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The Blyth Standard, 1960-02-24, Page 1
THE BL VOLUME 72 - NO. 05, Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa. East Wawanosh Federation i WEDDINGS Directors Meet McCLINCHEY—MOSS A pretty wedding was solomired on The East Wawanosh Federation of Saturday, February 20, 1960, at the Agriculture Directors and their wives United Church Manse, Auburn, when mot at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Oliv Rev. R. M. Sweeney united in marri-. er Anderson, the evening of February age Marion Ruth, elder daughter of 11th. The president held a short !nisi- Mr. and Mrs. William Moss, of Auburn, ness meeting after which progressive and David E. McClinchey, son of Mr euchre was played. The high lady he- and Mrs Gordon McClinchey, of RR 2, ing Mrs. Eerl Caldwell the high man, Auburn, The ceremony took place at William Gel's, 3:00 p, in. A bountiful lunch was served by Mrs, The bride was dressed in a ballerina - Anderson, assisted by Mrs. Wilfred length dress of pale yellow silk organze Sanderson. A very enjoyable get -to- over taffeta, organza appliqued flowers gether was enjoyed by all. I around the waistline tapering to a point Simon Hallahan moved a vole of at the base of the V-shaped neckline thanks to Mr. and Mrs Anderson and and a full skirt, and were a small famiy for their kind hospitality. The pill -box hat of yellow organza trimmed other directors also spoke of the ehjcy with sequins which held the shoulder - able get-together and hope they would length veil. She wore a corsage of yet- bave'morequring the coming year. law and white carnations. Elie was attended by Mrs. Alvin Plunkett, as' OBITUA R,Y matron o[ honour, sister of the groom,' WILLIAM ROY FOWLER who wore a ballerina -length gown of shale blue chystallctte styled with full ' Service was conducted last Thursday, skirt and v -shaped neckline, white hat February 11, in the Ball and Mulch and wore a corsage of bue and white funeral home, Clinton, for William Roy carnations. The groom was attended Fowler, who passed away at St. Mich- by his brother, Mr. Norman McClinchey gel's Hospital, Toronto, on Monday of RR 2, Auburn. morning, February 8. Ile was the vie- A family dinner followed at the home . tim of a cerebral hemorrhage. The of the bride, where the bride's neither Rev D. J. Lane, Sl.. Andrew's Presby- received, wearing a dress of printed terian Church, officiated.I blue silk fashioned on princess linen Pall -bearers were George Bancroft, and wore a corsage of pink carnations. Bernard Marchand, Kenneth ,Scott, She was assisted 'by the groom's mo - Dynes Campbell, Howard Irwin and ther, wearing a dress of printed navy Jack Harcourt. Flower -hearers were blue silk with matching jacket and a .David McDonald and Allan Culbert. pink carnation corsage The dining Interment was in Clinton cemetery. room was attractively decorated with Born on Concession 7, West Wawa- pink and white streamers and white nosh, he was the son of Harry and wedding bells, and the bride's table Enuna Fowler, Clinton. He had lived was centred with a 3 -tiered wedding, in Blyth and Clinton and moved to cake topped with white hells and flow - Toronto more than ten years ago, where ers. The cake was flanked by lighted he was a shovel operator. He lived pink tapers and bouquets of pink and; at 637 Ontario Street. white snapdragons, Miniature wed- I Surviving besides his parents are six ding cakes were the place cards, The I brothers, Gordon, Goderich; (Harold, dinner was served by Mrs Arnold St. Helens;St. Helense Edward and Alvin,. at Craig, Mrs. Russel King, Mrs. Wililam home; Benson, Blyth, Leonard, Lon- Dodd and Mrs. Clifton McDonald. don. The dinner was followed by a recep- Six sisters, Mrs. Dynes (Erma) tion for 150 guests in the Blyth Mem- Campbell, Lucknow; Mrs. George (Aa) o'ial Hall, Guests from a distance Bancroft, Leamincton; Mrs Bernard were from Plattsville, louden, Gode- l (Helen) Mtarchand, Leamington; Mrs. rich and the surrounding district. Kenneth (Lorraine) Scott, Brucefield; For a wedding trip to Victoria B.C. Mrs. Jack D. (Lois) Angelo, Chicago; and California, the bride donned a pal! Beatrice. Detroit. blue brocade dress with matching jack-' Attending', the funeral - from a dist- et, black coat and black and shite ac- ance was Mrs. Anne Baker and son, cessories, Ross, Toronto.. W. M. S. Meeting The Woman's Missionary Society of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church eget on Thursday. February 18, at the home of Mrs. W. Morrill, with a good attend- ance, Mrs Geoti a Fear had charge of the Devotional .nerind and Mirs. W. rood read a chapter in the Study Book. Mrs, W. Dalryminle nave a lovely ninno solo. Miss Mary Machan received the. offer- ing.. Plans were Started to celebrate the W.M S. 75th anniversary. Mrs. Good closed with r reyer and a lovely lunch was served by Airs. Shortreed, Mrs, George Fear had charge of the devotional period and Mrs. W. Good ,read a chapter in the Study Book. .Mrs, W. Dalrymple ielavn a lovely piano Polo end Miss Mary Machan received (he offering, Pans were started to celebrate the !'NMS 75th Anniversary, Mrs. Good • closed with prayer and a lovely lunch was served by Mrs. Shortreed, Mfrs. George Fear and Mrs. Merritt. Brother Passes Suddenly Gordon Dain Philp; 58, securities de- rartment manat±e' of the Bank of Montreal at dnwntnwn Queen and Yonge Streets, Toronto, died- on Tues- day, February 23rd from a heart at- tack Mr. Philp was born at Listowel, where he joined the bank 40 years ago, He went to Toronto in 1940. • Surviving are his wife, the former Margaret Foster; ,two sons, Peter and David; two. sisters. Gladys, of Lieto- wel, and Mrs David Osborne, of En- gle$artrt. and one brother, Delbert Philp The sympathy of the entire com- munity goes out to Mr, Philp on the passing of his brother, AMONR THE CHURCHES Sunday, February 28, 1960 S1'. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., Minister. 1.00 p.m.— Church Service and • Church School. ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA, Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector. Quinquagesima Sunday Trinity CJnlrch, Blyth. 10:30—Qioly Communion • Dedication of new Credence table. St. Mark's,. Auburn. 11:30—Sunday School. 12:00—Holy Communion, ?Trinity Church, Belterave, 2:00—Sunday School, 2;30—Eveping Prayer. THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth Ontario. Rev, R. Evan McLagan - Minister Miss Margaret Jackson - Director of Music. - 9.58 a,m.-Sunday Church School. 11,00 a.m.--•Morning Worship. "YOU are in Africa" • • 3,00 p m. -NO Bible Study Group • 8.30 p.n}.—'•Young Peoples' in Church CHURCH OF GOD McConnell Street, Blyth, Special Speaker, 2,00 p.m. --Sunday School. - - 8.00. p,m,.—Church Service.,;] WALTON The president, Mrs. Wni. Thaniee presided over the February meeting of the Walton Groun on Wednesday even- ing in the School room of the church. Hymn 488, Conic Let us sing of a wonderful love," was sung with Miss Bessie Davidson at the piano. The scrip:iure lesson, read by Mrs. G Mee- ; ray, from Matt. 25:41.40. was followed I with prayer by Mrs. F. Walters. Com- ments were niven by the leader. The topic on "Lots Wife" the woman who looked back, was given by Mrs Art I -McCall, Mrs. Timmer nave a medita- tion on "An Old Fashioned Mother," The roll call was answered with a hook from the New Testament, The minutes of the last meeting were read by the secretary, Mrs. Herb Travis and Thank you cards A remnant bundle from Eaton's was handers out to he sewn for a bazaar. The WA treasurer Mrs. Rog Bennett and Wele treasurer Mrs. Earl Watson, gave the financial reports. The Schneider supper to he held in March was discussed also. the World Day of Prayer; Hymn 252, "In Christ there is no East or West" was surra and tie leader pronounced the Benediction. hostesses for the evening were Miss Bessie. Davidson, Mrs. Ron- ald Bennett and Mrs Ralph Travis. A Bible contest on the book of Matthew was conducted by Mrs. Gordon Murray The contest ler March will he from the Book of Mark and will be conducted{ by Mrs. Ferne Patterson and Mr's. Lu- elle Marshall. Mr and Mr's. David IIackwell, of , St. Marys. visited on Sunday with Mr.I and Mrs. W. C Jlackwcll and Mr. and, Mrs. Wm. Dennis. ,MLi.ss Shirley Beige!. has accepted a position in the Canadian Bank of Com- merce in Seaforth Miss Noma Hooey left on Sunday: 1 for three months affiliation to the On -1 tario Hospital, London. Miss Catharine Buchanan also left on Sunday for Homewood 'Sanitarium Guelph where she will be on affiliation for three months, Both girls are stu- dent nurse from St. Marys IIospitalt Kitchener Mr. and Mrs. Fred Martin and daughter, of Burford, were week -end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin, • McKillop Group The February meeting of tie McKil- lop Group was held Mille home of Mrs. Nelson Reid with 17 ladies present, Mrs. Russell Barrows. presided opening with a .reading and hymn 488 "Come let us sing of a wonderful Love" -with Mrs E. McCreath as pianist. The lead- er offered prayer and Mrs. Gordon McGavin read the _scripture from Psalm 19 and Meditation on "God's Geography". Reports were heard and bulsiness conducted The Schneider Supper was discussed. The topic entit- led "Try a Little Leaven" was given by Mrs. Campbell Wey. A reading on Valentine was given by Mrs, Barrows. The closing hymn 498 "More Love to Thee" was followed with prayer, Lunch was served by the ladies of the 12th concession west, TAN DARD BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 24, 1960. Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. PERSONAL INTEREST Blyth Board Of Trade Met Mrs. W. J McCall and daughter, Susan, spent last week visiting friends in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. 'Phomas Taylor, of Goderich, Ml's. Elizabeth M'cI)owell and Gordon, of Westfield, visited last week with Mr and Mrs. Albert Walsh and Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown and Bruce, and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walker visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs Orval Diehl, of Brunner. Mr and Mrs. Jim Johnston and Paul, of 1Vinghanh, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Lolyd Walker on Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Walsh and Mrs. Esther Johnston visited with Air, and Mrs. 'Phomas 'Taylor, of Goderich, on Tuesday. Visitors with Mrs M. Lippold, who is a patient in Clinton Public hospital were her daughter, Mrs, Jean Kim - molly, and son, James, of Sarnia on Saturday, and on Sunday her sons, Jack and Mrs Lippold of St. Thomas, and George, and Mrs. Lippold, of West Lorne. Alt. and Mrs. Dennis Weymouth, of Toronto, spent the week -end at the home of elle. Ann Sundercock. • BELGRAYE Mrs. James Young has returned from her trip to Florida. Mr. and MD's. Russel Walker, Gode- rich, wiit'h Mrs. Robert Stonehouse and Mr and Mrs. Lewis Stonehouse. 7'he regular weekly euchre was held in the Arena room on Wednesday night with 8 tables i►i play. High score for ladies was won by Mrs. Gordon Hig- gins in a draw with Mrs, Joe Dunbar and Mrs, MI Arnist'oig, who all had 71 points. Low lady, Miss Annie Baker also in a draw. high gent, J. E. McCal- lum and IoW Harold Vincent. Novelty prize was won by Mark Armstrong. Women's institute electing A meeting of the Belgrave Women's Institute was held in the Coninnuhity Centre on Tuesday afternoon, with the president, Mrs. Richard Procter, in charge A two -minute silence was ob- served in memory of a departed nhem- bet', Mrs. Jesse 11 heclem. Mrs. Het son Irwin and Mrs Clark .Johnston were manned learners for the Spt ing 4 li Homemaking Project, "Meat in the Men." The branch will canvass for the Red Cross, and the following were named to collect from the village and district: Mrs. Clifford Logan, Mrs. Stewart Procter, Mrs, Richard Procter, John Nixon, Mrs. Earl Anderson, Mrs. Waller Scott, Gordon Bosnian, Mrs, Ed- gar Wightnan, Miss M'avey Isobel Neth - cry, Mrs Garner Nicholson and Mrs. Stanley Cook were chosen a nominating committee; and Mrs, Clifford Logan was named auditor in place of Mrs. J Wheeler, Mrs. Leslie Bolt was conven- er of the program, Mrs, Stanley Cook presented the motto; Mrs, John Nixon played a piano solo; and Mrs. Walter Scott gave an address on the salmon. A hunch was served by Mrs. Kennetlh Wheeler, Mrs Fred Cook, and Mrs. Garner Nicholson, Belgrave Dfistrict Credit Union Limited Annual electing A banquet was held in connection with the annual meeting of the Bel - grave District Credit Union Limited, in the Foresters Hall, Belgrave, Tues - clay evening The president, Albert Coultes, brought the meeting to order. The dinner was prepared by the wo- men of Trinity Anglican Church Guild, who were thanked by Mlason Robinson. Clark Johnston sang several solos and' also led a sing -song accompanied at the' piano by Mrs. Lawrence Vannan, The treasurer -manager, Gouge Michie, re -1 ported that in 1959, the seventh year of operation, Him had been a large turnover of money, but the share ac- count had increased by only $3,800. There was an increase in membership of 28. The average savings savings per member, $149,96, was slightly less hall in 1958. C. R. Coultes reported for the credit committee, and Lomb Campbell for the supervisory colleted - tee On recommendation of the direc- toets, it was agreed to pay a 3 percent dividend. Douglas Bennett, Guelph, credit union' Heldman, was chairman for the election, which resulted as fol- ows: directors to serve a three-year term, Ted Fear and Min Nixon; cred- t committee to serve a three-year term, Kenneth- Barbour; supervisory committee to serve a three-year term, Stewart Procter )Henry Pattison spoke briefly about the Credit Union League and introduced the guest speaker, Mr. Bennett., who gave a flannelgraph de- monstration of the theme of his topic, "Credit Union, What is it?" A short question and answer period followed his talk, George Michie introduced 'Hector Barb, representative from CUNA Mutual Insurance, who briefly explained the insurance of the credit union. Albert Coultes expressed thanks to the speakers. Cotleratulaticns to Marylouise Law- rence who celebrated her second birth- day on Wednesday, February 24, 13th OF JIULI.ET'1' DEFEAT CKNX The largest crowd of the season was on hand at the local arena on 'Tuesday night to witness the hockey game be- tween the 13th of Hallett Rural League Team and the CKNX Radio and TV team. It was a very well played game and contributed Several excit'rx emotes for fans of both teams. When th hell sounded the finish, the 13th were lead - by a 8 - 3 margin Scorers for the 1311i were Sander - cock 'and Scott with one each, Duizer and Jack Lee, who was called from retirement to play the game, tallied for two each. The marksmen for the losers were Ernie King, Wayne Brown and Bob Deyal. On 'Tuesday evening 13 members of the Blyth Board of Trade met in the Library. As the Board of 'Trade has been rather inactive for the past sev oral years, this was in the form of re organizational niceties,: The i:cw offi- cers elected were: R. W. Madill, as president, and J, '1'. Stewart as secre- tary. It was decided the Association would meet on the third Tuesday of each month, and it is hoped as the meetings are held, more of cur business people will take an interest and attend the meetings An unofficial count showed 46 ,businesses new operating in the village. A motion was carried to ask the council for a grant to be used for.ad- vertising on local radio stations pro- moting the village. The matter of street lights, which have! been purchased and not yet instal- led on the business section, was discus- sed and it was decided to attend the next council meeting to request some action 111 this regard. It was also decided to contact the local Telrpho e Commission requesting the possibilities of having a dial sys- tem installed in our community. Discussed at great length was Satur- clay night and holiday hours. Cards are to be printed, stating the proposed hours, and put on display in local stor- es. It is hopc:l that all merchants will comply with the hours suggested by the Board. The meeting was adjourned until March 15, at 8.00 p.m, CO1ti1GRATUL,ATIONS 1 Congratulations to Jackie Vincent who celebrated his birthday on Mon- day, February 22. Congratulations to Mrs. Frank ftaith- by who celearates her birthday on Sun- day, February 23. Congratulations to Miss Joyce Riley who celchratcs her birthday on Sun - I day, February 23. Congratulations to Debbie Wallace who will celebrate her 2nd birthday on Sunday, February 28. Congratuations to Mr. Beverly Wal- lace who will celebrate his birthday on Sunday, February 28. Congratulatcns to Mr. William Wal- den 'who celebrates his 85th birthday on 1Vcdnesday, February 24th. Congratulations to Shirley Bryant, daughter cf Mr and Mrs. Wray Bryant, 11th birth:'ey cn Saturday, Fe:weary 27. Congratulations to Vonnie Bryant, daughter of Alt', and Mhis. Ilarry Bry- ant, who celebrates her birthday on Friday, Febraury 26th, Congratulations to Robbie Lawrie who celebrated ,his birthday on Mon- day, February 22nd. Congratulations to Mas Hugh Cum'n3 of .London, w;io celebrated her birth- day on Wednesday, February 24th. Congratulations to AIr. Roland Vin- cent who celebrates his birthday on Thursday, h'ebruary 25th, Co%matelaticns to Mr's. N. Radford, of Lynden, who celebrates her birthday on '1'hursc;ay, February 23th. Congratulations to Mrs. Jim Walsh who celebrate!; her birthday on Friday, February 26th Congratulations to Joanne and Jon Clare, who celebrate their 3rd birthday on Saturday, February 27111. ' of Smiths Falls, who celebrates Ihcr • I.,UN l) ESI30RO The Minstrel Show from Chalmer's Church 1'.P.0 ilorvie, which was spon- sored by the Explorer and 'tyro Groups last Friday evening was quite well at- tended considering the weather and heavy roads. Everyone enjoyed the performance and the proceeds were quite :Satisfactory, Mee Bert flunking is visiting (itis week with their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. James Dewar, of Atwood. AIr. and Mrs Stanley Johns, of 'Ttt- ckersmilih visited with the latter's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Wm Manning the latter end of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lear and Mr. and Mr.. Nelson Lear went to London Sunday aflerncon to see Danny. 1Ve are glad to hear he is responding to the treatment quite satisfactorily. Mr. Frank Tamblyn motored to Leamington last. week Mrs. Tamblyn who has been visiting wile their beget- ter for the past two weeks returned with him On the way honkie they called on Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Johnston. and fancily, at Riverside, also on a cousin, Mrs. Eleanor Humphries, of Chatham.. Mrs Hobert Townsend spent Friday with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Vtlly Townsend, of Clinton. Mrs. Alex Wells spent the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Simpson McCall of Stratford. The W. I. will hold their March meeting cn March 3rd at 2 p.m. Roll Call will he answered by bringing a guest and introducing them. A Penny sale at the close of the meeting. The last half of members names on roll will contribute the articles for sale. Our sliest speaker will be Mrs. Beech- er Menzies who is president of the Hos, pilal Auxiliary. 1Vc hope for a good BIRTHS I1E'l; Y—In Clinton IIospital on Friday, February 19, 1960, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Henry, the gift of a son, Neil Bogert. PECK 1'1'I'—In Soldiers Memorial 11os- pital, AM'.ddlclon, Nova Scolia, on '1'hurr,'lay, Fe,brthahy 10, 1960, to F10 and Mrs. J. F. Peckitt, R.C.A.F. Sta- tion Greenwood, N S., the gift of a son, Stephen John, a brother for Jac- quelyn, Jeffrey and Michael. Legionnaires in Round Robin Series PLAY HERE FRIDAY NIGHT The Blyth Legionnaire Intermediate Hockey 'Team has started the play offs and are currently competing in a round robin series with Lucknow and Sea - game ' Seaforlh Ihonrth Tef►rst Wednesdays oe night nand led f on Friday night they will play host to the Lucknow squad. I The top two teams will play off for . the group championship and the right to advance further down the play off trail. Schedule Feb. 24 Blyth at Seaforth. Feb. 26 Lucknow at Blyth. Feb 29 Blyth at Lucknow. Mar, 4 Seaforth at Blyth. Church Features Africa le the morning service in the United Church last Sunday a filmstrip "Cop- perbell Calling" was shown. Photo- graphed in Northern Rhodesia, the pie• tures showed the change that has come upon the Af'icnn since the orcaing of the copper mines in recent years. Many of the customs of the African people and of the African Church were depic- ted. The contribution of the church in lifting the community to a nobler life was illustrated In the evening an "African Safari" was sponsored by the Young. People. Displays on the study of Africa were - made by various groups. The Mission Band had an attractive display cf scrapbcoks on Angola made by the children. The Tyro boys had made huts fcr an African village, The C.G.I.'T. dis- played a map showing the products that Africa offers to the world. The W.M.S. display included a hand -made hag made by hand from elephant grass and presented to Mrs. !Vin McVittie by Miss Frances Wallhridge, a mission- ary in Angela. The Young Peopde had prerared a series of posters on "Africa in the News" and a comparative study of the life of a Canadian child, one in an African pagan village and one in an African Christian village The Tyro goys demonstrated an African game and the Vcung People sang an African song. The film "I'll Sing, not Cry" was shown. This film was made on location among the Umbundu people of Angola and shows their custom of singing in the face of every trial and adversity except death. 'Through the messege of God's love in Chest it becomes possible for them to sing even then. The film presented its message in a very dram- atic and ca,ivating manner. It shows the diagnosis of a witch -doctor, a vil- lage dance in the moonlight, the wo- men at the pounding rock and working in the fields, the making of mud -plaster for the walls and many ether interest- ing customs of the Ochimbundcr. This film is also to be shown on the CBC Television series "Heritage" and can he seen this Saturday on CFPL-TV at .12.30 pen. Lunch, provided by the W.M S. and the Young People was served by the C.G I.T. and the program closed with the singing of 'Paps. U.D.P.C. Members Held Area netting In Blyth Seventy-five members of the United Dairy and Poultry Co -Op met for their ► area meeting in the Blyth Memorial hall on Wednesday afternoon, Febru- ary 17. Asmorgasbord dinner was served by thBelyth. Ladies Guild of Trinity Church, Mr. Max McAteer, area manager, in his report stated, "'This is the only meeting in this area " All dividends from shares are being sent out as they are accrued. Over 586 thousand lbs of butter were made in the Wingham plant in 1959, which was a slight de- crease from the 1958 output. The de- crease can be attributed to an increase of milk handled at the Blyth factory, which was more than one million and a half lis. in 1959. The Wingham Plant handled one mil- lion sixty-five thousand dozen eggs and over 489 thousand lbs. of poultry. The W D.P.C. has undergone an ex- tensive improvement program, having added a cooler in the Blyth plant, with a capacityof 80 thousand ,nd lbs. of milk. Also conveyors have been installed to lessen labor and time in unloading trucks. Other modern machinery re- cently added are a cheese packing ma- chine and can washer, which first op crated on the day of the meeting. With the firming up of the cheese market, cheese making was resumed in the Blyth plant, but when the price was fixed at 31 cents, they again re- versed to the handling of milk. De- spite Canada's population increase but- ter consumption has dropped. Deficiency payments on eggs was dealt with by Mr. McArter, who stated, one of the weaknesses of deficiency payments is "A" large eggs are being taken care of but what becomes of the smaller grades. Something should be done about the smaller size eegs Mr. Wilfred Shortreed gave 1110 plant committee report, stating, the great volume of business has contributed largely to the success of U.D.P.C. A trophy had been provided for the Dairy 441 Calf Club which was won by Audi Bylsma, for having the best calf in the Club. A donation was also made to the Dairy Princess contest. The guest sneaker at the meeting was Mr. Julian Smith, who has had a var- ied experience in Co -Operatives and is presently the manager of the Mar- keting Devision Ile spoke of Co-Op- eratve Marketing in tobacco, and stat- ed that fruits and vegetables have be- come a factor in Ontario handled by Co -Ops, in some areas farmers, espe- cially Ilollanders, have formed their own co-operative method of selling their market garden produce. 'I7he management, Mr. Smith stated, have an eeligation to their members. Be- cause of Co -Op competition, farmers are getting better prices, and although the price paid by the Co -Ops may be a cent or two lower sometimes, the integrity of the Co -Ops is never ques- tioied. Co -Ops have been set up to serve all producers, large or small Subsity and deficiency payments have ' not had the effect that was anticipated. People who want farm products want quality. Zone Director Bob elcKerche', of Scaforth, in his report stated, the most important item I have to report is the merger of the Seaforth egg grad- ing station into the UDPC, which was completed at their meeting yesterday. Now the UDPC in this area is Blyth, 1Vingliam and Seaforth. Russell Bradford, Ifuron County Dairy instructor, spoke on the prone iseusous use of anti biotics and how soon should milk be used after a cow has been treated with anti biotics. It is helicved that some people are al- crgic to these antibiotics and we do not want this pinged on the dairy in- dustry. If we want good markets for our dairy products we Hurst have good quality milk and cream. Manager Merle Brigden spoke of the steady volume of business but stated, nargins are not what they used to be, we must have a profit in order to sur - ;live. To do a top job for you, the members, we must expand. We have a membership of over 1000 but hope or an increase during the summer months. Harold Suter, previous manager of he Guelph plant and presently produc- tion manager of UDPC, stated, a sur- ey has been taken of marketis for luid milk but it is difficult to predict when these markets will be opened. The investigations will continue. One f the great costs of going into this; ield is in processing and the standard f milk would have to be raised. Chairman George Powell reported he oreenization is showing a profit,rm The area plant committee were all °turned to office by acclamation and ire as follows: deorge Powell, Wilfred hortreed, Martin Baan, Maurice M- ahan, of the Blyth District, EriclHack- tt, high McKenzie, Lucknow, John Currie, Les Fortune, David Ireland and Elmer Ireland, of the Wingham District. • WESTF.IEI,D Miss Doreen Howatt, Wingham, was' at her honkie Friday night and Saturday. 1 Mrs. Wilson, Goderich, spent the, week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Weidman and familyMr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell were in London recently. Mm and Mrs. Howard Campbell and boys, visited with Mrs. W. F. Campbell in Clinton, on Sunday evening. airs. J. L McDowell and Gordon cal- led on Mr. and Mrs. Albert Walsh in Blyth on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell vis- ited with Mr, and Mrs. Charles Scott on 'Tuesday evening. Mr, and Mfrs Clifford Ritchie and Ruth, of Walton, visited with Mr. and MD's. Melvin Taylor and Bill on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Snell, Peter and 1 Catherine, visited with Mrs Jessie Webster, in Clinton, Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell vis- 1 ited with their daughter, Gwen, in Hamilton, on Sunday, Mr Franklin Campbell, London, vis- ited meth This parents fora week. Tile Farah Forum was held Monday t evening at Mr. and Mrs. Howard Camp- bell's. After the broadcast, an enjoy.; v able evening was spent playing Lost !f Meir. The attendance was very goad, with 25 present. The next meeting is ate Mr and Mas. R. Koopmans on Mon 0 day evening. I f Miss Lorna Buchanan, of London, 0 spent the week -end at her home. The Westfield ladies had a quilting t bee on 'Thursday and were happy to have completed 3 more quilts r Mission Rand was held on Sunday with a good attendance. It opened with S the Call to Worship, followed by Mem- 1 her's Purpose and prayer by Miss e Jeanette Snell. Scripture lesson was read by Ilarold Campbell. Offering wa3 taken by Sharon Dowling and dedicated by Douglas 1lowatt. Story from the Study Book by Mrs. L. Walden, Bene- diction by Mr's. L. Walden On February 22nd, 17 members of the Fireside Farah Forum inet at the home of .Mr. and Mrs. Eric Anderson. As it was fourth night the broadcast was review. Following are the results of the euchre: most games. Mrs. Hugh Flynn, Mrs. Bob Dalton; lone hands, Mrs George Carter, Don Buelhanan; consol- ation, Mrs Joe Babcock, Mrs. Harvey Taylor. Mrs. George lloggart invited the group for next meeting, • BLYTH UNIT CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY TO MEET A meeting of the Blyth Unit of the Canadian Cancer Society will be held on Tuesday, March 1st, at 8 o'clock in the Library room. We would like all the newly appointed members -to be present. 1Vc are having as our speaker Dr J. C. Ross, of Goderich, and I am sure Dr. Ross will have a very instructive and interesting message for us. Lunch will be ser'vcd and we are looking forward to a good turnout from our area. Crocuses In The Scots Town Of Ayr "Look at the crocuses!" We speak the words with gay aban- don, as we greet one another these days. For crocuses are a feature of our Ayrshire gardens where they thrive in our light, sandy soil, blooming in time for St. Valentine's Day in nl i d - February. The first of the flowers appear in my own garden in a '' z. -straight line of bright yellow, in shape not unlike fat exclamation marks. But an ex- clamation mark should mark an end, while the crocus starts the flowering of spring bulbs. As happens every year, my tame blackbird makes me aware of the blooms. There he sits on a low bough of my cherry tree calling "Come out!" Oft he flies down on the lawn, cocks his glossy head, and then looks in at the kitchen window with bright, orange -ringed eyes. It is the signal for me to stop *work — the blackbird's utter lack of responsibility is infec- tious — and I go out into the garden to find the crocuses growing under the cherry tree as they have grown for longer than I can remember. I contrast the yellow of the flowers with the blackbird's orange bill and find the two warming the air with their flames of light. Startled by this discovery, I run to the open win- dow, shouting to the inmates of Hope -Chest Luxury Gy row,. WitA Add a flowery touch to towels, scarves, pillowcases with grace- ful, springtime motifs, Applique or embroider these .true - to - nature sprays of roses and pansies. Pattern 620: pat- tern of patches; transfer 4 motifs 61/2 x 12 inches; colour schemes. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAiL and ADDRESS. New 1 New 1 New 1 Our 1960 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book Is ready NOW ! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular de- signs to crochet, knit, sew, em- broider, quilt, weave — fashions, (home furnishings, t o y s, gifts, bazaar hits. In the book FREE —3 quilt patterns, Hurry, send 25 cents for your copy. ISSUE ! — 1960 the house: "Come and look at the crocuses!" And the birds cry shrilly to one another, as though startled by the same feel of spring. Before the yellow bloom is spent, crocuses in blue, purple, and white show in the paths and borders, The petals open into chalices when the sun shines, and ingratiating scents steal up from the crocus cups, coaxing the bees to visit. The flowers are worth growing for the bees alone. We are proud of our crocus lawns in the town of Ayr, and since the removal of tall, iron garden railings these floral car- pets of blue and yellow are seen to advantage by pedes- trians, One garden I used to know had its crocus carpet em- bellished with floral letters forming the words. "Flowers that bloom in spring." Another garden in the same town still has its outstanding lawn planted with crocuses. The flowers are packed as closely as daisies in a meadow, increasing every year. The owner informs nue: "Nobody knows who first planted them, but we do know they have been there for one and a half centuries. No new ones have been added, nor large clumps divided." By March crocuses are at the peak of their bloom in my home town, And that is the time when our letting season begins, with everyone galvanized into sudden preparation for those who will be our house tenants for sev- eral months of the year. Fresh curtains are hung on the win- dows, fresh paint put on front doors and garden gates. But more attractive than the paint or curtains, to those in search of a house to let, is the sight of thousands of crocuses in the lit- tle front gardens. They are irre- sistible to people who live in the city, writes Marion Hender- son in the Christian Science Monitor, While they are common to almost every British garden and grow in most parts of the world, the history of the crocus res mains obscure. It is thought that a pilgrim of the 12th century introduced the plant to Eng- land, secretary in the hollow of his staff a few corms picked up in Syria. Those corms took to British soil and were known as those of Crocus sativus, the autu►nn crocus, which proved a valuable source of saffron for more than 500 years in Britain. The flower of the autumn cro- cus blooms in September, rising out of the ground bare of leaves From the strong, yellow stigma was derived the saffron that gave its name to the small Sussex town of Saffron -Walden where the industry prospered until the introduction of synthetic dves over a century past. One of the most remarkable aspects of this industry was the fact that it took no fewer than 4,000 crocus stigmas to produce a single ounce of saffron. The price of the product was always high, for saffron was thought to be a valuable medicine as well as being used to color cakes and meat in England. Up to the end of the last cen- tury the Irish used saffron to dye their linen, and in the Scot- tish Highlands it dyed the cur- tains of large and small houses until Victoria's reign ended. The autumn crocus, though no longer used for manufacture of any kind, appears as an orna- mental graden plant, seeming to bring back the spring when it blooms in September. It lacks the joyous look of the spring crocus and has nothing like its prodigal bloom. Spring's hap- piest flower "children" are the first crocuses. They 'recall the advice a Chinese writer gave his people: "Take time to look your fill on the Spring flowers , .. the sight of them renews the spirit of man and woman." LET le e WELK-KIN RING — Lawrence Welk is cheek -to -cheek with of his favorites. Meet 7 -month-old Robbie, his grandson, child of Welk's eldest daughter, Shirley. BARDOT IS BACK—Brigitte Bardot swaps stage kisses with actor Jean-Paul Belmondo in Paris during her first studio session since the birth of her son, Nicolas, last month. �1r• I r~ gver a � "�.r• HRONICLES 1NGERFARM Gv ent:1.ol4r,e P. Cla t e Another week gone by ... a pleasant week, weather-wise. That is, until Saturday. Then we had a combination of rain, fog, ice, snow and flood -water. But thank goodness the basement re- mained dry. We went down in the middle of the night to make sure, Good weather during the past week made it easy getting around, and that was fortunate. Tuesday more quilting — quilt done and out and I brought it home to bind. For some 'un- known reason no one ever seems anxious to bind the finished quilt. No one except' me and I rather like the job. It gives me a nice feeling to cover the raw edges with a neat binding and to know that one more job is really fiinished and the quilt ready to be sent on its way — to bring comfort and warmth to someone who really needs it. I often wish I could follow — un. seen — some of our quilts to their destinations; to see and know something of the families to which they go; maybe to some outpost in northern Saskatche- wan where winters are long and the comforts of home dependent upon the strength and ingenuity of the people. This week we are setting up two more quilts. Yes, we are going to punish our fingers all over again just as they are get- ting nicely healed following the inevitable jabs and pricks with- out which no person can quilt successfully. Every time you hear an "Ouch" or a "Darn" you know someone has done it again and you pass over the adhesive or suggest a dab of nail -polish — some prefer one, some the other, Another highlight last week was our Institute meeting — topic, Historical Research, Four of the older members were ask- ed to give brief histories along specific lines. (1) •Street names in the village and how they ori- ginated. Also history of the two churches. (2) Life of Dr, Dixie, pioneer medical man of the dis- trict. (3) History of "Cherry Hill Farm," also that of "Glenerin" now used as a convalescent home for Robert Simpson employees. (4) Indian history of the district previous to pioneer settlement All this material will later be incorporated in our Tweedsmuir Scrapbook. The story of "Cherry Hill" al- most made me weep. Once the most beautiful house in the dis- trict it is now almost falling apart, Not only that at one time it was furnished with wonder- ful handmade furniture of wal- nut, cherry and bird's-eye maple. The old house for some years now has been lived in on a rent- ed basis and at some time the solid walnut dining -table had been used for ironing the fam- ily wash. As a result the marks of an overheated iron are burnt right into the table -top. Isn't it dreadful how little respect Is often shown for old buildings, trees and pioneer relics of all kinds? In some districts histori- cal societies are doing their best to revive interest in, and appre- i elation of, historical landmarks but alas, in many cases it is already too late. So much has been lost. In the Old Country everything possible is done to preserve historic sites 'but in Canada all too often trees and old buildings are doomed for destruction by powerful, relent- less bulldozers. How does this wholesale des- truction come about? I know one way. For some years now property owners have been ap- proached by real, estate brokers or representatives of a land - deal syndicate and a tempting price offered for farm or small holding. The business is done through lawyers, the identity of the actual purchaser remains ob- scure, The owner feels he cannot afford to turn down a good offer so in due time the deal is closed. Later the former owner feels terribly upset to see his old house in ruins and his once carefully tended fields over -run with weeds. But he has burnt his bridges and no amount of regret can replace them. Finan- cially he has made a good deal and he has to face the fact that you can't eat your cake and have it too. Now for the latest on family news. The day after Eddie had his cast off Jerry went to the doctor's to have an abscess lanced on his neck, and then again on Friday. When he found Daddy was stopping the car out- side their own hone there was trouble. "No — no — not home. Go Grandma!" Friday night is a regular ritual — shopping and then grandma's, However, they came out next day and all was well, The three boys came In with a lovely bouquet of red carnations for our anniversary. Incidentally we had visitors to- day and I said "Don't you like our beautiful carnations?" "Yes," said Mrs. 13., "they look almost real, don't they?" "Look real," I exclaimed, "they ARE real!" Now I ask you, how can you win? Mrs, 13, had to smell the carnations before she would be- lieve I wasn't kidding. Compact Cars Russian Style If someone in Moscow wants to buy a Moskvitch, Russia's "economy" car, he coughs up 25,000 rubles ($G,500 at the offi- cial rate of exchange, $2,500 at the more realistic tourist rate) and puts his name on the wait- ing list. Two years later, if he's still around, he gets it. In less than 30 days, however, Joe Snaith, Annerican, will be able to get the sane car for only $1,500 — 'and it's quite possible ha won't have to wait at all. The diNerence, apart from ideologies, is soft-spoken, persistent Robert Castle, 31, of Herkimer, N.Y. Castle, a prospercus auto deal- er (Ford, Renault, Fiat — abnl t" 2,500 sales a year) with real- estate and financing interests in Herkimer and nearby Syracuse, trekked to the Soviet Exhibition in New. York one day last sum- mer alog with some 40,000 tour- ists. Castle had heard of the Moskvitch (literally, "Moscow resident") — a four -seat, four - door, four -cylinder car with a 45 h.p. engine — and there he saw it. He liked it, wanted to sell it, and immediately opened negotiations with the Amtorg Trading Corp., official Soviet trading organization in the U.S. A 'few weeks ago 111 Moscow, Castle signed a contract giving him an exclusive franchise to distribute 10,000 Moskvitch cars in the U.S. in the next two years. Castle said the first of the little Moskvitches would start arriv- ing around the end of April at the rate of 500 -a -month (sedan and station -wagon models) with sufficient parts to service them. He added that he had inspected Russia's Moskvitch production facilities, and had been assured the Soviets could ship him all the cars he could sell. Was Detroit quivering at the unexpected competition? Not at all. "Who'd buy them?" snorted one U.S. automan. "Just some crackpots who'd like to say they own a Russian car," Castle was undaunted. By the end of the week, he claimed he had already received more than 50 inquiries from aspiring Moskvitch dealers from coast to coast. SALLY'S SALLIES :�• rr ~� •'X don't want to go down in history liko you; I'd. be glad to go anywhere," A Real Shocker! Last month a little dog beloved by a 'Toronto woman, became suddenly ill and died. The own- er had no place to give it a de. cent burial so a friend said "I3ring it over to my garden" The grieved one started off car- rying it inn targe shopping.bag. On the way she stopped in 0116 of the big department stores and set the bag down while she made a quick purchase. When she turned back it was gone. The clerk told her that the usual rou- tine among shoplifter is to go to the nearest washroom, take nut the contents and throw away the container. Off went the owner of the little dog, opened the near- est washroom door and there on the floor lay a woman in a faint — the dog in the open bag be- side her. With supreme presence of mind our friend pushed through the curious customers surrounding the woman, picked up the bag and walked out. From •Gossip. KNOW THY SELF Khat n nian believes they be ascertained, not from his creed, but from the assumptions on which he habitually acts. — Georffe Bernard Shaw. To Size 48 PRINTED PATTERN 4963 SIZES 36-4 ty-4.4.444 The two-piece dress — ideal under a coat now or as a suit when spring arrives. Longer collar is so smart and slimming above curved - peplum jacket. Choose faille, cotton, wool. Printed Pattern 4963: Wom- en's Sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Size 36 takes 4 yards,39-inch Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier, accurate. Send FORTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, „STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box I, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont, DOLLSVJLLE Unusual beatnik dolls, called "sweetniks," naturally, surround their -creator, Lada Draskovic, in Rome. The dolls are dressed in . loose -fitting sweaters, toreador nants and sandals. Their straggly, woolen hair is 'done in bright red, blue, orange and greens. 1• The "All Fall Down" INNZtO.,K54,10,040%,01,110 ar Grand National Of all the events in the sport- ing calendar the Grand National is the one most likely to provide a regular quota of sensations, We have become so used to some kind of a "turn up for the book" that 1t is a minor sensation if the favourite wins, One of the strangest of the aeries was the 1921 Grand National, Of the thirty-five start- ers only one completed the course without falling, Even that one very nearly came a cropper. Only four horses finished and the rider of the favourite re- mounted to finish second, after breaking his collarbone, The final oddity was that 'very schoolchild in Lewes, Sus- sex, where the surprise 100-9 winner, Shtiun Spadah, was trained, was given an Easter present of a new shilling to cele- brate the victory. The rapidity with which horses went down and out of the race stirred memories of the nursery game, "Ring o' roses, all fall down." The race was farcical from the beginning, Slippery conditions caused horses to tumble -like nine - .pins at all the early jumps. Seven fell at the first 'fence and fotlr more at each of the next three. Among the three victims of Becher's Brook - was Turkey Buzzard ridden by an alnatetn•, Capt, Bennet. But Capt. Bennet, knowing his mount was as strong us a lion, remounted and urged hiin on. Two fences later, how- ever, Turkey Buzzard lost his looting again and once more the rider came off, Still he refused to admit de - teat and, remounting once more, set off in chase of the leaders. Evidently he felt that as so many l horses had come down already there was a chance that some of those in front of him would also drop out. He was right. A great cheer soon proclaimed that Turkey Buzzard, the horse that had fal- len twice, had gone to the front • — and the race was not yet half over! But though so few animals were still surviving, they were keeping so close together that in these conditions a mishap to one could easily affect two or three others. This happened at the fence before the water, Where one horse rolled over and brought down another, the fancied Loch Allen. It is probable that this acci- dent also unnerved Shaun Spa- dah, for he misjudged the jump and landed on his knees. His head touched the ground, but his rider, F. B. Rees, managed to retain control and got him to his feet again. Coming into the racecourse first time round only seven were still standing. Turkey Buzzard, apparently unaffected by his two tumbles, was still in the lead, *followed by All White, Fore- warned, Shaun Spadah, The Bore, Glencorrig and Loch Allen, who had been remounted and made up the procession, though a long way behind. Loch Allen, however, was des- tined not to complete the race. First he refused at the fence before the water. Though event- ually he was persuaded to get over, he clearly had had enough, for he came down at the Brook. Now the pace and the effects of the falls were beginning to tell on Turkey Buzzard, for going out into the country for the second time he faded and surrendered the lend to All White and Shaun Spadah, It seemed that the race would lie between tnese three, as the only others left, Fore- warned, The Bore and Glencor- rig, formed a group a little way behind them. Then Glencorrig refused and not only put himself out of the race, but conceivably also en- sured that the other two would not win, All White and Fore- warned came down at the salne fence, probably distracted by his LIGHTS OUT — Stopped for good, San Francisco's famed "bird cage" traffic lights have been taken down as too old-fashioned for the modern city. These lie in a warehouse before a public auction, refusal, thereby mistiming their jump and coming to grief on the treacherous turf, So now the field was down to three horses out of nearly three dozen, and there was still a long way to go. But though the num- ber of runners had been reduced so severely the race was by no means over. Shaun Spadah, Turkey Buz-• zard and The Bore were racing along in that order — All White, who had been remounted, was cantering steadily on well in the rear, Then the drama was carried a stage farther when Turkey Buz- zard, now thoroughly tired by his efforts to make up the ground lost by his earlier falls, came to grief once more, at the fence be-. tween Beoher's and the Canal Turn. Yet again his rider remounted, determined to finish the course, and the gallant animal tore af- ter the leaders. But now the leeway was too great and the distance in which to draw up too small, Turkey Buzzard, though still running, was out of the race 'tor practical purposes. Meanwhile The Bore, galloping hard towards the finish, had closed up on Shaun Spadah and these two raced neck and neck, It looked like being a thrilling finish after all, even if it was a two -horse race now. But there was still another unexpected twist to come. Two fences from home The Bore fell heavily, throwing his -rider and owner, Harry Brown, Shaun Spadah was thus left almost alone, Mr. Brown, obviously hurt, quickly scrambled back on to his horse and went on to the finish, The crowd cheered him home, for The Bore was favourite. But not until afterwards did they discover that he had ridden home with a broken collarbone sus- tained in the fall, which was caused by a rein breaking at the critical moment. In the end the chief honours went, as they should, to the only horse that kept its feet through- out the race, with secondary hon- ours to the rider of the fav- ourite, But many think the real hero of that "All fall down" National was Turkey Buzzard, who came back to finish after three falls, Yet, officially, he is doomed to obscurity because he finished a few yards behind the leaders! Maglciaris should be barred from sawing women in half — there are too many of them as it Is, SKETCHES OF A 'KILLER? — These sketches represent a man believed to have killed the wife of D•r. Francis Clarke, two women employes and a cab driver in Clarke's North Bruns- wick, N.J.; estate recently. They were drawn from descrip- tions of the killer provided by a gardener and a "mystery wit- ness" said to have been an amateur artist. Middlesex County Prosecutor` Warren Wilentz said that from descriptions offered so far, the, suspect's main characteristic was • "ruddy face." Binoculars For The Sportsman What almost all sportsmen want in their glasses is resolving power, which may be roughly defined as the ability to focus on details to identify a species, judge the size of a head, or to distinguish animals' tracks For general purpose, I use a 7 x 35 binocular because of its light weight and size. It answers for about 90 per cent of my ob- servations perfectly, but It is not sure for the identification of small birds beyond 75 yards, nor will it surely tell a buck from a doe at 400 yards, So, I often carry a 12 x 80 monocular in my rucksack, 'for long distance only. Yet it costs, weighs, and bulks less than my 7x35 glasses, It might pay she hunter of sheep and goats exclu- sively to select just one high- power glass, such as a 10x50, provided its bulk and weight were not too much for continual carrying. But my combination suits me perfectly. Almost all of the best binocu- lars offered since World War 11 have the lenses coated with mag- nesium fuoride. I refer to the coating of all the surfaces of all lenses and prisms; not only the two exterior lenses, Such coat- ing is always an advantage. It transmits a little more light, thus slightly increasing resolving power. To a very large extent, it eliminates glare, or dazzle, when observing toward the sun, particularly if sunlight touches the objective lens. Coated lenses give a better rendition of colour. But it is not an absolute necessity, and one can sometimes pick up a pair of older best -make glasses at a re- duced price w h i c h, for most practical purposes,, are as good as the coated ones. Field of view is the diameter of the circular view seen through the binocular, and it is expressed in so many feet at 1,000 yards, It depends largely on the magnification, a low-pow- er glass having a much wider field than one of higher magni- fication, A 7x35 typical binocular will have a field of about 375 feet at 1,000 yards. Wide field of view is a necessity with glasses to be _used for watching athletic events in order to keep the objects or contestants con- stantly in view, Glasses used for such purposes should have a field pf not less than 300 feet. It is not so necessary for long- range hunting, where a field as small as 200 feet is not objec- tionable. Most binoculars can be had with either central focusing or with individual focusing. With the former, the two telescopes are focused for distance simul- taneously by means of a focusing wheel that lies between the tnvo. With the individual focus- ing glasses, each telescope must be focused individually by turn- ing the eye lens of the telescope. Thus with the central focus, you can focus the entire instru- ment instantly 'while it is held at the eyes. With the independ- ent focusing glasses, you must take the glasses away from your eyes and turn each eyepiece to the proper adjustment on the scale engraved on the eyepiece. ' It is true that you can focus each telescope of the latter type for a universal focus of over 100 yards, and then while observing at that or greater distances the glasses will be in correct focus and will not need to be changed. Also, it is claimed that the in- dividual focusing glasses are more. dust and waterproof, but 1 :. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: . AGENTS WANTED BRAND New Novelty! 850,000 yearly. Agents wanted at once. Send 81.50 fqr sample. Exclusive Franchises. C. C. Brawiey Mfg, Co., 266 Dean, Brooklyn 17, New York, AUTOMOBILES MARE Old ears run like new, Amazing motor compound. Tested, proven. Fully guaranteed. $305 postpaid, Newco, Box 16441, ifunlock Creek, Pennsylvania, BABY CHICKS B1tAY pullets, started, available' send for list. Dayold Am's, white and brown egg specialists, dual purpose, and broiler chicks, to order and some for prompt shipment. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BETTER MOTORING 50',;, OFF oil filter cartridges, popular brands, for early and late model cars, trucks tractors. Write and save, P.0, Box 1268, Whitby, Ont. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BE YOUR OWN BOSS1 OWN AND OPERATE A Coin•Metered Unattended Westinghouse Laundromat Equipped Laundry Store, Net $4,0000,000 Annually. Write or phone today for full Infor• nation about unattended coin-operated Westinghouse Laundromat equipped 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 - led at lowest monthly instalments. Yu 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 think this difference is exag- gerated. When observation is to be con- fined almost exclusively to a considerable distance, as in mountain hunting, probably the individual focusing glasses are slightly superior, and certainly they are slightly cheaper, But for observation at short distance, particularly for bird study, or for woods hunting, where you may have to change the range of your observing of- ten, the central focus glasses are much better, for they can be focused instantly while continu- ally observing the subject. Regardless of the glasses used, sportsmen wish to observe very critically, and for this reason any binocular must be held steadily. A good way is to sit clown and rest the elbows on the knees, or something solid such as the limb of a tree, a rock, or a tree stump. — By Col, Townsend Whelen, Associate Editor, Sports Afield. Smuggled Secret It was in the East — China — that silk was first developed 4,000 years ago by one of the Empresses. The story goes that after being jealously guarded in China the secret of silk produc- tion was given to the world by a princess who married an In- dian prince in the year A.D. 419, and in her head-dress snug- gled the eggs of the silkworm and the seeds of the trees which produced the leaves on which the worms fed. People driven from France by the loss of their religious rights in 1885 included skilled silk wea- vers who settled in Spitalfields, London. By 1700 silk weaving was one of England's most im- portant industries. It reached its highest prosperity in the first half of the nineteenth century, when the looms numbered 17,000. "I resent hint saying there's a fool in every family." uwhyr "Well, he knows I'm an only child." BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES GRiLL & GAS PUMPS with apartment. Profitable business for retired couple. South of OrlIIIa. $6,000 down, Bal. easy terms, HIGHWAY RESTAURANT and gee pumps. Largo corner lot with possi• hllttles on two highways in tourist district. Family Concern. $8,000 will handle. Reasonable terms, Particu- lars, Berge Jarnel, Realtor, 14 William St., Ortilia, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE DRY cleaning plant in good southern Ontario town. Outstanding opportun• Ity, particulars on enquiry, W. H. Molsa Realtor, Blenheim, Ontario, GROCERY and meat market for sale. Complete Butcher Shop Includes all stock and equipment on the Beach, 13,500. Write Ray's Market, 2908 S. Ocean Dr_, Vero Beach, Florida, FARM MACHINERY DAIRY MEN Still breaking up bales the hard way? NOW; WINS'I'ED Rola-made, the original BALE SHREDDER SAVES YOUII TIME, TEMPER AND YOUR BACK Shreds dry or frozen hales. Get a free demonstration. Write for literature to E. 0. McDougall & Son, Blenheim, On. tario, EMPLOYMENT WANTED PENSIONER with over ten years sere. ice In medical and administrative post• ,Ions as a Staff Member of the United Nations seeks light 5•dny week em- ployment on reasonable minimum sal. ary as drug store clerk, or office clerk drafting and typing routine corres- lpondence, or microscopist end clinical aboratory assistant or medical ree• ords librarian. Willing to undertake other Jobs requiring high sense of res- ponsibility and exactitude, Write Box 206, 123.18 Street„ New Toronto, Ont. FOR SALE BEST OFFER ACCEPTED 40 ACRES land, workable or pasture, Lot 16, Con, 12, Mornington, Massey Harris Fertilizer Seed Drill. P,T.O. Allis Chalmers Combine with flax rolls and pick up. Small barn timber. Ap ply Sinton Stemmler, !lesson, Ont, GEESE BREEDING Geese, high producing P11• grim Strain. Hatching eggs and Gos• hags to season Special rates for ,urge orders, Walter Gauthier, R R. 1. Bells Corners, Ontario, HELP WANTED — MALE COMBINATION man, Compositor and llnotype operator required for lob shop. Apply Marcy Printing Co., 167 Wellington St., Sarnia, Ontario. LINOTYPE OPERATOR or improver for commercial plant. bfcCready's Printing Co., Box 816, Tillsonburg, Ontario. INSTRUCTION EARN more! Bookeeping, Salesman- ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Leta sons 501. Ask for free circular No. 33. Canadian Correspondence Courses, 1290 Bay Street, Toronto. MAGAZINES FLORIDA! Opportunity Paradise: nor. Ida Cracker Magazine tells all In words - pictures. $1.50 per year. Old Cracker, 135 White Drive. Dept. C,L„ Tallahassee, Florida, MEDICAL IT'S PROVEN — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH tho torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scaling and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3,50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 9865 St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE AIR COMPRESSORS v4 to 10 I1P,, 1.1. to 100 cin., stationery and tank mount ed, Air Drills, Grinders, Hoists, etc. Largest selection new and used, out- standing values, trade-1ns accepted; we repair Mr Compressors end Air 'cools. SILVER BROTHERS 87 Stuart St. West — Hamilton Ontario. Telephone JAckson 2.3�0S "DESTROYER" for use in outdoor toll. ets, Eats down to the earth, saves clean. ing. Directions. Thousands of risers, coast to coast. Price $1,00 per can, post- paid. LOG CABiN PRODUCTS, 322 York Road, Guelph, Ontario, "PORTABLE sawmill for sale - log capacity, 30" x 24' 52" blade, heavy duty International industrial engine, 24" planer, Good machines to supple- ment farm income, Complete $25t)0.00 Phone Seneca 5.2609 or write J. P. LUMBER CO. 137 Lesperonce Rd„ Tecumseh, Ontario." MONEY TO LOAN UNLIMITED Money Loans - ro Clty and Farm Folks. Money for anything and anywhere. Phone or write now OPS Investments Ltd„ 99 Avenue Road. Toronto SVA, 2.2442. ISSUE 9 — 1960 NURSE WANTED NURSE as Matron, capable and re able, middle age, for Nursing Hom Live in, 83 Emerald Street 8., Ham ton, OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN 411 BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn llairdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St, W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W,, Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL GRAY hair hack to natural color wit Never . Gray tonic. Write for fre Colder, A. J. Bruyere, 028 Notre Dam Avenue, Winnipeg 3, Manitoba, Seeking Companionship? 1VBITE or contact Confidential Mar - 'logo Bureau, 75 Sparks St„ Suite 35 Ottawa CE, 2.4664, If no answer of evgs„ IRE. 3.3669. HEALTH, Happiness, Prosperity, Ad, vancement and Success are accelerated by the Home Course in Psychology. In- formation free. Royal College of ScI. ence. 709 Spadina Ave.. Toronto, Can- ada. ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods, 36 assortment for $200, Finest quality, tested. guaranteed, 91alled In plait; scaled package plus free Birth Control booklet and catalogue of supplies. Western Distributors, BOX 24TF Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SAVE SAVE SAVE Fihns developed and 8 magna prints In album 400 12 magna prints in album Got Reprints 5e each KODACOLOR Developing roll $1,00 not including prints), Color prints 35e each extra. Ansco and EIttachrome 354 min 20 ex- posures mounted in slides $1 25 Color prints from slides :m Pach. Moncy refunded In full for unprinted nega• fives, FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31 GALT, ONT PROPERTIES FOR SALE FOR Sale — 6•room clapboard bunga- low on 1 -acre land; custom built; hot water oil heat; landscaped lawn; good water supply; double garage — a truly lovely property for family living, situ- ated on paved road In Gormley, Ont. Asking 817,500. For further particu- lars, please contact Floyd G. Ratclift, R.R. 4, Stouffvtlie, Ont., phone 9.4808. PROPERTY WANTED HIGHWAY LOCATION or unused farm on tourist highway for handicraft shop and bees. Anywhere. Sudo terms. Borge Jarnel, Realtor, 14 William Street, Orillla, Ont. STAMPS STAMPS bought sold, Approvals by mall, Early Canadian stamps and money wanted, Simply write to Stumps for Collectors, 1322 Bloor Sl, W.. Toronto 4, Ont., Canada. STAMPS WANTED WILL pay 90 cents per 1110 for large size Canadian, U.S.A. stamps or will exchange for foreign, WILSON'S STAMP EXCHANGE T Peter Street South, Orttlia, Ontario, WANTED WANTED TO PURCHASE USED 200 ampportable welders, gas driven any quantity. Also Ilft trucks and industrial equipment, Apply: STANDARD ENGINES, EQUIPMENT & SUPPLIES LTD, 118 Parkdale Ave. N., Hamilton, Ontarlo, - - LI. 9.356B WINTER RESORTS ACAPULCO • MEXICO ECONOMICAL efficiency beach unrts, bungalows, pool, shopping and house- keeping services Included, Bungalows Marbrlsa Box 345, Acapulco, Mexico. • ItchJtcli IWas Nearly Crazy Very first Ilse of s,nhing, r, , littx liquid D. D..D. Prescription po%it!rrly relieves raw red itch—can:,ed by ecrema, r;tshry, scalp irritadam rhatinp—other it. h 1 nuhies. Greaseless, statnlrs.)..19c triad h .tele must satisfy or campy 1,1.k. 1t.a'i ':of"r, Ask your drnggi .t tar 11.11,11• I' It Fs( :1(119•10N BACKACHE May be Warning Backache is often caused by lazy kidney action. When kidneys get out of order, excess acids and wastes remain in the system. Theft backache, dis• turbed rest or that tired -tout and heavy headed feeling may soon follow. That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal action. Then you feel better—sleep hatter—work better. Get Dodd's Kidney Pills now, 59 MAESTRO SENDS 'EM FLYING — Billiard balls erupt under the direction of world champion Willie Mosconi. He demonstrate% a shot for Don Tozer during an exhibition. Th. balls In rile air sent five others into the pockets. t} " et PAGE 4 ' MENs.e LOOK YOUR BEST IN A BILTAIORE HAT 1 Priced from 87.50 We have a Complete Stock of HAUGII'S BIG SS WORK CLOTHES R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Home of Good Quality Merchandise" Ir.•rkm•••.w~•+•,•rkrJamra •#w•• • • •'*44••rr•••••+44 WALLACE'S • • DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES • FOR YOUR SEWING NEEDS: Zippers, Etc., Drip Dry Broadcloth and Prints. t OVERALLS AND JEANS FOR MEN AND BOYS BY BIG I3. & I-IAUGHS. ; WINTER GOODS REDUCED Dry Cleaning Pick Up Before 8.45 a.m• t = Tuesdays and Fridays Phone 73. .M.N..M.H..'P..+.r.......'.....J'.•..... MI 0.1.#44.444J~ Savings, too, have a way of growing And just like her Junior Depositor's 'Account, your Savings Account will grow, with regular deposits., THE CANADIAN BANWOF COMMERCE MORE THAN 800 BRANCHES THROUGHOUT CANADA LOCAL MANAGER-- W. L. Kress. ♦` 1 H t •-•-•-•-•- 4-o rw-• 4-•-• •-• e4 • •++ • *4-4+4-4444444 jj Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — SEAPORTS LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -- THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON: EXETER,: 2-6606 Business 41 Residence—Hu 2-3869 Residence 34 �N•- •-a e -N-•-•-•-•-•-• ++4+4+44 44-.4-•-•-+ -444.4-4.444 • •44-44-4-44 444444-4-•-•-•4-•-*+44-4 EXCELLENT FOOD AND MEALS WE SPECIALIZE IN FISII & CHIPS At All Hours. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. M 44444-4-4-4-44-4.+-N 4-4-4-444-4 •-•• •+N+• 444-4444-4-44-4-444-1 • Wingham 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"I'ON. TIIE BLYTII STANDAR() Il CO.OP February �1.50 • PLUS an addiuima saving cf by pay.ng ca:di by MAttl'tl I7tn. There's no better way to cut fer- tilizer cost:: than to take advan- ii of the early season discounts on Co-op Fertilizer. to ton 60 tbi.tttt W141) ,M[.10 HIGH GRADE c.--) FERTILIZERS 't] m y bei 04, eH®very FHBUARY 29 BELGRAVE CO.OP ASSO(ATION Wingham 1091 SPECIALS: Wednesday, Feb 24, 1900, _ I u, Iu• . NOTICE Huron County Farmers' Union MEETING Agricultural Board Rooms, Special Purchase GALVANIZED PAILS Tlhet,e arc first quality galvanized pail; purchased at a special low price and the savings are being passed on to you. No. 12—straight pail -with blue handle, 8 qt, capacity Special each 88c No. 14—straight pail wilit blue handle, 10 on -half qt. capacity Special each 99c Model 101 "Roto Egg" EGG WASHERS Regularly $19.95 Complete with electric agitator table, sanitizing tub (not heated), plastic coated egg basket. Ideal for small nock owners. Phones Brussels 388W10 Special each $17.95 1.,x-:'it,YJl...t1..1'�l .11111..1,41 1.1/11.11. .I.v 11. C'hrl:nicles, was read by Mrs. Andretvi was "''''"'1'1(16'0"to DinsCordon Taylor 1�irkcanncll, The F'tudy Book was tak-' fm typing programs, an(1 lO Mrs. en by Mrs. Clifford Brown, and she f from PhyllisCowan tv toy ing was closed by prayer by the pres- I� I' AUBUJIN The March meeting of the Auburn Horticulture Society will he held on March 1st in the Orange hall. The main part of the program will he the showing of local views as taken by some of our ardent camera men in this district. Anyone wishing In order bulbs or plants for spring planting please have your order in by that night. The meeting i� called to order at 8.30 p.nt. St Mark's Anglican Guild The ladies of St. Mark's Anglican Guild met for their February meet..n at the home of Mrs. Clifford I.lrcwn with 22 present.. '1 he hostess opened the meeting with the birthday hymn.. for Mrs. John McNichol, "Frim every stormy wind that hews," with Mrs Gordon Taylor presiding at the piano Prayer were said by Mrs. 'Thomas Ila`; girt. The scripture lesson, frern 1st 1 !IIT I. iI l 1 i Y 1.11 .d 1111 1-._.. read n letter 1 Brown for hot. hospitality. 'the nmeet- \vr,tt to 1'alcrston to teach in t to Kin- „dent. A card was scut to Rev, 11 naird College, l'he topic on Prayer xienll from the ladies fora speedy was given by I\ IN. Robert 3 Phillips.' recovery. Mrs..,lohn McNichol gave a very in lore ing account of her recent trip to Florida. The closing hymn, "My faith looks up to Thee," was sung. The pres- ident, Mrs. Thomas iIaggitt, took chao::e of the business period Tic minutes of the previous meeting were read by the secretary, Mrs. Ed. Davies, and approved as read. Thet•easurer, Mrs. Gordon Taylor, gave the finan- cial statement. Mrs. Andrew Kirkcon- nell was appointed to give prayers at the World Day of Prayer on March 4th in Knox Presbyterian Church. The roll call was answered by the paying of pennies, amounting to the size o[ their shoes doubled. A vote of thanks Clinton FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 at 8:30 p.m. Special Speaker: RUDY USICK, president of the Manitoba Farmers' Union. EVERYONE WELCOME TENDERS FOR GRAVEL TOWNSHIP OF EAST IVAWANOSH Sealed 'lenders will be received by - the undersigned until 1 o'clock oast Tuesday, March 1st, 1060, for crushing and spreading of approximately 10,000 cubic yards r%H inch size gravel to be delivered anywhere in the Township under the direction of 1110 Road Super- intendent, contract to be completed by September 30, 1960. A certified cheque for $300,00 to ac- contpaniy tender. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. STUART McBURNEY, Road Superintendent, Wingham, Ontario 04-2 TOWNSHIP OF IIULLET'I' TENDERS The Council of the 'Township of 1Iul- lelt will receive Tenders for the Spray- ing praying of Cattle in the Township for War-, We Fly. Tenders to he so much her head per spray for two sprays. 'fen- ders to he submitted to the Clerk not later than 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1960. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Barry F. Tebbutt, Clerk, 11.I1. 1, Londesboro, Ontario. 04.3. ONE-STOP SERVICE FOR SALE "Kitchen and Bedroom: Suites. Wide selection at the Godfrey Schuett Show- rooms at Mildmay. Convenient Terms. Free Delivery." 04-2 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN TIIE ESTATE OF JOHN CALD- WELI., late of the Township of East I'nwanosh in the County of Huron, 1'oeman, Deceased. All persons having claims against the estate of the above deceased are required to file the same with the un• dersigned Solicitor for the said Estate on or before the 29th day of February, A.D. 1960, after which date tate assets will he distributed amongst the parties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which notice shall have been given. Dated at Clinton, Ontario, this 5th day of February, A.D. 1960. E. 13. Menzies, Clinton, Ontario, Solicitor for the said Estate. This is the way she likes to do her market- ing: filling her list of needs in one place, from well -stocked shelves. She likes to do her banking the same easy, convenient way. At her local bank, all gunner one roof, a trained and courteous staff provides every- thing in the way of banking service. Here she can cash a cheque, arrange a loan, open a deposit account, rent a safety deposit box, buy money orders or travellers cheques --the list of banking services goes on and on. All over Canada, the chartered banks make this same convenient, one-stop service available to millions of customers. THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY Wednesday, Feb 24, 1960, ,.IML.........} A.. Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO. ••.e/.N N.Y INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Erre, Casualty, Sickness, Ac:ident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone .104. Residence Phone 140 IL, dl II , 1, I • TENDERS WANTED BY BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES EAST WA1Vr1NOSI1 I u'I-Ulne Steady TENDERS will be received en or be- delivery work in this area, No selling fore March first at one o'clock by the required, Canadian Corporation Dis- undersigned for a Warhle Fly lnspec- tribuliug Nationally advertised prod- tor, a Sprayer Operator, and o. Oper,acts require a local resident to make I' RIDAY, ator's helper, 'rbc Inspector to provide Tight deliveries; to establish accounts his own transportation, 'Tenders to in this arca. No experience necessary. colnIne11cine at S:;i0 state on_ hole' bases. The lowest or ally Applicant must have a good driving re - tender not necessarily accepted.curd, be reliable, sober and bore>I,, 111 1.110 II. II. '11IOMI'SON have transportation in the form of al I.n(lcsbor( Community Hall Township Clerk, 01-2 car lir light buck alill have $1,400,00 • cash available, Could he handltcl by Ladies Please Brin Lunch FILTER (QUEEN SALES & SEI11'ICE someone presently, 5 I y, cmpin) cd, Appy in Admission uUc. Repairs to All Makes of Vacuum writing to: Contract. Division, 15121 F'g- Cleaners, Bob Peck, Varna, phone ;Alen Ave, W,, 'Toronto. 10Ontario, Ilens'all, 696112, 50-13p.tf. 52-7 THE BLYTII STANDARD - PAGE 5 •♦�NIIN♦♦INIINII ►+NIItIN�VNNNI►M eWy,I,.+1++n4r+ MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE GODERICH PARI{ THEATRE Phone JA4.7811 Blyth 'Trinity (;(lurch ANNUAL PANCAKE SUPPEIt 13Iyth Memorial Hall TUESDAY, IMARCII 1 serve(} from .1;10 to ! o'CIOCI{ Admission: : Adults (i0c, Children 40c Thurs., Fri., Sat., Menu:- Pancakes, Maple; Feb. 25 • 26 Syrup, salads, cake, pie and lea, NN •ilii++��►�M�, LYCEUM THEATRE \\Ingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Night Commencing at 7:15 p.m, Mullett Federation of Agriculture CAR}) PARTY FEBRUARY 26 E JN 11IEA111(1A 1 1Nn1:1`51011E—ln 'hating memory of a SANITARY SEWAGE DiSPO13A(, dear husband and lathe', Kenneth Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc„ pumped Whitmore, who pas: Uri away 2 years and cleaned. Frere estIneates, Louu K '+;• t, ago February 2:1, 1958, Blake, phone 42Ra, Brussels, R,.R. 2. "` In our heart your memory l'ngers, ' Sweetly tendo', fond and truss To have, to love, anal Then to part, Is the greatest sorrow of one's heart. —,Lovingly remembered by his wife, Gladys, and son Dou;las. CARD OF '}'HANKS I wi,1110 express lily sincere (hanks to all my friend:; roil rebel:, e; who re- membered inc w'; I1 co;,le, letters, OltCh1ESTRA flowers and eats \veer I owes a patient Dancing. from 1.0 to 1 in Win' lain Hospital. Spt:•ial thanks ` to 1)r. Pedley, Dr. Currin, and the LUNCH COUN'I'Irat nursing :;tall', Rev, Mel seem, also Airs, Eelher Johnson arid Alrs E. Admission at popular prices Shotreed for their kinrinc..,. ? Blyth A);'ricultural Society 05-1p, —Mrs, Jelin Caldwell, CR�11VI't,�1•I) &('AD of 'rnANKS -- — HETHERINGTONr 1 wish to (hank all the relatives, BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS '1O11'NSIIII' OF 11L'LLI:;'1'T ' friends and neielihour:; I'or 1I:: it many TENDERS acts of kindness during my husbands The Council 01 the 'Township of Iltll- last illness and death-. For expressions lett will receive 'renders for the Crush- of synlpal'ly and floral tributes. Special ing and Itn:nline of approximately 12,E thanks lo L.O.L. No. e63, for (heir 501'- (1(1(1 cu, yds. of gravel for the roads in vice in the chapel, the 1;•ry Charles the 'Township. Gravel to he crushed ]neer for officiating al the funeral scr- and put through a three -quarte' inch screen. All gravel to be crushed rind 'spread to the satisfaction cf the 1{oad Superintendent and the District Engan- ver, Tenders must be accompanied by a Certified Cheque for $200. '}'enders to be submitted 10 the Clerk not later than 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1061). Lowest or any '}'elder nut necessarily accepted. Marry F, 'I'cbbutt, Clerk, 1{.1{, 1, Londesboro, Ontario. 04-3, 1VANTEn Old horses, Vic per pound, Dead cattle and horses at value, Important to phone at once, day or night, GIL. BERT BROS, MINK RANCH, Godcrlca. Music by }'none collect .1483J1, or I4113J4. Blyth Memorial hall FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 ""N"T I''ARRIER'S BLYTII 131+;At?'i'Y 13,18 Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 J. H. Crawford, R. S. Ilethcringtoo A.C. Wtngham and Myth. IN OLYTH'I EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by nppnlnlment, Located In Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyih, 104 Winghatn, 4, G. B. ('L ANCY OPTOMETRIST -- OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GI)DERICII 254 J. E. Langstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 pin, Wed. — 9:00 n.ln. to 12:30 p:m,•.-•+-.-+• •.. o • * • • • 0000.0 Clinton Office - Monday, 11 - 5:30, ; ����� Phon, IIU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, ;' BARGAINS OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. • W1NGIIAM, ON7 EVENINGS BY APPOIN'TNIFNT (For Apointment please phone 770 Wtngham), 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. UEODAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "Where Better !lulls Are Used" Artificial Insemination Service for all Breeds of Cattle. harmer owned and controlled. Call us between 7:30 and 10:00 a.m. week days and (1:00 and 8:00 p.m. Saturday evenings, at Clinton Hu 2-3441 or for bong distance Clinton, Zenith 9-5650. BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING McKILLOP ' MUTT TAL FIRE INSURANCE CO Tenatronic & Automatic Car and Mantle Radios Aerials and Back Seat Speaker Kits. Also 8evcral Used Radios. • Expert Radio and 'ITV Repair Service. NEW ADMIRAL TV AVAILABLE , ' HOLLINGER'S I1A1)IO & TV SERVICE Phone 4Brussels • R.%2, MythytMyth1 5115 0-4-4444 44+ +♦ 04144 444 444+44-0 ,.•N M•M MN++N I+ N I M+NW NN N D N Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AT CLAN'1'ON SALT; DARN 01 1.30 p,m, IN IILYTII, ('HONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer. 05-tf, ,W V M N+•Y NNN,rN+N+N� DEAD STOCK SERVICES Highest Cash Prices PAID FOR SICK, DOWN 011 DIS- . ABLLD COWS and IIORSES. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ON1 OFFICERS: President — John L, Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John II. Mc - Ewing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W, E. Southgate, Seaforth, DIRECTORS: J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. 11, McEw• ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton, BRUCE MARLATT Norman Trew'artha, Clinton; J E. Pep- per, Brucefield; C, 1V, Leonhardt, 011 Bornholm; II, hullo', Goderich; R. GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119 Archibald, Seaforth; Allister J3roadfoot, 24 1lOUlt SERVICE Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr„ Londesboro; J. DEAD STOCK F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker, �+ Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth; Harold Squires, Clinton, Also Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old ilorses — Sc Per found PHONE COLLECT 133 — BRUSSELS BLYTH ti 13 , K. W. COLQUIIOUN INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PIIONES Office, HU 2-9797; Bee - Phone Blyth 78 SALESMAN ' yin Kennedy IIU 2.7559 WANTED HIGHEST CASH 1'11ICES paid In surouoding districts fur dead, old, sick or disabled horses or cattle, Old hor- ses for straighter 5c n pound, For prompt, sanitar" disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman finalise, 13lyth, 21R12, If busy phone Leroy Acheson, Atwoed, 1b:1, Win. Morse, Brussels, 16J6. Trucks (tvallable at all times. 3.4. 1, Mar. vice, the organist, Alr. Lloyd 'rasher, the pallbearers and f1owe'b,';u'es, and lo all who hcdpca in any other way. My sister -in-laws, Alae Bradshaw, Fan-, " ,of nie Riley, Myrtle Nicholson, Marjorie' EUCII RE and LOST ,Jehnstcn, join me in thanking you all. ill tl]C 05.1p. —Mary Grasby, IN AIEMORIAU Forester's (-tall, 13elgravc ELLIOTT—lit luwill memory of a dear THURSDAY MARCH 4 son, It., James Elliott, killed in ac• tion February 21..1, 1045, A silent tear, a saddened heart, at 8:30 p.m. Since a cruel war did us part: , Join your fellow Co -Op , TIC gave his life, his country to save,, We have but a picture of his smiling members and Patrons for an face' evening' of entertainment took hint to a better place; Ilis song a;td laugh, his foot steps we (hear 110 marc. As time goes on we miss him more, Ills job was well done, —Ever remembered by his mother. 05-1. -27 George Montgomery 'Nina E1g i11 "WATUSI" A ,technicolour jungle m210 - drama. NOW PLAYING—Feb 25 • 26 • 27 Denny Miller • Joinnla Burnes In a new version "TARZAN AND THE APE MAN" In Color, Alun., Tues., Wed., Fel). 02 March 1 • 2 `r1NTERLU1)E Adult Entertain:nen( Filmed in Europe, in Technicolor, tells of a post war romance between a continental symphony conductor and an American government ‘worker, June Allysnn • Rossano Brazzl and Keith Andes Thurs., I'ri„ Sal„ March 3 •'I - 5 Another Bright and Breezy hit of British Buffoonery: "CAIRItY ON ADMIRAL" with !lardy Kruger • Sylvia Syms and ytonald Lewis 13AC'HELOR OF HEARTS" In Eastman Color Starring Peggy Clnntnlns and A. E. Matthews (0\1IN(-Olivia DelIa%'llund In "LIBEL" with Dirk Ilogarde. N+I INNNANI N•NNe4++NN Or#00IW MNM+J,PN"M 'I'I:ACllhat WANTED TOWNSHIP OF IIULLETT Qualif Protestant Teacher for TENDERS 'fetlock School, S.S. No. 6, Mullet!, 20 The Council of 1110 Township of IJuI- pupils Duties In commence in Set10111- te11 will receive Tenders for the sup- ber 10611 Apply Io Sccrelary-'}Teasel'-' !' Sang 701) lbs. Warble Fly Powder to John 11, merino'', 1(.11. 1, 131 Ih, I he delivered to (ht township Garage Applications to be 111 by ,March 21, 106(1.' til 1 onsicsboro, Ontario. 650 lbs. of lIS 3. 1Varhle Fly Powder to be in 15 lb, bag:; Tel 50 lbs, in 1 Ib. hags. All 'fenders to be submitted to the A Leap Year Sadie 1Iarvhins 'J'Lwnship Clerk not later than 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1960. lowest o' any tender not necessarily Foshee �._._ Ic51. 11arry 1:'. Tebbutt, Clerk, and Dance i 11.11.1, Londesboro, Onta(I1 rio3, , Foresters Hall, l3clg rave 'TENDERS }}ANTI:}) A1nrris Township 'fenders tvill be received by the tn- dersissed up until 12 o'clock .10011, Sponsored by Belgravc ' ?larch 7, 1960 for the contract of sup. 14,0.14. No, 462 plyin;:,', crushing rind hauling approx- iibalvly 01) cubic yars of EUchl'l' to start at 9 o'clock fin. MOITis Township roads; crushertel to sharp be equipped with three quarter inch Music by FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 FOR SALE Maple body and limb wood. $5.00 cord in the yard. Apply, Donald or Clifford Schultz, phone 341112 Blyth, 02.4p NOTICE The regular meelin of the Blyth Agricultural Society wil he held in the Library on Thursday, March 3rd, at 8.30 p,m. All directors and committee members are urged to attend. 05.2 FOR SALE 1951 Ford Tractor, with Deerborne Motor, both buckets; Also new and used electric welders, Apply, Roy Pep- per, Bruceficki, phone Clintlon, IIU 2-7463 05•Ip WANTED TO PURCHASE ' One -elan cross -cut saw. Apply, W. C. McLarly, Blyth 05 -Ip 100 bales of straw. Apply, phone 14115 Blyth, 11,R, 2 05•lp round screen. ANNUAL MEETING ANI) BANQUET A certified 011(51110 for $200 must ac- Jl01t111S FEDERATION OF CLIN'I'ON HIL i 'POPPERS Col nlea ly each tender Lowest or any AGRICULTURE -� 1 fences not necessarily accepted. The annual meeting and banquet of L,ulies 1.)1'111!; lunch 012. Geo, C. Marlin, Clerk, Ilse Morris Federation of Agriculture 11.11, 4, Brussels, will he held in the Forester's Hall, -- — Belgrave, on March 3rd, at 7 p.m. AUCTION SALE Oh DAfi11' CAT'T'LE The pregeanune will consist of a From fol 2(1, concession 6, Godrrich panel discussion, chaired by Douglas Township, 1st farm south of Porter's Mills. The speakers on the meeting CO-OP hill Church, on are: Free Enlerpri.se, Arnold Darrock; Federation of Agriculture, Bill Oswald; llog Marketing Board, Eldred Aitkin; Farmers Union, Frank Nesbit. Get your tickets from any of the directors, Adults, $1.25, Children, 75c 05-1 Everyone Welcome SO,.',IAL EVENING IIEI NOTICE OF RATEPAYERS MEETING The Morris Township School Area Board is calling a meeting of the Rate- payer's of Morris School Arca in the Township hall, February 20, at 8.30 The purpose of the meeting is to discuss the building of a new class- room in the }Patton Section in 1961, Also to discuss further consolidation of schools al a later (late if found ne- cessary, GEORGE AIICHIE 04.2. (Chairman of the Board) YOUR JOB more eggs per dollar OUR JOB CHICKS bred to lay more sponsored by your business. Br4grave Oo-Operative Association own High production cannot be promised into chicks, It must be built in, SAY ROE CH ICKS — and get the right ones' every time. Famous STONE'S, DEMLEItCIIIX, TRUE -LINES, .110E RED and SUSSEX CROSSES. Famed "HY-LAY" blood lines available and pro- ven at FARMS LIMITED ATWOOD, ONTARIO .No high cost franchise payments, TUESDAY, MARCH 1st at 1.30 p,m., the followins: 56 COWS CONSISTING OF: 111 Holsteins — 12 Jersey,; ---4 Ayr - shires — 2 Durhanls. Sr11e cows are fresh by sale date: (;;dance springing cr milking. 10 Dairy heifers pasture bred, '}'his is a good sale of cattle with high producers with gond quality and condi- tion, tv;lh most cowl,; raised on the ' ('arm, Plan to attend this sale for gcvd quality cows TERMS CASE! Win A, Townehentl, Proprietor. Edward W. Elliott, Auctioneer. CARPENTER 1VORK For carpentry and wood work at reasonable prices. S(:-c'cializing in -made In order cupboards. Estimate Freely g,:ven. Contact !toy McVittic, phone 201, Blyth. 05.2p, TOWNSHIP OF IIULLETT APPLICATIONS The Council of the Township of Hul- lett will receive applications for One Warble Fly Inspector for the Township for 1960 Spraying of Cattle for Warble Fly. Salary to be 90c per hour and 5c per mile while on Township Business. Ap- plications to be submitted to the Clerk not later than 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1960. Harry F. Tcbbutt, Clerk, R.R. 1, Londesboro, Ontario. 04-3. 111 NOTICE TO MOTORISTS who have not obtained 1960 Licences Your 1959 driver's licence and vehicle permit will expire at mid- night, March pith, After this date it will be illegal to drive with 1959 licences or plates. Licences have been on sale since January 4th, Get yours today from one of the 250 Agency Offices throughout the province. Avoid delay and inconvenience, • Don't wait lit the March deadline RENEW YOUR LICENCES NOW 1.10-014-40-111H4 11-041 •4 0 441+1 ♦4 1 -*** *****-F F•44-0-•-• AN IMPORTANT REMINDER You must show proof of liability insurance when you apply for plates, or hay an extra $5,00 fee. If you do not have o certificate ' fee licence purpose, call your insurance agent today. A POLICY 1 FOR FIRE, 'fIIEFT AND COLLISION 13 NOT LIABILITY INSURANCE. 1 .+0+-4-4 4 04-044-$4--44-I444-4-+-4-44-4 F4+444 ******144-4 441 ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT non. John Yarentko, O,C„ Minister , D, ,1, Collins, Deputy }Minister ,_,._•„Mr►wr rano—. -, , ••• •, Mci 8410•1•11•0 MI 't 1 Husband Trouble And Its Cures! "You've got to stop at home sometimes, Harry," sobbed the lovely young wife"It's unfair going out every night, dancing, You know 1 can't have any fun as lum." But Harry, although twenty- three -year-old Marga non(y'thN8argat, pecting her first baby, refused to stay at home, "I can't mooch about here, doing nothing the whole evening, or just sit staring at you," he exclaimed, irritably, Margaret rushed out of the room. One row followed an- other. Because of her husband's neglect and selfishness, she feared she would soon become a nervous vrecb unless she took some action. At last, after much cogitation, she decided what she most Uo. . . . One xommn evening Harry went to his wardrobe to put oo his dinner jacket. It hung on the peg x|mm, all his other clothes having been remove d. Be grasped it, and then drew back in dismoy, for his hands clutched o nirky, h|u:k, glutinous mess, Margaret had smeared the whole jacket with TAR. Rushing downstairs, he de- manded to know what e'nmndedtoknmvnhat she meant by such a horrible trick. "I'll clean it for you," she said, calmly, "after the baby arrives and we can go dancing \oAetbur" Harry's fists clenched, For a mo- ment it looked as if he was going o'mentit}ookodxoi{bexaogoiog to hit her, but he controllecl him.him- self. "Oh well," he said, ^I suppose girls do strange things when they're in your condition." And, remarkable to record, after that act of self-control, Harry put aside his passion for By the time the baby un.ivod, he was a reformed character, To- day, his wife is firmly convinced that her tarring act not only saved her muoioXo, but turned her dance -crazy husband into a model fu1hec. Not all varieties of husband - trouble end so happily. In fact the peudulum, as many couples realize to their dismoy, tends more often to swing sharply the other way, to widen the breach, Some husbands really do ask for trouble. A Scot from Ubxn, who migrated to a small market town in south Eaoez, built up u thriving drapery business. A stickler for accounts, he made his wife keep a strict tally of her housekeeping money. In fact, she had to present him with her books weekly showing exactly how every penny went. .At first, sharing his ideas of economy, she conformed without protest to this practice. But soon she realized it was a kind of ob- session with him. Oneweek'eod. when he called for her housekeeping book, she brought him instead a grey fu- neral urn, "What's that for?" he demanded, much puzzled. "l want to check your expense book. dear." "You've got it, right in front ofyou."she retorted. "Just look inside, and you'll discover its ashes." He removed the lid and launched into a stream of abuse, but she interrupted him. Grasp- ing the urn, she emptied it over his hcacl so that the ashes trickl- ed all over his face. "How funny you look, decor- ated like that!" she burst out, hysterically. ^Perhaps that'll help you to forget that stupid idea of yours of accounting for every little farthing!" A Texas husband, Jakub Fried- mann, had to seek police pmhr' (ioo recently from his wile. "She's determined to roast me alive by setting fire to my bed," he reported. Three UmcyFhrhad shoved a fire basket under his bed, so that he had woken up wreathed in Umnr/, his bed- clothes blazing rd'duUob\ozinx 'I'he police found that the fire - raising was prompted by jeal- ousy, and based on quite ill- founded suspicions. Friedmann had engaged a new »ocm\xr7, x pretty and efficient blonde of twenty-four. His wife, liowever, seemed to think that her hus- band was in love With the girl In this case, desperate meas- ures paid off, tor the couple were reconciled. A German wife, 8i\dcgmrdb K. . . . =riled to an Essen book- keeper, used her skill as a pho- tographer to punish him for his infidelities. She managed to snap secretly the girl in whom he was interested, then she paired this photograph Uh that of an el- derly millionaire and posted the combined picture 1uher husband, "When you've as much money as he has, you may take her," said the anonymous message. Her husband, however, forced her to confess. Then, as each ac- cused the other of 6ecopUon, their house became x ba(UoUeid, the husband tearing clown and smashing the pictuns, the wife picking up porcelain and china and hurling them at her disloyal partner. Such was the fracas that neighbours had to intervene and kcep the Iwo honie-wreckers apart. An accountant living in Sussex had a preeoh000e, in which he spacio|ixediugroniogU8a. But his wife, he discovered within the first few weeks of their mar- riage, upriage detested figs and frowned on his greenhouse hobby. "I'm not going to give it up," he told her, but he has since done so. She did not wreck the greenhouse; her method was far more subtle. She poisoned the soil and as fast as he introduced fresh soil and plunis, so she ap- plied her secret killing does. Finally, he had to give it up as obviously nothing would grow inside. Now, however, the green- bouxe has been converted into a sun parlour, and everyone is happy, Some husbands run into trouble when least expecting it. A man who married a divorcee took his bride to a seaside villa. But as he unlocked the front door, a figure lurched out of the obudonx, the wife's ex-husband, "You've stolen my wife," he raved, roaring drunk, "You're mdgdng to get away with this!" Caught completely off guard, the bridegroom t clown un- der a terrific uppercut. Shocked and frightened, the wife ran screaming clown the path, with her ex-husband in hot pursuit, "I always knew you were a hrub. Cbudie, and now this proves it," she olu1Ued, as he caught up with her, Seizing her, ' he tried to kiss her hut luckily a passer-by intervened. As it happened, the newlyweds spent their honeymoon first night under the same roof. But the battered bridegroom, his head • swathed in bandagcs, was so ner- vous that he locked himself in o separate room and refused to come out until satisfied that his rival had left town, SWEET BIRD Jody Youblood loves Adam She carries the 9 -month-old falcon on her shoulder all day long in her Fort Worth, Tex., restaurant. Once Jody loaned lovable - Adam to the 6/y zoo where he promptly tore into aviary cell. mnttm, New he': back with Jody and all is sweetness. , `v'r'"�` = REAL ARTSY TABLE — Guests who drop in unexpectedly may find this table doing likewise. This dining room table is dus|&`ud to fit against the wall when not in use — where it looks like a framed painting of grasses und butterflies. Tilted forward, it can squeeze in five. � TM.~^/,��������� � ^ dam Andoews. Here, for a change from the usual batch of recipes, is the tale of a woman who decided to try hmno'mxUe bread, It was written by Mrs. Gail Edith John- xou in the Christian Science 11oni1or and 1 hope you enjoy U as much as I did. ~ * ^ I looked suspiciously at the recipe. "?7by, oh. why," } moan- ed, "did l have to marry a man who loved homemade breud|" But 1 had, and he did. He was "sick and tired," he had said, "of mouthing bought bread that tasted Ube glue and xunduot!" Resignedly l started in. "Dis- solve two packages of yeast in one-half cup of warm water," the recipe' read. l filled a mea- suring cup half full of hot tap water and added the yeast, Then { stirred in exact amounts of everything else and kneaded the sticky mess as ordered for 10 minutes, eyes riveted on the clock, Finally, l "rounded" it up in a greased bowl, covering it with a damp dish towel. The recipe called for a warm place for the dough to raise, so l set it on top of my oil stove. When 1peebed under the cioth later the dough looked like the same white blob ] had started with, l checked it two, two and a half, three hours &te,, It still hadn't risen. I decided I'd better punch it down anyway. An hour later that punched - down look was still ihoru l didn't have the faintest notion what was wrong, but [ decided to bake it and sue what hap- pened. ' ^ � Somewhat Sticky I dumped the gooey mass onto my f|oured hoard to shape |oaveu It came out of the bowl with dlU\culty, as heat from the oil stove had baked an inch - thick crust on the bottom. Duuoied, but still game, l fin- gered the crust into the dough and shaped "loaves," These | baked at 425 degrees F. for 25 minutes. Baking couldn't do them any harm, l thought inno- cently. Being unfamiliar with my omn, l neglected to move the dial from preheat to buke\ Removing t h e "loaves" from the oven was like taking bricks from a kiln. They resembled bricks in size and colour and weighed as much, I turned them out n/ the pans and decided to try a slice. Laboriously l cut through the leathery crust and into the musty smelling bread. It was mushy gray and tasted that way. The first thing my husband noticed when he arrived home was my pathetic attempt at pre- paring the staff of life, He pecked mo on the nose, aniDcd, un asked, puzzled, "What's that funny smell ?" 'Nothing To Hide' ^0h nothing, door nothing," 1 said, hastily backing in front of the loaves. l grabbed a towel and covered the evidence, "What are you hiding?" he asked coyly, reaching :or the towel, "Ah, my little wifey has baking breud|» He hefted a loaf and it accidentally fell to the floor, making a very uu' 6reudUbo thud, He picked it up, leaned against a chair, and just laughed and laughed "This — this —" he choked weakly, "is the craziest bread I've ever seen. Just like honest - to -goodness brick 1" ISSUE 9 — 1960 WM. He stopped suddenly when he saw the tears rolling down my cheeks. "Oh, honey," he said, "I'm sorry. l didn't mean to hurt your feelings. Don't get 8ix- uoroged I'll bet, if you try again your broud1| come out right 1" * * I tried, and — oh, well, prac- tice does make perfect. Little things done just right can make a difference. For instance: HOT water killed rny yeast and caused the musty bricklike bread. The water must be lukewarm. Another thing; Direct heat will 'form a crust on dough; a high shelf or chair near a warm air register is much better. And still another: Punching down then shaping loaves properly gives a fine texture, preventing a Swiss cheese effect from air bubbles. Many sessions later l had concocted a whole new re- cipe. Here it is: Fioe'evcrY'Ume bread—For two loaves: Dissolve 1 package of dry yeast and 1 teaspoon sugar in ',/4 cup luke- warm water. lei stand 10 min- utes. To l cup milk add: 1 cup hot wuter, 3 tablespoons sugar, l tablespoon s a 1 t, and 2 table- spoons shortening. When mixture is cool to luke- warm, add yeast mixture and 1/2 teaspoon cardamon, Then add sifted flour XmduuUy, until dough can be handled. (No uo,:d to measure.) ^ * 4 Knead about 10 minutes or un- til dough is smooth and elastic, tut only slightly nUcby. Round up in greased bowl; bring greas- ed side up. Cover and let due until double in b u 1 k. Punch down and lei rise again. Shape into two |ouvm, put in greased pans, and let rise until double. Bubo at 425 degrees F. for 25 minutes. Turn out ou wire racks Cool, then freeze or store in plastic bags. ^ ^ , One last Warning: Put the bread to rise in plain view. Once l nestled my bowl high - on a closet obcH and went gaily about my hnuoowork. pleased with myself for having found such a nice warm spot. Hours later l flew to the shelf with palpitating heart. It was a mess! The blown -up dough had escap- ed the bowl and was stretching sticky tentacles .into my best blankets and sheets THE PROBLEM Most olxxhave upretty clear idea of Ihe world we want. What we lack is an understand- ing oj Low to go about getting FLORAL — Straw -and -shantung beach hat is one of the Italian Imports you may 6e seeing next summer. Does Money Bring Happiness? "" The question is hardly original but the now it has kod in the obscure Italian vUb8ou[San Marco d'Urri was surely unpre- cedented. The money arrived last No- vember when every muu, wo- man, and child in San Marco was presented with 25 shai'e of Bank of America stock worth $1,200 and paying $47 a year in divi- dends. ''88xruvig8noo!" the vil- lagers cried when bankers, TV comenomen, and news photogra- phers arrived from Genoa and slogged the last half mile into town on a muddy n'tuie path, The church bell tolled and them was lofty praise for the two bm(he/s. Victor and Joseph Suturuo, who had sent the money from Ame- rica. Rich and childless real- estate operators in Reno, Nev., they had wanted to create a me- morial to their father, Leopold, who had spent his youth in San Marco. "Che generosita" the vil- lagers d Everyone,that is, except the terrible -tempered widow Vir- ginia Cmsiod|i C� 1‘ ho, in an age cfpayola, nh/^d bo sign up for her share, Claiming it nuk the work of the devil and hurling lurid curses, the xiJon forced her son, Mario 85.nod daugh- ter, Gentile, 03. to ;;,c up their shares, too, The ri|/vp'. ,he m~ gued, was going to ;lie dogs, pre - When the \lilt:eel's started squabbling ovcr their new wealth, it seemed Ihe widow might be right. Youths swagger. ed around in fancy 111!W trench once - peaceful countryside was ruined by the roar of scooter hibmu worse still, ofeud developed over nho( sort of "thank yoo" gesture San Marco should make. On proposal was to change the name of the village to So|onnu (that wouldn't cost anything, but was 8n:UyJiananl,d as too nig- gardly). Then a statue nxo pro- posed but rejected oothe ground that San Marco has no piazza to put it in. Finally, the 220 inhabit- ants of the upper part 01 the vil- lage decided l-|oXcdccidnd to build a church in honor of the Sntoruoy This would save them nxikiug half m mile to the church in the lower part of the town. Bot the 64 resi- dents of lower San k{onnWjod- ed. They preferred a bust ot Papa Leopoldo in front of the present church. "You want the ,hw'eh and the statue, too," complained upper San Marco, "Y9d1. you've got the wine - shop and the (o}er|.ion — yoq can't have orm)ih}ng." shouted back ]ow et' San Marco. Then a small boy got a bright \dex. Why not a statue of Loupol- (10, halfway between the upper and lower levels o[the r|Un:/? "Magnifico," the villagers xg,oed, and for a \N -die it seemed that even the widow Csssinelli would xppmvc. First she sent son Mario oub to claim his share. NexL she sent daughter Gentile. But Gentile was in`ypud in a sudden 6 -foot fall of snow and barely made it back to the wid- ow's one -room shoA. |t was a xnyning sign to the widow. "The devil's behind ihis,° she wailed last month. "We'll pay for all this gold in some terrible nay Just you wait unJoec" • '1 01)1 a fraid, doctor," said Mi's, ' Wimpole, "that my husband has some terrible mental xK|irUon. Sometimes l talk to him for hours and then discover that he hasn't heard a word." � "That's not an affliction, madam," was the weary reply. FASHION HINT They Still Keep A Broom At The Door Years ago when we were first setting up housekeeping and my green bride was not yet aware of all the country customs, old Cyrenus Hastings stuck his head In the back door and called, "Where's your broom!" I can't write it the way he said it — halfway between broom and bruin. I got him a broom, and he swept the newfallen snow from his great lumberman's boots and carne into the house to sit a spell and exercise our rocker. Since then any sign of snow here causes the broom to be stood by the back door in an- cient Maine style, "Snowing a mite," I will say, and she says, "Oh, then I'll put the broom out in case Cyrenus cones" Old Cyremus stopped coming long since, but many a new boot has been swept clean by the broom he taught my wife to keep handy for snow. And now, with the swift years, I notice people aren't sweeping their feet any more Some fete do, still; but mostly folks march up to our back steps, thump the panel, twist the knob, and walk right past the broom to bring all their nice wet snow for the floor. And I notice back -door steps aren't accoutred with brooms so much now. I think it was a nice little custom, and should never have waned, Snow, back then, wasn't something the civil authorities removed to the quick, but was a friendly, useful, not unpleas- ant aspect of winter which could be lived with easily. Now peo- ple come in low shoes and rub- bers, and sometimes without even rubbers, and you can go all over the county with sum- mertime gear, Then you wore some kind of hi -cut, or galoshes, and expected to trudge a good deal in deep snow. When it came to entering a house, you swept your feet — and every home hacl a broom out so you could do it. There was always a broom at the schoolhouse, at the church, and sometimes at the store. You didn't track in. I haven't seen any now for some time, but there used to be a commodity called felt boots, They were, without question, the warmest, most comfortable footwear for winter use, They were made of thick, coarse felt, a little hairy, and their soles probably had some hemp or cardboard thrown In for stiffen- ing, They laced up almost to your knee, the top half having hooks instead of eyelets Out-of-doors, you wore a pair of heavy gum rubbers on them, which kept you dry -shod and RAUL COMES CLEAN — Raul Castro, brother of Cuban pre- mier Fidel, is snapped in Ha- vana — minus his well-known beard and pony tail haircut. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 57. Augment 1, rootlike part DOWN 4. Capital of 1 Soft food Oregon 2, Old Fr, corn 9, Philippine 3. Dregs 4, Mat dish 0. Exist 6. Singing syllable savage 12. Adept 13. Legend 16. land of gaite' 17. fruit 18. Pull after 19, T'alce out 21. finite closer 23. Yellow ocher 24. Tufted plant 28, Turkish call• 29. Surfaces n street 81. Old soldier (colloq,) 32. 2000 pound, 83. Alert 84, ,lapnnese outcast 85. Urge 86. More dlscourteout' 87. floor covering 88. Pence of ntinoi 40, SCRUM root of 100 41. Serpents 42. Not hew 44 Insect 46. Music dratnn 48. Decree 51, Assured beyond doubt _ 14. Attempt 55 56, Help 56, Rounded roof-, gave you traction. They were Ideal for all outdoor farm wcrk, and in 40 -below weather your feet would always he cozy. — which was not true of /cowhides. And, a very good arrangement, when you came into the house you . could slip off the rubbers and the felts made just as good slippers as anybody ever had. A bit high, but fine, Felt boots did have one fault. Their internal combustion sys- tem set up a natural pedal reac- tion which could offend in a close room with fussy people. Their usefulness in the open was their failing in the parlor, Also, this steaming tendency which made them so salubrious in the cold outdoors had a a way of corning through at the ankles, so the snow would melt there some, and then freeze again, and this built up great balls of ice which clung to the fibers, This didn't impede the efficiency of the boot, but it gave you something to whack at when you tried to sweep it off. It wouldn't sweep off, You could whack at your ankles un- til the broom shattered, and you'd just get a hearty jingle - jangle like a crystal chandelier in a high wind, You could pull the ice balls off with your fin- gers, but not with your mittens on, and standing there doing it while supper waited was a chil- ly matter worth remembering when grayheads speak of the olden days. In time, pulling off the ice would remove enough fibers so the boots went weak at the ankles. Another thing you could do was remove the boots at once and let them melt by the fire, but the felt ab- sorbed the water and it some- times took more than overnight to dry them again. Cowhide boots, swept on the step, were a lot easier to get ready for tomorrow, although we did have to grease them now and then. We did this with neatsfoot oil, which you could then buy without hunting the state over. It was an oil made from the hooves of neat cattle, or oxen, and it would make leather boots as wet -proof as a duck. Best way was to pour it in a baking pan and stand the boots In it so, the leather would soak up well, You used a dauber to cover the uppers. This chore had a rich farm aroma, and every kitchen ,had a corner where boots were greased and because of constant dripping the planks would be oiled as well as any boots for' an area of about four feet. And there was forever and ever a harnessy smell there, ripest in August when the weather assist- ed in dispensing it. One point being that you could wear felt boots itt the other room, but oily leather boots were not conten- anced on a sofy. I lean, myself, towards felts. They were harder to sweep, but their other ad- vantages were telling. Today the floors you come in on are laid with linoleum and well waxed, and a quick cotil- Lon with a mop takes no longer than sweeping. The wide pine planks of old farmhouses were another story. But if you come to our door in snowtime, you'll find a broom there, and we'd appreciate it if you'll sweep. We like to keep a custom here and there. Old Cyrenus, when ' he swept, used to up -end the broom and whack his heels with the handle — not wholly to show he was thorough, but to crack any Ice that might send him under the wash bench when he crossed the threshold. — By John Gould in' the Christian Science Monitor. "In times of trial," said a preacher to his congregation of convicts, "what brings us' the greatest comfort?" "Acquittal!" mumbled a voice - from the back, ISSI1E 9 — 1960 'i. fast tense ending 8. Factory 9. Point a gun 10, Also 11. Girl's name 14. Abound 16. Bushy clump 19. Separated 45. '!'utter 20. Pootball tear., 46,'1'at•o paste 21. ileverage 47. Finish 22. h'unernl 48, identlenl oration 49, weary 23, (ireet G0, Brood of 25 h'xuggetate 26, Bodily I o, tor,' 52. Perform 27 Aloe's thirties 5:1 'Tyne ',tonsure 29. Average 30, Id, Indian weight 39. Sod 41. Conjunction 43. Uttered 44. Branches of learning hbencnnti 1. 2 3 %4 5 12 13 6 7; 9 10 11 14 15 16 21 22 24 25 26 27 35 3Q 31 .•: 34 37 41 44 —777, , .48 49 50 6 Answer elsewhere on this page 1-21 mol PATTERN FOR SURVIVAL — "Painted" with a snowplow, this composition in manner of the modern school is a design for survival; it permits cattle near Aberdeenshire, Scotland, to reach ground cover for fodder. TIIEPA2M FRONT In a small, compact laboratory at Ottawa, a total of 114,651 samples of cheese were analysed for extraneous 'natter last year by white-frocked technicians working with spotless, stainless steel equipment, For the small (normally less than six employees) staff of the Canada Department of Agricul- ture cheese laboratory, it was a record year. — surpassing the 1958 test by seven and a half per cent. • ,� • About 97 per cent of the cheese graded fulfilled the re- quirements of Canada First Grade from the standpoint of extraneous matter, says F. D, Murphy, the official in charge of testing operations. This is slight- ly lower than the previous year's percentage. • • Canada was first to undertake this analytical work on a nation- al basis. And, since this coun- try poneered in the work equip- ment in the laboratory was de- signed by leaders in the Cana- dian cheese industry. Now reports indicate that Australia has taken a page from the book of her Commonwealth sister country. Australia has in- stituted a method of testing for extraneous matter that is almost identical to the one Canada has had for several years, * • * A sample of cheese is taken from each vat graded and for- warded to the Ottawa lab for analysis, Samples are referred to as having Disc 1, Disc 2, 3 or 4. The first two discs qualify the 'cheese for inclusion in Can- ada First Grade, Disc 3 Canada Second Grade, and Disc 4 Can- ada Third Grade, or below — depending on the nature of the sediment. • • • At first, results of the analy- sis were relayed to the milk'pro- ducer and cheese manufacturer for their information only. In 1954, though, the federal gov- ernment, ruled that every vat must be tested for extraneous matter and that a premium would not be paid unless they were DIscs 1 or 2. (Premiums have been paid on top quality Canadian cheese since 1939.) • • • In 1957, the Canada Dairy Products Act was amended to make extraneous matter analy- sis a factor in determining grade. Of the toal samples tested last year, 25,910, or 22.6 per cent, were classed Disc 1; 85,490, or 74.5 per cent, Disc 2; 2,979, or 2,6 per cent, DIsc 3; and 272, or 0.23 per cent, Disc 4, * * • Underscoring the advancement made in the testing program to date is the fact • that in 1953, out of 85,000 samples, 46,000 were classed as Discs3 and 4, and in 1950, out of 107,000 samples, 25,000 were Discs 3 and 4. Last year there were many more samples and only 3,000 in the bottom two classifications. Apple sauce, traditionally served with pork, may now ac- company other meats to the din- ner, table in the forst of canned jellied apple sauce. The jellied sauce was devel- oped at the Canada Department of Agriculture Research Station at Summerland, B,C., as one of a series of products intended to utilize surplus apples of dessert varieties. • • • Though normal fruit jellies must contain more than 65 per cent sugar in order to set, use of a special pectin permits a gel to be formed from sweet• ened apple splice containing not more than 30 per cent sugar. Fruit' acid •is added to impart n good tart flavor to jellied sauce made from low -acid dessert varieties, The set of the jelly Is control- led by varying the proportions of pectin, sugar, and acid so that the products will be firm enough to slice, yet not too stiff to spread. • • • Addition of red food coloring gives an attractive product for serving with turkey or chicken, and a nutmeg -flavored jelly is good with ham or pork, • • • Want to get the most out of your pole barn? Then consider this: At the Nappan, N.S., federal experimental farm, it was found that large, pole -type loafing barns used for cattle in winter make execellent shelters for rearing pullets In confinement during spring and summer. • • • T, M, Maclntyre reports that 2,000 White Leghorns were rear- ed from eight to 20 weeks in a pole. barn 40 by 100 feet. Five doors, three in front and one at each end, were wired so that they could be left open or closed depending on the weather. Feed hoppers and water fonts were arranged so as to leave a central alley wide enough for a truck, Tubular -type feeders held a sufficient feed for one week, Movable roosts, four feet high, left floor space for the birds during the day. • • * This method of rearing pul- lets elminated losses from pre- datory animals, reduced feeding time, and cut down on late even- ing and early morning attention. BEE NUISANCE! Tens of thousands of bees con- verged on a marmalade factory in Gorizia, Italy, and so alarm- ing was the invasion that work- ers fled in panic and the factory was closed. Scouting parties of bees were first attracted by piles of empty sugar sacks stored outside the works. Workers fought the first arrivals with sprays and swat- ters, but • when the main army of insects arrived and took pos- session of the factory itself in search of sugar, employees de- cided to quit. Some days elapsed before has- tily summoned bee experts were able to clear the premises of the invaders, Nutty Things About Apples Apple growers everywhere are excited by the news that a fruit farmer in South Africa has pro- duced apple trees which bear fruit all the year round and never shed their leaves. Before putting the tree on the market, says a report from Wel- lington, South Africa, the far- mer sent a number to friends in all parts of the country to test under all possible conditions, All reported that the trees grew exteremely well and are bearing apples "up to the best of expec- tations." What's more, says the farmer, the tree has been found to be at least fifty per cent less sus- ceptible to virus and insect plagues. Ever since Eve mankind has been eating apples. The apple Is the oldest fruit associated with human beings, but we are not the only creatures who like ap- ples, More than five hundred species of insects are known to feed off the apple tree which will also support fungus and other growths. Talking of apple eating, a Pennsylvania barber succeeded in eating 366 apples in two hours and five minutes before a crowd of 400. He did it for a wager. Any ill effects? "A bad attack of indigestion and stiff jaw mus - cels," he reported, Because housewives like to have apples with ruddy cheeks, scientists at a U.S. agricultural research station experimented until they discovered a liquid which, sprayed on the ripening fruit, turned then red quickly. It's astonishing how many strange beliefs have apples as their core! Women in some parts of the world who have not giv- en their husbands an heir some- times go out in dry weather and roll under apple trees, convinced that this will make them fruit- ful. Some negroes believe that apple -shaped birthmarks can be removed by rubbing them with apples and keeping the person on an apple diet, This, of course, Is not so. English, German and Danish folklore contain many stories of apples used as love charrns. Some Danes to -day believe that an apple serves as a chastity test, fading when the owner is unfaithful. Champion apples? •A Durham man named Stobbs. was gather- ing apples in his orchard in 1818 when • he found it Yorkshire green more than thirteen inches in circumference. It weighed 131/2 ounces, , but was dwarfed by another apple picked by a man named Fillbridge who also lived In Durham. This giant was 22 inches in circumference, � ll?flAYSCllOO1 JESSON By Itcv. It. lt'trclay Warren B.;5., B,D. Courage for Christian Witnessing Acts 21: 27-39 Memory Selection; Thou therefore endure hardness, as a good soldier of Jesus Christ. 11 Timothy 2:3, Paul and his party were warmly welcomed by the bre- thren on their arrival at Jeru- salem. And then events took an unusual turn. The Christian Jews in Jerusalem — and there were many of them — were zealous for the law. Paul had been preaching to the Gentiles and was not requiring them to be circumcised and walk after the many customs of the Mosaic law. Now James proposed that Paul purify himself along with four men who had taken upon themselves a Nazarite vow, and bear the expense of the sacri- fices that must be offered before they could shave their heads. This would amount to a public demonstration that Paul himself was keeping the law, and would refute the charges that he wa41 teaching Jews not to do so. Some time before this, Paul of his own accord had taken such a vow. (Acts 18:18). Paul agreed to do as was suggested. Whether Paul made a mistake here or not, is hardly for us to judge. Nowhere is it suggested that he did wrong. It seems to be part of his pattern of being all things to all men. To the Jew he became as a Jew. There was certainly nothing sinful in what he did. People change their ideas slowly. Paul was not up- holding these vows and the sub- sequent offerings as a means of salvation, They were no substi- tute for faith in Jesus Christ. On the other hand, Paul's course here didn't seem to accomplish much for the kingdom unless it was to assure the Hebrew Chris- tians that he was not hostile to the law and hence could be fully trusted. But now, non-Christian Jews front Asia saw Paul in the temple and supposed that Tr(); phimus, a Gentile companion from Ephesus, had accompanied him into the temple. This was a serious offense, if it had been committed. Gentiles were nig permitted in the outer court of the Gentiles. The agitation be- gan and soon the city was in an uproar. They drew Paul out of the temple and began to beat him, purposing to kill him. His arrest by the Roman soldiers saved his life. Paul obtained permission to address the ntob. He told of his conversion. When he mentioned his commission to preach to the Gentiles, the uproar began anew. The chief captain took him in and ordered examination under scourging, Paul announced that he was a Roman citizen and es- caped further beating. A strange turn of events in- deed! The way is being made for him to preach at Rome at State expense. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking 3N3't-�53w�o10010IV X21©1N 9114 I dN00 NQV 4dO 2fo via d B b N 3 1 1 3_?! :n.a 2i5onb .:ra ✓ 13'. 9A I1V NOL 1 5 A 59AVet I1V SSOW11'5111101aM 3.130Kim OJ. NOW31 33'1111d NO 11 IOV211 30V ✓ IVWW31V5 Sad THE TURNING POINT OF A STILL WORLD — A six-inch snowfall coupled with stacked farm lair plement wheels makes an interesting pattern of circles. PAGE„ 8 ' Renew your Subscription to The Standard Now! THE 13Lt11i STANDARD �.., Wednesday, Feb AUBURN Wingham, visited on Sunday with his .,"14•44-•-•-•-+.+ x+44.444++++++++.444. aunt, Mrs. Maud Fremlin. Mr, and Mrs, Jack Haldane, Miss Ruth Anne ilaldane of Hamilton Mr. ''04.4sI P41.00 4414 '"""''' NNI.041.04 "'' 1 Walkerburn Club i $ Z }} CANADA PACKER SPECIAL SLICE SIDE BACON, 1 lb. j 39c ASK ABOUT THIS ~NWM1. 11.444.4~4~.MH#4 DOMESTIC SHORTENING 3e off deal 1 lb. ctn. 29c Beehive GOLDEN CORN SYRUP, 2 Ib. tin .. 29c Ingersoll CHEESE SPREAD 4c off deal large 16 oz. jar 53c Maxwell House INSTANT COFFEE large 6 oz. jar 93c t-.-.+K-.+MN •-1+4-N+4 4.-4- .++-.N-.+.4 .-.-•-.• • .•. • .•- This Week's EXTRA SPECIAL BONUS Redpath Fine Granulated Sugar (one to customer) 5 lb. bag 39c 0-4-1,+4-4-+++4-41-4-.++4+ 4.4N -.+.-•-N 4-4 4-4+4-44 4-4-4-4-4-4.44-% filore Units of our "FANTISIE WEAR" have arrived each unit 99c with $5.00 Grocery Order. Watch our Window for FRUIT SPECIALS ' 14-4-44-4-+4-4-4 4444444-4,44-4 # •-•-•4444-4,4444-•4444-44+444-4-0. MEAT SPECIAL--.. SERVICE - QUALITY - SATISFACTION We Deliver Phone 156 DOLLAR DAYS Stewart's Red & 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" FRESH FRUITS AND WESTON'S FEATURE SAVE 4c PAY ONLY 31 c VEGETABLES 4 Colifornia Sunkist Oranges .... 3 doz. 1.00 ib P. E. I. Potatoes 2.10 lb. bags .... 1.00 t tl • 1 The \Valkerburn Club mot at the home of Mrs. Henry !hulking for then rc;ular meeting with 16 Indies and 12 children present, The president, Mrs. George Schneider, was in charge of the meeting which opened by singing The Maple Leaf Foreverfollowed by all rc' peating the Lord's Prayer. 1 he min- Met;of the previous meeting were read by Mrs, Lorne Honking and approved. The roll call was answered by a New Year's Resolution they had made. Pro- gram conun t:tee for the next meeting is Mars. Ted Honking and Mrs. HulbertDuizer The lunch committee will be 11.11:s. Guy Cunningham, Mrs, Carman Gross, Mrs. Ariel Duizer and Mrs Herbert Duizer. The lucky draw was on i won by Mrs. Gee Schneider. The program committee was in charge of Mos. Stewart Ament and Mrs, GarthMcCtinchey. An interesting display and demonstration was given by Mrs. Lloyd Pipe, of Londcsboro, of articles made from foal n rubber. Attractive table centres, dolls, doilies,. cushions etc. were shown A delicious lunchwas served by Mrs, Worthy Young, Mrs Leonarl Archambault, Mrs. Stew4- art Ament and Mrs. Stanley Brill. Little Miss Cynthia Camiibell re- turned to her home last week after spending 11 couple of weeks with her grandmother, Mrs. Stanley Johnston. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sturdy and Hos and Airs. George Sturdy, of Clintcn visited in Auburn last Thursday even ing with Mr. and Mrs. Keith Arthur and family. Mrs. G. Sturdy also visit- ed with Mr and Mrs, Herbert Mog- ridge Mh-. and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor spent the week ened at St. Catherincs with their daughter, Mrs. Ronald Rathwell, Mr. Rathwell, Michael and Janice, 1\rrs. Taylor remained for a week's vis- it. Air. Murray Rollinson, of Goderich, spent last week end with his parents; Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rollinson Mr and Mrs. Jim Hembly and Mr.Ted Hembly, of Palmerston, spent Sun- day with their .parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Hembly. Mr, and Mrs. Bert Marsh have mbv- ed to Auburn and will make their hone with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Mogridge. Mrs, Gladys Hull, of Brus- sels, has been assisting at the Mog• ridge home since the first of the year, left for her home last week. We wel• conte Mr. and Mrs. Marsh back to the Auburn community Mrs, Keith Machan and Mils. El, Davies attended the 4-H Club Leader- ship Training School at Wingham for the project, "Meat on the Night'," on Monday and Tuesday, Miss Mary Clark, nurse -in -training at Stratford General Hospital, spent the week -end with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Fordyce Clark, Mr. and Mrs. 'Phomas Jardin and family, of Wingham, spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Straughan. Mr Gordon Dacr is a patient in Goderich hospital where he is suffer- ing from a sliver in his hand. A number from here attended the re- ception for Mr. and Mrs. Cor Bakclaar. Mr. and Mrs. Baketaar were married recently at the Christian Hcf;,.m Church Clinton by Rev. Van Ee';. The bride was formerly Joan, n,u':1 Huckins, daughter of Mr and Mi . A. B. Huck - ins, of R.R. 2, Goder•i''•. and the groom, is the son of Mr a 1 Mrs. J. C. Bake - tear. of R.R. 1. Auburn. The wedding music was played by Mr. Roeder. Giv- n in marria,e by her father, the bride wore a-stre2t-length dress of pale blue rocaded taffeta with cap sleeves, Iather.J bodice and empire waistline, ith matching jacket. She wore a lite flowered headband and a corsage yellow roses. A reception followed at he home of the bride Following a edding trip to Buffalo and Niagara ails they will .reside at R.R. 1, Au - urn. The groom is employed at the eers Body and Fender Shop. Mr, and Mrs. Murray Taylor, of s Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c F 19c Cooking Onions 3 lb. bag Radishes, 8 oz. bag, 2 for 19c Large Head Lettuce 2 for 35c Rhubarb ... , per lb23c MEATS and FROZEN FOODS Birds Eye French Fries 6 pkgs. 1.00 Fresh Picnic Hams, per lb. 33c Smoked Picnic Hams, per lb. 37c Country Style Sausage 6 lb. box 1.89 Weiners, 3 lbs. 1.00 Daisy Bacon, 1 lb. pkg59c Sliced Side Bacon, per lb. 49c Head Cheese, 3 lb. tin ... 89c Lean Hamburg, per lb... 39c Lean Blade and Rib Roasts per lb. 49c Sliced Bologna, per lb. 27c Bargain Galore Each and Every Day. Shop and Save During Our Big DOLLAR DAYS You Save on Every Dollar. Red and White BONUS OFFER Corduroy Decora- tor Cushion only 1.19 with 5.00 pur- chase. Leslie Fenty, of Trinidad, West Indiett, and Mr. Neville Nunes, of Kingston, Jiamaica, spent last week -end as guests • of Mr. and Mrs William Goddard and family. Mi'. Fenty and Mr. Nunes are students attending McMaster Univer- sity in Hamilton, It was an exciting week -end as these boys had never been accustomed to snow and ice, and a 'gent thrill to go tobogganing along with getting stuck in the snow bank with they car Mr, and All's Harry Arthur, Judith, Mark and Gregory, attended the fun- eral of Ma's. Arthur's grandmother, Mrs. Mills, at Woodstock last Saturday. BLYTH ARENA SCHEDULE Free Skating for Beginners Wednesdays 2 - 4 TIIURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25 Public Skating - 8 to 10 p.in. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26 Intermediate Play Off Hockey - LUCKNOW vs BLYTH 8:30 p.m. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27 Public Skating - 8 to 10 p.m. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 29 Rural League Hockey 13th vs Blyth -- Milburn vs Auburn 7:30 9:15 TUESDAY, MARC!! 1 Public Skating - 8 to 10 p,m, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 2 Broom Ball -• 2 games. TP41Ne MEM WITHOUT PENALTY PAYMENT NEW METHOD of choosing the finest blood lines -such as Stone's, Demlerchix,True- Lines, bought outright by ROE- raised, selected, hatched and handed to you proven, ELIMINATE PENALTIES ELIMINATE DICKERING Get the best from ROE FARMS LIMITED ATWOOD, ONTARIO WRITE FOR PRICE LIST TODAY! "NEW CARS FOR SPRING" BUY YOUR NEW CAR NOW AND BE READY . FOR TIIE GOOD DRIVING DAYS AHEAD We've been stocking up and have a fine ,selection to choose from. 1 only ENVOY 4 cyl. Station Wagon. 5 VAUXHALL 4 cyl. Sedans (a choice of colours) 1 only VAUXHALL Cresta 6 Sedan. Black, with whitewalls, 1 only CORVAIR Deluxe .Two Door, Black, with Whitewalls, Automatic Transmission, 2 BEL AIR 6 CHEVROLET SEDANS 2 BISCAYNE 6 CHEVROLET SEDANS. 1 OLDS. '88' Sedan, Smart two-tone, fully equipped 2 1960 CHEV. half -ton Pickups. UED CARS--- A full line of late and older models -- some really good ones, . Come and see. Your present car may be sufficient down payment. Why not let us talk it over? Lorne -Brown. Motors CLINTON � ONTARIO .0N.+ +,-4-•++♦++.+4444.444 ..+•.-•••+.a4.a+.a..1.1: COUGH ANI) COLD REMEDIES Philps Bronchial Cough Syrup 75c Dristan Tablets $1.25 Bayer Nose Spray 99c Vick's Inhalers 49c Buckleys Cinnamates Capsules 89c Kold Ease Cold Capsules 1.25 Kold Ease Nose Spray 1.25 TONICS and VITAMIN PRODUCTS Wampoles Extract of Cod Liver .. 1.59 and 2.89 Malteirol 2.50 Scotts Emulsion 100 and 2.00 Vi Cal Fer Capsules 1.95 and 4.95 Cod Liver Oil Capsules 98c R. D. PHILP, Phm. B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PHONE T.0, BLYTH Pancake Mix, Rekular or Buttermilk ... ,2 for 41c Clover Leaf Pink Salmon I 1 Ib. Tin 59c Knechtel's Cheese Spread 16 oz. Jar 51c Good Luck Margerine . 3 lbs. 91c Jewel Shortening 1 lbs. 2 for 49c Ballet Toilet Tissue 4 roll pkg. 45c Weiners per lb. 39c Bologna per lb. 29c Snell's Food Market AND LOCKER SERVICE. WATT FEEDS . WE DELIVER Telephone 39 +444-•-•-.-•+++•4-++•+ SPECIALS ON SEABREEZE STEREOS Bass, treble, volume and balance control, 2 large speakers and 2 tweeters. (in separate bbxteo), the utmost in tone and volume enough for the larg- est hall. Regular $149.95 NOW $25.00 DISCOUNT. Other Players at $89.95, $84.95 and $34.95 We have in stock Morfleck Multi -Color Paint in 14 Colours, in Quarts and Spray Cans. Also 18 Utilac Spray Finishes at $1.79 pek can. ' VODDEN'S HARDWARE L3 ELECTRIC PHONE 71R2 --- BLYTS, ONT. •4444-+444444.4-444+44-•-•-•-•-•-•-•-•444-444-044444++. These -Three Beautiful Top Quality 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 Telephone 47 Blyth, Ontario (ars For Sale 1960 FORD Sedan 1956 BUICK Coach 1956 MONARCH Hard Top 1954 OLDS. Sedan. 1953 METEOR Coach. CABIN TRAILER Hamm's Garage .Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers