The Blyth Standard, 1959-11-18, Page 1THE BLYTH
'VOLUME 71 • NO, 43
What Is "REVOCATIO
The following information has ben
issued by tate Huron Citizens Legal
Control Committee:
"Revocation isn't one of the most
common words in the English language.
but It is certainly going to become bet-
Use McGill
June; 1969
Posttorized Office Department, Ottawatt' BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, NOV, 18, 1959 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mr, and Mrs. Brock Vodden, of Ni-
agara Falls, spent the week -find with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ilarolcl
Vodden and Mr, and Mrs. William
Merritt.
Mrs, Wm, Bell has returned from a
ter known in Huron and Perth counties week's vacation in Detroit with her
before November 30,I daughter, Mrs. Wm, Chopp, Mr. Chopp
This is the legal term used to de- and Billy.
(scribe repeal of the Canada Temper-
ance Act.
When the electors of the two count-
ies voted to adopt the CTA before the nett.
first world war they _were actually Mr, and Mrs. R. D. Philp visited on
voting to bring part II of the Act into Sunday with the latter's mother, Mrs.
force (Part I is the machinery. used MacCorkindale, of Owen Sound,
to bring on and conduct the vote and Mr, and Mrs, Clayton Chisholm, of
Part II is the Canada Temperance Act Provost, Alberta, Mr. and Mrs. Jinn
itself, as we now have it in tho two rifle Miller, of Milverton, visited with
counties). ' Mr. and Mrs, %Vim 13e11 last Thursday.
Now the issue before the electors is ( Mr, and Mrs, Leonard Cook returned
what the lawyers would call "revoca-, home Saturday night after spending
tion of Part II of the CTA" but this two weeks halide with Dr. and Mrs.
means exactly the same as "repeal,"
Mr, and Mrs,' Finlay McGowan, of
Oakville, visited on Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs, Orval McGowan and Ken -
a much more popular word,
The ballot to be used on Monday,
November 30 has on It two spaces on
one of which the voter should place a
plain X with the black lead pencil pro-
vided in the voting booth.
In the top space appear the words
"FOR THE REVOCATION" and an X
in this space indicates the voter's de-
sire to repeal the CTA and bring in the
Ontario Liquor.• Control Act. An X
in the bottom space indicates the vot-
er's preference for the CTA.
Huron and Perth are the last two,
counties in Ontario that are still undei
the CTA. A total of 30 counties and
three cities have voted it out, most
of them by large majorities. The
most recent votes were in the Dis-
trict of Manitoulin, which voted the
Act out of force in 1949 and Peel county
Where it was rejected by over 60 per
cent of the electors two years later.
HUNTERS RETURN FROM THE
MUSKOKA DISTRICT
Messrs. Art Colson, Nelson Lear,
Harry Sturdy, Bill Leiper, Jim McEw-
ing, Ken Thompson, Cliff Saundercock,
Weldon Tyndall, Tom Allen, Frank
Schneider, returned home Sunday ev-
ening after a week's hunting trip in
the Muskoka District.
TO HOLM OPEN MEETING.
Zone 3 of the United Dairy and Poult-
ry Co-operative Limited will be hold-
ing a meeting for members, patrons
and interested persons, at the •Blyth
Town Hall on November 25th. -
The meeting begins at 11:30 a.m.,
followed by a luncheon and business
meeting.
Zone 3 includes the Seaforth, Wing -
ham, Blyth area.
BIRTHS
PATTERSON—In Clinton Public Hos-
pital on Saturday, November 14, 1959,
to Mr, and Mrs, Kenneth Patterson
(nee Gwen Campbell) the gift of a
daughter, Gayle Marie,
441 CLUB MEET
The Londesboro 4-H Club met at the
home of Mrs. Percy Carter on Novem-
ber 12th. The meeting was opened by
repeating the 4-H Pledge. Roll call was
answered by giving added plans for
more roomier clothes closet.
We worked an our garment covers
and started our laundry bags, The
meeting was adjourned. Lunch was
served by the hostess.
The next meeting will be held at the
home of Mrs. Reta Little on Thursday
November 19th.
RECEPTION
A reception will be held on Friday
evening, November 20th, at the Lon-
desboro Hall in honour of Mr. and Mrs,
Tony Middegaal. Music will be supplied
by Jim Scott's Orchestra, Lunch will
be provided.
AMONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, November 22, 1959.
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev. b, J. Lane, B.A„ Minister,
1,00 p.m.— Church Service and
Church School.
ANGLICAN CHURCH
OF CANADA
Rev, Robert F. Meally, Rector,
The Sunday next before Advent
Trinity Church, Blyth:
10.30 a.m.—Morning Prayer.
St, Mark's Auburn:
11,30 a.m.--Sunday School,
12 o'clock—Morning Prayer,
Belgrave:
2.00— Sunday School,
2.30 p.m.—Evening Prayer,
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev. R, Evan MeLagan Minister
Miss Margaret Jackson • Director
of Music.
Stewardship Sunday
10.00 a.m.—Sunday Church School,
11:15 a.m.—"It's Up To You,"
3:00 p.m.—Bible Study Group.
8.30 p.m.—Young Peoples' at Church
CHURCH OF GOD
Mer'onnett Sheet, Blyth,
Special Speaker,
2.00 p.m.—Sunday School.
3.00 p.m.—Church Service.
Wardlaw and girls, of Brantford, and
Mr, and Mrs, Jack Farrow and daugh-
ter, of Galt.
Mrs. A. A. Ewing, of Scarboro, re-
turned home on Thursday evening,
with her son, Mr, Richard Ewing, af-
ter a three weeks visit with her broth-
er, Mr. Archie Somers, and sister,
Mrs. S. Cuming,
Mrs, Arthur Ward who is visiting
with her daughter, Mrs. Wilfred Fish-
er, and family, of R.R. 3, Brussels,
visited with her sister, Mrs, A. C. Ken-
nedy, at the home of Mrs, B. McArter,
for a couple of days last week.
Mr. Sydney Smith, of Howell, Mich.,
visited last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. Bell.
Mrs. 'T. Elliott is visiting with her
son, Mr, Gordon Elliott, Mrs. Elliott
and family at Kitchener.
Mr, and Mrs. W. Good and their
nephew and niece, Mr, and Mrs. Roy
Pepper, Mrs. Leslie Johnston, Mrs.
Ilarvcy Brown, Mrs. Elwood Shortreed,
Mrs, Edith Creighton, Mr. Charles Ma-
chan, Mr. and Mrs. L. Scrimgeour,
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Youngblut, Mrs. Ar-
chie Montgomery, • attended the Royal
Winter Fair, Toronto, on Tuesday,
Mr. and Mrs. L. Scrimgeour returned
home on Sunday after a ten day visit
with their daughters, Mrs. Joe Marks,
Mr. Marks, Carole, Brian and Brenda,
of Windsor, Mrs, Baxter, and Air. Bax-
ter, of Chatham.
TEMPERANCE ACT
VOICE OF EXPERIENCE: KEEP
THE C.T.A.
Many citizens who have lived under
both laws .testify against the Liquor
Control Act. Here are passages from
a few letters:
"Success to you in IIuron. I live
about eight rods from a hotel, and I
wish the repealists could see what I
see daily. The attempt to repeal the
C.T.A. is only another move on behalf
of the liquor interests to widen their
scope."—E. C. BOYD, Waterloo county.
"I have not been living in Huron for
over two years, but I hope the voters
of Huron will uphold their record for
keeping (he best interest of the rising
generation always in mind. I enclose
$15 to help win the battle."--WAI. A.
CURRIE, Granton,
"Ilaving lived in communities con-'
trolled by the L.C.A. and C.T.A., I
know that the adoption of either will
make little difference in the obtaining
of alcohol by the youth. The boys and
girls of Grand Bend can obtain alcohol
in their community as easily as can
the young people of Exeter."—BILL
POLLEN, student minister.
"Living in Huron under the Canada
Temperance Act for the past year and
a half is a welcome change from many
years spent in areas under the Liquor
Control Act. It is good to be able to
walk clown the main street without
being accosted by an alcoholic, and to
know that our girls can walk in safety
in the evening. While drinking does
exist, for Huron is not "dry," the evi-
dences are not continuously thrust un-
der our eyes and noses, in long queues
before the doors of liquor stores and
brewers' warehouses; and loud and un.
seemly conduct about the doors of bev-
erage rooms. The number coming to
our door seeking help in problems in-
volving alcohol has been greatly re-
duced, and respect for law and order
in this community is proportionately
higher. It would be a serious retro-
gression to bring Huron under the
Liquor Control Act.
—Rev. T. Garnet Hussey, Wingham.
FROM TIIE CHAIR
Another successful meeting of Lo-
cal 116 of the Ontario Farmer's Union
was held in Nesbitt's school, East Wa-
wanosh, with a fair attendance.
The minutes of the previous meeting
were read and adopted, followed by
a lively discussion on Farm Union
Week, and plans for a membership
campaign.
It was decided to hold a social even-
ing on Tuesday, November 24th in Nes•
bitt's school, cards to start at 8:45 p.
m. The social committee to look after
prizes and lunch.
During the evening membership cam-
paign teams will be appointed to assist
those farmers who are interested in
a fair share of the national income,
to become members of the Farmer's
Union.
Auditors were appointeed and their
report wilt be read at the next meet-
ing on Dumber 8th,
Now, as it was I who was in the
chair, I would like to take this oppor-
tunity to thank the ladies for the very
lovely lunch they served after the meet-
ing adjourned,
Your Lneel Pres.,
Ray Hanna,
Muscular Dystrophy Cam,.
paign November 25.
Next Wednesday, November 2i, the
members of the Blyth Fire Departmeft
will be calling on the residents of the
village for donations to the annual
Muscular Dystrophy Campaign.
The campaign will get under way at
7 p.m. and the whole hilirt ed support
of the community is asked in making
it a success again this year.
All donations, large of small, will
be received with pleasure and official
receipts will be given.
BELGItAVE
Mr. and Mrs. W. Byers and daugh-
ter, of Detroit, were week -end visitor.;
with Mr. and Mrs. C. Procter,
Little Carol Walker who has been a
patient in Hospital at Wingham has re-
turned hone. .
Mr. and Mrs. Goldie Wheeler, Ann
and Billy, were Sunday visitors with
his parents.
Mrs;- H. Irwin spent a few days in
Toronto at the Royal Winter Fair ttu:;
week.'
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vincent spent
a day in Toronto last week.
About 45 members of the Baby Band
and Mission Band, their mothers and
member's of the Women's Missionary Taylor IHazel) of Marton; Ross, of service of song.
Society of Knox United Church gath• Oil Springs; Jack and Bill, of Wing- At the: evening service they will he
ered in tete church for the graduation ham; also 20 grandchildren and 6 great showin, slides on their work among
exercises of the Baby Band members , grandchildren; one bit.ther, Alvin Orvis the lepers. Mr. Joe Baker, of Youth for
Christ, will be assisting.
, Services, morning worship
Evening service, 7.30 p,nm.
Toys For Underprivileged
Children
The Fire Department at the Clinton
Radar School are asking the people of
this district for unused toys, These toys
will he repaired and painted and then
donated to the Children's Aid Society
for distribution to the underprivileged
children of the area as Christmas gilts,
Anyone wishing to donate are asked
to contact Mr, Rotted Chalmers, of
Blyth, who is a member of the Depart-
ment at the Air School, A great :Zeal
of time is required for the repair work,
and your immediate attention to this
matter would be appreciated.
OBITUARY
GEORGE H. ORVIS
Mr. George II, Orvis passed away
suddenly on Tuesday, November 10th,
at his home in Wingham.
Funeral service was held from Cur-
rie's funeral hone, Thursday, Novem-
ber 12, at 1.30 p.m. conducted by Rev.
Mr. Husserr.
Surviving are his wife, the former,
Annie Campbell, and four daughters,
and three sons, Mrs, Vic Loughlean
1Jcan) of London; Mrs. Andrew Scott
(Velma) of Wingham; Mrs. Fred !low -
son (Mary) of Blyth; Mrs, Cameron
Missionary Rally To Be 'Remembrance Day Observed
Meld At United Church At Local Service
A Missionary Rally of wide interest
will be held in Blyth Ueited Church on
Thursday c'; ening, November 19th, at
7.30 p,nt, This event is sponsored by
Huron Presbyterial W.M.S. and mem-
bers of all Auxiliaries in Huron are in-
vited and expected to attend. The spe-
cial speaker will be Miss Frances M.
Walbridge, of Angola, Africa. Miss
Walbridge is a vivacious speaker who
has much to tell of her work as princi-
pal of the Vocational School for girls
al Camundongo, and of the vocational
short courses and camps for women
and girls conducted in the area. One
cf her special concerns is Christian
literature of all kinds and literacy
work. Windham C.G.LT, choir will
provide special music.
1 his year, church groups of all ages
are studying Africa. This Rally pro-
vides a wonderful opportunity for the
people of Huron to hear a missionary
en active service in Africa.
f J ECIAL SERVICES AT THE
CHURCH OF GOD, BLYTH NOV. 22
Missionaries, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Green, from the leper colony, Tangan-
ika, Africa. They are both talented
singers and will be taking part in the
into Mission Band on Wednesday after- of Wingham.
noon. Mrs. Harold Vincent, Mission
Band superintendent, explained the
meaning of Remembrance Day, and a
short silence was observed. Wendy
Fear, president of the Mission Band,
was in charge of the meeting. Marilyn
prayer by Airs. Vincent. Thr: girls that Mrs. William Gross had passed
from the Belgrave school contributed away suddenly at the age of 58 years
a musical number. Mrs -Robert Coul•' in Clinton hospital. She was the
tes, superintendent of the Baby Band,' daughter of the laic Charles Regele
was in charge of the graduation ser-' and Caroline Eggert, and was born in
vice when the following were grade• I McKillop township. On June 28, 1923,
ated: Sherry Stackhouse, Keith Black,' she was married by Rev. G. L. Gross
Marlette Pletch, Ernest Cook, Donna to Mr. William Gross, of Hullett town -
Walker, Karen Pengelly, Owen Fear,
Mary Grasby, Clayton Bosnian, Steph-
en Fear and Brenda Cook. Mrs. Cold-
tes led in prayer, and then told a story
of a Korean girl. Jeanette Johnston
led in prayer. Mrs. Kenneth Barbour
gave the "Mother's" prayer. Donna
Grasby and Marilyn Campbell formed
an arch , and as Mrs. Coultes called
their names and gage out the certifi-
cates, the graduates passed under the
arch and were. received into the M.
sion Band. Mrs, Ross Anderson told
things she learned about Africa while
attending a school for leaders at St.
Thomas. Gordon Campbell and Brian
Hopper took up the. offering, and
Ralph Logan collected the mite boxes.
Mrs, Walter Scott spoke brielly"to the
boys and girls, and then called Mrs,
• William Kelly and Mrs. John Ander-
son to the front, where Mrs. Anderson
presented Airs. Kelly with a gift from
the W.M.S. Marilyn Campbell and Ruth
Michie showed a story on flannelgraph
and a film, "The School Bell Rings in
Angola" was shown. A lunch was ser-
ved by the W.M.S. members.
AUBURN
Airs. William Gross
Taylor read the scripture followed by This district was shocked to learn
•
FIRESIDE FARM FORUM MEETING
On November 16, 18 adults of the
Fireside Farm Forton stet at the hone
of Mr. and Mrs, George Carter to dis-
cuss "Farm Prices."
(1) Prices are usually set by supply
and demand, although they are influ-
enced by all who handle tine product
from the producer to the buyer, each
salesman trying to get a profit. The
producer can regulate the price by
lowering tine amount produced and the
consumer can refuse to purchase or
buy very small amounts when Atte
price is too high.
(2) The majority think that most
farm prices at the present are fair,
but that the articles we must buy are
priced much beyond their value, espec-
ially machinery and lumber. Egg
prices have been [luxuating greatly
sometimes they are much below their
value, but with both eggs and pork the
large surplus is the cause of these low
prices. Our beef and pork prices are
intittenced greatly by the U.S, supply
and the amount of duty on imports and
exports between these two countries.
'Ihe following were winners in a few
games of euchre: most games, Mrs.
Oliver Anderson and Ihtgh Campbell;
loner hands, Mrs. Ilarvey Taylor and
Oliver. Anderson; consollation, Mrs.
Joe Babcock and Hugh Flynn,
Mrs. Harvey 'Taylor invited the group
for next week.
WINNERS IN INTER -COUNTY LIVE-
STOCK JUDGING COMPETITION
The Annual Aller -County Livestock
Judging Competition was held in con-
nection with the Royal Winter Fair,
Toronto, on Thursday, November 12th.
Huron County's team was made of
three Junior Farmers in the County
namely, Ronald Smith, Brussels; Bob
Broadfoot, Brucefield; Arnold Camp-
bell, Scaforth, Ronald Smith was the
individual winner in the competition
over 69 entries from across the. Pro-
vince and' as such is the winner of lite
E. A. Summers Montana! Trophy,
had a score of 933 out of a possible
1000 points,
As a team the County placed 6th oul
of the 23 teams which were competing
The winning team was from Carleton
County in Eastern Ontario, '1'Ite mem-
bers of the Huron Team are all Junior
Farmer members and have had a
great deal of es!'erience in 4-11 Cl:th
wort: in the County.
ship. Following their marriage they
took up residence on the Auburn -Blyth
road, and have lived in this community
ever since. She wet a member of
Knox United Church, the Women's As-
sociation and the Auburn Women's In-
stitute, Besides her sorrowing husband 1
she is survived by five sons, Harold
and Carmen, Auburn, and Clayton,
Ronald, Gordon, and one daughter,
Elva, all at home. Also three grand-
children. 'Three sisters, Mrs. Wesley
(Elmina) Fisher, Mitchell, Mrs. Wil-
liam (Annie) Iloegc, of Seaforth, Mrs.
Alex (Adeline) Stokoph, Mitchell; al-
so tour brothers, Clarence, George,
Ilarry and. Edward, all of McKillop.
The largely attended funeral was held
on Saturday afternoon, November 14,
at the .1. Keith Arthur funeral home,
concfuc:ed by Rev. R. M, Sweeney,
assisted by Rev. G. L, Gross, of Wing -
ham. Mrs, Betty Wilkin sang a solo
accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Wil-
liam J. Craig. Burial took place at
the Union cemetery, Blyth. The pall-
bearers were: Messrs. John Daer, Bert
Doer, Edward East, Sydney McClin-
chcy, Major Youngblut and Wilfred
Plunkett. Flowerbearers were six
nephews, Gordon M rcgge, Ralph Mul-
holland, Gerald Stoskoph, Aaron Doerr,
Lewis liocgy and Donald Muegge.
The beautiful floral tributes were a sil-
ent reminder of the high esteem in
which she was held in this district.
Mr. and Mrs. Wells and Douglas, of
Clinton, and Mr. Clarks Twitchell, of
Prescott, were guests last Tuesday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips,
Mrs. Fred Walt, of Clinton, visited
recently with Mrs. Maud Fremlin.
Mrs. Leonard Plain, of White Rock,
B.C., is visiting with her mother, Airs.
William Tabb, and her brother, Mr.
Torrance 'l.'abb.
Mr. Stewart King and Ait', Walter
Kraemer, of 'Toronto, spent last Thurs-
day with Mr, and Mrs. Russel King.
Mrs. Duncan MacKay returned from
London last Saturday where she had
been a patient in Victoria hospital for
o'rcr a month.
Mr. Albert Campbell has sold his
home in lite village to Mr. and Airs
IIcinz Rutkowski and family who have
taken possession. They had resided
in Goderich before coming here. We
welcome then( to our cemeelmity.
Little Miss Diane McDcueall has re-
turned to her home after staying with
Mr. and Airs. Keith Machan, Randy
and Trudy.
Several from this community attend-
ed the Memorial Service at Blyth on
November llth. Mr. Elliott Lapp was
guest soloist.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell,
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Daer, Mrs, Sam
Dacr attended the funeral of the lata.
Mr. John Kelly, at London last Thurs-
day.
ANNUAL CIIURCII PARADE
The annual church parade and ser-
vice of Blyth Branch Canadian Legion
No. 420, prior to November 11th, was
held at Burns United Church, IluHett,
on Sunday, November 8, with the min-
ister, Rev, 11. Funge, in charge of the
service and Coin. Ilarry Gibbons, Par-
ade Marshall, in charge of the Legion
Members and Ladies Auxiliary,
'['here war n real good turn out of Vet-
erans azul Auxiliary members,
boring the service, Comrade Kelland
McVittie tread the honour roll for 1914-
18, and Comrade Ed. Bell read the
1939.45 honour roll. Two minutes sil-
ence was observed atter the rolls had
t•cen read. The minister gave a very
insririne a•1dre, . Th: st'v'ce he'„
ecce'e•-'7.-' 1 ,-itch ".h.' Cuece, ulna
l:u Lg reelielien,
11
a.m.
WALTON
W.M.S. and W.A. of Walton
The W.M.S. of Duffs United Church
held their November meeting in the
church Sunday school rcom. The 2nd
Vice President, Mrs. Gordon AleGavin,
opened the meeting with the Call to
Worship, "He hath appointed unto you
a Kingdon(" aim the singing of hymn
280 "The King of Love." Mrs. N. Schad°
and Mrs, A Coutts read in succession
the following selections, Isaiah 61, Mark
4: 3-9, Matthew 25: 31-45. The leader
offered prayers of Thanksgiving for .the
Kingdom; Confession for our obstruc-
tion of its coming; a prayer of Deter•
cession. Hymn 516, "Gori of Our Fath•
ers, known of old" was sung. The roll
call was answered by a "Favourite
book of the Bible" and the minutes of
previous meeting' by Airs. 13. McMi-
chael. The tinanical statement was give
en by Mrs. 1f. Craig. A nominating
committee was appointed to draw up
a slate of officers consisted, Mrs, Wil-
bur Turnbull, Mrs, K. McDonald, Mrs.
E. Mitchell, Mrs. H. Craig and Mrs.
G. McGavin. A minute's silence was
observed in memory of the late Mrs,
I1. 13. Kirkby. Reports from the Sec-
tional Convention of the \V.M.S. at
Constance, October 21, was given by
Mrs. J. Clark and Airs. C. Ritchie. We
were asked to remember our Mission-
i,ry, Miss Florence Taylor, in prayer,
send her cards. A gift to be sent from
our society is to be looked alter by
Mrs. W. Turnbull and Mrs. H. Craig.
The meeting closed with the Lord's
Prayer repeated in unison.
Mrs. A. McDonald chose as her mot-
to for the W.A. "Having Done all to
stand" taken from Ephesians 6: 10-18,
Comments and prayer on the scripture
was given by the leader. The secre-
tary's report and correspondence was
read by Mrs. R. Bennett. The dishes
lett from the fowl supper should be
gotten as soon as possible. The seventh
annual W.A. Rally at Auburn was re-
ported by Mrs. N. Schad° and Mrs, D.
Watson. The meeting closed with hymn
400 i'Fight the Gelid Fight" accompan-
ied by Mrs. D. Watson at the piano
and prayer given by Mrs. A. McDon-
ald.
The Women's Institute sponsored a
Progressive Euchre and Lost Heir
party in the Community Ilall on Fri-
day evening, with the following com-
mittee in charge, Mrs. K. McDonald,
Mrs. F. Walters, Mrs. R. Williamson,
Mrs. E. Miller. Mrs. G. Watson. Eu-
chre prize winners were, high ladies,
Mrs, E. Stevens; low lady, Mrs. G.
McGavin; men's high, Janes McDon-
ald; men's low, K. McDonald. Lost
heir, ladies high, Mrs. E. McCreath;
men's high, John Williamson; men's
tow, Alexander Williamson.
Miss Jannie Van Vliet and •Miss Cor-
rie Ruiyter, of Stratford, were week-
end guests with Mr. and Mrs. Jan
Van Vliet.
Mrs. Lorne Hulley, of Seaforth,
spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Marks.
Mrs. Jack Campbell, Mr. and Mrs.
Sato Burch and son, Bill, of Carbury,
Manitoba, and Mr. and Mrs. W. C.
Bennett, of Clinton, visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Porter on Saturday.
The November meeting of the Wal-
ton Women's Institute will be held in
the Community Hall on Thursday ev-
ening November 26th, with Mrs. C.
Marlin and Mrs. D. Buchanan as co -
conveners. hostesses will be Mrs.
Ron Bennett, Mrs. Harold Bolger, Mrs,
S. Humphries, Mrs. A. Coutts, Mrs. L.
Marshall and Mrs. 3. Ryan.
POPPY COMMITTEE REPORT
The report to the public, poppy sales,
were down some to previous years.
The poppy fund, after expenses, is
used entirely for the aid of needy Vet-
erans and their families. The chair-
man, on behalf of the local Branch,
wish to thank everyone who purchased
wreaths. moles, or assisted in any
way in the salts,
1 VF,T trrr. FO1'r,,fT
Thank gnu, Chlineal, Harry Gibbons.
The Blyth Branch No. 420 of the Can-
adian Legion, accompanied by the
Ladies Auxiliary to the Branch, and
the pupils of two rooms of the Blyth
Public School attended the service in
the Memorial Hall on November 11.
The chairman of the Poppy commit-
tee, AD'. harry Gibbons, made the ar-
rangements for the parade and service,
and with the assistance of Airs. Gib-
bons, K. McVittie, T. Thompson and
W. Mason, decorated Ute hall.
Due to inclement weather conditions
the usual parade from the Legion Hall
to tete Memorial Hall had to be cancel-
led, with the Legion and Auxiliary
members, along with the school child-
ren and their teachers, Mrs. D. Howes
and Mrs. B, Hall, meeting in the base-
ment of the Memorial Hall and going
from there to the auditorium.
Rev, R. Meally, rector of the Angli-
can church, and Padre of the local
Legion Branch, arranged the service
and was assisted by Rev. E. McLagan,
minister of the local United church,
who gave the Remembrance Day ad-
dress.
The singing was led by a choir made
up of members of all the local church
choirs. The organist was 1•Iiss Marg-
aret Jackson, of Blyth United church.
Special soloist at the service was Mr.
E. Lapp, of Walkerburn.
During the service the following
wreaths were laid: Provincial, Com.
Mrs, J. Pierce; Blyth Legion, Com.
President 11. Badley; Village of Blyth,
Corn. Reeve \1'm. Moffitt; L.O.L., Mr.
Roy Noble; Ladies Auxiliary, Com. It.
Burns; Masonic Lodge, Blyth, Cotn.
Bruce Smith; Women's Institute,
Mrs. 1V, Good; Eastern Star, Cont.
Airs. Ii. Phillips; Lions Club, Mr. C.
St. Michael; Masonic Lodge, Londes-
boro, Mr. Bert Shobbrook; Blyth Pub-
lic School, Judy Tartan.
After the laying of the wreaths, the
Last Post and Reveille were sounded.
The chairman of the Poppy commit-
tee, on behalf of the Legion Branch,
wishes to thank • everyone who took
part in the service or assisted in any
way, also to those attending.
LAND ESBORO
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Youngblut, Mr,
and Mrs. John Fairservice, of Blyth,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Youngblut, of Goderich, on Sunday, al-
so attending the baptismal service of
their young grandson.
Mrs, 'rhos. Fairservice, Mrs, Albert
Shaddick, of Clinton, Mrs. Carl Ward,
of Stratford, and Mrs. Wm. Bagaent,
of Ingersoll, spent last week end in
Port IIuron,
The Orangemen's annual Turkey Ban-
quet was held last Friday evening nt
the Community Hall with a good at-
tendance in spite of the inclement
weather, A splendid supper was en-
joyed and the remainder of the even-
ing was spent playing euchre.
A visitation pertaining to the Sector
Plan. which a number of the laymen
of the church participated in last Sun-
day, met with a good reception. Many
of the laymen enjoyed the experience.
The community was saddened on
Sunday morning by the death of Mrs.
Eleanor Throop. Mrs. Throop will be
sadly missed. She was a good neigh-
bour and was of a kindly disposition,
her generosity to all charities was not-
ed. The sympathy of the entire com-
munity goes out to her immediate
family,
Mr. and Mrs, Ed. Youngblut spent
Tuesday at the Royal Winter Fair.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to Mr. Murray
lamm who celebrates his birthday on
Thursday, November 19th.
Congratulations to Mrs. Elizabeth
Quinn, of St, George, who celebrates
ter birthday Thursday, November 19.
Congratulations to Miss Lorraine
Pease, of St. George, who will cele -
irate her 9th birthday of Friday, No-
vember 20.
Congratulations to Mr, Orval Mc-
Gowan who celebrated his birthday on
Sunday, November 15111.
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen Faitz, of Hamilton, who cele-
brate their 4th wedding anniversary
on Thursday, November 19th.
Congratulations to Barbara Faitz, of
Hamilton, - who celebrates her 3rd
birthday on Thursday, November 19.
Congratulations to Linda Warwick
who will celebrate her 3rd birthday on
Thursday, November 19th.
W. M. S. Meeting ""' !
The W.M.S. of Blyth Presbyterian
Church held its regular meeting on
Thursday, November 12, at the home
of Miss A. Toll. Tire president, Mrs.
W. Good, presided and Mrs. Dalrym-
ple was at. the piano.
Mrs. Dalrymple had charge of the
Devotional period and Mrs. Hosford
reviewed the study book. Mrs, Mer-
ritt read the minutes of the last meet-
ing, and a short discussion followed
about starting a Mission Band in the
near future. A nominating committee
was appointed to bring in a slate of of-
ficers at the next meeting, which were,
Mrs. Dalrymple, Mrs. Gordon Caldwell
and Mrs. Ilosford, A thank -you note
was read from Mrs. George Caldwell.
The next meeting will be on Decem-
ber 10th, at Mrs. Merritt's, with Mrs.
D. J. Lane giving the Christmas mes-
sage.
.\ erliciotts lunch was served by
;,iiss Tell,
No Old Maids
Among The Eskimos
On his recent Arctic Circuit,
Mr. Justice Sisson ;ranted two
divorce decrees to .:anadian Es-
kimos. Thus a new step in Es-
kimo society, from the human re-
lations' standpoint, began. For
until these actions, legalized di-
vorce didn't exist among these
nomadic hunters M caribou, seal
and walrus. They had always
practised a code o! marital re•
lations strictly their own which
produced strange results.
As Mr. C, W. Rowley, adviser
to the Northern Affairs Depart-
ment, testified: "The happiest
igloo I ever lived in was occur
piel by two couples. And not un-
til I left did I learn that the
couple, were originally matchc d
the other way round."
After this, Eskimos may per-
haps copy Western civilization's
Marriage customs. So far they
have managed very well without
any ceremony at all. Youngsters
are often matched as prospec-
tive mate:, in infancy, some-
times even before birth.
The young Eskimo male takes
the girl promised to him as soon
as he can support her. But, if
they do not get on well they sep-
arate without any fuss or loss
of face. The wife, tribal custom
dictates, takes care r,, the chit-
ctren. But, once children .ire
born, such breakups are vey
rare.
Until recently, some Eskimo
hunters maintained two or three
wives. Conversely, a woman n
not criticized if she had two
husbands. All dcnended on the
availability of males and fe-
males.
What mattered was that every
adult had a mate, bachelors and
old maids being quite unknown,
And, with one or other partner
able to walk out at will, domestic
rows seldom caused trouble in
igloo life.
They Send Letters
To Juliet!
To the ancient city which was
the traditional scene of the
world's most celebrated love
affair come many letters and
notes every week addressed to a
girl who has been dead hundreds
of years,
The city is Verona and the girl
was the lovely Juliet whose woo-
ing by the passionate Romeo in-
spired one of Shakespeare's
greatest tragedies. The letters
and notes pour in from love.
lorn girls in many parts of the
world, some being simply ad-
dressed to "Juliet, Verona, Italy."
Nearly all the letters from
girls abroad ask the dead Juliet
for advice, sincerely believing
that she will help them. The
tomb of the two lovers is situ-
ated in .an old disused monastery
and is of rough stone. As the
tomb is uncovered and the lov-
ers are clearly not inside it, it
is usually explained that they
are "underneath."
Historians have cast doubt on
the Romeo and Juliet story des-
pite the fact that there is a mar-
ble plaque under the "lovers'
balcony" and other tablets in-
dicating the place where they
stayed. They say that Shakes-
peare borrowed the story from
a romance invented by an ear-
lier writer called Masuccio who
in turn had been inspired by a
story from classic Greece.
1 have heard it said that the
secret of good health is to eat
onions, but I have never been
able to understand how you can
eat onions and keep the secret.
Sir Thomas Moore, M.P.
TOP NEWS — As much "for men only" as the cigar, the fedora and the derby are lifted for
the ladies this fall. Man -type hats, like these modeled by Ruth Copeland Oft) and Inge
Gruber, are becoming women's wear, continuing a fashion trend that sa wthe ladies donning
mannish straw (rats during the summer,
Jazz Is Jumping
In Russia!
One of the most fascinating
discoveries that has been made
since the thaw in U.S.-Russian
relations is the size of the beach-
head that jazz has established
within the well -protected citadel
of Marxist culture. Taped from
Voice of America programs,
pressed on bootleg disks and
even X-ray plates, jazz' has
raised such a ferment within the
strict confines of Soviet musical
life that the Communist authori-
ties hardly know what to do
about it.
When a jazz club began to -
flourish in Leningrad recently,
however, the authorities knew
just what to do. This account
from a Leningrad jazz huff to an
American friend recently told
the story:
"The Leningrad jazz club ..
was established here in Sept.,
1958 by some of the most en-
thusiastic jazz fans. They had
wonderful ideas of studying the
history of jazz, playing real jazz
music, and 'foundsting' the Rus-
sian style of jazz according to
the Russian school of polyton-
ality, The club has some won-
derful jazz combos playing in all
styles from Dixieland to swing,
bop, progressive, etc. One of
them was an experimental quin-
tet including such instruments as
the violin and the French horn
and they sounded so nice.
"The whole world knows that
Russia is a very musical na-
tion and they have a real feel-
ing for jazz. The popularity of
jazz in Russia is tremendous and
a very good example of that is
the concerts of the jazz club
which were attended by more
than 2,500 people each day (in
Leningrad). Indeed, it was the
finest jazz club in the country.
But after existing for about eight
months it was closed by the offi-
cial authorities (end of May '59).
The causes of that were ex-
plained in this way. They said:
'Probably you do a very won-
derful and useful job, but we
leaders understand nothing
about jazz and so we cannot pro-
vide leadership And what can
a club be without Communist
leadership?"
"It sounds pretty funny," the
fiussian jazz buff wrote, "hut it
Is so."
DRIVE CAREFULLY — '1'he
life you save may be your own.
LATE MODEL — This is the latest in buggies driven by the Amish.
It has rear view mirrors, headlights, parking lights and tail-
lights A new state law will require in addition a flashing red
Tight to warn motutisis.
TABLE TMII(S
Jam Andrews.
Here are a few freezing
points, in case you haven't froz-
en baked goods lately, Fruit,
berry, mince and chiffon pies are
especially suitable for freezing,
Custard or cream -filled pies
tend to become grainy. Meringue
toughens during freezing and
should not he used.
Most pies can be frozen either
baked or unbaked. Fruit pies,
however, are best frozen un -
baked.
* * 0
Do not slit the top crusts of
unbaked pies until just before
baking. This prevents evapora-
tion of juice during freezing.
Baked pies should be cooled
thoroughly and frozen at once.
Wrap and seal with tape.
If pies are very fragile they
may be frozen before wrapping,
Pie shells, either baked or un -
baked, freeze well and should be
frozen before wrapping.
* • *
One home economist who had
experimented with the addition
of fruit to commercial mince-
meat for pies recommended the
addition of 1 chopped apple, 1
cup raisins, and 3 teaspoons but-
ter to the mincemeat for 1 large
pie. You may want to experi-
ment—you may even want to
run a taste -test among mem-
bers of your family to determine
which filling is best for your
particular pie.
For your 2 -crust mince pie,
put pie in a 450° F. oven until
edges are brown, then turn to
350' F. until pastry is evenly
browned.
*. * .
The ever - popular apple pie
may be made more festive for
holiday serving if you combine
the usual fruit with bright red
cranberries. Here is the way to
make one.
CRANBERRY -APPLE PIE
4 tart apples
114 cups cranberries
:M cup sugar
!i teaspoon cinnamon
14 teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons butter
Pastry for 2.crust pie
Pare, core and thinly slice the
apples. Wash and cut cranber-
ries in half. Line a 9 -inch pie
plate with pastry, Place a layer
of apples in bottom of pie plate;
add cranberries; add remaining
apples. Sprinkle with the sugar,
cinnamon and salt which you
have nixed together. Dot with
butter. Cover with pastry that
has an opening cut in center for
steam to escape (if you do not
intend to freeze the pie). Seal
edges. Bake in 400` F. to 425°
F. oven about 45 minutes or un-
til apples are tender and crust
is golden brown.
*
Another fruit
which you may want to try is
rhubarb and raisin. Use rich,
dark raisins and you'll find it is
a perfect foil for the bright
piquancy of rhubarb. Brown
sugar blends these two flavors
together in a way you'll like.
RIIUBARIi-RAISIN I'IE -
1 cups sugar
cup brown sugar
cup flour
'i teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon grated lemon
rind
cup water
1 cups sliced rhubarb (canned
or frozen may be used)
1 cup dark, seedless raisins
Pastry for 2 -crust 9 -inch pie
Combine sugars, flour, salt,
lemon rind, and water in a
saucepan. Cook until mixture
thickens slightly, stirring con.
etantly. Pour sauce over fruits
and mix well. Divide dough in
half. Roll one-half of circle
about 1/e -inch thick and fit into
9 -inch pan. Roll remaining dough
for top crust. Pour filling in pan
and top with other dough. Flute
combination
edges. Bake at 425° F. about 35
minutes. .
* * •
APRICOT PIE
1 (12.ounce package dried
apricots
2 cups water
2/3 cup sugar
4; teaspoon salt
1,14 teaspoon nutmeg
11/2 tablespoons cornstarch
2 tablespoons cold water
Pastry for 2 -crust 9 -inch ple
Simmer apricots in the water
about 15 minutes. Add sugar,
salt, and nutmeg. Simmer 5 min-
utes more. Combine cornstarch
with the 2 tablespoons cold
water; add to apricot mixture
and bring to boil, stirring con-
stantly. Cook 2 minutes. Line a
9 -inch pan with dough and fill
with apricot mixture. Top with
remaining crust (cut steam slits
if you are not going to freeze
pie). Flute or press with fork to
seal in juices. Bake at 425° F.
about 20 minutes, then reduce to
350° F. and bake 15 minutes
longer.
* * *
Flavor in Pastry: For special
zip in your apple pies, roll
grated cheese into dough. For
spiced pastry, mix cinnamon and
ginger into crust. For mince pies
or create pies, use orange juice
instead of water when mixing,
and add about 1 tablespoon
grated orange rind for each pie.
These Folks Don't
Like Confetti!
Young lovers have been warn-
ed that their wedding at a vil-
lage church in the British Mid-
lands may cost thein £3 extra
from now on — unless they can
persuade their exuberant and
sentimental friends not to pelt
them with confetti afterwards,
To combat what they call the
"confetti menace," the parochial
council are imposing a "we
don't want litter in our church-
yard" ban. They demand that
before the service the bride-
groom shall pay a £3 "good be-
havior" 'fee. This is only return.
cd to hint if no confetti is
thrown.
'If there is confetti, the money
goes towards the church funds.
Couples who get the idea that
confetti throwing can start out-
side the church may have an•
other shock, for the police can
class them as "litterbugs" and
tine them.
One opponent of confetti a'.
weddings some years ago called
it "a relic of barbarism and a
survival from the days when the
bridegroom captured the bride
by force."
Hundreds of tons of confetti
worth many thousands of pounds
were not only made, sold and
distributed in Britain, but were
exported annually in pre-war
gays. Confetti is still in consid•
erable demand despite - com-
plaints from vergers that the
custom of throwing it at newly-
weds gives then a great deal of
extra work.
Rice is rarely thrown at wed-
dings to -day, but the custom was
widespread in Victorian tines.
The Chinese threw rice at newly-
weds believing that it induced
fertility. The Romans threw
grain for the same reason. In
Saxon times couples were show-
ered with red and white rose
petals as they left church.
"Let's revive this petdl cus-
tom," urged a minister not long
ago. "It was picturesque, harm-
less and much more natural than
the use of coloured confetti made
of paper."
ISSUE 47 — 1959
Charlie Chaplin
As He Is Now
The world's most famous and
most controversial—morally and
politically— comedian was isol-
ated from the world behind what
he calls his "wall of silence."
Charlie Chaplin seldom strayed
far from the book -filled study of
his $420,000, 15 -room chateau in
Vevey, Switzerland. Chaplin was
not, however, merely taking it
easy. Forty-five years after mak-
ing his first movie ("Making a
Living"), he was up to his acro-
batic eyebrows in a project he
thinks will prove to be his ma-
jor accomplishment: His auto-
biography, spanning 60 years of
show business. He is in the final
stages, and until the book is
finished Chaplin will stay at it,
pacing up and down, dictating in
a high-pitched voice, correcting
himself with great frequency.
In his wood -paneled library
recently the 70 -year-old come-
dian took a rare time out from
his writing to expound to News -
week's Lionel Durand on a num-
ber of subjects, including: His
coming seventh child, which his
fourth wife Oona, 34 -year-old
daughter of the late Eugene
O'Neill, will present him with
around Christmas (People ask
nie if I am pleased, Of course I
am. But they should ask their
question in ten years — then it
will be interesting!"); his future
plans ("I want to do a nice big
comedy with color, wide screen,
stereophonic sound, and all the
trimmings, I want to try it once,
anyway, It should be great fun
to play with all these new tech-
niques"), and his favorite movies
("I think I liked 'City Lights,'
'Limelight,' 'Monsieur Verdoux,
and 'A King in New York' best").
"I picked the three films for
the 'Charlie Chaplin Revue' be-
cause they're full of fun and in-
vention," he went on. "Besides,
composing two hours of music
for them was an interesting chal-
lenge. I may bring out some
more, depending on the recep-
tion Charlie gets around the
world, but I feel I no longer have
any association with the little
man with the black mustache.
I keep a number of half -written
scripts in the freezer, mostly
comedies, and I'm interested in
new projects,
"Comedy, or at least humor, is
around us all the time, Once a
comedy director asked me; 'What
are you making?' I said this: 'Oh,
the same old thing — getting
people in and out of trouble'."
For Chaplin, the business of
getting in and out of trouble has
often carried over from films into
real life. And his real-life diffi-
culties have been by far the less
savory of the two. He lost a much -
publicized paternity suit in 1945.
In 1952, having become a multi-
millionaire but not a citizen after
42 years' residence, Chaplin left
-
.r
the U.S. in the midst i,1 touch
bad feeling over his cutstioen
left-wing sympathies. In 19511 he
got into difficulties ovei his Fed-
eral taxes, which he settled last
year for $425,000.. -_
The last new Chaplin film, "A
King in New York," was widely
criticized as a heavy-handed as-
sault on the United States. This
picture (still to be shown in
America) of a deposed monarch
seeking freedom but finding "hy-
steria," suggested this question;
Did he ever get homesick for
the U.S.?
"No, I really don't," said Brit-
ish subject Chaplin, bristling.
"In fact, I'm happy not to be in
the United States, I'm much
freer here." He added:, "I am
essentirilly a shcwman and I like
to amuse people — I have no
messages to pas,5 around. An art-
ist, or a comedian, or a clown,
must comment on whatever sur-
rounds Min, But 1 don't shoot at
targets. • '
"I keep fit by walking, play-
ing tennis, and raising tulips in
my garden," Chaplin concluded
somewhat abruptly. "I can abide
anywhere, in almost any coun-
try, I appreciate the basic things
of life, a good glass of wine, a
good meal, love" — and he add-
ed: "And having furl! I think
that's very important. I don't
know of anything else more im-
portant!" —From NEWSWEEK.
AGE OF REASON
Summoned by the police to
attend court, to answer a charge •'
of driving a motor scooter with-
out a driving licence, William
Bryant, aged 88, explained to
an Oklahoma court that the rea-
son he had not applied for a
licence was because he thought
he had to be accompanied by his
parents.
GET THE POINT — From her
toes to her hairdo, this Pari.
model is in style. She sports e
"cosmic" coiffure while display-
ing a pair of "missile -styled"
shoes.
Up-to-date Fashion
FIVE -DAY -A -WEEK FAVORITE — the shirtdress with step-in
buttoning and smooth lines. Always ready to go, it's made of
crisp "Orlon" acrylic fiber and rayon checks that drip dry and
let you decide the ironing question. Printed .Pattern 4640 in Hall
Sizes 141/2 to 241/2. Send Forty Cents for each pattern (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety). Please prial
plainly SIZE, STYLE NUMBER, NAME, ADDRESS. Send your
order to Anne Adams, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto,
Ontario.
Autumn Splendor
Created For Man
If'n 1 were a brainy State De•
partment official, geared to the
perplexing semantics of human
affairs, I would hold my summit
conference on Porcupine Hill -
or some similar `sun - drenched
October vantage Point where the
delegates could look oft; It .Is
impossible to survey the New
England autumn in its rampages
of colour and be mad at any.
body.
There is more than the foli-
age, if you need more. The sea-
son is frantic with the activity
of the Inhabitants as they hui ry
to get the crops under cover,
and this is stimulating It is al-
ways good to see people work-
ing. From the practical side,
there is no time to look off;
you've got your hands full any-
way. But you do look off; every-
body does,
Nothing is so pressing and de•
mending that you can't take
time for the maple red, beech
bronze, birch yellow, and deep
russet of the oaks. Trucks lum-
ber binwards with the potatoes,
apples disappear into the sheds,
squashes are piled in yellow
mountains by the canning shops.
Everything is geared to pros-
perity; but just when nobody
has `any time for it, you have
to stop. and look at the foliage.
Somebody tried to explain to
me once how it happens a true
sets up this wild cacophony of
brilliance, but it was no use.
Something about sugar in the
roots and the chlorophyll reac-
tors among the isotopes. A won.
derful thing.
Well, there may be those in
this world who want to reduce
the fires of autumn to an equa-
tion. I refuse to be impressed.
The thing is much simpler than
that. I think the leaves turn
• pretty so I can look at them and
:fedi good about everything. I
don't think the sugar content of
the sidehill has one thing to clo
• with it. Why would all this take
place, like running • a railway
system, if it was just to satisfy
tome complicated engineering
PILLAR OF CHARITY - On dis-
play at Gorleston -on -the -Sea,
England, is this towering col-
umn of coins, mostly penny and
threepenny pieces. The pillar
contains about $400 in coins
donated by vacationers to pro-
vide holidays tor the physical-
ly handicapped,
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Stonocutter
6. Young
noelalite
(ab,)
9. Outcome
12. Siouan
Indian
113. Mrs:
1 Roosevelt
16. Strength of
1 a solation
.16. Luggage
17. No (Scot.)
118. An engraving
pinto
19. ;lap. outcasts
20. Trane -
gression
61 Carved
'Indian pole
19. 14ngllsh
letters
24. A grudge
26. Stent
28. Nut
29. Sneelfir
preference
83. Snot on a
pinving enrd
86. Acrid
86. Qunrlrnped'e
mother
89. Mohammedan
potentate
11. Snenserinn
4,nrncter
41, Shield
'14. ignited
'45. Tntal
46. Pine to
"The Tempest"
'16, Watehful
110. (treed for
riches
*1. Rifle hall
62. Monetary
• unit of Japan
63. Mountain
(Scot.)
64. Name
DOWN
1. Witticism
2, Silly
8. Diabolical
4. S•shaperi
molding
formula deep in the pores of
the wood? It doesn't make sense.
If 1 wasn't here to look at it,
what's the point in doing it?
They could, change the seasons
here ju"st as well, the way they
do in other parts of the world,
without the fanfare and hooraw.
The maple, except for me, could
just as well act like a rubber
plant - which has the same In-
ternal yearnings but never turns
colour. The only possible answer
is - it's for me. So I enjoy it.
What we do here, and we're
not the only ones, is make a
little trip. Some folks go over
the mountains, but we've found
one place is as good as another,
I've seen the Intervales, and
I've also seen one flaming maple
against the spruce of a back
pasture. One leaf is like the
mountainside, So without any
place in mind, 'we just go until
we find the spot that pleases us,
and we stop there.
Then we dismount, spread the
camping -out stuff from the back
of the truck, and stay there until
the daylight fades and the last
trace of blue velvet has been
squeezed from the sky and night
is arrived. The fall air is clearer
than the fuzzed -up kind in sum-
mer. The sun is warm, without
being a burden. Very fine, all
around.
In the fall the woods get a
little livelier, 'The animals are
on the move, enjoying the scen-
ery and getting ready for win-
ter. A deer sometimes wanders
out patty -foot to look us over.
The squirrels come head -first
down a tree and chatter, We
even had a skunk once. Skunks
are friendly, really, and don't
mind company. And you almost
have to fight off the Canada
Jays. They are thieves, and care
not for anything, and will fly
in for miles at the sound of a
bread crumb dropping,
After a bit, what I do is throw
some odd rocks together for a
fireplace, and get a bed of coals.
Afterward, I start the potatoes.
6 have no idea what these pota-
toes taste like at home, for I've
never had any at home, I get
a pan hot, and then throw in
a jorum of chopped -up bacon.
When It has dried out some,
but hasn't begun to crisp yet, I
put in some onions,
I don't know if you have ever
heard a pan of onions cry out
on the fall air the way these
do. It is as good as a fire siren,
and will echo off distant crags.
There may be braver noises
than a pan of onions in foliage
time, but they're hard to beat.
After the onions have worked
a little, I fill the pan with diced
potatoes, and slip on a cover.
The cover tends to quiet the
Inions a bit, but it also starts
a kind of steaming process
which I like. I don't urge the
potatoes on too much, let them
osmosify slowly. They'll take it.
Next I sort of rub down the
steaks, and open a package of
peas, and start the cornbread
and gingerbread. Then I . .
But there, I shall spare the
intimate details, or too many
will envy me. I don't mean it
that way. We spend some time
assessing the woodsmoke and
the onions, letting the olfactory
sense confuse itself with the
visual properties of the peri-
phery. In short, we just loll back
and let autumn entertain us. It
causes a day of days. There may
be dark and care, but not here.
And I always, some time dur-
ing the day, reflect on what a
waste this would all be If I
weren't on hand to enjoy it. I
lie back and never once reflect
on the Isotopes in the cambium.
That's absurd. The whole thing
is spread out there just for us,
and we're glad. - By John
Gould in The Christian Science
Monitor.
The main
your old age
6. grandfather
of Saul
6. First
appearance
7. Snapping
beetle •
8. Solicit
9. Crowing out
10, Pecan
11.Trim
14. A lifetime
18. Lettuce
20, Trench
21. Overdress
22, Main theme
25 (Irani'
27. Flying
, mammal
thing to save for
is yourself.
30. Pupil
31. Plant's
climbing
device
32. Period
31, King's
residence
35. Part of a
bridle
30. Disintegrate..
37. Century plant
3R. Italian city,_
40. Sun flax
43. Title
45. !loyal person
(Iiaw•nuan )
47. Churl's
napkin
46. Nnrsn rnnnty
t^ golf rnrlart
1 I 3
12
4
5 'fti.0 1
i :13
8
9
14
10
11
15
16
s 11
44:44.`,18
ems}
--------421:2147:23
19
20
:i::21
-
24
25
,26
x
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`' �:
28s
,ti,\ 29
'30
31
12 ,
,,
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,
, 3
36 31 31' .
39
40
`ti 41
42
43
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45
`titi
titin:
4-1.---r"--
41
: 48
49
50
' 51
52
53
54
1041
Answer elsewhere on .LI is page
STRAIGHT AND NARROW - Francoise Groulx keeps everything
lined up as she plows a furrow at Dundas, Ont. At 14, Fran-
coise was the youngest contestant in the International Plowing
Match.
TIIEFARM FRONT
The following- article by the
Farm Editor of the Christian
Science Monitor is of, • especial
interest to Canadian farmers,
and so I pass it along to you.
$ 1 *
Being a good neighbor is not
always easy - especially when
the man next door does some-
thing himself very much like
what he objected to your doing
earlier,' Something like that has
been happening. lately between
the United States and Canada,
Being friends from way back,
these two good neighbors will
doubtless find amicable ways of
solving their individual prob-
lems in ways to avoid stepping
on each other's toes. The ques-
tion is: How?
Two important commodities
are involved: wheat and pork,
Canada, like other wheat pro-
ducing nations burdened with
surpluses of their own, has not
been happy about some of the
efforts to dispose of American
wheat abroad, feeling that this
disposal has cut into Canadian
markets.
Now the United States is con-
cerned about a Canadian govern-
mental program on pork which
threatens to flood the United
States with pork at a time when
American farmers have depres-
sed hteir own prices by produc-
ing too many hogs.
• • •
The situations in wheat and
pork are not exactly parallel,
but they are similar enough that
Americans now face a little taste
of what it's like to have another
nation handling its agricultural
surplus in a way that threatens
to upset American markets,
Canada built up its pork sur-
plus in approximately the same
way the United States acquired
its tremendous stockpile of
wheat: through government price
supports which stimulated over-
production b y guaranteeing
farmers a profit.
When the Canadian stockpile
of pork reached a reported 120,-
000,000 pounds, the government
felt forced to change its pro-
gram, Pork, - as a perishable
product, cannot be stored for
years as wheat can.
The new Canadian program
for pork calls for "deficiency
payments" similar to those pro-
posed some years ago for Amer-
ican farmers in the still con-
troversial land far from defunct)
Brannan Plan.
n - -
Under the new system, Cana-
dian pork producers will s311
their hogs on the open ntarkcct
for whatever price they can get.
At tine end of the year, Canada
will pay to farmers the differ-
ence between the average mar-
ket price and the support rate,
which is figured on the bask of
80 per cent of the average mar-
ket price for the preceding 10
years.
This subsidy will be paid to,
each farmer at year's end oni
only a limited number of hogs.
Current guesses as to the nuns.
ber were recently reported by
the Wall Street Journal as rang-
ing from t10 to 200. Canadians
are hoping 11:e new program will
Piet the sn1a'I f stoke and hold
r t!cH, n d..tcr. L't t some be -
Have that even this •plan. may
encourage overproduction. Why
shouldn't a small farmer ' who
usually raises only a few hogs
step up his production to the
limit to get as much from . the
government as he can?
• • •
Both Canadian and American
farmers are concerned about
what will now happen to the
American market for Canadian
pork, Canada doesn't want to
lose, its American market
which has been taking 'an esti-
mated 7 per cent of Canadian
pork. But American farmers
don't want their prices forced
lower still by an influx of cheap
pork from Canada.
Among the organizations de.
manding action to protect Amer-
ican farmers now is the Ameri-
can Farm Bureau Federation,
which in mid-October sent iden-
tical telegrams to Secretary of
State Christian A. Herter and
Secretary of Agriculture Ezra
Taft Benson following up mes-
sages sent in June and asking
"that the United States take ef-
fective action' to prevent dump.
ing of Canadian pork onto the
United States market," by impos-
ing duties.
• • -
"United States producers can
compete on straight economic
basis with anyone, but we can-
not allow our livestock prices to
be wrecked by subsidized com-
petition arising out of deficiency
payment schemes instituted by
another government," said the
telegram.
While the pork problem is
thus threatening an internation.
al crisis of a sort, it is not so far
Upsidedown to Prevat,t reeking
reaching nor is it likely to be as
long lasting as the wheat prob.
tem. But it may demand inter-
national cooperation of the kind
now developing between two
good neighbors •in ••regard to
wheat. •
r • -
Within the last two weeks, the
Canadian -American Committee,
sponsored by the (American)
National Planning . Association,
and the Private Planning Asso.
elation of Canada, consisting - of
about GO representatives of bus-
iness, labor, agricultural, and
professional interests in both
countries, issued a statement
"Towards a Solution of Our
Wheat Surplus Problems,"
The general aim, concluded
the committee, "should be to re.
store the balance between sup-
ply and effective commercial de-
mand as quickly as possible... .
Such a solution requires as an
ultimate objective the elimina.
tion of government pricing polic-
ies that require export subsidize.
tion, various forms of protections
against imports, and other de-
vices which effectively under-
mine the operation of market
forces."
Cooperatide ' ' action between
Canada and the United .States
should be considered, reports the
committee, at least in the form
of a joint program for using
wheat surpluses in the two coun-
ttites for famine relief and spe•,
cial emergency purposes, and
possibly in a broader program
"which might envisage the es-
tablishment of national reserve
stocks of wheat in underdevelop-
ed countries,"
It would hope to draw other
wheat -exporting countries into
the program. This, of course,
comes close to the "food for
peace" plan now being explored
by five nations at the gov^rn-
mental level.
These are economic objectives,
which seldom have easy sailing
when launched, as they must be,
on the heaving waters of na.
tional and international politics.
And so, even when neighbors
agree -informally or officially -
on desirable objectives, the ques-
tion still remains: How' can these
objectives be attained for the
good of all, and to harm none?
DANGER SIGNAL
The tail of the white-tailed
deer is feathery a n d snow-
white. When the deer is startled
and begins to run, its tail stands
straight up. In midsummer, the
white-tailed deer has a red coat.
When winter approaches, the
coat turns to a light bluish gray.
Males along the Canadian bor-
der sometimes weigh more than
275 pounds,
A Torontonian recently saw
his wife off safely in a plane at
Melton Airport on a trip to New
York.
When he had at last fought his
way back home through the
traffic, he found a wire reading:
'Arrived safely, Love, Mary'.
UOAY StilOOl
_LESSON
Ry Rev It. 11 14arren Ii,A,. 11.0.
Saul Confr,lnted by' Christ
Acts 9:1-9
Memory Selection: Neither is
there salvation In any other: for
there is none • other name given
among men, whereby we must
he saved, Acts 4: 12.
•
The conversion of Saul of Tar-
sus was one of the greatest
events in the early church. This
man had stood by the clothes of
those who stoned Stephen to
death. He was a leader in the
fierce persecution that followed.
As he went to Damascus in this
diabolical work he was confront-
ed by Christ. In addition to the
account of this experience given
in our lesson by Luke, we have
the record of Paul's own testi-
mony to it before a mob in Jeru-
salem (Acts 23) and again be-
fore King Agrippa (Acts 28)
• Saul, later known as Paul, be-
came the chief apostle. In fact,
most of the remainder of the
Book of Acts is •an account of
his 'ministry' to Jews and Gen-
tiles in Asia, Macedonia, Greece
and Italy, He steadied the
church when it threatened to
split into Jewish and Gentile
groups. Peter precipitated this,
emergency at Antioch. Paul,
whose understanding of the
church as the body of Christ was
clearer, rebuked Peter and saved
the day. Paul, twa3 a learned
man, having been taught by Ga -
mallet, one of the most noted
teachers of that day Paul was
the chief theologian of the early
church as a reading of his 13
or 14 letters shows clearly. His-
tory states that he died as a
martyr
How was Saul converted?
First, he was convicted for his
sin. When he heard the words,
"Saul, Saul, why persecutest
thou me?" he asked, "Who art
thou, Lord?" The answer came,
"I am Jesus whom thou perse-
cutest," Saul trembled and was
astonished. He surrendered to
the One whom he had been per-
secuting, saying, "L o r d, what
wilt thou have me to do?" He
yielded his will completely and
trusted in Jesus Christ. From
,this faith he never parted. A
miracle had happened. The per-
secutor became a humble and
obedient disciple of the One
whom he had persecuted. He
himself suffered much for his
witness for Jesus Christ.
Lord Lyttleton, an a v o w e d
atheist, studied the life of Paul
to prove that his alleged conver-
sion was a myth. As a result he
became troubled about his own
sandy position and was eventu-
ally transformed into a devout
believer.
ISSUE 47 - 1959
GUARDING THE GUARDS - Steel barriers protect a Buckingham
Palace guard in London, England. Harassment by spectators
of guards standing outside the palace grounds was cause for
retreat. Henceforth the fence will separate them,
d4u`:i
CLIFF DWELLERS - Residents of five San Francisco, Calif., apartment houses were P
after a landslide into the site of a 16 -story building.
A
i
PAGE 4
Wingham Memorial Shop
Yur Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY. LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'L'TON.
WIINM�NWr�+H'�'� MI,NNNJ�N.I
Bulkie Sweaters, sizes 4 to 12 years 5.95 up
Ladies Bulkies, orlon and ban-lon. 8.95 up
Reversible Skirts, 4 to 14 years 3.98 up
Preteen Reversible Skirts, 10 to 14X 7.95 up
Boy's Suits ,sizes 1 to 3X, carduroy or flannel
2.98 up
4
Also a complete line of blouses, slim jims, jeans and
skirts.
rafk Shoppe
ppe
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
BLYTH, ONTARIO.
"The Shop for Tots and Teens"
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
FOR YOUR FALL SEWING NEEDS,
Zippers, Etc., Drip Dry Broadcloth, Prints
JEANS and OVERALLS For Boys And Men
By Haughs and "Big B"
Dry Cleaning Pick -Up Before 8.45 a.m.
Tuesdays and Fridays.
Phone 73
1
1
44+++9- ++H+.+
PREPARE'
FOR WINTER
With the cold winter months fast approaching
Now Is The Time To Prepare Your House For The .
Long Cold Nights Ahead.
It is a proven fact that Insulation can turn a cold
house into a warm home. You can also expect
Great Savings On Your Winter Fuel Bill.
We Carry LUMA FOIL, FIBRE GLASS AND
ROCK WOOL, in 2 and 3" bats, LOOSE WOOL and
Zona Lite — All Reasonably Priced.
Also in stock is INSULLATED SIDINGS
In Scores of Colors and Patterns.
Contact Us Now To Insure Quick Delivery.
A. Manning & Sons
Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario
COLD WEATHER WEARING APPAREL
Ladies Winter Coats, Half Chamoise Lined, Good
Assortment of Styles ' and Shades to choose from
Large Assortment of Winter Caps, for Men & Boys
Mens and Boys Leather Gloves and Mitts
Mens Green Whipcord Pants, all sizes
Mens Heavy Mackinaw Pants
Boys Heavy Corduroy Pants, size 8 to 12, Spec. 4.95
Womens Black Overshoes, Mouton Trim, sizes 3
to 9 with Zipper Spec. 3.95
Mens Brown Overshoes with Strap, sizes 6
to 12 Spec. 4.95
Large Assortment of Rubber Footwear for all
the Family
Lay Away Plans For Christmas
A small deposit holds your Gift Items till Xmas.
Or you can pay it out.
You may have your choice of Black Diamond
Stamps, or 5 Percent Sale Slips.
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT.
iwrn a ion caul 1..4111, 60111111015PORI
1411E IILYTI# STANDARD
ir.w�r..v rr.o�� arm+
AGRICULTURAL DANCE
In BLYTH MEMOIIIAL HALL, on
FRIDAY, NOV, 20th, sponsored by
Blyth Agricultural Society, Music by
Mel Fleet's Orchestra, Dancing from
10 to 1, Admission at Popular r'r ices.
AUBURN
St. Mark's Anglican Guild
The Anglican Guild of St, Mark's
Anglican Church met for it's No 'rm-
ber meeting at the home of Mrs, Sty: -
ley Polish with a large attendance, 'the
president, Mrs, Thomas Haggitt, took
charge of the meeting which opened
by sine ing the hymn "Faith of out
Fathers." The scripture 1:sson was
read from the Gnsnel of John, 5.;1
chapter by Mrs. Polish. Prayer was
given by Rev, Robert Meally. The re•
membrance subject was gi'en by Mrs.
Polish "The Greatest Love." The hymn
"The Church in the Wi'dwood" was
sung, followed by a reading; "From
the Roadside Window" by M s. Join
McNichol. The minutes of the previous
meeting were read by the se:retarv,
Airs, Ed. Davie;, and approved. The
financial statement was given by Mrs
Gordon R. Taylor. The roll call was
answered, by naming a flower i,r the
Bible. 1t was decided to send a brie
for refugee relief in the near future.
The ladies decided not to have a con-
gregational supper this year. The hyir n
"0 God our help in ages rast" was
sung followed by the benediction by
Rev. Meally, An auction was held
with Mrs. Davies and Rev. Meally in
charge. A delicious lunch was ser .ed
- by the hostess assisted by Mrs. Frank
Raithby,
Knox Young People Meet •
The Young People's Scciely of Knox
Presbyterian Church met in the Sal).
bath School room of the Church with
a good attendance for their meeting
which took the form of a remembrance
service. The president, Edgar Leath-
erland, was in charge and tire meet'ng
was opened by singing the hymn "I
need Thee every hour" was sung fol-
lowed by all repeating the Lord's
prayer. Psalm 103 was read respon-
sively and the roll call was answered
by naming a great man in the Old
Testament. The minutes were read
by the secretary, Helen Youngblut.
The offering was received by Stewart
Youngblut. A business period follow-
ed and Rev. D. J. Lane gave `ti detail-
ed account on Sir Winston Churchill
and pictures of his life and what he
has done for the British Empire dur-
ing the wars and his political life in
England. His visits to the armed fore•
es while in battle helped him under-
stand the problems of our time, Rev.
Lane closed the meeting with prayer.
A large attendance was present last
Sunday evening in the Auburn Baptist
Church when Mr. John Agulian show-
ed picture of his trip this summer to
his' home. land in Lebannon. The pro-
gram began with a sing -song with Mrs.
Robert J. Phillips presiding at th'a
Wednesday, Nov, 18, 1959
CHRISTMAS SHOP EARLY
.. 4
1301 NOW55 M.P.43
'T •� �. .•....-• �•1
'******** , 4. ¥4 ******4-4t**',
MADILL'S
piano, followed by prayer by Mr. Frank ( of the Holy Land and his complete! Raithby thanked Mr. Agulian and
Raithby, The pictures showed views I trip, also some home pictures. Mr.1 clbsed the evening with prayer.
CHRISTMAS TOYS --
--CHRISTMAS RECORDS --
--SEA BREEZE PLAYERS 34.95 up
We now have MORFLECK. SPRAY PAINTS in
bombs, sprayer required) at $1.79 each
in 14 Colour Assortments.
HOOVER CLEANERS and FLOOR POLISHERS
HOOVER STEAM IRONS, Uses Ordinary
Tap Water
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
U ELECTRIC.
PHONE 71R2 - BLYTH, ONT.
1
-WM4MISII'•I N'N4r
STOP (3 SHOP
Monarch Cake or Pastry Flour 25 lbs. $1.80
Salada Foil Pack Tea Bags, 90's per pk. 73c
Honey Pod Peas, 15 oz. Tins 2 for 29c
Carnation Milk, 16 oz. per Tin 15c
Grapefruit 5 for 25c
Silverbrite Salmon, whole or half fish, per lb. 51c
Top's Dog Food, 15 oz. Tins 10 for $1.00
Royal Purple Calf Meal 25 lbs. $1.75
Snell's Food Market.
.AND LOCKER SERVICE. 1
WATT FEEDS
Telephone 39 — WE DELIVER
."14W NNNNN�MI
YOU CAN'T BEAT THE VALUE OF
HOMELITE
CHAIN SAWS!
Whether you want a chain saw for
occasional wood cutting chores or
every use, Homelite has a model just
right for the purpose. Lightweight,
rugged and dependable, Homelite
chain saws consistently deliver quality
performance at low cost. With full
power in any cutting position, easy
starts in any type of weather and
the flush -cut handle for ground -level
cutting, you can't beat the value of a
Homelite Chain Saw. Try one ...test
cne today!
Manufactured in Canada by •
MACHINERY
/0".
COMPANY (ONT.) LTD;
37 Densley Ave., Toronto, Ont.
SUPER ZIP
Extra power for the toughest culling
lob ...Weighs only 18 lbs....
fells trees up to 4 It. In diameter..
Harvest
woodlots for
extra money...
, trim and prune
trees ...clear land,
Cut firewood,
fence posts,
building lumber
faster, easier
and cheaper.
1
56.
F.O.B.
FACTORY
GET A FREE DEMONSTRATION FROM
LLOYD WALDEN Blyth, Ontario
Wednesday, Nov, 18, 1959 THE BLYTH STANDAIt
. I 1 1 •.
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
FOR SALE
Feed turnips, near the road, Arply
Bill George, R.R. 1, Blyth, phone 40119
42 2,
11
FOR SALT:
4 holstein heifers, in calf, artificially
. bred, Apply Elie Bury, phone 401112,
;3 Blyth, _ - 43.1p,
FOR SALE
Red Rock chickens, 51 months
starting to lay., Apply Mike Bochum
phone 451116, Blyth. 42-21
FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to All Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensel! 696112, 40.10p,t
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAI.
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumper+
end cleaned. Free estimates, Louu
•rNNV • 1•••Ni+II•N N N N •W NNNH
,1 Clinton Community
'I • FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT
WANTON SALE IIARN
f I at 1.30 p.m,
IN BLYTII, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Blake, phone 42Re, Brussels, R.R. 2.
WANTED
Old horses, 31/2c per pound. Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL.
13F41T BROS. MINK RANCH, Goderich
PICA collect 1483,11, or 1483J4.
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
1BARRIS'rERs & SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetheringtoc
Q.C. Q.C.
Wingham and Myth.
iN 'MYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agenoy
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4,
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
- - GODER1C11 WS)
J,,E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seatoit?i Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5;30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 .a.m. to 12:30 p:m,
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST. - WiNGHAM, ON7
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
(For ApoIntment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
• Optical Services.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Publlo Accountant
' GODERICII, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M,
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
rUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"Where Better Bulls Are Used"
Artificial Insemination Service for all
Breeds of Cattle. Farmer owned and
controlled. Call us between 7:30 and
10:00 a.m. week days and 6:00 and
8:00 p.m. Saturday evenings, at Clinton
Hu 2-3441 or for long distance Clinton,
Zenith 9.5650.
- BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
McKILLOP MUTTiAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTH, ON1
OFFICERS:
President - Robert Archibald, Sea -
forth; Vice -President, Alistair Broad -
foot), Seaforth; Secretary -Treasurer,
W, E. Southgate, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. II. McEw-
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton,
E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J, E. Pep-
per, Brucefield; C. W. Lconhardt,
Bornholm; 1f. Fuller, Goderlch; R,
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Lelper, Jr., Londesboro; J.
F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker,
Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth;
Harold Squires, Clinton.
K. W. COLQU NOUN
INSURANCE AND ILEAL ESTATE
REPRESENTATIVE
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada
CLINTON
PHONES
!)!lice, HU 2-9747; Res. HU 2.7551
Phone Blyth 78
SALESMAN
Vie Sennedy
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager, Auctioneer.
05-tf.
40.0141~.#4‘PP#rM•Y N.•M 444..PO ,4,..
r'.�• ,111%MrN.NNJNMYJIMP411.411M0,r
Massey Ferguson
Fully Reconditioned 44 M -II Tractor.
No. 20 Good Used Tractor,
Allis Chalmers Tractor.
Formal! C Tractor and Loader, with
Cultivator and Bean Puller.
1953 Ford Station \Vagal.
1954 Plymouth Sedan,
Ilomelight Chain Saws,
Lloyd Walden, Proprietor
Queen St., Blyth — Phone 184
1
4 ####4'r.•..4. P.41.1.11441/1
DEAD STOCK
WANTED
IIIGIHEST CASH PRICES paid in
surounding districts for dead, old, sick
or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor-
ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For
prompt, sanitary disposal day or night,
phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth,
211112, if busy phone Leroy Acheson,
Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels,
15J6. Trucks available at all times.
34. 1, Mar.
DEAD STOCK SERVICES
Highest Cash Prices
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DIS-
ABLED COWS and IIORSES.
Also
Dead Cows and Horses
At Cash Value
Old Horses — 5e Per Pound
PIIONE COLLECT
133 — BRUSSELS
BRUCE MARLATT
011
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119 BLYTH
24 IIOUR SERVICE
13t1.
Hundred*
of happy
users will
tell you...:
YOU
CAN'T
'TOP
co-oP
ANTI-
FREEZE
- • Won't evaporate
• Non -foaming,
• Non -corrosive
Containsrust-inhibitors
BELGRAVE CO.OP
BELGRAVE, ONTARIO
Phones:
Wingham 1091 -• Brussels 388W10
•
`VI:STFIELD 4444444EUM THEATRE+•-•
Mrs, John -Gear and family, of Wat-
erloo, brought her mother, Mrs, J. L.
McDowell, and brother, Gordon, home
on Wednesday alter a few days visit
in the city.
1',Ir. and Mrs, Lyman Jardin anti
children, of Toronto, visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Smith and family,
also other friends aver the week -end.
Misses -Donna Walden, Barbara
Smith and Lorna Buchanan, all of Lon-
don, visited with their families over
the week -end. Andy Griffith, Felicia Farr
Miss Sharon Dowling had her tonsils
out on Saturday. We all hope she is
feeling better soon,
Winghaln, Ontario.
Two Shows Each Night
Commencing at 7:15 p.m.
•
Thurs., Fri., Sat., November 19.23.21
"Eleven young people from the com-
munity attended the service at Clin-
ton in Wesley Willis United Church on
Sunday evening, The interesting ser-
vice was conducted by the officers of
the Y.P.U. One of the most Int' resting
features was the group discussion on
•the forth conning vote in Huron.
The Young People were almost un-
animous in their decisions, that further
liquor outlets would be very harmful
to both young and old in the country.
Mrs. Frank Campbell is heme for
two weeks from Clinton.
The first meeting of the Farm Forum
was held last Wednesday evening at
Mr, and Mrs. Norman McDowell's.
. Mr. Gerald McDowell was elected
chairman for the coming year.
The- Mission Band met on Sunday
with a good attendance. Tire meeting
opened with the Call to Worship. 'Iheu
the hymn "Jesus Lorps Me" was sung. ,
The members purpose was repeated,
after which Miss Jeanetta Snell gave
the prayer, Then they had the roll
call. Shirley Snell read the 23rd Psalm.
The election of officers was held,
President, Gary Walden; vice president,
Harold Campbell; secretary, Audrey
Snell; treasurer, Marjorie Smith, The
offering was than received. The story
was read by Mrs. Lloyd Wallen. The
meeting closed with the benediction.
Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Campbell vis-
ited with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Bolton,
at Hespcicr, on Wednesday.
IN ME1IORIAM
WARD—In loving memory of my deal
husband, Arthur, who passed away
one year ago, November 21, 1958.
God took him home, it was His will,
But in any heart he livcth still,
To me he has not travelled far,
Just entered God's Eternal hone,
And left the gates ajar.
—Always remembered by his loving
wife, Annie, 43-1p.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks to our friends for their kindness
in remembering us in our time of sor-
row. •
—Mr. and Mrs. Fred Howson and
family. •
IN MEMORIAM
WARD—In loving memory of a dear
father, Mr. Robert Arthur Ward, who
passed away November 21, 1958.
Its lonesome here without you dad
1 miss you more each day,
And when I look at your rocking chair
And your smiling face I do not see
I know God has taken you to his home
up there.
—Sadly missed by his daughter,
Gladys. 43-1p
• MUNICiPAI, NOTICE
Nomination for Reeve, Four Coun-
cillors and 'Three School Trustees to
serve the Township of Morris during
the year 1900 will be held in the Mor-
ris Township hall on Friday, Nevem
ber 27, 1959, from 1 p.m. to.2 p.m. .
If -necessary an election will be held
on Saturday, December 5, 1939.
43.2 GEORGE C. MARTIN, Clerk.
FOR SALE
Pioneer Chain Saw and circular saw,
complete; Coleman space heater, large
size, used four months, would exchange
for pigs. Apply, phone 261110 Blyth.
43 -Ip
COME! Buy Christmas
gifts, cakes, puddings.
WHERE? Christmas Fair
Knox United Church,
Auburn.
WHEN? Friday, Nov-
ember 20th, 7:30 p.m.
VISIT
Toy Land
ONE WHOLE
FLOOR OF TOYS
•
In
"Onionhead"
A mirthful service comedy.
le+44+++•-•-•-.+ 44+ s+N+, •4+1.4 t $ $ $ H+
ROXY THEATRE, PARK
GODERICH.
,
PAGt 5
CLINTON.
Now Playing; "Girl In A Bikini" (Ad. Now, Nov. 19.20.21; Twin Comedy Bill,
"Carry On Sergeant" and "The Square
ult) Brigitte Bardot, "Blood On The Peg,"
L'word". George Baker • Sylvia Syms
(Last complete show on a double bill
8:30
Saturday Matinee; "Blood On The
Sward" only,
Mon,, Tues., Wed., N- ovember 23.2.1-25
Adult Entertainment
Neville Brand and Patricia Owens
Twentieth Century Fox presents a pre•
view showing of its newest November
release;. a story designed. for adult
action fans.
"Five Gates To Hell"
In Cinemascope
Mon., Tues„ 1Ved., November 23-24.25 Thurs., Fri., Sat„ November 26-27-28
"Holiday For Lovers"
Clifton Webb, Jane Nyman, Carol
Lynley
Coming Next: " WATUSI". George
Montgomery, Thine Elg, David Farrar.
DANNY KAYE, Barbara Bel Geddes
and Louis Armstrong
A cavalcade of music, comedy and
drama as King-Komic Kaye tells the
life story of jazz musician Red Nichols,
with the help of Bob Crosby's orchestra
"The Five Pennies-
'', Vista Color
•-•-• •• 4-44.44-4 •-•-•-•-•-•-••-••-•-• 4-1-• ♦ ► •-• a -4 -•+1+•+x -•-•-1-•4-•4-1-N • •+•-•-•-•-•-N-N� ••1� H -
FOR SALE
14 started pigs. App:y, Ma -;on Bail- I
cy, plane 54B5, Illylh. 43.1' Lady or girl for light nursing in mo -
FOR SALE I dern home. Part time or evenings.
A good 1949 Plymouth sedan. Api'ly, � Apply at Blyth Standard. 43-1p
II. Philips, phone 44, Blyth. 43-2p
IIELP WANTED
FOR SALE
3 German Sheppard Puns. Apply
Lewis Whitfield, phone -130, Blyth. 43-1 •
BAZAAR & TEA
Orange Hall, Blyth
SATURDAY, NOV 21st
sponsored by
Trinity Church Guild
Bazaar and Tea Opens at
3:30 o'clock
RENTAL SERVICE
CATTLE CLIPPERS, CEMENT 'MIX-
ER, (with motor), WHEEL BARROW,
VACUUM CLEANER, FLOOR POLISH• I
ERS, BEIlI' SANDERS, 4 HEAVY
DUTY ELECTRIC DRILL, WEED
SPRAYER (3 gal.), EXTENSION LAD-
DER (32 feet), PIPE 'WRENCHES,
PIPE DIES & CUTTER.
GARDEN TILLER.
LAWN ROLLER
Apply to
Sparling'sHardware
Phone 24, Blyth
i
ICI • I
a
GUARANTEED
CATALOGUE -
PRICES - _
LAY AWAY PLAN :'
:I -
MARTIN'S
2ND FLOOR
Clinton
Ont.
WOOD FOR SALE
Limb and body wood mixed, dry,
about 40 cords, $6.00 per cord. Apply
Mrs. Beth Knox, phone 501115, Blyth.
43.1.
FEWEST ALCOHOLICS UNDER C.T.A.
Ontario has 2,210 alcoholics• for every 1000,000 persons 20 years of
age and over.
Ontario adds 5,000 yearly to its total of alcoholics. (The Alclhol
Rngearch Foundation not long ago said 4,000, but has had to revise
this.
The number of alcoholics in this Province was announced recently
as 78,000. Each victim affects detrimentally about five. other 'mesons
---in Ontario the equivalent in population of a great city.
The Alcohol Research Foundation for rehabilitation costs $250,009
annually.
In a condensed report on a 1956 survey, the Foundation said 600
of 1.000 clergymen made general comments and attributed to the use
of alcohol: martial dicord, poor church attendance, juvenile problems,
drunken driving, crime, demoralization of women.
The number of alcoholics in Ontario has doubled since 1946, when
crcktail bars were established. The more outlets, the greater the
liquor consumption and the more numerous the resulting tragedies.
Huron, under the Canada Temperance Act, has 750 alcoholics per
100,000 population, half the next lowest total among the Ontario count-
ies surveyed.
How can any thoughful person vote to impose upon Huron the
Liquor Control Act with its eight (at present) types of liquor outlet?
LET'S NOT LOSE THE C.T.A.
FOR .THE REVOCATION
Against the Revocation X
PUBLISHED BY HURON C.T.A. COMMITTEE
After Repeal
MANY PEOPLE ARE ASKING
"What legal outlets will We get
after repeal of the CTA?"
HERE ARE THE FACTS
The larger towns in the county will be eligible for a government
liquor store and a brewers retail store. No vote for these outlets
is necessary anywhere except Clinton, which is under local
option.
Your local Canadian Legion Branch can apply for a club licence --
also without a vote.
Beverage rooms, cocktail bars or any other public licenses could
not be established anywhere in the county without a further vote
in the municipality concerned in which three-fifths of the electors
register their approval.
HURON CITIZENS LEGAL CONTROL COMMITTEE
JOHN E. HUCKINS, Chairman
t 111 n 1111 1II ,11111, 1 YV 11.41..,1.,.11 III11.111 liI,I 11 d 1111111101111011111 11 III III II INLINNESSII1161111,,i
ANNA I4IPST
_yam t24n:a, a,,inA.eo,.
"Dear Anne Hirst: I could be
the happiest wife in the world
If my husband would stop drink-
ing. In every other way, he is
Ideal, and through our five years
of marriage our love has only
deepened. He has lost two fine
positions because of this weak-
ness, yet, 1)e argues that he gets
so depressed ttfithout alcohol
that he cannot bear it another
hour. So he takes the first drink,
admitting the , usual consequ-
ences are inevitable.
"I left hint three years ago,
hoping he would straighten out,
Neither of us could stand
being apart, and since then we
have tried to conquer it together.
I suffer with him when these
moods come on, and I would
make any sacrifice that could
dispel them... . Now I have
tried everything I know, with
almost no success. I can honest-
ly•say I. have never reproached
him aftersvard, I love him too
much,
"Perhaps in your long experi-
ence you can find some hope for
us both? I pray you to try.
DESPERA'T'E"
COMMON SENSE
• The next time your husband.
• complains of depression, go
• with him to his doctor and in-
' sist on a check-up. Nerves can
' cause all sorts of miserable re.
• actions, as can some lack in
' one's physcial make-up. A
• physician that knows the fan-
' ily history can usually diag•
Wonder Wardrobe
PRINTED PATTERN
4924 :. SIZES
2-8
MIX -MATCH wonders — all
quick -to -cut, easiest to sew.
Whip up blouse, jumper, jacket,
pyeralls in thrifty cottons — gay
solids or bright • plaid, 'n' plain
duo. • '
Printed Pattern 4924: Chil-
dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6
blouse takes 11/8 yards 35 inch;
jacket 1%; overalls 17/8 yards.
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate,
Send FIFTY CENTS 50C)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety)'. for this
pattern. Please print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont.
' • nose a condition and, with the
• patient's co-operation, relieve
• it.
• Like so many other afflicted
• persons, perphaps your hus-
* band thinks he needs the re-
• laxation that alcohol tempos-
* arily supplies. I suggest that
• he get in touch with Alcoholics
• Anonymous, who have helped
* so many thousands of men and
• women overcome 'their seem-
" ing need for liquor.
• :A loge such as you and your
* husband are blest with is too
* rare to risk. With everything
* to live for, including a wife
• whose contentment is built.
" around hint, surely your hus-
° band will not allow such a
" marriage to be wrecked when
* there is help to be had! A man
* who cannot control his appe-
* tite for drink should never
o take the first sip, Those who
* have learned to resist it are
* living testimony that his can
too, if he will co-operate, If
* he contends that he is the ex.
* ception, ask him to try for
* your sake. Faith in himself
* and his own moral strength is
* what he nerds, and others who
* have found it know how to
* help him.
* Alcoholics Anonymous is
non-sectarian, there are no fees
• involved; its only purpose is
* to aid anyone who needs aid
* and will do his part. Many
• who have sought help and
" found it, are now rescuing
* ethers trapped by the habit.
• 'fhe group has grown from its
* inception in 1935 to a member-
* ship of over 200,000, in 7,000
* groups in 70 countries. It has
* been accepted by churches,
* prisons, hospitals and many of
* the medical profession. Ask
• your doctor's opinion of the
o organization's work. I think I
* know what he will say.
• •
"DOES IIE OWN ME?"
"Dear Anne Hirst: For over
three months I've been engaged
to a young pian I've known for
a year. I though he was the most
courteous and thoughtful person
in the world, and he was—until
we got engaged.
"Now he thinks he owns me!
He tells me what to say and how
(and I'm not ignorant) and he
has taen a dislike to my best
girl friend. He almost •furbids
my seeing her. He isn't always
as polite to me as he used to be.
'What has happened? I love
him dearly, but I don't like him
as he is. You understand what
I mean': CLARICE"
• How much do you know
* about your fiance's home life?
* Does his father try to dominate
* his mother? If he does, you
' can understand why this lad
* follows his example; now that
* you are to. be his wife, he is
* showing that is what marriage
* means to him.
* You do not intend marriage
• to he like that, and you had
* better tell him so. You are the
* same girl he admired before
* he proposed. You will he the
' same loyal friend to others,
* too, and you will expect him
* to treat them (and 'you) with
' his former courtesy... Other-
• wise, the engagement should
* be ended.
" I expect you two have been
* seeing each other too often
* Take 'off ,a couple of nights a
* week fbi• your frierids and
* your family. If he does not
* get the idea explain it, and
• put it up to him.
• *
Unburdening one's heart to
an understanding friend often
brings the relief of confession.
Anne Ifirst's sympathy and
experience can comfort you.
Write her frankly, and address
your letter to her at Box 1,
123 Eighteenth St., New 'Tor-
onto, Ont.
TIERNEY AS SALEGIRL — Actress Gene Tierney, under treat-
ment at Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., models a necklace
ice a dress shop nearby where she works as a salesgirl.
END OF HER 'RUN AWAY' — Nine-year-old Evelyn Rudie, who won TV stardom as the pre-
cocious "Eloise," primps at Friendship airport near Baltimore, Md., after a jet flight. Evelyn,
whose proclaimed goal was an interview w ith Mrs, Eisenhower, admitted :he sole purpose
of her "run away" from her Hollywood home was for publicity and to bolster her personal
popularity. She was taken to the home of a family friend' at nearby Chevy Chase.
A
RONICLE.S
¶i1NGERFARM
' Ou.r lc&Lra DCt&vkt
4 >.
A dull, dreary day—and back
to standard time. That's fine
except.that'animals have no way
of knowing' the clocks .have been
' set back. . So what happens' —
carly Sunday mornink , Ditto
was pawing at my face and
Taffy was wandering all around
the house wanting to go nut.
Partner stlil being dead to the
world there was nothing for it
but to leave niy warm bed and
attend to them. Once awake that
extra hour seemed tool long to
take so I split the difference and
got breakfast halfway betw:en
fast and slow time. I expect in
a day or two we shall be quite
well adjusted.
Last week I was in the Milton
district and made a number of
calls, mostly on farm fanil:es,
fairly close to Ginger Farm.
Partner didn't come as he want-
ed to get on with some garden
work at home. Plenty to do and
not too much time to do it in
You never know how soon
ter 'will stretch forty, its icy
har.d.
I found a number of chap
in and around our old nei-
bourhood. On one farm the mon
of the family had put in a svrin:-
ming pool. I mean a properly
constructed swiming pool which
I imagine cost plenty. It was th
real McCoy. Shallow at one end
for children and six feet deep
in the middle. Cement paving,
stones all around the outside
and enclosed by a chain -lime
fence. His Wife said they really
enjoyed last summer; never felt
the heat at all and always slept
well at night. Perhaps I should
add this young fellow does not
depend on ;arming_ for a liv-
ing, fur the reason that he sold
shout hal f his acreage some
time ago.
Another place 1 visited farm-
ing activities are still very much
the order of the day. Hen. I
found the lady of the house had
had the entire back of the house
remodelled. Spacious, stream-
lined kitchen with an adjoining
utility room and enough cup-
boards and gadgets to please the
most fastidious housewife. Re-
membering the old kitchen as it
used to he I thought she had
done a marvelous remodelling
job.
At still another farm 1 found
no outstanding improvements
other than painting and paper-
ing but the old farm kitchen
had nicely "homey" look with
its black -topped kitchen range.
And of course there was a big
old-fashioned tea -kettle on the
side of the stove ready to pull
forward so visitors could be
welcomed with a cup of tea It
awoke nostalgic memories of
our own kitchen in days gone
with mitts and oversocks dry-
ing on the high top shelf and a
kitchen where everyone came to
get warm quickly. A few sticks
of dry wood and the stove -top
would he red-hot in a few min-
utes. Yes, there are attractions
peculiar to each type of kitchen
— the old and the new.
One other place i visited --
a poultry farm with an ultra-
modern house, not quite finish-
ed hut liveable. It had every-
thing, matching the hest of any
suburban homes I have seen ••-
but with more space in all the
rooms. All this and a gorgeous
view from every window! The
back looked nut to a wooded
section of the Hamilton Escarp -
m e n t; the front to limestone
cliffs of the same. With ',he
autumn colouring at its best
the scene was one of breath-
taking beauty, marred partially
by a barn under construction
between the house and '"I'he
Mountain." It was a shame it
had to be there however I sup-
pose it was unavoidable since
raising chickens is the owner's
business. Right now he is not
very happy about the price of
chickens. How could he be when
chickens, ready for the oven,
were selling in the stores last
week at 290 a lb. What the far-
mers were paid for those same
chickens I can't imagine—cer-
tainly it wouldn't pay for the
cost of raising them.
I finished my round of visits
by passing Ginger Farm and
what I saw made- me glad to
come back to where we are
living now. It won't be long
before the cloverleaf at High-
way 401 and 25 will be finished
and then the traffic going past
Ginger Farm will be terrific—
and the house only 125 feet
from the road. We loved the old
farm but it has nothing to at-
tract us now only a host of
happy memories — and that
nothing can destroy.
And now for quite a different
subject. I attended a meeting at
Clarkson at which the speaker
was that well-known television
personality, Charles Templeton.
His subject was "What is Wrong
With Our Schools?" He laid
mos: of the blame to the number
of poorly qualified teachers pre-
sently employed — a situation,
he claimed, that is liable to be-
come progressively worse and
should have been foreseen ten
years ago. Mr. Templeton is a
fluent speaker and kept rigid
control of his audience during
the question period, allowing
them exactly ten minutes to ask
questions. That, I thought, was
somewhat dictatorial. But per-
haps he was afraid there night
be a George Rowllands in the
audience!
Q. Some 1f my friends have
told me that it is improper for
a person, even when dining alone
in a public place, to read at the
table. is this true?
A. Your friends have misin-
formed you. There is nothing
at all wrong with a person, who
is dining alone, reading at the
t able.
Now You Can
Smell The Movies
Trying to follow in the foot-
steps of his late, flamboyant
father, showman Michael Todd
Jr. has found himself blazing a
new and typically flamboyant
trail: He has become entrepren-
eur of Smell -O -Vision, a process
for pumping odors into a movie
theater to heighten the impact of
the movie. Developed by Swiss
inventor Hans Laube, Smell -0 -
Vision! caught the elder Todd's
fancy as early as 1954, but it was
left to Todd Jr. to carry it
through, In the last year and a
half, he has spent $2 million to
produce a movie ("Scent of Mys-
tery") especially written for
aromatic effects (examples: a
mystery woman identified only
by her perfume, a villain who
smokes an odoriferous pipe), He
has also built up the Dec. 22
premiere at Chicago's Cinestage
theater as a pioneering venture
into the third dimension of sense.
A few weeks ago, however, it
appeared that pioneer Todd
might be beaten by a nose. New
York theater owner Walter
Reade Jr., himself the son of a
big name- showman (who for-
merly operated New York's
Astor and Mayfair theaters), an-
nounced at a scented press con-
ference that he would premiere
a smellodrama of his own at the
Mayfair on Dec. 2. Obviously
,rushing to beat Todd's premiere
date, Reade's A-romaRama, Inc.,
laid out some $300,000 for the
U.S. and Canadian rights to an
Italian - made travelogue on
China ("Behind the Great Wall")
plus the rights to a U.S.-develop-
ed process that could be used to
dub smells into the scenes.
Among Reade's best smells: The
scent of tea leaves (during a
scene in a tea -house), of a tiger,
an explosion, and a clean, spark-
ling river.
The decision in this contest
may well hang on who has the
best set of smells. Both will get
their smells from varying mix-
tures of aromatic chemicals con-
cocted by perfume chemists to
stimulate natural odors,' Reads
l
wil"inject" his odors into the
theater through the air distribu-
tion sy-stem, counting on quick
evaporation and a special elec-
tronic filter to kill each one off
before the' next -scheduled smell.
Todd will pipe his odors to each
seat, which is more expensive
but also quicker and easier to
control, Some Todd beak -
busters: The scents of peaches,
fresh-baked bread, salty ocean
breezes, and an "overpowering
smell' of port wine (to go with
a scene In which a man is crush-
ed to death by falling wine
casks).
Both producers agree on one
thing,,As Reade put it: "You can
be sure. that none of odr. smells
'will be.objectionable,"
It's what: you learn after, you.
know it all. that counts.
rAtot %a&
Knit a shrug to toss over
everything, to keep you warm
and cozy It's in a fast and easy
pattern stitch — so becoming
with all of your fashions!
Pattern 503: easy -to -follow di-
rections, Misses' Sizes 32-34; 30-
38 included in pattern.
Send TIIIRTY.FIVE CENTS
in coins (stamps cannot be ac-
cepted, use postal 'note for safe-
ty) for this pattern to Laura
Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth
St., New Toronto, Ont. Print
plainly PATTERN NUMBER,
your NAME and ADDRESS.
New! New! New! Our 1960
Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book
is ready NOW! Crammed with
exciting, •unusual, popular de-
signs to crochet, knit, sew, em-
broider, quilt, weave—fashions,
home furnishings, toys, gifts,
bazaar hits. In the book FREE
— 3 quilt patterns, Hurry, send
25 cents for your copy.
ISSUE 47 — 1959
y.•..o.;• • opo:.;,::;:• ?>f
•
<` it
Let the engineer do your driving.
car free and carefree!
by train and arrive relaxed,
refreshed.
-e
Are Grey Cars
More Dangerous?
If you prefer pure colours to
tints and .pastels in clothes and
furnishings, the chances are that
.you are an emotionally well-bal-
anced extrovert. You are prob-
ably a good mixer, more mater-
ialistic than those who prefer
tints, and consistent in your
views and thoughts.
If you prefer tints or pastels,
you are more likely to be the
introverted type, a thinker
rather than a doer, sensitive to
criticism or inclined to feel that
others don't understand you, Al-
though prone to introspection,
:you probably have better taste
and judgment than the people
who prefer pure colours.
These are among the discov-
eries recently claimed by psy-
chologists and scientists who be-
lieve that colour plays a very
important part in aur lives and
emotions.
Interior decorators and home
furnishing experts have long
suspected that different colours
In your home have varying ef-
fects on your emotions and atti-
tudes.
Now the scientists confirm that
rooms with blue walls or decor
are soothing and encourage a
relaxed environment, B right
colours — yellows, pinks, and
some greens.— can he exhilar-
ating and conducive to a stimu-
lating and cheerful atmosphere.
On the other hand, drab grey
walls promote fatigue boredom
and discontent. Both grey and
black act as depressives. •
But red is the colour to treat
with kid gloves, Apart from
driving a bull to distraction, it
has a disturbing place in the
arena of human emotions.
Tests have shown that red,
whether as the predominant col-
our in clothes or room decora-
tion, increases tension, creates
restlessness and agitation, and
appears to make time pass more
slowly,
A psychologist, in a recent
test, put a highly tense woman
in a red dress and sat her with
him In a room decorated in the
same colour. She was so affect-
ed that, within minutes, she had
knocked over a vase and spilt a
cup of coffee.
When the psychologist switch-
ed her into a green dress and
took her into a room with blue
as the main theme, she acted
without any nervousness at all.
Greens' and blues, claim the
scientists, have a calming effect
on people and' also make time
appear to pass more speedily.
Possibly the most outstanding
deductions come from tests on
car colours. It has been found
that both blue and yellow tend
to make objects appear closer
than they really are. Greys make
objects seem farther away than
they are.
Consequently, blue or yellow
painted cars would seem to be
the safest. Other drivers, be-
lieving you to be closer than you
actually are, take action in good
time,
Grey -painted vehicles g i v e
other drivers the impression
that you are farther off than
.you are.
As the scientists point out,
these findings only confirm the
pattern of colour in nature. A
clear blue sky is uplifting; a blue
sky and soft green country land-
scapes together are usually suf-
ficient to calm the most disturb-
ed nerves.
Conversely, people are prone
to depression under black thun-
der -clouds or grey skies,
I'ROF ESSIONAL PRIDE
Steve Lux of Waldron, Ind.,
told police he glanced out of his
car window, at a stop light, saw
a familiar face in the next car,
and told his companions, "There's
the meathead who was wrestl-
ing tonight," The wrestler got
out of his car, kicked a dent in
Lux's auto, broke a window,
climbed back and drove off,
FIGURING — Dr, Solomon Lefs-
ghetz, above, 75, received an
honorary degree from the Uni-
versity of Paris, France, for his
mathematical studies. He fig-
ures Soviet successes in rocket
guidance can be traced to their
lead in basic math,
THAT'S HOW IT GOES — What's going on in the mind of this
disgruntled motorist Is anyone;s guess, as he stands in silence
next to a policeman writing him a traffic ticket on New York's
Fifth Ave,
Stole Keys of the
Bank Of England
A young man of strange habits
was Cornet Robert Pate, of the
10th Hussars, son of a healthy
, Wisbech landowner.
He gave up eating in the mess,
saying that the cooks and mess -
men were trying to poison him.
When the regiment was ordered
to India he sold his commission
and took rooms in Great Marl-
borough Street taking his faith-
ful batman as servant.
Every morning he would pour
half a pint of whisky and 2 oz.
of camphor into his bath. He
would spend hours mixing his
own tooth powder, with a pestle
and mortar. Daily at three -
fifteen, wet or fine, a hackney
coachman called to drive him
out over Putney and Barnes
Commons — always the same
route, the ride lasting for two
hours.
Always he would pay the ten -
shilling fare in separate shill-
ings, His servant had to keep a
pile of them on the mantel-
piece with the Queen's head up-
wards.
"Mad Pate" carefully stowed
them in his pocket in the same
order, and gave them to the cab-
by in a neat pile.
This peculiar obsession with
the Queen's head reached a start-
ling climax on June 27th, 1850.
One afternoon Victoria, with her
eldest children, the Prince of
Wales, Prince Alfred and the
Princess Royal, drove to Cam-
bridge House, Picccadilly, They
were visiting her uncle,_ •the
Duke of Cambridge.
At six -thirty about two hun-
dred people gathered outside the
gates to see her leave. As the
horses slowed down to pass
through the east gate a man
stepped out of the crowd and
brought his cane down as hard
as he could on her face drawing
blood.
A footman grabbed him by
the collar and handed him over
to a police sergeant, The crowd,
incensed by the outrage, wanted
to' lynch him. He was taken to
Vine Street Police Station,
charged, tried and sentenced to
transportation to Tasmania.
There was no apparent motive
for Pate's senseless attack.
Another eccentric in Neville
Williams's inimitable gallery of
"Knaves And Fools" was -Mrs.
Elizabeth Dunham, who lodged
in Hope . Alley, London Wall,
early in the last century. '
She had a mania for acquiring,
by fair means or foul, the keys
of important buildings, but never
made use of them for felonious
purposes. She merely hoarded
them to gloat over, until she had
amassed more than a trunkful,
Her hauls included keys of
several noblemen's houses in
Mayfair and Belgravia, of the
Royal College of Physicians, the
Royal Exchange, the Church Mis-
sionary Society, Whitehall gov-
ernment offices, hospitals, halls
and even Maidstone Jail,
She was the terror of house-
keepers, porters and nightwatch-
nhen in the City and Westmin-
ster.
Finally she thought she could
tackle the Bank of England,
which would be the greatest tri-
umph of all, for it had n military
guard.
She walked right past Shack -
ell, the porter, who was busy.
Once inside his lodge she found
the keys and dropped thein in
her basket. She was questioned
as she left, but quickly allayed
Shackell's suspicions,
But when he wanted to lock
the gate at three -thirty he dis-
covered that the keys had gone.
At once there was a hullabaloo,
for the Bank of England's keys
had never before been stolen.
Shackell gave a description of
the woman which was circulated
to all City peace officers. Two
days later various clues led one
of then! to Hope Alley, Despite
Mrs. Dunham's denials, he found
in her bedroom the trunk and
box crammed with keys and the
Bank keys under the mattress.
When, at her trial, the two
keys were passed to her in the
dock for identification, her in,
lit up with joy. Wrapping them
in a handkerchief, she told the'
,court: -
"I shall hold them for the right
of my King, my country and my-
self," and refused to give them
back. Deemed insane, she was•
sent to an asylum — and kept
well away from its keys!
Charles de Berenger, an officer
on Lord Cochrane's staff, landed
at Dover in 1814 with bogus
news of Napoleon's defeat and
massacre by Cossacks in Paris.
His action was part of a con-
spiracy to enable speculators to
profit on the Stock Exchange, •
The quack Dr, Graham, who
ran a "A Temple of Health and
Hymen" in London, installed a
sumptuous "magnetico - electric"
bed warranted to make childless
couples fruitful. This he hired
out at £50 per evening, later re-
duced to £25 when the bed's
popularity began to wane!
The murderers, forgers, biga-
mists, cheats and hoaxers in this
fascinating collection are a monu-
ment to human ingenuity and
credulity,
Drunken Pigs
Cause Trouble
Chaos was caused by a
drunken donkey in a Yugosla-
vian village recently. He_ found
the wine in the cellar of his
peasant master and drank the
lot — eighteen pints of it.
His. owner realized what was
happening only when he saw the
merry donkey careering drunk-
enly through the streets, at-
tacking villagers. It took pix
men to round him up. When he
was finally tied up he fell
asleep.
Snorting, hiccuping, swaying
pigs flopped out of a railway
car at Sarreguemines, France,
not long ago. They were pedigree
•pigs, too, "Blind drunk," was a
veterinary surgeon's verdict
when he examined them after
gendarmes had arrested six of
then!,
What had happened? Some-
where along the line, the police
found out, the truck was shunted
and lurched, Out of their cages
tumbled the pigs and 'out of two
broken barrels • flowed fresh
Bordeaux wine. The pigs drank
the lot.
Many animals, especially some
dogs, enjoy a. glass of beer but
monkeys generally prefer gin,
whisky or other spirits. It is
said that an elephant's liking for
strong drink at • the end of his
day's work cost a man his life in
India ten years ago. The ele-
phant's owner stopped at a
tavern for a drink and when he
emerged the smell of alcohol
in his breath so enraged the
thirsty elpehant that it trampled
him to death,
L%I4ST
.:: CLASSIFIED: ADVERTISING .: .
AGENTS WANTED
EARN Cash in your Spare time Just
show your triends our Christmas and
All -Occasion Greeting Cards (including
Religious) Stationery, Gifts Write for
samples. Colonial Card Ltd 409.D
Queen East. Toronto 2
ARTICLES FOR SALE
SIX olever novelties postpaid only 25f.
Ross Hancock, Box 28, Postal Station J,
Toronto 8, Ontario,
Snowshoes. All sizes and styles. Bates'
Humane Snowshoe harness (Pat). No
more blistered toes, Folder. "Snow -
shoeing In Comfort," Bates' Snowshoes,
Dept, W, Metagama, Ont.
LADIES( Give that man In your life an
exclusive "Krallon" tie. Guaranteed to
resist grease ink, acids, etc. Looks
like a $5,00 tie with an added feature
— the permanent fashionable knot,
Beautifully gift boxed. State color
preference, Only $1.50 each or 2 for
$2.98 postpaid. Semi money order to:
Qulnte Sales, Box 51.11', llellevlllo,
Ontario,
BLANKETS
10u",(, l'UIIE Virgin Wool, Double Bed
Size, Write tor pamphlet, S. W • Sales
'Co., Box 190 Strathroy, Ont,
BABY CHICKS
BRAY has readyto•lay Ames 1n -Cross
Pullets, also started. Dayolds to order.
Book your December -January broilers
now, Dud purpose and Leghorn clucks,
to order, See local agent or write Bray
Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton,
Ont,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES.
•
IIERE Is the opportunity to develop
and operate a clean, simple, profitable
manufacturing business from your
home. Formula available at reasonable
cost plus all necessary Information,
PIIIPI'S 86 Knightswood, Guelph Ont,
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
FROZEN food locker and grocery -meat
business. Farming town. Clifford
Weeks, Realtor, Sault Ste. Marie.
LUMBER and builders' supplies bust•
ness located In Southern Ontario (to•
bacco belt). Established 1940 Terms.
Box 190 123.18th Street. New 'Toronto.
Ontario
MACHINE Strop tor Sale, Lease, Main
Street location. Price $5500.00. Cantelon•
Taylor Machine Shop, Collingwood Ont.
WATER POWER CHOPPING MILL
sawmill, seed cleaning plant. Modern
home, Priced right, easy terms, IL
Hemstock, 2290 -5th Ave West, Owen
Sound, Ont. Fred Genoe, Realtor.
EDUCATION
EARN College degrees all college sub-
jects, from recognized university,
through correspondence study. $195.,
terms. Trinity College, 325 Bankers
Trust Bldg., Indianapolis 4, Indiana.
FARMS FOR SALE
25 ACRES good clay loam, Remodelled
7 room house, small barn. W. Regter,
R.R. No, 3, Dashwood, Ont._
•
100 ACRES good land with buildings:
Year round stream: School & IIlghway
1 mile. With or without usual imple-
ments or pure bred Ayrshlres, Reason
for sale: Going to B.C. All enquiries
should be addressed to: Mr. Arne den
Duyf, RR4, Kenilworth, Ontario,
This advertisement published free as
one of the many benefits of:—
THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA)
1020 DUNDAS STREET EAST,
LONDON, ONTARIO.
FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
ELECTRIC DRILL SALE
SALE special Black and Decker V4" elec.
tric drill with geared chuck key. Power-
ful universal motor 2,000 R.P,M., Fully
guaranteed by the manufacturer. Note
this is a genuine Black and Docker
drill. nationally advertised, regularly
selling for much more. Bargain while
they last $10,90 postpaid For prompt
delivery send check or money order
to: S. & A. Distributors, 190 Brookside
Ave., Toronto 9. Ontario.
y _ FINANCIAL
6 %
Interest Paid On
GUARANTEED
TRUST CERTIFICATES
ANY TERM, 1.5 YEARS
THE
Sterling Trusts
Corp. 372 Bay St.. EM 4.7495
FOR SALE
SMALL McCrae sawmill 44" saw, steel
carriage, excellent condition complete
with slab saw, tractor and building
$2,000, Also 56 Ford Tractor, Industrial
Loader, and two trucks. Ivan Nelson.
Port Sydney, Ont.
HELP WANTED FEMALE
PHYSIOTHERAPIST
TO HEAD DEPARTMENT
FOR Baycrest hospital and the Jewish
Homo for the Aged. Salary open, de-
pendent upon previous experience,
CALL or write Mr, Sant Ruth, admin.
Istrator. 3580 Bathurst St. RU. 1.3501.
HELP WANTED MALE
LINOTYPE OPERATOR
EXPERIENCED on floor for progres-
sive job printing plant, would con -
skier two•thlyder ,yvlth aptitude, full
Printing Ltd. St.., t
scale, fringe NIX 'A nply Phibbs
, Ont.
it: "•, r -
r,
rt'7
INSTRUCTION
EARN more! Booltheeping, Salesman-
ship Shorthand, 'rypewrtttn , eta, Les-
sons 50f. Ask for free circular No. 33,
Canadian Correspondence Courses 1200
Spy Street Toronto
LIVESTOCK
CARLOAD lots of Western Herford
calves, Present prices. Heifers 210 Ib.,
steers 230 Ib, Write to George Mc -
Sherry, Sidney, Manitoba. Buy quality
cattle direct from our ranch,
80 YOUNG Ewes $16.00 each, Registered
Angus Bulls, Richard McCurdy, R. 11. 1,
Chesley. Telephnoe 622.41,
REGISTERED Shorthorn cowa heifers,
polled hulls, Accredited, J. A. Arm•
strong & Sons, R. 1, Union, Ont,
DUAL Purpose Shorthorn, Present
offering — Cow, Bred heifers, Bulls
and Bull calves of all ages. Write or
visit the farm. Ernest A. Peart and
Sons, Caledonia, Ontario_
MEDICAL
ROYAL JELLY! Pure, fresh, In natural
forth, 5000 mgs. only $5, a 30 day sup-
ply. Write for Information. Scott Bee
Co„ Winnsboro, Louisiana.
DON'T WAIT — EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN _ OTTAWA
$1,25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH tho torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles,
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching scaling and burning ecze•
ma, acne. ringworm. pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn 131 hopeless they seem
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 53.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
NURSES WANTED
IMMEDIATE VACANCIES
FOR
GENERAL DUTY
NURSES
FOR an active medical -surgical unit,
Accommodation available In modern
nurses' residence,
FOR FURTHER PARTICULARS
APPLY TO
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
IODE Memorial Hospital
Windsor, Ont.
REGISTERED
NURSES
Starting Rate — $276.65
REQUIRED by Metropolitan Toronto
for Greenacres Home for the Aged.
located In Newmarket, 40 hour work
week, Permanent position, good em•
ployee benefits: Apply Personnel Office,
387 Bloor St, East 1VA. 4.7441, or at
194 Eagle Street, Newmarket.
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
KNOW the day of any DATE, 1753 to
1999. Leap Years 1756 to 2000, Send 51
to: Dates, 3502 Station 13, Savannah,
Georgia
ADULTSI Personal Rubber Goods. 36
assortment for $2.00. Finest quality,
tested. guaranteed. Mailed un plain
sealed package plus free Birth t'ontrol
booklet and catalogue of supplies.
Western Distributors, BOX 24TP
Regina, Sask.
PHOTOGRAPHY
SAVE! SAVE! SAVEI
Films developed and
8 magna prints in album 400
12 magna prints In album 60!
Reprints 50 each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll $1.00 (not Including
prints) Color prints 35C each extra,
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 mm. 20 ex-
posures mounted in elides $1.25. Color
refunded fromlfullefor5unprinted Money
Wes,
FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31. GALT. ONT.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WINTER PARK, FLORIDA
DOMMERICH Estates. Beautiful new $
bedroom 2 bath, Colonial home. Cert.tral heating and air-conditioning; fire•
place; fully equipped kitchen with dish-
washer; 2 car garage; landscaped lot,
$26,500. Phone M1 4.7262 or write P.O.
Box 536 Maitland, Florida.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
"32,500.00 A real bargain — must he
seen! 150 acres on Don Mills Rd, offer -
ng all the privacy and beauty of ou
northland with fast trout stream ane
park -like hills and trees Natural swim•
ming hole! Picturesque building sites.
Front of farm Is clay -loam, arable rich
Itnd, 160 rods frontage on pavement,
Must be seen. Usual farm buildings.
56 ACRES on pavement near 400 h
King 'township. Scenic hills overlookln
beautiful countryside, full price $20,00
515,000,00 Full price for 100 acres In
King Township, rolling clay loam, G-
roomed brick house, hank barn, hydra
throughout, Good water,
CALL us for farms and small acreages,
homes and building sites, W. .1. Pear-
son, Broker, R. R, 3, King. PA 7.5073,"
•
BARRIE district stock and dairy.
FARMS, vacant land, country homes.
ELLWOOD Blaclt, Farm Broker,
SHANTY Bay. Phone Barrie 803.11.2.
TORONTO, evgs. BE. 2.2402
DAIRY BUSINESS:
Brick building 25 x 88 with living quar-
ters and snack bar. Equipment 1st class
condition. Located In u small town. No
opposition. Showing good profit. $20,-
000 00
20;00000 down, balance terms.
TOBACCO FARM:
150 Acres, 90 acres workable, sandy
loam, creek and pond. Barn Is 30 x 60,
Green house 150 x 24, 5 Kilns, oil tired,
Irrigation system Complete line of
machinery and equipment. II room 2
storey house, Located 15 miles from
Cobourg Ontario f'rlce $70,000,00 Only
$25,000 00 Down.
150 ACRE FARM:
in excellent condition, 120 acres work.
able, 5 acres hardwood hush, flowing
creek. 8 room house witn hath, large
barn 70 x 55, straw shed 28 x 64. ce-
ment stables, drilled well, school un
farm, close to town, all buildings are
In A-1 repair. Owner retiring Priced
to sell at only Slagle 06 Bn.sv terms,
STORE:
Solid brick 22 x 80 with 0 rooms apart
ment above with bath. furnace heavy
wiring, suitable for Restaurant or
General Store. Located in the Village
of Atwood on Highway 'o 23 lone.
dlate possession. $5,000.00 down. bal.
nnce terms
DUDLEY E HOLMES
Insurance & Realestate
Listowel, Ontario. Bus. Phone 470.
PROPERTIES WANTED
PROPERTY Wanted - Btislnesse,
Farms, Homes Small Acreages, Every
Description. We cover Ontario Please
write. W. L. Stevenson Real Estate,
Phone 325 Mount Forest. tint. Phone
Toronto, EM. 4-7842.
SITUATION WANTED
HEAD Gardner or Nursery Foreman,
experienced all branches, Including
greenhouses, experinced with staff re•
quires responsible part. Replies to:
Smith apt, 10, 34 Tobin Street, Hall.
fax, N,s,
STAMPS
BUILD UP A FABULOUS STAMP COL-
LECTION FOR ONLY 51.00 A WEEK.
Upon receipt of your dollar we will
send you a selection of all different
stamps from a country. Your first
selection will Include a complete list
and quantity of the stamps shipped
each week starting with Albania.
FIRE ISLAND STAMP CO,
BOX 37, U.S,A., WEST ISLIP, N.Y.
TEACHERS WANTED
CAMP Petawawa 1s constructing an-
other elementary school and requires
for January, 1960, teachers for Grades
kindergarten primary to VIII Minimum
$3,200 (includes commuting) $200. Al.
lowances for experience up to 6 years,
General allowances for degrees, certifi-
cates, etc. Apply stating qualifications,
Inspector's name, and phone number,
etc. to: C. Earl Craig, Supervising Prin.
clpal, Camp Petawawo,
VACATION RESORTS
GATEWAY AREA
FURNISHED 1 -bedroom apartments,
TV, heat, air conditioning, everything
furnished. $1,200 up to 6 -month season.
Also weekly and monthly rates. Carioca
Court, 817 N.E., 18th Ave . Fl. Lauder-
dale, Florida.
ISSUE 47 — 1959
MERRY MENAGERIE
o�'I!l1'''1
"You can't trust 'this guy-
last year every other carrot
was a horse -radish!"
You Can Depend On
When kidneys tail
to remove excess
acids and wastes,
backache, tired
feeling, disturbed
test often follow.
Dodd's ICidney
Pills stimulate
kidneys to normal
duty. You feel
better—sleep bet-
ter, work bettor. \ „,.
You can depend 58
on Dodd's. Get Dodd'sat any drug ore.
CUNARD SAILINGS
FROM MONTREAL and QUEBEC at Thrift Season Rates
See Your Local Agent —
No One Can Serve You Better 10% reduction on your return fare afte January 1, 1960.
CARINTHIA
*SYLVANIA
*SAXONIA
November 13 Havre, Southampton
November 27 Greenock, Liverpool
November 28 Havre, Southampton
*Special Christmas Sailing
CHRISTMAS SAILINGS FROM NEW YORK AND HALIFAX
CARINTHIA
IVERNIA
Prem New York
Dec. 11
Dec, 12
from Halifax
Dec. 12
Dec. 13
Greenock, Liverpool
Cobh, Havre, Southampton
Corner Bay & Wellington Its.
Toronto, Ont.
Tel EMpire 2.29111
Cunard Line
Office, all Montreal • Halifax • Saint John
Quebec • Toronto • Winnipeg • Bdmonto.' • Vancouver
PAtEg
viermair
BICK'S YUM YUM PICKLES
large 32 oz. jar
CATELLI'S COOKED SPAGHETTI
large 28 oz. tin 23c
STOKELY'S FANCY I-IONEY POD PEAS
2 - 15 oz. tins 29c
STOKELY'S FANCY TOMATO JUICE
2 - 20 oz. tins 25c
43c
CHRISTMAS BAKING NEEDS ---
Raisins - Currants - Cherries - Mixed Peel - Citron
Mixed Fruit - Walnuts - Pecans
All in Stock for your Christmas Cake
Why wait -- pick up your Christmas Candies and
Nuts -- Your Choice
THIS WEEK--- A set of 3 carving knives given
away -- a chance for $1. or more purchase --
Draw at 9:30 p.m. each Saturday.
• ,44.MPIJMN .N4N•~4~~..► N,.........,..
•+•.-•-.-..0-4-4.4-444-41-4-4-4-4-4-44-44-4-4-4-4+4-44-4-444-4 4 4•14- -44 +..•. +11-4-40-4-4
Announcement
BUSINESS OPENING DELAYED
Due to decorating difficulties the opening of the
Blyth 5c to $1.00 Store has been postponed until
Monday, November 23.
The entire store has been renovated, and many
Opening Day Specials will be offered to the people
of Blyth and District. An excellent opportunity
to Christmas Shop at Tremendous Savings.
We are continuing to operate the Simpsons -Seers
Order Office, and any Christmas shoppers wishing
to order may do so immediately.
BLYTH 5 to 1.00 STORE
Wilbur and Irene Yandt
Blyth, Ontario Phone 80
.++•41-0-.1 4-••-•-•••••••-•-•-•-•-•-••••.••••-•-
111111
.444-•H+...- .+.�N+
4 444 44 4 4+., 4444 F.+ .+...4-4++4-4-44-4-4-4-4-•+4+-4+4-0-44-4-4-4-444
Stewart's
Red (3 White Food Market
"WHERE THE PRICES ARE RIGHT"
SHOP RED and WHITE and SAVE
Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
"The Best For Less" -- "Values Unsurpassed"
No. 1 Quality Golden Ripe Bananas, 2 lbs.... 23c
Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c
California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 69c
Aylmer Choice Peaches, 20 oz. tin 2 for 49c
Monarch Pastry Flour, 7 lb. bag 55c
Redpath Granulated Sugar, 5 lb. bag 39e
Delmar Margerine, 3 lbs. 89c
MEATS & FROZEN
FOODS
Weiners ... per lb. 39c
Bologna . • . per ib. 35c
Turkeys, 6 - 8 Ib.,
per ib. 47c
Chickens, 3 lbs. over
per lb. 35c
Maple Leaf Tender -
sweet Ham (cooked)
per lb. 69c
Wallace's Turkey Pies,
box of 3 75c
.-4-4-4-4444-444 4-4-44 4-.4-4+ 41-41-4-4-4-4-4
WESTON'S FEATURE
SAVE 4c
PAY_ O N !,Y 31c,
Raspberry Jelly Roll
1 %rill STAND A Witinegday, Nov. 1A„ Obi
,
BLYTH ,LIONS CLUB
MONSTER
INGO
BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL
BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL
Saturday, November 21
commencing at 8:30 p.m.
1 SPECIAL FULL HOUSE FOR 2 TURKEYS
14 REGULAR TURKEY GAMES
1 EXTRA SPECIAL GAME (will be announced)
-DOOR PRIZE -
ALL THIS FOR 75c ADMISSION
Extra Cards Availableg50 Each or 5 for $1.00
SHARE THE WEALTH GAMES - 2
Cards 25c Each or 5 for s100
1
+4-4 4 4-4.4.4-.•4.4 444• 4-44-444-4 444 •-•-•44444d
1
1
Clinton
--•4444+-
(Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON - EXETER - SEAPORTS
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -
TIiOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CLINTON: EXETER:
Rna1rn4,--Ifv 7-04911 Revd:Irv: 41
R a:.1 rirr-_'i , ! ?:oin Rraldcn''.e 4,i
H-•-4-.-.+•-.�•4►►N►►tr1►•►►•+-4.0.4►4►ev1+ I-t•s 0 -44Th(
1
Nomination Notice
TAKE NOTICE that a meeting will be held in
the auditorium of Blyth Memorial Hall, for the
purpose of nominating candidates, for the offices
of Reeve, Councillors, Public School Trutees and
Public Utility Com]nissioners, for the Village of
Blyth, on Monday, November 30th, 1959, from 7
p.m. until 8 p.m: And election if necessary to be
held on Mondvy, December 7th, 1959, with the poll
being open f _ : _ti 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. in Blyth Mem-
orial Hall.
GEORGE SLOAN, Clerk.
IM+M...V•WhYMIINdNI N
Savings, too,
have a way of growing
And just like her Junior Depositor's
Account, your Savings,Account will grow,,
with regular deposits.
THE CANADIAN
BANK OF COMMERCE
MORE THAN 800 BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA
VITAMINS
Help keep the whole family in the best of health by
building resistance to colds and other ills. Many
well recommended vitamin supplements are listed
here.
Ostoco Drops $1.45, $2.40, and $4.25
Tri -Vi -Sol $1.65 and $2.95
Vi-Daylin Drops $2.40 and $4.25
Infantol $1.25 and $3.50
Wampoles Extract Cod Liver .. , $1.59 and $2.89
Maltlevol Liquid $2.50
Halibut Liver Oil Capsules, $1.15, $2.29 and $4.29
Vi Cal Fer Capsules $1.95 and $4.95
One A Day Multiple $1.49, $2.75 and $4.49
Cod Liver Oil 90c and $1.50
Scotts Emulsion $1.00 and $2.00
R. D. PHILP, Phm, B
I DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER - PHONE 70, BLYTH
•4+4+$+4+-4+4+4+N4-44•4+ 4 4+14.4• 4+ 4•-444--4iO4•.+4•4-1
1
44-41444
Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association
"Where Better Bulls Are Used",
WANTED
, More Cows To Be Mated To Our
BETTER BULLS
Through Our Artificial Insemination Service
This will mean EXTRA PROFITS for you
with the resulting
Better Cattle For Better Living
Breeds and Bulls to fit your choice -
We are a non-profit farmer owner and controlled
service organization through which the members
are providing this better service for themselves.
For service or more information call:--
CLINTON HU 2-3441
or for long distance
CLINTON ZENITH 9-5650
Between 7:30 and 10:00 a.m. week days and
6:00 and 8:00 p.m. Saturday, evenings.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING
..-.4444+++++.444-.......±...... 0-4-4-4-44444-4-414-4-4-44.
These Three
Beautiful
Top Quality
A beautiful bathroom - more comfortable,
more convenient - can be yours at budget
cost. In a choke of gorgeous colours or in
spotless white. •
BLYTH PLUMBING & HEATING
Telephone 47 Blyth, Ontario
444.4•.-4444-.....•.++..
EXCELLENT FOOD AND MEALS
At All Hours.
WE SPECIALIZE IN FISH & CHIPS
HURON GRILL
BLYTH •ONTARIO •
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
REV, DR, JOHN LINTON TO SPEAK
THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY
Rev. Ur. John Linton, general secre•
N•239C of the r'inadInn Tmm:Wanno Fed-
eration, will speak in the following
1. CO:.:.CL icn t 8 conl-
iaian to hall l:.e Canada Tel:•,p ranc•J
r,sI,ET.'TI4rnAT r ---17.L.:.,:1 e:; _r;n nager.
Act In Iluron: Goderich, North St. Un•
iced Church, Sunday, November 22, 1'
a.m.; Exeter, Main St, United Church
Sunday, November 22, 2.30 p.m.; Sea
forth, First Presbyterian Church, Mon.
day, November 23, 2.30 p.m.: Clinton,
Pr`arin St. United church, November
23, C _ .m.