HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1960-02-03, Page 1r
THE BLYTH STANDARD
VOLUME 72 - NO. 02
Authorized as second class mail,
Post Offipc Department, Ottawa.
BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, FEB. , 1960 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
'Former Blyth Man Severely Blyth Municipal Council
BurnedMany Contribute To Arena,
Legionnaries Meet Monkton Saturday The regular meeting, of the Blyth
Word has been received here that Nianorital Hallal 11 otnwasl hld Februarin y '
Donald Armstrong, son of Mr, andMonday,y Still More Heeded
Night, Lucknow On Monday Mrs, James Armstrong, is a patient in 1st, at 8 pan., with Reeve Mort;tt,
the Kenora Hospital having suffered Councillors Cook, Elliott,Fairservice _ .. _-
1"The residents of Blyth and district
Last .Wednesday evening the Blyth severe burns to his face, hand and foot, and Rowes present. P�:RaONAI. INTEREST have again shown their generosity
Legionnaires dropped a close 8.6 de- The accident 'happened when Don was
Motion by Elliottand Crok that the
T"Lim s and Officers Hold Pp when called on by a local organization
cision to SeafoMh, The game was play attempting to carry a burning pan or
minutes of the last regular meeting be Air, and Atrs. John Cameron, Elmira, to contribute to a worthwhile cause.
ed at Seaforth. Blyth goals were scor• Banquet grease out of the house. His wife sutra, adopted. Carried. visited with the tatter's parents, Mr. The campaign to glass in the east end
cel by, Coultes, 2; Shields, 2; McDoug' Teachers and officers n[ the 5tutda moned help from their• land lord who Fire Chief Irvine Bowes presented and Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour, on Sun- of the arena has nearly reached its
all and Elliott scored one each.Y arrived in time to smother the fire. council with the Firemen's annual re' day, goal with onlya few more dollars need
Church School of Blyth United Churchn°t•I•
BLYTH 8 • TEESWATER' 4 gathered last Friday evening for their It is expected Don will be in hospital' I ed to completely pay for the project.
uet. Mrs. C. Johnston was for six weeks, and as his, face is com-
ae
Motion by Rowes and Faire vice tha+. Mr. and Mrs. Wm, East, Patricia Ann The work has been completed at the
On Monday evening the team travel- conveneannual r the supper committee, and lately covered with bandages, he can th�IQ report be adopted. Carried. � and Philip, of London, spent the week arena and one can now watch a hockey
led to'Teeswater to do •battl'e with the the program derive no pleasure from reading or Motion by Elliottand 1 a►tse vice end with he parents, Mr, and Airs• game in comfort of the warm room.
Leant from :that 'village and came out miitcc Group o1 of the WA, funder the smoking. Ile would like very much to that on recommendation of street com 11'm. MCVitile• • Following is a complete list of those
en tete ilia' end of an 8 4 score. It is leadership of Mrs. C. Ladd, assisted hear from his Blyth friends, and his mince, and due to difficulties in se- who have contributed as of Wednesday,
wife and ntbther will read to him anycuring truck for street work, that we 'Mr. . and Mrs. Gordon Shortt and
understood that the Blyth goal tender in the kitchen and were thanked for Diu rias, of Barrie, spent the week -end February 3rd:
Bruce "Turk" Barrie, was a major thier willing help by Mr. R. Madill, letters that are sent, The address is purchase a one ton truck from Hamm's withthetatter's mother, Mrs, Gladys Frank Elliott $10.00
factor in the locals win. Mr, I�', llowsen, superintendent, acted General Hospital, 1{enara, Ontario.
Garage for $300.x,0. Carried. ,lohnslon, her sister, Mrs. ,Joe Alblas Elliott insurance Agency 25.00
as chairman and welcomed over 50 We at ,the Standard Office, along Alotion by Cook and Howes that we are Mr, Miles.
George Sloan 10.00
Scoring for Blyth wore, Shields with teachers and officers and their friends. with all of Don's friends here, wish give the Blyth Horticultural Society r: Ed. Bel! 3.00
3, Coulees and Foster 2 each, and ,flint Lawrie led in an enjoyable song him a speedy and canplcic recovery, grant of $101.00. Carried. Mrs. Inez MacDonald, who has spent James Lawrie 5.00
Smyth with 1. Motion by Fairservice and Elliott some lime with her sister, Miss Marg- Dr, K. Jackson 3.00
period. Mrs, J. McDougall, at the pi that communications be filed, Carried. aret ilirons, and brothers, Jim anti Atnold Berthot 5.00
This Saturday night in the Blyth ano, played "Romance" by Sibelirts, Horticultural Society elect Motion by ('Dol{ and Elliott 'that the Hubert llirons, lett last Friday to visit Wm. Bell 5.00
Aruna the Leglonnairres will be hosts and hymn transcriptions which were Officers hour rate for street work be $1.00, Car- her daughter, Mrs. J. C. Mitchell and Geor a McNall 10.00
to Monkton and your attendance is re- much enjoyed, g
quested in order to give the boys the Mrs. W. 11. Pike, of Ilderlon, was The local horticultural Society held tied. Mr. Mitchell, of Richmond Hill, Norman Gowing 10.00
support they deserve, • arliest speaker for the evening. She their annual neetitrg and election of Motion by Elliott and Fairservice Scott Fairservice ' 10,00
that By -Law No. 1, 1960, he read the I r. and Mrs. Donald Ward, Trudy
spoke of the urgency of creatingan officers and directors on Thursday af- y' y Mr. MurrayWeymouth
Bill Radford 5.00
first and second bine, Carried. and Stephen,
On Monday night the "high flying" environment where children may learn ternoon, Janu. 28th, at the home of and Miss Lois McKane, of Stratford,
Jim Stalker 5.00
team' from Lucknow will make their the Christian way, so that we do not Mr, and Airs, Lorne Sc►•intgeour, Motion by Howes and Cook that ByWalsh Bros 5.110
appearance on local ice. just "prepare them for life, but help Due to the unavailable ahsetce of Law No, 1,1960,as now read a first visited at Sunday witr their aunt, Airs,
Ann Sundercock, Lloyd Tasker5.00
Chem to live right now as Christian the secretary, Mrs. !:meson Wright, turd second time be passed, Carried, Blyth Standard 10.00
W#lutlter you are a hockey fan or children.". We are sometimes "innoc- Mrs,. C. Johnston was appointed sea e- Alotion by I airservee and Elliott Mr, and Mrs, John McNichol of R.R.Jack Stewart 10,00
not, be sure to attend both of these tar forthe Heeling, mid also presid- 1.hal By -Law No. 1, 1960, he read aWrightgames. We can guarantee there'll be ulated against real religion,"said the Y2, Riyih, enjoyed a visit to Sarasota Emmerson Wig5,00
speaker, because we are exposed to ed for the election of the following. ex- third time. Carried.
Jungle Gardens during their recent ha- Dan McKenzie 1.00
entertainment aplenty. ecuUre and directors, Motion by Cook and Howes that By-
adult expressions of faith before wecation on the Sun Coast of Florida, Alvin Snell 3.00
Don't forget you can' now watch the are able to understand them. Mrs. Honorary president, Mrs. Annie Lyd- Law No I, 1960, as now read a third The visitors mingled with flamingos Knox Produce 5.00
games from the warmth and comfort Pike, in urging her audience to sincer- diatt; president, Mrs. Lorne Scrim -
The
be finally passed. Carried. and ether exotic wild [owl roaming tree Harold Knox 5.00
of the newly built spectators room, oily, concluded, "nothing we can say gecur; 1st vice-president, Mrs. C. Itig• I'he above 13y Law is to enable coup ly amici Florida's fine scenery, Other
Walter 'AleGill 2.00
about the Christian life can take the gins; 2nd vice-president, Mrs. C. Ladd; til to borrow .money for village fin- points of interest in Jungle Gardens Jack Creighton 5.00
secretary -treasurer, Alts. E. Wright, antes until taxes are paid. ' g bordering jun- Arcade Store 5.00
place of the Christian life in our- were huge Royal Pains
selves." 1960 Directors:. Miss J. Woodcock, Motion by Cook and Howes that By- gle trails, hundreds of colorful topical Wellington McNall 2.00
SUCCESSFUL CARD PARTY HELD Mrs, Pike recalled for the group Mrs, K. Webster', Mrs.. Ida Pelts, Mrs. Law No, 2, 1960, be read the fist and plants, and brilliant macaws which Ann Hollinger 1.00
IN LONDESBORO HALL some of the interesting and amusing C. Johnston, Lorne Scriwgcour, second time. Carried, pose with visitors for pictures, Hay Aladin 10.00
-_ _- .- .. n anion,' Directorsr 1960 1 1961• Mrs Motion by Elliott and Fairservice
--------------••------. Federation,*
.. , . �►• ( , . < Loyd Walsh 5,00
held a card partyin the Lotd�q lio o ch li. in the Sunday School. Edith Rogan, Alts, Grace McCallum, that By -Law No. 2, 1960, as now read Mrs, Gerald Westberg and daughter, L
j• y:g Grover Clare 2.00
Hall on January 29. A large creit�d at�' ; ..1. - E. McLagan thanked both Mrs, D, McKenzie, Keith Webster, Rol -a first and second time be passed. of Stayner, are visiting wtih her par -W. J. Hallahan 2.00
tended, there were 20 tables, Everyone A'i : and Mrs. Pike for their visit and and Vincent. Auditors, Mr, and Mrs. Carried. eels, At . and Mrs, Harold Badley, and Frank Gong 5.00
reported having a good time. for their inspiration. He also an- C. Johnston. •
Motion by Fairservice and Elliott brother Richard. 11. Bondy 1.00
The prize winners were: Ladies high, pounced to the teachers that the pro- 1t was decided to purchase 200 tuber- that By+Law No, 2, 1990, be read a W. Yandt 2.00
Mrs. Elsie Shaddick; Ladies low, Mrs. jects for missionary work by the child- ous begonias bulbs to sell at a reduced third time, Carried, Ai, Jim Riordan, of Windsor, spent
Bill Flynn;; Ladies lone hands, Mrs. rum in 1960 wouid be the providing of Price to members only, as an incentive Motion by Howes and Cook that By -the week -end with his mother, Mrs. H. Doherty Bros, 5.00
1960,Riordan. Mr. and Mrs. F, Bainton 100.00
Leonard Archambault; Men's high, 7 eye operation for blind Africans and to join the Society early. Seventeen taw No. 2,as new read a third Howson & Howson , , , , ", 10.00 •
George Carter; men's low, Robert providing' Christian literature for boot I members fees were paid at the meet- tune be finally passed, Carried. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Cook attend George Hamm Jr. 5.00
Townsend; ' men's lone hands, Jack children and adults around the world ing The above By -Law authorizes )goad ex- ed the funeral of the late Mrs. A. Fin- Hamm's Garage 5.00
Armstroaig;A Motion was made that Mrs. L. ponditures up to $7000, Lucky chair, Alex McMt• who have just learned to read. - A ley, in 1Vin;harm, on Saturday, George Gilfillan 5,00
chael. There will be another card tear. poster. Scrimgeour be a de1cgatti to the On- Motion by Fairservice and Elliott
illustrating these projects hasP & W Transport t 5.00
ty on the last Friday of February. now been posted on the Church Sebool tario Provincial Horticultural Cowen- that clerk forward annual petition for Ai•. Alfred Cook, of Westfield, spent Superior Food Market 5.00
bulletin board. tion to be held at the Royal Cannaught statutory grant, under provisions of an evening recently with Mr, and Mrs. Howes Dairy 10.00
After 'a social hour of games' and con- hotel; Hamilton, ori March '10th and highway improvement act, to Depart L. Cools, John Young 10.00
' :llll.h, menti of Highways, Carried,
teals, lite eventing was closed with a Mr, and Airs, Gordon Wilkinson, of Mrs, L. Scrimgeour 5.00
Show Removed .Fx0111 Magri benediction by the minister, The secretary -treasurer's report re- Motion by Howes and Fairservice Brussels, visited with Miss Josephine J. B, Watson 5.00
Strew- '- t vealtel there was 80 members in 1959. that accounts as read be paid. Car- Ed. Watson 5.00
;, $169.86 was spent in civic improve- Tied. Woodcock recently,
r" Archie Montgomery 2.00
Last Friday snow removal operations • meat, including labor. $25.00 was spent John Bailey, part salary, st. foreman, H. Deer 5.00
were carried out on the business see- Y.P.U. Meeting for seeds, bulbs and plants lo beautify $110.00; John Bielcy ,part foreman and U.D.P.C. Co. 5.00
tion of the village. This was the first the village, caretaker, 62,60; 11. Letherland, weigh -
CONGRATULATIONS Stadelman 1.00
time that it had been necessary to The regular meeting of the Blyth Y The special work of the Society is master and firing, 50.00; G. Ileffron, CONGRATULATIONS H, Selling 2.00
"clean up" the street this winter, a PU was held. on Sunday evening at the the planting and care of horticultural garbage collection, 105.00; Blyth Post Coni Bl th Lions Club 50.00
decisive change from last *year -when Park on DinsleySL, the window boxes master, unemployment ins. stamps, gratuations to Mr, and Airs, Y 7
church. Thomas Cronus Sr, Who celebrated their Blyth Canadian Lesion 75.00
it was a common sight to see. the load• Na►icy Johnston led the sing song, and flower bed at the Memorial hall, 4,80; Municipal World, account, 9.09; 39th wedding anniversary on Sunday, 2.00
.1, Freeman
er and truck's eating away at the Don Scott and Doug Howson took the and a beautiful exhibit of flowers with Ila►mn's Garage, snow pleughiI1 , 44.50; Januar 31st. B. Wallace
2.00
heavy banks. This must be a relief to worship, The business period was an attractive poster at the Agricultural George Hedford, snow ploughing and Y John Bailie 2,00
the local council as much of their held. Rev. McLagan continued the Society's Fall Fair. The Society ex- removal, 435.35; Alex Patterson, 2,00; Congratulations to Mr. and Ai's. Ai -
year's allotted money was .spent on study on Africa, . pressed great satisfaction for the work Earl Noble, 16.00; Irvine Bowes, Flre beet Nesbitt on their wedding ane}ver Clayton Lada 2.00
snow removal and plowinglast winter. done by the caretaker, Bill Neizan. men's salary, 584,00. nary, Monday, February 1st, G. Brown 5.00
Taps closed the meeting,
The work Was done by the local firm of A public meeting was arranged for Motion by Elliott and Bowes, that we Wm. Morritt 5.00
1.00
Radford Construction Company., March 23rd at the home of Mr. and do now adjcurn, Carried. M. Richmond.09
The failure to mention the weather Mrs, Clayton Ladd, when plans will —George Slcan, Clerk, Fireside Farm K. McVittie 2.00
in the Standard. was not an oversite, Mrs. H. Gibbons Heads be made for public planting in 1960. I lreside Forum Campbell Transport . , 5.00
On February 1st 17 adults of tate Moody }Tolland 1.00
but we felt that possibly any mention -Ladies Guild For 3rd Term ' Borden Cook 5.00
of the beautiful winter we have had OBITUARY BLYTH PUBLIC LIBRARY REPORT Fireside Farm Forum Met at the home Alex Manning & Sons 25.00
would havd the effect of causing "Old The annual Guild meeting elf Blyth of Mr, and Mrs. Don Buchanan. The Rev. 11. E. McLagian . , 2.00
Man Winter" to change his mind. Let's Trinity Church was held at the home JOHN WESLEY SEARLE Owing to the illness of the chairman, broadcast was on Farm Advertising, ,Jack Lee 1,00
keep our fingers crossed, of Mrs. J. B, Watson; on January 28, Rev, 11. Meall , there has not been Does it Pa '!
John Wesley Searlepassed awayY Y Wm, Thuell 9,80
with 15 meinbcrs present, The pres- Y an annual meeting to dales Following We believe farmers and retailers
ident opened the meeting with prayer, after a brief illness at his home in is a report for 1959:could work together more closely for Total Collected $584.80
followed by the Lord's Prayer in uni- Motmis township on Thursday, January Circulationwas 2400, consisting of the advantage of both. The present Total Cost $618,78
AMONG THE CHURCHES son, 28. He was in his 74111 year. - Non -Fiction, 114; Fiction, 1086; Juven-) method is for the retailer~ to take a Still Needed $33.98
The scripture lessen was read by Mr, Searle was married to the late fie, 1200; an increase of 413 over 11950 set profit, regardless of the price given
Sunday, February 7, 1960, Mrs, J. Watson, After all old business Emma Patterson, who predeceased 'There arc 23 adult readers and 68' the producer. He could take a much The Parks Board wishes to thank
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN was attended to the president, MIs, him many years ago. He resided all juvenile readers. The children are' lower profit when prices are low, yet AIr. F. J. Slorach for installing heating
CHURCII Harry. Gibbons, thanked every ono for his life on the family farm at lot 13, particularly interested. We mulct wel•' be making the same percent gain on system, also to the many 'others who
Rev, D, J. Lane, B,A„ Minister. their loyal support in the past year. concession 10, Morris township. come more adults. Some new books; the money he has invested, If he did helped greatly with carpentry work
1.00 p.m.— Church Service, and It was a very successful year with over Surviving are one son, Alan, living will be purchased soon. $64.00 was so, the consumers would purchase and by giving donations,
Church School. $700.00 being realized by the ladies, on the farm; one sister, Mrs. William spent on new hooks in 1959. There is more at the lower price and as a result
Mrs,• K.. Taylor took over for nottln- Fear, Blyih, and three grandchild►en' a balance in bank of $37.35. the retailers profit would be increased,
anions and election of officers for 1960, Helen, Gail and Mary Searle, Mrs. A. Fear, Secretary. Why should the farmer receive 19c
ANGLICAN CHURCH owing to the absence of Rev, Meally, Funeral service was held at the' BIRTHS !
• per dozen for grade "A"eggs and the
OF CANADA who is a ' patient in Clinton hospital. Tasker Memorial Chapel, Blyth, on retailer receive 45c? Why is,, cheese ARMSTRONG —• In Kenora General
We all wish him a speedy recovery, Saturday, January 30th, at 2 p.m. Rev.
FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE TO MEET on the rnat•ket quoted at 35c and lite re' Hospital, on Saturday, January 9,
Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector. Miss J. Woodcock read the minutes of M. Thomas, of Walton United Church,tail price be 70c per Ib. C e _ e . is
4th Sundayafter Epiphanyofficiated, and Mrs. H. Brown ►1a eel , • 1tro ,tof and Mrs, gift
DonaldfArm-
4th n.
the Past annual meeting and the ronin- played The Friendship Circle will meet at not very perishable nor bulkyl., :Now strong, Kenora, the gift of a son.
Blyth: altots and election of officers were as special music on the piano. Interment the manse on February 9, at 8.15 p.m.- retailers wrap packages of cheese at
10,30 axe, --Morning Prayer, follows: Hon. President, Mrs, Roger- took place in Brussels cemetery. A novelty is to be brought to this meet 12 or 14 ounces in place of the Tb. or
Auburn: son and Mrs. Meetly; President, Mrs, Pallbearers were six nephews, Ar- ing for January and February. Pro- half Ib. as formerly, Just one more
11.30 •a:m•—Sunday School. II. Gibbonsr 1st vice, Mss, K. Taylor; chic Yotut, John Young, Henry Young, gram will be in charge of Mrs. Vod- attempt to fool the public. Morris Federation Director
12,00 o'clock—Morning Prayer, 2nd vice, Mrs, Albert Nesbitt; secre• Mervin Richmond, Walter Shortrced. den, Mrs. C. Johnston and Mrs. B. The retailer could tell the producers Morris
Belgravo: lacy, Miss J. Woodcock; treasurer, Miss and William Brown, Walsh, of special preferences the consumers
2.00 p.m:-Sunaay. School. Marjorie Stewart. All were chosen by Flowcrbearers were Jack Taylor and have and the producers should try to The directors of the Morris Federa.
2,30 pith—Evening Prayer, acclamation, The following commit- Ray 'Neter, - supply !heir wants with high quality tion of Agriculture met at the home of
tees were also nominated: rectory,RECEPTION products. We beleive it would pay to Earl Anderson on the evening of Jan.
Mrs. Slorach, Mrs, Walsh, Mrs, Roger- CANCER SOCIETY MEET spend more money on National Food uary 21st. Ross Smith, president, was
.THE UNITED CHURCH son, Mrs. Watson; treats and flowers, A reception will be held in the Blyth Advertising program which would be in the chair. - Minutes of last, meeting
OF CANADA - Miss J. Woodcock; sewing, Mrs, Dex• The Blyth Group of the Canadian Manorial Hall on Friday, February 5 educational and teach consumers the were read and approved on motion of
Blyth Ontario. ter, Mrs, Watson, Mrs, Machan, Mrs, Cancer Society met on Monday, Feb- for Mr, and Mrs. Dwight Campbell., food value of many of ourp►rnlucts• Hopper and Bacon.
McLellan. ruary lst, at the hotne of Mr. and Mrs, ince Jean Johnston} newlyweds, Music Many housewives do not know that the A committee of R. H, Coultes, Ted
Rev. R. Evatt McLagan - Minister The president thanked Mrs, Taylor Harold Vodka, by Jim Piece's Orchestra. Ladies vaftrahie vitamin A Is contained in, ap ['eat and Stanley Hopper, was appoint.
Miss Margaret Jackson - Director and also the members for re-electing An increase in attendance shows that please bring lunch. ples as well as oranges. cd to investigate the possibility of t;
of Music. ler to her third term as president, snore people are becoming interested The consumption of our products park in the Township,
0,55 a.m.—Sunday Church School Plans were made for a noon lunch- in this great field of work.
PATIENTS IN CLINTON HOSPITAL could be increased by promoting ex Moved by R. H. Goalies, seconded by
11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship, eon in the Memorial Hall, Several of Mr, Lloyd 'Tasker was chosen as ercises in arenas, gymnasiums turd ,
"African 11lanhtutt," the members were repotted to be on campaign chairman and Mr. Harold led fear, that the r 1960, executiav ap•
3,110 part —Bible Study Grou •We are pleased to report Rev, Rob- walking out door exercises more pap point the directors for Carried:
P the sick list, and It is hoped that they Vodden as vice-chairman, erg Zlcally Is improving nicely after pop-
ular. All these would increase the alt- Agreed to have a banquet and panel
Acts 19. will soon he up again. Anyone rsquir- The next meeting will he hclrl in 111e uneu going surgery last Saturday, petite, Walking has become a lost art discussion or question and answer pan -
8.00 pan.—Young Peoples' at Church. ing quilts should contact the Guild as Library on Tuesday, March let, at 8 Airs. Elmer Kellar is a 'patient in for many urban and city dwellers. cel for the annual meets
, ttg. Speakers
Film "Into a Larger Life."
there are several avallable, o'clock, when we will have a guest Clinton hospital. \1'e hope for a speedy Mrs. Bob Dalton incited tic, group !'or the panel from the Farmers' Un.
The next meeting will be at 'Mrs. speaker and lunch will be served, recovc►y for next week. ion, Federation of Agriculture, Hog
Alf Meehan's, in February. At. this Everynoe is cordially invited to at Winners of the progressive euchre Producers, Co Op. and the Free Ettkw
CHURCH OF GOD meeting plans will be made. for the tend. following the meeting were: most prise Association, Doug Miles to Chair
Mcconnelt Sheet, Blyth, Pancake Supper on Shrove Tuesday. It was deckled to purchase a metal PATIENT IN HOSPITAL games, Mrs. Oliver Anderson, Ais• the panel.
Special Speaker. • • Agreed to pay each 4-H Club member
,a The president closed with prayer and cabinet to hold the supplies. Mr, George Nesbitt is a patient in Hugh Flynn; lone hands, Mrs. Jinn,
2.00 p.m, --Sunday School a dainty lunch was served by the hos- The hostess served lunch and the Victoria hospital, London, We hope for Howatt, Paul Buchanan; consolation, from Morris Township -$2,00 for having
I. 1400 p.m.—Church Service. !"; less, assisted by Mrs. C. Walsh, meeting adjourned, a speedy recovery. Mrs, Bob Riley, Jim Jamieson, COinpleted cue or more projects in 19591
Could Find No
Bruises On Buster
When a slapstick comedian
heaves a pie in somebody's face,
can it be just any old pie? Em-
phatically no. Take the recipe
which film comic Buster Keaton
swears by: "With a blonde the
target, the filling is a mixture
of blackberries, flour, and water,
garnished with whipped cream.
When a brunette is the one to
be smeared, a lemon -meringue
filling is substituted for the
blackberries, which shows up
better on the screen against a
dark complexion. Two crusts are
cooked, one inside the other, un-
til brittle. The double crust pre-
vents crumbling when your fin-
gers slide across the bottom in
delivering the confectionery."
According to his own count,
it has been 25 years since Buster
Keaton made his "last important
picture," yet the hand that
throws the pies has never lost its
skill. The great deadpan comr
edian, now 63, still derives a
comfortable income from work
in night clubs, summer theatre,
European circuses, occasional
movies, TV guest appearances,
and commercials. He is neither
a millionaire, like Harold Lloyd
or Charlie Chaplin, nor a broken
man such as ,the late Fatty Ar-
buckle became,
In his autobiography, My
Wonderful World of Slapstick,
published this week, Keaton tells
the story of his 60 years in show
business, including his rough -
and tumble stage performances
as featured star, at the age of
5, of The Three Keatons, an act
in which he was billed as The
Human Mop and treated accord-
ingly, The rest of the book dwells
largely on the happy heydays in
Hollywood in the '20s, when
life was a round of hard work
and big parties. In 1932 Keaton
was divorced by his first wife,
Natalie (sister of Norma Tal -
badge), took up heavy drinking,
and was fired by M -G -M. He
was "flat broke" by 1934, and
from 1935 to 1940 made two -reel
films called "cheaters" because
they were shot in three days
each. In 1940 he started work as
a gagman for $100 a week at
M -G -M, where his pay had once
been $3,000 a week, and he then
gradually worked his way back
up the financial ladder through
small movie roles and TV guest
shots, H. devotes less than 25
pages to;,these_•last 29 years of
his life ;'»•
As ThP':'Hufri'an Mop, little
Keaton, • i'sho ':.became •probably
the greatest knockabout comic
of all time, suffered such appar-
• ently merciless maulings from
his father that he was twice re-
quired to strip naked — before
a New York mayor and a New
York governor — to satisfy the
Society for the Prevention of
Cruelty to Children that he was
not covered with bruises. Dur-
ing all his years in the movies,
he suffered only one work -stop-
ping injury — he broke his leg
when the sole of his slap shoe
got caught in a moving stair and
he was tossed 12 feet. On another
occasion while moviemaking he
did break his neck when a
stream of water knocked him off
a train cnto the rails, but the in-
jury wasn't discovered until
long after it had healed.
Ilere is the Great Stone Face
on the most famous element of
his vanishing art, his deadpan:
"One of the first things I notic-
ed I in vaudeville) was that
whenever I smiled or let the
audience suspect how much I
was enjoying myself they didn't
seem to laugh as much as usual.
I guess people just never do ex-
pect any human mop , . . to be
PARALLEL PARKING — A parking jam fills every inch of space in front of this London,
England, store window. The carriages with their occupants wait for mothers to return.
pleased by what is being done to
him .. , (When I was making
movies with Roscoe (Fatty) Ar-
buckle) a few fan letters to Ros-
coe asked why the little man
in his pictures never smiled.
We had been unaware of it. We
looked at the three two-reelers
we'd done together and found
it to be true. Later . , , I tried
smiling at the end of one pic-
ture. The preview audience hated
it and hooted the scene, After
that I never smiled again on
stage, screen, or TV."
—From NEWSWEEK
Attention! All
Canadian Teachers
Trooping into classrooms at
Clayton and Bayless high schools
in suburban St. Louis recently,
bright youngsters enrolled in
freshman physics carried under
their arms the most unusual
textbook in the U.S, Its title:
"Russian Sixth Grade Physics."
The book is a 123 -page, loose-
leaf volume for Soviet children
in what amounts to the Ameri-
can eighth grade,
Translated by Alexander Cal-
andra, associate professor of
physics at nearby Washington
University, the text is part of
a U.S. Office of Education pro-
ject headed by Calandra him-
self. The project's purpose; To
improve science teching at the
freshman level, "American ninth
graders usually study general
science," said Fred Boercker, one
of Clayton High's teachers giv-
ing the course, "This involves
everything from soup to nuts—
mostly nutty," In contrast, the
Russian book treats just a few
topics with ABC continuity, and,
unlike U.S. general science, in-
troduces the use of math in solv-
ing problems. Despite some
propaganda in the introduction
("electric light . , . was created
by ... Russian scientists, P.N.
Aiablochkov and A.N. Lodigan")
the text is effective — and best
available,
"The sad thing is that it hasn't
been clone before," said Calandra
of the translation last week,
"Contrary to general opinion, the
Russian pupils are not over-
loaded on science, They've simp-
ly cut out the frills." The pupils,
themselves, are as enthusiastic
about the Russian text as their
mentors are. "In other science
books there were lots of colored
pictures," said Joe Langson, a
student at Clayton High. "This
Russian book has small, simple
figures, but they sure are to the
point. You understand what
they're getting at."
TEETHING RING — like father, like son, Mark Connolly, 7
months, nibbles on the handle of his dad's throwing hammer.
Pop Harold is world champ at the hammer throw. His wife,
Olga, holding the infant, is former Czech athletic star.
.'�TABLE TALKS
ektra. Arattews.
RAISIN SQUARES
Mix: 1 c, raisins
1 c. hot water
1 c. brown sugar
2 tbsps, lemon juice or
1 tbsp, vinegar
Bring to boil and thicken with
cornstarch mixed with a tittle
water, Cool slightly.
2 c. sifted cake flour
2 tbsps, sugar
2 egg yolks
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 c. shortening
c. sour cream
c. fine dry crumbs
1 tbsp, white sugar
2 egg whites
Beat egg yolks and add sour
cream. SIft flour and 2 tbsps.
sugar and salt in bowl. Cut in
shortening and make a well in
centre and pour in egg and
cream mixture, Mix with fork,
Transfer to floured board and
knead to a ball, Cut in half and
chill. Roll one half in square
shape 8 by 8 inches, Place on
cookie sheet. Sprinkle with dry
crumbs and spread raisin filling
on top, Roll other half of pastry
for top, Brush with unbeaten
egg white and invert over rai-
sins. Brush top with egg whites
and sprinkle with white sugar.
Bake in very hot oven 450 deg-
rees for 15 minutes and reduce
• heat to 350 degrees and continue
baking till brown.
• * *
DATE NUT SQUARES
3 eggs
1 c. soft bread crumbs,
packed tightly
1 c. chopped dates
1/2 c. chopped walnut meats
Heat oven to 350 degrees.
Beat eggs until very thick and
light. Gradually beat in sugar.
Add bread crumbs, chopped
dates and nuts. Spread in shal-
low 9 -inch square or 10 by 7
inch greased pan. Bake for one
hour. Cool. Serve in squares or
break into small pieces, place
in sherbet glasses and top with
whipped cream or pudding
sauce, Makes about 20 squares
or 8 large desserts.
{I * *
OATMEAL COOKIES
1 c. butter and shortening
mixed
1 c. brown sugar
2 e. oatmeal
2 c. sifted flour
1 tsp. soda
',z tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla
3a c. boiling water
Cream butter, shortening and
sugar. Blend in oats and dry in-
gredients. Add vanilla and boil-
ing water. Shape into small balls
and press down with fork. Bake
at 400 degrees for 15 minutes.
.:
* •
SAND TARTS
1 e. plus 1 tbsp. butter
1,4 e. confectioner's sugar
11/2 to 2 c. sifted floor
V8 tsp. salt
1 tbsp. plus 1 tsp, cold water
y2 tsp. vanilla
Walnut halves
Cream butter and sugar. Com-
bine ria c. flour and salt and
blend into creamed mixture.
Add water and vanilla and work
in remaining flour, Chill dough.
Pinch off small amount of dough
and roll into 11 -inch balls. Top
each with walnut. Place on bak-
ing sheet. at 375 degrees for 10
minutes, reduce heat to 325 de-
grees and continue baking for
15 minutes. Cool before frosting
with '/a c. confectioner's sugar.
2 tbsps, hot milk
r/� tsp, vanilla
mixed until smooth and put
around cookie with pastry tube.
Yield; 30 cookies,
* • •
JAM COOKIES
I egg
1 e. brown sugar
!.l c. Nhortening
c. flour
4 tbsps. cold water
1 tsp, soda
2 tsps. baking powder
1 tsp. vanilla
Cream sugar and shortening.
Add egg, water and vanilla. Sift
dry ingredients together and
add. Mix well. Using about a
teaspoon of mixture, roll into
balls. Make a hole in centre and
fill with jam. Bake at 350 de-
grees until brown.
• •
PRALINE COOKIES
2 tbsps. butter
1 c. brown sugar firmly
packed
1 egg
1 c. pecan halves
4 tbsps. flour
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Preheat oven 350 degrees,
Grease cookie sheet and coat
with flour, Melt butter and
stir in sugar. Mix in well
beaten egg, nuts, flour and
vanilla extract thoroughly. Drop
from teaspoon onto cookie sheet
about 5 inches apart to allow for
spreading, Bake 8-10 minutes,
Wait a minute — no longer —
before removing from pan with
spatula,
Flyingest People
In The World
• Alaskans probably fly more
than any other people in the
world. There is one plane for
every 160 people in Alaska,.sev-
' enteen times the average 'of her
sister states. If Alaskans have
any rivals in this respect, they
will be found in other northern
countries where huge areas are
spanned by few railroads or au-
tomobile roads, and where ice
conditions limit the shipping
season to a short summer period,
Along the suburban lake shore
of Anchorage you will see rows
of neatly moored pontoon planes
awaiting their owner pilots. Most.
are small craft which take off or
land on any of Alaska's number-
less lakes. Families living' in
Alaska's largest city use them
to "get away from the conges-
tion of city life." They bring
spare parts, machinery, mail,
freseh food, and relief workmen
to remote mining and oil devel-
liver trappers, fishermen, scien-
tists, tourists, or weekend camp-
ers. They taxi doctors, nurses,
patients in and out of the bush
and permit a 'minister to visit
the farthest borders of his par-
ish. Nowadays much prelimin-
ary prospecting for metals and
oil is done from the air; so is
mapping, in a fraction of the
time formerly required. Almost
a•thousand children go to school
by plane in Alaska, salesmen
visit their customers and some
prosperous Eskimo women at
Point Barrow are said to fly
south regularly to Fairbanks, a
thousand -mile round trip, to have
their hair done.
In tiny, distant villages, the
bush pilot plays an important
role, Usually one man does all
the flying to and from a small
village. He knows the terrain by
heart and has made friends with
the local weather. He will fly in
weather other flyers would not
dare attempt, He is a combination
mailman, ambulance driver, per-
sonal shopper, and Santa Claus.
Sometimes he is the only link
between the village and the out-
side world. Of necessity he is
their confidant; he is their
newsbcarer, and usually is odor
-
cd by the villagers. If he has
any unusual personality traits
they are discussed with relish
and woven into a kind of folk-
lore that follow him for the rest
of his life.—From "Here Is
Alaska" by Evelyn Stefansson.
On the river bank a passer-by
stopped and asked an angler:
"Having any luck?"
"Pretty good," replied the ang•
ler. "I haven't had a bite for
three hours,"
"That doesn't sound very good
to me," said the other, "What
makes you think it's good?"
"You see that man over
there?" pointed out the angler.
"Well, he hasn't had a bite for
six horn's."
ISSUE e — itap
Eskimo Dog Makes
Great Partner
West Base was a bustle of acti-
vity as :nen went to and fro,
their shadows pointing to the
South Pole in the ever -rising
sunlight, Each driver was busy
with his team
Even the dogs seemed to feel
the thrill of this teamwork. You
tell your dog what to do, the way
you want him to turn, and when
you want him to stop. He under-
stands and obeys immediately,
and the rest of the team will fol-
low him.
A good lead dog is priceless;
there are only a few of them,
When you find a dog that will
break trail without the driver
going ahead of him, when he
obeys your commands instantly
as you steer by compass day after
day over hundreds of miles of
snow and glare ice, you have a
good lead dog. If you lose the
sled and he leaves you far be-
hind, then suddenly looks back,
stops and turns the team around
to return to you, you have a
leader who is also a friend. And
if you can depend on his intelli-
gence and judgment to lead you
through the worst crevasse area
in Antarctica without making a
single mistake, you have a part-
ner who is worth his weight in
gold.
St, Lunaire was like that; l
have never found another clog to
equal him. But King was one of
the hest at Little America III.
At last everything was ready,
the men were wishing us good
luck, and the word was given to
the dogs to be on their way. It
did not have to be repeated; the
dogs literally sprang into action,
and though the loads were heavy,
they had no trouble getting into
motion, Each of the two teams
was hauling two sleds with a
total weight per team of 1,400
pounds,
• * •
There would be monotonous
days of traveling over a bitterly
cold and seemlingly endless waste
but the passing hours and end-
less days do not lower the spirit
of the proud Eskimo dog; he
travels gaily along pulling the
seld, and with his pricked -up
ears and beautiful tail high above
his back, he Is something to be-
hold and remember forever. W
were proud of our dogs and
loved every one of them, They
were doing good work, pulling
many loads against a sarong wind,
We deeldec] that seven miles wan
enough for the first march, hav-
ing started so late in the day.
We often fed our dogs theis
two pounds of pemmican each,
How proud they looked as they
watched us coming toward them
with their food. Their tails would
wag and their bold -looking eyes
and faces were eloquent with
pleasure and appreciation, Many
times they did not feel satisfied,
and would look at us, asking for
rnore. I would say to King,
"That is all, old boy. We can't
give you any more, You will
have to get along with it,"
He, would understand the tone
of vbice if not the words, and set
the example by licking up every
crump, after which he \vas ready
to lie down for the night. I
would then take my small shovel
and (lig a hole for each dog, just
big enough for him to curl up in,
Now he was protected from the
wind and could sleep comfort-
ably. In soft snow the clogs would
rather do this themselves, but in
hard snow they alwnys looked ex-
pectantly for me to do it for
then, When I was through, each
one would look up at me as it
to say "Thank you," and then
lie down, curling his tail snug- • •
ly around his nose, — From
"Antarctic Night," by Jock Bur-
sey.
Your Teen-agers
Will Love This
Chocolate -Coated Popcorn
Here's a sweet popcorn mix-
ture that teen-agers can make
some Saturday morning. Pop 2
quarts of popcorn and put in a
bowl big enough to hold twice
the amount; set aside. Combine
1 cup white corn syrup, 1 cup
sugar, !re cup water and 2 table-
spoons butter in a saucepan.
Cook over medium heat, stirring ,.•
constantly, until sugar is dis-
solved. Continue cooking, with-
out stirring to hard -crack stage.
Remove from heat and add 2
squares unsweetened chocolate,
melted. Blend well. Slowly pour • .
over popped corn, stirring until,
uniformly coated. Turn out on
foil, Separate kernels, working
quickly, Let get cold.
SHOWY CATS WE HAVE KNOWN — Beam Ridge Hi-Fi, a cham-
pion Persian cat throws a nasty look at the camera, above, at a
White Plains, cat show. One of her prize ribbons serves as an
Impromptu laurel wreath. She's from Tuckahoe, N.Y. Affection-
ate Tanya, 9 -month-old African lioness, rests on John Kipp, Jr,,
2, at a New York show, below,
Children Love
Bird- Watching
As grownups, we tend to for-
get the wonders around us. We
discovered that our baby, even
before she could walk, loved to
sit by the window and watch
the activity outside, Leaves
swaying or blowing on the
ground were entertaining mo-
tions for her. We decided to
set the stage for a more elabor-
ate show by putting up a bird -
feeding station,
Soon the visiting birds and
their ways began to stretch out
the length of time that the baby
would watch. Now, at four
,years, our child still spends
time at the window, What is
'best of all, her early interest
developed a basic curiosity that
has led to books about birds,
identifying them, and learning
to treat all animals with kind-
ness and tolerance.
It is a fun project that is
educational, too, Children, as
they grow older, can help mix
•special foods for the birds, plan
.special tidbits to attract specific
breeds, keep picture records al
the birds that come to the feed-
er, and do other projects that
fit their age and ability.
No matter where you live, you
can start such a simplified na-
ture plan. Select a window that
is easily accessible to the child
•for your observation post. If
••there is a convenlent tree close
'by, that Is fine! If not, perch
your feeder on a pole, as close
to the house as possible, or use
.a window feeder.
Supply the birds with the
right food and the parade be-
gins. A hanging feeder can hold
any of the commercially prepar-
ed seed for wild birds, while
.suet held in a simple container
will attract insect -eaters such as
:woodpeckers and nuthatches.
Teach your child that all birds
have a place in nature. (You'll
be surprised h o w beautifully
:iridescent a starling can look
.In a shaft of winter sunlight.)
'If some birds seem more ag-
gressive than the others, put a
supply of their favourite food
a little distance from the main
supply. Often this will lure them
to that spot and leave the other
•feeders for the smaller birds
writes Betty T. Owens in The
Christian Science Monitor.
Besides the many commercial
feeders available at low cost,
here are some simple home-
made ones to get you started:
In dried firewood, drill holes
2.bout 2" in diameter, Beneath
each one, fasten a perch made
from a dowel or twig, Fill title
.feeder with a suet mixture for
the clinging birds,
A window shelf will bring the
birds very close to you. It can
'be about 8" by 22". By closing
it at each end and fitting it with
.a glass top, you make it into a
good winter feeder.
• A recipe that's "for the birds"
is as follows: Mix 1 cup of melt-
ed bacon fat with five table -
.spoons of peanut butter until
smooth. Add enough corn meal
to thicken the mixture to a con-
sistency that is easily handled
and formed Into shape. Coat a
pine cone with this mixture or
spoon it into the homemade
feeding log described earlier and
watch your bird friends eat it
up.
Children will soon learn that
there is' a bird etiquette to be
followed when watching at the
window. Slow, quiet moves are
necessary " if the birds are to
come in close. Since this is for-
eign to the nature of most chil-
dren, it is interesting to watch
them develop the self-discipline
required.
It is true that the unusual
birds you attract with your na-
ture program may be greatly
outnumbered by the sparrows or
MIN
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. fDowny cloth
4. Flower
8, Appointed
time
12. Artificial
iangguage
13. Building
angle
' 14. Ages
16, Put into
large
bundles
17. SStruckdle.
30, Danger
21 Air (comb,
form)
23, The Christian
era •
24. Symbol for
samarium
20, Anchor tackle
29. Commemora-
tive structures
83. Is indebted
86. Small tumor
80, Cleansing
agent
87, Sniallenkeys
40. Yetchiike
plant
41. Yes
42. European fish
43. United
45. Thicknesses
48. Heated
chambers
53. Halo
64. Wireless
56. Jap. eaten=
0. Custom
58. Sick
18.
Emblem of
morning
60, Island In the
Aegean Sea
61. Pipe fitting
DOWN
1. Pen pointe
2. First man
3, gHorseback
4. Buy back
6.011 (suffix)
8. Rebuff
7. Actual being
PIGGIES WILL GO TO MARKET - Young pigs like these
now stand a better chance of living and getting to
market since a serious disease of swine - vesicular ex-
anthema - has been eradicated. It was another ac -
GIANT STEP - "Watch out for
that first step" might be good
advice for anyone frying to
leave through the back door of
this dwelling in San Mateo,
Calif. The plans called for a
back stairway. It wasn't built.
the species that happens to be
common to your part of the
country. But, to a child, a spar-
row holds wonder, too, and the
inquiring parent mightbe sur-
prlsed to find that there are 30
different varieties ofsparrows-
each with its 'own markings and
personality. It', challenges even
an adult to tell them apart!
One final and important point
stressed by the Audubon Socie-
ty: Once you start feeding birds
in winter, do not stop, They
depend on you and may have
stayed nearby on your account
instead of migrating to more fa-
vourable places. For their trust
in you and the children, It Is
therefore essential not to fail
them,
8, lattices tun 01 agent spelling
O. Sood covering o: Noah
10. Youngster 34. Expression of
11. Adjective pleasure
au tlx 31. Offensive
18. Jap, outcast 33, Breathes
18. English heavily In
street car sleep
22. Propels a boat 44. Girls name
24. Chief actor 45. Bow
25. Serpents 40. Lohengrin's
26. State of bride
profound 47. Served joint
insensibility 49 Redact
27. Oft 60. Egyptian
28. Thrice river
(prefix) 61 Only •
80. Born 62, Help
31. Te 53. Indian
32. New Testa. i Friar!
'4 5 6 7 : : 9 10 11
`ti; 14
Answer elsewhere on this page
J
1
complishment for science. It took seven years of co-
operative state -federal effort to conquer the disease.
This development means that millions of dollars will
be saved by the livestock and meat industries.
TIIEPARM PROT
J \auzsvell,
Will all of us soon be walking
around in air-conditioned suits
designed to make our individual
climate whatever we prefer?
Something that may be the fore-
runner of this has already ap-
peared - and we aren't talking
about space suits, either, This is
a down-to-earth contraption.
• • *
N e w air-conditioned helmets
that reportedly may make far-
mers look like the men from
Mars were described at the re-
cent meeting of the American
Society of Agricultural Engin-
eers in Chicago.
Designed for protection of
tractor drivers in hot, dusty
fields, these helmets "utilize me-
chanical refrigeration such as
that used in automobile air con-
ditioners" and include a centri-
fugal filter for removal of dust
particles. Each helmet is fiber-
glass, with a six-foot flexible
vinyl hose and, according to the
report, can be wired into any
12 -volt or converted 6 -volt igni-
tion system.
* * *
Neils P. Jense, physicist and
Robert C. Mueller, manager of
marketing with the Jamieson
Laboratories of Santa Monica,
Calif., believe the helmet will
find ready acceptance among
farmers in dusty areas, but say
frankly that they don't know.
what the general reaction will
be.
"Some people suffer from
claustrophobia when putting on
the helmet, others are delighted
with it," the report. "We realize,
though, that something as new
as this takes hold only by de-
grees, and we believe that in
1 time air - conditioned helmets
will be as acceptable as home
air conditioners are now."
* • *
Another innovation described
at the same meeting by Dr. Wil-
liam R. Bertelsen of Neponset,
Ill., was called a "jet-propelled
magic carpet" which could be of
great use to farmers in moving
grain, fertilizer, water, cattle,
men or machinery over unpre-
pared ground.
This Aeromobile, a peripheral
jet vehicle, hovers about six
inches off the ground at speeds
up to 40 miles an hour and is
said to be capable of lifting
enormous weight for a given
horsepower, writes Helen Hen-
' ley in t h e Christian Science
, Monitor.
* • •
"It equals the efficiency of a
fixed wing aircraft which carries
its load only at fast forward
speed while the ground effect
machine will hover and move
at fast or slow speeds," said Dr.
Bertelsen. "It exceeds the heli-
copter in sheer weight lifting in
hover or forward speed,"
"Accessibility of field and
crops is another advantage," he
said, "One could pass over grow-
ing crops as harmlessly as the
wind, This might allow the far-
mer to dust, spray, or tend his
crops while hovering safely
above them. For example, the
rice grower could travel over
his flooded fields to repair
dykes.
* * *
Portable plastic ditches for Ir.
rigation under difficult condi-
tions were another development
discussed at the engineers' meet-
ing by L. J. Lamberg, research
chemist with International Har-
vester Co.
Made from large - diameter,
easily portable irrigation tubing,
these portable ditches "provide a
method of irrigation where pro-
per land grading for standard
open irrigation is impossible or
impractical," said Mr. Lamberg.
"They, in turn, ars prompting
research into the use al low-cost
collapsible plastic tubing for
high-pressure sprinkler irriga-
tion. Systems now under devel-
opment will permit low-cost irri-
gation of orchard and other fall
crops such as corn, tobacco, etc.,
while completely eliminating the
arduous pipe handling associated
with conventional methods."
* * *
All this gives only a glimpse of
the many was in which the Jet
Age is transforming the hitherto
earthbound world of farming.
• • *
Canadian bred cattle may soon
be roaming the ranges of Ru-
mania.
Two delegates from the Ru-
, manian Legation in Washington,
inspected several herds recently
and afterwards told representa-
tives of the Livestock Division,
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture, that they would recom-
mend immediate purchase of
Canadian cattle.
• * •
They were interested in se-
curing grade Hereford. breeding
stock - about 800 or so heifers
ranging in age from nine months
to three years.
The Rumanians discussed the
matter with Canadian authori-
ties while inspecting cattle at
the Royal Winter Fair in Tor-
onto, At. the same time they
looked over a purebred herd at
the Stouffville, Ont., farm of
George Rodanz and saw some
feeder calves that had just ar-
rived from western Canada,
• • *
A follow-up visit to the west
w a s arranged through W. F.
Hart, Calgary fieldman for the
federal Livestock Division. The
Itinerary included a purebred
sale, visits to stockyards, a feed-
lot, ranches, and the Lethbridge
Research Station.
Rumanian weather conditions
are not unlike those in western
Canada, and the Rumanians are
interested in a hardy type of
beef cattle able to survive a
winter outdoors.
The shark is generally believ-
ed to be the most dangerous fish,
but the barracuda, a large, sav-
age pike -like fish of the tropical
seas, is more likely to attack
man than the shark. It is almost
as large as a twelve -year-old
boy, and its mouth is such that
any bite Is likely to result In
permanent injury to the unfor-
tunate victim.
Only Coughs Spoil
Silent Opera
Never has there been a more
startling rendition of Verdi's
celebrated "Anvil Chorus." In
unison six well -muscled black-
smiths pounded six foam -padded
anvils with rubber mallets. Be-
hind then a student chorus from
the University of Detroit silent-
ly mouthed the words. Except
for a few coughs, the only aud-
ible sound was the squeaking of
the sneakers worn by the 65
members of the chorus.
The occasion for this exercise
in musical futility was the De-
troit university's "Silent Record
Concert," staged recently in a
downtown theatre. It attracted
1,100 Detroiters who paid up to
$3 each to see a succession of
silent routines. Among them: A
soundless parade as the chorus
enacted "When the Saints Go
Marching In," a recording of
silence made In Grant's Tomb,
and several loud and clear dis-
sertations on silence, including
one by m,c, Henry Morgan who
advised the audience to get rich
because "silence is the one com-
modity not purchasable by the
poor."
An elderly woman, taking her
first aeroplane trip, was given
some gum by the hostess. When
she asked what It was for, the
hostess informed her it was to
prevent unpleasant pressure in
her ears during take-offi and
landings.
After they had taken off and
landed at two places, ths wo-
man called the stewardess.
"Help me get thls stuff out of
my ears," she said, "It hasn't
done a bit of good, anyway."
POLE STAMP - One of a series
of four Australian stamps on
the Antarctic, this one honors
the first men to reach the
South Magnetic Pole. Depicted
are, from left, Sir Edgeworth
David, Sir Douglas Mawson
and A. F. McKay, who reach-
ed the pole ds members of
the 1908.09 Shackleton expe-
dition.
NMY SCIIOO1
LESSON
Ily Iti•i It 15 ttiart'n 11.A.. 11.0.
Persistent Evangelism
Act. 18: 1-11; 1 Corinthians 2:1-5.
Memory Selection: Be ye stead-
fast, unrnoveable, always abound-
ing In the work of the Lord,
forasmuch as ye know that your
labour is not in vain in the Lord.
1 Corinthians 15:58,
Many people feel that they do
their bit if they appear in church
Sunday morning and drop in an
envelope representing 2 cents on
each dollar of their income. But
the early Christians were differ-
ent. They had a saving message
for the world and they had to
tell it. They were thrilled with
Jesus Christ who had changed
their lives and they wanted
otters to share in the blessings
too, They were evangelistic.
Some were humble trades peo-
ple as Aquila and Priscilla who
worked at tent making. But
their main interest was in
spreading the Gospel.
When Paul arrived in Corinth,
he moved in with Aquila and
Priscilla and worked with them
in the trade in order to he,p
support himself. Anti-Semitkm
was strong in that day, too. Like
other Jews, Aquila and Priscilla,
had been compelled to leave
Rome by order of the Emperor.
For a year and a half Paul wit-
nessed in Corinth; first in the
synagogue and then in a private
home, A church was established.
Later, in reminiscing of his
early ministry in Corinth, Paul
w rot e, "I determined not to
know anything among you, save
Jesus Christ and Him crucified."
This was Paul's message. He was
a well-educated man and could
converse freely on many topics.
But for him, Christ was all and
in all, Jesus Christ, the Son of
God, who died for our sins
and rose again, a conqueror over
sin and death and hell, Is the
answer to man's need in every
age.
Paul's success in winning con-
verts in every city he entered
was due in part, to his clear
and vivid presentation of Jesus
Christ as the Saviour of the
world. To Paul, sin was the
world's worst malady. God's
judgment was against it. Only
through repentance and faith in
Jesus Christ could man be de-
livered from sin and its ever-
lasting penalty. Paul was deadly
in earnest about it. Therefore he
suffered and laboured that he
might reach as many as possiblt
with the saving message of Out
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
Let us share in hls passion today
and this will be a better world.
Since ancient times, ths north.
, west Indians have lured the
black -tailed deer within shoot-
s n g distance by imitating the
soft, wheezy call of the fawn
in distress - a sound likely to
bring not only members of the
family to the scene In a hurry
but quite possibly wolves and
bears also.
ISSUE 8 - 1960
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
991'''9OWVS M30
111 39ysn o1I
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9N3AO 93 11
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9813 51350W1VW
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1 18 3d 3J.0
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9
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9
1 21 19
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V213 9113 00 1
IVO 35021 dYN
DIKE GIVES WAY - Residents of Tuindorp, Holland, carry their salvaged belongings down
a flooded street in the town. A dike gave out along a branch of the North Sea Canal. '
PAGE 4 ' ME ELVIS STANDARD
• Aln�+r�tl■r.Wr�rlrr
. ■I_ iii.
LONDESBORO
The W. I. will hold a social evening
for the family this Friday evening,
February 5th, in the hall. The mem-
hers are requested to bring lunch.
There will be crokinole for the child-
ren.
'l'he WAS. February meeting will
be held at the home of Mrs, Lily Web-
ster, Thursday of next week, February
11th. Group 2 will be in charge of the
program.
Mrs. Frank Tamblyn and Jack, mo-
tored to Leamington on Saturday morn -
Airs. 'Tamblyn will visit with their
daughter, Margaret, for a week or two.
Mr, and Mrs. Dave Mair and Charles,
of Detroit, were week -end visitors with
I\fr. and Mrs, Robert Fairservice. Miss
.\nn Fairservice returned with them
and will go to Ann Arbor on Thursday
for final treatment on her throat.
Mrs. Stan Crawford and baby son,
of Toronto, spent the past week with
her parents, Mir, and Mrs. Nelson Lear,
rc urning to Toronto on Sunday,
Mr. and Dins. Harold Adams, of Clin-
tcn, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ed.
\'oun;blut, on Sunday.
A Valentine' Social Evening for the
three Londesboro Charges will be held
in the Community Hall on the evening
of February l2th. Ml are welcome.
Mrs. Ernest Adams and Miss Olvet-
ta Bri pant, of Clinton, spent Tuesday
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Small.
A number of the ladies of the WI at-
tended the meeting of the WI at Clin-
ton last Friday where a fine collection
of pottery was displayed. A social cup
of tea followed, during which Miss Bet-
ty Gibhings favored with selections on
her accordian.
4N •+ ♦x+44 -44 .-4 r+•*444+444 4444 -•44 -4 -•-•-•-
COAL COAL COAL
--WE HAVE ON HAND
FOR QUICK DELIVERY ---
LUMP AIIBERTA (deep seam) COAL
CHESNUT & STOVE ANTHRACITE (hard coal)
RICE & BUCKWHEAT Anthricite Stoker Coal
PATSY HOME STOKER COAL (Bituminus)
THIS IS OUR TENTH ANNIVERSARY IN THE
COAL BUSINESS IN BLYTH,
To Our Regular Customers -- Thank You.
To Our New. Customers -- We Welcome You.
IF YOU HAVE A FUEL PROBLEM
GIVE US A CALL --- WE'LL TRY TO BE OF
SERVICE,
A. Manning & Sons
Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario
EXCELLENT FOOD AND MEALS
WE SPECIALIZE IN FISH & CHIPS
At All Hours.
4
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
44444N
Walton News
Duffs Church Annual Meeting
The Annual Congregational meeting of
Duffs United Church was held en Tues-
day evening with) a good attendance of
ntenibers. The meeting was opened
with hymn 199 "We Love the Place 0
God" with Mrs. Harvey Brown at the
piano, The hymn of Love written by
J, B. Phillips was read by Rev. W, M,
Thomas, followed by Prayer,
Harvey Craig was appointed secretary
for the evening and she read the min.
utes of the last annual meeting. Rev.
Thomas expressed appreciation from
the session to all leaders in the church
during the year and of the very ting
spirit prevailing. He spoke of the
church as being a centre of fellowship
and love, and quoted, That is what It
is and would like to keep it that way.
There are 274 residents, and 34 non
residents in the charge. Thirteen jd.h-
ed by Faith, Ten removals, five burials,
seven baptisms and three weddings, A
prayer For the departed members was
given by the mipister. The Insurance
Policy of the church was referred to
the trustees to be looked into, As each
report was adopted, a number was
given: Brenda and 'Mary Bewley a
duet, accompanied by Carol Wilbee, for
the Mission Band; Baby Band, Caro-
lyn, Dianne and Clayton Fraser a trio,
accompanied by Mrs, Ii. Travis; Y.P.
U., Barbara and Marion 'Turnbull a
duet, accompanied by Mrs, Wilbur
Turnbull; the Women's Association was
complimented on their splendid work
for the year; Sunday school, Linda Bry-
ans and Mary Helen Buchanan a duet,
with Pauline T'hamer accompanying;
CGIT, Ruth Ritchie gave the year's ac-
count of the activities oarried on, Mary
Lou Kirkby and Ann Achilles a duet,
with Mrs, H .Travis at the piano; Choir
Mrs. Ii, Travis and Mr, Don McDonald
a duet, accompanied by Mrs. II.
Brown. Two new stewards were ap-
pointed, namely, Mr. Don McDonald
and Mr. James Smith, with Mr. W. J.
Leeming and H. Craig being re-elected.
Campbell Wey was appointed represent-
ative for the Presbytery Men's Club.
Rev. Thomas moved a 'vole of thanks
to all the departments of Church, Sun-
day School, Choir, CGIT, Baby I3and,
YPU, Caretaker and all those who
helped make the. year such a success.
Mr. John Leeming also gave ,a vote
of thanks to Rev. Thomas and Mrs.
Thomas for their fine services render-
ed, Hymn 376, "Blest Be the Tie
that Binds," was sung and Rev.,Thom.-
as closed the meeting with prayer.
Lunch was served and a social time
spent. .
!M'rs. George Flewitt, of Tuckersmith,
was a guest at the 'home of Mr. and
Dirs. Walter IIroadfoot, fora few days
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Lamont and,child-
ren, of London, were week end visit-
ors with the latter's parentis, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Porter.
Herb Kirkby, of Toronto Art College,
spent the week end with his father,
Frank Kirkby and family.
4 " Ron Ennis of Wesl c 'n University,
visited with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Ennis, over Nile week end.
Wayne McMichael and boy friend
were week en:I visitors with the form-
er's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Robert Mc•
Michael.
Mr. Geo, 'Taylor left last week for
Mexico where he will spend a month
or two.
Miss Olene Dundas, of Toronto, spent
the week end with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Torrance Dundas,
Jerry Dressel, of Hamilton, visited
at his home over the week end.
Mr. and Mrs. Graham Sholdice left
last week end for California where they
will visit with the latter's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Sinclair.
A large number from here attended
the "At Home" at the District High
School on Friday evening.
Mr. Wm, Smith and Miss Smith, of
Saskatchewan, have spent the last
month visiting with tine former's sister
and brother-in-law, Mr, and Mrs, Ed
Bryans.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jenkins and sou,
of Norwich, spent the week end with
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin. •
Mr. and Mrs. Alan McCall and Bev-
erly spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs.
Harry Snell, of Londesboro.
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Walters, Jean
and Larry, spent Sunday with the lat-
ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George -
Raper, London.
•-•-44.44-144-444-• 44444444444444 44+4-4-4-4444444444-4-444444-44
Wingharn Memorial Shop'
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
' Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
= Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO`I'ON.
f##$-• • • .4 • • • • •-• 4•44444444444444444 444444444444-H 44-4-4-4
Sale Definitely
Ends
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6th.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR
ANNUAL SALE
Every Item in the Store is On Sale,
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS OF 15 to 70 PERCENT
ON ALL MERCHANDISE IN THE STORE.
No Alterations, No Refunds, No Layaways
and No Charges --- All Sales Final,
Black Diamond Stamps and Sales Slips will not be
issued during this Sale.
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT.
Women's Instittte
Mrs. Frank Walters presided for the
January meeting of the Walton We.
men's Institute held in the Community
Hall last Thursday evenlrg. Mrs, E.
McCreath reported on the December
meeting and called the Roll which was
answered with "A penny for each inch
of your shoe." Thank you notes were
read and business letters dealt with
"Meat on the Menu" will be the next
project for the 4-11 Club Girls and Mrs.
Jim McDonald and Mrs. Nelson Reid
as leaders. The 'Tweedsmeur History
Book which must be completed by No-
vember will be compiled by Mrs. W.
E. Turnbull, Mr's, Ron Bennett, Mrs.
Ed. Miller, Mrs, Gordon McGavin,
Mrs. W. H: Humphries and Mrs.. Ed.
Dougan, The following committee was
appointed to make -arrangements for
a Euchre to be held. February 12. -Mrs.
Glen Corlett, Mrs. Jim McDonald, Mrs.
Ron Bennett, Mrs. A. Coutts, Mrs. 11.
Smalldon, A Ladies Card Party was
planned for •Mareh with Mrs. Forrest
McKay as convener and Mrs, Joe Ry-
an, Mrs. Harvey Craig, Mrs, James
Nolan and Mrs. Alvin McDonald ass'Mt'
ing. The Treasurer's report by Mrs.
T. Dundas showed a balance on ha;id
''of $33,55, Mrs, Lawrence Ryan and
Mars. Ed, Miller co -conveners for
llealth and Home Economics were In
charge of the second portion of the
meeting with Mrs, Ryan presiding.
Mrs. Miller gave the Motto, "A Merry
Heart kills more germs than Medicine"
and Mrs. Ryan read a story entitled
"Thins My Grandmother Told Me"
by Laura A. Brown. Leaders of
"Clothes Closets Up to Date" Mrs. Nel-
son Reid and Mrs. Jim McDonald, des-
cribed the work done by the 4-11 Club
Girls who had their exhibits on display
which were shown at Brussels on Ach-
ievement Day. The commentary was
given by Geraldine Dennis. A very
Interestinlg report was given by Mrs, F.
Walters on the Area Convention at
Guelph. hostesses for the evening were
Mrs. James Nolan, Mrs, Glen Corlett,
Mrs, F. Walters, Mrs. George McAr-
thur, Mrs. II. Craig.
BORN—To Corporal and Dors. Fred
Walters, the gift of a daughter, Janu-
ary 20111, 1960, in Calgary, Alberta,
HURON COUNTY FORUM ANNUAL
HELD IN BLYTH
(By J. Carl Hemingway
On January 14th, Huron County Farni
Forum held their Annual meeting in the
Blyth Memorial Hall, with about forty
members attending,
Bob McMillan, Chairman, presided,
and stated that the decrease in Farm
Forums seemed to be due to the fact
that many projects such as the organ-
ization of Co -Ops, and the building of
Community Centres has been complet-
ed. Farm Forums however, are still
even more important now to formulate
ideas for the betterment of farm people.
Warren Zurbrigg, County Federation
President, stated itu his remarks that
Farm Forum was born of necessity in
thin depression but fails to be appreci-
ated by young farmers who do not re-
member those days. It could happen
again, This is an opportune time for
these same young men to attend their
Farm Forums and lay the plans that
will prevent the depression of the
"thirties" returning in the "Sixties."
Mr. Ken Stewart, President of Mc-
Killop township Federation, told us of
the Workshop that will be held Feb-
ruary 8, 9 and 10. On the 8th, DefIci-
ency Payments will be the topic in the
Brodhagen Community Centre. On the
9th, the topic 'will be Co -Ops and Credit
Unions in tire ;Library, Seaforth. On
the 10th, Producer Marketing will be
discussed et Brodhagam. These are af-
ternoon meetings from 2,00 to 4.00.
On the evening of the 10th a social
evening will be held in the Brodhagan
Community Centre with Mr. Peal, Man-
aged' of Seaforth Shoes, showing his pic-
tures of his trip to Russia,
Following the meeting of the Farm
Forum the directors met and elected
Arlin _.Soldan, Zurich, chairman anal
*lance William, Exeter, Vice -Chair-
man.
On January 20th. delegates of the,
Ontario Hog Producers met in Toronto.
The object of the meeting was to find
out the opinion of these delegates, and
the producers that they represent, on
the present method of sale of hogs.
Of the almost 400 attending only six
or seven were opposedto the present
method. Yet it seems that a vote must
be held. Mr, Goodfellow stated last
fail that the method of sale must be
modified to have the confidence of
the producers we can only conclude
that it must be changed to get tire con-
fidence of tihe processors. Also no de-
finite new method has been suggested
therefore we can only conclude that as
fat' as the processor is concerned any
change would be an improvement, 'l'he
objective of all this Marketing Legisla-
tion was to improve the 'bargaining po-
sition of the producer, so lel us he sure
that we retain what we have until such
time as a definite new method is sug-
gested that will further improve the
bargaining position of producers.
Wednesday, 1Pell 0, 19
Order Your Counter Cheque
Books (printed or blank)
The Standard Office,
t,NINI NdI
COMFORTABLE SHOES
by "MURRAY SELBY"
Pliable Calf Uppers with Goodyear Welt Leather
Soles, Rubber Heels, Steel Arch.
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Home of Good Quality Merchandise"
t
1
•N•M • • ••
•
WM4~~~~~~~~~~••••••,•~A~e~••••#######7
TENDER FOR REPAIRS TO
REGISTRY OFFICE FLOOR
GODERICH, ONTARIO.
Sealedtenders, clearly marked as to contents will
be received by the undersigned until 12:00 noon
Thursday, February 18, 1960, for repairs to the
Registry Office floor,
Details and specifications may be received from
the undersigned, at the County Court House.
Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
JOHN G. BERRY, Clerk -Treasurer,
County of Huron
Court House
'Goderich, Ontario.
NNVI-i### - .ba AI'/ N
HUCKLEBERRY
POINT
At the beginning of this century some farm
land on Hamilton Bay was called Huckleberry
Point. This land became the site of part of ,The
Steel Company of Canada, Limited.
Instead of farm land supporting a few famil-
ies there is now at Huckleberry Point Canada's
largest steel -making plant employing 11,000 of
the Company's 16,000 employees. This - year
Stelco marks its 50th year of supplying steel for
Canadians.
What happened at Huckleberry Point has
happened in hundreds of towns and cities across
the country. Canadian manufacturing now em-
ploys nearly 1,400,000 persons. These turn out
the materials for a growing economy while their
families provide markets for the products of
Canadian farms, forests and mines,
T H I
STEEL COMPANY OF CANADA
LIMITED
MONTREAL GANANOQUE HAMILTON BRANTFORD TORONTO '
Wednesday, 'Feb. 6,1961)
OB1'I'11;1I0Y
-'AIRS, ,1 I; i; 1%11E1..11 It
The people of I1cl.trrn'e an I :.urruund-
1rg, district were i-,uht !lel to ht a of
the death of \Ir>;. Jes:. 11'11 -e'er in SI.
Joeeph's hospital, !.ouch e, on ;:untl.ty.
Iter passing came alter ;t short
, , Sltie was horn in :\(orris tewnshiu 6/.
years ,ago, the form• r 1lazt 1 B. Camp-
bell, IMJo. daughter ul the lel,. Dun'din
Campbell and 111ar;aret Cochrane, �lte
n. r rigid .\Jr. 11'hcc 1. r in \1'jnglenn In
1920, and Ih:,y farmed en the 4:11 con-
re.::,ion 1.f \lerris lotvnsiiii, until their
I:Mellon:I, In 1 eteravc in 1918.
11•s. It heeler was very rtctivc in
rhurclt \volt, IllelnIAT of the
Ian r,tv,t 1'nitcrl Church. She was a
Life 11clnther Of the 11'.11.;, rInd also an
actio,: moldier of the •11' iinen's itsti•
lute.
Surviving besides her bereave:I hos-
t
BACK AGAIN
Rev. Henry
Ge Adams
EX -MONK
Who Spent 12 Peru's In .\
\ioitastery
(fernier I'r. 1tilarlan of
Basilian Ordrr1
Director of the Evangelical
'Mission of Converted Monks
and Priests'
Slnufiville, Ontario.
Editor, ('novated Priests'
Evangel.
Feb. 9 to 94
8 P.11.
— 1t►etti,lt•1, u, an earths, Come, near, Learn
ROlnlall Catholic �;:ndents, Priests, Nems arc especially invited.
In Bethel Pentecostal Tabernacle
ELGi,N :1V1:1'1'1'' A'1' 11'A'i'EI11.00 S'I'liEE'T, GODEIiICll
Interview Lx-1:ri'sl Adana each afternoon in the Pastor's Study
—1 TOPICS —
Tuesday, i'eIiivary 9—"Personal Protestantism."
1Vednesday, February 10—"Practical Personal I'i otestantism."
Thursday, h'ehruary 11 --"Putting Personal Protestantism Into
Practice." (part 1)
hriday, February 12—"Putting Personal Protestantism Into Practice."
(part 2)
Saturday, February 13—"'fhc Evangelical llissicnt of Converted Monks
and Priests pres'l s: "Iarlachronut Pic.
tures entitled, "Our Mission '1'o Homan
('alhnlics."
Sunday, February 11-11 a.ut.•—"1'ul1iug Personal Protestantism into
Practice." (part 3)
7.30 p.m.—"The :Message, the Monastery and
the Monk,"
Rev. 11, C. Cracknell, phone JA 4.8506
• I4 -4 -t -•-14-x-*• •-•-••rr• 4-•-•• •-• •••••••••--• .•-•-• -•-•-• • •-• • • H•• -•-•-•-•••••J-••,♦
Trig MATH STANDARD
giffildiodbmivardeasismagastaul
::and are, one brother, Sandy Camp•
bell of Illorris, 111111 two s1er. ,- Airs.
Annie Orvis of \'in;hann and 'Airs.
11ai ;ttel 1V:111ncc 1.f Seafcrth.
The funeral tva:; held an Wv;lpesday
al 2 p.ut. front Ihe S. J.:Val;er'funernl
hone, \Vingliant, and interment took
Place in i;r':1tit1t it cemetery, Iielgrave,
Bev. T. G. !hisser effirialctl at the
service. 'lite pallbearers ivcires Arthur
and Robert \Vallate, Kenneth: 11'Iteeler,
1to:s Andersr,ii, Boss Iliggins' and Jack
Orvis,
ROBERT EI(NEST WALDEN
Robert Ert:cst Walden, 90; of 63
Greene Avenue, Earl 1{ildotiiin, ' died
Thursday, January 21st in 1Vinnipeg
General Hospital.
He was horn in England, October 17,
I869, son of John and Susannah Walden,
and came to Canada in 1874, spent his
carIy years in Ontario, and learned his
trade as blacksmith in Blyth with It.
Douglas, arrived in lianitoba in 11)9I,
settled at Bagot where he was the
"Village Blacksmith" for 54 years. lie
married in 11197. Mr. Walden was nl-
way., active in Church and community
affairs, until retiring in 1945.
(le tante to East Kildotan fifteen
yzars ago, residing with his daughter
and son-in-law, 1Ir. and firs, M. Erl-
cnd:•on.
He was past master of 'Temple Ma-
sen1c bodge No. 49, of MacGregor,
Al (inhabit.
Itis wife, Ina Gourley, predeceased
him in 1910. Surviving are a (laughter,
Cora Erlendson, one son, Loftin 1, G.,
of Ottawa, four grandchildren and one
great grandchild, and also one sister,
('fhircat Mrs. .1. Caldwell, and three
brothers, William, Jesse and Percy,
all of Blyth, Ontario.
The funeral service was held in
I3ardals Funeral home, Winnipeg, Man-
itoba, al. 10 a.m. Saturday, with Itev.
C. 11, Forsyth officiating,
A graveside service followed at 2 p.
nt. at Heaver cemetery near Bagot,
!Manitoba, will Rev, J. L, Fargy in
charge, and members of the MacGreg-
or
acGre;or Masonic Bodge held a brief service.
Pallbearers were sons of Mr. Wal -
dens early associates and close friends
of the Ilagot district: 11lessrs. Albert.
Pogue, Ephriann Pogue, Jack Adapts,
John Arnold, Stalls Crealock and 'Ted
Iladelyffe.
WHITE CANE IVEEK JAN. 7 • 13
"!';very Canadian has three ways b
prey., ill I,lin 11:1.! s " declared Mr. J.
11. (CinLe;ul, ( hail pian of the Huron
County Advi: ory Hoard, Canadian Na-
tional Institlde for the Blind, as he
r!i:,eussed White ('ane \Veek, ,January
7 to 11111. S1'onsrred by the Canadian
Courtci I of Ilio Blind and The Canadian
National Int;lute for the Blind, the: John Morrissey, Government repro.
Week, noi as;tc iaterl with fund raising,'senlative, and by appointment of
reminds 1':uiaclians of the use of the I County Council, !Messrs. J. Kerr, \Ving-
lfhifd ('r(ne and the role eadt citizen • hart; .1, Willits, 'llrrnberry; and U.
plays in the e•ire of the eyes. Bct:c'rntan, McKillop. Secretary-tteas-
"licfp prevent blindness," he said, urer is .1. G. Berry, Geduld).
"help cure it and 111.11) improve the Medical Officer Reports To Board
lives of Iii r'1. already blind," I "With the advent of the new year, we
\'ou can help prevent, blindness by , have been pleased to co-operate in a
observing these ,u;ge tions; Inew and challenging programme. 'f his
Always wear 11.01001\v goggles when'l is the provision of an initial home um's-
working tcah abrasives or chemicals, ing visit to the cancer patient -- on re -
Get plenty rt rx: rcise end steep, quest of the family physician, the fan-
Gond health nutans "i',d sight, ily or the Cance Foundation, Actually
i h the cancer patient is just one of many
'fake your children to the doctor types of chronic illnesses to which
when they develop headaches and list- health unit services might be expanded
Icssness. They may have poor vision, with further study and backing,
Other siervices, however, should not
(lore than 2,000 people lose their be neglected. For example, experience
BAILIE PARROTT ELECTED
CHAIRMAN
HURON COUNTY IIEALTiH UNiT
The inaugural meeting of the Huron
County Health Unit was held in Gode•
rich on 'Tuesday, February 2nd.
Mr, Bailie Parrott, reeve of Morris
Township, was elected chairman for
1960, Other members include, Mr.
right every year and doctors agree
that. over 50 omen, of this blindness
is completely unnecessary.
"Realize, that I•liednees is your Wei -
nes:;," Ile tirel-(1, "and take steps to
combat eye disease in its early stages,
Etteaiira :e others with poor vision to
have their eyes t xnmined. Sometimes
Ixople are, afraid If the doctor and
Mid Put 11'7 a visit lo (he eye spocial-
isl until it is loo late. •Don't let:in-
difference cause, blirrhress. •
"A wealth of lale''t often retrains un-
developed through blindness," Mr. Kin-
kead continued. "A1any artistic people
have their talent~ imprisoned because
they cannot see or must substitute • a
second -rale. career for a lucratide one."
During White Cane Week study the.
frustration.; that' arise from these
causes and help make life easier for
your blind neighbours, Do not avoid
the use of Ihe wor:I "See" in your. present prohlenrc in that their nursing
conversations, 'Talk about the news. staff is part-time and used irregularly,
of the day and expect the blind person:The aspect of safety from fire is handl-
to answer questions. Itetnember, that ed by the local fire departments, some
Blindness is Y011li Business, land do` of whom have already reviewed a plan
what you can to lighten its' burden all • of action in the event of conflagration'
year round. :or similar etnergency,
Influenza is present in the county out
,,not yet in the proportion reported from
some of the border cities. A reinva-
s:ons of the Asian strain which swept
through these parts several years ago
is very probable, since it has already
been indentified below us. In the fall
t of 1957, this mild type of influenza
closed many schools and industries for
short periods. Fatalities were vchy
few. Provided that no spontaneous
'variation occurs in Ihe character of
this virus, its effect should be less ap-
parent in our conununities in 1960."
is now stowing that problems like
polio' are still with us despite vaccina-
tion. The protection of the preschool
;i•'(1 school child may even increase
the hazard to unprotected adults since
it is possible for the children so immu-
nized to still act as carriers, Nor has
the incidence of TB declined in meas.
ure with its mortality. The revival of
interest in tuberculin testing, however,
offers hope of further control of this
disease. At the present time this lest
is offered annually by the Unit to ;sec-
ondary school students. Opportunity
for all citizens to be tested will be
afforded by the mass survey of the De-
partment and Tuberculosis Association
which is scheduled for July.
The Board will be interested to know'
that the nursing homes licensed under
county by-law are regularly inspected
by the Health Unit. We are plcasrxl
that in most instances the compliance
has been excellent, One or two do
c��`','µad:���;t�!0f•�.ti�'s:.•..!:.<''?s.>; ...
>•7k?1)A+.gq�pvro»+>wowwo:wOr?c.v+�v;.vh;r.iy> ..........
I
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CLINTON -ONTARIO
1
MY GETUP AND GO HAS
GOT UP AND WENT
How do I know that my youth is all
spent?
Wall, my get up and go has got up and
went.
But in spite of it all, I am able to grin,
When I think of where my get-up has
been.
Old age is golden, see I've heard said,
But sometimes I wonder as 1 get into
bed,
My cars in a drawer, my teeth in a
cup,
My eyes • on a table till I get up.
• Ere sleep dines my eyes, I say to my-
self,
• Is there anything else I should have
laid on the shelf?
I'm happy to say as I close my door,
My friends are the same, only perhaps
even more.
When 1 was young, any slippers were
red,
1 could kick my heels over my head.
When I grew older, my slippers were
• blue,
But still I could dance the whole night
through,
Now I am old, my slippers are black,
I walk to the store; and puff my way
. back.
The reason I know my youth is all
spent,
My .get-up end go has got up and went.
But I really don't mind as I think with
a grin,
Of alt the places my get-up has been.
Since I have retired from life's cont-
petition,
I busy myself with complete repitition.
I get up . each morning,'dust off my
wits,
Pick up :the papers and read the
."Obits." , . • .
If tiiy 'name, is missing, 1 know I'm
not deed,
So I eat a'godcl breakfast, and go back
to bed,
Life is much less rugged than it was
a century ago. But, says the Onta►io
Safety League, mart' omen Ft.ilt die with
their boots on ... with on- foot pas-
sing heavily on the gas pedal.
Good driving is a social technique
involving restraint and consideration
for others, as much a it is a physic,
skill, says the Ontario Sifety League.
The Ontario Safety League reminds
pleasure -seekers, particularly all driv-
ers of cars and (:oats, of a 2C00 -year-
old Greek saying: The Art of Living
consists in dying young . , . but as late
es possible!
PAGE 5
SEED COMPETITION TO BE HELD
A'1' EXETER
The Huron County Seed Judging
Competition will be held at the Exeter
Legion hall on Friday, March 11, at:
10.00 pin '1 he competition is under
the direction of the Huron County
Branch of the Ontario Department of
Agriculture, and is open to all young
111,011 in Huron County under 30 year's
of age as of March 1st, 11160, who have
not attender( Agricultural School o:
College for more than 2 years.
Judging will consist of the following:
One class of wheat, oats, barley and
corn. Two classes of small seeds (Alf-
alfa, Red Clover or 'I'imotliy). Reasons
will he given on two classes, one each
of the large seeds and small seals.
('!'hese classes will be announced at
the competition). \Vec ! and weed seed
identification - 111 weeds to identify
from mounts or pictures, and 10 weer!
seeds. (All weeds and seeds which
are considered Noxious and Province:
of Ontario, (irltts !'hose listed below
which are common in Huron County
may he used in this competition).
Grass and Legume Identification -•
10 grasses and legumes to identify
from mounts, pictures or seeds. Soil
and Crop Quiz • 10 questions based on
crop selection, mana:;ement and soil
and fertilizer use.
Each class will be
50 points for placing;
sons. Identification
scored at 10 points
case of ties, awards
the conte'<tant having
on reasons.
scored a possible
50 points for rea-
quizes will be
per question. In
will he made to
the highest score
Sections: 1. Novice, open to those
under 16 years of age as of March 1st,
1960, who have not competed in this
competition bclore. 2. Junior, open to
those under 18 years of age as of Marc?;
1st, 1960, who have not taken part in
the 4-11 . inter -Club Competitions.
(Grain or field crop section). 3. In-
termediate, open to those under 20
years of age as of March 1st, 1960,
who have not represented Huron Coun-
ty in the Intcr•Counly Seed Judging
competitions, and who have not grad-
uated from the two year course at
11idgclown or Guelph. 4. Senior, open
to those under 30 years of age as of
March 1st, 1960.
The Huron County Crop Improvement
Association Trophy will be awarcd to
the contestant making the highest
score in the Novice and Junior Sec-
tions. A replica will be presented to
the winner.
The Ifuron Crop Improvement Trophy
will also be awarded to the contestant
making the highest score in the Inter-
mediate and Senior Section.
Prizes for each section will be
awarded as follows: 1st, $5; 2nd, $4:
3rd, $3; 4th, $2.75; 5111, $2,50; 601, $2.25
7th, $2; 8th, $1.75; 9th, $1.50; 10th,
$1.25; 11th, $1; 12th, $1; 13th, $1; 14th,
$1.
Special Team Section: Huron County
Junin' Farmer Teams, open to, a leant
of 3 boys or girls under 20 years of
age as of March 1st., 1960, •who have
not represented Huron County in Inter-
club Seed Judging Competitions. These
teams will be coached and entered in
the competition by a Junior Farmer
member who may take part in the Sen-
ior section .of the competition. 'leant
entries should reach tho Ontario De,
pertinent of Agriculture, Clinton, on oe
before Friday, March 5th, 1960,
Team prizes: 1st, $12.00; 2nd, $8.00;
3rd, $4.00; 4th, $9.00.
High School Teanis: open to 3 boys
representing a High School in Huron
County. highest 'ngrigate score tot'
3 contestants from each school to count.
Members of Junior Farmer Teams in
this competition are not eligible for
High School Team Prize Money.
Prizes: 1st, $9.00; 2nd, $1i,00; 3rd,
$3.00; 4th, $3.00; 5th, $3.00.
The Topnotch Feeds Limited Trophy,
donated by 'Topnotch Feeds, Seaforth,
will be presented to the winning High
School Team.
Entries to be made at 9:45 a.m. on
day of competition, except for High
School Competitors who should contact
the Agricultural Teacher at their school
and make entry prior to Wednesday,
March 2ttd, 1960, and be forwarded to
the Agriculturgl office not later than
Friday, March 4t.li, 1960.
Special Awards will be given as fol
lows:
The Huron County competitor with
the highest aggregate score in the
Grain and Livestock Judging Compe-
titions over a period of ,two years, will
be awarded a trip on the United Na.
tions Bus Tour to New York and Wash-
ington, or a trip of similar value. The
winner must be an active member of
a Junior Fanner Club or haVe equiva•
lent experience as a 4-11 Club Members
The Ifuron County Competitor with.
the second highest aggregate score in
the Grain and Livestock Judging Come
petitions will be awarded a trip to
Eastern Ontario or an award of similar.
value.
Counter Check Books
(printed or blank)
At The Standard Office 1
IMAGE
...............
AUBURN NEWS
Auburn Library Meeting
The annual meeting of the Auburn
Public Library was held in the Library
with the 1st vice-president, Mrs. Dun-
can Mackay presiding. on Saturday cv-
eninr;, January 3Cth. 'rhe secretary
read 1La minutes of the last annual
meeting, which were approved as read.
The treasurer's report showed receipts
of $634,62. Disbursement of $398.70, and
balance in the bank and cash on hand
of $235.92. The librarian gave her re-
port showing '3078 books were read in
1959 ,of these there were 1811, fiction;
270, class: and 997 juvenile. This is
an increase from 1958. There is a
membership of 43 adults and 58 puplic
school children receive free reading.
The retiring directors were, Mr. Keith
:Arthur, Mrs. Edgar• Lawson and Miss
Margaret R. Jackson. Those elected for
1960 to 1963 were, Mrs. Ralph D. Mun-
ro, Mrs. William T. Robison, and Mr.
Lunday McKay. Mrs. McNichol due
to retire in 1962 and who has moved
from this community was re-piaced by
Mis. 'Phorias ltaggitt, At the Direc-
tors meeting which followed, these ot-
ficcrs were elected: President, Mrs.
Duncan \lacKay; 1st vice, Mrs. Oliver
Anderson; 2nd vice, Miss Elma Mutch;
Secretary, Miss Margaret R. Jackson;
Treasurer, Mrs. Sidney Lansing; Li•
bruin, Miss M. R. Jackson, assistant,
Mrs. D. MacKay. The convention dele-
gate is Mrs. D. MacKay, with Mrs. 0.
Anderson as alternate. New books to
the value of $100. are to be purchased.
'l'he auditors for 1960 are Mrs. R. D.
Munro and Miss E. I\Iutch. The com-
mittee to purchase new books; Mrs.
W. T. Robison, Mrs. D. MacKay, Mrs.
0. Anderson, Miss M. R. Jackson. The
committee to select hooks from the
travelling library truck: Mr. Keith Ar-
thur, Mrs. William Dodd, Mrs. D.
MacKay, Mrs. 0. Anderson, Miss M. R.
Jlackson and Mrs. J. Hildebrand.
Little Miss Cathy McClinchey spent
Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Kirkconnell.
Mr. Donald Ross, of Oakville, visit-
ed friends in the village last Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. William L. Craig, Allan
and Brian spent the week -end m Tor-
onto.
Mr. John Buchanan is a patient in
Clinton hospital where he underwent
surgery last week. 11'e wish John a
speedy recovery.
Mrs. John Durst is spending the wint-
er with her daughter, Mrs. Harold
Gross, Mr. Gross and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kirkconnell and
son, Donald, of Goderich, visited with'.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell,'
-Mary and Dianne, last Sunday. They
spent Sunday evening with his grand-
mother, Mrs. Sam Daer.
Mr. and Airs. Arnold Craig were
guests last Sunday of Mr. and Mrs,
George Day and family, of Winghatn.
Mr. and Mrs. George Thornton and
son, Bob, of Brussels, were recent vis-
itors with her uncle, Mr, Andrew Kirk.
connell.
Mr. and Mrs. John Maize and son,
Rickey, were Toronto visitors last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Koch ,of Gor-
rie, were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Maitland Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scott and Mrs.
Stanley Johnston visited friends in Lon-,
don recently.
,Miss Shirley Brown recently enter-
tained her friends to a sleigh -riding
party. Old Dobin was replaced by a
tractor to draw the sleigh containing
the. 12 young. people for over 6 miles.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Brown followed by dancing.
Miss Margaret R. Jackson attended
the executive meeting of the Presbyter-
ial held last Thursday at Clinton.
Mrs. Charles Straughan visited with
her sister-in-law, Mrs, Charles Wil-
liams at Clinton last Thursday.
Samuel Rowed
Funeral services were held in Lon-
don last Friday for the late Mr. Sam-
uel H. Rowed who passed away at his
home 424 Central Avenue, London, last
week. He was 79 years of age and
was horn in Auburn the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. George Rowed, who lived
in the old Asquith home where Mr, and
Mrs. Ed. Davies now reside. He at-
tended U.S.S. No. 5, Hullett school, and
over 60 years ago went to reside in
London, where he was a car salesman
for many years. He was the last mem-
ber of the Rowed family of 4 daughters
and 3 sons. When the family was
young the mother operated a store in
this village where the Baptist church
is now. Ile is survived by his wife, the
former Mary E. (Minnie Marsh), one
son, William Henry Rowed, of London;
4 grandchildren and 3 great-grand-
children.
Mr. Bob Youngblut, of London, spent
the week -end with his mother, Mrs,
Ralph D. Munro, and Mr. Munro.
Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Kirkconnell vis-
ited last Saturday with their daughter,
Mrs. Louis Blake, who is a patient in
1V'ingham hospital having undergone
surgery. We wish Jean a speedy re-
covery.
Mr. and Mrs. John Daer and Mr. Ro-
bert Daer spent the week -end at Mit-
chell visiting at the homes of their
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jack-
son and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Seiler
and Johnny.
Mr, and Mrs. Durnin Phillips, of
Dungannon, were guests on Sunday
with Mr, and Mrs, Robert J. Phillips
WAWANOSR FEDERATION SECTY, and capable of handling the very dif-
REPORTS ON TORONTO fieult position of Minister of Agricul-
CONVEN'IION ture.
and airs. Phillips visited with her coos- The delc,,tes were guests of the On -
I would like to give a brief report of tario Goverrunent for luncheon and
in, Mrs. CharlesrStrarghatllunro, Mr. the Canadian Federation of Agricul• were welcomed by Hon. l,eslic Frost,
1tr, and Ralph �,lune Convention which was held in the At the head tabla were dislin,rrished
and Mrs Haty Worsen, 11'ilkin attendedtRoyal York hotel in Toronto last week's delegates from all provinces and a
J. Craig, Mrs. George, It was a wonderful experience and �.
the funeral of the late Mr, Arthur Pet- lady delegate from Prince ince Edward Is -
tie at Stratford last 'Tuesday. Is -
pleasure for ere to sit in at this cow' land was given the honor of saying
venlion with delegates from every pie I grace. At our table were delegate;,
Knox United Church, Auburn vincs of Canada and to listen to them from Saskatchewan and Eastern Can -
express their views and opinions 00 add, and it was very nice to have
Under the leadership of Mr. Colin the policy of the government, with re this opportunity to talk and vis'.t with
Fingland and the Rev. R. M. Sweeney spect to Agriculture. '1this
men. The guest speaker was
the congregation of Knox United Church Howard Cowden, President esidenl of Constmt-
1he lion. W. A. Goodfellow welcomed
enjoyed a successful year, asp evi- the•detet;ales, and in his address, point- i ers Co-operative, Kansas City. In his
doled in the reports gnus at the an cd out the FA had provide, good lead-,
nual congregational meeting held urchre it was organized twenty address he pointed out many ways that
witty in the ch. The Rev, R. Al, •'"rship •since co-operatives could help the small farm -
Sweeney took curehe and conducted a four years ago, and that there was er. He continued by saying that the
'The Steward's reportn need for a strong farm organization• surplus food that we have should he
devotional period. Ile also stated that since the farm distributed in some way In countries
was given by Miss Elma Mulch and .population represents less than fifteen of the world who do not have enough
showed a gratifying balance in the l ifood for their
General Fund. AIr. Everett Taylor's percent of the total population, it was people.
' ti' • •r and AIor's unfortunate that other farm organize-mc.Mr. H. H. Ilannanr, president of the
report for the Missionary tions were being formed and this weak -
CAF, also addressed the gathering and
tenance Fun:l showed that $1181,00 had ened the position of the farmer, Ilei
been sent to the Treasurer of which silid "ln unitythere is strength."
the Sabbath School had donated $94.93•
and the Junior congregation $5.00. The The address by the 11on. Douglas
his comments were most interesting,
He was one of fifteen men who mel in
a room in Toronto 24 yc•ars a':n and
Sabbath School closed the year with 1 Harkness, Minister of Agriculture for formed the Federation of Agriculture,
an average attendance of 100 and madel Canada, was very informative and he! and today the FA is recognized by botr
donations to the ML & M., Connell of outlined the policy of the government] Provincial and Dominion Governments
Christian Educat`.on, the Furnace Fundlon deficiency payment. Ile said that as the voice of the farmers.
and White Gifts. The Women's Mission- egLs were in surplus supply in nearly I could write a great deal more but
ary Society exceeded it's allocation,'SII counftfes of lite world Deficiency I will close and sum up by saying
sent a bale of clothing and footwearvalued at $348. for Home Missions, a
240 lb. bale for Overseas Relief and
Christmas baskets to sick and shut -Ing,.
The two Mission Band groups sent
$71,91 to the treasurer, n 65 lb, bale of
clothing for Overseas relief and $10 . to
a Korean Missionary. There are 40 en-
rolled in the Baby Band. The three
groups of the Junior Congregation .re-
payments on eggs would be paid to that • this was a very successful con -
producers in April, for eggs produced venlion.
rho first three months of 1060, up to
one thousand dozen "A" large to each
prodticdt'. Ninety percent of the pro-
ducers woltid be eligible for full de-
ficiency payment as this represents pro-
ducers with flocks of 500 or less, After
his address, Alr. Harkness wits clues- ,
tinned aitd crilicezed by delegates for
ported an enrollment of 70 and contrib- .over one hour, but won the admire- The Editor
LETTF,!t
uted to C.A.R.E.; U.N.I.C.E.F.; ..the
M. & M. and purchased a Kindergarten
table for the Primary. The W.A. with,
receipts of $1610.88, among other wor.-.
thy objects, contributed to the Furnace
Fund, general church fund, manse fui-'
nishings and equipment and electrical
supplies. The reports from the other
various organizations showed encour-
aging progress during the year; Miss
Elma Mutch after several years of ex-
cellent and efficient work as treasurer
resigned and Allan Webster was ap-•
pointed as the new treasurer. Miss
Margaret R. Jackson was re-elected
church secretary and Mr. Everett Tay-
lor
ayfor as Local and Charge M. & M. treas-
Urer, The election of other officers re-
sulted as follows: Committee of Stew-
ards, Leonard Archambault, Keith. Ar-
thur, Robert Armstrong, James Berle
bly and Robert Arthur were re-elected
to retire in 1963; Ushers, Kenneth Mc-
Dougall, Roy Finnigan, Keith Arthur,
Allan Webster, Stanley Ball, Tom
Cunningham, Brian Spiegelberg, John
Wright, Harold McClinchey, William
Anderson, Donald Young and Percy
Youngblut; Auditors, Mrs, Ralph D.
Munro and Mrs. Sidney Lansing. The
meeting closed with the benediction .by(
Rev, Sweeney.
A large, white hound, Light of the
World Bible was presented by the con-
gregation of Knox United Church at a
recent Sunday morning service, to Miss
Elma •hutch, in appreciation of her
contribution to the church as treasur-
er for'so many years.
• Women's Association
•
The members of the Women's Asso-
ciation of Knox United Church met In
the Sunday School auditorium for
their January meeting. The Orchid
Group had charge of the devotional
period with Mrs. S. Lansing in the
chair and Mrs. Norman Wightman at
the piano. The Ode was sung followed
by a poem "The New Year" given by
Mrs. Lansing. After singing„ Standing
at the Portal” Mrs. Lansing read the
scripture lesson followed by the medi-
tation and prayer by Mrs. Arnold Craig.
The speaker of the evening was Mrs.
Maurice Bean who related many of
their experiences while on a trip to the
West coast last summer. It was much
enjoyed by all. Mrs. 'red East voiced a
vote of thanks to Mrs. Bean. The of-
fering was received by Mrs. Charles
Straughan and Mrs, William Straughan.
Mrs. Ernest Durnin and Airs, George
Miilian sang a vocal duet, "How Great
Thou Art" after which the hymn "He
liveth long who liveth well was sung.
Mrs. Arthur Grange presided for the
business period. Mrs. Robert Arthur
gave the financial statement which
showed a very successful year for this
organization. Plans were made for a
family night to be held the latter part
of February. A donation was sent to
the CKNX Story time. Mrs. Grange
closed the meeting with the Benedic-
tion, A social halfahour was enjoyed.
Sunday School Knox United Church
ti rid l I' I de'•
on a respec o everyone ry
fending his policy on agriculture It
such a manner that left no doubt in
our ponds that here was a man sincere
Secretary, Mrs. Ernest Durnin; Music
Committee:.1st quarter, Mrs. Kenneth
McDougall, 2nd quarter, Mrs. George
Million, 3rd quarter, Mrs, Norman
Wightman; 4th quarter, Mrs, Gordon
McClinchey; 'Teachers; Nursery Class,
Mrs, Leonard Archambault, Airs, Ar-
thur Grange; 'beginners, Miss Margo
Grange, Mlss Madge ICoopmans; pri-
mary girls, 'Mrs, Jack Armstrong, Miss
Elma Mutelir' primary boys, Mr, Wit-
liam L. Craig, Mr. Lloyd McClinchey;
sunshine girls, Mrs. Bert Craig, Mrs.
John Durnin; junior explorer boys,
Mrs, George Miilian, Mr, Allan Web-
ster, Mr, Tom Cunningham; good will
girls, Miss Betty Durnin, Mrs. Gordon
McClinchey; intermediate boys, Mrs.
Oliver Anderson, M1•, Leonard Archam-
bault; junior bible class, Mr. Keith
Arthur, Mr. Arthur Spiegelberg; emer-
gency teacher, Mrs. R, Sweeney; adult
bible class, Mr. Percy Yottnghlut, pres-
ident.; social committee, Mrs. Everett
Taylor, Mrs. Ted Mills, Mrs. Bert
Craig, Mrs. Jack A 'strong, T11t's.
Charles Milian, Mrs. harold Webster.
CrawL••rd—Hallam
Knox Pre-hyterian Chapel, Goderich
was the scene of a pretty weding on
Satur•da , January 30, 1960, at high
noon when Rev. R. McMillan united in
marriage Donna Christine, younger
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Hallam,
R.R, 1, Auburn, and William Thomas
Crawford, son of Mr, and Mrs. Stanley
Crawford, of Goderlch. Traditional
wedding music was played by the
church organist, Mr. II, De Jong.
Given in marriage by her father, the
bride looked charming in a white vel-
vet gown styled on princess lines, v
shaped neckline and lily -point long
sleeves. Her three-quarter length veil
of silk illusion and scalloped edges was
held in place by a close fittings cap of
white daisies, She carried a white
prayer hook crested with red roses
and rose buds on ribbon streamers.
Mrs, Donald Elliott, of London, sister
of the bride was matron of honour,
wearing a street -length dress of red
velvet, with princess lines. It featured
a portrait neckline with bow its front,
a matching red velvet headdress trim,
tiled with seed pearls. She carried a
bouquet of white baby mums, Mrs,
Gordon Crawford, sister-in-law, of
Goderich, was bridesmaid; dressed in
red velvet style the same its the mat-
ron of honour, and also carried, white
baby nrunrs. The pretty little flower,
girl, Wendy Lea Hallam, niece of the
bride, wore a red velvet •dress with
matching headdress and carried a nose-
gay of baby white mums. The groom
was attended by his brother, Mr. Gor-
don Crawford, of Goderich, and the
usher was Mr. Donald Elliott, of Len -
don, brother-in-law of the bride. The
wedding reception took place at the
The Officers and Teachers of Knox Tiger Dunlop Inn where the bride's
United Sunday School met for their mother received the guests dressed hi
annual meeting and elect their officers a sheath gown of royal blue with royal
for 1960 which were: Superintendent, blue and pink accessories and wore a
Mr. Charles Scott, assistants, Messrs. pink carnation corsage. She was as -
Oliver Anderson', Harold Webster, Wil- sisted by the groom's mother, dressed
liam Straughan; Secretary, Miss Mar- in a gown of navy blue with winter
lene Easom, assistants, Misses June white accessories and wore a pink car -
Mills and June Baechler; Treasurer nation corsage. The dining room was
and LiLterary secretary, Mr. Arthur beautifully decorated with pink and
Spcigelberg, Mrs. Ted Mills; Temper- white carnations, streamers and light-
ance secretary, Rev, R. Sweeney, Mr. ed tapers. For a wedding trip to Nor -
Harold Webster; Missionary and Tem- thein Ontario, the bride wore a sheath
perance Committee: 1st quarter, Mrs. dress of moss green wool, Borg jacket
Bert Craig (Temperance); 2nd quarter and nwss green accessories and a red
Mrs. Leonard Archambault (Missions); rose corsage. On their return they
3rd quarter, Mrs. Harold Webster (Mis- will take up residence in Goderich.
sions); 4th quarter, Mrs. Fred Toll Guests were present from Stratford,
(Temperance), Diplomas and seals, Kitchener, Lucknow, Penetang, St.
Mrs, Kenneth McDougall; Cradle Roll Catharines, Sarnia, London, Aubur.,.1
—Elmer Ireland.
TO TIIE EDITOR
Ottawa 4, Ontario
29th January 1960
From reports received from Post-
masters In all parts of Canada 11 rs
quite evident that once again the pub-
lic has responded generously to the
It
perarmaerem
WESPFiE1,D
The ladies of the W.M,S. mel in the
Sunday School room, for the January
meeting in charge of Miss Jennctta
Snell and her group. Miss Snell gave
the Call 10 Worship and Hymn Ina
"Send the light" was sung with Mrs.
Gordon Smith as pianist for first part
of the meeting. Mrs. Edgar 1b wal1
gave a reading "The Blessed New
Year" after which Miss Jeanetla Snell
led in prayer. The 'Scripture lesson
Duet. 10: 25-36, was read by Mrs. E.
Mowatt. Mrs. Lloyd Walden led in
prayer. A reading "In 'l'oo Big a Hur-
ry" was given by Miss Snell. Mrs. T.
Biggerstaff ;;ave a review of Chapter
2 of the Study book "Africa Disturbed".
Jeanetta Snell thanked all who had
taken part and turned the meeting ov-
er to Mrs. Charles Smith for the !nisi -
Post Office Department's request 10
"Mail Early for Christmas," Postmas-
ters have mentioned, in particular, the
public service rendered by newspapers
in stressing the need for co-operation
in mailing early to avoid disappoint-
ment during the festive season.
The co-operation of the Press and
public, coupled with particularly good
weathcr over the greater part of Can-
tada, rade possible a successful hand-
ling of a record volume of Christmas
mail by postal staffs.
On behalf of the Canadian Postal
Service, I wish to thank the newspap•
ers of Canada most sincerely for bring-
ing to the attention of their readers the
importance of mailing early at Christ-
mas.
Yours sincerely,
G. A. Boyle, Deputy Postmaster
General
(s your Subscription Paid ?
Wednesday, Veb. 6i,1980
ness part. The president used the
theme of "New Years" in the Call to
1Vorship and hymn 242 "Nearer My
(rod to 'thee." Mrs. C. Smith took
: cripture reading of several short
I assagcs and gave a reading "What
I' nd of Year will you make of 1960"
and then led in prayer. The minutes
of last meeting were read and approv
cd and roll call answered by 12. 'Il,e
special collection was taken for baps
expenses. A discussion on the letter
from CKNX-TV for a donation was lett
over until next meeting. The next
meeting to be in charge of Mrs. How-
ard Campbell and her group. It was .
moved by Mrs. Marvin McDowell and
unanimoteily approval that we send a
card of congratulations to Mrs.: Sween-
ey on the birth of their son, in Clinton
1luspital. The singing of two verses
of hymn 241 "Nearer Stil1.,Nearer"
with Mrs. Gordon Smith as pianist, and
the benediction brought the mooting to
a close.
11'e are very sorry to report that Mr.
Ronald Snell and Miss Mary Snell,
children of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Snell,
are confined to theli' home through ill-
ness. \Ve wish them a speedy recover.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter de Groot and
(110d1e1 visited Stiday with Mr, and
Mrs. John Hope and family, of Harris•
ton.
Mr. \Ver. Walden who has:been quite
ill at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Alva
Afcl)owell we, are glad to report he is
improving from an attack bf shingles.
Mr. and Mrs. N. McDowell, Mrs.
Charles Smith and Messrs. 'F''arl Gaunt
and Alva McDowell went ;to Toronto
Monday to see their cattle sold that
were shipped on Saturday.
Mr, and Mrs. Israel Good and boys
visited on 'Thursday evening with Mr,
and Mrs. T. .1 Biggerstaff, 13111 end
Phyllis.
Congratulations to Mr. Harvey Wight•
man in obtaining the position of super,
interment for the Waterloo Parks Cow -
mission, recently.
SHUR'GAI
SELECTED — GRANULATED
FETILIZERS for 60
are'wayahead!
PRODUCED IN MODERN PLANTS
with the finest automated
equipment to assure adequate
SHUR-GAIN supply.
CONTINUOUS RIGID QUALITY CONTROLS
every 3 minutes a sample of SHUR-GAIN
is drawn for laboratory analyses.
vert • •<,•.
ADVANCED RESEARCH
is a continuing program in
SHUR-GAIN "labs" and fields.
OVER 50 YEARS OF KNOW HOW
SHUR-GAIN is backed by experience,
unmatched by any other
Canadian fertilizer manufacturer.
tta�
nanTirens
CASH DISCOUNTS
throughout February, $1.50 per ton
early delivery discounts are yours for the
taking ... with additional discounts for
prompt payment ... discounts can total
as high as $5.50 per ton on some analyses.
When you take advantage of early delivery SHUR-GAIN discounts, there's
no need to worry about caking or hardening in storage. Suva -GAIN
Selected -Granulated Fertilizer with its controlled low -moisture content,
and granuled texture retains smooth flowing consistency through
prolonged storage. SHUR-GAIN guarantees perfect drillability, greater
availability of phosphorus and almost complete freedom from dust.
SHUR•GAIN proven for Canadian conditions
FERTILIZERS
The Finest Fertilizers For Your Good Earth
CANADA PACKERS LIMITED • WELLAND • TORONTO • CHATHAM
.•
Wednesday, Feb, (3, 1960
„1 ,
miimillinomMOINIR
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
Counter Check Books
(printed or blank)
At The Standard Office
FII/TER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to Ml Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensall 696112, 40.10p.tf
SANITARY SEWAGE HISPOaAl.
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
end cleaned. Free estimates. Louts
Blake, phone 42Re, Brussels, R.R. 2.
WANTEu
Old horses, Pic per pound. Dead
cattle and horses at value. Important
to phone at once, day or night. GIL.
BERT BROS, MINK RANCH, Godericn,
Phone collect 1463J1, or 1403J4.
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
CRAWFORD & •
HETHERINGTO 4
BARRISTERS eta SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R; S. Hetherington
Q.C. Q.C.
Wingham and Blyth.
iN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4►
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICI,AN
(Successor, to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist) .
•
FOR APPOINTMENT RHONE 33,
GODEnIdn 354)
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed.— 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST. • WTNGHA M, ON7
EVENINGS T3Y APPOINTMENT
(For Apointrnent please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, 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.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"Where Better Bulls Are Used"
Artificial Insemination Service for pll
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
NOTICE
THE BLYTH STANDARD
FOR SALE
Hereford Bull, serviceable age, Ap-
ply Ernest Noble, phony; 36114, •plyth.
02.1p
IN MEMORIAM
PATTERSON—In loving memory of
Vinna Patterson, who passed 'away
two years ago, February 3, 1958.
A happy home wo once enjoyed,
How sweet the memory still,
But death has left lonesomeness;
The world can never fill,
Every day I sadly miss her,
Deeply do I feel her loss,
r Lonely is my home without her,
Help me dear Lord to bear the cross.
—Ever remembered. by her Husband,
02.1p,
Ml -Air -Way Vacuum Cleaners,
For Sales and Service, phone 4088,
Blyth, 01-2.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Part-time Steady
delivery work in this area. No selling
required. Canadian Corporation Dis-
tributing Nationally advertised prod-
ucts require a local resident to make
light deliveries to establish accounts
in this area. No experience necessary.
Applicant must have a good driving re-
cord, he reliable, sober and honest,
have transportation in the form of a
car or light truck and have $1,400.00
cash available. Could be handled by
someone presently employed. Apply in
writing to: Contract Division, 1512 Eg-
linton Ave, W., 'Toronto 10, Ontario.
ANNUAL MEETING
The Annual Meeting of the Wingham
General hospital Association will, be
held on FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5111. at
8 p.m. in the Recreation Room of the
Nurses Residence, at Wingham. Ali
matters of business pertaining to the
Wingham General Hospital Association
including the election of Directors, and
other Officers and consideration of .the
ByaLaws of the Hospital will be trans-
acted. In order to oast a ballot in the
election of Directors a person nmst be
a member of the Association. One year
membership may' be ohtained for the
sum of $1.00 from the Wing'i1am Hos-
pital or the Secretary. Everybody
52-7 welcome.
H. C. MacLEAN,
DEAD STOCK President.
WANTED
HIGHEST CASII 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,
21R12, if busy phone Leroy Acheson,
Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels,
15,16, Trucks available at all times.
34. 1, Mar,
DEAD STOCK SERVICES.
Highest Cash Prices
PAID FOR SiCK, DOWN OR DIS-
ABLED COWS and HORSES.
Also
Dead Cows and Horses
At Cash Value
Old Horses - 5c Per Pound
PHONE COLLECT
133 — BRUSSELS
BRUCE MARLATT
OR
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119 BLYTII
24 HOUR SERVICE
13t1,
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ON7
OFFICERS:
President — Robert Archibald, Sete
forth; Vice -President, Alistair Broad -
foal?, Seaforth; Secretary -Treasurer,
W, E. Southgate, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS:
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H, McEw•
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton,
E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep-
per, Brucefield; C. - W. Leonhardt,
Bornholm; H. Fuller, Godorich; R.
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; J.
F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker,
Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth;
Harold Squires, Clinton,
K. W. COLQUHOUN
INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE
REPRESENTATIVE
Sun Lite Assurance Company of Canada
CLINTON
PHONES
Office, HU 2-9747; Res. HU 2.7555
Phone Blyth 78
SALESMAN
Vio Kennedy
JOHN STRONG,
Secretary,
02-1,
NOTICE
TAKE NOTICE that the Annual.mcct-
ing of the producer members of the
Ontario Ifog Producers Co -Operative
in the IIuron County Group he conven-
ed et 1 .p.m. E.S.T., on Wedifesday,
February 10, at the' Logien Hall in the
town of Clinton; for the purpose of the
conduct of. the ,proper business of the
annual meeting, the election of dele-
Giates and alternate delegates.
ROSS LOVE, Chairman
A. II. 1VARNER, Secretary.
02-1
IN MEMORIAM
CALDWiELL—In loving memory of a
dear daughter and sister, Faye Cald-
well,
who passed away six years ago -
February 6. 1954. ,
So many things has happened Faye '
Since you were called away,
'linings you would have enjoyed
!Ifad you been left to stay.
So many things to share with you
In just the usual way.
Things that could be so much nicer
If you were -here today.
We cannot bring the old days back
Nor your hand we. cannot touch,
But God has given us wonderful mem-
ories
Of the one we loved so much,
—Too dearly loved to ever be forgotten
by Mommie, Daddy, Jack and Gerald.
02-1p.
CARD OF THANKS
Our sincere thanks is extended to
relatives, friends and neighbours, for
their many kindly deeds and expres-
sions of sympathy at the time pf our
recent bereavement.
Your thoughtfulness Was sincerely
Appreciated and will always be re-
membered.
02.1p. —Allan and Alice Searle.
►4-4 44++4-4444 .+4+444+4++x.+
RADIO
BARGAINS
Tenatronic & Automatic
Car and Mantle Radios
Aerials and Back Seat
Speaker Kits.
Also Several Used Radios.:
Expert Radio and 'FV
Repair Service.
NEW ADMIRAL TV
AVAILABLE
HOLLINGER'S
RADIO & TV SERVICE
Phone 45R5 Brussels • R.R. 2, Blyth
+.+44•+4.4-44-44:
1,11444•4444.0.4~4.0104414,041404~0.044.#4. •
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT ,
CLINTON SALE BARN
1 at 1,30 p.m,
IN BLYTH, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager. Auctioneer,
05-tl,
i
LYCEUM THEA RT E
Wingham, Ontario.
Two Shows Each Night
Commencing at 7:15 p.m.
Thurs,, Fri., Sat., Feb. 4-5-6
Deborah Kerr
Rossano Brazzi
in
"Count Your Blessings"
A humorous sophisticated
romantic comedy.
fN0•4•44,01#NNMNN,fNN1tf NW,
NOTICE
TAKE NOTICE that the Annual
Meeting of the producer members of
Iluron County Hog, Producers' Associa-
tion will be convened at the hour of 3
p.m. E.S.T. on Wednesday. Flbruary
10, at the Legion Hall in the town of
Clinton for the purpose of the conduct
of the proper 'business of the annual
meeting, the election of officers and
the election of voting delegates and
alternate delegales.
Guest Speaker: Charles McInnis.
ROSS LOVE, Chairman
A. II. WARNER, Secretary.
old
FOR RENT OR SALE
Brick Cottage on Queen Street, reas-
onable. For rent until April. Apply to
Box 100, Blyth. Ontario. 02-2
LOST
In Blyth about December 17, a 'Toy
Fox Terrier, Registered Tena, black
and white. Tag No. 7510. A Reward is
offered. Anyone having information of
anyone holding this dog please phone
Blyth 22.11. or contact Ronald Baird
immediately. 02.1
‘444-444-4-44444+ + 444444+4.+.44-4+4+44-•-tt' ' •
POLIO THREATENS IN 1960
This year could see a resurgence of poliomyelitis In Canada. H
you are der the
e
olio
protection, do see your o
urdoctf 45 oand doctor aboutthisimmunization,Inquire bout
combined Polio -Tetanus protection which is now available in the same
injection, and is of value to anyone • regardless of age.
If for any reason you cannot arrange to procure this service from
a pivate physician, then plan to attend a regular public clinic held ip
this area at:
1
WINGHAM Town Hall 3rd Wednesday 10:00-12:00 A.M.
(Phone 862J) of every month
SEAFORTII Northside United Church 2nd Thursday 1:30.3:30 P.M.
(489M)
CLINTON Ontario St. United Church 3rd .Friday 2:00.4:00 P.M.
(IIU-2.9661)
Help keep misfortune by polio out of your home. Start NOW to
secure protection for 1960's polio' season. •
R. M. Aldis, M.D.,
Medical Officer of Health,
Court House, Goderich.
1
1
PAGE
}NINMNI
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT TIIE
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811
NOW PLAYING— "IIARRY BLACK and the TIGER„ — In Color with
Stewart Granger • Barbara Rush - Anthony Steel.
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
"THE BEAT GENERATION"
A tensely dramatic stor yef a young housewife who runs afoul of
some unresolved fanatics from Beatnik Land.
Steve Cochran • Mamie Van Doren • Fay Spahr
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
From the studios of G. Arthur Rank we present a well-balanced
double -hill bundle of entertainment
"ALL FOR, MARY"
and
"NOR THE MOON BY NIGHT"
COMING— "NORTH BY NORTHWEST" irn Color with Cary Grant
James Mason • Eva Marie Saint.
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
FOR YOUR SEWING NEEDS:
Zippers, Etc., Drip Dry Broadcloth and Prints.
OVERALLS AND .LEANS FOR MEN AND BOYS
BY BIG B. & HAUGHS.
WINTER GOODS REDUCED
Dry Cleaning Pick Up Before 8.45 a.In. I
Tuesdays and Fridays
Phone 73.
400404~~~#~4~#~4~004144 •
s-4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•—•-•—• ++.114-4-+ •-•-•-•-•-+ • -110-•-• H •+.4++4444 4+++•4
1
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
TIIOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CI.INTON: EXETER:
Business—Hu 2-6608 Baldness 41
Residence—Hu 2-3869 Residence 34
+4+++441
NOTICE
TAKE NOTICE that the Annual
Meeting of the, producer members of
Huron Ccunty Group of the Ontario
Hog Producers' Marketing Board be
convened at 2 p.m.. E.S.T., on Wednes-
day, February 10, at the Legion Hall'
in the town of Clinton, for the purpose
of the conduct of the proper business
of the annual meeting and the election
of representatives (delegates) to the
District Hog Producers Committee.
ROSS LOVE, Chairman
A. H. WARNER, Secretary,
024
WALLPAPER SALE
Watch for the Semi -Annual Wall-
paper Sale, February llth to February
201b. Every Pattern a Bar gain.
The Wallpaper :'bop, E. Wilkinson,
Wingham, Ontario. 02-2p
FOR SALE
Maple body and limb wood, $5.00 cord
•in the yard. Apply. Donald or Clifford
Schultz, phone 341112 Blyth. 02-4p
FOR SALE
Blue Mohair Chesterfield and Chair,
Price $15,00. Apply Mrs. Keith Web.,
ster, phone 160, Blyth. 02-1p
FOR SALE
Heavy Duty 3 Burner Electric Stove;
2 oil heating stoves; 200 gal. til tank.
Electric hot water tank. Apply, Pool-
room, Blyth. 02-1p
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to thank all those who
remembered me with cards. treats and
visits. while in Clinton Hospital. Special
thanks to Dr. Street and the nursing
staff.
02.1p. —Donna Hamm.:
•
•
The service around here is
value of electricity's low-cost versatility. In the
past few decades it has helped us take charge of
our chores .. , reduced housework to something
that's almost enjoyable and helped raise our living
standards to a new high.
In the 60's it will do even more to help fill our
working days with pleasure and turn spare hours
to leisure.
Two pair of jeans come out of the puddles and
fun of wet weather—go into the careful heat of
anautomaticelectric dryer. And before you can
say ".terrific" they're ready to be worn again.
This gentle speed and efficient service. are just
two of the dozens of benefits you get when you
put electricity to work in your home.
More and more people every day discover the
HYDRO
Is yours
LIVW 1311,1"MR ti3I.BCTRICA11l.Y,
National Electrical Week— Feb, 7th • 13th
ELECTRICITY
SPARKS THE 6(1.1.)9
�+
Turned Bigamist
To Save Nurse
The attractive young German
nurse looked with loving eyes at
the wounded soldier. She had
nursed him devotedly, but now
ell' was chaos. The Red Army
had stormed into her native city
Qf Mecklenburg. It was a time
of pillage, plunder and agoniz-
ing rumours.
Soon, as many feared, curt
orders came 'from the Russian
Commander, requiring all single
Women between twenty-one and
thirty to report to their local
labour offices, bringing only
personal belongings in readiness
for their deportation to Siberia.
It would be, better to be killed
ihe nurses whispered among
themselves. But there was a way
out, at least for one lucky girl.
A hospital official told August
Schroeder, the wounded soldier:
"You can save that nurse if you
marry her."
'August furrowed his brows,
for he had a wife and children
in Upper Silesia. But he quickly
subdued his conscience, reflect-
ing that they would probably
have been killed as the Soviet
panzers crashed triumphantly
into Germany.
So, relaxed and smiling, ha
took the girl into his arms. Al-
ter all, but for her devotion and
care, he told himself, he would
not be alive. The pair quickly
found a priest who married
them.
Thus, bigamy spared the nurse
the terrible fate that befell so
many of her colleagues.
August moved his new "wife"
westwards to the safety side of
the Iron Curtain. For a time the
pair were very happy. Then
August discovered that his wife
and family were still alive. He
sent them money and food par-
cels, but not even a regular
supply of gifts eased his troubl-
ed conscience. At last he sur-
rendered to the police and con-
fessed to his "crime."
The sequel came recently,
when he was brought for trial
as a bigamist before a Cologne
court. The judge heard his case
sympathetically, remarking that
it revealed a "refreshing touch
of romance and pathos."
The court, compelled to take a
serious view of bigamy, sentenc-
ed August to eight months' im-
prisonment, but this was sus-
pended and he was released im-
mediately on probation.
Now his advisers believe that
his wife will divorce him. He
will then be able to put his
marriage to the nurse on a pro-
per legal footing.
Conscience has a very strange
power. In another recent case, a
priest at Casale, a town in North
Italy, went to a worker and
handed him a silver watch.
"Why, that's mine!" said the
Cut A Slim Figure
PRINTED PATTERN
4956
SIZES
12!4-2,u
ty
►t& i ` 0.»+f
Slim and trim under ybur coat
now—smart enough to take • you
right through spring. Curved
collar, wise seaming on bodice
help to narrow your waistline.
Printed Pattern 4956: Half
Sizes 121, 141/2, 161/2, 181/2, 201,
221/4, 24%. Size 161/2 requires 2%
yards 54 -inch fabric.
Printed directions on each pat-
tern part. Easier, accurate. •
Send FIFTY :CENTS "' (500)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern, Please print plainly
SIZE, DAME, ADDRSSS, STYLE
NUMBER;.;` •
Send order to MINE ADAMS,
Box I, 123 1.'Sghteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont
HAPPY BIRTHDAY — Princess
Margaret Francisca of Holland
is shown in an official portrait
for her 17th birthday. She's one
of four daughters of Queen Ju-
liana and Prince Bernhard.
worker, examining the watch
carefully. "It belonged to me
when I was a boy, You don't
mean to say you've suddenly
found it, Father, and by some
miracle identified it as being
mine?"
The priest shook his head. "No
my son," he said, "the man who
stole it from you eighteen years
ago asked me to return it to you.
Apparently, the thief could not
sleep properly. Gradually, over
the years, his dreams came to
be haunted by watches. He
awoke in a cold sweat, a ticking
sound throbbing in his brain.
"So, he made confession,
brought the watch wih him, and
hoped that by restoring it with
my help, he would once again
sleep quietly and at peace,"
To go on "living a lie" proves
inthe end, too much for many
people. It proved too much for
a young infantryman who in
April, 1948, after serving for a
year in Palestine, deserted from
a famous regiment.
Later, he joined the Jewish
Army. Then, in 1950, he married
an Israeli girl and worked on a
collective farm. Twelve months
later, he inherited by his mar-
riage a farm of his own. He and
his pretty young wife, working
long hours, and in all weathers,
made it pay, too.
But deeply embedded in his
mind was the thought that he
had let down his country.
Finally, his conscience troubl-
ed him so much that he could
ignore it no longer.
So, much against the advice
of his new Jewish friends, he
brought his young wife with hint
to England and surrendered.
Court - martialled, he was sen-
tenced to a year's detention.
Sometimes a man's conscience
speaks through a girl. A 21 -
year -old Glasgow boy deserted
from the Black Watch. Though
he kept his equipment, he re-
sisted the idea of surrendering
to the police, determined to keep
his new-found freedom.
He now had a civilian job
bringing in £8 a week, and with
his father and mother both seri-
ously ill, he was able to send
them £3 a week instead of the
7s. he'd been able to spare them
from nis national service pay.
But he'd won the love of an
honest girl. She knew that,,deep
inside him, he was a 'very
troubled man. "Why don't you
make a clean breast of it?" 'she
wards."
But he still shook his head
dourly.
Without saying another word
to anyone, she went to the po-
lice and got him arrested. He
was courtmartialled, and given
nine months' detention. To -day
however, he is very glad that his
girl had the courage to act of
her own, and remove a great
weight from his mind,
Among the spate of robberies
now troubling the police, mean
thefts occur almost daily. Old
people and even disabled ex -
servicemen are robbed of their
life., savings.
But sometimes the thief is
troubled by conscience and
makes amends, returning a batch
of savings certificates or a cash-
box.
Sometimes tragedy results be-
cause someone allows a. trifling
matter to prey on the conscience
until even health is undermined,
A greatly respected • n 1n ; had
given the date of her 'birth. as
1894 although she knew it was
1891.
To her, this fairly common
.feminine deceit appeared
heinous crime. She confessed it
" to her convent priest who told
her not to worry. But she went
on fretting, feeling that her
whole religious life had ,been a
lie.
Finally, she went to one of her
convent's" outhouses where she
splashed coal -oil over her
clothes and set light to them. It
was her conscience that killed
her.
ANYBODY GOT A YACHT? — Freda Jones is all set to go yacht -
Ing in Florida waters. Just one small detail is missing.
HRONICLES
"i1NGERFAR?„
We are buying eggs now in-
stead of selling them as we were
a few years ago. Even so I
would much rather eggs were
sixty cents a dozen than forty,
which is what we are paying at
-the 'present time. At sixty cents
a farmer has a ,certain margin
of profit but at forty he has
none. E v en . at sixty cents it
should be remembered the only
time a farmer gets top retail
price for his eggs is when he
is selling to privae customers,
going from door to door "with
his produce. But for every far-
mer who has his own route there
are scores whose only market
is to wholesale shippers. Collec-
tors pick up the eggs ungraded,
returning the following week
with a cheque and a grading slip
showing the eggs have been can-
dled and graded according to
quality and size. The charge for
this is four to five cents a dozen,
irrespective of the wholesale and
retail selling price. Naturally if
the price is low — say twenty-
five cents to the farmer — the
charge al five cents a dozen for
grading is more noticeable than
if the price is fifty cents. And
the farmer is entirely at the
mercy of . the grader. If he is
honest, well and good. If he is
not, the farmer has no proof that
his eggs should have been given
a higher grade and consequently
a better price. Even Gordon Sin-
clair is concerned over the pre-
sent low price of eggs to the far-
mer and quoted one farmer's
wife who shipped a large quan-
tity of eggs and received an
average of 181 cents a dozen.
Sinclair mentioned the cost of
feeding, raising and caring for
poultry — and other farm stock
— but he didn't mention, what a
lot of other people also forget,
that is, the cost of veterinary
services. The terribly high cost
of drugs hits the farmer not only
for members of his family if
they are sick but also for the
animals. The last year that we
were farming we were down to
five or six head of' cattle in-
cluding two milk cows. One of
our grade cows had trouble calv-
ing and our subsequent veterin-
ary bill was $64, or about half
the value of the cow. But you
know • how it is, if an animal
gets sick, whether she's a grade
or registered beast, doesn't make
any difference. A farmer can't
b.VJU b,... 11)
"Sugar Popsy hu remarkable
will power. He's willed every -
MU to me. ►
bear to see an animal suffer
and he certainly can't afford to
lose her. So he is trapped, both
from a humanitarian and a fin-
ancial point of view.
Traditionally, the 'Partner Is
supposed to be a born grumbler,
and believe me, at the present
time, he has something to grum-
ble .about. So, those who have
to • buy farm produce, shouldn't
be too happy when the price of
eggs drops far below normal. A
reduced farm income naturally
results in less purchasing power.
You can't spend what you
haven't, got — even on the In-
stalment plan the day of reck-
oning finally comes. Or else .. .
Well, in our family the first
month of the year brought a
casualty. Eddie was playing
around a pile of cement blocks
in the yard next to his home
when one of them fell on top of
his foot, fracturing three toes.
A cast will be necessary but
must wait until the swelling has
gone down for the doctor to set
the toes. Poor little chap, he
has been so good, both at home
and at the hospital emergency
ward. In fact, at the moment, 1
think he is rather enjoying all
the attention he is getting. How-
ever, two of the others are mak-
ing a claim to fame too. David
by cutting his first permanent
teeth .and Cedric his baby teeth.
Yesterday they were all here —
all five grandsons and their par-
ents. One family stayed for sup-
per, the others went home. How
often it happens that the grand-
parent's home is the halfway
house for other members of the
family. We are glad to have it so,
it is one way of keeping the
family together. I remember it
was never the same for my fa-
mily after my widowed mother
died. We were pretty well scat-
tered by then but mother was
the medium who got us in touch
with .one another.
Right here we are kept in
training by neighbourhood chil-
dren, especially three-year-old
Julie who lives next door. The
other day the front door bell'
was ringing like mad. Julie had
heaved the mat all the steps,
and dragged a box up to_ the
door. That was also shoved aside
and a chair we leave for the cat
was brought into service. Later
Julie's ;:mother asked if her
daughter had been ringing our
bell. Partner laughed — "Ring-
ing it — she just about tore.
the place apart! Why — did you
see her?”
"No, but• Julie said she push.
ed a button at Mr. Clarke's door
and then she hear d 'jingle
bells!'" There is never a dull
moment with children around.
Bless their mischievous little
hearts.
"I want a very careful chauf-
feur, my man, one who takes no
risks whatsover," said the pros-
pective employer,
"Then I'm just the chap you
want for the job, sir. Can I have
my wages in advance?"
How Kimberley
Gets Its Diamonds
The Rand is the basis of South
African power and prosperity;
but Kimberley is the basis of the
Rand, for its diamonds financed
the great gold magnates, bolster-
ed the ebullience of Rhodes and
his peers, and enticed the first
vivacious flood of adventurers
and fortune hunters to South
Africa, They find diamonds in
many other places, too. They
even manufacture them nowa-
days. The Cullnan, greatest of
them all, was discovered in the
Transvaal. In South-West Africa
they pick them up in handfuls
from the beach. In Tanganyika
they guard the deposits with
radar mechanisms. But Kimber-
ley i s the most famous, the most
suggestive of all diamond cities,
and to the world at large its
name remains more or less syn-
onymous with the allure of pre-
cious stones.. .
A plateau of bleak no-man's-
land surrounds your mine at
Kimberley, ... Within its fences
the whole process of diamond
production is conducted. There
are the mine -shafts (for it is
underground mining nowadays,
down the deep diamondiferous
pipes); and there are the big
crushers which pound the rock
when It comes to the surface (so
hard are the diamonds that they
are hardly ever broken in this
brutal process); and there are the
little trains which, clanking
mildly, bring the crushed rock
to the washing plants; and there
is the series of pots and pans
and weirs and screens that re-
duce the crushed, washed, sort.
ed rock to the smallest concen-
trates.
Finally they extract the dia-
monds. In a long unpretentious
room, not unlike a printing shop,
there stand a series of machines
like linotypes, Five or six eld-
erly operators, of unspeakable
integrity, tend these machines
and greet the visitor with grave
incorruptible smiles. The crush-
ed rock arrives down a chute
and is poured over a sloping
table lined with petroleum jelly;
and if you watch this operation
very closely, and scrupulously
obey the instructions of the ma-
chineman, you may see a petit -
point of tiny speckles ornament-
ing the surface of the grease.
The muck runs away out of
sight, to be returned to the
earth again: but the diamonds,
those unshakable cores of bril-
liance, embed themselves in the
vaseline like oysters, and sparkle
away merrily when the operator,
seizing a trowel, scrapes the
grease from his table and de-
posits it in a nearby pot.
So they get their diamonds.
The grease is boiled away and
next door four men and a girl,
in clinical white coats, pick up
the gems in frying -pans and sort
them on a table. There are
greenish diamonds and yellow
ones, brown and white and an
occasional heavenly blue: there
are little flaky unpretentious
diamonds, and diamonds that
seem to have been chipped with
a penknife, and diamonds of ulti-
mate perfection of symmetry.
They examine these treasures
with their eye -glasses, and they
sort them by shape and colour:
but at the end of the day, for all
ISSUE 6 t 1960
the .. shaking and the cru h-
ing and the greasing and the
boiling and•the sorting, only two
little piles of stones, like nta ,iral
molehills, lie on that table corn.
placently.—From "South African
Winter," by .lanes Morris.
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lee
Q. is it considered excusable
now to "reach" at the table?
A. While the old "boarding-
house reach" is still considered
the sign .of a chowhound, we can
properly reach for things that we
can get as easily as our neigh-
bor can — instead of being over -
genteel and bothering him need-
lessly to pass them.
Q. When there Is to be a sup- ,
per for the bridal party after
the rehearsal at the church, is
it necessary to invite the clergy-
man — and, if so, his wife?
A. If you know the clergyman'
well (in which case you would • •
probably know his wife well,
too), they would both be invited. ,
Otherwise, no,
Child's Favourite
!�y Zwt,W{wile
Make a picture or a cushion of
each of these cuddly kittens.:
Just the thing for the' nursery!.
The kittens, entirely in cross •
-
stitch, can be done in six -strand
cotton or in wool. Lovely baby
gift. Pattern 668: transfer of two
103a -inch squares.
Send TIIIRTY - FIVE CENTS..
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note Tor safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box
1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor-
onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAMY
and ADDRESS.
New! New! New! Our 196Q
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, t o y s, gifts,
bazaar hits. In the book FREE
— 3 quilt patterns. Hurry, send
25 cents for your copy.
FEAR BENEATH THE GAIETY ? — Dr. Bernard Finch (left) and
his wife, Barbara, are shown with actor Mark Stevens — all
seeming to be having a fine time — in this picture taken at
a party Aug. 20, 1958, Eleven months later, on July 18, 1959,
?rttrs. Finch was found slain in their, home and shortly after'
wards Dr. Finch . arrested for her murder. Stevens testified
Jan. 20 at the trial that Mrs. Finch confided to him she was
afraidofher husband.
J
Foul Blow Won
Championship
Jimmy Wilde, first flyweight
champion of the world and,
pounce for pound, possibly the
greatest fighter who has ever
lived, was knocked out only once
in his career of over six hun-
dred fights, It was the occasion
when he lost his title, in June,
1923, but although the story of
the fight is senational enough,
the story heind it is even rnore
dramatic,
The little Welshman had vir-
tually retired as no challengers
had come along and, in fact, he
had not fought for a couple of
years when, out of the blue, an
American promoter asked him
to go to New York to defend his
crown against Poncho Villa, a
Filipino who had just won the
American flyweight title.
Jimmy was not keen, and
when the promoter asked him to
name his own terms he thought
he hacl effectively crushed the
Idea by demanding £13,000 plus
expenses — a fantastic sum in
those days, But the bluff was
called, and after four months'
strenuous preparation Wilde
stepped into the ring In the
steamy atmosphere of New
York's Polo Grounds,
'1'0 the crowd he still looked
the same old Jimmy Wilde, a
frail little figure whose skinny
arms seemed packed with dyna-
mite. Though old for a boxer (he
was thirty-one) he appeared as
perfectly trained as always.
None of the crowd knew that
for the first :time in his life
Jimmy Wilde was going into a
fight lacking confidence.in.him-
self, Only he, his manager and
Mrs. Wilde, who, was at the Ting -
side, shared the secret that he
had lost . the miraculous timing
that had made him so success-
ful,
In training he had discovered
that no longer was his brain
working at its usual lightning
speed. Even worse, he was not
connecting properly when prac-
tising on the punchball—tell-tale
evidence that his punching had
lost its snap,
It took Villa just three min-
utes to realize th1s. Several times
in that first, round Wilde hit
. him, but failed to inflict any
damage. To the Filipino and his
seconds it seemed too good to be
true. What instructions he was
riven in that minute's interval
tan only br guessed, but it is
gbvious that he was told to give
is veteran opponent no rest,
For practical purposes the
tight ended in the second round,
Throughout it, both men fought
hard. Neither gave ground;
Wilde because his fighting heart
refused to acknowledge that he
was up against a better man,
Villa because he was not re-
ceiving the usual punishment
suffered by the Welshman's op-
ponents.
In the third round the ring -
wise veteran might have pro-
duced a surprise, But he never
had the chance. As the bell
sounded the end of the second
round and Wilde turned to go
back to his corner, Villa swung
a terrific punch that landed just
below the left ear.
There was no doubt that it
was a foul blow, delivered after
the bell had sounded. Yet the
referee took no action, probably
because Wilde showed no re-
sentment or visible effect, What
no one realized was that the
punch had sent Wilde into a
trance. Years later he said that
his corner suddenly seemed a
long way off and his seconds like
figures in a dream,
But his wife knew something
was wrong when, in the first
few seconds, he ;was forced back
an the ropes. This was something
that hnd never happened be -
ARMS AND THE MEN — Complicated arm action results dur-
ing Illinois -Purdue basketball play. Arms, from left, belong
to Terry Dlschinger (Purdue), Jerry Berkshire (Purdue) and John
Wessels (Illinois),
fore, and by it she knew the
fight was lost, Her fears increas-
ed when she saw his counter -
punching was feeble and out of
distance. "He's blind!" she cried
out, but the seconds, though al-
armed, assured her he would be
all right in a minute.
The fourth round, however,
was only a repetition, So was
the fifth.
The big problem was how long
he could last, fighting by in-
stinct. The answer came in the
seventh round, when he was fin-
ally put down and out, Pancho
Villa was the new world fly-
weight champion.
But the drama of the fight
was only just beginning. As the
unconscious and battered wreck
of the ex-champlon was carried
into the dressing -room Mrs.
Wilde took one look at him and
declared that he was dying. Doc-
tors who were called thought
so too, for they told her, not
veay reassuringly, that "if he
speaks your name, he'll live."
All through the night the fight
to save his life went on. Once
Villa looked in, and gazing at
his victim sobbed: "I'm sorry,
They made me do it. They made
me do it,"
Everyone in the room was too
distraught or too busy to ask
what he meant. But was this the
explanation of the atter-the-bell
blow and its sequel? With gang-
sterdom and intrigue rife in the
States, had Villa been forced by
threats to land an "accidental"
blow to make sure of winning?
The terrible injuries Wilda
•had suffered had caused him to
lose his memory. He failed to,
recognize even his wife, whom
he called "Nurse," Four months
passed before the doctors con-
sidered him fit enough to travel
home, He was still broken in
mind and body, but they thought
time and his native air might
effect a partial cure,
The ship was well out in the
Atlantic when Mrs, Wilde 'found
her husband, whom she had left
sitting in a chair, standing be-
side her. Grasping• her hand, he
said softly: "You're not my
nurse, You're Elizabeth Ann, my
wife,"
After four months, Jimmy
Wilde had spoken his wife's
name. Recovery was quick and
complete,
A lean telephoned the police
to report that thieves had tam-
pered with his car. "They've
stolen the steering wheel; the
brake pedal, the accelerator, the
clutch pedal and the dashboard,'
he complained.
A police sergeant said lie
would investigate. Then the tele-
phone rang again.
"Don't bother," said the same
voice with a hiccup, "I got into
the back seat by mistake."
Truman Is The
Worst -Dressed "Man"
By TOM A. CULLEN
Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
London — (NEA) — Someone
should tell Harry S. Truman
about that old double-breasted,
gray suit he is wearing in Ma-
dame Tussaud's wax museum, It
has earned him the dubious dis-
tinction of being the "worst -
dressed man" in the waxworks,
Someone, likewise, should tell
Secretary of State Christian
Herter not to give Madame Tus-
saud's the brush-off, The Tus-
saud people are hopping mad
because Herter has turned down
their request to do him in wax,
Pope John XXIII, Queen Eli-
zabeth II, President Eisenhower
and Sir Winston Churchill ap-
' parently have no objection to
being exhibited as wax dummies
at the world famous wax em-
porium which is now celebrat-
ing its 157th year.
You can learn a lot of curious
facts at Tussaud's: that Danny •
Kaye Is regarded as something
of an anatomical freak, that
Marie Antoinette had a 42 -inch
bust measurement, that General,
Franco is a half inch shorter
than Napoleon,
The waxworks has remained
In the Tussaud family ever since
It was •founded in London in
1802. It is now run by Bernard
Tussaud, the great -great-grand-
son of the original Madame Tus-
saud.
Tussaud's uses only human
hair for its wax models, and
this, in turn, comes from con-
vents in Italy where the nuns
have 'their heads shorn, just be-
fore taking the veil.
Blondes are the hardest to
match, accordini to Vera Bland,
the Tussaud beautician who does
the hair Insertions. "Maybe it's
because blondes don't enter con-
vents," she explained,
Next to the hair, the eyes are
most difficult to match, Tus-
saud's has the eyes of its models
made specially by a London
manufacturer of surgical glass
eyes.
Stanley Wismark, who is
known at Tussaucl'r as the "body
builder," was in a tizzy because
he had just b en commissioned
to do a plaster body of King
01a1 of Norway.
"Oh, no, not two straight legs
again," he groaned, looking at
recent photos of King Olaf in
which the monarch appeared to
be standing at attention.
"The thing we try to avoid
in Making wax models is arrest-
ed action," he explained. "We
like movements to be natural,
flowing."
It was Wismark who explain-
ed why the model of Danny
INVASION IN DETROIT — Among the latest neo-Nazi paraphernalia uncovered by police is
this pile found in the home of a 14.year-old boy. He was the •"fuehrer" 'of 'a teen-age Nazi
club. Some of the patches on the shirts are U.S. Army military insignia.
: . CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
BABY CHICKS
BRAY has started pullets, white and
brown egg layers. Send for list. Day-
old Ames, while and brown egg spe-
cialists, dual purpose and broiler
rhlcks, to order, See local agent, or
write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North,
Nonillion, Ont.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES _
KNI7"I'1NG business well established,
operated from home, no overhead,
work dune by women in their awn
home. Cash price $3,150 which includes
entire stock nod machines. Six months
operation will cover purchase price.
Full partlrulnrs, write flux 204, 123. 18Ih
Street, New Toronto, Ont.
1d,ARKET PLAZA
PETERBORO, ONT,
NOW LEASING FOR NEW ADDITION
OU'l'S'rANDiNG opportunity for bak-
ery, delicatessen shoes, ladles' wear,
hardware, sporting goods, clothing,
variety, paint and wallpaper, applluu•
tem, furniture, ate,
Contact
FROMAC DEVELOPMENTS LIMITED
541 Brant St., Burlington, Ont.
NElson 4.2344
Kaye is all wrong anatomically,
"His American tailor pads his
shoulders o u t and makes his
hips taper."
The exhibition spares no ef-
fort to make its models accurate
and life -like. Wherever possible
Bernard Tussaud, w h o makes
all the heads, likes to have at
least one interview ("sitting," he
calls it) with the subject,
Tussaud's p-eters to use
clothes which have been worn
by the subjects, which is where
Harry Truman's old suit comes
in,
When Truman became Presi-
dent in 1945 clothing was ra-
tioned in Britain and Tussaud's
had no clothing ration coupons,
For his model Truman kindly
BERNARD TUSSAUD dresses the
"worst • dressed man" in the
museum,
presented the ,nuseunl with a
complete o u t f i t, which was
brought from Washington by
Clement Attlee, then British
premier, in his personal luggage.
But the most bizarre aid of
all came 'fro7-1 John Haigh, the
acid bath murderer, who on the
eve of his execution willed to
Tussaud's the clothes which his
model is now wearing, He also
left instructions for keeping
them neatly pressed and brush-
ed.
Missing from Madame Tus-
saud's is Pandit Nehru, whose
effigy was recently withdrawn
following complaints that it did
not do justice to the Indian
prime minister.
• Nehru'z ' effigy bore "no re-
semblance to his dynamic and
charming personality," c o m -
plained 29 Indian • crew mem-
bers of the S.S. Corfu, "This
pains the heart at every Indian
who visits the exhibition,"
Now' Bernard' Tussaud plans
to wait until Nehru visits Lon -
d o 11 for t h e Commonwealth
prime ministers' conference in
May, at which time he hopes to
make a ne' model from first-
hand evidence.
The .daughter of a preacher
Iiad attended a dance, much
against her father's wishes, When
she appeared for breakfast the
next morning he greeted her:
"Good morning, daughter of
Satan!"
"Good morning, father," slue
replied.
Q. flow can't prevent the an-
noyance of -discolored skin
caused by my costume jewelry
and bracelets?
A, By simply coating the guilty
surfacrs of your jewelry with
some coloi'Irss fingernail polish.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
GARAGE AND LUNCH COUNTER
REAL good business, 80,000 gallons on
No. 6 Highway, edge of expanding in•
duslrlal town near Guelph. Building
almost new well equipped and mod-
ern. Lunch counter shows excellent
profit, 80,000 gals. — handles 5 cars and
trucks. Price of ;35,000 includes build-
ing, all garage and lunch counter
equipment. Low down payment. Rl
health forces ease. immediate posses-
alon. This Is a real opportunity.
A. J, YOUNGBLOOD, REALTOR
Phone 111W, Fergus,
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
OWN AND OPERATE
A Coln•Metered Unattended
Westinghouse Laundromat
Equipped Laundry Store.
Net $4,000•$8,000 Annually.
Write or phone today for full infor-
mation about unattended coln•operuted
Westinghouse Laundromat equlppt:d
laundry store opportunities In your
community. You manage In your spare
time — while netting high Income.
We finance 90% of your total purchase
offer you longest financing per-
iod at lowest monthly instalments, You
receive training and advice from a
national organization that has helped
over 8500 men and women like you
go into business for themselves. No
experience necessary. Modest invest-
ment, This proven new profitable auto -
matte business offers a moneymaking
opportunity to anyone who wants to
own his own business. Compare our
complete program.
ALD, CANADA, LTD.
54 Advance Road,
Toronto 18, Ontario.
ROger 6-7255
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALO
MEAT market for sale, new equipment
and 9 houses. Serpent River, 18 miles
from Elliott Lake on Highway 17;
house Income 3490 a month: meat soles
average $3,000 per month, Write to
e ply Phll'a Meat 3farket. Serpent
River, Ont
COINS
"COINS wanted, pay high prices 1060
coin catalogue 251, Gary's f8) 9910 —
Jasper, Edmonton, Alta."
FARMS FOR SALE
300 acres, 150 workable, balance creek
pasture. Sizeable amount of timber.
Good barn partly steel equipped. Good
brick house. $20,000. terms,
215 acres, 200 workable, balance good
bush. Large steel barn, steel equipped,
silo. Brick house. $22,000.—$8,000. down.
135 acres, 115 workable. Choice loca-
tion, Barn,steel equipped, silo, Drilled
well. Brick house, bath, furnace. $25,000.
125 acres, good barn. Recently remodel-
led frame house, ;16,000.-15,000. down.
30 acres, Two small barns, Insul brick
house, bath, furnace, attached garage,
17,500 — half cash,
LARGE listings of dairy stock and cash
crop fame.
Archie Blue, 365 Sunset Drive, ,
St. Thomas — MElrose 1.7114.
Salesman W. F, Patterson,
Real Estate Broker, Chatham,
FARM MACHINERY
DAIRY MEN
Steil breaking up bales
the hard way?
NOW: WINSTED Rolo•matic,
the original
BALE SHREDDER
SAVES YOUR TIME, TEMPER
AND YOUR BACK
Shreds dry or frozen bales. Get a free
demonstration, Write for iiterature to
E. G. McDougall & Son, Blenheim, On-
tario.
GEESE
BREEDING Geese, high producing P11 -
grim Strain. Hatching eggs and Cos•
Iings in season, Special rates for large
orders, Walter Gauthier, R.R. 1, Bells
Corners, Ontario,
HELP WANTED MALE
SALESMEN, (full or part time baste).
Due to the recent introduction of a
new any accident type membership
we require additional sales personnel
to contact persons living In both coun-
try and towns. immediate earnings and
unlimited opportunities can be yours
In this well respected established or.
ganfzatlon If you display the neces•
sary ability. No previous sales expert.
ence necessary since training and sales
tnatcrial provided by the Company. In•
vesttgate this opportunity now by writ -
Ing to the Allied Services (Canada).
Personnel Division,P.O. Box 1029, Lon•
cion, Ontario. so tat a personal Inter.
vlew can be arranged. All replies held
In strictest confidence,
INSTRUCTION
EARN morel Bookeepingg, Salesman-
ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les-
sons 501. Ask for free circular No. 33.
Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1290
Bay Street, Toronto.
LEGAL WILLS
TIIiNK It over before It's too late.
Make your own will. Legal Will forme
;1.00 each, Delco, Dept. A, 1144 Tama-
rack Troll, Chattanooga 11, Tenn,
LIVESTOCK
ANGUSVUE Farm offers young balls
serviceable age. Bred fentoles all ages.
Angusvue Farm, 11 A, Campbell & Son.
11,11 I, Listowel, Ontario.
MAGAZINES
FLORIDAi-Opportunity Paradlsel Flor•
fin Cracker'Magazine tents all in words -
pictures. ;1.50 per year. Old Cracker,
135 White Drive, Dept. C.L.,Tallahassee,
Florida, .
MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
LORD'S Prayer on lovely jeweled cross
with chain and retractable ballpoint
pen. Only ;2.70 cash, Halley Smear,
Willow Springs, Missouri.
MONEY TO LOAN
UNLIMITED Money Loans — '1'o City
and Farm Folks. Money for anything
and anywhere, Phone or write now.
OPS investments Ltd., 99 Avenue Road,
Toronto. WA, 2.2442,
MEDICAL
.HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT DIXON'S
'NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAIN
REMEDY? IT GIVES GOOD RESULTS.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
51.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISiI the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles,
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you, Itching scaling and burning ecze-
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eczema will respond readily' to the
stainless odorless ointment regardless
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Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE ;3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2145 St, Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
IT PAYS TO USE
OUR CLASSIFIED
COLUMNS
NURSES WANTED
.110
REGISTERED NURSES
;295.1335
L.P,N,'s 0200•1240. 15•bod U,C. Mlsslo
Hoep., 90 miles from Winnipeg. Daly
bus service. Residence accommodation,
145 full maintenance. Apply Supt,
M.C, Memorinl Hospital, Erlksdale,
Man,
OPERATING ROOM
SUPERVISOR
with experience or post -graduate tral .
Ing for 60 bed active general hosplta
about 20 miles from London, Resldenc
accommodation available. Excellen
personnel policies, For particulars r
garding very attractive offer, write t
Director of Nursing,
Itrathroy General Hospital,
REGISTERED NURSES
REQUIRED
(General Duty and Operating Room)
MODERN 52.bed hospital 50 miles from
Ottawa In the heart of holiday resort
area has openings. Commencing salary
du4t0yOtwoer week )t hill statutoryextra
holidays'
from employment date, three week
annual vacation, straight eight hour
day, fourtyfour hour week,
Private accommodation ht luxurlott
new residence with full board an
facilities including laundry. (125.00 pe
month only deducted for residence a -
commodatlon).
Apply
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
PONTIAC COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
SHAWVILLE, QUEBEC.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profenslon; good
wages, 'thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
351 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
HEALTH, Happiness, Prosperity, Ad-
vancement and Success are accelerated
by the Home Course In Psychology. In. -
formation free, Royal College of Rip
ence, 709 Spadfna Ave., Toronto, Can-
ada.
ADULTS) Personal Rubber Goods. 311
assortment for 52.00. Finest quality
tested. guaranteed. Mailed In pial
t�
sealed package plus free Birth Control
booklet and catalogue of supplies.
Western Distributors BOX 24TP
Regina, Sask.
PHOTOGRAPHY
SAVE I SAVEI SAVE I
Films developed and
8 magna prints in album 401
12 magna printa In album 804
Reprints 51 each
KODACOLOR
Developing toll ;1,00 (not Including
prints), Color prints 351 each extra.
Anaco and Ektachrome 351 mm. 20 ex.
posures mounted in slides 31.25, Colo;
prints from slides 351 each, Monet
refunded In full for unprinted negf-
Lives.
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31 GALT, ONT.
PROPERTY FOR SALE
FLORIDA'S greatest land bargain.
High, dry 94 acre — 8395.00 — Ng
money down — ;10 monthly — Between
Ocala and Gulf — Streets - Electrl
Fishing - Hunting. Write Dept. HI
Rainbow Park, Box 521, Ocala, Fla,
STAMPS WANTED
WILL pay 40 cents per 100 for large
size Canadian U.S.A. stamps or will
exchange for foreign,
WILSON'S STAMP EXCHANGE
7 Peter Street South, Orillla, Ontario.
LEACHERS WANTED
OTTAWA
SEPARATE
SCKOOL BOARD
APPLICATIONS WILL RE RECEI 'Ell
BY 'l'HE UNDERSIGNED FOR TEACFI-
ING POSITIONS IN REGULAR CLASSES
ATTENDED BY ENGLISH SPEARING
PUPILS AND FOR TE11PoRAM' SUP-
PLY STAFF.
FEMALE (a) -11E1 CLASS)
MINIMUM .. ;2,600.10
MAXIMUM . .. 34.2110 00
FEMALE (b)—(2N0 CLASS)
MINSMUM . S2,500 00
MAXIMUM 41.1(10,00
MALF lc)—)1ST CLASS)
MINIMUM 42 800,0)
MAXIMUM 14.100 on
MALE (d)—(2N0 CLASS(
MINIMUM. • NOM
MAXIMUM S4.30')',9
`TEMPORARY SUPPLY STAFF —
;10.00 PER DAY
MALE, MARRIED, 5500 00 1DI)I 1 LUV.
AL FOR ')'EACHERS WITH FIVE
YEARS' EXPERiE.NCE IN UNTAIt10
APPLY ro
AIME ARVISAIS B,A. F.C.I.S.
SECRETARY•TREASURER
140 CUMBERLAND ST.. OTTAWA
CE. 6.7475
WANTED — RABBITS AND PIGEONS
RABBITS and Pigeons alive wanted for
table use, Box 203, 121 IHI h Slrcel New
Toronto. Ont.
MERRY MENAGERI
:.20
"1 understand they've never
bothered to buy hint a ieash!"
ITc
STOPPED
IN A JIFFY
or Very first use of sootldng, coolingyliquid
D,D,). Prescription positively relieves
taw red itch—caused by eczema, rashes,
scalp Creasclesa stainless. chafing—other9t trial bottle tau
se
satisfy or money back. Don't suffer, Atk
your druggist for O. D. 0. PRESCRIPTION,
ISSUE 8 -- 1900
4
PAGE 10
IN MEMORIAM
CRAIVFORD—In loving memory of a
dear mother, Mrs. Edward Crawford,
who passed away two years ago,
February 51h, 1959,
Always in our memory,
She hold's a place apart,
For no one else can ever be,
More cherished in our heart.
—Lovingly remembered by her family.
02.1gt,
Renew your Subscription
to The Standard Now!
E LEAF FANCY RED SOCKEYE
SALMON, 2'- 7 three-quarter oz, tins .... 1.00
BETTY CROCKER,nWHITE
large 20 oz. pkg.
CADBURY'S CHOCOLATE
1 lb. tin
CAKE MIX
(Choc. Drink)
33c
53c
ST. WILLIAM'S 2 FRUIT MARMALADE
lge. 24 oz. jar 27c
SPECIAL -- SPECIAL -- SPECIAL
Fantaisie 4 -piece Dinner Set ---
first unit - dinner plate
'one tea plate - one cup and saucer 99c
with 35,00 grocery order.
MARRA'S SPECIAL---
Lemmon Jelly Rolls, reg. 35c 29c
one other to be included for week -end.
SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION
We Deliver Phone 156
StANDARt Wctlnday, Feb, el 0000
BELGRAYE We are sorry to hear that John telt. +4+++4H+♦ -+-•-•-•+4- •+♦-♦+♦♦-•+
The annual meeting of Knox United
Church was held on Tuesday, Cont•
ntonc!ag with a pot -luck dinner, Rev,
R. E. McLagan of Blyth United Church
was chairman and opened the meeting
with devotions, G.w i ge Jchnslon was
secretary for (he meeting. Reports
were read by Ali's, Jack Anderson,
Mrs. J. M. Coulles, Armes Aiichle,
Mrs. J. R, Coultes, Mrs, George John-
ston, Mrs. George Marlin,, Mrs. Jesse
117aeeler, Mrs, Ted Fear, Harold Vile
cent, Mrs. Jack Taylor, Walter Scott,
George Jchnston and Bill Coulles. El-
ectrons to the session and stewards
were by ballot, with Mrs, George Mar-
tin and Mrs. Leslie Bolt as scrutineers.
The following were chosen: new elders,
three-year term, R. H. Coultes and
Harold 1'inccnt; other elders are, Wal.
ler Scott, Lewis Stonehouse, Albert
ahanan Jr. Is In Clinton hospital, after
havirg his appendix removed last
Thursday. We all wish him a speedy
recovery.
Mrs. Arnold Cook and Sharon are
,'sitir, with her father, 111r, Bailey,
at Princeton, for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClinchey and
Sandra visited with Mr. and Ah's.•llaw-
ard Campbell and family, on Sunday
evening.
Air, Franklin Campbell, of London',
is staying with his family for a few
days.
Mr, Russel Batton spent the wee
end with M'r. John Campbell.
Misses Barbara Smith, Donna Wa
den and Lorna Buchanan, of Lon
Colgate Dental Crean, 2 regular 35c tubes ...................... 50c
Colgate Dental Cream, 2 regular 63c tubes 99c
Shield Tooth Paste, regular 35e SALE 25c -
Shield T oII 1' st , r eguI 08
o t as e c SALE 65c
k Palmolive Shaving Creme 65c
/ Wlldroot Cream OII 43e ,, BOTH FOR 65c
)talo Shampoo, regular G9c , , ...... .. 2 FOR 99c
London,
'Helene Curtis Lanolin Shampoo, regular 2.00 .. . ... . . ...... SALE 98e
Helene Curtis Egg Shampoo, regular 2.00 SALE 98e
Helene Curtis Spray Net, regular 79c SALE 59c
Vicks Vnpo Rub 1.09, with free Cough Drops , , .. , ..... SALE 1.09
Andrew's Liver Salts, regular .79c SALE 09c
Johnston Baby Lotion, regular 75c 2 FOR 1,33
Vleks Nasal Spray .98c and Kleenex .51e , , , , , , , , , , , , , BOTH FOR 98c
Dolcin Tablets 3.95, Trial pkg. 50 tablets BOTH FOR 3.95
spent the week end at their homes.
Mr. Douglas Campbell spent Friday
and Saturday in Welland.
Hiss Doreen Ilouall, of Wingham,
Coulles, Lyle )topper and George Jhon- spent a few days at her home last
ston; new stewards, three-year terns, week.
Leslie Bolt, Kcamoth IVhcoler and Bo. A very successful quilting was held
beet. Grasby; other sterwnrds are: in the church basement last Wednesday
e
James Cocltes, Clarence. Yuill, George with three quills being completed fo
'Wallin, Clifton Walsh, IVilliam Coultes relief work. Plans were made for th
and Jack ifiggins. Harlin Grasby was quilting to be held on February
returned to the board of trustees; 18.next
others are, Ernest Michie, Albert 'Curd.
tes, Jesse Wheeler and tiers 1Vhceler, Mr, and Mrs. David Webster visited
- The plate collectors are -again Jack with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell
Higgins, Kenneth Wheeler, Robert recently.
- Grasby, Darold Vincent and George
Michie. Ushers are again Lyle Hop.
Iper, convener, Jack Higgins, Martin
Grasby, Ernest Michie and Jesse Wheel-
er. Auditors are Airs, George Martin
and Mrs. John Higgins; manse conn
mittce, Mrs. Jesse Wheeler and Mrs.
i Clifford Logan. It was decided that the Free Skating for Beginners
I manse committee call for tenders to Wednesdays 2 - 4
build cupboards In the manse.
Tire regular weekly Euchre was held
in the Community Centre on Wednes. Thursday, February 4
day night with 8 tables in play. High
scores were won by Mrs. Ted Fear Public Skating -- 8 to 10,
and Mr. Alark Armstrong, and the low
prizes by Mrs. George Johnston and
Grant Elliott. The novelty prize went
to Robert Yuill.
Mr. and Mrs. Goldie Wheeler; Billie
and Anne, of London, With relatives
hereon Sunday. '
Residents of the community were
-,saddened on Sunday night when word
was received from London that Mrs.
Jesse 1Vheelet' had passed away in St,
Joseph's Hospital. She had entered the
hospital on Friday night and under-
went surgery on Saturday. She suffer-
ed a heart attack on Sunday and failed
to rally. 'She was formerly Hazel
Oampbell, of Morris township and' fol•
lowing her marriage they farmed on
the 4th line of Morris. They dispersed
of farm and moved to Belgrave where'
they have resided since, She was ac—
tive In church organizations, being a
BLYTII ARENA
SCIIEDULE
1
M4
. 4.41,101104.0 0.~#4#~~#4,404~#041.0~######11~~06,00
'~"''" S memobr of Knox United Ghureh, she
Stewart's
Red U 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"
Sunkist California Oranges
HOSTESS ROLLS 3 dozsize, no, 138,
1.00
Florida Grapefruit
10 for 49c
Luck Dollar Coffee
1 lb. bag 59c
i SAVE 4c Heinz Tomato Juice
PAY, O N LYS 2 Si 48 oz. tin 2 for 57c
Delmar Marge'ine, 4 lbs. 99c
Meaty Ribs . , , . per lb. 39c
Fresh Pork Butts, per lb. 49c
Sirloin Beef Roasts
per lb. 59c
Fresh Pork Hocks
per Ib. 19c
Devon Breakfast Bacon
1 lb, 8;oz, tin 1.19 1 lb. pkg. ...,,,,,,. 59c
3 - 1 lb. pkgs 69c
Maple Leaf Head Cheese
3 lb. tin 99c,
Salmon Steaks, per lb 69c
Grade A Turkeys, 6 - 81b.
per Ib. 49c
Grade A Chuickens, 3 - 31/2
per lb. 39c
Pork Sausage, 6 Ib, box 1.89
Weiners, 2 Ib. cello pkg, 83c
was also a number of Belgrave Wo-
men's Institute, and was interested in ,
the flower section of the School Fair. Public Skating, 8 - 10,
Besides her husband, she is survived
by her brother, Alex, Morris, two sis- •Wednesday, February 3
Iers, Mrs. G. Orvis, Wingham, and Mrs,
Wallace, Seaforth. Many beautiful floe- Wednesday, February 10
al tributes express the sympathy of
many. The funeral will be held on' -----
Wednesday from the J. S. Welker Fun-
eral Home, Wingham, with burial in
Brandon Cemetery, Delgrave,
Friday, February 5
Rural League Hockey.
(Blyth and Auburn
at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, February 6
Intermediate Hockey
Blyth and Monkton
Monday, February 8
Intermediate Hockey
Lucknow and Blyth
at 8:30 p.m,
Tuesday, February 9 . ,
From The Chair
On Tuesday, January 12, the Auburn
Local 116 of the Ontario Farmers' Un-
ion held their monthly melting with
Mr. Mel Tebbut, a director from Grey
County, as guest speaker.
Mr. Tebbut's address was an explan-
ation; of "how" and "why" deficiency
payments cane about.
Why! because the membership of the
Farmers' Union In the 5 provinces
where we are organized asked for a
change of Agriculture support policy,
whereby the support would be paid di-
rectly to the producer. Under the sup.
port price assignment it was paid di-
rectly to the processor on many of our
farm products,
Howl deficiency payment were
brought about first was that they had
to be introduced by the members of
a local in the form of a resolution to a
provincial convention, who in turn
adopted thein for presentation to Par-
liament Hill by the LF.U.C.
At this time the Farmers Union ask-
ed that deficiency payment be brought
on a parity level but as yet we have
not been able to bring enough pressure
Ito bare to accomplish this our "ulti-
mate dint."
During the question period someone
introduced the Hog Vote. Now we feel
this vote was brought about by a res•
olution presented by the locals to the
annual O.F.U. conference held in Octo-
ber, 1959, at Guelph Ontario.
This Is a very Important Issue for
the producers of Ontario, and all as-
pects of the hog marketing situation
should be studied carefully before It
Is brought to a vote.
During the discussion period our
members agreed unanimously to press
forward in our quest for Parity Prices,
which is the democratic right of every
Ontario farmer.
—Ray Hamra ;President,
Local 116 O.F.U,
WESTFIELD BLYTII AGRICULTURAL
FLOOD OF
white eggs
without a hand
in your pocket
ROE FARMS
now buys outright the
top bloodlines In U.S.A.
PROVEN lines such as
STONE'S, DEMLERCHIX,
TRUE -LINES, These are
Canadian tested—se.
Iected and hatched for
you, without trade name
penalties.
GET THE BEST FOR LESS AT
BOE
FARMS LIMITED
ATWOOD, OP TARIQ
UTERAT,URE ON, REQUEST,'
ANNUAL MEETING
Mr, and Mrs. Norman McDowell and SOCIETY
Mrs, Charles Smith wore in Toronto
on Monday. 1 in the
Mr, and Mrs, Roy Noble and Valdene
visited with Mrs. 11izzie Campbell and Blyth Memorial Hall
Mrs. Minnie Chamney on Friday even- 011
ing in Wingham. FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 5th
Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell aid
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell visited at 2 p.m.
with Mr. and Mrs. IVllson and Mrs. EVERYONE WELCOME
Eva St@ckhouse, at Brucefield, on Tues. 01-(2day,
•
P. 0. PHILP, Phm, B
DRUGS. SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER - . PHONE 70, !MYTH
H -•F1+♦ •+�•♦•N•-•+♦-♦♦♦ •4••44-•144-1•-++H44-!
H N44444-44- 44 444-4 -+ • 4-1 •-•.. bF• •• •-•♦+•+4 •-•-•-•4-•
Assorted Jams and JeIlys, 9 oz, jar , . , , . 5 for $1.00
Assorted Cake Mix 3 boxes 89c
Free-O,Seed Raisins -per pkg. 29c
New Instant Quaker Oats .. , .. , . , , , , per box 39c
Potatoes, Save 6c 10 lbs. 49c
Apples, Delicious, Macs and Spys 3 lbs. 25c
Large Celery per bunch 25c
Cooked Ham ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, per lb. 89c
Peameal Back Bacon per lb. 69c
$neII's Food Market
AND LOCKER SERVICE.
WATT FEEDS
Telephone 39
-- WE DELIVER
s+-••+•-.4+.4-4-+-•+a+*++4-++++++•!44- 4 4.4-.4 t+•+♦?
+i♦+4+444 4++44.•4-•+4+-4-+++
MARCHAND
CLOTHES DRYER
free yourself from clothes
line drugery
5 heat control,
full length flourescent
light
OUR SPECIAL . , 189.95
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
3` ELECTRIC
PHONE 71R2 --- BLYTH, ONT.
♦-++++-♦+w+♦-4♦.•♦.♦-4 +$ t $ •+w
These Three
Beautiful
Top Quality
604, ormammogra
A beautiful bathroom — more comfortable,
more convenient -- can be yours at budget
cost. In a choice of gorgeous colours or In
spotless white.
BLYTH PLUMBING & HEATING
Blyth, Ontario
Telephone 47
Cars For Sale
• 1960 CHEV. BEL AIR
SEDAN.
1959 CIIEV BIC.
SEDAN.
1957 CHEV SEDAN.
..1956 FORD COACH. , .
1956 MONARCH Hard
Top Coach,
1953 METEOR COACH.
1948 FARGO 1 TON.
CABIN. TRAILER.
Hanim's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers