HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-09-20, Page 1VOLUME 7'l - NO. 30
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Malt and Ilene Se ( qGn
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Authorized as second class mall, BLYTH ONTARIO WEDNESDAY SEPT. 20, 1961 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3,50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Depmtmer,l, Ottawa.
PERsonAL MEREST
Airs, 11107. AiacDonald and hu' dau:hl
er, MI's. J. C. Mitchell and Lindsay, ul
• Richmond Hill, :pent the wool;end \\dh
the former's sister, Allis Margarcl Ili.
1'(115 and brothers, James and Hubert.
Mrs, Mary (;rasby and lir. \Vin. Nes•
bit, of Scatorth, visited with their
brother, Al r, J, I',. Nesbit, 11rs. Nesbit
and family last Thursday.
;lb's. i:usete A1cA(lonl and RAM \es
it('d with 1115. A. Quinn and l:chvard
recently.
,lir. and Mrs. Harold Ceok, Ivan and
Warren, Air, and Airs. Lennard Cook
spent the week -end in London, with
relatives and friends, also took in the
Fair,
'Mir. and Airs, Irvine Wallace, accom-
panied by their daughter, M's. Ken.
neth Tyndall, and Laurie, of Clinton
visited on Sunday with their daughter
Airs, Leslie Rutledge, A1r, Rutledge sin(
family, of Streelville. 'Their grandson
Itcbcrt Rutledge, had ,jut returnee
home from the hospital alter an appen•
(kids operation,
Air's, It 1). Philp and Airs, K. Whit-
more visited on Sunday with tate lot 01•
er's mother, Mrs. AlacCorkindale, of
Owen Sound.
OS LAE Sam Dougherty, of the
boat, Cap. 1)e La. Madeline, slationee
al ilalifax, N. S., is \'isiiimt with Ili:
parents, Mr, and Airs. Russell Dough
arty, and will report buck to his boat
on October 91h.
Alr. and Airs. Archie Scott and E(litli
of Exeter, visited on Sunday with AL'
and Mrs. Laurie Scott and family.
Mrs. Kenneth Taylor and bliss Jose-
phine IWoodcnck visited on 'Tuesday
with the former's mother, Mrs. AleFar•
lane, at Queen's View nursing house.
llensall.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook, Blyth,
Mir. and Airs. Lloyd Walden and Linda
Air. and Mrs. Alvin Snell and 13onnie
of Westfield, visited Sunday evening a:
the hcnle of Ali'. and Airs. Jim Leddy
Donnybrook.
Airs. Fred Cook is visiting with Mr.
and Airs. Garth McClincliey and child
ren, Sandra and Brian, of Auburn.
- Mrs: A. - AI: `Fear.• . is spending, two
weeks vacation \villi her daughter
Mrs. It, I1, Buller, at Bandeau Park.
Air. and Alrs. Austin Dexter were
guests at the home of their daughter
and son-in-law, AIr. and Airs, Wilmer
Glousher, and attended the Constance
Church Anniversary on Sunday.
Miss Arlyne Powell, who attended
Teacher's College, Stratford, last yea)
is teaching grades 3 and 4 at Clinton
Public School.
air. and Mrs. Gordon Shorll and fam-
ily, of Barrie, are huliday'ins with her
mother, Mrs. Gladys Johnston.
Mrs. S. Cuming spent two \veeks
visiting with her daughter, Mrs, G. 0.
Bradley, Air. Bradley and family, at
Mleaford. Mir. and ;firs, llugh Curring
of London, were also visitors, taking
Mfrs. Curring to Mleaford. Mr, and Airs.
Bradley and family, and Airs. Cuming,
spent Saturday, September 2, in Lon-
don, visiting with Mr. and Mrs, Iiugh
Cuming, also attending the Western
Fair.
AMONG TILE CI1URCIIES
Sunday, /September 24, 1861
ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN
N
CHURCH
Rev. D. .1. Lane, B.A., D.D., Minister.
1:15 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday
School.
Surday visitors at Auburn with 11r.
and tins. 'h,iii L,n\dur lout Jimmie
were, 111, and Mrs. George Lawlor, ul
Aul:ur0, Air, and Mrs, 'font Park. Dun-
gannon, Mr, and MI'.;, t'laytun Ladd, of
Illy'Ih. '1110 occasion 10 n1;0'k the fur.
Iy-1111111 wcddtllg anniversary of 1111.
and Airs, (eurge Lawlor.
Airs. \Vin. I''luiell and daughter, Airs.
Wiwi tenter, at 'Tottenham, All'. 1111:;
el llidlcy and Mr:,. I':. Heath, of Tor,
onto, spent the weekend \villi ,Mr<, F.!(
y the :slid genu and Alis.. ('earl Gidley.
on 1'i May night their cutisiu,
Olive skinner, of Los Angeles, ane
Airs, ('harles Lockwood, of Clinton
called on then(.
FIELD CIROP 11'INNI?lis; ANNOUNC'Ei)
Winners in the Field Crop Competi-
tion spolisul ed by Il!ylh Agricultural
Seciety of Ensilage Corn were announc-
ed Tuesday night and are as lotion's:
\\'m. Clow 84; Arnold CCok, 113; Maur-
ice Dean, 82; Robert Caller, 81; Simon
Ifallahan, 80; Walter Oster, 79; ,lino
11c1`all,
13;' \Vin, Carter, 77; Gordon
.1lcCliuchey, 09; Itay Manna, 64; I3oyd
l'aylor, 53. Ten points will be drdncteu
if corn is not shown at the fair.
FRII,N1)SIIIP CIRCLE 11EE'TING
The regular sleeting of the Friend-
ship Circle was held at the home of
Airs, Carman Macl)onald on Srptemhel
1211 with 15 preset'(,
Mrs. Ray ,Madill, president, opened
the meeting, The roll call was answer.
:'d by 0 penny for each button; 5 cents
far each zipper,
Box tops Iron) General Mills are le
he handed in before November 3011.
All's, Audrey Walsh will have the .Jun-
ior Congregation for October.
lb's, 11cLagan opened the devotional
1'ericd \vith the call to worship. Byrne
"Sing 10 the Lord of harvest" was
511112. 'I he scripture \vas read by
Shirley 1tiggies. A poem, "Happy
Harvest, 'I'inte," by Ruth Webster, and
a reading on the golden days by Alrs.
Mcl..agcl.
Mrs. Mcl.agan explained the United
Church \Vonien's Organization anll a
very deliculurch wvd
11)0 ccnmmitteioe,s assisted by
as theserhoestessby
Aluriel Mannins moved a vote u;
thanks' to the'. Cdiiimitt01 and the hos
res'
The October sleeting will be hrid
at the home of Awircy \Valsh with I'a'
Spading, Alyrtle Vodden and Audrey
Walsh on the committee.
WORKING TOGE1711ift BRINGS
G1tia1'1'EIt ACHIEVEMENTS
113y J. Carl Hemingway)
Some (welly from Huron County
Agents and Committee men and their
wives attended a chicken barbecue at
Inwood on September 1:1111, in honour
of the most successful agents of Co -Op
Insurance in the London Division.
'('Itis Co -Operative, originated by the
Ontario Federation of Agriculture and
later co-sponsored by Ont. 1''cderation
of Agriculture, the Ont. Credit Union
Lea:ue, the United Co -Operatives, Cop.
Union and the L'Union des Cultivaleurs
Fran-Ontariens has in a matter of 1',
years risen to second position in the
Casualty insurance field in Ontario.
It was originally organized to provide
farniet's \vitt) Auto Insurance \with sat•
isfactory coverage at. a price they
could pay. 'These policies have now
beccule SO popuhu' \with urban people
11101 these now out number the rural
policy holders.
We owe 0 debt of gratitude to the
devoted efforts of those who have made
this self-help program 0 success. We
of Moroi County were proud to see
our representatives at the top of the
list in sales achievement and safe -
driving promotion on which the awards
were based(. \Ve would particularly
congratulate Mt', Russell Knight, ni
ANGLICAN CHURCi1 OF CANADA Brussels, who received the hi ;hcs1
award in the whole south-western On-
tario Division.
f would like to quote a few sentel•
ccs from the Zurich Citizen's News.
"it required nn.investmenl of $13,177,60
in 1900 to provide one employee with a
iC.b 111 the manufacturing industry.
Few manrsfacttu'ing erp'oye s 1'.a'izc
anything like this 0010001 is needed to
provide them with a job."
I wotljd'also like to suggest that few
manufacturing employees realize that
it requires over (\vice that capital in-
vestment to provide one farmer with a
job.
In spite of this investment, farmers
in Canada have been providing their
city cousins with the cheapest food in
the world,
1 feel quite sure that, if in turn our
Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector.
171h Sunday atter Trinity
Trinity Church, 131y1 h.
10,30 aim.—alatins.
Sacrament of 13aptism,
SL Mark's, Auburn.
12,00 o'clock --Matins.
Trit,lty Church, Belgrave.
2,00 p.m.—Sunday School.
2.30 pan.—harvest Thanksgiving.
Evensong, Guest Preacher,
Rev, C. F. Johnstoon Lfh,
Rector of Wingham,
TILE UNITED CHURCH -
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev, R, Evan McLal:ain • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kai
Director of Music, •
ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY
9,55 a.m.—Sunday Church School,
11.00 am,—Rev, W. J. Rogers
Guest Minister.
"How Big Is One?"
7.30 pint. —"Among the Baggage."
CHURCH OF GOD
McConnell Sheet, Blyth,
John Dormer, Pastor
Phone 185
10.30 a.m.—Sunday School,
11.30 a.nl,—Alornhng Worship,
7.30 p.m.—Evening Service.
8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service.
8,00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship.
city cousins could say Mat on were
Providing ns with the cheapest nlanu-
faclured products in the world, the
problems of A',g1'1('llllure would quickly
disappear. This in turn could very Mr. Herbert E. Pickles, of 'Para, pas -
well clear up most of the prcblems of sed away in ilospital, at London, on
urban industry. Tuesday, September 12, 1961, in his
I wonder will the clay ever come 73rd year, The late Mr. 1 irides occupied
when we will work together rather than the store in Blyth where the Standard
ccmpele against each other; will we Office is located and moved to 'Para 23
ever realize that the greatest good years ago.
comes when we work for each other Surviving are his wife, (lie former
rather than when we strive against Mary Keith, Iwo daugtllcrs, Mrs. Ger•
each other, 'rid tAilcen) Marron, of Tara, Mrs.
With the competition currently going Harvey (Helen) Nuhn, Owen Sound 13lyth Pu'llie Library
on, I wonder if there will be lime for and two sons, Ross, of Gleiehen, Al- frcnl September 2011 l0
this revolution to take place. berth, and Bert, of Winnipeg, Manitoba.
NEPHEW DIES SUDDELY iN ' JOSEPH BABCOCK \1'IN,, COUNTY
1RAW ACCIDENT PA:31Uk1•; COMP 1.1ILION
On Faltn'clay evening, September 17.
Mrs, Clayton 1,add received a tele-
phone call from her mother, Ali's.
Charles Davids, of Bryan, Ohio, infor-
ming
ntoeusing her of the sad news of the 0001•
dental death of Mrs, Ladd's ncphewr. by
marriage, ML'. Gene Geffen, of Jewell,
Ohio.
11'hile out on a hunting trip on Sat-
urday morning the first day of the
huntirg season, M!'. (1('1'011 \Vali tICCI•
lil'lllillly shot through the temple,' i!1
lite
‘
vends \\there 110 was unknown It
he by his brother-in-law, laddie lateens.
who was shouting at a red squirrel at
Hie time. Mr, Goren was rushed 'lo
hospital and lived one hour after -{he
accident.
Airs. Phyllis Geren, Airs. Ladd's
niece, and lir. Geren were both grad•
oaks of a teacher's college and were:
hot i leaching at Jewell, Ohio. Mrs.
Ladd's nephew Eddie Lavers, had just
recently returned from California
\ncac he was stationed at Beale Qu
Poise in service training. Mrs. Geren
and Eddie are the children en of Air, and
Airs, 1':d lateens, ul Bryan, Ohio. Airs.
havens beim All's. Ladd's sister, '
LON1)ES13011,0
Airs. Thomas Fothergill, df 13osinan
Riker, Alanitoba, and Alt'. Gordon Dpg-
eatt, of \Virghanl, visited on '1'ues&i,y
evening with lir. anti- Mrs. Ed*in
Fothergill. •
Airs, Arthro' Brunsdol, of Assinibnd:,.
Sask., was 0 recent, Visitor 1\'lilt Mr.
and A1fs. Bert 13runsdon,
'1'he annual fall bazaar sponsored by
the L(ndesburo Women's 'institute will
be held in the hall on Wednesday, No,
1Clglbel' 15111, at 3 (1.1)1.
i\1r. and Ars. Ed. Youngldut spent
the week -end with the latter`s sister,
Ale. and Mrs. Gordon Curls, of r\rkona.
Al's. Bert Shobbl'ook, Alt's. Joe Shad -
click and Airs. At1 Clark are attending
the Grand Chapter of the Order of the
Eastern Star held in 'I'orello this
week,
The 11'.M.S, held the September
meeting at the home of Ali's, Harold
Livingstone, The president opened the
111001ip.g with a P00111' and hyrnn, ful-
Icwed by prayer, Alinutes were read
and adopted. 'l'hankobferiug meeting
was discussed. Christian Stew'ardsll(p
and '1'eulpe'ance readings were given.
Prayer was offered by Mrs. Clark,an
.111'3,. Lear gave the chapter. frons--th.
Study Buuk. The meeting closed with
the use of hymn "'fake Time to he
holy." A light lunch was served by
Group 1. I Berl Wishes lo Airs. L. Sc'inigeou:
A number from the village attended who celebrated her birthday on Mon -
Western Ex. on various day's. day, Set tenter 10th.
A number from the village attended Conbralulations to Mt', and Airs. Al -
anniversary services at Constance 011 bell .Walsh wllu celebrated their 4911
Sunday. 1 wedding anuivetsary on Monday, Sep -
Mr, and Mrs. Dunn, of Southern Sask. ternbcr Ilth.
visited for a couple of (lays during the Coma al11lations to Mr. Jac(: Pipe, of
week with Mt'. and Airs. Wilmer lIow- Brussel,, who celebrates his birthday
att. on September 20111.
Fricnds and old neighbours of Mrs. Congratulations to Mt'. and Airs. Jim
Wm. 13runsdon who resides with her Walsh who celebrated their wedding
daughter in Clinton will be sorry to anniversary on September 111th.
learn that she is in failing, health. She Congratulations to Mr. Gilllc..rt Neth -
is in her 94th year and has always cry who will celebrate his birthday on
been very energetic and taken a great Friday, September 22nd, -
interest in 1110 neighbourhood, Congratulations to Cynthia Rose Ne -
the y who celebrated her 6111 birthday
on Friday, Septeniber 13111. -
Congralulations to Arthur Ileffron who
celebrated his 0th birthday on Thurs-
day, September 14111.
Congratulations to Wayne 1lcClinchey
5vilo celebrated his 13th birthday on
September 171h.
Congratulations to Patricia licClin-
chey who celebrated her 8111 birthday
on S0plembee 20111. guests wearing 0 chess of taupe sil
Josci:h Babcock, of i;lyth, has been
declared the winner w Inc 1961 Huron
County 1 a:,Itlr1 lulu, Withal and wit,
receive the Mantle CICrI:, donated I y
Julies (lac turdi(on Sods I,td., uI 1',:,•
clef, '1 hr.; cluck will le pte.,cntcil by
a rcprc,cnlalivc of diam':, ,\ialN;111;1 ial
al the line ill the Huron County So!
and ('roll Annual :heeling towards
end of :oycn.l'rr.
Judge, 11i.1; ,UI:u1, \viuner of I'le 19" L
Huron ( .;only Pa. lure ('nul;'cliliun
.judged the 19 pasture, that we're enter.
rd. JO:,' It Ral,ccrk had .:7.1 anilnn,
units pa,,ttlring o11 his 1.1 ilei tea of 1 a5
line, praelica!Iy 2 animal units pe,
acre, '1 u0 ; eco nil place ler the '1 mance
Feed award i, :Uch e I•.t:leringir,n, u
R.R. 1, Ile)salb, Aiehie hurl 107 a,atnnl
units Ian 12 OCreo pa:;tai'(-d with 0' Citi
1,4 amlll0al units per acre. In Iltii l
place vias Doug Farquhar, of Clinl•'n.
0 first ye: r number uI the CItl'.petioe.
0111.1 i5 11c w inr.CF (11 the ir,ward (10n
by J. 11. 11100'/.1', o1 tae \'0'110 Faleneed
Mill,
The winrcrs \v;th th:ar total score..
are as fell',w.;:
1st, Jo '•` h Ra:-c:.ck, Blyth, 20.1.1:
2nc1, Archie Elheriu.lu'1, 11.11. 1, lien
sall, 193.'1; :3rd, Dung Farquhar, 11.11. 1.
Clinton, 11(,1,3; 4111, 1'r ter de Grc..t, 11
R.:1, lilvt!l, 197,3; 5th, Rollet t Ft titer -
1:.11. 3,!aforth, 191.0; 611i,
tan Pies\Ili: ter, 11.11, 1, Zaric'l,
7111, R. Kool man, 11.11, 2, Au',urr, 1115.9,
\1(1,, Jilin ('til ole, R.I(. 3, IVnlcthann
103.9; 911, Bill 'I urnbull, Brtr 511:•, 102.11.
IOIh, James C. Drennan, hint. ,unru
Illo.a; lith, George .'Jctleo, 11.1f. 3.
1Wlllgha111, 1131.5; 121h, 1\. ;A111Siilga
Son, 11.11, 2, Guderfch, 177.0; 13th, Iiu-
bcrl Down, 11.11. 1, llensall, 17(1,1; 141 h.
G, \Winlel, 11.11. 1, Fnrilvi,'h, 7.t..3;
1`.;I It, Ilow;it'd 1'ynl, Centralia, 171,a;
16th, W. Eckel, 11.11. 1, Varna, 169.5;
17111, \Vm, 1!. Gm, Auburn, 167,1; 131 It
John lireadfoul. tlrucelirld, 104.8; 19111,
Art Bolton, 11.11. 1, Dublin, 134,3.
BIRTHS
CA:IIPBELIr1n Clinton Public Ilos-
pital 00 Thursday, Septa tuber 11
1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Harold Camp
bell ; r., the fill oI a daughter
Frances Elizabeth.
IVA1''.10t1T1I—lit New Alount Sinai ilos-
pital, '1'11renlo, o11 'Thursday, Septem
ber 11, 1961, to Mr. and Airs. Dennis
A. Wayn;otclll, of \felon, the gift u
VONG1tATCL.ATIONa"
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Air. and Mrs. John Perry, Victoria
Park Avenue, 'Toronto, wish to
announce the engagement of their
daughled, Iris Lorraine, to 'Phomas
John Webster, son of Mr. and Alrs,
Keith Webster, Blyth, The wedding
will be in Blyth United Church on Sat'
urday, October 71h, at 2 pdn.
Mr, and Mfrs. Lorne 13, Reid, of Kin-
cardine, announce the engagement of
their daughter, Gladys Doreen, to Mr.
David William Nesbit, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John 13. Nesbit, of Blyth, The
marriage will lake place on Saturday
the seventh of October, at 3 o'clock.
at the liniterl Church, Pine River,
4.1I CI.U13 MEETING
The second (meeting of the 4.1I Club
was held at the hone ot'• Mrs, W. Good
on Wednesday, September 13 at 7:15
p.111,
1'Irs. Good told us about the Fruits
in season and fresh fruits from 0110:
places, also choosing and using fresh
fruit,
Atter the business was finished, Airs.
G. Mason took us out into the kitchen
and showed us how to make the apple
salad mould which was delicious.
The next meeting will be held on
Monday, September 25 at 7:15 p.m.
at Mrs. G. Masons.
We were given our home assignment
and the meeting was closed with tlu
Maty Stc',vau't Collect,
HERBERT E. FIDDES
WEDDIHGS OF INTEREST
CRAiG—JOI1NS'I'ON
hasf!itts (( wi'ftc and illative gladioli,
1 uttcd h fns, liHilctl Cal 111'111'01 caul 1101•
u In 0,17,0 c;If'!clalr:,ra, 1' tilled a lovely
lac:. round in llly'l11 United Church.
;tl lyday, S(,'I('li l 1'r IG, 11161, al lwel5e
,'011 1.l:, tut' the marria„e of 31: ri!yn
lac;taclinc, elder daughter of Mr. and
:11.,. 1). (11:it'd(:, Johnston, 1linsley
;reit, Itlytn. to llunali1,1r,bn 11u.'h:nor,.
r;u:t, sun 1 1 11r. and 1115. Ira5iil Crafk
11.11.:'. lilyt i. Re:. Charles Scull, of
umiltun, a former minister ut the
• 10111), clliciated for the (101,ble ring
All—m13.
3liss Paige I'aillips, l.undcn, played
I: Ic!le on'; Bridal Match and 000'110
a1:ild lh' selufst, ",los. lieniu16 Pat
r r: un, ,\ 0('urn, as Site sang "I'll \Vali,
,este Yt a", "L'ecause" and ' 'l'Io
1.1 id's 1'rayei .”
(;'.\ en in marriage by her father, Ho
,ride was lovely 111 0 fluor-len;th g..\•'.
1f I1::r10ez.1, styled with tilted shine
call':1-c'I s ibrina neeLline, will
I r.lolues c: chantilly lace, 'n..)loi.l
:til frith 1111111- Cell( seg11i115, and lib
0;11t :1t eves. :1 1nr ie hon' and stream
_r.; 10. eted the hack o1 the ;
He Spent Ten Weeks
In Purgatory:
For very good reasons of their
own, early explorers of Alaska
gave to the spot where Birch
Creek enters the Yukon River
the name Purgatory.
But for William C. Waters it
was the spot, or so he thought,
that would make all the differ-
ence between survival and
death. For ten desperate weeks,
alone and lost in the sub -Arctic
wilds, he tried to find it. Last
week, after his rescue—and aft-
er he had lost 78 of his normal
180 pounds—Bill Waters could
manage a feeble joke: "The
trouble was I was going through
hell to get to Purgatory. I was
going backward."
Authorities at Fairbanks had
long since decided that Waters
must be dead. Ilis abandoned
car had been found in late June
on the Steese Highway close to
Its northern end at Circle, 120
miles from Fairbanks. On the
front seat was a booklet, "How
to Camp Out." A month later,
on July 21, a coroner's jury was
summoned to make a finding of
presumptive death. But the
jurors thought there might just
be a chance — however slim —
that Waters was still alive. They
declined to authorize a death
certificate.
The jurors were right. At the
very moment of their delibera-
tions, Bill Waters was working
his painful way along the edge
of Birch Creek. He had already
lived for five weeks on berries
and rose hips ( the fruit of the
wild rose). He was t a live on
the same diet for anothar five
weeks before rescue cane.
He had plann,:d it as the vaca-
tion of his lite—••1 always want-
ed to see that Alcan Highway."
So Waters, a 42 -year-old bach-
elor from Erlanger, Ky., who
works as a railway mail clerk
on the Cincinnati to Chattanooga
run, set out in early June for
Alaska. He made Fairbanks
with no trouble, then pushed on
along the Steese Highway for
Circle, the northernmost point
of the U.S. highway system.
A few miles from Circle, he
knew, Iva, Big Lake, where he
had heard there was good fish-
ing. He left his car, and his
"Hew to Camp Out" booklet,
and hilted off over a trail
through tile muskeg for Big
Lake. He had a fishing rod, a
tackle be::, a machete, a hunting
knife. and eleven matches. At
I3ig Lak, he caught a pike.
Then, I.a;:ause the marshy trail
had made rough walking, he de-
cided to try a different way
back. "I didn't have a map," he
sighed later. "That was the
stupidity of it."
He never did find his way
back. All he could do was fol-
low Birch Creek, which he fig-
ured would run into the Yukon
and then to civilization. But
Birch Creek runs parallel to the
Yukon for a good 100 miles be-
fore the two join. And Bill
Waters, day after day, pushed
through the thick growths of
willows on the banks of Birch
Creek. At one point, he tried to
build a raft, but gave up, His
'SALLY'S SALLIES
'rMrs, Blaball spilled all that
this morning. She's such a
gossip!"
feet became so swollen he could
hardly walk. Ile lost track of
time. ''1 couldn't believe it
when they told me 1 had been
gone more than two months."
Two hunters, a man and wo-
man from Fairbanks, found him.
Maddeningly, Waters had been
unable to attract their attention
the first time their outboard
motorboat went past. His swol-
len feet wouldn't carry him to
within shouting distance — and
he couldn't shout very loudly,
either. But now he stayed by
the bank, Twenty-four hours
later, the boat came past again
—and this time the gaunt, beard-
ed figure was sighted,
From his bed in a Fairbanks
hospital, where doctors said he
would recover, Waters couldn't
believe he had been saved. "I
didn't think anyone would look
for me," he said, "I'm just a
postal clerk." — From NEWS -
WEEK
This Town Adopted
A Whole Family
After almost twenty years of
homeless, weary wandering a
Polish refugee couple and their
family have reached journey's
end. They are moving intu a
brand-new house, fully fl:rnish-
ed, with fond in the larder and
flowers in the garden, at Wing -
ham, in New South Wales.
More than a year ago the peo-
ple of Wingham (pop. 2,030) de-
cided that they would like to
give a home to a European re-
fugee fancily who, in the normal
way, could not migrate.
They chose Mr, and Mrs. Mar -
cin Reczniarek, who, with their
three children, had lived almost
twenty years in refugee camps,
with little chance of leaving be-
cause Mr. Reczniqrek had con-
tracted tuberculosis.
While he was being treated in
Europe, the people of Wingham
and its surrounding district built
a house and completely furnish-
ed it.
Recently the family, with Mr.
Reczniarek's health restored, ar-
rived in Sydney, They were met
at the wharf by the Town Clerk
of Wingham who pressed into
Mrs. Reczniarek's hand the key
of the first home of their own
the family had ever known,
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. Is it permissible for one's
calling cards to have any kind of
decoration on then?
A. No; this is only for business
cards. Social cards should be of
plain white, of good quality, en-
graved in black, and without
embellishment of any kind.
Q. How can a young man and
his sister (both unmarried) word
the invitations to a wedding an-
niversary reception in honor of
their parents?
A. "Mr. John J. Adams and
Miss Mary Louise Adams request
the pleasure of your company at
the wedding anniversary cele-
bration of their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry L. Adams, etc."
Q. When women, already
seated at a luncheon table, are
introduced to one another, do
they shake hands seated, when it
is convenient to do so?
A. No; they bow. It is much
too awkward to reach across a
table to shake hands.
Q. Just what is the correct
way to eat an olive? Does one
put the whole olive into the
mouth at once, or does one take
only small bites out of it while
holding it in the fingers?
A, A very small stuffed olive
may be put into the mouth
whole. Larger stuffed ones
should be eaten in two bites, A
plain olive is held in the fingers
and pieces bitten off around the
stone,
ISSUE 38 — 1961
LOOKING GLASS — From this single, huge chunk of glass —
48 inches thick and weighing 4,000 pounds — will come a
precision -finished telescope mirror 84 inches in diameter and
13 inches thick, The glass blank, is destined for a telescope
at the University of La Plata, Argentina. When finished in
1962, the telescope will be the largest in the Southern Hemis-
phere. A company official inspects the glass before it moves
into the melting oven.
GRANDMA MOSES IS 101 — Noted painter Grandma Moses
wears a big smile as she celebrated her 101st birthday on
September seventh.
RONICLES
etnFRFAAM
Well, the beginning of this
column could be just a repetition
of last week's in which I said
-- "And still the hot, humid
weather continues!" I wonder
how much longer we've got to
take it? You know, it's a queer
thing — the districts we usually
think of as either hotter or
cooler than here are just the
reverse, Last summer we were
up to Milton several times in
hot weather and each time it
seemed much cooler when we
got home, Partner used to say
— "it's because we get the cool
breezes off the lake." This year
the cool breezes — if there have
been any — must have gone the
other way as we found Milton
far less humid than where we
are, Which was fortunate, as
Milton really had two big days
last week.
Friday and Saturday saw the
first Annual Reunion of the On-
tario Steam and Antique Asso-
ciation, And it was an outstand-
ing success, There were steam
threshing outfits, early tractor -
drawn grain separators, water -
tanks, horse-drawn road scrap-
ers, early vintage tractors used
for threshing, an old fire engine
Jiffy "Toe -Cosies"
Gy r4 W
Light up the reindeer's nose
with a RED sequin—charm tots
with these cozy slipper socks.
JIFFY! Knit a slipper in an
evening—just one flat piece plus
ribbed cuff. Thrifty gift! Pat-
tern 928: directions for children's
sizes 4 to 12 included.
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 Toron-
to, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NA111t, and AD-
DRESS.
FOR THE FIRST TIME! Over
200 designs in our new, 1962
Needlecraft Catalog — biggest
ever! Pages, pages, pages of
fashions, home accessories to
knit, crochet, sew, weave, em-
broider, quilt, See jumbo -knit
hits, cloths, spreads, toys, linens,
afghans plus free patterns, Send
25'.
Ontario residents must include
10 sales tax for each CAT.", LK;
ordered. There is no sales ta% co
the patterns,
and a great number of ancient
automobiles. T h e outstanding
feature of all this machinery was
the fact that it was all in good
working order — so much so
that every mobile vehicle dis-
played was included in each of
the several parades each day, in-
cluding the parade on Saturday
which passed through the entire
business section of the town.
Every so often one or other of
the steam engines, would let off
a blast from its whistle answer-
ed by a toot -toot from an an-
cient horn on one of the cars.
Cars? Oh yes, there were any
number of cars — a few. of them
probably in better working con-
dition than some of the rattle-
traps we occasionally see on the
road today.
At the Fair Grounds the anti-
que engines really did their
stuff as on each day a load of
grain was put through one of
the old threshing machines, And
do you know what? The thresh-
ing machine used for demonstrat-
ing was the very same machine
that used to pull into Ginger
Farm many years ago, (This time
I didn't have to cook meals for
the threshers!) The man who
owned and operated the machine
at that time was also on the
grounds but only as a spectator.
Our son Bob was operating the
threshing outfit the first day of
the Reunion but not the second.
He was too busy looking after
exhibits of his own — a mobile
crane and an old Rumley trac-
tor — the latter acquired just
recently, and which he drove
proudly in the parade.
There was also an exhibit of
non-mobile farm machinery —
gas engines at one time used for
pumping water; 'wooden rakes
and forks for use with horses or
oxen and even a dog -treadmill
for drawing water.
In another hall there was a
marvellous collection of antiques
of every description — furniture,
kitchen equipment, churns, pot-
tery, glassware, musical boxes,
model steam engines, high wheel
bicycle, also a "bicycle built for
two". In fact there was just
about everything you ever heard
of, And some of the things were
for sale, I hurried along when I
saw the "for sale" notice or I
might have come home loaded!
All in all it was a marvellous
exhibit and demonstration of old
time machinery and equipment
and we are glad it is planned to
be an annual affair, (Watch for
the date next year, folks, it is
well worth going many miles to
see.) Too soon we forget the
hard work and ingenuity that
was necessary before our fore-
fathers could wrest a living from
the soil. They left us a tremen-
dous heritage, one that all too
often is not appreciated as it
should be. Canada is making
great strides today but let us
not forget that it was the pio-
neers who made our present
progress possible.
Of course, as a family, we
all turned out in full force to
see everything we could at the
Reunion. No, that isn't quite true
as Dee and her family are still
at the cottage, Bob was busy all
the time; Partner was roaming
the grounds; Joy and I and the
two little fellows were on the
grandstand. When Ross caught
sight of his father in the par-
ade he yelled and jumped around
so much he almost brought the
grandstand down, He wasn't so
happy when the clowns cane by.
He found their faces not funny'
but frightening, I doubt if he had
ever seen a clown before, I
have promised to make him a
clown outfit so he will under-
stand it is all make-believe. Ross
has such a terrific imagination
that to him everything is real —
and i don't like to see him
fri'!htened.
P.S.: I should have said the
v; n•n^n of the district were do-
ir : t; i' part — catering and
s' • a,nt meals — real, old -
1. _ ;ling meals!
Only Wind Your Car
Every Three Miles:
Thumbing through the instruc-
tion manual ot, my n e w car
makes me nostalgic. The new ear
smell brings back old tinges, I
look again at the first volume of
"The Horseless Age," 1895-6, It
opens with a full page adver-
tisement of "Daimler Motor
Company's factory and offices,
Steinway, Long Island City, N,Y.,
where the celebrated Daimler
Motors, operated by either Gas,
Gasoline or Kerosene are manu-
factured."
Picture captions announced
that "The Daimler motor carri-
ages were awarded the follow-
ing prizes, grand prize 5,000
francs at Paris, July 1894; a gold
medal and first prize at Turin,
May, 1895; 3 first prizes of 40,-
000 francs, as well as the second,
third, and fourth prizes at Paris,
June, 1895," Below: "The Daim-
ler Motor is the most powerful
and compact as well as reliable
Engine now on the Market."
The magazine began as a
monthly "published in the inter-
ests of the motor vehicle indus-
try," subscription two dollars;
single copies 25 cents, Its open-
ing editorial says some may
think such a magazine prema-
ture but it argues that "a giant
industry is struggling into be-
ing."
Gottfried Daimler of Cann-
statt, Germany, it notes a little
later, started things off when
in 1888 he invented a "new pe-
troleum motor."
Issue No, 1 is chiefly a com-
pilation of all sorts of self-pro-
pelled machines — gasoline,'
kerosene, steam, and even the
"s p r i n g motor quadricycle,"
showing a sedate and full-heard-
ded gentleman at the tiller of a
machine where "four powerful
springs furnish the propelling
force," These are said to "make
rapid headway on a level road"
though it is agreed that "the
springs are scarcely strong
enough to make a long run on
one winding." The owner "hopes
to be able to run it at 20 miles
an hour and cover three miles
on one winding,"
A traffic -stopper if ever we
saw one, turn that driver loose
down Broadway in his quadri-
cycle!
Early issues of the magazine
show nervousness over nomen-
clature; what should they call
the new machine? "Horseless
carriage" didn't seem quite
right; readers should please coin
expressions and write in,
The January, 1896, issue an-
nounced that Barnum and Bail-
ey's "Greatest Show on Earth"
is to exhibit "a Duryea motor
wagon through the country next
season."
In the motor carriage races at
Narragansett Park, Providence,
Sept, 7, 1896, the electric carri-
ages won, writes Richard L.
Strout in the Christian Science
Monitor.
The January 1897, editorial
quotes Marcel Desprez, member
of the French Institute, before
the Automobile Club of France:
"The learned gentlernan is haunt-
ed by the fear that if this fuel
comes into general use for ve-
hicle propulsion we shall sooner
or later:be brought face to face
with ati:.oil famine, because only
8,000,000. tons of oil are annu-
ally taken from the earth while
400,000,000 tons of coal are an-
nually mined."
April 5, 1899 — "The proposed
bill to license motormen in this
country is an imitative measure
from French precedents, It is
false to our institution, detrimen-
tal to the citizen whose freedom
it curtails, an impediment to a
most promising industry."
Motorists keeping up with lat-
est developments found what
they wanted in the Oct. 11, 1899,
issue — "The Pneumatic Cushion
Spring Controversy" — a n d
again on Oct, 25, 1899 — "The
Equine Mind Analyzed,"
One disadvantage of the gas
motor, the editors noted in 1902,
was that it wasn't self-starting
while steam and electricity were,
And steam was noiseless too,
they pointed out, except when
it blew up.
That is a thought lo take away
with you.
Just Call Me Honey)
Working fora firm in Hono-
lulu, capital of Hawaii, is an at-
tractive girl who has good rea-
son to avoid signing her name
more often than is strictly neces-
sary.
Why? Because hers is the
longest name in the world to-
day. It consists of sixty-five let-
ters. How the girl remembers
them all mystifies her friends,
but she has never been known
to misspell her name,
Hold your breath — here it
I s : Kuuleikailialohaopiilaniwai-
lauokekoaulumahiehiekealaomao-
naopiikea.
The meaning of this strange
name is: "My wreath of love of
the ascending heaven waters the
forest leaves so graceful and its
sweet perfume fences the path-
way through the clouds."
In Europe there are plenty of
long surnames, but none so long
as that. The longest belongs to
a Greek family and has thirty-
six letters.
It is; Pappatheodorokomandor-
onicolucopoulos.
Week's Sew -Thrifty
PRINTED PATTERN
4740 SIZES 10-20
44014444
EXTRA -easy! Whip up this
cool, smart, simple dress and
bolero in a day, to wear day aft-
er day. Choose linen or cotton
in colors bright or basic.
Printed Pattern 4740: Misses'
Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, Size
16 dress takes 3 yards 39 -inch;
bolero takes 1 yard.
Send FIFTY CENTS (500)
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern. Please print plainly
SIZE, NAME, ADDItFrSS,
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 35¢,
Ontario residents must include
10 sales tax on each CATALOG
ordered. There is no sales tax
on patterns,
A GASSER — Pat Rizzuto's new hat is really a gasser — for
jet engines that is. It isn't really a chapeau at c!I but a fuel
spray bar for the new J79 turbojet engine,
Master Horsemen
And Black Tents
Certainly every visitor to Jor-
dan should try to make contact
with one of the great Bedouin
tribes, The dwellers in the black
tents of the Bedouins are the
last of the truly nomadic people
of the Near East who F till have
a large population.
The tents of the Bedouins may
be seen not far from Amman.
If one takes the car to Madaba,
a distance of only twenty miles,
one can see the beginning of
the huge stretch of territory
from two to three hundred miles
in length and stretching across
the border into Saudi Arabia.
The main Bedouin tribes of
Jordan each have theft own
tract of I a n d, sometimes vast,
along wihich they trek accord-
ing to the season and in put sue
ance of their agriculture. Theo'
agriculture is the agriculture of
nomads concerning itself mainly
with their large herds of camels,
goats unci sheep. These days,
however, the Bedouins du grow
a certain amount of barley and
there is no doubt that there is
a tendency for the Bedouins, in
time and after a fairly lengthy
transitional period, to become
non-nonnac!ic farmers.
In order to achieve this, very
much greater progress will have
to be made in the irrigation of
the desert areas, 1 myself visit-
ed the Bedouins in the desert
and found them a hospitable and
dignified people. The black tents
which are made from coarse
sheepskins and wool, altnough
they look ramshackle, are in fact
a wonderful protection against
those enemies of the desert, the
sun, the wind and the rain. The
flaps of the tents can be open-
ed or closed at will and even
in the coldest or the hottest wea-
ther a fairly temperate tempera-
ture can be secured within the
tent. Many of the Bedouins are
quite fair and a certain number
of them can speak a little
French or English. The Bedouins
have their own laws adminis-
tered through their Sheiks.
The day of the Bedouin starts
early and closes when the sun
goes down. The life they lead is
an uncomplicated and a con=
pletely natural one and the sim-
plification of life leads to the
acceptance of a code of honour
and morals the like of which is
not often seen in so-called civil-
ized society these days, The Be-
douins are not easily approached
by foreigners, particularly for-
eign visitors, but this can be
achieved if a certain amount of
tact is exercised in approaching
them.
The Bedouins are all born
horsemen •and this applies even
to Bedouins who might be
thought to have become urban-
ized, The men often ride bare-
back but the Sheiks have beau-
tifully embroidered saddles of
the Arab type; Bedouins are
master horsemen, The hospital-
ity of the Bedouins is prover-
bial. Arab hospitality, and Be-
douin hospitality in particular,
traditionally runs to three days
for any passing stranger, a day
of welcome, a day of rest, and a
day of departure, but this is of-
ten extended to much longer
periods.— From "Modern Jor-
dan" by Gerald Sparrow.
Q. Ilow can I remedy pers-
piring feet?
A. One of the best remedies
is to powder the stockings with
one part of chlorinated lime, one
part prepared chalk, and one
part of powdered starch. Also
bathe the feet daily in cold
water,
Ark.
LET'S ALL BREAK A LEG! — Dick
Anderson continues to play his
game of golf despite a broken
leg, It has been over three
months since the golfer's acci-
dent, and he has been able to
bring his game down to 77.
Before his occident, his score
was 98,
Protective Masks
Can Be Dangerous
Halfway through the bruising
pro football game between the
New York Titans and I-Iouston
Oilers last October, Howard
Glenn, a 245 -pound guard for the
Titans, suddenly looked and act-
ed singularly tired. The 24 -
year -old offensive lineman had
played smart, hard ball; but just
after the start of the second half,
he seemed befuddled, Glenn was
sent to the locker roorn to rest.
He lay down for a bit; got up
and took a belligerent poke at
an attendant; and then passed
out. He died at Hermann Hospi-
tal in I-Iouston two hours after
injury, and the autopsy showed
he had a broken neck,
Broken necks have been con-
sidered a risk, but a remote one,
in football. But since 1947 the
proportion of injuries and fatal-
ities blamed on damage to neck
vertebras, even among stocky
players, has risen each year, In
the Journal of the American
Medical Association two neuro-
surgeons and two coaches from
the University of Michigan put
the blame for this increase
squarely on a device which is
supposed to protect football play-
ers: The tough plastic helmet,
with its face guard projecting
3t/2 inches in front of a player's
nose, which has come into wide-
spread use in the past decade.
Drs. Richard Schneider and
Edward Reifel and athletic di-
rector Fritz Crisler and former
coach Bennie Oosterbaan first
suspected the helmet when a
Michigan lineman suffered a
severe neck injury during a 1960
game, Movies showed that on
one of the boy's tackles, an op-
ponent's knee had hit the vic-
tim's face -bar, snapping his head
back so sharply that the edge of
his helmet dug into his spine.
Later they rechecked on four-
teen deaths from head and spinal
injuries during the 1959 season
out of a total of eighteen deaths,
and found that six could be
blamed on accidents with the
helmet. They also checked sev-
eral 1960 accidents, including the
case of Howard Glenn,
Movies of the Titan -Oilers
game showed that Glenn's head
had been snapped back by blows
to his face guard during three
different plays; the third one
,PENSACOLA
1926
sWv
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
CAPE
CANAVERAL
GULF OF
MEXICO
Miles
0 150
1947
MIA
1909 HAVANA ,y
a
CUBA >rr
.I
SOME OF THE BAD ONES — Hurricane Carla was the first dan-
gerous storm of the 1961 season. Newsmap traces the paths
of four destructive hurricanes which struck the same area in
the past. In 1909, one whipped over Cuba and left 350 dead
In Louisiana and Mississippi, and $5 million in damage. Its path
carried it all the way across Lake Superior into Canada. In
1915, a hurricane killed 275 and caused $13 million in dam-
age. It, too, dissipated in Canada. In 1926, ,a storm which
killed 100 in Florida and cost $100 million blew out in eastern
Texas. In 1947, 51 persons died in Florida and along the Gulf
Coast; $110 million in property was lost before storm stalled
In northern Louisiana.
probably crushed his vertebras,
and his flare-up in the locker
room may have severed his
spinal cord. in professional foot-
ball fa player may he tackled by
his face guard. i3ut in college
ball, this isn't legal.
Drs. Schneider and Reifel and
Crisler and Oosterbaan strongly
recommended a radical redesign
of the helmet. They suggest that
a chin strap be developed which
releases under certain pressures,
and they recommend that the
back edge of the helmet have a
flange of sponge rubber to re-
duce the striking force on the
neck vertebras, Most controver-
sially, they disapprove heartily
of the protective face guard, a
single or double bar of plastic,
which in some states (like Michie
gam) is mandator,' for high-
school players.
But if gridsters insist on k•
in their masks, the Mich:,
experts believe that the b,
should be shortened so it doesn't
stick out so far in front of the
player's face, This would make
it less handy to a tackling play-
er's hand, and would cut down
on the amount of leverage dur-
ing a backward thrust, As a
bonus, it would improve visibil-
ity (the present bar, sticking out
31 inches, cuts vision by one-
third,
The Michigan men aren't alone
in condemning present helmets.
For the past year and a half,
Frank J. Cavanaugh, head tnin-
er of the Cornell University
team, has been working on a
helmet which is higher in back
to prevent neck injuries and
which would be made of a softer
material, the better to absorb
shocks to the head. Cavanaugh
commented. "Perhaps with a
softer helmet we could do away
with the face mask completely."
From NEWSWEEK
How To Take Better
Landscape Pictures
Are landscapes deceiving to
a photographer? Anyone would
think they would be the simpl-
est of all pictures to produce.
The subject could hardly be
more co-operative — it doesn't
wiggle, scowl at the camera,
jump about, or run away. It
just sits waiting to be photo-
graphed.
But as everyone knows who
has tried, the scenes that win
contests and appear on cal-
endars don't "just happen."
They are the result of an in-
quisitive eye, careful planning,
skillful execution, and a certain
amount of hard work.
The September issue of Pop-
ular Photography features ten
helpful guides for shooting land-
scapes;
Take enough time. No one
can do his best work if he feels
rushed, especially if the job at
hand requires close attention
to detail and an artist's calm
appraisal of the scene before
starting work.
Look for the unusual, tvheth-
er you have a camera in hand
or not. Visualize a particular
scene with snow—and come
back and shoot it in the winter!
Search for the very best
camera position for each situa-
tion. Experiment with high
and low camera angles. Often
you can conceal unwanted —
but immovable! — objects by
shifting your camera.
Forget many of the rules
you've heard about for photo-
graphy in general. Dont' reduce
your camera to the status of a
duplicating machine—try any-
thing the "wrong" way if you
think it will produce a striking
and unusual picture.
Do a little arranging of the
landscape if it seems necessary.
Remove old 'newspapers, tin
cans, sticks; include boats, peo-
ple, hay rakes, and wagons,
Sally forth when normal peo-
ple (non -photographers) hug
their hearths. Fog, rain, and
snow can give a completely dif-
ferent mood to a scene. Try
photographing, a half hour be-
- : - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING - : -
BABY CHICKS
QUICK shipment on Bray started 3.4
week pullets, also cockerels, Request
special list. Antes and Dual•purpose,
hatching to order.' Book October -No.
vetnber broilers now. See local agent,
or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John
North, Hamilton, Ont.
BERRY AND ROOT PLANTS
RASPBERRIES
Fall planting, strong dlseitse•free plants.
$4.00 per hundred post paid If cash with
order 'rhos nlsson. R.R 6, Markdale,
Ont
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
MACHINE shop, 30x36, cement block
and brick office and washroom plus
0-roonn brick house. Located centrally
In Kitchener, This Is n going concern
and ran be bought with or without
Inventory, Price $22,000, fully equip-
ped $30.000. 'Terms Contact ltInzel &
Ulmer, Realtors, 62 Sherwood Ave.,
Kitchener, Phone SII 3.5847.
HARDWARE STORE
NIAGARA peninsula; clean stock and
fixtures Brick building; doing $60,000
annually Will take mortgage on build -
Ing; recently remodelled. Inventory
$10,000. For a good buy and n solid
Investment, write for appointment to J.
Corupe, 36 Spruce St. St Catharines.
Ont.
COINS
GUARANTEED TO PAY — $10.00 for
1925 .050. $4.00 for 1923 014. 10 Page
illustrated buying list .250 refundable
on first purchase. 'Toronto Coin Box
307 Terminal "A" 'Toronto, Ontario__
CHINCHILLAS
LiQUJDA'J'iNG Chinchilla herd, and
all equipment. Best offer. Dello Chin.
chilies, 1075 Chandler. Windsor. Ont,
DOGS FOR SALE_
SPRINGER Spaniel puppies, also cocker
Spaniel, Shelties and German Short
Haired Pointers. Registered, well-bred
stack, healthy. reasonable. Ormstrum
Bead Kennels, 11,0. 2, Tecumseh, Ont.
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
JUNIOR PHONE $8.95
COM.IIUNiCA'rE from main building to
horn, garage, boathouse or basement.
C,O.D., F.013., Montreal. Gemsoc, P.O.
Box 345 Snowdon, Montreal 29, Quebec.
fore sunrise. Just remember to
protect your camera from pre-
cipitation.
Plan your landscape pictures
and use all the tools and tech-
niques you have available. De-
cide which part of the day you
want to shoot in, if you need
people to give the view scale,
if you want to use selective
focus. Study the effects of va-
rious filters.
Switch lenses frequently and
your pictures will improve. The
amount of background included
in a landscape can be controlled
by changing lenses,
Aim for the highest technical
quality you can possibly pro-
duce. This will entail carrying
filters, several kinds of film,
and often a tripod, but worth it.
RACK A'I' WORK AGAIN
For the first time in nearly
ten years, composer ("Easter
Parade," "Oh, How 1 Hhate to
Get Up in the Morning," "God
Bless America") Irving Berlin
is hard at work on the songs
for a Broadway show. The title,
"Mr. President," say authors
Howard Lindsay and Russel
Crouse, concerns no President
living or dead, Berlin's last
musical was "Call Me Madam,"
1950-1952. What lured Berlin
back to Broadway? "1 have been
waiting for an idea that excited
me," the 73 -year-old composer
said. "Lindsay and Crouse have
cone up with that idea. I am
excited."
How Can 1?
Ry Roberta Lee
Q. ]low can I keep my leather
gloves sweet-smelling and odor-
free?
dor-
free?
A. Shake some rice or talcum
powder into the gloves before
putting them away. This will
prevent that disagreeable leath-
cr.:: smell sometimes acquired
when worn constantly.
Q. Is there anything you can
suggest when one has lost or
broken the decorative cap from
the tip of one's umbrella?
A. You might try replacing
this with a toothpaste cap. Clean
the stub of your umbrella, then
force, 'fit, and cement on the
new cap.
FARM HELP WANTED
FULLY experienced single man for
dairy farm. Good wagee and steady
employment, Apply Andrew Carter,
Phone 843.2750 Snelgrove, Ont.
FARMS POR 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 horn 45'x50'. water, hydro; also
100•acre pasture farm. if Interested
contact Alex Young, R.R. 1, Berkeley.
Ont
200 ACRES in Huron, ample water,
nearly new home. Apply Box 241, 123 •
18th Street, New Toronto, Ont.
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
CU'1"I'Elt bar for 000 New Holland liar-
vester. Used one season, bargain, New
Holland oil fired hay and grain dryer,
demonstrated once, 5 ILP motor, can.
vas -duct Included, 51,650,00. It. Cowan,
Dunnville., Ontario.
DITCHER FOR SALE
SPEICHER 'TANDEM TRACTION, two
years old, with hydraulic ground con-
veyor and 14 In, buckets. Roth Bros.
Phone 217, Wellesley, Ont.
FISHING SUPPLIES
WANT three hands? New fishing rod
holder attaches to belt, unbreakable
styrene plastic, 51.00. Guaranteed.
World -Wide Gift Products, Box 307,
Laurel, Maryland, USA.
•
HELP WANTED MALE
HOSPITAL ORDERLY
PERMANENT position open for , ntah
qualified by training and experience.
Medical, Hospital and Sickness Benefit
insurance, Pension Pian, 40 hour week,
5200,00 per month to start. Apply: DI•
rector of Nursing, District Memorial
Ilospttal, Leamington, Ontario.
STATIONARY ENGINEER
(4th Class)
PERMANENT position to satisfactory
applicant with papers, Mainly on shift
work, but Interesting opportunity to
learn maintenance of hospital equip.
ment. Medical, Hospital, Sickness Ilene.
fits, Pension Plan, 40 hour week, start.
Ing salary $225 monthly Apply: Ad.
mtnistrator, District Memorial Hospital,
Leamington, Ontario.
LIVESTOCK FOR SALE
Aberdeen -Angus A wide selection
available, all ages, both males and fee
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. Me'raggart, Sales Agent, 1 Wel.
Iington Street East, Aurora. Ontario.
MACHINERY FOR SALE
DODGE power wagon 4 -wheel drive
complete with winch ,portable derrick
and leg, Jack arms and connection for
electric trailer brakes. Good condi-
tion. Louts LeJeune, R.I1, 1, Fort Erle.
Phone Fort Erie 871.2332 evenings.
MEDICAL
WANTED — EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO 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 or Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchasing nutria consider the
following points which this organiza-
tion offers:
I. The best available stock, no cross.
bred or standard types recommended.
2. The reputation of a plan which Is
proving Itself substantiated by files of
satisfied .ranchers.
3 Full Insurance against replacement.,
should they not live or In the event
of sterility tall fully explained In our
certificate of merit).
4. We give you only mutations which
are in demand for fur garments
5 You receive from this organization a
guaranteed pelt market in writing,
6, Membership in our exclusive breed.
ers' association whereby only pup
chasers of this stock may participate
in the benefits so offered.
7 Prices for Breeding Stock start at
5200 n pair
Special offer to those who qualify,
earn your Nutria on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R. No. 2, Stouffville, Ontario.
LEARN WELDING
NO TIME ItMIT
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
NURSES WANTIID
OPERATING room registered nurse,
immediately. Small, active 0,11. 8 -day
week and call back service. Apply Coo
tage Hospital, Uxbridge, Ont.
NURSES TRAINING SCHOOLS
NURSING SCHOOLS
EARN to 565 week as Practical Nurse.
Learn quickly at home. No high school
necessary; no age limit, Write for free
booklet, lesson samples, Post Graduate
School of Nursing, loom 891191, 131 S.
Wabash, Chicago.
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 Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street. Ottawa
PERSONAL
SELECT•A•(411T Service eliminates re•
celving duplicate gifts. Builds greater
goodwill for your customers, Informa•
tion, write: Select -A -Gifts, Box 6142,
Mobile, Alabama.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED guaranteed, mailed In plain
parcel, including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment. 18 for
5100 (Finest qualitvi Western DistrIbu•
tors, Box 24•TPF Regina, Sask,
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT ONT.
Films developed and
8 magna prints 40e
12 magna prints 60e
Reprints 5e each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 911e (not Including
prints). Color prints 30e each extra.
Anseo and Ektachrome 35 m m 20 ex•
posures mounted in slides $120 Color
e.
funnts dedf to fullom tfo ues nprinted negatives.
_-_
---
PHOTOS -- ---
YOUR Photo, high gloss, postage stamp
size, perforated, gummed. Send snap
or photo ireturnedi Sheets of 100 only
$2.00 per sheet. Photostamps, 1121
Brunette Avenue, Dept 02, New West.
minster, B C.
PULLETS
9000 iTl'•I.INES wormed and, vac•
clnnted All ages available. 18 .weeks
51.75 Or'et 30 vearc In Poultry Come
and see them. I:;4r1 Glddis R.1 No 1.
Rldgetown. Olt 4.2324,
STAMPS
150 DIFFERENT Canadian stamps S2.0n.
Approvals' Want lists filled. Harold
Jones, 2824 Dewdney, Regina, Sask.
TOBACCO WANTED
ATTENTION tobacco growers, we are
paying top market prices for rye.
Trucking arrange• Call Byron 801 Ed.
mund's Transport. Komoka. Ont
ISSUE 38 — 1961
FARMER — DEALERS WANTED
Well established Ontario seed house
hes opening for corn dealers In fast
growing nationally advertised brand.
Contact Box No. 240, 123 • Eighteenth
Street, New Toronto 14, Ontario.
—WANTED
BORING MILL
OPERATORS
ENGINE LATHE
OPERATORS
TURRET LATHE
OPERATORS
MILLING MACHINE
OPERATORS
MUST BE ABLE TO SET UP
AND OPERATE
ON DIVERSIFIED CLASSES OF
WORK
AND ABLE TO READ DRAWINGS
PLEASE APPLY BY LETI'ER
STATING EXPERIENCE To THE
SUPERVISOit EMPLOYMENT
Canadian
General Electric
Comony Limited
PETERBOROUGH, ONTARIO
VII
�c) � So Much to See So Much to Save
()
(1
rl
()
()
()
()
()
SEE YOUR
LOCAL AGENT —
NO ONE CAN
SERVE YOU
BETTER,
• Cunard Thrift -Season rates are now in effect.
• And from Nov. 1 until Feb. 28, 1962,
Cunard's new low round-trip Excursion Rates
save you 25 per cent ... with the same superb
cuisine, service and gracious living for which
Cunard is famous,
PAY LATER IF YOU WISH
Fly Cunard Eagle to Bermuda, Nassau, London and in Europe.
Corner Bay & Wellington Sts.,
Toronto, Ont.
Tel: EMpire 2.2911
Sailing from Montreal EVERY FRIDAY to:
HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON
OR
GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL
Regular calls at COBH begin Dec. 9
CARINTHIA • IVERNIA • SAXONIA
0 U
gel6i*
� tete is �%t dawn,
PAGE 4 '"
WINTER JACKET SALE
Annual Pre -Season Sale, Sept, 21 to Sept. 30
Boys' and Gir115' Jackets with hoods, 4 to 6x, 4,95 up
Girls' Jackets, 8 to 14 5.95 up
Boys' Jackets (some with hoods), 8 to 14 .. , , 9,95
Teen Girls' Jackets, 10 to 16 10.95 up
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22
Blyth, Ont.
4
-
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP,
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A, SPO'ITON,
jf
/Well le 1 I IIIIM!I 11 Mee Wee III I I .xm -III 1111111 1111 10101h11 mg 11111n1 111111-14411Mm4 ween ll --I r00, we. irli r IIJ41M
.0010114.000050:00000.1.0.— e1
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-» J
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
--� CLINTON:
Business—Hu 2-6606
Residence—Hu 2-9869
PHONES:
..41 !'
rrh„�r.,* EUTET :
° Buainen 41
Residence 34
1 , I
1
16W i..r,u IIWM1JI 11 Dill, f 01.11115 011 1 1 1 1111 11111064.1 11■141time II 1111410-1iS 110 meow 011I1.611 Irl 1111 11011 11 111
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 73. -
YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN-
KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS
_ JEANS and OVERALLS.
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M
4.111.11y0111J1..01.i-441r1.MxW1.14+MMI.00.0.+u000•• lr11 �.yw
I 1 11 0 IIII .11 11 .11 1 ILLI I 1 11 11 1 .. ,1 10 11 1:11 111 11 111 1 11111011 10111 1 M 011.1 II 11111111b 1 11 1 I
ew 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,
upto44
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 Villi the
Family
Save Black Diamond Stamps for Premiums
or 5 percent Sales Slips for Merchandise.
"The House Of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211
BLYTH, ONT,
\Valton News
The September meeting of the Walton
Women's Institute will be held in the
Community Hall, Thursdny evening,
September 28th at 6:30 p.m. with Airs,
Alvin McDonald and Mrs. Nelson Marks
as co -conveners for Education, The
roll call will be answered with "a
I:eautiful thought from poetry',” Motto
"Take time to read, it is the founeia•
tion of wisdom." Hostesses for the
e-vening will be Mrs, Wilfred Short.
reed, Mrs. Gerald Watson, Mrs. Earl
Watson, Airs, William Thamer and
Mrs: Nelson Reid.
Mothers of the Walton Public Li•
brary are again reminded that the Li
brary will be closed Tuesday, Septem•
ber 19th and Tuesday the 26th, but
will be open as usual on October 3rd,
Library hours will be 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m,
Mrs. Edna Hackwell's school received
first prize for marching at the 41st
annaul Belgrave School Fair last Wed•
nesday when pupils from 18 rural
school from four townships In north
Huron marched. S.S. No. 11, Walton.
with Mrs. Margaret Robertson as teach
er, received school prize. The prize
money was donated by Fred Cook, of
Belgrave.
A reception, honouring Mr , and Mrs.
Ross :Bennett, was held in the Corn.
munity Hall Friday evening. During
the lunch hour the newly-weds were
presented with a sum of money by Aff.
Howard Hackwell with Mr. Barry Mar•
shall leading the address. Mr. Ian
4
\\'ilbce's orchestra supplied the music
for dancing•
The anniversary services of Duff's
United Church will be held on Sunday
September 24 with Rev, R. C. \finlow.
of Hensel) United Church, conducting
both services. The morning service
will commence al 11 a.m. and the ev•
ening service at 7:30 p.m. The choir
will render special musieunder the do -
rection of Mrs. Harvey Brown.
Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Zncger, of Ni.
igra On The Lake, visited at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ennis
Sunday,
Miss Tillie Dundas, of New York,
and Mr. and Mrs. Torrance Dundas
have returned home after spending the
past week visiting with friends and relit.
Ayes at Huntsville, Meaford and Mather
son, Northern Ontario.
Recent visitors with Ah'. and Mrs,
Waller Brondfoot were: Mr. Alvin Par•
tnharson and daughter, Eloise, Niag•
arra falls, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Farquhar.
on, London, and Alr. Ed. Matthews.
eaforlh.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim McDonald and Mr,
and Mrs. K. McDonald and family visit.
ed with Mr. and 'Mrs, Wallace Sholdice,
at Port Credit on Sunday.
Miss Margaret Garrison, Reg. N.,
Windsor, AIr. and Mrs. Ralph Watson
Donna and Davey, of Sarnia, Mr.
Wayne McMichael, were recent guests
at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Robert
McMichael,
WESTFIELD NEWS
AUBURN
Harvest iinme Service
Sheaves of oats arrnnged to form
two crosses, baskets of flowers, fruits
mud vegvtahles formed an attractive
relling for the annttni harvest Ilunie
C'luiich service hell last Sunday at St,
Mark's ,\ii licnn Church, The rector,
Rev. 11, P. Meetly, was in charge of the
service and Mr, wailer Pickford wps
the guest speaker. Mr. Pickford has
heen a Lay reader for some time and
will enter university this week to study
to be a minister of tho Gospel. Ile
gave an inspiring message on the text
"Blessed is the Nation," and reminded
the congregation that harvest time was
the time to renew their loyalty to Goc
and thank Him for His many gifts.
Ile stated that God's hand of blessing
had truly been on Canada and that Can.
Mr. and Mrs, Neville Forbes and Mr.- Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Walden and
Grant: Snell, Londesboro, were guests family and Phyllis Biggerstaff were
of Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon on Western Fair visitors last Wednesday.
Sunday, Mr. Wm, Walden visited with Mr,
Messrs, John McDowell and Lyle and Mrs, Orval McGowan last Wed -
Smith are on the Whitechurch baseball nesdayl
team who played the first game in a Mr. and Mrs. Percy Vincent, of Hul•
series at Verona, north of Kingston, on lett Township, visited on Tuesday with
Saturday. Unfortunately the game wa: Mr. and AIrsl Jasper McBrien at the
lost 4-3. The next game is to be play• home of Mr. and Airs. Gordon Snell.
ed Saturday evening in Wingham Ball We are sorry to report that Mr. Nor -
Park, man Radford, of Lynden, is a patient
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell and in the Brantford hospital. We wish him
a speedy recovery.
Rev, and Mrs. Donald Snell and boys
visited over the -week-end with Mr. and
Airs, Rooss Radford and daughter, at
Port Colborne.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell and Jean-
etla visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Johnston, of Donnybrook,
and while there attended anniversary
services in Donnybrook United Church.
Wayne were the guests of Mr, and
Mrs,- Carl Deans, Guelph, on Sunday.
Miss Barbara Smith and Mr. Eric
Vogle, of London, visited with Mr, and
Mrs., Gordon Sniith on Sunday.
There was a good attendance of
Westfield people at the Donnybrook an.
nivetsary services on Sunday. Hey.
Funge, Londesboro, gave two inspira-
tional sermons. Westfield anniversary
will •he held this coming Sunday wiln
Rev. C. Lewis as morning speaker and
Rev. Hugh Wilson the evening speaker;
Messrs. John and Donald McDowell
were among the grade 12 students of
Wingham District High School who at-
tended the presentation, of "Henry
VIII" at Stratford Festival Theatre on
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs, Norman Wightman and
Murray, also, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Cook spent Friday at London Fair,
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Smith and
Margery were guests of Mr. and Mrs,
Jim Smith, Brussels, on Sunday.
Mr. Carl Smith, South Woodsley, is
visiting his uncle, Mr. Gordon Smith,
this week,
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell, Ju-
dy and Janice, were in London on
Saturday.
Miss Sharon Cook visited with Miss
Sandra McClinchey Friday and Satur-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper McBrien, of
Goderich are spending their 515th weft•
ding anniversary at the home of Mr,
and Mrs, Gordon -Snell and Jeanetta,
too -day, September 19th. Congratu-
lations,
The September meeting of the WIM.S!
was held in the church basement Mon -
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Clearing Auction Sale of Farm Stock
Implements and Feed, from Lot 14,
Concession 10, Hallett Township, 2V2
miles soouth of Londesboro on
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 291h
at 1.30 p.m,, the following
CATTLE -15 Dairy Cows and Heifers
as follows: 6 Holstein cows, 4 years
'old, milking and bred again; Holstein x
Durham cow, 4 years old, milking and
bred again; 4 Ayrshhire cows, 4 years
old, milking and bred again; Brindle
cow, 4 years old, milking and bred
again; 3 Holstein heifers, 3 years old,
milking and bred again; 2 Holstein
heifer calves (born in the spring).
DAIRY EQUIPMENT—Surge 2 pail
milker, complete with compressor and
piping for 17 cows (only 3 years old);
8 can Dari-Kool milk cooler; 6 milk
cans; 2 milk strainers,
LMPLEMENTS-1949 Ford Tractor
(Al condition); John Deere hydraulic
plow; John Deere 2 row scuffles; John
Deere side delivery rake; John Deere
power mower, 7 fl, cut; Allis Chalmers
Model 60 combine, with scour clean
and pick up; Cockshutt 11 hoe fertil•
izer drill; Snow King snow blower;
rubber tire wagon; 2 wheel trailer;
manure spreader; 3 section drag har-
rows; dump rake; Massey Harris 2 row
day evening with Mrs. Arnold Cook's bean puller; approximately 200 chick
group in charge. Miss Dorothy How- feeders; 3 water fountains; walking
att gave a very interesting report of plow; 5 rolls of snow fence.
the, Junior Leadership Course she at- FEED -2150 Bales of Mixed Hay,
tended as delegate in Alma College. TERMS CASH
St. Thomas. The October meeting will No Reserve as the farm is sold,
be -in charge of Mrs. Alvin Snell and Bert Hakkers, Proprietor.
her group, Edward W. Elliott, Auctioneer. 30-2
S ome folks like Fred are careless!
A dvice they will ignore.
F red was warned to fix his ladder;
E very day, it cracked some morel
T he day the ladder broke
was sure no joke!
Y ou should have heard the yell
when Freddie fell!
F rom top to bottom, down he went,
n almost nothing flat!
R esuit , four cuts, ten scratches,
S ix bruises, one squashed hall
T he next time, Fred may be alert
and make repairs
so he won't get hurll
!.._'•a_1
Every year, over 2,000 Ontario farm people
are hurt in falls,
Remember to be careful, won't you?
Canadian Farm Safety Week
July 23 to 29
Co-operators Insurance
Association
c
1
ednesday, Sept. 20, 1981
Minns should be thankful for the
abundance which they enjoy. The choir
was under the direction of Mrs. Norm-
an McC'Itnchey nail special mmw
given by Mr. ,faller Hallett and slc Alr
James Lawrie, of Rlylh• '`hey sang
two duels, "God was there" and "Be
still and know that Ile is God." They
were accompanied by Miss Alice Rog.
ersnn, of illyth. Al the evensong ser-
vice the rector, ,Rev. 11, Meetly, was
the speaker and spoke on thanksgiving,
telling the congregation to always be
thankful to (ind for all Itis gifts and
reminded the cif God's promise to
Noah that while the earth remaineth
there would he a seed time and liar -
1\11'. Elliott Lapp was soloist and
sang, "Hew Great Thou Art," and "My
Task," accompanied by Miss Margo
Grange.
5 PERCENT DISCOUNT on All Purchases made
for Children with Family Allowance
Cheques.
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Goo(, Manners"
�,,,�.T,;:,;�:... .: .>. �;:„3:11.f.t..r:1.-9l.Mr L15.'lltrl.;,J,'.MJJ•r.'�s ,
5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
LADIES' FLANNELLETTE DUSTERS, small,
medium and large.
LADIES' BRIEFS, shall and medium, 3 pr. for LOU
IMPORTED HOLLAND BULBS, get your supply
SOOn.
NEW ASSORTMENT ENLISII CUPS and
SAUCERS.
BABY BLANKETS, PILLOWS, DRESSES,
SLEEP SETS, BABY PANTS, UNDER-
WEAR, TOILET ARTICLES, ETC.
±. ML. ►III1.ouon, .1,1.•.441-.1-...- 4M...• NI. 111111x. ..101w44b4r1Ir 111. "dm ,r,l.5x1.Ji.11x 11 1 - 11 1.11.1►{
x. r 1 1 1 , 4111. u . ... 1111 -. i,.u0 .11r Ill 1 4.1. .I 10.1-x11 ,„Mir, 1114101.1 111441.01 I
luti� � �lifrl (nOttrrli
)iiururi 1$ruirp
tiba r, Z4t1
11:00 a.m. --- "How Big Is One?"
Rev. W. J. Rogers, Erindale,
Guest Minister.
--- Special Music by the Choir •--
7:30 p.m. --- "Among the Baggage!"
Rev. W. J. Rogers, preaching.
--- Music by the Choir ---
111 x 1111.1 JIJI: hill loawidal.ill n0.0xbu-'• .1 ..1411.1.10 lis 61.,1,•.I111J.111.5111 41111111 111.1 le a 11 ,-5111111 .,
x 1 1 1 11 1 111 111 1 1 1 1 11 111 11 1 1 1111 11 1 11 1 111 111 1
11 III 1111 1 hill
DID YOV KNO'W'.: A
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 (o -operative Association
BRUSSELS 388W10 PHONES 1VINGHAM 1091
Wednesday, Sept. 20, 1961
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
". ............ �..,r ',O,,.••••1 ,...,,f..,
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
III. ,,.Ilii I III ,i,. III,. i.i!
SANITATION SERVICES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired.
Blocked drnin3 opened with modern
equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin
Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254.
Iltf.
WIIOO
BLY'TII BILLIARDS
"Your friendly sleeting
1
place.
►f
Tobaccos - Soft Drinks
Confectionaries
open 9 a,m, to 12 p.m.
Doc Cole, Proprietor
IVIVII.IMIIII.I. /.IIMI4 FNt,#JIV:
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-tf,
FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to All ;flakes of Vacuum
Cleaners. Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Ilensall, 696112, 50.13p.1f.
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 23812 Brussels, Onlar
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTII, ONT,
OFFICERS:
President - John L. Malone, Sea -
forth; Vice -President, John H, McEw•
ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS
J. L. Malone, 'Seaforth; J. I1. McEw
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton
Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep
per, Brucefield; C. W.-Leonhardl
Bornholm; It. Faller, Goderich; R
Archibald, Seaforlln; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr„ Londesbor'o; V
J. Lane, 11.11. 5, Seaforth; Selwyn Ba
ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth.
Harold Squires. Clinton.
DR. R. W. STREET
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance. Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No. 8 Highway, Phone JA 4.7231
Goderich, Ontario,
20-tf
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
I'11J'RED IUcIN'l'EE
Ileal Estate Broker
WALKERTON, ON{'ARiO
Agent; Vic Kennedy, Myth,
Phone 78.
ACIIESON'S DEM) STOCK SERVICE
$1.00 per 100 lbs. plus bonus for
fresh dead, old or disabled horses and
cattle, Please phone promptly to At-
wood, Zenith 34900 (no toll charge) or
Atwood 356-2622, collect. Seven day
service. License No. 103C61,
VACUUM.CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
caners and polishers. Filter Queen
, Varna. Tel. collect Hensel' 696112,
50.13p,tf.
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS -I P.M. TO 4 P.M.
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS,
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
ROY N. BENTLEY
Publlo Accountant
0O0ERICH, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 - Box 478,
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETR IST
PATRICK ST. • WINGHAM,. ONT.
EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT,
(For Appointment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination,
Optical Services.
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seatorth, Phone 791 - Clinton
HOURS:
Beaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. - 9:00 a.tn, to 12;30 p:m.
Clinton Office • Monday, 9 - 5;30.
Phone HU 2.7010
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT mon ES,
GODERICH S6•�'
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASA PRICES
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value
Old horses--ic per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels.
BRUCE MARLATT
OR
GLENN GiBSON, Phone 15R9, Blyth
24 dour Service
Plant Licence No. 54-R,P,-61
Colector Licence No. 88-G61
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cesspools, etc., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake,, phone 442W6, Brussels, RR. 2,
"IMMUNIZATION CLINICS"
"Immunization Clinics will be held
by the Health Unit at the Blyth Public
School from 3;00 - 4:00 p.m. on Sep-
tember 27th, October 25th and Novem
her 22nd. Polio' and other vaccina
will be available to both adults ani
'eschool children."
FOR SALE
Holstein 2nd calf heifer, due Septem
her 28th; 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 $8,000 yearly for the
right man. Can you make short auto
trips? Full or part time work. Can
you call on Rural, Town and City
dwellers? Are you prepared to start
at once? Write Sales Manager, Box
817, London, Canada. 26.4
UNWANTED HAIR
Vanished away with Saca-Pelo. San -
Fele is different. It does not dissolve
or remove hair from the surface, but
penetrates anl9 retards growth of un•
wanted hair. Lor -Beer Lab, Ltd., 5,
679 Granville, Vancouver 2, B.C.
27.4p.
Association
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE
Farmer owned and controlled
Service at cost
Chace of bull and breed
Our yrutftoamore fficient
artificial breedinge livestocwik
o
operation
For service or more information call:
Clinton 1IU 2.3441, or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9.5050.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARitisITERS & SOLICITORS
J, H, Crawford, R. S. Hettherington,
Q.C.
WInrhem end Blyth.
iN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNINU
end by appointment.
Located In Elliott Insurance Arenel
r
TRE BLYTH STANDARD
NMIINIIMINv '#LININ ,
BROWNIE'S
DRiVE•IN
THEATRE
CLINTON, ONTARIO
Thur,, Fri., Sept. 21, 22
Double Feature
"FLAMING STAR"
Colour -Scope .
ELVIS PRESLEY
Delores Del Rio • Barbara Eden
"12 Hours To Kill"
Scope -One Cartoon
Nice 1lhtardos • ilarbara Eden
Sal., Mon., Sept. 23, 25
Double Feature
"Tess Of The Storm
Country"
Colour - Scope
Diane Baker - Wallace Ford
"The Seven Thieve,"
Scope - One Cartoon
Edward G. Robinson - Joan Collins
Tues., Wed„ Sept. 26, 21
"THE LEAGUE OF
Jack Hawkins
One Cartoon.
Coming: "For The Love OF
Mike" and "Freckles"
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
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
AND OTHERS
iN TIIE MATTER OF THE ESTATE
OF MAUD BRYANT, late of the Town-
ship of Haat In the County of Huron,
Widow, 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
J. T. GOODALL, Solicitor for the Exe-
cutors of the said Estate, on or before
the 201h day of September, A.D. 1901,
and that after such date the Executors
will proceed to distribute the assets of
the said Estate, having regard only to
the claims of which they shall then
have had notice.
DATED at Wingham, Ontario, this
25th day of August, A.D. 1961,
J. T. GOODALL,
WINGHAM, Ontario,
Solicitor for the Executors
Phone Blyth,1 0 4 _
!gingham h;
273'
DE HAAN'S PIANO TUNING
Tuning, Repairing Organs and
Pianos, Phone 659W11, Listowel. 27.4p
THE WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Dungannon
Established 1878
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brown Smyth, A.R. 2,
Auburn; Vice -President, Herson Irwin,
Belgrave; Directors; Paul Caesar, 11.11.
I, Dungannon; George C. Feagan,
Goderich; Ross McPhee, R.R. 3, Au-
burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F.
MacLennan, 11.11. 3, Goderich; Frank
Thompson, R.R. 1, Holyrood; Wm,
Wiggins, 11.11. 3, Auburn,
For information on your insurance.
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, DuranPhillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
48,
AUCTION SALE
Clearing Auction Sade of Farm Stock
and Machinery al Lot 28, Concession 1
East IVawannsh 'fou nship !1 mile ease
of Auburn, en County Road, nn
MONDAY, OCTOBER 2nd
at 1 p.m.
CATTLE -2 red cows bred July 15;
Red roan cow; Red cow bred July 6;
ilcreford coax bred July; part Ayrshire
cow; Roan cow bred July; White face
hiller 2 years old; Red hei`rr In
months old; 5 yea: ting cattle; 7 calve.;.
MACHINERY -Case model S tractor;
Fleury 13issel.2 Iurrcw traclr.r plow;
McCormick Deering manure spreader;
cultivator disk; 6 it. McCormick mow-
er; roller; dump rake; hay loader;
16 fl. hay rack; walking plcw; milk
cart; set slei,hs; harrows; chicken
fountains and (mks; electric brood
er and bulbs; 140 It. extension cord;
32 ft. extension ladder; chicken crabs,
2 wheel trailer with stock rack; qurur
lily of look hay,
Other articles Ino nunnerous to morn -
lion,
No Reserve Farre Sold.
'I'EIt11s ('ASI(
Wilfred Fandercun, Proprietor,
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer.
George Pcv ell, Clerk.
Alit -1'10N SALE
Auction Foie of 40 ,1.'rsry and Glen,
sty Com. and Ileifers from 1 of 21, Con-
cession 6, Goderich '1 own dill), 1 mile
south of I'nttrs hill, no POIt:11,f:
TUE I)AY, St PTi?M1P It. 211,1
al 2.60 p.nt„ the fallowing
Ile;, Genesee Wheat; Com. Genesee
4D Jcr ey ;sad Guernsey CntV; a^d' 1` heat. Grotto en tiro 1: tnc. R. N.
heifers - In have recently Le.;hene:t. Ale:coler, Londesburu, Ont. 30.1
balance springing or milking and re' 1N1IE110RIA11
bred and guarantee'! to he in calf; I In loving memory R a dear Fath -1
2 hulMeics iec^ally freshened; 3 Ilol
y �tnd :r;rndfathcr, \Vm. 11. Govier, who
steins milkin; and redved; a number
Or- PAGE
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811
NOW PLAYING
Now Playing -"MISTY" A picture for (he entire family.
In Technicolor with David Ladd and Arthur O'Connell.
Mon., Tues„ Wed„ Sept. 25, 26, 27
FRED AS1AIRE • DEBBIE REYNOLDS and TATS IIUNTER
A cast, a story and a fun -show you will enjoy
"TILE PLEASURE OF I -IIS COMPANY"
In Technicolor
Thur„ rFl„ Sal., Sept. 28, 29, 30
CYI) CiIRIS'SI, • ERNIE KOVACS and GEORGE SANDERS
'rake us to the Italian Alps fur a satirical comedy
"FIVE G01,1)EN HOURS"
Also:• "'fhe Wonders of Puerta Rico . Rasslin Champs" and a cartoon
Coming --"Doctor In Love" with Michael Craig - Adult Entertainment
FOR £AI.E
A few Aberdeen Angus hull
herd accredited. Apply Carman L!;:in
phone 131110, Blyth. 30.1p.
calves Clinton Community
of young calves.
This is a good lot of cattle of fine
quality and condition and sold to staisfy
TERMS CASIi
A. E. Townshend & Son, Proprietors.
Edward W. Elliott, Auctioneer. 10.1
APPLES FOR SALE
CHOICE QUALITY MncINTOSII
FOR EATING
COOKING
and
CIDER
Get Your Winter's Supply By Calling
BI.VTIl 1510
or A'1' TIIE FARM 2! MILES EAST
Oi' BLVTII
H. BOYD TAYLOR
NORTHERN SPYS, RED
available, lair r
ORDERS TAKEN NOW
SPYS will
passed away two years ago, Septem-
ber 21, 1359.
1 he Golden Gate stood open,
'Iwo years ago today;
\; ith goodbye's lett unspoken,
Yeu gently slipped away.
-Lovingly remembered by family and
grandchildren. 30 -Ip.
CARD OF THANKS
The baby and 1 wish to thank those
who sent us cards and gifts, and visits
while a patient in Clinton Puddle llos
pilot. Special thanks to Dr. Street and
the nursing staff.
-Darlene and 'Trent Shobbrook.
30.1p.
1'()R STILE
Etec'lric ltaugcllc, in good condition.
Inquire at The Standard Office. 30-111
FOR SALE
be DeT<alb hybrid Pullets, all ages, rea
sona17e prices. For information call
11'nn, Carter, phone 12119, Blyth. 30-lp
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERL FRIDAY EVENIN AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 7:30 p.m.
iN BLYTH, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager. Auctioneer
05 -ti
FOR SALE OR RENT
65 acre grass farm, spring water, in
Township of Morris. Apply Laurence
Nesbit, phone 7237 Auburn. 29-3p
FOR SALE
7 ronin brick cottage with 3 -piece
bath, hardwood floors, heavy duty
in , situated on 11i11 SL. Blyth. Apply,
,ilex Wells, Londesboro, phone 49110
Blyth. 29.11.
HONEY FOR SALE
Honey in the comb; white honey in
your own container, 23c a lb,; 30 Ih.
or over 20c a Ib. Apply Sam Fear.
phore 36118, Blyth, after 4 p,m. or
Russell Fear 725W2, Wingham, 30-1
HOW MANY PAY THEIR BILLS BY CHEQUE ?
Nowadays most people do/Writing a cheque on your bank account is
the quick, handy way to pay for larger purchases as well as bills.
Canadians write almost three million cheques every banking day/Fast,
efficient handling of these cheques is accomplished by the clearing system.
maintained by the chartered banks and extending into every corner
of the nation /It makes possible the convenience, the simplicity and the -
safety you command every time you use your cheque book.
THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY
It's About Time To
Plant Those Bulbs
From September onward in
the north is the time to plant
spring -flowering bulbs, Daffodils
go in first, then hyacinths and
the little bulbs, 'Tulips can be
planted then or later, October
on into November — even as late
as the holes can be dug for them.
In warmer climates, keep bulbs
in the refrigerator until Decem-
ber, then plant.
Spring -flowering bulbs are so
beautiful and so easy to raise
that with a little care a long
season of bloom is practically
assured. Daffodils, narcissus, and
jonquils, alone, can be planned
to spread over many weeks. If
one begins with snowdrops, the
first harbingers of spring, and
ends with the handsome Darwin
and Breeder tulips, the bulb -
flowering season will stretch
from February into May with
a constant unfoldment of loveli-
ness.
Following the snowdrops are
the winter aconite, crocus, and
chiondoxa. Then come scillas and
grape hyacinths. Daffodils are
going on at the same time, and
the quaint species tulips, Kauf-
mannicra and fosteriana,
By then, the colorful tulip
parade starts, with the early
singles and doubles, and on into
the parrot and cottage and late
doubles, ending with the Darwin
and Breeder.
If you add some of the other
"lesser" bulbs like Scilla cam-
panulta (wood hyacinth) and
Dutch iris, you have an exciting
display — all for planting bulbs
in the autumn.
It is better to get a few first-
rate bulbs than many second-
rate ones. Even when planting,
say, 50 daffodils on the edge of
the woodland for naturalizing,
It is best to buy good bulbs.
some dealers sell then for natur-
alizing at quantity rates, speci-
fying that they are top-quality
but not named.
Good root development in
autumn is important. Success
calls for loose soil that the
roots can penetrate, plus enough
moisture, If the ground is dry,
soak it well before digging. Dig
the whole area deeply, ' then
smooth it over and place the
bulbs where you are going to
plant them. The bulbs are plant-
ed pointed end up.
If the soil is clayey a soil
conditioner should be added. For
the first-year blooms the flower's
already are formed in the bulbs,
so fertilizer is not essential, al -
thought enriched soil is always a
good idea. After blooming they
should be fed so they can build
up for the next season, Good
drainage is important.
Some shade also is important
during the summer after they
have bloomed.
How deep to plant each kind
and how far apart depends to an
extent on the size of the bulb,
also on the soil. Late planting
in sandy loam can be less deep
than early in heavier soil,
When you plant tulips, daffo-
dils, or hyacinths in a perennial
border, plan groupings by color,
advises The Bulb Growers of
Holland. Keep the surrounding
plants in mind in ordering, and
get complementary shades, Plant
five or six of one variety in
a small border, a few dozen in
a large border. A mass of one
color is more dramatic than a
spotty mixture.
And don't forget the "lesser"
bulbs. Grape hyacinth, crocus,
chiondoxa, scilla, and the species
tulips and tiny fragrant jonquils
and narcissus are too exquisite to
miss. You will he glad next
spring that you added them.
DRIVE WITH CARE !
baptism of Fire for Red Cross Disaster Relief
Victitnc of the lire ht Michigan's Thumb Country crowd
floors and stairs of iam-packed Bad Axe Court House.
The fire that swept the Thumb Country of north-
eastern Michigan in September, 1881, brought first
operation of what is now the American Red Cross
Disaster Services. Artists for Harpers Weekly maga-
zine at the time captured as best they could details
of the disaster, More than 200 died, and some 15,000
persons were made homeless by the fire. The fledging
f2.4TABLE TALKS
� ,> clatve Andrews
One of the biggest U.S. makers
of glass jars publishes a leaflet
titled "Homemakers Earn $150,-
000,000", It says "20,000,000 or
more women get an average of
10 saved pennies for each quart
of fruit, vegetables, and relish
canned at home. Pennies add up
to $150,000,000 a year, And they
get them tax free!"
+ + «
Further on in the leaflet was
this: "How is it possible to esti-
mate the amount saved by can-
ning? Start with the assumption
that a jar will give service for
10 years," Estimates were then
given for cost of jar and fuel,
and concluded with: "Add this
to cost per quart for produce,
sugar, and seasoning, Then com-
pare cost of the home -canned
food with the purchase price of
the same amount factory can-
ned."
The last paragraph in the leaf-
let asked: "What other than cash
saved are the dividends of home
canning?" Answer: "Good -tast-
ing meals, well-nourished bodies,
freedom from worry over food
costs, opportunity to exercise or
develop creative ability. But for
many it is the fellowship and
respect which result when
mother, father, and children take
an active part in a mutually
worthwhile project."
«
* «
Before you begin your can-
ning or jelly -making, read these
few extra hints: "A teaspoon of
sugar added before closing the
jar for processing helps the
flavor of canned beets, corn,
carrots, and peas. If the recipe
calls for sugar it will be all the
better for a smidgen of salt. Yes,
that goes for jam and jelly too.
Peaches and pears for canning
are easier to handle if cut into
halves, and peaches pitted and
pears cored before peeling. For
a new, special taste, add a table-
spoon of corn syrup to each
quart of tomatoes before process-
ing."
* „
Canned Apples — Hot Pack
Make a light or medium syrup.
Add 2 tablespoons salt and 2
tablespoons vinegar to 1 gallon
of water, Wash, drain, core, pare,
and slice apples, or cut into
halves or quarters. Drop apples
CONCRETE CURTAIN — An East Berlin girl (foreground), now
living in the western sector, talks to her mother over the con-
crete wall that divides the city. Later Communist police used
tear gas grenades to stop the people from fraternizing over
the wall,
TUNNEL TOGS — It's the pro-
verbial man from Mars again.
Pennsylvania Turnpike tunnel
guard Samuel Gabler leaves
an emergency truck at the
Kittatinny Mountain Tunnel.
Outfitted in the latest fire
fighting gear, Gabler is ready
for any incident at one of the
pikes eight tunnels.
into salt -vinegar water. Rinse
apples and then boil them in
syrup for 5 minutes. Pack hot
fruit into hot jars. Cover with
hot syrup, Process 20 minutes in
boiling -water bath,
Canned Apples for Ties
Follow above recipe, but use 1
cup sugar for 4-5 cups of water
when making syrup.
Canned Applesauce
Wash and drain fresh, sound
apples. Remove sterns and blos-
som ends, Slice apples; cook un-
til soft. (May need a little water
to prevent sticking.) Press ap-
ples through sieve or food mill
to remove skins and seeds.
Sweeten sauce to taste, Reheat
to boiling, Pour, boiling hot, into
hot jars. Stir to remove air
bubbles, Process 20 minutes in
boiling -water bath,
Note: Duchess and other ap-
ples which "sauce" without
straining should be pared and
cored before cooking.
«
* *
When wintry winds blow and
snow coVers the ground, there's
nothing like a bowl of hot soup
to start your meal, Here is a
vegetable soup mixture that you
may want to can now and use
on cold days.
Vegetable Soup Mixture
5 quarts chopped tomatoes
2 quarts of sliced okra or 2
quarts green lima beans
2 quarts corn
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons salt
Wash and drain vegetables.
Chop and measure red -ripe to-
matoes, Cook until soft. While
tomatoes are cooking, slice okra
(or shell beans), cut corn from
cob. Measure. Press tomatoes
through sieve. Mix tomatoes,
vegetables, sugar, and salt. Boil
until thick. Pour hot, into hot
jars, Process pints 55 minutes,
quarts 65 minutes, at 10 pounds
pressure. Note: Any mixture of
vegetables may be canned for
soups. Prepare vegetables for
cooking, Mix. Add water or
broth to cover. Boil 5 minutes.
Pour, hot, into hot jars. Process
for the length of time required
by the vegetable in the mixture
that needs the longest process-
ing,
"Supplies at Cass City" is caption on sketch made follo►� ing
Michigan fire of 1881. 'Young lied Cross brought relief.
organization, "Clara Burton's Red Cross Society," col-
lected supplies from just -formed chapters in Dans-
ville, Rochester, and Syracuse, N.Y., for delivery to
stricken residents. Red Cross disaster services total
some $32a million spent in 7,800 relief operations
over the 80 intervening years since the first big test
in fire -ravaged farm and woodland areas of Michigan.
Women's Opinions On
Modern Packaging
If you ever have had to keep
peace at the breakfast table by
searching around in the cereal
carton for a plastic premium,
or if you ever have thrown the
frozen food wrapper away only
to discover that cooking in-
structions were on it, or if you
ever have tried to select the
charmed thread that unlocks
the sugar or flour bag—unsuc-
cessfully — the packaging in-
dustry wants to know you
better.
Already, the industry has
found out a lot about people
and packaging through a recent
survey in Chicago, Seattle,
Philadelphia, St, Louis, Cincin-
nati, and Kokomo, Ind,
If some of the findings seem
obvious, they also must be seen
as matters of important routine
that too many may be taking too
much for granted.
The study — sponsored by
Chicago Printed String Company
which, as a manufacturer of
package — opening tapes and
strings has a special interest in
packaging problems — shows
housewives complaining most
about packages that are difficult
to open, those that require use
of instruments in opening, that
tip or will not fit on shelves,
those that cannot be reclosed
properly, that give incomplete,
inaccurate, or obscure directions,
and those that do not stay neat
looking,
The housewives most like
packages with spouts and pull
tapes; plastic containers and
jars that can be reused easily;
cereals and other packages with
reclosable tops,
The women feel packaging has
improved in the past 10 years,
but 40 per cent of those survey-
ed (300 wives and husbands in
total) contend that the nation is
overpackaged,
There is a strong but defini-
tely minority sentiment that
yearns for the old pickle barrel
manner of merchandising.
Sixty-one per cent of the
survey respondents appealed
for rip -tape -type openers which
allow a pull of a string to open
a container.
Consumers like spuots on
packages—if the spouts are
sturdy and won't fall inside the
packages when pushed—bona
fide perforations which "give"
when punched, cellophane tape
and adhesive tape and other
simple package openers,
Complained one housewife:
"If you are a married woman
and your husband comes hones
at night and says: 'What did
you do all day?' and all you
can say is 'I opened the sugar
bag;' this is hardly stimulating
conversation for the dinner
table."
What about prepackaging
foods, meats ospecially? Most
consumers like the convenience
and santiary aspects of pre-
packaging, but they clo not al-
ways feel they get as good
quality as with nand -picked
products.
"Int prepackaged meals they
always have the nice side up
and you can never turn it
over," one woman commented,
writes Robert Colby Nelson in
the Christian Science Monitor.
One major complaint concern-
ing prepackaging has to do with
the need for rewrapping such
items. Nearly half the consum-
ers said they have to rewrap
many such items, and of those,
83 per cent said they do not like
to do it.
As for coupons and premiums
on packages, these rouse nixed
reactions. Premiums that come
ISSUE 38 — [961
with packages are much more
popular, it was found, than
coupons for discounts or coupons
that had to be "sent in" to re-
ceive the premium,
Some object to premiums
placed within the boxes be-
cause, it is felt, they short
change the buyer by taking up
product space.
Resentment is greater when
the premium included is some-
thing that the consumer has no
particular need or desire for but
must accept because she wants
to buy that particular brand,
Others feel that if a manufac-
turer can offer a cost-cutting
coupon, provide a "bargain"
offer, or give a worthwhile free
item, then that sante manufac-
utrer should be able to lower
the price of the product.
Complaints or not, 75 per cent
of the consumers questioned
admitted having at one time
purchased an item because of
the premium offer involved.
Parental Observation: "We're
not taking a vacation this year
but then we did send the chil-
dren to camp."
When Mark Twain
Lectured In London
For this London campaign he
had an entourage, having hired
Charles Warren Stoddard at $10
a week to serve as so-called sec-
retary, companion, and amateur
stage manager. The wages were
theoretical, for Stoddard refused
to accept pay for congenial du-
ties.. ,
They moved into a large cor-
ner suite of the Langham hotel,
overlooking spires and hundreds
of smoking chimney -pots, and
fell into a pleasant routine, The
day began with breakfast . .
occasionally with friends, at
twelve -thirty. Then they read
the papers and the mail, which
usually came up '.\ Ith the fiat
round of toasted :nof;ins, After
that they took a w: all; through
a park or Hollywcll Street or
into Portland Place to see the
horse Guards. Jic turning to the
Langham they tills( d afternt gat
talk with music, '1a k Twain
singing jubilee :ong,t er "Con
Bowline" to his own piano ac-
companiment. Sc.:nc:ince dur-
ing the clay Strdd_iid brought
the scrapbook up to elate, scan-
ning a dozen paler, for notices
that he carefully ciil.ped and
pasted in with such i,•ving care
After dinner the a'mled e\e-
ning dress, and .., .:30 arriwcd
at the anteroem :n 1-lancver
Square. For the w.t. half ht ur
Stoddard ;toed at t to window
counting cat'tia..c , \l file Mirk
Twain strode abi.it the t'cenl
with such re: tit impatience
that Dolby setltlli:nes i►ad to
calm him down, 1,t eight pre-
cisely Stoddard l • ''rued the
speaker to the Iota of the sti.ps
leading to the st.,, c, ;'n n retired
to the royal box.
Mtu'k 'swain's (i;.;.t a; tion ::le
to walk to the f::,:;ig'its, Lok
over the house, anti.: :on his bards
like Lady MacBelh. Stoddard no-
ted the extreme (IL ib':ratton of
speech and the v :y sag e;'feet lit
jokes: a pleasantry mat brought
down the hou.,e one night caused
only a mild i'p,-:e another.
Laughter was sonut.'imc; hearty
and spontaner_us, sometimes
sporadic, somctim.s an isolated
outburst that gradually spread
over the whole :ud'.rnee. Once
fog, laden with seeped in
to becloud the c:'.ul`toriun: rn
such hazy gloom twat Mt.rk
Twain, a .shadowy f: .tire halr,ed
by misty light, :'c assured his
listeners: "Perhaps ; n.l can't : ce
me, but I'm here." — From
"Mark 'twain on :he Lecture
Circuit," by Paul Fatout.
Fashion Hint
Fifty -Mile Trip
Without Stopping
Boston was a happier place in
those day,;. You drove the car
up to the Parker 'louse, left it
at the curb, had a leisurely
meal, and then drove it off again
from the front entrance. No fuss,
no parking bother, The only dif-
ficulty - it was 1902.
"1 frequently run into Boston
just for lunch," reported Robin
Darvon, "for as the distance is
but 16 miles and the roads level
I usually cover the trip in an
hour; just time enough to add
tone to the appetite."
Mr, Danson tells about it in the
"Experience & Comments" col-
umn, page 208, of the Jan. 22,
issue of The Horseless Carriage,
"After arriving at whatever
hotel is selected there is no
trouble to care for the machine.
I simply leave it in the street
and when ready to go home just
turn the crank and fly away.
No one ever expects to drive a
horse 16 miles in an hour and
then go home within an hour or
two. Besides, a horse is a bother,
because it must be put in a stable
and fed. In emergencies I have
been able to get away in less
than one minute, and be two
miles away in ten minutes. It is
the quickness of operation that
recommends the horseless veil.
cle."
If Mr. Damon could get two
miles out of Boston in 10 min-
utes he did better than we can.
Of course as he pop -popped into
sight he had a clear path - all
the horses tried to climb lamp-
posts.
You can't blame lir. Damon
for being a bit smug, "I have fre-
quently started on 50 mile trips,"
he reports, "and made the dis-
tance without once stopping the
carriage,"
In those days you bought a
horseless carriage and it was de-
livered by freight train. Then a
man from the factory came "in
about three days" to tell you
how to run it. But often, as in
Mr. Damon's experience, he didn't
come, Then you hired a local
machinist, read the meager in-
structions, and launched the
palpitating craft yourself.
Mr. Damon and his local
mechanic "worked for three
hours before we could get a
single snort from the engine. One
difficulty was that it took about
87 horsepower to turn the en-
gine over the compression, for
there was nothing said about
the release cock. It was a hot
day, too."
But victory at the end! "At
last with a pound, and a tremen-
dous rush of black smoke, the
motor commenced to mote."
Who doesn't feel a thrill at
BERLIN BISHOP - Pope John
XXIII has appointed Most Rev.
Alfred Bengsch to be Bishop of
Berlin. Rev. Bengsch, who lives
in East Berlin, will be cut off
from visits to West Berlin. He
succeeds Julius Cardinal Doepf•
ner, who becomes Catholic
Archbishop of Munich.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Matron
5. Crisp cookie
9. Spigot
12. Short jncicet
13. Speed
'15. Thaw
16. Telephone
girl
17. American
rodman
:19. Jfohnmmcdae
priest
20. Salad plant
23. Cut oft
26 Flower
28. Fruit of the
rose
80. Chemical
combining
form
81. Armed
conflict
82. Type size
$4. Pipe fitting
35. Yale
$6. Adage
37. On one's
guard
,09. Empty to a
mass
'41. Location
143. Afternoon
functions
455. Yeast
9. Motherly
S. Terrible
8. Genus of Wild
orchids
Otherwle2
g5. Norse gog
T.OrRiin pipe
AU
1.1=121811 .iii Newfoundland
declares emergency at height
of raging forest fires,
res Frenchman .•
ilac $ alr nor to Havana;
80 passengers and plans
ars retuned.
GUST 3 fithir-son tom fall -�
n attempt to hijack airliner
to Havana,ars captured 1e
I I taco.
Britain
app fes or a • mission
into European
Common Market,
AUGUST;9
34 vocalic, , EOM East Germae
ritish schoolboys killed , Red; shut down city's border
In plane crash in Norway. ' crossings to halt flow of
refugees and begin erecting
brick and barbM wire
barricade' tension grows
as Allies protest.
llte1.11411114 Russia announces
it will resume nuclear testing.
�AUGU
AU(,,US 1 30
tnslddpennt�t Ile
Fre Intfiottlart fo
manta Orli War. _
THEFARM FRONT
JokA
ED, NOTE: The following
article is taken from the wide-
ly -circulated British weekly
"Tit -Bits". We reproduce it here
for what it is worth,
* $
4'
Modern chemistry has pro-
duced many poisons of incredi-
ble power which help the farm-
er in his battle against insects.
Some of then are "selective"
and will kill one class of crea-
ture but not another, But some
are deadly poison to man.
New insecticides are invented
every year and are put on the
market after short-term tests.
, But only now are we discover-
ing the dreadful long-term ef-
this crisis? Mr. Damon's first
trip round was entirely in low
gear, two hours without stop-
ping, "when the machine sud-
denly collapsed" at this tough
treatment. "The chain had
stretched and jumped a tooth"
and the "low speed driving shaft
was red hot." What to do? -
"the machinist fixed the chain
and we poured water on the
shaft,"
Mr, Damon was no fool, writes
Richard L. Strout in the Chris -
tion Science Monitor. Nobody
could say the machine wasn't
sturdy, he observed, because it
still ran after all this abuse, The
next trip round he had learned
about his "high speed clutch."
Then "there was perfect bliss,"
Mr. Damon had no trouble
after that for two weeks except
that the muffler exploded, Also
the engine began pounding as
though hit with a sledge hammer
and it occurred to him after a
while that the "cooling tank
was empty."
Wonderful cars were the
motors of old! - they contended
with incredible roads and with
drivers ignorant as Indians. All
credit to the pioneers also who
would spend two hours in the
hot sun cranking the mysterious
contraptions without knowing
about the "release cock,"
Mr, Damon summed it all up:
About everything had happen-
ed to him, he said simply, that
could happen to a beginner, "and
I now know almost everything
came f r o m inexperience in
operating."
A gay recklessness ruled. Driv-
ing with a second beginner, Mr.
Danson reported, "the latter
suddenly shouted, 'how do you
stop the thing?' Before I could
tell him we bumped into the rear
of the other automobile,
"I told 11in1 always to select a
wagon to stop against, for it had
more spring than a tree or post,"
3. Persian fairy 27. Verso of three
9. Salt of titanic foot
acid 29. Quietness
10. Spray 33. hiatus
11. Unit of light
33 First fiddle
Intensity 40. Portion
42. Soothe
14. Ilydraulic 44. District in
DOWN pumps London
40. Degrading
47. 11aelle
48, Require
49, floor
covering-
511
overing511 1,1111111
51. Peer Uynt'e
mother
1. Half (prefix 18. Tapestry
2. Solar dirt: 21. Sleeveless
wrap
3. fashion 22. Perch
4 Wheedle 24. Bard
5, Scotch cake 25. Impressed
6, Catnip with wonder
7. Malt beverage 20. healthful
1 2 3• 4
12
15
17
18
6 7 8 9 ro 11
13 '4
19
21 22. h -,X 23
24
Answer elsewhere
on this page,
fects they may have on the peo-
ple who constantly handle then,
Years later they niay develop
skin cancer or suffer from ob-
scure nervous disorders. Users
of one class of insecticide intro-
duced fifteen years ago are now
going temporarily mad, A few
have died.
The "organophosphorus" in-
secticides, or organic phosphates,
used to spray fruit trees and
greenhouse plants, are the dead-
ly agents, They are applied to
the leaves and branches before
the fruit appears.
They destroy insects by put-
ting their nerves out of action.
They are not swallowed, but
absorbed through the softer
parts of the insects' skin and
through their breathing -holes.
They also readily penetrate the
human skin,
A minute quantity may be
enough to kill an insect. The
same amount has no noticeable
effect on man, but repeated
doses mount up and may reach
dangerous levels after some
months of constant handling or
splashing.
A year or more may pass be-
fore a man Is known to be poi-
soned by his own insecticide.
• • •
One worker began handling
these poisons in 1956, without
wearing protective clothing or
gloves, as advised by the manu-
facturers.
After one year he complained
of nausea and pains in the chest,
but this was attributed to indi-
gestion. in 1959 he suffered
from cramp in the limbs and his
sight was affected.
In 1960 he was admitted to
hospital with severe migraine
and general mental disturbance.
He suffered from insomnia,
irritability and a feeling of anx-
iety, and strange ideas began to
enter his head. They took the
form of religious mania, and he
thought he was urgently needed
in Rome to replace the Pope.
Nothing could be done for him.
He was sent home and began.
to lose his memory. ]:-Ie mis-
placed his feet when trying to
walk and failed to focus his eyes
properly when looking at any-
thing. He found himself doing
peculiar things.
This man gradually recover-
ed, and a study of his and other
cases showed how the poison
works in the human body, It
affects the central nervous sys-
tem, causing damage that can be
permanent if it is not checked
in time. • • •
The phosphorus atoms are re-
sponsible.
Phosphorus is essential to hu-
man life, It is an important
constitutent of bone and we take
inorganic phosphates as nerve
tonics.
But the phosphorus in the in-
secticides is not available for the
body's use and there is far too
little of it to cause ordinary
"phosphorus p o i s o n i n g." It
works in a far more dangerous
way. The body's private "tele-
graph," that controls the beating
of the heart and other vital
motions, and that enables us to
"give orders" to our limbs when
we wish to mOve, is the nervous
system.
Here and there, but especially
in the spinal cord, there are au-
tomatic
u-
ton1atic switchboards. The
phosphorus insecticides j a m
these, so that some • messages
fail to get through,
Experiments with a n t111 a 1 s
have proved this by producing
paralysis in the legs of dogs and
hens, and shows how dangerous
these insecticides can be on
farms where livestock is kept.
These poisons work in the sante
way as the deadly "nerve gases"
developed -but fortunately nev-
er used -for chemical warfare.
* • •
The nt:.1 puwer,ul poison
AUGUST 17
10 ear inter-
merican Alliance for Progress
• pact s�ned In Uruguay.
Maj. Gherman
itov orbits earth in
sutcllito; lands after 11
trips, 435,000 miles,
1.),;1+ 1 il 16 American
to ;,;,; drown when tourist
bus plunges into Lake
'Ik'r�� Lucerne, Switzerland,
French ;'t fighter
cuts cable carry: ::ars at
Mount elan:; J parsons
plunge to death, 81 others
eventually rcuc.led.
known -cause of food -poisoning
cases known as "botulism" -
works in a sirnilar way. It Ls
produced by a bacterium in air -
sealed canned vegetables that
have not been properly steril-
ized. Cases of botulism to -day
are extremely rare,
Many of these drugs cause
hallucinations, and are used for
this purpose by witch -doctors.
The new insecticides, in which
phosphorus atones do the dan-
gerous work, have similar men-
tal effects.
• * •
The patients fall into two main
classes -depressives and schizo-
phrenics. Schizophrenia is com-
monly known as "split person-
ality" and sufferers are liable to
behave like two different people.
A man of thirty was poisoned
by an insecticide spray and
shortly afterwards became con-
vinced that some of his col-
leagues intended to shoot hitn.
When alone he heard "voices"
discussing it.
He switched on the radio and
imagined he heard the announ-
cer talking about it!
Isis behaviour became so
strange that people in the street
stared at him, and this convinced
him that he was a marked man.
He became terrified and was
eventually admitted to a mental
hospital, • . •
Paranoid schizophrenia was
diagnosed, and after a course of
treatment he was discharged as
apparently well. His recovery
was due to the slow elimination
of the poison from his body.
Altogether about sixteen cases
of insecticide poisoning have
been intensively studied. In
seven of them the first diagnosis
was made by psychiatrists. There
were three scientific officers
studying insect sprays, eight
workers in greenhouses and five
farm workers.
• • *
A third of them showed tend-
ency to split personality and the
other's suffered from severe de-
pression or were liable to lose
consciousness at odd times,
In nearly all cases the memory
was impaired and some had dif-
ficulty in speaking clearly.
The final solution lies with
the chemists. They are busy
devising super -insecticides that
-like D.D.T.-distinguish be-
tween insects and man. There
is no doubt that this is possible.
A nerve poison has been found
already that distinguishes -not
very usefully, perhaps -between
dogs and toads. It kills cattle
but is one hundred times less
-1 ew.
''�iilewsmap
poisonous to rats and 10,000
times less effective for toads.
Unfortunately it is dangerous
to man, but any day may bring
the news of a safe insecticide
that is really harmless to men
and animals.
Expensive Way
Of Catching Mice
You know the fellow who
talked about better mousetraps
and a beaten path to your door?
Well, he was wrong.
Who says so?
Paul Zinkann of Akron, Ohio,
says so. What's more, he has
4,000 better mousetraps and
$60,000 worth of red ink to
prove it.
As president and sole owner
of the Pioneer Tool & Die Co,,
Zinkann was first ensnared four
years ago when he signed a con-
tract with a Cleveland firm call-
ed the Self Sett Mouse Trap Co.
to manufacture a Rube Gold-
berg -style device which leads
mice through a complicated one-
way maze, up a tiny ladder,
eventually dropping them into
a water tank to drown. Under
the arrangement, each would
put up half the cost of making
the 11/2 -foot -long baited steel
traps.
As it turned out, the traps
worked fine; but at $29.95 each,
there were few takers, Three
years and $60,000 later, Self
Sett went bankrupt, and Zin-
kann took over. By knocking
the price down to $15, he man-
aged to unload 1,000 traps and
still hopes to regain some of his
investment. As proof of his faith
in the gadget, Zinkann still
keeps two on duty around his
plant, One has caught 108 mice
in eight hours. Zinkann looks
back on the whole affair calmly.
"You might say," he said last
month, "that I simply got
mousetrapped."
•
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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)1IIAY SCilOOl
IFSSON
By Rev, R. B. Warren, B,A., B.D,
Gains, a Christian Layman:
Third John
Memory Selection: I have nil
greater joy than to hear that my
children walk in truth, Third
John, verse 4,�
In today's lesson we have the
portrait of three men, Gaius
Diotrephes and Demetrius. Lei
us consider them in the reverse
order.
Demetrius had a good report
of all men and of the truth.
He did things honest in the sight
of all men. He represented the
Christian faith well. Some pro-
fessed Christians strive to please
their associates but do not com-
mend themselves to those out-
side the faith. Sonie are Phara-
siacal and adopt a "holier than
thou" attitude. Some, while ap-
pearing kind to their own, appear
surly to others and evidence
covetous traits. How are sinners
likely to want to know Jesus
Christ if His professed followers
do not show forth His Spirit.
Diotrephes assumed the posi-
tion of church boss. It is a sad
state when one man rules the
church. Much power tends to
corrupt. He even talked against
John and he decided who of the
brethren would be admitted to
the church. The editor of a
church paper once wrote an edi-
torial on Diotrephes, the church
boss. Thirty men wrote in can-
celling their subscription for
what they termed. "the personal
attack on me". What makes fer-
tile soil for the development of
a church boss, is the utter indif-
ference of so many members,
when it comes to caring for the
business of th- church. Indiffer-
ence of voters in a democracy
paves the way for a dictator-
ship.
Gaius was well -beloved. He
was given to hospitality. In the
early days in this country, the
travelling missionary on com-
ing to a community to hold
meetings would be entertained
for a week or two in one home
and then he would go to another.
Today he would be sent to the
hotel. The prophet's room (see
2 Kings 4) isn't in many homes.
Twenty-six years ago today,
(August 31), I married a girl
from a home that was noted for
its hospitality. Ministers and
their families, as well as others,
knew they would receive a
hearty welcome at any time.
Three of the daughters married
ministers.
John wished Gaius prosperity
and health, even as his soul pros-
pered. There is more connection
here than many realize. What
would be the state of your health
if it depended entirely on your
spiritual condition?
THIRD IIAND FOR LADIES
To help women who have
trouble juggling mirror, make-
up kit, and applicator when put-
ting on mascara, a New York
outfit is marketing its Eye -See.
It's a magnifying mirror held in
place by eyeglass frames and a
strut from the bridge of the
nose. It thus leaves both hands
free to manipulate the make-up.
ISSUE 38 - 1961
No Pillows Needed
For These 'Troops'
Front-line "troops" in the war agairo, army worm hordes
ravaging Egypt's cotton crop are the drums of insecticide,
above, aboard a passenger plane. "Enemy," left, is "Pro-
denia litura," a type of army worm Drums are but pall of
some two million pounds of insecticide airlifted by com-
mercial airlines and MATS planes in a massive air freight
operation. Egyptian agriculturalists became aware of the
new insecticide through exchanges with other resec.rchers,
and through the recent international Agricultural Exposi-
tion in Cairo. Egypt purch7-e1 the chem'; -:1. Ai lift cot
under way 24 hours after the need b::ante known,
PAOi 9
CROP REPORT
Fairly good harvest conditions during
the past week has allowed most of the
farmers to wind up harvest operations.
Bean harvest is progressing favourably
with very little, if any pick. Some far.
mers have started to ensile their cora,
it is quite mature. Calf.prices have ta•
ken a jump and are hard to secure al
the moment.
—D. H. Miles, Ag. Rep.
WANTED
Vinegar jugs, clean and with caps
will pick up, B. 'Taylor, phone 15H3.
Blyth. 30.1p.
Order Your Counter Cheque
Books (printed or blank)
At The Standard Office
HEAR
The Ritchie Evangelistic Party
in the
WINGIIAM BAPTIST CHURCII
John and Edward Sts, Winghaln, Ont,
WEDNESDAY, SEPT;MBER 20th, to OCT. 1st
SUNDAYS 11 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. • WEEK NIGHTS 8 p.m.
The Ritchtes have recently returned from an extensive evangelistic
tour of Great Britain and Sweden.
GREAT. MUSICAL TREAT
424 Sleigh Bells 28 Musical Glasses • 32 Hand Bells
Set of Silver Cord Bells, played by Mrs, Ritchie
Music with a Charm - Messages with a Challenge
. 1w. . , I u u 1 Id • Luau .11Y..0 , 1 • 11 I
FALL FOOD FESTIVAL
HEINZ TOMATO KETCHUP
2.11oz, Bottles 45c
NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT
18 oz. pkg. 24c
MAN'S SIZE FACELLE TISSUES
large pkg. 27c
SWIFT'S PREM LUNCHEON MEAT
12 oz, tin 39c
CLARK'S BEANS .with PORK
2.15 oz. tins 31c
CHEERY MORN COFFEE
1 lb. bag 65c
For Superior Service
Phone 156
■--
See Fairservice
y We Deliver
1 1 -
Stewart's
Red C3 White Food Market
_ Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
No. 1 Grade Chickens, 3 lb. average , ...per lb. 31c
No. 1 Small Cooking Onions 101b. bag 39c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 lb. bag 99c
Quaker Oates, lge. pkg. 43c
Aylmer Catsup, 11 oz. bottle 2 for 37c
Kraft Cheez Whiz, 16 oz. jar 55c
Habitant Table Syrup, 16 loz, jug 27c
Swift's Brookfield Cream Cheese, 2 lb, pkg. 97c
Peameal Cottage Rolls per lb. 49c
Stokley's Ping, 48 oz. tin 3 for 1.00
Raspberry and Strawberry Jain, 24 oz. jar ,... 39c
Gem and Sunbrite Margerine 4 lbs. 99c
No. 1 White Ontario Honey 4 Ib. tin 99e
Redpath Sugar , 10 ib. bag 81c
RED and WHITE BONUS OFFER ---
Roslyn Brand Blankets, full 72" x 84" size, 6"
satin bindh ig, Only $3.95 with $5.00 purchase.
r
•
THE BLY'i H STANDARD
AUBURN NEWS
Sunday visitors with \L•. and Mrs.
Meredith Young and family were,
and Airs. Percy Riley and Laverne,
Mr. and AL's. Clarence Crawford, II.IH.
1, Auburn, A1r. and Alrs. Larne Popp
and family, of Blyth, Mr. and Mrs. W.
H. Wilson Sr., Mr. and Mrs, 13111 Wit -
son Jr., Arta Lee and Ronald, all oI
Sault Ste Alarie, and Mr, and Mrs.
Fred Aliddleton, Clinton.
'Mr. Watson Chin and Mr, William
van Deursen have returned to An(h'evv.=
University, Berrien Spring, Michigan
after (laving spent the past sunnier at
the heme of AL's. Stanley Johnston
Air. Arthur (range of the James Hay
district rcturr.ed to his position there
after a week spent 'illi his t'ife and
family.
The Executive of the horticultural
Saciely- 0101 last week at the home at
the president, AL's. Kenneth Scott. Th;
minutes were read by Airs. Davies in
the absence of the secretary, Mrs.
Gcrdon I1, 'Taylor. Plans were discus
sod to do sonic tall planting; of bulb,
to help beautify the surroundings of
the new Alcnlorial Community Ilail.
Airs. Ed. Davies and Mrs. Heil Crain
were appointed delegates to the dist
rict meeting to be held at Lucknuw
the later part of September. A specia
open meeting is planned for October
with a special speaker. Mrs. Roberl
J. Phillips pinned a lovely corsage of
(It's. James llembly and Mrs. Scull
Presented Mrs. lleibly with a girl o1
behalf of the Society. Mrs, ]lenbly
has been an active member of the ex
ecutire for the past five years they
have resided in Auburn. She and All
Hembly twill be moving soon to Dubli
where he has been transferred as nian
ager of the Imperial Bank of Com
coerce in that village. Mrs. IlemblV
thanked the Society for the gift and
lunch was served by the hostess, as.
sisted by Mrs. Hobert J. Phillips.
Guild Meeting
The Guild of SL Mark's Anglican
Church nlel at the home of Airs, hm'ct
yce Clark with a large attendance o
members And visitors. The hostess
led the meeting and gave the devotion.
' al thoughts, reading the twenty-scconi
chapter of the Gospel of 5L Luke. The
topic was on "The Beatitudes" and
•
this was given by Airs, Roy .11acr. At;
interesting report of the work clone by
the women in the Diocese of Huron
was read by Mrs. Thomas Ilaggitt.
president, Ali's. T. haggitt, presided
for the business meeting. The minutes
of the previous meeting were read by
Mrs. Ed. Davies and the treasurer.
Airs. Gordon R. Taylor, gave the fin-
ancial statement. The roll call was
answered by naming their favourite.
Parable. A letter from the Unitarian
Relief was laid over for another meet-
ing, Airs. William Clarke showed in-
teresting coloured slides of local scenes.
A card of sympathy was signed by
all the members to be sent to the rec•
tor's wife, who had recently received
word that her mother had passed away
in England. After a successful auction
conducted by A's. Davies, lunch was
served by the hostess, assisted by hot
daughter, Alt's. Laurence Nesbit, and
Mrs. Orval Mci'hee,
Ida White Group Aleeting
The first nlceting of the fall season
for the Ida White Group Children of
the Church was held in the Sunday
school room with the president, Marion
Youngblut, in charge. Mrs. Donald
Baines was at the piano. The scrip-
ture lesson was read by Eddie Haines
and Joyce Leatherland led in prayer,
The roll call was answered by naming
one thing they had done during the
vacation holidays. The leader, Mrs.
Wilfred Sanderson, told the story, "The
hole in the roof." It was about a Itttle
boy on an island in the Pacific Ocean
where there was only one Bible for
all the residents on the island and
the great joy when the supply ship
came once a year with a large chest
full of Bibles, one for each family,
Air. and Mrs. Guy Cunningham were
guests of honor last Saturday evening
at the home of Air. and Mrs. Joe Ve•e-
wey when they enterl'ained 25 friends
and neighbours. Mr. and Mrs. Cun-
ningham moved to the village last
Friday. Cards were enjoyed and Leon-
ard Archambault read an address and
Joe Vel ewer pt
esentecl than with a . t 1 "Why ,
to
Jr
Miss Margaret Wright, of Brantford,
is enjoying a week's holiday tt'ilh Dir.
and Alis, Hobert Arthur and family.
Guests with Airs. Charles Asquith
la,l weekend were Dir. and Airs. Beg
:Asquith, ;lir. and Airs. Harold Asquith
ALTs. Donald Oldrieve, all of 'Toronto
and Aliss Mary, of Cooksville. They all
Akin -led the panoral of the late Charles
AleNeil last Friday in Goderich.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Haithhy, Airs.
;tanley Johnston and Mrs. Donald
Kai, of Et lactate, attended the Ronson
1 ailhhy wedding at London last Sat-
urday.
1'rcfessor Ivan Morgan, Mrs. Morgan.
Mary and Franklin, of Hamilton, vis-
ited recently with Mr. and Mrs, Frank
:faithby.
Mr. and Airs, Norman McDowell
;pent last Sunday visiting with Ile
;islel, Mrs, Carl Deans, Air. Deans
.;nd family al Guelph.
Mr. and Airs, Allton Shackleton and
wo sons, of Ottawa, have returned
once after a week's visit 'ilk 11r.
and Airs. Oliver Andersen and family.
Air. and Airs. Edgar llacr and family
ivy taken up residence in tltc Railh-
y hone recently vacated by Mr. and
vIrs. Bob Gardiner and Julie.
Dr, and Mr's. Charles 'Poll and Miss
,111, of Trail, 13.C,, visited this week
.1111 Air. and Alt Fred Toll and
lr. and Airs. Kenneth McDougall and
unify. Miss Jill is returning to Kings.
01 to enter her second year of studies
t Queen's University after a summer
aeation tvith her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wagner,
Snow, Ohio, are visiting with
1 this district this week.
11'.111.5. Alceting
The Woman's Missionary Society of
Knox Presbyterian Church met in the
'•unday school room with a good at-
tendance. Alter the call to worship
the opening hymn was sung with Mrs.
Duncan MacKay al the piano. Thi
scripture lesson was read by Mrs. Mac-
Kay and the meditation was given by
Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson on the Christ-
ian as a citizen, followed by prayer
by A1iss Minnie Wagner. The cffe'ing
was received by Mrs. Frank Raitilby
and the chapter of the study book,
"Together we provide education and
medical services," was read by Airs.
W. Bradnock. The minutes of the pre-
Vinns meeting were read by the sec-
retary, Mrs. Alvin 1 eatherland. Plans
were glade for the Thankoffe'ing meet -
ins on October 15 when Miss E. Somer-
ville, of Goderich, will show her pic-
tures of her trip to the holy land.
invitations trill be extended to the other
churches in the villa'e to attend,
An invitation was accepted to hear
Afi ss hazel McDonald at the Arthur's
Circle meeting and also an invitation
lo Belgrave on October 3rd. The train-
ing school which will be held in Blyth
for leaders of children's groups, was
also discussed. The leader of the C.O.
C. group, Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson, ask-
ed for members to save cereal hos
lops with the big G on so the children,
can make money with Iheln. They are
also collecting used stamps. The toll
call was answered by each nailing a
Prophet named in the 13ible. Reports
of 1110 Ihn'on Presbyterial held last
week in Blyth were given by Mrs. A.
Leathcrland and Airs. Ed. Davies. Airs.
Wilfred llollinson closed the meeting
with prayer. Lunch was served by
Mrs. Charles Stewart.
of Glen -
relatives
AUBURN BAPTIST CIIURCII HOLD
941h ANNIVERSARY
Large baskets of colored gladioli,
asters and roses, decorated the Auburn
Baptist Church for the 94tH Anniversary
Services last Sunday.
The guest speaker was Professor Ivan
Alorgan, of Divinity College of the Mc-
Master University, Hamilton. He chose
for his subject, "Consider What God
Has Done" for his afternoon message.
He said that God had chosen the people
of Ilis Church and has chosen everyone
to be a member of His family and has
promised a share of all that belongs to
Christ. 'floe strength and faith of the
fathers was what lie wanted this ser-
mon to impart. Ile thanked the Auburn
congreglation for the invitation to be
the speaker for this occasion. 'rhe guest
1 soloist was Airs. John Ostrom, of 1Ving-
h(un, who sang the solo, 11 by I Serve.
hie lamp and other gifts. I Jesus" and a duct with her niece, Miss
A Iiss Belle Keating, of 1Vingham,
visited with Air. and Mrs. W. T. Hobi• Linda Perigoe, of Toronto, "I Am Not
son and otllet' friends in the village Worthy."
last week, j Following the service a luncheon was
113I -COUNTY CAMPAIGN FOR TIIE BLIND
HURON COUNTY OBJECTIVE $6000.00
Send your donation today to:
MR. W. L. KRESS, Blyth, Ont.
'1'Vednesc1ay, Sept, 20, 106
r
served in the Sunday School room of the Reception For Nel'IyWetls
church to the visiting friends from! A large ore vol attended the reception
Godcrich and Clinton and other points, in the Myth Memorial (fall for Mr. and
among them being, 91 year-old Mr. I Mrs. Cornelis van Vliet rnee Lois Cun•
George liailhby, who is now a resident ningliami last Friday evening. Music
of Iluronvicw. I for dancing was supplied by the Jim
At the evening service, Mr. Craig Pierce Orchestra. An address of con -
Peters, the minister, was again in granulations was road by Bill Buchan
charge of the service, assisted by Her, r an and a purse of money was rpesentccl
E. Von Keitz, of Godcrich, and again by .11111 Masan. A floor lamp was Ku-
nio service of song was in c liar e of the l;enled by Jim Glousher on behalf of
church organist, Airs. Rei lett .1. Phil• the chivari gang,
lips, and a choir ul' former members •Airs. John Sclater, of Seaforlh, i1
1 visiting her sister-in-law, M. Edgar
led in the singing. Mrs. J. Ostrom sang Lawson.
a solo "hear Us As We Pray" and she Friends in this district will he Inter -
and Miss Pcrigoe sang the duel, "The ested to know that a former resident,
Love of the Saviour." I Rev. Hugh A. A. Hose, 13.A., R.D.,
Professor Morgan chose for his ev• to he married at Smith halls on Octs,-
ening message"Argo Gospel is Good bii 14. Hugh is the son of Bev. and
News." Ile gave an inspiring message lb•s. 11'illiain Hose, of London, nin-
on this subject and concluded his re•' ister of Knox United Church here about
marks that the Good News is for all' Int years ago, and is a grachlate of
the 1 niversily of 'Toronto and McGill
people and the Church's Task is the University, Montreal. His bride, Miss
Sheila
J. 11(i'forcl, of Valais. Quebec.
is 0 graduate of Montreal General 1Io:i.
pita(.
Grcal Commission "Go \'e into all the
World." Bev, Charles Lewis pronounc-
ed the benediction.
1
PARAME'I"1'E BONUS PACK
Paranlettes 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 Paralnette are as follows:
Paramette Syrup, 32 ounce $9.85
Paramette Syrup, 8 ounce $3.50
Paramette Tablets, 50's $3.50
Paramette 'Tablets, 25's $2.00
Paramette Juniors (tip to 6 years) 60's $3.50
Buy Paramette Bonus Pack and Save $2,00
R. U. PHILP, Phm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PIIONE 70, MATH
"FAIR WEEK SPECIAL"
WESTINGHOUSE CLOTHES DRYER
WESTINGHOUSE GYRATOR WASHER
BOTII FOR ONLY $279,00
RECORD SALE--- This Week Only
Any 45 R.P.M. Record .... 75c
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
I3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair,
Blyth, Ont.
Call 71
•
11J
... J. L. ... r..., rnr+In•* U, i.0.p,p I I. .110
Cars .For Sale
1961 PONTIAC Sedan
1959 PONTIAC Sedan
1957 CONSUL Sedan
1957 CIIEV. 2 door hard
top.
1955 METEOR Coach
1954 CHE V. Coach
1955 FORD Sedan
1956 CI-IEV. 2 door
Older Models for Cheap
Transportation
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
•
...r ug i.A.,...11..1100 • 11411414111110 PIII.Y111•1 Iiimm •.-...+..Flum1•.:.. ••.1..6..........u..uYr—....rwr..a...O,iYi4.tl1.V JI11,1. I. , ,Y
1 Ir .o. ....J
.n...1.... ..iwrv.l o/0. .aa.lurui.. 6111101 u J
•
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP f3 SAVE
Tip Top Pork and Beans, 20 oz. 2 for 35e
Mount Royal Choice Peas, 20 oz. 2 for 39c
Aylmer Catsup, 11 oz. 2 for 35c
Stuffed Olives, Special, 16 oz. jar 49c
Cheery Morn Instant Coffee, 10 oz. jar 1.19
Brown Sugar, Special, 4 one-half lbs. 30c
Baker's Chocolate Jiffy,2 lb. tin 95c
Wallace Frozen Turkey Pies, reg. 75c, Special • 59e
King Size Fab, Extra Special 99c
Aer 0 Wax Paste Wax, big 2 lb. can 79c
New Super Ajar, large size 2 tins 29c
Side Sliced Bacon - per pkg. 39c
Large Country Style Sausage 3 lbs. 1.00