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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-09-13, Page 1VOLUME 7,1 - NO. 29 Authorized as second class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1961 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. Post Office Department, Ottawa. GUESTS ARRIVE Iti 'HORSE & BUGGY' Something For Everyone t Blyth Fall ll Fair FOR WI. MEETING extIuesdayIediiesda, Septeitiber -2 0 men's Institute held in Alernortal Hall mother with the youngest grandchild Thursday evening drew an attendance was Mrs, Wesley Taman, and the Local residents will have their chance a record attendance. Remember—you of over fifty-five, lucky chair prize went to Miss Barb- Mrs. Charles Johnston presided for a aro Miller, Clinton. BLYTH POPULATION DOWN PERSONAL INTEREST to see the famous Clydesdale horses al can have all the special features in th�1 brief business period, during which, Mrs. Scrimgeour closed the meeting Mr. Auburey loll net Wednesday af- world at a tall fair, but if you do not Population figures from the 1961 Ceu• AIrs, Ronald Janliescn, of White- ternooi', 'e}tember 20, when, along with have the attendance success is impoe- Alrs, Wellington Good reported that by reciting an appropriate.poem, "Sep sus have been released and show the she and Mrs. Gordon Abseil were meet (ember." church, Miss Camille Hoodleas, of Tor- the Belgrave Pipe Band, the six horse ,ible. rather disturbing tact that Blylh's onto, visited on Saturday with Mr. and hitch will lead the parade of school lag with mach success as local leaders --� y ;apulalion has decreased by 37 since Mrs. Orval AlcGcwan and Keanelh., rhildre n from the Blyth Public School of the Fall project for 4-11 Club gh'1, WEDDINGS 1956, Mr. and Mrs. Finlay McGowan, of to the lair grounds at I p.m. BLYTH LIONS CLUB "Featuring bruit." AIrs, Keith Web. Local population figures are as fol Oakville, Mrs. Eugene McAdam ani The 'Toll horses have won acclaim BAER—EASOi11 AT THE FAIR stcr and Mrs, Dan Hallahan were ap-sows: Robin, of Clinton, visited on Sunday it many fairs and exhibitions through - pointed local leaders for the Senior Candelabra, while and Yellow gla(lio 19.31 1959 with Mr. and ?.Ins. Orval AicGcwun and silt Canada and the United State The Blyth Lions Club is again Navin; project "Focus on Finishes." Mrs. li, told ydlcw baby mums, formed a Blyth 720 757 Kenneth, nd till will Alford Intal and district a booth at the local Fall Fair and will Wellington Good and Mrs. Ann Stu lovely setting in Knox United Church, 3russels 845 781 Mrs. R. J. Kre3s, David and Kevin, residents, who have rut yet had the he selling all varieties of Planters dercock are the delegates to attend the Auburn, when Miss Marlene Eason.), el Ashfield 1686 1632 of London, are flailing with Mr. and afporlunily la sec these champiuns►lil Peanuts to attenders of the fair. Huron County Women's Institute Rally Auburn, was married to Ronald George Grey 1874 1936 llrs. N. h. Kress. 'uses. to get a first hand view of the This booth proved fairly successful to be held at Elintville, October and. Baer, of Colborne Township, The bride Morris 1503 166 Mr, and Airs. S.-11. fliselet, Mark ane rev ratialally famous Clydesdales, last year and the Club sincerely hops The program was in charge of the is the younger daughter of Mr, and East Wawanosh 1161 1440 Kathy, of Otillia, spent the week -en Air. Charles McNau:hton, M.P.P. of that the same patronage will be sho'�,a convenors of Historical Research, Mrs. Mrs. Rey L�-tsnm, it.lt. 1, Auburn, and 1Vest 1Vawanosh 1165 1171 with her mother, Mrs. L. 1\'iehlnuu t.xetcr, will omen the fair alter the theta again. Lorne Scrimgeour and Mrs. John the groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.and Susan. own'o reaches the grounds, and Mr. An added feature in the booth will be Young. Howard Baer, of Colborne Township. Airs, ,lean Kccln+ic :pent a few clay: (amid Jacks( n, of Seal urlh will act a key cutting service, run by one m. The focus of the meeting was on Rev. Charles Lewis officiated for the 13L1"r11 LADIES GUEST ON with her daughter and son-in-law, Alr. ':, nr., ler of ceremonies and will keep the Lion members. 1f you are in nee -1 grandmothers, six of whom arrived at double -ring ceremony and the church TY PROGRAM and Mrs. Fred Chapple, and ,lube, of lie many ellen:con activities running e a key of any shape or description• the meeting in a horse drawn top bug• organist, Miss Margo Grange, played Kipper], also attended the London Fair, moothry, he sure to bring your old key with you gy, kindly loaned for the occasion and the wedding music and aeeallpanlo(I Several of the members of the Blyth Mr, and Ahs. Ray Dobbyn and fain. A si eclat feature of the day will he and visit the Lions at their booth. They driven by Miss Lena Dougherty, filyth, the soloist, Airs. Walter Cunningham, Women's Institute were guests of CKNX ily, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cook, of Lan lie Mai ten Flyers of Stratford, two will be very pleased to serve you. Members had been forwarned, that I.onderbor•o, as she sang "The Wedding '1'V on Monday afternoon and appeared don, visited on Saturday with Mr. and young omen wlio have put together an unless they brought a guest to the Prayer" and "0 Perfect Love," (Turin_• on the program AI'Lady. Mrs. Wm. Bowes and other friends exciting trampoline act. They %vill meeting, they would be expected ie the cerenulry, Mrs. Mary McElroy, Mrs. Logan, here. perform several 15 minute acts during ANNIVERSARY ANNOUNCED join a Rhythm Band. The ruse wan Given in marriage by her father, fhe. Mrs. Biggins, Mrs. Scrimgeour and Airs. E. i1. Buchner, of fesarl'oru, the afternoon. Local flavour is also successful in having several members lodge looked lovely in a floor -length lirs, J. McNichol appeared on a panel Michigan, her daughter ,Mrs. 'I'. Mac- included in this feature as one of the Plans have been convicted for the cajoled to join the band which was %%•kite gown of French chantilly lace and discussed "What was good about Donald and twin baby sons, tan an I performers is Ren 1Vasnlan, who lived Anniversary of Blyth United Church composed of Miss Pearl Gidley, pianist. ,and nylon tulle and lined throughout the good old days," which we are ,Jamey, of Evansville, Ind., visited on in Blyth far several Years when his witch will he held on Sunday, Septem- Mrs. Mary Taylor, Mrs, Edna Cook and ‘villi white peau-de-soie, The waist of sure proved very interesting to listen- Friday and Saturday with their cousins, ,pother operated one of the local Bake her 24. Rev. W. J• Rogers, a former Airs. Dan Battalion, playing harmom he chess featured a Sabrina neckline ers. Mrs. Edythe Sturgeon and Aliss Pearl Shops. Ben's partner is Jim Gilespe. minister and at present minister to ices. Other musical instruments use(' which went to a V in the back and b The Blyth W. I. Rhythm Band liter- Gidley. Also Mr. 1Vm. Andrew and Miss • A midway will be at the grounds and the Erindale congregation of the (In - were: a cow bell over one hunched row of tiny buttons, and lily point ally stole the show when they played Freida Andrew, of Goderich, spent Sun- will no doubt add a great deal of thrill ited Church of Canada, will be gues.: years old, kitchen utensils, Barnett sleeves. 'fhe very full skirt had large two selections while dancing gracefully day with them. and excitement for the youngsters. minister. Mrs. Grace McCallum, Mrs. Lorne was trimmed with seed pearls and irri- the band were as follows: from Bermuda, these were played by appliques of lace and the whole dress around the studio. The members o[ Mrs. I. Wi:htman accompanied by The many livestock judging events' The choir will present special music Mrs. Mary Mr. and Mrs. Ross King, of Winghat,,, \sill include: Blyth-Belgrave 4-11 Beef Services of public worship will be held Hadley, Mrs. Charles Johnston. (Iiscent sequins. A wide double panel Taylor, Mrs. Fred Cock, Mrs. Walter attended the wedding at \Velland on Calf Club; Blyth 4.11 Dairy Calf Club;at 11.00 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. Friends of A panel discussion was enjoyed on of lace fell from the nipped in waist- Cook, Mrs. ll. McCallum, Mrs. C. Saturday of Nancy Clement and Robert Huron County Champion 4-11 Dairy the congregation are invited to attend "What was good about the Good 01d line to the floor both front and back. Johnston, Mrs. L. McGowan, and Miss Wightman, son of AIr. and Mrs. Nor Calf Club; Regional Guernsey Show these anniversary services. Days." The panelists were, Mrs. Mary. Her elbow -length circular veil edged Pearl Gidley at the piano, man Wightman, of Welland. Mr. and for the counties of Middlesex, Lamp - 'McElroy, Mrs. Arlelta Fear, Mrs, with french chantilly lace was held in Mrs. Robert Wightman are leaving Fri• ton, Ellin and Huron; cutstanding clas- Edith Logan, Mrs, John McNichol, with. place by a tiara covered with seed day for England where Mr. Wightman scs in all livestock; and again this year BIRTHS Mrs. Lorne Scrimgeour moderator. The pearls and sequins. She carried a Morris Township Council is studying for his Doctorate having the Pony Show which proved to be so summing up of the discussion was; %Olite Bible crested with a corsage el received a British Commonwealth Fel- successful and entertaining at last ' ORTELLI--In Chatham Hospital on "There was a lot of good things about ' red roses and while ribbon adorned The Morris Township Council met onlowship. Ile received his Masters De- year's fair. Saturday, September 9, 1961, to Mr. the Good Old Days, there was more with tiny roses andseed pearls. September 51h, with all the members gree at Western University, London, The big livestock parade has been and Mrs. Lloyd Ortelli, formerly of sincerity, store- sociability, deeper Mrs. Bert Lyon, Londeshoro, was her present, ss this year. advanced to 3 p.m, starting time instead Blyth, the gift of a son, Malcolm friendships, which we would like to sister's matron of honor,, wearing a -The- minutes of • the last-,-regu1it -Mr. and Irs. John Young left by.hus of the original -5 p.m. time because ot- Douglas, .a brother for David. have retained, but we wouldn't ex. I ballerina -length gown of aqua brocaded meeting and the special meeting of on Monday morning to visit the form- the popularity of this event. change the spring -filled mattress al • taffeta, matching aqua pa's double- August 22 were read and adopted on er's sister, Mrs. John Gould, and Mr. today,for the ole{ straw -filled tick, theThe festivities will end with a big bow fashion enhanced will veils, She elation of Ross Smith and Wit. Elston. Gould, of Council, Idaho, and with his RECEPTION electric lights for tallow candles :null carried a yellow and white bouquet of A'Ioved by Janes Mair, seconded by nephew, Mr. Wm. Murray, and Mrs. dance in the Blyth Memorial Hall in coal oil lamps, electric washing 111:1• mums, Ross Smith, that the Assessment Roll Murray, of Esquirnalt, B, C. the evening, the music supplied by Ian •A reception will be held in Blyth chine for the washboard and tub, but Miss Phyllis Glen, Goderich, and for 1962 be accepted, Carried. Mr. and Airs. Jack McNichol were Wilhee's Orchtst'a• Memorial Hall on Friday evening, Sep - with all this progress and conveniences, Miss Cheryl Donnelly, of Waterloo, Moved by James Mair, seconded by recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. The Agricultural Society certainly tember 15, for Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius we are no happier, and think we are niece have gathered together all the ingred n iece of the groom, were bridesmaids, Rn3s Smith, that the Court of Revision George Gray, and family, at Weston. van Vliet (nee Lois Cunningham.). Mu - busier than in the Good Old Days. wearing dresses of aqua brocaded tat- on the Assessment Roll be held on Oc- They were accompanied home by Mon- lents of a rip roaring fair. All that is Miss Anna McDonald, Women's Di- fcta styled similar to that of the mat- tober 2, 1991, at 2 p.m. Carried, ica Nesbit %oho had been visiting with needed is an assist from local and dis- sic by Jim Pierce's orchestra. Ladies rector of CKNX, TV and Radio station., ron of honor. Moved by \Vm. Elston, seconded by her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Gray, trict residents to swell the grounds to please bring lunch. \Ving•ham, was guest speaker, and hay AIr. Gerald McMichael, nephew of James Mair, that we pay the following and Mrs. D. Shield'.), of Toronto, who ing brought a studio camera with her the groom, was the best man, and the grants: Brussels Recreational Commit- visited for a week with Mr. and Mrs. Session In and a television set available she was ushers were Bert Lyon, 'Jonesboro, tee, $125.00; Belgrave Conrmuuity McNichol.able to show the audience individually and John Feagan, Colborne Township. Centre, $75,00; Bluevale Cemetery, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Quance, of Tor Presbyterians Hold how they would look on TV, The groom and his attendants all wore $75,00, Carried. onto, were Sunday visitors with Mr. Miss McDonald explained some of the charcoal suits, white ties and socks, Moved by Ross Smith, seconded by and Mrs. Jack McNichol. They were Blyth Church intricacies of a television camera and and a white carnation boutonniere. Walter Shortreed, that the following Li- accompanied home by Mrs. Quance's and what women should or should not Following the ceremony a reception brary Grants be paid: Belgrave, $15.00, mother, Mrs. D. Stockill. wear if they appear on television. took place in the Sunday School audi• Bluevale, $15.00; Walton, $15.00, Car- Mrs. Bert Bell, of 'I'eeswater, and her Forty-seven \V.Af.S. members of Hu- favoured with a lovely solo, accompan- She delighted her audience by singing torium, which was attractively decorate tied. daughter, Marilyn, of St. Thomas, vis• ron Maitland Presbyterial of the Pres- ied by the church organist, Mrs. Wm. two solos, accompanied by Miss Pearl ed in pink and white streamers and moved by Walter Shortreed, seconded ited with Airs. Mary Taylor on Satur bylerian Church in Canada registered Dalrymple. Gidley. wedding bells. Assisting the bridal par by Ross Smith, that the Resolution day. tor a morning and afternoon session hi The special speaker was Mrs. Hugh Prizes were awarded to the grand ty in receiving the guests was the from Peel County be filed. Carried. Mr. and Mrs, George Pollard visited Queen Street Presbyterian Church. Wilson, of Shakespeare, Who with her mother who was the first to locate a br'ide's mother wearing a dress of tuts Moved by Walter Shortreed, seconded last week with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. myth, which were presided over by husband were former missionaries to safety pin {n her purse and was won quoise figured nylon, matching hat, by James Mair, that the road accounts Whitehouse and family,. at Caledonia, miss E'1 Somerville, Goderich, Pres- ]radia. Mrs. Wilson followed the theme b•lack accessories, and wore 0 pink caw as presented by the road Supariutet►d and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pollard and hylrrial President. The the►ne of the for the day, stating in part, God es - nation corsage. She was assisted by elft be paid. Carried, family, of St. Calhariues, heeling was "leve", Love tum God and pegs first place in our lives, and we THE c the groom's mother in a dress of green .Moved by Ross Sn11(11, seconded by Lowe for our fellow men. should ask ourselves, Have we the AMONG 7.IlI� CHURCHES figured nylon, matching hat, and black, b 6 Wm. Elston, that the general accounts 111 her opening remarks Miss Sont' deep dedication to God that the Conn - Sunday, September 17, 1961, accessories, with a yellow carnation as presented be pai(. Carried. W.A. GROUP 1 MEETING erville said in part, "Love gives us n�unists have to communism. If nos - The bride's table was centred with a James Mair, that the Court of Revision Group t Blyth flailed Church \\. A. shrinking world," "Love is God conn of God's inability, but because we have ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN three -tiered wedding cake and the dim on the Inglis Drain be held on October held their September meeting at 1110 ing into the human hearts, for love and failed God. CHURCH ser which was served by candle light 2nd at 3 p.m. Carrie(.), house of Mrs. Clayton Ladd on Tuesday love alone can make passible God's with 8 members and one visitor Resent. Mrs. Harold Phillips favored with a Rev. D. J. Lane,- B.A., DD., Minister. was catered to by the members of the' ,Moved by Ross Smith ,seconded by . present. promise of peace,' solo. An impressive memorial service 1:15 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday W.M.S. with Mrs. Oliver Anderson as \\stn, Elston that Jas, Mair be cont• Theme of meeting being "Harvest" is Mrs. Ernest Geddes, Mrs. J, L, Bell School. convener. The pink and while color missioner to look after the repair on plentiful. and Mrs. John Gordon, of Seaforth Aux. was conducted by Mrs. John Thompson, scheme was carried out in the pink and the Peacock Drain. Carried. I'resie{eat, 'Airs. Ladd, opened.) the it{any, conducted the worship service. °E Seaforth, for Mrs. t David white florets of glads, placed intermit meetingwith a reading and prayer, Lane, Clinton; MisslLena Livingston, ANGLICAN CIIU12CIi OF CANADA Moved by \Vatter Shortreed, secondedAims. Wellington Good, Blyth, %%elconl Myth; Alms. Charles Brodie and Aims. T tedly among a green vine which centred by Ross Smith that the Reeve and Alts. Iieilyman had charge ci the de all the guests. A conference for load• , . Rev. Robert F. Wally, Rector. the tables and went from bouquet to Clerk be authorized to sign papers for votions and gave a reading on Theme ers of Children of the Church will take rhinos Oliver, Seaforth. Mrs. Albert 16th Sunday after Trinity bouquet where the Queen Anne's lace Harvest Is Plentiful Mrs. Mary MeTaylor, Goderich, brought courtesy Trinity Church, Blyth, certificate regarding permanent emthe farm of a supper meeting in Blyth greetings. flower enhanced the glad, bouquets. ployees of Mun{c{pal Authorities. Elroy %•cad the scripture. Thoughts for Presbyterian Church, September 27, 10.30 a.m.—Matins, Rev. C. Lewis was master of Gere Carried. the clay were given by Margaret 1t{cons, and a Conference for Sunday School Bev. I). Leslie Elder, Chosen Moderator St. Mark's, Auburn. Thanksgiving Services monies for the G5 guests. Moved by Wm, Elston, seconded by and Mrs: Ifollyman offered prayer, Se leachers training to be held in Goderich The meeting of Presbytery in Trinity 8 g The waitresses were friends of the cretar , Alrs, Walsh, read the minutes , o'clock—Matins.Walter Shortreed that the meeting ad Y Church, September 17th, at 2.30 p.m Anglican Church, opened with Sacra - 12:00 Guest Preacher, AIr, W. Pickford, bride, Misses Btva Gross, Betty Det' journ to meet again on October 2nd at of last meeting, and also called the moll Discussion groups from various depart- ment, and the choosing of Res'. D. Less LayReader, W'ingham• sin, June Buechler, Gwen McDowell, 1 p.n1, Carrie(.). %filch tvus answered by a verse oI .)lents and prayers by Bayfield Auxili- lie Elder, Seaforth, moderator. g TI1e fohlot\ing accounts %vete paid: scripture with word harvest in 11. Mrs. ars and Belgrave closed the morning Presbytery agreed to fulfill its oh - 8.00 p.m,—Evensong, The Rector. Joan Mills, Bernice McDougall. Ifoonatds ligation For a trip to Northern and Eastern Glcn Cnultes, fox bounty, $4.00; Juhn gave treasurer urn report. Mrs, scssiou. to the Blue Water Film I eder• T 2.00y p.m.—Sunday Church, ay Echo, Ontario the bride chose a illative sheath Y 550.00;g Kcchnfe gave a reading. Mrs. Fairser p.m,—Sunday Schooh Brewer, earl salary, postage Dinner was served by Blyth Auxili. alion, in accordance with the agree - jacket, cress with a beige embroidered mauve and mileage to nothings, 17.50; Pita vice Was �Present to axplain the joiniut, ary, in Memorial Hall where the ladies melt matte with thein. Information 2.30 p.m.—Evensong. of the W.M.S.and W.A.of United jacket, beige and mauve feather' hat, crest Manor' Idd,, 92.75; Relief Account were joined by 2.1 clergy numbers of was brought l0 Presbytery by the In- 2.30 UNITED CiIUIICII beige accessories and 0 yellow 'carua- 225.00; Provincial Treasurer, insulin, Church in 1962, and also answer goes• Presbytery who had nil in Trinity lerim Moderator, Rev. T. C. G. Mc- Church OF CANADA tion corsage. 3.84; Geo. Marlin, hydro for hall, U,10; Bins which were asked about "United Church, Blyth, through the courtesy of Kinney, that applications are being Blyth Ontario, Guests were present from U.S,A., Brussels Recreational Committee, 125. Church Women" which this society is the Anglican peapie, received from candidates to till the Rev, R. Evan A1ci,af;an - Minister Toronto, Kitchener, Waterloo, London, 00; Belgrave Community Centre, 75.00; to is called. At two o'clock ladies of the I'resilery vacancy left by the death of Rev. Alex .Miss Margaret Jackson - Director Stratford, Shakespeare, Clinton, Gode Bluevale Cemtlery, 75.00; Brlgravt the October meeting will be ate the ;lgaiu convened in the 1'rrsbyicriar Ninito, RD., late minister of Wing - of Aiusic• rich, and the surrounding district. Library, 15.OD; I3luevale Library, 15.00; bonne, of Mrs. 1loonat'd %with Pearl Church when Rev. D. Leslie Elder, first 110111 Church. It is expected these can - 10,45 a.m.—Church School meet, __________s_ Walton Library, 15.00; George Machu, Walsh and Jean Kechnie assispresident ing. Church, Seaforth, the newly elected (Nicks will soon be heard by the 11.00 a.m, Rally Day Service. Mectirr, was closed by the presldenl Combined Service with the Sun- BANK- NITE WINNERS By -Laws and Clerks fees Burke Drain,moderator brought greetings from \\Ingham congregation. 70.00; Callender Nursing Hume, 1118,50; wan prayer• Presbytery. Forms relative to the condition of all day Church School. Mrs. Harry Gtt]ley, $15,00, ., 70.09; haven Nursing Monne, 185.50: A delicious lunch was served by hos-The t+fleruoon worship service vac manses within the bounds of presbytery "The Church is There." less Mrs. Ladd and a vote of thanks , ts were �, Miss Nota Kelly, $5.00, c Court of 11'visiou, l'u►vey Drain: Iluss in charge of Henson Auxiliary. Misrwere distributed and are to be com- l. Walsh, $2,00, ' Smith, 5.00, Wm. Elston, 5.00, James given to her by Mrs. C. Wheeler, Dianne McConnell, Goderich, a student pielely filled as soon as possible and IVIccCHURCH GOD Dorothy Johnston, $2.00, Mair, 5.00, Walter Shortreed, 5.00, 1f a deaconess school, told of some of returned to the convenor of committee Johnnett Stteet, Blyth, ' Stewart Pr'ocler, 5.00; Advance T{noes, W1N PRIZE AT BOWLING her experiences as a Vacation Mission ill charge, Nev. W. J. S. McClure, R.R. John Dormer, Pastor JohnGcrt{e van , $Luneren, $2.00. 'TOURNAMENT Phony 185 Brown, $i.OU, Advertising, 1.80; Canada Culvert Cu. n•y, one year in New Brunswick, anti I. Listowel. These forms were sent to 10.30 a.m.—Sunday School. Mrs. felts, $t.UO,- Ltd., pipe for 'turves Drain, 170.72; Mr. Harold Vodden, Blyth, and his ,Isis year near Cal'0ry. Miss McConnell presbytery by the secretary of the 11.30 a.m.—Morning Worship, Mary Nesbit, $1.00.Township of Grey, Burke Drain, 406.85; son, Brock Vodden, Scalarth, won 3rd spoke with enthusiasm of herwork home Mission Board. 7,30 p.m.—Evening Service, floss Wilson, $1.00. , George Radford, Pease Drain, 35.00. mire a flash camera each, at a lawn which she beh1twe; is most important Presbytery adjourned to meet again 8.00 p.m,—Wed., Prayer Service. The same ' money is offered next Stewart Procter, George C. Martin, bowling tournament pt Walkerton last and one of the greatest hiudran(�es in first Tuesday In December at 10 a.m, 8.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship. Saturday, Reeve. Clerk,1 Saturday. _ _ lake warm Christians, Miss McConnell in 5L Andrews Church, Windham. 3o Sweet Is Home Among The Amish The past months have seen Anna and Chris getting nicely 1aled in their farm home, Their ame construction house sits to e front of their "85 paid -off acres" and is painted drab gray decording to custom, Yet there la nothing drab about its appear - (Ince, Anna's windows twinkle and shine with polishing behind the bright -blue blinds of Amish tradition. Her picture -book vege- table garden, close to the high- way, flaunts a vivid border of Coxcomb, begonia and geranium. Chris keeps the lawn mowed to velvety smoothness. It is, withal, a place to take delight in, Already Anna has a loving, in- timate name for every room in her home, and the quiet pride and joy of a true hausfrau as she speaks of "the little east room," "the south bedroom," or, wonder of wonders, "the break- fast room," True to custom, the kitchen is known simply as "the room." Kitchens in this locale deserve a special designation, being as they are the very heart of the home, and go where you will in Amishland, you find that "the room" always means the kitchen. Inside, the house is a marvel of neatness, with "slim towels" In bright colors and wedding china in glass -fronted cupboards. Much of the furniture came from the Zaugg attic, and all of it is painted in harmonizing colors, with decals which feature the tulip, the dove, and the five - pointed star. Collectors of Early Americana would sigh with pleasure at the sight of it, On the outside are to be found all the features which make a fare) typically Amish, The wind- mill, so necessary for power for pumping water for the stock where electricity is Verboten, as well as the alternate planting of apple and peach trees in the or- chard, which is an example of Dutch practicality. Chris ex- plains the planting, his sensitive face beaming with the loving in- terest he gives to each operation .I on his tidy farm. "Peach trees mature fast," he tells us, "while the apples are still growing, and the fruit from them we will have for a long time before the apples come in, Later, on, the worn-out peach trees will be taken out, leaving plenty of room for the heavy -bearing apple frees." Most fascinating of all to Ni That Casual Flair PRINTED PATTERN Soft pleats give a skirt such a lively sweep and swing! Be a vivacious lady wherever you go in this frankly feminine version of the shirtdress! Choose "sing- ing" solid color or print, Printed Pattern 4672: Misses' Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 takes 4 yards 39 -inch fabric Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, A1)1) R E S 8, STYLE NUMBER, Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St, New Toronto, Ont. The biggest fashion show of Summer, 1961 — pages, pages, pages of patterns in our new Color Catalog, Hurry, send 350. Ontario residents must include IQ sales tax for each CATALOG ordered, There is no sales tax on the patterns. ISSUE 37 — 1981 is the water wheel in a stream which runs through the farm, and which is used to pump water to the house. We strive to take in all its component parts as Chris explains them. First there must be a simple dans in the stream to cause a waterfall, Then a channel above the dam, and a boxlike construction to house the water wheel. Wire, fastened to the wheel, is attached to a shaft and extended to where the pump is located in "the room," The whole is operated when water which the dam holds back forces its way through the narrow channel and into the boxlike construction. The pressure of water coning in with consider- able force causes the wheel to turn; the rotary motion of the wheel propels the shaft, causing the wire to move up and down, and the steady move►nent of the wire operates the distant pump. "All that trouble for just wa- ter!" some plight say. Yet, think- ing of how utterly helpless most of us are without electrical power, we are moved to say, "Very ingenious!" It was with vast satisfaction that Anna and Chris had their first harvest meals this summer when they made use of the local baling crew. Various relatives and near neighbors also came to help in the haying. ("A whole lard can full of applesauce with cream in two days," Anna re- ported glowingly when telling how heartily the men ate.) Cold, smooth applesauce, made from Transparent or Early Harvest apples and sweetened with sugar, plus a generous sprinkl- ing of candy redhots, is served with a dollop of sweet cream on its pinkish surface. It is a deli- cacy at any time, and most es- pecially to men who work long, hot hours in the prickly hay, writes Mabel Slack Shelton in the Christian Science Monitor, Even with the most modern equipment, farming is not easy. With primitive tools, It is often back -breaking work. Yet the very rhythm of Amish toil re- ,flects a quiet Christian grace, On any given day the horses are groomed, the cows milked and the chickens fed and water- ed before breakfast, These are daily chores. After the break- fast (always hearty) comes the appointed day's. work, If it is haying season, the girls may be called ' to help fork the long windrows of limp hay into piles for the baler after the most pressing household `chores are done, They are excused in time to start the big noon meal. Ev- eryone works until five o'clock, then the horses are unhitched and the harness'removed. After the sweaty collars are lifted .off, the horses' shoulders are washed with warm water and carefully dried to prevent chafing. (Ani- maLs are gifts of the Great Pro- vider and must be looked after tenderly.) Then they are fed and watered. Meanwhile t he womenfolk have again fed and milked the cows, gathered the eggs and made supper by adding what- ever seems required to the dishes served for the noon meal. After this last meal of the day, the work still goes on. If tomorrow is market day, the whole family pitches in to prepare the vegeta- bles, gathering, scrubbing, siz- ing and tying them in bunches. The eggs are crated, perishables are carried to the cool stream in the springhouse. At last comes evening devotionals, with the fa- ther or a grown son reading high -German from the big Book, and ending with sentence pray- ers from everyone down to the smallest child. A full day of hard work is be- hind the family, yet there are no cases of overwrought nerves or frayed tempers. There is the soothing knowledge of tasks well done to speed them to their rest, This is the simple life, It will produce no renowned artists, no great writers nor, indeed, any written records of the people's daily lives except that done by others, The Amish write nothing down except the names of their children in the big family Bible. Yet who would say they are not adding to the culture of America with their peaceful, pastoral pursuits? Feminine Voice on the Bus; "With everything being reduced to compact size these days why is it hdusehold bills remain so large?" SAY "WREN" — When Jenny Wrenn starts to ring the HMS Wren bell at Wren training headquarters in Burghfield, Eng- land, there is bound to be some confusion. Jennifer Wrenn is a member of the Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS), often called WREN by Britons, and Jenny Wren is a British nickname for a wren (the bird, that is). The bell is from a sloop HMS Wren. Any questions? HR.ONICLES G1NGERFARMo And still the hot, humid weather continues, However, we know it can't last forever. Some day it will turn fresh, cool and Invigorating and we'll get all the things done we've been put- ting off until cooler weather. Trouble Is some things have to be done at a specific time — like going to the Exhibition, Every year, along with other membersof the Toronto Wo- men's Press Club, I get an invi- tation to a tea at the Queen Elizabeth Building. This year was no exception. Although I . wanted to go the thought of tak- ing a bus and wearing hat and gloves all day almost got me down, But everything worked out fine. A neighbour, driving in about noon offered me a ride, returning home about 7,30. That was one difficulty solved, There was still the hat to worry about. My only two presentable hats are both scoop -shaped and al- most suffocating on a hot day. So I went to a little store near here and bought a bandeau — you. know one of those little affairs mostly ribbon bows and veiling that passes as a hat. Thus I went to the C.N.E. tea, And it was fun. I met fellow members there whom I had not seen in years as I haven't been getting out to the meetings lately. Maybe those of you who follow the activities of the many who con- tribute to press and radio might be interested to know a few of those who were there. At our table there was Lyn Harrington — you are all tam- iliar with the delightful travel articles written by Lyn and Richard Harrington, There is never a dull moment when Lyn is around. And there was Leeta Cherry, editor of "Glad Tidings" former columnist to the old Can- adian Countryman. And Laura Chisholm — author of many de- lightful gardening articles. Anne Merrill was also there. I am sure those of you who take the Globe and Mail enjoy her bird - watching column, And Ruth Hammond, free lance writer and a terrific talent for organizing. Also Esther Heyes, author of a recently published historical book on "The Story of Albion" — (Peel County) Constance Lea, free lance writer of many years standing. And Agnes Swinner- ton, recently retired editor of the United Church Publications. And last but not least, Laura Sclhip- pei's, a lady from the Nether- lands, very much in the lime- light these days because of her controversial commentaries by press, radio and television, She is a delightful person to meet, full of fun and excellent com- pany. Also present was Rose- mary Dudley, in Public Relations for the Ontario Government. Margaret Zieman, free lance writer and lecturer — and the present president of the Toronto Women's Press Club, was one of those pouring tea. Of course there were many others there whom I have not even mention- ed, some I knew only by sight. All we did for about a couple of hours was sit around and talk shop, stopping briefly to admire and applaud each time a manne- quin passed by modelling the latest in women's fashions. It was all very Informal and friendly and I, for one, had a delight- ful time. When the tea was over I wandered around a bit — visit- ed "Mediscope" which illustrat- ed very clearly why one has to pay $10 for such things as blood counts, allergy tests and smear cultures, The public seemed to be genuinely interested — es- pecially in "The Birth of a Baby" — a demonstration so crowded I didn't make any at- tempt to get in, So I still don't know very much about the btr'th of a baby — including my own! From there I went to the Sal- ada Tea Gardens, a delightful little oasis of peace, away from the heat and crowds. Men and women of vision must have been responsible for •the creation of that much needed restful spot, The only thing that marred it was the noise from speed boats, racing along the water -front My last stop was the Scadding Cabin which I never miss visit- ing, Why, you ask, there's never anything new? Oh, but there is, This year there is an old book, published in the 17th century and printed in old English, A treasure, if ever there was one. And how do you think the York Historical Society came across it? Well, one of their members was at the Annual Rummage Sale sponsored by the T o r onto Symphony Orchestra and among the relics she spotted this book. No doubt it had been in someone's attic for years and years. Wasn't that a thrilling find? And now a word to the Board of Directors of the C.N.E, I wonder if it would be possible to put a few benches inside the foyer of the Queen Elizazbeth building so that those waiting to attend a tea or luncheon might have somewhere to sit. Last Fri- day I saw two ladies, both of them crippled, sitting on the stairs at the entrance to the Fashion Show. They were asked to move but there was nowhere else for them to sit. I, too, could have done with a seat! Modern Etiquette By Anne Ashley Q. How do the bridesmaids carry their sheaves of flowers A, If they are walking two abreast, those on the right hold their flowers on their right arms, the sterns pointing downward to the left—and those on the left hold them in their left arms, steins pointing down to the right. Bouquets or baskets, however, are held in the front. Q. Is it considered proper to use the spoon to test the temper- ature of the coffee at the table? A, This is quite all right; But after one little "taste -test," the spoon should be replaced in the saucer and left there. Q. When a house guest wishes to give his hostess a little gift of appreciation, when should he present it? A, He may bring it along and present it soon after his arrival, or send it to her soon after his return home. This, of course, does not excuse him from writ- ing that all-important bread- and-butter letter to his hostess as socn Ps possible after his re- turn li..r,►e. Heroes Who Don't Get Headlines! Among the thatched huts of a Mekong Delta village near Saig- on, a mosquito -control team of eight men fanned out to spray DDT in South Vietnam's constant fight against malaria, When the health officer in charge sounded the lunchtime signal, only six then returned, Three days later, the bodies of the two missing men were found floating in the palm -fringed Binh Chanh River. According to peasants, the two malaria fighters were killed by a band of twenty men, presum- ably Communists, who wore dark clothing and carried daggers, Though lamentable, these re- cent casualties were hardly ex- traordinary to those acquainted with the peculiar hazards of combating malaria -bearing mos- quitoes in tropical Vietnam. Other reports about that strange battlefront last week from Newsweek's correspondent Fran- cois Sully: Six native anti -malaria work- ers carrying out spraying opera- tions 100 miles northeast of Saigon were kidnapped by Com- munist -infiltrated p r i nh five bushmen. Fate: Unknown, In Cangioc, 10 miles south of Saigon, "South Vietnam Libera- tion Front" rebels ambushed a six - man mosquito - eradication team, destroyed their equipment while threatening worse if they tried to continue the job, The mosquito -killers, said the anh- bushers, were making village maps that might be used to track rebel guerrillas, Since February 1958, when President Ngo Dinh Diem laun- ched a massive drive against the malaria -bearing anopheles mos- quitoes in South Vietnam, twen- ty eradicators have been killed and 30 others kidnapped, But as disheartening as this toll appears, it pales beside the yearly 30,000 deaths and 600,000 hospital cases attributed to malaria in that Country. With these appalling statistics in mind, Diem's health officials were determined not to let guerrilla violence slow their drive against one of the coun- try's greatest health menaces. Gen. Tran-Tu-Oai, chief admin- istrator of the anti -malaria cam- paign, said: "We have no inten- tion to quit. This war against disease has to be won," To win it, General Oai has ' been dispatching an army of 2,000 brown - uniformed DDT 1 sprayers to the remotest spots in his rugged country, in trucks and jeeps; on motorbikes, even, where roads allow; in outboard- powered canoes where streams permit. (The U.S, contributed i $11 million, mostly in equip- ment, to the fight.) In the jungle -thick Vietnamese Cordil- lera, teams leave their trucks for slower but more dependable elephants. Every hut is a target for DDT or a comparable mos- quito -killing insecticide; and in an average year the workers give 1,250,000 dwellings some protection against the debilitati- ing disease. Now, the drive is paying off. North of Saigon, where roughly 92 per cent of the dwellings (occupied by 6 million people) have been treated, officials have reported a sharp drop in malaria infection (7,22 per cent in 1958 to 1.48 per cent this year) found in blood slide examinations. With such results behind thein, General Oai's workers hope to destroy the anopheles mnsquilo by 19(15. '1'o achieve this, eradication teams are surmounting dozens of bizarre obstacles, troublesome, if not as serious, as the ever-pre- sent possibility of death or kid- napping, Farmers, fearful that DDT will poison chickens or spoil their tobacco leaf, try to drive away the sprayers; lough, half -naked tribesmen refuse to let teams into the sacrosanct huts where local spirits are sup- posed to dwell, But in at least one jungle village, eradicators have been cheerfully welcomed by the mountaineers: They have discovered that DDT, used on a bait of rotten meat is great for killing tigers. "flow will my girl friend treat me alter we're married?" asks a reader. Try listening to her talking to her little brother Child's Delight f aMA MU& Ho-hum—sleepy boy! Just the right doll for a sleepy child to cuddle. He's a sock doll and has a sister in this pattern. And she's wide awake! One or pair will delight a child, Pattern 896: directions; pattern for 2 dolls, pajamas. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont, Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. Send now for our exciting, new 1961 Needlecraft Catalog. Over 125 designs to crochet, knit, sew, embroider, quilt, weave — fash- ions, homefurnishings, toys, gifts, bazaar hits, Plus FREE—instruc- tions for six smart veil caps. Hurry, send 250 now! Ontario residents must include 10 sales tax on each CATALOG ordered, There is no sales tax on patterns, DRIVING OR FLYING? — The answer is "both," when you speak of how actor Robert Cummings gets to and from work. 0 At top, Cummings is all set to leave airport near his Beverly Hills, Calif., home in plane with detachable wings. • Below, after day's work on TV location at Palm Sprinr-:, CLmmings drives his auto -plane to a nearly airport. HA fly il- ,re in 30 minutes. Travelling The Old Pony Express Trail At Shell Creek (California), there is intact not only the adobe building that was used as a Pony Express and stage sta- tion, but also the log blacksmith cabin with bellows and work- bench. Like a timeless giant, the stone walls and cast-iron dnurs of Fort Schellbourne are here to greet you. We were shown around by Mrs. Ruth Itussell, owner of the ranch, who tald its that she and Mr. Russell are proud of these historic items and intend to preserve them. We picked up horseshoes and other relics of the Pony days. It seem- ed as though the Gosiute Indians might come riding over the near- est ridge at any instant. Fort Churchill is in ruins, One of the buildings used to have a marker in front of it designating it as the Pony Express station, but, apparently, it has been sto- len even though it is in a slate park. The only thing we found in Carson City is a marker on the lawn of the capitol building. 'rhe state museum, in the old Federal mint building, is excel- lent but has nothing about the Pony Express. At Genoa (California) we found another almost hidden marker. Through the steep drive called Kingsberry Pass, one can see the trail almost all the way. This is a beautiful scenic ride and comes out on U.S. Highway 50, with Lake Tahoe glimmer- ing ahead. The Pony Trail did not go to Emerald Bay, but we did --and so will most camera- men. On into Sacramento the station sites are well marked. Today, near the Strawberry site, there is a fine modern inn Pla- cerville still has the appearance and air of an old Western town. At Folsom, the Pony station still stands. There were two Pony Express offices in Sacramento. Both buildings are still standing, but In a shabby district of the city. Majors & Waddell used a corner building as their office; Wells Fargo moved the Pony near the center of the same block to a more ornate building, which still has some of the original Iron grill -work on It. (The State Historical Society and local his- torians hope to save these balld- I*gs and eventually develop them into museums.) While Sacramento is the ofti- e i a 1 western terminus of the Pony Express, the first rider and horse to arrive from the east was ferried across the bay to San Francisco, We, too, went to Ban Francisco, but by bridge, Liven in 1959, the end of the Pony Express trail called for a weekend of snoozing. We could better appreciate the herculean job the men of the Pony Ex- press had to face, as well as the hardships of the early wagon trains and stage travellers, We had had some idea od all this beforehand, but only a trip of this kind can make one realize Its greatness and rugged reality. It Is no wonder the Pony Ex- press will live forever in the hearts of men, — From "Hoof- beats of Destiny: The Story of the Pony Express," by Robert West Howard, DRIVE WITH CARE ! THE YOUNG COUNT -- An 18 - year -old El Segundo, Calif., boy named Stephen Jensen walked into a restaurant while, wearing this "Dracula" .cos- tume. When arrested by po- lice, he explained that he had been working for five days on the outfits which he planned to wear in a high school play and wanted to test the public's reactions. RiDE 'EM COWBOY — This modern-day cowboy hangs tightly to the steering wheel of a wide -tired vehicle called Desert Rat. This Hotel Was Too Popular! It isn't true that all the olives in the martinis at the Fontaine- bleau in Miami Beach are uncut emeralds, but there are enough real-life attractions to have made the huge hotel a mecca for well- heeled vacationers ever since it opened in 1954. Aside from the largest private beach in the area and acres of cabanas, it often features "gala" shows with big - name stars such as Frank Sina- tra and Sammy Davis Jr. More than bringing in paying uests, all this has also put the Fontaine- bleau high on the tourist's list of places to visit. As many as 8,000 persons have jammed into the hotel at the same time — most of them just to take a look around, But there will be no mob scenes at the Fontainebleau this winter, President Ben Novak last month turned the Fontaine- bleau into a private club and health resort, closed to all but paying guests and their friends, Anyone coming in to look over the new bowling alleys, tennis courts, ice-skating rink, and in- door pool will have to sign up for a room first, at $27 to $35 a day per person (with meals), thus becoming a member of the private club. Novak explained the switch by noting that "there is a definite need (in Miami Beach) for a spa," where a guest can get low -calorie meals, a medical checkup, and a daily massage. That wasn't the entire story, as another executive of the hotel made plain: "Paying guests had become a minority group and weren't getting full use of our facilities. Presumably, the pay- ing guests were getting annoyed and moving to other hotels, Space And Silence Far In The North The ice-cold water was mirror calm, and our bow wave crinkl- ed the pencil -sharp reflections of the mountains, Surprisingly we ran into huge swells inside the fjord. There was little to see because of the heavy mist blow - Ing down over the coastal moun- tains from the hinterland of ice, It was the time to sleep. I went down to the cabin and climbed into my bunk, not bothering to undress. As I dozed I heard Mr, Shirer saying something about a box of prunes he had bought at the store in Longyearbyen. It made me contented and I imme- diately fell into a deep sleep. Next day we sailed into Kongs- fjord. This was the most beauti- ful fjord we visited. Glaciers, several miles wide, filled the head of the fjord. Mountain peaks, their black tops looking like polished marble, showed only a few hundred feet above the thickness of ice. Ahead of us in the blue distance were the three 4,000 -feet high crown - shaped peaks of Svea, Nora and Dans, famous landmarks of Spitsbergen, Some parts of the fjord were cut sharply from view by protruding headlands of rock. The fjord was almost full of drifting ice; some pieces hard- ly showed while others were nearly as long as our ship. Al- though the sun was hidden by ribbons of cirrus clouds, the larger floes still spnrkled and reflected the green sea. We were surrounded by inter- minable space and silence. it is this feeling of space, of the big- ness and strength of the land- scape, that dominates one in the Arctic, Certainly, there is the beauty of colour and shape, which alone would be enough for pleasure. But the very cen- tre of your being stirs, You absorb the grandeur, the primi- tiveness and loneliness. Every sense builds on towards more excitement, which you know will always be sustained. . Near the shore line we watch- ed the dainty Arctic phalarope as it waded about searching un- der the pebbles with its long beak, looking for food, As we steamed along the coast we often met this small wader, skimming over the water at great speed and calling with a high piping sound. There were numerous elegant and friendly waders, but they all looked the salve to me, with their gray bodies and red legs, Further up the fjord the drain- ed slopes and warm gullies were covered with grass and flowers. The most abundant flowers we saw were the white and yellow poppies, short stalked and deli- cate looking. There were sever- al varieties of saxifrage, grow- ing together with pink stitchwort on thin soil between rocks. On the floor of the gullies, mosses and lichen grew amongst small clumps of reeds. Around the edges of the ponds and in the swampy ground the fluffy heads of beg -cotton looked like thistle- down.—From "Land of the Bog - Cotton," by Russell Sutherland. A Most Worthy Son Of A Great Father The late John Lardner ' was only 47 when his career ended in 1960. He possessed one of the most sophisticated senses of hu- mor of the current journalistic generation, His prose was sinewy and spare, according to modern tastes, and moved in lean, brisk tempos. Yet he managed to leave a curious impression of belonging to a richly romantic past. A faintly exciting promise in all he wrote suggested that he found himself in a fading but golden world peopled by the final but not unworthy representatives of a legendary race. Whether deal- ing with hard-bitten marines of World War II, flat -faced prize- fighters, or even television per- sonalities, he could place a cer- tain honest aura about the peo- ple he liked. Lardner wrote about war as a combat correspondent; about prominent people and habit pat- terns as a social historian; about theater and television as a critic. All areas except the theater are represented in this collection of essays entitled The World of John Lardner. But, like his father Ring Lardner, he never abandoned for long the field of sports. The world of John Lardner may be said to rest on the un- articulated but firm code of the sportsman. Honor, at least with- in one's given set of rules, and courage: these were the impor- tant virtues. The people Lardner admired have innumerable faults, and their often narrow areas of ex- cellence vary astonishingly. But they all share the sportsman's ability to be charming in victory and stoic in defeat. The people to whom he did not respond — Lindbergh and Jack Paar, a strange pairing, are the notable examples among these essays — he judged as either graceless winners or poor losers. He prized childlike exuber- ance; he did not particularly value restraint beyond its pre- ence in a craft, (On the topic of drinking in the United States, for instance, he could be dis- tressingly casual.) He loved a gorgeous sort of self -dramatiza- tion; he could not abide people who took themselves solemnly. Lardner's pieces are essential- ly portrait sketches: from the daffiest of the Dodgers, Babe Herman, to the young GI on the Iwo Jima beachhead,it is the diversity of human temperament that fascinates him. Like his father, he had an ex- act ear for speech and even more, a deadly sense for just what it betrays, (The parody of Mr. Paar is devastating precisely MERRY MENAGERIE "Durno how rd ever have made It acmes 1! you hadn't come along!" because of its tonal accuracy.) Lardner was a sharp rather than a profound commentator. He wrote from a pose of mildly bored nonchalance, good-humor- ed skepticism, and lightly ac- quired learning, as if he were an undergraduate working for a gentleman's C. He assumed, probably correctly, that readers who were interested could dis- cern the conscientiousness and craftsmanship behind the pose, All journalists have a tempta- tion to turn life into a good story. Lardner, with his gift for storytelling and his genially bi- zarre wit, must have experienced this temptation more than most. But when the people he wrote about imperceptibly became wry myths, it seemed less a matter of professionally pumped -up enthu- siasm than the uncaiculated vision of a gentle romantic, not quite resigned to his times. And perhaps this is the best tribute that can be paid him as a writ- er and as a man, Making it Easy To Own Death Weapon Every now and then a new car comes down the pike with such modishly classic lines and humrningly tuned engine that auto buffs as well as Sunday drivers pause to look and hanker. There was the Stutz Bearcat in 1913, for instance, the Lincoln Continental in 1939, the Mercedes 300SL in 1952. And in 1961, there are the new Jaguar XK-E's. Only time will tell if these English sports cars with the dazzling looks and speed (150 m.p.h.) really belong on the illustrious list of great cars, but they have undoubtedly got off to a racing start. After a sneak preview in Geneva, the XK-E's—a hardtop selling at $5,970, and a roadster priced at $5,670—were officially unveiled at the International Auto Show in New York last March. Before the show closed, $30 million in orders had been written up, nearly as much bus- iness as all makes had done at the show a year earlier, Since then, the Jaguar plant in Coven- try has been on an overtime basis. But Jaguar production still lags well behind demand. Only 60 of the hand -tooled XK-E's came off the assembly line last week, though by late next month output is scheduled to reach the 150 -a -week mark. Much to the chagrin of British sportscar lovers, who have been doled out a mere 60 XK-E's so far, 80 per cent of production is ticketed for the U.S. But there may be a brand-new Jaguar on the road soon, designed specifi- cally with the British market in mind. Sir William Lyons, founder, chairman, and managing director of the Jaguar Car Co., may re- place the Mark IX, a bulky sedan that sells at an equally bulky $6,100, with a smaller, faster, ultra - streamlined sedan. It would weigh less than 2,000 pounds (under Britain's new de- flationary budget, the maximum - size car that a businessman can write off as a tax-deductible expense). Sir William may in- troduce the new Jag at the Lon- don Motor Show in October, but he's perfectly willing to settle for a later date if need be, As al- ways, he would rather let a cus- tomer wait than "skimp on quality." "'The success of Jag- uar," he says confidently, "is due to our quality." If the proof is in the payoff, no one can argue with him. With production running 15 per cent ahead of last year's 25,000 cars, the company expects to surpass its banner fiscal year of 195, when it earned $3.9 million. This year may even ' outshine 1957, when the company picked itself out of the ashes of a devastating fire and got back into full prod- uction within twelve weeks. — From NEWSWEEK Fogging the Issue of Fluoridation The United States Surgeon General Luther L. Terry, in an article in the current journal of the American Medical Associa- tion, has seen fit to attack the opponents of fluoridation of the public water supply as people who "befog the issues and harass those who want its protection for their communities." Inasmuch as fluoridation is available to whoever wants it, and without the public water supply being fluoridated, it is obvious that any attempt to compel the fluoridation of the public water supply is nothing other than an attempt to compel all people to submit to the will of those who desires to improve their own health in their own way have already been comple- tely satisfied. This attitude of the Surgeon General is therefore ridiculous. What the man is actually saying is that the will of a mi- nority should be imposed on the majority, and that when the per- sonal desires of the minority, so far as they themselves are con- cerned, are already completely CLASSIFIED BABY CHICKS REQUEST special Bray (1st started pullets and cockerels, quick shipment. Ames and Dual-purpose, hatching to order. October broilers, book now. See local agent or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont, BERRY AND ROOT PLANTS RASPBERRIES Fall planting, strong disease•free plants. $4.00 per hundred post paid If cash with order. Thos. Blsson. R.Tt. 6, Markdale, Ont BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE HARDWARE STORE NIAGARA peninsula; clean stock and fixtures Brick building; doing $60,000 annually Will take mortgage on build. Ing; recently remodelled. Inventory $18,000, For a good buy and a solid investment, write for appointment to J. Corupe, 36 Spruce St.. St Cathnrines, Ont, FARMS FOR SALE 100 ACRE farm, good hunting and fish - Ing area. Apply Joe Robins, R.R. 1, Gravenhurst. 167 ACRES good land 7 -room house, bank barn 45'x50' water, hydro; also 100•acre pastura farm If interested contact Alex Young, R.R. 1, Berkeley. Ont FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE DITCHER FOR SALE SPEICIHER TANDEM TRACTION, two years old, with hydraulic ground con- veyor and 14 In, buckets. Roth Bros. Phone 217, Wellesley, Ont. LIVESTOCK FOR SALE OUTSTANDING Herd, Sire Summltdale Gold Sateilite 14N, Many generations of polled breeding. 3 years old, quiet. Keith Weeden, Paisley, Ont. Aberdeen -Angus - A wide selection available, all ages, both males and fe- males, in this popular beef breed. Sev- eral cows with calves by side and dams rehred. Top blood lines of the breed represented Write your requirements. A C. McTaggart, Sales Agent, 1 Wel- lington Street East, Aurora, Ontario. MEDICAL SATISFY YOURSELF — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA. $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH 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 will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt er Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1/4S St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO ARTHRITIS Try "Edoren"I Reliable herbal treat- ment for arthritic pains, Pleasant, safe, effective, Month's supply $5' money back guarantee. Write for particulars. PICKETT'S DRUG STORE PICKWOOD PHARMACAL CO. LTD., MILTON, ONTARIO capable of full satisfaction. It is no less senseless than it would be for those who are op- posed to fluoridation to demand legislation that would prevent those favoring it from buying fluoridation pills or having their teeth treated with other forms of fluoride that have been found suitable. Such an attitude as that would be insufferable.—Alameda Star (Calif.) How Can I? By Roberta Lee Q. How can I remove some paint spatters from window glass? A. A strong solution of baking soda will usually do a good job of this. Q. Ilow can I insure crispness in my French -fried potatoes? A. If the potatoes that are to be French -fried are allowed to stand for at least a half-hour in cold water prior to frying, it will insure their crispness. ADVERTISING NURSES TRAINING SCHOOLS EARN to $65 Week us Pracneul Nurse. Learn quickly at home No high school necessary; no age limit Write (or fres booklet, lesson samples Post Graduate School of Nursing, Room 1267. 131 S. Wabash. Chicago. NURSES WANTED OPERATING room registered nurse, immediately. Small, active 0.11 541ayy week and call back service Apply Cot- tage Hospital, Uxbridge, Ont NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing nutria consider the following points which this organize - Hon offers: 1. The best available stock, no cross- bred or standard types recommended. 2. The reputation of a plan which 1 proving itself substantiated by files of satisfied ranchers. 3. Full insurance against replacement 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 1• You receive from this organization a guaranteed pelt market in writing. S. Membership in our exclusive breed- ers' association whereby only pur- chasers of this stock may participate In the benefits so offered. 7. Prices for Breeding Stock start at 1200 a pair Special offer to those who qualify, earn your Nutria on our cooperative basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd., R.R. No. 2, Stouffville, Ontario. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Cell MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 351 Bloor St. W., Toronto Branches: j4 King St. W . Hamilton 72 Rideau Street. Ottawa PERSONAL HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED guaranteed, mailed In plain parcel Including catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment. 18 for 11.00. (Finest quality) Western Distribu- tors, Box 24 -TPF Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB BOX 31, GALT, ONT. Films developed and 8 magna prints 400 12 magna prints 600 Reprints 50 each KODACOLOR Developing roll 904 (not Including prints). Color prints 300 each extra. Armco and Ektachrome 35 m.m 20 ex- posures mounted 1n slides 51 20 Color prints from elides 32! each. Money re- funded In full for unprinted negatives. PULLETS 1,000 HY-LINES — wormed and vac- cinated — All ages available. 18 weeks 11,75. Over 90 years In Poultry. Comer and see them. Earl Giddis, R.H. No, 1. Ridgetown, OR. 4.2324, TOBACCO WANTED ATTENTION tobacco growers, we ars paying top market prices for rye Trucking arranged. Call Byron 801, Ed- mund's Transport, Komoka, Ont. TEACHERS WANTED AMALGAMATED school, North West River, Labrador requires high school teacher, must be able to teach French and English as chief subjects, also pri- mary teacher for grade one and b Sinners. Latest Newfoundland salary Beale plus northern extras. Accommoda- tion at prevailing rates or own arrange- ments If preferred. Unusually Interest - trig work. Apply: Chairman Amalga- mated School, North )Vest River, Labrador, LEARN WELDING NO TIME LIMIT Also Certificate Courses in SUPERVISION — INSPECTION QUALITY CONTROL A.R.C. SCHOOL OF WELDING 92 John St. N., Hamilton JA, 9-7427 JA, 7-9681 ISSUE 37 — 1961 A STONE'S THROW — Zug, Switzerland, b one of the few places in the world where "only a stone's throw" is a big task. Josef Ruegg found out the hard way, but managed to heave the 184 pound stone a distance of nine feet. The stone hos been In ure since the early 18001. PACt 4 BACK TO SCHOOL APPAREL T Shirts and Sport Shirts, long or short sleeves 4 to 14 98c to 2.98 Boys' Cardigans and Pullovers, 4 to 14, ... 2.98 up Dark Cotton Dresses, 4 to 14 2.98 up : Girls' Cardigans and Pullovers, 4 to 14, 2.98 up Needlecraft Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Ont. Vingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. • Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'11'ON. 1 .11 .Iii I .I.1 11u .. FOR A COOL AFTERNOON TREAT --- Visit Our Restaurant For A Refreshing SUNDAE, MILK SHAKE, SODA, LIGHT LUNCH Meals At All Hours. HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON - EXETER - SEAPORTS LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE - THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. j i4.11-1.1�ILr.1. CLINTON: Business -Hu 2-6606 Residence -Hu 2-3869 ••• PHONES: _ k: .'',1 ''�''1- :t,% ,.t.. EXETER, Business 41 Residence 34 THE BLYTH STANDARD Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1961 AUBURN NEWS Harvest Thanksgiving Sunday, Sept, 17 St, \lark's Anglican Church will hold their annual harvest Thanksgiving Sir, vices next Sunday, September 171h, tit 12 noon and 8 p.m. The guest speaker at the noon service will be Mr. Walter Pickford, Lay Reader, bf 11'in�ham. Special music Will be supplied by Messrs, Walter Buttell and James Lawrie, of Blyth. The Evensong Ser- vice will be in charge of the rector, Rev. Robert Measly, with the guest soloist being Mr. Elliott Lapp. The Auburn Daily Vacation Bible School closed the season with a bans; Lalance of $45.24• The balance from 1960 was $54.65 to start the 1961 school. The daily collections amounted this year to $31.42, and the cost of supplies was $73.11. Annual Masonic Church Service Over fifty members of the Morning Star Masonic Lodge of Carlow marched to their annual church service at Knox United Church last Sunday. Rev. Char los Lewis spoke on "The Color of Faith." Special music was supplied by Misses Marsha and Matie Koopnlans and Bernice McDougall, who sang the trio, "God Will Answer Prayer" aecom eanied by the church organist, Miss Margo Grange. Rev. P. L. Dymond, rector of the Clinton Anglican Church, was guest - speaker at Sl. Mark's Church. He he been conducting harvest home Services at the Blyth Church last. Sunday. Rev. J. B. Sishler of Innerkip, was the speaker at Knox Presbyterian Church while Dr. D. .1. Lane conducted the 124 anniversary al Rathol Presby- terian Church. New Fall Project "Featuring Fruit" is the fall project for the 4-H Clubs in Huron County. The first meeting of the Auburn Club will he held on September 18 at 7 p.nl. at the home of the assistant leader, Mrs. Ed. Davies. Mrs. Keith Machan is the leader, and the girls will learn how to serve fruit in various ways in all menus. All girls from 12 years of age to 26 are invited to attend this first meeting, Mr, and Mrs. Leslie Voynich, of Preston, visited last Friday with Mr. and Mrs. .J, C. Stoltz. Mr. and Mrs, K. McVittie, of Blytn, visited last Saturday evening with her sister, Mrs. Robert Chamney, and lir. ; Chamney. 1'Ir. and Mrs. Donald Haines, Mar garet and Eddie visited on Sunday with her father, Mr. IVilliam Rathbun tufo other relatives at Hillsburg. 'Mr, Eldon Stoltz, of Guelph, visite;. last Saturday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stoltz, Mrs. Betty Crete and son, of Windsor, returned honkie last week -end after a few weeks visiting with her uncle, Mr. Arthur Youngblut. Mr. and Mrs. 'Fred Youngblut and family, of Woodstock, visited recently with 1Ir. and Mrs. Wilfred Sandersoa and daughters. Mr. and Mrs. James Heulbly spent last week -end with relatives at Gra• venhurst. 'Misses Kathleen Andrews and Anna -Marie Schneider commenced their nur- ses' Training Course at Wingham hos- pital last week. Misses Margo Grange, Shirley Brown and Joan Mills enrolled this week at the Teacher's College, at Stratford. W,AI.S. Meeting Mrs. John Durnin, president of the Woman's Missionary Society of Knox United Church was in charge of the September meeting held in the Sunday School room. Soft music was played by the pianist, Mrs. William J. Craig, whc also accompanied for the singing of the hymns. The meeting was opened willi prayer by Rev. C. A. Lewis. He was the guest speaker who told the mem- bers about the new woman's organiza- tion and its formation of the United Church. Mrs. John Durnin and Mrs. Kenneth McDougall delegates to the Conference held recently at St. Thomas thanked the members fon' sending them. A discussion took place concerning the Memorial Fund which is to be set up in memory of the late Mrs, hansutll who was president of the W.M.S. Con- ference when she passed away. Plans were made for the Fall Thank-Offet in; meeting when the Londesboro ladies will he guests. Mrs. (James Jackson presided for the devotional period and gave the Call to Worship. Mrs. Donald Fowler read the scripture lesson from .u.. I+ MY wt.:.. WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES Phone 73. YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN- - KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. 11111110.111111.1. DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. 1 1. 1 ..I 1 0 I1 1. 111111 11 1I 11 II 1.1111111111.111... III ..11.1 II 111111 -III, New Fall Wearing Apparel DRESSES, Just Arrived. New Fall Shades SKIRTS, All -Wool BULKNIT CARDIGANS, sizes, Small, Medium and Large, also 40 to 44 100 percent Interlock BAN-LON CARDIGANS. up to 44 BAN-LON PULLOVERS, New Necklines - LINED JEANS for Boys and Girls ' ' MENS SUITS, All. Sizes LADIES UNDERWEAR, by (Watson's) SHOES and RUBBER FOOTWEAR for all the Fan>iily Save Black Diamond Stamps for Premituns,' or 5 percent Sales Slips for Merchandise, "The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store ` PHONE 211 BLYTH; ONT. •__ , ; -- ,._...:.�.�___ the 25th chapter of St, Matthew. Mrs. Jackson gave an account of a mission ary in Angola and led in prayer. A teen l:crance reading, Alcohol as a remover, Remove from lire everything that Is worthwhile. miss Margaret R. Jackson took the fourth chapter of the Study Book. Mrs, Donald Fowler gave a reading 'I'1'here Always will be God ' The offering was received by Mrs. Kenneth McDougal. Plans were dis- cussed to cater to the Baer-Easom wedding. Mrs, .1, Jackson thanked all who had taken part in the program and pronounced) the benediction. There will be no church services or Sunday School in Knox United Church on September 17 and 24111 owing to Anniversary Services at Donnybrook and 1Vestfield Churches. Mr. and Mrs. William Slraughan re- 'urncd last Friday from a visit with \h', and Mrs. William 'fleck and fain- ly, at Kitchener, Mrs. Jean Mayhew ind Mr. and Mrs. Les Mayhew, Tor - alto, and friends in Hamilton and Brantford. Mr. Ernie Laughlin, of Paris, visited "ecently with his cousin, Mr. Fred Toll, led Mrs. Toll. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gardiner and Julie moved last Saturday to SL Marys Odle Robert is attending `t'eacher's College al Stratford. Congratulations are extended to Mr. Duncan MacKay who received wor; last Saturday that he had been succes- sful in recent summer school subjects and will receive his B.A. degree from the University of Western Ontario in October. Mrs. Robert Seiler, John and Susan, of Mitchell, are visiting with her par- ents, 1Ir. and Mrs. John Daer, while Mr. Seiler is on a business trip to Cali- fornia. WESTFIELD Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell attend- ed the Baer-Easoln wedding in Knox United Church, Auburn, on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. James Boak and child- ren visited with Mr. and Mrs. Arnold I - Cook recently. Mrs. Keith Snell and Peter have re- turned to Guelph after one weeks visit with Mr. and Mrs. 11. Campbell. Miss Cathy remained fon' a longer visit. Several from the community attended the Sunday evening service of the Bap- tist Church in Auburn. The end of the grain harvest is in sight, with only a few fields left to thresh or combine. The hot sunny days of the past week was what was needed for the completion of harvesting opera- tions. The postponed September meeting of the \V.M.S. will take place in the 'ehurch•basement Monday evening, Sep- tember 18th, at 8 o'clock. Airs. Arnold Cook and her group in charge. Mr. 1\'m. Walden visited over the week -end with his daughter and son-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harburn, o1 liensall. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walden and 11Ir. and firs. Walter Cunningham celebrat- ed their wedding anniversary by taking a trip to Kincardine and returned by Goderich on Sunday, September 3rd. Congratulations to both couples. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Biggerstall were Lucknow visitors on Monday af- ternoon, CROP REPORT A week of excellent weather has aid- ed the farmers to harvest a great deal of their grain. There is yet at least 25 percent of the crop to thresh and com- bine. Considerable harvesting of beans has taken place with yields of "not worth harvesting" to "35 Bushel Crop" report. ed, quality is reported good. Turnip leen are reporting "cracks" from loo fast a growth. IIeavy Movement of steers out and into the arca are taking place. Silage and grain corn are maturing fast and it won't be long before the job of filling silos will be upon the farmers. -D. II. Miles, Ag. Rep. Confiscated firearm auction sale. Hespeler District Office, Saturday. September 16th, at 2 p.m, MEET YOUR NEIGIIIBORS AT THE GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811 - NOW PLAYING Thur., Fri,, Sat., Sept. 14, 15, 16 TINA LOUISE and KERWIN MATIIEWS "THE WARRIOR EMPRESS" In cope and Color also "MY DOG BUDDY" Mon., Tues., Wed., Sept, 18, 19, 20 GINA LOLLOBRIGIDA • LUANA PATTEN and ERNEST BORGNINE Tom Chamale's novel becomes a vivid screen drama in Cinemascope and color "GO NAKED IN THE WORLD" Adult Entertainment Thur„ Fri., Sat., Sept. 21, 22, 23 ANNE SE'11'AIOIIE . DAVID LADD and I'AM SMITH Dramatize lht story of two children and their desire for a wild pony "MISTY" Scope and Color Coming -Fred staire "TILT PLEASURE OF HIS COMPANY" , 111111 1 11 11 1 11 sumassommoisma.111 1 111. 1.. 1 1 11 11111 1 1.11 11 IW41011 1 4I n . 11.1 . 1 .1 ... u.. 1 iii .11...E O. 11 • .. 1.. II . ... 4 . 4 . . u . I. . 111EN'S READY -'1'O -WEAR with two pair of punts in ehec]cs and plain shades Size 36 to 46 ONLY $35,00 and $38.00 R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Gaud Manners" .dd.... ..r.ra� ..�..�--r.... �.�..-1111.---11,. .u. r1.... 111.1...,., I...... ..•_.1........1..1•.1, wins ll.Ir. 1111111' 5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH IIIIPORTEI) IIOLLANI) IIULBS:- hyacinth, Cro- cus, 'Tulips, Daffodil, Narcissus. Planting. time from Sept. 1, flowering time ilia;'. April and 11Iay. 3 -RING BINDERS:- a real Special, Reg. 2.98 On Sale 1.19 FOA1\i CUSHION CURLERS:- 3 sizes, Reg. 100 On Sale 89c FANCY CUPS & SAUCERS:- assorted colours, Cup aIRl Saucer 65c 1a. n ip 11u , .,1.. .11 . 11.1 ,.. w -.n. 1.11111 .11 w. .1 .1 .1t. . 1 I ,1 1 I.I ., , I I .1111....{,, 1 64n.1 .. .I Y 1..1 4 .i 1 11 LL .. 1 lid Y111 You and your family are cordially invited to attend the tiemi•Amutal CIRCUIT ASSEMBLY G14' .JElIOVAII'S >I WITN ESSES to he held in WINGI-L1M 1)ISTRIC'I' 11IG11 SCIIOOL Victoria Street SEPTEMUER 15, 16, 17, 1961 Commencing at 6:15 p.m., Friday Through Sunday 01 special interest will he the public talk at 3.09 p.m. Sunday "The Twentieth Century L1 Bible Prophecy" SEE THE BLYTH LIONS at the FALL FAIR VISIT THEIR BOOTI-I ON TIIE GROUNDS AND AII) THEIR ENDEAVOURS BY PURCHASING ALL VARIETIES OF PLANTERS PEANUTS SPECIAL FEATURE t. -.J.u1.0... ALL KINDS OF KEYS CUT (while you wait) 11,11].:..-..u.1.-.._....�......1...,,S I..1..., '.L....,,I.. . .-.:aLw .1 • .I.LL111.01..1.111.64 *NUM THINKING ABOUT INSTALLING A NEW OIL FURNACE DID YOU KNOW.: Your Co -Op can supply you with top quality furn- ace oils and any other heating oil that you may require. They also offer 1 free furnace or stove cleaning per year. Belgrave Co-operative Association ,'.IiSI 11111 BRUSSELS 38811110 PHONES WINGIIAM 1091 1111111 II11.I4.1111 .. .I. ..d.1.. 1..1.4. 1.1 MI Y. 11.114 4,11.11 111 II I.In 1 .1 .III....11.{1 M I . 1.I.II 111 Wednesday, Sept. 13, 1961 THE BLYTH STANDARD Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH -- ONTARIO. ••'•�MMMMi\Mi4/V.WY,IV �I,NV\ �. \n, v\/ V V `.I, /v.I�.V'\i INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, Office Phone 104, Residence Phone 140 . 1111.n W„ u, 11.• n.. .u.. .. ,.... .. J,u.. .1 .W. r, .., n.l ..11,.,•n, ill I, , FOR SALE OR RENT 65 acre grass farm, spring water, In Township of Morris. Apply Laurence Nesbit, phone 7237 Auburn. 29-3p CARD OF THANKS I would like to express my sincere thaeks and appreciation to all my • neighbours and relatives who so kindly helped with 1he.hayiug and harvesting • (luring my recent illness, . 29-I. —Meredith Young. SANITATION SERVICES AUTOMOTIVE Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired. lfeelmnicnl and body repairs, glass, Blocked drains opened wilh modern steering and wheel balance, Undnslu'ay equipment, Prompt Service, Irvin for rust prewenllnn, Coxun, 111ilverlun, Telephone 254, DAVIDSON'S T'.eaco Service till, No. 8 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231 Gndrrich, Ontario, 1314171I 131LL1AIIDS "Your friendly meeting place." Tobaccos - Soft Drinks Confectionaries open 9 a,m. to 12 pa. Doc Cole, Proprietor 1414 N1,14' NAPO i BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 TV ANTENNA REPAIRS TV Antenna Repairs and Installation. Year around service, Phone collect Teeswater, 392.6140, TV Antenna Ser- vice. 45.11, FILTER (QUEEN SALES & SERVICE Repairs to All flakes of Vacuum Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone Ilensall, 696112. 50.13p.tl. D(1 YOU iIAVE BUILDING Olt RENOVATION I'I.ANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Job Cull GERALD EXEL Carpentry and Ilinsunry Phone 231112 Brussels, Ontario McKI LLOP 11'I UTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. IIEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTII, ONT. OFFiCEIIS: President — John 1,, Malone, Sea, forth; Vice -President, John II, McEw• ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E. Southgate, Seaforlh. DIRECTORS J, L, 1Talone, Seaforth; J. 11. McVty Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton, Norman '1'rewartha, Clinton; .1. E. Pep. per, Brucefield; C. W. 1 eunhardl, Bornholm; 1i, Fuller, Goderich; R Archibald, Seaforlh; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforlh, AGENTS: William ',elper, Jr., Londesboro; V J. Lane, 11,11. 5, Seaforlh; Selwyn 13a ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforlh. Harold Squires. Clinton, DR. 11. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. ' OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. To 4 P.M. EXCErT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. '1'0 9 P.M. [TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERiCiI, oN'r. Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 978, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETR IST PATRICK s'1'. • \WINGiiA1\T, ONT. EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT. (Far Appointment please phone 770 \Vinghain), Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services, J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Sealorth, Phone 791 — Clinton IIOUIIti: tdestorlh Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 0;30 pun, Wed. — 9:(10 ern, to 12:30 pan, Clinton Office • Monday, 9 • 5:30, Phone HU 2.7010 G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the lute A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GUDEIIICH 1011 Waterloo -Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost Chclee of bull and breed Our artificial breeding service will help you lo a more efficient livestock operation For service or more information call; Clinton 1111 2.3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9.5650, BETTER CATTLE 1''OR BETTER GIVING CRAWFOR.D & HETIIERINGTON nAltRlsTEItS & BOiIICITORR J. II. Crawford, R. S. ilclherington, Q.C. QC, Wlugham stud myth, IN i1LYTII EACii THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located In Elliott Insurance Agency Phone Blyth, 104 Windham,' 4� 20-11 PIt0J'ER'1'IES FOR SALE tl'l1,FRED 1t!cIN'I'EE Real Estate Broker WALI(Ei('1'IIN, ONTAI{IO Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78, ACHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE $1.00 per 100 Ibs• plus bonus for fresh dead, old or disabled horses and cattle. Please phone promptly to At- wood, Zenith 34900 (no toll charge) or Atwood 356.2(322, collect, Seven day service. License No. 101061. VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND SERVICE Repairs to most popular makes oI cleaners and polisher. Filler Queen Sales, Varna, Tel, collect Ilensall 6116112. ' 50.13p,t1, DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASA PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN 0R DISABLED COWS and iIORSES also Dead Cows and horses At Cash Valle Old Horses -4c per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels.., BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15R9, Blyth 24 hour Service Plant Licence No. 54.11.P,-61 Colector Licence No, 88•G61 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, RR. 2, ion SALE Holstein 2nd calf heifer, clue Septem- ber 26th; 5 black yearlings and 4 black calves. Apply, Gilbert Nethery, phone 16118, Blyth. 28-2p LOCAL MAN REQUIRED I need a representative for my firm in this area. The opening in this area may be worth $U,000 yearly for the right man. Can you make short auto trips? full or part time work, Can you call on Rural, '1'otvn and City dwellers? Are you prepared to start at once? Write Sales Manager, Box 017, Loudon, Canada. 26-4 UNWANTED IIMIt Vanished away with Saca-Delo. Saca- i'elo is different. It does not dissolve or remove hair from the surface, but penetrates and retards growth of un• wanted hair. Lor -Beer Lab. Ltd., 5, .679 Granville, Vancouver 2, B.C. 27-4p, NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS iN TIIE I1A'TTER OF TILE ESTATE OF MAUD BIRYANT, late of the Town- ship of Ilullett in the County of Huron; 1Vidow, deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN pur- suant to the Trustee Act, that all creditors and others having claims against the Estate of the late Maud Bryant, are required to send particu- lars of their claims, duly verified, to 1, '1', GOODALL, Solicitor for the Exe- cutors of the said Estate, on or before the 20111 day of September, A.D. 1961, and (hat after such dale the Executors will proceed to distribute the assets of the said Estate, having regard only to the claims or which they shall theii have hall notice. DA'1'EI) at Wingluam, Ontario, this 25th day of August, A.D. 1961, .1. '1'. G00DAI,L, \WINGIIAl14, Ontario, Solicitor for the Executors 273' DE IiAAN'S PIANO TUNING Tuuing, Repairing Organs and Pianos. Plume 65911'11, Listowel, 27.4p TIIE WEST WAWANOSII MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office, Dungannon Established 1878 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Blown Smyth, R,R. 2, Auburn; Vice -President, Berson Irwin, Belgrave; Directors; Paul Caesar, H.R. 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan, Godcrich; Ross McPhee, I1.11. 3, Au- burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. MacLennan, 11.11, 3, Godcrich; Frank Thompson, 11,11, 1. Ilnlyrood; Wm. (Wiggins, 1(,11. 3, Auburn, For information on your insurance, call your•ncarest director who is also all agent, or 1110 secretary, Mullin Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon 48. Order Your Counter Cheque Books (printed or blank) At The Standard Office • WANTED TO BUY 2 girls bicycles, Apply, Jim Scott Jr.. phone 481119, 131ylh. 29.1r FOR SALE 7 room brick cottage with 3 -piece bath, hardwood floors, heavy duly wir• in;, situated on 111711 51., 13101. Apply, ,flex Wells, Londesboro, phone 49110 Myth, 29.11. " PAGE A East 1VawannSII Council I Moved by Snell -Robinson, that the Co,, axle, etc. for grader, 335,86; T1>'am• The East 11'awaros(t 'Township cowl., Officials sign the petition for interim' as Morrison, welding grader, 6,00. General Cheques: - C, W. Hanna, registering deed, (3,50; Blyth District Fire Area, fire calls, 151.9(1; 1Iiuwi County Ploughmen's As- socia1iI,IlIl, grant, 25.00; BI'ookhav'eu Nursing Heine, plain, of patient, 92,75; Lloyd 'Montgomery, 1 fox bounty, 4,00; James 11. Coupes, live stock claim, 59 pullets al L511, 75,00; John McCal- lum. live stock valuer, 5.00; W. S. Gib. \lunicil'al liability policy prem. iuun, 262.41; direct relief, 66.73. Moved by Snell and Robinson that council adjourn to meet October 311 al one o'clock al the Belgrave Com- munity Centre, Carried, it. If. Thompson, Clerk. cit islet September 5111, with all (Jo subsidy on the 1901 road expenditure. member's pi esent, Reeve Ilanna pl c5ill 1 Carl'iedl. ing, Mowed hy Buchanan -Pattison, that The minutes of the meeting ludo council pay the Myth 1)istrict Fire August ht, were read and adapted ea A1('1 account of $151.00. Carried. motion by Iluchanan 1'allisun. . I Moved by Robinson and Snell nal Vowed by Rrhinsnn-Snell, That ('man- the road and ;:ene'al accounts as pre• ell pay $66.73 as direct relict ter 111•, F'entedl be passed and 1:,1id. Carried. Month 01 Scplemher, Ca: rit. d.1 Mut idl by Pattison and Buchanan \loved I:y Pattison-13uchanan, PIA Thal council give a grant if $253011 to council renew luso policies with 1V. S.1 the Huron County I'luu_lunen's As;o Gibson. C,u die 1. elation. Carri,ld Itc.ad Cheques:. Stuart 11c1urney, sal. $185,00, bills p:.irl .4;c, $135.45: ,flan 11cl3u•ney, wage:, and trucking, 102.20; Harold Cuuk, 7,1': hrs. cutting weeds at 3.00, 20,50; 11, and 11. 'Tire and Battery Service, 22 hags ca, el., (34,92; Phillip D;nv.•on, twclding and ell:, 6,50; Jlarry 'I'ornatd:es. Ai.ply Mr. Clem Galbraith, 11'illiaul,. ;302 gal:;. fuel and lax, 07.70, phare 60, Blyth. 21 -Ip ° t tease, 0,70, 101.40; Dons, Road 'AREAL WANTED TO BUY Forage hex and wagon. Apply Jim Scott, phone 431119 or 481123, 131y1 h. F011 SALE 4,41.46 C. \V. Ilanna, 1tceve. Is Your Subscription Paid?. --DONATIONS TO BLYTH FAIR -- .III, 11111.114111111111181114 1111111 Ilei 11 1111 11111 1 • 11, li 11 .1 1.1.11 1 111111 Id.IW11111 114 111111 Y Y 14 1,1 SNELL FEEi) MILL Quality Feeds Sales and Service for International harvester New Holland and Gehl Equipment "Contact Us Before Buying" Phone 4(iR8, Blyth 41.11 14 1, M 1 I: 1 . ., .1 1 ,11 1 11 . I .I.1 In. 1 ,1 1 .11... ,111 1 4.41 M1 111, 11 d1.1 . 1 1. . T. B. ALLEN Londesboro, Ontario Sur -Gain and Purina reeds Grain and Fertilizers Phones: Blyth 251111 Clinton IIU 2433t),) 4 .......,.,..• .i. --... .., ..,n.•. „ u •, ,.,4I, ni., 1, .-....,,r, s•r.,-. ,-.uu ........ OM. .—.I...u.. i ,...a., LONDESBORO LOCKER SERVICE Groceries, Meat, Eggs Phones: Blyth 44R17 Clinton HU 2-9951 • 444 F. M. PECKITT & SONS Plumbing and Heating Londesboro, Ontario. Phone Blyth 41813 AGENTS for GILSON FURNACES .11 FARM SEEDS For Quality and Value R. N. ALEXANDER "A Complete Seed Service" Specializing 1n Climax Timothy Londesboro, Ontario Telephones: Blyth 26R33 Clinton IIU 2.7475 ROBBIE BURNS GARAGE White Rose Products J. J. Case Farm Equipment Sales and Service Londesboro, Ont. Phone Blyth 4.181 A�.r..nr,..r.. uu•„r.r-...-rn..-,AI. .n,i-unun 1 11-. 1. 1,1.. ri.Iw I,41r,,.(1 ..1r-.. In... r 114. 11,.1 m•..,•nr...'.' Wishing Every Success to Blyth Agricultural Society THOMPSON'S GENERAL STORE Londesboro, Ontario a. ,116. wurllu 111.1 11.1 .010114•,-,..ss,,.1,.• Is...• .... �YII Iw•ilk 1r 1..., 4.J0Yw 1.._ 1 .,. /..1 .i.,.,,11w1 • 1. til 1110, 1111 1111p.11,1.n. GORDON RADFORD'S GARAGE Oliver Sales and Service Londesboro, Ontario Phones Blyth 44R5 Clinton HU 2-922 4 • , 4 1 11 ■ Acknowledgement Of Thanks The Officers and Members of the Blyth Agricultural Society ack- nowledge with sincere appreciation, the support and co-operation of the following Contributors and Advertisers, who have made a most worth- while contribution to the printing of this book, as well as to 1110 Fair: Rise Farms Milling 10.91 A. Berlhut 3.00 Howson & Howson 1 Id. . , 10.01) Gerald lleffron 3.03 United D:'!ry & Poultry Co- Ab. 13acnn 3,0(1 Opera(ive 10, 01.1 Lorne Brown 'Motors Ltd. Geol'e Watt 25.00 Clinton 5.00 Wallace 'luau y Farms .. :1.99 Barlliff Bros., Clinton 3.00 S. 1I. Jchn:.!.n 3,00 \\;lions Ilunneslead Acres Campbell's 'Transport, Herford Farm • .5.00 B;yth 3,00 Ken Cooke, Clinton 3.00 Grandview Lunch .. ...., 3.00 Edgar Whiteman & Sons 3.00 A. Manning & Sons 3.00 IL S. Travis, \\Talton 5.00 George Radford Const. Ltd. 5.00 Gordon Radford, Londes- G.,wing's Sunoco Service .. 3.00 ()oro 3,00 Needlecraft Shoppc 2.00 Robbie Burns Garage, Lon - Blyth 5c to $1.0'1 Store 3.00 deshoro 3.00 'Mille Cole, Myth Billiards 3.00 Them, stn's General Store 1Juron Grill . ............ 2.00 Londesboro 3.00 Wallace Dry Goods 3.00 F. M. Peckitt, Londesboro 3.00 Lloyd Walsh Barber 3,90 R. N. Alexander, 'Andes - 11, \V. Madill ;LOU born ...... .... , . , , , 3,0(1 \'u:ldcan's Hardware and T. 13. Allen, Londesboro . , 3.(10 Electric 3,00 IAnddCSh01•n Locker Service 3.00 Ladd's Barber Shop ;1,0u W. J. Mills Motor Sales C'rcighlun's While Hose 'Ltd., Gotlerich 5.00 Service Station 't 00 It. 1), 11tiro, Auburn 3,00 Knex's Produce 3,60 W, L, Craig, Auburn 5.00 Snell's Grocery and Locker Cliff McDonald, Auburn 2,00 Service 5,00 Jim Henlhly • 1,00 Arcade More 5,09 Charlie Scott 2.00 Kurncth Dairy 2.00 Robert Phillips, Auburn .. 2.00 Doherty Bros . ....... . ... 3.00 Gordon Taylor, Auburn .. 2.00 Stewart's Red & White 5.00 Tom Johnston, Auburn ... 2.00 Superior Store 3.00 ]tarry Beadle, Auburn , . , 1.00 Blyth Standard 6.00 Cliff i3rown, Auburn ... , . 1.00 L. E. Tasker 3,00 Keith Arthur, Aubrun .... 3.00 Elliott Insurance Agency 3.03 .J. A. Plunkett,Auhurn ,.. 2.00 Ben Walsh, Superlest William Seers, Auburn .. 3 00. Garage3.00 \Vm.Gow, Auburn 3.00 John Baillie 3,00 Elmira Fertilizers Limited, Fred Gregory 2.00 Elmira ............... 5,00 Walter Mason 1:00 Galt Chemical Products John Bailey 2,00 Ltd, 5.00 Sparling's hardware 4.00 Snell Feed Mill ....,..... . 3.00 William 'Thuell ........ , 3.00 L. M. Scrimgeour . , ...... 3.00 W. McNall 2.00 Clarence Hanna, Belgrave 3.00 P. & W. Transport ... , .. 5.00 * GRANTS 13ernard Hall Insurance Corporation of Blyth 100.00 Azency 3,00 Morris Township 100.00 Ilantm's Garage 3.00 Ilullett ,:Township 100.00 Philp's Drug Store 3.00 East Wawanosh Township 85.00 S. P. Hallahan & Son 3.00 Province of Ontario 786.00 James Lawrie 3.00 County of Huron .. , , , . , , , , 175.10 Blyth Beauty Bar 3,00 Field Crop Grant 65.00 A. Montgomery 3.00 * Estimated (Prize List published prior to receiving same). DONATIONS AND SPECIAL PRIZES: Miss J.. Woodcock 2.00 Mrs. E. Carroll 2.50 John W. Hanna, 1LP,P.10.00 Eldon Cardiff, M.P.P. 10.00 Toronto Star 10.00 131yth Women's Institute 10.00 A. Y. McLean........ ..... ....... ................. . .. Trophy G. L. Griffith and Sons , 2 Cow Halters, Value 11.00 Gorman Eckert and Co, Ltd. Club House Products Simpson's, London . . . . . ..... . . .. . . . . . . . ... 5.00 Merchandise Certificate T. Eaton Co., Ltd. Siler Casserole, Value 16.00 Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Silver Tray Simpson -Sears Silverware, Value 16.0,, Canada Packers Ltd . ..... . . ....... Canada Packers Assorted Products Standard Brand 40,00 (Watson Bros, 10.08 Frank 13ainton ,... 1 pair wool blankets, one dozen socks, Value 30.00 George Watt 6,00 Warwick Seed Co 12,00 Wm. ('after ...............................„,,..sass 6.00 1t. W. Madill llaugh's Big 133's 'Poem Leiper 5.00 Scott Fairsc►'vicc 5.00 Mullett Federation of Agriculture 5.00; East Watvanosh Federation of Agriculture 15.00 Morris Federation of Agriculture 15.00 Robin Howl Flinn' Mills Ltd. . . . ... . . .. . . ..... . . . Two 25 lb, Bags Flour Mary Maxim, Paris, Onf, 10,00 William Neilson's Limited . , 2 Ib. Box Every Piece Different Chocolates Snell Feed Mill ...... Bag Calf Startena Howson and Howson Ltd. Bag Calf Startena Belgrave Co -Op Bag Calf Startena Nicholson File Co. of Canada Ltd. Three 12” Files Linited Dairy and Poultry Co -Operative Trophy Compliments of K. C. COOKE, FLORIST Clinton, Ontario "Flowers for Every Occasion” .,1111 elm • Compliments Of EDGAR WIGHTMAN & SONS Breeders of Scotch Shorthorns Belgrave , Ontario Trading Stamps And Other Gimmicks A savings bank has just made me an interesting offer — if 1 will start a new deposit in the amount of $50, they will give me some green or yellow stamps. So, I think if I had $50, instead of depositing it in a hank. I would try to buy some stock in a green or yellow stamp com- pany. Defended as "just a sav- ings scheme," the trading stamp thus emerges victorious and has been embraced by its competi- tion, the savings bank. In the face of dire national peril the American people may not ,..are to ponder on this to the full, but I would be derelict not to give them an opportunity. I think the trading stamp people have goofed on their greatest chance, Stamps should be redeemable for taxes, in these times, and not a single move has been made in that direction. It opens up a whole new field of incentive and should have the support of the government. Here lies the greatest area of service by all. The tourist, coming to a toll gate, could just hand Jn the right number of stamps. and when the highway commission gets books enough it could turn them in on new construction, If local taxes could be paid, not in the annual sadness t f cold cash, but with 325 boc ks of stamps, there would be t new zest in the quest for p'llitical stability, and the public would have so much fun pasting up the commitment that t a x p a y i n g would be like baseball or motor - boating. Children could be in- culated with love for the fif- teenth of April, Notes from the Internal Revenue Service would no longer threaten you with a $10,000 fine and jail, but would say, "Because of error in com- putation in item 3, lime 13, article 9, schedule C, you are two and a half books short, , , ," Somebody with more time for research than I have should do a treatise on the general theme of getting something back when you spend money. The trading stamp is far from new, although it never before hit its present popu- larity, and the idea of a "free premium" is older than that. In my uncle's old country store the gimmick was a gift with a pound of tea. Uncle had a little wooden box near the cash register, filled with slips of paper, and as he held up the box a tea customer would pick out a slip, Uncle would read off the number on ft, "Number 15, a wash basin!" Dumber 25 could be anything else, too, depending on how well he had "bought" lately, and what he had out back that was moving slowly, The value of it also de- pended on the current mark-up on tea, As a lad, hanging around the store, I used to marvel at the joy with which shoppers would pay 15 cents extra for a pound of tea and then go home delighted with a six cent wash basin, A phase of this study would be the magazine and newspaper "premium." In our living room we cherish a lithograph called "Little Sweethearts." It shows a young boy and girl in the rhap- sody of first love sharing a bas- ket of wild strawberries, and it was a "free premium" from the Family Herald and Weekly Star back in the 1890's, This maga- zine, still publishing in Montreal, is aimed at the English-speaking rural Canadian, although it is wider read than that, and is one ISSUE 37 -- 1961 of the great publications of North America, It built its circulation by offering "family art" to the prompt subscriber. The present staff of the Fam- ily Herald and Weekly Star knew little about Little Sweet- hearts, except that accumulated dignity surrounded a copy of it hanging over the editor's chair in the inner canctum, But with a will they dug through old files, and what we found nut is amaz- ing. The painting was done by an English artist named Millais, who at one time was president of the Royal Society, and who is hung in the Tate Gallery in London, However, because this is so apart from his other work the museum seemed reluctant to admit he ever painted it, and the conclu- sion left is that he did it as a bread-and-butter job for the Can- adian magazine and regarded it as unimportant, It is, to say the least, "sweetly sentimental," and hardly an English landscape, Thus denied, the Millais paint- ing was "milked" hard by the Family Herald, For almost a year they built up the expectations by telling how the artist was com- missioned, how he was coming along, and how the lithographers in London were at work. When the print -job was done, the de- parture of the ship bringing the pictures to Canada was announc- ed, and its arrival was followed by ecstatic delight from those privileged to see the picture, All this was aimed at a late -fall sub- scription drive, and those who renewed could send 25 cents ex- tra to "cover cost of mailing" and receive a copy of this well -pro- moted painting. Inasmuch as the millions of copies printed cost the magazine but a few cents each to put in the hands of sub- scribers, the matter becomes "trading stamp" material. Over a great many years the Family Herald (which, incident- ally, had at one time a Boston publication office and a Boston editor) distributed many such art premiums which still hang in many homes. Little Sweethearts was the most popular, and prob- ably was the most popular maga- zine premium ever, but another similarly sentimental one was "It Fell From The Nest." This show- ed a child, bird in hand, gazing up into a tree. Another was "The Battle of Balaklava," with the "Charge of the Light Brigade." Queen Victoria on her diamond jubilee was the subject of an- other, As the "free premium" drew results the magazine pros- pered, although editorial qual- ity sometimes fell off as the staff spent its time rolling up pictures by the hundreds of thousands, Yet there was something to .say for the 25 cents coming in to pay for a free gift that cost about a dime, —By John Gould in the Christian Science Monitor. Some Useful Hints About Frozen Foods The last thing into your shop- ping cart at the grocer's should be your frozen food packages, and the first thing into your cold storage at home should be these same packs, say the people at Seabrook Farms, a leading froz- en food firm. Ice creams should be stored not over 1 month—the children will see to that. Peaches a n d strawberries, steaks, whole chickens, are good for a year, Don't hold vegetables longer than 8 to 10 months. Fish and shellfish (cooked or ROYAL HOBOES — The royal court of the nation's hoboes — king, queen and princess —. take the solute of their subjects in convention at Britt, lowo, Proper designation for the hoboes' group is Tourist Union No. 63, King David I (Harry Beetison, Ashland, Neb.) is flanked by princess, "Brown -eyed Susan," left, and Queen "Boxcar Betty" Link, tt TABLE TALKS Jam Andrews The U, S. Food and Drug Ad- ministration has recently an- nounced the seizure of several packaged foods which it charges are short of weight, or otherwise improperly labeled, The average consumer who sometimes won- ders about the empty space In some packages will be glad to know that someone is checking. * • • "Here is a different -to -make - and -taste lemon pie made from ingredients that are available everywhere in any season," writes Rose Alberta Bairpaugh in the Christian Science Monitor, "My friends always ask for the recipe when I serve it as a party dessert—and my family compli- ments me when it appears as the conclusion to an everyday meal," LEMON PIE UNUSUAL Pastry for an 8 -inch pie with lattice top 11,4 cups sugar r cup flour 14 cup very thin slices peeled lemon 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 1 cup cold water 1 tablespoon butler Line an 8 -inch pie pan with rolled dough, Blend sugar and flour thoroughly. Spread 11/4 cups of this mixture on the dough. Arrange lemon slices over this sugar -flour mixture and cover with remaining mix- ture. Add grated lemon rind, Sprinkle cup of cold water over mixture. Dot with butter. Ar- range pastry strips over top in lattice fashion and seal edges. Bake at 425°F, for 10 minutes, Reduce heat to 325°F. and con- tinue baking for 40-50 minutes, Serve while still slightly warm, • • • "Here is a buttermilk pie recipe that has been in our fam- ily file •all of my lifetime. It is very good," writes Pauline E. McConnell. BUTTERMILK PIE 1 baked pie shell 1 tablespoon butter 1 tablespoon flour 2 tablespoons cornstarch 3 eggs, separated 2 cups fresh buttermilk I% cups sugar fresh), cooked meat, hamburger, bread, may be a little "tired" 1f stored over three months, IN THE BEST BRITISH TRADITION — As far as these Britons on the East-West Berlin border are concerned, that East German officer on armored car in background doesn't even exist. Completely ignoring him — and his armored car — General Sir Rohan Delocombe, left, British cornmcndant of Berlin, chats with some of his officers at a tense border point. Neither pc neral nor danger separate officer in centre from his pipe. l4 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla Nutmeg Bend together thoroughly the butter, flour, cornstarch, and egg yolks. Add to that mixture the buttermilk, sugar, salt, and va- nilla, Cook in top of double boiler over hot water until thickened. Pour into a baked pie shell. Sprinkle lightly with ground nutmeg, Cover with me- ringue made by folding '/x cup sugar into beaten egg whites, Brown lightly in oven. Cool be- fore serving. Note: This same recipe may also be baked in an unbaked pie shell, using 3 whole eggs in the filling and omitting the me- ringue, , • • Lemon chiffon pie is a favor- ite with most people, and the following recipe makes a hand- some one. Mix 1 envelope gela- tin (1 tablespoon) with / cup sugar and Vs teaspoon salt in the top of a double boiler. Beat the yolks of 4 eggs and add to them ' cup lemon juice, and Y4 cup water, Add this egg mixture to the gelatin, Cook over boiling water, stirring constantly, until the gelatin is dissolved—about 5 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind, Chill this mixture, stirring occasionally, until it mounds slightly when dropped from a spoon. Then beat 4 egg whites until stiff and beat in 1 cup sugar. Fold the gelatin mixture into the egg whites and turn the whole mixture into a baked pie shell, Chill until firm and top with whipped cream. • • • Another hot weather special is a frozen cottage cheese and pineapple salad. It's easy, too, Drain the excess moisture from 11/ cups cottage cheese and beat with a fork or electric mixer until smooth, Whip 3/4 cup cream until stiff and fold in the cottage cheese. Add 1 teaspoon salt, 3/4 cup well drained crush- ed pineapple, 1• cup finely sliced dates, 1/4 cup mayonnaise and 3 tablepsoons lemon juice, Pour into a freezing tray and freeze. Cut into slices for serving and arrange on salad greens. Allow about 3 hours for freezing this salad, It will serve 6, • • • These two recipes which 1 concocted with honey I thought might be of interest to readers, writes Ada Vinton, The Honey Blondies won a prize for me at the Beekeepers Convention in 1958, in Fort Pierce, Florida. HONEY BLONDIES ?a cup butter 1 cup honey 11/4 cups light brown sugar 3 eggs 2% cups all-purpose flour 23/ teaspoons baking powder /4 teaspoon salt 1 cup broken pecans 1 package semi -sweet chocolate bits Melt butter in a saucepan; add honey and sugar. Beat well and cool, Then add eggs, well -beaten, flour, baking powder, salt, pecans, and chocolate bits. Pour into well -greased floured pan, size 101/2 x 151 xl and bake 20 to 35 minutes at 350° F. Coo), cut into squares, and dust with powdered sugar. M • • HONEY IIEitMITS 1!e cups strahtctl honey 1,13 cup melted shortening 2 eggs iij cup milk 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup chopped raisins 1/4 teaspoon cloves 31/4 cups flour 4 teaspoons baking powder Mix dry ingredients together. Use some of the flour to cover raisins. Add melted shortening to honey, then eggs. Mix alto- gether and drop from tip of spoon onto greased cooky sheet about two inches apart. Bake in moderate oven about 375° F. Chopped nuts or chocolate bits make good substitutes for the raisins. Has Science Been Stopped? Can't Penetrate Mystery of Visions By WARD CANNEL Newspaper Enterprise Assn, Hanover, N,J,—Can it be that the fragile human mind has fin- ally defied invincible science? For after 15 years and thousands of astounding experiments on mentality with a remarkable drug, psychiatry appears to be stymied by what it has learned. The drug is LSD—lysergic acid diethylamide—a fungus deriva- tive made in Hanover (by the Sandoz Pharmaceutical Co,). Scientifically speaking, LSD is a member of a drug family called halucinogens which produce a- cute nervous system symtorns, perception disturbances, cloud- ing of consciousness, a tendency to euphoria, In real life, this means you have visions when you take LSD, Now, visions have been very important in the history of man and his religion, art philosophy— and even science, But nowadays the fashions are different, Vis- ions today often are called psy- choses and the people who admit having them are the mentally ill, And so it Is that psychiatric re- searchers armed with halucino- gens, have been everywhere con- juring up visions in cats, mon- keys, artists and other specimens —all under immaculate labora- tory conditions, of course, noting each word, movement, brain wave, corpuscle, etc. Because if mental illness can be demonstrated as a chemical change, It can probably be cured the same way, And the same is true for the other delusions like hope, joy, fear, love and in- tuition, But it hasn't worked out at all well. The chemical and physical changes haven't been Isolated ad- equately. It's almost impossible to get the same response to the drug twice in the same subject. And it's the very dickens to get a precise clinical picture of the vision suitable for framing, Part of the problem lies with science which alters the vision by trying to measure it. But probably the biggest part of the problem is the vision itself. Author Aldous Huxley, who has had experience with the hal- ucinogen mescaline, sets out his understanding of these in his book, "The Doors of Perception" Remembering and thinking straight seem little reduced, Per- ception is greatly intensified, the way It was in childhood, Will and Interest in space and time are greatly diminished. And the visionary moves into another world—simultaneous cxperience in the "inner and outer" worlds, Another subject, Jane Dunlap, calls her experiences with LSD "cosmic" in her book on experi- mental visions, "Exploring Inner Space," She progressed, she re- ports, from visions of evolution to visions of paradise, Well, experiences like these are very trying for scientific re- searchers. Dr, Harold Himwich, one of the world's leading ex- perts on brain function says: "What does it prove? Nothing. That woman could just as easily have gone from paradise to evol- ution under LSD," And Dr. Carl Henze, vice pres- ident of the manufacturer, who decides what experiments will be HUXLEY; Space and time are less Important. given the drug to work with, shakes his head sadly, "Oh, these subjects are always reporting cosmic experiences and inner and outer worlds. But how is it that real scientists, tak- ing these drugs in the laboratory and then measuring their react- ions carefully, don't have these cosmic results?" Little wonder, then, that in- formal clubs are springing up in the U.S, of people who have been halucinogen experiment subjects and now can neither explain nor forget their visions: But it is little wonder, too, that Dr. Henze like many other researchers, is unhappy. "To be able to make such a powerful scientific tool as LSD," he moans, "and then not be able to do anything scientific with it" Fashion Hint m�nr ,,,^r^.«.•. .__.., apt pal�ly,m III 11111q1@II4I II:�aIII"IfIlflipal l6 W moil! nil ldull Dill Ill! id I II i M tlnlulllllmll ;flllhl: r i{1p� iItl 91111I1IN1."" II�ullll��Imin°'.',I? 1 iIN•�I{k .I. IIIIItlII siuallu g,+aR li)�IµJ,,idary,?,II11Ullln.n uip)I IImllO (,IIili�Il��� ii ,�I se 1p�dll np„ :,,•,' 1 �I '� IIP �r" II1tlOihllflllll I i ,_ -,.:��:IIIII�1�l!I�l��!.411�41 t11ili� II�111`P Wem,mtnurnarenm ,emu as �'� our�Imm�nminuum�>fI nil INS ,Wnuigil I, ;NI hIIInu9a11ulmpryli it^,k ...r( Just Wihere Is That Old-Tiilme Bread 1 For the first time in ' gy ut's history, white bread, .11 iced, wrapped, untouched by had, made Its appearance in Cairo re- cently. A text printed on the pater wrapper informs he customer that this bread is made with pure, white, enriched flout con- taining an impres_ive q'lantity of vitamins. It is produced in the biscuit and bread bakeries at Shobra, north of Cairo, one of the many new factories that have apt i ng up in that area in the laot two years, Here everything b dune by modern machinery: we ghing and sifting the flour, mixing the ingredients, cutting and s1 aping the dough which is :hen co' duct- ed on belts to gigantic a•'ectric ovens that remind one (d the equipment of model hospitals. The dough is baked as it rates, in slow notion, througt; the ovens and the finished p, educt dries and cools on its wa V to the packing room where it is machine -packed in boxes and wrappers. At no time do the pro- ducts suffer contact with hu:ran hands. There is no immediate danger that this new, hygienic bit ad will supplant the traditional Egyptian loaves, hu: through the narrow breach that has b•en made it is possible to glimpse the dreadful day when all Egypt's bread, produced in vast depersonalized factories, w i 11 come to us white, intact shroud- ed in paper, tasteless and un- breadlike. In the meantime, however, we may still enjoy watching the ba- ker perforin the breadmaking ritual, kneading the dough with his hands, shaping the loaves with the deft movements of a prestidigitator, and placing them with incredible speed on the ba- ker's peel, about 15 feet long, to slide them into the earthen- ware oven aglow with wood em- bers that have preheated It. In the large bakeries the oven is heated by a powerful gus jet that hisses and roars oir.Inously, like a fire -spitting drag'>n, We may still :Inger in the baker's shop, selecting. arguing and haggling over W'e shape, size and color of the loaf we want to buy, and choe'se it fi om an astonishingly wide variety The mere fact of asking for bread in Egypt is fraught with deep significance, for here you ask for 'eysh, meaning life, in• tead of khobz, the word used in other Arab countries, The Egyptians have aiways had a deep respect for bread, and this is perhaps the reason for their choice of this word It Is quite common for poor Egyp- tian families to spend half their income on bread; 'eysh and foo (stewed beans) being their stable diet. The method of baking bread and the type of loaves used to- day have not changed since Pharaonic days, and it is the same bread as that which Sarah baked when the three angels came visiting, and which Jesus broke and ate with the disciples at the Last Supper, There are more than 200 kinds of bread in Egypt, if one counts the various types made in the villages, but in Cairo and other large cities, the most common, apart from European loaves, are tradtional loaves known as 'eysh, ballad', 'eysh shams and 'eysh balladi mefaka', names that one might expect to find in the catalogue of an art exhibi- tion or a program of music, "Life of the Native," "Life of the Sun," "Syrian Life." With the exception of the she. nhi loaf, they are made from whole wheat or corn and match in colour the mud 'houses in the Egyptian villages and country- side, the old mosques and bei d- ings of Cairo, and the waters of the Nile at flood time, The con- sist of two thin layers of dough about seven inches in diameter, with an air pocket separating the two layers. The ballad' mc• fake' is leavened and allowed to remain longer in the oven, which causes the upper layer to rise like a dome and become very crisp. 'Eysh sham! is lighter in cotcur about 3/4" thick, with a crumb Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking X10 80 31 1 3 101130 N N3 A3'. V910 V931 3 t! s 8000 Q' 1V113N lie 1'1 Id38 dVw IW 8Vd wallas AOD SVM N303 as G10 1 t6 b0 0 V 1 3 A S V 1 V a a 1 3 1 n ao NN a� S3 0 V a ll3d 1.das; di4da 3 3 V 1 V !l 0 ,N 0 ISSUE 37 -1981 similar to that ot European bre:td. Another type, which one finds less frequently in Cairo, is ua- fer-thin, about 16" in diameter, ch'y and crisp, writes Irene Bee- son in the Christian Scicltco Monitor. Balladi loaves are ideal for making the traditional Egyptian sandwiches that are not only de- licious but as satisfying as a substantial meal, The top layer of the loaf is sliced across the middle, to form a sort of elongated pouch, which is filled with mixed salad, taa- meyah (small croquettes made of cooked beans ground to a smooth paste, seasoned with choped parsley and condiments and fried in deep oil), taheenah (ground sesame seeds mixed with oil and lemon juice), kufta (minced meat cooked over char- coal) or fool (stewed beans mix- ed with butter and lemon juice). This type of bread is used also, instead of a fork, for removing kufta from the spit or by those who prefer to eat with their fin- gers, using a small piece of bread to wrap the food they pick out of the dish or plate. Sliced white bread, which is practically all crumb and disin-. tegrates very easily, is obviously not suitable for either purpose. Apart from t his and other practical 'considerations, such as the higher price of the new loaf, the joy of eating bread begins with the wonderful smell in the baker's shop, with handling the hot loaves and fighting on the way home to resist the tempta- tion to bite into the crisp brown crust. It is comforting to see hun- dreds of loaves piled up on a counter or rack, all different in shape and varying in colour, so that one knows that they were made with feeling and care, It is fascinating to watch the delivery boys on their bicycles weave through the erratic Cairo traffic, balancing on their heads large trays made of thin strips of palm wood, stacked high with ballad! and shami loaves, sym- bols of life and vigor, Immaculate, white bread, crammed full of vitamins and dressed in protective paper is all very well, but it looks effete and listless beside the sturdy balladi loaves that are the col- our of the soil and the shape of the sun that causes the grain to ripen, Porpoises, Sharks And Dolphins Those who have had the good fortune to come into contact with whales or porpoises usually find themselves in a state of breathless astonishment, T h e things that are likely to startle the observer are the enormous dimensions of the giant whales and the grace, speed of swim- ming, and playfulness of their smaller relatives -the porpoises and dolphins. The dinosaurs of the geologic past are sometimes erroneously thought of as the largest animals which ever lived, , The most tremendous -and in some ways the most fascinat- ing -creatures the world has ever known are not extinct. They are here, at this moment, for man to study and enjoy. A dolphin, strictly speaking, is not a porpoise; and the term "porpoise" was originally meant to apply to other odontocetes. However, common usage leans more and more toward the de- signation of the bottle -nose dol- phin as a porpoise, and it is popularly known by that name in the United States, Since it generally remains within a few miles of shore and readily enters ocean bays and brackish rivers, it is the porpoise most often seen by landlubbers, Its triangular dorsal fin is a familiar sight to swinhrners and to fishermen in many parts of the world. Unfortunately, the term "dol- phin" is not restricted entirely to the cetaceans. There are two large game fish, which are also called dolphins,• This often leads to some confusion, Another com- mon error, which could only be made by the uninitiated, is to mistake a swimming porpoise for a shark, yet the difference in the behavior of the two is so fundamental that no one should ever make such a mistake, In swimming, a porpoise "porpo- ises," that is, its fin goes up and down rhythmically as it comes up to breathe, A shark will never porpoise, and its fin - when out of the water - re- mains in the sane horizontal plane. - From "Porpoises and Sonar," by Winthrop N, Kellogg, Q. Wihat is a good way to clean a hot soldering iron while work- ing with it? A, Fasten the shell of an elec- tric -lamp socket to your work- shop wall or bench, and fill this with steel wool. Then all you have to do is force the hot iron into the wool and rotate it to clean it, Attach the socket by driving a wood screw through the hole in the bottom. THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY - An antlered tourist identified only as "Jim," shows photographers how the reindeer "who got away" looked. He was In Rovaniomi, Finland. TllFMM FRONT Itoakszeu If people who eat the food produced by farmers could see even a small part of the work and research that keeps improv- ing the quality of that food, they would surely be less inclined to bemoan what they call the high price of food, We have just had a quick glimpse behind the scenes here at the Dickinson Experiment Station, one of eight such sta- tions operated in the state by the North Dakota State University of Agriculture and Applied Sci- ence, • • • Stockmen are constantly en- deavoring to improve the feed- ing of their animals, both to produce better meat and to hold down the costs of that produc- tion, Many research programs aid them in this effort, including some going on here at Dickinson, en'a personally conducted tour, escorted by Agronomist Thomas Conlon, we saw adjoining ex- perimental fields - one with crested wheatgrass and the other with crested wheatgrass combined with alfalfa. For six years, steers were grazed sepa- rately on these fields and their rate of gain compared, • • • "In the six years of the trial," states the official report on the test, "the crested -alfalfa pastures have produced an average of 121.4 pounds of beef per acre in a spring grazing period averag- ing about 57 days, while the crested wheatgrass pastures have produced 88.7 pounds of beef per acre in the same period," Conclusion: A farmer gets more beef per acre when he seeds crested wheatgrass with alfalfa in his pasture. * « « Feeding experiments for both cattle and hogs are a continuing part of the program here, writes Helen Henley in the Christian Science Monitor. But not all experiments here are for crass commercial pur- poses, Mr, Conlon showed us a tidy little orchard of plum, apple, and crab apple trees -grown just to demonstrate to farmers they can have the pleasure of a fruit tree or two in their yard. Com- mercial orchards would not be feasible in North Dakota, not only because of climate and soil conditions, but also because there isn't sufficient population to justify the large production nec- essary to Blake orchards commer- cially profitable. But those rosy red crab apples, just about ready to harvest, looked pretty prosperous, * • • "The ladies will be coining in soon to ask us for those apples to Blake jelly," observed Mr. Conlon. Although North Dakotans mostly grow corn only for silage, and the average height around Dickinson isn't much over three or four feet, Mr. Conlon proudly displayed one field with some nine -foot stalks. He could be exact about the size; he said, because a visitor a few days earlier had measured them with a tape measure, The visitor couldn't believe what he was seeing, But this, Mr, Conlon carefully pointed out, was well above average in the state, A good strong stand of alfalfa was grown in a dry bed of an old stream -"a grassed waterway," Mr. Conlon explained. The fields Spread out before us graphically illustrated how proper planting can utilize water runoff to nur- ture gocd crcps. Here we saw thriving u.ien corn right, along - side of stunted dry corn, The line where the water stopped was clearly discernible. On Farmer Joe Ridl's land nearby, Mr. Conlon pointed out how Mr. Rids had dammed up the runoff to provide a little reservoir from which he draws water for sprinkler irrigation - a device which enables him to grow a second crop of alfalfa when many farmers here have to settle for just one, • • • "Planting grassed waterways or impounding runoff or build- ing diversion dams makes use of water that otherwise would be wasted," explained Mr, Conlon. He estimated that Mr. Ridl's dam might have cost around $1,000, but the cost would vary with the conditions. A future grove of Christmas trees, now mere seedlings, is making a brave beginning at the station, with about 100 trees of six different varieties, The re- searchers propose to find out whether Christmas trees might become a good cash crop for North Dakota farmers, • « • It is interesting to note that while a political party in Can- ada seeks to weld farmers and organized labor into a major force, the farmers of California have just administered a re- sounding defeat to a fully chart- ered AFL-CIO union which spent $500,000 in an effort to unionize farm labor, says an editorial in the current issue of "The Grow- er". Not only did the union organizers retire from the battle- field in utter disorder but they, by their actions which included strikes, also gave such further impetus to the automation and harvesting techniques that, it is generally agreed, practically ev- ery specialty crop in California will be mechanized to more or less degree in five years' tinge. •' * • The effort to bring labor un- ions and farm organizations to- gether for political action is doomed to failure -the two par- ties are just not compatible. The farmer, caught in a cost -price squeeze, is very conscious of his increased costs, largely the result of continuing demands for more by the unions and the fight of the so-called business world to maintain aid often increase the profit ratio, The farmer's fight is similar to that of the business man. It is a fight to improve the profit margin. This alone 1 puts the farmer in a separate category to the unionist, By and large Ontario farmers prefer to walk alone, They haven't reached the stage where they are going to entrust their fate to labor unions and social- ists, especially those in the ranks of the latter who can he regard- ed, in the fullest sense, as "long hairs". Those farmers who might he attracted by the "pie -in -the - sky" programs would do well to study the attractive packages some unions have been able to wrap up for their members, They woulud be amazed at what they would find especially in the ever -widening field of fringe benefits. Abuse of the working man paved the way for unionism. The wheel has turned and now it is some of the major unions who can be accused of abuse, What is now wanted is a clear exposi- tion of some of the c+)ntracts negotiated by organized labor with the hourly rates of pay and the ever -widening fringe bene- fits clearly spelled out, Having studied the existing contracts and the established demands it would also be profitable to study the capital gains of the large corporations t h r o u g h inflated stock values. The two arranged alongside of the profit margin on an average farm would make for some illuminating conclusions, they're Paid to Break Millions of Eggs 1f you 'think "egg -breakers" are those who quiz the eggheads you are making a natural mis- take, the egg -breaking business being little publicized, Egg - breakers are women who, dress- ed in spotless white uniforms, break eggs in a bare, spotless room, maintained at a 68° F. temperature. Of the 60 billion eggs laid in the U.S, per year, six billion are purposely broken annually, The greatest number of eggs Is broken when the price is low -usually in the spring -or when over -production keeps prices down. Eggs laid by chickens younger than 11 months (they are considered Grade B, even though they are still of good quality), and thole with stains or cracks, are also broken. Once out of their shells, they are churned, and pumped through a centrifugal strainer to remove any particle of shell that might have slipped by the inspector. Then the eggs are canned in 30 - pound containers and stored In freezing rooms maintained at temperatures of minus 10° to 20' 1'. There the eggs can be stored for long periods of time. Bakers, and spaghetti and mayonnaise manufacturers buy whites, or yolks, or both, according to their needs. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Charge 4. Cantonment 3, Social group 12. Acknowledge 13, Spoken 14. Copycat 15. Methodize 17. Indian weight for gold 16. iluiiding wing 19. Suffice 21. Temper 24. .lune hug 25. Pond fish 20. Shaft of light 29. Ts carried 32. British statesman 34. llumoroun person 70. Inlet 37. Antllnsln 39, Averagr 41. Wirt, measurement 42 rhnrt 44. Repieni`;h 45. Neither anImal nor vegetable 90 fa able 5t. Stent Cs Banish 5f, Olive gentle 67. Smooth 99. Anil not 119, Valley (our"'of eating 61. We1ght nn\VN 1. In favor of 1. remote sheen 3. Produce 4. Neck ornament I. Textile screw pine 6. Rugn }IMY SCIIOOI _LESSON By Rev. it. Barclay Warren ILA., 8.D, Titus, Serving In ]lard Places 2 Corinthians 8:6, 23a; Titus 1:1a, 4-11; 2:7-8, Memory Selection: In all things showing thyself a pattern of good works. Titus 2:7 Titus was a Greek, apparently of Antioch, where he became associated with Paul, When they went up to Jerusalem, some Jews insisted that Titus be cir- cumcised. Paul's reaction to this is summed up in Galatians 2:5. "To whom we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour; that the truth of the gospel might continue with you," The council of Jerusalem confirmed his action, Titus laboured at Corinth and greatly endeared himself to Paul. But his main work was in the island of Crete. It was a difficult assignment. The Cretans are de- scribed as liars, beasts, lazy, drunken, immoral, violent tem- pered, Titus was apparently the bishop of Crete, left there to "set things in order" and "ordain elders in every city". Paul sets a high standard for an elder and bishop in the church. Here it is as expressed in The New English Bible. "Is he a man of unimpeachable character, faithful to his , one wife, the father of children who are believers, who are under no imputation of loose living, and are not out of control? For as God's steward a bishop must be of unimpeachable character. He must not be overbearing or short-tempered; he must be no drinker, no brawler, no money - grubber, but hospitable, right- minded, temperate, just, so that he may be well able both to move his hearers with whole- some teaching and to confute objectors." Recently i assisted in a service In which eight people were re- ceived as candidates for the ministry. Three were following the example of father and grand- father and one a was following in the steps of both grandfathers. But more important than the human relationship in deciding for the ministry is the relation- ship to God. Paul said, "For though I preach the gospel, I have .nothing to glory of: for necessity is laid upon me; yea, woe is unto me, if I preach not the gospel," To succeed in the ministry, we need to have the sense of being divinely called. It is a hard task but most worthwhile. DRIVE WITH CARE I 1 • Catletlo Epic poem . Stolen property 11, Salver 13. Rubber tree 20. Rocky pinnacle i. Atoms 12. Vlbratlonlees point 11. Canon . One of Caroline Islands 7. Use arguments Hs Prevailing 30. Malignant 81. Vend 33. Number 35. Plkellk• fish 38. Spoil 40. Late 43. Peeled 45. Jade 48. Frame ot mind 47. Not busy 48. Christmas 40. Son of Jacob 53. Shelter 64. Also 55. Sea eagle t 2 3 �.•: see 4 5' 6 1 ....` 8 4 10 '11 12 f I3- '•• t4 15 .. l8 16 Fe. 19 rr' 20 11 21 22 23' ,A 4 r... onS :n,{ 25 .' 26 21 "•:!:28 29 30 31 32 3334 35 yl 36 37 38 :,•,39 40j :::•.' 41 :iri,f.....14.71.1ritaiminnimt:.:44,% 5.0 as 51 ''..W5.. 52. 53 54 55 56 l,{ s, 57 ;;'5,x.58 59 •, 50 >:;61 Answer elsewhere on• this page ATLANTA SCHOOLS INTEGRATED - Arthur Simmons. 16, Donite Gaines, 16, and Wille Jean Black, 15, arrive at Atlanta's Northside High School, Aug, 30. Nine Negro students quietly entered four white high schools in the' city. Police guarded the schools and arrested at least six per3ens who fared to move cn sma;tty vr;z:n ordered to. Mayor William Hartsfield said he was ext.-ern:1y proud of the manner in which Atlanta integrated its schools. Plitt S ~ LONDESBORO NEWS •Mr. and Mrs, John Armstrong and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Carter and family. attended St. Johns United Church a week ago Sunday when Wm. Jeffery, infant son of Mr, and Mrs. Ken Arm• strcng was baptised, Mr. Mason and Mr. Clunis, of Ridge - town were visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fairservice last week. They were former trustees of Mrs. Fairser- vice in days gone by. Mr. Ken Gaunt and lady friend, Miss Margaret Morrow, of Lions Head, were weekend guests with Earl Gaunt's. Mrs. Jennie Lyon who was a patient in the Clinton Public Hosi:ital for a few days was taken to her daughters home in Hamilton on Sunday. Mrs: Morosso spent Saturday in the village, Mrs. Ruth Meyers, of Simcoe, also visited her mother, Mrs. Lyon, on Wednesday. Miss Beth Thompson left Monday , evening for her term at Teacher's Col- lege, Stratford. 4-H CLUB MEETING The first meeting of the 4-11 Club "Featuring Fruit" was held at the home of Mrs. W. Good on Wednesday, September 6th. The election of officers were as fol- lows: President, Lenora Ann Hallahan; 1st vice president, Mary Machan; secre- tary, Betty Ann Kelly; assistant secr•e• tary, Helen Hollinger; press secretary, tint Bttnt S ANT ARD LOCAL WITNESSES TO ATTEND CONVENTION Mr. Lincoln Martin, the presiding minister of the local congregation oI Jehovah's Witnesses announced that travel arrangements have been coni pleted for more than 22 witnesses from this area to attend a 3 -day convention in the 11'inghunt District Iligh School September 15.17th. "This assembly," said Mr, Martin, "comes in the wake of many larger conventions held this summer in Can. ada, U.S.A. and Europe. in fact, he commented, we expect several persons who have attended these assemblies to be on hand to tell us of their expel.. iences. Continuing Mr. Alantin said that ministers froth several congrega- tions in this area also have been invit- ed to speak on various points of Christ- ian living in this Twentieth Century. There will be discourses, practical de- monstrations and illustrations of how one can live up to Christian principles today. Dorothy Bailie. Name of club was chosen "Blyth Berry Bells," The demonstration was on measuring and abbreviations. There were 17 girls present. Next meeting will he held at Mrs. W. Good's on September 13, at 7.15 p.m. *FOOD MARKET* MAPLE LEAF FANCY RED SOPKEYE SALMON, 7 three-quarter oz. tin 53c HEINZ FANCY QUALITY TOMATO JUICE 48 oz. tin 28c LIPTON CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP MIX 2 pkgs. 23c - RED ROSE ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS pkg. of 60 75c NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE f' 6 oz, jar 93c WESTON CHOCOLATE VIENNA COOKIES 2 pkgs. 49c For Superior Service Phone 156 -- NNW See Fairservice We Deliver Stewart's Red White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver No. 1 Ontario Potatoes, 101b bag 25c, 501b bag 99c Redpath Sugar, 10 lb. bag 79c Gem Margerine 4 lbs 95c White Cross Toilet Tissue 8 rolls 89c Red Rose Tea Bags 60's ' pkg. 75c Libbys Deep Brown Beans, 20 oz. 4 tins 85c Libbys Tomato Juice, 48 oz. tin 27c Special Sliced Side Bacon Ib. 49c 8 Weiners, 8 Rolls, All For 49c • RED & WHITE BONUS OFFER Roslyn Brand Blankets -- Six Colours, 6 Inch Satin Binding. 72"x84" Regular $5.95, Only $3.95 with $5.00 Order plus tax Walton News The monthly meeting of the V.M.S.I and W.A. of Duff's United Church was held in the church basement with 15 members present, Mrs. Gordon 111c - Gavin, IV.M.S, vice-president, opened the nieeth'; with the call to worship. Itynin 270 was sung, Mrs, McGavin read the 34th psalm, followed by pray- er. The topic, "Outside the Structure" was given by the Walton Group. The minutes of the last meet:ing were read and the roll call was answered by naming an apostle, Mrs. C. Ritchie and Airs. I. Baan were named as del• egates to Sectional meeting at Goshen on October 25. The next meeting is to be held Wednesday evening, Octcher 4th, This is an open meeting to in- terested members of the Bethel anti Winthrop 1V.AI.S. Rev. Arthur Iliggin- botham will give an outline of the new organization to be formed in 1962. The treasurer reported $538 had been sent to headquarters for the first half 01 the year, The meeting closed by al, repeating the Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Alvin McDonald presided for the W.A. meeting. Plans were made for the annual fowl supper on Wednesday November 1st. The program commit- tee appointed is Mrs. N. Reid, Mrs. G. McGavin, Mrs. A. McDonald anci Rev. Higginbotham. The price of tick- ets to be 1,50 for adults and 75 tot children. The next meeting will be October 4th in the evening, a cup oI tea and cookies to be served. Sixty boxes of Christmas cards are to be ordered. The meeting closed with prayer. Mission Band The September meeting of the Mission Band of Duff's United Church was held in the schoolroom last Sunday morning with Gary Bennett conducting, Iiynm 623, "Jesus Loves Me," was sung with Karen McDonald at the piano, The call to worship was, "My life is God's gift to one, what I make of it is niy gift to Him." Ilymn 614, "When He Cometh," was followed by Nellie Baan leading in prayer. Mary Bewley read the scripture, taken from Mark 10: 13-16. The leader, Mrs, Walter Bew- ley, explained that Jesus meant all children, not just white ones. Larry Walters and Bruce Clark received the of ering and Gary Bennett dedicated the offering with prayer, Jack Mc- Call read the minutes of the last meet- ing. October will be the Thanksgise ing meeting, Gerald and Nellie Baan are to send for a film for the meet- ing. Velma Higginbotham will play the piano, Barbara Bryans will leat. in prayer and Glenna Houston will read the scripture. Classes were taken with the following teachers in charge; Mrs. G. McGavin, Mrs, N. Marks, Mrs, Jas. Smith and Mrs. W. Bewley. Hymn 609, "Mothers of Salam," was sung and the meeting closed with the Myzpah Ben- ediction. The attendance for the day was 45. Mrs. J. Humphries, of Windsor, vis- ited last week with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Margaret Humphries. Miss Jean Mills, of Toronto, was a holiday visitor with her father, Mr. Earl Mills, Mr. and Mrs. James Mowat, of Tor- onto, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Doug' Ennis and Mr, and Mrs, Ed. Miller for a few days last week. Mrs. John Shannon is visiting this week with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walsh and family, at Hagersville, Mr. and Mrs, David Andrews, of Toronto, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Dundas. A very large crowd attended a re• ception for Mr. and Airs. Mac Shot - dice in the Community Hall last Fri- day evening. During the evening the newly-weds were presented with a well !filled purse. The address was read by Mr, Neil AlcGavin and the presen- tation made by Mr. Douglas Kirkby.' Ian Wilbee's Orchestra furnished the music for dancing. Mrs. Ethel Ennis is at present core fined to her bed at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Ritchie, Eg- mondville. The Walton Library will be closed September 19 and 26, but will he re- opened as usual October 3. A new shipment of books have just been re• ceived and the library board would appreciate any new interested mem- bers. Library hours are Tuesday af- ternoon 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., and Tuesday evening 7:30 p.m. to 9;30 p.m, Mrs. Margaret Humphries and Mrs. Nelson Reid attended a Homemaking Club leaders training school at Clin- ton on Wednesday and Thursday of last week, Miss Isabelle Gilchrist, Huron County's new Home Economist, con- ducted the school, The project was "Featuring Fruit". Mr. and Mrs, W, Stutz, of Waterloo, were guests over the week -end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. Dundas. Miss Tillie Dundas, of New York City, is at present visiting with her brother and sister -Its -law, Mr. and Airs. 1'. Dundas. Mr, and Mrs. Higginbotham, of Shef- field, visited last week at the manse with his son and daughter-in-law, Rev A. Higginbotham, and Mrs. Higginbo- tham, The Anniversary Services of Duffs United Church will be held on Sunday. September 24th, with Rev. R. C, Win - law, of Hensel', as guest speaker. The morning service will commence at 11 A.M. and evening at 7.30 p.m. A Provisional Committee meeting was held in Duffs United Church last Wednesday evening. Rev. A. Higgin- botham outlined the duties of the new organization and stressed the need for a Christian Education Committee am for an AI, and M. Committee. Mrs. Walter Bewley was appointed Liter- ary Secretary. The following duties have been outlined by the Dominion board: t1) '1'o inform all women of the congregation about the new organ - Indian; (2) '1'o accept an allocation for 1962; i3) To plan for use of the 1962 program; u4) To recommend methods for securing funds; t5) '1'n apt:oint a nominating committee; r6n 'I'o appoint a sub committee of the previsional coniniittee. Additional niembet's were added to the committee from the 17th and 161h group. A fourth meeting of the provisional coniniittee will be held September 25th, and an open meeting of all the church women will be held October 4th in the evening; at which time Rev. Higginbotham will sive a complete explanation of the new :rganizalion, • Miss Catharine Buchanan, nurse -in - `raining at St, Marys Hospital, Kitchen- er, spent the weekend with Mr. and qrs. Donald Buchanan. Mr. and Airs. George Dundas have :churned home after visiting with Mr. and Mrs. David Andrews at their sum- mer cottage near Barrie on Lake Simcoe, CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Miss Loren Roe, of Seaford', who will celebrate her, birthday on Saturday, September 16th, Congratulations to Miss Marie Noble who celebrates her birthday on Sep. tember 18th. BROWNIE'S 0411SIONIIims r DRIVE-IN q . THEATRE !� CLINTON, ONTARIO Thur,, Fri„ September 14, 15 Double Feature "THE WACKIEST SHIP IN THE ARMY" Colour -Scope Jack Lemmon - Ricky Nelson "Passport To China" Richard Basehart - Lisa Gaston[ (One Cartoon) Sat„ and Alon., Sept. 16, 18 Double Feature "THE LOST WORLD" Color and Scope Michael Rennie • Claud Rains Fernando Lavas "When .Comedy Was King" All Star Cast One Cartoon Trues., and Wed., Sept. 19, 20 "TWO WAY STRETCH" Peter Sellers One Cartoon Corning Next— "FLAMING STAR" With Elvis Presley 1•M1JMMNJ•TMIfNI•MI•IMI.fI.IM.! 1 P & W TRANSPORT LTD. Local and Long Distance Trucking Cattle Shipped Monday and Thursday Hogs on Tuesdays Trucking to and from Brussels and Clinton Sales on Friday Call 162, Blyth 44.4.4~1,044P", eir4.41.0•Nr"intIM41.004P. Clinton Community I FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERL FRIDAY EVENIN AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 7:30 p.m. 1N BLYTH, PHONE BOB HENRY, 1501t1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer. 05-1f. •/Jy I•I....ramtry. e(.0. • M•1.3.1.4N34•wN MM, FOR SALE Reg. Genesee Wheat Com. Genesee Wheat Grown on Own Farm R. N. ALEXANDER Londsboro Clinton -Phones- Blyth HU 2-7475 .. , , 26.33 MOTHER PASSED AWAY Rev. and Mrs, Robert Meetly receiv I ed word on Monday that Airs, Meally's mother, Mrs, Gibb, of Dalkey, Co. Dub- lin, Ireland, had passed away last Tuesday, Mrs, Aleally had spent three months last spring with her mother returning home the middle of June. 1901 JUNIOR FAItMEI( SOILS TOUIt Murray Mulvey, R.R. 1, Wroxeter, is attending the Ontario Junior Farmers Soils Tour this week representing 1lu- ron County, The loth' is open to one young farm person from each county in the province and this year delegates will visit farms in York, Ontario and Sintcne counties, The tour stresses soil ctmservation, land use, crop and live- stock production and general farm management. A1r. Alulvey is 2nd Vice President of the Huron County Junior Farmers' Association and a Leader of the Turn - berry 4-11 Dairy Calf Club. 1 J IIIY•1•A•M Y..n..S I!I• .., 111•014 . Y.i.ir.••.1. , ,-r.01./1r1Nry-.. ri... Si ion - Yip lb. uulIII ,1-11. 111.1E it MY1011AdCI.I ILYI 1. I I i u . • . I . . nY Wet'tiesc1ay, epl;. i ,196i ' WORLD WIDE CRiSfs Every Wednesday evening In the 'trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, at 8 o'clock, there is a half hour service for Intercession for World Peace. Anyone wishing to attend are welcome. In these days of tension and world strife the need for prayer Is very great. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE 'there's a bit of doggerel that goes something like this: The codfish lays ten thousand eggs, the lowly hen lays one; The codfish revel. cackles to tell you what. she's done, And so we spurn the codfish, while the lowly hen the prize, Which only gnu; to show you .,1 It pays lo advertise! .i,1..... 1-i M1YMMIYl11111 1116 111 I PARAMETTE BONUS PACK Paramettes contain essential Vitamins, Minerals, and Trace Elements necessary to overcome Nutritional Deficiencies. Paramette Tablets, 100's - 25 day supply Free, $6.00 Paramette Syrup, 16 oz - 4 oz bottle Free , ... $5.50 Other Sizes of Paramette are as follows: Paramette Syrup, 32 ounce $9.85 Paramette Syrup, 8 ounce $3.50 Paramette 'I'lblets, 50's $3.50 Paramette Tablets, 25's $2.00 Paramette Juniors (up to 6 years) 60's $3.50 Buy Paramette Bonus Pack and Save $2.00 R. D. PHILP, Phm, E DRUGS, SUNDRIES, 'WALLPAPER -.. PHONE 20, BLYTH ADMIRAL 23" and 19" TELEVISIONS WIDE-ANGLE PICTURE Canadian -Made Quality .'1` We have several models at Special Low Prices: - Low -Boy, Console and Portable Sets. VODDEN'S HARDWARE �3 ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Call 71 Blyth, Ont. -....-...--.........��.-...-•.......d.ILi1..,. tJ.-6L.i I1...ldl.3111. lt!.11r.:.:.. uii,...•••••,64 • 1 n • 1111 u.. n r I 1.. mi.a .. u 1- u m •, u n u .� 1...I, a.,. l 11,411.1 ,, 1.,I n. l 111 ,. 1111 4 11 1 Cars For Sale 1961 PONTIAC 4 dr. 1955 FORD 2 dr. 1959 PONTIAC 4 dr. 2 - 1954 CHEV. 2 dr. 1958 METEOR'4 dr. 1952 MERCURY 4 dr. 1956 CHEV. 2 dr. Older Models for Cheap 1955 METEOR 2 dr. Transportation Hamm's Garage Blyth, Ontario. ' New and Used Car Dealers IM II 1111 I11 1 11 11 I 1 1 11111111 11111 111 1111 111.. 11.111 ..1+1111 •.! •.. , I lllr. MI.-.I.0.M..L.r11.1I. IYll. 111 11 1 SNELL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP 8 SAVE Kali or Prem Luncheon Meat 2 for 69c Maple Leaf Fancy Red Sockeye Salmon, per tin 55c Southern Cross Tuna Fish for 49c - Knecktle's Cheese Spread, 16 oz. jar 49c Squirrel Peanut Butter, 16 oz. jar 39c Dole Fancy. Fruit Cocktail, 20 oz. 2 for 65c Shredded Wheat, large size, 8 coupon in pkg., 2 ,- 39c Shreddies, whole wheat or cereal .... per pkg. 25c 'Come in or Phone in Early for this Real Big Saving on Meat Specials Smoked Cottage Rolls, whole or half per lb. 59c Smoked Picnic Shoulders per lb. 45c Cooked Ham Special per lb. 99c Chicken Broilers, 3 or 4 lbs. per Ib. 35c Roaster Chickens, 5 or 6 lbs. per Ib. 55c ;•r