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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-04-12, Page 1VOLUME 74 - NO. 09 Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa- HIGRON (ANCR OBJECTIVE 13 SET AT 596,000 Warden Ivan Forsythe of 'Iluron County Inas given enthusiastic endorse— i PERSONAL INTEREST rnetit to the cancer campaign in Hu- i T NDARD BLYTH, ONTARIO, 'WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1961 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. FIRE CONFINED TO UPPER !MR. AND 11RS, PIIELAN iIONOURED PORTION OF IIOWATT HOME A social evening was held on Friday, Last Wednesday afternoon, Apj•il 5, April 7, ie No. 1 Scho:,l Morris 'Ibwn- the Blyth Fire Department answered a ship, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. James call to the home of Mr. and Mrs. I4dgar Phelan who have recent,y teat the dist• Ilcnvatt and family, East Wawahosh riot and moved to Blyth. township, when an electrical short cite. Euchre was enjoyed with the follow• ' euit caused a fire In the attic of their ing being the winners, high lady, Mrs. Lan•iC Scott; low lady, Keith Richmond (playing as a lady); high gent, Murray Seirtsema; low gent, Aubrey McNichol; lone hands, Mrs. Laurie Scott, ladies, A successful dance was sponsored by and Mr. Laurie Scott for the men. Blyth Agricultural Society last Fridley Mr. and Mrs. Phelan were called to evening, Garnet Farrier's Orchestra house. A bucket brigade, formed by several ran which opened this week. . Mr. and Mrs, Donald Yunghlut and .neighbours, was successful in keeping "I recommend this cause to every' daughter, Lori, of London, spent a few the flames under control until thObri• citiien in Huron," Warden Forsyth days last week with their parents, Mr, gado arrived. However, smouldering shingles and sheeting necessitated; the said, "in the hope that each will re.. and Mrs. Frank Marshall, removal of a considerable spend generously to this worthy ap• , Warren,Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cook, Ivan and portion of 1 visited at Thamesford and the roof, cal." ' I oudon, with Mrs. Cook's sisters, Mrs. Mr, Ilowatt, with the help of neigh - "We in�Iluron •are fortunate to have i'y Mitchell and 1lrs, Jean Fox, over hours, made the necessary repair9 to in active aoeIety prepared to look tiller) the weekend. his hone this past week. fur patients who become afflicted with i1Irs. John Collinson returned home• — ----- . ..his dread disease and to give active r on Monday after visiting with her sis- EAST WAWANOSII FEDERATION OF tssistance to the research and educa- i ter, Mrs, Ellie Beirnes, of Goderich. AGRICULTURE MEETING .ional work being carried on across : Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Baxter, Chatham, Canada. I am happy to endorse their 1 are spending a few days vacation with eanpaign and their activities in this i Mrs, Baxter's patents, Mr, and Mrs. eoanty," Lorne Scrimgeour. Noting that this year's objective is Mrs. Allan McCombs, of Buffalo, ,N. Ivisited last Thursdaywith her sis• . •1,;,000, the warden said it constituted Y., .so small challenge, "However' I ant tar, Mrs, Mason Bailey, Mr. Bailey sure the drive will be a success if ev- and farnily,Rev. Robert Mealy will he guest ery Huron citizen contributes his speaker at the Gorrie charge on Sum- share." day, April 16th. Rev, .T. Attwell, of County campaign chairman, R. E. Gorrie will be guest speaker at the Pooley, of Exeter, reveal this break- Anglician Churches in the Blyth charge, down of the objective: Goderich dis- Mr. .and Mrs. R. D. Philp visited on trict, $4,000; Exeter district, $3,500; Sunday with their son-in-law and ter some discussion, a motion Was Clinton district, $2,500; Wingham dis. daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Racine,) made and carried by Elmer Ireland tract, $2,500; Seaforth district, $2,000; Bob and Ken. I and Oliver Anderson, that instead 01 Blyth and Brussels districts, $750 each. Mr. Walter Mason returned home raising the niill rate in the Township, Town - Mr. Pooley announced that the Ilur- last Saturday after spending a year in that $50,00 The East Wawanosh Federation of Agriculture met at the home ofnthe President, John R. Taylor. The President called the meeting to order. The minutes of the last Direc- tor's meeting were read by the seci'c• tory, Simon Hallahan. They wore ad. opted as read on motion of John M. Taylor and Wilfred Sanderson. The County report was given by John R. Taylor. 11e mentioned that the County Federation would require more money to meet 'their obligations, however pe MRS. CHARLES JOHNSTON HEADS BLYTH WOMEN'S INSTITUTE LOCAL PEOPLE. WiN AGRICUL- TURAL SOCIETY PRIZES The Blyth Women's hnstitute held their May meeting in Memorial Hall with a very good attendance. ! Reports were given by the convenors of all standing committees as this is the close of the branch Institutes year, The program was in charge of the branch the front and the follcwing address was stnl,;tlicd the music. , Directors, with Mrs. C. Ladd, convenor. read by Mrs. Jack McNio'ol: 1 Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour, a past presi- dent, presided for the election of the following officers: Past president, Mrs. Wellington Good; president, Mrs. Char- les .Johnston; 1st vice, Mrs. Luella Mc- Gowan; 2nd vice, Mrs. Keith Webster; sect.•treas., Mrs. Ben Walsh; Branch directors: Mrs. Mary Appleby, Miss Josephine Woodcock, Mrs. Edith Logan, ,Mrs. Gustave Kur•no:h; district direc- tor, Mrs. Wellington Good; pianist, Miss Pearl Gidley, assistant, Mrs. Mary Mc- Elroy; visiting ccirtnittec, Mrs. Maly McElroy, Mrs. Albert Nesbitt; conven• ors of standing committees; Agriculture and Canadjan Industries, Mrs. Keith Webster, Mrs. Peter Iloonard; Citizen- Thip and Education, Mrs. Chester Hig- gins, Mrs. Clayton Ladd; Historical Research, Mrs. Lorne Scrimgeour, Mrs. John Ycung; Honk Economics and Health, Miss Josephine Woodcock, Mrs. 1. Young; Public Relations, Mrs. Dan f S3lfahan, 1lrs. Kenneth Taylor; Twc- :dsmuir Village history, Mrs. Kenneth ,'aylor, Mrs. Edith Logan, Mrs. John McNichol. Mouth organ selections, played by Mrs. Fred Cook, and accompanied by Miss Pearl Gidley, were much enjoyed following instalalticn of the new of- ficers, much new business was an ranged. OBITl1ARY The May meeting will be in charge of the new vice-president, Mrs. Luella ,iIRS. ,IEREMIAII TAYLOR McGowan, while the president is at- tending the president conference at ' 0 A C Guelph Deer Jinn and •Mary: It is with ming• led feelings that we a group cf your friends and neighbours have gathered here to -night to have a social time ta-i drawn at the dance was held by Boyd gether. We cannot help hut regret it Taylor, H.R. 3, Walton. The ladies is because you are leaving our conn committee had donated an all wool 'nullity but "'I he old orrier changes blanket, the lucky ticket was hell by yielding place to the new" and time Mrs. Leonard Archairhault, H.R. 1, strings many changes. :•rn. For you we ,are glad that you will Ata meeting of the Ladies commit - now be able 10 enjoy a well earned re' tee a sale of home-made baking was arranged for Saturday afternoon, April 15, at 3 o'clock in A. Berihot's Butcher shop. Donations for the sale will be gratefully accepted. Past President, William Cow, had donated a registered heifer calf, from his accrcditee hard, on which tickets had been sold, and the lucky ticket tirement, we arc pleased teat you are not going far lawny and will be ahle to come back and visit us especially now that there will lie no cows to milk or hens to feed, and you will always he welcome. And so to -night we are pleased to have this gathering with you, JOHN W. McDOUGALL RECEIVES not to say "Gond Bye" I:ut to wish you CASA AWARD the best of luck in your new home. As a token of the esteem in which you Jelin W. McDou�Shc, son of Winona have both been held in cur conrmiuni•A. McDougall and Inc late John G. Mc ly we ask you to accept these gifts with Dougall, is one of the winners of $2,200 the wish that God's blessing may rest recently awarded by the National Be be refunded fon the Town• upon you and give you comfort, health search Council of Caaaaa to university ship Treasury to the County Treasurer.' and happiness for many years to come. graduates for further study. The President reported on the Cancer —Signed ea behalf of your friends and John is currently finishing layc esteir - Research Campaign and the Directors' neighbours. oof .Science rice Queen's degree, having glaFcllow- will make this canvass. I Messrs. Charles ,ouch and Jack etc- I University Motion by Charles Smith and Join Nichol presented Mr. .and Mrs. Phelan sill be) f usedtoraldoctotaale he new in scholarship • M. Taylor, that a donation of $20.00 be with an end table and a table lamp. forwarded to the Belgrave School Fair Mr. Phelan roiled fittingly Board. Lunch was served hy the ladies. Elmer Ireland reported the recent annual meeting of the Ilog Producers, LONDESIi0R0 W, I. INSTAL, also the Huron County Hog Vote. There OFFICERS Mrs. Jeremiah Taylor, of Auburn, was some discussion on the way this gassed away on April 10, in G+odcrich The executive and convenors of the on Federation of Agriculture has con- Janitoriat a, Mr. anndd firs.. GeAugustine and sented to bake charge of the township daughter, Patsy, of Burlington, visited canvasses throughout the county, "We over the week -end with the latter's are indeed grateful for this kind co- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bacon operation —it proves that rural and and family, of Belgrave, and also with urban people can work together dice- friends in Blyth. lively to fight a common enemy." Rev. R, Meally was guest speaker at Funds raised in Iluron are used to the Wingham Orange Lodge on Monday finance service work In the county as 1 evening. His subject was "Weaknesses well as general education and research ; of Protestantism." d . 1 G0, ! Master Rickey Thompson, of Lions programs across Cana a During 9 Head, returned home after spending Huron Unit spent over $3,100 to help 701 the E)aster holiday with his cousins, patients in the county. In education. i Linda and Bill Hamm, over 28,000 pieces of literature were 1 Airs. Thomas Grasby, formerly of R. distributed and 45 film showings ar-, R. 2. Blyth, held a successful furniture ranged, More than $10,000 was forward- I sale last week, having sold her house cd to provincial headquarters to further in Winthrop and is making her home . eecarch. in Seaforth with her brother, Mr. Win. Comments Mrs. A. M. Harper, Gode- Nesbit. is:h, president of the unit; "Iluron Jhn Pollard hied his tonsils removed sounl has mode an effective contribu- in Clinton Hospital last Wednesday re - tion to the battle against cancer in past turning home on Friday, years. We do hope we will continue to receive the support and eo-operation •,f Huron citizens to enable us to fulfill ;ur obligations again. According to local campaign chair- nan Wiliam Merritt, a house-to-house :ampaiga will be conducted in Blyth .he week of April 10. Federation of Ag- 'iculture volunteers will be calling on 'arum homes at various lines during the month. DAYLIGIIT SAVING DATES ANNOUNCED '.Fite Blyth Municipal Council, at their , e.s.tlar :netting last Monday evening, .,n.euncad the dates for the local ht. Igo to Daylight Saving Time. ? yth residents will, move their clocks e hour ahead at 12.01 a.m. on Sun - y, April 30th, and the change of time wilt be in effect until 12.01 a.m. on Sun- day, October 29, when they will revert :pack to Standard Time. :f .".TONG THE CHURCHES Sunday, April 16, 1961 ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., Minister. 1:00 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday' School, Mission Band Meeting Thirty members of the Mission Band and their leaders, Mrs. Button and Mrs. McLagan, met in the Church school room on Monday, April 10, after school. The Call to Worship wes given by the president, Jane Pollard, which intro. duced the theme "The laws of God are sure" and a discussion followed on "Gcd's Laws" after which a hymn "0 God whose laws will never change" was sung to the tune of the Doxology. Shirley McCullough read from the New English Bible the portion of Scrip- ture of Jesus the twelve year old boy at the loin; de. This was followed by prayer by Patsy Elliott. The secre- tary, Cheryl Ann McNall. read the min- utes and called the roll: The offering was 'received by Patsy Dougherty and Joyce Riley. Piano solos were played by Betsy Elliott and Ruth McLagan. 'A reading by Bonnie McVittie and a vocal duet by Carolyn Haggitt and Georgina Garniss. Business included a letter of appreci- ation from Dr, Stewart Allen to whom our stamps are sent. Also a new seal of recognition for good work in 1960 was attached to our Mission Band ccr. ' tificate. A missionary story "The Ne- glected Garden" was given by Mrs. McLagan. Hymn 615 was sung and the meeting closed with all repeating the Members' Purpose. ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Rev. Robert F. Mealy, Rector. 2nd Sunday after Easter Guest Preacher, Rev. T. Attwell, Rector of Gorrie, . Trinity Church, Blyth. • 10,30 a.m.—Mratlns, St. 'Mark's, Auburn. 11.30 a.m.—Sunday School. 12,00 o'clock -Matins. 'I'rit,ity Church, Belgrave, 2.00 p.m.—Sunday School. 2,30 p.m,—Evensong. TIIE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA ' Blyth Ontario, Rev, R. Evan McLagan • Minister Miss Margaret Jackson • Director of Music. Ecumenical Sunday 9.55 a.m,-Sunday Church School. 11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship "The Ship Under the Cross" CHURCH OF GOD McConnell Street, Blyth, John Donner, Pastor Phone 165 10.30 a.m.--Sunday School, 11.30 Worship. 7.30 ' p.m. --Evening Service. 8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service. ?,00 pep, Friday, Youth Fellowship. vote was taken and it is to be hope,' that if another such vote should come up, there would be a much better sys- tem arranged. He -also reported that well over $17,000.00 had been raised in the county for Pame shares. Mrs, Taylor served a delicious lunch, which was much appreciated by those peresent. - The next meeting will also be held at the home of one of the Township Director's. The President adjourned the tne_eting. . . . , district director, Mrs. Edwin Wood; couver, Robert and Gordon, of Gode. pianist, Mrs. Jack Armstrong. assist• rich, 2 sisters, Miss Estella Rutledge, CONGRATULATIONS ant pianist, Mns. Harry Lear. Goderich, and Mrs.. Mabel Westland, Flower and Card conveners, Mrs. 1V. Landon. which this year took the form of Congratulations to Mrs. D. McKenzie Tyndall. Mrs, D. Anderson, Mrs. Les Funeral service will be held on Thurs. pot luck supper. Sunshine sisters wn who celebrated her birthday on Thurs Rcid, 511x. Will Maurine, 111 s, harry day afternoon at 2:00 pan. at St. Marks had religiously kept •their identity . day, April 6th. Durnin, Mrs. Lorne linking, Mrs, Jim Anglican Church with burial at Ball's secret fora year revealed their identity Congratulations to Miss Lenora Ilig- Ilcwatl, cemetery. and names were drawn for anothe gins who celebrated her birthday on Conveners of :tandin; Committees: The pallbearers will be, Ed. Davies, year Friday, April 7th. i Agriculture and Canadian Industries, Thomas Johnston, Robert J. Phillips Mrs. Harold Philips sang, )rrccompan Congratulations to Mr. Charles John• Mrs. J. Riley: Citizenship and Educe- John Maize, Clifford Brown and IIarry ied by her daughter, Mrs. Ray Vire :;ton who celebrated his birthday on tion, Mrs. Lorne IIunking: Home Econ• Arthur. Tuesday, April llth. omits and Health, •Mrs Jack Lee; alis. Congratulations to Miss Frances torical Research and Current Events, CJohnston who will celebrate her birth. Mrs. Les Reid: Resolutions, Mrs. Len day on Wednesday, April 12th, ; Shobbrook; Public Relations, Mrs. Ar - Congratulations to Debbie Grant, of thug Clark, The roll cell wns answered by 11 by Port Colborne, who will celebrate her I join I!te Institute ,year after year,'• !bbitthday on Monday, April 17th. The program was in change of Airs. ! Congratulations to Mr. Archie Som-, om• `William Manning, Mrs. J�'c'c Clark, d The Lo deshoro Women's lnsitute Hospital after a short illness. She was standing committees will meet Friday held their annual meeting on Wednes• Mary Jane Rutledge, dau?hter of the afternoon, April 14th at 2 o'clock, t. day afternoon, April 5th in the Londes• late Mr. and Mrs. George Rutledge, and arrange the 1961-62 program. born Community Hall, was born in West Wawanosh township. Mrs. Mary McElroy will main ref. Mrs. Otto Popp, district president, She was in her 8911 year. resent the local Institute on the canto. was present and insalled the new of. She was a member of St. Mark's An. committee, and Mrs. Luella McGowa: floors as follows: clean Church, Guild land Women's In- a member of the Memorial Hall Board. Past president, Mrs. Edwin Wood: stitute. It was decided to have another Pus president, Mrs. Tem Allen; 1st vice Surviving arc one son, Gorden, of Au' trip, and written suggestions for •place: president, Mrs. Dave Anderson; 2nd burn, and one daughter, Mrs. Lloyd to visit are requested for the May mee; vice •president, Mrs. Milt Li'tle: seee (Gladys) Raithby, of 30 Belgrave Ave.. Lary- treasurer, Mrs. Len S' eherook; London; 3 grandchildren, 6 great grand. assistant'sec.-t•eas., Mrs. J. Fhaddick; children, 3 brothers, William of Van. Eng. The West Huron District An�.0 : meeting was announced for May 17th in 1Vingltam. Following the meeting, the sunshiny sisters annual banquet was enjLyect ors who will l 17th.atc his birth ay of Mrs. Mauve thinking and Mrs. Clare Monday,CongrApril 17th. Vincent. It Nein, the Easter holidays, I of . Congratulations to Mr. Edward Reid, INC Were very fortuna'e in having ;i I ' hislbii'thd ay on lullett Thursdlay,who rApril s �13th.ing, )number of young people taking part I: Congratulations to Mr, Milton Bruce {ns follows: duet, Bar!'ara and Bonnie. who will celebrate his birthday on April d Wendy Cal dwellu; ctaccodclick uin rdian solo, Barbara 16 Congratulations to Mr, Clifford Walsh Burns; piano duet, Donna Younghlut, who celebrates his birthday on Thurs. and Lorna Miller; nano instrumental, day, April 13th. Susan O'erk; piano instrumental, Lona Congratulations to Mr. D. A. McKen• : Miller; rccitetlons, Sharon Little, Bev.' ; zie who celebrates his birthday on Fri-' erly Lee, Vicky Wellbanks. Mrs. Bert day, April 14th, ;Shobbrook; highland fling, by pupils of I. Congratulations to Mr. Clayton Ladd' No. 5 school. April 14th ' tion on how to pack a weekend bag. who celebrates his birthday on Friday The Club Girls put on a dentanst•a- BIRTHS WOOD—In Sarnia General Hospital on Sunday, April 9, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Wood (nee Shirley Pat- terson) the gift of a son, Perry Nel- son, a brother for Teresa. RIE,HL—In Alexandra Hospital, Gcde• rich, on Tuesday, April 4, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Riehl (nee Elda Riley) of Goderich, a daughter, Kim berley Darcene, ATTENDED STANLEY CUP GAME Messrs. Larry Walsh, Jim Foster, George Oster, Carman MacDonald, and Charlie Knox, attended the Stanley Cup hockey game in Detroit last Saturday between the Red Wings and Chicago. They reported standing in line for one hour and a half to purchase tickets. Congratulations to Stir, and Mrs Nor Those taking part were: Marie Riley, SPICING CLEAN UP She herd of Clinton who are cele. June Govier, Donna Lynn Shobbrook, mann p listing their 90th wedding anniversary Marsha Tebbutt commented of the tar The first evidence of the spring clean LONDESI3ORO • on Thursday, Aprilble decorations for different occasions. up in the village was witnessed on yl3tlt, , Congratulations to Robert John Popp Mrs. Otto Popt was the spea{er of Wednesday morning when members of Mrs. John Shobbrook is at present a who celebrates his 3rd birthday on Fri - patient in Clinton Public Ilospital, as day, March 14th. of the Countryside," and the hostesses hand and commenced to sweep up the the result of a fall, one shoulder was Congratulations to Mrs. ArUnur Ward served a delicious lunch, dirt and debris that has collected on dislocated. We hope she will soon re- who will celebrate her birthday or Fri - Special Announcement the streets during the winter months. • cover. day, April 14th, The Lotdesboro Women's institute ' The members of the Explorer Croup Congratulations to I{cit Stewart who Attendance Contest Losers will enter.W.A. GROUP 1 1IEETING visited their blends at the County will celebrate his 1st birthday on Fri. lain the winning side Monday evening, Home last Tuesday. A programme was I day, April 14th, April 24th at 0 p.m, Group 1 of the W.A. of Blyth United presented to the audience beginning w;4h a welcome by Barbara Lee, The I Explorer Purpose was repeated and the 1 C. W. L. MEETING hymn, "This Is my Father's World,' I The annual meeting of the C.W.L. of followed. --Beverley Lee read a pass -1 St Michael's Church was held on Mon - age of scripture, followed by a poem 1 day .afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. by Catharine Funge, Barbara Burns Kelly. Father Reed -Lewis opened the favored with ern accordiai selection; meeting with the recitation of the Lea- n piano solo by Lorna Millar; recite- gue Prayer. The 1960 officers were all tion by Sharon Little; piano solo by returned to office far 1961, The treas. Susan Clark; reading by Vickie Well- urer road her annttial report which prov. banks; Highland Fling was, danced by ed the League had a successful and ev six girls in costume; piano solo by 1-Iel- entful year. The secretary read the en Good; duet by Lloy Shaddiek and minutes of the last meeting. Consid- Wendy Caldwell, "Pit on your old grey erable correspondence was road and bonnet; piano solo by Heather Snell; discussed. accordion solo by Barbara Burns; pi- No sick calls were reported. Mrs. L. ano duet by Lorna Millar and Donna Cronyn land Mrs. L Phelan offered to Youngblut. Everyone joined in a sing- visit the rick this month, Our spring song. The girls served lunch. and Mrs. bake sale will be held in May, Mrs. D. Johnston took them on a tour through Balaban gave an interesting talk on the ,Evenew ono ienjoyed thwhich e soon be afternoon ened. land ed cial by Mrs.riB. Midticga it vas won by, ze donate by' hope to repeat the visit, I Mr•s. L. Phelan, 1 conven- and Mrs. Neil . Catherwpod, of ; Lunch was screed by elected cone tt•1 Harr w, spent a couple of days recent• I ors and hostess Mrs. M. Kelly. The ly et ith Mr. and Mrs. Willows Mont -meeting adjourned red with prayer, Win. The next meeting will be held on Miss Vitra Knox, of Toronto, spent ; May 8. The lunch committee will be the weekend with her parents. Mrs. D. Ilallahan and Mrs. G. Cronin, BLYTIi CHILDREN TO BE ON TV Kenneth McLagan, son of Rev. aid Mrs. R. E. McLagan, and Kathy Street, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. R. 1V. Street, will a!:pear on Reimer Room School next week over CKNX television. Group 3 W. A. Meeting Group 3 of the W. A. Blyth United Church held their monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. C. Galbraith of April 5. The president, Mrs. J. Lawrie, op- ened the meeting with a reading. Mrs, D. McKenzie rend the scripture Re. 0: 1? -20, also the Thouehts for the Day, "The Si•irit of Man." The Lord's never eels re"eaterl in unison. The minter, and roll call were read. The tee -viper gave her report. Nine hos- pita) calls and four house calls were reported. Miss Agnes Lawrie gave two piano selections. The next meeting will be held I\Ion day, May I, at Mrs. J. Lawrie's.. A contest wlas enjoyed hy alt, Mrs D. McKenzie thanked the hostess,, Church held their meeting at the home of Mrs. IIollyman on Monday, April 10, at 2.30 The thence of the meeting was "Judge Not Lest we be Judged." Mrs. Ladd op• oncd the meeting with a reading entitl- ed "Whatsoever is true, whatsoever is just, think on these things." Mrs. Ilolly- man took over devotions with Mrs. 11ial. lace Bell reading the scripture lesson, Math. chapter 7: 1-6, and singing hymn 376, Thoughts far the day were given by Mr's. Frank Bell and prayer was of- ferees 17 members and 3 visitors an. swered the roll call. The business me of the meeting was taken by Mrs. Ladd. Alice Falconer gave a reading "A pray. cr for the middle aged." There also was two contests, • Next meeting is at the home cf Mrs, Wheeler with Mrs. Laid id and Mrs. :.licit:tmerit assisting, and tine roll call is to be answered with n verse of scrip• Lure with the word wisdom in it. Meeting closed with prayer by pres. Mrs: Ladd. A delicious lunch was sere vel by tlte•hostess ant l,,stesses, Mrs. Flelconer and Mrs. t '.,t,vn. Mrs. Grant .1 moved a vote of the:its to i,ostess and hostesses for hone and lowly lneeh. cent, hEEDER STEER CLUBS ENJOYED - BUS TRIP Iluron County's two Feeder Stee Clubs from Belgrave and Feere !' other interested beef feeders, jour e; by bus on Thursday, April 6t' , County where they visited 5 Beef Ca.L farms; Western Ontario Agricultural School; and that county's decidedly different drainage set up. A total c 35 men made the trip, inrluding Agri cultural Representative Doug Miles. The bus left Belgrave at 6,30 a.m and arrived at the first farm at 9.3' . m. All of the beef feeding set up visL ed had some things in common, nom- ly, a large upright silo, a pole Marr ' bedded area, a paved exerci-e y I with mature corn siloage and r,-,! as the major crops. The farms visite were owned by George Kerr, Dresden Lloyd Cravens, Eberts; Murray Jack Bear Line; George Morris and Archie l all, of Merlin. 'In Ridgetown at the Western Ontario Agricultural School, a number of new structures were seen, including a fee I grinding and mixing set up, two be barns, and the most modern &.'alto'' • en any college campus in Canada. Tier President of the school invited the group back on June 6, for Beef Cattle Day, which was held last year at the Ontario Agricultural College at G::elrh Land drainage is a touch more expen- sive operation in Kent County than it is in Huron, because the land is so flat the surplus water has to be drained off into deep ditches. The tile drains on each ifarm led into open ditches and the water from these ditches is pumped into larger municiPal ditches which carry the water to the rivers and lakes. The host county's Agricultural Rep- resentative, John Dutherford, and assis- tant, Doug Keyes, made arrangement for the viistors and acted as guides for their tour through the county. The trip was sponsored by the Belgrave and Seaforth Co -Operatives. WALTON The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper was observed in Duffs United Church last Sunday morning when the follow- ing were received into the membership of the church; Audrey McMichael, Bon- nie Uhler, Mary Helen Buchanan, Irene Johnston, Alexins Williamson, Graeme Craig, Alexander Guletzen, Larry Johnston, I:emrfh \Villin,rson, Gerald STnali, Wtirjrie Williamson, Roues! W;1- iiarnson, Erie Willt---^r. By C€rtifi- cate, Vii ' and Meo ,Elf Andersen and �' ra end Mrs. Douglas Kirkby, Her Trial A Blot On British Justice Througghout the years there have been many alleged miscar- riages of justice. In this case there should not have been a conviction. Florence Nlaybeck was convict- ed mainly because she had com- mitted adultery — not because Ate was charged with murdering her husband, Scientists called as witnesses at her trial could not agree that Mr. Maybrick had died from arsenical poisoning. And it was by no means certain that his wife had administered the poi- son,. Even today experts sometimes have difficulty in stating the cause of a particular death. In a number cf cases since the war forensic experts have been un- able to agree on what is the fatal dose of a poison. It's hardly surprising that they couldn't agree seventy years ago In the case of Mrs. Maybrick. The jury do not appear to have been interested in the arguments and quarrels of t he scientists. They apparently were determin- ed to convict an unlucky woman who, by standards of modern justice, should have been acquit- ted, The dead man was a hypo- chondriac, for years he had been dosing himself with pills and potions for health and other rea- sons. When such people die it's difficulty to ascertain the cause. Nevertheless, science put Flo- rence Maybrick in the dock. Her trial and sentence is a blot on British justice. She had all the bad luck that could come to any woman, The day after her conviction for murdering her husband, us- ing arsenic, 'The Times' made this comment: "It is useless to disguise the fact that the public are not thoroughly convinced of the prisoner's guilt. It has been noticed by thein that the doctors differed beyond all hope of agreement as to the cause of death." The general public were alarm- ed. The only people who re- mained supremely indifferent were the prosecution, the judge who tried her, and the Lancashi- re jury who convicted her. In the past forty years we have hanged two women, not so much because they were convicted of =murder, but because they were guilty of adultery and we are !still puritanical enough to dis- like women who are caught in immorality. Florence Maybrick was such a woman. She had been having an affair and, because of it, the pre- judice which surrounded her at her trial was overwhelming. The i, For Half -Sizes PRINTED PATTERN cf_►tr�r 4838 14;'2-241 Smart Spring companion — a suitdress with trim, slim lines to make you look taller and nar- rower. Choose tweedy rayon, cot- ton, faille, wool, Easy -Sew Printed Pattern 4838: Half Sizes 141/2, 161/2, 181/2, 201/2, 221/2, 241/2. Size 161/2 jacket and skirt 41/4 yards 35 -inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print p 1 a i n 1 y SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.. New Toronto, Ont, ANNOUNCING the biggest fashion show of Spring -Summer, 1961 — pages, pages, pages of patterns in our new Color Cata- log. -- jut out! Hurry; tend 350 Snow! law doesn't take kindly to an adulteress charged with the mur- der of -her husband. She was tried at Liverpool in July, 1889, before Sir James Fitz- james Stephen, then one of the senior High Court judges, In hie prime he had been responsible for the Indian Penal Code. But when he sat in judgment on Mrs. Maybrick he was an old and sick man, He had had at least two strokes and his handl- ing of the case was grossly un- fair to the prisoner. Mrs, Maybrick was also the victim ot her tinges, in that at the period of her trial there was no Court of Criminal Appeal and, being tried before the Crim- inal Evidence Act. 1898, she was unable to go into the witness box and give evidence on her own behalf, writes David Ensor in "Tit -Bits", Florence, a young, attractive American, was married to James Maybrick, thirty years her sen- ior, in 1881. The marriage was not happy. Mr. Maybrick was an unpleasant character, who had been in the habit of taking drugs for some time, He had been taking strychnine and arsenic both as tonics and as aphrodisiacs. His own health was his principal consideration and, both in America and in England, he obtained medicines which contained arsenic: He took these regularly, Being so appre- hensive about his health he con- sulted many doctors. It was per- fectly clear that his own doctor in Liverpool gave him no arsenic. Mr. Maybrick was dosing him- self daily with quack remedies and medicines. At the same time Florence was rash enough to have an affair with a man named Brierly, with whom, on at least one occasion, she had stayed in London. Before long her hus- band's relatives and her servants found out about it. The Maybrick home was very unhapppy. In April, 1889, Jaynes Maybrick fell ill for the last time. There was evidence that Florence had bought arsenical flypapers and she had been seen soaking them in water, There was evidence that she had given a meat extract to her husband, which was afterwards found to contain arsenic, When her husband died and she was tried for his murder she said the soaking of the papers was for the purpose of obtaining a cosmetic preparation and she had added a powder to the meat extract at the express wish of the dead man. In his body the scientists found plenty of arsenic, but that was hardly surprising as he had been taking it for years. It was her infidelities which led to her conviction, I believe. The doctors had been quite unable to agree that arsenic was the cause of death. Their argu- ments made it clear there might have been various causes of death. In such circumstances there should never be a convic- tion, But she was sentenced to death. The gallows had already been erected when the Home Secre- tary decided to conunute the punishment to penal servitude for life because, he said, "there was a reasonable doubt that the death was in fact caused by the administration of arsenic." If that was so, Mrs. Maybrick was not guilty, but the author- ities had the effrontery to keep her in prison for fifteen years. Surely this was a monstrous in - j ustice? Modern Etiquette By Anne Ashley Q. Isn't it proper for a woman to use her maiden name as a middle name after she is mar- ried? A. This is the established cus- tom. In other words, after Joyce Margaret Denton marries Wil- liam Henry Morgan, she then becomes Joyce Denton Morgan. Q. What is the meaning of "a la carte" In a restaurant? A. This simply means that you select any dish that appeals to you and pay for each separate item, whereas in ordering "table d'hote," you pay a set price for / the whole meal. Q. We are buying a new home about 15 miles from the city we now live in. Would it be proper to send printed cards announc- ing our new address and phone number to friends? A. Yes, this is a perfectly pro- per idea — and practical, too. Some people use printed post- cards for this purpose, listing all the essential information. Q. What is done with the wrapper on a Lump of sugar when dining in a restaurant? Do ,you put It on the tablecloth, in the saucer of your cup, or in the ashtray? A. There's no rule for this — just common sense. I would say put it on the tablecloth for later clearing by the waiter a 1 on g with the crumbs. If you put it into the ashtray, there's danger of a fire, and if put into your saucer, you could cause your cup to tip over. when you re- place It on the saucer after sip- ping. - 1 . TURNING ON THE CHARM — Mrs, Jacqueline Kennedy, wife of the President, chats with her escort, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Adlai, Stevenson, during the intermission of a performance of the New York City Ballet. HRONICLE� 1'GINGERFARM 'Ooh Gwe�.d.oline P. Clark.¢ Today there is a very slight greenish hue on parts of• the lawn; the weeping willow branches have a yellowish tinge; a few more spears of flowering bulbs are plainly visible and there are definitely more birds flying around, mostly robins and red -winged blackbirds, All, as you know, omens of spring. There is also plenty of mud and many sloppy, wet patches. But we have to take the good with the bad — that's the way of life. For instance, bright sunshine — that makes us forget the wet, miserable days we have had for over a week. May it so continue. This morning when I turned on the radio quite early I was greet- ed by someone singing "Oh what a beautiful morning". It was a cheery greeting to start the day. Last week, weather notwith- standing, was most interesting. We had lots cf letters, plenty of visitors and an over -dose of hockey. One letter, from friends who are still farming, recalled many of our own farming ex- periences. This was typical, "Last Tuesday was my birthday and also our wedding anniver- sary. So how did we celebrate? Just like this. In the morning Henry was cleaning out the stables and tripped just as he was coming through the door- . way with a load of manure. Of course the manure upset and he somehow hurt his leg. That same evening he put a pail of cream down on the floor while he latch- ed the barn door. It tipped over and split most of the cream. Later I drooped a pile of plates off the kitchen cabinet, breaking several. During the evening the kitchen stove developed a klink- -er in its "innards" so I had to rake the fire out, start a new one and then wait for it to burn through before we would •go to bed. And that is how we cele- brated our birthday -wedding an- niversary!" Quite a celebration, wasn't it? Then we had friends come to visit whom we could hardly rec- ognize from their farming days, Actually their farming was just an experiment, They didn't know the first thing about it — and learnt the hard way, Final- ly they had to sell out, The roan had a splendid war service re- cord and was able to get a good government job, for which he was suited by training and edu- cation. The difference in their health and appearance was un- believable. We were delighted at the change. Why people w'th nothing but enthusiasm expect to make a go at fanning I'll SALLY'S SALLIES Iv V/4114* "Would It disturb you, sir, if X surd 'good morning'?" never know. It is hard enough for those with experience to make a living to start with, so why tempt providence unduly, Life, at best, is full of frustra- tions. We can't avoid them so they must either be ignored or overcome. We meet these frus- trations in every walk of life because we are each dependent upon others.' Last Saturday I was confronted with one small irritation after another — peo- ple I wanted to see in three sep- arate houses were not at home. Plans I had made for going to Toronto had to be shelved on account of rain. While shopping/ several ordinary, everyday items I wanted were out of stock. And last but not least was other peo- ple's garbage! It was collection day in a certain well-known sub- division and the overall picture was revolting, How people can be so inconsiderate towards the men who have to pick up the garbage I can't imagine. In many homes the house is immaculate. Children are required to remove their rubbers outside the door. They must speak properly and be polite to visitors. Clothes and toys must be taken care of. Mother has carefully manicured hands. Her hair is stylish and at- tractive. Father's suits make fre- quent trips to the cleaners. It has, in fact, every appearance of being a well-conducted home — until' it comes to putting out the garbage. If the garbage can won't hold all the _refuse then the sur- plus goes out in broken cartons and paper shopping bags. If dogs conte along and distribute ban- ana skins and melon rinds all over the sidewalk that's just too bad. The garbage,, man will pick it up anyway, Paper of course is blowing all over the place. To my way of thinking a per- son's character can be measured by the way in which garbage is put outside.his door. Menial tasks must be done by some for the benefit of others but surely our self-respect requires that menial tasks be made as inoffensive as possible. When I pass a house where the garbage is properly put out in suitable containers, and the surplus securely tied, 1 know that within that house is a man and woman who has con- sideration for others, By that same token I know they are worthy of respect, Dogs are blamed for a lot of the garbage mess but if proper • cans were used and the lids put on tightly the dogs would not be so tempted to investigate, Well, that's one frustration I can't do anything about — ex• cept to air my grievance, And here's hoping it starts a few peo- ple thinking, Panhandler: "Will you give me a dime for a cuppa coffee?" Pe- destrian: "No, I don't give money to people on the street," Pan- handler: "What should I do, open up an office?" In rabbit hunting, remember they seek cover in cold weather. You should stoinp around likely spots in the underbrush to rout them out. ISSUE 15 — 1961 He Prefers Chess To Hula Dancers Marlon Brando In midship- man's frock coat and knee breeches brushes aside the bare- legged native girls and heads for a grass hut, Rangy Australian, Chips Rafferty, follows him, Together the two men hunch over a chess board in grim, con- templative silence—broken only rarely by a muttered curse from Brando at some move he has made. It is lunch break time during filming of "The Mutiny on the Bounty" on the South Pacific is- land of Tahiti, There are 5,000 Polynesian natives in the cast and Brando and Rafferty have grown blase about the sunny sex -appeal of the girls. But the feeling is not mutual. Silently watching the ches.5pla,y- ers is a black -haired beauty wearing a half -sarong, a wreath of flowers and nothing else, Her eyes are riveted on Brando , . . She is called Tarita and the only English words she knows are the ones Brando teaches her in the film: "I love you." She is nineteen, she has lived all her life on an island called Bora- Bora and File 11as never seen a big city nor heard of Marilyn Mon rc e. She had not heard ot Marlon Brando either, until he invaded her innocent world with an army of actors and technicians and picked her from 1,000 native girls as his co-star. She is shy and serious. With the money she makes from a long -terms contract for which she has been signed up by Metro - Goldwyn -Mayer, she hopes to invest in her father's land, Icer other hopes seem to be centred on Brando but the big - tinge actor, who is cast as mu- tineer Fletcher Christian, is shoulder -shrugging and offhand "Tahitian girls?" Brando's eye- brow a r c 11 upwards, "Weil, they're certainly the most grace- ful and photogenic I've ever seen. But they sure have seine strange ways. They'll adore you for five, six days, then suddenly disappear — oft with someone else.. A week later, maybe, they'll Will up again, completely unconcerned, without any ex- planation, expecting to take up where they left off. "But there's no doubt about this island being a spot of para- dise, man," he says dreamily. "Maybe the *last place like it in the world. It's hard to explain it docs something to you." The 'breathtaking beauty of Tahiti and the easy-going ways cf its women were the cause of the historic mutiny aboard His 1Vlajc;ly's Armed vessel "Boun- ty" in 1789, The sante charms also army the movie makers some .170 years later . , . Th' r'^I.hcd man is the only American in the cast. The rest are Britisih, Australian or na- tivc. And the charms of Tahiti are icit rn nnc British actor, Trevor Howard, who plays the sadistic Captain Bligh. "It "cl.s rather monotonous, really," drawls I-Iow.vard. "Even the sunshine and the miles of golden l'^aches. After you finish work there isn't a darned thing to do," Howard's wife, who alniest al- ways agree; with him, adds: "After a fortnight here you do get frightfully bored, you know, It's just like Cumberland with a permanent blue sky attached." For Britie!I director Sir Carol Reed, the island has its own problems—chiefly the islanders Tahitians may have wonderful good looks but they find it hard to concentrate on any task for long. The moment Sir Carol clinlhs from his special c:ullern platform they scatter 1 i k u screaming s,;:hoolchildren a n d for the beach for a swing. The next half-hour has to be spent rounding t11(01 up and restoring make -up --floral decorations and all, For years after the mutiny the filo recreates, old - time windjammers avoided calling on Tahiti, The Garden of Eden landscape and the carefree girls caused hundreds of sailors In desert, When the Bounty 01011 1'60 - led, they put their snarling, bullying Captain William 13)iglr in a boat, together with eighteen men loyal to him, and told him to row for it. 'Then, led by Fletcher Christian, they sailed the Bounty back to 'Tahiti, col- lected a harem of native sweet- heart and sailed cn to Pitcairn Island, 1,380 mile., away. For eighteen years nothing was heard of them until an American ship touched at Pit• cairn. Of the original mutineers, one man survived. The rest had murdered each other in quarrels over the women. The survivor, former sailing master Adams, wa:: lording it over the island surrounded by a ccurt of native women and children. The mutineers had not found the paradise life, But their great -great-grandchildren live on Pitcairn Island to -day. Terrific Topper 61/ .K44I44 Wit?JNG Smart, simple, iicwr. Toss this Chanel -style jacket over every- thing — dresses to sportswear. Jumbo -knit! Ike large needles, 2 - strands knitting worsted to whip up this bulky beauty in rec- ord time. Pattern 591: directions sizes 32-34; 30-33 includzd. Send 1'IIIP't'Y - FIVI's CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety). for this pattern to Laura Whe_Nr, Bos 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PAT'I'F N NUMB'set, your NAME. and AI)- DItESS.. JUST Olih TII1; I':'"35f S nid now for our c ccitin", new 1961 Needlecraft Cotaflr?. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, em- broider, quilt, weave — fashions, homefur•nishings, toys, gifts, ba- zaar 'hits. Plus FREE—instruc- tions for six smart veil caps. Hurry, send 25e now! CALICO'S BACK — Country, calicos return to small wardrobde as the calendar rr» ; toward summertime. The full -skirted dresses ho -1 f!'Iffy Iuola'rn sleeves and multiple bands of braid. An American View 1,.ue(I bonds repayable by the 'transit Couunission out of eur- Of Toronto's Subway rent revenues. That's What Toronto slid if you live in one of the big sub- way -less cities south of the bor- der think about it When your car stalls in bumper-to-bueiper rush hour trn'ific, or as you hang to a rail on a honielvard bound bus that fights traffic li: hts. trucks, and cobbled streets! - By Richard rd 1,, Strout in clic Christian Science :Monitor. In 1928, Senator George Norris went to Toronto, Canada, and found that a family using 334 kw of electricity a month paid $,135 for what would have cost $132 in Birmingham, Ala., and $40 in Nashville, Tenn,, another town in the then undeveloped Muscle Shoals area. The example of Toronto helped produce the fe- derally constructed 'TVA, now a model of ,regional development In emerging countries round the world. 11) 1953, 'Toronto created the "N1 etrnpoli1illl Council," known to city planners all over the United States because it brou,',ht into a single, unified gnvernma.nt dou'ntmwn 'Tcv'onlo and its -aub- lII'il:. Sooner or later something 03 this sort mist he done in United States cities to end the eraiy anarchy of rival jurl:alic- !.ion., now prevailing. A third feature should be noted in Toronto; It has its own mubway, Begun in 1949, it t"tis opened. in 1954; it is 41 miles le ng (three miles underground) T,nd has 12 stations. The Febr'u- ar'y issue of "Metropolitan Transportalion" calls it "probab- ly the most sane:es fol postwar ri.li :i 11'.'11 it 111siai1::irll oil the continent." 11 says: ''Toronto is the only unpoaiant city en the North American ,'on- tincnt which a^p:: rs to (hid a raticnaa1 solution to the transp .l•- lalion problem." Toronto is about the size of Wu;hin);ton,• D.C. Its downtown population in 1950 was 700,000 and the new population now em- braced by "Metropolitan C(„'n- eil" (Metro) is about 1,400,09(1. Seven years of operating the highspeed public subway has been so successful that a new 10 -mile subway is being built. Ontario's Prime Minister Leslie Frost broke ground for this Nov, 16, 1950. The 10 -year project will have 25 stations and carry an estimated 345,000 riders a day. The present subway carries 250,000 passengers every busi- ness day, with 32,000 at the peak hour, Three advantages are as- cribed to it, First: The subway eased sur- face traffic congestion overnight, removing streetcars on busiest roads and giving the city trans- portation equivalent to a high- way 20 lanes wide. Second: The subway save time. R converted ear drivers into transit riders. It kept an esti- mated 10,000 automobiles off downtown streets every business play. Third; Millions of dollars were added to assessment rolls by new commercial and office buildings along the entire route. It saved the centre of the city and made suburbs accessible. Assessed values in the 14 subdivisions served by the subway jumped 87 per cent, contrasted to only 10 per cent elsewhere, One esti- mate says the tax increase from this valuation jump was enough to liquidate the subway cost, The public likes the subway. ,According to the magazine, "It has proved to be the anchor of the community, It has assured the permanence and stability of Me downtown area, which is the foundation for growth and pros- perity of any city." This judgment may be unduly optimistic, but at least Toronto likes what it has well enough to launch another 10 -mile new sub- way. How was it financed? Cost was borne by the Toronto Transit Commission and by Metro, which POT LUCK - Skill and patience pay off as Marlin ljunggren, of Stockholm (Sweden) Govern- ment Museum of History, nears the end of his reconstruction of this ancient Viking pot. The tiny vessel was found in tiny f -'rents in a graveyard. GJIN >u� THUMB 11' you have a slimly spot in the garden, or live in a mild, sunny climate and have a lath house, ,you can raise those love- liest of shade -loving flowers - tuberous begonias, 'These lush tropical plants With their huge, abundant blooms can till those shady places with rich colors all summer long. There are so many forms that you can have a variety of flow- ers in an all -begonia planting. The camellia -flowered are per- haps most p:,pular, the big satiny blooms so like their namesakes you can scarcely tell the differ- ence, '1'Itc y look like roses, too, some themfive inches acvoss with a of he 1 i . perfect rosebud in the center. 'there is also a carnation -flow- ered, with frilled, ruffled petals. Frosty is new this year, with deep rose flowers, each petal tipped in white. Other types are big singles, the petals frilled, and singles with tufts o1' crests on each petal, called Crested, the center's a fluff of gold. There are varie- ties that look like daffodils, and there are several variations of the camellia type, particularly the Picotces, familiar in cor- sages. As for colors, tie range is wide, from deep red velvet through the reds, the pinks, in- cluding rich rose, coral, salmon, to gold and daffodil yellow and ivory into pure white. The leaves, with their thick, often reddish stems, are a beautiful shape. A collection of potted tuberous begonias in a lath house is a sight to remember. Park plant- ings I have admired in Canada have never been forgotten, either. But wherever they are grown, they make a beautiful splash, writes Millicoat Taylor in the Christian Science Monitor, The tubers are round with the top concave. For early blooms in the northern hemisphere start them indoors in March or early April. (Some dealers sell starter sets with tubers already plant- ed.) Set the tubers Into soil or peat moss, the concave side up, and cover them not over half an inch. They need good light, and a temperature from 60 to 70 de- grees. Water sparingly until they sprout, increasing the moisture as the plants grow. In a month or so the tuber's should have good root systems and can be transplanted into in- dividual- pots. By May in mild climates they can be put out- doors, directly in the ground or their pots set into the ground. In the North this should not be done until June, Large plants may need staking, , Begonias must be sheltered from wind and hot sun. They are heavy feeders and will ap- preciate liquid plant food at in- tervals during the summer. Keep them well watered, The tubers of most kinds need to be dug up at the end of the season, dried, and stored, How Can 1? , By Roberta Lee Q. How can 1 make 'my teeth whiter? A. One method is to apply a solution of peroxide of hydrogen diluted with one-half water. Q. How can I make my own liquid hair shampoo? A, Shat'e a bar of good castile soap into one pint of water, al- low this to simmer over a fire until the soap is entirely dis- solved. Q. flow earn i produce my own "homemade" cream rouge? A. Scrape the unusable ends of your olcl lipsticks into a small jar, Add a small amount of cold cream and melt on an asbestos mat over a low flame --- and presto, a gocd rouge! Q. have you any suggestions for restringing neeklaecs in the interest 01 greater strength? A, If you'll restring your neck- laces with fishing line, you'll eli- minate worries over possible future breakage.. Q. Iiow can .I eradicate. some crayon stains fruit' unwasbablc and washable materials? A. For unwashables, sp.inge with carbon tetrachloride, flush- ing the stain out onto a lowel placed under it. if neccssal y to lubri:ate the stain, use snipe pet- roleum jelly or white m:ncral - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -. AGENTS WANTED STEADY PROFITS SELLING ;mule to measure clothes di. reef to wearer. F'Irin eslnhlished 1033. Attractive cloths easily sold. Generous Commissions. low prices, free salt Itemises, Full or part tine, Experience not necessary, Tremendous opportunity Write for samples, Rodney Tailoring Co , Dept. X10, Box 3010, Montreal, BABY CHICKS ARE you ready for peak scasnn': ()Met note from good assortment Bray started . pullets, various breath Including Ames In•Cross hayolds hatched to order: also semi: for prompt shipment. Order St yelime broilers now, Sec lora) '!gent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BATTERIES BATTERIES REPAIRED - ItItOKEN rases, hosts, covers, cells re• placed, ele. Fier pickup and delivery within 71 mile radius. is I,Ichll. 11.1, 1. Stott ford :'hone Shakespeare 2 II III. BERRY R ROOT PLANTS ONTARIO'S LARGEST STRAWBERRY GROWERS ALI, (:OM3IF.IiCIAI. VARIETIES 12 MILLION PLAN'I'S Returns of up to $2,501 per acre under our new growing system. For complete information and price list, write: WILE. BOS'T'ON BERRY FARMS (REG.) 1111, No. 1, WIISONVILI.E, ON'I'AIt10 PRONE: WA'I'Fau'011n HI('KOIRY 3.51107 BOOKS \IACA7,IN1•:S 10(, 53101 orders prepaid, 1Vestern, romance, detective, \v a r. met:M.nies, humor, sport, educational, movie, French, medical, men's home, science. State wants, Freelllsns Corn. wall, Ont BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES MEN OR WOVEN ! Chance of a life- time! '1'o get Into a well paying bust - /less •,(lth little capital. Details for stamp. vomiter, 31:dtson 3, Wisconsin - MOTELS MOTELS MOTELS INQUIRIES invited front operators In. !crested In Chain Operation Motel, 25 Units with Gasoline Bar. and Coffee Ilar. Locations available Ontario tad Quebec on 25 years net lease basis. Capital to furnish required, Lease se. curtly, excellent banking references. A - good opportunity for security of oper. ration In All Canadian Motel Chain. Write: ilousquet Construction Inc., 2 Gottin Blvd, East, Montreal, 1' Q. 'fel. 1)U. 7.111139. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE FOR Sale, well established retail coal, fuel on and ice business In South West- ern Ontario, Good earnings. Minimum cash required $15,000 plats inventories. Write to Martin unci Antliff, Auditore, 153 King St. W,, Chatham, Ont. COMPLE'T'E cement block nwnufactur• Ing plan) for vibrated steam cured blocks, Close to new hydro ntomle en. ergy project, full price 510,000 Apply William 11. Roos, Pt. Elgin, Ont Phone 136•W. RESTAURANT -service station, H1ghw'ay 11, south of Gravenhurst, both fully equipped, doing good business, Low down payment, balance open mortgage, Apply Walby Motors, Kliworthy. 11us• koka. CHRISTMAS TREES CHRISTMAS tree seedlings. Austrian and Scotch pines, Best possible stock, $15 per 1,000. D. A. Tiffin, Cookstown, Ont, COLLECTION AGENCIES (MUMFORDS Nationwide Collection) All creditors having back bills, and notes that have not been peld, cony down all names and mall them to: 2925 Haw. Thorne Avenue, Richmond 27, Vlrg)nla, DOGS FOR SALE PUREBRED Scotch Collie Pups. Born February 10, Beautifully narked. Sired by Imported grandson of Lochlnvar of Lndypnrk, English champion. Dam's Sire: Keln,grove Duke 2nd, champion. At eight weeks: males 440.00; females $30,00. Papers $2.00 extra. John C, Moore, R.R. i, ltichmond, Ontario. EAVESTROUGHING ATTENTION TINSMITHS YOU ought to know that halt' round eavestrough in 211 gauge can be bought at less than current prices. Write Enos S. Martin, R.3 \Vallensteltt, Ont cit. Then 'flush the area ahem. For washables, if traces rei t:in after the above treatment, try removing with soap and ammon- ia, color permitting. . WANTED '1'o BE LION'S DINNER Feeling considerably annoyed after a battle of words with her husband; a native woman of Manyara, Tanganyika, trice( to commit suicide by offering her- self to a lion. The offer was spurned by the lion, which after disdainfully looking at the woman for a tirne, resumed its feed on the freshly - slain zebra which it had brought down. FEMALE HELP WANTED 51ENOGRAPI1)-11, shorthand: et once, Also good plait cook, exclusive yacht club, North Channel, Lake iluron. Ali - ply in writing with full background end photograph. Highest wages. Ilur• hour island acht and Flshing Club, K (((1 (song, Manitoulin Island, Ontario, FARM HELP WANTED MARRIED man for farm, purebred heel' cattle. Good wages. Seperate house ptlth all cbnvenlences, Apply with ref- erences to Ilox 233, 123.11111! Street, New Toronto, Ont. FARMS FOR SALE :\'1"1'EN'1'ION Earn! buyers. One of the most up•to•date farms along the Ottawa !alley route. from Sault Ste Marie for rale Ilet\y soil, Bright future for dairying 450 acres, 100 under i d!!0a- non Complete lie ul' power operated (((w machinery, 00 head dairy cattle, house, 3 baths, mllkhousc, garage, poultry house, hydro, telephone Price 555,000. For Information write Box 232, 123 • 10111 Street, New Toronto, Ont. • 50 ACRES, 25 under cultivation. seeded to hay, balance hush and pasture. Good tw•u-st0rey house, 3 bedrooms and bath upstairs, 4 roosts downstairs, nice kit. Then, large sunporch, good well and cistern, 2 pressure systems, hard and soft water on lap. 'louse partly [urn - !shed if desired, ,Nice lawn alth trees, shrubs, flowers, etc., good garden, some fruit trees, good barn, huge new driving shed, Electricity. On No. 10 Highway, in small village with stores, churches, etc. lies passes gate. Close to railway station. Immediate possession, good terms. W. 51. Sutton, Berkeley, (Int. FARM EQUIPMENT • 11181 LANCEMAN asparagus harvester, used less, than 31) hours, Reasonable, Lot Smith, 3205 Watkins Ill , ('olunlbus, Ohio. I1Elnont 5.07.19. UEX'I'I1.1fend diesel, used 1115 hours, $2101,011 Holland 60 baler, slightly used, $t10(10) Spring tooth drag 3 point hitch, new. $151 (10. ley Sider, 31; Eliza• beth 5t., tVelland, out Phone ILE. 2.55(2. 000l,T111' Equipment and Farm Sup. plies. Write now for your flee cata- logue. Rideau Specialty Co., Box 277 Smiths Falls, Ontario. 20 G\N Woods bulk cooler, chore no milking mchine. John Gibson lilt 2 Caledonia, 110 5.2172. IIEIIE they are; Ile an eu'ly built lleasy duty wagons wall 15•ilch tires. 5125. A. Vcanderbtoor, General IIupair Shap, Beachville. F.\IMAi.L 51,1), new condition. high clearance adjustable front axle, also narrow hoot end, belly plump, two• way remote control valve, Model 257- 1.11.0, cultivators, good tires. 400 hrs• since complete rebuild, $1995.00. Con• silo trade and deliver In 3110 mile radius EARL DEAMUDE R.R. No. 6 DUNNVILLE, PHONE 177M2 • FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE NEW Holland Crop•Chopper, Model 33, used one season. John Deere Cultivator, Model CC -I47, used one season. 211' 1.11. 1'hresher, completely equipped. Lysed four seasons. Contact 0. Ferguson, 12:10 Pepper 11oaad, Burlington, Ontario. NE. 4.0712 WD9 DIESEL INTERNATIONAL tractor, lop condi. 11on. Good cash buy. Ernie Duckett, concession 3, Leamington. Phone FA 0.0425, FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS CANADIAN exclusive available, patent - wave and curl comb, wanted by every woman. A proven $1 mail order item in U.S. Write Royal Scot Water- bury, Conn. 37 COMIC Books $2.00, Hard Cover Book disposals, 4 different $1.00. State wants. Cold coloured necklet crosses, rhine- stone centre, 52.00 dozen, sample 350. Cash Postpaid. Oft' -price merchandise bulletins 10C• Freemans, Cornwall, Ont. HUNTERS ! FISHERMEN I CAMPERS! 'I'IIE sportsman's best friend - safe, etemonical. Don't be caught in the wet or cold with nothing to start a camp :'ire. Carry one of our resinous wood blocks In your jacket or tackle box. 1\'11l light and burn Instantly, even when well Four 14) blocks - 10 ounces, 51,1111 postpaid. Results guaranteed or money rcl'untle(I. Cariboo Pitch Chips, Box 672, Williams Lake, British Co, tumble. PAN RAPH REGORDS 101111 record requirements are as close ie your own mailbox! Safe delivery etteranteed. Send 25 cents In coin or stamps today for our up•to•date eine- Mem. listing everything recorded In Popular 1111s, Country and Weston, 1.n1In American, Polkas, Classical, Folk anti Fora'len Language Music. Bob Dcstns's Music Centre, Dept. W 1,10, P 0. Ilox 7.17, Montreal, P.Q. HOUSE PLANTS AFRICAN Violets. \Vrtte for list offer - Ing all the finest varieties and colours, Aiken Nursery, Chute Panet, Que. HORTICULTURE DAYLILiES NEW ,WONDER FLOWER • mAOM all summer, subzero lardy -- Inst a lifetime. Rush name and address fer coloured catalogue of these amaz• the flowers. Florldel Gardens, Port Stanley, Ontario, HERB TEA HERB TEA, very good for Arthritis, Neuritis loss of pep and appetite, hulids rich red blood One month sup. ply, 53.00. A. DeLuca, Carmichael, Pennsy'h'nnla. INSTRUCTION EARN More! Bookkeeping, Salesmen - chip. Shorthand, Typewriting, etc. Les- sons t!(IQ. Ask for free circular No 33. Cunndlatn Correspondence Courses 1200 Ray Street. Toronto. LANDSCAPING TREES and plants for home and gar. den. %Vrlle or phone for free catalogue or visit WIndover Nurseries, Petrone, Onterlo. Ph. n MEDICAL PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE GOOD RESULTS FROM 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 the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you Itching scalding and burning ccze• ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless, odorless ointment, regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE 53.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 51 Clair Avenue East, TORONTO MISCELLANEOUS SPECIAL Offer' 1,1)011 embossed bust. (less, appointment, or personal cards, only 53.93 postpaid Fast! Accurate, Free literature and samples. Mutchler, Box 251, Lincoln, 11llnols, U.S.A. • GEORGE Washington's Cousin's Gold Poen! Manuscript autographed, let. Free chliiren's :animal story by author Included. 1020 N. Kenmore. Hollywood 29, California, U.S A. MONEY TO LOAN 5101'J'GAGL Loans. Funds available on sultable farms, homes, stores, apart- ments, hotels, motels. Pleasant, emir - (roils service. For information write, phone, or drop In, United County in. vestments Ltd„ 30.15 Bathurst Sl Tor. onto 19, Ont, 110 9.2125 MUSIC YOU ton can make money writing songs. You too can release your own talent on records. Complete details and four months subscription to the Song - Leader Magazine for only 51.00. Song. Leader, ilielcl, Manitoba, Canada, NURSES WANTED REGISTERED NURSE ON'T'ARIO !Ionics For Mentally Retard- ed Infants, inc., Plainfield, Ontario, (7 miles north of Belleville) requires im- mediately, additional trained staff. 8 hour duty, Night or Day. Salary $3,600 to 54,50(1 with car allowance and fringe benefits. Apply In writing with refer - (ewes to Mrs. Leonora Velieman, P.O. Box 100, Plainfield, Ontario. THREE REGISTERED OR GRADUATE NURSES Required For 15 bed hospital, situated on the beau- tiful ARROW LAKES, B.C. Standard salaries, holidays and semi-annual in- creases, 90 hour week and living in accommodations at low cost. APPLY TO ADMINISTRATOR ARROW LAKES HOSPITAL NAKUSP, B.C. NAME LISTS NAME Lists of Doctors, Dentists, Nurses, Restaurants ! 500 tor $5 00 or 1000 for $10.00. Florence Wellmeyer, 917 Maden Avenue, SI. Louts 15, Mis. sours. -y NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing Nutria consldet the following points which this orgaplza• tion offers: 1 lite best available stock nu cross. bred or standard types recommended. 2. rhe reputation of a plan which is proving itself substantiated by flies of satisfied ranchers 3 _Full Insurance against replace. men'. should they not live or in the event of sterility 'nil fully explained in out certificate of merit.) 4. We give you only imitations which are In demand for fru garments 5 You receive from this organization a guaranteed pelt market in writing. 0. Membership In o u r exclusive breeder' association, whereby only purchasers of this stock may partici. nate in the benefits so offered 7 Prices for Breeding Stock start at $200 n noir Special offer to those 5(10 quality; earn vont Marten on our cooperative basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.. R.R. No 2, Stouffville, Ontario OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession; good wages Thousands of suc'essful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Cntnlogue Free Write 0t Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor SI W.. Toronto Branches; 44 King St, \V.. Hamilton 72 Rideau Street. Ottawa PERSONAL GET 0 hours sleep Nervous lelts1011 may cause 75'; of sickness Partleu• tarty sleeplessness, jitteryne,s and Ir. ritabtllty. Sleep calm your na•r5es with "Napes". 10 for $1; 50 for $4 Leon's Drugs, Dept. 211. 471 Danforth, Toronto. KNOW ''OURSELF 1 Complete 0l'aplle Analysis. Send several 'hies of own handwriting and 51 for Silentiftn Anitlysls. 1):.ndv, Rua 337 t', 1 ,•thlividge, Alberts HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TES'I'EDguaranteed, mailed In plain including ncluding catalogue and sex hook free with trial assortment Ili for $1,00 (Finest quality) Western Distribu• tors, Box 24•TPF. Repina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT ONT. Films developed and 11 magna prints Our 12 magna prints 66e Reprints 5e each KODACOLOR Developing roll 900 (not including prints Color prints Ser cacti extra. Ansco and F:ktachrome 35 m m 20 ex- posures mounted In slides 61,20 Color prints from slides 32e each. 1lnney re- funded In full for imprinted nee:dives, PREDICT THE WEATHER MOS':' closely guarded Secrets in the World ! Never revealed before! "50 Ways 10 Predict Rain In advance." Will It rain tomorrow" 'fells you to• morrow's weather today! Send for these Thain Secrets, only $1 00! Weather Secrets, 1'.) Box 472, ,\c Inner East, P.Q., L'anaada. PROPERTIES FOR SALE $7,50111 LOM' taxes, new 0 -room bunga- lows, treed lot, 15 mins. Peterboro; also 10 (acres garden land, terms 1 Khns• man, 11.11. 1. 1 rnsertelle ('hone 21.1321 \illlhrook. SALESMEN WANTED F'ULl, time and part•thnc salesmen re- quired at once to sell exclusive formu- lations of the well known Agricide Insecticides, Challenger Spray'':, Bis• tnfeetants, etc., direct 10 1)airy Forme, Exclusive territory arranged liberal commission on first and repeat orders Must be known In :arca and beta, •a good record. Apply by letter to lir. K. Feldkamp, R Sc„ Provincial Manager, Red Line C'hcmicnls of Canada. (.1d., ;holy 'torero() 111. (1,1(1,rtn. STAMPS 2nD CANADA stamps; ;all dltfcrent. used, 51. Interesting set, 1 each. 51. M. 3. Wilson. 1269 ('anterhurs Rd., Port Cr'edlt, Ont. SIX beautiful Korea stamps. catalogue value 51e - only 10e to new approval Applicants. ;Maurice More. Pal \ 572, Fort Bragg. Coliforms SUMMER COTTAGES FOR RENT VELLA - VILLA COTTAGES or 3 bedroom housekeeping voltages, city convenience, open April 15 to Oct, 15 Reasonable. Phone \Vasaga 45(1 or write Robert Brolt•n, 11.H. 1. 1Vasnga Reach, Ont. TEACHERS WANTED EXPERIENCED teacher required by 'l'upperville School U S.S. No 30 Rhathan and Camden Townships, Kent County, for Sept. 1961 - 4 grades Ap- ply stating qualifications, salary ex- pected and name and address of last inspector to Mrs, Fuchsia Brown. Sec- retary, R. No, 3, Tuppervllle, (int. VILLAGE OF ROSSEAU REQUIRES teacher, Grades 1 to 4 for term commencing In September. State qualifications, experience and salary expected to, C. S. itaymond, Secy.- Treas., Rosseau, Ont. WANTED - FOSTER PARENTS AND DOMESTIC EMPLOYMENT WANTED UNDEiRSTANDING Foster P:,renls, Cap- able of Supervising Girls of Sellout Age. ':'hese girls have personality problems and will be under boarding care, Do. mestic employment also required for girls 16 to 111 in a good family setting, Reasonable Wages, Apply Superintend. ent, P.O. Box 3117, Galt. out WHOLESALE CATALOG SAVE Money ! Buy at less than whole- sale, from shoe laces to televisions. Free catalog, Unlimited Sales CO.. Box 925)1.0, Chicago 90, Illinois. ISSUE 13 - 1901 MERRY MENAGERIE 1 • BEWARE! VICIOUS DOG! ,t 137:;;". Io," 310 "Gee, not That refers to my lop tar (� MORE LEISURE... MORE PLEASURE.. () (, (((I) l') (1) (J 0 () (3 BETTER (3 (3 (( V v 11 .MORE MEMORIES TO TREASURE (3 (t) O O () () () O (l (y) () O 1) (i tiat's JFOIC �n Sring! Cunard First Sailings from Montreal' & Quebec SEE YOUR LOCAL SERVE YOU IVERNiA April 13, May 5 AGENT SAXONIA April 22, May 12 CARINTHIA *April 28, May 19 NO ONE CAN 4FROM QUEBEC FOLLOWING DAY Corner Bay & Wellington Sts., Toronto, Ont. Tel: EMpire 2-2911 670 CUNARD .rlooAs PAY LATER IF YOU WISH PAGE 4 ' CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Donald Fowler wish to express their sincere thanks and appreciation to relatives, friends and neighbours, for their many acts of kindness, for floral tributes and cards of sympathy during their sad 1 1 bereavement. Special thanks to Dr, J. W. Wallace, nurses and staff of Gode- rich hospital, the Blyth Tele{:hone Sys- tem, Rev, R. Sweeney and the Arthur Funeral Wine. —Mrs. Donald Fowlcr,Melba and Roy Finnigan. 09.1 5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH MEN'S and BOYS' SUMMER CAPS--- assorted colours and sizes. BOYS' and MEN'S BRIEFS and TOPS for summer LADIES' BLOUSES for SPRING--- assorted col- ours and styles. GREAT SPRING SALE--- bill coming the week of April 17th. A host of Bargains while they last. 61 - 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 SPECIALS Boys' Jackets, suede or sheen, 4 to 6x, 3.98 to 4.98 Girls' Car Coats, corduroy, sheen or corded cotton, 4 to 14 4.98 up Teen Car Coats, suede or waffle weave, 10 to 18 8.95 up Coat and Suit Sale Continues. 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 price; thrifty! HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. N C.K.N.X. WIN -A -DRYER STORE "WEEK -END SPECIALS" 20 percent off on all Ladies' Spring Coats. Men's Suits, 2 pr. pants, all new spring patterns and fabrics, alterations free. Men's and Bbys' Sport Coats and Dress Slacks. Men's Nylon Stretchy Socks 69c up (Seam -Free) Nylon Hose, new shades, first quality Special 99c (With Seams) Nylon Hose, first quality, Special 69c Rayon Breakfast Cloths (52x52) Special ' 99c Slips, cotton with eyelet trim $1.98 Slips (Stanfields) Tailored (non -static) ' $2.98 Corduroy Oxfords for Girls, cushion arches, sizes 4 to 9 in Black, Green, Gold, White, Special 1.79 New Shoes for Men, Women and Children, at very reasonable prices. "The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. • - :r� ,-,.-ur, THE BLYTH STANDARD Wednesday, April 12, 1961 _ . 46.4.41.1.011M111 - ,.y���y rYaarl■I.,u .• M,1■.. wG.-11.■MMin111■.{1W~WM.•1r 11•...rH■ea., III 11 r �1�►JM1YY ' OM1�.1YYMi.M1-0/MYI.■■.�.1■' 1�M11�1tl1•.IIr.4 arrow ww.o wr.• WESTF) IED 'Miss Marlene nasom and Mr. Ron Bere were guests of Mr, and Mrs, Ger- ald McDowell Sunday evening. Mrs. Charles Smith, Mits. 1I, Blair, Mrs. 11. Carol:bell, Mrs. G. Smith, Mrs. J, L, McDowell and Mrs. A. Cook, at- tended the \V.M,S, Presbyterial in Wing. ham on Thursday, There was the larg- est attencaince ever recorded with the program very interesting and instruc- tiv'�. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell and David, also Ates, Gordon Smith were Toronto visitors on Monday. Mr, and Airs. Elvin Wightman and family, of Niagana Falls, visited with A1r. and Mrs. Norman Wightman on Saturday. Mrs. V, Kershaw, Miss Gladys Mc- Dowell and Mr, Dan Ferguson, of Gode. rich, also Mrs. James Potter, of ::gull Ste A7�a•ie, were visitors with Mr. and Mrs, Marvin McDowell and Graemc, on Sunday. Mr. Potter, who is on his way home after spending the winter in Flor- ida, remained to spend a few clays with other relatives in the community. AIr, and Mrs. Gerald McDowell and Wayne Wiled on Miss !'era Wilkins and Mr. 13, Wilkins, in Goderich, on Wed- nesday, On Friday 'Messrs, Lyle Smith, Don and .John ItfcDowell, attended the 'l'oc- Ah:1ha Conference in Wingham United Church. The boys report an interesting meeting of teen-agers interested in 'Temperance with films, Police demon- stration of a Ibrcathalizer test and other items. Master Murray Wightman visited with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Thom- as Wilson, Goderich, during Easter va- cation. Miss Barbara Snaith, London, was with her parents over the weekend. We are sorry to report another fire in the community, On Wednesday af- ternoon a fire burned a considerable portion of the roof on Mr. Edgar Ilow- att's house. It was fortunately brought under control before more damage was done. It was cause by an electric short circuit. Mr. and Mrs, Mac Wilson and child- ren, of Ilamilton, were the guests of Mr, and Mrs. Norman Wightman, Fri- day. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Snell and Jean- elta, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Snell, Messrs. Jasper and. Ernest, also Mr, and Mrs. Douglas Campbell attended the funeral in Goderich on Monday of the late Mr.' Ed, Kershenski, of Detriot. Interment was made in Colborne Cemetery, The Easter meeting of the Westfield Mission Band was held on Sunday of-, ternoon and was opened with hymn! 289. The Member's Purpose was re- I peated in unison, Matthew 27, verses 27 to 31, was road by Gary Walden, Mary Snell played a piano solo, follow- ed by prayer by Elaine- Snell. David McDowell gave a reading "Easter Time." Bonnie Snell took up to offer- ing and it was dedicated by Norma Smith. A piano solo by Marjorie Smith and a reading by Douglas Smith, "Flower Messangers." Mrs. Ilarvey McDowell told a story. The roll call was taken land Miss Jeannetta Snell then told another story. The meeting was closed with prayer. Mrs, Thomas Biggerstaff visited with her mother, Mrs. Bryant, who is a pa- tient in Clinton hospital. Mrs, Israel Good and t'ree oys, of Wingham, visited Sun y with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ....mas Bigger - staff, Phyllis retur ai home frau Wingham, after F .ruing the Easter holidays with hc:r ..ester, WALTON Air, John Reid and daughter, Averil Reid, have returned to Peace River, Alberta, after spending the warier months with Mt'. laugh Campbell. AIr, and Mrs, Roy IIuether who have been residing at lIolmcsville have mov. ed to the McArthur Farni west of Wal- ton, which they purchased last year. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Boyd have re- turned home after spending the past three months in Florida. I Mr. and Mrs. Doug Lawless and fam-1 ily, of Burlington, spent a few days last' week with 1Ir, and Mrs, Wilbur Turnbull, Mrs. Peter McDonald visited with friends in Stratford through Easter week. Alas e1r Gary Bennett visited with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, X. Bennett, of Clinton, through•the holiday, Mrs. Belle Boyd, of McKillop, spent a few days with '1rs. Maud Leeming, A number of ladies from Duffs Un- ited Church attended the Presbytery meeting held in Wingham last Thurs- day. Mr, and Mrs. George I[abkirk and family, of Ingersoll, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs, Wilbur Turnbull. Mr. and Mrs. Ted McCreath spent the week -end with friends in Toronto, 111[rs. Ruby Dundas, Caroline and Eleanor, of Glencoe, visited with Mr. and Mrs, George Dundas. Airs, Fred licitly, of Toronto, spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs. Walter Broadfoot. Mr, Glen Oliver,of Victoria hospital, London, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs, Les Oliver. Mr, and Mrs. Wallace Shannon and Kathy, of Sarnia, visited with Mrs, John Shannon, for a few days last week. Air, and Mrs, Robert Dundas, of Tor- onto, visited last Tuesday with Mr, and Mrs, '1'. Dundas, Mrs. John Watson is at present in Clinton Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dinsmore, of Kit- chener, spent the week -end with Mr. and Mrs, Gordon McGavin. Mr, Kenneth Ryan has accepted a position with the Beaver Lumber Com- ' pany of Merlin last week, Mrs. Wm. Dennis and Mrs. David Ilackwell, of Stratford, spent Easter week with relatives in Edmonton, Al- berta, Mr, and Mrs. Nelson Reid and Mrs, John Shannon spent a few days with friends in Sarnia. While there Mrs, Reid attended as a delegate to the W, A. annual of the United Church. Miss Corrie De Ruitjter, of Stratford, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Jan Van Vliet Sr. • r'. and Mrs, Rattly Merkley, Gorn- all, visited with Mr, and Mrs. Ronnie Bennett one day last week, O Jackson Aluminum Ltd. Seaforth is colecting wool for grading and sale on the co-operative plan. Shippers may obtlxin sack and twine free of charge 'from the above or their Lirenser Oper- ators, Any Government Defisicnry Payment will apply only on Properly Graded Wools, Secure the utmost by Patronizing the Organization that made this possible, Canadian Co -Operative Wool Growers Limited 217 Bay Stree - Toronto BENEFIT DANCE for Mr. and Mrs, Harold Carter • in Blyth Memorial Hall on SATURDAY, APRIL 15 Music By !PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA Dancing front 9 to 12 o'clock pan, Ladies please bring lunch EVERYBODY WELCOME who recently suffered a heavy fire loss CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank the Blyth Fire De- partment and my neighbours for help- ing at my recent fire, Also to Mr, and Mrs, Harry Armstrong, who served lunch to the then, —Harold C irter, 09 -Ip. CARD Of TIIANKS I wish to express my thanks and ap- preciation to all my neighbours,friends rand relatives for the many act of kind- ness and messages of sympathy exten- ded to me in my recent sad bereave - trent, and also for floral tributes. Special thanks to Rev. E. McLagan, Rev, R. I►iealiy, the Biyth Legion 420 for condtteting their service, Dr. Street. Mrs, II. Brown and Mr. Lloyd Ttaskcr, and those who assisted in any way. --Mrs, Fred Crawford. 03.1. fs your Subscription Paid BELGR'1YE CARD of THANKS WATSON--I wish to thiutk all my friends who have boon so kind to re- nse:r; aer me with cards, flowers and treats while I ani in Wingham hospital, —W, N. Watson. The Goderich Community Concert Association campaign for membership is taking place this week. If anyone is interested phone Blyth 205 or Blyth 54. WE CARRY THE BETTER LINES OF MEN'S 1 Work Boots SISMAN, GREB, JOHNSTON, RELIANCE AND I-IYI)RO CITY. MEN'S BLACK LEATHER WORK BOOTS --- with leather insole and nailed cork outsole, full rubber heels, sizes 6 to 11 Only $5.50 READY-TO-WEAR SUITS BY HOUSE OF STONE in Charcoal, Grey and Navy -- cuffed ready-to-wear ONLY $59.00 R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Home of Good Quality Merchandise" • i 1 J 1 .1 1 1 1 .1 1 11 I • .' I 1 1 11 , ,I 1 , Wingham Memorial Shop = Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'I'TON. The eighth meeting of the Seven Sew- ing Sisters group II was held at the, home of Mrs. Harry Rinn on Wednes-1 day afternoon, with seven girls present, The meeting opened with the call fol- r lowed by the pledge and motto, Linda Rinn read the minutes and the roll call, , was answered by showing a bound but- ton -hole. Linda Johnston gave the hone assignment. The girls hemmed a diagonal skirt. Mrs, Dale Miller the; home economist paid a visit and check- ; g ed the record books and gave the girls' hints to improve then, she also in-: spected the dresses the girls have been = making. The singing of the theme clos- ed the meeting and a lunch of fruit bread and tea was served. The next meeting will be at Mrs. Rinn's on April 12, at 7 o'clock p.m., and the roll call will be answered by the girls showing their completed dresses; _ CARD OF THANKS Me wish to thank our friends and neighbours and the Blyth Fire Depart- ment for their assistance at our fire last Wednesday; also to those who help- ed with the new roof. All vias greatly appreciated. —Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Howatt and fam. fly, 09.1 Imr.1•1 • Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — 8EAFOBT11 LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE — TI[OSIAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON: EXETER: Business—Iia 2-6606 Business 41 Residence -11u 2-3869 Residence S4 4 11 1 ar,111 1 61 . 1 1 I 'V FURNITURE AT THE MILDMAY FURNITURE SHOWROOMS NEW IABSUE ---liviNCngroom,LUDES bedroom, 70 kitchenIT. S USED INCLUDES TRADE-INS and some shop worn suites. Free Delivery. Convenient Terms. GODFREY SCHUETT MILDMAY, ONT. III II I 1 1 1 . I� 1 • 1 , 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 Cancer Campaign In Blyth And Community TOWNSHIP CANVASSES Conducted by the Federation of Agriculture Let's Keep On Fighting Cancer In Ilt'.ron •- Give Generously Vv'e e day, April 12, 1901 mum a at airstrat-wrru, 11..11..,....,.... �,;, Elliott Insurance ,Agency BLYTH -ONTARIO. INSURANCIl •. • ALL BRANCHES ..raw BLYTH STANDARD . . 1111 •.,,,,,•,,,,.,,,-'�'-••Nr•..NW1,,,, --.: LYCEUM THEATRE Wingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Night Automobile Fire, Casualty, Casualty, Sickness !accident, W� N'E SP CIIALI: E'IF.arm Liability, - ,1 Office Phone 104, � GIVING SERVICE, Residence Phone 140 I--- • • •' :.111,11 FOR SALE 1 .,,,,,,,,,,,� , Waterloo Separator with ) ,"'""""^.Y^.N.----.•,,,,,,r S ' cc c «' 33x•+5 in grad working Clinton Community tier, price 75 WILFRED McINTF.E Iteul Estate Broiler 1VALKER'fON, ONT, Agent: Vle Kennedy, Myth Commencing at 7:15.1'hp11C 78. Matinee Saturday afternoon at 2p.rn. I Blyth, bathrullfurnaceU lc�y Street, 1 200 acres 11, miles east of Blyth, Mor. - �"-� ; res Township, Good buildings, Thur, Fri, Sat at Apr. 13.14-15 100 acre faun in Wnwnnosh Town. . .,hit,, good buildings, 6 acres hard wood l rush, 11, miles from village, "All The Young Men" . 300 acre grass farm in East Wawa- slosh, with pond, i 100 acres in Hullett, with spring creek tarring, Alan Ladd, Sidney FUJI price $4000,00, _ ) , 125 titres on the Gth of Hellen, goodniticr, Ingmar Johansson 1 i10use, L-shaped barn, silo. Cement block, building in Walton War melodrama, H,frdwar•c store, 6 mined apa,tmcnt above, steam healed, straw sh 1 I a �1)cr Sol order, $ •oo• Apply Simon Italia- Juan and Son, Belgravc It,R, 1, phone FARMERS Blyth. 0' FOR SALE I MICTION SALES 1180 BI J.1p , Baled hay; also timothy seed, Reg. alar and Climax. Apply J. B, Nesbit; 1 CLINTO phone 53R5, Blyth, BARN09.20, EVERY FRIDAY AT 3 f N BALE at 2 p.m, FOR SALE IN BLYTII, PRONE BOB IIE �����NN'""'"'�••^�M► 200 acres 9th of Ilullelt Township, 140 workable, hard wood lush, 2 stir br' • hn Plumbing use, furnace 'and bath i , Loud hare, About 335 Manson Leghorns, one year 1 J NRY 15081 U7 J, exciting srrr t yarn I 'p d, laying GD percent and more, $1,10 Leer, Carp � "ROAR cls, A Aucll 71,vo Pioteslarit teachers ' r ---- Pp1Y, S, sltllt, R,R. 3 Blyth, I ComifLT_ one 7519 Auburn. 08 2p "'""'' ^"^^• b HIGH TIMI." Bin F• . b �ibian . 1 ucsday 1Vcld. GODF,RICH PAGE 8 MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE PARK TH +.ATRE Phone JA4.7811 NOW PLAYING NOW- April 13,11, 15 "TIAs' SUNDOWNERS" In Color with Deborah Kerr and Robert Mitchum, Muni, Tues., Wed, April 17, 18 19 .- LIANA ANDREWS . RHONDA FLEMING Adult • N n ANNn'FR ' Tell a gri):ping and dramatic story of an airline A aslt ands fs curse• quences, ^ Thurs., "`THE CROWDEI) SKY" In 'Technicolor Fri., Sat„ April 20, 21, 22- I)oublc 13111 "RAYMIE" IMVIJ) LARD . JULIE ADAMS • IUCHAJU) ARLEN . A tale of a buy and of faith and courage. HOWARD DUFF and HELENE STANLEY In an n echnicolo,•, of ea ph oe Corey, Bob McNair, TEACHERS WANTED I OF THE CROWD" Man __ oneerf 05-tt, I ' WORK OF ALL KINDS senior roan anti one for the junior S I room of Union School No. 17, East ""^'�•^ Specinllzirtg' in bull • I' . N•V +w•w,.w n cupboards etc, A Oros ), to start next September, • Dealer In Steel and ' Appl , ' ` ` • experience, and li b law i OR RENTRoofing, fP• • stating salary farm, spring wales, ' FOR SALE 65 acre grass Township of Morris. Apply,ie Nesbit, phone 7237, AubLaurence oG•2, BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling, Ann Hollinger Phone 143 "CATTLE SPRAYING FOR LICE Waren water used, Satisfaction Guar- anteed. Phone J. M. Baeker, 95 Brussels," TV ANTENNA REPAIRS 11 TV Antenna Repairs and Installation.1 WANTED Year around set•vice. Phone collect,t HIGHEST C PRICES ��'"''''"''''""�'�^��• P & W TRANSPORT LTD. IVOItK GUARANTEED ,cations, to ,I, A. ,McBurney, R.R. Local and Long DistanceI, I3elgravc, SccreVirY EastIVawar.osh Trucking CRANK MCMICHAEL Township Seim! Area Board. 03.3. MR, 4, Goderlch FOR SALT; !� phone Carlow 1108 IIome grown Alfalfa Seed. Apply, 51.10p, Glenn Carter, phone 231111, Blyth, 03-2 Cattle Shipped Monday and 'Thursday - Hogs on Tuesdays TEACHER WANTED Trucking to and fromt)ril Applications will be received until Brussels and Clinton Sales tS.S1iNo.f or 7, Hallett., Approximately ppthe position oxif tmately on Friday IG pupils, Apply, statin Call 162 tions, salary expected, and namercol 11, Blyth last inspector, to Mrs, Leonard Shot), brook, secretary, R.R. 1, Blyth, Ont, 46.6 DEAD STOCK '1 ce arou 392-6140, 'f•V Antenna Ser. suiJJGRE ASH 1 paid In vice. >; districts for dead, old, sick BLYTH BILLIARDS 45-tf, or disabled horses or cattle. Old hor. FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE ses for slaughter 5c "Your friendly meeting CIBob Peck, Varna, phone phone collect, Norman Knapp, Hensall, 090112, 50.130f. 21812 it Blyth, SANITARY SEWAGE IABP Septic tanks, cesspools, etc„ pimped IaJG' Trucks available at all dines, and 1 Confectionaries Blake, phone 42Ra, Brussels, H.R. 2. CRAW'VFORI) & HETHERINGTON BA/MISTERS & SOLif)ITORB J. II, Crawford, R. S. IIetheringto Q.C. Wlnlbam and Blyth iN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING Located IndEllliott Insurance Arenoy Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 1, c per pound G. B. ('L Q.NCY Phone collect 133, Brussels, OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN BRUCE MARLATT Repairs le All Makes of Vacuum prr'rnpt, sanitary disposalayund, For Cleaners, B day or night place." busy phone Leroy Acheson, TObaCOOS DISPOSAL Atwood, 153, Wm, Morse, Brussels, "Soft Drinks c caned. Free estimates. Lou,, 0, P OR SICK, DOWN Olt CONTACT US DISABLED COWS 34- 1, Mar. open 9 a.m, to 12 ). 1 m. DEAD STOCK Doc Cole, Proprietor SERVICES HIGHEST CASH PRICES D AIDE and HORSES For All Your also ELECTRICAL PROBLEMS 06-4, NCE To GARNET FARRIER'S 6 -Piece Orchestra 111 Blyth Memorial Hall FRIDAY, APRIL 21 Sponsored by Blyth Agricultural Society i Lucky Draw Prizes Admisslnn at Popular Prices • All Welcome FOR SALE C1lm(:ix Timc;hy seed; Red Clover, Apply Ralph Caldwell, phone 54R23, Blyth. TaSow Thjs 09.1p. - Sprjnq?cnRDofTIU1NKs RITISH ����;r�:.., ill>> 1SRAEL • The Bible's National Message We believe that the Ccllo•Saxon pcup:cs are the descendants of God's servant race and nation. Israel: that our anc`ent 'Throne is the continualion of the Throw: 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 tir•gent. importance. WE WOULD LIKE TO TELL YOU ABOUT IT For Ycur Copy of Our FREE Booklet "An Introduction to the British -Israel Evangel" Write lo the Secretary CANADIAN BRITISH ISRAEL ASSOCIATION lei Ontario P,O. Box 744, Station B, Ottawa, Ont. PA I hat Are You Going I wish to thank my treats while s and As seed growing is our only friends 'fin' cards and treats while a pa tient in the Clinton Hospital, also to my business we have the Tamil an ie nurses and •Dr, R. W. ' following Street, It was all greatly appreciated; b special seed 9-1p, Mrs, Sam Dacr. ' REG, CLIMAX -Grown on own farm. This seed is eligible to �- certified Climax. grow Dead Cows and horses At Cash Value Old' Iforses�-1 Y d t1 (Successor to the late A, L. i:ole, Optometrist) - FOB APPOINTMENT PHONE' 33, GODERICH 25.1) !. E. I.ongstaff, Opto Seatorth, Phone 791 - HOURS: Seatorth Daily Except Monday 24 hour Service Plant Licence No, 54-R,P.-61 Colector Licence No, •88-G6i mctrisi DO YOU HAVE C on BUILDING Olt 9:00 aim, to 5:30 p.m. Wed.- 9:00 an, to 12;30 p•m, lint RENOVATION PLANS Clinton Office - Monday, 0 - _ Ilion, HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETR IST PATRICK ST, • WTNGHA M 1.VENINGS BY APPOINT (Lear Apointnent please phon Wingham), Profiuional Eye Examination. Optical Servicer,, & Wed Fora First Class and Satisfactory Job GERALI) EXEL ICall i11AN } awleigI3tlSilitSS. Sell to 1500 • 6:30. families, l Carpentry and Masons profits for hustlers.Phone 23812 Y ;Write today, Ruwlcigh's, Dept, D-130.5 _ Brussels, Ontario 4005 Richelieu, Montreal, _ _ 09.1 VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND SERVICE f CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all those who sent, ONI Repairs to most popular makes of cards and flowers while I was a pa -1 lot Ill';'. cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen tient in Clinton Public Hospital, Spe- e 770 Sales, Varna, Tel, collect Ilensall 696112, i sal thanks to Dr. Street and the nurs Free Estimates Given On - WIRING CONTRACTS 0 Fast and Efficient Service on all A quantity of straw, Apply George - � FOR SALE ELECTRICAL REPAIRS Fear, !)one12It4, Blyth, 09 -Ip, BILL'S ELECTRIC BAKE SALE 1Vni. Ilull, Proprietor, On Saturday, , Butcher Shop,Y11 frit 15 at 13erthot's Phone' 171 1 Committee of Blyth Ladies' Agricultural Blyth, Ont,d Soci- 09.3p Blyth at 3 o'clock, 09.1, 'ANTED ROY N. BENTLE Milo Accountant GODERICH, ONT, Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 - Bo Y Bl � fore Friday noon,anApply Jim Bas rrie,: •We wish to thank the Blyth Fire De-- I phone 17114, Blyth, x 478, partment for (heir pr'om'pt attendance,/ 1' n and all who helped at our recant clrini- i The NOTICE n .ncy fire. parson that put the ! 50.13p,tf, J qi staff, 1954 Pontiac car, Apply, phone 1187, i Blyth. 09-1 15 little FOR SALE CARD OF THANKS - C -Marjorie Marshall, FOR SALE 09 -Ip, iIOUSE FOR SALE Brick house, with 5 rooms and bath, new gas furnace, newly decorated, alba) a new roof ueen 2 Street, B•ly th. Apply tat The Standard Office. 09.1 WORK A reliable girl wants horework, Ap- ply_phone 151110, Blyth, FOR SALE Cedar posts, anchor posts, 'and poles, reasonable price, Apply Jasper Snell, phone 35825, Blyth, 09-3p. • PASTURE TO RENT Gross for ten head of cslale, lets of • Itadc and water. Apply Miller Rich• iond, phone 1380, Blyth, 00-1p. 'r1) DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE H°URS-I P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS, 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE -BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost Choice of bull and breed Our artificial breeding service will help you to a more efficient livestock operation - For service or more information call: Clinton HU 2-3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9-5650. BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING • McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS: President - John L. Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John H. McEw- ing, Myth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E. Southgate, Seaforth, DIRECTORS J, L. Malone, Seatorth; J, 11, Maw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J, E. Pep- per, Brumfield; C, W. Leonhnr•dt, Bornholm; H, Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister I3!'oadfoot, Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr„ Londesboro; V. J. low, It It. 5, ,('frail; Selwyn Ba- ttu, Bru)sAls: James KFyes, St al'urlh: lllarnld Sgtllteg; Clinton, --Mr, and Mrs, Major Youngblut, lmately. Thank you, or 09•lp, • 00.1 can. Your kmdncss will never be forgotten•! In Evergl s lonely lour are ethinking, near. .1 ply, Wm. Manning, Londesboro, phone -John Pelan, Blyth 24114, -Pearl Walsh. -Ever remembered by her son, Bob, 09.1 09-1p, and family. 09.1p, • • i REG. YORK BARLEY -This Is grown from salt water txeated seed and has Embryo Test 0,8 percent Smut Cotuit which Is extra low. CERT NO, 1 SELKIRK WHEAT -A very good yielder, LOCALLY GROWN ALFALFA --Several lots to choose from. Also a full line of clovers, grasses and hay and pasture miexlures. Inquire about Cyclone Power Seeder, R. it ALEXANDER Member: Canadian Seed Growers Association, LONDESBORO, ONTARIO Phones Clinton HU 2-7475 Blyth 261133 CARD OF THANKS I would like to thank all diose who BELL -In lovingEIN Amemory of a dein• called on me, sent cards, letters, treats mother and and flowers, while I was in Wingham Bell, who passed awaygrandmother, 4, Elizab go hospital. Special thanks to those who April 11, 19.17• yc�►s ago !coked rafter my hc•me; also Rev. Mc- We who loved you, sadly miss you, c cad calf on • FOR SALE Lagan, Mr, Dormer, Dr. McKibben, bury trotted-; Baled threshed oat straw, clean. �'' McKim, and the nursing As d dawns another year; I d yours at THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE Gcr:e Up Terich:ng To Be A Clown If a fellow can't run awao toll join the circus just because he's only 51 2, the next hest thing cer- tainly would be for his father to quit his job, sign up as a Flown -- and take junior along as pari Of the act. . That was the reason there were izpangles in the eyes of young Charles F3oas as the Linli- ly's trailer took or; front Michi- gan last month for Alabama and the winter headquarters of the Penny Brothers Circus at Scotts- boro, Also in the trailer were Charles' cheerfully long - suffer - in'. mother, Kathleen, and his three skiers, aged respectively 4 years, iti months. and 212 months. And, of course, there was fathi : -- 35 -year-old I)r. Charles Boas. ;; Ph.D. from the Univer- sity of \i,Chigan and until a few (Lys :,en an assistant proles or 01 geography phy at Michigan State University. .111 his live a cirrus bell, !)r. Bos had finally decid- ed to take the big jump from campus to tanbark, specifically to join the Peniy Brothers fac- ulty of downs. For Mrs. Boas it was "some- thing my husband always want- ed to do." For the babies there could be only the dimmest awarencs of a change in sounds and salols. For 4 -year-old Lol- lie. "going with daddy to the cir- cus will be fun" and she hoped "to swing on the trapezes." But for young Charles — or Toby, as he's called — it was a matter of the most solemn im- portance. marking his own em- barkation on a new career as wen as his father's. He talked about it with professional seri- osuncss, occasionally breaking up at the thought of the funny things in their act, "We've got a magic box," he explained, "Me and daddy and zome other clowns come out. 1 have an ice-cream cone and 1 put it in the box, and daddy puts in a little custard pie. Then I turn a crank, a bell rings, and out comes a great big cone. Daddy is surprised. Then I turn the crank again and out comes a great big custard pie. Daddy stays, 'Let me have it,' and I do— right in the face." What did Toby want to be when he grew up? "Oh, maybe I'll be a fireman or maybe a balloon man," A balloon man? Like an as- tronaut in space, maybe? "Gosh, no," said Toby with a trace of scorn. "The man who sells balloons." One Way Of Meeting A Great Challenge In our security - conscious, steam -heated society, boredom and a loss of real zest for life are rather common. People com- plain that there is no challenge in daily living, that everything moves along in a prearranged, or at least readily predictable, fashion. It is true that a plan can no longer get together a few house- hold goods in a wagon and head west toward a frontier. It is not at all true that there are no longer any challenges that will test the mettle of a courageous man or woman. We have in mind one challenge in particular. It can be simply stated: Try applying the precepts of your religion, without reserv- ation o1' sail -trimming, to daily life. Although this may sound rather simple, a challenge not to be compared with the hardships and hostile savages that tested the pioneers, it is actually the most demanding challenge of all, Suppose that concept of the brotherhood of all men — not merely those whose skin is the same color as ours, whose poli- tical and moral ideas are the same as ours, but literally all men—were to be applied un- stintingly to our dealings with others? Suppose the admonition to Et 11 all We ha\'e and give to 1i1e }0,01' were to be followed t0 the letter? Suppose everyone ac- cepted as 0 solemn obligation the den' and to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, comfort the oppressed --without, be it noted, first taking precautions to assure personal comfort" Those are only hints of the immeasurably great challenge that confronts us all. There is still plenty of pioneering to be done.—Greenwood (Miss.) ('onl- nlol:wealth. They Store Apples Under Water ! A traveller who recently re- tulncd from a visit to Hungary has been telling of some tasty apples and vegetables he ate strainht from the river bed! And before you think this man is oft his head—let us say that he did so as a result of all experiment for using underwater beds for food storage. At twelve sites, including va- rious places on the Danube and 'I'iza rivers. supplies of apples were sunk in plastic containers. In some instances, the surface of the water froze over—but with no ill effects to the apples. The authors of the scheme, two horticultural experts, San - dor Fejjes and Jozef Kresch, joined forces with an engineer of the Synthetic Material Re- search Association. Together, they have solved the problem of unr'erwater ventilation. The ap- ples have freedom to breathe and sweat. 'l'he traveller states that apples thus bedded down retain both their bloom and freshness. They taste as delicious as when they are freshly picked. The new plan will reduce costs in maintaining expensive store- houses, hitherto a must, because of Hungary's big apple crop. Now We Have The Stamp Bootlegger Stamp dealers in the U.S. badger countries from Afghanis- tan to Zululand to keep issuing new stamps, essential imports for the $100 million -a -year philatel- ist trade. Partly due to this pres- sure, the volume of new stamps has hit blizzard proportions (in 1960, world postal departments turned out nearly 2,000 special issues), But traders last. month were complaining louder than ever. Cause of their troubles: Phila- telic 'free-booters cornering the market. Here's how they work, A broker, usually an American with connections, buys up exclu- sive rights to the new issue of a cooperative nation, often at a discount, and sells the stamps for whatever the market will bear. One New York firm, for ex- ample, peddled foreign 6 -cent stamps in this country last year for $8.50 apiece. The over - all take, according to Britain's Phil- atelic Traders' Society, often runs to about $100,000 on a single is- sue. "When you think of collectors who are having to pay fancy prices for issues that will fall in value in a few years, you realize what a racket is going on," com- mented a broker at the Eighth National Stamp Exhibition in London. One Latin American collector, unable to buy a new stamp in his own country, raised such a cern- motion recently that he almost single-handedly forced his gov- ernment to revoke its exclusive contract with a New York deal- er. Despite such rear -guard ac- tivity, however, the double-deal- ing persists. The Maldive Islands, a British protectorate in the In- dian Ocean, recently issued, for instance, a new stamp with a face value of $21, "How many Maldive fishermen," wondered a British broker, "can buy such a stamp out of a month's earn- ings?" Top pay in the Maldive s: About $21 a month. Hct?LOOM — Five generations hove prized this quilt. It was ma:e at a quilling bee 139 years ego by the great, great g, anc;r,icilber of Mrs, Cyrus Cooley of Memphis. PILOT TO BE SKY PILOT — Canadian Pacific Airline pilot 'tom Elden catches up on some school work between flights, He is studying at the University of British Columbia to be a minister and logs 3,000 miles a week between classes. TABLE TALKS 41 c!ane. A 1isese5 MOULDED CHICKEN Minced 0hic k e n and finely chopped almonds are combined to make (.hese delicious chicken molds, 2 packages unflavored gelatin ti cup cold water 2 teaspoons chicken soup base or 2 chicken bouillon cubes 2 cups 1101 water cup mayonnaise teaspoon pepper Dash cayenne pepper 2!: cups minced cooked chicken cup finely chopped ccler) cup finely chopped almonds Salt to taste 1 cup heavy cream, whipped Stuffed olives, sliced. Soften gelatin in cold water. Dissolve chicken soup base or chicken bouillon cubes in slot water. Add softened gelatin. Stir until dissolved and well blended. Cool mixture, then stir in mayonnaise, pepper and cayenne. Add minced chicken, celery, al- monds. Salt to taste. Chill un- til mixture begins to thicken, then fold in whipped cream, Rinse 8 individual molds with cold water. Place a slice of stuffed olive in bottom of each. Fill with chicken mixture. Chill until firm. To remove molds, hold for a second in hot water, Invert on a serving platter. DEVILLED EGGS 3 hard -cooked eggs, peeled l tablepsoou mayo noise t.'s teaspoon vinegar !i teaspoon salt Dash pepper !, teaspoon dry mustard ti teaspoon paprika 2 drops tabasco sauce Halve eggs lengthwise. Remove yolks and mash. Mix yolks with mayonnaise, vinegar, salt, pep- per, mustard, paprika, and ta- basco. Blend well. Refill egg whites. Chill until serving time. STUFFED EGGS :t eggs Cold water 1 tablespoon mayonnaise 1 drop anchovy paste I.N teaspoon salt Dash pepper 6 small stuffed olives Pimiento, Place eggs in saucepan. Cover with cold water. Cover sauce- pan, place over low heat, and bring slowly to boiling point. Re- duce heat and simmer eggs for 20 minutes, As soon as they are cooked, remove from hot water and plunge into cold water. This pre- vents egg yolk from discoloring, and the, eggs shell more easily. Remove shells. 1 -salve eggs lengthwise. Remove yolks and mash. Mix yolks with mayon- naise, anchovy paste, salt, and pepper. Blend well. Place a small stuffed olive in each half -white. Fill with the yolk mixture. Garnish with pi- miento. Chill until serving time. CORN S'L'ICKS 11,i cups Hour s„t cup cornmeal 1 tablespoon baking powder Is teaspoon salt 3,4 cup grated cheese 2 eggs !i cusp sugar cup milk !'1 cup melted shortening Silt flour, cornmeal, baking powder and salt into a bowl. Stir in grated cheese with a fork, so that cheese is mixed all through the flour -cornmeal mixture. Beat eggs until very light Add eggs, sugar, milk and melted shortening, all at once, to flour - cheese mixture. Mix together but do not beat, Stir just enough to mix the ingredients. Fill 12 greased cornstick pans, Bake in 400 oven for 18 minutes, If you haven't any cornstick pans, bake in 9 -inch -square bak- ing pan for 30 minutes, and out into squares to serve. + MAPLE CHIFFON PIE 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin 2 tablespoons cola water Is cap milk I cup maple syrup ! teaspoon salt 2 egg yolks, beaten teaspoon vanilla 2 h 1 cup hweavilesy cream, whipped 1 9 -inch baked Inc shell 2 tablespoons finely chopped walnuts. Soften gelatin in cold water. Combine milk, maple syrup and salt. Heat in the top part of double boiler. When hot, slowly blend in beaten egg yolks, Add gelatin and stir until well blend- ed, Remove from heat, stir in vanilla, Chill until slightly thick- ened. Beat. egg whites until stiff, 'fold into cooled mixture. Then fold in whipped cream. Fill baked pie shell with this mixture. Sprinkle with finely chopped walnuts. Chill for 4 hours and serve. 1.., e RHUBARB COMPOTE 3 cups rhubarb 1 cup sugar 1 cup water 1 tablespoon minute tapioca 4 tablespoons grenadine, Select firm young rhubarb. Cut off leaves and stem end. Wash. Peel or not, as desired. Cut into 1 -inch pieces and meas- ure 3 cups, Place in greased baking dish. Sprinkle with sugar, Add water, Cover and bake in 325 oven for 1 hour, until just tender. Strain off as much of the liquid as possible without disturbing the pieces or rhubarb. Combine liquid and tapioca in saucepan, Cook for 10 minutes. Remove 'from heat, cool slightly, stirdn grenadine. Pour over rhu- barb. Cool, then refrigerate until thoroughly chilled. Serve with whipped creast, if desired. Cairo Car -Parking Colorful Business Pulling up to the curb of a downtown Cairo street recently 1 was accosted by a tall, black - faced elan dressed in a long brown overcoat and red tarboosh. "Leave the brake off when you leave and put the gear in neu- tral,” he said quietly in a deep, powerful voice. "if someone bumps you from the rear the car won't be hurt, you see," "Oh, yes," I said, taking his ad- vice and prepared to get out of the car, Then, as 1 looked away for a moment, there clone a thunder- ing shout in Arabic that resem- bled the liner Queen Elizabeth putting out to sea. "YA KAWI!" Looking at the kind -faced Ulan, I found 11101 smiling through big, gold teeth and pointing upward, In another moment there came another stenorian "YA KAWI!" "Old Sa'ad the cur parker here is the most religious elan on Kase el Nil Street," a passerby stopped to tell mc. "The Koran says good Moslems should repeat Allah's name as often as pos- sible. "Sa'ad has such a powerful voice he lets it go every now and then. Allah has about 100 names and "Ya Kawi" (Oh All -Power- ful One) is one of then(. "This is his 22nd year on this very spot. If people around here don't know him by sight they know him by voice." "YA KAWi!!" Sa'ad roared once again. "YA KAWI'! 1'A KAWI!!" Sa'ad Mirzilni Sa'ad is Cairo's most colorful car parker, a job preferred by some of Egypt's most 111111 s u a l personalities. Where the United States has parking ureters and police to check them, Cairo has car park- ers who must use their own de- vices to be store they get paid. Sections of Cairo streets are divided up by mutual agreement, the higher -paying curbs nets' the center of town being preferred and going to glen with highest seniority, Concessions are sone- ' times passed on to sons or cous- ins like valuable family legacies. There are few easier jobs in Egypt. In return for finding parking spaces and for insuring that hub- caps remain where they belong, drivers pay one piaster — about two cents — to the car packers. The custom is purely voluntary and many try to get away with- out paying. A few Americans here, for example, pride them- selves on resisting this non- bureaucratic system s a y f n g, "Why should we pay! There's no law about it, is there?" They ignore the car' parkers frantic screams of "Aiwa! Aiwa!" as they poll out from the curb while 11e stands in their path. It is his only way of getting the pi- aster from reluctant car owners, writes James Davidson in the Christian Science Molitor. Sa'ad Mirzilni is one of Cairo's oldest and most respected car parkers. For 22 years he has worked the north side of Kass el Nil Street opposite the Wahba Building where many foreign correspondents have their offices. His booming "KAWIS" are a fa- miliar part of the daily street scene. He is married and has four children, Asked why he works instead of following the Oriental custom of living off children, he replies, "It's better to work. I can't stay hone idle. Allah wouldn't like it, I'm still strong, look," About six feet, two and weigh- ing over 200 pounds, Sa'ad indeed presents an imposing figure, "My father came from Darfour in Sudan," he tells you, "He was six feet, five and 275 pounds. He lived to he 1 I11." At e, Salad usually lets nl t "1'A KAWIb" Sa'ad worked five years In the Egyptian Army in Palestine and Sudan, And before becoming a carparkcr he served five years with Cairo police, Ile maktis between a dollar and a dollar and a half a day -- 4 good salary in Egypt for unskill- ed, illiterate work (farm laborers get 50 cents 0 day 1. Sa'ad, how- ever, is ani exception and is liter- ate, as the pile of newspapers by his chair at the curb testily. Cairo carp0rke's are part of the city's lower income brackets and most of them have come from the villages. They are 011 especially religious. Five times a day they spread out a newspaper on the sigewalk, face :Weed, and pray. New regulations are coning out regulating traffic. Where be- fore car parkers could fill streets With double and triple packers, getting the added piasters that went with thein, police now are cracking down. In many strc ens In slid -Cairo double parking is out. w Ion't be long, m:ul�' pro} le feel1, before Cairo officials take the opportunity for added rev- enues and install parkin.g.melers, And when they do one of Cairo's most colorful citizens, foghorn - voiced Salad Mirzilni Sa'ad will have to return to his home mar King Farouk's former Abdin Pa- lace and live off his sons. It will he a sad day for him, Ind* cd. Cairo might be more efficient without Sa'ad and his colorful colleagues, but one wonders !r the city would be as interesting as it is with them on the toh. (t, Is there something I can. put on any window screens to help keep my house tree of flies during the summer months? A. One method that has been found highly effective is to paint the screens with a solution con- sisting of three fluid ounces of quassia extract, one ounce of sugar, and 30 grants of guilt arabic. This solution, which is applied with a brush, is deadly to flies, which it attracts, but is harmless to humans and 11111111als. GUESS WHO? — Believe it or not, this is a Chicago police- man and he's in proper uni- form, Patrolman James Nolo wears a new tan smock which will protect uniforms in han- dling messy work, including loading the paddy wagon in Skid Row. ISSUE 15 — 1961 EASTER PARADERS — The Brennans of Oak Park, III., are always the grandest family in th, Easter parade. Thomas Brennan, the ;other, each year slakes a complete wardrobe for every member of his large family, That's Mrs. Brennan, far right, back row, Kennedy is A Rocking -Chair Fan That old - fashioned rocking chair discovered in the Presi- dent's office is not one of the antiques with which Mrs. Ken- nedy hopes to refurnish the White House. It is a regular porch -type cane rocker to which she has given a decorator':; touch, with a specially made foam rubber cushion and arm coverings. The chair itself has been stained nrl- hogany to match his other office furniture. Discovery that President Ken- nedy is a rocking -chair man carie as a surprise to reporters recently. Actually it's an old story. He had the chair in his office in the Senate. He admired a similar chair some years ago in the of- fice of Dr. Janet G. Travell, new White House physician and pos- ture authority, found it comfort- able, and ordered one like it Now when visitors conic In and he wants to "pull up a chair," he takes the rocker. It makes good sense, accord- ing to Dr. Travell, who insists that different chairs have dif- ferent purposes. A desk chair, for instance, i3 related to a Mask. A dining room chair is releed to a table. Neither are gen..ral purpose chairs. She Is somewhat of a spe2ial- ist on this subject, having Ce - signed a proper kind of seat for farm tractors, as well as com- fortable seats for airplane pilots who must remain in a sitting position for long periods during alight. She feels that a person should select a chair as carefully as he buys a suit, or a dress, A chair that is right for a person who is kix feet tall Is not at a.11 the ind of a chair which will be comfortable for a woman wno is five -foot -five, says Dr, Trp veII. She claims the average pereon cannot tell just by looking at a chair whether it is going to be "a good fit." Ncr can he judge wen by sitting in it, unless he sits for about halt an hour, or takes it home on trial. "It's like sleeping on the sand," she explains. "At first it feels fine, but you can become very uncomfortable if you stay there very long." Her theory is that every chair should be selected with the pur- pose for which it is to be Used in mind. "You wouldn't thirst of using a lounging or reading chair at the dining room table," she points out. Not that she recommends a "posture chair"; just one that fits,. Each chair has its own par- ticular use. There is no "all- purpose chair," in her estimation, any more than there is an all- purpose shoe for all occasions and weather. -By Josephine Ripley in the Christian Science Monitor. Tortoises Plague African Farmers Tortoises, beloved as pets,,can be dangerous and pestilential, At least, that's the view South Afri- can farmers hold of them, Re- cently thousands of mountain tortoises lumbered down from the hills to invade their crops and pastures. Prolonged drought and blistering sun had forced thein to seek new feeding grounds, Until recently, it was illegal to interfere with thele. For the tor- toise, in the sunny African clime, is protected as Royal Game, It could not be trapped or killed without a permit, But realizing how serious is the tortoise onslaught the Director of Nature Conservation withdrew the ruling. So in a big round -up which has just started, tortoises are being scooped up by the hun- dreds and either disposed of or earmarked for transfer to distant nature reserves, One farmer, Mr. Van der Merwe, has come up with an or- iginal use for them. "It's a grand chance for us to get together and found a local to'toise.soup industry," he says. IIts main outlet, he,thlnks, would be catering for aristocratic appe- tites - such as' royal banquet and similar functions. Husband: Have you ever won• dered what you would do if you had Rockefeller's income? Wife: No, but I've often wondered what he would do If he had mine 1..11yerhefewe 1„ , , ng ONVa 113S gNPd 3 0 1 0 3raui Ill. 4 S±dO)S3� .3 NVd Nn 1Ot1>1 1 1 -ION 1Y s TN a•. ill 64111 MTV. l Mr b ifittki41- 4i - - n l,'bf V SEVEN CHILDREN DIE IN FIRE - Charred bed frames rest in the smouldering remains of the Raymond Floyd home near Excelsior Springs, Mo., March 15, where seven children, ranging in ages from 2 to 11, burned to death. Their parents had driven into town to do the family laundry and left the youngsters alone in the house. IIIEFARM FRONT haussea In conversation among Mid- west U.S. farmers you are likely to hear talk of "this new MT." The speakers are referring to a simple, successfill way to cut the cost of soil preparation and cul- tivation. MT means minimum tillage, the reduction of the number of trips over the field preparing the seed bed. • M Harry Galloway, Purdue Uni- versity agronomist, says he is impressed by the willingness of Midwest fanners to try out the new tillage methods tested at the experiment stations, In Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois, and some other states, as well as In Indiana, practical farmers have put the MT methods to the test and are getting results, Mr. Gal- loway says. Field men of the. Purdue University extension ser- vice interviewed 57 fanners who raised their corn by the MT method and heard 50 of them say "MT pays off," Most of them figured it saved them from $2 to $3 an acre. The lone farmer who disagreed found the method he used not adapted to his muck soil. r,, • v, Mr. Galloway sat down in the lounge of Purdue's Memorial Union one evening and explain- ed to me the fundamentals of minimum tillage, diagraming soil . structure on a sheet torn from his notebook. He made It plain that in certain soils much of the discing and harrowing done in the traditional methods is not necessary or conducive to the highest yields under today's con- ditions, The methods developed with horse-drawn plows were not designed for use with heavy modern machinery which pounds the earth as the horse-drawn machinery never did, What's more, today's price squeeze and the scarcity of farm labor en- courage farmers to eliminate as many motions as possible, writes Dorothea Kean Jaffe in the Christian' Science Monitor, • N ' MT seems to be doing this. Conventional soil treatment, said Mr, Galloway, calls for some 11 trips with the tractor over the field frim early spring to har- vest time. With MT methods, these can be cut to as few as six, although they may run to eight or nine, depending on the parti- cular technique used, The most striking form of minimum tillage is known as wheel track planting. Instead of discing twice and perhaps her rowing also to prepare what used to be regarded as "a nice fine bed," the MT fanner plants in the track left by the wheels of the tractor that pulls the plow. The field Is left rough except for the tracks. In them the weight of the tractor has broken the clods and impacted •tlhe .soil suf- ficiently to give the seed a start- ing bed. ("'.:ver notice how weeds grow in the footprints on a spaded garden?" Mr. Galloway asked. "Same principle.") • * There are advantages to this method other than saving trips around the field, By leaving the soil rough except for wheel tracks it remains more porous, more water absorbent, less in- clined to puddle. Moreover, weeds don't 'grow so fast in loose soil as in the conventional "good seed bed." This postpones the need for cultivation and gives the farmer a chance to do other jobs demanding immediate at- tention, There are various other mini- muln tillage methods. Farmers have names for them -"plow - plant," "plow then plant," "lirni.t- ad tillage," Each Is a definite procedure, adapted to a parti- MOON SHOT? - No, this is not a scene at Cape Canaveral, The unusual picture was made on a farm. The structures are silos, with the moon as a back- drop. cular soil or situation. Labor is also eliminated by combination of jobs. For example, a farmer may attach a sprayer behind his wheel track planter to include pre -emergence weed spraying in his planting labor. He may plow with a mulcher attached to his plow, eliminating the need for discing and enabling him to plant in the conventional way. • • • Up to now, MT has required no new machinery. Farmers have ad apt ed their present equipment to the new methods, "They're wonderfully ingeni- ous about it," said Mr. Galloway, "They study MT in our winter schools, then go home and im- provise. Some farmers change the wheel spacing on their trac- tors and add two extra wheels in order to put the tracks where they want then, One fanner hitched his planter so the right runner followed the inside edge of soil compacted by the rear tractor wheel and the left run- ner planted in the front wheel track." 4, . • • This farmer, working his field alone, made a practice of plow- ing several rounds with one trac- tor, then leaving it and mount- ing the other tractor to which the planter was hitched. In any case, planting must be done not more than half a day after' plow- ing in order to' get good results. Manufacturers are watching minimum tillage 'experiments like hawks, said Mr, Galloway, Allis-Chalmers is offering a wheel track planter this spring, he said. Deere & Co., studying experiences of users of their ma- chinery, report a Wisconsin farm- er in the northern limit of the corn belt who gets 100 bushels to the acre by wheel track plant- ing, more than he ever got .be- fore. Purdue University offer's a table showing the average cost of conventional and MT methods, It shows in every case a lower plowing cost per acre, counting labor, power, and equipment, "There's no fool like an old fool," goes the saying. No, you certainly can't beat experience. ISSUE 15 - 1961 Ben's Pockets Were Always Crammed My brother Ben followed 1n his father's footsteps In the mat- ter of filling his pockets so that Mother used to remark, "Ben outcrama his father." Mother could not take with Ben the same measures that she took with me because the pockets in a boy's clothing were too numerous to be sewed up. She tried scolding him, She sought to reward him when he remembered to keep his pockets clear and clean but neither blame nor praise could change his ways. Even as a small child, my bro- ther was a confirmed berry - picker, It was he who always found the first sweet strawberry in the meadow grass and har- vested the last tart cranberry in the frosty marsh. Mother was pleased that he liked to pick berries but she deplored his practice of depositing them in his pockets where, crushed and mixed with chalk and marbles, they became entirely unedible. Father, who himself was a great berry -picker, pleased both Mo- ther and Ben by suggesting a device that solved the berries - in -pocket problem. He showed Ben how to cut a band of bark from a white birch, how to fash- ion it into a cup and pin the edges together with a briar or a sharp twig. Birch baskets fill- ed in turn with strawberries, blueberries, raspberries, black- berries, and cranberries were welcome offerings which Ben brought to our kitchen table, When Ben was older, he did not cease to pick berries but he also gathered objects of a less attractive nature. One year, he collected lizards and tree toads. Another year, he amassed a col- lection of rocks and mosses, and for several seasons he centered his interest on sea shells. What- ever he collected, he placed in his pockets so that his pockets had often to be turned wrong side out for cleaning and wash- ing. Finally Mother hit upon a novel solution, She used heavy blue and white ticking to make holders that fitted into each poc- ket. In this way the overworked pocket was saved from much wear and tear. In the winter, Ben found fewer objects to collect. There were no berries; rocks and mosses were covered with a blanket of snow, Spruce gum was about the only outdoor ob- ject that was added to his pocket collection of odds and ends, writes Esther E. Wood in the Christian Science Monitor. One winter afternoon, when he was walking leisurely to school, he stopped at Herman's i carriage shop, where his cousin was painting a sleigh, In the corner of the shop was a broken wasp's nest with bodies of the insects scattered upon the floor. Ben was curious about the wasps and he gathered a dozen or so of them for later study under his magnifying glass. He gently tucked the insects into the poc- kets of his mackinaw, and hur- ried to the schoolhouse which he reached just as the teacher was ringing the bell. The other chil- dren had removed their outdoor wraps and hung them on the wall nails near the stove, leav- ing the nail nearest the stove for I3en. The belated pupil re- moved his cap and mackinaw, hung them on the nail, and hur- riedly took his seat. The pupils soon became in- volved in a busy afternoon of geography and history. At about three o'clock when the older were busy reciting the capitals of the western states, we little girls in the front row were dis- turbed in the reading of our his- tory lesson by the buzzing of insects about our heads. The heat of the stove had brought Ben's wasps to -a lively rejuvenation. Just as Cousin Austin said with confidence, "Idaho -Boise," Alice cried out in alarm, "Bees, bees, bees." In a moment the school room was in an uproar. Desk tops were banged; school books were dropped: children sprang to their feet. In the excitement, Olive up- set the water pail and I kicked over a dinner pail on the hearth of the stove. It was Miss Mason's firm hand that brought order out of the chaos. The little girls were told to go to the entry and close the door. The older girls were asked to open the win- dows while Miss Mason and the older boys armed themselves scarfs and caps with which they drove the offending insects out of doors, After the wasps had been banished, the windows closed, and the children reassembled in the cold room, Miss Mason asked the pertinent question, "Children, did any of you bring those wasps into the school room?" A subdued Ben raised his hand to reply, "Please, Miss, I brought a pocketful of wasps to school. I meant no harm, They were sound asleep for the winter, I never expected them to wake up." "Pocketful of. wasps indeed," exclaimed the teacher. "It is too cold for school to continue. All the pupils except Benjamin are excused to go home." Miss Mason's mild correction of Ben took an unusual form. She asked him to look up the word pocket in the dictionary and to write the definition on the back blackboard. The next morning when we came to school, we read the sentence, "a pocket is a small bag inserted in a gar- ment for carrying small articles, as money." Each day for a week, Ben was bidden to read aloud the sentence at the close of the day's session. The incident of the wasps and Miss Mason's punishment sug- gested to the boys a nickname CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1, Word of commiseration 6. fold up tightly 9. Sprung 131. Species . Ilurttul 14. Pull after 16. Pentagram 16. Cleave 38. Crack 20. Clive forth 21. Intense pals 81. friendship 27. Irawlteye State (ab.) 90. Sprites 30, Rall bird 31, Curve 33, Fr. premier executed for treason 33. And not an, Actual 38, Dormouse 40. World organization (ab.) 41, Island In Firth of Clyde, Scot. 41. Accompnnlea 48, War god 47. Independent Ireland 48. Re-examina- tion 61. Covenant 64. Iferb ova 53. Ifonest 66, Siouan Indian b7. Cage 68, Stone paving block 69, 9hDaOWrt N 1. Beast of burden v, Abraham'. nephew 3, Cockatoo 4. Compete 0, Jubilee IIOAY sdiloOl LESSON By Rev. 1t. Barclay Warren It.A.. I1.D. When the Righteous Suffer Job 2: 3_16;29: 13-21 Memory Selection: Blessed is the man that endureth temptation; for when be is tried, he shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love hhn, James 1:12. The problem of suffering is always with us. The book of Job faces these problems realistically and answers some of them. Let us consider three of them, (1) Suffering is not necessar- ily punishment for the indivi- dual's sin. God's testimony of Job was, "A perfect and an un- pright man, one that feareth God and escheweth evil." Even after his loss of property and children, "In all this Job sinned not, nor charged God foolielely." Then after Satan's second vicious at- tack, this time on Job's body, the comment is, "In all this did not Job sin with his lips." Job's so-called friends said he must have sinned to have incurred such suffering but God's word of hire is good, (2) Suffering is a test of faith. While pain has its origin in the nervous system, the pressure upon man's spirit is terrific. This is evidenced in Job's laments such as, "Let the day perish wherein I was born." This is the time when faith is a great source of strength. Job said, "'Though he slay'me, yet will I trust in him," Faith thus tested in the fires of affliction, comes out stronger. (3) Let us continue in our ef- forts to alleviate suffering, but we shall never eliminate it. We have made marvellous progress in the control of T.B., but cancer increases. This world isn't heav- en. Pain accompanies man in his earthly pilgrimage. The Chris- tian must learn to receive bene- fit through his suffering. Job exclaimed, "When he hath tried me, I shall come forth as gold." Job got a clearer vision of God. This is especially seen in the last chapter, He was chastened and humbled. He learned patience. So for us all, We must capitalize on our sufferings, When Paul's prayer for the removal of the thorn from his flesh was answer- ed with a promise of grace suf- ficient, he said, "Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon ane." The Christian can, by the grace of God, be triumphant in the time of suffering, for Ben. During the following months of the winter term, he was called "Pocketful Ben." 6. H. yum (var.) 29. Soft cloth 7. fully grown used for 6, So, Amery an linings ruminant 32. Desert train 9. Depot 34. Places 10. Cooking vessel 37. Persian hook 11. Reverence money 17. Edges 39. Sluggishness 19. Tumble 47. Cozy places 21, Coronet 44. Iasso 22, Scarcer 46. Father 23, Dforning 48, Tear reception 49. Dusk 16. Fresh -water 50, Not in fish 52. Pro and - 26. Tales (oolloq.) 63, Turn hay Answer elsewhter un this page TRYING TO PALM HIMSELF OFF - Thorny character is a tenrec, a prolific animal from Mado' Eascar which feeds mostly on earthworms. An admirer holds it in the London Zoo. J PAGE 8 1lA' MEMORIAM IIEFFRON--In loving memory of a dear son and brother, "Teddy" lief- fron , who passedy away three years ago, April 13, His memory is a keepsake, With which we \vitt never part; Though God has him in his keeping, We still have him in our hearts. -Sadly missed by Mom, Dad, brothers and sitsers. 09-1p. I !. BENEFIT DANCE Sponsored by the Blyth Legionnaires hockey Team. FOR ALBERT SMYTIIE who was injured in a hockey game this season IN THE BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL FRIDAY, APRIL Lith music by JIi%I PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA Lunch Counter Those wishing to donate, may do so at the Superior Food Store, Standard Office, or Elliott Insurance Agency. .I I.1 11 0 KELLOG'S SPECIAL K CEREAL 6 and one-half oz. pkg. 25c HEINZ COOKED SPAGHETTI 2 • 15 oz. tins 31c LIPTON'S ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS pkg. of 60 73c AYLMER PEACHES, choice halves 2 • 15 oz. tins 39c AYLMER TOMATO CATSUP 2 - 11 oz. bottles 35c AYLMER BOSTON BROWN BEANS 2 15 oz. tins 33c AYLMER CHOICE PEAS .0..4 ...N... ••• oI I LMY... I 'uM gib III THE BLYTH STANDARD 1 r•I. ... `r_'�..� ...�✓I.iiW�1'Ll��i 1 AUBURN NEWS aliss Margaret R. Jackson visited in Toronto last week with her friend, Mrs. C. 1) -bie. Mss. Ted Mills spent a few days at her hone last week. She has Leen in Lcndcn with their son, .line, \vho is a patient in Victoria hospital. Miss Ella Wagner, R.N., of Wayne, Mich., spent a few days last week with relative; here. Airs. Alargaret Arthur is visiting at St. 'Phomas, with her dau htLt, Mrs. Bob Drtvis, Alr. Davis and family. Sherrill' and Alrs. harry Sturdy, Miss Betty Sturdy, 11.N„ Mrs, Edith Sturdy, Airs, Elir.aueth hill and Miss Sadie Carter, of Goderieh, visited with Air. and Airs. Robert J. Phillips last Friday ev:ning. A[►•s. \Villian Riddell returned to La Riviere last week after spending the winter months visiting relatives. Air. Riddell left for home a couple of weeks ago. Mr. George Raithby returned home on Sunday after undergoing surgery on his cye recently. Mrs. Florence Ashman, of Detroit, is! visiting with her sister, Mrs, Mary Deer. Mr. David Hamilton is visiting w:th l his daughter, Mrs. Harvey Andrews, rod .lir. Andrews, at Cromarty. ,r. and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell, Ma1'y and Diane, visited last Sunday _ with their daughter, Mrs. Louis Blake, AIr. Blake, Faye and Maryanne, at L'russc's. Faye and Maryanne, had spent their Easter vacation with their grandparents here. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craig and fam- imaidemidoimumimismor moos ):rotifer, Alfred Marry) of Clinton, and three sisters, Mrs.M4ay Seuburg, Den. vet', Colorado, Mrs. Wally (Gladys) Marchant, Milford, Connecticut, Mrs,' Kathaleen McDonald, Willowdale; four hrothers and one sister predeceased him, Rev, R. M. Sweeney conducted the funeral service and Mrs. Betty Wil- kin was soloist accompanied by her mother, Mrs. William J. Craig. Burial look place in Dungannon cemetery, Pallbearers being, Messrs. Roy Bur. chill, Dublin, Dynes Campbell, Luck. new, Rebut Fowler, Goderich, Thomas Johnston, Charles Scott and Arthur Youngblut, of Auburn. Friends were ! prc�ent from Owen Sound, Wasago Beach, Toronto, Mitchell, Dublin, Rip. fly, cf Ilderlon, visited last week -end wah his parents, Atr, and Mrs, William .l. C►�iig. Carolyn and Vera Jane re-, turned home after spending the Easter, vacation here. - Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mills and daugh- ters, cf Exeter, visited recently with At-. and Mrs, Jack Armstrong. • \1r. and Mrs. Ben Hamilton and Jo' n visited friends in the Coaksville ho:►;laal Last Sunday, who had been in. jured in a recent car accident. Recent visitors with Mr. and Airs. Bert Marsh and Miss Betty were Dr.; HelenMarsh of New York, Mr. and ' •14 4.1 1 • I. 11I WIN, . 111 1'. 11I.•. I.0 .1 11.0 A I. • '1 Airs. Howard Wallace and family, of ! "' Brampton.I i ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS Miss Gwen McDowell returned last ; week to her leaching staff on the i Orangeville Collegiate, after spending the Easter holidays with her parents, 1 Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell. , , Donald Fowler i Wednesday, April 12, 19Gi ley, Seaforth, St/Ingham,1 rtteefield, Gnderich and the surrounding district. The District Representative of the Horticultural Society, Mr, Charles R. I3ristow will make his first official vis- it to the local society on Monday, April 17 at 0 p.m. in the Orange Hall. He will show a sound fibra on the "Miracle of Bulbs" by John Ott with a special musical score written for the film. The Lucknow Society will be the guests and special musical numbers will be given by them. Following the program there will be a questionnaire period and ev-• ei'yone is welcome to attend this pro. gram sponsored by the local I-Iorticul= tural Society. Funeral services were held at the J. Keith Arthur Funeral IIome last Satur- day for the late Donald Fowler who passed away in Goderich hospital on April 5, after a day's illness there. IIe was in his 70th year and was the son of the late Edward Fowler and Isabel McNevin, -and was born on the Gth con- cession of West Wawanosh. In 1917 he married the former Laura Irwin who survives him, and Lived in the Dungan- non area for 30 years. They have lived in Auburn for the past 19 years and he served ras village clerk for several years, and attended Knox United Church. Surviving besides his sorrow- ing wife is their daughter, Mrs. Roy ; (Melba) Finnigan, also of Auburn, One II Ii: u , 1 h ! ., SPELL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP & SAVE _1 .1 1 1. • 2 - 15 oz. tins 33c AYLMER CORN. Golden Cream Style 2 - 20 oz, tins 41c AYLMER VEGETABLE SOUP 2 - 10 oz. tins 27c For Superior Service Phone 156 o- SION See Fairservice We Deliver 1..I„I.. Stewart's Red C3 White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver OUR MARKET IS A (IKINIXI WIN -A -DRYER STORE Your receive a ticket with every $2.00 'purchase. Listen to CKNX Radio and see it on CKNX TV Florida Grapefruit (pink) 10 for 49c Golden Ripe Bananas per lb. 14c Large Head Lettuce 2 heads 29c Ripe Tomatoes - 2 pkgs. 35c Rome Beauty Apples 6 qt. bask. 89c California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 79c Fresh Asparagus per Ib. 39c California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 79c Finest California Cauliflower per head 33c Giant Tide, with free map of Canada, 79c White Swan Toilet Tissue 8 rolls 89c York Pork and Beans, 20 oz. tins 2 for 29c Monarch and Sunbrite Margerine 2 lbs. 51c Javex Bleach 32 oz. bottle 23c Grade A Chickens per lb. 35c Grade A Turkeys, 6 - 7 lb. per lb. 49c Peameal Cottage Rolls per lb. 53c Vaunclair Beef Steakettes per lb. 59c Special Sliced Back Bacon per Ib. 59c _ Special Sliced Side Bacon per lb. 49c RED and WHITE BON"U S OF? ER r Plastic pails, assorted colours each 49c A. 1■ .. 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D. PHILP, Phm. B DRUGS, STJNDRIE:+ WALLPAPER - PRONE 20, I3LYTEI 11 . I . I 1 :, I I 4 I, 41141. .11.m 1.0E111 Y . Y 1.4 1.01..1114 •4 ;,441,11. .1 . 4...1 SIGNS OF SPRING Skipping Ropes, Bats and Balls, Roller Skates, Fishing Tackle, Lawn Rakes, Fresh Paint, Lawn Mbwers WE HAVE THEM VODIDEN'S HARDWARE (3 ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Call 71 Blyth, Ont. I u 1I 4 4. ..... t 11 IL .11 11.1 ,. .d 4 I. lI. 4.1111 , 1.• .ee .awsx/raMILI srMMEIv r 17w,t as+11►rg ►1ma111arllaw►n^ ars For Sale 1960 CHEV. Sedan _ 1960 PONTIAC Coach 1959 FORD Galaxie Sed. ' 1958 CONSUL Sedan _ 1956 CHEV. Sedan I; , 1956 PLYMOUTH Sedan 1,11 11..4 1955 FORD Hardtop 1955 DODGE 2 -1954 FORDS 1954 DODGE 1952 DODGE 1952 FORD Sed. Delivery Hamm's Garage (anadia-Iives''' : Investment New and°'y`"°°""° Secu rities 50,000 Township of North Grimsby County of Lincoln 5 three-quarter Debentures June 1, 1963 to 1975 6000 Village of Lakefield 5 three-quarter Debentures December 15, 1975 to 1979 Price 100.00 100.00 19,600 Town of Smith's Falls 101.25 6 Debentures, May 1, 1962 to 1965 50,000 City of Brandon 100.00 6 Debentures, April 1, 1967 to 1971 • 1000 Township of. Whitby Separate Sc1. ool Board100.00 a 6 one-quarter Debentures, May 1, 1980 21,000 Township of North Gwillimbury Separate School Board 100.00 6 one-quarter Debentures, May 15, 1974 to 1976. Bell Eouin!ock & Company Limited 44 King Street 7 A, Toronto, Ont. Local Agent: GEORGE ;LOAN, Blyth, Ont. ,11L1=4;• ==•' .ls-moo.......... 11a.r...:....a.`u:_1...a: s.+. � .+v,.G:i '41:�•r:iTi 4.=`11 ,4!•W .►.wJ ,-..."11\'1 ,''a., i3•�'ij�i„ 7 1 .1 T 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 !of a Iump 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 prcelht 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 not 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. -