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The Blyth Standard, 1959-06-03, Page 1
fllE BL' VOLUME 71 - NO. 21. 1111111•1111•111! innagoriwwwwwww. STANDARD Authorized• as second-class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, JUNE 3, 1959. Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.N. Post Office Department, Ottawa Memorial Service Held At Blyth Union Cemetery The annual Memorial end Decoration service was held at Blyth Union Cern. etery on Sunday afternoon May 31. There was a good attendance, The rer- vice was conducted by Rev, R.:4', :deal ly assisted by Rev, R. Evan McLagan. Music was provided by Mrs. W. Van- Egmond, of Clinton, who so willingly came for the service bringing along (ter accordlan, which was supplemented by some of the Ladies Auxiliary of Blyth Branch, Canadian Legion, who led in the singing of the hymns, Mr, Harry Gibbons was parade Mar- shall for the Blyth Legion Branch, who paraded from the gate past the Legion Plot which had been decorated before- hand by Comrade Gibbons, where the colours were placed at the head of the plot and each Legion and Auxiliary member deposited a poppy. The offerir;, which was taken up by Legion members amounted to ^31.38. Expense for order of service sheets and advertising, $15.00, The balance of. $16,38 was turned over to Mr, George Sloan, Secretary -Treasurer of the Ce- metery Board, LONDI:SBORO, Rev. J. T. and Mrs, White left Mon- day to attend the United Church Lon- don Conference in Sarnia. The Order of the Eastern Star will attend Church service on Sunday, Juno 7th, in Londesboro United Church at 10 a.m. Visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Lyon on Sunday were, Mr. and Mrs: Robert Wildfong, of Hazelton, 13. C., who are on a honeymoon trip; Mr; and Mrs, Taylor and Mrs. Taylor Sr., of Mitchell; Miss Margaret Taylor, of Hazelton, B.C.; Mrs. Gormley Thomp- son, of Brampton; Mr. and Mrs. Herb Mogridge, of Auburn; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wallace and Nita, of Bramp- ton. Rev. and Mrs. White visited on Sun- day with' Mr, White's sister, who is a patient in City Hospital, Hamilton. Mr. and Mrs, Roy Duncan, of De- troit, spent the weekend with their cousin, Mrs, Lily Webster, also Mr. and Mrs, Lou Govier, of Goderich, and Mrs: Jean Radford, of Clinton, called on Sunday, at Mrs. Webster's, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kenyon, of De- troit, and Mrs. Etta Crisp, of London; were Saturday visitors with Mr. and Mrs, Bert Allen. Mrs, Emma Haines is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs, Bloor; in Mount Forest, The Father and Son Banquet held on Friday evening in 'the United Church was a decided success. About 115 sat down to a bountiful repast. Rev. Sweeney, of. Auburn, gave a splendid address. Mr, and Mrs, Charles Small visitor; on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Garnham, of Seaforth. Mrs. Walter McGill spent the week- end with her sister and family, Mrs. •Gordon McPhee, of Auburn, Mr, and Mrs, Willows Mountain 'vis- ited with Mr. and Mrs. Cal Strang, in Goderich, IN CLINTON HOSPITAL Mrs. Clayton Ladd is a patient in the Clinton Public Hospital, We hope for a speedy recovery. ii.,1%1ONG THhi CIU.IRCIIES Sunday, June 7, 1959. ST, ANDREW% cttust)1'TERIAN CHURCH 1.00 p.m.—Sunday School and Church Service, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Myth. flutario, Rev. 11, Evan McLagan - Minister. Miss Margaret Jackson - blt•ectcr of Music. 10.00 a.m.—Sunday Church School. aL15 a.m.-Morning Worship. Branch 420 of Ladies Auxiliary to Canadian. Legion will attend: 8.00 p.m.—Young Peoples'. ANGLiCAN CHURCH Rector, P.ev. Robert ,Meally 2nd Sunday after 'Trinity Anglican Church Blyth: 10.30 a.m.—IIaly Communion and Sermon. ' St. Mark's, Auburn, 11,15 —Sunday School, 1 12.00 o'clock—Holy Communion and Sermon, Anglican Church, Bclgravc-2,00— Sunday School: 2.30 p.m.—Holy Conununiou and Sermon, curium t» cnn McCnnnen Sheet, Blyth, Special Speaker. 2.00 p.m. -Sunday School. 3.00 p.m.—Church Service. PERSONAL INTEREST Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Walsh and Mr. and Mrs, Ben Walsh attended the Su- pertest Convention held in London Tuesday evening, ' Mr, and Mrs. Robert Coghill, of Kit- chener, were guests of Mr, and Mrs. Walter Butlell during the weekend. Recent visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Cook were, Mrs: Jean Harris, Mr. and Mrs; David Hynes, Mr, Bill Roberts, all of Lon- don, Miss Frances Cook, of Clinton, Dr, and Mrs, L. A. Wardlaw and daughters, Susan and Carole, of Brdnt- ford. Sunday callers, Mr, and :Mrs. Reg Carter, of Woodstock, Out of town guests with Mrs. F. Oster on Wednesday of last week were, Mrs, James Marshall, Mrs. Clara Eberths, Mrs. John Grierson, Mrs. Bud Morrow and Miss Eddyth Willis, all of Hanover. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Kechnie and fain' ily, visited on Sunday with the tatter's mother, Mrs. Sutherland, of Port Bur- well, Mrs. Beryl Robbs, of Monkton, and Mrs. Ernie Radford, of Clinton, were Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs. J. B. Watson. Mrs, W: Cockerline returned home Monday evening from Seaforth Hos- WEDDINGS BUURS—McCOOL On Saturday; May 30th, at 3 o'clock, Londesboro United Church was the scene of a pretty wedding, when Phyl lis Isabelle McCool exchanged wedding vows with John G. Buurs, in a double' ring ceremony. Rev, J. T, White offi- ciated, The bride is the daughter. of Mr, and Mrs, James McCool, of Lon- desboro, and the groom is the son of Mrs, Adria,on Buurs and the late Mr, K. Buurs, of Eiland 318 Brock in Wat• crland, North holland. The church was tastefully decorated with mauve lilacs and yellow tulips. Miss Margar- et Jackson, of Auburn, officiated at tho organ, • The bride entered the church on the arni of her father, dressed in a hooped skirt of white Chantilly lace with bolero of lace and net with pearl and rhine- stone trimming, A floor -length veil was held in place by a headdress of pearls and rhinestones. She carried a bouquet of pink roses and stephenotis Bridal attendants were, Mrs, B. A. Zablocki, of Clinton, wearing a lilac and white figured street -length dress and lilac headdress and a bouquet of yellow roses. The junior bridesmaids were Miss Linda Wellbanks and Miss pital where she had been confined for Shirley Riley, similarly dressed` in a few days, green and white figured nylon with Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Stewart. Karl and Kathy, Mr, and Mrs. Jack Carter, Mr, and Mrs. Reg, Carter, all ,of Wood- stock, Mr, Harold Carter and Donnie, of Delhi, Mr. and Mrs, Robert McClin- chey, .Patricia and Wayne, of Blyth, were visitors with Mil, F. Ilollyman; on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Wellington McNall at- tended a re -union. of the 7th Medium Regiment, Royal Canadian Artillery; held at Listowel last week -end, Misses Margaret ..McGowan, Oak- ville, and Alice Smith, Toronto, visited over the week -end with Mr, and Mrs; Orval McGowan and Ken. They at- tended the sport car races at Port Al- bert on Saturday. On Saturday evening Mr. and Mrs, Orval McGowan and Kenneth had as their guests Messrs. Nat Adams, M Robson, John Smythe, Leo King, all of Hamilton, Dennis King, Dublin, Ire- land, and Kenneth Askew, Detroit, These gentlemen took part in the Green Acres Sport Car Races at Port Albert during the day. This being Mr. Nat Adams first race when he won three trophies. Mrs. Herb Travis, Walton, will dem- onstrate "Gold Rush Cake" on "M'• Lady" CICNX Television on Tuesday, June 9, at 2,30 p.m. Ladies Guild Meeting The Trinity Church Guild met at the home of Miss Josephine Woodcock on Thursday, May 28, with a good attend- ance. The meeting opened as usual follow- ed by a few moments of silent prayer for a departed member and a prayer •by Rev. R. Meally. The scripture reading was given by Rev. Meally. Several aprons were shown by Mrs. Gibbons, one of these being a traveling aprnn. Plans were made for a quilting in June, The next meeting will be at the Thome of Mrs. Rogerson, The Ladies Guild are having a straw-, berry tea in the early part of July. All business being over Rev. Meally closed the meeting. A 'very successful auction was held. Rev. Meally being the auc- tioneer. Tlie hostess served a delicious lunch and a social half hour was en- joyed by all. BELGB AVE Mr. and Mrs, C. R. Coultes attended the funeral of the late Mrs, Wm. Mc- Pherson, at Lucknow, last week, Mr. and Mrs. Art Scott and family, of Midland, spent the week -end with relatives here, Mr, and Mrs, W. Byers, of Detroit, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. J, C. Procter, Mr. and Mrs. A. E, Coultas and Lin• est, Mr, and Mrs. C. R. Coultes and Marie Coultes, attended the Convoca- tion Exercises at University of West- ern Ontario, London, on' Saturday af- ternoon. J. Clifford Coultes, son of Mr. and Mrs, A, E. Coultes •received his B.A, dexec. Mr, Bert Bradburn, of Lucan, spent a few days in ore village, ' Mr, and Mrs. Bruce Keys and fam- ily, of Varna, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs, James R. Coultes and family, Mr. James Irwin, of Hamilton, 'spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs. 11. lrwin, The Boy Scouts and Cub group, of Belerave, and their leaders and nient- hera of committees, nttendtul the Bally held In Chet ley on Sunday afternoon, Sense from here attended the Mein' orI:dl Service at Union Cemetery oa Sunday. garlands of white lilac and carried nosegays of yellow mums. The ringbearer was Master Rickey Zablocki and Master Clayton Riley was train bearer. Mr. Archie Riley supported the groom, and the ushers were, Kenneth Thompson, of Seaforth, and Robert Ri, ley, of Hallett. The bride's mother chose a dress of dusty rose lace with black accessories and a corsage of white carnations, Mrs, Ernest Dale, stand-in mother for the groom, wore a pale blue dress with white accessories and a corsage of white carnations, Mrs. McCool assist- ed by Mrs. Dale Greceived the guests who were present from. Woodstock, Toronto, London, Seaforth, Blyth and Londeiboro. About '55 guests partook of a sumptuous turkey dinner served by the Commercial .at Clinton, The happy couple left for a honey., moon In Northern Ontario. ANNUAL EASTERN STAR CHURCH SERVICE The Blyth Regal Chapter Order of the Eastern Star will hold their annual Church service this Sunday morning, ,Tune 7th, at 10 o'clock, in the l.ondcs- boro United Church, All members are. urged to attend, HhYTli LIONS DAiRY CALF CLUB MEETING The Blyth Lions Dairy Calf Club held their second meeting on May 2Gth, at the farm of Edward Bell. • The meeting opened by repeating the 4-11 Pledge, The club members then judged a class of Holsteins. Mr, )3e11 placed them and gave reasons for his placing, Mrs. Bell invited us to the house foto a delicious lunch, . CLINTON SPRING SHOW TO BE HELD NEXT WEDNESDAY Clinton Spring Show will be held in the Community Park in Clinton on Wednesday, June 10, with classes in alt types of live stock being exhibited and judged, Ferris wheel for the children, and games of chance on the midway, will provide the opportunity for fun for everyone, Approximately $2,500 will be paid out in prizes, Disaster Hits East Wawanosh Fanner Four Hereford cattle weighing about 500 lbs. are deed and seven more are very sick from what the veterinarian declared is lead poisoning. Mr, and Mrs, Nelson Patterson are redecorat. ing their home and had taken the painted paper off the walls and placee in the back yard for disposal later. These cattle had eaten this refuge and on Sunday morning the first one be' came ill. Three veterinarians have been called In but little hope is held for the seven more. Grade 7 And 8 Pupils Take Bus Trip The Grade 7 and 8 pupils of Blyth Public School and the principal, Mr. W, McNaughton, also Mrs. Allan Grant, Mrs. Sid McCullough and Mrs. John Selling took a bus trip to Detroit on Tuesday, when they toured the assembly line of the Ford Motor Crm' rally. nip there they nlso visited the rotunda and had their lunch i'1 the cafeteria. Other places of interest: � taken in by the group were the Green- Iidd Village Museum and the 'Loo., , OBITUARY CLARESSA MAUD TAMAN Mrs, Claressa Maud Taman passed away at her home on Wednesday, May 27, In her 77th year, after a lengthy illness. She was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Taman, and was born in Blyth, July 24, 1882. In 1909 she married James W. B. Stewart who predeceased her in March 1950. She resided in Listowel until 1935 then moving to Newton and re- turning to her old home in Blyth in 1945, Left to mourn the loss of a loving mother, one step -daughter (Mae) Mrs. Wm, Cookson, Red Deer, Alberta; (Irene) Mrs. J. F, Ray, Hamilton, John - T„ of Blyth, and Marjorie at home. Also four grandchildren, one brother, Thomas Edgar, of Saskatoon, and throw sisters, (Emma) Mrs. Allen Burwell, Asquth, Sask,; (Hattie) Mrs. Andrew Burwell, Saskatoon; (Lottie► Mrs, J. Rogers, Edmonton, Funeral service was held from the Tasker Memorial Chapel, on Saturday, May 30, conducted by Rev, R, Meally, rector of Blyth Anglican Church, of which the deceased was a member. Mrs. H. Philips sang a solo accompan- led by Mrs. II. Brown, Pallbearers were, Messrs, Sam Bur- gess, Earl Noble, Alfred Machan, Rus- sel Wilson, Jack Watson and William Merritt. Flowerbearers were, Messrs. Stanley Chellew, Charles St, Michael, Del Philp, John Manning, Charles Machan, Douglas Whitmore,, Calvert Falconer; Harry Gibbons, William Thuell, and Lenard James, of Wingham, W. J. Cockwell, Mac and Murray Cockwell, Atwood. Interment in Blyth Union Cemetery, Friends and relatives attended from Hamilton, Goderich and Wingham, W EST,' Miss Gwen McDowell attended the graduation ceremony at Stratford, held in the Shakespearean Festival Theatre on Saturday, when Miss Betty Sturdy, of Clinton, was among 18 members to receive their diploma. She also at' ended the reception afterwards, Anniversary Services will bo held in the Westfield United Church on Sun- day, June 7th, at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m: Rev. Roy Kennedy ,of Dungannon, will be the guest speaker, Special music at bots+ „ervices, Mr. Ha: v^y Snell spent the weekend in Detroit and 7.t'shigan, Mr. Gerard itd,ard and family, of London, were We.,.field visitors on Sunday. Miss Mary Tunney, of Leiden, is vis- iting her cousin, Mrs. Wa:ter Cook, Mr, Coak and other friends. • Mr, and Mrs, Garth McClinchcy, of Auburn, were visitors with Mr. sunt Mrs, Lloyd Walden, on Sunday. Mrs. Fred Cook, Mr. Arnold Cook, Erma and Sharon Dowling,• were Sun- day visitors with Mr. Gordon Bailey and Mr. 'and Mrs, Austin Bailey, of Princeton; also Mrs. Grace Ross, Mr, and Mrs, Frank Carter; of Woodstock, and Mr. and Mrs, 'Phomas Mackie, of Embro. Mr. and Mrs, Israel Good and sons; of Wingham, were visitors Sunday ev- ening wening with her parents and family: We arepleased to report that Mrs. Levi Good Is convalescing at the hone of het' mother in Byron, Mission Band Meeting The Mission Band of Living Service met In the United Church schoolroom on Tuesday, May 19, with Glenna Gow- Ing in charge. After the Call to Worship, the hymn 112 was sung with Betty Jean Cook at the piano, The Work and Worship twins were Brenda Thuell, who read 'he scripture, Matt, 10-1-8, and Bon- 7ie Bell, who led in Litany prayer, The names of the dsiciplcs were learned in verse form and afterwards sang to the tune of "Jesus loves roe." Readings were given by Shirley Mc- Cullough and John Adams, and Patsy Elliott played a pleasing piano solo. The offering was received by Marg- arite .Alblas and Cheryl Ann McNeil. The secretary, Jane Alblas, read the minutes which were approved, and as she called the roll each member an- swered by naming a storing flower.. Business included the discussion of a picnic to be held sometime in June at the Lions Park, Another chapter In the Junior and Senior Study Books Wil, in charge of lhti leaders, Mrs. Kechnie and Mrs. Butlell. The meeting closed with repealing tate Member's Purpose. Blyth Municipal Council The regular meeting of the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Vil- lage of Blyth, was held in the Memor- ial Hall on Monday, June 1st, at 8 p.m.; with Reeve Morritt, Councillors, Cook, Elliott, Fairservice and Howes present. Motion by Elliott and Howes, that minutes of last regular meeting be ad- opted. Carried. Motion by Cook and Elliott, that cor- respondence be filed. Carried. Motion by Fairservice and Howes; that we acknowledge letter from On- tario Water Resources Commission, and clerk furnish further information. Carried, Motion by Elliott and Fairservice, that we accept the auditors report. Carried, The report shows a deficit of $436.65 for 1958. In connection with the rais- ing of the level of sidewalk on Queen street, the village received $1,561.69 in February 1959. Motion by Cook and Elliott, that the mill rate for Village of Blyth for 1959, be set at 69 mills for commercial and 54 mills or residential. Carried. County 14, Village 30, Welfare 1/, Public School 161/2, Clinton School Area 7. Motion by Howes and Fairservice; that accounts as read be paid. Car'r'ied. John Bailey, part salary, st. foreman, 110.00; John Bailey, part foreman and caretaker, and acc., 66.93; John Bailey. ace. for special police, 12.00; H. Leth• l crland, weighmaster, 40.00; Gerald Ileffron, garbage coll., 89.50; Blyth Postmaster, unemp. Ins. stamps, 4.16; George Sloan, part salary and ace. 226.00; Co. of Huron, road signs, 130.60; John Young, st. work, 10.50; A, M. Harper•, acc., 900.00; Doherty Bros., acc., 5.50; Manning and Sons, acc., 16.61; Thomas Lawrence, st. work, 30.00; Donnelly and Donnelly, acc. 3.00; Don Hunking, acc., 4.00; Earl Noble, st. work, 71.10; A, Patterson, 3.00. . Motion by Cook and Howes, that we do now adjourn, Carried, George Sloan, Clerk. FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE TO MEET The Friendship Circle will meet on 't}tesday. June 9, 'it, the hone of Miss Flare McGowan, of Clinton. Members bring articles for children's fish pond; Phase inert at the church at 8 o'clock, WALTON Mrs..11, B, Kirkby is_at..present a patient in Wingham Hospital, Mr, M. Fraser spent the weekend with friends in Stratford, Mrs, Wilbur Turnbull is visiting with her daughter and .son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Lawless, of Sitncoo. Mrs, T. Dundas and Mrs, D. Ennis spent the week -end in Kitchener, with Miss Olene Dundas, and attended the Graduation Ceremony at K. W, Hospit- al on Saturday afternoon, when Tfiss Yvet.c Van Poucke was one of Ise graduating class. Others attending were, Mr. and Mrs. A, Van Poucke and Gary, Mr. and Mrs. Marcelle Van Poucke and son, Mr. and Mrs. Clar- ence Martin, Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Jen- kins, of Burford, and Mrs. A. )3ennen- dyk and son, Bank. • Women's Institute The monthly meeting of the Walton Woolen's Institute was held in the Community Hall on Thursday evening with the Blyth Branch as guests. Mrs, F. Walters presided, opening with the Institute Ode, Mary Stewart Collect and 0 Canada. Mrs, E. McCreath cal- led the roll which was answered by each member donating a tea towel for the new kitchen. The secretary's re- port was given and correspondence read. A bus trip to Stratford Shakes- pearean Festival in August was plan. ped wth Mrs. Stewart Humphries and Mrs. Alvin McDonald to make further plans. Catering to Crowds" was the Short 'Course chosen for the fall, with Mrs. Gordon McGavin and Mrs. Wilbur Turnbull in charge. It was decided to have a Garden Party in the Commun. ity Hall basement on Wednesday, June 17, with the following committee to make arrangements:. Mrs. Jan Van Vliet Jr., Mrs. E. Stevens, Mrs. D. Ennis, Mrs. G. IIibbcrt and Mrs. D. Buchanan. Mrs. N. Marks, Mrs. W. E. Turnbull, Mrs. 1I. Craig and Mrs. foe Ryan were appointed to notify Mrs. D. Ennis of any illness in the :ommunily. Mrs. Roy Williamson was 'n charge of the second part of the meeting. Musical number's were giv en by ,ioyce Hamilton, Joan Hamilton, and Aileen Williamson. Current E''• ents were given by Mrs. R. Williamson and Mrs. II. Williamson gave the motto on "We are Nearer to God in the Gan den than anywhere else in the World." Mrs. L. Scrimgeour, of Blyth, enter• Wined the ladies with a humorous reading. Mrs. R, Dalrymple, of Eg• mondville, gave a very intoe stint,* de - Rubber articles. Mrs, 11, Williamson thanked the speak- er and presented her with a gift on behalf of the institute. Lunch hostes- ses were, Mrs. E. Miller, Mrs. ,i, Van Vliet Sr., Mrs. W. II. Humphries, Mrs. J. Bruce, Mr's, Roy Bennett and Mrs, T. Dendaa, AUBURN Miss Margaret R, Jackson, the li- brarian, requests all county books to be in next Saturday, June 6th, Mr, and Mrs, Fred Reid, of Clinton; visited last Tuesday evening with Mrs. Charles Straughan, Mr, and Mrs. Fred Youngblut, Ma- rie, June and Laura, of Woodstock, Miss Laura Wagner, R.N., of Syracuse, N.Y., and Miss Ella Wagner, R.N., of Wayne, Mich., visited last Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson, Barbara, Margaret and Mary, and otle, er relatives. Miss Ruth Daer, of Atwood, and Miss Shirley Daer, of London, spent tho week -end with their parents, Mr, and Mrs, Roy Daer, and family. Mr, and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor spent the week -end with their,daughter, Mrs: Ronald Ralhwell, Mr, Rathwell, Mike and Janice, at St. Catherines. Mis.s Mary Houston, of Hamilton, and Miss Frances Houston, R.N., of London, spent the week -end with their parents, TIr. and Mrs. John Houston, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor, Mr. Davd Hamilton, and Mrs Jeremiah Taylor, were in London, last Friday. Mrs. Taylor remained for a visit with her daughter, Mrs. Lloyd Raithby, and Mr. Reithby. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bailey and son, of Manitoba, visited last Thursday ev- ening with his cousin, Mr, Roy Finni- gan and Mrs. Finnigan, they are holt- (laying with her aunt, Miss Josephine McAllister and Mr. David McAllister, RR 2, Auburn. Congratulations are extended to Miss , Betty Sturdy, only daughter of Mr. ' and Mrs. Harry Sturdy, now of Clinton but formerly of this community, who, last Saturday, graduated as a nurse from Stratford General Hospital. Guests from here were Mr. and Mrs: Frank Raithby, Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips, Mrs. Stanley Johnston, Miss Sadie Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ar- thur; Miss Margaret Wright, Miss Gwen McDowell, Mrs. Arthur Grange and Mr, John Arthur. Mrs. Alfred Nesbitt and son, Law- rence entertained at a birthday party last Saturday for her nephew, Chris- topher Hutchinson, who leaves this week for a trip to England- to -visit his family. The tables were set on the lawn and those present were, Mr. and Mrs. John Nesbit and family, of Blyth, Mr. ard Mrs, William Govier and fam- ily. of Staffa, Mr. Alex Nethery, of Belerave. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nesbit and family. After the delicious dinner the group presented Chris with a suit- case. Tir. and Mrs. Gordon Wilson and John. of Toronto, scent last week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lawlor and Jimmy. A large crowd gathered in the Blyth Memorial Hail last Friday evening to honour Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Patter- son, newly-weds. The evening was spent dancing to the music of James Pierce's orchestra. An address of con- cratulations was read by Mr. David McClinchey and a large purse of mon- ey was presented by Mr. Bob Arm- strong. T'Ir, and Mrs, James Ilembly and Mr. and Mrs. Tom .Johnston, visited at Collingwood last Sunday. Mr, and Mrs. Duncan MacKay and family spent last week -end in London with Mr. and Mrs. John Weir and family. Mr, and Mrs. Carl Govier and Ger- don, and Miss Catherine Welsh, of Goderich, are attending the funeral of the ladies' aunt, Mrs. Joseph Herr, of Turner, Michigan. She was 93 years of are and had lived for many years in U.S.A. She was before her marriage Catherine Welsh, of Goderich. Mrs. Loftus Welsh, of Goderich, is staying with her daughter, Mrs. Lewis Ruddy, and Mr. Ruddy, EAST WAWANOSII FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE MEETING The East Wawanosh Federation of !griculture met in Belgravc. Arena Board Roonl, on Monday evening, May 25. President, Einer Ireland, called the meeting to order. The attendance was some what below usual owing to tho ielayed seeding weather, The minutes If the last Directors meeting were read by the secretary and adopted on motion if Sanderson and McGowan, Einer Ireland reported on the County 'edcration meeting. He mentioned that '.he county executive were purchasing ten of tine books written by W. C. Wood at $3.00 each. A motion by Charles Smith, seconded by Wilfred Sanderson, that the town. shin of East Wawanosh purchase one of those books and it would be available for anyone in the township to rend. Mr. Ireland also repprted on the Hu- ron County Beef Producers Beef Tour, John M. Taylor reported on the County Beef Producers, Her Garden Was A Murder Graveyard Many of the world's most wicked women ha✓e deceived their victims with an air of in- nocence or an irresistible beauty. But one of the most evil women ever known looked just what she was — a. sub -human dealer in death, Amelia Dyer had so ugly a face and body that, when she was young, other children ran away and taunted her fr4.m a distance. This, indeed, may have been the reason for her evil life in later. years. The insults probably filled her with hate and made her exact a terrible price in revenge. She was a dwarf, just over four feet in height. She had a large, hooked nose and Tutting chin. But her voice was soft and melodious, and she could capti- vate people tvith her wheedling speech. Her dark eyes, which so often glittered malevolently, could, when she wished. exert an almost hypnotic power. Amelia lived with her humble parents in a cottage on the out- skirts of Reading. Kindly people, seeing how other children jeered at her, did their utmost to help her. Among them was the vicar of the local church, \vho was delighted to discover the piety of this ugly duckling. "I find nay happiness in higher things," she said to him %%hen he found her in the church one morning. "I have been here all night, praying and thanking God for the good people who befriend me." Amelia was then fourteen. Her statement was sheer hypocrisy, but her semblance of piety had a quick result. A simple country- man called Dyer was inveigled into marrying her, his advisers pointing out that a good wife was better than a pretty one. Amelia gave birth to a daugh- ter a year later. After that, the unfortunate Mr. Dyer vanished and was never heard of again. Amelia now had a pleasant cot- tage, with a big garden, near the Thames. What more natural than that this God-fearing young mat- ron, whose own daughter was so beautifully cared for, should of- fer help to women less fortu- nately placed? And so, in the placid years of the• mid-Victorian age, Mrs. Dyer set 'up as a professional foster; mother. '"I can offer the sweet baby a comfortable home and a mother's care," she told inquirers. Some of the applicants were, regrettably, in too much of a hurry.- to ask many questions. -They were prepared to dump their babies on this strange -look- ing woman, whether her claims were justified or not. Other unfortunate young wo- men, crazy with worry at having an illegitimate baby on their hands, handed them over to Mrs. Dyer's care on the strongest re- commendation of the members of the lccal church, The latter, it must be said, had not the slight- est suspicion that anything was wrong, 1t is true that a local builder, demolishing a boat -house on the river's edge beyond Amelia's cottage, claimed that he had once seen the foster -mother stealing bricks. But it seemed such an absurd kind of theft that no one took any notice, , . . The years went by. Amelia Dyer became well-known locally as a woman always ready to care for unwanted babies. She charg- ed as little as $15 and as much as $150. Few, if any, of the par - FOR MODERNS — Shown re- cently, this crisp, white sheath for summer wear is made of a wrinkle - resistant linen • like rayon. Yellow belt picks up ac• cent of the vcliow flowers OUT OF THIS WORLD — Other -worldly look of the struc- tures, above, fit the bleak site on which they're located. On Unimak Island, far out in the Aleutian chain, she group of buildings are part of the westernmost link of the transcontinental DEW—Distant Early Warning— network. Churchlike dome, houses radar unit, "Dishes." left, and curved reflectors, right, are portions of radar detection and beam -casting communications equipment. ents ever returned to see how their children were getting on. When some did return, hors. Dyer gleefully informed thein that she had been fortunate enough to get their children adopted. "I can't tell you the details," she said to one young servant girl who asked about her baby son. "It has to be secret, because her ladyship is going to pretend the baby is hers. "Your little boy will one day be a duke. Ile may marry royal- ty. But if the truth were ever to be revealed. . . ." With such nonsense her simple dupes went away mollified, Then, on a hot summer's day in 1396, an angler fishing below Caversham weir felt a tug on his line. Winding in his catch against the force of the current, he saw that it was a half -submerged brown -paper parcel. Inside was the body of a baby. "Another one," he said to him- self. "It's disgraceful that the po- lice don't so anything." Every angler and boatman on that stretch of the Thanes knew that finding the bodies of chil- dren Was a common occurrence. But such was 'the slight regard for young human life in those days that no one had bothered to report the finds. This time, however, the angler took the parcel to the police sta- tion. There, a keen -eyed sergeant saw the blurred, faint lettering of an address on the wrapping paper. It was that of Amelia Dyer. The police visited her cottage, recalling as they waited at the door, the stream of babies that had gone there. But the place was now, as always, silent and childless. Amelia invited then in with- out any sign of fear. She quoted appropriate texts about inno- cence and a clear conscience. But she was hesitant when asked to give the names of the people who had adopted children ;under her care. The upshot was that she was arrested. Mrs. Dyer's daughter was also running a baby farm not far away. She was no mur- deress, and she soon confessed that she suspected her mother's fearful trade. • "I know that some of the ba- bies died," she sobbed. "I've seen Ma going down to the river af- ter dark. She used to take the bodies in a carpet bag with a brick in it. She had to, because there wasn't enough money for the burial costs." Under questioning, she admit- ted that she was aware that the babies did not always die na- turally, "Once," she said, "Ma brought a baby to my house and said she was on her way to hand it over to some gipsies. I went out to the garden, and when I came back, Ma was pushing a parcel under her chair so that her skirts hid it. There was no sign of the baby. I was frightened and didn't say anything. But next day I asked how the baby was. "'Fine,' Ma answered. `Ice's a nice little lad.'" By then, the baby's body was miles down the river. The police dug up Mrs. Dyer's garden. It was like a graveyard, crammed with the tiny bodies of young babies. Mrs. Dyer, confronted with the evidence in Reading jail, refused to answer. But in mumbling, "My daughter knows nothing about it," she inferred that she realized her own guilt was obviously be- yond question. Taxed with the need to show some remorse and indicate how many murders she had commit- ted, she opened her Bible and began reading it aloud. She maintained this attitude at her trial. She was condemned to death. In the cell, awaiting the scaffold, she prayed so loudly that other prisoners complained of the din. She was warned that, if she did not keep quiet, her supplies of gin would be withdrawn. That had the desired effect, for Amelil Dyer was an alcoholic. When the chief warder entered her cell and announced that be- cause of three other hangings that day she would be given an - HEALTH QUEEN—Barbara Lyon reigns over a food -laden table as Miss Health at convention of the National Restaurant Associ- ation. ' other twenty-four hours of life, she grinned in triumph and said that it was divine justice. But, the following morning, she became her true self, Almost helpless from gin -swigging, she snarled in fury as the warders approached. Then, in a voice raucous and ugly, she bawled her challenging toast as she drained half' a bottle of neat spirits, "Here's to everyone," she yelled, "off to hell to join ole Charlie Peace below." With her own curse of con- demnation ringing in her ears, the dwarf was dragged to the scaffold, Eye -Opener The reasons for the prelimi- nary sight-seeing trip to Aus- tralia arranged by a Chicago newspaper for Stanley Yankus, are more apparent every day. The aim wasn't to glorify Mr. Yankus as an individual. Instead it was to give him, and many of the rest of us, a chance to know more about Australia. A few days ago Mr. Yankus talked to Roger Nott, minister of agriculture for a big sector of farm land around Sydney. He learned that Australia, too, has had its faun acreage restrictions. A number of years ago actual acreage allotments were assign- ed to wheat farms there, during a period of surpluses. The con- trols were removed when • the surpluses disappeared. But Mr. Nott conceded that they might have to be imposed again, if a surplus wheat situation were to return. Mr. Yankus, who returned to his home Sunday, says he'll have to "have more time to think about what I saw" before he makes up his mind whether Aus- tralia is the place for him, At least he has some better' know- ledge of the actual facts of Aus- tralian life. One thing you have to say about wheat controls there, they were more realistic than those in this country. Here mil- lions of dollars are paid in gov- ernment subsidies to Targe "cor- ,porate farmers." In Australia wheat growers were paid. a market price for the first 3,000 bushels they produced, and a much lower price for •all above that. This could be one big rea- son that the Australian surplus problem disappeared in a few years. — Muskegon (Mich.) Chronicle, Obey the traffic signs — they are placed there for YOUR SAFETY. TABLE TALKS t: eiaue Andws. "'Keep it simple' is my motto when I have a party for small children," the mother of three said. "Let them play outdoors, if possible, give them something easy to play — and don't organ- ize them too much," They always like and expect ice cream and cake — and to make up for the plain ice cream, she said, she always tries to have a cake that will interest the children and that they can admire for the few minutes be- fore it is cut, Here are several cakes she has served at these children's parties. Carrousel Cake Frost a 2 -layer cake with white or pink icing. Dip animal crackers in melted, unsweetened chocolate and allow to harden. Stand animals upright around the top of the cake, and insert in the icing behind each animal a stick of peppermint candy. For extra decorations, repeat the row of animals around' the bottom of cake. * « * Merry -Go -Round Cake For this, you'll need to get some miniature colored plastic animal candleholders. With can- dles in them, place at regular intervals around the top of the frosted cake. Behind each can- dleholder place a striped soda straw and have the straws con- verge, at the center. On top, fasten with a short length of Scotch tape a big brightly col- ored satin bow. * « « Cowboy Cake A brown frosting ,is best for this cake, Put a toy cowboy up- right in the centre of the cake and build this fence around him at the edge of the cake: Split long colored gum drops and stick a toothpick in the end of each half, Insert --them criss-cross fa- shion around the cake, * « * The children in your family who are becoming interested in cooking may enjoy the cookies described below which they can easily make for themselves. Pea- nut butter, chocolate chips, and graham crackers are the ingredi- ents, writes Eleanor Rickey Johnson in the Christian Science Monitor. 'PEANUT BUTTER GRAHAM CRACKER COOKIES 3 tablespoons semi -sweet • chocolate chips 6 graham crackers 3 tablespoons crunchy peanut butter Spread each cracker with about 1/2 tablespoon peanut but- ter. Top each with about 12 chips. Heat in 325° F. oven 2-3 minutes, dr until chips are soft- ened, Spread quickly over crack- ers. Cool. Note: Do not make more than 6 cookies at a time. Other quick cookies that chil- dren in the mood for cooking can make call for crushed corn chips and semi -sweet chocolate. These crunchies are dropped and then chilled. CORN CHIP -CHOCOLATE CRUNCIIIES 1 6 -ounce package of semi- sweet chocolate 11,4 cups lightly crushed corn chips (measured after crushing) Melt chocolate over hot water in top of double boiler. Add crushed corn chips. Drop by spoonfuls on waxed paper. Chill. Makes 24 cookies, Mother may be called on to help a little with crumb maca- roons — depending, of course, on the age of the learning -to -cook - child. This is a recipe for a party — it makes 40 cookies. * 0' * CRUMB MACAROONS 1 cup fine bread crumbs 1 cup sugar ?4 teaspoon salt - 1 cup chopped nuts 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 eggs, beaten Combine crumbs, sugar, salt, and nuts. Beat eggs and add vanilla, Add egg mixture to crumb mixture and mix well. Drop by teaspoonfuls on a well - greased baking sheet. Bake at 350° F, for 15 minutes, or until lightly browned. Remove from baking sheet to cooling rack at once. * « « • With their cookies, your chil- dren may want to try making their own drinks. Milk shakes flavored with fruit juices are favorites. To make these, com- bine in a covered jar for shaking (or beat with a Dover beater) 1 cup cold milk, 1/2 to 1 tablespoon sugar,, 1 tablespoon fruit juice, and a dash of salt, Choose for Among Tibetans I liked/ the Tibetans enor- mously, They are quite differ- ent from the Chinese, with whom, despite the close quarters in which they live, they have hardly anything in common. Against the background of a bustling throng of small Chinese traders, all uniformly clad in dark blue so that no individual stands out, your eye cannot help being caught by these hand- some, gentle giants, caravan - men or nomads who have come in from the interior to sell their wool and buy tea with the pro- ceeds, They move slowly through the crowd, dwarfing it, their massive, muscular frames lounging along with an easy athletic gait, In appearance they are not in the least like the Chinese. With their deeply tan- ned complexions, almond eyes, prominent, cheekbones, and noses which are often aquiline, they might almost be Ameri- can Indians. The Tibetan women, tall, well-proportioned, and graceful, are in general not less impres- sive than the men, They have the same prominent cheekbones,' the same almond eyes, , , , As for Tibetan children, they can only be described as adorable, espe- cially when they are very small, They wear, even in the coldest weather, either nothing at all or alternately a miniature sheep- skin shuba which, bulging un- naturally round the miniature bipeds, makes then look like overgrown little chickens. — From "Tibetan Marches," by Andre Migot, these milk shakes grape, orange, raspberry, blackberry, pineapple, or cherry. Add ice cream to these, if you desire, • Let the children try this banana milk shake; it serves 4, BANANA MILK SHAKE 4 ripe bananas 3 cups cold milk 1 pint vanilla ice cream 2 teaspoons vanilla Peel bananas, place in bowl and mash until smooth. Add the other ingredients; beat with rotary beater or shake until well mixed. Serve immediately. « « « Or let them try this peanut butter milk shake, This serves 1. PEANUT BUTTER MILK SHAKE 1 tablespoon peanut butter s/ cup milk / cup vanilla ice cream Mix peanut butter with 1/a cup milk until smooth; gradually add remaining milk, stirring to keep smooth.. Pour into large jar with lid; add ice cream; shake until Ice cream is almost melted. ISSUE 23 — 1959 DIVING CAR — This parked car In Central City, Colo,, suddenly did a duck -dive during centennial celebration of discovery of gold in the area. Car's weight broke through earth crust Into a 10 -foot -deep, abandoned mine shaft. MIXUP — One got away from this mirey mess in Minneapolis. Car, right center, was aban- doned. Gas company truck, center, tried to pa ss Stuck Helper truck, left, got stuck. Diesel cab, background, became stuck before this soggy saga began. A third gas company truck, piloted by a driver hep to mud, stayed out 'of trouble. so The Boy Aeronaut As almost everybody must be aware by this time, J, A, D. Mc- Curdy made the first powered Blight in Canada on February 23, 1909, But it was a time when other daring young men were trying to hop into the air in various dubious devices, One of these was Larry Lesh - a four- teen -year old Montreal glider flyer. Lesh's flights were not wholly unpowered, To get air- borne Ile like to use a horse or a boat, At 13, and living In Chicago, Lesh built himself an Octave Chanute -designed glider - wing 'span 16 feet, wing area 125 square feet, muslin -covered, no tail, total weight 25 pounds. Towed into the air by a car, Lesh made several 250 -foot flights and brought the glider with him when his family moved to Mon- treal. Here, he kept flyjng from a farm near Dominon Park, sub- stituting n farm horse (ridden by a friend) for the two -car. On these flights Lesh often got up to 100 feet and flew in winds up to 25 miles an hour. IIe was a dedicated bird boy, with ample cold nerve. His next project, however, brought objections from Chanute, who was helping out with expenses as well as sup- plying designs This involved a slightly larger glider, which was equipped with a tail boom, rudder and stabili- zer, Control was achieved by swinging, the whole boom assem- bly up and down, (or side to side) by means of ropes, the tail being fixed, This time young Lesh (it was August of 1907 and he was a 14 - year old veteran of the air) pro- posed to get off the ground with the aid of a motorboat. The glider had no undercarriage ex- cept Lesh's sturdy legs. Lesh's airport was a concrete dock on the St. Lawrence. The. glider was hooked up to the waiting motorboat with a 300 - foot towrope. On signal, the boat headed out into the river. As the rope began to pick up the slack and tauten, Lesh gathered his glider around his waist and, 'applying full boy -power, sped along the dock. After a short run he was in the air. With a 15 mile an hour wind in his face, young Lesh flew downstream. HIs seat in the kite - like craft was a sort of trapeze, his joystick was a rope, instru- ments he had none. As the mo- torboat below chugged with the current, Leshflew past the Mon- treal waterfront, past Dominion Park. At times his glider skitter- ed in rough air. Finally, seven miles away, off Pointe aux Trembles, Lesh sig- nalled his escort to slow down. His idea was to cast loose the towrope end make a nice landing on either land or water. The motorboat driver misunderstood •the signal. The boat made' a sharp circle and stopped before Lesh had a chance to cut loose. His power plant thus thrown into reverse, Lesh came down to 25 feet and abandoned the glider. Luckily, he could swim well. His heart afire with love. for the great sky, Lesh then went on to powered flight and became a famous barn-stormer and air ace? As a matter of fact, no. He got into radio and became a res- pectable business man in Florida. WHERE THERE'S A 1VHEEL THERE'S A WAY Drags Brankovic and Boza Mar;anovic • are keen tandem cyclists and frequently enjoy a trip through the streets of Osi- paonica, Yugoslavia, Brankovic is paralyzed and cannot use his .legs, while Mar- janovic is blind; but on their tandem cycle the paralyzed man steers while the blind man sits on the rear seat and pedals. ISSUE 23 - 1959 STIRRING FROM LONG SLEEP - The 17 -year locust, this time the 13 -year variety, is emerging from a long sleep. The peri- odical cicada, as it is formally known, this month will stretch its wings in the area shown on Newsmap. The insect does not feed on crops, but may harm young trees and vines where it builds its nest beneath the bark. TIILPMMFROT. A •new three-year wheat agreement relating the one which will expire on July 31 has been drawn up by the United Nations Wheat Conference which was attended by representatives of all the major wheat exporting and\ importing countries of the world and was one of the most successful UN parleys ever held at Geneva, * * • The two salient features of the new agreement are that it takes •realistically into. account the wider needs and changed cir- cumstances of the modern world. and that the United Kingdom, which declined to join the two previous wheat pacts, now will participate as a wheat importer in the new agreement. * • * During the protracted negotia- tions it was realized by all the participating countries that an international agreement o f• which Britain, the largest buyer of wheat in the world, was not a member, did not make sense. « * • ' The new agreement differs in several important aspects from the previous one. The mecha- nism which has been worked out is expected to achieve stability in the international trade in wheat which had previously been lacking. Moreover, it intro- duces the element of competition which had also been absent. Most important of all, the objec- tives of the pact havebeen widened considerably and the International Wheat Council now will have an opportunity to play a constructive and valuable role in the years ahead. * • • Objectives of the agreement now include the promotion of expanded trade and the securing of the freest possible flow of this trade in the interest of both ex- porting and importing countries, the overcoming of the effects of burdensome surpluses and crit- ical shortages, the encourage- ment of the use and consumption CROSSWORD PUZZLE 8.•Snteured with 20 Secuudwuw n black liquid 30. Otherwise 0. Acknowledge 3.1. Lighten applause 36. f111 10. Dave 37. Become boring 11, Word of 30. Obtain affirmation 42. Nothing 10, Redact more than 18.Of lis . 44 Flesh of 20. Dots calves 22.13oloVed 45 Sinful 24. Bellow 46 La Ire 25, Border 47. Refuse wool 26. Convey 48 At,nosphere property 49. Crafty 27. Petrel 5n dell i segslnn ^C Itronnt '.R AI 11.,1110 ACROSS 1. Dissolve 6. Blunt 0 Male child 12 western state 13 Vocal solo 14 Ile under obligation 16 Traveled from pinee to place 17. Scowls 10. r'nmpleted 20. r'Ity in Indiana 21. Military na*lstnnt 83 Was Ineorrect 27. iTnvered 81 T.arle 22. Maiden 83.•'rronhte 84. Miry: 35 rinrldeas of infatuation •81i Succeeded 85 V•ahnred piece 40. Do hosinea• 41. Trees 43, ileakled 47. Pnlarn 60. Arm envering 61. Purl 62. Silkworm 64. Cnncelted 60. r,nrienvor 64 r'nnvns abetter 67. furl clout measures DOWN 1. Silent 8, 1;ng1Ish Reboot 3. Praise 1. Indications of harm 5, Bounder 0. Ahrat am'. birthplace 7 Prevalent 1 2 3 4 ' -5 6 7 8 ' 9 10 II 12 :.;3 .,03©N© "SSb'7 y.",:,;13� 14 15 16 ,te; 17 . IB" 14 f %: r.'�'� 20 . •i. '.tirV. ✓r1> ri : :• /rf; :: r. •:';ti '.Y:. 21 22 ••y''.23 ' S• 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 . :;.; ; 3I 32 33 ••• 34 35 ty.: x 36 37 38 39 •yy 40• ti�;� .. r. ;; 'S :. ` 41 42 �.� . 43 44 45 46 47 40 49 A SO 51 .....% % 52 53 Ati' 54 ss t.:'• y`ti 64 ;:.` 5-13 57 Answer elsewhres on this page of wheat, and the furtherance of international cooperation gen- erally concerning . wheat prob- lems. For the duration of the•agree- ment the minimum price is to remain unchanged at $1.50 (Canadian) per bushel and the maximum price lowered from' $2 to $1.90 (Canadian) per bushel at the insistence of the import- ing countries. • * * T h e International Wheat Council will have increased pow- ers and functions and will be- come a world forum for wheat problems. It is charged with an annual review of the world wheat situation in the light of information available in relation to national production, stocks, prices, trade, including surplus disposals and special transac- tions,and other relevant facts. * * * In the new pact the previous concept of individual guaran- teed quantities has been aban- doned, So has the procedure of put and call, Instead, obligations are generally on a global basis so that trade can now flow more freely, • * * • Importing countries undertake to purchase a percentage of their total commercial imports from the exporting. members. Export- ing countries which now, in ad- dition to the United States, Canada, Australia, Argentina, France, and Sweden, include Italy, Spain, and Mexico, under- take, on the other hand, to sup- ply the commercial needs of the importing countries. These mutual obligations are tied to the price range which is declined as excluding the maxi- mum price. At the maximum price, the duties of exporting countries are no longer to sup- ply all commercial requirements, but are limited to a definite quantity of wheat, which is based on the average volume of purchases by the importing countries from them over a re- cent period of years. * • * At the same time, if the price reaches the maximum, import- ing countries are freed from their percentage obligations so that they may seek to obtain their commercial requirements during a maximum price period from any source, although they may if they wish take up their rights against exporting coun- tries to the extent of,the definite quantity. A Scottish counsel met his match in a witness of his own nationality. The case concerned . a suitof clothes. Counsel argu- ed that his client was entitled to three months in which to pay his bill. "Now, sir," said counsel to the witness, "had I ordered the suit instead of my client, would you have summoned me to court?" "No," was the reply. "And why not, pray?" asked counsel with a triumphant smile. "Well, because, you see, I should have wanted cash down from you." A fight is truly seldom won By persons who begin it; When everything is said and done, It hurts both people in It. Penny Candies In Papa's Store Of all We fascinating places in Papa's store, undoubtedly the most popular with Deer Forest children was the candy counter, with its wide choice of delectable items, The thriftiest selection wu perhaps the large cup of jelly beans which made a goodly showing in the small red and green and white striped bags, even for one cent, Little girls, though, were likely to choose the small frying pans which contained a yellow and white concoction supposed to look like a fried egg, We all knew the imitation eggs left much to be desired in the way of flavor, and moreover were almost im- possible to dig out with the tiny unreliable tin spoons which ac- companied them, but the pans were very useful in our play- house furnishings. The boys of course disdained such obviously feminine gad- gets, preferring the longer -last- ing bittersweet licorice whips or the big, hard, round, black jawbreakers which, carefully stowed in one's cheek, lasted . longest of all, Papa allowed me a good deal of latitude at the candy counter, and I allowed myself somewhat more. The only forbidden ob- jects were the beautiful choco- late creams with pink and yellow fillings and walnuts or pecans on top, which cost two cents ' each, Candy carrots, marshmal- low bananas, cocoanut biscuits, small pointed chocolate drops, white and pink hearts inscribed with tender sentiments were mine for the asking, or even better, the taking. No one in our little Wisconsin community thought of such a thing as an allowance in those early days of the century, and spending money was not plenti- ful, but most of the children had an occasional penny or two and spent it with the careful deliberation such an occasion required. Papa seldom dealt with these customers, whose se- lections required time and deep, concentrated thought, but young Cousin Fred, our clerk, seemed rather to enjoy them, and wait- ed on them with patience, of- fering counsel when necessary. I used to wish that my friend Georgie could come in oftener, His mother was the town dress- Inaker, and a very good one. She got fifty cents for making a dress, or perhaps a dollar if it were especially fancy with many tucks and ruffles, and she had to manage carefully to stretch this over the needs of her little family. There were few pennies left for candy. But though Georgie didn't have many pennies to spend, he had a great fund of ideas that made him a most desirable com- panion. Indeed, I was only too glad to share occasional contents of my striped candy bag with him, for I enjoyed his lively ,company. I even hoped he might some day teach ale to hit a base- ball with something more close- ly resembling a real bat than the wide board I was obliged to use if I wanted any success. But Georgie preferred the company a; boys who could really play baseball, swim, fish in our little river, camp in Hel- geson's Woods, and •do all those things that made life around Deer Forest so enjoyable for little boys and which were not . considered ladylike occupations for little girls, writes Alta Sal- verson Seymour in The Chris- tian Science Monitor. Most of all, though, he longed to tage after his older brother's crowd -big boys thirteen or fourteen who had wonderful adventures like going to Hat- chet Lake on spring evenings, building a bonfire, and actually popping corn or roasting pota- toes. Sometimes even still older boys like Cousin Fred went along and we could hear distant sounds of singing. No wonder Georgie wanted to go. I'd have liked to go myself,but when 1 said that to him .he laughed heartily. There wasn't a chance for me, and I knew it, but •Geor- gie was resolved td try. I saw the older boys walk by one spring evening, Georgic's brother Ronald among thein, and Cousin Fred went out to join them. Before long, I no- ticed Georgie walking quietly by, a well -judged distance be. tween himself and the other group. This looked so interesting, 1 slipped out myself, trusting, as Georgie was no doubt doing, to the gathering dusk to keep fro.31 being noticed, But our long twi- light had a way of lingering, , The older boys had undoubtedly caught sight of Georgie, for they came to a halt. I dodged quick- ly into some bushes beside the road, for if Cousin Fred saw ale, I knew I'd be sent home. Georgie came to a halt too, but when his brother called, "Georgie, you go home!" he didn't answer a word, just stood as still as we did when we were playing "Statue." The group ahead went en again, and Georgie went oa also, dragging his feet a little, but making steady progreu, 1 followed, not that I had the slightest hope or even intention of joining the bonfire -makers at Hatchet Lake, but I did want to see that Georgie got there. Once again the boys stopped, and this time Ronald shouted dire threats at his little brother -threats which had no effect whatever, for Georgie just wait- ed until the boys went on again, then quietly made his own way forward. I heard Ronald say impatient- ly, "He'll just spoil everything - that kid! Mother wouldn't want him out with us, I'll have to take him home." But Cousin Fred seemed to have a better idea. He walked back,•holding out his hand, "I'll give you a penny if you'll go home, Georgie," he said. Georgie hesitated. Pennies were rare and precious, So was an evening with the big boys at Hatchet Lance. But perhaps he pictured himself at that desirable candy counter, for after a mo- ment he reached out and took the penny. "good boy! Now scoot!" Said Cousin Fred and hurried back to his group. Georgie turned, but it seemed he couldn't quite bear to give up. Once more he turned to fol- low the boys. "A bargain's a bargain," they all shouted, and Georgie at last started home. Papa was already closing up when I ran into the store, for the farmers were too busy to come in to trade on spring evenings. "Where have you been?" he ask- ed, looking surprised, for I wasn't allowed to run out alone as a rule after supper. So of course I had to tell him all about it, but to my relief he just chuckled. I knew Georgie would be in early the next morning, and managed to be on hand when he arrived. I wanted to see that he spent the penny to the very best advantage. Papa must have said a word or two to Cousin Fred, for never did a penny stretch as that one did. There was a licor- ice whip, of course, and that alone made a goodly showing, sticking out of the top of the little striped bag. But Cousin Fred added jelly beans, candy hearts, and two big black jaw- breakers - a good four cents' worth, I could see that. Georgie looked bewildered but blissful as he took the bag and ran out- side, I scampered after him in time to see him put his hand into the bag and draw it out with a look of wonder•. He just had to tell someone his almost unbelievable good fortune, and as I was handy he told me. "Look here!" he said, his freckled face one big grin, "All this -and three pennies In the bottom of the bag!" "Three pennies!" I gasped, im- pressed enough to please any- body, and if Georgie swaggered a little, I certainly couldn't blame him. "Fred must like , you!" "Oh, well," said Georgie care- lessly, "I guess I did something he liked pretty well, that's all. Here -want sone?" I did, of course, but there was something I wanted even more, and this seemed a favorable time to ask. "Georgie, do you suppose you could teach me to bat with a real bat?" "Instead of that board you use?" asked Georgie pityingly. "Girls aren't much good at base- ball, but if you want to be a tom- boy, all right. We'll try, anyway." He fished in the bag again and brought out an offering that de- lIghted me. "Here," he said ex- pansively, "have a heart." Foam -Filled Beds Content The Cows Straw hu given way to foam. filled mattresses es cow beds at a farm ner Kidlington, England. The mattresses are the inven- tion of Maj. Anthony Bramley. When he began using a com- bine harvester for his grain crops he found he had no straw for bedding down his 80 cows. The combines, which separate the grain from the straw right in the geld as they cut it, have made long straw scarce and dear, Short straw is no good. The cows just push it aside and bed down on concrete. Faced with this situation, the major thought "People lie on mattresses - why not cows?" The main difficulty was finding a material for cow mattress cov- ers tough enough to stand up to cloven hoofs. Finally a plastic was found and now the major has patented his invention. In addition to overcoming the shortage of long straw the mat- tresses also save labor, With them there is no daily straw to remove. The mattreses are just hosed down, left to drain and the caws come home from pas- ture to clean, dry, soft beds, The single bed size mattress is five feet six inches long and three feet, six inches wide. It tapers from three inches thick to 11 inches. A former salesman had joined the police force. Returning from his first beat, the sergeant asked him if he liked his new job. "Oil, it's great," the ex -sales- man' replied. "The hours are good, the pay is all right, and the customer is always wrong." IN DETROIT - If you drive, don't walk, is the moral. Drives dozed; auto took to a pedes' trian tunnel in the motor city. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking SE13 11431 ;map Ni 3r99 a9/111 ofialtidWaad':`910 NW0u.:,;11b 3a'J: SEgoa►p:aaacn•p VA Ivan .4 Wa •:;sia!nW iS asal31in1d HigulaiN .3fr7.1S17J SW1IT, . :.;3 .,03©N© "SSb'7 an! MAIM NO DOVE, HE - Peacock mirrors the world's curios ty as he peers through picket fence at the Palais des Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, where the Big Four foreign ministers are meeting. The bird is one of several which inhabit the palace grounds. PAGE 4 COME TO THE "COTTON PARADE" Tot's Dresses, Sizes 1 to 6X $2.98 to $4.98 $4,98 to $8.95 $6.95 to $13.95 $2.98 to $5.95 $1.69 to $3.98 79c to $2.98 Girl's Dresses, Sizes 7 to 14 Teen Dresses, Sizes 10 to 14X Skirts, 8 to 14X teen Blouses, Sizes 2 to 18 years Boy's T Shirts, 1 to 14 also Jean's, Slim Jims, Pedal Pushers, Shorts, Skirts, Slips, Pajamas, Socks. Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH, ONTARIO. "The Shop :for Tots and Teens" THE RUTH H S1 ANDARD i 4 4 4 ATTENTION FARMERS 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 We can build your Pole Barn or give material esti- mates for the "Do It Yourself Man." A. Manning & Sons Phone 207 --• Blyth, Ontario 04 - N• -NN •4444-4444...„ Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON - EXETER SEAFOHTH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE - THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES; CLINTON: EXETER: Business -Hu 2-6606 Business 41 Residence -Hu 2-3869 Residence 34 ♦ • •4+44+4 44 -N+4+ -f • •-•-•-• 44444444+4 +4 ++44444444-* 4•4444- 1 Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every W tiOc Day. CEMETERY LETTERING, Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON, 1 SUMMER FOOTWEAR FOR ALL THE FAMILY Special purchase of SISMANS SCAMPERS, for Men, Boys. Youths. Misses and Children. A tremendous saving awaits you. This purchase will not be duplicated at this offering. (Factory Seconds). Mens size 6 to 12 at $3.99. Boys, 1 to 51/2 at $3.49. Youths and Misses at $3.29. Childs at $2.99. Mens Black and White Heavy Running Boots, Size 6 to 11 $1.98 Boys Black and White Heavy Running Boots, Size 1 to 5 $1.79 Youths Black and White Heavy Running Boots, Size 11 to 13 $1.59 Little Gents Black and White Running Boots, Size 6 to 101/2 $1.43 Save on Hydro City Work Boots, by buying now at last Years Prices. Ask for, and Save your Sales Slips. Save Black Diamond Stamps, for Premiums. The Arcade Stores STORES IN BLYTH & BRUSSELS. 1 McNALL ELECTRIC Phone 219 - BLYTH, ONT. EXPERT REPAIRS TO: E LECTR iCA L .APPLIANCES, RADIOS & T.V. Electrical Contracts For All Types Of Wiring. No Job Too Large Or Too Sinai!, Doug McNall PROPRIETOR. "You Call For Us •• We'll Wire For You" .#......-41 ......M.1r. DANCE Blyth Memorial Hall FRIDAY, JUNE 5 Music by Mel Fleet and his Orchestra Dancing from 10 to 1 LUNCII COUNTER Admission at popular prices Sponsored by Blyth Agricultural Society 1S TOPS! as low as $185lao Fells trees up to 3 feet in dl-' ameter. Cuts 18" trees in 18 seconds. Only 18t pounds. Famous Homelite quality. Have a FREE DEMONSTRATION jlns bar Ind chain LLOYD WALDEN Phone 184 BLYTII, ONT, REDUCED PRICES For Three Days Only Thursday •• Friday -- Saturday HAVE CARS - WILL TRAVEL 58 Rambler Metropolitan 2 dr, hardtop, radio, aircondition heater, two tone, 10,000 miles, was $1575.00 3 days $1399.00 58 Rambler American Deluxe coach, radio, aircondition heater, 16,000 one owner miles, was $2195.00 3 days $2049.00. 57. Chevrolet Deluxe coach, automatic transmission, custom radio, like new, was $2095.00 3 days $1925.00. 57 Volkswagen Deluxe coach, genuine leather trim, custom radio, new tires, Al, was $1475.00 3 days $1369.00, 57 Dodge Regent V8 4 dr. sed., push button transmission, sportone paint, seat covers, was $2195.00 3 days $1957.00. 57 Rambler Super 4 dr. sed., power brakes, new tires, a local ministers car, like new, was $2095.0 3 days $1957.00. 57 Plymouth Plaza V8 4 dr, sed., cus- tom radio, seat covers, clean, was $1895.00 3 days, $1699.00. 56 Plymouth Savoy 4 dr, sed., sportone. Ipaint, new tires, 1 owner, spotless, was $1650.00 3 days, $1525.00. 56 Plymouth Savoy V8 4 dr. sed., push button transmission, radio, sportone, was $1795.00 3 days, 31649.00. 56 Plymouth Savoy 6 club sedan, air- condition heater, economy 6 engine; was $1395.00 3 days, 31199.00, 56 Dodge Regent 6, 4 dr, sedan, aircon- dition heater, sportone paint, was $1650.00 3 days, 31499.00. 56 Meteor Niagara 300, 6 cyl., 4 dr sed. custom radio, two tone, economy G motor, was $1495.00 3 days, $1299.00: 55 DeSoto Fircflite V8, 4 dr, sed., auto.: matic transmission, power steering, brakes, scat, windows, custom radio, a top luxury car, was $1995.00 3 days, 1849.00 55 Plymouth Plaza 6 Club Sedan, cus- tom radio, two tone, wheel covers; like ncw, was $1195.00 3 days, r'1097.'. 55 Dcx1ge Crusader 6, 4 dr, sed., spor- tone paint, aircondition heater, low. milage, was $1295.00 3 days, M099.00. 54 Oldsmobile Super 88, 4 dr. sed , rower brakes, automatic transmis sion, radio, was $1450.00, 3 days, $1299.00 54 Dodge Regent 6, 4 dr. sed.. custom radio, two tone, wheel covers, the best 54 rnudel on any lot anywhere, seeing is heleiving, was $1195.00 3 days, $112.5.00, 53 Dodge Regent 6, 4 dr, sed., seat covers, aircondition heater, a black beauty, was $925.00, 3 days, $860.00. Several other and older models to choose from. No reasonable offer refused. TRUCKS: 55 Fargo half -ton express. 57 Chev. 1 ton express. Serving motorists for over thirty years; Open every evening. Trade or Terms. REG. MeGEE & SONS /1_4 Goderleh •• Ontario, NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF George Em. merson IVilson, late of the Village of Blyth in, the County of Huron, Gentle. man, Deceased All persons- having claims against the Estate of the said George Emmer- son Wilson, who died on or about the 21st day of April, A.D. 1959, are re- quired to filo- proof of the same with the undersigned on or before the 22nd day of June, A.D. 1959, after which date the assets will he distributed among the parties entitled thereto, having' regard (Ay to the claims of which notice sha'I have been given. Dated at Clinton, this 2nd day of June, A.D, 1959, E. B. MENZIES, Clinton, Ontario, Solicitor for the Administratrix. 21-3. Wednesday, June 3, 1959►, ' 4111101, FOR SALE CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to express my sincere thanks to the many friends who remembered me with cards, letters, gifts and visits; also the Order of the Eastern Star, while I was a patient in Clinton Hos- pital, I. also wish to thank Dr, Myers, Dr. Oakes, the nurses 'and staff of the hcspital who were so kind to me, Rev. McLagan for his friendly visit, and to all those who sent In baking to the hone cr helped in any way. It was 'reatly appreciated' 21.1p, -Dorothy Scott. RAWI.EIGII business now open in Tcwnships Ashfield, Wawanosh Eask and West. Trade well established, Ex- cellent opportunity. Full time. Mite at once. Rawleigh's, Dept, E-136.189, 4005 Richelieu, Montreal. 21.1 A quantity of nixed grain, Apply Cecil Wheeler, phone 88, Blyth. • CARD OF TIIANKS Words cannot express my gratitude to Louis Doer, Jim Walsh, George Fear, Gordon and Ralph Caldwell and Bill Dalrymple, for taking complete charge of the work of my sale. I rhali never forget, .Miss A. M, 21-1 CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to thank all of the firemen for their goodness to us on the day of our chimney fire. Words are inadequate to express our feeling of gratitude to all who came to help, and to the tele- phone operator, Miss Josephine Wood- cock, 21-1p, -Viney Ileffron. MADE ONLY BY SISMAN • Flexible leather soles or special composition. • Tanned twice --for protection against farmyard acids. • No nails or screws to walk on or work loose. • Moisture resistant construction. • This construction used in 4 Army Boots. Now on, sale at . MADILL'S THE TEAM FOR HuronBruce Riding PREMIER FROST JOHN W. HANNA Under Progressive Conservative administration Ontario has sten the greatest expansion and development in its history. Ontario's progress in human betterment, resource development and industrial expansion in .these past 10 years is unequalled anywhere in the world. Continuation of these wise policies and sound leadership will assure even greater progress in the years ahead. The Govern- ment of Leslie Frost and your Progressive Conservative Candi- date mcrit your support. POLLS OPEN FROM 9.00 A.M. TO 8.00 P.M.. D.S.T. Advance Polls at Mildmay, Wingham, Ripley and Brussels --- Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, ,tune 4, 5 and 6 Huron -Bruce Progressive Conservative Association Wednesday, June 3, 1959. 41.....11.... Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH — ONTARIO. INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability, WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 imm11m111111ft 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. ,444-.444÷.÷...-•-•444-. 4.4,444444 -$ •4- 44+44* ••••••• 'WALLACE'S DRY GOODS •--Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES Yard Goods, Zippers and other Sowing Needs T -Shirts, Shortie Pajamas, Childrons' Wear Men's Work Clothes by "Big B" and "Haughs" Phone 73. car Sales and Service. C. McDonald, McDonalds Radio -TV; Oil Burners; 'Proprietor, Auburn, phone 59-12. Electrical Appliances; Electric Fen. I 19.4. FOR SALE THE BLYTE STANDARD , BROWNIE'S DRIVE•IN THEATRE i lli Clinton, Ontario FEATURING THE LARGEST WIDE SCREEN IN HURON COUNTY Thurs., Fri., Sat,, June 4, 5 and 6 "The Big Country" . ' (Colour) (Cinemascopc) Gregory Peck, Jean Simmons, Burl Ives_ , Charlton Heston (One Cartoon, Mon, Tues, Wed., June 8, 9, and 10 "The Man In The Grey Flannel Suit" (Colour (Cinemascope) Gregory Peck •- Jenntter Jones (One Cartoon) , TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY Rain or Clear • First Show at Dusk Children under 12 In cars Free r-.rIIIIMI. AVON SALE ' Avon Anniversary; Sale now on with 67 Sale Priced items, Mrs. Roy Tfe- VIttie, phone 201, Blyth. 21.1p FOR SALE 1 670X15 Tire, no breaks and fair tread, suitable for wagon tire, $4,00; One car top carrier. complete, $3.00. Apply, W. A. McNeil, Blyth. 21 -Ip FOR SALE 2 burner Electric Rangette, with good oven, only $15.00. Apply Mrs, Roy McVittie, Blyth, phone 201, 21.1p HOUSE FOR SALE 11/2 storey brick dwelling on east side of Queen Street, Blyth, Ontario. For particulars, apply, Irvine Wallace or i Gordon Elliott, Executors Robert Newcombe Estate. LYCEUM THEATRE, Wingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Nigilt Commencing at 7:15 p.m. Thurs., Fri., sat., June 4.5.6 James Stewart Kim Novack 'Jack Lennon 1 Ernie Kovacs in "Bell, Bobk and Candle" An enjoyable off -beat romantic comedy Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES; EVERY: FRIDAY AT / CLINTON SALE BARN.' at 8 p.m. IN BI4YTH, PHONE BOB HL2,NRY,150R1." Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer, 05 -If. WANTED Girl Guide uniform size 14.16, or someone to :Dake same. Apply Bos "A", in care of The Blyth Standard. 21.1p CARD OF THANKS We wish to ex)sress, our sinere thanks and appreciation to our many friends, relatives and neighbors, for their acts of kindness, floral tributes and cards of sympathy, during the re. cent loss of our dear mother, Spt:cial thanks to Dr. Street, Rev. 11. Wally, and Mrs. 11, Phillips. —The family of the late Mrs. Claressai Maud Stewart. 21-11 e June llth isYOUR day.... • Premier Leslie M. Frost On June llth approximately 15,000 dolling places in Ontario will be ready to receive your vote. They will remain open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. (Standard Time) and from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. (Day- light Time). Time -tested election machinery will assure every voter the free, full and impartial exercise of this ancient and honourable privilege of democratic citizenship. • • FLOW you vote is YOUR business, but it is also :important to your family, friends and neighbours that you DO vote. . Your vote means many things. It expresses your judgment on the issues put forward by the various parties during the election campaign. It gives your opinion about the Candidates who have placed their names before you. It states your decision about the future progress of our Province and the men who will guide its destiny in the years immediately ahead. In these last few weeks you have had many opportunities to assess the policies and platforms of the principal parties. You have been given a complete and comprehensive accounting of the • stewardship of your affairs by our Progressive 'Conservative administration. We believe the record has been one of good stewardship, wise • management, and sound planning for the future. The purpose of this brief message is to suggest respectfully that the safest, surest and most forward-looking decision that you can make on June llth is to give your vote for the Candidate 'who represents the Progressive Conservative Party and the government whose policies have been so ,largely responsible for. Ontario's spectacular pro- , gress in the last ten years. Even Greater Progress Lies Ahead—On June llth VOTE PROGRESSIVE CONSERVAVIVE Published by the Progressive Conservative Association of Ontario HANNA, John W. .......� ••;.a.: ew,•Li'-1w'r',,.'_.. ,,..a..,.:.,,.:.� 4040:.. Y A .h._ _omimikoPAGE mmor7 •,f•.•.•o..i.-..- ROXY THEI.IIRE, PARK CL WW1. Now Playing: June 4.5.6 "The Shaggy: Dog" Walt Disney's newest and most delight- ful fantasy, NOTE: Cblldren's Saturday matinee tickets (fur this picture only) 25c, Fred MacMurray, Jean Hagen, Tommy Kirk Mon., 'rue's., Wed., June "The Barbarian And The Geisha" True life story of the first United States consul in Japan John Wayne, Elko Ando, Sam Jaffe 8.9.10 GODERrCti. Now Playing; Rhonda Fleming' and Guy Madison in "Bullwhip", scope and color Mon., Toes„ Wed., June 8.9.10 Victor Mature, Leo Gcnn and Art MacTavish Presenting an original Ronald Kemp screen play based on tank warfare in the desert during the campaign against Rommel, "Tank Force" Seel* and Color Thurs., Fri., Sat., June 11.12.13 Jack Le'illmon, 'Glenn Ford, Anna t'ashfi and Dick York From Frank Htlrris' novel "Reminis- cences of a Cowboy comes a story of t'oot'I_and•nail conflict between two partners, "Cowboy" In Technicolor Coming next: "GIGI" Leslie Qtit% -- — ----- Louis Jourdan, Eva Gabor. Coming: "Inn of the Sixth Ifappiness" •i' '•!. a,.,.-._ .4044..,}t. . .± .+•••-.. •4 • •'4 •a..+►-•-..... _ _ -r...... DEAD STOCK WANTS)) IIIGHEST CASH I'P,ICES paid in surounding districts Lor dead, old, sick or disabled horses 'or cattle. Old hor- ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth, 21R12, if busy, phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, Wm, Morse, Brussels, 19,76. Trucks available at all times. 34- 1, Mar. Massey Ferguson WE HAVE ON IIAND 1 - '81 Massey. 2 good used pull type ploughs. 1 good used manure spreader, Mc- Cormick. FULL LINE OF NEW MACHINERY Lloyd Walden, Proprietor Queen St., Blyth — Phone 184 •-•••••••• DEAD STOCK SERVICES Highest Cash Prices PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DIS- ABLED COWS and HORSES. Also Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old Horses — 5c Per Pound PHONE COLLECT • 133 — BRUSSELS BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN Gm50N, Phone 15R9 BLYTH 24 HOUR SERVICE 13tf. NOTICE After selling his business in London almost 5 years ago Rae J. Watson, your Liberal candidate had a wide choice of where to live. This Huron -Bruce area was chosen because Rae was raised and educated here. The hills and spring cricks are wonderful ; the Great Lakes offer excellent boat- ing and the people are sec- ond to non. AlthSough this job, of rep- resenting you, will take him to Toronto for several weeks at a time, Rae has no inten- tion of m,bving out of his nice comfortable, new house nor away from the people he likes so well. FOR SALE Registred Hereford Bull, 1 year old. Apply to Joseph Hoggart, 3 miles south- east of Blyth. 21-lp FOR HALE Purebred Landrace, serviceable age boars and bred gilts, from imported stock, at very reasonable prices. Ap• ply, J. F. Wilson, Auburn. 20 1 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and (cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 42fl , Brussels, KR. 2, WANTED Old horses, 31c per pound. Dead cattle and horses at value. Important to phone at once, day or night. GIL- BERT BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderlch, °hone collect 1483J1, or 1483J4. BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON BARRISTERS di SOLICITORS 1. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington. Q.C. Q.C. Wingham and Blyth, IN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located in Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyth, 104' Wingham, 4� G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A. L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE SS, GODERICH 25.11 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed, 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 pail. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30. Phonr HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. - WTNGHAM, ON! EVENINGS BY APPOI.NTMENT. (For Apointment please_phone 770. Wingham). Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services. --r ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERICH, ONT. Telephone 1011 — Box 478. DR. R. W. STREET Blvth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY. AUCTIONEER Experience, Courtesy and Satisfaction Guaranteed. Prompt Assistance Given in Arranging Your Sale Problems. Phone :5R18, Blyth. George Nesbitt, George Powell, Auctioneer. Clerk. WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls Are Used" ,Artifcial Breeding Service — All Breeds of Cattle — Member owned and controlled. Cost Low — Efficiency High. Use of the best of bulls. Dis- ease controlled, Safety. For service or more information phone: Clinton, HU 2.3441 or for long distance, Clinton, Zenith 9-5650. Between: 7.30 and 9.30 a.m. week days, 6.00 and 8.00 ,p.m. Saturday evenings. Calls received on Saturday evening wil be serviced on Sunday morning. For cows in heat on Sunday morning, DO NOT call until Monday morning, BETTER CATTLE, FOR BETTER LIVING McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICF - SEAFORTH, ONT OFFICERS: President—Robt. Archibald, Seaforth; Vice -Pres., Alistair Broadfoot, Sea - forth; Secy-Treas., Norma Jeffery, Sea - forth. DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone, Se'forth; J. H. Maw - Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; T. J. Trewnrthn. Clinton; J. F. Pepper, Brucefield; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm; ET. Fuller. Goderich; R. Archibald, Sea- 'orth; Allister Brnndfnot, Seaforth, AGENTS: William Leiner. Jr„ Londesboro; J g'. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker 1ru..al.. "-' Munroe, Seaforth. K. W. COLQUIIOUN INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PHONES Office, iii) 2-9747; Res. HIT 24554 Phone Blyth 78 SAT,ESMAN '',,: �'lo Rowdy , "'"" `AN4iceuist � aniti ,IRS�T "Dear Anne Hirst: Four years ago, when I was 15, I married a man 10 years older; my parents o1' nted violently, but I was one win knew everything. 'Now we I. e a darling little girl, and it is ch' ,fly for her sake that I seek rm.:. advice ... Her father has be vi drinking all this time (v" `ch I did not know till I mar- ri -.:11 and he is getting worse. He mi 'treats me physically so that I P.-1 actually afraid of him. ""o far I've been able to pre- ve:1e our little girl's seeing him at such times, but I can't tell hog, .. long I can keep that up. Str.mgely enough, he is crazy about her and she loves him with all her heart. He has to be away from home now and then, but when he is here, he drinks al- most all the time. He tells neigh- bors that I am a spendthrift, and spreads tales that I see other men in his absence. He give me so little money that I am almost without decent clothes, and I have to count every dime. The only places I go are to church and an occasional movie with my little girl. "I know you will tell me to leave my husband, but I haven't the heart to separate these two. I expect he will drink more as he grows older, yet how can I let her know what sort of father she hasI must act soon, and I'll do anything you say. DESOLATED" SLIM HOPE • . Your husband must know • how miserably he has failed • as both man and father. To • spread tales of your loyalty is • monstrous. I am afraid that • your only appeal is through * his love for the child. There * lies your strength. Not for long • can he conceal his weakness. • You will have to make him un- derstand that if he does not • transform himself into a de- • cent, right -living citizen you * will take her from him, he- • cause you refuse to allow his • influence to darken her life. • The time for him to change • is not next year, nor next • month, but today. If he will • not consent you will have to • carry out your threat, and • promptly. * If he realizes this is a crisis, * and will do his part, you will • be as patient as you can to -'-help him win out, Perhaps it * is not tDo late. It is up to him. * * • SIST;P,R STEPS IN "Dar Anne Hirst: I am 16, and Jnu:t consult you on a serious prcb! em. My boy friend asked Day Lister to a dance, and though ohs is t—o years older I'm afraid the likes him. (My mother says For Entertaining . t r moots li 11 IiAt 1 Drc;; up a luncheon table i, ith this set — a large dolly as enterpicr e, smaller as , place ats. Scallop;.1 border enhances e. - graceful o , :11 shape. Pattern 660; elirections for 20 x 30 -inch doily; natchin, 1 nes 121 x 20 and 7 x 13 inches in No. 30 cotton, 'Send '1•IIIRTY-FIVE CENTS ,., (Starnes cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this Ittern to LAURA WHEELER, x 1 1 2:', Eighteenth St., New oronto, Ont. Print plainly A T T it N NUMBER, your AME; add ADDRESS. Send Cul .a copy of 1959 Laura Wheat r eiccdlecraft Book. It has 1•)acly designs to order; em- broidery, crochet, knitting, weav- ing, (uilting, toys, In the book, In special surprise to make a little fire happy — a cut-out doll, tlothcs to er !: r. Scdn 25 cents for this t;:;c':. to date him as usual, but keep her out of the way.) "He tells me he loves me, but friends say I'm, foolish to hang on to him, they call him a flirt . If he should ask me to marry hine shall I accept? BROWN EYES" If the lad has the reputation t of being flirtatious, why take • him seriously? Why believe • that he loves you when he even invites your sister out? • I -Ie seems determined to play the field; if you can enjoy " facing such competition go • ahead, but I am afraid you will, • only get hurt. Should he pro- * pose (which I doubt) postpone * your answer until he has * proven it is only you he cares * for. • As foryour sister, why don't * you and the young man go for * a walk or visit friends? It * isn't probable she would * invite herself to accompany * you, and maybe she will * eventually get the idea sho * is intruding. * * * Miracles do happen in this world, and one can always pray that the love of a little child will move a strong man. Anne Iiirst's long experience and concern for troubled read- ers have brought now hope to those who seek her counsel. Write her at Box, 123 Eigh- teenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Graham Goes Big Down Under Resting in his Sydney hotel, the Rev. Dr, Billy Graham open- ed his Bible, closed his right eye, and read with perfect ease the twentieth verse of Psalm 66: "Blessed be God, which hath not turned away my prayer, nor his mercy from me." "You see," said the ebuIIient evangelist Last month, "I am almost completely recovered." Actually, Dr. Graham says he regards as providential the eye trouble which afflicted him three months ago, impairing the vision in his left eye and delay- ing the start of his Down Under crusade. "I know the Lord meant it," he explains. "It creat- ed a tension without which the Australian mission might not have been such a triumph." Rarely, indeed, had such crowds turned out to hear Billy. One Sunday at the final Syd- ney meeting, he broke his own record with an audience of 150,- 000 spread over two stadiums. The total attendance in four weeks in Sydney came to . 980,- 000; "decisions for Christ" num- bered 56,780 — more than he won in the sixteen -week crusade in New York's vast population area in 1957. In his nine weeks of crusading in Australia and New Zealand, the far -roving evangelist has faced more than 2 million persons. More impressive to Dr. Gra- ham himself, however, was the geographical range. Aside from these two nations it included, through wireless and tape re- cordings, the islands as far north as Papua and, as far east as Fiji. "I'm dizzy with the thought of what has happened in this area," he said. Next month, after short cru- sades in Brisbane, Adelaide, and Perth, the evangelist will be home in Montreal, N.C. "Then," says Billy Graham, throwing up his arms, "I'm going to have two and a half months clear — en- tirely with my kids," Next ma- jor domestic crusadetarget: In- dianapolis. —From NEWSWEEK. H ARD •HAT HALO — Sister Mary Madonna wears a Civil- ian Defense helmet in her role as evacuation director for St. Mary's Hospital, during CD ex- ercises. HONEYMOONERS — As they arrived in New York from the West Coast, newlyweds Elizabeth Taylor and'Eddie Fisher were weary but happy. They were married in Las Vegas and were planning to go on to Spain. • H1tONICLES �IN6EAFAIte No matter what the weather there is one crop that never fails, The baby crop. Come wind or rain, heat wave or blizzard, it makes no difference — they come anyway, those little bundles of joy, We have a new arrival right next door to us. Last Wednesday I took the mother to our local hospital for a blood test while Partner took charge of her small daughter.. Next morning the mother went to the hospital again. That time it was a hurry-. up call. The baby was born three weeks ahead of time. It was a • boy and mother and son are do- ing fine so everybody is happy. Another day we were over to a farm ten miles from here where the nucleus of another crop was being seeded. The fields looked awfully dry. and we haven't had a rain since so 1 am sure most farmers are getting quite anxious. However, there have been dry spring seasons before at which time the farmers were sure the seed would he blown away. And then a life- saving rain would saturate the fields, the oats, barley and pas- ture fields would copse to life and the farmers forget their past worries. The age-old saying still holds good — springtime and harvest never fail. One year can be better than another; isolated sections may be hailed, dried or eaten out, but there has never yet been a crop failure from one end of Canada to the other, True, there may be regional failures. It so often happens one part of the country may be dry and the other wet. But nature has a way of maintaining a balance, al- though to the individual it often doesn't look that way. On yet another day I was at our local W.I. meeting at which the District President was speak- ing. It was an enjoyable, infor- mal but very worthwhile meet- ing. The President did not give an address as is usually the cus- tom but discussed with us prob- lems in Institute work. Actually our branch president had writ- ten to her ahead of tune, asking a number of questions to which she hoped the answers might be given from the platform. 1 thought that was really an ex- cellent idea, One question was how and where money should be spent. This is often quite a weighty problem as the secre- tary receives so many appeals frcra outside organizations. The District President con - 1 -1 ted that our own branch ex - pen -es should be looked after first. Delegates to the District Annual, Officers' Conference and Arr's Convention should have their expenses paid by their hrnrch. She thought that if dele- gate, give their time it is as much as we should expect from them. They should not also be out of pocket. She also stressed, as so many Provincial officers have done in the past, that money -making project should not be the main objective in W.I. work. We should be satis- fied if we raise sufficient funds to look after branch expenses and local appeals — such as come from regional hospitals, old age homes, school for retarded chil- dren and the Children's Aid So- ciety. Provincial .and Federal W.I. expenses are covered by the amount deducted by Head Office from our annual membership fees — except in the case of spe- cial appeals. I couldn't have agreed more with the District President's re- marks, I have seen more than one W.I. branch lose members and finally disband because too many demands were made upon its members, mostly for fund- raising activities. At one time keeping pace with local organizations was easy, Most women found time to work for their church and the W.I. But now there are so many organi- zations a public - spirited club- woman could be away from home every day of the week. More than one person has had a nervous breakdown .,through trying to keep pace with home responsibilities and too many outside activities. There is a club for this, a society for that, auxi- liaries for hospitals, schools, vet- erans and masons. In fact most men's clubs have women's auxi- liaries. Before she realizes what is happening the average house- wife, urban and rural, finds her-. self soinvolved she doesn't know which way to turn. We need to take an interest in community activties but not to the point of exhaustion. The same principle applies to children. I am thinking now of one eleven -year old girl in parti- cular. A bright, intelligent child who learns easily, Yet she makes little progress at school, and may not be promoted next fall, Why? She is out every night of the, week — to dancing classes, music lessons, Girl Guides or dramatic school. And every week 'some one is having a birthday party. The child is high strung and pro- bably tired out before the day begins. How can any child keep up with her school work with so much after-school activity? The responsibility obviously be- longs to the parents. No child's health and education should be sacrificed for the sake of over- ambitious parents. And yet it is Often done although a happy, carefree growing -up period is a child's natural heritage. At least, it should be. Little Tommy had been fas- cinated by his first trip to the ballet. On the way home he said to itis mother: "I don't know why all the girls had to stand on their toes. Why can't they just get taller girls?" SALLY'S SALLIES 'Take tine back, please, and 5t•Ing me a pink one; I'm re- ' decorating the N»om." Girls Who Lead ":ruble Lives By day she was a perfect se- cretary in a shipping office . honest, respectable, reliable. By night she was a young wildcat who went out robbing shops and houses with a. gang of reckless young criminals, Returning to her lodgings af- ter a day's work, she discarded her well -tailored business cos- t u m e, donned a sweater and tight -fitting red jeans, and tied up her hair in pony -tail fashion, Then she went off to a cafe in London's East End, where she joined her gang. This double life lasted for several months, Then, a short time ago, Janet, the 24 -year-old Scots girl, blundered, Acting as look - out for the gang which was 'car -ramming a tobacconist's shop, she screamed a warning as a policeman rounded the street corner. But it was too late' her boy friends had already crashed in- to the shop. The policeman grab- bed her wrist. She bit him and with her free hand punched him in the face, but he held on. When Janet was put on trial and sentenced to six months' imprisonment,• h e r employers were astounded, It couldn't be she, insisted the shipping office's chief clerk. She always seemed to him, and to all her business colleagues, such a quiet, consci- entious girl. Like certain other people, Janet suffered from a split per- sonality, a Jekyll and. Hyde complex. Sometimes this com- plex plays havoc with a per. son's romantic life. A beautiful 28 -year-old South African girl, Sonia, goes through agonies because of her dual personality. She finds her- self quite unable to love one person wholeheartedly. S h e craves for the affections of two entirely different types of men. One is a lad of eighteen just starting a career, the other a mature man of the world in his late forties. An orphan, Sonia recently consulted a psychiatrist a bout her problem. She seemed to be suffering, he said from repres- sion at not having a brother or 'lather. Her nearest approach to hap- piness sees her• shuttling be- tween her two loves. This leads to curious complications. A few weeks ago her older man friend, a mining engineer, met with a serious accident, brealc- ing his leg and three ribs, He expected her to visit him the next day, but. she said she couldn't because that day she had a date with her younger boy friend! A more piquant if more read- ily understandable double life is being lived by Yvonne,' a 23 -year-old dancer; a girl of French parentage, but since na- turalized in this country, Her father died because he was too fond of the wine bottle. This has made the girl a strict tee- totaler who hates wines as a drink, yet it has an irresistible and secret fascination for her. For, according to a close friend, she saves all her spare money and spends it on good quality*hite wine. Then, when she has accumulated sufficient stock, she pours it all into her, bath and wallows in it! "She seems . enormously re- vived in vitality whenever she's had one of her white wine baths," says her friend. Angela, a twenty-six-year-old Midland girl, worked in a coal merchant's office. She was a 1 quick' and efficient secretary, and her boss entrusted her with some of his private business. Soon she . discovered that 1.0 was being unfaithful to his wife, so either out of greed for more money or disappointed because of his lack of interest in her, she turned' blackmailer. On three occasions he left money at, a certain spot, as an anonymous letter advised hire to do if he wished to keep his guilty secret dark. But when this became too costly he pluck- ed courage and told the police. ' A trap was set. A package, with £ 15 in marked notes, was left at the foot of an oak, and the police kept watch. The detective in hiding was surprised when a pretty fifteen - year -old schoolgirl dismounted from her cycle, went straight to the spot where the package was buried and retrieved it. "What are you going to do with that?" asked the officer. "I can't tell you," replied the child firmly. "Then 'perhaps ,you will tell me who you are. What is your name, please?" She told the detective her name,. and the coal merchant's blackmailer was revealed to be her elder sister. Fashion . Page Flash PRINTED .•rXi'TERN Spring's most flattering shirt- waist features a dashing,curved collar above a shapely waist and a skirt -fol of upressed pleats. Casual in cotton — dramatise for evening in fluid silk print. Printed Pattern 4874: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 118, Size 16 requires 51 yards 35 -inch fab- ric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (50e) (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly S 1 Z E, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. ISSUE 23 — 1959 AUSTRALIA -BOUND — Stanley Yankus is shown with his fam'Iy on their wuy to a new =life in Australia, The rebel Michigan farmer Is leaving the .uuntry because of federal farm re- s'rIM►ans Yankus holds daughter ler'•en, 3, Below him are sons Dennis, 11, left, and Russell, 13. Mrs. Yaokus is at right. It Sure Paid John To Advertise Some weeks ago, as many of you will remember, John Gould's wife lost a prized old three -tine fork. Ile tditl about this loss in his widely -read column in The Christian Science Monitor. Per- haps you were wondering if there was any response. Well, here's what happened -- up to now! * * * For some weeks I've wondered how to commence this report, and I suppose the best way is to stop wondering and begin. It has to do with three -tined forks, and if anybody was ever thrust into Orbit by his own firecracker, 'twas I. May I underline, first of all, that there really was a three - tined steel kitchen fork; that my helpmate did lose it; that she did say she couldn't keep house without it; and that she did be- seech me to inquire in the public print *here one might apply to get another. Thus a "Dispatch" on the subject appeared, and we hadn't the vaguest notion of what we were starting. The truth is that there has not been such a spate of response since your editor and I first cook- ed up the idea of these Dispatches —and to me this is a puzzling thing. Of all the variant topics we've touched on, pertaining gen- erally to human affairs, the last I'd have picked for an all-out winner would be the three -tined fork. And it is embarrassing that there are so many of you, but only one of me, When the forks carne by dozens and the letters by scores, there were a couple of days of amazement, and then the throwing of hands in the air. To all joining in the collective plan- ning, preparation, making and distributing of a great family journal, such response is a joy. You don't always realize how far the cand10 beams, until one day some such item clicks. But I'ni stumped at finding a way to ade- quately acknowledge such an oGipouring. Even as I contemplated the task, Daylight Saving came in, and I lost an hour, Then Presi- dent Eisenhower proposed up- ping the letter stamp to a nickel, which seemed a personal affront! And the mail showed no sign of letting up, or the forks of ceas- ing to come. Indeed, before the first letters could be opened, noted, and appreciated, there al- ready had arrived one from a gentleman who said he had sent a fork, and as I hadn't acknow- ledged it, perhaps it had been lost and he should put a tracer on it! (I wrote him at once, of course.) There aren't many places we haven't heard from—Boston, the Middle West, the South, the Pa- cific Coast, Canada, England (a couple of forks received from here were over 300 years old). There has even been time to hear from Australia. But quite,apart from the edi- torial satisaction that comes from finding sah a plural topic, my "pink ap'P is a -sing in the kitchen, 'a fork in each hand and another Carmen -like atwixt her teeth, and she is as happy as a clam at high tide, as gay as a banana split, and no task is too arduous. She can flip doughnuts again, get pickles from the brine, and the scrambled eggs are smooth as a smelt. There were two -three ladies wrote in and said goodness, they'd lost their forks, too, and if perchance we got an over- supply, would we share? We shared, sending to each the name of the original donor so thank- you's could be made. She thinks I should shape up some pine boards, long panels to go above the cupboards in the kitchen, where she can attach the forks in a permanent exhibit. RHUBARB SASS—All the elements of a classic rhubarb are pictured, above, in San Francisco. Guess who won? Umpire Frank Dascoli, naturally. Giants' Wes Westrum (3) found him- self out of the game after protesting a disputed play, and manager Bill Rigney waved his hands in vain. She has each laid out with a tag on it, telling who sent it. However, Postmaster General Summerfield was careless, and a few packages came through rim - wracked beyond identification, There were also several anony- mous arrivals. Some came with ribbons tied on; many had notes giving family histories. Although all were essentially the same kind of fork, and satis- fied the definitions, there were many styles. Some had bone handles, some, ivory, some wood —and a few had homemade han- dles showing ancient repair. Most showed long years of use, but a few were brand new—indicating they may still be had in stores if you know where to look. And also, as I said, that money is no object when the lady of the house is in want. Besides all the forks that came, dozens of letters said, "If you don't receive one, let me know and I have one I'll send." The essence of the whole ex- perience, perhaps, is found in the predominance .of letters which ,recalled such forks in the hands of grandinothers, aunts, smooth- ly doing household chores—happy memories hitherto neglected. Some of these letters showed a refrain ... wonder whatever be- came of that fork? So, it is gratifying to have touched on a subject which pleased so many, and sparked so many a tangible response. But that is "shop talk," and relative- ly unimportant. The important thing is the friendliness, neigh- borliness, kindness • and concern. It is as if we had a fraternity, with the tines standing for ab- stractions in triple array. The whole thing has left us deeply touched and humble, and feeling very rich amongst a broad membership. When the panels are in place, and the fork 'collection" becomes a dominant theme in our kitchen (the room we live in!) it should be pretty hard to convince us that an in- dividual is ever an island. If Ex- calibur and Durandal and things like that have become legendary symbols of morality, how much more potent'to us will be the eso- teric values of the three -tined fork! Possibly we can, sooner or later, send off our individual thanks. Certainly we plan to! Meantime, because we thought you'd like to know, we have in- sinuated this Dispatch. We cer- tainly hope everybody is as hap- py as we are!—By John Gould in" The Christian Science Monitor, Ixx � .F�TfcSc�y4 4, 3 n� ,A1 a1,,n•:t; SKY STATIONS —_ A new approach to creating ,a stratosphere station has been proposed. It would be kept aloft with energy rays beamed from earth. Drawing depicts saucer -like plat- form. Rotor keeping it hovering in thin air layer would be converted to heat in much the same way as an electric stove element converts electricity to heat. Under development by Raytheon, the stations could be used for missile'' detection, long-range communication, navigational and meteorological aids, surveillance and TV transmission, They Dueled With Ten -Ton Trucks The lone girl woke in her sleep- ing- bag in a glade near Anchor- age, Alaska, and in the early morning light saw . . , four vast furry brown legs and feet with great long curved claws. The huge bear had come out of the trees and was some twelve feet way, moving his great blunt head from side to side. He seem- ed as large as a horse, shifting his weight gently from one front paw to the other, Suddenly he reared up to peer at her over entervening twigs, She moved her head to keep him in view, and the movement may have startled him, for he drop- ped back, turned round and padded silently away. Adventurous Lorna Whishaw, a British Columbia housewife, doesn't say she was scared, merely that , . . "I wanted to leap up and yell, to let the world know I had seen a bear, a great Alaskan brownie," She had hitch -hiked 2,670 miles from her home on Lake Kootenay. Her geologist husband, committed to a three month's expedition, had urged her to go off somewhere on her own, too. So she'd left house and children in the charge of a neighbour and set out blithely with a pack and thirty-six dollars to hike and get lifts up the Trans -Canada and Alaska Highways. The first truck driver who stopped for her warned her "Highways ain't no place for dames on the loose," and told her of a cousin's girl who'd gone off like that and been murdered. "Never go along with any truck- er who asks you," he added. "Type you need is the guy who don't want to take you; then you'll be okay." One truck driver — Jack Martin' deaf after an air crash when he was a pilot in the Far East, but the best driver on the road — exclaimed: "Oh, the luck!" on seeing another ten -ton truck on the road ahead signal- ling madly. "Now you'll meet my buddy. You just wait, you'll really see something," The next few minutes, Mrs. Whishaw says in "As Far As You'll Take Me" were the most terrifying of her life. Jack paus- ed on a hilltop; the other truck, on an opposite hilltop, did like- wise, Then, with a blaze of signals, like joustling knights, they roar- ed down towards each other, head on, at ever-increasing speed — Jack yelling like a maniac, pulling on the siren, jumping up and down on his seat. She grab- bed at the door to jump for her life: "Sit, you fool!" he screech- ed, seizing her by the hair. With roaring, blinding death only a few feet from then the other truck leapt across the high- way. Jack, with a yell of tri- umph, swerved left and they flashed past each other on their respective rights. A wild jolting kept Jack's truck from the left-hand gutter and brought it to a halt on his own side of the road, Both driv- ers leapt out and ran to greet each other. "What's the idea?" she gasped, shivering and sweating, when they were again on their way. "The idea is to cross and pass on the right. Whoever chickens (funks) crosses first. He did, you see? Boy, he thought he'd had it." "Suppose he'd decided not to chicken, then what?" "Then he would have had it." "They always done it, for fun, Jack added. When she said, "One of these days ." he retorted, "So what, it's an honourable death, ain't it?" Later, on her return journey .:. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: . AGENTS WANTED EARN Cash in your Spare Time. Just show your friends our Christmas and - A11.Occnsion Greeting Cards (including Religious), Stationery, Gifts. Write for samples. Colonial Card Ltd., 489.13 Queen East, Toronto 2. I. WEVERMAN Real Estate requires farm agents in your locality. 380 13 Bloor W„ Toronto, WA. 2.2442, GO INTO BUSINESS for yourself. Sell our exciting house- wares, watches and other products not found In stores, No competition. Pro- fits up to 500%. Write now for free colour catalogue and separate conn• dentin! wholesale price sheet. Murray sales, 3022 St. Lawrence, Montreal, BABY CHICKS -- IT'S time to order Bray July -August broilers, Special prices on dayold heavy breed cockerels, Prompt ship- ment dayold and some started dual pur- pose pullets and cockerels. Some Ames pullets, also Leghorns. See local agent, • or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BOYS' AND GIRLS' CAMPS CHILDREN'S CAMP for boys and girls 6.17. All land and Water sports under college -trained leadership. Registered Nurse. Home cooked meals. Six pontes and horses to ride at no extra cost, Screened Insulated cabins. Aqua plan - Ing and Water skiing. 29th year for Canada's outstanding Camp. Highly recommended. Reasonable. Dr. and Mrs, Martin, Directors Write for free fol. der: "Wildwood" Vaudreull. Quebec, MARIDAN RANCHO BEAUTIFUL scenic Location. Miles of riding trails. Children 6.16 years, $25.50 weekly. Best of supervision. 1Vilte R.R. 1, Varney. Phone Durham 580W2. Ranch Arrowhead ONTARIO'S FINEST RANCH CAMP A wonderful western holiday for boys and girls 0 to 16, July and August; • adults, May, June, Sept. and Oct, Com- plete camp program; fees include daily riding, instruction and trails, Write for illustrated folder — R.R. 3, Collingwood, or phone Toronto EM. 8- 6548, BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE BILLIARDS and cigar store, sound established business, building and all equipment included. Located in they - Ing town between Toronto and Hamil- ton, Books open to genuine buyer. Owner retiring and .will give good terms and hold 5% 1st mortgage. An excellent opportunity . Call or write W. D. Hitchcox, Realtor, 541 Brant St., Burlington, NElson 4.2343. FOR Salo — Machine Shop, Woodwork - Ing Shop, living apartment, in the pret- tiest town In Ontario. Reasonable, No triflers please. Box No. 186. 123 -10th Street, New 'Toronto, Ont. HARDWARE Store and / or Heating, Plumbing, Tinsmithing Business In in- dustrial town. Reasonable, Apply Box 367, Perth, Ontario. GARAGE WONDERFUL opportunity in a grow- ing industrial town, 40 miles from Toronto and a possible franchise with one of the big three car manufactur- ers. Corner lot 145' x 132', on a main highway through town. Garage build- ing 45' x 90', plus an addition 20' x 30', consisting of showroom, workshop, office, stockroom, 2 hoists and pit. Heated with hot water by oil. Estab- lished 14 years, Aggressive car dealers or garage operators should investigate this business. Wm. J. McLeod, Real Estate Broker, Acton, Ont. Phone 203. south, she'd heard that he'd been killed i11 an accident. Mrs. Whishaw dropped off in the Yukon on the way back to go otter -trapping and wild sheep hunting in the mountains with a game warden. At Car. max, near Dawson City, she met Mrs. Jane Fletcher, now nearly eighty, who'd been dance -hall girl "Rosie Murphy" in Dawson in the gold -rush days and still hoarded away several thousand dollars' worth of jewels and valuables in a cigar box, Near Kluane lake Mrs. Whi- shaw was shown an abandoned homestead which looked as if it had been rifled by bears, for everything was overturned. "The place belonged to a man called Brown," she was told. "He had a wonderful wife, a pure Eskimo. She had his children and slaved for him for forty years, never saying much and taking all the miserable treat- ment he handed out. "One day, when the family were all grown up and left home, she waited for him oppo- site the front door. When he came in, she shot him dead with his gun. Then she took the bus to Whitehorse and gave herself up to the Mounties. She was tried for first-degree murder and acquitted," Nearing home, Mrs. Whishaw told her last trucker: "Thank you, Mitch. Thank you and all the drivers. Thank you for be- ing so good to me. Thank you for all you have taught lne." How Can i? By Anne Ashley Q. Ilow can I make poached eggs hold together? A. Add half a teaspoonful of vinegar to poaching eggs, and it will cause them to hold to- gether. This will have the sante effect on fish, Q. How can I keep the colours in chintzes from running? An aspirin added to the wa- ter in which chintzes and cre- tonnes are to be laundered will prevent the colours from run- ning, and even improve them. Q. How can I make cleaning fluid odourless? A. Add a few drops of oil of sassafras to each quart of fluid used in cleaning clothes. This mill deodorize it and entirely remove any disagreeable odour from the garment after the cleaning. FARMS FOR SALE FARM for sale — 200 acres, good clay loam, new bank barn, milk contract, trout river through farm, 7 room house, hydro, spring water. Close to church, school, tourist lakes, $5000 down. Leslie Piewis, Gravenhurst, Ont. HANOVER area: 100 -acre farm for sale, good buildings, hydro, pressure sys- tem; good water; 15 acres bush, 85 acres cleared land, spring -fed stream, Will sell with stock and implements or without. Miss Clark, 698 Eglinton E., Toronto. Empire 8.3071, GARDEN MACHINERY PLANET Jr, Garden tractors, tillers, seeders, wheel hoes, John C. Graham Co., Distributors, Leamington, Ont, HELP WANTED WOMEN SEW at home in your spare time, in- come unlimited. Send 500 for instrttc- ttons today. North Star Products, P.O. Box 112, Dept. P., Cedar Grove, N. J. MALE AND FEMALE HELP WANTED FOREIGN Job Reports! Highest wages, Free Travel. Adventure. Men, women, unusual opportunities. Skilled, unskill- ed, all trades. Only $1,00, Universal Researcher, Box 4912, Baltimore 20, Maryland. , INSTRUCTION EARN more! Bookkeeping, Salesman- ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses. 1290 Bay Street, Toronto. MAGAZINES TEACIIERS', Educators', M.D.'s,,Dent• fists' magazine subscriptions. Lists free. Postgraduate Medicine, year, $10, 2 years, $17. S, D. Rapp, 929.14th, Santa Monica, California. MEDICAL WANTED — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEU- MATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you, Itching, scaling and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm, pim;+les and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odories ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.00 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2865 St, Clair Avenue East TORONTO NURSES WANTED ENJOY the atmosphere of a friendly 640 -bed Down -Town hospital. THE TORONTO WESTERN HOSPITAL 399 Bathurst Street Toronto has vacancies for GENERAL STAFF NURSES nu5al00 ncrem ntsth toa$2t 85 r00ent with an• 40 -hour 5 -day work week WRITE giving full details to: Director of Nursing Service. Hospital Superintendent REGISTEIIED nurse for 30 -bed modern hospital, starting July 1, 1959. Furnish- ed 3 -room apartment provided. Reply, stating previous experience and salary expected to Mrs. R. E. Linton, Secre- tary. Englehart and District Hospital Board. Box 609 Englehart, Ont. GENER4L DUTY NURSES FOR 100 -bed hospital, up-to-date faci- lities in a beautiful location on the the shore of Lake Erie. Residence avail- able. Salary $260,00 month with recog- nation for P.G. courses. 44 -hour week at present. APPLY DIRECTOR OF NURSING Port Colborne General Hospital PORT COLBORNE, ONT. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN • BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant, dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St., W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL MY RUPTURE was removed naturally, For FREE FACTS, write: John Mor- timer, Box 120 W, Elora, Ont. PHOTOGRAPHY SAVEI SAVE! SAVEI Films developed and 12 magna prints to album 60f 2 magna prints in album 40f Reprints 50 each KODACOLOR Developing roll $1.00 (not including prints). Color prints 350 each extra, Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 ex- posures mounted in slides $1.25. Color prints refundedroIn full m efor s 5unprnted Aneti lives. FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. PROPERTIES FOR SALE FOR sale or trade, service station and garage, fully equipped, in small village near Napanee. Good iocation and busi- ness. Apply James Ferguson, RR. 1 Napanee, 920 r 22. 50 ACRES of timber. 15 acres with three houses, large barn, pressure system, bath room. John H. Parks, Bannockburn, IF YOU WANT IT — YOU CAN HAVE Wholesome — Healthful Year Round Odorless and rapid Sanitary Elimin- ation Cleanliness of contents In Out- door Toilets — Septic Tanks — Cess Pools, by accepting our special in- troductory offer of two pounds of Sproul's "SEPTI•K•LEEN" for only $3.00 f.o.b. Toronto. An amazing fast - acting Compound HARMLESS to Hu- mans — Pets — metals or materials Just recently become available for distribution. The fast, safe, odorless results will mike you glad you did. Inquiries solicited from Agents and Dealers. SPROUL CHEMISTS 2674 Yonge St. — Toronto HU. 3-5747 STAMPS AND COINS FOR the finest In stamps on approval. Post paid both ways. Write today. M. Hideout, Box 476, Hamilton, Ont. STAMP collectors — send for freo price list. Postpaid both ways, Hamil- ton Stamp Co., 5C08 Segni Rd. Haiti - more 12, Md., U.S.A. UP to $200.00 paid for 1921 Canadian 5f. 20 -page "Premium Buying Guide" showing prices paid for coins 250. New brochure "How to invest In Canadian Coins 250. For both send only 350 to: Merles, Box 033 -WP, Calgary. A DREAM RAINBOW FOR YOUR ALBUM A beautiful collection, sports, flowers, animals, etc,, more than 318 different stamps. Satisfaction for everybody, Al( that for only 250. With our benutlful stamps on approval. Faro Stamp Co., Dept. W., Stoneham Company, Quebec, (A.S.D.A. SUMMER RESORTS DAY-VUE LODGE, Lake Muskoka, Bola good swimming, home cooking close to Dunn's Dance Pavilllon, $30.00 weekly. Dox 78 Bala. GOLDEN Beach cottages on Lake Nipissing, near North Bay, safe bath - Ing, sandy beach, tf•K cottages with 2, 3 or 4 bedrooms, For folder write Stan Richardson Camps, SS No. 1, 5, No. 1, North Ray, Ontario. BLUE WATER CONFERENCE NEAR WALLACEBURG, ONT. "Undenominational Summer Resort" $3 to $7.50 daily, including meals; all recreational facilities; evening meet- ing; Bible and missionary speakers. For folder write 153 King W., Chatham, Ont. HOUSEKEEPING Cottages to rent at Hinterland Beach, on Kamaniske$ Lake, Barrys Bay, one, two and three bedrooms, beautiful sand beach, crys• tal clear water, good fishing, attractive cottages, For pictures and information see Carl Pitts, Omemee, Phone 106. PORT SYDNEY 81USKOKA, ONTARIO On Beautiful Mary Lake SAFE sandy beach, boating, water skiing, recreation director. Delightful woodland walks, For a perfect holi- day in every way, visit Mary Lake. For further information write Port Sydney Tourist Promotion Association. SUMMER PROPERTIES FOR SALE BUY, Sell, successfully, Port Carling, Muskoka area, specializing In summer properties. Call 51 E D Milner Real. tor. "COTTAGE for sale In Hallhurton High- lands on Hollow Lake near Dorset, On- tario, Half acre lot, 100 feet lake front- age. Lake and Speckled Trout fishing, good hunting. For information write K. Miller, 60 Bay St„ Woodstock, Ontario. TEACHERS WANTED PROTESTANT teacher S. S. No. 12 Chatham Township. Duties to com- mence September 1959. Maximum salary $4000. Apply stating experience and qualifications to Mrs. Leola Sherk; Sec.-Treas. Tupperville, Ontario. PROTESTANT teacher for S.S. Nb. 4, Yarmouth, Elgin County. Small school, all grades. SALARY, $2,90a-33,100, depending on qualifications. APPLY, stating qualifications, experi- ence, and name of last inspector, to Mrs. John W. Millman, R.lr, 1, Sparta, Ont. Duties to begin September, 1959. TEACHER required for rural nubile school for September. Small enroll - mein. APPLY, stating salary expected and experience, to: John A. McLeod, Treas. of Aberdeen -Plummer Township school area, Leeburn, Algoma Ontario, TEACHERS WANTED BY ORO TOWNSHIP SCHOOL AREA SALARY schedule, minimum for quail - fled teacher $3,000 with annual incre- ment of $200 to maximum of $4,000. Fifty dollars per year for four years will be allowed for experience. WHEN applying state experience, age, religion and name of former inspector. John G. Currie, Oro Station, Ont. TOWNSHIP School A r e a, South Fredericksburgh requires fully quali- fied teacher. Commencing September. Salary $3,100. State age, qualifications, religion, telephone number and mune of present inspector. W. G. Gilbert, Secretary -treasurer, R. R. 2 Napanee. 3 PROTESTANT teachers for township school area of Mayo, Ilastings County, starting 1059.60 term. ONE for one -room school (McArthurs Mills), Grades I to V. Salary $3,000. ONE for principal two -room school (Hermon), Grades V to VIIi, Salary $3,300, ONE for junior room, two•room school (Hermon), Grades I to IV. Salary, $2,800. GIVE name and address of last Inspee- tor and experience to A. W. Itamsbot- tom, Hermon, Ont. SPORTING GOODS FIBREGLASS CANOES, "SENECA" JS ft. 55 lbs. Wilderness 'rested. Send for Free Catalogue of Sporting Goods. Algoma Sports Shop, 334 Goulais Ave- nue, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. TURKEYS BROAD llreasted Bronze turkey poults, largo good market type strain. Reason- ably priced. Circular. Brunton Turkey Fane and Hatchery, It. 2, Camphellford, Ont. ISSUE 23 — 1959' —backache! —tired out! —rest disturbed! ARE ALL W..�,:IVES •FED UP? When they are troubled by backache, that tired out feeling or disturbed rent, many, many women turn to Dodd's Kidney Pills. These conditions ran he caused by excess acids and wastes in the system and Dodd's Kidney Ma stimulate the kidneys and aid their normal action of reproving these excess acids and wastes. Then life seems brighter, housework tighter! Why don't you, too, try Dodd's? c3 SLEEP TO -NIGHT AND RELIEVE NERVOUSNESS I4UMY TO -MORROW To 6e happy and tranquil Instead of nervous or for a good night's sleep, take Sed!cln tablets according to directions. SEDICIN® $1.00—$4.95 TABLETS Drve Stens Odrl PAGE 10 YOUR FRIENDLY superior FOOD MARKET Nabisco Shredded Wheat, 2-12 oz pkgs. • 37e Clark's Beans with Pork, 2-20 oz, Tins 35c Heinz Tomato Juice, Large 48 oz. Tin 27c Salada Orange Pekoe Tea Bags, pkg. of 60 ... , 73c EXTRA SPECIAL—"Imagine" Our Favourite Brand of Coffee, Cbeery Morn 59c Try Our Frozen Food and Dairy Counters For More Specials Shop The "SUPERIOR" Way Satisfaction Guaranteed. PIIONE 156 --- WE DELIVER SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION. modernize your kitchen and bathroom with EMKO FIXTURES and FITTINGS ' Let us show you how you can increase the comfort and modernize the appearance of your home at an amazingly low cost, How? Why with the newest in EMCO fittings and fixtures for kitchen or bathroom, SEE THEM NOW AT BLYTH PLUMBING & HEATING Telephone 47 Blyth, Ontario TilAt1 o .10"673 with the E„CLUS1VE UNIVERSAL WELL SANT l`. RN ILI THAT TRAPS [BACTERIA -LADEN MOISTURE;' t 1 (� L ERS Laborato?.9 tests show that the advanced design of Universal Milkers def- initely reuuc;3 bacteria count! GET THE FACTS ON find out how Universal Milkers con help you keep bacteria counts town for GRADE "A" PRODUC- TION. iraedersal MILKERS BELGRAVE (0 -OP ASSOCIATION Wingham 1091 Phones Brussels 388W10 YOU ARE INVITEII TO VISIT OUR DISPLAY at the WINGIIAM TRADE FAIR. THE BLY'TII STANDARD • CONGRAT1TLATIONS ( Saturday, Juno lith. Best Wishes to Leslie Snell, son ci Happy birthday to Mrs, Mvili Snell, Ruv. and Mrs. Donald Snell, of Cal._ Westfield, who celebrates her birthday Bary, who celebrates his birthday on on Sunday, June 7th, E 1 N•••-• ♦.+� N r+H11+ri M+� N1 ro We still have MAXWELL 4 -CYCLE MOWERS AT $69.95, 18" Cut Gardening Supplies, Step Ladders, Hoover Cleaners and . Polishers FOR THE COTTAGE OR CAMP 1 WESTINGHOUSE ROASTER OVEN will cook a 30 Ib. turkey, or bake a cake ONLY $45,00 VODDEN'S HARDWARE E3 ELECTRIC PHONE 71R2 --- BLYTH, ONT, /4444444 N-• 4 H s $ • 4 14+-P-+ $4 � •-$+H �4�N1+�1N44+1 �+H i4'N••444444•I44444M444I•NNN •~WW ' CONTEST WINNERS Dolls (1) Cheryl Ann 11lcNall. (2) Vikki fowler, • (3) Cheryl Madill Flowers, Etc, (1)Mrs. Vi Fowler. (2) Cheryl Madill. (3)Mrs. Vi Fowler. Our Sincere Appreciation to Mrs. D. 1-Iowes for Judging the compe- tition and to all our customers who so generously took part, PELTON'S -VARIETY STORE BLYTH, ONT. DUCOAJLASWIaltrAu • Y00 CAN PACK INTO A DAY IN 0 Northern Ontario .. , paradise for people who want to relax. The great outdoors stretches for mile upon mile, yet a day can he as varied as you care to make it. Wild life .. , scenic cruises , . , luxury lodges . , . fascinating mining developments ... you'll find thole all aide by side in this groat area. QC :y;;fi -j }t• l Ir=� i 0 Discoverhow economical it is to explore Ontario by mailing the coupon below. Literature you will receive includes an up -to -data list of accommodation that shows you where to stay at tho price you want to pay. a. vii:::•?<:'.'•:<�::+�.}.r.':vniC%i::'�'+7.'•:•`i'`+�':'r'.'.`4nitiS)'i^.•`•;•',!f FREEI ONTARIO TRAVEL 000 Parliament Bldg.., Toronto, Ontario. Send M. Ilter.lure shout Northern Ontario and road map Nam* Addrsee f t ,. !P'v • 30• ' .Mara?v i .:4`YYr''•ttft3' .S.M.M Ontario Deportment of Truitt & Publicity, Hon. Bryan L. Calker:, Minister KNOW 'ONTARIO"_ BETTER. BIRTHS BRINDLEY—At Aticxandra hospital, Godcrich, on Thursday, May 21, 1959, to Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Brindley (nee Violet Gbw) of Auburn, the gift of a son, Larry Russell, a brother for Ronnie. Why would you vote a- gainst Rae J. Watson Think things over and give hint a boost by voting for him, s 1 Wedne8day, June 3, 190, ' HEADQUARTERS FOR BABY SUPPLIES Make Philp's your headquarters for all baby supplies. We carry full lines of fresh baby re- quirements at all times. Aqua Seal Baby Pants 39c Drytex Baby Pants 69c, 79c and 89c Baby Coverall Bibs 98c Johnson's Baby Oil or Lotion 75c and 98e Jbhnson's Baby Shampoo 75c Johnson's Baby Powder ° 45c and 75c Castoria 53c and 85c Infants Glycerin Suppositories 50e S,M,A, Infant Feeding 98c. 2 for $1.95 Dexin Infant Feeding $1.25 and $4,00 Evenflo Nursers Complete 39c Twin Tins 39c and 59c Cotton Balls ' 49c Rectal Syringe, Infants 75c R. D. PHILP, Phm. B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PRONE 20. BLYTII ...•••••+ •••-•-•-•-••••-• 44+•44• ♦ ♦ 41+t4• ►1 • • 444+44• N44 -NN 04+•4+44 W44444 ••••••4 rw•iv STOP f3 SHOP at Snell's Food Market This Week -End. ammip Having recently purchased the grocery business from Mr. and Mrs. Moody Holland, I have now tak- en possession. I will endeavour to do my utmost to give efficient service, and am looking forward to pleasant busi- ness relations with the people of Blyth and district. Yours truly, Alvin Snell. Clark's Pork and Beans, 20 oz. 2 for 35c Tip Top Peaches, 20 oz. 2 for 45c Nature's Best Tomato Juice, 48 oz. 25c Habitant Sweet Pickles 2 for 45c Carnation Milk 2 for 29c Potatoes, 10 lb. 30c Snell's. Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. Telephone 39 • WE DELIVER A JOINT Political Meeting1 will be held in the r BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL ON will be held in the MEMORIAL HALL ON MONDAY, JUNE 8th at 8:30 P.M. JOHN HANNA — RAE WATSON Candidates for Huron-BruQe HARRY STRANG — CHAS. MaaiNAUGHTON Candidates for South Huron 1 WILL BE THE GUEST SPEAKERS COME ONE COME ALL and hear what your candidates have to say. Sponsored by the Ontario Farmers Union. The Farmers Union will hold their Quarterly County Meeting in the Board Rooms, Clinton, nn June 4111 at 8:30 p,ni. The guest speaker will talk on spray and weed killing. Everybody Welcome. —Robert Taylor, Director, O.F.U. 4.WNMN+NNMIMM.a.I•N.- �. RED L3 WHITE 38th ANNIVERSARY • SELL—A--RRATION ' at STEWART'S BLYTH PHONE 9 WE DELIVER YOU CAN SAVE ON MORE THAN 50 ITEMS STOCK UP AND SAVE FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES California New Potatoes 10 lb. bag 69c Pineapples, Cuban, at their best, 2 for 49e New Spring Texas No. 1 Carrotts 2 pkgs. 25c Garden Fresh No. 1 Radishes 3 bunches 19c Sunkist Oranges, 113's per doz, 49c Sunkist Oranges, 163's 2 doz. 69e Florida Grapefruit 5 for 29c FROZEN FOODS ANI) SWIFT'S MEATS Sunkist Orangeade, 6 oz. tins, Is. 2 for 39c Fraservale Fish and Chips 24 oz. pkg. 63c Birdseye Tasty Onion Rings 40 oz. pkg. 35c Fresh Boneless Pork Butt Roast per lb. 49c Fresh hark Sparc Ribs, meaty, per lb. 49e Premium Franks, bulk. per lb. 39c Premium Breakfast Sausage, skinless, 1 lb. pkg. 37e Everswcet Bacon 1 lb. plcg. 63e Turkeys per lb. 45c Chickens per lb. 35c Pcameal Rolls per lb. 49c Sliced Bologna per lbs 29c