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The Blyth Standard, 1961-07-05, Page 1
THE B STANDARD' VOLUME 74 - NO. 20 Authorized as second class mail, BLYTII, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JULY 5, 1961 Post Office Department, Ottawa. Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. PERSONAL INTEREST BANK NITE TOTAL $30.03 THIS Over One Hundred Relations Gather Mr, and Mrs. s Vipond and Miss SATURDAY N1GI1T Blyth Public CChristin, of near Englehart, and Mrs. Teta) Eank Nile prize money this D. slitter and Scott, of Kitchener, via- Saturday night will am.;unt to $.10.00 For Wightman Family Re.Union trod on 'Tuesday with Mr, Vipo 's with the extra five dollars being added auct, Mrs. E. W. \li}:and, at the hone .to the jackpot prize, so that the, bi? ■ of ls. 1\y L, erty is an, winner will reve $1S.I0. The othList The hcme cf Mr. and Mrs. Edgar' WEDDINGS 11rs. Roy Doherty is a patient in V1ic• prizes will remain the same: ode for Wightman, of Belgrave, was the scene toria Hospital, London, We wish trier $5 00; three for $2.00; and tour for cf an interesting family gathering en RADFORD—TREBLE a speedy recovery. i $1.00• Sunday, July cul, when descendants Mr and Mrs. Norman Radford,<.or Last Week's Winners MANY ATTEND HURON AUXILLIARY H—honours 75 percent or Netter; C. of the late James Wightman met for Benuniller United Church, decorated4;1 ANNIVERSARY TEA P.—conditional pass. with baskets cf peonies, ferns and can. Lynden, called en Mr. and Mrs. Vial- , 0 0 Miley Higgins. a reunion. ler Cook, cn Monday, $5.00—Rose Marie Cam~.:ell. More than 2 0 guests attended the Promoted To Gracie 1 Over ane hundred relatives were pres- delabra with lighted tapers, was the Weekend visitorsnwith Mr. and Mrs. $2.00—Mrs. Jinn 1',IaGall, Emma ent from Auburn, Bluevale, Blyth, scene on Saturday, July 1, of the wed:ecoid anniversary tea of the Huron Byron Bell, Connie Bowes, Johnny Britton, Brucefield Gcderich, Listowel, -lung el Dorene Georgina Trealo and Orval McGowan and Kenneth were: Gregory, Linda Hamm. aunty Auxilliary et the Ccuaty Home Erc•wn, Billie Burkholder, Paul Cum- Lucan Lucknew, Wingham, Orillia, Janus Melville Radford, The double Mr. and Mrs. Hilliard McGowan, 01 $1,00—Donley Johnston, Dnrct^ t llurnnvie,v, Wednesday alternocn minas, Roger Garniss, Arthur Heffron, g Oakville, Mrs. Wm. Skelton, Mr. and Johnston, Ilarcld Phillips, Mrs. Deflate June 2ath. Deborah Hicks, Sharon Ivor, Brian Stanley Welland, Saginaw, Mich., and La Riw ring ceremony was performed by Hr.v •S :elton, Mrs. Ewart Youn', . Irs. Ilarve y Johnston, matron of Johnston, Teresa van Lammeren, Shar- e tanley Moote, 'Ihe bride is the laugh- :,lrs. Donald . kg b y fere, Manitoba, as well as frons the stir ter Ie At. and Mrs. William 'Treble, Powe and granddaughter, Miss Diane Iuronvie++', and Mrs Fred Thompson, on Mason, Wayne McClinchey, Billies rounding community. Ibwe, all o1 London. r. Mr. and Mrs. McKellar attended Carlow, and the groom the son cf Mr. Mrs., John Gummow and daughtea`rs, lIULLRTT TOWNSHIP DRAIN resiue:a of the Auxshere received McDougall, aDvid Riehl, Marcel Stasi - Mr. at.rl Mrs. Gordon Radford, Londeahoro, r ae pests who were ushered to the ter elman, Donald Stewart, David Street, Pram Saginaw, as did Miss Eva Bight Given in marriage by her father, thr! of Den Mills, are spending this,week CONTRACTS LET 00111 by some of the residents while Kevin Tasker, Barry Young, Teddy man and Mr Clarence Wightman bride were a floor length gown cf Swiss with her parents, Mr. and Airs. J .B. The Township cf Iiullell has l,t the :hers were guides on a conducted tour Whitehouse. from La Riviere, the latter two winWatson. tiring the prize for corning the farthest, embroidery and tulle over taffeta, The contracts for two nriniciaal drains, Lc the tir,me, prearranged by Mr. and Mrs. abel Stackhouse of Brucefield bodice was styled with lone lily point Mrs. Lorne Dale, AIr, James Sims. be completed in the township this year. It's. ,Johnston which was much enjoy- was njoy Promoted To Grade 2 of Seatorth, Mr. Art Sims, of 'Toronto, was the oldest member present and sleeves scalloped sabrina neckline. were Blyth visitors on Mondayevenin The tender of George Radford Con :d by the guess' Lyle Adams (H), Cathy Carter (Ha n 1he bouffant skirt was accented with Pearl struction Ltd , Blyth, for $2,150 wa Baskets of June stovers were eweny Marilyn Galbraith (H), Gary Germar. Kathy l Heisler cf Orillia, was the young. Air,. Edythe Sturgeon and Miss l earl T Municipal I vhere, making a pleasing setting, for H , Kathie Galbraith Kechnie !H), Murray Man - ford est while Mr. and Mrs. Kennet's Craw a tont and back overskirt of swiss Gilley returned home on Tuesday a et accepted for the Daer Municipal D.aitl n cf Wingham, were the most re en:'arci;!ey and sweat to a brush speeding the last two weeks in Hespet er Frank Kistner, Dublin, was SICC2S1 :ie lc;ely apiroh:ted tea table, whice y married, train. A crown of pearls held a lace ththeir sister, Mrs. Maude McVittie, ful in his bid for the Bryant Municipa gas covered with a hand crocheted lace nine (►, Wayne Margaret (11), Ruth ep (11), (H) , Margaret Ann van Gen - 'The late James and' Mrs, Wightman edged veil. She wore a necklet of cul Drain at a price cf $1,6':0, anquet cl�.h, the wcrk of a forme: ,cp (IL), Steven Walsh (lJ,, Boa and son, Bill, who motored them back, and five of their ten cailch•en emigrate .ured reads with matching earrings, 1'revious to that they were guests al The awarding of these contracs tool. natron, Lhs. Jacol;s, and presented by •hitehouse (H), a ifs of the groom. airs. feat•! Egan, in Toronto, while place at the regular meeting of tare ter to Huronview. The table was c_n Pass: Sheila Blake, Jimmy Fowler, ed from IVccler, England, to Lennox g a.and Addington Ceu ty in Ontario 'the maid of honor was Miss Patricia .intending the Rebekah Assembly. Township Council in the Communits i red by a low silver bowl of rases Jimmy Johnston, Scott Kennedy, Barb frcnl whence they came h East \Vow alelaenr.a, 'Toronto, cousin of the bride i',lrs. Robert Meetly returned home Hall, I.endcsaoro, on July 4111, dikes with candles in siker holders std Riehl, Gerald Riley, Janette Ril- ancsh in 1865. Mr. Wightman we( and "Hiss Jane Treble, sister of the from Dublin, Ireland, on Thursdayat- Other business dealt with was he she tea regal ccnvenor was Mrs. W. C T Sennett, Clinton, ay, MorleyShepherd, huried in 1869 in the old Blyth ceme• 'ride, acted as bridesmaid, They were ter visiting her mother, Mrs, Gibb, raising of fire protection 0:1 the Cam Pouring—Mrs. Carroll, tery on Dinsley Street, 'I'I1ose present identically gowned in orchid taffeta and and other members of her family, for !tt!'ItyHall ij09 t Jcoverage set.oto rem � 0 00(i Ips. James 1 for the orfirst alnati Mrs Promoted To Grade 3 on Sunday were descendants of three 'vire matching head-dresses of rrchi) the past three months. She was ac. previous , . ,4 of his sons: Henry, James and Rich. flowers, and carried baskets of white companied home by her niece, Misr 'with the Iln',rick Mutual Insurance Co. George Mann, who were followed by Helen Adam, !H,; Mary L. Chalmers .Nesta alums with orchid tulle..Joseph Shaddick, RR, 1, l:cndes::oro Ira. Ivan Forsythe, .Its. William Man ard. June Craig, who has secured a Nisi- 7,, Shan, airs ,soba Hanna, IVin;ham 111; Georgina Garniss; Deborah Geo -As it was nine years since as many Arnnid Riley, Clinton, was groom, agent. ncl Mrs. Percy cy graham. Assisting n ' y g y man, and the. ushers were, John Rad- tion in London, Ontario, 3 , g ' .tan H1; Carolyn Haggitt; Florence cf the clan had been together, a ver ford,Londesboro, ushers e, then Rata til George 1). Leith, of Listowel :erwing were Ates. George Mann, airs `Jessels tiU; Joan Howatt (111; ,tilar- ha}:py afternoon was spent in rrnevvwas a Myth visitor on Friday, canine, '_. G. Winter, Mrs. Hd. Porter, ^,Its ;aret Howson (II); Mary Howson (Hr: ing old friendships and in making nee and Donald Treble, Carlow, twin broth- in at the Standard office to renew his (BIRTHSg °r of the bride Miss Elliott, Miss PatriciaFtriciHarland ones Lawrie (Inn; Cameron Manning ones, subscription. d Mrs. MurrayMills,of Brant. WATSON—In Clinton Public Ho pita' 'till Janet McMillan. (fie; Archie Mason (H►; Grace Mc - Mrs, Noma Hazlett, soloist, sangylinche (H); Patricia McClinchey; Bless This House" and "0 Perfect on Saturday, July 1, 1?61, to ?.Ir. and 'J he Mitchell kitchen whoonvenar was MORRIS TOWNSHIP COUNCII. Love", accompanied by Airs. Bense►( ford,a(►�EarlhlillsnoflWalton, were ills, of tguest� Mrs. Erltivard Watson, the gift of a 'AIrs. Mit;heVJ olc,�dam,�was assist Ronald 11MeLao d; n (11); Ji Rile' Medd; Straughan, rson, a brcthfr for John, Kim and ed by Mrs. filet. Edith cd, Airs. Ches y y - A special meeting of the Morris Town. of Mr, and Mrs. Walter Butte!' 'at er Higgins, Mrs. Edith Logan. pond Riley; Ann Shaw; Linda St.adel• p i1)0 reception was held at Tiger Dun- Bogies' Beach during the weekend. Jane.,;mann rH); Susan Street (ll); Bill ship Council was held nn June 26, to lop Inn, , , HALL -1n Clinton Public lfospit,al on its. Keith Webster was saleslady a:y Mr. and Mrs, Alba t Walsh acccm the watt. tables which was the work c' Young IT H. deal with amended By -Laws for the For her wedding trip to the !Vest mas Tuesday, Jul;; 4, 1961, to Mr. and purpose of removing certain properties coast the bride chose an acqua dress Taylor, of llelsell,her llattended theoGot• Mrs Robert Hall (nee Elizabeth the residents of Hurcnview, and fount' -=Te s, Carroll, Mrs. Holland from the Morris 'Township School Area with matching duster and white acces• Brawls) the gift cf a daughter. Promoted to Grade 4 and forming a new School Area in and ;oriel, and a corsage of den wedding anniversary of their lis airs Gerdy Manning was in charge pink roses. ter and brother-in-law, Rev and Mrs. _ ;f the guest hook, and so the second Barbara Bell; Maxine Bowes (B': around Walton, Will Taylor, of Dorchester, Wednesday 1nniverary cf Huron County Ladice Jichard Chalmers; Robert Cook; Lynn Moved by Ross Smith, seconded by Walter Shortreed, that By -Law No. 7. June 28th. BUS TO LEAVE AT 7 A.M. \tc;iliary to IJurenview was a decide( lliott (11); Beverley Fowler (H); 1967 as amended be given the 1st daft ROLSTON—DAER Mrs, V. J. Lyons, R.N., or Toronto, ?access.g spent the weekend with her father, Mr. 1RickyGerman; Evelyn Haggitt; Bren- 2nd readings.' Carried.The Myth Women's institute aur g ' Bouquets of yellow and white shasta Watson, to be held Friday, to Ni a Itfaselweod (I{); Bruce Howson (11); `Moved by 1`; m. Elston, seconded by � q , W. N. Mtin Wingham hosipl al, tripJuly 7,�auglas McVittie (H) ; Nancy Stewart Mins and blue delphinium decorated also with Ann Jeanette and Paul of agra On The Jake and other point: W.A.GROUP 2 MEETING .James Mair, that By -Law No. 7, 1961, H); Ricky Taman (C.P.); Dale Tas- as amended he approved as read the Knox Presbyterian Church. Auburn, on Blyth, vwill leave the I',Iemoial IJall promptly (;reap 2 cf the 1\'omen's Asso:iatio! :er (H ; George Whitehouse. 3rd time and finally passed Carried, Saturday, July 1st, at 3.00 p.m. for a Mr. and Mrs, Lorne - re Scrinn eour at 7 a.m. Everyone take a hex lunch g K stet at the hcme of Mrs. S. Chellee —Mrs. Bateman, Mrs. 1{olland. By -Law No, 7, 1961 is a by-law to pretty wedding when Shirley Marie turned from a 10 clay visit with their on Wednesday, June 21, with Mrs. E remove certain properties from the Daer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy daughters, Mrs. R. W, Baxter, and Mr, Walsh presiding, Promoted to Grade 5 Morris Township School Area, Deer, Ij.li: t, rll!b\nn, became the I axler, Chatham, Mrs, Jo.e _Alaska• ' CELEBRATED 30111 WEDDING The meeting opened with the Lord': Warren Cook (I{); Patsy Dougherty; bride of Iiarold Robert-ftolsten, sen of Mr. Marks, Carole, Brian and Brenda, ANNIVERSARY Prayer. Mrs. Logan read the seri turf , Airvel by Walter Shartreed, second air, and Mrs, Grant Rolston, 645 Dttt a Betsy Elliott (H); Vicky Lou finch ed by Ross Smith that By -Law No. 8, Windsor, and their grandson, Frank lesson and Mrs. Potts gave the Lessor H); Verna Hesseln'ood; Delbert Hol - 1961 as mended be given the 1st and ferin Ave., London. Rev, D. J. Lane, Jr., and family, Detroit. They were Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Wightman cele Thoughts and led in prayer. Minutes 01 2nd readings. Carried. D D., o.ftciated• accompanied home by Mrs. Marks, (,rated their SOth wedding anniversarye land; Connie Howatt (H); Sandy Ke- ine he weddin music was played by 1c r al i meeting bywveand the hnie; Bonnie Laidlaw SID; Connie 'Moved by James ?Mair, seconded by � g 1 y ' Brian, and bliss Beverley Cowling. on July •nth, In honour of this oc�a• real call answered by eleven members , \. by that 1,T aw No. 8, by Mrs. Fred Lasenby, London, who chose Mr. and Mrs. Jinn Chalmers and sion there was a family gathering at [he group will be in charge c` the W.A aialaw (H); Mary McClinchey (H�. as amended be approved as read the The Wedding Prayer" and The Brid daughter, Christine, of Clifford, visited their home in Blyth on Saturday, July meeting in the church June 27, all 3onnie McVittie; Brian McNeil (11); 3rd time and finally passed. Carried, al March." She also accompanied the on 'Tuesday with their parents, Mr. and 1st. catered to the Lions Club on June 22 Terence Riehl (H); Donna Mae Riley By -Law No, 8, 1961 is ea by-law to soloist, Miss Judy Clinton, Lambeth; Mrs. Robert Chalmers, and family. hlrs. 1i'ighlman is the fouler Mary Sick calls and the treasurer's report ID; Joyce Riley; Barbara Shephera who sang ' 0 Perfect Love"and Walk Mr. Donald Brown, of Vancouver Vipond, daughter of Mrs. E. W. Y i were given. 'Ihe group will hold meet l{); Emma vHazel tfi). form a new Township School Area in Hand in Hand," during the ceremony. Island, B.C., is visiting his parentt, pond and the late Mr Vipond, of Ate ings in July and August. The July meet—Mrs, Hazel Bateman. and around the Hamlet of Walton. Given in marriage by her father, the Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Brown, and family. wood. Mr, Wightman is the son of ing to be held at Mrs. LlcCalhhn's 0 Promoted To Grade 6 The meeting adjourned on mction of bride wore a floor -length gown of ensSusan , YWm. , 'Ross Smith and William Elston. Miss Wightman has secured e the late Mr. and Mrs. Wightman July 12th. Mrs. Walsh and Mrs. Chet Stewart Procter,• broidered nylon organza over taffeta• position in the Wingham Hospital for of East Wawanosh, leew each had a contest, John Adam; Leland Adams (H,; Gen. Alantin, The filled bodice was fashioned with the summer holidays. They wet•e married at the home of Reeve. Clerk, y Mrs. Chellew vv ea thanked for the ruddy Bell; Wilfred Button; Patsy short shirred sleeves and a scoop neck- Mr. and Mrs. George Underwood and the pride, near Atwood, by the late. use of her hcme and the meeting dos :lliott. (Iii; Gordon Haggitt; Dale line trimmed with an embroidered lace family, of Wingham, Mr. and Airs. Net- Rev. J. B. Townsend and resided 01 ,d with the Mizpah Benediction. Lunch :ennedy (H); Peter Martyrs (H); Shirt- S.S. 10, EAST WAWANOSII PICNIC daisy motif with matching white nylon son Lear, of Londesboro, Mr. and Mrs. the 101h of East 1\'ananosh until 1113V,vas served. :y McCullough (If); Cheryl Ann Me organza wristlets. Her elbow -length Harry Lear and family, Mr. and Mrs. ing to Blyth six years ago this summer Tall ti); Kenneth McVittie (H); Jayne The pupils of S.S. No 10, East Waw- veil cf pure silk French illusion was Jim Scott Jr. and family, Misses Deb• They have three daughters, Mrs. S Tallard (H): Mervin Riehl (H); John anosh and their teacher, Mrs. Aubrey held by a crown of seed pearls. She bie and Geri Lynn Bell, of Kingston. R. (Eleanor) Heisler, of Orillia; Mrs. WHITECHURCII RECEPTION HELD :tewart (H); Brenda Shaw (H). Toll, held a picnic on the school carried a cascade of deep pink roses, were Sunday visitors with Mte nd Mrs Kenneth (Jean) Crawford, of Wing FOR NEWL'1'-WED, Mrs L. M. Hall, grounds last Tuesday, June 2701. white feathered carnations, stephan• Jim Scctt Sr. and Ken. ham, and Susan at home, On Friday, June 16th, a public re. Several parents and friends gathered otis and ivy. Alessrs, Larry Walsh and Douglas Those present on Saturdaywere: ception was held at the W'hitechurct Promoted To Grade 7 for the event. A ball game was play- Mrs. Donald Dewar, Atwood, sister Whitmore attended the wedding of Ed Mrs. E. W Vipcnd, Mr. and Mrs ccnununity hall for Mr. andMrs. Ron Janet Adam; Bobby Bell lH) Alan ed by the meg, and a program of mus- cf the bride, was the matron of honor, Rock and Pamela Shepherd, of Wind- John Irvine, Jimmy and Betty, Mr old Jamieson (nee Margaret McGowan) Carter (H); Allen Howes (H); Bever - wasnumbers, presented by the pupils. swearing a less of Elizabeth blue n• sor, on Saturday and spent the week pawl Clark, of Atwood, Air, Jack Vi -newly-weds. Boyd's Orchestra, Luck• ley Jewitt (ID; Gail Johnston (�11); was enjoyed. The festivities were fol -on tricot over silk taffeta. The bodice end with Mr and Mrs. Clifford Walsh; pond, Ucnald and l;lizabeth, of Mit new, provided the music for deicing• Stephen Kechnie (H); Doreen Riley lowed with a barbecue and coffee. was berbandt andr feattreil ed over aascoopshirred ueckline Layton, Warren and liathy, of Sarnia. shell, Bh. and Mrs. S. R. Heisler, Mark Following, the lunch hour arr. and (inn; Sharon Riley (H); Dianne Shop --and Kathy, of Orillia, Mr. and Mrs Mrs, Jamieson were called to the plat herd 'H); James Webster. ___..._ and short shirred sleeves. She carried Kenneth C'ravvford, of 1\'ingham, Mr, form and Mr. George Webster present - spending E. W Vipond, of Atwood, is a cascade of white shasta mums, blue , ,i Dlrs. L, M. Hall, spending a couple of weeks with her LEAK - LYON RE -UNION and airs. Donald Young and family. eft the collate with a gift of money daughter, Mrs, Leslie 1Vightman, and cornflowers and ivy. of Blyth. from the friends and neighbours Mr. Promoted To Grade 8 family. A[iss Marilyn Deter, sister of the The Lear -Lyon tee ration was held Ernest ,Snowden read the following ad. bride, was bridesmaid, wearing a at the Londesboro Community Hall, on ,tress: Campbell, Danny (IJ); Elliott, Bruce chess the same as the matron of hon. Saturday, June 24th, with 80 personsFIREMEN LEARN RESCUE 11ETI(OD Dear Ronald and Blargaret: (1I); Fairservice, Maralyn; Finery, AMONG TIM CllURCHESma and carried a similar bouquet. ' present, We are always glad %vhen a new Richard (C.P.); Fowler, Vikki; Gib - The groom was attended by Mr. Jere The early part of the afternoon was Last Thursday evening Mr. Andy household is set up in the community bons, Jim; van Lamasery, Gertie (H); Sunday, July 9, 1961. ' ry Mathers, Woodstock, friend of ,the spent renewing old acquaintances. Anderson from the Ontario Fire Mar. and when the couple are newly-weds it McCullought, Margaret (H); Riley, ST, ANDREWS' PRESBYTERIAN groom, and the ushers }vere Mr, Got The following spurts were in charge shell's Office, Guelph, attended a prac is both thrilling and romat'tic. Thr Tons (H); Warwick, Ruth. CHURCH- don Daer, R.R. 1, Aulurn, and 11h', AL of Mr. and Mrs. Emmerson Hesk and tine of the Blyth Fire Department and country in particular needs homes for Ronald S. Higgins. Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., D,D., Minister. rill Uaer, Gederich, brothers of the Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gaunt: conduced a demonstt•aian on evacuate home is the unit of our civilization, and 1:15 p.m,—Church Service and Sunday bride• School. • For a reception which followed in the Chilch•ens race, 4 years and under. ing persons from a burning building. the farmer has an int1 wrlant role to Promoted To Grade 9 The he demonstration was carried out play in our national economy. Merger- Cartwright, Keith (11); Cook, Betty church parlours, the bride's mother Peter Case and Joan Kerslake; girls 5-7 t HU received the guests wearing a sheath �by'ce Kerslake, Debbie Davey; boys from a second storey window of the et, we welcome you to our community Jean (H); Elliott, Grant (H); Gowing, ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA dress of blue and while. nylon tricot, •' 7, Douglas Case, Bobby Case; girls, focal telephone office, and members o and trust you may find us good neigh Glenna (H); Gregory, Emma; Heffron, • Rev. Robert F. Measly, Rector. thatching jacket, while and pink acces• 8'10, Elaine Roberton, Katherine Lynn; the local brigade were )nwered to the acurs and friends. To Ronald we have 'lion; van Lammne•en, Josephine (H); 6th Sunday after Trinity curies and a pick ruse corsage, She boys 8-10, Douglas Crich, Donald Ker ground tint to a role with the use of a special sword of advice at this time: !sadist, terry (111; Martin, John (11); Trinity Church, Blyth, was assisted by the groom's mother slake; young ladies, Joan Sinclair; the firemen's rescue hitch, When a young and handsome farmer B{et."inchey, George; Medd, David (H); 12,15—Aerial, r young men, Ken Gaunt; most stately From the city brings his bride, Riehl, Melvin; Scrimgeour, Donald St, Mark's, Auburn, who wore a dress of green and while Mrs. L. Hesk and Frank Rio And he chooses that the country (H►, n Ion tricot, white accessories, and a couple,, , „ Is the place where they reside, —Ronald S. Higgins. 8 p.m.—Evening Prayer, y bertou; orange race, Nelson Lear; ANNUAL DECORATION SER.ICEt.t; Trinity Church, Belgrave, corsage of yellow roses. AT Bh1"Ill UNION Ci'M!;'I-ERs' He must early be reminded • The .sial guests were served by fashion show, Bob Kerslake and Eileen 10.45 a,m.-4Iatins. friends of the bride, Mrs Howard Tait, \\'eher; hitting bag on tine, Katherine That the tasks upon the farm 12.00 o'clock— Sunday School. lits, Paul Hutchins, eDlrs. James Carl. Lyon; youngest present, Steven Craw- 'l'Ite annual Decoration Service was Can be trade so ?Heti lighter, W. A. MEETING r Cart- wright, Miss Norma Daer fo'd, held at the Blyth Union Cemetery nit And the hours full of charm Y THE UNITED CHURCH Sunday, .)toe 25th, in charge of the I! he hears in mind, it's different The regular meeting of the Blytit OF CANADA For a wedding trip to the Pastern Following the spots ail sat down to United Church W A. was held in the .States, the bride donned a brown linen a bountiful lunch served by the lunch Blyth Legion Branch No. 420. Rev, R For his bride to dress a bird basement of the church, Tuesday at Blyth Ontario, sheath with beige lace midriff inset.- committee, Mr, and Mrs John Riley AIeiilly, assisted by Rev, E. McL.agat, IVith it's feathers all upon it, 2.30 and opened Rev. R. Evan McLagan - Minister tion, matching white and beige. acces• and At•. and Mrs,. Ernest Stevens, were in charge of the service. WheThat she she's thinking 111 ng of a in the ocity . n d with the theme hymn Miss Margaret Jackson Director sones and a salmon corsage of rues• irollnvving are the officers tui next The offering amounted to $26.00, and and all repeated the prayer. of Music. On their return they will reside near year: President Belt Lyon; vice resi the exlense�c were $10 Ott, the balance Fowls were shote "F..viacerated The secretary's report was read and 9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church School, Byron. Guests were present from dent, L!rnest Stevens; secretary trews $16,00 was turned over to Mr. George New before this bird is readied the correslondence. It was decided 11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship. Clawson, Michigan, Windsor, Lydon. iter, Lni Lorne Honking; Lnmch Commit Sloan for the Cemetery Board. Meals can often be belated, not to have the meetings during July "Up a 'Tree." Lone it takes the leas to gather and August, A bazaar' k to he held at Kitchener, Mitchell, Brunner, Blyth, tee, Mr. and Mrs. J{arry Durgin, Mr. From the vines where they are sunning, a later dale. The ladies again offered Be'. Duncan McTavish, of London. Gederictt, C'ah•n, Atwood and Zurich, aed Mrs, Amos Osbaldeston, Mr and + e 6 to hells with lunch for the children of Guest Preacher during July‘rd before they're shelled and cooking Mrs. MurrayBlLyon; Sports Committee. Mr. and Mrs Arnold Berthot and Oh how fast the clock is running! Vacation School in August. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Roberton, Mr. and Sandra are visiting vwith relatives in Fut with kind co o~orating Meeting closed with prayer by Rev. S CIIUl1CII OF GOD CONGRATULATIONS Mrs. Jack Sinclair. Alberta. Mr. Larry Walsh and Dnn trilby shrill entr',ine winch praise E. McLagan. Lunch was served by 114cCnhnerl Sheet, Blyth. ' Scrimgeour are in charge of the Rut For this gallant iitllF lady group 2. John Dormer, Pastor Hearty congratulations to Mrs. G. cher Shon. twho girls learn mfr country ways, Phone 185 0, Bradley of Meaford, who will cele-11'OMEN'S SOFTBALL PRACTICE Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walsh and Steven Gladly we congratulate you 10.30 a.m,—Sunday School, brate her birthday on July 6!11, spent the holiday weekend in Northern And give weleeme to your wife, HOME FROM W'INGHAM HOSPITAL 11.30 a,m.—Morning Worship. Many happy returns to William Hugh The Women Softball Team will hold Orderly. Ben brought home four very 1VI;hes with cur gifts we ire you Mrs. Mary Taylor returned home last 7.30 p.m.—Evening Service. Cunning, son of Ah•, and Mrs. Hugh a practice at the Blyth Public School beautiful lake trout. Far a long and happy life. Wednesday from Wingham Hospital 8.00 ppm,—Wed., Prayer Service. Curling, of London, who celebrated his every Tuesday night at. 7:30. Anyone Mr. Ronald Walsh spent. the ween• -1 Signed on behalf of the community, were she had been a patient for seven 8.00 p.m; Friday, Youth Fellowship. 11th birthday on July 41h, Wishing to play is requested to attend. end at Grand Bend. L - . . Ernest Snowden, George !Webster. ',veeks, Britain Has Its Growing Pains Too Britain's population not only is on the increase but on the move, according to the 1961 census fig- ures, Some areas, such as the coal mining and textile ut eas of the north and west, are losing Inhabitants. But the suburban areas around the big cites now are filling up and expanding, en- croaching ever farther into the country. Significantly, the major tiritish eities are not themselves growing. 'the population of Greater Lon- don now is 8,172,000, a drop of 176,000 in the past 10 years Bir. mingham and Manchester are down proportionately. It is the "dormitory" residential o ► e a s around these major urbar centers that are growing so impressively. Indeed, so many peuple ap- pear to have flocked to the Lon- don area and the south u•' Eng- land that some humorists foresee tne British Isles soon overbalanc- ed with the south getting its toes wet, and the north of Scotland sticking up out of the Atlantic, high and dry. The suburban sprawl, accord- ing to a preliminary report on the head -count of last April, is bring- ing all manner of problems in its trail. It is placing a vast strain On the public transportattc,n sys- tem — the buses and t.nder- ;,rc,und railways that muse con- vey so ninny workers from their homes in the suburbs to tl.e city WIG back each day, Shim -haul • railway service also is under pressure, as commuters who once gioriccl in a compartment, or at least a seat to themselve', now find themselves standing In the aisles. ::: ;• v;-1-, 1 . net h' a ng values are soaring around the cities, roads and parking lots are becoming choked with cummut- ers' cars, school and other public facilities are overcrowded, and the countryside is rapidly disap- pearing from view — except where it is protected by green- belt regulations. In the meantime the seven largest British cities find them- aelves losing their norma; resi- dential areas, losing their popu- lation, and instead becoming only a tremendous commercial complex which is harder and harder for the would -he custo- mer, or worker, to reach These British islands are not- ably small In area, and with an Increase of population of 2,500,000 ille the past decade, the areas that Slned are beginning to feel as ough the "standing room only" gn should be hung out, whereas :k declining areas feet more Resettle and neglected, writes enry S. Hayward in the Chris- tian Science Monitor. Where did the population come from? About 300,000 immigrants ¶ re absorbed last year alone, mainly from Ireland, Europe, and the West Indies. This year, the incoming West Indian contingent may be trebled. Although 108,000 persons emi- grated from the United Kingdom 1r the past year, since 1954 55 im- migration has steadily exceeded emigration. In fact, Britain at present is experiencing the great- est influx of new residents since European refugees fled here be- fore and during World War II. Over the decade an estimated 225,000 immigrants from over - LOSER'S HIDEOUT? — Former Vice President Richard M. Nixon and his family will live in this furnished home until their own home is constructed. seas settled down in England and Wales alone, which figure is just under 10 per cent of the total population increase. Why do so many immigrants still come to these increasingly c.vercrowded islands? England and Wales have a population den- sity of 790 per square male ex- ceeded in Europe only by the Netherlands. T h e comparable density figure for the United States is 49. They come, apparently, for the social benefits of the British wel- fare state, its "free" national health program of medical care (the payments for which are in the form of taxes rather than fees), full employment, good wages, better opportunities ,and high living standards, They come despite housing shortages and general lack of elbowroom. Meanwhile, there still are more wo►nen than men among Britain's nearly 53,000,000 inhabitants. It has been that way since the cen- sus began 160 years ago. In the past 10 years, moreover, Scot- land's population has increased by 82,000, and is now over 5,178,- 000, the highest recorded. The increase should have been 337,000; but 255,000 Scots migrat- ed, half overseas, half to other portions of the U.K. Then, too, the coastal towns are becoming larger, which prob- ably testifies to the influence of the motorcar and the ability of more people to retire. As usual, the planners are not satisfied with the way all these Britons are drifting around and finally coming to rest in the µToni places, They want more planning policy — for industry, roads, new towns, revival of city centres. They want to reverse the trend from depopulated areas to those already overcrowded. 'Yet, overcrowded or not, it Is clear that more people than ever still like it here! Q. What can I do about,.the edges of books that have be- come badly soiled? A. You can clean them by using fine sandpaper fitted around a curved sanding block, Use a block which has approxi- mately the same curvature as the book edges. Sand lightly, using just enough pressure to remove the stained portion of the paper, String -on -Finger Things To Do Before Vacation Disconnect elle trio applb leek all doors and 'windows'antes, avoid short emu, Mk pollee to check houm danger, home lett tt completely burglars. Slave post orrice hold mai! 1s as to until your return home. Arrange 10 have Someone ell( stop milk delivery by piton - (awn and water garden big dairy; don't put note planta. In bottle. TABLE TALKS oian¢Andeews. When the weather is hot, try a chilled, frosty bowl of cold soup, and you'll be surprised at what a good start It is for a hot - day dinner! Cold soup means to many people simply vichyssoise (in case you've ever had trouble, it's pronounced vee-chee- swahhz) a cold, creamed soup made, among other things, of potatoes and leeks with a chick- en broth base. This soup, tradition says, was invented for Louis XIV of France and, like so many fa- mous dishes, was invented acci- dentally. Louis, always afraid of what his chefs were serving him, had an official taster. By the time food was brought from the kitchen down long corridors and the tasting ceremony was performed, food was cold, To avoid censure for this, vichy- ssoise was made even colder and served to the king as a spe- cial delicacy, even though it was actually of peasant origin. This cold soup now has many versions, and has become an international dish. Many chefs are proud of their vichyssoise and will give the recipe when asked for one of their 'favour- ites. At the Arizona Inn in Tuc- son, the chef told me that he used a little bit of apple as an ingredient because, "vichyssoise should be slightly sweet," he said. ''Ada a very little nut- meg and mace also, Apples should be peeled and chopped before being added to the chicken base." This chef used 2 parts coffee cream to 1 part of strained stock -- but unless your ,stock is especially rich, this pro- portion would thin it too much as to taste, writes Eleanor Rich- ey Johnston in the Christian Science Monitor. 4 * Next to vichyssoise, probably the most 'popular cold soup is jellied consomme or bouillon, If this is made in your kitchen, use any good recipe for beef soup stock. This takes several hours of cooking before adding the vegetables — onions, car- rots, turnips, garlic, parsnip, bay leaves, leeks, parsley, ete. Then the stock must be cooked again for at least an h o u r, then strained. In 4 hours' cooking, liquid will be reduced by 1/2. Soup made this way should jell when chilled for several hours; if it does not, add a little gela- tin for your cold soup, In most modern homes, canned consom- me or bouillon is used, Simply put your can of soup in the re- frigerator and chill for several hours; open and serve with lemon wedges, garnish with a spray of parsley or mint. Here is a simple and very easy version of vichyssoise, It serves 4 generously. All good cooks agree on one thing about this soup -- fresh chives are best for the garnish. VICHYSSOISE ti cup butter 4 leeks, sliced (white part only) t a cup sliced onion 2 cups diced, raw polatoes- 4 cups chicken broth Si cup heavy cream Salt and pepper Finely chopped chives Heat butter; add leeks and onions and simmer about 5 min- utes until soft but not browned. Add potatoes and broth. Simmer 30-40 minutes or until potatoes are tender. Press through a rine sieve or food mill. Add cream and seasonings. Another famous cold scup is Borsch, Here is an easy recipe for this delightfully coloured SOUP. ISSUE 27 — 1961 CHILLED BORSCH 2 cups beet juice 14 cup sour cream 1 tablespoon lemon Juice 1►z teaspoons salt Pinch pepper 2 tablespoons minced scallions 1 cup finely diced beets 1 small bunch water cress �•� cup slur cream It you use canned beets, add water to the juice to make the 2 cups beet juice, if necessary. Place beet juice, s4 cup sour cream, lemon juice, and season- ings in a bowl and beat smooth with rotary beater, Add scal- lions, diced beets, and coarsely cut cress leaves (discard stems). Chill well. Serve garnished with sour cream (use remaining 1/4 cup for this). Serves 9. * Cucumbers and shrimp• are combined in this clear, summer soup, COLD SHRIMP AND CUCUMBER SOUP 1 41A -ounce can of deveined shrimp 4 cups boiling water 4 chicken bouillon cubes !i teaspoon salt 4 sprigs dill with seeds 4 thin lemon slices !i cup sliced onion 1 cup thinly sliced cucumbers )R teaspoon white pepper Drain and rinse shrimp. Dis- solve bouillon cubes in boiling water; add salt and dill, lemon, onion, and cucumber. Cover and simmer 10 minutes. Add shrimp and heat for about 5 minutes .longer. Chill; just before serving, sprinkle with white pepper. Serves 4. r * JF At the Hotel Castellana-Hilton in Madrid, I once had a cold soup that is a specialty of the chef there. With it were served, in separate little dishes, diced fresh bread, chopped onion, green pepper, cucumber, and to- mato. The soup was called Caz- pacho. CAZPACHO 2 raw tomatoes 1 raw onion raw fresh green peppers 2 raw cucumbers 1 clove garlic 2 French rolls (soaked in water) 4 ounces olive oil 4 tablespoons vinegar I teaspoon red pepper Pass all ingredients through a meat -mincing machine, strain and add a little water, making the soup the thickness of cream soup, Salt to taste, Always serve Cazpacho very cold. • CHILLED CANNED SOUP Blend can cream of celery soup, cream of chicken soup, cream of mushroom soup, cream of pea soup,with 2 can of milk and t/i can of water. Heat, stir- ring, just to boiling point. Chill before serving. Serves 4, Telephone Manners In New Zealand The conviction that ''Hello" or "Hullo" on the telephone do not represent good telephone man- ners appears to be spreading in the telephonic world, New Zea- landers in the recent telephone courtesy campaign staged in Wel- lington, the eapittd city, were encouraged to announce their identity when answering the telephone, not simply report to "Hello" or "Hullo." Some New Zealanders, it ap- 1,ears, who carefully avoid such expressions udhen answering the telephone, have been in the habit of saying: "Are you there?" This led one New Zealander somewhat warmly to write to the press that this form of address also should be strictly taboo as good telephone manners. "Of course there is someone there," he wrote. That may be so, we agree, but "Are you there?" as a form of address would seem in order when one knows the caller. It is pleasant and friendly and far re- moved from the somewhat abrupt business office efficiency of: "Shrinklethistle speaking." New Zealand public telephone equipment is of the type which returns the coins if calls are un- successful, To operate it, the user listens after dialing and on voice response presses button A. This connects him. But imagine, said the writer to the press, when a caller is down to his last pennies on a public telephone and, having pressed button A on response to "Are you there?" finds that it was the wrong number. (Having made a complete connection, the pennies cannot be retrieved.) "If the number had been stated (on voice response) in the first place, he could have hung up and dialed again. A little abrupt, perhaps, for the mystified person who was called," he said, "but when down to our last pennies we cannot afford niceties." "Are you there?" may be heard on the telephone in other coun- tries as well as New Zealand'and probably for the same friendly and pleasantly relaxed reason. But wherever used it should be strictly avoided on party lines. These collective telephonic sys- terms have their own peculiar difficulties and humors, as has been pointed out in New Zea- land, but "Are you there?" pleasantly broadcast over a party line could have the entire line responding. Manners on a party line, it was said, should be a simple mat- ter and a party liner is entitled to receive his call without con- fusion and enjoy it in peace, "With the spread of long-dis- tance calling," said one New Zealand newspaper, "toll man- ners become more important. The public should be patient with toll staffs, who may be desperately busy, There are still • country districts where lines hang from trees, and are main- tained by the subscribers," it added. There are people, it is also worth noting, who would be glad to know, as the same journal in- dicated, places where lines do not hang from trees or ani other structure, "The telephone," it said, "is frequently regarded as an intruder." Things were getting to the point, it seemed, where people chose for their vacation only places without telephones. Well, some folk, one gathers, now are looking for vacation spots that do not have TV, writes Albert E. Norman in the Chris- tian Science Monitor. The difficulty Is not s.i much in finding a place where these things do not exisc but in find- ing a country where they do not exist. Proof rests in the fact that this correspondent once made a telephone call to the United States from the deep SI)ws of the Antarctic! When calling the American explorers at the South Pole, "Are you there?" as a form of address would not be out of order, as it could he read by said explorers as genuine curio- sity on the part of the caller. In that case, the appropriate ex- plorer reply would be: "Almost.' The pole station is just a natter of yards from the South Pole proper. On the other hind, ;,s ex- perience shows, callers from the South Pole will not L•: greeted with "Are you there?" Almost invariably they will be : reeled with: "Where are you? \Vhat? The South Pole? No!" "The person called shruld be given reasonable time to re - ;.pond," advised the New Zea- land journal. "Ile or she may be in the garden. Waiting in silence for your man to come to the telephone can be wearing Tele- phone instruments," it added somewhat cryptically, "wear out in time and it may not he gene- rally known that the (telephone) department re places then (free)." This could be a comforting as- surance to callers, waiting a long time for their man, not to be unduly concerned about the equipment wearing nut in their hand while waiting. It would be replaced free of charge. The main point, of course, apart from the expense involved for the telephone organization, is that good telephone manners require the caller in such cases to at once leave his name and number. Thus his man would not be obliged to hurry up the gar- den path on a shout from the house: "Telephone, telephone!" Q. How can I prevent my homemade jams from crystalliz- ing? A. By adding a tablespoonful of glycerin to each pint of jam. This makes the jam more trans- parent, and reduces the amount of sugar required. CRUTCHES AREN'T FUN, NO MATTER WHOSE — President Ken- nedy uses crutches (left) to walk from his car to ramp to board the Presidential yacht, Honey Fitz, for a cruise down the Poto- mac River with Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda, As h* reached the ramp (right), the President discarded his crutches and used the railing for support, CAUGHT IN THE ACT — These photos released by the U.S. State Department show U.S. counter- spy Karel Hlasny (carrying briefcase under arm), an instructor at the Army Language School, Monterey Calif., supposedly carrying classified information as he enters San Francisco res- taurant. A few moments later, at right, Czech diplomat Miroslav Nacvalac (second from left) enters the same establishment to pay Hlasny for the "information." The U.S, charged that on six o:casions holt, Nov, 3, 1958, through Jan. 21, 1961, Nacvalac met Hlasny in San Francisca and gave him a total of $1,700 for what he thought was espionage material. The U.S. de- manded that Nacvalac, No. 3 man in the Czech delegation to the U.N., be recalled. UIIAY SC1100I LESSON By Bev, It, Barclay Warren ILA., 11,1), Andrew; Bringing Alen to Jesus 4uhn 1;35-42; Matthew 1:18-211; John 6:8-f1 nlemory Selection; come yc after nus, and 1 will make you to become fishers of men, Ask, 1;17, Andrew':, chief claim to fame Ls that he brought his brother bimon . to Jesus, 8iinon, later called Peter, became the most dynamic of the twelve discil.les. Even though Andrew apparently played second fiddle to Peter all his life, he did not complain or ask for a more prominent place, It takes more grace than 1 can tell, To play the second fiddle: well, Andrew has been described as a elan "who hovers on the edges (vf the inner circle of the dis- ciples, occasionally in it but usu- ally not." Andrew helped prepare for the miracle of the feeding of the Five 'Thousand, He knew a boy with a lunch of five loaves and two fishes. Perhaps he had made friends with the bcy, tell- ing him some fishing experience, or how to tie a tricky knot, On the last day of our Lord's pub- lic ministry, he brought' to Je- sus the Greeks who had first approached Philip. Andrew was no racial bigot. He wanted peo- ple of every race to know Jesus. Tradition says that Andrew died a martyr in Achaia. Aiwa - consul, whose wife and brother had been converted through An- drew's ministry, ordered An- drew's crucifixion and the cdd X-shaped cross is known as the St, Andrew Cross. Legend. tells. ' of early labours in Scythia, now Russia, and so he became a pa- tron saint of the Russians and his X was a part of their flag before Communism gained con- trol in 1917. Andrew so im- pressed the early Christians in Sootland that it has been the land of St. Andrew ever since, with his cross in their flag, too. Wdlen Scotland and England united, the white X went into the British flag where it ap- pears today with two other roses for England and Ireland. ritain is. the only major na- on with a Christian cross in flag, and Andrew is the only tone of the twelve ever • so hon - 'Eared. Very 'few have . the leadership Puality and preaching ability of eter. But almost everyone of us On do the smaller things as An- drew did, We oan introduce•our relatives and friends to Jesus. We may, like him, introduce a phl1d to Jesus, whose gifts may later bless the world, Andrew was a fisher of men. Launching Time': It's that pre - vacation season when one sees more boats•on the highways than on rivers and lakes. LI T;tfLtEDGY, F134 UNLUCKY? - Well, it is in a Kense, because the U.S. air mail rate has gone up, This 13 -cen- ter will be used to some inter- national points after June 28, ISSUE 27 - 1961 CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Hnndwloh filling 4, Sound of disapproval Windmill nn 11 12. Amer, humorist. 3, Set oil 4, 24 flours 6. Tantalize 7. Aftorsong .0, Intellect. 0, worships 1, Cott or filly '3, Morose 0, Stand fast •7, Appear to be •8, Moro niong :n, Blushing .1, 1!!1111101'8 .3, I'nt•t it th• moult) +4, Pronoun 5, Anc..Ilaltnn family de. ltemove 1114 heard it Places of worship I6, British ntatesuitn 11, Close-flt tote pull -on nwetit or ., Antique ...Man's nim* ;,..Potent ',13e of` t l•tt ,1, em0118 f ', ureter st nq e, lea yenta g od. i110161 04, abellr 17 fg Qwrr ist teat Ws 'YOUR MOTHER DID THATI' - At the White House, Charley (right), President Kennedy's Welsh terrier, is introduced to Pushinka, whose mother, Strelka, was put in orbit around the earth and recovered last August by the Russians. The six -month-old puppy was a gift to the Presi- dent from Soviet Premier Khrushchev. In foreground Is Pushinka's passport. TIIEFARN FRONT Holstein steers raked as fed yearlings from spring calves brought satisfactory returns even through the carcasses were not smooth and well finished. At the Animal Research Insti- tute of the Canada Department of Agriculture in Ottawa, 18 Holsteins gave lower returns over feed costs than, did 17 Shorthorns (the highest) and 14 Shorthorn -Holstein crosses. But according to CDA's W, A. Jor- dan, the returns were satisfac- tory and the Holstein compared well with its two competitors in the tests. * * * - Half of the calves in each of the three groups were suckled, the others pail -fed on whole milk for the first nine weeks of the test. The suckled calves had access to a creek from midsummer un- til weaning in the fall, After the first nine weeks the pail -fed calves were fed meal and hay until midsummer, then put on aftermath and given all the meal they would eat. • • • In late fall all calves were fed a fattening ration of silage, hay, and grain and the following spring were slaughtered as they reached market finish. • • • Average gain of the Holsteins and crossbreds was 1.72 pounds daily from birth to market, and for the Shorthorns 1.65 pounds. During the winter fattenirg peri- od the Holsteins ate 9 pounds of grain daily, the Shorthorns 8.5 and the crossbreds 8.1, In spite of the extra grain consumed by them, the Holsteins had the poorest type and quality of car- cass as they tended to grow and develop instead of putting on fat. Holstein carcasses graded 34 per cent Standard and 09 per cent Commercial; Shorthorns 6 per cent Red, 23 per cent Blue, and 18 per cent Standard and 53 per cent Commercial, The crossbreds' grades were inter- mediate. * * * Average cold carcass weights of the Holsteins, crossbreds and Shorthorns were 438, 404, and 9. Embellish 10. Ford 11. watches narrowly 16. Gentle 13, Composition 2. Hubbub In verso 20. Away from 3. I,egendnl•y 21, Till the Holl sen ereo1ore 21 Comply with windward 24. Official 4. Secluded doorkeeper viler} 26, Toward 6. fulls 1t ilhthe east 23.11and over violence n. Overt 6. 1'nrral tel 33. A euppot't 7. Average (eh.) ::3.Climbing 6. Superfluous devices 35, Differently SL Carefully notice 3.4, Provided with weapon,, 39. Preserves from hare. 41, Crystallize 42, Charles 1,8 nth 41, Titin layer of gold 16. H. 11, Stowe chnraclrr 47. Born 43, Shooting • marble ht. I,Iee. engineer (ah). •1 '2 3 :.} 4 i 6 7 0 x';'/ 'l4 !o // 12 \ 03• rS /e ,17 IB --4- -�'.'�-+...., ••.,�;,,� ,'/1 •• • 70 2/ 22 1 24 i+, \ti ••w. �s,'XI"?•," 38 A% .• 42 .if •.•.. . •ii• ••�'••, •o, oar •;, An3w4r elsewhere on this page. DOLL 'EM UP "Dolling up" her "Sweetnik" for the fair at Rome is Yugoslavian -born doll - maker Lierka Draskovic. The doll above is made of wood and fabrics and has a painted ball for a face,. 406 pounds; dressing percentages 53,0, 54.6, and 54.9, The suckled calves in each group finished considerably heavier than the pail -fed ones. The returns over feed costs from all calves were satisfactory. „ * Potato leaf roll has not been common in recent years, but the threat of a serious outbreak in Eastern Canada still exists. J. P. MacKinnon of Frederic- ton, N.B., points out that an epidemic of leaf roll in late 1930's finished Green Mountait: 113 a commercial variety, and varieties now popular are not highly resistant to the disease. Mr, MacKinnon is an author- ity on plant pathology with the Canada Department of Agricul- tltl'e. n • Leaf roll is spread by the green peach aphid. Good rul- tural methods undoubtedly help in keeping it under control but there must be some natural bur- . riot's, of svhich little is known, that are preventing large scale spread of the disease, Develop- ment of resistant or immune varieties appears to he the best hope for lasting corirol, • • • Greenhouse tests at Frederic- ton have shown the green peach aphid to be very effective in spreading the leaf roll virus. When caged on diseased plants for five days, over 90 per cent picked tip the virus; some be- came infective in the first two hours, When infective aphids were placed singly on a new plant every day for 15 days, some in- fected all 15 plants. Once they picked up the virus, the aphids continued to infect healthy plants as long as they lived. Just Like The Cat Marcello Came Back When the Senate committee headed by Tennessee's Estes Ke- fauver cast a net into the gumbo of Louisiana rackets eleven years ago, a prune catch brought' to the stand was one Carlos Marcello, Senator Kefauver heard testi- mony that Marcello had it hand in Louisiana narcotics, bookmak- ing, slot machines, and night clubs, denounced him as 'one of the leading criminals in t;'e U.S. today." The U.S. Immigration Service swiftly moved in: Marcello, no U.S.. citizen, could be deported. The specific reason for doing it was that back in 1938 Marcello had been convicted of hi►stling marijuana. Thus began one of the longest would-be deportation cases on record. First the U,S,.started.shopping around for a country that would accept Marcello, who came to America as an 8 -month-old infant in 1910. (Naturally there was no copy of his birth certificate.) Al- together, five nations turned Marcello down. France, where his parents had once resided briefly, declined. So did Tunisia, when the US. offered .in proof a docu- ment that reported that Marcel- lo was horn Calogero Minacori, the son of Giuseppe and Luisa, in Carthage. However, since Marcello's par- ents themselves had claimed Ital- ian nationality, the Italian Gov- ernment finally agreed to har- bor him, But Marcello's attorneys brought suit in an Italian court, asking that he be declared a non - Italian; the action, which is still pending, blocked his deportation to Italy. There things stood - Marcello living happily in New Orleans -. until this year. Then somebody came forward - "a foreign in- formant," the U.S, says - with a record that showed a son named Calogers was born on Feb. 6, 1910, in Guatemala, to Giuseppe Minacore (with an "e," not an "i,") That was when things be- gan to move. One day in April, when Mar- cello stopped in at the Imneigra- tion Service office in New Or- leans for a resident alien's regu- lar check, border patrolmen took him into custody, hustled hon in- to a car without so much as a toothbrush, drove hint to the air- port and bundled hila onto a plane for Guatemala. U.S. offi- cials breathed a sigh of relief, They were rid of Marcello at last - they thought But now Ivlarcello Is back In the U.S. How he got in and where he came from neither he nor his at- torneys were saying. Marcello simply turned up at the Innni- gration Service office in Shreve- per•t and repotted that in Guate- mala he hadn't been welcomed at all. Instead, he said, he had been spirited away to El Salvador, thence across another border, and had eventually shade his way back to his favorite state, Louisi- ana. Wearily, immigration officials L'rdered him to the alien intern- ment center at McAllen, Texas, to await further hearings, A re- porter asked him where lie real- ly crone from. Marcello, in a soft, bemused voice, said: "i don't know myself." In the use of tears A woman is wise, She can CUt a man Right down to her sighs. DRIVE WITH CARE ! Shed A Tear For The Old Cream Jug ! Once again June is National Dairy Month, and anything we say will be appreciated by the National Dairy Council, which las pr.ovidwd -fact-sheets Ful -our editorial convenience. This ex- plaids liow, of course, the inat- tentive and disinterested editors across the country suddenly chance upon a concert of erudite editorials which move the mas- ses in. the direction of greater milk consumption. It i;^'t just coincidence. 10 perusing lhc' statilics, I Notice that while America is' de- livered its daily bottle, never- theless •'utripteert million odd quarts of milk never mot e into the market at all, but are con- sumed on the farm. Besides be- ing the benefactor of mankind, the dairy farmer looks out for himself. The high commercial purposes of National Dairy Month thus dwindle, for net only do we have the eager customers along the apartment ha'Iways, but we have the prudent dairy farmer who never has to pay a milk bill, He, loo, is a consumer. There is more to this statistical situation. The milk business, as it annually does more and more for the off -farm customer, is doing less and less for its own people. The reason is that as our society .pursues its course, fewer and fewer farmers keep fewer and fewers cows, although milk production and consumption con- linue to rise: This is because of the increasing efficiency of the daily cow, and the limit is not yet in sight. It is also because of. improved methods, mechanical aids, better knowledge of nutri- ments, and many another "fac- tor" the city customer need not know about, There is also the tendency to consolidate, making one big business where there used to be 10 little ones. In short, although all this milk is retained on the farm for home use, each successive June sees fewer and fewer farm families to enjoy it. So while we cheer at Nation- al Dairy. Month, we can also shed a symbolic tear for the passing of the ,old cream jug the farm cream jug as distinj guished from the paper carton that graces the apartment break fast nook. And this is extremely important. A friend of mine who runs a milk route in a nearby town was approached a few sum- mers back by a rusticating neighbor who wanted._ s_o m e cream, The gentleman had a valid desire and a legitimate complaint. It seems he had forsworn his city ways, and after a rat-raca life had closed his skyscraper office and had retired to the scenes of his boyhood, Bright were the suns that gleamed for him of yore, and now rte was back again to pick up where he left off. He had sold his place on Long Island and had bought another on the west side of Hedgehog. Hill where the sunsets would be lovely and the pace less demanding. He had hove a sigh of relief and• settled in. ' He found soon enough that things had changed while he was away, His lost youth was not be- ing recovered as he expected, And here .h was back in tile._ hinterlaiid of his yesterdays with his yens, and he wasn't gettirt the kind of cream he remember- ed. He said to my friend, "Don't you have any cream any :none?" My friend said he did, indeed, have cream, and reached for a bottle off the truck, "No," the gran said, "1 don't meet. that stuff. I can get that stub in any delicatessen on 13102411 V. 1 mean real cream such is my grandmother put on my Indian pudding and my mother pelt on my porridge, i 111011 creaun that has character, strength and fla- vor. Cream."- My •friend-replirrtt- "1`e,, I -do have such cream. I hat it at home on the table, and we use It with a free and lavish hand, It ts' just the 1<ind of cream >•uu are talking about. But I ran''.. sell it to you, and I'd wast to funk up Ow law before 1 even offer you some as a gift. In my opinion, off -hand, I think you are doom- ed to a consumer's life of abstin- ence .in this respect." The elan said, "I tvou:d like to have some cream that was put in a wide tin pan on tit• cellar floor, where it is cool and con- genial, After it has beep there two -three days, coagulating its beneficence into mag nil ic�n:0, 1 would like to have the cream skum off the skint -milk into a brown bowl with a yellott stripe around the edge, and I would like to have that howl ! sought to me so I could put it on my table and do what I warted to with it." I1 -My friend said, "I knot'; what you mean. You want a b.•wl of activated lactic bacteria which exceeds the legal limit by about four hundred and sevent million, and 1 ane restrain€ d from such commerce by the Milk Con- trol Board, the Market Admini- strator, the Board of .health, and the Department of Public Wel- fare, It is -against the 'aw to traffic in' the commodity you have• just described so delight- fully," The man said, "Alas!" or words to that effect, "I tell you what you can do," my friend said. "If you want to come out to the farm arts .have dinner with us, I can set a bowl of cream like --•that on -the -t -al and you can dip into it, We have cream like that. We have it all the time. I put a pan or two down cellar every night Just for us. But for customer's, 1 have to be carefvl.,and, every, move I make is regulated down to the last •notvM, and- if ' I put cream like that in my truck they'd throw the book at me. When can you •come for dinner?" "This •eventng," the man said. And he went. But the. statistics §how that fewer and fewer dairy farmers are producing more and more milk, and what this means to bowls of cream should be con- templated well as we lay down all else and observe National Dairy Month. - By John Gould in the Christian Science Monitor. • Q, How can I insure a tighter grip when driving screws into wood?, • A: ft,'yoN'll dip your screws into some paint or glue before using them, they'll stay whero they're supposed to indefinitely. Keeping on your toes.will keetp you from getting down at heel. Upsidedown- to, Prevent Peeking • ,L 3S 1SV3A ave 11110 '13 A 91 ' 9 1 1 ©!=7¢'i_/t3 213W-13 Q39d Jsas2i9 ao'��sdllb:,. N 3AtFHS 3.1. d11 09 S3HS W9.9S •911nns a AW CIB21 19V IVOd s321oaV' iNlw:-: 3aod3:::' Rawbo1. A 4 , :; 3AnDir 3 3MV 0 NY0?J9 WY FESTIVITIES UP IN THE AIR - These ruins of Machu Picchu. one-time stronghold of the Incas, located high in the Peruvian Andes, will be the site of a seven-month folk festival, The fes- tival will commemorate the 50th anniversary of its discovery by Hiram Bingham. This collection of magnificent palaces, sat• red temples, gabled houses, elaborate plazas and massive stont stairways and walls was lost to the world and unknown eves to Peru itself until the Yale professor's accidental discovery. PAGE 4 WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES Phone 73. YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN- KET'S, DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. til nl-in.r i1 , I l 1 III II. 11 I11.lI 11 +.....I I di 1 I., 111.1 I.. n1+1 11 , I.. •11111•111 u n 1 11 111 COOL SUMMER SPORTSWEAR Boys' Shorts, 2 to 10 years 98c up Sport Shifts and_ T. Shrts, 1 to 14 79c up Girls' Shorts and Pop Tops, 2 to 16 .... 2.89 up Girls' and Boys' Sunsuits, 1 to 3x 1.69 up Girls' and Boys' Bathers, 2 to 16 .... 98c to 6.95 also: Slim ,Tiros, Pedal Pushers, Jeans, Blouses, Sun Dresses and Sleepwear. NeedlecraFt Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Ont. y �.-..s.., y. 1111 ,-• v, ..wn rw+rrili .�i.i.-t..�l.'�11�iYw'r�:L:. Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP, Open'Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. ' Phone 256, 'Wingham R..A. SPOT\ ON. . .11 AI 11 I 1 I I Al 1111 bli LY 11 . . Y 11 /L 11, . 1 111 11 .d L Id MINN L MILVIIME=110.‘anddladdMi11,,11 Clinton Memorial': Shap T. PRYDE and SON.. CLINTON — EXETER — SEAPORTH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: . • ,i EXETER: ,( Business 41 &catdence 34 CLINTON: Business --Hu 2.6606 Residence—Hu 2.3869 IN..�1L.I��s:.�1'1I---m�.is, lrara:^�'w,-�--:•II.a.�' :7 1111 .. WE'VE FOOD TO SUIT YOUR MOOD .. . from the tastiest sandwiches in town to a delic- ious full -course meal. . A snack is a real pleasure here. The service is speedy, atmosphere congenial ... and the prices thrifty! HURON GIILL BLYTH - ONTARIO 2 FUNK GONG, Proprietor. �J7.I,11: .111. Yl li l ' YY.4 iii 1 1 (learingOI SUMMER GOODS 20% Discount On The Following Summer Cotton Dresses, 20 percent off. Pedal Pushers, 20 percent off. Slims, 20 percent off. Cotton Skirts, 20 percent off. T Shirts, 20 percent off. Short Sleeve Sport Shirts, 20 percent off. Men's Dress Straw Hats, 20 percent off. Corduroy Running Shoes, gold: green, blk., white, Special $1.49 1111. ; Clearing lines in Brassieres, up to 40 percent off. Shoes for all the Family. - The Arcade Store PHONE 211 , ' BLYTH, ONT. W ' -'TIDE RUTH STANDARD ��noggy, Yu% �, i96i .- — – 4 Walton News Garden Party A Garden Party sponsored by the MORRIS SCHOOL HOARD MEETING Women's Institute was held in the A meeting of Morris School Board Community Hall last Wednesday ov' June 29, was held in Township Hall ening. A very tasty supper was served with all members present. in the basement by the ladies A pro• gram consisted of two plays presented by the Moncrief Young People and the Jueicr Farmers' Male Quartette fur- nished several vocal numbers. Mr. Gordon McGavin acted as chairman for the evening, Mrs. Ronald Bennett and Mrs. Russel Barrows were pro gram conveners, and the following committee was in charge of supper arrangements, Mrs. Ken McDonald Mrs. Herb Travis, Mrs, Donald Bu chanan, Airs. Harold Bolger, Mrs. Re) Williamson. Induction .Service The Induction Service for Rev. Ar thur Higginbotham was' held in to,. auditorium of Duffs United Church Friday evening, June 30. The Presby tery of Huron was represented by Rev J. C. Britton, of Seaforth, who con ducted the Worship service and lnduc tion and Rev. H A. Funge, of Londes koro, preached the sermon, choosin his text from Acts 10, verse 33, "Nov `herefore are we all here present before God to hear all things that are corn manded thee of God." Following tlu Induction service a social hour wa held in the schoolroom. Members o inox United Church, Moncrief, an( Duffs United Church, Walton, were hi .roduced to Rev. and Mrs. lligginboth am, June and Velma, as they assemble( in the basement. Introductions were made by Mrs. Orval Harrison and Mrs Allan McTaggart of Montcrief, and Mn Clarence Martin and Mrs. Nelson Rei of Walton. Lunch was served, Mr Allan .McTaggart spoke words of wel come to the new minister and his fam- ily on behalf of the Moncrief charge and Mr. Douglas Fraser for Walton. congregation. Rev, Britton, Rev. Funge also spoke briefly to which Rev Higginbotham replied, expressing his thanks for the kindness already shawr them since their arrival. A large congregation was present Sunday morning in Duff's United Church when Rev. A. Higginbotham opened his pastorate here, chosing his text from 2 Corinthians 4: 7, "But we have this treasure in earthen vessels.'. The choir rendered the anthem, "The Lord is my Shepherd," under the di. rection of Mrs. Harvey Brown. Sacra• ment of the Lord's Supper will be ob- served Sunday morning, July 16. Alis. sion Band will be held next Sunday morning at the usual hour. Picnic The Walton Public School. held their annual picnic on the school grounds Thursday afternoon. The teacher, Mrs. Margaret Robertson, and Brian Traviss were in charge of games and races. I irs.Clarence Martin and Mrs. Frank Walters spent Monday at Norwich with the former's daughter and son-in-law, Mr, and Mrs. Floyd Jenkins. Ronald Ennis who has been employ- ed at Western University computing and tabulating centre for the past six weeks, left last Friday far Toronto ' where he will attend the Ontario Col• lege of Education for the next eight Weeks. Mr Gerald Dressel spent the weekend al his home prior to leaving for Ham- ilton where he will attend summer school at McMaster University. -Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Humphries, W;enda and Kim, spent. Sunday with Dr. add Mrs. John Bennett, New Market. Mr. William Bennett remained there and will accompany Dr. and Mrs. Ben- nett on a motor trip to the Western Provinces. ' Michael Gututzen has returned home from a motor trip to Saskatchewan. Mr. Martin Baan returned home last week after spending about three weeks in Holland visiting with his parents and other relatives. Mr. Roy Bennett has purchased the Grainger house on Alain 'Street, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Humphries and family visited over the holiday week- end at Everett, Ontario, with her sis- ter and brother-in-law, Mr and Mrs. G. Hetherington. W. Alf. Anderson spent the holiday weekend with his daughter and son -in law, Mr, and Mrs. Ross Taylor, of Ottawa. Mrs. Anderson and Nora re- turned home with him. Mrs. Mary Dressel, of Toronto, spent the 'wekend with her mother, Mrs. Fred Ennis. Miss Ann Achilles has accepted a position in the Toronto Dominion Bank in Seaforth. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Taylor and Mis- ses Lorraine and Sheila Riddell, of Alexandria, Kentucky, visited with Mr, and Mrs Russell Barrows. Mrs. Walter Broadfoot visited on Monday with Mrs. Ferne Patterson, who is a patient in Victoria Hospital, London, • Walton School Report The following is the school report for S.S. No. 11, Morris: Grade 8 to 9: Linda Bryans (H); Gerald Blake. Grado 7 to 8: Ann Blake; Larry Bol- ger, Shirley Thamer (H); John Tham- er. Grade 6 to 7: Larry Walters (TI); Carol Wilbee (11); Bruce Clark (II); Janet Shortreed (H); Sherrill Craig (11); \Venda IIumphries. Grade 5 to 6: Helen Searle (H); Carol Shortreed (H); Linda Travis (11); Mary Bewley (11); Billy Helinga (H); Jim Blake; Billy Graham (promoted conditionally); Doug Pollard (promot- ed conditionally), Grade 4 to 5: Barbara Bryans (II); Gary Bennett (H); Neil McDonald (11); Sandra Watson (11); Murray Blake, Grade 3 to 4: Brenda Bewley (H); Emma.Shortreed (H); Karen McDon- ald (H); Brian Pollard. .Grads 2 to 3; Beverley McCall (11); Judy Thamer (H); Bobby Blake (H); Gordon Mitchell (H); Keith Wilbee. Grade 1 to 2: Gail Travis (II); Gab Searle (H); Susan Dale OD; Debbie McCall (H1; Sharon Marks (I1); Bren- da Pollard (H); Billy Shortreed (II); Bruce McDonald (II); Ronald Dronick (H); Philip Blake (If). Mrs. Margaret Robertson, Teacher. Five tenders for transporting some of the pupils from Walton School to either S.S. 1 or S.S. 12 were considered and contracts granted as follows: Route 1, to Ken (McDonald for $800 per year: and Route 2, to Allen Searle for $950 per year. Howard Clark was instructed to get he necessary material and make re• airs to the outer walls of the school •ildings. Payment of bills presented was au. horized: Ross Anderson, 56.66; audi• '.cr, 75.00; G. Workman, 3.10; Advance limes 6.29; Guidance Centre, 11.70; 11. slathers, 292.55; Sparlings Hardware, 11.29; Staintons Hardware, 5.95; H. Ber- nard, 14.00; Alexander's Hardware, 1.73; Hood Supplies, 3,54; J, Elston, i4.50; Post Publishing, 3.75. The furnace at S.S. 5 will be thor•ough- y checked and necessary steps taken o put it in a satisfactory condition. Next meeting at the call of the chair- man James Elston, R. S. Shaw, Chairman, Secretary, WESTFIELD Mrs, Arnold Cook, Sharon and Janet, nd Mrs. Edna Coak visited with Mr. rd Mrs James Boak, Crewe, recently. Mr, Laurence Campbell, of Noble. .,rd, Alberta, is spending a vacation rith his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard ;annpbell and other friends. Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Beherns and child - :en, of Wroxeter, also Mr. Ed. Taylor, .)f Brussels, visited with Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon on Sunday. Mr, and Mrs, Arnold Cook and girls, Mrs. E. Cook and Mr A. E. Cook were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garth McClin• they, Auburn, on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. John Gear and children, ,4 Waterloo, spent the weekend in the community. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wightman, Welland, called' on !Airs. W. F. Camp- bell On Sunday. Airs. Marvin McDowell and Graome, also Miss Gladys McDowell and Mrs. V. Kershaw,of Goderich, were visitors with Mr and Mrs. John Cowan, Exeter , on Sunday. Mr. Elgin Thorn and son, James, of Toledo, Ohio, are camping at Mr. Harvey McDowells. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snaith, Norma and Douglas were in London on Sun- day, Miss Lorna Buchanan spent the holi- day weekend at her home. Several families of the community attended Memorial Services at Bran- don Cemetery, Belgrave, and Ball's Cemetery, Auburn, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Vaughan Alunro, Lon- don, are camping at Wightman's Grove. Miss Margery Smith is spending this week ,with her cousins in Waterloo. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell and Wayne attended the Carter re -union in' Lions Park, Seaforth, on Sunday. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank Dr, Addison, Dr. Oakes, all the nursing staff of Clinton Hospital, who looked after me while I was so ill. Rev. R. Meally, of Blyth, and all who visited me while I was in hospital. Everyone who sent flowers, cards, or enquired about my welfare 21-1p. —Harry Gibbons. CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank all those who remem- bered nie with cards, flowers and treats, and those who visited me while I was in Seaforth Hospital .and since returning home. It was all greatly appreciated_. 21-1. —Ellen Sillib "SUMMER SALE" ON MEN'S WORK BOOTS BY SIS11'IAN No. 85 -- Men's Leather Soled Work Boots with outside counter and steel arch, Regular $10.95 SALE PRICE $9.45 No. 98 --- Men's Cork Soled Work Boots with out- side counter and steel arch, Reg. $9.95, Sale $8A5 No. 74 --- 11'Ien's Cork Soled Work Boot with.inside counter, Reg. $7.95 SALE $6.45 R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Good Manners" - .1i III, III 11..,.I.....��-.a.�11.....au..r..�o.r��..�....._. il:.�..,�•... Il.+d.:4 r...AI -Irrnllgi111INr:1_i...Y i . Y. . H.lrnr •.•••...•••••• .1 ilaa: . i . r. 1 ,1•• NOTICE TO DESTROY Noxious Weeds NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to property owners in urban and subdivid- ed areas to destroy all Noxious Weeds as often as necessary in each season, to pre- vent their going to seed. Also, after July 22, 1961, proceedings will be taken to destroy Noxious • Weeds in accordance with the Weed Control Act. _ ALEX CHESNEY Huron. County Weed Inspector i d I Renew your Subscription to The Standard Now! Build your bank balance ... Build your peace of mind THE BANK THAT BUILDS CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMM_ERCE Over 1250 branches to serve you. Wednesday , July 5,161 Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO, INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SER VICE, Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 .I. W,., II I••I ,.11M1 1I II 110E1MillineliadallELMAGINIMISCII • JI1,11. i u,. I,,. SANITATION SERVICES YMAN/rINI++•.1•.41.++++r.....w.+++. Septic Tanks cleaned and repairer!, Clinton Community Blocked drains opened with modern equipment. Prompt ,Service. Irvin Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254. lllf, BACKHOEING Backheeing and trench work done promptly and efficiently. Harold Con - gram, phone 1079, Wingham, 11-12p, V.PI. NO tlfl+Y.►J•I+.P# 4 Pe MI BLYTII BILLIARDS "Your friendly meeting place," Tobaccos - Soft Drinks , Confectionaries open 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Doc Cole, Proprietor II.WfIMNI...f4•d q ,J,,NJ IdY. ININIA 4 BI,YTi•I BEAMJTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 TV ANTENNA REPAIRS TV Antenna Repairs and Installation. Year around service. Phone collect, Teeswaler, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser. vice, 45-tf. - FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE Repairs to A1I Makes of Vacuum Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone Hensall, 69682. 50.13p.ti. SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, R.R. 2. CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON RARRiS'TERS da SOLiCITORS J. II. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington, Q.C. Q.C. Wingham and Blyth. iN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located In Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4, G. B. CLANCY OFTOMETRiST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late •A. L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODERICH 36.1 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 5;30, Phony HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETR EST PATRICK ST. • WINGIIAM,. ONT, EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT. (For Appointment please phone 770 Wingham). Professlonal_Eye Examination. Optical Services. ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERICH, ONT. Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478. DR, R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS, ,7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. II'UESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAIZ Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WIIERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost Chcfce 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. BEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTIi, ONT, OFFICERS: President — John L. Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John II. McEw- ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E. Southgate, Seaforth, DIRECTORS J. L, Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw- ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton; Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep. per, Brucefield; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm; Ii. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth, AGENTS; William Leiper, Jr., Lonclesboro; V. J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Sehsyn Ba- ker, Brussels; James Keyes. Seaforth; llarold Squires: Clinton. FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERT, FRIDAY EVENIN AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 7:30 p.m. IN BLYTII, THIONE BOB HENRY, 15081. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer. 05-tf, I' & W TRANSPORT LTD. Local and Long Distance Trucking Cattle Shipped Monday and Thursday Ilogs on Tuesdays Trucking to and from Brussels and Clinton Sales on Friday Call 162, Blyth ACHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE $1.00 per 100 lbs. plus bonus for fresh dead, old or disabled horses and cattle. Please phone promptly to At- wood, Zenith 34900 (no toll charge) or Atwood 356-2622, collect, Seven day service. License No. 103C61, DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASA PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and IIORSES also Dead Cows and horses M Cash Value 01(1 Horses—lc per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels. BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15R9, Blyth 24 Hour Service Plant Licence No. 54-R,P.-61 Colector Licence No. 83-G61 DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR RENOVATION PLANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Job Call GERALD EXEL Carpentry and Masonry Phone 23R12 Brussels, Ontario VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND SERVICE Repairs to most popular makes of cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen Sales, Varna. Tel, collect Hensall 696R2. 50.13p.tf. TILE WEST WAWANOSII MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY IIead Office, Dungannon Established 1878 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Brown Smyth, R.R. 2, Auburn; Vice -President, Jlerson Irwin, Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, R.R. 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan, Goclerich; Ross McPhee, R.R. 3, Au- burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. MacLennan, R.R. 3, Goderich; Frank Thompson, 8.11., 1, llolyrood; Wni, Wiggins, 11.R. 3, Auburn, For information on your insurance, call your nearest director who is also an agent, or the secretary, Durnin Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon 48, THE DL'YTE STANDARD NJNIttt.MNttttMtM, ,,#ttt!M! BROWNIE'S CLINTON, ONTARIO FOR SALE Choice :nixed hay, standing, baled or on shares, Apply Roy Easom, Au- curn, phone 7716. 21-1, FOR SALE 103 Mount ,lope Queen gullets, 5 months old, Apply, Mrs. Ray Snell phone 3:.'48, Blyth, 21.1 FOR SALE Choice Purebred L acon•.he Boars, four months old Pri.:ed reasonable. Apply, Gorden McClinchey, R.R. 2, Au" burn, phone 526.7242, Auburn, 21.21 EAVESTROUG111NG Tues., Wed., Thur., Fri., July 4, 5, 6, 7 Eavestroughing for Lale and installed Double Feature -- Adult Entertainment Whitfield, guars:;t= ed. A; ply, Ear Whitfield, phone 52R23, Blyth. 21-lp .'.IAN IS'ANTED For Rawleigh Business. Sell to 1501 families. Goad profits for hustlers tiVrite today, Rawleigh':, Dept F -K6 -S 4005 Richelieu, Mont-eal. 21-: AUTOMOTIVE Mechanical and body repairs, glass, steering and wheel balance. Undaspray for rust prevention, DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service No. 8 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231 Goderich, Ontario. "THE FACTS OF LIFE" Bob !lope and Lucille Ball "Oklahoma Territory" Gloria Talbot and Bill Williams One Cartoon Saturday, Monday and Tuesday— July 8, 10, 11 "The Magnificent Seven" Yul Brenner and Steve McQueen Colour — CluemaScopc — One Cartoon Wednesday, Thursday and Friday— July riday— July 12, 13, 14 "CARRY ON NURSE" Adult Entertainment Kenneth Connor and Shirley Eaton 1 Short — Colour — One Cartoon "HELP WANTED — MALE" A Permanent Career with Security and Steady, Above Average Earnings can be yours as a Rural Watkins Deal- er. Sell top quality necessities for home and farm. No investment. For personal interview, write today giving age to Watkins Products, Inc., 350 St. Hoch St., Montreal 19-3. PROPERTIES FOR SALE WILFRED McINTEE Real Estate Broker WALKERTON, ONTARIO Agent; Vic Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78. 100 acres in West Wawanosh, 70 ac- res hay, silo of corn, brick house, 9 Moms, large Karn, hen house 2 story: 10 acres hush, hydro. 100 acres in East Wawanosh,; large house, new barn, hydro. 200 acres in East Wawanosh, 1 set of buildings, hydro, lots of water. 125 acres in East IVawanosh, good house and barn, 1 mile from school, hydro, pressure system. A good buy. 100 acres in' Hullett, close to Blyth. 100 acres in Hullett, close to Londes- boro. 1 large Dairy Farm near Londeshoro Many more farms and businesses to choose from. CLOSING NOTICE The office of G. A, Williams, optome• trist, Wingham, will be closed from July 3 to July 18, Inclusive. In order to attend the Canadian Optometric Asso- ciation Convention in Halifax, N.S. 20.3 FOR SERVICE Yorkshire Hog, could be Pedigreed. Apply John J. llaggitt, phone 40R5, Blyth. ' 20-3p 11h ....N. .I! R In.... ,. STRAWBERRIES FOR SALE Strawberries are now at their best Order Early F. W. ANDREWS Clinton, Ontario Phone HU -12 3462 SQUARE DANCE COMPET1TION SEAFORTH LIONS CARNIVAL Wednesday Thursday Friday AUGUST 9 10 11 First six entries in each class accepted. CLASSES: UNDER 21 --- Over 21 $400.00 IN PRIZES PRELIMINARIES --- Wednesday and Thursday FINALS --- Friday Entries will be informed er Hour and Date TWO CHANGES --- Supply Own Caller Music Supplied. Send entries to: WILLIAM BALL �p�,Y� yy Box 11{{295 --- Seaforth 1111104/' :.,.%" I, .111 • I I .. t, ,1 .I, 1 I ...:1. .. 111 1► Ib I II CI MINIMI 20-11 FOR SALE 8 pigs, 7 weeks old. Apply, Karl Whitfield, phone 52R23, Blyta, 21.17 FOR SALE Wood, 1 ft. Tong and delivered to Blyth residents in Pard lots. Apply Russell ,Nilson, phone 149, Blyth. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF CARRIE C. HAGGITT ALL PERSONS having claims against the estate of the above mentioned, late of the Village of Blyth, in t:,e County of Huron, Widow, who died no the sixth clay of June. 1961, are require., to file proof of same with the undersigned on or before the fifteenth day of July A.D. 1961. After that date the Executor will proceed to distribute the estate having regard only to the claims of which hc: shall then have had notice. DATED at Wingham this 26th day of June A.D. 1961. CRAWFORD & 1IETIIERINGTON Wingham, Ontario, Solicitors for the Executor 20 it ,, . I I ,1 1., 1 , .. • "•' PAGE MEET YOUR NEIGIIBORS AT THE GODERICII PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811 NOW PLAYING Now Playir.g--"NORTi1 TO ALASKA"—Color JOHN NIAYNE • STEWART GRAINGER • CAPUCINE Adult Enteralmnent Mon., Tues., 11'ed., July 10 • 11 • 12 JACK LEMON • RICKY NELSON • JOHN LUND in a picture designed to tickle your funnybone. "WACKIEST SHIP in the ARMY" tL:'! Scope and Color ti "Rasslin' Champ" and "Wacky Wigwam" Thurs., Fri., Sal., July 13 • 11 • 15 KERWIN MATTiiEWS • JO MORROW • ,TETTE THORBURN Present Jonathan Swift': adventure tale under the magic of Cincmasclv e "The THREE WORLDS of GULLIVER In Terhaiholor "Candid Mike" and "Count Down Clown" Coming—Elvis Presley in "FLAMING STAR" ..11 11414 •.dllu 1.,1 .,11 1 ..H, 11.1 .. anI.. .•I 1 P 1 ,1 '1 . II I..h 11 . I.I rl a.,.l ,.,S'An. .41'.+, 4.•IJ .a..,, x1,4.11,11 I... 11 . I.... i„ I 5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH PICNIC SUPPLIES: Cold and Hot Drinking Cups, Serviettes, Paper Plates in Plain & Plastic Coated. CARRIAGE COVERS: Net Material $1.19, Nylon $1.49 NEWT SUMMER JEWELLERY just arrived. BATHING CAPS: each, 79c, 89c, 98c SUN GLASSES for Children, Ladies and Men. BEACH BALLS ............ . ... 25c to 98c each SWIIiI RINGS, assorted sizes. ONTARIO Application forms for 0\TARIO RETAIL SALES TAX • VENDOR'S PERMIT should be returned by... July 15,1961 Official Permit Application Forms Who requires a vendor's permit? have been sent to over 120,000 Ontario Every company or person, who in the vendors together with detailed inform- ordinary course of his business sells goods tion on the new Ontario Retail Sales to purchasers in Ontario, must have a Tax Act. These applications should be sales tax vendor's permit. Restaurants completed and returned by July 15th, and otherpremises selling prepared meals so that vendors will receive their permits require apermit.Permitsare also required and additional information well in ad- by salesmen or manufacturer's agents vance of September lst, when the tax who sell in Ontario for non-resident goes into effect. vendors not registered in Ontario. Vendors who have not received oicial Permit Application forms should sena for one today! COMPLETE AND MAIL THiS CONVENIENT COUPON Retail Sales Tax Branch, Office of Comptroller of Revenue, Parliament Buildings, Toronto 2, Ontario Please send me a Permit Application form together with detailed information on the Ontario Retail Sales Tax, NAME COMPANY NAME ADDRESS TYPE OF BUSINESS PHILIP T. CLARK Comptroller of Revenue 111 tit _:_ til ::1 =l Ili 111 Eli Ill lit 4 •1 Waisted Time In College Courses by Raymond 1Uoley in NEWSWEEK A year ago. president Grayson Kirk of Columbia University wrote this indictment of the four- year college course: "Four years in some adolescent playpens that are called centers of learning may be a pleasant interlude for young people, hut it is a luxury tivhich they, their parents t!,e col - loges, and the country can no longer afford." This sharpens and roof^ms my own itnttre.;sirm after there dec- ades -.. :ir<tas a full -tins and later :a- a part-time uni'.'c•tsity professor. 11 cones with added emphasis now Lybon the nation': taxpayers are about to he nicked again for Federal :aid to students and collo ,t,,;. The lour-vear tradit.0j lr an In medieval times orlon Oxford and Caanl>rid,e were created. English gentlemen welcomed a quiet sanctuary for their sons un- til they ,weer old enough to as- sume the responsibilities of life The time spent in the universities also helped prepare then for the Easy -Knit Success ivt A Y V ao, New! A jerkin that's smart for year 'round wear—a tailored buckle cinches the waist. Easy -knit jerkin — casually right and cozy with skirts or slacks. Cables add texture in- terest, Pattern 741: directions sizes 32-34; 36-38 included. Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS (stamps canna be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT- TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send now for our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalogue. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave — fa- shions, homefurnishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits. Plus FREE — instructions for six smart veil Caps. Hurry, send 25e now! ISSUE 21 — 1961 ministry, the professions, Balloter- ship,the military, and also juai or .tor living in an arls- tocraoy. Harvard, following the English pattern In 1636, set the style which still prevails gener- ally In the United States, imprisoned In this tradition, colleges have devised plausible means of stretching out their of- ferings from September of the first year to June of the fourth. Long vacations help a lot — three months in the summer, and weeks for Christmas and Easter .holidays. Those happy dt,ys off. are usually consumed in loafing or in going to and getting over innumerable parties. I'or an in- dustrious few, the stunner can be. used to earn some money, 13u1 considering the ultimate loss to the colleges, it tvuuld he cheaper 10 provide loans and scholar- ships. The male high-school gradu- ate now is faced not only by the necessity fur preparing fol a vo- cc,tion after college, but by years of military service. If the boy chooses to enter a profession, he will not be ready to earn a living until his middle or late 20s The. surgeon earns little or nothing until he is 30 or more, This is an injustice to the student and an intolerable burden on most par- ent:. But 0\ en with the months of actual study limited by bmunte- 005 vacations, the academic of- fering Inas been heavily diluted with plenty of soft or irrelevant courses. The observations that follow may not apply so specifically to the learning of foreign languages or science. But they certainly ap- ply to the disciplines with which I am most familiar, the social sciences. In that part of the curriculum, faculty members with four years to thin out their offering can move with the utmost leisure. Courses are given which need not be taught, only read in books. Usually a faculty member has an introductory course for "funda- mentals." Then a moderately ad- vanced course which merely el- aborates the introductory course. And for the third course, a re- capitulation of the first two. Too often the wisdom and knowledge of a professor could with effi- ciency be imparted in one full year's course. But the colleges justify this part-time use of talent beeatise they want "research" and the writing of books. Jacques Bar- zun, dean of the Graduate Facul- ties at Columbia, takes sharp is- sue with this insistence upon what is called productive re- search and scholarship. Too often it is merely an "excuse for a flight from teaching." And the pressure on young teachers to "produce" means gross neglect of students and classrooms. Indeed, the gifted and inspiring teacher is under a heavy penalty. The dull fellow who can neither teach 'nor write well is the benefici- ary. The college plant is also ineffi- ciently used. President Kirk es- timates that the plant is .r oper- ation only about 46 per cent of the time. With a rise of more than 100 per cent in enrollment of 7 million in prospect by 1970, such inefficiency is deplorable. The remedy is three college years •of eleven months each. Faculty members might choose time off for writing or travel, or more pay. There would be a faster turnover of students and less expense for parents, colleges, taxpayers, and donors. And stu- dents would be able to add a year to their productive life. GUN SWIGGER — Actress Stella Stevens isn't trying to commit suicide, she is merely using a water pistol to "shoot" herself o drink. In order not to spoil her make-up between takes of her Paramount picture "Deadlock," she uses this strange method ie quench her thirst. MAMIE AND IKE DROP IN FOR LUNCH — President Kennedy put aside his crutches long enough to play host at a White House luncheon in honor of Japanese Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda. From left: Mrs. Kennedy, Prime Minister and Mrs, Ikeda, General and Mrs. Eisenhower and the President. Before the luncheon, President Kennedy and Mr, Eisenhower held a pri- vate conference. HRONICLES i1NGERFARM dkrao►dattns D. C1e oke The strange bird I mentioned a few weeks ago is not a hermit thrush as I imagined. It is a Brown Thrasher. And apparent- ly, it had a mate as a nest was built in a big thorn bush next door. Three brown speckled eggs were laid and carefully tended by the mother bird. Our neigh- bour kept close' Watch to make sure the nest was not disturbed by marauding cats. But her watchfulness was not sufficient protection against crows , and starlings, And so, one by one, the eggs disappeared, leaving only scraps of broken shell. But the thrashers are s till around. We often see them on or near our feeding station and quite frequently hear them singing from the top of a nearby tree. They are beautiful .birds to seg and to hear. It grieves me to think their .eggs were destroyed. If only there were some way to protect our song birds from ma- licious and less attractive birds. Of course the birds fight for themselves as much as they can. We quite often see a thieving crow being chased away by a number• of smaller birds. Cow- birds are particularly aggres- gressive. And yet too often it is the crow who wins out, presum- ably by cunning and stealth. Because of tragedies in the wing- ed world such as happened to the brown thrasher bird watch- ing is not always a pleasure — it can be a heartache, But then what applies in bird - land also applies to humans. Things do not always turn out the way we plan them. Birds build their nests in what they think is a sheltered spot. In juste the same way man may buy ur build a house in a beautiful, quiet country setting, The place is reasonably close to good roads, churches, schools and shopping centre so everyone is happy and enjoys the freedom of country life. And then, it quite often happens, the family is hardly settled before a speculator buys up most of the adjacent land and first thing they know bulldozers move in, houses spring up like murhrdoms overnight—and then, it's goodbye privacy and coun- try living. Another case might be that of a family crowded into a city apartment who get listening to housing propaganda on the radio — "Own your own home in our newest and most spacious sub- division .. , enjoy independence at its best , . . low down pay- ment and move right in," It sounds good compared to a city apartment, So they buy a house with all the trimmings. They soon find the locality lacks trees, privacy and space but it has an abundance of dogs, cats, chil- dren and cars, And you know it is funny what can happen in a modern home, I went to a new house one day and after ringing the bell I heard a voice say — "Bill, answer the door will you I'm in the bathroom!" The lady of the house had obviously forgotten the bathroom window opened out on to the front porch! Just lately I have been listen- ing to a lot of nearby subdivi- sion advertising so last Sunday when Bob was here I suggested that we take a run over to see what it was all about. We did . , , and how glad I was to get home. Street after street with houses —So much alike it would be hard to recognize one's own home In the dark. And the next house no more than ten feet away. I looked at the treeless sundrenched streets and literal- ly got hot all over, But still suburban life, I have to admit, seems to suit some young couples A LITTLE MIS(S)CHIEF — Asked to smile, this little Swedish Miss made a funny face for the photographer. She was wear- ing her traditional costume for flag day celebration in Stock- holm. very well. The children have other children to play with; the mothers have their coffee breaks and Dad has plenty of time left over after mowing the wee lawn (with a power mower, of course!) and hoeing the flower border. So I guess it's not for me to grumble — just so long as I'm not required to live in a sub- division. Right now we are experienc- ing joys and sorrows on our own acre lot, Our garden isn't doing too well, Some of it is water- logged so that hoeing is impos- sible. Rabbits are still busy. They have even chewed off some of the small shrubs we planted this spring, And aphids and cther insects are every- where, stunting the growth of treys and shrubs, Green cater- pillars drop from the trees on to our heads and down our necks. Ugh! But we are learning a lot. We know now which plants are disease resistant — morain lo- cust, mock orange, trumpet vine, weeping birch and Manitoba maple, Badly infected are the flowering birch, spirea, honey- suckle vine, and of course, the roses, We hand -spray them but sometimes the damage is done before we notice, Our petunias don't look too healthy but our iris and geraniums are grand, Flowers are like people—some like it hot, some like it cool, But I haven't found anyone who en- joyed last week's humid wea- ther. But there has been plenty to think about besides the weather the Coyne -Fleming contro- versy had everyone talking. And the biggest guessing game to date is what will come out' in the Budget. By the time this gets into print we shall know — and some will be happy and others not. That's the way it always is, and always will be. When Learning Was A Privilege Think of wearing your primer on a cord around your neck! That was what Dorothy was so proud to do, Think of calling that primer a book, when it was not a book at all, but just a single page! The hornbook was the only kind of primer the school chil- dren had in -those days, When the strange primer was hung around Dorothy's neck, in order that she might carry it safely to school, it really looked more like a toy than anything else. There was only one printed page. A thin piece of wood was put behind the sheet of paper to keep it smooth, and over the printing was spread a sheet of horn so thin that the letters could be seen through it. Printing cost so much in those days that the little sheet must be kept safe from wet or dirty lingers, But glass was costly, too, and so the thin covering of horn was used. A frame of brass was put around the whole, and the wooden back had a handle at the bottom, The hornbook looked like a little hand mirror. A very odd primer! Dorothy wore her hornbook to school the second day. A new cord had been put through the hole in the end of the little wooden handle, and the horn- book hung like a very large, locket around Dorothy's fat little neck. If Dorothy had gone to school when her own daughter's daugh- ter went, she would have had a real book with pictures, Perhaps there would have been a picture of an acorn and a picture of a boy and the rhyme: "A is an Acorn that grew on on oak, B is a Boy who delights in his book," This surely would have given some help in learning A and B. It would have been easier still if Dorothy had learned to read in these days, for nobody would have troubled her with the let- ters at all. She would have be- gun •at once with little stories, just as she expected to do. It seemed very stupid to keep saying the alphabet. Round 0 and curly D, to be sure, were easy, but how could any one ever tell which was little b and which was little d? There were days when Doro- thy wished she lived where lit- tle girls had no hornbooks. At last site knew that the hump was on the right side of b and on the Ica side of d; and she knew also the sounds of the easy syllables itt the next line, a -b, r, h, o -h, ob, and all the others, There were more lines on the hornbook page, ,and they to'. tr fi long time to learn, because 0l was a line that held all the fig+ tures, and the lower part of Ura page container! the Lord's Pray- er. The day she way five yearp old Dorothy read to her grand- father everything on the horn- book from the cross in the upper left hand corner to the Amen at the end of the prayer, -- From "Everyday Life in the Colonies," by Gertrude i., Stone and M, Grace Pickett, Modern Etiquette By Anne Ashley Q. Is it proper to have one's telephone number engraved on one's personal stationery? A. Never. Q. Ilas a divorced woman the privilege of continuing fo wear her rings? A. If she wishes — although It would seem logical that she would wish to discard her wed- ding ring, Q, llow does one properly In- troduce one's stepfather? A. Introduce him as "my step- father," and, of course, be sure to mention his name (which is affluent front yore's), as, "Mr. Jackson." The man who says he's never made a mistake usually has it wife who did. For Half -Sizes PRINTED PATTERN Enjoy the sun in a styled -to - slim playsuit — wrap on tate skirt when 1 "dress look" is re- quired! Smoothly zips up back boy shorts give you a trim thigh - line. Printed Pattern 4883: Half Sizes 14%, 161/2, 181/2, 201/2, 221, 241/1. Size 161/2 playsuit tales 21/1 yards 35 -inch; skirt 2%s yards. Send FORTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern.. Please print plainly S I Z E; NAME, ADDRESS, S TY LE 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 — just out! Hurry, send 350 now! THE CRUCIFIXION — "The most beautiful and moving sequence to reach the screen" that's n Hollywood word-mangler's description of the -crucifixion scene in the new film, "Barabbas." Filming it against a total eclipse of the sun was the idea of producer Dino D3 Levssntiis, who gambled $16,000 that such a phenomenon could be photographed. 1111.04 NMI 1.1 IIIII NIIIIPAMmonlliillal NI MMMMM Four Years Old — Smokes Cigars 1 Brenda Gail Phillips Is only four but her favourite occupation i� not playing with dolls but ..molting strong cigars. When her father caught Brenda 'smoking a cigar he bought re- cently, he sent for a doctor, ex- pecting the little girl would he terribly sick, Everyone was amazed when Brenda finished off the cigar, and then smilingly asked for an- other! Doctors say thaat Brenda ap- parently lacks something in her system, They advise that she should be allowed tobacco once in a while, Her father didn't like the idea of Brenda puffing away at cigars, however. '1'o try to break her of the habit he gave her three strong cigars in succession. But she smoked them all — and then asked for more! Neighbours, a t Spartanburg, South Carolina, often drop in to marvel at Brenda happily puffing away in her own small chair while. watching television, Oysters Have Foes Over And Under . Some people think the world k their oyster, but the starfish know that the oyster is their world, The conflicting philoso- phies have led to ferocious com- petition for oysters, with the starfish, in recent years, win- ning out, The starfish have two advantages: They are closer to the supply, and they don't ob- 'terve the "r" -less month rule, An average starfish. can eat 10 to 20 bushels of oysters a year. One week, last month, on Long Island Sound, people struck back. Skindivers, 400 -strong, fetched up an estimated 25,000 'starfish, saved an estimated 375,- 000 bushels of oysters for people to eat, MERRY MENAGERIE CAUTION 1 DEER CROSSING Wqmp CAW IoM. • 1114 -,nI 'Well, it's about time WIC got a little consideration!" THE FACE OF WAR — A wounded Laotian soldier it carried to a vehicle for the trip to an aid station at Vientiane, Laos, He was among those wounded when the village of Padong fell to pro•Communist rebels recently. Where Every Kid Makes The Team Baseball's dad, Abner Double- day, would probably thrill to the new mood that has come over his game on a number of dia- monds in Fort Wayne, Ind, A new league has just been laundched in town, They call it the Wildcat League. It not only has teams, coaches, scrappy young players, bats, balls, sacks, plates and mounds, distinctive T-shirts and caps, but it also has a significant philosophy, It appears to be such a sturdy and pioneering philosophy, in fact, that other communities may want to try it out. Thr philosophy is simply alis: everybody who comes out for a Wildcat League • team makes the team and gets in the game, That's it, Not so new? Perhaps not in essence; new, certainly, on this scale. 1t„is a hopeful departure for the 81/2 -to -14 -year-old baseball set which, in recent years, has been caught in a flurry of highly organized leagues which set out to build sportsmanship and ath- letic skill but which, somehow, seem 'frequently to have brought about as many tear -stained fre- ckles as jack -rabbit shortstops, How Babe Ruth Set That Record Every year, about this time, there is talk about this or that ball- player fracturing Babe Ruth's record of sixty homer's in a single reason. So here, just in case you like to keep tabs, is when, where and who against, the Babe did it. The year, in case you've forgot- ten, was 1927, Homer Date Against City Made 1 April 15 Ehmke, Philadelphia N, Y. 2 23 Walberg, Philadelphia ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,Pllila, 3 24 Thurston, Washington Wash, 4 29 Harriss, Boston Boston 5 May 1 Quinn, Philadelphia N. Y. fi 1 Walberg, Philadelphia N. Y. 7 10 Gaston, St. Louis Sl. L. 8 11 Nevers, St. Louis St. L. 9 17 Collins, Detroit Deti,oit 10 22 Karr, Cleveland Cleve. 11 23 Thurston,. Washington Wash. 12 28 Thurston, Washington N, Y. 13 29 MacFayden, Boston N. Y. 14 30 Walberg, Philadelphia Phila. 15 31 Ehnke, Philadelphia Phila. 16 31 Quinn, Philadelphia Plli;a. 17 June 5 Whitehill, Detroit N. Y. 111 7 Thomas, Chicago N, Y. 19 11 Buckeye, Cleveland N, Y, 20 11 Buckeye, Cleveland N. Y. 21 12 Uhle, Cleveland N, Y, . 22 16 Zachary, St, Louis ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,I,N, Y. 23 22 Wiltse, Boston Boston 24 22 Wiltse, Boston Boston 25 30 Harriss, Boston N.' Y. 26 July 3 Lisenbee, Washington Wasll. 27 Il Whitehill, Detroit ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Detroit 28 9 Holloway, Detroit Detroit 29 9 Holloway, Detroit Detroit 30 12 Shaute, Cleveland Cleve, 31 24 Thomas, Chicago ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Chicago 32 26 Gaston, St, Louis N, Y, 33 26 Gaston, St, Louis 34 28 Stewart, St, Louis 35 Aug. 5 G. Smith, Detroit 36 10 Zachary, Washington ............ Wash 37 16 Thomas, Chicago ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,„ Chicago 38 17 Connally, Chicago Chicago 39 20 Miller, Cleveland Cleve, 40 22 Shaute, Cleveland Cleve. 41 27 Nevers, St. Louis ,,,, St, L, 42 28 Wingard, St. Louis Sl, L, 43 31 Welzer, Boston N. Y. Sept, 2 Walberg, Philadelphia ............ Phila, 6 Welzer, Boston Boston ItWetzel., Boston • Boston 6 Russell Boston , Boston N, Y, N, Y, N. Y. 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 GO 7 MacFayden, Boston 7 Harriss, Boston 11 Gaston, St. Louis 13 Hudlin, Cleveland N, Y. N, Y. N. Y. N, Y. Boston Boston N. Y. 13 Shaute, Cleveland 16 Blankenship, Chicago 18 Lyons, Chicago 21 Gibson, Detroit . N. Y. 22 Holloway, Detroit 27 Grove, Philadelphia N. Y. 29 Lisenbee, Washington N, Y. 29 Hopkins, Washington N. Y. 30 Zachary, Washington ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,N, Y. Boys with hearts set on posi lions on many of these Well known leagues across the coun try have, in countless cases dragged home hopelessly after tryouts to report that "they said 1 wasn't good enough to make the team,” In some instances parents themselves have pulled off- spring out of games or off teams when competitive z e a 1 among sideline adults got out of hand, A variety of -.unfortunate fric- tions have overshadowed set- tings originally conceived as training 'fields for wholesome teamwork and competition ,for young boys. It is against this somewhat unsettled background of organ- ized baseball for youngsters that Ford Wayne's Wildcat League ap- pears so promising. Dale W. McMillen, Sr'., one of the city's 'pioneer industrialists and, in recent years, one of its most ardent boosters, has provid- ed financial support for the leagues, And he has set the guidelines for it too. He has reminded the people of Fort Wayne that the future of the community "rests in the hands of its youth and that ade- quate recreational opportunities are vital to their development as good citizens." "Because ort o u r interest in youth," he continues, "we are sponsoring the 'Wildcat Baseball Leagues' which will offer an opportunity to play baseball for ALL boys of ages 81/2 -to -14 re- gardless 9f race, religion, or fin- ancial means, "Through these additional re- creational opportunities, a'l d without interfering with any league now in existence, it is our desire to teach, train, and coach any youngster who cannot qual- ify for play in any league now organized, "This investment in youth is an investment in the future of our community, We know of no Netter way to help ensure its growth, prosperity and enrich- ment." White-haired and hard -driv- ing at 81, Mr, McMillen consi- ders these leagues "the most Im- portant thing I have ever done." Ten of Fort Wayne's best pub- lic and private school coaches have been hired to direct the teams; 10 carefully screened col- lege athletes and 10 of the city's top high school seniors will work as paid.- assistants, They have been instructed that the mission of the leagues is "the creation of a wholesome atmosphere for the players so that correct atti- tudes, habits, language usage, and sportsmanship may be a di- rect outcome of their partici- pation in this program," The boys must buy Wildcat caps and T-shirts but if they cannot afford them they may do assigned chores to earn them, writes Robert Colby Nelson in the Christian Science Monitor. The league manual counsels them in the tenets of physical and mental fitness, "Don't clutter your mind with unclean, uncouth thoughts and Ideas, Use it for worthwhile thoughts. "Learn the rules o'Z the game and play according to them, A good sportsman never cheats, "Teamwork is very important to every team, Bickering, argu- ing, fighting with teammates will help your team lose, "Never blame an umpire or a teammate or an opponent for your mistake or error. Admit your inistake or error — but don't repeat it," And tucked into a corner of the Wildcat Baseball League'. handbook is Mr. McMillen's per- sonal, most cherished guidance: "Improve yourself every day. Beat your own record." 111.1111 - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BOYS' AND GIRLS' CAMPS BOYS AND GIRLS 8 to 15 can have e wonderful onc•week Ilolldsy at our Breesldo Camp (near Parts, Ont,) under experienced Christian supervision. The low fee of ;14 covers registration, room end board swimming and other sports, classes with handbooks, evening meet - Ings with "Aunt Phyllis" Mason - the children's friend, treats, handcrafts, Insurance and other Items. Boya' week — July 17 to 13, Girls' week - July 24 to 30. For folders, wilt° the Camp Director, Rev, W. 11. Moody, 664 Fen. nel Ave. E. Hamilton, Ont. Phone FUlton 3.1681 or FUlton 38745. These Skin -Divers Got Well Skinned Working is only one way of earning a living, Far mere al - tractive is that practised by a man called Tom Crichton, who cruises the Mediterranean in a 39 -ton ketch, the Jack London,. When funds are low he takes passengers, and that's where the fun starts, At Palma, Majorca, on one occasion, a German calling himself a professor of archaeol- ogy hired the Jack London to take groups of amateur archae- ologists skin-diving. A week before the first were due to arrive, he turned up with a donkey cart filled with what looked Tike bomb rubb'e, but turned out to be earthen puts and bowls, broken or faulty rejects from a local pottery. "It is necessary to seed the ground," he explained, and pro- ceeded to "seed" various under- water sites around Palma Bay and elsewhere by chucking the stuff overboard, The first party of young Ger- man amateurs arrived with their frogmen's kits, and the ketch immediately set sail. The "professor" stood near the bow with a folio of centuries-old charts, calculating the best place to look for archaeological treas- ures, then got Crichton to anchor at one of the seeded sites, In went the divers, Up came the first with a whoop, proudly waving a piece of cooking pot tvhich the professor studied min- utely before ascribing a name and date to it. And so it went on. "What happens if these things are examined by experts when they're taken back to Germany?" Crichton asked, "Nothing happens because they dun'( get back to Germany," the professor explained. "Ancient rel- ics can't be taken out of Spain. We just gather thein all together and present them to the curator of the local museum, As he is a special friend of mine he gives each of the boys a nice letter of appreciation." That is one of the strange and hilarious incidents recounted by Crichton in his recently publish- ed book: "Salt Water Vagabond." How Can 1? By Roberta Lee Q. flow can I insure the In- stant lighting of candles on a birthday cake? A. Prepare them ahead of time b;' applying a drop or two of fingernail polish to each wick, Q. !low can I make the appli- cation of enamel easier and smoother? A. By placing your can of enamel in a pan of hot water for awhile before beginning your paint job. REGISTERED NURSES For 20•bed, fully equipped, private hos. pital located In progressive town In Northwestern Ontario, Starting salary $275,00 per month minimum to ;325.00 maximum for three years' experience. Board and room In modern nurses' resi- dence Is supplied at no charge, Excel. Tent employee benefits, Year-round rec- reational facilities, Further particulars en request. Apply to Superintendent WILSON MEMORIAL HOSPITAL MARATHON, ONTARIO with details of experience, age, availability, and references, BABY CHICKS BRAY has many varieties started chicks. avallable, prompt shipment. Dayolds to order, Broiler chicks, order now, See local agent or write Bray Hatchery, 110 John Horth, Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE FEED business, mill, bldgs,, office, ex• tra storage sheds, double garage, pri- vate railroad siding, 520,000 down. Hawkins tiros., 10 Wakefield, Parry Sound, 111. 6.5231. BOA'!' marina, hont and motor rentals, bait, 16 boats, 3 canoes, 5 motors, new boathouse, 20'x36'; older boathouse 18'x40'; modern 6•roont house, large lot. See Cord. Wilson, owner, Washago. • BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES OPPORTUNITY for an active person with office or construction experience to purticlpale In n yeerround resort business, Minimum 53,000 required for un unlimited future. Box 238, 123•I1Itb Street, New Toronto, Ont• COINS CAST¢ for•your Coins, Giant 126 page book, listing prices 1 pay. Send 51.00, refundable first purchase. Stanley Kop• kin, 1359 Coney Island Avenue, Brook. IYn 30, New York, WANTED, wanted coins, we're buying, no need to write, Just send your coins Insured. Enclose 24 stamps, Money order sent same day or your coins re- turned, Honest appraising. William Feyer, •Coln Exchange, 161 Wyandotte Street East, Windsor, Ontnrio. CL. 7.•8427. FISHING TACKLE GOING FISHING ? 5•PiECE split bamboo all•purpose rod packaged with many extras. Packed In strong lightweight wooden box that prevents breakage and keeps equip - merit dry, Complete 57.05 prepaid. Hud. son Sales Ileg'd,, Box 11126, Pince d'Armes, Montreal, FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE MOUNT Forest 28.45 thresher An rub- ber with Watson cutter, 120 ft. drive belt and 18 It, elevator, Also 30 Massey- Harris asseyHarris standard tractor. Both In ex- cellent condition., Arnold Rife, Rose- ville Road, Galt, FOR SALE' — MISCELLANEOUS CHAISE Lounge Cole — 511.95. Camp Stools — $1,981 Portable Water Soften- ers and Purifiers — 529.00, Barbecues - 59.95; Tape Recorders — $39.83. Other lines, Express Prepold. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. •Cate• logue. TWEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FERGUS 18, ONTARIO HOUSE PLANTS AFRICAN VIOLETS, LEAVES, Plants, Newest vagietles, FREE list. Louise Johnson, Box' 1071V Hudson Heights, Que. MEDICAL • READ THIS — .EVERY SUFFERER Of RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEIJP,ITIS SHOULD TRY- DIXON'S' REMEDY- ' ' " MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 235 ELGIN OTTAWA 51.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin • troubles. - Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scalding and burning ecze- ma, acne; ringworm, pimples and foot eczema wi11 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' r 1863 St. Clair 'Mende East, TORONTO MONEY TO LOAN OPEN Mortgage Loans on farms, homes commercial, etc. Fast service, , Phone, write, or drop in. United County Investments 110., 3645 Bathurst Sl.. Toronto, RU. 0.2125. MISCELLANEOUS AMAZING! Watch colorful Mineral Aquarium Gardens grow like Magic (Kit 51,). Marino, 415 West 441h, New York 36, New York. (100So Delight Guaranteed!) NUTRIA ATTENTION • PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchase g Nutria consider the following points which this organize• tion offers: I. The best avallable stock, no cross- bred or standard types recommended. '2. The reputation of a plan which 1s proving Itself substnntiated by files of satisfied ranchers. 3. Full Insurance against replace. ment, should they not live or In the event of sterility (all fully explained In our certificate of merit.) 4 We give you only mutations which are In demand for fur garments, 5, You receive from this organization a guaranteed pelt market In writing. G. Membership In our exclusive breeders' association, whereby only purchasers of this stock may partici. pate In the benefits so offered. 7. Prices for Breeding Stock start al 5200 a pair. Special offer to those who qualify: earn your Nutria on our cooperative basis, Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.. P,.R. No. 2, Stoufevllle, Ontario. ISSUE 27 — 1961 „m. -ooi1Ml --,1 or OP INTSMST TO ALL . PORTRAIT MINIATURES from negative -or print, Personalize your l tern, greetings with "Photosturpp 100 for 52.00, Kormoczy 3110 Doss, Seattle 44, Washington, U.S.A. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN LADIES who like surprises. A grab bag 4f costume Jewelry, only 52.00! All pew, Jewelry Grab }lag, P.O. Box 107, Inde- pendence_Mlssourl, U.S.A. .OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL (treat Opportunity Learn Ualrdre•.slng Pleasant dignified profession; gond w;',s. 'Thousands of successful ,ll1 rvcl Graduates. America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write nr CsIt MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor 5t. W., Toronto Branches: 44 fling St W , Ilamilton 7'4 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL UNWANTED HAIR VANISiHED away with SaerePelo, Saca• l'elo Is different It does not dissolve or remove hair from the surface. hot penetrates and relurds growth of un- wanted hair. Lor•Beer Lab. Ltd. 5 6711 Granville, Vancouver 2, 11.C. PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA -CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. Films developed and_. 3 magna prints 4f)e i' magna prints 60c ,Reprints Sc each. KODACOLOR Developing roll 0J< ,not Including prints), Color prints :0: each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 rim. 20 ex• posures mounted In slides 01.20 Color prints from slides 32< each. Money re- funded In full for unprinted negatives. PROPERTIES FOR SALE FIIANKFORD, Ont ; 6 rooms, all town conv8nlences, !urge lot near Trent River; terms. Contact J .W. Summers', Colborne Ont. or call Colborne 66, eggs ALBERTA 640 ACRES West of Edmonton on Jasper .Illghwey, Ideal tor two , fnnllles or one largo family, Near round work, Pulpwood Puipmill nearby. Good demand for pulpwood at good prices. Start to make money first day. Land price from 525 to $30 per acre. Terms cash or ex- change 'fur property nearby. For in- formation write Mr. Frank Besse, 43 Regent St.. 'Toronto 2, Ont. or phone EM 6.3680 REMAI,LING SERVICE LAS VEGAS Color Post Cards! Four for 51. Ten for 52. You address, we remelt Free! Western Ways, Box 2109, Las Vegas, Nevadu; 'STAMPS ' 100 MIXED Australian stamps for 25s. ' IV6-TulTilry'stitmps to fill your Domin- ion store's stamp albums, Write Sutton, 1927T Upper James, Hamilton. SUMMER,,RESORTS- - HOLIDAY iN Ronnechero Valley, heart of Rem frew County, Good. fishing, beaches, sight-seeing Write EGANVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE EGANVILLE, ONTARIO, CANADA. , SEE THE WONDERFUL. SUNSETS AT New Hotel Belyedere. SITUATED oh wind-swept bluffs, over. looking 30,000 Islands, Georgian Hay. Golf. tennis, fishing, bathing. Rooms •with private hath; rooms' wllh privald toilet. All rooms with hot and , cold running water, Ileautyrest m,sitresses. Meals tops. BOOKLET—A. G. PEEBLES, MGR. . PARRY' SOUNp, ONTARIO PHONE RIVERSIDE 6.5581 AND ; RIVERSIDE 6.4990 TEACHERS WANTED REQUIRED for R.C.S.S,, No. l I'isdale' South Porcupine. TWO TEACHERS AND ONE PRINCIPAL 1'0r-0•classroom Separate School. J, V. GERVAIS, SEC.•TREAS. BOX 367 • SOUTH PORCUPINE, ONT TEACHERS WANTED BY SIOUX LOOKOUT Separate School Board For Grades 4, 5, and 7. STARTING salary fol• first=l'I;Is8 Bert!: fieato 53,400 with yearly In'I' ment of $200, WITiI application please stale gtialifl- cations, experience and the name and address of your last Inspector APPLY to: " MR. L. C. BOWER, SEC.—TREAS. R. C. SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD BOX 338, SIOUX LOOKOUT, ONT. TRADE SCHOOLS ' LEARN I.B.M. OPERATION WIRING ALSO 'KEY PUNCH TYPING NOT ESSENTIAL. IN'I'ERNAT10NA L DATA PROCESSING INSTI'T'UTE 130 KING ST. E,, i1A7iiLTON PHONE JA. -81108 UP -SEE -DAISY — Able to lift a loaded truck trailer off a freight car like a child playing with a model train, this newly developed machine was shown in a preview at freight terminal this month. The 30 -ton capacity fork-lift is the latest development In the new field of piggy- backing. Cars art now loaded from ramps. , N b+www+r ...... Ir . 4aloolY CLARK'S BEANS WITH PORK 2.15 oz, tins 29c SHERRIFF'S GOOD MORING MARMALADE 24 oz. jar 47c NESTLES QUICK CHOCOLATE FLAVOUR 16 oz. tin 50c HEINZ TOMATO KETCHUP 11 oz. bottle 22c 2 - 15 oz. tins 49c YORK STEWS--- Beef, Irish, Chicken For Superior Service Phone 156 01011 See Fairservice We Deliver Cara For Sale 1961 FORD Sedan 1959 PONTIAC Sedan 1959 CHEV. Sedan 1958 METEOR Ranch Wagon. 1958 AUSTIN Sedan 1957 FJORD Sedan 1953 FORD Coach 1953 CHEV. Sedan 1953 BUICK Convertible 1952 FORD' Sedan Del. 1951 CHEV. 2 -door hard top. ths 4144 Iittit Mit sit ANbAttb AUBURN NEWS Promotion List of S.S. No, 9 Hallett Grade eight to nine • Linda Andrews. Hans Bake:aar, Sharon Ball, Ruth Schneider; seven to eight - Betty Hal- lam, Casey Verewey; six to seven - Douglas Archambault, Shirley Bunking Bill I app; five to six - Brenda Ball Wendy Schneider; four to live - Brenda Archambault, Daryk Ball, Daryl Ball Stephen Haggitt, Nancy Lapp, &hl ie Schneider; two to three • Jcyce Hallam Kathy Schneider; one to two • Ralph • Hallam, Keith Loerke. —Teacher, \1 it mer Errington. Promotion at S.S. 2, West Wawanosh These pupils will be in these grade; when the fall school term or ens in Sep- tember: one, Janice Foran; two, Doug las Durnin, Cathy Foran, Terry For- an; four, Kathy Hallam, Ronald Me Phee;, five, Frank Foran; six, Randy Kerr, Con Foran; eight, Ronald Durn in, Jim Moss, Cliff Hallam; nine, Annc Fcran, Glen Webs`.er, Fred Stir,ing Andre Delbergue, Teacher -- Mrs. Myrtle lame. On the last day o' school the pupils honoured her with c parting gilt of a monogrammed Shaef- fer pen and pencil set. Ronald Manic read the address and Andre Delberguc ;:resented Mrs. Munroe with the gift She has been supply teacher since Hit beginning of the year Promotion List of U.S.S, No, 5, Bullet (Auburn Scheel) Promoted to grade nine: Carole Brown, Lorne Daer, John liocgenl:oom Barbara MacKay, Barbara Sanderson Promoted to grade eight: Philemon Bisback, Allen Craig, Elmer Diebol Margaret Sanderson, Mary Sanderson. Promoted to grade seven: Judith At . thur, Laura Daer, John Mackay, Gai: Miller, Brigitte Schlichting, Robert IViikin. Promoted to grade six: Ronald Arthur, Brenda East, Freddie Mogen- ,. boom, Dianne Kirkconnell, Allan Mc- Dougall. Promoted to grade five: Brian Craig, Jennifer Grange, Joyce Leath- erland, Betty Moss, Karl Teichert. Promoted to grade four: Mark Arthur, Wayne Arthur, Ronald Brown, Karen East, Petra Teichert, Patsy Wilkin. Promoted to grade three: Shelly Grange Randall Machan, Mary Wilkin, Pro- moted to grade two: Dana Bean, Nancy Brown, Alarie Plunkett, Gail Seers; Peter Teichert. Teacher — Duncan MacKay. S.S. No. 9 Enjoy Bus Trip The pupils of S.S No. 9 and their teacher, Wilmer Errington, and some of the parents enjoyed a bus trip to Fort George and Niagara last week. They also held the annual picnic with results of the races being: senior bcys. Hans Bakelaar, Billy Lapp, Douglas Archambault; intermediate boys, Daryl Ball, Bob Schneider, Daryk Ball; juniot boys, Keith Loerke, Ralph Hallam; sen- ior girls, Betty Hallam, Linda Andrews, Ruth Schneider; intermediate girls. Brenda Archambault, Brenda Ball, Wendy Schneider; junior girls, Kathy Schneider, Joyce Hallam; standing broad jump: intermediate girls, Wendy - Schneider, Brenda Ball, Shirley Hunk- ▪ ing; junior girls, Kathy Schneider, Joyce Hallam ;running broad, senior. boys, Bill Lapp, Hans Bakelaar, Dong- las Archambault; Inter, boys, Daryl Ball, Bob Schneider, Stephen Haggitt; - Jr. boys, Keith Loerke, Ralph Hallam; - Sr. girls, Betty Hallam, Ruth Schneider,, - Linda Andrews; Inter. girls, Brenda Ar- chambault, Wendy Schneider, Nancy Lapp; Jr. girls, Kathy Schneider, Joyce Hallam; high jump, Sr, boys, Hans Ba- kelaar, Bill Lapp, Doug Archambault; Inter. boys, Daryl Ball, Stephen Hag gitt, Bob Schneider; Jr. boys, Ralph Hallam, Keith Loerke; Sr. girls, Linda Andrews, Betty Hallam, Ruth Schnei- der; Inter, girls, Brenda Archambault. Wendy Schneider, Nancy Lapp; Jr. _ girls, Joyce Hallam, Kathy Schneider; sack race: boys, Bob Schneider, Bill Lapp, Douglas Archambault; girls, Wendy Schneider, Brenda Ball, Kathy Schneider; wheel harrow race: Ilans _ Bakelaar and Bob Schneider, Casey Verewey and Douglas Archambault, Wendy Schneider and Brenda Bali; kicking the slipper: Doug Archambault, Casey Verewey, Bob Schneider; girls, .. Brenda Ball, Joyce Hallam, Wendy Schneider; boys three-legged race: Daryk Ball and Stephen Haggitt, Doug Archamhault and flans Bakelaar, Ca- sey Verewey and Billy Lapp; girls: Brenda Archambault and Nancy Lapp, Wendy Schneider and Brenda Ball. Sharon Ball and Ruth Schneider; pre, school children race, Arva Ball, Rickey Archambault, Louise flunking; adult bean bag toss, Mrs. George Schneider. Mrs. Stanley Ball, Mrs Leonard Ar- chambault; hit the balloon: Mrs. Ar- thur Hallam, Airs, Jirn Cartwright. The picnic was concluded with a ball game and picnic supper. A new fence and ' hall screen has been erected on tht 1 school grounds by the trustees. t Knox United Sunday School Picnic • Knox United Sunday School held their annual picnic at the Goderich Summer School grounds. The winners of the races were as follows:pre-school Sherry Plaetzer, (Vanda Plaetzer, Ri- ckey Archambault, Paul Chamney; girls, 7 and under: Marie Plunkett Shelly Grange; boys 7, Larry Cham- ney, Keith Loerke; girls 9, Brenda Ar- chambault, Uncle Reed, .hoys, Billy Millian, John Koopmans; girls 12 and under: Klaska Koopmans, Gail Miller. Patsy Millian, boys, Glen Webster. Billy Lapp; girls,16: Marie Koopmans, Ann Speigelburg. The ladies race was won by Martie Koopmans and Ann Speigelburg. In the soft ball throw the winners in their age groups were, Shel- ly Grange, Marie Plunkett, Klaska Koopmans, Laura Daer, Martie Koop- mans, Ann Speigleburg, ,John Kcop- mans, Larry Chamney, Glen Webster. Billy Lapp; Three-legged race, Ann Speigelherg and Martie Koopmans Sharon Ball and Patsy Millian, Glen Webster and John Koopmans, Billy Millian and Allan McDougall; sack race: Martie Koopmans, Klaska Koop- mans, Doug Archambault, Billy Lapp; hop, step- and jump: Marie Plunkett, Klaska Koopmans, Ann Speigelburg. Larry Chamney, Keith Leorke, Glen • Webster and Billy Lapp; kick the slip- ; per: Klaska Koopmans, Ann Speigel- Hamm's Garage Blyth, Ontario. ' New and Used Car Dealers - ..,....-�.. � .. .�. ... �, _- �...., 1... i...uwuuu:..:.. L1J 111.1)• -111.rrrir.l..0ulr-.Il 1111111..-.IWii M.JiLl1 WI.Y1 LI.IY11.11Y11 iL 1i1.'�a.d'.+�iLi�J'rJ.Jr..I.r..11 �1I�1.1. WAIL I SMELL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver -f 6TOP, SHOP USAVE 1' $ SAVING FROZEN FOOD SALE Haddock Fish and Chips, 24 oz. pkg..:. 2 for 1.00 Sunshine French Fries, 9 oz. pkg. .... 6 for 1.00 Sunshine Fancy Peas, 12 oz. pkg. 5 for 1.00 Zero Pack Fancy Corn, 12 oz. pkg. 1.15 for 1.00 Country Fair Peas and Carrotts, 11 oz. pkg., 5 -1.00 Libby'A Mixed Vegetables, 2 lb.bag :', . 2 for 1.00 Morton's Turkey, Beef and Chicken Pies, 4 for 1.00 Sunkist Frozen Lemonade, 6 oz. can ... 2 for .25c The Tea that dares to be known by good taste alone Orange: Pekoe, 60 tea bags .75c Shreddies Cereal, 12.5 oz. 2 for 49c • Muffets Cereal, 9 oz. ` ' 2 for 33c Iib 110 I.aai Ir 1.11... 1.11L1 1111.It11.:LI 41 11 IJ 711111. II1.11111r1.11111L111-1- Stewart's Red (3 White Food -- Market Blyth Phone 9 - We Deliver SHOP and SAVE on these OPPORTUNITY DAYS BARGAINS Cottage Toilet Tissue ' 12 rolls 99c Sunbleat Peas R tins 99c Choice Quality Tomatoes ' 6 tins 99c Miracle. Whip Dressing 32 oz. 67c 'rreesweet Grapefruit Juice, 4 oz. 3 tins 1.00 Kleenex Tissues 6 pkgs. 95c Birls Eye Frozen Orange Juice 6 oz. 89c Birds Eye French Fries, 9 oz. 2 pkgs. 37c • California Sunkist Oranges, 163's • 3 'doz. 89c burg, Glen Webster, Doug Archam- bault; nail driving contest, Mrs. Law- rence Plaetzer, Mrs. Harold McClin• they, Harold Webster, Percy Youngblut. The races were in charge of Mr, Har- old Webster and his committee. Memorial Ser -vice At Ball's Cemetery The 35th Annual Memorial Service ',vas held last Sunday at Ball's cemetery with Mr. Craig Peters of the Baptist March officiating, The service of song was led by the organist, Mrs Robert Phillips, with a choir of members from he churches in the village. During the c: vivo a duet, "Follow Me," was sung y Rev, and Mrs. John Ostrom, Wing - ',am. AIr. Robert Arthur, chairman of :he cemetery hoard, welcomed every. -.ne on behalf of the hoard and stated hat he had sent in his resignation and ,hal a meeting of the plot holders would be held soon to elect a nen 'rustee. Mr. Arthur has served on the :pard for four years, Ile spoke of the vork done at the cautery and said hat the money had been invested in he Sterling Trust Company and that he revenue from these bonds woulo e used for the upkeep of the cern- tery grounds and church. Mr, Peters ;ave an inspiring message on "How hall we arise?" Ile based his re - narks on Paul's letters to the Corin - :flans and spoke of the ressurection :trough Jesus Christ. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gagner and amity and Mr. and Mrs. Gus Ratz nd family, all of Toronto, spent the t-eekend.with Mr. and Mrs, Ben Ham - loo and John 'Mr. and Mrs. William Bieck, Sheila andra and Penny, of Kitchener, and :Jr, and Mrs. Charles Adams, of Tor- onto, spent last Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Straughan, Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Pentland, cf North Bay, are visiting this week with her mother, Mrs. Charles Straughan. The executive of the Auburn Horti- culture Society plan to have a rose tea next Friday, July 7th, to he held at the home of Air. and Mrs. Rchert J. Phillips. The tea will be served on the lawn and all the visitors will have a chance to enjay the beautiful rose gardens. Mrs. Catherine Dobie, Mr, Eugene. F. Dobie and Miss Jane, of Toronto, visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs J. C. Stoltz and 'Mrs. Marguerite Chop- in and Miss Margaret R. Jackson, Mr, and Mrs, Reg, Asquith, George and Anne, of Islington, spent the holi- day with his mother, Mrs. Charles As- quith. Mr, and Mrs, Robert J. Arthur at- tended the funeral of their brother-in- law, John Clatsworthy, of Granton, last Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Janes Hembiy are vacationing in the Muskoka district Mr, William Moorehead is the relieving manager at the Canadian Imperial Bank for the three weeks, Lir. and Mrs. Kenneth Thain and family, of Toronto, are visiting this week with Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Mac- Kay and family. Mr.. and Mrs. John R. Weir and family, of London, also visited over last weekend. Mr and Mrs. Gordon Powell and Wayne visited last week with Mr, and Mrs. Stan McIntyre at Dundas and also Mrs, Mary McNall at Welland. Plans were made to hold the 1951 Daily Vacation Bible School on July 17 to 22 In Knox United Church, Auburn The theme, "Living for Jesus," will he used throughout the four classes of this six-day school, Leaders for the seniors will he Mrs. Lloyd Walden, Mr. Craig Peters; juniors, Mrs. Ed. Davies and an assistant to be appoint- ed, Dr. D. J. Lane and Rev. Robert Meally; primary, Miss Margaret R. Jackson, assisted by Miss Bernice Mc- Dougall, Miss Betty Youngblut, Miss Martie Koopmans and Miss Rose Marie Haggitt; pre-school children, Mrs, Ar- thur Grange, Mrs. Frank Raithby, Mrs. Thomas Haggitt and Mrs. Robert Ar• thur. The closing exercises will be held on July 23rd at 7:45 p.m., when a program will be presented by the school. Certificates will be presented to the children who have attended five nut of six days, with exceptions made in case of sickness. Rev, D. J, Lane presided for the meeting held on Mon- day evening in the United Church when representatives of the four denomina- tions in the village were present to plan for the coming school. St. Mark's Anglican Church will hold their church services in July at R:30 n.m. with the rector, Rev. Robert Meally, in charge, Knox Presbyterian Church service will he held at 9:30 a.m with Dr. D. J. Lane officiating. There will be no church in the Knox United Church, but the combined con- gregations of the charge will meet at Donnybrook July 9, Westfield on the lath, with Rev. Elmer 'Taylor, of Gode- rich, officiating. No church service in any of the churches on July 23rd hitt Sunday school classes will he held on the 23rd at 10:15 a.m. at Knox United, Auburn. Air, and -Mrs. Howard Wallace and family, of Brampton, spent the week• end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bert Marsh, and grandmother, Mrs. Herbert Mogridge. Mr. Thomas Anderson and his three daughters, Donna Lynne, Dale and Loraine, of 'Toronto, were weekend guests with his hrother;;Mr. Oliver An- derson, Mrs. Anderson, Will a}n and Nancy. - Mr, and Mrs Chester Taylor, of St. Helens, and Miss May Ferguson, of Wingham, spent Sunday with the ladies' sister, I1rs. Maud Fremlin. LON1)ESBORO Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Dodds and family, of La Grange Park, Chicago, are visiting with their cousins the Shaddick families. Mrs. Turner, of Brandon, Manitoba, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Barry Snell and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Crawford, of Manitou, Man., are spending a short time with the former's brother, Clat- ,.J BVI ethoiddy, ,toly to i661. `" ends, and family, also attending the Shubbrook reunion. Mrs, Mae Hodgert and family, o; Thames Road, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Howatt on Sunday Mrs. Sadie McDonald, of Walton, spent the weekend with Mrs. Alex Wells.• Billy Armstrong, young s ;n of Mr. and Mrs. Ken Armstrong, spent a weeh with his grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. John. Armstrong, recently. Friends of Mrs, Jennie Lyon will be pleased to hear that she has returnee to her home here for the summer months. Mr, and Mrs, Mervin Durnin, Stral• ford, spent the week -end with Mt. and Mrs. Harry Dtlrnin, also attending the wedding of Mr, and Mrs, Jim Radford on Saturday Londesboro United Church intend bolding n chicken barbcque on the church grounds on the evening of ,July 251h. Further notice will he found in the coming events column next week. The Lcndesbcro Girls Softball team played in Winthrop Tuesday evening, July 4th, for their first game of the season. They were defeated by a score of 19-10, and played seven innings The return game will be in Londeshoro on Friday night., July 21st, Come out ball fans and cheer for your team. "KEEP BABY NAPPY" WE CAN SUPPLY MANY OF HIS NEEDS Johnson's Baby Powder 45c and 75c Johnson's Baby Oil 79c and 1.10 Mennens Baby Magic 79c and 1.00 Castoria 59c and 89c Glycerin Suppositories 60c Baby Bottom Bath 49c and 98c Baby Pants 39c, 69c and.89c Babys Own Tablets 49c and 1.09 S. M. A. 98c, 2 for 1.95 Ostaco Drops 1.10, 1.80 and 2.95 Tri Vi Sol 1.65 and 2.95 Steedman's Powders 39c Evenflo Bottles, Complete 39c Rigo Soothers 20c R. U. FHILP, Phm, B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER -- PHONE !0, BLTTH 4 it I .I.r11111. IN 111111) amu. ..n-11 A111.111 11.111r Ills !11.111111 VIII .I I II..I,11)11 .11.1 11.-.11.11111. 111111 !ILA 1111111111.1 4 WESTINGHOUSE SUMMER SALE 10 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR (no trade-ins) . $199.95 FULL SIZE CLOTHES DRYERS $179.95 1 • VODDEN'S HARDWARE X14 ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Call 71 Blyth, Ont.