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The Blyth Standard, 1959-01-07, Page 1
• ...- >UNINIMM, rizod `at faGond-class mail, BLY TH, ', ONTARIQ W D NESDAY, JAN.., 7, .1950 oscotftcy Department, Ottav,t w . : - RUraI. League Ho:key Schedule Announced A meeting Was held -'last week in the ' Blyth Comar'unity Arena to• lay: , At plans Por: the hoclirey season.'It was. wedded that the Blyth Rural Hockey League would operate again this year, The ";league will be operatingwith , four teams this year, as compared with three teams last year, '' Auburn, the 13th of: Hullett and Blyth, will again have teams, with Constance • making the 4th team, Several'; new rules were instituted into the league, the main one we feel, Was drawn ,up to assist the referees, who haver ,for, the past several year$, Blyth Congregations TO Subscription. Rates $2,50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S. PERSONAL INTEREST/ ,Christanas visitors witlt Mr, and 1 �, • Wm, cow, of Aubern,`wzre: _Mr. a4�d Mrs, Wm, Natirgang, Kenneth and WEDDINGSTI WAYMOUr-CH1t iSTII: In a double -ring eeltenony• conduct - skis, Mr,- Ropf, a of Gadshill; Mr alfa ed by the Rev, , J, Telford, in Wesley s United Church,..Vlimtea, Saturday, Dc - Mrs, Glen Wales and boys, of Londe' clo Their Friends •;OOth.Wedding Anniversary' wedding anniver- January 11, . 1059, C, Stoltz, of Au - at' home to their Pen. to 5.30 p,m, :On their 60th sary, Sunday, yr, and Mrs, .J. burn,;' will be Ifriends from 3 and from 7 pm, to 8.30 p.m. lreen' working under extreme difficul Observe 'Week Of Prayer Mr, and . Mrs;. Jack ; Ladd,' -Patty a Wayne, of Godes1ch; Mr, and • IV1 Leonard Brindley and Ronnie, of A�•�' burn Mrs geeMacArthur and MA. cot -doer. 1958, Doris Christie, daugh- ter'oP M. and Mrs, R: W, Christie, be- came the bride of Dennis Arthur Way-• mouth, son of Mr, Arthur Weymouth Wal'dl3ville Home Destroyed Charles Weymouth, of ' Londe'J,oro -, and the late: Mrs, Weymouth, of Blyth, f'` Ontario. Mr, Roy de Haas who has been Brit• green and silver Christmas trees a of Mr, and Mrs, Sam Blyth Council H�IdTIn- augural, Pass By -Law played at the home `of Mr.;ur,rl Mr., The Church was prettily decorated The horn visit to ollund. Hs w'''ith bine lights, white "'conics and Thuell, of Wardsville, was completely by plane for a i t H. Rite with mums, The choir sang beim the piano developed englrio trouble Il By Fire Wm. Gow returned on December 2ty6� detroyed by fire on Monday, January service and a choir member sang 5th, {f Montreal and ran into n fog ire Smite Firemen from Wardsville and Glen - land which delayed him "a day on his "Bless This House" during the signieg . of the register, , cos brigades were called to fight the {rips Mr. Dick Chellew, of Ncrth Bay,` blaze but were unable to save the The brideegiven in marriage by her father, wore. a floor -length gown M frame dwelling. Everything was lost white satin, with emro!dee a top avid except the clothes the family were :lily paint sleeves, Her finger' tip veil wearing when the fire broke out, a c ' before the flames er beau ht onus is'emplaycd at the Gow home while lire, is away, ); Patty 'and Wayne Larl�l, of Gourmet; ti s -A; f`ine,;of' $200 will be imposed sent Christmas holidays with titre any player who In ;any way Inter fares with- the 'referee, and said player. may -be suspended from_ any,future games: if the. referee deems tt neces- spry. Following is the schedule 'of games; 'Jan, 7 7 13th. - Constance. 0 Blyth Auburn. 12 - ,Blyth, - 13th, 14 - Constance -.Auburn: Blyth Constance, ::• 10 •-'13th Auburn., 21: Constance 13th.• 23 -- Auburn- - Blyth. 13th; Blyth, , 2Jl -- Auburn •- Constance, Fell. 2 Constance Blyth 4 --,-Auburn • 13th, Games start at:: 8.30 Sharp :• The first w eek in Janu ry ea h year p was held in place by buudeau cf It was feared at one time, grandparents Mr, and Mrs Wm Gow. is opservea oy dian. Council of Churches as a Week of Prayer. Local'- churches have '•'arranged a, joint service: for all protestant congre- gations to be held an Friday January hers of'the Cana 9, in: the St, Andrew's Presbyterian: Church at 8;00 pm, Rev. D. J. Lane, 'eminister of the Presbyterian Church w111 'preach, and Rev, Robert Meanly, .;rector of the Anglican - church, and Rev, R. ' Evan McLagan, of the United Church, will conduct the service, •The members of all congregations,are sincerely- urged to join with Christians around the world in prayer to Gcxt at the beginning of the New Year, 'vices} held `At W. A. Group Meeting hurch Group one of the United Church W. �,. ;lmpressly@ services werfi' hold A.' met at the home of Mrs. Wm, Mc Mrs. MaryTaylor and Mrs:-ldri Pette spent New Years with the farmer's son;, and daughter-in•lnw, Mr, and -Mrri.;. Freeman :.Turney, and family, of Teeswater. New Years visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Thomas. Cronin Sr,, were; Mr. and Mrs, Nelson Meyer,` Hamilton, Mr. and; Mrs. James Cronin and family,- Walt kerton,' Mr, and Mrs, Lorne Croninia, Clinton,. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Heffroll, and family, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Cron; in, Blyth, Mr. Harry Cronin' and Mrs` white mums and she carried u white were g r con - Bible crested with a white orchid and trol, that the flames would Spread to stephanotis, I the Village Motel, about 25 yards Mrs Margaret- Pritchard; twin sister away. of the bride, as matron "of,honour and ` Living with Mr. and Mrs. Thuell are Wendy Christie,; also' a sister, was Mrs. Thuell's parents, Mr. and Mrs, bridesmaid, They both wore blue James Cullen, and minutes before the dresses :. with shoulder ca,ur, white building was ' destroyed, ;Nlr• Cullen, feather hats, and ,white maria, , who is blind, escaped to the roof if The flower girl, Lynn Gilmour, an adjoining veranda, and from there niece of the bride, wore a blue dreee was rescued by firemen. - • and carried a blue and silver nosegay. Mr. 'I'huell, who is postmaster of The best man ,was Ted Christianson, Wardsville, . and Mrs. - Cullen were ushers away at the time of the fire. Mrs, Angus McIntyreLondon, cousin of the groom, and ;the ff cc and Cook that Donald Cochran, of Toronto, I rescuing their two.children. with her�.brother, M;r', Norman. Hotiver'r Following � th the roc rr� The sympathy of this comunity, The inaugural meeting of the Muni- cipal Council of the Corporation of the Village: of Blyth, was held in Memor- ial Hall January 5th, at 8 pm, with Reeve Merritt, Councillors Cook, • El- liott, Fairservice and Howes present, Rev. Robert, Meally opened the meet- ing with prayer, followed by a brief address to the council. The members of the council subscribed 'to their oath of orifice, Motion 'by . Elliott and Howes that the minutes of the last regular- meet- ing and special meeting be adopted, Carried, Motion by Howes and Elliott that we give Rev. Mr. Molly a vote of thanks -for attending this meeting. Carried. Motion by Elliott and Cook•that con- stable John Bailey print a final no- tice that car owners do not park cars on the village streets from le am. un- til 8 p.m., during the snow ploughing season. Carried. Motion by Cook and Howes that Correspondence be filed, Carried. Motion by Ellio'at . and Howes, that By -Law- No. 1, 1959, be read a first Thuell suffered minor burns willle andsecondtime, Carried, • Mrs D McCallum spent New Year were, Ronald Steepe, of Clinton, and Motion by time rvl 3 hild is By -Law No, 1, 1959, as now read a Mrs, Hoover and family, and also visit= a ceremony, e, i I tt held Fellowship t extended to Mr. and Mrs T�rttell led h s in first and second time be passed. Car- -1 sister Mlss •Beth Hoover all of . on was in the Hallo t their gree los. vied. B 1 • the Church, where. the bride's mother ; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Buttell,,` Mr. ane{ received- wearing a blue lace. dress Mrs. Dan McKenzie left en Monday,: with matching hat and white accessor- for a holiday In Florida: . les with a white gardenia corsage. She Mr, and Mrs. George Radford, ac" was assisted by the groom's aunt, Mrs, A Sundercock wearing a dry comparted by, Mr. and Mrs, Lornes t ie1 Trinity Church, Blyth, during Vittie on Monday afternoon, December r dress with matching hat and accersur- 29th at 2,30 to organize their group Brown of Cltitfgn left on Sunda for ,s C'1s�ta11!as 'aeasan 2 fl rose beige .., , a holiday at See Petersburg, Florida. " les and wcaringea, pale pink rose' cor- Ort;Cbi'i Fve, .there was a;;well for the : coming year. Mrs, McVittie �',��..1 '; �. i and opened the j Mr. and Mrs. 'Ross Tasker and dough' sage, ,,., •loly_ Co r nun on acted as chairman .' ;n of t • with Rev. -Craven, of;i der.lch,;acti l., ;meeting with the reading Years week -end with the former's as, Celebrant, 'assisted, by ec r, ore an mother, Mrr A. lis Tasker, and M a>zd nt Lirntberlost hod e in Northern ' Mr. Cardiff returnedhome.. .from ee er eft on g the bride wore a light "beige sea � e• say or a � holiday in o a. bosh legs . rs: Wsn, McVittie;,.'secretary Altar Guild who` lied also placed" the. ant,.:. M ;� , The bride and groom were escorted he seri - ter, Linda, of Streetsville, spent New; }e � down the aisle aP the Church by ' a t h tet Rev. Robe E -, d f 11 1 g slate of officers w • Scottish Piper to the reception hall,' Motion by Howes and Elliott that By -Law No. 1, 1959. be read a third L. E. Cardiff, M.P.,.Injured' time. Carried. ' In Fall Mr, L. E. Cardi•lf, M. P., of Bruss had the misfortune -to fracture both his heels when 'he fell from the roof e Theb B La authorizes . the ur f borrow • poses for 1959, Motion by Fairservice and Howse [Wotan by Cook and Fairservice that By -Law No. 1, 1059, as now read a third time be passed. Carried. ls' oave By -Law o ing of money' for village pur- his garage on December 23rd. The; accident: oceunredi when the 1 der; he wadi- standing on slipped._. ad- . 1Ie- rt Meetly, The cine h had The . o ownMrs.r` For their wedding trip to Ottawa was removing snow one .a garage. i i fo thacoming year h fr��m the With thisson •inombersof'theLeader Mrs, Frank Bain on, assist Tuc d f h ]id Ontarta, b5' Fl >;jd New ::Years' -:.visitors . with -Mr. and' as and Llovri Tasker and family, been effectively decorated in ,kee, g •else ed n n r Mr,and Mrs.Cecil Wheeler l hospital- wearing a cast to his line: on flowers on the Altar ieasurer, Mrs:r'Wm.. Radford,`,'Doyo Mrs Jack Ladd and family, of Gode -'` o Mrs, Frani:`• Baintone,V,Isitation, A scrv[ce oY Mattins; ;vas 1t41d • ern ti ns,. ,rich'were Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Ladd r V, Task Flowers, Cltristrri s Da d`altho h yervl a yvI s, �i el < ee wm' HlSdhelVlre;and•N't, p Y+,�t►1. _.ng, ,a,, ,�. f k :�. � �W:-{low,.Mt`:'and has net been'held a e:`on:'.Christmas .Rad'ord, Mrs, • I oonard . B -1n 1 h r d ey and 'Ronnie,. Day for many =years, 'it'<was'n uch apes ; Our meetings are tee be', held't first+:Mr and Mrs,; Tom Lawlor and Jinrmle .""- e"4' ` Monday -`in the;mon h at 2.30 withdthe ll: et Auburn ' predated and the attendance wus en :._. r. 4 burn ''. ; �1 act a comantt ee' see r. .?{P couraging, ,, 'r " , hostess s°ru ng !tl i ! 1 ht L Mr. an'd`.Mrs. L, Scrimgeour, return - . A watch Qf t providing one thing for u night service: was; held o•t wo : ed. home , last Friday frc•m a ten dly Kew Year's Eve Miss Margaret Preparations were. made for the visit e at Elmira, Windsor, Detroit and Clark, of, Auburn, was-orgainst ,'1'h January meeting of the W Al and also Chatham.. • "• for the Annual Supper and the flowers Rector., `delivered an . insplrinq :; rtndf Mr. and Mrs Walter Mason and challening,'messag' .taking his,+!.t t d ,t e. ti�• for Church Services for the month of January,, ,tie ��' Archte,'-Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mason from Isaiah 26.3, "Thou' wilt keep him' and family spent, Naw' Years with Mr, < It+ ),decided, to have a bake' sale, tof tofTheon London, i ,ces'seems to. new - These seryl d >ir 'hole and peace,- increa iefeltli and fresh courage for ethe fttt �r� er' to en il ;,.prl- � vilegedto;attend,rr7'"ige:• '. , ,_ ...:2U,• : ,1e:,Vrie's�.�iketer, the ' former c j1r, gayspri; vete -co,µelon. d i 6 . we-kto'nll. the siick`'and shut-in/par crs.erho had made -the -:request. : THE CIIU.iRC�IES AMONG T . t , Sunday, January, 11, 195 IT, ANDRE V't3 PT UT.' :CHURCH 1,00 p.m.-Sunday,School and Church Service. , THE UNITED CHURCH, OF --CANADA Rl� th, flntario. :. Rev. R. Evan,McLagan - Minister. 'Mires. Margaret Jackson " - Director - e of. Music, 10.00 a.m.-Sunday "Church School. 11.15 a.m.-"The Claims of Christ 1,2)" "I -am 'the -Light" Installation of Offieers. Nursery Dor children 3 and under at the Manse. 7.30 pen, --Evening Worship. 8.30 pan. --Young Peoples' a son's. • Wed. Jan 14 -Annual Congregational Heating, Supper at 7.00 p.m... ANGLICAN CHURCH' Rector, Bev. Robert Molly Anglican Church Blyth;' 0.45 a,m.--Sunday School. 10.30 a,m:-Mbrning Prayer. 8.09 p,m.-Meeting-of A.Y.P.A. itt Rectory, •, ! I ice! Wednesday, Jan. 14 -Annual Vestry. meeting in • Rectory at 8 pen, St. Mark's, Auburn, 11.15 --Sunday School. 12 o'clock -Morning Prayer Tuesday, . Jan, ..13-Annttale Vestry meeting in Church, at•,0 Anglican Church, Belgrave-2,00-- Sunday School; 2,30 p.m, --Evening Prayer, mutton tit don McConnell Sheat, Blyth, Special Speaker, 2.00 p.m. -Sunday School 3.00 p.in,-Churclt Service. Open House Held At Unite d Church Members • of the congregation of the United Church in ,Blyth'.and their friends attended an. Open, House` at the Manse last ;Tuesday, Rev. RR.. -Evan McLegan, assisted by .their parents, Monday, February .2nd, at 2,30, at the Mrs. W. S. Pettit, of, London, and, Mr, home of Mrs. Wm. Radford. Anyone caring to join our little :group for the coming year please •feel. welcome to do so as we will be most happy to have Mrs. McVittie closed the meetings and Mrs. A. Sundercock, past -president with these words, I said to the man and vice-president ole WA; W, who stood; at the gate of the year "Give C. Falconer and Mrs,`Sundercock, pros- n'e n light that I may tread safely into ident and vice-president'.of the W.M.S.; the unknown" and He replied' "Go out Mrs, F. Howson and Mrs: K,.MacDen into the darkness and put your hand aid, past president and president; of you, .. • and Mrs. H. . J, •McLagan, of Mitchell, welcomed their' guests,' Thosereceiving at the door were Mrs C. Johnston` and %Mrs. Wm. Rad- ford, C:G.I.T; leaders;; Mrs. F. Bdinton Into the hand of God, That'shall, be to you better than a light and safer than e known wey.'1, What a wonderful way• to start our year relving on God, trust- ing Him; serving Him., After , which 1VIrs. McVittie-served a d,elictous lunch OBITUARY PERCY GLAZiER Percy Glazier passed away in Hui- lett township in his -68th year, Funeral service was held at 2 pm, Tuesiav,. January; 6, from the Bali and Mutch funeral home, Clinton..' " .Survived, by sisters, Mrs. Selena Pt-' ley,' Clinton,; Mrs. Mary Hesselwood, Blyth; and Mrs, Mervyn Hodgea, Pott Albert.: ,i HOWARD , C. TREWARTIIA' Howard C, Trewartha; ;; farmer of Hullett township, passed -"away in his 67th year," Funeral service was held.. on Wednesday, Janeary.7th, at 2 nit, from the Bull and;Mutch funerat,hume Clinton; Interment took place`In' the. Chinni. cemetery, He losurvived by his Wtir,;tlla,for-' mer, Mary Tyndall; and cons, ;;toss, at` home,, and -Frank, et Cardinal;; nlso,,3. brothers, Nelson, aft Climate, Herbert and Edgar, of Hohneaville, the , Friendship : Circle, Retiring . group leaders of the W.A„ Mrs. Wnt. McVittie; Mrs. M. Richmond; Mrs.' D. McKenzie and Mrs, A,'Sun- dercock poured tea. Girls from the C.G.LT.,' the Inter- mediate classes of the Sunday, Church School and the Young People's Group served tea and cookies. These includ- ed Sharon • Jackson, Sandra` Berthot, Jean • McVittie, Barbara Campbell, Lena : Dougherty, Gail Gowing, Helen MoClinehey, Anna Christensen, Jeanne (Ashton, Wilma. Alblas, Sylvia Sander- son,' Susan�`Wightman,' Ann Howson, Marilyn Johnston, Ula Griffiths, Lorna Barrle,.:Karon Cook, ,Dtnnn. Radford, 'Laurens Walpole and: Margaret Ann Doherty.' Solving' in the kitchen were Mrs. G. McGowan, Mrs, ,B. ,Tasker, Mrs. J'• Young, : Mrs: M. McVittie,: Mrs. L, Scott, Mrs. W. Button,' Mrs. B. Walsh, tiVftrs•, `J.. _Fairservice, Mrs,; J, Lawrie Mrs, A. Grant' and Mrs. W.' Cgckerlina, Free Skating There will be free-Pating for the ,begIntl,q1,s of'IllYth and district,. in the loctikAketta on Wednesday aft4srnoons frotii" g.ti Pen. tO 4.00 p.m, during the Months ,January and February, All wool ,dress, ' brown fur jacket, with' brown accessories. They have ,taken up residence in Toronto. DICKEY -LAWRENCE A quiet wedding was solemnized on Thursday~ January 1, 1050, in Blyth United Church, when Rev, R. Evan McLrgon united in marriage : Irene Lydia, eldest daughter' of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lawrence, of Blyth, to James Edgar, only so.. of Mr, and Mrs. Har- old `,Dickey, of Lon .',nn.'. The bride, given In -marriage by her father, was attended by her sister, Audrey, and the groomsman - was Mr. Wllllam.Dobie, ot'Auburn.. A reception followed at the hcmt of the bride's parents. Guests were ' resent from London, Exeter, Blyth: and Luoknow, The couple will reside In Blyth. Prior to her marriage a shower was held for Irene Lawrence at `the home of her grandmother, Mrs: Albert Hag. gitt, The bride' was escorted to'adec- orated chair; by Mrs. Harvey Carrick. Miss Virginia Oliver read the follow- j Ing address:;., i Dear Irene: Wo offer you these ghats in hopes you find them useful in the new. life before you, We have watched you 'from child- hood until today alnd hope our friend- ship will continue to grow and as you make -new contacts In your married life may . these gifts remind you of ns here tonight With, allgood wishes your friends and neighbours, Irene was assisted in opening her many lovely gifts by her mother, and sister, Irene thanked those present for their kindness, A- delicious lunch was served, Fox Seen In The Village Last - Sunday when• Mr. and Mrs. George Radford were leaving for Flor- ida, a fox was noticed by Mr. Radford,` loafing around on the lawn. He im- mediately phoned Ben Walsh to bring chis shotgun, but by the time Ben ar- rived Mr. Fox had departed, an at- tempt to track it down proved futile, It is not known It the' fox wins rabid or just 'hungry, .Perhaps he was just taunting the' local :hunters : ,who have had very little success in track- ing down the sly enimals this year. CONGRATITLATI()NS Congratulations'. • to Mr. Kenneth Hemm who celebrated his birthday on Wednesday, Janua'ry 7t11;' Congratulations' to Mrs, ,Phyllis 'at,,Ayr,• who' celebrated ;her birthday- on; Wedneslay,'• January .'Ith. Congratulations ' to yisse Glenyce Bainton' who .celebrated ,her birthday. on :Wednesday, January 7th, Congratulations to Mr,; and Mrs.` Alf. Machan w'ho' celebrate their 47th wed ding anniversary 'on Saturday, Jan- uary 10th, • j ,Co'tgratulations to -Mrs, Harry 91.b.. hens whocelobrates her birthday en. Friday, January 9th:: - , Congratulations. `to John Campbell who celebrated 'his birthday on Thurs- day, January 8th., i '`Congratulations- to Mr, and Mrs, Guy: ,Cunningham ,who celebrate their birth-. days -on 'January 7 and -January 10,'- I' Congratulations to, MrChester kid - gins who celebrated his. bjrthday on Thursday, •January 1st. •. Conga•atulatlons to Mrs. Frank Camp Bell who 'celebrates her birthday, on January 9th, FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE Tre Friendship Circle met at the home of Mrs, F. Howson on Monday, January • Tho meeting ;opened with a poem by Mrs. ' F. Howson, followed try hymn 571. - The scripture was read by Mrs„ 13, Walsh, Mrs. Howson led` h pray- cr. Mrs. R, Madill gave a rearing, Hymn 570 was sung,- followed by a reading by Mrs McDougall,. Worship service was closed with a prayer by Mrs, Howsgn, • The business period. wns conducted: by Mrs, B. Walsh, Minutes were rend and the roll call answered by bringing d Christmas cards, and paying of es, Meeting to ble changed to the Accepts Position In Italy Mr. N. O'Meara, United Co-opera- tives of Ontario Area Supervisor,. Ridgetown, Ontario, has accepted a position as Agricultural Co-operatives Italy, with the Food and WIriallturril, work internationallY wit" co-operae tiVes. Francis Xavier University Atlitgonish, ,Nova %Scotia. He was formeiTY-Ir Icharge Of Co-operative Statistics arid 'ben. of a special Canaan" Misn,an to !India' in connectiOn with the ColumI o Plan. • Mon', recently he has b:en mitional Director, then Area Super- visor with the upo, Ile in expected to assume his international dutibt in that' the: clerk forward petition fur statutory grant ort.1958 road .expendi- ture -to the Department of Highways, Carried. •. Melon :by; Fairservice . and . Cook that we confirm, conunittecs as read. Car- ried. Streets odd Drains, Cook -and Hower. __Water-. and. Light, Howes, and Elliott. ,-Finance, Elliott and Cook.• • Welfare, Fairservice. and Howes. law end Order, : Fairservice, Elliott. Parks Board, Reeve : Merritt, Mrs. Ken Taylor,' Mrs. L.- Scrimgeour, D, Howes, Ai Berthot,.: C. • Wheeler, 0. McGowan. Hall' Board; Reeve Morritt, Mrs.' Chas. Johnston; G. Elliott, A. Berthot, D. McKenzie, G. R. Vincent, G. Wett. Motion Lly Howes and Cook that accounts as read be paid. Carried. John.Bailey. pt. -salary st. foreman, (110.00:' John Bailey, pt.: foreman and caretaker, 63.18; H. Leatherland, weigh mater and' firing, 50.00; G. "Herfronr garb, col., 87.00; Blyth Postmaster, un- a fox 6''G. Sloan, emp, ins, stamps,' 4,1 1 bounty, 20.00; Town of Clinton, 624.19; Ontario 'Good Roads Association, 15',00; Harnm's ', Garage'' snow ploughing. 108 00;• Robert Brown,. st. work, 1.80; Earl Noble, st. work, 4,50; Ray Hunk - ha, sanding st 10,00;•• Geo.' Radtnrd, bulldozing, 82.50; Gee.,; Radford, snow ploughing 36 one half hr ; 273.75; Geo, Redford,' snow - removal, :528,00, loader 8,00 per' hr.,trucks 4.00 per hr. Motion; by Elliott and- Fairservice that we' do:'now., adjourn. Carried. . George ,Sloan, Clerk. • lith Busy Bakers .1;ite' 6th meeting of .the Club wag h,eld at the 'hoirle of Mrs, D. Webster on December 27th. e_ The -meeting- was opened. with the Pledge,-eftei' which the minutes of the 15th meeting were read, The rool call, My list Of food products, was answer- ed by all members present, then n cereal quiz was answered after which the:assistant leader_ nuide corn bread. The herne assignment and roll call for the, next meeting were given. Luneh was served cit'the close of the meeting. Reception • .Friday January, 9th, in Blyth MomoriallIall for Mr,. apd,Mrs, George frakgIft, (nee -Mary .Livermore), of Auburn,' newly-wed& Jim Pierce's Ore 'ebestra, Ladies please, bring, lunch. ,Vicki ..Wellbanlei spent last ,v,tedi at the *rine of Mr. and 111rs, Bob Norris, of ..Markhiiin. Ladies Auxiliary To Meet ' The postponed meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary 'will be held o'n'' Monday, January 28th, at 8 ph% in the Legion, ANNE I4IPST —*a11. Family awmAgiot "Dear Anne Hirst: I lost my husband •five years ago, and I have been so lonely since, that many a time I thought I did not want to wake up tomorrow. But a few months ago some friends introduced a nfan from out of town, and we both have become interested in each other. He has already declared his love, and I really do believe I have found someone I could consider marry- ing, "He seems to think only of my pleasure, he enjoys good music End the theatre as I used to, and we are so congenial 1 feel I have known nim for years. "He is about ready to retire, end says he will move here where all my friends are if that will make me happy. He is orf my faith, just my age, and ' as actively interested in young people as I am. "I can tell you it would be very easy to love him. What :lo you think A.R." TAK1. YOUR TIME • I would not predict what sort * of husband the man would * make when all I know is what * you, a woman about to fa:1 * in love, tell me of him. When * a man falls in love he appears • at his best, as a woman does. * These friends, some of whom * have known him for a dozen * years, say "You are made for * each other." * It seems to me the best way * to study him is to become en- * gaged, and take your time in * setting the wedding date. + * • QUESTIONS FIDELITY "Dear Anne Hirst: I've been going with a fine young man for nearly a year, and in many ways he has proven his love. "Very soon he leaves for col- lege, and we are both miser- able at the prospect. (He feels - he needs a special course for a more distinguished career.) "Will he stay faithful to me? How can I be sure? Or will he forget me once he Is gone? WORRIED" * If a man's love depends upon * his seeing you frequently, it le • a poor emotion indeed. Don't * insult your young man by * such a question. * The separation gives you the * chance to know him even * better. Letters you exchange + will keep you close, and re- * veal ideas and aspirations he * has not yet confided; in return * you can encourage him with * assurance of youe faith and TALL ORDER — Filling a tall order of glamour, Roberta Booth tries a streamlined stretch at Miami Beach. She says •she keeps in shape with exer- ciso on the beach while a lot •mf folks in cooler areas are get- ting theirs with a snow shovel. ISSUE 2 — l959 * future hopes, As he concen- * trates on his studies he may * not write as often as you * would like, but don't be * alarmed. Keep up your end of * the correspondence anyhow. * Go out with other men * friends, too, It will keep your * mind alert, and help you un- • derstand him better. • * * Problems attack all of us, and it Is good to have an under- standing of unseen friend who can see your situation objective- ly. Anne Hirst Is wise and kind, and has aided thousands of readers who turned to her. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., dNew Toronto, Ont. No More Sunburn? For the legion of fair -skinned folk who painfully sunburn but do not tan, Dr, S. W. Becker of the University of Illinois has hopeful news. Addressing the American Academy of Derma- tology in Chicago last month he reported that the highly public- ized "suntan pills" not only pro- tect against sunburn and in- crease tanning, but are helpful in fighting eczema, vitiligo (white spots) and psoriasis. At first these pills, called psoralens, seemed almost too good to be true. Now, Dr. Beck- er announced, after many months of research by several investigators„ the manner in which the psoralens affect the skin has been clarified. "The chemicals," he said last week, "act as photosensitizers. When taken by mouth, the patient be- comes more sensitive to sunlight for about eight hours. If the skin is exposed to a small amount of sunlight at this time, the hor- ny (top) layer thickens. "After about two weeks of daily exposure, the horny layer becomes quite thick, and pro- vides a filter which protects the skin against sunburn" and, at the same time, produces a good tan, Dr. Becker added, In ordin- ary sunburn, without drugs, the skin's brown color is lost as soon as the top layer of the skin scales off.. "But the horny layer produced by the psoralens does not peel, and it holds all the brown pigment" for about` six months. In this way, it would be possible to use the suntan pills in the early summer,. and be immune to sunburn for the rest of the season, Didi asked his father, "Is. It true that man has ' descended from monkeys?" "It's been pretty well proven." "But what about all the mon- keys who are monkeys now?" • "They were smart enough to want to stay that way!" Simple to Crochet rtsr 40. IV., pita 441 1.• Or4iA C44■,M.gr'AV tr�"ill'WiTAt jitrrr" 767 • {.4._ +fir Se lacy, delicate! Scatter daisy doilies here 'n' there to set off a vase? or knickknack. D4lightfully easy to crochet! Petal stitches form daisy on V - stitch background. Pattern 707:. directions for doilies 111/2 and 19 inches in No, 30 cotton. • - Send THIRTY-FIVE , CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this' pattern to LAURA WHEELER, Box 1, 123 EIghteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PAT. TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. A NEW 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book, JUST OUT, has lovely designs to' order: em- broidery, crochet, knitting, weav- ing, quilting, toys. In the book, a special surprise to make a lit - tie girl happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to color. Send 25 cents for this book. FORGOTTEN MAN — Guy Williams, who stars on TV as Zorro and Don Diego, is afraid those fictional characters will com- pletely overshadow his real personality. So he's hired a press agent to let people know about actor Guy Williams. Here's Guy giving the upsy-daisy to his 7 -month-old daughter, An- toinette, as wife Jolene looks on. The couple also has a 9.year- old son. What I am about to write could be called a few words for and against small town shopping ver- sus shopping centres. My remarks also take into 'consideration the age and agility of the shoppers. It isn't a plug for any store, either big or small — just a few observations based on my own experience. So here 'goes, All things being equal I like small stores. 1 like to shop where I am known; I like the friendly approach— "Good morning, Mrs., Clarke, what can we do for you today?" .But.alas, the accommo- dation isn't what, it ,used to, be, and that in itself creates a hard- ship for people past their prime. Here is an example of one day's shopping well before the Christ- mas rush. - • Scene: a small but busy nearby • town. Trouble started in .finding a place to park. My first call was at the bank, (Wouldn't you know it?) It was busy, with as many peoplebehind the wickets as in front yet only one teller was available. I stood In line for some time. There were two chairs but to sit meant losing my turn. Then I went to,, the drugstore— phone bill to pay, . two prescrip- tions to get filled; odds and ends to buy, I went to the pharmacy counter first -- only one of the druggists was on hand. In be- tween filling prescriptions he - had fourtelephone calls — and each one lengthy. I looked around for a place to sit. There wasn't a chair in sight, nor ,even a spa- cious ledge. It was my first time out after battling a virus bug. It was cold outside but inside my fur coat was too hot and felt like a ton weight. Finally I noticed a steep step to the pharmacy de- partment. I asked the druggist could I sit there until he was through. Which I did as he didn't offer to get me a chair. My next call was for groceries. That wasn't too bad. There was parking space and I got along fine until it came to checking out. Then of course I had to wait my turn as there was a clerk at only one of the pay -desks. My last call was. at a jewellers to leave Partner's watch for cleaning. The saleslady was busy with a travel- ler and apparently her business with him was more important than waiting on customers. More standing. By the time I got home I'd had it. Well, that and similar experi- ences brought about certain changes. Since then I have phoned the drugstore for any-' thing I want and had them de- liver. It is more trouble for them but considerably less for me. And after all, I am the customer. Then Partner•and : considered the banking situation and de- cided to open an account with a small branch that has just open- ed up within • walking distahge of . our ' home.. Provisions? Well, 'for everyday requirements I shop at the little village store but I make a trip to a shopping centre about once In ten days. There I don't find the very things 1 want missing from the shelves and there is never any problem about parking. But oh dear, how very impersonal -- no one knows me at all, But at least there is very little waiting -- that is, if I choose my time and avoid the rush hours. Department store buying , . that's a nightmare, I do very llIttle. Instead I use the phone and the mail order catalogues, To sum up I would suggest that small town stores offer more accommodation for customers. Surely at least one chair could be provided for those who need to rest. And wouldn't it be pos- sible for branch banks to have at .least two ,tellers on duty at all times? Local post offices might also provide a bench or a couple of chairs for' waiting customers. Well, we had another experi- ence last week, of a very differ- , ent nature -- a sort of seeing is believing affair. Coming through the village one day we saw a fox, right in the middle of the ,road. It dodged in and out among several cottages and then sat down in an orchard, as if be- wildered. We came 'home and called the police. Two days later a fox hunt was organized. Re- sult, one fox killed about two miles from here. We don't know yet whether it was rabid. Next day I. took Taffy for a rabies shot. I would have taken him before but he wasn'.t,old enough. Yesterday a neighbour reported a cat had taken a fit in her drive- way. Really this rabies outbreak has everyone worried, People with .children and animals can't be too careful. And no one should befriend any stray ani- mal that comes around, Rough on the animals but safety comes first, Take your own animals to be inoculated. Most districts have free clinics at a central location. Inquire from the police or the Township council. Animals show no ill effects from the shot. They are luckier than humans who suffer considerably. For that rea- son inoculation is not given unless a person has been bitten or otherwise in contact with an animal known to be rabid. "It is alcohol, and alcohol alone that is responsible ,for your present plight," said the judge. "Thank you, your Honor, for saying that," the prisoner said. "You're the first person that has not said that it was all my fault." New York ' City Without Papers Varied substitute news chan- nels have opened up in this r.ewspaperless city, but their to- tal effect does not begin to fill the information void. News bulletins distributed by some large firms to their cus- ;omers are .among the unusual and spontaneous methods of piercing the printed -news, cur- tain which the lengthening de- livery workers strike hap drawn over this city. Schrafft's serves two one. Nage bulletins a day to patrons in half of its 39 restaurants along with the menu. The' news is picked of radio broadcasts, At Pennsylvania Station, the Long Island Rail Road flashed news bulletins on a screen et the start of the strike. Now it has set up a screen of 12 panels slowly revolving with latent news. Items are phoned in from the city desk of the Long Island Press, one of the nine strike- bound papers. Passengers of the New Yore Central Railroad each night are handed one-page news digests in the Grand Central concourao or can find them on their seats in the trains. About 45,000 such sheets are passed out daily. -- Out-of-town newspapers, as well as news and feature maga• zines, sell fast, The heaviest de- mand is for stock -market and sports news. A • spokesman for Hotaling's News Agency said: "They'll take any paper as long as it carries those two kinds of news." Sales of foreign periodi- cals at that agency have in- creased 25 to 30 per cent The Dallas News reportedly flies in :00 copies each day, one-half for prominent Texans, the rest for general sale. "Man, those • crazy Texans," was the comment from a taxi driver quoted by the Wall Street Journal (which continues to operate as usual,), Those of the city's ubiquitous newsstands still in operation sell anything remotely- connected with news. Publications such as the Hobo News were seen sold on Park and Fifth Avenues, writes Frederick W. • Roevekamo . in The Christian Science Mon: - tor. A team of Harvard University students sold copies of the Har- vard Crimson in a marathon sales campaign last week., Te avoid police interference for un— licensed sales, they gave away the papers and then asked for "contributions." After at least 30 sleepless hours of selling, they told a tele- vision interviewer that the ,Crimson' was selling on Times Square as well as among Har- vard alumni along Fifth and Madison Avenues. Radio and television stations have -increased the frequency of their' news programs, WCBS-TV alone added six dailyshows: one of 30 minutes, one o 25 minutes, two of 15 minutes, and two of five minutes each. Networks also are receiving editorials and reviews of books and plays from strike -bound papers such as the New -York Times and the Herald Tribune for use on the air. Broadway Theatre business reportedly is seriously slowed down, since patrons miss the reviews and ads to guide them in buying tickets. The national syndicate serv- "I really had to drag. George along." ices of both papers continue to send out staff -gathered news, but If New Yorkers want to read them they must catch an out-of- town paper. Meanwhile, an Associated Press survey estimated the total loss in newspaper revenue at 1,5 million dollars a day and 3.8 million dollars for Sunday's edi- tions, Ancient Sport, Except for archery, lawn bowl- ing is our oldest known sport. It was declared Illegal by Ed- ward III way back in 1361, be- cause he feared it would sup- plant the bow and arrow — then our principal means of defence— as a• pastime. When the ban was lifted it became so popular in the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries that many noblemen had their own greens laid down. Women played it in those days. Henry II's wife, Eleanor, confessed that when she was feeling irritable a game had "a sweetening effect" on her tem- per. Henry VIII had a green laid at Whitehall Palace, although at the time the game was once more illegal - banned by his own act! One suggested origin of bowls is that an ancient king of Scot- land amused himself by rolling the heads of his enemies along a flat meadow towards a peg stuck in the turf. There may be something in it, for even to -day the woods clustered round the jack are referred to as the "head." Q. Is It proper for an oMce girl to use perfume? A. Only, if she keeps her per- fume down to a mere "hint." Her perfume must not "shout." A -B -C Easy to Sew PRINTED PATTERN 488 Sufis ' 2-10 Il/ 1tg.4444 Little girls love , the merry, whirl of fashion's new Trapeze line as they turn, dance, skip! Choose school,- going cotton oP party -pretty velveteen. Printed Pattern 4882: (h»- •dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 takes 1s yards 35 -inch fabric; Yi yard contrast. Printed directions on each pat. tern part. Easier, accurate. • Send. FIFTY CENTS (stamp, cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, A D D R E S S, STYLE Send order to ANNE ADAMS Box I, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont, OLD-FASHIONED COUNTRY WINTER — Amish buggies In the snow lend a turn -of -the -century look to this scene, Breakneck modern pace hasn't disturbed a flake of this serene country winter. Buggy owners were attending :meeting. Defied Killer To Win Trophy. No other sports tournament can rival the Davis Cup for the way in which the honors go round, Great Britain, Australia, France and the United States have all held, the trophy for a period of years without inter- ruption. Once they lose, usually they have taken years to get it back again, Just now, over in Britain there are signs that they are get- ting strong enough to make a real challenge once more, and that the 20 -odd years "in the wilderness" are coming to an end, This story of a week- end in Paris in 1933, which end- ed in the Cup's returning to Britain after an absence of 21 years — a victory which ended the hoodoo that seemed to haunt the players and shattered France's domination of this fam- ous international lawn tennis event. France had held the Cup since 1927after two years as losing finalists, Ill all those eight years they had relied on only four players - Jean Bototra, Rene Lacoste, Jacques Brugnon and Henri Cochet — the "Four Mus- keteers", as they were, called Now the team was breaking up. Lacoste had retired and in his place the French authorities were giving a chance to a new- comer named Andre Merlin, The draw brought Merlin on court in the first match, against Austin. i The Englishman, anxi- ous to strike a quick demoraliz- ing blow, swept his young op- ponent off the court in Less than an hour: the score, 6-3, 6-4, 6-0, tells its own story. Cochet revived French hopes with a display against Perry that had the strongly partisan crowd cheering for minutes on end and that had an unexpected yet im- portant sequel. , .The veteran Frenchman followed Austin's example and gave his opponent no chance to settle down. He was leading 4-1 before Perry began to get a grip on himself and pulled back to 4-4, Five times Cochet was within e stroke of winning the set, yet each time Perry pulled him back. TAR the Englishman -=-/E+et n douBle fault to lose at 10-8, This upset Perry and he could do nothing right at the start of the second, Cochet led 4-2 be- fore the Englishman recovered his touch to draw level, take the lead, and finally coast home at 6-4, and when he took the first two games in the third set the match seemed over. But Cochet, far from spent, pulled up to lead 5-3 and was in sight of capturing the set. Once more, however, fortunes turned and again Perry drew level, finally winning at 8-6. The two men had been playing hard for nearly two hours in tropical heat. Cochet looked tir- ed, but after trailing 3-1 he took the next five games to draw level at two sets all. Immedi- ately pandemonium broke out, and it was some minutes before order could be restored and the game resumed, , ,0 Perry -realized he had lost the set through being too anxious to win it quickly, and he did not repeat his error in the decider, Instead, it was Cochet who "blew up" tq lose at 6-1; Next day the French pair won the doubles. so the Last day be- gan with Britain leading 2-1, Austin facing the wily Cochet. Lacking Perry's stamina, "Bun- ny" tired after winning the first set. Coehet became the hero of the French crowd with a win at 5-7, 0-4, 4-6, 8-4, 6-4 to make the series two all, As Perry and Merlin came out for the deciding match, the crowd's sympathies naturally were with the young French- man, He had the responsibility of trying to keep the Cup in France against the man who was proving himself the greatest British player of his genera- tion. Would nerves ruin Merlin, or would the tide of enthusiasm inspire him to win? For a time it seemed the crowd and Merlin would prove an unbeatable combination. Per- ry,` plainly affected by the cheering, lost the first set 6-4. After leading 4-3 in the second he lost his service and the next game, Merlin nestled only one point for the set; -add the crowd went crazy. Witji ;h 2-0 lead, he seem- ed sett yv#rh, But Perry, grit. ting his ' t e h, grimly returned everyt]hirr'k 4nd at last the young Frenchman; overcome by the ex- citement, cracked, He lost that vital point; Perry pulled up and took the set at 8-6 to level the match and skated through the next at 6-2, Merlin made one last effort. As against Cochet two days pre- viously, Perry became too eager to finish it, and his 4-1 lead in the fourth set was whittled away and Merlin got to within a point of 6-6, The Frenchman had now be- come the killer at the net. Four successive strokes from him were all smashes, Yet each time Perry . returned them. His fourth "miracle" return was all that was necessary, Merlin could not\ get the ball across again. Perry had won the point, any quickly took the set and the match. The Davis Cup had gone back to Britain, Appropriately, It stayed there as long as Perry remained in the Davis Cup team. During World War II, a pri- vate and a sergeant were court- martialed for striking a colonel. Asked why he had doneit, the sergeant explained that the colonel, while passing down the line of review, had stepped on his sore foot, "Instinctively," said the ser- geant, "I threw up my guard, like anyone would do, and let hint have It before I realized what had actually happened. It was an accident, I can assure you." Then the buck private was asked for his explanation. "Well, you see, sir," he replied, "when I saw the sergeant strike the colonel, I thought the war was over." ON THEIR WAY HOME — Princess Grace of Monaco posed with her husband, Prince Rainier, la's they, boarded a plane to return home for Christmas. TheyYhad been in the States on a vaca- tion for the past month, but returnedtospend the holidays with their two children. They left from New York's International Air- port. • WARM FRIENDS — Pert Dixie Qualset takes a wintry walk with her dog, who has just the thing every dog needs—earmuffs. The dog's ears are a bit too long for the muffs, but a little warmth is better than none in the cold weather. The Great Battle Of The Books The Soviet Union has been throwing "the book" at the United States now the United States is throwing it back. It has been throwing millions of books around the ' world — books in some 50 different lan- 'guages. Books about this coun- try — the classics, books on eco- nomics, history, fiction. As a result, if a popularity con-' test were to be condticted today on the most popular American, way out front in that Gallup Poll would be—Abraham Lin- coln, In one Far Eastern country, a 25 -cent paperback book on Lincoln sold out practically over- night -25,000 copies! A best seller on the streets in Arab countries is, of all things, "Little Women." Some 60,000 copies of the Arabic translation have already been snapped up— ',by little Arab women. In an Asian country, one mer- chant rented doorway space for a bookstall featuring the . low- cost, paperback English transla-, Wm. He is reported to be doing a flourishing business during ,the day, and subletting the space for sleeping quarters at night. The popularity of these paper- backs is such, rumor has it, that one trucklioad was hijacked and sold on the "black market." It is thought they may even be trickling through the Bamboo Curtain into Red China from border countries where they are available. The book program, under the United States Information Agen- cy, began in' 1950. The agency cooperates with American and foreign publishers in the publi- cation, translation, and distribu- tion of these editions, Since that time, more than 44,000,000 copies of 4,400 Amer- ican titles have been put out in 50 languages. For many years, Soviet Com- munist books, selling at extreme- ly low prices, have been flooding the book markets of the world, or have been given away free. This country has entered the battle of the books—that is, the battle to tell the American story through its own literature — under a three-part program. This includes assistance to publishers in the production of hat'd cover but inexpensive, books; produc- tion of low-cost paperbacks; and the sale abroad by American publishers of English language paperbacks, The latter program is made at- tractive to publishers here under a special currency arrangement by which -the government guar- antees that they may convert into dollars the foreign curren- cies obtained from the sale of their books in foreign bookstores. Interest abroad in Americans and their country is indicated by the "best sellers" among the translations—sonic of which, in- cidentally, are produced by hand presses under the most primitive publishing conditions. American capitalism has been so denounced by Soviet Russia' as to stimulate a great curiosity about it, apparently. At any rate one of the most popular transla- tions is "Capitalism in America" by Frederick M, Stern, published in 25 languages. Another "best seller" is Fred- erick Lewis Allen's "The Big Change" abbut changing condi- tions in the United States be- tween 1900 and 1050. Also, "This 1 Remember" by Eleanor Roose- velt, in 18 languages; "America," by Stephen Vincent Benet; "USA,: The Permanent Revolu- tion" by Russell Davenport, in 17 languages. "The Fall of a Titan" by Igor . Gouzenko, in 17 languages, and ;ta ARTFUL - Scuiptor as well as optometrist, Sidney Eisler uses a bust of himself to check the fit of a new type reading glasses. Eisler's patented glasses are small enough so that the wearer can see over them when not reading. Low ear ' pieces don't interfere with side vision. "The New Soviet Empire" by David Dallin, in 20 languages, are high on the popularity list, indicating curiosity also in de- velopments in the Soviet Union, writes Josephine Ripley in The Christian Science Monitor. Such classics as John Stuart Mill's "Essay on Liberty," "The Federalist Papers," and other similar writings are going well in some countries, The -"Essay on' Liberty" was actually reviewed in half a dozen different news- papers in Damascus, and Syria after its publication there. Japan is taking to the Ameri- can classics, and the books are being used in schools in that country,, 'Intellectual circles in Italy have been ]raking "`The Federalist Papers" a subject of seminar discussions. The American books do not go into Soviet Russia or its satel- lites, They are distributed, how- ever, in Poland and Yugoslavia. The Yugoslays have been ;par- ticularly interested in transla- tions of books on the war by Generals Eisenhower, Clark, and Bradley, but also go for such books as "The Sea Around Us" by Rachel Carson; "The Life of George Gershwin"; Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Letter"; "Moby Dick"; and works on the Ameri- can economy. The program has been consid- ered tremendously effective, and one of this country's best long- range foreign programs. But it is still far smaller in scope than that of the Soviet Union which prints many millions of books annually for distribution abroad, with stepped-up output to such areas as the Near and Middle East. One Russian publication, inci- dentally, has a familiar sounding title: "Goldilocks and the Three I3cars," but not as familiar is the name of the author: "Leo Tol- stoi"! A staid gentleman, honorary judge at a horse show, was up- set by the dress of some of the girls, "Just look at that young per- son with the 'poodle cut, the cigarette and the blue jeans," he decried to a bystander. "Is it a boy or a gtrl?" "It's a girl, She's my daugh-, ter." "Oh, forgive me sir," apolo- gized the old fellow. "I never dreamed you were her father." , "I'm not," snapped the other. "I'm her mother." 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 dolour catalogue and separate confi- dential wholesale price sheet. Murray Soles, 3822 St. Lawrence, Montreal, BABY CHICKS GET In for the early markets with Bray Chicks. Prompt shipment on day- olds ayolds and few started Broiler Chicks Ames, dual purpose cockerels and pullets. Order February -March now. Request pricellst. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. DAIRY PRODUCTS WANTED FARMERS having churning cream to market will find it profitable ship- ping to City Creamery, Toronto, where you get the best deal. We supply cans and remit promptly. Let us hear from you, City Creamery, 1207 Queen E. FOR SALE •SALE of New Surplus electronic sup- plies and tubes. Radio, Amplifier and other electronic kits, Priced below wholesale. Write: Master Kit Company, Box 206, Belleville, Ontario. WELDERS for farms and shops. From 156.50 and up. Also used welders from 0,00 and up, Forney Arc Welders rotted, Box 251, Station D, Ottawa, Ontario, HELP WANTED GRADUATE NURSES! New 50 bed hos. ppltal, Evening and night positions on 0.11, Wing $310.00, Apply Director of Nurses Memorial Hospital, Carlsbad, New Mexico, INSTRUCTION EARN More ! Bookkeeping, Salesman- ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street, Toronto _ MEDICAL SATISFY YOURSELF — 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 wil respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem, Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3,43 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2865 St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO OPPORTUNITIES FOR, MEN AND WOMEN LEARN AUCTIONEERING. Term Soon. Free catalogue.: Relach Auction Col- lege, Mason City, Iowa, America. LEARN to repair watches at home or Mica Free folder. 4379 St. Hubert, Montreal, Que, NEW TO CANADA — Proven "Magic Voice" Courses solve presonal prob- lems. Invest $100,00, Get back $247.50. Courses retail $49.50. Audio Suggestion, 204 Mercantile Building, Edmonton. "PROFITS FOR FARMERS" LEARN how you can realize up to $50.00 per ton for manure by pro- ducing dried manure for gardeners and flowergrowers. Full instructions 11.00. Contract Farming, Dept F. 111 Hen- don Ave., Wlllowdale Ont. ISSUE 2 — 1959 to burglar's wife was being vigorously cross-examined by the prosecuting attorney. Attorney: Madame, you are the wife of this prisoner? Witness: I am. Attorney: You knew he was a burglar when you ]Harried him? Witness: I did. Attorney: May I ask you how you came to marry such an in- dividual? Witness: You may. I was get- ting old and had to choose be- tween a burglar and a lawyer. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN WORK available in Auto hauling 19 the West if you can qualify and ow or can purchase late model Tracto#, Contact Dominion Auto Carriers Ltd. Highway 98, Windsor, Ontario, BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dlgnfied profession; good wages, Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates, America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free, Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W. Toronto Branches: 44 King St, W,, Iiamilton 72 Rideau Street Ottawa PATENTS FETHERSTONHAUGH & Com pan y Patent Attorneys, Established 1890, 600 University Ave., Toronto Patents all countries, PERSONAL WE set Poems to music for small fee. We furnish records and copies. For free examination, send poems today to: Successful Song Co., P.O. Box No, 7702, Nashville 9, Tenn, 51.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty-five deluxe personal requirements. Latest cata- logue included. The Medico Agency, Box 22 Terminal "Q" Toronto, Ont. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. FILMS developed and 8 magna prints 400 In album. 12 magna prints 600 in album. Reprints 50 each, KODACOLOR Developing roll 51.00 (not including prints). Color prints 350 each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 ex- posures mounted In slides 51.25. Color prints from slides 350 each. Duplicate transparencies 250 each. POULTRY STARTED chicks,' Pullets, Npn•Sexed and Cockerels. Turkey Poults at bar- gain prices. The reason — better hatches than expected. 4 Weeks Old egg breed Pullets 525.95; 10 Weeks old 531.95; 4 Weeks Old Turkey Poults 525.95; 7 Weeks Old 526,95. Don't miss these bargains, Send for complete price list, TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO SWINE REGISTERED Canadian Yorkshires July boars 555, through December. Papers extra. 6 June sows 5350, All are of score. qualified as sows. Dam of Sire has 89 qualified. Every sow put on test. He was first and Reserve Junior boar 1957, Clarence Wallace, Iroquois, Ont. Phone 24067. TEACHERS WANTED WANTED: First Class, Experienced teacher, To begin duties In January. Salary, $400.00 per tnonth. FOR details contact: Mrs. Virginia M. Cameron Sec. Treas., S, S. No. 1 Con- nell Pickle Crow, Ontario. .MERRY MENAGERIE tit flusVll•16 mr,"qr':rab. bM,vlb Ol M1en.l; µp "What's more, I bet theynever do find us:" YOU CAN SLEEP TO -NIGHT AND RELIEVE NERVOUSKE$$ TO-MORROWI To be happy and tranquil instead of nervous or for a good night's sleep, take Sedicin tablets according to directions. SEDICIN® $1.00-$4.95 TABLETS Drug Stores Only' "You mean to say— just 3 -a -day may send backache away!" Sounds good! Logical, tool You see the normal job of the kidneys is to remove excess wastes and acids —so often the cause of backache—from the system. Dodd's Kidney Pills stimulate the kidneys in this function and so may bring you that welcome relief from backache they have many others. Try just 3 -a -day. You can depend on Dodd's — in the blue box with the red band, e4 = Dodds'' ;• ICT O,N GY..; Pills DURABLE — Archie • Moore, 40 -you -guess -how -many -years -old, whales away during his Montreal light -heavy bout with Yvon Durelle. Archie retains the title and now pegs his all-time knock- out record at 127. 4 PAGE 4 TEE RUTH STANDARD 1 1 New and Second Hand SKATES FOR SALE An Excellent Supply Of HOCKEY STICKS AND EQUIPMENT SKATES SHARPENED R. W. MADILL'S SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The 'Home of Good Quality Merchandise" News Of Auburn The members of the Waikerburn family, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McDoug- Club entertained their husbands and all, Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Toll and Mr. families lust week in the Orange $all, and Mrs, Hugh McCrostle, entertained with a large attendance, Mrs. George their friends last Tuesday evening in Schneider, the president, was in charge the Blyth Memorial Hall, Music for and MIss Margaret A. Jackson at the dancing was supplied by Allan's Or - piano for the singing of the Carols. chcstra; of Kirkton. A delicious lunch Recitations were given by Kathy was served to the many guests, Campbell __�. Mel nnnrl. „",,,,;.w.,., ,,.,,w,,, Douglas 'CI b lilold Final1vlectmg played a mWn's card. Low prices went burn. The novelty prize to l,,obert Grasby. Following lunch, doming Was enjoyed With Bruce's Orchestra furni- shing the music, Mrs. Richard Proc- ter, the president, welcomed the guests and thanked them for their support. Sitotinsday, iahttat" ",10 O Belgr'ave News iA very suecessful Euchre and DAnce was held in the Foresters Hall on Fri- day evening by the Women's Institute. Twenty-six tables of euchre were in play with C. R. Coultes in charge, The winners pf high scores ware Mrs. Ken. Wheeler and Mrs, R.. Wahcer, who tf Arch:lrr.ioault and Billy Lapp. Duets' were sung by Jerry Duizer, Joan Mc- i The seventh meeting of the Auburn Dougall, Nancy Lapp, Brenda Anchor- The 4-11 Club met last Friday bault and Wendy and Kathy Schneider, evening at the home of their leader, Highland Fling dance done by, Ruth Mrs, Ed, Davies, at 7.30 p.tn. The pros - and Eileen Schneider. A trio number !dent, Marilyn Daer, opened the meet - was sung by Dougle Archambault, Bil- ing with the 4-1-1 Pledge, The minutes ly Lapp and Bobby Schneider; 3 girls of the previous meeting were read by also did the Hula Hoop Song; A hum- the secretary, Mario Leatherland. Final orous skit ' "In the Barbershop" was arrangements were made for Achieve - given by Tod thinking, Lorne Homing, .•1111+.4-41.+-.+N.-.+.-.4-...-.�++..-...+.•N....-+.. Leonard Arcllambalcit, Jim McDougall end Joe Bunking. Cr•okinole and cards were enjoyed. Gifts wore exchanged by the Club Sisters who also bought for their husbands. Bags of candy and treats were given to the children. A beautiful quilt trade bi' the club mem- bers, on which tickets had been sold, was won by Mr. Charles Asquith. Mr. Wihner Errington drew the ticket. Pro- ceeds from the sale of tickets is to be donated to the cemetery board at Ball's and Hope Chapel. A delicious lunch �,.....�... ..rH •was served by the members of the .,. club, IW.fNMNMK . IN....414~•••I.MN Get Your Simpsons New Sale Catalogue Now Phone 80, Blyth, PELTON'S 5c to $1. STORE MILL ENDS & DOLL HOSPITAL BLYTH, ONT. ►++++++++•-f+-►+-+•- +++++-++++-++� +++c+e-.•• 1 The Young People's Society of Knox Presbyterian Church met in the Sab- bath School of the Church with a good attendance. Edgar Leatherland, the president, was in charge with Shirley Brown nt the piano. After singing 0 Holy Night, Psalm' 84 was read respon- . , sively. The scripture lesson, Luke 2:1- 13 was rend by Gordon Deer. The min- - ides of the previous meeting were read by Helen Youngblut, -who also called the roll. The offering was received by Gordon Daer, who also gave the treas.: urers repoiit. Rev, D. J. Lane spoke on the first five Shorter Catechisms and gave their meaning.. He also told the • life story about Philip Brooks who wrote the song, "0 Little Town of Bethlehem." The young people were di- vided into groups and contests were enjoyed pertaining to the Christmas Story. The meeting 'was closed with prayer. Mrs. Craig last week. ,•-e-e-e-e.e-es,.H.. +-++++++++.+-er+.r++++�+++-s++• torr. and Mrs. Fred -Toll with their I Mr. and Mrs, John Doer and Mr. Bob iDaer visited last Thursday with Mr. and IMrs. Norman McClinchey end Cathy. The annual school meeting of U.S.S. No. 5 was held last weals in the school room with a fair attendance Mr. - Maurice Bean was appointed chairman for the evening, The secretary-treasur cr Mr, Frank Raithby, gave his reports. Mr, William Moss was appointed to be - the new trustee, replacing Mr. Robert Turner whose term had expired; Other trustees are J, Keith Arthur, chair• man, and Mr. Ted East. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Cliff ' Brown on obtaining 2nd priie for their - decorated service station. Mr, Arthur Grange, of Falcon Bridge' spent New Years at his home here. Miss Sadie Carter and Miss Elma - Mutch attended the funeral of their aunt, Mrs Fred Mutch at Clinton last week. Mr, Bob Yungblut returned to Shel- Vourne last Saturday after spending vacation with his mother, Mrs, Ralph Munro and Mr, Munro. i 'Congrntulaticns to Mr. end Mrs, i Donald King, of Strathroy, on the birth of their son last week at Strain - "The Huron County Council will meet in the Court House, Goderich, Ontario, on TUESDAY, JANUARY 20th, 1959, AT 2.00 P.M. All communications, notices of deputations and accounts must be in the hands of the Clerk not later than noon, Saturday, January 17th,1959." 52-2. JOHN G. BERRY, Clerk County of Huron. ment Day in Blyth on February 7, Sev- eral of the girls made and demonstrat- ed how to cut ginger cookies. Next Saturday, January 10, the Club g'r1s will visit the Howson and Howson Flour Mill at Blyth to see the process that wheat is put through to make flour. All record books must be -finish- ed by that day and handed to the lead - ere. The Mary Stewart Collect was re- peated to bring the meeting to a close. Lunch was served by Mrs. Davies, assisted by Mrs. Audrey Machan, and ginger cookies, cheese and tea also ser- ved: Eileen Schneider was chosen to make the Comments on the 1'vltibit "Wheat and its Products" at Achieve- ment Day. Mr, and Mrs, J. Hembley were Lon- don visitors last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Maitland' Allen returned from Flint, Michigan, last Saturday where they spent the holiday seascn with her sister, Mrs. William Coates, Mr, and ares, Les Vincent and fam- ily, of London, spent New Years with Mr. and Mrs, Harold Vincent and fam- ily, as did' at: ter members of the fam- ily. Mr. and Taira. Goldie Wheeler and Lc;idon with Mr. and Mrs Ii, Wheeler. meeting. family, of • The fie% meeting of the Belgrave "Cooking Meddlers". opened with u demonstration on making date squares by Barbar'l Krug and Marie Coultas, The business part of the �Nreting w•as opend by singing "0 Canada" and the secretary gave her report, The group decided to invite Mrs, McAllister, the home economist; to be present at the next meeting on December 20 at 9:3 ► a.m. at the home of Mrs, 11, Irwin, A- chievement Day will be February 14. The roll call was answered by nam- ing a food. product. Alter each cer- eal was named, Ors. Irwin told some- thing about Its food value. The home assignrnent is to make any two recipes in the members pamphlet and to com- plete her record books, Recipes are to be chosen from gingerbread, Johnn;g cake or any quickbread and report on 'success are to be given at the next News OF Westfield Mr, and Mrs, Carl Deans and daugh- ters, Elizabeth and Sandra, of. Guelph, were New Years visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell. Elizabeth re- m'ained to spend a few days with Gwen, returning home on Sunday. Gwen also returned to Hamilton to re- sume her studies at McMaster Univer- sity. Mr. and Mrs. Norman M:Dowell I accompanied them back. 1 Friends and neighbours m t at the home of Mrs. Fred Cook on Wednes- day evening to visit with Mr. and Mts. Mr. Coates. Wm. Bush, of Toronto, and to see the and Mrs, Sea oaly Johnston visited last Old Year out and the New Year 9n. gam - Saturday with Mrs. Leslie Johnston, of All'enjoyed the evening spent. in es, singing and dancing, Lunch was Blyth. served. , Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Davies spent Christ- mas with Mr. and Mrs. C. Thistle, and Mr. and Mrs. Norman M^Dotti ell, Gerald and Gwen and Elizabeth Deans, other relatives in London and on Sun- day visited at Belmont. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Haines, Mar- garet and Eddie, spent the holiday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Rathbun, of Hillsburg. Miss Margaret Craig, of Bluevale, visited her uncle, Mr. Arnold Craig and ANNUAL JANUARY CLE RANCE SALE ENTIRE $50,000.00 STOCK 15 TO 50% OFF THROUGHOUT THE EN- TIRE STORE. NO LAY AWAITS, NO EXCHANGES, NO CHARGES, AND NO ALTERATIONS. NO SALE SLIPS AND NO BLACK DIAMOND STAMPS WILL BE ISSUED FOR THE DURATION OF -THIS SALE. SALE STARTS FRI., JAN. qth ALL SALES FINAL 1 15% Off on all Work Clothing through the Store. 20% Off on all Leather and Rubber Footwear. 20% Off on all Underwear, Dress Shirts, Sport Shirts, and all Staple Goods. 25% Off on Women's and Children's Winter Coats and -Car Coats. 25% Off on Women's and Misses Dresses and housecoats. 60 Pair Women's Plastic Rain Shoes, Cuban Heels only , . Special 99c 25 Dozen Ladies Full Fashioned Ny- lon Hose, 2 pair to a customer (Subs) $1.00 9 Young Men's Suits (2 pants) sizes :34 to 38 only Special $23.95 11 Men's Melbourne Flannel (2 pant) Suits, Sizes 36 to 46, Special 26.95 11 Men's All Wool Worsted (1 and 2 pant) Suits, sizes 36 to 46, Regular $59.95 Special $39.95 5 Men's 100% Nylon Parkas, Quilted Linings, Reg. $2.1.95, Spec. 19.95 7 Boys Suburban Coats, Quilted Ling ings, sizes 8 to 16 years Spec. 7.95 4 Men's All Wool Suburban Coats, Regular $16.95 Special $10.95 Men's Flannel Work Shirts, in Small and Medium Only, " Special $1.69 Young Men's Dress Slacks, Reg. to $10.95 Special $5.95 Rays Flannel Plaid Shirts (Sanfor; ized) Special $1.59 Boys Station Wagon Caps, Spec. 1.00 1 Rack, Ladies Blouses, Short and Long Sleeves, made of Terylenes, Dacrons, Crepe and Cottons. Don't miss on this give away • special. Come early. Regular 6.95, Special 1.00 1 Rack of Cbidren's Dresses, Skirts and Jumpers, Regular to 6.95 Special 1..99 Women's and Misses Flan. Pyjamas and Nightgowns. Come early. Special 1.99 Women's all wool Gloves and Mitts Special 75t: 50 pr. Ibex Flannelette Blankets, first quality, all white with borders or plain grey 70X90, Spec..... 5.50 Boys' and Girl's Flan. Pyjamas, sizes 2 to 6X, Spec... 1.59 or 2 pr. 3.00 25% off on all Luggage in the Store. MEN ! this is your chance to buy your Spring Work Boots at 'such a Tremendous Reduction during this Sale. The Arcade Stores • STORES IN BRUSSELS AND BLYTH roy hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Toll, of Ham- ilton, spent Christmas with theu• fars- ilies and then left fur Florida to spend the holiday. Air. and Mrs, Frank Rai`i:bv spent New Year's Day with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Raithby, Goderich, The annual Public meeting of the Auburn Library will be held on Mon- ►�+� day evening, Janary 12 at 8 p.m. in 1 o•O'++ +~+'~'~ 444-•-•-•444+++++4444, the Library rooms. Have you had the measles This is the topic of every conversation the last week or so since the terrific ep- idemic of this disease bro,te out in this community. Dr. Weir says that r. (similar outbreak of the same ddserne came in 1913 after the school Christ- mas Concert, the same as this year. ;The children are very sick and the at- tendance at school on Monday was very low, (Miss Ruth Andrews, of London, and Miss Marie Andrews, Hanlliton, spent the New Year's holiday with their parents, Mr, and Mrs. Warner An- drews and farnily. Mrs. Fred Plaetzer returnei that week -end after a visit in Lucknow - with Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Johnston and Mr. Milton Plunkett, at Toronto. spent Friday afternoon with Godes•:':h relatives. Mr. and Mrs. K. K. Dawson, of Dun- gannon, with Mr. and Mrs, Norman McDowell on Friday evening. Mr. Franklin Campbell left for New Brunswick on Tuesday to resume his position with the railroad. Mr. Gordon Smith is a patient in 1 Wingham Hospital. We wish him a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell at- tended the funeral on Monday of her aunt, the late Mrs. Herbert Osbal1e - ton, of Benmiller,, held at Ball and Mulch funeral home, Clinton, The recent stormy weather meant the cancellation,of School busses. Mrs. Robertson braved the cold and blocked roads to carry on her duties at S.S. No. 6, HURON LII3EftAL ASSOCIATION ANNUAL MEETING TUESDAY,JANUARY-13---- at 8:30 p.m. { GUEST SPEAKER: . ROY FIRTH, OF TORONTO Vice-president of Ontario Liberal Association. Everyone Welcome GOD SAVE THE OUEEN • E. W. Tucky, Exeter, President. W. L. White, RR 2, Seaforth, Secretary. 1 SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY: TURKEY DINNERS Make up a farnily party and take advantage of this spe ial.., HURON -GRILL BLYTH •ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. 1 Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs, J. C. Stoltz who will oeleegate their 80th wedding anniversary next Sunday, January 11, 1059. EDGAR GAUNT INJURED IN FALL -1 Edgar Gaunt of the 9th concession ui • East Wawanosh sullfcrcd a painful ac- cident en New Icar's night. A$ Mr, Gaunt was climbing the ladder to the straw mow to put down feed, his hand slipped on the rung tied he fell back- wards, landing heavily on his heels I lie was taken to Winghtun Hospital on Friday where X-ray showed that the bones in both heels were broken. , On Monday of this week casts were !applied to both feet. Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R: A..SPOTTON. ++ a44 -+++r++++4 -++w+++++ • NOTICE TO (AR OWNERS All car and truck owners in the Village of Blyth are requested to refrain from parking on Village streets from 1 a.m. until 8 a.m., and anytime during snowplowing operations. Persons failing to comply with this request do so at the risk of being liable for any damage caused to their vehicle during snow plowing operations. Their cars will be taken away at the owners ex- pense.. This is a final warning. - Signed, JOHN BAILEY, Chief of Police. 04+4+44 44444•N+.+++ -N4 4++#,+.444.4+41+++44..4+44- +4.+ tired to lay, January 71 1059 Farmers Urged To Attend Forum Meetings by J. Carl Hemingway By the time you read this the first Farm Forum program on Vertical In- tegration will be over. I sincerely hope a large number of you tended your forum and reported your find- ings, 'These findings are important. The National office repor:s a great number of requezts for the findings of the Forums on the topic "Performance or. Personality," These requests are coming from Fair Boards, Agricultural Colleges, and Breeders, It isn't enough that Information gets to you; we must get your ideas back if anything is to be done. If you didn't attend Farrar Forum, and remember you have two chunces In this area, radio on Monday night at 8:30, and CKNX TV on 'Tuesday n•ight •rat 9:30, there will ,be she second in this series this coming week and the final the following week. Most of you have prnhably hear that Charles McInnis, president of the Ontario Hog Producers Association, was invited to speak at ,nveral meet- ings of Agricultural Producers in the United States, There, Vetilcal Inte- gration of the Broiler Industry is com- d 1 ••••••••••••44444444.1r, hire.4.••# 44....•,.+~.•.w•., MM-IdItN•N 'WALLACE'S DRY GOODS -,-Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES Yard Goods, Flannelette Pajamas, Winter Under- wear, Overshoes, etc. All Reduced for the Month of January. • Phone 73. Anyone leaving vehicles parked on "I'P''••''"" •~4."'~ •••40''"'"'4'''"'""" the side of the township roads do se at their own risk. The Township will I not hold themselves responsible for any damage caused by snow plows. —Stuart McBurney, Road Superb:- - tendent, 52-2 ' MYTH STANDARD 'piece and Is expanding 1.1.the product tion of hogs quite rapidly, It Is interesting to see that news, re- ports coming from these nteetins state SEWAGE DISPOSAL r PAGE 5 Have your septi: tanks pumped the , RUXY THEATRE CLiNTON, saidtary way, Schools and public buildings given prompt attention Now: ",t Certain Smile" Adult Enter - 414i Rossano Brazzl, Joan •18•t. Fon- taine, Christine Carere NOTE; This picture will not be shown on Saturday afternoon. For the child- ren we have "Taza, Son of Cochlse." Rates reasonable Te) Irvin that Producer Marketing such as islyilverton, 75X1 62 carried on by the Onturmo Hog Pro• -- ducers may well be the salvation of the family farm. Perhaps you could keep this In mind' while studying these farm forum programs. • ' As mentioned in previous articles, a Brucellosis information caanpaign will be corn -Welted shortly,. There will be a meeting within easy reach of you. This is an Importiant factor in the health of your family as well as a means of reducing losses in livestock. We hope all of you will cone and get I all the information. IN MEMORIAM GILLESPIE—In loving memory of our dear mother, Mary Ethel Gillespie, CATTLE SPRAYING • of Ayr, who passed away January IHave your cattle sprayed for lice, 6, 1950, and our dear father, George satisfaction guaranteed, at reasonable Murray Gillespie, of Ayr, who pas- prices. Contact Lewis Blake, sed away January 15, 1944. '42R6 or 95 Brussels. Their smiling ways and pleasant fazes Are a pleasure to recall, They had a kindly word for each, And died beloved by all.. Some day we hope to meet them, Some day, we know not when, To clasp their hands in the better land Never to part again, —Lovingly remembered by their daugh- ters," Sadie Hamm, Margaret Taman. Betty Bowes and their families, 52-1p, Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 1,30 p.m. IN BLYTII, PHONE B013 HENRY 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer. 05 -if, v! NOTICE TO. RESIDENTS O1' EAST 1 WAWANOSII TOWNS1III' Elliott Insurance Agency. BLYTH -- ONTARIO. Ivwb V W,/ /�.•Y INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farin Liability. ' WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 1.04, Residence Phone 140 4 •4+44.•+•+r+•-•-r1-•+H4-•H•-r-••.•••N •+•+• •••l ---CriintonMemorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -- . Tlt(MAs STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON; Business—IIu 2-6606 Residence—Hu 2-3869 MAN WANTED Unexpected change causes vacancy in Huron County. Splendid opportunity for year-round income. For details write Rawleigh's, Dept. A-136-917, 4005' Richelieu, Montreal. • 52.1 "PARENTS: Tint immunization •clinic for le ex Blyth and district pre-school children will be held at the Blyth Memorial Hall on January 14th from 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. This is the third in a current series of . clinics with protection available against ,. diptheria; whooping cough, tetanus Phone 24, Blyth small pox and polio'. phone 48-12 RENTAL SERVICE CATTLE CLIPPERS CEMENT MIXER (WITH MOTOR) WHEEL BARROW VACUUM CLEANER FLOOR POLISHERS BELT SANDER HEAVY DUTY ELEC- TRIC DRILL WEED SPRAYER, (3 Gal.) EXTENSION LADDER (32 feet) PIPE WRENCHES PIPE DIES & CUTTER Apply to Sparling's Hardware SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL. • CARD OF THANKS Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumpev {We would like to thank' the W.M.S. end cleaned. Free estimates, Louu and W.A. of the Blyth United and Pres- byterian Churches, the Women's In- utitute •and our many friends, who 0- EXETER:XETER: `: membered us with gifts; cards, lettfrs Business 41 and, personal visits during the holiday Residence 34 • season. It was deeply appreciated, : i� a Fre . • ••••-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-.44-#44•••-•-•44-444•-•-•44-•-•-•44-444-+•-••-•44 • •-4e.4s-4 4444± •-+-• • 0-•44 � �. , a" 11. Mt. and Mrs with a NEW C0 -0P BATTERY' for only $711 s95 BELGRAVE CO.OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION Belgrave • - Ontario • d 0 er, N.�NWNH`'-�1.1..IIM�NN /NI.NNI FPREST LONDFSBORO, ONT. Interior & Exterior Decorator Sunwcrthy Wallpaper Paints - Enamels - Varnishes Brush & Spray Painting. 04•4.441N,/ MW.IIVNMNNNIN,NJ.MI.N• EUCH171 PARTY Sponsored by Regal Chapter /To. 275 O.E.S., Blyth FRIDAY, JANUARY 9th at 8:30 p.m. At the Chapter Rooms, Dinsley Street Lunch will be served Admission 50 cents Everyone Cordially Invited. CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to thank all who remembered me with cards, gifts and treats, while a patient in Goderich hospital. Also Dr. Mills and purses and staff. 52-1. —Mrs, Oscar Ament. CARL) OF THANKS I wish to thank my good neighbours and the C.W.L. for their Friendly Greetings and Valuable Gifts sent to me during the holidays. 52.1p. —J. T. McCaughey. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday "Doctor At Large" Light-hearted nonsense, guaranteed to promote a pleasant degree of hilar• ity among viewers, Vistavision and Eastman color. Dirk Bogarde, Muriel Pavlow, Donald Sinden Thursday, Friday, Saturday "Spanish Affair" Romantic adventures filmed in the historical cities and hilly countryside 1 o� beautiful Spain. Cinemascop.: and color. Richard Kiley, Carmen Sevilla Jose Guardiola, •. '•+4.41+• •• 4+4$'• •-•-•-•-••••-•+_•_•• 1st Showing 2nd Showing, At The Air -Conditioned PARK GODERICH. NOW PLAYING— Robert Mitchum in "The Hunters? In Cinemascope and Technicolor. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday DOUBLE BILL Presenting an episode fro,n World War II in which a sergeant . le v ever when the general is r:i ie .. "Imitation General" As an added attraction Inc bright British comedy. • "DAVY" Alexander Know and Donald Sinden Thursday, Friday, Saturday Marjorie Main, Parker ti : ,'i •.iv and all the other Kettles in a riotous comedy adventure. "The Kettle's on Old Mac - Donald's Farm" a barnful of fun for every menthol of. the family. H44 •+N•44 a•+• tt.-'►444 "-' DEAD STOCK WANTED HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid in surou^ding districts for dead, old, sick or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor- ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth, 211112, if busy phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels, 15J6. Trucks available at all times, 34- 1, Mar. caD p'›-( Q Hg l gi4 4G? CV W C4 PA PA W FURNITURE UPHOLSTERED Full line of covers. Estimates given. Apply A. E. Clark, phone 208.14, Blyth. 50-4p. •^FILM DEVELOPING Films developed in 24 hours—in by 3 .p.m., back by 4 p.m. next day. Pel - ton's Variety Store, Blyth, Ont. 51-4 FOR SALE 10 pigs, 7 weeks old. Apply, Archie Young, phone 40R8, Blyth. 52-1p FOR SALE Kitchen extension table with three leaves, 4 kitchen chairs to match, and 1 rocker. Apply, phone 194, Blyth. 52-1p. BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Ann Hollinger Phone 143 CRAWFORII & 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 G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH 25.11 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. I hone HU 2=7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETR IST PATRICK s'r. • 1.TNGHAM, ONT. F\TF,NTNGC BY APPOINTMENT, (For Apotntment please phone 770 Wingham). Professional Eye Examinetton• Optical Services. ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERICH, ONT. Telephone 1011 — Box 478. DR. R. W. STREET Blvth. 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 :5R18, Blyth. George Nesbitt, George Powell, Auctioneer. Clerk. WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING, ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls Arc Used" Supply artificial breeding service for all breeds of cattle. If phoning long listance, simply ask for - Clinton, Zen- ' ith 95650. If it is a local call, use our regular number - Clinton, Hu 2-3441. For service or more information, call between:- 7:30 and 10:00 A.M. week days; 6:00 and 8:00 P.M. Saturday ev- enings. For cows noticed in heat on Sunday morning, do not call untll Monday morning. The quality is high and the cost low. FOR SALE Kitchenette buffet, light finish, with a glass door. Apply Mrs. Ray Vincent, phone 110, Blyth. 52-1p FOR SALE 19 pigs, 10 week old. Apply Russel MacDonald, hone 17R13, Blyth. 52 -Ip, —~ NOTICE Keem Knitting l_"omeany require 25 local ladies for part time home knitting by machine. No experience necessary. Apply box 447 Mount Forest.. If on rural route please give direction. 1 52-2 CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to thank all those who re- membered the baby and I with care!:, visits, treats end gifts, ,while in the hospital and since returning home, Special Rinks to Dr. Street end the nursing stacf of Clinton hospitnl. •-Mrs. Alvin Pengelly and Brenda Diane. 52-1p. CARL) OF TiHANKS We wish to thank anyone who sent Christmas boxes, treats and gifts et Christmas and New Yenrs. It was very much appreciated. 52-1—Murvin and Margaret Gorier. Counter Check Books At The Standard Office, McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. READ OFFiCF - grAFORTH, ONT OFFICERS: President—Robt. Archibald, Seaforth; Vice -Pres., Alistair Broadfoot, Sea - forth; Secy-Treas., Norma Jeffery, Sea - forth. DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone. Seaforth; J. H. McEw- Ing, Blvth; W. S Alexander. Walton: R. J. Trewartha. Clinton: J. F. Penner, 13rucefield; C. W. Leonherdt. Bornholm: H. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Sea - forth; Allister Brmdfrnt, Seaforth, AGENTS: • William Leiner, Jr., Londesboro; d F, Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker boson:-, r -a- Munroe, Seaforth. K. W. COLQUHOUN INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PHONES Office, HU 2.9747; Res. HIT 2.7556 Phone Blyth 78 SALESMAN Vic Kennedy WANTEI) c)ld horses, 34c par pound. Dead attle and horses at value. Important to phone at once, day or night. OM - BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Ooderich, phone collect 1983,11, or 148334. 44 tf. Blue Ribbons For Attics A lady writes with a wonder- ful idea, although the details need working out, She thinks there ought to be a national an- nual award for the best attic— taking into account the neatness, quantity of bric-a-brac, and the entertainment potential on a rainy afternoon. A lovely attic, she says, is a wotsome thing. The general subject of attics is therefore thrown open for dis- eusion, I remember Sally Irish said one time, relative to the way four generations of living had accumulated Irish belongings, "Of course, our attic moved downstairs long ago!" This en- croachment of the attic is a hovering kind of thing, and in extreme instances can keep the modern development of the low- er floors in balance, but a true attic 'keeps its distance. When you climbed the stairs, or pass- ed through the scuttle, you left everything behind as going through a magic casement open- ing on the foam, . . There were two kinds of attics —a barn attic and a house attic, A well -regulated household had a subtle distinction between these, so when Mother said, "Put it up attic," you knew without her saying so just which attic it should go in. The barn attic was best in those old four-square places built back in seafaring days when the far places of the world contributed souvenirs, and treasures from the golden isles were stacked tier on tier. In one such old place they used to play charades—in cos- tume! Charades, to me, always seemed like a desperate chance, something you did in an extrem- ity of ennui, but these people dressed it up beyond belief. When it was your turn to puz- - ale everybody you would go up attic and rummage around to ' find something to wea••, Chinese Mandarins would come out to dramatize the word "palent(il- ogy"; or Gold Coast slavers would appear to act out "dis- combobolate." One evening a man and his wife came crawling in on their hands and knees, dressed in Tar- tar tunics and looking ferocious, and they kept shoulder to shoul- der and said, "Oink! Oink!" The word was "quahog," and it was guessed fairly soon, ours being a shellfish region. A good time was had by all, and the value of a ready attic was demon- strated, A barn attic wouuld usually have a flock of chairs past re- pair, some rockers with the cane bottoms gone, and lots of trunks. Exciting it was to find one of those old leather -covered chests, with moth-eaten camel hair still "GAG" SHOT — Hank McCul- lough prowls downtown streets of Los Angeles with a tankful of "fresh air" from less smoggy localities. Reason: air pollution that plagues Los Angeles at times because of peculiar at- mospheric conditions that trap ground air and its load of in- dustrial and automotive ex- haust fumes. showing, but sometimes it would just be full of coat hangers, There were those big trunks for going far distances, with rounded tops on them, This was to keep the express company from piling trunks on top of one another to the crushing point. In the attics they would some- times be standing on end, about three high, showing that you could pile them up just the same, On a rainy day, with the noise on the shingles, almost any attic was a good place to be, Attica were usually darkened, for the windows would be small up there, Our old house attic had one small sash in the gable, and the only way to open It was to take the sash out entirely and lean it against the wall. We did that in summer, for attics were expected to explode if you didn't ventilate—the sun on the roof generated unbelievable heat, It had been the custom from long ago to tack a piece of net- ting over the opening after the sash was removed for the sunl- mer. You had to tear the net- ting away in the fall to get the sash back, so in time the frame had become stuck with thou- sands of tacks, each with its little ruff of fibre. The netting was to keep out wasps and barn swallows, but mud nests of both these critturs hung on the roof boards to show there were some summers when the precaution was neglected. There were efforts now and then to "clean down" the attic. There would be some cobwebs. and kitties, but the job wasn't one of cleanliness mainly, it was neatness. An attic was a place you put things, but seldom took out, To rearrange everything once in ten years or so called for some sense of elimination, but mostly a job of warehouse management. And there were always things you had forgotten but now de- cided you could 'use again — such as our old walnut living room set, which my father bought at an auction for two dollars shortly after he was mar- ried. It got shabby after a time, and was . taken up attic, Then one year it was rediscovered, and Mother thought she'd like it upholstered, So Father climbed up and passed it down through the hole to her, and after a time in the furniture shop it reap- peared n our front room — a beautiful set. People would inquire, and my father always explained that it was "handed down" to his wife. Antiques handed down in the family were always Mere preci- ous than those bought in, so the effect was good. Father never troubled to explain that there had also been a time when he "handed it up" to her, too, Almost every attic had a clockreel, or checkreel, for wind- ing yarn. After many turns, it would click, to indicate the length of a skein. How many - many youngsters, absorbed in attic playing, have turned and turned and turned a clockreel, just to hear that wonderful cldck at last! And downstairs, all through the house, everybody heard it, and wondered what idiot was up there turning that clockreel for amusement, Or— where is there .nore fun on a rainy day than finding some steelyards, and weighing things? Our attic had a cylinder phonograph, one that played disks through a horn, one that had a built-in horn, and then a long radio laid out on a board with earphones. It used to bring in KDKA clear as a bell, But there, came a time we stopped keeping such items, for succeed- ing radios must have been junk- ed and forever lost. A prize for the best attic might prove many things. It might make us all glad, I should like to be one of the judges, and have time for it. A little fellow, calling on a neighbor with his mother, sud- denly said, "Mrs. Rand, may I see your new bedroom rug?" "Why, Tommy, how nice of you to be interested. Of course you may go in and look." The boy left, then reappeared, "Gee, Mommy," he said, puz- zled, "it didn't make me sick." NOT "MUSH" — FISH — No Alaskan, he. Dog sled driver above, is fishing on shores of the North Sea near Cuxhaven, Germany. B)sk.ets are left on the sands at low tide. When tide rises, small fish get in the baskets. As the tide ebbs, fish are trapped. T!,•. ';thcrtnon m. kcs a twice -a -day run with the dog -powered t' • 3. • DIN AMA ECH OF fl�lM,EES 00M10-0, 00 .... W 00 SHARING THEiR BURDEN - Seven-year-old twins Julia, left, and Magdelina,Urdiales, of San Antonio, are identical even in misfortune. But they make a smiling appeal for contributions to the 1959 March of Dimes campaign against polio ,and other diseases, The girls are believed to be the only identical twins stricken with paralytic polio at the same' time. Afflicated at the age of six months, they wear long leg braces and still receive out-patient care at the Robert B. Green polio clinic. ) 'TABLE TAW elTheAnatichs. Pudding Recipe Slightly Delayed Hail, season of jollity and right thinking, and everybody's been so nice I should like to re- ciprocate, so if you'll gather; around and pay attention I shall spread Christmas cheer with a lavish hand: Not long ago this department advanced the happiness of the world immeasurably by: produc- ing the recipe for New. Mea- dows Inn sugar cookies. Nothing in a long time seemed to please so many people. It even pleased me, for one lady wrote that mine wasn't the recipe at all, but another one just like it that was different, Thinking on the great good worked so easily, I will hance it again with a Christmas recipe, one that is geared to the holiday from away back. And herewith my greet- ings: This kind of Christmas pud- ding is pretty much a lost art. We hear about them in the stor- ies and adages, and see them on the cards and decorations. But the homes where one of these will be constructed will not be too frequent—unless of course all you folks decide to try it. This decline of the Christmas pudding is probably a gauge of modernity—for one must have a big kettle, and one must have four consecutive hours of stove heat over andabove the require- ments for the rest of Christmas dinner. This pudding makes the kitch- en department the mecca of en- thusiasts. It sets the front -room delegation into magnificent ex- pectancy. It will make the most obstreperous youngster sit with folded hands and wait. It steams up the windows, so the whole neighborhood knows. And it is not for time -saving, short-cut new -era ladiea of the instant persuasion, Please, then, to assemble the following ingredients: 8 eggs 1 pound kidney beef suet' 1 pound flour 1 pound raisins 1 pound currants 1 cup sugar 1 nutmeg, grated 1 teaspoon ginger A little salt 1 pint of milk I am copying these words from the handwriting of Grand- mother Lane, who was an ances- tor of mine in remoter times. The only internal evidence of this wonderful woman's touch is in that line, "a little salt." In other recipes she left us she fre- quently uses "some milk," "a shake of flour," and in one place, "a dab of fat," But here she is more precise, and any woman worthy of the name will know what "a little salt" means. You will now "wisk" the eggs. And you will flour the fruit—to fix it so it will hold its place in the mixture and won't settle during coking. Then ""ou will mix everything together in a Happy Christmas gesture of amalgamation. • Next you need two things: a square of good unbleached cot- ton, about a yard, and a good, stout cord, The cotton becomes the pudding bag, and the string is to tie it off and, perhaps, to lift by. Soak the cloth in some warm water, 'to dampen it, and flour it well on what is to be the in- side of the bag. This, of course, is to 'keep the pudding from sticking to the cloth. So you lay the cloth out flat and dump the pudding mix on it, and for till' you should have some help. You'll want somebody handy to pick up the corners of the cloth with you, bringing them together so the string can be tied around. There is a • littl'e trick to the string—you want to tie it so a little spare room is ]eft in the bag, for the pudding will swell some, Not much. It won't explode, at any rate—but the eggs do constitute "rising material," and you'll get a little increase. Furthermore, when NEW CHUTE SPINS LIKE HELICOPTER Hailed as the first parachute innovation in 50 years is the Vortex Ring, left, a low -weight, high -drat chute which will fit into a brief case when packed, Designed by David T. Barash, 37 -year-old .aeronautical engi- neer, the whirling chute substi- tutes four sail -like blades of cloth for the standard canopy, Rota- tion of the blades like a helical). ter rotor creates a "vortex ring," or, doughnut, of air around . the tips. Lines attached to a swivel allow the spinning of the eight - pound chute, The new design has proved to have virtually no os- cillation or glide characteristics which make drops in high winds so dangerous. Low opening shock makes the chute excellent in paratroop drops from low alti- tudes, and from high speed air- craft. Successful tests have brought it to the attention of the military for uses including brak- ing planes, below. this bag comes out of the pot af- ter cooking, things are going to be pretty hot, and you'll want the string secure and strong enough to use it as a handle. If you don't have a big pot, you are now in trouble, But if one large enough is on hand, have some water in it and have it boiling good, Gently lower the bagful of pudding into the water, put on the cover, and keep the fire going for exactly four hours, One of those can-. ners that will take eight or ten jars of plums or peaches for preserving Is an ideal pot for' this, The four hours can be used to prepare the rest of the holiday feast, or you can go out for a round of golf, or something like that. In our household the sche- dule of the whole day takes its cue from the time the pudding is set to boil. As soon as we know the pudding's time, we know everything else. I might warn you that the boiling of the pudding will cast a certain aroma of the laundry , about the kitchen, particularly in its early stages, It's the cloth. Somehow the raisins and ginger won't come through to you, hut there may be a suggestion of socks and shirts, 'Tis sad that such needs explaining, for happy people know about this, and It is not good to reflect that I am advising unhappy ones! After four full hours, just as the' family is finishing dinner, a delegation of accredited fe- males should be dispatched to the kitchen to unlimber the pud- ding. Get the biggest platter, Uncover the pot, Lift out the bag with a gaff. Don't trust the steam! Untie or cut the string. And, with about six hands help- ing, roll- the pudding out onto the platter, It will be about the size of a basketball. Relax. Sniff! The trophy may be car- ried to the table with carols, or it may be dismembered or serv- ed from the kitchen. Hard or soft, or both sauces, Try it, You will thank me for my Christmas offering, Hurrah! —By John Gould in The Chris- tian Science Monitor. HE HAS THE JOB — It's offl- cial. Joe Cronin, 52, is the American League's new presi- dent: He succeeds Will Har - ridge. Bucky Harris is expected to step into Cronin's shoes as general manager of the Red Sox when Cronin steps up. Winter Haven Por Animals From mid-September to April. or May we were alone in the croft, and for weeks, (sometimes months, we saw nobody except each other, Even the postman was rarely able to call in during winter for a chat, The croft was at a fairly high altitude and we had snow every year. Most animals enjoyed playing in the snow, If it was not too deep the otters would race out when the flakes had stopped falling.and roll over and over in it, then chase each other like dogs, As they had been reared in a croft from infancy I had to show them howto mak* a snow chute and slide down it, I chose a steep hill and beat a length of snow hard with a spade, making the first descent .myself on a tin tray. The otters were not long in getting the hang of tobogganing. Soon they were flying down the chute, forepaws tucked well into their sides, back legs used for giving a brisk send-off and then kept out straight, No sooner had they reached the bottom than they hurried up to the top for another go Hearing birds indoors one realises the strengthand carry- ing power of their voices When the wren uttered its sharp 'tick, tick' in Aunt's bedroom it could be heard clearly in the parlour with both doors closed, We were treated to brilliant displays of ' singing by thrushes and black- birds, but these songsters are best enjoyed in the open, for their voices are too powerful in- doors, Directly there was a break in the weather those birds which had recovered sufficiently were let out, Many we never saw again but others revisited the croft, some almost daily. Our circle of bird friends grew like a chain letter, a bird which we had cared for during a bliz- zard returning later, for example with_ one or two acquaintances of its species, We often got back to the croft after a walk to find, if •. a door or window had been lett open, several of our late guests disporting themselves on picture frames and ' furniture while nervous_,steweeniert,.tlely.,.a agitatedly round the room, utter- ing cries of alarm at our entry ... We returned one day to dis- cover artificial flowers in a bowl pecked to pieces,. and a china ornament knocked off the mantlepiece and b r o k e n. A starling was on the writing desk and, having chattered a brief greeting to tis, it continued with • the task of extracting envelopes from a - packet and dropping them over the side of the desk,., Deer often came down to the croft in severe weather in search of food, their lean flanks show- ing the effects of poor grazing, There was nothing we could do for them ... One day when I was sitting in the parlour I was frightened by a loud snort, fol- lowed by an antlered head ap- pearing through ; t h e window, The .stag regarded mecalmly for a while, and then withdrew. —From "Seal Morning", byRo•iiIP!'L.- - Britain's Imperial Diehards By TOM A. CULLEN NEA Staff Correspondent LONDON - (NEA) - if Prime MInister• Harold Macmillan -looks unhappy these days it is .not be- cause of unemployment; infla- tion, or next year's election pros- pects, Britain has never been more prosperous, nor Macmillan more popular. No, what gives the prime min- ister that harassed look is the League of Empire Loyalists, a small band of "Empire First" cranks dedicated to making Mac.- millan miserable. The marvel is that -Macmillan takes the persecution as calmly as h.e does. ' For example, the prime min- ister was entertaining Dag Ham- marskjold at a banquet not long ago, when a bearded loyalist sprang from underneath the ta- ble and begat. shouting, "Down with the United Nations!" The startled U.N. secretary general nearly choked, but Macmillan went right on eating his soup. A few weeks later Empire Loyalists invaded a garder party where Macmillan was speaking to Tory ladies, "Macmillan is ambassador of the dollar area," his tormentors shouted. Did the League, founded in 1955, has Fascist leanings. Its secretary, A. K. Chesterton, for example, is an ex -follower of Sir Oswald Mosley, the British Fascist, but he has managed to window -dress his national council with such respectable ancients as the Earl of Buchan, 78, and Field Mar- shal Lord Ironside, 80. But If the League has bor- rowed some of its ideology from Hitler's brown shirts, its antics are typically British in their wackiness, • Take the Buganln-Khrushchev visit to England in 1956, The League, as well as Sir Anthony Eden, was on hand to greet the Soviet leaders when they ar- rived at Victoria Station; and as Sir Anthony stretched out his hand, a loyalist voice boomed over a microphone, "Eden is shaking hands with murder," Eden looked as though he had been stung by a Moray eel, ' The League's greatest triumph to date, however, was the hoax it pulled on the Archbishop of Canterbury at the Lambeth Con- ference in July, None of the 351 Anglican pre. Tates assembled from all parts of the world as guests of the Arch- bishop found anything unusual NOT A BIT SPORTINGt;,A member of the League of Empire Loyalists is shown above, being asked to leave the Conservative Party , Conference. prime minister blow up? No, he waited while the ladies, bran- dishing their parasols, drove off the intruders; then went on with his speech. But the last straw for Mac- millan's .supporters came in Oc- tober when loyalists gatecrashed the Conservative Party's annual conference in Blackpool and tried to drown his closing speech with blasts from a bugle. This time the hecklers got as good as they gave, a couple of ,them being taken out to the cloakroom and beaten up by at- __ -tendants. -B,ut did this stop the league? It only made matters worse, "Fascist beasts dripping with blood," the League screamed, and currently the 'Conservative �r ,.....'Party is in hot water; for. hav- '. ,�a dng used "excessive violence, .0..amounting to brutality," in - ex- ' -=4;pelling the intruders. Aar No one knows for certain what the League stands for, as its 'members seldom get beyond shouting "Don't scuttle the Em- pire!" before being thrown out of meetings. A list of what they are against would include ',the United Na- tions, Archbishop Makarios, NATO, American air bases in Britain, European Free Trade, Egypt's Nasser and Danish but- te; (this last because it is "un- fair to New Zealand butter). , In the view of many, the CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS DOWN 1 Mark of 1. Boxed omission 2. Proverb 6 Carpenter's 3. Mt. chain tool 4. Remnant 9. Seat in church 5, Plaything's 14. "Bell for-" 8 Uncivlilzed 13. Stir tip 7 Chnloednnv 15. firltty 16 Pope's residence 17. Breakfast fond 13 •Command to a cat 20 Porker 21 Profound 23 Enclosed field (civil law) 25. Turk; cap. 27: Roof edge 29 Burning 31 Contrive 34 Divided Into Parts 85. std -womanish AA. Bobbin A7, Clamor 88 Rend metrically. 4n, Pitcher 44 Side of a triangle 4n f'nremonv 48. fico paste 49. Matured 61 Poen hitt 63 Enliven 64. Catkin 65. Jap, coin' 56, Plower plot 57. AppIIos crease to about the two bearded "bishops." One wore a high hat with a full-length, black cassock and imitation gold chain. and cross, while the other wore a round - brimmed parson's hat. Both were Empire Loyalists in the- atrical costumes. . At the appropriate moment, they ; commanded silence, Then the , horrified assembly . heard their plea, "The Empire Loyal- ists ask you to protest against the invitation to the arch -ter- rorist Makarios to visit this country" The London Daily Mirror has a suggestion for dealing with the loyalists. "In the old days rural England had a . fine remedy for; such, boors," the Daily Mirror says editorially, "They were taken gently and firmly to the duck pond and thrown in," But newsmen opine that with- out the League British politics would be a lot duller. "Pull over, .buster," said the cop, • "You haven't got any tail light" The driver got out and after examining the situation looked so positively horrified that the cop was actually moved, to sym- pathy. "It's bad, mister,". said the cop; "but not that bad." Recovering his voice the mo- torist stammered, "It's not the tail light that bothers Inc. What hapened to my trailer?" 8. Drollery 9. Peaceful 10. Ornamental stand 11. Small tumor 14. Apex 10, Cavern 22. Resound 24 Breathing sound 26 LetterZ 28. Periods of time 30, Callum tar • natters 81. Crazy 32. Basis of dyes 33 Pin used In bowling 34. Transmitted 36. Made an Ineursion- 89. Or. Island 41. Hesitate 42. Correct 43. Lenses 44, Jewel .47. Ot an ago 49. Devil fish 50. Seize 52 :Vine vessel t 2 3 4 5 :•.6 7 8 ..� • 9 10 I I •At 12 • 15 A9! 13 1 15 * fie•'• 16 17 }•:� 8 •� •!•:• 19 . 00••• : •.:• 20 •.:: ti4•• 21 . 22 `:::.23 .. 2 ' ••$: 25 6 31'32 33• •y': 11.0.0 34 35 Ne 36 tit•.•.e.y 37 ti•:: 38 39, > • 40 41' 42 •••• •44 . 5 ••.. 46 47 tis• 48 I . 49. 5 1 •.., ti- 52 • '..'•;• 54 55 . 56 57 Answer elsewhere on this page READY-MADE FAMILY - Norman Burgess, 36, is placing the ring on the hand of his bride, Mrs. Evelyn Teskey, 33, during their wedding in Toronto. Tho widowed Mrs. Teskey is the •mo- ther ofeight children, ranging in age from three to thirteen and they've all been' in an orphanage since the', father's death earlier 'this year. Burgess is a $3,900-a year customs officer. TllEFAN FRONT J Efforts in the cheese industry to produce the purest possible products are paying off. During the first ten months this year, about 98 per cent of all cheese graded fulfilled the requlrements of Canada First Grade from the standpoint of extraneous matter. This achievement follows on the heels of a 1957 amendment to the Canada Dairy Products Act, under which extraneous matter analysis of cheese' be- came a. factor in' determining grade. e • • Canada was the first country to undertake thisanalytical work, A sample of cheese is taken from each vat graded and for- warded to a central laboratory. at Ottawa where analysis of the samples is carried out. Samples are referred to as having Disc 1, Rise 2, 3, or 4. The first two discs;qualify, the cheese for inclusion in Canada First Grade, Disc 3 Canada Second Grade,' and Disc 4 Can- ada Third Grade, or below depending on the nature of the sediment. Tests. were started on an'edu- cational basis as the upshot 'of a wartime incident in which • two carloads ;of cheese were turned back from their United, States, destination. * * • At first; results of the analysis were relayed to the milk pro- ducer and: cheese manufacturer for their information only: In 1954, though, the Federal Gov- ernment ruled that every vat must be tested for, extraneous matter and that a premium would not be paid unless they (Premiums have been paid were DIscs 1 or 2 on top quality Canadian cheese since 1939.) • The latest amendment estab- lishes a direct link between ,grading. and extraneous matter analysis. , • • •. In 1953, when .the, . program over' half of the 85,909. samples submitted 'were Discs 3 and 4. • Two'years,litter, the figure had been whittled down to 37 per cent. Pointing up the giant strides that haver been• -'made to date is the a fact:shat- this" year, out of 93,709 samples tested;' only 0.18 per cent -were Disc 4. and 1.93 per cent'Dlsc 3. Wheri''a''Sample is received at the unique . Ottawa laboratory,. anamoupnt of 15 grains is meas- ured and dissolved in a solution of sodium citrate. It is filtered through standard discs which retain the sediment and classi- fied under microscope. • '• • F. D. Murphy heads a sur- prisingly small staff that hon - 'dies operations at the lab. As many as 1,600 samples have been processed by six people in one day. Equipment; .used in the lab- oratory was designed.by leaders in the Canadian cheese indus- try, since Canada pioneered; in the work. • • • .Number of factories submit- ting samples of cheese this year are 277. Last year there were 349, and the year before 339. The reudctlon, officials explain, is due to a number of small fac- tories closing and amalgamation of others. • • . * Two tests that seem to prove "Your new secretary looks very efficient." "Yes,. that's her specialty." "T'fiieiency?" "Nu, 1G:•hit,g efficient." the' superior egg -laying ability of range -reared over 'confine- ment -reared pullets were con- ducted at the Experimental Farm Brandon. Each test involved a separate group of 1800 birds and showed little to choose between the two rearing methods as regards livability, body weight gains or feed requirements during the growing period. •, • * In the laying house too their body weights were about the same and, contrary to common belief, the range -reared birds consumed as much feed as their opposite numbers. The incidence of feather picking and can - ,CHRISTMAS CROP - Carefully stored by a worker in a factory in Vienna,, Austria, are these Christmas tree balls ready for painting. nibalism was slightly higher in the confinement -reared birds but was never a serious prob. lem. Mortality rate was less than three per cent in each group. No difference was noted either in age at first egg, egg weight or feed needed to produce one doz- en eggs, * • In both experiments however egg production was three per cent higher in the range -reared birds and these birds were ap- proximately four ounces heavier at the end of the test than the pullets reared in confinement, Who Says They're The Weaker Sex? When a masked man entered the bakery, the 23 -year-old girl assistant gave a cry of apparent terror. But flinging up her arms she grasped an open bag of flour that lay on the shelf above her head and showered the contents into the gangster's face Then, before he could recover, she thrust the sack over his head and, jerking her knee into his stomach, twisted the mouth of the sack tightly around his neck, Hearing her cries, the manager of the shop, in Essen, Germany, rushed in. But, by now, she hardly needed his help. The would-be raider was' reduced to rt state of shocked helplessness, From time to time. greatly to the surprise and discomfiture of thugs, peeping Toms, bag - snatchers and other scoundrels who prey on the supposedly weaker sex, their cowardly as- saults meet with determined op- position, In some cases the re- actions are so swift, splr'ited and - resourceful that the tables are turned completely. A husky, six-foot gunman imagined that he had an easy - catch when he decided to raid a Chicago grocery store kept by two elderly sisters, Miss Ar- t menta Vest, aged 65, and her 62 -year-old sister, Mrs. Eliza- beth Heber. "Stick 'em up!" he ordered harshly as he confronted Miss Vest across the counter. But, far from being cowed, Miss Vest reacted with lightning speed. She snatched at the gut, in his hand and, although he instinctively pulled 'the trigger, she managed to wrench it from his grasp. The shot roused her sister. • She dashed froth the store room, sized up the situation in a second and tore the handkerchief from the gunman's face. Then the two sisters sat on the man, Each of the women was nearly six feet tall and in remarkably good physical condition. They wrested with the 150 - pound raider, and through sheer tenacity a n d determination, threw him to the floor. Seconds later, he was gasping for mercy. In less serious crimes, too, the resourcefulness of girls and women of all ages is sometimes remarkable. A peeping Toni who, for several weeks, pester- ed nurses at a South of England hostel got a thoroughly well- deserved shock when he tried to peer into one of the dormi- tories one night. The sash win- dow was raised and there was not a sound from within, so the man thrust his head over the sill. It was a fatal move; the nurses were expecting him. Down came the window and the peeping Tom was trapped. A strong young nurse, wielding a cricket b a t two - handed, brought it down smartly on his head. The nurses released the man from the window and found out that he was unconscious. He was indeed caught and outl When the police arrived, they found thenurses working hard 10 bring him round. U)MY SCilOOl LESSON By Rev, R. Barclay Warren B.A., B.D. What Does Discipleship Cost? Mark 10: 17-27 Memory Selection: The things which are impossible with men are possible with God. Luke 18: 27. Jesus' conversation with the rich young ruler well illustrates the difference between morality and discipleship, Having kept the law from his youth was not enough, either in the sight of God or of the young man him- self. He realized that something Else was involved in inheriting Eternal life. We must make a complete surrender of ourselves to God. God never asks any- thing less of us than our all, Frances Ridley Hat•ergal ex- pressed it well in the words: "Take my love, my Lord 1 pour At Thy feet its treasure state; Take myself and I will be Ever, only, all for Ther -' C, H. Zahniser, wr.ttng 1n Arnold's Commentary, tells of what discipleship cost C. L'. Studd, He gave away nis fur - tune and became a missionary to China, India, and Africa. A le: - ter, written to Mr. Booth of r►,� Salvation Army, containing his last fourteen hundred pound 1.• had this note accompanying it, "Henceforth our bank is in heaven. You see, we are rather afraid, notwithstanding the great earthly safety of Messrs Coutts End Co., and the Bank of Enrg- rand, we are, I say, rather afraid that they may both break on the judgment day. And this step has not been taken without def- Inite reference to God's Word, and the command of the Lold Jesus, who said, 'Sell that ye have and give alms. Make for yourselves purses which wax not old.' " At the close of the letter he wrote, "Please also to enter the subscription as coming from 'Go and do thou likewise.' " We are not all called to turn over all our money but this is certain, it must be completely dedicated to Christ's cause, for nothing that we' are or have can be withheld. When the British government sought to r e w a r d General Charles Gordon for his brilliant services in China, he declined all money and titles but finally ac- cepted a gold medal inscribed with the record of his '33 en- gagements. After his death it was found that he had 'sent it to Manchester during a severe stringency to be melted down and used to buy bread for the poor. Under the date of its send- ing this words were found in his diary, "The last and only thing I had in this world that I valued 1 have given over to the Lord Jesus Christ" The rich young ruler of the lesson kept all and lost his soul. "Does a giraffe get a sore throat if he gets wet feet?" ask- ed a zoo visitor. "Yes," replied the keeper, "but not until a week afterwards." ISSUE 2 - 1959 Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking Sag' N N 3 W 3 d 1 3 N 3 A V a a V 3 a O V 0 a !I© ti SIX DIED HERE - Flames from a burning gas main soar skyward in Allentown, Pa., as firemen soak buildings near the demolished Mountainville Hotel to prevent the blaze from spreading. The gas explosions killed at least six person and some 20 others were injured. El 1 PA(E8 • iiittiatitstAtutm Ass mateamaalabissalthiheadialliakkassaim Aar sa is id am i Children's Aid Society Grateful News Of Walton: For Assistance The Board and Staff of the Cnil•l- n:n's Aid Society of Huron County ex- tends its gratitude to the individupls, churches and organizations (rare all parts of Huron who assisted the So- ciety In its annual distributio t of Christmas gets to more than 300 child- ren in this county. Five orr,aniznttons contri1)ated complete family Christ- mas bcxes including a fowl dinner, 58 churches and organizations donated money, White Gift, cartons of Boal and clothing; 39 individuals saint mon- ey, dolls, treats and other gifts. From the RCAF Station at Centeel:a arrived a load of sleds, tricycles and other toys. On December 22nd the P..CAF Station at Clinton entertained 90 children from all corners of this County to a wonderful party at the Station. Invitations were arranged by the Children's Aid, whim is grat- ful to the airforce personnel for its generosity; to the county reeves and mayors, board members end Individ- uals who provided transportation cos' the many children. To the ladies who ass'.sted in wrap- ping and to the individuals and the members of provincial and town po- lice forces who helped with the de• livery, the Children's Aid Society 1s extremely grateful. We Wish a happy and prosperous New Year to all. sung and meeting closed with prayer, an anthem after whichall Joined in Mrs, A. McDonald opened the W.I1LS.'church singing "0 Come All Ye Faith - with ,prayer. The roll call was an-. l ful" with Miss Audrey Hackwell at d by naming a Christmas hyalin 11►e or n. Miss NJon swore a Clark was i n and secretary's report was given by charge of the service which opened Mrs, B. McMichael, Members • drewµryth the Call to Worship and • hymn names of the C.G,LT, girls to find out „. Little Town of Bethlehem" follow - who they were to be' W.M.S, Mystery Mother to. The treasurer's report -was ed by the scripture. reading. The an - given by Mrs, R. Achilles. The Missioa- Fry Monthly will be p'.aced on Bulletin Board and each subscriberis renuested to pick their 'own up, Mrs, C, Ritchie 'ly prayer and hymn "Gentle Mary read an item on Christian Fellowship Laid Her Child." ' Rose Eva Buuck, i "Good Friday Question on Christmas Larry Kistner and Barbara Hoegy, of Eve." The Walton group gave the topic Brodhagen, sang "Bring a Torch" un - on "Curribean Area" taken by Mrs. J,• • der the direction of Miss Audrey Hack - Clark, Mrs, A. McDonald moved a vote well, The offering was received by of thanks to the ladies for their willing Don Achilles, Herb Kirkby and Neil support. The topic for. January is to: be token by the 8th and 16th group and McGavin, The story "The Shepherd roll call answered with the paving of Who Didn't Go" was told by Victor fees. Hymn 55 "Joy to the World" was Uhler, ' "The Evergreen" was sung as them "I Heard The Bells" was sung by the choir; MIss Donna Smith WAS the first candle lighter. This, was followed The following officers were named tar singing "The First Nowell The Angel • •���+•+•+.•+••+.•.•....�..+...+a++•.r•+rr••++•+�+• l0 in W<M.S.: Hon: President, Mrs, E. Did Say." The second and third candle Aryans; past president, Mrs, A. Mc- lighters were Marian Turnbull and Donald; president, Mrs. Wilbur Turn - Shirley Bolger. Anter the lighting of bull; 1st vice, Mrs. D. Watson; 2nd vice,'the third candle all the COLT, mern- Mrv. E. Mitchell; 3rd vlrr', Mrs. r. Me- bars repealed the CG,I,T, Purpose r;vvin; secretary, Mrs. R, McMichael; treasurer, Mfrs, H. Craig; press seer". "Silent Night. Holy Night" was sunp tsrv, Mrs. T. Dohs, assistant. Mrs, 11 ns the closing hymn After which ihr Achilles: simply see„ Mrs. C. Martin:. Benediction was pronounced by Rev Community Friendship. Mrs. E, Hack- w. M. Thomas. well. Christ.tan Fellowshin,scc., Mrs, C Miss Move Lou?, Toronto, and Mr Martin; Missionary Mnnthy sec Mrs end Mrs. Jerry Cnrdt.9P, of Kitchener 'r, Ilnndns: Associate Helpers see., Mrs ,Here Christmas visitors nt iii., home E. McCreath; Stcnva� shin sec.. Mrs, H. of Mr, and MTS.' Walter Broadfoot and " Kirkhv: Llteretura see.. Mrs. J. McDon- Airs, F,er,tn Pat►paean. w1d; Mission Banal Sunt., Mrs. W. new- ARr ave xirkhv, nt Nnmilt.nn, snnnt lee, assistant, .Mrs. N. Marks: Bahv 1 D d Pond Supt.. yrs, T. Travis. Mrs, Th. Christmas with bis grandparents, Mr Pennett: CG T.T. lender, MRS 'Mona and Mrs. H. B. Kirkby. rtartr, assistant. Mrs. WM, cont+s' pion- Mr. and Mrs, ,Tamps Johnston. (.real- ist. Mrs. D. Watson and Mrs. H. Travis: rev, Jov and Judy, of Essex, and Mrs rndltors,, Mrs. W •Johnston, 'Mfrs L. 01- Silas Jolr sten, of Clinton, saws Iver, • Walton Institute l'•hristn+ss at Mrs. Johnston's home i'n' the villare. . Mr, and Mrs F""nk 1tRnrshall anal :""nr:g ofNr•rih14".P16711:severalThe Christmas meeting at the Wo-va ith Mrs. Luwh:, Marshall, Mr. men's Institute was held In the hall on Fer and other rntntiveg, Thursday evening, with about forty Mr. and, We. Rapala Bcnnei+ Grey ladies In attendance. Mrs, Frank Wal- rend intim soeet f:hrist","s day with ters presided for the business period. ,mr, and Mrs (Mierklev, Betmnre. The coll call was answered with a 50 I Mr. and Mrs. 'Lawrence, Marks, of cent donation for shut-ins, amounting Exeter. were Christmas visitnrs nt the to $2100 A solo was much appreciated 114-44444444 * *444+444* • 4 4+4 444-4-4-4 4• -4+44-44 1! ST. MICHAEL'S Weston Soda Crackers,. Salted, 1 lb. Box Campbell's Tomato Soup, 2-10 oz. Tins 27c 25c Westminster Coloured Toilet Tissue, 8 in a bag, 79c Chase & Sanborn Instant Coffee, 6 oz. Jar , , $1.25 Satisfaction Guaranteed. PHONE 156 --- WE DELIVER SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION. .$4$-$4$,11'1•••F+•14 -4-4••14144+.44_.+4_.±._14+1144-4444-.4.1.11+1♦ • • i • 1.114-44,444-• ♦ 444-4444-44404-4-444 1.4-e 4-4444-44.0. 4-4440444-41. 4, •- 44-44444-4-4•4 44 ,,,j44444.44#4±•-4-4•4 14.4+44-4 i ATTENTION FARMERS If you are, anticipating an addition to your- present stabling room or planning to build a Pole Barn SEE US ABOUT YOUIt Pressure Treated Poles Pressure Treated lumber & Steel We can build your Pole Barn or give material esti- mates for the "Do It Yourself Man." A. Manning & Sons Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario Christmas Carols were sung, with Mrs. Wm. H. Humphries at 'the piano. Santa home of Mr. and Mrs. Russel Marks. Mr. and Mrs. George Duntln spent several days with their dauehter end Claus arrived and distributed gifts, Fon-lnelan,, Mr, and' Mrs, David. An - after which a number of amusing con- Brews. Toronto, and other members of tests were conducted by Mrs. Ed Mc- the ,family, Creath, Mrs. Ken McDonald and Mrs. 'Mr, and Mrs, Ted McCreath spent Wm. Turnbull. Mrs. W.m, H. Humphr- 'Christmas with relatives in Toronto. les was the prize-winner for the best Christmas table centre, with Mrs, Bert Mr. and Mrs. James Inmont and ftamily, of London, were holiday guests Johnston and Mrs. Hilda Sellers ns at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd : judges. Lunch hostesses were Mrs. Porter. . Roy Williamson, . Mrs. Ross McCall, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fraser and fam- e IMrs, James Nolan, Mrs. Lawrence- Ry.. ily, of Strntford, visited with Mr. Mal - 1 en, Mrs, Ralph Travis, Mrs. Donald colm. Fraser. Buchanan and Mrs. George Williamson. 'Christmas visitors with Mrs, E, En - The following committee was appoint-. nis,, were: M.r and Mrs. Kenneth RA - ed to' send• bo'ces to •shut-ins, which...804s chic and Lnrry,lEgmondvllle, Mr. Jerry been received in donations Mrs. An- Dressel, Mr. A, Kelly and Mrs. M. drew Coutts, Mrs. E. McCreath, Mrs. Dressed, Toronto, , • • H, Craig and Mrs. E: Stevens. ' ; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bell and family The Christmas Concert of Waken of St. Pauls, ii ijInnesota, are guests at Public School, S S. No. 12, was held cin the home of the latter's parents, Mr. : , the school on Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs, Leslie Oliver. TorranceDundas acted• as chairman ford Mrs, Charlotte Boyd left on Saturday : program which consisted of recitations, for New York: for an extended visit • cf cruses, duets, dialogues. drills, chap. with. Miss M. M. Dundas,, : es, The' teacher, Mfrs. H. Rotertson, I M. and Mrs: Don Gray and family, ' 'Is to be congratulated on the variety of Stratford, spent a few days with of the ` program and the o"ficiency of relatives. -• - ' the pupils. Santa Clause, arrived slid Mrs. Jean McGale and family, of distributed gifts to the children 1 Toronto, is holidaying with her par-. ' iMr, and Mrs. Earl Coutts, R'cky and ents, Mr. and Mrs. John McDonald, Robbie, of Toronto, and Mr. Carl • Mr, and Mrs.' Fred- Martin and Mr. • (`.putts, Londe►, visited w.iili Mr, mid and Mrs, Floyd Jenkins and family, of Mrs, Andrew Coutes-and Mr. and MA. Burford, were!"guests at the home of Ted McCreath on Saturday, • i' • Mr, and Mrs: Clarence Martin, 'Miss Jennie Van Vliet, Miss Co#= Mr.. Wayne McMichael, of Windsor) ria Rulyter, of Stratford, with Mt. is vacationing with his parents, Mr, and and Mrs. Van Vliet, ; Mrs. ;Robert- McMichael. - Teachers returning to tjvar duties The annual Sunday School Christmas otter spending the Christmas, season at concert was held in the schoolroom of their homes were, Miss Mary Dennis, the church on Tuesday evening with London; Tom Somerville to Northern Rev, W. M. Thomas acting as chairman: Ontario; Lois Ann Somerville, Eliza Special numbers were given by the beth McGavin, Ohne Dundas, 'Beth various classes with the teachers in Mellwing, Lois P.oe, all lo Kitchener; charge. Mr..Baan, superintendent of Gerald Dres el, Langton: Murray the Sunday School, spoke a ten, words Kirkb , Tavistock; Rose Marie Bolger of ,thanks to the teachers for. their and Marjorie Boyd, Milton; Beta Boyd, loyal support during the -year. Santa • Claus 'arrived. and distributed gifts and bars a candy. I tM5's. - John Nott is at present visiting with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr: and Mrs.. Ernie Stevens, It's (USTOMER APPRE(IATIO:M' WEEK at Stewart's Red CI White Food Market Jim Dandy Liquid Cleaner, Save 6c 43c 'Srestons Crackers or Saltines, Save 8c 29c Aylmer Tomato Soup, faave 4c 3 tins 34c Cold Seal Sockeye Salmon, Save 9c .. , 2 tins 89c Heinz Ketchup, 11 oz, bottle, Save 3c 22c Fresh Pork Ham Rolls, Lean and Boneless, 1b► 69c Sweet Juicy Sunkist Oranges doz. 33e +4444 s.s -4 -1P4•1't4+N+t i+9+#H+4-4444+#$444•4+4-+ Barrie; Clare Buchanan near Listowel Bob Hum•vhries, son of Mr. and , Mrs. Stewart Huanphries, has hsen cons Vine/ to Stratford Generil Hospital fc, the Past week owing to an accident pertaining to the eye, which required an operation. ' A Christmns Dance was held in the- Cnmmunity Hall last Mendsy evening with music furnished by ian Wilbce'S Melody Makers. The f)cor prise war won by Murray Huether, of Crnn= brook. Spot dances by Miss Isabel Cummings and Oliver Pryce and Mrs: Ronald Bennett and Jack Kelly. Mr. and Mrs, John McGnvin, of Torr onto, spent Now Years with Mr. and LONDESBOKO New Years visitors were as follow; Mr. and Mrs, Tom Allen and family with Mr: and Mrs. Cliff Allen, of Fur- lartan, Mr, and Mrs, Mac Hodgert and fam- ily, Mr. and iMirs, Jim Howatt and fam- ily, Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Irowatt, with Mr, and Mrs, Wilmer Howatt, Rev, and Mrs. Brenton and daught- Mrs. Gordon McGavin, ors, of Woodstock Mr. and Mrs, Wm, The sympathy of the community is Manning and June, with Mr, and Mrs. extended to relatives of the late Mrs. Harry Lear. Rev, and Mrs. Brenton Gordon Rowland. the Ioniser Marie remained over calling on friends on Rvan, who was killed in n traffic act Friday, i cede -t on Wednesday morning ire Mr, and Mrs. James McCool and S•raltorcl. I Mr, and Mrs. Russell Marks, Mr, end • , Mrs. Dick Marks and Sharon and Mr; and Mrs, Ralph Travis - and Lindia, spent New Years with Mr, and Mrs; Jake Marks. Untended for bast week.) The Canadian - Girls in Training and the Young People's Union held their annual vesper service' in the auditor- ium of Duffs United on Sunday even- ing. Tho .choir loft was beautifully decorated with rowo of lighted candler and evergreen boughs, interspersed with coloured lights. A Christmas tree formed the setting for the front of the ,church. The large choir entered the Phyllis, 'with Mrs, Lena Crawford, of Blyth, , Mr. and Mrs. Wan. Wells and Doug las, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Walls and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Allen with Mrs. Robert i Youngblut. Mrs• Wm. Addison with her son, Mr, George Addison, and Mrs, Addison, of Seaforth. Mrs, Mary Crawford with her daugh- ter and family, of Kitchener, Mrs. Merger:t Crich and family I with Mr. and Mrs, Ted Fothergill. 'Air. and Mrs. Erie Allen (nee Irene Fothergill) with Mr. and Mks. Ted Fothergill last week. Miss Maxine Hunking returned to Grathroy alter a weeks holiday. at her Wc1neiddy, hintiaryl 7, 1.6g6 +44.♦.4 444444 +++4444444444.44-4144444+++++44444++++444 ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS Make this store your headquarters for Animal Health Products and Veterinary Supplies. Peni Mycin Bougies, G's $2.00, 12's $3.50 Pani Mycin Ointment, 200,000 Units .. , , .:.. 75c Pani Mycin Ointment (Herd Yak) $3.75 Veterinary Hypo Syringe, 1O.c,c. with needles $3.00 Ayercillen (for injection) ' $1.00 Scourex Tablets ' - $1.75 and $3.00 Dr. Bells Medical Wonder - $1.50 Porcine Mixed Bacteria $1.35 and $5.75 Pellagrex V.M.A. Mix ............. ........ . $2.50 Royal Purple Tonics 90c and $3.00 Royal Purple Disinfectant 50c and $1,40 Doom Dust for lice 79c R. D.Phm. B s w , DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER % PHONE 70, BLYTH' 4444444.14444444444+ 4444.4 4444444- -444-4-4+4.4444.4.144 N ••••••# H~04r• STOP 3 SHP , at Holland's Food Market This Week -End. Snowflake Shortening 125c White Cross Toilet Paper Liquid Gay Serviettes, White Cross 2 for 33c 1 for 23c 49c AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 -- WE : DELIV ER ► +#44÷4.4÷."÷"4"444÷44.-#4 "44'4 .44444.1.i.N1+1++17+ JANUARY REDUCTIONS ON ,YA • 1 10 percent on all inside paint 15 percent on all outside paints SAVE on your decorating needs.jrWe have a cont plete`stock of Benjamin Moore paint: A t We Have Some God Used Televisions On Hand. SPECIAL- One Marchand clothes dryer, with heat control.. Let us show it to you. VODDEN'S HARDWARE 3' ELECTRIC ` YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse') PIiONE 71R2 •- MATH, ONT. _ !1P41•N+44+•.S 14-441 44•1+44-44.4.4-414-44.•4-4,!4-.64-41.44444+444-04i-• 1•••+441 . COUNTY OF HURON TENDER FOR 1. 25,060 GVW TRUCK Sealed tenders clearly marked "Truck Tender" will be received by the undersigned until 1(2:00 noon on Friday, January 16th, 1959, for the purchase of 1- 25,000 .GVW cab and chassis. Specifications and tender forms are available at the office of the, un- dersigned. All tenders must be submitted on official form. ` The lowest or any tender not necessarily ac- cepted. - • see' . • -.a J. W. BRITNELL, , County Engineer, Court House, Goderich, Ontario. 1 '.-41+l••+4,4-i-44 •+ 4 4444 home, .Mr. and Mrs. Ward Schlaldunn, Gail and Marilyn, and Mr. Gordon Gosling all of Lindsay, with Mr, and Mrs, Enrl Gaunt, Fay Gaunt returned home Sat- urday from a weeks visit with cousins at Lindsay, Lois, Linda and Patricia Mo.ire, of G•ederich, spent a couple of clays with their grandparents. • Mr, and Mrs. Wan. Moore, Tdr, and Airs. Gerald. thinking, with Mr. and Mrs, Harve Hunking, Mrs, Ruddel, Mr. Fred Johnston and Mr. Dave Ewan, with Mr. rind Mrs. John Scott, Meas Mary Dymond, of Toronto Un- iversity, spent the week -end with her friend, June Manning, ". Mrs, Jennie Lyon wht has hem tin- der the Doctors core is Improving but still bedfast. I Mrs, Eleanor Throop is showing a marked improvement her many friends will be pleased to hear,