HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-03-22, Page 1THEgLsTANDAaD
VOLUME 74 - NO. 06
Authorized as second class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, MARCH 22, 1961Subscription Kates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa.•
IMPRESSIVE CEREMONY OPENS
AUBURN DIAL SYSTEM
The new Auburn Telephone Dial Ser-
vice was dedicated last week in the
village and immediately started to
take calls for all the subscribers on
the exchange.
The ceretnony was Attended by near-
ly a hundred interested citizens and a
retired chairman of the Blyth Municip-
al Telephone System, Mr. George Mc -
Nall, had the pleasure of cutting the
ribbon, IIe had helped to plan this
project, but owing to ill health was
forced to retire last fall,
Rev, Robert Meally, rector of St, Mrs, Wm. AlcVittie president of the
Mark's Anglican Church, dedicated the '
Dial system to the service of mankind. 1V, M, S., presided for their March
He spoke of the scientific knowledge meeting in the school room'/ of � the
being used for the advancement of United Church on .Monday evening.
� Following the call to worship, the
cottununicatiott service.
Community Friendship convener, Mrs.
Mr, Victor Handforth, of the Ontario
Telephone Service Commission, of Tor- lila Pelts, reported several home calla
onto, and Mr. Archie Young, chair- had been made, and ten to residents of
e.
man of the Blyth Commission, pulled the Huron Sp County convenor,Hn
out the blocking tools from the switch- The Spply Mrs. Calvin
ing equipment. The honor of placing Falconer, reported that 16 quilts, large
the first. call � went to A4fc5s Josephine and small, had been pieced and quilted.
Woodcock, operator on the Blyth ex-' The president asked that a committee
change for many years. 1 of four from the W.M.S, be appointed
to act on a provisional committee with
T
' F)'ed Gregory Chosen New PERSONAL INTEREST
Village Constable Mra, Esther Johnston and Mrs. Albert
At a special meeting o[ the Blyth, ;Walsh were visitors, with Mr. and Mrs.
Municipal Council on Monday evening ,Tom Taylor, Hensel!, on Friday, i
the application of Mr. Fred Gregory Mrs. ,George Dubs, of Strathroy, and
was accepted by council as the new vii• j her daughter, Mrs, Joe Babcock, of;
cipal System. Company representa• loge constable, street foreman and ,,Londesboro, returned home after a
fives that supplied the dialing service caretaker, ;'pleasant trip to Miami, Florida. i Honored On 35th Wedding
equipment and phones spoke of their' Mr•, Gregory was chosen from a list
pleasure in supplying such modern; of six applicants, two from Blyth and MIss Ella Metcalfe, of London, is Anniversary I
equipment. John Manning, of Blyth,1 four `from out of town. He succeeds ;staying with Mrs F. Rogerson, while I
whose company built the brick building Mr. John Batley and his duties will ;Miss Alice Rogerson is a patient in the Local residents, Mr. and Mrs. Rus -
which houses the system, also brought commence on April 1st.
(Clinton Public Hospital, •I set MacDonald, were honoured on Fri -
greetings.
Mrs. Lorne Scrimgeour Recieves
Horticultural Award
f day evening, March 17, on the occasion
f • Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Shol:brook and of their 35th wedding anniversary, with
The luncheon was served by the W.
!,Darrell, visited with friends in Sarnia a surprise partyat their home. Those
A, of Knox United Church, Count Auxiliary Presents
W. M. S. Meeting
Y on Sunday, I present were the couple's family: M.
Hold Annual Meeting �_ Mr, Douglas Whitmore accompanied and Mrs. Reg Ilesselwood, Gary, Wen -
The Huron County Auxiliary to theby Mr, Larry Walsh, of Galt, visited dy, and Lori Ann; Mr. and Mrs. Ken
CountyHome met in the assembly < with Mr. and Mrs, Clifford Walsh, MacDonald, Beverley, Brian and Bar.'
;
room of the Home on Monday afternoon ;Layton, Warren and Kathleen Mary, 01 aryidMr. and Mrs, Carman AfacDon•
, aand d of Blyth,
March 20th, with Mrs. Fred Thompson: Sarnia, on Sunday. Also visiting this ,,.., and Mrs. MacDonald were mar -
the president, in charge. Walsh's were, Air, and Mrs. Ray Hun -
the at the home of the bride's sister,
The Auxiliary was organized March king and David, of London. Amanda, by Rev. Barnby, minister of
vas the annualsmectintheiecthe pronday h, 1969, andMrs, Susan `Taylor returned .to the the Blyth Methodist Church at that
made in the two years was most cn•:home of her brother and sister-in-law time. Following their marriage they,
f Air, and Mrs. N'ni. McVittie, after he. I lived at Langsidc in Kinloss Township
couraging, Ifor almost two ears, moving to the
Blyth C.G.I.T., under the leadership! ing a patient in SL usgha►n Hospital for Y "
of Mrs. Keith Webster and Mrs. Dwight' the past twelve weeks, ffarf mt3here they now reside in January 1
Campbell, made their second Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Wm, East, Philip and
afternoon visit to the hlome, which the Patty Ann, of London, spent the week -
residents enjoyed very much. Mrs. R. end with their parents, Mr, and Mrs, M
W. Bennett, corresponding secretary, , Wm. McVittie, asons Hold Successful
The last call on the old magneto four members from each of the other reported, several inquiries had been re- I At -Home
switchboard was placed by Mrs. Ray- organizations of the church. The mem• ceived from other C.G.I.T• groups, ex.' Miss Josephine Wcodcock, Mrs• Sadie '
mond Redmond. This switchboard bers of the W.M.S. cotmnittee arc Mrs. pressing a desire to visit the IIome. Cuming, Mrs, Luella McGowan, tele- The Blyth Masonic ,Ledge held their
has been operated by Mrs. Donald K. Webster, Mrs. F. Howson, Mrs. Birthday parties are held the third :phone operators on the Blyth Municipal annual At -Home recently in the Blyth
Fowler and Mrs. Roy Finnigan for the g 1 Wednesday afternoon of each month, Telephone System, and Mrs, A, Bertha, Eastern Star longe rooms, wool beefy
Wm. McVitlle, Mrs. Winona McDougal Y
last two years. with Mrs. D. McKenzie as alternate. Twenty-six of these parties have been secretary -treasurer, attended the dedi• guests were present to enjoy an even•
In a matter of seconds the dial sys- A letter was read,announcing the' held since June 9th, 1959, and all but cation of the Auburn Telephone Dial ing of {:regressive euchre. I
tem was in action, and by 8 p.m, over last presbyterial meeting of the W.M.S, one have been sponsored by Women's Service last Wednesday at Auburn. i 1i'or, faro. Carman Haines welcomed
one thousand calls had been recorded 1lnstitute Branches in Huron County. the guests, and Bro. Wellington Mc -
at the dial station. I in Wingham on Thursday, April 16th.! Crafts were exhibited at two Huron. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Popp, of Dungan- Nall was in charge of the festivities.
Delegates to the presbyterial will henon,visited with their son, Mr. and ,•
A reception followed in the Orange CountyAgricultural Fairs, Blyth our', Winners of the card games were:
Mrs, Wm. McVittie and Mrs. D, Mc-' gMrs, Lorne Popp, Douglas, Dianne,
Hall,where Donald Young, super -i I Seri:orth. A cupand saucer showerladies high: Mrs, Arletta Fear; gents
tendent of the Blyth and Auburn ex- Kenzie. ; Robert and Larry, ladiesMrs,
YA letter of appreciation was read was held by the auxiliary members an& high, Duncan Sinclair; low,
change, presided for the program of,! from Miss A. M. Rose, missionary in 22 were donated. A Christmas Fair ; Mr. Wm. Walden spent the last few Mary Hollyman; gents low, Ifarold
speeches. He thanked his • staff . of ; Korea, for the Christmas gift of $10.00 was held at the IIome for the residents .days visiting with Air, and Nirs. Ilar. Gross; lone hands, Mrs. Arletta Fear.
linemen, David Nesbit, Murray Go-, � which was such a success it will be old McClinchey and family, of Auburn, A delicious lunch of sandwiches, ice
vier and Lorne Hoggart, for their co -i for work in Korea, cream and cake was served at the
The Easter thankoffering meeting repeated, Easter and Christmas cards
operation, and to the operators, the !will be held in the school room of the arc sent to each resident. Mr. Harry Cronin who has been in close of the meeting.
commission and the councils for ,their ;church on Sunday evening, April 9th Mrs. Harvey Johnston reported, 9 'California for six months, is at present
assistance. Arrangements were left with the prose ; quilts had been sold, also pillow cases, visiting his mother, Mrs. T. Cronin Sr.,'
Mr., Bert Craig, chairman of the dent and vice.president, t toys, mats and pot holders, all made and other members of the family. +RECEIVES COUNTY II0i4IE POSITION
Auburn village trustees, spoke for his 1
council and thanked trustee's,
Blyth Tele- The program was in charge of Mrs. by the residents who receive a gener• Mrs. F. Tamlonson and her daughter,
YDan McKenzie, and following• the in.; ous percentage of the proceeds for their Mrs, Freda McKillop, and son, Barry, Last Friday evening Mr. Donald
phone System for the past fifty years vocation by Mrs. McKenzie, Mrs. Edith wot'k• of Richmond Hill, spent Sunday with Hottes received the appointment of
of service rendered to their village. Logan read the scripture lesson and The date of the annual anniversary stationary engineer at the Huorn County•
tea was advanced to a later date, A4 • rs, Ann Sunuercock. Home, Clinton. IIe has been working ,
Reeve . Scott Fasrset•vice of the Vil- Mrs. R. W. Vincent offered prayer.
lage of Myth, brought congratulations, A piano solo,, played by Mrs, Ray
and hoped that within the. next. three Vincent, Menuet by J. J, Paderewskl,
Mrs. Thompson in, a brief address', Mrs. Rev, Meetly sailed en Wednes• on a tentative basis in that capacity
expressed pleasure' at the' success .'at`,* day en -the Sylvania for Dublinelreland; ,since March 6th,, and the job,was con-
i
years Blyth would have dial service. %vas "Amer.njoyed, also a film strip"Amer. rained by the auxiliary. where she will pay an extended visit firmed at a meeting of the I uron
Others bringing greetings to the ;can Neighbours." Mrs Keith Webster presided for the with her mother, who has been ill since! County Home Committee last friday.
newly constructed system were Reeve election of the following officers and Christmas. Mr. Howes operated the local dairy
Tom Leiper, Hullett township, Reeve convenors: honorary presidents, Mrs. for 13 years, having sold the business
Clarence Hanna, East Wawanosh town. FIRESIDE FARM FORUM Ivan Forsythe and Mrs. Roy Adair: to Mr, G. Kurnoth last fall,
ship, and Reeve Ralph Jewel, Colborne President, Mrs. Fred Thompson; Re -
BIRTHS
On March 20th 12 adults of the Fire.
p Secretary, Mc
BIRTHS
side Farm Forum mot at the home! cording ecre ary, Mrs. MitchellLETTER FROM A SUBSCRIBER
Mr.tutions Handfed!' succ brought corn i Adam; Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. SPARLING-Mr. and Mrs. Grant Spar
gratulations on the successful cutover. of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Anderson. The R,W.Bennett; Treasurer, Mrs. Violet ling are happy to announce the arrival 917 11th Ave. S.,
He said this fully modern exchange, subject for broadcast and discussion Habgood; Publicity, Mrs. Lorne Scrim- of their son "Grant Rufus Steven" Port, Alberni, B.C.
will be capable of long-distance dialing' was "life and death now can we en -Entertainment Mrs. Gordon
when the time comes for that method sure purity in our food." geour; in Clinton Hospital, Thursday, March March 15, 1961.
of communicating, lie hold the assem• 1 We think Canadians are not concern- Cunningham; Arts and - Crafts, Mrs. 16th, 1961, Dear Mrs. Whitmcre:
bled guests that it was exhilaratingto ed enough about addatives in food, Harvey Johnston. Enclosing a money order to bring
my subscription up to date. o able a
see independent telephone systems Chemical fertilizers, insectisides, weed
1 killers, antibiotics, anticeptics, pre- great number of the names are strange
under local ownership and manage-! to now of course, it nice read
men' and wished success on their fur- servatives, feed addatives, fumigants, g toof the old of s.co Belated is b cto con -
the
face efforts, fungicides, are essential for efficient gratulations to Jim Sims, also best
Among the fifty guests gathered for. production of foods, but they do con- wishes to two couples who celebrated
luncheon were representatives of tam certain poison.
Abandoning their use would result in g golden weddings awhile back, Script
the operators oof the Blyth System, Immediate decline of the quantity and McDOUGALL-In Clinton Public Hos- geours and Jenkins. Among my happy
the secretary -treasurer, neighbouring, recollections childhood days are
Telephone Systems, Huron -Kinloss,' quality of our food supplies and would pilot on Friday, March 17, 1961, to memories of skating on Pollard's pond
Brussels, Morris and Grey , and Mr. cause a rapid rise in food prices. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon McDougall, the
Fordyce Clark of the Colborne Muni- Scientists say that the continued use g gift of a son, a brother for Wayne, and having lunch at Scr irngeour s
Y afterwards, also going to Jenkins' bush
of food subjected to these chemicals bi 1 Billy, Dianne and Shirley,
will causemanydiseases,.as th y are each spring in maple syrup time. ,
a form • of poison. The chemists say
CONGII�1TTTLATIONS
Congratulations to RickyThompson,
of Lions Head, who will celebrate his
7th birthday on Monday, March 27.
Congratulations to Douglas Lorne
Popp, of Blyth, who celebrated his 6th
birthday on Sunday, March 19.
Congratulations to Miss Margaret
Ann Doherty who celebrates her birth-
day on Thursday, March 23rd,
Congratulations to Mr. Carman Gwyn
who celebrates his birthday on Friday,
March 24th.
LEAR-In Clinton Public Hospital, on
Thursday, March 16, 1961, to Mr.
and Mrs, Harry Lear, the gift of a
son, a brother for Danny.
Mrs. L. M. Scrimgeour, Blyth, was
the recipient of the highest award given
by the Ontario Horticultural Society at
their annual convention at the Royal
Connaught-Sherraton Hotel, Hamilton,
on March 16 and 17,
The award was in the form of
beautiful silver Trillium pin, and is
given for outstanding service to the
Society.
Mrs. Scrimgeour was the only persu•i
to receive the Trillium pin at thin
convention, and is also the only person
in District No. 8, which extends from
Exeter to Tobermory, to ever receive
such a pin. •
The presentation was made by the
vice-president of the Ontario Society,
Rev. J, W. Siebert, of Elmira. Tho
award sponsored by Mrs. 'Thelma
Boucher, author and magazine colum-
nist for the horticultural Associatio
and is ranked quite highly among Hoe-
ticulturalists in Ontario.
Mr. Cliff Epps, Clinton, retiring di-
rector of District No. 8, was also the
recipient of a gift,
Mr. Scrimgeour was also in atten-
dance at the convention, and the couple
returned home as far as London with
their daughter, Mrs. Joe Marks, Wind-
sor who had journeyed to Hamilton to
witness her mother's presentation.
BUSINESS CIIANGES HANDS
Effective last Friday, March 17, the
Blyth Billiard Parlor changed owner-
ship, when Mr. Milne Cole purchased
the business from Donald McIntyre.
Milne, or "Doc", as he is better
known to most local residents, was
born in Blyth and has lived most of his
life here. Of recent years he has sailed
on the Great Lakes in the summer
months and returned to the village
in the off season, His friends wish him
success in his new business venture.
HONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, March 26, 1961
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CIIURCII
Rev. D, J. Lane, B,A., Minister.
1:00 p.m. -Church Service and Sunday
School,
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Meetly; Rector.
Palm Sunday
Trinity Church, Blyth,
10.30 a.m.-Matins.
St, Mark's, Auburn.
11,30 a.m.-Sunday School,
12,00 o'clock -Matins.
Trinity Church, Bel.grave.
2.00 p.m. -Sunday School,
2.30 p.m. Evensong.
TIIE UNITED CIIURCII
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev. IL Evan McLagan - Minister
Miss Margaret Jackson - Director
of Music.
Palm Sunday
9,55 a.m.-Sunday Church School.
11.00 a.m.-Morning Worship
Sacrament of Lord's Supper
"Take Up Thy Cross,"
CHURCH OF GOD
Merlon/16i Street. Blyth.
John Dormer, Pastor
Phone 185
1.00 p.m. -Sunday School,
2.00 p.m. -Worship Service.
8.00 p,m,-Wed., Prayer Service.
8,00 p.m. Friday, Youth P1;11uwshlp,
t a v 4, Had a welcome little visit from Della
thaorm' food eaten in Canada and the - and Ab Nesbitt last summer, also Ross
United States is the safest, cleanest BROMLEY -In Clinton Public Iiospital and Ariel Robinson spent a few days •
and most wholesome food in the world. on Wednesday, March 15, 1961, to Mr,' with us. Always glad to show eastern
Rules and regulations on the labels Congratulations to Air John Creigh- and Mrs, Harold Bromley, the gift visitors the beauties of the west.
should be carefully read and obeyed, ton who celebrates his birthday on of a daughter, a sister for Grace, We have had a very mild, very wet
George, Arthur and Vern. winter with the spring flowers blooming
We haven't sufficient scientific know- Monday, March 27th.
ledge to lodge a complaint about the * �. 4+since Christmas. Regards to all,
addatives which might have poisoned 1 Congratulations to Mrs. Frank Bell Sincerely,
food. All fruits and vegetables should who celebrates her birthday on Monday, Lois (Robinson) Tassie,
be washed before consumption. Sprays March 27th. i
have killed many birds which would
who celebrates his birthday on Tuesday CANCER SOCIETY
most games, Mn•s. George Carter and Volunteer canvassers will be con -
most Oliver Anderson; lone hands, Mrs. ! Congratulations to Mrs, Jack Stewart ducting our annual drive for funds, in
Don Buchanan and Jim Howatt; con -1 who celebrates her birthday on Wed• the village, the second week 111 April,
solation, Mr, and Mrs, H, Taylor, nesday, March 29th, g and I would ask for your support for
'Mrs. Jim Howatt invited the group i 1 this worthy cause.
for next week, when the questionnaire Congratulations to Mr. Jack Tyreman 1t Blyth made a splendid contribution
will ,be answered and officers will be I who celebrates his birthday on Thus- 1n 1960, lets. all help fight against can
appointed for next year, day, March 30111, I ter in 1961.
Congratulations to Mr. A. E, Cook, t
-Wm.1961, Merritt, Chairman Campaign,
FRED JOIINSTON PRESENTED WITH who celebrates his birthday on Friday, '
FIFTY YEAR JEWEL March 31st.
BRUCE BRADLEY CHOSEN
At the regular meeting of Hullett Congratulations to Mrs. Beryl Riehl di STUDENT LEADER AT MEAFORD
Masonic Lodge AF & AM held on who celebrates her birthday on Friday, Mr. Bruce Bradley, 18. of Mcaford,
March 14th, Bro• Fred Johnston was ;March 31st, son of Mr.ruand Mrs. G. , Bradley, d,
presented with hisn fifty year Jewel.byi Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Car- Mcaford, and grandson of Mrs. Sadie
of
!The presentation was made by bus
son, Harold Johnston, of London. Bro, men Haines, R.R. 2, Blyth, who will Cunning, of Blyth, was chosen Mcaford
John Lee presented a cake which Mrs • celebrate their 15th wedding anniver- District High School's representative
to the Student Leader's Club, He was
chosen by the principal and staff of
the school,
Bruce is a grade 12 student, is presi-
dent of the Meaford Forestry Club, and
president of the Anglican Young
People'§ Association. Ili'; plans range
Anne Jeanette Watson and Mrs. George' between b coming a secondary school
Nest,itt. teacher or a forester, ,
A delicious lunch was served by A picture and Timm' anying story
the committfee In charge, assisted by appeared in last Saturday's London
the hostess, 'Free Press.
MeNALL-In Victoria Hospital, Lon-
don, on Sunday, March 19, 1961, to
Mr. and Mrs. Elgin McNeil, of Gale -
rich, the gift of a son,
have cleaned 'off the insects. + Congratulations to Donald Collar ANNUAL CANVASS, BLYTII BRANCH
Winners of progressive euchre were: ; March 28th,
Friendship Circle Meet
The regular meeting of the Friend-
ship Circle was held on Tuesday,
March 14th, at the home ofMrs,
Charles Johnston with 27 present,
Mrs. RayMadill, president, opened
the meetingwith a poem. The roll
call was answered by a favourite
spring flower,
The program committee opened the
devotional period with a reading by
Mrs. Evan McLagan, Mrs. Dave Web-
ster gave an Easter reading, followed
by prayer, A film, "'The Crucifiction,"
was shown, followed by scripture by
Mrs. Harold Vodden. The hymn, "Re•
joice, the Lord is King," closed this
portion of the meeting,
Mrs. Dwight Campbell rendered two
lovely solos on her alto horn, accent -
parried by Mrs. Winona McDougall at
the piano. An Easter parade of hats
created great enthusiasm, with prizes
going to Mrs. Earl Caldwell, Visa
Lee had made .and which was decorated ' sary on Saturday, March 25111,
b BroIunIF g
y
. . ' e, Congratulations to Mrs, Milton Bruce
Visitors were present from Carlow who will celebrate her birthday on Sun -
and London, day, March 26th.
RECEPTION Congratulations to Miss Vikki Fowler
A tr.:•c pticn will be held for Mr. and who celebrated her bit thday on Tue4thiy
Aiarch 21st,
Mrs. David Chalmers, newly-weds, on
Frkc'ay evening, March 24, in the Blyth Congratulations to Miss Josephine
Memorial Hall. Pierce's Orchestra. van Lammerron who celebrated 1ie_
Everyone welcome. birthday on Monday, Match 20111.
•..
OBITUARY
John Fulton Shannon
John Fulton Shannon passed away
Tuesday evening, March 14th, in his
81st year,
In failing health for the past three
years, he was removed to Clinton
Public Hospital on Monday where he
died the following evening.
He was born in Grey township, but
spent most of his life in McKillop
township, where he farmed until re-
tiring to Walton in 1950. He attended
Walton Public School.
In 1914 he married Mary Amelia
Rogerson, of Airdries, Alberta, at Cal-
gary, who survives. Also surviving
are two sons, Wallace, of Sarnia, and
Ivan, on the homestead, McKillop
Township. One son, Melville, was re-
ported missing in 1942 while serving
with the Air Force in Europe, and later
was reported killed. Other survivors
are four grandsons and one grand-
daughter; one brother, Sol Shannon,
Blyth; two sisters, Mrs. Jean Harrison,
London, Mrs. Liizie Habkirk, London.
He was a member of Duff's United
Church, Walton, where he served as
secretary -treasurer in the Sunday school
for many years.
The body rested at the D. A. Rann
Funeral Home, Brussels, until Thurs-
day, when the funeral service was
held with Rev. W. M. Thomas, of Duff's
Church, in charge.
Pallbearers were: Nelson Reid,
Russell Marks, Douglas Ennis, Charles
McGavin, Russel Barrows and Archie
Somerville. Burial was made in Brus•
sols Cemetery.
LONDESBORO
The W. L held their annual Sunshine
Sister Banquet in Auburn on the 14th
of March, when the ,Auburn ladies pro-
vided a beautiful turkey dinner. A
short meeting followed and the sun-
shine sisters were revealed, causing
considerable merriment. A short pro-
gram was enjoyed. Mrs. Fairservice
read a poem "A Tribute to the Insti-
tute" and also conducted a contest
which was won by Mrs. Allen Shaddick
and Edythe Beacom. Lucky chair was
won by Mrs: Harvey Bunking, and an
elimination contest was won by Mrs.
Tebbutt. Mrs. Harry Durnin gave a
reading and a lovely trio, contri-
buted by Mrs. Tom Allen, Mrs. Vin-
cent and Mrs. Allen Shaddick, ac-
companied by Mrs. Edwin Wood, were
enjoyed. The retiring secretary -treas-
urer, Mrs, Pipe, was presented with
a lovely cup and saucer. Mrs. Len
Shobbrook will be the new secretary-
treasurer.
ecretarytreasurer. Ails. Tom Allen, president,
era3 also presented with a gift. Mi,s,
Edythe Beacom showed pictures of their
recent trip to the West, also local
scenes. The vv.-. ing was greatly ca -
1
When Employees Had
To Toe The Mark
Everyone is familiar with the
rules covering those employed in
offices and factories today. Gen-
erally, the regulations are mod-
erate—entirely too lenient, many
employers complain,
The work week for most work-
ers is now 35 to 40 hours, and
leisurely lunch hours and morn-
ing and afternoon refreshment
breaks and rest periods are com-
monplace. Conditions under
which work is done are as com-
fortable as possible, and the
work itself has been eased con-
siderably. Onerous and some.
times humiliating tasks and reg-
ulations which once character-
ized many areas of employment
have been eliminated.
There are still complaints, of
course. Many are the inevitable
routine complaints of ordinary
workday life, a supervisor's cri-
ticim, a lack of balance of work
in an oifice or shop, favoritism,
that sort of grievance. Some
complaints are more justifiable.
But have you stopped recently
to think about the conditions of
employment in the last century?
Today's easy-going rules would
have been unbelievable for em-
ployees who worked under these
company rules in effect in 1854:
"Any employee who is in the
hrhit rf smoking Spanish cigars,
getting shaved at a barber shop,
going to dances or other places
of amusement, will surely give
his employer reason to suspect
his integrity and all-around
honesty....
"Each employee must attend
Sunday School every Sunday.
Men employees are given one
evening a week for courting and
two if they go to prayer meeting
regularly... .
"After 14 hours of work, leis-
ure time must be spent in read-
ing good literature."
A few years later, on April 5,
1872, Zachary U. Geiger, Sole
Proprietor, posted regulations
for employees in his Mt. Cory
Carriage & Wagon Works which
included the following:
"Office employees will daily
sweep the floors, dust the furni-
ture, shelves, and showcases,
"Each day fill lamps, clean
chimneys, and trim wicks. Wash
the windows once a week.
"Each clerk will bring in S
bucket of water and a scuttle of
coal for the day's business.
"Make your pens carefully.
You may whittle nibs to your
individual taste.
"This office will open at 7 a.m.
rnd close at 8 p.m., daily except
on the Sabbath, on which day it
will remain closed,.. .
"Every employee should lay
aside from each pay a goodly
sum of his earnings for his bene-
fits during his declining years,
so that he will not become a
burden upon the charity of his
betters...
"The employee who has per-
formed his labors faithfully and
without faults for a period of
five years in my service, and
who has been thrifty and atten-
tive to his religious duties and
is looked upon by his fellow men
as a subtantial and law-abiding
citizen, will be given an increase
of five cents per day in his pay,
providing a just return in profits
from the business permits it."
Earlier in the 18th century,
Amassa Whitney posted rules in
his Winchendon, Mass,, plant on
July 5, 1830. Excerpted, they pro-
vided:
"The mill will be put into op-
4ratlon 10 minutes before sun -
flee at all seasons of the year,
The gate will be shut 10 minutes
past sunset from the 20th of
March to the 20th of September,
at 30 minutes past 8 from the
Pth of September to the 20th of
March, Saturdays at sunset.
ISSUE 12 — 1961
"It will be required of every
person employed that they be in
the room in which they are em-
ployed at the time mentioned....
"Hands are not allowed to
leave the factory in working
hours. ,
"Anyone who by negligence or
misconduct causes damage to -the
machinery, or impedes the pro-
gress of work, will be liable to
make good the damage for the
same..
"Any person employed for no
certain length of time will be
required to give at least four
weeks' notice of their intention
to leave (sickness excepted) or
forfeit four weeks' pay, ...
"Anything tending to impede
the progress of manufacturing in
working hours, such as unneces-
sary conversation, reading, eat-
ing fruit, etc., must be avoided.
"No smoking will be allowed
in the factory, as it is considered
very unsafe.. .
''The hands will take break-
fast, from the first of November
to the last of March, before go-
ing to work. [At other times]
25 minutes will be allowed for
breakfast, 30 minutes for dinner,
and 25 minutes for supper, and
no more from the time the gate
is shut till started again."
These were typical company
rules. The similarities in some
of the regulations were not
coincidental; the provisions were
so common that even the word-
ing was much the same, place to
place. And the penalty for. vio-
lating the rules? Discharge, of
course, and frequently blacklist-
ing with other employers. —By
Ed Townsend in the Christian
Science Monitor,
Saying A Lot
In Small Space
A new sort of doodling is go-
ing on at The New York Times
copy desk. Late at night,' be-
tween editions, headline writers
have been preoccupied with a
pastime called "Through History
With Times Headlines." The
idea: To tell history's biggest
stories with typical Times re-
straint, if not understatement.
To make the task tougher,
rules of the game restrict the
heads to 143 units, the maxi-
mum under the rigid typeface
(24 point Latin. Antique) The
.rimes has used since 1007 over
one -column s t or 1 e s continued
from page one. These samples of
the head writers' humor were
reproduced recently in Times
Talk, the paper's house organ:
* • *
JEHOVAH RESTING
AFTER 6 -DAY TASK
• • •
METHUSELAII DiES:
JUDEAN WAS 944
• • •
MOSES, ON SINAI,
GETS 10 -PT. PLAN
* • • `
FRENCH ARE URGED
TO CONSUME CAKE
• • •
HOLLAND SETTLERS
IN $24 LAND DEAL
0 • 0
BLAZE IN CHICAGO
IS LiNKED TO COW
0 0 0
But no matter how long Times
copy editors doodled, they'd
have to work hard to beat the
aotual Times headline announc-
ing the assassination of Presi-
dent Lincoln: AWFUL EVENT.
The young and ambitious
clerk's desk was close to an area
frequently traveled by the exe-
cutives in his organization. Stra-
tegically placed on his desk, and
readable at five to ten paces,
was the quotation, "Everything
good in a man thrives best when
properly recognized."
Obey the traffic signs — they
are placed there for Y 0 U R
SAFETY,
SWEET ON J. F. K. — Mrs, Marion Tucker, has created a unique
portrait of President Kennedy, The painting is done in cake
Icing, framed In marshmallow, Cake topper and Bible com-
plete gift, presented by Mrs. Tucker at the Democratic National
Committee.
RULES BRITTANY—Jeanine Levesque is a vision in lace in Paris,
France. The 19 -year-old hairdresser from Painpont was elected
"Duchess of Britanny — 1961" at the annual banquet for
natives in the province.
TABLE TALKS
dame Ad:cws
Nine hundred persons enjoyed
a Swedish smorgasbord at the
headquarters of the Salvation
Army in Kansas City recently,
and hundreds more who wanted
to attend were turned away be-
cause of lack of space, This is an
annual dinner — it was started
five years ago — that has be-
came increasingly popular until
a big overflow was reached this
year,
Menu for the dinner included
Swedish meat balls, potato sau-
sage, hickory smoked ham,
steamed halibut, pickled herring,
bruise beans, boiled 'potatoes,
molded salads (they needed 65
of these), tossed salad, assorted
cheese, cottage cheese, cele slaw
(100 pounds of cabbage!), dev-
iled eggs, relishes, 'pickled beets,
limps, rye crisp, white bread,
rice p u d d i n g, lingonberries,
cookies, and several hot and cold
drinks,
When guests presented their
tickets at the door, they were
given a leaflet with recipes for
foods they were about to be
served. Here, according to Elea-
nor Richey Johnston in the
Christian Science Monitor, are
Beane od theta, which I am happy
to pass along to you.
• 0 *
SWEDISH MEAT BALLS
1 pound ground beef
14 pound ground lean pork
1 egg, slightly beaten
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon salt
1� teaspoon pepper
2 teaspodns savor -salt
1,4 teaspoon nutmeg (optional)
1 small chopped onion
Bread crumbs, coarse—enough
to be absorbed by the milk
Combine all ingredients, Mix-
ture should be moist; add more
milk if necessary. Form into
small balls; fry in butter, turn-
ing constantly. Do not overcook,
° . 0
One hundred seventy pounds
of cihicken halibut were used at
the smorgasbord. It was cooked
this way:
BAKED FISH
Wipe fish dry. Ru:b with salt
inside and out. Brush with but-
ter and place in greased baking
dish. Add a scant cup od water,
Cover and bake 10 minutes at
1100° F. to sear,, Reduce heat to
450° F. and bake 10 minutes
more. Remove from oven. Skin
off top of dish. Dot white flesh
generously with butter; sprinkle
with paprika; return to oven.
,Cook, 10. minutes uncovered
:Time may vary somewhat ne-
.: cording to size of fish. (This re-
cipe is for a family -sized fish.)
.
On a small scale, a "Dip" par-
ty may he considered to be simi-
lar to a smorgasbord in the sense
that each person goes around the
table and selects the food that
he wants. I went to such a dip
party on a recent Sunday eve-
ning, Small, elaborately decor-
ated paper plates were used by
those serving themselves from
bowls and a chafing dish, We
clipped with corn chips, potato
chips, small crackers, carrot and
celery sticks, taking some of
every kind of dip offered and
then settled around an open fire
for talk and eating. We went
back often — and we needed
nothing else for our supper —
though the hostess did pass
homemade cookies with the hot
beverage that we poured for our-
selves when we had finished the
dips. Four or five varieties are
a good number. For a hot dip,
try this one. It is made of dev-
iled ham, cheese, mayonnaise,
Tabasco, and tomato juice.
CHAFING DISH DIP
!:2 pound processed cheese
2 tablespoons mayonnaise
1 can (41< -oz.) deviled ham
1 tablespoon finely chopped
onion
'i teaspoon Tabasco
3 tablespoons tomato juice
Melt cheese over low heat. Stu
in mayonnaise, deviled ham,
onion, and Tabasco until well
blended. Gradually stir in toma-
to juice, mixing very well. Id dip
seems too thick, add more tomato
juice; transfer to candle wanner
or elating dish and serve with
chips and raw vegetables. Setyes
a, 0 4•
Dips inside with sour cream are
popular and any dap party should
include at least one of these.
Here is one to serve cold.
CLAM SOUR CREAM DIP
III cup .our cream
cup minced clams, well
drained
14 teaspoon each, onion and
garlic powder
Dash ground black popper
Dash ground cayenne pepper
teaspoon ground basil leaver
14 teaspoon salt
Paprika for garnish
Combine all ingredients except
paprika, Max well. Pour'into a
small bowl, sprinkle with pap-
rika. Serve on a tray surrounded
by carrot and celery sticks, raw
cauliflower, raw broccoli flower -
lets, radish roses, chips, and small
crackers. • + ,,
For an unusual clip, try one
made ed avocado and ripe olives,
BLACK OLIVE-AVACADO 1)1P
1 soft ripe avocadd
1 tablespoon minced onion
2 tablespoons mayonna}se
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teapsoon Tabasco sauce
1/2 cup chopped black olives
Peel avocado and mash. Stir
in onion, mayonnaise, lemon
juice, salt, and Tabasco. Blend
well, Stir in black olives.
*
PARTY EGG DIP
4 hard -cooked eggs
14 cup mayonnaise
1/4 cup tomato catchup
2 tablespoons milk
/2 teaspoon lemon juice
!j teaspodn each, salt and sweet
basil,
Chop eggs fine and place in a
bowl; add remaining ingredients
and blend well, Chill before
serving,
Making A Comeback
After A Stroke
Over BBC radio one night re-
cently came a voice from the
past. The rich baritone accents
were those of Douglas Ritchie, a
popular news commentator dur-
ing World War II whose "Col-
onel Britton" broadcasts were al-
most as well known as the in-
spired exhortations of Winston
Churchill.
Now, after a long silence,
Douglas Ritchie spoke again. Not
as a news commentator but as
the author of a personal -experi-
ence book, "Stroke," which had
just been dramatized on the
BBC program "True Story."
"I didn't know 1 would ever
again be talking to you from this
microphone—or from any other,"
Ritchie said. "Four years ago, I
was dumb and paralyzed. 1 can't
speak quickly now, but 1 can
speak, and I go on improving, 1
go for a half -mile walk with a
stick every day. My right arm
and hand are still useless, but
I've learned to write with niy
left hand."
After the broadcast, the BBC
switchboard flared with calls
from listeners who wanted to
know more about what had hap-
pened to the long -remembered
news commentator. To his cozy,
gray -flint and red -tiled house on
a steep hilltop overlooking the
River Mole at Mickleham, Sur-
rey, where he lives with his de-
voted, charming wife, Evelyn,
came a sheaf of letters. "Your
voice has the same timbre and
clarity that I remember during
the Battle of Britain," wrote one
woman.
Ritchie's book "Stroke," tells
the full story, On May 7, 1055,
the robust, fidgety perfectionist,
then 50, suffered a severe brain
hemorrhage. At first it was
thought he would die. Eventual-
ly, relieving his paralysis (the
complete right side) and aphasia
(loss of voice from Injured brain
cells) became a job for the re-
habilitation experts.
"Stroke" reveals with poignant
perceptiveness the various stages
of Ritchie's ordeal, from the first
efforts to exercise his paralyzed
muscles, to the painfully slow,
frustrating task of relearning the
language he had used so well,
To stroke victims everywhere
(750,000 annually in the U.S,),
Ritchie offere this practical ad-
vice: "You must be patient, no
matter how slowly things go.
You must set your sights lower
learn to accept your limita-
tions."
Sausage Skins
Hid Big Money
As the grey truck pulled to a
stop nearby, the Milan police-
man' stared suspiciously, He had
noticed the van delivering sa-
lami and. other sausages mashy
times before and had noted that
It always seemed to stop at the
same spots—and always the same
wary - looking customers were
served. The matter needed look-
ing into.
A report went in. Milan's po-
lice chief decided to investigate.
The next time the van pulled
up at a customary stopping place
to serve a waiting man, a squad
closed in. The driver pushed his
engine into gear and tried to
drive off, but the squad was too
quick for him.
When the sausages were ex-
amined, the police found a few
genuine ones but the others had
tight skins stuffed, not with
meat, but counterfeit American
dollar bills,
When the police traced the
source of the notes they got a
surprise—they crone from the
local Palace of Justice. The bills
had been sent there following a
raid on a ;printing shop and seiz-
ure of its output -40,000 coun-
terfeit dollar bills.
A Ministry offici.►1 had been
delegated to burn the fake nut,a.
Instead, faced with the tempting
pile, he had hidden them be-
tween the wall and a safe in his
office. As regulations demanded,
he certified that he'd destroyed
the notes. Top officials made ap-
propriate entries in (heir records
and the matter was forgotten.
The notes remained in their hid-
ing place.
hater, however, the official
was arrested and found guilty
of another charge. ile was jailed
for six months, While In prison
he often thought of his hoard and
the time passed in pleasurable
anticipation,
inunediately after his release
lie returned to the palace, sneak-
ed past the guards, and made
his way to his old office.
Feverishly, he removed wads
of the counterfeit note;, stuffed
them under his shirt and crept
away. I -le repealed the visits at
interval;.
Accomplices helped him to
pack the dollars into sausage
skins, organize a "ales round"
and distribute them. The truck's
customers were illegal money
vendors, Passing cff the dollars
as genuine, they exchanged them
for Italian lire,
13y the time the police swoop-
ed, their system had worked so
effectively that only 54,000 or the
hoard remained, 'I'hi, cx-offi hal
had done well for himself het"re
he stood in the Mack main,
charged with burglary, swindl-
ing, false practices and conceal•
ing stolen gocds,
In the last five years, Interpol
has uncovered and smashed sev-
enteen workshops for printing
counterfeit currencies, documents
and passports in France, sixteen
in Italy, eleven in Germany and
eight in Belgium.
In a basement workshop in
Paris a gang was busy printing'
millions. Not content with pro-
ducing false franc notes, it ran
off thousands of German D -
marks, Dutch guilders, Spanish
pesetas and American dollar
bills.
But, unknown to these clever
operators, the police got wind of
their activities, Inspector La-
eroux waited until the next big
press .day. Before daylight, on
a drizzling winter morning, hie
squad crept into tactical position.
near the counterfeiters' den.
He listened Intently — and
heard the click and whirl of
printing machines in hill cry.
He tossed a stone into the base-
ment window and, as the glass
splintered, his men closed in.
The three counterfeiters tried
to bolt, but they were soon hand-
cuffed. The cellar was littered
with wet notes, and stocks of
waterproof paper, some of , it
stolen from the Bank of France.
ROCKETEER — Professor Alla
Masevic is vice president of
t h e Astro - Physics National
Council of the U.S.S.R. The
lady scientist, shown in Rome
on 0 lecture tour, has worked
on several Russian satellites,
YES, SHE CAN, BILLY BOY — The:e girls have been judged the U.S, nation's best cherry pie
bakers in a Chicago contest. Sherry Shirley, 18, (seated) is number one.
Muir;ng Fr'ends
On A Jungle Road
`IIIc firs) people 1 saw In
Nigeria had come out of a bus,
The bus had its name painted on
, told it was in a ditch by
the side of the road with a creep-
er of bright red flower tangled
In the bundles tied to the lug-
gage rack. The passengers were
smattered In cheerful family
groups over the road, Some of
them had their cooking pots and
were frying up the bananas and
stew they had carried with thein,
some of the men were chatting
together, and several had settled
themselves comfortably to sleep,
Everybody seemed pleased to
see our car, and one of the cook-
ing wolnell pressed n banana on
me, The bus would be there two
hours, three hours, or perhaps a
day or so, she said, It depended
on when the sten from Mamfe
came to drag' it out of the ditch,
We tried to edge past the bus—
carefully—because we had seen
further back the burnt-out wreck
of a lorry which had got too
close to the side of the road, and
rolled over into the trees clown
the bank. Several of the bus
passengers woke up or left their
food and lined the side cf the
bank, testing ,the stud, pushing
at our wheels, and telling us to
an inch how near he ditch we
could go.
We were on our way from
13amenda in the Camcr000s to
Calabar in East Nigeria, Mnstly
we had travelled on the worst
road I had ever seen, it was nar-
row and twisting, and open to
one tray tfaffic only, the direc-
tion of the traffic changing,' on
alternate days. During the Rains
one day each week was reserved
by the Public Works Depart•
men( for running repairs. But
even so the ruts in the road were
deep enough to make ordinary
English sedan carts stick w ith
their wheels hopelessly turning
Inches above the hard surface.
The cars that can manage these
roads are Continental, Atner'ican,
or hest of all, long wheel -based
Land Rovers with 'four wheel
drives to get them out of the
worst mud patches, Ill a French
car we got through, but at the
end of the journey our exhaust
pipe had been knocked off and
was tied to the roof -rack and we
had also stuck four times be-
tween Mamfe and Calabar. Eut
this did not matter much because
oven the empptiest bit of jungle
miraculously produced a crowd
Of people within a minute or so
to help push us out, , ,
It was a good way of coat-
ing into Nigeria, For most of the
journey the road was a narrow
track through very dark, very
dense forest with tall straight
trees, almost branchless, but'
PHOTOGENIC — Lilly,
pound hippo, gives out wills a
heap of no expressicn. The cni-
mal was sold by Mlle New
York Central Park Zoo 10 a
circus,
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
nelt0S8
1, lie's•
I. )II,IInp'r
Juriwliellun
1. n'Ift of
Abraham
12, Con•trllntlun
13. Iteclwn
16. Unnd-lut:k
ih,Ieci
11, livery
13. i xc'Iamallon
19. I'aclt
211 ,tnrhnr tn( kk
11 And nil
22, Swallow
iluit'I:I,v
13, Si tidy
—21. Alenrnr;u,dWn
26, Land nu'nsll'e
2t. Inde
25. Pronoun
29, 3101101n
30. l'oeforrn
12. tv"Idtlr♦
13. Ily
11, .►User,
16, Some
37. I.7.mpon+e
19, Shallow
1'r4cel
39, 11:I1iIPtl
10, Throw
41, Nene
42. Veonl
43. illuropean
awnllow
45, leorgit'en!et
49. ltlaok cuckoo
49, Deal vettevette11a. i mall ahlla
111 ire, nrttote
DOWN
1, Artier leen
unete
nit!) le:toms of eel eper bunging
(rein them. Everything was try-
ing .to push its way up into the
sun above tree level, and after r
time I wanted to 501) 111e sun too,
, Very occasionally there was
colour in the dark green ,
flame -coloured flowers, or leaves
striped with white. ,
But nothing worse than stick-
ing in the stud happened to us;
and the machcts we saw were all
waved at us in the most friendly
way,—Front "Nigeria; Newest
Nation," by Lois Milchison,
Hide All Your
Shiny Articles !
People who visit a large os -
1 Eich farm in South Africa are
I usually asked by officials to hide
all shiny articles they may have
brought with them.
This is because ostriches Wright
otherwise gobble them up. Os-
triches are used to swallowing
bright pebbles which help them
digest their normal food and
they find visitors' rings, brac-
elets, watches, buttons and spec-
tators irresistible,
While in the Kalahari desert
of South Africa, traveller and
novelist William J. Makin re-
ported that twenty large and
small diamonds were found in
the sinntach of one ostrich n'hich
had been allowed to wander
freely with his companions over
the diamond fields,
Mr. Makin reported that the
ostriches often swallowed dia-
monds to assist their digestion,
preferring the gems because of
their hardness or because they
were naturally attracted by their
brilliance in the ;and.
The South African government
claimed that since the ostriches
had taken the diamonds from
the fields, (hey were the prop-
erty of the stale,
A large number of coins weigh-
ing more than four pounds and
worth $10 were found in the
stomach of an ostrich which died
in the .Buenos Aires zoo. And a
London Zoo ostrich's stomach
yielded two shillings' worth of
coppers, a bangle, several pieces
of silver, jewellery, glass, a
watch -chain and a glove, as well
as smaller articles.
Ostriches still give us many
everyday articles. Their tough
leathery skins are made into
handbags, shoes, wallets, belts,
gloves and even Bible and other
book covets.
And their bones, when stilled,
yield a good -quality bone meat.
In fact, South African breeders
pride themselves on using ev-
ery part of their birds, except.
their brains,
Gaiety girls, flaunting gor-
geous ostrich plumes, created
huge business for ostrich farms
i11 Edwardian days, and feathers
fetched prices as high as :1500 a
pound, which often worked out
al $750 a feather.
Nearly a million ostriches were
farmed in mu) district alone, But
to -day, the feather price has
slumped to below $30 a pound,
and the sante district supports
no more than 50,000 birds,
When fully grown an ostrich
could easily beat champion run-
ner Herb Elliott, Within seconds
the bird can reach 40 m.p.h. and
keep it tip,
A single kick from an ostrich
could kill a irrul.
Curiously, the male ostrich,
though ill tempered and ecs0nt-
ful of hurilans, is thoroughly
domesticated, Under the female's
eye, he builds the nest and sits
00 the eggs for 1Iie tial five
days,
After that, the female sits by
day and fattier by night, That
goes 011 (01' forty-two days, until
the eggs are hatched,
Orators in Grandpop's day
used to say that history is at the
crossroads, Now we're al a
cloverleaf.
9, Aiti god
10. One of "The
Three
Alusheleer•"
11. Core
14. Chancellor's
office
3. Plato, rolilrp,1 10, (Jull) for
oat winding' milli
3, ('hear• '1rr. 10. Utttliflet
4, neat for 21, Nothing
oarrytn; 22, ,Henry
Nol,"ht 23, !told,/
0, IlIr,. 21, t•ouih
A, Ill':h r.,11 a. 15, Itcfllsa wool
1ih.1 27, I'L':talritre
1. lolt 29.4\ffeelcdly
S. Halt nnclnr shy
I L 3::::4 '5 f. ;7
22
25 '
28
17
3t,. I ry fee
btriorelnind
11. Worthleu
leaving
32. Press lcatlie*
33, Mailing card
34. Sopa rate
35. irrigate
37, Balloon
bnslcest
39. Rival
40..inegun
42, Ily way 02
43, Sound -of
lo
14, Ileownla
45, Myself'
47, That thing
8 9 10 11
20
z3
zq.
26
27,
4.,
32
34 35
38
S ' )
Answer elsewhree on thle page
HIS OWN RACCOON HAT — Sleddy Reynolds, 10, wears his live
racoon hat, "Gordy." His parents were performers al a Sports-
men's Show,
TIIEFARM FROT
J
Dc;mestic di;'npearance of be
rattle, averagine 38,700 lice
weekly in 1960, set an all -tin
record for Canada, reporle
Ralph K, Bennett, Canada D
pal'tment of Agriculture.
He said the long-term pietist
of the industry "can hardly b
anything but bright."
Total marketings in 1960 0
2,465,000 head were nearly seve
per cent higher than in the pre
vious year, Alberta accounte
for 33 per cent of bite total out
put, Ontario 30 per cent an
Saskatchewan 19 per cent.
Inspected slaughter of enol
totaled 1,942,000 head, an in
crease of 11 per cent over 1959
ca Choice steer.; in Toronto and
id $23 for the same grade at Cal -
le gays"
d The potential capacity to pro-
e- duce on the North American
continent was still tied basically
•e to the carrying capa2ity of the
e Western rangelands.' Grass was
o limiting factor because "every
f piece of beef starts out as a calf
11 and cow on grass."
Analysis of two significant
d facts in the beef cattle industry
—.the limitations of grazing
•
d lands, and the growing demand
for beef arising frons the rapid
f7 growth in human population—
indicated a' basically favorable
situation,
♦ k •
There was a dramatic rise it
the marketings of Choice grade
cattle, he pointed out. In 1960
the weekly average was nearly
. 11,900 carcasses, or 32 per cent
o! the total kill. Mr. Bennett
called this figure startling when
compared with 2,450 Choice
grade carcasses, or 11.1 per cent
of the kill ten years. ago.
♦ •
The increase in Choice ;rade
reflects the improvement in cat-
tle and growth of the cattle
feeding industry ,111 Canada, Mr.
Bennett stated,
The greatest increase in Choice
and Good grade cattle during
1960 has taken place in Alberta,
where ntarlceiings totaled 430,000
head, about 55 per cent of total
deliveries,
4, t .}
Ile said that human popula-
tion in Canada was climbing
steadily but cattle numbers had
not increased much in the pest
five year:;. The cattle tote: on
December 1, 1955 was almost
10 million. Last December 1,
it stood at 10.11 million, an in-
crease in five years of nine per
cent or an average of 1.8 per
cent per year. During the sante
five -yore period, the human
population rose from 15,7 mil-
lion to 111 million, a 13,5 per cent
boost, of an aocl'agl''yoal'ly gain
of 2.7 per cent.
•
Predominantly, Canadian cat-
tlemen were on an export econ-
omy with their fortunes linked
vet'y closely to those df Ameri-
can cattlemen. It] 1960 Canadian
cattle exports td the United
States were about 10 per cent
of total marketings — much :ass
than the 655,000 live cattle and
53 million pounds of beef ship-
ped in the peak year of 1958,
That shipment was the equiva-
lent of 700,000 cattle or 28 per
cent of the total niarkcling.: 1'01
1058.
I 1. *
He noted a decreasing supply
of boneless beef and an cvcr•in-
creasing demand for this pro-
duct,
A decrease in the number of
dairy cows in the past 25 years
had meant fewer canners and
cutters for slaughter. "M" grade
carcasses In the 1960 inspected
kill totaled 218,000 or 11 per
Cent,
Artificial insemination was re-
ducing the nuniber of bulls in
Canada. In 1900 the umbel of
carcasses in the "C" grade to-
taled 63,013 or a little more than
three per cent. The 1948-51 aver-
age was approximately five per
cent,
• • •
Cattle prices at the year's end,
he said, were "about $25 for
• • ♦
There were 6,704,198 hogs
graded in 1960, a drop of 1,804,-
021 from the near -record 8,568,-
217 carcasses graded the previ-
ous year,
• Canada Department of Agri-
culture figures show that on a
national scale 30,5 per cent were
Grade A. I1 teas the highest per-
centage c'i' Grade A's since 1951
when the figure stood at 31.3
per cent. In 1959, the percentage
of carcasses grade A was 29.5
per cent.
♦
Elgin Senn, chief cf the grad-
ing section, Livestock Division,
said that the percentage of Grade
A's has risen slightly each year
since 1954,
In 1946 the percentage of
Grade A hog cat'cas,es rose to
an unprecedented 32.4 per cent.
In 1954 it fell to 26 per cent,
Mr, Senn states one factor may
have influenced the picture in
1960, "It's the first full year
we've had since A and 13 grades
were altered on October 5, 1959,"
he said. "At that time the mini-
mum tveig'ht for Grade A cogs
was dropped 'five pounds while
the back fat measurements were
tightened slightly."
In any case, the number of ear.
cassee graded A is increasing
slowly and with the change in
the payment of the Federal Gov-
ernment premiunms frcm $2.00 on
A and $1.00 on B grade to $3 00
on A grade, a further improve-
ment in 1961 is anticipated.
WMY SCIIOOJ
LESSON
By Rev, It, Barclay Warren
II,A. H.D.
Jesus Gives Ills Life
John 19: 17-2a, 28-30.
31entory Selection: 1 am the
good shepherd; the good she's.
herd glveth his life for the
sheep, John 10:11,
Chapters 13 to 19, nine in all,
of the 21 chapters of the Gospel
as recorded by St. John, are de-
voted to the last 24 hours of our
Lord's life before His death on
the cross, Why such • detail?
Examine the biographies of the
world's great and no where else
will you find a biographer de-
voting so much space, in fact,
more than a quarter of the book
to the last day of the man's life.
What is the explanation?
The death of Jesus Christ has
vtry special significance. The
Psalmist and the prophets, parti-
cularly Isaiah, had spoke.] of 11
centuries before. As our title
states, "Jesus Gives His Life,"
The men who carne to take hits
in the garden fell to the ground
at his word, (18:6). He said, "I
lay down my life., that I might
take it again. No man takcth ft
from me, but I lay it down of
myself." Why did He give him-
self to die al the age of thirty-
three?
To answer this question
thoroughly calls for a study of
the whole Bible. 1t is especially
clarified in the Book of Acts, the
Epistles and the Book of Revela-
tion. Man through disobedience
in Eden fell from the stale of
innocency. He no longer enjoyed
fellowship with his Creator, He
was now sinful, Jesus Christ,
God's Son, same to pave the way
for a r'cconciliation. He camp as
a man to save men. He hill no
sins of His own. As man's re-
presentative He bore our sins m
His own body on the cross. We
are saved from our sins when
we repent of them and believe
on Jesus Christ, We are saved
by His Grace,
"Were the whole realm of
nature mine,
That were an offering far too
small.
Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands my soul, my life, my
all,"
We may have salvation
through faith in our Lord Jesus
Christ,
Time To Order
Garden Seeds
While perennials are the back-
bone of the flower borders, most
people look forward to growing
many of the lovely annuals each
season, and now is the time for
ordering seed,
Annuals add color and variety
to the garden, With a little plan-
ning and their long blooming pe-
riod, one can have an abundance
of flowers all summer and into
the autumn.
Use them to fill gaps in the
perennial border, in front of
shrubs, or in among newly
planted shrubs which are small,
Plant them among bulbs to hide
Upsldedotvn to Prevent 1'rl'krng
1110 fading (,ili;ige of tulip, sold
daffodils, (,r around bleillinl:
heart, oriel:f:,I pr)ppi,',, and other
early-blornring plant:.
For slaking gardens in nets or
rented homes, annuals are a
wise choice, '1'lley will bloom in
six of eight Weeks from seed
and continue all summer.
The seed catalogues are such
fun that exercising restraint is
difficult, If the resulting garden
Is to be a joy and not a burden,
however, thoughtful planning is
a must. We need to select vari-
eties that do we11 in our locatiu» ,
In the South are hot, dry sum-
mers. In the North we need
quick flowering. A definite color
plan and only a few types of
flowers massed for effect and in
blending tones are usually better
than miscellaneous mixed cotori
and too many kinds,
Annuals are classed as hardy,
half - hardy, and tender, The
hardy can be sowed as early as
the ground can be worked. Sweet
peas, cosmos, larkspur are hardy.
Half - hardy annuals, such as
snapdragons. should not be
planted in the open until after
the last spring frost date for the
locality; and lender annuals,
such as zinnias, must be planted
only after the soil is warns.
If you have no book showing
average spring and autumn frost
dates for your region, ;IA your
nurseryman or aeries] 1lw'al ex-
tension statics what your dates
are.
In the front of most seed cata-
logues are the new flowers for
the season. Seeds of then' may
he more expensive, but it is re-
freshing to try a fats new kinds.
510S'1' EMBARRASSING
In Miami, Florida, blonde,
freckled Marjorie Curry from
Washington, U.C., bought a new
bathing suit, wore it in the
water and sued the store for
$5000,
The reason: The suit got so
transparent when wet, claimed
Marjorie, that people could count
all of her freckles, causing her
"embarrassment and humilia-
tion,"
The most galling problem
harassing a suburbanite was to
keep dogs from tearing up his
patiently -cultivated lawn, His
prominent "Keep Off the Grass"
sign wasn't taken seriously by
any of the dog owners. Seeking
a fresh approach, he erected a
small sign on a newly -seeded
area. It read: "Protect your dogt
Lawn specially treated with poi-
son." Not a dog touched a blade,
AH, SPRING — Knorke, a go.
rilla in the Berlin, Germany,
zoo, seems to be waiting for
the vernal equinox. He receiv-
ed the flowers on his fifth
birthday.
ISSUE 12 — 1961
ELVA COURIER — EXPLODER VIEW — A speedy Elva Course; sports car, guided by V,'i. ni
Widdowson at a Smithfield, Tex„ t, ask lose, mss c; n turn. FI;'ing hay h7'?s and frying E:vi
parts were captured by the camera 0; n:wsi: per p',:.:;,groph:r Ecb la
:.son.
4
PAGE 4
i
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF IMLYTH
Parish of Blyth, Auburn, Belgrave
HOLY WEEK SERVICES
March 27th to Friday, March 31
in TRINITY CHURCH, BLYTH
8 p.m, each evening
Monday, March 27th—Rev. E. J. Harrison, Bay-
field.
Tuesday, March 28th—Rev. 1I, Donaldson, Seaforth.
1Vednesday, March 29th—Rev. C. S. index, Clinton.
Thursday, llarch 301h—Rev. C. Johnston, nigh am
Good Friday, March 31st—The Rector.
"Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by"
'WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth-•- BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 73,
REDUCTIONS ON
WINTER CLOTHING
YARD GOODS, ETC,
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M.
NEW SPRING ARRIVALS
Tots Coat Sets, 1 to 3X $5.95 up
Girls' Coats and Suits, 4 to 14 $10.95 up
Teen Coats and Suits, 10 to 14X $15.95 up
Spring Hats, infants to teen 01.98 up
also : Dresses, Scarves, Gloves, Skirts, Jackets,
▪ Car Coats, Blazers, Grey Flannels, White Skirts,
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22
Blyth, Ont.
WARNIN
FIRE STRIKES ONLY ONCE
FIRE STRIKES ONLY ONCE
GET ALL YOUR FIRE EXTINGUISHERS
FROM
G
J. C. LAMONT
ETHEL FEED MILL
Phone 16J6, Brussels
BRITISH
ISRAEL
The Bible's National Message
We believe that the Cclto-Saxon peoples
are the descendants of God's servant
race and nation. Israel: that our ancient
Throne is the continuation of the Throw:
of David; and, in view of present world
conditions, that a general recognition of
this identity AND its implications is a
matter of vital and urgent importance,
WE WOULD LIKE TO TELL YOU ABOUT IT
For Your Copy of Our FREE Booklet
"An Introduction to the' British•Israel Evangel"
Write to the Secretary
CANADIAN BRITISH -ISRAEL ASSOCIATION
In Ontario
P.O. Box 744, Station B, Ottawa, Ont.
LOND ESBORO
THE BLYTH STANDARD
Walton News
1
Walton Willing Workers
The fourth meeting of the Walton ( Morris Township Council
,Willing Workers was held on March The Morris Township Council met in
16th at the home of Mrs. Harvey Craig. the Township Ball- on March 13, with
The meeting was opened with a verse all the members present. The minutes
of "My Wild Irish Rose,"played by' of the last meeting were read and ad-
opted on motion of James Mair and
Ross Smith,
Moved by Walter Shortreed, second-
ed by Wm, Elston, that By -Law No. 4.
1961, setting the Road Appropriation at
$51,000,00 be passed subject to the ap•,
proval of the District Municipal En-
gineer, Carried.
Moved by Smith, seconded by Mair,
that the tender of George Radford Con-
struction Limited to supply, crush and
deliver, approximately 15,000 cubic
yards of gravel at 72 cents per yard be
the president, Mary Helen Buchanan,
followed by the secretary's report read
by Anne Blake. 1l was decided to have
lunch at the meetings. Mary Helen Bu-
chanan and Ilene Williamson are to
supply the lunch for the next meeting.
The meeting will be at Nora Anderson's
on Tuesday, March 21. Roll call Is
. "the finish I'm using for my dress."
Home assignments are ;'sew In the
▪ darts, sew up the top on the dress and
overcast all seams," The leaders, Mrs.
Margaret Humphries and Mrs. Ilarvey
Craig, served a lovely lunch and the
meeting was adjourned. I accepted subject to the approval of the
District Municipal Engineer, Carried,'
Mr, and Mrs, William 'Miller, of Mit- Moved by Shortreed, seconded by ,
ellen, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Elston, that By -Law No. 5, 1961,
Douglas Ennis. authorizing agreement with Howard
Miss Ione Watson and friend, of Smith for reforesting be given the 1st,
- London, spent the week end with Mr. 2nd and 3rd readings. Carried.
and Mrs. David Watson, I Moved by Smith, seconded by Short-,
Miss Muriel Schade, R.N., of Wing- reed, that the reading of the Engin-
ham, visited over the week end with ecr's Report on. the Bryant Drain be
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman held on April 3 at 2.30 p,m, Carried,
Schade, 1 The following petition, signed by the
1 Mrs. Lorne Hulley, Seaforth, has re- ratepayers of S.S. No. 1, Morris, was
turned home after spending the past presented to the Council:
week with her daughter, Mrs. Howard We, the ratepayers of School Section
Hackwell and Mr. Hackwell, 1 No. 1, Morris, are opposed to the build-
, Mrs, Margaret Humphries has return- ing of a new centralized school in
ed home after spending several weeks Walton, and in the event that dehen-
with her daughter, Mrs, Horace Rut= tures are being issued for such, re.
ledge, London, 'quest a vote „on the question of with -
Mrs. Jack Mcllwain, of Seaforth, drawing from the Township School
spent Sunday with her parents, Mr.. Area,
and Mrs. W. C, lfackwell, I Moved by Elston, seconded by Short-
The Hall Board members sponsored reed, that the application of Charles
a progressive euchre party in the Hall Souch
for Warble Fly Inspector, be
Friday evening with thirteen tables in accepCarried.
Moved by Mair, seconded by Smith;
play. Prize winners: ladies high, Miss that the General Accounts as presented
Fennie Dennis; ladies low, Mrs. eGorge be paid, Carried,
Blake; gents high, Graeme Craig; Moved by Elston, seconded by Short -
gents low, Jim Blake. Music for (lane- reed, that the Road Accounts as pre.
ing was supplied by Garnet Farrier's sented by the Road Superintendent be
orchestra, i paid, Carried.
Among those attending the funeral Moved by Smith, seconded by Mair,
of the late John Shannon were: Mrs, that the Reeve and Clerk be authorized
L. Sinko and son Charles Shannon, to sign the papers for Certificate Rc-
Airs, S. Cook, Mr, Wm, Carbett, Mrs. garding Permanent Employees of
' Mary Reid, Mrs, George Watt, Mr, Al. Municipal Authorities. Carried,
bert Ireland, all of Toronto, Mrs, Liz- Moved by Mair, seconded by Smitlt,
1 zie Habkirk, Mrs. Jean Harrison and that the meeting adjourn to meet again
i Mr, and Mrs. Stanley Harrison, from on April 3 at 1 p.m. Carried.
London, Mrs. 1Vm. Walsh and daughter. The following accounts were paid:
1 Sharon, Haggersvillc, Mr, and Mrs. John Brewer, verifying tax arrears,
1 Wallace Shannon and Kathy, Mr. and $32.00; Provincial Treasurer, Insulin,
Mrs. Clifford King, Sarnia, Mr, and 3.98; Municipal World, Statutes and
' Mrs. Saul Shannon, Blyth. • i supplies, 46.90; G. Ronnenberg, Bond
•Air, Ed. Davidson is at present a premiums, 49.50; George Martin, hydro
patient 'in Scott Memorial Hospital,. for hall and shed, 22,63; Town of Wing-
Seaforth, ham, Nursing Home Care, 1.63; Bak-
ers' Convalescent Home, 158,50; Ad.
,✓ante -Times, advertising, 7.83; Brook-
haven Nursing Home, 149.50; Pinecrest
Manor Ltd., 39.75; Village of Brussels,
RABIES ON THE i)::CLINE IN fire call, 50.00; Win. Elston, Good
Roads Convention, 35.00; Walter Short -
reed, Good Roads Convention, 35.00;
James Mair, Rural Municipalities Con-
vention, 35,00; Ross Smith, Rural Muni-
cipalities Convention, 35.00; Relief ac-
count, 95.00,
Stewart Procter, George C. Martin,
Reeve, Clerk.
CAN '_:)A
There was a marked decline in the
number of rabies cases reported in
Canada iii the eleven month period
ended Fvuruaty 28.
Canada Department of Agriculture
figures reveal that only 253 cases were
reported between April 1, 1960 and Feb.
ruary 28, 1961 compared with 852 cases
for the same period the previous year.
Only Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba and
British Columbia reported any incidence
of.the disease in the past year. There There are 226 service club members
were 201 cases In Ontario, 35 in Quebec, in Ontario dedicated .to nothing short
15 in Manitoba and 2 in British Col- of unconditional surrender df disease
umbia. and deformities that prevent little
Animals affected most frequently children from running and playing
were foxes, skunks and cattle, with „with their brothers and sisters—a ver•
147 of the total oasts recorded involv- i tible (army who rallies every spring
ing wildlife. Twenty dogs and ten' for their annual assault.
cats, all In Ontario and Quebec, were' The weapon they unleash on the gen-
inifeeted, eral public is the Easter Seal—a sym•'
Two cases of rabid bats were report- bol of hope and opportunity provided
ed in British Columbia. Titis is the by the Ontario Society for Crippled
first record of rabies in bats since Children.. Everyone will have now re -
• 1957. I ceived their Easter Seals, • and this
An officer of the Health of Animals, year a target of $875,000 in voluntary
Division, CDA, said' there ,has been contributions must be realized or some
a slight increase in the incidence 011 of the more than 15,000 handicapped
rabies in Ontario during the past. kiddies across the province of .Ontario
month. will be neglected. From the simple
The cases, he said, have been cote- act of sending to everyone a letter and
firmed largely to wildlife—principally ,a• sheet of Easter Seals, to the import -
foxes and skunks—with the odd trans- ant business of forming a Society's
mission to domestic livestock and dogs. policies in its expansion program for
The disease has been reported in 361 crippled children, the service club
Ontario counties, members take a keen interest and ac -
A slight increase in rabies at this tivo part,
time of year is not abnormal, he said. They take pride in assuming the of -
He added that with foxes beginning to ficial liason between the docal health
den up, a sharp decline in the disease 1 authorities and the Society, making it
is anticipated. their duty to see that every handicap -
Renfrew county in Ontario was the ped child is treated and provided with
most heavily infected, with the major- transportation and proper bifaces and
ity of cases involving foxes, appliances made necessary by. his dis-
As a result, the department's sub- ability,
district officer in Renfrew county has More progress in the tore and treat -
re -established the reporting system by i mont of crippled child has been made
visiting all veterinarians, municipal! in the past twenty-five yeams than dur-
clerks, medical officers of health and.ng ing the whole previous history of man -
other local authorities, kind. Everyone is asked to help the
members of the service clubs to keep
this Vital program in operation until
every crippled child in Ontario has
BIRTHS the opportunity of a happier life and
PASSCHIER—In Wingham General Hos- the chance to achieve independence.!
,pita' on Tuesday, March 21, 1961 to That way they will grow to assume
Mr. and Mrs. Anton Panscbler, R.R..their rightful place In Society as a
self 'sustaining and contributing chi.
4, Brussels, the gift of a son. zen--not a liability.
SAUIV_'DERCOCK—In. Clinton Public
Hospital on Monday, March 13, 1981
to Mr. and Mrs, Robert Saundcrcoc'c,
Londuboro, a daughter, i6 your huhacrlptlo11 Paid '
GIVE TO THE EASTER SEAL
CAMPAIGN
Wedneaday, Match 22, 1961
STEP OUT THIS SPRING WITH A
HOUSE OF STONE
Made To Measure SUIT
a large variety to choose from
Priced from $57.00 to $92.00
WE CARRY A LARGE SELECTION OF
Ready To Wear SUITS
Priced from $35.00 to $60.00
MEN'S WORK BOOTS
by Simla, `Greb, Hydro and Reliance
Priced from $6.95 to $11,50
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Home of Good Quality Merchandise"
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOITON.
•
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. I'RYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CLINTON: EXETER:
Business—Hu 2-8606 Business 41
Residence—Hu 2-3869 Residence 34
WE'VE FOOD TO SUIT YOUR MOODfrom the tastiest sandwiches in town to a delic-
ious full -course meal.
A snack is a real pleasure here. The service is
speedy, atmosphere congenial ... and the prices
thrifty!
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG. Prorl:'ietor.
Mr, and Mrs. Wesley Iloggart, ot
Clinton, visited with- Mr, and Das. Ed.
'Mrs. John Burr and children, of,Youngblut on Sunday:
Ilyde Park, have been spending the' Mrs, Gordon McPhee, of near Au-
pasl week with her father, Mr, Jas.! burn, visited with her sister, Mts.
MCA al. I Walter McGI1l. on JIonda).
ANNOUNCEMENT
Effective Friday, March 17111, I have eommenc-
- ed operation of the Blyth Billiard Parlor, having
purchased the business from Mr. Donald McIntyre.
It is my sincere hope that the public will avail
themselves of my facilities, and assist me in Oper-
ating a prosperous and respectable establishment.
MILNE "DOC" COLE
FORESTRY POSTER COMPETITION
OPEN TO GRADE VII and VIiI
STUDENTS
The Ontario Forestry Association has
announced plans for the first national
forest tire prevention poster comps•
tition open to Grade VII and VIII pupils
throughout Ontario. Winners of the
Ontario contest will be submitted in
a national competition sponsored by the
Canadian Forestry Association. Grand
prize is an all expense trip to Ottawa
during Forest Conservation Week, May
20 - 27, 1961.
Entries in the OFA contest should
encourage good outdoor manners and
should emphasize the need to prevent
forest fires. An original figure or
symbol could be effective,
Posters should be not less than 9"x
12" nor more than 22"x28", They must
be original, and should consist of not
more than three colors to make re-
production economical,
Pupils must place name, age, grade,
, shool and mailing address on the
lower right corner on back of the post-
er, Entries must reach OFA office at
229 College Street, Toronto, by April
8th, 1961. .All entries become the prop-
erty of the Association, Winners will
be advised by mail,
1 First prize is $25 in the Ontario com-
petition. $15 and $10 will be awarded
second and third prize winners respec.
tively. Five honorable mentions will
1 be awarded, All winners receive a
conservation book,
Wednesday, March 22, 1961
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE,
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of a dear brother,'
John II, Garner, who died March 23,
-1950.
There is no death! What seems so Is
transition;
This life of mortal breath
Is but a suburb of the life Elysian,
Whose portal we call death.
—Ever remembered by his sister
Mrs. Lorne Scrimgeour, Mr. Scrim-
geour and family. 06-1
FOR SALE
Baled Straw. Apply, Orval McGowan.
phone 54118, Blyth, 06-ip
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
"CATTLE SPRAYING FOR LICE
Warm water used. Satisfaction Guar-
anteed, Phone J. M. Backer, 95,
Brussels." 48.6
TV ANTENNA REPAIRS
TV Antenna Repairs and Installation.
Year around service. Phone collect,
Teeswater, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser-
vice. 45-tf.
FII/TER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to All Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners, Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensall, 696112. 50.13p.tf,
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess•pools, etc., pumped
,nd cleaned. Frei estimates. Lout►
'tla}ce, phone 42R5, Brussels, R.?t. 2.
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS m SOiJCiTOPS
J. II. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
Wtugham and Blyth.
iN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4�
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST -- OPTICIAN
Successor to the late A. L. Cole,
Optometrist)
MR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICH 23.1,
1. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
-;rz;forth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
fi rd. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office • Monday, 9 - 5.30.
Phone HU 2.7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
P 1TRICK ST. - WINGHAM. ON1
17,VENINGS 13Y APPOINTMFNT
(For Apointment please phone 770
Wingham),
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Servic s.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, ONT.
relepjtone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478.
1R.. R., W. STREET
Bluth, Ont.
OFFICE HnUES-1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
UE SHAY, THURSDAY; SATURDAI
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE
USED"
Farmer owned and controlled
Service at cost
Choice of bull and breed
Our artificial breeding service will help
you to a more efficient livestock
operation
For service or more informatiort call:
Clinton HU 2.3441, or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9.5650.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE • SEAPORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS:
President — John L, Malone, Sea -
forth; Vice -President, John If. McEw-
ing,•B1yth; Secretary. -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth,
• DIRECTORS
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw-
ing,Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep-
per; Brucefield; C. W. Leonhardt,
Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderich; R.
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth.
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; V.
J, Lane, 11.11. 5, Seaforth; Selwyn Ba-
ker, Brussels; Jamas Keles, Seaforth;
) cold 5gttires, Clinton.
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at' 2 pan.
IN BLYTH, PHONE
BQB HENRY, 150R1.
THE BLYTR STANDARD
LYCEUM THEATRE
Wingham, Ontario.
Two Shows Each Night
Commencing at 7:15 p,m,
Thurs., Fri,, Sat„March 23, 24, 25
Jack Lemmon Ricky Nelson
in
"The Wackiest Ship In The
Army”
The landing of volunteer observers on
Japanese held islands by an ancient
sailing vessel during the Second World
War.
Plumbing
Carpentry
Joe Corey, Bob McNair, WORK OF ALL KINDS
Manager, Auctioneer,
05-tf,
Specializing in bullt-in cupboards etc.
,,,.r.,,,NNW 0,,,,P,,,,,,,,~41.044N. Dealer in Steel and Ashphalt Roofing.
WORK GUARANTEED
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Hogs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 162, Blyth
DEAD STOCK
WANTED
HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid In
surounding districts for dead, old, sick
or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor-
ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For
prompt, sanitary disposal day or night,
phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth,
21'R12, if busy phone Leroy. Acheson,
Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels,
15J6. Trucks available at all times
34- 1, Mar.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASH PRICES
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value
Old Horses -4c per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels:
BRUCE MARLATT
24 Hour Service
Plant Licence No. 54-R.P.-61
Colector Licence No. 88•G61
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Cal
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 23R12 Brussels, Ontario
TOWNSHIP OF GREY
TENDERS FOR DRAIN
Tenders will be received by the un-
dersigned until 1 p.m., Saturday, April
1st, 1961, for the construction of the
BURKE Municipal Drain in the Town-
ship of Grey which consists of 11,072
ljileal feet of open drain. Plans and
specifications may be seen at the
Clerk's office, Ethel, Ont. Tender to be
accompanied by certified cheque for
10% of amount of tender. Lowest or
any tender not necessarily accepted.
EDYTHE M, CARDIFF,
Clerk, Township of Grey,
ETHEL, ONTARIO 05-2
AUCTION SALE
Auction Sale at Thornton Hall Farm,
one mile west of Scaforth, on Highway
8, on
TUESDAY, MARCH 28th
at 2 p,m.
CATTLE—Holsteins, registered, vac-,
cinated and blood tested, 12 cows and. Ferguson 3 furrow plow; Ferguson
several heifers, eight cows due to cultivator, scuffler attachments; Fel.-
freshen in the spring. They are • bred gason manure loader; one way disk,
from, and to such sires as Milestone, ; with three point hitch; Tandem disk;
Tradition, Clearcreck Model and Fres Newton mower, three point hitch;
er. Butter Boy, I John Deere side rake; Cockshutt man•
PIGS -2 bred sows; 8 pigs, 4 months ure spreader; John Deere drag liar -
old;. 8 pigs ten weeks old, f rows, 16 ft,; 36 ft, extension ladder;
MACHINERY -13e11 thresher, 24-40, Buckler farm wagon, 16 ft, rack; flat
with straw cutter and grain elevator,,; rack for wagon; Tilan, chain saw (one
in new condition; 200 [t. cable with : mA11); Massey IIarris grain fertilizer
block and 100 ft. drive belt; Massey 7 drill; Massey Harris hay loader; col -
ft. binder, has cut approximately 250' ony house; coal brooder stove; hay
acres; 2 unit Surge milking machine :fork car, pulleys and ropes; two wheel
and 750 pound motor driven McCormick trailer,
cream separator. CAME—$2 Hereford steers,
TERMS CASH lbs.; 20 Hereford steer calves, 1
James F. Scott, 11.11. 2, Scaforth, old, 550 lbs,
Proprietor. POULTRY -250 red Sussex
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer, • year old.
Cata1 ues available by contacting GRAIN -400 bushels
the rroprietor; 06.1 Other articles stoo numerous
_-. - ...
FOR SALE tion,
FRANK McMICHAEL
R.R. 4, Goderich
phone Carlow 1108
IN MEMORIAM
OSTER—In loving memory of a hus-
band and father, Mr. Fred Oster,
who passed away March 21st, 1959.
Ever remembered by his wife and
family. 06.1
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all my friends and
relatives who remembered me with
cards, letters, and visits, while a pa-
tient in Wingham Hospital, They were
all greatly appreciated. Also Dr.
Street and the nursing staff,
06.1p. —Mrs. Susan Taylor,
FOR SALE
Ladies blue spring coat, size 17, ex-
cellent condition, reasonable. Apply
Mrs. Charles Johnston, phone 30, Blyth.
06-1,
FOR SALE
1000 to 1500 hales of mixed hay.
Apply II. Kennedy, Londesboro, phone
Clinton 110217552, 06.1p
FOR SALE
Maple and elm tree tops.
f 1 'Millar Richmond, phone 13116,
I
TEACHER WANTED
51.10p. • Applications will he received until
April 15th for the position of teacher
at S.S. No. 7, Hullctt. Approximately
16 pupils. Apply, stating qualifica-
f tions, salary expected, and name of
last inspector, to Mrs. Leonard Shob-
brook, secretary, 11.11. 1, Blyth, Ont.
06-4.
Apply
Blyth.
06-1p,
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes o
cleaners and polishers, Filter Queen
Sales, Varna, Tel, collect Honsall 696112
50.13p.tt
LOST
Will the person to whom the late
Ilarvey Mason loaned his book of song
or anyone knowing its whereabouts
PLEASE contagt Mrs. Mason at 137
Scaforth, or Box 53, It is a mucd
treasured keepsake, 05.3
FOR SALE
s Table potatoes. Apply, Jasper Snell,
phone 351125, Blyth. 06-1,
BAKE SALE
Group 2 of the Women's Association
of Blyth United Church have planned
to hold a Bake Sale at the home of
Mrs, Ben Walsh on Saturday, April 1st,
1961, at 3 p.m, Come and have a cup
of tea.
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
For J. Earl Gaunt, Lot 36, Concession
11, Ilullett Township, 214 miles West of
Londesboro on
SATURDAY, MARCH 25th.
at 1 p,m.
MACHINERY -350 Utility Interna-
tional tractor with hydraulic and LP.
and P.; Freeman manure loader; In-
ternational Harvester hydraulic plow;
International Harvester Ilydraulic 7 ft.
mower; International Harvester culti-
vator; International Harvester side
rake; International Harvester 7 ft.
binder; Fleury bissel 10 ft. packer; ;
Case 32 plate disk; 5 section harrows
with stretcher; George White rubber
tired wagon, with 15 ft. rack; Interna-
tional Harvester 15 run power lift seed
drill; International Harvester hay load-
er; power sprayer with motor; '2,000
lb, scales; 240 lb. scales; fanning mill;
grain roller with 1 H.P. motor; cream
separator; feed cart; wheel barrow;
cutter; quantity of lumber; colony
house 10x12; hay fork, car and ropes;
sling ropes; 200 gal. gas tank; 1,000
bales of hay. '
CATTLE -35 Hereford yearling steers
approximately 700 lbs.
FURNITURE—Glass cupboard; kit-
chen cabinet; rocking chairs; kitchen
table and chairs; 8 piece dining room
suite; china cabinet; antique dishes;
g. rugs, 9x15 and 7I/2x9; 2 bedroom
suites; chesterfield suite; desk; other
articles too numerous to mention,
TERMS CASH
Proprietor, Earl Gaunt.
Auctioneer, Harold Jackson,
Clerk, George Powell, 05.2
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Clearing Auction Sale of Farm stock
and Machinery, at Lot 21, Concession
2, Morris Township 33; miles north and,
2% miles west of Brussels, on
TUESDAY, APRIL 4th
at 1 p.m.
MACHINERY—Ferguson tractor 85;
iliolstein cow, 5 years old, freshened Proprietor, Ralph Shaw,
on MOmd:ry, Apply, II. Roctcisoender, Auctioneer, Harold. Jackson.
phone 141"1:1, 131,vt11,., 08.1. Clerk, George Powell,
TERMS CASA
1000
year
liens, 1
to men -
FOR SALE
Singer, Slant Needle, sewing machine,
sells regularly for $247.00, complete
with zig-zagger and attachments. 'fake
on payments balance cwing, 0 paymelas
of $8,10 or $60.00 cash. Write to
W, A. Hutchinson, 100 Ridout St. 8.,
. London, Ontario. 06-1.
DANCE
In Londesboro Community Hall on
Wednesday, April 5th, sponsored by the;
13th of Ilullel.t Hockey Team. Jim I
Scott's Orchestra. Admission at pop-
ular prices, Everyone welcome. 05-2p
FOR SALE
Frigidaire Refrigerator, in good con-
dition. Inquire at Standard Office, 06-1p
LOST
Shaft on power lake off of hay eleva-
tor, on No, 4 highway or 5th of Morris.
Finder please contact John Pipe, phone
489J5, Brussels. 06-1
ARTICLES FOUND
We have in the Standard a red glove,
a childs galosh, black mitt, and a pair
of brown and sand .mitts, that have
been found 'and handed in. Anyone
losing these articles call and pick them I
up.
BELGRAVE CO.OP REPORTS
SUCCESSFUL YEAR
The annual meeting of the Belgravc
Co -Operative Asseciation was held on
Tuesday evening, March 14th in the
Foresters Hall, with the Bclgrave Wo-
men's Institute serving a Turkey din-
ner,
Rev, J. II„ Anderson said Grace and
the president, Albert Rieman, extended
a welcome to all present.
The guests at the bead table were
introduced by the vice-president, Mr.
Jack Taylor,
The guest speraker, William Harvey,
supervisor of Area No. 9 United Co -
Operatives of Ontario, was introduced
by Mr. C. R, Coultes,
Speeches were given by past presi-
dent, Simon Hallahan, arca fieldman,
William Rousse, and the manager of
the Canadian Bank of Commerce, Wing -
ham Branch, Mr. H. H. Ilotson,
The secretary, Mr. R. IL Coultes,
read the minutes of the last annual
meeting. Area supervisor, Lorne Pow-
er, rood the financial statement. The
total sales for 1960 were $412,363 and
for 1959 they had heen $349.909. The
total assets 'for 1960 were $186,943, the
total increase being $62,454.
The manager, Mr. R. Orr, stated
that the Co-op had :a favourable year's
business as indicated by an increase
over 4939,
The retiring directors were Sam
Thompson, R. H. Coultes and Albert
Rieman, and were all re-elected for
a three year period. Other directors
Err Jack R. Taylor, C. P. Chamney,
(2. R. Couitea, 14eslie Bolt, . Ronald
Coultes, i3,1e1 Craig, and the manager,
N. R, Orr.
111111..1111
06.2, 14 ACtl;1r SijiA;criptiun Paid?
PAGE l
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT TILE.
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JM -7811 -
NOW PLAYING
NOW—Walter Brennan and Phil Harris in "The Boy and the Laughing
Dog."
Mon., Tues„ Wed.,—Adult Entertainment
Martha Wyer, Joan Bennett and Raymond Burr
Fro mthe William F. Claxton novel, a dramatic story of Southern
plantations and the people who live there.
"DESIRE IN THE DUST"
In Cinemascope
Thurs., Fri„ Sat.—Double Attraction
Debra Paget, Paul Christian and Lucian Palau!
A forgctlen city in India sets the scene for adventure
"JOURNEY TO THE LOST CITY"
In Color
also
"CIRCUS STARS"
Featuring Popo and other great European Circus Acts
Coming—BOB HOPE In "Alias Jesse James" in Color,
KEEP IN TOUCH
the sure way—via your local
CBC RADIO NETWORK STATION
CBC NEWSCASTS , . . clear—complete—accurate, Pre-
pared by CBC editors from recognized world news
services. In addition CBC's own staff correspondents
and reporters provide exclusive on the spot coverage
from news centers throughout Canada and the world.
OBC FARM NEWS ... Monday to Friday (12:30 p.m.)
on the CBC Farm Broadcast—now starting its 23rd
year ... Saturday (12:30 p.m.) on CBC's Junior Farm
Program ... Thursday (9:45 a.m.) on Food Facts and
Sunday (10:20 a.m.) on the Ontario and Quebec
Gardener.
Coming Mon. April 3—Summer Fallow, back for another
season with stories of rural people and their problems.
KEEP IN TOUCH
Stay with your CBC Radio Network Station
Notice To Investors
PRESENTLY OFFERING A NEW ISSUE OF
$50,000,000.00 PROVINCE OF ONTARIO
DEBENTURES •
51/2 Percent Debentures
Maturing 15 April, 1981
Callable 1979
Price $100.00 and Accrued Interest
514 Percent Debentures
Maturing 15 April, 1968
Non -Callable
Price $100.00 and Accrued Interest
Delivery of debentures expected on or about
April 17th.
Available in denominations of $500.; $1,000; $5,000
$10,000; $25,000; $100,000
Bell Gouinlock & Company Limited
44 King Street Wrest, Toronto, Ottt.
Local Agent: GEORGE SLOAN, Blyth, Ont.
A Queen's Wardrobe
For A Royal Tour
The blaze of publicity turned
on Queen Elizabeth II and what
rhe weary is probably brighter
than that focused on any other
woman in the world, Only Mrs,
John F. Kennedy, wife of the
President of the United States,
as her public engagements mul-
tiply in number, seems likely to
attract such a spotlight,
Queen Elizabeth 11, since she
left the schoolroom, has had to
wear clothes influenced to some
extent by the circumstances of
her public engagements.
First she must consider those
ubiquitous cameras. Her clothes
must show up \veil against a
crowd in black and whit: pho-
tographs, For I his reason the
Queen often chooses light colors,
People who wait hours to see
the Queen pas; by want to see
her face and catch a glimpse of
her smile. Her hats, therefore,
must be either small or have off -
the -face brim;,
Since her wedding, the Queen
has been more adventurous in
her styling and many here credit
the good dress sense of her hus-
band, the Duks of Edinburgh for
this,
For her current tour t India,
Pakistan. Tibet, and Iran, the
Queen had more than 90 outfits,
with special dresses for each big
function, : cl a variety of cli-
mates had to be considered, too.
Queen Elizabeth's chief dress-
maker is the usually cheerful,
smiling Norman Hartnell. As
soon as the itinerary of ;t royal
tour is fixed, Mr, Hartnell is
summoned from his Bruton
Street salon to eBuckinghant
S
Ze5
PRINTED PATTERN
Xr
44.. 440
A deep - descending c ., 11 a r
Fames you in softest flattery
gfbove a slimming skirt. Smart in
daytime cottons — elegant in silk
lar faille for gala evenings.
Printed Pattern 4704: Half
iSizes 12/, 141/2, 161/2, 181/2, 20/,
;21. Size 161/2 requires VI yards
88 -inch fabric,
Send FIFTY CENTS (500)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety,) for this
pattern. Please print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont..
ANNOUNCING the biggest fa-
shion show of Spring -Summer,
1961 — pages, pages, pages of
patterns in our new Color Cata-
log — just out! Hurry, send 350
now!
ISSUE 12 — 1961
Palace for a preliminary con-
ference. On the next visit to the
Palace Mr. Hartnett takes
samples of new and suitable
fabric,, At this point the experi-
enced "Madame Vera," one of
Mr, Hartnell's chief vendcuses,
comes into the picture, Ikr pri-
vate name is Madame Poncin, a
charming Englishwoman, widow
of a Frenchman, %vho has the
entire charge, from this moment,
of shepherding the royal ward-
robe through to completion.
The Queen likes, whenever
possible, to experiment with
color and texture, She is keenly
interested in the "feel" of fab-
rics. She presses them with her
fingers and tests them. She
loved the soft silks, chalk -white
satins, gold shantungs, the di-
aphanous organzas. and the
corded grosgrains, from which
day and evening dresses were
made for the Indian visit,
As soon as the Queen has
chosen the materials, Mr. Hart-
nett retires, usually to his coun-
try house not far from Windsor
Castle, to make delicate water-
color sketches of the suggested
models.
Much discussion goes on when
the Queen sees these. Each
design is conned in detail and
visualized against the back-
ground in which it is likely to
1:11 worn. For the Indian visit
there were gorgeous settings,
and eastern trappings, for which
the Queen chose dresses mostly
in plain color's—pastels for day,
and white with gold or silver
for evening to show up well
against the strong reds, greens,
and blues worn by British and
lrdian guests.
For her first State banquet in
Pakistan the Queen chose a
white satin evening gown with
a dramatic folded train of em-
erald satin flowing from the
deep neckline, writes Ruth Jor-
dan in the Christian Science
Monitor.
Another evening dress was a
slender sheath, white crepe em-
broidered in crystal brilliants
and etneralds to match the
Queen's emerald and diamond
tiara.
For day wear the Queen chose
loose, collarless coats over cool -
looking dresses, one in gold
shantung and another in peri-
winkle blue.
Once the Queen has decided
on the styles, there is bustling
activity in Mr, Hartnell's work-
rooms, behind the gray and sil-
ver salon with its crystal chan-
deliers, Madame Vera is linchpin
of this activity.
Skilful fitters go from the
salon to the Palace at intervals
where fittings are carried out
under the watchful eye of Mr.
Hartnell and Madame Vera,
Although there is a dummy of
the Queen's figure, she has the
usual number of fittings as ma-
terials do not respond to an in-
animate shape as they do to a
moving figure.
Only those who have seen the
Queen at close range realize how
petite she is and how small her
waist.
As many of those thousands
of people who flock to see the
Queen only see her head even
when she stands up in the limou-
sine as she has been doing in her
Indian tour her hats are most
important.
The Queen chose quite frivo-
lous models of petals and flowers
in pale colors. These sat high on
her head and held their own
against a background of mag-
nificent bright turbans worn by
the Ltdians. Many of the Queen's
hats are made by Claude St. Cyr,
of Paris, who has a London salon
on the ground floor of Mr. Hart-
nell's house.
Queen Elizabeth's relaxed and
simple manner makes a fitting
at Buckingham Palace an enjoy-
able session. Often she keeps the
company laughing at her amus-
ing remarks. She herself clear-
ly enjoys every minute of plan-
ning and fitting. Those who
serve her experience a charming
relaxed gaiety and are warned
by a sweet smile which is neces-
sarily missing from solemn pub-
lic appearances.
Highway planning somehow
devises new and wider highways
funneling into cities that had too
much automobile traffic ten
years ago.
DAWKINS SCORES WITH CUPID — Peter Dawkins, West Point
AIi American who won fame as rugby player in England, an-
nounced his- engagement to Judi Wright, with whom he is
shown here,
THE GOVERNOR'S GIRLS -- Janet, left, and Kay We!sh are
twin daughters of Matthew Welsh, Democratic governcr of
Indiana, The 18 -year-old girls are freshmen at Indiana Uni-
versity. That's the family Bible they're cradling.
4.0
f�.i, N� i1
1 ` ". rIJ'/ /rX;;'
HKONICL
161NGERFARM
Friday, March 3, was a record
day in Ontario insofar as warm
air and bright sunshine were
concerned. Partner was out for
a walk late that afternoon and
stopped to talk to a neighbour.
Fred remarked on the lovely
spring-like day. "Yes," agreed
Partner, "but there's rough wea-
ther ahead."
"Rough weather!" repeated
Fred incredulously,
"Yes," answered Partner —
and added "Ever heard of sun -
dogs, Fred?"
"I've heard of them but I can't
say 1 really know what they
are."
"Look over towards the west
and you'll see them."
Fred looked, and there on
either side of the setting sun
were two perpendicular bars of
red -gold light. "Those are sun -
dogs," explained Partner. "When-
ever you see them you may look
for rough weather within about
twenty-four hours."
And we got it — snow and
wind during the night, followed
by rain with the promise of
freezing rain later on , . , and
Chicago got its tornado.
We don't often see sun -dogs
in Ontario. Out west we used to
watch for them. After they ap-
peared many a farmer would
make a hurried trip to town to
get supplies before the weather -
changed. Sctnetimes the change -
might be delayed forty-eight
hours, but it always cane.
Well, I'm glad the weather
stayed fine here until I had my
special little chore accomplished.
That is, getting my new licence
plates for the car. Yes, 1 was
one of the late -getters, not from
choice but necessity. I couldn't
very well get them while 1 was
confined to bed,
I got to our local office about
ten o'clock on the morning of
March 1. The parking lot ac-
commodates about 100 cars. I
drove in and around three times
but never a space could I find,
Finally I double-parked while 1
went to speak to a traffic officer.
"Isn't there ever any let-up
around here?" I asked. Cars
were still rolling In,
"No, ma'am!"
'Then when is the best time to
come — can you tell me that?"
"Eight -thirty in the morning
— that's when we open."
So I came away and went back
next morning, arriving at eight -
twenty -five. Even so there were
nine men nhead of me waiting
on the steps for the doors to
open. I got in the line-up. In
about twenty minutees I was out
again, my precious plates clutch-
ed ,jealousy in my arms. By that
time the office and lobby were
full and all the parking space
taken up again. While waiting
around I noticed the required
proof of insurance often proved
to be a stumbling block. One
man said he was insured but
couldn't find the voucher. "Then
you must pay the extra $5 or
come back with your voucher,"
"If I pay now and find the
voucher later will the money be
refunded?"
"Sorry — no rereed," The
man paid his extra R5,
Two wnmen were filling out
forms for renewal, 0,'e said —
"Heck, I don't know if 1 have
liability insurance!" The other
girl took over the form and fill-
ed in the answers without ask-
ing any questions! I had my in-
surance policy with me as well
as the voucher because last year
our agent hadn't given enough
information and I had to go back
for the policy. This year I came
prepared and sure enough it was
needed, Our agent is going to
hear about that, believe me.
Another thing, next year I'll be
getting my plates the first week
in January as I have done other
years — that is, D,V, and wea-
ther permitting.
What's the sense of putting it
off? One might just as well pay
first as last. Money is just as
hard to find one time as another.
Well, here we go, back to farm
topics, You know, sometimes
when I watch "Country Time"
on TV it almost scares me, The
progress that has taken place
since we were activety engaged
in farming is astounding. Eggs
never touched by human hands
except when taken from the hens
— even that wouldn't be neces-
sary with trap -nests. Suction
cups pick up eggs; conveyor
belts take them from one opera-
tion to another; eggs moved
from hens is pecking plants in
48 hours. It would take a wise
hen these days to know her own
eggs, Efficiency . , , wonderful,
but I wouldn't want it, For the
sheer joy of farming give me
the days when we worked with
<<r biddies like buddies, with
meatus . for those with unusual
characteristics. And they were
never scared when we walked
among them, Thirty years ago
most small flocks had the run of
the farm, laying somewhat strong
flavoured eggs, But oh, the joy
of it when we found a motherly
President's Wife
Digs Up Treasures
Little has been seen of Mrs.
Kennedy during her first month
or moro as a resident of the
White House, but her presence
has been felt in R very positive
Way,
For she Is obviously a rather
positive woman, with a strong
feeling for the artistic fitness of
things, This was apparent al-
most immediately,
Like any wile coming into a
new home, she looked it over
and saw things to be done. First
of all she was struck by the lack
of authentic, period furniture in
the downstairs public rooms.
A quick tour of the White
House brought to light hidden
"treasures" in downstairs rooms
and tucked away in locked cab-
inets. As a result some of these
have been brought forward for
use as public display. She saw
paintings which she felt could
be more prominently displayed
to advantage in other parts of
the house,
Soon the American public
be:::;n to realize that this young
woman with her quiet, almost
shy appearance is a person with
a mind of her own and not
afraid to express it,
Indeed, of all the nation',; First
Ladies, it is doubtful if any has
come into the White House and
given it the imprint of her own
perscnalily in so shoe( a time,
Each First Lady has, in some
way, left her signature there in
some contribution to its historic
mosaic, but this has generally
.come over the course of years,
not weeks, Mrs, .Eisenhower, for
instance, made it her project to
complete the china collection so
that there are now pieces rep-
resenting all first families.
Jacqueline Kennedy plunged
into White IIouse housekeeping
like an art collector into an an-
tique shop. She immediately
came upon a historic desk made
from the timbers of the British
shin Resolute.
The desk was one given to
President Mayes in 1878, and
used by many Presidents since.
But during the remodelling of
the While House in the Truman
administration it was moved
downstairs to what is known as .
the "broadcast room,"
Mrs. Kennedy saw it not, only
as appropriate for the Pr'esident's
office because of its historic
value, but also because of its
connection with the sea. The
President, as a Navy man, had
rcruested her to secure some
paielings of naval battle scenes
fes his office. These she found
among White House art, but the
deo was an unexpected dis•
covert'.
P.'Iany tourists have long ad-
mired the' lovely Howard Chan-
-dirt Christie portrait ot Mrs.
C:'tivin Coolidge on (he grcund
floor corridor. So did Mrs, Ken-
nedy, and promptly had it hung
in tr}e m're elegant setting,, of
the ]'gid Ream.
Most significant cf all, per-
haps, is her conclusion that
somcthine should be done to
remert,• the lack of authentic
period furniture in the first floor
rooms—that is, the East Room,
the Red, Blue, and Green Rooms,
and the State Dining Room,
Mrs. Keenec►y was by no
means the first to note the un-
fortunate contrast between the
beauty of these rooms and the
hen venturing forth with a clutch
of fluffy chicks hatched in a nest
the had stoien away in a dark
corner. of bite 1:arn. Those were
the days when, even if farming
methods lacked efficiency, there
was colour and charm that pro-.
vided a tremendously satisfying
way of life,
rail cr ern: ,i tt 1
flan, 'ihis i;'.t: ic: n c;cplored ht''
visitors and 1, - 1 r;:vious admin-
istrations, t••ril. ; Josephine Jtilr
ley in the Christian Science
Monitor.
Now the present First Lady 1
has taken the initiative toward
remedying this deficiency. She
has been in close touch with the
Fine Arts Commission in alt ot
her thinking about White House
changes, and out of this develop-
ed the appointment of a com-
mittee of the Fine Arts Commis-
sion which had just been given
the task of locating authentic
furniture of the period — and
then more important—of raising
the funds to purchase these
items,
Modern Etiquette
By Anne /'shley
Q. Is a hostess obligated (o rise
and gree( each newcomer to her
home?
A. Most certainly. A hostess
who does not do so is rude and
inhospitable.
Q. What do you do when you
have accidentally taken some
"foreign matter" into your
month at the dinner table —
stones, fish tones, and such?
Are these removed with the
fork?
A. No, do not use the fork
These foreign bodies are remov-
ed with the thumb and fore•
finger, and (;laced on the edge
of the plate. -
For Year 'Round
1 � - ••
It/ Lawka 1W6Qr
868
Daughter 1 :.,; so pretty he
this whirl -skirted dress, Colorful
embroidery trims neck.
A practical juniper! Can be
worn with blouse — without, it's
a summer dress. Pattern 86(k
only the jumper pattern:.sizes 2,
4, 6, 8 included; transfer.
Send TIIIR'F'Y-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for s'sfety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1,
123 Eighteenth SL, Nsw Toronto,
Ont, Print plainly t'.1"1'lItN
NUtlii3ER, your N.1`1E and AD-
DRESS,
JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send
now for cur exciting, new 1961
Needlecraft Catalog, Over 125
designs to crochet, knit, sew, em-
broider, quilt, weave — fashions,
homefurnishings, toys, gifts, ba-
zaar hits, Plus FREE — insl'ue-
tions for six smart veil caps. Hur-
ry, send 250 now!
C,.;:NG5 IN 11'IE ART WORLD — Come international cries, economic recession and co d war
ten::ons the art wort.: continues to spin at Us own pace. In Copenhagen, Danish au horess
Isuk Denesen, left, examines a statue of herself completed by U.S. sculptor Emile Norman.
At an artists' boll in St. Louis, Lee Pope, center, shows up as a living mosaic. And in Paris,
F,c.t.:e, the r ,nb'ence is noted between Annabel Buffet and the painting of her created by
her ce!abruted I usband, 8• rmrd,
Bookshop Small
But World Famous
Longing to meet "the, great Mr,
Samuel Johnson," a literary lion
hunter named Janies Boswell
finally bagged his prey in Toni
Davies' London bookshop, Ever
since the days of that historic
meeting in 17(33, the pnenome►I-
on of the bookstore -salon — the
place where writing men can
be encountered not only in print
but in person — has had some
kind of spotty survival some-
where. Probably the nearest
thing to this which Uhe U.S. af-
fords today is a narrow, step-
down grotto in New York City's
West 40's where Frances Stetoff,
74 — a white-haired lady in a
eiust smock — runs the Gotham
Book Mart.
!fere, on a winter's evening
not long ago, Brendan Behan
hustled in from an. insipidly
canoe appearance on the Jack
Paar Show to address a meeting
of Miss Steloff's James Joyce
Society in the Book Mart's back
room. On the air, Paar had made
a sneering reference to the
probable dullness of the book-
worms' get-together. Paar should
Leve gone along, Taking in a
lrrv.c'y whiff of the Book Mart's
atmospheric dust, Behan plung-
ed into a "J'yce lecture" — full
of anecdote, song, and ribaldry
— which packed enough enter-
tainment value to keep Paar
hi business for the next year.
The Gotham is a bottomless
fountainhead for name dropping,'
Martha Graham — empress of
the modern dance — has helped
wrap packages there during the
Christmas rush (out of abiding
gratitude because the Book Mart
underwrote her first concert).
Theodore Dreiser and H. L. Men-
eken, full of good German beer,
once dropped in of an afternoon
and created a bibliophile's treas-
ure as a tipsy prank. Asked for
an autograph by a customer,
Mencken seized a finely bound
Bible and signed it as author,
with Dreiser countersigning as
"his disciple." (The book wound
up in the famous Adolph Lewi-
fb'hn collection,)
Moat of the excitement which
the Gotham holds, however, is a
radiation of Miss Shelaff's own
feeling for her books. This is a
love affair which goes back to
1907, a year when she thought
she had reached felicity's pin-
nacle because a Brooklyn de-
partment store pulled her out
of the egrset department and let
her sell books during the Christ-
mas season — at a princely wage
of $7 a week.
Later jobs in bookstores kept
her close to the objects she lov-
ed, but far removed from pros-
perity, "For years," she said, "I
never allowed myself more than
15 cents for lunch — wheatcakes
and hot chocolate at Childs
would fill me up the best," One
Clay in 1920, she spied a space -
for -rent sign in a brownstone
basement, "I looked at that ht-
tle room with the marble fire-
place," she said, "and my spine
lit up. 1 thought, what a lovely
little place for the bookshop
I've always wanted!" It was $75
a month, and she only had $100
to her name, but she rented it,
and made a ge of it.
Nowadays, the catalog of the
Gotham Book Mart (still dint and
Dickensian, though in different
quarters) circulates worldwide,
and visitors from as far away as
New Zealand sometimes enter
the shop with a pilgrim air.
"You don't grow rich as a book. -
miler," Miss Steloff said, "but
you make it up in the doctor's
bills you don't have to pay. The
only sad thought I have is that,
probably within a generation,
bookstores like this will have
ceased to exist, All you'll have is
self-service supermarkets for
pr,perbacks," From NEWSWEEK
We understand tax instructors
have been asked to treat tax-
payers with courtesy e v e n
though the customer isn't neces-
sarily, right.
ATTENTION -GETTER— Ira Schul-
man, unemployed salesman,
dramatizes his job hunt with
a donkey ride down Broad-
. way in New York, Schulman,
23, said he just wanted to
draw attention to his plight.
When Sheer Courage
Retained A Title
Some of the most memorable
battles in the long history of the
prize -ring have been produced by
boxing's Middleweight division,
the 160-1b, class. This division has
bestowed its crown on some of
the most courageous warriors the
game has ever known.
Such a warrior was a seeming-
ly mild-mannered chap, born
Anthony Florian Zaleski In Gary,
Indiana, who became known to
the boxing world as Tony Zaic—
"The Man of Steel."
Though a'1ready a champion
and a veteran performer, Zale
zoomed to true prominence and
a place in history in his. three -
bout series of heart -stoppers with
New York's brawling Rocky
Graziano back in the late Forties,
It was in the first of these
epics, at New York's Yankee Sta-
dium on Sept. 27, 1946, that Zale
really demonstrated what the
world "Courage" means.
Tony was a 31 -year-old, ring
rusty and utterly stale middle-
weight champion, who sat in his
corner under the glare of the
stadium lights that night, wait-
ing to snake the first defense of
the title he'd won from stylish
Georgie Abrams five years
earlier. The 1941 attack on Pearl
Harbor had come just nine days
after he'd been crowned king of
his division, and Zale had seen
his peak fighting years drift by
in four years of war with the
Navy. Now, with the added years
and the slowed down reflexes
that went with them, he found
himself facing Rocky Graziano,
a man younger, better condition-
ed, and possessor of such destruc-
tive punching power (.hat he was
the new terror of the middle-
weight clASS,
While Tony had been gather-
ing dust on the ring shelf, Grazi-
ano hadn't. In •fact. so spectacu-
lar had been Rocicy's rise, that his
bombshell punching had all but
obscured the fact that Zale had
once been known for his thun-
der -punching too. Regarding the
titleholder as champion in name
only, the odds -makers had in-
stalled the Rock as a 3-1 favorite
in the pre -fight betting.
As many another veteran
fighter has tried to do before and
ince, when faced with younger,
stronger opposition, Zale gam-
bled on ending it in a hurry.
Scarcely had the opening bell
sent thele on their way. than
(fir.;
MODERN OUTRIGGER — For the sportsman who likes his
canoeing but not the chance of a sudden swim, these remov-
able aluminum pontoons have been designed.
'Pony 11011krd a lel% _honk that
(lunnp111 dm surprised Graziano
on the deck, Shocked but unhurt,
Rocky leaped to his feet and or-
gan pouring ll non-stop volley
of punches into Zale, that had
hint dazed, bloody and battered
before the round was half over.
Zale took the barrage standing
up, In refusing to fall under the
onslaught he only succeeded in
infuriating the challenger fur-
ther.
Graziano lashed the champion,
Finally Zale crumpled — but the
bell saved him from being count-
ed out, writes Gil Smith in The
Police Gazette.
Dragged to his corner, 'Pony
only had time to recover a frac-
tion of his strength in the min-
ute between rounds. Still dazed,
he stumbled out to be a target
for another savage battering in
the second round. He scented un-
able to hit back with anything
more than an occasional left, But
while he reeled under the Rock's
hammer blows, he stayed grimly
on his feet, Through the third,
fourth and f if t h punishing
rounds, Zale faltered badly at
times 'but refused to go down.
Graziano's inability to topple the
wreck in front of him, had the
crowd roaring. By the end of
the fifth the challenger was be-
coming arni weary and Znle's
incredible courage was on its
way to becoming a legend
There was nothing in the first
half of the bruising sixth to in-
dicate that disaster was stalking
Rocky Graziano. Zale, the tired
old champion, was still in his
ha tcrouch, shouldering his way
forward into the path of further
barrages. IIe was 1 o o k i nig
through his puffed eyes for a
sign of an opening. As they
reached the halfway 1n a r k
through the sixth, Tony saw it!
Tensing, but keeping his bat-
tered face expressionless lest it
betray what his eyes had noted,
Zale shuffled just a little closer,
He moved his left within range.
Then he sent a ripping hook to
Ricky's midsection,
The punch buried itself into
the challenger's stomach. Graz-
iano halted, shuddered, and sank
cross-legged to the canvas, He
smiled emptily as he listened to
referee Ruby Goldstein toll off
the count. He was on his haun-
ches, still listening when Gold-
stein shouted "Ten!" The Instant
Ruby said it, Graziano stood up.
He made an effort to resume tht
action, But the referee waved
him away. The fight was over,
and the middleweight crown still
rested on the battered head of
Tony Zale,
The sudden ending touched off
one of the wildest scenes in the
history of Yankee Stadium, The
time of the knockout was 1:43
of the sixth. While a thoroughly
distraught but perfectly unmark-
ed loser made his way to the
dressing room, they raised the
hand of a smiling but lump -
faced Tony Zale who resembled
a man who had been beaten to
a bloody pulp with a club
So tired that he could scarcely
stay erect without the full sup-
port of his handlers, Zale had
one significant footnote to add to
the night's story when interview-
ed in his dressing room. He said:
"1 might have stopped him
earlier. 'Cept 1 fractured my
right hand in the second round."
And with that kind of courage,
quiet -spoken Tcny Zale added
another page to the memorable
history of the 160 -pound division.
Canadians Work In
Kipling Country
The border tribesmen of ICIO-
lung's breeehbolt-snicking time
would be amazed if they could
come back to witness a ceremony
today in their wild, rocky land.
At a spot a score of smiles out
from Peshawar, near the mouth
of the Khyber Pass, President
Mohammed Ayub Khan of Paki-
stan (himself a Pathan) is dedi-
cating the Warsa.k hydroelectric
project, the biggest construction
work to date in Pakistan's thir-
teen -year history.
Pakistan could not have done
this $773 -million job alone. it is
a joint enterprise, with Canada.
For five years, teams of Cana-
dian engineers have worked out
of Peshawar, and later on the
site itself, living in part on the
foods of the country (buffalo
%'utter, okra and black-eyed peas
among them) as participants in
the Colombo Plan. Perhaps be-
cause it is little -publicized and
so docs not get much involved
in international politics, the Co-
lombo Plan is an effective c;r-
ganization, 1ltarsal( is one of its
monuments. — 13altimo'c Sun
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. HOW can 1 clean (he ver-
tical tube of a coffee percolator?
A, One way is to rout a pipe
cleaner through it, Or, fill the
percolator with water, acid four
tablespoons of salt, put the tube
into this, and let it perk for 10
or 15 minutes, If this should
dull the luster of the percola-
tor, restcre it by boiling vine-
gar in it, er water with pieces
or roti lemon.
- - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -
AGENTS WANTED
IF you are Interested In selling two
profitable lines, "Viking" cream sepal..
ators and "Viking" milkers, suspended
and floor types, as Local Agent, we
have some territories vacant In Ontario
and Quebec, Write today for full de•
tolls to: Swedish Separator Co Limited,
720 Notre Dunne S1. West, Montreal (3).
P.Q.
BABY CHICKS
01(DE1t ently to ensure delivery when
required -- dray hatching to order, also
some dayolds and started, prompt ship.
meat, Anus !n•Cross and other breeds
started pullets, to 16 week-old. Book
MayJune broilers now. Sec local agent,
or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North,
Hamilton, Ont,
BERRY & ROOT PLANTS
ONTARIO'S LARGEST
STRAWBERRY GROWERS
ALL COMMEiICIAL VARIETIES
12 MILLION PLANTS
Returns of up to $2,500 per ;acre under
our new growing system.
For complete Information and price
list, write:
11,11,F, BOSTON BERRY FARMS (REG,)
11.R, No. 1, WiLSONVILLE, ON'T'ARIO
PHONE: WATERFORD HICKORY 3.5807
BULBS
GLADIOLUS Bulbs treated, ready for
planting. Large 11i to 2 Inches diam-
eter - $3,50, Jumbo 2 Inches up -
$4.00 hundred, Post paid, William Bart-
ley, Waterdown, Ontario,
ONION SETS
1st CLASS government Inspected. Size
• is, produce very uniform Onions
without seed stalks. Price at request.
State quantity. Newhouse specializing
in Sets
NEWHOUSE
RR2 Niagara on the Lake
BUILD -IT -YOURSELF
BUILD Electric Pin -Ball Game, 20" x
30" x 46" high. Wonderful project for
all. Easy simplified plans $2.00. Alaz-
zola, 345 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn 38,
New fork.
MAKE Penguin Boat, Water, ice, Snoo'
Power, Trailer Top. Complete less
than $195,00. Instructions 53.00, Syl-
vester McKee Engineering, P.O. Box
247, Burlington, Wisconsin.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
COMPLETE cement block manufactur-
ing plant for vibrated steam cured
blocics. Close to new hydro atomic en-
ergy project, full price $10,000. Apply
William H. Itoos, P1. Elgin, Ont, Phone
136•W,
RESTAURANT -service station, highway
11, south of Gravenhurst, both fully
equipped, doing good business, Low
down payment, balance open mortgage.
Apply
. Walby Motors, Kllworthy, Mus -
SHOE STORE FOR SALE
FAMILY shoo store established in 1884.
Clean saleable stock at much below
cost price. The building, 17' by 65', Is
yours free if you buy the lot for
$1800,00 end the stock.
OWNER WISHES TO RETIRE
CONTACT SHAW'S SHOE SHOP
CALEDONIA, ONT.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT
Save On Milker Repairs
Inflations, milk and air tubes, and
gaskets. For all snakes of milkers. Most
pulsators repaired. Loomis & Loomis,
Port McNlcoll, Ont,
FARMS FOR SALE
GALT district, 100 acre dairy and
poultry farm, close to paved road and
village, New stuunchlons and box stalls,
accommodation and equipment (If de-
sired) for 8,300 broilers. Completely
modernized 8 roomed stonehouse, This
Is an outstanding property for general
funning, poultryman or country home,
Asking price is $25,000 with suhstan-
llal down payment, Contact Lloyd
Brown, R,R, No, 2, Gait, Phone 621-9200.
Associate Clayton G. Nogg limited,
Galt.
FARM HELP WANTED
'17101IOUGHLY reliable couple, mid-
dle-aged or even partly retired for
gentleman's farnn near Toronto, Man
with dairy experience, preferably some
gardening. 1Vife to help on week -ends.
For appointment write or call Frank
Veltenheimer, manager, Cyprus 6-1318,
Klehnbnrg.
FARM EQUIPMENT —
20 CAN Woods bulk cooler, chore -
boy milking machine, John Gibson, (tat 2
Caledonia, 110. 5-2172.
MYERS power take -off Orchard Sprayer
with rocker boom, 200 gal, tank, 20
gal. per minute pump. Bought new,
used two seasons. Farm sold, Sprayer
can be bought at big discount, P. C.
Wells, R. 3, 'I'hedford, Ontario,
WE have developed a farm wagon that
has proven to be reliable for forage
racks and bale hauling, Its main feat-
ures are a very good steering for short
turning and high speed no sway trail -
Ing. For illustrated folder write Horst
Welding, 11R No. 3, Elmira, Ontario.
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
FOR sale: Sawyer Massey Threshing
Machine with straw shredder and long
feeder, also one 1.11.C. grain binder,
both In good condition. Apply J. M.
Laird, Norwich, Ont, Phone Norwich
286.1V-1,
NEW Holland Crop -Chopper, Model 33,
used one season. John Deere Cultivator
Model CC -147, used one season, 28''
1.11, Thresher, completely equipped.
Used four seasons. Contact G. Ferguson,
1298 Tepper Road, Burlington, Ontario.
NE, 4-0712.
490 1.C. W/12" John Deere Tractor,
all purpose grousers direction reverser,
lights, bottom plate, key switch, rain
cep and shield; 831 Crawler loader
11'/02" bucket & teeth, counterweights,
purchased new July, 1960 for .$8000.00;
1954 (lodge 3 ton (lump truck E' license;
Low bed machinery float, total price
for all equipment $7,000.01) tnav be
financed, must be sold to wind up
estate. Box 188, Port Perry, ('bone
Yukon 5.7931,
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
('AN.11)IAN exclusive available, patent-
ed wave and curl comb, ranted by
every %%onion A proven Si mail order
Item in U.S, Wate Royal Seo) Water.
bury, Conn.
KEEN RAZOR BLADES, four to seven
smooth shoves guaranteed; Nee Nam
pies. Order direct, 411 blades $1. Agents
wanted. Lloyd Jaeger Co., 12111V Rex•
borough West, 'Toronto.
QUILT PATCHES
ASSOit'1'E1) Broadcloth, plain and print-
ed, 3 lbs. $1.119. Special, smaller pieces,
4 Ib.s, 51.90. Assorted Flannelette, 3 lbs,
$1.49. Quilt Designs - set of 16 504
Drapery:- (letter quality assorted mill
ends, 1 •3 yards lengths, 44 inches wide
-- 5 lbs. 57.98; pieces for cushions, 2
lbs. $1.90. Postage paid, refund. Gordon
Pollan, 411 Abell St., 'Toronto 3
^!
CHEQUE protector - recently over.
hauled $30.00, '1' II, Graham, 296a Glen.
forest (toad, 'Toronto 12, Ont. IiU.
7.2245
PHONOGRAPH
RECORDS
V'E are Canada's mall order head;•
quarters for all types of records, popu•
lar, classical, folk, foreign language,
country and western _ we have them
all! Snfe delivery positively guaranteed.
Send 25 cents In coin or stamps to•day
for our up•to-dale catalogue. Bob
Destry's Music Centre, Box 797, Mont-
real, P.Q. Please enclose this ad when
ordering.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
FOR sale, trade on good car, 'Perms.
section with buildings. Information
on request, Mike Hanus, (0- •• .Ira,
Manitoba.
HORSES
QUAIt'l'l:R horse consignment sale, De -
troll, Mich., April 8. State Fairgrounds,
Write: Lecic)) and McKinley. Fenton,
Mich.
INSTRUCTION
EARN Morel Bookkeeping, Salesman-
ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les-
sons 504, Ask for free circular No. 33.
Canadian Correspondence Courses. 1290
Bay Street, Toronto,
MEDICAL
A TRIAL - EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH( tho torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you. Itching scalding and burning ecze-
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free en Receipt of Pries
PRICE 53,50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1545 sr. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
MISCELLANEOUS
SEND wallet size photo, card, license,
sealed,ln plastic 50, 3--$1.00, Other bar-
gains, catalog. Agents wanted, profit-
able, Gallardo R.F.D. No. 2, Box 42•A,
Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico,
MONEY TO LOAN
3IOR'1'GAGE Loans. Funds available on
suitable farms, hornes, stores, apart-
ments, hotels, motels. Pleasant, coup.
(colts service. For information write,
phone, or drop In, United County In-
vestments Ltd„ 3645 Bathurst St., Tor-
onto 19, Ont, RU. 9.2125.
loans—Mortgages
FIRST and second long and short term
loans and mortgages from 56,000 up on
business stock, machinery, light or
heavy equipment, contracts, and ac-
counts receivable factoring or pur-
chaser. Capital for new businesses or
recapitalize present, Complete (inane -
Ing of motels, hotels, hospitals, medi-
cal clinics factories, office buildings,connnercial buildings a n d develop-
ments. Bank loans on time deposits or
compensating balance, Interim funds
on all projects and construction, lease
back on all types commercial hulldings
and motels. For financing let its assist
you. For appolnttnent call Commer-
cial Loan Department Investment Dis•
count Corporation, 10906 Gratiot Ave.,
Detroit 13, Mich. Phone DR, 1.8915 or
DR. 1.9650.
NURSING HOMES FOR SALE
NURSING home, licensed for 9 patients,
fully equipped, In residential district.
Apply to 68 Gladstone Ave. St. Thomas
Ont., or phone ME. 1.9301, No real
estate dealers.
Palmerston Seniors Home
Equiped with Niagara Therapy
See for yourself - the price Is right.
Licensed for ten guests, Rates $100.00
to $150,00 per month. Large solid brick
modernized home, double garage, huge
treed corner lot, Complete with furni-
ture etc. Owner has purchased, another
business. Write or phone now: Pal-
merston, Box 195 or phone 491. Ilurry,
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchasing Nutria consider the
following points which this organize -
Hon offers:
1.- The best available stock, no cross•
bred or standard types recommended.
2.- The reputation of a plan which Is
proving itself substantiated by files of
satisfied ranchers.
3,_Full Insurance against replace•
ment, should they not live or In the
event of sterility (all fully explained
In our certificate of merit,)
4. We give you only mutations which
are In demand for fur garments
5. You receive from this organization
a guaranteed pelt market In writing.
6, Membership In o u r exclusive
breeders' association, whereby only
purchnsers of this stock may partici
pate In the benefits so offered
7. Prices for Breeding Stock stud at
$200, a pair
Special offer to those who quality
earn your Nutrrla on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.
R.R. No. 2, Stouffville, Ontario
REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate openings for General Duty
Nurses In a 20 -bed private hospital
located in a modern Pulp Mill town
in Northwestern Ontario. Starting
salary 4259.00 per month plus room
and board at no cost, Annual incre-
ments in recognition of satisfactory
services, Accommodation provided In
single rooms In comfortable Nurses'
Residence, Employee benefits include
Group Insurance, Pension Plan, and
11 b e r a I vacation allowance Year-
round recreational facilities, Apply,
stating full particulars of age, es-
perience, availability, etc. to
Box No. 230, 123 -18th Street,
New Toronto, Ont.
OPPOR f UNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; good
%%ages 'Thousands of successful
5larvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St. W„ Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W. Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
GET 8 hours sleep Nervous tension
may cause 75'.b of sickness. Particu-
!arty sleeplessness, jltteryness and Ir
rltability. Sleep calm your nerves with
"Napes", 10 for $1; 50 for $4. Lyon's
Drugs, Dept, 20 471 Danforth, 'Toronto.
HANDWIIi'1'ING analyzed; comp! e t e
analysis by experienced graphologist.
Enclose 51.00 and self-addressed en-
velope to Mrs, H. Ingram, 454 Geneva
St., St. Catharines, Ont.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TES'T'ED, guaranteed, mailed in plain
parcel, including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment. 18 for
51.00 (Finest quality). Western DIstribw
tors, Box 24 -TPF, Regina, Sask,
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT. ONT,
Flims developed and
8 magna prints 404
12 rnagna prints 604
Reprints 54 each.
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 904 (not including
prints Color prints 30e each extra.
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m,m. 20 ex-
posures mounted In slides 31,20 Color
prints from slides 324 each, Money re-
funded In full for unprinted negatives,
ROOFING CONTRACTORS
ATTENTION
Churches, schools homeowners, Hay`
your slate root and metal work checked
and repaired by expert workmen. A
material and workmanship guaranteed,
Free estimates. Call AX, 4.6205. Norm
Mothers, Parkhill, Ont.
STAMPS
A LiMITED supply of genuine "Nova"
world mixture samples still available,
Write for yours today. 254 for postage
'and handling, Jebrnmek, Dept, E, Box
556A, Toronto.
AIRMAILS, animals, birds, flower,,
plus 10 different large U.S. commem-
oratives and 7 lovely Nigerian stamp!.
104 with approvals. Stellar Stamps,
Dept. 5, 23 Scott St., Toronto.
BRITISH Colonial and USA used. Send
204 and 100 different from your du-
plicates and hove me send you an
entirely different assortment of 100
different. Approvals of above at 35
Scotts catalogue. T. 11. Graham, 206a
Glenforest Road, Toronto 12. Ont,
TEACHERS WANTED
OTTAWA
SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD
Requires for September teachers of
regular grades, (tome Economics, In-
dustrinl Arts and Auxiliary classes,
BENEFITS
Physicians' Services incorporated, Cum-
ulative Sick Leave Pion, Teachers'
Credit Union, Modern, well-equipped
schools.
SALARY SCHEDULE
Offered to 'teachers by Board
(September)
First Class Minimum $3000.00
Maximum $4850.00
Second Class Minimum $2700.00
Maximum 59550,00
Allowances: One-half confirmed experi-
ence outside of Ottawa University De-
gree; Special Certificates; $500 for
male married leachers with five years
experience.
Address applications giving qunll'Iea-
tions, experience, name of last inspec-
tor, etc., to
A. Anise's, B.A., F.C,I.S.,
Secretor} -Treasurer,
190 Cumberland St., Ottawa CEO.7475
VEGETABLE SPONGES
GROW 1'et,etablc Sponges! Plant curt-
osi(y. !Matured Trutt list for bathing,
washing or painted into beautiful
flower decorations. Seeds 201'. Zachary,
no\ 4913, Pittsburgh 6, Penna.
ISSUE 12 — 1961
MERRY MENAGERIE
4KM Cwn4w.v
4 r J'f.176IT
"You've got me, pall Even >f'
don't know what T amt" ,
TL' ..1i,12 -POWERED CAR OF THE FUTURE — Lightweight gas -turbine engine and a "decelera-
tion airflap" are novel features of the "Turboflite," Chrysler Corporation's. new experimental
car. The 450 -pound engine produces 140 horsepower and can be operated with unleaded
gasoline, kerosene or jet fuel. The airflap is operated by the driver. Hung between the
rear fender fins, the flapis adjusted to catch the wind end •low the car.
PAGE 8 ME BLYTH STAN�IAR
_ .�..� +y
WTESTr) IED
Mrs, .1, L. McDowell and Gordon, Dir.
and Airs. Norman McDowell, visited
with +11Irs. Mabel Stackhouse and Mrs.
Mac 1Vilson, Brucelield, on Tuesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell were
Clinton visitors on Friday,
Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Behrns and child -
len, of Wroxeter, called on Mrs. J. L.
McDowell and Gordon Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Cook, Sharon
and Janet were in Princeton Tuesday
visiting Mrs. Cook's father, Mr. Bailey.
Mr. 11'm. Elsley, Clinton, visited with
Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gorden on
Saturday.
AIr. and Mrs. Walter Cunningham,
London, visited with 111r, and 11Lrs. Ar-
nold Cook on Sunday.
Farm Forum was held Monday night
at Mr, Gerald McDowell's. The very
interesting subject was purity in food.
This will be the last regular meeting
of the season. Family Night will he
held March 30th, in the Church base-
ment. Visitors will be welcome to heal
Mr. Gordon McGavin.
1Ve are pleased to report Master
1
George Snell was able to return home
from the Ilospital on Friday,
On Frkiay Mr. and Mrs. Bert Vincent
of Belgrave, were the guests of Mrs.
J. L, McDowell and Gordon, Miss Laura Phillips recently recciv-, mother in Ireland this week and was
Messrs. Leslie and Joan Buchanan ed word from a former Aulxu•n woman,: presented with a purse and travelling
were in London on Tuesday. Mrs, William Youngblut, of Armstrong, kit as a token of good wishes from
Mr. and Mrs. Alva McDowell visited B.C. She was formerly Turic Brown, the Guild, Mrs, Meally thanked the
over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. and will be remembered by many in members for remembering her, The
Wnt. Kelly, of Scaforth, this district, During this winter she roll call was answered by "what Lent
Mr, Wm. Walden accompanied Mr. has not been enjoying good health and means to me." The president, Mrs.
and Mrs. Sid McClinchey to Ilensall to her friends here wish her a speedy Thomas Haggitt, presided for the bus -
visit with Mr. and Mrs, Frank Harburn, recovery, mess period, Mrs. Ed. Davies read
on Sunday, and is now visiting with Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell, the minutes and the correspondence.
and Mrs. Harold McCl'utchey and child- Mary and Dianne, attended the fun- The financial statement was given by
ren, of Auburn. eral of the late Mr. Andrew Douglas„ at the treasurer, Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor.
Mr. Orval Tanney, of Blyth, visited Garde, last Saturday, . Mrs. Meally spoke of the improve-
Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Singh, of monis to the kitchen and upstairs of i
Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Alva McDowell, and also Mr. and Mrs. London, visited with her mother, Mrs. the Rectory, and invited the ladies to I
Thomas Biggerstaff, Phyllis- and Bill. Arthur Grange, Margo, Jennifer, and see the work that had been done recent- -
Mr. and Mrs, Peter Keizer, of Tees• Shelly. i ly. A successful auction was held after
Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. James . the meeting, with Mrs, Ed. Davies and
water, visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Dlrs. Peter de Groot and children. Hembly last Sunday were, Mr, and Mr. Meally assisting. Lunch was sere
Mrs. J. S. Brown and family, Mr. and ed by member of the Guild, •
Mrs. Jim Hombly and Mr, Ted Hemb•, Mrs. Charles Straughan is visiting ;
ly, all from Palmerston. I in London with her cousins, Mr, and
Cottage cheese is an uncured cheese Miss Margaret Wright, of Brantford, Mrs. Ed. Ryan,
spent last weekend with Mr, and Mrs.; Miss Frances Houston, , of Lon- i i
made from pasteurized skimmed milk.� � R,N,
It is available dry or creamed and is Robert Arthur and family. ( don, spent a few days last week with
a valuable source of protein. I Mr. Robert Ferris, of Brantford, vis- her parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Hous-
ited Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell ton.
last Saturday evening. Mr, Ferris is) Mr._Charles Beadle, of London, spent'
' principal of a Brantford Township last week end at his home here,
School. Mr. and Mrs, Donald Patterson, of
In Clinton Ilospital Grande Prairie, are visiting at the
Mrs. Mary Daer is a patient in Clin• home .of his nephew, Mr. Oliver An- ;
• ton hospital where she is suffering Berson, Mrs. Anderson and family,
from a fractured bone in her wrist. Mr, and Mrs. John Daer and Robert
While gelling a pail of water at her Daer spent a few days in Mitchell vis-
- = neighbour's, she slipped on the ice on iting with Mr. and Mrs, Ralph Mitchell
Saturday evening. Her friends wish and family, and Mr. and Mrs, Bob
Siler and family•
her a speedy recovery,
-Mr, and Mrs, Gordon R. Taylor spent
last weekend with their daughter, Mrs. WEEKLY FARM REPORT
Ronald Rathwell, Mr. Rathwell and
family, of Owen Sound. ' (by J. Carl Hemingway)
Mrs, Berne Boyd and daughters, The Huron County Federation of Ag -
Joanne and Karen, and Miss Frances riculturc held their regular monthly
Trott, of London, visited for a couple meeting March 14th with president
of days last week with Mr. and Mrs,
AUBURN NEWS
Wednesday, March 22, 1961
.r.~NiAIPMU...NN.,Y.-,'1„•►,r«. l.wNY+• •.+••L .,-,..,►. -
•
BLUE BONNET YELLOW QUICK MARGARINE -_ Roy Eason and Miss Marilyn' Easom. Warren Zurbrigg presiding.
! Mr. and Mrs. Mel Osmond, Ann and ; The president and secretary were
1 lb. pkg. 30c Marilyn of Toronto visited last week- appointed to represent the Federation
PUREX TOILET TISSUE
2 roll pkg.
BICK'S SWEET MIXED PICKLES
15 oz, jar
"THE TEA" by LYON'S
1 pkg. of 60 tea bags 63c
25c
FULL SELECTION OF SEEDS -- BUY EARLY
FROZEN FOOD, COLD MEATS and FRESH
VEGETABLES IN STOCK
For Superior Service
Phone 156
111
IVO
See Fairservice
We Deliver
StewarVs
Red (4 White Food' ' Market
Blyth Phone 9 ; ' We Deliver
ORDER NOW--- A TURKEY FOR EASTER
Arriving Next Week-- Turkey Broilers 4lbs.
8 lbs. per Ib. 49c
Spy Apples 6 qt. bsk. 89c
Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 29c
California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 79c
Florida Grapefruit 10 for 39c
Texas Carrots 3 Ib. bag 25c
No. 1 Cooking Onions 3 lb. poly bag 17c
Fine Quality Tomatoes 2 pkgs. 35c
Large Head Lettuce 2 heads 29c
No. 1 Ontario Potates 50 Ib. bag 1.49
Aylmer Catsup 2 bottles 35c
Fireside Saltine Sodas 4 • 1 lb. pkgs. 99c
Cut Rite Waxed Paper 4 rolls 1.00
King Size Surf per pkg. 95c
Pard Dog Food 10 tins 1.00
White Swan Toilet Tissue , 8 rolls 89c
MEATS AND FROZEN FOODS
Pork Liver per lb. 33c
Lean Hamburg per lb. 49c
Schneider's Large Sausage per Ib. 45c
Special Sliced Back Bacon per lb. 59c
Special Sliced Side Bacon per lb. 49c
Frozen Peas 2 lb. poly bag 49c
Frozen Corn 2 lb. poly bag 53c
Frozen Mixed Vegetables • , , • 2 Ib. poly bag 49c
Ice Cream half gal. pack 79c
Ice Cream, . bricks 25c
10
w.. -Mat. fit "3
_ end with her mother, Mrs William T at the Safety Council for the county.
Robison, and Mr. Robison. On the recommendation of the Fed-
- Mrs, Margaret Arthur is visiting oration Insurance Committee, Mr, Bob
Fed -
=.1 McMillan, Hallett Township, was ad -
23c
with Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Wall and
family, at Langside. ded to the committee.
1 - !Mr, and Mrs: Bert Taylor returned •Mr. Bill Duncan, of Goderich Co-
last week from a three months visit operator's Insurance Supervisor, re-
- .1 last
with their son Mr. Ronald Taylor,'ported that there are now something
Mrs, Taylor and family, at Vancouver, over 4,300 policies in force in the
B.C.county A little over 1,000 new policies
• The Women's Institute catered to the were approved during the past year.
I.ondesboro ladies last week. Miss success of this Co-operative cer-
Edythe Beacom was the guest speaker tainly proves that farmers are capable
and gave an illustrated lecture of her -of providing adequate protection at a
trip to the Canadian West, . reasonable cost in the insurance field
. John Duriiin attended the Conserva• by working together. There is no
- five Convention in Ottawa last week, reason to believe that they would be
-Miss Marlene Easom has commenced any less successful in any other pro -
her duties as Receptionist at the Iluron ject they set their minds to.
County Horne. , For some years now the demands
_ Mrs. John McKnight, Mrs. Lloyd Fen.being made on the Federation have
guson and Mrs, C. Hugill, of Gede ich, been increasing to the point where
visited last Thursday with Alts. ,Baud finances will not permit further ser-
, Fromlln vices. The meeting felt that the para
Mrs, Ed, Davies ret i . ed word last ticipation in the TV and Radio pro -
• Saturday that her b. other, Kenneth grams provides a valuable service.
Monck, of London, is recovering in St. Certainly many farmers have benefit-
= Joseph's hospital after a serious spinal cd through improved compensation
a,: a align, Mi'. Monck has been guest from Hydro, Pipeline and Highway
soloist on several special occasions ieasements as a result of the efforts
in
this villt:oc, and his friends wish himof your organization. Many, too, have
a specJy recovery, found the credit available through your
• Keeping up with the neighbouring township council for tile drainage quite
coinnnunilies the ladies of this district . helpful. Currently the Federation is
_ are enjoying a millinery course. Those making a study of taxation in order;
taking part in this interesting project that a more equitable method may be,
- arc: Mrs, Ed. Davies, Mrs. R. J. Phil -
In
for rural property owners,
lips Mrs. Gordon R Taylor Dors For-
_
In order that these projects may be
dycc Clark, Mrs, Earl Sherwood, Mrs, carried on, along with many more, it
Mrs. was recommended that either the town-
- Gordon Dobie, Mrs, Tom Lawlor, �� �OP
- William Straughan, Diss, George Mil- ship units increase their payments to the county so that it would equal one half
- liars, Mrs. W, T, Robison, Mrs. Lloyd m111 or approach their township team•
•Norman McDowell, Mrs, Arthur - Walden, Mrs. Harvey McDowell, Mrs. cils with a request that the levy be
increased to the one half mill, This
Grange, Mrs. Robert Arthur, Mrs. liar- would increase, the Federation levy by
ry Arthur, Dirs. Cliff Brown, Mrs. Geol.-50 cents on $5,000 assessment.
ge Schneider, Mrs. Worthy Young, 5.0
meeting was turned over briefly
Mrs, Tom Haggitt, Mrs. Bob Gardiner, to Bob McGregor, Zone Director of the
Mrs. Frank Raithby, Mrs. John Dur- Ontario Eeet Producerh ,Association,
- Bin, Dors: Ernest Durnin, Mrs. Bert for the purpose of electing seven ad -
Mrs.
Craig, Mrs . Len Archambault, Mrs. Kirkconncll, Mrs. Bob Turner ditional voting delegates from the
William Archambault, ner Andrew township Beef Producers Directors to Tip Top Choice Peas, 20 oz. 2 for 37c
and Mrs. attend the Zone meeting,
- W, Bradnock, Silly Fancy Cream Style Corn, 20 oz. t. , 2 for 37c
-_ . Mr, Thomas Johnston, Mr, Bob Phil- Mrs, Warren Zurbrigg reported on
the Otario Rural Leadership Forum Campbell's Tomato Soup, 10, oz. 2 for 25c
- lips and Mr. Andrew Kirkconnell, at- � which she attended at Niagara Falls.
tended the official opweek-eening ceremony Shepointed out: that for the past five Campbell's Chicken Vegetable Soup, 10 oz., 2 for 35c
H. London last opened
t itwneenw
the ware-- years here has been an average at- Pride of the Valley Dessert Pears, 20 oz., 6 for 99c
Howden Co. opened their new tendance of 60. This means that there
house. Mr. Johnston was the winner of are some 300 trained rural leaders now
• six lawn chairs and Mr, Kirkconnell
- won six step -ladders, active in Ontario, As the years go
b
Mrs. Thomas Ilaggilt; Mrs. William { these people and those to follow,
will a real contribution to their
make
Riddell and Mrs. George Beadle visited vi1l u kees,
. last Friday with Mrs. Annie Mongk omob McKinley, of Zurich, and Jas,
and her daughter, Mrs, Mildred Wet- Dir,Dunbar, of Wroxeter, were chosen as
11 surer, at Tavistock. I voting delegates to the Ontario Poultry
, Jim 4laggitt, of Tecswato, vis• with Bob Broadfoot
ited several days last week with his producers Annual,
brother, William, and Miss Rose Marie and George Underwood as alternates, -
Haggitt. The meeting ,
appointed the Resolu-
Anglican Guild Dict At Rectory lions Committee as the Committee to
The Anglican Guild of St. 'Mark's bring recommendations for revision I ! Cream Center Chocolates for Easter . • . per lb. 29c
Anglican Church met for it's March of procedure in conducting future Com- =
- meeting at the Rectory in Blyth at the modity Group elections of county coo-, '
home of Mrs, R. Meally. The hostess nnittee men.
presided for the progranm. She chose
the scripture lesson from the twentieth
chapter of St. Luke. Prayers were C,1V.L. MEETING
taken by Mrs. Thomas Haggitt, and The C.W.L. of St. Michael's Church
the chapter from the study book, The
- Turning World was given by Mrs. met on Thursday afternoon at the home -
Robert J. Phillips, Mrs. Meally gave of Mrs. M. Kelly. The president, Mrs. ;4m,
an inspiring message on Lent and
what It means to us. The story J. Martyrs, opened the meoting with the
of ,recitation of the League prayer. The' -
Passion IVeek was read by Mu.
T.; secretary read the minutes of the last per was discussed. Throe sick • calls i A good attendance would be appreciat-
_ Haggitt, and Rev. Meally spoke briefly 'meeting. hue t0 4}te absence of the were reported. Mrs, G. ;tanto and ed for the annual' meeting to be held
of the Lenten Season. Ile urged all to treasurer the financial report was om• Mrs, V. Heffron offered to take the calls on April 10, at the home of Mrs. M.
attend tine special service; in kill, anted. Correspondence was read and for this month.Kelly. Mrs. 0, Cronin and Mrs. J. Mar-
'
Trinity Church during Holy We^h discussed. Business concerning our, The meeting adjourned with hra5'ers, tyn are un the hutch conunlllcc,
i • Mra. AIea11y lb leaving to vi:,lt her ! future babe Sale, and catteriu; ela sup-
MR. EASTER BUNNY SUGGESTS
that you shop around at Philps for those Special
Gifts.
Smiles N'Chuckles Easter Chocolates, 70c to 3.50
Easter Chocolate Novelties 10c to 69c
FOR THAT SPECIAL PERSON --
Cups and Saucers 1.00 to 3.75
Cornflower Candy Dishes, Plates and
Vases
75c to 5.95
Pins, Earrings and Necklaces 1,00 to 5.01)
Toiletries for Men and Women: Old Spice, Yard-
ley's and Evening in Paris.
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B
DRUGS. SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PHONE 70, 13LYTII
I I •
Cars For Sale
1961 FORD Sedan
1960 PONTIAC Coach
1954 FORD Sedan
1950 METEOR
1952 FORD Sedan Deliv.
1952 DODGE Coach
1955 CHEV. Coach
See Other Models Not
Listed
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
"USED T.V. SALE"
STILL ON
WE STILL HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF
RE -CONDITIONED USED TELEVISIONS
1 Used Refrigerator $25.00
1 Used Washer - $25.00
SPECIALS on SEABREEZE RECORD PLAYERS
Automatic and Single Play.
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
L3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Blyth, Ont.
Call 71
1
A
l
at
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
We Deliver Phone 39
"WEEK -END SPE(ALS"
BiMore Peaches, 20 oz. . ' 2 for 47c
Puritan Cooked Ham, one one-half lb. tin . , . 1.39
Sparc Ribs with Dressing- per lb. 45c
Bacon, side per lb. 59c
Cooked Ham per lb. 95c
Cooking Onions per lb. 5c
MacIntosh Apples 2 lbs. 25c
Pink Grapefruit 10 for 35c
RED HOT SPECIAL on BENCH HASSOCKS ---
large size, 24" long, 16" wide, 14" high. As-
sorted colours to choose from. Hurry and get
this beautiful piece of furniture at the low
price of $5.95 with $3.00 order of groceries.
Avoid disappointment for the number is limited