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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-11-22, Page 1VOLUME 74 - 39 E ANDAR Authorized as second class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, `VEDNESIAY, NUJ', 22, 1961 Subscription Rater $'2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. post Office Department, Ottawa. and for payment of postage in cash, Three Injured In Head -On Crash last Saturday Night Once again the second curve in High- way 4 about one toile south of Blyth has been the scene of a serious asci. deet \vhen two cars met head-on l i,'i Saturday night, A London man, William Anthony Fitzpatrick, 41, of 436 Charlotte SL, the stile occupant of one of the care was taken to Clinton hospital by the Ball and Mulch ambu:ancc of Clinton and later to St. Joseph's hospital, I..on. don, reported to be in serious condi. tion, The 'rasher Ambulance service, mi Illylh, attended to the victims of the ether ear, driven hy David Comnrton of Kintail, who suffered knee and head lrtjhir'i('s. Mss Eleanor fart; had si'v ere facial lacerations, but her brother l.,at'1.1', ith:o it passenger in the Comp ton eat', was not hurt, Pres, Constahht Alex Code -rich, investigated, Twaddle, el LOCAL RESIDENTS RECEIVE CITIZENSHIP PAJ'EItS $55,011 BiNGO WON (,AST SATURDAY The $55.00 Jack I'ot {lingo prize was won last Saturday night at the weekly Lions Club bingo. lite ntor.cy was offered if the bingo was made in 60 calls or less and was given to Mrs. John Young when she. was successful in 59 calls, Ander bin a will be held this Sal• tn'day night in the ?tentorial hall when :he $55,00 will again be tittered. IIURONViEW AUXILiAR.1' PREPARING FOR CHRISTMAS FAIR The November meeting of Iluronvie v Auxiliary was held in the craft room al. Iluronvicw on November 201h with an excellent attendance. 'hhe president Mrs, r Dr.) 'Thompson presided. Mrs W. L. Bennett was appointed treasur- er, replacing Mrs. hale„ oud who i:, returning to England, A lively lel of gifts were received to Thirty-five persons received Canadian be used at the Christmas !''air on the Citizenship papers from 1hir'ot County ills of December. Appreciation was Judge I''rauk Finglamd at an intpres• expressed by all for these gifts from sive ceremony on Mol:clay evening of Blyth, Auburn and Pennebaker, of last, wceek, at the court house, Gude Clinton. flans were finalized for the rich. Fair, 'Tea and cookies will he served '!'hose receiving their Canadian Citi by the auxiliary members following the sale, }lubcrt Hobe and Edelgard !Iola. The Walton W. I. are sponsoring the Blyth; Gerhardus lleyink and Jamul birthday party for December. Mrs. 13oren(lina lleyink, R,11, 1, Blyth; Bruno Gurdon Cunningham reported plans for Braccker, John 13raecker and Olga entertainment for December, '1'hc Melanie 13raecker, 11.11. 2, Walton; meeting closed with lunch. Fred l[cllinga and Sally Ilellinga, R.R. 3, Walton; Edouard Gertsch and Mar- lene Maria Gertsch, 1..11, 2, 1Vallon; Heinrich I''rauciscus Exel, 11r1t. 3. Brussels. zenship papers from this di Ariel. were: FRIENDSHIP CIRCLE PLAN CHRISTMAS ACTIVITIES The regular meeting of the Friendship Circle was held on 'Tuesday, November 14 at the home of, Mrs, John 1}unning wills 16 present. Mrs. Lorne Popp opened the meeting with the call to worship and hymn. "'!'his is My Father's World" was sung. Mrs. Harold Knox read the scripture and Mrs. Bruce Barrie led in prayer. The hymn "God sees the little sparrow fall" was sung. The roll call was answered by the size ol your stocking. All members are reminded to hand their General Mills box tops to Mr's, Ray Madill before November 30th, IL was decided to buy programs for the Christmas Worship Service, also World Friends fur Mission Band. A committee fur making pop corn balls for the Christmas concert will meet in the church basement on Dccontbei 7th, were Mrs. Ray Madill, Mrs. hred Howson, Mrs, Charles Johnston, Mrs. Evan McLagan. The December meeting will be held at the manse with the following com- mittee: Mrs. Robert Carter, -Airs. 13111 Young, Mrs. Bruce ha'.coiler, Mrs. Dwight Campbell, Mrs. George Oster. Rev, Mcl,a'gan showed a very inter esting filar on Stewardship, The meets closed with the benediction, after which a delicious lunch was served, AMONG THE CHURCHES Sunday, November 26, 1061, ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. D. J. Lane, 13.A., D.D., Minister. 1.00 p.m.—Church Service and Sun. day School, ANGLICAN CIIURCIi OF CANADA Rev. Robert F. Aleally, Rector, Sunday next before Advent Trinity Church, Blyth. 10.30 a,m,—Sunday School, 10,30 am. —Mathis, St. Mark's, Auburn. 12.00 o'clock --Matins. Trinity Church, Belgrave, 2.00 p.m.—Sunday School, 2,30 p.m.—Evensong, THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth Ontario, I1cv, 11: Evan McLagan • Minister Mrs; Donald Kai Director of Music, 9;55 a.m,--Sunday Church School, 11.00 a.m,—Morning Worship, CHURCH OF GOD McCannel Street, Blyth, John Dormer, Pastor Phone 105 11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship, 10.00 a.m,—Sunday School, 7,30 p.m.—Evening Service, 8,00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service. to work on their dresses, Lunch was 9,00 p,m, Friday, Youth Fellowship, served. THREE INJURED IN 5'IO111t1S TOWNSHIP CRASH Three persons were taken to Wing. barn General 11o::pital from n twa-car crash on the first line of Morris—'!'own• ship two miles east of 11'inghanh, on Saturday, 'they are Mrs. Jack Glouslte', of 11,11, 4, Winghanh, driver of one ear, with face—Iacet'titfons, 'fractured knee and shock; her daughter, 13arltara Gloush- er, three, head injuries and face lacer• ations; and Robert 13rucc McLennan. also of R.R. 4, Wingltant, lacerations and chest. injuries. Provincial Constable Ron 13c11, ol 1Vingham, investigated, AUBURN LADIES PRESENT IMPRESSIVE; CIIItiSTtMAS 1''Allt A pretty Christmas setting of min• iature lighted church with a gowned choir and a concealed record player playing Christmas Carols, greeted vis• iters to the Christmas Fair last Friday evening in Knox United Church, Au. burn. Receiving the guests were Mrs. Kenneth McDougall, president of the W.A. and Mrs, John Durnin, president W.1,.S, Rcv, Charles Lewis of• of the tidally opened the !''air at 7:30 p.m, Ihn Sunday school auditorium was attractively '(decorated with large red tapers and Christmas wreaths and the tables were attractively arranged with honte•ntade baking, candy, aprons and Many forms of fancy work done by the members for this annual event, The farm produce table also offered ninny 1 vegetables and fruits. Miss Margaret NIsSBI'1=111 Clinton Public Ilospilal on R. Jackson was assisted in senior= Thursday, November 10, 1961, to Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Nesbit (nee Mary Clark) the gift of u son, Michael Clark, PERSONAL INTEREST Mrs, Williard Armstrong and Mrs Sol Shannon attended the funeral of the latler's brother, Ire'. T. J. Rolan son, at. Knox Presbyterian Church, Stratford, on Saturday, M►'. and Mrs, Gordon Craig and fair ily, of Guelph, visited on Saturday with the fornier's mother, Mrs. Robert Craig. Mr, and Mrs, John Simpson and Jean cf Brussels, Mrs. Robert Craig, ol Myth, spent Sunday with the latter's daughter, Miss Ada Craig, of London. Ales, 1lajur Youmbinl visited with her son, l.,ynn and friends in 'Toronto last week aid also attended the Royal Wilder !''air. Mrs, J. McDcu_gal1 was able to re• turn to her (tome on Sunday after be- ing a patient in Win;ham hospital. Mr. and Mrs, R. I). Philp visited on Sunday with the latter's mother, Mrs, Ma.cCorkiidalc, of Owen Sound. Mr. Richard Ewing and daughter. Patricia, of ;:carbon, Visited on Sur day with his uncles, Messrs, Robert and Archie Somers, and aunt, Mrs. S. Cunr!ng, On his return he was acconi parried by his mother, Mrs, A. A. Lw• i1.:', \vino had spent three weeks \vitt) her brothers and sister, Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd 'Tasker, Dale and Nevin visited on Sunday \villi Dr. .1, C. and Mis. Ross, of Goderich, Mr, Ronlad Philp and son, Stephen; of 1.011(100, visited for a couple of days last week with his parents Mr. and Mrs. 11. I). Philp, and sister, Mrs. Wm. Racine, Mr. Racine and fancily, of C;orlericlh, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson McClure and family, of Milburn, visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jack McNichol, 11r. and Mrs. 'Thomas It Taylor, of llelsa!l, visited on Tuesday with 11r: and Mrs, Albert Walsh and Lloyd, Airs. George Gray, of Weston, visited for a couple of days a week ago with Mr, and Mrs. Jaclf,McNichol, and at• tended the funeral of her Mint, Mrs. \Vit. Nesbit, 0f Seaforth, on S,aturdny. She was accompanied (home on Satur• clay by Mr. and Mrs. McNicihol who spent the weekend with Mrs, Gray and her family, and also attended the Win. ter Fair. C,G,I.T. GiRLS ELECT OFFICERS The Canadin Girls in Training met in the Blyth United Church on Novcm• her 16t11 and held their election of officers, resulting as follows: president. Alargarcl McCullough; vice-president llonuy Bell; secretary', Gail Johnston: treasurer, Joyce Johnston; pianist, Heather Cleland. Mrs. Webster explained the study for the year and led the worship service. It was decided that the girls will sell the United Church calendars again this. year. Mr. 1}cLa'7,an led in a sing -song and the girls enjoyed a game of "neigh- bour's." The meeting dosed with taps and will meeting again on the 23rd al 7 p.m. BIRTHS Christmas cards for the Mission Band by Nancy Anderson, The small tea tables, centred with a small red poinsetta and evergreen, were very busy as hutch was served throughout the evening. The busiest place was the rooms that were re- served for the Children's Christmas Fair. This was convened by Mrs. Maurice Bean, who also was in charge of the puppet show and the pictures, A fish pond created great excitement as each child fished for five cents and received many treasures. Mrs. William Lr Craig was in charge of this and was assisted by her sons, Allen and Brian, who asked if the gift was for a gir. or boy, large or small, so the gift would be suitable, A booth of jewellery and small mita: stents, operated by Mrs. Harold \Veb• stem', sold many articles to their small customers for a few pennies, Games were also played and these were super- vised by Mrs. Elliott Lapp. A lunch of hot dogs and chocolate milk was served to the small patrons. Despite the cold, snowy evening, this fifth Christmas Fair was a great success. SEWING GROUP MEET The ladies of tic Sewing group, "Fu - cos on Finishes," Met at the home ol Mrs, Keith Webster on Thursday ev- erting with fourteen present, '('hey cul out. dresses and practised putting in zippers, Another meeting was held 'Tuesday evening, November 14t11 at the hone of Mrs, Webster when they continued PARENTS ViEW YEAR'S WORK AT PUBLIC SCHOOL OPEN iIOUSE The annual Open ]louse held last Wednesday evening, November 15, al the Blyth Public School attracted Many parents of the community, with the majority of families represented by either one or both parents. The evening; was planned as an iufol% anal get-tagelhe' by teachers, parents and pupils and gave leacher and parent a chance to discuss problems and preparations for the coming examhw- lious. Also a great interest to the visitor's was the display of art, writing and books set up in each of the rooms by the pupils. Mrs, Marshall's Kindergarten class won the prize for the room having the largest attendance of parents, with a 76 percent turnout. BIItTIIS 1VEBS'TEIt--In 1Vhhghant General Mos• pital on 'Thursday, November 16, 1961. to Mr. and Mrs. David Webster. (nee Ruth Mowatt) the gift of a son, Stephen Wayne. VERN SPEIRAN FLIES 10 IRELAND 1Ir, Vernon It. St eiran, W1,0 operat- ed Speirau's 11ard\ware Store in Blyth for a number 01 years, and is nuts a Flight Lieutenant in the Royal Candi in Air Force, stationed at Comex on Van ccuve' ls_arll, left last tveek un a train- ing mission to Bally Kelly, in Ireland, aloin; with his crow 111 11lur, Irani lite 407 "Donlon" Maritime Petro' S:Juad rat, Dlakie; the jaunt will I II, Spcirai were: Sergeant. Tem McCormick, (die, go\v, 5cotlamd, I'';1, Paul i'inhniing;, C an - 'brook, 11.('„ and 1 ,I. Ross C'ui ry, of L'dnlcntnn, A!bcr,a. Former 1i iends in )Myth are proud of the accons,►'ishmets Vern has load( since re -joining the lf.C.A.F. and are hoping that soon one of his flights wil. :ring hint clsse enc,tt_h to home for a friendly visit. EXETER MAN HEADS WESTERN (INTA1110 i'l IBI ISIII':Its 1)en_l!d roofthcel I, pub!! •her of the Exeter '('nuc, Adwuca'e, was el'•otcu President of the 11'e',t ru Vittorio 111-k ly' Ncw':•I:aper A:;sec!alton al 0 nr club r held in \i'aterio(' en Saturday. Other officers ele,a''rI: Biel Landl.ur• 011311, Grand l'at'e}' Star and Vidctk. fu vice-piestcicnl; 1Villi:lt1 '1'emplin. Ferns News-Recod, secretary; (ten 'itcth Baulk, Pre_tun '!'inn::, Ireatie erg directors, Ernest Ritz, Nese Ilatnhur, Indeeendcrl, Aitss \filo,) Dnuhin, ton M.w;•Itecorrl; panl•pres!dcnt George 'Tatham, 1,i:tuwcl Danner. It i;CEI''TION A 1'ccci ,lion will he held fc r Mr and )Airs, David Nabil (nee (lady:; Reid) in Itlyth Alcnr.:rial Hall on Friday, No- vember 21th, Jim force's Orchestra Ladies bring lunch. `v LSTI('iE1,I) Mrs, Shirley Wood and children, of Chalk River, visited Mr. and Mrs. Ger. alt) McDowell oft Alonday, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Cook, Sharon and Janet, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. 'Thomas ,Mackie in Enhbro on Sun. day, Mr. and Mrs. Alva McDc\well, Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd McDowell and Mr. Gordon Hollowell visited with 1lr. and Mrs, Murray McDowell, Coukstuwn, on Sunday, Mr. stay Perkins and Mr, Cecil Camp. bell, Exeter, called on Mr. and Mrs, II, Campbell, Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Graeme McDowell attended the Royal Winter !''air, Toronto, on WCII• nesday, Mr, and 11rs. Gurdon Smith were visitors wilt) Miss Edna Smith, Kit• client' (Jul Tuesday. !''arm Forum was held 'Monday eV• ening al the home of !Air. Charles Smith with a good attendance. A lively dis- cussion was held on the subject, "The Farm Family, what's harrcnir',4 ti it?" It was the opinion that there are great changes taking place and they are not a!I for the. better, Most com- munities are suffering from the lack of young people, especially girls. Next week Farm Forton will he in the form of a social evening al the home of Mrr. Gerald McDowell. .11r. and Mrs, Kcil.h Snell, Peter and Canty, Guelph. were with Mr. enc Mrs. (toward Campbell on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, IVnt. Kelly, of Sea• forth, spout a couple of days last wccl; with Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell. Mr. Wm. 'Walden is visiting his daughter, 11rs. hrank Harburn, Mr. IIarburn and family, of ilensall. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Day. id Webster, of Blyth, who are the proud parents of a baby boy. Mr, and Airs. T. J. Biggerstaff and Mrs. Peter 13rontnter and daughter, visited in 1Vingliam on Thursday, CON (i 1t.ATU LA'.I'ION S congratulations lo diaster Geon:Ye Longman who celebrates his 11tlh birth. day 011 Friday, November 34111, Congratulations to Harold Lorne Ball. Icy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bad- ley, Swift Current, Saskatchewan, who celebrates his 1st birthday 01 Sunday, November 19th. C'cn ratilalious to Cathy Madill who celebrated her 3rd birthday on 'Tues- day, November 21st, .Congratutuli0us to Robert 11ntic(Ige who celebrated his birthday on Novem- ber 22nd. Congratulations to Mrs. J. S. Chellew who celebrated her birthday on Novem- ber 22nd. Here's an idea from the Ontario De• liniment of Agricu'lut'c that will help you get out of those icy spots this win- ter: carry a 50 -pound hag of (hick WILL CELEBRATE 501h WEDDING grits in the trunk of your LW. The grits are quite cheap 1110e a bag) and don't freeze as sand frequently does. Grits are easy to clean up if some get spilled in the trunk and because of their sharp• cess, allow better traction on ice. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Bert Allen, of Londe(boro, who will cele- brate their 5011i wedding anniversary on Thursday, November 30111, Regal Chapter O.E.S. Elect Officers OBITUARY 1185. 11AR1' KELLY There ra:.: c•rl away in (initial Public 1lespiral en 'Tuesday, November 141h 11rs. 11,1u'y Kelly, widow of the late Michael 11. belly, in her eighty -filth year. •hc was the dauh'itcr of Mr. and NIrs, \Tilnian' Patrick IIaila;lan, and WaS ['int ie i;ail 11';htwtumsh Townshii an the Tarot now occupied hy Mr. and Dhls, 41:nu ice Ilallaltan, She was married in 191)1 to llicliac' 11, Ke!ly in Si. Afieb;:el'.s C.rtholic L_Inu'ch, Myth, and lived the remainder of her file on the farm on concession I Uurris township. Her hus`and pre- :eccascd her (:'1 I)(saari cr 31st, 1912, 1 iter !had live chilch'en, Brace daughter':, 111(1 two : n;!s, 111 ., ,Jr)serh Feeney 'N••Il'e'r Mr• Ge,l:;e Tanner cllary'i ,rd Sera, Pr't f. nn a d '('Lora;. 'line', _•c re sf'; ;y;10(1 !nlrirep, 0110 of John Feetteyi, rrr'leceased her it '►;,i. .Il'r' S'' t' P'I .I'r'is( {11'alldell'ltiren Ile was 0 stauircli ment'n.r (1 ±l 11ic1•aeI's Ca'hofir 1:hurc'l, Feloneed 'he Altar t'cciuly, the Catholic 1Volnctl': !.ea ue, the s'.ciety 1: r the 1'topana- tlo' of the Paiill and the league of nit acted liar'. 'Die remains need at her late resi- dence until Friday thorn`7g when they wore !alien t'i St. lAlichael's Ch'lrch tvhcrr_ ltcquiunh lligii ;\►ass was sunt; by Ret'. Father (heed.. -Lewis and thence to t:•t. liichacl': Cemetery. t;dx member; of the Catholic 1Vonien's Lea.:tie formed a Guard el honor al the ( hurc•lt and the pallbearers \vcre; two grandsons and four nephews, '111011103 and ,(anus Evens', Simon, John, Dau and 1Villiain Ilallahan. Friends were pre:,ent from 'Tot onto l,cudou, Dorchester, 1Villowdale, Slral foal, Seaforth, Dublin, Kitchener. f31y lh and Brussels, MR , RICHARD B. MOWRY Funeral seri ices conducted by Rev. Ei. Aieally, hector of 'ninny Anglican Church, were he'd on Saltrday, No coulter 1n, at 2 pen., at the 'Teske, Memorial Chapel, Queen Street, Blyth for Airs. Rich_(rd I1. Mowry, who passed away t:_' 11'in_ttam General Ilos1:'ital or lilur,,dt?, N&ver,irer IC,Ii, in her 07th year, where she had hecn a patient for the past six weeks. She was 0 nlem)len of the Ar_;Iican Church of Canada, The pallbearers were: Musses, Nor man Garrett, Nrresan Gc\ving, sus :cl Holmes, Grant Spalding, George Sloan and Arthur 11'ay'moul h. Burial took place in Cemetery, Mrs. Mowry was horn in Stratford in 1875 and was formerly 131vuhe Edythe Chamberlain, daughter cf Iphriarn D. C'hanrbe'laiu and Emma A. Corson. Her father owned and operated a bock store in Stratford. After selling his Inkiness, he will) his wife and daughter moved to 1313 it) where Mr, Chamberlain beanie associated with his father-in-law, M►'. Jenkins, in a General Store, now oc- cupied by the Myth Standard. Miss Chamberlain was post mistress for se'• era' years. After her marriage to Richard Mowry in 10(17, they resided in 'Toronto and later in Montreal where Air. Mowry Nas;c(1 011 in July 1927, Mrs, Mowry 13'01 Union returned to 1313111 seven years ago where she and her only son, Hubert, purchased a home on Queen Street. Surviving is her son, Hubert, of Blyth. Her only brother, !)avid Chamberlain predeceased her in 1912. Mr, and Airs. Bert Shobbrcok wcr, irslalletI as worlhy matron and worth„ l:alrnn of Reza! Chapter No. 275, Order of the Eastern Star at their lodge ronin in 1)1yt11 on 'Tuesday evening. lnslalling officers were: Mayon, Mr;. Myrtle Voddeh, 1'.31.; patron, Ilaroli Vodden P.P.; ntarshall, !qrs. 1LuIli E'.taddick, 1'.11.; chaplain, Mfrs. Belly Maines, 1'.91.; Mrs. Anon Crozier, Di • IrictUrinl(3 Grand Matron of District 1, In:' rlli114 Lrird: Mrs. Evelyn 'I'hon►p• sun, 1'rl).1).G.31.; Sydney Thonlpsc,'(, P.P.; Harvey Sil'ib, P,1'.; 1lix. Aura Davies, P.31.; Cannan Maines, 1'.1'.: soloist, Mrs. 'Nth Vincent; organist, ilrs• Shirley Vincent.; Mrs, Charles :1(1;'ms, P51.; warder, Charles Adams. P.P.. soh:t ua, Gecste Neere 1re',ellt from 11'hisham, I',t'nu'rslnn, Brussels, Exeter, Clinton ,uh,l Goderich. tlfiicers ins felled were: worthy Mat. ten, 'Mrs, Berl Shol,hte•ok; \VeriK.' 1'a000, 31r. Bert Shobbrock; associat•, matron, Alts. Lana Craig; ass.ciato l atrin, \'I)I, Carter; secretary, Mrs. I?,h.ihe Phillips; treasurer, Airs. Nctlh^_ (;!arks t:so'Juclreis, 'airs. ,lean Leach. a soc'!.11e conductress, Mrs. Mildred Anent; chaplain, Mts. Doiethy Scutt: tr.arsball, 31! s. Marion Wright; organ rat, Mrs. Ruby Philp; Achill, Mrs. life, 31i: 'dick; Ruth, Mrs. Genevieve Allen; Esther, Ali::. Ellen Sillib; Martha, Mr. Petty Arcchaelhaull; Jaecla, Mrs. Je::• is 11,A;rr; tvardcr, 1}iss Mina Mute)); sentinel, JusPplt Shadclick; trustees, firs. Elsie Chellew, Mrs. Elsie Shad - dick, Mrs Nellie ('lark; auditors, Alp,. Ruth tz•iladdick, Mrs. Myrtle Munro, 11rs. Dorothy Elliott; ways and means, Mrs, Elsie Shaddick, Mrs. Nettie Clark, lir.,. I':na Craig, Mrs, Mildred Holdall, firs, Elva Garrett, Wm. Carter; flow- ers and card:, Mrs. Ann Sundet'cock, ',lis; Edythe 13eacern, Mrs, Marjorie:. East. Refreshment committee Cost. Est•al chairman, Mrs. Luella McGowan. Refreshment committee. Mrs. Margaret Anderson, Mrs. Jean Caldwell. Property, Wellington MeNall and Mrs. Edythe Phillips. Mrs. Dorothy Scott,• immediate past matron was presented with her jewel by her sister; Mrs Ella McGowan:.µ Mlr. Bert Shcbbrook presented 11r. Laurie Scott with his jewel, The chapter presented Mrs, Dara Shchbrook with a basket of pink and white carnations. DISTRICT ESSAYS JUDGED David 'Tomkinson, of Mitchell Public School, stood first in the District 6 Perth -Burnt t essay competition, "The Place of lite Indian in Canadian Ilis- tory," Sponsored locally by the vari- ous agricultural societies in the two counties. The top essay from each fair is entered in the district competition. This year six essay's reached the dist- rict level, with over 50 essays. entered in contpetitioon at the various fairs. The essay of David Tomkinson will • now be forwarded to Toronto to be entered in the provincial competition twhich is sponsored by Mrs, Ethel Brant M'otturc and the Women's Section, On- lario Association of Agricultural Soci- eties, Other district prize winners were: Keith Strang, R.R. 1, Ilensall (Exeter Nair); and Ruth Gorwill, of Seaforth. Also entered in the district competition were essay's written by Rosalie West- lake, S.S. 4W, Stanley Township (Bay- field Fair); Glenna Lupton, S.S. 4, Downie Township (Stratford Fair'); and Elaine Sanders, S.S, 5, Morris Town. MR. JACOB C, S'1'OLTZ ship (Belgrave School Fair). Fred Cosford, of the Seaforth District Funeral services were held on 'Tues- School staff, English Department, day afternoon at the J. Keith Arthur was the judge on the district level. Funeral Monne for Auburn's oldest resi• Mrs. Joseph Grummett, District 0 dent, Mr, Jacob 0, Stoltz, who passed Wontet's liepresentative, who is in away in Clinton !Hospital of Saturday,: charge of the competition in the dit. November 111111, in his 91 sI year, after t'icl, reports that the response has been u month's illness, !most gratifying, this, the third year of sucd a competition. She expresses ap• Burn at New Dundee he Was the son preciation to the pupils, their teachers, of the late Jacob Stoltz and Margaret the various school inspectors, and the Taylor, and attended school in that ,fudges, who have been most co-oNer- district. Sixty-three year's ago he was alive, married to Margaret Garland and cause to this community where they fame(' in least 11'a\wannsh '1'owttship'COUN'I'Y COUNCIL IIEAR OF TREE until they retired to Auburn about 15 I PLANTING ACTIVITIES years ago. Ile was a very faithful, HIuron County Council were told by member of Knox Presbyterian Church Larry C. Scales, zone forester of Strat- where he was n member of the 1C!t•k• ford, on 'Tuesday that 0 total of 89,510 Session and served also as a manage] trees was Nltulled this spring in Ilttton for many years. County and this past fall 180,000 were Survivhl, besides his wife is one son. planted in (lay' and Stephen townships. Eldon 11. Stoltz, 01 Guelph, )h, mol on Spring planting comprised: Robertson I'racl, Colborne Township, 5,000 red daughter, Mrs. 1iprguerite Chopin, o' oak and hard maple; Rodgers tract,!Vin"ham: also three grandsons and one granddaughter'; two brothers, \1'il East Wi'twanosh, 2,000 while pine, 2,000 liam, of Preston, and Edward,Newred pine; Shappardlot tract, Colborne Dander, one sister, Mrs. Edith Cosset Township, 1,000 Norway spruce, 20.900 of Plattsvilic. One dauxhter, ].lith, whore ptnee, 12,000 white spruce; Stet.- Passed away several years tr,o. cnson Tract, Morris Township, 29,600 white pine, 7,500 white spruce. The funeral service was conducted The Huron County reforestation by Dr. i), J. Lane. with burial taking scheme for the spring of 1962 is ear• pace in Ball's Cemetery. Pallbearers marked as follows: Turnberry Town. were Messrs. Jnitn 1louston, Arthur ship, 47,000 trees; Goderich 'Township, 1'oungblut, Wesley 13radncek, Kenneth 40,000; Stanley 'Township, 5,000; East Scott, James Jackson, and Bert 1Vawanosh Township, 37,000; Morris Day,, ! , r. t , Township, 5,000. Why Not Beef Stew At Big Banquets? What would happen if some famous hostelry, accommodating an affluent convention, should serve a good beef stew at the ceremonial banquet? 1 occasion- ally get invited to some such event, and there is a sameness. They bring on roast beef or steak, lobsters, or some species of fowl, and a pattern persists, And there have been steaks when I'd sooner have had a good smoked frankfurter with a boiled potato, or a plain old platter of ham and eggs. To tell you the honest truth, as distinguished from the truth in some publications, there are a lot of people in this world cooking beef, poultry and fish who ought to be asamed of themselves. They stand back in a frock, with a tall chef's hat on, and they go pooh la -la at a fried cel as if cookery is a mystic and occult freema- sonry where only the elect may enter, They have erected around the human appetite a great pose of special privilege. And they have abused the public into thinking no banquet of stature can succeed without langouste en flambeau, with relish trays and petits fours—or some such mar- vel in the $10 range. I'd like to see a beef stew come marching in at one of these $100- a -plate testimonials some eve- ning—an iconoclastic feed that would put the perdrix au chou embonpoint back about 75 years, and lift the spirits of the sub- scribers into new heights of glad- ness. When you start a beef stew make sure you can control the heat, for stew means to boil slowly, to seethe, and a stew is a dish that is stewed. Then you will need a good fry -pan or spider, a pot or kettle fit -for -the - deed -you -have -to-do, and some beef. The kind of beef you have doesn't matter as much as some people think, If you chance to get a rubbery old joint of bull -beef from a veteran specimen who spent his time in iniquity and hardship, you can still stew it into a veritable rainbow of de- light. You couldn't bake it, or fry it, but you can stew it. A beef stew is measured in end results, not in basics. So when you get this beef haltered and thrown, you cut it into cubes about an inch square, and you fuss it around in some brown, or maple, sugar until it has become congenial, It wants to feel wel- come in the household, looking forward to a bright future. Now you get the old spider bot and you slobber In a goodly Sum of bacon fat, or butter — salt pork is good, too—or even a patent subterfuge if you are reduced to the non -poly -satur- ated ideology, and when it be- comes vocal you dump in the meat. I don't want to convey the idea that any of this is crudely done, or handled haphazardly, but I want to leave the impres- sion that there's nothing hoity- toity about it, either. Some peo- ple chop trees, some paint signs, some cook, It isn't like painting Mona Lisa on the head of a pin. So, just sear the beef, and when it gets seared enough, stop sear- ing it. The pot in which you concoct the stew must big enough so the stew will stew. When company comes unexpectedly you can throw water in a soup and make do, but once a stew is started there can be no replenishment of the moisture. A precise estimate at the start is essential, and there can be no deviation from time to time, Having the meat ready and the pot hot, you now begin to erect the stew amply, To anybody who asks, "Yes, but how much do I ISSUE 47 — 1961 use of anything?" the only sen- sible answer is, ''I low should I know?' You're making it!" On- ions, for instance. A good stew maker projects an ample esti- mate, and then uses about four times that number of onions, It doesn't hurt a bit if you sluice them through a bath of bacon fat first, but you don't have to. Potatoes should be cubed. Dice some carrots. I -lave a good yel- low turnip—the tivhite ones are no good. Try some celery, may- be a little cabbage. Toss in some dry beans --kidneys work fine. Use ronie green beans, too, and some peas and a Little corn, A handful of barley, Just keep building. Fool around with some herbs and weeds if you want to, There isn't much of anything that will hold a stew back once it gets started right. Soon after this Nvonderful idea gets going the house will have an aroma and glow, and the shingles may vibrate as if J, P, Sousa was iehea sing in the attic. A good beef stew is much mare effective advertising than lighted space on a billboard, People who never noticed you before will tip their hats and smile. Cask and care will depart. But let the fire play pianis- simo, and set the cover slightly ajar. You cannot hurry a stew, as you might char a steak or brown a stuffed baked. Time is the key ingredient, and an osmo- tic symphony must be achieved, If you want to leave it and go across town to have your por- trait painted, you may leave it in full knowledge it will be there when you get back. At evensong, you can set it off and let it cool all night, to be brought to sim- mer again on the morrow, Dum- plings may be inserted on the home stretch, if you really love your family. And I would like to see a feed like that sometimes when I go to a swanky banquet and get stuck with other fare, By John Gould in the Christian Sci- ence Monitor. Be Sure You Fasten Those Seat -Belts! People who travel regularly by air are apt to become blase about it. They regard air travel the same as others regard a trip by bus, And therein lies the danger. The warning, "Fasten your seat belts," tends to be ignored by some passengers. They should obey this instate- ' tion at once and keep the belts fastened until advised otherwise, says the Ministry of Aviation. Forting out the danger§ ej disobedience, in a survey of ad- cidents, the Ministry gives in- stances of what can happen to passengers. A Dakota flew into a storm between Stornoway and Benbe- cula. In spite of the instructions, a woman unfastened her lap strap. Her head banged against the cabin roof, resulting in a fracture of the spine and scalp laceration, Over the Pyrenees, a Viscount flew into thunder cloud. When the aircraft pitched, a woman who left her seat was thrown to the floor, sustaining head injury and a broken ankle. There were a number of less serious injuries. Safety straps could also save many lives and prevent serious injuries if they were more wide- ly used by motorists. A TASTE OF HIS OWN MEDICINE The doctor couldn't sleep one night with the constant drip, drip, drip from the bathroom, He filially called his plumber, "Do you know it's three in the morn- ing?" said the plumber. "Yes, but if you were sick you'd call me at three." "That's right -- well, give it two asprins and call int again in four hours." DON'T GO, DAD—The tears of Eric Hendricks testify to how tragic life can be when you're one year old. Eric is downright distressed by the fact that his dad, James Lee Hendricks, a Fort Worth architect, has been mobilized for duty with the 49th Armored Division. Even the privilege of playing with dad's service boots is no comfort. TABLE TALKS Jam Andrews. Cool, crisp autumn weather makes home cooks think about barbecuing ribs in the back yard and braising pork chops indoors for dinner. A young woman of my acquaintance asked me the other day why all fresh pork should be cooked "well done" and what does "well done" mean? It means that all the pink colour of the meat has disappear- ed and the meat has become a whiteish tan, and the meat juice has become clear. It usually means, too, that the meat has be- come fork tender, and maximum flavor attained,, I# you use g thermometer, an internal tem- perature of 185° F. or more should be reached. + * The popular cuts for braising are loin and rib chops, tender- loin and shoulder steaks, cutlets and steaks from fresh hams, the liver and the heart. And, this is the way to cook these cuts: Have skillet hot, Place chops or steak in skillet and brown well on both sides for 10-15 min- utes. For cuts like chops with their own fat, do not add fat. For tenderloins, cutlets, liver, and heart, add 1-2 tablespoons lard to pan, * Season meat and add a small amount of liquid -1/4 to ?s cup; cover, turn heat very low, and cook for 35-40 minutes, depend- ing on thickness of meat. There are many varieties of that simple method, You may dip chop in flour or in egg and dry crumbs before cooking. You may finish the covered cooking in a casserole in the oven, Or, pour tomato sauce, tomato juice, cream, Creole sauce, or canned soup over meat after browning and finish the cooking in the oven, You may add browned chops to a casserole of vege- tables, such as scalloped potatoes SURVIVORS AND RUINS — Survivors of hurricane Hattie make their way post ruined buildings in street in Belize, British Honduras, gathering the few personal belongings they can find in a city so ravaged that officials have decided to rebuild it In another Ioc"ticn some 40 miles oway. • or sliced sweet potatoes, or to apples, and finish cooking in the oven, Or, have your chops cut double thick, cut a pocket in each, and stuff with a fruit or bread dressing, then braise, in- creasing time according to thick- ness of the chops, writes Manor Richey Johnston in the Christian Science Monitor, To make gravy with braised chops, remove meat and meas- ure,drippings. Add 2 tablespoons flour for each 2 tablespoons fat drippings, Blend well, then stir in 1 cup cold water, milk, or other liquid for each 2 table- spoon flour, Stir until smooth and thickened. For extra brown gravy, brown flour in fat before adding liquid, * . * Serve braised pork chops with broiled apple rings—just sprin- kle brown sugar over cored un - peeled apple rings, dot with but- ter, and broil, These are especial- ly good with the following chops cooked with apple juice, - APPLE FLAVORED PORK CHOPS 4 pork chops 2IA-3 cups apple juice 11/2 teaspoons salt 4 ounces spaghetti 2 tablespoons brown sugar 2 cups peas (optional) Brown pork chops in heavy skillet; remove chops from skil- let and drain. Acid apple juice' to drippings in skillet and season with salt. Bring to boil. Slowly add spaghetti to boiling juice. Sprinkle with brown sugar. Re- turn pork chops to skillet, Cover and simmer slowly for 15-20 minutes, Add peas. Cover and simmer until peas are tender. Serve hot, Serves 4, * u * Try an orange sauce made with frozen orange juice for a new, zesty taste to your next dish of pork chops, SWEET 'N' PORK CHOPS loin pork chops 6 cloves 1 teaspoon each, salt and pap- rika 1 tablespoon brown sugar 1, teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons shortening 16 oz. can frozen orange juice, thawed and undiluted ''i teaspoon cinnamon Insert 1 clove in the center of each pork chop, Blend salt, pep- per, paprika and rub mixture well into both sides of chops. Melt shortening in heavy skillet or Dutch oven and when hot, place chops in pan and brown on both sides over nieditm heal. (Do not crowd chops in pan; it is better to brown 3 at a time,) Combine thawed, undiluted or- ange juice with brown sugar and cinnamon and pour over chops. Cover and simmer about 30 min- utes or until tender. Serves 9-0. These savory chops are cooked with browned rice. Add a little thyme for a distinct, new flavor. RAKED CHOPS WITII RICE 6 pork chops 2 tablespoons shortening 11,4 teaspoons salt 1,4 teaspoon pepper 1 cup uncooked rice 8;$ cups chicken bouillon Those British Suro Still Like Tea! The Englishman's cup f f tea is his cup of tea, and wee to them who try to say him nay. in i1110, the bearded merchant prince 11, Gordon Selfridge, touring his block -long London department store, harked al. his manager: "Where are they all ''At tea," he was told, nicely enough. "No more tea'" harked Self- ridge, "No more staff!" said the man- ager, Last month, the lord Motor Co,, Ltd., fell into the teapot tempest when 190 foundrynten of the Dagenham (Essex) plant re- fused to take their "cuppa" from company lea trolleys. "'fire tea served up from company urns is not the sort of drink our lads want," roared one of the 400 un- officially striking workers, "We prefer our own brew—sweet, hot, and strong, and made in a bucket. The firm has cut off oto' hot-water supply!" "Not so," said a bland lord official', "'The brewing of tea in the factory has never been sanc- tioned, A blind eye was turned to it in the- past." The two ''tra- ditional" ten-minute tea breaks were costing an estimated half hour in production every day, and Ford started sending 118 stainless - steel lea trolleys through the shops ancl produc- tion lines, Ford held out for only two clays; then by midweek, the hot water was back, and the buckets, and the workmen, and the 2,500 cars a day, The English consumption of tea is phenomenal. George Or- well called tea "the English- man's opium." In Hoboken, N.J., English -born Noble Fearnley Hutchinson Fleming, chief tea taster for the Lipton Tea Co., told a visitor last month: "The English consume 10 pounds of tea per person per annum, In America, it's only six -tenths of a pound, Or put it this way. In the U.K. they drink twice as much tea per capita as Americans drink tea, coffee, and soft drinks combined, The U,K, taste is dif- 2 cuia diced green pepper 1/2 cup diced onion 'A teaspoon thyme Brown chops in shortening; re- move chops from skillet and sea- son with salt and pepper, If chops are very fat, dip out part of drippings, Add rice to drip- pings; cook until brown, stirring constantly. Add remaining in- gredients, Pour into a 3 -quart casserole; place chops on top. Bake at 350' F. for 1 hour, Serves fig 11',1 ii 1,11;"I remit., too, They ,!:0 a gustier drink, with more dy, Ameri- cans like pointicr. brisker tea, which you got trim high -grown bushes, lint our Icer is in no way inferior. The only thing is, you've got to brew it right. There's no- thing wrong with a tea ba;. Jlut Americans are nervous. '('hey yank the bag out the soon. You've gut to wait at lea.s4 three minute. And you roust use enough tea, We design a tea bag to make 0 cup of tea, But there area lot of people who try to get two cups out of one bag. That ,lust won't work!" A self-styled "hardened and shameless tea drinker," Dr. Sam- uel ,Johnson is supposed to have knncked off no fewer than eigh- teen turps at a sitting, and Thom- as De Quinccy usually drank tea from ti in the even. ng straight through to 4 in the murnir.i, 13ut if quantity is the triter ion, one must turn to organizations. 11 takes some 25 pounds of tea to gut out one day's editions of Lord ileaverbrook's Daily Express. And, undoubtedly, the most fan- tastic tea service to gin when Shell Oil opt ns its `.1i(1 million, 25 -tory skyscrap: r , .1 the banks of the 'Thames. Sia sty conveyor belts That might leave been dreamed uli by Chadic, Chaplin for "Modern Tina," will zip urns of hest tea to cash :.r--5,000 cups ill eight minute- slat. The brew of the leaf is indeed, what 1)can Swift called the stuff: "Water bewitched," LOOK LOOK — Making it o double-header, this London lad imitates "Matilda at the Well," in St, Pancras' section, Fashion Hint I1III1JIj1lo' IljI n ru° ' ru u.. hl,.t�ul)II�� u�Ifi lildd,pulti,�untu�u��fGlNfti�+�, dmn, W,o4!, Plowing Is Cheaper By Elephant ! In ancient India, 1lindu !cin.;s going into battle wile %vont to use elephants ns tanks to lead a charge against enemy infantry and break up its ID a s s e d strength. When the kings fell more peaceful, they used their pets in elaborate temple proces- sions or for a saunter through the streets, the local raja sitting under a golden "howdah" -scat or pavilion -to display to the population his power and glory. In the seventeenth century, the Moghul Emperor Aurangzeb had a special platoon of elephants, operating as royal guards in the palace gardens and some of them were trained to salute Ills Ma- jesty as he passed by, In modern India, there are just as many elephants, if not more, but very few rajas and emperors to maintain them, and the cost of feeding these leviathans, or at ]oast those that are In captivity, has become quite n problem, In a few cases, ingenious officials of the hard-pressed, under - stocked Indian railway, have been using elephants in out -of - :the -way yards to shunt rolling trlock, But the process admitted- ly is slow and not too many of these four -legged shunting engi- nes can be used at the salve time. About eight years ago, in the heavily forested terai regions of the Himalayas between India and Nepal, which were slated for reclamation, planners decided to Use elephants instead of tractors for plowing the reclaimed land. There was talk at that time of using a thousand elephants sim- ultaneously, but as sometimes happens in these projects, enthu- siasm outstrips reason, for no one thought of the time it takes to trap, tame and train an elephant. However, disappointments apart, after eight years of effort, those taking part In the experiment have come forward to assert that elephant -plowing definitely is cheaper than tractor plowing, that an average elephant can plow seven acres per day at a Cost of Rs 6 (about $1.20) per acre whereas the tractor's cost per acre is exactly double. After much experimentation Also, three different types of plow have been evolved for har- nessing to elephant power; the first a two -furrow plow, the sec- ond a three -furrow plow and a harvester. Subject to the availa- bility of this type of power, these plows and harvesters now can be mass-produced in the country. Another problem overcome was the harness for the ele- phant's rather large neck. After nary designs had been rejected, mos'ly by the elephant, a harness of r oft but strong rope was evo'.ved which seems to be 'suc- cessful, And so in parts of north In- dia, particularly in the state of Uttar Pradesh, can be seen the strange sight of an elephant am- bling up and down a field, ploy, ing deep and straight, while overhead fly jet fighters of the Ind:an Air Force and along the roads bordering the field ply Inttian - manufactured automo- U► neo r to Prevent Peeking SFW 9J 1 3147 1 9010EIN 00'41 simN39 39 1 d dl biles, It is, however, a typically Indian picture, fascinating in its anachonisnn, revealing all the different stages of development through which this country is passim;, revealing also a welcome initiative and enterprise 10 a (01111try short of fuel, short of modern methods of locomotion and the know-how to keep the wheels turning smoothly, writes Sharokh Sabavaln in the Chris- tian Science Monitor, Apart from this, in modern In- dia, where big -game hunting no longer is popular because it IA too expensive, there is the prob- lem of what to do with the ris- ing population of pachyderms. In the Himalayan foothills, for In- stance, the peasantry has grown to dread the wild herds which trample their crops during an- nual migrations from Pithora- garh to the forests of Hardwar, a 500 -anile trek which leaves 1n its wake devastated fields, brok- en orchards and sometimes de- populated villages, An estimate of wild elephants in this region puts the figure at around 5,000. To catch, lane and use these elephants on the larger co-ope- rative farms in north India is a solution which the government and the local peasantry are ty- ing out with considerable skill and perserverance. In the south, the elephant still is in traditional use to haul timber, roll logs into rivers and carry merchandise from one market center to an- other. The motorist quite often will see a whole convoy slaking its stalely progress, a picturesque sight, which can grow tiresome when the "mahout" -driver- of the elephant at the head of the convoy has gone to sleep and all the elephants have strayed to the crown of the road, there to stand gazing dreamily at the horizon. '1'o 011 the !tooting, they merely rather disdainfully flap their huge era's, while the "mahout," equally impervious, goes on sleeping. This correspondent, traveling in a baby Fiat by night along the Grand 'Trunk Road between Del- hi and Calcutta, once crashed in- to an elephant standing motion• less across the road, with disas- trous results to his vehicle and very little damage to the ele- phant, The "mahout," as usual, was having his forty winks and so, apparently was the elephant. There are many indians, there- fore, who are more than glad that the noble beast Is being put behind the plow. Harry's Club Is Very Exclusive Back in the White Ilouse to spend the night for the first time s i n c -e January 1953, former President !tarry Truman found that despite all the redecorating being done by Mrs, Jacqueline Kennedy, his old black baby - grand piano was still on the premises. The Kennedys brought it upstairs from the library for the occasion, After a nostalgic black -tic dinner (among the guests; Maj, Gen. Harry H, Vaughan, Dean Acheson, John W. Snyder) in the East Room, Truman heard one of his favor- ite pianists (Eugene List) play his favorite music (Chopin's. Waltz in A Flat, Opus 42) and then took over at the keyboard himself to play Paderewski's Minuet in G Minor. Truman was in rare form during his visit. He took the time to describe the right-wing John Birch So- ciety as a "Ku Klux outfit with- out night-shirts," and he brought down the house at the National Press Club when he explained: "Mr. (Herbert) Hoover and I .have formed a former Presi- dents' association, He's president and I'm secretary, The other fel- low hasn't been taken in yet," WATER TAP - Inspectors 0. Lylley, right, and R. Brewer 'lave set up a water top at Sevenoaks, Kent, England. They ck leaks or stoppage In water mains for the water board listening to the rush of the liquid through the pipes. GENUINE PICASSO - This villa, near Velletri, ' Italy, may not look like a work of art, but it wos recently bought and redecorated by the world-famous Pablo Picasso. Located 10 miles from Rome, the house will be his home while in Italy. 1,4 FARM FRONT If entomologists are to cmtrol the bugs, they will have to beat them at their own game. ll1 in- sects use genetic tricks to coun- ter insecticides, entomologists will likewise have to use bio- logical subtleties to defeat the pests. Ot', to put it in the form of a question, can men learn to use the insect's reproductive ma- chinery for purposes of in:ect control, They can and they have. The most celebrated case to date is that of the eradication of the screwworm fly from the southeastern United States. * $ * This is a pest whose larvae in- fest cattle, deer, and other ani- mals, It has caused millions of dollars of losses annually in areas it inhabits. Chemicals have afforded little control over the flies. But before World War II, two Department of Agriculture entomologists found the research road that led to an effective means of control. 4, They were Dr. Edward F. Knipling, now director of the Department of Agriculture's En- tomology Research Division, and Dr, Raymond Bushland, now taking charge of a new research laboratory being established at Fargo, North Dakota. At first, their concept seemed a wild dream. Theory was clear. But practical means were indis- cernible. In fact, they did not become available until the 1950's. f f t The central idea was simple enough - induce the flies to breed themselves out of exist- ence. 'rhe entomologists had no- ticed that the females mated only once, while the males ma- ted several times. If a female mated with a sterile male, she would produce no offspring. If a significant number of sterile males could be introduced to compete with normal males, the fly population in a given area could, theoretically, be drasti- cally reduced, if not eliminated entirely. The question was how to breed sterile males in large enough quantities. The answer was found when scientists working In other fields discovered that doses of X rays or gamma rays can render some insects sterile without otherwise affecting them or their normal behavior. There is not space 'to tell of the trials due to colleagues' skep- ticism, official indifference, and lack of support that the two en- tonlolgists faced for years. Their work often was done on their own time and frequently had to be shelved in favor of more pressing assignments. But with the tool of radioac- tivity in hand, they were ready to answer a call for help when Curacao, In the Netherlands An- tilles, was_ suffering from a screwworm-fly plague In 1953 * * Males of an especially sexually active strain were sterilized and released over the island the fol- lowing summer at a rate of 400 per square mile. Within 14 weeks, the screwworm fly popu- lation was decirnated. This was a boon to Curacao goatherds, But It was only a .pilot project for the Knipling- Bushland technique. This was proved out in a massive way in an 10 -month program In Florida that ended in July, 1959. e M The state had been suffering one of the worst screwworm in- festations in its history. A huge fly "factory" was set up which turned out 50,000,000 sterile males per week, These were re - toasted in predetermined pat- terns by a fleet of 20 aircraft. When the program was fin- ished, Florida's screwworm pop- ulation was nil. 44 Although there is always the possibility of a reinfestation from other areas, quarantine regulations help guard against this. It is believed that no case of screwworm trouble has been reported east of the Mississippi since 1959, Were a fly invasion to occur, the sterile male fac- tory could be reactivated. The work of Drs. Knipling and Bushland has been'widely hailed as one of the most important de- velopments ever to come from Department of Agriculture re- search, or from any other agri- cultural research establishment for that matter. Yet it is only a beginning, a first step toward a revolutionary and promising approach to insect control, This is the kind of control that is based on detailed biological knowledge of the species in- volved and that deals with that particular species without dam- aging others. The sterile - male technique looks promising for controlling such other major pests as mos- quitoes and tse-tse flies. But if it should prove impractical, re- search very lkiely could turn up a workable alternative, For example, in some cases it may not be practical or econom- ical to raise sterile males in the quantities required or to distri- bute them properly, But it might be possible to introduce genetic factors into the wild insect pop- ulation that would spread nat- urally throughout the popula- tion and be unfavorable to its survival, , {: t Or perhaps one could breed and release interracial hybrids that would interbreed freely with the pest species, producing sterile females as offspring. Still another technique might involve• the introduction of parasites that would hold down the population of an insect pest to tolerable numbers, The remedies that eventually inay bo adopted will be main and varied. f3ut they will all stem from the astute applica- tion of a thorough knowledge of the biology and s(o)upy of the insects themselves. It has been difficult in the past to muster enthusiasm for this approach, which requires yeas of basic research that must be continuously supported whe- ther an insect pest is in evidence or not. The tendency has been to ne- glect this kind of research and then to apply poison sprays in a panic when an emergency arose. If men are really to achieve ef- fective pest control without de- structive side effects, they can- not afford such a lack of vision any longer. Hyenas Are No Laughing Matter! Is the hyena, that strange un- lovely n- 1ovely animal whose howl sounds like the laugh of a ma- niac, slowly dying out? Will his so-called laugh -- one of the weirdest and most dreadful sounds in nature - be stilled before the end of this century,' Some naturalists who have recently returned from Africa think so. Roaming areas where earlier this century these shaggy -haired ungainly creatures were :onn- paratively plentiful, they lis- tened vainly for the hyena's cry - a scream, high-pitched and palpitating - which he utters in moments of excitement, espe- cially when he sees that his food is near at hand, Hyenas will attack a sleeping man, but by and large they are cowards at heart. Naturalist Cherry Kearton, who hated using his rifle ex- cept when necesary, once de- clared that there was something so loathsome about the hyena that he felt no compunction in killing it. Kearton called the hyena "the graveyard of the African na- tive." He found it was the ter- rible custom in Central Africa, if a native was very ill and likely to die, to put him or her in a hut on the outskirts of a village - and then make a hole for a hyena to get through. In those days the dead in -that area were never buried. An argumentative man sat next to a clergyman on.a bus, Ile said, "I'm not going to heaven because there is no heaven," "Well, then," replied the clergyman, "go to hell, but be quiet about 11." CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 59, Nerve 1. Change network direction (neut.) 1. flenr wheel tooth 8, Ruselan emperor 12. Century plant 13. Swine canton 14. Air (comb. form) 15. Mendicant 17. Helper 19, fop. coin 20, Dwarf 22. Sward 23. Metric land measure 25. Insect 26. Thus 97. Pithy 80. Between (prefix) • 33, Type measure 34. IClnd of eaueage 36. Function 87. Loafed 39. Flesh of deer 41. Man's nickname 42. Swamp 43. Note of the scale 44. Condition* 48. Artielio quality 48. American republic (ab.) 61, Kind nt cloth 63. Drug. yielding plant' 65. Supplication 66. Name meaning 'rntelt fir) 69. Vehicle on runners 80, stale child 61. war god DOWN 1. Shoe latchete 3Sheltered . Kind of brandy 4. Small barrel 6. Shorten DAY SCIIOOI LESSON Ify Rev ;t. :;.u•cla} 11':u•reo 11,.1„ 11,11. Growth 'Through Witnessing. Acts 1: 13-21 A witness about anything mus, know the matter first-hand and be willing to communicate: tha+ knowledge. A witness for Christ intuit know Christ. hearsay MU not be effective. Ile 1111151 have an urge to share this knowledge. Just before His ascension, Jesus said to His disciples, "You will receive power when the Holy Spirit moues upon you: and you will bear witness for 11)0.-" Acts 2:11. Isere is the secret of wit- nessing as is readily seen in the history of the early church fol- lowing the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. The Memory Selec- tion expresses the altitude of those who are filled with the Spirit. 11 is, ''14e cannel but speak the things which we have seen and heard." Acts 4:20. 11 is an inspiring story, Thu disciples were indeed the light of the cvorld and the salt of the earth as ,Jesus charged them to be in Elis Sermon on the Mount, But they used words, too, They were bold in presenting their testimony of Jesus Christ. God sanctioned their teaching with miraculous signs such as the healing of the lame man al the Gate of the temple, The disciples grew as they wit-. ncssed. They were fervent in prayer for the conviction and conversion of their fellowmen, Their preaching was evangelistic. They urged people to make the choice of Jesus Christ as Saviour and Lord now, The pulpits of our day spend too much time in the edification of the saints. The saints would need less nursing if they were devoted to the task of making more saints.. They were keen in evangelistic visitation. They went from house to house to win the people to present, positive faith in Jesus Christ; and then to build them up in the faith, They were enthusiastic about the task of witnessing. A Christian must have exercise if he Is to grow. And witnessing is the finest of exercise. The world needs our witness. Let us as Christians, be fully consecrat- ed and filled with the Spirit, that Jesus Christ may gain dominion in the lives of more people, ISSUE 47 - 1961 6, Correlative 81. Self of either 32, ICing Arthur's 7. Large man lance 8. Contemptible 35. Flowering person plant 9. Fanatic 10. Eng. 88, Tenant composer 40, Complement of a cup 12, The end 44. Demons 45. Containing all possible 46, Six 47, Alott 41•, Glut 54, Playing verde 52, Boy 54. Period 57, Artlelclal language 11. List 18. while 18, That thing 81. Expose 24, Garbed 26. Gastropod mollusk 27. Hawaiian wreath 28. Also 29. Incline the head 30. Tavern Answer elsewhere on his page LOOKOUT ABOVE -Progress has caught up with foYast fire lookouts, which once were crude wooden, walk-up affairs. Now, in oddition to running water, electric stoves and other conveniences, a new tower near Molalla, Ore., features an electric eleyator. The, 145 -foot steel tower, maintained by a fire patrol association of forest landowners, over- looks tree farm lands of Crown Zeilerbach Corp. In close-up at right, Eugene Jacobson, assistant district warden, takes off on the long ride to the top of the lookout tower, PAGE 4 SHOP FOR QUALITY SAVE WITH QUALITY Girl's Coats and Coat Sets, 1 to 11 $18.95 Up Teen Coats, plain and plaid, 10 to 16 , $18.95 Up Girl's Sweaters, ban -ton, orlon or bulkie $3,98 Up Ladies bulkie or shag Sweaters $8.95 Boys Pullovers or Cardigans, shag or bulkie. 4 to 14 $2.98 Up A small deposit twill hold any article ' until Christmas. Needlecraft Shoppe Phone 22 • Blyth, Ont. THIN I.BI,YTII STANDAItb Walton News 4. M1rslon Band The November meeting of the Tio. sion Band was held Sunday moriiinl LON7J I'.513OKU at 11;30 a.m. in tit' basement of L►Ittl': The Afission Iland held their Thant: United Church with Alts, Miller Dew- offering meeting on Monday evening Icy as leader. Tussle 588 was sung. with a Targe attendance. The president Thank - followed by t.Itts n, Il e�l Smut Purpose Linda Litl.lc, opened the meeting; with repealed In unison. Hymn 613 WAS Mill; a hymn. Correspondence was taken and the leader gave a shirt discussion Li,r e of by lie secretary, cialuirlae = on "1't'e,>ari►:;; for Christmas." ..trip' ; Funpe. hell call Was answered by tore taken trent l.siash 9: 6, and Micah fol`lyr ht Roll s. Lorna Milier then ' 5; 2 Was read by Helen Searle Mid favered with a Piano instrumental i Beverley McCall lead is prayer. ot'• which was followed by a number by _ ferhlg was taken followed by offertory the Snell quar'telte. An accordion solo _ prayer, Jack McCall read the minutes by llarbara Burns was enjoyed. ('Salim 1 . a r Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — SEAPORTS! LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE — THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. - FRONE/r ; CLINTON; • 44,' EXETBIL Business—Hu 2.6606 Business 41 Residence—flu 2-3869 Residence S4 of the Iasi meeting. Nest meet ivil' I ;trine Funge contributed a Christmas be the White Gilt Service when the poem and Ceoffcry Shaddick came u; nlenthc►'s will present gills Of used o► with a lively piano instrumental, Mrs. new c, nwelethelt e Anderson then Inti'oducd 1110 guest mitts. lothingScriptureew willash he takensor Wby speaker, Mrs. h'inglantl, of Clinton, lobo ' Karen AIcDonald, prayer, Karen Colitis I1e.,l 'ihh hit 1'i! t of the :rotvn ups as and Helen Searle at the piano. There well as the c'hihlr•ee With stories of will be five girls to take past In the oiu Canadian North, Alaska and Me Pro;ram. EleeUon of olfieers: priisi• 1'tdcon, 111E0 showing beautiful scenic dent, Carol Wilbee; \'i4e pl esidtint, Ncl• picture's taken on their trip to Alaska, lie Baan; sca'i't'lary, \'canrfi Hig:;inholh• this past summer. Everyone enjoyed .ant; treasurct, 11t!1'rill Craig; assistant the evening and we are proud of the _ treasurer, Karen Coutts; librarian,' sl; redid talent aur young people arc fuBewley. Class teachers (hi . ;_hctving and appreciate the time our ontitCdali were Aiicen Wllilatrluoit, A1rS. crmnble leaders are giving do this work. Robert Aic\lichael, Mrs. G. AleGavin, . Mrs, N. Marks. The meeting closed with hymn 13 and I.he Mispah Ben - diction. FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest- aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full - course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts, HURON GRILL BLYTH -ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. " Walton Grnult Mrs. Ethel ltackwell was hostess to the Walton group last Wednesday ev. ening, Mrs. Wtn. Thamer presided, op• ening with hymn 262, "'The Morning Light is Breaking." Prayer was offered . any I1rs. Ethel ltackwell after which the scripture passage was read by Mrs, Alf Anderson, Mrs. Thamer gave 4 continents on the 12th verse also medi• talion entitled, "In Grandma's Days.' Mrs. George Hibbert gave an Interest• ing topic on Christmas, followed With Wingham , Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP: Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. • - Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON. • WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS, & SHOES Phone 78. YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN- KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. Pre Christmas Sale 10 PERCENT DISCOUNT ON EVERYTHING IN THE STORE From a Package of Needles to a Suit of Clothes, Shoes and Rubber Footwear, YOU SAVE • SAVE - SAVE We back this up with our ENTIRE STOCK of BRANDED MERCHANDISE Do your Xmas Shopping Early A Small Deposit will hold any item until Xmas REMEMBER-- Discounts on Everything in the Store. . "The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PHONE 211 .• ;f. BLYTH, ONT. a poem, "There'll always be Christ- mas," The roll eat! Was answered with the name of a missionary. hitt ules wore read by the secretary, Mrs Herb 'Traviss. Mrs. E. Backwell con vener of the nominating committee, an. nouncC(1 the new officers for the conn• ing year as follows: president, Mrs. Emerson Mitchell; vice-president, ,bb's, Wm. 'Thamer; secretary, Mrs. Herbert 'I'raviss; Treasurer, Mrs. It. Achilles; asst. treasurer, Mrs. W. C, Badmen; Pianist, Mrs, Harvey Brown; suppet committee, Mrs, Ralph Travis, Mrs. Nelson Marks, Mrs. Allen 'McCall, Mrs. Ernest Stevens; quilt committee, Mrs. Ethel Hackwell, Mrs. Geo, Dundas, Airs, Alf Anderson and anyone willin:: to assist, Mrs, Geo. Ilibberl's side were winners In the copper contest lot the year, The losing side, with Mrs. R. Achilles as leader, decided to have the annual Christmas party on Decem- ber 13th when there will he an ex• change of gifts and boxes will be pack- ed for shut-ins. The meeting closed with hymn 505, "Abide with Ale." Mrs A. Anderson conducted a Bible qui: and Christmas cards were offered lot sale. Lunch was served by the hos less, Airs. Ernest Stevens and Mrs. Nelson Reid, 25th .Wedding Anniversary On Thursday evening about 83 friends and neighbours gathered at S.S. No. 12 Grey School, to extend good wishes to Mr. and Mrs. Alex Gulutzen on their 25th Wedding anniversary. Euchre was played and those winning prizes were Mrs. Hugh Johnston, high, and Mrs. Donald Buchanun, low; men's high. Mr, Harold McCallum, and Air, Henry Armstrong, low, Mr, and Mrs. Gulut- zen were called to the front and a short progt;atn was rendered by Mrs. Harold Smalldon and Mrs. Harold Mc Callum. and a sing song enjoyed. Mrs. Glen Corlett read the address, Henry Armstrong and Bill Murray presented them with a smokers stand, ash tray. electric fry pan and serving basket, also an electric clock from Michael Gulutzen. Mr. Gulutzen thanked his many friends in a few well chosen words. Lunch was served by the ladies and a. social half hour enjoyed. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Burke and son of 1Vinghant, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Art McCall on Sunday. The Library Board will hold their annual meeting at the Walton Library Thursday afternoon, November 28111 at 2:30 pan. All members and anyone interested are invited to attend. A 'pod attendance is requested. Mr, and Mrs. Earl Rowe and Mr. Wm, Dougall, of ilensall, and Mr, arid Mrs. Arline Rennie, Seal oil i, were supper guests at the home of Mrs. Maud Leeming last Wednesday even ing, the occasion being the 92nd birth- day of A1iss- Mary E.- Mowbray, who resides with Mrs, Leeming. Herb Kirkby, of Woodstock, spent the weekend at his home here, Miss Ruth 'Ennis, Reg, N., of Kit- chener•, and Mr. Ronnie Ennis, of Ham- ilton, spent the weekend with their parents, Mr, and Mrs. Doug Ennis. OBITUARY MRS. JAMES SCOTT Mrs, James S. Scott, of R.R. 2, Sea - forth, passed away at London on Sun- day, November 19th, in her 59th year. She was the former Mabel Elizabeth Livingstone, of Hallett Township. Surviving are her husband, and a sis- ter Mrs. T. R. (Josephine) Thompson, of Clinton, and brother, William E. Livingstone, of Hullett Township. Funeral service was held on Wednes- day at 2 pan. at First Presbyterian Church,. Seaforth. Interment in Malt- ' lAndbmiii Cemetery, A social time was Spent while the girls served a bountiful lunch. -Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Ilowatt re• turned on Thursday from a two week ti for trip to Southern Alberta. .Mrs. Laura Lyon spent the weekend tvah •her daughter in ICitchenei'. Mr. and Mrs. Spence Hann and fam- ily, of Waterloo, spent Sunday with Mr. Will Govler and Mrs, Webster. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fairserviee were also dinner guests with Mrs. Webster. Arr. and Mrs, .1. D. Elsley, of Listo- wel, were Sunday visitors wil.h Mr. and Mrs, Harvey 1lunkIng. Jack Tantblyn spent the weekend with tlis sister in Leamington. OBITUARY NORMAN GEORGE SIIIELS Mr. Norman George Shiels, 63, of liclgrave, formerly of Brussels, passed may in \Vingham General Hospital on Wednesday, November 8, Surviving are his wife, the former : Lillian Rogers; sons, Norman, Ash - .01d Township; George, Hensnll; datnghters, Mrs. Garnet (Donna) Allan, 'Email; Miss Shirley Shiels, Detroit; a sister, Mrs. George (Elizabeth) Johnston, of 11'ingham. Funeral services were held Friday froth D. A, Rann funeral home, Brus- ;rets, with burial at Brussels cemetery. • `\TC(111esd11y, Nov. 22, 1961 "SALE CLEAN"UP" C91ltinuer At Our Store W1'l'II NIYY BARGAINS' 3 Only— MEN'S TOP COt1-'lt••- Reg: $21,50); $19 ,95 5 ilitd *15,95 SALE $12.50; $14.99 and $11.99 1 (My--- HEN'S NAVY SUIT, size 38 --- To Clean Up at $18.50 BOYS' 3B RUBBER GOLOSHES --- Reg. $/1,95 Clean Up at $2.99 Froni Now Until Xmas 0nI)•--• 11) PERCENT DISCOUNT ON ALL PUR. CHASES MADE FOR CHILDREN 1VITIi. FAMILY ALLOWANCE CHEQUE, Our Store is Jammed Full of Xmas Merchandise SIIOP EARLY And g'et. the Largest Selection. R. W. 11adi11's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Good Manners" Si - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH APRON ANI) DISH TOWEL SETS, Special .. 19c PLASTIC i)RAPES, Children's designs only, pr. 99c NEW JEWELLERY FOR XMAS XMAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS: Dolls, Doll Buggies, .irons, Ironing Boards, Hockey Games, hockey Sticks and Pucks, 'E'ea Sets, Crolcinole 13oards, Table and Chairs, Snow Shovels, all size's for children, Assorted Boxed Games, Puzzles, Paint by Number Sets, Fiction and Classical Story Books. 1.1 II .n. CTION AGAIN$T PROFIT -ROBBING POULTRY DISEASES, keep'em healthy .rh. FiGHTS DISEASE IN BIRDS keep;. em healthy .. iy:r:: »:ice KILLS GERMS IN DRINKING WATER • TeiThthyCi POULTRY FORMULA WITH AN'T'I -GERM 77 Now! Get two-way insurance on poultry profits with Terramycin Poultry Formula with Anti -Germ 77, This double-barrelled weapon, specifically designed to fight poultry diseases, embodies a powerful water disinfectant that kills germs in the' drinking water while potent Terramycin fights disease in the birds, The superior antibiotic action of Terramycin controls more poultry diseases, faster, including profit -robbing CRD, It also combats secondary infections, enabling birds to get back 6n their feed fast after setbacks due to disease or stress, Use Terramycin Poultry Formula with AG 77 for prevention and treatment of disease, against stress and to stop laying slumps. It helps you get young birds off to a disease-free start and promotes greater uniformity of gr4Wth, FtAI direr• tions on package. Dissolves Instantly Stays Potent Longer • Available wherever animal health products are soli' Terramycin ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS Animal formula • Poultry formula with Anti.Germ 77 • Liquid Terramyclrl for Mastitis • A & D Scours Tablets • Terramycin injectable Solution Pfizer Research Contributes to More Profitable farm- log SINCE 1041 j 19416 I. A • 'edfihdt , Nov, x ,1061 Farmers' Union Disagree With Enquiry Cornmittee Report The Ontario Farmers' Union has tak- ett issue with the Agricultural Market. Tug Enquiry Committee for its recons• n)ondation that govormnents, both fed eral and provincial, should not inter- fere with the trend to fewer and large! farms. At a meeting in Guelph, November 15th the Ontario Farmers' Union Exec.. uteve reviewed the recently published report of the committee which was ap• rohnted in lfareh 1959 by the Ontario Goavcrnmcr:•t to enquire into tite mantel. Jeg and distribution of farm product; and the "most practical forms of pro• ducer group action" to meet the con. centrated buying power of present largeeeca1e food proce-sin„ and rltstri• buthee systems. "What the committee recommend in effect is that farmers should adjust to this concentration of buying power by getting off their farms," Ontario Farm Uunion President Mel, Tebbutt, said. "fhis, of course, would make it easier for big business to integrate the fewer fanners who would be left on the land.' 'the committee equates bigness with efficiency and ;greater productivity which it considers desirable," Mr. 'Pete butt eafd, "But, he added, at the saute time the committee admits that in. created production will not help the Reducer who will have to pass on any benefits to the consumer. This seems to be a rather unrealistic approach to solving the fanners' problem," he said. CONGItATU14ATIONS C'ottZreadalions to Mrs. Orval Mc- Gowan who celebrates her birthday on Novcnsher 2f'th, Congratulations to Airs, Kenneth 'I'yn• dell who celebrates her birthday on November 271h. Congratulations lo Mr. G. 0. ilradley of Mcalord, who celebrates his birthday on P)mvember 2801, Congratulations to .Ir. I..inyd Watch who celebrates his brililday on Noelle. her lath. Congratulations to firs. Stuart Roh• bison who celebrates her birthday en November 24th. !i 1 ating policies with other provinces. "11'e are air aced by the narrow view of the conunitte which seeks parnchi i solutions, "Mr, Tehhut1 said. farm problem is not provincial or re; instal it is national—even international. And the answer is not to be found in increased production wiles:; we can increase effective demand al llle same time." Instead of restricting itself to Cana• da's traditional markets in Britain and West Europe, the committee "shouhl have raised its eyes" and looked for new ones, Iie said, Canadian farmers could easily double present food pro• duction, the Ontario Farm Union Pres- ider!. claimed. "But what good would it be if we clau't know where to put !the :duff?" Canadian farmers know enough about production, he said. "What we need is a few economists who know souse• thing about distribution." The committee made the very cone neon error of looking at the farm situ• ation out of the context of the general economy, the farm leader said, "They went farther and took the Outarie farm ecol:otny out of the context of the Canadian farm economy by neon• mending that Ontario farmers should conquor the Ontario market.." :Mr Tebbutt thought it was "naive' to expect that Ontario farmers could solve their problems without co•ordin- IT 011111 LE 1 w 't i I3LSm11 iANDARD1 -1 PAGE 5 CELEBRATED 2 th WEDDING ANNP1'EREARY Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Pipe, of Morris Tcwnshlp, entertained Mr. and Mrs. 1V3ts.n Sholdiee to a turkey dingier on the occasicn of their 2.th wedding an• niversary. t ter, thirty net;hh-urs and (menet. neighbours arrtve:l to spend and en• jeya`ile eve.sing with the honoured guests. $20,001) SURPLUS POSSIBILITY FOIL HURON ih'edictions are that Huron County should mrd the year with a $211,0110 sur• flus, or at least maintain a balanced budget, Clerk•Treasurer, Jahn G. Der. iy, told Huron County council on Tues. ;ley. He said although the hielneay account, showed a deficit of slightly more than $78,000 for the period endiir, September 30, the ccur-tee should end the year with a balance. Highway expenditures dur- ing this period were slightly over $921,000. C'cunty revenue for the same period was $402,250 and expendittu'cs were $382,000, Ile said the highway depart- ntert must carry out its major pro- grams within a short time and as a re- sult builds up Targe exi:enrlilures, Rev- emie is not ava11ahle to off -sot these expenditures until the end of the year. Air, Berry said this is a constant prob- blem and. it would seem that either the pec: rani, will have to be reduced or funds increasers to keep up the financial end of the (Iepartnterl. FE11ERATION NEW3 (By J. Carl Heninev:ay ) Just a reminder that the Huron Coun- ty Federa:ion cof Agriculture Annual ilie ting win be held at Londeshoro, November 291h. You will he receiving; your Federation Annual Survey very shortly. Look up the particulars. 1 ceeld eery well fill tie this article with a re,.ert of the 0 F.A. Annual but you will get a muck were trnnrprchen- sive. account in your Rural Co•Operat.or. Seine time ago you p1o'.ehly heard that there was to he an invesligatio'l into restrictive trade pract'crs in Ilse meat parking industry. The report has been released and a few co;!cs found their %nay into the County. However we have been informed that it is nt w out of print ;end ro Coping are available Since it is :'u:h an enlight^ring manu- scrirt it is unfortunate the( mere ferm- i ere cent ha, e11. It coups be ver;; hr•iel!" semnie't un by simely st?lirg that the paeleine du:try finds it in'.:ch erre profitable to elinlinete rl' intimidate c'-mpetitior rather than to i:r..:rove efficier.e'y. cinee the Hog Prrdi eers 1) r:e rnadde it possible for small ricers to ostein a supply el liras th::nur;h their open market mettle(' of selling another means 01 eliminating couspetitiuu had to he devised. In chatting with a smell paceer from Eastern Ontario recently I find that the answer has been rowel, 1 hail n1 !iced that (herr is :a ce icer!- ec1 promotion of Fe'lerally insr.eteed cleat. I, (momently, had lheught that this was perhaps a rod health pre - ' caution haat my packer friend tells me that this effectively eiinli': ;te:, the small packer since his V0'tlllle 01 eusi• ness cannot afford a Federal inspector. This has cru1 off all his sales to chairs stores. in trying In continue by Milne to 5011111 stores he suddenly found That salesmen from the large packers were offering 14 days credit, This means that the small packer trust have enough wanking capital. to pay fur three week's supply of live. stock. Smell packers dc.n't have enough working capital to pay for three week's supply of livestock. Small packers don't. have enough money. While the 5111;111 packer selling local- ly has to meet this competition on his total sales, the large packer only needs CROP REPORT Cold weather and snow in the past few days has caused the stabling of most: of the livestock. This weather has also slowed clown the plowing op- erations with a loud (Jeal of plowing left to do. heavy rains approximately a week ago have helped the water sit. nation. D. G. Grieve, Associate Agriculture Rep. for ]Duron County. z. 2::: HT...S1E) 444 I County Health Doctor Reports To county Council On Important Matters HURON SCHOLARSHIPS AWARDED The committee, comprising the War. den Ivan Forsyth, D. 11. !titles,' age; cultural Representat.ve and J. H. Kinkaid, appointed by the Huron Coun- ty Council, to award scholarships and bursaries, announces the following: At Ontario Agricultural College, De. gree Course, Ross Wein, Crediton; Dip - ham Course, Gordon Strang, Hensel'. At eiaeDonald Institute: Mary McIn- tosh, R.R. 3, Seaforth. At Western On. fa1Jn A_rieli.'tural School, Ronald 111- chr,lscn, 13elgrase, The committee apfointed by the. Hu- ron County Council to award scholar - shies ar'J t•t'.a.ries at the University et Western Ontario announces the fol- lowing sele:tic'ns for 1961: Linda Blake, Goderich; William Etlt- erin> .cn, 11.11. 1, Hensel(; Mark Ben- der, 11.11. 1, Varna; John E. Hall, R.R.1.3, Ailsa Craig; William Marshall, Kirk. ton; William Van den Henget, HR. 6, Seaf(Jl'th; Pict Van der Meer, Gode!'ich, The scholarship; to the boy and girl from 1111/011 County who attained the higeeet standing were awarded to: ,John Runetedtler, Wingham, and Emily Jaee Horton, Ilen:.all. to do this in the comparatively small arca it which if wishes to eliminate ecnipetition. According to my friend the method is quite eflective. If the inspection of all meat by in- spectors under the Federal Health of Animals Branch of the Department of Agriculture is a necessary health pro- tection then it should be available to all processing plants regardless of size. It must not be the means of discrimin- ating the small supplier out of business under the pretense of a health pre- caution, :0�.::4:$......c:? ,4tr ,, 'tr::hk?Yt+.:r•!.:•�`;C `.<sro 111Iailii'•''u .11 sf'd3 ee . 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Envoy's Econo-Power 4 -cylinder engine squeezes gas for extra go, FOUR DISTINCTIVE WAYS TO GO ENVOY Glamorous Envoy Custom Sedan, glitter- ing star otthe Envoy line ... tops In looks, leader inn value! 1umfilled Sherwood Station Wagon , , ; lots of "go" on the road , .. lots of space for your load! Adventurous Envoy Soecial... high fashion , , . real convenience and driving ease , . , at an economy price! Extra•Thritty Envoy Standard . , . all of Envoy'sdependabllltyandluxuryfeatures ,., for a price that's rock•bottom low! (I4'h(tcirall tires optional dt extra: rest) HERE TODAY ANOTHER GENERAL MOTORS VALUE MANUFACTURED FOR GENERAL MOTORS PRODUCTS OF CANADA, LIMITED, BY VAUXHALL MOTORS LIMITED, LUTON, ENGLAND. PARTS AND SERVICE FROM COAST TO COAST E•162C LORNE BROWN M T S Ltd. 30 Ontario Street CLINTON--ONTARIO Phone HU 2.9321 The following is a report presented to Huron County Council by Dr, R. M. Ardis, of the Huron County Health Unit, pertaining to matters important to all rc :dela of the county: In the el:r'ted annual report of the Bean Unit which was recently dis- tributed, there was reference to the crisis in hospital accomodatlon. With the strop; emphasis in the past few months on civilian preparation for em- eieency measures, the hospital shout: assume a still greater roll in their ccn'lnunities. You have probably been told of the "disaster plans" which pies: on co-creration between the hospitel and the rubric. In other words, if yce create a strong hospital and related organization in your community, you hove a tyro -step start in any civil em- ergency, Celine!' will he interested to learn that in the period October 16th, 1951 to the present, a total of $503.50 has been colected in plumbing fees. Co -opera Eon from the plumbing trade and the public has been generally good. On Octcher 5th we were advised by t)1„ Dc futy Minister of Health for Ontario that beginning in 1962 there will be no Derarttmental subsidy for plumbing it greaten. This is going to create pre:. 1011,3 for the 1912 Board of Hea!te reading ajproval by the Department cf a new budget andaccounting pre. cedures. With the revenue from pulm- hire fees, however, the task can be accompliehed. A resurgence of animal Babies has been noted in the past six months, with an incidence approximately four times greater than the experience (:f the halite period last year. Bovines ' account for the majority of cases (8', followed by fox (3), sheen (2), sk ne: (2), dog al e wolf (1). feineteen hie mans, sIio were considered in +tango: from exposure to these cases, are un- clergoin,e or have completed the 1.I - dose course of vaccine. In other phases of the work, it is regretted that we have been unable to attract sufficient public health nurs- es to bring the staff up to Kase line requirements. This means that activi- ties such as home nursing cannot be developed at present nor can school health services he expanded. Concern has been expressed over inflating costs which curtail the purchasing power of our budget both for personnel and basic supplies. it has been suggested that a uniform exemption for health agen- cies from federal and provincial sales tax would be of some help in this di- lemma. An answer which has been found in ether areas is the centralization.' and amalgamation of the authority for health and social services, .The pro- ponents of this system claim that Vital services are not compromised to local prejudices, and there is a continuity cf qualified personnel. On the other hand, these persons must admit that under this sceme there is a loss of personal relations which heretofore oc- cupied a traditional role an these ser- vices, THE SUBSCRIBERS WRITE Thaniee,ville, Ont. Dear Mrs. Whitmore and Doug: The Blyth Standard just arrived and now while it is on my mind, I am sending a cheque to renew my sub- scription which is slightly past due. Each time we are home I think per- , haps we will slip over to Blyth but them the week -end soon goes and we are back house again. I still enjoy the news of Blyth however. and wish everyone well. We have three children now—,all .girls—•don't think I sent the birth an- nouncement of the last one a year ego. If anyone is down our way stop around, Always glad to see old faces. Sincerely, -\\ Loraine (lfanulton) 51taw�, 165 Ihtfferin St., Guelph, Ont. The Blyth Standard, Enclosed please find a post office order to cover my subscription to the Standard for another year. Wishing yott the compliments of the season, . I am yours truly, Mrs, Harry Zeigler. Grand Isle, Vermont. Pear Mrs. Whitmore: Each year I hope to get back to my old home, Lot 34, Ooncessibn 7, East 4Vawanosh, but something always turns up to prevent the. trip, So as the Years pile up past the 76 mark I look `onward each week to the arrival of the Standard and doing of the folk in Westfield who were part of the daily scenes in the 1890's and the first de- eacle of the 1900's. Sincerely, Gordon E. 1Vightman, Counter Cheek Books (printed or blank) . !! The Standard • Office, `s WAGE g 'I' TIIE 13IXTII STANDARD fireside Farm Forum Members Discuss "The Farm Family On November 20 Mr, and Mrs. George Carter held a meeting for the Fireside Farm Forum. Twelve adults were present. The interesting topic was "The Farm Family, 1Vhal's Iiappenin; To lt"" Fancily life has changed greatly in our community. The little country School has closed and pupils are picked up at their gates and transported by bus to a towns school whore they receive a splendid musical training which giv• es them au advantage over their par. ents. Mingling with nwnerous pupils which help them socially to overcome shyness and self consciousness and helps their mental development. With cars young people go farther from home to mingle with their friends for entertainment. The majority of adults in the community also find every day living conditions greatly changed. Hydro, improved machinery and home gadgets have lightened the work, en• abling the parents to work part time away frau the farm to earn sufficient money to pay the great increase in taxese, hydro bills, hospitalization and very expensive machinery. Many housewives choose to teach school, work in the County Horne or Radio School. Many still assist in outside work. Mother and dad are very en- ergetic, belonging to ladies clubs, W. I, Logion, Eastern Star, Federation of Agriculture and church organizations. Most of their parents felt they had time for only one off -the -farm project. We believe many of the changes are for a better life with a broader out- look. Daily papers, magazines, radio and television keep us in touch with the whole world, Parents could strengthen the tics of family life by giving each child some share in keeping the home neat and attractive, By having light chores to give them interest and a sense of re- sponsibility. Do this in a firm but friendly manner. To give children a tease of sharing in pleasure and work. Let them feel their friends are wet• romm in the home. Be interested in their friends and activities. Churches and clubs hold family night and have mother and daughter, father and son banquets. Be a friend al your children; not just a boss. Do you believe your son and daughter mould be better off in the town or city than on the farm? Generally speaking, no, Country children have most of the education advantages of the city ones. Except the einall children lack swimming and E;kating instruction. This is a question for the individual child to decide. He Eliottid not be forced to farts if he does, not want to. Children in high school should have an 'opportunity to team of many different occupations Eo they could choose their life's work more- wisely. A few games • of progressive euchre were ,played, with winners as follows: nest games, Hugh Campbell; ' done hands, Watson Reid; consolation, Mrs. J. Hewett, Mr. and Mrs. Carter in- vited the group for the next meeting, - OBITUARY • MRS. ROBERT W. JAMES Funeral service was held on Novena ber 9, conducted! by. Rev. T. Husser of Wingharn United Church for Mrs. Ro- bert W. Jatnes, of East Wawa'nosh who passed away in Winghatn Hospital on Tuesday, November 7th, Interment took place in Winghatn Cemetery. Mrs. James was the former Eliza Ann Taman, and was born in Gaulbor• ough Township, the daughter of the late Joseph Tainan and Eliza Greer. She came to Blyth with her parents when four years old. She . married Robert James on March 12, 1202, and moved in 1906 to the farm cm which she resit• ed at the time of her death. Her husband predeceased her in 1025. Surviving g are one. daughter, Mrs. Ruse seell (Viola) Salter, and a son, Leon- ard James, at home. jj0'1 '• COIN NOTES " " By Jack C. Dietrich, Box 28, Clinton. To all Coin Collectors: A meeting is: being held with the purpose of forming a Coin Club on Thursday evening, November 30, 1991, in the Council Chambers in the Clinton Town Hall' -at 8 o'clock,lf you have on- ly started collecting don't hesitate to come out, after all It's the novice col• lector who will learn the most from a Coin Club, DALE BULL. WINS AT ROYAL WINTER FAIR Dalevista N. Peerless, a Guernsey bull, bred and owned by' William Dale, R.R. 1, Clinton, won a' -red ribbon at the Royal Winter Fair; Toronto, on Mlonrlay, November 13, topping a close of 12 senior calves. W iodrows Regal Rose, a four-year-old, in milk, placed 4th in 40 entries, Other prizes won were 6th, 7th and 10th. Mr. Dale was exhibiting six head of cattle. Residents of Blyth and district will remember the Prominent- 'part Mr, Dale's Herd took -in the Blyth Fall Fair and be quite pleased to read of his success at the Royal, OFFICIALS PREPARE FOR 1962 PLOWING MATCH A[1.3(1lZN Officio's of the Ontario Plowmen's r, 0. l'. Group meet Association, headed by F. A. Lashley 'i'he Ida lt'hitc C,O,C, Group of the mana;!er, and :1lston Camphcll, presi• Knox Presbyterian Church was held dent, visited the Derby Township farm in the Sabbath school room of the of Norman Barber and neighbouring church with a god attendance The farms, site of the 1962 International president, Johnny MacKay, ;;ave Plowing Match. call to worship wlticlt was inlbwea by a.I "renter, the Apostle's t'ri'ed, Ihti The visiting officials+sere high in I'urposc and the 1 era's lhayrr. The their praises of the site and said it flags were held by Margaret 1'cuu ;• one of the bes.t seen in many years, I blut. The scripture lesson from Luke Victor U. Porteous of Owen Sound, 19: 16, was read by Joyce Leather:anrl chairman of the Grey County Pim ing wit h the meditation and question per - Match Ccmmittce, who has been work 1 iod led by the assistant leader, Mrs, ing hard in staking arrangements, said Donald Haines. Marian Youngbhtt the site was the best he had seem gave the prayer and the minutes were' Purpose of the 0.P.A. Officials' visit read by the secretary. Eddie Haines. Was to make preliminary check on The roll call w:ts ans++'erect by all soil and drainage conditions, and to titcmbers naming a Club or or;�aniza on that do good work. The ntajnrily PM tite location of entrances, parking of them answered by naffing IVNK'EP'. lots, 1':uwing fields and the tented city. An interesting story "I3ctrind the 13ani• The local committee has been \sulk- Loo Verve," was told by the leader ing with Det•by 'Township Council and Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson. It was about the Commissioner of Provincial Police an eight year olds girl from Pakistan in planning for routes and handling the who wanted to learn to read, Living parking of thousands of cars daily. 1 with her grandparents who didn't want her to go to the Mission School, this Some of the changes in crop rotation and other routine farm practices, in• eluding the fencing necessary by the use of the land for the Match, are al• ready in effect. Other changes will be carried out in the spring and activity will increase, culminating in the Four Match Days in October, The Norman Barber farm is located very conveniently to Owen Sound which offers many facilities of use to the influx of large masers. Owen Sound Mayor William Forsyth was the winner of the special plowing match held for mayors of the various municipalities represented this year at Belleville, COUNTY COUNCIL CONSIDERING ADDITION TO OFFICE FACILiTIES Lack of accommodation may result in Huron County having a second county building or a possible addition to the present courthouse on the square. Following considerable debate Huron County council unanimously authorized the property committee to investigate offering was received by Bill Lapp the possibilities of a new building. Ther and Daryl Ball and dedicated. Alter committee was also authorized to hire an architect to prepare plans for the proposed building or investigate an addition to the present courthouse. The committee previously had taken a $500 option on property located at South, ,Britatnia and Picton streets, owned by the town. Sale price of the property is $7,500. With the option good for a year, council deferred ac• tion on purchase until a report is forth• coming from the conunittee, The committee also recommended that in planning the proposed new bulid• ing an allowance be made for expan. Sion. In the present building, Reeve Ballentine Becker said, "We cannot build any higher as a provision was made at the time it was erected." , h'urther recotnnuendation was that in planning the new building the follow• ing offices be transferred to or incor- porated' into the' new building: Huron County Children's Aid Society; proba- tion offices; detention home; juvenile and fannily court judges office and fans• ily court room (also magistrate's quer• hers); the Huron County Library, Members' were told that for some tiThe the property committee has had under consideration the advisability of making more office space for certain offices within the courhouse• At pres- ent the Surrogate Court and sheriff's office are in need of different arrange• stents and the children's aid office needs more space. There is also a need for an office for the emergency nieasures coordinator. The probation officer is also located itt temporary quarters, Reeve Frank Walkom, of Goderich opposed any addition to the courthouse Mating at would spoil the design of the building. lie also objected to any de. centralization of authority and said there would he better continuity of alt offices were kept • together. An addition to the courthouse would mean that county council would have to negotiate with the town for more land, .Reeve Mel Crich, of Clinton. suggested that old Clinton post office as a passible building for county of. fices If Clinton's request for a new post office is approved, Exeter Reeve William McKenzie fav• ored an addition to the courthouse, little girl finally won out att(1 was abh' to go to the school in her village, show ing that Canadian children do not think of the opportunity they have in this land, which other children in other lands are without, an education. The closing prayer was repeated it unison. Light Bearer's Mission Band "Five Landings" was the topic for the Light Bearer's Mission Band at their November Thankoffcring meeting. 'The leader, Judith Arthur, gave the Call to Worship and Bill Lapp read (he scripture lesson based on the topic of spreading the Gospel. Ronald Ar- thur placed the small Christian flag on the map of Smith Rhodesia. Daryl Ball at Porto Rica: Brenda ,lrchatn- bault at Japan; and Cheryl TO at thte Coral Islands of the Pacific Ocean, The story of the fifth landing of Bibles printed by the Bible Society in 11W language of the, countries receiving then\. These were provided by the Young People from the shores of Lake Ontario, This story completed the chapter of the Study Beok. The Thank. Since it has been announced that the Ontario Poultry Producers' Association is drawing up a pian of teletype egg auctioning to be•.placed before produc• ers for acceptance or rejection, calls are many asking when details will be av!ailahle. This is criterion of the high interest, Since the Association representatives met on September 29th, the Board has held several meetings and with the assistance of the Bell Telephone' Com- pany representatives, and under the guadance of the Ontario Farm Products Marketing Board, are gradually ham- mering the proposals into such shape that they can go before producer for their con eedera tibn. The Board chairman, Tom Robson, points out that during the winter farm operators have more time for consid- eration and so the committee Is doing all in its power to get its arduous tach camuleted, so that a decision can he reached before the spring farm work is again at hand, the distribution of 1Vorld Friends, Mrs, Arthur Grange closed with prayer. C,G.LT, Meeting The Auburn C,G.['1' members mcf in Knox Presbyterian Church with the first vice-president, Darlene Stewart in charge. The meeting was opened by singing the National Anthem with Patsy Milian at the piano. The niin- utes were read by the secretary, Gail Miller. The scripture lesson, Psalm 90, was read by Patsy Millian, follow- ed by the Purpose and Lord's Prayer, The roll call was answered by each member giving their favourite saying. The assistant leader, Mrs. Dungan MacKay, continued the study on Ha- ligions of the World and Hinduism was the one which she told the girls about and how they had many strange beliefs in India and other neighbouring Asian countries, Following the singing of taps, the girls started their craft work of learning to smock, taught by the leader, Mrs. Wes. Bradnock. KING\ OF THE FOREST! Turn power into profit! Use the 660 for cash crop cut- ting . , . heavy jobs that need extra cuffing speed. • New exclusive crankshaft won't break or crack, even on the toughest timber, • New "pancake" type fll• ter prevents 'saw -dust slowdown' , . , keeps the engine cleaner. • Easy to heft and handle. MAKE YOUR OWN TIMBER TEST ...SOON AT LLOYD WALDEN R.R. 3, BLYTH, ONTARIO ,Phone (Residence) 37R6 0 e: � e't' • • .r' ate• ' c cr• czcf �Ia., .jam (1)\ • 1• 11-4 a 'assesses • • ttrt- CO/ We(luef4day, Nov, 22, 1961 >r' r RW r„s atronct noses tc(�,rtpn,��rjt.Or, ki; � y�'/�ry1.a Mk, � �211 Y V v V VY ii (ip 4 iwg 141>,,,,_(0 kei,_::)_,...-::„.:4 -.,--::.-;.--A, �i \ft 1 ii.iK.,.-_:.-.z,.-,.-:ii.'7,.r7:" .-_:.rp,-mrP--,"_:.:.'-,7--„.i,.F. 2-- - '-.:.-.7.—1„.-..,.j_-M.r..:-.,--.-,-4-•_---.-::.„1>..,..;--'.-,,.:.-:)...-,-„-.---..-.:...4-.:-':i.*4.....:,-.,.-..I,17.4:.i,4s„tq.,i.\\.o.-1,:'; e ;fit __�r .7 bJ Ya?"i',i ;,a, .),..:.:;&.., ,....,-..,„,i,,,.,) 0:al›vo ,,,,,,,„ '”"1',C '".,- 0 •— �� r� ti:),..::_:::.‘" ,E176-4) .4___.,..1 -,-„:-.4,.., ,,,..;,,,, ;,,,,,,,c,„ ..>40 —:ofa e F J'� d- Don't miss this VALUE -PACKED opportunity... Choose from the world's ,finest watch values! 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Unbreakable mainspring. luno• nous hands and dial. Steel case and sweep second hand, 539.75 NO DOWN PAYMENT REQUIRED Terms as tow cis $1 weekly ANNSTETT JEWELLERS WALKEIRTON SEAFORTII Wednesday, Nov. 22, 1961 Elliott Insurance Agency AVANDAUD AUCTION SALE;NOTICE TO CREDITORS Of holstein and Jersey Cows and ALL persons having claims against Heifers from Lul No 13, Concession 7, rho estate of Annie Goner, late of the. Colborne Township, 1'4 miles West of Township of (trey and of the 1!.wnship GUDERICh PARK THEATRE Phone JA47t111 �� Auburn, on the County Road of Wawanosh, in the County of Huron. NOW PLAYING ILLI i 11 --- ONTARIO. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21 Widow, who died on or about the 1st 'n.•.NVIM.IV•i1/vn}.p�•:., y,^N.l..•Ms' ...•...... •.......,...,,,.... ,,...,.,.,,,..,..,•.,..,,..w,n at 1.30•p,m, day of Serteinber, l969, are required to MEET YOUR *NEIGHBORS AT ME 1-" PAGE 1 + 10 Holstein cows freshened Iran 3 V file the sante with full particulars with New-Nev. 23 • ?t • 25-' CIMARRON"-by Edna Ferber. INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES 1 weeks; 14 Holstein and Jersey (VMS, the undersigned on or before the 23rd Scope and Clear - Glenn Ford and Maria Schell milking and due again hi January and day of December, 1961, es atter Ilial Automobile. Fire, Casualty, Sickness* AC+�idell February; 6 Holstein 2 -year-old heifers. data the assets of the r.;tale will be 1Viildstorm, F'arill Liability, Life. pastere bred; 12 calves, Holstein and distributed. SPECIALIZE . SERVICE. Holstein of and Hereford cross bred. Dated lhI 16th day of November lice., 'Tues., 11'er1., Nnt. '27 • /e • "9 -- Adnll rnlerlaelmt , • WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE. Some these cotes are in hill rudue• 1961, p SHIRLEY ,MarLAlNl, and DEAN MARTIN , Office Phone 104. e ` Phonelion and balance (Inc in early spring, ,1. KENNETi1 HUNTER Co-starred in a r.ophisticated comedyin Technicc,t,►r R(sldenee 140 if weather is unfavourable sale will Goderich, Ulaario , , „ '- • r„ be under cover, Solicitor 10r the :ILL IN A NIGHTS WORK AUTOMOTIVE TERMS CASA •Administrate ix, 3\13 NOTICE' Art 1larcrkamp, Proprietor. --- - Alechanlenl and body repairs, glass, 7.01vNSIIIP OF HU1 I rTT.� A nomination meeting fur the par steering and wheel balance. Undaspray Edward W. Elliott, Auctioneer. 1 -' fur rust prevention, NOMINATION NOTICE Thur., Fri., Sal., Nov, 30, 1)-.. 1 and 2 pose of nominating canlidates for the FOR SALE Take Notice that a meeting of the F;LI'IS i'1(LSl,isl' position of Reeve, Councillors, School DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service 11'uomn tied, s u inga, spring filled Ratepayers of the Townshi ► of Ilulletl with Hoye Lange, Tuesday Weld and Mdlle Perkins 'Trustees end Public Utility Cumin's, No. 8 highway, Phone JA 4.7331 f °I ►' S' Goderich, Ontario, mattress and c11•esser to match, Apply will be held in the Community hall Present, ht newest., a drama with songs, In scope gnu color sioncr, for the Village of Myth, will be ,1t's. Jack Lee, phone 491114, Blyth. Londesbur'u, on Friday, November 24. "WILD , , , COUNTRY" held in the I3lylh Memorial !lull on Dion 20If 39 .1, 1961, at 1 o'clock p.m, for the: purpose IN 1 Hi', COIJNThl day, November 27111 from the hour of PROPERTIES FOR SALE of nominating fit and prover persons lo Saturday ,llaliuce Only-"111ESAD HORSE" -with David Ladd 7 p.m. until 11 p.m., and erection if nee. AUCTION SALE be elected to the office of Reeve and c..sar on Monday, IYILhltlsll Ale1NT1';E s y y December 4th \vitt, To be held at the farm lot 14, eonccs• Fier Councillerh fur tee year 11+02. Reid Estate Broker the poll being open from 9 a.m. until WALKERT(IN, ONTARIO sion Stanley Township, 1'14 miles Nomination paper's must he filed 0 p.m. in I3lylh ,Mcinoi i;+I {fall. Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth, test, t4 mile south of Brucefield, on with the Clerk before 2 o'clock p.m., on Cnnthte,-By popular request "Tile NUN'S STORY" with Audrey GEORGE SI:OAN, Clerk Phone 78, TUESDAY, NOV1:AMBEIt 23 the above date. }fe \'urn, at 1.30 p.m,, A public merlin;; will cemmenee at 2 1)0 YOU HAVE BUILDING Olt ACHE:SON'S DIAD STOCK SERVICE o'clock +.m. when c ue;tions of interest RENOVATION PLANS , Consislist, a to the municipality) will be discuhsed. Farmers. Are you interested in 40 head of Registered and Grarl� For a First Close and ;ialisfaeluty Joh ,;oiling Ilio best and highest cash price.; Harry F. 'l'ebbutl, Clerk, FOR 5.1LI: CARD OF THANKS 11o.stein cows and !loiters, 20 Holstein Call for 3•our dead, old or disabled horse; R.R. 1, Londesboro, 38.2 Pulliam cow, 5 years o'd, to freshen I with to thank those who sent m,: GERALD EXEL and cattle? 1f so, phone Atwood, Zenith cows and heifers recently fresh, 20 ;,•�•\;ii•;.l;er 25th: Black cow, part Ito!• cards, treats and made visits while u Carpentry ail Masonry 4900 no toll charge) or Atwood 356- Holstein cows and heifers due in De. AUCTION SALE Phone 231112Brussels, ()Marin 2622 collect, and five our company a comber; several Jersey caws fresh and For the )"stale of the late ,Mrs. Annie 51(''.11,1i year; old, to freshen January patient in Clinton Public Hospitii, try. Seven day service, License No. springing; 12 young calves; 1 Hereford Gower. Lot 33 North half concession iicl, good milkers. Apply Torrance special thanks to Dr, Street and the & TRANSPORT 1411). 103061, Mull, 18 months old. L, Township of East la,ano:h, on Dundas, , Wallin), 'hone Brus:els 39011i; lensing staff. •. All cattle vaccinated and blood tested. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25 3:1.1 39-1. Lural and Long Distance VACUUM CLEANERS TERMS CASA 6 al 1,30 pin, SALES AND SERVICE ) WANTED Trucking '' 1)'Arcy Ralhwcll �� Sons, Proprietors. Consisting Of LOST Repairs to most popular makes of ° 11Pliablc man as Dealer in Huron cleaners and polishers, tiller Queen I[arold Jackson, Aucliuucer. 39•) 100 acres more or less on which is (;runty Experience ace sol necessary. 9 1 y In August, 7 keys and finger nail Cattle Shipped Sales,Varna, 'Pe. collect Ilensall '96112• situated one bank barn, 50x60, straw rine 0,• ).ortunily lo step into cid profit clip un chain; on Armistice Day, 2 keys FOR SALE shed 30x40, one frame dwellin;, 10 ac ;,yule usii;ess where Rawlelgh Products on a chain. Finder please contact Mollday and Thursday 50.13p.1L Quantity of propane gas brooders. res of hardwood bush, supply of well Y STOCK glass water foutains, lube feeders. water. Small Quantic of House.l;we been sold Igor years. Big profits. le Walter Mason, phone 161 Blyth, or Hogson Tuesdays DEADS' Antique Products , f Dept K. on credit. Write tie leas at Standard Office. Reward ol- Apply Russell Cook, phone 35817. hold Effects; 1 colony house 12x12. Rawle'gh's, Dept 1(•136.163, 4005 Riche. fered, 39lp, Trucking to and from SERVICES Blyth, 39.1 Everything Waist be sold to close the lieu, Montreal. 30-1 Brussels and Clinton Sales FOR SALE - CHRISTMAS TREES Estate. HIGHEST CASH PRICESTERMS CASII1 on Friday PMI) FOR SICK, DOWN OR Choice quality Scotch pine, reasonFOR SALE CELEBRATED 35 WEBDING ' DISABLEI) COWS and HORSES able rices, Gcur Tan 131 'l'es't Farms, 'forms on Real Estate Ill percent day Scotch fine Christmas 'frees, can Prices' g YANNIVERSARY iY Call 162,Blythof sale, hal ince in 311 d tys. also Owen Sound, Ontario, phone 1rRttnklir,1 stq,f•ly your needs. Apply 1110/1115 Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Tull, Hallett Gdi.54. 36.1 Mrs. Henry Brindley, Executrix. 1'icrce, Thune 13699, Brussels. 39 t'.+. , SANITATION ,'iER1 IDES Dead Cow and Horses At Cash Value Ucurgc Nesbitt, Auctioneer. 38-2 i Township, edetained Dir, and Air: , Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired. 01d horses -4c per pound '2222 -" -- ----- James 110,;, of Collln"<vor►d, to a fowl EUCHRE PARTY STRAYED ` ' Blocked drains opened with modern In Eastern Star Chapter Room, Blytli, WANTED , supper at their home on Friday evening, Phone collect 133, Brussels, YA •Nr.rohxd ca f siraycc) lu the prem equipment, Prompt Service, Irvinon Thursday, November 30th, at 0 Boys 'snow suit, 5170 9, unable far November 10, to honour them on their Coxon, Milverton, 'Telephone 234. BitUCE MA1tLATT o'clock 14111011 and prizes. Admission play. Apply Mrs. Ken MacDonald, i.r; of .tack Wilson, •Auburn. Ownct ;1.,th wedding anniversary. lltf, 131,1"I'tI BEAtJ'.I'Y BAR Permanents, Cutting, -June Pierce. 911(1 Styling. Alin 1Iollinger Phone 1.43 McKILLOP MUTUAL FiRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • ,SEAFORTII, ONT, OFFICERS: President - John L. Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John Ii, McEw Ing, Blyth; Sect'elary-Treasurer, W. E. Southgate, Seaforth. DIRECTORS J. L. Malone, Seaforth; .1. 11. McEw Ing. Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton. Norman 'Trewarlha. Clinton; .1, E. Pep. per, Brumfield; C. W. Leonhard!, Bornholm; }{, huller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Bruadloot, Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Linidesboro; V .1. Lane, H.R. 5, Seaforth; Selwyn 13a ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth: Harold Squires, Clinton. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS -1 P.M. TO 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, TBURSDAY, SATURDAY ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant OODERICH, ONT. Telephone, Jacllson 4.9521 - Box 478. 50c, 39.2 phone 171115, 131yt11, 01149.31' mid son•in:law, Lois and Bedford Dun - FOR GLENN GIBSON, ('hone I9119, Blyth SALE EUCHRE AND DANCh. gee and their two grandchildren, Bren• Two Poll Hereford bull's, 12 month: In Forester's Hall, Belgrave, en Fri. FOR SALE 6 24 hour Service old. Apply, Ernest Noble, phone 358.1. day, November 24111, at 8,30 p,m, Far• lied maple bunk or twin beds with day and Bonnie, of Seaforth, and Mr. Plant Licence No, 54-R.P.•61 Blyth. 39.1p rier's Urncc_lro, Lundi counter. Spun.'inner spring nrattrc_ses, almoit new and Mrs. hap!) Hogg, of Collirgwuod. Colector Licence No, 88•G61 sored by Belgrave Orange Lodge. 39 -Ip (6 months) for $35.00. Mrs, Keith Web. 111 the evening guests were present FOR SALEsloe, phone 160. 391. from Seaforth, St, Columba!), Coiling- - SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Medium size Quebec IIeater, reason. CARD OF THANKS 1 wood, Cromarty, Belgrave, Hullett, Mc - Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped able, Apply, Carl Longman, phone 20811 Our sincere thanks is extended to all . FOR. SALE Killop and Toronto, to help celebrate and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis [Byte, 39.1 those who expressed their sympathy in Misses winter coat ,pale blue, with this happy occasion, when Progressive Blake, phone 4421VG, Brussels, Ill. 2• so many kindly ways, at the time of red fleck and grey fur collar, size 9 euchre was played, MUNICIPAL NOTICE mother's death, We appreciated very to 11 years; 1 pair of ladies nylon fur. Mrs• Hogg was the former Elva Stap• -.,.....4.44,....,41,......,..~......,...~4,4,.......,...-MORRIS TOWNSIIH' offish all the donations of flowers, spier trimmed overshoes, size 6, black; 3 pair les, of McKillop, They were married at Clinton Community I hereby dive notice that nomination itual boqur'ls, sympathy card~ and of hisses pumps, l:+pered toe and flat. the Mchiillop manse by the.Rev, Mr. of a Reeve, Four Councillors and two bakingRe. We also thank Rev, Father L. heel size 6; 1 cloth quill (crazy patch Ferguson on November 10, 1126, with FARMERS School 'Trustees tot serve the Township E. Public Hospital and nurses of Clintoneiwork design) wool filled. These ar• Mrs, Ernest Toll, , sister of the. bride, of Morris during the year 196., \\ill he [Iospilal and all who helped in held at Mor►•is Township Hall Friday, any way and Mr, Lloyd Tasker,• titles arc all in good condition. Apply and Adrian Nogg, a brothel' of the AUCTION SALES November 24, 1961, from 1 p.m, to 2 p. 39.1p. -The Kelly Family. 110110 111123, Blyth, ' 39.1, groctu,'as-attendants, • ,.. • EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOONn1All persons wishing to qualify must CLINTON SALE BARN either be present at the nomination by • , at 2 p.m' 2 p.m. or have a written consent for IN BLYTH, PHONE nomination signed by hint or herself in BOB HENRY, 159R1, the hands of the Returning Officer by Joe Corey, Bob McNair,2 p.m., November 24, 1961. Malinger, Auctioneer If demanded a poll will be opened at 05.0. the following places on Saturday, De. -1NJ.MMIMIIMM.4M.r:•MM1MMIJ•i centber 2, 1961; 3:1.1 may hare 50)110 by paying expense'• 'Those present were their daughter Polling Sub -Division No. 1. D.R.O. THE WEST WAIVANOSII MUTUAL Laurie Scott; School House S.S. No, 1, FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY P.C. Leo Cronyn. Polling Sub -Division No. 2, D.R.0, Mend Office, Dungannon • Allan McCall; School House U.S.S. No. Established 1670 11, PC, John Hislop, Polling Sub -Division, No. 3, D.R.0, BOARD (W DIRECTORS Mark Armstrong, School IIousc S.S. No. 5, P.C. Christopher Nethery, President, Brown Smyth, H.R. 2, Polling Sub -Division No, 4, D,I,O, Auburn; Vice -President, llerson Irwin, Howard Smith, Morris 'Township Hall, Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, RR, P,C, Jack Clark, 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan, Poll11ng Sub -Division No. 5, 11110. Goderich; Ross McPhee, R.R. 3, Au• Charles Campbell, School House S.S, burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. No. 7, P.C. Gordon Iliggins, MacLennan, RR, 3, Goderich; Frank Polling Sub -Division No. 6, D.11,0. Thompson, 11,11, 1, Ilolyrood; Wm, James Bowman, School house S.S. No, Wiggins, 11.11. 3, Auburn, 10, P.C. Thomas Pullman, Polls to be open from 9 a,nt, to 5 p.m. George Martin, Returning Officer. G. ALAN %V1LLIAMS,- call your nearest t 011 directofrttw1 osa isal also OPTOMETRIST an agent, or the secretory, Dut•nhiGRASS FARM FOR SALE PATRICK ST. - WINGIIAM,, ONT. Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon I 120 acres, well fenced, never failing (For Appointment please phone 770 48, I water, gravel pit., revenue from town- Wingliani). 1 ship dump. Good barn on property, Professional Eye Examinatloti, POSITION WANTED' Anyone interested apply to Mrs. Harold Optical Services. Anyone wishing n reliable baby sitter Sellers, or, Herb Travlss, Walton, On• phone 19116, Blyth,39!p, Tarlo. 39-2 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 - Clinton ., HOURS: Seaforth Dally Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m, Wed. - 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 510, Phone HU 2-7010 G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN (Successor tto the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOB APPOINTMENT rlloNtl 33, GODERICB 23rd Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Fortner owned and controlled Service at cost Clicico of btal and breed Our arlificialbreedhtg service wIll help you to a more efficient livestock operation ror service or more information ea1L Clinton IIU 2.3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9.5650. BETTER CATTLE FOR BEl'PER LIVING CRAWFORD & HETHERINGTON BARRISTERS & 9OiJCITOR5 J, H, Crawford, R. 5. Hetherington, QC. Q.C, Wingbem and Blyth. iN RLYTII EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment, Located In Elliott Insurance Agenoy Phone Blyth, I04 gingham, 4e• WANTED HIGHEST CASII PRICES PAID FOR• OLD Ir'EATIIER TICKS also New Goose and Duck Feathers. Write to: - LOUIS WAXMAN --- Brussels, Ontario. Box 119 FOR SALE L SNOW BLOWERS WITH IMPROVED FEATURES CHOICE OF TWO MODELS Made By ALVIN WALLACE • PHONE 31R4 BLYTH, ONTARIO ..:-,-r...,.:.,m.........,:,. ..I... ,+o iala.r. .„w ....J happiest news yet ...for homes on the grow •.,r: MOM. 11103"em MEN *NM� Win: 711e Best, Most Modern Way To Heat Recreation Roolns ...Unheated Sunrooms ... Home Additions, Economically, Easily. EL Ei 0 HEAT now makes it possible and practical to enjoy room -controlled heating comfort in the added living space you are planning, without going to the trouble and expense of extending your existing heating system, Built-in electric heating units operate independently of your main heating system -delivering almost instant heat, where you want it, when you want it ... without putting an added strain on your furnace -.without .without overheating the rest of your house. SEC`' r" 10:3111 is safe, clean, quiet. You enjoy a healthier atmosphere in an electrically Heated 100111 because electric heat docs not deplete the i►nportant oxygen content of the air. Electric heat docs not create draughts, dryness or dust. Individual wall thermostats may be turned up or down, at will. You control the heating comfort and the heating cost. kL�v l:,tc IS easy and inexpensive to install. Electric wiring to the built- in electric heating units is all that is required, You eau have the job completed quickly, even in midwinter --because there is no need to disturb your present heating system or slake costly structural changes. L'all your qualified electric Treating contractor or your local Hydro for assistance itt die use of modern electric heating, For Comfort . , , For Convenience. , .For Ease of Installation.) Complete your home with electric heat. •„x,n5osr;;�cgk� HYDRO 1. yours Spotted Salvage Worth Millions Up from South Africa an her maiden voyage, the ti,759-ton freighter Oregon steamed into the shoaling tide -ripped Atlantic waters south of Nantucket Island early of a gray December morn- ing almost exactly twenty years ago, With any kind of luck -- despite the wartime blackout im- posed three' days earlier, after the attack on Pearl Harbour — the Oregon would be dockside in Boston Harbour before the day was out, discharging the first of 14,076 b a ! es of high- grade wool. Unseen by the 42 officers and men in the Oregon, the battle- ship Nc'v 'Mexico, in company with four screening destroyers, was booming south through the sante waters, hastening to join the stricken Pacific Fleet. Like the Oregon, none of the war- ships was showing a light and, in that first week of the war, none had radar. At 4.42 a.m. the Oregon and the New Mexico collided. The Ne\\ .Mexico, Tightly da- maged, detached one destroyer to stand b} the Oregon and pro- ceeded toward Norfolk, Va., for repairs. The Oregon, despite a great rip in her starboard side, was taking no !water and so sent the destroyer about her busi- ness. The Oregon sailed on to Boston at full speed of 13 knots, Shortly atter the destroyer ;eft, however, the wind freshened and heightenill4 trays began \wash- ing aboard. The Oregon went to the bot - ton) within a matter of hours, with a loss of seventeen lives. Since that dint and near -for- gotten day, the Oregon and her cargo of golden fleece, worth perhaps $3 million at current wool prices, has eluded every effort at recovery. And the job seems tantalizingly easy. 'T h e depth — under 200 feet — is well within the reach of divers, The wool is tightly compressed and thick with lanolin so that the bales, once freed from the hold, should bob to the surface. But only one man out of the scores who have searched—fish- ermen and salvage experts, div- ers and plain adventurers — ever so much as claimed to have seen the Oregon, And he brought up no wool. Understandably then, a report HELPS HERSELF—Debbie. Sue Brown, 5, the 1962 U.S. March of Dimes Notional Poster Child, helps herself to a drink thanks to those who helped her through giving to the March of Dimes. She was born with an open spine which had to be closed by surgery when she was eight. She wears the half -leg braces for corrective purposes. INN that the Oregon had bean found recently set in motion a tidal wave of envy and incredulity Prom Point Judith to Woods Hole, The man who discovered the wreck: Burton Mason, a 30 - year -old diver previously known for his efforts to raise the last German submarine sunk in tl'orld War 11. A breezy, bearded extrovert frunl Trumbull, Conn,, Mason paused in his preparations for recovering the wool to telt. how an educated guess and an instru- ment often used to find oil led him to the wreck. "I started searching last August," he said, "and made repeated runs with a fathometer over the spot shown on the charts for the wreck. Nothing. "1 became .convinced that the chart, which was marked with bearings that had been taken from the bridge of a sinking ship. was wrong." By this time, in Mason's words, he was "down to 32 cents and a secondhand razor blade," Surrendering his salvage rights to 1 h e ship's insurers, Mason went to Boston and there per- suaded an adventurous State Street tax attorney, John S. Bottomly,, to. take •up the rights and ,g iv e Mason a i'ontract to continue the hunt. Thus bankrolled and furnish- ed with an elaborately equipped 76 -foot dragger, the Captain Bill 1II, Mason got Acro Service Corp. of Philadelphia, an aerial - mapping a n d .oil - prospecting firm, to conte to his aid with a ' device known as the magneto- meter, which detects certain un- derwater and underground masses by rioting changes in the earth's magnetic field, "I don't know why nobody else ever thought of the magnetometer," Mason said. "It's been available ever since World War II," In 45 minutes, • guiding the Captain Bill III by radio, a mag- netometer operator in Aero Ser- vice's Beechcraft led Mason straight to the.ltulk, The spot: Just off Asia Rip and the Phelps Bank fishing grounds, within sight of Nantucket Lightship and Texas Tower No. 3 — and not many miles from where the Ita- lian liner Andrea Doria lies on the bottom. The Atlantic did its best to deny Mason a glimpse of his prize. Wearing free -diving gear, Mason started down the anchor cable, "It was whipping very hard," he said, "The sea kept pulling my mask off my face and filling it with water. I managed to get down to 85 feet where a tremendous surge pull- ed my helmet and flippers right off and damn near ripped me off the cable." Later, after another futile dive, the Captain Bill III's crew rigged a 1,500 -pound cement block on chain and cabin and dropped it, Mason tried abain, "The current was mild and the visibility pretty good," he said. "At 95 feet I ran into a school of tuna so thick I could see nothing, At about 100 feet I saw the wreck and landed 6 feet from the block," After exploring the immediate area, Mason surfaced and com- pared his underwater observa- tions with a photograph of the Oregon, "1 found I had probably been on the port side of the fly- ing bridge," he said, "Everything on the bridge matches the pic- tures," As this was written, Mason was intending to return to the scene and, he hopes, bring up the first bales of the Oregon's wool. "It's just a mechanical problem now," Mason said, From NEWSWEEK • ATOMIC AFTERMATH—Nurse Anja Valve of the chemis- try department of Helsinki University measures the blood pressure of Dula Nakkalajorvi, a Laplander from northern Finland undergoing tests for radioactivity. It is feared that the Lapps have been indirectly contaminated by the recent Soviet nuclear explosions. Reindeer, the Lapps' chief food, feed mainly on lichen which, because of its slow growth, preserves radioactivity for possibly as long as 30 years. STAR BRIGHT — Sophia Loren is on the set again making another film, this one in Lugo, Italy, for Director Vittorio De Sica (left), She is playing a shooting gollery owner, Other people go shopping, visiting. or have a day .down- : o w'n without incident but whenever I do any of these things I seem to run into the unusual — sometimes pleasant, sometimes not. What happened last Tuesday bordered on • the bizarre. I was having a lot of pain and inflammation in one eye so I went to see my oculist downtown, That appointment naturally took me into a build- ing almost entirely given over to offices for doctors, dentists and so on, I got into a crowded elevator and just beflore the door closed a man more or less push- ed his way In carrying what ap- peared to be a box of chocolates. Turning to the elevator girl he said as he opened. the box — "For Dr. Blank — nice box of chocolates, eh?" He gave me an Takes Little Time Trim the tree with sparkling "jewels" — children will love this gay Christmas slipper! Jif- fy knit — thrifty — ideal gift. Just ribbing added forms cult, Pattern 843: chart; directions for child's sizes 4 through 12 included in pattern, 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 'Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly ['AT - TERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS, FOR THE FIRST TIME! Over 200 designs in our new, 1962 Needlecraft Catalogue -- biggest evert 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 lo Sales Tax for each CATA- LOG ordered, There is no sales tax on the ps0lerns. inquiring look, knowing very well 1, too, had seen the con- tents of the box. Without stop- ping to think it was no business of thine I said involuntarily — "Looks more like a blood-stain- ed knife to tne!" "'That's just exactly what it. is. Old Doc Blank carved me up a few months ago so I'm just laking him a reminder!" The effect was probably the result of red paint but what I saw was, to all intents and pur- poses, a blood-stained short - handled knife lying on a bed of red -splattered cotton batting, I wonder if the doctor appreci- ated his patient's peculiar brand of humour. Later that day 1 was walking past a section of the subway construction job when 1 noticed a workplan standing beside three cylinders of propane gas. Or maybe it wasn't — I don't really know. Anyway the man was fooling around with the nozzle and I heard escaping gas or air, or something. Perhaps he was only testing the nozzle be- fore connecting the pipe, But I wasn't laking any chances and got by in a hurry. On the crowded bus cor,ung home I witnessed this pleasing little incident, Two girls, about ten and twelve, sat near me, They wore navy blue uniforms so evidently they came from a private school. One approached an elderly man, the other an oldish lady Each said — "Would you please take my seat?" I just felt warm ab over, We hear a Iot of criticism about the younger generation but nere were two little girls, without anyone to prompt them, gener- ously offering their seats to two elderly people. I couldn't let that pass without comment, "You are very thoughtful girls," I said to the one nearest to me, She just b e a me d. After all everyone, especially a child, likes to be appreciated. My next stop was at a local druggist's to have my prescrip- tion filled. I waited fifteen min- utes. Another woman was also waiting and kept up a steady conversation with the druggist about her allergies and the num- ber of drugs with which pier doctor had treated her,.(1 could just imagine!) Then she got on to her daughter's troubles and why it was impossible for the daughter's children to be born naturally. She was just describ- ing the second Caesarean when the other druggist came along with my prescription so i was able to make good my e;cape. I wonder — have some folk completely lost all sense cf mo- desty and reticence? Is it neces- sary to broadcast one's symp- toms and allegies for all the world to hear? Believe me I felt sorry for that voting phar- macist. Incidentally, while I don't appreciate intimate per- sonal details I do like hospital dramas such as Dr, Kildare, Ben Casey and the Young Doctors, Ls: 2r in the week I visited a (tome for the aged where I know several of the residents, I also met others, Driving hems I thought of the difference in their personalities, Mrs, A. I had known for about forty years. She uses a crutch now to get around but mentally she is as alert now as she ever was, Being in need of medical care and not having anyone to - look after her she reluctantly decided upon resi- dence in this home for the aged. ISSUE 47 — ltiGl i asked if she was happy, "Yrs," she said, "Because I made up my mind I had to he. I have no reason to complain, tl'e are welt fed and well cared for but it %vas some lime before I could reconcile myself to institutional care, But my friends don't for- get me. 1 gel taken out and home for supper, Sometimes I even get invited to an institute meeting." Well, friends, if we live long enough we, too, shall be old, and what we are now probably determines our pattern for the future, Cheerful and tolerant— querulous and complaining -- which shall we be? Incidentally at a luncheon the other clay I sat next to Edna Jaques. Many of you will re- member her lovely little poems, Years ago she wrote these lines, "Oh, let ole mellow with the year's And not grow old and stale!" Believe me, this talented and charming little lady has fulfilled her wish. She has, indeed, grown "mellow with the years." How About A Gamo Of Mah Jongg? The exotic lingo of the ancient Chinese game of mag jongg ("three 1)11111,'' "East Wind"), was a common sound in many an American home back in the '20s. Then contract bridge swept the nation, and few people had the patience to cope with mah jongg's inscrutable rules. Only a .straggle of diehard women kept on building "hands" of flowers, dragons, and winds with painted tiles, Last month, about twenty of these stalwarts gathered earnest- ly in a tiny New York office to press on with a .series of test games which will end in mid- ,Ianuary. The ladies—the board .of directors of the National Mali Jongg League—are trying to de- cide whether there should be, among other things, a change in the number of flower tiles. The rulings they hand down will af- fect hundreds of thousands of American women who have, in the past five years, returned to the favorite game of their mo- thers. "Our membership has tripled in the past five years," Dors. IIer- ma Scheffcr, blond league pres- ident, explained. "Just in Illinois, membership has boomed from 2,000 to 15,000. We think the main reason for the new interest in mah jongg is the introduction of big jokers two years ago," she said, "'These are like canasta jolters and add an element of chance to the game," The joker tiles are now included in sets. A good mah-jongg set costs about $25. 1l includes 152 tiles, four racks, dice, chips (the various Willtnin», hands have different monetary values), and carrying case haven though a tot of old sots are being retrieved from American attics (the league sells joker decals to bring them wtp to date), the two major manufac- turers, Cardinal and A&L, both say they can't keep up with orders. "Il dcesn't take a college edu- cation to learn mah jongg," Mrs. Scheffer insisted. "Some people play a god game after one les- son. C:111'S2, thea are some who have played twenty year's and they're just awful, but they don't know it, All malt jongg players consider themselves ex - When a young mother found her slx-year-old son busily put- ting a bandage around his thumb, she said, "You poor child, what happened?" "I hit it with a ham- mer and it hurts." "But I didn't hear you cry." "I didn't cry. I thought you were out, Modern Ettigue'rfe :lute +1,h11.3 O, Is a glute►alhet c.r l;+rlllalhcr ,uppe.scel to remember 1 II ehitci's birthday with a girl ea:'Ii ye:►r? . A. Not nee.':esorilw, :1 christ- ening pre..au is +•xpc'.'I.,d, I+ut anything beyond that depe ods upon !tow nutrh you think of Co; child, Usually, it's nice for the godparent to r e in ('111 h e r the child'; birthday with a c;lyd. Q. 1f a mein :who does 11111 have a car goes oil with a girl who (toes, is he supposed to pay fur the gasoline? A, His first suggestion of the evening should be a stop at 0 service station for some gasoline for his girl's car. Q. Is it ever proper to leave one's spoon in the coffee cup or in a howl of any kind during a meal? A. No — the only exception being: When soup is served in a soup plate, the spoon is left in it, handle extending over the right edge, parallel to the table edge — and, if you're served iced tea, with no saucer under the glass, you leave your spoon in the glass, holding it aside with your first and second fingers as you drink. Just Like Baby's 1 PR IN I LU !'A"1 11;4.14 INFANT DOLL WARDROBE 4870 FOR DOLL 10"-20" TALL g--41olg. 4404 Delight a little girl with this beautiful wardrobe for her new baby doll"-- Easy -sew pattern in- cludes bunting,. snow -suit, over- all set, coat, hat, dress, bib, slip and panties„ Use remnants. Printed' Pattern 4870'. For dolls 10, 12, 14, 16, f8', 20 inches. Please state size. Scnd FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted,. use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly S I Z E, NAME, ADi)II I1SS, STYLE NUI:?" N1:. Seri order to Anne Adams, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth Sl., New Torcnto, Ont, FALL'S 100 BEST. FASPIIONS se;:arates, dresses, suits,. en- semble:, all sizes„ al'1• in our new Pattern Catalog in (color. Sew for yourself, family,. 35e. Ontarro residents rrrust ineUude lc Saes Taxi Moen each CATA- LOG ordered. There is no sales tax on the. patterns, CATTY CORNER — While Julie, 8, reads up on felines, Fluffy, the puss, grabs a catnap on desk top. Fluffy follows Julie to, school every day. but shows no inclination toward education, even about cats. Gambling and Golf Like Siamese Twins A t t he Woodntont Country Club near Washington, D,C,, two real-estate men, partners in a luxury apartment house, played an eighteen -hole golf match, winner getting the apartment house. In Atlanta, one weekend golfer, down $3,000 going into the eighteenth hole, offered a "press" on the last hole: A new automobile or nothing. Gambling on the golf course, of corse, is nothing new, But today, with millions of sporty Americans playing the game Seriously, what is new is the va- riety of gambling methods, The old stand-bys — the $1 Nassau ($1 each nine, $1 over-all), the straight $1 -a -hole — have been replaced by betting systems as tricky and complicated as a downhill lie on a split-level greecti. In the U.S, last month, these were some of the newest and most popular golfing ham - Bridge: As played in West- chester County, N.Y., each team in a foursome bids on its score for alternate holes, A team wins one point for making its bid and one point for every stroke un- der it. At $1 a point, with doub- ling and redoubling, it can mount up. !tingle Bangle Bongo: As played at 'tram O'Shanter in Chi- cago, Bingle is the first player on the green, Bangle the player closest to the hole, and Bongo the player who sinks the longest putt. The Bingle, the Bangle, and the Bongo collect from 50 cents to $50 apiece from each member of the foursome, The lure: Luck counts more than skill. Hamner: As played at Brook Hollow in Dallas, two men play for $25 a hole, Whenever player A hits a bad shot, player B can say "hammer," This means that the hole is played out for $25 extra. Player A can refuse the hammer, but if he does, .he au- tomatically loses the hole (and the original $25 bet), l'arl-mutucls: As played at Orchard Lake near Detroit, this is the race -track principle, with each foursome in a tournament constituting a "horse." Non - players can bet on any horse they wish, and the odds are de- termined by the amount bet on each horse, Wheel: As played at East Po- tomac in Washington, D.C., twen- ty players, competing in five separate foursomes, bet a "wheel," meaning that each player has nineteen separate bets against nineteen opponents. In a $100 wheel, one man, con- ceivably, could lose $1,900, How Can 1? By Roberta Lee Q. What can I do when a fabric is too delicate for the use of ordl- nary starch? A. Melt a little granulated sugar in boiling water, and add this to your rinsing water, Q. How can I make candles from the rinds of lemons, or- anges, and grapefruit? A. Boil these pieces two or three titnes until the water is clear, then boil again with sugar added to taste, and until the rinds are soft and sweet. Both children and adults usually relish this kind of candy. If someone could tell its how to have that Friday night feeling on Monday morning he'd be famous. OH WHERE, OH WHERE .. . -- Leslie Tapia knows where his little clog hos gone: into the army Tony followed him into active duty at Ft. Whiting. Tony's only advantage is that he's a natural born "dog face," .^d:u SMILING RUSSIAN — Soviet U.N. Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin sits behind his sign of office in New York after taking over as president of the Security Council for the month of November. Hitching Racks Not Parking Meters This is the time of frantic har- vest for housewives, as heavy frost warnings are given out. Eminaline and Hilda make scur- rying trips to the garden all afternoon to gather the tender things, the peppers, the tomatoes, and the last of the grapes, They leave the hardy cabbage, the banked celery and the parsnips, which are always better for hav- ing a little frost on their tops. Kitchens across the valley are redolent with the aroma of sim- mering vegetables as the women- folk prepare the batches of end - of -garden sauce that thrifty Amish or Pennsylvania Dutch housewives always make at this time of year. Combining some of practically everything in the garden and featuring ripe tomatoes, red and green peppers, onion and chop- ped celery, it is simmered un- salted, put through a food mill and canned for use in soups, over swiss steak or smothered pot roast, Trina likes to thicken an occasional jar, add tiny neat balls and bake it in the oven, It is also excellent as a sauce for fish. Purple and white grapes go into jam, jelly, juice for the home and for Holy Communion, and there are always a few jars of plain seeded grapes and skins for pies. Blankets are hung to air, stoves are being brought in and hooked up with shiny new length of blue -black pipe, and houses are being banked with evergreens until they resemble the ones on Christmas cards, Everybody in our valley is getting ready for winter. It is good to see the children go by 'twice a day on their way to and from school, Boys in high laced shoes, trousers cropped midway to the knees, plain col- larless jackets and wide -brimmed felt or straw hats trudge along in groups. The girls walk to- gether in their long black cotton stockings, high topshoes, their dresses well below the knees and covered with while pinafores. Most of them wear their hair parted in the middle and braided. The older girls pin their braids up in buns, These are not laggards. They go joyfully in the mornings and seem just as happy to be going home in the afternoon. One misses the gaily colored lunch pails, now that hot lunches are being served in our school. It used to be that an Amish school- boy was practically inseparable from two objects he owned, his hat . and „dinier, pail, They don their .hats: for play at recess, no mattet''what the weather or how furious the pace of the game. And on the way home from school when they participated in games of tag or ran foot races, their pails were clutched in their hands, Nowadays they otily have their hats. Amish sten still Weal' the low - crowned broadbrinns, but the young bachelors favor the newer rotnd-topped hats, which they wear porkpie style. A casual visitor to our region might look upon the outward evidence as proof that people here are serenely living 19th century lives in a 2011n century world, and there is much to sup- port this view, Our village streets are lined with hitching racks in- stead of parking meters. The gen- eral store sells shawls, heavy black stockings, bonnets and high top shoes, and out in front of it there is a hand -operated gaso- line pump, one of the last of its kind in the state. The cabinet shop depends on a diesel engine for power and is illuminated by gasoline mantel lamps. We have a buggy shop, a thriving harness MEGAPHONITIS — Ex -cheer- leader Peggy Kyser (University of Arkansas) finds her hands full with a five-foot "mega- phone" for the Liberty Me- morial monument shaft, be- hind her, in Kansas City. The stentor is one of four such for o 305 -bell carillon in the monument to international un- derstanding. shop, and a "chicken factory" where the chickens are kept pro- ducing by oil lanterns instead of electricity. Some of our roads are literally horse and buggy trails where horses shy when an occasional car goes by. But to us there are indica- tions that 19th century ways are gradually being replaced by more modern ones, People here will never "go gay" (worldly). How- ever, education standards are be- coming more relaxed, young people now have Youth Night once a week in addition to the traditional Sunday night sing- ings, and as many as wish to do so in our community attend the county fair, something unheard of a few years ago, An Amish newspaper is published in the county, and most families take a daily newspaper and subscribe to at least one farm fagazine. Yet with all these changes the tempo of life here stakes for serenity of living, and the young people still love their homes, "Wouldn't you like to try city living for a change?" Benny, our teen-age neighbor, was asked by a boy front town. "Olt, no, 1 couldn't ever give up farming," Benny told hint, "And besides I like to be out where I can get the fresh air." Tomorrow is the Sabbath, a "church Sunday" for the Amish, and .today the backless benches for the congregation were hauled to Benny's home by a mule team hitched to a big wagon which still had its hayrack on the chas- sis. Il is common procedure. Every other Sunday is reserved for church, the ones in between tor Visiting relatives and friends. 1.'e often wonder where and why this particular rule Origin- ated. 'There are no written church rules, everything is by tradition. And any change in congregation- al rules can become rigid church canon in the few years it takes to forget how things used to be. writes 'label Slack Shelton in the Christian Science Monitor. For some obscure reason ad- missions to the church occur at two-year intervals only, and to- morrow is one of the special Sundays on which new members will be taken in, llilda and sev- eral of her girl friends will be admitted, as will Benny, But something is troubling hint. Glad he is to be joining church, he confides, as we meet and talk at the long line of mailboxes near our homes, but when he does it will have to come out that his name is actually Benuel and not Benjamin. This is something he has kept secret from his chums, who will surely tease him when they find out, His mother's father had the name before him, and nobody klso that he has ever heard about. The Amish usually name their children by writing down Bible names and drawing one "by lot," We hasten to assure him that it is a fine name and one to be proud of, a combination of Ben- jamin and Samuel, most likely, and chosen to please two grand- fathers at some time, no doubt, He thinks over the suggestion, then gives a relaxed grin, Benuel Isn't such a bad name after all, the grin says, and who cares about a little teasing, anyway. Kipling once wrote of this re- gion, "It is peaceful as Heaven might be if they farmed there." And so it is. He's Big Daddy Of All Race Horses Adios is a 21 -year-old stallion with a knack for begetting strong, speedy pacing horses. He has sired more winners (329) with greater earnings ($10 mil- lion) than any other horse, stand- ard -bred (harness racing) or thoroughbred (flat racing), in history. Today the country's best pacer (Adios Butler), best three-year- old pacer (Henry T. Adios), and hest two-year-old pacer (Lehigh Hanover) are all offspring of Adios. At Roosevelt Raceway (N.Y,) last month, the first three choices in the Roosevelt Futurity, the country's richest harness race for two -year-olds, were sons of Adios, The success of his family, while it docs little to enrich Adi- os personally, has made him the most expensive gigolo in harness racing, To breed a mare to Adios, the mare's owners must pay $12,- 500 to the three-man Adios syn- dicate (Del Miller, Lawrence Sheppard, and Max Hempt). Miller, who keeps Adios on his Meadow Lands Farm near Wash- ington, Pa., bought Adios for $21,000 in 1948, sold him for $500,000 in 1955, and then repur- chased a one-third interest in 1956. Adios's offspring now com- mand fancier prices than their sire brought in 1948, Three years ago, one of Adios's sons, Dancer Hanover, was sold for $105,000. For three years, Adios yearlings have sold for an aver- age of $25,000 apiece. At the annual yearling sales in Harrisburg, Pa,, the crop includ- ed three choice sons of Adios: Lincoln Hanover. Probable price for this full brother of Le- high Hanover: $75,000-$100,000. Majestic Hanover. $50,000- $60,000, Truman Ilanover. $50,000- $60,000, While his sons earn the money this month, Adios, a graybeard by racing standards, will relax in his comfortable 2 -acre paddock at Meadow Lands, eating oats and munching hay. Would his owners consider selling Adios? "Not a chance," said Miller, look- ing at his favorite horse, "Not for $1 million„" NUTRIA ATTENTION PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA When purchasing 'nutria consider the following points which the organize. tion offers: 1. The best available stock, no cross bred orstandard types s r co en ed. 2. 'l'he reputation of a plan which Is proving Itself substantiated by files of satisfied t•anclicrs. 2 Full Insurance against replacement should they not live or in the event of sterility hall 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 tnarket In writing. S. Membership in our exclusive breed. ers' association whereby only pur• chasers of this stock may participate In the benefits so offered. 7. Prices for Breeding Stock start at $200 a pair, Special offer to those who qualify, earn your Nutria on our cooperative basis. Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd., R.R. No. 2, Stouffvllle, Ontario. r.. CLASSIFIED BABY CHICKS 1.15 WEEK OLD Antes pullets will give you early egg production. Bray also has other varieties available, Dayolda to order, Now le the time to order your next lot of broilers. See local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE FULLY equipped restaurant, seats thirty eight, large apartment upstairs, situated In town with 3 large grain elevators. Box 2.33, Hensel,. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES PEOPLE wanting extra money find wonderful opportunity with Catholic religious jewellery at wholesale. Mini• mum order $10.00 Details and full color catalog 50c, Dept. W, Catholic Religious Art, 776 MacDonell, Post Box 626, Port Arthur, Ontario. CHANGE YOUR LUCK COME TO TORONTO SELL REAL ESTATE Age -Education No Barrier Many real estate men corn $8,500 0 year and more selling houses, aport- ment buildings, land and businesses. PETERS AND WILES LTD. REAL ESTATE BROKERS 8 Toronto Arca Offices over 30,000 Properties Sold Immediately Require For 1961-62 Expansion 45 TRAINEE SALESMEN 27 EXPERIENCED SALESMEN 5 SALES MANAGERS For details of qualifications, pay training programme, write — "EMPLOYMENT MANAGER" PETERS AND WILES LTD. 1190 WESTON ROAD TORONTO ONTARIO FARM MACHINERY WANTED ALLiS Chalmers Combine wanted else one to wreck with Bin. Fordson Major tractor. 49.51 wanted. W. Scott, R 6 Owen Sound. FARM HELP WANTED — MALE MARRIED man, fully experienced, cap. able of taking charge of herd for year. round employment on dairy farm. Sep. orate living quarters for small family, Hent, electricity, milk supplied. Apply stating wages and size of family, Mel- vin J. Baird, R.R. 3, Carp, Ontario. FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS WE offer the best value In men's work and fancy socks In Canada. All socks sold on moneyback guarantee, if not satisfied, Postage Paid. To Introduce our socks, we offer 1 pair all•wool work socks FREE with every 5 pairs pur- chased at 85e per pair, or 1 pair Lambs. wool and Orlon fancy socks FREE with every 5 pairs purchased at 75e per pair. Free catalogue listing hundreds of mer- chandising Items. '1'\VEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FEIRGUS 11, ONTARIO PORTABLE SAFETY HEATERS Thernt'x Heaters provide safe, econom- ical auxiliary heat for cars, trucks trailers, tractors — also In home and outbuildings. Two year guarantee. Mod. el No. 22 — 2400 BTU — $26.95; Model No. 57C — 4000 BTU — $55.95. Ontario purchasers add 3% Sales Tax. Shipping charges prepaid. Send cheque or money order. HAYES & McBRIDE Import Company Limited, 2075 Lake. shore Road, Burlington, Ontario. HORSES SHETLAND PONIES FILLIES and stud colts for sale, $100.00 and up. Registered, best of blood lines. Blyth Acres Pony Farms, myth, On• tarso. Phones 140 and 191. INVESTMENTS 8% GUARANTEED And secured. With no collection, lnven• tory of management problems, Interest and principal quarterly. Call or write, Income Investments Ltd., 42 James N., Hamilton, JA. 7.4558. MEDICAL POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the tortnent 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 of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 186S St. Clair Avenue East TORONTO READ THIS—EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect. ADVERTISING OPPORTUNITIES BECOME AN ENTERTAINER FUN -- PROFIT — DISTINCTION Two books show you how to overcome stagefrlght, jokc•telling, imitations, using a microphone song writing, Learn the real secrets of Ventriloquism and how to make your own Dummies, 100'S of facts and techniques. SPECIAL OFFER $1.00 for both hooks. Fortune Publications 12:134 • 77th Street, Ed- monton, Alberta. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Ilairdressing Pleasant dignified profession. good wages. 'I'housr,nds Of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest sl em Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Cali MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor 51. W., Toronto Branchh 44 Icing St 1w., !►,•muton 72 Rideau St reel , Ottawa PET STOCK TItOPIG1l, and I:uropc'n Finches Can. arias, Budgies, other c:,rehirds \i"n• keys, Hamsters, Guinea figs Ch,otie- Icons Literature. 1)ct:dled prlrelist I5c. 'thousands Birds Tarin Delta, 1101ario, — -! PERSONAL ' LOVERS OF GUI)! I t:.rn Ili, declared purposes • 1'e11 not loll re,lnlcu In confident hope. write n!hle ':Toth \IIs• E1011, BOX 011 Brantford, Onl IF you like to read loin our N, tel Flub! Information for :wit -addressed stamped envelope. Novel Club. I'.(1 Boa 12(17 CL, Bakersfield, California HYGENIC RtJBE1R GOODS TESTED guaranteed, trailed in Plain parcel, including catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment, 111 for $1.00 IFlnest qua11tyi VJettern Distribu- tors, Box 24•TPF, Rceinr, Sask. � STAMPS FREE mint Africa srl and 5 U S. Tom~ mems., with approvals. Litho, Box 51, Canoga Park, Calif. STAMPS of Canada Album, 23 Pages, spaces for 370 stamps. Send Fifty Cents to: Wtehtman, Box 328. Smith's Cove. Nova Scotia TRADE SCHOOLS ELECTRONICS Evening classes In radio, television, color automation. Transistors and septi conductors Visit or write Radio Elec- tronic Television School, 725 Dundas. London, GE. 3.20(11. _. WELDING EQUIPMENT WELDING Machines, Electric, Used, Good Condition, Very iteasonable. May be seen or picked up at Saltfleet Equipment, Belgraden Avenue, Stoney Creek. Norman 4.4461. ISSUE 47 — 1961 LEARN WELDING NO TIME LIMIT Also Certificate Courses in SUPERVISION — 1NSPECTiON QUALITY CONTROL A.R.C. SCHOOL OF WELDING. 92 John St. N., Hamilton JA, 9-7427 JA. 7-9681 RABBITS CROSS breed, Flemish, and New Zea• land, white young does of breeding age, from selected stock: also young bucks, 8 months old, average 8 lbs. and over. Variety of colors. 500 on hand; also available rabbits for meat; also addi- tional young stock 6 to 9 wks. You can raise rabbits, there is a large demand for rabbit meat, It sells at 80e lb. at all chain stores and meat counters; the best meat you ever ate. Raising rabbit* Is it pleasure. APPLY 473 Ritson Rd., S. Oshawa. IIISS EARN MORE MONEY Sell "Lustre Craft" . Stainless Steel Cookware Full-time - Port -time No initial investment necessary Apply in Writing lo: Canadian Steelware Distributors 924 Churchill Ave., SUDBURY, Ontario IN:-: :: 4'V• '. w . .. trr..,.�^, oas'pi•a:t'»>u�...•,`k:a1«stv:cia;'":.ti••.O{t ;?, • POURING IT ON—A fireboat pumps water on the blazing Formosan Reliance after it collided with a Norwegian tanker off Houston, Tex. ship SS Union WAGE 10 OBITUARY MILS, Li'aILA ViOLA MIDDLETON Mrs, Lelia Viola Middleton, of Coale - rich, passed away at Victoria hospital, London, on Monday in her eith year. She was the widow of John Robert And• dleton, of Goderich Township, Surviving are two sons, J. Ross \lid-, Belton, 11,R. 2, Bayfield, teacher at the Clinton D,C,i„ John, of Cleveland; 41aughtors: 12r's. Keith (Phylist Tyn- dall, Mullett Township; Mrs. E(hvio (Ruhr) Tufts, London; Airs, Allen (June) White, Clinton; Mrs. John (Lois) AtacKenzie, 'Toronto; and sister's, All's. Robert McMillan, Goderich, Miss Thel- ma Feagan, Toronto: brothers, George Feagan, Benmiller; Chester Feagan. Goderich; James Feagan, Colborne Township; Douglas Feagan, Niagara Falls. Funeral service was held at Si. George's Anglican Church, Goderich, oe 'I'hurs'ay, Ncvembcr 23'd at 2 p.m, In. ferniest in hayfield Cemetery, *FOOD MARKET* FANCY RED COHOE SALMON 7 3'1 oz. Tin ,39c ; LIBB1"S FANCY TOMATO JUICE Large 18 oz. Tin .27c KELLOGGS CORN FLAKES Giant 12 oz. Pkg. .25c REDPATH ICING SUGAR 2.1 ib. Pkg. .2rc LIBBYS DEEP BROWN BEANS 2.20 oz. Tins .39c KRAFT CHEESE WHIZ 16 oz. Jar .65c LIBBY'S FRUIT COCKTAIL r ; 15 oz. Tin ,27c TiOP CROP POPPING CORN 2.1 lb. Bags .27c DAVID COOKIES 4 Assorted Pkg. .99c GET YOUR BAKING SUPPLIES AND XMAS CANDIES EARLY WHILE THE STOCK IS COMPLETE For Superior Service ••- See Fairservice Phone 156 -•- We Deliver Bargains Of The Year 1961 PONTIAC Sedan 1961 CHEV. Sedan, Auto- matic. 1961 FORD half -ton 1957 CONSUL Sedan 1956 CHEV. Coach 1956 DODGE Coach 1956 FORD Sedan 1954 CHEV. Sedan 1951 FORD Half Ton Older Models, 1 Hamm's Garage Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers Pink and White Grapefruit, 96's . 8 for .3k No. 1 Large Head Lettuce , 2 heads ,35c Fresh Ocean Spray Cranberries , , , , 1 Ib. bag .25c California Red Grapes 2 lbs. .29c Fraser Vale Fish and Chips 24 oz. pkg. .59c Birds Eye Frozen Green Peas Grade A Chickens, 3 lb. average lb. .29c Long Island Ducks, 5 Ib. average . , , .., .. , , , ib, 59c Maple Leaf Bologna , lb, .31c Free Xmas Corsage with Joy Detergent ,91c Free Half Pound Bag Maxwell House Coffee with purchase of a 7 cup Coffee Percolator $1.89 Jewel Shortening 2 lbs. .55c Jewel Shortening 3 lb. tin .83c Granulated Sugar 10 Ib. bag .79c Crown Golden Corn Syrup 3 lb, bottle .43c Stewart's Red U White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver irk THE 13LYTH STANDARD AUBURN NEWS Anglican Guild Aleeling The An,'ican Guild ol SI, Mark'm Church met for its November meeting at the horse of Mrs, Andrew Kirkeon• nell. Mrs, Kirkconnell presided for the meeting and Mrs, Gordon 11, Taylor was al the piano. :After the hymn "Front Ocean Unto Ocean" the prayers were taken by Mrs, Kirkconnell, 'I'hc scripture lesson was read by Mr:,. John Dacr, the fourteenth chapter cf John, Airs. Gordon Taylor road two rea(l'Jlgi "Autumn" and "The len Commandments fur Church Go' ers." Airs, Wheel J. Phillips played an im h'unlenlal un the piano, The 'Topic un Missle:is was given by Mes. George chneider, She also gave an interest. 'ng wont. of the Indian Alission in Saskatchewan under the ehail;e of Rev It, Bramwell, who was the hector here several years ago. Also assie f;lg 11 this school is Miss Marjerie Stcwa; l formerly of Blyth, ?ti's, Ed. Davie, gave the study took on Miss Edna Scan Ion and the work she does in the Wo' men's Auxiliary of the Anglican Church in Canada. This pati of the meeting was closed by singing, "The Loi'd is any Shepherd." Tic president, Mrs. :nomas Ilaggitt, took charge of the business session. The minutes Were read by the secretary, Mrs. Ed, Dav• les, and the financial statement was given by ,Mrs. G. R. Taylor. The roll call was answered by each nall'Iing 3 missionary. Plans were made for the Christmas season with the children of the church and the next meeting which is to be held at the hone! of Mrs. Sant Drier on December 01h, 'There will also be the election of officers at this meet' ing. In place of a church suffer a canvass was held of the congregation and this was very successful to raise funds for the church. Lunch was sere• ed by Airs, Kirkconnell at the close of the sleeting. Airs, Major Younblul visited last ' week in 'Toronto with her son, Lynn, and her (laughter, Atiss Betty. Mr. and Mr's. Clarence Walden, of Seaforth, and Miss Lila Youngblut, of Goderich, visited on Sunday with the ladies' brother, AIC. Arthur Youngblut. Airs. Ed. Davies visited last Satur• day with lair. and Mrs. Albert Dom at Streetsville. Mrs, Keith Machan attended the Roy' al Winter Fair at Toronto last week as the guest of the Department of Agra' culture as a reward for her work (l 4.11 Club leader. Of special inleresl to residents of this district was the special speaker at their luncheon, ,Mr Harry J. Boyle, Airs. Nelson Rill and Miss Sadie Car• ter, of Goderich, visited last week with Mrs, Edgar Lawson. A1C, EII'gene Dubie, of Toronto, visit% last Sunday with Mrs. J. C. Stoltz ani; her daughter, Mrs. Marguerite Chopin. Mrs. James Jackson visited recently with her daughter, Mrs, Donald Kai, and Mr. Kai at Oakville. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R,athwell, Michael and Janice, of Owen Sound, visited for a few days last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Gordon R, Taylor. Mrs. Peter Ilollinga and baby son, Hank Walter, returned home on Mon• clay from Goderich hospital, Mr. Courtland Kerr, of Bennlilier, and Mr. Ed, Davies attended the horseshoe pitching competition at the Royal Winter Fair last Saturday. Congratu• lations are extended to Court who calve fourth in the C Class and received a money prize, Mrs. Herbert Govier and Mr;:. An- drew Kirkconnell visited last week in Toronto. Hot'liculture Executive Meet The Executive of the Auburn Ilorticul• tural Society met for its November meeting at the home of Mrs. William Straughan, The president, Mrs. Ken. neth Scott, was in charge and the min- utes of the previous sleeting.were read by the secretary, Mrs. Gordon Il, Tay- lor, The financial statement was given by Mrs, Ed, Davies in the absence 01 the treasurer Mrs, Bert Craig. She stated that there was $131.41 on hand. The five premium bulbs that were re• ceived by the society will be planted in the Manchester Garden. It was de- cided to put up a fence this winter to protect the flower beds. The president and Mr. William Straughan, were el• ected to place Santa in his leigh and the reindeer on the Atanchoster Garden the first week in December. A none- inaling committee io bring in the 1002 slate of officers al the Christmas meet- ing were named. 'They are Mrs. Bert Craig, convener, AA's. Duncan MacKay and Airs. Robert J. Phillips, The So. ciety will sponsor a contest for the best (l0egrated 110r»e and lawn for the Christmas season. There will be three prizes donated of first, $5.00; second, $3,00; and third moo. There will be outside judges asked to pick out the winners, Everyone is asked to coin• pete in this contest and make Auburn pretty for this season of the year. Mrs, Ed, Davies gave an interesting report of the District meeting held recently in Lucknow. Plans were made for the, December sleeting when Rev. C. Lewis will bring the Christmas message, There will be an exchange of 25 cent gifts, with Miss Etna Mulch and Miss Margaret R. Jackson in charge. The: committee in charge of the pot -luck, lunch will be Mrs, W. 13radnock, Mrs, Ed, Davies and Mrs. William Straugh• an, Auburn 1-11 Club Meeting The eighth meeting of the Auburn 4-1-1 Club was held at the hcnle of Dar- ; i ne Stewart. The meeting was opened by rill repeating the 4-11 pledge and the Lresident, Jannett Dcbie, presided. The minutes of the previous meeting were read by Marian hickey, '1110 roll call was answered by the len members by each telling their favorite fruit re- cipe. The leader, Mrs. Keith Mttehan, and Airs, Ed, Davies, the assistant, rc• viewed the work taken and led in the qui!, 011 menu building. Plans were Irla,!e 1'ot' Achievement Day on 1)ccenr bcr MI to he held 111 the Clinton D.C.I. Plans were also made for the Poster lo show three different. ways to serve ,roil, Afargiu'et Sanderson and Laura I►aer will make this poster and Marian Iliebey was chosen to give the c0111• ! wails. Tho girls made plans to hold a Cllrislnlas party on December 1st (11 Mrs. Davies mill each drew name:; for gii t'i. 1110 leaders demonstrated how to make a fruit drink. 'flits was made ,villi grape juice, cherries frozen in the Centre of ice -cubes and topped with mint leaves, This was served with the aair,p1e of their favorite fruit bread )rour:,dnt by each girl to the meeting long with cookies. Mrs. Alae Adams, of Londesboro, is visiting with her sister, Mrs, Fred Tull fand Alr, 'loll, this week, Dr, and Airs. Arnold Vokes, of Dun. ;annon, visited last 'Tuesday evening with Ah', and Airs. Robert J. Phillips. Congratulations are extended to Mrs. Gorden R. 'Taylor tvho was installed as Worthy Matron of the 131ue Water Chap. Icr No. 284 1(1 the (Eder of the East• ern star at (lu(Icrich, last Wednesday evening. Friends of Mrs, William Riddell, of 1,11 1311101T, Manitoba, Hnrnla'Jy Miss Alma Youngblut, of Aaburn, l \rill be pleased to know that she is improving after a fall when she fractured 1101 arm. Air, Torrance 'Tab) visited relatives at Alilton last week -end, Air, and Mrs, Ralph Jackson, Sharon and Murray, of Mitchell, spent the week•entl with her parents, Mr. and Airs, John Daer and Mr, Robert Dace, Alr. and Mrs. Lloyd llumphries vis- ited last Sunday with his sister, Miss Alay 1Iwnphries; at Brantford. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Law- rence Nesbit on the birth of a son, II. chael Clark, in Clinton Public hospital Inst week. Mrs. Orval Alcl'Itee returned last week from a seven weeks trip back to her home in England, Slic visited het mother, Alis Lily Kerns, in London, and also other relatives, as well as the Canterbury Cathedral, Dorset and Curie Castle which is an historical site and preserved for a tourist attraction. 'Ilse ite of this Castle Is the last strung hold of the Royalists Burin; the reign of Oliver Cromwell. Airs, AlcPhco made I.he trip from Aluntreal by the S.S. lb• ernia to Southampton and returned to Canada via S.S. Saxonia. Air. McPhee and Ronald met her at Stratford last week -end, 4.11 Club Meeting The Auburn Aces 4-11 Club met al the home of Toni De Joung with the presi• dent, Jannete Dobie, in charge. The minutes were read by the secretary. Alarian Hickey, and tete roll call was answered by ten members telling ol the different ways of serving dried fruits. The leader, Mrs, Keith Ma' Chan spoke on Fruit Salads 'and told the girls how to prepare and what fruits are suitable for these sai;ad dishes. The demonstration on making, a fruit bread was clone by Toni lie Jong and MQargaret Haines, assisted by Jannett Dohie. The assistant lead- er, Mrs, Ed. Davies, told how to snake jellied salads, how to prepare the nwuld and what ch'essings to serve with thein. The group work was the planning of mentis to use fruits when in .season. Lunch was served by De Jong and her daughter 'Toni. Mrs. Donald Fowler has returned front a visit with relatives at 1Vasagc Beach, W.A. llectir,g Mrs. Charles Millian presided for the opening session of the W.A. meeting held in the Sunday School room of Knox United Church with the Dorcas group in charge. Mrs. Norman Wight• lean presided at the piano. The scrip• ture lesson from St. Matthew's gospel; the 28th chapter, was read by Miss El. va Gross and the meditation and pray. cr were taken by AIns, Stanley Ball, A s010 was sung by Mrs, Emmerson Itod ger, The guest speaker, Mrs. Tom Al. len, Lotldesbo('u, was Introduced by Mrs. S. Ball. She showed colorful slid• es of her recent trip to Western Canada and many local scenes. Mrs. Charles Alillian thanked Mrs. Allen and 011 be• half of the W.A. presented her with t gift. The offering was received by Mrs. R. Koopmans and Miss Viola '1'homp• son. The president, Mrs, Kenneth Mc• Dougall, look charge of the business session and the minutes were read by the secretary, Mrs. Everett Taylor. The financial statement was given by Mrs. Robert Arulhur. The report of the visit' ing committee was given by Mrs. L:►w' ranee Plaetzee who reported 11111 four N'isits had been trade during the past month. Mrs, Wm, Straughan, convenor of tine kitchen committee, gave her re. port, It was voted by the members to donate $25. to Sing -Tine and to also give the Sigma -C Boys Club $25.00. Plans were made for the annual Christmas Fair to be held on November 17th. The following convenors were named: Advertising, Mrs. 0. Anderson: Welcoming committee, AL's, J. Mullin; Decorating, Mrs, A. Grange; Bake Ta- ble, Airs. It. Arthur; Blaney Work Air's. L. Plaelzer; Aprons, Miss Elni Mulch; Children's Booth, Mrs. M. Bean; Candy counter, Mrs. William Empey; Produce, Mrs, E. Durnin; Mis- cellaneous, Mrs. T. Lawlor; Lunch, Mrs. 13. Craig. Mrs. McDougall closed the meeting with the benediction, The Dorcas Group served lunch, THE MISSION RANI) of 11L1'TII UNITED CHURCH will hold their Annual Supper And Bazaar IN THE CHURCH SCHOOLROOM on SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25 from 5 to 7 p.m. Adulls 75c Children 35c 7. ,••1 ir r ,itAl, "lJ•'1 do-. 11 11'ecl'ntOny, Nov, 22, 1961 'I'ENDICRRS colt DRAIN TOWNSiiiP OF GRIN 'fenders will be received by the un- dersigned until 1 p.m., Saturday, I)e• comber 2nd, 111(11, for the construction of the 111SL01' Municipal 1)cain in the Township of (grey, which consists of ti,e35 lineal feet of open (Train. flans and specifications may be seen al the Clerk's office, Ethel, 0nl. 'fender to be oevenssanic(I by cert died cheque for of amount of lender. Lowest or any lender nol necessarily accel'l0(1, EDYTHE Al, CARDIFF', Clerk, 'Township of Grey, ETI I'EJ , ONTAII1O, 89.2 ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS We carry the full line of Ni tolls Products -Spec- ialists 111 Veterinary Medication. Scourex Tablets 1.75, 3.00 and 8.50 New Scourex Tablets 1.50 Phenothiazine (for worm removal) , . 1.00 and 1.95 Calcium Phosphate with Cobalt 1.25 Keratex for Pink Eye 1.50 Pellagrex Paste for Pigs 1.50 Ringtex Ointment (for Ringworm) .. 85c and 1.50 Cow Pox Ointment 1.00 Fevrex (Sulfamedication) 1.75 and 3.00 Gargetex (herd Pak) 3.50 11lusclex 'Tablets 3.50 R. D. PHILP, Phm. E DI(UGF, IlUNURIE9, 11'Al.I,ITAPRR -.• PHONE 70, 13LYTM YOU CAN S'1'I1J., GET AN "ELECTRIC BLANKET FREE" With your purchase of a WES'T'INGHOUSE CLOTIIES DRYER AT $17.1.95 (budget terms) GENERAL ELECTRIC FLOOR POLISHER at a New Low Price - $29.95 VODDEN'S HARDWARE (1 ELECTRIC Call 71 Television and Radio Repair, Blyth, Ont. .1JI ie¢,. i .1 1 1 11• ,,.. 1, 1 1 . J , i. :1 ,' 1141.1 I. BLYTH LIONS CLUB CASH BINGO tK u IN TIIE um" 1IEMORIAL HALL ON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25th Commencing at 9:00 p.m. (D.S.T.) ww..•.WSI ✓•+wv.mwwwvvwyv wv.•ww✓..wv..v wvv.�.v....w 15 REGULAR GAMES FOR $5.00 EACII 2 SHARE-THE-WEALTII GAMES 1 • $55,00 GAAil, IF NON IN 55 CALLS (winner after 55(11 call will receive half proceeds from the game) Adulission at Door 50 cents (extra cards available Ilan To Attend And Support The 1)lytir Lions Club SNELL'S FOOD MARKET 131(.1 55c VALUES BIG $1.00 VALUES Green Giant Niblet Corn, 14 oz. 3 tins .55c Del -Monte Sweet Peas, 15 oz. 3 tins .550 • VanCamp's Pork & Beans, 20 oz . , , 3 tins .55c Paramount Sockeye Salmon per tin .55c Allen's Pineapple and Grapefruit, 48 oz. 2 tins .55c Kleenex, Regular, 200's 3 boxes .55c - Al))1les, most any variety 6 lbs. .55c ▪ Morton's Frozen Meat Pies 4 for $1.00 Country Style Sausage 3 lbs. for $1.00 Riblets, fresh and lean 41bs. $1.00 Schneiders Crispy Flake Lard 5 lbs, $1.00 1 Giant Fab, 1 Giant Ajax, 1 Poly Bag Scouring Pads, All 3 For $1.00 Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP tl SAVE 11 101 11n1 RI 111111111111111111111111- 1. ; 11