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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1959-02-25, Page 1VOLUME 71- NO 07. Session Held Organizational Meeting At the organizational meeting of the Cession. held l st weChurch week Mr, Keith elected as Clerk for the 'coming year. It. was agreed that Mr, D, McKenzie ,e asked to act as Roll Clerk and Mr, F. Marshall was elected as Service Elder to represent the Session at var- ious ceremonies in the church. It was decided to have a Good Friday Ser• vice at 7.30 p.m. and to have a special Church Attendance campaign between Easter Sunday and Christian Family Sunday, The area of the congregation wee divided into 20 districts each one to have an elder assigned to it. The el- ders will visit in these districts before each Communion Service delivering communion cards to church member;,, Mr. McLagan outlined some of the things that could be accomplished by the elders In their districts, A retention at the Manse for the el- ders and their wives wns announced' for Friday, Merch 13, at 7,00 p.m, Hullett Federation Card Party and Dance The Hullett Township Federation held a card party and dance in the Londesboro Hall on Friday night, Fe- bruary 20. Owing to bad weather and road conditions there was a small at-. tendance. The winners of the progressive euchre were as folows: Wornen's High, Reta Flynn; Women's Low. Shirley Ad - aim; Women's Lorre. Hands, • Mrs, John Flynn; Men's Iligh, Bob Town- send; Men's Low. Bruce Walker; Men's Lone Hands. Lloyd Pipe, The regular monthly meeting of the directors of the Federation will be held on March 5th, instead of the 12th in the Londesboro Hall, on acount of some special business coming up, All directors please try to be present. Live Wire Farm Forum The Live:•Wire Farm Forum met at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Gordon How- att on Monday evening, February 23rd with 12 adults and'3 children present.. The broadcast was listened to and it being review night there was na discussion. The business period follow- ed wtih Gordon, Howatt as chairman, The minutes of the last meeting were read- and moved'by Len Archambault and seconded by Lorne.Hunkin; that the minutes he adopted as read. The next meeting to be held at Mr. and Mrs, John Snyder's home. Moven :'y Pat Hunking and seconded by Henry Hunking that the meeting adjourn. Progressive euchre was played with the winners as follows: high lady, Mrs, Stewart Ament; high When, Bert Bunk- ing; low lady, Mrs. Bert Hunkl^g: low man. Mr. Len Archambault; most lone _hands, .Joe Thanking, • The men served the lunch and wash- ed the dishes. • LI Authorized as .second-class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, FEB. 25, 1959. Post Office Department, Ottawa Don't Try It - I lid Casey Verewey Had Successful Music Student Ronald Snell was successful in pas- sing Grade II Theory examination of the Royal Conservatory of Music, of Toronto, with 1st class honors, raking the highest mark in his grade at the local centro, recently held in Blyth, Terry Wilson, Lucknow, was successful ,in passing his Grade VIII piano exam- ination at the Stratford local centre. Ron and Terry are pupils of, Mr. A. E. Cook. ------- MURRAY-In --1-- W.M.S. MEETING The Women's Missionary Society of S. Andrews Presbyterian Church met last Thursday, February 19th, at the home of Mrs. George Caldwell. The president, Mrs. W. Good, was i in charge alnd opened the meeting with prayer. Mrs. Dalrymple had charge ..a-cc�', fifejeyotlu1 - e labs„The minutes of't.lre previous meeting were read by Mrs. Shortreed, as our secretary was absent, , Mrs. George Fear gave the story of Sarah from the i3ible, Helen Adams received the offering, and Mrs. Good gave a chapter from the Study Book. the Indians in Canada. written by Mrs. Mac Cardiff, of Brussels. Mrs. Good invited the society to her home for the next meeting. Miss A. Toil cleserl with nravnt•• end Mrs, Caldwell served a lovely lunch, AMONG T11I CI.lU CIIES Sunday, March 1, 1959. J6T. ANDRC1v'S t'IrESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1,00 p.m. -Sunday School and Church Service. THE ()N1'TEIS CHURCH bh "CANADA' - ttivth nntario. Bev. R. Evan, McLagan . Minister. hiss Margaret',Jackson - Director • of Music, ' 10,00 a.m.-Sunday Church School. . 11,15 a.m.-"A Foolish Farmer." 2.30 p.m. -Church Membership Ctass,' 7,30 p.m. -"You are 'a Murderer!" 8.30 p.m. -Family Fireside .and Y. P, U. featuring a film "The Tourist',', - ANGLICAN CIIUIICiI Rector, Bev. Robert Meetly 3rd Sunday in'Lent Anglican Church Blyth: 10.30 a.m.-Morning Prayer. Wednesday -Lenten service at the' home of Miss J. Woodcock. St. Mark's, Auburn, 11.15 -Sunday School. 12 o'clock -Morning PrnJer, Anglican Church, Belgrave--2,00-- Sunday School, 2 30 ".p m, -Evening 'Prayer. ('UniMH of ono Mrr'nnnetl St) cot, Blyth. Ronda! Speaker. 2,00 p.m. Sunday School. 3.00 p.m. -Church Service. MURRAY-In hospital at Victoria, 13. C., on Friday, February 6, 1959, to Mr, and Mrs. Wm, Murray, of Es- quinhalt, B. C,, a son, William Scott. LOND ESBORO Last Wednesday evening a number of the members of Belgrave Orange Lodge met with Londesboro Lodge for a special time, about 26 were present. It was deciued to hold a Chicken Bin- , go in the Orange Hall on the evcn,ng 1 of February 27th. Mr. Art Mahally, of London, visited with Bert Allen and Wesley Vod len on Sunday. Mrs, Robert Townsend is spending a couple of weeks with her sister in Oshawa. , • The W.A. held their February meet- ing last Thursday at the home of Mrs. Harry Durnin, with a good attend uwee Mrs. Alex Wells and Mrs. George Hicks, of Centralia, visited their sister, Mrs. Robert Wells, who is. a patient ' in Victoria Hospital, London. They found her a well as could be expected. The Y.P,U. met in the Sunday School Room on Sunday evening with 28 pres- ent. After the business was conducted, Rev, White held a Bible Stud Class. in connection with enrolment in church membership. Mr, Tom Allen presented moving pictures, covering local semi - cry and various trips they have taken. These pictures were very interesting. i We have many beauty' spots near by IF we would take time to appreciate ahem, Mrs. Mabel Scott is spending a few dens with her daughter, in Tucker - smith, Mr. ,Tim Ilnwatt is wearing a broad smile these. days, a long awaited son an"^"red last Thercday. Mrs. George McVittin visited her sis- ter. Mrs Easom, of Clinton, one day lb' f week. Mr, and Mre. Jack Kellar, of Sea- rnrtliATre, -Watson Reid 'and son. ; Dnvid. and Mrs. Genre C'nrter ^rl 11st Wednes`lny with Mr. and Mrs. D; R. MacKenzie, of Lucknow. While talking to our two :friends about last weeks toboggan escapade we were told how exciting and thrilling the sport really was, and haat they had suffered a misfortune thatt'doesn't happen very often., Well we }tried it and are now limping with theibest of them. We were having avers) enjoy- able njoyable time when someone suggested if we had more weight on thye tobog- gan we might go faster, so three of us, totaling about 450 lb Huron County Federation • Directors Meet (by J. Carl Hemingway) Huron County Federation of Agri- culture Meeting on February Pith. 'i he Secretary 1''ieldman outlined the new rates of compensation being of- fered by Ontario Hydro for the con- struction of lines across farm land, The OFA has been negotiating for several months and, while still not satisfied with the compensation, the nr.•w offer is about three times the old rates. In view of the new line that is to bo constructed shortly from Seaforth to ; Clinton it was agreed that the Feder- ! ation convene a meeting of the farm- ers affected and the township federa- tions in order that the land owners night have all available information In this same platter of land acqui- sition, the meeting agreed that the County Federation protest the propos- ed straightening of the bend at Auburn, , This road was only constructed some three years ago and it hardly seems reasonable that It is now obsolete. The County Federation agreed to assist the Women's Committee with their Essay contest and that the Field - man send out copies to each township, of the rules of the contest. 'These are to- be distributed to each of the rural schools. Mrs, Vera Greig, vice-chairman of Ontario Farre Forum, reported on the Annual Convention held in Saskatoon. Due largely to the interest shown in this area in the farm programs and the TV Farm Forums, the CBC will be putting on more regular farm pro- grams ,in the near future. • Also it is. expected that their will be several private stations carrying the T -V Farm Forum next year, There was considerable discussion `on the Freight subsidy know being uaid on Western feed grain coming to On- tario, Many seem to feet, that this was of no benefit to the average farmer, hut was a special advantage, to the lar."e and -vertically integrated fee('er, It was agreed by the meeting -that this, nuestion should he taken back to the farmers in the townships, to learn the feeline of the producers. The results will then be gassed on to the County 'and to the OFA. The resolutions committee was ask- ed to formulate a resolntinn that would erotect the farmer in' nbtainine screen - Ines taken from grain sold to com- nle"cinl renters. This will ha pre• see(^'' pt the- next. meeting. While it was tint the kind of weather to .mitre ono think or outdoor eelhet'- Inr•s• the r+nefinrr dirt sur," -ll tll.lt 1110 rlirrntn"� cl+nnl•i 1,14,,1! filet, ',tens an ^•r iulnrov.cd Worship Service far this 1! ,i.,, nice err"end rl+nt 41v, riot^", ntl^n vivo n emelt of s2. nil to 1I4,coil and C"n'l Trinrm•n,',. " Association for their Annual Seed Fair. Everything was going smoothly until the toboggan suddenly started :to spin and our big No 11's were ledged in the snow, causing a very painful; injury to the left knee, However, it fs an ill wind that doesn't blow aameonb some good, and our friend, •Detbert,reports record sales In the liniment depart- ment. ' Narrow Escape Casey Verewey, 12 year old son of Mr, and Mrs. Joe Verewey, of the 13th concession of Hullett township, had a , narrow escape from the icy water r,f the creek which flows behind the barn ' on his father's farm, when he went to rescue the family dog. The dog was • giving chase to a fawn when the ice broke, letting both dog and fawn Into the water, drawing then under the ice to their eselh, 'f my 1'rs rb11 to get out of the water and so escaped certain death although mourns' the ' death of his dog which was brought . from Holland when the family came and was a friend of all the neighbours • in that district. School Board Meeting Tho regular meeting of thei Blyth Public School Board was held on Mon- ; day evening, February 23rd, at 8.15• o'clock, All trustees were .present. The minutes of the last meeting were not read due to the fact the school books are at present being audited,. The accounts as follows were pre- sented and passed on motion by;Trus- tee Manning, seconded by Trustee Clare, Carried. The Guidance Centre, 12.38;6 Blyth Hydro, 21,24; J. Stewart Groceryt1,39.46; It was decided that WednesdaL March 4th, would be Open Houseat the school, commencing at 8 o'clock; in the evening. • ,•,.»+4( A motion • was made by Trustee Webster, seconded by Trustee Manning, that a suitable nrize he given to the classroom with the highest percentage parent attendance at Open Hou$e. A work bee was planned for Monday morning, March 30th, to clean out the.I Science room. Adjournment. moved by' Trustee Manning, seconded by Trustee Elliott. ! CONGRATt1LATIONS Congratulations to Warren Walsh i who celebrated his 4th birthday on Tuesday, February 24th. Colhgratulations to Agnes Lawrie who celebrated her 6th birt6hday on Fri- day, February 20th. Congratulations to Stephen Walsh who celebrated his 5th .birthday on Friday, February 20th, . • Congratulations to Mr. Leonard Cnok who nelehrated his birthday on Fri- ' FIREMEN IIOLD ANNUAL BANQUET Last Thursday; evening, February 19th, the members of the Blyth 'Fire Department held their annual banquet in the Memorial Hall. Twenty-seven members,,their wives and friends were in attendance. Following the delicious meal, served by the Ladies Auxiliary, progressive 'euchre was nlayed. with the fo(leveeng winners: 'High 'lady,- 'Mrs. George Bailie: low lady. Mrs. Don Young; high man, Gar Doherty; low man, Jack Hesselwood. BIRTHS HOWATT-Irl Clinton Public Hospital on Thursday, February 19, 1959, to Mr, and Mrs. Jim Howatt, of Lon- desboro, a son, a brother for Connie, Joan and Judy. BELGR AV E The regular weekly euchre was held on Wednesday night when 9 table; were in play. High scores were wen by Annie McNichol and J. If., Irwin, and low by Mrs, H. Procter and Jesse Wheeler. The novelty prize went to Mrs. J. H. Irwin, Mrs, Ken Wheeler and Mary Anne, Mrs. C. R. Coultes spent Wednesday with relatives in' Clinton. Club 20 spent a very enjoyable ev- ening as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vincent on Thursday night. Pi•ngt'cs- sive euchre was enjoyed with high scores being won by Mrs, Robert Gras - by and Clifton Walsh, Consolation prizes went to Mrs. G. Bosman and Geo, Michie, Lunch was served. Mr, and Mrs. C. R. Coultes and K. II, Wheeler spent Monday in Toronto. The C.G.I,T. held a very successful sale of cookies on Saturday in the store of C. R. Coultes. Mrs, Richard Procter, president of the Women's Institut", was in charge of the regular meeting held In the Comunity Centre. There were 30 mem- bers present. It was announced that the WI had received several replies from councils and other gropes re- gnrding its stand on Daylight Saving Time. The institute is going to snon- sor a 4 -II garden club, with Mrs. Her - son Irwin as leader. A donation is being sent to Mental Health and Mus- cular Dystrophy. The postponed, eu- chre red dance will be held March G. Mrs, J. M. Coultes, Mrs. .Jack Ander- ^nn, Mrs. Albert Vine.ent, Mrs. Lyle Hopper and Mrs. Clifford Logan were nnmed a committee 'to prepare for the Belgrave Co-Oo banquet, which the group Is catering to on March 17. The fnllowdng`evere named as collectors tor the Red Cross for the village and sur- rounding community: Bill Taylor, Mrs. Kenneth Wheeler, Clarence Yuit, eerc, (merlon Morins. Clare Van Camn, Robert Grasby, Mark Armstrong, Al- bert Vincent, Harry Brydges and Mel Bradburn. The next electing will he held Mn'•eh 24. instead of the regular rIn' which is the date for the bnnquet, Mrs. Lawrence Vannan and Mrs. M. Taylor enve a report on the Summary Day held In Clinton recently. Mrs. Lewis Stnnehnese was enlivener of the progrnrn and Miss Louise Jefferson Kg'"^ the melt). "We help ourselves by helnine miners." Patsy Logan and I orna Bolt sang a duet and w�•.re nr• ernnrnnl^•1 by Mrs Lawrence Venturi, An n'1'treCe nn rift'nnrhlp was civil by Mrs SI" -ley T.,unc'1 wes eeeee'1 by Mrs. Welter Cc'tt. " Than Wightnhan and Mrs. Stenlcy Black days February 20th. • Congratulations to Robbie Lawrie who celPhrated his birthday on Sunday. February 22nd. (irngratulations to Billy Hamm who celebrates his 1st birthday on Sunday, A1-areh 1st, Concrntulatinns to Jon and Joanne C'ln"n w'ho will celehrnte their 2nd birthday nn Friday, rehrtinry 27th. Congratulations to M;;v Louk•e Law- rence. who re'ohrated her 1st birthday on Tuesday, February 24111, W. A. MEETING President, Mrs, IL Phillips, of the W. A. of Blyth United Church opened the February meeting with thet,l3 hymn and led in prayer. AIr. McLagan spoke on a new ladies organization as one women's group for the church. Minutes of previous meeting were read and approved. Mrs. Philli'J,3 wet- camel et•e me'1 the visitors. Roll call was giv- en, The Auburn ladies quartette sang "The Ivory Palaces," The. cog. espon- dence was read. The business was discussed, and the• reports given. Group. 2 was in charge of the devotional part of the meeting. Mrs. Petts gave a reading, Mrs. Vincent read the scrip- ture lesson and time lesson thou':lrs and prayer were given by Mrs. Iii cies The Auburn ladies nunrte e rang "Hew Great Thou Art." Mrs, Phipies gave n reading "Live Each nay," The meeting ^'over',;v,ith•hymn 38; and time Doxology. Grrun 2 served lunc:l. ,r A • S. Vokes Jan '"�-•'4ANNON, ONT. Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S. PERSONAL INTEREST Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Walsh, Lay- ton and Warren, and Mrs. Mary Lip- pold, spent the week -end with relatives in Sarnia. Mr. Ray Vincent left on Wedne:;day to attend a H,C.A.F. Conference at Trenton for the remainder of the week. Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Scrimgeour re- turned home on Sunday from Windsor, r(fter spending three weeks at the home of their daughter Mrs. Joseph Marks, Mr, Marks and family. They spent from Thursday till Sunday on their return with their daughter, Mrs. R. W. Baxter and Mr. Baxter, of Chat- ham. Mr. and Mrs. Marks spent a ten day holiday in Bermuda. Mrs. Mary Taylor returned to her own home on Sunday after spending the past three months with Mrs, Mary McElroy. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Watson, visited on Sunday with the former's sisters, Mrs, 11, West and Miss Alice Watson, of Goderich. Mr. Lloyd Walsh, of Burlington, snent the week -end with his parents, Mr and Mrs. Albert Walsh. Mr. William Racine and son, Bobby of Goderinh, called on Mr. and Mrs R. D. Philn. on Saturday. on his way bh visit with 11,1r, and Afrs, Ronal elite an•1 S'ephn. of Lonlo•,, ' Mics Paine Phillins, of Blyth, was n week-end•guest at the Park Plaza it Toronto, Mr. end Mrs Art Colson and KPn Tqr. and >"l's. Harry Sturdy and M" melees rolson. Sheet the weeleend in peneehretee were they attended the funeral of Mr. Roland Colson. John Hanna Reports The sudden and unexpected death of Hon. Thomas L. Kennedy, rite time Premier of Ontario and longti.. e Con- servative minister of agriculture, cast a deep shadow over proceedings in the Legislature during the fourth week of this session. Although old in years, in experience, and in public service, Col- onel Tom was young in spirit and was the trusted adviser of many in high places and the respected counsellor of younger Legislature members; his standards and principles always had the respect and admiration of all. He will be greatly missed not only in his own community but throughout oun great province. Night sittings of the House commen- ced this week as members joined al- most to a man in the throne speech debate, while government leaders en- deavoured to make progress 'with ne- cessary lgislation. The committees of the House again were diligent in their duties and everyone was kept very busy. The annual convention of the Association of Rural Municipalities , meeting in Toronto brought here for it a large number of reeves and municl- pal officials who provided good au- diences in the IIotise, many delega- tions for ministers, and days and nights full of interviews for their mem- bers. Debate on the natural gas controver- sy, on the report of the select commit- tee on Labour and on the various bills introduced, continued with hunch vig- our and at great length, Announcement was also made by Prime I,linis- ter Frost that the budget would ue brought down the following week and everyone awaits its presentation as an Indication of the government's election year policy. Sessions of the committee on agri- culture and on Education provided many discussions of current problems and policies, Farm safety and farm marketing received the attention of the rural members, while Dean Diltz of the Ontario College of Education discussed at length the problems of teacher training and some of the steps being taken to ensure an adequate sup- uply of secondary school teachers for Ontario blah schools and collegiates. Among the throe° debate speeches two were worthy of comment. One by former Speaker W. J. Stewart (Cons - Parkdale) was a stirring appeal to all members to beep alwnvs in mind and practice our high principles and great traditions. The other was a most he tetCStem srenn1i her reenter Pi•e1111er Harry Nixon (Lib. -Brant), the dean of the House, which wns full of histor; and good sense and listened to careful- ly by all the members. OBITUARY STEWART FRANCIS (PETE) LITTLE Stewart Francis (Pete) Little died suddenly around nine o'clock Saturday morning, February 21, 1959, in the din- ing room of the Commercial Hotel. Ile had just finished his breakfast when lie suffered an attack of coronary thrombosis and died immediately. Mr. Little was unmarried and for the past ;year had made his home 'at the hotel. He was born on the Little homestead, in Hullett township, on highway 4. He was the eldest sou of late Thomas and Isabell Bruce Little. Surviving are three brothers, Wil- liam and ATillnn, of ITullett township, and Jack, of I ondon, Also four sisters MMrs, Maori^^ . (Alive) Canell, St. Cnlherinec: Mrs. Theo (Mary) Chrlr- tiansen, 'Drente: Mrs. John (Emily) Fischer, Stratfnr4: Mrs, William (1;rntrieel van T)uscn, London, Re"..1 T. White, minister of Londeg- horn 11„ited Church. nffieisterd ;t the far^rel ce"vice on Mnndny aftr •engin in the Tanker Memorial Chin^l, Rlvlh Pitrial followed In the Blyth Union Coe s' ery, Pnllhpnr:.rc w^ Arnhln TITnntrinni. r "v, T phis Doer, Tod Prest. ,Inrk Mil- ler, Sam Caves and Norman Gowing. GORDON MANNING newel services for Gordon Man- ning e-••^ held en Monday afternoon at the Ball end Mulch Funeral Home. Clinton, with burial being made in the Clinton Cemetery. • Mr. Manning passed away very sud- denly in his ear on the way brim) from a neighbours on Friday. Febru- ary 20. ITe was horn on the 13th con- cession of Hullett townshin, where Mr. Carl Lon^man now li"=s, His Parents were the late Ch^"les Men- ning nor) Ada St.nhhrnnk. The family inew,r1 to Brucefield in 1919. u^ lvnc married in ln,o to '11ar� r ',' ..-; 0 Terre"^e, %led liv"l at Port• n"� 11111, Dir. rim,ning wn•: rnhployea. ,VIII, fho rural hrrdrn nt Clininn, cure'„inn ere his wire and one sen. ,1r,hn ('h^..ins, and-- to-, hrn:',^'•e Nor man of Clinton, and Alex of Blyth. Y.P.U. MEETING • The regular meeting of the Blyth Young People was held at the, home of leIr. Ken Jackson. The meeting- was opened with a singsong led by Lorna Barrie, Prayer was led by Lenr. Dougherty with Sam D0.11,11C::(11 read- ing the scripture lesson. Lorna Bar - die and Susan Wightma;h were in charge of the business. rhe meeting was closed with taps. The next meeting will 'oe held in the United Church. - • (ith Line Farm Forum (intended for last week) The 6th Line Farm Forum met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Taylo nn Tuesday, February 17, with attend dance of 11. The subject. of discussion. wa "S'i",'rvised Credit." (1) What are the more imnortan' credit needs in your community that are not being met at the present time" Long tern, loans for full scale farm ins of nt l"pct 80 rercent or total in vestm^rt and a' low rate of interest (2) 1Vhnt bind of program can me.' th^ ne�dc? 1Tndncided, (3) Advisnry service «.blit he woh enure h+r chiller' enallfierl far f.Mt Joh, and the",r, chnnlrl he cnnnrvisinr nn n mete comparison to the ex• tic"t of the loan. nor lavt two .,thcetina l,.r•" co -,n -r t^rt due to eo,vd and weather condt- tde++ql. 't'hn ilevt v-1/10111? mill hg' 11n1,1 nt the honkie of rtr, :led Mrs. Ivan Wight- m^'on P"' dev, 1'.-hrunry 24. Lunch and n social hour followed. William Walden Honoured In honour of Mr. William Walden who celebrated his 85th birthday on February 24th, is family gathering numbering 25, met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney McClinchey, of Au- burn, on Saturday evening. Games and contests were enjoyed. Mr. Wal- den was called to the living room and all called to attention, while Mrs. Frank Harburn read an address com- posed by Miss Geraldine Harburn, which was very suitable for the occa- sion expressing the good wishes of this happy day to him. Gary Walden and Glenn Harburn presented their grand- father with a chair and other gifts. A1r. Walden thanked all for their lov- ing kindness and gave a real interest- ing talk on his past years, telling of the progress he had seen from driving oxen. going to church every Sunday in `he lumber wagon, then the democrat, . 'he briery, the first cars and how the years hn"e made vast changes In many ways. He also recal)ed when much of fin land was all bush especially the Me,G*'wan settlement' es his home was where the late Mr. Will Kechnie 'ived, when he was a boy. Mr, Walden has four children, Mrs. Sydney McClinche:y (Elva) of Auhrlrn• Mrs, G. R. Jennings ((Mabel) of Li- vonia, Michigan: Mrs. Frank Harburn 'Madeline) of Hensall; and Lloyd, of Westfield. He also has 19 grandchildren +nd 4 great grandchildren. Mr. Walden is enioving' good health end we hope he will have many more Manny oecasinns such as this, as his slogan Is "You're as young as you l.uneh was served to the guests. Regret wnc expressed that illness and -end renditions prevented some of the rr:nnrls f"en1 being' present to. 'min nelebrate this event. LIBERALS TO MEET IN BLYTII The Huron -Bruce Liberal Association will be holding a meeting in the Blyth Memorial Hall on Tuesday, March 3rd, in support of Rae J. 1VaFsnn, of Luck - now. the party's candidate in the forth- eoming election. Guest speaker will be Professor .Jim Scott, well known speak- er of the district. "CHESTER CLUB" MAKING STEADY PROGRESS The "Chester Club" is growing, the latest addition being our esteemed ed, itor. It seems he also took up the sport of Sunday tobogganing and now represents the other side of the street. -A. Berthot, President. W. I. TO MEET The regular monthly meeting of the Blyth Women's Institute will be held in the Memorial Hall on Thursday, March 5th, at 2.30 pan. Meeting in charge of Mrs. B. Walsh and Mrs. L. Badley. Everyone welcome, WESTMELD Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith visited on Thursday with Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Smith, of Brussels. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith were Kitchener visitors recently. Measles are making their rounds among the school children and quite a number are absent and quite sick with them we're sorry to say. 14 ladies met on Wednesday in tire church basement and completed 3 more quilts for overseas relief. Mrs. John Cowan, Mr. Don Cowan and Miss Vivian Webster, of Exeter, Miss Gladys McDowell and Mr. Dan Ferguson, of Goderich, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Marvin McDowell and Graeme. At the annual West Wawanosh Mu- tual Fire Insurance Co. meeting held in Dungannon, Mr. Marvin McDowell, who has been a director for the past 21 years, resigned from his office. Mr. Verson Irwin, Belgrave, was ap- pointed to fill the vacancy, It is an honor to Mr. McDowell for in all those years ho has never missed a meeting.,. Mrs. Alva McDowell visited with Mrs. Syd McClinchey, of Auburn, on Thursday, Mrs. J. L. McDowell visited with her sister, Mrs. Elwin Taylor in the Wingham District Hospital on Sunday. We are sorry to hear that Mrs. Taylor -' suffered a stroke on Friday evening and -vas taken by ambulance to that hos- -ital. Latest reports are that some 'mnrovement is noticed. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell in- vited the Farm Forum for the next meeting on Tuesday night. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Redmond •enort seeing n timber wolf on their 'arm on Saturday. Mr, Gnrdon van Fleit is hone this '.veck with Mr. and Mrs. Redmond, 'reining with the new arrivals of little 'gmb.s from the large flock of ewes they keen. Mission Band Meeting A good iittendancc met on Sunday • 'n the Sundny School room, when thele regular Mission Band meeting. was Meld. Norma Smith gave the roll call, crit', by r ed the escrinturWalden, Margery from Psalm: 10'1. Billie Snell received the collection with Elaine Smell offering prayer. In the illness of Miss Jeandta Snell. Mrs. Walden had chnrce of Junior and Sen- ior nhr+n,hnrs. TTer story was centered around a little Negro boy who lived in the State. • RONICLES °F lNGERFARM Well now, we had a real- good start for the week ... on Sun- day morning Partner upset half a pail of water all over the kitchen floor! And you know what a flood a little bit of water makes on a waxed tiled floor. It took the two of us about fifteen minutes to mop it up. I didn't mind helping to clean up the mess but I was glad I didn't make it! As it was Partner had plenty to say—"These modern Louses—in the old farm kitchen you could spill a pail of water and hardly notice it?' The floor there was hardwood, but not polished, so it was used to the soap and water treatment. We are still skidding around on ice outside — except when we're paddling. Freeze and thaw, mild and bitter, And so it goes, The weather I mean — not the beverage. We make a bee -line for stores and bank every time we get a decent day, otherwise we are quite content to stay at home. Friday night Dee and family came in after shopping and brought me ,a few supplies, including rock salt which we had been trying to get for a week. Such a demand for it the stores had run out of supplies. It was our first experience with rock salt and Partner doesn't think it does as good a job as the ordinary bulk salt we used to get for the cattle. Next time we are near a feed store we shall bring home a 75 pound bag. Then I suppose we won't have any more ice. Salt will keel. any- way and it's good for putting out a fire — but heaven forbid that we should need it for that purpose. We have had a great time since Christmas catching up on little jobs that had been laid over until the new year. Partner made a binder -twine mat for Bob and a big wooden box, on casters, for Dee to keep the boys' small toys in. It has three partitions, one for David, Eddie and Jerry respectively and deep enough to make it difficult for Jerry to reach things by himself and thus scatter :oys all over lhe floor. However, 1 wouldn't be surprised to hear he had over-balnaced and was found standing on his head in the box. That little fel- low can get into more mischief than the other two put together. And of course he has the most innocent expression. I have been going through a lot of stuff stacked away in the basement — magazines, papers, notebooks and scrapbook. One day we had a visitor here who does quite a bit of free-lance writing and she wanted to know if I had any information on a Favorite Handcraft scuta V t' NR&! , Use these gay Swedish designs for quick bazaar items , . . to ^ls, potholders, bags, mats. Eo simple, even a child can help with this handcraft, Pat- tern 566: charts, directions for weaving 4 different designs on huck. Decorate many varied ar- ticles, Send TIIIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted; use postal note for safety) for this pattern to LAURA WHEELER, Fox 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly the PATTERN NUMBER, and your NAME and ADDRESS. ' Send for a copy of 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. It has lovely designs to order: embroid- ery, crochet, knitting, weaving, quilting, toys. In the book, a sur- prise to make a Little girl happy --a cut-out doll, clothes to color. end 25 cents for this book. certain subject. I thought I had so off I went to the basement and brought up two big cartons of brown envelopes, marked as to contents. When she saw the boxes she laughed, "You too," she exclaimed. "How my hus- band does go on about all the paper clippings and articles that I collect." I knew exactly what she meant as the same situation exists in our family. Partner is almost afraid to use a news- paper to light the fire unless he asks me about it first. Or maybe he forgets and I almost yell at him — "Don't burn that — it has an article in it on bird- houses , . . or on training dogs or time saving recipes" — or whatever I happened to be inter- ested in at the moment.. But I must admit the clippings do have a way of accumulating so it becomes absolutely neces- sary to go through them occa- sionally. It is a job that can run into days — or even weeks — depending upon how absorbed one gets. And there is knitting — TV pick-up work I call it. Outgrown sweaters and socks are ripped out and re -knitted into mitts and small blankets, using two strands of contrasting wool for addi- tional strength. Wool from baby sweaters starts life again as baby socks, only one strand of wool being used. Incidentally, play mitts from used wool are far more satisfactory than any made from new wool, The used yarn, already washed and shrunken, does not mat when washed. My non -knitting neighbours have caught on to what I am do- ing and bring me their old hand - knitted garments instead of throwing them into the garbage. And thoy feel well repaid when, in time, I present them with mitts for the children. Quilt tops is something else 1 have on the go. How do I get the time to do it all? Well, for one thing I am a fast worker — and I also have a dishwasher. No, no — not one of those elec- trical things. This one is human and goes by the name of Part- ner. So you see my husband is really a partner in the true sense of the word and lives up to the name I gave him years ago. There are times when I would rather do the dishes myself but I let it ride - except when I've been baking. Then I do get them done myself — it saves a lot of explaining. I know I would hear — "What did you make all these dishes dirty for — can't you do a bit of baking without all this mess?" 'So — washing the dishes myself is the easiest in the long run. Your Mannerisms Can Be Important Science is watching our man- nerisms. Experts who have just concluded an extensive probe into the gestures of hundreds of men and women declare that they reveal a person's character and feelings more effectively than anything else. "Keep an eye on your manner- isms and gestures and you'll learn to know yourself and other people much better," they advise. Scientific study of gestures shows that they fall naturally into two classes. "Any downward movement of the head, hands, arms or eye- lids expresses dislike or con- tempt," states one scientist who checked upon 500 men and 500 women in different walks of life. "Any upward movement us- ually expresses admiration or pleasure." He says there are a few ex- ceptions to this, but they only serve to prove the rule. For in- stance, there's a way of raising the eyebrows which expresses a sneer, but then a sneer is really a compliment which is meant to be understood as an insult, the scientist adds. A sneer, too, is deliberate whereas the gestures which real- ly tell tales are always made without deliberation. One of 'the experts tells of a pretty girl who, although still in her early twenties, has deep little furrows running down one side of her face because of her nervous mannerism of constant- ly screwing up her mouth. "Another attractive girl I know. would be much more at- tactive if she shortened her laugh," he suggests. "She opens her mouth far too widely and this mars her looks. It's a mis- take, too, ' for 'a girl to try to smile continuously and : talk ,at the same time, Smiles are not always lovely. Constant smiling is practiced by some"- film and TV stars in the' United States, often takes away character from a girl's face." One girl who was interviewed during the investigation confess- ed that her harsh, uncontrolled laugh lost her a husband. She had become engaged but one evening her fiance told her frankly that he found her laugh intolerable—and broke the en- gagement. "We believe that many a girl has missed a chance of marriage because of her synthetic and obviously insincere smile," re- port the scientists, Is Your Child Safe On A School Bus? KIDS' DAY — School bus operator Harold J. Taylor, of Ira, Vt., places new, and quite appropriate, license plates on his bus. He is assisted by daughters Karen, left, and Pamela. Taylor requested and received the special plates from the state's motor vehicle department. During this school year, an estimated 400,000 Canadian ele- mentary and secondary school pupils will be driven an estimat- ed 70 million miles to and from their classrooms. Their safety will mainly de- pend on three things: the skill and judgment of the school bus driver; the mechanical condition of his vehicle; and the conduct of the children themselves get- ting on and off the bus and dur- ing the actual travel. Yet it's a shocking fact that, in the words o! Fred Ellis, general manager, Ontario Safety League, "Many communities are apathetic to these elementary safety factors." Fortunately, to date there have been very few school, bus tra- gedies in Canada,' But as high- way travel conditions become more hazardous our luck may not hold out. The number of accidents in recent years involv- ing school vehicles should serve as a stern warning. During the last six months of 1958 in - On- tario, for example, there were 31 accidents. British Columbia had 27 accidents in 1957 — or• an average of nearly three per month over the 10 -month school year. No statistics are available for all Canada. The irony of the situation is that safety experts know what precautions must be taken to prevent large vehicles, from be- coming involved in accidents. The trucking industry follows their advice eagerly with the re- sult esult that commercial truck driv- ers have an impressive safet^ record. On the other hand, many school administrators fail to fol- low the truckers' example. One can only conclude that many communities attach more im- portance to delivering a carload of furniture or a tankful of milk than they do to transporting their children safely. Some recent accidents empha- size this point. Near Orono, Ont., a bus carrying 14 high school students stalled while going up u hill and started rolling . back- wards. The brakes failed and the bus rolled over an embank- ment. Four of the children were injured. There would likely have been many more injuries had the vehicle gone over a much deeper drop nearby. There's a good chance that the inefficient engine and the defective brakes might have been detected before the accident, had the bus been undergoing routine mechanical checks. The school bus . inspec- tion system in Ontario has been improved since then, but in some provinces many school buses Mill go several years without a thorough mechanical check. In the Mundare district in Alberta a seven-year-old girl alighted from a school bus and walked in front of it to cross to the other side of the highway. As she was doing so, she stooped over to pick up n book she had dropped. At that instant the driver - who couldn't see her — pulled ahead • and crushed her to death. Satety officials have long advocated the necessity of escorting children on and oil -buses and helping them across the road. On a school bus near London, Ont•, student passengers were shooting hard paper pellets at one another with rubber bands. One of the pellets hit a 10 -year- old girl in the eye. She may permanently lose the sight of the eye. The difficulty of controlling young children at all times is known to every parent. But on moving vehicle such control is essential. Every authoritative article or booklet dealing with sere school transportation em- pt'sizes this point. One sertion of the 50 -page Safety Handbook i ublished by the American Auto mobile Association shows how order and discipline can be main- tained by school bus patrols. In Saskatchewan, a school bus driver was fired after a formal road test showed that he was incapable of handling the job His was not a rare case. Con- trary to the advice of safety ex- perts, a man can become a school bus driver in any one of several provinces without a stiff medical examination and without know- ing much about driving a bus. In investigating the safety of our school transportation in Can- ada, I questioned police, safety experts, and provincial education and highway officials. I posed these questions: Are we doing all we can do to protect our children? Are we ignoring ha- zards that could be removed? What are the greatest danger points in our present school transportation systems? Their answers give cause for both optimism and pessimism. The cheerful news is that many school ' authorities are fully aware of the 'school bus safety problem and are meeting it with vigor and imagination, generous- ly back by dollars; others are becoming aware of the hazard and are organizing to meet them. On the gloomy side, I found that in many parts of Canada the full nature of the problem Is not yet realized and that very little is being done. In some localities, considerations other than safety —such as local politics or the de- sire to savea few dollars — are being given priority. The most important figure in sale school transportation is the man who drives the bus. The National Safety Council likens him "to a ship's captain or an airline. pilot ' because precious human lives depend on his ex- perience, skill and judgment" Yet the sad fact is thrt too often the employment of the school bus driver is made on a casual basis. It's often a part- time job taken on by a person who works in a garage, in a store, on a farm or on shift work. The health of the driver is an. important factor, yet only a few provinces, such as Alberta and Nova : Scotia, ' insist on annual medical certificates. A mature age is also important, that's why the National Safety Council sets 21 as the minimum age for a bus driver — advice that's followed by at least 18 American states. In most Canadian provinces, a youth of 18 can get the job. A candidate's temperament and his attitude toward children are also important considerations. In the opinion of W. Arch Bryce, secre- •tary of the Canadian Highway Safety. Conference, "Dangerous hooliganism on many buses is the direct result of a careless hiring attitude by boards of edu- cation, When a wrong choice is made, there's trouble ahead." In practically every part of Canada, school bus drivers lack adequate training in the opera- tion of a heavy vehicle. A typi- cal new driver holds only a chauffeur's license and has ex- perience only with passenger cars. But' is this qualification enough? Most trucking com- panies think not. They require all their new drivers — even if they've held a chauffeur's license for 20 years — .to take a long, intensive course in handling heavy vehicles before taking regular runs on the highway. For the same reason, Wallace N. Hyde, director of motor vehicles, North Carolina, says, "The per- son with a good record driving an ordinary car will not neces- sarily make a safe and efficient school bus driver." For one thing, there's quite a difference between carrying two or three young passengers in a family car and carrying several dozen lively — if not rowdy — youngsters who are temporarily free of any parental or teacher discipline. There is also a whale of a physi- cal difference between a 55 pas- senger conveyance and the or- dinary family car. For example, at 25 mnh a passenger car will stop in 25 feet; a bus needs 40 feet. You need more space to take a turn with a bus and you have to take it more slowly A driver needs many hours behind the wheel of a big vehicle to get the hang of the transmission. Re- cently one Canadian bus dealer received a complaint from u driver that the clutch was al- ways wearing out. The dealer went for a ride with the driver and was amazed to find that he - was thoroughly unfamiliar with the transmission. He knew little or nothing about how to use the six -speed gear shift which was intended to give greater control ening up or down hills and in slirrery weather. The indifference of many school boards often adds uo to the inefficiency of the bus driv- ers. A Saskatchewan safety of- ficial told me, "Many school bus drivers feel that nobody is in• terested in what they're doing, Fn they became careless." Fred Filis of the Ontario Safety League adds, "There's no incent- ive for the gond school bus driver." In contrast, • in many parts of the country commercial truck drivers with good records are given cash bonuses, feted at hanauets and sent away on courses to imnrove their status, What can be done to ensure that our children are not entrust- ed to unqualified drivers? First and foremost, we should be much stricter in the qualifications re- omired for school bus drivers. The state of Pennsylvania has laid down a list of criteria now widely approved by safety au- thorities in Canada and the Unit- ed States. It says that the driver should be at least 21 years of age and in ,excellent health. Each year, he should be 'tested for vision, hearing, muscular ,steadi- ness and strength, fast reaction time and freedom from physical conditionswhich might make him faint, such as heart disease, high blood pressure and epilepsy. Psvcholoeical tests should estab- lish that he's a stable, self-disci- plined and patient person. A number of highly regarded local citizens who know him should attest to the fact that he's a per- son of good habits. • (Continued Next Week) Modern Etiquette by Roberta Ice Q. What expenditures does the best man have for the wedding? A, Only the expenses of a gift to the bridal couple and the clothes he wears for the wed- ding, His principal duties are to stay with the groom most of the day and see that he gels to church on time, .He also takes care of the bride's ring and the clergyman's fee, which the groom gives to him in an envelope and which he gives to the clergyman immediately following the cere- mony. Q. When a hostess is serving cocktails and knows that one or two of her guests do not oars for them, what should she do? A. She should•be prepared In advance for any such eventuali- ties, and serve these guests some soft drinks. Q. When two men and two girls are eating together in a public place, at a small table, how should they be seated? A, The girls should be seated opposite each other, (plow may a woman know whether or not to offer her hand to a man when being introduced? A. There is no rule for this. It is altogether optional with the woman. She can remember, how- ever, that the proffered hand is her way of showing sincere and genuine pleasures over the meet- ing. Week's Sew -Thrifty PRINTED PATTERN 4828 SIZES 2-10 44yam.444 See the diagram — even a be- ginner can stitch up this pretty jumper in a day! Curved neck reveals blouse beneath,. back hu inverted pleat, half -belt. Printed Pattern 4828: Chil- dren's Sizes 2;rA,.3,..8,_20.-Size 6 jumper takes 1% yards 39 -inch; blouse takes 1 yard. Printed directions on each pat- tern attern part. Easier, accurate. Send FORTY CENTS (stamps cannot `be accepted; use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAM' and ADDRESS, STYLE NUM- BER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 12.3 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. ISSUE 9 — 1959 RECOGNIZE THE BLONDE? — If you don't know who the blonde is at right, it's be:ause you're used to seeing her as a brunette. Scphia Loren, known for her dark, sultty ltal'an loc!c, lett, wears her hair blonde for part in "Heller With a Cun", a western, Pear - Shaped ? A pretty brunette mathemati- cian, a man-made moon, and one of the nation's top mappers con- tributed to a new picture of the earth recently — a shape quite different from the classroom globe, Mother earth, the American Physical Society was told by John A. O'Keefe, a NASA geo- desist, is "slightly pear-shaped, with the narrow end in the Arc- tic and the broad base in the Antarctic." This revolutionary profile was first traced by the Vanguard satellite launched last March, Ann Eckles, a 24 -year-old gra- duate with the Naval Research Laboratory, noticed a peculiar fact in her routine computations of the Vanguard orbit: When the satellite orbited closest (405 miles) to earth, it dipped down about 2,5 miles over' the North- ern Hemisphere, and rose 2,5 miles over the Southern. According to Dr, O'Keefe, this dipsy-doodle course was caused by the pull of gravity, To ac- count for this, he concluded, the earthmust hump out some 50 feet at the North Pole, yanking at the satellite with that much more downward gravity tug. The South Pole, on the other hand, is 50 feet flatter than previously calculated. At the same time, sea levels in the North Temperate Zone are 25 feet lower, but those in the south are a cor- responding amount higher than believed. This may be man's first clue that the earth is made of stern- er stuff than geologists had dreamed. The earth is constantly whirling on its axis, If its inter- ior were soft and plastic, the whirling (like a potter's wheel) would help mold the outer shell into a smooth sphere, The pear shape, however, indicates an underpinning stiff enough to support the added stress of a polar bulge, Making Light Of His Troubles Although a car accident in 1942 left him without legs and a crushed spine, Buddy Koster, of Chicago, has not let it inter. fere with his ambitions in life. At the time of the crash he had a thriving electrical sign busi- ness in the city for which he had big plans. After the acci- dent he spent 15 years lying flat on .his stomach in hospital. When he was -discharged last year Koster started to get or- ganized again, Every night, after she has returned home from her job as a telephone supervisor, Mrs. Koster drives with her hus- band around the local shops and factories. She writes down the names of places where the neon Pim are faulty or out of order. The next day Koster drops each firm a card pointing out the trouble and offering his cervices as an electrical neon expert. He gets around in a wheelchair for the various -jobs. "The way I look at it," he says, "9f a guy really wants to do something, nothing can stop him if he sets his mind to it." BACKACHE. May be Warning Backache is often caused by lazy ...,kidney action.. When atdneyl get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the system. Then backache, dis- turbed rest or that tired -out and heavy - heeded feeling may soon follow. That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then you feel better—sleep better—work better. Get Dodds% Kidney Pills now. 59 • HUSH MONEY — University student Mike McCann is his own customer as he shells out a dime to play his "SI.P"—silent long - play record. It's one of the 'selections on the juke box in the student union snack bar. To make sure the customer knows his selection is playing, the "silent" record gives one, lonesome "beep" every 15 seconds. Pint -Size Parking For Small Cars While Detroit hesitates on the brink of all-out production of small economy cars, the western United tSates and notably the West Coast have in considerable degree already accepted tiny im- ports as part of the regular way of life. A notable demonstration may be seen in several of the largest and newest public parking gar- ages. Architects of these have utilized all manner of odd -sized spaces for special marking, "Sports Cars Only," The result is that such spaces can accommodate two vehicles instead of one, or three instead of two. At certain places along walls it is feasible to accommo- date ccommo- date an occasional small car where otherwise no parking could be laid out. Evidently the garage owners weren't precisionists in their "sport car" markings because the clear intention is to accommo- date any sort of small vehicle. There are more so-called "econo- my cars" fitting such spaces -- than "sports cars" and as a math ter of fact even the sports car enthusiasts never have agreed on a definition for their pets. "Any car in which one can enjoy sport is a sports car," says the most liberal of the defini- tions. This could take in any- thing, presumably. Some of the larger sports cars such as Fer- rari of Italy and Aston -Martin of England would really crowd the new small "sports car" stalls in which a Volkswagen or a Renault, economy -size but not primarily for sport, fit with room to space. (The definition of sports car most generally ac- ceptedis that it is a smallish two - seater carrying bumpers, windshields, and other street equipment, fit to use for super- market shopping but also ca- pable on occasion of competing in races with some chance to win in its class as defined by cylinder displacement.) There is talk of making spe- cial financial inducement in parking small cars but the big garages thus far providing espe- cially for them run into this snag: They're of the new "park - yourself" type, where one takes a time -slip on , entry and pays against the elapsed time on de- parture, The owner does most of the work himself with a mini- mum of contact with garage personnel — and if he has an imported car with usually four - speed manual gearshift, he pre- fers it that way, But it doesn't provide any easy way to offer a special price concession to him. writes Randall Gould in The Christian Science Monitor, Where he sometimes scores is• in parking on the open street. Many of the small imports are so short that two can fit within the space covered by a single parking meter. The writer re- cently participated in a com- plete om- p1ete l'y unarranged scenario where four bobtailed little ve- hicles were ranged inline along the curb space controlled by but two meters, Obviously only one driver is. likely to "feed the meter" in such case, but which driver? Po- lice or "meter maids" have no way of telling when they come &long, and if they ticket one car they may be trying to punish the driver who paid. The situa- tion could be really perplexing in case of concerted effort by several "mini - car" operators, , especially with the type of car that can be faced in to the curb and its door opened directly on the, sidewalk without any rear - end projection beyond a space representing the width of the now -normal American car Tests have shown that the length of one of the longest American cars.'" egti.als the combined withds of four such mini -cars, Just how small the reported- ly impending "big three" small cars will be when they roll out of Detroit is still a question. Figures have mostly dealt with wheelbase measurement in the forecasts, this being apparently planning within the 100 -110 -inch range which would be about a foot to a foot and a half under the prevailing average through o n e Cadillac, t h e Eldorado Brougham, is listed at a magni- ficent 156 inches. European im- ports mostly range within the 80's and 90's. But overhang is important and presumably Detroit will be fru- gal in this respect as is• already evident in American Motors' Rambler and Studebaker's Lark, as with the small .cars built overseas. by United States subsi- diaries and imported her e in ever-increasing numbers. While domestic small cars are likely to be big enough to require one full parking meter space -apiece, they undoubtedly will help solve traffic congestion and occupy much less space in garages pub- lic and private. Doors of many private garages will close again for the first t i m e in several years. c HARD TO EUROPE WINTER AND SPRING SAILINGS TO BRITISH PORTS: At Thrift -Season Rates First Class from $274 ONE-WAY FROM Tourist Class from $179 $ 179 VESSEL from HALIFAX CARINTHIA SAXONIA SYLVANIA IVERNIA CARINTHIA SAXONIA SYLVANIA IVERNIA 'CARiNTHIA *SAXONIA * 'SYLVANIA *IVERNIA e *CARINTHIA *SAXONIA e 1SYLVANIA *CARINTHIA *IVERNIA i Sot. FEB. 21 Fri. FEB, 27 Sot. MAR, 7 Fri. MAR, 13 Sol. MAR. 21 Fri. MAR. 27 Sot. APR. 4 Fr'. APR, 10 To Cobh, Liverpool Havre, London (Tilbury) Cobh, Liverpool Havre, London (Tilbury) Cobh, Liverpool Havre, London (Tilbury) Cobh, Liverpool Havre, London (Tilbury) From MONTREAL and QUEBEC Mon, APR, Thurs. APR. Wed, APR, Thurs. MAY Thurr. MAY Thurs. MAY Thurs. MAY M. MAY Thurr. JUNE 13 Greenock, Liverpool 23 Havre, London (Tllbury) 29 Greenock, Liverpool 7 Havre, London (Tilbury) 7 Greenock, Liverpool 21 Hovre, Southampton 21 Greenock, Liverpool 29 Liverpool 4 Havre, Southampton *Summer Season Rates Apply WASTC sUNso RUISES MAU AVIA FEB. 271h7th MAR. 21st. 1011 VESSEL TO FRENCH PORTS First Class from $284 Tourist Class from $184 from NEW YORK Te CARINTHIA FrI. FEB. 20 SAXONIA Thurr, FEB, 26 iPARTHIA frt. FEB, 27 QUEEN ELIZABETH Sal, FEB. 28 SYLVANIA hl. MAR. 6 QUEEN MARY Wed, MAR, 11 IVERNIA Thurr, MAR, 12 MEDIA Fri.,MAR, 13 QUEEN ELIZABETH We. MAR, 18 CARINTHIA Fri, MAR, 20 QUEEN MARY Wed, MAR, 25 f PARTHIA !hurt, MAR, 26 SAXONIA Thurr, MAR, 26 QUEEN ELIZABETH Wed. APR, 1 SYLVANIA Fri, APR, 3 QUEEN MARY Wed, APR, 8 IVERNIA Thurr, APR, 9 MEDIA Pr!. APR, 10 *QUEEN ELIZABETH Wed, APR, 15 *Sails from Quebec following day See your local agent - No one can serve you better CUNARD LINE �Cor, lay & Wellington Sts,, Toronto, Ont. Tel: EMpire 2-2911 Cobh, Liverpool Havre, London (Tilbury) Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Cobh, Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Havre, London (Tilbury) Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Cobh, Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Liverpool Havre, London (tliburv) Cherbourg, Southampton Cobh, Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Havre, London (Tilbury) Liverpool Cherbourg, Southampton Via Bermuda i'or free Illustrated Iltorature clip this ad Mail to your and Cunard Office nearest With your name and address,' . :. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: . AGENTS WHAT HAVE YOU TO SELL? MANUFACTURERS agents for Saskat- chewan, Write J & M Sales and Service, llox 902, Estevan, Sask. AGENTS WANTED GO INTO BUSINESS. for yuurselt. 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They are the results of more than thirty years of careful selection and breeding. They have to be outstanding producers because we want the very best kind of Chicks for our own flocks - high producers with low feed con- version costs, We have four pure • breeds and four crosses - Columbia Rock White Leghorn, 1.-400 Leghorn - Rhode Island Red x Columbia Rock, Rhode Island Red x Barred Jiock, White - Leghorn x Columbia Rock, White Leg- horn x Columbia Rock x White Leg- horn, Ames In•Cross, Write for • free folder. The Oxford Farmers' Co.opera. Live Produce Company, Limited, 434 Main Street, Woodstock, Ontario, STUDY your market, order early. Bray can give immediate shipment dayold and some started Dual•purpose pullets and cockerels. Some Ames pullets, Day- old heavy breed cockerels, Order March•April•May broiler chicks now. Request pricelist, See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. . TIME now to order Bessies, Babcock Bessles give top egg laying perform. ance whether kept in cages or large flocks, Gentle, easy birds to handle. High producers 12.15 months, Excellent livability. Large white eggs of high interior quality, illustrated catalogue in colour on request. Red x Sussex, Warren Reds, Sussex x Reds, Red x Rocks also available, 100% live delivery, 98% livability 3 weeks, guaranteed, Whitney Farms & Hatchery, Milverton, Ontario. ONTARIO'S MOST PROFITABLE LAYER LOGSDON'S 11 & N "Nick Chicks", Day old discount on large orders. Leukosis resistance. Started pullets available. Order now for spring delivery. Infer• matlon upon request. Logsdon's H &'lf HIatcheries, Seaforth, Ont, • BOATS AND MARINE ENGINES CANADIAN NORTHERN COMPANY Dreamshtps for Summer Sailing CN35 yawl, a growing class 3 already sold in Ontario. Accommodations for 4 or 5, large gblley,teak decks, dacron sails. Universal engine, many other fea- tures, all packaged In a sleek welded steel hull and priced lower than any comparable yacht. CN30 sloop. Four -berth layout, 28 h.p, engine, teak decks, dacrons, etc. Ready to sail and priced reasonably. CN "Caprice" - Easy to sail, easy to trail. 18' 6", 3•bertlt sloop. Dacrons, aluminum spars, stainless rig, 'A minia- ture cruiser.racer for $1,850. Contact Us for FuII Details Used Boats, Sall and Power Marine Design, Custom Bullding, 249 LAKESHORE ROAD EAST PORT CREDIT BOOKS BOOKS! (new) 2000 titles, 124 each post- pald. World famous authors. Catalogue 60 pages, 254, Bargain Books, Dept, C., 722 East Silver Spring, Milwaukee 17, Wisconsin. BOOKKEEPING SERVICE BOOKKEEPING Service. By mall, $2.00 per month, records kept. W r i t e. Auditor. 230 Ilorbert,Waterloo, On- tario. FOOD DISTRIBUTOR FISH_--- \VRI'rE for our 1959 price Inst. We have a good supply -Quality end Variety. SILVERSTEINS 135W King St., London, Ontario, FOR SALE • AUTOMATIC Needle Threader shipped postpaid anywhere in Canada, $1.00. Write for free folders. A. Manger Mall Order, Callander, Ontario. MUST Sell Patents on Portable Refrig• erator and Compressor for cars, homes, make toys also, Stanley \Volker, 321 E. Harvard Avenue, Orlando, Florida. NOW Available, Ten different 3 x 5 glossy color photos of U.S. Rockets and Missiles, Send $I,00 now to: Missiles, Box 6060, Cocoa Beach, Florida. NOTICE TINSMITHS BUY your half round trough hangers nt a reasonable price. Apply Enos S. Martin, 11. R. 3, wallenstein Ont. 8 BEAUTIFUL Aprons - Assorted col. ors - Only $1. Guarnntted to be worth $6 or your money back, Wnt, RICE, 117 Washington Ave. Kingston 2, N.Y. I.E,L. PIONEER CHAIN SAWS Reconditioned, new saw guarantee - new low prices shipped prepaid - wr•ite for free list today - \Vllson Mar. Ina Limited 15 Bay St,. Box W. 1780. Parry Sound. Ontario. GLADIOLI BULBS GUARANI EED H o 1 1 a n d Imported. Large beautiful Exhibition bigoms. Many famous named varieties. Mixed, large $6,50; Medium $5.50; Small 54.50 per 100. Selected large mixed Si dozen, Medium 754 dozen. Postpaid. Free Bonus; 12 named blooming size bulbs with orders of $10 or over. JOHN MASON (Importer) BOX 1025 GANANOQUE, ONTARIO. FUR FARM ANIMALS THE fur trade is waiting for top tool. Ity nutria fur. We have nutria for spring delivery that grade excellent In New York. Stewart's Nutria, Box 164, Dryden, Ont. W. J. Stewart A, C. Thompson. HELP WANTED HARDWARE SALESMAN EXPERIENCED ntan for contractors' and builders' hardware sales, all bene. fits provided, Excellent working condi- tions. Apply In own handw'rltktg stat. Ing previous experience, age, etc., to Box 179, 123 -18th Street New Toronto, Ont. HELP WANTED WANTED: Two experienced knitting machine fixers for 100 needle or coarse. ser Scott and Williams II and H Hosiery machines, Good wages and working conditions, Will pay expenses to move to States, Reply Ballston Knitting Com. pany, Box 30, Ballston Spa., New York, HELP WANTED -FEMALE MATURE woman or girl for general housework in a happy home, three school children, char kept, good salary, Write Mrs. Bornstein, 92 Ridelle Ave„ Toronto 19, Ont, PART TIME HELP WANTED FEMALE A Canadian market research organiza- tion requires ladies as parttime repre- sentatives in the smaller towns and cities (not Toronto, Hamllton_or other large city) to conduct public opinion polls and telephone surveys on radio listening and TV viewing. As some of Om surveys are conducted from your hone, a private telephone Is required, Write to: Elltot-Haynes Ltd., 515 Broadview Ave„ Toronto, Ont. HORSES ATTENTION HORSEMEN ONTARIO Belgian Horse Assoc, hold- ing 6th Annual Draft Horse Sale, Wed. nesday April 8th, 1959, Lindsay Fair Grounds, Lindsay Ontario. All horses must be contlgned and catalogued, Con. signments close March 10. For entry forms write Jack Wood, R.R. 2, Aurora, Ontario, INSTRUCTION EARN More 1 Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les. sons 504 Ask for free circular No. 33, Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street, Toronto MEN & WOMEN ENROLMENTS ACCEPTED NOW FOR DAY AND EVENING COURSES INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS RADiO & TELEVISION CIRCUITRY COLOUR TELEVISION For full information mall this coupon, phone or write to your nearest .RADIO ELECTRONIC TELEVISION SCHOOL 377 Talbot Street, London 329 Ottawa St, N., Hamilton 13 King Street N., Waterloo 124 Geneva Street, St, Catharines Name Street Town LIVESTOCK DUAL PURPOSE SHORTHORNS HILLHEAD Farms present offering, young cows, calving January and Feb- ruary, heifer calves. Two herd sirs prospects from 11,000 lbs. of milk dams. Herd on R.O.P. Write for particulars. 1f, A. Hewitt's Sons York, Ont, MACHINERY AND MOTORS SAW CHAIN 25% DISCOUNT 16" LEI. Pioneer $13.50. 18" McCulloch D44 $15.50, 17" Homellte EZ $15.25. Write for details on our complete line of saw chain, JAY'S MAIL ORDER, BOX 44 BURLINGTON, ONTARIO MEDICAL "ARE you sure you don't have sugar (sign of Diabetes)? Thousands do, and don't know it! Play safel Check your family nowl Simple home test that you make yourself, detects sugar imme- diately, 254 each 6 for $1.00 Postpaid. Royal Company, Dept. C, 1051 Mt. Royal East, Montreal GOOD RESULTS - EVERY SUFFERER FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect BRONCHIAL asthma, bronchitis, hay fever, sinus sufferers, why change clim- ate for your health? A new diet has been worked out that gives lasting relief, no money down, Send for 30 day trial offer, giving us inforntation about your Condition. Acme Dietetic Service, 4525 Sue Hall Drive, El Paso, Texas, POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczema Salve wW 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 $3.00 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 57. Clair Avenue East TORONTO MUCUS IN THROAT THUNA'S PINK TABLETS for the nose and throat, dropping of mucus dis• charge, sensation of a lump in the throat and other disturbances. Ask Your Druggist OPPORTUNITIES DRILLING FOR 011. SHALLOW Ontario field investing part. ners. \Vrlte P.O. Box 55, Terminal A, Toronto. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN FLORIDA! Is booming, Classified sec. limns, Jacksonville, Miami newspapers, listing jobs, all types, men and women, Rentals, 51.00. Lawson Press Service Box 14(11 Jacksonville 1, Florida. LEARN AUCTiONEERING Perm Soon, Free catalogue. Relsch Auction Col. lege. Mason City Iowa. America. OPPORTUNITIES MEN AND WOMEN: SPEEDi,AND trains for Stenographer In 10 weeks Home -study. ABC System. Free folder. Casson Systems 10 East. bourne Crest, Toronto. DELIVERY WORK $150.00 MONTILLV income for part. time deliveries and collections, ust have car or light truck. 5795.00 ensh required. More income for full time. Reply giving name address and phone number to Box No. 178, 123IIlth St.. New Toronto, Ontario, BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn ilnlydressingg Pleasant dlgnfled profession; good wages Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates Americo's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write of Call MARVEL HAIRDRESING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St W Tnrnnto Branches: 44 Kang St., W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street Ottawa PATENTS FE'l'HEI1S'I'1iN11AUt;li & Company Palen( Attorneys. Established 1890. 600 University Ave. I'orunto Patrols all countries. PERSONAL "ADAM to Armageddon," brief history book free to bible readers, Address: Box 149, Dorchester, Ontario, ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goodell 25 assortment for $1,00 Finest quality, tested, guaranteed, Mailed In plain sealed package plus free Birth Co; trol booklet and catalogue of supplfe Western Distributors, Box 24•T Regina, Sask, DETAILS FREE! For hard to locate Products and items, or Manufacturers, Send Name and Address to: Location Service Bureau, Box 37.5 Almond, Wls• consin, U.S.A. FOOL your Friends, loved ones! Make them think you are In Texas, Letter Remafi, only 254. (coin), J. Duncan, Box 4273, Dallas 0, Texas, LADIES for the best In cosmetics, try Peggy Newton Products, Free cata- logue beauty chart. Bern's Novelty, P.0, 13ox 945 , Montreal, PEN Pals! 254 (coin) gets you on our Pen Pal Lists. State age, sex and in- formation about yourself, "Bob" 13ox 11336, San Antonio, Texas. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. FILMS developed and 8 magna prints 404 In album, 12 magna prints 604 In album. Reprints 58 each. KODACOLOR Developing roll $1.00 Mot Including prints). Color prints 354 each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 ex- posures mounted In slides $1.25 Color prints from slides 354 each. Duplicate transparencies 254 each PET STOCK BUDGIES, champion class breeding Stock, singles, or pairs, guaranteed, Write: Aviaries, 2 Edgowood Gardens, Toronto, POULTRY WE have 8000 Mount hope Queen Leg- horn Pullets at present 3 to 4 months old, We also have Red X Sussex, Red X Rock Sussex X Red every week of year, any age. They are all vaccinated, wormed, debeaked and culled. Free delivery within 100 miles. Write or phone Tavistock Poultry Market, Phone 60, 'Tavistock, Ont, PROPERTIES FOR SALE FOR Sale - Eight room unfinished house with garage, located at 116 Chesterfield Ave„ London, Ont. Apply Box 2, Glencoe, Ontario, PROPERTIES WANTED WANTED waste farm land aiso cut over bush lots for bunting. William O'Brien, Coe 11111, Ontario. SEEDS SEED FOR SALE CLINTLAND Registered No. 1 Oats, 1st Generation, H. R. McKim. Quality Seeds, Dresden, Ontario. MU. 3.2511 DOUGLAS SEEDS EXCLUSIVE European and American strains - 'All American" selections - flowers, vegetables, begonias, cetera - urns, For Canada's finest listing of Hy- brid and Improved seeds write: Douglas Seeds, Brantford, Ont, STAMPS AND COINS "BEGINNERS - try a selection of Approvals priced 14 to 104 each, mint and used, Mint U.S. stamps given free to every applicant, iillson Tremere, Ormiston, Saskatchewan." FIRST DAY COVERS CANADA, U.N., U.S.A., First Day Covers. Write for price lists or ap- provals. B. A, Ovens, Chippewa, Ont, 20 FOREIGN Coins $1.00, Gold Boyer. Mtn $15.00. 1958 Canadian Uncirculated Coln Set, $3,50. Scotch Highlander Badge $1.50, Coln Buying List 254. Crown Hobbles, 167 Codsell, Downs- view, Ont. 100 DIFFERENT Free to approval appli- cants, R. Mackenzie. 11575 Fredmlr Blvd„ Montreal, SWINE TOP quality Landrace swine, 2 to 8 months priced from $25.00, Mervin Howe, R, 5, Aylmer West, Ont, SUMMER PROPERTIES FOR SALE Presqulle Point - New summer home or year round•all city conveniences - oll heated fireplace - 521,000.00 - terms - for inspection con tact J. F. Day, Real Estate, Trenton, EX. 2.4261. Little Luke Resort - Between Cobourg and Trenton - Concrete buildings - dance floor, canteen, dining, clean sand beach, living quarters. Always booked for season, Parking, trees and tables. Exclusive. For particulars and terms, J. F. Day - Real Estate - Trenton EX. 2-4261. VACAtION RESORTS ARE you looking for a quiet restful place to spend a winter vacation? Our Canadian guests return year after year. Comfortable apartments, complete kit- chensin a real desert setting, with beautiful view of the mountains. Close to all facilities, 11 miles below Palm Springs. Write for our reasonable rates. White Chimneys Apts.. Box 651: Palm Desert, California. SOUTHERN RESORT FORT -Lauderdale, Florida, near ocean. Modern rooms, apartments, Send for brochure. Windsor Manor. 2835 Terra - mar St. WINTER RESORTS LEARN TO SKI at LIMBERLOST LODGE with JOSL HUTER, C.S.I. Two 1000 ft. Tows. Four Downhill Trails. Wide practice Slope Limberlost features all-inclusive Ame- rican Plan rates, averaging $10.00 per day. No tow fees or other extras. Com- plete ski rental and repair service. Three hours from Toronto. Five Day Learn To Ski Weeks 542.50 Monday to Friday All Winter LIMBERLOST LODGE Box 54 Ltmberlosl P.O. Huntsville, Muskoka, Ontario Phone; Huntsville 1552. Ext. 68. WANTED WANTED IN NEW CONDITION LH.C. 11/2 to 21/2 all bath gas engine, Johnson 4h washer motor, Wisconsin 3 horse. engine with reduction gear. Would trade one bag concrete mixer for hall bag size, Enns, S. Martin, R. 11. 3. Wallenstein, Ont. SLEEP TO -NIGHT AND RELIEVE NERVONSNES$ I MA" TO•MORRONI To be (sappy and tranquil instead of nervous or for a good night's sleep, take Sedicln tablets according to directions. SEDICIr TABLETS $1.00—$4.95 Dreg Aeras WO ISSUE a — 1959 PAGE 4 11.111111 •94414+•-•-•-•-•-• •-•+,-N rH-•44-4 •+4-4. 4-4-44 -• 41+4++ • 41-4 +4444 $4+ . 2 2 1 Clinton Memorial Shop T. I'RYDE and SON CLINTON -- EXETER - SEAFOWIH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE - THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON: Business -Hu 2-0606 Residence-IIu 2.3869 EXETER: Busiiess 41 Residence 34 1 i • ••• 4•+4+•+4+44+• • • ++4+44 4+4-• 4+4-44+$ •-• +-4-•.44-11 4-4+4 4 •, 1.50 per ion on eo tes.W.0 �� V/NlN MClll, HIGH GRADE cn FERTILIZERS TI 7q. Cash Discount :or payment in 10 day. There's no better way tit' cut fer- tilizer costs than to take advan- tage of the early season discounts on Co-op Fertilizer. r 4.24'12 ® goo 4-24-12 by taking delivery before FEBRUARY 28 BELGRAVE COOP Phone Wingham 1065-W Phone Brussels 388W10 NOTICE For your convenience, the Belgrave Co -Opera- tive is staying open for business on Thursday after- noons until further notice. Wingham MemorialShop • Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSIIIP. Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON. _ 11 111 .1. .111- 11 1, 1 . . J 11 1 .41, l+N+I0NItwNI0.4.#4MINIItJt.wo m,~so, NN4,, N'NJr'IN1 RED TAGGED CLEARANCE SALE NOW ON Bargains in Regular Stock marked way down for quick clearance. All Red Tagged Articles must be sold, cannot be laid aside. PELTON'S VARIETY STORE BLYTH, ONT. •4/V►IVIINIYNIIIrnNNIININN+IWNNNIIMIJNNNVt•1N+I,/r I. J-! •u 1. 45111 J.. 1 .. :•1111./,. 1411' I I I .. 1.1 .1 .. i.1 I .1. 0 11 .-. WeekEnd Specials BLOUSES in sizes 12 to 44. DRESSES of Washable Jersey, Drip Dry, Cottons and Better Silks. NEW SPRING COATS for Ladies. Special in Boys HAPPY IF'OOT SOCKS 69c NEW DRIP DRY PRINTS in Good Selection of Patterns. Newest in DRESS SHOES for Ladies, with high or Low heels. • Growing Girls DRESS SHOES. Ask for, and, Save your Sales Slips. Save Black Diamond Stamps, for Premiums. Store Closes at 6 o'clock Saturday through February, The Arcade Stores STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS. THE BUTT! STANDARD Oro AJ, n D i.ale...•1 1 . Ad:w „,.rra{L00111 :.Jt.w.1•40r..as f.w leie ... 111-11111 11111 11.101.0111.111.11.1•1121011111111.0f News Of Walton Walton Group Th.,: February meeting of the Walton Group was held in the church basement an Wednesday evening with 24 ladies present, with Mrs. Wm; Thamcr, vice presiuent, in charge. Ilymn 485, "Je- sus keen me near the Cross" was sung with Miss Bessie Davidson as I anist. Mrs. Gordon Murray read the scrip- ture lesson from Matthew 5:14.18, aster which Mrs. Thamer comented on the passage, Prayer was ou'ered by Mrs. i`a. Ilackwell and a poem, "Hang On" was read by the lc€ c c r, 11 i E. 1 ►1 Travis gave an interesting topic o.l "There is no Unanswered Prayer." The ROTI Call was answered by naming an apostle. The W.A. treasurer's report was given by Mrs. R. Bennett and W.M.S. by Mrs, E. Mitchell. Three bundles of Red Cross material were handed out. It was decided that used Christmas cards and .scrap books be sent to the County Ilonie, Clinton, to be completed by the ladies there. Iiymn 252, "In Christ there is no East Nor West," was sung as the closing hymn. Lunch hostesses were Mrs, R. Bennett, Mrs. R. Travis and Miss Bes- sie Davidson. Social Evening A social evening was held i.l the churn basement of Duffs United Church on Friday evening when ai. English, Irish and Scotch program was l:rescnted with Itev, W. M. Thomas acting as chairman. The program con- sisted of duet by Glenna Houston and Carol Fraser; suis, Auc-irey McMichael; Old Country Tea Party, presented by the Walton Group, namely: Mrs. N. Marks, Mrs. -P. Nfcliu„a,d, Mrs. F. waders, Mrs. W. C. Backwell, Airs. R. Travis, Mrs, G. Dundas, Miss Bessie Daviuson, !qrs. R. Bennett, Mrs. E. Hackwell, Master Gordon Mitchell with Mrs. 1I. Travis at tire piano and Mrs. Mitchell with the violin; duet, Jack McCall and Bobbie Snannou; Men's cnwr, presented by toe 16th Group: Alr, Bert Johnston, Mr. Jim Smith, Air. Doug Fraser, Mr. Rae Houston; Mr, Don McDonald, Mr. Alvin M.:- Uonalu; reading by Mrs. R. McMi- chael; solo, Geraldine Dennis; Neuse Baan and Mary Helen Buchanan; aecordian sola, Mary Dennis; solo, Don MacDonald; reading, Mrs, H. Craig; solo ,Audrey McMichael; duet, Graeme Craig and Sherrill Craig; solo, Mrs. Vain Vliet, At the close of the pro- gram, coloured slides were shown on Mexico, California and other westc; n states, by Nelson Marks, with Howard Iiackwell explaining the pictures, • Lunch was served by the ladies of the 16th Group and the 17th and Boundary' Group tidied up. Miss Ross Marie Bolger, of Milton, spent the week -end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. .Harry Bolger. Wayne McMichael,, of Windsor, vis- ited at his home over the week -end. Mr. Ian Kirkby, of Toronto, was a w'ek•Nnd visitor . with his vrandpar• gots, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Kirkby. Mr. Hugh Johnston has returned nome after being confined to Winghant hospital, following a train -car crash. Mrs. Hilda Sellers, of Lucan, spent several days with her. daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. Travis. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Ennis, Cathy,. Beth, of London, visited with Mrs. E. Ennis on Sunday. Mr. Ron Ennis, of London, visited on Sunday with his parents: • W.A. and W.M.S. The W.A. held their February meet- ing in the church basement Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Ken McDonald as president. Hymn 388 "0 Master Let Me Walk With Thee" was sung and the scripture taken from Corinthians chapter 1, 31, chapter 12, 1.13, read by Mrs. Bert Johnston. Mrs. McDon- ald commented on same. The secre- tary's report was given by Mrs. Ron Bennett and Mrs. A. Coutts gave the financial statement. An English, Irish and Scotch Variety social will be held Friday evening at 8.15 in the church basement. Ladies are requested to bring sandwiches and tarts. Door keep- ers to be Mrs. A. Coutts and Mrs. Ron Bennett. The 16th of Grey and lith of Morris to help serve. the Boundary and 17th to clean up. Mrs. M. Baan will order 50 boxes of assorted cards to he distributed among the groups and sold. It was left with the kitchen committee to look after buying paper for the setting of tables also old ta- blecloths to be made into tea towels and to look into the matter of replac- ing new ones. Another project for the year was to he a Variety Auction In the fall. Meeting closed with prayer. Mrs. Dave Watson opened tate W. M. S. meeting with prayer. The 'roll icall was answered by a verse of "Faith" and the minutes of the last meeting was read by Mrs. R, McMI- chaei and several cards of thanks wore ackntwledged. Mrs. H. Craig gave the Treasurer's report and Mrs.. 13. McMi- chael stressed the need of reminding each group of the March of Dimes. A prayer for our Missionary, Miss Flor- ence Taylor, was given by Mrs, Mc- Michael, The Community Fellowship secretary, Mrs. Cliff Ritchie, gave a reading entitled "Sees Salvation of Majority by Christ or Communism," The topic was taken by the 17th and Boundary group with Mrs, D. Buchan- an chosing as her topic "Know our Neighbours, the Indians." Prayer dos- ed the meeting, • REVOLUTIONARY NEW AUTO IRU$1NESS START1iD BY ZURICII FIRM Jack J. Pearson, prominent car dealer in Zurich for a number of years, has announced the formation of a new. company, to be known as Pearson Auto Leasing Ltd. This business is the newest line of customer service related to the auto- mobile industry In Canada. While car leasing has been prominent in United States for 15 years, it is still in it's infant stages in Canada. However the idea is catching on quickly, as there are now a total of 10,000 cars being leased by Canadians. The most prom- inent users of this service are larger chains, commercial organizations and professional men, who drive 35,033 miles or more in one year Under the leasing system the cus- tomer is relieved of all responst'iilit.y, such as insurance, licences,. etc, At the same time he has no large amount of money invested, and li:: can put it to other uses. A new car is sup- plied at regular intervals, without ally cash outlay, and there is a tremen- dous income tax saving, Many dif- ferent plans for leasing are available, some of which include no cost to the customer except the gasoline. Ex- perts claim that by 1117'1 40 per cent of all cars in Canad& will be leased. The manager of Pearson Auto Leas- ing is Jack Turkneim; Larll+h, Ile has been busy completing several courFes on car leasing systems. and should he well qualified for the position: As soon as possible the new firm in- tends appointing a local gark:e in each community a.; a service' depot for customers in that partL"u'ar area. WESTFIELD Mr. Walden Celebrates85th Birthday A nice evening was held on Satur- day,cvening at the home of 'Mr. and Mrs. Sydney McClinchey, Auburn road, when relatives joined for the occasion of Mr, William Walden's .birthday which' takes niece on Tuesday, , s~ eb- ruary 24. Gifts were presented by the family and grandchildren. Mr. Wal- den who is 85 years young, is hale and hearty and enjoys visiting with his family and friends. At present he is .wending a fewi weeks with his daugh- ter, Mrs. Reg Jennings, and Mr . Je,n- ninrs and family, iii Michigan. «'c wish Mr. Walden continued good health in the years ahead. Farm Forum met. at the hone of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Mcnnwell 1a�i Tuesday evening with a fair ett'nd• Onn.n. 11rn'ndm, n.rnnind thiq wnnk if. tr hninrt hnl•l nt Mr. anti Mrs. tinuln, a Campbell's home, Keine review'night there will he a social time spent. LAKE ERIE ICE FISHING BEST IN YEARS An unusually long period of zero and sub -zero weather has produced angling opportunities unmatched in the Lake Erie District for many years Conservation officers report that at Leamington, for example, safe ice ' covers a wide area and large perdu and good-sized smelt are being caught in abundance; one fisherman caught 143 perch in a little more than an. hour. Fishing shacks and automobiles dot Rondeau Bay and other favourite win- ter fishing areas such as that, adjacent to Mitchell's Bay on Lake St. Clair. At almost every port along Lake Erie the story is much the same, De- partment officers report, The idea of • 1^44,4-4 • +$-4+$-4• • 4;N•44 r•-•t•4•••••+N+4i4+•+ .•.. TENDERS FOR TRUCKS Sealed Tenders clearly marked as to contents will be received by the undersigned until 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, March 12th, 1959 for: (a) 2 - 25,000 GVW Trucks (Cab & Chassis) (h) 1- I/2 Ton Panel Truck Tenders for (a) and (b) to be submitted separately. Tender forms and specifications available at the Engineer's office. J. W. BRITNELL, County Engineer, 07-1 Court House, Goderich, Ontario. r$4-N.f 4444-• • 4444.44 ••• 4 • 44+4.4•+4 44-44 44 • • 444.4 • • •44 N angling through the leo for smelt has been "catching on" for the past sev- eral winters. Smelt fishing is pro• ductive also in the NIagara River m plat' % w'nere the ice is heavy enough to be safe. Of ice fishing in the Inner Bay at Long Point, conservation officers de- scribe it as "exceptionally tine,' with 400 anglers on the ice on a recent Sun - clay atfernoon, and every one of them had a fish. I; BUY - HAUGHS BIG 88 OVERALLS AND WORK CLOTHES MEN'S & BOYS' CORDUROY PANTS BY CARHARTT. - 1lednescta', Peb• 261 Aword of caution: Don't take Chan• ces when ice fishing, Bo sure the lee is thick enough to support you. Even in continuing cold weather, it Is not uncommon for cars to. have accidents even after automobiles have traversed the ice safely for days, Pressure rid- ges and fissures occur without warn- ing and thin ice or drifted snow can easily hide danger spots, veterans warn. 411444 11-414•44.4-41-44-444 R. W. MADILL'S SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The 'Home of Good Quality Milercbanciise" te• w0+4•4••wos+s+-+-r••e44+44•1*.ems44+4+44. I -4H+4-•-4.4+4-•.4+•+4+44+4-4-4 44-+44+444444 4-44 44.4++4 1 t HURON -BRUCE LIBERAL ASSOCIATION G IN BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL Tuesday, th 3rd 8:30 p.m. GUEST SPEAKER: PROFESSOR JAMES SCOTT In support of Rae Watson, of Lucknow, Huron -Bruce Candidate EVERYONE WELCOME t . N+•-+• 4+4 •-•4-44-•-• • 4. •• 44 4 41-4 4-v 4-•-•4 •-•+ •••v • r►s+•+• 44+ 44 •+•1 , APPLICATIONS FOR POSITION OF COUNTY WEED INSPECTOR � Desired qualifications: . 1. Somepractical experience with herbicides _(experience as a custom weed -sprayer an ad- vantage) - 2. Prepared to spend at least 100 days a year at this work. 3, Ability to work with the public and act as ad- visor to spray operators in the County. 4.. Age - approx. 50 years of age or younger. 5. 90c an hour, plus mileage 08c. 6. Available for interview Thu'rs., March 19, 1959, 7. Phone number of applicant. 8. Applications to be submitted to the undersigned in sealed envelope clearly marked ."APPLICA- TION" before noon Manda , Ma'ch-16;-1959. JOHN G. BERRY, Clerk -Treasurer Court House, Goderich, Ontario. 444• • 44+•x+•44+• •-•-rr•4J-1++• ••144-N+• 4-••N+1NN *•••••... ++.N.....r..I�..wr..+w...rv4•+ INJ 44+44rN~4444.NN+. SALE ENDS SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 28 GET IN ON TIIE BIG SAVINGS ON THE LAST THREE DAYS OF SALE. ALL WINTER CLOTHING PRICES SLASHED. Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH, ONTARIO. "The Shop fur Tots and Teens" 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. N+IINtf44./II4.44M'IM4I+444444IJvN4*.•N INNIt•NIN✓•MIMN Wednetuiay, Peb, 2 ,109. - Easter Seals Being Mailed Out his Week This Thursday Is the day 1111en means hope, To them the Easter thousands of Rotarians, Lions, Kiwan- ians, Kinsman, and other service club members mail their Easter Seals to everyone in Ontario asking for help in their crippled children's work. The 13,599 crippled children in the province, living on farms or hi ci'.y homes or in remote northern hamlets, know that the. 1959 sale of Easter Seals Seals bring treatment and training, a possibility of dependence argil relief from the physical handicaps that birth, illness or accident have left them, 1 est year, the Ontario Society for Crippled Children, whose only annual appeal for funds is made in Easter Seal Campaigns by 221 service clubs, carried out its biggest program in all .•0fw11MNsxNm INIM uclIImIRis,zaars.:+4Z11111M1111=11111/Ass tsar, Elliott insurance Agency BLYTII -- ONTARIO. •t V• ./IN.NVWV'.AMM/w.N. WVV.n.////LM1/�NVNMI-I/•M/1 INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automohile, Firn, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability, WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SER VICE, I 1? Office Phone 104, Residence Phone 140 4 • i We can build your Pole Barn or give material esti- f sat „... d.. lad... ..... Vstan 1 0-44+4 r4 •-4-4-:-•-••4 -4-4-$ +e•a44 r• -••c '.-4s++•4-4-0-*-11--4+4- +•4 rrtH•N4' TTENTIO F'KERS If you are anticipating an addition to your present stabling room or planning to build a Pole Barn SEE US ABOUT YOUR Pressure Treated Poles Pressure Treated Lumber & Steel mates for the "Do It Yourself Man." A. Manning & Sons Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario 44 4-4♦•�4-N�-a•+*44-6 •••-•-•-••s 4++rN•+•N•N*4+•••i-944+- 4.499-4-4•$•,••,*•N4-*•4-•••H+•.Hr•HN4444*NN+•4-+4S'•-•-••N 4 BLYTII STANDARD wY^a►ni11l1ilObilU.�wa... -. _. ..... . ..• _.._._.. �`�`....,....,. its history, This year, mor) than 13,500 youngsters, who are listed on the Society's rolls as quote "active" casts, will have increased because Ontario's swiftly growing population means hundreds of new cases each year, The provincial objective of tips year's Easter Seal Campa'.g.i, Febru- .,t'y 26th to March 29th, Is $800,000, • The organization that cares for this ' ------ ntnnher of children is amazingly small, A tightly -knit office staff at headquart- Thurs., Fri., Sat,, ars in Toronto, a score of highly -train- ed nurses, a corps of volunteer doc- tors and an army of public -,spirited citizens who give freely of their time, of all proportion to the money spent «The Wings Of Eagles" The result Is a volume of service out in the work. i A highly entertaining blend of lusty LYCEUM THEATRE Wingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Night Commencing at 7:15 p.m. Feb. 26•27.28 John Wayne, Maureen O'Hara in This work lakes several forms. comedy, human interest, and drama. There is a nursing service mtue up of twenty-two graduate ntirses, each of whom has taken a special post -grad- trate course in orthopaedic nursing which qualifies them as orthopaedic • Clinton Community nursing consultants. These nurses vis - 1t the homes of handicapped children, teach the parents how to administer • FARMERS therapy treatment or direct the child I AUCTION SALES • to medical attention. The nurses function ;n specific di- i visions of the province ranging front the Lakehead to Eastern Ontario. A- vailable for their use are qualified therapists whose value is indicated by the fact that the Ontario Government reguests the assistance of two during I a polio epidemic some years ago and which assistance was provided by the Society at no cost to the province or patients. Five summer camps this year will give a three-week holiday to more than 1,200 children,. who, would other- wise have no such holiday because of their inability to attend conventional camps. This is the biggest crippled children's camping program of any single political area in the world and A happy home we once eninycd, its •importance is that it more than How sweet the memories still, gives a holiday, it teaches. children But death has left a loneliness, who are often embarrassed by handl- The world can never fill, caps to care for themselves and get —Ever remembered by his wife, Lena. along with other youngst.r3. Year round, too, Woodelen, near London, is IN MEMORIAM a crippled children's centre to provide special treatment for resident and out• WHI'IMORE—In lovin" memory of a patients, rt•-er husband and father. Kenneth Clinics for the examination of child- Whitmore who niicaeri away one year ren in areas far from major hospital f ago, February 23rd, 1958, centres are also organized and attend- 1 Not Inst today — but every day ed by top medical sper•ialists from ; In silence we remember. Toronto, Hamilton, Ottaw:, and else.. 1 • where giving their experienced advise. ; —Sadly missed by his wife, Gladys, If children need hospitalization, • this and son, Douglas, __ • is provided on a specialist's advice and local doctors co-operate in ,iii o• IN MEMORIAM viding treatment at home,* • ! McNALL— In loving memnry of our With -the opening of the thirteenth mother, Mrs, Gorge McNnll, who annual iEasEcr Seal Campaign today, passed away one year ago, February them': VIII be thousands of service 28th, 1958. cltiti trier and women warking for a We am sad within our memory, better •future for Tinimy and all his Lonely are our. hearts today;' For th' one we loved cn dearly pals. Your contribution to ti:.a Easter Has forever been c�'led away, Seal Campaign is neede 1, WO think of her in silence, BENEFIT DANCE No era ca _see us ween, There will be a benefit dance`fit ..1 •% .But .many silent tears are shed 1 Blyth Mehtbrial.Hall on Wednesday, When others are asleep. IMarch 4th, for Eric Anderson, of the Constance IIockey Team. • Eric had the misfortune of having his 'eye ir.- jured in a game •at the local ceren;a early in the season. - EVERY FRIDAY AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 1.30 p.m. IN BLYTH, PHONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, . Manager. Auctioneer, t 05-tf, -INousd.#Mrµ•It'Y N••.MINNI•'�M- IN MEMORIAM . CRAWFORD—In loving memory of my , dear husband, James Crawford, who passed away six years ago, March 1, 1953. Gone dear Jim gone forever, !tow I miss your smiling face, But you left me to remember, None on earth can take your place. AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE to ONTARIO FARM PEOPLE A Fas 'tccidertt Survey • WILL BE CONDUCTED THROUGHOUT ONTARIO FROM MARCH 1, 1959. TO FEBRUARY 29, 1960 This survey will record all farm accidents and fires during the year and seek to determine their causes. The objective of this survey is to provide the basis of a Farm Safety Program designed for your bene- fit. • The Farm Accident Survey in the County of Huron is under the director of your Agricultural Repre- sentative D. H. Miles, and Associate Agricultural Representative A. S. Bolton, assisted by Bill Els- ton, RR 4, Wingham - Morris; Mrs. Lloyd Pipe, Londesboro - Hullettt Frank Thompson, Winghant - East Wawanosh. An accident reporter will collect details of all ac- cidents for each community in your. Township. The success of a farm safety program will depend on the full co-operation and assistance of all Ontario farm people in this survey. ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OR AGRICULTURE Dr. C. D. Graham, Hon. W. A. Goodfellow, Deputy Minister. • Minister. 4-44+4444-44-4444+444• N4M�M4+'H+H'�-tr-4 •e OPEN NIGHT AT BLYTH PUBLIC - SCHOOL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4 at 8 p.m. All rooms will be open for inspection by the visitors. The Senior room will be fea- turing a debate by Grade 7 and a . Students Forum by Grade 8. The School Board will give a PRIZE to the room having the most parents present at the' school that night. No Admission. DANCE Blyth Memorial Hall —Remembered by her family. 07.1p, . WANTED Girl to learn egg candling and 'ab - ,ling, pnnly Maitland Creamery, Wing - ham, Cat ado. 07-1. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Music by • Mel Fleet and his Orchestra Dancing from 10 to 1 LUNCH COUNTER Admission at popular prices Sponsored by - Blyth Agricultural Society CARD OF THANKS We would like to thank all those wonderful people who have been so kind to us during the last six months, for the letters cards -and gifts sent to me in hospital. Special thanks to Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Ruddy and to all who don- ated to the generous shower which we received on Friday. Although. we coin never repay them for all their kind.; ness it was deeply anpreciated, 07.1p. —Frank and Christina Nesbit. CARDOF THANKS A sincere 'Thank You" to all who remembered me with calls, cards, flowers and treats, while I was •a pa- tient in Clinton Hospital and since my return home. They were all very uta:': apnrcciated, 07-1. —Mrs, Ruth Thue;i,... T-"' SALE 7 choice Hols.cc.. 'toffee calves, price $40 each; 52 Yore -hire X Landrace chunks, weighs approx•enately ;i0 lbs; a very large quantity r" flies 0 to 7 weeks olrl. Contact, John rreidanus & Sons. 1 ondesboro, phone 2:1112 or 56113, Blyth. 07-3 FOR SALE 12 pigs, 8 weeks old. Anply Clarence Johnston,phone 121119, Blyth, 07-1. FOR SALE Registered Aberdeen Aims Bull, 10 months old. Apply John Rhin, phone 331113, Brussels, 07.1-p, WANTED Responsible person with License for delivery. Apply at Superior Food lltarket. 07-1. WANTED Reliable man as Dealer in Iiuron County. Experience not necessary. A fine opportunity to sten into old prof- itable business where Rawleigh's Pro- ducts have been sold for years, Big profits, Products furnished on credit. Write 11awleigh's, Dept. B-136-163, 1005 Richelieu, Montreal, 07-1 RADIOS & TELEVISIONS REPAIRED By Peter Hollinger, RR 2, Blyth,,! phone 45115, Brussels. 074f, FOR SALE Car -top carrier, good as new cort1 ditlon. Apply W. A. McNeil, Blyth, Ontario. , 07.1p, FOR SALE Electric brooder, as good as new, for 500 chickens. Apply Peter Hoon- aard, phone 15118, Blyth. 07.1p, CIIICKEN BINGO A Chicken Bingo will be held in the Londesboro L.O.L. Hall on February 27th at 8:30. Everybody welcome. 07-1p. FOR SALE 150 Red Sussex Pullets, 8 months old, $1.25 each. Apply Mason Bailey, phone 12115, Myth. 07-1 GRAVEL TENDERS TOWNSHIP OF GREY •- Tehtders will be received by the un- dersigned until 1 p.m, Saturday, March 7th, 1959, for crushing and hauling 15,000 cubic yards, more or less, of gravel for the Township tcof Grey. Crusher to be equipped with 7;i screen. Gravel to be supplied by the township. All work to he done to the satisfaction of the Road Superintendent. A certi- fied cheque for $300.00 must Accom- pany Lander. Lowest or any tender not neccssnrily ncrnled, Mrs. E. M. Cardiff, PAGE 0 ROX/ THEATRE, . PARK -"� —CLi14TOrt.— ,GODERICH. Now: Francis Covers The Big Town" „ , "Abbott & Costello elect The Keystone Now Playing: Jerry Lewis in Rocker Kops" "Mot Mlsbehavht", bye Baby", In color with Marilyn . Continuous, starting at 7. Saturday Maxwell. matinee at 2, Mon„ Tues., Wed., March 2-3-4 Mon„ Tues., Wed., Double Bill "The h• " James Stewart, Audio Murphy, DIanne Foster and Dan Duryea. Space Children" A Series of railroad payroll robberies Michel Rae, Peggy Webber,Jackie becomes the focal point of a stirring conflict between two brothers. Coogan « ff and Night Passage "COLOSSUS OF NEW YORK" In Cinemascope and Technicolor _ John Baragrey, Mala Powers, Otto Thurs., Fri., Sat., March 5.6.7 Kruger Double Bill •___.-___ _.__ _ Marjorie Main • Percy Kilbride and— Thursda , Frida , Saturda all the Kettle Kids Y Y Y i episode in their untranquil lives. Jerry is a riot as a bachelor daddyMa & Pa Kettle at Waikiki and nursemaid to triplets. And as the second half of an enter - raining Double Bill Jerry Lewis, Marilyn Maxwell, cc ff Baccaloni Smoke Signal •<•4+4±-r 4-$4-••N1-•-•+••••4± 4 -±4++.1•** -±? -•?4•N"'; SEWAGE D13POSAL' ___ CATTLE SPRAYING Have your septic, tanks pumped the Have your cattle sprayed for lice, sanitary way. Schools and public satisfaction guaranteed, at reasonable buildings given prompt attention prices. Contact Lewis Blake, phone Rates reasonable Tel Irvin Coxon 42116 or 95 Brussels. 48-12 Milverton, 75R4.62.184; -- — FILM DEVELOPING DEAD STOCK 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 "Rock -A -Bye Baby ff WANTED IBLYTH BEAUTY BAR HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid in it: ou^ding districts for dead, old, sick Ann Hollintrer or diesbled horses or cattle. Old hor- Phone 143 ses for, slaughter 5e a pound. For J prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, I CRAWFORD & phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth, ; 'HETIIERINGTON 211112, if busy phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels, 1536. Trucks available at all times, 34- 1, Mar. BARRiS'TERS & SOLICITORS J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington 0 C. O.C. Wingham and myth. • iN BLYTH EAcn THURSDAY MORNING S PREST and by dt n sura nt F. o Loratrd In ElliotInsurance Agency LONJWSBOIIO, ONT, Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 48 Interior & Exterior Decorator Sunwcrthy Wallpaper Paints - Enamels - Varnishes Brush & Spray Painting. N4. # #d4 I+,••N•MN•MNr•*4.1 .NI. • FOR SALE Choice quality Sebago potatoes. Ap- ply Norman McDowell, phone 41115, Blyth. 06 -If Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton ~ TENDERS WANTED HOURS: The Council of the Township of Seaforth Daily Except Mondry & Wed East Wawanosh will receive tenders I , 9:00 a,m, to 5:30 p.m. for Warble FlyInspector for the Town- eC in 9:00 a.m. to Monday. pan. p Clinton Office - 9 • 5:30. ship dor 1959 spraying of cattle for P•hon( HU 2-7010 Warble Fly. State price per hour includ- ---- ing his own transportation, also spray- G. ALAN Wi l,LIAMS, er operator and operator itelper. State OPTOMETRIST price per hour, duties to commence n1T1 �T('rC c'r UtTNGITAM. ONT April 10. Any or no tender not paces- rer1NTer:c RY 4PPOT"t'i'MR'v'T sarily accepted. Tenders received by (For Apointment please phone 770 the Clerk on or before March 3rd, 1959, Wingham!, at One o'clock. Profeseionai Eye Examination. 06-2. , R. H. Thompson, Clerk, RR 1, Optical Services. Belgrave. --=- • PROPERTY FOR SALE • ROY N. BENTLEY A good two-story house, garage with hen house above, colony house, 1� acre of land, in village of Blyth. Ap- ply phone 107111, Blyth, 06-4p. FOR SALE G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRiST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH 25-11 J. E. Lonystaf. f. Optometrist Potatoes. Apply, Ralph Caldwell. phone 121123, Blyth. 06-3p. WANTED TO RENT House and barn with hydro and wafer. Apply, Henry Bowman, R.R. .1, Blyth, phone 221133. 07-1 .1.,,M.04~t MASSEY-FERGUSON Sales and Service Beatty Equipment and Parts Lloyd Walden, Proprietor • Queen St., Blyth Phone 184 RENTAL SERVICE CATTLE CLIPPERS CEMENT MIXER (WITH MOTOR) WHEEL BARROW VACUUM CLEANER FLOOR POLISHERS BELT SANDER 1/2 HEAVY DUTY ELEC- TRIC DRILL NEED SPRAYER, (3 Gal.) EXTENSION LADDER (32 feet) PIPE WRENCIIES PIPE DIES & CUTTER Apply to Sparling'sHardware Phone 24, Blyth rublie Aerountant GODERICU, ONT. Telephone 1011 — Box 478. DR. R. W. STREET 'Myth, Ont. OFFICE TTOTTRS-1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY AITCTTONEER Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Prompt Assistance Given to Arraagine Your Sale Problems. Phone :3818. Myth. George Nesbitt, George Poweil, Auctioneer. Clerk 1VATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls Are Used" Supply artificial breeding service for all breeds of cattle. If phoning long listance, simply ask for - Clinton, Zen- ith 91650. 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 AM. week days; 6;00 and 8:00 P.M. Saturday ev- enings. For cows noticed in heat on Sunday morning, do not call until Monday morning. The quality is high and the cost low. McKILLOP MITTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICOFFICERS: E - gI ORTH, ONT President—Robt. Archibald, Seaforth; Vice -Pres., Alistair Broadfoot, Sea - forth; Secy-Treas., Norma Jeffery, Sea - forth. DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone. Senfnrth; J. H. Mena. Ng, Blyth: W. S. Alexander. Walton • 1'. J. Trewsri.ha. Clinton; J. F. Penner Rrurefield: C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm H. Fuller. Goderich: 11. Archibald, Sea. forth; .Allister Brn•+dfnnt, Seaforth, AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; .1 F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker 1Rrescal-• -t- Munroe, Seaforth K. W. COLQUHOUN INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PHONES Office, HU 2-9747; Res. HU 2.7536 Phone Blyth 78 SALESMAN Vic Kennedy • WANTED Old horses. 311c per pound. Dead cattle and horses at value. Important SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL, to »hone at once, day or night..GIL- Clerk, Townshin of Grey, Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich, Ethel, Ontario. and cleaned. Fres estimates. Louie °hone collect 148331, or 148334. 07.2 j Blake, phone 42B0, Brussels, R.R. 2. 44 1, Recipe For A "Scripture's Cake Real winter set in for us be- fore Christmas this year. Now the earth is frozen iron -hard, and the snows follow each other in what seems a timed regular- ity. The sun, when visible, is far to the south. At night the stars twinkle icily in the dark blue sky, flashing jewels displayed on a great swatch of velvet. Careful Amish housewives see to it that layers of newspapers are put between their potted plants and the frigid window- panes. There are days when the frost patterns on the glass are never entirely melted by the heat from the roaring stoves. Yet each season has its charm, and these are the months for living in. The focal point of farm life on cheerless days is the kitchen. Cosy, warm, and com- modious, it is the heart of the home, the busiest spot during the daylight hours and beyond. At the Zaugg's one can always find Anna in this common room, gentle and pretty in her house cap and apron, working indus- triously alongside her mother, already knowing most of the housewifely arts Emmaline pos- sesses, yet eager to learn more. Ironing, sewing, churning, bak- ing, hooking rugs, and piecing quilts, they spend the days in felicity around the fire, Amos comes in to sit a spell, but never in idleness. While he warms him- self, a man can crack hickory nuts and walnuts gathered on the farm, and pick out enough ker- nels for the baking of cakes and cookies to keep the women sup- plied for days to come. Only Hilda goes to school now. Dropping by after a trip to the pcstoflice and village store, I try to steer the talk in the di- rection of those early days when Amos' ancestors lived in what were then the trackless reaches of William Penn's woods. And without a hint of boastfulness he relates how even then the econ- omy of the German settlers was extraordinary. Other colonists destroyed the forests by gird- ling the trees, and after they had fallen to the ground, burnt them in huge outdoor ricks. To his people this seemed a wicked waste, They cut down each indi- vidual tree, and preserved each stick as though it were gold. "Chimneys the others had," he says, wedging the flatiron 'tighter between his overalled knees, "and chimneys to spare—one at each end of the big room, and two big fireplaces in which in Winter they built mighty fires with huge logs—and there they sat, faces burning hot and their backs cold like ice," "But those were the days of great cold, What else could they do?" we ask. Then he tells how the Ger- mans had only one chimney to save expense in building, and that they heated their houses with stoves to save wood and the time and labor of cutting it. "Even temperatures they had with the stoves, so that their womenfolk could work at vari- ous useful occupations in the long winter evenings. While in the homes of other settlers, the wives and daughters passed the time in idleness, their fingers numb with cold unless they stayed by the wasteful fires in the great fireplaces." Emmaline's eyes twinkle at this. "Useful we are yet, h'm, Poppa," she asks, "as in the old days a'ready?" And Amos answers gravely HEIGHT OF FASHION—Comedi• enne Carol Channing peeks out from beneath the towering coiffure .she sports while ap- pearing at a New York night .spot; It's a space-age creation dubbed the "Missile Cone", Studded with diamonds, it's valued of an astronomical $500,000. and wi(h great sincerity, "The wife is more than half," It is a saying in this region, one in which he devoutly believes, Christmas was quiet in our valley, but as always it was a joyous time. And the seeable, believable part was the togeth- erness of families. A blizzard had piled the drifts high two days before, leaving the old familiar landmarks — wood- pile, picket fence, and the pump house which shelters the elec- tric motor for our well — garbed in stately white robes shot with silver, We had guests in our home for Christmas; yet we kept an eye on the doings . of our nearest neighbors and dearest friends. And were rewarded by the sight of Eli driving his family across the meadow in a horse-drawn pung. This was really the old- fashioned way of traveling, and we rushed outside to wave. Eli returned our greeting with a will. Katrina, rosy and smiling, held a baby on each arm, Even in this region where chil- .,dren are counted a priceless as- set, as well as a joy and blessing, no one would say other than that the twins were a special ex- tra gift from the Great Giver. But Emmaline's attitude at times bespeaks her feeling that in some degree they are also the result of good management on her daughter-in-law's part. And it is true that Trina is a wonder- ful manager in all ways. Not being forewarned as to the size of her issue, she nevertheless took two babies in her stride, writes Mabel Slack Shelton in The Christian Science Monitor. Born in eerily spring, Molly and Melvin spent the summer months on the screened pordh of their parents' home, from where their baby eyes could look out across a sweep of tidy fields, Thus the love of the land is early instilled in the children of these master farmers. And by next summer, they will no doubt be prattling of the twelve acres of potatoes their father is rais- ing, rather than of fairy-tale and television characters, At nine months of age, they still wear dresses, When they reach the toddling stage, Molly will still wear them, but they will come to her ankles, with the skirts gathered full on a waist- band. And her little sunbonnets, woolen in winter, cotton or rayon ones for summertime, will be made exactly like the ones the other Zaugg womenfolk wear. And Little Mel will have jackets that button to his chin, with miniature broadfalltrouser; such as his father and grandfather wear, and on his flaxen head he will have a tiny black flat - crowned hat, the like of which can be found in any store which stocks Amish apparel—and prob- ably nowhere else on earth in that size, They are sturdy, healthy ba- bies, and just now at the cuddly, roly-poly stage when it is such a joy to hold them, Trina never lacks for sitters when she wishes to leave them behind for a few hours. How she 'manages to do all the work required of a farm wife, tend her children and make Christmas presents, too, is a mystery—at least to anyone not trained from early childhood in. these arts. Yet she does it with grace and much gaiety. When we donned heavy wraps and galoshes for our Christmas call on the family, we found she had captured the loveliness of her June garden in rose petal beads for me. "To make them is so simple," she protested at my misty -eyed thanks, And since I am the only one on her list who wears beads, perhaps she en- joyed the novel task, But "Look once!" Emmaline cried, and we paused to admire her gift from her son's wife, the like of which we had never seen. Framed to. hang by her pastry table, it was a recipe for Scrip- ture Cake, which goes like this: 1 cup Judges 5:25 (butter) 2 cups of Jeremiah 6;20 (sugar) 31/ cup's of I Kings 4:22 (flour) 3 tsp of Amos 4:5 (baking pow-, der) A !tile Leviticus 2:13 (salt) I Kings 10:2, to taste (sweet spices) 1 cup boiling Genesis 24:11 (water) 1 cup of Numbers 17:8 (almonds) 1 large spoonful Proverbs 24:13 (honey) 6 Job 39:14 (eggs) 2 cups chopped I Sarnuee 30:12 (raisins) 2 cups chopped Revelation 6:13 (figs) Take Solomon's advice for mak- ing a good boy (beat well), and you will make a good cake. Pro- verbs 23:14. And so another Christmas passed, quietly but leaving us content and happy in the rich- ness of friendship. A man was telling a friend of his narrow escape in the war. "The bullet went in my chest and came out of my back," he said. "That was a near thing," said bis friend. "It could have gone through your heart nad killed you," "My heart was in my mouth at the time," the lucky man re- plied. COLD WEATHER — A crew member stands on the deck of the ice -coated schooner Halwawk as the vessel unloads In Halifax, Nova Scotia, on returning from the North Atlantic fishing grounds, where the worst weather conditions In years are re- ' ported .One fishing vessel has gone down and two others with 48 men aboard were reported missing. ',TABLE TALKS eJarke German's chocolate cake has become a highly popular dessert during the past few months, It's a moist, rich, three -layer cake with a delicate flavor that comes from the sweet cooking choco- late that is used as an ingredi- ent, There are many and varied stories about the -recipe's origin. One is that a serviceman sta.' tioned in • Germany brought it back to his wife, It is more likely, however, that the name came from the sweet ingredient—Ger- man sweet chocolate -which has nothing to do with Germany but is named for Samuel 'German, an Englishman who went to the United States almost 100 years ago. This man started life in the. new country as coachman to a famous chocolate _ manufacturer and gradually worked into his employer's business and finally developed the formula •for the sweet chocolate that bears • his name, If you have missed this recipe or mislaid it,. here it is again. It takes time to make and it isn't expensive, but if you want a reputation for cooking skill and a new "specialty. of the house," try this delicidus-. and lovely -to -Look -at chocolate cake, GERMAN'S CHOCOLATE CAKE 1 package siveet cooking choc- olate cup boiling water eup butter 'or other shorten- ing 2 cups sugar 4 egg yolks, unbeaten 1 teaspoon vanilla 21/2 cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon baking soda 1/2 teaspoon ,salt 1 cup buttermilk 4 egg whites, stiffly beaten Coconut -Pecan Filling and Frosting Melt chocolate in 1/2 cup of boiling water. , Cool, Cream but- ter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add egg yolks, one at a time, beating after each addi- tion. Add vanilla and melted chocolate and mix until blended, Sift flour with soda and salt, Add sifted dry ingredients alterntftely with buttermilk, beating after each addition until batter is smooth. Fold in stiffly beaten egg Whites. Pour batter into three 8- 1/2 1 DOESN'T LOOK SLEEPY — New York City disk jockey Peter Tripp looks wide-awake after a 200 -hour grind without sleep. Carried on under medical super- vision as a stuntin behalf of this year's March of Dimes, his marathon insomnia is . said to set a record. Medical authori• ties hope to learn much about how sleep deprivation affects a person 'ftom Tripp's carefully domumented ordeal, or 9-ineh round layer pans, lined on bottoms with paper. Bake in moderate oven (350° F.) for 30 to' 40 minutes, or until cake springs back when lightly press- ed. Cool, Frost top and between layers with Coconut -Pecan Fill- ing. and Frosting. Coconut -Pecan Filling -Frosting Combine 1 cup evaporated milk, 1 cup sugar, 3 egg yolks, '/a pound butter, and 1 teaspoon vanilla in a saucepan, Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until mixture thickens, about 12 minutes, Remove from' heat. Add 11/2 cups (about) tender -thin flaked coconut and 1 cup chop- ped pecans. Beat until cool and of spreading consistency; Makes enough to cover tops of three 8• or 9 -inch layers, Makes •21/2 cups. * • • j�;, SOUR CREAM1.,. APPLESAUCE CAKE 1/2 cup heavy sour cream, % to 1‘ cup sugar 1/9 cup unsweetened thick apple. sauce 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon . cinnamon 2 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 teaspoon soda 3,4 teaspoon cloves 1 cup chopped raisins 1 cup chopped nuts Mix sour cream, roger and applesauce. Sift dry. Ingredients together and add .to the first mixture with the raisins and nuts. Mix well, Pour into an 8x8 well -greased square pan or into your favorite loaf pan, Bake at 350° F. for about 1 hour. • * • If you like an easy chocolate cake, try -this devil's food with the baked -on frosting. DEVIL'S FOOD WITH BAKED, ON FROSTING 1/2 cup water 1/2 cup cocoa 11/2 teaspoons soda % citp shortening 1'4 cups sugar 2' eggs 21/2 cups sifted flour Iii teaspoon salt :;1 cup sour milk 1/2 teaspoon vanilla Mix water, cocoa, and, soda to- gether; allow to stand while mixing other ingredients. Cream shortening and sugar well. Add cocoa mixture. Add eggs one at a tune, beating well after each addition, Sift flour and salt, and add alternately with the sour milk and vanilla. Pour into 121/2 x9x2-inch pan. Bake in preheat- ed 350° F. oven for 45 minutes. Remove from oven and spread with frosting. Return to oven and bake 15 minutes longer. BAKED -ON FROSTING 2 egg whiles, beaten stiff 1/2 teaspoon baking powder 1 eup brown sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1A cup chopped nuts Add dry ingredients and van - ilia to beaten egg whites and beat again. Spread over cake, sprinkle with chopped nuts and bake as airected above, * * * If you ever plan to have a "buffet -style" party, perhaps you'd lilce to make a cake sim- pler than a fruitcake, but one that would be just right for handling in one's fingers. Here is such a cake, which you can incite yourself, Cut it In thin slices for finger eating. If you Want to use it for a dessert for a sit-down dinner, serve it warm with a hot lemon sauce, ORANGE RAISIN CAKE % cup hot water 1 cup seedless raisins n cup shortening 1 clip sugar 1 egg, slightly beaten How To Make A Million A Year "The best thing that ever hap- pened to me was when I met Jerry Lewis," recalled his ex - partner Dean Martin in Holly- wood recently, "The best thing that's happened to me since then was when we split up," The breakup of the comedy team two years ago has since given the, lie — in a loud way, of course — to the classic rule that whenever a famous comedy team splits, both halves fall abruptly into obscurity, Rubber - faced Lewis has become finan- cially (if not artistically) suc- cessful as a producer • comic. Martin, the crooner and former straight man, has established himself as a dramatic actor of steadily increasing 'finesse and a big moneymaker in his own right. His income in 1958 was in the neighborhood of $1 million, He was preparing recently for his fifth movie venture in the 29 months he has been unattend- ed by Lewis — playing a Broad- way director in the film "Career" for Paramount, Between re- hearsals he talked to a News- week reporter in his Beverly Hills home, an English field- stone - and - wood affair with seven bedrooms (the Martini have seven children).- "When hildren)."When I was making pictures at Paramount with Jerry," he said, "I'd skip off and play', gulf all the . time because I was un - s/ cup applesauce 1/2 cup fresh orange juice and pulp 2 cups sifted flour 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg 34 teaspoon cloves 1 cup chopped nuts 1 tablespoon grated orange rind Pour hot water over the raisins and set aside to plump, then drain. Cream shortening with sugar until light and fluffy. Add beaten egg and blend in apple- sauce and orange juice and pulp. Add flour sifted twice, with six dry Ingredients that follow, and beat smooth. Stir in the drained raisins, chopped nuts, and grated peel, Bake in 10 -inch greased angel cake or spring -form .:pan, for about 11/4 hours at 350° F. or until done. Cool on rack, •1S you serve it warm, use the following hot lemon sauce. I1OT LEMON SAUCE 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1/2 cup sugar 1 teaspoon grated lemon peel 1 cup cold water 3 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons butter Sprinkling of nutmeg Mix first four ingredients and boil 5 minutes. Add lemon juice and butter. When you've spoon- ed it over the cake, sprinkle with nutmeg, happy. Even the ride to the studio every day was boring, because I knew that nothing would happen when I arrived at work, It got so I didn't even bother to read any of the scripts. I always knew what my lines would be; Jerry would say something like 'I think I'll go to the drugstore.' Then I'd have to say; 'You're going to the drugstore?' " "So I would tell the writers to write me out of the picture as much as possible, I had no In- centive. It was always; SIng to the girl and sit down; sing to the girl again, sit down again. "When I 'finally left Jerry I had no idea what 1 was going to do, I had no idea it anyone wanted me, Well, M -G -M put me in a little throwaway musical called '10,000 Bedrooms.' Then 'The Young Lions' happened, MCA got me the part (that of a potential draft dodger who finally proves himsel in combat), and my being with Marlon Brando and Montgomery Clift started things moving," "My gambler role in 'Some Came Running' was a snap for me, I just played cards and talked Southern. But next came 'Rio Bravo' (to be released in April), Before I went to work on It, I asked Brando to read the script and tell me what ideas I should have in mind. He didn't tell me how to act the part. He just told me what to think about, I play a drunk with d,t.'s. I'm fighting the bottle, the bad guys, and John Wayne, the sheriff who makes me his deputy. It's a very good role, more dramatic than anything I've ever done, "After 'Career', I'm scheduled to do two comedies for Colum- bia; The movie versions of 'Who Was That Lady I Saw You With' and 'Bells Are Ringing'. I've also been offered the role Sinatra refused opposite Brigitte Bardot in 'Paris by Night'. I'm reading the script now, It doesn't look so good, but maybe they can fix it up. ."I'm more fortunate than many other actors because, like Sinatra, I don't have to rely on movie work. I can do night clubs, television, and records. That gives, me a certain amount of security, so that I don't have to take every picture that's of- fered me, Every picture can't be good. I get a $200,000 allowance for each TV show I do for NBC (two a year): ' I'm an active partner in DIno's Lodge (a rest- aurant on Sunset Strip) and in the Sands Hotel in Las Vegas, which is like an oil well — it pays every month. The only night-club work I do now is two weeks a year at the Sands, I had my fill of nightclub smoke in my early years with Jerry." Would he ever reunite with Lewis? "Sure," he said, Under what circumstances? "When we get to the noon," —From Newsweek, ISSUE 9 — 1959 FASHION HINT 4 4404000. Country Store On A Back Road It was well below zero, a chill night embellished by a ripe wind from Canada, and we were com- ing home from upstate over the back roads. I like back roads, People live on them, Nothing seems to happen to me, ever, on the big bonded highways, They have no mail boxes akimbo, or lighted kitchens, or frosted . tie- up windows. I like to swing along the rivers, and over the hills, and keep in touch. So she said, "Better find r. place tp pick up a loaf of bread." I don't understand the feminine Inventory, She had been riding along, checking the cupboards and shelves back home, conduct.-' ing a running account of provi- sions. Bread — yes, bread was low, and breakfast would be coming up. So we came to a fork in the road shortly, with a store, and I pulled up. "Arid I guess some prunes," she added.• This was far front somewhere. We were back in the woods. Yet progress hasn't been selective, and you can have about any- thing now back in the woods. No reason to expect any de- ficiencies — the little country store now has its frozen foods and such. I pulled open the door and stepped in — and there was a difference. They were burning wood, in a wood stove. It smelled good, You have to have a little touch of wood 'smoke In the air whenever yo burn wood, because a little puff or two comes out when you open the front door and stoke., And you have to keep stoking. But more than that, wood heat Is another kind of heat, and you can feel it. It was cozy In the store, warm to hot, and as I left the door and walked forward it began getting hotter. I went by a stand of axes and a couple al chain saws on the floor, and saw a display of felt boots. This *as lumbering country, and such things would be in demand in the winter. There was a fellow sitting by the stove—just sitting —and he was gray and elderly. Mackinaw and mittens on, cap down over his ears, he didn't look tip at me. He didn't know I was coming In, so he hadn't planned to look up. And a wom- an came out of a back room when she heard me close the door. "Hi!" she said, I said, "Hi!" • She said, "Guess it'll be colder 'fore it's warmer." "Oh,' I said, "It'll warm up come June," • The man said, "It! it don't, it'll be a long winter." Now, I report this fully, for 1 FISHING PARTY—Location where Russian fishing trawler was captured by Norwegian Navy ship • is spotted on Newsmap. Charged with violation of Nor- way's fishing boundaries, the' Russians were escorted to the town of Aalesud, believe there are expatriate people present who will want to know there still is such a store, with, axes on display, and old men at a stove—a stove, even— and a society where conversa- tional by-play is as important ,as., ringing the cash register. 'Wood fire feels good,' I said, "Best kind," she said. "None better," said the man. The woman said, "Been so cold I' have to get up once and fill it. Freeze up if I didn't, Most of the time it'll hold, hot ashes to morning, but these cold nights Pd wish it to burn longer." "Can't you get oil 'here?" 1 asked, knowing that they could, but giving the conversation. every opportunity. "Oh, sure," she said. "But I'd look sweet buying oil with the profit on what groceries I sell here. Besides, I got 10 men 'cutting hardwood, and if I just take out one stick to a cord, I couldn't burn it. ' "Not that I do,". she said, "But I could. Scalers would never know," • "Wouldn't you like to have an oil furnace?" "Well, yes and no. Be a fine thing, but old John D.'s got all he needs without support from-, me. I got fifteen hundred acres I pay taxes on, and wood just lays around. That stove can glow red, and it don't cost me a cent." The door opened and closed, and it was my girl friend com- ing to see what happened to me. "Oh, smell the wood fire," she says, . "I burn wood at home some," she said to the woman. "Best to bake by," said the man, "I want some baking powder, too," she said to me. "Baking powder," said the woman. "Anything else?" "Bread and -,prunes," I said. "I got loose ones and tight ones," she told me. "Loose ones is best," said the man, "They cook up better, and got more gumption," "Let's have a snatch of loose ones," quoth I. "Best kind," said the man. So we paid up and drove along, with an invitation to stop in again, and while the bread had seen better days, the prunes were delicious. We cooked them on a wood fire, which is the best way, It's nice to know that that littlestore is there, hotter than a two -dollar pistol, and het by wood through preference and prudence. It's on the road less traveled by, right in the fork, back a piece. —by John Gould In The Christian Science Monitor. $200 A Shot "TIAs is a money - making scheme," a Canadian official said frankly last month, his eye on the huge amounts wealthy sportsmen spend on big -game hunting in Africa. The scheme: To open up the isolated grass and muskeg • country of the North- west Territories to buffalo hunt- ers. The North American buffalo, onetime king of the plains, is almost extinct in the U.S. but more than 13,000 closely pro- tected by the government, still roam C a`n a d i a n grasslands. Strays from the Wood Buffalo National, Park in Northern , Al berta avid the Northwest Terri - to; s;.ve been straggling north in*Ic ;numbers that food is rultilingthort, so hunters willbe alliWe 'to kill 2,700 of the un- gai#rlyj:lt tasty beasts. Bag lim- it One per year, License fee for United States hunters: 5200. — From NEWSWEEK, A mother with six children boarded a bus and gave the con- ductor so much trouble that he said at the end of the trip, "I wonder you don't leave half of your youngsters at home when you travel." Wearily the mother looked at him and replied: "I did." -•��-�— 10. Macaw .CROSSWORD 11,ltongth•eot PUZZLE 17, Performers Cistern 6er 1 19. Beast ACROSS . niente 20, Connected links 1. windmill malls' 2. wag • 21, Hurry .• 6 (Iresso 3, !tubber!! 22, Enumerate 8 Ituselnn 4. Band of color 23. Decree emperor 6, Stew , 24, Deals out - 12 4iarth 13 River (Sp.) 14 Brave man• 15. Very hungry 17, hear 18. Chair 19 So. African colonist 20. Playaunfalrly 22 Folded 26. Listen ' 26„1yo9 27, Perform 23, Stupid person 29, Closes • 30. Wire measure 31, That thing 12. Scotch tea• cake 11, Staff of office 34, Tidiest 16, Classes 37. Highway division • 11, right 39. Article of apparel 41, Brighter 44, F'o"tl fish 45. Laborers 46. Tuber 47, watches ._ narrowly 41, Grunting ox 4/. Bed support DOWN 1. Pard publl� anno;"ce- 6. Help 7. As far as 8. Menace 9. Prophets sparingly • 28, Preferred 29. Perfuse 30. Warlike 32. (lazes fixedly 33. Sets on horseback 35. Similar 36. Male descendant 38. Humbug 39. Itlder !lag- gard henrine 40. Dried grabs 41, ocean 42. I'erlod of time 43. Deeny 45. Belonging tome 1 2 12 15 3 4 :.:.:.:5 V: 6 7 f'Q, tit 6 14 9 10 II , •:•: ti 11 • ,5�,• 16 . , 17 ' ..,$ • . oi,y! 20 21 .••;.21 21 24. 25 t:.; 2 .•.:;27 2/ t: 29. ...*., 30 11 32, .a;ti 33 34 35 :.- :r) 9 40 a x•' 44:.t•• :.•,.44 47 : E4e Answer elsewhree on this page BALLS OF .YARN Railroader Ed Wilson uses colorful balls of yarn to knit sweaters. Taught by his wife, Wilson is now suf- ficiently skillful to shame most females. He sold enough sweaters last year to pay for a vacation for himself, his wife and their four children. He's regularly employed as a baggageman. THEFAIE4 FRONT Cal oezr:ir • It 0; Registered warehouses have been advocated by a leading government official as a .means of bolstering a sagging potato industry in Canada. * * * E. G. Paige, Director of Fruit and Vegetable Division Canada Department of Agriculture, re- minded the Potato Section of the Ontario Soil and Crop Improve- ment Association that potato consumption has slipped by about 40 per cent over the past 30 years, He • said an urgent examina- tion of production and merchan- dising methods is warranted to see what can be done to halt this disastrous downward trend. •,* • Mr. Paige noted that with re- gistered warehouses, the onus would be on the grader or packer to comply with grade standards and other regulations. It would mean a. more consist- ently well -graded pack being put on the market. Too, warehouses would pro- vide records of sales and aver- age returns, aiding federal sup- port programs or deficiency pay- ment systems, And, he added, production of a better eating potato would be encouraged. * * * "Position of the potato in the national economy is such that the industry must make every effort to see that services avail- able to it through universities and ,governments are used to best advantage,” said Mr. Paige. "Ways and means of improve - Ing its position, however, must emanate largely from the in- dustry itself, •, • • While conceding that the high standard of living in Canada is partly responsible for the de- crease in consumption of pota- toes and other low-cost :'foods, the federal spokesman claimed the degree to which changes in eating habits occur can be in- fluenced by the , quality and at- tractiveness of the products as they are presented to the house- wife. ' Unless corrective measures are taken, he said, powerful re- tail organizations will assume control of their . requirements through a form of so-called ver- tical integration and the indus- try will evolve into one where a relatively few selected and specialized producers will, under direction of these retail outlet?, produce the bulk of potatoes for domestic market, The remainder of producers would he limited to supplying the export require ments._ and what is left of the domestic mvrket, *• * * Besides the swing to potato warehouses, he urged promo- tions of the nutritional qualities of the nntato and a drive toward ., new and better processed potato products, • A Russian apple variety may 'play an tmpbrtent role in the development of a more winter- hnrdv. Canadian apple.- This Is the' conclusion of ` Ca- nadian Department of Agricul- ture officials after 20. years' ob; servation • of the Antonovka variety at 'the Fredericton Ex- perimental 'Farm. * * • Various test winters since 1939 have shown that Antonovka trees tonwnrked to the varieties Bancroft, Fdeer, Kendall. Linda, Mnenun, Red Sny and Sandow, have done better than when the trees are grown on their own trunks. • • * Singleworked, o r standard, trees of Kendall, Linda, Red Spy and Sandow practically all per- ished during a series of test win- ters, while double -worked trees of the same varieties, while in- jured to some extent, largely re- covered and bore good crops, The Antonovka • wood that makes up the trunks and lower portion of the scaffold branches was not injured. • • * While forming only 8.9 per cent of total beef gradings in 1958, the new Standard grade, introduced a year ago filled 'a gap in national beef grades and , justified its creation. Homer J. Maybee, Canada De- partment of Agriculture, said Standard beef was in demand by institutional purchasers like the Armed Forces and hospitals. In fact, on occasion some sup- pliers with Department of Na- tional Defence contracts substi- tuted Good grade beef because of the shortage of Standard. • * * Owing to the lack of volume, Standard has yet to be sold in any proportions on the retail level. Though this grading was fair- ly uniform throughout the year, the high point was May when it averaged 9.9 per cent of total Canadian slaughtering. A built-in possibility is that Staard will be called on if Canadian consumers demand a leaner type of beef and prices fall into line accordingly. "The Standard grade has proved a worthwhile change," summed up Mr. Maybee, That Long Arm Of Coincidence! How significant are coinci- dences? From ' time to time, even in the most humdrum lives, events occur which bring some of us up with a jolt. Some of these events may be no more than mildly surprising; others may exert a lasting 'influence on our lives. An example of a remarkable but not really baffling conci- dence was recently quoted by a famous Harley Street doctor. He tells of a man who noticed a second-hand walking -stick in a bric-a-brae shop. He bought it, and when he got home dis- covered that it bore his own ini- tials in silver. Closer scrutiny showed that underneath the ini- tials was the date of his birth. Yet investigation showed that no one in his family had ever owned the stick! Even more striking is the tale of the young sub -lieutenant who made repeated visits . to the Admiralty to try to discover the fate of a friend .called . Green, who .had been captured by the Japanese in Hong -Kong. . Eight or nine visits over a period of many months failed. to yield any trace of his friend The sub- lieutenant gave up the search. On the following day his car was halted at traffic lights, just outside the Admiralty. Crossing the road in front of him was the missing friend. He had made a sensational escape from the Japanese. It ,was, in fact, his very first day in England! Walter de la Mare, the poet, told another true story of coin- cidences A friend of his—we'll call him John Brown Smith Jones—on a walking tour in Cumberland, put upfor the night at a hotel. As he was about to sign the register he saw that the last signature in the book was his own unusual com- bination of names—John Brown Smith Jones. He never discovered who his namesake,, was, for the stranger had left overnight; But this was .not the end of the story. When the traveller reached Kirkby Lonsdale and stayed the night there, he found the ` following entry in the visitors' book: Jones Smith Brown John, his own name exactly in reverse! Some coincidences seems so far-fetched that it is difficult to believe them, even when one has proved them true. Not long ago, for example, a writer set out to walk from John o' Groats to Land's End, meaning to write a book on his travels. On the very same day, another writer set out to walk the opposite direction, from Land's End to John o' Groats, also with a view to writ- ing about his journey. Investigation showed that- the two travellers, unknown to each other, had actually stayed the night in the same hotel—the Trust House at Abergavenny— and that their respective pub- lishers had offices exactly op- posite each other in the same street. The two books might even have appeared on the same day if one of the travellers had not seen a newspaper report of the other, Eventually one of them gave way. But you don't need to be a writer in order to experience remarkable coincidences in your life. A St. Ives fisherman, for example, was rescued from his sinking ship by the second cox- swain of a Kent lifeboat. Not long afterwards the rescued man was on holiday in Kent 'when the lifeboat was called out for the third time in two hours. One of her crew had earlier been injured so the fisherman volunteered to go in his place. The first man he helped from the sinking ship was the same second • coxswain of a Kent life- boat! From the United States comes the story of a truly amazing coincidence. Edith Cohen and Julia Reilly, two teenage school- girls in Detroit, entered for tin essay competition, the subject being "Does Money Mean Hap- piness?" Although the two girls came from different schools, had never met, and lived In dif- ferent parts of the town, the first seventeen lines of their essays were word-for-word the same! But for the most staggering coincidence story of all we must turn to the statisticians. They assure us that if a monkey were given a typewriter and continu- ed to batter away at the keys for an infinite period—perhaps billions of years—it would one day type a correct draft of Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," quite inadvertently, of course. It's that sort of possibility which adds edge to a line from Shakespeare himself: "There are more things in heaven and earth ... than are dreamt of in • your philosophy." The Lewis woodpecker of the far West doesn't dig into wood for its food. It catches insects and bugs on the, ground or in. the air, or bores into fruit for them. The flat shell of the window oyster of India is so translucent it can be used as a window glass. NMY 5(11001 LESSON By Rev. R. B. Warren, B.A., B.D. God's.Love and Man's Refusal Matthew 21:33-43 Memory Selection: Be is des- pised and rejected of men. 'said53:3, The day of Calvary would come later that week and Jesus knew it. In parable he foretold His own death at the hands of God's favored people, Israel. God had bestowed great blessing on the chosen seed of Abraham. He expected fruit. But they had beaten and slain many of His messengers. Micaiah and Jere- miah were imprisoned; Zachar- iah the son of Jehoida was stoned to death. Then God sent His be- loved Son. Against Him they poured forth their hatred and envy as they prevailed on Pilate to crucify Him. It seemed on that dark day that God was de- feated. But He wasn't. Three days later He raised His Son from the dead. Forty days later He received Him into Heaven to sit at His own right hand. In 70 A.D. God's judgment fell on this rebellious people, Their city was destroyed by the Roman army and they were scattered throughout the world. Only in the last forty years have they been allowed to return to their own land and that under some restrictions. The Gospel which was first presented to the Jews was given a more favorable re- ception by the Gentiles. Why do people reject Jesus Christ? While many of the Gen- tiles have accepted Jesus Christ, many still reject Him. It's hard to understand. We know that to obey God and accept His salva- tion as provided by Jesus Christ, is 'the proper thing to do. But sin blinds our eyes. It requires effort to turn from sin and seek God. Of course, we are not saved by our effort. We are saved by faith. But it requires exercise of the will to repent of our sins and thus get into the position where God can give us the faith by which to believe. Jesus, in his lament over Jerusalem, said, "0 Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens un- der her wings, and ye would not!" A hen has several calls for her chickens. They must heed the call and come to the shelter of her wings. So we ought to heed God's call. If we don't, we shall have no shelter when the storms of God's judgment break upon the earth. Let us come to Jesus Christ! ISSUE 9 — 1959 Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking .LV'1S .)IVA 53 A3 43IaIV 1 N O O a n15 9 3 tf NY 31 OS 15 OVW 3N00 iw 51nH5 0 lan0 3 3 5 as b IH H J-jv lY3 0 H 0 I 3Aa a 1 d 5 55 ly d 3H 5 bl 3MM H 5 N H 0 ti I 5 a PHOTO FINISH —Mouse, lower left, has his emotions all bottled up in the face of cat-astrophe, as kitty prepares to take a nip , from the bottle's stopper, No hero, he, "Kitty" is a photo en- largement, and this little drama was played out in a photo- grapher's studio, 1 PACE 8 ' nit Atm o' ANDA1t k-•4++4+04444444+ • •-•-.4-4•444-044-44-•••••-•-•-•444-444444444444-. ST. MICHAEL'S f PRE -SPRING SPECIALS Heinz Tomato Juice 2-20 oz, Tins 27c Old Dutch Bleach, 3c off deal (with new Coffee Pot Handle) 32 oz, bottle 19c Old Dutch Cleaner, 10c off Deal Banded 2-14 oz. Tins 25c Doles Hawaiian Pineapple Juice, large 48 oz tin 35c Leave your orders for -- Easter Bunnies - Chickens and Candy Also Bartliff IIot Cross Buns Fresh and Frozen Meats And Vegetables All Types of Canned and Frozen Fish For Lenten Dinners. Satisfaction Guaranteed. PIIONE 156 --- WE DELIVER SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION. • •++-•-• 0+4-•+•+-.-4+..- •+.-.+++++4+0+1+.++x+ ...�+•. �. + .+.4 +...+.+N SPECIAL EVERY DAY, INCLUDING SUNDAY: • TURKEY DINNERS Make up a family party and take advantage of this special. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. ,...4+ ++++ 4 +4+4 6 4+4.44.+.+.....,..44.•4+4•+•-4+4•.•.•++•4.4; , on a farm takes courage and a strong right arm," was giver= by Mrs, Thomas Haggitt, who pointed out that the Soil : and the Soul are closely related, and it i t� (n. ,�'` �t......W..J,l,.S4. _ 1. il. - .1.. Weflilei ,$$ IR rirrrrr News Of Auburn Red hearts, cupids and traditional Valentine motifs was the setting for the February meeting of the. Auburn Women's Institute which was held last Tuesday afternoon at 2,15 tem i'i the Orange Hall with a large attendance, The presidept, Mrs. George Milian, was in charge and opened tee meeting with the Institute Oue, Mary Stewart Collect and 0 Canada, with Mrs.: Ro- bert J. Phillips presiding at the piano, The secretary -treasurer, Mrs. Bert Craig gave her reports which were ac- cepted, A letter concerning , the con- vention at Guelph for District Dnec- tors was.read, but Mrs. R. J, Philips j the district director was unable to at- tend this conference so no one will be sent from this branch. The Hurn County Project for, the coming 'i nr was discussed but no decision was made for 1959. The nominating com- mittee of Mrs. Fred Plaetzer, Mrs; Donald Haines and Mrs. Wes Brad - nock were instructed to bring in the slate of officers for 1959•at the•March meeting. A home -coming shower for a former member who has been ill In the hospital for several months, and recently returned home was planned and all donations are to be left at Phillips and Taylor's store. The con vener of Agriculture and Canadian In dustrics, Mrs. Wm, Goddard, had as her guest speaker, Mr. A. P. Boutilier of the Sifto Salt Co., of Goderich, He' was introduced by Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor, and gave a very interesting address on the history of salt, which is the oldest industry in Goderich, He stated that the.late Mr. Sam Platt had been drilling for oil in 1866 and had discovered salt instead of oil, Within 6 years 12 different companies had been formed and down - through the years many of these, discontinued operations until now only the Sifto Salt Co,, re- mains. Ne told that we are situated here in the Michigan Salt Basin and that 1000 feet •below this community lies 500 feet • of salt which exists in ' form to 1000 feet deep, }re stated that salt in its natural state is 1n 3 forms; Rock salt (underground); brine (salt springs) and from the sea. He de- scribed the present mining • operation carried en now by his company In the 16 ft, wide shaft and how the salt is to he brought •to the surface by- the trackless minim` method and invited the Branch to visit the plant later on to observe. He distributed small samp- les of Sifto Salt. Mrs, Andrew Kirkcclanell • thanked the speaker for his interesting address and presented him with 'a gilt from the Society. A Musical Quiz was given by Mrs, R. J. Phillips, with Mrs. Gordon Taylor being the winner. A. musical duet by Mrs. Everett Taylor and Mrs, R, J. Phillips was much en- joyed. • The motto, "Facing the future MOOSEMEAT FARE AT GODERICII The members of the Clinton Revol- ver Club with guests from Blyth, Lon- desboro and Goderich, attended a moosemeat banquet in Goderich. About 25 attended the dinner, chair- man of which was Rae J. Watson, of Lucknow, Canada, despite the fantastic growth ' perhaps the care of the sacred so of manufacturing in the' last two de- is the changing of our thinking from cades, still is the world's largest net , the slfish thoughts of "I to the un - importer of fully manufactured goods. selfish thought of "You.", Mrs. Ed. Davies gave two readings, "A Valen- A nation grows: During 1958's first tine from an unknown friend" and quarter 158,306 babies were born in i "The Good Old Days." The Roll Call I Canada, was answered by "What makes a good Dollar Days AT STEWART'S FOOD WHITE A KET BLYTH PHO NE 9 WE DELIVE1t MORE FOR Y OVR MONEY SHOP AND SAVE ON THESE OUTSTAND ING VALUES READ ALL ABOUT IT IN HAND BILL PHROUGHT THE MAIL FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES TEXAS CARROTS SUNKIST JUICY GOLDEN ORANG ES, No. 113, 51b. poly bag, VITAMIN LOADED SPINACH FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT, Full Of Juice • SUNKIST JUICY LEMONS 2 Bags 23c 53c ' 2 pkgs29c 12 for 59c 6 for 29c. Apples, Bananas, Grapes, Green Pepp ers, Rhubarb, Mushrooms, Radish, Carl rots, Cabbage, Green Onions, Brocolli, Cukes, Turnips, Parsnips, Sprouts,: Celery, Lettuce. 1 - SWIFT'S MEATS AN D FROZEN FOODS Libby's Dollar -Day Feature -Frozen Strawberries 3 pkgs. 1.1) ) Swifts Grade "A" Chickens per ib. 35c Swifts EverSweet Bacon , . 1 ib. pkg. 59c Fresh Pork Liver, sliced per ib. 29c Peanteal Cottage Roll, whole roll or half per lb. 45c McCormicks Jersey Cream Sodas , ... 3-1 lb. pkgs. $1.00 Kingsdale Fancy Cookies, regular 39c pkg. , 3 pkgs. $1.00 ' Delmar Margarine, 1 lb. pkg. 4 pkgs. $1.00' Burns Pure Lard, 1 lb. pkg.. , 6 pkgs. $1.00 ' farmer's wife." A vote of thanks was tendered to Mrs. Gordon Taylor for composing an Institute Song, which was sent in for competition. The meet- ing was closed by Mrs. Gordon Cham- ney, Mrs, Wiliam Goddard and Mrs Bert Craig, Henry E. Wallace Mrs, Ezekiel Phillips received word recently of the death of Mr, Henry E. Wallace who died sudaily of a heart attace in Penticton, B.C. The late Mr, Wallace was born in Clinton in 1879 and on March 21, 1905 he was married to Mary Ellen Symington of this vie lage. In 1906, they and one son, went to Batteford, SasK„ apd later to the Starvlew district where they filed on a homestead, He added more land to his 'holdings through the years, and with two other sons and two daughters born,in that district extended his farm - Ing operations, He was an active man in - community efforts, serving on school board and council. Surviving be - .sides his wife, are 4 sons, Oliver, Brock, Thornton, William and Glen, all of Wilkie; 2 daughters, Mrs. Fred MacEachern (Olive) of Unity, Mrs. R. Larmour (Esther), of Wilkie; also 16 grandchildren and 4 great grandchild- ren and one sister, Mrs. Norman Ball, -of Clinton. Mrs. Bob Seiler and son, Johnny, of Mitchell are visiting at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Deer. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Craig were recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Er- nest Craig, of Goderich, David.Hamilton is a patient in Clinton hospital, we wish him a speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs.. Kenneth Staples, Marian, Susan and Carol, spent the week•cnd with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ives, of Colborne Township. Miss Frances Houston, R.N., of Lon- don, spent the week -end with her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Houston. Mr. and Mrs. Grant Raithby, Tom- my and Jimmy. of Collingwood, visit- ed last week with Mr. and Mrs, Frank Raithby, John and Harold. Mr. and Mrs. .Ronald Rathwell, Mi- chael and Janice, of St. Catherines, spent the week -end with her patents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor, Mr. Jesse Walden, Mrs. Joseph Slaughter and son, Donald, of London, visited last Sunday with Mr. Percy Walden and Miss Viola Thompson. Any girl between the ages of 12 and 26 years wanting to join the Garden Club please contact the leaders, Mrs. Keith Machan or Mrs. Ed. Davies. Representatives' of the four neigh- bouring townships and interested farmers in this district gathered last week in the Orange Hall to hear about the brucelossis program in Huron County. The County Agricultural isep- resentative, Mr. Douglas Miles, out- lined the method for the control of this disease. This program is spon- sored by the Department of Animal Health. The canvas is to be done by directors of . the Federation of Agri- culture in the near future, - The Young People's Society of St. Mark's Anglican Church entertained the A.Y,P.A, of the Deanery of Huron and the Y.P.S. of Knox Presbyterian Church to a toboggan party last Friday evening.. Lunch was served to the guests in the Sunday School room of Knox Presbyterian Church by Misses Shirley Brown, Margaret Clark. Caro- lyn Clark and Mr. Lawrence Nesbitt. Mrs. John Maize and children spent last week with friends at Kerwood. Mrs, Charles Scott spent the week- end with relatives in London. We are pleased to report -that Mis,. Elma Mutch and Mrs. John Moulden were able to return to their homes last week after several week's illness in Clinton hospital, Mrs. James Robert- on is convalescing at the home of her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Townsend, of Clinton, and Mr, Roberton is much improved and is being cared for by Miss Shirley Patterson in Clinton hos- pital. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Powell visited on Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Donald McGuire and family, at Port Albert., Mr. and Mrs. Louis Blake, Faye and Maryanne, of Brussels, visited on Sun- day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs Andrew Kirkconncll, Mary and Diane, Mrs, Amos Andrews and Miss Ethel Washington, of Goderich, visited last Tuesday evening with Mrs. Charles Straughan, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hamilton, of for. onto, visited over the weekend with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Patterson, of Gederich, visited with relatives in the village last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Hesk and son, Terry, of Lobo, are guests of her par- ents, Mr, and •Mrs, Robert `Turner, Barrie and Lynne. Fireside Farm Forum On February 23rd 17 members of the Fireside Farm Forum met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jamie- son, Wo answered the questlonairre on Labor. Union. • The majority believed at one time unions hadeheen :a real benefit to the ;working -man as they secured better pay, `shorter working hours- and better working conditions, However. at Pres- ; ent we think the unions have become too powerful and they often have un- principled leaders, Their strikes ire- quentiv cause hardships, Mrs. Hugh Flyhn invited the group for next week, • Winners _ of tire pro- gressive euchre were as follows: High, Mrs. Bert }Iogeart and J. C, Babcock'; - Lone hands. Mrs, Geo. Houaart and Don Buchanan• Consntntlon, Mrs, Hare wy Taylor and Bert Hogged. I • JOHN ROWLAND John Rowland passed away in Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth on Fri• • day, February 20th, in his 8Rth year. Ile was a life-long resident of Hulett Tcwnship. Surviving are a son, Norman, of 1 Walton, and a brother, Gordon, ` of Stratford. Requiem High Mass by Rev. Father Reed Lewis was held at St. Michael's , -.4 s••«e++41••+1 F+4044+44-444194-•44-0444.0++++•+414+444-0++41 MR DRUGGIST KNOWS VITAMINS Ills academic training, his close association with= the pharmaceutical manufacturers and his professional relationship with your doctor, means that your druggist knows vitamins and is ready to supply the vitamin supplements that you need. You can be sure of the purity? and potency of the vitamin products that bear the labels of the great pharmaceutical houses as carried in your drug store, NEO CHEMICAL FOOD (LIQUID) NEO CHEMICAL FOOD (CAPSULES) •WAMPOLE'S EXTRACT OF COD LIVER VI CAL FER CAPSULES GERIPLEX (for folks over 40 years) MALTEVOL _ ALPIiAMETTES CAPSULES 'INFANTOL VITA POPS VI D4YLIN R. U.Fhm, B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER •-• PHONE ?O, BLYTH • 0-4b44-04.••-•-.9......-•-•-•-•••••-•-1.4•4• 4s #4-••••• •+.••6••+.4-F. • $1,85, $3.95 and $6.85 $1.95 and ;3.45 $1.50 and $2.75 , $1.95 and $4,95 ; $2.95 and $8.75 $2.50 . $1,00, $1.85 and $3.50 .4.1 $1.25 and $3.50 $2.50 and $5.95 $1.70 and $3,50 ..~#40~~0,•#~1~•~4•4•••I•4•4.••• N#N,r.• ,•~•` P#w SffNN. STOP f3 SHOP r at Holland's Food Market This Week -End. Hawes Paste Wax 1 Ib. 39c • Devon Peas, 20 oz. 2 for 29c Ogilvie Oats, 51b. 49c Matches 3. for 25c HoIIan's Food S arket s AND LOCKER SERV ICE. Telephone 39 - . WE DELTV ER .44~000444400444 O ++•+-• *++++.+•..,,.-.•+++1.4+••4r.++4.' - WHITE GOODS SALE UNTIL SATURDAY SPECIAL- - MARCHAND CLOTHES DRYER, with heat control $179.J5 ROGER►, MAJESTIC TELEVISION _ WESTINGHOUSE TV SPECIAL ALSO USED TELEVISION. FEBRUARY 28. VODDEN'S HARDWARE 8 ELECTRIC YOUR WESTINGHOUSE DEALER "You can be sure, if it's Westinghouse" PRONE 71R2 • BLYTH, 14.14•4 410+•++ON-• 444-$-,•s +•+••14144-+040i+t-6 H•HH+N Your money is safely invested when you' purchas0 • Debentures or Trust Certificates from Huron & Erie- t7anada Trust. Issued jn units of $100 or more for 1 to 5 years. •' • they're authorized by law as trustee investments.{ ' 414% for 2: and 4 yearei-4 f for 1 and 2 years 4 0+ t `Plan sway step wllh�,, . ,Huron,& Erie»CanadaTrust District Representative -• Gordon B. Elliott, Blyth I Te.* Roman Cathoilc Church, Byth, at 10. a,m. on Monday, February 23rd, Bur- ial took place at Brussels Roman Catholic Cemetery. MRS. CATHERINE SHEI'IIIRD Mrs, Catherine Shepherd of 'Ricker - smith 'r'ownship, formerly of Colborne Township, - passed away hi her 91st year. Funeral services were held on - Monday at 2 p;m. from the Ball and Mutch funeral home, Clinton. Survivors: a daughter. Mrs, Alice 1 awson, of Tuckorsmith; a brother, William. McClure, of ben!;annon; sik• ters; Mrs. Mary Galbrnith, of Tucker. smith; Mrs. George Mct'lute, 1Vilkiu, Sask. 1 „