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The Blyth Standard, 1960-06-29, Page 1
THE BLYTH S - ANDARD VOLUME 73 - NO, 23 Authorized as second class malt, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1.960 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. Post Office Department, Ottawa, HistoHlStOr OF Auburn Presbyterians 'World Refugee Blitz Termed! PERSONAL INTEREST ' ry"Overwhelming" Mr. and Mrs, harry Aladin and fam- ily, of Oakville, visited on Sunday with It was announced today by John AI•. and Ai's, nay Madill and family. Berry, Goderich, that a total of! AI.iss Lorna Barrie \vhu has been Revealed In Souvenir Book A souvenir book, telling of the history of the Presbyterian Church In the Auburn district, will be available at the end of June. '1'11is interesting book tells the life of the Auburn (then Man- chester) congregation froom 1800 to 1960. The first church service Was held here hi a lea school house (where Mr. and Airs. Maitland Allen now reside) with missionaries bringing the goaprl to the early setters. The fist minister was Mr. Archibald Currie, who was called and sealed as pastor of Blyth, Hulled, and Manchester in 1860. M►'. Currie continued as pas- tor until early in 1862, It was during his' pastorate that the first church building was erected. Mi'.'John Tic• Donald donates the lot, and the building committee were Messrs Joseph Dobie, John ,Jackson, John McDonald, an:I James Scott. The contract of the buildin; was let to Mr. Holmes of Goaerich, for $250. They paid $6.00 a thousand for brick at Goderich, anal those who had hose tcanes diel the teaming. T'h'ey secured split shingles for $2. per thousand and pine for fin- ishing at $10. M'cney was scarce and the church was not completed until several years later, but they were able to worship there. The first communion roll contained 14 names: Joseph Dobie, Jiclln Jackson, John Brown, John Scott, Charles Rodger, Airs. Charles Rodger, Peter Pattc'::ol, Mrs. Peter Palter - son, John McCullough, Charles McDon- ald, Mrs, Charles McDonald, Alexander S''crisrat,eo,r,; 'William McKinnon and Airs. William AlcKinnon. It is difficult for tis, with our roads of to -day, to picture this whole dis- trict as a huge forest, with only a few trails through it. Supplies had to he prccurc(I from Clinton or Goderich, and it was nothing unusual for two neigh- bour women to start walking to ole of these towns with a basket of eggs in elle hand, and a basket of butter in the ether. ATany hardships were endured by these early settlers, and a complete bistoa'y from 1860 - 1960 is fount in this book which will be available at this memorable time for the Auburn congregation, Induction Service To Be Held At Belgrave Rev. J. II. Anderson, B.A., formerly of Wheatley, will be inducted 115 min- ister of the Belgrave and Calvin -Brick TJnited Churches, Thursday, June 30. The scrvies will be held at Knox Un- ited Church, Belgrave, at 8.30 tem. Representing Huron Presbytery, Rev. T. G. 'fusser, B.A.. B.D., of \Vingliam, and Rev. 11. A. Fume, of Londcrboro, will conduct the induction Service. Fallowing the service, the congrega- tions will hold a reception for their new minister and his family in the church schoolroom. Rev. \V. D. Clark, Wing - ham, has been serving these congrega- tions as retired supply for the past 8 months. On Friday, July 1, Rev. W. R. Welsh, B.A., from near Blenheim, will he in- ducted as minister of the Bluevale- \l'hit.echurch Pastoral Chat'ee,, Rev. J. L. G. Brown, Brussels, and Rev. J. E. Clarke, B.A., of Gerrie, will conduct the Induction Service .at Bluevale at 8.30 p.m. AMONG THE CITURCBES Sunday, July 3, 1960. ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CIIURCII Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., Minister. July 3—Service withdrawn for. Au- burn Church Centennial. ANGLICAN CIIURCII OF CANADA 3rd Sunday after Trinity Rev, Robert F. Measly, Rector. Trinity Church. Blyth, 9,30 a.m.--Matlins. St. Mark's, Auburn, 11.30 a.m.—Sunday School. 12.15 o'clock—Martins. Trinity Church. Reberave. 10:45 a.m.—Mattins. 12.00 o'clock—Sunday School. r THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth Ontario. • Rev, R:' Evan McLagan - Minister Miss Margaret. Jackson - Director of Anisic, 9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church School, 11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship. 8.30 p.m. Young People at the Church CIIURCII Ole' GOD McConnelt Street, Blyth, I Special Speaker. 1 2,00 p.m.—Sunday School. $.00 p.m,—Church Service. — $13,366.17 has been contributed by lin- teaching at Sarnia, is spending Lha son County citizens in the Blitz for holidays with her parents, Mr, and World Refugee Year held in Alay1. The Airs. James Barrie, total represents approximately $4,0001 \liss Karen Cook has secured a posi- above the target as sat in March by the tion with the London Life Insurance Huron County committee in charge, of Company, of Louden, which Ant, Berry acted as Ucasurer,i AI•s. Gcor);',. 110010) Sr. and Ken vis- which blitz was unique in that Huron' iter. in Orangeville last Sunday with ?Tr, and Mrs. ,lamlc. Cal' raid •also County tva3 the only county in the Prov -I with Mr. and ti's. Elwin mum, ). 'They ince: Of Ontario that was organized by, iwould.like to be remembered to all a group of local citizens for the purpose 1 theirfriends. I of raising money to assist the Canadian Mrs. hied Crawford received tvord1 Committee for World Refugee Year to Saturday that Fred is impruvin„ 0nct help clear the refugee camps tit cff Ih'0 critical list. Europe. ( Mrs..10:•ie Cele, who has been visit- ing Mrs. Frank Fingland, Clinton, who with Mrs. Fred Crawford, lett on was instrumental in organizing the Sahu'day t0 visit with i' Iativcs in tit. blitz, described the results as "over- Catharines, whelming." I Mr, rout Alis. George McNall left ` at Sunday fora trip to the 1VCat Cont _ I Music Recital Meld III Blyth United Church An audience of parents and friends enjoyed a program of delightful music presented in the sanctuary of the Blyth United Church last 'Tuesday evening by the pupils of Mrs. Winona McDougall, A.'1',C,11„ It,AI.'1'. ; '1110 recital opened with the singing cf "Clod Save the Queen" and selected stanzas Iron) the hymn "'fake Aly Life'' with Mrs, McDougall at the piano and Miss Margaret Jackson at the console el the organ. Mrs. McDougall couple- ntonled the pupils for their fine pres.cn- lalion and the progress of their year's' work. Mrs. Margaret Thompson ex- pressed the gratitude of the pupils, and Stephen Kcchnie, on behalf of all the pupils, presented Mrs, McDougall with a bouquet of res'cs and a crystal salt and pepper. set. Susan Wighlnrcut (Grade 11) played Chopin's Waltz in A; Susan Street (Pri- ntery), "flie bong Trail" and "The Bee"; Ronald A1cLagan ( Primary), "in 'the Swing" and "My 11ec1 Drum"; Stephan Kcchnie (Grade U 'The Little IVhitc Cloud" and "'the Juggler"; 13;:t- ly Youngblut sang "Evening Star" and played "rally IIo" (Grade 31; Neta Sherwood tGrade 71 "The Rain"; I3arbara Wasson (Grade 61, "Allegret- to"; Janet Beecroft (Grade ill, Men- dclssolin's "Song IVithout Words,'"; Gwendolyn Martin (Grade 9), Ilandel's "Bource"; Allyn l'ow'est (Grade 10), "Rosemary"; Carol Pepper, A.R.C.'l'., Raclumanioff's "Elegie" and Brahms "Rapsodie"; Nelson McClinchey, A.R. C.'l'., Chopin's "Fanlasic Impromptu" and Alacllowell's "\-larch Wind." Mar. garet 'lhonlpson sang at various inter- vals Gounod's "'171e King of Love My Shepherd Is", Sanderson's "Break of I)ay," DelRiego's "stoning" and 131z et's "Lomb of God." "We are more than pleased with the ( M'r, and Mrs. Walter Cook were response," said Mrs. Fingland, "Wei Westfield visitors. en Sunday with their though we do know that there were -daughter, Mrs.. Alvin Snell, Air. Snell many in the county who were not con- and family. Traffic Accident claims Lives Walton Mother And Daughter William Brown llospitalizetl FF'rom Traffic Accident Mr. William Brown, of Blyth, was ad- mitted to the Exeter huspital, suffer- ing from i'actured ribs and a fractured collar bone, ►'eecivcd in 0 traffic acci- dent al Exeter Iasi Friday. Mr. Brown was one of four men trav- elling to work in 0 Buren County truck on the Alount Carmel road, 5 miles west of Excie r, when it was in collision Wall a car. The driver of the truck, Chris ilutchison, Frank llallahan and Roy Buchanan, also paseengers in the Luck where not seriously injured. Bill returned (101»e from the hospilall '''sudsy entl is feeling a great deal Wets:. laded. it was both amazing and heart -I Mr. adMrs. Weldon Tyndall, M', `.. WEDDINGS --- warming to observe the growing inter- and Mrs. Art Colson and Ken, spend BADI. EY-111[IIIYL est during the campaign on the part of Huron County citizens as they learned of the plight of the refugees. While World Refugee year is officially closed: in June — the prcblcm is not by any means solved. We, in Canada, who' have the second highest standard o[-, theworld, wi I of ussll a I living in I nc 3Y, and in a spirit of compassion, continue ' to gin's: to thee() despairing people, Rev. 11. G. M,ac?lillan, Goderich, as campaign chairman, had working withi him 0 large number of volunteer citt-, teens representing each area of the county. Other members u fthe county committee inducted Alrs. Bernard hall, 13Iyth, secretary, and Mrs. C. A, Trott, Clinton, publicity chairman. A report on Ifuron County's accom- l:lifhn ents for \Vorkl Refugee Year will be personally presented June 29 at 'Toronto by Mrs. Fingland, when she attcnld'es a special meeting of the Can- adian Committee for World Refugee Year to mark its official termination. *••, "^ , --nolo f•nm the federal,gnvoc•n- nirnt and representatives of the 42 na- lienal sponsoring organizations will be on hand to learn the total fund-raising efforts from. Canada. Breakdown of the results of the can- vass in llttrott were: County of iltiron $ 500,00 'Pewit of Goderich 2,126.21 Clinton and RCAF Station Clinton 2,735.43 1Vinghan 980.86 Seaford] 973.37 Exeter 1,460,16 RCAF Station Centralia 723.(1;) Crediton 576.85 Myth392.25 Auburn 126•'25 Brussels 131,45 Hensel' 300.00 Hayfield 121.60 McKillop Township 211.60 East \\'awauosh Township 80,00 tlsboi'ii Township 10 Grey Township part of last week on a trip to Sault Ste Marie. I Mrs, Walter Calk held a quilting- on Wednesday al the home of Mrs John Polis, after which tea was t;e•vcd to the ladies at the forma's home. WA L'I'ON A very successful Garden Party, sponsored by the Walton Women's ln- slitule, was held in the Conuntuiity hall, Wednesday, June 22nd, with the following committee in charge: slit's. A. Coutts, Mrs, 1\'m. '1'hantcr, Airs. W. J. Turnbull, Mrs, Glut Corlett, Airs. Les Bever and Airs. Ilerh Travis. Airs. Jim McDonald, Mrs, Geo. llibberl and Mrs. Alvin McDonald were in charge of the following program, which was held following the supper, with Mr, Don McDonald as master of ce'cmon- ies, School chorus, accompanied by Mrs. E, McCreath; solo, Linda Bryans; Scotch (lance, Elaine Oke and Janette Turnbull, Seafarth; piano solo, Aileen Williamson; lap dance, 11tdh Anne Wil - stn and Christine 'Turnbull; Highland. Fling, Joyce 1lcuthc'r, Brussels; square dance, McKillop Grctip; Scotch dance, Nathon Phillips and Anne McConnell; solo, Gail Travis; lap dance, I1uth Anne Wilson and Christine Turnbull; solo, 1)on McDonald; square dance, McKil- lop; solo, Mrs, Harold Smalldon. Mrs. Ella Farquharson and Alt', and Airs, David Allison of London, were guests at tire home of Mr. and Alt's. Walter Broadfoot, on Sunday, Mrs. Kenneth Ritchie of Egmondville, silent the week c;nd wills her mother, Mrs. F. Ennis. Mr, and Mrs. Roy 'Purvey of 131110. vale, spent Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Ed. Millet', Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Brown, Carol, Nancy and Ronnie of Ataburn, called on friends in the village On Sunday ev- ening. Mr. and Mrs. John McGavin and family of Owen Sound, were week end vie:tors with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Me - Gavin. Miss Bessie Davidson has returned home after spending two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. K. McGavin, Midland. Miss Dianne Lawless of Burlington, is visiting with her grandparents, Mr, and Mrs, Wilbur Turnbull, .Mr. and Mrs. George Kirkby and Patsy, of Burwash, spent the tveel( end with Mr. 11, B, Kirkby and other rela- tives. Miss Norma Hocgy of Kitchener, vis- ited with her parents, Mr, anal. Mts. Clifford Moony, over the week end.' This commmunity was shocked on h'ri- clay when word was received that Mrs. Ifarry Bolger was instantly killed in a ear accident, and her daughter, Rose - made, was critically injured and pas- sed away later in Victoria hospital, London. Mrs. Jim Bolger, who was also a passenger, was removed from \Vinghan hospital to Victoria Ilospilal, Leutdon, ort Saturday, and at present is improving. Our deepest sympathy is extended to friends and -relatives of the deceased. Mrs. harry Bolger was the former Elva Pearl Richmond o[ Blyth, a sister of Mr. Mervin Rich- mond. A LETTER FIIOM A SUBSCRIBER 46 Norfolk Ave, Galt, Ont. Dear AIrS. Whitmore; It is again time to renew my subscription for the Standard, so enclosed is the money or- der for $2.10, - It is nice to r'eceiv'e the paper weekly ars it keeps one up on what is doing in ,he old home town. My kindest regards, Yours Truly, Mrs, Wm, White, Goderich Township Coil.lorne Township Ashfield Township Stanley Township Aiorris Township (lay Township Mullett Township 358.50 222.85 393.60 235,95 100.00 385.55 100.00 30,00 Total • $13,360.17 LADIES AUXILIARY TO MEET The regular meeting of the Blyth Ladies Auxiliary will be held on Mon - (lay, July 4th, at the home of ?1i's. Eva Wellbanks, Londesboro, at 8:15 p.m, WESTFIELD Air. and Mrs. Orville Bawks, Mrs. R, Rowell, Pickford, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Ortar McDowell, Sault Ste Marie, Mich. visited with Mr, and Mrs, Norman Mc- Dowell and other friends for a few clays. Mr, and Mrs. Ilovard Campbell, Ilugh and Iiarold, AIr. and Mrs. Keith Snell and children, attended the John- ston re -union in London on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell en- tertained Saturday evening in honour of their guests from Michigan, with friends of the immediate vicinity. Rela- tives were also present from Goderich, Exeter, Belgrave and Blyth. Misses Donna Walden and Barbara Smith, of London,- Were hone for the week -end. - '1'he Young People of the community had a weInet' roast with the Auburn Young People on Friday evening, due to bad weather it was held indoors. Alt'. and A11's. Gerald McDos'ell were guests on Saturday at the White -Kay wedding at Aylmer Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Brown, of Mount Forest, visited with Mrs, J. L. McDow- ell and Gordon on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Keith Snell, Peter and Catherine, visite.' Saturday evening and Sunday with Rev. and Mrs. Harold Streit and Peter, in Loudon. Mr, and Mrs. E. ("cirllira, of 1 tick - now, visited with Mr. and Airs. Harvey McDowell and family on 'r'htu'sday ev- ening. Miss Sandra Brooks, of Lucknow, is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs, Arnold Cook. Mrs. Kershenski, of Detroit, and Mrs. Jasper McBrien, of Goderich, called on Air, and Mrs, Douglas Campbell I Saturday afternoon, Airs. Fred Crawford is visitin); this week in Kitchener with her sister, Mrs. Luella Colo and Irene. Mr. and Mrs. Julia Donner, the for- mer a graduate student of Alberta Bible Institute, of ('anlrose, Alpert, ar-' rived in Blyth on 1Vedncsday, June 2', to lake over the j'asloral (Ittt'cs of the Chtn•ch of Goa. They have lateen tris resi eence 10 Irvine Brwes apartment. Mr. ants ill's. 'I'unney an(I family, cf 'I'eeswaler, v;sited 011 Sun- day with the fo'ster's mother, 'arra., ?lacy 'l'vylnl•. Misses Joanne Crawford, Margaret and Marianne McGowan, of O1 kvilte, spent l.ho week -end with Mr. and ?I's.' Orval McGowan and Kenneth, AIr: and Airs. Gordon Wilkinson. of Brussels, vi ;Red en sway with Mess J. \\oodeoek. \1I', r;11:l.Alls. Ronal.( Philp and Ste- phen, of 1.o11:len , vis Ib—irvfi• aint(-;sirs, It. 1), Philp on 5n:ulay. Miss Nancy Johcslen has securest 11 position al Grand I3cnd for the holidays. Royal Conservatory of Music 'Theory ltesults The following is a list of sucessful candidates in examinations held re - candy by the (loyal Conservatory of Altisic el 'Toronto in Blyth. The names are arranged in order of merit: GRADE V THEORY Harmony Pass—Nelson C. A1cClinchey; Carel E. Pepper. Forel First Class Honours— lrs. Frank Thompson. GRADE iII TIIEORY Harmony is: history IIonours—Marion Gamble, Charline Lohncs. Harmony First Class Ifoncurs—Nancy L. Olde. lfonours—C'alharine Potter. Pass— Wayne F. Brooks. History Pass—Janet Beecroft. GRADE iI THEORY First Class Honours—Beth Merrick; Phyllis E. Bradley; Kathie Cameron, A'fargaret Maines (equal); Elaine Alex- ander, Ruth A. 'Weston, James Rob- inson (equal); Yvonne Connelly, Georg- ina Kieffer (equal); Joyce Procter; Nancy P. Johnston; Bernice McDougall, Neta Sherwood ( equal. Honours—Kar- en Groskurlh, Sandra L. Henry (equal); Valerie A, holland; Helen G. Ford, Pass—Anne Ilowson. GRADE I THEORY First Class Honours—Anne Cardiff, Geraldine Dennis (equal); Joyce Har- mon; Brenda Houston. B:i ken: 01 gladiolus and fern (leor-! Med Fire United Church for the May 20) h v; rlding of Prances Joyce Pribyl i an.1 Kenneth Lorne Radley, both of; f;wifl Current, Sask. Bev. W. ,1. Bell was the officiating clergyman, 'l ho bride is the young est slaughter• 01 Alt'. an'I Mrs. W. 1'rihyi ni ('antuar, the )'n•oam is the son of Mr, and Mrs, Lorne' Iiuy Badley. 131y1h, Ontario. Given in marriage by her father, the, bride wore 0 gown of imported Chan- tilly lace and lulls over bridal satin. The lace bodice featured 0 V neckline_ cool:ro l.lered with secluirs and cap sleeves, 'I'Ite full skirl. was; banded with lace and styled with chapel Iain. 1 tit- . irs-of-Ihe-valley wreathed ger head- I dress of plashed velvet an:I softly loop- ed mohair. I Irl' bouquet was of red!, roses, and her crystal jewelry was al gift of the groom. hiss Doran Erickson, Cousin of the ( bride, was her only attendant. She chc.,c 0 goltn of blue lace similar style to the bride's. 1fer head -chess Was of seed pearls and -sequins, and she car - it i- 111( elle �aYeef^ -1r,41.1 ‘Shite. ally l- eI•s. Alr. Harold Creighton, attended tine gro:m. John Pribyl, the bride's besot -i Cr, and 13rian Oakinan, ushered the star.;;:;. .. _. Streamers art:l wedding bells decor- ated the atom for the silt:per, white candles in Ccnper candelabra, flanked the twedding cake, which was surroulxd- ecl by tulle. The groom responded to! the br?!al toast preposcd by the o:fi- ciatin;g mini ter. \I'cdd!ag guests included Mrs, Lorne Badley and daughter Palsy ,lean, of 1 Blyth, Ontario. Alr, and Mrs. Badley will made their home at Gull Lake. Shower For Bride Prior to 1Teddlug Prim• to her wedding, Airs. K. Bad- ly, the former Frances Pribyl, was Ilse guest of 1101101' at an evening show- er at the home of her sister, Mrs. Jack Dowling. The evening was spent in various col - tests and games. Doreen Erickson and 4 ?less W. Pleckliain presented the hon- ored g1':sl with a basket of gifts chiefly of plastic ware. Lunch was served by the hostess assisted by Mrs. F. Pribyl, Alts. Plcck- hanm and Miss Erickson. OBITUARY KATHRYN MARGEUI►ITE BRIGIIAM Funeral services were conducted by Rcv, 11. E, McLagan on. June 16, 1060, at the Tasker Alcutorial Chapel, Blyth, for Kathryn Alargeurilc Brigham, 10 year old daughter of AIt', and Airs. Charles Brigham, of East \Vawanosh Township, who passed away in Victoria Children's hospital, en Tuesday, June 14l'In, The pallbearers were, Lyle Steidle Murray Mowatt, Bob Taylor, Alex Blair. Flo erbeaters, Marilyn 'Taylor, Judy McDowell, Bonnie Ccok, Cheryl and Kerry 'Poll, Marjorie Smith, The re- mainder of the pupils of S.S. No. 13, East 1\'awanosh, loaned a guard of honour. Burial tool( place in Brandon cemetery lic(gravc. Surviving are her parents, one sister, Anila, ac;l four brothers, Jim, Jelin, Douglas and Chrislo'hcr. FIREMEN ANSWER CALL TO GIBBONS IIOME Last Friday afternoon the Blyth Fire Brigade answered a call to the home of Mr. and Mrs, Ilarry Gibbons, Blyllt, taken the pipes from their cook stove because overheated, The flames were quickly extinguished and the house re- turned to normally without serious damage, Results of Royal Conserva- tory Of Music Examinations The following is a list of successful candidates in examinations held re- cently by the (loyal Conservatory of Music of Toronto, in Blyth. The names are arranged in order of merit. GRADE X PIANO honours, Allyn Powell. GRADE IX PIANO Honours, Gwendolyn° J. D. 1lartii; Pas,, Margo Grange. GRADE VIII PIANO Ifonotu's, Alex Hewitt; Barbara Snell. GRADE VII PIANO Pass, Dianne Radford. GRADE VI PIANO Honours, 13011111e Snell, Barbara \Vas - son (equal); Sharon O'Donnell; Diane (Lewitt, Barbara AlacKay (equal); Pass, Shirley Brown. GRADE V PiANO 1lcnors, Carole Brown, Jannett Dobie (equ:ll); Pass, ,1l trgar(( (iwOrson, Judith Arthur, Robot \\'ilk11n, GRADE IV PIANO Ifanout's, Laura Drier, .Larry Snell, Bill Lapp; Pass, Cheryl A. McNeil, GRADE Ii PiANO Honours, Robbie Snell, Patricia El- liott. BIRTHS YOUNG—To Mr. and Mrs. William Young, 11.11. 1, Blyth, in Clinton Pub - lie hospital, on Friday, June 24, 1960, the gift of a daughter, Kat'en Ann, a sister for Alan, 11ONOUREI) FOR SALESMAN CAMPAIGN Congratulations are extended to Mr. Gerald Bradley, of Meaford, who is a salesman for Canada Packets, won a Bar -B -Q, on a sales call; aign, and won a transistor radio on another sales promotion. Mr. Bradley is a son -ht -law of Mrs. Sadie Curring, cI Blyth, The village of Walton and surrounding cGI11111UIIilie5 were shocked to learn of the fatal traffic accident last Friday, which claimed the lives of two Walton residents, Airs. harry Bolger and her daughter, Rosemarie. The accident occurred on Concession 12 of Kinloss township, last Friday af- ternoon. The Bolger car was in col- lision with a car driven by Stetvat't MacGillivray, of liollyrood. Airs. Bol- ger died instantly of a broken neck, and her daughter, Rosemarie, aged 21, suc- cunnled later in Victoria hospital, Lon- don. Mrs. Jilt Bolger, the former June Lcatllerland, of Auburn, was also a passenger in the car, and is a patient in Victoria Ilospilal, suffering from a broken jaw and deep knee lacerations. A is expected she will be released from the hospital within the next tow days. Mr. AlacGillil'ray, driver of the other car, was admitted to the hospital suf- fering a fractured leg and cuts to the face. His condition is reported as fair. Mrs. Bober was the former, Elva Pearl Richmond, daughter of the late Mr. and Airs. Russell Richmond, Since Ihcir marriage, she and her husband, had farmed 111 Grey township. She teas a member of St. George's Anglican Church, \Valton. Surviving are her husband, one son, James, of Grey township, a daughter, M's, Gordon (Marilyn) Engle, of Cran- brool(; a brother, Mervin Richmond, of L'Iyth; and one granddaughter. h'uniral scrviOes were held for the Iwo victim; from their home at lot 6, concession 17, Grey townshipRev. Ken- nl th W. Jaggs, of St. John's Anglican Church, Brussels, officiated. Interment followed in Brussels cemetery. Celebratel 25tH Wedding Anniversary and Mrs. Dan IIailahan were at home to their relatives and friends, Sunday, June 26th, when they gathered to do them honour on the occasion of their 25 years of married life. The afternoon was spent in a social eatiaseieg.esfaety lawn, pictures were taken and the yoilife `''' n armed in a game of ball. A buffet lunch was'ar- veil to about fifty guests. After supper the celebrants opened their very lovely gifts, that were brought in, :\ftcr a few words of appreciation from Dan and his wife, the singing of "For They are Jolly Good Fellows," wishes fcr many more years of Wedded Life, everyone returned to their own h!.nic, Guests were present from \Vingham, 'I'ecswatec, Mallon, Goderich, Cran- L•rcok and Blyth. KILPATRICK AND McDOWELL FAMILIES HONOURED The friends and neighbours of Blake's Church and community hon- oured the Kilpatrick and McDowell families at a gathering Friday night. Rev. Mr. Kaiser invited the two families to the front and addresses were read by Howard Blake and Mark Berger. Lovely gifts were presented from the community, and the choir of Blake's Chtu•ch also presented Elaine and Murray McDowell with a gift and en address was read by Louise An- drew, 'A program followed and lunch was served. W. A. GROUP 1 TO MEET Group 1 of the United Church W. A. will meet at the hone of Mrs. Walter Cook on Monday, Juy 4111 at 2:30 p.m,: IN CLINTON IIOSPITAL Rev. Robert F. Wally is a patient in the Clinton Public Hospital where he will undergo a slight operation,, \Vc wish hint a speedy recovery. POST OFFICE IIOURS FRIIIAY, JULY 1, 1960 Wicket. Service at the post office ori Friday, July lst, will be one hour only, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m, The lobby will close at 6 p.m. W.I. TO MEET 'fhe regular meeting of the Blyth Wo• nrcn's Institute will be held in the Mem. orial Rall on Thursday, July 7th, at 2.30 pan, The sleeting is in charge of Atiss Josephine Woodcock, convenor of (Tonle Economics, There will be a demonstra- tion, "Meat On The Menu" by the Blyth Meat Queens. CONGRATULATIONS Congeatulations to Mrs. Fred Ostetl who celebrates her birthday on Mons clay, July 41)1, Congratulations to Mrs. G, 0. Brad., ley, of Meaford, when she celebratesi her birthday on Wednesday, July 6th A happy birthday to Master Hugir William Cunning, sot of Mr. and Mrs. ltugin C'uming, of London, who will cele. brate his birthday on Monday, July 4, Congratulations to Mrs. Mary Tay., lot' who celebrates her birthday on Eris day, July 1st. Congratulations to Miss Betty Blake, who celebrated her birthday on Monday% Juno 27th, Best wishes to Harvey Snell, Blyth• who celebrated his birthday on Tues, day, June 28, - Just A Kid That Nev r Grew Up The author, who had written his book In verse, was reading it aloud, rather nervously. The listeners who had gathered in his publisher's office in New York were laughing at him. It was not ridicule, however; the ruthor was that modern classic r. Seuss, who was reading from Green Eggs and Ham," latest of tkhe children's books with which the doctor of humor — in pri- vnte, Ted Geisel — has been di- 'rerting tots (and also their pops) for twenty-three years. A tall, tanned fellow of 56, Geisel presented his book to Random House insiders in the form of art boards set up on a bookcase, each board with its special Geisel cartoon and( verse. The story, to be published next fall, is written entirely in 50 primer words for beginners, and concerns a bug -like character, "Sam -I -am," who attempts to serve up "Green Eggs and Ham" to a sourpuss in a stovepipe hat. When Stovepipe refuses, Sam, the super -salesman, keeps after him, trying to sell him the idea of green eggs and ham in boxes, trees, houses, cars, and even un- der water until Stovepipe gives in, Do you like Green eggs and hare? I do not like them Curves of Glamor PRINTED PATTF?RN 4805• SIZES 10-18 Dazzle your after -five audience In this willowy sheath that (turves gracefully away from your shoulders to bare a beauti- ful neckline. Make it in shan- tung, surah, cotton — NOW Printed Pattern 4805: Misses' izes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 takes 31/4 yards 39 -inch fabrlc. Printed directions on each pat- tern part. Easier, accurate. Send FORTY CENTS (stamps 9annot be accepted, use postal Pote for safety) for this pattern. lease print plainly SIZE, NAME ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, lox 1, 123 Eighteenth St,, New Toronto, Ont. AW Sam- l -am I do not like Green eggs and ham .. . 1 do not like (hem here or there I do not like them anywhere ... This sort of catchy verse, ac- companied by his wildly comic and imaginative illustrations, has brought Geisel impressive suc- cesses in the children's book field. Recently he had five books on the best-seller list of juven- iles — a phenomenal record for one author, Besides reading his 64 -page jingle to his publisher, he was also getting together a big one-man anthology of car- toons and stories, tentatively titled "Dr. Seuss Treasury." Geisel, who is now just about the undisputed king of the kid- dies' end of the bookshelf, set out as young man to be a teach- er of literature — he hoped at Dartmouth, his alma mater. "The whole project, though," he re- called after his reading recently, "came off a very shaky launch- ing pad, so I guess it was never meant to be, There was this Campbell Fellowship to Oxford open to Dartmouth students, and I thought I had it practically in the bag. I called up my father (who at 81 is still superintend- ent of public parks in Spring- field, Mass.) and told him so, and Pop called the local newspaper. The next day, there was my pic- ture on the front page of The Springfield Union, with the story that I had won the fellowship. Well, it turned out I didn't. To save his pride, Pop dug up the money and sent me over there anyway." At Oxford, he met his future wife, Helen Palmer, an attractive school-marm-to-be who occupied the seat ndxt to him at a Shake- speare lecture. They now live in La Jolla, Calif, Ted started car- tooning for a living before he did his first kids' book, and sold cartoons to most of the big maga- zines. He also got into advertis- ing (his cartoon slogan, "Quick, Henry, the Flit," was a classic), and finally movie -making (he wrote the Oscar -winning "Ger- ald McBoing-Boing"). But his No. 1 enthusiasm is still chil- dren's books. His wife explains: "He's a kid himself. He has never grown up." — From NEWSWEEK. Mixed Reaction "I don't care whether our kids are black, white, or polka dot — just so long as they call me daddy," said jubilant Sammy Davis Jr. in London, where the Negro entertainer and blond May Britt revealed that they will marry (after the Swedish film star's divorce from her pres- ent spouse, Stanford student Ed- ward Gregson, becomes final). Jarred to tears the next night by Fascists who carried placards ("Keep Britain White," "Sammy Go Back to the Trees") and shouted insults outside the caba- ret where he was performing, Davis rallied when other Britons wrote to assure him that the demonstration was the work of a lunatic fringe. "Ninety-nine per cent of my mail since the incident has been from people saying: 'We're appalled, we're ashamed, we apologize, and may we congratulate you both'." Presiding at the wedding of Negro songstress Eartha Kitt, 32, and white real-estate man Wil- liam McDonald, 30, Los Angeles judge Elmer Doyle told the pair: "I am a judge in the divorce courts, and in most of my cases I try to salvage a marriage. I don't want to see either of you in my department." $ONNIE By T1411 OCEAN — Dark-haired Bonnie Leon proves rthere's something In al name as she helps Mother Nature dec- 01* at beach. everybody out! Stephen and Bobby Schnitzlein, fore and aft, evacuate their wading pool. Crawling technique enables them to explore the surrounding area minutely. .rac' el at ROgittrES • 1NGERFAR�• Cvettidolin.e P. Cletly¢ We drove up to Shelburne one day last week and what we saw worried us quite a bit. Hardly any spring grain sown at all and fields that were meant to be sown now so overgrown with grass and weeds it will rnean twice the work If the farmers ever do get them worked up for planting. The friends whom we visited generally have a won- derful garden. This year cab- bage, broccoli, tomatoes and even beans are still in boxes waiting to be set out, while the garden patch has yet to be dug. But they have a terrific crop of black -flies and mosquitoes which we did our best to avoid, Partner and Mr. X were setting out to look over the farm when I sug- gested they take insect repellent along with them. "We won't need it where we are going," said Mr. X "I have the names and addresses of all the flies and mosquitoes around here and we are not calling on them today!" Sure enough they came home without a bite. Mrs. X and I were not so lucky. We wandered around in the garden, looking at the gorg- eous iris, and IA found plenty of the pesky things waiting to welcome us. Partner and 1 also found other inconveniences on the way up. We ran into a road construction job on the highway — six miles of it. Eventually we turned on to a side -road to get to the farm. There we found the road com- pletely torn up, with bulldozers and graders blocking the way — and without a detour sign to warn us. We had to back up quite a piece before there was room to turn around, And that didn't please me at all as I hate backing up. However such con- ditions are part of the hazard of summer driving. The b2St thin.: to do is hang on to the wheel, grit your teeth and remind your- self it is going to be a lovely road when it's finished — good driving for years to come. Another day the were over to ,T Iton airport to bid "bon vny- "e" to a young neighbour and her two boys returning to Eng- land. Visiting Malton is always a thrill. We hadn't been there since the big planes started using the airport. Our young friend was going by let -- and to see a jet take off is really something. No whirling propellors, no vis- ible mechanism at all as the huge machine taxies along the runway to a spot where it waits for the signal to take off, Pres• enLly comes a terrific roar. You see the huge machine suddenly sit hack on its haunches, as it were; the nose lifts and in a met - ter of seconds the plane is air- borne, carrying aloft the pas- sengers and crew who have en- trusted their lives to its intri- cate mechanism and the skill of its pilots and navigator. Going over to Malton we again noticed bare fields along the way. Bare? I shouldn't call them bare. I never saw so many flour- ishing weeds. By "bare" I mean they hadn't been sown. Market gardeners and nurserymen too must also be having an unprof- itable season. One nursery near here was offering annual bed- ding plants last week at two boxes for the price of one. And they were not going very fast at that. I didn't buy any, Pet- unias I set out three weeks ago have hardly grown at all so I am filling up the borders by transplanting self -grown seed- lings — poppies, cosmos, snap- dragons and burning bush, In dry weather we can save plants by watering but there is no sub- stitute for sunshine, And I don't need to tell you it's been cool, hardly a night but what the furnace has come on even with the thermostat set back to 62. And you remember the fore- cast for this summer was hotter than last yearl Of course, there is plenty of time for hot weather yet, but not in June — not with the month for weddings and roses already half gone. Remember 1 was quoting last week from a new book entitled "Folk Medicine"? Well, the other day there was a short write-up in the "Globe and Mei)" contra- dicting what Dr. Jarvis had said. According to the American Medical Association no curative value can be attributed to a mix- ture of honey and vinegar, as claimed by Dr, Jarvis, So there you have two opinions and how are we to know who is right? But at any rate we can't do any harm by eating honey. On the other hand, according to English folk lore vinegar has a tendency to dry the blood. Just what was meant by "dry blood" I don't know but 1 remember as n child I was not allowed vinegar for that reason. As you know any Medical As- sociation is against any new drug or treatment until its worth has been proven by years of re- search. But we might also re- member that Pasteur, Lister and many others were ridiculed for years before their life-saving theories were accepted by the Medical Association. Photographing Pope John The slight, graying photogra- pher with the bushy mustache scampered around the book -lin- ed Vatican study, kneeling and twisting as he clicked away at Pope John XXIII with the three cameras around his neck. As the cameraman zeroed in for a close- up shot, Pope John joshed him: "You photographers really get around, don't you?" The' words couldn't have been more apt in describing Tony Spina, the wide- ranging, 45 -year-old chief pho- tographer for The Detroit Free Press whose exclusive color shots of the Pope were spread across many recent roto sections. To obtain his unusual pictures (few photographers are permit- ted professional audiences with the Pope), Spina flew from Lon- don (where he covered Princess Margaret's wedding) to Rome armed witha wide-angle Panon camera and two Japanese Nikons and an advance letter to the Vatican from Detroit's Arch- bishop, the Most Rev. John F. ' Dearden, After a four-day ,wait, ' 'y It dirdn(Iibis wangled Spina, who speaks fair Italian, a ten- minute audience with the Pontiff in his study. "The Pope was dressed in a cream -colored outfit with a cream skullcap, and looked to be about five -feet -seven and about 200 pounds," Spina said, "He has a very nice smile. I took a pic- ture and the Pope said: 'Don't you need lights?' I said no. He said that was good: "I don't like artificial lights'," When Spina's ten minutes were up, a sculptor cane in to finish a bust of Pope John, "The Pope motioned to me that it was all right to stay. After a few shots the Pope asked 'Would you like me to put on.a red cape?' After I made a good color shot, he took ' it off. He was real obliging." "He asked me 'Where are you from?' and I told him Detroit. He said 'Where does it get its name?' I told him it was French and meant a narrow strait. I said SALLY'S SALLIES .rw.. ar. 114.0 k...01„._.1 SX "Do you really focus with one eye for profiles?” 'That's the automobile eapUal u( the world' and he said 'Oh ye... 1 know that very well,' Ile said, 'Spina — that's an Italian name' I told him my father had cone (ram Cosenza in Italy in 189:: and he said, 'Oh, that's fine'," "Once, he motioned that I wu:. going to get his double chin. I told him I wouldn't, that the light coming in from the win- dow wouldn't accentuate it. Ile was relaxed and seemed to be enjoying the whole thing. At one time, he put his hand on his stomach and smiled when 1 had moved low for a different angle I got the idea," Spina indicated delicately that Pope John pre (erred not to have his substan- tial girth emphasized. "We talk- ed in Italian the whole time. A monsignor told me the Pope is taking English lessons from an Irish priest and they're all won. dering if he'll swells it with t, brogue." T h e scheduled ten - minute audience stretched out to near. ly two hours and, at the end, the Pope gave Spina a hand- somely boxed silver medallion bearing the Pontiff's likeness. In turn, the Detroit photographer is sending Pope John a leather- bound volume of the pictures he took. The Pope, said Spina, com- plained to him: "Nobody ever sends me pictures," Patient: I'm worried about my memory, can't remember my best friends' names, telephone numbers, streets. Doctor: And when did all this begin? Patient: When did all what begin? Sun -Day Prettiest 1111 r4ttner ` Y kapt/I, Daughter will love this breezy pinafore for summer play or parties. Gay huck weaving. A snap to sew—a prized pina- fore, Pattern 583: directions: pattern pieces; husk weaving charts. Child's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 included. Send TIIIItTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New To- ronto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. New! New! New! Our 1960 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book is ready NOW! Crammed with exciting, unusual, popular de- signs to crochet, knit, sew, em- broider, quilt, weave — fashions, home furnishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits, In the book FREE — 3 quilt patterns. Hurry, send 25 cents for your copy. ISSUE 27 — 1960 WAYWARD BUS DRIVER — Whole busload of tourists from West Virginia keep their sp!rits high outside Washington, D,C, They were stranded on their way to the nation's capital when their driver suddenly deserted. One passenger's opinion: "I think he didn't know the way and didn't want to tell us." Fishing By Radar A Gentian firm claims to havo Invented a r'evolutionar'y new method of catching fish by using electrical Impulses and suction tubes, The new method is seen AS being of special value for herring and sardine fishing, In tests carried out at sea over the last three years catches cat up to twelve tons in eight minutes are claimed, The pro- cCFS, which uses a special im- pulse generator, has caused a sensation in fishing circles all over the world. Its basic principle is to attract large swarms of fish by an un- derwater light, the fish being first located by a radar -like de- vice, The fish are bemused with fjirpulses before being sucked rap a tube, the diameter of which is rather more th;'n that of a man's body, One technical obstacle that had to he overcome by the in- ventors, in addition to operat- ing the process from a small power tinit, was how to avoid stunning the fish completely, for when unconscious they would rink or float to the surface. The inventors discovered that different sizes and species of fish rtlspond to varying im- pulses. A herring, for instance, requires 2.4 volts and a cool About I volt, As a result, the current can be varied, it is claimed, to sc- tiure the size of fish wanted and the new method would not con- travene the International Fish- eries Convention which lays down 75 millimetres as the mini- mum size of mesh which trawl- ers are allowed to use. The Con- vention also set a minimum size limit for fish caught, below which they must be returned to the sea. More Royal Dogs Than Royal Humans! Guests it the British Royal Palaces get a lot of pleasure trom being "introduced" to the Royal Family's dogs, When there's a Royal Family party nowadays there are often as many as ten dogs, present, and often more royal -owned dogs than royalties! The Queen has two corgis, the Royal children two more, The Queen Mother owns another teou le of corgis, in addition to a frisky King Charles spaniel and R dignified dachshund, Two gyalyhams belong to Princess argaret. This Royal love of animals is almost a family tradition. Queen Victoria owned one of the finest Pekingese to come over from the Imperial Palace . in Peking, The kennels in the Home Park at Windsor housed over eighty dogs when she died. She kept dach- shunds long before they were known to the general public here. She and the Prince Con- sort exhibited occasionally and Itlome of their best show dogs were deerhounds, DRIVE WITH CARE! Moose your olivetti portable $99.50 or terms POLICE SCUFFLE -- A dub - wielding pro -American rightist demonstrator fights with po- lice in Tokyo, Japan. Defied Orders — Saved 18 Lives Every summer for the past four years a German named Johann Punzel has spent his an- nual holidays in the town of Differdange, Luxemborg, where he is wined and feted by cer- tain people who were once his prisoners. The story behind this strange situation is this: At dawn on May 10th, 1940, Differdonge became part of the front line—the Germans advanc- ing on one side, the French com- ing out from the Maginot Line to resist them, All but eighteen residents of the town were evacuated. These eighteen were employed at the big Hadir steelworks and they had volunteered to stay behind and put out any fires in the works, The eighteen were led by Jo- seph Weiler, middle-aged chief of the Hadir fire hr'idgade, and they included one woman, Mrs, Wailers, who refused to leave her husband, The group moved into the air raid shelter and for the next two days the German - French battle raged over them. Five times, parties ventured out to extinguish small fires, On May 13th the French wibti- drew and the Germans took over Differdange. The firemen and Mrs. Walters were put to work as ,cleaners, Then, a fortnight later, Differdange was shelled from the French lines and dam- age was done to dumps and stores, For the next three days the shelling went on, still with the same relentless accuracy, It was obvious that no artillery could be so much on target with- out "inside information." The Germans suspected the firemen, On June 1st, they were lined up and marched to an interroga- tion office, passing on the way $149.50 or term, The Olivetti Letters 22, the portable portable, is so light and slim, you'll positively enjoy swinging it at your side. 'l.'lle Olivetti Studio 44 is the choice of many who prefer n heavier machine, yet still want portability. Both machines provide all the important features; of dice - size typewriters, plus special Olivetti features that save lime and nutke for neater typing, such as htdf-line and half -tet ler spacing that let you insert omitted letters and extra words. Patch comes in a distinctive travel case. — Come in and see for yourself why "It 's so mice to type on all Olivetti)" Cltoose /our Olivetti portable. At better stores everywhere, or write OLIVETTI (CANADA) LTD. 481 University Avenue, Toronto 2, Ontario. 0 squad of soldiers diegin(; 8 large hole, Its purpose was hor- ribly obvious, At the otlice, a captain said bluntly: "We know for a tract that at least one of you has been sending information to the 'French. Ile will confess at. once, Otherwise you will all be shot," Nobody confessed and all eigh- teen were locked in 0 concrete garage for fourteen hours Then the German captain interviewed them again. When no one con- fessa:d, t he captain said: "You will be executed in an hour," Ile returned to the N.C.O. with him. "in an holo' bring these people out two at a time and shoot them, Corporal Punzel." Thirty-year-old Corporal Pun- zel had never been given such an order and, though he was a Nazi, it disturbed him. IIe went to the battalion ad- jutant and asked if he was really supposed to shoot the Differ- dange firemen. The adjutant told him to verify the sentence at the judge advocate's office. , 13y the time Punzel found the judge advocate's office more than half the allotted hour had pass- ed, A lieutenant said: "The men have been duly sentenced, but 1'11 look into the matter. Report to me again in an hour," More hopefully, Punzel re- turned to the prisoners. They clamoured around him, protest- ing their innocence, but before he would discuss anything with them he took Mrs. Walters out of the garage, "She will be all right, I prom- ise you," he told her husband. "I would not harm a woman." Punzel remembered that the lieutenant had said "the men" had been sentenced; he saw .in this some justification for releas. ing Mrs, Wailers, He found an army truck and ordered the driver to take Mrs. Walters to Luxembourg city and release her. "Be calm," he then told the male prisoners; "if I have to stage an execution I can fake it somehow," But he wasn't as hopeful as lie sounded, Reporting back to the lieuten- ant, Punzel was told that the sentence must be carried out, but that a reprieve of twenty-four hours had been granted to give the guilty man a further chance to confess. However, if the French shell- ing started all eighteen were to be shot at once. Punzel told the prisoners noth- ing about the proviso, but for hours he was acutely anxious, praying that the French would not fire. All that night Punzel fought with his conscience. He was a soldier and he had to obey orders or face the penalty -- a severe one in the Wehrmacht. He was also human, a married man with children: he would never know peace If he shot these men. With two hours to go to exe- cution time, Punzel had a con- ference with his ten soldiers. He told them that what he was about to do he did on his own authority and that they must de- clare that they knew nothing about it, None of the soldiers made any trouble for him — two even con- gratulated him. Punzel's next move was to mend for a Lorry. Ile then went in to the prisoners. "There is a lorry outside," he said. "Get into it quickly, drive down the main streets and nobody will suspect you," As they crowded around him, some of the older men became hysterical with relief, Punzel had to speak sharply. "Get out!" he said, pushing then) toward the door. "Do you want to be shot? Go!" And they went, As he climbed aboard the truck, twenty -one- year old Nicholas Kremer asked Punzel for his full name and army number, Kremer wrote down the details with a nail on a piece of wood. Then the fire- men of Differdange were gone, In Luxembourg City, they hid with friends and relatives until the Franco-German Armistice of 1940, after which it was safe to appear" again. Johann Punzel, having betray- ed his trust as an N.C,O, and a loyal party member, was now in the same agony of mind that his prisoners had been. Somebody would want to know why the execution had not been carried out, He waited, not .knowing quite what to do, but sure that within hours he himself would face a firing squad, But fifteen minutes before the time of execution an emergency order came through — Punzel's regiment, the 330th Infantry, was to move at once, forward to the fighting line. In the confusion that followed, nobody gave a thought about the Differdange firemen — the cap- tain of military police who had given Punzel the original order was rushed oft somewhere else, the judge advocate's office moved away; Punzel's adjutant was overwhehned with paper work and nobody knew the cor- poral's secret except his Own men. And they did not betray 1)1111, After the war, Nicholas Kre- mer, an ambitious young man, .:. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: AGENTS WANTED arta\ESI•: oriental (amps! Selling? 1lcrr's something really different! We teant one only, agent In each district. Send $3.00 for your sample lamp and wliolesade price list today! C, Holden, lion 510 SI. Marys, Ontario, S,EN and women Doinonstrale and sell our newIHfy Electric Tenpole, Free den"nlatntler to persons with referen- ces. Ilurlbert Agenrles, Rockville, Yaretool lt MAT Scntl:, , ARTICLES FOR SALE "DESTROYER for use In outdoor toil- ets, Eats down to the earth, saves eleuning Directions, Thousa,uls of users, coast to coast. Price 51.00 per can, postpald, i.ng Cabin Products. 322 York Road, Guelph, Ontario BABY CHICKS 1111_1 featuring new low prices on (Word and started chicks, prompt ship. Went, See local agent or write. Bray Hatchery, 120 John North Hamil- ton, Ont. BOYS' AND GIRLS' SUMMER CAMP HttAESIDF: (near Paris Ont.) a low cost well supervised and enjoyable camp with a well balanced program for children 8 to 15 years. Hoye July 18.24 girls July 24.30 For information and registration forms write itev, W. 11. Moody, 664 Fennel Ave., E., Hamilton, nr phone FU 3.8745, FU, 3.8681. BOYS' SUMMER CAMPS ENJOY your holidays on a real farm. goys 10.15 years. Horseback ridingout- door camping, swimming, fishing qualified counsellor, home cooked meals. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Witty, R.R, No. 1, Gore Ray, Manitoulin Island, Ont. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ICE cream, soft Investigate the pos- sibilities in this tremendous business. Can be installed to your present store In addition to your regular business. Small Investment; large profits, Dox 212, 123.18th Street, Nov Toronto, Ont, LIFETIME INCOME! Every 52 returns $130.001 No risk. No work, Everything legitimate. investors Dreamt Details, stewed envelope, Will Taylor, 44 Lib Ilan Avenue, Providence, Rhode Nand, SERVICE; station' now Texaco tanks; store; separate 11 room house in at- tractive Llallburton village close to lovely lake; all year business; good turnover — a real opportunity for general mechanic in growing tourist community; reduced price due to wife's serious illness; enquire about this! Fred, 11, Reid, Broker, Vacation Properties Consultant, 43 Victoria St., 'Toronto 1. BE YOUR OWN BOSS ! OWN AND OPERATE A Coin -Metered Unattended Westinghouse Laundromat Equipped Laundry Store. Net $4,000-$8,000 Annually, Write or phone today for full Informa- tion 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 of'er you longest financing period at lowest monthly installments, You re- ceive training and advice from a nn- tional organization that has helped over 8500 men and women like you do into business for themselves. No ex- perience necessary. Modest invest- ment, This proven new profitable automatic business offers a money- making opportunity to anyone , who wants to own his own business. Com- pare our complete program, ALD CANADA LTD. 54 Advance Road Toronto 18, Ontario ROger 6-7255 entered politics. He wanted to know what had happened to Corporal Johann Punzel, He tried advertising, writing to mayors of German cities, to soldiers' organizations, to the police, all to no avail, It was not until April, 1955, that Johann Punzel was found. The result was that in June, 1955 — fifteen years after the in- cident — Mr, and Mrs. Punzel visited Differdange as guests of Kremer and the surviving fire- men. The Punzels were overwhelm- ed by hospitality -- and by the sincerity of their welcome. It was all the more startling be- cause Germans, as a race, are Mill not popular in Luxembourg. Now the Punzels come to Luxembourg each year and the highlight of their stay is a church service at which they sit in the front pew while the pastor speaks about human charity and courage, using Johann Punzel as his prink example. Fish and Chips Battles Television A. popular British Institution is 111r'eatened. It's the fish -and -chip supper. The lure of the TV screen is stronger than the pungent smells coming from the shops behind the "'frying tonight" slates. . "Wagon Train," "Wells Fargo" and other Westerns are keeping British viewers from their na- tional dish — fish dipped in bat- ter, fried, and eaten with sticks of potato cooked in boiling, oil, "We can always tell when 'Wagon Train' is over because we get a surge of customers," Mrs. Edith Theobald of Man- chester told ale. British fish fryers, meeting at their National Federation con- ference in the West Country, emerge as men gazing into gurg- ling cauldrons while customers sit glued to the celluloid screen. Only when the Redskin bites the dust do crowds rush in to buy hot fish -and -chips supper:. Mrs. Theobald urged the fish fryers to take up the cudgEls — or whatever fish friers take up. "We must adapt out meth- od," she said. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE SNACK BAR on No 6 Highway, 3 years old could be year round Iuslnese, Living quarters attached, 111ust sell due to health. Apply Paul Guerin, Varney, Out, GENERAL store, dwelling, modern conveniences, In good farming com- munity, thirty miles northeast of Lon- don, Ont, Price $12,600.00, 1959 business turnover approximately 543,000. Write to or come and see C. A. MncDougald, Harrington West, Ont. ANTIQUE BUSINESS WELL este/dished, Good Clientele, 2 years old brick building, Apartment, Large showroom with stone fireplace Smaller showroom,Double glazed large windows. 2 athrooms. !)right airy basement workshop, wuik•In ent- rance, Separate storage building, 495 feet frontage on highways 7 and 12. Low upkeep and tuxes. Early posses- sion, Reason for sale Ill health, $0,000.00 will curry. balance on easy terms. Stock available from owner. Lylia M. Millen ileal Estate, Phone Brooklln. Oliver 5.4971. GENERAL store and equipment, 2 gas pumps, storeroom and garage, also a 5 -roomed house, plus bath and fur- nace, sell reasonable. Apply to box No, 22 Port Rowan, Ont. Gift Shop — Strathroy Well established, Good clean saleable stock, in main business section. Own- er's wish to retire. For sale with bulllding, In excellent condition. )las 2 modern apartments. Terms can he arranged on building. Immediate pos. session, Telephone for appointment, Apply to CAMPBELL MACKINLAY REAL ESTATE— S'rRATi1ROY PHONE 139 CANOES FOR SALE CANOES, tough rugged fibreglass, 15 ft. long, 371/2 inch beam, easy to carry, only 53 lbs. "$179.00 delivered". Niro gara Porlager, 2041 Carman St., Nile' gara Falls, Ont, Phone EL. 4.9895. CONSULTANT — REAL ESTATE PERSONAL service vacation and stmt. lar properties, longest experienced, Satisfied clients, Fred H. Reid, Broker, 49 Victoria St., Toronto. FARMS FOR SALE ONE hundred acres, tiled drained choice clay loam, on highway, Perth County, Barn 45' x 05' steel stenchlons, 2 silos, drive shed and other buildings, 11 -roomed Krick house, new 011 furnace bath and cupboards, hot and cola water, large lawn with 55 maple trees, 17 registered, accredited, listed, Hol- stein, crop and equipment, W. Bogle, Newton, Ont, Telephone—Milverton 36 R. 2-1. 100 -ACRE form for sale In Huron county, Ont. Excellent land, young orchard bearing, good trout stream, fine buildings, hydro, close to town, highway, churches, school bus by gate. Real buy; early possession. Box 213, 123 -18th Street, New Toronto, Ont. HAROLD D. POAPST Broker WINCHESTER MILK contract farm, bulk cooler, stable cleaner, 60 head purebred hot- htelns, new power machinery, moulern ome 18 miles from Ottawa. Prier $40,000,00, terms. Call b,,:: Dewar, Ken- more; Metcalfe 19 R 4, - - - 195 ACRE natural drainage, farm for sale situated on Highway 7 end 8 be- tween Kitchener and New Hamburg. Plenty Spring Water and Drilled Well. Red Brick 2 storey house, equipped with pressure system, three piece bath, large bank barn. Contact Earl Honde- rich, Baden, Ontario. 50 ACRE farm for sale, Six room house good barn, implement shed hog pen, hen house. Drilled water, Hydro in house and barn. On School bus route. Reason for sale Ill Health. Ap- ply Mr, John T. McFadden, RM. No, 1, Berkeley Ont, This advertisement Is published free, as one of the many benefits of:— THE ALLIED SERVICES (CANADA) 1629 DUNDAS STREET EAST, LONDON, ONTARIO. FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE EBERSOL'S / MILVERTON Ebersol Snow Blowers Ebersol Feed Mixers Ebersol Electric Hammer Mills Ebersol Feed Carts EBERSOL FARM ELEVATORS EBERSOL GRAIN THROWERS EBERSOL SWIVEL FEEDING CARRIERS Ebersol Seed Mixers Ebersol Thresher Shredders Caswell Farro Crates Caswell Wayo Crates Caswell Cattle Curriers Contact your Dealer or Write Ebersol Farm Equipment Company Limited, Milverton, Ontario, Phone 171. FLORIDA PROPERTIES FOR SALE FLORIDA — 'l'op location, amain high- way for fish camp, motel, cafe, sight- seeing boats, over famous Wakulln Springs, $15,000 with terms. Box 167, Tallahassee, Fla. FLORIDA — (Near Ocala) CENTRAL Florida, undeveloped high rolling ranch land. 320 acres, $85 per acre. 15 acre farm with house $2,500, Many others. Sun Land Realty of Flor- ida, 013 N. Stale ltd. 7, W. Hollywood, Florida. FOR SALE BABY SHOES! Sizes 0,.1, 2,.$1.75; 3 to 6, $2.95 postpaid. Money order orgy. C, 11. Baker Enterprises, 408 E Stough- ton Champaign, Illinois. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS WA'1 CH dog alarm for your car. Makes sneak thieves run. Easy to Install, any make. Only $5 95. Postpaid. Allied im- port Agency, Box 3011, Station "11", Montreal. a HELP WANTED • LAIIOItA'L'ORY TECHNICIAN Imme- diately 5 day week. Apply Su+ter- ,Intendent, Uxbridge General Hospital. Uxbridge, Ontario. MACHINERY FOR SALE FEED MILLS 51)Itl'ILUS stock 01 new Tornado No. 15 feed mills. hall bearing with hop per. must sell $49.110 Send for circu tar. Federal, 1115 Ring E., Toronto. MF.O1CAL IT'S EXCELLEN1. rREAL RESULTS AFTER TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS AND NEURITIS. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OtTAW,n $L25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the tornu'nl of dry eczema rashes and (1vcping skin troubles. l'oll's Eczema Salve oil) not disappoint you Itching, scaling and herring tett' ma, acne ringworm, pimples .and root eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment rami, le.s 01 how stubborn o1 hopeless then •tial. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE !.3.50 PER tAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East TORON50 NURSES WANTED General Duty Nurses F014 modern 50 bed hospital. Rest ence accommodation available, 40 ho 5 -day week. Good personnel benelkt Starting salary: new graduates $275.0 with experience $285.1)0, with Onto Registration, also Supervisor of Nursing required State experience and salary expeeted, Ad• areas enquiries to: The Administrator, Sioux Lookout General Hospital, P.O. Rox 909, Sioux Lookout, Ontario. NURSES TRAINING SCHOOLS 1AI(N '1'O $65 WEEK us Practical Nurse. Learn quickly at home, No high school necessary; no age Amit, Write for free booklet, lesson samples. Post Gliraduate School of Nursing, Roma 91- E70, 131 S. Wabash. C'hic'ago NUTRIA Bonnyview Nutria Mutations YOUR opportunity — 'Thirty pregnant females available, Utters guaranteed. Top quality, pairs or trios No better stock available rut any price. Charlotte Brunt, 11.8. 1, King, Ontario. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Ilulrdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 355 Bloor St. W., Toronto Iironebes: 44 Ring St. W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL (,ADZES — Dumas Female ('Ills $5.00. Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, 'Toronto_ BOY Trouble? Girl Trouble" Love Trouble? Don't suffer a clary longer when expert advice can be obtained so easily, quickly, and cheaply De- laying and bungling can mean total toss of your chance. Send me your problem with $5.00 for prompt per- sonalized analysis of what's wrong and what to do, STRICTLY CONFIDEN- TIAL, rA. C. Martin, 1 104, .110Cnnnh, Miss,, U.S.A. DRUG STORE NEEDS BY MAIL PERSONAL needs. Inquiries invited. Lyon's Drugs, 471 Danforth, Toronto. ADULTS' Personal Rubber Goods, 36 assortment for ;;2.00. Finest quality, tested, guaranteed, Mailed in plain sealed package plus Iree Mirth Control booklet and catalogue of supplies. Western Distributors, BOX 24TF Regina, Sask. GET 8 HOURS SLEEP NERVOUS tension may cause 75 of sickness, Particularly sleeplessness, ►Itteryness and irritability Sleep, calm your nerves with "Nnpps", 10 for 51.00, 50 for 54.00. Lyon's Drugs 471 Dan- forth, Toronto, PHOTOGRAPHY — — SAVE! SAVE! SAVE! Films developed and $ magna prints in album 40f 11 magna prints in album 6Ot Reprints 51' each KODACOLOR Develo,.i.-" roll 51.00 not including prints). dolcfr• ,~oats 35t' each extra. Ansco and Ektachrotn. 15 m.m 20 ex - s Color prrtntsesfromnnslidesn 35('Jreach. Money refunded to full for unprinted nega- tives, FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. PROPERTIES FOR SALE LOOKING for a place to relax? Over- looking trout stream in Huron county, 2 -storey brick home, modern conveni- ences, stable, about 2 acres of garden land, raspberries, small fruits, Lots of trees and flowers, terms. Richard In- gram, Wroxeter, Ont. COTTAGE for sale, 22' x 24', two bed- room, living room, and kitchen; fenced and landscaped on Georgian Ray, 1 mile from Lions Head, winterized, hydro, scenic view of Isthmus hay. Price 54,000, unfurnished. Apply Har- vey Warder, i,lon's head. Ont Phone 52-R-13. TEACHERS WANTED CLARENDON 'rSA requires leachers, principal for Plevna 2 -room school and others. First class certificate required. Salary offered: $3,000 to 53 200 accord- ing to school and experience Please state last Inspector. For Information contact Mrs E. A. Card, serretary- treasurer_Plevna. North F'rontcn: e ONE PROTESTANT TEACHER FOR GRADES 1 TO 8 FOR HAWK JUNCTION PUBLIC SCHOOL. 30 minute drive from the 'I'r:,n..•( .mads Highway No. 17 uor'h of S;"It Ste, Marie. PLEASE st,l0 quaiuti,ati.,n- add salary, also name of your last ite.pector APPLY to iI. i'. giro». Coal; +Usti No. 1 Townships 27 ;out 211,, DISTRICT OF ALGOMA HAWK Juncit!'n. ()mark SUMMER RESORTS C1L\I,E'l' Brunelle. Sport sewn s north• ern rendezvous on hour 1•111;e near Kapusknsin(; Modern sermon xtation. tine French cuisine, Phone 114 write Andr'ee ant 11011.' 111111111111111111erne;le Uu•'nh%nm Ont. DIVINE Lake (.0dee, I•oe nisi:Med 11teri sure will show 1)11 what this unique and enchanting place has to on'er. Port Sydney, 'Iusknka. 1h11arlu. HOLD EVERYTHING! UP to ,lull' 10th we are (Merino a tis count of 10`., on rat's that aro already very reasonable A tcondrrill' holiday at bnrenln prices. Folders.Vote the Hills of lllistikosk;: 1 ochlln, ROSELAWN LODGE, BALA 1100.115. cabins all owning water or private bathroom. line food, beach, summer sports. t'iendly moderate. write n1' phone nnselswm Lodge Bala Muskoka. Le lvlontciciir 3IOS'l OUTSTANDING RESORT IN F,\JIEl) S'I'E. ,\11F:LI•; VILLAGE 1. Largest swhnolhl1 11001 in the tan rentians.'3' diving 1 oards..ndr. 2. IIlmmilated Roble') :Null. court 3. (rosiest cocktail tour,;c. 4. 'Mears h0>ond (''unuore 5. Hiding, boaltmO movie, e"n 1,011 driving rangy 11e80,v 6. tior•IAI' ;tad s'por'ts ,,r,': i 1,tn trader n dlrect0)' 1 St111111nr1 111e011'c, 111'1 ((Nae, 11111810 for dvu'ioc. 8. Catholic ;Aid Prole=last churches 10 the village Outstanding Vacation At . Reasonable Rates Write For Folder R. T, Couillard Le Montclair, Ste, Adele, P.Q. VACATION PROPERTIES FOR SALE 111IIC11 tree 'I'anagnmi resort: til$ acres; tornlsh0(1 11na111 lodge and cot- tag0.: 2 large boathouses; Targe dock; 5 boats: 0utboardclect•ic system; tools; extras ell Inc $14000; - a smelt %gull(' with gnat possibilities. Fred H. 1ic!d, Vacation Propertics Cnnsnitant, 43 \'l 10rin St., '1brnllt0 1. ISSUE 'ti — L1WU PAGE 6 ir-•+•+• •-1+-•+•-••+t •+e.-•4 • +.4' • • •-• • u • a-• • •4+1 • •11.41 • • •••• 4F44'I Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRVI)E and SON CLINTON — EXETER — sEAFOR'ru LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE — T1IOnlAs STEEP, CLINTON, PHONES: CLINTON: Business -11u 2-6606 Residence—flu 2.3869 EXETER: Business 41 Residence 34 TEE BLYTH STANDARD Wednesday, June 29, 1960 BELGIZt'►VEIle day WAS arranged by Mrs, Ii. Proc- •....•-+•+.... Iler \‘ 10) is convenor of Health, Tho The June alerting of the 11'o(nen's roll call was tulswered with a hone' Institute was held in the community 1', needy. Mrs, Garner Nicholson had centre with a good attendance, Mrs, char„0 of the motto. Mrs. litrrge It. Procter, the Ilr[sid,mnt. opened Ilse J;,hno•lun favoured with piano music Ink -4011g in the inial ii 1n .:r, The trirrh was much enjoyed. AU'. N. Ku- secrelary-treasurer gave the rt ports.' claim, of 1Vingllnnl, showed slides anda ;'1,a:'.:nlitl e('iiu'Irry service will be 1(:%e a talk 011 1lie Niagara Cyel0 )las- „ held July ,I, al 0.15, in Brandon cane;- sa,;e. evcrn1 gifts were hrought far leo', 10 oils. of rain in the I'reshyter- ea :err patients, The report of the ian Church. The bus Trip will be on the District Annual was given by Mrs. W. rt;;ular nt^elfin; day, July 19, an.1 will Sco:l. Names were alt.0 taken for the go to Louden whore sonic poir!s of in• sewing al the 1laspital. The meeting } Ieiest wil be visit.:). Nil's. hkn 'Wheel- was dosed with The Queen anal Grace ('r, Ihr h."Igravc co,) Lradr. , anncnnc- was t un;g and lunch was served by Mrs. • ��•i••-•-•-•-•��41-•-••+~•-••-•••.,'''�..�*�.�-•��•{•-•-• ('[I lilnl the Cubs11';11 assistance from G. Higgins. Mrs, Nelson 1118;1115 all(I leaders and crininitle0 nu'm!'ers had Mfrs, IL Procter, PICNIC AT S.S. NO, 8 IIt'LI,ET r ehihl, Georgina Anne Funge; LargesI planters the flower bed at BK. cem&ry, I, 111. nod Airs, Lloyd Anderson, of S.S. No. 8 Ilullell held a picnic for family prrscr.l,NI('. an.1 Mrs. Elgin Nantes are 10 be given lo Alis. C. Bali. i.r' i 1 with lir, and Ales, J. G. An the ratepayers and children cn Mon- Jesting, na for the bus trip, The program for-dersr:n. day evening, June 27, on the school 1 111: and Mrs, Allan Campbell and, A U I” IJ 1 .N , babe, of London, with their parents for i grounds with 109 present. After a bountiful supper 0 program IOOtI1 Anniversary Observed bouqu:1 of flowers was placed in mens- the week -end, I of sports and rare:; WITe held with Knox Presbyterian Church nlarkrnJ ory of the tale Mr. Jelin Graham, by Mrs. G. Armstrong and family, of the following results: it's luolh ;utni''orsary last Sunday with Mrs. Gra!:am.Ln:n'r:l, t‘,1111Mr. and Mrs. Il. Irwin. Nh Pre-school age children, n't'ay Ihu1• Ree, Daugra, Black, of Atwood, 0A I M:', and Mrs. ,laln.es McCrea and'' King, Barbara Lee: Girls 0 to 8, Ann guest spca%er at holh services, The Ccnlenn1al Service of Knox Presby- i Homily, of 1'crl Cro.li1, called on rela- • ' Bakker, Grace Longman: Boys 0 to 8, service , • , (obit ('hutch Sun -`V I11a di ll s g of sung was tinder Ih[ ;tirccltun lives and friends in th�c village on Bruce Broadly, Steven Clark girls tl of the cr:,ani;l, Mr. Arthur 1'uungblut, A centennial service ii being 110111 day. R. is to 10, Jane IGlat:p, Susan )'lark; Boys Rex. Black spoke en brie parable of the next Sabbath. July 3r:l, al II a.m.,' Mr. Charles Johnson is 0 palir'nl in 8 to 10, Anlh•ew 11'ieckowski, Kennelli Solver for his morning sermon, remind -I when Rev. Findlay G. Stewart, 1).1)., the Hospital again after a few weeks ° .gosling: Throwing ball ir,to pail, Beth Ing the congregation to look back overt of Kitclicner, rat moderator of the at home. SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR all, Norma McDougall; Boys 10 to 12, tch past ccatury and see that the \e v!! General Assembly of Ilse PreAylcrian Mr. and Mrs, C. Manna were called Bernard Bakker, Arthur )Junking; Giris of Gel has 11000 reached and the got' Church in Canada, will he the guest hank from Cornwall owing In the dean' over 12, Marjorie flunking, Ann Knapp: secd has been sown and every Chrispan 1 speaker, The guest soloist will he Mr, of her brother, Mr. Stanley Lvunox, of Boys over 12, John Saundercock, Neil must cultivate this sec;) if the world Harvey McGee of North Bay, and 11101 Grrrie. The sympathy of, the Cons- ' Jesting; hrowing ball into hail. 13cth of to -day is going to throw out the cvil.'scrviC•'':. of song will be i:d l'y n chrir n;nily is extended to Mrs. llanna at 44-4+4-4-44 • 4 -4 .4 4-4 • 14 4-4 4-4-4-4-4 4-1+4 4.4-4.4- 4-4-4-44-444 -44-4 4-4 -4.44-4-4-4 • Thompson: Kicking slipper, children, Ile said that ton often the people of lo- of fiend• members. Follr+.win+; the ser- thi.+ time. Arthur flunking, Catherine hunger day are Ino busy to know the a •cal pin•- vice a reception will be held in the lfr. and Mrs. George Sargent and son )'Natives here. Toronto. Kicking slipper, ladies, 1lrs. Jack Lee; rose. of life and lose sight of (io-a, In Sabbath School room fel' everyone when of Mass. U.S.A., are visiting with her Ali's, Norman Gook and baby son, ar- Mr, and Mrs. Charles Small left Frt. Kicking slipper men, Cliff Saundcrcock; the evening message, he stoke en the a smorgasbord lunch will be served, mother, Mrs. A. Perdue, and other rived home on Sunday afternoon from, day miorning on 0 trip to Montreal for :1 -legged race, Barrie Pipe, Ifarvey Car. text, "Measure the Church," and gavel ler; Snow hall race, Catherine Funge's as inspiring sermon. Ile thanked the team; Time race, Barbara Lee; Alys• congregation for their patience and tea• tery number, Mrs, ,Pack Clark; Oldest dcrstading when he was a student inin- lady present, Mrs, Art Clark; Oldest Ister here, Rev. 1). J, Lana asaisfed Irian present, Stanley Lyon; Youngest al the evening service. A hcaulifnl 4.44 • t♦ •-••••• 44 • . ♦ +.. r-.-.•.-.•+-..-.+a*•+.-G+-•++-1-. D UR URT? WHY PUT UP WITI-I SORE FEET when we can help you Come in and let us take a PEDOGRAPH of your feet aitd suggest the correct arch support for your particular troubles. "The Houle of Good Quality Merchandise" 1 f 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'TON, 4+H ÷.-4-a 4-4 N. x.-+44 N+ 4. •o-Y+f+++-. 4-444-4-4-4-4.-4-4 r+ -.-.i VACATION TIME IS HERE ... f KEEP COOL IN Shorts (Jamaica or short) plaids or plain 8 to 20 ,,,.,,,,. 1.39 UP Children's Shorts or Short Sets sizes 2 to 7. , 98c to 2,98 Skorts, sizes 2 to 6X , .,-. 2.39 to 2.98 Bathing' Suits, sizes 2 J /8 years 1.198 to 6.95 Boys' Trunks; o;Zes -2 to 14 98c UP NeedlecraFt Shoppe BLYTH, ONTARIO. "The Shop for Tots and Teens" (ars For Sale 1960 FORD Fairlane Sedan. 1958 STUDEBAKER V 8, Automatic Hard Top. 1957 CHEV. Sedan. 1955 PLYMOUTH Sedan 1954 FORD Sedan 1953 CI-IEV. Coach Hamm's Garage Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers t• •...4-4-4.+44.4.4-44 , "WEEK END SPECIALS" Girls' Pedal Pushers, size 3 - 6X, Reg. 1.98 Spec. 99c Girls' Shorts, size 3 - 6X, Reg. 1.39 . Spec. 99c Girls' Kahki Jeans (sanforized) size 8 - t4 yrs. Reg. 2.98 •,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,• Spec. 1.5( Children's Leather Sandals, foam soles, in red or white, ,........................... Spec. 2.49 Men's Sisman Scampers. size 6 to 10 one-half (Factory Seconds) Spec, 3.99 Boys' Sisman Scampers, size 1 - 5 (Factory Seconds) Spec. 2.99 Ladies Sandals, patent pumps, broken sizes Special 1.99 Men's Canvass Oxfords, leather trim, panco soles, size 6 • 11 Spec. per pr. 1.49 Men's Sport Shirts, short sleeve , , , , , Spec. 1.99 Men's White T Shirts, with pocket, Spec. 2 for 1.00 IIIen's Dress Straw Hats Spec. 1.99 The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. 1 1 1 ONTARIO LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY Select Committee on Crop Insurance On April 5t1, 1960, the Legislative Assembly of Ontario appointed a Select Committee "lo enquire into all matters relating to insur• more of agricultural crops produced in Oninrii against hazards to those crops during the growing season," and, without limiting the generality of the, foregoing, In inquire into the following matters: 1. The hazards affecting each crop during the growing season, such ni bail, drought, frost, wind, excessive rainfall, flood, disease, insect pests, etc.; 2. The annual losses sustained by the producers from each hazard; 3. The insurance, if any, presently available for crop insur, ance in respect of each hazard; 4. The rates charged or that might be charged by insurance against any or all hazards; 5, The application of the Crop Insurance Act (Canada) to Ontario, or particular areas thereof, or in respect of part ticular crops or otherwise; And to make such recommendations as are deemed advisable with respect thereto; The Committee invites representations from parties interested in any or all aspects of the foregoing terms of reference, Such repre• senlatim's should he in the form of written briefs, fifteen copies. of whirl' sho, ! ' !,e submitted to the Secretary of the Committee not later Ihm September 15th, 1960. An opportunity will be given at a lair, date for those making submissions to appear in person before the Committee. William A. Stewart, M,P.P,; Chairman June 16th, 1960. G. R. Bagg, Secretary, Box 247, Parliament Bldgs,; Toronto 2, Ontario; llospilal in Wingham, AIr. 1Vilfrcd Walker is a patient in Hospital at Wingham, LONDESBORO a weeks visit with friends. Mi'. and Mrs. Percy Spencer, of De• troll, spent a few days with Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Pipe and all alknded the Coullcs-Pipe wedding in Brussels on Saturday. The regular monthly Meeting of Ihr A number of Nile W. I. ladies took a Londeshoro 11'onleu's lnslilule will be bus trip last uesday lo London visit - held Wednesdayevening, July Glp, al i inn several man of interest, The Cole. 8 p.m, Topic; Historical Research audI1)1011 Areal Plant, Kellogs and Spring - Current Events. :Iloilo: Ml's. Clare Vincent. (toll Call: "Your favourite bank, school teacher and something you re- member about 11,cin,'' l'rogrant: Mrs. Chris Kennedy who has been a Airs, L. Reid, Mrs. W. 1totvatt, Mrs, John patient in Clinton Hospital for the past Riley, All's, ,Nuc Shaddicl(. Hostesses;neck returned house 00 Saturday Mrs. Robert 1"airservicc, llrs. 11arl'y ,;lightly inlpruvcd. 1)urnin, Mrs, Weldon '1'yndalt, 1115. 1101'- M'. and Mrs. s. John I3urr and baby, vcy Kennedy. visited with Mr. and Mrs. James Mc Visitors with Mrs, John Shobbrook at Cool on Sunday. present are, Mrs. Edna Mcnitgcnicry Mrs. Alex Wells spent (he week -end and a friend from Hamilton, also a with Mr, and Mrs. Simpson McCall in brother, Ah'. and Mrs, Ed. Webb, of Stratford, TA IF YOU GO TO HOSPITAL READ YOUR ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANC GUIDE if you haven't one, ask, your employer or write 8 PI 8U11A Make sure you take along your Hospital Insurance Certificate or, at least, the Certificate . number. Jot the number down now—and keep it where it can be found in an emergency, CE. ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION TORONTO 7, ONTARIO', HYDRO Is yours LIVE Br,TT,:R ELECTRICALLY, SCRIM TEAM! Win or lose :: , there's going to be a "home run" tonight on the family's hot water supply. Active youngsters use a lot of hot water at bath -and -bed time, but with electricity on your side you'll be ahead of the game, install a modern, two -clement electric water heater of the right size and capacity for your family's needs. Then, when you scrub, tub or do the family washing, you'll always have an ample supply of hot water waiting for you. You won't have to wait for it. And, thanks to cicctricity, you have the extra reassurance of safety and absolute cleanliness in operation, To &et; more put of life, get the most out of electricity, - - 1 Wednesday, June 29, 1960 THE BLYTII STANDARD • Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO. M././•MIVMMNV* /NOUN . INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, hire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability, WE SPECIALIZ.O IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 104, Residence Phone 140 SEPTIC TANKS PUMPED, REPAIRED Sewage Disposal Problems Solved, Wells and cisterns cleaned. Estimates given, Irvin Coxon, phone 254, Milver- ton, Ontario, 18-1.1 FiLTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE Repairs to MI Makes of Vacuum Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone Ilensel!, 096H2. 50.13p.tf. SANITARY SEWAGE U1SPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louts Blake, phone 42Re, Brussels, R...U, 2. VWANTEU Old horses, 31,hc per pound, Dead cattle and horses at value, Important to phone at once, day or night. GIL- BERT BItOS, MINK RANCH, Ooderlc , Phone collect 1483J1, or 1403,14, BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 CRAW FOR I) & IIETIIERINGTON BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS J. II. Crawford, R, S. Iletheringtod Q.C. R.C. Wingham and Blyth. IN !MYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located In Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4� G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH t5.11 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 5:30. Phone HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. - W1NGIIAM, ON1 EVENINGS BY APPOiNTME3NT (For Apolntment please phone 770 Wingham). Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services, ROY N. BENTLEY Publlo Accountant OODERICH, ONT.. Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 — Box 478. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M, TO 4 P.M, EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS, 7 P.M. TO 9 P,M. ' !TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association Artificial Insemination Service is pro- vided from bulls of all breeds. We are farmer owned and controlled and per - ate at cost. Summer calling. hours:•- Between 7:30 and 9:30 a.m. week days; 0:00 and 0:00 p.m. Saturday evenings. For service or more information call: Clinton HU 2.3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9-5050. BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTIi, ONT. OFFICERS: President — John LN Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John II. McEw- ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.. Southgate, Seaforth. DIRECTORS J. L, Malone, Seaforth; J. Ii. McEw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J. L, Pep- per, Brumfield; C.• W. Lcorhardt, Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald. Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; V. J, Lane, 11.11. 5, Seaford; Selwyn Ba- ker, Brussels; James Kuyes, Seaforth; Ilarold Squires, Clinton. K. W. COLQUIIOUN INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE i REPRESENTATIVE 6nn Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PHONES pffice, HU 2.9747; Res. ITU 2.7550 Phone Blyth 78 SALESMAN „Vie Kennedy W`Ntt.•MIPOtM�N-IV MI�NN LYCEUM THEATRE Wingham, Ontario, Two Shows Each Night Commencing at 7:15 p.m. THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, JUNE 30 • JULY 1-2 John Wayne • 1Villiaun holden in "The I-I'orse Soldiers" A civil war adventure melodrama. MINNNrtI *VP ANY I #NI0114f`t I t MN'.. tY.h00ttttse#114 14.41 Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AT CLANTON SALE BARN at 7.30 p.m. IN BLYTII, I'IIONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer. o5 -if, "NM NN."OM I N^, N.P.V•41,0 ,e, tM4%. DEAD STOCK WANTED HIGHEST CASII PRICES paid In surounding districts for dead, old, sick or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor- ses for slaughter 5e a pound, For prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth, 211112, if busy phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, Win. Morse, Brussels, 15J6, Trucks available at all times, 34. 1, Mar, NO'T'ICE TO FARMERS For Fast and Satisfactory Service of Hauling Live Stock, Grain and Fertilizer, Call P and W TRANSPORT Pocock and Wilson General Trucking Service. Rates Reasonable. Phone 162 Blyth. DEAD STOCK SERVICES Highest Cash Prices PAID FOR SiCK, DOWN OR DIS• AIILED COWS and HORSES, Also Dead Cows and IIorses At Cash Value Old, IIorses — 5c I'er Pound PHONE COLLECT 133 — BRUSSELS BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN GIIISON, Phone 15119 BLYTII 24 HOUR SERVICE 13tf, FURNITURE Uphostered and re -modeled. New line of covers. Estimates given, A. E. Clark, phone 201114, Blyth, 17-8p. STRAYED Strayed to the farm of Earle Noble, Steer weighing about 700 lbs. Owner please call 114 Blyth . 32 -Ip CARD OF THANKS Words of appreciation cannot express my thanks to my many kind neighbours and friends, for their calls, visits, flow- ers, lowers, and treats, Special thanks to Dr: Street and Rev. Meally, and the Legion, for their hospital bed. Words cannot express our thanks to you all. 23.1, —Mrs. M. Quinn, CARD OF WANKS - Dan and IIilda Hallahan wish to thank their relatives and friends for I their lovely gifts, good wishes, and kind deeds, on the occasion of their 25th anniversary. FOR SALE Ayrshire cow, due to freshen July 7th. AiTMply John Franken, phare 38115, Blyth. 23-1. CARD OF TIIANKS Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gibbons wish to thank the members of the Blyth Fire Brigade for their very prompt speedy nul efficient answer to the calf for help on Friday evening. We arc also pleased there was no damage of any kind, either by fire, stroke or wat- er. RECEPTION A rerer,!fon and dance will be held foe Mr. and Mrs. James Cartwright (nee Grace Hallam) on Friday evening, July Eth in Blyth Memorial Hall. Lad- ies please bring lunch. music by a gea(1 orchestra.. BROWNIE'S Clinton -- Ontario •4.4•-•44-41.•444•..4.44-4-44-4.44444-• 4-4 •-• ***** 4- • 4•44 1.44 4-4 44 LVED., IIU1tS„ FI{i., JUNE 29 • 39 . JULY 1 THE HORSE SOLDIERS JOHN WAYNE (Colour) 1VILLIAIII HOLDEN • CONNiE TOWERS (Ose Cartoon) SPECIAL ADiMISSiON 75c 2� ��+4+•+44•„ •-•44-4-4 444 • • 4-4-4 •-•4,444-H+4 14 • 4+4 F1•• 4+4 . SUNDAY MIDNITE ONLY — JULY 3 "TILE SCREA1111NG "TERROlt FROM THE SCULL" YEAR 5,000" Adult Entertainment Adult Entertainment John Hudson •. Peggy Webber Joyce Ilolden •- Ward Costello 44•'•-4-••e.• 4-4+4-e 4-44 4-44-44-4- -4-•-4444-4••4-• .. • •-•4.44•-44-••+-•, SAT., MON., TUES., WED., JULY 2 • 4 • 5 - 6 ON THE BEACH Gregory Peck • FredAslaire - Ave Gardner Teny Perkins SPECIAL ADMISSION 80c 4•+4-• •♦ • 4+4 *4 • ♦-• 14+4 err • •-• ae+-• 4 •+• a 4-4-• 4444 4 •.44. THURSDAY and FI{IDAC -•- "HAPPY ANNIVERSARY„ Adult Entertainment David Niven „ Mibi Gaynor •- Carl Reiner (Two Cartoons) JULY 7 and 8 %-•444+444-4444 4 -•• • 4+4-4 .1+44 -•-1- 4-1-4-* 4+ *4-6- 4- *. 44 4.4-44•+1-44-•+. Blyth Billiards NOW OPEN Soft Drinks -- Tobaccos -- Chocolate Milk Billiards. COME IN AND TRY IT NONE TOO OLD and NONE TOO YOUNG. Owner and Operator. DON MacINTYRE •+4+44-1-•±4.144-49 4 4+44- • • +11+444444 4e -e4,+4+4++444-4+• 4+4' •-• 4+-4-444-44-4-1-44-4+44+++++444444-•-•444-44 a••• a e+e44+4+4.4 4 • THANK YOU On Behalf of the Citizens of Blyth, the Vote "NO" Committee extends thanks to the voters, the workers, the switch -board operators, and all whose support and co-operation contributed to the success- -f ul vote in the recent liquor plebescite, For the information of the public, our expens- es were as follows: Posters 11.00 Printing and Advertising Postage and Stationery Mimeographing 92.45 13.50 1.75 $118.70 *4444-44-44444444-.4444-444+4444-4444+14444+4-444-44444444+ •+444.4-•-•-•-•+„-•-•-4+ 1 MUSIC SUPERVISOR WANTED is your APPLICATIONS are requested for Music Supervisor, in the eight Public School Classrooms of East Wawanosh Township School Area, duties to com- mence September OMI. Lessons are for a continuous period of one hour a week per classroom, for not fewer than thirty-five weeks per year. Applications stating qualifications, experience, and salary, will be received by the undersigned up to July 9th, Jamas R. Coultes, J. A. McBurney, Chairman, Belgrave. Sect, R.R. 1, 23-2. Belgravc. DAIRY CALF CLUB VIEWS PASTURE AT ALVIN BETTIES FARM Blyth Lions Dairy Calf Club met on Wednesday, June 8 at the farm of Al- vin Bcttics, with 13ayfield, Exeter and Brussels Clubs attending. Donald Grieves, assistant agricultural representative, introduced 111r. Battles, who proceeded to give the members a guided tour of his farm land, explain- ing his farming operations. ile was assisted by Jelly Chaimbcrland. The latest speaker, Mr. McLaren. 0 graduate of Ridgutown College, spoke on management of pasture in ,Tne"al. Maurice Ilallahan, leader of the Blyth Lions Dairy Club, thanked Mr. Mac - Laren for his interesting talk. A quiz contest was conducted. The members separated into indh- viclual Clubs and attendance and busi- ness was attended to. Lunch was serv- ed by the hostesses, and the meetting closed with the 4 -II Pledge, Subscription Paid ') j WN44**N NNMN#SM Nt..NWIN MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT TiIE Gol)l.lucu. YARN{'1'IIIE;ATRE Phone JA4.7811 PAGE 5 NOIV PLAYING — Thurs., Fri., and Sal. TONY CURTIS •• JANET LEIGH -• DEAN MARTIN In the rollicking comedy that has tickled folks coast to coast "WHO WAS THAT LADY" ALL WEEK STARTING JULY 4th in all sincerity we promise yoc a picture you will enjoy and remember. A new 20th Century Fox classic:– "A DOG OF FLANDERS" In Cine►nascope and Technicolor 'l'o miss it means to he left out of countless conversations - Starring Lavid Ladd •• Lonald Crisp •- Monique Aberns COMING— Brigit Bardol in "LOVE iS MY PROFESSION." Ituslrictcd to persons 18 years and over. �.NIVN�IINNSNNNe tN•44.IIN*****N4,{NNryjN.JNIyMN.0 WANTED Girl wants housework one day a weak Inquire al the Standard Office, Myth. 23-1 p CARD OI'' THANKS 'I he Brigham Family wish to thank the many friends and neighbours for floral tributes and gifts to CN113 fund, and many ads of kindness shown us "'ut•ing cur recent bereaventrn1- Special thanks to i;ev. It. E. Mcl,agan, Mrs. Brown and 11r. Lloyd 'Tasker. 23.1 p WANTED Batey cav'riage, in gond condition. Arl'ly Mrs. John Franker, phone 311115,, Blyth. 23-1.! CARL) OF THANKS I I woud like to thank all my neigh- ; hours of the ninth line of Morris, and my friends for remembering Frances awl myself with cards and gifts at the time of our wedding. They were greatly appreciated and we will never forget your kindness. 23-1. —Kenneth and Frances Badley: SWIMMING LESSONS AT CLINTON Registration for swimming lessons in Clinton Community Swimming Pool will take place Saturday morning, July 2nd, from 9 in the morning until 12 o'clock noon, at the pool. Anyone from Blyth or vicinity who ; wish to pool cars to attend these les- sons are to gut in touch with Mrs. L. Siadditionn. BE A AHEAD Doctors say everyone should he checked for TB each year:' They have our safety in mind. The test to be carried out in Huron County this summer will determine whether those tested have had '1'B. You will be asked to return two or three days later, and have your test read. If signs of TB are evi- dent, then a chest x•ray will he arranged for.. The x•ray will show whether TB Is active at the time. The best way to keep a jump ahead of tuberculosis is to,find it early. Visit one of the 18 FREE TB DETECTION CLINICS in HURON July 19 to August 5 HURON COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIATION ► too se Wm SALER TWINI • CERTIFIED Mkt For smoother non-stop baling, use guaranteed Co-op Twine. Ties more bales per ball ... ties right and stays tied. BELGRAVE (O -OP ASSOCIATION Wingham 1091 -, Phones Brussels 388W10 Earth Shook And The Seas Heaved There seemed no end to the horror. AU through a long and terrifying week, Chile, that thin diver of a country that runs down the western coast of South America, writhed in agony. Without respite, earthquake after earthquake convulsed the land, ripping apart leuildings and burying thousand in the debris, In the mountafks, six long -inactive volcanoes errupt- ed,spewing out boiling hot lava, smoke, and ashes, In one com- munity at least eleven persons were immolated by the lava. "The whole world seemed to be shaking and shivering," one quake survivor said. "Every- thing danced in a terrible rhy- thm." When the dance of death was done, 2 million Chileans — a quarter of the country's popula- tion — were homeless and fight- ing for bread and emergency food stocks, But for others the horror was still to come. Giant sea waves Let in motion by the quakes roll- ed 6,800 miles across the Pacific and smashed into Hawaii, rip- ping up the city of Hilo. They continued on to hit Japan, leav- ing 150,000 people homeless. In the Philippines, the toll from the earthquake - triggered wall of water was lighter. Some nine- teen dead and thirteen missing. Then, in a freak of nature, the Philippines were hit by a second catacylsmic force: Tropical storm Lucille lashed across the main island of Luzon with tor- rential rains and 50 to 70 -mph winds. In her wake, rain poured steadily down to eighteen straight hours. Much of Manila, the capital city with a popula- tion of 2 million, was under wa- ter. The death toll from drown- ing alone climbed near the 100 mark at the weekend, Lucille was in no way caused by or connected with the Chilean earthquakes or the Pacific seise mic sea waves, With summer ap- proaching in the Northern He- misphere, the season of the big storms had commenced in the Pacific. That week the Joint Ty- phoon. Weather Center on Guam was already looking out for signs of Lucille's succesors. Eighty per cent of the world's earthquakes occur in the wide circle that surrounds the Paci- fic. The cause of the tremors in Chile seemed to lie in a line of cracks (faults) and weak spots in the earth's crust, beginning offshore and sloping under the mountainous land. Slow pressure built up tension along these lines until the crust finally let go in a series of upheavals, rocking the long, narrow land from end to end, setting off more quakes at other weak points, stoking up old volcanoes and creating new ones. Since the first tremor hit on May 21, Chile has suffered a dozen earthquakes. rhe sixth one, which was the biggest (equal to the San Francisco quake in 1906), apparently caused an underwater landslide or similar disturbance that generated a train of seismic sea waves. The waves ("tidal waves" is a misnomer, since they have nothing to do with tides) raced across the Pacific at about 425 miles an hour, showing only a 2 or 3 -foot crest. But when the shock waves reached the gra- dually sloping shore of Hawaii, which produces such beautiful breakers 'for surf rider§, the wa- ter was lifted up into a huge moving wall that rolled inland for hundreds of yards. Four big waves hit Hawaii within one hour, the biggest one 15 feet high and with enough strength WORRIED, PERCY? — Guinea plg Percy squats on a pillow while three-year-old Nina Souro examines him with a stethoscope, Percy thinks its a megaphone, to pick up whole buildings and toss them across a street. This has happened before. But, until 1946, when 165 Hawaiians were killed, seismic waves were accepted as a fact of Pacific life. After that, the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey set up a seis- mic -sea -wave warning system — a chain of ten earthquake -re- cording stations and twenty wave -measuring stations around the Pacific. The system worked well. Ha- waiians were alerted to the pos- sible epproach • of damaging waves twelve hours in advance, and were told that disaster was indeed on the way five hours and 35 minutes before the waves struck. When they hit, just af- ter midnight, the houses and hotels along the beaches were virtually empty. Those who were killed had apparently ignored the sirens and radio broadcasts. Just after Hawaii received word of danger rushing toward the island, five cabled warnings went out to Japan, The last mes- sage, advised that the "sea wave has spread across the Pacific," but at that time only two duty officers of Japan's Meteorologi- cal Agency were at their posts, Most of the others were at a pirzefight in Tokyo. No warn- ing was given to the hundreds of thousands of rice farmers and fishermen living in flimsy wood- en shacks along the shores of the Japanese Islands. Nine hours after the last warning was re- ceived, the waves struck. One of them was the largest wave in Japan's history, Except in a few villages, where early rising fishermen had looked at the sea and guessed what was coning, the first warning to inhabitants was the arrival of the first wave — luckily, not the biggest. The next day, the agency di- rector tried to blame the warn- ing system. 'The wave reports," he said, "referred only to waves in the South Pacific." But a spokesman for the Coast and Geodetic Survey told Newsweek: "We sent our information to Tokyo and the seismologist there knew it was a seismic wave. He's trying to .over up, He should have listened to the radio." By the end of the week, the agency director had sub- mitted his resignation. The seismic warning system proved that it can save lives when heeded by both officials and the public. But little can be done about the loss of pro- perty caused by such waves. And,- as of now, there is no de- fense against an earthquake. Un- til the land of Chile ages and settles down, its inhabitants will have to live in fear of more quakes. Mt BIKINI'S THE THING — The bikini is catching on according' to stores across the' cotintry. More and more girls will depend ' on Iwo hankerchiefs and hope this summer as are these surf • splashing lovelies, having fun at a beach, "0f the making of many books their is no end" according to the Bible, and that was written long before the hood of cookery books started coming off -the presses. And today I thought you might like to hear something about some of the earliest and most famous of all these household guides. '1 Mrs, Becton's book of House- hold Management, was written by Mary Isabella Becton, was published just about 100 years ago. Today it is regarded as a highly desirable piece of Vic - twine. Directed to budding house- wives of the period, it ran to 1680 pages of more than half a million words and it its time was a best seller, grossing over two million copies, No array of Vic- torian wedding gifts was com- plete without a copy to inspire and direct the bride in the taste- ful and tactful management of her new household and, one might add, her new husband, for Mrs. Becton had much discreet advice to offer concerning the man of the house, In this latter connection, Mrs. Beeton certainly practiced what she preached, It is recognized that her tireless devotion and love for an ailing husband and her desire to aid him in his busi- ness constituted the motivating force behind her book, which was so richly rewarded in its massive sales, Prior to this, she had had good reason to observe the need for a manual on house- hold management, as we shall shortly see. The eldest of a family of 22 children, Mary Isabella early be- gan to learn the rudiments of household management the hard way, so that later she wrote: "What motivated me in the first instance to write a work like this was the discovery of the suffering brought upon men and women by household mismanage- ment." The force of this realization was to be wonderfully manifest in the comfort she later brought Into the life of Samuel Orchart Beeton, the young publisher she married in 1856 and whose busi- ness she did so much to prosper. Seldom has there been, one gathers, such wholehearted and joyous collaboration between au- thor and publisher as there was in the emct Bence of Household Management, produced by the ]louse of Becton, published by the House of Becton, and dilig- ently promoted by the House of Beeton. If ever a work was pro- duced by a united family, House- hold Management surely was it: Small wonder that it was to be- come one of the all-time hest sellers in its chosen field. ' Mrs, Beeton produced more than a book on household man- agement. She recorded the modes and manners of one of the most celebrated periods of British history, a period best re- membered, perhaps, for its faith- ful practice of the social grace'.. Other women emulated her and in our home today is a yellowed copy of a no less mas- sive tome on household manage- ment, not far removed from Airs. Becton's own heyday. The edit- ors were two ladies of scholar. ship, assisted by several others professionally heading such ap- propriate institutions as a college of housccraft, a school of cook- ery, a ladies' poultry club and o farm, Another lady editorial as- sociate was a lecturer on bee- keeping. The disciplines represented by the entire editorial array made a lengthy list. Between then, the group contributed more than 7,000,000 words of text on what the preface described as the "der. 'nestle woman." "A glance at the contents," said the preface, "will show how varied is the list of subjects of special interest to women." This was something of an understate- ment. The list was so formidable that the editors declared that successful mastery required qualities demanded of a field marshal "and a few not unim- portant qualities in addition." Any fair-minded field marshal, reading the list, would undoubt- edly agree, writes Albert E. Nor- man in the Christian science Monitor. The 700,000 woad course in household management began with a study of the fundamen- tals of domestic architecture. The wisdom of this inclusion, it seemed, was to prevent young newlyweds from falling into the trap of buying a jerry-built house. No jerrybuilder could sell a house to a woman capable of judging the comparative merits of domestic construction as taught by this book. In such sub- jects, the book was also a mine of sound information for hus- bands. Water supply was an impor- tant consideration in those dist- ant times, as the book revealed. In many homes, perhaps a ma- jority, in cities and towns, It was necessary to store water in tanks or "cisterns," How many house- holders today give more than a passing thought to the constant supply of pure water that is theirs at the turn of a faucet? But in grandmother's time, the young bride was wise to ask the builder just what arrangements were made for water supply. The illumination of the house was another matter requiring careful consideration. The "Edi- son light" that we today take so much for granted was not available. But there Was "air gas," as it was called, generated on the premises, if you had the price of the equipment. How many young couples used it we do not know, but in the speci- men shopping list offered in the book, candles were never omit- ted as a regular item of stores. When inspecting the heating arrangements of the new house,, the bride was advised by the editors to look for fireplaces lined with Krick rather than iron plates, the latter tending to transfer the heat more readily up the chimney, For those who desired some elegance in heat- ing equipment, there was the "boudoir grate," described as "an almost perfect imitation of a homely log fire." As the name suggests. these harmonized best with their surroundings when insalled in bedrooms, and the Oilers noted with evident satis- faction that this elegant piece of cast iron was "designed by a woman.' ]n case the newlywed reader had not realized the potential. gold mine represented in her husband's possible skills as a handyman about the place, the hook gave her a reminding nudge that "some men have a taste for carpentering and carv- ing. Then how can this taste be more satisfactorily employed than in the furnishing of the home?" A good question, in case the candidate carpenter should ric.mw, there it was in Mack and white that "cosy window seats and pretty ottomans can be turned out by the home uphol- sterer and carpenter ala trifling cost," "Do not aim at handsome effects which cannot be achieved with the small sun at ,your com- mand," warned the editors. "Cheap imitations should be , shunned," That little escape clause could have been inserted by a skilled lawyer. It certain• ly offered non -carpentering grandpa a very handy loophole, If grandpa was thereby suc- cessful in not being pressed into knocking together cosy window seals and pretty ottomans, he still needed plenty of tact when it came 10 selection of furnish- ings. The book said that "knowl- edge of the ins and outs of fur- nishing is hest attained by ex- pctience, and for this reason the bride's mother will often be able in make many UFO ul sugges- tions." In those days, the bride's mother and the bridegroom's mother both knew, as the book testifies, the imports nee of grandpa's getting a good dinner. To help keep him happy, the bride was advised to serve some• thing along the following lines for dinner: Iced Melon Clear Soup with Quenelles Turbot with Shrimp Sauce Beef Creams will Mushrooms Lamb with Mint Sauce Sorbet Roast Pheasants with Orange Salad Nest of Chestnuts \vith Cream .fell,\' Cheese Straws St:awl'y' Dessert berIces It seeing quite reasonable to conclude that any man, having had a dinner of that caliber, would not be averse to n little job of knocking together a few cosy window seats and pretty oftomans. '.I'he book laid great stress on tact, the editors devoting to the subject a good deal of the 37,000 words found in the chapter on Etiquette, Tact, as they pointed out, was not enough. Good man- ner's also were essential. "Every period of history," they wrote, "had its recognized code of man- ners, and though the etiquette of our forefathers differed con- siderably from our own social rules, yet the governing prin- ciples of true politeness have always had their foundation upon the practice of true kind- liness, courtesy and considera- tion for others; for 'Manners are not idle but the fruitof loyal nature and of noble mind,'" To give practical direction to this advice, the editors quoted from a little 17th -century gem: The Accomplished Ladies' Rich Closet of Rarities, or The Ingen- ious Gentlewoman and Servant Maids' Delightful Companion. Refraining from inquisitive questions at the table of one's host was just as de rigueur then, as It is today. Thus The Accom- plished Ladies' Rich Closet of Rarities advised readers: "Be not inquisitive (for that Is uncome- ly)to know what such a Fowl or such a Joynt cost, nor discourse of Bills of Fare." And again: "Eat not your spoon meat so hot that it makes your eyes water, nor be seen to blow it." One wonders whether the young bride of today has such excellent and comprehensive sources of advice as those I have mentioned, and, if she has, to what extent she uses then, "People are easily entertain- ed," says a magazine, . All you have to do is listen to them. French Made Easy Once upon a time, the U S. Ar- my in Europe trial to leach GI's French, The results were some- times hilarious. A new language, "fractured French" produced such adapt renditions as chideau- briand ("Watch out. ']'Ire castle's burning"), pas du lout ("falhe{ of two"), and Jeanne d'Arc ("Nb light in the bathroom") Of late, the U.S. Army has giv- en up the taste as hopeless, But now it has devised a new ap- proach to Franco -American re- lations, which may well fracture some Frenchmen, in future, said :+n Armv spokesman, all U.S. military ve- hicles in France wi11 carry print- ed cards that "\will enable Ame- rican drivers to help stranded French motorists even il they cannot speak each other's lan- guage." Thus, \vhen an Army truck whips along Rout( Na- tionale No. 7 and comes onto a French car packed by the v':iy- side, the GI driver will stop :end, with a flourish, hand a -card to the Frenchman which reeds, in French: "Dear Fellow Driver: 1l ap- pears that you are having diffi- culty with your automobile and although I do not speak French, 1 would like to offer my assist- ance. If you would check the ap- propriate sentence below, 1 will know how to assist you: 1-1 am out of ga 2—I have a fiat lire and sun without a spare , , 3—My engine slopped and I do not know the cause. I need n mechanic .. 4—Would you send someona from the next service station up the road , 5—I need to borrow some tools. 11-1 am not in any difficulty .., 7—I need an ambulance . And what if the poor fellow it just parked and whiling away the time with his girl? Pas de quoi, which means "Don't ask questions." Kitchen Trick Most women have struggled with getting paraffin off of a jar of jam or jelly, Sometimes a press of the thumb would do il, but more often than not you got your fingers sticky, or, as a last resort, you used a knife to pry it off, This last method usually re- sulted in your eating some bila of paraffin or in wasting some of the jelly, You look your choice! Gone is all this struggle, waste, and inconvenience, if, after you pour on the hot paraffin, you place a piece of string in it. The string becomes anchored and serves as a handle when you ere ready to open the jam, ISSUE 27 — 1960 Styled For Slimming '1'11E CITY SHEA'1'I-I keeps its perfect poise through luncheon or late -day occasions. It's styled to slim the short, fuller figure — of a eool, carefree fabric of "Dacron" polystcr fiber and "Orlon" acrylic fiber with a smooth silky texture. Printed Pattern 4533 comes in Halt Sizes 121/2 to 221/2. Send Fifty Cents (stamps can- not be accepted, use postal note for safely) for each pattern. Send to Anne Adams, Box 1. 123 Eighteenth 5t., New Toronto, Ont. Please print plainly YOUR N'AI►IE, ADDRESS, STYLI; N1letitElt anti SIZE, Dairy Month Ancl Remarks Thereon ---- June i3 Dairy Month, and 1 fuel constrained to make some appropriate remark s. Three glasses milk every day, etc, The statistics on dairying are in- teresting - every year the num- ber of dairy farmers goes down while the production of milk goes up. Fewer farmers keep more cows who give more milk, Indeed, the dairy business has so changed that an old cow hand like myself is almost a stranger to it today. It is less sociable. As It has consolidated and mechan- ized, it has become the kingpin of American agriculture, all phaxes considered, until today the dairyman sounds more like an industrialist than a fanner. The Dairy Princesses are be- ing selected nationwide right now, to glamourize the business, and they are very different from the tight -fingered las3ies cf a bygone time, sir she sayed, sir she sayed. The chances are your Dairy Princess can tell you the calcium content of .04 milk, but she couldn't get a decent strum on the bottom of a pail. Milking was always, almost everywhere, considered squaw work, In most of the world, a man who milks loses face. Switz- erland is one country wh.'re a man could milk within the de- finitions of propriety, ane in parts of Europe a milkir;n 'nun g1 still ..nfl. 4 a aw ss, even though he may in truth be an Armenian. I'll bet you didn't know that! Today the gentle and persua- sive art of draining a cow is so thoroughly mechanical that a Dairy Princess needs only to be pretty and have enough votes. In New York State not long ago a power failure in the milk - shed created disturbance enough so the news service featured it, and whole legions o! cows went unmilked until they could screw in a new fuse. Some farmers cleverly drove their trucks up to the barns and connected hoses to the vacuums on the wind - :held wipers, giving their milk- ing machines enough pull to do u 'lair meantime job. But that night hired man af- ter hired man deposed and stat- ed that he could not or would not milk - and it's perfectly true that it was just as well, for 'cows nowadays know little that isn't mechanical and they would probably have put up a holler. I think the great marvel of the milk business is the process of pasteurization, which has been overplayed as a health device, for its primary function is far more practical. The dic- tionary is a little more accurate about this process than some of the milk promoters. It stops or delays fermentation, and with - 0 R Eca Sr9` pa * " LA. 41.411Z41 oU.S.POSTAGE rn H 4n FORESTRY STAMP - This stamp, which will go on sale Aug. 29, marks the Fifth World Forestry Congress. The design is taken from the Congress seal. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Salad plant 6. Iligh mountain 8. Spot on a paying card 12 'fake delight 13 Deface 14. flarem room 15. Puffed up 17. Orem fear 19. Stuff 20. woven fabric 22. Toper 23 Watches narrowly 2. Fresh supply ' 3. Eluded 4. Coterie 5, Killed 0. Morning tab.) 7. Buddhist Miler 8, Arts II• chairman out it the modern dairy llwinc,s couldn't operate, Milk is highly perishable by nature -- the elements that nature -the Clements that slake it an ideal food are all elements that promote quick and natural digestion. Quick spoilage of milk, in truth, is its own proof of ex- cellence, Pasteurization thus de- lays this natural consequence and gives the farther time to move it long distances to waiting door- steps. Most milk travels at least 100 miles today between pro- ducer and consumer. Not long ago a dairyman in southern Massachusetts bid on and won a government contract to supply milk to the Loring Air Force base at Limestone In northern Maine - some 400 miles away. It wasn't too long ago this would have been utter- ly absurd. And this dairyman had his cows not in Massachu- setts, but in Vermont( At first he brought milk in tank trucks all this long distance, but later Ile began buying milk produced in Maine and set up a creamery near the base - smoothing the logistics. But his Vermont cows stand ready to fill any gaps If Loring needs more milk, and pasteurization makes the long hike possible. America depends most heavily on Holsteins, They are a large framed cote; derived from the continent, and by selective breeding have improved on an old reputation for a low?? ill .jUullttty, aney usecf `o say if the cow filled a pail, but you could look down through the milk and see the bottom, she was a Holstein - and In those days it was "steen." It is now "stine," and she Is a potential record -breaker in all categories. Next comes the Jersey, a smaller and folksier animal from the Channel Isle of Jersey, whose rich milk won her the name of the "butter cow," They say there are more Jerseys In the world than any other cow, and a man with a herd of regis- tered Jerseys always has a pleased look on his face. Another Channel breed is the Guernsey, who is growing fast in popularity, and is trademark- ed with the "Guernsey Gold" title. She has a high conversion factor - food to milk, and she is one of the prettier cows when she adorns a sward and contri- butes to a landscape. Also impor- tant In America is the Ayrshire, from Scotland, who like the Scots themselves is adaptable and can stand in a snowbank in Canada while her sister is equally at home in an Alabama swamp. Her conversion factor Is high, too, and she is chummy. Easy to work with in modern milking parlors. Two other breeds are gaining favour. One is the old Red Dur- ham or Milking Shorthorn, whose beef characteristics give ,her a "salvage" value. She gives a fine milk, but traditionally doesn't "hold up" so well as the year advances. Here again, se- lective breeding is changing that, and many farmers believe her the ideal cow. The other is the Brown Swiss, said to have a mighty potential and some day to be far more popular than now, Milk consumption nationally Is on the increase. Congress has just enacted a far bigger sum for school and institutional milk programs. So let us salute the milkman in June, when green pastures are lush and the morn- ings are splendid, and Bossy on yonder brow is lighthearted and kind. - By John Gould in the Christian Science Monitor. I'! you listen to all the songs you wouldn't think there's an Irishman left in Ireland. They're all somewhere else singing about it, 8. Heroine 30. Confirmed of "The 32. Cut off Merchant of 33. Manner Venice" 35. Haunt 10. Artificial 88. Unfasten language 40. Spiced meat 11. Average 42. Floor 16. Lowers covering 1n rank 44. Eucharistic plate lythlrul bird 2111..1:1r al>' 45. Scintilla:. inn 24. riental 48. Deep holes eft hl 50 Animal's stomach 20. 111dioulcd 51. clone by 27. lust "f n 62. Shout story 54. Fold o% or 28. Plerr' "111 57. Noon symbol 1 2 3 4 5 .):. 6 1 8 }' t9 10 11 .:w 12 tir 15 16 AV 25 nettling Potion 29 Dedicated 81, Diving bird 82, Musical note 34, Secluded 36. Exist 67, i.ubricate 39. Releases a claim 41. clave one's word 43. Piles 46. Simpleton 47. Month (ab,) 41 49. Jurisprudence 60, Astringent 53. Expand 65. Span of years - 16. ina bird 68. Domesticated 69 limned the victory t0. Color 1. Backbone DOWN 1. Crinkled tabrlc 19 Answer elsewhere on this page. FRUIT OF CIVILIZATION - Everything -probably including a kitchen sink - turned up when this section of the Surrey Canal in London was drained, Re odturs'; `i3$ys1iglithidr#J1e,7k (p (u"nk; ofebciaknal will�be filled In and used as a building site, TIIEFMN FRONT Jo xau.ssai United States, exploring the possibility of nationwide eradi- cation of hog cholera, has con- sulted leading authorities in Canada where the infectious virus disease has never been given a chance to get a foot- hold, Dr. K. F. Wells, Canada's Vet- erinary Director General, attend- ed a Chicago meeting called by local, state and federal officials to discuss the problem. Dr. R. J. McClenaghan, chief of the Contagious Diseases Sec- tion, Health of Animals Division, was at a similar meeting in New Orleans, and Dr. W. A. Moyni- han, associate chief, attended one in New .York City. a * * Even before the turn of the century, Canada rigidly controll- ed hog cholera by slaughtering all animals found suffering from It. During the past decade there have been eight outbreaks in which about 3,500 pigs were des- troyed by officials and their owners compensated. The U.S., on the other hand, .long ago decided to live with the disease rather than attempt to stamp it out. Control by vac- cination has cost $1 per hog up to market age, and the annual loss to the swine industry from the disease has,. been estimated at $50,000,000. Hog cholera is often associ- ated with the feeding of uncook- ed garbage. * * * Tree growth on 2,000 acres in southern Quebec was sprayed from the air with DDT last month, as authorities waged`war on infestations of gypsy mote. It is only the third time in 35 years that an outbreak of this pest has been reported in Can- ada. * * * L. L. Reed, who directs sur- vey work for the Plant Protec- tion Division, Canada Depart- ment of Agriculture, said DDT in diesel fuel was applied at the rate of one pound per gallon per acre. "This is the same treatment as has been used with remark- able success in the United States," explained Mr. Reed. "American officials report near- ly 100 per cent destruction of larvae." e * * Nevertheless, extra precautions will be taken this year to guard against further spread of infes- tations. About 800 sex -attractant metal traps, loaned by the United States Department of Agricul- ture, will be used during the summer flight season of the moth. In addition to placing traps at the point where controls have been applied, the trapping area will be extended north and west to ascertain if additional pock- ets of infestation occur. * a * Since only the male gypsy moth flies, cartridges containing the scent of the female moth are used to lure them into the traps where they are caught on pieces of cardboard smeared with tanglefoot, Normally, only a few moths are caught by this method, but last season 97 moths were trap- ped in southern Quebec. A field survey confirmed that several infestations had become estab- lished. First gypsy moths w e r e brought from Europe to Massa- chusetts by a French scientist for experimental purposes. a a a A third shipment of Canadian agricultural products left Mont- real recently, bound for Rum- ania. It was the wind-up of pur- chases arranged for by a delega- tion of Rumanian agricultural leaders during a four-week tour of 'farms and ranches in central and western Canada last March, * * r• The final shipment included: 220 Hereford heifers and five bulls from the prairie provinces; 100 Ontario Holsteins, including two bulls from high test dams; 19 Aberdeen Angus cattle, in- cluding one bull, from Ontario; 50 Landrace pigs from western Ontario; eight Alberta rams - five Rambouillet, one Columbia and two cross-breds; and two Border Collie sheep dogs, also from Alberta. In the earlier lots were 892 Hereford heifers from western Canada and nine Hereford bulls from Ontario. a 4' * Carl Anderson of the Eastern Irrigation District, Brooks, Al- berta, accumulated the western stock. Of the cattle making the trip to Montreal, a small num- ber were rejected by Rumanian officials for reasons that could be attributed to the hazard o! the train trip. a a * Bucur Schiopu, Vice Minister of Agriculture, who led the dele- gation to Canada, said that qual- Weather Forecast For Eight Years! A lot of holiday resorts would get a tremendous boost if rain- less periods could be accurate- ly forecast. But in the United States, 87 - year -old scientist Dr, Charles G, Abbot has startled more cau- tious experts by forecasting the rainfall for the next eight years, Dr, Abbot, who hopes that his predictions are at least 60% ac- curate, says, for instance, that St. Louis will have rainfall 25% above normal in 1967. Isis predictions are based on years of research on the amount of heat coming from the sun, lengthy exploration of musty weather records, the gradual de- velopment of a theory that mois- ture and temperature trends run in precise cycles of 273 months each, and the use of an electron- ic computer to put it all together. But other meteorologists will not go along with his theories. If You Get Bitten... Bitten by a venomous snake, the seasoned woodsman quickly applies a make -shift tourniquet, cuts into the wound with his knife, and sucks out the poison. Then, happily, he may take a bit of "snakebite medicine" - a slug of whisky. US, Armed Forces Medical Jour- nal, this age-old treatment is risky and "can speed death." Comdr, Robert S. Leopold, chief of the physical -sciences depart- ment of the Naval Medical Field Research Laboratory at Camp Lejeune, N.C., explained why: "Suction helps spread the snake venom faster." DRIVE CAREFULLY - The lite you save may be your own. MY DIANE - Diane McBaine, 19, lust happened to be sitting on her suitcase when a pho- tographer happened along. ity stimulated his interest in pro- curing Canadian cattle and other farm products. Besides the livestock, the Ru- manians bought corn and soy- bean seed. In addition, a Can- adian firm was given the job of constructing a 250,000 bushel elevator on one of the country's biggest state farms. (74 ,. �!i'4 r• llRY SCilOOl LESSON Ity Rev. It Barclay Warren C A. ILO. Men Who Spoke for God Amos 7:7.15 Memory Selecion: Preach the word; be instant In season, nut of seastln; reprove, rebuke, ex- hort with all long suffering and doctrine. 2 Timothy 4:2. The subject for the lessons of this quarter is, A Century of Great Prophets. We shall study Amos, Hosea, Isaiah and Micah, in that order. Amos was a herdman and ga- therer of sycomore fruit in Te- koa of Judah when the Lord called him to go and prophesy to Israel. His preaching disturbed Israel. He pointed out in detail the social injustices of the day. He warned of the danger of the sense of false security in this era of unparalleled prosperity since the days of Solomon. Amos' penetrating attacks on sin pro- voked opposition. Amaziah, the priest, complained to King Jere- boam. He bade Amos to go home to Judah and prophesy there and leave Israel alone, But Amos Ne predicted that the children of Amaziah would be slain, his wife would be a harlot in the city and Amaziah would die in a strange land. Many ministers have confided to a minister friend, "I wouldn't dare present that line of truth in the church where I am now." Of course, ministers must have in hind the capacity of their hearers to receive. Paul wrote in his first letter to the Corinthians, "And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat; for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among y envying, and strife, and dj sions, are ye not carnet...And walk as men?" But Pautrwas re- ferring to the leper truths of Divine revelation. He was not suggesting that he had withheld reproof of sin, A reading of his letter shows that he condemned fornication, covetousness, extor- tion, railing, drunkenness, law- suits between members, r r-'- :' -.>- ing and partaking of the Lord's Supper unworthily. Paul did not hesitate to expose sin. Ministers have a great respon- sibility. They heed the prayers of God's people. If they are speaking for God then they must give His message at any cost. And they must give it in the spirit of love. May God help us to be faithful to Him, We wish we could get as ex- cited over things as radio an- nouncers think they can make us. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking N1dS Sdd 3A a NO a3Wy ©b© 3 L Y 1 Ellie N ' ©E S 3 Mt:969E1E3 0'a©0CIEJ© 9© Da©© ©- RI DIM 0 eco --Lie aUS ooh 0S 30 3 39 5y 0 Obd l!0 y'1 a 3A a'd V A ISSUE 27 - 1960 1 3 TEXAS MINNOW PERHAPS? - That's 75 pounds of live yellow catfish squirming in the arms of 10 -year-old Bobby Koncak and Dallas, Tex., aquarium supervisor Jeff Moore. Bobby and hls father hooked the fish and turned it over to the aquarium for display. - PAGE 8 - mot, alma THE MIR STANDARD Wednesday, June 29, 1960 Nita Pale .11144.............................................................orommosepommil4011111.1111111111.1.111111.11161111111111114 I . tions In other areas. Corn, beans, stei AUBURN I RH last Week With 110T sister, Mrs. ..•-• •++444-4+444 •-• •44 • 4-.44 • •-•-•-• *4+,4-.4+. 4* •++444-•-•-•44444 gar beets are making excellent pro- , , , lie:t Taylor and 111r, Taylor. Haying is progres..ing favourably in ,,I l. .`, -- ,i I t , gt.t, • •• n 1 New Alembers lima 10 DetrOlt. after se'er' week , score areas of the et unty while iider- )1( td on early sown PHs. Showers. % i ,; 1, I " Ill'a(11 rervice was held “Is' with Mrs, John Graham, mitten showers are curtailing opera. are keeping pastures fresh. wak at Kuiburn Forrester's 111111 for , Mr. and Mrs, William Seers spent • I a 111.'W irmuliers of tle.! Auburn Ceurt. Int Saturday in Toronto. 'this Order et Forre'‘ters is P0 ''-Y a m,.. Robert pithiado has returned to • • • I to Miss Roe returned on Monday to her (nuitulian Order of Forresters • Receive . 111 44.14 *4. • ovos. wor+Nroors-se•#rays•dr• ••••••••••••440,0, canadiaa organt.iation, and anyone v"u NO11% 'XII, afterspending his two week's • 2 z "WEEK -END SPECIALS" • 41 2 k 41.1hist~~041144,04,01#404-0.0~14~14441t44141~41414,444NN144**444•441 Salada Orange Pekoe TEA BAGS pkg. of 60 is a Canadian citizen is able to join, :walnut with Mr. and Mrs. Harold I lt was forin.il in London, Oulario, on Cart,.r and Barbara. ,J 11110 1°1:1' 1070, bY a group a InnancssManv front Iris district attended the, ews and orphans and to help one anoth-' wit -1" I. memorial service al Dungannon C0111 mt. a la provide prtlectin or. their clery last Sunday. • 1 • t r and to assist tho..e in d'strese This; All,.. Robert Phillips is a ratient in oreanization has ils c.i.gin at the time' Victoria Hospital. We wish him a s • ! of Robin lload when he gathered ir.e1.1 rrcovery, t,"g,e:tkr in , `-7,:tierw,c"1 1;‘,("'es,1,., 1,01' ,100- ();i Tuesday afternoon ()pen House. tteiton; ;eau eascii on me mine :tory was held al 5.5. 16, 1as1 \vawanosh,' getker for mutual sudyeet....'lle:' 101:1- 1 tipi."-.; entertained the mothers, grand- , whea Mrs. Sidney Lansing and her of King David who Ie.,ti them to el ar!„e. The Team Chief Itattger IS ,,,.1 rnucieat program was presentA, n ' thers, and interested fri,snils. A 1...n• a initiation Team No. ii5, was in 'troller Jaw...a Jamieson; Fraternal Wi„it Airs. Elaine mepuweti„ muse; i - f ili'd-tipervisor, at the piano. 'Wally of the Fupervisor, Brother Ilawkshaw 0 Iticharlsini; District ALeueger, 113111.4°;110ert 1.11n1,11111,1,,le)eit\'sit‘ivseicreilens'itzteva"I':111114:trios ar,111111)1tets1 1:1'Isi:-, . elicitor; Provinteal Alanager, U. J. Alatzanke, of chesie,, Y: 'Astrid. ':.,isted in serving refreshments. Tre , llieh Chief Ranger, 131.6,ler George , guests were then given an opportunity Ginn of Delimiter. Many of the inem-Ell i iLehtr *, over the pupil's note books,. hers from here al len :led this imyres- work hooks and crafts. Before the 73c '1 li,\ 0 ceremony w1111 their "w nanuners.* close of the afternoon, Mis. Norman les..0 igng were: Cornelis Bakelaar, mcGunchce, in a few well 1'105A Pillsbury Double Dutch Devils' Food CAKE MIX Save 10c with coupon inside 2 - 19 oz. pkgs, 59c • Rose Brand MIXED PICKLES, 16 oz. jar 30c ... ig7IIT A nitro 1 IININ tiz. till 37e 8 WEIN ERS and 8 IIOT DOG BUNS 49c FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES For Superior Service Phone 156 --- We Deliver See Fairservice • a 120- 01.• Be sure to get your Certificate of Payment (Form 104) from the firm you are leaving. Then follow the simple instructions on the back.. READ YOUR ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE GUIDE -if you haven't one, ask / your employer or write ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION TORONTO 7, ONTARIO 4%444 +4-444+1444-* • 4** 44 *44 • • .4 • • 44 •-•-• • • • 4-* •44 • • • .044 • • Stewart's 7 • • Red ( White Food Market "WHERE THE PRICES ARE RIGHT" . SNOP RED and WHITE and SAVE Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver "The 'Best For Less" -- "Values UnsurpasSed" BIG .DOLLAR DAY CELEBRATION BARGAINS GALORE VALUES THAT CAN'T BE BEAT Having. run out of some of our Dollar Day Specials last week, we now have them in stock for this week -end. COME IN AND SEE THE SPECIAL BUYS Trainload Sale of 'Watermelons, Fancy Size, Special each 69c Sun Spun Ice Cream, half gal., 79c Maple Leaf Canned Ham, save 24c 1.29 Stokely's Pineapple Grapefruit Juice 3 - 48 oz. tins 1.00 4. Libby's Blended or Grapefruit Juice 3 - 48 oz. tins 1.00 + Bright Choice Peaches 5 for 1.00 Kleenex, Chubby or Regular 7 for 1.00 Grade "A" Chfcicells,_lto,3 and one half lbs, - IRA' Ib. 33C 11 i* -44444-44444-4-44-•-•-•-•-•444-•-• •-•-•-•- • •-•-•-•44-• +4.444...4 ...444.441 N-•-•-•-•-•-•44.•-•-4-414-• 4-$. • -•4-•-•-• •-• 44444-4444-$ + • •-•44-•-•-•-•-• EXCELLENT FOOD AND MEALS WE SPECIALIZE IN FISH & CHIPS At All Hours. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. +++4 •-•-•-•••-•-•-•-•4+++++44+4-4.-••••-•4-++4-0-• +44-4-•-•+44-444-+++441 STOCK UP NOW ON: Summer Supplies & Insect Repellent 6-12 Insect Repellent 69e Tanto() Insect Repellent 69c Sia Way Insect Repellent 29c Noxema Stiti Tall Oil 55c and 75c Tartan Sun Thu Lotion 59c Noxema Cream 33c, 73c and 93c Rose Dust 99c Tomato Dust 89e Bug Killer 45c and 69c Arsnate of Lead 69c and 1.40 Raid Bug Killer 1.69 Insect Killer Aerosol 89c and 1.39 R. D. PHILP, Phm, B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, witrA.rArrat -PRONE 70, MATH 1 Howard Tait, Marl AleChnehey, wcrds expressed the aonreciatwn of • ••••••••••••-•-•-••-•••••••••••••••••0-4-•-•-•-•-• •44 *4-444 •44-•4444-•444-• +44-s tliose 'present for an elijiiyable after- ' ........ ........, ......., Wayne Jackson, Gordon Daer, Lloyd ANIN144.1N4-41dNP~~~Nr1/~044.4441•4114,044~~ . McClinchey, Lawrence Nesb,t, Kenneth ,;(al i Ila,4gitt, William r.eers, Gee:Ion Gress ; ---.... Ronald Gross, Gerald Pobie, litss ' The members of tk 4-1 1 Club of Meat in the younghtd., John maize, Gordon pima Menu met al the home of Mrs. K.:,lit Hedger, Barrie Young, Frederick Davies for their final meeting, Mrs. Armsdrene, Christopher Hutchinson,' Keith Malian, the leader, led in the, • Order your Strawberries now and be assured William Dobie, Toni Cunniaidiam, At'- discussion of the meat charts, and pre- thur Hallam, Raymond Hallam, Wesley pnred the girls for Achievement Day,: of your supply of fresh -fruit at wholesale prices. sradnock, Arnold Andrews, Walter De- w'ica cach girl has 10 rectIgnize 10 dn." N . ferent cuts of meat. They rehearsed ' hold. Prices guaranteed not to be above that of last year. nrs, Thwas Iiinulitt:** presinenr_m, thtir .slell, Making most of their meat , Rose Maitrlialik10,g,,Pal,1 in 1,1 re„: in the Orange hall with a tlaret attend- song was enjoyed and (1 water roast' 19- W. ANDREWS. thv: Auburn Women's institute, was in • L .aiee o ic . June me, iiwhich .. t Jannett Dobie and Janet Yo'un.'A.'SQ:'' - • . ance, 'Me meeting was opened with closed the evening. Phone HU 2-3-162 Clinton, Ont. the Ode, Mary Stewart. Collect, and Sunday visitors with oh. an( Mrs , 0 Canada, with Mrs. Bohai. J. Phillips SkIney Lansing were, Mr. and Airs. presiding at the piano. The minutes Ilerb Peter, Bcrvie, and Mrs, Edith were approved as read by the secretary, 'hinter, Glen RoCk, New *Jersey, Mis. Bert Craig. The convenor of Mrs. Gerald Laramie, of Sudbury, is Health, Mrs, W. J. Craig introduced the ‘siting with Mr. and Mis. Gorden Pm' guest speaker. Dr. ilerbert Such, of ell, Wayne?, Bobby and Terry. Goderich, who spoke on good posture Mrs. Frank Raithby entertained in and physical fitness. IIis interesting H. honour of Mrs. Stanley Polich, who lusfrafol texture showed the bone with her husband, and family, left. for structure of the human body and how Saskatoon last Friday with their rolling FOR YOUR SEWING NEEDS: many diseases and pain is caused by Inane. They have retkled here for '4 poor posture. Airs. Ed. Davies thank. years and Mr. Polich has been station- ed the doctor for his helpful message, ed at Clinton for five and a half years. Zippers, Etc., 1)rip Dry Broadcloth and Prints. and on behalf of the soeiclY Presented During the afternoon the neighbours Mrs. Wes Bradnock, "Just a little help him with a gilt A solo was sung by Presented her with a parting gift and a dainty 1011011 was served to all Pres- OVERALLS AND JEANS FOR MEN AND BOYS BY BIG B. & }LAUGHS. from you." Reports of the District . cid, Annual were given by Mrs. Robert J. Ball's Cemetery Memorial Service Phillips for the meriting session and The 34th Memorial Service at Bali's WINTER GOODS REDUCED Mrs. Ed. 'Davies gave the account of cemetery will be held on July 3rd at the afternoon pession, held recently at 3.30 p.m. at the church on the grounds. . Dry Cleaning Pick Up Before 8.15 a.m. Londesboro. Plans to go and see a play Owing to the illness of Be'. R. F. Really of St. Mark's Anglican Church Tuesdays and Fridays at the Shakespearan Festival this sum - and see The Midsummer Night's D. J. Lane H.A. of Knox Presbyterian mer were madc. It Was decided to g0 the service will be conducted by Rev. Phone 73. - - 1 Decant, and anyone wishing to go on Cinlrell. . ......•...,••••........*,......,.........•••••••,.....•......m.e......,.......w..,••••••••••,•••004%, STRAWBERRIES FOR SALE 00#~4,444••• ***** .141414 4.* •••••• 41 MI Irn IsP4WM4 11#41414,0 ••11#41.141 • 4,4 4 NI N11 4.44# ,I••••• Me ..- vvP,~~04,,s a 4,4,resm,rs#4, • .rn••••••••Torpme•• m."~••••••,he .0.4.* ••••••~0,0~ 1 WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES this trip at the end of July is asked to get in touch with the president. It was .4111111111111111111111111MEMENIMMINIMINIMMIM decided to take the COIll'EC Eat to Live" in the fall. The convener of the 7 card committee, Mrs. Clifford Brown, ! gave her Red. The roll was answered by a gift for a cancer patient. The ietscith.1 IVO) closed by singing "The Queen" and the Grace,A del;e' yes 1 I 11.111d1 was served by Al Sr' Uei', MrS, WM. Straughan 7-1.1 lts Jose- phine McAllister. Funeral service v- , held at the J. Keith.Arthur fe• .al home on Mon- day„June 27lh, John A. Thompson, 2.0 pan. L... hompson died sud- (:..aly of a rouary at his home in West Wav- ioeh township ‘vhere he had resided • , his life. Ile was the son of the late Uriah Thompson and Florence Alart:a, and was born on Septein'ter 9, 1903. Ile was a member of Donny- brook United Church. lfo is survived by his brother, Donald, 0411 whom he 1 resided, also Iwo sisters, Mrs. Donald (Rebecca) Gibbons, Sunridge, and Miss Lucy Thompson, !ironic, Ontario, Rev. R. M. Sweeney officiated for the ser- 4, vice. A trio was sung by Rev, Swaney Mr. Lloyd Walden and Mr. Harvey Me - Dowell, accompanied by Nit's, Hilliard _4 Jefferson. Burial took place at Dun- gannon cemetery. Pallbearers were, Alessi's. Cyril Boyle, Howard Thompson, Brown Smyth, Mason McAllister, Wil- liam Cranston and Morley Johnston, Recent, guests with Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Craig and Mrs, Betty Wilkin and family were, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Melt- murray, Mr. and Airs. V. Coleman and boys, of Flint, Michigan, they also vis- ited with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Worse!! and Terry, of Goderich. Miss Josephine McAllister of St, ,! Augustine, visited last Sunday with ._!! Mr. and Mrs. W. Bradnock. Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd McLarly anti: family of Goderich, visited on Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Eizabclh Mc-, Larty, Thil pupils of U.S.S. No. 5, - and their teacher, Mr. Duncan Mac- 7 Kay, enjoyed a bus trip to Toronto - last Friday. Mrs. Robert Johnston and son, Allan, of Kenora, visited Mr. and Mrs. Harry Beadle last week, an Wednesday. Mrs. William Moss and Miss Moss attended the innnorial service at Harvey Cemetery, Logan township, and visited last , Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McLean of Moncrief. -Mr. Peter Brown. of Windsor, Mr. George 'I'umm and Miss Erna Balm: of Gordo, visited with Mr. and Mirs. Maitland Allen. Mrs. J. J. ;Mater, Mr. and Mrs. Lu- cien Hemberger, of Seaforth, visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Edgai' Law- son, Anyone wishing to attend the Dis- trict Ifor'Ocuture meeting at Gorrie on July 61.11 please contact the presi- den of the Auburn Society, Mrs. Ken- neth Scott. Mr. Thomas Anderson, of Toronto, spent the week end with his brother, Mr. Oliver Anderson, Mrs. Anderson, 1Villiam and Nancy. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Youngblut of Kitchener, Mr. and Mrs. Hat•old Kirk - conch and Donk( Godi rich, Mr. and Mrs. John Daer, Mr. Robert Dar were Sunday visitors with Mr. and MY Andrew Kirkconnell, Mrs. Youngbk t visited with Mrs. Sam Dear, Mrs. M. II. Martin of Goderich, vis -i 1 4 2 1 toc educi • SATURDAY JULY 2 TO SATURDAY JULY 9 . _L 1 ROGERS MAJESTIC 21" LOWBOY .rm,Evisiorq Regular $359.95 SALE $299.95 1 1VESTING11OUSE REFRIGERATOR, 13 cu. ft, capacity, automatic defrost and cold injector fans, Regular $409.95 for $399,95 1 ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR, 12 cu, ft„ automa. tic defrost, Regular $379.95 .... for only $299,95 MARCHAND cLoniEs DRYERS, made by Max- well, St. Marys. Will take regular washer load, Regular $209.95 for $179.05 SEA BREEZE PORTABLE STEREO PLAYERS, 2 large speakers, 2 tweeters, treble and bass control, balance and volume controls. Regular $149,50 for $119.50 AUTOMATIC SEABREEZE MODELS $99.95 for $79.1l $81.95 for $69.95 ROGERS MAJESTIC 7 TRANSISTOR RADIO, $79.95, Save $10.00 $69.95 CHANNEL MAS'TER 6 TRANSISTOR HOME RADIO, $54.95 for $46,95 REDUCTIONS ON ALL ELECTRIC RADIOS, GENERAL ELECTRIC BREAD AND BUN TOASTER $39,95 • for $31.95 SUNBEAM FRYPAN, SPECIAL $17.95, lid included SAMSON DOMINION FRYPAN and lid Regular 24.95 for $19,95 PRESTO FRYPANS $15.95, control free, lid glas3 or metal 3.25 WESTINGHOUSE ROASTER OVEN, just plug in any outlet, will roast a 30 lb. turkey, Reguar $69.05 for $14.95 For Asthma and Hay Fever Sufftrers, TRAVEL- AIRE AIR CONDITIONER $69.95 FILTRO 8 cup AUTOMATIC PERCULATORS $9.95 LAZI-ANN DREAMBEDS $22.95 RECONDITIONED VACUUM CLEANERS $24.95 up I g EXTRA SPECIALS Plastic Pail Specials 69c Flashlights 49c and 59c Dun -Foam Pads, 72"X 54" 2.09 Plastic Drop Sheets. 8' X 12' 98c Enamelled Trays 29c Fibre Glass Insulated Picnic Bags 1.95 Screw Driver Sets 98c Sponges 5 for 59c DRAW at 9 p.m. SATURDAY, 'JULY 9th ROGERS MAJESTIC 5 tube RADIO SAMSON DOMINION IIOT DOG COOKER (one ticket given for every $2.00 purchase) . I .1 • w. I All Sales Cash Ne Refunds Vodden's Hardware & Electric CALL 71 TELEVISION AND RADIO REPAIR. 077 - BLYTH, ONT. 1