The Blyth Standard, 1961-03-29, Page 1VOLUME 74 - NO, 07
Authorized as second class mall,
Post Office Department, Ottawa,
TELEPHONE AI4NUAL MEETING
VERY POORLY ATTENDED
Municipal Telephone System, held in
the Memorial hall on Saturday after-
noon, March 25th, was noted for the
small number of the 692 subscribers
present,
Chairman Archie Young read the
auditor's report, which was accepted,
Mr, James Phelan, senior commis-
sioner, in his brief address, stated,
"The commissioners have gone ahead
with plans for the conversion of Blyth
System to dial operation, acting on a
decision trade at the 1960 annual meet-
ing.
Commissioner Albert Nesbitt said,
"while he had only been a commission-
er for a few months, having filled a
vacancy on the board, he had dis-
covered there had been a let of extra
work 'and meetings with the conver-
sion of Auburn to dial."
In referring to conversion to dial for
Blyth, lineman Donald Young said,
"rot too much new wiring would be
necessary for dial in the rural areas,"
in reply to questioning, lineman Young
stated, "the tentative and earliest date
for conversion to dial in Blyth would
ARD
BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, l961Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
EASTER SEAL TIREASUR.EIR
REPORTS CAMPAIGN VERY SLOW 1
Mr, R. W. Madill, treasurer of Um
, Blyth Lions Club Easter Seal Cain-
, paign, reports that donations have been
coming in rather slowly this year. ,
! Up until Tuesday of this week only
Will Celebrate 00th Birthday
j Mr. Jacob C. Stoltz, of Auburn, will
celebrate his ninetieth birthday on Ap-
pril 5th at his home.
i A :ariraer all his life, he Was born
at New Dundee and came to this dist-
rict 62 years ago when he married Mar.
;t ret Garland, also of New Dundee.
He Was a successful farmer specializ-
ieg in purebred Shorthorn cattle. They
retired to Au;urn 14 years ago, and
1 enjoys working in the garden and
with flowers.
Ile has been very active in church
and community life, being secretary
of Knox Presbyterian Church for nearly
40 years, and was chcsel a member
of the Session many years ago.
One of a family of eight, he has now
cniy ane brother, William, of Preston,
and a sister, Mrs. Edith Castle, of
Plattsville
Mr. and Mrs. Stoltz enjoy visitors,
sand especially like a game of cards,
along with watching their '1'V shows.
•
be December 1962, and even then the l He was the only sen of Mr, and'Alrs.
amage Estimated At $2,500
In Mullett Township Fire
$322,00 had been received from this
district. Last year the campaign real-
ized a total of over $600,00, approxi-;
mately twice the amount received so
far in the current campaign.
We again remind residents in the
district of the importance of this cam-
paign. All money received will go to
help crippled children, and a great por-
tion will be spent in this area,
The assistance of everyone is needed
to make the campaign a success, and
we feel sure that local residents will
again lend their support to the crippled
children,
i I
OBITUA1tY
THEODORE 0, CIIRISTIANSEN
Mr, Theodore (Ted) Douglas Chris-
tiansen passed away suddenly from the
result of a motorcycle accident on Sat-
urday morning, March 25, 1961. Ile was
a member of Metropolitan Toronto Po.
lice Department.
date would be dependent on the com-
pletion of the trunk lines by Bell Tele-
phone System."
The present commissioners were all
returned to office, namely: Archie
Young, James Phelan and Albert Nes-
bitt.
A vote of confidence was given the
commissioners, the lineman Donald
Young, secretary -treasurer, Mrs. Arn-
old Berihot, and all other employees
of the System.
rollowing the public meeting, the
conmlissioneres met in the telephone
office and again chose Archie Young
as their chairman.
Horticultural Society Ilolds
Enthusiastic Meeting
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Johnston open-
ed their hone Wednesday afternoon for
a meeting of the Blyth Horticultural
Society, when plans were made for a
successful year for the organization.
Mr, and Mrs. Walter Cook were re•
engaged as caretakers of the Horticul•
tut gal Park, street intersections, or' any
other project undertaken by the Soci-
ety.
A Maylime tea and arrangements of
stiasonal flowers was planned, also a
flower show in mid stnner,
The 1960 membership was down
somewhat, but the Society hope the
1961 membership will go over the top.
The hostess served refreshments and
the meeting adjourned to meet again
Saturday, May 27th at the home of Mr.
and Ma's. Clayton Ladd.
AMONG THE CIIURCIIES
Sunday, March 26, 1961
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCiII
Rev. D..1. Lane, B.A., Minister.
1:00 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday
School.
ANGLICAN CIIUItCII OF CANADA
Rev. Robot F. Meally, Rector.
Good Friday and Easter Day
Trinity Church, Blyth. .
Good Friday
8 p.m.—Meditations on the Cross.
( Easter Day
10.30 a.m.—.1-Ioly Communion and
d
Sermon.
St. Mark's, Auburn.
Good Friday
12 o'clock—Meditations on the Cross.
Easter Day
12 o'clock—holy Communion , and
Sermon.
Trinity Church, BelRrave,
Good Friday
2,30 p.m. --Meditations on the Cross.
Easter Day
2,30 pan.—Holy Communion and
Sermon.
THE UNITED CIIURCII
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario,
Rev, R. Evan McLagatl • Minister
Miss Margaret Jackson • Director
of Music.
Easter Sunday
9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church, School,
11,00 a,m.—Morning Worship
Easter Cantata by Jtunior and
Senior Choirs.
Sermon: "Follow Me-'?
CIUJRCII OF GOI)
McCotinett Street, Blyth.
John Donner, Pastor
Phone 185
10.30 a,m.—Sunday School,
11.30 a.m.—Morning Worship.
• 7.30 p.m.—Evening Service,
8.00 p.tn.--Wed., Prayer Service..
8.00 p.m,' Friday, Youth Fellowship.
Confirmation Service I Theodore 0. Christiansen, of 'Toronto,
Observed At Londesboro Iris mother was the former Aiiary I,illle,
sister of Messrs Milton and William•
A confirmation service was observed
in the United Church on Palin Sunday,
March 26th, when 20 young people ad-
herents of Burns and Londesboro, were
confirmed, also four joined by certifi-
cate,
A silver paten was presented to the
church by the Young People and dedi-
cated by the pastor, Rev. henry Funge.
A double quartet gave the anthem,
""Iris Midnight and on Olive's Brow."
A solo, "The Palms," was rendered
Little, of Londesboro.
The funeral was held on Tuesday,
March 28, from the Morningside Pres-
byterian Church, at 1 p.m. Internment
took place at Glendale Memorial Gar-
dens,
AIr. and Airs. Win. Little, Airs. 1\Iilton
Little, of Londesboro, land Mr. Arthur
Waymoulh, of Blyth, attended the fun.
era!,
I by Mrs. Claire Vincent, assisted by ROBERT 1), COLE
the choir,
t Rev. Funge gave an impressive sent
men on "Christ's entry into Je'usa-
Icm,"
Those being confirmed into the
church were: Burns Church, Mr. Robert
Iteid, Mr. Alex AlcEwing, Mr, Trevor i
Moon, Joan Moon,
Londesbcro Church:. Patricia. Burns,
Keith Cartwright, Audrey Duizer, Marg-
e aret IFunking, Arthur Ilgking, Nancy
Johnston, Bonnie Kennedy, Brenda
Kennedy, Nornia McDougall, Robert
Shaddick, Richard Shaddick, John Sun-
dercock, Linda 'Thompson, Lcny Wcst-
erhout, Donald Vincent.
Mrs. Bert Brusdon went ti Ottawa on
By Certificate: Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Livingstone, Mrs, Ilarvey Wells, Airs.
Lloyd Penfound.
WESTFkELD
'191e Belgrave Broomball Team has ,
been quite active this year, and of late;
has entered into several tournaments.
During the season a group of teams
comprised of Brussels, Blyth, James-
town, 8th of Morris, Stone School and
Belgrave, played a home and hone
series with Belgravc aid Brussels tie-
ing for first place.
In a 'tournament played at Belgravc
recently, Bclgnavc lost out in the final
game to Lloyd Doors, of Wingham.
Belgrave also entered the Lake Hur-
on Zone Tournament at Walkerton, and
again lost out to Lloyd Doors in the
finals.
Players front Westfield on the Bel -
grave team are: John, Don and Gerald
McDowell, Garth Walden, Lyle Smith,
Keith Rodger, Roy, Bill and John Bu-
chanan and Fred Armstrong.
CONGZt_V1'1TLATIONS
Best Wishes to Gary Walden, West-
field on his 13th birthday on Friday,
March 30.
Happy birthday to Bonnie Snell,
youngest daughter of Air, and Airs. Al-
vin Snell, Westfield, en her 5th birth-
day Sunday, April 2nd.
Congratulations to Mrs. M. Fritzlcy
who celebrates her birthday 011 Sunday,
April 2nd.
Congratulations to Mrs. It. W. Madill
who celebrates her birthday 011.Tues-
day, April 4th,
Congratulations to Mr, Leslie Garniss
who celebrates his birthday on Tues.
day, April 4th,
Congratulations to John Radioman
who celebrates his birthday on Wed-
nesday, April 5th.
Congratulations to Patsy Dougherty
who celebrated her 10th birthday en
Wednesday, March 291h.
Congratulations to J, C, Bnbcock who
celebrates his birthday on Mach 30.
Congratulations to Mass Ella Metcalfe
who cc:lel:rated her birthday on March
17th.
• Congratulations to Beverley MacDon-
ald whet will celebrate her birthday on
Al:nil 5111.
•
Air. Robert D. Cole passed away in
Toronto General IIospital on Thursday,
March 23rd, in his 79th year, from the
effects of a severe stroke. IIe had been
in ill health for the past year and a half
with a heart condition.
Mr. Cole was born on the 6th line of
Morris, a son of Albert P. Cole and
Isabella IIood: He :farmed in the west
for many years, later coming -to Tor-
onto where he worked in the 'shipping
department of the Gliddon Paint Com.
pany until ill health forced 111111 to re-
tire.
Surviving are his wife, the former.
Rhoda Bell, three sons and one laugh-
ter, Bert at Melfo't, Sask.; Elwood at:
Peterborough; Nelles, and (Phyllis)
Mrs Dr, Lloyd Little, both of Toronto;
three sisters, and two brothers, Mrs.
Brandon, of Frobisher, Sask.; Mary in
London; Mrs. James Michie, of Morris
Township; George and Charles, of Lon-
don.
The funeral service was held on Sat-
urday from the Giffen and Mack fun -
era! home. •
Those attending from here were:
Air. and Mrs, James Michie, Mr,
George Michie, Mrs. Ross Anderson,
Belgrave, Mr. Robert Caultes, 3rd line
of Morris,
Fireside Farm Forum Hold
Final Meeting
On March 27th the Fireside Farm
Fortun held their final meeting for the
season at the home of Mr. and Mrs,
Jim Howatt. "Fourteen adults were
present,
The questionnaire was 'answered and
the following committees' appointed:
cards for the sick, Mrs, Don Buchan•
an; to start Forum in fall, Mrs. I-Iarv-
ey Taylor and Mrs. Oliver Anderson;
reporter to the Seaforth Expositor,
Mrs, Oliver Anderson; for Blyth Stan-
dard and Seaforth News, Mrs, George
Carter; entertainment, Mrs, Bob Dal-
ton, Mrs, Don Buchanan and Mrs.
Hugh Flynn, Airs, Mowatt was re-
appointed president and secylt'eas.
Winners of the few games of pro-
gressive euchre were: most games,
Mrs. Oliver Anderson and Mrs, Bob
Dalton; lone hands, Mrs. George Car
ter and Mrs. Alex Riley; consolation,
Mrs, Bert Ifoggart and Oliver Ander-
son.
A special lunch of sandwiches, pie
and ice cream was served,
•
W. I, TO MEET
The Blyth Women's Institute will hold
their monthly meeting in the Memorial
Hall o1 Thursday, April 6th, at 2.30 p.
n1, Election of Officers. Sunshine Sis-
, tors and members of the Institute will
have a pot luck supe' following the
meeting,
HOLIDAY HOURS AT L('.1I,
POST OFFICE
There will be one hour wicket service
on Good Friday and Easter Monday
from 1.00 p.111. to 2.00 p.m.. Lobby Will
eE.RSON AL INTEREST
Master Stephen ,tones, cf Clinton,
spent the week -cid with his grandpar•
oris, Mr, and Airs. B. Hall.
Mi's. Foster who has been staying
with Mrs. J. Collinson returned to her
hone in Goderich on Monday.
Mrs. John Col:inson is visiting with
her sister, Ahs. Ellie I3ea'nes, of Gode.
rich.
Mrs. Mary Taylor who has spent the
winter months with Mr. and Mrs. Alain•
land Henry returned to her home on
Monday.
Alrs, Edna Cook visited friends in
\Voodstock on 'Tuesday.
Mrs, Alvin Snell and Bonnie, Mrs.
Peter de Groct and Marion, Wes:field,
Air. and Airs. \\'ng. Robison, Auburn,
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook
the rast week.
Mr. Cecil Wheeler returned home on
Saturday ;titer having being a patient
in Galt hospital fcr the last six weeks.
Visitors c\ 01' the week -end with Mrs.
Leonard Cook, and also with Mr. Cook
in Clinton hospital
well, were Dr and
an and Caro,e, cf
i'1rs. Jack Farrow
who is doing very
Mrs. Wa'dlaw, Sus-
l3rantford, Mr. and
and Janie, cf Galt,
?Jr. and Mrs, Robert Finlay, and San-
dra, of Lucknow,
Mrs. Leotard Ccok's brother, of Wa-
wota, Sask-, spent a weak with her.
Mr. \\'nn. Cocke'line was a Toronto
visitor over the week -end.
Air. and Airs. Brock Vodden and Jchn,
cf Niagara Falls, spent the week -end
with their parents, Mr, and Airs. II T.
Vodden, and Alr. and Mrs. Wm. 14orri!l.
Mrs. Afary McElroy spent a few days
with relatives in Seaforth and Mitchell.
Ricky Taman, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Wesley Taman, had his tonsils removed
in Clinton Public IIospital on Wedncs'
day.
Sunday visitors with Mrs, Edythe
Sturgeon and Miss Pearl Gidley were,
Ay; ant M"s. Andrew and daughter,
Freida, of Goderich, Ah', •Russel Gidley
and Mrs. E, Heath, of Toronto.
Mr. and Mrs Carl Cox and Gerald,
of Clinton called on Mrs. K. Whitmore
rand Douglas on Sunday,
.IONS CLUB MEETING
The regular meeting of the Blyth
Lions Club was held last Thursday ev-
ening in the Memorial Hall at 6.30 p.
m. with president, Donald Young, in
charge.
The meeting was opened by singing
"The Queen" and grace by Rev. Robert
Meanly,
A very delicious dinner, served by;
Group 4 of the United Church \V.A.,
was enjoyed, The leader of the group,
Mrs. W. L. Kress, was thanked on be.
half of the Club by Lion Douglas Whit-
TIVENTY•EiGIiT JOIN UNI'T'ED
CHURCH AT SUNDAY SERVICE
Twenty-eight persons were received
as members of the Blyth congregation
v: the United Church of Canada at a
confirmation and reception service
held last Sunday.
Ah'. Millar Richmond, on behalf of
the Se .acn, introduced those received
un profession el faith and certificate
of transfer as follows: Miss Sandra
Bcrlhot, Ivan Balke, Ivan Cook, Ron-
..., 1?Ilictt, Bruce Fear, Wayne rear,
John t, .ibraith, Barry Grant, Gwilym
Griffiths, Terry Madill, Jim Webster,
Hrs. James Cartwright, Mrs. David
' Chalmers, Air. and Arcs Walter Cook.
.lir. and Mrs. Toni Cronin, Miss Isobel
Fox, Mrs Carman MacDonald, Mr.
and firs. Lorne Popp, Mrs. A. II. Rail.
sur 1, Air. land Mrs, Ed. Radford, Mr.
and Mrs. George Radford, Miss Arlene
Richmond, Mrs. Mervin Richmond.
,Each one was presented with 0 Cory
of the Souvenir history of lite congrega-
tion by the Session, and those received
cn rrofession of faith were presented
with a copy of the Catechism of the
Unite;! Church of Canada, the Stat
trent of Faith and a gi.t looklet on
Church Membership.
[CANVASS TO BE HEI.1) IN AUBURN
! A canvass will be held during April
in the Village of Auburn when local
canvassers will be calling on all resi-
dents for their donation to the Canadian
Cancer Society,
All Auburn money will he separate
I from other donations and will be credit-
ed to the residents of that village.
—Wni. Gow, Auburn Chairman.
—Wm. 1Io'rill, Qampaign Chairman.
FIRE DEPARTMENT EXTINGUISHES
GRASS FIRE
The Blyth Fire Department was cal-
led to Londes,aoro an Monday to extin-
guish a grass fire in a field just south
of the village, owned by Air. Clare
Vincent.
A Department of highways survey
; crew working near the field, made an
effort to control the fire but were final-
ly forced to phone the Fire Brigade.
more,
The business hart of the meeting was
opened with the reading of the minutes
by the secretary, Lion Robert Wally,
I The Club voted a donation cf $25.00
to the Retarded Children's School at
Wingham,
(Lion Russell Granger, of Zurich, De.
puty Governor of District A 9, was pre.
sent and talked over several matters
with the Club
The sleeting gt,as closed with the
"Roar,"
School Board Meeting
The regular meeting of the Blyth Pu-
! blic School Board was held on Monday
evening, March 27th, at 8:30 o'clock.
Trustees Webster, Madill, Young, Stew-
art and Street, were present.
A motion was made by Trustee Street,
seconded by 'Trustee Stewart, that the
minutes of the previous meeting be ad-
opted as read, Carried.
• Mr, Higgins, reported the percentage
;attendance fcr Februay was 94,23, and
the enrollment 149.
It was noted that the Kindergarten
room (Mrs. K. Marshall, teacher)
would be the recipient of the cash prize
offered by the Board to the room with
the greatest parent attendance at Par-
ents Nita at the school which was held
on March 8th...
A motion was' •'made by Trustee
Young, seconded by Trustee Madill,
that a Canada Year Book be purchas-
ed. Carried.
The Inspector's report was presented
by the secretary land a discussion of
teacher's salaries followed.
The following accounts were ordered
paid on motion by Trustee Madill, sec-
onded by 'Trustee Young. Carried,
'tele Bone, $36,00; Spariing's
lla:c:ware, 51,19; Blyth hydro, 22.50;
Garnet E. rattier, 20.00; E. Scrim-
geour, 2.50; Superior Food Market,
17,00; B, Hall, 93.50; Educator Supplies
19.35: Elliott Insurance Agency, 236.74.
Adjournment was moved by 'Trustee
be open frons 0 a,nn, until 6 p.111, 1 Madill.
LONG LOST PARCEL FOUND
While workmen were ripping out par-
titions and floors in the old post office
in Goderich, they found a parcel mailed
cn June 2, 1912, which appeared to be
misplaced and never reached its des-
tination.
The parcel was addressed to "Miss
Ada Johnston, Ihincks Street, Goderich,
and contained a small signet ring, pre-,
miuni in a Comfort soap coupon savings
contest.
Town officials said the long lost par-
cel will be delivered to "Miss Johns-
ton" if she can be located.
CHIMNEY FIRE ON WEDNESDAY
NIGIIT
The Blyth Fire Department was cal-
led out on Wednesday night for the
third time this week, when the chim-
ney on the farm home of Mr, and Mrs.
Major Youngblut, on the County Road
between Auburn and Blyth, caught fire
When the brigade arrived, flanges
could be scot flaying out the top of
1110 chimney, and the accompanying
sparks proved a serious threat to the
roof of the house. However, prompt
and efficient action by all parties in-
volved eliminated serious damage and
prevented what could have been a very
serious (fire,
HURON BRIDGE MAY BE COMPLET•
I ED AHEAD OF SCHEDULE
The new $1,000,000 bridge over the
Maitland River at Saltford, may he
open by September 151h of this year,
several months ahead of the scheduled
completion date.
Work on the concrete and steel span
is now at least two months ahead of
previous plans,
Excellent weather conditions and the'
winter works program is responsible I
for the cagy condition dale.
Mr. Larry Walsh, of GO, spent the
week -end with his parents, lir. and
Airs. Ben Walsh. I'O!l:ltd
I Prompt action by the Blyth Fire De-
partment, and an ample supply of wal.-
cr, were instrumental in saving the
farm honk of Air. and Mrs. Charles
Bromley and family, lath concession
c: Mullett Township, on Wednesday
afternoon.
When the fire truck arrived the flan•
CS had broken through the outer wail
on the north side of the frame house.
Two lines of hose were connected and
quickly put into action, one at the end
cf the building and one on the roof.
It was immediately seen that the
Frames had reached such intensity as
to render the 500 gallon. water supply
on the fire truck incapable of extin-
guishing the fire. Firemen commenced
to hook up the auxillia'y pump into a
well on the farm, but the water level
was too low to be of use. The pump
was then taken to a small' creek run-
ning through the fang .and relayed wa-
ter back to the lank on the truck, With-
out this water supply, firemen could
only have stood by helplessly after the
truck supply had been expended.
lhe fire is thought to have originated
from the chimney, which had been on
fire earlier in the day. It is expected a
spark had been left smouldering and
broke into flames shortly after noon.
The flames were confined mostly to
the north cent of the dwelling, and
damage was mostly to the roof and
end wall with heavy water damage to
the lower portion of the house. 'Total
damage as estimated by Fire Chief Ir-
vin Bowes at $2,500.
BIRTHS
KECiiNIE—Barbara and Glenn Kechnie
announce the birth of their daughter,
Elizabeth Susan, on Friday, March 24,
1961, in Clinton Public Hospital.
CA'LPBELL—ht Clinton Public hospital
en Wednesday, March 22, 1961, to
,Mr, and Airs. William Campbell, the
gift c: a son, Curtis William, a broth-
er for Lorie.
RACINE—In Grace hospital, Windsor,
on Wednesday, March 22, 1961, to Mr.
and' Mrs. Leo Racine, of Anmhcrt-
sburg, twins, ra son and daughter,
a brother and sister for John, Doug,
Brenda and Paul.
CELEBRATED 38tH WEDDING
ANNIVERSARY
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Nel-
son Lear, of Londesboro, who celebrat-
ed their 38th wedding anniversary on
Wednesday, March 291)1.
Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Chellew entertain-
ed at a dinner in honor of Mr. and MI's.
Lear.
Those attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Lear, Mrs. Ab. 'Taylor and Mr. and
Mrs, M. Martin, of Goderich, Mr, and
Mrs. George Underwood and children,
of \\'iinglyim, Miss Doris Lear and Miss
Fran Johnston, of Hamilton.
Mr, and Mrs, Wilbur Welsh of Clin-
ton, visited with Mrs. Kenneth Whit-
more and Douglas on Wednesday ev-
ening.
DR. ALEXANDER NIMMO FORMER
MODERATOR DIES
Dr. Alexander Ninuno, minister of
St, Andrew's Presbyterian Church, of
Wingham, and a former moderator of
the Presbyterial Church in Canada,
died suddenly Tuesday night of a heart
attack. Ile was 67,
Dr, Ninuno suffered the attack while
driving his car on Highway 7 east of
Georgetoglm.
Dr. Ninuno had been visiting friends
in Toronto and was returning to Acton
where he was conducting Holy Week
services. I-Iis wife was with him In
the car and she managed to bring the
car to a safe stop.
Born In Northern Ireland, he immi-
grated to Canada in 1925 and has been
minister at Wingham about 16 years.
In June of 1959 Ile was elected moder-
ator of the Presbyterian Church in
Canada. lie held this post for one year.
lie sutifered a heart seizure about
two years ago and was confined to
hospital for some time, After his re-
covery he resumed his duties as mini-
ster at the Wingham church.
Dr. Ninuno is survived by his wife.
one daughter, Airs, George tMargareti
lr il.:olm, Wii ghain, and three grand.
toilet]. A stn, T-tewait, d;v1 emit
years ago as result of a car accldenz.
Funeral arrangement are I:1 charge
of the R. A. Curl is and Sons funeral
l::•u::.V.in'''.n.
He Was A Legend
in His Lifetime
"There are only three or foul
of us titans left," Sir Thomas
Beecham boasted on his nth
birthday nearly two years ago,
"One by one they depart —
ySbrauss, Furtwangler, Toscanini,
pahler, I feel like Robinson
Crusoe on a desert island—but
where's my pian Friday?"
With Sir Thomas's death last
month in Louden (of a cerebral
thrombosis), on. more titan de-
parted, an outrageously outspok-
en and irreverent titan, to be
sure, but a true Olympian in
spirit and deed, His Jovian fire
was withering to all who felt the
burning lash of his tongue and
pen, but the climate of British
music today owes much of ite
healthy vigor to the little battl-
Ing baronet with the goateed
chin and the gimlet eye.
With a fortune which came
from Beechanm's laxative pills,
the peppery conductor organized
orchestras and opera companies
and brought music not only to
London but to all of the pro-
vinces. He championed Handel,
Haydn, Mozart, Berlioz, and
Strauss when those composers
were novelties in the orchestral
re;)ert'•ir0. net staples as they
are today.
Asa c ncluctnr, Sir Thomas's
memory was phenomenal—and
variable. At a performance in
Manchester one memorable night
years ago, he w'allod in a' the
last moment. picked up his baton
and whispered to the concert-
master: "Bv the way, what opera
are we doing tonight?" On fin -
other occasion, after perforating
a symphony h;, did not admire,
he turned again to the first vio-
linist and said, rather audibly:
'Why don't y—.1 play?" "It's
over'," muttered the uncomfort-
able fiddler. '''I'ha:k God!" sigh-
ed Beecham.
Sir Thom,,s's contempt for
singers ki2s as monumental as
his dislike for modern music
("Net only dead, but thrice
damned"). When accused Ince
of drowning out the great La-
uritz Melchior and Frieda Leider
In a performance of "Tristan and
Isolde," he retorted: "I was per-
forming a public service."
"The ghost of Bizet no less
than of Mozart must surely stir
at the thought cf his demise,"
wrote The ?.Lanchester Guardian.
"But if he was a genius he was
also a !iseesed jester, a prodigy,
a prodi^al . . , and was at all
times to 1e -i watched with awe as
well as ;flection, like a volcano.
Like Tc.canini, he became -a- leg-
end in his lifetime."
Cut -to -Slenderize
(PRINTED PATTERN
4936
SIZES
141/2 -24th
G'1A.tg. -414tis
Flattery for sunny clays aoead!
We nominate this, softly draped
neckline with a tabbed bow as
ene of the prettiest for h;;.lf-
sizes, Skirt is so slimming.
Printed Pattern 4930: Half
Sizes 141, 161/2, 181/2, 201/:, 221/2,
241/2. Size 161/2 requires 33't
yards 35 -inch fabric.
Send FIFTY CENTS, (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for safety) for this pattern.
Please print plainly SIZE,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont.
ANNOUNCING the biggest fa-
shion show cf Spring -Summer,
1961 — pages, pages, pages of
patterns in our new Color Cata-
logue — lust outl Hurry, send
35! now!
ISSUE 13 — 1961
CHASE AWAY THE BLUES IN THE NIGHT — Suzane Vayda, 19,
is the only all-night disc jockey in Toronto, Canada, and her
soothing husky voice is much appreciated, While on the air, she
gets many phone calls from night workers who just want to
talk, Of course, some callers try to arrange dates but most
are content to talk.
4t
HIiONICLES
(TO lN�G1g.thliM
Last week the CBC program
'Close -Up" certainly gave view-
ers plenty to talk about. We
thought it was somewhat repeti-
tious but we sat it through to the
end. As we watched neither of
us was too happy about it, For
one thing we knew it must have
been rehearsed and that made
the tears and emotion seem some-
what unreal. As a. show it was
excellent but as a news story ...
I don't know. But still I don't
see how anyone could really
blame Mr. Exelby. He probably
thought of it as just a job and
a means of making a few dol-
lars, so why not take it? I don't
suppose he anticipated any ad-
verse publicity. Apparently most
of the criticism against him was
because he resigned from a $6000
a year job last fall, because it
showed "little promise for the
future", Well, what's wrong
with being ambitious—even if it
backfires? Without ambition
few of us would get anywhere.
Ambition is the spark that makes
an ordinary job just a stepping
stone to better things. I know
of two fellows right now, both
in their thirties, who are resign-
ing from $0000 jobs in a few
months time. One of them is
going to England the other has
been promised a more lucrative
job in Ontario. Maybe things
won't work out for then either;
they might even be among the
unemployed before the year is
out. But at least they will have
shr.wn a little initiative.
As for the unemployment sit-
uation we are not in 0 position
to know too mach about il, Ex-
cept this, Judging from what we
have seen and heard the unem-
ployment problem is not nearly
so acute as it was in the
"Hungry Thirties". For one thing
men would take anything then
to earn a few dollars. Relief
payments were not sufficiently
attractive to keep men from hon -
i est employment. Even white-
collar men learnt to handle a
pick and shovel,
I remember one man we hired
by the day for farm work. We
paid him a dollar a day and
board — and he was glad to get
it, Actually it was a good wage
for unskilled labour at that time.
Some got less. This fellow had
no mean.; of transportation—nor
had we, for that matter, except
a horse and buggy. He walked
a utile and a half Mehl and
morning to and front our place
and worked from seven m the
morning to six at night, Day
labourers had a lot of pride in
those days — they were content
with what little they could earn
rather then accept relief,
Another matter very much in
the news again now is margarine,
The battle still rages between
butter eaters and margarine buy-
ers. And still another battle
about colouring or not colouring
margarine. You have all heard
the arguments — buy butter and
support the farmer: buy marga-
rine and cut down the cost of
living. It is an argument that
has been see -sawing back and
forth for years. The Department
of Agriculture can't stop house-
wives from buying margarine so
they have tried to make it tt- I
attractive by prohibiting the use
of colour. And it hasn't done
one bit of good. Housewives who
want it buy it regardless. Many
of them don't even bother to
work in the colour bud. So isn't
it time the government stopped
trying to brow -beat then into
buying butter. Women will buy
what they want anyway, ?Moth-
ers who have to make a number
of lunches every day think they
are saving money with marga-
rine and if another spread, is
used on top of it, peanut, salmon
or sandwich meat — you can be
quite sure mother isn't wasting
her time and energy working a
colour bud into the margarine,
There is still another reason
why people buy margarine that
has nothing to do with the cost.
Some doctors recommend it to
lower the daily intake of animal
fat. At the recent Heart Founda-
tion Conference corn -oil marga-
rine was recommended as being
preferable for patients with high
blood pressure. So, trying to fol-
low good advice, a housewife
may buy a pound of margarine
— doctor's orders — and then
raise her blood pressure trying
to work that darn colour bud
into the mess! You don't believe
me? Well, just you try it. The
sane goes for folks with arthri-
tic hands. It could mean hour's
of pein afterwards,
Incidentally I have a sugges-
tion for colouring that i.; some-
what revolutionary. Why not
switch the colouring around?
I-fave margarine sold with a deep
dandelion colouring and butter a
' pale primrose yellow, Most but-
ter is coloured anyway so it
would only be a platter of put-
ting in less yellow, Years ago
in England the best butter was
always lightly coloured and with
very little salt, Cooking butter,
or salt butter, was as yellow as
a canary.
By preference I am a butte'
eater, Fresh buttered toast —
that's for ane! But my doctor
says no butter — corn -oil merge -
rine. Wouldn't you know it? So
that's why I'm raising my voice
against the ban on coloured
margarine. One thing I forgot to
point out — butter as a spread
goes farther than margarine. I
have proved it.
Q. When invited to someone's
hone and there are small dishes
of potato chips and peanuts plac-
ed on tables around the roost,
is it prdper for a guest to help
himself without being asked?
A, Since these dishes are ob-
viously there for the guests. it
is quite all right to help eeett -
sclf,
WEDDING BELLS WILL RING IN JUNE — Edward Duke of !:cat,
25 -year-old cousin of Queen Elizabeth and eighth in line of sucr
cession to the throne, and his fiancee, Kathleen Worsley, 28,
daughter of Sir William and Lady Worsley, stroll in the garden
at Kensing:cn Pc;ace. Miss Worsley and the Duke will be mar-
ried June 8 in the 9501ear-old St. Petcr's Cathedral in York.
Making A Purchafe
— Persian Style
A pleasant refuge from the
dark political concerns cf Teher-
oan is the cluttered antique shop
of Solaiman Rabbi, the Jew. The
window of Solaiman Rabbi's
shop Ls as dusty and jumbled as
the interior of the store itself,
but just intriguing enough in its
array of tribal bric-a-brac, silver
daggers, and fly-spec!1ed Persi-
an miniatures to catch the strol-
ler's eye.
Once caught, and once linger-
ing, the passer-by saes rising
slowly from the dim interior of
the shop a short figure muffled
in overcoat and fedora hat, be-
neath which horn -rimmed spec-
tacles protrude. Solaiman Rabbi
himself is coming to the doer to
invite you in.
You edge warily into the shop,
ready for prompt escape. But he
says nothing and you turn to his
cases of trinkets and baubles,
peer as best the poor light will
allow 'at stacks of copper trays
turned green with age, There is
nothing ... and at that moment
Solaiman Rabbi comes forward
again.
"You are interested in old
Persian miniatures?" he asks,
peering up from beneath his hat.
You are willing to look at them,
you reply, and he shuffles to-
ward a back room,
A woman huddled by an oil -
burning heater—for the winter
is cold in Teheran — watches
your movement from front to
back, The back room is worse
than the front in its clutter, fall-
ing just short of being a flea
market of junk, Switching on a
naked light bulb, Solaiman Rn.hbl
takes down a battered portfolio
and clears a space on the crack-
ed top of a glass case.
"Isere are pages from old
becks of Persian poetry," he ex-
plains, "made 140 to 150 years
ago, during the Qajar dynasty."
He scrubs a dry and dirty hand
across the surface of one page.
"You see? Mineral colors , .
they will never change."
Each page he extracts front the
se—se
SALLY'S SALLIES
d arta
PEACE
"Hlmttelf Bald, 'You'll have to
carry me In',"
portfolio is yellowed with age
and crumbling at the edges, but
in the center cf each page, glow-
ing in soft colors like a jewel, is
a painted Persian scene, illustrat-
ing the lines of poetry hand-
peinted on the page above and
below the miniature, writes
Harry 13, Ellis in the Christian
Science Monitor.
The colors, when held to the
light, give off a dull sheen of
quality, not gaudy or bright.
Horsemen with drawn swords
charge at each other across fields
of flowers. Other horsemen in
flowing robes play polo on a
green field, There are quteier
scenes—sten and women picnic
beneath a flowering tree, each
blosscm delineated with care,
each fold of cloth, each tuft of
grass. In Persian painting there
is no vacuum; space itself does
not suggest, as in Japanese and
Chinese art. Instead, the painter
of Persian miniatures, his deli-
cate brush tipped with gold, or
orange, blue, green, or pink,
touches glowing color to the very
limits of his picture,
Page after page Solaiman Rab-
bi turns over, A beggar in an
ora;ge rcbe and white turban
importunes a passer-by, who
hesitates beneath the pink blos-
rant's of a graceful tree. A noble-
man, cross-legged on a golden
duan set in a meadow of flow-
ers, converzcs with two follow-
ers, seated on lesser and lower
choirs of gold.
You know, as you gaze at
these unctuous pictures, that you
will not go away empty-handed.
"If I buy two," you say to
Solaiman Rabbi, "what kind of
price will you give the?"
He fixes you behind his
gla SEB.'
"This is your first time in my
shop. I have given you a bro-
ther's price. Every six months
I may find such a book in some
village. They do not make them
any more , .. There is only one
price,"
An Iranian enters and speaks
to Solaiman Rabbi in Persian.
The latter fetches a dozen pieces
of oddly shaeed green tile and
the customer r^rts them thel gh,
What Solaiman Rabbi said about
price may cr may not be true,
but by the time he comes back
you have agreed within yourself
to pay what he asks.
He rolls up your treasure in a
bit of paper and you place it
under your coat against the rain
which has started to fall outside
in the Persian dusk, You start
back to your hotel room, some-
how fortified to face the com-
plexities of modern Iran,
I do not oare for arguments,
It's seldom that I'm in one:
I think that they're a waste of
1ime—
Unless, of course, I win one!.
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. %YIten you have received a
business teller signed by a wom-
an., and you are uncertain as NO
wether she is "'Hiss" or "Mrs.,"
how do you address your reply?
A. When in doubt, always use
"Miss,"
Q, Is it all right for a man 10
use only his initials when sign-
ing social correspondence?
A. No; he should sign his 'full
name,
Q, Just %t')tat is the correct
way to eat peas?
A, With the fork. Cor'r'ectly,
push the end.; et! the tines of
your fork under the peas end
lift a not -too -big mouthful onto
the fork,
Q. Medd it be fitting for a
father an anw►unee the engage-
ment of his daughter to a gatt►ee-
h►g of relatives and friends itt
his home in the form of a toast
and, 11 so, what would be an
appropriate toast?
A. This is quite proper, Usu-
ally, champagne is brought out
and when everyone has been
served, the father raises his glass
and say.; something like this:
"1'o my daughter, Margaret, and
lay future son -in -taw, Bob, Shall
the drink to their happiness?"
Q. 1 am separated from my
husband, When writing my
name, should i use my hushand's
full mune, or should I use my
first name in conjunction with
his last name?
. A. Although separated, you are
still "Mrs. ,John Smith," Should
you become divorced, you grill
become "Mr's. Mary Burton
Smith," combining your minden
name with your married it^me.
"Hundreds of women in Cana-
da have taken up lav," states a
judge. There are also thousands
tvho lay it down,
Catch Baby's Eye
111 feat44 Wk
One -of -a -kind gift! Dhli,lu a
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Parasol - pretty cots ! 13,tby
loves gay colours — use scraps
for patches; kitten; ars ent-
broide'ed swiftly. Pattern 1127:
nine 5x7 -inch motifs; charts; di-
rections,
Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted use
postal note .:or safely) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, l3ox
1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor-
onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
attd ADDRESS.
JUST OFI? THE PRESS! Send
now for our exciting, new 1901
Needlecraft Catalogue. Over 125
designs to crochet, knit, sew,
etnbroider, quilt, weave _. fa-
shions, hotnefurnishings, toys,
gifts bazaar hits. Plus .FRET —
ittstructions for six smart veil
caps, Hurry, send 250 now!
PASS THE TEAR BOTTLE, PLEASE — End of the world? No. End of tournament basketball game in which the team
of Shortridge High School lost by a point to it; archrival in Indianapolis. The girls, Shortridga rooters, of course.
Just A Simple Case Of
Plain Swollen Heads ! !
By DICK KLEINER
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
NEW YORK — Behind the
Jack Paar vs, Ed Sullivan feud
is a complex Story of show busi-
ness economics aggravated by in-
flated egos.
It bolls down to two men who
have honest differences of opin-
ion and definition.
On the surface, they fought
over the price paid to perform-
ers on the two shows — a flat
$320 tee for an appearance with
Paar and one considerably high-
cr with Sullivan.
What set Sullivan off was the
ease of a pretty, young singer
named Joan Fairfax. She took
$1,000 for doing two numbers
with Old Smiley. When she
worked the Paar show, she also
did Iwo numbers but her pay
check was only $320.
Sullivan blew his stack. Paar
defended his position by saying
that guests on his show don't
come on primarily to perform
but to be number's of the panel.
Sullivan's contention — and
this is shared by many show
business insiders — is that there
may he merit in what Parr says
when applied to comedians — but
net to singers,
A .ramie, such las Buddy Ilack-
' alt or 1\lyron Cohen, can sit on
the Paar panel and ad lib. Ile is
not using his standup material.
Ile can then go on the Sullivan
show, or similar variety TV pres-
entations, and do his regular rou-
tine without being afraid that the
public has seen it all before.
Sullivan's friends say he would
never have objected to the dif-
ference in price for comedians.
But singers are another matter.
When a girl such as Miss Fair-
fax sits on the panel of Paar's
show, she knows she's going to
sing, Sullivan and his supporters
can see little difference between
a 'sineer performing from the
beat of Paar's easy chair and
standing up and singing on the
Sullivan show. A song is a song
is a song,
As one veteran Broadway man-
ager says, "Even a blockbuster
act goes on Paar's panel and
knows he has to sing. His eyes
are open."
What makes Paar's stand hard
for Sullivan and others to swal-
low is that his "panelists" often
are required to rehearse their
numbers.
At other times, they are, in
the worlds of one Broadwayite,
"conned" into performing on the
fir, He mentioned Gracie Fields,
who was surprised on the air by
a request to sing, and trumpeter
Al Hirt, who was so startled that
he didn't even have his instru-
ment with him. (He borrowed
one from one of Jose Melis' mu-
sicians.)
When the Paar Show started,
it was a panel show. The price
for guests was established and
nobody objected: But gradually
the panel elements have been
dropped or, at least, relegated to
second place, behind perform-
ances. It is this element of sub-
terfuge which rankles Sullivan.
But Paar obviously believes
that guests on his show are not
quite the performers they are on
the Sullivan Show and others. On
the so-called variety shows, there
are production numbers and
other devices to niake the enter-
tainers stand out.
It is this honest difference of
opinion that has got out of hand.
. Advisers of both men are angry
because the whole affair became
a public disgrace. The feeling is
that neither man helped himself
in the public eye,
An economic oddity of the
Faar-Sullivan problem is that
both shows are booked by the
lame man, agent Marty Kummer
FAST GAL - Mrs. Grace But-
cher, mother of two, collects
her breath after breaking the
world indoor record for the
women's half -mile run. She did
2 minutes, 21,1 sIcondF.
ISSUE 13 — 1961
of MCA, The Sullivan show is an
MCA package; MCA handle
Paar personally. Therefore, the
whole business of booking the
shows falls on Kummer, who is
1961's candidate for "The Man
On The hottest Spot."
When the debate Was sched-
uled, and later called off, there
appears to have been another
honest difference of opinion ----
this time on the definition of the
word "debate,"
Sullivan apparently thought a
statement and rebuttal constitut-
ed a formal debate, Paar believed
JOAN FAIRFAX - Started two
swelled heads to get sweller.
that a debate required an open
discussion.
The feeling around the tele-
vision centers is that neither
"welched" or "hacked out" but
that both were sincerely unable
to agree on ground rules.
With people other than Paar
and Sullivan, who are both on
the egotistical side, probably all
of the issues could have been
ironed out without the public
getting into the act.
Show business, in general, and
Paar and Sullivan, in particular,
would have been better off if
cooler heads had prevailed.
British Motorists
Nuts On Speed
The headlines on the story
said: ice Causes Five Crashes on
Mi.
"i was bowling along quite
happily at 95 miles an hour . , „"
one of those involved 'was re-
ported as saying,
Reading this on my morning
train to Waterloo I nearly shout-
ed out Loud, which, on this train
at any rate, would have been
considered exceedingly bad form.
But this I find one of the most
disarming things about my
countrymen; not their praise-
worthy capacity for silence but
the loyalty with which they be-
lieve still in the tales of their
childhood.
Speed is still beautiful to Bri-
tons, Highspeed motoring indeed
Is the one contest in which one
can properly talk of "the British
race,"
Ice causes crashes. Speed is
safe, "Ninety-five" is quite rea-
sonable. If, following a slow
driver, a fast driver becomes
impatient and overtakes unwise-
ly so that there is an accident,
the slow driver is to blame.
No Minister of Transport in re-
cent times has felt strong enough
as a man and secure enough as
a Minister to refute these very
English fallacies,
But having driven hundreds of
thousands of miles in Britain, the
United States, and Western
Europe, this correspondent, for
one; is convinced that while they
go completely unchecked it will
be impossible to reduce by much
the annual toll of'casualties suf-
fered in this War of the Roads.
Now ice, as everyone knows,
very rarely causes a crash, Driv-
ing a car inexpertly or too fast
over ice is more usually the
cRuse,
Going to a neighboring village
along a winding lane the other
evening I passed on the way a
Jaguar that was deep in the
woods, crushed against a tree.
Coming home, after the Jag had
been towed away, 1 saw a sports
Sitnen in the identical position.
There was ice on the corner,
I suppose 100 cars had passed
that way in the hour. If ice caus-
ed crashes, they would all have
been in the woods,
But in the sane conditions 911
drove safely by ,Thus two drivers
caused their own crashes. They
would have crashed less severely
had they been cornering less fast
and net at all if they had been
cornering carefully,
Yet, "This car will cornet safe-
ly at over 70 mph," one reads in
almost every other test report
in the press, And readers be-
lieve it. Motoring editors, the
marshals of speed, never remind
their r coders that no ca'
corners safely at over 70 niph if
there is ice on the corners; or
for that matter if the driver
ra1nuul gra Lound it; it ,a : I; lion•
any milli wagon is on the other
side, or if there is a child in the
road, or if another driver is com-
ing the other way also at over
70 mph.
And nobody tells British
motorists that when impatience
causes a fast driver to overtake
a slow one in a dangerous situa-
tion it is the impatience of the
fast driver not the sloth of the
sluggard that is the danger,
series ,Ichn Allen, May' in The
Christian Science Monitor,
Road casualties each year now
in Western Europe cy:,cad !szne,-
000, Appalled, ;the United Na-
tions 'Transport, Commission for
Etlrope had produced some vital-
ly interesting reports on the re-
duction' of casualties (up to 50
per dent) 'through the enforce-
ment Of s experimental speed
limits. It has repeatedly urged
an all -Europe test of speed limits,
to no avail. The United Nations
is balked by a few countries.
notably Great Britain.
It astounded this correspond-
ent when he asked the British
Transport Minister about these
UN researches that until that
moment the Minister had never
heard of them,
1 am convinced that we could
halve road casualties if, while
we wait patiently for the new
roads we so desperately need,
we conduct a campaign de-
liberately aimed at turning the
ear from the symbol of speed
and selfishness into a symbol of
convenience and cafe. Even If
we did not impose speed limits
(it might be asking too much of
the British yet) we could at least
have safe "discretional" speeds
posted clearly on each stretch of
road and at each corner. It
wouldn't be difficult.
But if drivers go on saying,
"Nonsense; it's the slow drivers
that cause all the accidents," that
means war. In that case, and in
that context only, here is one
driver who is convinced of the
virtue of unilateral disarma-
ment.
How Can 1?
Ily Roberta Lee
Q. )How can I cope with a
stubborn screw-type jar lid?
A, First, tap the edges of the
lid to "spring it" a little. If the
lid still refuses to budge, wrap
a big rubber band, adhesive or
friction tape around the lid, or
hold a piece of sandpaper over
the top, then twist. The added
friction you get should do the
trick,
Q. 1Vhat can I do about remov-
ing the tinge deposit, hard -water
scales, and discolourations hong
the Insides of aluminum vessels,
which have been produced by
the constant boiling of water?
A. One good method is to boil
vinegar in the vessels, Another is
to cut up raw lemon, put it into
the vessel with water, and boil
for 15 minutes before 5•coering
it. Still another approach is to
boil rhubarb in the discoloured
pot,
Q. ilow can 1 slake a good
carpet - cleaning compound at
home?
A, A good one is a grated
raw potato rubbed over the stn' -
face of the carpet, and finisled
off with a wet, warm cloth, This
is very good for stained or spot-
ted rugs. Or, use cornstarch,
dampened and rubbed on, and
then your sweeper to removc
MERRY MENAGERIE
T Il
t1k.Il1
a46 _ , tAsiPart_
"He's not much on WILL
power, but wow! Does he have
WON'T power!"
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•
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Order AtayJune broilers now, Agent -
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136.W.
RESTAUIIAN'l'•service station, Highway
11, south of Gravenhurst, both fully
equipped, doing good business. Low
down payment, balance open mortgage.
Apply Walby Motors, Kilwnithy. Mus-
koka.
CHRISTMAS TREES
CHRISTMAS tree seedlings. Austrian
and Scotch pines. (test possible stock,
$15 per 1,000. D. A. 'Tiffin, Cookstown,
Ont.
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EAVES'tROUGHING•
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ATTENTION TINSMITHS
YOU ought to know that half round
ravestrough in 28 gauge can be bought
at less than current prices. Write Enos
S. Martin, 11,3 Wallenstein, Ont.
EMPLOYMENT INFORMATION
COMPLETE step-by-step Informntlon
on how to get a better job, improve
yourself, send $I.00. Phelps 118 Greg-
ory Lane, Salem, Oregon. —
FARM HELP WANTED
THOI1OUGHI1.Y reliable couple, middle
aged or even partly retired, for gentle.
man's farm near Toronto. Man with
dairy experience, preferably some gar-
dening, Wife to help on weekends.
This position will be attractive to
couple who no longer wish responsl-
bllity of farm under their own opera•
tion and would like for family reasons
to be close to Toronto. Apply Frank
Veltenhelmer, Manager, Cyprus 6.1318,
Klcinburg, Ontario.
FARMS FOR SALE
TWO 100 acre farms opposite, five mllee
from Clinton. Buildings on both, One
with hydro and considerable hush. Carl
Diehl, Bayfield, Ont.
•
FARM, 200 acres, 12 miles from Sarnia,
clay loam, 130 acres well tilled. good
frame !House, 3 piece bath, automatic
hot water heat. Good steel truss barn,
hen house, granary and implement
shed. Apply Ralph Yokes, 11.R. 3,
l'etrolla, Ont.
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
WRECKING; all steel Whlte 28.50 grain
thresher, Myatt Bearings, adjustable
shatter and screen clover concaves. All
parts cheap. Also 13 inch mill grinder
for $25.00. August Bauer, H.R. 5,
Mitchell, Ontario.
NEW Holland Crop -Chopper, Model 33,
used one season, John Deere Cultivator
Model CC -147, used one season. 26i
1.11. Thresher, completely equipped,
Used four seasons. Contact G, Ferguson,
1208 Tepper Road, Burlington, Ontario.
NE. 4.0712.
FOR sale: Sawyer Massey Threshing
Machine with straw shredder and long
feeder, also one I.H.C. grain binder,
both In good condition. Apply J. M.
Laird, Norwich, Ont. Phone Norwich
286-W.1.
FARM EQUIPMENT
FARMALL M,D, new condition, high
clearance adjustable front axle, also
narrow front end, belly pump, two.
way remote control valve, Model 257•
I•11.C, cultivators, good tires. 400 hrs.
since cotnplete rebuild. $1995.00. Con•
alder trade and deliver in 300 mile
radius. '
• EARL DEAMUDE
R.R. No. 6 DUNNVILLE, PHONE 777M2
H ALL THIS INCLUDED
() IN YOUR CUNARD TICKET
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P'ARM EQUIPMENT
IIEI(E they are! Be an early bird!
Heavy duty wagons with 15 -Inch tires
8125. A. Vanderkool, General Repair
Shop, Ifeachvllle.
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20 ('•1N 1\'oods 00111 cooler, rhoro
boy milking mnrhine. John Canton, Bit 2
Caledonia, 110. 5-2172.
WE have developed a farm wagon that
has lireven to be -reliable for forage
racks and bale hauling. Its main feat-
ures aro a very good steering for short
turning and high speed no sway trail.
Ing. For Illustrated folder write Horst
Welding, R11 No. :1, Elmira, Ontario,
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
PRESERVE Flowers! instructions, 1n•
gredlents, $1.00. Marley
Stephenson, 174
Euston, Burlington, Ont a rio.
CANADIAN exclusive awadlnble, patent.
ed wank soul curl comb, wanted by
every woman. A proven $1 mall order
Item in U.S, Write Royal Scot. Water-
bury, Conn.
37 COMIC Books $2.00. Yard Cover Book
d1'pnsels, 4 different $1.00. State wants.
Gold coloured necklet crosses, rhino-
stone centre, $2.00 dozen, sample 358.
Cash Postpaid, Off•pri'e merchandise
bulletins 10e. F'reemans, Cornwall, Ont.
QUILT PATCHES
ASSORTED Broadcloth, plain and print-
ed, 3 lbs. $1.89 Special, smaller pieces,
4 lbs. $1.98. Assorted Flannelette, 3 11)s,
$1.49. Quilt Designs - set of 16 - 508
Drapery:- Better quality assorted mill
ends, I -3 yards lengths, '44 Inches wide
- 5 lbs, $7.98; pieces for cushions, 2
lbs. $1.98. Postage paid, refund. Gordon
Pullen, 48 Abell St , 'Toronto 3.
GOURDS
GOURDS! Fantastic 36 -In. handles.
Grow yourself, sell $2.00 each, make
good Income. Generous packet fresh
seeds, Instructions $1.00 postpaid.
Derco, Box 11310, Asheville, N.('
HOUSE PLANTS
AFRICAN 11olets, Write for list offer-
ing all the finest varieties and colours.
Aiken Nursery, Chute Panel, Que.
HORSES
SHETLAND registered 3 year old filly
with white mane and tall. 11. S. Hail,
21 Maple Street, Galt.
INSTRUCTION
EARN More! Bookkeeping, Salesman.
ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les.
sons 500. Ask for free circular No. 33.
Canadian Correspondence Courses. 1200
Bay Street, 'Toronto,
MEDICAL
HAVE YOU HEARD ABOUT DIXON'S
NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAIN
REMEDY? IT GIVES YOU GOOD
RESULTS.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN, OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you, Itching scalding and burning ecze•
ria, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless odorless ointment, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they eeetn.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 63.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 8t. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
MISCELLANEOUS
3,000 INTERESTING Offers only 258.
Get Listed. Recellve free samples, maga.
Axles, etc. William Brown, 926 West
4Gth, New York 19, N.Y., U.S.A.
MONEY TO LOAN
MORTGAGE Loans. Funds available on
suitable farms, homes, stores, apart.
meats, hotels, motels. Pleasant, cour•
teous 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 $6,000 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 online.
Ing of motels, hotels, hospitals, medi-
cal clinics factories, office buildings,
commercial 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 buildings
and motels. For financing let us assist
you. For appointment call Commmer-
dial Loan Department Investment Dis-
count Corporation, 10906 Gratiot Ave.,
Detroit 13, Mich. Phone DR, 1-8415 or
DR. 1.4650.
'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
dealers.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant, dignified profession; gond
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates.
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
• 358, Blear. St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchasing Nutria consider the
following points which this organize.
Hon offers:
1. The best evallable stock, no cross-
bred or standard types recommended.
2.- The reputation of a plan which 1s
proving Itself substantiated 05 files of
satisfied ranchers.
3._Full insurance against replace-
ment, should they not Iivr. or In the
event of sterility tall fully explained
In our certificate of merit.)
4, - We give you only Imitations which
are in demand for tut garments
5 - Yqqu receive from this organization
• guaranteed pelt market In writing•
G. llembershi 1 in our exclusive
breeders' association, whereby only
purchasers of this stock may partici-
pate In the benefits so offered
7 Prices for Breeding Stork .-taut rat
5200, a pair
Special offer to those who qualify:
earn your Nutrrla on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R. No. 2, Stouffville, Ontario
PERSONAL
NANUWRITING analyzed; complete
analysts by experienced eraphologlst.
Enclose $1.00 anti sell•atldressed en-
velope to Airs. 11. Ingram, 454 Geneva
51., St. ('atharinc•s, t1nL
GET 11 hours sleep Nervous tension
may cause 75', of sickness Pau•Iicu•
tarty sleeplessness. jlltetyness and ir•-
rhahllity, Sleep 11,1111 your nerves v i1(1
"Nappy", 10 for 5l;, 50 ter $•I. Lyon's
Drugs, Dept. 20. 471 Danforth, 'I pronto.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED. guaranteed, mailed in Main
parcel, including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment 111 for
$1.00 (Finest quatitv1 1'•lectern Distribu-
tors, Box 74 -TPF. Reoina, Sask
PHOTOS
YOU1( P110'10 on Stamps Iron) any
size photo, snap. 11101 11,I 5. personalize
stationery, greeting cards. rte. No • $2.,
frac particulars, samples 51t:bench,
'Pyrone, Ontario,
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT. ONT.
Films developed and
8 magna prints 401
12 magna prints 608
Reprints 58 each.
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 908 snot including
prints. Color prints 308 each extra.
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 ram. 20 ex-
posures mounted 111 slides $1,2)1 Color
prints from slides 328 each. Money re-
funded In full for unprinted negatives.
ROOFING CONTRACTORS
ATTENTION
Churches, schools, homeowners. Hav♦
your slate roof and metal work checked
and repaired by expert workmen. MI
material and workmanship guaranteed.
Free estimates, Call AX. 4.6205. Norm
Mathers, Parkhill, Ont.
SALESMEN WANTED
•FULL time and' part-time salesmen re-
quired at 'once to sell exclusive formu-
lations of,the ,well known Agrlcid
Insecticides, Challenger Sprayers, Di*
lnfectantsretc., direct to Dairy Far)n*
Exclusive terrlt5ry arranged. Liberal
commission on first and repeat orders.
Must be known -'in area and have t►
good record.-Appjy by letter to Mr. It,
Feldkamp, B. Sc., Provincial Manned.
Red Line Chemicals of Canada, IAd.,
Mimco, Toronto 18, Ontario.
STATIONERY
CARTOON STATIONERY, an exclusive
product to make letter writing tnore
fun. $1, postpaid from: Otto A. Wis-
ner, Box 320, Chicago 90, Illinois_
STAMPS
SIX beautiful Korea stamps, catalogue
value 518 - only 10e to new approval
applicants. Maurice Moore, Box 572,
Fort Bragg, California.
TEACHERS WANTED
U.S.S. No. 10, Kinloss (Whitechurch)
Bruce County, requires an experienced
Protestant teacher for a modern, well-
equipped school. Apply starting quali-
fications, salary expected and name of
last Inspector. Duties will commence
Sept. 5th. D. J. M. Moore, Sc(-. •'I'reas.,
RR No, 5, Lucknov, Ont.
Teachers wanted by
MURDOCHVIILLE
INTERMEDIATE SCHOOL
Intermediate Licence, Salary $3,200 •
$4,950. Elementary Licence, Salary
$2,850 • $4,600. Atodcrn 7 room school.
Sick Leave and Retirement Gratuity
Plan In effect, Town of 3,100, aecrea-
tlon Centre with skating, curling;, swhn-
ming and bowling. Good skiing, hunt-
ing and fishing. Apply: The Trustees,
Murdochville Protestant School, Box
879, Murdochville, P.Q.
Newcastle
Public School Board
REQ1IIRES TEACHERS FOR
MIDDLE GRADES
Salary schedule in effect
Minimum $3000. $200 per year for
two years experience, annual Incre-
ment of $200.
Apply stating full particulars to
E. 5. Barchard, Secretary
'Newcastle, Ontario
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275 lbs. free baggage allowance • Superb cuisine
Duty-free shopping • Dancing, parties, movies
Stabilizers for smooth sailing • Flawless British service
Save 10% on round-trip until April 14•,.
PAY -LATER PLAN AVAILABLE
SEE YOUR LOCAL AGENT
No One Can Serve You Beller
Corner Bay & Wellington Sts,,
Toronto, Ont.
Tel: EMpire 2.2911
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FAST, FREQUENT SAILINGS TO ENGLISH, SCOTTISH, IRISH & FRENCH PORTS
FROM NEW YORK & HALIFAX
QUEEN MARY Mar, 22,4pr. 5, 19, May 3, 17 'SYLVANIA Mar, 22, Apr, 14
QUEEN ELIZABETH Mar. 29, Apr. 12, 26 'SAXONIA Mar, 30 •• •
MEDIA Mar, 31; May 5, June 2, 30 'CARINTHIA.•Apr. 7
,PARTHIA Apr, 21, May, 19, June 16 'Oom Halifax follewtno day,
' FROM MONTREAL d QUEBEC
IVERNIA Apr. 13, May 5, 26, June 16, July 7, 28, Aug. 18
SAXONIA Apr, 22, May 12, June 2, 23, July 14, Aug, 4, 2S
CARINTHIA )Apr. 18, May 19, June 9, 30, July 21, Aug. 11
' !from Quebec following day. R1OUTAR-SAIIINOs THER8AFMER
000.UNARD !
Branches at: Halifax • Saint John • Quebec -
Montreal • Toronto • Winnipeg • ldmonton • Vancouver
5,
PAGE 4
11 11-- I_ I I
SHOP NOW FOR EASTTR
5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
We have a Fine Assortment of : Choc. Moulds, all
designs; Easter Box Chocolates; Creamed and
Marshmallow Eggs; Small Chicks; Easter
Baskets; Corsages; China Novelties; Egg
Cups; Spring Hats; Spring Purses.
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.
JOIN OUR PARADE
Boys' Jackets and Blazers, 1 t'o 8 .$2.98 up
Flannel Trousers, grey or navy, 2 to 8 . , , , $3.98
Spring Suits (girls) 4 to 14 ' ` ' ` $6.95 up
Teen Suits, checks or plain $15.95 up
Spring Coats, sizes 1 to 6x $8.95 up
Girls' Spring Coats, wools or all weather,
sizes 7 to 14x $13.95 up
• :I
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
ME Una i►b � i ell day, March ,19, 1961
- iWifl,illr.-�• o -- -s.-. � i1�s-...► w.r.wa
I L
AUBURN NEWS MEN'S WORK BOOTS
Women's Institute Meeting
Mrs, Thomas llaggitt, president of
the Auburn Women's Institute, was in
charge of the March meeting held in
the Orange Hall. The meeting was
opened in the usual manner, with Mrs.
W. J. Craig at the piano, A letter
was read from the Department rc•
garding the classes in needlework be-
ing held April 25 and 26 in the Orange
Hall. Classes will be held 10 a.m, to
4 p.m., 'and anyone Interested please
contact the president. The Branch vot-
ed window treatment for their first
choice in the Senior Local Training
School, with flints for the Home Nurse
as second choice. Tho annual Sun.
shine Sister banquet is to be held this
year in Knox United Church, with the
Naomi Group of the W. A. catering, on
April 21st, A sing -song was led by Mrs.
Gordon R. Taylor, and Mrs. Ed. Dav-
ies complimented Mrs. Thomas Law-
lor and Mrs. Gordon Dobie on the
success of their Third Meal Cos sc
land spoke on the Summary Day held
at Wroxeter. Tho convener of Com-
munity Activities and Public Relations,
Mrs, Thomas Lawlor, gave an interest-
ing paper on Public Relations, and told
what it meant and how every member
should bo interested in this•subject to
be good Canadians. The reports of the
standing committees were received.
Those reporting were Mrs. 'Frank
Raithby for Citizenship and Education;
Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor kr llistorical
Research; Mrs, William Straughan for
Home Economics; Mrs. William J.
Craig, for Health; Mrs, Tom Lawlor for
Public Relations; Mrs, Donald Haines
for Resolutions. Mrs, Andrew Kirkcon-
nell gave the report of the card com-
mittee and Carole Brown was selected
to attend the concert in Goderich.
' Lunch was served by Mrs. W. J. Craig
and Mrs. Robert Chamney. The nomin-
ating committee submitted a slate of
officers but some offices were not filled
so the executive will consider this at a
meeting this week.
C.G.I.T, Meeting
The C.G.I•T. Girls met in the Sunday
School room of Knox Presbyterian
Church with 15 girls present. The presi-
dent, Jannett Dobie, gave the Call to
Worship and Barbara MacKay was
pianist. The minutes were read by the,
secretary, Laura Daer, The roll call
was answered by each girl telling what
she would like to be when she grow up.
Judy Arthur read the scripture lesson.
The offering was received by Mary
WE'VE FOOD TO SUIT YOUR MOOD ..
from 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, Proprietor.
EASTER SPECIALS
SPECIAL REDUCTION OF 20 percent an all
WOMEN'S SPRING COATS
New Spring Shades in Seem -Free Nylons ,First
Quality Special 99c
Full Fashioned Nylons with seam, new shades, all
sizes , Special 69c
Men's, Young Men's and Boys' Sport Coats, New
Patterns, also Windbreakers.
Men's Olive Green Shirt and Pant Sets, Sanforized,
all sizes ' Special 6.99 a set
Boys' Pin Cord Slacks, sizes 8 to 16 yrs., Spec. 2.99
Young Men's Black Pin Cord Slacks, sizes 29 to 38,
sanforized Special 3.49
New Spring Suitsassorted patterns, all sizes, 2: pr.
pants, alterations free I . Special Price $33.95
Growing Girls' Corduroy Sneakers, cushion arches,
heavy corrugated soles, in Gold, Green, Black
and White, all sizes Special 1.79
Children's Plastic Calf Oxfords, foam soles, sizes
6 to 3 Special 1:69
Large Assortment of New Spring Footwear for all
the family, including Work Boots, at very
reasonable prices.
"The House of Branded Lines and .Lower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211
BLYTH, ONT.
N '
Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth McDougall
and family, and his mother, Mrs. Ethel
McDougall, of Seaforth, visited friends
at Mount Forest recently,
Mr, Carl Tiechert had the misfor-
tune to have three fingers cut with a
power saw, He was taken to Clinton
hospital by Tom Johnston whore Dr.
R, W. Street, Blyth, gave medical aid.
Mrs, Edgar Lawson visited with Mrs.
Nelson Hill and her sister, Miss Sadie
Carter last Friday.
Friends in this community were
ploased to welcome Mr. Harvey McGee
back to Auburn 'after several years
spent in North Bay, He plans to make
his home with his cousin, Mrs, Mait-
land Allen, and Mr. Allen, '
Knox United Church Sunday School
will hold their annual Pancake supper
on Friday, April 7 from 5:30 to 8:00.
Mrs. Keith Arthur spent a few days'
last week with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Petman, of Goderich.
Mr ,and Mrs. Roy Farrow, of Mil-
chell, visited on Sunday with Mr, and
Mrs, J. J, Robertson and Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Johnston,
Mr, and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips
were guests of Mr. and Mrs, Earl
Raithby, of Goderich, on Sunday.
Mr, Pete Zimmerman, Mr, Amos
Andrew and Mr. Harry Washington,
of B, C. called on friends in the village
last Saturday.
Mr...and., Mrs, Lorne McDonald, of
Seaforth, Miss Isabel Fox and Miss
Olive McGill, of Blyth, visited with
relatives here over the week end.
WESTFIELD
Mrs. Alvin Snell and Miss Bonnie,
were guests of Mr. and Mrs, Walter
Cook, Blyth, recently.
We are sorry. to report that Mr. Tel-
ford Cook is in Wingham hospital, We
wish for a speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Campbell and
Mrs, Raymond` Redmond were in Lon-
don on Saturday.
Two student teachers from Stratford
Teachers' College were practise teach-
ing in Westfield School last week. They
were Miss Claire Chamney, Belgrave,
and Miss Sandra Strong, Wingham,
'Mrs. W. F. .Campbell spent a few
days in Clinton the guest of Mrs. Nor-
man Carter.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith were in
Kitchener on Saturday.
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Campbell and
Mrs, W. F. Campbell called -on Mr. and
Mrs, Bert Taylor, Auburn, Sunday ev.
Sanderson and accepted with prayer in ening.
unison. Mrs. Duncan MacKay gave an! Mr. and 'Mrs, David Webster, Blyth,
interesting. story using the sand to ill- called on Mr, and Mrs. liarvey.McDow-
ustrate her story. She also told how
girls In India get their education. Car-
ole Brown gave the financial statement.
The girls accepted an invitation to at-
tend the W.M.S. Thankoffcring on April
0th at 8 p.m., and als to attend the
C.G.I.T, Rally in Gode. i_h on April 15.
A reading was givr' by Barbara San-
derson 'and riddles by Judy Arthur.
Y. P. S. Meeting
The A:'' urn Young People's Society
met in Knox United Church with Dor.
othy Noble in charge. The scripture
lesson was read by Dorothy Howatt.
Prayer was given by Marsha Koop-
mans. The offering was received by
Lyle Smith and Garth Walden. The
topic on Faith and Evangelism was
given by Dorothy Noble. In the busi-
ness period, the Young People decided
to change the date of the presentation
of their play to May 12th.
Mrs. George H. Barr
Mrs. George 11, Barr passed away
In Clhnten Hospital on Tuesday, March
ell Wednesday 'evening.
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Wightman, Luck -
now, visited with Mr. and Mrs, Norman
Wightman on Thursday.
Mrs. Thomas Wilson, Goderich, was
the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Norman
Wightman, and Mr. Wightman.
CARD OF THANKS
My sincere thanks to friends for,
cards, flowers and visits, while I was!
a patient in Wingham Hospital. Special
thanks to Rev. MoLagan and Dr, and
nurses for kindness shown me.
074p. • -Mrs, Edna Wallace.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank Dr, Street and the
nurses for their kindness while George
was a patient in 'Clinton Hospital, Spe-
cial thanks also to Rev. Dormer, of
Blyth, • Mr. Ernest Snell land other
friends who helped at home.
07-1p -Jasper and Eva Snell.
BATII ROOM REMODELLING
Complete plumbing and heating new
21 in her 77th year, She was born in ; instalations, or repairs and replace-
Hullett township, Margaret Ellen Web-
ster, the daughter of the late Joseph
Webster and Elizabeth Scott. Her
husband passed away in 1940, and she
has for several years made her home
with her nephew, Harry Webster, on
the Maitland Block of Hullett township,
She was a member of the Auburn Bap.
(1st Church. The funeral was held on
Friday, (March 24th at 2:30 p.m. at the
Arthur Funeral Home, Auburn. The
service was conducted by Mr. John
Agulian, with burial taking place in
Blyth Union - Cemetery.Pallbearers
were Guy Cunningham, Fred Wagner.,
John Armstrong, Jack ' Lee, Stanley
Ball and Bert Shcbbrook,
The Palm Sunday Servide at St.
Mark's Anglioan Church was well at.
tended. The Rector, Rev. Robert
Meally, chose far his message, "The
Truth of the Christian Religion," Palms
adorned the altar and small paha cros-
ses were distributed to the members
of the congregatoin at the close of the
service by two members of the choir,
Misses Carolyn Clark and Shirley
Brown. The Good Friday service will
be held at 12 o'clock noon and everyone
is invited to attend. •
A - pleasant evening was spent last
Friday 'at the home of Mr. and Mrs,
Kenneth McDougall. Twenty members
of the family enjoyed a dinner in hon-
our of Mr, Fred Toll on the occasion
of his birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Craig aro
enjoying a week's vacation with their
daughter, Mrs, Stanley Strasser, Mr.
Strasser, Barbara and Beverley, at
Sault ,Ste Marie.
Afr, Sttwart Toll, of Hamilton, visited
recently with his parents, Mr, and Mr,:.
, Fred 'Toll.
monis.. Free estimates. Apply, L.
Whitfield, phone 130, Blyth. 07-1p
FOR SALE
Frigidaire Refrigerator, in good con-
dition,. -Apply et Standard Office, Blyth,
07.1p
WANTED
Good : home dor -puppies, Apply Karl
Whitfield, phone 52R23, Blyth. 07.1p
FOR' SALE
1 truck load of teed turnips. Apply,
Jolm Schoeman, phone 31R14, Blyth.
07.1p
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to thank all those who
remembered Steven and I with cards,
flowers, treats and visits, while in Clin-
ton Public Hospital and since our arriv-
al home. Everything has been greatly
appreciated,
07-1. ' -Mrs. Pat Sparling,
CARD PARTY IN LONDESBORO
The Hullett Township Federation is
sponsoring a card party in the Londes-
boro Hall on Thursday, March 30. Cards
to start at 8.30. Admission 50c, Ladies
bring lunch. Everyone welcome,
FOR SALE
(Pressure system complete with elec-
tric motor, puinp and tank; 200 gallon
oil tank; 20 gallon electric water heat-
er, Apply, phone 2LR223, Blyth. 07-2
AVON CALLING r.
THE NEW Rose Gay Lipstick creme
supromo and evtntone, now available
at special Introductory price. Many
other products also on sale. Contact
Mrs, !toy McVittie, phone 201, Blyth,
07-1
by Sisman, PRICED Greb, UP T01$1195 net Johnston
"THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS"
MEN'S BLACK WORK BOOTS with cork sole and
Rubber Heel, sizes 7 to 11 ONLY $5.50
MEN'S BLACK WORK BOOTS with Cord Sole and
Cord Heel, sizes 7 to 11 ONLY $7.50
SEE THE NEW
Feather Weigh Sport Shoe
by Sisman
_ upper is made of Islon Nylon, resistant to scuffing
and bruising, for long wear in all kinds of weather
MEN'S SUITS, ready to wear or made to measure,
priced from $35.00 to $60.00
MEN'S and BOYS' SLACKS and SPORT COATS.
HELP OUR CRIPPLED CHILDREN
• SUPPORT THE EASTER SEAL CAMPAIGN
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Home of Good Quality Merchandise"
i
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTITON.
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON - EXETER - SEAPORT,'
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CLINTON:" EXETB)s:
Business --Hu 2-6606 Business 41
Residence -Hu 2-3869 Residence sti
Notice To Investors
THE FOLLOWING ITEMS PRESENTLY BEING
OFFERED:
Price
50 x 1000 Province of Ontario 100.00
5 one-quarter Debentures
To Mature 15 April, 1968.
50 x 1000 Province of Ontario 100.00 -
5 one-half Debentures
To Mature 15 April, 1981.
50,000 City of Brandon
6 Debentures
To Mature April 1968 to 1972
2,000 Township of West G. Willimbury
R. C. Separate School Board
County of Simcoe
6 one-quarter Debentures
Mature 15 February, 1969 and 1970 100.00
100.00 _
5,000 Township of Saltfleet 102.00
County of Wentworth
6 one-quarter Debentures
Mature 15 October, 1968 and 1969.
3,000 Township of Whitby 100.00
R. C. Separate School Board
6 one-quarter Debentures
Mature 1 May, 1980.
50,000 Township of North G. Willimbury
R. C. Separate School Board 100.00
6 one-quarter Debentures
Mature 15 May,1967 to/1976. •
Bell Gouinlock & Company Limited
44 King Street West, Toronto, Ont.
Local Agent: GEORGE SLOAN, Blyth, Ont.
ewo..wo1.r444+d.4lrir.r •
,i,p.lema+r .- .-_ 11 1....-1-1.1..
Wetlneaday, March n, 19
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTF! —ONTARIO.
r
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability,
WE SPECIALIl.E IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
DISTRICT SALESMEN WANTED
To bundle imported and domestic
merchandise. Good commissions, MI
replies confidential. Contact, Myer
Bowen, 3515 Van Horne Ave,, No, 5,
Montreal, Quebec, RE 3.5472, 07.1
BAKE SALE
Group 2 of the Women's Associatio
of Blyth United Church have planne
to hold a Bake Sale at the home o
Mrs. Ben Walsh on Saturday, April 1st
1961, qt 3 p,m, Come and have a cup
of tea.
n{
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager, Auctioneer
05 -if
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT
CLINTON HALE BARN
at 2 p,m.
IN BLY'rll, PHONE
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,
Tceswater, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser-
vice, 45-tf.
FiIIPER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to A1I Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensall, 696R2, 50-13p,tf.
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped
end cleaned, FreP estimates, Louie
Rieke, phone 42Re, Brussels, R.R. 2.
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J. II, Crawford, R, S, Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
Wingham and Blyth.
IN BLYTH
BACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, h
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cola,
Optometrist)
FOX APPOINTMENT PHONE 38,
GODERICH 250.1
,T. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Senforth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a,m. to 6:30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 pan,
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM, ON'I
EVENINGS BY APPOINiTMENT
(For Apolntment please phone 770
Wingham),
Professional Eye Examiaatios.
Optical Services.
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFiCE HO11RS-1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE
USED" '
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 information call:
Clinton HU 2.3441, or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9-5650.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
IIEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTIi, ONT.
OFFICERS:
President — John L. Malone, Sea -
forth; Vice -President, John H. McEw-
Ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth, cl
DIRECTORS
J. L. Malone, Seaforh; J, H, McEw-
Ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
Norman Trewadha, Clinton; J, E. Pep-
per, Bruce/field; C. W. Leonhardt,
Bornholm; Ii, Fuller, Goderlch; . 11. 11
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth,
AGENT&
William Leiper, Jr., Lvndesboro; V. 'in
J, Lane, RR. 5, Soafortlt; Selwyn Ba- hp
ker, Brussels;_•Jai 1et#:.!i'ey'es, Scalorth; tic
Harold Squires, Clinton. -
1
4
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
i 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 hoe.
ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For
prompt, sanitary disposal day or night,
phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth,
21R12, if busy phone Leroy Acheson,
Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels,
15J6. ' Trucks available at 'ell times
34- 1, Mar.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
IIIGIiEST CASA 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, 54-11.P.-61Colector Licence No, 88-G61
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 231112 Brussels, Ontario
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Clearing Auction Sale of Farm stock
and Machinery, at Lot 21, Concession
2, Morris Township 39.1 miles north and
2;; miles west of Brussels, on
TUESDAY, APRIL 4th
at 1 p.m.MACHINERY—Ferguson tractor 85;
Ferguson 3 furrow plow; Ferguson
cultivator, scarier attachments; Fer-
guson manure loader; one way disk,
with three point hitch; Tandem disk;
Newton mower, three point hitch;
John Deere side rake;, Cockshult man-
ure spreader; John Deere drag har-
rows, 16 ft.; 36 ft. extension ladder;
Buckler farm wagon, 16 ft. rack; flat
rack for wagon; Than chain saw (one
man); Massey Harris grain fertilizer
drill; Massey Harris hay loader; col-
ony house; coal brooder stove; hay
fork car, pulleys and ropes; two wheel
trailer.
CA'ITL):--32lleroford steers, 1000
lbs,; 20 Ilereford steer calves, 1 year
old, 550 lbs.
POULTRY -250 red Sussex hens, 1
year old.
.GRAIN -400 bushels grain,
Other articles too numerous to men -
lion,
TERMS CASH
Proprietor, Ralph Shaw.
Auctioneer, Harold Jackson,
Clerk, George Powell. 06.2
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
eancrs and polishers, Filter Queen .
ales, Varna, Tel, collect Ilcnsal1696112.
50.13p,tf,
FOR SALE
300 bales of good hay. Apply, Cecil
'heeeler, phone 88, Blyth. 07.1
CARD OF THANKS
Tc all them who sent•me good wishes
letters and cards, during my stay in
epilal. 'They were very inUch appro.
ttcd, Yours sincerely. '
THE B
LYCEUM THEATRE
Wingham, Ontario,
Two Shows Each Night
Commencing at 7:15 p.m,
Thurs., Fri,, Sat., Alar. 30, 31, Apr, 1
Clark Gable • Sophia Loren
in
'IT STARTED IN NAPLES'
A Romantic Comedy
Plumbing
Carpentry
WORK OF ALL KINDS
Specializing In built•in cupboards etc.
Dealer in Steel and Ashphalt Roofing,
WORK GUARANTEED
FRANK McMICHAEL
11.11. 4, Goderlch
phone Carlow 1108
51.10p,
TEACHER WANTED
Applications will be received until
April 15th for the position of teacher
at S.S. No, 7, Hallett. Approximately
16 pupils, Apply, stating qualifica-
tions, salary expected, and name of
last inspector, to Mrs. Leonard Shah -
brook, secretary, 11.11, 1, Blyth, Ont.
06.4.
DANCE
In Londesboro Cptnmunity Hall on
Wednesday, April 5th, sponsored by the
13th of Ifullett Hockey Team. Jini
Scott's Orchestra. Admission at pop-,
ular prices, Everyone welcome, 06.2p
BLYTH BILLIARDS
"Your friendly meeting
place."
Tobaccos - Soft Drinks
Confectionaries w
open 9 a.m, to 12 p.m, . i 4
STANDARD
WILFRED McINTEE
Real Estate Broker
WALKERTON, ONT,
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth
Pion; 78.
2 story brick house, Dinsley Street,
Blyth, bath and furnace,
200 acres 11/2 miles oast of Blyth, Mor.
ris Township, Good buildings.
100 acre farm in Wawanosh Town•
ship, good buildings, 6 acres hard wood
bush, 11 mlles from village,
100 acre grass farm in East Wawa;
nosh, with pond.
100 acres in Ifullett, with spring croek.
Full price 64000.00.
125 acres on the 6th of liullett, good
house, ]-shaped barn, silo.
Cement block building in Walton.
Hardware store, 6 -caned apartment
above, steam heated,
200 acres 9th of Ifullett Township, 140
workable, hard wood hush, 2 stcry brick
house, furnace and bath, goad barn,
07-3.
FOR SALE
Girls yellow teat and coat set, size 6
and tweed cont and hat set, size 6X
Apply Mrs. Allan McCall, phone 360W12
Brussels. 07-11
FOR SALE
20 pigs, 8 and 9 weeks old. Apply
Russell MlacDonald, phone 17R13, Blyth.
07.1
NOTICE
To Whom This Concerns:
I,
Betty Anne Leltitia Young, daugh-
ter of Mr, and Airs. A. J. Young, R.R.
1, Blyth, hereby claim I am not the
Betty Young who was previously con-
victed and sentenced in jail for fraud.
06.1-p, —Betty A. L. Young.
FOR RENT — _~
2 apartments, Queen Street, Blyth,
Apply, M. A, Cummings, phone 17812
Blyth, 07 -Ip
FOR SALE
.Maple Syrup, $6.00 per gallon. Apply
Mason Bailey. phone 54R5, Blyth, 07-1p
HELI' WANTED'
Man for dairy farm, Apply Clem Gal-
braith, phone 66 Blyth. 07.1
FOR SALE
11952 Chevrolet Sedan, in fair condi-'
tion, real good tires. Apply, A, D,'
Campbell, phone 35R18, Blyth, 07.2p
FOR SALE
95 acres of good grass land, excellent
water supply, on concession 5, East Wa-
anosh, Apply Russell Cook, phone
6817,' Blyth, 071
Doc Cole, Proprietor
CONTACT US
For All Your
ELECTRICAL PROBLEMS
Free Estimates Given On
WIRING CONTRACTS
Fast and Efficient Service
on all
ELECTRICAL REPAIRS
BILL'S ELECTRIC
Win. hull, Proprietor,
Phone 171 Blyth, nOt,
DANCE
To GARNET FARRIER'S
6 -PIECE BAND
111
Blyth Memorial Hall
Friday, Apr. 7
sponsored by
BLYTH AGRICULTURA
SOCIETY
LUCKY DRAW PRIZES
Admission at popular prices.
AUCTION SALE
Mellon Sale of household Effects al
the residence of Mrs, Thomas Grasby,
6 miles north of Seaforth on County
toad
WEDNESDAY, APRiL 5th
at 1 p,m,
3 furnished bedrooms; pillows; blan-
ket box; wardrobe; carpet 13x6; 2 sidc-
boards; cupboard; china cabinet; 2
couches; occasional chairs; rocking
chairs; 6 dining room chairs; extension
tablet small tables; kitchen chairs; 2
lawn chairs; coal heater; small Wing -
ham, wood stove; electric iron and
toaster; heavy duly hvt plate; croeks;
lamps; sealers; dishes; small grabs;
lawn mower; garden tools; cross 'cut
saw; hand sleigh; barn jack; other
articles too numerous to mention,
TERMS CASiI
opriefnr, 111ttrs. Tltoairal; Grp.
—Cecil -Wheeler, Auctlonee,r, Harold Jac1,,on. 07.1,
FOR,SALE
Timothy seed; and alfalfa seed. -Apr
ly Wm. Blake, phone 15R11 Blyth.
07-1
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to thank ail nay friends
and neighbours who sent cards and
treats to the baby and 1 while in the
Clinton Public Hospital and since re-
turning home, Special thanks to Dr.
Street and the nursing staff.
07-1p, --Thelma 'McDougall.
FOR SALE
Girls two-piece spring coat set, pink
fleck, size 3X; boys two-piece blue
fleck, size 2, Apply phone 28R11, Blyth.
07-1
PAO 0
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4'7811
NOW PLAYING
NOW—Debra Paget In "JOURNEY TO A LOST CITY" Color
Also Russia's Most Famous "Circus Stars,"
Mon„ Tues., Wed., Double Bill
BOB HOPE and RHONDA FLEAtING
In which Hope joshes the story of a notorious gunslinger,
"ALIAS JESSE JAMES"
Technicolor
Don't miss the true -life adventure drama;
"DESERT FURY"
Technicolor
Adult Entertainment
Thurs„ Fri., Sat,
Steve Reeves • Primo Carnera and Sylvia Koesina
Bring to life the tale of a mythical strong man.
"HERCULES UNCHAINED"
In Scope and Technicolor
COMING—"The Sundowners" Color with Debra Kerr.
BRITISH
ISRAEL
The Bible's National Message
We believe that the Celto-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 Secretory
CANADIAN BRITISH -ISRAEL ASSOCIATION
in Ontario
P.O. Box 744, Station 8, Ottawa, Ont.
Cars For Sale
1961 FORD Sedan
1960 PONTIAC Coach
1954 FORD Sedan
1950 METEOR
1952 FORD Sedan Deliv.
1952 DODGE Coach
1955 CHEV. Coach
Sec Other Models Not
Listed
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
FOR SALE
28 pigs, 10 weeks old. Apply Wni.
Patterson, phone 526-7795 Auburn.
WANTED
Reliable girl for house work, Apply.
phone 17R9, Blyth, 07.1
WANTED TO RENT
Pasture for 12 yearling steers. Apply
Wallace Nicholson, phone 31R11. Blyth.
07-1p
PRECISION GRANULATED FERTILIZER
1/ COMPLETELY GRANULAR 1/ DUST'FREE / ALWAYS FLOWS FREELY
ONLY SUPER FLOW iS `PRECISION
GRANULATED' TO GiVE THESE BENEFITS
No clogging or skipping—The controlled range of granule size
gives a smooth, constant flow, acre after acre. Gives more even
distribution of plant food , . , more uniform crops.
Save time and work—You waste no time clearing and resetting
equipment. You save time in the field.
Dust-Free—More pleasant to handle and no loss on windy days.
Equipment is easier to clean.
Highly ly soluble—Moro phosphorous made available,
tool
Remember, only SUPER PLOW is "precision grana.
fated". It's the top-rated granular fertilizer on the
market today. Ask your neighbour Who uses it!
Order from your SUPER FLOW fertilizer dealer
A product of Canadian Indusltiet Limited
"Gone About As Fur
1
As Folks Can Go"
The swiss de0:1-st a explore'.
Jacques Piecarcl, a tall, lanky,
banciseme man of 38, shares a
special problem with a special
group cf men, Like Sir Edmund
Hillary, conqueror Evore.o.
like Don Larsen, pitcher ot a
perfect game, Piccard has reach.
ed the top in his field, the ahse,
lute pinnacle of ;lel ;
Levement --
or moce precisely, in Picearti's
field, the absolute Dott,an. \Veen
he and U.S. Navy Lt, Don Wilk?'
descended 35,800 feet to the fk o,.
of the Peenic Ocean's Challeneer
Deep one year ago, they not
only rem:lied the ocean's deepest
deep het the earth's remoteet
put. Iliere was no pla,a‘ fart hi
10 eo.
Happtly, the question of wIlat
to do 101 ati ensor.' longe:
bothers Piceard. Last eionth, ie
was hack in the U.S. of pines
for 1h2 niesoscr.e,li Went I:le
Greek -meso" or middle iiIII
"skaphe" or beau, a new (Heine -
ship to explore the Ocean Mid -
depths. Like the record-setting
bathyscaph (from "bathys,"
cieep), it was desinged by Jar.
quer Piceeird's famote, still ac-
tive father, 77-year-ol(1 Prof.
Auguste Piecard.
'rho bathyscaph," Jacques
Piccard explained to a visitme
"is for the hadal (from 'Hades')
depths below 20,000 feet, The
mesoseaph will operate at about
:1,000 feet. We will have room
for four pecple. There will be
yeveral viewing ports, search-
lights, and robot arms to gather
;fish or picot life. Vertical and
horizontal propellers w•ill enable
it to maneuver up, down, and
sideways, or hover, like a heli.
copier.
"I don't think ol the bathy-
scaph and the mesoscaph as be-
ing in competition or as dupiica-
tion. It is like going on a trip.
One can go by bicycle, or sports
car, or train, or plane — depend-
ing upon what one's purpose is."
'We hope to build it in Lau-
sanne. I only live a few min-
utes' walk from my father's
house. We don't have a real
workshcp since we don't have
the money for one. Money is the
problem. The mesoscaph would
be about 10 feet in diameter and
cost about $500,000 to build,
"If we had the money tomor-
row we could have the meso-
scaph ready in one year. The
U.S. Navy's Office of Naval Re-
search is interested. They bought
the bathyscaph and they say
r —
11 l'4uy the mesoscaph once
it. is built. Bust right now they
say they can't give us the money
to build it — the gold outflow,
you know."
Piccard is modera.te'y optimis-
tic about the financing, since
President Kennedy himself spe-
cifically suggested that nations
together "tap the ocean depths"
in his Inaugural Address.
What about the Russians—how
good is their oceanographic pro-
gr'm?
"I can tell you this story about
the Russians," Piccard replied.
"When Walsh and I surfaced af-
ter the Challenger Deep dive,
our instruments indicated we
had reached 37,800 feet. That fig-
ure was announced. A week 1a -
ter the Russians announced that
they were building a diving ship
to go 37,800 feet. Then, when our
instruments were recalibrated, it
turned out that the actual depth,
the farthest one can go was 35,-
800. They had spoken too eager-
ly." — From NEWSWEEK.
Q. Do salad bowls and iced -
lea glasses require service plates
beneath them?
A. A salad bowl does not re-
quire a service plate beneath it,
nor does an iced -tea glass — al-
though in the latter case, if you
wish, you may have one, and
then :ipcons may be placed unon
it rather than left in the glasA
while one is drinking,
HE MADE IT — Covered with
bandages, but very. much
olive, Lewis Stevens, 37, lies
In a bed at Zanesville, Ohio,
hospital, He was burned when
an ox,e furnace t xplcdcd
wris..;•e W.? Works:
ISSUE 13 — I !Nil
BOARDING HOUSE REACH — The grass is always greener,
bc-ze against a log while reaching for food ata dam,
=
11 LE
TALKS
Katie Ancipews.
Popovers, old-fashioned and
delectable, are coming back into
style. I say this because I've had
thorn served to me several times
recently at parties.
I'm glad to see this trend
because many home cooks seem
to have built up a sort of mental
hazard on the subject before
they have even tried making
them. Actually, they are easy to
make and may be baked in
either glass custard cups, regular
weight muffin tins, pottery cups,
or the heavy cast-iron muffin
pans that are usually known as
popover pans,
"I bake popovers in glass
custard cups and I never have a
failure," one friend told Inc as
she served them high, hot, and
handsome for dinner. "I have
several secrets, I use about 3
tablespoons less milk than most
recipes call for, and I grease the
cups thoroughly and then flour
them just as thoroughly. Also,
where most recipes say to cook
them at a very high temperature
for 15 minutes, then lower it, I
cook them all the time at 400'
F. Using separate cups, I place
them all on a cooky sheet before
for easier handling,"
There are a couple of other
popover secrets you may want
to know: you can turn off the
oven heat and leave the "sec-
onds" in the oven to keep hot.
Also, you can mix the batter
hours before baking, even the
day before, cover it, and place
In the refrigerator. Mix it with
a spoon before baking. Fill your
popover cups only about 1/.1 full
—and if you like them crisp,
cook a little longer than most
recipes say.
*
Here is a recipe that one of
my popover -loving friends gave
me, writes Eleanor Richey John-
ston in the Christian Science
Monitor.
*
POPOVERS
1 cup sifted flour
3/1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon shortening
(optional)
2 eggs. slightly beaten
cup milk
Place flour and salt in mixing
bowl, If shortening is used (it
isn't usually used), cut it into
flour and salt mixture until mix-
ture resembles corn meal. Blend
eggs and milk and add to dry
ingredients, Beat with rotary
beater until smooth. Fill cups Mt
full (grease the cups well). Bake
at, 375° F. until -well browned—
about 50 minutes. If desired, re-
move popovers front oven and
cut a little slit in side of each to
let steam out; return to oven for
a few minutes. Remove prompt-
ly from cups so bottoms do not
steam or soften.. This recipe
makes 12 medium or 8 large
popovers.
Note: An additional egg may
be added for a crisper, and even
larger, popover.
BAKED CARROTS
2 cups cooked, diced carrots
1 tablespoon chopped onion
2 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons flour
I teaspoon salt ,
• ki teaspoon paprika
11/2 cups milk
cup diced cheese
1/2 can cracker crumbs mixed
with I tablespoon melted
but t e r,
Melt butter in saucepan; add
Hour, salt, and paprika, mix
well. Add milk and cook, stir-
ring until creatny. Add carrots,
onions, and cheese. Pour into
buttered baking dish and spread
crumb and melted butter mix-
ture evenly over top. Bake at
350° F. for 25 minutes. Serve
from casserole in which it is
baked.
Note: cabbage may he 'tied in
this recipe instead of carrots.
. . ,
Here are two dessert recipes
ruer'e with seg whites and said
to be t‘ ell worth trying.
etc.;
ISUWERM1LIC SHERBET
- 2 cups buttermilk
1 0 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 egg whites (large size eggs),
beaten stiff
1 cui»nashed canned apricots
(or crushed pineapple).
Combine, buttermilk, sugar,
and vanilla; pour into freezing
tray and freeze until mixture
becomes icy; remove and beat
until smooth, Add egg whites
which have been beaten until
stiff and the fruit. Put mixture
back into tray and freeze solid.
Remove and beat until smooth.
Again put the mixture back and
freeze for about 2 hours — then
it is ready to serve. Serves 4.
The
reader
cooky,
second dessert sent by
is, she says, "A quick
delicious and crunchy.
even for swans.
This fellow
These should be left in the oven
not over 5 minutes."
GRAHAM CRACKER
CRUNCIIIES
2 (.111)s graham cracker crumbs
I., (.111) sugar
2 egg whites (from large eggs),
stiffly beaten
VI teaspoon ereant of tartar
cup toasted pecans
A few flakes toasted coconut
(optional)
Combine cracker crumbs and
sugar; fold in stiffly beaten egg
whites and cream of tartar, Add
nuts and coconut. Drop by tea-
spoon onto greased cooky sheet.
Bake at 350 F. for 5 minutes.
CHOCOLATE SPONGE
11.2 tablespoons plain gelatin
1/2 cup cold water
is cup Wiling water
4 eggs, separated
1 cup sugar (scant)
4 squares chocolate, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla
Dash salt.
Dissolve gelatin in cold water
f o r 10 minutes. Meanwhile,
cream the egg yolks and sugar
A GOOD RUSSIAN SPY LOOKS
LIKE ANY AVERAGE EXECUTIVE
By TOM A. CULLEN
Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
LONDON — What does the
well-dressed Soviet spy wear in
1961, or rather, how is he dis-
guised? How docs he operate?
What is he like?
Have Russian spies kept pace
with the sputniks?
Those who think that the So-
viets are exporting ham-fisted
operators are due for a nasty
sheet when the naval secrets
spy trial unfolds at the Old
Bailey court beginning March 13.
Ivan the Spyman has acquired
the outer trappings and sophis-
tication of a gentleman. He
speaks English fluently without
a trange accent.
Chances are that he travels on
a British Commonwealth pass-
port. He is equally at home in
Paris, Budapest or New York. In
the game of espionage, it does
not pay to linger in one place.
It he is a really top operator,
Ivan's chances of being assigned
to Britain are good, because im-
portant American bases are lo-
cated here and the Soviets ap-
parently find British security
easier to penetrate than that in
the U.S.
In Britain, Ivan is likely to
pose as a Commonwealth busi-
nessman investing in a small
firm as a cover, He looks like an
executive. His suits hear the
mark of Saville Row.
Ile also may have a nagging
wife who complains of his con-
tinued absence.
The above is a fair description
of Gordon Arnold Lonsdale, 38,
the Russian who claims to be
Canadian, who Scotland Yard
says was the brains behind a
spy network here.
Lonsdale is one of five accused
of transmitting secrets of Brit-
ain's underwater weapons, In-
cluding details of Britain's first
nuclear submarine, to Russia.
There was nothing to arouse
suspicion about Lonsdale when
he arrived in London a few
months back.
His Canadian passport was in
order. And his name- had the
right ring: Gordon Arnold Lons-
dale sounds Os though it came
out of a British drawingroom
comedy. He joined the Overseas
League, Mecca of Common-
weelth visitors.
To give his visit purpose, .he
invested in Allo Security Prod-
ucts, a small firm sharing offices
with a real estate agent, in the
heart. of London. Alia markets a
remote -control locking mechan-
ism,
There %vas only one wrong
note in Lonsdale's disguise which,
a purist might find fault with:
"Be chewed gum, In Britain;
'company.directors simply do not.
chew gum, hot even if they come.
from Commonwealth countries.
According to Scotland • Yard
detectives, Lonsdale made .con-
tact with Henry Houghton, 55;
an ex -Royal Navy petty officer.
employed at the anti-submarine
base at Portland. He then in-
duced Houghton to hand over to
him secret Admiralty drawings
and charts,
Houghton, in turn, enlisted the
help of his fiancee, Miss Ethel
Gee, 40, who also worked at the
naval base. These two civil
11. Add Macd choco-
at stir; laid and salt
and stir again. Add the hulling
water to the gelatin mixture and
stir; acid ahout 1.3 of this gelatin
mixture to the chocolate mixture
:incl stir, scraping the sides of
the howl with a spoon. Grad-
ually add remaining gelatin,
stirring until well -blended Chill
to consistency of unbeaten egg
whites. Heat egg whites until
stil f and fold into first mixture.
Chill an hour or more until firm,
SODA CRACKER PIE
3 egg whites
1.1 teaspoon cream of tartar
1 cup sugar
1.2 cup ‘valnuts (chopped)
1 teaspoon vanilla
12 soda crackers, crumbled
13ea1 egg whites until foamy;
add cream of tartar and con-
tinue beating until still% Stir the
sugar into the egg whites Add
vanilla, Mils, ariq cracker
crumbs. Bake in ',wavily greased
8 -inch pie pan al 350° F, for 1
hour. Serve with strawberries,
peaches, or bananas and whipped
cream, Sweeten the fruit before
using.
SIIE TOLD THEM!
Over the giggles uf two teen-
age girls in the audience at a
concert in Hopkinsville, Ky., Met
Opera soprano Rise Stevens
could hardly hear herself sing.
She thumped •white -gloved
hand on the piano, stopped the
music ("The Gypsy Song" from
"Carmen"), and told the crowd
she couldn't put up with the
gigglers: "I'll have to ask them
to stop — or leave." That ended
the disturbance, and Miss Ste-
vens finished her concert and
lock two encores. Afterward, the
singer noted that her own 16 -
year -old son Nicolas — it student
et Choate School — is a jazz
buff who has no fondness for
classical music. Miss Stevens
added pointedly: "But at least
he doesn't go to concerts."
The dime isn't entirely worth-
lo.ss these days. It still makes a
pretty good screwdriver,
Lonsdale, in his choice of
Waterloo rail ‘yay station and
environs as the scene of his
rendezvous with Houghton and
Gcc, showed a fine understand-
ing of British character.
For Waterloo is just the spot
that a couple of middle-aged
British civil servants would
choose as the starting point for
an illicit weekend in London,
away from the prying eyes of
their neighbors.
LONSDALE and Houghton met
Vic theatre,
servants were the primary
sources of naval secrets, accord-
ing to police.
Once having obtained the Ad-
miralty papers, Lonsdale alleg-
edly turned them over to a mys-
terious couple, Peter and Helen
Kroger, to be photographed or
coded for radio transmission to
Moscow.
These are the five who will
stand trial, and who face maxi-
mum prison sentences of 14
years if convicted,
frequently in
front of the Old
Lonsdale met Houghton and'
Gee several times, either in
front of Waterloo or .in front
of the Old Vic theater on the
opposite side of the. street.
Sometimes the three of them sat
on a Park bench outside the Old
Vic. On each of these occasions,
Scotland Yard detectives saw
either Houghton or Gee hand a
parcel to Lonsdale.
Once, on Aug. 6, 1960, Lons-
dale "met Houghton alone at
nearby Steve's Restaurant,' and
British Advice
For Fathers -To -Be
Miele should father be when
mother's giving hirth? London
physician 1), W. 11111 started this
sort of baby talk in Britain re-
cently when he wrote in the
British Medical Journal that the
father should be present at a
birth. Among the replies was
one from Irish doctor Joseph
Patterson, '"lite proper place for
father, if not at work," Patter-
son contradicted, "is in the local
I Pub 1, whither instinct will usu-
ally guide him." Another reply.
was from Harley Street surgeon
Albert Davis, Once there was a
father with him at a birth, Davis
recalled, and "I had to use th.
sutures prepared for the mother
to repair an extensive scalp
laceration on the father. Ile had.
fainted and fallen at the sight of
the 'happy' event,"
POOR RICHARD — Orson Welk,
is recreated in the image of
Ben Franklin for a role In the
mpvie "Lafayette," being film-
ed in Nice, France,
their conversation was over-
heard by a detective in the next
booth,
"You seem to have plenty itt
your brief case," Lonsdale re-
marked. "Yes," replied Hough-
ton, "I have more than my sleep-
ing and shaving kit." Lonsdale
went on to comment that "it
looks like a lot of work for me
tonight."
But Lonsdale had other prob-
lems to keep him awake nights,
domestic problems, as it turns
out. At the forthcoming trial,
an exchange of letters between
Lonsdale and the woman whom
police claim is his Russian wife
will be introduced.
Most marriages are studded
with little anniversaries, mean-
ingless to outsiders — the first
date, the first kiss, This Russian
couple seems to have dated their
romance by the number of cele-
brations they witnessed together
in Moscow's Tied Square.
Thus, the woman who police
say is Lonsdale's wife writes to
complain that they have been
apart for "seven October Revo-
lution celebrations,"
"How unjust life is," she sighs.
"1 fully understand you love
your work and try to do all this
very conscientiously. Neverthe-
less, my reasoning is somehow
narrow-minded in a female fash-
ion and I suffer dreadfully."
"My beloved Galyusha," begins
the reply, which police say is. in
Lonsdales handwriting, "Y o u
wrote that seven October anni-
versarics Avere celebrated with-
out me, This is so, cf course, Fut
I have celebrated them without
you and without the children
and my people.
"I am not complaining," the
letter adds, "but even you can-
not imagine how sad 1 feel in
general and especially a( this
moment."
"I will be 30 shortly," the
letter concludes, "Is there 0111011
left?"
If convicted, Lonsdale may
have to celebrate 14 more Oc-
tober Revolutions in a prison
cell.
THE SPIES were overheard at Sieve's Restaurant near their favorite meeting grounds,
••=1•11'
House Foundations
Made Of Granite
The neighborhood in which
Aunt Harriet and Uncle Pearl
lived was appropriately called
the Granite Neighborhood, It %vas
there in the days before the Civil
War that the Doorstone Quari3
turned out door - rocks by the
huadred, In our childhood, the
quarry was no longer in opera-
tion, though there were relics of
the clays of its activity, the
granite boarding house, the chip -
strewn road leading to the
quarry hole, and Uncle Pearl's
huge barn, which had once
housed the Doorstone oxen and
the galamanders,
The nearby Blue hill Granite
Company and the White Com-
pany were concerns that did bus-
iness in the late nineteenth cen-
tury and into early decades of
the twentieth, '['he cutting sheds
of the former were in sight of
Aunt Harriet's house so that she
heard the beat of the hammers
on the cutting chisels as she
went.ahout her work,
The White works at the foot
of Clay's h111 employed the men
of the Friend's Corner Neighbor-
hood in the months from March
to November. My brcthcrs and
I took price in the fact that Fa-
ther and Uncle Pearl were, "hiss
cutters," and that Uncle Arthur
had the reputation of being the
fastest cutter on the job. Otis
and Ben and my cousin Austin
served as tool and' water boys
when they n•ere in their teens,
but the decline of granite -cutting
and the closing of the Granite
Neighborhood works defeated
the boys' ambition to bo master
cutters.
We children had listened to
the conversation of our granite -
cutting elders so that the jargon
of the trade was familiar to us
Ashlar, reankiy stock, curbing,
six cut work, grout, and galanki-
ander were ail terns that we
understood and used with occur -
[Ty. We recognized the shrill
whistle of the Blue Mill Quarry
and the more robust blast of the
White whistle as signals that
twice a day, at seven o'clock and
at twelve, summoned the men to
work, and, at eleven, gave the
signal for the workers to knock
off for dinner,
The four o'clock whistle meant
the end of the day when the cut-
ters brushed of their stones, fold-
ed their aprons, and placed their
peen hammers, their hand ham-
pers, and their chalk and line
in their tool boxes. The black-
smiths banked their fires and
the teamsters unhitched the
work horses from the cumber-
some galamanders. The engi-
neers left the engine house and
the quarrymen climbed up the
ladders front the quarry hole.
The horses that had been stabled
in makeshift hovels while their
owners worked in shop or
quarry or engine house raised
their heads and neighed as
though as to say, "Good, this
day's work is done. Let's hurry
home to my stall and feedbox
of oats."
Granite cut at White's yard
was taken to Atlantic coast ports
by white -sailed schooners and
ships. One of the schooners was
the Herald of the Morning, a
craft in which we took great in-
terest because Father and Uncle
Arthur owned a two -sixty-fourth
Interest in her, Granite was not
the Herald's only cargo, She
brought pineapples from Carib-
bean ports to Baltimore, coal
from Baltimore to Maine, and
now and then cargoes of ice, a
Maine product that for a few
decades brought -great prosperity
to the Kennebec Valley, writes
Esther E. Wood in the Christian
Science Monitor.
The school in our Friend's
Corner Neighborhood was called
the Granite School, It sat on a
granite -crowned hill and was
guarded by a great gray boulder
that served equally well as a
goal, a fort, or a lighthouse, In
the vicinity of the schoolhouse
THOUGHteUI - New York's
subway, long the target for
asmateur artists, Is going along
wvlth the gag. In order to pro -
keel other signboards, special
rte
stars have been set up for
nustaohe-drawers to pros -
s their art upon.
were shallow quarry holes from
which in the pre -Civil -War days
stock had been taken to make
paving for the Mississippi (liver
levees and for city streets.
One of the holes, the Manning
Quarry, was a favorite play-
ground, which we called the
"Hanging Gardens of Babylon."
Since the two levels of, the
abandoned quarry were covered
only by crisp lichens and stunted
seedlings, our designation was a
highly imaginative one. But we
Friend's Corner children were
never short when it cane to im-
agination. A second quarry hole
was our Comstock Lode and a
third a dungeon in the Bastille.
Not all the granite went into
paving and ashlar and curbing,
Every Friend's Corner home had
a granite foundation and, in the
case of our modest farm house,
there was a double underpinning
of blocks. Every house had a
granite door -rock and a granite
hitching post, where the horse
of an afternoon caller was, in
the warm months, hitched while
the owner went inside for a
visit,
Uncle Pearl and Father had a
friendly rivalry over the use of
granite on their homesteads,
Father cut a well -curb for our
backyard well; Uncle Pearl made
corner flocks on which he placed
the rain barrels: Father cut a
granite urn which was set under
the parlor windows and in which
Mother planted red gerailiutns.
But Uncle won the "battle of
granite" when he laid a sidewalk
I' cut stone from his back door
to the Karn, a walk which we
children found ideal for bounc-
ing balls and rolling marbles.
At the time when Father and
Uncle were busy making granite
conveniences for their homes, we
children became interested in
collecting stone chips, a hobby
which Father encouraged by
suggesting that we strew the
chips along the foundation of the
house, a space where the grass
at best grew sparsely. Dan and
Uncle Arthur were so much im-
pressed by the neatness of the
margin that they engaged us to
make a similar fringe of chips
along the foundation of their
honkies.
Today no paving is quarried al
Friend's Corner;` no granite is
cut in the Granite Neighborhood;
the whistles are stilled; the
granite -laden Herald of the
Morning no longer sails down
the bay. But we still have re-
minders of the days of granite
prosperity - o u r foundation
blocks, our door - rocks, our
hitching posts, now so seldom
used, and our chip margins which
are as gray and as neat as they
were forty years ago when we
children were for a brief time
workers with granite.
Those Big Trucks
Score Again
The lobby for operators of big
trucks has scored again, this
time in the Arkansas Senate, Un-
der rules that require 18 votes,
the lobby lined 10) 19.
Arkansas has had a maximum
load limit of 28 tons, The state
has inverted about 800 million
dollars of tax money in high-
ways, one of the largest invest-
ments of any type within its
borders.
During the hearings on the
proposal for heavier truck loads
there was an extraordinary in-
cident in which the Highway
Department staff presented a
written statement attempting to
protect this investment. They
said only a few miles have been
designed for proposed loads.
They said most of the present
surfaces are rebuilt on subgeades
of the days of lighter trucks.
These surfaces do very well
under automobile traffic and the
ordinary size of trucks. On
nationwide figures only about
five per cent of the vehicles are
the heaviest trucks that endan-
ger highway investments, In
Arkansas less than 3,000 vehicles
hold licenses for the heaviest
loads.
But such considerations are of
small moment to operators of
big trucks, The lobby that found
its way through the. Tennessee
Legislature barricades in 1959 has
.now prevailed upon the Arkansas
Senate to allow five more tons
of payload. -Commercial Appeal
(Memphis).
1 liked his speech,
It pleased nie vastly -
Especially when
He said: "And lastly-"
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CARROT TOP - Natalina Petrarca, 4, a Roman miss, sits atop
what she believes to be rabbit heaven - a mountain of car-
rots. She is, of course, munching on one.
TllIA2N FRONT
Jo
There has been "some evi-
dence of improvement in quaii-
ty" cf Canadian hogs since the
government instituted its hog
premium policy last October,
Ralph K. Bennett, Canada De-
partment of Agriculture states in
a review of the 1960 hog industry
in Canada,
The new policy provides for
a $3 premium on Grade A hogs.
The total number of Grade A
hogs marketed in November and
December 1960 equalled 31.1 per
cent compared with 20.2 per
cent for the corresponding period
In 1959, However, Mr, Bennett
felt it is "too early to forecast any
direct results of the change in
hog premium policy."
+ * *
There was a huge drop in the
number of hogs in Canada dur-
ing 1960. The 1960 total was al-
most 6.8 million head, compared
with 8.6 million head the pre-
vious year, The figures repre-
sent a decrease of 21 per cent
during the year.
Domestic disappearance av-
eraged 125,398 head weekly, a
reduction of about 8,400 head per
week or about 6 per cent less than
the preceding year,
* * •
There was also a considerable
drop in export of pork and hams
to the United States in 1960.
Shipments to the U,S. during
the year totalled almost 45 mil-
lion pounds, some 8 million
pounds Less than the preceding
year, Total exports of pork and
hams to all countries during
1960 amounted to about 65 mil-
lion pounds,
The number of hogs on Cana- •
dian farms at the end of De-
cember 1960 was estimated at
5.5 million head, a reduction of
14 per cent from the 6.4 million
at the sank time the preceding
year,
4, * *
The average price for the year
was almost the sane as for 1959
but the range of prices was much
wider. Prices ranged from a low
of $19 at Toronto for Grade A's
last March, to a high of over
$30 in December, The cumulative
national weighted average de-
livered price, per hundredweight
for Grade A hogs, was almost
$24,
• , 4,
Quality, a major problem in
the hog industry, did not show
any marked change during the
year. The percentage of Grade
ISSUE 13 - 1961
A increased by one per cent,
and of Grade C by one-half of '
one per cent. This gain, how-
ever, was offset by a decrease
of nearly two per cent in Grade
B hogs.
"Since the ban on United
States' imports was lifted in
February, 1960," Mr. Bennett re-
ported, "the Canadian hog pro-
ducer has been in the sante po-
sition as the cattleman has been
in for some time - his prices
are tied directly to price levels
in the United States."
• • *
More Canadians are reaching
for canned fruit than ever be-
fore.
Basing their calculations on
published statistics and about
1,000 replies to questionnaires
sent to Ontario orchardists, the
economists come up with some
figures of Canada -wide interest.
Ontario in 1956 had 83 per
cent of the country's peach
trees, 66 per cent of the pear
trees, 75 per cent of cherry trees
and 53 per cent of the "other"
tree fruits, most of them plums
and prunes. Twenty-nine of Can-
ada's 48 fruit canning plants were
in Ontario in 1958.
4.
*
Not only has a striking in-
crease in Canadian consumption
of canned fruits taken place but
it is likely to continue, according
to the economists.
While the population of Can-
ada only doubled in the last 32
years, the home market for can-
ned fruit increased by almost six
times. On the basis of average
disappearance for the past five
years, they concluded that there
appears to be a market for 7.9
million pounds of canned cher-
ries, 62.5 million pounds of Ban-
ned peaches, 31.2 million pounds
of canned pears and 10.1 million
pounds of canned plums,
• * *
Average per capita use of the
four fruits canned was steady at
seven pounds in the period 1954-
58 compared with 2,4 pounds in
the 1929-33 period,
The relative stability in use
now reached may be due to the
growing consumption of frozen
fruits - from 24.1 million pounds
in 1953 to 36,6 million pounds in
1958. This was a jump of 52 per
cent, more than three tines the
rate of population increase in
that time, • •
More than half of the peaches,
pears and cherries harvested on
883 Ontario farms surveyed by
questionnaire were sold for pro-
cessing, mostly under contract.
Plums were sold half for pro-
cessing and half for fresh use.
• • *
The investigators noted that
approximately 52 per cent of the
Canadian production of the four
fruits was used fresh In the five
years ended 1958, Two per cent
was exported and the remainder
processed, Imports of fresh fruits
were mostly consumed fresh, not
processed,
Per capita consumption of the
fresh fruits totals 12 pounds at
which point it has been fairly
stable for the last five years,
• * *
Better buy a spare can -opener?
An Eskimo's View
Of His Homeland
From the writer's point of
view, the Arctic has no favour-
able qualities, unless its severity
be counted as such. It is a bar-
ren, empty land, largely comfort-
less and desolate, The endless
tundra stretching from sea to
horizon has an austere, monoton-
ous charm, a certain cold, clean -
edged beauty. Yet throughout it
is hard on man.
To the Eskimo, however, it is
home, the earth's most favoured
place, They have no desire to go
elsewhere; they are content with
this country which contains
enough walrus and seal to satis-
fy most of their needs,
In its topography, the eastern
Canadian Arctic ranges from
great glistening, coloured cliffs
to flatlands, that roll away, mile
after empty mile, featureless and
undifferentiated, save for quiet
inland pools that blue -spangle
its monotonous expanse.
The fleeting weeks between
the passing of one winter and
the corning of another witness
temperate and even warm wea-
ther. Snow melts, flowers bloom,
birds flock from the south, The
land becomes sombre brown, not
colourless, but dead in colour,
save for the brilliant orange of
lichen -covered rocks.
Aivilik men are keen geo-
graphers when describing their
immediate surroundings. B u t
once they venture to, tell of the
outer world, geography gives
way to cosmography. I asked a
number of them to describe the
world. The earth, they replied,
is merely several weeks journey
In extent from their home. Most
agreed that it is both flat and
circular, with Southampton Is-
land as its centre. The sun, fol-
lowing an irregular course,
travels about it, lighting first the
upper and then the under side.
At the end of the earth stand
four great pillars which support
the sky dome, Here are the stars
which burn so brightly in the
heavens on clear nights - From
"Eskimo," by Edmuns Carpen-
ter, Frederick Varley and Robert
Flaherty.
)IMY SCIIOOI
LESSON
By Rev, it, Barclay Warren
B.A., B.D.
Christ, Our Living Lord
John 20: 11-22.
Memory Selection: Jesus said
unto them again. Peace be unto
you: as my Father hath sent me,
even so send I you, John 20:31.
The rising of Jesus Christ from
the dead was the climax of the
wonders that accompanied His
coming in the likeness of man.
The apostles, after Pentecost,
took full advantage of this in
pressing upon their hearers the
claims of the Gospel. Here are
some typical expressions from
their preaching as recorded in
Acts. "I -him. , , .ye have taken,
and by wicked hands have cruci-
fied and slain: whom God hath
raised up, having loosed the
pains of death: because it was
not possible that he should be
holden of it," (2:23). "God hath
made that sane Jesus, whom ye
have crucified, both Lord and
Christ." (2:36). "Ye. , , . killed
the Prince of life, whom God
hath raised from the dead;
whereof we are witnesses."
(3:14.15). In comparison with
the apostles we are much too
calm about the glory of the
resurrection. We accept it but
we fail to grasp the wonder of it.
Jesus was seen alter His res-
urrection over a period of 40
days by people, singly, and in
groups as large as 500. After
Pentecost, 120 of these became
the nucleus of a witnessing
Church. They emphasized the
resurrection of Jesus Christ as
proof that Jesus was the Christ
and therefore the people should
repent of their sins and believe
in Him. They saw multitudes
converted to faith in Jesus Christ
as their personal Lord and Savi-
our. And still the work goes on,
though not as fast as it should.
The church is too much caught
up in the spirit of the age to give
the witness it should, Paul said
in his letter to the Philippians,
(3:18.10), For many walk, of
whom I have told you often, and
now tell you even weeping, that
they are the enemies of the cross
of Christ: whose end is destruc-
tion, whose God is their belly;
and whose glory is -in their
shame, who mind earthly things."
Fleshly appetites rule ill many
lives today. And what glorying
there is in the things of which
we should be ashamed. Many of
the best selling books and most
popular movies exploit all sorts
of sex perversions. Earthly
things have our attention far too
much, May God help us to re-
pent and return to the simplicity
of the Gospel as set forth by the
early Church.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS 63, Neat
1. Prates
Curtsy
Nlpa palm
12. Instigate
18. Head of a watt
4. Ancient
stringed
Instrument
16. Preserved an
account of
17. Penile
18. Coin of
Macao
19, Large lizard
21. Several
23. wind flowers
28. Rather than
27. Twice
(music)
28. Up to the
time of
19. Ruthenium
symbol
. A'lorlt of birdo
611pp
Anewererythe
Purpose
88. Palm
cockatoo
85. wapiti
26. Energy
(slang)
27. Gigantic
39. \Vatehfulnenn
40. Subsequent to
41. Branch of
the sea
12. A roust (Fr.)
14. nanntlene
13. fhllseed
49. English
letter
10. City in
Indians
11 Marries
6:. Dutch
commune
DOWN
1, Needlefish
2. A president's
nickname
2. Suited
4. Broken up
5. Injurious
6. Great bodies
of water
T. Cotter ream
key
ti. Divorcee's
allowance
9, Despot
10. Macaw
11. write
6, Artificial
language
10. In a trenzt 39, Moved
to kill furtively
11. Glaotal
fragment
22, Cit In
Bolivia
18. Help
1, Kind of duck
276 Incline
. Exalt one'.
self
11. Benefits
81, Not healthy
14, Winged
16. Gained by
labor
16. Coddle
112. Grasp
suddenly
41. Land
measure
41. Crude
41, Identical
46. Pagoda
ornament
46. Biblical
character
47, Worked hard
(oolloq,)
1' Z 3
4
4.:.
6'
6
7
.•r
8
9
10
/1
•:'•
13
/4
21
26
y,".�,
;:r
24
Z
s.
p' •:::,
.*•::•
to
..
v.
31
y �,
Vs
32
33.
3
,
3.
37
•38
r
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•
t39
4Z
ti.�:ti
'
40
.49
' '
50
r3/
;i:3' :
5j•
1,'53
/
Answer els 'whree on this page '
FISHING FOR TROUBLE -Ice fishermen on Lake Winnebago, Fond shanties, The ice had drifted into the lake, A makeshift
du Lac, Wis,, received a surprise when they stepped from their bridge was arsed to girt then, their cars and shanties back.
PAGE 8 '
LONDESBORO
A former resident of Londesboro in
the person of Mrs, George Barr, passed
away on Tuesday afternoon in Clinton
Public Ilospital, where she had been a
patient for several weeks. She had
previously made her home with her
nephew, Harty Webster, 'for the past j
few years. Sympathy is extended to
the family.
Mr. James McCool went to 'Toronto
on Illonday to sec his brother, Welling-
ton McCool, who is seriously ill,
W, I. To Meet
The W. I. will hold the April meeting
7
on Wednesday, April 51h, (note change
of day) and will entertain the 4.11 Club
girls following the completion of their
course, District President, Mrs. Popp,
of Dungannon, will also be present.
licstcsses are: Mrs, Gordon Radford,
Mrs. 11ar 'e Wells, Mrs. Bert Alien,
Mrs, Jack Armstrong.
Mr, and Mrs. Gilbert Mair, of Ches-
ley, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd McEwing, of
Moorefield, Mrs. Lily Webster, IVnm.
Gooier and Mrs, Viva McGregor, were
guests with Mr. and Mrs, Robert Fair -
service on Sunday,
The members of the Explorer group
will sleet at the church on Tuesday,
April 4th, at 1.45 p.m., and will go to
*FOOD MARKET*
"EASTER SPECIALS"
MAPLE LEAR CANNED HAMS
one one-half lb. tins 1.35
CLOVER LEAF FANCY SOLID WHITE TUNA
7 oz. tin 37c
DOLES FANCY FRUIT COCKTAIL
2 - 20 oz. tins 59c
STUART HOUSE FOIL WRAP
1 - 18 inch width box 55c
RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS
pkg. of 60 73c
FIRESIDE SALTINE CRACKERS
2 - 1 lb. boxes 49c
PUREX TOILET TISSUE
1 twin pack 23c
COOKED and DRESSED HAMS for EASTER
COOKED MEAT - FROZEN AND FRESH
VEGETABLES
MARRA and WESTON BAKING-- always fresh
r. Superior Service
P:one 156
See. Fairservice
We Deliver
THE BLYTH STANDARD
Walton News
Wednesday, March 19, 1961
01.11111.111111V1i�-40.-�... al.Y'11..IMIh,a011MMsrw,,.,n••..,wMW.,.. • ....,. ••
o'clock sharp, and each member please
The fifth meeting of the Walton1Vil I bring their own plate. The hostess in
ling Workers was held at the home of charge will be Mrs, E. Watson, Ars, G.
Nora Anderson on March 21 at 7 p.m.
Watson, Airs, Wm. Thamer, Mrs. W,
The meeting was opened by singing Shcrtreed, Airs, D. Buchanan, The dis-
trict president, Mrs, Orval Harrison,
"Put on your Easter bonnet, Ml's, will be present to instal the new officers
M. Humphries showed us holy to put and will give an address on citizenship,
our stay stitching samples on paper.
Mrs, A. McDonald and Mrs. D, Buchan-
The next meeting is at Ante Makes an were the citizenship conveners, Cur.
on March lath at 7 p.m. Seven mens rent events were given by Mrs, A.
bers repeated the 4.1I Pledge and an-
swered the roll call which was "a fin- McDonald and Mrs, D, Buchanan gave
ish I rdusing for my dress," \\'e a detailed outline on Canadian Indians,
had ' all d fitted I
Very y interesting slides were shown by
Willing Workers
a out dresses r ec on us an, Mr.Carl Hemingway, on the sante
were given some pointers Mrs Mil
LC
1 1C Home Economist, CetnilleU tl Ho E o • •t nt ,1 st:l: ject, A gift was presented to Mr,
,
'= on the meeting and our dresses. .Our Ileningway, Hostesses for the evening
1. home assignment was given to us were; Mrs. H, Travis, Mrs. Stewart
• which was 'followed by a delicious lunch Humphries, Mrs. Doug Ennis, Mrs.
served by Mrs, A, Anderson and Nora.
Walton Group Ifunm-
phrtes,
Terrance Dundas, Mrs, Margaret
Members of the Walton Group were Officers' for W. I, for 1961.62
reminded of their several duties at the
annual bazaar Wednesday, March 29 • Past President; Mrs, Frank Walters;
- . at 2 p.m., with .Mrs. 0. Struthers as President: Mrs. James Nolan; First
guest speaker during the regular meet., Vice -President: Mrs. Kenneth 111cDen-
ir'g. Airs. Emmerson Aiitchell presicl• and; Second Vice -President, Mrs. Glen
ed due to the absence of the president. • Corlett; Secretary: Mrs. Ilarvey Craig;
Mrs. Wm, 'Thamer, Ilymmns 99, "Sweet' Assistant Secretary: Mrs, Nelson Reid;
the moments rich in blessing," and 485 Treasurer: Mrs. William Humphries;
"Jesus keep me near the Cross," were
•
4111Ma
To Our Customers
We wish to thank our many customers that
have paid overdue accounts.. Also those who have
made arrangements to pay their accounts by the
end of March.
We also would remind those who have been
busy, or have overlooked paying their accounts, to
drop in by the end of March to make some arrange-
ments.
Overdue, delinquent accounts are subject to in-
terest charges and collection after the end of March.
A. MANNING U SONS
BLYTH, ONTARIO,
N
Stewart's
Red & White Food Market
Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
HELP CRIPPLED CHILDREN---
USE EASTER SEALS
Large Head Lettuce 2 heads 29c
Tomatoes, cello pkg. ' 2 for 35c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 lb. bag 1.49
Spy Apples 6 qt. bsk. 89c
California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 89c
Turkeys for Easter, 4.8 Ib. per Ib. 49c
Cooked Picnic Shoulders per lb. 43c
Special Sliced Back Bacon per lb. 59c
Special Sliced Side Bacon per lb, 49c
used. Mrs, F. Walteres led in prayer
and Mrs, Allen McCall read the scrip-
ture, telling the story of the Crucific•
i
t oft. In her topic, the Women of the
Chut'ch, Mrs. Neelson Reid emphasized
women were the first evengelists, being
the first to spread the news of the ris-
en Christ. Mrs. A, Anderson rendered
a solo with Mrs. H, Brown accompany-
ing, The secretary gave her report
and read the thank you notes, The
group is invited to the April meeting
of the 17th and Boundary on April 12
at 2 p,in., to be held at the home of
Mrs. Jan Van Vliet, also to Seaforth
United Church March 28th at 2:30 p.m. Mrs. Joe Ryan, Mrs. R. Barrows; Res -
and to Mencrief Thankoffering April olutions; Mrs, R. McCall, Mrs. Gerald
2. Our own Easter Thankoffering meet -j Watson; Public Relations: Mrs. A.
I ing will be held April 6111, Mrs. George; Coutts, Mrs, Win. Dennis, Mrs. G. Ry- i
I McArthur, who has moved to Seaforth,. an, Mrs, George Love; Sunshine Cenr
j was presented with a gift and thanked; mittce: Mrs. D, Ennis; Brussels Fall
the ladies, inviting them to her home Fair Board Directors: Mrs. James Mc•
for the July sleeting, Donald, Mrs. Ralph Travis,
District Director: Mrs. Frank Walters;
Assistant District Director; Mrs. Ronald
Bennett; Branch Directors: Mrs, P.
McDonald, Mrs. S. Humphries, Mrs. A.
McDonald, Mrs, R. Bennett; Pianist:
Mrs. J. Bryans, assistant, Mrs. II, Tra-
viss; Press reporter Mrs. D. Ennis;
Auditors: Mrs. W. T. Turnbull, Mrs, L.
Oliver. Conveners of Standing Comit-
tees: Agriculture and Canadian Indus-
tries: Mrs; George Williamson, Mrs. R.
Williamson; Citizenship and Education:
Mrs. Alvin McDonald, Mrs, N. Marks;
Historical Research and Current Ev-
ents:' Mrs. J. Van Vliet Jr., Mrs. Wm.
Turnbull; Home Economics and Health.
1
11.1•11.
'The roll call was responded to
1.
by naming a disciple, Mrs. W. Broad- WEEKLY FARM REPORTii
' foot led an oral discussion on the life
and travels cf Paul and his letter to,(By J. Carl Hemingway)
the Phillipians. The meeting closed by
all repeating the Benediction, Lunch On March 17th the Ontario Federa
hostesses were Mrs. Ronald Bennett, 11011 of Agriculture Co -Operator's In- _
Airs, W, C, Hackwell, Mrs. R, Achilles, surance Conference was held in the
Mrs. Ferne Patterscn, of Seaforth, is King Edward Hotel, Toronto, Since i
visiting with Miss Bessie Davidson. its formation some 12 years ago, -
Miss Ruth Ann Ennis, of Kitchener the progress of this organization has I
Waterloo Hospital, spent a le* days at been tamazing,
the home cf her parents, Mr, and Mrs. j In the past five years it has almost
Doug ,Ennis. I doubled its automobile policies from
j Mr. Don Achilles left Tuesday for 56,000 to 101,000 and its other lines po1-
Red Lake where he has accepted a posit
ides from 2,000 to 17,000. Through
tical with the Ontario Department of the years your company has endeav-
1Lighways, oared successfully to provide you with
A large crowd attended t1 a reception better protection at reasonable cost.
heli 1n the Community 1 .11 last Friday At the same time it has been able to
evening in honour of Mr. and Mrs, Doug iia' reasonable interest on all share
Kirkby, newly -wedgy. 'Inc evening was capital, ,
spent in dancing to Ian 1Vilbee's or- , Suggestions for improvement in pro-
chn,,ra, During lunch the bridal couple viding the coverage you want are al -
were called t„ the front and an address ways welcome. It is your project in
was read y Barry Marshall and a helGhelp, Let's make it even better,
purse cls money was presented to them! Co -Operators Life Insurance, which
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Taylor, staffaiby Mc Sholdtce, was launched just over a year ago,
reported outstanding success. Perhaps
spent Sunday with the latter's parents, fc�r the first time in history, a Life
Mr, and Airs. R, Achilles. I Insurance Company has been able to
Mr. Herb Kirkby, Paris, spent the pay dividends to policy holders at the
Keck -end with his fattier, Mr. Frank end of its first year of operation.
Kirkby. With over 6 million Life Insurance in
'Mr. and Mrs. Murray Kirkby, of Port force at the end of 1960, we hope to
Credit, attended the Kirkby reception make it over 13 million by the end of
Friday evening.
Women's Institute
The Walton \Vomens' Institute was
▪ held last Thursday evening in the Conn-
: munity Hall with a good attendance an-
- swering the roll call, "a famous per-
= son born on a farm," Mrs. James Not -
an, president, opened the meeting with
the Institute Ocle, Mary Stewart Col-
lect and 0 Canada followed with the
secretary's report by Mrs. Ed. Mc-
, Creath. The treasurer's report waS
given by Mrs. T. Dundas, Seaforth
• Fair Board List, was passed around,
A report was filled out on the best
programs on TV and radio and sent
- in. 1t was decided to sponsor the 4.1I
Girls Club at the Brussels Fair and
give a donation of 10,00 to the Board;
Arrangements were made f t
1961.
Since the Press, Radio and TV have
done a good job of bringing a report
of the business 'activities of the recent
Hog Annual, I will not comment on
this Part of the meeting, However,
there were a couple of items in the
program that were apparently over-
looked.
These sidelight's developed at the
annual dinner meeting on March 21st.
Farm organizations, iYarticularly the
Hog Producers, have at times been
criticized for their laxity in recogni-
tion of political personalities, This
oversight of the past was corrected
by the presence of the Minister of Ag-
riculture, Mr. Biggs, Mr, Geo. Mc-
hlague, Opposition Loader, Oliver, and
CCF Leader, MacDonald, at the head
• 0r 7 )o table.
_ luck supper tend reveal your sunshine
sister at the next meeting. Gifts will be'
i It was surprisingly evident that the
`+ , exchanged. Supper to be served at 7. Minister of Agriculture and the gov-
ernment he represents has lost the eon-
; didence of the Hog Producer delegates
to an amazingly high degree. This
the County Home, Clinton, to present fact reflected quite clearly in the Min -
an Easter program. ister's face from time to time. Many
Mrs, Bert Brunsdon went to Ottawa delegates commented on this after the
- Wednesday of last week to attend the dinner and some at least had hopes
funeral of her sister, Mrs. T. Trom- that it would have some affect on gov
bley, who passed away on Tuesday. etnment Farm Policy, j
• Sympathy of the village goes out to In the light of this it came as quite a
Miss Doris Lear and Miss Frances'
_- he•, shock to me to hoar It reported over
CFPL Radio on the morning of MannJohnston, of Hamilton, visited over the 24th, that the Ontario Minister of Ag
weekend with Mr. and Mrs Nelson'. riculture now feels the time has arrived
Lear, to remove the ban on the sale of colour.
Mr. and Mit. Hugh Kennedy, , r Con ed margarine In Onntario,
•
quest, Sask., and 'Mrs, Lloyd Walkom, have we, farm people, dropped so
of Mitchell, spent Saturday with Mr, low in the eyes of Government that a
and Mrs. Alan Shaddick and family.' show of our displeasure has no affect
Mr. and Mrs, Wm, Hamilton, el; on our elected representatives? I resent
Moorefield, spent Sunday with Mr, and getting kicked but to be considered too
Mrs. Robert Thompson and family. dumb to know it really adds insult to
Mr.. Harold Dalrymple and baby son taiury.
of Egmondville, spent the weekend with Perhaps the IIog Producers can find
her parents, Mr, land Mrs. Gaunt. some comfort in having the Cream
I• Mr, Charles MacNaughton, of Exeter, Producers join then in licking each
ptiid a visit 11) Itis coll:dns, Mrand. r i';ers wounds but I wonder who will be
Mrs, Harold Livulgalone. last week. 'tett on the flet of second rate citizens?
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 TIIAT 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 5.00
Toiletries for Men and Women: 01d Spice, Yard-
ley's and Evening in Paris.
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B
!HCU69. SUNDRIES. WALLPAPER --- PHONE R0, MATH
.1 III II I i iiY .1 .11 1 1,
I II I 11 1.1 • s , i 1 •1 1
SPRINGTIME PAINT SALE
MOORE'S REGAL WALL SATIN in 24 colours
and white, flat finish, no paint odor, no thin-
ners needed, one coat covers most surfaces, re-'
coat in one hour.
BENWOOD FINISHES, STAINS, no wiping toff
needed. Lo lustre clear varnishes, clear in
colour, satin finish. Clear floor finish, durable
full gloss. Paste Wood Filler, for new wood not
requiring colour.
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
U ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Call 71 Blyth, Ont.
Before You Buy
Look These Over
New Car Business IIas Been Good. As a Result
We've Got Some Mighty Fine USED CARS As
Trade-ins.
SEE THEM - QUALITY AND FAIR PRICES
3 '60 OLDSMOBILE 4 DOOR SEDANS
All Fully Equipped.
'60 CHEVROLET SEDAN
Automatic and Radio.
'59 OLDESMOBILE 4 DOOR SEDAN
Fully Equipped 2750
2 '58 CHEVROLET SEDANS
Your Choice ' 1850
'58 FORD SEDAN
Automatic, Radio, etc. ' 1775
'56 CHEVROLET SEDAN 1075
All above are one owner cars - in the best of
condition.
'57 VOLKESWAGON 2 Door Deluxe,
with radio, etc. Leather trim.
Smart new paint . $975
441-4•41-414-40-41-41-0-4.1•4144•40•49-114-40 4r-44•0-4411-•••••4-4•411-411-4•41-0-441-11-1•4•••••••
(HEAPIES
keep only, the best in the older models.
These are really good value.
I
'54 Chev. Bel Air Sedan 675
'52 Pontiac Coach
! 1
295
'51 Chevrolet Sedan 195
'37 Pontica Sedan 150
4
.++44-444-r+44+44 4-•+.-.-.+.+.
TRUCKS
'59 CHEVRCILET half ton Pickup 1550
Like new. One owner.
'59 BEDFORD VAN 895
Extra good. One owner.
'53 MERCURY half ton Pickup 450
'52 CHEVROLET half ton pickup 100
LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED
CLINTON, ONTARIO -
-1