HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1958-10-01, Page 1v
VOLUME 70 • NO. 38.
Anniversary Services At
Blyth United Church
Last Sunday the United .Church in
Blyth celebrated its Anniversary with
special morning and evening Services
of Worship. The minister, Rev. R.
Even McLagan, spoke on the theme
"God's Gift and Ours" in the morning.
Iia commented on the familiarity of
John 3; 16 among Christians and won-
dered if it is more than n text that is
memorized. "Knowing the verse" he
said, "we know the gospel and can tell
it tc others, But do we live It in our
lives." The minister pointed out the
sacrifice made for the world and for
men in the death of Christ and won-
dered if we are willing to make asi
much sacrifice in our gift. "Do we love
the world as much as God does?" asked
the minister in speaking to a congrega-
tion which filled' the nuditorium and
the galleny and included visitors from
R$ far away as Galt, Ontario, and Ed-
monton, Alberta.
In the eycning Mr, McLagan took as
his theme "Give away to get," suggest-
ing that to have true freedom we must
become obedient to God's laws as we
know them in Christ, making Christ
oar Master. ,The choir and the male
quartette sang at both services and
piano and organ duets were given by
Miss Margaret Jackson and Mrs. J.
McDougall.
Following the evening service n Fire-
side Program in the basement featured
a piano solo by Mrs. Ray Vincent and
a film "The Long Stride" produced by
Church World Service and shown by
Ron Snell, of Westfield. The film de-
picted the plight of refugees in vark
ons parts of the world and the grcatit
need for relief which is being given
by the United Nations and such or-
gn"izations as the Church World Ser-
vice. Lunch was served by Mr. Mc-
Lellan, assisted by Mr. M. Richmond,
Mr. and Mrs. C. Falconer, Mrs. F.
Ilowson and Mrs. F, Bainton.
Mr. McLngan suggested to his con-
gregation that each family invite an-
other to come to church with them
next Sunday- when the special Weeks
of Worship will continue.
Many friends of the United 'Church
Congregation joined them on Tuesday
evening to celebrate the Anniversary
lit a Turky banquet arranged by the
W,A. A delicious,.. and bountiful meal
was served with the heli of tl'e You ig
Peoples and the Friendship Circle.
Guild Meeting
Trinity Church Guild, Blyth, met at
the home of Mrs, Ken Taylor on Tues-
day, September 23, Instead of Thurs-
day, September 25,, the reason for this
wns the Guilty is catering to the Blyth
Lions Club on., Thursday evening.
There were 12 ladies present. The
meeting owed as usunl. followed by
prayer by the president,. Mrs. Harry
Gibbons. The scripture reading by M.'s.
Ken Taylor, the 23rd psalm,,
After all business had been attended
4o the supper. was planned and all ar-
rangements made for same. '.Mrs. Tay'
for showed around 25 slides of pictures
taken were her daughter, Claire. Is at
Frobisher Bay, which were lovely and
much enjoyed by all. The country
there looks very bleak and iceburgs are
plenty.
The next meeting will be on October
30 at the Rectory, this meeting will in-
clt•dc Belgrave and. Auburn Guilds.
Mrs. Gibbons then closed the meeting
with prayer. The hostess served n de-
licious lunch. , •
AMONG TIM CHURCHES
Sunday, Octobbr 1!, 1959
$T, ANDRl1V'S PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
1 p.m --Church' Service and Sunday
School.
Rev. D. J, Lane, B.A., Minister,
THE UNI'I'r•-D CHURCH
OF CANADA
Plyth, Ontarin.
Rev, R. Evan McLagan
Week of Worship (3)
World -Wide Communion Sunday.
• Each One Invite One .
10:00 a.m.-Sunday Church School.
11,15 atm. --"This is my Body!"
7.30 p.m. -"The Lord's Prayer '-
0) Our Father."
LYTH
sT• - - 0 lialdimand Advocate ilkIL
CAYUGA, ONT.
Post
d as Department,
mail,
BLYTH,ONTARIO,WEDNESDAY OCT,1 1958.
Post Office Department, Ottawa > >
PERSONAL INT4FREST WEDDINGS
Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Ladd, of Blyth, GROSS--CUNNINGIHA111
Mr, and Mrs, Tom Park, Dungannon,
visited with Mr. and 'Mrs, Jack Ladd, A pretty but quiet wedding was sol -
Patricia and Wayne, of Goderich, on
Sunday. The occasion being Mrs. Ladd
ISr's birthday.
Mrs. B. J-Jall and Mrs, Harold Badley
attended the Canadian Legion Auxil-
iary Convention at the Royal York
(Hotel in Toronto lost week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Walsh, Layton
and Warren visited on Sunday with the
latter's sister, Mrs. Douglas Kimmerly,
and family, at their cottage at Brights
Grove. Mrs, Walsh's mother, Mrs. Lip-
pold is visiting with the Kimmerly'a and
she was celebrating her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs, Finlay McGowan and
Mnrianne, Oakville, spent the week-
end with Mr• and Mrs, Orval Mc-
Gowan and Kenneth.
iMrs, V. Tasker is visiting with her
sun Ross, and family, of Streetsville,
and later in the week is leaving for
Greenwood, N, S., to visit with her
son, Cpl. Glen Tasker and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Walsh and
daughter, of Belgrave, spent Sunday
with their mother, Mrs. Norman Walsh.
Mr. and Mrs. James Zvi eal1 and
ernnized at the home of the bride's par-
ents, on Saturday, September 27, 1958,
at 2 pan., when Rev, R. S. Hills united
in marriage, Margaret Christena, elder
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Guy Cun-
ningham, of R.R. 1, Auburn, and Car-
men Milne Gross, son of Mr, and Mks,
William' Gross, of R.R. 1, Auburn.
The lovely bride, wore a nand -made
full-length gown made from nylon
,Chantilly lace and nylon organdy, scoop
neckline, pleated bodice, short bouffant
!sleeves, and lace sash at back. Her fin-
gertip veil of appliqued silk illusion
'was held In place by a tiara headdress
ofear is and carried a bouquet of red;
P,
roses. She also wore a necklace of
"real cultural pearls", the gift of the
groom,
The matron of honour, Mrs, Lloyd
McClinchey, sister of the bride, wore: a
gr.wn of green Chromespun taffeta,
scoop neckline, cap sleeves, bow in. the
back, in waltz -length, and carried; a Mrs. Norman McDowell, accompanied
bouquet of white roses. her and wont on to spend a fcw drys,
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Lyd- Miss Elva Gross, sister of the groom, at Buffalo, Niagara and Guelph.
diatt are vacationing in Nova Scotia. was dressed in a cocktail -length gown• • Mr. and Mrs. V. Kobza,
Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Fear are visiting ;of burnt orange crystallette, V-neck-' were Sunday visitors with
with their daughter, Mrs. Duffield, and line, dropped pleated waistline,. pointed
family, of Guelph. in front and a bouffant skirt, and car
Mr. W. McNaughton, Mrs. 13. Hall, ried a bouquet of white roses,
Mrs. Bateman andi,Mrs, Carroll attend- i Mr. Clayton Gross, 1*other of the
ed the Teachers Convention in 'London groom, was best man. e
last Friday. Miss Margaret A. Jackson played the
iAMns, Bert Kechnio and daughter, of (wedding music and also accompanied
Bright's Grove was a Blyth visitor last the soloist, Mrs. Willis VanEgmond, of
Mailing List Corrected
On Monday of this week the sub-
scription lists of The Standard was
col reeled and brought up to date, You
are asked to please check this week's
label and make sure no error has
occurred.
U. your label reads prior to October
1958, your subscription is in arrenrs.
We wish to thank all who renewed
their subscriptions and for the words
of encouragement to us. It is greatly
appreciated.
WINS BABY CONTEST
Donald Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Carter, R.R. 3, Blyth, won first
,prize in the baby contest at the Brits -
5e13 Fall Fair last week,
W ESTF J LD
Miss Gwen McDowell has left to re-
sume her studies at McMaster Univer-
sity, Hamilton. Her parents, .Mr. and
Thursday. Clinton.
' . i
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Plewes, of Sault I A reception followed In the church
Ste. Marie, visited last week with Mr. parlour of Knox United Church; Au -
and Mrs. Keith Webster and family. burn, were the bride's mother gowned
Mr. George Webster has returned to in a Jamnecan brown dress with 'orange
Western University, London, for Ills ice accessories and. a corsageof orange
second term. He attended the London coloured roses, received the guests. She
Conference Y.P.U. P.11y at Leamington was assisted by tiie groom's mother
over the week -end. gowned in a blue dress and wore pink
Miss Irene Lawrence, of Goderich,
Mr. J. Dickie, of London, spent the
week -end with the former's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. Lawrence, and family.
Mr. David W. Somers, accompanied
by his little granddaughter, Glenna
Maureen Somers, of MShcand, spent
Wednesday with his sister, Mrs. S. For a wedding trip to Niagara Falls,
Cuming,•and brother, Mr. Archie Som- Central States and through the Missis-
ere. sippi Valley, the bride wore a red.vel-
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Nesbitt, Senforth, ver dress with white and black acces-
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Grasby, Walton, 'sorts and a corsage of white carnations,
speri4'last Monday with 'Mr. 'and Mrs:. J, Guests' • were' present from. Paris,'
J. B. Nesbitt and family, of Morris, , Blyth, Londesboro, Clinton and Auburn,
accessories with a corsage of yellow
rose:. The waitresses were, Mrs, Nel-
son McClure, of Seaforth, Mrs. Russel
Good, Londesboro, cousins of the bride,
and Mrs. Del Delore, Paris, Mrs. Mur-
ray Lyon, Blyth, Miss Ruth Doer, At..
wood, friends of the bride. •
LOND ES13ORO
Mrs. Arthur Kunkel, Niagara Falls,
and Mrs. Louise Brindley of the Nile,
were visitors with Mrs. Manning, Sr.,
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Hes1c, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Turner, Lin an Barrie, of
Auburn, spent Sunday with Mr. and 1
Mrs. Gordon Ileal at Lobo.
IMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pipe, Mr. and
`Nits. Emerson IIesk and Mrs. Harry
Durnin are anticipating a trip to North ,
Bay on Friday to visit with Mr, std
Mrs. Glen Robinson and family, re-
turning Monday.
Mr. Wm. Govier is a patient in Gode-
rich hospital having undergone an op-
! eration last week, HIis many friends
hope he will soon be back to normal.
,Tnck Howott had a severe attack of
appendicitis lost Friday and was rush-
ed to the Clinton Public hospital on
Saturday morning. His friends are
glad to hear he is recovering from his
operation and doing nicely.
Mrs Robt, Beattie, of Windthrop,
spent the past week with Mit, and
Mrs. Charles Small.
We are pleased to know that Mrs.
Robert Fairservice Is recovering nice-
ly from an attack of the shingles. '
ANGLICAN CHURCH
Rector, Rev, Robert Menily
Anglican Church; Blyth -9.30 (Stan-
dard time) -Holy Cimnmunlon, Rev.
Dr. Henderson, D.D. Huron College.
8.30, Tuesday -Bible and Instruction
class.
St. Mhrk's Auburn -12.00 (Daylight
time) -Holy Communion, Rev. Dr.
Ilenderson, DID., Huron College,
11.30 -Sunday School,
Anglican Church, Belgrave-(Day-
light tine) -2,10 -Sunday School,
2,30 -Evening Prayer,
CII111tCH 01 001)
Mcc'onneit Sheet, Blyth.
Special Speaker,
10 atm. ---Sunday School.
11 a.m.-Morning Worship.
7:A0 p.m. --Evening Wor"ship.
Wednesday, 8 p.m.-Prayor and Bible
Study, _,--
Celebrated Golden Wedding
Mr. and ,Mrs. Thomas McPhee, of R.R.
3, Auburn, quietly celebrated their
Golden Wedding on September 30, with
a faintly dinner.held last Friday even-
ing at the home of their daughter, Mrs.
Stuart Taylor, of Nile.
Mr. and Mrs. McPhee were married
50 years ago by Rev. Rutherford, at the
P:esbytertan Manse at Dungannon, and
hnve resided ever since on their farm
in West Wawanosh, Mrs. McPhee was
formerly Margaret- May Smlth, of
Dungannon. They have 2 sons, Harvey,
at home, Orval, of West WaW hngsh, and
1 daughter, Beth, Mrs. Stuart Taylor, of
Nile. and 3 grandchildren.
-Mrs. Mcr'iee has, 3 brother and 3
sisters living, and Mir. McPhee has 1
brother and.1 sister, and also his step-
mother, Mrs. John tvliePhee, who recent-
ly passed her 91st birthday.
They are both vnhted members of the
Nile. United Church where Mr. McPhee
!Ban honourary elder of the church
hiving served en the session and being
Suriday School superintendent for
many years and 30 years on the Trustee
beard. Mrs. McPhee is a life member
of the W.M.S.-where she was treasurer
for many years.
The family presented them with a -tri -
lite lnmp, a lnrge silver engraved plate
to mark the occasion and the grand-
children gave them a geld cup and
Batu er.
OBITUARY
ARTIRUR 11'ILLIAM WILTSE
Mr. Wiltse passed away in Clinton
Hospital on Tuesday, September 30th;
where he. had been a patient sir:{:e
Sunday.
He was a son of the late Mr. and
Mn, Levi Wiltse and was married
52 years ago to Eva Grace Bawden.
and resided on Highway 4, south of
Clinton, until 1952 when they moved
here on the boundary for four years
and two years ago they bought theist
present residence from Mr. and Mrs.
Jpck McGee, on Wellington street.
Hr is survived by his wife, and two
brothers, Horace, of Auburndale, Flor-
ida and Milton, oT Clinton.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.
on Thursday, October 2nd, from the
Ball and Mutch funeral home, Clinton,
c•nducted by Rev. D. J. Lane.
Pallbearers will be: Cal Streets,
Fred LeBeau, Elmer LeBcau, Frederick
Anderson, Gus Bisback, Gerald Hef-
fron, Flowerbearers Albert Mitchell,
Jack Bawden, Beecher Streets, Stew-
art Euelle ,and Willam J. Miller.
Burial will take place in Clinton
cemetery.
BIRTHS
ORTELLI-At- Alexandra Hospital,
Gcderich, on Thursday, September
23. 1958, to Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Ortelli, of Blyth, the gift of a son,
David John, -
WHITE -In Wingham Hospital on F"rri-
clay, September 20, 1958, to Mr. and
Mrs. Ray White, of Belgrave, the gift
of a daughter.
ON FISHING TRW
Twelve fishermen from Blyth raid
district motored to Medford last week -
!
end. According to reports the fisher -
I men far exceeded the fish. Those mak-
ing the, trip were; Joe Hunking, Ray'
Hunking, Ben Walsh, San) Beadle, Bill
Patterson, Elmer Kellar, George Hag-
gett, 13111 Riehl, Melvin Richt, Harold
Creighton, Ken Badley and 13111 Man-
ning.
1
TRIPLETS ARRIVE 1101E FROM
11'INGIIAAi I1Osl'I'i'AL
Dwight Jinn s, Doneldn Kay and Dan-
nv Walton, triplet babies of Mr. and
Mrs. James Lamont, of Belgrave, hnve
arrived home from Wingham General
Hospital, The community pres'nted
the Lamont's with a clothes dryer and
a suns of monoy and a -sterilizer,
of Blyth,
Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Campbell.
Mrs. Dora Blair, Belgrave, visited
on Sunday with her son. M. Hugh'
Blair and Mrs. Blair and family.
Mi. Franklin Campbell. who has
been employed on the railway out West
for the summer, returned to London
to resume his work there, • He was a
Ivi:itot with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
(Howard Campbell for a few days the
!past week.
- Wedding bells are ringing in West-
field this week. 1 first and second time be passed. Car -
1 Rev. Donald Brydon, • of Ripley, was
a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin DIA-.
Dowell on Sunday.
Mr. Harvey •Wightman, of Water
was hone over the week -end.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook vis
with Mr. Thomas Cook at Wingham
Friday.
Mr. Ernes
poli: barn o
Mill has the
completed w
• Clifford
Mr. and Mr
home Mond
hospitalized
accident on
working in
and brother,
his foot with
gash between
one, requiring
hope it won
be able In b
Mr. and A'
Londes-
boro, were
with Mr. an
and Gerald.
Mr. and M
with her sister,
Mr Vodden,
Mr and M
Sunday visit
and Mrs. Jack
Mrs. Peter
Ann, Jackie,
home on
her parents,
par -
lents in Wit
past three r
in London..
Mr. Jasper
with Mr. an
Ant
Rev. Don
Ripley United
prencher for
held on Sun
Westfield Cl
chose his text
The male choir
under the
with Gram
men's quart
Elaine AMD
cuing service
text from
The Auburn
vice of son
were much
Grange was
tended both
ole and dahlia
for the anniversary
world wide
observed in
Arnold RECEPTION
';N
Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U,S.Ai
Blyth Municipal Council
The regular meeting of Council was
held in Memorial Hall on September
2nd at 8 pan. with Reeve Motilif.t;
Councillors Ccok,''�lliutt and Fairser-
vice present. Motion by Ceok and
Fairservice that minutes of last regu-
lar meeting be adopted, Carried.
Motion by Fairservice and Cook, that
correspondence be filed. Carried.
Motion bt,' Cook and Fairservice,
that clerk forward petition for interim
- payment of statutory grant, under
Highway Improvement Act, to Depart-
ment of Highwnys. Carried.
Mctioo;
ANN€ FIRST
-Vows. rom✓v r ..,a tor. -
' "Dear Anne Hirst; After wait-
ing three long years my fiance
and I planned to marry at
Christmas, but two months ago
his father died, leaving a
meager provision for his family,
which surprised them all—they
had thought him comfortably
oft. His younger brothers and
his sisters are still in school.
What a blow to our plans!
"My fiance feels his first ob-
ligation is to take care of his
mother and the family, and I
have to agree, He makes a very
bood salary which would have
een adequate for us, but of
Course they will need most of it
now.
"We have talked everything
over—and he thinks we should
break our engagement, but still
see each other.
"If we break up I do not
think I could bear seeing him,
knowing it may be several years
before we can marry. I have
held a good position for seven
years, and I wouldn't mind
keeping it; but I am not getting
any younger, and we both want
children.
"I applaud his loyalty, but
Pansy Square
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-
when I think of my own future
I wonder whether I should wait
indefinitely? DISTRESSED"
•
•
•
Unless you are prepared to
live with your fiance's family
(and no matter how much
• you like them, it would pre-
* sent problems) I agree with
• you,
• What other solution is
• there? If you saw him reg.
• ularly you would wear your
* heart out with longing, and
• the strain could result in
* emotional collapse, You have
• to earn your own living, and
• must not take chances with
* your health. No matter how
• cruel the wrench, I think your
• decision is the only practical
• one you can make,
• You emphasize that his bro-
• thers and sisters are devoted
• to him. When they learn he
• has had to break the engage-
* ment, the older boy may want
• to start helping out earlier
• than he expected. This, how-
* ever, you cannot count on.
• Don't sit back and resign
• youself to maidenhood, though.
• Look up your former friends,
• cultivate them. Dating the
* men you used to know will
• divert you and keep your so-
* cial life refreshing. This you
• need to carry you on, so don't
• let any false sense of loyalty
• deter you.
• One cannot, thank goodness,
• anticipate the future. Marry-
* ing your fiancee may be pos-
• sible earlier than you think
* today. Meantime, refuse to
• bury yourself and mourn your
• fate.
•
• • •
SOLDIER'S LETTERS STOP
"Dear Anne Hirst: My boy
friend and I had an understand-
ing that when he comes back
from his service we would be
married, But he has been gone
four months, and seems to have
stopped writing me altogether.
"I am sick from worrying.
"Shall I keep on writing? Do
you suppose he has found some-
one else he's fallen In love with?
LOVING AND WORRIED"
* Many a soldier cannot find
• time to write his girl as often
• as he'd like to. Besides, sol-
• diers are frequently moved
• from place to place without
• notice, and letters are some-
* times lost in the mail or late
• reaching their destination.
* You do not say how often
• your young man wrote be-
• fore he ceased to; wait a bit
• longer, but send your own
• letters through. Mention that
• his are not coming as they
• did, but you are trying not to
• worry.
• Even when he is in love,
• many a young man dislikes
• writing to his girl and is apt
• to postpone it unduly.
• Some men in service do
• meet other girls at service
• dances and other affairs, but
• don't consider this idea un-
* less you find later that it is
• true.
* Cheer up! Lots of other
• girls are wondering these
• days, too, but this is all a part
• of loving a soldier.
If your plans for the fu-
ture must be postponed, be
a good sport about It and
adjust yourself as best you
can. Telling Anne lIlrst
about it can relieve the
burden, and often she can
suggest practical ideas to
light the way... Write her
at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.,
New Toronto, Ont,
WAVE OF THE FUTURE — Not to be outdone by the fair sex,
businessman Anthony Moss has his hair waved at a London
beauty salon for men. Hair net keeps his tresses in place while
beautician Mr. Charles wields an electric dryer that looks like
a Martian's space gun. The salon provides men with permanent
waves, mud packs and other beauty aids.
MISS AMERICA 1959 — Mary Ann Mobley, relaxes in Atlantic
City after winning the Miss America title, The 21 -year-old
college senior, who wowed contest judges the night of the
final judging with a jazzy dance routine, hopes to be in a
Broadway musical comedy some day.
HRONICLES
iINGER FARM
Gv¢ndoline D. Ctanbe
Wonders will never cease. We
actually f o u n d a repair man
who was willing to work on a
Saturday .. , and a plumber at
that. We were having • trouble
with our kitchen sink. The wa-
ter became slower 'and slower in
draining away and finally quit
running . entirely. Partner un-
screwed goose necks and T -
pipes, worried away with wire
cleaners and solvents but with-
out any appreciable improve-
ment. Finally he said, "You'd
better look through the phone
buok and see if you can locate
a plumber. If we contact some-
one today maybe we can 'get
him to come first thing Monday
morning." Not having ,been in
this district very long we natur-
ally don't know whom to con-
tact when it comes to repair
men, The best thing I could do
was thumb through the "yellow
pages" and pick out names at
random. The first one didn't an-
swer; the second had had his
phone disconnected; the third
was answered by a woman who
said .she would have hei bro-
ther call when he came in. But
we were not too hopeful, The
best we could do was wait.: The
man didn't phone at all — he
came instead, ready and willing
to get on with the job. The
trouble was soon located and
thirty feet of straight pipe
cleaned out. He told us we had
probably been too sparing with
the water, not letting enough go
down the sink to keep it flush-
ed. We knew he was right be-
cause every day we nut the dish
water in a pail and used it to
water the garden — to savl
drawing fresh water from the
well. So naturally the sink
wasn't getting properly flushed,
To prevent further trouble the
l.durnber told us to close the sink
trap once a week, fill the sink
full of water, clean and hot.
•Then open the trap and let the
water go suddenly. He said
force, combined with the hot
water, should carry away any
deposits left in the pipe. It
sounds like good advice so 1
am passing the information
along for what it may be worth.
But plumbing trouble wasn't
our worst experience last week.
No, indeed. I was on my way
down to Port Credit, tried to
stop at the first stop sign and
my brake went right to the
floor. I had often heard of
brakes failing but this was my
first experience. It gives one a
horrible, helpless and terrifying
feeling. I hope to h e a v en it
never happens again, Fortun-
ately I was on a quiet road.
Even so I had to drive with one
hand on the emergency brake
and the other on the wheel. I
wouldn't have had too much
trouble except that the children
were just coming out ot school
and the road seemed to be teem-
ing with bikers and first grad-
ers, wandering from one side of
the road to the other. By the
time I got to the garage near
home I was in a bath of pers-
piration, Incidentally I met a
po11ce cruiser on the way but
, apparently mypredicament was
not obvious to h i m. It was
ironic I should run into serious
trouble on the very eve of th
n e w traffic law enforcements
for the prevention of highway
accidents.
Now what else happened last
, week? Oh yes, Partner went
twice to the Exhibition. l didn't
gc. any more — I was getting
all the excitement ,I wanted at
home. One day Partner went
down on the bus; the next time
with Bob and Joy to see the
air show. They specially wanted
to see the Arrow but as you
probably know the Arrow did
not appear. They were so dis-
appointed. While they were
away I took care of " Ross who
wasn't too happy when he saw
• Mummy and Daddy drive away
without him. Happily baby fears
and tears are soon forgotten and
in a little while he was playing
around with Ditto and the
PuPPY.
That same puppy gives me
plenty of exercise — @round the
block twice a day and " then
walking over our acre lot in
search of mushrooms.
We generally get enough for
supper every day — and' we're
still alive to tell the tale.
In between sessions with the
car, plumbing, heat and humi-
dity — and the puppy — I have
been trying to houseclean, ready
for a W.I. meeting that Is to
be held here next week. We
have also been refinishing some
of our old furniture but if we
hadn't had a deadline for the
Groom . Forgot
Wedding Ring
Happiness shone in the eyes of
the lovely Italian girl as, helped
by her two bridesmaids, she put
on her smart wedding costume
then added the finishing toucheg
to her make-up, •
She looked exquisite, and her
bridesmaids told her so,
"Don't forget your key. You'll
be coming back to the house to
change before going away," one
of them reminded her. She pick-
ed up the key and slipped it in-
to her pocket,
As they drove to the church,
the bride's heart beat faster In
a very short time now, she' and
the young professor she loved
would be uttering their vows,
and he would slip on to her
finger the ring they had chosen
with so much care in a Milan
jeweller's shop some weeks
earlier,
"Hope Luigi hasn't forgotten
'the date," she said to her com-
panions when they neared the
church. It was a joking refer-
ence to her young man's occa-
sional absent-mindedness. She
did not really believe he would
forget.
She was right. He was there,
looking'spruce, but a little har-
assed, because he had got up
rather later than he intended
and had had to dash to the
church.
A "stag party" the previous
night had made him sleep late.
All went well until the priest
asked the bridegroom to place
the ring on the girl's finger. He
fumbled in his waistcoat pocket
for it, for he had no best man
to carry it for him.
It was not there! He felt in
the other pocket—all his pock-
ets, Still no ring. Like a flash,
she thought of the key in her
pocket and took it out unob-
trustively and gave it to him,
"Use this," she whispered.
"It's all right, dear. Don't
worry."
Using the loop of the key as
a ring, he slid it on to her fin-
ger under the astonished eyes
of the priest. Nobody else in the
church was near enough to see
what was happening.
But the bride well knew that
anything in the form of a circle
is legal substitute for a wedding
ring in most countries — and her
presence at mind prevented an
embarrassing situation from de-
veloping.
As they were signing the reg-
ister—the brad having slipped
the key back into her pocket—
the bridegroom had an Inspira-
tion. He felt in the turn -ups of
his trousers and found the miss-
ing ring. It must have fallen
there before he got his taxi to
the church.
There are many people like
that resourceful bride who
know how to keep cool in a sud-
den emergency, Presence of
mind is a most valuable asset
when things go wrong.
meeting it probably wouldn't
have been done yet. Partner
made two night tables from odds
and ends of furniture and for
one dresser he took the mirror
out of the frame and hung it on
the wall. Then I enamelled the
dresser to blend in with the
Vitas beds. The dresser in our
room is solid oak so on it 1
did a refinishing job with flat
varnish stain and h a v e been
quite pleased with the result.
Honest to goodness it is much
more fun making over what
you've got around than it is
going out and buying new stuff
—just for the sake of being
modern. Why not dare to be dif-
ferent? I find it very, very bor-
ing to go into one house after
another and find so many of
them with the same type of fur-
niture; window drapes from cor-
net' to corner and broadloom
from wall to wall, Like that old
English music hall song about
the whole family sleeping in one
bed "and when Father said
'Turn' we all turned,"
STEPS TO A LONG LIFE—
i
■
!ISM
rte;•- ----III
LIFE EXPECTANCY
Ostrich Waltz
Amazes Observer
"I liked the clean sparkle of
the morping air just outside Jo-
hannesburg and often got up
early to take walks, On one of
these walks when 1 was some
distance from my hotel, 1 no-.
ticed a movement far away on
the veld," writes Cecile de
Banke, in her autobiography,
"Bright Weft," "From a distance
it appeared to be blown grass.
But as I got nearer, I saw that
there were two long lines, run-
ning parallel to each other, of
what I thought were tall animals
jumping up and down,"
As Miss de Banke got closer
she saw that the "animals" were
ostriches. The birds were drawn
up in two long lines facing each
other, those on one side being
light in colour and those facing
them dark, with red markings
down the front of their legs,
Both lines danced up and
down, the dark birds occasion-
ally jostling one another and
changing places, as though they
wished to get opposite one par-
ticular hird. When this was ac-
complished, the pair, would move
round each other with a waltz-
ing movement and then go off
together across the veld.
"Later I was told that I had
seen the mating dance of the
ostriches and that no one else
who had gone near enough to
see the sight had ever lived to
describe it. He explained that
with one powerful kick the red -
marked male ostriches had been
known to disembowel horses and
to kill men with one blow," says
the author.
Jrsd The Trapeze
PRINTED PATTERN
4622
SIZES
9-17
The dashing, young Trapeze—
designed for you who are always
first in fashion, love to look
exciting. T h e front is wise./
darted to reveal the figure —
the back flows freely with a
half -belt for smart accent.
Printed Pattern 4622; Junior
Miss Sizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size
13 takes 4% yards 35 -inch.
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate,
Send FORTY CENTS (40e)
(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.
- AIN - NUN
-- - NI 111
N - EN - - ■
.-sr- INN INN
-..-INN Ime be we re au so
NN
Min
r '71,2 l'••72,3•
■
n
1 '
■ 74,3
ISSUE 40 — 1958
78'4
mom 77.9
■
e
.E+vlsno _ ri:
WOMEN
MEN
The Longer You Live" •
The Longer You Might Live
This step graph shows ho* overage expected life span (for white moles
and can be femalecs)
to live ttinues too 69 orrow hmor•,aer • person lives. A boAnd if he reaches That aof five
ge, the
chances are good for another decade of life. According to the Metropoli•
ton life Insurance Co. the average white male teaches the hallway mark
in life shortly after 35. But hit female counterpart isn't ot that posit
until 31 or so. For nonwhites the middle point is 34 and 3f res_.ttivz'
•
4
1
tVedneadny, October I, 1955
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH — ONTARIO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sii;kness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability:
WE'SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE,
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
FOR SALE
Quart Sealers. Apply Mrs. Harry
Gibbons, phone 107R2, Blyth, 37.2p
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
and cleaned, Free estimates, Louts
Blake, phone 42Ro, Brussels, R.R. 2.
SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Have your ,septic: tanks pumped the
sanitary way, Schools and public
buildings given prompt attention.
Rates reasonable Tel "Irvin Comm,
Milverton, 75114, 62-1941
NNI0"..44IwII4'4•I•PI4.41 I0•AP !NSI
F. C. PRIEST
LONDESBORO, ONT.
Interior & Exterior Decorator
. Sunworthy Wallpaper
Paints Enamels • Varnishes
Brush & Spray Tkitnting.
•NM►•IJ^NNN I•IIINNVMMNIMMI•
FOR SALE
Talman sweet apples, customer pick
own, Per bushel, 25 cents; 50 Red
Rock Pullets, 8 months old, ready to
lay, Apply Tytus Woszczynski, Mor-
ris Township, 8th concession, int 6.
38-1p
FOR SALE
3-plece red velvet winter outfit, size
3; Roosters and geese, dressed and
delivered, Apply Mrs, Alex Nethery,
phone 52r114, Blyth, 38-1
FOR SALE
Washing machine; 6 dining room
chairs; dining room table; day bed;
small table; radio; sideboard; lawn
mower; 2 dressers; copper boiler; pail;
also numerous other articles. Apply
George Hallam, 2 miles west,' of Au-
burn, phone Dungannon, 11R22, 38-2
FOR SALE
100 Red and Columbia Rock Pullets,
6 months 01(1, laying. Apply, Edgar
Wightman, phone 15R8, Brussels, Bel -
grave, Ontario. 38-1
ib
AUCTION SALE
At Lot 34, Concession 8, East Wawa-
rtsh, 314 miles west of Belgrave, 1
mile south on
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7
at, 1 p,m.
CATTLE—Black cow, fresh; Holstein
cow, milking and re -bred; Jersey cow,
!due Oct, 10th; Jersey cow, due Dec, 20;
Jersey cow, fresh; 2 llolstein and Jer-
sey heifer's, due in March; 2 Jersey
cows, milking, due In April; 9 yearling
Hoieford heifers.
HAY -17 tons of haled hay.-
MACHINF,RY— McCormick Deering
side rake; Deering mower; 10.11. hay
reek with sliding ruck; Massey Harris
11; -run shoe drill; I horse cultivator;
Frost aril Wood binder, 7 ft, cut; Mc-
Cormick Deering manure spreader; set
of diamond harrows; set of horse discs;
wniking plot': firing plow; set of 2000
' lb, scales; wagon box and stock rack;
gravel box; turnip drill; fanning mill;
folks; shovels; chains; Rock Elm plank
10"X8'; gauntity of lumber; other arti-
cles too numerous to mention.
1 PROF' RTY—Consisting of 100 acres
of choice clay loam land. On this pro-
perty is situated a 11/2 story stone ven-
eer house with hot and cold water,
bath room•, and all modern conven-
iences. A bank barn, 52 ft. by 72 f",1.
in excellent state of repair. Property
to be sold subject to reserve bid, Ter-
ms on property to be made known the
day of sale.
No Reserve
TERMS CASH
Leander Good, Proprietor.
George Nesbitt, Auctioneer.
George Powell, Clerk, 38-1
Order Your Counter Check
Books at The Standard
(printed or blank)
ONL
,VAUXH
,GIVE�
`Y
1
No other car in its price field offers such
wonderful choice for complete motoring
.pleasure as Vauxhall. From the really
low priced 4 cylindev, 5 -Passenger
Victors to the all new "Sixes", Velox
and Cresta, Vauxhalls gives you more
extra features, mote handling ease and
riding comfort, more value for the
money than any; other line of cars in its
class. Choose your Vauxhall now.
�' IE BLYTU STANDARD
BROWNIES ROXY THEATRE
LYCk,CIM'[�HEATRE
-...r.1110.-,
DRiVE•IN
i3 'THEATRE
Clinton — Ontario
Thursday, Friday, Oct, 2 and 3
DOUBLE FEATURE -
"Jet Attack"
John Agar and Audrey Totter
"Suicide Battalion"
Michael Conners and John Ashley-
(Onb Cartoon)
Selurday, ‘ Monday,—-Octobor. 4 and 6
"White Feather"
(Colour)
Robert Wagner and Debra Paget
(Onb Cartoon)
Tuesday, Wednesdeay, October 7 and 8
"Tank Force"
(Colour) (Cinentascope) 1(Comedy)
Anthony Newley and Anne Aubrey
(Onb Cartoon)
Tuesday -r— Dollar Nite
$1.00 Admits a Carload
FOR SALE
•
l ear old hens. Apply Mason Bailey.
phone 12R5, Blyth 38-1p
WANTED
Box stove for burning wood, in good
condition, Apply Mason Bailey, phone
12E5, Blyth, 38-1p.
FOR SALE •
,Quebec heater and. a Rangette, Apply'
Jinn Young, phone 178P.2,_ 3112p
FOR SALE
Out house, good repair. Apply nt
the Standard Office. • 38-1p
NOTICE
The firm of Huron Farm Supplies
operated by Merritt & Wright has dis-
olved partnership and accounts owing
must be settled by October 15, 1958,
Huron Farm Supplies, Blyth.
WHITE WASHING
Anyone wishing white washing con-
tra Patterson Bros., phone 30R24,
Blyth. 30-tf,
•
IN MEMORIAM ._._
McELROY—In memory of our father,
INV Herbison McElroy, who pas-
sed awny, September 30, 1948,
-Remembered by his sons, Barrie and
John. 38-p
WINGHAM.
First Show commences at 7:15 p.m.
THEATRE CLOSED MONDAY,
TUES., WED., OF EACH WEEK.
Thursday, Friday, Sat•, Oct. 2-3-4
"TILE MATCIIM'AKER"
Shirley Booth, Anthony Perkins,
Shirley MaoLaine
The frantic omplloations that stens
from the matchmaking activities of
a sly, but warm hearted, middle-
aged widow.
_ FARM FOR SALE
71. acre grass farm, good well, situ-
ated on part lot' 1, concession 13, Hul-
let.t Township. Apply to Colin McDon-
al;l, phone 40R14, Blyth, 37-3p.
-- iN MEMORIAM
POLLARD—In loving memory of a
dear mother, Mrs. Samuel Pollard,
who passed away September 30,
1939,
Her thoughts were all so full of as,
Sne never could forget.
And so we think that where she is,
She must be watching yet,
As Angels keep their watch Up there,
!Please God just let her know,
That we down here do not forget,
We love and miss her so. ,
i' --Sadly missed by son and daughter.
Gcorge and Beryl. 38-1p.
iN MEuMORIAM
HC'LLYMAN—In loving memory of a
dear husband and father, Francis
John Hollyman, who passed away
October 5th, 1956,
11 1 had all the world to give,
I'd give it yes, and more,
To hear his voice and see him smile,
Anc: greet him at the door,
1 Bal all I can do dear dad,
L; go and, tend your grave,
And leave behind a token of love
Tn the best dad God ever gave.
I like to think when life is done,
Wherever Heaven may be,
That he'll be standing at the door,
Up there to welcome me.
I—Always remembered by his wife,
Mar), and' daughters, .Dorothy and
Frances, 38 -Ip
Victor 5•Passeneer Sedan
Victor Super 5•Passenger Sedan
Victor Estate dr
IS f CHOICE !
AND VAUXHALL GIVES YOU All THESE
EXTRAS AS STANDARD EQUIPMENT
;FOUR -DOOR CONVENIENCE • FIVE AND SIX PAS-
SENGER COMFORT • STEERING COLUMN GEAR
,SHIFT • 4 AND 6 CYLINDER ENGINES • SPACIOUS
TRUNK • FRESH AIR HEATER AND DEFROSTER • Cresta (1 -Passenger Sedan (
'FIiE•WAY IGNITION SWITCH • SPRAY INSULATION
A^AiNST RUMBLE AND ROAD NOISE • PANORAMIC
VISION • AMAZING ECONOMY • SPORT CAR ,
THE BRITISH I HANDLING
' CAR BUILT, AND BACKED BY GENERAL MOTORSralighaiiv.25s8A�SEE YOUR LOCAL VAUXHALL DEALER
•
Velox 6•Passengor Sedan
LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD.
CLINTON -ONTARIO
1
CL
INTAN.
PAGE, 5
f
Now flaying: "The Sheefiman", Glenn
Ford, Shirley McLaine, Leslie Neilsen
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
"St. Louis Blues"
The life story of W, C. Handy, the
man who wrote some of the world's,
grec•test blues, including the immortal
title song. Filmed in Vista Vision.
Nat "King" Cole, Eartha Kitt,
Pearl Bailey
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
"Saddle The Wind" In Technicolor
A trigger-happy young fighter who A true life adventure drama — telling
couldn't be saddled . , . a story filled the story of a white boy, raised amidst
with the action, songs and flavor of the traditions and culture of an Indian
the West, tribe, asd his return to his own people.
Robert Taylor, Julie London Fess Parker, Joanne Uru and
John Cassavetcs James MacArthur
1st Showing 2nd Showing
At The 9:30 p,m. ,
Alr-Condltloncd
PARK f
GODERICH.
Now flaying: "Saddle The Wind" In,
Color, Robert Taylor, Julie London.
ALh WEEK—OCTOBER 6th to lllis
WALT DISNEY PRESENTS
"THE LIGHT
IN THE
FOREST"
Coming next: October 13-18 "The Light
in the Fo►'cst." T Coming: Jose Ferrer In "The High
Cost of Loving" with Gena Rowland,
.ss•+•4-r+_t.-64- _ 44-0-6-444•a-• +± 1•4+4-tplt +trt++-r+••H+.•.
WANTED
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Old horses, 31%e per pound, Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
Ann Hollinger
to phone at once, day or night. GIL-
Phone 143 BERT BROS, MINK RANCH, Goderlce,
Phone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4,
_._...__--------- --- 44 tL
RENTAL SERVICE
POWER LAWN MOWE
CEMENT MIXER
(WITH MOTOR
•
WHEEL BARROW
VACUUM CLEANER
FLOOR POLISHERS
BELT SANDER
1/1 HEAVY DUTY ELEC-
TRIC DRILL
WEED SPRAYER, (3 Gal.)
EXTENSION LADDER
(32 feet),
PIPE WRENCHES
PIPE DIES & CU'1TER
Apply to
Sparling'sHardware G. B. CLANCY
WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING
ASSOCIATION
For artificial insemination service or
R' more information, telephone the Wa-
I terloo Cattle Breeding Association col-
Leel at Clinton, Hu 2-3441, between:
i7.30 rad 9.30 A.M. week days, 8 and
8 P.M. on Saturdays. Do not call for
service on Sunday. Cows in heat on
!Sunday can be inseminated satisfact-
orily on Monday.
We supply service to top quality
bulls of the Holstein, Jersey, Ayrshire,
Guernsey, Brown Swiss, Red Poll, _
Hereford (polled and horned), Beet
Shorthorn (polled and horned), and
Dual Purpose Shorthorn, Angus and
Charolais breeds, The cost is low.
Business
Cards
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRiSTERS do SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington.
Q.C. Q.C.
Wingham and Blyth.
IN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located in Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48
Phone 24, Blyth
TREASURER'S SALE OF
LANDS FOR TAXES
Corporation of the County
of Huron
TO WIT:
13y virtu" of a warrant issued by the
Warden of the l`nunty of Huron under
his hand and the seal of the said corp-
cration bearing date of the 12th day
of August 1958 sale of lands in arrears
of taxes in the County of Huron will
be held at rtry office at the hour of
2 00 p.m, in the Court House on the.
9th day of December 1958 unless the
taxes end costs are sooner paid. Netter:
is hereby given that the list of lands
leer sale for arrears of taxes was pub-
lished In the Ontario Gazette on the
5th day of September 1958, and that
colics of the said list may be had at
my office.
The adjourned sale, if necessary,
will be held at the above office on the
16111 day of December, 1958.
Treasurer's Office this 13th day of
August, 1958.
(signed) J. G. BERRY,
Treasurer.
35-13
RELGR AVE.
Ilarvest Home services were held in
'1': inity Anglican Church on Sunday.
Thc church was nicely decorated with
large baskets of gladioli and other au-
tumn flowers. Vegetables grain and
fruit also formed a part of the decora-
tions, The rector, Re4. Robert Meetly,
conducted the service. The choir sang
a special anthem.
Mr. and Mrs, Les Shaw and Sharon,
also AIpr, and Mrs. Lloyd Anderson, all
of London, spent the week -end with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. An -
di non.
Miss Joan Brydges, of London. spent
the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Dunbar.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pattison and fam-
ily were Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs, R. Higgins.
Mr, and -Mrs. K. 11, Wheeler and fam-
ily were visitors with Mr, and Mts.
W. Pickell and family, in Hamilton Fri.
day and Saturday.
We aro sorry to know that Mrs.
Foss Anderson is n patient in Wing-,
11001 Hospital.
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Anderson, of
Tecswater, were visitors with relatives
here en Sunday.
Airs. C. Hanna and Jean, Mrs. Lewis
Cook and Mrs. Telford Cook spent Fri-
day In Londbn.
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN I
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICII 0541
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth 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.
Phony HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETR IST
PATRICK S'1'. - V'INGHAM, ONT,
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT.
(For Apointirtent please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant 1
GODERICIL, ONT. 1
Telephone 1011 — Box 478, '
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. '
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY.
AUCTIONEER
Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction
Guaranteed,
Prompt Assistance Given In Arranging
Your Sale Problems.
Phone 15R18, Blyth,
George Nesbitt, George Powell,
Auctioneer.Clerk.
K. W. COLQUHOUN
INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE :
REPRESENTATIVE
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada;
CLINTON
PHONES
Office, HU 2-9747; Res, HU 2.7558
SALESMAN
Vie Kennedy
Phone Blyth 78
M7KTT1LOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO. '
HEAD OFFTCP • ar! FORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS:
President—Robt, Archibald, Seaforth;
Vice -Pres., Alistair Broadfoot, Sea -
forth; Secy-Treas,, Norma Jeffery, Sea -
forth,
DIRECTORS:
.T, T. Malnnn, Seaforth: .7. H Mel';w.
hie. Plvih: W. 5 Alexander Walton:
r. J. Trewarthn• ('.lintnn: J. 1". PPnn+r,
rtriirnfi,.ld: i' W T,Pnnh1rdt. T1nrnhnlm:
H. Fuller. Gederteh: R. Archlbakl, Seas
forth; Allister Prn•+dfrot, Seaforth.
AGENTS:
William Lsiner Jr., Lnnderbnro: x
F. Prueter, Brodltag'en: Selwyn
. Baker,
ljrtrsrs+Ls� �• x4unroe, Seaforth}�
Princess Worsted
Sneezing Powder
In ten years' time the vuarld's
gossip -mongers will probably be
weaving romance rumours
around another British princess
who will certainly have all the
charm, glamour and fearlessness
of her aunt, Princess Margaret,
Blonde Princess Anne is des-
tined to become a vital figure in
the pageantry of the Common-
wealth — but none of today's
royal advisers has discovered yet
how to stop the constant whis-
pers of romance that are bound
to circle her when she's older.
Luckily, Princess Anne is only
nine years old. But, even at
nine, she is a personality in her
own right , , , riding shaggy fell
ponies bareback at Balmoral,
fearlessly befriending racehorses
at the royal paddocks. She is so
very like her mother. Yet she
also takes after her father, too.
When she went into hospital
for her tonsils operation, she
had to be persuaded to take a
few toys with her, She did not
particularly want them, she ex-
plained, because she needed a
change. When taken to the Royal
Tournament, she insisted on hav-
ing two little friends there. "It
will be so nice for them," she
said, earnestly, "and so nice for
me, too!"
Her young friends were Susan
Babington Smith and freckled
Caroline Hamilton, who go to
"school" at Buckingham Palace,
Mrs, Hamilton lives in one of
the streets behind the Palace and
delivers Susan to "classes" in
the morning in her baby car and
collects her at night.
It's all part of the "new deal"
for princesses at the Palace, for
It was thought that Anne might
be in danger of becoming too
stuffy if she took lessons alone
with her governess. In the after-
noons, the three children ex-
plore London, visiting perhaps
the Tower, the Zoo or the Na-
tural History Museum — and
they are seldom recognized.
The Queen's policy of avoiding
the limelight for her children has
worked well. Few people know
what Princess Anne really looks
like. Tall as her brother, she is
often dressed in frocks cut from
her mother's clothes, She was
taken for a walk outside the
place grounds not long ago
'just for a few minutes."
But the few minutes were pro-
longed into an hour and a half
as she made a complete tour of
the two big London parks near
the Palace — St. James's and
Green Park,` No one spotted the
Princess or if they did so they
were too polite and sensible to
make a fuss.
At Balmoral not long ago the
YEAR'S SUPPLY — Mark Little-
field, 5, has a year's work cut
out for him. His quota of the na-
tion's hot dog output — 62 of
the succulent wieners, accord-
ing to meat industry spokesmen.
Princess "escaped" with her bro-
ther and cycled down to Craithie
village, much to the horror of a
French governess who was in
charge of them, Then the truant
children devoted themselves to
the business of shopping, buying
sneezing powder for a practical
joke and a horror mask with
which Princess Anne hoped to
scare the grown-ups.
These are stories that might be
told of any little girl,but Prin-
cess Anne is happily growing up
quite naturally, a triumph for
the fresh breeze that has recent-
ly blown through Palace routine.
Not long ago, Anne was expected
to be a bridesmaid at the smart
Abel Smith wedding. The Queen
made her own appearance at an
Abel Smith wedding when only
five. But Her Majesty declined
the invitation for her daughter,
feeling that the publicity might
not be good for the child.
Princess Anne had a mink coat
at four and riding boots when
even younger.. She has been
taken on wonderful cruises on
the royal yacht and has shared
smuggled trips in her father's
helicopter. She has whizzed in
speed boats and flown in a
'plane. Yet the last thing she is
, is spoiled.
She has a set of the world's
most glamorous dolls — perfect-
ly costumed little ladies from
France, But Anne has to address
them all whenever possible in
French. After her father gave her
swimming lessons at the end of
a long bamboo pole with a rub -
her, loop, the secretary of 'the
Amateur Swimming Association
wanted to give her a silver
swimming spoon,
The Duke explained, however,
that she was not yet proficient
enough. And Anne had to try
harder . , . until she developed
into a very good swimmre and
eventually won the spoon, her
first sporting trophy.
When one of the royal corgis
fell ill, it was Princess Anne
who first noticed the trouble.
The dog was sent away to an
animals' hospital, and Anne ask-
ed about him every day until he
came home fully recovered.
And when she heard that one
of the Celevland bays • in the
royal stables was poorly, noth-
ing would ' content her but to
visit the horse to help feed him
and cheer him up.
Most people imagine that a
royal princess must be sur-
rounded by toys. In reality only
a few are kept at every royal
residence, to be greeted en-
thusiastically as old friends
whenever the Royal Family
settles in,
At Windsor, for instance, there
is Princess Anne's own doll's
house, a perfect miniature 30in.
high and 61t, long, in ultra-
modern style. There is electric
light in every room, running
water in the kitchen, a radio
that really receives program-
mes, and even a roof garden
with a beautiful lily pond and
a real fountain.'
At Sandringham, the atten-
tion of Anne — and her indis-
pensable friends — is invariably
turned to the miniature child's
caravan. The berths have real
foam -rubber mattresses on which
youngsters may sprawl.
Many of the cupboards are
fitted with miniature clothes -
hangers. The stainless steel sink
encourages regular washing up
and tidiness.
The only fake is the cooker,
because it would be foolish to
ask a child to play with an ap-
paratus that could burn,
Princess Anne .Elizabeth Alice
Louise is eight years old and still
living in the wonder world of
carefree childhood. So it's "many
happy returns," for the most
important little girl in the
world , , , the only little girl
who can play a game of football
and have the Queen of England
taking part as goalkeeper,
FISHER TALKS TO THE PRESS — Singer Eddie Fisher talks to
reporters outside his Bel Air, Calif., home afterhis arrival from
New York where he and actress Elizabeth Taylor were fro•
que,it;y s: n together.
•
DEBBIE GOES FOR A VISIT - Actress Debbie Reynolds leaves
her home with her daughter, Carrie, to visit friends, marking
the first time she has met newsmen since the talk concerning
her husband, Eddie Fisher, and Elizabeth Taylor, started, Fisher,
who was in their Hollywood home, did not accompany his
wife.
/TA BLETALKS
Many women have given up
making raised rolls, mainly be-
cause of the time involved. A
new recipe for hot rolls, with
the whole process requiring
:lightly less than two hours, may
well encourage more women to
whip up a tasty , batch of these
rolls after they get home _ from
work and have them on the
table in time for dinner, says
Fern E, Lee, writing in The
Christian Science Monitor.
* • *
Best of all, they don't taste
like the "quickie", type of pack-
aged roll mixes, Their texture is
such that they have, won prizes
when exhibited at state fairs,
The recipe follows: •
Dissolve two. packages ol ac-
tive dry yeast in a large mixing
bowl with roup water (110°F,)..
Let stand for five minutes,
Add 2 tablespoonsful sugar;
1 teaspoon salt, and ►h cup sifted
flour. Beat smooth with rotary
beater, Let stand covered in a
warm place for 15 minutes,. Mix-
ture will Bubble up and, become
foamy.
Then add 1 cupful lukewarm
water (90°F,), 1;(4 cup powdered
dry milk, 3 tablespoons sujar, 2
cups sifted flour, 1 cup shorten-
ing (room temperature) and 2
unbeaten eggs, Beat for about
2 minutes.
Then work in about 4 cups
flour. The dough should be Soft,
Turn out on floured board and
shape into round balls. Cover
and let stand for 5 minutes,
Cut ball in half, Roll with
rolling pin into oblong shape
and cut into rounds Form these
into balls with fingers and place
in greased pan, cover, and allow
to rise until double in bulk
(about 35 minutes).
The other half may be made
into additional rolls or formed
Into cinnamon or caramel rolls.
Roll into oblong, spread gener-
ously with butter, sprinkle with
cinnamon and brown sugar. Roll
up, cut, and place in greased
baking pan to double in bulk,
For the caramel rolls we but-
ter the baking pan generously,
add brown sugar and nuts be-
fore putting in the rolls.
Raising period is from 30 to
40 minutes . , , baking time from
15-20 minutes in 316°F, oven.
* * •
Use either fully ripe or all -
yellow bananas for this variety
of quick bread. ;Variations of it,
add prunes, nuts, and raisins,
BANANA TEA BREAD
11/4 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
'/ teaspoon soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup shortening
4 cup sugar
2 eggs, well beaten
1 cup mashed ripe bananas
(2 - 3 bananas)
Sift together flour, baking
powder, soda, and salt. Beat
shortening until creamy in mix-
ing bowl, Add sugar gradually
and continue beating until light,
and fluffy, Add eggs and beat
well. Add flour mixture alter-
nately with bananas, a small
amount at a time, beating after
each addition until smooth, Turn
into well -greased 81/2x41/2x3-in,
pan. Bake at 350°F. about 70
minutes, One loaf.
* * *
VARIATIONS
Banana Apricot or .Prune Bread:
Add 1 cup finely cut dried apri-
cots or prunes to flour mixture.
(If fruit is very dry, soak' in
warm water until soft. Drain and
dry well,)
Banana Nut Bread:
Add rfs cup coarsely chopped
nuts to flour mixture,
Banana Raisin Breads
Add 1 cup seedless .raisins to
fiour mixture.
• • •
A quick, orange loaf calls for
4.4
finely chopped or ground orange
peel, adding a faint orangy-bit-
ter taste to the sweet bread.
QUICK ORANGE BREAD
1/4 cup butter
2 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
% teaspoon salt
1 cup finely chopped or ground
orange peel.
35 cup orange juice
1 egg, well beaten
1 cup sugar
Sift dry ingredients together,
Cut butter into dry ingredients
;until the consistency of coarse
corn meal, Combine orange peel,
juice, egg and sugar. Add to dry
ingredients, stirring just enough
to moisten. Spread evenly in a
9x5 -inch loaf pan that has been
greased. Bake at 325°F.•for 50-60
minutes. Cool,
_* • •
Nut bread is a favorite for tea
sandwiches. when spread lightly
with cream cheese, This one is
kept moist with applesauce as
an ingredient,
TOASTY NUT BREAD
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1/ cup chopped toasted
almonds
2 teaspoons shredded lemon
rind'
1 egg, beaten
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup applesauce
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
Yi cup melted shortening
Sift together flour, baking
powder; and salt. Add almonds
and lemon rind, Combine egg,
browh sugar, applesauce, al-
. mond extract and shortening,
mixing well. Add liquid to flour
mixture, stirring only until flour
is moistened. Pour into greased,
paper -lined .4x8' -inch loaf
pan. Bake at 350° F. about 50
minutes, Makes one loaf,
* • •
Whole wheat flour is , com-
bined with prunes to mak,: this
surprise quick bread.
QUICK WHOLE. WHEAT
PRUNE BREAD ;;
3/4 cup 'shortening
% cup .sugar
X egg
1 'cup chopped, drained,
cooked prunes
2 teaspoons grated lemon
rind
1 'cup sifted flour
1 cup whole wheat flour
1 teaspoons baking powder
+MIN. VOLUME
• w,
Medicine Men
Make Millions
"If you take these pills the
way I tell you, you can get rid
of that limp. The same way with
your ,heart, Your heart will be
a lot better, Only $22.50 for a
month's supply,"
"I had an ulcerated stomach,
arthritis, neuritis, pyorrhea, and
I wore glasses, I had a 44 -inch
waistline and high blood pres-
sure, I was finished (but) I knew
that God wanted life in this
body, So I asked God, and I got
one word: 'Food', Now I can
t r ace everybody's unnatural
condition to malnutrition,"
"You eat food to make blood,
You send down junk, your body
will be junk, You send down
vital elements that are needed
and you can't even catch a cold."
Spiels like these, recorded on
tape recently by the Food and
Drug Administration, ' are the
chief stock in trade of a modern
version of the old American
snake -oil peddler: The 50,000
door-to-door salesmen who each
year are hawking an estimated
$500 million worth of "wonder
foods," vitamins, and minerals to
more than 10 million Americans.
Last month the Food and Drug
Administration, along with the
Better Business Bureau and the
American Medical Association,
opened ' a determined drive
against these pitchmen's cruel
exploitation of fear and false
promises.
The drive, built around a
movie, an exhibit of typical de-
ceits, along with anti -fraud
pamphlets, is aimed at reducing
public gullibility rather- than
jailing quacks. The frustrating
reasons: Manufacturers of use-
less nostrums are careful to
guarantee nothing in their print-
ed advertisements, Cures for
everyqthing from falling hair to
1/4 teaspoon salt
iii cup milk
1/4 cup chopped nuts
Cream shortening and sugar
together. Blend in egg, prunes,
and grated lemon rind, Then,
sift dry ingredients together,
Add dry ingredients alternately
with milk, stirring only enough
to blend, Add nuts, Pour batter
into • greased 8x4 -inch loaf pan,
Bake about 1 hour at 350° F.....
4441_
cancer are claimed by salesmen
only in the privacy of the home
or small lecture hall, If the
FDA's two dozen inspectors catch
one of the pitchmen — usually
a housewife or laborer working
as a part-time medicine man —
there are six others to take his
place,
A further impediment to offi-
cial action is the fact that the
carefully labeled ingredients in
the nostrums are, in themselves,
harmless, Supplementary ' vita-
mins, dehydrated potatoes and
cucumbers and onions, ground
beef bones, blackstrap molasses,
and "natural foods" raised by
organic farming can neither help
nor harm the average well-
nurished American,
Nevertheless "the damage
caused by house-to-house ho-
kum can be great," says Dr.
Louis M, Orr, president-elect of
the American Medical Associa-
tion, "This is particularly true
when patients with diseases of
the nerves, blood, liver, kidneys,
heart, or digestive tract neglect
proper medical treatment in the
hope they can find a cure in a
capsule," The damage to Ameri-
can pocketbooks is also immense.
The nostrums cost up to a hun-
dred times the value of their in-
gredients.
The task of lighting food fads
and deceptions is' aggravated by
the fact that Americans are the
most diet -conscious people in the
world. As such, an AMA spokes-
man said recently, they are easi-
ly victimized by food myths, in-
cluding (1) all diseases are
caused by fautly diet; (2) the
foods raised on the nation's "de-
pleted" soils are poor in vita -
ming and minerals, (3) the food
industry kills nutrients by "over -
processing" food, (4) aluminum
pots and pans are poisoning the
nation, and (5) anyone suffer-
ing from "that tired feeling" has
a vitamin deficiency which' can-
not be detected but which may
lead to serious ailments.
The Food and Drug Adminstra-
tion last week saw little hope of
total victory over such hokum.
"I am afraid that we can never
get rid' of the hard core of
quack "victims," Dr, Kenneth
L, Mllstead, a top FDA official,
said, "These people want to be
food faddists — they are a cer-
tain psychological type who
want to attract attention by eat-
ing peculiar things,"
—From NEWSWEEK.
THE GREAT SPIRIT — A workman puts the finishing touches on
a 9,000 -pound aluminum reproduction of sculptor Marshall
Frederick's heroic "Spirit of Detroit" at an Oslo, Norway,
foundry. The statue was shipped to the U.S, to be erected in
Detroit's Civic Centre.
PER PERSON
•
DOOR SWINGS
INWARD
l�:�w� 4141 4141. .n 4141
SAND OR
EARTH•FILLED
BAGS AROUND
WOODEN SCREEN
4141, 4141
Z,-0„
MAXIMUM
DIMENSION VARIES
TO SUIT
e•�•S�;� '' .t' n.. '''1,i•:'; :1. 'r• 1;•. 4141. -�y'u-tyMM 41.
MIN. FLOOR AREA=-10'SQ. FT. PER' PERSON •
s� ipt �b:: S'ss"II'i C f %Yiiln4ati%i4k ;�a�':.4141' G: ' 4141 'Y': {`
4141 r;::'r>: 4141
PLAN FOR,SURVIVAL - Drawhig'above is of a low-cost` temporary shelter against radio -active
fallout (not blast),: suitable for mist basements. The U.S. office of Defense and Civilian
Mobilization' recommends it as minimum protection in case of a nuclear attack. Besides sand
or earth,'ODCM lists other materials that 'might be used, such as bricks, concrete btocks,'books
and papers, water in containers and lumber -the thicker the better. Items which should be
stored in the shelter are emergency food and water, a battery-operated radio, flashlights, bed.
ding, first aid kit and sanitation aids. ODCM, under direction of Leo A. Hoegh, is distributing
detailed bulletins' describing shelters and fallout p,otective measures,
1
THE DISAPPEARING "MAN'S WORLD" - Woman has invaded another time-honored retreat of
the male - the pool hall; Here Masako Katsura, the First Lady of billiards, dazzles male on-
lookers with her skillful performance. She caroms one ball off another on the table and the
first ball lumps up to knock the third ball off the top of bottle.
Beauty, Squalor
Go Hand In Hand
Looking through the 'plane
window as we arrived over
Hong Kong, I wondered where
on earth the landing ground
could be, for I could see nothing
but fold upon told of crags and
rocks. It must have been diffi-
cult for the pilot to. know just
when to swoop down.
The airfield is, in fact, not on
the island of Hong Kong but on
the mainland of China, or rather
that portion of the mainland
called Kow-loon, which forms
part of the Crown Colony.
Our colony really consists of
three sections. First there is the
island itself. This was ceded to
us in 1841 after what has 'come
to be known as the First Opium
War. It was a brief war, lasting
less than six months, The two
sides got together at the end of
it and the Chinese offered to give
us Hong Kong. Eliot, our chief
representative, accepted.
When this news reached Lon-
don, Lord Palmerston, Foreign
Secretary at the time, was furi-
ous. He dismissed Hong Kong as
being "no more than a barren
Island with hardly a house upon
it."
The Chinese Emperor was
equally furious with his repre-
sentative, He refused to sur-
render Hong Kong,F"It 'man im-
Cortant place," he said, Both the
hinese representative and our
man Eliot were instantly dis-
missed — and the war was re-
sumed.
A few months later this sec-
ond flare-up ended. We had de-
cided by now to keep Hong Kong
and we insisted that China
should open five ports to us for
trading, Two of these ports,
known as Treaty ports, were
Canton and Shanghai.
It is a pity that those who had
doubts about it at that time
can't see Hong Kong now, It is
withput question the loveliest
place I have ever visited. The
houses and trading offices, some
of them In the style of some-
what modified skyscrapers, rise
in tiers to the top of the peak,
and the view from all parts is
truly magnificent,
It was soon obvious that the
Island wasn't large enough for
the rapidly developing trade, and
by 1860 a part of the mainland
was ceded to us by China. This
is part ,and parcel of the colony
and is completely British.
But before long we outgrew
this, too; and we began to nego-
tiate for still more land. The
Chinese agreed to lease this, not
sell It.
This third section of the col-
ony is the largest part of it -
356 square miles in all. In depth,
It stretches as far as from Lon-
don to Tunbridge Wells.
They say in Hong Kong that
it is "bursting at the seams." The.
population, only 750,000 a few
years ago, is now close on three
millions. Slowly, this tremen-
dous growth is being absorbed
by the new industries that are
rising almost daily in these new
t territories.
There are factories for snak-
ing cigarettes, others for sugar,
paint . and textiles, I saw large
numbers of film studios making
Chinese pictures for sale in Red
China, 'writes R. J. Minney in
"Tit -Bits."
There is, in fact, quite a big
trade between this British island
of ours and China proper. Ex-
cellent new roads have been
built, and a railway now runs
from' Kow-loon, . on our part of
the mainland, right up to 'the
SET
ID OF The Way I Did.
'ItIj
Simple home treatment •
Quick results - natural healing.
Complete instructions - $3.00. Money
refunded If not satisfied.
-PRSS JOHN MORTIMER, FREE
try, Sox 121C,Elora, Ont., Can. FAMCTl
met.r
Chinese frontier, from where
one can go on by train to Can-
ton and Peking. This is all to
the good and has made the
island extremely prosperous,
The houses are of the villa
type, such as you see in the
South of France, and are sur-
rounded by lovely gardens with
the most beautiful exotic flowers,
There are farms on the island
itself, with cows. As a result I
drank real milk, the only place
where I drank it during the
whole of this trip; elsewhere, it
was just tinned or•, more gener-
ally, powdered stuff — even in
Tokyo,
There is a racecourse — the
English population could not
live without that — and there
are three golf courses, two of
thein on the island, the third on
the mainland.
But side by side with this
wealth there is great poverty—
inevitable in view of the tre-
mendous increase in births each
year among the Chinese and
also through the flow of refugees
from the mainland,
Vast numbers of new flats have
been built on the mainland sec-
tion of Hong Kong. They're fine,
handsome blocks, but they soon
become slums, because the Chi-
nese live many to a room and
put out their washing to dry on
poles stuck out through the
windows,
I have seen ndthing like it,
not even in China, where every-
thing appears to be orderly and
clean. But here the streets are
littered. People crouch on the
pavement to eat. Girls grab men
by the arm as they walk by.
Touts offer to take you to sor-
did dance halls.
What a blot all this has
brought to one of the most love-
ly settings in the world! But
every effort is being made to
clean it all up, and I have no
doubt that in time it will be very
different.
The squalor, however, is con-
fined to the mainland. The island
itself is spick and span with
tidiness. It rises in glorious tiers
to the top of Victoria Peak, from
where the views are, truly
breathtaking, particularly at
night, when the Lights give it the
splendour of fairyland.
Scores of ferries travel to and
fro all the time and you can go
from the mainland to the island
in less than five minutes, taking
your car with you. The English
club occupies a site that must be
worth a fortune, right on the
GOLDEN BOY? - The battered
face of Art (Golden Boy) Ara-
gon bears witness to the savage
punching . of one-time middle-
weight king Carmen Basile.
Basilo knocked Aragon out in
the eighth round in Los. Angeles
to win the right to fight Sugar
Ray Robinson for the middle.
weight title. It Sugar doesn't re-
tire first, that is,
seafront in the centre of the
town.
There are many streets of most
fascinating shops, offering you,
duty-free, the choicest goods
from the ends of the earth. You
can buy a Japanese camera
there for less than you would
have to pay for it in Tokyo; and
superb opera or field glasses
which would . cost you thirty
pounds in England can be bought
for two or three pounds.
Within twenty-four hours a
firm of Chinese tailors made me
a suit of tussore silk for the
equivalent of £3 los, It was an
excellent fit, At another place I
got a silk dressing -gown for 30s.
;No duty and a low cost of liv-
ing make all this possible.
Food Is cheap, too—or rather
such food as is grown there. But
rents are high because of ,the
'restricted space,
There is wonderful bathing
from wide, sandy beaches. The
life appears to be ideal; but 3
was told by- those who live there
that .the'. summer is almost un-
bearable.
Winters are warm, like our
spring. By the end of April it be-
gins to get hot, Those who can.
get away do so. The rest have
-to swelter in the steamy atmos-
phere.
I found at the back of the
island a quarter that is known
u Aberdeen, so called, I 'was
told, after a regiment that was
quartered. there a hundred years
ago. To -day 46,000 people live
there—entirely in boats, They
are not refugees—they have al-
ways lived like this. The boats
are huddled cheek by jowl; you
could walk across them for half
a mile. Somehow the owners
manage to get out and set off
with their nets for fishing. It's
a picturesque colony, swarming
with youngsters who rush ashore
and hold out their hands for
coins.
On the edge of this colony
there are two floating restaur-
ants, where visitors sail out for
a meal. The food is good, and you
can get English as well as Chi-
nese dishes.
Rockets Probe
Sun's Eclipse
Astronomers all over America
are excited at the prospect of
giving man on October 12th his
first "look" at a total eclipse of
the sun from outside the atmos-
phere.
A ship bristling with rockets
Is being sent to the South Pa-
cific as part of this unique ex-
periment. Scientists explain that
a ship is being used because the
zone in which the sun will be
totally obscured crosses no large
land areas.
On the ship's helicopter flight
deck will be carried eight -rock-
ets, each' equipped with a vari-
ety of instruments to record the
different aspects of solar radia•
tion, and radio telemetering
equipment to transmit the data
back to earth,
The rocket firings will be car-
ried .out as the ship steams back
and forth near the Danger Is-
lands, a group of atolls cast of
Samoa. The experiment will call
for extreme accuracy in.launch-
ittg the rockets.
Before : their nature was fully
understood, solar eclipses were
regarded with superstitious
dread. In the wilds of North-
West Australia it Was said that
the sun was "being stolen by a
dreadful monster."
The.tctal eclipse of 1870, vis-
ible in Spain and Italy, took
place while I''rance and Germany
were at war.
Many French astronomers were
shut up in. Paris. At great danger
to himself one managed to escape
in a balloon from ,the besieged
city with the essential parts of
his telescope,
He gut to Spain safely in time
for the eclipse, but found the
Spanisl•or'kies completely over-
cast.
.:. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: .
AGENTS WANTED
GO INTO BUSINESS
for yourself, Sell our exciting house-
wares, watches and other products not
found In stores, No competition, Prof.
Its up to 500%, Write now for free
colour catalogue and separate cone•
dentlal wholesale price sheet, Murray
Sales, 3822 St. Lawrence, Montreal.
ARTICLES FOR SALE
VELVET BUTTON BERETS
MADE in 8 sections, Black, Brown,
Navy, Red, Meige, Coffee, Powder,
Sand, Dior, Mint, Coral Orange, Tan-
gerine, Turquoise, White, Pink Yel-
low, Grey, Royal, Gold, Purple, fiottle
Wheat, Wine, Head sizes, 211 22, 22i�
Inches, $2700 each. Money Order, Post-
paid. F. & 13, Hat Manufacturing Com-
pany, 4881A St. Lawrence Blvd., Mon.
treat, Que,
BABY CHICKS
ASK for Bray pricellat on 7-8 week old
dual purpose pullets, prompt ship-
ment. Dayolds to order. Also Ames
dayoid and started for high produc•
dont low maintenance, Order Novem-
bor.becember broilers. See local agent,
or w`r t t e Bray Hatchery, 120 John
North, Hamilton,
FOR SALE
WOOD FIBRE - CHENILLE
ALL materials for artificial flowers In-
cluding plastic foam. Write for whole-
sale or retail price list. Flowercraft
Supply Co., 4543 Kingsway, South
Burnaby, Vancouver, B.C.
COLOR T.V.
New "COLOR -PIX" screen filter In.
stonily changes dreary black and white
pictures to wonderful color tones of
blue amber and green, etc. Just place
outside your T.V. screen. Enjoy color
on your T.V, now for only $191 pre.'!.•
paid or C.O.D. charges extra.
Send today! State whether for 17" or
21" screen,
HURLBERT AGENCIES
Rockville, Yarmouth, N S,
INSTRUCTION
EARN morel Bookkeeping, Salesman.
ship Shorthand Typewriting, etc, Les-
sons 50;. Ask icor free circular No, 99.
Canadian Correspondence Courses
1290 Bay Street, Toronto
LIVESTOCK
Carruthers ScourTablets
ARE an Inexpensive and quick treat-
ment for the FIRST SIGN OF SCOURS
IN CALVES. Give 6 tablets every 6
hours up to 3 doses. Purchase from
your druggist, or mall order to
CARRUTHERS DRUGS LTD.,
Lindsay, Ont.
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
REGISTERED Shropshlres: E w e s,
•lambs rams. AL L. Kent, R. 1, Oak-
ville. i4o. 5 Highway, 11/2 miles west of
Trafalgar,"
Paid For Land
With Clay Pipes
Who smokes a clay pipe now-
adays? Not many people, accord-
ing to Mr. Macqueen Pope, the
famous historian of the theatre.
"The old clay, has gone, I fear,
with the old times," he said re-
cently. Clay pipes were regularly
smoked by rich and poor until
the late fifties of last century,
Mr. William Swnyard, of Alder-
shot, Hants, who for nearly half
a century turned out clay pipes
from his kiln at the rate of 4,300
a week, said that the clay lost
popularity among soldiers after
the South African War.
"During the war Tommy At-
kins acquired the cigarette habit
and this was one of the reasons
why the clay pipe industry be-
gan to fall away," he added. A
certain number of clay pipes are
still made to -day, but most of
them are bought for children to
blow soap bubbles with.
At Whitstable, Kent, in 1956,
more than 200 clay pipes were
washed up on the beach at high
tide.
Clay pipes in the past often
figured in barter transactions.
Three hundred of them were in
the list of articles given by Wil-
liam Penn in exchange for a
tract of land in what is now
Pennsylvania. Another record
shows that, in 1677, 120 clay pipes
and 100 jews' harps were ex-
changed for a plot near Titnber
Town1, New Jersey.
MEDICAL
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED - 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 eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles,
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you. Itching scaling and burning ecze-
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem,
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3,00 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
216 P. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
MONEY from spare time hobby. Small
investment, Raise Golden Hamsters,
New and Interesting pets. Free Utero.
ture Gerald Saunders, Box 114, Delta,
Ont.
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good
wages, Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates.
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free.
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MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PATENTS
FETHERSTONHAUGH & Company
Patent Attorneys, Established 1890.
600 University Ave., Toronto
Patents all countries.
PERSONAL
ADULTS! Send 10¢ for world's funniest
novelty joke cards. Free catalogue
specialities, herbal remedies, vitamins;
food supplements. Western Dlstrlbu.
tors, Box 24.FC, Regina, Sask.
BEFORE SPACE TRAVEL, TRY FIG-
URE SKIING. Outdoor Interests, Good-
wood, Ontario.
ATTENTION SPORTSMEN
ACCOMMODATION _available for 20
hunters, Thanksgiving week -end (part-
ridge) and Nov, 1.12 (deer). Guides on
request, Home cooking, book now,
Taylor Lake Lodge, Whitestone On-
tario, In the Parry Sound District.
$1.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe
Personal requirements. Latest cats.
ogue included. The Medico Agency,
Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont,
SMOKING TOO MUCH
CUT down the easy way. Chew "Kwlts,"
the new antl•smoking chewing gum.
Takes the craving away for hours.
Contains Lobeline - a new discovery.
Price 69S package, 3 packages for $2.00
postpaid. Wilson's Lab Products, Box
200 Markham, Ont, or your local Drug-
gist can procure them for you,
PHOTO SERVICE
NEW FAST
COMPLETE Photo Service designed for
speed and custom Photofinishing. Ex-
pert enlarging, 8 Exposure roll Con-
tact Slze 40e Double Size 50c. 12 Ex.
posure roll, Contact Slze 45e, Double
Size 70c. You will appreciate our speed,
quality and friendly dealing. Renown
Photo Service, Erindale P.O., Ont,
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
150 ACRES, 20 miles west of Kitchener
highly productive, buildings modernly
equipped. Malcolm Davidson, Newton,
Ont.
RABBITS
NEW ZEALAND REDS
JUNIORS from registered stock, all
pedigreed, $20.00 trio. Write: Pat's
Rabbitry, 19 Kline St., Halifax, Nova
Scotia;
ISSUE 40 -- 1958
SWINE
A LANDRACE breeders' sale will be
held on Monday, October 5th at 1:30
P.M, at the farm of Omar Swartzen-
truber, R.R. No, 2, Petersburg, On-
tario, Highways No, 7 and 8, 11 miles
east of Baden and 8 miles west of
Kitchener. Telephone Baden 205. R 2r.
Fifty carefully selected head of Land -
race will be offered. The sale will con-
sist of carefully selected guaranteed
in -pig sows and gilts, service age
boars, sows and gilts with litters and
open gilts from the herds of Fergus
Landrace Swine Farm, Fergus, On-
tario; one of the oldest and largest
breeders and Importers of Landrace
Swine in Canada, Omar Swartzen-
truber, R.R, No. 2, Petersburg, On-
tario and the Tonra Stock Farm, R.R.
No. 3, holland Centre, Ontario. An
added attraction will be sows and gilts
carrying service to champion boars
such as Craig Atlus 6th, champion of
the Aberdeen Show at Scotland,
Maryfleld Solid 26th, Champion at the
Petereborough show in England,
Chartwell Prince and Chartwell
Viking bred by Sir Winston Churchill
and other outstanding Scottish boars
with Canadian or U.S. papers.. All
stock guaranteed breeders. Sale will
be held under cover. For catalogue
and mall bids, write or telephone any
of the breeders or auctioneers. The
auctioneers are Tom Robson and
Hugh Filson, Denfield, Ontario, Tele-
phone Ilderton collect. Also Clinton
Jantzi, Baden, Ontario, Telephone 148
Baden,
MERRY MENAGERIE
..yy,�.ww ewew1YlY,r.l.. p.e-\
1 4,
It
fi 'f vxv 9�
'You're supposed to go OIN1;S
OINK—not BEEP BEEP!"
IUse your SPARE TIME to
build an interesting and
PROFITABLE
BUSINESS CAREER
Investigate how Shaw Schools will
help you prepare for a career that
will assure your success and security.
Underline course that Interests you-
• Bookkeeping • Cost Accounting
• Shorthand • Typewriting
• Stationary Engineering
• Short Story Writing
• Junior, Intermediate and
Higher Accounting
• Chartered Secretary (A.C.I.S.)
• Business English and
Correspondence
Write for free catalogue today.
Many other courses from which
to choose.
lay & Charles Streets, Toronto
Dept. No. H-13 .
i/AIL'1•i•1:l•1•i
YOU
CAN
SLEEP
TO -NIGHT
AAO RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS
MAN TO-MOAAONI
To be happy and tranquil instead of
nervous or for a good night's sleep, take
Sedlcln tablets according to directions.
SEDICIN® $1.00-54.95
TABLETS DrugStern ORM
EARN EXTRA MONEY
EASILY
BE A COLONIAL AGENT
Sell a Complete Line of Christmas Cards - Everyday Cards
Sacred Calendars - Personal Imprint Lines
• Novelty and Gift Items
FREE CATALOGUE AND INFORMATION
INTRODUCTORY SAMPLE OFFER -2 Boxes 146 Cards Retail $2.00)for 51
COLONIAL CARD LIMITED
489 QUEEN STREET, EAST
TORONTO 2, ONTARIO
1-CCG'CCCCCC•�C��..�CCC�C�CCCCCCCG GC�C�:CCCCCCCCCi_•'C"_•rCr_,rC'C�':�.�•.
1
1
i
1' VESSEL From MONTREAL
r
CUNARD TO EUROPE
FALL AND WINTER SAILINGS
TO BRITISH PORTS:
First Class from $274
Tourist Class from $179
SYLVANIA
f SAXONIA
CARINTHIA
f IVERNIA
SYLVANIA
tSAXONIA
CARINTHIA
(IVERNIA
SYLVANIA
f SAXONIA
CARINTHIA
' IIVERNiA
SYLVANIA
SAXONIA
Round Trip
FROM
$344
Te VESSEL
Fri, OCT. 3 Greenock, Liv.rpoc
Fri OCT. 10 Hovre,Southampton
Fri. OCT. 17 Greenock, Liverpooi
Fri OCT. 17 Havre, Southampton
Fri. OCT. 24 Greenock, Liverpool
Fri OCT. 31 Havre, Southampton
Fri. NOV. 7 Greenock, Liverpool
Fri. NOV. 7 Havre,Southampton
Fri. NOV. 14 Greenock, Liverpool
Fri NOV. 21 Havre, Southampton
Fri. NOV. 28 Greenock, Liverpool
Frl. NOV. 28 Hovr.,Southampton
Nem HALIFAX
Sat, DEC. 13
Sun. DEC. 14
t Calls .1 Quebec
VrfEST
Ir-A
RUISE
S
i CA I
Od. SR11._ itov.l
MAURETANIA
Ow 11-i41•1'iO11u11-A
QUEEN ELIZABETH
MEDIA
MAURETANIA
QUEEN MARY
QUEEN ELIZABETH
PARTHIA
QUEEN MARY
MAURETANIA
BRITANNIC
QUEEN ELIZABETH
MEDIA
QUEEN MARY
Greenock, Liverpool QUEEN ELIZABETH
Cobh, Havre, Southampton PARTHIA
Specially conducted Christmas Sallings
See your local agent -
No one can serve you better
pr.!
CAttNta
11
!;,sal WotsetttAHNIC
yl.��len 11
.danseewe Odle
TO FRENCH PORTS:
First Class from $284
Tourist Class from $184
From NEW YORK
CUNARD LINE
Tel: EMpire 2.2911
Wed, OCT. 8
P1. OCT. 10
Sot. OCT. 11
Wed. OCT. 15
Wed. OCT. 22
Fri. OCT. 24
Wed. OCT. 29
Thurs. OCT. 30
Fri, OCT. 31
Thur,. NOV. 6
Fri NOV. 7
Thurs. NOV.13
Fri, NOV.21
Fri NOV.21
Te
Cherbourg, Southampton At
Liverpool
Cobh, Havre, Southampton'
Cherbourg, Southampton
Cherbourg, Southampton ,
Liverpool
Cherbourg, Southampton
Cobh, Havr., Southampton
Cobh, Liverpool
Cherbourg, Southampton
Liverpool
Cherbourg, Southampton 1
Cherbourg, Southampton
Liverpool
!ring your relatives
lir
friends from Eur
ope
Prepay their pesseges t
Clearie
SPECIAL IOW FARES
Inquire about Ca a on Geveremeet
Assisted Pause' leen Scheme
t
-Corner orner Bay & Wellington Sts., Toronto, Ont. . J I
•
1
PAGE 4
_ -Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSH.IP,
Open Every Week. Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
Come In And See Us For Your Sewing Needs.
Printed and Linen Tablecloths.
Cotton Sheets and Pillow Cases.
Ibex Blankets, Sizes 70X90 and 50X100.
Sealtread Plastic Footwear,
Dry Cleaning Pickup Every Tuesday and Friday
From 9 to 9,30 a.m.
Phone 73.
.44••#•••••14•••••••••••••~4.......•.••••• •••.•••.....•• • •
FALL AND (WINTER JACKETS
Boys Fleece Jackets, fur lined split hood,
4-7 $10.95
`, 8-12 $13.95
Girls Jackets, some with hoods, 4-7 . , $6.95 - $10.95
8-14 $7.05 - $14.95
Girls Teen Jackets, hoods or fur trimmed,
10-18 $14.95 Up
Needlecraft Shoppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
"The Shop for Tots and Teens"
THE ELYI'H STANDARD Wednesday, October t 1O5 •..
x..111 III 1 -
JI.r
boat on Monday after aottvaleacing for
t t three weeks at his home her with Mrs,
NCS TS V n Auburn n Staples, Marlon, Carol and Susan,
I Mr, William Brown and Mr, Gordon
Celebrates 80th Birthday
Mrs. William Tabb will celebrate her
Math birthday on Saturday, October •1,
at ter home in Hullett tow.iship on t4
Baseline, Mrs, Tabb is the daughter ct
the lute Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Wit-
mer, and was in East Wawunosh town-
ship near Westfield. She was married
to the late Mr. William Tubb at the
Baptist Parsonage, Clinton, In 1899, by
Rev. John Murdoch. They resided for
2 years on the Baseline, then '7 years
near Westfield, and then they went to
Maple Creek, Saskatchewan, where
'they resided for 30 years. Having no
crops for 3 or 4 years on account of the
drought they returned to the Nile. Fif-
teen years ago they moved to their
present home. Mr. Tabb passed away 1
years ago. Mrs. Tabb is a member of
the Auburn Baptist Church and until
recently enjoyed sewing and garden-
ing but is able to keep house for if r
son, Torrance, with whom she resid. s.
She has a daughter, Melinda Etta, Mrs.
Lt.ona}•d Plain, and 4 grandchildren.
Mrs. Tabb has 2 sisters, Mfrs. Fred Tab')
(Etta) of Woilseley, and Miss Rc•s:e
Wilmer, of Milton, 2 brothers, and I
sister have passed away.
Walkerburn Club
The ladies of the Walkerburn Com-
munity Club met last Thursday at the
home of the president, Mrs. Harvey
Bunking. The meeting was opened
with the Maple Leaf followed Ay pray-
er by Mrs. George Schneider. The min-
utes of the previous meeting were read
by the secretary, Miss: Ted Bunking,
and approved as read. The roll cull was
answered by "Why Mothers get grey "
; The monthly draw was won by I'i o, .
Joe Verewey. The draw for the Gold,
satin bound) blanket, was won by Mrs.
Elliott Lapp. Plans were made for the
October meeting which will be held a
werk earlier on October 23rd and the
roil call will be answered by "What I
I scrvt. to unexpected guests." The pro-
s ,. ..••...2
$gran will he in charge of Mrs. Elliott,
% •+r++0.+++4+-4-+-•-•r+H-•.•••-•+444.•-•+•-••••+•••-•-••+•+•+• Lapp and Mrs Harvey flunking and
FURNACE
Cleaning Time
•
•
4
NOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE YOUR
FURNACE CLEANED AND C1:IECKED OVER
BEFORE TIIE HEATING SEASON AHEAD.
We CARRY OIL FILTERS, AIR FILTERS,
HUMIDIFIER PLATES AND PARTS
REPLACEMENT PARTS FOR MOST OIL
AND STOKER FURNACES.
NEW and REBUILT ELECTRICAL CONTROLS.
•
CLEAN NOW AND SAVE FUEL AND
TROUBLE IN THE WINTER AHEAD,
A. MANNING & SONS
Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario
1 t.l•.e lunch committee will be, Mrs.
James Jackson, Mrs, John Snyders,
1 Mrs. Bert Bunking and' Mrs. George
Schneider. The grogram of readings
and contests were in charge of Mrs.
Janus Jackson and Mrs. George Schne-
ide► A delicious lunch was served by
Mrs. Percy Vincent, Mrs. Andrew Kirk-
cc.nucll, Mrs. Ted Bunking and Mrs.
Joe Bunking,
W. A. Meets
The Woman's Association of Knox
United Church met last Tuesday even-
ing in the Sunday School room of the
church with the Happy Hustler's Group
in charge. Mrs. Torn Lawlor presided
;; 1 for the program. 'with Mrs. Norman
W►ghtman at the piano. The meeting
was opened twit the W.A. Ode and the
• hymn "Take my- Life." The scripture
lesson was read by Mrs. Kenneth Mc-
' Dougall with meditation by Mrs. Har-
old Webster. Prayer was given by Mrs.
Lawience Piaetzer. A solo was sung by
Mrs. Emmerson Rodgers and a reading
given by Mrs. Ernest Durnin "The W.
A " After singing the hymn "Take Time
to be Holy" the offering was received
by MIrs. Arthur Grange and Mrs. Ken-
neth McDougall. P:ctures of Five
Oases and local scenes were shown by
. Mks Margaret A. Jackson. Mrs. Maur-
; Ice Bean, the president, took charge of
• the business period. A delicious lunch
: was served by the group.
Mr. and Mrs. John Weir, Joan and
,
i+44444444•4-.••444444-44444-44-444•4444444•4444444•44444
.
7
•
•
New Fall Merchandise
Ladies Fall and Winter Coats at Reasonable Prices.
Women's and Misses Fall Dresses.
Skirts of Tweeds and Reversible Plaids.
Ladies Chamoisette Gloves, in many colours.
Large Selection of Handbags.
Banlon Cardigans and Pullovers,
Good Selection of Girls Car Coats.
Boys and Girls -Lined Jeans.
r
Rubber Boots, Insoles Free, atreasonable
prices (first Quality) $3.75
Ladies Corrective Shoes in black Kid Ties & Pumps
YOU MAY HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF SALES
SLIPS OR BLACK DIAMOND STAMPS.
The Arcade Stores
STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS.
Bobby, of London, spent the week -end
with Mr. and Mrs. Duncan MacKay,
Barbara and Johnny, and Dr, B. C,
Weir, Friends of Joan's will be Inter-
ested to know that she won an aware'.
recently In the ,photography contest
conducted by the London Free Press,
lMr, and Mrs. Gordan Taylor spent
the week -end In St. Catherines visiting,
with Mr, and Mrs, Ronald Rathwell an
Michael .
Mr. and Mrs, William Robison visit-
ed last week with' Mr. and MI's,, Oct
mond and family at Torontao,
Misses Isabel Fox and Olive McGill,
of Blyth, were guests on Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J, Phillips.
Mr. William Welsh, of Detroit, visited
last week with his cousin, 'Mips, Charles
St►•aughan.
Mrs. Vivien Wagner and daughter
Marjorie, of Toronto, visited on Sun-
day al tip Wagner home,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bowey, of St.
Thomas, are guests this week of Mr.
e►:d Mrs. Ed. Davies.
. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cowan and Mr.
and Mrs. Alfred Gross, of London, vis-
ited on Sunday with Mrs. Sam Doer.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Youngblut and
Belt) and Mr. and Mrs. Russel King
jv►sited recently in Hamilton with Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Youngblut and family.
Mr. and Mrs. William Straughan vis-
ited last week with Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Jerd-In and family, of Wingham.
Mr. Bob P,obinson, of Clinton, is em-
plcved at Sear's Body and Fender
Shop.
Mr.' Kenneth Stapley returned to his
Turkey Supper
in
Duff's United Church
Walton
WEDNESDAY, OCT. 15
5.30 until 5 o'clock (D..T,)
Adults, $1.50 , .
children, 6-12, .75c
•
APPLES
Now Picking Macintosh
apples. Order now and avoid
disappointment. Also Spy,
Delicious and Tatman Sweet
apples this fall.
Contact
BOYD TAYLO;rt
15R5, Blyth. 38-2
The Annual Meeting
of the
FARMERS UNION OF
HURON COUNTY
will be held in the
Agricultural Board Rooms
Clinton, Ontario on
.FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3
at 8.30 p.m.
Mrs. Evelyn Prosser Women's Presi-
dent.. and Vaughan Douglas of CKNX,
will be guest speakers.
A good attendance is requested.
,R. Taylor, A. Nesbit,
Chairman. Secretary.
COUNTY OF HURON
Applications
For
DEPUTY CLERK -TREASURER
OF THE COUNTY OF HURON
Sealed Applications for the position of Deputy
Clerk -Treasurer will be received by the undersigned
until 5 o'clock p.m., Tuesday, ORober 14th,1958.
'Please state age, marital status, experience,
education, salary expected. Also state references.
Please mark clearly on envelopes —
"Applications." -
JOHN G. BERRY, Clerk -Treasurer,
38-2 County of Huron, Goderich, Ontario,
♦ •+4-•'•'• •-•444 • • •-•.• •-• • .......44 ♦ 444-• • • ••i-•-• •4 4.•..4-44 4-•4414++4
•
HURON HOLSTEIN BREEDER'S
Annual Heifer Sale
Clinton Fair 13arns, Clinton
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 15
AT 1:30 P.M.
Accredited, Vaccinated, Blood -tested
A number from listed herds
A select group of bred heifers from R.O.P. dams with good records In-
cluding a daughter from n former world record producer.
Many from and bred to top Unit Sires, some fresh et Sale time the
balance due soon afterwards.
BOB SII('RE, AUCTIONEER
For Catalogues write:
S. C. Galbraith, Blyth, Ont. Allen Betties, Bayfield; Ont.
38-2
.4444444444 N•44••N•4.444•44+444.44 i.1 -•++1++•444+4j
t
Youngblut have secured employment
at the Blyth Woollen Mills. Mr. Wm.
Dodds Jr. and Mr. William Doble have
' been working there for some time,
Mrs. Elmer Kellar, Blp'th, spent the
week -end with her daughter, Mrs. Har-
ry Arthur, Mr, Arthur, Mark and Greg.
There was no school hero last Fri-
•
•
day so that the teacher, Mr, 1 ur.')an
MacKay, could attend the Teacher's:
Convention, at London;
Mr, and Mrs, Erneiit Patterson, of
Goderich, visited last Sunday with her
parents, Mr, and Mrs. George Beadle.
' • Mrs, Gordon Chummy, Larrp', Paul,
Lorraine and Douglas, and Mrs, Alvin
Leatherland, Marie and Joyce visited
los•'. Friday with Mr. and Mrs. James,
Bolger, of Walton.
`4•-•-•-• ••-•+• •••+H-• •t•••+•-• •-•++ • 1+•+•+•+►+•+r•-•T• • •. • • • •
GIGANTIC
10th ANNIVERSARY
SALE
CONTINUES AT MADILL'S
STORE -WIDE DISCOUNTS
Thrbughout Qur'Entire Store
10 Percent Discount
ON ALL MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR
A few samples are:
Overalls, Pants, Shirts, Socks, Pajamas, Jackets,
and many, )nany items too numerous to mention
Alio on our entire stock of Men's Women's and
Children's Shoes,
5 Percent Discount
On our entire stock of Men's, Women's and Child-'
ren's Rubber Footwear.
1 CENT SALE
t, MEN'S- DRESS PANTS
Here is t sensational savifig for you, never before
offered in this district.
Men's Melbourne flannel pants with self belts,
pleats, zipper encloser, in light grey and charcoal
1PAIR $10.99---2PAIR $11'.00 i
An extra pair ONLY 1 CENT
(alteration extra)
CHECK OUR SALE BILLS FOR MANY, MANY
MORE BARGAINS .
AN EARLY SATURDAY ) IORIVING SPECIAL
a re -grouping of Women's -
$1.00 SHOES
BE EARLY — DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED
R. W. MADILL'S
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The :home of Good. Quality Merchandise"
•
•4444-.1-• •44+ •444-44-4-•444-•-•444-044444 0.4f
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAPORT!'
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE --
Tii031AS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CLINTON: EXETER:
Business -11u 2-6606 Business 41
Residence --Hu 2.38110 Residence 34
♦ ++44444444 +4444 • • 44•+•-4••-+•+•-+444 .4+•44-444144-♦ 441
-•..•••V.N•.NN.N.f1I.MIM.I•••~#•••••••t1+••N
WaterIoo(tIe Breeding Association .
"Where Better Bulls Are Used"
Offsprin'g of our bulls continue to win their
share of honours at the shows especially where'
given equal opportunity.
Example --JERSEY I
A daughter of Brampton Standing Beacon was Grand Champion at the
1058 Waterloo County Parish show for Sherwood Taylor of Gale:
Her Com was a du:lthter of Jester's Drbnmer and n top shoim cow.
Har grandma was a daughter of Brampton B. Violet's Beacon and al
Reserve Grand Champion at the Royal Winter Fair, 'These three gen-
erations were all bred through the Waterloo Unit.
-Example –= HOLSTEIN
A daughter of Sealing Wing Pletje was Grand Champ:on at the 1058
Waterloo County Black and White Show for Irvin Brubacher, Her dam
was by Elmcrorfl Mon-0l..lrandt These are both Waterloo Unit siren
lte Waterloo County Black and ,White show was the largest in Ontario
so far for this season. Unit daughters were prominent amongst the
winners -especially in the milking age females, . ,1
- You can have this same breeding by calling col-
lect for service or more information to:
. • Clinton HU 2.3411
Between 7:30 and 9:30 A.M. week days
6:00 and 8:00 P.M. on. Saturday evenings
Calls received on. Saturday evening are inseminated
early Sunday morning.
N...•+•BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER. LIVING
Rural Happenings
'Way Down East
There seem to be several things
that deserve mention,
We decided to take Sunday
afternoon off and get away from
the place for a change, intending
to drive out and see how the
potato fields .looked, and when
we got home there were seven
notes in the back door starting,
"Don't you ever stay home' , .?"
Another thing that happened
proves that time is a purely re-
lative thing, I hadn't seen, Phil
Craig since 1924, when he and
I were expert shovelers in the
Freeport Gravel Pit. We got $18
a week for filling blue tipcarts
with gravel, and Road Commis-
sionor E. H. T, Maim was building
about 75 miles of road for around
a thousand dollars, The E. stood
they said, for Emil, and maybe
the H. T, stood for happy times,
because they were,
• Phil and I would shovel like
mad until the gravel began drip-
ping off the top of the load and
the teamsters would haul out.
Then we'd sit on our shovel
blades and rest while another
team banked in. This was good
exercise and we slept and ate
well. We'd discuss local politics
and dances t at Sylvester's Pa-
vilion and the weather, and thus
put in a fine summer, I hadn't
seen him since.
But I parked the automobile
the other day in a duly accredi-
ted spot, and as I stepped out
there was Phil Craig going by,
looking not greatly unlike the
same companion of the pit. He
lifted his head as he passed and
without hesitation said:
"Hello, John!"
"Hello, Phil," I replied,
Then he continued to walk on
into the next 34 years, no doubt
feeling he had said about all
there was to say, and so he had.
That same trip, somebody was
telling about the time WhIsp'irin'
Stetson had a telephone put in.
Whisp'Irin' was a victim of that
down -East sense of the ridicu-
lous which also leads to bald-
headed men being called Curly,
and things like that. His normal
speaking voice was a blatant
blast that outdid Stentor, the
bulls of Bashan, and the bass sec -
BONING UP - A girl who ob-
viously has a bone to pick with
someone is Maureen Smith,
pictured as she watts in line
for a bus ,in London, England.
The skeleton, an amateur the-
atrical prop, probably proved
invaluable in getting her a seat.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Commotion
4 Omen
character
7. Utopian
12 Su It Plvret
morrow
14 Concise
16. Article
15. Smell
17. Thin cut
18, Old Irish ruin
20. Instigate
22. Household
god
23. Swims hero
25. Short way
27. Yellow ocher
29, Ventilate
31 ritrl', name
33 college
degree lab.)
34. I iironenn
mong bird
87. TAY nt enne
36. King of
Minium
40. Venture
42. Tarn paste
43. Alun
46. t`nntente of
nn titian
47; Formerly
60. Choler
13. T,nng stick
14, nevernge
65, nark of n bast
67. Connerfleld's
wife
6!. At home
60. Annoy
11, Incident
O. Appended
11, iilshnn's
Jurisdiction
11, Sleighed fnbrie
IOWN
1.'10 pieces
2. Mother of
l'erhetlm
3 Word of
choice
4. Opera
5. Vulgar
ndmlrers of
wealth
6. Ileron•
tion of a combined intercollegi-
ate glee club, When he said how -
do to some passing lady, it would
set her right backs about three
paces, You could hear him all
over 'town.
So somebody saw the tele-
phone man up on a ladder at
Whisp'lrin's house and said,
"What do you need a 'phone for
-all you gotta do Is open a win-
, dow and talk!"
Whisp'irin' said, "Yeah, but
sometimes I like an answer."
We had another fellow, speak -
Ing of Whisp'irin', who was mild
and moderate and never could
be heard unless you whated him,
and they always . called him
"Howlin'," Howlin' Gunderson,
One thing puts you in mind
of another, so somebody asked
whatever became of Sim- Greem,
Sim was an in -and -outer, mov-
ing around the villages doing
odd jobs, and once in a while
putting on a little show he had.
His specialty was fire-eating.
During his act he always smear-
ed gasoline on his face and
shaved with a blowtorch. This
was most spectacular. On one
occasion he had one side all
shaved and was about to do the
other when Minniebrook Hall
caught fire. This was the social
site at Porter's Landing which
Sim had engaged for three dol-
lars for a one-night performance.
They put out Sim and the flee
in that order, and nobody has
seen him since.
Sim always talked with a rich
flow of multilegged words, and
that brought to mind Sassafras -
Joe Minto, who was our best dis-
courser, He was supposed to have
swallowed the unabridged as a
boy. Joe was of uncertain origin
(which was not unusual in ,that
era of Maine seafarers who
touched all the front verandahs
of the distant world) and had a
little salt -water farm on which
he raised various things, He'd
come one day with shucked
. clams or spike mackerel, and the
next time he might have cucum-
bers or blueberries. And his flair
for articulation made It a treat
to stand and haggle.
Ray Dyer was one of his regu-
lar customers for eggs, and one
day Ray lit into him for brin-
ing such small ones, It was pullet
time and Joe was working off
his, peewees, After Ray had ex-
hausted his contumely, Joe took
a deep breath and said:
"I would respectfully request ,
you to comprehend, Mr. Dyer,
that these ovoid integers of poul-
try production are transported
to you in the identical measure-
ments originally projected by the
manufacturing specialists in my
employ!"
Ray swayed a little, and said,
"What?"
Joe said, "I say, this is how the
hens lay 'em!"
I also heard about Marshy
Pillsbury, who cranked up his
old Model Tthe other morning
and started to town. He came
off the little dirt road out past
his place, onto the hard -top, and
got there just as a motorcade by
an antique -car club was going
by on its way to an outing,
• Marshy drove right into line,
and when he got to the village
there was a special motor -police-
man there to convoy the antique.
cars, and he waved Marshy right
along with the rest of them.
Every time Marshy tried to giro
off the policeman motioned him
back I -to line, so Marshy kept
on going and went away over to
Small Point where they had an
exhibition, and Marshy won third
prize.
This is the flrst time he ever
won anything, except for dry
beans at Topsham Fair, •and• he
was pleased, although when he
got home his sister asked him
some lively questions about
where he'd been. Marshy's is a
1911 Model T; he bought it new
at that bine; and he didn't know
about antique cars. And so on. -
By John Gould in The Christian
Science Monitor.
1 Pronoun
8. Dingle
9. Silkworms
10. Attribute
11. Shelter
13. For
19. Scheme
21. ituch
21. Valium!
singer
25 Support
78, Youth
30. Paper
measure
32. i,Ilylike plant
34. African worm
31. 1.11
36, Snare
38. Italian coin
41. Poems
44. Anxious tear
45. Incline
48. Avalanche
49. Dogma
51 Sootrh
highlanders'
language
63. County In
Ohio
51 Am written
(mus.)
50."ian's
nickname
58. Arsenio
52 About
(synth.)
Answer elsewhere on this page.
...:,ore }S�d��'4c� yjitlaq :':
GREW OLD TOGETHER .- A couple of old-timers get together.
Hattie Higgins, 75, ' hglds a 100 -year-old wheat cradle. The
crude but graceful implement was common on farms a cen-
tury ago; before wheat was harvested by combines.
£PMN FROT
40.
Approximately a million dol-
lars is being spent this• year on
-poultry research in Georgia, the
U.S, nation's, No; 1 broiler -fryer
state, to prduce improved and
tastier poultry in a -minimum of
time and" at the lowest possible
cost.
The big 1958 Investment in re-
search, with emphasis on breed-
ing and feeding, comes atop ever -
Increasing sums which have been
spent for the same purpose in
recent years, And poultry ex-
perts cite that such research is
constantly, producing worthwhile
results.
• • •
As an example, 15 years ago
16 weeks and 15 pounds. of feed
were needed to produce a three -
pound broiler. Presently in
'Georgia three -pound broilers are
turned ''out in eight or nine
weeks on about seven and one-
half pounds of feed. Some pro-
ducers ,achieve better than that
average.
• • •
Dr. C. K, Laurent, formerly
head of the poultry department
of the Georgia College of Agri-
culture at the University of
Georgia, where much of the,
poultry research in Georgia is
conducted, forecasts that within
the next five years a scant six
weeks and only six pounds of
feed will be needed to produce
a three -pound broiler.
• . • 0,
Charles Vantress, who con-
ducts a tremendous independent
broiler breeding research pro-
gram at the Chas. Vantress
Farms, Inc., sees it a little dif-
ferently. He believes a three -
pound chicken will be produced
soon in seven weeks on about
1.75, pounds of feed per pound of
meat -a total of 5.25 pounds of
feed for the three -pound bird.
• • •
What this should mean to•the
,housewife is easy to see -better
poultry at lower cost. Georgia
poultry experts claim that chick-
en has long been the best buy in
meat available, and they forecast
that the day lies ahead when
per capita consumption of poul-
try will exceed that of pork,
• which is currently GO pounds or
more per year,
An estimated -25,000 persons
are currently employed in the
various segments of the Georgia
poultry industry which now
benefits more farmers and their
families than any other single
commodity in the state.
• • •
Funds to carry out poultry
research In Georgia are provided
by feed marft.ifacturers and deal-
ers, manufacturers of feed sup-
plements and supplies, and in-
dependent breeders, supplement-
ed by some state and federal
government funds for university
research.
• • •
In his huge operation, with
headquarters In Duluth,, Ga.,
Charles Vantress and his scores
of researchers and aids have de-
veloped a new variety of broiler, •
known as the Vantress Domin-
ant White Male Line, especially
for crossbreeding for meat, and,
incredible as it may seem, his
males will sire more than 1,500,-
000,000 "Vantress Cross" chicks
in the next 12 months,
Males for crossbreeding stock .
are shipped all over the United
States and Canada and South
America. They travel in the
farms' own trucks, by parcel
post, railway express, and air
express, In addition to the 400 -
acre pedigree breeding farm at
Duluth, Mr,' Vantress also has a
3,000 -acre mountain farm at Jas-
per, Ga., and distributing plants
in the Northeast, Midwest and
on the West Coast.
• • •
Mr. Vantress himself is still a
relatively young manand began
his pedigree testing program in'
Live Oak, California, in 1939, A
little over three years ago he
moved his operations to Georgia
because he felt .that this section
offered the opportunity of doing
the best breeding job possible
and also because Atlanta is the
hub of the broiler belt.
'At Duluth, a continuous pedi-
gree pure line testing program
and pedigree cross -testing pro-
gram are being carried out, and
results have been heartening,
Vantress entries won both of the
National Chicken -of -Tomorrow
contests and have taken numer-
ous other honors, The farms
specialize 100 per cent on male -
'line ..breeding.
• • •
As a result of the breeding
program, coupled with the per-
fection -of " better feeds and im-
proved feeding practices, the
Vantress farms are now produc-
ing birds with better conforma-
tion, a • larger ratio of meat to
the bone frame, a better eviscer-
ated yield, and a faster rate of
growth on less feed.
The Mighty Voice
Of Big Ben
When Big Ben struck three
o'clock in the afternoon, we all
jumped -and my ears rang for
some moments afterwards. You'
see, I was standing within six
feet of that monstrous bell in
the tower high over the House
of Commons.
With a special party of watch
and clockmakers; I had plodded
up the spiral 'staircase of 290
steps f r o m the Parliament
Square ground level to the clock
room, where the mechanism
that runs perhaps the most
famous clock in the world is
housed,'
We were there at a quarter
to three, when the eight quar-
ter bells chimed the quarter
hour, right on the dot. The ac-
tual chinning was far above us,
but we could see what made it
go. Pulleys pulled, wheels spun
Fans whirred around. Rocker
arms went up and down, There
was an impressive ,.noise 'quite
apart from the bell.
We already had traversed the
narrow passage behind t h e
clock's four faces. Each dial is
nearly 24 feet in diameter, The
numbers on the face are each
two feet long, The minute spaces
are a foot square, The hour
hands are nine feet long, and
the minute hands 14 feet long
After mounting another 44
steps, we entered the belfry
chamber and were in the pre-
sence of Big Ben itself. 7 mean
herself. Or maybe himself, That
requires some explaining Big
Ben is the big bell, not the
clock. And big bells, it seems,
like ships, always are referred
to as "she" in the bell -world.
This she -bell, however, has al-
ways been known by a mascu-
line nickname, writes Henry S.
Hayward in The Christian Sci-
ence Monitor,
Some wanted to call her "Vic-
toria." Others advocated "St.
Stephen." One of the latter
was Commissioner of Works Sir
Benjamin Hall, a large man
himself, who in 1857 made an
ardent speech in the Commons
about the new clock. Cried a
member: "Why not call it 'Big
Ben' and have done with it?"
And that was how the name
came about. She's a him,
But to get back to the big
bell that makes one of the most
famous sounds in the world. Big
Ben is about 14 tons. The first
version was cast at Stockton-
on-Tees, and the ship that car-
ried it to .London nearly foun-
dered in a storm. This bell
didn't "speak" properly, and the
experts of the day kept testing
it with heavier and heavier
clappers until the bell broke,
It was' recast; to the surprise
of many it hit the intended note
of "E" and was hauled back to
Parliament by 16 white horses.
Again, they hit it too hard;
again it cacked. But they turn-
ed it an eighth and patched it
up -and that bell still is per-
forming today.
The quarter bells are set to
the following lines:
"All through this hour,
Lord, be my guide,
And by Thy power,
No foot shall slide."
Big Ben then booms to under-
score the message.
Only a handful of times in
more than 100 years has Big
Ben stopped. Once driving snow
halted the hands. But the first
part of the clock mechanism to
be renewed since 1859, a new
pendulum spring, was not re-
quired until 1944.
During World War II Big Ben
had a close call. On May 10,
1941, the chamber of the House
of Commons below was destroy-
ed by bombing, The clock's
south dial was smashed and the
belfry damaged, But through-
out the bombing of London Big
Ben's voice broadcast as usual
its message of hope and inspira-
tion to the British at home and
abroad. It told the world this
• capital was calmly carrying on.
From the outset, accuracy has
been demanded of Big Ben. The
original specification called for
the first stroke of each hour to
be correct to within one second
-and for the clock to telegraph
its correct time twice a day to
Greenwich Observatory.
They said it couldn't be done,
that no clock so big could be so
accurate. But after 10 years, a
clock mechanism capable of
meeting the specifications had
been produced.
The clock formerly was hand
wound, a formidable task which
took strong men many a weary
hour, Now it is done by an
electric motor. Large copper
British pennies rest on the
pendulum in' careful piles to
give it just the right weight for
split-second accuracy. Amateurs,
such as I, give a lot of credit to
these pennies, which we under-
stand, but we looked blank
when it was . explained that
"power is conveyed to the pend-
ulum via double three-legged
gravity escapement."
Big Ben, they say, has never
been more than four seconds
off. For weeks at a time it has
run to within one-tenth of a
second per day of true time.
Big Ben is not meant to be
heard close to. ' However, when
standing in the tower you hear
that mighty voice bong once or
thrice, something of the majesty
and history of this country
sweeps over you with the sound.
But, take it from me, 12 would
be too much.
ll)IMYSCIIOOI
_LESSON
By Rev It. Barclay Warren
B,A., B,1)
Introducing the Gospel
Luke 1:1-4; 3:1-6,
Memory Selection: When the
fulness of the time was come,
God sent forth his son. Galatians
4:4.
For this quarter we ;,egin a
study of the life of Chris! based
on the three Synoptic Gospels
with a strong emphasis on the
Gospel of Mark. These record
chiefly the events of ;hrist's
Galilean ministry with Luke in-
cluding an account of His mini-
stry in Peres. John records
principally Christ's deeds and
sayings in Jerusalem and Judea.
All four give a detailed account
of the last week and esr."cially
of the last twenty-four hours of
Christ's life,
The writer of the lesson for
today was Luke, "the beloved
physician" who joined Paul at
Troas on his second missionary
journey. There in the account
In Acts he begins to use the per-
sonal pronoun "we." He went
with Paul to Jerusalem at the
close of Paul's third missioi,ary
journey and evidently stayed In
Palestine during the two years
which Paul spent as a prisoner
in Caesarea, During that two
years he had abundant oppor-
tunity to talk with apostles and
gather data of his Gospel also
the Book of Acts.
During that two years Luke
very likely had opportunity to
meet Mary the mother of Jesus.
One present-day scholar has re-
marked, "Luke's exclusive nar-
ratives concerning the birth of
John the Baptist and of Jesus
are such as would interest a phy-
sician, to whom such personal
disclosures would be confided."
Some critics say they do not be-
lieve the story of the Virgin
Birth because neither Jesus nor
Paul mention it. They uncover
their own evil heart al unbelief
when they reject the accounts
by Matthew and Luke. These are
in full record with God's ' state-
ment that the seed of the Ta-
man should bruise the serpent's
head; with the prohecies of
Isaiah concerning the birth of
Immanuel; Paul's teaching of
the `incarnation and Jesus' re-
ferences to His own unique re-
' lation with the Father. The man
who rejects the account of the
Virgin Birth rejects much more
of the Scriptures. Let us ape
proach the study of the life of
Jesus knowing that He is indeed
the Son of God.
If all the sack dresses 'in the
world were laid end to end they
would reach half way across the
ocean -and lots of men thin%
this would be a good idea.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
LPIN 3'7$ 0 00
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ISSUE 40 - 19511
WAR AND PEACE - A Chinese Nationalist antiaircraft battery
in the background spoils the illusion of pastoral peace given
by the toiling farmers in the foreground. The incongruous
grouping was seen near Taiwan, capital of Formosa.
1 1
14
•4-•-• • • • •-• ♦ • 4 •- • • • • 4 4 • • 4-• 444- 44 4444444 •-4N-04 *4 • • 444-014 4 •-
•'2nd ANNUAL 111!Ri)N COUNTY -
PAGE 8
1
somiorator
ST. MICHAEL'S
LET'S HAVE A FULL SUPPER
WITH THESE SPECIALS
Aunt Jenlina Pancake Mix, Buttermilk,
Regular 20 oz. pkg. 21c
Crown Brand Corn Syrup, 2 lb. tin 29c
Aylmer Nancy Pumpkin, 2 lyre. 28 oz. tins , • .. 37c
Heinz PJmato Ketchup, 11 oz. bottle 20c
Not too early for preparation of Christmas Cakes
peels, cheries, nuts and etc. -- get a supply of fresh
ingredients.
Our usual full line of frozen fruits and vegetables
each a special in itself,
Satisfaction Guaranteed,
PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER
SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION.
tIL BLYTII STANDARD ' Wednesday, October 1
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to Shirley Ament,
who celebrates her 2nd birthday on
Wednesday, October 1st. '
Congratulations to Mark Vincent,
who celebrates his 2nd birthday on
Monday, October Oth.
I Congratulations to Mrs, Lloyd Wai-
t den who will celObrate her birthday on
October 3rd',
11
.••MMrN••N•••••NN••N•I. NV•NN•1IIJVN•N•••••NWI••••••,N.•.-.••N
••••••1••• •• • • Hr ••• ••• •• • •4.4. • •-• • 4.. ••••••••-•:•-•• ••N-+r•i•N44-'
Ciur Rug Wool, per Ib. 1.29; 5 lbs. or over per lb. $1.
Simpson -Sears Catalogue Mail Order Office
PELTON'S 5e to SI. STORE
•MILL ENDS & DOLL HOSPITAL
•-•14•-•44 •-• 1••(••-•••••i••444••4•••••t--!-$-••--9•4 44•.4
•
•-•-•-• +4444-44 44+444- 444-4 • • • • t 0-4 • • +4-4 r•••• 0+4 •- 04-44 444
FELLOWSHIP MEETINGS
Tense who would like to come and
have fellowship and hear the mes-
sage, which Mrs, McClinchc, has writ -
ter: pertaining to the healing of their
little girl, Is welcome. A portion of
this message will be given each Sun-
da,y, which will continue for several
weeks. 1 John 1; 3, That which we
have seen and heard we declare unto
you. You may have fellowship with
us, and truly our fellowship is with the
COURT OF REVISION
MORRIS TOWNSIiIP
1 The Court of Revision on the 1959
Assessment Roll for Morris Township
will be held In the Township Hall on
Monday, Octekber O, at 10;30 run.
3'i-2. -George C. Martin, Clerk.
"PARENTS! A series of lm'mun-
izatiomclinics will be sponsored by the
Health Unit for Blyth and district pre-
school children at the Memorial Hall,
stnrting.Wednesday, October 18th from
1;30 - 2;30 pan, Children three month,i
of age and over may 'Obtain immuni-
zation, including polio' vaccine."
38-1
WANTED TO RENT
Lots or n field close to Myth for
gaming turnips; also will buy manure,
Apply Percy Adnr>r, Blyth, phone 179.
38-1p.
FOR SALE
1 pah• of geese, Apply phone
Carlow.
3008,
38-1.
iN MEMOi1IAM w^
Father and his son, Jesus Christ. Dae: -In loving memory of a dear hus-
These meetings will be held at the ; band, father and grandfather, who
I once of Mr. and Mrs. S. McCllnr.lao;. grassed away, October 3, 1013.
Our
Tice first one being held on Sunday, A'ink
circle hos been broken,
A gone from our chain,
October 5, at 8 p.m, Standard lima, Put though we are parted for a while,
Please comae and bring a friend, . • We know we will meet him again,
-Ever remembered by his wife and
S. McClinchey. family, and his grandchildren, 38-1p
-Mrs,
BY-LAW N0..4, 1958
OF THE VILLAGE OF BLYTH
A By -Law for establishing and main- 9 The collector shall handle nil re.
f paining a s, stepn for the collection re- ceptaeles with due care, but in
movnl and disposal of ashes, garlinge case of damage or Loss the Muni -
and other refuse in the Village of clpnllty shall not be held liable,
Myth. No receptacle shall be permitted to
The Council of the Corporation of remain on the street, or in front
the Village of Blyth enacts as follows: of premises served, for an un -
1
+ 1 For the purpose of this By -Law reasonable length of time after
"Garbage" shall inept) all rejected, collection has been effected,
abandoned or discarded household II No person shall pick over, interfere
waste, either animal or vegetable, with, disturb, remove, or scatter
wearing apparel, sweepings, and any bundle of paper, or any artf-
all refuse matter except garden ole so placed for removal, whelh-
refuse aid: "ashes" as hereinafter er contained in receptacles, or oth-
defined. crwise, exept and until the same is
(hi "Ashes" shall nienn the residue removed liy the Corporation.
of any household fuel after such 12 Ashes, waste paper, and rubbish,
fuel has been consumed by fire,
and tins, bottles, metals, crockery
and glass.
rc) "Householder" shall mean one
owner, occupant, lesee, tenant, or
any person in charge of any dwell-
ing, hotel, restaurant, apartment
house, office building, public in-
stitution, industrial plant, or other
building including stores.
2 The Corporation shall collect, re-
move and dispose of, at the ex-
pense or the Corporation, all ashes
and garbage. Such collection is to 13 The Corporation shall not collect
be made not less than once .per any abandoned, condemned or re -
week, and the collection, removal jested product, bi-product, inanu-
nnd d:sposalof said asltc3, gnrlfage lecturers' waste material or the
and other refuse shall be under the stock of any wholesale or retail
supervision of the Town Foreman, dealer, as for example, eggs, fish,
:1 All waste or refuse from butcher pickles, fruit, or vegetables and
shops, grocery stores, restaurants, which shall. be regarded as trade
hotels, and other places of business waste. Manufacturers' waste ma -
must be kept in properly' covered terial shall Include wood paring3
waterllght metallic receptacles, and or shavings and automobile bodies
must be kept so covered as to pre- or parts thereof,
vent the ingress as egress of flies, 11 Householders shall be required to
and the escape of offensive odors, strain and wrap and tie n11 tablet
Discarded boxes whether wooden and kitchen waste In paper, and to
or card -board shall not be. mixed deposit such parcels in the recep-
with the wf;aste or refuse from lade.
stores. If more frequent removal 15 The derision of the collector shall
Is required by wenn:nits of stores
or other places of business, such
removal must be made by said
occupants,
4 livery ho.rsehnlder shall p-ovlde
and maintain in proper order and
' repair, for the dwelling or other
building occupied by him, covered
whtertfght metal receptables of
circular design, equipliecl with two
handles, having a .capacity of not
more than two cubic- feet each,
contents not to exceed seventy-
five pounds, and which shall not ue
filled to a greater height than
witin tun inches of the lop.
.i Receptacles shall be provided and
maintained in good condition, In
sufficient numlr;rs to contain all 18
ashes, kitchen or table waste pro -
(Thee(' in or emanating from every
dwelling, hotel, restaurant, apart-
ment house( public Institution, in-
dustrial plant or other premises,
and each receptacle shall be pro-
vided with a' gond watertight env-
er, which sail at all- times remain
In position, so as to prelede Ir.•
grass of Mrs, or the rscape off
odors therefrom,
17
BLYTII, ONT.
SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY:
TURKEY DINNERS
Make up a family party and take advantage
of this special.
HURON GRILL
BLYTII - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
•
.-44-444+4••4-4.4 •-• f•-• •4•.•44 • • 04.4-• 4• -•.t•• -4•N 4.0 4+4 H t 4•••N1
IStewart s
Red IS White Food Marke*
Yes They're Oven Ready
SWIFTS GRADE «A" STUFFED CHiCKENS
35( Per lb.
SPECIALS
Libbys Fancy Ouality New Pack Cream .
Style Corn, save .7c, 15 oz.... , . , , . 4 for .59c
York Peanut Butter. E. D. Smith's I1ure
Rasberry ,lam, 9 oz. tumbler .... both for .55c
Lihbys Deep Brown Beans, save .7c,
20 oz. tins ........................ 3 for .59c
Ouaker Muffets 2 boxes .33c
Lihbys Cooked Spaghetti, save .6c 15 oz.
]:ins :3 for .41c
Meat and Frozen Foods
Libhys Green .Peas, 2 lb. poly bag, 51c
Cream Style Corn, 12 oz. pkg. . . . ... . . . . .. 23e
Bologna . , , , .33c lb.
Peanlral Cottage Roll
Weincrs , , , • .15c lb.
.49c lb. -
Golden Ripe Bananas 15s Ib.
SHOP REI) & WHITE AND SAVE
Blyth Phone 9 • 'We Deliver
"The Best For Less" - Values Unsurpassed
PLOWING MATCH
SATURDAY, OCTOBER
TO BE HELD AT TiHE FARM OF
KEITH WEBSTER
ONE MILE NOItTII OF BLYTII
Putter Ausplcr, of North Huron Plow-
man's Association
1 36-t2'1
DEAD STOCK
W"ANTED
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•
1
1
{
1
HIGHEST' CASH PRICES laid in
wounding districts for dead, old, sick
or disabled horses or cattle. Uld hor-
ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For it
plr,mpt, sanitary disposal day or night,
phone collect, Norman Knapp, -Blyth,
211112, If busy phone Leroy Acheson,
Atwood, 153, kWm. Morse, Brussels,
15.16. Trucks available nt all times.
34- 1, Mar,
i
4
4
other than- excavations, builders 14
and ]rade waste, shall be moved
from all dwellings, public, high,
separate schools, churches, and
Charitable institutions, public hos-
pital, and public library, without
charge; provided, however, the!
such materials are deposited in
covered receptacles and placed for
the collector, ns hereinbefore des-
ignated, and further, that all such
waste tamer Is securely tied In
bundles,
6 'Ilouseholders !leap thoroughly
strain all table and 'kitchen waste
. before placing it In garbage re-
ceptacles, and no such refuse of _
the consistency of swill shall be
collected' from and premises what- 18
socver•.
7 Contents of any receptacle will not
be nllectcd if found 10 be it n
fro'cn ronditton, or for any reason
dacu11 to remove. garbage and refuse shall not be al -
'Such Receptacles shall at nil times lowed to accumulate on any preen•
be kept on a portion of the prem. ises bill shall be regularly deposit-
isns of, or connected with, the ed for collection.
8
be final as to quantities and clais
of material to be removed, and al-
so as to whether or not a recep-
tacle or the placing of the same
meets the requirements of the Cor-
poration. In no Instance shell the
Corporation be called upon to
make collections from, or return
receptacles to, any point which In
the opinion of the Town Foreman.
is unreasonably inconvenient E.
dangerous to Its employees; nor
shall it be required to remove re-
ceptacles from any point other than
that designated by the Town Fore-
man .end then only when such re-
ceptacles are in accordance with
the requirements of this 13y -Law.
No:t•tvitIstandirg anything to con-
tran,• herein, no material such as
moving -picture films, celluloid cut-
tings, rags soaked with gasoline or
oil, acrd no highly. combustible
waste of any kind shall be collect-
ed by the Corporation, and no par-
son shall mix any srrcho material
with an;thI g collected by the Cor-
paratIon or shall deposit ,Orly such
waste excepting as approved by
the Town Foreman.
A11 garbage and ashes collected un.
der the provisions of this by-law
shall be disposed of under the su-
pervision of the Town Foreman as
and where the Council deems de-
sirable.
Evenv householder, us herein de-
scribed, Is'requlred to dispose nt
iall gnrbnge and refuse the'. may
he Ii, upon or about their premis-
es to the specified manner; and
Tired of being Tired?
Is undernourished blood causing your fatigue?.
For better health take vitamins regularly. Start
the children off to school feeling fit and peppy.
One A Day Multiple 1.40, 2.50 3.95
Vi Cal Fer,12 1.95, 4.95
Iranized Yeast 1.20, 2.00 3.35
Geriplex (for over 40 years old) 2.95, 8.75
Wampole Extract Cod Liver - 1.50, 2.75
Maltevol t, . 2.50
Neo Chemical Food 1.85 3.95 6.8
Phospho Piex (for tired nerves) $2.50, $4.25
Geritol (Liquid or Tablets) $3.29
R. D. PHILF, Fhm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PIIONE 70, BLYTH
Nom••••N••••-•• ••44 •.4-•-•H ►H ••••4.•.*N - ••••••••••.4.4.4„4.4.4
iW,••N•N•••••••NWN•N1N•N•NI ••••••I�1?
STOP L1.SHOP
at Holland's Food Market This Week.End.
Red Bird Matches .,,,,•, ,,,,,,,,,,,, 3for .25c
5 M. Corn Syrup .69c
Snowflake Shortening .,,,.,,,,,•,,.,..,..•, .25c
Carnation Milk 2 for ,29c
Other Specials Throughout Our Store
Holland's Food Market
AND 7,t?CICER SERV ICE.
Telephone 39 n , -- WE DELI'V ER
' •'•N••'••NM••NN•NNNN•I• M••••••••W•NNM►N•~0.140 1NNI••r1
+-4-414 +•-•••44.4.4.1••♦•44-•-N1N••044-04• •4••••444 •4.4+1r
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY
SALE OF' PAINTS AND VARNISHES
10% OFF ON ALL CASH SALES.
Just Arrived
WESTINGHOUSE CLOTHES DRYER
Model D11'IN, with heat control , ...$199.95
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
ELECTRIC
YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER
"You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse"
PHONE 7182 BLYTH, ONT.'
i
14.4.4-44 444 •4.4 44-•-44-444444-44444 44-44444444-4-4-64-441
-•-•44••41
t••].-••••• ••-44 • • •4 4.4••44.4 •••4444.4.4.44-•44!4 44*44444.44
t HURON -BRUCE LIBERAL ASSOCIATION
NOMINATING CONVENTION
and
ANNUAL MEETING
'TOWN IIALL, WINGI-LAM
Thursday, October 2nd
at 8.30 p.m,, D.S.T.
SPEAKERS:
John J. Wintersneyer
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M.P.P.
Leader of the Ontario Liberal Party
Mr. Wintermeyer will be interviewed on CKNX-TV
Thursday, October End between 6.00 and 7.00 p.m,
JAMES SCOTT, secretary of the O.L.A.
BUSINESS:
NOMINATION of Candidates for our Priding
GENERAL BUSINESS
ELECTION OF OFFICERS
C. R. Dunbar, president,
GOD SAVE THE QUEEN
`r• 4444 444.4444 • •••4••.4.4 • • 44 •41.• •+•,•-•.4.44.4144-••-•}4{,_4,
POI ••••.••,H•'"•••••PAP•+•M•MN.•'. DEAD STo c KNMN•.•N.•N
SERVICE
dwelling of the hmrs�holder, and 19 Any person convictedof a breach Clinton Comma my
of any of the provis°ons �f this by-
law shall forfeit and pay, al the
• discretion of the convicting Magis-
trate or Justice of the Peace, n
penally of not less than one dol-
lar and not exceeding ',exclusive
of costs) the sun of fifty dollars
for each offence,
Passed in Council this 18th day
of September•, 195'8,
GEO11GE SLOAN, Clerk.
on the drays of collection shall be
pllrvd immediately adjoining the
street or Ione Of there be.. n
through panel to give the collector
ready access to such receptables, at
hours specifier) by the Town Fore:
man for the purpose of emptying
and returning the same, and such
householder shall on such days per-
mit and allow any employee of the
Corporation to have access to and
to empty and' return such recept-
acle or receptacics.
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVEIIY I'RiDA.Y AT
CLINTON SALE BARN •
at 7.30 p.m.
IN BLYTIi, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager, Auctioneer.
05 -If.
•
Highest cash prices paid
for sick, old or disabled
cows and horses: also dead
cows and hoti'sps at highest
cash value. Old horses at
4 cents per lb, •
Please phone promptly,
call collect
BRUCE MA RLATT
Brussels 56R7,
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