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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-04-05, Page 1VOLUME 74 - NO 08 E BLYTH STANDARD Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa, ... EASTER HOLIDAY VISITORS ... Mr, and Mrs, ,Wm, Hoggart, of Clin- ton, visited on Sunday with their son- in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. Roy McVittie, Kenneth, Bonnie and Douglas. Mr, and Mrs, Brock Vodden 'and John of Niagara Falls, spent the week -end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Win. Morritt and Mr. and Mrs, Harold Vod• •den. Mrs, Vodden and John remained here •for a few days. Miss Ella Metcalfe returned to Lon- don after visiting with Mrs. F. Roger - .eon and Miss Alice Rogerson. We are pleased to welcome Mr, and Mrs. James Phelan to Blyth to the 'home they purchased from Mr. and .'.firs. John Manning. Mr, and Mrs. Clifford Walsh, Layton, ',Varren and Kathleen, of Sarnia, spent the week -end with Mr. and Mrs, Bon Walsh, Larry, Ron and Steven, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Walsh and Lloyd, Mrs. George Gray, of Toronto, sang a 'beautiful soli) at Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, on Sunday morning. Miss Claire Taylor, of Kapuskasing, is spending the Easter holidays with ;ler parents, Mr, and Mrs, K, Taylor, leers, Pearl Walsh returned home from Vringham Hospital on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Ronald Philp and Steven, visited Gcod Friday with their parents, Mr, and Mrs. R. D. Philp. Mr. and Mrs, Jack Gunnnow, Eliza- beth and Katherine, of Don Mills, are spending the holidays with their par- ents, Mr. and Mrs, J, B, Watson. Mr, and Mrs. David Slorach and daughter, Julie, of St. Catharines, spent! •the week -end with their parents, Mr,' :and Mrs. F. Slorach, Blyth, and Mr, and Mrs, George Bailey, of Clinton. Mrs. Gordon McDonald and Mrs, J. C. Mitchell and daughter, Lindsay, of ILi hmond afill, spent the Easter holi- days with Miss Margaret Hirons, Hu- bert and James, . Mr. Jim Riordan who has been em - ',toyed M the A and P Store in Chatham has been transferred to London. Mies Mary Nesbit underwent an op- eration in Clinton Public Hospital on 11Ienday. Mr, and Mrs, Elliott Taylor, of Rip- ley, visited with Mr. and mfrs. Wm. McVittie and Mrs. Wm. Taylor. Mr, and Mrs. Freeman Tunney and family, of Teeswater, visited with the former's mother, Mrs. Mpry Taylor, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stewart, Karl and Kathy, of Woodstock, spent Easter week -end with their mother, Mrs. F. tlollyman, and .sister, Mrs. Robert Me- Clinchey, Mr. McClinchey, Patricia send Wayne. Mr, and Mrs, Hugh S, Curring and' daughter, Gloria, and son, Wm, Hugh, of London, visited with the former's mother, Mrs, Sadie Curring, on Good 2riday. Mr. David W, Somers, of Midland, is visiting for a week with his brothers, Robert and Archie Somers, and sister, Sadie Cuming. Mr, and Mrs. Jim Dickey, Dianne and Jimmie, Mr, Mery Clark, of Lon- don, Mr. Joe and Larry Wesenburg, of Brussels, spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Lawrence and fam- ily. Miss Madeline Llawrence returned to London with her sister, Mrs. Dickey, for the ',Easter holidays. Douglps and Robert Popp are visit- ing with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Meredith Young and Donald, of MONG THE CIIURCIIES Sunday, April 9, +1961. ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CIIURCII Rev, D. J. Lane, B,A., Minister. 1:00 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday School. ANGLICAN CIIURCII OF CANADA Rev, Robert F. Meally, Rector. 1st Sunday after Easter trinity Church, Blyth. 10.30 a.m-=Matins. St, Mark's, Auburn. 11.30 a.m.—Sunday School. 12.00 o'clock—Matins. Trieity Church, Belgrave. 2,00 p.m.—Sunday School, 2.30 p.m,—Evensong. THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth Ontario. Rev, R. Evan MeLagan - Minister Miss Margaret Jackson Director of Music. Easter Sunday 9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church School. 11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship CHURCH OF GOD Mcc:onrielt Street, Blyth, John Dormer, Pastor Phone 185 10,30 a.m.--Sunday Sehool, 11,30 a.m.•-aMotnting Worship, 7.30 p.m.—Evening Service. 8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service. 8.Q0 pen. Friday, Youth rellowslrtp. R.R. 3, Auburn. Dianne ,and Larry Popp are visiting with their grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. Otto Popp, Dungannon. Mrs. Carrie Ilaggitt is a patient in Clinton Public Hospital. We hope for a speedy recovery. Miss Ruth McClinchey, of London, and Miss Helen McClinchey, of Exe- ter, spent Lust with Mr• and Mrs. John McClinchey. Week -end visitors with Mrs. Leonard Cook and with Mr. Cook in the Clinton' hospital were, Mr. and Mrs. David Hynes and baby Claudia, and Joanne, also Ifetather Brown, all of London. Joanne and IIeather remained for the holiday. Mrs. Edna Sutherland, of Port Bur- well, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Kechnie and Betty Sue. Sandy and Kathy Kechnie are visit- ing with their aunt, Mrs. Wm, Kipp, of Paris. Stephen Kechnic is visiting with his aunt, Mrs, George Jonckhccrc, at Glen Meyer, Mrs. Anne McCreary, of Ithaca, N. Y., spent a week -end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J .11. Phillips, and Miss Paige Phillips, and with other members of the family. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tasker, Linda and Kenton, of Streetsville; spent the week -end with the former's mother, Mrs. A. R. Tasker, and brother, Lloyd, Mrs. Tasker, Dale and Kevin. On their return they were accompanied by Mrs. Tasker. '11ir, Kenneth Somers, of Midland, visited on Good Friday with his aunts,1 Mrs. Edythe Sturgeon and Miss Pearl Gidley, Mr. and Mrs. Mason Btiiley spent the week -end with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Stewart, of Sarnia, and attended the wedding on Saturday of Mrs. Bailey's sister, Isabel Stewart, to Ronald Hayes. Mrs. Thomas Bailey, of Sarnia, is , visiting with her son, Mason Bailey, Mrs, Bailey and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor, of Sea- forth, have returned from a two week' trip to Florida:.., They stopped at New Orleans, §t.;petersburg for a week, Winter Have i and Georgia. • Mrs. Wm. McVittie attended the fun- eral of the late Mrs, E. Hankould, at Tavistock on Friday afternoon. She was president of the London Conference BUanch of the W. M. S. at the time o[ her death. Miss Lena Livingston, of Ridgetown, called on her many friends and old neighbours in the village on Sunday af•I ternoon. IIer friends were happy to see her so well. BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5, 1961 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. OBITUARY FRERERICK ALLISON CR,AWFORD Frederick Allison Crawford pasted away Saturday night, April 1st, in Westminster hospital, London, where he had been a patient since last June. Mr. Crawford was born 66 years ago' ion the 13th concession of Hulled town- IIULLETT COUNCIL DEAI. WITI[ MANY DRAINS LONDESBORO A number of the Londesboro ladies attended the bazaar and tea at Walton last Thursday sponsored by the WA of the United Church. Mrs. Thomas Fairservice celebrated a bill:hc:'ay on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bagaent and Barry, of 'Wood- stock, and Mr. and Mrs. Ab, Shaddick, I of Clinton, present, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson and daughters, spent Sunday at Moorefield. Mrs, Wm. Emilia returned with them to spend a few days. Mrs. Mary Shol:brook spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Gibbings. David Fairservice arrived ,home on Sunday for a few holidays, He •has spent the past year at R'.mouski, Que- bec, doing commercial flying. • Miss Anne Fairservice, of Wayne University, Detroit, 1s also spending the Easter holiday with her parents. Mr, and Mrs, I-Iarry McEwan and family, of Chatham, and Mr. and Mrs, Jack .Hamilton and family, of London, spent the weekend with Mr, Wm. Gov- ier ovier and Mrs. Lily Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Grant ono family are spending a few days with Mr, Fred Peckitt and Mr, and Mrs, John Jewitt; Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Radford, of Niagara Falls, spent a short Itme last week with the Gordon Radford family. Mr, and Mrs, Earl Gaunt and Ken- neth spont,Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Andy Gaunt, of Lucknow, Mr, Earl Gaunt has 'disposed ,of his farm to Mr. Gross of the Auburn Road. (Miss Christine Livingstone, of Dor- chester, and Miss Darlene Campbell, of London, are spending the Easter vacation with Mr, and Mrs. Harold Livingstone, Miss Karen Allen Is spending a few days with her sister, Gloria, in London. Mr. end Mrs, Audrey Knox and fain- tly, of Stouffville, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Knox. Mrs. ,Alex Wells spent the weekend with Mrs, Sadie McDonald in Walton. TO TEACH IN SEAFORTH Mr. Brack Vodden, of Niagara Falls, has acquired a teaching position on the I En ,Iish staff of the Seaforth District Collegiate institute. His duties there will eomrncnte at, the fall tarn. ship, a son of the late Edward Craw- ford and Ellen Roberton Crawford. • Ile was a veteran of World War I and went overseas with the 161st Huron Battalion. Following his return from overseas duty he married Miss Pearl Ilamm, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Alex Ilatnm, Blyth. For a number of years they lived at Kapuskasing, Northern Ontar- io, but four years ago they returned to Blyth and took up residence on Dinsley Street. Besides his wife, he Is survived by one brother, Johnston Crawford, of !lulled, township. Rev. Evan 11Ici.agan, minister of Blyth United Church, was in charge of a public funeral service in the Teske). Memorial Chapel Tuesday afternoon at two o'clock. Mr. Crawford was 'a member of Blyth Legion Branch 401; and Padre Robert Meally, rector of Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, con- ducted Legion rites in the chapel of the Mausoleum of Blyth Union Cemetery., The guard of honor was Legion Com- rades Stanley Ball and Robert Govier, Bearing the flag draped casket was Comrades Donald Sprung, Kelland Mc- Vittie, Bruce Sniith, Stanley Lyon, IIar• old Badley and Wm. Merritt. Bugler, John de Francesco, of Clinton Air School band, sounded Taps, followed by two minutes silence, then sounded re- veille. Burial followed in Union Cemetery, Blyth, NORTIL HURON ORANGEMEN MEET AT LONDESBORO The semi-annual county meeting of North Huron County Orange Lodge met in Londesboro Orange Hall on Wednes; day evening last, with a good repre- sentation of all the lodges in the coun- ty. The meeting 'was in charge of the County (Master, Worshipful Bro, Hare vey Jacklin, and the County Officers, Guests at the meeting were Right Wor- shipful Bro, Carol Smith, of Kitchener, Past Grand Master* of Ontario West, now representing Orange Insurance in this section of Ontario west; Past Coun. ty Master, Charles Stewart, Clinton, also a sub -agent for Orange Insurance, One of the high lights of the even- ing 'was the presentation of a lovely plaque purchased b the t and putt rase y ne conn y given to the recording secretary, of any lodge in the county who had sent in the best and most complete report of his lodges work for the past year. The county master then called on R.W. Bro. Carol Smith and PCM Stewart to make the presentation to Bro. Jerry Mathe- son, of Dungannon lodge, who had been given. ninety-nine points out of a pos- sible one hundred, by those who had judged the work. He was called to the altar and R.W. Bro. Smith highly con- gratulated him on his splendid work, telling him of the value of a good sec- .retary to a lodge, and hoped that he would keep right on. P.C.M. Stewart also offered congratulations and then presented him with the plaque. Following this R.W. Bro, Smith gave an outstanding address, speaking of the progress of Orange Insurance in Canada, our Public School system, its great value and the great need of Christian Education in the home today. P.C. Stewart was then palled on, he gave a very inspiring message on the great need of orangeism today and our flag the Union Jack. Both speakers congratulated the county master on the fine meeting. The large attendance showing very plainly the fine job he was doing for the Orange Order in North Huron, ,The meeting was closed and The Queen was sung. The members of Lon. desboro Lodge served a bountiful lunch. WEDDING ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED A surprise party was held in honour of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hoggart on Sun- day at the home of their daughter and son in law, •Mr. and Mrs. John Hessel- wcod, to mark their 38th wedding an- niversary. Those present were; their .other daughter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Roy Appleby, Allan, Ken, and Muriel, of Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs, Art Hoggart and son, Johnnie, of Goderich, Mr, Lorne Hoggart, of Blyth. They have four grandsons, one granddaughter and one great grandson. For the occasion they were presented with an electric fry pan, Mr, and Mrs, Bert Hoggart were mar- ried April 4, 1923, in Ego. e n '' '11,. nt manse, by Rev. McDonald. Mrs. Hog - gad was the former Maly Jane Riley, of Tuckersmith township, Following their marriage, they lived at lot 11, concession 8, Mullett town- ship, where they stI11 reside. 60 Pigs, 2 Barns Lost In Early Monday Blaze The regular monthly meeting of the Council of the Township of Hulled was held on April 3 in the Community Hall, Londesboro, at 8:30 p.m. The Reeve and all Councillors were present and the meeting opened with the reading of the minutes of the previous meeting. A resolution was Massed by council accepting fire protection from the Town of Clinton with the payment of a re• taining fee of $200 for the year 1951. The annual membership to the Huron County Municipal Officer's Association was renewed with a payment of $20.00 for menlbership, The Clerk was given instruclions to set a date for the' courts of revision on the Jenkins, Sturdy, Bryant, and Doer Drains, All of these are to he constructed under the Municipal Drain- age Act. Instructions were given to the clerk to advertise for tenders for the con- struction of a Municipal Don known as the Van Baaren Municipal Drain, A petition 'for new drainage work was received from Mr. Elie Bury and will be referred to the township's dram. pge engineer, Mr. James Bowes, Lis- towel, Ontario. The council then adjourned to meet again May 1st at 9:00 Blyth Municipal Council The regular meeting of the Municipal Council of the Corporation of the Vil• lage of Blyth was held in the Memorial hall on Monday evening, April 3, at 8 p.m., with Reeve Fairservice, Coun- cillors, Cook, Ellictt and McVittie present. Motion by Elliott and McVittie that the minutes of the last regular and special meeting be adopted. Carried. Motion by Cook and Ellictt that cor- rce, u^dente be filed. Carried. Motion by Cook and Ellictt that we set Daylight Saving Time to commence at 12:01 a.m. April 30111, and end et 12:01 a.nt. October 29th. Carried. Motion by Elliott and McVittie that the Street Committee look into the mat- ter of a public parking lot. Carried. Motion by McVittie and Cook that accounts as read he paid. Carried, John Bailey, part salary st. fireman, 110.00; John Bailey, part foreman arm caretaker, 62,60; H. Leatherland, weigh Imaster and firing, 50.00; Blyth post - master, unemp, ins. stamps, 4.80; G. IIeffron, garbage collection, 114.50; G. Sloan, clerk's acc., 43.00; S. R. hart and Co., stnUonery etc., 15.81; Luck - new Sentinel, ace., 125.92; Eliiott In- surance Agency, 16,00; Doherty Bros., acc., 12,60; Earl Noble, 29.00; Geo. E. Radford Ltd., material and machine rental, 149.75; A. Montgomery, coal nee., 15.00; Huron Co. Mun. Associa- tion, 20.00; Welfare accounts, 385,50. Motion by Cook and Elliott that we do now adjourn. Carried, George Sloan, Clerk. WESTI' IED Friday evening Family Night for the Farm Forum was held in the basement of the church. A program was coin• posed of: musical number by llarvey McDowell, violin, John, guitar, Judy, ukelele; duet, Misses Martie 'and Mar- sha Koopman; reading, Mrs, Arnold Cook; quartette, Messrs, Gordon, Harv, cy and Lloyd McDowell and Lloyd Walden, Mr. Gordon McGavin, Walton,' showed slides on his trip to Russia,1 also his trip to Western Europe, with' very interesting comments. The pro- gram was followed by lunch, conclud- I ing another successful year of Farm Forum, Miss Linda Aitken, Scarborough, vis- ited with her cousin, Miss Betty Blair, over the Easter 'weekend. •AIr. Cecil Campbell, Exeter, visited with his parents on Easter. Mrs. Jessie Snell, Guelph, was the guest of Mrs. ,J, L. McDowell during the Easter season. Mr. and Mrs. John Gear and child- ren, of Waterloo, spent several days in the community. Mr. Gordon R. Smith, of Western University, spent the Easter vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Smith, Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Ray Hanna on the birth of their new son. Easter was observed in Westfield church on Sunday. During the Sunday school session, Misses Judy McDowell and Norma Smith sang "Near the Cross," and Mrs. Arnold Cook gave an Easter reading, Rev. R. Sweeney's sermon was "God's Resurrection Pow. er," The choir sang Easter music, Holy Communion was observed, Mr. and Mrs. James Buchanan, Kev• in and Jeff, of Amherstburg, spent a few days with Mr. J. Buchanan. Mr, and Mrs. Keith Snell and children of Guelph, spent the Easter weekend with Mr, and Mrs, H. Campbell, Messrs. John and Donald McDowell spent Monday in Goderich as specta- tors at Young Canada Hockey week. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook and Mrs. Edna Cook visited with Mr. Alfred Cook Friday to celebrate his birthday. The Church Choir also observed Mr, Cook's birthday after choir practice Friday evening, Mr, and Mrs, Harvey McDowell en- tertained with a family dinner to cele- brate Mr, and Mrs. Marvin McDowell's 51st wedding anniversary Friday ,even-' Ing, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Snell and family were also present. Mrs. Melvin Taylor is on a motor trip to Virginia this week, accompany' ing Mrs. Carry Bowles, of Hamilton. i Mr. and Mrs. Howard Snell, Clinton, Miss Maty Snell, of IIamilton, were viistors with Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon, on Friday. Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell enter- tained their children and grandchildren Saturday evening with special guests Mr. land Mrs. Murray McDowell and Heather, of Cookstown. Messrs. Norman, Gerald and Alva McDowell and Bert Lyon, were on a business trip to Toronto on Monday. Sunday night Mr. Harold Carter had an trerortunftte fire, burning his newly coo:evoke! piggery. it was very for- tunate the wind was in the right direc- tion to save the house and big barn. On Monday morning a fire partially destroyed a hen house on the farm of Mr. Simon Smit. The Blyth Fire Dee pertinent woe at both fires. IIULLETT FEDERATION FINAL CARD PARTY The Mullett Township Federation of Agriculture held their final card party in the Londesboro Hall on Thursday, March 30, with a fair attendance. The directors are grateful to all those who attended the parties during the winter months, making them such a success. Prize winners were as follows: wo• man's high, Mrs. B. Fairservice; wo• man's low, Mrs. Jim Howatt; woman's, lone hands, Airs. Harvey Taylcr; men's high, Percy Gibbings; men's low, John Bromley; men's lone hands, Cecil Cart- wright; lucky prize, Mrs. Leslie Reid. W. M. s. TIIANKOFFERLNG MEETING The Easter Thankoffering meeting ut the Blyth United Church W.M,S, will be held in the church school room on Sunday evening, April 9th, at 8 p.m, Rev. Funge, of Londesboro, will be the guest speaker, As this is an open meeting, all members of the church arc invited to attend, Anycne from the sister church who wishes to attend will be most welcome,' BIRTHS THOMPSON—hn Lions Head Hospital on Tuesday, April 4, 1961, to Mr, and Mrs, Norman Thompson, of Lions Head, the gift of a daughter, POPP--In Clinton Public Hospital on Tuesday, March 28, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs., Lorne H. Popp, a sen, Paul Her - men, ,a brother for Douglas, Dianne, Robert and Larry. RECEIVES CONGRATULATIONS FROM FORMER BLYTH MINISTER Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour received a letter of congratulations this week from Rev. and Mrs. C. J. Scott, of Hamilton, Ont., and formerly of Blyth United Church, for achieving the honor placed on her by the Ontario Horticultural Society, at Hamilton, on March 16. The letter is as follows: Dear Mrs. Scrimgeour; 1Ve are so happy to learn about the honor that you have received, and send our sincere congratulations. We heard the announcement of your presentation on the radio the morning following the convention, and immed- iately telephoned the hotel, but you had gone before that. I have happy memories of the many things you do in Blyth to improve the appearance of the town. The street flowerbeds add a great deal to the charm of Blyth, and there are so many other ways in which the Horticultural Society there make it such a lovely place in the growing season. Your honor is well earned and de- served, and we are so happy that your efforts have been recognized, and we hope you received a great deal of pleasure from this great honor, Yours sincerely, (Rev.) Charles and Mary Scott, 110 Prospect Scutlt Hamilton, Ontario. March 2 e 1961. Early Monday morning fire, origin- ! ating from a heat bulb, destroyed two barns on the farm of Mr, Harold Car- ter, on the division road, north of Auburn, The fire was first noticed shortly after 1 a.m. a call was placed for the Blyth Fire Department. When firemen 'arrived the two Karns were a mass of flames and the large main barn, only 10 feet from the burn- ing buildings, was in great danger. The. Department concentrated its ef- fofits on saving the large barn and it wasn't until 6:30 a.m. that they felt the fire had subsided enough to allow them to return to Blyth. An ample supply of water was made available by daming a small creek near enough to the buildings to give firemen sufficient hose to reach the blaze. The truck was operated from the creek, with two lines of hose run- ning hack to the fire. Lost in the fire were GO pigs, some of them ready for market, along with a considerable amount of teed. The cattle that were housed in the barns were Greed. One of the structures was a new building, 40'x60', and not quite com- pleted. No insurance had been placed on it. The other building was 30'x70' and it and the contents were insured. At about 9:30 Monday 'morning the Blyth Fire Department were called to the farm of Mr. Simon Smit, R.R.' 3, Blyth, when a hen house was discover- ed on fire, which was believed to have started from hydro wires at the north end of the building. Flames had broken through the roof of the building when the fire truck ar- rived and before the blaze was extin- guished, the entire building had been gutted, and the roof partially fallen in. The firement were somewhat ham- pered in their activities, due to frozen equipment which had not lead time to thaw after fighting an all-night fire at Mr. Harold Carter's farm, only a short distance from the Smit residence. BLYTH LADY IS SWEEPSTAKE WINNER Mrs. Sid McCullough received a very pleasant and unexpected surprise last Thursday when she was the recipient of a letter, informing her that she had won £1,175 in the Irish Sweepstakes. This should amount to over $3,000 in Canadian currency, and is the prize received by the holders of residual tickets. 'Mrs. McCullough informs us that she can find excellent use for the money, and is extremely overjoyed with her good fortune, HOME FROM HOSPITAL 111lrs. F. Benninger, who had been a patient"in London Hospital, meturned to the home of her daughter, Mrs. Leon Bannop, of Seaforth, last Friday, GROUP 1 TO MEET Group 1 of the W.A.. of Blyth United Church will meet at the home of Mrs. Holtyman on Monday, April 10, at 2.30 p.m. FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE TO MEET The regular meeting of the Friend- ship Circle will be held at the home of Mrs. Norman Cowing on Tuesday, Ape ril llth, at 8.15 p.m____^ W.M.S. TO MEET The regular meeting of the W.M.S. of Blyth United Church will be held on Monday, April 17th, at 8 p.tn. Please note change of date. CONGRATITLATIONS Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Merritt who celebrated their 41st wed- ding anniversary on Monday, April 3. Hearty Congratulations to Mrs. Hugh C. Somers, of Winnipeg, Manitoba, when she will celebrate her birthday on Monday, April 10th. AUBURN Easter Services were held in all the churches of the village last Sunday, "Power of the Resurrection in the Christian Life," was the theme of Rev. i Robert Meally's address at St. Mark's Anglican Church, and he alio held an Easter Communion Service. The choir under the leadership of the church or- t artist, Mrs, Norman McClinchey, sans "The Old Rttgge.t Crow," 'The bott- quets of flower; were placed In the church in memory of Altred Nesbit, Mr, and Mrs. John Merl and Mr. aid Mrs. 14.7zel:iel Phillips, by their famil- More About Those Year -Round Schools The possibility of a 12 -month school year has been kicked around for several years now, The recent California Citizens Commission on Education recom- mended that the Legislature study the possibilities of a year- round year, Educators have debated the effect of a three-month vacation for teenagers. It has been point- ed out that this country no long- er has a rural economy — child labor has been replaced by ma- chines. Yet we still retain the short ::chest year with a long summer Vacation. S. Bryan Jennings cf Middle- burg, Fla„ a member of that state's chamber of commerce committee on education, has been an outspoken advocate of year around school use, Jennings advocate= "the effi- cient use of educational facilities and teachie; personnel by abol- ishing, as rapidly as possible, the outmoded system of operat- ing schools for nine months in the year and allowing our build- ings—which represent. the in- vestment of billions of dollars— to stand idle for the remaining three months of each year," Jcnnir.g: e limate4 that if all of the schc' is in th.' nation would oncratc 43 cw?„,!:,s in the year with staggered enrollments, the cgt:k,•a1.2rt rf 444,0011 addi- tional etas: ro^,ms would b^ cre- ated—equal to 0 c.;n.:trtt^tion rust of $18 billions.—Merced (C Cif 1 Sun -Star, They Really Ate in Grandpa's Dny •I nr ' ' • t:'! c `tug as Hutch as you did a few year back--a.cording to scientists who have l:,en cheekiwg up on the amount cf food we con ume, One rezult df this is that our dinner -;rates have been shrink- ing in size, They are consider- ably -nailer than they were in grandfather's and great-grandfa- ther's times. They and their forefathers consumed food in a big way. Up to a century ago six or seven courses et an ordinary meal were quite common, The newspapers of earlier tunes frequently told stories of extra -special eaters, too — Hien who ate record amounts of food to win cc-agers or just for the sheet fun cf Garagantuan eaters are rare to -dad, No one organizes a fes- tival of the stomach as did some of our ancestors. You don't hear ;tor instance of record appetites like that cif a man named "Peet - steak Pete," Who once consumed Seventeen pounds of beef for dinner or that of "Lambey" Smith who actually ate seventy- Olve sm'tll lamb choirs at a single cal, For Entertaining t rti,40.4w Dress up a luncheon table with this set — large doily as center- piece, smaller as place mats. Scalloped border enhances draceful oval shape. Pattern 660; irections for 20x30 -inch doily; matching ones 1n'ax20 and 7x 13 inches in No. 30 cotton. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot he accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New To- ronto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send now for oar exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave — fash- ions, hotnefurnishings, toys, gifts, bazaar' hit3. Plus FREE—Instruc- tion; for six smart veil caps. Hurry, ;end 25f nowt .amu aflls''' ,,ri LUFTHANSA GERMAN AIRLINES has announced the order of 12 Boeing 727 jet aircraft, boosting to 25 the total number of jets the airline has in operation or on order. The new short -to -medium -range aircraft are scheduled for Lufthansa's routes' to the near east and within Europe, the first six being delivered by summer 1964, the 'balance by summer 1965. Summer will see the German carrier operating lets on all long-distance segments of its five. continent netwcfk, 50 flights weekly on the North -Atlantic runs alone. F -r; 1 H RONICLES °/ki1N6 Rt Alai w C vs 4o tt . Cla 1.t Oh dear, it looks as if we've got to face it again ... the speeches, the promises, the pro- paganda that always precedes a general election, We almost wilt at the thought of it. Not because we are so well satisfied with the present government that we want them to remain in office; not even because we are dissatis- fied with them and want thein out. Sounds as if we're sitting on the fence, doesn't it? It isn't even that. When the time comes we shall know which way to vote — but we would like to postpone it as long as possible, Our immediate interest is the weather. We haven't really had a bad winfpifsliiit yet I don't know of any _year when we have Iooked fot'ti-dacra.to spring so eagerly. Lase weelc it made me feel just wonderful to see a red, red robin strutting around on the lawn. He won't be so wel- come later on when small fruits are ready for picking, But have you noticed — although you see robins at this time of the year you never hear their sweet song. Maybe they are afraid of getting laryngitis if they warble too much before the weather warms up. Most people look for an early spring when Easter is early but of late years there seems little connection between Easter r.nd the. weather. Here's hoping this sexing will be an exception. I think the children around here must be longing for spring too. Anyway they make a bee- line for our patios, front and back, where we have a six-foot overhang that keeps dirt in the planters nice and dry, making it just like a sandpile for the youngsters to play in. That is until the dirt gets mixed up with the snow. Then they are able to make mud pies with which they plaster our steps and patio, A lovely mess, I assure you. Generally their shouts and squeals cf delight betray'them so it isn't long before Partner or I chase them home, Their, mothers are no more pleased with their escapade than we are because they go home with snowsuits plastered with mud. I am thank- ful it is the patio we have to clean up and not the kids! Any- way, the poor little tikes have to play somewhere. Incidentally, have you noticed how limes have changed the way in which children get fresh air and exercise in winter? When our two were small I used to dress them warmly and take them for a walk, even if it was only for half -an -hour, And I kept them on the move. That way they didn't get a chance to get cold or run into mischief. Nowadays mothers put snowsuits on their pre-schoolers and send them out to play by themselves. The snowsuits are such a pro- tection against the weather there is little fear cf thein catching cold. But what is there for the poor little mites to do? Natural- ly, if they can find any nice dry dirt they are going to play with it. Failing that they get bored and come pounding at the door for a cookie or to go to the bath- room. Mothers grumble because children are no sooner dressed than they want to come in again. To my way of thinking it is eas- ier to take them for a half- hour's walk rather than turn them loose on their own. Exer- cise 13 what they need — and the fresh air is good for mother too. Ot course on a farm children can always find plenty to amuse them at the barn — and they PETITE — Vicki Trickett flies in for a visit. She'll soon star in "Gidget Goes Hawaiian." love to help Daddy with the chores. Which goes to show there is no place like a farm for raising a family, Speaking of raising a family I was very interested in the eco- nomy menus published a few days ago by one of our evening papers. Some of them looked quite good. But I couldn't help thinking what a luxury those meals would have been in Eng- land when we were on war rations. To make our weekly ration of two ounces of butter go further we mixed it with mashed potatoes and then re- molded it into pats. A filling and favourite dessert was bread pudding. Our family still likes it. Here is the recipe. Grease a pyrex dish with margarine, Fill it three-quarters full with stale bread, Sprinkle with brown sugar, raisins, currants and peel. Add cinnamon and vanilla, Also two tablespoons of margarine, Beat one egg and sufficient milk to cover the bread. When bread is soaked blend thoroughly with fork. Bake in 373 degree oven about an hour. Good old-fahloned oatmeal porridge instead of packaged cereal is another budget saver. It you know how to make it properly, Too often it is a thick, lumpy mess. It should be smooth and creamy and served with brown sugar and whole milk, And why should pork and beans always come out of a can? Any gocd cook book will tell you how to make Boston baked beans. Soup? There is nothing so eco- nomical as homemade soup, with rice, or pot barley as a filler, Potatoes? Scalloped potatoes go a lot farther than boiled. And do you know that brown sugar syrup makes a good dessert'for children if fruit is not available, Boil two cups of sugar with one cup of water, Add vanilla or maple flavouring and you have a dessert as good as maple syrup, Fine for sweetness but don't for- get all children — and grown- ups too, need raw fruit, vege- tables and fruit juices. Spring is gradually approach- ing—however, one skeptical in- habitant we know of continues to carry a snow shovel in the trunk of his car, DRiVE CAREFi11,1,V — The life you save may be your own An Otter Makes Himself At Home ! I have never been able fully to make up my mind whether certain aspects of otter behaviour merely chance to resemble that of human beings, cr whether, in the case of animals as young as Mij was, there is actual mimicry of the human foster parent, Mij, anyway, seemed to regard me closely as I composed myself on my back with a cushion under my head; then, with a confiding air of knowing exactly what to do, he clambered up beside me and worked his body down into the sleeping -bag until he lay flat on his back Inside it with his head on the cushion beside mine and his fore -paws in the air. In this position, such an' attitude as a child devises for its teddy -bear in bed, Mij heaved an enormous sigh and was instantly asleep. Mij and I remained in London for nearly a month, -while, as my landlord put it, the.studio came to look like a cross between a monkey -house and a furniture repository. The garage roof was fenced in, and a wire gate fitted to the gallery stairs, so that he could occasionally be excluded from the studio itself; the up- stairs telephone was enclosed in a box (whose fastening he early learned to undo); my dressing - table was cut off from him by a wire flap hinging from the ceil- ing, and the electric wires were enclosed in tunnels of hardboard that gave the place the appear- ance of a power -house, All these precautions were en- tirely necessary, for if Mij thought that he had been ex- cluded for too long, more especially from visitors whose acquaintance he wished to make, he would set about laying waste with extraordinary Invention • There was nothing haphazard about the demonstrations he planned; into then went all :he patience and ingenuity of his remarkable brain and all the agility of his muscular body. More usually, however, when he was loose in the studio, he would play for hours at a time with what soon became an esta- blished selection of toys, ping- pong balls, marbles, india-rub- ber fruit, and a terrapin shell that I had brought back from his native marshes. At night he slept in my bed, still, at this time, on his back with his head on the pillow, and in the morning he shared my bath, With utter indifference to temperature he would plunge ahead of me into water still too hot for me to enter, and while I shaved he would swim around me playing with the soapsuds or with various celluloid and rub - her ducks and ships that had begun to accumulate in my bathroom as they do In a child's — From "Ring of Bright Water," by Gavin Maxwell. Matrimony is a process by which the grocer acquires an account the florist once had. SALLY'S SAM �f t f� r ' !• '► "You'll appreciate it m Daddykins, whea you g4 the billV' Scarlett O'Hara Comes Back Home Miss Scarlett O'Hara of "Gone With the Wind" fame came home to Atlanta, Georgia, atter 20 years of wandering in foreign parts, and the people took her to their hearts like a long -lost daughter, The British actress, Vivien Leigh, whom the whole world identifies with the charming but turbulent heroine of the late Margaret Mitchell's epic of the Civil War, returned for a three- day visit in connection with a revival of the film which first made her famous. The revival is a part of Atlanta's Civil Wat' Centennial Celebration, Standing on a floodlighted platform in front of Loew's Grand 'Theater where "Gone With the Wind" first was shown 22 years ago, Miss Leigh looked into the upturned faces of thou- sands of Atlantans crowed into the triangle formed 1';y Peach- tree and Pryor Streets (Atlanta's counterpart of Times Square) and told them: "It's wonderful . It's wonderful to be back." Her cultivated British, voice was choked with emotion, With her !was Olivia de lfavil- land, who played the part of Metairie Hamilton, the gentle and faithful wife of Ashley Wilkes. She also was greeted by stormy applause. Only they of the four principal stars of "Gone With the Wind" are Left today. Clark Gable, the swash- buckling Rhelt Butler of the film, passed on recently, Leslie Howard—the cultivated but fu- tile Southern aristocrat, Ashley Wilkes—was lost on a British transport plane during World War II, The movie's revival brought back a flood of memories to Mayor Hartsfield, who has serv- ed in his post longer than the mayor of any other large Ameri- can city, whites Joseph H. Baird in the Christian Science Monitor. It was he who welcomed the film starts at the premiere in the same theater Dec. 15, 1939. When he met Miss De Ilavilland at Atlanta's new municipal air- port, she noted the modernistic administration building and look- ed away toward the downtown skyline where 20- and 30 -story skyscrapers now rise where once there were historic buildings of the past Civil . y,'ai.-. era, and observed: • "My, how A-t1anla has changed!" "Yes," the Mayor said with a grin, "a new city, but the same old Mayor," At a press conference at the Biltmore preceding the ball, MIss Leigh, who described' herself as a "middle-aged Scarlett," dis- closed plans for an around -the - world tour with other British actresses and actors with a rep- ertoire of four plays, These will include Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" and "Merchant of Ven- ice," "Duel of Angels" -and "The Lady of the Camellias." After a tour of Far Eastern countries, the British players will conte to the United States in the fall 01 1962. • A correspondent found a chance to ask Miss Leigh a ques- tion that always has intrigued him: "How did you, as a British acrtess, manage a convincing Southern drawl?" "1 just studied it for two weeks," she replied. Miss Leigh said that recently she had seen the screen tests which she had made in Holly- wood before Mr. Selznick as- signed her the coveted role of Scarlett O'Hara, and was amazed now that he had done it, Modern Etiquette Ily Anne Ashley Q, When abusiness letter Is addressed jointly to a man and u woman, what is the correct salutation? A. "Dear Sir and Madam." Q. If a man is Walking st ilk a woman and she is carrying her coat on her arm, should hs offer id carry It for her? A. This is not expected. Q, What is the best and easi- est way to Introduce married couples td each other? A. One good way is merely! "Mr, and Mrs. Carson, Mr, and Mrs. Rogers," Or, "Mary and Tom Carson, Helen and Dick Rogers." Q. Some fellows I've never mel occasionally phone me try- ing to make i►lind dates. Would It be proper for me to accept these? A. Blind dates are dangerous, unless arranged by a friend. In this case you mention, it's al- most like being "picked up" on the street. Boys who do their blind dating on telephones are usually pretty poor pickings themselves; or they wouldn't have to get dates this way. Ultra -Easy! PRINTED PATTERN 4776 SIZES 12-20 IY-Atna. -440.1 This dashing, side - buttoned wrap is spring's most applauded casual! Sew it swiftly, sash it smartly with a quick tie—it has no waist seams. Choose cotton, shantung, surah. Printed Pattern 4776; Misses' Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 1G takes 31A yards 39 -inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, N A M E, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. ANNOUNCING t h e biggest fashion show of Spring -Summer, 1961—pages, pages, pages of pat- terns in our new Color Catalog— just out! Hurry, send 355E now! ISSUE 14 — 1961 . PARIS IN SPRING — Actor Karl Boehm has eyes only for hii wife, Mouchie, as they take in the sights of Paris, He Is in th. French capital for the filming of "Four Horsemen of the Apo• calypse," Persuading Ducks To Come Home The ducks cheer us up. It Is a COmleal Fright to see them return in the evening, trundling rapidly down the trail, bobbling along single file like toy clucks on an Invisible string. They, invariably stop at a certain place above the falls for duckish deliberations — trying to make up their collec- tive mind. They hesitate, stretch their necks this way and that, make false starts, and run back again. Suddenly, seized by an en- thusiastic group impulse, they come runneling clown the steep bank and into the water; bob- bing and ducking like corks, showering crystal skeins of \\ i- ter over their backs and drinking end dipping as if they haw not had a drink for a week. On winter nights the ducks used to return voluntarily, but only at a particular time— just as twilight merged into the pro- per degree of darkness, We ii:cd to call it "cluck -dark," or as Ed- win said, somewhere around half -past -fox -time. Balmy spring evenings are quite a different story. Now it is our last duty after the day's work to hunt up and down the creek for our de- linquent. lar, r t!:c drake av ith two wive; who is smart t nough to keep therm Fe- questerecl while Edwin our: Lies the "dcv. n -due'::," nsurtly tar- thcr aY'ay and among in an r e briers. We endeavour- by ,any means we can think of to induce the ducks to return home My phony fox -bark was very cfcc- tive until the novelty wore oft. Then I tried using Any fla.4h- light as a "witch light," switch- ing it after the ducks and herd- ing them along, mu. h to their terror. rtily flashlight did very well indeed until last night, when its feeble light had to compete with a great golden moon shining out from behind dark clouds. The air was warmly mysterious and the ducks remained moored in a large pool, I waved them homewards. I spoke bland words calculated to make them think returning thoughts, They moved about uneasily, making noncom- mittal sounds in their throats, 1 shied a few pebbles aft, but they only moved•farther away. Ducks are master geopoliticians. They force you to clamber up and down snaky, weedy banks, strug_ gle through brier' patches and detour around waterfalls. In des- peration I step into the swollen creek, floundering up over my knees in the cold eddying water, while they fly down across the falls, or take to secret duck trails through the woods to avoid too much water. A mountain stream can be too tempestuous even for a duck. These forays are apt to be strenuous, 'but we keep after them until the whole mutinous crew is back at the home port, following its leader single file Into the duck house. We are be- draggled, our shirts torn and boots squishing with water, but we are usually laughing and feel ten years younger. — From "In the Arms of the Mountain," by Elizabeth Seeman. Government officials are those people who take 35 acres of land and shape it into a mile of pack- ed earth for your benefit. They Call It a superhighway. WIRED FOR SPACE — It's not ribbon for milady's spring out- fit that Shirley Gray is exam- ining. Pretty spirals are an im- portant part of the guidance system of a missile. The ribbons — "contour cables" — are plas- tic with flat metal strips em- bedded in them and save near- ly half the weight of conven- tional wiring. Pool Hustlers Getting Scarce They here shooting "Sur of Angels" in New York. producer - director Robert Rossen explain- ed, "bccawe 1 like to work in New York," land they had picked the Ames Billiard Academy, just oil' Times Square, "because of the size, and the feeling of age —of having been lived in by pool player's." The movie, de- rived from Walter Tevis' short, dramatic novel, "'l'hc hustler," is all about a man who plays pool for money. For two weeks, crews had been making the old poolroom look even older, installing beat -up leather choirs, seedy looking cur- tains. During the same two weeks, Paul Newman, who plays "Fast Eddie" Felson, the young pool -hustling hero, was taking lessons from ten -time world - champion pocket billiards player Willie Mosconi. Jackie Gleason, who at his current weight . of 255 pounds plays "Minnesota Fats," the big man whom Fast Eddie has come to town to beat, needed no lessons, having spent much of his youth hanging around pool hails in Brooklyn, where he once made a string of 96 balls. Gleason practiced for the film at home, on his own table. At the Ames Billiard Academy, director Rossen, gray-haired, and sporting a maroon knit shirt, squinted through a viewer and Charlie Maguire, the assistant director, yelled out: "All right, cut the chatter!" Newman took his place beside character actor Myron McCormick, and the scene rehearsal started. Gleason, in a conservative overcoat with•a huge red flower in the lapel, came in the front door, went over to check his coat, revealing an identical, huge red. flower in his jacket lapel, lit a cigarette, carne over to watch Newman shoot, and ex- changed ten. lines of dialogue making the match (at a $200 -a - game bet). Then a take. Newman missed three balls In a row. "Cut," called Rossen, "At this rate, we'll be doing four minutes a day," said Rossen. "We're pretty much on time." At another table off camera, BULL'S-EYE — Remarkable accuracy of the air-to-air Falcon mis- sile is demonstrated by the hole in this 36 -inch aluminum target. Standing beside one of the missiles and looking through the hole is James J. O'Reilly, test pilot for Hughes Aircraft Co., maker of the missile, The disc was hit dead center from more than a mile away. In tests at Holloman MB, N,M., such disci were suspended from a tower and heated to simulate a jet's exhaust. Heat -seeking Falcons were then fired at them from aircraft. Willie Mosconi was showing a pool shot to McCormick. McCoi - mick tried it, sank the ball twice, and ben med. Mosconi, the biggest stick in the pool lacune (he once ran 52(i balls without missing), was wearing a sport jacket with a Brunswick emblem on it. It is his job to sell Brunswick pool tables and the idea of pool -play- ing to the public; "The old green -paint -on -the -window joints are going," he said. '''they're not economical any more. And the hustlers have gone with them. Of course, 1 won't say they won't come back, Ile admitted, how- ever, that pool players looking for action could still find it. "Well, yes, there's Bicycle Char- lie here in New York, and Ko- komo Joe in Miami. in Chicago there's Big Time Charlie and State Street Willie, and then there's Cheery Nose — he's a roamer. 13ut thk movie shows what pool was, say, twenty years ago. Not what it is today." Newman, Mosconi said, was an apt pupil. "He looks like a pro- fessional. Of course, he's liable to make a shot three times, and then miss it six times in a row. But he looks good, You know, he used to rack balls at Kenyon College tat the Student Union] for 75 cents an hour." The next scene was ready, Newman and Gleason lagged the balls, to determine the break. Newman won, "Cut," said Rossen, because Gleason was supposed to win. They did it again, Gleason won, Newman broke. As the camera moved in, Mosconi raced in to change a few balls to make easier shots for Gleason. Gleason walked around the (able. "Cut," said Rossen. "Ridiculous," said Gleason, "If the balls broke that way I'd play the eight!" Everything stopped for a con- ference. "I'll practice that break to- night," Newman promised. In his new nine -room Park Avenue apartment, Newman now has a pool table In the dining room. "We eat in the living room," he said, "or in the dining room right on the pool table." "Cut the chatter," Maguire hollered, "Places. One more time." From NEWSWEEK. Should Atomic Wastes Be Dumped? Will radioactive waste stay harmless indefinitely once it's been dumped into the sea? This problem is vexing America's scientists. As ever -greater quantities of so-called low-level atomic waste are disposed of in American w a- ters, sonic fear a leakage, which could be very dangerous for people living along the neigh- bouring coastline. Fish, too, could become con- taminated and to handle or eat them would cause blistering \'OUnds. To prevent such dangers, a "hot" waste study project is now operating in the Santa Cruz basin off the Californian coast, There, radioactive material, in- cluding debris from atomic fac- tories and laboratories, is being dumped in containers of experi- mental sizes and shapes, includ- ing fifty -five -gallon steel drums and reinforced concrete cylin- ders. Lowered by cable, the contain- ers are photographed during their immersion to depths of 1,000 fathoms. After same months, specimens will'be photo- graphed again, and others haul- ed back to the surface for in- spection. Sometimes, the pres- sure of water cracks a drum. Then, however competently seal- ed, all its "hot" waste escapes. Latest Thing — The Round Hot Dog! The hot dog, said the Ameri- can Kosher Provision Co. last month in tones normally reserv- ed 'for the fall of governments, is on the way out. In Its place, AKP said it was offering a cir- cular frankfurter with a hole in the center, like a doughnut, designed to be eaten on a ham- burger bun, AKP claims its 1 ound dog, now being test -mar- keted -in New York and Miami, will cost no more than the tra- ditional longic. The credit (or blame, depend- ing on the point of view) for the drastic alteration (the first, sausage historians claim, in 3,000 years) lay squarely with the New Frontier. "We feel the Ken- nedy Administration signals the beginning of a more modern era," said an AKP spokesman confidently, "People are more readily adaptable to change. Give us one season at the beach- front and we'll win over the masses." Metanwhile, bhe hot-dog tra- ditionalists were howling. "Blas- phemy . . , Irreverence," splut- tered a counterman at Nathan's, R popular Coney Island hotdog emporium, "One bite and what have you got left? Mustard on your $3 sport shirt and a hunk of meat in the gutter. 'I'h;s Is eating?" — - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING - BABY CHICKS PEAK 'cakon Approaching! Bray' has gaud assortment breeds for prompt shipment, In started pullets, Including Ames J n•Cross Unyolds, prompt de. livery and hutehrd 10 order. Book Maty. June broilers now. See local Agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BERRY & ROOT PLANTS STRAWBERRIES ONTARIO'S largest growers. All con• mt•rclal varieties. 12 million plants, Itedcocl verlety� 50 r» $2.50 - 100 (t, $4.00 500 r„, 012.00 - 1,000 rc: $20.00- 5,000 r„ $50.00 - for complete info', motion and price list, on other var• letics, and also a new growing system write; 11 II. F. Boston Berry Forma Meg.) 11.11, 1 Wilsonville, Ontario. BATTERIES BATTERIES REPAIRED ht(01r i'. \ , aiaa, posts, covers, cells re• placed, err. Free plck•up and delivery within 7.i mile r.dlus. E Llchtl, R.I1. 1, Stralloro, Viten :11i1);1.pcarc 2 It 10. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MOTELS MOTELS MOTELS INQUIRIES Invited from operators In. terested In Chain Operation Motel, 25 Units with Gasollne Bar, and Coffee Baa', Locations available Ontario and Quebec on 25 years net lease iasis, Capital to furnish required. Lease se. curlty, excellent banking references. A gond opportunity for security of open anion In All Canadian Motel Chain. Write: Bousquet Construction Inc., 2 Gonln Blvd. East, Montreal, P.Q. 'fel. DU. 7.8839, BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE COMPLE'T'E cement block manufactur• lug plant for vibrated steam cured blocls, Close lo new hydro atomic en• ergy project, hill ',rive $10,000 AppIy Pillion Ii hoes. Pt Elgin, Ont Phone 130.W. 11ES'1'AURAN'I'•service station, Highway 11, south of Gravenhut•st, both fully equipped, doting good business. Low clown payment, balance open mortgage Apply Walby Motors, lilltvorthy. :Nus. koka. FOR lease with option to buy, thriving modern restaurant, terrazzo floors, paved entrance, lunch counter, banquet hall. Illghwny 4 and 83, Exeter. bust. ness known as Armstrong's, established 1949 Main highway from Detroit to Northern Ontario, from Kitchener to Grand (lend, Provincial Park. Speen. (zing In weddings, clubs, banquets, Terrlfle location. business can he sub. stan1lally increased, Wilin111ed oppor• tunities for niotel, lounge, drive•in res. taurant. Available May 1st, lime for rush season Contact owner, write \Vard Fritz, Elxcler, Ort. CHRISTMAS TREES - CHRISTMAS tree seedlings, Austrian and Scotch pines. Rest possible stock, $15 per 1,000. D. A. 'Tiffin, Cookstown, Ont. EAVESTROUGI4ING ATTENTION TINSMITHS YOU ought to know that half round eavestrough in 28 gauge can he bought at less than current prices. N'rlle Enos S .Martin, 11,3 Wnllensteln. Ont FARMS FOR SALE FRUIT farm, 100 acre, Beautifully situ. atcd on county road, sixty miles west of 'Toronto at Paris, 5,700. SIx miles from Brantford, 55,000, Sixty acres apples, 20 acres pears, 4 acres red cherries, 7 acres peaches, etc. All bear. Ing, Two modern oil heated homes. Complete equipment. Excellent retail sales, Immediate possession. Schuyler Orchards, Paris, Ont. How Can I? Ily Roberta Lee Q. clow can I make putty? A. By mixing linseed oil with sifted whiting to the proper con- sistency. Q. Is there any way to re-. move small scratches on glass table tops or 00 the glass screen of a TV set? A, These are often very ef- fectively cbliterated with tooth- paste, rubbed on with a soft cloth, and then polished off with another. Q. How can 1 clean and re- new oil paintings? A. Best, of course, is to have this done professionally. If you try it yourself, go over the paint- ings with a wad of cotton dip- ped in turpentine, rubbing very lightly and carefully. Then ap- ply a coat of special varnish sold in all artists' supply stores, Q. Can you suggest an easy method of removing yellow stains In a sink or tub, caused by dripping faucets? A. Here's what might be call- ed a "common cents" ]method: Even old stains give way if rub- bed with a copper penny! Fol- low this treatment with your usual cleanser. FARM EQUIPMENT 20 CAN Woode bulk cooler, chore. boy milking machine. John Gibson Hit 2 Caledonia, 110. 5.2172. HERE they are: Be an cony bird! Heavy duty wagons with 15•inch tires. $125. A• Vaunderkool, General Repair Shop, Ileachvllle. \VE Ione rievelopped a farm wagon that has proven to bo reliable for forage racks and bale hauling. Its main feat• tires are a very good steering for short turning and high speed no sway trail. Ing. For Illustrated folder write Horst \Voiding, RR No. 3, Elmira, Ontario. F'ARMAi.L M,D, new condition, tdgh clearance adjustable front axle, also narrow front end, belly pump, two. way remote control valve, Model 257. 1.11•C, cultivators, good tires. 400 hrs. slnce complete rebuild, 11995.00. Con. alder (rade and deliver In 300 mile radlu•; EARL DEAMUDE R.R. No. 6 DUNNVILLE, PHONE 777M2 FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE NEW Holland Crop•Chopper, Model 33, used one season. John Deere Cultivator Model CC•147, used one season. 28'' LG. 'thresher, completely equipped. Used four seasons. Contact G. Ferguson. 1298 'Tepper Road, Burlington, Ontario. NE. 4.9712. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS CANADIAN exclusive ennoble, patent. ed wave and curl comb, wanted by every woman. A proven $1 mall oder item In U.S. Write Royal Scot Water bury. Conn. 37 COMIC Books $2.00, (lard Cover Book dlsposals,'4 different $1.00. ;tate wants, Gold coloured necklet crosses, rhine- stone centre $2,00 dozen, sample 35f. Cash Postpaid. Off•price merchandise bulletins Erle, Frecmans, Cornwall, Ont. QUILT PATCHES AS'SOR'TED Broadcloth, plain and print. ed, 3 lbs $1,89 Special, smaller pieces, 4 lis. $1,911. Assorted Flannelette, 3 lbs. $1.49, Quilt Designs - set of 16 50f Drapery:. Better quality assorted mill ends, 1 .3 yards lengths, 44 Inches wide - 5 lbs. $7,98; pieces for cushions 2 lbs. $1.98. Postage paid, refund. Gordon Pollan, 48 Abell St., 'Toronto 3. HOUSE PLANTS AFRICAN Violets, Write for list offer. Ing all the finest varieties and colours. Aiken Nursery, Chute Panet, Que• INSTRUCTION EARN More) Bookkeeping, Salesman. ship. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les. sons 50r. Ask for free circular No 33. Canndlan Correspondence Courses 1290 Tray Street, Toronto. MEDICAL IT'S EXCELLENT, REAL RESULTS AFTER TAKING DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS AND NEURITIS. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect. POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH thn torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salvo will not disappolnt you Itching scalding and burning ecze• ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless, odorless ointment, regardless of how stiibborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE S3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1065 St, Clair Avenue East, TORONTO MONEY TO LOAN 51ORTGAGE 'Loans. Funds available on suitable farms, homes, stores, apart- ments, 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 terns loans and mortgages from $6,000 up on business stock. machinery, light or h.avy equipment, contracts, and ac. counts receivable factoring or pur. chaser. Capital for new businesses or recapitalize present. Complete (Inane. Ing of motels, hotels, hospitals, medl• 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 end motels. For financing let us assist you. For appointment call Commmer. cial Loan Department Investment Dis• count Corporation, 10906 Gratlot Ave., DRDetroit.1.4650. 13, Mich. Phone DR, 1.8415 or Newcastle Public School Board REQUIRES TEACHERS FOR MIDDLE GRADES Salary schedule in effect Minimum $3000. $200 per year for two years experience, annual inert. ment of $200. Apply stating full particulars to R, S. Barchard, Secretary Newcastle, Ontario NURSERY STOCK PINE, Spruce and Fir seedlinge, and transplants for Windbreaks, woodlots, and Xmas trees. Ilardwood eeedlinga. Privet, Chinese Elms, Cedar, Barberry for fledges end ornanmentals, Write for Free Price list. Richardson Fame, Dept. W, Pontypool, Ontario. NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing Nutria consider the following points which this organisa- tion offers: 1. The best available stock. no crose• bred or standard type, recommended, 2. 'I'he reputation of a plan which le proving Itself substantiated by files of satisfied ranchers 3._Full insurance against repines- ment. should they not live or In the event of sterility tall fully explained in our certificate of merit.) 4. We give you only mutations which are in demand for fur garments 5 You receive from this organization s guaranteed pelt market In writing. 6, Membership In o u r exelnslve breeders' association, whereby only purchasers of this stock may partici. pate In the benefits so offered 7. Prices for Breedlne Stock khu•t at $200. a noir Special 011et to those tvho qualify: earn your Netrria on our cooperative basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd„ R.R. No. 2, Stouffvllle, Ontario OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profeastont: good wages 'Thousands "I auerera'et Sltrvel Graduates America's 0re::test Svstcm lllusn alcd ('ad:dotue Frre write tit Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 356 Bloor St W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W. Hamilton 72 Rideau Street. ()haw a PERSONAL iIANDWRI'l'iNG analyzed; c n m p 1 e t • analyst:. by eaperleneed graphologist. Enclose $I e.0 and self•addressed en- velope to Mrs. II. Ingram. 454 Geneva St., St. Catharines. Ont. GET 8 hours sleep Nervous tension may cause 75';. of sickness Particu- larly sleeplessness, iliteryness and Ir. rltabllity. Sleep calm your nerves with "Napps" 10 for $1; 50 for 54 Lyon's Drugs, Dept 20 471 Danforth, Toronto. HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED guutanteed, emailed In ulaln parcel, including catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment 18 for $1,00 (Finest quality) Western Distribu. tors, Box 74 -TPF. Renina, Sask. PROPERTIES FOR SALE CALEDON HILLS LANDSCAPED three acre estate, wide trout stream bridges waterfalls, fruit trees, woodlot, large modernised farm house, two hathlnoms, ell furnace, double garage, barn, on main highway close to Credit Forks. 535.000. Phone 291112, write Walkington, RR 2, Csledon, • PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT ONT. Films developed and 8 magna prints 40e 12 magna prints 00s Reprints 5e each. KODACOLOR Developing roll 90e snot nnPluding prints Color prints 3(w each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m m 20 ex. posures mounted In slides $1.20 Color prints from slides 32c' each. Stoney re- funded In full for unprinted negatives, ROOFING CONTRACTORS ATTENTION Churches, schools, homeowners, Have your slate toot' and metal work checked and repaired by expert workmen, All material and workmanship guaranteed. Free estimates, Call AX. 4.6205 Norin Mothers, Parkhill, Ont SALESMEN WANTED FULL time and part-time salesmen re- quired at once to sell exclusive formu• lotions of the well known Agrlcide Insecticides, Challenger Sprayers DIs• Infectants, etc., direct 10 Dairy Farms, Exclusive territory arranged. Liberal. commission on first and repeat orders. Must be known In arra and have a good record. Apply by letter to Mr. K. Feldkamp, R. Sc., Provincial Manager, Red Line Chemicals of Canada, Ltd., Mimico, 'lo•onto 1C, Ontario. STAMPS SIX beautiful Korea stamps, catalogue value 51e - only l0' to new approva applicants. Maurice Moore, Box 573, Fort Bragg, California. TEACHERS WANTED - U.S.S. No. 10, Kinloss tWhltechurch) )truce County, rceuires an experienced Protestant teacher for a modern, well. equipped school. Apply stating quali- fications, salary expected and name of last inspector Duties will commence Sept. 5th. D..1. M. Moore, Sec. • Treas., RR No. 5, Lucknow, Ont. ISSUE 14 — 1961 THAT'S THE WAY THE BAIL BOUNCES — Natio nal League umpire Mel Steiner walks away and catcher Hal Smith of the Cardinals look s at him as Jake Wood of the Tigers scores in the first inning of the Detroit -St. Louis game in St. Petersburg, Fia, Maybe Steiner is loo embarrassed to stay on the scene. It appeared that Wood would have been a sure out if the ball hadn't hit the umpire. PAGE 4 ' 1 FURNITURE AT TI -IE MILDMAY FURNITURE SHOWROOMS NEW INCLUDES ABOUT 70 SUITES ---livingroom, bedroom, kitchen. USED INCLUDES TRADE-INS and some shop worn suites. Free Delivery. Convenient Terms, GODFREY SCHUETT MILDMAY, ONT. 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. SPRING COATh and SUITS REDUCED 1 Rack of Coats and Suits Reduced to a Sacrifice Coat Sets (some boys) sizes 1 to 6x 4.95 up Girls' and Teen Coats, sizes 7 to 14x , .'. , 9.95 up Girls' and Teen Suits, sizes 6 to 14x Teen, 4.95 up NeedlecraFt Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Ont. 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, Pronrietor. SPRINGTIME SPECIALS Ladies' Spring Coats, just arrived. Ban -Lon Pullovers, featuring new necklines. White Bulkee-Knit Cardigans. Blouses of Cottons and Tereylenes. Slims, new shades in pin cords, sizes 12 to 20 Full Fashioned Nylons (seem free) First Quality, Special 99c Men's New Suits for Spring, assorted patterns, all sizes, 2 pr. pants (alterations free), new ship- ment. Girls' Corduroy Sneakers, cushion arches, heavy soles, in gold, green, white and black, Spec. 1.79 Children's Plastic Calf Oxfords, foam soles, sizes 6 to 3 Special 1.69 Footwear for all the Family, including Work Boots (Hydro City) all sizes and styles to meet the demand. "The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. _.�. !.Y��_-`.•►- -s• 1: THE BLYTH STANDARD WALTON AUCTION SALE Walton Bazaar Dispersal Auction Sale of Holstein The Walton Group o: Duffs United cam, Daley Equipment, Machinery Church held their annual bazaar last and 50 acre farm. South 1 ▪ of lot 21, Wednesday afternoon with guests from Concession 11, Ilullelt Township, 1 mile Bethel, Winthrop, 131:::ns, ',endes!;oro,' east of Londesboro, on Moncrief, Anglican ladies Walton, and MONDAY, APRIL 10111 I our other church grcups. Mrs, Harvey at 1 pm. Brown at the crgan and Mrs, Elwood Sic. U•ced, Wingham, accompanying 'ing on CA, l'I'LC—•10 young Registered Ilol- stein cows, fresh; 11 grade Ilolstein the piano, furnished prelude music. cows, fresh and due to freshen in April Rev. R. M. Thcmas opened the meet- and May; 5 Registered Ilolstein heifer ing with hymn 374, "We Give Ton calves. But Thine Own," followed by scripture 1GACJ{1 FRY—Fa► ntiall AI AlcCor reading and prayer. Mrs. E. Mitchell,: mid: Deering tractor, recently recoil- vice econ vice president, welcomed the guests ditioned with manure loader and scut• and the following program was pre- tier; Massey Harris 15 disk power drill sated: reading, Mrs, Leonard Leem- (good); Oliver clipper combine, No. ing, Bethel: reading, Mrs. Geo, Love, 15,in good condition; wagon; flat rack; McKillo;t Group; reading, Mrs, II, L. gain box; steel water trough; set of Jennings, Brussels; reading, Mrs. Al- scales. i vin McDonald, 16th Group; reading, DAIRY EQUIPMENT -8 can spray Mrs. Gordon 13'aancha•d, Winthrop; solo milk cooler, in Al condition; 2 unit Mrs. Ted 13c11, Burns, accompanied 11 Surge milking machine, complete, 1. Miss Ida Leiper; reading, Mrs. Harvey year old; pail water heater (new). Craig, Boundary Group; reading, AAs. FARM—At same place 3 p.m. the Rcbcrl Fairservicc, Lcndes:.oro. Mrs. 50 acre farm will be offered for sale,' N. Reid introduced the guest speaker, cls loam land, 43 acres workable, Mrs, Orval Struthcr, Mitchell, who baY, 34x56 with all new stabling. chose as her theme, "'Through the „ , I I.R\'IS—Properly 10 per cent clown,' Looking Glass." Her first quotation, balance in 30 days. Sold subject to 1 Corinthians l3, was explained by stat reserve bid. ing tat the I3ible is God's mirror.' For us we see God in a mirror. TheoprCIIATTLIS,S CASII more we look in God's mirror, the' I Auctioneer,tor, John S. Miller. more we see. Always be willing to oHaroldeJackson, do the things that you are asked to Clerk, George Powell do, as that is what God intended us Sale IIcld Under Cover to do. Let the Bible speak for itself. 08.1 If we saw more clearly what God was asking us to do, I think we would try CLEARING AUCTION SALE and do it. Iler second thought was Clearing Auction Sale of Farm Stock, - taken from 2 Corinthians 3:18, This 111achinery, Ilay and Grain, at lot 26, shows that we are always on the gn Maitland Concession, Colborne Town - and that we never stop long enough to ship, 3 miles north of IIolmesville, or, ruaect the spirit of God in us. Let us 1 mile east and 2 miles south of Ben - slow down and see the need of God, miller, on and let His purposes be known to us. TUESDAY, APRIL 1.lth Jesus had a time for quiet, for study,:at 12 o'clock slurp , for shoring, and for peace. Do we? ; CATTLE—ft Holstein cows fresh; 9 Let us pause long enough for God toIlolstein cows, due in April and May, be reflected in our lives. Finally from 1 Jerseycow, due in May;5 Holstein James 1:23, when we see God in a open hifers; 10 young calves; 5 steers - looking glass and then see ourselves, rising 2 years old; 10 steers and belt we will want to do something about ors rising 1 year old. it. During the offering, Alrs, Brown PIGS -16 York chunks, 125 lbs. • and Mrs. Shortreed gave a musical MACHINERY—International 460 De- number. Mrs. E. Watson, Mrs. Ron isel tractor, 2 years old, equipped with Bennett and Mrs. W. Bewley received the o@fering and offertory prayer was _ given by Mrs. Mitchell. The meeting • closed with prayer by Rev. Thomas. The guests were invited to the school room where the bazaar was held and lunch served. - Mrs. Neil Reid, Dennis and Eric, Toronto, and Mrs. Robert Pickering, Sandra, Kimberley, Bobbie and David. Oakville, spent the weekend with Mr. - land Mrs. George Dundas. - Mr. Ron Ennis, of Western Univer- sity, London, spent a few days at his home. Master Bruce Clark is visiting at By- ron fora few days. • Mrs, Clifford Ritchie s; ^•it t"^ week - • W 9 Inter 1 • pulley and snap tack loader ,- - national tractor, recently ovorhaulcd,1 with good rubber, (Terms can be ar- ranged on tractors); International 7 ft. P.T.O. combine, 5 years old, equipped with flat rolls And pick up attachments; International thrasher on rubber, equipped with straw shredder, in good condition; 28-46 International semi mounted mower; New Idea side deliv- ery rake; New Idea manure spreader, 2 yqars old; John Deere 3 furrow plow; Ropey cultivator with new feet; 16 plate tractor disc; 5 section harrows; International hammer mill with 4 screens; 28 ft. smoker bale elevator; Cobey wagon, with good :rubber and 16 ft, hay rack; New Holland hlay hal- end with Mr. and Mrs. Cow'cn Lydiatt, er Barrie1 extra 116 ft. hay rack; post }tole = j B Visitors at the horn of Mr. and Airs. I auger, new; Iiomelite chain saw; 26" 1Clarence Martin \i,:re: Mr. and Mrsi bar super zip gran auger; Surge milk- Floyd Jenkins ^ d family, of Norwich er with 2 single units, also 2 other ^.'d Mr. and Mrs. Fred Martin and single units; 11.8 gal. milk clans; 1942 family, of l,urtard. International 1 ton truck; 1950 GMC Rev. D J Lane officiated at Knox S tnderson led ►n prayer. The ton pick up truck with rack and good Presbyterian Church for their special was received by Eddie Haines. • M.:sire -end Hackwell,tf London, r tires; electric motors; electric fencer; Easter service, and gave an inspiring Much credit vitas given to the Blyth spent Cie week end with her parents, placed Mrs. Harold Carter when two other Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ilackwell. helf feeder for pigs, and a number of message on "Eternal Life as found rice Brigade in saving a barn ten feet Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marshall and I steel pig troughs; 2-3 hundred bales of through Jesus Christ." The beautiful away at the farm home of Mr, and fancily, �of North Bay, visited over the mixed hay, quantity of Rodney seed bouquets of flowers were Easter week -end with Mr, M. Fraser and Alrs. Luella Marshall, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Coutts, Robbie and Rickey, Toronto, and Mr. Carl Coutts, of London visited with Mr. and Mrs. ' Andrew Coutts. • Mr. Gerald Dressel, of Toronto is spending Easter holidays at the home of Mrs. E. Ennis. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Burke and fain - spent Easter Sunday with Mr, and ' Mrs, Art McCall, Mr, sand Mrs. Douglas Hcske and family, of Godet•ich, visited over East- er with Mr. and Mrs. Andy Turnbull, Miss Barbara Turnbull, of London, and Miss Shirley Turnbull, of Orillia, visited at their home. Miss Ione Watson and friend, of Lon- don. spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson. Mr. Victor Uhler, of Sioux Look -Out, visited with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Uhler. Mr. and Mrs. E. Stutz and Wolfram, - of Wellesley, and Mr, and Mrs, W. Stutz, Kitchener, spent Sunday with - Mr. and Mrs. Torrance Dundas. Seventeen members will be received - into the congregation of Duffs United Church at the service of Holy Commun- ion Sunday morning, April 9 at 11;30 a.m. This Is the final Communion Ser- - vice of Rev. M..Thomas, with members, of this church prior to his retirement at the end of June. Mrs: Torrance Dundas spent a few - days at Wellesley and Kitchener tits week. 'Wednesday, April 5, 1961 ....••=.0 6.1 u,Rwrw..Nr..-w..• wrrwrara/-R.M-I w.IJaa .w„ r••-wIM116 /0w , v . • ilii. 1 li SPRING TIME IS DRESS UP TIME Ftor the man who likes to be well dressed, we have Ready To Wear Suits PRICED AS LOW AS $35.00 with two pair of pants MADE -TO -MEASURE SUITS BY HOUSE OF STONE M'IEN'S 100 percent ALL WOOL DRESS PANTS in Charcoal, Grey and Brown Flannel Sizes 32 to 44 Priced At $16.95 by House of Stone FOR THE BEST IN WHITE SHIRTS BUY ARROW White Broadcloth with French Cuff, Only $5.00 R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Home of Good Quality Merchandise" Ig I WinghamMemorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day, CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'1'TON, II g Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTII LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE — T1tOA1AS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON: EXETER: Business-1Iu 2-6606 Business 41 Residence -11u 2-3869 Residence 34 • AUBURN Sunday School, Marie Leatherland read the scripture lesson and Barbara offering oats; poultry equipment, including heat memory of the late F. 0. Mcllveen buildings burned about 2 a.m. on Mon - bulb brooder; chains, shovels, forks; by his wife, The church organist, Mr. day morning. These newly constructed quantity of hemlock lumber 2x4 • 2x8. Arthur Youngblut, was in charge of the buildings housing the 60 pigs which music and accompanied Mrs. Donald burned to death were 40 by 60 and 80 Maines and her daughter, Margaret,; by 40. Later on about 9 a.m. they an - when they sang, "Alone," An inter-: swered a fire alarm from the home of esting film, "The Redemption of Man" Mr, Simon Smit, where an empty chick - 08 -1 was shown at the open session of the 1 en house burned to a total loss, Mr, Bob Machan and Bill Griffiths, of Sarnia, were visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Reid during the weekend, Mr, John Baan, of Ridgetown, has - returned home after completing one year at Agricultural School. Congratulations are extended to Mr, and Mrs. William Thamer on the birth of a daughter April 2, Easter Sunday,' in Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth. Counter Check Books (printed or blank) The Standard Office, TERMS CASII No Reserve Farm Sold Proprietor, John Dunbar. Auctioneer, Harold Jackson. Clerk, George Powell. 11 II . li .0 • . I. 11!!! PLEASE, Huron, Don't Stop Now! Huron citizens have been fighting cancer two effective ways: 1. Having an annual medical checkup to catch early symptons. 2. Giving a generous donation to the April campaign to raise funds for research, service and education work. Support The April (anter Campaign In Blyth And Community TOWNSHIP CANVASSES Conducted by the Federation of Agriculture Let's Keep On Fighting Cancer In Huron -• Give Generously rill -'.... _, te,m5t .-'i "- ._ _66._. Wednesday, April 5,1961 THE BLYTH STANDARD .,..._._ -1 ,. . .....-..1.1.11aNYA.,._r_.....�., ......_......,.. ....u.,imamai ., ,---.:,..,NI~0P, n...��,. .4„�.,oavwr��O�imas+mmers...swnwo,Wrr.omona -11 Elliott Insurance Agency savarwr BLYTH -- ONTARIO. INSURANCE; IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALME IN GIVING SERVICE. Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 1111 .v 1. I III 1 111 hl•! ii Ju 4;1 1 01.MI'1 /'1..a 1,f "..."1.•••0 4.4,111.1~.~444,1 Man for profitable Ttawlei:;h Busi- ness, Good living at start. Write Itaw- leigh's, Dept. D-136.101, 4005 Richelieu, Montreal, 08-1 FOR SALE AUCTION SALES WANTED Maple Syrup, $6.00 per gallon. Apply Lloyd McClinchcy, It.R, 1. Auburn, phone Auburn 526-7591. 03-1 FOR SALE OR RENT 65 acre grass farm, spring water, in Township of Morris, Apply, Laurence Nesbit, phone 7237, Auburn, 08-2. BLYTII BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 "CATTLE SPRAYING FOR LICE Warm waler used. Satisfaction Guar- anteed. Phone J. M. Backer, 95, Brussels." 48-6 TV ANTENNA REPAIRS TV Antenna Repairs and Installation. Year around service. Phone collect, Teeswater, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser- vice. 45-tf, FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE Repairs to Alt Makes of Vacuum Cleaners, Bob Peck, Varna, phone Hensall, 696112. 50.13p.tf. SANITARY SEWAGE ofsPOSAI. Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumper' and cleaned. Free estimates. Lotto Blake, phone 421311, Brussels, R.R. 2. CRAW 11)RI) & II ETIIERINGTON RARRIiS'TERS & SOLICITORS J. II. Crawford, R. S. IIetherington, Q.C. Q,C, Wingham and Blyth. IN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located in Elliott Insurance Ageno3 Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4. G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN iSuceessor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 83, OODERICH tb•C, J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seatorth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m, to 5;30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30. Phone HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. - WINGHAM, ONI inrENINGS BY APPOINTMENT (For Apofntn:ent please phone 770 Wingham). Professional Eye Examination. . Optical Services. ROY N. BENTLEY Publio Accountant GODERICH, ONT. Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 — Box 478. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS, 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. r'UESDAY, 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. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTII, ONT, OFFICERS; President — John L: Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John IL McEw- ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W, E. Southgate, Seaforth. DIRECTORS J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. II. McEw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J,E. Leonhardt, Pep- per, Brucefield; C. W. Bornholm; I1. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth, AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; V. J, Lane, R.R, 5, Seaforth; Selwyn Ba- ker, Biytssels; James Keyes, Seaforth; Harold Squire;;, Clinton, Clinton Community FARMERS EVERY FIUDAY AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 2 p.m. IN RUTH, PHONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer, 05-tf. • . 4'4011,v.NIv#►11# ,+I Mf!I`1,.I•MI MN+. P & W TRANSPORT LTD. Local and Long Distance Trucking Cattle Shipped Monday and Thursday Hogs on Tuesdays Trucking to and from Brussels and Clinton Sales on Friday Call 162, Blyth DEAD STOCK WANTED HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid in surounding districts for dead, old, sick or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor- ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman 'Knapp, Blyth, 21812, If busy phone Leroy, Acheson,: Atwood, 153, Wm. Morse, Brussels, 15J6. Trucks available at all times. 94- 1, Mar. DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASII PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and IIORSES also Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old Horses -4c per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels, BRUCE MARLATT 24 Hour Service Plant Licence No, 54•R,P,•6I Colector Licence No, 88•G61 DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR RENOVATION PLANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Job Call GERALD EXEL Carpentry mid Masonry Phone 231112 Brussels, Ontario DANCE To GARNET FARRIER'S 6 -PIECE BAND in Blyth Memorial Hall Friday, Apr. 7 sponsored by BLYTH AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY LUCKY DRAW PRIZES Admission at popular prices VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND SERVICE Repairs to most popular makes of cleaners and polishers. 'Filter Queen, Sales, Varna. Tel. collect Hensel! 696112.; 50-13p.tf, LYCEUM TI-IEATRE Wingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Night Commencing at 7:15 p.m. 1iatinee Saturday afternoon at 2 p,m, Thursday Friday Sautrday, April 6.7.1 Rod Taylor, Alan Young, Yvette Mhmieux in "THE TIME 11'IACIIINE" A science -fiction melodrama based on the H. G. Wells' novel about the man who invented a machine to transport ' him through time. 4,0...N1.414NN104/011.. ►e1.1...N.1. Plumbing Carpentry WORK OF ALL KINDS Specializing in built-in cupboards etc. Dealer in Steel and Ashphalt Roofing. WORK GUARANTEED FRANK McMICIIAEL R.R. 4, Goderich phone Carlow 1108 51-10p. TEACHER WANTED Applications will be received until April 15th for the position of teacher ; at S.S. No, 7, lfullctt. Approximately 1 16 pupils. Apply, slating qualifica- tions, salary expected, and name of last inspector, to Mrs. Leonard Shob- brook, secretary, 11.11. 1, Blyth, Ont. 06-4. ,11,0,0"#11,P0 114,11'.4'01 1 BLYTII BILLIARDS "Your friendly meeting place." Tobaccos - Soft Drinks Confectionaries open 9 a,m. to 12 p.m. Doc Cole, Proprietor ,...##s 4.,eJs.?#.,...1I. 4 .....~.##. CONTACT US For All Your ELECTRICAL PROBLEMS Free Estimates Given On WIRING CONTRACTS Fast and Efficient Service • on all ELECTRICAL REPAIRS BILL'S ELECTRIC Wm. Hull, Proprietor. Phone 171 Blyth, 1101. FOR SALE Pressure system complete with elec- tric motor, pump and tank; 200 gallon oil tank; 20 gallon electric water heat- er. Apply, phone 21:823, Blyth. 07-2 CARD OF TIIANKS We would like to give our sincere thanks to the Blyth Fire Brigade and ail our neighbours who as:;isted in ocu recent r'himney fire. -Vet:be and Pietje Bylsma and family. 08-1p FOR SALE 1 mail chain saw, in excellent condi- ti:n, Apply, L'lyth Billiard Parlor. 08.1 FOR SALE Maple Syrup, $6.00 per gallon. Apply Mason Bailey, phone 54115, Blyth. 07.1p NOTICE Commencing Mon., April 10, we will again carry out every day milk delivery to our customers. HOWE'S DAIRY Blyth, Ontario. • CARD OF TIIANKS We wish to thank all our good neigh- bours for their kindness in work in helping Its trove, 08-1. --James and Mary Phelan, FOR SALE OR RENT A grass farm on the 3rd concession of East Wawanosh Township, with a good barn. Apply Lewis 1V'hi.tficld, phone •130, Blyth, 08-1p, FOR SALE Brick house, with 5 rooms and bath, new gas furnace, newly decorated, also a new roof, with a large lot, on Queen Street, Blyth. Apply at The Stamtlar d. 08.1 HELP WANTED Watkins protected locality including Blyth and Brussels open for as man with ambition and cat'. No investment re- quired. It costs nothing to investigate. Write Box "X" in care of the Blyth Standard. 07-1p FOR SALE IIome grown Alfalfa Seed. Apply, Glenn Carter, phone 281111, Blyth. 03-2 CARD OF TiiANKS To many friends 511,1 n,:iehbuurs who helped out when I tin,.,; lovely flowers, gifts and eatds I re- ceived avhile in the hospital, and to the doctors, nurses and staff, I would like to express my sincere thanks. Your kindness will never be forgotten. —Barbara Kcchnic. Wi1.FRED McINTEE Reil Estate Broker WALKElt'1'ON, ONT. Agent; Vic Kennedy, Myth Phone 78. 2 story brick hcusc, Dinsley Street, Blyth, bath and furnace. 200 acres 11/2 miles cast of Illyth, Mor. pis 'Township, Good buildings. 100 acre farm in 1Vawanosh Town• ship, good buildings, 6 acres hard woad hush, 11/2 miles from village. 100 acre grass farm in East Wawa - nosh, with pond. 100 acres in Mullett, with spring creek. Full price $4000.00. 125 nacres on the 0th of Mullett, good house, L-shaped barn, silo. Cement block building in Walton. Hardware store, 6 roomed apa: tmcnt above, steam heated, 200 acres 9th of lfullctt Township, 140 .,vorkab1e, hard wood 1:ush. 2 story brick house, furnace and bath, )load barn. 07-3, • III Iiii••••• • whs.. Mi m11111 ela `----. �— FOR SALE 7952 Chevrolet Sedan, in fair condi- : tion, real good tires. A: ply, A. D.', Campbell, phone 3511111, Blyth, 07-2p FOR SAI E About 335 Manson Leghorns, one year cld, laying 60 percent and more, $1.10 cacti. Apply, S. Smit, R.R. 3, Blyth, phone 7519 Auburn. 08,2p. FOR SALE Girls two-piece spring coat set, pink fleck, size 3X; boys two-piece blue fleck, size 2. Apply phone 28R11, Myth, 08.1 FOR SALE Baled hay; also timothy seed, Rcg• ular and Climax, Apply J, B. Nesbit, phone 53115, Blyth. 03-2p. FOR SALE _ Maple Syrup, made by evaporator, $6.00 per •gallon. Apply Lloyd McClin- chcy, phone 7591, Auburn. 03.1p FOR. SALE Wine chesterfield. Apply Mrs. M, Holland, phone 77, Blyth. 0;¢1 -,--__ FOR SALE 350 bales good mixed feed hay, Ap- ply Torrance Dundas, Walton, phone Brussels 390W5. 03.1, FOR RENT Pasture, 27 acres, lots of water and shade. Apply Lorne Popp, phone 18115 Blyth. 08 -Ip. lei GGDERICII PAGE MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT 7'11E PARK THEATRE Phone JAI.7811 - NOW PLAYING NOW—APRIL 6-7-8, Steve Reeves and Primo Carrera, In "HERCULES UNCHAINED" Scope and Color MONDAY, 'TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10. 11 - 12 Ernes;' Borgnine, Zolu'a Lampert aiid Alan Austin The true story of a police lieutenant who launched a fight against the Mafia "PAY OR DIE" Adult Entertainment THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY, APRIL 13 - 14 • 15 Robert Mitchum, Deborah Kerr and Peter Ustinov Filmed in Australia, A new and adventurous tale built around shipmen and their families, "THE SUNDOWNERS" In Technicolor COMING—"TBE CROWDED SKY"—Adult Entertainment n .0 I , .. 11..1 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: Hirt our ancient Throne is the continuat:on of the Throe: of David; and, in view of present wcrld 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 B, Ottawa, Ont. CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to express my appreciat'.on to the Blyth Fire Department, friends and' neighbours, for their help at my recent fire. 081p. —Charles Bromley. CARD OF TIIANKS I wish to thank those who remember- ed me while a patient in Clinton Hos- pital. Special thanks to Dr. Street and Dr. Newland, and the nursing staff. 08-1. —Gwen Patterson. There Is Strenght In Numbers When Farmers Decide To Improve Their Cattle OVER 10,000 MEMBER BREEDERS SHARING SUPERIOR SIRES OF ALL BREEDS RESULTS IN LABOUR CONSERVED DISEASE PREVENTED DOLLARS SAVED FOR ALL BETTER CATTLE eINNV.~~~0~#~04,..INVVNNO OW.4WW`MANNNi You, too can share in the advantages of Artificial Insemination For more information, phone: CLINTON HU 2-3441 or for long distance CLINTON ZENITH 9-5650 BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING Waterloo Cattle Breading Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" 1 Father, Daughter And Backstage Secrets Talking shop, actor Sir Mi- chael Rcdrrave and his chart;;itcr Vanessa let their guests Into some backstage secrets when they gave a "saucepan session" et the Criterion Theater here re- cently. The young members of the audience were guests cif the British Deanna League. Vanessa carne onto the stage with a shopping basket and a saucepan. Sir Michael threw a sheaf of questions into the sauce- pan, and they were drawn and answered one by one. A question on improvision drew from Sir Michael a story about Robert Bolt's "The 'Tiger and the Horse," the production which father and dsughter both appeared. }Ie recalled that (,oe clay his dresser had for2cttcn to put a flower into his buttonhole — an important item in the plot. Ca- therine Lacey, his stage wife, made him aware of the fact when she suddenly said: "So, I zee you are not wearing it," in- stead of exclaiming that he was wearing it, Sir Michael found himself making up some sen- tences explaining how he had lost the flower, and she improv- ised: "I'I1 go to the gr rdcn and pick you another." When a questioner su Nested that playing Shakespeare was "playing safe," Sir Michael dis- agreed entirely. Nothing was further frnr "playing safe" than apppearinc in Shakespeare, he said. The aewr is being compared with all the best actors whom the audience has seen play ,.he Shakespearean role before, He is also up against the audience's own image of how the part should he played. New plays were less dangerous to the repu- tation, but so far Sir Michael had rot come across many with suitable parts for him. Vanessa told of early recol- lections of seeing her father in reheansai of a Christmas play when she was five, He was sup- posed to be killed and thrown over a parapet. She was taken backstage to see the mattresses and other objects to minimize the fall. When she saw the per- formance, she had a feeling of beirg "in the secret, in on the game." She has been ."in on the PROBLEMS — Ingemar Johans- ton isn't worrying about his ring fights. He is discussing his tax problems with newsmen in Palm Beach, Fla. The U.S. gov- ernment claims he owes about $1 million. practically curt sere. about his, views of a national flouter. Sir Michael mitt he felt such a 1ht atcr should not he cr n`in(d to London but should h.vc branches up and down the t,nmtry. As for the nuildin'!., he would ug;gest two aatditoriu n , one for the > nailer intimate pr1 duction and the other for I: ter productions such 11 s'n's "1'ce1* liynt.'' Vanessa would like three—an extra cne for a theater in the round, Sir ilt1ehael's "ideal engagc- m_nt," he said, would be one whcrc lie worked with the same company for 0 long period. "Even a year is not enough," he said, "because at the end of the year the company breaks Op." At another holiday session, Judi Dench and John Stride, the Old Vic's lovers in "Romeo and Juliet," conveyed to the young audience their enthusiasm at working under the Italian pro- ducer Franco Zeffirelli. This was the first straight play in Britain produced by the famous opera producer. At first this fiery Latin found the English actors "too mourn- ful, too miserable," Miss Dench recalled. "lie denounced us for having no fire," she said. The two speakers acted the first meeting of Romeo and Juliet as they had originally played it to Zeffirelli in traditional Eng- lish style. This made Zeffirelli cry out in agony: "No, no, what is it . . the end of the world?" Mr. Stride and Miss Dench then played it taking note of Zcffirelli's coaching. By Melita Knowles in the Christian Science Monitor. "My Fair Lady" Breaks All Records On March 14 the Alan Jay Lerner -Frederick Loewe ver- sion of Shaw's "Pygmalion" en- tered its sixth year at the Mark Hollinger Theater in New York. According to Variety, the show business weekly, it is "the top musical comedy hit of all time, the most profitable, and the most widely circulated." Since opening night (March 15, 1956) "My Fair Lady" has been seen in New York alone by 3,000,000 patrons, who have paid $17,000,000 into the box office of the Hellinger, the entertain- ment's first and only Broadway home. On its fifth New York anni- versary "My Fair Lady" was also playing in London, Stockholm, Sydney, Amsterdam, and Auck- land. It has been acted—in suit- able translation—in Copenhagen, Oslo, Helsinki, Mexico City, and Melbourne (where it stayed for 90 weeks). The National Com- pany recessed for 10 weeks last spring to play engagements in Moscow, Leningrad, and Kiev. Lars R. Schmidt, who owns for- eign language rights, is planning a Berlin production. The total worldwide audience now exceeds 10,000,000; the total box office gross, $48,000,000, The original cast album has sold 3,200,000 copies, and there have been 30 other recordings by va- rious bands, singers, and or- chestras. The New York run of "My Fair Lady" is exceeded only by that of "Oklahoma!" which lasted five years and nine weeks, On June 13 the musical comedy about a phonetics professor and a London flo\ver girl will over- take the legendary Rogers -Ham- merstein western. There seems no doubt that "My Fair Lady" will set a new Broadway record. Optimists feel that it may even run for another season. CAPSULE PREVIEW — A model of the Mercury capsule, com- plete with dummy astronaut, gets the once-over by John Delia, 12. Designed by National Aeronautics and Space Administra- tion to take the first American into space, the model is display - r at the city Museum of Science and Industry. • SPAZ: FOR SPACE — Every time a missile nese cone races hundreds of miles into space and thousands of miles down the test range in a few minutes, it leaves behind miles of magnetic recording tape that takes months to decipher. The taped information is valuable since it records every detail of a flight. Photo shows a small part of the 2,000 pounds (four million feet) of tape that has been amassed from 135 flights by GE -made nose cones. They represent 32.1 hours of flight over 230,960 nautical miles by 162,000 pounds of equipment. They include such firsts as the first ICMB flight of a nose cone and first object ever recovered from orbit. TABLE TALKS 'r sank Actdecwws CREAMED DAM. 3 cups chopped cooked ham 3 cups chopped cold, boiled potatoes 1 green pepper, chopped 2 cups milk Salt and pepper 1 tablespoon butter. Combine chopped ham, pota- toes and green pepper. Place in skillet and add milk. Cook uncovered over very low heat, stirring occasionally, until quite thick, about 25 minutes. Add salt and pepper to taste. Stir in butter and serve. *IIAM-BONE SOUP 1 ham bone 8 cups water 2 onions, sliced 1 clove garlic, chopped 1 bay leaf cup pot barley, 2 carrots, sliced thin 2 potatoes, pared and diced 1 green pepper, chopped • s cup diced celery 1 28 -ounce can tomatoes Salt and pepper. Place ham bone in large kettle. Add water, onions, garlic, bay leaf and pot barley. Cover, bring to boil, reduce heat and simmer 11/2 hours, Or, cook in pressure cooker for 30 minutes, Remove bone, pick off any meat, chop the meat and return to stock. Discard bone, Skim off excess fat. Add carrots, potatoes, green pepper, celery and canned toma- toes, Reheat to boiling, Reduce heat and simmer for 1 hour long- er, or until vegetables are tender. Add salt and pepper to taste and serve. SPICED PRUNES These may be served either hot with a roast or cold, as a relish. 1 pound prunes, cooked 1 cup vinegar 1 cup sugar 1 cup water I teaspoon each, cinnamon and ground cloves Combine all ingredients except prunes and boil 1 minute, add prunes; bring to boil. Cool and leave in refrigerator for 24 hours. * OATMEAL QUICK BREAD This is a slightly sweet bread, and it stays moist. It's very sim- ple to make and can be served warm or cool, toasted, or in sand- wiches. Combine 2 cups sifted all-pur- pose flour, r/r cup sugar, 1 table- spoon salt, 1 teaspoon soda, 11/2 cups rolled oats (quick or regu- lar), 1 cup whole bran cereal, 1 cup raisins, In a separate bowl combine 2 beaten eggs, Pk cups buttermilk or sour milk, r/z cup molasses. Add liquids to dry in- gredients and stir just until dry particles are moistened. Pour in- to a greased loaf pan (9x5x3) and bake at 350°F, about 1 hour, or until well done and browned. I used a glass bread pan, and found I had to cook the loaf about 10 minutes over the hour. GLAZED CARROTS 1 pound new carrots Boiling salted water 1/2 cup corn syrup 3 tablespoons butter Cut off tops and scrub carrots with a brush, Scrape, if desired. Place in rapidly boiling salted water. Cover and cook 15-20 minutes, until carrots are tender. Drain well, Heat corn syrup and butter in a skillet. Add drained carrots, simmer until well glazed, turn- ing frequently. Serve immedi- ately. ASPARAGUS 1VIT11 LEMON BUTTER 1 pound fresh or frozen asparagus Boiling salted water 4 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons lemon juice 1,z teaspoon grated lemon rind. Cook asparagus in boiling salt - eel water for 10-15 minutes, until just tender. Heat butter, lemon juice, lemon rind until piping hot, Pour over asparagus and serve, * ,, + CREAM JUBILEE 1 envelope gelatin 3 tablespoons cold water 11/4 cups milk cup sugar Pinch salt 2 egg yolks, slightly beaten 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 egg whites, beaten stiff ',a cup sugar 1 cup whipping creams CHERIRY SAUCE 1 20 -ounce can sweet black cherries 2 -inch strip lemon peel 1!_ tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons cornstarch 2 tablespoons cold water Soften gelatin in cold water. Mix milk, sugar and salt together and heat in double boiler. Beat egg yolks slightly and stir hot milk -sugar mixture Into egg yolks. Cook over hot water until slightly thickened, stirring con- stantly. Add softened gelatin and stir until dissolved. Remove from heat and add va- nilla. Cool until slightly thick- ened. Beat egg whites until stiff. Gradually beat in 1/4 cup sugar. Whip cream until stiff. Fold beaten egg whites into cooled mixture, then fold in whipped cream. Turn into 11/2 - quart ring mlod. Chill until firm, Turn out on serving platter. Place small bowl in centre, fill with cherry sauce. To make sauce: Drain cherries, reserve fruit and juice. Combine juice, lemon peel, lemon juice, and bring to boil. Mix cornstarch with water, stir into cherry syrup, Cook and stir until clear and thickened. Re- move lemon rind, Add cherries. Chill thoroughly. Lizard For Dinner Australian Treat An Australian inland patrol officer, Bill Harney, has just pro- duced the first ever "Bush Cook Book"—a collection of more - than -original recipes used by Australian aborigines. Bill knows as much about aborigines as any man alive, For years, he has watched their ceremonies, trek- ked with them, eaten their foods and shared their hazards. Now in his fascinating book he parades a rare feast of aborigin- al delicacies — including such tasty 11e1115 115 baked crocodile c rind kangaroo steak. The latter, 13111 informs readers, is extra nutritious if served with bacon, Aussie ovens are sizzling these days wilt many of 13i11's fantas- tic recipes, "It's not possible," he says, "t0 describe the flavour of the meat o' the native lizards—which the aborigines have eaten for thou- sands of years and which I and many others find delicious. They have their own special flavour lika beef, mutton or chicken," Wife Stuttered — He Sought Divorce When film actress Anita Ran - settle asked for a divorce ,from her second husband on the ground that he refused to laugh et her jokes or witty repartee, the Californian judge, Wilbur Powell, remarked: "]t is preposterous that you should seek to thus discard a man merely because he sees nothing funny in your remarks, I find then extremely unfunny myself. "We live in strange tines, in- deed. If such suits should suc- ceed, judges will be asked, shortly, to grant divorce just be- cause a partner snores, lisps, stutters — or parts his hair on the unfavoured side." Probably the judge was on - aware that a divorce suit v. as brought on the ground that a wife stuttered. It happened in Chicago. A Pole, Vladislav Wracznski, sought freedom from his pretty, young American wife because she stuttered when tying to pro- nounce his name. The husband complained that it made his name sound ridiculously long when she stammered and stm- bled through its combinatinm of consonants, Equally optimistic was the Mi- ami businessman who sued for divorce because his wife had an affliction of the left eye. The ailment caused her to wink — to her own embarrassment and her husband's jealotu rage. The demented man claimed that he was involved in a brawl at least once a week — because of men mistaking the woman's wink for an invitation to flirt. In England, a Portsmouth chandler told a divorce judge that his wile insisted upon tak- ing their pet budgerigar to bed with then. Not only did the bird soil ,the bed linen, but the hus- band awoke each morning with bird seed in his hair, ears and mouth. The judge ruled that there were not sufficient grounds for granting a divorce, but advised the husband to seek revenge by taking the family Airedale into bed with him. In a recently -published report, a London marriage counsellor stated that some wives ask for advice on how to get a divorce for such trivial things as hubby dropping his clothes around the bedroom floor instead of plac- ing them neatly on a chair, or slopping sauce on a clean table- cloth — even because he leaves the soap to get sticky and soft in a wet soap dish. With husbands, however, the counsellor reports, divorce is usually contemplated only where infidelity is suspected. "Men are, perhaps, more pre- pared to 'forgive their partners' little fads and fancies, as long as they remain faithful," he states. This does not seem to ;.apply abroad, though. Recently a re- port from Calais announced that a man had sought divorce from his actress -wife because she in- sisted upon wearing gowns with plunging necklines. One Tree They Cannot Kill When an international party of nature lovers touring Europe to study the trees that 'flourish in capital cities reached London recently they were amazed at what they celled "the majesty and hardiness" of the fine old plane trees which grow well despite London's fog, dust and sect, One reason why these trees, known as the Londoners' own trees, are much more successful in London than any other vari- ctics, they learned, is that they arc constantly shedding theist hark, And with the bark goes 1110 filn of soot and dirt lett by Ma city air. A London plane may reach a . height of more than 100 feet It is long-lived and a hybrid pi o- c:uccd by two trees brought to Londc•n from the East more than 600 years ago. Amcng the oldest planes in London are some in Berkeley Square which were planted in 17119 — the year the French stormed 1he Bastille. But the most fame us 01 the London plane trees is a lar.d- mark in Cheapside and stands on what is said to he one of the most valu:u:!e, pat: of Ivul in the City — a diad burial ground. This centuries-old tree, in the ',catgut a business area, has long hc;'n legally protected from des- truction- by special clause; to the leases cf shops in the vicin- ity. 1l is in the tiny churchyard of the St. Peter be Cheap, burnt clown in the Great Fire and nev- er rebuilt. \4T0rdswc.rth wrote al.1aut this t•ce and a thrush he heard sing- ing in it. "All love the old tree herniae it is a solitary thing surviving strangely out of pl<.'e," wrote an authority on London. "Lonely stands the old tree through the years on land that is woo th, maybe, a little forunc" Bombing in two world wars failed to wipe out the London plane trees. One famous news- paper described them as "daunt- less." The branches at' one of the t ces were killed during a 1042 raid when incendiary bombs rained on it, but soon afterwards vigorous shoots appeared from dormant buds up and down its old trunk. 'l'hat tree continues to flourish today. ISSUE 11 — 10411 BITES DUST — Veteran film star John Payne k recovering in a New York hospital from a broken leg received when ha was struck by a car. He is the hero of TV western, "The Rest- less Gun. DIOGENES CAN QUIT LOOKING — Candidate for "Most .Honest Man" title, Douglas Johnson, right, receives a handshake from Brink's guard P. R. Young Johnson found a sack of money — $240,000 — on a los Angeles street, and turn_.1 it over to the F.B.I. The G-men gave it back to Brink's men, who dropped h from an a rmo, . 4 car. City F,B,I, head William Simon looks on. Wheelwrights Are A Vanishing Race The small singing river Meon runs through some of the most beautiful country in Hampshire to join the sea in a quiet creek between Spithcad, Where Eng- land's fleets have assembled for centuries, and the deep channel which takes the ocean liners out of Southampton, Old cottages and barns all up the lovely Meon valley have ancient ships tim- hers in their construction. Oak, which centuries ago grew os stripling trees in the New Forest close by, and in its prime went into the mn)ting of the high -pooped vessels of Tudor times, the little ships that car- ried the early settlers to Ameri- ca, and the old wooden then o' war that sailed under Nelson. After anything .up to 50 years at sea, they would limp back to a breaker's yard at Fareham or Portsmouth, then the best pieces would be loaded on a wagon to he drawn up the road and start life again, as part of a new - built inn, a manor house, or a snug cottage. At the head of the valley, the lytch gate of the church has been made of them, and beyond it, the thatched !tome of the Ayling brothers liar for all its stout uprights, wood which has sailed the seven seas. Wood—oak and box, hazel and ash—has also been the life-long occupation of William and Alfred, now in their seventies. They are still carrying on the job that has been in their family for six generations, work- ing un the sante spot for over 200 years, for they are two of the very few wheelwrights still left in this part of England, When i carne down the lane, past the long timbers stacked against an ancient tree beside the cottage, and scattering the gamecock hens pecking m the yard, I stepped into another world, A world which, almost everywhere else, disappeared quite a century ago. Logs burned in the big open hearth in the cot- tage kitchen, a black chain hung .to suspend the cooking pot, an old iron pump delivered the water to the sink, and oil lamps gave the lighting, The two brothers were busy making a ladder, Alfred was smoothing the treads in swift, sure strokes, with the box -wood plane he had made when he was a young man, Beyond the work - ship door were two other lad- ders they had just completed, painted bright blue by William. "Not much call for cartwheels these days," they told me sadly. "We mostly do wheels now when we're making wheelbarrows. "Small wheel like that is the trickiest to make," said William, "harder than a big chap to get to run true. I started helping my father to make wheels when I was eight, but I was 20 before I made a cartwheel on my own — you've got to have hnd experi- ence, so you can judge things to a fraction. ' "We had to help with other things, of course," remembered Alfred, "There were carts them- selves — the whole thing used to take about a fortnight and cost around ten pounds, And sheep cages, and chicken coops, and hay rakes, There was always a job waiting when you came home from school — and if by chance there wasn't — well, we'd have to go and pull the weeds out of a widow's garden. No playing — or birds -nesting" In the lofty barns, where the great ratters reared up to be lost in (lusty dimness, they show- ed me the oldest tvheel on the premises, one that for a century and a half had been worked manually by a handle fined in Upsrctecto •n to Prevent Peeking A nn33 ` In' ("tad 3.4V Y� 1IM AdY.LO $V31d • .1( 3 od INJ.)SOa HO 3e InDIa orb _� QOE.' .in0113S un -rH D n o 1NE.A1 9Nda aim gin 3ci J© S N CJ d0 the centre, to revolve the lathe for wood -turning. There too, with shafts pointing pathetical- ly to the roof, stood the different types of carts they had made in earlier years. The brothers sur- veyed them nostalgically. The demand today was for smaller things — cold frames, pick and shovel handles, rakes, and the ladders, writes Marjorie Nisbett in 'i'he Christian Science Moni- tor, In the corner stood the draw Fhnves they had used for lighten- ing spokes and wagon timbers, the axes for cutting the wood they bought standing, the iron beetles they used as wedges for splitting trunks, the great five - fool -long saws with then' wicked teeth that they used to cut out planks in the saw -pit, There, under the shade of great oak, Alfred was always "bottom -saw- yer" among the rah) of falling saw -dust; William working above at the exacting job of "top -sawyer", as his father and grandfather before hint, "You always work together -- do you never disagree as to how a job is to be done?" I asked them. \Villiain shook his head. "No, we never have once—" "We worked together now for 00 years" nodded Alfred. "We just consult each other before we start — and we always come • to terns. "And we've still got almost more jobs on hand than we can tackle." In the long, light evenings too, there was the garden, It was cultivated to the last inch. Honey from the white bee skips that edged the flower border, eggs from the scratching hens, butter and milk from the four grazing cotes, apples from the gnarled trees almost. touching the lower edge of the long sweeping roof of their centuries- old cottage — there was scarcely a necessity for which they need- ed to step, 'outside the small- holding, Even the roof they re - thatched themselves, at inter- vals, "The straw's hard to get, though, today. Costs £40 a ton —• and it takes two°tons to do that over properly!" said Wil- liam, They may live in another world. Quiet serene, and almost self-supporting. But the world which rushes down the main • road bordering the village sees thein by no means as back num- bers, for far beyond it the Ayl- ing brothers are known as crafts- men. That is why, not long ago, they had to catch the train to Reading, where they replaced . with seasoned oak, treads in a valuable and ancient staircase. ' Why, recently, they harnessed their gray pony each morning, to jog down in the trap to West Meon, to do a woodwork job in the church. And, from half across the country a pair of trap shafts hnd just arrived for mending. "I'11 like doing them," said William wistfully, "I'd always rather.be working on something that has to do with a horse," Disc Jockey Helped Catch Himself Death came suddenly to a twelve -year-old boy in Medway, Massachusetts, recently. He had just started to cross the road when a large car sped round the corner, The youngster had no time to jump clear, The vehicle smashed into him, and he was killed in- stantly, Without slackening speed, the driver raced on, Police immediately alerted the local radio station, who arranged to broadcast messages appealing • for the driver or anyone who saw the accident to come for- ward. A little later, Ronald Greene, one of the station's disc jockeys, went on the air as usual with his record programme, At frequent intervals he asked listeners to contact the police if they knew anything at all about the hit- and-run driver, Then, his prograninle over, Greene prepared to leave the studio—to find the police wait- ing for kiln. They had identified hint as the wanted motorist by an ornament missing from his car—found al the scene of the accident, ANNIVERSARY — This is the first of five stamps marking the Civil War centennial which the U.S. Post Office will issue, This one, recalling the shelling of Fort Sumter, the opening of hos- tilities, will be released in April in Charleston, S.C., site of the Font. 111.111. WHALE OF A BUCKET — A worker in Danville looks as though he is about to be gobbled down by a huge drag bucket — the .world's largest. It is destined for service in an open pit cool mine 1n Brazil, where it will take 50 -ton gulps. TIIFA2M FONT Entomologists know her as Hippodamia Convergens. . H e r admirers know her affectionate- ly as the "Little Cow of God." And everybody else knows her simply as a ladybug. By what- ever name, she stands today in high and rising favour with far- mers. A ladybug, 11 seems, can do no wrong and a great deal of good. She is the angel of the insect world. She cats :melt harmful bugs as mites, scale, mealybugs, bollworms, le a f - w•orms, and the eggs of all such insects known to be harmful to man's crops, Her delicacy is the despised antis. o • • She is exclusively et►rhivo:ous and won't touch vegetation, She has almost no enemies. But she • will attack any insect pest that i3 not too hard -shelled, too fast- moving, or too. large. And with admirable discrimination, she re=• frains from attacking other "good" insects. * M As if this were not- enough, she is also inexpenslvffrs easy to care for, and quite undemand- ing; just hose her dawn once in a while when she's travelling or pop her into the refrigerator when she isn't working, More and more she is' being "harvested" and made available for duty in gardens, orchards, and fields as a substitute for sprays and poisons. One of the leading harvesters of ladybugs in the world, the Lady Bug Sales Company, of Gridley, Cali'f,, hails her as the "farmers' private army on duty 2.4 hours a day" • ,' 4 There exist about 600 known varieties of ladybugs, pinhead size to thumbnail size. But only Hippodamuia Convergens, the species with bright orange body and black spots, is found in large enough numbers to be harvest- ed commercially. An estimated 90 per cent of all ladybugs supplied in the United Stites •are harvested on the western slopes of the. Sierra Nevada Mountain range over- looking the great. Sacratrcnto Valley in California, r '# 4• At Lady Bug Sales Company in Gridley; in the heart of the valley, 11i's. 11'1 E, Nelson pre- sides over the packing, shipping, and closely guarded processing cf swarms of Hippodamia Con-. vergens. Her company ships out,al least. 10,000 gallons of ladybugs (135,- 000 bugs per gallon) a year to all the 50 states, mostly to the wheat, corn, cotton, and alfalfa belts, e • Ladybugs from there have watched over peanut plants in Peru, cotton fields its Blythe, Calif,, birch trees in Anchorage, Alaska, and maple trees in Tole- do, Ohio, They have even been shipped as far as Egypt. Lady Bug Sales Company ships its ladybugs through ret;u- ier United States mail in ,,cull packages of 5,000 (for small gar- dens); medium packages of 30,- 000 (for lot -sized gardens); and in large packages of 100,000 (for• 10 -acre fields and orchards). The bugs cost about 71 cents per thousand. r. ,: After they have had their till o[ aphis and such, Hippodantia Convergens swarm into nests in the mountains and hibernate like bears. That is where they are "harvested." And it takes a cantly sense of ladybug ways to locate their nests. Margaret Waugh, who Iacgh- ingly bills herself as "Ike only Indy ladybug packer in the world," says that "a layman wouldn't know how to find lady- bug nest's or even what to look fun'." 1'r::fc ',nal pickers go up in- to the mountains each harvest season — usually around Christ- mas and again in June — and raid the nests, 4, M 4 Armed with plastic dish pans, they creep up on the hibernating ladybugs, pounce on their nests, scoop up ladybugs, leaves, pine cones, dirt, and all, and cram them into the pans and finally into special bags. "They are so wiggly -squiggly," explains Mrs. Waugh, "that while you are picking a gallon of them, a quart is taking off in another direction and up your pant legs and everywhere." • • l' Good pickers generally know there whereabouts of from 2,000 to 3,000 beds . along the western slopes of the mountains. The ladybugs nest at altitudes rang- ing from 2,000 to 6,000 feet, They like it cool. At Lady Bug Sales Company, Mr's. Waugh, the lady ladybug packer, and her husband, Mau- rice, package the Hippodamia Convergens and prepare them for shipment, • • + Nobody has yet devised a sub- stitute food that ladybugs will eat. And nobody pas ever suc- cessfully raised them In captiv- ity. They have got to be harvest- ed out in the mduntains in their beds, writes John C. Waugh in the Christian Science Monitor. * • • A generation of ladybugs only lasts for one season. They lay their eggs, perish, and their off- spring swarm to the mountains to make up the next season's harvest, As Mrs. Nelson puts it, "Lady- bugs sometitnes traipse away." So each year, to keep the Insect pests cleared out, several appli- needed. But 75 cents worth of neded. But 73 cents worth of ladybugs have repeatedly done the work on an acre of field or orchard that $6 worth of spray couldn't. And in some areas, particular- ly where crops are easily dam- aged by spray, there has been. a decided flocking to Hippodamia Convergens, At any rate, Mrs. Nelson saes her business grows busier every year. • • • A laboratory covering 20 square miles under the crisp Wyoming sky will be operated by the University of Wyoming, It will be a typical family - sized ranch of Great Plains pro- portions—a "spread"—on- which teams of university research spe- cialists from various departments will put together all their knowl- edge to show how a ranch should be run to achieve the utmost in profit . . The university, a Land Grant college, has heretofore conducted many investigations into better farming and ranch practices, as well as fundamental research Into problems and possibilities of soil.; water, and vegetation, These have been available singly to farmers and ranchers, Now all such advanced knowl- edge will be put to work in this good-sized, commercial live stock operation to see how the com- bination may pay out. • • • The ranch, near Douglas, in eastern Wyoming, will also be used as a gigantic classroom to which university students and extenslon service classes will be taken. And the lessons learned will be made available to all Wyoming ranchers, and else- where 011 request. Both sheep and cattle will be raised on this ranch, a herd of about 100 and a flock of about 1,000, thus discounting the tradi- tion that sheep and cattle do not get along together any better than sheepmen and cattlemen. * + Movable fences will eliminate sheep -herding, and will also di- vide up the range for oarefully controlled rotation of grazing on pasture made as lush as possible by fertilization and reseeding, sagebush elimination, and new types of grasses and herbage. • • • Everything will be carefully recorded for future study and use—from the response of the range to various types of treat- ment, through that of the ani- mals to rates of stocking and grazing, dual use of range by sheep and cattle, livestock gains under various conditions, etc. * e 4' The "Northern Plaine Pilot Ranch" is on land made avail- able: by Jack Morton, veteran Wyoming rancher, The informa- tion gained will be generally useful throughout the northern Great Plains. It will take up to two years to prepare, and the first experi- mental period will be of 10 years, The academicians are as- suming that they not only can make a profit on a commercial - sized ranch operation, but that they can show the way to pri- vate operators. Use Radio To Locate Lost Sheep Farmers in Australia no longer worry about lost sheep, Little Bo Bleeps are helping the far- mers to find them, The farmers are using the bleeps of radio transmitters to locate quickly those among Aus- tralia's 100,0011,000 sheep that tend to wander. Several of the sturdiest ani- mals in each flock -- those that tend to lead the rest — have a radio transmitter • strapped to their backs. An aerial protrudes tram the top of each transmitter and every now and then a bleep le sent out, The farmer -las a re- ceiver that acts as a direction Ander. Keeping the flocks together in Australia was a colossal task be- fore someone thought up this radio . idea. IIAY SCIIOOI LESSON By tree. R. Barclay Warren 8.10. The Source of True Wisdom Proverbs 1;2-7; Job 28: 29.28 Memory Selection; if any of you Zack wisdom, lel hire ass of God, that giveth to all men 11- herally, and upbraideth not; and It shall he given unto hits, James 1;15, It ever wisdom was needed in the world, it is today. As 1 wilts the Congo crisis deepens and the withdrawal of South Africa trots the British Commonwealth em- phasizes the tensions that cxtst in Africa. A letter from mission• ary 'friends in the Congo area tell of the missionary refugees who have come to their home and of two who were slain. The turmoil and unrest as reported in the newspapers arc not exaggerated. John Kennedy's flashing smile, 90 attractive during the presi- dential campaign, has given way to a scmhre serious contenonce as he has the responsibility of making important decisions re- garding Cuba, other Iselin American countries, and econo- mic and other problems. We should pray fcr our leaders. Where can we find wisdom? In the eloquent passage in Job 28:12-28 the speaker points out that it cannot be gotten for gold, but "God understa:ndcth the way thereof, and He knoweth the place thereof," and says to man, "Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdorn; and to depart from evil is understanding." It isn't some new philosophy we need. We must act en the prin- ciples c': t'i;'hteousness that we understand right now. We must turn away from sin, confess to God and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ for our salvation. If multitudes of people around the world would do that, it would be reflected in the les- sening cf world tensions every- where.We who have the light of the Gospel should lead the way. I'm tired of hearing people say, "Oh, I'm not really living as I should, but I'm really not so bad. I think I'm as good as the aver- age," This is not enough. "To him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not to him itrt sin." James 4:1/I. We must walk in all the light that shines upon our path from God's Word. Jei. sus said of lukewarm Christians, "I will spue thee out of my mouth." Revelation 3;16, We must awaken from the lethargy that has befallen upon us be- fore judgtnent conies. ISSUE 14 -- 1961 1, Censure 29, German river CROSSWORD Daugrrter 32. Large orrd- Tantalus oh.wlnr PUZZLE DDk0ROsa tide 1.13rood of pheasants 11 One of David's rulers i Ineense4 14. Acknowledge. mint of a 15. Fortlficatt ne 1177 Put side by side 15.Excavated 10. flush t. Theatrical hit I. Mountain nymph 17, Olive genus !3. A thing found 30. Show 't State (&b.) 31. Cover 91. Lead 38. rraxment' 64. Buelnese ;fetter 16. Haug, notrees 36. Confront 37, Allude 33. Lubrtoetee 41. Dared Sell 41. lrunwr 44, Decanter '46. Cat 45. Dleolosed. 64. Thighboqn 83, Constellation 51, Firmament 54, t{nppv Claves 55 Even (oontr.1 11. Peacock animal butterflies 11. Small 11.Payable tortr,xs Jiall (air.) 43. Bristle DOWN tOhaete 31, Default 1, Cone -bearing try 38, Age of men t ill pf the sus 4Pitchers 1. N t ve metal . Omit in 4*, Coarse prase 1. Dabbled pronounoing stem 4, Jargon 11, Eebyl. sun 44, Lettuce (Bhumorous) lo45. Diving bird ltter vetch 11. Priest's 4 , Sport rp'atherr 'Himont s . By birth Greenlandtlemen11, i of ( 0 0011424 il, VerMys's- ' AlrsNeI elsewhree on this page OVERSEAS — A PENNY PER MILE — This is the model for a proposed 300 -seat, all -wing Supersonic air liner. Its British designers soy it could cut transatlantic fares to $31. --a ses PAGE 8 41( BENEFIT DANCE Sponsored by the Blyth Legionnaires Hockey Team, FOR ALBERT SMYTHE who was injured in a hockey game this season IN THE BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL FRIDAY, APRIL I4th music by JIM PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA Lunch Counter Those wishing to donate, may do so at the Superior Food Store, Standard Office, or Elliott Insurance Agency. ELLMAR PURE PEANUT BUTTER 16 oz. jar 29c • PUREX TOILET TISSUE 2 roll pack 23c CLARK'S BEANS with PORK 2 - 15 oz. tins 29c PILLSBURY DELUXE WHITE CAKE MIX large pkg. 27c HOWES PASTE FLOOR WAX 1 Ib. tin 49c THE BLYTH STANDARD prra 11111 1 1 W11/�r.,. AUBURN NEWS .Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Pentland, of North Bay are visiting with her moth- er, ALrs;'CI ides Straughan, this week. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Gagner, William and Joan, of Toronto, spent the week- end with Mr, and Mrs, Ben HIamilton and John. Mr, and Mrs, Clifton McDonald and family visited friends In Hamilton last - I week. Friends o; Mr. George Railhby will be pleased to know that he is recover- ing from surgery on his eye in Strat- ford Hospital, Misses Carolyn Clark and Shirley Brown are spending their Easter vaca- tion in Toronto. I Miss Margaret Clark, teacher in Toronto, is holidaying in New York this week. Mrs. Jeremiah Taylor was taken by ambulance to Goderich hospital last Sunday evening. We wish her a speedy recovery, Mr. sand Mrs. Ronald Rathwoll, Mich- ael and Janice, of Owen Sound, spent the holiday with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, Gordon R. Taylor. Marsha Koopmans presided for the Young People's meeting held in the Westfield United Church and Barley TEACIHERS WANTED Two Protestant 'teachers, one for the senior room and one for the junior room of Union School No, 17, East Wawanosh, to start next September. Apply, stating salary, experience, and qualifications, to J. A. McBurney, R.R. 1, Belgrave, Secretary East Wawanosh Township School Area Board. 08.3, IN MEMORIAM WILLIAMSON—In loving :nchnory of ' our father, Mr, Thomas Williamson, • who passed awtay one year ago, April 0, 1960, and mother, who passed away July 19, 1960, - They say they're gone but I still hear their laughter. Luke bells that echo on a frosty night, And I will know their courage ever after The pain they bore and smiled to make it bright, They never showed a qualm when life ceased giving, The gift of health that to them was so dear, . They say the're gone but their strength and valour, Remain with us who keep their mem- ory dear, --Lovingly remembered by their daugh- ter pnd son-in-law, Florence and George Nesbitt and family, 08.1p FIRESIDE SALTINE CRACKERS 2.1 lb, box 49c AYLMER TQ_MATO SOUP 5 - 10 oz. tins t 49c PILLSBURY DELUXE 'CHOC. CAKE MIX large pkg. 27c For Superior Service Phone 156 SOS See Fairservice We Deliver Stewart's Red White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver TENDERS FOS. ALTERATIONS Serled tenders, clearly marked as to content and forwarded in envelopes supplied, will be received by the un- dersigned for alterations to the Surro- gate Court and Sheriff's offices in the Court house, Goderich. These tenders pre due no later than - noon, Thursday, April 20, 11961, All necessary specifications can be - secured from the undersigned and an inspection of the presmises will be necessary lbefore you can submit a proper price. All tenders must be submitted on fortis supplied by the undersigned. Lowest or any tender not necessar- ily accepted. Sun Spun Ice Cream ' half gal, pack 79c Miracle Whip Salad . Dressing, save 6c 35c Maple Leaf Ched R Spread, save 16c 47c Kam Luncheon Meat, save 5c 43c Rose Pickles and Relish, save 11c .... 2 jars 59c Aylmer Tomato Soup 10 tins 1.00 Allen's Orange, Apple and Grape Drink, 2 tins 55c Red and White ,Instant Coffee, giant size, jar 99c Red and White Mlik 7 tins 1.00 Australian Seedless Raisins 2 ib, bag 49c Facelle Tissues, save 10c 3 pkgs. 49c Golden Ripe Bananas • per lb. 14c Ripe Tomatoes 2 pkgs. 35c Green Cucumbers 2 for 39c Crisp Radishes ' 2 bags 15c Fresh Tender Asparagus per lb. 35c Green Onions 2 bunches 15c No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 ib. bag 1.49 California Oranges 2 doz. 89c Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c Spy Apples 6 qt. bsk. 89c - Peameal Cottrige Rolls (whole) per lb. 49c Swift's Butterliall Turkeys, 5 lb, to 7 Ib,, per lb; 49c Grade A Chickens , . , per lb. 39c Long Island pucks per lb. 59c JOHN G. BERRY, Clerk -Treasurer. County of Huron, Court House, Goderieh, Ontario, .....4.WedttegdaY, Aril 5, 1901 ,31 ++an.1101.11.KO.PAMINI r_. ......._.11./1/1..M1111w1...tarmac iltl........ .....i..... _ Spiegelberg read the scripture lesson, The o;fering was received by Hugh Campbell and Garth Walden and pray- er was given by Anne Sprung, The topic on Missions was given by Marsha Koopmans, Mr, and Mrs, Donald King and Stev- en, of Strathroy, visited last Friday with Mr, and Mrs. Russel King. 141x. and Mrs. William Rollinson, of Toronto, spent • the holiday with het brother, Mr. Everett Taylor, and Mrs. Taylor, .Mr. and Mrs, Ivan Stephenson and sons, of St. Catharines, spent the week- end with MT, end Mrs. William T. Rob- ison. Mr. and Mrs, Harold Kirkconnell and son, of Goderich, visited last Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Andrew Kirkconnell, Mr, and Mrs. Harry Arthur, Judy, Mark and Greg, spent Sunday with her 1 parents, Mr. and Mrs, Elmer Keller, Blyth. Visitors with Mr, sand Mrs. John Hous. ton and Miss Olive Young were Miss I Mary I. Ilouston, Hamilton, Miss Jean ► Jamieson, • Toronto, and Miss Frances Houston, R.N.,.of London. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dayman, of Jordon, spent .the holiday with Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Plunkett, Marie and Ron- ald, Miss Nancy Anderson had her tonsils removed last Friday in Clinton hospi- tal. 141r.' and Mrs. Reg, Asquith, George and Anne, of Islington, spent the week- end visiting friends in the village. Mr, and Mrs. John R, Weir and Bob, of London, spent the holiday week -end with Dr. B. C. Weir, Mr. and Mrs, D. A. ,McKay and family, Miss Barbara MacKay returned to London with them for the Easter vacation, • Mr, William Straughan and Mr. Ly- man Jardin, of Wingham, visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bennett and family • at Ridgetown last Friday. W.A. Meeting Knox United Church The Woman's Association of Knox United Church met in the Sunday School room of the church for their monthly meeting. The Naomi Group were in charge of the devotional period with Mrs. William L, Craig as the leader. Miss Elva Gross presided at the piano. The scripture lesson was read by Mrs.. Thomas Lawlor, followed ' by meditation and prayer by Mrs. John Durnin, A duet was sung by Betty Moss and Jennifer Grange, accompan- y ied by Mrs. Kenneth McDougall. Mr. Keith Arthur showed interesting pic- tures of his trip to Florida and also the Cypress Gardens there, He also had many pictures of local scenes and people in this community. The press• I dent, Mrs, Kenneth McDougall, presid- ed for the short business session pnd the Naomi Group served lunch, The Walkerburn Club Meeting on as the theme of the meeting. A read- ; ing "The Meaning of the Cross" was given, and Mrs. Lorne Hunking also read a. reading. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs, John Sny- dors and will feature a penny auction. The program will be in charge of Mrs. William Hunking and Mrs, James Jack. son, The lunch committee will be Mrs. Stewart Ament, Mrs, Lorne Hunking, Mrs, Henry Hunking and Mrs. Bert IIunking. The meeting closed with lunch, served by Mrs. Guy Cunning- ham, Mrs, Herbert Duizer, Mrs, Ariel Duizer ;and Mrs. Carman Gross, The Easter Thankoffering meeting of the Lightbearer's Mission Band, with 32 juniors present, was opened by the dall to worship given by Judith Arthur who led in reading responsively from the 28th ,chapter of St. Matthew. Miss M. Jackson gave the meditation and spoke on the meaning of Easter, and I' ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS We Carry a Full Line of the Well Known NIXON PRODUCTS Scourex Tablets $1.75, $3.00 and $8,50 New Scourex Tablets $1,50 Preventex Tablets $1.25 and $2.25 Gargetex for Mastitis, Herd Pak of 6 $3,50 Pellagrex Mix $2 5t1 Calcium Phosphate with Vitamin D $1.25 Bloat and Colic Remedy $1.50 Ringtex Ointment (for Ringworm) .85c Cow Pox Ointment $1.00 Keratex for Pink Eye $1.50 R. D. PHILP, Fhm. B DRUGS. SUNDRIES. WALLPAPER —• PHONE 7.0, BLYTH 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. The Walkerburn Club met at the home of Mrs. Joseph Verewey with a good - attendance. Mrs, George Schneider, the president, opened the meeting with - 0 Canada, and prayer. The roll call was answered with a Bible verse. The draw donated by Mrs. Carman Gross was wcn by Mrs. Jack Hallam. Donations I - were sent to the Cancer Society and to I the Crippled Children's Association. An interesting program was in charge I - of the president with the Easter Seas - LOCK OUT Polio and Lockjaw The coming season will increase the hazard for both these ,dis- eases. Ask your doctor about the combined Polio -Tetanus Protection, If for any reason you cannot arrange to procure this service from a private physician, then you are welcome to attend one of the free clinics held in this arca at: SEAFORTII—Northside United 2nd Thursday • 2:00 . 4:00 p.m. (48981) Church of the month _WINGIEAM—Town Ball (862J) CLINTON—Ont. St. United (IIU-2.9661) Church 3rd Wednesday • 10:00 . 12:00 a,m, of the month 3rd Friday of . 2:00 • 4:00 p.nt. the month Don't Let Polio or Tetanus KNOCK OUT You BENWOOD FINISHES, STAINS, no wiping sof f 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 I� ELECTRIC 1 Television and Radio Repair. i Call 71 Blyth, Ont. it I i II i. 1 1 1 .t17 .I 11 1 11 Y ,i,Y 11 .1 Cars For Sale 1961 FORD Sedan 1960 PONTIAC Coach 1954 FORD Sedan 1950 METEOR 1952 FORD Sedan Deliv. 1952 DODGE Coach 1955 CHEV. Coach See Other Models Not Listed Hamm's garage Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers TEN ER TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT Tenders will be received by the Township of Hullett for a Work of Construction to be known as "The Van Baaren Municipal Drain" consisting of a construction of 1,600 lineal feet of open ditch. Cleanout of 5,360 lineal feet of existing ditch, 1,000 lineal feet of 8 inch tile, 828 lineal feet of 10 inch tile, and the construction of one catch basin. Tenders will be received and contracts award- ed only in the form bf a lump sum for the comple- tion of the whole work in accordance with the Engineer's Plan, Prbfile and Specifications. Tenders will be accompanied by a certified cheque for 10 percent of the tender and will be re- turned to the successful bidder on his producing a 100 prcent contract bond, or, failing this, when the contract is completed. The Plans, Profile, and Specifications may be seen at the Clerk's Office. All tenders must be re- ceived by the Clerk trot later than April 17th, 5:00 o'clock p.m. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. HARRY F. TEBBUTT, Clerk, R.R. 1, Londesboro, Ontario. AUBURN I the superintendent, Mrs. Arthttr Grange led in prayer, Phe roll tail was an• swered by naming a book of the Bible Iand all repeated the Member's Pur- pose, 13111 Miliian and Daryl Ball re. ,ceivcd the offering and the dedicatory �. prayer was sung, A discussion on the Dead Sea Scrolls followed, after which Mas. Grange told the story of the find- ing of the Hidden .Treasure in 1947, and also a story from the Book of Books, called seven pieces of silk. World Friends were distributed and Judith closed with prayer. •