HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1958-05-07, Page 1VOLUME 70 - NO. 19
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Authorized as recond-class mail, BLYTH ONTARIO WEDN SDAY MAY 7 1958 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.
Post Office Department, Ottawa > t •' i' pS
Rev. !ken de. Vries Accepts (all
To Exeter
PERSONAL INTEREST CONGRATUTLATIONS
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Philp visited,`on.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Rob art
Hogg and family, of Chatsworth,
Mr. and Mrs,. A..'KKosseri, Mr, c. d
Rev. Bren de Vales, who has been Mrs. John Schoeck and family, of Han.,
rector of the Anglican Churches In l over, visited on Sunday with Mr. ti0'
Blyth, Auburn and Belgrave, for the Mrs, R. W. Madill, Cheryl and Telly,
W. I. MEETING
last three years and one-hitlf, has ac- The 'Blyth Women's Institute held
:coped a call to Trlvitt Memorial 1 their May meeting Thursday after- 1 'Mfrs Ella Metcalfe, of London
• :Murch, Exeter, and St, Paul's Church, noon In Memorial hall with a good at- visiting this. week with Mrs. F. R91
;Iensall. His duties will commence on tendance: Mrs. K. Taylor, the presi- son and Miss Alice Rogerson,
May 18th,` !dent, gave the high lights et the Dist- IMr•s. John Fa
irservicc, Mrs., Le
Rev, -and Mrs. de Vries and family riet Executive meeting which was held Crawford, Mrs. Edna McMillan a
' ame to.Canada from Holland in 1948 ,in Auburn recently. Mrs. Lillian Searls were .Toronto vi
i'nd took up residence in Port Franks, 1 The date of West Huron District an- .crs on Friday last,
Both were quite ,active in the under- ' nual meeting was announced to be ,
ground movement in Holland durin3 held In Goderich, May 28th, and the (• Mrs. Lillian Searls, of Norwich, .1•164
World War ]1I. In 1950 they moved t.t date of the London Area Convention, turned to her home on Sunday after,:
London where Rev. de Vries was em- October 21st and 22nd. an extended vLsit with her niece, $.
pioyed with the London Life Insur-An invitation visit Tiger Dunlop E. McMillan, of Blyth, Accompanyih•g
(ince Co., and in 1952 were transferred I W (Carlow) branch in June was accepted. her were Mrs, Lena Crawford, Mr.
to Brantford. Myth branch will have Walton branch John Paice and Mrs. E. McMillan. i
Rev.' de Vries enrolled at Huron as their.guests at their June 5th meet- I iVTr, Rcbcrt Wallace attended tip
nollege, London, in 1954, and in Oc- In.g, Mrs. W. Good and Mrs, C. Hig- Turkey Forum of the National Turkey
tuber of the.same year came to Blyth gins were named delegates to the Dist- Federation in Chicago on Mondaty•,
as a student minister. Ile advanced to riot annual with the official delegates May 5th, Mr. Wallace represented''
Deacon in November 1955, and was or. Mrs• K. Taylor, the president, and Mrs. the Canadian Turkey Federation. r.
Luella McGowan, District director,
IS
r -
a
t
• 2
drained Priest in May of 1957,
Mrs• C. Higgins and Mrs. Maty Ap-
Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Tunney and
-Rev and Mrs, de Vies have six
children, Peter, Joanne, Marianne,
pieby were in charge of the program, "family, of Tceswater, visited cn S»ti-
the theme .of which was "The Open day with the former's mother, Mics.
Frank, Paul and Brian. Their youngest Door." Mrs. W. Good and Mrs. C. Ladd Mary Taylor,
two boys. Nut and Brian were born, each contributed readings.
s'nce the family moved to Blyth. The meeting closed with everyone
Mrs, de Vries mother Mrs. Anthitttf participating in a Spelling bke. Mrs. "Letter To The Editor"
Vogel, who has been residing in Blyth J. 13, Watson was In charge. There was
for the last year and one -hall, will be ,a display of lovely mats, the members with them to Exeter, i
The de Vries family will not only be of the cross had completed in the pro -
The in Rug Making.
-reatly missed by their church men/-
hers, but also by the many friends in
Blyth and district which they have
runic since coming to the village,
Ilondon Conference Branch
W. M. S. Meeting
LONDESI3ORO
We are pleased to hear that Mr.
Prank Tamblyn is progressing favor-
ably having undergone an appendix
operation Tuesday morning of last
week.
Mr. Art Mahaffy and daughter, Su -
Mrs. Wm. McVittie attended the san, of Byron, visited with Bert Allen's
i.ondon Conference Branch of the W. and Mr. Wesley Vodden, last Sunday.
M. S. held last week in Windsor. ! Mrs. John Shobbrook accompanied
':'here were 300 delegates present. her daughter, Mrs. Percy Gibbings, and
i'ach of the 5 sessions were full of in- son Boli to Toronto, spending the
r tiration. The special speaker was week -end with Mrs. Gibbings daughter
Rev. Goth, c! London, who last sum- Doris, also visiting with her brother.
r.-ier was delegated to visit all overseas Mr. and Mrs. Alister Broadfoot, of
missions of the United Church, His ad- Tuckersmith, were Sunday visitors with
cress was IVith interesting and chat- John Scott's and Mrs. Ruddell;
L l :**,raId,.we mustradvance In j +Miss:Margaret Tamblyn; -of - -Loam-
evCry-fnitssionary-project we have in ington, spent the week -end at her
every nation where we have workers home here.,
(specially in Japan and iIndia, These Mrs, Alden Shaddick and her sons,
t vo great countries have open minds Richard and Robert spent the week-
; ow ready to embrace the Christian end with friends in Windsor,
f Lith. But we must act now, we dare IiThe ladies of the Londesboro Insti-
rot wait, these doers wilt not remain tute met in the community hall on
c pen always, If we do not accept the May 1st, with their new president,
rreat challenge now and share what Mrs, Edwin Woods, in the chair. The
v'e have, Russia will, and when that meeting opened with the Ode, 0 Can -
happens the door will be closed dor- oda and the Mary Stewart Collect. The
ever, we will have lest those millions secretary rend the correspondence find
of people, It is a very - sobering the minutes of the last meeting. The
nought. - business was then dealt with. Roll call
While In Windsor Mrs. McVittie
'.'as the guest of Dr. and Mrs. T. L
rnrnby. Many Blyth people will re-
membl.r the Rev. Mr. Barnby who was
rt sninister for some time. in our church
in Blyth, Dr. T. Barnby, M.D. is his
ton. He was very pleased to hear of
many-- people he remembered and of
whom his parents were so fond. He re-
called many amusing things ,also
pleasant ones, His mother is still liv-
ing in London,• and she celebrated her .
"2nd birthday very recently. She is
very active and enjoys fairly good
health and reads a great deal. There
were 150 signed the guest book at hor
ldrthday party,
,was answered by "The handiest gadget
in my kitchen. • Mrs. Durnin gave en
interesting reading. Mrs. Leonard Cald-
well and Mrs. Armstrong conducted
the penny sale. The meeting closed
with the hostesses serving a dainty
lunch.
kMONG TITE CIIIJRCHES
Sunday, May 11, 1958. ,
T. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
1 p.m. -Church Service and Sunday
ichool.
Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A„ Minister.
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Moth, Ontario.
Rev. W. D. Clark, Minister,
10;15 a,tn.-Sunday School.
11;15 a.m,--Morning Worship,
ANGLICAN CHURCH
Trinity, Blyth • -10;30 a.m.--Mattins
and Baptism,
St. Mark's, Auburn -12 noon -Mat -
tins and Baptism,
Trinity, Belgrave-2;30 p.m.•=Even-
song and Baptism,
CHURCH OH. G01) -
' McConnell Sheet, Blyth,
Special Speaker,
10 a.m,-Sunday School.
11 a,m.--Morning Worship.
'7:30 p.m. -Evening Worship,
Wednesday, 0 p.m. --Prayer and Bible
Study.
"Letter To The Editor"
Gentlemen - Are Fire Crackers go.
Ing out of existence?
In the State of Michigan Fire Crack-
ers are definately out. Heavy penal-
ties are imposed on any smuggled or
brought into the country. Careless-
ness of young hoodlums, fires and bail
accidents have brought this about.
Canada is fast following them. This
year over 50 percent of the towns will
not sell to minors. By -Laws are pas-
sed allowing merchants to sell time
days before the holiday only. A large
percent of merchants are recusing to
stock them at all claiming they aro
more trouble than they are worth.
You can not stop nature, there is al-
ways one or more lads who like to
Show off and get careless. This is a
shame as It used to be a lovely sig;tt
to watch the rockets,: going up and
these lads have spoiled It for the in-
nocent ones.1 have not seen any trav-
ellers, this year offering any rockets
and have only a limited quantity to
choose from. No merchant will be
Coolish enough to stock heavy in view
of the above out look.
We strongly suggest that our local
residents advise their children to save
their fireworks fbr the Lions Darty
at the Fair grounds 'on the holiday
night. They are doing it especially
for you.
• -Thank You, George W, Pelton.
TILE FARMER'S LAMENT
Why - oh why must the town man
monkey with the clock. We fully rea-
lize that he has a strenuous time put-
ting in his 40 to 44 hours a week if ,it i
wasn't for the public holiday every
month if there isn't one he will have
the mayor or reeve proclaim one
(Civic Holiday) his Wednesday after-
noon off and his week or two vacation
we doubt if he could stand it,
We also realize that he has a hard
time staking ends meet. Chicken $1.5t
but its the same cid hen the farmer
received .90 cents for dressed up to
look- like a chicken; beef 22 cents a
pound; pork 30 cents; eggs, 32 cents
a dozen, present farmers prices; and,
wages only $1,50 to $2.50 per hour.
Terrible, terrible, must have more
money or else a grant from the gov-
ernment.
Comes time ,for the farmer's
tion. Iie is dressed in his best,
W.M.S. To .Meet
The regular meeting of the W.M,S
of Blyth United Church will be held
on Monday I1ny 12tH, tit 8 p.m. Grunt
5 will be •in charge.
V ac1M'
a few
friends gather to see him off. They
carry him out, a few flowers on top,
and away they go with the preacher
in the lead. .A couple o! cars follow
to see him safely out of town and he
is gone where the town man can't
monkey with the clock when he comes
on the poor old -farmer.
DONNYT3ROO K
Commencing last Sunday service, in
Donnybrook Church\is being held at
9.45 a.m. for the summer months with
Sunday School following the church
service.
Many from here attended funeral
services on Wednesday afternoon, at
Curries funeral home in Wingham, for
the late Charles Robinson, who passed
away on Sunday, April 27th, in Wing -
ham hospital, where he had been n
patient since suffering a severe stroke
several weeks ago.
Mr. Robinson who was in his 75th
year, was the son of the late James -
and Catharine Adamson Robinson, and
was born ori the 6th concession of
West Wawanonh where he lived tuOil
retiring to Wingham about eight years
ago. He was highly respected by all.
A good neighbour and n kind friend.
He was a farmer member of Donny-
brook United Church and took an ac-
tive interest in All Church and com-
munity affairs.
Surviving besides his wife, the for-
mer Catharine McClinchey, of Auburn,
are two sons. Gordon, -of Wingham,
Edward, on the homestead, and two.
daughters, (Jean) Mrs. Sgt. H. Dainty,
of Petawnwa, and (Irene) Mrs. Doug-
las Williams, of London; ten grand-
children; one sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
Naylor, of Donnybrook, who is nt
(present a patient in Wingham hospital,
:and n large number of nieces and
Inepilews, His death makes the fifth
bereavement in the Robinson family
circle in less than one year.
The funeral service was conducted
by Rev, Durrant, of Wingham United
Church assisted by Rev. Harold Snell,
of Exeter, a former minister of Don-
nybrook Church. Pallbearers were;
Messers H. Jefferson ntnd James Leddy
of Donnybrook, and four nephews, Ed-
win Mills and W. J. Craig, Aullurn,
Scott Robinson, London, Carman Bor.
Iley, of Sarnia. Flowerbenrers were:
Messrs, Gordon Naylor, Charles Mills,
Carman Pratt and Earl Lynchbury. In-
terment was made ht Wingham ceme-
tery.
Congratulations to Donald Howard
who will celebrate his birthdoy nn
Friday, May Oth,
• v
• 'Congratulations to Mr. Donald Cart-
wright who will celebhte his birth-
day 'Sunday, May 11th.
• •
Congratulations to Mrs. Earl Gaunt
and Mrs, Emmerson Hesk, of Londes-
boro, who celebrated their birthday
on Saturday, May 3rd.
•r
Congratulations to Mr. E. J. Cart-
wright who celebrated his birthday
Sunday, May 4th.
• •
Congratulations to Mrs. J. E. Bryant,
360 Brunswick Street, Stratford, who
will celebrate her birthday on May 8.
• ►
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. R.
W. Madill, who celebrated their wed-
ding anniversary on Friday, May 2nd.
* •
Congratulations to Kevin Tasker
who' celebrated his 3rd birthday on
Saturday, May 3rd.
• 4
Congratulations to Glen Riley, of
Londesboro, who celebrated his 5th
birthday on Friday, May 2nd.
►
r
Congratulations to Mrs. Ed. Johns-
ton who celebrated her birthday on
TuescMy, May 6th.
Congratulations to Mrs, Ralph Cald-
well who celebrated her birthday on
Monday, May 5th. -
Congratulations to Miss Karen Cook
who vole'.)(-ated her birthday on Sat-
urday, May 3rd.
IN W'INGiIAM HOSPITAL
Mrs. Simon Hnllahan is a patient in
1Wingham hospital. We hope fur a
i speedy recovery.
i ►
Congratulations to Miss Lenore Ann
Hallehan who celebrates her 15th
birthday on Sunday, May llth. •
Council Discuss
Sewage Problems
Directors And Committees
10f Agr. Society Meet
The Directors and Committees of the
Men's Division of the Agricultural So-
ciety met in Memorial Hall Monday
evening with a record attendance and
much enthusiasm.
President, George Watt, chaired the
sleeting. The prize list was complete-
ly revised and many special features
and attractions added.
The Women's committee had met
previously and the amount of prize
money in each class was substantially
raised. Many special features have
been added to the Junior Section. For
grades 7 and 8, a map of Huron county
marking towns, incorporated villages,
(townships and rivers. Grades 5 and 6,
butterflies mounted and named. Grad-
es 3 and 4, a named animal moulded
from mache. Grades 1 and 2, three
articles made from plasticine. Another
special open to all grades, is in Bird
,Protection, and to consist of a bird
house, feeding tray and bird bath. The
tgrades in all cases to be the standing
of the pupil at the commencement of
the fall term.
Newly -Weds Presented
With Gift
A large gathering of neighbors
friends met at the home of Mr.
Mrs. John Snyder in honor of
and Mrs. Jim Glousher and Mr.
Mrs, Hank Dyk, newly-weds.
llhe evening was spent playing cards
after which the couples were called
toget-her and Mr. Bert Shobbrook read
an address, and they were presented
with end tal.fies and lamps. The
groom's thanked everyone for the gifts.
Lunch was enjoyed by all. •
Blyth Archery Club Taking
• Shape
Tuesday evening, May 12, 7 pan.
sharp (weather permitting) all arch-
ers with application forms signed will
meet in front of Peltons Store enroutc
to their new archery range ' at the
otne \of'`-•Mr_.and••.Mrs-.-John Blake; -•
(cars will be appreciated).
Application forms may be obtained
Girls and ladies, 12 years to 80 years
from Mrs. Charles St. Michael; Boys
and men 12 years to 80 years, frons
Mr. Ken Carter.
Won Prize At Kitchener
The Blyth Ladies Auxilia-v took a
bus trip to Kitchener last F.' fay to !
appear on CKCO Bazaar, A number '
of the ladies wore hnts designed by
themselves. Mrs. Russell Dougherty
wore a hat made out of a rutabaga
with a sign on the back of it, once a
turnip now a rutabaga. She received
$5.00 for winning first prize, plus an
extra $15.00 for standing on the corner
cf King and Queen streets for 15 min-
utes, wearing the hat.
Blyth Brunettes Meet
The fifth meeting of the Blyth Bru-
nettes was held at the home of Mrs.
Appleby on Monday night, May 5th,
with 17 girls present. The meeting op-
ened with the 4-1-1 pledge followed by
the roll call which was answered by
one accident hazard in my home and
what I'm going to do about it. The
minutes of the last meeting were read
and adopted followed by business dis-
cussion.
The next meeting to be held on
Friday night, May 16, at the home of
Mrs, Charles Johnston. Four girls
were chosen for the lunch.
Mrs. McDougall explained and dem-
onstrated the following things on first
aid: fractures, how to tie a sling, burns
and their treatment, fainting, suffoca-
tion and artificial respiration. Some
of the girls took part in showing the
Holger-Neilson method of artificial
respirution. Houle assignments were
given, The roll tall for next meeting
will be display of your charts, My
Horne and Myself. The meeting closed
with the Mary Stewart Collect follow-
ed by lunch.
CORRECTION
The Mill rate
minutes in lust
'have been 1112
Drills,
in the School Board
weeks paper should
trills instead of 61..e
LIBRARY NOr10E
t Beginning May 170 the Blyth Pub -
Pc Library will be open on Saturday
c,yenings from 8 until 9.30 until fur-
! :her notice.
and
8 n'l
Mr.
and
Letter From the Canadian
Red Cross
The following letter was received by
Mrs. Luella McGowan, Ladies' Aux-
Iliary, Canadian Legion.
Attached please find receipt for
$470.65, the amount of money forward-
ed to us in connection with our recent
car.'paign.
Our s•r-ere thanks to you and the
ladies of the Auxiliary and to the citi-
zens of Blyth for their wonderful sup-
port given us and which made possible
the success of this campaign. We re-
alize a great deal of work and plan-
ning was necessary to achieve this
success and we are most grateful to
all and ask that our thanks be. passed
along.
The work of the Canadian Red
Cross Society is very worthy of your
support and if at any time we can be
of service to you please do not hesi-
tate to call on us.
Looking forward
continued pleasant
more our sincere
derson, Campaign
Area Branch.
with pleasure, to
relations and once
thanks. -John An -
Director, London
The regular meeting of Blyth Coun-
cil was held in Memorial Hall on
Monday at 8 p.m., with Reeve Morritt,
Councillors, Cook, Elliott, FaIrservlce
and Howes present.
Motion by Cook and Elliott, that
minutes of last regular meeting be ad-
opted. Carried,
Mr. Russel Bentley was present to
request council to correct a drainage
problem adjoining his property. Coun-
cil ngreed to inspect the property,
Mr. Barr, District Engineer, and Mr.
Walsh of the Ontario Water Resources
Cammission, were present to discuss
and advise council in connection with
Blyth Creek pollutiop.
Mr. Barr gave a very informative
address in respect to stream pollution
and sewage treatment, also gave an-
swers to many questions from coun-
cil members. He also proved by tests
taken at different times that the coda
drain and Queen street storm sewer
:are responsible for pollution to a
much greater degree than the public
realize. Mr. Barr suggested a lagoon
type of sewage disposal, as being more
economical to install and very tial?
expense for operation after installa-
tion. The commission would super-
vise, install and finance a sewage sys-
tem for the village, and as it is an en-
tirely government, enterprise lower
interest rates are charged, and in ad-
dition debentures can be extended to a
forty year period, in this manner the
•annual payments are greatly reduced
at the conclusion of a question and
answer period. Mr. Barr advised coun-
cil to engage a consulting engineer and
obtain an estimate of a lagoon type
of sewage system for the Village or
Blyth. Following this survey and fur-
ther discussion By -Laws may be pas-
sed, however before actual work may
be started, the approval of the Ontaria
Municipal Board must be obtained.
Motion by Elliott and Howes, that
Mr. Barr and:. Mx. Walsh -,be given a
vote. of .thanks ia4ttending .this ,iitteet .
k(Iotion by Fairservice and Cook.
that we do now adjourn at 11:40 p.m.
to meet again on Thursday, May 8th.
at 8 p.tn. Carried.
-George Sloan, Clerk.
Waiting List For Cubs
Any parents of Blyth, Auburn or
Londesboro Areas who have boys eight
years old or over, or who will be
eight by the end of November 1958,
and wishing them to join the first
Blyth Pack, may contact the cub mas-
ter and have their names put on a
waiting list so they can be registered
in November 1958, as there will be no
more accepted after this date until
November 1958. For further informa-
tion please contact Cub Master, Harry
Gibbons.
TROUSSEAU TEA
Mrs. Joseph McCaughey will hold
a trousseau tea on Wednesday, May 14,
from 2:30 to 4.30 in the afternoon and
7:30 to 9:00 in the evening, in honor o'
the forth coming marriage of het
daughter, Mary. Everyone is inviter
to attend.
Ladies Auxiliary Meeting
jThe regular meeting of the Ladies
!Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion
Branch 420 net in the Legion Home on
Monday, May 5th, with the president
presiding. We are planning for our
Annual Church Service on June 8th,
'and our Zone Rally, May 21st, in Blyth
,Memorial Hall. $25.00 was voted to
!the Canadian Legion and Ladles Aux-
' ilinry Scholarship which is open to
IA'gion and Auxiliary members fan -
i hies.
It was moved that our president, !
Mrs. Harold Badley, be delegate to ,
tour Convention In September to be
held in the Royal York.
AUBURN
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Arthur anr'
Jayne and John Wright moved to tht
village last week.
Mr. and Mrs, Bob Thompson and
family, of Brampton, visited on Mon-
day with his grandparents, Mr. ane
Mrs. Herbert Mogridge. Mrs, Gormerl•;
Thompson returned with them to thn
city after a week's visit with her par
01118,
GEORGE W. COWAN RESIGNS
AS CLERK -TREASURER
At the regular meeting of the Hui -
lett Township Council held in Londes-
boro on Monday night, Reeve William
,htniitt, and the council, accepted with
.regret the resignation of their clerk -
treasurer, George W. Cowan, o'
Londesboro,
Mr. Cowan has served the township
'in the capacity Of clerk -treasurer fo-
the past 13 years. His resignation, due
'to health reasons, takes effect on June
1st.
The council will meet at a special
i
session on May 19 to appoint his suc-
cessor,
WHITE-
tal
and
In
BIRTHS
Wingham
General
Hospi-
on May 4, 1958, to Mr.
Kenneth White, RR. 4
Brussels, the gift of a son.
McGee- In Wingham General Hospi-
tal on Monday, May 5, 1958, to Mr.
and Mrs, George McGee, R.R, 3
•Wingham, the gift of a son.
Sunday,
Mrs.
Now
Engagement Announced
Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth B. Davis,
Stratford, wish to announce the en-
gagement of their eldest daughter,
Muriel Jean, to 11Ir. William Asil
Coultes, son of Mr. and Mrs, Robert
H. Coultes, R.R. 5, Brussels. The wed-
ding will take place in St, John's
United Church, Stratford, on May 31,
I at 3:30 pm. 1
Sausage Was Spy's
Secret Weapon
On a bright, summer morn-
ing a solemn, dignified Mother
Superior cycled along a French
road from her convent to the
village, where the sick and
needy awaited her. Rounding a
corner, she ran into the rear of
a hay -cart and fell, the contents
of the basket on the handlebars
spilling on to the road.
Down from the wagon scram-
bled the driver. His face blanch..
• id under his tan when he saw
• who the cyclist was, He shud-
dered as two Gestapo men, who '
had commandeered a lift, also
climbed down.
"Dolt!" exclaimed one of
them. "Help the good Mother
to collect her thing's." And he
bent down to pick up the nun's
possessions,
The driver, a member of the
Maquis, moved slowly, stiff
with fear, for he knew what
was in the loaf of bread, now
broken at the corners, and in
the roll of sausage now lying al-
most at the Gestapo man's feet.
"Thank you, said the Mother
Superior calmly, as the German
llcked up and handed her the
oaf, then the sausage. The driv-
er, recovering his wits, retrieved
the Sacred Heart cards that
were scattered on the ground.
"Have a piece of sausage, lay
son," the nun urged him kindly.
He bit into it carefully to avoid
the explosive hidden in its fill-
ing. She smiled and gently
made the sign of the cross.
That night the sausage and
loaf, which also contained ex-
plosive, helped to blow a gap in
a bridge as an ammunition train
crossed it. At the same time,
ten miles away in the town, a
Gestapo office containing re-
cords of French Resistance sus-
pects suddenly burst into flame.
The full instructions for these
concerted acts had been written
in invisible ink on the Sacred
Heart cards, between the lines
of prayer. The success of the
operations had depended on
their safe delivery — and the
Mother Superior's cool courage
had ensured it.
She was one of our best war-
time agents, says Leslie Bell in
"Sabotagef", the story of Lt. -
Col. J. Elder Wills, sabotage.
chief of Britain's Inter -Services
Research Bureau and camou-
flage adviser to the cloak-and-
dagger boys. At times her con-
vent cellar was full of arms and
explosives for Maquis use. Cav-
ities in statutes of saints in the
chapel often contained codes and
instructions which agents ex-
tracted and digested under cov-
er of prayer.
The S'ured Heart cards, bear-
ing messages in secret ink, visi-
ble only under infrared rays,
had been made for the Mother
by Wills. She distributed them
openly on her normal rounds,
Col. Elder Wills and his staff
*Vinci c41tnt1esa masterpiecets
f deception, including k plaster
pit -prop concealing a three-
inch mortar; an explosive oil-
can; a radio hidden in a barrel
of wine which could be tapped
for drinking without harming
the set; imitation plaster and
papier-mache logs, fruit and
vegetables containing fuses, ex-
plosives and arms; imitation
coal containing explosive; cy-
anide suicide tablets disguised
as shirt buttons, lipsticks or
cigarette -ends; a torch which lit
when the button was pressed in
the normal way, but became a
time -fused grenade when the
button was clicked down hard,
and photographs of Hitler and
his chiefs of staff which could
be hung up openly, but which
revealed hidden codes to our
agents using infra -red to 'ches,
Even dead rats, obtained from
rat-catchers, were opened up
and filled with explosives, time -
fuses and detonators. They were
sewn up again and distributed
to agents in various countrles
for dumping in the boiler rooms
of factories, where they were
invariably swept up and shovel-
led into the furnaces with de-
vastating results,
The first experimental proto-
type to be completed might have
blown up Wills's H,Q., for when
it was laid out for inspection
the station cat swooped and
rushed off with it, frantically
pursued by every member of
the staff! Luckily, it was re-
trieved safely,
It was later tested at a coun-
try station, after which a dozen
were produced and distributed
to agents -abroad. Nine of them
caused big explosions in the
boiler rooms of factories en-
gaged on essential war work.
Another eighty were then pre-
pared and flown to Belgium to
be parachuted in a container,
the fuses being sent by other
means for safety reasons. Un-
fortunately, the 'plane crashed
just inside Belgium and the rats
were discovered. They were ex-
amined at Gestapo H.Q., and
sent to counter -sabotage schools.
Alerted, the German Intellig-
ence at once ordered villagers
and townsfolk to bring in every
dead rat found.
Wills's staff were dismayed at
first, but then they realized how
they could exploit the situation.
They instructed agents and Re-
sistance men to urge everyone
to kill rats by the hundred and
take them to the Gestapo.
The people took to the task
like ducks to water. It looked
like some huge treasure hunt as
men, women and children scour-
ed the local ditches and sewers
for the wanted rodents.
Sack upon sack of dead rats
arrived at the German head-
quarters.
Each abominable corpse had
to be carefully examined for
hidden explosive, while armed
guards took charge of the ever -
mounting piles—until the Ges-
tapo eventually realized that
they were the victims of a
monster leg-pull!
Fantastic, yet true, this is the
astonishing inside story of an
organfiation which, in one year
alone, equipped agents at the
rate of sixteen a day and is-
sued 90,000 articles of conceal-
ment and sabotage.
"Family" Program
Throughout England, . shortly
after 10 p.m. every Tuesday for
the past two months, phones In
physicians' homes have begun
jingling. From the other end
come repetitious complaints: The
caller has just viewed BBC -TV's
"Your Life in Their Hands" and
has collapsed or developed some
peculiar pains. On occasion, the
cane >3rQ Inorl distressing.
Last week in Oldham, at an
inquest into the death of Mary
Melia, 43, the coroner was told
by the victim's fiance that the
woman had brooded about her
heart disease after watching a
blood -curdling TV close-up of a
heart operation, Miss Melia's
suicide was the third attributed
by coroners to watching "Your
Life in Their Hands."
The BBC says "our viewers
have a healthy interest in di-
sease which we feel it is legiti-
mate to satisfy." But the Bri-
tish Medical Journal protested:
"This pandering to the preva-
lent interest in the morbid goes
against all efforts ... to interest
the public in health rather than
disease."
THAT'LL ITOP 'EM—A big wheel 1
°Ikey" Adams points to the sign
driving a 10 -wheeler for'the past
ing company with her husband,
better at the wheel than men.
n transportation, Mrs. Ida May
on her truck. "Ikey" has been
17 years and•operates a truck -
Glenn. What the country needs
BUSMAN'S HOLIDAY—Like the proverbial bus driver who goes
for a ride on .his day off, Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida uses
her free time to attend a movie. The lovely screen queen was
"caught" by the •camera,at a premiere in Rome.
lITAL
A
ii�+5
dam Aube=
If you ever have leftover
angel cake at your house -1(V may
take true restraint to achieve
this goal), try' this concoction.
It was dreamed up by a busy
homemaker' who wanted to
serve strawberry shortcake, but
whose guests were arriving at
such an indeterminate hour that
a freshly baked dessert seemed
impractical.
There was half an angel cake
in the pantry, This she broke
up into very small pieces—pos.
sibly 4 cupfuls—and spread a
layer of the crumbs on the bot-
tom of a casserole dish, Whip-
ped cream was spread on next,
them another layer of angel
cake crumbs, more cream, and
so on, until all was used. A. half
pint of cream, whipped, was
used in all,
The casserole dish was placed
in the refrigerator and chilled
24 hours. When the guests came,
all that remained to do was to
slice wedges, place them on a
dessert plate and cover with
strawberries.
Tip from the cook: be sure to
chill 24 hours so that the cream
will soak well into the cake,
• • •
French Savarin Bread
2 packages yeast, compressed
or dry
3/4 cup water (lukewarm for
compressed yeast, warm
for dry)
1/2 cup milk
1✓ cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
% cup melted butter
4 cups sifted flour (about)
11/s teaspoons vanilla
4 eggs, beaten
Confectioners' sugar icing
Chopped blanched almonds
Candled fruit pieces
Soften yeast in water. Scald
milk, and add sugar, salt, and
butter, Cool to lukewarm. Add
flour to make a thick batter;
mix well. Add softened yeast,
vanilla and eggs. Beat well,
Add enough more flour to make
a stiff batter. Beat thoroughly
until smooth. Cover and let rise
in warm place until bubbly
(about 1 hour).
Stir down. Turn batter into
well -greased 10 -inch tube pan
or 2 well -greased 11/4 -quart ring
molds. Let rise until doubled
(about 45 minutes for tube pan;
about 30 minutes for ring
molds). Bake at 350° F. about
35 minutes for tube pan and 25.
30 minutes for ring molds. Re-
move from pan and cool. Driz-
zle with confectioners' sugar
Icing and decorate with almonds
and fruit.
Quick Confectioners' Icing
3 tablespoons hot cream (lemon
or orange juice may be used
instead)
R cups sifted confectioners'
sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla or % tea-
spoon almond extract
Stir het cream into sugar and
stir in flavoring, If frosting
is too thick to spread easily, add
more cream; if . too thin, add
more sugar.
• • •
Quick Coffeecakes
14 cup butter, melted
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
% teaspoon salt
14 cup sugar
1 egg, beaten
2/4 cup milk
14 cup pineapple juice
134 cups pineapple tidbits
Topping
1/ cup butter melted
% cup sifted flout
14 teaspoon cinnamon
1/ cup brown sugar
Sift dry ingredients together.
Combine butter, egg, milk, and
pineapple juice; add to dry in-
gredients and mix until just
blended. Place in greased muf-
fin pans. Top each with 4-5 tid-
bits. Combine flour, cinnamon
and brown sugar for topping;
add melted butter; blend, Sprin-
kle over cakes. Bake at 375°
F. for 30 minutes.
•
* •
No matter which of the above
recipes you use -- or you may
have a favorite recipe of • your
own which you like better —
you can always vary the taste
of coffecake by using different
toppings, Here are several for
you to choose from:
Orange Crunch Topping
6 tablespoons butter
11/2 cup sugar
1 tablespoon- grated orange
rind
14 cup flour
% cup bread crumbs
35 cup pecans, coarsely
chopped
Cream together the butter and
sugar; blend in orange rind.
Add other ingredients. Mix
with fork or finger tips until
crumbly. Sprinkle over coffee -
cake batter before baking. (Tops
2 coffee -cakes).
• •_
3
34
y4
lig
•
Roney Crisp Topping
tablespoons softened butter
cup honey
cup shredded coconut
cup crushed corn flakes .
cup drained crushed pine-
apple
Cream together the butter
and honey until light and fluffy.
Add other ingredients and mix
thoroughly. Spread on batter
for one cake,
If you like to put the icing in
the bottom of the pan and then
add your batter, here are a few
suggestions.
Upside -Down Icings
Orange Marmalade: Sprinkle
1/4 cup brown sugar in pan; add
1 cup orange marmalade; spoon
in dough on top.
Butterscotch Nut: Melt in pan
1/2 cup butter and 1/2 cup brown
sugar with 1 '-tablespoon corn
syrup. Add / cup pecans or
walnuts. Cool to warm before
adding dough.
Dropped into Love
A man who fell four storeys
from' an American skyscraper
and escaped because he landed
squarely on a pile of mattresses
on a passing truck in the street
below, said that as he dropped
he saw in his mind's eye a
vision of a pretty girl with fair
hair. Two years later, at a party,
he was introduced to a girl who
was just like the one he had
seen during his fall. It was a
case of love at first sight and
they are now married.
Does a drowning man really
see his entire life pass before
him during his last few seconds?
One who did not, is the bo'sun
of a fishing trawler who fell
overboard to what seemed cer-
tain death in icy seas off Scot-
land not long ago.
He felt sure he would drown,
but he had the presence of mind
to keep his eyes open while un-
der water and, seeing the nets,
grabbed them and was rescued.
What passed through his mind
he later reported to the owners'
of the trawler. "I couldn't help
thinking '.hal the ship's bottom
l;adly ne'3s :,in'1,1_,," he said.
Those Days it Was
Really Ice Cream
In the midst of tremendous
successes we should not neglect
the long -overdue ultimatum from
the Food and Drug people about
ice cream. The word has just
come .down from Washington, the
result of fifty tedious years of
study—an unhurried decision ar-
rived at sedately,
Fifty years is about the same
length of time ice cream has
been going downhill, It would
have been wonderful if the Su-
preme Court had come out with
a stop order in 1908, but hu-
manity was not to be served so
well. In 1908 you could still get
a fairly decent ice cream, It
came out of the back seat of .a
one-horse cart fitted with jingle
bells, and you held a soup plate
up while the man did a three-
fold dip for strawberry, choco-
late, and vanilla, He always look-
ed first to be sure the money
wasn't in the dish, as it often
was.
Then you would run to the
house so Mother could distribute
the ice cream in smaller dishes
before it melted, and you could
sit in the lawn swing and eat it.
Do you think the Food and
Drug people know about the
lawn swings?
All they said was that ica
cream, as of 1958 et scq,, must
contain 10 per cent cream, and
not too much water and air,
Thus one of the greatest frauds
on the American palate finally
won the sanction of law. Air and
water, and. 10 per cent cream,
have been adjudicated, and the
respectable, legal amount is on
file.
We should pause to take public
notice of the announcement's
actual words, It says: "The
standards would assure • con-
sumers of getting what they ex-
pect in various kinds of ice cream
and sherbet.' Read that again!
" , . what they expect . .." So
what does a typical American
consumer, whose memory does
not stretch back to 1908, expect
when he buys ice cream? This
is the gist, the crux,
The American consumer, pre-
sumably, expects that he will get
10 per cent cream, air, water, and
a delightful artificial flavor. So
long as the concoction weighs
1.6 pounds to the gallon (this is
the Food and Drug minimum
from now on) . he is satisfied
when he gets the stuff home.
Thus we have not only the
Food and Drug definition of ice
cream, but we have the Food
and Drug definitions of a satis-
fied American—the expectations
of the consumer. Conforming
handsomely in all respects, he
goes in the "In" door of the
grocery, takes his little pushcart,
subscribes to the maximum price
regulations of the Milk Control
Board, secure in the implied
warranty of citizenship (he no
longer knows what caveat emptor
means), and picks up a quart of
ice cream with satisfied expecta-
tions that it will weigh one-
fourth of 1.6 pounds, contain 10
per cent cream, and will have
no more air and water than is
good for him, (By the way, or
weight, what is one-fourth of 1.8
pounds?)
We have some friends who
found a bargain in ice cream,
once, Some store was having a
stile to introduce its new frozen
foods department, and our
friends bought eight gallons of
ice cream. They took it home
and set to repackaging it in pint
containers, so it would be In
handy amount to carry them
through the wintre. Thus they.
could go to their freezer and get
a pint of ice cream, if friends
stopped by, and they wouldn't
r
have to open a gallon packnge
every time,
They were able to pack three
gallons in the first pint container,
and they ate the other five gal-
lons for supper with a cookie.
Our friends had been swindled,
at least to their expectations,
Oh, I know—this is not a new ,
topic with me. Yam the perennial
Jeremiah of the ice cream circuit,
and have tried often to teach
the truth to the uncaring masses.
I have told how we used to
make ice cream from 100 per
cent cream and eggs and fruit,
and how we cranked it on the
back steps.
This had no effect. I was
hoping enough people would read
about the real ice cream of an-
cient times so a demand would
materialize, and ice-cream mak-
ers would decide to -confect a
glad surprise. In our old ice
cream we did not use air and
water. We had a tutti-fruiti that
ran 17 pounds to the gallon, and
after we'd eaten it we could
get a drink at the sink or step
outside for a breath of air.
I notice, too, that this 10 per
cent ice cream, with its legal
air and water, •is restricted as to
"total solids content", Our old
ice cream would melt, but mod-
ern ice cream is solid, If you
didn't eat our old ice cream right
away, it would relax and become
loose and shapeless.,But you can
set a plate of today's constitu-
tional ice cream on a window sill
in the hot August sun, and come
back in. September and find it
en garde, alert and permanent,
It is no longer cold, but it might
as well be. Its total solids con-
tent of 1.8 pounds to gallon does
this, no doubt.
As with all similar government
pronouncements, this ice cream
white paper has its dubious
phrases. The general subject,
which should stir the appetite, is
handled in unpoetic fashion, and
doesn't make me hungry for the
goody at all. There is some-
thing about the discussion which
doesn't go with ice cream. I was
not all of a twitter as I read
about it, as I generally am If
the subject is brought up other-
wise.
I am not sure I read it closely,
either, and I do not intend to
go back and find out. I think
you can call it something else,
without breaking the law, if you
want to keep the air in and go
right ahead, as Len Marr used to
say, "Irregardess",
But if it says "ice cream", you
are going to get what you ex-
pect, and also what you deserve.
You may also keep and bear
arms, freely speak and publish,
and be secure in protection
against self - nicrimination. The
Grand Jury will see to it. But
do not expect more than 10
per cent. —by John Gould in
The Christian Science Monitor.
When you CARRY BABY,
wrap a small plastic tablecloth
around his blanket to keep fuzz
and lint off your clothing,
SALLY'S SALLIES
"You say you are not good
enough for me, Doesn't that
settle It?"
SPRING SWING—Making the most of the warm weather, a couple
a young ladies fly high in Central Park. The one at right looks
as though she's ready to zoom over the tallest of the city's
buildings.
By Their Dress You
May Know Them
Deliberate and orderly by na-
ture, Amos Zaugg does not do
things on the spur of the mo-
ment; he likes to plan his days
in advance, and has a firm belief
in the homely virtue of punctu-
ality. In his home, as in most
others in this locality, clocks
' are kept from ten to thirty min-
utes fast to prevent tardiness.
Emmaline, on the other hand,
follows a work pattern that is
more elastic, and one of her en-
dearing traits is her child -like
impulsiveness. If she feels "for
dyeing" on a weekday, no mat-
ter which one, out come her dye
pots,'And no gifted artist with
palette and brush ever mixed
colors with more artistry than
this simple . Dutch housewife,
Out of her judicious blendings
she brings forth bright violet,
soft delphinium -blue, rich wine -
red, brilliant winter - 'wheat
green, midnight -black, and all
the shades of gray.
Once we are deep in winter,
all the farm wives hereabout
get busy with their sewing.
There is no exchanging of pat-
terns, as in communities not
peopled by the "plain" sects. For
Emmaline and the other Amish -
women there is ons; one way to
make a dress: a tight bodice
with long sleeves, a kerchief
brought to a point below the
*aist both in front and in back,
a long full skirt. No trimmings
of braid, ruching, or embroid-
ery is allowed; color is their
only outlet for creative urgings,
end it is restricted to the young
girls.
Married wornen wear black,
or a subdued dark gray, It is
like the habit worn by Mem-
bers of an order, not subject to
change. But these fixed modes
portray a way of life that has
successfully combated the blight
of the century: materialism.
Men's and boys' clothes are
made at home -for where could
you buy a suit with broadtail
pants and a coat without lapels?
So broadcloth is bought by the
bolt, and fastenings of hooks
and eyes -and even zippers-.
for only buttons are forbidden.
It was the lavish use of buttons
on military uniforms in the sev-
enteenth and eighteenth cen-
turies that led to the Amish ban
on buttons.
Emmaline sews aprons and
bonnets of black for herself, and
under "' a commodious bonnet,
with a full skirt or ruffle in
back, she wears her simple little
prayer caps of white lawn or
white net throughout the day
to cover her head, as St. Paul
commanded, and to be ready at
any time of the day for prayer.
Anna and Hilda have bonnets of
soft rose and blue "for nice"
and their mother makes little
black jackets for them to wear
to church under their fringed
shawls, They are counted young
ladies now, and Emmaline half
sighs and says: "No more yet
do I put tucks in the Skirts and
sleeves to let out for growings."
In all this flurry of sewing,
no drapes or curtains are made
for the small -paned windows,
for these are strictly forbidden,
Yet there are ways to beautify
a house without ostentation. In
room -to -room doorways where'
there are no wooden doors, her
handiwork is evident in bright -
hued curtains that swing and
flutter briskly with each passing
to and fro. Clean rag rugs dot the
kitchen floor; hooked rugs are
used in the "good" room, and
pretty embroidered towels made
by the girls, as well as calen-
dar's from the local business
firms, make bright spots on oth-
erwise austere walls.
Every sunny window is filled
with potted plants: geraniums,
begonias, primroses, delicate
Patience Plants, and the prized
Christmas cactus, to name' a
few, Large windowpanes may
be forbidden, but the small
panes shine from daily wipings
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
Aelt(188
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1 Not so
dangerous
0 (Marge
12 Stowe
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13 6lndern1u
l4 IA1tlrely
15 lilaclnl
fragment
17. Stock nt
tweal(b
19 Ituhhhb
211 After eo11K
21 Lurk opener
23 Sooner than
21 N30111,11III lila
211 Deed
211 full alter
81 Article 1)t '
fit l•nl1ltl'e
It Snatch
35 Itor!e,
87 I,le of ease
118 Stormed
40, Doleful
12. !termini
43 Morning Ink)
41. 1'ltur-do-lis
In. Steer wildly
i8, \'nrietles
60, Scope
14. in the shat•
(which
separates
66 Sincerely
17. I'ast
68 1'('llnped
labrir
10. Sheller
41, Summit
19. I,ttltewa 1'111
13. 1'Inwrd 1111
rlrst card
and seem more cheerful than
any picture windows ever de- •
vised, Over all, there is the at-
mosphere of home,
Trina held her first quilting
party in her new' home this
winter, and there was a great
to-do there as she and Eli got
ready for the quilters, Every.
thing is always neat and clean,
but of course there had to be a
sort of supercleaning for the big
event, with even the cellar stairs
getting a good scrubbing by the
man of the house. No quilting
would be considered complete
unless everyone was invited
down cellar to see the shelves of
homemade jellies, canned toma-
toes and string beans, sour cher-
ries for pies, chow -chow, picca-
lilli and ketchup, spiced pears
and peaches, and all the other
good things that are there in
abundance, Every woman has
these same things at home in
her own cellar, but it is a sort
of ritual, and they would feel
cheated if dented the opportun-
ity to inspect it,
Trina's shelves were perfect,
from the fringed paper linings
to the last shining jar, and there
were two items on them that
captivated her guests: whole
string beans and tiny spiced
crabapples dyed red with food
coloring. "Afh, it's just some-
thing I thought up to do," she
protested, but her eyes were
shining and her cheeks were
pink as the primroses in her
window, and one could see that
Emmaline was pleased that her
son's wife should show such in-
genuity. It is by such things that
happiness is achieved here where
housewifely arts are so highly
prized.
Eight women, each provided
with her own needles and shears,
and with a long white sleevelet
drawn over her quilting arm,
gathered around the frames
stretched on the backs of four
chairs in' the living room. No-
where are patchwork quilts
more beautiful in design, more
exquisitely sewn.
Trina's quilt had a border of
grape clusters, with each grape
tufted and hand -sewn or appli-
qued on a white top to form a
design as startlingly vivid and
clear as any pattern etched on
fine china. One dared not voles
fully the praise it deserved in a
company of women dedicated to
abstinence from all forms of
pride, so I could only call it
"pretty," a puny word for such
beauty. A queen might delight
in such a cover for her bed, yet
Trina could only allow that it
would Abe "nice and cool for
summer."
There was much chatting
about quilts and who was mak-
ing what kind, I heard of one
called "Turkey Tracks," another
was "Four Doves in a Window,"
then there was mention of "Tree
of Paradise," "Seven Stars," and
the ever popular "Bethlehem
Star." I wanted to see them all,
and may in time.
A delectable odor pervaded
every nook and corner of Trina's
clean house as the noon hour
drew nearer, It was not quite
the pungent scent of sauerkraut,
but akin to it, Lizzie Mast, bux-
om and hearty, identified it for
me: sauerbraten. Food for a
quilting party is always furn-
ished by the hostess, and for
this most important occasion
Trina had selected the zesty
(neat dish that employs ginger-
snaps as an ingredient for the
gravy with which it is covered
when served.
Il has been said of ti gym, "By
their dress, you may know the
Amish," It could as truly be said
of their faces, for they portray
the rewards of a good way of
life. -By Mabel Slack Shelton
in The Christian Science Moni-
tor.
A dairy cream which can be
kept without refrigeration up to
six months has been developed
by the U.S. Department of Agri-
culture.
8. 111111)'',•
9. Destiny
11). t:uldo'e Wore
1 I. !louse finale
11). Bequest
10, r\II that could
be desired
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2 Ihisl ire mouthedjar
3 1(Ind of 21. contained
rubber 26 Elly of the
4. Scent ling 'raj Ala ha1
6..Iewls11 month 27 SIuft
r, 1'ounlcnl,lice 28. Label
7. 1'trblle 31), 10,N Is) al •
storehouse 3:1
1'ut sh l t
34. Under
36. Merry
39. Straight
41. Went dwIrtiy
41 Cubic meter
47 Armed strife
48. Ball
49 011np ecoid•
61 lir no legal
farce
69 College song
63, Watched
narrowly
61. Baseball
Implement
50. Self
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13 111.
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PAGE 4
�� INIM/I
For "Mother" On Her Day
Sweaters in Ban -Lon, wool or orlon
Nylon Hose (seamless and stretch)
Slips in rayon or nylon
Hankies, tatted edges
Scarves, white and colors
$5.95 Up
. pair $1.39
$2.98 Up
$1.25 and 98c
89c and 98c
Needlecraft Shoppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
"The Shop fur Tots and Teens"
‘-•-•-•+..-.+ r••. •-•-•-• ••r.+ H•. •-r+ •+• •-•-• • •+* $-•-• • H+• -•+•-H
i
1
•
•
MOTHS ARE DESTRUCTIVE
you get
FREE
MOTHPROtIFING
at
BUCHANAN CLEANERS
When Garments Are Cleaned By Us
Agent Blyth:
NEEDLECRAFT SIIOPPE
SPRING STOCK
FENCING SUPPLIES :—
Steel Posts, Barb Wire, Page hence,
Poultry and Hog Fence.
Stretchers For Loan
Lumber, Plywoods, 'Wallboards,
Arborite, Masonite
Ashpalt Shin,gles
Ashpalt Rolled Roofing
Insul-Brie Siding
r-
-Plans For Pole Barn Construction
Creosote Polos and Lumber
Steel and Aluminum Roofing
Homasote
Fresh Cement Arriving Daily
Free Delivery
A. MANNING & SONS
Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario
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DON'T FORGET
Mothers Day
SUNDAY, MAY llth
Full Fashion Nylon Hose 69c to 1.50
Ladies Handbags, Nylon and Plastics.
Womens Orlon Cardigans and Pullovers and Jum-
bo Knit Orions.
Womens Blouses of Nylon Dacron and Cotton
Large -/Vssortment, of Womens and Misses Dresses
in the new chemise styles of glazed cottons
and tereylene
Ladies Leather Wallets
Nylon Tricot Slips, also Cottons
Gioves hof Nylon and Chamois Suede in many colors
Womens and Misses Pyjamas and Gowns
New shipment of Luggage, made in England, in
smart new styles, priced from 3.95 to 8.50
Train Cases or Over Nite Bags 9.50 to 5.50
You inay have your choice of either 5 per cent Sales
Slips or Black Diamond Stamps.
The Arcade Stores
STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS.
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THE BLYTH# STANDARD Welnesday, May 7, 1958
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WALTON
W.81.S, de W.A,
�� i>�ru, .of a daughter i� ClintonThe May meeting of. Walton pulls
United. Church WMS was held. In the
church .bascanent en Thulvday, May 1.
Mrs, E. Mitchell,. and vice-president,
opened the meeting. by the use of hymn
2J "Lord of All Being," and, prayer:.
Scripture and comments were based on
"The World is One in prayer." The
minutes of the April meeting .were
read by Mrs. B. McMichael, ales. the
Thankoftering meeting, roll call and
thank you canis,. The treasurer, Mrs.
R• Achilles, gave the financial state-
ment. The bale, in charge of Mrs. C.
Martin, will be packed and pent away
as soon as possible. A collection will
be taken top In each group to defray
the expense of sending' the bale. It
was decided to leave the ordering of
more World Friends with Mrs. N.
Schadle, literature secretary, and the
Miss'.on Band leader, Mrs. W. Bewley.
The toplc, "To study servo proihlems•
.of prejudice and race relations in or-
der to discover how we can help those
who are working toward reconciliation
was taken by the 17th and Boundary
Group, the following ladies taking part
Mrs. Wim, Bennett, Mrs. M. Baan, Mrs.
H. Craig, Mrs. C. Ritchie, The meet -
Ing closed with hymn 378 "P` -se Up Oh
Men Of God," and a prayer.
Hymn 148 "Breathe on me Breath of
1God" opened the WA session with Mrs.
ID. Watson at the piano. Mrs. G Mc -
Gavin had meditation taken from
psalms 119 II will meditate on thy
statues," followed by prayer. Mrs. R.
Bennett gave the secretary's report,
and also read a number of apprecia-
tion cards. The kitchen committee
have the extra articles on display that
had been purchased. Mrs. A, Coutts
stated that their was a balunce cn
hand of $221.36, Everyone who have
flowers through the month of May are
asked to bring them to the Sunday
Service, then the following groups will
take their term for the month of Juno:
McKillop, July 8th and 16th; August,
17 and Boundary, and September,
Walton. The fifth annual Huron Pres-
bytery WA meeting will be held in
Wingham United Church. Mrs, J. Y.
McKinnon of London, and is London
Conference WA President, will be
guest speaker in the afternoon, Dele-
gates appointed to attend are Mrs. T.
Dundas and Mrs. B. Johnston or Mrs.
N. Marks. It was decided to try an
Auction Sale date to bb set about the
first week of September with the fol-
lowing committee in charge: Mrs. N.
Reid, Mrs. G. McGavin, Mrs. Ken Mc-
Donald. This committee can form
other committees us they see fit. -The
Bulletin Board for S.S., presented, by
Mr. and Mrs. T. Mitchell, was acknow-
ledged by the ladies, Plans were made
to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of
the WA with a social evening for the
wlhole congregation. The program com-
mittee to consist of Mrs. E. Mitchell,
Mrs. A. Bub and Mrs. Ethel Hack -
well, date to be Friday evening, June
6. Lunch to consist .of sandwiches; pie
and ice cream. Charge to be 40c and
• 20e, with Mrs. A. Coutts and Mrs. R.
,Bennett as doorkeepers. Hymn 187,
!Break Thou the Bread of Life, was
sung and the Lord's Prayer repeated in
unis:n.
A special Family Day Program Is
being prepared by the superintendent,
Mr, M. Baan, and the teachers cf
Duff's United Church Sunday School
for next Sunday morning to be held
in the auditorium of the church at
10:30 a.m. All parents are cordially
invited to attend as a number of child-
ren will take part in the service. A
Mother's Day Service will be held at
11:30 when the Sacrament of Baptism
will be observed and a Mother's choir
will supply special ntunliers under
the direction of the choir leader, Mrs.
Harvey Brown.
Mrs. Tillie Johnston who has been'
residing in Seaforth has now taken up
residence with Mrs. Thomas Leeming.
Mrs. George Dundas is visiting thf:;,
week with her daughter and son-in-
law, Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews, and
other members of the family in 'Tor-
onto.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gordon have
purchased the home of the late Mr,
Frank Kelly,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stryker and
family have moved to their new home
near Clinton.
Mr, and Mrs. Fred Sinclair had n
very successful household and imple-
ment sale last Saturday afternoon,
They will Iea0e Immediately for their
home in California,
Mrs. John Taylor has returned home
after being confined to Clinton hos.,
pita' for three months.
Mr. Art Bewley and daughter, cf
Toronto, were visitors at the home of -
Mr, and Mrs. Walter Bewley.
Mr. Ron Ennis and Miss Barbara
Boyd have returned home after hav-
ing completed their first year at
Western University,
Miss Ione Watson, of 'Toronto, and
Mics Verde Watson, of London, were
week -end visitors with their pareJtt.,.
Mr. M. Fraser spent the week -end in
Stratford with his son and daughter=
1n -law, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fraser.
Mr. lan Kirkby, of Toronto, visited
with his grandparents, Mr, and Mrs.
H. B. Kirkby, over the week -end.
Extensive improvements nre being
made to the former Kirkby house now
owned by Mr. and Mrs. F, Culbert.
Congratulations are extended to
Mr. and Mrs. J. Leaning nn the i A • it
of a daughter on Saturday, April 26,
in Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth,
and to Mr. and Mrs. Donald McDonald
1 on the birth of daughter in Clinton
W. M. S.
BAKE SALE
A Sale of - Horne Made
Baking and a display of
Quilts & Clothing for Over-
seas : Relief will be held in
the Church Basement o11
FRIDAY, MAY 16th
at 3 p.m.
All Proceeds to be used
for Relief Work of . the
W.M.S.
Scout and Cub
PAPER DRIVE
Saturday, May 10th
Have all paper tied in bundles and ( ;
at the curb.
Anyone in the country wishing to
bring in paper Saturday morning may
leave it at Elliott's Bus Garage on
Queen Street.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
ALL PERSONS having claims
against the estate of Mabel McCall
Gil.ton, late cf the Village of Blyth,
in the County ,of I•Iuron, Widow, who
died on or about the seventh day of
April, A.D. 1958, are notified to send
to the undersigned, ep •er before the
24th day of May, 1950, full particulars
of their claims in writing. Immediately
after the said 24th day of May, the
assets of the said Testator will be dis-
tributed amongst the parties entitled
thereto, having regard only to claims
of which the Executors shall then have
notice.
DATED this 2nd day of May, A.D.
1958.
CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON,
Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the
Executors. 19-3
NOTICE .
FORGET-ME-NOTS, green onions,
Brussels white loaf at Jouwama Mar-
ket Gardens, R.R. 2, Wingham, phone
883, 19-1-p
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BUILDING
Building and Plumbing, repairs, re-
modelling, bathrooms, cupboards. We
can supply you with bathroom fixtur-
es, electric water heaters, MacDougall
pumps, water softeners, plastic pipe,
'arborite, wallboard, floor tile, etc.
1 Prone 713W1, George A. Carter, PR 5,
Wingham. 19-4
FOR SALE
100 acre farm with fully modern
buildings, good locatilcn,'close to high-
way, also another 100 acres with it If
desired, good terms and possession
anytime.
40 acre highway farm, good build-
ings, modern house, close to town and
school.
6 -room brick dwelling cn Dinsley
Street, hydro, bath room, oil furnace,
all in splendid condition.
T
6 -room brick dwelling on Queen
St., all in excellent condition, fully
modern, priced to sell with terms.
CECIL WHEELER
BOX 55 — BLYTH, ONT.
WOOL
The Government Deficiency Payment
applies only on Properly Graded Woo's
Secure the Utmost by Patronizing
Your Own Organization
JACKSON HOMES LTD.,
SEAFORTH
is collecting wool for grading and
sales on .the co-operative plan. Ship-'
pers may obtain sacks and twine free
of charge from the above or their
Licensed Operators, •-
Canadian Co -Operative
Wool Growers Limited
217 Bay Street, Toronto.
DANCE
Blyth Memorial Hall,
FRIDAY, MAY 9th.
Music by
MEL FLEET & IIIS
ORCHESTRA
Dancing from 10 to 1
LUNCH COUNTER
Admission at popular priced
Sponsored by
Blyth Agricultural Society
Martin.
Hospital on April 29th.
Mr. and Mr;. Floyd Jenkins, of Bur-
ford, spent the week -end with the hal•
tet•'s parents, Mr, and Mts. Clarence
Martin.
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HELPFUL HINTS FOR
F n
.MOT
- MAY 11th.
Dress Sthoes, Slippers, Sandals,
Coinfortable Casual Shoes.
BUTTERFLY
YLONS
1
t—First Quality Trull Fa-
shion Nylons, Only 77c a pair,
2 pair for $1,50
Get on the band wagon with A- Ready Made
2 Pant Suit from our store. Many, Many Shades to
choice from. Sizes 36 to 44, ONLY $35.00
R. W. MADILL'S
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The 'Home of Good Quality Merchandise"
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‘44-.44-4444•44.4•4 44- 444 444 • •+•+•-r• 4.1++.4+41+++•+4++• 4,
For Your Lawn
All the grass seeds to make any mixture.
For Your' Hay Pasture
Mix tures
Climax Timothy • Vernal Alfalfa
For Your Long Term
Pasture Mixtures
All the grasses and clovers arc still available.
R. N. ALEXANDER
Londesboro.
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EVERYONE SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL LION'S CLUB
Variety Concert
THURSDAY, MAY 15
AT
THE MEMORIAL HALL
A GROUP OF LOCAL and DISTRICT TALENT FEATURING:
Amy Johnston's Scottish Dancers of Lucknow
The Belgrave I'sl'e Band
Soloist Jack Tyreman, of London
Tap Dancer, 13 yr. old Allan Reid, of Goderlch
Soloist Margaret Perry,'of Brussels
Lions Fashion Show "WOW" See the latest styles!
(This No One Will 15'ant To Miss)
A local quartet of prominent men
Accordlanist Viola 1'anEgmond, of Clinton
Duet selections by Jane Mary Snell and Claire Taylor, both of Blyth
Soloist Adeline Campbell, of 'Myth •
.For the Teenagers "THE BEE -BOP'S" of Goderich
(Sensational Young Ruck and Roll Orchestra)
Alas other local ntunbers both tlocal and instrumental from the
.schools and children who have won awards at district music festivals.
Come and Enjoy an evening of Top Entertainment
— Ill SUPPORTING US YOU ARE HELPING OTHERS -
8:30 P.M, Admission— Adults .GOc -- Public Scihool Students .250
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SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY: I
TURKEY DINNERS
Make up a family party and take advantage
of this special.
FIURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor'.
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Welneaday, May 7, 1958
Belgrave News
Mr, and Mrs, Jim Irwin and family
of Hamilton, spent the week -end with
Mr. and Mrs, H. Irwin.
Mrs, J. F. McCallum Is a patient in
Wingham District Hospital,
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Wheeler and fam-
fly, also Mr, and Mrs. H, Wheeler
spent Saturday in London with Mr,
and Mrs. Goldie Wheeler and family.
Clifford Coultes returned home on
Saturday having completed his third
year at Waterloo Ccllege,
Mrs, G. Ross Anderson and baby '
daughter, also Mrs, K. Barbour and
baby daughter, " returned home from
Hospital at Wingham last week,
Mr. and Mrs. George Jones and fam-
ily of London, spent the week -end
with her parents, Mr. and Mra. J. E,
McCallum.
ISE 13 1111 STA1ti1DARD '
lie Clark, 82; Gordon Campbell, 81,
Girls' solo, 7 and under; Brenda
Bone, 87; Judith McDowell, 85; Sheila
Flood, 84; Mary Bewley, 83; Kerry
Toll, 82; Rhonda Fear and Joan Bos-
man, both 81.
Boys' solo, 7 and under; Pae Mo-
thers, 85; Larry Lockhart, 04; Douglas
Smith, 82; Harvey Black, 81; Billy
Fear, 80; Brian Adams, 70.
Unison chorus, enrolment 25 and un-
der; S.S. 12 Morris, 84; S.S. 11 Nast
Wawanorsh, 03; S.S. 7 Morris, 80; S.S.
6 Morris, 79.
Results on Friday were as follows;
Girls' solo, 9 years and under:
Nancy Anderson, 87; Grace, Bromley,
85; Linda Coultes, 84; Klaske Koop•
man, 83; Diane Comore, 82; Catherine
de Yong, 01,
Girls' solo, 11 and under: Gloria
Lutz, 87; Linda Bryans, 06; Martie
Koopman, 85; Rosemary Cowing, 84;
Grace Mothers, 83; Caroline Sprung,
82.
Music Festival
The 19 -school Belgrave Music 'Fes-
tival, began last Thursday morning
with two very large classes in compe-
tition in the morning and four clas-
ses in the afternoon,
The festival committee choose dor the 1
first time as adjudicator, Lloyd G.
Queen, assistant director of music, for
the Province of Ontario. Music super-
visor for schools In .Morris township
Is Mrs. Nora Moffatt and Mrs. Elaine
McDowell for the schools In East Wa-
wanosh.
The festival is under management of
the Belgrave School Fair Association
of which George Michie Is president
and Stanley Hopper Is secretary. Mar-
tin Grasby Is chairman of the associ-
ations festival committee and Mrs.
George Michie is festival secretary.
Schools taking part in the 1958 Bel -
grove Music -,F t vgl And.. their, teach-
ers are; In Morris, S.S. 1, Mrs. J. Grif-
fiths; S.S. 3, George Budd; S.S, 4, Mrs,
W. Miller; S.S. 5, Neil Eadie; S.S. 6,
Miss Eleanor Smith; SS, 7, Hugh Sin-
namon; S.S. 8, Newton Galbraith; S.S,
10, Miss Jean Vogt; S.S. 11, Mrs. Har-
vqy Robertson; S.S, 12, Mrs. Edna
Hackwell. In East Wawanosh: S.S.
9, Lloyd Armstrong; S.S. 10, Mrs. Mar-
garet Scott; S.S. 13, Mrs. Mary Wight -
man;, U.S.S. 3, East Wawanosh and
Morris, Mrs, Marie Toll; U.S.S, 17,
Belgrave senior room, Mrs, Mary
Woods, Junior rooan, Miss 3r6uise Jef-
ferson; U.S.S. 7 East and West ,Wa-
wanosh, Miss Karin Krug; U.S.S. 6
East and West Wawanosh, Mrs. Elmer
Pobcrtson; U.S.S. 10 East and West
Wawanosh, Mrs. Beth Lansing, U.S.S.
11, East Wawanosh and Hulleti, Mrs.
Myrtle Yungblut.
Results of the classes for Thursday
were:
Boys' solo, 11 and under: Billy Heth-
erington, 86; Bruce Currie, 85; Graeme
Craig, 84; Robert Taylor, 83; Bob
Lockhart, and Wayne Coultes, both 82:
Gwillyan Griffiths, 81.
Duet, open class: MargJI Koopman
and Martie Koopman, 86; Barbara
Krug and Jean Bacon, 85; Wilma and
Dianne TcnPas, and Carol 'Walsh and
Ross Wlghtman, both 84; Gwillym
Griffiths and Dwight Gibson, 82; Cor-
rine Gibson and Laurine Walpole, 81.
Boys' solo, 9 and under: Ray Scheif-
ole, 86; David &owing, 85; Ted Lutz
and Neil Edgar, both 84; David Walsh
and Walter Whitehead, both 83; Char -
rammaraman
1
Boys' changed voices, own choice of
song: Norman Lockhart, 84; Joe Smith
81; Benno van den Assem, 80; Brian
Spiegleberg, 79; Keith Walpole, 78.
Girls' solo, 14 years and under:
Betty Mae Yungblut, 86; Barbara King,
84; Ruth noble, 83; Jane Eckenswiller
82; Anne Wightman, 81, Marie Noble,
80,
Boys' solo, 14 years and under: Jim
Taylor, 86; Keith Johnston, 85; Jim
Adams, 84; John Hessels, 83; Gary Ro-
binson, 82; Brion Travis, 01,
Double trio: U.S.S. 6 East and ,West
Wawanosh, 83; U.S.S, 11 East Wawa -
nosh and Hullett, 82; S.S. 12 Morris,
81; S.S. 5, Maris, 80.
Unison chorus, enrolment over 25,
U.S.S. 17 East Wawanosh and Morris,
85; S.S. 9, East Wawanosh, 03; U.S.S.
11 Morris, 02; U.S.S. 6 East and West
Wawanosh, 80.
Rhythm band, 25 members or less:
U.S.S. 18 East and West Wawanosh, 87;
U.S.S. East and West Wawanosh, 80;
U,S.S. 17 East Wawanosh and Morris,
85; S.S. 9 Morris, 84.
Two-part chorus, enrolment 25 and
under: U.S.S, 12 Morris, 88; U.S.S. 16
East and West Wawanosh, 84; S.S 6
Morris, 80; S.S. 5 Morris, 79.
Two-part chorus, enrolment over 25:
U.S.S. 8 East and West Wawanosh, 84;
S.S. 8 Morris, 82; S.S. 9 East Wawa -
nosh, 80; U.S.S. 17 East Wawanosh and
Morris, 79.
The following trophies were present-
ed;
1Wingham Lions Club Trophy to S.S.
12 Morris; School Area Trophy to U.S.
IS. 6 East and West Wawanosh by
Clarence Chamney; the Belgrave Co-
operative Association Trophy to U.S.S.
17 East Wawanosh and Morris by Ross
Robinson; Belgrave 1Women's Institute
(Trophy to U.S.S. 16 East and West
Wawanosh l;fy Mrs. Richard Procter;
CKNX Radio and TV Trophy to U.S.S.
12 Morris by John Crulkshank; School
(Area Trophy to U.S.S. 6 East and West
Wawanosh by Bernard Thomas.
George Michie, president of the
school fair, gave a few remarks, and
Martin Grasby and Norman Coultes
presened C. R.. Coultes and Stewart
Procter with gifts in recognition of
their services In past years to the Fos-
tival and fair.
We have installed a new ...
BEAR. TELELINER
FOR FRONT END CAR ALIGNMENT
now open for business — prompt service
Ken's Alignment Service
Phone 355, Wingham
08.4p
ATTENTION FARMERS
Warwick Seed Corn Dealers are the sole agents for
SIMAZINE 50W
A pre -emergence spray for the control of weeds
in corn, which eliminates all cultivation after
planting.
For any information and cost per acre contact
the undersigned.
We aim have a dry powder called Red Shield
for protection against wire worms, corn maggots,
seed corn beetles, and a bird repellent.
It creates a disease free area around the plants,
and will not in any way affect germination.
I will have most all maturity dates of Warwick
i $eed Corn available at all times.
GEO. WATT
BLYTH - PHONE 40R7 i
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PAGE 5
STRONG OPPOSITIONS
ENFORCE
GOVERNMENT
IF YOU WANT
TO HELP
BRING
G0OD:G0vERN\VENT
ABOUT
VOTE
for your
LIBERAL CANDIDATE
DR. ALEX ADDiSON
on MAY 12
For 15 years the Ontario Legislature has been dominated by a single Party with
overwhelming majorities. Secured by its strength of Members in the House, the
Frost Government has grown old and careless. It ihas become indifferent to nearly
all things except continuing in office. Despite this, it asks you to increase its need-
lessly large majbrity.
The Government has allowed urgent matters to drift.
Promises that were made alluring as election bribes have not been carried out.
The business of Government anal the administration of the people's affairs have
fallen into disrepute.
Assistance to municipalities is lagging far behind increasing costs of municipal oper-
ations. The result is higher and higher local taxes.
Now in the face of a by-election, new promises are being made.
Ordinary routine operations are being ad vanced as Government generosity. How
Iong will people be fooled? -- '
A new hospital is vaguely announced at the same time as a By-election.
The routine paving of a highway is put forward as something to be grateful for.
LET THE GOVERNMENT TELL YOU INSTEAD ABOUT
THE APPALLING PROVINCIAL DEBT
LET THEM TELL YOU ABOUT A DEBT THAT UNDER TIIE PRESENT GOV-
ERNMENT HAS BEEN INCREASED BY $360,000,000—A DEBT GROWING AT
THE RATE OF $2,000,000 PER WEEK!
That is what the people of Ontario want to hear about.
They will never hear of steps being taken to check this runaway money madness until
they elect a strong Opposition!
YOU CAN DO YOUR BIT BY VOTING FOR
YOUR LIBERAL CANDIDATE
Dr Alex Addison
on MAY 12
PAGE 6
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THE BLYTH STANDARD„ - - Welnesday, 1Viay 7, 195$
Mrs, Walter Cook, and Mr, Cook, !Koopman placed tat with their duet, it Was in honor of Mrs, (}aunt's birth.
Mr. and Mrs, Walter Cook and Mr, I Douglas Snaith 3rd for his solo In class ; clay,
Arnold Cook were London visitors on lUoys 7 years and under, Judy Me! I Messrs, Lloyd Walden and Alva Me -
Friday. i Dowell second for' solo girls 7 and un- Dowell were Goderich visitors on
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell vis- der. Teddy Lutz third, solo 6 years !Tuesday,
itcd Thursday evening with Mr. and tied under. Gloria Lutz first, solo 11 i We are pleased to report that Ron -
Mrs. Ken McGregor, of Grand Bend. years and under. Bryon Spiegleberg, nld and Marvin Snell were able to
There was no school in SS No. 6 as boys changed voice nolo, tfifth place, return to school agiin Monday,
the pupils were taking part in thtt Martie Kocpmans, third place, in solo I Mr, and Mrs, Jasper Snell and
Musical Festival held In Belgrave on 11 years and under. Kluska Koopmnns George visited Sunday afternoon with
May 1 and 2. The 1st, 2nd and 3rd !fourth place, in solo 11 years and un- Mr. and Mrs. Koss Taylor and iiaby,
winners of each class grave their num- der.
,We are sorry to report Mrs, Taylor has
hers at 14'btgham on the final night, I Mr, and Mrs, Harvey McDowell and been on the sick list with flu, We are
when Unison Chorus, Rythnm Bands Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Walden attended hoping she will soon he better again.
and 2 -part chorus were judged. the reception for Mr. and Mrs, Murray ! Mr. and Mrs. Tont Biggeratnff,
Westfield pupils got 1st place in the !Taylor, newly weds, on Friday ev- Phyllis, Bill and Mr. Orval 'Furinet•
two part chorus with enrollment over lulling at Whitechurch., were recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs
25. Second place for their Ilythmn ; Mr. and Mrs. Alva McDowell and • Israel Good and Carl,
Band out of a class of 17. First for Lloyd, visited Saturday with Mr, and I Mr. Wnr. Walden is visiting with
,Double Trio. Margjlc and Martie Mrs, Earl Gaunt; of Londesboro, and Mr. and Mrs. John Caldwell,
Mr, and Mrs, Roland Vincent, of
NQWS Of Westfield Blyth, were Wednesday visitors with
(the Buchannan's,
Mrs• Norman McDowell and Gwen
Miss Gwen McDowell bus accepted ' Master Warren Rodger spend the were Goderich visitors recently.
a position with the London Life In- waits -end with his grandparents, Mr. Mr, Franklin Campbell in London.
enrance for the summer months, and Mrs. Emerson Rodger. Luckily- no ene was seriously lutrt
Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon Mr. Cecil Campbell, of Exeter, spent
were visitors with Mr. and Mrs, Bert Sunday with his parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Vincent, Belgrave, over the week -end. Howard Campbell.
Mr. and Mrs. Wire, Helesic and baby, Mr, and Mrs. D:uglas Campbell and
Patty, and Mrs. Win. Rodger, of Gode• Mrs. Fussell Cook attended the Grad-
rk'►, were Sunday visitors with Mr. tuition of Mr, Morris Vincent, at Kit •
and Mrs. Emmerson Rodger. chener, on Friday evening,
Mr. Jim Hill, of Kitchener, spent Mrs. Mabel Stackhouse and Mr. and
Sunday with Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Mrs. Mac Wilson, cf Brucefield, spent ; Mrs, Frank Campbell visited with
Campbell and family. Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs, Mr. and Mrs, Norman Carter, of Clin-
Mr• and Mrs. Norman Radford, of Norman McDowell and Mr. Will Mc- ton, on Thursday evening.
Lynden, were Saturday visitors with Dowell, it bring the occasion of Mr.I Mrs, Jean Kechnie, of Blyth, is
Mr, and Mrs, Walter Cook. 'McDowell's Nth birthday, spending a few days with her sister,
on Sunday morning while separating
the morning milk at ,Ernest Snell's
farm, Ronald was attending the pow-
er driven machine, when suddenly
pieces flew in every direction, a disk
hitting Ron ,on the hand and Billie
who was close by was hit In the stom-
ach by a flying part.
It's More Important Than Ever:
Charlie MacNaughton will be it
valuable addition to the Frost
team. He will be heard at Queen's
Park ....
a
The Frost Team's
Contribution To
Huron Riding In
1957
ROADS
EDUCATION
HOSPITALS
WELFARE
MUNICIPAL GRANTS
$516,173.00
$876,822.00
$300,000.00
$201,400,00
$100,000.00
Huron Needs A Government Representative
To Look After Its New $10 Million Industry
Heretofore IIuron has had no provincial institutions of any kind. As a result of the untir-
ing efforts of the late Tom Pryde, a 1,300 -bed hospital for retarded children is to be built
on the shores of Lake Huron, near Goderich. The election of Charlie MacNaughton as a
member of the Frost team will insure that full benefits from this huge project will be der-
ived by the entire riding, Here are a few of the important benefits it can bring to Huron:
,< EMPLOYMENT — FROM 600 TO 800 MEN ANI) )WOMEN
PAYROU -- OVER ONE MILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR
FOOL) SUPPLIES — $350,000 TO $400,000 PER YEAR r
MAINTENANCE EXPENDITURES — OVER $200,000 ANNUALLY
CHARLIE MacNAUGHTON WILL WORK
FOR HURON
Vote
Support Good
Government
MacNAUGHTON, (harlesS.
Progressive Conservative
Monday, May 12
Welnesday, May 7, 1958
:ai,esnaler,..r+w+sar=a••a,o..;;;
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
n/�•V�/.M/VWV-I�.V�nIW�I�MN�/V ".•
INSUJRANCE IN ' ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
' Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
BROWNIES
THEATRE
Clinton -- Ontario
I1
'Thursday, Friday, May 8 and 0 1
•
i . The Fuzzy Pink N ightgown
Jane Russel, Keenan Wynn
(Two Cartoons) 1 z
i• i Saturday, Monday, May 1n and I2 '
------1 Double Feature
CLEARING AUCTION SALE tractor; tri: HP, Jacobsen power lawn ! "The Halliday Brand"
Imower; Rogers Majestic frig; 4 burner 3' ;
Of Farm Stock, Machinery, and )electric range (new); electric rnngettc; Joseph Colton, Betsy Blair
• 1 household Effects 0-plece dining room suite; desk; 3 kit -
At lot 6,,concession 10, Grey Town ellen chairs; table; kitchen cupboard;
(Colour)
"Sills Stockings"
2 cook stoves and pipes; 2 beds and I Cornet {Pude, Jean Wallace thing since swing .. , told by the King 1 In superb \'Istavlslou Color
shit, lr/4 miles East of Brussels, on t (Ona Curloon) of rock 'n' roll himself, Alan Freed, Also; "Vistarision Visits Spain" in color
springs; childs crib; 4 congoleum rugs; ' I'acsday, {Ycdnesday, May 13 and 14 $ Frankie Lymon, Little Richard, Coming:— All Next R'cek— "PERRI"
WEDNESDAY, MAY 14th. , meat grinder; Bcrkel meat slicer; safe;
amble Feature ' 'rmei++r•+••.•••••N+.#4.04.4~,.."...6 Chuck Berry {{'alt Disney's Masterpiece
at 1 p.m. DST. ?girl's bicycle; other articles too nuns• —..__._._ . ___ _.. •r• +•µ•���e:'ry +-•._._•�!�� �,�a��+plece +•
CATTLE — Durham cow; holstein cn•ous to mention. IIOItILOR SHOW nEAI) STUCK REMOVERS —
cow; Jersey heifer; 4 calves; 1 steer, TERMS CASH
"The aC { Sleep" o. andup, p t for
t.
"Star Of India"
Nr.e4 #040010,0,01•40104,04,4#*
LYCEUM THEATRE
WINGHAM.
First Show commences at 7.15 p.m.
THEATRE CLOSED MONDAY,
TUCS,, WED,, OF EACH WEEK.
Thurs., Fri,, Sat.,'
May 8, 9, 10
Fred Astaire, Cyd
Charisse
in
ROXY THEATR
CLINTON.
Now: Thurs,, Fri,, Sat,, Double 11111
i"Three For The Show"
Betty Grable, Jack Lemmon
and
"VALLEY OF FEAR"
Gene Autry ► Mon., Tues,, {Ved,, An Adult EntcrtraJn-
- - - meat Doubil.e Feature Program
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday !Jayne Mansfield, Dan Duryea and
Bombers R 52" I - '
1st Sl►owing 2nd Showing
At Tho 9:30 p.m.
Air -Conditioned, ,
PARK
OODERICU.
Now flaying: "ZERO HOUR" w•ltic
Dana Andrews and Linda Darnell.
Martha Vickers
Taut drama —action —suspense amidst l "The Burglar"
lilt• warfare in Korea , .. when a mas- Patricia Medina, Lce J. Cobb, Edward
ter sergeant takes on a captain—any- Arnold and Michael Granger
thing can happen, and does! Depicts a successful police action in
1,1 (:Incmasrope and Warnerenlor the Florida metropolis.
Natalie Wood, Karl Malden, . Miami Expose"
Marsha hunt -- --
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Cornet Wilde, Mary Astor, Jean Wal-
lace and Arthur Franz
"The Devil's Hairpin"
Thursday, friday, Saturday
"11'1r. Rock And Roll"
The biggest picture about the biggest
Tl 131 1 Sle Sir 00 ai i old sick and • 1 WANTED
800 lbs, No Reserve farm sold Basil Rathbone, Akinn Tamlroff disabled horses, and cows, Highest Old horses, 3!cie per pound, Dead
PIGS -1 sow, due June 1st, I Proprietor, Lloyd Alcock. ' "The Creeping Unl!nown" cash value paid in surrounding dist,. . "
cattle and horses at value. Important
TMPLIIvU NTS—International Farm- Auctioneer, Harold Jackson.Fitt for dead stock. Prompt sanitary
to phone at once, day or night. CIL-
•
'Brian Printery, Jack Warner
dis o l in winch equipped truck:.BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderlcb,
all M tractor; .Waterloo threshing ma -1 Clerk, E. P. Chesney, (One Cartoon) p l Belt Sander, Floor Polisher l
chine, Ehersol self feeder, 18 high _-•.. _...._ ,_—.___. Phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, :Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4.
4POMNN/•.--•t•✓�••••••w-•rr•NN• collect. 14-13 Vacuum Cleaner,!4 tL
elevator; 4 -furrow Jnternnttonnl plow;1 ATTENTION TURNIP GROWERS ,.. PREST ' __ 1
4 -section drag The Blyth Agricultural Society are C - "— I Cow Clippers.
cultivator; 32 -plate M. g o o AUCTION SALES pp
M: 'disc; 13 -disc International seed
sponsoring a Turnip Field Crop Com- 1,0\nliS1 0Ir0, ONT. Licensed Auctioneer now booking ; + ASSOCIATION
drill; case packer; International 7 -ft, petition, Anyone interested contact Interior & Exterior Decorator sales for the tonin season, Bart .Apply to WATERLOO CATTLE CREEPING
lal insemination service or
'm
power mower; Pollard Rowaker Fide the undersigned as sa:n as ,possible. I Z Sunworthy Wallpaper Pepper, R.IR.I.?,3, Seaforth, phone, Cl`n-5 1more information, telephone the \Va-
Fur nrlific
rake; wagon with rack; International Applications must be in before May ; Mints - Enamels - Varnishes ton, IN 2-7531. 12-7p. far icrlco Cattle Breeding Association col -
8 ft. binder on rubber; Massey Harris 2,4tt 1958. George Watt or Boyd Brush & SprayFainting, lett at Clinton, Iia 2-3141, between:
tractor; spreader; M.M. hr+mmer mill; Taylor. 4+•.► •000,04 04,0.0n+4.4.01.00404,0#04.4.410, ��
McCorgttc Deering ml
Phone 21, 'Myth 7:30 and 0;30 A.M. We supply service
McCormick D l ' 'Eking machine FOR SALT. — — — to top quality bulls of the Holstein,
RADIOS 11EPAIit1?n
2 dozen imperial quart sealers, 3 Jersey, Ayrshire, Guernsey, Brown
2 single units (like new); McCormick ( EUCHRE AND DANCE:
cream separator, 750' lbs.; circular saw; The Co -Op Social evening will be I AUCTION SALE dozen quart scalers and half dozen gal- By Peter Hollinger, R.R. 2, Blyth,
fanning mill; turnip pulper; turnip held on Tuesday, May 131h, .in BlythOf Household Effects and Real Estate Ica, sealers; 3 pair of curtain cranes, phone 45115, Brussels,
phone 110,
19-]p
plow; set 1200 lli. scales; corn crib, 7- Memorial Hall, Cards at 8.30 followed On Dinsley Street, Blyth. Apply, Mrs. F. T) remelt.
high, 5 wide, 20 Ll. long; colony house, byn dance. Ladies please bring lunch. ,.. Blyth.
10X12; Jamesvuy oil stove; 3 chicken Everybody welcome. SATURDAY, MAY 17th.
shelters; quantity hen feeders; 2 ton 1 -- — ---
l FOIL SALE _
poultry shell maker; 150 Sussex 'Red at 1;30 p.m.,
liens; alumin►un wheel barrow; set ` IR pigs ready to wean. Apply, �5 m,
VanCamp, Belgrnve, phone' 151115,
barn framing tools; 2 steel pig troughs; Chesterfield (upholstered); 3 -piece
1,J l wicker suite, chesterfield and 2 chairs;
copper kettle; 200 gal. steel septic tank;
side scraper; slush scraper; 2 hay cars;
rapes and pulleys; small boat; steel
posts; cedar posts; snow fence; lum-
ber; forks; shovels; hoes; tools; quantity
of truck tires and tubes 12X18; truck
tarpe (new); 1951 Chev• 3 ton truck;
71/4X13 stock rack and turnip rack;
steel cat,I'.e and pulleys; chain hoist;
20 sheets steel roofing; cement mixer;
steel water trough.
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS — Garden
Brussels,
BAKE SALE
2 antique rucking chairs tone wicker);
3 tables (antique); 5 dining room
By Group 3 of the United Church 'chairs. 4 piece bedroom suite, double
W. A. In Doherty Bros. show room on bed, mattress, springs, dresser, chest
Saturday, May 17th, at 4 o'clock (in- cf c't.awers, wash stand; 1 single bed
stead of 3 o'clock cn account of the (metal) mattress and springs; complete
Auction Sale). 19-2 ,toilet set; dresser; 2 wash stands; chest
-- --- 'of drawers; feather natttresses and
FOR SALE (pillows; wnrdrebe; rollaway aluminum
"White" Sewing Machine, in good ,chaise lounge and mattress; axminster
condition. Apply, phone 31115, Blyth. rug, 9'XlO'k'; piano (upright Mendel -
10 -1P 'ssohnl; bookcase; mirror; 2 floor
lamps; wicker fernery and fern stand
with ferns; plctures (antique frames);
kitchen (metal) table; baking cabinet;
cellar table; garden hose, 17 yard>;
Beatty electric washing machine; 3
round tubs; lawn mower; and other
articles.
PROPERTY—Lots 38, 39, 44, 45, con-
sisting of one acre of land on which
is situated 2' story red brick house,
in good state cf repair.
Property subject 1.5 reserve bid,
I': oprielors: Clare and Ida McGowan.
Auctioneer; George Nesbitt.
Clerk; George Powell. - 19-2
•
Look what PI ,mouth offers
at the
LOWES
Ic S
OF ALL LEADING CANADIAN CARS
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• Torslon-A/RE Ride
Level -smooth
•
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STOP
Safer -stopping
Total -Contact
brakes
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Ultramodern
push-button
• automatic
drive
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Beautiful
new Silver -Dart
styling
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▪ ' Brand-new
• Sure•Gripdifferential
:01111111111011 OOOOOOOO *OS,
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steering wheel
Safety -Centre
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Electric
windshield wipers
Plymouth Savoy
2 -door hardtop
CHRYSLER CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED
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New stretch -out
roominess
•
Plymouth Savoy
4 -door Sedan
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Big new
313 -
cubic -inch
Thrill -Power V-8
Newly
mproved
Thrill -Power Six
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• Huge 35 -
cubic -foo
• luggage
• compartmen
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Brand-new
dual headlights
CONFIDENTIALLY... if you
think this is a lot to get for the lowest
price of any leading Canadian car,
just wait'll you discover all the rest
of Plymouth's extra -value fca-
�aS
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Luxurious
new fabrics,
exciting
colours
tures! Come and try a '58 Plymouth.
There are 21 models at the lowest
prices. So you'll be able to get just
what you want. See how easily you
can own a big '58 Plymouth now 1
Take a demonstration Torsion•AIRE ride today
ko„pwePo,'ss PLYMOUTH
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Highest quality
at
lowest price!
QUALITY
BUILT
to the highest standards of
automotive craftsmanship
111
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Phone 25—DOHERTY BItOS.-4lyth Ont.
,Watch Climax—Shower of Stars. every Thursday night on TV—check your local program listing forllnte and channel.
01-tf.
N#+N «•,N NINNNNIV' ## ###
1958 WALLPAPER
- Samples Now On Display
(All :Plastic Coated)
and the latest patterns
Swiss, Red Poll, Hereford (polled and
horned) Bccf Shorthorn (polled and
horned), and Dual Purpose Shorthorn,
Angus and Charolaise breeds. The cost
is low.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
, Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 42Re, Brussels, R.R. 2,
A call will bring us to SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your septic: tanks pumped the
your home for a complete 1 sanitary way. Schools and public
sample showing. ' buildings given prompt attention.
Rates reasonable Tel Irvin Coxon,
F. C. PREST Milverton, 75114. 62-18•tf.
• i N.• NSI .1,04.4.0,••••••• •N.nI 0.0.0.04,0,10410#*
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 7.30 p.m.
iN BLYTIi, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey,
Easiness
Cards
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS di: SOLICITORS
I, Crawford, R. S. Hetherington.
Q.C. Q.C.
{Vingham and Blyth.
Bob McNair, IN BLYTII
Manager. Auctioneer. EACH THURSDAY MORNING
05-tf, and by appolniment,
�++.+wN+r..+r•. Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48
ROY N. BENTLEY
FOR SALE
100 Acres, on good road, 6 miles north
of
Seaforth, Brick house, modern in
every way, coal furnace, air condi-
tioned, 3 -piece bath up, 2 -piece bath
do.an.
56X78 burn, all modern stab-
ling,
103 Acres, on paved road, close to
school, t* utile from village, brick
house, hydro, 40X80 barn, Very goad
land in good farming district.
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. Colquhoun
REAL ESTATE BROKER
Clinton, Ont. ('hone hunter 2-9747
ViC KENNEDY, SALESMAN
Blyth, Ont. Phone 78
PASTURE
Can take in 25 head of cattle. Spring
water and plenty of shade. Apply, Ed,
- Youngblut, Londesboro, ' 17-3p.
SEEI) CORN FOR SALE
We now have available Funks Hy-
brid Seed Corn, Early and late vari•
etie;. Apply, Harold Cook, phone 61,
Blyth. 18-3p
FURNITURE Ui'11OLSTiiRED
Like new. Also re -styled. Full range
of havers. Estimates cheerfully given.
A, E. Clark, phone Blyth 201114,
18-4p
FOR SALE
4 shelters; 1 chicken house, 8'X10';
1 electric broader holds 200 chickens,
Apply, Bert Jackson, phone 361116,
Blyth. 19-1
WANTED
An experienced egg grader, or any-
one willing to learn. Apply to Knox
Egg Grading Station, Blyth, 19 -If
Public Accountant
GODERICII, ONT,
Telephone 1011 — Box 478.
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A. L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICII 25.11
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Scaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed,
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed, — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30,
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK S't. - WINGHAM, ONT
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
(For Apointment please phone 770
Winghaml,
Professional Eye Exantinatd,on.
Optical Services.
RONALD G. McCANN
Public Accountant
Office; Royal Bank Building
Residence: Rnttenbury Street
Phones 501 and 455.
CLINTON — ONTARIO.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE IIOURS--1 P.M. 'ro 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY.
AUCTIONEER
Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction
Guaranteed.
Prompt Assistance Given In Arranging
Your Sale Problems,
Phone 151118, Blyth.
George Nesbitt, George rowed,,
Auctioneer. Clerk.
APPLICATIONS
TOWNSHIP OF IIULLETT
The Council cf the Township of Mul-
lett. will receive applications for the
position of Clerk -Treasurer for the
Township of Hulled, duties to com-
rr,:nce about June 1st, 1950. Particu-
lar, may be obtained from the Reeve,
\William lis Jewitt. R,.R. 1, Clinton.
McKILLOP MUTT TAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE . SEAFORTH, ON'1I,
OFFICERS:
President—Wm. S. Alexander Wal-
ton; Vice -Pres., Robt. Archibald, Sea -
forth; Manager and Secy-Treas., Mer•
ton A. Reid, Senforth.
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McLrw-
1ng, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pepper,
Brucefleld; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm;
II, Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Sea,
Applications to be in the hands of the forth; Allister Br•oad(not, Seaforth,
1 Clerk on or before 8:30 p.m, Monday, AGENTS:
May 19th, 1958, William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro;
GEORGE W. COWAN, Cleric, F. I'ructer, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baket,
19-2 Lmulesburo, Ontario. llrus4''' y•'^ Munroe, Seaforth. _ J
itmblIng Walls
In Tokyo
Going out to buy carrots for
Omer used to be an ordinary
chore. How often, in America, I
would run to the corner grocery,
snatch up a bunch, and return
home, undiverted from my
thoughts, and so impartial to
the trek that, stopping to re
member, I could scarcely recall
having gone. Except that the
carrots lay like jackstraws in
the sink, waiting to be picked
up and scraped.
Since we have lived in Tokyo
such short treks have become
the most essential moments of
my days.
Stepping from our small yard
into the alley -street, I am sur-
rounded by walls and fences
which line the narrow way.
Some are formidable concrete
or stone; some are thin wooden
flats and others heavy, hand-
some pieces of wood. When I
feel shut, out by the walls I
think of Frost's "Good fences
make good neighbors," Or I
translate them into symbols; the
thick walls are the language
which even after eight months
b still an enigma to me; the
thin slats whimsically half hide
the gentle beauty which one
must learn to feel more than
to see; the handsome wooden
pieces are the substance of gen-
erations of tradition and beliefs.
Sometimes I imagine that I,
like those delicate tea roses
which have scaled one great
concrete wall and bloom exqui-
sitely along the top, can through
Two -Parts Perfect
PRINTED PATTERN
If you're shorter, fuller — sew
this slenderizing version of fa-
shion's favorite jacket dress.
Printed Pattern is proportioned
to fit you at shoulders, waist,
hips — no alteration problems,
Printed Pattern 4773; Half
Sizes 141/2, 161/2, 18%, 201/2, 221/2,
24112. Size 161/2 dress, 31/4 yards
35 -inch; jacket, 21/ yards.
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,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont.
ISSUE 19 — 1958
smiles and compassion and pa-
tience, scale or break through
my three walls,
But my short treks are filled
with encounters with people
and they open delightful doors
through the walls. If Mrs. K...
passes me on her way home
from market (carrying vegeta-
bles in small three -sided bags
made of newspapers) we ex-
change quick, shy bows. Since
she cannot speak English, nor I
Japanese, we may never have a
full, neighborly conversation.
Still there is a quality in our
self-conscious bowing which I
cherish—a. mutual consent to be
respectfully curious about each
other.
It is similar with the goldfish
seller, the fishmonger, or the
wife of the Shinto priest. I am
as much a novelty to them as
they are to me, and each time
we bow we cement this com-
mon bond. But it is the children
I meet on my walks who make
many of the walls tumble down.
I am usually greeted at our
gate by two intensities who are
not yet learning to count in
school (ichi, nichi, san, she, go)
but spend their hours hanging
on our gate or peering at me
through the fence. The clippety.
stock -stock of their getas has
become part of the atmosphere
for me. They are bursting
proud of their English and hail
me with a hopscotch of "hullo";
and when I smile "Hello, how
are you?" they giggle and clasp
each other and dart ahead of me
down the alley, writes Nancy
Nelson in The Christian Science
Monitor.
We pass through groups of
children playing dodge ball,
bat -ball, roller skating. On
some days their eager eyes in-
vite me to play with them.
Someone misses a ball, and I
catch and toss it back. "Sank
you," he calls, blushing at his
own daring to speak English;
and then warming my heart
when he echoes my "You're
welcome," or "That's okay."
Some days I am ignored along
with the other adults who pass
by. And on some terrible days
I am silently stared at for my
whole long walk down the
street. Then I try to stare at
myself too and see how strange
I must look to them. I imagine
them looking at a picture book
and, finding an American, point-
ing and commenting to a school
friend, "We have one on our
street, just like that."
I cherish most those two boys
who rose beside me down the
alley one day testing English
phrases from their schoolbooks.
I was pushing the baby carriage
and they pulled up beside me
on their bicycles. "What time
is it?" the taller one asked.
I shook my head, "I don't
know." The boy was disappoint-
ed in me; It was not the time
he wanted, but talk, "I asp a
boy," his friend said in meas-
ured rhythm, Finally I under.
stood, "Yes, and I am a girl.
This is a boy too, a baby boy,"
and I pointed into the carriage.
They grinned, Their English
textbook was coming alive. "I
go down street," the tall one
went on. "You go down the
street," 1 reminded him, "on a
bicycle," and my friend laugh-
ed.
But the other boy was trou-
bled. I sensed he was searching
for a word, mentally going over
lists of vocabulary. Finally he
burst out, "I am a boy; baby is
boy. You are not girl; you are
a mother."
He laughed, and his friend
cuffed his shoulder, laughing.
Then as abruptly as they had
come they nodded "good -by
mother," and peddled off.
Q. Our high school class Is
going to have a .lance, and sever-
al of us fellows would like to
know whether we should ask our
dates what kind of flowers they
want to wear on their dresses.
Can you answer this for us?
A. The best plan is to ask your
girls what color dresses they will
wear, then you choose flowers to
harmonize.
PLAYING BY EAR — This tiny violin and bow set is for real.
It was made by Mrs. Harriet Babcock Neil, 68 She and many
other older people showed the products of their unusual talents
al a hobby show for older persons. A visitor to the show plays
himself a cheerful little earful with the elfin instrumer.t.
BEAT GENERATION — These tigers are really dragging on
arrival in Dallas, from the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago. The
Siberian animals, worth $4,000, turned out to be both males
— much to the disappointment of Dallas 'zoo officials — and
seem destined to spend bachelor lives in their new home.
HRONICLES
1NGEAFAItM
I imagine a lot of mothers —
and maybe a few grandmothers
too, 'including myself—were not
too pleased with the weather
during the Easter holidays, Wet
weather and children at home is
not a happy combination, We
volunteered to have David here
to help him recuperate after the
measles. We thought fresh air
and sunshine as well as the
change would do him good—the
swings were ready and waiting
to encourage outdoor exercise.
But as you know it was cold, wet
and windy, But now, with the
Easter vacation over the weather
is grand so we are going to keep
Dave for a few days longer.
Daughter has no objection as the
other two little fellows are still
croupy and restless at night.
David is no trouble at all ex-
cept for his meals. What is the
matter with children nowadays?
By the time I have tried to get
a meal into Dave I feel too frus-
trated for words. We never had
that sort of trouble with our two
children. I gave them what I
thought they should have and
that was that. Anything that was
left came up for the next meal.
Dave doesn't care whether he
eats or not—preferably not.
However, I am hoping he will
improve as I got him some chem-
ical food—a vitamin and miner-
al tonic. I had it as a child, so
did our daughter, and now here
is our grandson having the same
tonic. I imagine it must be good
since it has been on the market
all these years,
Before David arrived I got in
half a day at the National Horne
Show in Toronto. Actually I
wasn't too anxious to go but once
there I found it paid off. There
are various extras we still need
around here and at the Horne
Show I was able to compare one
make with another, bring back a
report to Partner and after that
the decided on the best type for
our purpose, Not only that but I
was able to get particulars about
a few installations that were
here when we took over the
house, the mechanics of which
we had never properly under-,
stood. Now that we do under-
stand it will simplify the neces-
sary cleaning and care tremend-
ously.
And then in my wanderings [
found myself right on the spot
when CRC, was getting ready
to televise "Open House"—ons
of my favourite TV programmes.
It took over two hours to set up
the cameras and other equip-
ment in the Model House before
it went on the air. Fred Davis
was very busy conferring with
technicians and those taking part
in the programme, including
Frank Moritsugu, that genial,
Japanese artist in home decorat-
ing; who is also managing editor
of Canadian Homes and Gardens.
I had an opportunity to ask his
advice on a little home problem
which wasn't quite in his line.
Since he wasn't sure of the an-
swers lie promised to have a
member of his staff send me the
required information, This was
done and told me exactly what I
wanted to know,
Of course Anna Cameron was
on the set, looking very charm
:ng in a tailored grey suit and a
pink, close -fitting flowered hat.
After the broadcast I had a few
words with Anna. And you know
I felt as if I knew her sc well it
seemed almost strange to think
that she shouldn't know me! 1
found her fust as natural and
friendly as one would expect
frotn her broadcast;.
At that same time, a short dis-
tance from the Model house the
stage was being set for Front
Page Challenge that same eve-
ning. I was tempted to stay and
then decided I might just as
well get home in good time and
see it 'on television at home,
Partner was surprised to see me
back so soon but I had seen
about everything, found out a lot
about a number of things — all
in a matter of hours. You can
accomplish so much more if
you start out with definite ideas
about things you want to know
about. Wandering around aim-
lessly can be very tiring and not
too rewarding.
One thing amused me. I was
having a light lunch at the cafe-
teria, Sitting at the next table
were two very fashionably dress-
ed ladies—one of them loaded
with diamond rings and double
chins, She turned to her com-
panion and said — "Don't they
have a bar around here at all?"
The poor dears, wasn't it a shame
they had to miss their cocktails?
Well, so much for that — now
on with the work, Dave to go out,
Ditto needs feeding, one of the
kittens needs an eye-wash—one
eye gets stuck up and won't
open, The sunshine is lovely , .
robins, orioles and song -spar-
rows warbling with joy. Frogs
are singing, grass is greening, in
fact spring is busting out all
over. Partner is outside cleaning
windows, Dave with him, Daugh-
ter just phoned to say the little
boy with whom Dave generally
plays has chicken -pox. Poor
mothers, what a time they have
nursing their children through
first one contagious disease and
then another.
'Bye — I can smell my roast
— maybe I forgot to turn the
heat down!
Obey the traffic signs — they
are placed there for your safety,
ANNE 141RST
—iptaL Family ant#1.6e.e.ot,
"Dear Anne Hirst: I ant a
woman 19, and have been mar-
ried four years, We have two
lovely children whom 1 love
dearly. I was very young to
get married, but I didn't know
what love was —
"But now I think I am in love,
and with my husband's brother!
He is not married; he likes
me, I expect, just as a sister-in-
law.
"My husband is building us a
lovely home, and gets us every-'
thing we want. He doesn't know
about his brother, of course .. .
Once my husband said that If
anything like this happened, he
would not let me have the chil-
dren!
"Shall I stay with the husband
I don't love — or tell his brother
how I -feel? Help me, please!
MRS, C. D."
HOW CAN YOU?
* If you want to toss brothers
* at,each other's throats, break
* up your home, and lose these
h children of yours, tell your
* husband, but first go to your
r room and sec what the future
* holds.
* Where is your conscience?
+ You have an indulgent hus-
* band, you are about to move
* into a finer home, your chil-
dren look to you to be a model
" mother. (How could you go
* on without them?) Your
* brother-in-law would probab-
* ly be so horrified by your
* news that he would clear out
+' fast, and that would be that.
* Your husband's faith in you
* would be destroyed, and for
* the rest of his lite he would
* despise you,
* Put yourself in his place.
* What would he do without
* you, how bring up the children
• — and where would you go?
+ Disgraced in your husband's
* eyes, scorned by his brother,
* bereft of your children, what
* place on earth is left for you
* to hide?
* It is sometimes hard for a
* woman who married so young
* to stay to the course. She has
• lost the first thrills of mar-
* riage. She sees her husband
* as a stodgy, hard - working
* man, and forgets he is the
* provider of all the good things
* in this life she has without
* even asking.
* You wrote me under stress.
* You think you have found ro-
* mance, but what you feel is
* sinful and destructive. Empty
* your heart of such wicked
* notions, and be thankful there
* is still time to be the good
* wife you intended to be when
* you took your marriage vows.
* Go back to your church and
* pray for the strength to thrust
• this infatuation out of your
* heart. Count your blessings —
• and resolve from now on to
* keep your husband so content-
* ed that he will never guess
• how close you came to de-
* sorting all those you. promised
4 to cherish.
* 4 4 -
BOY INTIMIDATES HER
"Dear Anne Hirst: Once you
wrote that boys take their social
cues from the girls they date.
One boy I dated just twice
surely must have gone with the
wrong glrls. He said things with
double meaning, . and trying to
be pleasant, I just laughed at
them ,
"I soon sent him off — and
now he threatens to tell stories
about me! Unfortunately, he
knows a lot of the other students
at school, How can I stop him?
FRIGHTENED"
* This young man needs a
threat from one in authority.
* Tell your father or your
* brother the truth; if there
is no male member in your
family, tell your mother. She
will know how to silence fhb
vulgar creature.
4
*
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
Either he is too ignorant of
such a denunciation and the
lawful punishment he faces,
or too spiteful to care. In any
event, it will be out of your
hands.
4 * 4
If the day should come wheat
you think real romance awaits
outside your front door, picture
the devastation you would cause
if you yield, Write Anne Hirst
fast, and ask her for help. She
will give it, Address her at Bol
1, 123 Eighteenth St,, New Tor-
onto, Ont,
Needle Painting
6y f,u,k4 1NI,.4.1.
Just a little embroidery for
these two pictures. They will
add beauty to any room. Use
natural coloring, or just black oc
brown as in an etching.
Pattern 618: transfer of tyre
pictures 91fx11s/4 inches (em-
broidery size); color chart.
Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to LAURA WHEELER,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ontario. Print plainly
PATTERN NUMBER, your
NAME and ADDRESS.
As a bonus, TWO complete
patterns are printed right in our
LAURA WHEELER Needlecraft
Book; Dozens of other designs
you'll want td order — easy fat-
, cinating handwork for yourself,
your home, gifts, bazaar items.
Send 25 cents for your copy at
this book today!
FOR MIDNIGHT DIPS—Something new in bathing suits are these two from the spring collection
of Parisian designer Pierre Cardin. They are intended for romantic midnight bathing parties
on the Mediterranean coast or anywhere else that smart women gather, Mode, at right wears
the new "combination" creation in elasticized sculptured nylon in cream and gold with match-
ing turban,- Golden satin fashions the broad straps and edges the ankle -length pants. Suit at
left is in the same elasticized nylon in a rich shade of orange glinting with gold thread.
B red to be Savage
B ut Gentle Now
The bulldog was bred to get
Its teeth into a bull's nose and
hold on -- and it has become n
symbol of ferocity and courage,
But these dogs today are not
ferocious, They make gentle
pets.
The breed originated in Bri-
tain in the 16th century when
bull -baiting was a popular pas-
time, It was for this sport that
the bulldog was bred and given
Its name.
Coming from a long line of
fighting ancestors, bulldogs po:-
set'ssed extraordinary courage,
and were so savage that they •
seemed insensible to pain, To
tackle a bull, they had to be low
to the ground, their squat build
enabling them to avoid the horns
of the bull, The protruding, un-
dershot jaw allowed the dogs
to breathe while holding on with
a. "bulldog g r i p" to a bull's
nose. -
The sportsmen who kept dogs
for bull -baiting found It an ex-
' pensive sport, for many of the
dogs were killed. Sometimes the
enraged bull would toss a dog
thirty feet into the air. But
Once a bulldog had taken a grip
the bull rarely shook it off.
In 1835 bull -baiting became
illegal iv England, and bulldogs
might have died out if a few
dog lovers had not banded to-
gether to save this fine breed,
The Bulldog Club, founded in
1875, was the first specialist club
for any breed of dog.
Today, bulldogs bred for show
purposes have all their most
I
pugnacious looks exaggerated,
NO that they look even more
savage than their ancestors who
bad to do battle with the bulls,
But their undesirable character-
istics have been eliminated and
the bulldog has become one of
the 'finest physical specimens
without its original viciousness,
The present breed is gentle,
good. natured, affectionate and
loyal — but It still shows great
courage when it fights,
Since 1890 bulldogs haverank-
ed among the most expensive
breeds, many champions fetching
more than $3,000.
They were first brought over
to the United States by the early
English settlers, and large breed-
ing kennels were established in
Virginia. In the middle of the
19th century they became the
most popular breed for the dog
lighting contests that were the
gage among New York sports -
Bulldogs are now among the
top 20 most popular breeds In
America.
The perfect bulldog, according
to the official standards get by
the American Kennel Club, must
be of medium size and smooth
oat; wih heavy, thick -set, low -
swung body, massive short -faced
stead and wide shoulders,
Q. How can I make a polish
for metal and glass?
A. An excellent polish can be
made by mixing one part of
wheat flour to five parts of pot-
ter's clay. Apply with a damp
woollen cloth. This compound
will also remove tar and grease
from the glass and metal parts
of an automobile,
/OR COCKTAILS .-; ' Slim pants,
scoop neckline and a well -
,defined waistline In between,
make an. attractive cocktail en-
semble by Mayogalne of Paris.
This striking outfit is done In a
ironze and silver nylon print.
MAN-SIZE KITE—Russia may have had the biggest satellite up,
but Ross Byers, who lives In Knox County, claims the biggest
kite in his area. It's 10 feet high and 7 feet wide at the cross -
arm, and looks big enough to carry its little admirer, Susie
Myers of, nearby Vincennes. Plastic covered, the giant kite
requires a heavy nylon cord to hold it in flight and 150 feet of
tail to balance it. In a heavy breeze it's necessary to fasten
the cord to a post. The other admirers are Bonnie and Prince,
Byers' collies.
Crooks Didn't Have A Dog's Chance
On a night of dense fog Police
Officer Arthur Holman was call-
ed out, with his famous Alsatian,
Rex III, to find a man who had
attacked a woman on Mitcham
Common, London.
Reaching the footpath, he
ordered Rex to "Find him," The
dog led him through bushes to-
wards the electrified railway,
then looked about him, unde-
cided,
Hoping to find something the
man might have dropped in the
struggle, Holman told Rex to
"Fetch it," knowing he would
first bring anything dropped re-
cently, still bearing a human
scent.
First he retrieved a cotton -
wool pad smelling of chloroform,
next a navy-blue raincoat belt,
then a man's glove, and finally
—the most vital clue of all—an
envelope bearing a man's name
and address,
C,I.D. officers went to the ad-
dress and found that the man
was already under arrest. It ap-
peared that he had at once
• cycled to another part of South
London, committed a similar of-
fence, and been quickly appre-
hended, Rex's expert finding of
the articles enabled the police
to charge him with the earlier
assault, and he was sent to pri-
son for five years,
This acute sense was demon-
strated on patrol during the
early days of Rex's service,
when Holman went into the
Tooting and Mitcham Football
Club, "I've heard a lot about
these dogs," said groundsman
Jack Locke, adding t Ira t he
wasn't at all impressed by the
claims made for them.
"The next time you go down
the field on the roller," Holman
replied, "drop a live match. Rex
will find it for us." After criss-
crossing the large field, Locke
returned, saying, "I've dropped
it." Holman then ordered Rex,
"Fetch it," and although it took
him twenty minute s, Rex
brought it in,
In "My Dog Rex" Holman tells
other remarkable stories of "th
dog that never put a paw
wrong," never missed a day's
duty through sickness in nearly
seven years' service, and made
125 arrests.
At Sutton two men had smash-
ed an outfitter's window, scoop-
ed forty suits, and made off. A
passerby said that one had turn-
ed down a side -street, shouting
to his mate: "You go and get
the car!"
Running down the street, Ilol-
man saw a mon leave the side
of a pub and scamper off, "Stop
himl" le ordered, but as Rex
bounded in pursuit n big sheep-
dog dived through a gate, bark-
ing and jumping at Rex.
Holman wondered If Rex
would stop to fight, and be hin-
dered long enough for the man
to escape, But, hardly slackening
his pace, he threw off the sheep-
dog with a mgihty shake, kept
on after the man, and pinned
him in a doorway, .
His share, of the clothes was
found by the pub where he'd
been waiting for• his mate. Fierce
in cornering crooks, Rex never
fought another dog unless sorely
provoked,
One night they were called to
an engineering works by the
Thames at Battersea, About for-
• se
• ty policemen were assembled
outside, including plain -clothed
C.I.D. men. "What's the use of
calling a dog?" one of them ask-
ed while others looked on,
amused.
"Three men were disturbed by
the watchman at about 2.50," the
inspector in charge explained.
"They've burned a hole in the
safe with one of the firm's . oxy-
acetylene burners. They ran
from the offices to the yard at
the back, and although we've
been searching since three a.m.,
we can't find a soul, I think
they've gone,"
"We'll soon find out," Holman
replied. "But you'd better get
everyone out of the yard, I don't
want Rex attacking a detective."
Rex raced only thirty yards,
then skidded to a halt and be-
Han barking. Running to the spot,
olman saw a man Iying along
the arm of a small crane,
Rex then went off on the
scent of the other two, streak-
ing over riverside factory walls.
At last he reached a steel ladder
and tried to climb it, but the
rungs were iced over, and he
kept slipping back. "Can we get
to the roof from inside the
building?" Holman asked,
"Yes," he was told. "We've
already searched up there. All
the same, up to the roof they
went, and there Rex cornered
the two men, bent double be-
• hind a wall, "Call the dog off!"
screamed one. "I'm afraid of
• dogs!"
A terrifying experience fol-
lowed a call to Clapham Junc-
tion goods yard at two a.m. just
before Christmas, 1952, when a
signalman had seen a man tam-
pering with a wagon. Rex raced
off into the black maze of lines,
wih Holman running after him.
Soon he heard a rattle and rum-
ble — not of goods. train but of
a passenger express, and realiz-
ed with horror that they were
among the electrified tracks!
Heavens, he thought, Rex
might be killed.
He .was trembling with fear
when Rex suddenly bounded to
his side, Holman grabbed him
by the neck, pulled him close,
But what now? Move or stay?
They were between two tracks.
How close would the train pass?
A beam of light swung across
the darkness towards him "Keep
still!" screamed a voice. Holman
clasped Rex tightly and closed
his eyes. The train thundered
past with a blast of air that
nearly knocked him over. Hol-
man was shivering now, and
soaked with perspiration. "Keep
still!" the voice roared again,
"We're coming to you!"
The yard foreman who !ed
thein to safety said: "You were
both lucky, It was a miracle
that neither of you trod on
live rail."
Every night for two weeks
Holman, with Rex, had to keep
watch on a factory estate from
dreary, swampy waste land like
a refuse dump. Factories h a d
been broken into, watchmen at-
tacked, large quantities of metal
filings stolen. It was agonizingly
cold.
"Flat on my face on the damp
ground," the author writes,
"shivering, yet unable to slap
warmth into my chilled bones
tortured by a near -crazy
desire to stretch my limbs, des -
GREEN
-,Tt1UMB
y450be�%,M
Mgst of us are inclined to
plant seeds too close together
and sometimes with very fine
seed sometimes it can't be help-
ed, But the more tightly crowd-
ed the plants the less vigor any
one of them can maintain,
shortly after the seedlings have
shown their first sett of true
leaves and before crowding be-
comes critical take out the ex-
cess plants in both the flower
and vegetable garden. If you
have need for them elsewhere
In the garden these thinnings
can be transplanted readily at
this stage. •
For flowers that grow to a
relatively low height like Alys-
sum, Dwarf Marigold, African
Daisy, Wallflowers or Lobelia,
you should leave ony a few
inches space between plants in
to row. With larger flowers like
Zinnias, Asters, tall Marigold,
Petunias, Dahlias, Cosmos or
Snapdragons there should be a
minimum of a foot between
the row, With larger flowers lkie
Sunflowers and Tithonia should
have at least two feet space
between, Carrots and beets
should have an inch or so be-
tween them. Remove half of the
plants later on for the first
meals.
WATCH FOR BUGS
With so many easily applied
chemical mixtures on the mar-
ket, there is Little if any excuse
for having our flowers and
vegetables damaged by insects
or disease, It is no longer nec-
essary to prepare various con-
coctions. All that one has to do
is to go to the nearest seed
store, tell them our troubles
andget some handy preparation
which is simply dusted or spray-
ed on, For every bug or disease
there is a specific cure or con-
trol. The main thing is to start
control measures just as soon as
the first injury appears. Treat-
ment is not expensive.
A healthy, clean and vigor-
ously growing garden is the
best insurance against injury.
Well spaced, well cultivated
plants are far less susceptible
to trouble than neglected plots
overrun with weeds, Prompt
clean-up measures, after har-
vest or blooming, and in the
blooming, and in the spring and
fall will also help greatly. Many
bugs and diseases live over in
the ground, or in weeds along
the edge of the garden. Clean-
' ing these up regularly will help
substantially in keeping a gar-
den healthy.
NO HURRY
Do not fret if the spring is
late in your part of Canada this
year. In the first place fretting
will not help bring the warm
days any faster and secondly
there is still plenty of time any-
where in Canada to have a fine
garden, even if we can't get a
spade in the ground until late
May. Indeed there are several
quick growing things which will
make abundant bloom or fine
meals for the table even if
planted in June, The experts,
incidentally, always warn the
beginner to take it easy, to pre-
pare the soil well, and wait un-
til the spring weather has real-
ly arrived, Of course, one
should get nursery stock and
some of the hardier sorts of
flowers and vegetables planted
as soon as possible, but the main
sowings are best postponed un-
til around this time or even
later.
Spreading the plantings, too,
over a fairly long period, right
up to early July in the warmer
parts of Canada, is always ad-
visable. In this way the harvest
of flowers and vegetables is
spread out too,
FOR EASY RECOGNITTION
Sometimes it is pretty hard to
seedlings of flowers or vegeta-
seedlings of flowers or vegeta-
bles and the ever-present weeds.
You can make the\task easier
by planting evenly spaced in
rows and putting a stake at each
end of the row. Then, by sight-
ing along the row between the
stakes, you can find the kind of
seedling that appears only in
that line and readily remove
weeds. Or with seeds in a flow-
er bed you can sow evenly in
reg i!ar circles around n stake
and anything that appears out
of line is removed.
perate for the sound of a human
voice, a cup of tea, a cigaretie
, revolted by the rats, hedge-
hogs, and other vermin foraging
among the muck .. ,"
But in the end Rex was. off
after two youths, whom he cor-
nered in the darkness. Both wore
overalls. One, whom Holman re-
cognized as a criminal he'd ar-
rested two years earlier for
breaking int o a factory, had
wire -cutters in his pocket.
Holman,gives an absorbing ac-
count of Rex's training, besides
describing his exploits, in a book
that will engross all dog -lovers.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
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EXCEPTIONAL OPPORTUNITY
OILS, GREASES, PAINTS
Sell the best, Dealers wanted, Write
WARCO GREASE & OIL LIMITED,
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AGENTS
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ARTICLES FOR SALE
HANDICRAFT Materials: Foam rubber
for flowercraft, Leather, Fells,' Beads,
Shellcraft, Copper and Aluminum.
Write for catalogue. HANDICRAFT
SUPPLY Co„ Peterborough, Ontario,
FROM NEEDLES TO CROCODILES
WE supply anything. 35 Page .illus•
Crated Discount Catalogue listing over
300 items 5(4 refunded with order.
Special 152 piece Fishing Set regu-
lar $20,95 — only $24.95,
Consumers Shopping Service
58 Jones Avenue, Toronto,
AUCTION PRICES
LADIES' TWEED woolen spring Coats,
ass'td colours, sizes 12 to 20, also over -
sizes. Values from $30.00 to 165.00 for
only $14.95, SMART DRESSES, sizes 12
to 241/2 only $2,98. IMPERFECT
DRESSES, sizes 72 to 20, 11,95. LADIES'
GABARDINE, well tailored Ski Pants,
• not lined, ass'td colours, sizes 10 to
20, $3.49, MEN'S WINDBEAKERS, Latest
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PANTS, Meiburn, all colours, sizes 30
to 44 only 14.98. Outstanding Values —
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deposit, balance collect. D. ENGEL, 5017
St, Lawrence Blvd„ Montreal.
BABY CHICKS
•
PULLETS, Limited started. Dayolds,
Variety breeds: Ames In -Cross, Colum-
bian Rock Red Crosses — other high
producers, Order broilers for July -
August. Heavy cockerels. Mixed chicks,
Contact Bray Hatchery, 120 John N.,
Hamilton or local agent.
TtiE demand for Tweddle specialized
chicks was never better, Why? Because
we have the right breeds for the Job
you want the chicks to do, For maxi-
mum egg production on the mini-
mum amount of feed, K-137 Kimber-
chiks outshines them all. They are
terrific Layers of large sized top quality
eggs. We also recommend for maxi-
mum egg production Warren Rhode
Island Red, White Leghorn X Red, Red
R White Leghorn, California Grey X
White Leghorn. Our best by far for
dual purpose: Red X Light Sussex,
Light Sussex X Red, Red X Barred
Rock, Special broiler breeds, Turkey
Poutte. Catatelttt!.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD.
FERGUS, ONTARIO.
How Can 1?
By Anne Ashley
Q. What can I use as a sub-
stitute for egg In puddings?
A. One teaspoonful of gelatine
dissolved in hot milk Is a good
substitute for two eggs when
making puddings or cake.
Q. Is it Injurious to moisten
the hair with water too fre-
quently?
A, Yes; if this is done too of-
ten it causes the hair to become
harsh and dry, making it break
easily.
Q. How can I make perfora-
tions in home-made paper pat-
terns?
A, This can be easily done by
running the patterns through
the sewing machine, without
using thread.
Q. How can I easily remove
the string from beans?
A. Every bit of string from
the string beans can be remov-
ed if after thoroughly washing
they are plunged into boiling
water for five minutes and then
drained.
Books.
"JACKAROO IN Australia" Book of
sheeppgandhacatttle statg ions, $2,00, nn
Fred Woodgate, 19 Brisbane Street,
Tamworth, NSW, Australia,
ENTERTAINMENT
PICNIC, or Garden Party? Cowboy en-
tertainer with Ropea, Whips, Boomer-
angs, Laughs, Dave Stewart Malvern
P.O, Ont. Phone 1Toronto) Stewart,
$.41)80,
FOR SALE
MOTEL in Florida on beautiful harbor
near Ft. Myers, 9 cottages and. home.
125,000 will handle. Kashfinder, Wichita,
Kansas,
INSTRUCTION
EARN morel Bookkeeping Salesman.
ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, ere, Les.
sons 80t. Ask for free circular. No. 13.
Canadian Correspondence Courses
1290 Bay Street, Toronto
MACHINERY
BUCKEYE MODEL 12 TRENCHING MA.
CHINE with Buda gas engine In run
ning order. Make offer.
P. Tilley, Blackwood Hodge Equipment,
10 Suntract Road, Toronto 11.
MEDALS, BADGES, ETC.
MILITARY MEDALS — BADGES
CAP, Collar, Shoulder badges, Buttons,
Embroidered flashes, Crests, Regular
and miniature medals, Ribbons, Mill-
tary Insignia. Collectors write us your
needs. Special 10 different World War
II badges 11.00. EMPIRE CHEVIRONS,
254 CODSELL A V E., DOWNSVIEW
ONTARIO.
MEDICAL
DON'T WAIT — EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 ELGIN, OTTAWA.
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry Prisma
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salye will not disappoint
you. Itching, scaling and turning ecze-
ma . acne, ringworm pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seen.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.00 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
21165 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
FREE 1958 Catalogue. Gifts, cosmetics,
novelties, greeting cards, etr. Write
for your copy. Bern's Novelty 8108
Jeanne Mance, Montreal,
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates.
America'a' Greatest System
illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOLS
351 Steer St. W. Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PATENTS
FETiiERSTONHAUGH & Company
Patent Attorneys Established 1890.
600 University Ave., Toronto
Patents all countries.
PERSONAL
Fantastic Discounts! Send name, ad-
dress and 500 for big colored whole-
sale catalogue and confidential price,
Bat. Tomlinson, Box 825, Port Chester,
New York.
1L00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe
personal requirements. Latest cata-
logue included. The Medico Agency,
Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont.
ISSUE 19 — 1958
YOU
LAN.
SLEEP
TO -NIGHT
'ANI RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS
U4U1? TO•MORROWI
To be happy and tranquil Instead of
nervous or for good night's sleep, take
Sedicin tablets according to directions.
SEDICIN® $1.00-44.95
TABLETS Drvg stores Oelyl
ONE-MAN RESCUE—With the new Ambulitter, one person can
easily move casualties over any terrain —steep hills, rocks, •
swamps, etc. — without causing additional injury to the pcttjent...
The Ambulitter was designed to meet the requirements of battle-
field use, but also has civilian applications as shown above.
Low-pressure pneumatic rollers and a lightweight frame art
mounted to a standard Army litter. It can be "knocked down .
for easy transportation and storage.
t PAGE Yd
1
1
'1 iii TE STANDARD .
— __.._•.___.__-- wes
---
ST, MICHAEL'S'
Blue and Gold Fancy Tender Peas, 2-15 oz. Tins 33c
Jewel Shortening 1 Ib. pkg. 31c •
Dole Fancy Fruit Cocktail 20 oz. Tin 31c
SEED POTATOES
Sebago - Kathadins - Irish Cobbler
Fresh Fruit and Vegetable
Top Quality
Don't Forget Lion's Variety Show May 15
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER
SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISI1ACTION.
News Of Auburn
•
Auburn Anneltos Meets I, ices groomsman.
The fourth meeting; of, the Auburn A recelitlon followed at Tiger Dun-
Annettes met last Tuesday evening lot' inn where the brides mother re -
April 29, at the home. of the leader, ceived the guests wearing r g
own 4 Mrs. Alfred Nesbitt. Tho president, blue printed silk, matohing accessor-
ies and a corsage of pink carnations,
Betty Youngblut opened the meeting She was as by the groom's motll-
by all repeating the 4-H pledge. The er wearing a gown of green figured
minutes of the previous meeting were crepe, pink accersoiies and n corsage
read IJ ' the secretary,' Bernice Me- of pink carnations, The dining room
Dougall, and approved as rend. The was tastefully decorated with spring
roll call "Books I'd Like Ta Own" flowers, and the table was centred
was well responded to. A demonslra- with a 3 -tiered wedding cake; lighted
Von on Posture was given .by Mary tapers and topped with a miniature
Kirkeonnell, Eileen Schneider, Mori-
'bticte and groom. A deIieicus turkey
` lye Daer, Anna Marie Schneider. Mrs, dinner was served to' the immediate
Nesbitt gave a talk .on the pasteurizing families. Guests were present from
of milk and also various infections of Stratford, Goderich, MItchell, Blyth
the body. Mrs. Ed Davies spoke on 'and Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. McClin-
the "house fly," Various methods of they will reside on thegroom's farm
control of this pest were given and In West Wawanosh.
how to prevent their spread., The I Miss Margaret R. Jacksan, Mrs. Fred
guest speaker of the evening was Mrs• Ross, Mrs. Charles, Straughan, Mrs.
Kenneth Scott, R.N., who gave a very 'Alfred Nesbitt, and Mr. Ralph D.
helpful and interesting demonstration Munro, attended the Huron Count:
on different types 01 fractures, of the Library Banquet held last Friday ev-
jaw, spine, rib, collarbone, II-enst- ening
in the Goderich Legion Ifall.
Mrs, Nesbitt was the delegate from
this lit rary, Dr. Tolman of the Uni-
versity of Western Ontario was the
guest speaker of the evening.
Mrs. George Hamilton • arrived home
,last Sunday and is staying at the home
of Mrs. Fred Ross, Mr. and Mrs, Ar•
thur Rutledge, of Setrforth, were also
visitors.
Mr. Barry Young reparted last week
to his boat for the season.
A reception was held last Friday ev- All pre-school children of this dist-
Mr,
In the Blyth Memorial Hall for riot attended the Clinic held at Blyth
lir, and Mrs. James Glousher (nee last Wednesday for' polio.
Jane Snyder), Music for the dance A'B'• Wesley V'xlden of Hallett
lace's Township, visited recently With Al:.
act by and Mrs. William Straughan,
with a
Gordon I Visitors over the week -end .with
Mr: -and Mrs. John Daer were: Mr.
purse of money. Mr. Glousher thanked ,and Mrs. Robert Seiler and John, of
everyone for their gift. Stratford, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold R.oney
4 and Roger, of Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.
Walkerburn Club Norman McClinehcy and Miss Ellen
The Walkerburn Club held it's Ap.
ril meeting at the home of the presi-
i
Daer, of Blyth,
�}.-M••.+•.-••N-*...-.±.-.•N.-�.+...-.++4�••-$•* s i , -• •-•-•-•-•-•104.4.4
MILL END REMNANTS
Prints & Broadcloths.Gifts & Novelties
Household Commodities
(Fire Crackers May Be Purchased From Us
May 15, 16, 17, Legal Days Alloted)
5c to O. STORE
MILL ENDS & DOLL HOSPITAL
BLYTH ONT.
r•4- 4
44+ -4 4+
•. •-•••••-•.•-•+••
44-• . •-. •.-••-• •.•.-. •-. •• •-•• -•-•-•-•-•-
►44+••44•..+••••1444••41-•.-r•4 .4•••.444440-•.-•+•.44.444
.•4+ ; to prey:ous
Lone, arm, pelvic, thigh and leg. She
also gave the methods of • bandaging
all these different breaks, The next
meeting will bio held on May 8th at
the home of Mrs. Davies, The meeting
was closed by all repeating the Mary
Stewart Collect, Lunch was served
by Mary Kirkconnell and Marilyn
Daer.
Reception Held For Newly -Weds
was supplied by Mr. James P
Orchestra, An address was re
Mr. George Haggitt and Mr.
Beadle presented the couple
1 CORRECTION: It was reported in
dent, Mrs, Jim 14l�'Dcrunall, with a last week's paper that Mr. Roy Finn!-
good attendance. The meeting was gan was employed by Mr. Reg Hata-
**,1 opened by singing the Maple Leaf ton with his ditching machine, this is
Forever. The minutes of ti
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
meeting were read and approved by
Mrs. George Schneider. The roll call
was answered by each naming their
HAIRSTYLING HAIR TREATMENTS favourite Easter Hymn, The blanket
' AND premiums were dispayed and a dis-
1 cussion falowed. Two quilts were
REVLON COSifETICS quilted during the afternoon. The
Ann Hollinger • meeting was closed by singing The
Queen followed by the Grace. Lunch
For appointments phone 143. was served by Mrs. Stanley Ball, Mrs.
�rr•++• .+••• •••+•...••- +•4 •• ••+..+•.•••••-•+•4+4'4+4.- Leonard Archambault, Mrs. Stewart
l�•.44.4 •+•.•y.•.4444 • •. ••414..++•+•+11 •••.+•+r•-.+•••• •-•-• ef `Ament and Mrs. Joseph Verwey.
I1 Mrs, Andrew Kirkconnell, Mrs, Stan-
ley Ball, Mrs. John Sprung, Mrs.
Barad Sprung, Mrs. Mary Crawford,
;; Mrs. Stanley Lyon, Mrs. Arthur Clark
were among the guests on CKCO
Bazaar TV show last Friday. These
ladies went on the bus trip sponsored
„ by the Blyth Ladies Auxiliary. -.
Mrs. Louis Blake, Faye and Mary-
• anne, of Brussel., vis.ted last Thum-
, day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Kirkconnell, and daughters,
Mr, and Mrs. R:bert J. renillips were
guests last Wednesdsy afternoon wi`.h
Mr. and M"s. Zubrigg, at L'stowel.
Mr, and Mrs. James Raitht ,, are not
'enjoying the best of health and have
• gone to be with their s -ns in London.
We wish them both a Frmedy recovery.
' Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Brown and Julie
tewart's
Red b White Food Market
Salada Tr.a Bags, regular 79c pkg of 60 bags .. 71c
White Swan Toilet Tissue, regular 2 for 27c,
9 rolls for $1,00
Kleenex Tissue, regular and chubby, regular
2 for 39c 3 pkgs 49c
Giant Surf, free silverware in every pkg,,
regular 83c 69c
FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES
Tasty, Meaty New Potatoes
New Carrots
New Crop Silver Skin Texas Onions .
California Oranges
Fancy Quality Spy Apples
10 lbs. 69c
2 pkgs. 25c
... 31bs. 29c
2 doz. 89c
4 lbs, 59c
SHOP HED & WHITE AND SAVE
Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
"The Best IF'or Less" - Values Unsurpassed
•� +4.4.-4+•+•4+•.4-• ••-•-•-•-•-•-•••••-•-•-•-•-• 4-* •4.44••4-•44.-•-•1
1••••••••I•••?I.III•.'••II.I•I•••N••..NII•••I••••.....•y
incorrect.
Congratulations to some of the pupils
of Miss Margaret A. Jackson who won
honours at the Goderich Music Festi-
vanl. Among the winners were: Nan-
cy Anders:n, Billy Lapp and Larry
Snell, who won top marks with their
trio, also Robert Wilkin and Malcolm
Hiltz who won with their duet.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Craig at-
tended the funeral service for the late
Mr. Charles Robinson at Wingham last
Wednesday.
Miss Marie Andrews, , Miss Shirley
Patterson and Miss Karen Petterson,
of Hamilton, spent the weekend ut
their homes here.
MEETING FOR FAR,ILERS WITII
INI'ORMATION ON PROPOSED
FIPELINE
On April 28th, the Agricultural
Board Rooms was filled to capacity by
farmers affected by the proposed pipe-
line from Stratford to Goderich.
This meeting was called at the re -
guest of Mr. Don Middleton, Sec -field -
man of Middlesex County Federation
of Agriculture and member of the Ont.
Federation of Agriculture Pipelines
and Land Acquisition Comimittee, to
fEllen, of Fort Erie, spent the week- supply the fanners with information
end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs:ton obtaining their rights far this. in -
Jim Hembly, convience.
Miss Brenda Colquhoun, of Clinton, This Committee has been meeting
+ is visiting with her aunt, Mrs. Ken- regularly with cabinet ministers con-
i
Staples, Marian, Carol and Susan. corned and, in the case of pipe lines,
with the Ontario Fuel Boar_ d for the
Young People's Society
i
Entertains lfaneftt of all farmers.
The Young People's Union met an I The first thing we need to keep in
• April 30th in the Sahhhtth school room
of the Knox United Church with over
T,50 y.ung people in attendance. Louise
' Jefferson. the president, welcomed the
e visitors from the Nile and Dungannon.
The call to worship was given by
„ Marge Grange followed by the sing-
;; ing cf the hymn "Stand Up, Stand Up
For Jesus." The scripture lesson was
,, read by Margo Grange and Rev. R. S.
• lliltz led in prayer. An open discus-
. , sion followed on gencrnl questions
that teenagers should e nsider. A de-
bate "Resolved that all education
should be over television" took place
in which Wilmer Errington and
_ George Ribey upheld the affirmative
side and Luise Jefferson and Joan
Mills, the negative. It was proven
that all education should be over TV.
After singing • the hymn "What A
Friend We Have In Jesus" the meet-
ing wt,s closed with the benediction.
Recreation was enjoyed and Lunch
was served, The next meeting will
be held at Westfield United Church
with Joan Mills in charge.
McCLINCfIEV—DAER
The rectory rf St. Murk's Anglican
Church at Blyth was . the setting last
Saturday afternoon, May 3rd, 1058, for
the wedding of Lila Evelyn, daughter
Iof Mr. and Mrs. John Daer, of Auburn,
and Norman Gord',n, s,n of Mr. and
Mrs. Gordan M,cClinchey, of Auburn,
N.R. 2. Rev. Bren de. Vries officiated
for the double -ring ceremony.
The bride locked lovely in a white
wool suit with small navy flecks, in
the new box -style cut, navy aecessor-
tes and a corsage of pink carnations.
Miss Ellen Daer, was her sister's maid
- 'of' honour, In a pink v.w'ol suit, styled
similar to the bride's, white ac"essor-
- les and a corsage of while carnations.
Mr. David McClinchey was his l,roth-
•
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
For your sewing needs we carry a large stock
of Prints, Broadcloths, Drip Dry Broadcloths, and
Polished Cottons, Zippers and Threads,
For the Men we have- "(-Laugh's and "Brad-
shaws" Jeans and Matched Sets.
Greb and Ilydro Work Boots.
Phone 73.
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
, CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham„ R, A. SPOTTON.
mind is the fact that public services
such as highways, that,
hydro,
telephone and pipelines can cross your
property in spite of any inconvenience
or objection you may have.
In view of this the Federation has
taken a determined stand that prop-
erty: owners must be paid compensa-
tion to cover this direct or indirect loss
As'a result of their efforts the follow-
ing regulations have been added to the
Pipelines Act for your pra,tection,
(1) The Company requiring the line
must obtain permission -to construct
from the Ontario Fuel Board.
(2) The property owner has 14 days
after notice of a pulilic hearing to give
written objection.
(3) If objection is laid 60 days are
nllowed for investigation by Depart-
ments of Government, farm organiza-
tions, municfpalitics and land owners.
(4) The Fuel Board has the right to
impose on the Company terms and con-
ditions of construction and the use of
o standard easement contract.
(5) The land owner has the right
appeal the offer 'c,f compensation
the Government appointed Board
Arbitration without cost.
(6) Inspectors will be appanted to
nee that drains, fences etc. are proper-
ly repaired.
, I Mr. Crozier, chairman of the Fuel
Board, assured the meeting that farm-
ers who are not satisfied with the in-
cath:n of the line sh:atld refuse to
sign the easement and they will then
have the opportunity of stating their
cage 1before the Board. If the corn
plaint is reasonable it will be upheld
and the line moved.
The Federation is still working on
n satisfactory easement contract and
Pre hoping to eventually succeed in
getting the npproval of the Fuel Board.
IJ. Carl Hemingway.
to
to
of
Welnesday, May it, IA
.+44444++++++++++14-04-4044+.4+++.-e4444++++++0+...44+0•4
MOTHER'S DAY
Remember Mother on Mother's Day—Sunday,
May llth. It will take only a few minutes to visit
Philp's where there are gifts aplenty.
Smiles'n Chuckles Chocolates 50c to $3.00
Colognes and Perfumes 50c to $3.50
Corn Flower Vases $1,00 to $5.50
Cups and Saucers $1.25 to $4.00
c•
Necklace and tar Rings $2.00 to $5.00
Pins $1.00 to $4.00
Compacts $1.00 to $3.50
•
PHILP,Phn,
•DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER -- PHONE 20, BLYTII
'-41-♦K4MN-w-•-••• •.►w-• • ••• .•a•. • o n---. *r4 a •.,.. P'. w•M.�w • •.•yw.4-111.4.,4.
STOP f3 S'OP
, at Liolland's Food Market This Week -End.
(HEINZ CATSUP (large) 29c
ft
MATCHES 3 for 25c
CARNATION MILK 2 for 29c
PINK SALMON (Large) 49c
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO•SOUP 2 for 25c
CAMPBELL'S VEGETABLE SOUP , . , . 2 for 25c
Hollines Food -Market
AND LOCKER SERV ICE.
WE DELIVER ,
Tele,phone �;) --
►
NIV•IJ•...I••..II..m,. I• ' 44' rNIv I•.•MI 1••r1.••WIIb'.••N►M••MI...�
i4••••-•4-•4•*01.0• a••• -•.-•1-•4N wF•..-•-•-4••^•414+H-..4.44'4 4•"
WESTINGI-LOUSE 8 CU. FT.
REFRIGERATOR
OUR WEEK -ENI) SPECIAL
Five Year Warrant y, Be Sure To See This
Bargain Today.
Westinghouse Roaster Oven, ideal for hall,
church or cottage. Save $5.00 this week -end.
Westinghouse Portable Television, 17", needle
sharp images, Save $20.00.
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
& E,AWTIUC
YOUR WESTI.NCEIIOUSE DEALER
f •
4
"You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
PRONE 71R2 •-- BLY'I''II, ONT.
rN4-•+1+1.1+•-•+1-•-•• •-•-•-• 41.•-•-•-•-•••-•-•-•-•-•-• •+•+•+•-•9-F•+4 .4
N•NN•II.N•• 4•••►.NrN•rII•N.NIV•IN 1.4NII4,1VI1IMNrMM•
I
I
cricE
TO DOG OWNERS
By Order of Blyth Municipal Council all dogs
within the Corporation are to be kept from running
at large, effective immediately, and until the 30th
day of ;September,1958.
Arrangements have been made for a dog cat-
cher to pickup dogs where complaints have been
lodged by citizens.
The co-operation of all dog owners will be ap-
preciated in helping to eliminate animal nuisance
during the garden season.
Signed,
JOI-IN BAILEY, Chief of P�vlice.
BY SPECIAL REQUEST–=We are repeating our'
SHOE AD. for this week -end only.
FREE
Our Shoe Department is now completed and
with every pair of Wo'mens', Chidren's and Mens'
Work Boots—a pair of nylons for women, sokecs
for the children and work sox for work boots ab-
solutely Tree for this week only,
Shoes purchased here, we will guarantee re-
pairs.
THE ARCADE STORES -
STORES IN BLYTH ANi) BRUSSELS
/