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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1961-12-20, Page 1VOLUME 74 . • NO. 43 EL TNAR authorized as second class mall,WEDNESDAY r r Post' Office* Department, Ottawa. I3LYTH, ONTARIO, , DEC.'. 20, 1961 Subscription Rates 2.aQ in .ldvance, $3.50 in thrr iJ.a,A• and for payment of postage; in cash. FIRST HOCKEY DEC.. 29 OBITUARY The first hockey game of the season to be played at the Blyth arena will take place on Friday, December 29, al 8.30 p.m. when Luckncw and Blyth in• teruediates taill again renew their ri• w•alry of the Past two seasons, The Blyth Lc uonalres played a game in Seaford] recently when they dropped a 9 to 6 decision to Winthrep. Jilyllr was leading in the game 6 to 3 at the ens of the second period but lack of curet tion showed when \\'inthrop banged in six unanswered goats in the third frame. By all rei:orts the Lee onaires are much improved ewer last year ane should sul.l:ly local falls with scale ex cellent winter entertainment. Mr. Jack Lce, for many years a standout on Landesboro hoekcy teams is quite ably handling the coaching rhe ties, and if he can instil just a portion of his hockey abil`.fy into the Legion• aires, they should rcnle up with at Icasl ,i group championship, Attended Son's Wedding In Winnipeg A1r. and Mrs. It. 1), Munro, Auburn. left Mallon Airport by jet last. Saturday morning to attend the wedding of Mrs. Munro's son, ,Air. Glenn Yunghlut, of Edmonton, and Alias Jean Atcl.ennan, of Gri'sl'y, in the Fort Garry United Cliurcll, Winnipeg, 011 ,Salurday. They intended returning home on Sunday bat the flight was grounded front 6 p.m. Sunday until 2 o'clock the follc',vii>rf afternoon due to wenthei conditions in Toronto, Alr, Bob Yung - blot, of Toronto, also attended his t rethers.we-riding. Glenn and leis wife travelled to Tor- onto and wviill be visiting friends and relatives in this district during the week. Plans Finalized .1'101 New United Church Group The last meeting of the Provisional Committee for organizing the I3lylh United Church \Vumon was held on Monday- evening at the manse. The inaugural Heeling of The United Church Women was set for Wednesday January 17. • Unit meetings will be held Iwior lo that date, with 9 unif's'•to he organized, The inaugurel service and installation of elle executive will be held on Sunday, January 21, at 11 11.111. Several recommendations to be pre- sented to the inaugural ineetiug were discussed, including the budget for 1962, the program study, charter member- ship and responsibilities within the con- gregation. The annual congregational meeting will be held January 31 at 8 p.m. AMONG TiiE CIIH ►RCUES Sunday, December 24, 1961 ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CiIURCH 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. Menily, :lector, 4th Sunday in Advent (Christmas lave) Trinity Church, Blyth. 10.30 a.m.—Matins. 11,00 p.m.—Holy Communion and Sermon, St. Mark's, Auburn. 10.00 o'clock—Holy Communion and Sermon. Trinity Church, Belgrave, • 2.30 p.m,—Holy Communion and Sermon. Christmas Day: Trinity Church Blyth 10.30 a.m.—Matins. r Tilh (UNITED) CIIUIT;CIi OF CANADA Idyll) Ontario.• Rev. It. 1 vnii McLnt;an • �111nIster Mrs. Donald Kale- ' Director of Music,. Christmas Suliday- .• 'I'ile Difference!" • Cantata by Senior Choir, 7.30 p.m,—Faintly Candlelight Ser• vice for Christmas live, CHURCH (W GOD McConnell Street. Blyth, John Dormer, Pastor Phone 105 11,00 a.rn.--:horning 1Vorshlp, 10.00 a.m.—Sunday School, . 7.30 p.m.—Evening Service. 8.00 pan.—Wed., Prayer Service. 8.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship, WILLIAM CHESTER 'HIGGINS Relatives, friends and neighbour:. were caddcned to learn of the death of William Chc::'er 11ic_ins on Tuesday 01 lard week at his hem' Linsley Street Blyth, aflcr a short illness. Meant:, was b0!•0 in Turnherry Township, January 1, 1884, where he farmer=, until he retired to Blyth is 1950. Ile wee a member of the. United Chinch, Myth, and 'a member of the LO.L. fur (til years. . Ile 13 survived by his wife, Alargarel, one detainer, Lenore, -Reg, N., of Lon. don, one son, Joseph A., of Mitchell at;J two grandchildren, Joanne and Wayne, of Mitchell; two sisters, 1ii's Minnie Gallagher and 1'11ss Aland, of Gorrie, one brother, Edgar, of Brits. Sets. One sisters Mrs. Elizabeth Len• Fox, predeceased. One niece, Mrs. Emei' iii (Velma) Sherri, Wiii hang :iud one nephew, Alt'ie 11iegin:i, BI'us- scis. 1,01, service was held Wednesday night. funeral service was held Tiuu•s• clay at 2 p,111, from the 'Tasker Funcra; Chapel, Blyth, with the Rev. E. Me• began oi'ficiat1ng. Pallbearers were: John Fairservice, Calvert, Falconer, Leslie Fear, Lloyd 11 -cutting, Jint Halliday, and William Taylor. • Fluwerhearers were: Jack Higgins. Stewart Iligains, Ruhcrl Clea:niers, Ce- cil Wheeler and I). McKenzie. Inter:Med was in Wroxeter cemetery. AR(TIIBALD REID 11'ELLS Archibald Bcid Wells passed sudden- ly uo'ay at the Guelph General Hospital. onSaturday, December 9, 1,16t, in his 611t11 year, after a double surgical op' oration. Ile was born on March 3, 1894, in Iluilctt Township, son of the late John Well, and Jean Knox. Upon the death of his neither four years later, he went to reside al the home of his graudpar• cats, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Knox, d Blyth. Ile attended Blyth Public and Continuation Scl1Quls, also Clinton Col- legiate, thence he wont to University in Toronto where he studied to become an electrical ecleinccr, On August 21. 1915, lie was initiated as a member of the Blyth AF&AA'l 303, of which he was still a member. Ile enlisted and went overseas in the fall of 1915, where he served • his country in the First World War. Upon his return hp was married 10 Margaret. Gibson, of Wroxeter, nod they took up residence in 'Tomato from whence lie carried on his life work 01 ele=ctrical engineering and Hydro work. Seven years ago he was superannuated and later came to reside in Erin.' He is survived by his wife, Margaret. and one daughter, Jean, Mrs. A, H. Copeland, • of • Erin; also three grand - 60115 and one granddaughter. The funeral service was held in Erin United Church, of which he was a member, on Tuesday, December 12th at one o'clock and internment took place in Wroxeter cemetery, r-vgru, Aixowc-Av.mcswruritooc A Orwintao yLions Entertain At �Partyanus(hristma By Rev. R. Evan McLagan, Minister of the Blyth United Chui ch. Will you celebrate Christmas this year? Decem- bel. 25th is the day when Ave declare to all the world that we Believe in Christmas. All our preparations -- gifts, candies, candles, cards, trees, and turkeys -- conte to a climax on that day. It is Christmas Day But whatmakes it Christitlasw Day? The family (linnet'? The unwrapped gifts? 'Time -off from daily work? Thos c make it a holi-day but not a holy -day, Yes, we can celebrate December 25th ' without celebrating Christmas, Through the years many have found that ,you can celebrate Christmas without family, without a turkey dinner, even ,without colored lights and dec- orations. But you cannot celebrate Christmas with- out prayer, without praise, without a heart gladden- ed by God's presence. These are the things tliat. snake Christmas. With these in your heart told life every day can be Christmas Day. Wise amen seeking Jesus '.i'ravelled from afar, Guided on their journey By a beauteous still'. But if we desire Him He is close at hand, For our dative country Is our Holy Land. Iie is ino1'e than near us, If we love Hint, well; I''or He seeketh ever In our hearts to dwell, Will you celebrate Christmas this year? You'll have time for sending cards, for wrapping gifts, for getting a ch1'istlnas tree, for preparing christmas "goodies" and a c111'iSt;n'IliSrfeast. Will you find time on Christmas Day to kneel in Drayer? To give glad thanksgiving to God for 1{is love, .for His forgive- ness, for His sacrifice-- all of which conte in the Christ=mas Babe? Will you find tirlle for prayer and praise and worship? NO 5'I'ANDA1 D NEXT 1VEE'K \\ ith Clerietneae and New Years craning at the first of the week, as 1:: cu.:telnir; in this event, there will be no ieeue of the Standard next It € ,!k. As ;'lolriiy and Tue.ed:'y both ft • ur•: i;rcat'y in tee pid'lishine of tee Feer, it slab,:! Make: it in' os- s'b!e 10 gather adeert's':r'l''ni: and r".w' e !!i e:d` 1' to meet the 'fhetsrlay (k l'l ler Tel;; I''!'rr flrill the: wweei..ly grind wet a'r, l.d la, the o; par'unity of 'alai?' tip wr dl r'0lntnrl•e•al print - in' marl closing cut out' bucks by the teal of 1961. The next is_Ue of the S'an lard will 1'0 t•u!'i heel nn ,l,rriary A11Ierry Christmas The editor and stiff of the Blyth tsu €: u'd wwi:•h In ,jnin with the adw'ci• triers in Ibis ISSI,e in wishing each and Cw more of eur slllr"crilwt's and ft seal'('• the Mrrricst of t_'ht'lelmasrs. With file lut'nnsil and strife that is .•n Preva!lart tkroid:out the world in (hese l.rcubled times, it i3 probably Iffy difficult for us to adjust our think. !g to the true meaning of this wonder. tui Christmas Leasco. It is our fervent twiSh that the leader:; of all countries ir. the. world will ranee in their der. !astir:_ quest for power to reflect back aver past decades and realizc the fu- tility of their struggle, May the spirit of Cht•istiii;' cast its light upon them and inelj1 in their hears the true desire for Peace and Good Will among ilea. Then, and only then will all peoples of the world find it in their heads to wul'. ship Ilam in the true mcanitre of Christ - 1113S. May the year 1962 bring with it the greatest treasure the earth has ever known, "Peace on earth, Guotl will lc lues," .. PERSONAL INTEREST Mrs, Ellie Beirres and her nephew Lloyd Pierce, of Goderich, visited on Tuesday with the farmer's sister ane; tatter's aunt, Mrs. John Collinson. Coneratul'ations to li.uth irl1C1!!!che" - wl'o will celebrate ler llth birthday un December 21st.. Mrs, Leviisa lfeffrcn and Mrs. Wm. Bake and Bill, of Brussels, attended the funeral of the late Thomas Kearney at St. Augustine on Tuesday morning. Now to the Lord sing praises, Air. Kearney was a life-long member All you within this place, of Std Augustine parish and was biddy FRIENUSHIF CIRCLE of will be greatly missed And with true love and brotherhood respected an The regular meeting of the Friend Each other HOW embrace; by all who knew hint, ship Circle was held on Tuesday, De , cat,t Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Weymouth, Bruce camber .12111 at the manse with 18 pies- 'I1-1is holy tide of Christmas All other doth efface. and Douglas, of Chatham, spent Sunday A14' s, Bob Curter opened the meetingwith Mrs. Ann 5undercock, wil , a poem. Ilymn, "It came upon Miss Alar ,,ret Ann Doherty, nurse - byMidnight Clear," was .suit;, followed a .1 -a .• yy^ " ,1� ,, 9 • .z r: , . fly serif:titre by Airs, Dwight Campbell ' 1 '��' ca•) in -training al the K.W. Hosaital,. Kit - and Christmas Prayer by Mrs. George chener, appeared on CKCO-TV with the O: ter. Hymn "Joy to the World" wee nurses choir on Monday afternoon. sung, after which Rev, McL,agan gave MOrTii Town=ship Official - CANTATA FEATURED BY BLYTH DIF, and Mrs, Dennis Weymouth ane' UNIT(D CHURCH CHOIR AT a Christmas message on "What is the sou, q'eddie, of Toronto, spent the week Christmas Sph'iL" (Honored CIIR1STMAs SUNDAY SEIti,K end with Airs. Ann 5uuderrhek .ane. Deis. Ray A1,adi11, president, conduct,'On Friday eveninll, December 15, A Cantata, "Child of Heaven," will Arthus' WayMrs. h. ed the business with the roll call an - Gifts severed by a favourite Christi:las hymn, following the Council meeting Reeve be presented by tate choir of Blyth Gifts for the. adopted family were S'te wart Procter entertained the Coun• United Church at the Christmas Sun- Aliss Marjorie Illulking, with ether ten, dollars out of the funds to finish key dinner at his hodisplayed and it was decided to take oil, Officials and Employees, to a luteday Service 01 \i'orship next Sunda,=, members of the preliminary' students home. •_, !nominee. The sermon will be on the at the Stratford General Hospital out the Christmas box. ( 'Following the dinner Councillor Wel subject, "The Uifterence!" Portions '•raged "The Nativity Scene" at the It was decided to buy50 more new'11rn Crest, chronic patients hvsptta! ter Shoe -freed, on behalf of the Reeve of the cantata will also b(, featured on , hymn books for the church and the bat Council, Officials and Employees "Si-ti.tne," the regular program ' ul Stratford, uu Tuesday atlerncou. once of our funds to go to nursery sup- presented Nelson IIig;Fins who Inas beet! thw church, y; i`''lited Church presented over C1 Miss Jean IJ:anna, el Ltlema e, MIF plies lAlrsf oi'1larold our e0 Campbell favoured us treasurer of the Township for the past NY Y and Radio. able to return to her home from Wing 'Ilii several solos of bel'isttnas Carols. thirty year's with n Sheaffer pen Bund R,, the Christmas eve CandleRghl jlaul liusiiit ii last P'rid'av Stier being s Contests were conducted and a de- pencil set and a pipe in honour of his Service the Junior Choir and membet'< patient there fur the past few weeks. •lieious lunch was served by the 00nu1111• faithful service, of the Junior and intermediate Depalb lee in charge, assisted by the hostess. Mr, Higyhie wvllo well completely inents of the church school will pre 1 Arra. Harold \'odden nmved a vote of (01(en Lly surprise thanked them fur the sent a nativity paecant, "Colne .and, BIRTHS to our president and Mrs. Dave gifts which 11c was sure he would find Worship flim." Webster moved a vote of thanks to very useful HOd)(I1NS- ter.:end Mrs. Arthur F the committee and hostess. )(Heins ince Kathryn Cole) of 91 11141111 pos.!. OFFICE )(Heins Ridge Road, CalSary, Alberta IIONORED ON 451h ANNIVERSARY RECEIVED WORD OI'' BROTHERS T=here will he NO SE1{.VICiS to the are happy to announce the birth o' Public cn C'lu'istn;is I)ay, December a sun on 'Thursday, December 14 Mr. and Mrs. 1Vtallace 13e11 entertain 25.DEATH 1,! 1961, n blather for Christine, r b1 c! New Years Day,,January 1, Mrs, Hudgins is a niece of Alis: ed at a surprise party last Sunday, De- Mrs. Robert Turvey received the sad 11102. The lobby and wicket both are Mary Milne, cembcr 17, in honor of Mr, and Mrs. news 11101 her brother, Mr. William closed. - Frank 13e11, who celebrated their 45th Woodrow, of Estone Sask., had passed FEAR --In \Vim -die n Geiiernl llnspita wedding; anniversary en Wednesday, away on Sunday, December 17111. BABIES BAPTIZED ON SUNDAY on 'l'hutsday, December 7, 19111, 1., December 20, Surviving are his wife, the former Me, and Mrs. Russell Etter, 11.R. e Those attending the • party were Mt'. Jessie Scott, of near Seaford', and folie Carol Ann, daegllter of Mr, and Mrs. Winghaul, the rift of a sen. and Mrs, Lorne 1Jun dive 'atlti family, 501)3 in Saskatchewan and Elmer, of Norman Giving, and Constance Iso-- Mr. and Mrs, Irvine Wallace, Mr. Re- Barire, 'formerly of Jlluevale, and twwe belle, dau':hter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul GAVYN-1n Gcderich Jlosl'ital.ont 'fuer bort Wallace, and Mr, Leslie Fear, brothers, Kyle, Sask., and Robert, d1 McCool, received the Sacrament of (lay, December 12, 126t, 10 Mr. and Mr, and Mrs,. Bell were presented Peace River, Alberta, and one sister Christian Baptism at Blyth United Ml's, Boss Gwyn, of Godericb, the .with several useful and lovely gifts. Mrs.. Robert Turvey, o[ Blyth. Church last Sunday, • gift of a sun. . The regular meeting of the Blyth Lions Club took the form of a Christen ir; Patty last Thursday evening in the newly decorated basement of Lhe Bhyth Memorial hall, Over 80 Lions and their wives and families attended to mnelre this the best Chri:,1imas Party in 5L1*- ':ta1 ycats. The meeting wa:, opened by Lien president, Edward Watson, with the :ir:ing of "'The Queen" and a toast to '!le. Queen. Several Christmas Caiel, \were Sunt;, led by Lion ?arnel• Har.; Lear. 'Pail 'I'wieter, Walter Butted, created a sensation, and culla-li• 1a:::lner.t to' several members as he! Performed his duties, issuing fines foe (everything Irvin traffic violations to bu.rstinr' balloolis white the decoration:. were being i) aced about the hall. The minutes of the last regular meeting and • xecutive illeetin9 were read 1'y the se''rel dry, Lion Donald Young, . The Fre::ident evelcom' (l the gate!', and handed the meeting over to Lio'i 11ol'e!t Meetly, who acted as master at ceremonies for the procrain presenters by lhe'•l hiideeli, as follows: a gilt was presented to the dub pianist, Mrs. Winona McDougall, for her assistance 'luting the your: i"iaho solo, Jayne I'ellal•rl; vocal duct, I3ar-ry Youtia, Debbie (licks; piano solo, Agnes Law- rie. ve'cal duct, David and Kathy rircel, accioul1'3nied by Susan Street, al: o played a piano solo; reading, Nancy e.lew,3rt; recitat`.on, John Wat- eon; Lion harry Lear sang a lovely solo "White Christmas" accompanied on the piano by his wife; all the child- ren ferinc'd a choir and sang "Silent Night.' The 1 adios Guild of the Blyth Angli- can Church catered to. a very delicious turkey dinner with all the trimmings. They were thanked on behalf of the Cleb by Lion Jack Campbell. An added feature of ,the evcnin!a was the showing of two short' motion p10- tures by Lion Ray Madill, of the Lions" et work and play, taken at the Ilat- lowe'en party the club gave for the children of the district and at a regular 'I'hui•sddy'ni17i1` aloetin' brhIe or;auizei- tion. Santa ClfIU .,itya'ived to the ,jingling of sleigh bells -and distributed gifts ,ct trys anti candy to all the children present, The meeting closed with the Lion, Roar. School Board Meeting The regular meeting of the Blyth Public Scheel Beard was held on Mon - clay evening, Deceneber 18th, at niite o'clock. All trustees were present, The minutes of the Last rcw;tdar meet- ing were road and passed on n=otion by Trustee Street, seconded by Trustee Stewart. Carried. A motion was made by Trustee Ma- dill, that the radio which has been at lite school on approval be purchased. Seconded by Trustee Stewart. Carried. A motion was made by Trustee Mae- ning, that a typewriter be purchased fee the school. Seconded by Trustee Young: Carried. A elation was made by Trustee Street that a section of Blackboard be pur• chased for Grade I1 Room. Carried. The following accounts were ordered paid on motion by Trustee Manning, seconded by Trustee hradill. Carried. Blyth Hydro, 36.29; Irvine 1V,allace, 14,e5; Sparling's 'Hardware, 26.94; F. M. Feckitt ez Son, 17.19; Hay Station- ery, 135.40; Postmaster, 9.00; Blyth standard, 47.51; Blyth Telephone, 1.85; \'edden's Eleotric, 355.27; Stewart's Red & White, 2.02; Crawford and Heth- erington, 12.50. The Principal reported the percent- age attendance for November 97.09, and the cnrellnment 153. A ulotioil•a was tltade by. Trustee Voting, that Grade 11 Room be insul- ted. Seconded by Trustee Stewart. Carried, A notion was made by Trustee Ma- lin, that a Mia:trip and slide projcc- "'.ol' l:e purchased for the sc11001. Sec- luded by 'Trustee Street. Carried. The meeting adjourned, WILL CELEBRATE 60111 WEDDING ANNIVERSARY Mr, and Mrs. '111001ras Knox, Londes-' ',oro, will be at borne to their friends old neighbours, 'Tuesday, December • '6t11 from 2:30 to 5:30 at Londesboro :bonen sty Hall, on' the occasion of heir 60th, wedding ilhniversaiy, which 'alb un Christmas Day. It is respect- ulty requested ther,i be no gifts. E •3' i w '' ''vo sinoa•:i `' '1us' '�� '• aw • 'i ''a ' ''► ' ':'►' 't l ''l '5w '' '� '1 w1.Subscribers,ustomers riens vtt easons reet�n s o ur • cr �'_a~' 6Va +✓a ate' _ `'.e :. 4r!V'- _ r_ lbhV'' 1�'.e. �'s 1a c. V•,, .M (ee '• ietlej '31¢1W+: Sound Rays That Can Kill — Or 'Cure! Sound can kill. A death ray is now in the making! The "blas- ter," that weapon beloved of sci- ence -fiction writers for the rapid Slaughter of bug-eyed monsters, may soon become a fact! It is a horrible thought, but soon armies may be marching kgainst each other with silent killers in their hands. . Not long ago an American sci- entist picked up a small metal tube. He pointed it at a caged rat at the other end of the room and squeezed a tiny button. No- thing appeared to happen, There was neither flash nor sound. But the rat jerked, stiffened and toppled over dead! It had been killed by sound waves travelling at more than 20,000 cycles a second—far h:. h- er than the human ear can detect. They were absorbed so quickly by the rats fur that ultrasonic energy was. converted into heat. and the rodent died instantly of an intense fever all over the body. A similar sort of sound gun has been used in Gnat Britain to set fire, from a distance, to wool and other hairy materials. Mys- teriously, they started to smoke —then burst into flames. Had the rat been shaved, it would have lived. But such pro- tective measures will not be ef- fective much longer. The intensity of the ray is be- ing stepped up so that the nerve centres and the brain itse,f can be destroyed. And the ranee is being increased ... As with all kinds of sound, the waves radiate outwards from a central source, An early example was the "silent clog whistle, pitched so high that only ani- mals would hear it. There are many ways of pro- ducing inaudible waves of sound, but only comparatively recently has it been possible to concen- trate them and pin -point therm in a given direction. Although there has been very little publicity to date, the ultra- sonics race between Russian and American scientists is nearly as fierce as that to produce bigger bombs and guided missiles. Indeed, ultrasonics are playing an important part in perfecting long-range weapons of death .. and also as a source of power for space craft! It has been found that an ultrasonic "whistle increases or decreases the rate at which solid fuel burns, and also controls its thrust. Sound waves shot through a material speedup many chemical reactions—including burning and Oxidization. They have been made to boil water in less than a minute. How ultrasound works is still much of a mystery. In their ef- forts to solve the problem, sci- entists the world over have been studying the bat—because these nocturnal creatures use ultra- sonic waves to catch insects on the wing and to avoid obstacles. Watch the flight of a bat when dusk falls and note the fantastic speed with which it darts and turns through the air. It sees not with its eyes, but by sound waves emanating from the larynx in some species, and from the nos- trils in others, writes Basil Bailey in "Tit -Bits". The way the signals are bounced hack tells the bat of food or danger in the vicinity. Its ears have a much higher fre- quency response than those of a human. A bat which has been blinded will fly as well as ever, and this research has led to hopes that a model of the bat's amazing echo - locating system may one day be manufactured to assist blind peo- ple. For, while ultrasound can kill, it can also cure. It has al- ready been used with success in surgery, particularly for opera- tions on the brain. The technique i; proving most valuable in curing Parkinson's disease, a nervous disability com- ing from a section of the brain smaller than the head of a matchstick. In London a complicated meas- uring machine locates the exact position of the minute nerve cen- tre so that a needle can be driven through to reach and kill it. In the United States, however, the same result has been achiev- ed by directing ult'aeonic waves at the spot. ' When the diseased brain sec- tion is at point of focus, the rays destroy it within seconds. There have been promising ex- periments in cancer treatment, and in the disintegration of such internal ills as gall -stones and tumours. But this is by no means all the science of ultrasonics has to offer the human race "Echo - fishing," it is also called, looks like developing into a major in- dustry of enormous economic importance. Commercial applications in- clude the machining of hard, brittle materials, like precious stones: the cleaning of small me- tal components in watches and other precision instruments by penetrating to previously inac- cessible parts, the soldering of light metals, and the fatigue - testing of highly stressed metals. In Britain they have develop- ed an ultrasonic drill which can punch holes of any shape to ac- curacies of one half -thousandth of an inch, Ultrasonic vibrators have also been invented to prevent barna- cles adhering to the hulls of ships! For the uses of ultrasound are legion. In America they are ex- perimenting, with it as a means of cleaning clothes, of making meat tenderer and of ageing wine. And there is yet another func- tion of very special interest to Londoner's. High frequency "whistles" have been used to dis- perse fog and smog in small areas, The sound waves make parti- cles of dust, soot or fog collide so violently that they stick to- gether and become heavy enough fo fall to the ground. Like so many wonderful dis- coveries, ultrasound can be of huge benefit to mankind—or kill him. This incredible' new form of power .fs as easy to control as electricity. But can plan control his own nature so that the full fury is never unleased in the cause of war? TXPENSIVE POSTAGE The highest denomination stamp ever issued was the King George V. 100 pounds red and black Kenya stamp of 1925-27. And from Robert .Louis Ste- venson's writings comes this timely line: "The man who for- gets to be thankful has fallen asleep in life," TURNTABLE DINING—La Ronde, Honolulu's newest res- taurant, perches atop the 23rd floor of the Ala Moana build- ing the city's newest and tallest office building. The dining room seating 162 persons, makes one complete revolution «..iy hour, providing diners with o panoramic vista. TABLL TALKS Jct.= Amben FESTIVE SEAFOOD CASSEROLES, such as this Company Tuna Bake, are favourite dishes for holiday supper parties. During the holiday season, cas- seroles will be featured at many a supper party—and with good reason. These easygoing dishes can be prepared in advance, don't require watching in the oven, and 'stay hot in their handsome containers until guests are ready for seconds. Seafoods can be counted on to make elegant party casseroles, How would you like one contain- ing husky chunks of tuna and cooked, frozen asparagus, baked together in a creamy, toasted almond sauce? Or perhaps ten- der morsels of crab meat baked in a sherry -flavoured sauce at- tractively flecked with bits of red pimiento and green pepper? Re- cipes for both of these delicacies have been supplied by the home economists of Canada's Depart- ment of Fisheries. COMPANY TUNA BAKE 2 cans (7 ounces each) tuna 2 packages (10 ounces each) frozen asparagus cup chopped, blanched almonds cup butter, melted cup flour 1k teaspoon salt teaspoon pepper Few grains nutmeg 2 cups milk Paprika Drain tuna and break into large pieces. Cover asparagus with boiling salted water. Heat until water returns to boiling point; drain. Cut asparagus into 1 -inch pieces. Place in a greased 1 -quart casserole. Top with the tuna, Fry almonds in butter until golden brown, Blend in flour and seasonings, Add milk gradually and cook until thick, stirring constantly, Pour over tuna and asparagus. Sprinkle with paprika. Bake in a mode- rate oven (350°F.) for 25 to 30 minutes, Make 6 servings. !s i4 CRAB CHARLOTTE CASSEROLE 3 cups cooked crab meat OR 3 cans (61A ounces each) crab cup butter IA cup flour 2 cups milk 2 tablespoons minced onion teaspoon celery salt ti teaspoon grated orange rind 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 1 tablespoon minced green pepper 1 pimiento, finely chopped 2 chops Tabasco sauce 1 egg, beaten 1/2 cup fresh bread crumbs cup grated. cheddar.cheese • .: Pimiento or (mato for garnish • Remove any shell or cartilage from crab meat, If using canned crab, drain. Break neat into pieces. Melt butter; blend in flour. Add milk gradually and cook until thick and smooth, stir- ring constantly. Add onion, cel- ery salt, orange rind, parsley, green pepper, pimiento, Tabasco sauce. Stir a little of hot sauce into egg; add to remaining ape, stirring constantly. Addab meat. Turn into a greased 1/ - quart casserole. Mix bread crumbs and cheese, Sprinkle around top edge of casserole. Bake in a moderate oven (350° F.) for 15 minutes. Remove from oven and garnish top with pi- miento cut in shape of a poin- settia flower, or a whirl of thinly cut tomato wedges. Place under broiler and broil for about 2 min- utes to lightly brown the crumbs Makes 6 servings. The hock-baked-fc d able i. always one of the most popular at church bazaars and usually sells out first. "We 'could have sold twice as much," is often the plaint of the committee chair- man, I-Iowever, the food must not only be good; it must look good. Here are a few items that have passed both tests and be- come best seller's. Moreover, their preparation won't keep you too long in the kitchen. ISSUE 51 — 1061 1,, 1 t i FRUIT ANI) NUT 1)RO1'S cup shortening cup brown sugar, firmly packed teaspoon lemon extract 2 egg yolks 2 cups all-purpose flour, sifted 1,'2 teaspoon baking powder 1/2 teaspoon salt cup chopped nuts—walnuts or pecans t i cup chopped raisins IA cup chopped dates !:i cup chopped candied pine- apple Candied cherries Crean shortening, gradually adding the brown sugar, and beat well. Add lemon extract and beat in the egg yolks, one at a time. Add sifted dry ingredients, then fruits and nuts. Shape into small balls and place on greased cooky sheet at least two inches apart. Top each cooky with half a candied cherry, Bake at 350' F. about 12 minutes. Makes about four dozen cookies. A COCONUT MOUNDS 1 cup sugar !:2 cup white corn syrup 1 tablespoon butter 1.3 cup water Grated rind two oranges 2 cups shredded coconut Combine sugar, water, corn syrup, and butter in saucepan, Cook until a little syrup dropped into cold water forms a firm ball, Remove from heat; add orange rind and coconut. Combine thor- oughly and drop onto greased cooky sheet, Bake at 350° F. for about 12 minutes or until cookies are slightly brown on top. Make: one and one-half dozen cookies. 2 3,' M * « ORANGE MARMALADE COFFEE CAKE cups all-purpose flour, sifted cup sugar ?'z cup shortening cup chopped walnut meats cup orange marmalade 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon nutmeg !y teaspoon salt 1 egg, well beaten 1.; cup milk teaspoon vanilla flavoring Sift one cup of the flour with sugar and cut in shortening until mixture is crumbly. Blend in nuts. Combine one-half cup of this mixture with marmalade and reserve for topping. Sift to- gether remaining flour, baking powder, nutmeg, and salt. Add to first mixture and blend Ihor- i oughly, Combine egg, flavoring, and milk; blend with flour mix- ture: The dough will be quite stiff. Spread in an 3x3x2-inch pan and drop marmalade topping over the top. Bake at 350' F. for about 90 minutes. :11, SPICED APPLE CUTOUTS 3 cups thick unsweetened apple sauce cups sugar pound red chnunon candies Powdered sugar Cook apple sauce, sugar, and candies in heavy saucepan for about one hour or until very thick, stirring frequently. Al- low to cool. S ! on waxed paper and pat , '11 thick- ness. Let tend c ' , to dry out. Cot into d:'=it c. ,.:;1e- ~11th small cite!:;. cett'Lle. L It each piece from pent'r with la .atd >,+a- tala:and dip 0 powdered suear, Spread on su't4al id paper and Id mind ov,'en;:-ht before using. ti 1' • i11Ut h1NS 1 pint seamed milk !a cup butter 11 cup sugar 1;2 teasp,uin salt 1 compressed yeast cake Flour to snake a linin hatter 2 eggs Add butter, sugar, and salt to the scalded milk, When cooled to lukewarm, add the yeast, crumbled, and stir until dissolved. Add enough flour to make a thin batter, Let stand in warn place until light and full of bubbles. Add eggs, beaten, and more flour to slake a thick spoon batter. Cover and.let rise until light and double in bulk. Butter muffin pan \well and half fill with the batter. Let rise in a warns place until double in size, then bake at 400° F. for 15 to 21) minutes. Makes about two dozen delicious muffins. Paper Clothes Are A Great Idea Of all the ingenious inventions either on the market or drawing board, the one that appeals to me most is paper clothes that you can wear and then throw away. I'd say the perfect way to snake and circulate these paper suits would be for a fashion manu1ac- ture' and a newspaper—prefer- ably a pair that best lived up to the ideals set forth by Joseph Pulitzer and Ilart, Schaffner & Marx—to merge and turn out a newspaper that would unroll into a suit. My paper -suit boy would then toss my latest clothes on the porch each morning about six. Instead of reading- the contents, I would put than on and let my wife scan ane quickly at the breakfast table while I bolted down my coffee. bale►', on the bus, if enough of my fellow com- muters were wearing their news- paper suits, 1 could catch up on the headlines by reading the nearest paperbacks, I certainly subscribe to this idea of taking a daily paper that can be put on and worn to work and thown away the same day. (0f course, to be competitive, the evening papers would probably have to come in paper pajamas.) And just think of all the prestige you would have if your evanes- cent wardrobe was fashioned from one of the ten great Ameri- can newspapers for superior cov- erage, styling, and public service. What's more, you'd always be wearing the very latest in a suit that was made expressly for you and a few million other readers. And found only at better news- stands, Who knows, maybe the most famous size 36-46 daily paper - clothes slogan that people will wake up to in the exciting years ahead will be "All the Newts That Fits."—Jack Pope in Saturday Review Eskimos Break An Ancient Monopoly To break the Hudson's Bay Co.'s 291 -year-old monopoly on retail trade in the Arctic, Can- ada's 12,000 Eskimos two years ago acquired the legal right to establish their own cooperatives. Recently, at Cape Dorset on Baffin Island, they opened the fourth of a new chain of stores. The man behind the new co- ops is a 31 -year-old Eskimo artist named Kananginak whose soap- stone carvings and Eskimo prints are used on U.N. Christmas cards. When the Hudson's Bay Co. mar- keted Kananginak's prints, his share was $5; by marketing then himself, he earns $17 a print. That set Kananginak to wonder- ing whether the HBC was mak- ing similar profits on the fire- arms, radios, and tobacco, it sells to the Eskimos. Establishing a cooperative among the 300 Es- kimo of Cape Dorset, Kanan- ginak expects to gross $125,000 s year. HBC, which grosses $246 mil- lion a year, shrugged off the threat of an Arctic price 'var. "Eskimo trade," said an official, "is a minor part of our business." False Claims In Health -Food Circles Hollywood's Robert Cun1min0 and radio's Carlton Fredericks have a lot in common, Both are busy promoters of health food, both have written hit;-sellie4 books on the subject, and ran into trouble last month will the Food and Drug Adhllinistre- tion, Actor Cummings, who dont)) 's as vice president 01' the Nutt!. Bio utt!- Bio Corp, of Los Angeles, was named when the FDA seized a batch of the company's vitamin and mineral tables in Washin,• ton on charges that they were being promoted by false and mis- leading claims (e.g., that they help prevent inlpo'eee,e, !wart trouble, tubeieulo,a,, end c:ue 30 other maladies; p: emite b ty, athletic ability, end radiant living). Some of the .:::ms, s.:id the FDA—after noting. that any literature used to promote a feed product is considered fart et the product's label—were eontnir.od in Cummings' book, "S::y Yet ng and Vital." Fredericks' bink, 'Eat, Lige, and 13e Me rev - •' ,: cd (..t1 the same charges in V.I10,a, 111., along with about (0)) 7,;111)11)1001 r;h of u m1n an0 mSiineral s.lppleral (Toddler's Vitamin .-nd Mineral Supplement ter C;1''ciren, Vita- Glo Food Sul'ph :neat). Fret, r- icks, who has been 1,,,r hit:r controversial nutriti,:,a helicis un radio for more than twenty years, promptly accused the FDA of carrying out a "personal yer.cct• to," He admitted that one reason for his anger was the agency's contention that he had no right to bill himself as "Amellca'3 leading nut r'rlionist." For his part, Cummings 'n.as only too happy to reoperate ,,,;th the FDA, premised to f:re Nutri- Bio's Washineton cif sIri';Utor. Speaking through his wife, \;'no heads up Nutri-Bio's none-nlan• ning division. Cummings safe the company strictly forbids the Lee by its distributors of the type of literature seized by the FDA. That goes fen. his b ul:.. "Nut that there is anything wrong with the book," Mrs. Cummings pcirted out, "but it has no ehllne:ttntl with Nutri -Bio," A Toronto acid's cellar Is ,o damp that when he laid a nto cse- trap he caught a herring. POWER PILL — Gloved..-'tanc1 above holds power equcl, to tons of coal. The objects are aranium dioxide fuel pellets used in nuclear reactors. The Targe ones, 11 inches long, have an energy equivolenr of nearly o ton of coal. They love twice the strength of the small pellets, which were first aro- duced in 1958. About hc.!F a million of the new -size peels supply the fuel for o Iores e - actor. A! L EYES—The eyes have it as Jamie Walker, 3, ft.%:es the camera with an armful of wide-eyed kittens. Master Farmers Who Stick To Old Ways It was like bringing coel, to N e w c a .; t l e 'when the steam threshernhen from a hall • dozen counties brought their old -gate engines to our state fau this year. Yet whistles screeched, glouds of black smoke torted from ancient slacks, and purple game from far and near to see the show, As something rather new in the re-enactment of scenes horn early days, the art of thresl'!ng and doing other farm chore.; by steam has become a major sport from Maine to California, it ap- pears. And so devoted to their cause are the steam threshermen that fe\s sacrifices are considered too great for them to rescue an old iron monster from an ai an- doned sawmill or gravel pit. Then, after much time, money and effort have been expended In getting their piece o1 &pip - merit in running order, they're off to the fairs or threshel•Inen's meets to exhibit their prize. Fair -goers saw grain threshed by old-tlnhe separators, saws and planing mills operated, and they saw a rig bale hay. Youngsters rode in miniature farm waguns drawn by a small steam engine, and there were exclamations of surprise on every hand at the wonderful versatility of such oid- time contraptions, Then at the noon hour people crowded into the tents where ladies from a number of local churches In the vlolnity served home - cooked "Old Thresher Dinners," We marveled at the number of persons who seemed to think hey were seeing a part of early Americana that has vanishes] from the modern scene. Amos could afford a tractor a truck, a deep -well electric pump, Mechanical milking machines lend most of the other power equipment which science has dreamed up to make farm work easier. Still he and others like him have managed to convert their part of the earth into a garden of peace and plenty with the tools they have. And it is a matter of record that the Amish and Mennonites, whose intense love of the land distinguished them from other early settlers in America, were the ones who brought with them such advans ces in farthing as rotation of crops, improving the soil by fer- tilizing it with barnyard manure and by growing red clover, When they applied these methods to the rich soil of the New World. and housed their livestock as carefully as their families, they were recognized as master fann- ers, a title they still hold. There Ls no dearth of farm tools and wheeled equipment in the Zaugg's big bank barn, There is the family carriage with its side curtains and battery - pow- ered lights, the light market wagon, and the heavy farm wag- on, on which several bodies can be used on the same chassis by An ingenious arrangement of bolts. Also the manure spreader, the hay rake, the corn planter, the harrow and discs. .And the power needled to operate them is stabled snug and warm and pro- tected Fran: winter's blasts on the ground floor below. On the stone floor and in the loft above are ample stores of hay and grain to keep the animals well fed until another crop comes in, writes Mabel Slack Shelton in the Christian Science Monhtot Amos recalls that one of the stories handed down through all the generations Since this part of the country was settled' was the controversy between the men who built big barns and the English and Scotch-1rish sett ers who looked on them as unneces- sary and a luxury in a raw Lew land. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1, 8ott food 1. Pltoher's plato 8, Door track 15. Boat propeller 11, WPart agoof n a tongue ll ' harness 5, On condition ' So may it be ors delicate ', cadency r, howeer omlttately r, Rtd r laitr,• liOvgru and lttteyrolne • Trlbutnry Shrewd Mane " nickname ll:vigor l9QrtegQO .8 lolia ear .ow, steer, 1!. Qtovortng for east and shoulders , Prlolcly bear 1�, lteep.Hh ater UUMMounded 11'ootleuu ahintdl 11 Vans , Small draught 8, Dnrattnb measure fI. Woody fiber 6 The nalroor Iie,wN 1. Shall (\plosion 2. Swiss river 3. Belief lied 4, \\Birt 5. Ore deposits 1r, warns 7. never bottom S. Swindler Today the barn still outranks the house, and after the house conies the other buildings so ne- cessary on a well -kept farm: the springhouse, the smoke • hot,se, the chicken house, the sumacs kitchen, the combination bake- house and washhouse, the pr•rt- able corncribs, the pig pen and the woodshed, Kept neat and trine and given a coat of white- wash every so often, the smaller buildings add much to the looks and the value of the farm, And best of all they make a place that which it was intended to be from the start, a well - loved home, There is something elusive and almost mystical about i idian summer, A fugitive season, it comes early or late and can nev- er be accurately predicted, though Amos is of the opinion that it usually follows the first killing frost. All we are sure of is that after a cold snap that chills the blood, and after we have resigned ourself to the coin- ing of another winter, suddenly it is summer again. But with a difference. Now in this golden interlude the breeze is as soft as the notes of a flute. The air is still and sweet, and colored leaves float down soundlessly. The weather is balmy, all sounds are muted, the earth seems to wait in stillness, We wonder why it is called Indian summer, but the diction- ary cannot, or does not, tell us. It merely describes it as "a peri- od of mild weather occurring in the autumn, with hazy atmos- phere . , , corresponding to the English St. Luke's (Oct. 18th) or St, Martin's (Nov, lith)," The English reference book states that the mild weather around their St, Martin's day "corres- ponds to the American Indian summer," Neither book hazards a guess as to why it is sassed Indian summer. Amos believes it is partly be- cause the cool snap preceding it is known as "squaw winter," and he beleieves that the early Indirr,ns took warning from this first cold spell and struck their summer camps to move to more sheltered ones during the following period of mild weather. Emmeline, however, holds to the notion that this pleasant time, when the air once more blows soft and sweet and haze drifts over the valley after a pe- riod of pinching cold, was named by the early settlers for their Indian neighbors, who were cold and inhuman at first, then un- predictably nice and kind hi a time of sickness and great sor- row. Only nature is unconcer'1ed about names a.nd times of ap- pearance as we wait in dreamy stillness for whatever is to fol- low this halcyon time and cher- ish each day of srmky-blue wea- ther. In "Autumn Across America," Teate strikes a poignant no:: by recalling that the English eats this "farewell summer," But that is as it should be, for this is trolly stnner's last call. Toward the end of the month there will come days of driving rain, and after the storm Inas passed everything will be cbtl'er- ent, The air will be crisp, some days will be raw and cold, others short and sunny but without a hint of summer's softness. Then it will. be time for earl' lamp- light, hearty suppers of l'resh- dressed pork, and big pans of nuts and popcorn around the ke- chen stove before bedtime. And life will still be good, for every season on the farm has its own peculiar charm, HEAVY DOUGH In the Island of Yap 750 miles north of New Guinea, huge Mill- stones are used as money. 9. Crippled 10. Augury 11. Caro for the Hick 15. Urosen IInce a vine 19. Curl 20. Log float 21. Away front wlnil ward 23. Sunken fence 25. Uallght 111 27. Kind of tire 25. Willow genus 29. In good spirits (tllnl.) 31. hls(tu'unther 33, Of musical sounds 3f. Tontorvow (SP.) :19. Seandlna el in 39. ('ries Inqulslll, els 41. Command 10 aunt 42.:\1'I2„na Indl..n 4n.\ hnml, 45. Nutsrtm'e 17. Khll!InR (Ilrll,'Innpt 49, 11n t; rnu i ' 1:1. ~pini: .1 2 3 :i`4' 5 6 7 'ti,8 9 10 11 12 '13 v', 14 15 16 4��, 17 ' ;, ti 20.21 X:e: 8 22 ; _ 19 . 23.:1•' ter kh/ 24 25 '26 ,::::i>,-27 113 2 30 31 '8;'32 33 34 : 35 36 V37 . � .s 8� 39 S 40 44 45 s.:b .,y. 41 42 43 'A;! 46 . ;•47 48 49 50 53 �.S'• .51 :•:•: • .• 54 ;.;.; "•ts Answer elsewhere on this page :<,i�h.::`5 1,711 its 1 FOR NONSKIERS-No ski slope, this It's salt, piled moun- tain -high in Chicago, III , for use on icy midwinter streets. TIIEFMM FRONT Massachusetts and other states along the U.S. eastern seaboard are emerging as leaders of an "agricultural revolution," which may possibly end in the com- plete renovation of the 'farm image' in the United States. As Dr. A, A. Spielman, dean of the College of Agriculture at the University of Massachusetts, said recently, "We no longer have farmers in Massachusetts; they have been replaced by milk producers, cranberry producers, potato producers, and other spe- cialists." * * The farmer of the past, who raised a variety of crops and did his own producing, processing, and marketing, no longer exists. Farming today is developing Into a highly specialized business known as "agrindustry." According to Fred P, Jeffrey, associate dean of the agricultural college, the Bay State along with the other eastern states is lead- ing the way in developing the new concept of agriculture, while the mid -western and southwest- ern states have yet to fully ac- cept the agrindustry concept Mr. Jeffrey, in charge of en- rollments at the university, pointed out, "The demand for specialists in agriculture is tre- mendous." Giving what he team- ed a conservative cs;innate the educator said "th:.re are al least two jobs available for every graduate we have in agricul- ture." * * But as another p,', fcssor ex- plained, "Agriculture has a had name, Right now, we're getting about half as many students. its agrindustry Ile:ds," People nlcd to know, he asserted, that agri- culture is no longer en "overalls and pitchfork industry'." The advantages in agriculture are not recognized, the cducatols indicated. As a result of re- search, Inn -ling has develo,,ed into a highly cflicient and coin - plicated industry. Agnindtistry is divided 11111' four_ nta,jc'r division:: producers, pl'OC:S5n1's, marketing firths, and service limns. The prcducliun division alone in Massachusetts is a ,$160,000,000 business, ac- cording to Dean Spielman. Agriculture is without a d,.nbt the b i[ g es t industry in flu United States and Massachusetts, the dean said, including the four divisions in his estimate. The development of agrindus- try appears to be offsetting the over -abundance of labor which might have occurred as a result of eulonalion and mechanization 1 of farming. Although one farmer now can produce enough food to supply 25 persons with enough to eat, whereas in the past one farmer supplied enough for four or five, agrindustry has more than absorbed the excess labor and is crying for more. Dean Spielman pointed out that the production of food and fiber is "one place we're ahead of the Soviet Union." He said that it takes much more man- power for the Soviets to pro- duce food for their people than it does in the United States. * * ' While the United States now is out front in this field, he said, there is danger of this country falling behind, unless more stu- dents enroll and continue to de- velop agrindustry in that coun- try, writes George Moneyhun in the Christian Science Monitor. Another professor asserted it would be almost impossible for a student to comprehend the number of fields which modern agriculture encompasses. Posi- tions being supplied by agricul- ture graduates include city man- agers, golf -course planners, su- permarket managers, and insect exterminators * * * Airports also are calling on agriculture graduates to help maintain the turf near runways. Dust flying up beneath the lets and propellers has been a major problem for airport designers "Just the role of corn in our economy would be almost :in - possible to visualize," the pro- fessor said, mentioning too that the plastics industry, soaps, de- tergents, oleomargarine, and ice cream also are products of agri- cultural research. * * * Research plays an important role in the university's College of Agriculture. Many of the some 850 students enrolled in the college are studying food technology, which is devoted pri- inc1' ly to research in food pro- cession. Dean Spielman says stu- dents from throughout the world go to the university to partici- pate in the food -technology p:o- granl with hopes of raising the eating habits of their home coon- triec. Dean Spielman says the col- lege hos four major functicns: teaching, research, co-operative extension service. and "service and regulatory" activities. The extension service comprises ap- proximately 35 per cent of the college's effort and is devptr'd to ISSUE 51 - 11181 414.1 "extending the cultural and tech- nical resources of the university to the people of the state," Adult and youth programs, such as the 4-1I Club, are just a part of the extension service's activities, Service and regulatory activi- ties include testing feeds and seeds and enforcing dairy Taws, The Massachusetts Experiment Station, set up in 1887 and sup- ported by state, federal, and.-.thri- vale funds, also is operated by the college, Strange Doings' In A Church The current Anglican Digest reports what is probably the most unusual ceremony in the recent annals of religion: "It happened during the reces- sional at a parish church in On- tario, Canada. As the . choir moved in perfect unison to the hymn, the last young lady in the women's section slipped her stil- etto heel into the grating over a hot air duct in the center aisle. Without a thought for her fancy heel, the young woman slipped out of her shoe in time to the music and continued up the aisle, The first man following her no- ticed the situation, and without skipping a beat, reached down and swooped' uthe seioe. The entire grating carne with it. Star- tled, but still singing, the man marched on, carrying in his hand the grating with the shoe attach- ed. There was never a break in the recessional; rightin tune and in time to the beat, the next man stepped into the open duct," Put Their Carpet On The Ceiling According to dispatches from the scene, a lady in Kansas has a new house which she 'shares with six children and where the living room carpet is installed on the ceiling. The explanation of- fered is that the carpet in its unusual wall - to - wall location gives things a warm feeling and has worked an amazing improve- ment in the acoustics. It is al- leged that the noise the six chil- dren make has been muffled to a most gratifying degree. Per- haps the reasons for the extra- ordinary arrangement are as stated, but it also leads to some additional suspicion that this is just naturally a topsy - turvy. world. - Commercial Appeal (Memphis) Up,lrreliuwn to Prevent Peeking VNS 15V8 3141I1l d'l SJIS3NO 00dV ..6 3736V8 3100 _7VdON "1/MVH 1V3N,INV103S b39O $ W l A"031 3111 SV d I L Ito 0N3?J 1 NaWy 314/V11.1.0.7S HS :•b3 V1S "N .;e a N / 03001 370d 8V7S NDAY 5(11001 JJSSON By Rev. K. Barclay Warren B,A., B.O. Growth 'Toward Christian Maturity - Ephesians 4; 11-21 Memory Selection: Leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfec- tion, Hebrews 6:1. We conte to the fast lesson of the year and conclude the series on Christian growth•arld matur- ity. The sense of the opening verses of our lesson seems to be, "Christ gave some me n.- as Apostles, some as 'prophets; ere., with a view to the full egeIp- ;.• ment of the saints for the work of ministration or service they have each to do in order to the building up of the body of Christ." The building up of the Church - that is the great atm and final object; to that every believer has his contributio' to make; and to qualify al! for this is the purpose of Christ in giving "Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers," Too often the work of the Church u, re- garded as the responsibilit of a 'few faithful souls. But every man has his part. The hea ens, growing churches of today are those in which the laity have caught this vision. While one pian is Sunday School supe( in- tendent, another may delight in bringing children in his car; "..il- dren of parents•who don't bother going near the church them- selves but don't mind if sonleene looks after the kids for an nour. Sometimes the ,witness al the children penetrates the callous indifference of the parents. If we are to have proper spir- itual growth we must heed the injunctioii;""Put off•your old na- ture which belongs to your fur - mel' manner of life." RSV. And be renewed in the spirit of y Jur mind; and put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness. This is more than joining the church; much more. It is the miracle working, power of God the Holy Spirit. Jesus. Christ carne to destroy the works of the clevil. On ascending to heaven, He sent the Holy Spirit to make real .in the lives of men the grace which He so dearly purchased. The believer' need `not 'be in bondage to the fleshly nature. The Holy Spirit who purified the nature of the disciples 'at Pentecost and later,' will do -the same for us today This prepares the way for. 'greater spiritual growth. Then we can rendet bet- ter service. Many a woman. thinks she bought a dress for a ridiculous price wiien, in fact, she bought it for an absurd figure. TROOPS MOVE -A wounded woman is carried away from scene in Santo Domingo, D.R , after a truckload of army troops moved against a crowd of 1,000 women demonstrators, hurling noise bombs and firing machine guns. ttecite teller, 23, son of New York governor, reported sussing in New Guinea; intensi►e search fails to find him. ':` °'1,a U Thant of w 11uta:o elected acting M ,kre 74 Ariny recruits 1 secretory general of killed in airliner crash I United Nations. near Richmond. /A( NI7Ytier :4'" Russia puts "neutrality" pressure on Finfand, v 1 �'Jrj}ti �ti ��ti�ry-c•o, o or:fireeeeserAv'' X•15 rocket l •' ''� plane hits 4,070 m.p.h.�Heavy snows trap I200 hunters in New Mexico. 1 6'`� i / / A :Ii1Jf Worst brush fire in /' i ,__ / Los Angeles history rages, / destroys 456 luxury homes. INIUnkjill East Germans add :i . antitank barriers to Berlin wall, OV,: 20 West Berlin police force ` back thousands of West Berliners attempting to storm the wall. r'�• Death toll in British Honduras from Hurricat e Hattie set at neatly 400. U.S. warships stand guard off Dominican Republic as possible Trujillo family coup is averted. House Speaker Sam Rayburn, 79, dies of cancer. Russians read interview between President Kennedy and .Editor of !nestle. 1 Princess Margaret has baby boy. tiQV'29 U.S. sends ;,,,x,;; chimpanzee into two orbits of earth; recovers him safely. ,• ‘irK NOV: 24; Violence mounts as Daminicdns go wild at prospect of freedom; government attempts to break general strike. ` • ` •fie -. r __, ti '*S Argentine jet airliner crashes in Brazil, killing 52. 1 -a' _ j---------,/.. / 86 per- sons killed in riots marking 7th anniversary of Algerian revolt, 13Italian airmen with U.N. murdered by Congolese troops, eieserisieese: PAG\ 4 THE MATH S'tANDA11I itjAWICAVION06101611411016011101014/444004'04146010110d4l'ildK4li►ItuNIC 47 ace tMtld ter to B rite n erecting that Houk! he cuts as a cherub . . but theoe words say it beat: ''Merry thristmao and gond wishes to you," &Um' Pitettby Needlecraft Skoppe Phone 22 1Myth, Ont. r too, li • 1 Or M i `edhds y, Pke, 20, 191 it AUBURN & DISTRICT NEWS i iontaa licarney rased Away .1{ent:c;h 5cc'.t: C,G.1.I', loader, Mrs Archainthaull and Betty IIailsm as the A We,; Biadnock, Airs. Duncan'elacleay; major players. Vuother udcic:ain„ A11 lhon!a. I{caruey I'as;•(il away in 1'ic' 1 1u;cs' Aid 1'rc..:dent, 11t•s. l' i. 1',, platy, Bewari of Uwetcntin_;, which iur!a bopilaf, L unth.ntt, Atte Saturc}c';; wits; secretary treasurer; Mrs. tiny baric twinning to ctclyuuc who 'Mehl r.vcnha, in his 111;:11;1111;:e":1 ,lh year, Lora !Ii 1Vcsl Leer. Alter the tweet lance oI the nee at tea crick at t.er!ctn,as dinner r Wawanc h t'1 the t>!• Aui;utline district sl.te of officers, Mrs, Baltic.; (;ave ; erected nitre laughter. A monologue 'Eli he had scent his entire life title in that ie iirg, "Whet ate we Christian Wo• M.lhel• t`il•`.di':a !'tat'I!ij, WaS done by Ic'w,'!ship, where he, wit, a fait•tuer• men doing with 1.;lrislneis'" The ince' • ltetiy Roll:un, ;111(1 also r prep;; urviving ore two si:iters, Alii Elva in' was clued with prayer by Dr, D Chti to as drill ly the l,irl', of the who lived with Alii and Sister ,Vary ) 1..:lac, :,cit! .I, llec!IIte(nls were given by J Tonle, elother ,superior of Fl• Joseph - 1Lirry Fresno, Alwa Ball, hickey (.'om'cnt, Situ:oe. Resting at his lata' ladles AM etceltug asst anu-auii, ha'!h Rattling Keith residence until I'uesd ty morning, where• temp, Joyce llaii;nn, and n solo. ii t} 03 ) Rhlltilt R thlet:q tlRtkb(ihat r tDc3:14b r t>RiitAri( t•irlai •a;3►p4brl►a'kA1 t::tSeltDr llaihlti ► to S+tll aie 4WiltrititltieRti'K+4 t tteinKeRKtf101 tt4etld+` Clinton Memorial Shop T. P1tYDE and SON 7 CLINTON — E'bL'1F>1 — 6EATORTH LOCAL REPaESEN?AIIVE — THOMAS SIEEI', =gloIZ, PHONES: CLINTON: . EXE?ERI Besiness--Rn 2.8806 Realness 41 Residence --Re 2-9809 • , Residence 84 ,_ ttadltIotikkllt l a r""t"tillitOPPEKVCAL4tiltgtlitttlittittaMililf.' lQ 410.00 OVIK+t 141414=R r s':R MAYrti l e convey our sincerest hopes for a ! , ,i cheerful, happy Christmas and a bllghtel New Year to you, c14 a ) HURON GRILL I i3LYTH - ONTARIO ',, ' A FRANK GONG, I'ropriet or. A ,,ableetk inti! ttet4tP4t 4 4:I! r deet 1 ' ' il Requiem "Egli AB•tss was slay, by Fifth• '1'11(1 Ladles Aid of Knox 1'res'/y,cr• cr l C 'Themes ,tt the St -',1u •ustine 17.at (lnir•ch held their last meeting til 11. C. Church at 10 ii.m Burial took the Year with the president, Mrs, l.d, place in SL Augustine TLC, Cemetery Davies, in charge. 't he minutes wcrc tv' h the pallbearers Feint; 1(essr; rend by the sect etary, Mrs, Rey Drier Kenneth lcrldy Gus Reateentl, Ilil'iar(I She also gave the financial statement. Jefferson, Ted Robinson, Gurdon Foe:iii 'the meir crs decided to send the don. and C!arerce Gibbons. i mica to the Deaconess glome in mem. Mrs. Herbert Mogrid:e is vidti'.1:, (,y of the late Mrs, D. J. bane -am w'th her (taught me Mrs. Gormley INi'l•,c, J, h, Scull. rails were made 11 Thompson, and Mt', gloom' a, at proper° boxes for the shut-ins, The Brampton, Sunday `ehcol concert was scat for De Mrs. Wal'Itee Attdrewe is ;a patient. its ("it.'.:er 29th when a social evening wil Win;hatn hospil el. Der many friends la! enjoyed with (rents and gills Iot wish lee! tt eeeedy reeove: y. 11he children, The meeting was close{ es, (ieor;e Ifo::Litt is en:;ptoycd et w"h Ihe Grace and a dainty Christina: the Poul Office to help with the Christ. lunch was served by Ml's, Ed. Davie: Inas iu_iil. and Mrs. Alfred llollinsun, ('cpgratulatiens are extended to lir. and Mrs.George Ilkln u thebirth of a son un December 14th in Cliulun he::phial. = R " 1 I A I. a .(, re t 119 held l alil,n. 1 r I S. \Bark's Anglican Church when Dtich. ael Clark, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Nes+hit., was christened. 'the Godmother was Mrs. John Me11lcho1 and the Godfather was Mt', Fordyce Clack. Mr, Arthur Grave, of Cclpoy's Bay is vacationing at his home here, Mrs. Clayton Robertson, of Copper Cliff, is visiting with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, 11'illlaitl Stt'aughan, Manys residents in the village deco r- atec their penes for the coming Ch•.t etas season and took part In the Medi cultural Society's contest. These were judged on lltondey evening with the prizes awarded to the folimw•ing. first Mr, and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips; sec 011(1, Mr, and Airs. William '1', Robison. third, Mr. and Airs, Roy Finnigan. 'lite judges were Mr. and Mrs, Don Aberhart and Air. and Mrs, Ernie Prid ham, all of Guder!ch. James Elwin Mille Funeral serviees were held at the J, Keith Arthur' !ectal Home fol James Elwin Mills who passed away i a = -•„,,.. ..,: •' * 1,t141Rlfllf l Kl EMltl'tlitlhtul ! ati/c its Victoria Hospital, London, in ati: V ?' • in hair N4ettioria1 1 19th year, fllowing over a year's 11i-, ness. Born in West Wawanosh raven ls• ship, Jim was tht sols of Mr. and llrs Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of Ted Mills and was a student at the (ode 0 5SERVICE, r , , rich District. Collegiate Institute when QUALITY, CRAFTSM NSHIP he became 111,. He was a member os Open Every Week Udy, ' r the Knox United Church, Surviving CEMETERY Week D IIV besides his sorrowing parents are tzar 1 LETTERING. sisters, Miss Joan, student at Stralfor" 'hone " 56, IYingham • R.' '.h, SPO'I'TON. Teachers' College, and his twin sister Miss Jtute, The largely attended futi. etitel>r a elle al► elteietl oral was in charge of Rev, Charles Lewis, and he chose for his message "The 1_ ,ord is my light and my salvo- l QtitR thtuNSc#14Ktelegtete ti41i(etS iteeseeteleiewtetelil(CK+ eves eeet eeteeelitmeta ►,'' :lion." Burial took place in Dungannon 4 Cemetery, the pallbearer's being young 2 friends of the deceased, Donald Young ie Elwin Good, Donald Durnin, Allan Web. ;i'ltster, Bob Hallam and M. Bakker, Ilel• 'olives and friends were present front' I Detroit, London, onderich, Clinton and the surrounding district., W.M,S, Meeting WALLACE'S f DRY GOODS ••-Blyth--• BOOTS & SHOES YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN- KETS, ; DRESSES and SWEATERS . JEANS and OVERALLS, - . Phone 118. The IVtenten's Missionary Society of A Knox Presbyterian Church was heli 111 A•the Sunday School room of the church with the president, Mrs. Donald 11uhles, in charge. and Mrs. John Houston as pianist. The meeting was opened with the call to worship and the carol "0 Come All Ye Faitltaul" followed by prayer, 'f11c scripture lesson from the second chapter of the Gospel of St. Luke, was read alternately. The medi• talion on the Christmas Story was giv eh by Mrs. Herbed. Govier, She closed her message with a prayer written by the missionary, Miss Dorothy Douglas. The offerhee was received by Mrs. Roy Daer and Dr. D. J. Lane offered n prayer of 'Thanksgiving. A fihn "Our North American Neighbours" was shcwn by Air. Donald Maines. This col• on;u1 film showed the work of the \lis• sionarics in the Southern part of this Continent. The minutes of the previous meeting were read by the secretary. Mrs. Alvin Lcallierland, and she caller) tate reit which was answered by each member telling their favorite Christina: Carol. A report of the year's work twae elven and also the financial statement. The C•G.I,T report was given by Mrs - W. Bradnock and the C.O.C. report by Mrs. Wilfred Feandersen, She s.ta.ted that the.. children are still collecting used peerage stamps and asked everyone to save their. Mrs. Gordon Dobie, the se- cretary of the Memorial Fund, report• ed that five members had contributed to this project. The Horne Mel1•ers se- cretary, MIss Minnie Wa!gnet', stated that'. there was 51 sick calls reporUxl and that there was only one home Helper. Before the report of the Nom• inating committee, Mrs Wes Bradnock presented a Life Membership cerlifi• cate'lo,Mrs. Donald Maines. Mrs. Brad• nock then read the 1962 slate of officers which are as follows: "Dear Dear Little Stranger,' accom• Iion(►rary Presidents: Airs, Edgar I1'amic(I by Mrs, Robert J. Phillips; a Lawson. Mrs. Wesley Bradnock: past duct, Silent Night, by MissesaiBues president: Mrs. Donald Haines; pt'esi' ara MaMacKay nnrl Margaret Haines, dent Airs. Wilfred Sanderson; Ist vice 1t''. Frank Raithby read a filling chrisim as meesagc, written by •Bertha DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. r,f kliNtitiMakitiadatbitathMIDINWAVikkkaINNOLM1114444hM464,41)11/441 1PfeetlestAAE+KaEMMIAleteteettKtelCutlRatteat tietettetleeIRKeQKttMFN@iUtliletileldlre4tlei aa Take Advantage Of Our 10/0 Discount ig , j AND SAVE ON ALL GOODS IN THE STORE. To All Our Customers and Friends The Very Best of Christmas Wishes And a Healthy New Year. ---It's been a pleasure to .serve you. Mary E. Laidlaw, 'toe Willeberg. "The House of Branded Lines and. Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. 1Votncn's lnsiitute Meeting A lighted Chrism gas tree and docc'ra liens for the holieuy season was a 'rel ly setting for the December meeting o the Auburn Women's Institute wliet• they rnci in the Memorial Coitunuti ty 11.0. Mrs, Ed, Davies preslc'ed for the meeting with Mrs, Robett J. Phillip: at Ihe piano. After the opening session the minutes wcrc read by the seere tory, 11I1's, Thomas Haggilt, She re• ported that there had been many gifts brought in which were contributed lr the Christmas Fair at Iluronview, Mrs. Donald 1laines:i'eyor'ted on the comity,: program for W.I. members on Radio Foram early in the new year. The president reminded everyone to renieu) ber their Sunshine Sister with a carr and the members decided to send Chrisitntas cards to the shut-ins in this community, The convener of the cat cenunitice, Airs. Andrew Kirkconnell reported that 12 baby cards and bootee.; had been scut as also 27 get well cards and seven sympathy cards. Carols were sung, led by Mrs, Gordon 1t Taylor, The guest speaker for the :il!oriioon was Rev, Robert Meanly rector of St. ,Mark's Anglican Church. In his Chrlstntas message lie outline( history leading up to the birth of Christ. Ile staled that to fulfill the prophecy of Lite prophets tirade over inn years before the birth of Christ Mary and Joseph had gone to Beth. !chem to be counted as is done today when too census enumeration is taken. Ile pictured the stable and the happy occasion when the shepherds and wise men brought their greetings. In eon• eluding his inspiring message, he wish - 7d everyone the blessings of the holy Season and reminded the ladies tc serve Him on this earthly pilgrimage LI s they are passing through this life, .Airs. Andrew Kirkeonneli thanked Mr. Meally for his Christmas message. Mrs, Robert J. Phillips -played music while Mrs. Bradnock commented on the fashion show of dresses made din'• ing the project. "Focus on Finishes,' Those who took the course were Mrs. Norman McDowell, Mrs, Arnold Craig Mrs, Prank Ratithby, Mrs. Wilfred Sate (Jerson, Mrs. 'Phomas Lawlor, Mrs, Gordon Dolaie, Mrs, Fordyce Clark Mrs. Robert Arthur, Mrs. Bert Craig Mrs. Lloyd Humphries, Mrs, Roy Daer Mrs. Ed, Davies, Mrs, Kenneth Scott. Mrs, George Haggitt, Mrs. Rubert J Phillips, Mrs, Keith Machu, Mrs. Don. aid Haines, and Mrs. Bradnock, 'Ihe exchange of gifts was in charge of Mrs. Thomas Lawlor and Mrs. Gordon Dobie and many gifts were brought for the Children's Aid Society, Plans were made for the January meeting when Mrs. Oliver Anderson, convene' of Citizenship and Eduontion, will be in charge and a pot luck lunch served. A dainty Christmas lunch was served by the hostesses, Mrs, Ed. Davies, Mrs. Sate Daer and Mrs. Robert Govier Carol Service • t The annual Carol Set -vice was held 00 Sunday evening in Knox Presbyteri- an Church with a good attendance. This service was interdenominational and is sponsored by the Auburn Branch of the British and Foreign Bible So. ciely, Dr. D. J. Lane was in charge of the service and the church organist Mr, Arthur Youngblut presided at the organ. Many Christmas Carols were sung and the film, "Christmas through the Ages," was shown by Mr. Donal Haines, the president of the Bible So. eiely, The pictures showed how Christ• mas has been celebrated down through , the years and where the fur tree, the jingle bells, the yule log, the reindeer and St. Nicholas 'originated, also the manger scene on the birth of Christ Dt', Lane WAS assisted by Rev, Charles Lewis and Bev, Itobet•t Meanly and musical numbers Were supplied by the chto'ches' in the village, A trio was sung by Misses Marsha and Martie , Koopntans and Anne Speigelberg ac• companied by Mrs. Norman Wight - man, a solo by Mrs. Gordon R. 'hay. Mrs. Duncan MacKay; 2nd vice, Mrs., . 51)•tl•ford Spencer, a missionary in the AIv1n I.c athe land, assistant, Mrs. L. Lawson; pianist, Mrs, Duncan MacKay assistant: Airs, John Houston; Glad 'I'i• dings secretary: Mrs. Alfred Rollinson; 1V'elcenhe and Welfare: Mrs. Herbert Golder; Flower Committee: Mere. Al. fret! Rollinson; Literature and Library: Mrs. Gordon Dobie; home Ilelpets: Miss Minnie Wagner, Mrs. Roy Daer; Lupp'ly; Mrs. Herbert Govier, Mrs. C'ar. Golder.; Student and press, Mrs. Ed. Davies, Mrs. Charles Stewart: Memor• ial Fund: Mrs. Gordon Dobie, Alrs, Johnlfeu.'h,n: Nninioating Committee Mrs. Frank Raithby, Mrs. W. Brad - nock, Mrs. John Graham: C.O.C. lead- er: ?fir$, Donald haines, assistant, Mrs, and was done by Billy Lapp, Douglas Roy Dace: secrela ry.trensurer: Mrs.' Four last, 5. S. No. 9 Chrlstntas Colicert The Christmas concert of S.S. No. 0, Hullett, was held in the Auburn Coni. mtutity 111emoriul Hall with the chair- man, Harry Webster, in charge. Mr. Wilmer Errington, the teacher, and his pupils presented an Interesting program for the large audience, It was as fol- lows: The National Anthem; a recita• tion by Louise thinking, Mp' Senile; welcome by the chairman and a play Antaleur Night at Station B-IJ•N•K. This was a radio play showing Trow the performers carry out their work Fruit l,a.ssles, "t'ses of Dried Fruit," try:via Ileover; Clinton Fruit Lassies, "I''ruil. Salads," Mary Ferguson; Gode• rich (.'k ver Contrivers, "Various ways ttilk one fruit," Sharon ;.tewart; Thrif• ty Kiepenettc.:, "Use of Dried Fruit," ;Swop McBride; 'tiger Dunlop Lassies, Fru•l. t;peci,tlties" Bar:,ora Linklater, Il,tcreetiIL dei of tt ation, also took place, 'key were: 'lire Beitnore Ber'• ries, Breakfast for the Club Girl, and the Crediton 1 ruitettc'b gave a demon. stration on Family meals with two limits a day. 11uh D11110nnon 14 11111 Lassies presented Malting the most out of Fruits, tw'tlt Sharon Etewarton Bray Irwin, Barbara Pollock, Pat Ecdy, Donna McKenzie, Beverley 1'hi!• lips and Lenore Petrie taknl: u part. The Iluronc'.a;e Jolly Mils also present- ed flrcalcfa t for a, Club Girl. Mrs, Wes. Bradnock presented the County Honors ant phis to the lollowie g girls Mai had completed six or more pro - 'wets: Shirley Baird, Sharon Etew•art. 1'nt alcl:wvain, Lynda Aim:Donald, par• Icy alacltan, llarioo hickey, Alargaret Illstines, Ainrie Leather.:and, Aiarearet Hyde, Kathryn Oke, Gale Wilson ,And i Alice Uccrie: . Alps Josephine 1Vc.od- cock, District President from Blyth, presented the Proviuci'al Honors for 12 s e. to Mrs, o 1 project th(, completion! J Gertrude Diehl, Goderich; Mary Elliot., Clinton; and Marjorie Kieffer,. Wing. pane. A copy of the Brtt.aurc, Book of the year was also presented to these eiris. Certificates of Achievement and Mons were given to the girls who had t•uccessfully completed • the re+luire:1 projects. 'the spring project in Hilton County will be "Separates for Sunt• incr." Nultia' for Chrislioas, was sting by Louise thinking, A play, A Jolts That misfired, was presented with Shirley ilunkir-„ Douglas Archon t'au't, Wendy Schneider and Belty Reliant being the actors. Square dance numbers were done by the junior pupils, with the call• crs being Wendy Schneider and Brenda ' Ball, A puppet show, Lillie Red ilid 1 ing Betel, was done by Nancy Leap , Billy 1.3pp, Daryk Ball and Douglas Archin :null, 'l lie p' ay, A Christmas Lesson, Land en Ihe nem, A visit ll'(►Iel 1• Nici:o'.as, w')S acted, as also the Nati\ ily Story, \vitt' Wendy Schnei• der telling the Christneis Story and Juyce 1ltdIint giving a reading, (lied• tativas were given by 1!aryk Hall, ire Menge, and Brenda Ball, Aunt Vera. ,e ,, 'leave home, was 1 , Mee Alice c 1 , l.t, l 1. t , 1, , played well by 11alph hLalllaul, Keith Lapp, Cathy Scluielder curl Jcyce Hal. lam, A trio, Polly pully Uuorl!e, was -..itug by Deryk Ball, Bcb Schneider au(1 Daryl Ball. A play, M aderoe Cain. cilia's Beauty Parlour, showed GI( trials and tribulations of a beauty pal'• lour operator, and a song selection was given by the junior boys, Ralph Ilan. lam, llorry Vranken and hickey Arch• anibaull, how's your figure, was au amusing display in panlonnine of Brew da Archanlbau'-t doing exercises to keep your figure correct. A school chorus Reindeer Bells, and, The Little Ilei!. was sung,and tho play, Fooling Atm! t ,, b Julia, waacted by live ladies of the school section. Those-(akinz tett were Mrs. Leonard Archambault, Mrs, George Schneider, Mrs, Joe Verwey Mrs. Ai thu' Hallam and alt's. Henry prinking. A trio, It is no secret, was sung by Brenda Ball, Betty Italian: and Wendy Schneider. Santa Claus arrived and distributed gifts and candy to all the children, 4.11 Achievement Day al Clinton Over 200 girls participated in the 4-11 Achievement Day for the project, Featurittu Fruit, al Clinton last Salute day, The program was under the di• rection of the Ilonme ticonemist, Ili;s Isabelle Gilchrist. The morning session was the judging and planning menus for the day, fruit, The afternoon pro. gram was opened by all repeating the. 441 Pledge and the comments on the club exhibits, The following are the club exhibits and their commentators; Auburn Aces, "A days meal featuring fruit," Marion Hickey; Belntore 1, "Uses of Dried Fruits, Lois Simmons; Blyth Berry Belles, "Various ways with one fruit," A1ary Machan; Brussels yESTFIELD The Westfield correspondents wish to send Christmas Greetings to a11, espec. lolly Westfield friends, from Vermont ' to Seattle and Victoria. and all points 1 in between, We alk wish thein Best 1Vishes for the New year. • Miss Donna Berger aied'Mr. Carl Bele ger, of Seakni11, called on Mr.' Alfred Cook on Sunday, :Messrs. Sam and Earl Bolton, \Val• ton, were guests of Mr. and Mrs, Doug. las Campbell on Sunday, Mr. nnrl Mrs. Chas, Smith called on Mrs. Elizabeth Cardiff, Brussels, on 'Tuesday. Mr. amid Mrs. Ilarvey McDowell were in London uu 'Thursday, A Beed driver reacts instinctively, and consistently to traffic signs and nv,lrkings, says the Ontario Safely League, 13ul many drivers retjard a warning sign as a challenge, and feel t satisfaction if they ignore- it without I bcin ,, penalized, It is estimated that six out of every ten drivers involved in fatal accident violated some visible reminder of the law. Remember, law - fat drivers live longer. 1 1 a .1 a that please le with ease.. Pajarnas He'II like For luxurious lounging, com- fortable sleeping Contrast color, panels at Aleck pant and sleeve cuffs. CHOICE 011 COLOURS „ R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Good Manners" (0,Ado,v,),Dal)4440401),),?,mtioinaolyrizomlailompairoaolkAtialmothmi 140 1 Ji r 1961 C1IEV.Bel Aire Se. 1957 CONSUL Sedan clan, 6 cyl., automatic and radio. 1961 PONTIAC Sedan, radio. 1961 FOR1) half ton, ' 1956 FORD Sedan, 27,000 utiles. 1956 CHEV. Coach. 1956 DODGE Coach V8 1953 METEOR Coach aatlietatati Blyth, Ontario, New and Used Car Dealers Wednesday, Dec, 20, 1061 THE fL'i T§l'ADAItt) Morris Township council The Morris Township Council met in the '1'ownsh,p Hall on December I'! with all member(, present. Thr. 11P1!!tte: of the last Illeeting 14erc road and adopted on motion of 11111 Ia:.tc'u and !los i, f; ii .h 111(.1 td! , rc1 resem.a!n'e on the 111:1gtani .High Cchonl llojrrl, ::poke ft• the ceur.ei1 01 1 to t o addition to the \\'Ingham High S'.heol. As yet :hey have net receive'! the U.K. from hticlalow and Ripley, Moved by !alter Shortreed, second - !d by Jas. Mair lIial we trade the ole; Urrli.na e level in on 0 new one. car. 'ltitia. Moved by Jos. Mair, seconded by ,Pallet' S ot.treed that Wm, 1\1t1 h(, .ii-appuinlcd n: rcprewnl aliti'e on 1110 hing}lani High School hoard; Clarence tlrui.in as reprasentative 00 the Sea- orl l! High School hoard and Floyd 'l'ay. for as representative on the Clint, 111_11 School hoard, Carried 'Moved Try lees Smith, secondee) h J 1;. ,\!,lir deal Nelsul! Ili1l!ills he Taal• for actin( a:; Relict Officer f" 1Td. Carrictl Aloud I!y 111!1. h.l.;Fun, .-reoi kd h: :;m!!h that the 1'odrl account:, a by the Itoa!1 Suptrintendcn be paid. Carried Moved Fly Ross Smith, stcolleted 1?; 1W'a!ter t;llortreecl that the general ac count-, as presented be paid. Carried The meeting adjourned on motion '0 Jas. 11air and Wm. Elston to me( .11,;!;11 en January 8, 1962, at 11 0.0). 'I'lle following account:, were paid; County of Huron, lay, $34,911,12 Briu:sets 'Telephone, levy, 8,81;0.70 111011 'Telephone, levy, 2,067.01; 111cKil lop Telephone, levy, 136,99; Wm. Mc 104,'(1 caretaking, 123.00; Stewart Prue 100T4.'4;T;'r.aa,i I€ ' f �!, .:[i . i i 'N, x,''F,tl''.Z,;'fiRt a;tz:F;tiq:fiR{rC1:K,�x+*,;ml;;iy,� ,�5:.?: •' it From all of us to all of you, best u'i::lies for a i• Z '(':lin that lights up your hearts and homes tuith love and laughter. WALSH'S SUPERTEST GARAGE (rh !4 !h la lh 41iINPrai►iaaill!$r NIOI+'PialtDxi•!t'ii<ri)112,,i*titinOhNi'lis 1)) '11Fi204t`dlN',D1 hOFPt7 IAIPillt; ri N), le4tatgltat': RtP;'Rt6'Ar ICIttlItRRtrIttai,'tt;4PT.9111Y,!Xtralsi'A1n1C✓.; 49C11,tR11►P:I1gtCT4TtnteltAttt's; SEASONS' GREETINGS Once again at Christmastime we gladly take the f opportunity thus afforded 1.o extend sincere greetings to our Loyal Customers and Friends. May all the joys of Christmas be yours, and may the New Year dawn bright and sunny and continue that way throughout for you and yours, HANNA'S GENIRAL STORE laclgrave, Ontario A is kY miro t'e?ri1+"Prloataii,BerletIIPImPr?:eAm tlriiL•i1 ?z^7'J4hfi'ra;Fahrx-ka hDiPa1+1'-itdoia1nm6. ter, salary, '273.00; 0,altcr Shortreed, t,alary, 175.00; 1x01. Ii:L,lou, salary 115.01t„1.0. Mair, Malar, , 1;5,110; lens., 1:01;41, !salary, 175.00; Geo, Marlin saline, 117)0.00, road au'fil, 5.00, po:1 ails, 110.00; Nelson 5;)9.00, l'ost,0,7e, 40.00, financial state. tncnL, I0.00, ie!u't olticor, 75.00, c,:11001 attendance officer, 12.00, road audit 5.(9), tc!epl100r toll: , 1.150; (J1'1 11,'!11• [''OIlf)0 He: 51f 114_ 1'11!!!1.,'!' u!! 11. )111;i\ay, r''Clle:ration of Aif1'!c'ltl!rt, pl'0;;1 011: ,iIlq'!! Il'"11-1,er• .01c 11,8 1116, L•Cilf0Itl 111,!1 '.;O1.1Qr1l, 0001)• opening 01101!1'.; tit 10.11!t!y CI: taln3lll'r !til'}', 2,913.38; 111!lti,hlllll 1'11;11 ?Ave 110;;',1. 1'I',s, d,rylrfl by the!: Schur 1, uauntt:n3nct, and deber.tul t: teacher, Mr.:. I'1_'1 1 c o)' . Ven0d3 ir!!cl 24,295.03; Clinton 111:h i ehuol Alaintcn• Danny 1.: !!r:'111. 0 re .:tion; 0 flay by once levy, 1,1',922; Wesley ; Ilacklvell , the junior !rh : a nun•':e1 by the kin. Walton street lights, 9.30; County of dergarten c':a,; spelling cut hrisiiiw Huron, kvy under Sec. 51 Assessment Act, 8.40; Village of Brussels, Division with Nancy 111(!':1': c!1 101!1 l:! t oda John Court, 16.00; Frank Kirkby & Son, stun takltlg Ilii due part, a,erin 'anletl L'airl:'aw Drain, 4300; Blyth Standard, by Mr,*. (;eergc ,!'h!1;inn; 11'ay'ne !lop contract and eller priotillp„ 201.52, per l't'Clat!on ' 111!(!!1 Pap i; ;rich", treasurer of Ontario, relief ;lucid,' two carols, run; by thei :r; i' accom. 110.00; W. i11aeF'ar!'ane, wreath for re• panted by ;',lr'.• 1. I1. Anderon; a pia:). Irlenlbrance day, 9.50; Advance 'Times. by Mrs, ('! !ford Lagan': eta: s: a duet advertising, 22,40; Tawtt:.hip of Grey, i by Nancy ,Irdcl sou aur! V1111110 ,h):11) Sellers 11011114, 3:l, 13. Ion, "The 1�Ih1': 'Tell., Ale :.o," with Mr; . ;Ie1l'ill't Procter, George i'11a1'tin (,'Orli' J(hpstoll Ir(r+f1 ,,,,.ill' . MIR ANNUAL ( ON('1':111' A'1' FORESTERS 11,11 1, VIA 1;I1 111'; Rev. ,I. 11. Anderson \va, 11lojrnla'i al the animal 1'hii •taro!; cum.( It nl the Sunday 1,0hr0l of I',nr,>, 1.'11:'('1 Chia el,. . I3c1gravr, hold in die l'ur':•1'r. [tail Ir!° 1 1''t-1110,; 01(101!" Reeve. C;lerl(, steal lila(, :,' a1'' , by Rn . 11;;;i:m':: c'L•)s: 9rcon!t :vii 1 1, \li", ri,'nro .lnh!i:;tr!ti ihC ll!(' <'Inllp 01 t1!: \'',)11141, prni''l(1'. govt!' a i011001•00:, ;t_jt ' Clirislma:, IiEll:i" : a!' !,y the Jl!:!icr boy's, a:' 1'111• t11.0:••s: 411 1::; .tiliAtil,:axiti.l1.1,;11,tC.Ata;,o,Alrt 11a,y the age.old but ever•uc11' story of !Christmas re•caielu►'c your spirit and inspire you anew with all the joy a1111 wonder of the Day. LADI)'S BARKER SHOP rfL]"rll, ONTARIO :a:a. g...i;4atRte fitrw,,cRr,'r,:Air, rt, ,,;1 (.; :;tar Holidays are happy times, and we hope that this season will be an especially joyful one for you and yours. our best wishes to you. CitEIGHTON'S White Rose Service Station BLYTII, ONTARIO rC1R'6!Ric!Atc Cent:;lVC(.SRc igtVCtttnt iltC!C ":,'M • t 4. 11(11;44 and cheery as a Ci!risl!uar6 candle is our sincere wish for you. 111a,y you have a Merry C'hrisluras, (;(_I!VIN(>;'S Sunoco Service Station 1) i.,,"rl I, UNT711. it) .,'.'A;T:F�;t�•G;1�tf;R`�t�,'P.,'�;n •�t(1 tCl`.1'Q('SRnI�!¢irA:R�i Gtniht, n.a .[/--74\0 From all of us to all 1111 you, Our sincere wishes for a 1'ol1(103' season of good cheer, Our Best Wishes for 11 BLYTII EL i C'1`RIC SHOP Wm. Thud! Very ;Merl', Xmas and a , New ` f .7,:r. :l.tx:r:BL''TII, OONTARION Happy year to one a1.11.1 extitiN!Sin'n"hvr,41:044,�{tiitn�i�,!j all, TIIOMPSON'S GENERAL S'I'ORE Londe iboro, Ontario GREETINGS for CHRISTMAS and BEST WISIIES for the NEW YEAR 'from! WALSH'S BARBER SHOP t!'4,101,41/;i`>5 1!Ir1l00.111tRKA0, 4tilt1.14 1,1314 41131 i Ottti4414141t41441ttriV1,!8tETEIC t$Rf IAt ly 1c14301rl ll 41411 48$4541,$` .A Bar:ains 11 1 Ft p • l:e Ii 1V'ith our newly installed molasses mixer we are able to add it molasses to your grain, and also make our own Beef and f. Dairy feeds IN BEEF U DAIRY FEED !411 v Q t 3 �1 1 1 ,1 1 Belgrave (oOperative Association '11€ P QUALITY -•• LOW PRICED Concentrates & Rations can now be purchase d for your winter feeding requirements 1 ,, by contacting �' T la Once Irgain, we are happy to take this opportunely to wish all our good friends and patrons a very joyous Christmas, BERTIIOT'S BUTCHER SHOP IJL1'T11 ONTARIO ?S'44EttitgtialEtrit0gtdtOtt!ttglgt(I'Mtiti:R4;t4lta±li PAGE 11 RAVING VISITORS ICE A'I' ARENA If '' t i' t',:d t', :1)1.1,11 fill :fi1I11,1: 1 1 1'111 10!0(1', of 11,11'( 1; 11'11(1., 011(1 11) ,I''1)) )'1+11 111 111'1:.:• Ihr ''ilr;.•111,0: (0 011, I,C :0Irc.. 1,R t(11 !i1" 1,1.,,,,j,u'd 1'1 tl,r•h;u'pr.nin'.: !1 '.1!! ..' I', !l 11) III' pi.: 11!111 ('91 !11!!!! I:I li!, 114.1 1 I 4111. CON(;I(ATLLATION:S Congo' t.11altons to 11rs. Stewart ,1mer.t, who celebrates her birthday on Monday, Leec':II*cr 2',111. C ongratu1;1:i0:).`' to Mrs. Gladys Whit- Il")1'(, \111)) 1'('''; !' 1. :. Ilrl' b111111103' 01 [?crcnbrr 2:111, crry good sheet of ice has tak''1 h.11,a' 111 Ihr local arena, under the di - !Tenon of ?1(;,ors, John Young apt Harold ON Already local hock(', 4(0111., have l'raels;.ed at the arena, 0111 11 the I'nl'i 11r:atler stay'!; R'Ith it yam), ice • 11'! 1!'I h'' ,a'. orad of many plea i.(11';.Irio1: lu,lolay' hours -pent ORE 3 OPEN NIGHTS 1. ast minute shoppers are remind!' 1 that Blyth Stores will remain open 0.)• til 10 p.n1, for the remainder of til: ween, Illyth merchants will also he open net Wednesday afternoon immediately following the holiday period. a1)1'rl J.,h;ls'.ol,• f':u read ':'ilii"r1 i'r,111t0 ; rioar Robin. Driver, 1Fmcmber that the br. nn, fin''. ,lrrler:11!1. (''ilvin Pnbinon, Ela,:r for an impatient driver imhl)'"l- \lbcrl, I3ir!nan and Leslie Poll formcrl lately behind you is • sonlcwllere cls;o, h;o'iio!nl' a hand and gave Feti'eral The Ontario Salley League 1'eCt'!i)- '-1)robe, " 00,-00,, on led 1,: 111 ;. Albert 111u!1r1: that you neve!' Fry to keep ahr r+ l ''11010'1. 0 I''1\' ''I'I!: PhaL'I:!'aphe!''1 of, or aloft:side, anolhcr car that !; '1!'11!41 "'''h 'l!' l;l;s liobi!lsna, r11:.111r:; or lvca\'!r;'. 1.111(.,8 ,l;'1:'stn1 and Gcor e Jnlri. a:, Of,. .),'ors. th'' m'r-r r! ll::''•'1 C !I' lot in the 1,.: , -0!,!, t' r rt"' n, • el!eru5 afte!' which quoted by the Ontario Safety T eagu''. ?leen ,I!!'!t';'d 1) r:i' I: n!!t -!1f ')'I ., i "! ! 1!i fool :,'or' of the people `D!, " ' ?"`l:; a'vl 'l" i t'_!1!!! ; c'e. t:l ',1111 the of tilt: trim ,.. and that'$ L'ood 1:1,ou :,1 104!0!:.:{1 ,\:'t! .):!• f0! 112." 1 ..'•$',;ti...t`ry:?'.a:'•4:.";E�A�i:�.�'l'���i�i•.s,��r?re.�%t6+��;F�L�x�aR%�:��?� +l Lvhre and Dance In forester's Hall, Belgravc, on mew 9 (me 27th music by DON I)BEI't'I'SON AND THE RANCH BOYS Sponsored by the Arena Board. `. ,.':A''I': •1L �� 7:,.!f.?;Pif.'cif%r•/:fX'!!)'R 1`.17€41 i.'Idyl,l', YIR I~t' ;ANN ^111??1P '1,1214??? Ff/Y.r; 1'or ,.t, !,,. c• air. it!itT't114'g.'S1trStti4E~r:tl.at€A.a,rt$:•.,i•a•~ut8lIVi&1X41fclTIlfi►2iCi€rtl ,j ' p 01 a it ,1 P 1111 4 A+ • • J„ • Good news! It's holiday time. Our 'wish is that t ~ii your Yuletide will be a 6) t<° ' - newsworthy one, head- il —`"' Tined by happiness, ' good health, good cheer p1;kap, : z!b;` F�,'.,`:i. for you and yours.; 0 r 'r ( (2'r : at?t?•R ,i!1 :1?Ri' ` ?aMinta"RlPrst21?,p,R ,pikl�h `,i?rhr1 lw'1 1i i 47a,paiNatt,&,,,,1 . W. MADILL'S `Reel;10tHtritA4VEIEt;r44;eglAtC1": ui1f4044$1!4147 'FAEtgidlClalfilrttg+t•" i;kit$RCtitEtT.:$tClft 41C4rti" ,F �f1 Greetings of the season to you, our II friends old patrons! May peace and n ltaprieess be la your 10'0(4. urd Joy In your home at this glad Will glorious 1i holiday• time. , R? 1,, E. TASK ER f Furniture • Funerals l4 Ambulance Service f'? 1 ,�• � I11,YT1�qu, /�O{N7I'•AIII0� ,}1) 0 AtcicItljtvatAigkii R,tat t4t.1t�`� Tt4tIrct,ttara t'P tVii'L0rt fs t•4 1;j `rF fif ;1 A s'e're cooking up warm gond wishes for all our kind friends and patrons for n holiday season that fulfills all 1' their hopes. !' Phone BRUSSELS 388R10 Phone WINGIIAM 1091 EDNA� & ARCI1lP + r, MON 1(GOMERY . t 4 , ��"<�P'tnfs'tklt't"s!tki'?'lt1iAlla'PatktVeiti�ti'ain\i"(?ti'Citi7:WiiPtt4Aiiti k*Ri.: .At this Joyous Season '; i° It is my Sincere ,Wish that every one of you 7.; may be Richly Blessed and that Peace and Prosperity will he yours througlkout this coining year, a W. Hanna M.P.P Huron -Bruce A fn BLYTII. ONTARIO f 14.,2t?:7i:c1n'!criil002��9?to,i?(tR:93"Re`�t�Ra1�1r^.aa+s4�`yaats'�uL` a.�m"!^c c"u�a`i.`�'�n"lx"ts�"•">ibliga ?''Atait 6 '1".11114.1 - ,Iii Uri% STAN DAR,) tst.---_. 1 %,d'�(attfig +fits4! Teck Folthto+tut+ s�ew�mentekiocwit+t+raiftih ft itstiory €i Federation News IJ/4 +S' ' ,detm prok) 'try every star in the heeive.ts, e'rery jeyfi,ll Christmas hymn, every preetinry from the hear, ren'irld of the true deep mr:noir,.), the In. spite!,] messct9e of Chi sinlos, SPARLING'S HARDWARE (By J, Carl Ifetnu)gwa;'1 1Iuron County Fula: tion of :\gricu - ) lure held their regular monthly meet• int: December 12th, with the new 1'rc,,i. dent, Elmer Ireland, of East 11,'awa• nosh, presitlin • Since there w1'rt' set era► nee, t"wn• iltip Pres:tdent:A each was a: t; d identify himself and tell the u1 hi: farni aperation. a,�t Ab. 13at:,til, l2'c.:;ltleut of the County ,ir; flog .hii>+Ilil'et's Association, reporte,1 that the results of the hoe feeding pro 4 !deet would be completed before to, Iring sad it is hoped lie) snide vale an able information will be forl)hcom;u:!. PI (!harks 'I'honlas, of Grey iutedship ,t reported on the Poultry Producer: Afcctin; on an r.;g innrkclin; plan +!; that was held In Toronto recently. Al ii this merlin_ a motion was ras:a'(I ill• l :Articling the Ont. Poultry Producers; Iliroelor':; lo take die ncresinIy stew,; '6 to draft an ego Markelh ' 1'1111'. '1'hl i? means That a petition sl;.urd I:y ;it ti least 15 percent of the e3,/, postman,. toil1 'MVO to be presc "led 1'1 the ,'ecce • r6 Pi'oducls 'i11lri.r.tin'r Boardrertiteiliut' a AtarkeLin.g Flan for e;;:, ;, pruducod it i Ontario, lick: !taped Iha.t this can he '°i done by the e,id of 1''ebruarlr, i :rifler this time a Plan u'tll be drafted a::'1 rrescnted to the producers, :1 vole A will then be taken !('high will requirf that a reasonable number el producers vole and that two-thirds oI lhci c vot- ing tote in favour. The winter Shot•i Courses al the O.A.C. were discussed and it. was 4 agreed that the County Federation would sponsor two delegates Ili the om>egor )A.Avr,4r)sir,M0411aikolar=i2,airo.tiP 1).)11i0la4,11go>•tloadiAgo tui;,>ra`+ Marketing and Co -Operation Confer. once held January 2, 3, 4, and 5. 'q urstort,gt:;r;'crxrng)c,tvcic rodyerr;rettirglultedinCrttratclots'eisttw0tVI'lltierr,gcctc;' The Education ConuniItee reported that dells were being taken to hold a ti NEWYEAR'S second Huron County Leadership EVE 'Draining Forum early in the new year. tF Details will be available shortly. In closing just a couple of iteuls from DANCEeid.4recentOa ts,"Alinisterttawof A!,Reporiculture 1lanullon is seriously considering the advisa. Sponsored by Blyth Royal Canadian Legion tt, Willy of Government making provision { 1( for the accumulation of feed grain !T - Branch 420 0 serves." d I suppose there arc people w1u1 are IN THE BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL intere.stt�J in guaranteed lead supplies but our reserves of feed grains over the past several years hasn't made it ea .y for family farmers. Just when do reserves become huge surpluses'. Certainly "reserves" of pork products dr FrE, Dece 2 Music By .HM PIERCE'S ORCHESTRA FREE NOVELTIES AT MIDNIGHT LUNCH COUNTER Admission At Popular Prices • I , '` ivol atptwo!; ,) a, ;;ntnxtmnororwtwradmi tNw,a,wimitw,rmm,ia, 4 ts;lttt;t-,4441+KtK;iC'. ve, :tvt4c ittSudi+ttoccitw a .tRtC,mtwgrad egtRet'oworiteAtfitFtK tato; fAt is tt; TO TIIE RATEPAYERS OF 1 THE VILLAGE OF BLYTH THANK'YOU15/ FOR THE ACCLAMATION GIVEN US FOR 1962 Sincere Best Wishes To All In The Coating Season Reeve: Scott Fairservice. Councillors: Borden Cook. Gordon Elliott. Donald Howes. Kellam! McVittic. `1 1�3 h y?1 4r ar2tlta►gr 41414 t102ltyel 1%/41+. gri it4041.itectith ;,11'+ t3OPtbt itin bal.2':140 tlt>xMlaeft.ipmempetorttmer tpta'tLlteintiSbit6{fit er'ticr tforf S pilot t6evelet4 WISHING ONE AND ALL A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR 1 tt lr 11 i RILL'S ELECTRIC Phone 171, Blyth, Bill and June Hull Wiring and General Maintenance Commercial and Domestic Refrigeration 1'edneNdny, Leer. 20, 1901 • r dirt :nt:,itlr.A►rat=Fac!a'n' IK444111 otatw ",lKtr'VitPi dux+,haustingly(tuldildilt011111 14111 144' 15 In government hands didn't do much for the !leg producers, I cl, Again 1 quote, ' 1'he Prairies may he r,threatened by a mud' more serietl� ¢f doloih ht 1962 than in 1901." Th, S, ',',tinkling up of feed !;rain reserve:, ',C'\Erninent under these circumraanco3 �. c.,-.10.11c.,-.10.11only result. In loiter pliers tot ')!aarto :Valu and therefore livestockI )! Christ mag Day:. l'rodtcts would also be lower, �; 10:.19 a,ln.--Morun!f rrayer, When so many people have been llr ianlen;in4 the plight of the fainter in! j All';lican Christmas Radio F'1'tgran1!nes:- the oust. price squeeze for se'; era i �'! CIIItIST,1IAS EVE:year: , it hardly 500)115 reasonable that it; nine IhasOn carol Service from ,SI. Paul's Cathedral, London, )S steps should lie taken lo keep hind' ?,+ , 8 p,nr, on (1P1,, t f TheTheBishop'sishop's Christmas message 10:03 p.m., CKN'X, id V111{ISTMAS DAY: tR 1,1The Bishop's Christmas message 10:30 amt., CFI',,, London. 16 Ui\'1'r; U ('CHURCH,SL N[)A1' SCSCHOOLI ^,?la:k ..??2,1V1r2,ata siyiT2i; ,.ePa',ei:;,/Hilt;A:i+2lT:t 6131:4;a,2,:127;f9t!Tii 0,1)1Piilehlii? t7r"r'NAIFW ('Ifl1A)1if:N PRESENTCONCERT of the church school of lily!.!! l : ilic!g!t{��tvc,;rr1ctr! i.,gtc'f.,'nlr!ist":(�Sl;', rt`rtt1,.,54 4xC°'Rt.4,ftA,tillc: t ! 1'lgtlf'atittt:(i+rl.�,�tt�;lf!!i� I ANGLICAN CHURCHOr()1'' CANADA f I' viiirr '1'111N1'1'Y CHURCH, Bel "I'II Chri$t.i:llits Eve: - 10:70 u,ui•—,!!!!!11!!11; 1'r:!yer. 11:00 p,tu,---Ilol,l' Communion and Sermon. rs 'r t. United Church held thew t hiist:nas concert last week with a good attend. :, nice of parents. Christmas t:;)l'UI;, were Slnl„ ael'llld• � panie!t by Sus:an 11'ighlmat at the pi t' sono. Cathy Madill, Ralph Reba, GlendJ Johnston, Cathy Burkholder, Dianne M 'Deux all and 11orr'is Nesbitt Eavc short recitations. Ruth and Ronal() ,teLaEan and Agues Lawrie played c.ia.na selections; Susan Wightman and *')seryl Madill favored with a piano and organ duet. A meetly of Christ• utas Carols were sung by the pupils of A. 1Valsh's, Mrs, I.1, Craigs, Miss Sharon Jackson's, Mrs, 11. Vodden'r and Mr, and sirs. A. Wasson's classes. Dialogues were presentee! by Mrs, C• Johnston's, ltliss Nancy Johnston's, Mrs. Wm. MeV ittie's, Mrs, II. Vod• den's, Mr. K, Webster's and Mr. E. ;tleLagan's classes. The nativity scenc was portrayed by Airs, K. Webster's and Air. Ray Aladill's pupils, The of the children and their parents were presented for Van Sil Ahn, a Kor can girl whose education is paid for by the Church School. l(1r. F. Howson snperinlendent, closed the program with prayer and Salta Claus arrived t; to dist ribule treats to all the children. ` a t 1' Con.;ra(ulations to Layton 1Vatsh, oI liar nia, who celebrated his birthday on Tuesday, December 13. Congratulations to Mrs. Carl Long- man and son, Kenneth, who will cele. brate their birthdays on Monday, De- cember 251)1. SEASONS' GREETINGS \\'e welcome the opportunity the holiday season offers t(1 CNKCSS our appreciation of your Patronage and ,Wish a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to everybody, GRANDVIEW LUNCH Edith L. Creighton, Proprietress. 5e"SItifi+10119t)riAr'4'',N)1111,1•4i1r4i7141.7:9141Pitri.Iii?Ai.1f`rl4d 1,411>t?r$iM"kta`+t •I'Nkr?ieMrai›.4N ,1:9,r t K17,411r r+KIK1441ftKr uttrAttf.114;t(;' :alli GrALC4ZrI, K ,VCR 140. 7,t41,nt014 4gtalt(ttiZtVaM,,f a SEASONS' GREETINGS d We wish to extend to our customers and friends Istat 1%Tishe$ For A MERRY CHRISTMAS and a } HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR e2!t'~4rA,! 41!0lDitlh2►aiMI2t' M'IPIP00t+lnli+74:1411(4;144411 100ti ti hMkPi PIPAs,; BLYTH DAIRY Gus and Hanna Kurnoth 5 fi A May your Christmas be the happiest ever, and the New Year filled with health and Prosperity. BLYTH BILLIARD' Doc Cole, Proprietor 1Ve're all aglow with warm !Ashes to One and all for their merriest Christ. Inas ever , . , a happy holiday, bright with loug.lasting blessings of love and friendship, :food health, ,;Sod Wyk au►11 good dicer, DOHERTY BROS. ItLV1II, ONTARIO id 15 t J i",'Yr�!?t1'!r'h.Rtihe4,� 'ld•�!tFri+tie:?,i�t�t:'�i`�iMir,;inttir�lrn,a,�'.'rttit,'ilAust^litr_-tia?i►:2?c':ittit'�??:t�!�'t$e�.'c�i�:'s"'':Au� gq4tg vori.gt4'; tvittittiti«I€ vAprrlv4Fit:pr;r'tkk :r,+,;l!i tivluvpt!lar.;.3+ ttsiteito+A log" T•f "I 1 t1� �F9 r ev A }i As the wise Hien came to 13elhlehenl, fi iney the spirit of Christmas conte to you and yours , , , tilling your hearty 9 A with Its wonder and warmth and re. 6 newing your joy in lea message of IA f peace and good will among men!I HOWSON E4 HOWSON Ltd. 11 aLYrx, ONTARIO { AIGNaOtPetiVi it???4,Ptah'tiate4:itli2r',.at.441,1?1 11'1artln;icatkt211112,r2r2tla01N141tihFii 111eittThlt3 ^ b' tglq+n!&tft1,1 ti!St(tt.1341 tG't;"'411.'13i t=s<!tttttte;'fi'4'445!ii'QtC-'4%1 Ai(;tStAtritGtSetA Kr6 411111,07 nP 1)4 r,"1 pe 1,1 4 We're singing out Our }test Wishes To You for a Christmas that will fulfill all your dearest dreams of abundant happiness shared with your loved ones , t of good fellowship and good cheer , , . and deep contentment, 1' A. MANNING & SONS BI.YTII, ONTARIO At Madill's Store 1 ' V rttt f hy, Dec, 20, 1961 ' !i itiiii ittikloottoitkot itidiso4ntt+ otottimootto isixtookator, BLYTII - ONTARIO. len old happy custom A But it warms our heart fTo wish each of you a 111erry Christmas !+1t glei` hli ehh1171 1171 'tgtrch?1,141fir?'rPt?Iith.013R?nkt2IDt?t°!$liR a"Cbfi1'ire 'i13't10!?!19tr" Elliott Insurance Agency iK • •SF WVVw••Jv .n'vH.h/..a.'L•..'ML'MT-^,. 4, 4 1 FOR SALE !lard wood, limb wood wood. \Vi\N'1'EI):• work saw, Apply Fred Soiling; Brussels, and body with chain phone 07W 4I.43p, GIFT' SUGGESTIONS New Livingrunm Suite, naw or used piano, record player, desk, cedar chest hassock, hamper, lamp. \\ride selec lion at G. E. Schucll Furniture Show roams (situated on each side Main Street, Mildmay, 42•t SEASONS' GItEE'1'1NGS f1'oin the Blyth Beauty Bar AMI Hollinger DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR RENOVATION PLANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Job CaII GERALD EXEL Carpentry ant Masonry Phone 231112 Brussels, Ontario Sincere 'Best Wishes for a Merry Christmas And Happy New Year To All Our Customers and Friends P & W 'I'ItANSPOR'I' LTD. Local and Long Distance Trucking SANITAIION SERVICES Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired. Blocked drains opened with modern equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254. 11Lt, MCKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • 6EAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS; President - John L. Malone, Sea. forth; Vice -President, John H. MeEw Ing, Blyth; Secretary•Treasurer, W. E Southgate, Seaforth. DIRECTORS 3, L. Malone, Seaforth; J. 1I. McEw Iltb ', Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton. Norman 'rrewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep- per, Brucof icld; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm; 11, fuller, Goderich; It. ehibuld, Seaforth; Allister Broudfout, Seawall. AGENTS; William Leiper, Jr'., Ltmdesboro; V J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Selwyn Ba l:e r, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth. Harold Squires, Clinton. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOUl{S- 1 p.m. to 4:30 p,m. EVENINGS; Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (13Y APPOINTMENT) ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant GODERiOH, ONT. Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 - Box 478, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRiST PATRICK ST. • WINGIIAM,. ONT. (For Appointment please phone 770 \Vinghain). Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services, 3, E. Lont;staf, f, Optometrist Sealorth, Phone 701 - Canton HOURS; Seaferth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.nt. to 5:30 p.m. Wad. - 9:00 a.m. to 12;30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5;80. Phone HU 2-7010 G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optemetrlat) POB APPOINTMENT ICIIONE 33, GODERICH 15•11 Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BE'T'TER BULLS ARE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost Choice of Will and breed Our artificial breeding service will heli) you toa more efficient livestock operation For service or more information call: Clinton HU 2-3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9-5650. BETTER CA'rr'Lig FOB BETTER L1VTN(3 CRAWFORD & HIETHERINGTON BARRIS'TERB & SOLICITORS J. H. Crawford, R. S. OHeCt ,herington. Q.C. VIIn3hana end Blyth. iN? BLT'TH EAi P THiJRSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Derated to Elliott lnsarance ham(e Phone Blyth, 104 • AUTOMOTIVE • Mechanical and hotly repairs, glass, steering and wheel balance. Undaspray for rust prevention. DAVIDSON'S 'Texaco Service Nn. 8 Highway, Phone JA 4.7231 Goderich, Ontario, 20•tf PROPERTIES FOR SALE \VIi,FRED McIN'rEE • (real Estate llroker 1VALKERTON, ONTARIO Agent; Vie Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78, A('HESON'S DED ,STOCK SERVICE Farmers! Are you interested in getting the best and highest cash prices for your dead, old or disabled horses and cattle'' 11 so, 'phone Atwood, Zenith 34000 (no toll charge) or Atwood 356 2622 collect, and give our company a try. Seven day service, License No. 103C61. VACUUM CLEANERS SALES ANI) SERVICE Repairs to most popular snakes of cleaners and polishers, Filter Queen Sales, Varna. Tel, collect Hensall 696112, 50.1311,11. DEAD STOCK SERVICES ;ll(IIEST CASIi PRICES PAiD) FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and HORSES also Dead Cows a11(1 Ilr►lses Al Cash Value Old Horses --4c per pound Phone collect 133, Bru:,sc1s. BRUCE MAItLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth 24 Hour Service Plant Licence No. 54•R,P.-61 Colector Licence No. 88-G61 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, R.R. 2. Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLINTON SALE BARN at, 2 p.m. IN BLYTH, PHONE BOB IIENRY, 150111. Joe Corey, Dob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer 05.11. THE WEST IVAIVANOSII MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office, Dungannon Established 1878 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Brown Smyth, R.R. 2, Auburn; Vice -President, Berson Irwin, Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, R.R, 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan. Goderich; Ross McPhee, K.R. 3, Au- burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. MacLennan, I111. 3, Goderich; Frank Thompson, 11.11. 1, Holyrood; Win. Wiggins, H.R. 3, Auburn. For information on your insurance, call your nearest director who is also an agent, or the secretary, Durnin Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon 48, HOUSE,' FOR SALE 5 room house with drive ingarage. all conveniences, in Blyth. Apply, Mrs. E. J. Churchill, Mussley Ontario, phone Uarrielsvillc 269.3377. 41.3 'th)J ALW C OANDARf meow Walton Happenings Women's Institute The \\Talton Women's Institute held the.r Christn'.as meeting 1n the Com. n:an::y !Pall last Thursday evening ttr i h Mrs. Jas. Nolan ['residing for the epcniog exercises and business. The secretary's report was given by Mrs. Yarvcy Craig and correspondence read. 1 ie treasurer, Rias. Wm. Humphries retorted $72.78 on hand. 'The roll call aitswe!'el w:'.h a donation for re.' :ardcd children at \Vit>:;1:a(i1, It was rlccid, d II:ct tilt Institute join with the !fall Board in having Euchre l:arties January 5 and January 19, 1952, provid' ill; the 1111l1 Board teas agree:bee. The 'alter [art el the stalling was in charge of the directors with Mrs. t;`ewart Hum. ehrics its charge of the program. Chrishnas Carols were sung, with Mrs, 1\'111. Huila pries et the piano. Mrs. Frank Walters ,tc ve a Cln'istinas read. inti on "Recall' cue:eml and syn:'tots of ('hrt'lin•lstire," Alis. Hum,•hries lead a s.'ory chilled, "The Youngest Shepherd," "Autobicgraphy of o Christmas Tree," was the story chemo by ales, Ronald Bennett. Santa CJau: f.11111; 0(1 f i di,tribu.tc edits which were later displayed by the recipients. A colorful hunch was served by Mrs, Glen Corlett, Mrs. Geo. Williatn. on 1111'3. 111:11!1 WU:11111;oa, 111r3. Ray \Vii liatt:30n and Mrs, Harvey Craig. Con• yellers were the District and Branch Directors, Mrs, ',ewers Humphries Mrs. Pc.'e McDonald, Mrs. Frank Wall. ors, Ma's. Ronald Bennett. Walton Group The Walton Group enjoyed a turkey dinner last Wednesday evening in the church school room with the losing side in the copper contest preparing and serving the meals.. The tables were decorated with Christmas centra KING OF THE. FOREST! Turn power into profit! Use the,660 for cash crop cut- ting . , . heavy jobs that need extra cutting speed. o New exclusive crankshaft won't break or crack, even on the toughest timber. • New "pancake" type fil- ter prevents 'saw -dust slowdown' , , . keeps tate engine cleaner. • Easy to heft and handle, MAKE YOUR OWN TIMBER TEST .. , SOON AT LLOYD WALDEN R.R. 3, BLYTlr, ONTARIO Phone (Residence) 351{6 WANTED HIGHEST CASII PRICES PAID FOR OLD FEATHER TICKS also New Goose and Duck Feathers. Write to: - LOUIS WAXMAN Brussels, Ontario. Box 119 PON FOR SALE • SNOW BLOWERS WITH IMPROVED FEATURES CHOICE OF TWO MODELS • Made By - ALVIN WALLACE PRONE 31114 BLYTH, ONTARIO ;, rrr'•+ ,bY9y - .1s.,.. ac •. a .= pieces, red and twh'.te. candles, place cards a": Christmas serv'ic::es. 'I he '1'11c losers were dre:sed,.a3 maids and the winners store C1ni:Urtas costume:. Mrs. Geo. Hibbert was rrt:.ented with the mist ler the t1::.! r,rie nal cietaiUc. alas. R. Achilles e as in charge of the prt.i ran! which erre!::.tl %tali carol ring, ins. 0 ler numbers included Chri:;t hale read!:: ', aeloa, f'.3I10 Sul:, 11'oUtl1 organ solei' u!i, balloon contest hoola hoop contest and fashion coolest. Mrs. ladled 11 cloven was, winner cf a [ilia for the tacky sena('. Ie. Ere.', A. Big. ;;inlclleint who was a st'ecial guest si/oke bri(lly, ilr:xc.s were racked lot shut-ins feta wing the \1r, and Ales. I) it id I1 ('h yell .,isi► 0(1 on Sunday w'h Air. and Mrs. Net. son Reid and Alr. and AI':;. W. C. flack wc'1, Ah'. P 1:1111 F!11'i , 1'amillea, spent the weeleer l with his l :treats, (tIr a11r1 Airs. 1), E"►1!s. 'I he \Vt'!'un Library will 1' open Wednesday, I)r.:i it '.'v' 27 in L. all u: Tuesday en oecot' t of i3oxing Ua} being a to lii:ay, it will resume as lieu al day, Tuesday Imran 2 p.m, lu 4 p.m and '1.30 i,.m, to'3.30 p.m, for the cella !! 1 ; year. 114:11r1wa's OI' lltty Illelt'!1^I'': will be ;;ladiy aceepted at ally time. 1'cilper Sera ice The Canadian Girls in Trait!'n; anal Young People's Union united in the, annual Vesper f:'erl'ice last "unrlay e; cnirg in into church auditorium which was beautifully decorated with ever - ...Teen aaaglia, Christmas lights and lighted candles. Miss Eileen William- son was oremist p1)J''.ta; a n►ed'cy of carols as a Organ Prelude. Durira (Ise Processional hymn 'From the Eastern an L'chade gave the W.M.S. repeat and Mrs. Dave Sholdice gave the W. A. re pert. 1 he inaugural sheeting will br air, and AU's. Douglas Ilesk and child. head at the church Thursday afternoon i•cu vi41ted over the weekend wall January t. We were reminded that Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Turnbull. 'Le cal'.ital fund closes at the cull of lite year, '1'11c Inettin; cl!'sc•a wet' I'ynln 53, "Silent ?lull', ' azd prJ:;er A ::c_31 hour was held after tent meeting aild Christmas gifts were ex changed, Miss Norm laeemina has accepted a s; has1 at Carthage, S. 3. No. '1, Moue ingion Townoh:;', and will continence .r PAGE 1 duties beginning the new year. Mr, and Mrs. Bob Pritchard and family, of Toronto, spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Dave Watson, alive Corrie Jlulyter, of Stratford, visited over Sunday with AL'. and Mr - Jan Van Vliet, Order Your Counter Cheque: Books (printed or blank) At The Standard Office 1tat1Z' '.gtr!ftcl4tR1t;:S111C'1,AtC 11'41.1 lIZ'Safi' ttfie;ultfAlzfi a 4*1!4,41410!4i1401K121!C4 4 r5 Pi Ip 1 r t 1, I :E ld lF 8 rt x1 fir 1, 11 rr i, it l., !•r llcuntains" the m etr.))ers lock their q+ places in the choir. Miss Ruth Ritchie' ; was leader of the service. Special an- theles were sung by the choir. A 9 Christmas Fantasy "Angels and Arch. 1i angels Wray have t athered there" was presented ay Misses flarh0ra 'rurn':till Mary 1tclen !Weitzman, 1 huh Bryan: Bonnie Uhler, Audrey Mcllicl!aet, Nel lie Baan, (aril 1\'i'hee. '1hc story "'1'h: Alesselt;cr" teas given by !lou Uhler. The light Bearers were, June Illegal. bedlam, Irene Jo!ln;;ton and Pauline Timmer. Rev. I li:_3iuhnl.ham pront.u'tc- ed the Benediction. Mrs, E. McCreath and AIis:1 Shirley Bolger, leaders of the C.G.I.'1'. and Your.; People's Un• ion, are to be congratulated on this t:eatttiful Christmas p1 esentation, A social hour was spelt, in tho school room when a!1 united in ranging Christmas Carob. Lt 'ch oras served ay the Young People and C.G.I.T, During the service in Duffs United Church last Sunday morning the sac• rament of bai:ism was conducted by Rev, Higginbotham when Robert Wil• liaM, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J Leeming, was baptized, The Sacra• rent of the Lord's Supper will be ob.. served on Sunday morninee, December 31, McKillop Group .The nreKillop Grcup held their De- cember reeling 1Vcdnesday. evening December 31 at the home of Mrs. Wm Dennis with 17 meniaers present. The losing side in the copper contest, cap• Wined by All's, Wni. Dennis, enter tabled the winners, captained by Mrs. \1m, Leeming, to a buffet :upl er a' 7 o'clock. Mrs. Jack Busman pre- sided and opened the meeting with hymn 51, "0 Little Town of Bethle- hem," with Mrs. E. AlcCreatlt as ac. con1panist. Ahs. Norman Scha'e led In prayer, The scripture, taken from St. Luke 2: 8-20, was read by Mrs. George Love. A very fine topic was given by Mrs. E. McCreath on "'Ihe Legend of the Black Madonna," The minutes of the last meeting, also e thank you note from Mrs. Charles Mc. Gavin, to the group was read by the secretary, Mrs. Geo. Love. Mrs. Norm. CARETAKERS WANTED Applications, In writing, for the pos- ition of caretaker in each of the nine schools in , Morris School Area will be received until December 31. Duties will 'commence on February 1, 1952. Applicants will state sah_iry wanted A list' of duties may he obtained from .airy member of the School Beard. Nt application ueccsearily accosted. Itulph Shaw, Secretary. Brussels, Ont 43.2 CARL) OF THANKS I wish to thank these who sent cards, treats and visited me while a patient in Clinton hospital and since returning home. Sincere thanks to Dr. Street and the nursing staff for their kindness. Marharet Phcaan 43.1p, rut ,SALE Lux coal and wood stove. Apply John Snyde►'s, phone 526.7310, Auburn, 43.1p - WANTED Plain sewing and alterations. Mrs \Vm, McViltie, phone 85, Blyth. 43.11), STRAYED Hereford steer, around 850 lbs., stray• ed to the farm of Arnold Cook, R.B. 1 Belgrave, around the end of August. BINGO Legion Dingo every 'Thursday nit: 8;45 share►, iti Legion !tall, Lucknow. 12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share the -wealth and a special for $50.00 must go. Ino limit to numbers). 4011 FOR SALE CHRISTMAS SPECIALS:• Purebred Boxer Puppies, male Mal female; your: 'green male budgie, started to t.alk and cage. Apply Mrs. James McNeil phone 76, Brussels. 92'4 LOST A small female 110011, part beagle, black, white and brown markings, wearing collar. Finder please notify Jim Alcllwing, phone 50R0, Blyth. 43-1 MEET YOUIL NEIGIIBORS AT T'IIE GODEBICU PARK THEATRE NOW PLAYING Phone JAI -7811 NOW --Dee. 21, 22, 23• -"RIO BRAVO" John Wayne and Angie Dickinson ('III{1'TMAS SPECIAL -Men,. Tues., Wed., Dee. 23, 26, 27 BRIGID 11itA7.•1,OIV . STEVE MctIUEEN • PAULA r'REN'rtss 11) a Picture 110 could !Hake your t'lu•i:ti mis more henry 1!•3.:1'.I t i' the l!ilari.0 11'tt y flit. -the Golden Fleecing" "'1' 11.E .HONE YMOON MACHINE" Scope and Color Thur„ Fri., Eat., Dee, 23, ."29, 30 11Yl.E' MILLS • Bernard Lee • Man Bates The sensational your; star returns in a new British hit show "WHISTLE DOWN THE WIND" OUR SINCERE WiS1I for a CAREFREE CHRISTMAS tri ) ik fiYlrRn,;YP,a1),110'. 7rW,A,/ 7,i5.1Paiti+r2rx'r3,,D1),DalitTiDal.17r,I'(Se t'bt/ir 24Nor5lXaaPi?I.DIDaa,allre. '► F.,K ICA:1VAttlt'/F A'd AI tS,:1;,selftt(tT.'.Prittl:'•AtGElMIKdStGt9E($'INEtft$t6tCtitt„tatjtChtIVC1C70% 5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH /,,i .. 1, ;f MERRY CHRISTMAS and a 13 , HAPPY and PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR to everyone. We appreciate your patronage. Doris and ,Bill Hicks. r sn is is i d eraeaoat37iet2 tit3 $t)ttlApt$tit )par!)'fi!$t$'t a,$!?*).rihi1 "z )41;1 araltatatatfitraltateteteaCanatet8'a atia;ttbtraglaaalerteePaerurtetate let-atatatal atatatctatelata• ? p'0 4 1 a tt SINCERE SEASONS' GREETINGS We thank our customers for the pleasant Busi- ness Relations of the past year, and extend to sour • Friends and Cusomers Best Wishes for A Very Merry Christmas and A Happy and Proslierous New Year. , KNOX'S PRODUCE P. EGG GRADING STATION •- BLY'I'H, ONT. ,IA ,, Y.! t)QittIVMaP!kePIPIPIP 42124 iNPaPtAiiiThPaPa)'itPt7'iNNMr?tirD'LillshtAkiDiPtr'ilitt 1/424e '.ANNp)P4! 19041$4tllett,4ROCRlttfitfi'.CIUM=kA1C1-14141 t&t1PaZiFta ll ilitat$tetr44 11! I K+1144 t 444-; ., t 1 J BLANKET SALE 4 -pound 72" x 90" Satin Bound Luxurious First Quality MADE FROM 100 PERCENT PURE VIRGIN CANADIAN WOOLS Reg. $16.00 Value at $9.50 each Red, White, Green, Yellow, Rose, Blue also White 1Vhipped Stitch Rainbow Border ALSO FEATURED AT WHOLESALE PRICES: QUALITY 'GLOVES f Ladies' Oalined Capeskin Gloves Ladies' Lined Capeskin Gloves Ladies' Unlined Goatskin Gloves Children's Lined Leather Mills Lined Sal Mills Special Price; on WORK SOCKS These offers are available from December 8 • December 22 & J unary `2 - January 12 pr, $2,00 lit', $2.50 (hand hewn backs) pr. $3,50 pr, 75c pr, $1,50 BAINTON LIMITED BLYTH • Phone 6 1 Cashing In On Cockeyed History At Pointe du Hoe ;,n the Nor- mandy coast of France, several hundred yards from 0 m.a h a Beach, D Day was being re- enacted seventeen years ,later. Five "dead German" soldiers gulped ice water flavored with Pernod, cursed the heat in their native French, and waited for filming to begin on "The Lung - est Day." Behind them, a recon- structed pillbox which would turn out to have no guns in it was the object of attack by the Second Ranger Battalion, which included teen-age singing idol Fabian. Three times the dirt - caked Fabian had blown the line, "You mean we conte all the way up here for nothin'?" ;and, with money ticking away at the rate of $35,000 a day, tem- pers were rising. Director An- drew Marton called for another take, and an eager prop man be- gan waving his smoke can to- ward the camera. "There's too much mike," rasped producer Darryl F. Zan- uck, "Cut!" Marton whirled around, sweat popping out on his forehead. "Nobody says cut!" he bellowed, "Nobody says action but me when I'm directing. Nobody!" Zanuck reddened, took a fierce bite on his ever-present cigar, and stalked off the set. "It's D for 'Dollar' Day now," comments ed Cornelius Ryan, author of the best-selling book and the screenplay. Fran the beginning, the recre- ation of the grim realities of D Day had had a surrealistic over- tone, Filming in Corsica with the assistance of 1,600 Marines and 22 ships of the Sixth Fleet —the largest concentration since the Sixth Fleet began operating in the Mediterranean—the pro- duction was held up by a 5,000 - pound unexploded bomb found in the sand. Trying to re-create parachute drop on nearby Sainte - Mere - Eglise, seventeen French stuntmen (in American uniforms) pepped out of heli- copters nightly for two weeks and, blown by the wind, landed every place but in the town where they were supposed to Among the movie's personnel le a German ex -paratrooper as- gqigned to train two dozen Frenchmen, some of whom also fought in the war, to imperson- ate German soldiers. A Dutch youth with the scars of a Nazi whipping on his back walks around unhappily in a green Wehrmacht uniform. Omaha Beach itself could not be used in the film, because a D -Day monu- ment had been erected there. So Pointe du Hoc was burned off and shell holes were blasted, and 138 men from the Eighth Divi- sion were called in for cliff seal- ing. The movie's cast is strange: Peter Lawford, Williatn Holden, and singers Fabian, Tommy Sands, and Paul Anka; French pantomimist Marcel Marceau, and Britain's Richard Todd, a D -Day veteran who will play his own real-life commanding offi- cer, Maj, John Howard, Comdr. Phillipe Keiffer of the French Marines is an adviser on the filth. Another adviser was to he Comdr. Joseph Priller, the Ger- man who strafed Keiffer on the beach and killed five of his men, 'but the meeting never took • place; five weeks ago Fritter died of a heart attack. "I don't think anyone's ever had to spend so much time put- ting so little on film," Zat,uck said to a visitor, at lunch, "Right here we're spending two and a half weeks and half a million dollars for four minutes of film. Our problem is that we've got 27 principal roles. 'We've got to depend 'on history to hold it all together ... Moviemaking costs • so much you lie awake all night wurr' ing ,,bout it. 1'd like this to he the best picture I've ever made. But I don't know .. " Back on the set, director Alai - ton ran through a scene 1ii'whtch four German soldiers stagger tit of the pillbox, yell "Bitte, bitte" in an attempt to surrender, and are mowed down by :Tommy Sands, who asks his buddy. 1=I' wonder what 'bitte' means." Jan Heinrich, the German paratroop veteran, stood watching. "At least," he said, "It shows there was bestiality on all sides,' Author Ryan was asked if • it wasn't incongruous to see Pointe du Hoc being assaulted by three rock and roll singers: "Well, when you're spending X million dollars on a inovie," he an- swered, "you have to take out a little insurance, Zanuck wanted popular young stars to help bring the kids into the film, Well, be- lieve me, these are the only kids you can find in this age bracket," Zanuck's assistant, Elmo Wil- liams, ' came over. "Pointe du Hoc being taken by a bunch of warbler s?" he said. "I was shocked when I heard it myself. But really these kids have done everything we've asked them. Anka had to fall off a ladder seventeen times before we got one scene right." On the cliff, Anka was swish- ing the air with a carbine, its bayonet fixed. "Hey Anka, you're some boy with that pig sticker," a U.S, Ranger called. "Yeah," said Anka enthusias- tically, "I love this filum. Boy, this is great. This is really fun, man," Looking on, author Ryan said: "Me, I'm getting out of here next month, I want to forget about D Day for a while, I've become a kind of lost - letters box for everyone who has any interest in D Day, I'm always getting calls from somebody in Wichita who wants to know what hap- pened to a barmaid in Caen, and phone calls that begin: 'I say old boy, do you suppose we might have a spot of lunch some day? I did want to talk to you a bit about ...' "You know, when we signed this deal I got a cable from Hem- ingway. It said 'Don't Don't Don't,' But, really, I've got no complaints, Zanuck's terrifically tense now and he's putting his oar into every phase of this mo- vie, He tends to be a tyrant. But he's also a decent man. He's straight, and you can reason with him," Nearby, Sgt, First Class Joseph T, Lowe of the 81st Field Artil- lery watched the filming impas- sively. Lowe had landed only a few hundred yards away, at Omaha Beach, on D Day. Was it all realistic? "Oh, it's very realistic," he said, Was it like D Day? "Oh, No sir, it wasn't nothing like this. Nothing will ever be like that, believe me, sir." Modern Etiquette By Anne Ashley Q. Is it proper to ask the guest - of -honor at our . dinnertahle to say grace before the meal? A. Only if your, guest is a clergyman, Otherise, grace should bespoken by the host, or, in his absence, by the hostess. Q. is it all right for a hostess to serve several dishes at a time, if she must do all the serving herself? A. Certainly; considerate guests wouldn't think of criticizing her for this. Q. Since I do not drink al- coholic beverages, what am I supposed to do at a wedding din- ner when a toast is proposed to the bridal couple? A. I-Iold the drink that has been poured for you in your hand, rise, lift it when the toast is made, and then put it down at the first opportunity. WILL BE DIVORCED—Singer Dinah Shore announced she and her husband, actor George Montgomery, will be divorced after almost 18 years of marriage. She is shown above with her husband and her two children, Melissa,.13, and John, 7.. HAVE A HEART, GIRLS—Those tears indicate that Gary Lyn Kisel doesn't appreciate the attention of two such pretty losses as Janet Schnorr, 17, right, and Marilyn Myers, 17, The girls will reign over Heart Month in February. Gary, had open heart surgery lost July and he's doing fine.. 40 a '46 'el :11L 1)4.1 HRONICLES G61NGEaFARM A Happy Christmas to you all! It is not yet time for our Christmas (glory be!) because .this column goes to press three weeks ahead of the date that you actually read it. So you see what I mean when I say it is not yet time for our Christmas, However, at this season of the year it is easy to anticipate. For that rea- son I know that in every home •where these "Chonicles" are read — and in thousands where they are not — there is at .this moment a fever of activity. There is prob- ably a Christmas tree, gaily dec- orated and illuminated; parcels Swift Sewing PRIN'T'ED PATTERN 4700 14V2-24'1 • TWO main pattern parts, no waist seams—whip up this ver- satile juniper -dress in one day! Zips up back for smooth fit, can be worn with or without blouse. Printed Pattern 4700: Half Sizes 141/, 161/2, 181/2, 201/2. 221/2, 241/2, Size 161/2 jumper 21/e yards 54 -inch; blouse Pk yards 39 -inch. Send FiFTY CENTS (stamps cannot he accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly S 1Z E, NAME, ADUItESS, S'L'YLE NUMBER, Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. FALL'S 100 BEST FASHIONS —separates, dresses, suits, en- sembles, all sizes, all In our new Pattern Catalog in color. Sew for yourself, family. 350. Ontario residents must include le Sales Tax for each CATH• LOG ordered There is no sales tax on the patterns. tucked away in secret places; Christmas cards galore bringing best wishes from a host of friends; and unexpected letters from some with whom we had almost lost contact. There are oldish folk, a little tired and tak- ing every chance they get for a quiet snooze, or maybe sitting quietly day -dreaming; remems bering other Christmases so long ago. And the children — who can -what this Christmas will mean to them? 'This season of mysticism — everything so mixed up in their childish minds -- birth of the Christ-Child;.annual visit of Santa Claus; the getting and giving• of gifts. Don't you sometimes wonder what any child can make of it all? Do we take the right attitude in regard to children and Christmas? Be that as It may It is not my intention to moralize. 1 just want to say in all sincerity that I hope this will be for you the best Christmas yet, not necessarily in regard to gifts but because of the inner happiness that comes through close association with those we love. That is what real- ly counts, don't you think? I-fas 1t ever occurred to you that memory is one of our great- est possessions? Without it the present would have little mean- ing and inspiration for the future would be sadly lacking. Natural- ly the extent of our memory depends upon age and experience. I rentinnber the Christmases 1 spent in• England as a child, My father died when I was five and my mother took in dressmaking to support her five children, the youngest born three months after ,my father died but Lived for only sixteen months. My mother had a hard life — there was no baby bonus or hospital insurance in those days. Everything we ate and the clothes we wore all bought with the money my moth- er made by sewing. But I can't remember a Christmas that wasn't happy, As children we hung up our stockings at the head of our beds on Christmas Eve. In the morning they were always full — with nuts, an or- ange, homemade candy and a simple toy. We didn't haus a Christmas tree and the holly and evergreens around the house were what we children had gathered from the woods Our decorations were festoons on coloured "paperchairs" the intik- ing of which kept us iiecepi^d for orcins. happy hours lef^re Christ - nm a F. Christmas mernin7, vee were atti•al:e at dawn, explo'iv"; our Christmas steskine . P./tether would cone in singing and crop- ping her hands — "Tis Chri_tm::s Des 'tis C;. t- mas Day, how happy we all should be with plenty of toy ti ter girls and boys And a jolly big Christmas Tree!"' Then there was breakfast t nd after breakfast we stood around the old tahle piano sin'1ing cat, is to my mother's tu•ennmpanmmc m.t At neon we hada roast cluceen dinner—the only time my mother could afford/to buy c;I Ckcn. desert there wa., plum p int its a sprit.; ul holly on t„p. S. u„ .1 ,s u, 117olhcr aIWAY: 111111.1 , ;I tc HUT( pens.!.-w,:rth u, hr:tncf� tr. the house for Chri,iiele., was pour, d over CIL u d tire; :umd lighted with :m rostra. the d•umc• ing blue flames lea;;ine up and around the pudding vete :t f:,s- cinaling sight for us all, Christmas night we neat ly al- ways had "high tea” and friend: in to share it, There was carol singing again afterwards. As I look back 1 can only hope that Mother got as much enjoyment out of Christmas as she gave to her faintly. I rather think she did as she was that sort of per- son, She lived for others if ever anyone did, After I was married, carie to Canada and had children of my own, memory of my mother was my greatest inspiration at Christ- mas time. During the 'Thirties things were none too easy — as those who lived through the de- pression very well know — but when money was scarce I would remember Mother and tried to do for ny, children what she did for us. 1n that I had Partner to help, whereas Mother had no one, Actually I stappose Christmas Ls what we make it. If we lack worldly goods we can at least provide happy memories for our families to carry with thein through the years. So — Happy Christmas everyone — and happy memories • . , now and always. Package Astray In Distant Space LOST: 350 million copper wires. Disappeared about 2,000 miles in space, If found, please notify Massachussetts Institute of Technology or U.S, Air Force, care of Pro- ject West Ford, M1T's tniss•ing package, a 17 - inch -long stack of fine needles embedded in naphathalene, was launched Oct, 21 from Point Arguello in a trial of a unique communications technique. On the basis of two years of elabo- rate ground tests, technicians at the Lincoln Laboratory in Lex- ington, Mass., had predicted that the napthalene would vaporize within a few days in the vacuum of space, gradually spreading the whiskerlike. wires (each 7/10 of an inch long and one-third the thickness of a human hair) in an earth -circling belt 5 miles wide and 25 miles thick. The idea was that each whisker would act as an antenna, capable of reflect- ing radio waves, and provide the Air Force with a means of coin- munication independent of the vagaries of magnetic storms (and invulnerable to any possible sab- otage). But something went wrong with the project (which has been hotly criticized by astronomers both here and abroad on the ground that a sky full of whisk- ers would interfere with their interstellar observations). The napthalene apparently did not vaporize and the whiskers never separated or they did not dis- perse, "We, are rerunning many of the tests and calculations," said a spokesman for Lincoln Lab, "and trying to si/ot the package with our radar. We have had four radar contacts in the past month that may have been the package, but we're not sure it's the right one. Seeing it is like being in Boston and trying to see a foot- ball over Denver. We are still. looking. If we find it, perhaps we can find out why the whisk- ers didn't disperse, before any follow-up is attempted." There Is nothing like the first horseback ride to make a person feel better off. Fatal Lure Of The [aright Lights In the tropical gardens of the south coa. t of Viti Levu, Fiji, there is a brilliantly -lit square, measuring about sixty square yards, Iilunmination cones from a cri.:s-cr. ,7,.; pattern of '.vires strung from trce to tree, and festooned with hundreds of while neon lights, The wires splutter continuous- ly, and with each splutter there is a tiny flash, Each flash means that another insect has been elec- trocuted, for the wires carry a heavy charge. This is the insect - o - cutor, which costs about $250 in local currency, and is rapidly' helping the islands solve their insect problem. However, the "fried" insects that fall to the ground are attracting giant toads. Each night, an army of - toads arrives on the scene, to await the feast from above, The toads were imported years ago to deal with an insect pest, but now their number has so in- creased that another invention will soon be needed to drive the toads away. Trio of Treasures A gift or a possession to be enjoyed all year and always — filet -crochet .doilies! Use these rose doilies 'round the house, or for a luncheon set —smallest size under. candle- sticks. Pattern 522; directions; charts for 3 doilies in No. 50. Send TIIIIRTY-FIVE CENTS (Stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St.; New Toronto, Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS. FOR THE FIRST TIME! Over 200 designs in our new, .1962 Needlecraft Catalog — biggest ever! Pages, pages. pages of fash- ions, home accessories to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. See jumbo -knit hits; cloths, spread;, toys, linens, afghans plus free t:attrns. Send 25c. Carate° residents must include lc Sales Tax tur each CATA- LOG ntdered There is no sales tax on the patterns. ISSLIb 51 — 191(1 ROYAL PILGRIMS—Sheltered by huge canopies carried •bis by attendants, King Savang Vathana of Laos and his wife leave a Buddhist shrine at That Luang He had joined other government figures in an annual pilgrimage to the spot, near the capital of Vientiane, following .festivities, Dirty Work On, The British -Turf • to every instance, the 1!'niiler; and ratable boy's had hI on. thrown off guard by an attractive blonde Who wore plink over her country tweeds and spoke with .a jell. roomy French accent:. Arriving in a Ford Zodiac ('on,verlible, she • woiild•lallc knowledgeably about horses and indicate she had three of her (kwn in France which she • was 'thinking of bringing•to Bri- tain to train. Nateraliy, every- one stumbled ell over himself to draw .the Lady around,. Thereafter, it was Tile horses who started stumbling around. Since last Septelpher, at least sixteen of Britain's finest thor- oughbreds have been found to have been "nobbled" (doped), shortly after the engaging blonde visited their stables. One was Punch Bowl hotel, a well-lewl(ed second favorite which had to be pulled up during a steeplechase at Pertll. The latest victim was Hiawatha II, favol'ite for the Simonburn handicap 'Chase at Newcastle last month, who fin- ished last. Others have run, their jockeys reported, "as if they were drunk," Two weeks ago, a geld- ing. nailed Fresh Winds, an odds- on favorite to win the Abbots Bromley Handicap, was with- drawn al ,.'1' his trainer I::Iltld hint "half asleep' ,in his stall' Later, the trainer said: "The horse could not stand, Ills hind leg.; were paralyzed." In a country that spends more per capita on gambling ($35 a head, or $1,11 billion annually) than any other in the world, this was too much. The Jockey Ciub find the National F-lunt Commit- tee, which control steeplechasing and flat racing in Britain, called in Scotland Yard. Detectives quickly discovered that the horses had been "nobbled" by a tranquilizing drug called chlor- butol, They theorized that the mysterious blonde had worked as an advance scout for two known gamblers and a bookmaker from near Manchester, who actually administered the capsules. Getting proof was another question, Every bookie in Britain stood to make money from races where heavily backed favorites were scratched or ran poorly, but there were no discernible signs of any "conspiracy" among them, Neither could the blonde nor her pals be tracked down. Some re- ports the lady had dyed in the iiltretch-through the ruse of changing the color of her hair, Q. How can I make a good, transparent cement for glass? A, One good one is made by digesting together for about a week one ounce of India -rubber, 47 ounces of chloroform, and 40 ounces of mastic, BLAST BOOT—The U.S. Ma- rine Corps thinks It has licked the problem of casualties from land mines in warfare. De- veloped by Navy medical re- searchers, the armored boot above has a six-inch beveled stainless steel sole with a blast deflection contour wedge to ward of fragments of explod- ing mines. The boots are ex- pected to be issued In- 1962. w,l MOTOR CARS' GRANDDADDY—This is a model of the first motor car driven by the first internal combustion engine, invented in 1863 in Paris by Belgian -born Etienne Lenoir, The model is being shown at the "Century of Motor Cars" in Paris. Things have changed slightly since then. Sturdy Fellows — And A Sturdy Ship During the brief gray span of sub -arctic darkness in the wee hours of August 20, 1898, a black. bearded mariner beat on the door of the telegrapher's house in the whaling town of Skjacrvo near the North C'_:pe of Norway, A slec p,y tae leaned out of an upstairs window and an angry voice cried: "hello, what's the matter? Deuce of a noise to make al This time of night!" "1 conic from the Frani," sang nut the cheerful voice below, "Ilas Nansen arrived?" Bight off it dawned on the man upstairs this must be Capt. Otto Sverdrup, A11 Norway knew of Otto Sverdrup, mate of the Frani; and how Doctor Nansen had purposed to turn the com- mand over to him, and for Sverdrup to let the Frani work her patient, long-suffering way out of the polar ice driftand, once free, to head for home, Meanwhile, Nansen and Lieuten- ant Johansen were to strike out alone over the polar sea with two dog sleds in 1111 efort to nail the Norwegian flag to the North Pole, My, what an age that was —when men went places afoot) After three years of arctic si- lence the suspense was over, Sev- en days before the skipper of the Fram woke the town, the Skja- ervo telegraph had brought word from Vardo, Norway, that Doc- tor Nansen had landed that day from the British Jackson -Harms- worth Arctic Expedition's ship, the Windward, and that all was well with Nansen and Johansen after their Homeric sledge jour- ney over the frozen polar sea to 86° 14' north latitude, The pair had lasted oill the winter of 1895-96, in a snow hut on the northwest coast of for- bidding Franz Josef Land in their gruelling trek back to ci- vilization, Sverdrup and the other 10 Norwegians -had snug- ged it out in the fort -sided Frani as she inched her way through that third and final winter. . Caught in the implacable grip , of the polar pack, the ice -fast Pram drifted through 90 degrees of high west longitude, almost without starting a seam. And now it was all over, here In the town of Skjaervo where Sverdrup and his men made the birch leaves quake with hearty Norse cheers. Nansen and Jo- hansen were home safe, too. The telegrapher gathered up their reactions and packed them into a letter to a Christiania newspaper, "And did they_ re- joice!" exclaimed the excited corespondent up there under the icy eaves of North Europe, His letter went on to quote frag- ments of their pubilant remarks. "'What a day this is! What joy! And what a curious coincidence that Nansen should arive on the same day that we cleared the last ice and steered honiewardl' And they congratulated each .. ria SAYS WHO? .... SAYS ME!—These two rhinos seem to be arguing about who is the better. The one on the left is o black rhinoceros and the one on the right is a rare white one No apparent difference in color because both have been rolling in the mud at the London Zoo in England. • other," the telegrapher's excited letter went on, "all shaking with emotion, these sturdy fellows. , ." In Norwegian, ream means "forward," and there's something altogether inspiring and purpose- ful in the good ship's name, something that symbolizes the high, invincible faith and cour- age of Norway's Fridtjof Nan - sen. Ile tried for Ninety North and had to settle for n shade over 86 degrees of dark and dan- gerous latitudes, Still 226 miles short of the North Pole, Nansen had to be the world's grandest loser, That Nansen's "Farthest North" is being remembered and reread in this the centennial year of his birth, writes its own uplifting elegy to his lifelong service for Norway and for all mankind. He was a forward thinker and a forward facer, was this un- flinching Norwegian who went n.rouid leaving names of loved ones on the bleak and desolate land masses he discovered on his frozen journeys. His meticulous dedication to the science of geog- raphy, the exactness of his jour- nals and charts, made the arctic way easier for such men as Peary and Amundsen and Richard Byrd, writes Harlan Trott in the Christian Science Monitor. He had trained in the snow fields of Norwegian schoolboy athletics for his remarkable ski crossing of the great Greenland Ice cap. And when Eskimos on the southwest Greenland coast showed some whalers articles found on the ice that could only have come from the Jeanette Expedition which foundered in the New Siberian Islands in the polar wilderness north of the Lena Delta some years before, the ice -age odyssey of the Fram took shape in Nansen's thoughts. Yes, the Jeanette things showed there must be a great west -going polar drift across the icy rooftop of the world far past Siberia's Cape Chelyuskin, down' the Greenland Sea past grimy King Oscar's Land and around lucky old Leif's stormy Cape Farewell, Nansen confirmed it in the epic voyage of the Fram, }lis matchless forward drive swept hint up in later years into the League of Nations where as High Commissioner for Refugees he worked to relieve distressed hordes turned adrift by war, He won the Nobel Peace Prize, did this strong, gentle fellow—along with the biggest gold medal for his "Farthest North" that any geographical society had struck off since the Venetian John Cab- ot launched the centuries' long search for the Northwest Pas- sage, He had a "reel" for a ship, as a sailor would say, and a heart full of gratitude to builder Colin Archer, ", , To say the truth, we all dearly love the ship," Nansen wrote in his journal, 'as much as it is possible to love any Impersonal thing. , , , How often has niy heart glowed with warmth toward her!' To the builder ... grateful thoughts oft- en travel during the still nib{hts , . , and though all else lose faith in her, he will believe that she will hold out" Aye, the I''rani was a brave, forward going ship — just right for Fridtjof . Nansen, and Thel- mal. Johansen and Otto Sverdrup and their 10 Viking shipmates. The world still remembers them —these sturdy fellows! Tomb Robbers Are Plaguing Italy A booming world market.. for Italian antiques is giving a big boost to tomb robbers, Gains said to exceed over $3,000,000 v year result from sales of rldn- tiered pottery alone, Dr, Carlo Lerici, tale lvealtlly Industrialist baited the Lerici Fd9e Milan and a dis- tinguisounation hed archaeologist, is ap- pealing h, the government to stop thf,,rucrative traffic in under- aeotind treasure. While it lasts, his own Founda- tion's efforts to investigate anci- ent sites scientifically, and coni - pile a national record of their )1(y•uut land contents, are made 111y (liflieull. Persistent grave- 1h:c\ng cam rnr an the. total dis- hppeal';ltr.' of hll • 7ulcicnl ri(I7 f l!i i. - Eif'hty percent of all the finds v xeavalc'il. in.ltally Hoch year now flow, the Found:inion estimates, legs +his illicit channel, Large quantities of These rare and perhaps unique objects of art 1t,fy)}f-ar at antig(ie auctions in 1.3;e,l and Lucerne, Switzerland, There, wealthy collectors gather Io pay peak prices, According to Dr. Lerici, the ri,f,liers have taken al lead 2,(100 �(par1,le pieces of pottery, some weighing over five hundred- weight, from ancient tombs at Ccrvc•Icri, Central Italy, in the Let two years, :lore recently, they have slart- (d t,(n•rowing among the Etru- scan gravis near Rome, which dale tram the seventh to third c c ntl,i \' 13,C. The i,erici Founda- tion has, through its own re- s archu, pinpointed 4,000 SUII- i•c•.In tombs in the area. ala ny, the more ornate, are envy now. Others are wrecked be yond recognition. The looters t.top jut nothing. They even carve faway and remove stone -wall paintings and frescoes, Stich thefts prove, says Dr. Lerici, that the crooks are work- ing hand in glove with specialists. When ancient lambs are hack- ed ;,bout ro crudely, their walls collapse, and soon the tonin it- self is a monument only to vandalism. The way 10 stop the racket, gay,; Dr. Lerici, is for the govern- ment to pay proper rewards to archaeologists for discoveries, unci to see that authorized bodies only are permitted to "dig" on ancient. sites. Flat -Earth People Admit Defeat Members of an American so- ciety dedicated to the theory that the earth is flat have decided that they are wrong after all and are considering the advisability of breaking up their organization. Said one recently: "Data al- ready obtained through satellites in space seems to prove pretty conclusively that the earth is round, so there's not much point in our carrying on as a flat -earth society," But there are still a number of people in various parts of the world who are convinced that the earth is flat, For thirty-five years an Illinois man offered $5,000 reward, pay- able in cash, to anyone who could prove that the earth is round, He said he was sure that the earth had always been "as flat as a pancake," A Somerset man who died . some years ago, spent most of his life advocating the flat -earth theory. But he admitted he could not explain why outward -bound ships disappear below the hori- zon or why it is possible to cir- cumnavigate the globe, The ancient Greeks seriously believed that the earth was flat and supported by twelve col- umns, In ancient Egypt there was a widely -held belief that the earth was supported by four great elephants, each of which Stood on an enormous tortoise 2Wimming in the sea! Sonie tribes of Indians in North America believed that the earth was floating in water and refer- red to it as "the earth island," In the mythology of the Kato Indians of California, the earth is conceived as a huge horned monster ('1C1natty wallowing southward through the primeval water:S, ISSUE 51 — 1981 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY CHICKS 1 POULTRY MLA has Anus.nnd other good pullet varieties now available, 0111 week old, to give you early egg production. Hatching dnyolds to order, Book your next lot of broilers now. Si, local agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 170 John North, Hamilton, Ont, GET 11 & N "Nick Chicks," winner of the most random sample testa for pray fit per hen hunscd, front Logsdon II&N Hatcheries Ltd , Scaforth, Ont, phone 5511 '1'111; SHAVER S'1'r11ICIIOSS 2110 Layer Is making rI significant contribution to Canada's export trade and Is now sold In 28 countries abroad Achievements of Canadian agriculture are well known abroad, and lhe.prnfltable and reliable performance of SHAVER STAliCIU)SS 2118 Is further adding to this rewrite Iron Perhaps you've not tried this out. standing layer vet; this Is a conal year to do so '('here's on nulhorired Shover distributor near you, or write for prices and catalog to Shaver Poultry Breed. Ing farms I,ld,. Hos 4(11(;. Galt. Ontario, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES DON '1' buy stock in vending! Build up your own company! Ambitious and fi- nancially responsible men can get Into vending now on n full•lime or part -Ilene basis. A onredn•a.lifetime opportunity lo earn n good Income and gel a Rood return on your Investment, Let us start you In a business tailored In Your needs. Send details to "Tailored In. vestments", 200 (lav til„ 'Toronto, Stifle 303 or phone 239.7378_ MOTEL, modern. 111 units, earl' con. Luning 'I'V, radio, phone, bath and shower. Selling price includes 2 winter. (zed collages and completely modern 3 -bedroom bungalow. Located In firm. broke 2 minutes drive In venire lawn, Oceupaney rate about 70'1 Triple A rano:( High net profit. $75,000 down w111 handle. P. .1 Brennan, Realtor; 304 Pembroke St %VV. Pembroke, Ontario. DOGS FOR SALE (found pups ready to train, ex- cellent breeding, satisfaction or money back, pedigree on request $511 irassets A.K,C $35. Cooper Cunningham, Stun- ner, Illinois. WIRE -haired terriers 10 weeks, pure- bred, registered. Nicely marked, white —black and tan. $50.00. Stan Vare- wyck, RR 2, Courtland, Phone Tillson• burg, Victor 2.5014, after 6 p.m. FARMS FOR SALE DAIRY farm. 100 acres, 3 miles from Woodstock, Apply J. Tlmmermnns, 1111 1, Woodstock, phone llcachyllle, GA. 141638. FARM for Sale. 50 acres sandy loam, 4 acres pluck, 6 acres hardwood hush 11 storey house, honk barn. Central to 4 towns, Alvin (;Ingerlch, 11.11.3, Zurich, Ontario. FLORIDA VACATION RESORTS DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. ATLANTIC SEASIDI COURT FOR Ideal vacation, swimming, fishing and plenty of warm sunshine and fun, Como to Florida. For Information, write to Pauline and Joe McKay, 3119 South Atlantic Ave„ Daytona Reach, Florida. FOR SALE -- MISCELLANEOUS FALLOUT SKELTERS 95'7° of the country will survive — If they have a place to go, CALL; KERNOHAN LUMBER Days GE 2.3896 Ev'gs, GE 2.6197, GE 9.5522 620 Adelaide St., London HELP WANTED FEMALE DIETICIAN REQUIRED Immediately for 105 bed hospital, 40•hour week. Salary coin• mensurnte with qualifications and ex. perlence, Apply Administrator St. An. drew's Hospital, Midland, Ont. GLASS FORMULA AMAZING "One Way Glass" Formula. Simple materials. Yon can see out, others can't see In. Instructions, $1.50. Cottle, 24 John Street North, Hamilton, Ont. HORSES FOR SALE PONY or Horse for your child: Sole equipment and reliable books on the handling of animals: ideal Xmas gifts at 3 "C" Ranch, Flying Goose Farm, Erindale, Phone 1120.3533__ _ MEDICAL POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rashes and (v/ening 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 seen( Sent Posl Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1965 St CIaIr Avenue East TORONTO ._,MEDICAL '. IT'S IMPORTANT — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect, MONEY TO LOAN LOANS to buy a business or faun. To Improve and expand business and farm debts eunsolidated, payments reduced, Equipment pules refinanced. Can invest In your business, inactive partnership bask All -Canada. Symington Field, 57 lrloor St W., 'Toronto, V'A. 1.4022. NURSING HOMES BLUE Lodge Nursing Home, Kindly trained nursing. Good food, Incensed. 205 Tray Sl., Ilrnn11100, Ont. JA. 72052, GOLDEN YEARS lie•t home, 1$14 Brant Ave. Itranlford: -11cmher Ass,, lased Nursing; Home' Kind competent caro for your loved ones Moderate rates. P11. 752.5059. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN 10 INCH SIEI(LI'1'E l'ry Pan! lite non- stick skillet, Dupont teflon coating lets you rook without shortening, or fats. Easy to clean, specially treated surince. Postpaid $5,00 Amino, 10411 East 14th Street, Brooklyn 29, New York OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity (,earn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession. good wages. 'Thousands of sureessful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free %l't'llo or (i11 MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Broor S1. W•, Toronto Branches! 44 King St 14 , Monition 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL HYGENIC RUBBER GOODS TESTED guaranteed, mailed In plain parcel Including catalogue and sex book free with triad assortment, 10 for $1.011 ,Finest quality) Western Dlstrlbu• tors, Box 24 -TPF, Regina, Sask. PROPERTIES FOR SALE --- OWNER offers Beautiful revenue pro- ducing garden property on Paved road. House all conveniences, Age forces sale Particulars: Wm, lirclhour, Sev- ern Bridge, Ontario STAMPS United States Stai-nps FINE used la Columbian and 2c Pena - ma Pacific plus 4 old U.S, stanps•CaL 50c, all for 10c to new approval appll. cants, 581 STAMP CO., 1148. AGARD ST. BENTON HARBOR• MICHIGAN, U.S.A. SALESMEN • SALESMEN — DISTRIBUTORS Want a lifetime position in a new field? Like to help people es you mako money? Better investigate this new op. portunity In the Health field. Few lines about yourself will bring personal appointment.. No Investment necessary. You have never investigated this before, since this is th first time offered. Not food supplements or pills. NUTRI.MAR OF CANADA LiMITED, x. WO nor Drive, SPARE TIME OPPORTUNITIES 5100 A WEEK for making dramatic 3 second Demonstration of amazing, inn - expensive Fire Alarm. Free Kit. Cottle Dlsrllbutors, 24 John' Street North, Hamilton, On.t TIMBER WANTED HIGHEST prices paid for standing elm timber Apply 61cAlllster Mills, 200 Cardigan St., Guelph, Phone Guelph TA. 2.9351. TRADE SCHOOLS ACETYCENs'E, eleclrlc welding and Argon courses, Canada Welding. Can- non and Balsam N, Hamilton, Shop LI. 4.1204. Ices. LI. 5.021{3, MERRY MENAGERIE "Papa, when do 1 bloom WALKOUT—Soviet Ambassador Valerian A. Zorin, richt, leads a walkout of his delegation as Nationalist Chinese delegate Tinqfu F. Tsionn addresses General Assembly during Red Chino 'debate, FAtt id ir. E J3LYTII gTANt1A1UJ ,.r.,...._F ...�..,. , 17.7 ay, Bet. 20, 1901 vi.livaiti+&tut+ Aomowi e*sale+ ' tl a:9 k wa 11'BomVA(ettHttttM micio ovat*ftoppotott4mtiowtoettiottioalowd CHOCOLATES--- Sntile'N Chuckles , , 50e to $5,00 LADIES' SETS-- Brush, Cote )14Mirror- ;1$-..4);98 irror . t , $#;98 to $11.95 MEN'S SETS- Brushes, Holders, etc. 3.00 to 10,95 LADIES' TOILET SETS—Old Spice, Desert Flower, Fr' nd hip Garden. i «:a c - $4.75 MEN'S SHAVING SE \fie, Old Spice, W4oeig it to .5 PLAYING CARDS •- Single or Dou- ble 89c to $2.95 CORNFLOWER GLASSWARE - assortment of individual pieces, 60c to $5.50 CUPS AND SAUCERS 95c to $4.'15 FOUNTAIN PENS AND SETS --- Sheaf far $1.95 to $22,00 FANCY SOAPS --- Old Spice, Roger & Gallett, Rosebud . , . 50c to $2$2,00cos - Glassware - Chinaware Year to Our Customers and Friends Life Of Londesbor� Blackstnithil HasBeen Varied & Intersting, David Ewan born in Drumtoehty :a youth he worked in the slate quart;' in; 4 years and receiving 2 L's 'a year i Perthshire, Scotland, m 1882, a cen of 'for the handsome sum of A cents an wages. • !t fir. and Mrs. Peter Ewan, who has hour. At the age of 17 he began illi I Alter completing his arpreelice:l:ip ' been for 62 years behind the anvil, as ;apprenticeship as a biaeksntilh, sere 1 he worked for James Wallace, 4if Glen- ,1 i ('^ig, fur one year, then fee.- Jam; ,' . I Robertson, Spilel ield, for 13 mentis ,+situifiM+ ittttt444,4l4tq(a;( itxttlemoctgAte+-ciatolg araetota ttcEtgtcomittotixterti and 4 years for PeterStevens, 'el Pun• `, 11 rein. While ii Duonin he tarried 1! Margaret Hamilton in 1911. ;z!,e pas. ,1 A sed away in 1955. `, if ro 'I• hey left for ('ai iada on Dfay 15, _1 I 1913, arrivin; la Brussels on the 240h :i A of Mny. For 0 yearshe worked whit 3 Aitis t1ueh', Han Ewan, in the carriage i' Y ' and repair works, Coming to boletus q MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR from the SUPERIOR FOOT) STORE and STAFF, For Superior Service Phone 156 •-• See Fairservice We Deliver bore in July 1910 'he pureha(.'d t';r• J blacksmith shop from ru1• �{ strong which he has continued to f^ operate for the past 42 years i►u in, tr. ; that Nitric he Matte a mechanical iron ty„ hand fur William liecltie, td o nu,: ' fur Adam Nicholson rout n Ie'! brace I ri ►,t; for a I.ht'Ce fear o'd liuy, all of whisk {fo have been remarkable (icb(evemeats. l'9 ' 1le has accomplished in,_an elevti hour day, with the help °folds assist. ata., Dou:nl McDougall, 0 setting oI 0 wagon tires and put on 106 horse shoe;. Ills work has consisted of a ,]'cal variety of jobs; (ullit';' dawn wooden wheeled wagons an; putting re 'them t'on rubber, and was also 'agent :4 for the International Ilarv'ster Co. A for 22 years, selling the first tractor A and plow to leave Londesboro.: Ilis nephew, Peter Brown; also u A native of Scotland, served hitt appren- ticeship and continued with his uncle i for 15 years. For the past 17 years A he has been maintenance man with e,'• the Ford Motor Co. in Windsor. El :•xN ilik1410t t)bIONWr�tlrIAli&itrl►,Nii104--11.47 rbrilkahRt�i►ADaAr:Ar4)if9iiWiliA+Pi2�',' tq ttAtiM140PINEICA4e IWAPS4/i 11413 VICIII4tOMMINUR Ottlt tl iVCC1,1944,tf; it.gt'rov, P l i a 144 i 2nd Prize .... Teddy Bear ' 2.98 Li 3rd Prize .... Cushion 1.29 PI 1th Prize .... Pr, Nylons , 1,19 t'- 5th Prize .... 2 Ib. Christmas Cake 1.1.5 M 6th -.Prize .... Box Chocolates , 1,00 have a bountiful supply of Christmas Nuts and Candies, Candy Canes, Pop Corn Balls, Boxed Chocolates, Christmas Cakes, Puddings & Cookies, Christmas Wrapped Cigarettes, Cigars and To- bacco's, '• - GARDEN FRESH VEGETABLES & FRUITS California Grapes, choice quality 2 lbs. 29c Thnjarines, size 176 ` ' per doz. 39c 4 Sizes in Sunkist Oranges, Pink - and White Grapefruit. - Ocean Spray Cranberries 1 lb, box 29c Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 35c Mac, Spy, King and Delicious Apples, No. 1 Grade, 5 lb. poly bag 0 19c Mandarin Oranges , per box 1.99 No. 1 Grade Celery Hearts per bunch 25c Large, Solid Bead Lettuce 2 heads 39c Waxed Turnips, Radish, Green Onions, Carrots, Parsnips, Spinach, Brocolli, Cabbage, Cucumbers, Tomatoes, Cauliflower, Spanish : and Cooking Onions, Sweet Potatoes and. Brussels Sprouts. FOR THE CHRISTMAS DINNER we have -- Turkeys, Ducks, Chickens, GET YOUR TICKETS IN FOR TIW CHRISTMAS DRAW SATURDAY AFTERNOON lst Prize .... Blanket Value 3.95 t1 [91f Ria BEST WIS1!ES.`.?tiLA MERRY CHRISTMAS toa1F FRIENDS & CUSTWERS. . John T. Stewart. and Sons, •..r...,.r.,,.r. r.r.r✓v •r..•..,_v...,,„..,.r✓.r.n..,•�ti...,.•...,.,. YM Stewart's Red C3 White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver t� 1.14,1044e1411011440400141141210411044,14144044114.61/ 1 0611 (IFtMlatNPA))/NP44 Mission Band Meeting The DJissiun Band held their Christ - Inas mcclii . on Monday, December l0, with 40 children present. -The presi- dent, Jane Pollard, gave the call to worship which was resrended to by singing the chorus "0 Comte Let Us ;Were Him.” The Christmas story Luke 2: 0.16 was read by Shirley McCullough and Ronnie McVittie led in prayer. fol• lowed by a prayer verse 'The holy Child" read by Dale Tasker.: Ifynul "Silent. Nitliit" was sung by all. The se- cretary, Cheryl Ann MCNa1I, read the minutes and called the roll, each child answeriut. by naming something per- taining to the Christmas story. The treasurer's report 'was Given by Bon- ' nic Laidlaw which showed' that $147 was cleared from (lie. Mission Band Supper and Bazaar.:,Phe:laders and members extend their sine*. thanks and appreciation to all those w(io help- ed to make this event a,success. A vote of thanks was moved by. Carolyn ,11ug gilt (nid respected to.,w'itit •C hearty. ltiln(Iclap.,.Th_u.,offering. wai. rectiiy�t1. by Billy Young and, Kevin'I''askei','' ' A short prey 'ram followed with i piano solo by Clteryl Ann McNall; lead- ing by Nancy Stewart;• a chorus' ,u,•e Canie Down, to Stay" by "Ia• group of eight year Aids ; treading,{ Lyn Elliott; a son; "The Friendly Beasts" by Diary and Margaret Rowson; rI'aisy . Elliott played a piano :solo and' a chorus by the small chiklren "Away in a ;Man- ger"; Ronald and Ruth Mctagan,play- ed a piano duet and Brenda Shaw gave a' reading; a group of older. girls sang two Christmas Oarols with IJeath- er Cleland accompanying on the piano. Airs. Buttell presented the president, Jane Pollard, and sedretary, Cheryl Ann McNall with life ineni'ber certifi- cates, and spoke of the ;fine support the girls had given their' leaders during the past year. ti DIrs. McLagan showed a coloured film of the Christmas story which also dealt with the life of Jesus' up to twelve Christ as Is Corning. 54 WRAP IT UP EARLY or LAY IT AWAY NOW Ladies' Wrist 11'atches$12.95 Men's Wrist 11'titches .. $7,95 • $18.95 Girls' Wrist Watches .. $7.95 • $12,95 Pocket Watches ......... , , , l,i41,,6 Billfolds ;+1.00 to $6.00 - 'Cigarettes - Lighters - '1'ollac A Merry Christmas and <t HIappy New R. D. PHILP Drugs - Sundries - Wallpapers be - f d. . Telephone 20Rl, Blyth X" ..die`hiIADi Z)4)4ilat+2AliDtD1) 4i;ted`iiiikiN11149lDrBtDIDINDIAPatihr/r^)IMIADa laiDeX2i?iD43t1)1701 4412tiltADIANNI2424714141)*Oiailh,a tkIltAib; LOST Black three ring, notebook on Blyth main street. Finder please contact Barbara Campbell, phone 200 lllyth. 41-1p CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Mr. Chester Biggins wishes to extend our heartfelt thanks and appreciation for the many acts of kindness, •jne sages of sympa- thy, beautiful floral tritiutes and neem• oriant cards received Brom our Kind friends, neighbours•c.atid relatives in our recent sad' bereavement; also for the nutty acts 'or khidness during his illness, Special thanks to Reye. E. Mc - Logan, Dr, Richard Street, Tasker Fun• oral Chapel, Mrs. 1faio1d Campbell, 40,L., Mitchell Publio School, Mit. cliell Lions Club, the pallbearers, the f:owerbearers, the ladies who helped in the home• and all.thosc who helped in any way. —Mrs. -Margaret- d1iggins and Family. CHURCH OF _GOp, CONCERT The Churchis `lining its Christmas timpani on Christiitas Eve at. 7.30 p.m. jho greatest part of the evening will `be Laken up by a tlu'ee act play, called "'171e Shining Star." This play portray, the inn into which Joseph and Mary came, the Shepherds and the Wise men in search of the Christ child, the stables, and the adoration shown by these and an inn guest. and servant maid, is Your Subscription Paid" years old. The Members Purpose was i•epeat(.(I and the meeting closed, A Christmas treat and the World Friends were (Ifs. lributed. This .was the last meeting of this ongianization under the name Mis- sion Band. LONDESBORO NEWS The W.DLS, met for the December Mrs. Robert .Townsend arrived home meeting at the home of ;Mrs. Joe Shad. on 'Thursday having &lett( two weeks ir' dick. The president opened the mecthl; Oshawa and ,Toronto, with a poem. The minutes of the No- Mrs, Walter McGill spent Friday with veinbor meeting were read by the se- friends in Godericli, cretaty, Airs. Laura Lyon. The treas. Next Sunday evening December 24tH urer gate a satisfactory report which at 7.30 the Senior (and Junior choirs stated our allocation has been exceed., will participate 111 a coral service. A ed. .One waren quilt, socks and, mittsgood attendance Is hoped for as lime are requested for our spring allocation. I and effort has been expended Iu pre• Ia ,11111141(11 e;Mier t&tirctiVC,41t4YtGttItf,tgtlFV4041 04.tatgt5104441410(ttEtMtNtR KitRuttaittii;n • i 5 r� SEASONS' GREETINGS This is the lime of year wlieiit we like to pause and extet cl .Gciod lyishes, tb''tilt our Custoluers..anfl Friends and 'we `want to thank! 'ion. for your eonf i- dence and continued patronage,:' ., We shall endeayrouc" to merit your good will in the future. and to .0iteitil to you and yours good wishes for health and happiness in 1962. Hamin-S Garage New and ,Used Car Dealers... a ( - „ }?ir2�,titl3l�i�r"d0?Pt,rN"�w��t��I'3112iWiDilutor;i;3ip4t,AN.DafiltiNth;tilitkil,14 ,Put tELCIC tttetFt4to't"..1F414atiltg'unlitlittlittGt •'MCICKICAS'tiltMItittpt Qi014Veitte-tdtinitit19" yR May the wonderful Christmas Story fill our hearts ;wit),Lpeutc1,• allot•, deep, it stay with ,us during 1962, contentment; 1VADDEN'1 HARDWARE CI ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair, Blyth, Ont, A� Call 71 tiMat?AaBaaB WAPIIDla NItaa4iN ailifitai thiol DG41`r$taatlhl?11ZatInAaitblIADOWA INPIVAPti4dth a • t:., is toitfttatx t�t����s� t�t�tstalsgt�� ,omt. t~t� ti��a* t vvwtts .,• P, SNELL'S FOOD MARKET d lo Phone 390 ' We Deliver , i leg 47 There is a quantity of yarn on hand for I paration for this service. 1 ;;i The Sunday School Christmas concert' I was well attended on Friday evening. I t''1 'We welcome Mi', and Mcs. Gordon �P Shobbrook and family to the village. 1 t Mr. Tom Allen is at present suffer- Gia int; froth n sprained ankle, ip Receives t25 Year Jewel tit At the: regular meeting of the Niel - loch Chapter nt ' Seaforth on Monday y evening Mr. James Neilans was pre. ':, Ir. Dave Andet'smn h(id the 'pistol.-sent.ed with a 25 year past principal t'' trete of breaking an Allo last .week.' jewelby lid. Ex. Comp. John MeFad- !' Ile has a walking east oa :A is• able lel yen, Tiverton, Grand Supt, or Huron '1 got around. I District. i anyone caring to knit Airs. Bert•Shoh- brciok took chalice of. the program. Christmas hymns were sutig and sev- eral fine Christmas readings were given, Group 3 served a social cup 01 tea with christmas cake. utmine, little daughter of Me. and Mu's. 1 ' 'sent Wood, has_been a visitor Willi tier gt,ud1ialCnts, Mx, and Dors. E. Wood, for nig past week: Await You At Madill's STOP, SHOP f3 SAVE "CHRISTMAS SAVINGS" Home • Catsup, Big 20 -oz. bottles �.. , ;; ,-. for 55e Gold Reef Crushed Pineapple t2 1 gill. 99c: Stuffed ,Pimento Olives 16 'Oz. jar 45c Picnic Sweet Mixed Pickles 32 oz. jar 39c• t]• Tip Up Fancy Toiriato Juice, 48 oz...... 2 for ;55c '�; Potatoes . 50 lbs. 85c 10 lbs., 2 .f o•r' 11c f,l::.+ Oven Ready Grade A :Fowl : Turkeys, per 11.1..447V,141‘"1 Geese, per lb. 59c; 'Ducks, per lb: 55c; Chickensy) fq,:.. per lb. 49c; Fryer .Chickens,,,pci 1b. 33.''„'':i' ',''' (1 FREE XMAS ,DRAW ...- I • ' A free ticket will be given with each do1h%i'`purchase Thursday, Friday and Saturday. of ,this. *eek, 1.st, 2nd, 3rd, and 41.It prizes will lie JNiitttiful satin • bound double bed blankets. Draw will lie tirade Saturday, Dec. 23rd, at 9:30 p.nt. May Christmas conte to your house,': bringing the lightt1L.QQt:1. good cheer and • t .+ the wart0t11.06V-Itoblimlriends and good • Pito 10;111011,11,i I ”` • r �'v 0 fellowsli.6°451'1 k olif e4Cop 'sties �i, soul ftdi'rtelt riatmnS cu(agT,..�1,� • ',;t r,a\lsl 4.. - , i, • ''grltilt#.Oltkatitwilgt9v itati'L' ikait%t ti:Pi?tio tlRat t1t ' . ( jltimatavatit