HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1956-11-21, Page 1.;..
VOLUME 62 - NO. 50.
Authorized as Department,
Ottawa mail, BLYTA, ONTARIO, 'WEDNESDAY, NOV, 21, 1056 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance' $3.50 the U...a
Post Office Department, , inS �'
_-'.`.--
Lions Husband Of Former Blyth, Bishop Cody Conducts Mass
Girl Motor Accident Victim At St, Michael's Church Bishop . One of three men killed In a ntofpr The Most Rev. John C. Cody,"WarOn
accident near Oak Ridges, wns kr. of London, visited Blyth on Sunday
Charles Lloyd (Nick) Burnside, hu's- where he said a mass at Si, Michael's
WeeI,End bund of a former Blyth girl, Olgu Cgg'1- Church, He wns accompanied by is dough. The ether two fntalitles wc,gc secretary„ the Rev, Fr, J J A4cCo-- I
g � tick I � y
You won't want to miss the shoppin
feature in Blyth on Saturday when th
Blyth Lions Club stage their. annus
Fall Rummage Sale which starts riga
after dinner, in the Memorial Hn
basement. -.
.:.
Rats" To Bi
Russ Everitt n e 23, and the driver, ■ A Farmer
• g ; • Raymond England, age 27. Mr, Burn- The visit of Bishop Cody was prompt. I
side was In his 00th grace, All three ed by a promise he made Iasi Civic Freak Rutabagas Create men were residents of Bradford, O! t, Holiday week -end when he attended Cash Icor Saturday
X20.00 C
Interest
it and were returning from Toronto when and spoke at the special service at' Night Bank Nite Draw
All anyone has to du these days is
look out the Iron: window onto aha
main street and you realize that Blyth
is the centre of the rutabaga industry
es huge trailer loads of rutabagas art:
being transported almost centhnuousry
to Russell Dougherty's plant,
Also there Is the fact that Mr. Dough-
erty's enviable reputation In the Indus -
Y try has been built from the high qual-
ity product he finishes and shins to
11 their car went out of control across
If the offering of merchandise run
true to form, there will be someUtln
for the most fickle bargain hunter
and it Is a bargain hunter's dream com
true,
Collection On Friday Night
Citizens are reminded that on Fridn
evening, right after supper, the Llon
will be tnaking a door -to -doer canvass
in Blyth for articles which household-
ers may not •need, but which may be
just the tiring someone else is looking
for, • Householders can help grcotly'
by having their contributions conve,a
tent for quick plck-up.
Residents In the rural areas are ad
vised to phone Lions Jack McDougal
or Walter Bultell if they have conte!
buttons and where they cannot he
brought to town, arrangements will be
s
c
made to pick them up.
Everyone is encouraged to turn in
and help in this nnnual venture as all
moneys derived therefrom will be put
Into good community service by the
Club.
Mission Band Meeting
The November meeting of the Mis-
sion Band was held in the school room
of the United Church on Thursday,
Nov. 15th, with twenty-six members
present. •
Cheryl Madill, president, opened the
meeting with the Call to Worship,
which was responded. to in unison by
all members present, Hymn 604 was
sung and the Members' Purpose re-
peated. A bible story, "The King En-
ters Jerusalem," was read by Lent
Dougherty and Sharon Jackson led to
prayer. The offering was received by
Allen Howes and John Stewart. Tin'
minutes were read by the secretary,
Sheila Henry, and.ti lreaattoeg_s•.report
given by Sharon Jackson, A reading,
'How the Leopard got it's Spots," woo
given by Jimmie Webster, a piano solo
by Nancy Johnston and a reading on
"Peace," by Sandra Lyn Henry, "Hap-
py Birthday" was sung to Ann Howson,
Sandra Lyn Henry and Lena Dougher
ty. All mite boxes are to be brought
In to the December meeting and we are
making a collection of children's uses
woollen clothing to be packed in a bale
and sent to the needy boys and girls
in Korea,
During the study period, Mrs. 1),
Howes told a very interesting mission-
ary story with the aid of ilunnelgraph
pictures which was much appreciated
by the leader in charge, Mrs. Buttell,
and by all the children present.
The meeting closed by singing the
' Good -Bye song and tie World Friends
were given out by Nancy Johnston,
HOME FROM HOSPITAL
The• many friends of Miss Josephine
Woodcock will be happy to know that
she is convalescing nicely at her own
home from the effects of a fractured
ankle. Her sister, Mrs, Wm. Dawson,
of Torono, Is with her,
AMONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, November 25Th; 105
11T, ANDREW'S gRES1f1'TERIAN
CHURCH
3;30 p.m. -Church Service,
Rev, D, J. Lane, B.A.; Minister,
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth, Ontario.
Rev, A. W. Watson, Minister,
10;15 a,m,-Sunday School,
11:15 a.m.--Morning Worship.
7:30 pan. -Evening Worship. .
ANGLICAN CIIURCH
Trinity, Blyth -10:30 am, Holy Com-
munion.
'St, Murk's, Auburn -12 noun: Holy
Communion,
Trinity, Belgrnve-2;30 pm. Holy
Communion.
Celebrant for the day: The Rev. R, E
Ryssell,
CHURCiI OF 000
McConnell sheet, Blyth.
Rev, H. Stewart, Pastor,
10 a.m,-Sundny School.
11 a,m-Mnrning Worahlp,
7;30 p.m. -Evening Worship.
Wednesday, 8 p.m, -Prayer and Bible
Study,
Friday, 8 p,m.--Youth Fellowship,
markets In the United States and Can-
ada,
However, we cannot say that every
rutabaga brought to the plant is per-
fect, a fact which has been attested to
during the past week by a display ut
freaks in The Standard Office window.
Mr, William Mutch, who is a full-
time government inspector at the plant
during the harvesting and processing
season, is responsible for the display
of freaks which he gathered in the
course of his inspection duties at the
plant,
It Is surprising what resemblance
freak growths ran have to various
forms with which we are familiar.
One of these freaks greatly resembles
a bear In a sitting position, so much
so that the other morning we IookcJ
out to see George Garniss taking aim
at it -through the glass. The others nre
more or less just freak growths, but one
of the' freaks must have come in con-
tuct early in its growth with a sub-
stantial bolt eye -hook which it grew
through,
They're still on display for anyorat
who hasn't already seen then,
f St. Michael's Cemetery In connection
the highway, snapped off four gun ;.i
with the Morris Township Conteunad I •Agiln on Saturday night, $20,00 In
which time he blessed several new . casih will be given away to the lucky
statues which udorn the cemetery, I ticket holders at the Bank Nite Draw.
Following the mass, the bishop maPrize denominations will be the sane:
secretary attended a Communl;:a 'as lot Saturday night;
Breakfast at Hotel Clinton where mem.! Three draws for $5.00 each; two draws
bers of the Holy Name Society from far $2,00 each, and one draw for $1.00
LUCKY WINNERS:
Lucky winners last Saurday night
were as follows:
n Tigers lacrosse team, Hls wido`W for of both churches, the Rev, Fr, J. W, $5.00 -Bill Bescum,
is the former_ Olga Colclough, dough- P, Graham. $5.00 -Wm, Rohl,
ter of the late John and Annie Col-'
clough of Blyth who resided in tai $., $2.00 -Helen Bailey.
00 -Bernice Pierce.
dwelling now owned by Mrs, Thomits $2.00 -Clarence Johnston,
Elliott. They visited here frequently
when Mrs. Burnside's parents were llv- The Robert Brown,
continued open weather poses a
edraw
rails and plunged down a 15 -foot e !
bankrnent into three elan trees,
Provincial police arriving at
scene, had difficulty. extricating
men from the wrecked car,
All three men killed were involy
In the same business in Bradford. Mt, the parishes of Blyth and Clinton at -
Burnside was a well-known sports fl - tended.
ore and a former member of the Ham-; The event was arranged by the pa.
Town Officio s Entertained
At Reeve's Home
1
Ing, problem as to just when th
The retrains rested ad the Lathangue-
Kilkenny funeral home, Bradford, un-
til Friday at 6 p.m., thence were taken
to the Oliver funeral chapel, Mnrkdale,
for service on Saturday at 2:30,,_p.m.
Interment was made in Markdale ceme-
tery.
The sympathy of Blyth friends is ex
tended to Mrs, Burnside in her sud-
den, sad bereavement. , •
Reception At Londesboro
For Newly -Weds
• A reception for Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Lear, recently newly-weds, will be hold
in the Londesboro Community Hall pn
Friday night, November 23rd.' . Music
for dancing will be provided by l-Iapk I
Norris and his Orchestra. Everyonre.
Is cordially invited to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilhian',Young Honored
By Walton and Cranbrook Friends
Mr, and Mrs, Wm. Young recent'tivities and with the church choir,,;.Y
newly-weds. have been tendered fe= " 'To' yoni, 'Bill, we` emend a hearty
cep 11 d t tl s f t dl I d f 1 W f l ti ons an nes
(td a on n wo t• tan o we come. a ee sure nt
��
ferent centres recently, your choice of a wife has been a good
At Walton friends and neighlxouis one. You see she can sing to you, car -
gathered in the Community Hall for ry your money to the bank, serenaae
an evening of dancing to Wllbec's Or- you with everything from a bugle to
chestra and at lunch time Mr. and Mrs. the church organ, and . we have eves
Young were the recipients of a purse heard that she can nook! With a good
of money, presented •on behalf of those wife like this we think you should
assembled by Roy Young, with Boyd stay "Young" for a long Line.
Taylor reading the following address: To you both we offer our sincerest
Dear 13111 and Marlon; good wishes for a long and happy wed.
ded lite. Asp token of these good
At lust the hour for you has come, wishes, we would ask you to accept
With all your friends and neighbors this stand! gift. May it fill some small
here, pl?ce in your home.
To wish you well, with' lots of fun, Signed, Friends and Neighbours of
A huppy voyage thru the years, Union, Moncrieff, Cranbrook and Ethel.
In both instances Bill replied, sin -
Bill, we have known you quite awhile cereia thanking those assembled for
We see you there a lot;
Don't feel uncomfortable now,
For we've got ytau on the spot.
But you are good at helping too,
The ones who are in need,
So now we've gathered at the hall,
To show our "Thanks" indeed,
Marion, we hope we'll know you bei,
ter,
As here with us you stay,
Please, only senile about this poen,
For that Is just our way.
To both of you, the best in life,
As thru the years you go,
This is the wish of everyone,
We know it to be so. •
As troubles comae us well they may;
Just think upon this letter,
And know that soon they'll va►hlsh ton,
And you %vitt feel much better.
For on the farm it is for sure,
The chickens must be fed,
It isn't exactly strange we hear,
To find some in one's bedl
their kindness.
Mrs. Young was the former Marion
Morrow, of R.R. 3, Brussels,
Heading Error Creates
Mild Sensation
• An•error In last week's issue of Tho
Standard in which a Voters' Lists oust-
ing ndverti anent over the signature
of Clerk -Treasurer George W, Cowan,
of Hullett Township, curried a "Notice
To Creditors" heading, created a she
among municipal authorities, as well
ns Mr, Cowan's many friends in the
district,
The same afternoon the issue came
out, Clerk's of the various municipal -
hies were meeting in the Blyth Mein -
oriel Hall to have their voter's !Isla
checked by Judge Frank Fingland, of
Goderich,
Clerk -Treasurer George Slonn ut
Blyth was about the only one who
had time to scan the issue before the
meeting, but when - Mr. Cowan walked
in and everyone greeted him with a
particularly warm handshake, he be-
gun to wonder what was up.
Mr. Sloan informed him of the ap-
pearance of tie notice to creditors
heading in The Standard and Mr, Cow-
an came immediately to -this office to
repudiate any false impressions that 1
Wright be going the rounds as to his
untimely devise.
Needless to say, it was an error -
just one of those things that creep In
now and again, and you don't know
how.
Anyway, we're very happy to report
the error, and the fact that Mr. Cowan !
Is hail and hearty as we hope he will
be fur many years to come,
And now this story hos an end,
This gift of ours to you,
We ask you now to `please accept,
With wishes warm and true,
-Signed on behalf. of Friends and
Neighbours.
Again at Cranbrook Community Hall
a group of friends and neighbours of
that district met at the Community
Hall where dancing was again enjoyed
Ind where Mr. and Mrs, Young were
presented with a purse of money by
those present, Ross Shields made the
presentation and Brian Perseott read
the following address:
Cranbrook, Ont„ November 7, 1058
Dear Murton and 1311I -To -night we
your friends and neighbours have ae
scrnbled In this hall to honour yntt on
your recent marriage and to 'spend an
evening of fun with you.,
Marion, we have always found you
willing to tike your part in commun-
ity affairs, particularly in 4 -Ii Club sc•
•
iRECOVERiNG FROM ILLNESS
Friends are end to see Mr, Carman
Hedging about his place of bus!nest,
and ip town again, following an il'nes.a
which has confined him to his home.
Reeve W. H. Moffitt and Mrs, Mor
rill were bests to a turkey dinner Inst
Thursday night at which members o
!the Viiloge Council and Town Officials
, were guests along with other invited
'guests.
Present besides members of the
council were Messrs, Maurice Bean, ,f.
A, McDougall, George McNeil, William
Thuell, William Brown, William Cock-
erline, John Bailey and George Sloan,
Mrs. Msrrilt served the gathering t
delicious turkey dinner being assisted
by Mrs. M. McElroy and Miss Clare
Taylor.
Follou'Ing the dinner Mr. Maurice
Seen acted ns Master of Ceremonies;
and walled on everyone. present for a
few words.
Everyone expressed Uteir thanks to
Reeve' and Mrs. Moffitt for their hod-
pitallty.
The remulnder of the evening was
spent playing cards,
It has become a custom with Mr.
Mort'iti, who is finishing his twelfth
term as reeve of Blyth, to entertain
the members of his council and invited
guests, a gesture which is always ap-
preciated by those invited,
- should be held, It is felt that even
though the nights are cold, it is best
f held Saturday night instead of the af-
ternoon for convenience of country
shoppers, Again this Saturday night
draw time will be 0 pan.
•
Live Wire Farm Forum
On Nov. 12th the Live 1VIre Farm
Forum met, at the home of Mr, and
Mrs. Lorne Hunking with 19 adults
and 6 c'ialdren present.
The bre '-"st, "What About Farm
Management," (vas listened to after
which two groups discussed the topic
and whose findings tore:
1. We think that time. services are
niready available now thrush our ag-
ricultural representative, feed rompan-
ies, machine mechanics, fertiliaar com-
panies, etc,
2. The farmers should pay,
Mrs, Jas. McDougall led. the business
period when it was decided to discuss
"Hbw the Federation Should be Fin-
anced," and also the Christmas meet-
ing at the meethrg•Nov, 19th,
The next meeting is at the home. of
Mr, and Mrs. Jas. McDougall. Cards
wore played .and lunch served,
On Nov, 19th, the Live Wire Farm
Forum met at the home of James Mc-
Dougall with 20 adults and ti children
present. The broadcast was listened to
and the questionairre, "How to Fin-
ance the Federation" was answered.
The business period followed, which
was led by Jas. McDougall, Il was
decided to have a turkey supper and
Christmas Party on Dec. 15th, At the
meeting on Nov, 26, the various com-
mittees are to be formed.
The next meeting is at the home of
Ted Hunking.
Cards were played and lunch was
served.
Children Baptized At
Sunday Morning Service
A baptismal service was conducted
by the Rev, A, W. Watson at the Sun-
day nmorning service in Blyth United
!Church when the following children
received the Sacrament of Holy Bap-
tism; -
Marie Ann Empey, daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Wm, Enhpey, Blyth; Bnrba•it
Anne Young, daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Roy Young, Biytih; Marcel Stadelman,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Fernand Sladcl-
man, Blyth; Nita Jenn Wallace, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs..ilhwnrd Wallace,
Brampton, and Raymond Charles Mc•
Nichol, son of Mr, and Mrs. Aubrey
McNichol, Blyth,
Assisting the Rev, Mr. Watson in
the service were Miss Ula Griffiths
and Mr, Don Craig, to recognition of
Yuuth Week, and Itfr. Watson based
Ills remarks around this theme.
An eocelient congregation was pres-
ent tor tic service,
Local Masons Conduct
Initiatory Degree
At the regular meeting of Blyth A.N.
& A.M. No. 303, held Monday night,
the Officers and Past Masters confer -
'red the First Degree on Bro, Arnold
Berthot, of Blyth.
The election of officers fur 1057 was
also held and next Tuesday night,
Nov. 27th, a joint Installation servlet
for the officers of Blyth and Hullett
lodges, will be held al the Blyth Ledge
room. .
The list of incoming officers will ba
published next week following the in- 1
stallation ceremonies.
At the conclusion of the work, t1l
Junior Wardell and his committee serv-
ed lunch and a social time was spent,
Balt Teani Dine- And Dance
-But No Jackets
The officials and members of the
Legionalrre softball team, with their
wives and girl friends, enjoyed `a ban-
quet at the Legion Hone last Friday
night, catered to by the members of
the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian 1
Legion Branch. An excellent meal was i
provided and the ladies were duly I
thanked by Mr. Grover Clare.
Afterwards all reassembled at the
Memorial Hall whet`e a good crowd ,
joined with them for an evening of
dancing, e
The feature of the dance was to be t
the presentation of jackets to the team, a
but unfortunately the jackets hadn't r,
arrived, They are expected this week, 1 A
however. C
ICommencing this week, Nov. 191
the Huron County Junior Farms
start a "Wage War on Rats" campaiE
iwhich will run through to January
'The purpose of the campaign Is
stimulate a commwtity-wide drive
erradicate these filthy, costly pes
The Junior Farmers agree that rats 3
Ifar more common than most of us 11
to believe. Prof. R, H. Oxhurn, of t
OAC, found rats on every one Of
farms visited during a recent test,
tins estimated that each of these fart
lost as much as $1,000.00 a year
these pests.
Rats don't restrict their activity
farms. They're extremely common
round stores, food processing plan
and in many town homes. Duni
serve as a real source of infestation
many places.
People would not tolerate rats arou
their buildings if they appreciated hi
, iiithy and costly these pests are, a
how easy it is to get rid of them.
... The Huron County Junior Forme
Program is part of a province-wi
campaign of the Junior Farmers of C
larks, The Junior Farmers plan
' tell their story in newspaper nrticl
radio talks, talks at farm rneetin
and displays In many local slur
Committee Chairmen of the Wage IN
nn Rats Campaign are; Larry Wheath
RR, 1, Dublin; Earl McSixtdden, F
1, Sea`forth; Ross Smith, RR. 1, Eth
:nirl !Jetty Campbell, RR. 1, paw
Secretary -Treasurer, They will be
sisted by all .Junior Farmer and Jt
for Institute ine:nbers in Huron Cot
ty,
The "Wage War on Rats" ckmpai
will make a real contribution to c
community. it can mean the co
plcte err.+dicatlon of rots and mice
our whole area, It will mean a redi
lion i t the spread of both human a
livestock diseases, and will ss
members of our community $20.00
every rat killed.
To Serve With U. N. Fors;
Rfm. Alvin Armstrong, son of 1
and Mrs. James Armstrong, of F
Frances, formerly of Blyth, is amt
the Canadian Troops of the Quo,
Own Rifles, going Overseas to set
with the Queen's Own Rifles of C
ads with thef United Nations Pol
Force in the Suez Canal and Egypt
Territory.
A letter from his parents is to
fleet that Alvin would appreciate
ers from his Blyth friends, both yoi
nd old, while he is so far away. '
ddress is: SA 126092, RStn, Arrnstro
1st Btn. Queen's Own Rifles
anada, C.A,P.O. - 5049, Caned
Armed Forces, Europe.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations-- to Mr, and Mrs.
Steve Foltz, of Hamilton, who cele•
brated their first wedding anniversary
on Monday. Nov. 10th.
Congratulations to Mrs. Clarence
Crawford who celebrates her birthday
on Friday, Nov. 23rd.
Congratulations to Master George
Longman who celebrates his 8th birth-
day on Saturday. Nov. 24th,
Congratulations to Mr. Win. Tunney
of Toronto, who celebrates his birth-
day on Thursday, Nov. 22nd.
Congratulations to Jtlrs, Wm. 'Tu.nncy,
of Toronto, who celebrated her birth-
day on Tuesday, Nov. 20th,
Congratulations to Jobanne notion -
boom who celebrates her birthday on
Sunday, Nov, 25th,
BIRTEJS
FAITZ-Mr. and Mrs, Steve Foltz (
Olive Craig), wish to announce
birth of their daughter on Nov, 1!
1956, at Mount nonillion Ilospi
Both doing well,
POPP-In Clinton Public, Hospital,
Saturday, November 17th, 1956,
Mr. and Mrs, Lorne Popp (nee F
lyn Young), of Blyth, the gift o'
daughter, Dianne Isabel -a sister
Douglas,
THOMI'SON - In Wingham Gen!
Hospital, on Sunday, Nov, 4th, 1
to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Thomp
RR, 1, Belgrave, a son, a brother
John and Susan.
Several New Canadians From Blyth
District Among Those Granted
Canadian Citizenship
Twenty-two persons became Canadian
citizens in an impressive ceremony
held before ,fudge Frank FInglxnd, at
the Huron County Could House, God.•
rich in a special sitting of the court
over the week -end.
In the group were 15 from the Neth-
erlands, one from the United States,
two from Germany, two from Pnlnnd,
and two Ukrainians,
Following the ceremony the Nen'
Citizens were entertained by the hie
perlol Order of the Diughters of the
Empire nt the Canadian Legion hull,
Goderich,
Among the group were several from
the Blyth district, The complete list
follows:
Grace Bakelaar„ Clinton, Peter 13
1aar, Clinton, 'Marguerite Cathryn
der, lilt. 2, Mensal!, Liesbeth Fans
!RR 1, Londesboro, Otto Fangrnd,
Londesboro, Jean Hoytama, . RR,
Clinton, Chris Guetter, Wingdtant,
Frederik, Guettea', 1Vingham, Try
Hcssels, RR, 4, Clinton, John H
Heyink, RR, 1, Blydh, Jaskula I
infers. Kinarski, RR. 1, Blyth, Fra
zek Kinarski, RR. 1, Blyth, Olga Ot
zek, Exeter, Jaroslaw Orenczuk,
ter, Albettus Siertsema, Blyth, Jr
mint Siertsema, Blyth, Meerten S
semi, Blyth, Nebo Siersema, B
Peter Swinkels, RR, 2, Senforth, 1
Jacob Tinrnermans, RR, 3, Kippen,
rlan 'l'innnertnens, RR, 3, Kippen,
inus Van Veen, RR, 2, Brussels,
Terror Climb
Turned Man ®id
7i'layed by the bitter, early
morning wind, two men lay
huddled on the upper slopes of
26,620 -foot Nanga Parbat, the
Ilimalayan "mountain of terror,"
which bad already claimed the
lives of thirty-one would-be
conquerors.
)Lerman Buhl, an Austrian
mountaineer, nudged his reluc-
tant fellow -climber, Otto Kemp -
ter.
"Otto" Buhl pleaded, "haven't
you got any will -power? To -day
of all days --when everything's
flet -•and we're going for the
summit?"
.A mumble from the sleeping -
bag: "Not me --1 ain't got none."
So Buhl shouldered his pack
and gear and set oft alone,
thinking Otto would catch up
with him later. It was another
i'onr miles of struggling over
unknown snow and ice ridges
to the top, and with no oyygen
to help.
Up, up he trudged until he
came to a huge snow wall the
size of a block of buildings, a
colossal cornice structure. Here,
in 1937, an expedition had ended
in a shattering tragedy when an
ice avalanche buried Carl Wien
and his comrades. A sense of
desolation swept over Buhl. But
he must not think of death or
horror, up here alone.
As the sun grew unherably
hot it parched his body, fay on
him like a ton load. He found
It terribly difficult to make pro-
gress, breathed five times to
each step he took, sat down and
tried to eat, but couldn't swal-
low, so forced his way on and
no over the rim of the summit
plateau.
• Buhl, thoroughly exhausted,
now lay in the snow face down
on his rucksack, panting. This
looked like the end. Far off he
could see a dot—Otto. How
endly he would have had him
'with him now! But the dot didn't
anove. Otto seemed to have
yivcn up. Buhl couldn't wait.
))� must go on alone.
Ms description of the rest of
The climb in his dramatic book,
*Tanga P a r b a t Pilgrimage"
translated by Hugh Merrick, is
one of the finest epics of endur-
since ever penned. At 25,658
feet, In the gap between the
subsidiary and main summits,
be collapsed on the snow, again
exhausted. Hunger racked him,
thirst tortured hint, He swal-
lowed two energizinz tablets to
boost his failing powers.
On his feet again, he clam-
bered along an enormouse chain
of cornices, then had to face a
sharp rock -ridge of saw-toothed
trees, dominated by towers of
snow and ice -covered rock. And
17,000 below him was the awe-
some Rupal Nullah, a deep • rav-
ine. But it hardly affected him,
iso nnathetic had he become.
Whenever he looked at the
*summit ahead it looked no near -
THE EASY WAY — Placing a
steeplejack and equipment on
top of a smokestack more than
300 feet high it easy if you use
a helicopter. With the aid of
extensions of skid landing gear,
a Bell helicopter deftly lands on
top the chimney by straddling
It and putting steeplejack and
equipment on . the job. When
repairs were completed, the
helicopter. returned to bring the
workerback to earth.
er, ro he decided to fix his eyes
on some point only a few yards
off .. , the next ledge, next
spike on the ridge, and no far-
ther ahead until he got there.
That way he kept going,
Nearing the top at last, he
crossed some gullies and short
patches of snow, stumbling .over
boulders to the foot of the sum-
mit structure.
The highest thing he could see
was a projecting rock. How far
now? Iiad he the strength? He
could no longer stand upright,
he was a wreck. Slowly he craw-
led forward on all fours, nearer
the rocky spur, and to his joy
and relief saw nothing but a
little crest, a short snow slope.
He was on the summit, Every-
thing fell away on all sides. He
was the first human being to
get there. It was 7 p.m. It had
taken him seventeen hours since
leaving Otto.
"But I felt no wave of over-
mastering joy, no wish to shout
aloud, no sense of victorous ex-
altation . . . 1 was absolutely
all in. Utterly worn out, I fell
on the snow and stuck nay ice -
axe upright on the hard -beaten
snow .. , tobk the Tyrolese pen-
nant out of my anorak and tied
it to the shaft . "
Then he took nhotogranhs for
• documentary evidence. The sky
war cloudless, but immediately
the sun went down behind a
mountain range the cold became
penetrating.
After about half an hour he
took a last look back, turned,
and began the descent,
But his terrific ordeal was by
no means over. On the way down
he was startled to feel something
loose and wobbly on his left
foot, and saw the strap -fasten-
ing of his crampon — spiked
climbing aid—disappear below
him. Then the crampon came
off the boot. He grabbed it
just in time, then stood on one
leg, with two ski -sticks as his
only support. He tried to scrape
a shallow dent in the frozen,
snow with the points of the
sticks to give his smooth boot
sole a moment's hold while he
moved the cramponed foot a
farther on. In this way he man-
aged somehow to balance from
one snow -rib to another.
As darkness came down he
searched frantically for a perch,
found a stance with just room
for both feet though too small
to permit sitting, and realized
that he would have to spend the
night in that perilous position
standing up. He put on every-
thing he had, his woolly well
over his ears, his balaclava well
down over his head, and two
pairs of gloves. He had the
slanting rock face as back -rest.
"I was amazingly relaxed," he
..says. "I almost faced that night
at 26,000 feet with complete
equanimity."
Buhl swallowed another drug
to stimulate circulation and
protect him against frostbite.
His left hand clutched the pre-
cious ski -sticks, his right a
solitary hold. Utter weariness
overcame him, his head kept
falling forwards, his eyelids felt
like lead, he c$uld hardly stay
upright, he dozed off, woke with
a start .. .
The intense cold grew more
unbearable. He felt it on his
face, hands, feet, body. His
feet went dead. The night drag-
ged on; it was like eternity. At
last ... dawn.
"During those hours of ex-
treme tension I had an extra-
ordinary feeling that I was not
alone, I had a partner with me,
looking after me . , ." he says.
Moving into a gully, he removed
his gloves, couldn't find them.
"Have you seen my gloves?"
he asked his ghostly companion,
and heard quite clearly the ans-
wer: "You've lost them." When,
after forty-one hours' lone or-
deal, he at last regained his team
he was a drawn, haggard, old
man — at twenty-nine — as a
photograph of him taken by a
colleague shows only too clearly.
Climbs in his native Tyrol, the
Dolomites and Alps complete
the magnificent story of an in-
trepid mountaineer who was so
weak as a child that he had to
be kept from school a year be-
yond the normal time!
A gastric ulcer is something
you get if you go mountain -
climbing over mole hills.
SALLY'S SALLIES
"Dasr't be so fussy, sir! Just
cram it int"
HOOT, MON! IT'S ELVIS—Not THE Elvis, though both strum
guitars. Pvt. T. Ellwood has been dubbed "Elvis" by his com-
rades, He is a member of the Argyle and Sutherland High-
landers. The musical soldier is shown at Southampton, Eng-
land, boarding a troopship bound for the Mediterranean.
TABLE TALKS
eiane Andrews.
In the minds of most men
cheese is associated closely with
apple pie. If you'd like to go
a step further than serving the
cheese in wedges, try this
recipe for cheese mixed right
into the crust.
APPLE PIE WITH
CHEESE CRUST
21/2 cups flour
1 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons cold water
1 5 -ounce jar pasteurized,
processed cheese spread
IA cup cooking oil
31z cups cooked or canned
sliced apples
/ cup sugar
2 •tablespoons flour
7,4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1,4 teaspoon nutmeg
2 tablespoons butter
Sift together the flour and
salt. Add water gradually to the
cheese spread, blending until
smooth after each. addition. Add
oil and beat until well blended.
Add to flour mixture. Toss and
mix with fork. Form dough into
ball; divide in half, Before roll-
ing, shape each half into a flat
round, making top and edges
smooth. Roll out ons round be-
tween two 12 -inch squares of
waxed paper. If bottom paper
wrinkes, turn and roll on other
side. Remove top sheet and in-
vert pastry over_ a 9 -inch pan,
peel off paper; fit pastry into
pan.
Combine apples, sugar, 2
tablespoons flour, salt, cinna-
mon, and nutmeg. Fill the
pastry -lined pie pan. -Dot. filling
with butter, Roll second piece
of pastry; cut gashes for escape
of steam and place over apples.
Seal edges. Bake at 400' F, for
40 minutes, or until done.
Lemon pie is also a great
favorite and here is a recipe
that your entire family will
praise.
MAGIC LEMON PIE
1 8 -inch pie shell or crumb
crust
1 can (11 cups) sweetened
condensed milk
2 egg yolks, well beaten
1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
2 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon grated lemon
peel
Stir all ingredients together
well. The filling will thicken as
though cooked, Pour into baked
pastry shell. Spread meringue'
over pie, Bake at 350' F. 15-20
minutes until ,golden brown.
Cool'away from drafts,
MERINGUE
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
2 egg whites
4 tablespoons Sugar
Beat egg whites and lemon
juice together until soft peaks
form. Add cigar gradually,
beating until meringue holds in
firm glossy peaks,
* * *
The tang of sour cream and
spice, with the sweetness of rat- •
sins make custard raisin me-
ringue pie a special favorite
now just as it was in grand-
mother's dqy. Try this pie for a
"company" dessert.
RAISIN MERINGUE PiE
1 sup light or dark raisins
3 egg .yolks
1/2 cup milk
1 cup commercial sour• cream
3/4 cup sugar
r/4 teaspoon salt
34 teaspoon cinnamon
Pastry for sine., 8 -Inch crust
Rinse and drain raisins. Sep-
arate eggs and beat yolks Iight-
ly. Blend in milk, extant, sugar,
salt, and cinnamon. Stir in rai-
sins and turn into pastry -lined
pie pan with high, fluted edges.
Bake at 425° F. 15 minutes, Re-
duce heat to 325° F. and bake
20 -25 -minutes longer, until fill-
ing is set in center. Remove
from oven and sperad meringue
in swirls over top, Bake at 325°
F, for 15-20 minutes longer un-
til lightly browned. Cool be-
fore cutting.
Meringue: Beat the 3 egg
whites until foamy. Add 1/4 tea-
spoon cream of tartar, and beat
until barely stiff, Add 6 table-
spoons sugar, 1 tablespoon at
a time, beating well after each
addition. a ,,
PUMPKIN PIE
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon cinnamon
3/4 teaspoon mixed spices (nut-
meg, mace, cloves, ginger)
cup dry milk (whole or
non-fat)
teaspoon salt
Lia cups mashed cooked or
canned pumpkin
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup water or fluid milk
2 tablespoons melted fat
1 unbaked 9 -inch pie shell
Combine all dry ingredients;
add pumpkin gradually to the
dry mixture, stirring until
smooth. Add eggs, liquids, and
fat. Pour into pie shell and
bake.at 425° F. until set—about
35 minutes, Serve hot or cold,
as you wish.
14
*/a
Penguin Proves
Expensive Pet
When schoolboy Errol Berry
found an injured penguin ly-
ing -veak and gasping on a quay
of Cape Town docks, he, took
him home and bathed the deep
red wounds in the bird's- white
waistcoat,
Three days later Errol had to
raid his moneyboX to pay for .
fish for his Antarctic '`house
guest. The bird begar. gobbling
up 6 lb. per day, scorning salt
cod and insisting on fresh fish,
And when Errol's parents re-
fused, to pay for further ra-
tions, the boy sadly took the
penguin and set' him free.
The bird swam around, fish-
ing voraciously. But when he
had finished his meal he swam
back to the schoolboy!
To -day, Errol is gaining wide-
spread publicity as the school-
boy with the world's strangest
pet. Snappy, as he calls his pen-
guin, travels with him on buses
sleeps stretched fiat out in a
shed in the garden, and is very
intelligent.
A. penguin eats almost his
own weight in fish a day, and
soon he could not find sufficient
food offshore. For Snappy's own
good, Errol decided to release
him — and relinquish him —
far out at sea, For two months
the boy saw nothing of his
friend. Then he heard 6f a pen-
guin .which had landed on the•
beach•, peck:ng viciously at any.
one who dared to approach it.
It was Snappy, waiting for
him it the very rock where
they used to swim and fish to-
. gether, As "soon as the bird saw
the boy he waddled up and set-
tled cosily under his arm,
Now a trawling company sne•
cially sets aside hauls of fish
for Snappy, Occasioniilly, • the
bird goes to sea,for a week or
two, hut always returns, await-
ing his master at ''weir usual
rendezvous
How'd You Like
A Paper Dress ?
Disposable paper garments for
the use of research Workers in
atomic laboratories were devel-
oped some time ago by the Kim-
berly - Clark Corporation but
these are just the first step into
a new field. The next will be
paper dresses, slips, bathing
sults, rain capes, and who knows
what else for everybody to wear,
Many plant workers in mills
are already wearing paper work
clothes and some of the girls in
the offices enjoy wearing paper
dresses and skirts. They etc
either printed or painted in in-
teresting designs and have a
crispness which does not wilt
with wearing.
The paper material is non-
woven, formed by laminating
several piles of high wet -strength
cellulose wadding to each side
of a web of crosslaid threads of
rayon, nylon, or glass, held to-
gether by an adhesive, In making
this wadding, some of the im-
portant special features are built
in, such as resistance to wrink-
ling, scuffing, tinting, and also
desirable draping qualities.
The word "wadding" doesn't
strike a high-fashion note, but
whereas Kimberly-Clark is now
devoting itself chiefly to pro-
viding this paper "fabric" for
special laboratory uses, it has an
eye on far more glamorous pos-
sibilities,
About the only "paper" char-
acteristic of this product is that
it cuts like paper. But it sews
like cloth, However, it needn't
be sewed, but can be glued to-
gether or fastened by a heat -
sealing process. Just imagine
cutting out a new dress like one
for a paper doll, pressing the
seams together with a hot iron,
painting on a few posies and
dancing off to a party in it. But
so far paper is not available in
the yard -goods section of de-
partment stores.
The garments produced in the
research laboratories are not
only water-resistant but also
burn -resistant, and some can be
washed and reused a time or
two. The cost of such a new
gown would probably be about
$4: And think what a variety
one could have!
The idea stirs the imagination.
Want a new dress? Chuck the
old one in the wastebasket and
get out the scissors and the iron.
There'll be nothing to It — not
even much expense,
This is all in the realm of pos-
sibility but not of availability—
anyway not yet.
EASY WINNER
"We had a kind of drinking
competition at the club last
night, dear."
"So . I gathered. Who came
second?"
MEDITERRANEAN
SEA
PORT
SAID
AYSCIIOOL
LESSON
BY REV R. BARCLAY
WARREN. B.A.. B.D,
Qualities of a Christian
Matthew 5:1-12
Memory Selection: Blessed
are they which do hunger and
thirst after righteousness: for
they shall be filled, hialthew
5:6,
The beatitudes form the
opening part of our Lord's Ser-
mon on the Mount, Ile gave this
message in the early part of his
ministry, It might be called his
manifesto.
'Blessed' means 'happy,' Billy
Graham's book of sermons on
these beatitudes is well called,
The Secret of Happiness.
Everyone wants happiness in
this life but comparatively few
are finding it. Isaiah asked,
"Wherefore do ye spend money
for that which is not bread?
and your labour for that which
satisfieth not? Millions of dol-
lars are spent each month in
the vain pursuit of happiness.
Actually, if we matte happiness
the object and goal of our life
we will miss it. But if we
turn from our sins and let Jesus
Christ be Lord and Saviour of
our life and follow on to love
and serve Him we shall ex-
perience continual happiness.
That does not mean that life
will always be smooth sailing.
But we shall know that we are
safe with Christ on board. We
will have zest for climbing rug-
ged hills when our face is al-
ways turned Godward. We shall
be happy even when we are re-
viled and persecuted. A holy
contentment will pervade our
lives; not the cot tentment of
self-satisfaction or stagnation
but that which is born of a
sturdy faith and a sure con-
fidence that God is leading and
the end will be glorious.
The world's tyrants who
strutted for a time didn't real=
ize that to be humble, meek
and merciful was the way of
happiness. if they had they
would have been peacemakers
instead of war mongers. They
would have sought righteous-
ness and a pure heart.
The greatest riches and hap-
piness is available to all. Let us
read the Sermon on the Mount,
Matthew 5-7. Before we can live
this life we must be born of
the Spirit of God. With a new
heart we will have happiness
as we delight to walk in God's
way.
AMMAN
•
JERUSALEM
DEAD
SEA
0
cr
0
GAZA
GAZA STRIP!
IL ARISH
•
CAIRO
E GY P T
1
SUIz
RAS IL NAQR
GULF or SINAI
SUEZ PENINSULA
SAUDI
ARABIA
CEASE-FIRE IN MIDDLE EAST—Map spots approximate positions
of British, French and Israeli forces in the Middle East after the
ceasefire deadline was reached. ,,
T V
RKEY
1 •
Aleppo
Horne
•
Syria fears Israeli attack INA/11
aimed at outflanking Jar.
dan, Country under full
mobilization, Of Syria's 30;
000 regular troops, 20,000
are reported already in Jor-
dan. Syrian president visits
Moscow receires pledge of
all "necessary" aid,
LEBANON
^^~-ISRAEL
=Tel Aviv
M Goza
0.
Baghdad •
traq reported sending in lull
division of her total strength
of three into Jordan. Troops
taking up border politicos
opposite Israel,
SAUDI
ARAB I A
MILES
" r me_
NIWSMArt 0 100
ARABS . FEAR • •ATTACK -Iraq, Syria 'and Jordan fear ' being
brought into the Middle East fighting by an attack from Israel,
• iljustratdd on Newsmap above, Jordan fears a direct assault
'from the ,-Jerusalem area, Russia is strengthening ties with
Syria; • may' offer help if hostilities break out, Saudi Arabia
has broken diplomatic relations with France and Britain and
has dispatched troops. to Jordan,
Mermaids Fought
Octopus invasion
Invasion by octopuses! Hordes
of them were descending an the
Japanese• island of Tatoku, their
u g 1 y, multi - armed purplish
bodies clouding the sea fa' miles
around,
With dismay in his heart, Ko-
kiclhi Mikimoto rushed down to
the beach, Here was yet another
threat to his oyster br 's and the
cultured pearl Industry that he
had struggled so long to develop.
Ravenously hungry, the octopus-
es were descending on his oys-
ters, prying open the shells with
their tentacles to get at the meat
Inside - and swallowing thou-
sands of dollars worth "f pearls,
But Mikimoto was not to be
beaten. "Set out traps," he told
his worker's. But that was no
good - there were far too many
octopuses, "Send 'out the diving
girls with spears," Fearlessly,
the girls battled with the octo-
puses for hours, until too ex-
hausted to dive any more, But
still the invasion continued,
"Announce to all the villages
that I will pay ten sen for each
large octopus brought in and five
sen for each small one," Miki-
moto declared. "And also tell
the people they can keep the oc-
topuses for food,"
Octopus is a table delicacy In
Japan and this oiler brought
hundreds more people into the
fight, with the result that the
Invasion was beaten and the oys.
ler beds were saved.
At that time-1911-Mikimo-
to, the ex -noodle peddler, was
building up his cultured pearl
Industry the hard %way; for it
was a new industry and there
was no previous experience to
guide him.
"The average woman who ac-
centuates her natural beauty
with a string of cultured pearls
will never know the years of
trial and failure that were ne-
cessary to create those beads,"
says Robert Eunson in his vivid
biography of the amazing Miki-
moto, "The Pearl King.".
Genius, industrialist, expert
salesman, and quite a philoso-
pher -- that was Mikimoto, who
died in 1954, at the age of ninety-
six. As a genius who stubbornly
refused to accept defeat he could
be compared to Thomas Edison.
For it took fifteen years to pro-
duce the perfect cultured pearl.
When he succeeded, he took it
to his wife's grave and wept. For
It was his hard-working, ever -
faithful wife, Ume, who inspired
him to carry on in face of con-
tinual setbacks.
Not all oysters produce pearls
- they only do so, usually, be-
cause some foreign body, such
as a grain of sand, has forced its
way into their shells. Unable to -
get rid of the irritation, they sur-
round it with layer after layer
of a soft substance which even-
tually forms a pearl. Mikimoto's
idea was to ensure that all oys-
ters did produce pearls, by in-
serting a foreign body into the
shells.
July 11th, 1893, was the great
day when this bore fruit, Alter
five years of failure, Mikimoto
had almost given up hope, then
his wife opened an oyster. , , .
"Suddenly a low moan came
from Ume, as if she had been
struck in the pit of the stomach.
'!'hen a scream. 'Anata - you!
Anataf'
"He scrambled to his feet and
ran to his wife. . . Squatting
in the sand,.a knife in one hand
and a freshly -opened oyster in
the other, his wife was staring
in open-mouthed, wonder at a
gleaming while pearl.
"'We've done it!' Mikimoto
shouted, falling to the sand be-
side his wife. 'We've done it!'
"They embraced, ' cried, ran
roved in circles and fell to tho
sand in laughter while Rut
watched, half -eaten rice ball in
hand, hoping her parents had not
bot gone quite mad."
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
1. Live In a tent
5. 8lieed
eaMut ge
9. water resort
)2. +'niture'
medium
13. Abhor
1 f. Iv :Om
15. Deserved
17. I.Caf'et
43. Small tlsh
2'). Devoured
22. rrnulrtu
23. t'atm (let ed
Twilight
2.1, !rot*
31.Tow ard
82. \' ,tilatea
II. Invite
36.1n this way
37. ite,istereci
puree
It. Drive
it, Amer.
humorist
41. More
ex'mord re
14, Burned
AL Mason
113, nruw sleepy
4*. Anthem
11 Straddling
l6. Windmill Rall
I, Otherwise
68, Pull upart
69. Thrice
(ltrellx)
IO. Be fond .it
11. W,'aponf
])OWN
1.10a:eitlrtu yokel
. tit lq I ot tttrr
Mikftti oto never tried to pass
off his cultured pearls as natural
gems • - wherever his products
are sold they are always labelled
"cultured pearls." In 1933, when
he was being harassed by com-
petitors selling at shaper prices,
he bought up 750,000 Inferior
pearls worth more than $24,000
and, wearing his bowler hat and
a formal black kimono, he shov-
elled them into a furnace him-
self, The furnace, for all to see,
was set up In the heart of Kobe.
Mikimoto's diving girls or
amahs were a very colourful
sight around Tatoku Island as this
pearl industry developed. These
girls have been diving for oysters
and other sea creatures since
ancient times and are as much at
home in the water as they are
in theh' tiny, paper houses, with
with grass -mat floor's and sliding
doors, says Eunson,
The trade is passed on from
mother to daughter and the wom-
en swim until they are "far bed
yond the bloom of life," Mrs,
Oroku Kitamura is still an active
diver today and she is now past
sixty. Asked how she .liked her
job, she replied:'. "We divers are
willing to work any time and
love doing 11."
Apart from octopuses, another
great threat to the oyster beds
was the Red Tide, an invasion
of minute marine creatures that
killed off practically all shell
fish, In 1802, Mikimoto was
nearly ruined by the Red Tide,
which destroyed 5,000 oysters. In
1900 it struck again, but, this
time he was more prepared.'
Having received a telegram of
the danger, he hurried back to
his oyster beds and 'sent out an
SOS for his diving girls who in
a short time were • assembling
along the shore. "Now bring out
the extra baskets," he command-
ed, A thousand bamboo baskets,
each capable of holding fifty to
sixty oysters, were distributed to
the 300 excited diving girls.
They ran out a short distance
into the water and then dived
into the shallow oyster beds,
They filled their baskets and
then passed them up to their
menfolk who had rowed their
boats into position. As soon as
one boat was loaded it was
rowed out into the bay where
the oysters were deposited sixty
feet deep, where Mikimoto
thought they would be safe,
"In two days," says Eunson,
"the diving girls, working be-
neath the ocean until their bodies
ached from weariness and their
lungs felt as if they would col-
lapse from holding their breath
so long, had salvaged almost all
of the oyster'.,"
Employers of diving girls are
great believers in marriage. They
maintain that unmarried girls
are apt to be flighty and tunable
to keep their minds on their
work. So to encourage romance
on Tatoku, Mikimoto issued these
orders to his right-hand man:
"13e sure there are plenty of
boats for the workers to use at
night. Perhaps if they go row-
ing in the moonlight with some
of our pretty diving girls, there
won't be so many bachelors left
among the population of Tatoku,"
Sometimes hubby handle the
boat from which his wife dives.
"But, often as not," says Stinson,
"while Mama and the girls go
off 10 work, Papa stays home
tending the younger children and
trading gossip over the back
fence with the husbands and
fathers of other amahs ot Shima
Who go down to the sea in slips."
After Pearl Harbour, Mikimoto
declared himself a pacifist and
refused to help in the war ,ef-
fort, "i'nm a business man, not
a soldier," ho said after an en-
raged army officer sent him a
sword with the suggestion that
he commit hal'a-kir'i, When the
war ended he was eighty-seven
but he went to work again and
completely re-established the in=
dustry that had been all but
smashed,
10. Lumbertonn'e 33, 1'rulle
boot 36. \lore tlur•ly
11. Insect 111. I,ettsed
16. --or the u. Penitential
1.)'Urbert llle. season
13. Itepinie 3. I'lutt er
21. Dwells .i. barge m ter,t
22. r'erceived 7. The Orieot
3, Sailor sound 49. I:Mangle.
4 5.'I(-erteent 28. Sheepllte 10, slave d.'bts
5. That girl 24. Mita 11 drum 63, twltner.
6,'I'ake on eat'go 26. 91.”410:11 Stolle .3. I'uppp',,
7. 11y 27. t at er 111,411.111e mother
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9. Meager 30. Tilt ',7. Behold
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Attswrr elsewhere on this page,
ri ,4 .4.
•
MILKMAID IN MANHATTAN -Manhattan, Kan., that is. Connie
Morgan, freshman at Kansas State College, has been chosen
queen of the college's Agricultural Barnwarmer festivities.
Connie won the title by. beating out four other finalists with
her cow -milking ability.
£FAM FONT
kaussea
An engine which breathes dirt
will wear out much faster than
it normall; should, Dirt acts ass
an abrasive causing moving parts
to wear rapidly. There are case
histories of engines which have
worn out after a hyeek of work
as a result of dirt getting into
the air used by the tractor.
• •
There are three ways for the
dirt to get into the engine -
with the fuel, the lubricating oil
and with the air. Ordinary care
will keep dust out of the fuel and
oil,, but to keep the air that the
engine breathes dust free, re-
quires more attention,
• *
Engines may be equipped with
an oil wetter or an oil bath -type
cleaner. Either of these cleaners
is designed to take 99 per cent
or the particles of dirt out of the
air when operated at highest
efciency. Efficiency' can drop
as low as 50 per cent with poor
maintenance. An air cleaner is
thus of little value unless it. is
properly cared for.
'• .
Service the air cleaner fre-
quently. The service interval
can be determined by the dust
conditions under which the en-
gine operates. II conditions are
extremely dusty, the interval
should not be greater than 10
hour's. Never, under any circum-
stances, allow the cleaner to be
unserviced beyond an oil change.
Cheek all cleaner and carburetor
connections. '!'hese roust be tight
to keep the dirt out of the
cleaned air. Supplying the en-
gine with clean air pays oft in
reduced maintenance
Iceland is the oldest continu-
ously settled land in the West-
ern hemisphere, but the young-
est country. Irish monks were
there as early as 750 A.D. and
remained until the Norsemen
came about 870 A.D.
Trees do not grow in Iceland
nor are there any mineral depos-
its, The wealth of the country
depends on fshing and agricul-
ture. The former industry pro-
vides the exports, the latter pro-
duces enough )ileal and livestock
products to feed the population
of 170,000 people, Water power
is abundant, and .light industry
is making progress.
• • •
According to J. 13. Campbell,
Canadian Department o; Agri-
culture, grass is the Most import-
ant crop. in fact it can he con-
sidered the only fluid crop, be-
cause cereals seldom mature. The
principal gI'1ISSes are creepii g
red fescue. df.c•hampsia, north-
ern blue glasses, and species of
bent glass. Sedges are cotntlton,
as are heaths and inose:,
• • •
If the entire country was ar-
able it would have tremendous
-agricultural resources. however,
less than 15 per cent of the 40,000
square miles area can be devel-
oped, while only another 15 per
cent produces vegetation of any
kind. The balance is a cold des-
ert, covered with immense gla-
ciers, stark barren mountains,
black shitting sand and extinct
and active volcanoes, Of the
approximately 6,000 square miles
or arable land, less than 400
square miles or 250,000 acres are
currently improved to produce
cultivated grasses,
Fertilization is essential in Ice-
land to produce high 0511114
grass crops. Despite the 50 per
cent or more organic matter con-
tent of the soil nitrogen fertiliz-
ers are required because soil
temperatures ' seldom reach a
level to promote rapid nitrifica-
tion. Oddly, organic matter con-
tent increases even when .under
heavy cropping. Legumes are of
little value. Soil temperatures
are too low to stimulate nitrify-
ing organisms into feverish ac-
tivity. Phosphorus is required
on all soils while potash and
tninor elements are valuable in
certain areas. Sulphur and iron
are abundant, Applications of
up to 400 pounds of ammonium
nitrate per acre are economical,
•
Hay making is the big agricul-
tural chore. Modern machinery
is used on the level stretches,
but the primitive scythe and rake
are commonly employed wher-
ever tractors and mowers cannot
operate. Strings of ponies pack
the hay to the farm yard under
these conditions. '!'hese crops are
not uncommon during the short
growing season. The first may
.be put up as hay, the second en-
siled and the third pastured. flay
drying equipment is not coln-
111011, bol ifs use is spreading.
Many farms have silos, and all
will have substantial hay sheds.
.
The 6011,000 of so sheep are
wintered indoors and turned out
on range after lambing. There
they remain until the fall round
up, when the lambs are cut out
and slaughtered and their car-
casses frozen, The practice of
free ranging makes range man-
agement very difficult because
the range belongs to the district
not to individuals. No charges
are collected for range improve-
ment.
• •
•
Erosion osion is common in Iceland.
Extensive tracts of sand have
been eroded down to underly-
ing lava, a matter of maybe. 30
or nlort; feet. It must be realiz-
ed that this was originally grass-
land, not soil disturbed by c•ulli-
\ ation,
• • •
There is an active conservation
program which is bringing dev-
astated tracts of land under con-
trol. Nearly 200,100 acres have
been under conservation manage-
ment, Likewise new grasses and
tit•w strains of old grasses are
twine introduced by the Univer-
sity li,seart'h Institute, not only
.b
reseed eroded areas but to 111-
crc:Ise the yield from grassland
farms. The four experimental
larms fur studying grass produc-
tion and management methods,
and an Extension Service is dem-
onstratil1 the value of good hus-
Landrw and proper fertilization,
Progressive farmers are using all
available information to improve
their farms and give lc idet'ship
to their districts, however, there
is a hard cora of freedom -loving
N\iot'Sellltvl who follow the hus-
bandry practices imported from
Europe 1,000 years ago.
ilIS EXCUSE
At a`party one night a woman
was admonishing her husband.
"Henry, that's the fourth time
you've gone back for more food.
Doesn't it embarrass you?"
"No," replied the husband. "I
tell then' I'm getting it for you."
Drive With Care
Buried Alive
Then Vanished
Inhabitants of Sulmona, Italy,
aro giving one part of their town
a wide berth because a man who
.was buried alive there, three
months ago, at his own request,
has vanished from the grave,
Raoul Hinay, a fifty -year-old
Hungarian who had learned Yogi
in India, visited Sulmona with a
concert party and agreed to de-
monstrate his unusual powers by
being buried alive before wit-
nesses,
After Flinay's hands were firm-
ly tied, he was placed in the cof-
tin-sealed up and lowered Into
an eighteen -foot grave which
was then filled in with earth. hIe
was to remain buried for eight
hours.
Among the witnesses were a
doctor, a magistrate and the
local police chief to see that
there was no fraud,
Eight hours later, gravedig-
gers brought up the coffin, ex-
amined the seals and declared
them to be intact. The coffin lid
was removed. The ropes with
which Raoul had been tied were
in the coffin but he was gone,
There was an immediate
search for the missing man; the
grave was examined by police
officers but there was no tunnel
and no way out of it other than
by the top which had been
watched all the time by the
witnesses, Yet the Hungarian
was gone. Up to now he has not
been found, despite help from
the nternational Police Commis-
sion.
Nowadays, when Sulmona par-
ents *ant to scare their bam-
binos into obedience they say:
"The Yogi man will get you!"
Fifty-six years ago a similar
mysterious occurrence took place
in Los Angeles when an Indian
fakir allowed himself to be bur-
ied alive for ten hours, sealed up
itn a coffin, in a hole fifteen feet
deep. When the coffin was raised
and opened the fakir was gone.
He has not been seen to this day,
Desert Life
Several times I came upon Be-
douin women with their veils
thrown back, but the only time
I saw these women with no veils
on at all was when riding in an
Aranico exploration car toward
the Rub al -Khali in southern
Arabia, Without warning our
car breasted a dune and fled
down the slope into the very
center of a Bedouin camp, The
long low outlines of black tents
were spared about the hollow,
while in the center was the dark
mound of a water well, dug
down through the sand to the
rock below, its rim darkened by
the hoofs and ropes of many
years. All unaware we had come
upon this camp and saw women
in dresses of bright orange and
red, devoid of their black robes,
staring at us from their sections
of the tents.
Other women of the tribe, like
so many walking shadows In
their black outer robes, wound
their graceful barefoot way to
and from the Miler well, balan-
cing copper kettles and other
utensils on their heads.
Childrt'n in knee-length white
shifts stared at us open-mouthed
but for some reason we saw no
men. Perhaps they slept in the
family sections of their tents, or,
more likely, they were in the
majlis of their sheikh. But the
sheikh's tent, wherever it might
be in this hollow, we did not
see. Some of the leen, of course,
were ottt with the flocks, but not
many; for the true Bedouin
Scorns the work of herding, and
spends his idle day instead In
the shadow of his tent per before
• the coffee hearth of his elders,
drawing lines in the sand with
his stick and saying "aye aye"
and "nay nay" with his fellows.
Thirty seconds, 1 suppose, I saw
that camp scene before it disap-
peared behind a dune, yet I re-
call it still as a scene of warmth,
color, and human charm, In a
desert 'otherwise so barren.
It falls to the lonely herdrt••
man, out in the burning sun all
day, to guard the tribal flocks
from whatever dangers theca
may be and then to lead them
back at night to the friendly
shelter of the camp. Here the
camels are couched about each
tent, to ruminate and grumbly
through the darkened hours,
while the sheep are bedded
down inside the ring of camels,
with the youngest lambs tether-
ed to the ropes of the tent.
Over the ages the Bedouin
has developed certain narrow,
though highly specialized, skilLe.
He is able to read the least sign
in the desert around him that
may lead him to water in hlu
arid land. From boyhood the
skeletons of cameis he has pass-
ed on the long summer treks
and the blown sand mounds of
human graves, have warned
him that he must learn his des-
ert well, • The hoofprint ot a
camel in the sand is the kind Of
book he reads, and he knows at
a glance, because his safety
may depend upon it, the age,
sex, and type of beast that
made the mark, the speed with
which its owner was riding and
the probable purpose of h1••
journey, whether peaceful r�
otherwise, - From "Heritage .e'
the Desert: The Arabs and The
Middle East," by Barry B. r1156.
How Can 1?
By Anne Asides.
Q, How can i make an ink fox'
writing on glass, ivory, or otblx
smooth surfaces?
A, Use 3 parts nitrate of sil-
ver, 20 parts gum arabic, 30
parts distilled water. Dissolve
the gum arable in two thirds
of the water, the nitrate of sil-
ver in the other third. Then
mix and add the desired color.
Q. Trow can 1 snake paint ad-
here to tinware?
A. Rub the surface thorough-
ly with a piece of rough pumice
stone, or coarse sandpaper. Then
apply a thin coat of shellac
varnish before the surface its
painted,
Q. What can 1 do to cream
that will not whip properlyr
A. If the creast will not whip,
add the white of an egg to it:.
Have the egg and the cretins
thoroughly chilled.
Q, How can 1 avoid shelling
peas"
A. Wash the pods and place.
theun in the boiling water to
cook. The pods will open and
the peas settle to the bottom of
the vessel. Merely skins off the
pods.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
StWa_d LO -b -3
4d31. 3S 133M
3d-181 V 1310
egC10-N 3SN3S
o321V3S el3d V3
3-a91113doa,1S
snHi a i ■sa_i
01�3b J.VSU3A_
a31S39 .1S3N0_
MRN31V3 3a i
V?!1 C73112i3 '
NIVJ 3 VH aV
V
dS1L
M '1S dWY
HE'S A STRING -SAVER -In less than two years, Frank Stoebar
hos collected the huge ball of binding twine seen above. It is
seven feet', five inches in diameter and weighs 4,035 paunch.
He uses his'fractor to wind the ball. Friends and neighbors
save twine for him and he thinks nothing of driving 25 r ilc�
to get a trunkful of broken twine. Pictured with him ane huts
two grandsons, Richard and Arnie Collins.
PAGE 4
fi✓� 1 y ' F,
News Of Auburn
fid! S1ANDARD
/ I
end,
Mrs. Geo, Hatnilton is visiting friends
In Scufurlh and Henault this week, f don vlsrtors last week and visited 11,r,
Mr. Ralph D, Munro visited with M:,1 We nre sorry to report that a former Congratuhtlons to Mis; Evelyn RMIUt• Jim Glousher who is apatient now In
and Mrs. Stewart Toll of Ryckman b resident of this village, Mr. Thomas by of London, in obtaining her R.N. Des .Victoria Hospital. His many friends
Corners last week -end and was in at. Adams, of Toronto, is aatient in Sun gree, s 1
P
tendance et the Initiation ceremony of nybrook Hospital, t Mrs. Wes, Bradn.ck received word I wish him n epecdy recovery,_
Mr, htewart Toll to the first degree oft of her cousin's death, the lata
M. FI%RMERS' UNION GROUP MET
MrWm, Straughsr. returned lace
Masonry o1 the Acacia Lodge Nu, 61 of week -end irons a vlsit ut Copper Cliff Mrs. Lionel Min, of Guelph, She was 1 The November meeting cf the Qtr -
Hamilton, Ont, Brethren were also wilh her daughter, Mrs. Clayton Roo- formerly Effie Wilson, daughter of the taria 'Fanners Union Local 110, was
present from Dundas, Stratford and ertson, Mr, Robertson, Douglas and late Jaseph Wilson and the late Ma.. held at School No. 10, on November
"other Hamilton lodges. Karen, Mrs, Straughan accompanied garet Wilson, who formerly lived ir, 9th. Illghl}ghls of the evening were
Mrs, Marguerite Chopin who Is teach- them home, They were delayed In tie;" West Wowunosh, Surviving besides reports by Ray Hnnna and Harold Car-
er of Commercial at' Whngham District journey by a very severe sleet storm her husband are two sons, Harvey of ter, 011 the 5th annual convention held
High School, was chairman of the Com- last week that stopped all traffic up Halifax, Robert, of Guelph, and' two. at Ontario Agricultural College,
rnercial Section of District No, 5 Se- north, The Robertson family visited daughters, Margaret, 11,N., of Guelph; Guelph. On Tuesday, Ray reported
condary School Teacher's Federation. 'with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J, J. end Frances, R.N., of Calgary. Mr. and very good attendance with not Interest•
held recently at Wingham, The dts- Robertson on Sunday, Mrs. Jae. Wilson, Mr, and Mrs, Wallace Ing address by Mrs, Harvey London
tract composes of schools iron Kinear- Miss Edna Drier is visitinwith- her
g Wllsan, Mr. W4/1' Reid, Miss Josephine president Canadian Consumers Assn.,
dine to Orangeville,McAllister, and Mr, David McAllister,
sinter, Airs. Arnold Roney and 141". who, afterwards when approached,
itiosetasertsma
Wedliieaday, Nevi 21,196
and Norma Iiansch, , r.„v,w,. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Craig were Lan•
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Nleholson, Pau, Roney a't Mltcheti, this week• n11 of Nest Wass nosh, attended their promised tt speaker for a meeting in
and Louise, visited on Sunday tvith her Mrs. Ronald Rathwcll and son, Mich- cousin's funeral Huron County, Resolution that the 0,
mother, Mrs, Chas. Nlvins, and sister, eel John, of Dresden, are visiting with ST, MARK'S ANGLICAN GUILD F,U, oppose any compulsory Auto Drly
Airs. Howard Tait. 1 her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Tay I The Ladies' Guild of St. Mark's Ans.Ing Courses to Be introduced pato Se -
Mr. Milton Plunkett of Toronto Is lar. ! Bean Church met at the home of Mrs. condary Schools was carried. That d
visiting his sister, Mrs, Fred Plactzcr 1Lnrrv' Glasgow last Tuesday, Novena- collection at all regular local meetin';
and Mr. Plactzcr, ,
Mrs. Louis BlakeFa' e and Mn�•y
Mr, and Mrs, Wm. Seers and Gail, ' Anne, of Brussels, returned home on
visited Sunday with her parents, Mr, Sunday 'ger a week's visit with het
and Mrs. James Bloke, Colborne Twp. porents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirk-
�Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Patterson of Gunnell, A4ary and Diane,
Goderich visited on Sunday with her Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davies visited with
parents, Mr, and Mrs. Geo: Beadle, relatives in St. Thomas over the week -
+4+ -+N-++0-•+ 4+0-4+ 44-4-* 4+4 *44+44+ 4-444444
DO YOUR CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING
$1.00 will hold any article
until Christmas
LADIES' SLIPS $2.98 UP
CRINOLINE SLIP AND FRIL-
LED PANTIE SETS, in gift
box $2.98
t PANTIES,
(boxed in sets of three) $1.75
PRAM SUITS for Baby, $4.50 Each
BOTTLE HOLDERS .. $1.49 Each
LITTLE GIRLS PURSES $1,49 Ea.
t BOYS TOUQUES . , , , , . )Sc Each
Needlecraft Shoppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
d 4+4+ e+4+ -4++N+4 N-444-4-}441+4+. r++a+++4 t
4.4.4 4-4--+-I--4-4-.4 ♦ 404-+ 0 -1 -I -4-S+444 N 44 4+N•4 •4 ••• 4-41+4-4+44-4+4 444
SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY:
TURKEY DINNERS
Make up a family party and take advantage
of this special,
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
4
.•• 1-44444+++++H 44 4 44 4+4 4+4 4♦ H • ++6+4+4 +4 44-*
WEEKEND SPECIALS
- Boys' Plum Combinations, sizes 8 to 12 only,
Special at $1.49
Boys' & Girls' Pullover Sweaters, 8 to 14 years,
Special at $1,98
Boys' Ski Caps, quilted lining and ear laps,
Special at $1.00
Bbys' Golf Sox Special, 2 Pair $1.00
Flanclette Blankets (Kingcott & Ibex), first
quality, 70x90 Special, $5.95 a Pair
5 Wonlen's Knitted Suits, Red, Aqua,
Reg. $19.95 Special at $9,95
Men's Penman's Heavy Ribbed Combinations,
40, 42 & 44 only, slightly soiled . , Special $4,95
Boys' Stanfield's Wool Work S;bcks reinforced
with nylon. Reg. 79c . , , , Special, 2 Pr. $1.00
Men's Plaid Flannel Sport Shirts, in small, med-
ium and large. Reg. $2.89 , , . , , Special $1.98
RUBBER FOOTWEAR FOR THE WHOLE
FAMILY, AT SURPRISINGLY LOW
PRICES.
The Arcade Stores
STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS.
.. 1• ,
ber 13th, with 20 ladies present. cs. and that central fund be establishcn
Glasgow had charge of the meeting, was not carried. Tabled was n resold -
and after welcoming everyone, opened lion that a full dress debate be carried
the meeting with a hymn with harp out at County level and also Caul the
0.F.U. assist in financing a fact find-
ers en an impartial basis, Nominations
closed the meeting.
The Wednesday session, ogaln well
attended, was reported by Harold Cn. •
ter. Interesting address by Paul Rain
vine, Sudbury, on harmful effects of
sulfa fumes, having to be combated by
farmers in that ureal Mr, McCubbin,
when asked about Parity Prices, pro-
mised his support in the future. Mr.
Lloyd H•assen spoke on trade between
the US, and. Canada. Mr, Bob Ann -
accompaniment. Prnyers were taken
by Mrs Fordyce Clrk, A reading,
"It ,1Iolters Not," was given by Mrs,
Andrew Kirkconnell, The Scripture
lesson, Pselm 46,, was read by Mrs.
Glasgow. The Study Book, "To Travel
Hopefully," was made very interesting
bs. Mrs, Robert J. Phillips, The topic
'' 1 arras given by Mrs. Thomas 1Iaggitt on
1"Remembrance Day" and Mrs. GIa3-
gow read, "Lest We Forget. The clos.
in4 ,hymn for the worF'iip service was
4 ; "Christ is our Corner Stone," The
President, Mrs, John Daer, dealt with strong, appointed to approach the Fed•
;; the business, and the minutes of the oration of Agriculture regarding Hog
previous meeting were read by Mrs, Producers election of Dlrectons, con -
Frank Nesbitt in the absence of the (acted Simon Hullnhan, and was assur.
secretary. Mrs. Glasgow read the ed It would be an open meeting. The
treasurer's repast showing a good hal-
Registered Hcretr,•rd heifer prize spode
ance on hand, also u. splendid report of interest many, tickets and money col -
`the bake sale and tea held recently. It lected for tickets should be bonded to
• � was decided the members would mas-
aMrs, Alf, Nesbit. IL was agreed on
wer the roll at the December meeting committee for approaching possible
by giving donations fur the two dear, advertisers In Union Paper. Appoint-
sch:ols, of candy and traits and also cd were Jack Armstrong and Rut•rel
I a bale to the Indian school. The presi- Koopman. Suggested, wes a local pro •
I dent olosed the meeting with prayer.
The hostess scrvcd a delicious lunch, ject a skating rink, converted from shed
with help sponrorcd by members, was
• ssisted by Mrs, Rubl. J, Phillips. moved by Harold Carter. Cc,mmItlee
MORNING STAR LODGE OFFiCER.i nonolnted were Jack Wilson, .Sid Me-
ClincheyAforning S:nr Ledge A,F. & A.>VI„ and H. Carter. Next meeting
'Carlow, elected the following officers . to be held at S;hool No. 16, Dec, 1 Ith,
far 1957: I At the close of the meeting Carl Govlcr
W.AI.: Albert ARCH licher, LP.M.: reported on Hag Producers Meeting,
Wor. Bro. Frank Allen, S.W., Harold Clinton, In which establishing a law
Adams, J.W.; Thornton Eerly, Chaploin: i that it be compulsory for hogs to go to
W. Bro. Wm, Treble, Treasurer: w. ' Assembly Yards at Kitchener, Strut •
Bro. Reg Glen, Secretary: Int. Wor. Broford or London, was carried anent
Ralph D. Munro, D. of C.: RI., Wor, Bro. , mously, the vole being '75, to 6 against.
Hugh Hill, S.D.: Ray Fisher, J.D.: John The sheeting closed with lunch being'
Wilson, I.G.; Charles Adams, S.S.: Ant-
os Stoll, J.S.: Wm. L.' Craig, Tyler: Jas,
Prost.
served by Mrs. Harold Carter and Mr.;
Jack Wilson.
The Number Niner's of S.S. No. 0,
Hulled, met Monday evening at the
SOLD HORSES IN U.S, home of Mr. and Mrs, Percy Vincent.
Mr. Fred Toll, of Auburn, and son, The Forum took the form of a discus.
Aubrey Toll, of East Wawanosh, tic•, sion, "How to Finance the Federatlot'
commuted by Robert Marshall of Blyta, of Agriculture." It was decided that
have just returned from a trip to ' they support this organization through
Elkhart, Indiana, where they delivered the Willett Township taxes. Euchre
tour of their prize Purebred Clydes•
was enjoyed. Prize winners were:
s to Mr. Robt, Wlls n of Testi-k• high gent: Elliott Lapp, low, gent: Don -
Bob Form. Mr, Wilson is the owner aid Sprung, high lady: Mrs. George
of a chain of super markets and uses Schneider, low lady: Mrs, Roy Daer.
horses in a tandem hitch for advertise Lost Heir was also played,
meal purp,ses in parades etc. Prot Mrs, Alvin Leatherland, Airs, Gordon
nous to now, Mr, Wiloon has hot
hackney ponies for this job but is go.
In; into Cldves and mel Mr. Aubrey
Toil at thc Iloyal Winter Fair where
he was showing the horse.; which won
• numerous prizes, and made the par•
chase,
The Toll family have always bees
lovers of good horses and Mr. Free!
Toll's father, the late Mr. Fred Toll, of
East Wawanosh, was tine first man 'o
ship horses from the Blyth Station to
the West when Fred was five years old, BELGRAVE
Mr, Fred Toll Nought the grandmoth-
er of these horses, Bella of Riversdale, The weekly euchre was held in the
in 1928, from his brother -In-law, Mr. arena on Wednesday night with 5 tab -
Ernest Laughlin, of Paris, Aubrey ,les In play. High scores were won hy.
bought one of his coils, Anchor Ray's• Edith Procter and Fred Cook, and low
Bennie Jean, from Mr, Jas. Hogg, of by Mrs. Geo, Martin and J. E, McCal-
Seaforth In August. lum,
Mr. Wilson Is thinking of purchasing Quite a number from here atlendeo
in the near future, two other Purebren the -loyal Winter Fair In Toronto Inst
Clydes which will make the 6 Roans week.
ell related to each other. Mr, and Mrs. Russel Kelly and fant-
Chamncy, Mrs, Frank Raithby and Mr.
Donald Schultz, were London visitors
on Monday.
Mr, and Mrs. Donald 'Craig of Wing.
h:in, have moved into the house owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davies, We wel-
come them to our village.
Master Douglas Popp, of Blyth, la
spending two weeks'. with his grand-
parents, M•r. and Mrs. Meredith Young.
The Toll's received a Inge price for
these prize horses.
A euchre party and donee was held
lust Friday evening in S,S. No, 16, East
. 1 Wawanosh. Prize winners were: high
loci.} • Mrs. Berl Craig, low lady (play -
ling as lady); Freddie Armstrong, hI31n,
gent: Ari.old Gwyn, low gent, Wi lie
Gooier. Music for dancing was sup-
plied by McClinchey's orchestra,
Air. and Mrs, Carl Govlcr, Mr, and
Mrs. Reg. S'.hultz, rand Mr, and Mrs,
• Alfred Nesbitt were in charge. The
next party will be on January 4, 1057.
•J
4•Ii CLUB MEETS
The first meeting of the Auburn An-
nctics met at the .home of Mrs. Ed Day-
- les with 11 club members present last
Wednesday evening, The leaders, Mta,
Alfred Nesbitt and Mrs. Davies, explain-
• ed the new protect "sleeping garments"
and other various things they would
take during the course, Mrs. Nesbitt
showed different styles or patterns of
- galment.s and domonslnated how to
shrink new materials, Mrs. Davies
showed various materials from which
to make the night wear, also some ma-
terials which would not be suitable be-
eause they do not launder ensile and
do not wear well. Election of the of-
ficers took place: president, Lorraine
Hensch; iso vice, Shirley Pattersaet,
Ily spent the week -end in the village,
Mr, and Mrs, W. Kelly who hod spent
the past week with them at Cooksville,
returned home with them.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Shaw, also Ms'
and Mrs, Lloyd Anderson,_'spent the
week -end with Mr. and Mrs, J, G. An-
derson.
Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Wheeler were
Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs. K.
H, Wheeler,
Mr. D, Armstrong, who was visiting
his son, Gibson, in London, was taken
111 nnrl is a patient In hospital there.
'A corlond of Women's Institute mem•
bees attended the Rally at Cranbrook
nn Monday.
Bodmin Farm Forum met at the itomt
of Mr, and Mrs. S. Cook on Monday J
night wih a good attendance, Follow.
Ing the radio discussion the question.•
nirre was studied and It was decided
that the present plan of Muncie] 'rya. !
tem was the best, but more interest
by the farmer himself was necessary.
Progressive euchre followed a contest,'
Winners were Mrs, Is Bolt and Richert'
Procter and low score by Mrs, J, Nixon
and Carl Procter. Lunch was served
of Ica, sandwiches and tarts . The ,
next meeting will he nt the home ut
Mr, end Mrs. J. Nixon,
t
r
,,,In . casual coots 12r fell
FAVOURED CASUAL COAT FOR FALL
Stam performer on the Fall casual scene is the sub-
urban coat, Choose yours here from' a stunning
array of wool fleeces and tweeds.'
ECONOMICALLY PRICED AT $14.95
HERE IS A WARM
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fleece -lined, with a shearling inside
cuff to keep out the snow
Men's (all sizes) , , , $7,50
Boys' (all sizes) , , , $5.75
Misses' (all sizes) , , $4.50
Child's (all sizes) , , $3.95
5 PERCENT .DISCOUNT ON ALL PURCHASES
MADE FOR CHILDREN WITH FAMILY
ALLOWANCE CHEQUES.
R. W. MADILL'S
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The 'iTome of Good Quality Merchandise"
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Insurance Agency
LIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE, LIABILITY,
AND ALL CLASSES OF INSURANCE.
PHONE 122 - BLYTH, ONT.
44•44,44.~~ •IINN I•►+MNI.N'I•M..'I.I•.N.NI•NN'.I•IOI,MIAM.Wt•....,^
D
secretary, Edna Daer: press reporter, Thirty-five 4-1I Club Members from
Thelma McDaugslh Next meeting will Huron County showed their calves ut
be held Nov, 28th. Lunch was served • the Queen's Guineas Competition on
by the hostess, assisted by Lorraine Thursday, Nov, 15th.
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS , , , , , , , , , , , , , , LB. 43c
WEINERS
SWEET PICKLE ROLL LB, 55c
3 'LBS. $L00
Arnold Berthot
Telephone 10 --- Blyth.
ft)
•
1
4
Wednesday, Nov, 21,106
BLYTH LIONS CLUB
ANNUAL
Rummage Collection
& Sale
MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTII,
Saturday, November 24
Sale to Start at 1:30 p.m.
AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF MISCEL-
LANEOUS ARTICLES WILL BE DISPOSED OF.
You are reminded that the Lions will call at your
home Friday evening, November 23, for your
donations.
Contributions of Home-made Baking and Preserves
will be gratefully received.
Rural contributors may phone Lions Jack McDou-
gall or 'Walter Butte'', or any member of the Lions
Club, and arrangements will be made to pick up
their contributions.
PIJAN TO ATTEND ON SATURDAY.
f1MNMN1I+N••••• MN4INieI.•IIINNIi4MNNNJ
Nomination
Notice
VILLAGE OF BLYTH
A nominating m)3eting for the purpose of nominat-
ing candidates for the office of Reeve, Councillors,
School Trustees, and Public Utilities Commissioner
will be held in the
MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTH,
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, 1956,
between the hours of 7 p.m. to 8 pm.
An Election if necessary, will be held on
MONDAY, DECEMBER 3rd, 1956,
when a Poll will be open in the Blyth Memorial Hall
from 9:30 a,tn, until 6:30 p.m.
GEORGE SLOAN, CLERK.
Proclamation
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
The Annual Meeting of the Ratepayers of the 'Township of Mullett
will be held in the
Community Hall, Londesboro,
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23rd, 1956
The clerk will be in the Community Hall, Londesboro, .front 1 to 2 pan,
to receive Nominations for Reeve and Councillors for to hold office
for the year 1957.
When proposed candidate is not present his Nomination Paper
shall not be valid unless there is attaohed thereto evidence satisfactory
to the Returning Officer that he consents to be so Nominated.
A meeting of the Electors will be held in the Community Hall,
Londesboro, at 2 p,m., Friday, November 23rd, to hear proposed Can -
dictates, and in case more than the required number of Candidates to
fill the offices are nominated, and a vote demanded', n Poll will be
held on
MONDAY, DECEMBER 3rd, 1956,
from 9 n.m, until 5 pan„ nt the following places:
Poll Polling Place D,It.O, (toll Clerk
1. Forester's Hall, Kinbut•n ......... ........Secord McBrlen . Ephraim Clerk
2. School house, SS. No, 6 .........,
3, U. School Ilottse, USS, No, 2
4. Community Hall, Londesboro
5. Community Hall, Summerhill ,
6. Community Hall, Londesboro ..
7, For'ester's Hall, Auburn ................
Bert Beacons ..........
.Joseph Flynn ........
..Joseph Shaddick
Ephraim Snell ....
Bert Shobbrook ...
Mrs. William Craig
.... Leo \Witt
.. Bernard Tighe
Len Shobbrook
. Ivan ltoggnrth
...... Lloyd Pipe
1\lajor Yunl;bhtt
GEORGE W. COWAN, Township Clerk.
•
,rr1111111. k
'ISE DLUTR STANDARD
News Of Westfield
Mr, and Mrs. Chas, Smith and Lyle,
,Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Wightman, Mr, ann
Mrs, Edgar Howatt and Ruth Howatt,
took in the Royal Winter Fair at To-
ronto on Thursday.
1''4c, and Mrs. Will Rollinson of To•
multi, with her sister, Mrs. Emmerson
Rodger and Mr. Rodger over the woe..
end,
Mrs, Emmerson Rodger, Mrs, Ray-
mond Redmond, Mrs, Fred Cook ana
Mr::. Walter Cook were Stratford visit-
ors last week,
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell visit-
ed with Mr, and Mrs. . Everett White-
head of Teeswater on Saturday, evee-
ing.
Mrs. Frank Campbell spent Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Carter nt
Clinton.
Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Snell, Jeanette,
' Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Snell, visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Mc•
Brien, of Goderich. We are sorry to
I hear Mrs. McBrien isn't well at present,
We wish iter a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva McDowell visitea
with Mr. and jMrs. Bert Vodden of
Clinton on Sunday evening,
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Snell of Landon
spent the weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs, Howard Campbell.
Twelve children were absent from
school on Monday due to illness from
Chicken Pox, and colds with a bro;m-
dial 'cough.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell, John,
• Ralph, James and Eric, were visitors
with her sister, Mrs. Harald Head and
Mr. Head, London, on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. 1)mmerson Rodger and
Clare visited with her aunt, Miss Chris
• McClinton of Goderich, on Sunday,
Gordon R, Smith attended the Royal
Winter Fair from Tuesday until Satur•
- day. He entered his Shor'horn calf In
• the 4-1-1 club section and was among the
winners in that class,
Messrs: John and Leslie Buchanan
visited their sister, Mrs. Stanley Cook
and Mr. Cook, of Morris Township, on
- Monday.
Mrs. Fred Cook and Violet visited
with Mr, and Airs. Jas. McGill of Clin-
ton on Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sprung of Hul•
lett were Sunday visitors with Mr, and
and Mrs. Clarence Cox.
Mr. and Mrs. Telford Cook of the
6th line were visitors with Mrs. Fred
Cook and famlly, on Sunday.
• Miss Ruth Cook, London, was home
over the week-encl.
The farm forum met at the home of
Mr. and Mrs, Norman Wightman's on
Monday evening. After the radio
broadcast, Lost Heir was enjoyed. The
next meeting is to be held at the honk.
of Mrs. Fred Cook.
%VMS MEETING
The November meeting of the WMS
was held at the hone of Mrs. (Rev.,
R. S. Hiltz with a good attendance, and
▪ Mrs. Harvey McDowell and her group
in charge. The meeting opened with
- hymn 196. Mrs. Marvin McDov/rll led
in prayer. The scripture lesson was
read by the leader (Math. 5: 1-16). Mrs,
Roy Noble gave a reading. Mrs. Fred
.1. Cook gave a mouthorgan selection,
followed with a reading by Mrs, 11.
McDowell. Mrs, Norman McDowell re-
viewed a chapter in the Study Book.
After the singing of hymn 77, the Presi-
dent took charge for the business and
opened this part of the meeting with
hymn 96 and prayer. The minutes of
- last meeting were read and approved',
and roll call answered by 16, Mrs.
Fred Cook gave a Christian Steward-
ship reading. Mrs. J. L. McDowell gave
4 a temperance reading. Nlrs, Chas. Smith
gave a reading and also read a letter
from Miss J, Saunders regarding 1957
Christmas gifts for Indian girl. it was
moved by Mrs. Gordon Smith, second
ed by Mrs. Fred J. Cook, that we leave
this until the first of the New Year.
It was also decided to have a quilting
at Mrs. Walter Cook's home an Wed-
nesday, Nov. 2lst, It was discussed and
decided to have a conunittee of Mrs.
Gordon Snaith, Mrs. Fred Cook, and
Mrs. Howard Campbell, to look after
program for Christmas meeting, with
Mrs. Rev. Hiltz as guest speaker, and
have lunch of sandwiches, tarts and
teas. The treasurer's report was given
and collection taken. Mrs. Howard
Campbell read a letter from Miss
Joyce Facey. Mrs, Norman McDowell
and Mrs. Howard Campbell read the
slate of officers for 1957. Rev. Mr,
Hiltz spoke briefly to the officers and
led in prayer, It was moved and se-
conded that we take the November and
Decetnber collections to be given to the
MIS to help raise our allocation,
Hymn 112 was sung and meeting closed
with prayer. Slate of officers will be
Published next week. Mrs, Hiliz serv-
ed a delicious lunch.
▪ Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell visite4
with her sister, Mrs. Bert Vodden and
Mr. Vodden and Ailvin on Sunday,
Mrs. Annie Keating and Harold, of
Brussels, visited on Sunday evening
with Mr, and Mrs, Gordon Snell and
Jelunetta.
Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Webster and son,
Ken, of London, visited recently with
Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell and
Lloyd.
Mr. and Mrs, Jasper Snell, Mr. and
- Mrs, Gordon Steell and Jeanette, were
" Sunday visitor's with Mr, and Mrs.
Jasper 141cBrien of Goderich,
Mr. and Mrs. Newton Kerschensk(
and ATiss Maureen Kerschensk( and het
mother, Mrs, Ed Kerschenski, of De-
troit, visited Sunday with Mr. and Mts.
E. Snell, Mr, and Mrs. Donald Snell
and boys, also Mr. and Mrs, Alvin
",Snell and faintly,
J
Local Students At Teacher's
College Teach At Var-
ious Centres
Local students attending 'Teacher,
College, at Stratford, experienced their
Ifirst full week of continuous teaching
last week when they took up class
duties at the following various points:
Rhea Hall al Lincoln Ave. Kindergar-
ten, Galt; Joanne Hodgins, at St, And-
rew's Kindergarten, Galt; Marlene
Walsh, Grade 7, at Central School,
Guelph; Joan Wightmun, Grade 1, at
I Torrence School, Guelph; Ian Grif-
fiths, Grade 4, at Victoria School,
Brantford, and Norman Walpole, Grade
15, also at Victoria School, Brantford.
HULLETT
FIRESIDE FARM FOlt11:l
On Nov, 19th, 20 adults o1' the Fire -
:side Farm Forum niet at the hoarse Of
i Mr. and Mrs, Rcbert J::mieson.
After the broadcast, the questionairra
on "Procuring Finances for the Fed-
eration of Agriculture," was answered.
We believe the system used in Mul-
lett is quite satisfactory as long as the_
majority of the council etre in favour
of giving a grant to the Federation.
We think that. the second best way to
raise funds would he where a percen-
tage would be deducted from the sate
of all produce. This would be the
fairest way as the farmer securing the
most benefits would be the one paying
the most, but we believe it would be
more expensive and require more book-
keeping.
Jim Jamieson showed very interest-
ing coloured slides taken while on a
motor trip through the Western States
and Mexico. Mrs. Bob Dalton offered
her home for the next meeting.
Most games: Mrs. Bert Hoggart and
Mrs. Eric Anderson, playing as a mai,
Lone hands; Mrs. Harvey Taylor, Geo.
Carter; Consolation: Mrs. Joe Babcock,
Don Buchanan.
W. A. MEETING
The regular meeting of Group 4 of
the United Church W. A. was held at
the home of Mrs. Calvert Falconer on
Tuesday evening, Nov. 13th, with 10
members present.
The meeting opened by singing hymn
306, followed by the Scripture taken
from John 14, verses 1 to 14, followea
by the thought for the day, and Kaye:.
given by Mrs. Fred Oster. Hymn 271
was sung. The secretary's report and
roll call were given, also the treasur-
er's report. The business part of the
meeting was discussed after which se -J•
eral contests were enjoyed.
The meeting closed with the Lord's
Prayer In unison. Lunch was served
by Mrs. Calvert Falconer and Mrs, Wm.
Cowan, The December meeting will be
held .,' the home of Miss Morgue.
Hirons.
•
PAGE 5
•
YOUVRE
N•T
A GOOD
1!/ER
IF YOU FOLLOW TOO CLOSELY
A sudden stop by the car in front can
result in an accident. If you fail to stop
in time, that accident is your fault.
Good drivers make certain they
have lots of stopping room, whatever
their speed.
HOW GOOD ARE
YOUR DRIVING HABITS?
DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS, ONTARIO
Breeding Association An-
nual Probably January 7
Although the date for the annual
meeting of the Waterloo Cattle Breed-
ing Association of Waterloo has not,
been definitely set yet, a tentative date I
for January lith, 1957, is in the minds
of officials. Dr. H. A, Herman, Ext'-
cutive Se of the National As-'
sociaticn of Artificial Breeders from
Columbia, Missouri, has becn {•:e, red
as guest Fpeak•:r. Dr. Herman, in his
official capacity. is closer to the r'•t-
inI breeding business on an '
bout scale than any other mar,,
The following directorships re to he
filled at the annual meeting with the I
present directors eligible for re-el'ec-
lion: Holstein for South Waterloo,:
Floyd Becker; Holstein for North Wat-
erloo. Irvin Brubacher; Holstein for I
Wellington or Norti-. Perth, Everett'
Oxhy; Huron County director, Sandy
Elliott; Bruce County director, Norman
Schm Idt,
IUkt{t Wales W, Pill. L
�"i , �o•d,S.t
U• 98i
to b
•
Ut(ST NUIMIkI NEW;
u'3�nncs
k* EV Slb•B
kW{
THERE'S GREATER VARIETY
CHAN
•
NOTICE T() CREDITORS
Ia the instate of Mary Jane Lockie, late
of the Village of Myth, in the Cour.
ty of iluron, Spinster, Deceased,
ALL PERSONS having claims against
the Estate of the above deceased are
required to file the seine with the un-
dersigned Administrator for the said
Estate, on or before the 26th day of
November, A,D, 1956, after which dale
the assets will be distributed amongst
the parties entitled thereto, having re-
gard only to the claims of which notice
shall have been given.
DATED at Clinton, Ontario, this 6th
day of November, A.D. 1956.
E. BEECHER MENZIES, Clinton, On-
tario, Administrator for the said Es-
tate. 46 3,
Renew your Subscription
•
is the spice of life!
Canadians like variety and they like news!
They get both on PANORAMA, the local
show chuck full of local Western Ontario
events. The stars of PANORAMA are
you and your neighbours; people in the
area who make the news.
PANORAMA Newsreel provides on the
spot film coverage of area news events.
What to wear tomorrow is decided for
you by Clic latest weather news on PAN-
ORAMA Weathervane. News on the
sporting scene, and happenings in the
world -at -large, round out your evening
news picture on PANORAMA.
PANORAMA : 6:00 - People in the News
6:20 - Latest Sports News
6:30 - Latest World News
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1
PAG! fi
Delhi Defeats Redmen
In WOSSA (B) Finals
(By Robert K. Williams)
The Delhi football squad won decis-
ively over the Clinton Redmen in the
fight for the Group (13) WOSSA sham•
pionship at the Purple Bowl, In 'Lon-
don, last Saturday, At the very start
Delhi pushed down the field to take
a 21-0 lead in the first quarter,
The second quarter looked no better
for Clinton, even though Howard Arm-
strong made a touchdown on an olt-
taekle right. The play was actually
supposed to reach tate ten yard line anu
get a first down, but Howie plowed ov•
er the goal line, but this only dented
Delhi's lead of 27-7,
The third quarter saw the Delhi pas•
sing technique come to life, Stan Kru-
picz quarterback, threw a completer)
pass to Virog who raced over for an•
other T.,D With the successful convert
the score now became 34-7, Clinton al •
so showed its passing ability when
MacDonnell threw a pass to Finlay in
the end zone, The convert was un-
successful, snaking the score 34-13.
Two more touchdowns with one con-
vert, in the fourth quarter, gave Dotal
their victorious score of 47-13, When
the final gun went, Delhi was stopper -
short of another touchdown run by
Williams and Colquhoun.
One can certainly honestly say thin
Clinton felt they had lost to a better
team, and no one was angry or argued
ever the loss. We wish to congratulate
Delhi, but also warn them to "watch
cut" when next year's football season
comes around.
DONNYBROOK
The November meeting of tha WAIS
and WA was held on Tuesday after-
noon at the home of Mrs. E. Rohinsotl
with 13 ladies present. The WMS pro•
gram was in charge of Mrs. Chas, Jef-
ferson and opened by singing hymn
523. Ephisians, 4th chapter, verses 1-13
was read by Mrs, R. Chanunay. Pray•
ers were read by Mrs, C• Jefferson,
ITiss Hazel Stamper and Mr:. Money
Johnston, followed by all repeating the
Lord's Prayer. Psalm 734 was read
responsively. Hymn 556 was sung.
Minutes of the October meeting, whin
was held at the home of Mrs. J. C.
Robinson, Wingham, were approved a,
read, An int'itation from Mrs. (Rev.)
Hiltz to hold the December meeting az
the manse was accepted. The offer`.ne
was received by Jeanette Jrhhnsto,:.
Mrs, J. R. Thompson and 'Mrs. TQrn
Arrnstrcng favoured with a duet, Mrs.
Wm, Hardy gave a reading, "Oppor-
tunities." The chapter in the study
book, "Looking at South -East Asia,'
was read by Mrs. Stuart Chamne.
Hymn 500 was sung and the nieetin
closed in the usual spanner,
Mrs. E. Robinson presided for the
WA meeting which began by reading
Psalm 737 in unison, followed by pray-
er. Minutes of the previous meeting
were read and the treasurer's report
given. Marion Amustrong received
the offering for the flower fund. Mrs.
S. Chamney rend n poem, "The Gospel
According to St. Luke." Another hymn
was sung in closing. Lunch was t.er.'•
ed by the hostess, assisted by Mrw. Har-
dy and Mr. Gordon Naylor,
Mrs. Olive Allen of Clinton and Mrs.
W. J. Craig of Auburn, were recent
visitors with Mr. and Mrs. R. Chim-
ney.
Miss Louise Jefferson was home
from Stratford over the week -end.
Louise was practice teaching at
Guelph last week.
Mr, and Mrs, Chas. Mills of Code -
rich were Sunday visitors with friend:
in this vicinity.
Miss Elaine Jefferson is spending a
few days with her cousins, Mr. and
Mrs. Gordon Laing, Mitchell.
Mr. and Mrs. G. A. MacLaughlin of
Detroit were visitors in this vicinity
during the week -end.
Preceptory Elects Officers
Election and installation of Royal
Black Preceptory officers were held at
the Blyth Orange ffall on Tuesday
night, with the following results:
W.P-1Tarold Webster.
D.P.—Walter Scott.
Chaplain—R:'ss Errington,
Registrar—Harry Bryant.
Treasurer—George Bailey.
1st Lecturer—Harvey Bunking.
2nd Lecturer—Joseph llaanilton.
1st Censor—Roy Noble,
2nd Censor—Gordon Finnigan.
1st Standardbearer—Donald McLea n.
2nd Standard'bearer—Wm, Thuell,
Tyler—Calvert Falconer.
AUBURN
On Friday evening, Nov, 23, ther'l
will be a short film on Sunday School
Week, "The Teacher Teaching," by Mr,
Stanley McDonald, Clinton. Rev, Al-
exander Nimmo, Wingham, will give
an Illustrated lecture on his trip to
Florida,
A Kitchener hatchery held a social
for customers last Tuesday in the 0:•
an'ge Hall when hatchery pictures were
shown and illustrations on how to raise
chicks and many problems solved, Mr.•
E. Buck and Mr. W'm. Ducklow, of Kit-
chener, and Mr. Chas: Scott, represen•
tative in this district introduced the
guests. A srrcial hour was enjoyed,
OBITUARY
MILS, S„1, FALCONER
A funeral service was conducted on
Monday at 1;30 pan., for Mrs, Sadie
June Falconer, 52, of Princess Street.
Clinton, who died late Friday night at
the Clinton Public Hospital following
a three -weeks illness, The renaina
were at the Ball and Mutch funer:1
home tvhe•e Rev. Glen Engle of On-
tario Street United Church condueten
the service with interment being made
in the Clinton cemetery,
Born at Londesbot'n, Mrs, Falconer
tt•a•; a daughter of Frank Gibbs enc
the late Mrs. Gibbs of Clinton. She
had lived in Clinton almost all her
life, where she was a member of tri:
Ontario Street United Church and the
Clinton Chapter of the Order :'f the
E-istern Star. Her husband, Victor U.
Falconer, a former reeve of Clinton,
who was active in Clinton municipal
circles, cried in 1949.
Surviving besides her father are one
daughter, Miss Lois Falconer. of Clio.
ton, and one brother, Harold Gibbs )f
Hamilton.
,
THE STANDARD1 et1>r�It�s d y,1�i►1+, �i, $
Good Fall Keeps Butter
Production IJp
This has been a better than average
fall for the farmers wluase herds pr r'
Idthe cream that, in turn, becomes
the butter that Is served throughout
the province and elsewhere,
Pastures, of course, were good all
during the later part of the summer,
despite getting off to a bad start, and
u g:ocl production level was main-
tained during months waren excessive
heat frequently parches pastures anti
reduces milk flow.
The return of mild weather after a
few cold days in the early autumn has
extended the norm•rl pasturing per-
iod, and assured farmers of a goon
supply of feed fur the winter at the
same time, By Ienviu% cattle on pas-
ture longer they are able to conserve
m u•e of their feed supplies for winter
use.
Many mews were almost completely
cleaned out last spring, when co u
weather held up the sthrt of the pas•
ture season, and the delay in fall stab!.
Inv, was welccine, It seems to have more
than balanced the spring holdup, and
mows are well filled now with fodder
awaiting the cold winter and move-
'snent of livestock indoors,
This means, of course, that a goad
mill: flow will be maintained all whi-
ter and there will he no shortage of
goose', No one wants shortages, whica
MR! price fluctu3tions, least of all the
producer. who like; 1, see markets
maintained Iry a steady level,
DEATHS
SCOTT, Adam—Suddenly, at his home,
150 Medland S., 'Toronto, on Tuesday,
Nov. 13111, 1956, Adam Scott, beloved
husband of Margaret Edna Glousher,
and dear father of Mrs. F, C, Cary
(Jeanne), Mrs, E. Bridgett (Edythe)
and Wallace Scott, Toronto; Gordon
Scott, Oakville. The remains rested
at the Win. Speers funeral chapel,
2920 Dundas St, W. (near Keele), u':•
til Friday afternoon at 1;30 o'clock,
Interment in Park Lawn cemetery,
Mrs, Scott was the former Margaret
Edea Glousher, daughter of Mr, and
Mrs. Adam Glousher, of Blyth, and
is a cousin of Mrs. Jim Norman of
Blyth, and Mrs, Wm, White, of Galt.
CRAIG—Entered into Rest on Tuesday,
Nov, 201h, 1056, Elizabeth Ledge-•
woad, widow of William Craig, In he"
82nd year. Besting at the Tasker
memorial chapel, Blyth, where fun-
eral service will be held Friday. Nov,
23rd, at 2;30 p.m. Interment in Btyt1:
Union Cemetery. Service in charge
of Rev. A. W. Watson.
BIRTHS
WARW1CK—At Dr. Myers Nursing
Home Brussels, on Monday, Novem-
ber 11), 1058, 10 Air, and Mrs. Jame.;
Warwick, Blyth, the gift of a daugm-
ter, a sister for Douglas and Ruth,
110 S•1'
Hereford spring calf. Finder
notify Jack Kennedy, phone
Blyth.
please
12811
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Pourer Steering�•, Pedal -Ease !'ricer Brakes
and many otter extra -value features are
standard equipment.
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7Kn4%vriY.3'77T.Y��S
Uldsmubllr introduces a brilliant new combina-
tion of hardtop glamour and rugged utility to
station wagon design/ Shown above, the Super
88 fiesta. Two otlu'r 4 -Door Fiestas are avail-
able In the (-olden Rocket 88 Serie,,.
NEW SPAN•A-RAMIC WINDSHIELD , .. a
new slant on an ()Ids idea for style and
safety! Over 10',; more glass arca gives
you belle, wider visibility . _ . and wraps
every beautiful view around you,
Clinton ass LO
EXCLUSIVE ACCENT STRIPE ... another
reflection of Olds styling leadership and
your own good taste. This distinctive
"accent" styling is mirrored inside, too,
in smart new Tech -Style Interiors!
ATE
NEVI HI -LOW BUMPER , , , functional and
handsome, too! A double bumper com-
pletely frames the new teccssetl grille and
parking lights , , , gives twice the 1)10-
tection of an ordinary bumper.
NEW WIDE -STANCE CHASSIS , , , heavier,
tvidcr, with a lower centre of gravity,
Wider chassis and spring base mean
greater stability, flatter cornering and
more all-round comfort for you.
0.147E
•
AVN MOTORS Ltd. —Ontario
1Wedneot ay,21, 195d
WWI* Alm
141.11041
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
WALLACE'S
DRY, GOODS ---Blyth-- BOOTS & SHOES
LET US FILL YOUR SPRING SEWING NEEDS
With
PRINTS, BROADCLOTH, ZIPPERS, . THREAD,
ETC.
Phone 73..
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
- Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON.
Morris Township Council I'the meeting of Oct, 9th, were read and
adopted on motion of Ross Duncan and
The Council met In the Township Halt Stewart Procter.
on Nov. 5th with all members present.
Minutes cd last regular meeting, ana I Moved by Wm. Elston and Walter
•444-•+•+•-4.4-4.-4 •-• 44-44 4-4-44 4•4 • • ••+•4.4• • 1• • 4444 4•••4•• ••
Tenders Wanted
TENDERS will be. received by the undersign..
ed up to and until December 8th, for laying of good
quality linoleum on first floor hall' at Blyth Public
School, also to include any repairs needed to floor.
Any or lowest Tender not necessarily accepted.
For Particulars Contact:
BERNARD HALL, Secretary,
Blyth School Board.
.44.4•.44 4444/44444 4-444444444444 4444 -$44-!44444444
•444.444444; • 4-.4444-414-0444 4 411••+•+•••+1•• 444+4 444444444
Tenders Wanted
TENDERS will be received by the undersigned
up to and until Dec, 8th, for repairing plaster and
.painting two rooms in Blyth Public School.
Work to be done during Christmas holidays.
Any or lowest Tender not necessarily accepted.
For particulars contact,
BERNARD HALL, Secretary,
50-1. Myth Public Schbol.
• +444444 44+4444444-+4444+
•
>, . f STANDARD PAGE
Properties For Sale
8•room framedwelling. Complete
modern. bath upstairs, 2-plece 1st
floor, bullt•In cupboards, tile floor
in kitchen, Priced to sell, In Tpwn
of Wingham,
100 acre farm, 14/e storey dwelling,
water pressure; barn 56x58, driva
shed 85x30, cement stabling, silo,
heti house and pig pen; 1 mile from
Highway,
100 acre farm, 11/4 storey, asphalt
shingle clad, hydro, cellar. Good
barn 36x56, hydro, water, .drilled
well, Drive shed, 30x20 steel. Hen
house 10x20. 75 acres workable.
Morris Township,
97 acre farin on black -top county
road, good buildings, hydro, drilled
well, level, well drained, close to
school and village.
11/4 -storey frame dwelling In
1 Blyth„ on Highway, Small stable.
Hydro, water.
First-class brick dwelling on pay.
ed street, all conveniences, in Village
of Blyth.
200 acre farm, good buildings, hy-
dro, water, silo, close to village,
good land, well fenced. ,
Listings Invited. Other proper-
ties on request.
100 -acre farm, 8 -room brick dwel•
ling, water, pressure, hydro, etc.
Barn 60x66 and 32x50. Drive shed
*,20x30. Buildings in good repatfti A 2
2guod farm on Con. 11, Twp, of hiul•;
lett.
ELLIOTT
REAL ESTATE
AGENCY
BLYTII, ?HONE 104.
Gordon Elliott, Broker.
Victor Kennedy, Salesman. •
Res, Phone 140. Res. Phone 78.
Fie n , Ballagl Salesman,
Phone ' ng am, 5861.
•••••••#4~ 14.0.0'....044441.#4.4P4~..••••••44'
Shortreed that the bills on the Spivey
Drain be paid. Carried.
The Engineer's Report on , the Mur-
ray -Lamb Drain was read and consid-
ered.
Moved by Walter Shortreed, seconded
by Wm. Elston, that the Engineer's Re-
port on the Murray -Lamb Drain be pro-
visionally adopted and that the Clerk
be instructed to prepare By -Laws.
Carried.
The Engineer's Report an the Nichol
Drain was read and ddscussed.
Moved by Wm. Elston, seconded by
Stewart Procter, that the Engineer's
Report on the Nichol Drain be provis-
tonally adopted and that the Clerk be
instructed to prepare By -Laws, Carried.
Moved by Stewart Procter, seconded
by Walter Shortreed, that the road ac-
counts as presented by the Road Sup-
erntendcnt be paid, Carried,
Moved by Ross Duncan, seconded by
Walter Shortreed, that the meeting ad-
journ to meet again on Dec, 15th, at
10 a.in. Carried.
Account,/ Paid:
Jas. A, Hewes, Superintendence o;
Spivey Drain, 75.00; Superintendence of
Sawyer Drain, 100.00; B. Parrott, sel-
ecting jurors, 4.00; A.. Frasar, selecting
jurors, 4.00; G. Martin, selecting jurors,
4.00; S. Procter, Sawyer Drain, 6.00,
B. Parrot, Sawyer Drain, 5.00, Advance-
Thnes, advtg„ 1.44, Municipal World,
supplies, 8.48, Relief acct., 15.00, 14.
Kirkby, Spivey Drain contract, 1,349,00,
0. Martin, clerk's fees, Spivey Drain,
40.00, Jas. Spivey, Cole Drain, 11.00,
A, Fraser, supplies and postage, 26.00,
A. Fraser, balance .df salary, 150,011;
S. Fear, Brucellosis, 3.40, O. Campbell,
Brucellosis, 1.20, Court of Revesion—
B. Parrott, S, Procter, W. Elston, R.
Duncan, W. Shortreed, $5.00 each; 13.
Parrott, Cole .Drain, 10.00, Geo. Rad-
on Debentures
and Guaranteed
Trust Certificates
..:for 3, 4;
and 5 years '
33/a% for one and two years 1
HURON & ERIE
MOItTI;COal'ORATION
o;
THE
CANADA TRUST
co,tr:\.
Head Office--- London, Ontario.
Distrl.;t Representative; Gordon B. Elliott, Blyth.
-•••44~•••••••••44~~44...440001109+4+41♦ ♦x•-•++++44 •
LYCEUM THEATRE •
WINGHAM.
First Show commences at 7;15 p.m.
Thurs., Frl„ 8dt., Nov. 22.23-24
Rory Calhuutt, Peggie Castle
in
•
"The Yellow Tomahawk"
The story deals with the efforts
of an Indian Scout to bring an at •
my major to his senses and halt
the vengeance sought by the In-
dians,
Mon., Tues., Wed„ Nov,w26.27-2n
DOUBLE BILL Adult Entertainment
i Tense tale of two brothers, both police- In Scope and Color -
men. One plays It straight and one us- An emerald mine in Columbia competes
es the shield of he law to further his with a coffee plantation, for workers,
own ambitions. I but when a flood moves in a romance
Robert Taylor, Janet Leigh, George Rdrt developes between the two owners.
COMING —"A MAN ALONE" --Ray Grace Kelly, Stewart Granger and
Millard, Unary Murphy, Ward Bond. Paul Douglas •
•••-44•-••• • 44+•-• •�•» - i N •+•-4-4++3+�+N+•+�+•+1-••• J•
,
ROXY THEATRE, 1st Showing 2nd Showing
CLINTON. 7:30 p,m, At The 9:30 pari.
Air -Conditioned
NOW (Thursday, Friday, Saturday) -- PARK
"TIMBERJACK"
GODERICH,
NOW'_ PLAYING -- "THE 1-DVEN.,
Rousing adventure picture, filmed InTURES OF IIAJJI BABA"—An Gine-
Trucolor in Glacier National Park ana mascope and Technicolor.
Western Montana Mon., Tues„ laved., Adult Entertainment
Broderick Crawford, Anne Bancroft,
Sterling Hayden, Vera Ralston and I and Marilyn Maxwell
David Brian .Based on the Kefauver Senate inves-
tigation, revealing how an international
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday crime rhtg was finally smashed.
"ROGUE COP"
"New York Confidential"
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
"GREEN FIRE"
3
`Earth vs. Flying Saucers
and
"The Werwolf"
(Adult Entertainment)
NIIIN•NIN41I•MId44**** IIN41.
ford, Sellers Drain, 40,00, Geo, Rad
lord, Cole Drain, 2,260.00, W. Short
reed, grant to Walton library, 15.00
Mrs. J. Johnston, grant to Bluevste
library, 15.00, Geo, Johnston, grant to
Belgrave library, 15'.00, Mrs. Chas
Johnston, grant to Blyth Fair, 75.01)
Norman Hoaver, grant to Brussels Fair,
200,00, Stewart Procter, grant to Bel -
grave Fair, 25.00,
iBallie Parrott, Geo. C. Martin,
Reeve,' Clers
Crop Report
(By G. W. Montgomery)
Moisture in the form of rain and
snow have made plowing and the hush-
ing of corn somewhat easier. The cold
weather and snow early in the week'
made for a rush to stable, livestoeit,1
Ihowever, most beef cattle are still on.
pasture.
NOTICI; X1'O CREDITORS
In the Estate of Francis John . Iiolty-
nlan,
ALL PERSONS having claims against
the estate of the above mentioned, late
di the Village cf Blyth, in the County
of Huron, gentleman, who died on the
5th day of October, 1956, are required
to tile proof of sante with the under-
signed on or before the 24th of No-
vember,.1956.
Alter that date the executrix will
proceed to distribute the estate having
regard only to the claims of wjiich she
shall then have had notice.
DATED at Wingham this 1st day of
November, 1956,
CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON,
Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the
Executrix, 48-3.
MUNICIPAL NOTICE
Nomination of a Reeve, four Coun-
cillors and two School Trustees, to
serve the Township of Morris during
the year 1957, will be held at the Mor•
ris Township Hall from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m.,
Friday, November 23, 1956, and if ne-
cessary, an election will be held on
Monday, Doceinber 3, 1956.
49.2, GEO, C, MARTIN, CLERK.
HELP WANTED
Feinal waitress for full-time em-
ployment, r -ply in person to Bartllff
Bros., Clinton. 49.2.
FOR SALE
Quantity of soft wood and hard wood
slabs. Apply to Donald Snell, phone
351117, Blyth, 60-1.
DANCE
In Blyth Memorial Hall, Wednesd'y,
December 5th, sponsored by Blyth Ag-
ricultural Society. Music by Don Rob-
ertson and the Ranch Boys. 50-1.
• LADIES!
Earn good income selling Avon Cos-
metics. Opportunities open for wo-
men in Auburn, Dungannon, and rural
areas. Write Mrs. M. Stock, 78 Duch-
ess Ave, Kitchener, 50-2p.
FOR SALE
Christmas tree; Cedar at any height;
Scotch Pine up to 6 ft.; Norweigh
Spruce in 4 ft, heights Apply, James
Cartwright, phone 34116, Blyth. 50-3p.
HURON COUNTY TOUR TO GUELPH
On November 28th. Anyone wishing
to go and see the new Co -Op Feed Mill
in Guelph, contact Belgrave Co -Op not
later than Friday, Nov, 23rd, Free
dinner and transportation. 50-1,
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all my friends and
neighbours who so thoughtfully remem-
bered me with cards, treats, and visits,
while I was a patient in the Clinton
Hospital, also bo the nurses and Dr.
Street, I am most grateful.
50-1, Josephine Woodcock.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all those who remem-
bered me with cards and letters; also
those who enquired for me during my
recent Illness.
fi(1-1, Edna Doer,
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank all the friends and
neighbours for all their kindness dur-
ing any recent illness. Special thanka
to Mr, and Mrs. George McNall fot
their kindness in taking ire into their
home; and for their devoted attention
while I was confined to bed, All of
which was greatly appreelated by my•
self and family.
Mrs. Fred Richards and Family,
50-1p,
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant.
GODERICII, ONT,
Telephone 1011 -- Box 478
F. C. PREST '
LONDESBOUO, ONT,
Interior & Exterior Decorator
Sunworthy Wallpaper
Paints - Enamels - Varnishes
Brush & Spray Painting
*MO MMM•M.N'NM+•.
HURON
FARM SUPPLIES
OLIVER SALES & SERVICE
Telephone 4 and 93, Blyth,
FARMERS,
ATTENTION !
THE FOLLOWING USED MACH-
INES ARE PRICED TO CLEAR:
1- Allis Chalmers Har-
vester, with hay and corn
attachments:
1- 6 -ft. Oliver Combine,
with scour clean, pick-up
attachments, straw
spreader, down grain
reel.
1- 16 -run Oliver Drill.
THESE MACHINES ARE ALL IN
GOOD ORDER & GOOD REPAIR.
IF YOU ARE AMBITIOUS
You can make good, with a Rawleigh
business in Huron County. We help
you get started, No experience needed
to start. Write Rawleigh's Dept, K-136-2
Montreal, P,Q.
LANDSCAPING
Perennial flowers, shrubs, fruit trees.
Phone Don Simpson, 42, Blyth, repre-
senting the H, C. Downham Nursery
Co., Ltd., Strathroy, Ont. 49-1p,
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your septic funks pumped the
sanitary way. Schools and public
buildings given prompt attention,
Rates reasonable. Tel, Irvin Coxon,
Milverton, 75114. 62.18-tf.
WANTED
Old horses, 32c per pound. Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL-
BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich,
Phone collect 1483J1, or 148314.
44 tf.
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 -3441, between 7;30 and 9.:30 a.m. We
have all breeds available—top quality
at low cost.
Belgrave United Church
W.A.
Bazaar & Tea
will be held in the
Church Basement
Fri., Nov. 23
STARTING ,AT 3 P.M, •
Blyth Farmers' Co-operative
ANNUAL
Euchre „it Dance
will be held in the
Blyth Memorial Hall,
on the evening of
Thurs., Nov. 22
Euchre at 8:30 p.m.
A Good Orchestra will sup-
ply Music for Dancing
Ladies Please Bring Lunch
Everyone Welcome,
GROVER CLARE'S
POOL ROOM.
•
Billiards & Snack : Bar
Ice Cream - Hot Dogs
Homburgs and
San dwiches.
Smokers' Sundries
.
444.#441.1#04444~44.141044144.441.4.4~4.
Business
Cards
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, 11. S. Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
Wingham and Blyth.
IN BLYTII
EACII THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located in Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICH 25.61
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seatorlh Daily Except Monday & Wed,
9:00 a.m. to 5;30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p;m.
Clinton Office • Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETR [ST
PATRICK ST. • WINGHA M, ONT.
EVENINGS BY APPOI.NTMENT.
Professional Eye Examination -
Optical Services.
RONALD G. McCANN
Public Accountant
Offir : Royal Ea:tk Building _
Residence: Rattenbury Street.
Phones 561 and 455.
CLINTON — ONTARIO.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. '1'0 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M, TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY.
DR. N. W. HAYNES
DENTAL SURGEON.
Has opened an office for the Practice
of Dentistry in Clinton, on Albert St.
OPPOSITE THE ROYAL BANK
ON TIIE GROUND FLOOR
PHONE HU 2-9571. 62-41-tt.
AUCTIONEER
Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction
Guaranteed,
Prompt Assistance Given in Arranging
Your Sale Problems.
Phone 151118, Blyth.
George Nesbitt, George Powell,
Auctioneer, Clerk.
62-22+1.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates, Louis
Blake, phone 42116, Brussels, R.R. 2.
25.10p.
McKILLOP .MU.TTTAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - $EAFORTH, ONT,
OFFICERS: .
Pre9ident—Wm. S. Alexander Wal-
ton; Vice -Pres., Robt. Archibald, Sen -
forth; Manager and Secy-Treas., Mer-
ton A. Reid, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw-
Ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
E. J. Trewarthn, Clinton; 3. E. Peppar,
Bruceficltl; C. W, Lconhnrdt, Bornholm;
H, Fuller, Goderich; It, Archibald, Sea.
forth; Allister Brondfoot, Seaforth.
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr.,- Londesboro; J,
F. Prueter, E:'odllagcn; Selwyn Bs1m
Bruseela: Eric Munroe, Beat»rth.
ANNA 14IPST
*40clit Cou#L6eiet,
"Dear Anne Hirst: T am 15,
and I've been going steady with
a boy for seven months. I like
him very much, and he says he
loves me — but every week -end
he has some excuse to be out of
town,
"He says he visits relatives, I,
get to see him only once a week,
"Should I stay home and wait
for him, or go out with other
boys? JEAN"
* The high spot for most
'r couples is the week -end date
* —there are few time restric-
• tions on Saturday night, and
* S un d a y afternoons together
* can be long. Without these spe-
* tial occasions to look forward
* to, a girl's social lite is pretty
* empty and, I should say, thor-
* oughly unsatisfactory, Yours Is
* especially so, since you have
* only one date a week with a
* boy who declares he loves you.
* Certainly date others over
• week -ends, if, your mother ap-
* proves (and she evidently
* wIll); put yourself in circula-
* tion,
* Even if you could see this
* young man around the clock,
* giving hits all your dates is un-
* sound. You are getting chances
* to compare him with others
• who might prove even more in-
* teresting, more Tun to he with,
* Nor are you being fair to your-
' self when you are not learning
* more about others your own
* age -_ an experience that en-
* riches a girl's personality and
* gives her dozens of new topics
* to talk about other than "you
* and me."
" .Every girl's secret desire is
* to be popular. Iiow can you ex-
* pect to be if you have only
* one beau? First thing you
know, you will• be thinking he
* is 'rHE one and only—and you
• surely would be bereft if he
* suddenly changed girls. Teen -
One -Yard Skirt
isie7
sew PRINTED
EASIER -FASTER
MORE ACCURATE
ant One 2/a4d 5*.
4867
wikt5t
74 -30-
PRINTED P,1'1'•i•iiRN
it's a PRINTED PA'1"l'EJIN —
saves sewing work and time!
Directions are printed right on
each pattern part of this flatter-
ing sheath skirt — takes just
ONE yard 54 -inch fabric to
make! Sew several for your fall
wardrobe!
Printed Pattern 4867: Misses'
Waists 24, 25, 26, 28, 30 inches,
All given sizes: 1 yard 54 -inch.
Directions printed on each tis-
sue pattern part. Easy-to-use,
accurate, assures perfect fit.
Send 'TIi11tTY-i'1V1; CENTS
(stamps cannot he accepted; use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Print plainly SiZE,
NAME, ADDRESS and STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE.ADAMS,
123 Eighteenth St., New Toron-
to, Ont.
• agers of both sexes are famous
• for this practice, and rightly se,
• for it is wholesome and profit-
* able, These are the years to
* make lots of friends, some of
* whom you will have for the
* rest of your life, I hope you
* will stop wasting your time on
* one alone.
• I do not wiTh to arouse any
* suspicion. The lad may indeed
* be visiting relatives, but if he
* is spending every week -end
* with them isn't ft obvious what
+ a low place you rate in his af-
* fections? "Love," you must re-
▪ member, is one of the most
* flexible words. in teen-age lan-
* guage,
* Play smart, my young friend,
* and cultivate other nice boys.
* In a few months' time you will
* wonder why on earth you
• thought any one lad was worth
* such concentration,
• 1 give your problem much
* space today because I do not
* believe you realize how serious
* it is, and 1 wanted to explain
* * why you are certainly "off on
• the wrong foot."
GIRL *jot HURRY
Dear Anne'Hirst: I hope you
will settle my problem for me.
I have fallen in love with a boy
six years younger than I. He
loves me dearly and says that
age doesn't mean a thing to him
—but 1 think it may mean some-
thing later on.
"Please answer q'.,ickly as he
wants to starry me soon and your
counsel means a lot to me.
PUZZLED"
• You do riot tell me whether
* you are in your teens or your
• 20's, so it is not proper for me
* to give you a direct answer.
* You tell me little else to
* guide an opinion. The tone of
* your letter shows your impa-
* tierce (and I should say your
* youth), so I only can warn
* you that your parents are the
* ones to consult.
* At any rate, don't be hasty.
* Marriage, even in these mo-
* dere days, is intended to last
* all your life, and a year or
* so of getting better acquainted
is wise and safe.
* * *
There riot only Is safety In
numbers for teen-agers; there is
more excitement, new thrills and
Tots of fun. Give It a whirl, and
see. Refer any -problems to Anne
llirst, for she will understand
and guide you safely through.
Write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New 'Toronto, Ont.
Saved Himself A
Life Of Nagging
When a romantic young
Italian decided to marry the
prettiest girl in the village
where he worked, a friend who
knew her well warned him that
she as very self-willed and had
a fiery temper.
"She's lovely, but you'd bet-
ter start taming her noir', or
she'll boss you when you're
married," he said. "Whatever
you do, show her you're not a
'Yes man,' other wisr she'll hen-
peck you unmercifully"
The young man hit on a dras-
tic plan to avoid being hen-
pecked. In the crowded church
on their wedding day he utter-
ed a firm and loud "No" when
he was asked whether he took
"this woman" to be his 'lawful,
wedded wife." His bride nearly
swooned with surprise. Ile then
strode fl'ont the church.
Tearfully, the girl ran after
him and caught hire up. "i
love yon," he said, quietly, "hart
I wanted to show you that I
can say `No' and that I shall be
the dominant partner in our
marriage. You must always
obey me -- not I you. Now let's
go )lack and finish the wedding
ceremony."
The girl meekly nodded her
assent. Together they went back
to the altars That happened a
year ago. "We're indescribably
happy." confided the young
husband to his friend recently.
"Your advice certainly did the
trick.''
'Necks, Please!'
FRENCH FAKIR—This is'not an Indian fakir sitting on his bed
of nails, but a Parisian paintertouching, up a giant -sized
toothpaste tube while sitting on the business end of an equally
big toothbrush. The outsized brush and tube will be used as
part of a dental display at the Children's Show in Paris,
HRONICLES
7G1NGER FXizM
It is a little difficult these days
to keep one's thoughts concen-
trated on ordinary, everyday
affairs. Of their own violation
they go wandering off to the
Middle East, to Iiungary, to
Nova Scotia and to a little vil-
lage not far from here where
striking truck drivers put on an
active demonstration resulting
in the loss of a leg to a police-
man on duty. And all last week,
we had mild, foggy weather,
which was anything but cheer-
ful. And most of the problems
are with us yet, As far as the
Middle East is concerned no one
can forsee the outcome, The
same applies to Hungary. We ran
only i►ope that eventually action
by the United Nations Assembly
will justify its existence, The
Springhill disaster , . , how can
we assess the terrible anguish
of the families belonging to the
trapped men — or of the men
themselves? Happily the number
of survivors is greater than any-
one dared to hope for. The truck
drivers' strike ... if prolonged,
that is something that may touch
us all quite closely. And finally
fhe weather . we t'ertainly
can't change that. We have to
lake what cones and make the
best of 11. 'l'he most we can do is
avoid unnecessary risks along
the fog -shrouded roads.
((ere at Ginger Farm our ini-
ntediate problems have been
concern about the weather, and
with coughs and colds. Fog has
kept us more or less housebound,
which is rather a nuisance as -
there are several visits we in-
tended to make — but why lake
a chance travelling the highways'
unless you have to? However,
conditions are improving; I heard
planes going over last night and
this morning, A welcome sound
to niece Babs as her husband is
flying in from Sudbury next ._
Wednesday, 1 hope by then all
the colds will have cleared up, .
'?'alk about a roughing chorus,
we certainly have it here, Dur-
ing the day it has unexpected
complications. Because of the
;'olds none of us can hear too
well and we all speak indis-_
linrtly with a sort of a croak so
that we have trouble in making
each other understand, We do. a
lot of guessing—and we don't
always guess right. If the sore
throats continue we shall have
to take to lip-reading! But Of
MOM* sur worst troubles are at
night, Iwl night being beyond
average. In between my own
resllc:;sness, the children crying
and Pink t:nd I'ar:oer coughing,
something happened that added
in'nit to injury. It was two
o'rlor!: in 1he morning. The lele-
phoni' rang loud and insistently.
With my heart in nr,v mouth and
nothing on env feet ( ran to
;answer it. What had ha'wt'ned
, it must be something drastic
for anyoneIo,ring in the middle
of the uif;h1, The long distance
operator called our number —
and I waited in anxious suspense,
Then a voice said - "lhllln--is
Betty -Lou there?" Getty -Lou,
indeed! It didn't take me long to
inform the party that Belly -Lou
wasn't here, never had bre►;
here, and I didn't know any
Betty -Lou anyway! Their i went
shivering back to my bed. The
night was warm so 1 Miopose the
shivering was merely.. the result
of apprehenginn. J"nr awhile all
was quiet and Then Nancy started
crying again — more 1,,Alunr,
troubles, All in 1'1 it %VT: Mill',
. a night. Now as I write -it is af-
ternoon and everything is re-
markably quiet — the children's
after-dinner nap has lasted for
over two hours. Here's hoping it
isn't the lull before the storm.
Saturday we had an interest-
ing little outing. Partner took
care of Nancy while Babs and I,
with Carol in tow, visited a
nearby Exhibition and -sale of
Arts and Crafts, It is an anr+tl
event taking place the first week
in November. For the last three
years I have worn a fur coat for
the event. This year I was too
warm even in a lightweight suit
—one more instance which, points,
to the extraordinary weather we
are having.
As usual there was an out-
standing display of handicrafts
of ail kinds—exquisite costume
jewellry, beautiful handwoven
articles—including the loveliest
fine -wool stoles I have seen any-
where. One of these tines I am
going to be really extravagant
and treatmyself to one—might
have done it this time but light
grey was one colour they didn't
have. There was also a lovely
collection of pottery and a fine
display of oil paintings. The art-
ist, a remarkably versatile per-
son, wasdemonstrating old Eng-
lish lettering, which, to the aver-
age person, would be as difficult
to do as an oil painting, I ,won-
der how it is some people are so
gifted? Must be that for most of
us the right genes were not
around before we were born,
Pursue that subject any further
and we would soon find our-
selves involved in the old con-
troversial topic of heredity ver-
sus environment, To my know-
ledge, which is responsible for
what, has never yet been satis-
factorily explained. It Is an ex-
traordinary age we are living in
but even y,et we don't know all
the answers, And maybe that is
just as well—sometimes "a little
learning is a dangerous thing,"
How Can I ?
Q. How can I prevent moths?
A. Sprinkle a little turpen-
tine, or benzine, around 'the
crevices of closets, drawers,
and boxes. Wrap garments to be
put away in newspapers; moths
dislike the odor of ink,
Q. ]tow can I. remove plaster
A, Use one pint of vinegar to
one gallon of hot water. Scrub
well, then rinse with clear water
and dry.
and lime stains front wood-
work and Moors?
Q. How can I detect a leak
in a gas pipe?
A. At the point where the
leak is suspected, apply a, paste
of soap.' and water, if there is
a leak, bubbles will appears
Never use matches or a flame
in looking for a gas leak,
,Q, How ,can I relieve the
pinch of new shoes?
A. Wring a cloth., from hot
water and lay it across the tight
spot while 'the shoe is. on 'tire
foot, changing as it cools, This
will make the leather shape to
the foot,
Q. Iiow can 1 remove varnish
stains from goods?
A, fib the spot with turpen-
tine or benzine, then waste the
goods thoroughly.
ISSUE it — 1931
Modern
Etiquette...
Q, When a dinner course Is
finished, should the hostess'
plate be removed first, and if
not, whose plate?,
A. There is no rule governing
the order of removing dinner
plates.
Q. Which wonnan should a
man seat at a dinner table, the
one on his right or left?
A. The woman- on his right.
Q. Is it absolutely necessary
•to send a wedding present when
one has dedhncd an Invitation
to the reception?
A. This would be expected
of you only if you were very
intimate 'friends of the bride,
the bridegroom, or their fami-
lies, Otherwise, it Is not neces1
sary,
Q. How should one handle the
spoon when partaking of soup?
A. The spoon, of course,
should be held in the right
hand, dipped into the soup with
an outward sweep, then taken
from the side of 'the spoon,
never from the tip,
Q, When writing a letter to
an acquaintance who calls you
"Mrs. Bridges," how do you
sign the letter?
-' As "Mary Bridges."
Q. Do male members of a
party at a public dinner table -
rise when a man stops at the
table for a few words with one
of the' diners?
A. Not unless there is a great
difference in age. All younger
men rise for a really old gentle-
man.
Q. Is it proper for the bride-
groom to help address the wed-
ding invitations and announce-
ments? I've. heard this is "bad
lucks,"
A. ';'here's no reason in the
world why he shouldn't help, if
he wishes,
Q. Is it proper for bridge
player. to lay down several re-
maining cards in his hand with
the remark, "The rest of the
tricks are mine?"
A. This can be very annoying
to moderately skilled Players,
and it is quite often possible
that lie may be wrong. it is
much better taste to play out
all the tricks.
Q. I have been invited for a
week -end visit. Would it be
proper for inc to bring a gift
to my hostess?
A. This would be a very nice
thing to do, The gift need not
be valuable, but should show
care in selection, , Remember;
though, that tlds does not c ur-
cuse you from writing that
"bread -and -butler" letter as
soon as possible after your re-
turn home.
Pretty Centrepieca
..111.11610.1
Laud Witvil,
Elegant centerpiece for your
dining table; A graceful swan
crocheted in pineapple design •—
Tilt it with fruit or flowers.
Pattern 581: Crochet directions
for swan centrepiece; body about
12 x 8 ;4 Inches. Use heavy jiffy
cotton -- starch stiffly,
Send TWENTY-FIVE CEN'Plsl
(stamps cannot be accepted; u1D
postal note for safety) for thla
pattern to LAURA WHEELER,
123 Eighteenth Street, New Th..
rento, Ont. Print plainly PAT -
.TERN NUMBER, your NA)1I
and ADDRESS.
Our gift to you—two wonder-
ful patterns for yourself, your
home -- printed in our Lauri'
Wheeler Needlecraft Book ,
Plus dozens of other new desig►ta
to order — crochet, knitting, em-
broidery, iron -ons, novelties.
Send 25 rents for your copy t4
this hook NOW — with gift pat-
terns printed in it!
Ji1/ISHION HINT
Razor Records
'On his head was a bowler hat;
in his right hand was an elec-
tric razor; and with his left
Hand a Swedish motorist drove
along a counrty road shaving
himself, with the razor plugged
Into his twelve -volt car bat-
tery.
A police official could hardly
believe his eyes, but stopped
Itim, pointing out that he had
mot proper control of the car.
"Nonsense," replied • the. mo-
torist, "there are one-armed
drivers who drive quite safe-
ly, aren't there" He was tak-
en to court, but was found not
guilty of driving without prop-
el' control.
A barber in 'Charlottesville,
Virglnia, claimed the world's
aiming speed record in 1046 by
giving one of Li • customers "a
perfect shave" in sixty seconds
without any cuts or nicks, But
forty•four years earlier,' a• Bel-
fast .barber shaved six men in
two minutes. He also shaved
one . man with a carving knife
In eighty-five seconds and an-
other with a penknife in forty-
seconds.
]t has been calculated that a
man shaves Iwo square miles
'of face during his lifetime and
cuts off 250 million hairs.
Bronie razors with ivory
handles were used by the an-
cient Egyptians . for shaving.
Early . men also shaved with
flint, iron and pumice stone.
The first •safety -razor was in-
vented in 1762 by a master cut-
ler in Paris, Jean -Jacques Per -
ret, His was a straight razor fit-
ted with a guard. The usual
type of safety -razor, with a
blade at an angle to the hen -
dile, was first patented by a
Londoner, William S. Henson,
in 1847.
Hearing Stars
By Telescope
Secrets of outer space will
be probed this autumn with a
wonderful new $300,000 radio -
telescope — the largest In . the
world — which has been erect-
ed on a remote hillside In New
England.
This radio "ear" has a sixty -
foot antenna, a huge precision -
made aluminum bowl weighing
8,000 lbs., centred on a conical'
pier set In a concrete founda-
tion twelve feet deep.
The telescope is designed for
listening to the faint crackling
of radio signals sent back by
the cosmic gases of outer space.
By studying these signals, the
astronomers will be able to
trace features of the universe
that are hidden from ordinary
telescopes which work with
visible light.
The new telescope is control-
led, by motors that car. turn and
lilt it to face any part of the
sky and that can drive it .to
keep pace with the stars, As-
tronomers are already calling
it "a new window ' on the uni-
verse,"
They believe it will enable
them to study hitherto un-
known heavenly bodies and fix
their position with 'certainty In
the sky and 'also to measure
their radiations those invis-
• able waves' which reach our
•ea:th,from the Milky Way and
other' great galaxies of stars,
Nothing' 'more , fantastic`, than
this new instrument has ever
been conceived by astronomers,
for it will enable them to hear
sounds which occurred millions
of years ago.
•
DORS D'OR ~Diana Dors,.
Hollywood's glamorous. blonEli,•
Brltlsh, ;import, ; literally shines '
as a fashion model..Sha's Show.
ing off a form•fltting gold hath -
,Ing suit in the"fiIm, capiital.
MAYBE HE USES RADAR — Parading guard al Windsor Castle,
in England, provides much amusement for members of the
Bolshoi Theatre -Ballet Company. The obviously humorous sight
leaves not a straight face among the Russians, who were
performing In London,
Only One Swam Channel In 1956
So the English Channel swim-
ming season which got off to a
• record start and engrossed a
record rumber of challengers
finally fizzled out a flop, Only
one man was successful, the
lowest tally in ten years.
Even the commercially spon-
sored annual race drawing some
of the worlds greatest long dis-
tance SWimmerS was a failure,
Only ten of the,. 22 originally
entered actually started from
the French coast, None managed
,to get across, California's Eng-
lish born Thomas Park who fin-
ished second in the 1055 race
and who was in the water .10
hours. and 20' minutes got near-
est to the English coast to with-
in five miles of it. He received
• £250 an amount which the
promoter also gave to Ireland's
Jack McClelland and New Zeal-
and's Diana Cleverley for what
were, considered equally .meri-
torious performances. :.-
Exactly' one month after that
race McClelland was among"
those who challenged again pri
vately. . This time, the 32 -year-
old Belfast engineering
draughtsman was in the water
only 21/2• hours .before withdraw-
fng'on account of severe jelly-
fish 'stings. On the same tide .a
16 -year-old local Dover lad,
James Granger, set off to make
history es the youngest -ever
conqueror of this unpredictable
strip of sea water, 21 miles wide
at its narrowest neck, Granger
gave up after 8 hrs, 25 min.,
having covered approximately
12 miles. '
The solitary successful chal-
lenger among the 40 who pre-
pared was ' 31 -year-old Jacques
Amyot, of Quebec, ' The French •
Canadian' completed the France
to England route in '13, hrs, • in a
calm but cold sea. _Temperature
of the water when Amyot waded
through the • rocks beneath
Dover's famous chalk •cliffs was
58 degrees Fahrenheit, some two
or three below norma. for, mid-
July; But it was the earliest
ever success in 81 years of chan=
nel swimming • history, July 17
was the actual date with the
previous, earliest, and still the
first for a woman, being Can-,
. ada's champion Marilyn Bell on
July 31, 1955, •'. •
This -record early start her-
alded what was • thought likely
to prove an ,exceptionally good
channel swimming season, In-
' stead it ,proved exceptionally
bad. The coldest June for 25
years was followed 'by 'the dull --
',est and dampest July and Au •
-
gust. of ,this century. Seasoned
channel campaigners described
it,•as the worst swlmming sea-
son within their. memory, and a
• bitter ' disappointment. to : the
espirnrits, who. came .from more
than two, doien • countries. Some
of them' after more than ,six
weeks 'patient vigil for suitable,
• tide,and windhadla leave with-.
• out even 'trying on 'account of
*funds having runout,
Counting • both routes the.
channel has now ben' swum' 02
times,' Yon` will •'i,ot .Mind this
total • in • the •.recently published
Channel Swimming ' Associo-
tion's booklet, The explanation
for this is that 'many swimmers
known to have been successful .
have notbothered••to,:clalnl the
CSA certificate •and therefore
cannot be,,,"recognized", by that-
'equitable
han'equitable • : body• created ' by a
band df long distance swimming
enthusiast's . with ,Lieut; General '
Lord. Freyberg as their presi-
dent. •The : former Governor-
General of New Zealand -and
holder of the Victoria Cross
made - several .''noteworthy at-
tempts to swim , the channel' in
• the early 1920'i. • '
Objects.,•of the -.CSA „are "to.
investigate • the claim.s of ,per- •
sons.'to have -swum the\English,
'Channel and to •assist• with in-
Iorritation 'and•'hdvice those in-'
tending ;to ;,make attempts." Its
honorary 'secretary 'is a Folks=
stone •police inspector, 13111
'loydd, who says that for 'a
•
swim to be officially recognized
the aspirant must "walk into the
sea from the shore of departure
and swim across the Channel
until his (or her) feet actually
touch the shore on the opposite
coast." Such a ruling summer-.
fly disposes of doubtful claims
by character's who disappear
from one coast at night and bob,
up the next morning on the
other side accompanied by ' a
motor launch,
Except .to a record breaker,
swimming the Channel has lit-
tle commercial value these days.
The .majority of aspirants are
characters who swim long dis-
tances for the sheer satisfaction
It gives them and the urge to
pit their strength , and skill
against the hazards of a very
historic strip of sea water. In
some cases funds are subscribed
to enable a local lad . or lass to
make good but nearly .all are
self -sponsored and will: pay out
of pocket from $200 upward for •
the privilege, •
The minimum amount that
canbe spent on an attempt is
made up of $150 for the'hire of
accompanying boat and pilot;
$45 for the boat during train-
ing swims; and $15 for .special
food, chart and covering grease.
If the aspirant desires the pres-
ence of a CSA official an addi-
tional six guineas must be ,add-
ed, Only very occasionally do
swimmers succeed at their first
attemtps and only a•few at their
second,. So it can be reckoned
that it costs these Channel chal-
lengers,on average around $600.
for the satisfaction of doing
something the hard way in 10
hours or more which they could
do 40. times over the easy way,
by plane, in something like 10
minutes or less,
Fifty 'Years Of
Flame=Diving
'Slim Ella ' Carver ranks
among the world's most glam-
• orous• grandmothers: ' Yet at
sixty-four, when most women
.are content, to stay put, 'she
regularly climbs to ninety -foot.
]adder,'' sets fire to. herself: —
and jumps,
Her four• grandchildren think
'that she ought to take things
easy,. tending her little caravan
home and knitting, But Ella
revels ' in being the world's
champion' flame -diver and says
•.that she expects still • to be able
to fire -jump, do the splits and
turn cartwheels at seventy.
Recently, 'this startling old
lady celebrated her - 34,000th
flame -dive and her birthday on
the same day. .Instead of light-_
Ing the candles or her birth -
CANADA'S FINEST
CIGARETTE
day -cake, she climbed the div-
ing ladder, set light to the pet -
1 -soaked pads on her shout
and made her uitlal dive
t4 a tank Of flame,
"It's nothing," she says,
Tlfty years ago Ella saw it
poster advertising a ,wild west
' show' depicting agirl on a horse
diving into 'a pool of water, "I
bet I could do that," Ella told
• her school friend, •
In the circus manager's office,
however, she learned that there
were no vacancies for horse
divers, but the manager offer-
ed t r train her as a flame -diver.
Ella literally dived at the
chance!
Though ' most people think it
a wonder that she has lived to
be a grandmother, Ella scoffs at
the risks. She has been in hos-
pital several times for injuries
sustained when hitting the wa-
ter at the wrong angst„ Only
last year she bumped the side
of the• tank and was dragged
from the water unconscious.
Once she hit the bottom of
the canvas and metal tank —
and escaped death only by
twisting her body in the water
to absorb the shock of the im-
pact. And in her fifty years of
i flame -diving she has never once
been burned! •
ONE OUT OF 18,000 — • Jean
'Seberg, 17 -year-old, hos won
the role. of "Saint Joan" in the
projected screen version of Ber-
nard. Shaw's play. Producer-
director • Otto Preminger picked
Joan after a 37 -day competition,
.which called forth 18,000 ap-
plications ' from t h e United
States and Canada. The film
will be shot in London, Eng-
land, next January.
You cant qo
ALLOOT(
A
.9-
1
•These 'days nest people work under
pressure, worry. more, sleep leu. The
strain on body and brain makes physical
fitness easier to lose—harder to regain.
Today's tense living, lowered resistance,
overwork, worry—any of these may elect
normal kidney action. When kidneys Set
out of order, excess acids and wastes
remain in the, system. Then ..backache,
disturbed rest, that "tired•aut" heavy.
heeded feeling often follow, That', the
time to take. Dodd'. Kidney Pills. Dodd's
stimulate the 'kidneys to.' normal action.
Then you feel better—sleep better—work
' better. Ask for Dodd's Kidney Pills at
any drug counter. S3
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
AGENTS WANTED
00 INTO BUSINESS for yourself. Sell
exclusive houaeware products and , op -
name wanted by every houeeholder,
sse items aro not . sold in stores,
ere Is no competition, Profits up to
ppppb� Writo lmmedlalely for free color
Sataloguo with retail pprices shown,
eparate confidential wholesale price
will be included. Murray Sales, 3022
St, Lawrence, Montreal,
ARTICLES FOR SALE
NAME ilrand Watches at Wholesale!
Send details name, model, slat price,
picture if possible for lowest quotation.
Northwest Gems, 2819 North Warner,
Tacoma.7 Washington.
CUT prices on all new electric razors,
Schick, Remington Norelco Sunbeam.
Guaranteed satisfaction, Write for
complete list, Rex Sales Co., Box 2802,
San Diego 12, California.
TROPICAL Butterflies! Wing • open
exotic, multiple•splendored, 50 differ.
ent, U.S. 55.00, airmailed. Wholesale
outer welcomed. 5. K. Ong, No. 7,
Lane 1358, Chung Cheng Road, Taipei,
Formosa,
• HAND KNITTING YARNS
SAVE up to 30% on first quality yarns,
Large variety. Sent postpaid anywhere
In Canada. For more Information and
shade card send 25f in coln or 6tamps
(deductnhle from first order) to
Alpine Wool Shop, Kitchener, Ont.
HOLLY
(HOLLY. We will send you a generous
supply of beautiful Vancouver Island
holly for your Christmas decorations.
Included will be some gracloua cedar
boughs. C.O.D. or cash prepaid 51.95.
Millstream Hales, 705 Island Highway
Nnnalmo, B.C.
SEW iT YOURSELF
SOiT, cuddly infant gowns of finest
flannelette,' rut and ready to sew,
Package of 5, complete with instruc-
tions for only 51,98, Send Money Order
with name and address, or will ship
C.O.D.
OGILVIE LINE OF ESSENTIALS
Box 153 O'Connor Stenon
Toronto 16, Ontario
BABY CHICKS
WATCH for announcement In this
paper next week of a new sensational
chicken, which we will be producing
next year. This new .chicken will lay
more white shelled eggs, will live bet-
ter, live longer than any other chicken
we have ever offered the Poultryman
in Canada. Full details In next week's
edition. Place your order now for
chicks and turkey poults, All pops•
lar breeds at competitive prices. Cata•
logue. Laying pullets.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS ONTARIO
WE have pullets — wide cholce laying
strains, crosses, Ames In -Cross etc, Be
prepared for Grade A, Large egg
markets In '57. Broilers; cockerels.
Order ahead, altho each week we
have some on hand. Bray Hatchery, 120
John N„ Hamilton,
HEAVY Breed cockerel bargains,
seven and eight weeks old. Light Sus-
sex
ursex x Red Red x Barred Rock. Light
Sussex x Barred Rock, 515.95 per hun-
dred. Assorted breeds $14.95 per hun-
dred. Also younger cockerels at
lower prices. . Laying pullets. Cata-
logue.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS . ONTARIO
EMPLOYMENT WANTED
MIDDLE AGED couple seek work in
private home or motel. If Interested
write ' S. Patterson, Haidimand West,
Gaspe, Quebec. •
FOR SALE
24 x 42 Mount Forest threshing machine
with chaff blower, used four seasons,
Ross Clubine, 8, 2, Bradford,
200 GOOD young Suffolk breeding •
Ewes from Manitoba. Apply Ken Good.
fellow •Nobleton, Ontario. Phone Bol-
ton 1275.
CHINCHILLA ranch, 28 animals, reg.
!stared all equipment, best offer, eve-
nings or week ends. H. Van Zegeren,
06 Main SL, Millon.
LIVESTOCK
ABERDEEN Angus. Twelve registered,
vaccinated accredited .heifers. 3 bred,
four bulls, All sired by son of . Pros•
pectmere. Bred, cows. Ross Kohler,
Cayuga, Ont,
FARMERS! Save those good cows!
Send 51,00 cash for Information how to
.cure Mastitis and prevent milk fever.
I have cured my own cows of Garget
and have prevented aeveral.from having
milk fever. Mrs. N. Lund, Box, Mayer-
--thorp, Alberta.
MEDICAL '
DIXON'S REMEDY — FOR NEURITIS
AND RHEUMATIC. PAINS,
THOUSANDS SATISFIED
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 Ehln. Ottawa.
51,25" Express Prepaid
MEDIOAL
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE •
BANISIi the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping akin trouble .
Post's Eczema Solve will not dlsa
point you. itching• scaling and bur
Ing eczema; acne, ringworm, pimple
and foot eczema will respond reads
to the stainless, odorless ointment r
gardieas of how stubborn or hopeless
they seem,
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Prices
PRICE $2,50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
3665 Si. Clair Avenue East.
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
CHRISTMAS Special: Instructions, cro-
chet novel lea cozy. Make French typ;�
of rRlordanb 1725 or West Weat dollar
Avenul,
Spokane 11, Washington,
TUCSON Arizona booming! Warm and
dryl Industry Is moving here, writ
shouldn't you? Jobe galore) Relie
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Columns of jobs) Write for complete
classified adds 51.00. Opportunitiel
Agency, 426 E. 7th Street, Tucson,
Arizona, U.S.
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JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
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Illustrated catalog Free
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MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
358 moor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St., Hamilton
72 Rideau St„ Ottawa
"PEL'T'ING and Fleshing Tips"—Money
making advanced techniques on band.
ling raw mink and muskrat pelts.
Pamphlet 52.00 postpaid. Bial, 904 E.
Tipton, Seymour,Indiana.
WITCHCRAFT Works! Send for a •
citing brochure "New Ideas in Wltc •
craft", Send 53,00 cash to: Secre
Wisdom, Box 446, Crewe, Virginia,
USA.
OPPORTUNITIES
MEN and WOMEN
AGT•TELEGRAPHERS In demand. Me
wanted :now. We train and secure
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courses. Free folder, ,
SPEEDHAND' ABC Shorthand guano
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study. Free folder. Casson System ####
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Evgs. CL. 1.3954.
PATENTS
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Com p an y,
Patent Attorney,. Established 1890,
600 University Ave. Toronto Patents
all countries.
PERSONAL
'YOUR Mall forwarded confidentially
to you anywhere by Monomark 77
Victoria Street, Toronto. Write now."
51.00 TRIAL. offer. Twenty-five deluxe
iersonal requirements. Latest catalogue
ncluded. The Medico Agency, Box 22,
Terminal !'Q" Toronto Ont.
- SALESMAN. WANTED
W4bTl'MD: A real Ilve salesmen to take
ordaa5 for one of Canada's oldest esti.
blished Chick hatcheries, liberal coin
mission paid Box 146, 123 Eighteenth
• Street, New roionto.
SWINE
QUALITY counts in any livestock eo
deavour. Just recently a buyer fro
Mexico chose Landrace Swine Farm
make an initial purchase of two oui
standing sows and one boar. We hay
the reputation for having one of .th
best and largest Imported herds t
Canada. Immediate 'delivery on ope
gilts, weanling gilte, serviceable boars
• four month old and .weanling boast
Guaranteed in pig sows. Catalogue,
FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM
FERGUS • • ONTARIt
WANTED
USED Correspondence School Cour
bought, sold, rented and exchanpp
Austin E. Payne, 162•W McKittriok,
Kenh•We, N.S. '
ISSUE47 — 195
ITCH
or money bock
Vcry first use of soothing, cooling llqul4
D.D.D. Prescription positively relieve!
raw red Itch—caused by eczema, rasher, .
scalp irritation, chafing—other Itch troubles,
Greaseless, stalnlers. 390 trial bottle mut
satisfy or money back. Don't suffer. Ask •
your druggist for P. 0, 0. PRESCRIPTION.
mml
STOPPED
IN A JIFFY.
the
A great soul
prcfcrs
moderation
-S 'E 'N 'F C .A
$ 8.C.--4.D.6S )
ouse of Seagram
Men who .think of tomorrow practice moderation today
PAR 10
•
ummummunimimminimmusimmommir
IP'
FOOD MARKETS
AmilerA
AYLMER TOMATO SOUP , , , .21U -0Z. TINS 21c
SWIFT'S PREM 2 TINS 69c
LIBBY'S DEEP BROWN BEANS 2 20.Oz. Tins 39c
--- EXTRA SPECIAL ---
CHOCOLATE MARSHMALLOW COOKIES,
29c PER LB.
27 MORE SHOPPING DAYS 'TILL ---
It's Closer Than You Think --- So
We have all Your Needs for That CI•IRISTMAS
CAKE or PUDDING:
Fruits, Peels, Nuts, Cherries, Etc.
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER,
Londesboro News
Mr, and Mrs, Harold Johnston of her daughter, Doris, in Hamilton.
London visited with his fall K, Me. Miss Anne Fairservlce, sf Detroit,
Fred Johnston and Mrs, Ruddell on spent the week -end with her parents,
Sunday. Air. and Mrs, Robert Fairservice, Oth•
Mr, Almond Jamieson of Belgrave er visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Fairser-
v•ith Mr. and Mrs. Earl Grunt, !vice were Mr, and Mrs. Percy float
Mr. Thos. Oliver and daughter, Awl- of Lucknow, and Mr. and Mrs, Me-
t ey, with Mrs, Eleanor Throope, end Laughlin, of Detroit.
Mrs. 11. Wells. I
Mrs. Angus McLeod and Mrs. 1.Mr. and Mrs. Wnr. Addison are
L3vis, of Clinton, with Mr. and Mr:. speeding a few days with Mr, and Mrs.
(:has. Vcdden. Cl:fiord Addison.
Messrs. Cliff Sanndercuek and Bill j Mr, and Mrs, John MacFarlane and
Leiper are on a hunting trip in the Nancy, and Mr. and Mrs. Easom of
13racebridge area, !Clinton, spent Sunday with Mr. And
Mrs, Nelson Lear spent a week with :Mrs, George McVittie,
0+4 -N4 -44-4-F4• H 4-•-•-••-•-+•+f-H114-• +N+• -4+N -••-4-s-• ••+4 e
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
YOUR BEAUTY — YOUR BUSINESS AND MINE
STOP AT THE
B B B
FOR APPOINTMENTS PHONE 113, the convention at Guelph, Oct. 22.23-'L4.
IN4++••++•+444- 4- *•• ••44++'4+4+-4• •4•'-•+44-M•+4'"441 Mesion enselion at Duet,elpJoan and Will.
cal
Hamilton, "The Wayward Wind"; Sola,
Mrs. Harold, Smalldon, "Oh, I'm Sev-
enty --Two Boys"; John Simpson, Har-
monica, aeccmpanled by Joyce Hani-
Ilton on piano; Gail Storey, step danc-
ing, with Mrs, John Henderson at the
Red E3 White Food Market
further
Lunch was orved, dunce far
further particulars for our dance anti
SHOP RED WHITE AND SAVE euchre to he held soon.
Phone 9 "The Best For Less" We Deliver
Mr, and Mrs. George Dundas of Wa'-
ton, and Mr, and Mrs. Willis Dundas, of
Seaforth, spent the week -end with Mrs.
Green Giant Niblet Corn , , , , , , , .... , , 2 Tins 33c Ruby Dundas and family, of Glencoe.
Mr. ,nd Mrs, Ron Humelin of OHM)
. , were week -end guests at the home of
• York Brand Dessert, Pears (20 oz.) fUr 31c the tatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jan
bottle) ... , , , , , , 2 for 41c Vonvllel,
. Mr. and Mrs. Ken 'Travis ofPort
Pea Soup (28 oz. tin)
• Libby's Catchup (11 oz, 3 for 49c Elgin spent u few days with Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Travis.
Treesweet Orange Juice (18 o7,.) ... , . , , , , Tin 43c Mr. Wayne N1bMichtel of Windsor
'spent the week -end with his parents,
Treesweet Grapefruit Juice (48 oz.) Tin 35c ;; Mr. and Mrs. Robert McMichael,
Miss Yvette VanPaucke, nurse -in•
trainingat Kitchener-Wateriot hospt-
Clark's Porketi Beans (20 oz.) 2 tins 35c tal spent the week -end with her par-
Delmonte Pineapjlle & Grapefruit Juice " ents, Mr. and Mrs, Adolph VanPoucke
(48 oz.) Tin 39c Mr, and Mrs. Herb Travis, Mr. aria
Mrs. Stewart Humphries, end Mr, and
Aylmer Tomato Juice (20 fez. tin) , .... , . 2 for 29c Mrs. Stewart McColl, spent the week-
end in Toronto.
Libby's Rosedale Tomato Juice (48 oz.) 2t1C Mr, nd Mrs, Ted Bunt and family,
who have been residing on the Stone
t1
Libby's Deep Browned Beansfarm have moved to the 17th con-.
2tins 35c cession of Grey where they have pur-
FRESH FRUITS, VEGETABLES, chased „ f:rm .fran Mr. J. Richt, Mr,
Bunt will he employed at Monition.
..COQKED MEATS. Bunt
Coutts of 'Toronto, son of Mr.
+-.-.+••••1-.+14-•+4•+-•4.4.4++44•+14.4.4+•+4+4+4++4++4441+ and Mrs, Earl Coot's', .Ia nl the pant
Iwo weeks with his grandpercnts, 711r,
and Mrs. Andrew Ccutts,
•'NI•MNNk•MNl••IN1I•N/MIuNf,,,,,,~►I ~,,,,MINNVI,omess,.,,, Frank Kirkby, Ciiff„cd iloegy, Icon•
1
1
TDA BLYTH S'VA14DAHb
rr�r■r..rilt
PERSONAL INTEREST I Sunday,
Cpl. and Mrs, Harold Philips of To- Mr, F, Stoeit of Workworth visited AT WORK OR PLAY, HAVE PEP EACH DAY
.
wJlh Rev, and Mrs. Bren deVrie over �
ronto, spent the weekend with his I the wcck•end, •
' parents, Mr, and Mrs J. -H, Philips, Sgt, Phil Philips and Sgt, Louts Fon. To keep that pep, try, one of our vltanliil p).'oducts
Mr. and Mrs. 'Jack" Bailey were
Theyare sure to het) You retain viin,
visitors over the week-enu.
thine, of Camp Borden, spent the wcoh•. i Y
Mr. Lloyd Welsh of Burlington spent end with the formers p.rcnis, Mr. and vigor and' vitality
the week -end with his rents, Ms,. Mr$, J, H. Philips,
and Mrs. Albert Walsh. Mrs, Robert Craig is visiting her One -a -Day` Tablets (vitamin A & D)• $1.35,
son -In-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs,
Mr. and Mrs, Gruver Clore oast Sieve Foltz .and daughter of Hamilton, One -a -Day Multiple Tablets ... ... $1,40 and $2.50
daughters were recent visitors with I Miss Edna Doer, .who recently re.
• their parents, Mr, and Mrs. Groverr •
Clare and Jon, of Gan+uvpquo, turned home after- being n patient lin $ Cod -Liver Oil Capsules (100's) $1.35
Mr, and Mrs. fiGaniu Wallace and Victarla Hospital, London, for tun days, t
-
daughter, of Brampton, were week-ena
Is spending this week with her broth- Vi-Cal-lr er 12 Capsules . , . , . , .. , . $L95 and $4.95
visitors with the former's parents, Mr, er-in-low, and sister, Mr, and Mrs, Ar- ,
and Mrs. Irvhtc Wallace. Their
nold Roney of Mitchell, Vitasol M Capsules (high potency) $4.80
d:ughler, Nita Jt an, was uric of five Miss Hazel _Pelts, of Londlin, spent ;
1 children to be baptized at the morn- the week -end with her mother, Mrs. J. taeiiplex Capsules (for folks 50 yrs. &Older) $2.95
Ing service in Blyth United Church on Pelts, Bexel Capsules (for children) $2.98
News • C)f Waltian Wampoe's Etract Cod Liver •,.,,., .,.. • X1.35
Maltlevol (for extra vitamins) r 1a2.Q0
trsrw.rsrs'
,wedit§ttay, fay. 21b 1
NN S-1- 'f•.•.4-.74+0-Mr'0-e' 4.4
MISSION RAND
Iserited to them by Glen McNichol. Miss
Lots Godkln, sister of the bride, enter -
The November meeting of the Mission talned the audience with step -dancing
Band of Duff's United Church was held which was greatly enjoyed by all, Mus-
Sund;y morning In the fellool roonb! lc was furnished by Wilbce's orches•
with Mrs. Gordon McGavin In charge tea,
and Ann Achilles at the piano, The I A number of ladies from Walton at-
devational period, wHh Joan Hamilto-, tended a very interesting Huron County
seting as President, opened with hymn I Women's Atstttute Rally at Crunbrnoh
53, followed by all repeating the Lord's Community Hall on Monday afternoon
Prayer in unison. The secretary, Mar• last, One of the highlights of the at-
lon Turnbull, read the minutes of the; ternoon session was the presentation ut
last meeting, Mrs. McGavin read as
story, "Babies in Korea, The Scrip- a scholarship to bliss Mary Whyte, of
lure, Psalm 23, was taken by Audrey Seaforth, who has completed eight
!1JcAlichucl;'follm+'ed by hymn '171. Iu•
home -making courses, Last.ycar Miss
stead of a 'White Gift service It was i Whyte attended McDonald Hall, Guelph
and 19 at present n student at Strat-
ford Teacher's College.
-Miss Olene Dundas spent the week-
sembled in their cl:sses having as their end with friends In Kitchener,
tecchcr•s •Mrs, R. Achilles, Mrs. G. Me.
Gavin end Mrs, T. Dunda3. The meet- AUTUMN THANK—OFFERING
decided to give articles suitable for ' u
hale to be sent to Korea, Stamps wet
also collected, The members then ns-
,
•
R.D.PHILP,Phm,8
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, 11'ALI..PAPER »— PIIoNT 20, BL' T1I
r•► •+1'•'4+••4+•+1.1+441 0-4•141-10444444-M44•1+4N4+•M••i*f t+444
1
ing closed with hymn No, 4 and prayer The Autumn Thnnlcoffering meetln,;
The CG IT were guests at the Win- of Duffs United Church was held In ' '
throp mei ting Friday evening when the auditoriwn of the church Monday I
the Senior girls were presented with I evening. Ladles of Bethel, Winthrop,
L.nynrds, As it was a celebration of ,
the 40th birthday of CC1T nationally, I Duffs McKillop. Moncrief, Union anti
the girls presented a history of con'Walton Anglican, were invited guests
for the occasion, The devotional per
modelling the various uniforms and
iod was conducted by the President,
camp togs from 1056, Mrs, R. McMichael, 1st vice, Mrs, C,
A large number from the surround,Ritchie, and 2nd vice, Mrs. A. McDon-
ing distrlct attended the Royal Winter old. The visitors were welcomed by '
Fulrat 'Toronto last week, • Mrs. McMichael rind also the gue;t .,
FARMER'S UNiON
A successful 0. F, Union Euchre ann
•Baz:ar was held in Winthrop Hall,
Friday evening. Euchre prizes: Milton
Dietz, most games, Mrs. Harold Storey,
most g•.unes, Mr, Harold Smalldoa,
lone hands, Mrs, Orville Storey, lone
hands, Juan Hamilton and John Shnp-
son, consolation prizes. Bob Taylor, 01
Vurni, sub -director fur Huron County
gave a full and interesting account of
'444+++h+-• 4-+1-+► ► •- • +• ••++•-4++4+4-►•H••-+4 44 N•4++• •-N4444. •
Stewart's
4
•
t
1
1
NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER YOUR
MOLASSES
1VIIILE THIS PRESENT STOCK LASTS
45( per gallon
JUST ARRIVED -•- A CARLOAD OF
SOYA BEAN MEAL
$71.00 per ton
Howson & Howson Ltd.
BLYTH - - WINGHAM
'Better Feeds Mean Bigger Profits'
old Bennett and Nelson Marks, left fo'
French River on Sunday where they
will spend several days hunting.,
About 3') Wren left here Monday
morning to spend a th,' ut Maple, Out.
The trip was arranged by Mr. Het't.r
Travis and sponsored by a feed com-
pany,
' MIT. Nelson Marks and Sharon ,pent,
several days with Mr. and Mrs, Har-
vey Holley, Seaforth.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Lamont. and family,
pct London, were visitors at the' home
of Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Porter.
The November mcrting of the Wal-
ton Women's Institute will be held in
the C•tmmmunity Hall •un 'Thursday ev•
ening, Nov. 23rd. Conveners will be
Mrs, Jack Brynns and Mrs. Ross Me -
Call. The tall call will be nnswereo
by members displaying the oldest ar-
ticle In their possession.
COUPLE FETED AT RECEPTION
A large crowd attended a reception In
Walton Community Hall nn Wednesday
evening, Nov, 14th, for fytr, nt;d Mrs,
Murray Dennis, During lunch hour the
newlyweds were called to the plat -
.v...• = form and an address was rend by Jerry
Ryan and a well-filled purse was pre -
speaker, Miss M. Palethorpe, of Lon-
don, formerly of Korea. Numbers
were given by Mrs. F. Smith (solo),
Moncrief, and Miss Jean Hillin (plan)
solo), Bethel, Mrs. H. 13, Kirkby in-
troduced the speaker of the evening
and in her talk referred to different
misslonarlcs who had gone from 1h'
surrounding communities. In Miss Pale-
thorpe's opening remarks, she stated
that she had spent the last 40 years 10
missionary worlc,•mostly in Korea, with
the exception of 12 yenrs spent in WMS
offices in Toronto after she had been
evacuated from Korea during the Se- 1
. cond World War, Korean people cel'
long-suffering, notch sinned against,!
being n weak .country surmutded by
strong neighbours. Korea is like Pal-
estine, afraid of her neighbouring
countries. There are about 300,000 was
widows and 100,000 orphans, having
lost both parents in the war, leaving
many homes destitute and in want. '
'!'here Is the greatest admiration for =
Korean women under terrible condi-
tions, but do not complain and take :
things as they- come, trying to keep
families together. MIs3 Palethorpe
stressed the need of sending bales to.'
Korea, Since the war they Eire not
able to obtain proper clothing and food I , .
and rely on the parcels sent (rain otter
countries, During the war the sol- •
diers took a great Interest in the chit- _
dren and built orphanages for thenp,
Mrs. G. McGavin thanked Miss Pale
thorpe on behalf of the ladies, expres•
sing appreciation fur her very vivid
word picture of Korea. Mrs. G. Mc-
Kenzie of Duffs McKillop, favoured
with a reading. Mrs. Mac Macintosh
of Union, a reading, also Mrs. G. Case
'+4+•4-•4.4-44 •+• 0144+444 • 4.4+0-044 ►+e•
•
STOP f! SHOP
at Holland's Food Market This Week -End.
Mixed Cookies ' 1 Lb. 29c
Spanish Salted Peanuts .... ,, - 1, Lb. 29c
White Cake Mix (Robin I'Iood) 19c
Sun Blest Peas 2 for 25c
Club House Peanut Butter 16 Oz. 33c
Maraschino Cherries 1 Lb. 49c
York Pork & Bettns (20 oz.) 2 for 29c
Buy Your Christmas Baking Supplies Early:
Glace Cherries, Fruit Peel, Mixed Peel, Almond I'e-
, cans, Walnuts, Raisins, Dates, Currants, Etc,
IIoI!and's Food Market
AND LOCKER SERV ICE.
Telephone 39
WE DELIVER
• 044 44 4-+4 44 .4444-414 44.4 4.44 4#4 .444444-•44 44+4+44444444-
.11
+
VODDEN ELECTRIC SHOP
YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER
"You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
START GIFT GATHERING EARLY!
We have a wide selection on hand from 69c up.
Make a deposit and have them laid away now.
FOR THE HOME:
See•our New Westinghouse 30" Range,
compact, automatic,
with the Miracle Sealed Oven, at a New IJow Price
PHONE 7182 BLY11I3, ONT.
of Winthrop, a reFding. The meeting lou Women's Institute will 'be held in
closed with a hymn and Rev. W. 111, the Community I1311 on 'Thursday ev-
Thontas pronounced the Benediction, ;ening, Nov, 2'l. The roll call will be
A social half hour followed In Jim 'answered by displaying the oldest ar-
rclhool room where lunch was served. I titles In your possession, Everyone is
'l'he November meeting of the Wal- welcome,
FOR TAKE -OFF
fRgM THE WORLD'S FINEST
AIRCRAFT TECHNICIANS
RCAF Training means Top Training!
There are immediate openings right now to train
in these important aviation trades:
AERO -ENGINE • RADIO -RADAR • INSTRUMENT
ELECTRICAL • ARMAMENT • AIRFRAME
There's a great future in aviation: make aviation
your career --in the RCAF! Get all the facts now
about RCAF training, pay and other benafite,
See, write or phone the RCAF CAREER COUNSELLOR
at your nearest RCAF Recruiting Unll or write direct to
DIRECTOR PERSONNEL MANNING, .
RCAF Headquarters, Ottawa,
•