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The Blyth Standard, 1958-04-09, Page 1VOLUME 70 - NO. 15. Celebrated 55th Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs, James Galbraith, Din- pley Street, Blyth, celebrated their 55th wedding anniversary with a din- ner on Saturday, April 5th, 'Mrs. Galbraith was born in 1878, the former Mary Priscilla Ann Turnbull, nt Mono Township and Camilla, Duf- ferin County, a descendant of early , pioneers in Canada since 1823, Mr. Galbraith 'was born In Co. Down, !ro- tund, in 1874, and came to Canada in 1898, Married in Toronto in 1903 by the. Rev, C. 0, Johnston, Mr, and Mrs. Galbraith resided there for eight years, where Mr, Galbraith was a superin- tendent an the Canadian Express Co., now the Canadian Natiohal Express. In 1911 they purchased a farm orig- inally owned by Sir IWilllam Allen, near Oriole, in North York County, They held the original decd of paielt- ment. General farming occupied Mr, Gal- braith for about 33 years. In latter years he specialized in pure bred jer- seys. Mrs, Galbraith found time an her busy .life as farmer's wife to take part in the United Church Sunday School, the Women's Auxiliary and the Red Cross. In 1944 they retired from the farm to take up residence at Lan- • sir.,;, Ont„ later coming to Blyth in 1949. At the celebration were their two daughters and two t;:ns, nine of their eleven grandchildren and their one great grandson, Present were; Mr, Samuel Clements Galbraith and Mrs. Galbraith, of Blyth, Betty Ann, John and Mary Lynn. P..abert is attending Queen's University, Kingston, Ont., and was unable to attend. Their eldest son, Mr. Thomas. Leslie Galbraith, of Thornhill, was present with his family, Shirley (Mrs. Kenneth Macintosh and WI:. Macintosh) ' David, Peter . and Richard. Kenneth was unabe to be present as he holds a position at Fort William; Ont. Also attending was their daughter, Mrs, H. B: Sampson, and Mr. Sampson,' of WilLowdale, and their daughter, Mrs, Evan .Allan, of Desenanto, and granddaughter, Mrs. Eugene F. Gordon and great grandson Wdyne Gordon. Anothergrandchild, Kathryn Jane, (Mrs. S. C. Carisen) was not present as she, is living in Van - The dinner `table was attractively decorated in green and gold with or- chid shade mum centrepiece, After the toasts _the twh tier 55th wedding cake; decorated in green and gold and made by iMt s. Galbraith, herself, was cut by the bride and groom of 55 years ago, Hands were joined by the family and they sang "Auld Lange Syne" and "For They are Jolly Good Fellows." At the same time at another table the younger generation celebrated the great grandson Wayne Gordon's sev- enth birthday with a birthday cake and Easter decorations, A happy time was enjoyed as Mr. and Mrs. Galbraith spent the afternoon and evening; with their family gather- ed around them. Group 3 W. A. Meeting Group 3 of the W,A. met at the home of Mrs. Vincent, April 1st, at 2:30 with 15 members and 4 visitors present. Miss. McKenzie opened the meeting with a poem entitled "As We Walk." Hymn 105 was sung, and scripture read by Mrs, W. Radford. Prayer by Mrs. McKenzie, and,, a reading by Mrs. Grace McCallum. Two splendid con- tests were conducted by Mrs. MLGill, several aprons were sold. Hymn 98, Beneath the Cross of Jesus, was sung. Hostesses Mrs. Brown and Mrs, W. Radford served a delicious lunch. The meeting closed with God be with you till we meet again. Next meeting to be held at Mks. W. Radford's home on May 6th, • AMONG THI' CHURCHES Sunday, April 13, 1958, ST, ANDREW'S i'itESISYTER1AN CHURCH 1 ph. -Church Service and Sunday School, Rey, D. J.. Lane, B,A,, Minister, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Myth, Ontario. Rev. W. D. Clark, (Minister. 10;15 a:m,-Sunday School. 11;15 a.m.-Morning Worship, ANGLICAN' CIIURCH Trinity, Blyth -10130 atm.•-,Matttna. St. Mark's, Auburn -12 noon--nt- tins. Trinity, Bclgrave430 pan. -Evens song. .in,--Evon- song, CHURCH OF non Met'onnett Stteat, 131yth, Special Speaker, 10 a,m.-Stinday School, 11 a.m.-Morning Worship. Authorized as second-class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa I.. ' Blyth Municipal Council The regular meeting of the Blyth Council was held in Memorial Hall, on Monday evening, at 8 parr., with reeve Merritt, councillors Cook Elliott,Air- service and Howes present, Motion by Howes .and Elliott that minutes of the last regular meeting be adopted. Carried. Mr. Bruce Sully, of Goderich, was present to discuss with council the pur- chase of a grader, the estimated price being $4,000. pats was left for further consideration. Motion by Howes and Cook, that Blyth Council dispute the claim of Mr. Gilbert Nethery, Re - garbage dump. Carried. Motion by Fairservice and Elliott, that correspondence be filed, Carried. A request was received from Blyth School Board that some gravel be sup- plied for school property. Motion by Howes and Fairservice, that we adopt Daylight Saving Time, to commence on Sunday, April 27th, at 12:01 a,m. and end on Sunday, October 26th, at 12:01 n.m. Carried, Motion by Fairservice and ,Howes, that we accept the Auditor's report for 1958, Carried. The report shows a deficit of 1400. for 1957. BLYTH, ONTARIO, WJD NESDAY, APRIL 9, 1958. Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. r - • t PERSONAL INTEREST" OBITUARY Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Philp visited "9n Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Philp, of Loncl:n. , Miss Josephine Woodcock spent the week -end with her sister, Mrs, Dawson, of Toronto. Mr, end Mrs. Jack Creighton visited with the former's bother, Mr, Writ. Creighton, of London, on Sunday. Mrs, Pearl 4V.IcNal1, . Goderich, Mr. Donald ' flunking, Auburn; Connie Howatt, Londesboro, Mrs, J. Pierce, Blyth, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Loo Racine and family, of Amherstburg, and in Detroit, on Good Friday. Mrs, R. R. Branion; of Whittswpo&, Sask., visited a few days last tweets with her cousins, Mr. and Mrp, John Collieson. Mrs, W. Lyons, of Toronto, spent the Easter week -end with Mr, W. N. Wat. son, Anne Jeannette and Paul. Cpl. Harold and Mrs. Phillips, Of Toronto, Mr, and Mrs, Gerald Harris, Kristine and Kraig, of Southampton, 'Mfrs, Ann McCreary, of Ithaca, N, Y„ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Vincent and Mark, Mir, and Mrs, John Medd, David and Jimmie, of Clinton, spent the week -end, with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Har- old Phillips, Paige, and Mrs. Jessre Holland and Del. Cpl. Harold Phillips leaves for Egypt The clerk was instructed to write on April 22nd for a year, Sgt. Phil It'he Department of Highways MRS, WILLIAM GIBSON Mrs, William Gibson passed away in Wingham Hospital on Mbnday, April 7th, after being a patient in the hos- pital since last May. She was formerly Mabel Maud iMlcCall, daughter of the late Alex and Elizabeth (Daley) McCall, and was born on concession 7, Morris Township, She was in her 81st year, In February 1914, she married Wil- liam Gibson, and they farmed on Con- cession 9, Morris, until fifteen years alga, when they took up residence on Dinsley street, . Blyth. Mr. GIbson passed away two years later. Surviving are two brothers and one sister; S..B. McCall, of Toronto; J. S. McCall, of Stratford; Mrs, Walter (Belle) Perry, of Meriden, Connecticut, and a number of nieces and nephews. The funeral service wus held on Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock from the Tasker Mhmorial chapel conducted by Rev. W D. Clarke, with internment in Blyth Union Cemetery. Pallbearers were: Glenn Gibson, Alex Speiran, Emerson Wright, Bailie Parrott, Cecil Wheeler, William: Cockerline. W. I. Annual Meeting in connection with sidewalk on Queen Phillips goes to sea with the Aircraft Sunshine Sisters of Blyth Wo - Carrier Bonaventure for a period Hre !men's Institute presented a gala ap- is the only army man on board and is Motion by Howes and Elliott, that acounts as read be paid. Carried. John Bailey, part salary, st foreman, $110.00; John Bailey, pt foreman 'and caretaker, 64.93; H. Letherland, weigh - 'master and firing, 50.00; Blytit Post- master unen,p. Ins, stamps, 3.64; Gerald Heffron,, garbage coll., 161.50; Co, of Huron, gravel, grading, 110.00; Elliott Ins. Agency, 16.00; A.M, Harper, audit account, 400.00; Thos. Lawrence, 300: Earl Noble, st work, 28.80; Wesley , Thuell, st work, 28.80; A. Patterson, 7.00; J, Hesselwood, 10.00; Hydro Com.. st. lights, 249.60, Motion by Elliott and Cook, that we do now adjourn. Carried. George Sloan, Clerk, East Wawanosh Council The Council. met April 1st, with all the: members 'present, the Reeve' pre- ; siding. The minutes of the meeting held on 'Mtrch 6th, were read and adopted on motion by Buchanan and ! Purdon, f The County w:scd inspector was 'present. The council agreed to have the county spray Leafy Spurg and Bucktlurn again this year. Moved by Hanna -McGowan, that the road and general accounts as presented be passed and paid. Carried, Moved by Purdon-Buchanan, that the Warble Fly Inspector charge 5 cents a head for inspection on all cattle that are brushed. Carried. An agreement between the council and a ratepayer for cling some re- fotfstatton was read and signed by the Reeve and Clerk. By -Law No. 9 was read the first and second times confirming the above. Moved by McGowan -Hanna, that By- law No. 9 be read the third time and glassed. Carried, Following are the acci:unts paid: ROADS -Stuart McBurney, salary, 179.00, bills paid, 2.30; Wm. T. Irwin, wages, 44.05; Fred Deacon, wages, 4.25; Murray's Machine Shop, welding chains, 1.25; Wingham Tire Service, 'tire 1 30 grader, 57.65; Can. Oil Co., fuel and ori, 161.28; W. C. Becker Equipment Co., 562 grader repair, 53.17; Dom, Road Mach. Co., 562 grader j ropair, 70.55; N. S. Gibson, insurance, 2.53,32; H. Kerr Construction, snow re- moval, 140.00; Almond Jamieson, snow removal, 7.00; George E. Radford, snow removal„24,511; The Wingham Advance Times, adv. gravel tenders, 3,42; Total for Roads, $1,001.74. GENERAL -Wendell McCallum, 1 fox .bounty, 1.001 H. C. MacLean, pre- mium Treasurer's Bond, 12.00; Total for general, 13.00, Moton by Buchanan-Purdon that the council adjourn to meet May 6th„ at one o'clock at the Belgrave Community Centre. Carried, Orval E. Taylor,' R. H, Thompson, Reeve. Clerk, Presbyterian W.M.S. Meet The W. M. S. of St, Andrew's Pres. bytericfn Church held their Easter Thank -Offering on Tuesday, April 8th, in the church, when Auburn W. M. S. and Belgrave W. M. S. were guests, to hear Mrs. Rev, MacDonald, of Hensel', give a talk on India also it very inspir- ing Easter message. Mrs, Phillips, of Blyth, gave WOO wonderful messages in song, Mrs. Hosford and Miss Toll had charge of the devotional period. Mrs. Shortreed thanked all who took part. A very lovely lunch was served. Mrs, Brndnock, of Auburn, and Mirs, Dun- bar, of Belgrave, thanked Blyth ladles to the Helicopter, pearance when each Sister was pre- attachedsented with a smart Easter bonnet iM'rs, Hannah Eanigh and daughter, marking her Identity as each one re - Mrs. Rhea Carter, of Tottenham, Mr. vented her secret Sister, and was fit - Russel Gidley, Mrs. E. Heath, of Torr ted with a suitable bonnet at the an - onto, spent Easter with Mrs. Edytii� ! nuel meeting in Memorial Hall which Sturgeon and Miss Pearl Gidley. :commenced with a bounteous pot luck Miss Manaus Beekmnn, of Byron, 39 supper, spending a couple of days this week ! Names were again drawn for the with IMltsses Johann and Marianne de Vries,• •, `Sunshine SIsters for 1958-E9, and a j Mr, and Mrs. Freeman Tanney and vote of thanks given to Mrs. K. Taylor family, of Teeswater, spent Easter Sun: and Mrs. L Badley for making all the ,: lovely tints. day with the former's mother, Mrs;Mrs. L. Scrimgeour, convenor of the 'Mary Taylor. nominating• committee Mr. and Mrs, Donald McNeil, Don presented the na and Joy, of Toron'b, spent the following slate of officers, which was week -end with Mr. and Mrs, Welling- accepted; past president, Miss Jose • - ten 41QbNa1l, Cheryl and Brian. pain Woodcock; president, Mrs. Ken• - Miss Viva Cole, of HagersvlMr, nett Taylor; 1st vice-president, Mrs. . and Mrs. Clayton Volkes,< Port Dover,. Wellington Good; 2nd vice-president, spent the week -end with Mr, and Mire; ,Mrs. Chester Higgins; secretary trees - Jim Scott, Sr, urer, Mrs. Ben Walsh; district director, Mrs. Luella McGowan; branch direct - Mr. and Mrs. Joe_ Marks, Carole, Bri=.,j•s an and 'Brenda, of Windsor, spent the ors, Mrs; Grace' McCnlltim,Clny- holiday week -end with Mks. Mark's ton Ladd, Mrs. S. Chellew, Mrs, Mary parents, Mr, and Mrs. Lorne Scrim- Appleby; publicity, Mrs. Lorne Scrim- geour; auditors ti Rev. D. A. MaKenzie Writes Of A Holiday Week Spent In The Holy land. The following are excerpts from let -,buried. Dr, Gray thinks that they ters written by Rev. Donald McKenzie point to there as Christ's ticanb was really His, or else His was very near there. To -day we travelled north of Jeru- salem as far as Samaria. There is some very beautiful country en route. Most of it is quite hilly, but the Arabs really use every inch of arable land. I got a picture this morning of an Arab farmer plowing with an ox and an ass which illustrates Paul's saying, "Be not unequally yoked together." These farmers will certainly be glad of the rain which is coming this evening, as they need it for the barley which is maturing, and the beans which they are Just planting now. It has been very dry, and it is really too early for the dry season to have started. Jerusalem, March 27, 1958. "On Friday we went to Jerusalem, and crossed over to the Jordon side, Most of the group was scared of going through imanigratien into Jordon at Jerusalem, since Jordan does not rec- ognize Israel. But all went well. The weather while we were in Isra- el was sunny all •the time, and if any- thing a little too warm -between 75 and 90 degrees. Then, almost as soon as we crossed Into Jordon we got cold- er weather, with high winds and some rain, but it has been warmer again the past couple days. , One of our most interesting expert- ences was going up Mt. Gerizim and seeing the place where the Samaritans offer their Passover Sacrifice yearly. You probably remember from reading the gospels the antagonism which ex- isted in the time of Jesus between the Jews and the Samaritans which was a sect split off from the Jews. The Samaritan sect still exists and num- bers 335 adherents -about 100 more than they did 20 tears ago according to Dr. Cray. Almost s11 of them live in the village of Nablus south of Samaria, The son of their High Priest took us up the mountain and showed us the place Where the sacrifice is made. It is very interesting that the Jordon government has built a road 'up Mt, Gerizim, . s;a that this small . group can drive to its place of sacrifice. Dr. Gray says, "Look at what the Jordan government does for its minorities, and contrast this with. the Way the Israeli government has treated the Arabs, driving many from their homes. to his family during a recent three week holiday to the Holy Land. Nazareth, Israel, March 19, 1938. "We had a very nice plane ride here - from London to Rome on Sat- Iurday night, and after a days sight- seeing in Rome - the plane from Rome to Tel Aviv on Monday, Mon- dny, when we were flying, it was cloudy most of the time, so we did not see a great deal from the air. The sight-seeing In Rome was very much of a rush, but it was nice to see the irrtoortant sights of that city, even if in a hurry - the very ornate churches, St. Paul's and St, Peters, and quite a contrast to them - the catechombs -- the caves where Christians had to tticc•rship in the early days for fear of persecution. There were also the ruins of Pakan Rome which are very interesting. This is the end of our second full day in Israel. We stayed in Tel Aviv Monday and Tuesday nights in a very beautiful and modern restaurant. On Tuesday morning we went South from Tel Aviv. At J'_ppa, which is really part of modern Tel Aviv, we saw the house which is said to be that of Si- mon the Tanner, where Simon Peter once stayed. Going south from there we saw a lot ei country near the coast which was in Philistine hands in the early days of the Hebrew settlement, ,the hill where Sampson was born, and the valley where David killed Goliath. One place where we spent quite a pit of time was Tel Lachish-that is the mound time, the ancient Hebrew town of Lachish was discovered in excava- tions 20 years ago, Dr. Gray, our guide, was in on those excavations, so he had a lot to say about Lachish. Going north from Tel Aviv to -day, we saw the sight of Caesarea on the sea, an important town in New Testa- ment times, and the place where Paul was in prison before the was sent to Rome. There is nothing there but the ruins. We also saw what has been ex- cavated of the ancient tc 'n of Meg- iddo. You can see there the silo where the Kings of Israel stored the grain they received in taxes from the pet: le. Also -stables have been dis- covered there which some say were the stables for Solomon's horses. From Megiddo here is a very nice view of Another interesting experience was Mount Carmel to the west where yesterday when we went to Qumran Elijah had the c:'rttcsts with the pro- on the Dead Sea. and saw the ruins .= of Baal, Mt. Gilboa to the east the buildings occupied by the sect wr - where Saul died and a vent' beautiful used to live there. You remember that ist valley between Carmel and Megiddo. it was there that the famous Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered. On the same day we also visited the two sites of ancient Jericho -the one that was oc- cupied up until 5110 B.C., and the other which was occupied in Jesus time. Dr. Gras has been giving us lectures in the evening about the significance where Jesus is supposed to have gn:nvn .of these places, and he treally makes up. Both of these places are below the ground, and the guid.a tells you that in those days everyone in Nazar- eth Lived In caves. Of course no sae can know the house where Jesus lived for certain. Nazareth to -day is quite a large town, population about 22,000, mostly Arabs, and I think abut half Moslem and half Christian." geour. ' SVIrs. John Hesselwood, Sr„ spent the Easter week -end with her daugh- ter, .Mrs. Donald Johnson, of London. Mr, and Airs. Murray Scrimgeour, of Tillsonburg, visited with the former's parents, Mr. anti Mrs. Lorne Scrim- geour, and his brother, IMr, Everett Scrimgeour, Mrs. Scrimgeour, Doug and Don, on Sunday. Mr. and M!:s Hilliard McGowan, of Oakville, visited over the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Orval McGovian and Kenneth. Mrs. G. M. Young, of Toronto, vis- ited her mother, Mrs G. Macdonald, and her aunt, Miss Margaret •Hirons, last week, Mr, and Mrs, Frank Walsh, 01 Wil- lowdaie, Mr. and Mrs. iArlurray McDow- ell, of Ashfield, Mr, Lloyd Walsh, of Burlington, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Walsh, over the week -end. Special Services At Trinity Anglican Church A well attended service washeld nt Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, on Good Friday, which was conducted by Rev. Bran de Vries. This was a service of devotions and meditation and the 'Rector's sermon was based' on the "Seven Last Words from the Cross;" At the service of Holy Communion nn Easter Day, an Alter Prayer Book was presented to the church by Mrs. de Vries on behalf of the Altar Guild. This was given in ,memory of Derek Francis Slorach, and was inscribeci: To the Glory of God and in loving memory .of Derek Francis Slorach, be- loved son of Mr, and Mrs. F. Slorach, Blyth, Ontario, and brother of David. Born December 5, 1931, at Rockglen, Sack, Died July 25', 1952, nt Fort McPherson, N.W.T. Presented by the Altar Guild, Easter Day, 1958. The Rector preached an inspiring semen on the true meaning of Easter. The Junior Choir sang the anthem, "By Early Morning Light," and Miss Claire Taylor sang the solo, :The First Easter Morn." BIRTHS LYON -In Clinton Pulte Hospital, on Tuesday, April 1st, 1958, to Mr, , and Mrs, Bert Lyon (nee JoanneBeam)Eas) a son, (Wayne Albert). WALES -At St, Joseph's Hospital, "London, on March 31st, 1956, te, Mr. and Mrs. Glen (Wales (nee Donna Gow) the gilt of a son, John William. Ci,UII GIRLS STAND ON (:t!A;.T) TOMEET Club Girls Stnnd on Guar w:Il 7:30 p.m. -Evening Worship, for their kind invitation, Mra, Goad meet on Friday, April 1801, • t t' Wednesdy, 8 pan. -Prayer and Bible replied and Rev. MacDonald, Hensall, ! home of Mrs. Apgrleby, nt 7:45 I' 6t1�4y, spoke a few words, Girls' please note change of date, Mcg. Donald Howes, . Mrs. F. Bainton; pianist, Mias Pearl , Gidley; assistant pianist, Mrs. W. Cockerline; convenors of standing cent- ! mittees, Agriculture and Canadian In- dustrie:, Mrs, E. Logan, Mrs, A. Nes- bitt; Histori:al Research, Mrs. L. Scrim geour, Mrs. C. hnston; Citizenship and Education, 145 s C. Higgins, (Mrs. Mars Appleby; Home Economics and Health, Mrs, Grace I<.' Callum, Mrs. Maitland Henry; Community Activities and Public Relations, Mrs W. Good, N.i:'s. Gordon McDougall; Resolutions, Miss Josephine iWood•cock, Mrs, Her- old Phillips presided for the election and installed the officers. Miss Wood- cock conducted two contests with MI's. Luella McGowan and Mrs. C. Ladd the winters. The program. closed with a poem by Miss Woodcock. Blyth Legion Meeting At the regular meeting of the Blyth Canadian Legion No, 420, on Thursday, April 3rd, in the' Legion Home, two nd,v members were initiated: Com- rades Harry Tebbutt, of Londesboro, and Stewart Johnston, of Blyth, A donation of ten dollars was voted to the Easter Seal Campaign for Crip- pled Children, and fifteen dollars to the Red Cross. Correspondence included notices of the Zone Meeting in Clinton on April 13, and the District Meeting in Harri- son on May 4. The citizens of Blyth and surround- ing communities are reminded of the wheel chair and hospital bed avail- able from the Legion at any time. Congratulations to Mr. Archie A. Sorters, who celebrates his birthday on Sunday, April 13th Congratulations to Donna Longman who celebrated her 4th birthday on Friday, March 26th, Congratulations to Mr. Idiliton Bruce, of Belgrave, who will celebrate his birthday on Wednesday, April 16th. Congratulations to Mrs. Louis Blake, of Brussels, Who celebrated her birth- day on Sunday, April 6th. Congratulations to Mrs, Sam Deer, t of Auburn, who celebrated her birth - :day on Tuesday, April 8th. Congratulations to Mirs, A. Kirkcon- , nett, of Auburn, wiito celebrates her birthday on Saturday, April 12th. Benefit Dance There will be a benefit dnnce in the Blyth Memorial Hall on Thursday e- vening, April 10. This dance is for :Mn Mervin Govier, who has spent the winter in hospital in Toronto, suffer - Ing from arthritis. Music supplied by !,liar Pierce's Orchestra, Ladies plenso bring sandwiches. Going north from, there, you climb a very high 'hill to enter Nazareth. pe got :• 're about mid afternoon and saw the places traditionally associated with the 'holy far',', They show you the place Where Mary is said to have lived before she was married, and the place Jerusalem, March 22, 1958. "This has been a very pleasant trip but very exhausting, We have had our four days in Israel, and two of our six clays in Jordan. The highlight of the trip in Israel, was I think, on Thursday when we spent half an hour by the shb,re of the sea of Galilee. That country is really beautiful, and you could really feel close to God there. When we were down by Galilee, Dr. Gray told us that he is' pretty sure that he knows within half a mile the place where Jesus called Shnon and Andrew. He tells that by the kind of net they were using, a kind they could only use in shallow water near a spring, Yesterday. our first day In Jordan, we spent the day in Jerusalem. In the the history of this country live, He really knows this country having been here liar several years under the British Mandato, Al! of us were greatly impressed by the beauty and the quietness of the Garden Tonib, Dr. Gray thinks that the tomb you are shown in the church of the Holy Sepulchre is more likely to be genuine. The only guidance you really get front scripture is that the place of crucifixion was outside the wall of Jesus time." Londesboro W. I. Meeting , The Londesboro Women's Institute held their annual meeting.. on Thurs- day afernoon, April 3, 1958. After the regular business part of the meeting the annual report was given and the following slate of officers was brought in by the Nominating Committee: Past President; Mrs. Stanley Lyon: President: Mrs. Edwin ,Wood; 1st vice: Mrs. T. Allen; 2nd vice: Mrs. D. An- derson; Secretary -Treasurer: Mis. E. morning we saw the area of the nn- ;Throop; Assistant secretary -treasurer, clent Jewish temple. You can still see ;Mrs L. Pipe; District Director; Mrs, the huge rock which was probably the 'Stanley Lyon; Pianist: Mrs, C. Vincent; Holies of Mlles In the Temple of Sol- assistant pianist: Mrs. J. Arnttsrong; tamon. I1 is quite an impressive sight Press report: Mrs. W. Howatt; Flower It is under the dome of the rock which and Card Conveners; Mrs. J. Clark, is a Moslem sanctuary. We saw the Mrs, E. Hesk, Mrs, L. Reid, Mrs. L. `spring of Muni, source of ancient Jer- Pipe, Mfrs. J. Lee, Mrs. J. Howatt; usalem's water supply and the gxaol of Auditors: Mrs, C. Vincent, Mrs, B. Siloam to which the Water was brought Shobllnook. Conveners of Standing through a tunnel. In the afternoon we Committees: Agriculture and Cana - went along the Via Dolorosa past the dian Industries: Mrs, C. Crawford; 14 Stations of the Cross. A large part Citizenship and Education: Mrs. L. of the way is just a business street Caldwell; Community Activities and with signs on the sides of the buildings Public Relations: 117!rs, E. Knox; Home telling you you are tit station 5 or 9 Economics and Health; Mrs. P. Carter; • as the case may be, But at the begin- Historical Research and Current Ev ing of the route you cla see suhat is ents: Mrs, R Fairservice; Resolutions: Probably part of the authentic pave- Ma's. E. Throop, Mrs. White installed meet where Jesus was tried. The the officers. 11`hrs. Durnht gate a Eas- route culminates in the beautiful, but ter reading and Ml's, Welibank, Beauty perhaps over ornate. Church of the Councillor, demonstrated her products Holy Sepulchre, in the church the tit- on the mew presidents and Inst. ycar9 ditional places are marked where Je- presidents, Tite hostesses served sus was crucified a'id where he wets lunch, ANNE—*tot Family rat It isn't only romantic young girls who have trouble finding new friends. Presentable young men sometimes find themselves with not a single nice girl on their list, and flounder hopeless- ly about wondering what's wrong with them. One who is old enough to know better has been lonesome for some months, and though blest with worldly goods and proper intentions, he finally begs for hints to the loveless. "I am 28, and must confess that for the past several months I've had to go out alone," he explains, "I am my mother's only son, and at her insistence I have sought girl friends through our church. But either I don't appeal to them or for some other reason, they don't want to go out with me. "My mother insists that today's crop of sweet young things don't want to live Christian lives, They want men who will show them good times in vulgar ways, take them to suspicious places, and generally act the cut-up. "It looks like she is right. "I neither smoke nor drink, but I'm not a prude. I like live- ly girls, and try to keep up with them. Maybe I'm too hard to please, but I do have some ideals left. I pal around with decent men, but they just laugh and say the right girl will come along. But how long must I wait? "I have read your interesting column often, but I don't find any letters from other lonely men." * "Often you must have read * here of nice girls who are * disgusted with modern male * run-arounds that only want to * drink and pet and have no * time for girls who won't fol- * low suit. Their name is legion, * If the girls you meet frown ▪ on wholesome recreations like * movies, the theatre, sports, * concerts, dances and country * hikes, then you are meeting * the wrong kind. * I do not mean to disagree • with your mother, but my long * experience proves there are far • more lonely girls than lonely * men, who long for friendship * of decent chaps like yourself, * Strike out and find them, • Haven't your men friends sis- tti tars or other relatives? Ask them to double -date with you. 6 And talk with your minister; he is more interested in pro- f moting romances than you i think. ! I take it for granted you are tnot a bore. I urge you, though, to cultivate the light touch. I Read and remember amusing • stories and incidents, so you MEI Weeks Sew -Thrifty PRINTED PATTERN Just two main pattern parts plus facings — what could be easier to sew than this Printed Pattern! We know this summer dress couldn't be more flattering — those slim lines are pure magic for your figure! Printed Pattern 4609: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 18, 18. Size 18 requires 31/2 yards 35 -inch. Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted; use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SiZE, your NAME and ADDRESS and the STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eilihteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. • * are fun to be with, Compli- * went a girl on her appear- * once, her dress, her voice, her * sense of humor. Keep up on * the theatre, learn to dance • smoothly, " play a good game * of tennis or golf. And, of * course, never fail in the Uttle * attentions that please all girls, * ' One comment; I suggest you * not flaunt your religious be- * llefs before others; intelligent * young women will sense your • convictions through your man- * ner and general behaviour. It * is easy for one of strong be- * Iiefs to appear smug, and I * am sure you avoid giving that * impry cion, TO ALL READERS; Please do not request this man's name or address. He did not give either. * • • GRANDPARENTS' PROBLEM "Dear Anne Hirst: Several years ago my son-in- law deserted his wife and child- ren, and now he goes scot free, leaving my daughter with all the responsibility, He has never supported the children since. We have done all we could, but as they grow older (and our health is not so good) we find ourselves unable to continue. I know wd.ere he is, and the kind of work he does. (My daughter divorced him lately.) "Where can I go for advice? We cannot afford much expense to force the issue, but if I could eat some action started my daughter would take over from there .. , Thank you, and God bless you for helping so many of us in distress, MRS. R. D." • I understand that there is * a branch of the Legal Aid * Society In your city, that fine * organization which is so help- * ful to citizens who cannot af- * ford attorney's fees. If you * do not locate them promptly, * caL the Bar Association for * their address. * In smaller communities one * should consult the mayor or * judge in her town or county. • My best wishes for success • in forcing this heartless father * to take care of his own, * * * "Your column contains more human interest than any news- pper's front page," wrote a male reader. It does pay to follow the problems which ap- pear here, and many an Idle reader has found the answer to her own. Write Anne Hirst at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, Ontario. Modern Etiquette . e e by Roberta Lee Q. After spending a week -end visit at a girl friend's home, should 1 address my bread-and- butter letter to her or to her mother? A. To her mother, Q. At what age should i be- gin teaching my three-year-old son to rise in the presence of women guests? A. When he is about five or six. Q. Is it proper for the man to cross in front of the woman while they are walking togeth-, cr? A. No, The woman should have the right-of-way whenever pos- sible and the man should cross behind her instead of in front of her, IN SPACE RACE?—Fay Gargano looks like she's all set to get in the race into space as she dis- plays her new "Explorer" hair- do, inspired by the first U.S. satellite, She's modeling her lowering top at the 38th Inter- national Beauty Show in New York, where it was unveiled as one of the new "celestial line" of hair styles. How about (hose upholstered eyebrows? A HAPPY TIME—Producer Mike Todd Is shown with his actress wife Elizabeth Taylor and their baby daughter Elizabeth in a file photo taken in October, 1957. Todd was killed in a plane crash while en route to New York from Hollywood to be guest of honor at a testimonial dinner in his honor. HRONICLES IINGERFMZ? Goandoline P. Ctanke This morning we saw some- thing very beautiful—something we had not seen from here be- fore. From the living -room win- dow we saw a narrow strip of silver across the horizon to the south. It glistened and shim- mered like quick silver. For awhile we were mystified. And then we know. It was the bright sun gleaming on the waters of Lake Ontario. On clear days we can always see the lake but generally only as a mass of blue -gray merging with the sky. This was different. How often, I thought, we see beauty only as a fleeting image, Here for awhile and then gone complete- ly. For instance the sun is now higher in the heavens so that it is no longer reflected in the blue waters. In that same way we sometimes see the passing beau- ty of a rainbow, or the myriad colours of the Northern Lights, or an unusually. gorgeous sun- rise or sunset. Probably in na- ture we miss more of its glory than we see—more's the pity. "The blue of heaven is greater than the cloud"—so we are told, If we fail to realize it, it may be through lack of opportunity —or lack of vision. The farmer tilling his fields sees more than the business man driving his car. But even the farmer sees less than he did at one time, A tractor requires more attention than a trusty team. And no pian can look around while he. is baling hay — not the way he could when he was coiling hay in the old days. We even miss a lot of beauty when we go driving through the country—at least the driver does, He can't drive safely and be watching the scenery too. And 1f he is a fast driver his passengers don't see much either, But there is still walking—the ideal way of seeing the country. Partner is doing quite a bit of walking these days—trying to keep down the extra pounds he seems to be accumulating, And he generally comes back with little odds and ends of what he has seen or heard. Today it was swamp -frogs — heard for the first time this year. And a robin that he heard but couldn't see. And after looking the garden over he told me I had better get some peas and beans next time I go shopping. Doesn't that sound wonderful? Of course a late frost might nip the beans but it's worth taking a chance. Already the spring flowering bulbs are showing their crowns through the soil, But if they sur- vive 1t will be a wonder be- cause our cat and the puppy next door seem to think that outside planters were just made for their convenience! Spring must certainly be stir- ring up quite a bit of activity. This week -end almost every man around here has been busy washing his car. A few days ago we had ours washed at the garage—now it is just as had again, It never fails! The chil- dren around here are busy and happy too—with marbles, skip- ping ropes and swings, Running out without coats—and being called back to put them on. Sleeping babies in carriages are put outside for an airing; dogs are visiting back and forth and pussy -cats are on the prowl. It seems as if spring is definitely on the way — and yet it can change overnight just as it did in the U.S. What we have al- ways dreaded could happen. here — an ice -storm, breaking down hydro and telephone wires, leaving us minus heat, light and water—maybe for days. Not a happy thought, and I don't sup- pose it is likely to happen, but we shouldn't lose sight of the fact that it could, Well, we are just debating whether or not to get a set of gym swings for our back lawn —for the grandsons, of course. It will be something for them to look forward to when they come visiting. Daughter thinks it a grand idea — except for one thing. She says we shall have half the children in the neigh- bourhood visiting our back yard. Maybe — but I can't say I'm too worried, They run around here pretty much as they like anyway — just .because we let them. I don't like seeing little tots cooped up in a small space. Yesterday we had a young fellow come in with a petition for us to sign — for running water in this locality, Water to the east and west of us but we seem to be in a sort of blind spot. It hasn't worried us too much because we have plenty of water anyway but of course we were quite willing to sign the petition, even though it may add $29 to our taxes for the next ten years—if it goes through. We are gradually getting edu- cated in the ways of suburban living. Build a garage, fix up the basement, pave the drive- way or enclose the breezeway and you have about $30 clapped on to your taxes, On the farm we did pretty well as we liked and unless it was a new barn or an addition to the house there wasn't too much said about it, But in a suburban dis- trict there is the planning board, zoning bylaws, building per- mits and other red -tape. It seems an awful nuisance at times but without It the coun- tryside would look like a crazy patchwork quilt. Itlght the Second Time, In Mil- waukee, Mrs, Marion Murphy, 32, outraged when a cop stopped her for doing 40 in a 30 m.p.h, zone, jumped behind the wheel again, took off so fast that tire -sprayed gravel broke a squad car head- light, accelerated to 50 in a 25- M.P.H. zone, told the officer when stopped again: "Now you have something to arrest me for." ISSUE 15 — 1 Separating The Sexes in School Coeducation was taking a pummeling again, The Vatican, no believer ir( the practice of mixing boys and girls in secon dary schools, swung a heavy fist last month. The Vatican's Sacred Congre- gation of the Affairs of Religious ruled no member of a religious order can become head of a co- educational secondary school "except in case of dire necessi- ty," and even then there should be "scrupulous separation of the sexes" for lessons on the Sixth Commandment (which forbids adultery) and in biology and psychology, In no case, the Congregation said, should boys and girls join in sports, and in every case they should use separate school doors, Religious orders run most Catho- lic schools throughout the world, Sociologist David ("The Lone- ly Crowd") Ricsman got in an- other punch at a University of Chicago symposium when he suggested segregation of the sexes at the college level, "What we need," said Ries - man, "is some form of adult protection for our young people "who, at the moment, do not want to pursue each other," Riesman said coeducation tends to bend students into the ac- cepted masculine and feminine patterns and that girl students influence their boy friends away ' from such fields as medicine and science -- which require long preparation — and into domesti- city. — Newsweek. Vaccine For Measles in Sight A vaccine against measles is at last in sight, This momentous news was announced last month to a Manhattan conference of virus experts by Harvard's famed Virologist John Franklin Enders, winner of a Nobel Prize for de- veloping the tissue -culture foun- dation on which the Salk polio vaccine was built. Measles has been around so long and is so nearly universal among dense populations that it is widely regarded as an unavoid- able childhood disease. But measles is a severe illness, defin- itely dangerous for chlldren un- der three and for adults; it can lead to pneumonia and severe middle -ear infections (though in well -doctored areas these are now contained by antibiotics). It can also cause brain inflam- mation with high (10%) mortal- ity and a higher rate of perman- ent damage; there is a fulmin- 'ating (fortunately rare) form called hemorrhagic or black measles that swiftly causes death, What has held up the men of medicine in developing a vaccine against measles is the finicky nature of the virus. Man alone seems to be its natural host. The only lower species that can be infected with it are monkeys, For years, researchers reported growing measles virus In other animals or fertilized eggs, only to have the submicroscopic pdt- ticles vanish. This line of attack proved so disappointing that Dr. Enders gave it up 20 years ago, With tissue culture (1949) the picture changed. Last month Enders spelled out the many im- mensely detailed steps that be- gan with growing the virus (from patients' throats or blood) in human kidney cells, Along the way It was found that the virus caused sharply defined changes in the growth pattern of the cells on which it battened. This led to a valuable and simple test for showing the presence of live virus and also measuring immun- ity, For the live test in monkeysy Dr, Enders found, he had to get the animals by air, hot from the Philippine jungle; to make surf they had not been' accidentally infected, Finally, Researcher Enders :.piekpd a virus strain that, ha4 'gonethrough 24 crops in humus • kidney cells and 28 in cells from the amniotic sac ("bag of waters"), By then, it would grow in eggs. He grew six crops that way and 14 in chick -cell cultures. With this end product he inocu- lated fresh, measles -free mon- keys, The weakened virus lived a while in their throats but never multiplied in their blood, The monkeys developed antibodies which, months later, still gave protection. One major problem remained; to show that the weak- ened virus, which might be used as a vaccine, cannot cause en- cephalitis, Enders' research teams at Harvard Medical School and Boston's Children's Hospital are in the midst of that task, with re- sults to date encouraging. Even with the aid of the pub- lic-address system, soft-spoken Researcher Enders was scarcely audible at last month's meeting. But when he had finished, Cin- cinnati's Dr. Albert Sabin yelledt "John, you've done it again!" The assembled virologists b r o ke ranks, stood and cheered him,— From TIME, Color Adds Glamor 893 6y C�,1Ntiit& Dramatize your bedroom witk the brilliant splendor of tht peacock design. Combine vivid blues, greens, bronze; accent with glittering metallic threads Fascinating, fun to embroider. Pattern 893: transfer of motifs, 31 x 15 and 15 'x 18 inches. Send TIIIRTY-FIVE CENT1 (stamps cannot be accepted; uss postal note for safety), for this pattern to LAURA WHEELER, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont, Print plainly the PATTERN NUMBER, and your NAME and ADDRESS. As a bonus, TWO complete patterns are printed right in out LAURA WHEELER Needlecraft Book. Dozens of other designs you'll want to order—easy fas- cinating handwork for yourself, your home, gifts, bazaar items. Send 25 cents for 'your copy e4 this book today! 0,1, ELVIS—Rock 'n' roll singer Elvis Presley, teen-agers' idol and the army's property for the next two years shows off the latest fashion In Army fatigue uniforms at Fort Clrorce, Ark. lust When Will rhe World End? Predicting the e n d of the world is almost as old as the world itself, The Israelites 'did it; the Pha- raohs of Egypt had teams of carvers etch on their pyramid walls various dates for Judg- ment Day; and down the cen- turies Doom prophets have cropped up with monotonous re- gularity, Some have devoted their whole life to computing when the end will come. But many of them play sate like the man who spent weeks in 1933 adding together the verses of the Bible. He found they totalled 20,067, That, he announced over a United States radio network, would be the year in which the world would end, There are still 18,109 years to go, So even if he is wrong, he won't be around to be laughed et. There have been even odder methods of arriving at the Day of Judgment. An Australian worked it out by counting the stars, To this figure he added 03 — the year he had started marathon reckoning — and ecast the end for 36,654, Of course, he could be right! Others have used the solar system to arrive at end -of -world day. A Welshman has calculated the date from a study of sun- spots. One mathematical genius relied en a complicated system by which he worked out the earth's distance from the moon and sun, and subtracted the difference. Alter some more mental juggl- ing, he found that the answer was 1919. When he announced this the result was fantastic. In New York, street pedlars made a for- tune selling "Save Your Soul" charms. In the early months of the "fateful" year, South Ameri- can stock markets rose and fell with incredible speed. At least ane London broker sold all his holdings and departed to the >ltouth of France for a final spree. There was panic in Delhi, gloom in Moscow and a series of re- vival meetings in Cape Town. But 1919 passed and the earth was still revolving.. , , Not one forecast was made about the end of the world dur- ing the second World War, but u soon as V -J -Day came, the prophets of gloom worked tire- lessly to dampen the celebra- tions. A United States seer was given the freedom of a national radio 'station to tell the world that the end would come at 10.45 a.m. on September 21st, 1946, In hours his prediction was page one news everywhere. When September arrived, the seer broadcast instructions on how "to win a seat in Heaven." Thousands of people sold all their worldly possessions in an effort to secure redemption. Big business took a tumble. Some people stopped buying clothes. en food shops reported a de- finite decline in customers. But churches were packed. There were reports of hundreds of people spending hours every day kneeling in prayer, On September 20th, crowds of people took to the mountains around Los Angeles to join the seer in prayer. September 21st dawned. The tension mounted. But the day ended and the world was still intact. The seer vanished overnight. The F.B.I. and half the State WPM CLEO PATTERER—The dance that knocked Mark Anthony for a loop is the specialty of Lyn Jamal, 20, from Cairo, Egypt, now appearing in New York. Lyn and her twin sister, Lys, have brought Cleopatra's dances up to date, and added a few contortions of their own. police forces of America search- ed for him. The detectives lost the trail in Tangier. Many people have said the world will end at the death of certain famous people. Glad- stone, Queen Victoria and Adolf Hitler were all supposedly in- vested with this globe -destroy- ing power. Now, in this age of sputniks a n d guided missiles, sober- minded scientists have joined in the game of guessing when the world will 'end, Dr, Enrich Hessker told a Chi- cago meeting a few weeks ago that there would be no more Mother Earth around by 40,000,- 000. 0,000;000. That isn't going to worry anybody who reads this, of course. Others have said that the end will come when the earth and sun collide, or when the moon comes close enough to leave the earth frozen solid. But they add that this is not likely to happen for several billion years. How Can 1? By Anne Ashley Q. How can I make a cellu- loid cement? A. Use one part camphor and four parts alcohol, Dissolve and add to this solution an equal quantity, by weight, of shellac, Q. How can I clean varnished wall paper? A. Melt a bar of yellow soap and pour into a pan of warm water. Apply with a soft white- wash brush, Do not have the brush too wet. Q. How can I easily clean sponges? A, Soak them in milk for three or four hours, wring them until perfectly dry, then rinse thoroughly in hot water, Q. How can 1 make the taste of olive oil more palatable? A. A small pinch of salt added to the olive oil will make the taste more agreeable. THE FORM'S THE THING—If you wish to know the correct way to club a man, study this picture, Note the policeman's excellent form as his subject sags in Bogota, Colombia, Occasion for the demonstration of skill was a riot started when supporters of one presidential candidate started slugging it out with an opposition group. GREEN THUMB For a grand display of colour,. garden experts advise solid beds or a mixture of two:or three flowers only, of similar heights and blooming season. And if we can make these beds at least six feet across and better, the more impressive the effect. Showy flowers that suit these big solid beds are the zinnias which now come in a wide range of 'colour an adlmost as big as sunflowers, marigolds, (both • dwarf a n d large) Petunias, phlox, cosmos, salvia and quite a few other showy but not so common flowers which one will find listed in the Canadian Seed catalogue. To make sure the centre is seen to the best advantage or the back if the beds are in front of a fence or wall, it is a good idea to slope them upwards to- ward the back or centre by several inches. Planted well apart and fairly regularly in the beds cultivation will be a lot easier than where we jumble too closely together. YOU DON'T NEED TO SEE At the new home of the Cana- dian National Institute for The Blind in Toronto, there is a new kind of garden, In special beds there are all sorts of flowers noted for their fragrance, People do not have to be able to see to enjoy this garden and, of course, it is just as attractive, in face more so, in the evening or dark as in the daytime, Long ago, in the old fashion- ed garden, there was always a bed or two of specially fragrant flowers planted in such a loca- tion that their perfume would reach the people sitting on the verandah, A feature like that will add interest to any garden, old fashioned or modern and there are plenty of special flowers listed in any Canadian seed catalogue which will suit the purpose. Some of the best known for perfume are nicotine, sweet peas, alyssum, evening primrose, lilies, sweet william, pinks and mignonette. IT NEEDS FEEDING Most people understand well enough that vegetables and even flowers require plant food and they will add some sort of ferti- lizer to the beds of both, more or less regularly, But when it comes to the poor old lawn, they seem to think that grass will grow without any help whatever. In most cases it will grow, but it will grow a lot faster, greener and smoother if it gets a regu- lar feeding, say at least once a year. "But why push it along" some will ask "when that means I will have to cut it oftener," True growing grass will or should be cut oftener than a hay field, but cutting is easy with a modern mower and certainly it is much less difficult than weed- - ing. Well fed, quick growing grass will smother out most weeds and aside from regular mowing that is about all the at- tention it will require. FASTER THE BETTER The secret of tender vegetables Is fast growth. Modern varieties, of course, are a vast improvement over the sorts that were popular in our parents' day. Carrots have less core, beets are darker and there is no fibre, beans are really stringless and if the kids of a generation ago had the tender spinach available today, there would have been no objecting. But even with these new and im- proved vegetables the quicker they are grown the better the quality, The gardener can speed things materially in a variety of ways. First, of course, he should break up the soil making as fine a mulch as possible and keep it fine and loose with cultivation. He should also water when neces- sary, and space out or thin to permit easy growth. For root vegetables, especially those like carrots or parsnips that go down fairly deep, it is an excel- lent plan, where the soil is heavy, to make a' trench about a foot deep and six to ten inches wide. This is filled with fine rich soil with plenty of humus from the compost heap and here we sow the seed, 1Vristy Business. In Richmond, a thief broke into the home of Poliecninn Bernard J. Davis, made off with a set of handcuffs. MERRY MENAGERIE I' s r � i , • i ,,!} ('got, • 1 e, e , aetu+ 11 (Axl W M I•, Irw "1, on the other hand, DREAD to think of spring costing!" .:. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: AGENTS WANTED GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself. Sell our exciting house. wares, watohes and other products not found In stores. No competition, Prof. its up to 500%. Write now for free colour catalogue and separate cosh• dentia, wholesale price sheet, Murray Sales, 3822 St. Lawyencq Montreal. EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY OILS, GREASES, PAINTS Sell the best. Dealers wanted. Write WARCO GREASE & OIL LIMITED, Toronto 3, Ont, AGENTS MAKE YOUR SALES THE EASY WAY with TENDERAL, the only instant Liquid Meat Tenderizer on the market. No competition. Tenderal 1s a sure fire seller in popular demand and a steady repeater. Money back guaran- tee. DO IT NOW — while some good dlstrlcts still open. Write for free bot- tle of Tenderal with literature and full particulars for exclusive agency In your district. TENDERAL LABORATORIES LIMITED ARTICLES FOR SALE ALLIGATOR shears; magnets; cranes; scales' presses; butane tanks; damp- ster dumpsters. Popular makes; sizes, Priced to sell. H. Greenberg, Murrpphys• boro ISM Co., 194 Murphysboro, Ennals, ENUINE Feather Bird Pictures from mantle Old Mexico, Exotic! C lor- ull Beautiful! Decorative! 4 for $1.00 money order. Jerry Mabry, Box 931, San Antonio, Texas. E4ENUINE Lion and Zebra Skin Belts Matching Hat Bands 12. Lion Claw edges O. Cash with' order, Jones, Box 205, Sallabury, , Rhodesia, Africa. GUARANTEED cherrslealc:revives and gives auto battery longer lite. Send 11.00. Products, Box 6744, Ft, Davis Station, Washington 20, D.C. BABY CHICKS AMONG all nationally sold chicks entered in three or more of the same 1956.57 Random Sample Tests, K-137 Kimberchiks ranked first In average income, The K•137 being offered in 1958 le the result of two additional years of relentless selection for still further improvements of the birds that established these consistent records last year. Surely it's worthy of a test under your farm conditions. Send tor Kimber catalogue. Also offering other popular egg breeds, dual purpose breeds, broiler breeds, turkey poults, Catalogue, TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO EGG markets your beat? We have wide choice pullets, (Limited quantity start- ed). Have Ames In•Cross and other high producers. May -June broilers should be on order. Heavy cockerels, Wide choice in mixed chicks. Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton, or local agent. EXTRA INCOME EARTHWORMS $ EASILY raised in basement and back- yard. Information free, Booklet ."There's Money in Earthworms" 354, A. Howl 1106 Glencairn Ave,, Toronto 19, POR SALM DAIRY Farm. Good house, barns, Hydro, near highway, school, church. Erwin Fretwell, Prescott 2, Ontario, Fleet Of Trucks Driven By Women There's a truck fleet in Orlan- do, Fla,, that won't even hire a man, no matter how seasoned a driver. Six years ago, the lady owner - operator launched a diaper ser- vice there. After a year she de- cided if a woman's place is in the home, this rule applies even more so to the nursery. Women are more satisfactory for t h e twice -weekly delivery routes, she says, Mothers don't mind a woman sailing in, seeing them before they can make up their minds, let alone their faces. Women more understandingly deliver the dry, decamp with the damp, stirring not a ripple in the do- mestic seas. Things were differ- ent with strange men barging into nurseries. A few years ago, says the pro- prietress, summer business fell off with the floating population. Now it's a 12 -month rush serving 300 to 400 customers weekly. POR SALT FOlt Sale, Feed Mill and General Store, Home, Modern, 3 bedrooms, hot water heat, double garage, 6 acres, Railway siding, Good business, Further details write N. Whitfield, Thessalon, Ontario. LUNCHROOM Ice Cream, Tobaccos, Soft Drinks, Confectionery on Highway 518, Good Tourist Section. Geo, Dem• berllne, Sprucedale, Ont. RETAIL and wholesale feed business In Eastern Ontario. Centrally located with rail and truck facilities, Fully equipped with machinery and trucks. Buildings and machinery in good re• pair, Vendor will take back one open long term mortgage, Reason for sell - Ing — owner has other definite com- mitments, For further particulars write Box 167, 123 Eighteenth Street, Toronto 14, HELP WANTED Men & Women POSITIONS as asst, agents, telegra- phers await you when trained by us. Union pay. Can, Pac, Rly. will employ all graduates. SPEEDHAND, A.B.C. System qualifies for Stenographer In ten weeks, home study Big Demand. Free Folder either course, Write Cassan Systems, 7 Super. for Ave„ Toronto 14, INSTRUCTION EARN morel Bookkeeping Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les. gone 600, Ask for free circular. No. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street Toronto MEDIQAL IRED, depressed? Write for free terature today, telling how ROYAL JELLY may change your whole life. Randolph 281 East Fourth Street, New York 9, Hew York. WANTED — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 135 Elgin, Ottawa $1,25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes' and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scaling and burning ecze- ma; acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the atalnlese odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seeln. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Prise PRICE 13,00 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2145 It Clair Avenue East TORONTO OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN CALIFORNIA CALLSI 8 pages of facts about this provocative State, 12.001 Fay Langdon, 528 S. Alandele Avenue, Los Angeles 36, California. FREE Gifts, 325 and more can be earned by showing the Laurentian Line of Everyday & Religious box assort- meruo In .English and French,' Write for de ls,-Laurentlan Greeting Cards, 697LS . Denis, Suite 6W, Montreal Que, LPststt�b'p1d time Fiddle Playing quick- ly, Lathy. Play for Square Dances, Cdittplete Course 12,98. Satisfaction 7Guar3ttfeed. Old Time Fiddle; Mt, -Main 2, New York, BEA HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates, America's Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS 351 Noor St. W. Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company Patent Attorneys, Established 1890, 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries. PERSONAL $1.00 TRIAL offer. Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cate- logue included. The Medico Agency, Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont. SWINE FERGUS Landrace Swine Farm make not only the Yorkshire men but also the Cattle men shake their heads. At our last sale in Edmonton, 82 of our Landrace swine sold for 328,200; a record. At the pure bred cattle sale in Lethbridge, 82 head of cattle sold for 326,360 — 31840 leas than realized at our sale in Edmonton, Why did the breeders pay this record price for our Landrace? Answer: We import and breed the best Landrace that money will buy. When starting with Landrace, buy the best. Weanlings four months, aix months old gilts and boars, guaranteed in pig gilts and sows, serviceable boars, Catalogue. FERGUS LANDRACE SWINE FARM FERGUS ONTARIO WANTED CASH for store stocks, hardware, tire - arms, ammunition, etc, DRAKE, 136A Walmer Road, Toronto Phone WA, 1.4045, WANTED — Sprayer with blower for Orchard, used, good condition, Give details. 60 Woodbury Road, Toronto 14. WANTED — steam traction engine, 'rive details as to make and condition, ox 166, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Toronto, COMER — Sleepy • eyed, sexy - voiced lee Remick is being tabbed as Hollywood's answer to France's Brigitte Bardot. She plays a role that smolders in her new film, "The Long, Hot Summer", which, incidentally, is nicknamed "Peyton Place in Dixie" on the 20th Century -Fox lot, Reduced Thoroughfare. In Al- hambra, Calif., homeowners in a growing subdivision — expect- : Ing the name "Viscount" for their new street — complained when signs reading "Discount Street" were put up. 111 ISSUE 15 — 1958 YOU CAN• SLEEP TO -NIGHT RAMI PRIDE NEAYOYtNEq KM" TO•MORA0111 To be happy and tranquil Indeed of nervous or for a good night's sleep, take Sedlcin tablets according to direclions, SEDICIN® TABLETS 0 51.00-54.95 Drvg Sforn O,M Use your SPARE TIME to build an interesting and PROFITABLE BUSINESS CAREER Investigate how Shaw Schools will help you prepare for a career that will assure your success and seen My Underline course that Interests you— SBookkeeping •• Cost Accounting Shorthand • Typewriting • Stationary Engineering • Short Story Writing • Junior, Intermediate and Higher Accounting • Chartered Secretary tA.C.I,S.t • Business English and Correspondence Write for free catalogue today. Many other courses from which to choose. Bay & Charles Streets Toronto, Dept. No. H-13 - �_�'► ���: L•lei -1 CUNARD TO EUROPE SPRING AND SUMMER SAILINGS TO BRITISH PORTS? First Class from $262 Tourist Class from $175 VESSEL From HALIFAX • CARINTHIA Sat. APR. 5 SAXONIA Fri. APR, 11 From MONTREAL SYLVANIA Wed. APR, 16 t IVERNIA lhurs, APR, 24 CARINTHIA Wed, APR. 30 SYLVANIA Thurs. MAY 8 t SAXONIA Thun, MAY 8 CARINTHIA Thurs. MAY 22 t IVERNIA Thurs. MAY 22 SYLVANIA Fri, MAY 30 t SAXONIA Thurs. JUNE 5 CARINTHIA Fri. JUNE 13 t IVERNIA Fri. JUNE 13 SYLVANIA Fri. JUNE 20 t SAXONIA Fri, JUNE 27 CARINTHIA Fri. JULY 4 t IVERNIA Fri, JULY 4 At Thrift -Season Rates ROUND TRIP FOR AS LITTLE AS $350 To TO FRENCH PORTS: First Class from $272 Tourist Class from $180 VESSEL From NEW YORK Cobh, Liverpool CARINTHIA Fri, APR. 4 Havre, London (Tilbury) QUEEN MARY Wed. APR. 9 SAXONIA Thurs. APR. 10 PARTHIA FrI. APR, 11 Greenock, Liverpool QUEEN ELIZABETH Wed. APR. 16 Havre, London (Tilbury) BRITANNIC Wed. APR, 16 Greenock, Liverpool MAURETANIA iues. APR, 22 Greenock, Liverpool QUEEN MARY Wed APR, 23 Havre, London (Tilbury) MEDIA Fri. APR. 25 Greenock, Liverpool QUEEN ELIZABEiH Wed. APR. 30 Havre, Southampton QUEEN MARY Wed. MAY 7 Liverpool PARTHIA Fri. MAY 9 Havre, Southampton QUEEN ELIZABETH Wed. MAY 14 Greenock, Liverpool BRITANNIC Wed, MAY 14 Havre, Southampton MAURETANIA Sal. MAY 17 Liverpool QUEEN MARY Wed, MAY 21 Havre, Southampton MEDIA FrI. MAY 23 Greenock, Liverpool QUEEN ELIIABETH Wed, MAY 28 Havre, Southampton QUEEN MARY Wed, JUNE 4 t Calls al Quebec • Winter Season Rates Apply. — CRUISES — CARONIA Spring Nedtenonean (Tulse—Nay Is CARONIA North (apo Wise—July 1 CARONIA Autumn Nedlterranton (rules—Od,1 See your local agent— No one can serve you better CUNARD LINE Corner Bay & Wellington Streets, Toronto Phone EMpire 2-2911 To Cobh, Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton _ Havre, London (Tilbury) Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Cobh, Liverpool Cobh, Havre, Southampton _ Cherbourg, Southampton Liverpool — Cherbourg, Southampton Cherbourg, Southampton = Liverppool Cherbourg, Southampton Cobh, Liverpool Cobh, Havre, Southampton Cherbourg, Southampton Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Cherbourg, Southampton _ Bring your relatives ur friends from Euro Prepay theirpg s`5 Inquire Canada Arrshut Canadian Government d Passage lees Scheme ist PAGE 4 11 ValliMillIMMININIMmustjaNNOMPOIN tHE BLYTfl STANDARD = Wednesday, April 0, 195 . volt arkaaber1 ompollemosmiounimirimomaimmoroommusimmovimilmemamemisomuommo Auburn & District News Mrs Stanley Johnston has returned to her home after spending the winter n entIns with Mr. and 4V,i:s. James Raithby. Visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Bert Taylor last Saturday were: M6. and Mfrs Donald Stoncl else and family, of Guelph, Mrs. M. H. Martin, of Goderich. Mr. and Mrs, Earl Craig, Bradley and Janet, of Goderich, spent last Sunday with his brother, MIr, Bert Craig, and Mrs. Craig. The Villcge Council has issued the statement that the Village of Auburn will go on Daylight Saving en April 26, 1938, and remain on that time until the end of October the sane as last year. , ass Prize winners at the recent draw held at Mr, Gordon R. Taylor's store were: 1st prize, Mrs. Elsie Edgsley; 2nd prize, Mirs, T. J. Biggerstaff; 3rd prize, Mrs. Harold Carter. Mr. Jack Beadle is visaing in Gude- rich with Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Patter - ..:n. Professor G. E. Raithby, of the O.A C., Guelph, spent- last Friday with his father, Mr. George Radthby. Mr. and Mrs. John Ostrom and Bob- by visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Raithby and fancily. Bobby re- mained for the holidays, Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Davies were guests at a wedding in Behnont last Saturday. Mrs. Scan Daer, and her brother, Mr. Jack Teherville, are visiting with their sister, Mrs. Florence Ashman, in Dcasoit. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Y,:.ung, of Cul - bourne township, returned to their home after spending the winter months in Florida, Miss Evelyn Isis 'cchael, of Chicle - rich, renewed acquaintances in the vil- lage last Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. 1Waltcr Slitchling and I3rigette, visited friends in Chicago over the week -end. These friends are returning to their former home In Beiguim, Mr, Gordon rowel, spent the week- end with his wife and son. Ile has joined his boat in Sarnia. Mrs. George Hatnilt:n is visiting with her brother, MIr Lorne Wilson, Mrs. Wilson, at Brucefield. Mrs. Carrie Armstrong is a patient in VIctoria hospital, London. She ;s a sister of Mirs. George Beadle and Mrs. John Arthur. and is well known here, having resided here just a few years ago. Mr. David Hamilton, and his son Reg, were recent guests with the form- er's daughter, Mrs. Mac Allison, and Mr Allison, at Parkhill. Mr and Mrs. Beg Asquith, Anne and George, of Islington, visited with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Charles Asquith, over the hsliday. Mr•. and Mrs. Fred Youngblut, and family, of Woodstock, visited recently at the home of Mr. Walter ,Wagner. Mrs. Frank McArthur, who has been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Gow, has taken a pasition at Monkton, Mr. Benson Finnigan, Mr. Gordon Finnigan, Misses Myrtle and Christina Finnigan spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Finnigan. Master Michael Wales, of London, is isiting with his aunt, Mrs. Leonard Brindley, and Mr. Brindley-, Mrs. Carl Gevier is a patient in Goderich Hospital. Her friends wish her a speedy recovery. Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Robert Seiler, (nee Edna Daert, of Stratford. on the birth of their s:n, in St Marys hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell Mary and Dianne visited last Sunday with their daughter, Mrs. Louis Blake, Faye and Mary Anne. Dianne remain- ed for n few days holidays, Mr. and Mrs. Russel King are visit- ing with her brother, Mr, Carl Young- blut, Mrs. Carl Youngblut and fancily, of Hamilton, (.1mrs Chris Nesbitt, of Streetsville, and Miss Susan Gray are visitors wf t;n Mrs. Alfred Nesbitt and Lawrence, Mr. Clifford McDonald, of Thnm: ne spent the holiday with Mrs. McDonald, Gorden, Gc :rge and Peter. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan McKay, Barb- ara and Johnny, visited in London on Monday with Mr. and Mrs, John Weir, Joan and Bobby. Joan and Bob- by returned for the holidays, The /Women's Missionary Society of Knox Prebytcrian Oaurch held their Easter Thankoffer:ng Meeting :n Apr - i1 1st in the Sabbath School Room of the church with 38 la:lies present. Nies. Oliver Anderson, 1st vice-president, was in charge and gave the Call to Worship. The hymn "Jesus Christ is Risen To-dtW' (:Ipencd the meeting with Mirs. W J. Craig presiding at the piano for the' entire service, Mrs. John Durnin led in payer, followed by the scripture lesson from the first Corinthians, the 12th chapter, read by Mrs. James Jackson, Mrs, Durnin closed the devotional period with pray- er, Mirs. W. J. Craig played soft mu- sic while the thankoffering was being received by Mrs. Wilfred Plunkett and Miss Viola Thompson. A solo, "Tie Christ of the Galilean Road," was beautifully sung by Mrs, Duncan Mc- Kay. Mrs. W. Plunkett real an Easter leading. After singing 'jWhen I Sur- vey The Wondrous Cross" Mrs. Charles Stratrghan introduced the guest speak- er, M'rs, Margaret Erratt, of Varna. She gave a very inspiring address on Easter and what it should mean to ieveryone in the Christian World and 'closed her remarks with prayer. On behalf of the society Mrs. J, Durnin thanked her for the message. Mrs Gordon Chamney and Mrs. Gordon I Powell sang 'a duet "Christ Arose", Mirs. 0. Anders:n thanked all who had !taken part and after singing "Jesus Keep Me Near The Cross" pronounced (he benediction. A delicious lune was served and a social hour enjoyed. Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Jewell, Gordon and Mary Elizabeth, of Scarboro, visit- ed last Sunday with Mr, and Mrs, Roy Easom and Miss Marlene. Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Taylor, of Belleville, visited with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Bert Tay1_r during the week -end. Easter visitors with Mrs. Stanley Johnston were: -Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Jchnston and faenily, of London, Mr, and Mrs, Earl P,aithby, Miss Marie itaithby, Mrs. Donald Campbell, Cyn- thia and Louise, all of Goderich. Mr. Thomas Anderson, Misses Don- • na Lynn, Dale and Laurine, of Tor- ; onto, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Anderson over the holiday. The form- er's mother, Mrs. William Anderson. returned to the home of her daughter, Mrs. W rthy Fowler, after spending 'the winter months in Toronto. Mr and Mrs. Rotate .1. Craig and family, of Ilderton, visited un Good Friday with his lnrents, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Craig. Miss Jean Houston. Miss Jean Jam- Iics:n, of Toronto,' Miss Mary Houston, of Hamilton, and Miss Frances llous- ton, R. N., of London, spent the holi- day season will Mr. and Mrs, John Houston. Mr, and Mrs. Major Youngblut and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Crawford at- tended special closing ceremonies at Ridgetown Agriculture Scholl lust (Thursday afternoon. Their sons, Lyle and Bill, who are attegiling the school, returned home with them tor the ye - Mens' Black and Brown Work Boots, Full Grain Uppers, Duo Cork Soles (Good Year Welt Sewn), Special $6.95 Mens' Brown (Greb) Work Bdots with Cat Tread Soles, Guaranteed Against Sepera- tion For 6 Months. Mens' Black (Army Grain) Work Bbots, with Gro -Cord Soles, solid leather insoles, made by Hydro City, Reg. $10.95. Back to the land Special r $8.95 Mens' Black Work Boots, Full Leather Sole, with Genuine Panco Top Sole, Rubber Ileels, Steel Shank (Hydro City), Special $8,99 Young Mens' Black Jet Boots, Solid Leather made by Ilydro City, Special $11.95 Mens' Fancy Light Weight Windbreakers, Satin Lined, Special $7.95 Large Selection of Mens' Women's, Boys and Children's Dress Shoes, including Savage Shoes for children, at very Reasonable Prices. Mens' Blue Denim Jeans, triple stitched (San- forized). Special $2.98 Up Mens' Olive Green Work Pants, well made (Sanforized), Size 32 to 46 Special , , , , $3.95 Mens', Boys and Youths Running Boots, Black and White Trim, IIeavy Soles at. Reas'on- able Prices, Save Black Diamond Stamps for Free Gifts At Our Store. The Arcade Stores STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS. S. 1111,,., l. IF -.IY.JL.-a.in ...-..-.111.1 4,1%.,•01 ..J: 1 1,, cation, Mr. Gordon Bennett, chief Ag:. Rep, for Ontario, was guest speaker. Mr. and Mrs, Ronald Pent'and, of North Bay, visited over the week -end with her mother, Mrs. Clihrles Struug- han, Mr. and Mrs. Robert 3, Phillips spent ;let Friday :'Ith Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Fisher and family, :if Ben'ulller, Mr, and Mrs, Ceylon Lica, of Blyth, were recent visitors with his sister, Mrs, George Lawler and Mr. Layeer. ' • Mr, an Mrs. Gordon Miller, Mr, Harry Beadle and Mr. and Mrs, Wes, Bradnock were London visit:es, last Wednesday evening. I Mr, and Mrs. Robert Dayman and family, of St. Cat crines, visited' friends in this conenunity- over the hcliday, Friends of Miss Minnie Wagner are tarry to hear that she Is a patient in Clinton hospital where he has under gone surgery. Her sisters, Miss Ella Wagner, of /Wayne, Michigan, and Miss Laura Wagner, R. N., Syracuse, N. Y., are assisting in caring for her, We hope she has a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rathwell and son Michael, of St, Catharines, spent the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gorden R. Taylor, Master Dougie Ardhambnu'lt -had the misfortune to fall against some road machinery and cut his farehend, re- quiring several stitches to close it. He was visiting at the hone of his grand, parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Craig. Miss June Leatherland, .;if Brussels, spent the week -end wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Leatherland and family, Walkerburn Club Meets The monthly meeting of the Walker - burn Club was held last week at the home of Mrs. Lorne Ilun`dng. Mrs, 'James McDougall, the president, was in charge and the meeting was cpencd lay all singing "The Maple Leaf For- ever." The roll was answered by the I8 members present by each giving in o finished quilt block. The Club pro- ject this year is sending old woollens to Freston so the time was spent get- ting ell these ready to go. 9'lne pianist for the meeting was Mrs. James Jack- ron. The next meeting will be at Mrs. J McDougall's when one of the quilts will be done. A dainty lunch was served by t1ie hostess assisted by Mrs. Leonard Archambault, Mars. Stewart Ament and Mrs. Percy Vincent. Easter Services field The r?tar of Knox Preshyterian Church was adorned on Easter Sun- day with a beautiful bouquet of flow- ers placed there in memory of the late Mr. F, 0. McIlveen by his wife, Mrs. F. 0. Micllveen,. of Oshawa. During the service Misses Helen and Betty Youngblut sang "The Old Rugged Cross" After the Easter mesrage was given by the minister, Rev. D. J. Lane, prizes were given to the children for perfect church attendance and memory work done. Those receiving Bibles ' Stew+art, Marjorie Youngblut, Marian Youngblut. Hymn books were given to: Barbara Sanderson, Mary Sander- son, Margaret Sanderson, Betty Young- blut, Bruce' Youngblut, and Murray Youngblut, O her L•I:oks were pre- sented to: John MacKay, Margaret Haines, Barbara McKay, Marilyn Daer, Jannett Dobie, MnrIe Leatherland and Eddie Haines. Mr, W. M. Moorehead, of Bemni.11er, is relieving manager of °-,the local Bank of 0:ertmerce. Friends of Mrs. James Craig will be sorry to learn that she is a patient in Goderich Hospital. We all hope for n speedy recovery, Mr, and Mrs. Eldon Stoltz and fem. ily, of Guelph, Mrs. Marguerite Chi:pin of Wingham, visited on the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stoltz. Mr. and Mrs. ,William Stroughen left on Monday morning to visit their daughter, Mrs. Clayton Robertson„Mr. Robertson and family, of Copper Cliff. Mr. Charles Scott spent a weeks holiday with friends hi North Bay and Kitchener. Mr. and Mrs. M. Osmond and family, of Toronto, visited on the holiday ;with Mr. and Mrs. William T. Robison'. Mr. and Mrs, P.•:.y Farrow and their daughter, Mrs, Jack Young, Mr. Young and sons, Jim, Bob and Tom, all of ( Mitchell, visited last Sunday with the ' former's brother, Mr, Thomas S. Johnston, and Mrs. Johnston. Mr, Frank Walters, of Ingersoll, spent the holiday with his sister, Mrs. Arthur Grange, and family, Mr. Harvey Wlghtman, of Kitchener, was a visitor with his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Earl Wightman, Misses Isabel Fox and Olive McGill, of Blyth, visited recently with the fonmer's_uncle, MIr. and Mrs. Ezekiel Phillips, and Miss Laura. Mr, George /Wright of Western Uni- versity, London, and Miss Margaret Wright,, of Goderich, were week -end visitors with Mr. and Mrs, Robert Ar- thur, Wilda Jayne and John Wright. • Mr. Robert Robinson, of Clint:n, called on friends in the village last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Ellis Little, Joan and Nancy of Waterloo, visited on Monday with Mr, and Mrs. Wes Bradn:ck., PATEN DEDICATED The Easter Communion service at St. Mark's Anglican Church was very well attended. last Sunday. During the service • a new paten, was dedicated. This paten was presented by Mrs. E. Phillips and is In memory of her brother, the late James W. Medd, wino passed away .in November 1955, and :for yenrs was warden of St. Mark's Shure). The Easter message by the rector, wsits based upen verses 3-8 of the fifteenth elu+pter cf the first Epistle of St. Paul. The Rector explained thnt the Resurrection of Christ should give Christians something of great and spe- cial importance spiritually, They must direct all their efforts to put selfish- ness away In order that. Gcd. may reign undisputed in their lives. The choir sang an anthem, during the offertory were; Joyce Leatherland, Darlene with Miss M. Clark at the organ, News Of Walton W, A. and W. M. S. The April meeting of Duff's United Church W. A. was helcl in the Sunday School room on April 3 at 2 p.m. with 23 ladies present. The president, Mrs. G. MsGavin opened the devoti':nal per- iod with a poem entitled "The Lord is Risen.” Hymn 86 "When 1 survey the Wondrous Cross" was sung with Mrs. Wilbur Turnbull at the piano. A short prayer was followed by the top's :Why Weepest Thlora' and scripture taken from St. John, Chapter 29: 16-3U. Mrs. Run Bennett gave the secretary's report. Mrs. Coutts reported that Cie Everyday Cards had come and it was left, that each group could divide them as they liked. The treasurer's report followed. The kitchen ccercnittce is to look after the fixing of several items In the kitchen, also see ‘dhat is needed and purchase same. The Spring Pres- bytery will be held in Wingham, May 7. The meeting closed with hymn 100 "The StrIfc is Over" followed by prayer. Mrs. Dave Watson had charge of the Easter meeting. Hymn 103 "The Day of P,^ssurrection" was sung follow- ed by prayer, (Mirs. A. Coutts read the scripture taken from O'nronicles. The Thank -Offering meeting will be held April 14, Monday evening, con•.ncncing at 8. The guest speaker being Mrs, Bruce Hall, of Scaforth. Lunch is to consist of sandwiches and tarts. The McKillop group will serve and, Walton clean up. The report trent the dele- gates nttonding the Huron Presbyterial at Clinton, was given by Mrs, Ken McDonald for the morning session and Mirs. N. Reid the afternoon, Any bale articles are to he in by the end of April. Mrs. Harold Small:ton favoured us with a solo and Mrs, :Harold Bolger gave a reading, The 811) and 10th group was In (ehargfr of the topic on Japan, with Mrs. C. Martin, Mrs. J. NieDonnld, Mrs, Ken McDonald and Mrs. W. Turnbull taking part, Hymn 112 "Re- joice the Lord Is King" and prayer • I concluded the :meeting. ( Sunday School will be held nt 10.30 a.m, next Sunday morning In Duft'a I United Church and church service at 11:30. Mission Band will meet during (church service, 'This will be the be- ' ginning of the summer schedule. ▪ A large congregation attended the special Easter Service in Duff's church on Sunday niorn'ng when the Sacra- ment of the U:r:l's Supper wos ob- served with Rev, IW. M. Thomas in churge. Special music was rendered by the ,c/holr with (Mal". Don 'McDonald as soloist and Mrs. Harvey Brown, organist, Mr, and Mrs. Frank Marshall and !Susan. of North Bay,. visited with Mr. Malcolm Fraser and Mrs. Luella Mar- shall and Barrie, over the week -end. I Mr, and (Mirs. Jinn Jlcdmston, Greg- ory, Joy and Judy, of Essex, were Easter visitors at the home of Mrs. Silas Johnston, ` Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lyddiatt, of Barrie, were week -end visitors at the home .:.f air, and Mrs, Clifford Ritchie. I Mr. and Mrs. Neil Reid, Dennis and Eric, of Toronto, were Easter guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, George .Dundas, I (Mir, Herb Kirkby, of Art College, Toronto, spent the Week -end with his I parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kirkby. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lamont and tnmily. of London, spent a few days with Mr. i and Mrs, Lloyd Porter, i Mr. and Mrs, John King, Joyce and Wayne, of •Sarnia, visited with Mr, and Mrs. George Jackson for several ;days. Miss Muriel Schade, Reg. N., of Lon - den, spent the week -end with leer par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schade. Miss Joan Ryan, Reg, N., Cornwall, visited with liter parents, Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence Ryan, over the Easter week -end, Mr, Glen Oliver and Ron Ennis, of Western University, spent the week- end with their parents. Mrs. Ruby Dundas, Eleanor, Cacoli ne( and Joyce, of Glencoe, were holiday visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Gel:rge Dundas, Mr. David Hackwell, of Ordllia, spent several drays wtit'n his parents, Mr and Mrs, W. C. Hackwelh - Miss Edna Lightfoot spent the week- end with her parents at Clinton. Mr. Gerald Dressed, of Longton, la spenrling the Flaster vacation nt his home here. Miss Ruth Ennis, Kitchener. spent Good Friday with her parents Mr, and Mrs. D. Ennis. Mises Mary Whyte and Olene Dun- da3 are spendint, the Easter vacation Spring needs for Son, are: Sport Coats, Sport Jackets, Trousers, Jeans, Socks. Shirts and Ties We would like to put spe- cial emphasis on Black Pol- ished Cotton Sport Pants for Boys. FOR THE MAN WHO WANTS to LOOK SMART Within A Reasonable Budget We suggest our flannel 0 pant suit, in blue, brown, grey or charcoal, ready to wear . , .: ONLY $35,00 BUY HAUGHS WORK CLOTHES R. W. MADILL'S SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Rome of Good Qualify Merchandise" 1 4+4 ,144444444 4 /-•4444444444•4 44444 ♦ 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 4 • 1NNN I MN+.I Spring Jackets, 3 to 6X ' $2.98 Cotton Skirts, 3 to 12 $2.98 Up Teen Skirts, 10 to 14X $3.98 Up Cotton Dresses, 2 to 12 $2.98 Up Teen Dresses, 10 to 14X $6.95 Up 4 Still a Good Selection of Spring Coats. ' Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH, ONTARIO. "The Shop for Tots and Teens" ++•+• *4H4+•+• •+, H•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•+4-•-•-•+•-•-•-•-•-•-•+•-•-•-••••-•-.44-•-• SPRING STOCK FENCING SUPPLIES:— Steel Posts, Barb Wire, Page Fence, Poultry and Hog Fence. Stretchers For Loan Lumber, Plywoods, Wallboards, Arborite, Masonite Ashpalt Shingles Ashpalt Rolled Roofing Insul-uric Siding Plans For Pole Barn Construction Creosote Poles and Lumber - ' Steel and Aluminum Roofing ,Hbmasote - Fresh Cement Arriving Daily Free Delivery A.. MANNING & SONS Phone 207, ••- Blyth, Ontario #44444444444444 44 444 64+$44 444444+44-* • WWII 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. in New York, the quests salt'Wss Tithe Dundas. Mr. and Mrs. Art Bushy and Anne lapeut the 1•laa!er week -end with rela- 'tives at Midland and Penetung, Mr, and Mrs• Fred C>•'Ybert haul* recently moved to Kirkby farm in the village, Wednesday, April 9,1958, THE BLYTH STANDARD • WWI1-111 r,nelYY-- •,VV1.16.1 r1.1 A' Al 401.1111110611111 111 1111114 1 1 1 111111111101.1111111/1111 A,N Ill. Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO. - INSURANCE IN ALL BRA.NCI•IES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 104. . Residence Phone 140 •111111111111.11.111111111111.% i .11 1.,. 1 1 l 1 Ids , 7 How Does Your Farm Entrance Appear To Passing Motorists? The North Huron Junior Farmers are organ- izing a farm gateway improvement project during the spring and summer months, Open to anyone in East Wawanosh, Morris, Turnberry and Grey Townships. They will be judged on, originality, improve- ment, safety, --- , Prizes offered will total $75.00, lst Prize: $25.00; 2nd, $20.00; 3rd, $15.00 4th, $10.00; '5th, $5.00. If you wish to enter this project a picture of your farm gateway will be taken by. May 1, at which time the project begins, and another picture will be taken at September 1, when the contest closes. In this way the judges will come to their decision. ENTRY FORM NAME .. ADDRESS LOT N0. ... CONCESSION .............. TQWNSHIP.._ TELEPHONE .,.................... MAIL THIS ENTRY FORM TO: Glenn Ooultes, R.R. 5, Brussels. Before May 1. �n..NIJYINI4.#~ I~4~. Bonnies Chick Hatchery AGENT: WILLIAIM'I J. RIEHL, Blyth, Ontario, Phone 16R6. Canada Approved Chicks from Blood Tested Stock RED X SUSSEX PURE WHITE LEGHORNS THREE WAY CROSS LEGHORN X REDS Z SUSSEX X REDS .,u,,J, , HORN X 'LAMPS SUSSEX X HAMPS LEGIty::, 4g,..S,U$SEX RED X ROCKS RHODE ISLAND REDS HA MP X ROCKS AMES-N-CROSS Popular Prices—Order by phone now. "GOAD CHICKS ANYTIME" .NINII•..NNIJIJ NNIJdINM.NII•. CARD OF THANKS Ve wish to extend our sincerest thanks to all those who inquired for or sent letters, cards, treats and gifts or who made calls on Brian while a pa- tient in the Clinton Hospital. A etieolol thanks td Dr, Street and all the nurses and all others :wino helped make his stay in the hospital mare pleasant, It was greatly appreciated. --George, Elizabeth and Brian Fear, 15.1p. FOR SALE Wooden wardrobe, in gaod condition, Apply,. Fred Crawford, or, Box 72 Blyth, 15 -Ip WANTED TO RENT Land for turnips close to ,Blyth. Would put in on shares or rent lots in Blyth. Also manure wanted to buy for gardens. Apply, Percy Adams, • phone 179, Blyth, 15-ip FOUND I, Speedometer cable. Anyone can have same by proving ownership and paying for this advertisement. Inquire at The -Blyth Standard, FOR SALE The bullddngs known as S. S. No. 8 and S. S. No. 11, East Wawanosh. Ten- ders for any or all of these buildings will be received by the undersigned ! up toMonday, April 28th, 1958. High- est or any. tender not necessarily accepted. J. A. McBURNEY, Secretary, . R. R. 1, Belgrave. CLARENCE CHAMNEY, Chairman, R, R. 1, Belgrave. 15-3 FOR SALE 5 or 6 bushels of timothy seed, clean- ed, Apply, ,George Haines, phone 11B13, Blyth. 15-2p, ,Th'ese men are wise'. investors!. They invest , in Huron & Erie • ' Canada Trust Debentures and Trust Certificates, earning 4% to 41/2%o interest on $100 or 1 more for 1 to 5 years.`, , Ask for further details. ri i tanada Trust Huron&E e Ai;,' - Head Office — London, Ont. , District Representative: Elliott Insurance Agency, Blyth. FIRESIDE FARM FORUM IIELD , PARTY On April 7th the Fireside Farm Far - um held a party In the Forester's Hall in Constance, Rodger Sdhwass of CK NX showed his coloured slides on his y trip to Western .Canada, the' Peace Ri- 1 ver District and parts of the United a States, This }vtns enjoyed very much. The winners for the progressive euchre were as follows; most gaanes, Mrs. Nel- son McClure and Ron Jewitt; lone hands, Hugh Flynn and Don Buchanan; t consolat'on, Mrs, -Tom McMillan and Wilbur Jewitt. Lunch was served,* BROWNIES 4 DRIVE4N / I, THEATRE I f rizeMdito Clinton — Ontario OPENING Thurs., ApriIil 4 See the Best Movies on the Widest Screen in Huron County FOR SALE - 175 Acre Farm , 16 acres.good bush 1 solid brick house, 2 barns 60X72 and 1 34X52, garage and implement shed 11/4 miles frena Londesboro, This I property priced right for quick sale Immediate. possession. 100 Acres, on good roads, 6 miles north Of Scaforth. Brick house, inodern in. every way, coal furnace, air condi- tioned, 3 -piece bath up, 2 -piece bath down. 56X78 Urn, all modern stab- ling. 100 'Acres, on paved road, close to school, ti mile from village, brick house, hydro, 40X80 barn, Very good land in good farming district. LYCEUM THEATRE . WINGHAM, First Show commences at 7:15 p.m. THEATRE CLOSED MONDAY, TUES., WED., OF EACH :MEEK. Elvis Presley, Lizabeth Scott in rhurs,, Frt., Sat., . April 10-11-12 "LOVING YOU" rho story of a small t:mn bey who becomes a singing sensation. Seven songs by Elvis Presley, 1 11.4-4,44-4,4-.44-.44444 +4•�•1-e BOXY THEATRE, CLINTON, NOW: Thursday, Friday, Saturday "LOVING YOU' Bid:ng the rock'n'roll crest straight into teenage hearts, Elvis gives out with 9 songs as only he can do It. In glamoroula ,Teohnicolor, Elvis Presley, Lizabeth Scott Wendell Corey. PAGE'1 Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday "Short Cut To Hell" Adult Entertainment Fast-moving, action -packed drama, capably pit:ted by veteran actor James Cagney in his first ventu re US a Thurs., Fri„ Sat., April 17-18-19 rector. DOUBLE BILL ,rector. (vers, Georgann Scot • 'William Bishop "MASSACRE" and Coming Next: "Fire Down Below." "QUEEN of BABYLON fl :V.MI NN.NN+III NJI.PENN/ MN1 ,,.NI•....I.II N.IMNNI ...IIIJI•.1 1958 WALLPAPER Samples Now On Display! (All Plastic Coated) and the latest patterns • A call will bring us to your home for a complete sample showing. F. C. PREST ..N..IN.N41.4M..044••NI•N.NJ.►I.144. NOTICE Furniture upholstered like new. A. • E. Clark, phone 20R14, Blyth. 11-4p DEAD STOCK REMOVERS 515.00 and up, )paid for old, sick and disabled horses and cows. Highest cash value paid in surrounding dist- , Het for dead stock. Prompt sanitary disposal In winch equipped trucks. Phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, collect. 14-13 GENERAL STORE in small village, Building and equipment priced very reasonable. Stock at Invoice price. Would consider trading this busi- ness for small farm. All enquiries treated confidential. K. W. Colgiihoun REAL ESTATE BROKER Clinton, Ont. Phone IIunter 2-9747 VIC KENNEDY, Si4LESMAN Blyth, Ont, i -`.a."-9.78, NOTICE OF MEETING Huron, County Trapping Association meeting in Clinton Agricultural Bard Rooms, Wednesday, April, 10th, at 8,30 Ip.m. Prizes far best muskrat pelts, Speakers, lunch and free .admission. Elmer Trick, Pres, Bill Craig, Treas. CARO OF THANKS Many thanks .to my friends and neighbors for their flowers, cards and gifts tvlhile a patient in Clinton Public Hospital, —Mrs. Eleanor Throop, SEED CWTS FOR SALE Clintiand Oats, $1.00 per bushel, out sof bin. These oats got second prize at the Clinton Seed Fair, Apply William Bakker, phone 21R23, Blytlt, 15-3 FOR SALE Quantity of , Brant Barley, grown from Registered seed; Quantity of Timothy seed, Apply Harry Armstrong, phone 15R3, Dungannon. 15-2p CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank all our neighbours and friends who, were so kind to us and helped,ln many ways during our recent bereavement. Special thanks to Rev. C. J. Scott, 15-1p. —Jon McNichol and family. CUSTOM WORK Plowing and cultivating gardens. Apply, Donald Haines, phone 11R13, Blyth. 15-21) IN MEMORIAM BELL—In loving memory of a dear another and grandmother, wlw passed away April 12, 1957, In our hearts your memory lingers Thoughts of you are very near, Loved, remembered long, for always, Bringing many a silent tear, Like failing leaves the years slip by, But loving memories never die, Site lives with us in memory still, Not just to -day but alvays,will. —Ever remembered by her son and family. 13-1p FOR SALE Rid Clover seed, cleaned at Alex- ander Mills, Londesboro. Apply, Wil- liam Rnkewloh, (The John Mills farm) phone 40R15, Blyth. , 15-2p CARD OF THANK$. I wish to thank alt those n' a r membered me during nay recent uess. Special thtnss to Dr. Stret t nursing staff of Clintun Hospital. --MPs. Ines Mactloupldi, NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF ROBERT BAIRD. ALL PERSONS having claims again- st the estate of the nbbve mentioned ']Pte of the Village of Blyth, County of Huron, Retired Farmer, who died on the twentieth day of February, 1958, :are required to file proof of same with the undersigned :on or before the nine- teenth day of A;prI1, 1958. After that date the executor will proceed to dis- tribute the estate having regard only to the claims of which he shall then have had notice. DATED at Wingharn this 31st day of March, 1958, CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON, Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the Executor. 14-3 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF KENNETH - KINGSTON REID WHITMORE ALL PERSONS having, claims against the estate of the above mentioned late of the Village of Blyth, County of Huron, FuGila " , "qa'n.Pd.-.on.the tttenty-third da, of February, 1958, are required to file r-oof of same with the undersigned on or b -•"ore the nine- teenth day of April, 1958. After that date the executor will pnoce,-d to dis- tribute the estate, having regar:i only Ito the claims of which he shall then 1 have had notice. DATED at Wingham, this 29th day of .March, 1958. CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON, Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the Executor. 14-3 DANCE Blyth Memorial Hall, FRIDAY, APRIL 11th Music by MEL FLEET & HIS ORCHESTRA Dancing from 10 to 1 LUNCH COUNTER Admission at popular prices Sponsored by Blyth Agricultural Society OF THE FIRST 25 COUPLES THE LADIES WILL RECEIVE FLOWERS TENDERS WANTED Tenders for the construction of the Crosby 'Mtwicipal Drain Extension in East Wawanosh and Morris Townships will be received by the undersigned on or before one oelock, !1ht• 6th, 1953. Engineer's estimates and pians moo, be seen at the Clerk's Office, R.R. 1, Bel - grave. Ten per cent of contract price to accompany tender. Township will supply tile and pipe through roadway. The lowest or any tender not neces- sarily accepted. Dated this 3rd dav of April, 1038. 11. H. THOMPSON, Clerk FOR SALE R.ei Poll Durham Bull, one year old. Apply, Ernest Noble, phone 36R4 lllyth, 15-1p FOR SALE Girry Oats; Brant Barley and Garry oats mixed, grown from registered scud last year. Apply, Wnt, Empey, phone 1518, Dungannon. 15-11t. Rita Hayworth, Robert Mitchum, Jack Lemmon, 1st Showing 2nd Showing At The 0:30 pan. Air -Conditioned PARK _ GODERICH. _ Now flaying: (Ronald Reagan in "Bell- cats of the Navy" and Gene Autry in "Whirlwind." Mon„ Tues., Wed, Adult Entertainment 1 Ann Blyth, Paul Newman, Richard Carlson and Gene Evans The biographical drama of Helen Mor- gan, famous blues singer in prohibi- tion days, the rise and fall of her career, • .j "The Helen Morgan Story" In Clnemoscope Thursday, Friday, Saturday Henry Fonda, Anthony Perkins, Betsy Falmer and Michel Ray "The Tin Star" In Vistavision Coming: Ronald Colman and IMedy Lu• marr in "The Story of Mankind." 444.4.4044. 4+144.4444x.4444444 -r4 VIINIIN�r�•,yty.�y.�.Nd1NMNIJNI WANTED F�� PREST j Old horses, Vic per pound. Dead . C. f cattle and horses at value. Important LONDESBORO, ONT. Intcrlor & Exterior Decorator Sunworthy Wallpaper Paints - Enamels - Varnishes Brush & Spray Pktinting. .N.1'N.OIO..IN.NI RENTAL SERVICE Belt Sander, Floor Polisher, Vacuum Cleaner, Cow Clippers. Apply to Sparling'sHarclware Phone 24, Blyth •NN.. N.{ Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 1;30 p.m. IN BLYTII, PRONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe'Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer. 05-1f. ...J..M.I.•.JIN•Y CIiAIN SAWING Custom Chain Sawing, ;wood ;or logs, reasonable rates Apply, Boyd Taylor, phone 15R5, Blyth. 13-3 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped end cleaned. Fre'' estimates, Louu Blake, phone 42Rts, Brussels, R.R. 2. AUCTION SALES Licensed Auctioneer now booking Eales for the coming season, Bert Pepper, R.R. 3, Seaforth, phone, Clin- ton, Htt 2-7534. 12-7p. AxEmv .CONCERT— Legion QNCFu ...Legion Hall, Clinton FRIDAY, APRIL llth at 8.30 p.m. Lucky Draw on Three Prizes Sponsored by Farm Ligon of. Huron County Admission 50c. Everyone Welcome AUCTION SALE OF HOUSESIIOLD( EFFECTS AND BLACKSMITH TOOLS For John Doerr, Sr., Lots 10 and 11, Dinsley Street, Blyth, SATURDAY, APRIL 12 1.30 p.m. FURNITURE—Rangette, ;in good con- dition; 3 electric lamps; sideboard; chest of drawers; cupboard; 3 beds with springs and mattress; drop-leaf table; kitchen stool, kitchen table; 0 kitchen chairs; 3 rocking chairs; toilet set; wash boiler; rug 9x9; quilts; bed spreads; pillows; table cloths, POULTRY & EQUIPMENT -40 Hy - Line White Leghorn Pullets; 30 Rock and Hamp Hens; 5 chicken crates; feed troughs: pails; teed box. TOOLS -32 ft, extension ladder; De Laval cream separator, 500 lbs; two- wthecl trailer with 4 tires; anvil; forge; hand drill with 12 drills; set of taps and dies; stand vice; bangs and ham- mers; wrenches; chisels; 2 wheel bar- rows; set of 250 Ib. scales; forks; shovels, chains, sap pails and spites; other articles too numerous to mention, John Doerr, Proprietor, George Nesbitt, Auctioneer. George Powell, Clerk. , 14-2 HOUSE FOR RENT 0 -room omfortable house, hot and, .,'old water supply, wired for heavy 'uty stove, bathroom, Coombs Street, ll•rth. Apply, N. Radford, Lynden, )ntarlo, phone Lyndon, 44R5. 15-2p. PIGS FOR SALE 17 chunks. Apply Ward Knox, R.R. 11 Myth. 14-1p 1VAN TED` Cattle to pasture for the season, good grass and river runs through the pasture, 5111 line of Morris, Oran Fins - to phone at once, day or night. GIL- BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Godericb, Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483.14. 44tf. RADIOS REPAIRED By Peter Hollinger, R.R. 2, Blyth, phone 45R5, Brussels. 01-tt. WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "For artificial insemination informa- tion or service from all breeds of cattle, phone thn Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association at: Clinton Hu - 2 -3441, between 7;30 and 9:30 a.m. Wt. have all breeds available—top quality at low cost. SEWAGE DISPOSAL Have your septic, tanks pumped the sanitary way. Schools and public buildings given prompt attention. Rates reasonable Tel. Irvin Coxon, Milverton, 75R4. 02-18-tf. Easiness Cards CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON BARRISTERS 6: SOLICITORS J. H. Crawford, R. 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 ROY` N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERICII, ONr. Telephone 1011 — Box 478, • G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A. L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH 25-11 . E: h mil gstaffl Opiometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Scaforth Daily Except Monday & Wod, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9;00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30. Phone HU 2.7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM, ONT EVENINGS BY APP•OI.NTTMENT Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services. RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant Office: Royal Bank Building Residence: Rattenbury Street Phones 561 and 455. CLINTON — ONTARIO. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY DR. N. W. HAYNES DENTAL SURGEON, Has opened an office for the Practice of Dentistry in Clinton, on Albert St OPPOSITE THE ROYAL BANK ON THE GROUND FLOOR PHONE HU 2-9571. 62-41-th AUCTIONEER Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction Guaranteed, Prompt Assistance Given in Arranging Your Sale Problems. Phone 15R18, Blyth, George Nesbitt, George Powell, Auctioneer. Clerk. McKILLOP MUTjt•AL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAPORTH, ONT OFFICERS: President—Wm, S. Alexander Wal- ton; Vice -Pres., Robt. Archibald, Sea - forth; Manager and Secy-Treas,, Mer. ton A, Reid, Seaforth. DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pepper, Brucefleld;'C. W. Leonhardt, Bornhohn; H. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Sett, forth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth, AGENTS:- William GENTS:-William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; 3, r. Prueter, Erodhagen; Selwyn Daker, sell, Brussel% phone 17J5, 15.Sp rur0414u n Munroe, Seafora �, Princess and Pianist -- Love Conquers Protocol by Rosette Ilargrove NEA Staff Correspondent Stockrolm -- The most popular song in Sweden these days is "Spring Is In the Air," a love ditty with words and music by Robin Douglas -Home, Douglas -Home may be British, but young and old, students and shopgirls here are humming his song with knowing smiles, for some time this spring it's expect- ed Douglas -Home, 25, may be permited to announce his en- gagement to Sweden's eldest princess, 23 -year-old Margaretha. The fact that they are in love is not news, but for a time it looked as if the romance might well end to the strains of "Stor- my Weather." The royal family considered a piano -playing com- poser a poor matrimonial pros- pect for pretty, lissome Mar- garetha. In March, however, they re- lented. Robin was allowed to pay a visit. When he departed, a royal communique said word of betrothal might be forthcoming — if they were still in love after a cooling off period. Since the romance seems to have been a case of love at first sight, there's little doubt in Swedish minds about the out- come. Margaretha met Robin a year ago at the plush London cocktail lounge called "Casanova" where she was taken by the "Duke of Kent's set." The handsome piano player stepped over to say hello to friends in the party and was presented to the princes. And from that evening on—for some- thing like the next three months — the princess and the piano player met every night. Then word of the romance reached Sweden. Margaretha, who was in London to study do- mestic science and nursing, was ordered home posthaste. Robin's official letter of proposal (which bore the family seal, "Faithful Until the End") was answered with a courteous but firm "No." After a stormy family coun- srl'1 the first marshal of the Swed- ish court announced: "The young man is charming. But he has no title, no money, His present position would not permit him to give the princess the standing to which she is en- titled. Princess Margaretha is not sufficiently wealthy to keep her husband and the cost of living in London is high. Therefore the marriage is impossible," For the British this looked just like another Townsend affair. Both Margarets were victims of unfortunate loves. The Swedish press unanimously said: "The dreams of greatness, of Princess Sybille (Margaretha's mother) will condemn her four daughters to blessed spinsterhood." With great dignity Robin re- s i..A - ♦ � �- fused teiii sm inters as -4 'ea. - in various nightclubs at home and abroad. He also refused to discuss his romance. Meantime, back in the palace in Stockholm, Margaretra looked lovelorn. Behind the scenes, however, Margaretha was fighting for her love. She started to win over her adoring grandfather. She pointed out that the Swedish royal fain- ily descended from Marshal Ber- nadotte who came from a "petit bourgeois" French family before he was crowned king of Sweden in 1810. Robin, on the other hand, was a member of the royal aris- tocracy and could trace his fam- ily tree back to 1473, Margaretha's mother, daughter of a German dj,rke, seems to have been the main objector to her marriage. Despite her marriage into the ultra -democratic Swed- ish court, Princess Sybille has always been a stickler for eti- quette and firmly believes in the grandeur of princes. On the other hand, there is no law in Sweden which can pre- vent the princess marrying Douglas -Home. She is 23 and need not obtain the royal con- sent, as is the case of Margaret of England. Now it looks as though love had conquered in Sweden, There PIANIST D(,UGLAS-HOMES Prin• . 4Iss believed in grandpa. PRINCESS MARGARETHA: Morn - ma believed in grandeur, are even rumors that betrothal will be followed by a June mar- riage, to which all the crowned and uncrowned heads in Europe will come. Commented a Palace official, a romantic and a poet like most Swedes: "It is best for the mar- riage to take place when the trees are in leaf and the roses in bud. Then, too, all the chil- dren will be out of school and they will be delighted to see the wedding." Tracked By Shoes When a man stripped himself naked to commit a murder he reasoned, quite rightly, that he could not be identified by his victim's blood do his clothes. But he forgot that he was wear- ing shoes and the police found traces of blood on them, Twenty years ago, in Massa- chusetts, two pairs of shoes con- victed another murderer, He had strangled a girl and placed her body between two mattresses on the bed. He then took off his old, cracked shoes and swapped them for a new pair which he found in the house. When arrested he was wear- ing the new shoes which the owner identified, and the shoes found on the scene of the crime fitted the murderer perfectly, In 1935 an old-fashioned fa- ther in Virginia took a whip to his twenty -year-old daughter because she had been out after dark with a boy friend, The daughter retaliated by beat!nx him to death with I, shot. Two years ago, in North Lon- don, there was an epidemic of house -breaking. It was eventu- ally traced to a thief with out- size boots. He used to kick the doors in! When Night Falls Along The Cape From Monomoy Point to Race Point in Provincetown — fully fifty miles — twelve coast guard stations watch the beach and the shipping night and day. There are no breaks save natural ones in this keep of the frontier. , . . Every night in the year, when darkness has fallen on the Cape and the sombre thunder of ocean is heard in the pitch pines and the moors, lights are to be seen moving along these fifty miles of sand, some going north, some south, twinkles and points of light solitary and mysterious, These lights gleam from the lan- terns and electric torches of the coast guardsmen of the Cape walking the night patrols, When the nights are full of wind and rain, loneliness and the thunder of the sea, these lights along the surf have a quality of romance and beauty that is Elizabethan, that is beyond all stain of pres- ent time, . , . Every night they go; every night of the year the eastern beaches see the comings and go- ings of the wardens of Cape Cod. .Winter and summer they pass and repass, now through the mid- night sleet and fury of a great northeaster, now through August quiet and the reddish -golden radiance of an old moon rising after midnight from the sea, now through a world of rain shaken with heavy thunder and stabbed through and through with light- ning. And always, always alone. Whenever I rise at earliest dawn, I find the beach traced and re- traced with footprints that van- ish in the distances each step a chain forged anew each night in the courageous service of man- kind. — From "TheOutermost House," by Henry Reston. When it comes to getting into an evening gown, some women don't go tar enough. FIT FOR A PALACE—Looking like an aging giant's birthday cake is the world's largest chandelier, as it is turned on after its completion in Limburg, Germany. The massive fixture is 16 feet high, 11 feet in diameter, weighs more than a ton and a half, and has 545 electric candles and some 20,000 pieces of hand -polished crystal, Destined to hang in 'a Chicago concert hall, it may be exhibited at the Brussels World's Fair. ilk TABLE TALKS v.. h • d e1atz Ari yt Pizza is a sort of pie, having a raised dough for its crust. There are many variations for the filling, but to be authentic it should contain tomato paste, cheese, garlic, oregano, olive oil and either sausage or anchovies. For a small family with diver- gent tastes, you might try mak- ing half your pie with sausage and half with anchovies. There are those who hold the opinion that almost anything can go into a pizza, as into a stew! Some of the possibilities along this line are tiny meatballs, mush- rooms, ripe olives, onions, capers, fish, parsley, heart of artichoke chopped ham, chicken, shrimp, lobster. It is said on good authority that there are now about 19,000 pizzeries along the roadsides and in the cities and towns of the United States, elbowing out some of the hamburger stands. In these restaurants or drive- ins, usually pizzas and spaghetti only are served. To Make things easy for your- self, try using packaged hot roll mix for „ f,- nrSi—pzs '(ani' you may like it so well you'll always use it for this purpose), ITALIAN -STYLE PIZZA 1 pound pork sausage roll 1 package hot roll mix s/% cup minced onion 8 -ounce can tomato sauce 8 -ounce can tomato paste 1 teaspoon salt I/ teaspoon oregano s/ teaspoon garlic salt 8 ounces sharp cheddar cheese Slice and pan fry sausage un- til pink color disappears; drain, - Reserve 2 tablespoons drippings. Prepare roll mix by package directions.' Let rise until light (30;00 minutes). Only one rising period. Pan fry lightly the onion in 1 tablespoon drippings, Add tomato sauce, tomato paste, salt, oregano, and garlic salt. Divide dough into four parts, roll and arrange in 9- or 10 inch pie pans, Brush surface of dough with sausage drippings. Arrange half the cheese on dough, Cover with tomato mixture. Top with saus- age and remaining cheese. Bake immediately in hot oven, 450° F. for 15-20 minutes. Serve hot, If desired, sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese, finely cut pars- ley, or sliced cooked mushrooms. Serves 6. • • One Italion woman claims that nothing makes a pizza so good as Mozzarella cheese sliced or cut In small pieces. She advocates brushing the dough with olive oil instead of drippings to pre- vent sogging, However, she re- luctantly admits that Parmesan or some nippy cheese may he substituted if Mozzarella is not available. "But it won't be the real Neapolitan pizza," she warned. She uses 1/2 clove of garlic minced fine instead of onion and garlic- salt as is used in the above recipe. ° ° ° Roquefort cheese and anchovy fillets make another good filling, ROQUEFORT PIZZA FILLING Ii cup crumbled Roquefort cheese 3 tablespoons olive all 1 can (11 -12 -ounce) tomatoes, drained and crushed 1,4 teaspoon each oregano and salt r/ teaspoon pepper 8 anchovy fillets, cut into small pieces Sprinkle dough which you have put into pie pans with Roquefort cheese; sprinkle cheese with 1 tablespoon olive oil; cover with tomatoes, Sprin- kle with oregano, salt, pepper, anchovies, and 2 tablespoons olive oil. Bake at 450° F, for 25 minutes or until golden brown. If you'd like to use pizzas for hors d'oeuvres, cut the pies into thin slices, or make small' in- dividual pies and serve hot, If you want to cook- -them early, stick them under the broiler for a few minutes just before serv- ing. ► * • Have you ever noticed that frying pineapple or tomatoes in a skillet leaves your pan shin- ing and free from stains? The Vermont Extension Service says this is a helpful result of cook- ing an acid food. The Service also recommends using fresh water when washing your elec- tric frying pan. Any grease in dishwater will leave a film on the outside of the pan, which_„ will then becom ,.. ss lured- fhe next, -tird"y+ou turn on the heat. It's also all right, they say, to use steel or aluminum cleaner pads if your pan has become stained. * * French -fried fruit looks much harder to prepare than it is — but there's no debate about its goodness, This coating forms a golden crust which stays on, I am told, and it's equally use- ful for frying meat, ,fish, or vege- tables. Just blend half a cup of corn oil with a cup .of sifted flour, add an egg and 11/2 cups milk, and beat smooth. (The batter will be thin,) Dry thoroughly such fruit as strawberries, ba- nana slices (thick), or pineapple slices or wedges; coat with un- seasoned flour, dip in batter, and fry in oil three to four inches deep at about 375° F. You'll have something very special to show for your efforts. Triumph Of A Hypnotist ? In the comfortable consulta- tion room of psychotherapist Karl Schmitz, in Munich, Ger- many, a grim man sat in hyp- notic trance Before him was a notebook on which he was scrib- bling wildly, Desperately strain- ing to jog his memory, he tore up page after page, Dr, Schmitz, a towering man with a bland senile, limped about the room on a cane, encouraging and ca- joling his patient, FInally, the writer's confusion disappeared; his scribbling be- came an orderly sequence, After three weeks of six -hour days un- der hypnosis, the patient's meni- ory cleared and, so the doctor said, he wrote lucidly of long - ago events. The patient was Heinrich Ger- '-ach, once an obscure Latin tea- cher yin a school near Bremen. His hypnotic treatment got him started on the writing of a cur- rent German best-selling book, "T h e Betrayed Army," a 600 - page shocker presenting a vivid picture of the gradual decima- tion and final surrender of 22 German divisions on the icy plains before Stalingrad in 1943. Published only three months ago, the book already has reached its sixth printing and is being translated into seven languages. Next summer it will be intro- duced to U.S. readers by Har- per, Last month, . Gerlach's enthu- siastic readers heard an amaz- ing explanation of the book's grim accuracy and authentic autobiographical flavour: A t least 120 pages, originally writ- ten at the time of the Stalin- grad crisis, had been recon- structed eight years later under hypnosis — that, at least, was the story Munich newspapers printed. Moreover, they said, Dr. Schmitz was suing Gerlach far 20 per cent of his royalties be- cause of his help toward getting the book written. Gerlach had started his book shortly after becoming a Russian prisoner of war at Stalingrad. His first draft was confiscated by prison guards. Doggedly, he set to work again, and once more his notes were discovered and torn into shreds, A third at- tempt — in microscopic hand- writing in a tiny notebook—was also seized before his release in 1949, For the next two years, Ger- lach vainly strained his mem; ory to reconstruct his experi- ences, Penniless and desperate in 1051, the papers said, he went to Dr. Schmitz, who had gained a reputation for evoking total recall through hypnosis, In Gerlach's case, hypnosis worked, "It was like being back in two places at once," the wri- ter said, "In the silent hell of the prison camp and in t h nerve -shattering hell of the battlefield, Suddenly, 1 h a d found the thread again," Gerlach completed his manu- script in 1051 and submitted it to several publishers, Not until 1052—was the book published by the Nymphenburg Publishing House. By then, Dr. Schmitz had lost touch with Gerlach, When the hypnotist saw the book fill- ing the show windows of book- shops in Munich, he decided to remind his former patient of his financial obligation, "I can't and won't deny that my work was helped by Dr. Schmitz's treatment," Heinrich Gerlach, now 49, said recently, "But then, couldn't a gynecolo- gist, with equal rights, ask for a part of all future earnings of any child he has helped into this world?" To this, Dr, Schmitz replied: "The reason I am suing Gerlach is not because I am after money —although I do have an explicit contract signed by him in which he voluntarily offers me the 20 per cent for spiritual 'and materi- al assistance rendered, My main motive is the hope that the trial will help me -publicize what hypnosis may and . can do." Gerlach said: "I don'trecall signing such a contract. If I did, I must have been under his hyp- notic influence." -- From News- week, ONES FOR THE BOOK Booksellers sometimes need crossword puzzle minds to inter- pret requirements of their pros- pective customers. One, with long experience of the trade, was telling of an elderly woman who came to him asking for a book by a man Milled Herbert, She was vague at first but later her mind cleared, "I've got it!" she called out, brightly, "It's called 'Deadly Hollyhock,' " What she really wanted was "Holy Deadlock," by A. P. Herbert! On some days, when a man arrives, knowing the book's title, publishers and price, the book- seller feels sure he is dealing with the author himself, He sim- ply wants to ensure that the shop stocks a copy. OFF WITH THE COONSKIN—After six outdoor action films, Fess Parker decided he was ready to ditch the coonskin and the wild frontier in favor of some indoor roles. And that's why he took on Playhouse 90's production of "Turn left at Mt. Everest", a romantic comedy in which he plays a. devil-may-care Air Force romeo. Fess is shown above in an exciting scene with Patricia Cutts, • FROZEN FOODS—Outdoor mess is no picnic for storm. Whut's for chow? Strictly cold cuts fo r Regiment, 1st Marine Division. No, they're nct they are unc':rCcinn cold -weather exercises at these U.S. Marines as they dine (?) in a snow the faceless, park -clad troops of the 5th in Antarctica, but "sunny" California, "kre Pickle Meadows Training Center near Bridge- port, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Give Delinquents A Calf To Raise Somebody used to tell about a novelist who was asked by a doting mother what her boy should study in school to make him a writer. He said, "Teach him to read Homer in Greek!" The mother, of course, backed away• thinking she'd been given a flippant answer to a serious question, but the novelist sim- ply felt the boy would accumu- ' late certain judgments and per- ceptions along the way until Greek would be merely the ex- cuse for general equipment. I think it was a good answer, al- though not the only one, So, I was thinking about these wayward boys who are causing the ruckus in the city schools, and I would like to suggest they be taken out into the country somewhere and given a calf to raise. The calf would be an ex- cellent probation officer, and during his growing up would inculcate certain virtues, Calves come in two styles - bull calves and heifer calves. The latter led to Eph Prout's old remark that "a heifer calf is better'n none at all," to which he added, "but a bull calf is worse." In the actual raising, it doesn't make much difference, although a heifer calf who shows a straight back, thin tail bone, and other optimistic traits will become a permanent member of the herd and you favour her somewhat. The veal calf, whose tenure is short is another thing. • There are various times in a boy's life when he measures up And advances, When he could Mand in a bushel measure and hold two bushels of meal he was supposed to be a man. When he got big enough to leave t h e horse -rake and build load he was that much ahead of the time he could just rake; and when he could come down off the rack and pitch on, he was really get- ting somewhere, All these moments were im- portant, but none was any more important than the day his fa- ther said, "Well, Son, there's a likely - looking crittur, how'd you like to raise him up?" If in later years, some board of directors should say, "How would you like to be president of the company?" it could scarce- ly mean more. A calf to raiser A fellow was really growing up! A fractious high-school stu- dent who is yanked from his de- linquency to nurse -maid a bull calf will at once be amazed at PIM CANCER "CURE"? - Major eventual breakthroughs envis- ioned by scientists may lead to better understanding of the nature of cancer, and may open paths to drug cures and point the way to widespread pre- vention of cancer through im- munization. So says Dr, Leroy E. Burney, U.S. surgeon general and head of the public- health service. He cautions that the ultimate cure of cancer will not be found overnight. CROSSWORD PUZZLE AentnNN 1. Tax 6 Cribbage :more 2 ICInd of dog 12 Italian collie 1:1 Aref Ie. ex- pInrer • 11 ,\tnrrlean ndurntnr 16. Sweet mon 10 Pugin 17 Towards vhelter 1st Obscure 20 %Vater•lnrke.I ntnd zs hermit 24. Companion 27 Different Its 'Pawn In nitlo 32.11nre recent 14. ('Daher 25. Iinlf tlla• metere 67. Dutch :eholnr 22. ligature 41, Pot In a new Inner covering 44. tipper house 4*. (lreedy 49 Contend 51. Stone god 62. Prntl 53. Ila wrnng 64, lJr1;2 up 15. Appear 56. 1,egnl matter Later pert In Pe, nnW'N 1. Rana. 2; Largo town 3. Sources of metal 4. !led ennopy 5. do ahead r,. Cereal:1)114e 7. Nature 5. StvIMP roller e the animal's precocity, A newly arrived calf doesn't waste time languishing and being waited upon, He takes over the com- plete operation of the world, and bases his whole career on food lie can at once outrun the wind, outpull the tido, and outmaneu- ver a jackrabbit. A boy, pitting bull strength against bull strength, soon finds he is in second place, By the time a bull calf has jerked him the length of a tie-up he will decide to exercise cunning and strategy, He should begin to see why delinquency is unapplaud- ed. Standing on one end of a rope, the bull holding the other, and both boy and bull depicting obstinacy with their eyes bulg- ing like cucumbers, will soon strike the boy as a poor way to pass the time. The boy will see that brains are superior to force, The boy will thus take a turn of the rope around a stanchion, which will make the, bull calf do a flop -up, and after two or three s u,c h manipulations the bull calf will tend toward docility. The boy will also learn to grip the bull calf by the nose and steer him, and will thus learn what a bull's nose feels like in the gray quiet of a country morn when the question of who's boss is in dis- pute. One morning the bull calf stands for you and you have won a great decision. A boy with a new bull calf is better than a circus act. The family usually assembles to watch, and laughs and carries on as if it was funny. When you start for the mother cow with your calf, and wind up by being slapped against the wall until all the harnesses fall off their pegs, the hilarity of your rela- tives seems unkind - but it does determine you ,to avoid such awkwardness the next time. A purpose is inculcated, and you greatly enjoy that pleasant morning when they come to laugh, but see you walk slowly down the barn, your calf will- ing and clever at your side and the halter rope loose and dangl- ing, This is a tremendous mo- ment, Teaching a calf, next, to drink from a pail is exciting. You put some warm skimmed milk in a bucket, stir in a handful of calf meal, and hope for the best. A calf doesn't know what a bucket is, so you put two fingers in his mouth and deceive him, Gently you lower your fingers into the warm, glutinous mess, and if he keeps sucking and gets a taste you may wean him In- ►tantly, More often he will blow, which throws milk and meal up your sleeve under your armpit, and makes you feel sticky. Then he will slat his head, which douses the interior of the barn until the beams drip. You wouldn't believe one quart of warm milk could make such a mess, Then you go to the house and mix up some more, Weaning a calf .often means weeks of living in an atmosphere of warm milk and wet mash, and teaches patience. Your overalls will dry in the shed while you're in school and flakes of calf meal will drop off them until the floor is brown. But one day you've won again, and the calf cats from a pail, even chews some hay, and there is much ratisfaction when Father ob- ;•crves, "You're getting some heft onto him, no doubt about its" This is success! It's fun to go to the barn and see how he's coming. You conte in from school -that is, you used to -- and change into your barn clothes, and rush out. He knows you, of course, and runs his snout up your chest, and you scratch his ears or rub the little buttons where his horns are coming. Then when you get old- er you think back on all the things he taught you, and you think maybe more boys ought to raise a calf, - by John Gould in The Christian Science Moni- tor. 9. lieWalittn dance 10. Sign 11.'Troublesome plant 19. Persian 21, Safekeeping 23, Cried like a cat 24. Alcamo of transportation 26. 1larent room 20, Crazy 28, 1'nrk product 29 barge bird 30, Oriental commander 33. Rubbers 30. In the same place 38. Of old age 40. At no time 41. Knocks 42, Crydof the wi 43, hInlioy 45. Ilobrew month 48. Pith hat 47. Additional 50. Anger I 2 12 3 4 • ..r.ti s s 5 6 1. 13 ." ,� ?AV a 14 8 10 II 15 . s.� 16 S • 11 13 19 ".020 21 W 22 23 • 44 ,s'i 24 25 26 21 21 29 ' t 31 . ' 32 33 .:s. 14 . 3536� 37 ll • 41 42 43 " t44 • • • 41 46 41 46 'Pe. tis 49 50 •. ;:t a:::: 11 52 ..yti', .ti 5l • .0.'•:%64 s• , 55 • ';s % 51 '" 1-20 5 Answer e,sewhere on this page. CAN'T BE TOO CAREFUL - A': every sports car owner knows, people just love to put their hands all over the interesting little vehicles. So Lt, Col. Nicholas J. Rifkin had this special sign made up to hang on his MG -TC. It means that only qualified mechanics can poke into the car's inner workings. ' While some spokesmen are be- wailing the "disappearance" of the family farm, others are stout- ly insisting that the family farm is holding its own in the cha11B- ing economy. Which Is true? The discussion . of this question will be better understood if the term "family farm" is defined. A composite definition would describe the family farm as one in which the family depends on the farm for most of its income, carries the management respon- sibility, and does the work, ex- cept for occasional hired help at peak periods. Many such farms are included in the U.S. Department of Ag- riculture's classification of com- mercial farms, whose sales range annually from $1,200 to $25,000 or more. Not all commercial farms are family farms, but ob- viously, a large farm family can swing a big operation. While family farms have been increasing in size ever since the tractor replaced the mule, they have been decreasing in number, although it is reported that they are remaining in the same pro- portion to the whole farm'popu- lation. The Department of Agriculture estimates that '4,855,800 farms were in operation during 1957 - a 2.3 per cent decrease from 1956, or 17 per cent under 10 years earlier, representing the. loss of a million farms in a dec- ade, • • • To those nostalgically inclin- ed, these statistics have over- tones of sadness. They embrace some individual failures and tragedies. Yet it is the steady trek of workers away from the farms into industry that has made possible the tremendous output of modern conveniences that have transformed Ameri- can living habits - including those of farm families. Everyone seems in agreement that the family farm -epitomiz- ing the wholesome environment which Americans like to feel nurtures men qualified to be- come Presidents of the nation - must somehow retain its iden- tity in society. But can it do this? • • • "The trend toward larger commercial farms has been viewed with apprehension by many who fear its effect on the family farm structure," states an Agriculture Department re- port on "Family Farms in a Changing Economy." "In creases in farm size are taken by some persons to for - bode an increase 'in the use of hired labor in farming and an associated increase in a farm population without equity in farm ownership or management decisions. This would conflict with long -held social values of the American people, who re- gard the family farm as one of the bulwarks of a stable and prosperous rural economy." Actually, the report shows, en- largement of a farming opera- tion nowadays is usually ac- companied by mechanization which sometimes enables a fam- ily, that formerly had to hire labor, to handle the work them- selves -thereby earning classlfl• cation as a family farm, states a writer in The Christian Sci- ence Monitor. In any case, economists hold that the Ude of technology that has revolutionized American farming overnight cannot be stemmed. One might as well have tried to oppose the earlier transfer of families away from owning their homes in small towns to apartment living 1st crowded cities, on the grounds that living in one's own house close to the out-of-doors held social values that families -and the nation -could i11 afford to give up, • e r The position of small family farms today in some ways is like that of small businesses which have sometimes had to struggle to keep their footing during the era in which industries have grown into giants and given the little fellow some rough elbow- ing, Yet despite problems, many have survived and prospered, Most observers expect that fam- ily farms will, too. But it will not be the family farm of 30 years ago. And some that remain family farms In character may lose that classification by definition. Some family farmers are choosing to keep their operations small, and are supplementing their income by taking off -the -farm jobs in nearby industries. These, by of- ficial classification, become "part-time" farmers, Each farm family is having to work out for itself the plans that best solve its own problems and provide the income it needs. • • • The farmer's compelling urge for income comparable to that of other citizens, stems in part from the delightful taste of prosperity he had during World War II, With incomes zooming then, many farmers enjoyed for the fiat time luxuries and con- veniences which had becoifie commonplace to urban dwellers. Farmers have, in fact, im- proved their material standards of. living as fast as they- have improved their farming tech- niques. In 1956, reports the De- partment of Agriculture, almost all farm families had electricity and mechanical refrigeration in their homes, two-thirds had houses with running water, half had telephones and television sets, two-fifths had home freez- Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking B 111 3 SdV'1 1001 318-N 3a W33S 3 3)I0d IA O IAV 3N i13a N'V8 1 106'21 3N VOV i. O 3la'va w o,2 1 Id 3 1 S%W 31V 2111 .L0aS ire, and three-fourths owned automobiles, • • e To maintain the income that will assure continuance of these things that so quickly became necessities, many farmers are having to make the adjustments already indicated. These adjust- ments are counted as one small piece of the whole great pat- tern of progress that moves people forward in the continu- ing effort to better their lot, Such progress is not without its pangs. Sometimes it comes hard, in terms of human values and the human displacements involved, But it appears to be inevitable, Publicity Stunts Despite a century of gastro- nomic renown, a famed Paris restaurant was no match for the twenty -year-old gourmet w h o selected a splendid three-hour meal, determined that his con- noisseur's choice - and the se- quel - should get his name In the headlines. With the prettiest girl he could find, he ordered wines and dishes with superb discrimination. Two dozen snails were followed by three lobsters a I'Imperiaie, three chickens and flaming crepe suzettes, Then he politely con- fessed he couldn't pay. "Give me a chance to make money to play," he begged a magistrate. "I'm expecting a for- tune from a gramophone record." And all Paris laughed, for Fern- dy Poulenc was drawing atten- tion to a new disc he had re- corded, which might otherwise have been lost among the scores of new issues. Something similar happened when handsome Bob Lewis baker's roundsman, was founts stowed away aboard Mayflower II, A bucket of pig swill and a tub of water followed him over the side, But maybe it was worth it, for that evening baker Bob was ' singing on TV, You can't always tell where fame will follow, .In France a theatrical agent discovered a priest atrumming a guitar in Dijon cafes, accompanying his own hymns and spirituals, The agent persuaded him to make a record of "Lord, my friend," and it became an instant suc- cess. The sequel was that when Father Aimb Duval, the singing priest, appeared at a Paris thea- tre excited teenagers stormed the doors and filled 5,000 seats. The Father's records sell like hot cakes. His earnings are In the top class. Yet he still feeds frugally on fruit and crusts and keeps not a penny for himself. He has taken a vow of pov- erty and all his earnings go to his religious order which in turn passes the cash on to the poor. Obey the traffic signs - they are placed there for YOUR SAFETY. By Rev. R. B. Warren, 13,A., 11.11. God's People in Bondage Exodus 1:7-22 Memory Selection: The Lod U on my side; 1 will not featly what can man do unto me? - Psalm 118:6. The seventy souls of Jacobi family which went down int, Egypt in the days of Joseph had become a multitude, The Shep- herd kings who had ruled Egypt in Joseph's day were not real Egyptians but invaders front Asia with their capital in the north east part of the Delta. They were expelled about 1501 B.C. by a native Egyptian, the first king of the 18th dynasty. This new line of kings tried be curb the growth of the Israelites but every attempt failed. Harsh taskmasters forced the Israelites to bear heavy burdens in build- ing two treasure cities for Pharaoh. "But the more they at- flicted them, the more they mul- tiplied and grew." The midwives of the Hebrew women were bidden to kill the male children. That failed because the hardy Hebrew women were delivered of their children before the mid- wives arrived. Finally, in des- peration, Pharaoh charged lift people, saying, "Every son that is born ye shall cast into the river, and every daughter ye shall save alive," But one of these very male children, con- cealed oncealed in the home for three months by his parents and th put in a little ark in the fiegii by the river's brink, was destined to be found by the Tyrant's daughter, raised and educated in. the Egyptian court, and later, under God, to lead his people out of their bondage in triumph over the Egyptians. Of him it 1x written, "And there arose not a prophet since in Israel like unto Moses, whom the LORD knew 'face to face, in all the signs and the wonders, which the LORD sent him to do in the land ot Egypt to Pharaoh, and to all his servants, and to all his land, and in all that mighty land, and in all the great terror which Moses showed in the eight all Israel," Deuteronomy 34:10- 12. Men who defy God and Sir laws of truth and right always lose. Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin have had their little day. They have left their trail 4 blood but have finally gone down in shame. The path of the Christian L not always strewn with -roses. Neither was the path of our Sa- viour. Why should we complaint Let us bear our cross and fol- low Him. We shall triumph al- ways when we are on God's side. ATTENTION -GETTER -This elaborate shoe, fashionable in 1680, gets a lot of attention in Offenbach, Germany. Part of the collection in the town's show museum, it's made of several slices of leather glued together and nailed to the shoe. Well, of course, they're looking at the shoel .1. .11,111.• ,l o... SERVICE RIVALRY -An alert Frankfort Morning T ' m e s photographer, consctous of current Pentagon attempts to dispel charges of inter service rivalry, found an unintended and embarrassing example in. these billboards at an intersection near that city, Ironically, the Navy poster had been put up by mistake, explained the billboard owner. The day the picture appeared in the newspaper, the Nay y advertisement was replaced by a commercial one. to stop the "competition" between the services -and a flood of kidding telephone calls, PAGE 10 ' ST. MICHAEL'S Superior Food Market Champion Whole Fish Cat Food, 2c off 15 'oz. Tins 2 for 27c Pillsbury Angel Food Cake Mix pkg. 47c Kello ,cg's Corn Flakes, Giant 16 oz. pkg. 31c Eilmar Pure Peanut Butter, 16 oz. Jar 29c Satisfaction Guaranteed. PHONE 156 •-- WE DELIVER SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION. T •M�•N.•I• ••NN — • 1 t i •, i ••++•44•-•-*4+•-•-+•-s•-N+•4•+•-•4+•♦-+•++•4•+H•4•••'•'+•-+� BROADCLOTII REMNANTS t We'have just received a trial size shipment of Coloured Sturdy Broadcloth Mill End Remnants from one to two and a half yard lengths at 48c Yd. We still have a few Print Remnants left from 1 yard to 4 yard lengths at 39c to 44c Per Yard. Keep in mind Benmiller Blankets make useful Wedding Gifts. PELTON'S 5c to $i. STORE MILL ENDS & DOLL HOSPITAL BLYTH, ONT. TM WITH STANDARD WES'IVI.ELD aSx, and Mrs. John Gear , Marilyn, Warren and Marie, of Waterloo, were Easter holiday visitors 'with Mrs, John McDowell anal' other friends, I Miss Barbara S!.nith, 1:;f Toronto, was a guest at the Forester—McClinchey wedding on Saturday, and spent the week -end will her parents, Mr ,and Airs, Gordon Smith, 1 Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Taylor, of Bel- leville, spent the wcek-end with her mother, Mits. Fred Cook and his w- elds, Mr, and Mrs, Bert Taylor, Au- bu,rn, and other friends, I Mr, Armand McBurney arrived home on Saturday frcm Michigan, after spending the winter with friends in Texas. i Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Taylor and Mrs. Fred Cook spent Saturday even'ng .with Mr and Mrs. Jing Bonk, of Crewe. ' Messers Norman McDowell, Alva ,McDowell, Ivan Wightnx►n, Earl Gaunt wtere in Topcnto on Monday for the sale of their cattle, s'ihil.ped on Satur- day. . On Monday Mr, Harvey McDowell visited with his son, David, who is a` patient in. the Sick Children's Hospit- al, Toronto. David will be remaining for anther week for treatment, I Mr. and Mrs. Jim Buchanan, of Am- crstburg, spent the Easter holiday week w;th his father, Mr. John Bu- ' chnnan and family. , A large number from here attended, the Forester—McClinchey wedding at A uburn, Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Good, of Blyth, were Thursday visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Campbell. Farm Forum The last meeting of the Farm Forum was enjoyed on Thursday evening I when a good number met in the base- ment of the church. Ronald Snell, with his projecture, showed slides. A Isis:,rt program was given when Edgar Howatt gave a number, playing the mouth organ and guitar, piano solos by Dorothy Howatt and John Mena - /well, Harvey McDowell with saxa- phone, accompanied on piano by John and a sing song with Mrs. Norman -4-4} .444. -•{••+••-•4H+•-4.4-• 4414+4 -4 -4• -N -•+•+4•+N444-% Wightman at the Wano. Ice cream •4444-44 44444 w44•4 ••++•+•: cake and sandwiches were served. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Horne, of Wind- BLYTH BEAUTY BAR itikmSTYLING AND IIAIR TREATMENTS REVLON ('OSJIETIGS Ann Hollinger It -444-4-4-4444-444 I' or appointments phone 143. -4•+•1 G+++4±4 •4-44444 44 •4r4+444 NH-•+• 4- x444•-••+444444 44- 4444 + •- • • •-• • 4•+•1.4+• 4-+44-•-++4•-•••+N•+•••• 1 1 E 1 Stewart'$ Red White Food Market ... Plump Select Quality Bananas 2 lbs. 29c Tasty Garden Fresh Asparagus per lb, 33c Flesh Mushrooms per lb. 59c Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 59c Fresh Rhubarb per lb. 29c Ripe Tomatoes pkg;. 33e. Appetizing Refreshing Cantelopes each 33c JAVEX, LIQUID BLEACH, Reg. 47c 64 oz► JUG 43c CLARK'S BEANS with PORK, Reg. 2 for 39c, 20 oz. tin , .2 for 35c JOHNSONS HARD GLOSS GLO COAT, Reg'. (i9c Pt. Tin 59c SPIC & SPAN, GIANT PKG. Reg. 79c For 73c SWIFTS PREMIUM MEATS • I Lean Hamburger per lb, 49c Peameal Cottage Rolls, whole or half per lb. 55c Premium Bologna per Ib. 33c Eversweet Bacon, .1 lb. pkg. 69c Premium Weiners per lb, 45c ' 1 SHOP RED & WHITE ANI) SAVE Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver "The Best For 'Less" - - Values Unsurpassed 14444-44 -44 N+•+4-•4+• N •+•4.4 +• •444 •-•+•+4-•4.4.4-4-•-••N +N 1 WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SIIOES JANUARY SALE DISCOUNTS ON WINTER GOODS such as: Wool Yard Goods, Mitts, Cloves Sweaters, Lined Jeans, Underwear, Overshoes, Etc. Phone 73. N•••I•.�.••NI two4, ad "••••••.••.•.•• Nw DONNYBROOK 1 fly, of Kingston, were visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Cliff Henderson and M.4'. and Mrs. Edward Robinson and family of Kippen, were Sunday visit- :sans. :rs with Mr. and ,Mlrs. Stuart Chaney I and girds Mr. and Mrs. John Noble and family Nliss Irene Jefferson, of Dunnville, 'have moved to the house on the farm of Mr. John Connelly. is home for the Easter vacation. I Mr. Sandy Nixon has returned home Mr. and Mrs. R. Chamney returned after spending the winter in Mexico. at t'he week -end from St Petersburg, Szt. and Airs. Herb Dainty and fam- Florida, where they had spent the sor, with Mr. and Mrs. D:uglas Camp- (bell, on Monday, Mr. and Mrs. Reg Jennings spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walden. Mrs, William Hclesic and baby daughter, Wanda Patrioia (Patty) „spent a few days \with her parents, Mr. land Mrs. Emmmerson Rodger. Mr, and Mrs. Wm, rollinsan, of Tor- onta, were visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson Rodger, over the Easter holiday. Friends will be sorry to hear that Mr. Norman Rodger, of Toe nto, working on a construction job, had the misfor- tune to fall 12 feet, breaking both his heels, He will be hospitalized from 0 weeks to 3 months. Mrs, Earl Gaunt visited on Monday iwith Mrs. Alva McDowell and Lloyd. 'Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kelly, of Sen - forth, visited on Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Alva McDowell and Ll:yd, Mr, Orval Tunney, cf, Blyth, visited over the holiday with Mr and Mrs. McDowell, and also w4:th Bill Bigger - staff. Mr. and Mrs. I rael Good and Carl visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Biggerstaff, 13111 and Phyllis. Mr, 13111 Biggerstaff and Phyllis spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Har- ry Bryant and Mrs. Wm, Bryant. Mr, and Mrs. Hope, of Harriston, and three children, visited rn Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Peter de Groot and child- ren. Mr. and Mrs. ,Tanper McBrien, of Goderich, visited Friday with Mr. and Mrs Gordon Snell, Jeanette, and other relatives. past hu10 months, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Jeffers:n and sons, of New:i'arkel, Mr. and Mrs. George Reeves and granddaughter, Carol Robinson, visited at the Jeffer- son homes over the holiday, Mr, Gordon Cfnamney and sons, Lorry and Paul, were Sunday vlsftvrs with Mr. and Mrs. R. 'Chimney, BELGRAVE The regular euchre was held in the Community Room on Wednesday night with 9 tables in play, High scores were won by Mrs. J, C. McCallum and Murk Armstr:ng. Low scores by Ba:- bnra Krug and Joe Dunbar. The no- velty 'prize was won by Joe Dunbar. The election of officers for the corning season resulted' as follows: president, Mark Anmstrong; vice-president, Mrs. M. Armstn_ng; sec. treasurer, George Grigg, Mrs. Jessie Wheeler was nom: 'ed to assist in buying the prizes. Busi- I ncss consisted of donations of $50. tad the Arena Board, $10, to the Belgrave Pipe Band, $10. to the Belgrave School Fair, to be given to the spelling match contest, $20 to the Boy Scouts Which are organizing in Belgrave community, Miss Barbara Irwin, accompanied by her Iwo nieces, Valerie and Brenda Ir- win, all of Toronto, are Easter visitors with Mr. and Mrs, H. Irwin, Clifford. Coultes, of Waterloo Col- lege, Waterloo, spent the Easter week- end at his Thome here. A euchre and dance vias held here in the Foresters Hall, the proceeds go- ing to the Belgrave Pipe Band, High prize winners at euchre were: Carol Walsh and Mrs. Gordon Pengelly, Low scores were held by Wendy Fear and Mrs. Geo. Johnston. There were 10 tables in play. Tickets had been sold. on two turkeys and winners were Ter- ry Harcourt and Karen Trainor. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Anderson, •nf , London, with Mr, and Mrs. J. 0, An- derson and other relatives, Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Armstrong, and family, of Thorndale, with relatives here. (Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Wheeler, and family, with Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Smith and family, of Brussels, on Saturday. I Mr. and Mrs. Ml Rezonsaff, and ba- by, of St. Catharines, spent the Easter week -end with Mrs. L. Johnston and George. • iM'r. and Airs, E Hartlin, and Kim, of London. Mr. and Mars. Jas, Anchrson. of Guelph. Mr, and Mirs. Wan. Schrei- ber, and family, of Strectsv'lle, and Keith Anderson, of St. Thomas, spent the Easter week -end with their par- ents, Mr, and Mrs. Earl Anclers:n. I Mr, and (AVE, Bruce Marshall, and faintly, of near Sudbury, with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cook Mrs. N. Walsh, and Mrs. Harold Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Gordon Hill, Mr. and Mrs. C. day. I Mrs. Ross (Grace) Anderson, and baby daughter, arrived home on Sat- I Sat- urday from Wingham hospital. Mr. and Mrs. ;,y.(2Kenzie, of London, of Blyth, with Ma', Walsh. Fred Reid, Mr. and and family, with 11, Coultes, on Sun - were Gcod Friday visitors with her mother, Mrs. W. Blair, Mr. and Mrs. H. Walsh and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J ,M;, Coultes moved on Monday ince the village to the home they Nought from the Miller Estate, Mrs. Jan -.os R. Coultes is,a patient in Wingham District Hospital \where she underwent surgery cn Tuesday. We wish her a speedy recovery, LONDESBORO Easter Sunday guests with Mr. an'd Mirs. Tom Allen and family were: Mr, and Mrs, 'Phomas C. Allen, Exeter; Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Allen and Shar- on, of Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. Austin O'Neil, Donald, Gary and Shirley Al- len, of Parkhill; Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Allen and family, Fullarton; Mr. Bruce Sawyer, Mitchell; Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Allen, Lucan. Dr. Lester and Mrs. Al- len, Barry and Sandra, of Watford; Mr. and Mrs. Garfield Cornish and family, of Woodham. Mr, and Mrs. Stan Crawford, of Tor- onto, Miss Doris Lear, 1of Hamilton. spent the wcek-end with Mr, and Mrs. Nelson Lear. _W. ', and Mrs. C. Vokes and Misr; Viva Cole, of Hagersville, spent the week -end with Mr. and Mrs, Jim Scott Sr. Miss Vino Knox, of Toronto, visited with her parents, for the Easter holi- day, Guests with Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Howatt were: Mr. and Mrs. Mac Hod- gert and family, of near Exeter, Mr. and Mrs. Jima Itowatt and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Howatt. Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Bagaent and fam- ily, of Ingersoll, spent Sunday with W'etirtU8t4a7, April 1958. - }41144 N 04+4.4444+4-44-44+4+444444.4.14+04444 1 FO)3. THEIR MAJESTIES -- THE BABIES Make Philp's Your Headquarters For Baby's Supplies, S. M. A, 98c Dexin , $1.25 and $4.00 Lactogen $1.00 and $2.50 Glycerin Suppositories 50c t Jcl:inson's Baby Powder 39c, 2 -for 69c Johnson's Baby Oil 69c and 98c Johnson's Baby Soap 3 for 29c Vi-Daylin Drops $2.40 and $4,25 Ostoco Drops $1.45, $2.40 and $4.25 Cadol Drops $1.65 Infant Rectal Syringe ... , 70c Ear and Ulcer Syringe 75c Q-Tips 39c and 59c. R. D. PHILP, PNm. 8 DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PIIONE 20, DLYTII 1 STOP f3 SHOP , at Holland's Food Market This Week -End. Stokely's Fancy Peas, 15 oz. 2 for 33c Carnation Milk ' 2 for 29c Jewel Shortening 2 for 55c Kellogg's Cornflakes (Large) 2 for 49c See Our Other Specials In Store o and's Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 — WE DELIVER Give your feet freedom and comVort with a pair of Sisman Work Boots. Sisman Thoro- built good year welt Boot with heavy -lea- ther outsoles, outside counter and steel arch, uppers are made of horse -hide leather, to with stand barn yard acid, all sizes, Priced $10.50 We carry a large selection of Work Boots in leather and cork soles made by Sisman, Valentine, H. H Brown and Hydro City. Mere is a low priced. Work Boot, made from heavy retan upper leather, Dru cork outsole, full rubber heels, all sizes, Only $5.95. Our Store is pleased to help you with your footwear needs. whether it be for man, woman or child. R. W. MADILL'S Shoes -- Men's & Boys' Wear - "The Home Of Good Quality Merchandise" 4 r Mrs. 'Fhoanas Fairservice, Karen is gersoll, spent Sunday with Ilev. and spending the week wish her grand- Mrs. White. mother, I Miss Ann Fairservice visited with her 'parents over the holiday, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Small left an Monday for a months vacaticn in England with &1e. Small's relatives. I Mr. and Mrs. Edward White, of In - Mr, and Mrs, Norman White and family, of Sarnia, are visiting with Rev. and Mrs, White, Mrs. Rhoda Hann and children, of Kitchener, are spending a week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil .Govier, EASY ALL FABRIC AUTOMATIC WASHER WATER TEMPERATURE CONTROLS . Five different temperatures for Kash• ing and drying , . , from all•cold to ail•hot. Sale for all washables, including new 'Miracle fabrics." GOLDEN SPIRALATOR WASHING ACTION .. , Fastest, most efficient and safest of all. EXCLUSIVE HYDROPOISE SELF. BALANCING TUB, THREE-WAY RINSE that "floats" off scum and soil. SIMPLIFIED UNIMATIC CONTROL, with handsome illuminated control panel. EASY ALL FABRIC "Meter'd-Alre" DRYER'k SEVEN -HEAT SELECTOR provides correct, sale heat for all fabrics ... from room temperature to 185 degrees. METER'D•AIRE SYSTEM gives even heat distribution for fast, thorough drying, SUPER•SAFETY DOOR SWITCH post• lively prevents machine operating while door is open. LARGEST LINT FILTER of any dryer easily removable for cleaning. Cabinet same sire, same style as washer — THE PERFECT MATCH. THIS WEEK -END SAVE $150.00 THE PAIR -FOR $539.90 Vodden's Hardware fi electric Shop Phone 71114, - Blyth, Ontario,