HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-01-10, Page 1ANDAR
VOLUME 11 - NO. 45
Authorized as second class mall, BLYTI1, ONTARIO, WEUNESIJAY, JAN. 10, 1962
Post Office Departnleet, Ottawa.
and far payment of postage in cash.
Subscription Rates $2.50 hi Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Huron Health Officer Outlines County
Meat Inspection System
The following article has been re
ceived from the Huron County Health
Officer, Dr. R. M. Aldus, tegardln;
the recent unfit pleat scandul ail its
effects on residents in Huron Ccunty.
In Iiu•ou County the Town of Godes
rich has had a meat, inspection pro•
gramme in effect since 1948. In an
('vera ;e year, approximately 2,300 car.
,ca ses will be processed in the 'rnwn
alt'lttnir with condeI ntation of about
5 t r(lal;sc, and 21x0 l luliuns. t'o, even
with the rure ase of firs•t class stock,
condemnation will occur. In addition,
of course, meat from federally inspect-
ed racking houses is ah,o admitted le
the Town.
In the rest of the County, independent
operators of approved s tau.;filer house
are issued permits by the County Board
of Health under the Public Health Act.
Their files are reviewed each. year by
the Board, and if a,proved, a number-
ed permit is issued to the operator
for p►tblie display. Dead stock plants
and dealers are licensed by the Ontario
Department. of Agriculture under the
Dead Animal Disposal Act.
1t has been said that illicit ineal is
more likely to be found in the shops
of merchants who buy from distant
meat, packing plants that do not conic
tinder an approved inspection plan.
Some of !hese plants may be unaware
of the precise source of all their pup•
chase:;, particularly if they buy stock
that has already been slaughtered and
portioned. The retailer has less know-
ledge about the ori:in of this product
and has generally bought in good faith
with no intent to deceive the public
Disturbing as it may be, the recent
publicity will cett.ainly make penplc
Mere aware of the problems of food
control and it will help to ' stimulate
more consideration of the co!lsuuler
in legislation and administration.
GETS TEACHER 01' YEAR AWARD
Mr. Charles Harold Richards, 53, ol
Killdeer Crescent, Leaside, head of the
mathematics depaidenert of East York
Collegiate, has been named inathei>~at•
ics and science teacher of the year by
the 20, 000 member Association of Pro
fessional Engineers of Ontario.
lite three-year-old award is judged
by a special committee from teacher,
nominated across the province- by (IR'
serious districts of. the Ontario Secon-
dary School 'Teachers Federation. Air.
Richards, a teacher for 35 years, Meads
a staff of 11 teachers and he himself
teaches matheniralics to four grades.
The award will he made officially al
the a'ssociation's annual meeting on
January' 27th.
AIr. R,iohards i -s a son of Mrs. Fred
Richards, of Blyth, who is spending the
winter with her family, and is at Pres•
Milt with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Richards
end family.
LEFT FOR CALIFORNIA
Mr. and Mrs. George Radford left.
Sunday for California to spend a few
weeks in the wanner climate. They
were accompanied by Ah•, and Alis,
Lorne Brown, of Clinton.
r.1MON(.TI119
Sunday, January 14, 1962,
ST. ANDREWS PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Rev, D. J. Lane, B.A., D:I)., Minister.
1.00 p.m.—Church Service and Sun-
day School. '
ANGLICAN CHURCH (W CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Meetly, Rector.
2nd Sunday after Epiphany
Trinity Church, Blyth.
10.30 a.m.—Sunday School,
10:30 a.m.—M'attins.
Annual Vestry Meeting 1911% Jnhunry
in Rectory 8:30 p.m.
St, Atarl('s, Auburn.
12,00 o'clock—+Mattins•
Tritely Church, Belgrave.
2.00 p.m. --Sunday School.
2,30 p.m.—Evensong.
THE UN1'f15U CiIUIICH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev. R. Evan McLit'2an • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kai
Director of Music.
9:55 a.mi.—Sunday Church School.
11 a.rn.—Morning Worship.
Bev. II. A. Futter, Londesborough.
will coneluct Public Worship.
CHURCH OF GOD
Mcc'onneii Street, Blyth"
John Dormer, Pastor
Phone 165
11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship,
10.00 a.m.—Sunday School.
7.30 p.m.—Evening Service.
0.00 p.m. --Wed., Prayer• Service.
1.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Felluweltlp.
WEDDrNG 3
YUNGBLUT--McLILNNAN
A pretty wedding was solemnized at
Fort Garry United Church, Winnipeg
when Jean Margaret McLennan, 1)l
Cal;'ary, Alberta, became the bride of
(dein Boss Yun;blut, of Edmonton, Al
berth. The bride is Me daughter o'
Jlr. and Mrs. William McLennan, of
\Vuitieeg, aid the groom is the ;.on el
itali h 1). Illunro, of Auburn. 'rhe
hunch vitas attractively decorated will
beuqucsts of chrysanthemums and
Christmas decorations. The Rev, Don
old Ray, minister of Fort Garry
Church, c Iiciatefl, and the special 111u
sic was "(1 PerfectLove" "The Lords
Prayer" and the "Hebrew Medic.
111111."
Given in maria:e by her father
;he bride looked lovely in a white gown
of lace over laffekl, her shoulder -length
veil of silk illusion was held in place
by a small crown and she carried ar
old fashioned bouquet of rod roses olid
eh:ilterc(i carnations,
She was attended by her sister,. Miss
Mary McLennan, of Winnipeg, w'hc
wore a frown of yellow lace over taffeta
and carried a bouquet Of yellow -$old
FUR'S,
The f;roiusrna11 'h'. Robert Yung.
blul, of Toronto, brother of the groom
and the ushers were Mr. James Mc
Lenient, Winnipeg, and Mr. Donald
Pont, of Calvary, Alberta.
Following the ceremony a rcceptier
was held at the home of the bride';
l;iolher and sister -in law, Mr. and Mrs
Gordon McLennan, of fart Garry
where the bride's mother received in n
gown of printed silk and wore a cor
Barye of gold roses. She was assisted
by the groom', nlethrr, wearing
teal blue brocaded gown and a corsage
of pink rote. '
For a wedding trip to Toronto, and
(hicnre, the bride donned a purple
wool brceaded dress, white rabbit's tut
!rat, black patent shoes and purse. On
their return they will reside at Edmon;
ton, Alberta.
Guests from a distance were, Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph D. "Munro, Auburn
Mr. Robert Yungblut, Toronto, AMiss A.
Jones, Calgary and -Mr. 1). Yunt, of
Calgary,
'I'lle groom is a graduate of Queen'!
University, and the bride is a gradual(
cf the ilniversity of Manitoba at ilii•
uipeg, The groom is well known i i this
community having lived here until he
graduated from the Guderich District
Colle ~ale tnstitute, Prior to her mar-
riage the bride was the guest of 1101101
at several showers and huicheons giv•
cli by her friends.
Fi U:SIDE FARM FORUM MEETLAG
On January 8111 six adults of the Fire-
side F'artn Forum" met at the Home of
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dalton to listen tc
the breudoast conducted by Bob Car -
bed, read tate guide and discuss the
teple, "How Can 4-1I Be .Improved."
We were unanimous in thinking
that 441 Junior Farmers and Home-
makers were splendid orsaniiations for
training in a practical way for the
rural young people. Besides learning
many valuable facts about farm life
they receive a training in co-operation
prci.arin; programs, accepting respon-
sibilities and kindness and thoughtful -
mass regarding animals, Besides learn-
ilug sowftt;, gardening, canning and
baking, and table settings, the girls al-
io have a wonderful training -in neap
(1055, color blending, careful shopping,
tltoroughucss, co-operation, observation
of beauty of colors and textures, and
flower arrangements. As high school
pupils now receive credit for one mite
ject when they produce certificates in
music studied at home, why shouldn't
4-11 pupils also receive the credit when
they can pass examinations in 4.I1
tvork? We think so. The more willing
parents, helpers and leaders in 4.11
work the better for our country as well
as for the young people.
Mrs. Eric Anderson served Mulch and
the prize -winner's of Ihe card games
were, Mrs. ,him ilowatt, Mrs, Oliver
Anderson and Mrs, George Carter.
Mrs. Jim Mowatt invited the group
for neat week,
JOIIN MANNING iIEADS BLYTH
SCHOOL BOARD
'File inaugural meeting ol' the lllyth
Public School Board was held on Moi•
day evening, Jaivary lith.
Itcv. E. McLagait, minister of Illyllt
United Church, was present and ren-
dered 111e inaugural address and
prayer. Clerk George Sloan adminis-
tered (with of office and alleakince.
'lite regular meeting; date was set for
the 41.11 Monday evening in the month
at 0.3o o'clock.
Airs. Jean Berthol. was re-eligstlged as
Sccret:ary'I'reasti'er at lite present sal-
ary.
The following accounts were Massed
at a special meeting held on December
30th.:
Skcoch Office Supplies, $210.119; Ed-
ucator Supplies, 56.00; Moyer Vico
Ltd., 311,40; Kiigswell Welding, 50.67;
A. Manning & Sons, 941.76; Mrs, K.
Marshall, 10.00.
PERSONAL INTEREST,
Mrs. Wm. Moffitt spent a few days
last week with her daughter, Mrs,
Brock Voddel, Mr. Vodden and John:
of Seaforth.
Mrs. Jean Fox and Mrs. Mary Mil•
chell, of London, spent Christmas Day
with their brot.hcr-in•1aw and sister,
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Cook, Ivan and
Warren. s.
Mrs. Gladys Johneton spent a few
(isys during the Christmas holiday's
with her sondn-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Shortt, Douglas and
Gail, of Barrie, and is spending Jan-
wiry
.3 t'Lary with her son-in.law and daughter,
Mr. and Mr:;. Joe Alblas, Kevin, Gleiin
and Gary, of London.
Miss Liuda Welbanks and Miss Joan
McDougall, of Londesboro,• spent a few
lays in London during the Christmas
holidays with Miss Glenda McDougall.
Mr. Marsh Wclbanks, of Toronto,
tperl. Christmas week -end at the home
of his sister-in-law, Mrs. Eva Wet
backs, and family, of Londcsboro.
"AGRICUi'I'URRE" WAS THEME OF
JANUARY W. 1. MEETING
Ai;anagenell. "will be the key factor
in the outlook for the future In success-
ful farming, with never a backward
glance" stated Mrs. Keith Webster,
convenor of Agriculture, in her address
1)l the January meeting of Blyth \Vo'
men's Institute held 'Thursday afternoon
111 Alemorial Hall. Mrs. Webster also
reported on the recent. district short
course. "Focus on Finishes" of which
she and Mrs. Dan 1lallahan had beck
tooal loaders, and had found the course
to be cnjoyoblbe and instructive. Sev•
oral nicely finished dresses were un
display,
The roll call "A tweed that ;should
be destroyed," was well responded to
by each member giving. the name of
the weed that caused her the most
trouble in her gaarden. Everyone as
greed that measures should be take!',
to eradicate the wild carrot which,
grows so profusely along our road.
ways.
A tc'a and bake sale will be held
In conjunction with the regular Febru-
ary meeting, which will be open to
everyone, Plans were made for the;
annual 5t. Patrick's supper.
Mrs. Ida Petts reported thirty likes'
of .Christmas trolls were sent to the
:;ick and shut-ins. Several notes of
appreciation were read by the sure.
ars-. Mrs. Wellington Good and AIt's,
Gunton 'Talon were appointed local
leaders for the Sprint; project, "Sep -
;dates fon' Summer" for 4-11 Club girls.
A cooking school was announced for
April 6th.
Mrs" Peter }Leonard conducted a con•
test on "Cloth" 10iiei1 didn't seem so
difficult after the read the answers.
Worst storm of winter rocks
countryside; no serious damage
NEW YEAR'S GREETING FROM
SWEDEN
Lararhogskolan
Stockho'nt
'wedetl, Dec. 1%?, 1951
Dear Mrs. Whitmore:
Bhcause 1 thick t(ry often cI re;
friends in Blyth a d remember their
warm wishes on 1)'y' dr.parturc a !dew
Year':, greetnia to them all at mlr,.
via the Blyth Standard Iii:ht be rattler
fun. ,\lso it will allow them to share:
a little of the very good experience
which I ant hying in this courtly
which lies so far north" The darkness
which ('011)05 row at 2.30 "on a bright"
sunny day is the mos( unusual asreci
of lite here, Otherwise Sweden is morn
like Canada, in climate, and standard
of living. In 51ockho'm, most people
live in apartments, even in the suburbs.
Buildir ,s are modern and well heated"
with much het water and all modern
conveniences. One shops for [cod in
many 1,111011 shops which specialize in
one or two items only. There 01'0 atst
some big drparlttle'I stores.
Christmas heeins here the first. gam
day in December, the first. Sunday ol
advcnl when, in every honk a single
candle is 1:1. Another caudle is added
on the :1 Sunday:; which fellow. 'There
are emetics of all size:;, with lovely
holders ol many der! 11s and materials.
Steres are full of IJa11d1U1, and to bury
city situates h!t_:e gas flare burn in•
stead of candles.
An inlf orlant celebration takes place
on De(1ember 1:3, the date on which the
longest night occurred in medieval
clays. Very early on this morning, e""•
ery school, office, organization, and
helve (where there is a dau;hter),
celebtettes. A blond girl, dressed in
while, wearing candles in her ham' and
carrying a candle, conies cut of the
dark, singing Santa Lucia. She is fol.
lowed by other girls in white robes
carr'y'ing- dandles, -and by -Steffan,. the
star hoy, dressed in white, a tall white
cone-shaped hat with gold stars en it,
and carrying a long stick with a go'(1
star at the lip. lir the home, the child -
reit dressed in this fashion awaken the
father with coffee and pepPat'kaka (like
gingersnaps, hut rich and either stat'
or heart. shared'. In schools aad offi-
ces, the same teed i:; served, and also
"Lucia Cats," rolls shaped in a certain
way, and made only once a pear. Lu
c:fa parties last all day and a hot mut-
led wine called €;ler �g is served. People
dance and sing also and it 13 a bi;
BLYTIi LEGION OFFICERS' INSTAL•. holiday. I went to 4 Lucia parties, be -
LETT BY HOW1CR BRANCi1f seniag, at 6:30 in the morning and end•
A 'joint installation was held at the in; at 11:00 at night.
Blatt' Legion Horne on Thursday even.In Sweden, Santa Claus dna not
ing, January 4, 1962, when Branch 420 come via reindeer, but walks through
Royal Canadian Legion, and the Ladies, the street with a long stick to help him.
Auxiliary mot to install their officers He is called Tompte. He knocks at the
for 1962. An installation team from the door on Christmas eve and the child
Iiowick Branch came to Blyth to con -ren let him in, get their presents and
duct the ceremony underthe leadership" open them then. So December 24 is
of Comrade President Fraser Lynn the big family day here.. Also, Tompte
and Sat. at Arms ,Comrade Jim Clark :is rather frightening, and not the kind.
Ccineade Zone Commander Mrs" Mc• I beueve:ent figure that pup Santa
Cann of Zone C 1, Ladies; Auxiliaries
Instead of turkey, the Swedish ham is
came from Gerrie to install the Presi, the Christmas food.
dent of the Ladies Auxiliary. Christmas decorations do not revolve
Branch President, Donald Sprung; around the birth of Christ, nor does the
1st vice president., Wm, Richt; 2nd vice theme of Christmas, 'There are no wise
president, Arnold Bening; other Legion then, shepherds, mangers, etc. There
officers were: secretary, Clair.. Vincent; are Tointe, hearts, candles, pepper.
15cwlsure, Stanley Lyon; Legion Padre, kalta, some stars, a few hells, but not
lieu, Retied. Molly; Welfare,Ed. many" I have been told Breton Christ-
Rola
Executive Committee: K. Mc -
people
morning al 11 o'clock Swedish
1' (tie, G. Iiapgltt, Scott Fairservice, people make their once•a-year-trip to
Stewart Johnston, Stanley Ball and church. It is a very long service though,
Tons Thompson; Eel, at Arms, Wm. about 5 hours,
I'honlpsott. I am very [oitunate and shall spend
Auxiliary Officers: president, Mrs, December 24, 25 and 26 .(second Xmas)
Harry Gibbons; 1st vice president, with three different families who are
'Ips. Stolt Fairservlce; 2nd vice prest ntv friends now. December 23.30 old
dent, Mrs. John McLellan; secretary, frtcnds from Holland shall visit me,
Mrs, !furry Tebbutt; Treasurer,Airs. and I have 0 small Swedish house to
Ed. Bell; Sgt. at Arms, Mrs. T. Cole; use for the vaoation where 1 shall en•
executive committee, Mrs. K, Hesse!• tei'lain diem. On New Year's Eve 1
wood, Mrs. Eva WelbIanks, Mrs. A. shall go to a party at the home of my
'McClure, Airs. IL Badley and Mrs.
Luella McGowan.
Alter the installation had been coin•
pictcd a buffet lunch was served and
a social evening was spent by the Le-
gion members, Auxiliary members and
guests.
NO PARKING A'1' NIGHT
As is indicated by an advertisement
placed in this issue of the Standard,
car and truck owners would be well
advised to refrain from parking on vil-
lage street's daring the might. trots and
early morning hour),. '!'his is the time
when local snow plowing operations are
carried out and any vehicles on lite
streets make it extremely difficult for
phew operators.
Any responsibilly for damage incur-
red on said property wi11 be that of the
owner. Also ~here is the added incon•
venience of shovelling a huge bank of
snow before use of the car or truck is
made possible.
Swedish Dentist, and then travel to
the center of Sweden to visit another
colleague for a few days. And so you
can sec how very well I am being car-
ed for in this land where people are
serl)ascd to be so reserved and mi.
friendly. My hest wishes for a very
happy new year to all my old friends.
1 shall dhink of you but shall not he
lonely, thanks to all any wonderful new
friends here in Sweden,
Anne 1l'liillips) illcCeeary.
•
ON STAFF AT WINUIIAM HIGH
SCHOOL
Mr. George Webster, 13.Sc who has
hecn doing research work with the
Minnesota Alining and Manufacturing
of London, has accepted a position on
the staff of the Winghain District limb
Scheel and will teach science.
George commenced his duties on
Wednesday, January 3, and 'he and
Mrs. Webster will move to Wingham
acme time (luting January,
BLYTII COUNCIL iIOLDS
INAU'GURAL MEETING
The inaugural meeting of the Coun-
cil of the Corporation of the Village of
'i,'ytl1 was held in the Memorial Hall
n 'Tuesday, J'iruary 211(1 at 3 p.m. with
!?ee' e 1'airservice, Councillors Cook,
E1'i^l.t, flower a!v! McVittie present"
'!lie Reeve and Councillors suhscrib-
;d to their cath of office and Rev.
teberl Meally, of Trinity Anglican
:-hureh, addressed the council briefly,
otr,wine with prayer"
Metioa l'y Elliott and Cook that we
iwe Rev. Mr. Meally a vote of thanks
1)r attending this inaugural council
,11(aur,l by Elliott. and AicViltie Lha!
he inSinaiss of I.he last regular meeting
be adopted. Carried
Motion by llowes and Cook that (tecta
ft. Fairset'wicc be the Village o'
Blyth represcntal.ive to the fllaitfand
Valley Conservation Authority. Carried
Mot on by Cook and Elliott that cop
respondence he filed. Carried.
31011011 I1y Elliott and 1lo4ves that
Icy -Law No, 1, 1962 lo authorize the
!terve and 'Treasurer In borrow $25,00r
from the Bank of Commerce to sleet
current e:tpcnscs of the village of 131yth
until taxes are collected, be read( a
lirsl and second tittle.. Carried.
Motion by Cook and MIVitlie that
13y1.aaw No. 1, 1962 authoriziu; the
Itccve. ,0111 Treasurer to borrow 125,00(,
from the Bank of Commerce to meet
current ekpensc3. of (110 village of Blyth
until to:;es are collected, be read a
third time and passed. Carried.
Motion by McVittie and Elliott that
accounte as read be Danl. Carried,
Fred Gregory, part salary, street
foreman, $140.00; Fred Gregory, part
street foreman and caretaker, 57.00;
11. Lcalherland, weiglunaster and fir-
ing, 10.00; Blyth Postmaster, unemp.
ins. stamps, 6.00; Goor;e Slcan, ac.
count rendered, 93.69; Gerald Ileffron,
i'rb.' calli'clroti 94.00;" Municipal Worl(i
subcriplion and clog tags, 38"00; Blyth
Legion, ace. re. wreath, 7.00; County
of Iiuron, gradin;, 38.50: Manning and
Sons, account, 132.17; Sperling Hard-
ware, ace., 9.0"1: 'town of Clinton,
691.9;); London Scale Works, ace.,
eosin; Earl Noble, street wink, 6000;
Hobert Gregory, street. work, 7.00:
Haunul's Garage, ace., 111.71; Bann's
Garage, snowplowing(, 60.00; We'Jare
accounts, "185"00.
11)1 ion by Howes and C:cok that we
do now adjourn. Carried.
George filo-an, Clerk.
M!L'GETs SPLiT SERLE3 WITH
LiSTOII'EL
The Blyth Lions Club midget hockey
team split in a two -game series played
with Listowel last week.
The, lads opened the current season
with a 5 to 4 win over the Listowel boys
in the Palmerston arena last Wedn(ss•
day evening, and by all reports slowed
'Treat promise against the teals from
a much larger community. This should
prove to be an incentive for local fans
to attend their games, giving some
much needed and well deserved sup.
rot'(. • •
Terry Madill was 1.110 big gun fes
131y1h, notching two counters, with Don
Scrimgeour, 'I'om Ileffron and Don
Appleby cart' denting the twine twice.
The return match was played hi the
Myth arena last Friday evening as the
first half of a ctoltb!.e header and naw
a very -good crowd on hand to witness
(lie affair. Listowel made the journey
still smarting from their earlier defeat
and through sheer determination were
able to return home tvittl a 4 to 3 vic
tory. The Blyth lads appear tired
from the game just two nights previous,
or perhaps just a little over. confident,
and were unable to unt•ack themselves
from Use hard -checking Listowel club.
Sharp shooters for Blyth were Robbie
Lawrie, Tom Ileffron and Ron Elliott..
The highlight of the game, from this
writer's viewpoint, was the outstanding
play of the Myth goal lender, 12 year
old Allan Howes. Adan, wo could still
play pec wce hockey, is matched
against players two classes above itis
age limit in Ihe 14 to 16 year old mid -
gel class. ills goal tooling ability and
courageous play time and again thwart-
ed the determined efforts of the !statue,
el
. sluw-
el team and was the major rause of the
close strn'e of the game.
The team will play their next g,alnc'
this Friday night, ,i.anuaary 12, against
l.,ucknow in trite lural 310130 at 8 P.111
A special appeal is made for fan, tc
rive the boys tour whole hearted sup
pot's.
BIRRT1IS
MARSHALL—In Clinton Public hospital
on ,Monday, January 1, 1982, to Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Marshall, the gift
of a daughter, Sherrie Frances, a
sister for Sandy,
What. can be described as the first
blizzard of the winter struck this dist-
rict in a prolonged four-day seige of
sleet, snow and wind, and had the area
literally "hanging o►1 the ropes." The
storm left in its wake a dense covering
of white fluffy snow and with banks on
the sides of the roads reaching rather
treacherous heights, the hock -out
blow mast ceertair-.y would be in the
forth of high winds if a thaw is not
50011 in coning.
The' storm started early Saturday
morning with a covering of sleet t o
'hick that several local youths were
seen skating on the main street. Mr.
Ben \Walsh tells the best story evolving
from the ice storm. Ben was travelling
to Clinton on Saturday horning follow-
ing the department sander, when they
met a chap, who apparently lives on
a farm on No. 4 highway and works on
ancthcr farm clown the -road, skatin
ta work of the road. According to
11011, he was making much better time
than either he or the sander. At ole
point about one Mile north of Clinton
ears were backed up for nearly a mile
when they were unable to conquer the
icy C0(lditions on a hill"
The 'sleet turned to snow Saturday af-
ternoon and continued for the next
three clays. liural mail carriers found
il. imposisble to carry out their duties
on Saturday and Tuesday.
The foci' -day storm scented to keep
building in intensity and reached its
climax on Tuesday. Traffic was slowed
to a crawl and local school buses were
rrtany hours over due but reported all
children reached home safely. Other
than the usual hardships resulting from
such a storm, no serious damage or
accidents have been reported in this
arca.
Wednesday morning saw the storm
reduced to just a few flurries. Skies
were beginning to clear and the sun
break through to watch the country -side
once more dig its way out from under
the pent-up fury of oid man winter.
LEGIONNAIRES''IIE WINTHROP 3.3
The Blyth Legion intermediate hock-
ey leant opened their local hockey
scene last Friday .ni;ht with a 3 to 3
tie wills' the visiting Winthrop team.
The game .Marled with Blyth setting
a fast and furious pace that would cer-
tainly have produced a win for the lo•
cols had they been conditioned to
stanch the pressure. However, possibly
lack of conditioning proved a handicap
and the game slowed to an evert battle
between the two clubs.
The same two teams had played pre.
viously in December with Winthrop
winning by a 9 to 6 score. The 3 to 3 tie
last Friday is a good indication that
Blyth is steadily improving and by the
time the playoffs arrive, should be a
strong contender again this year. The
slow Blyth start each year can be at••
trihuted to the fact the other teams are
playing on artificial ice and are bet-
ter conditioned is ie.n the schedule gets
Into full swing, -
'I -he Legionnaires had several good
scoring chances but were turned bake
by the Winthrop goalie,. Hugh Flynn,
who has now become famous for qui.
ling the attack of many Blyth teams
over the past few years. John Radford,
Doug; McDougall and John Lawrie,
were the Legionnaires able to perform
this feat.
The next brute game of the team is
Friday, January 26, when they will play
lost to Atwood. They will play in At-
wood on the 10th and Lucicnow on the
24th.
CHIMNEY FIRE LAST SATURDAY
The Blytlt. Fire Department answered
a call at. 8 a.m. last Saturday morning
to 1110 farm home of Mr. and Mrs.
Thalen, on the farm formerly owned
by Mr. and Mrs, Albert Nesbitt. The
firemen quickly extinguished the burn-
ing chimney with no damage to the
house.
WILL CELEBRATE 89th BIRTHDAY
Congratulatiets and Best Wishes to
31r. W..1. Sims, of Seaforth, who cele•
prates his 89t11 birthday on Mond'a'y,
,laniary 15111.
IN CLINTON HOSPITAL
Mrs. Harold Phillips is a patient. in
Clinton Public Hospital. Her many
friends wish her a speedy recovery.
FARM SOLD
Mr" and Nits. Cameron Walsh have
sold their farm 5 miles north of Blyth
on No. 4 llighWay, to Ma', Leo Kenny,
of Mitchell, who will take posession
in the spring when Mr, and Mrs. Walsh
will move to 'lilchell, ,
This Big Money
Seems To Stink
Petunia non olet (money has
na. srriclll is an ancient adage;
but as the following account of
the troubles in Katanga, appear.
ing in NEWSW'VEEK would seem
to show, some kinds of. modern
money 'could well stand a deo-
dorizing treatment.
At times during the fighting in
Katanga last month, it seemed
that the line-up was the United
Nations vs. the Union Miniere du
Haut-Katanga, an enormous min -
Ing complex that completely
dominates the economy of the
secessionist Congo province.
Fighting swirled around the
company's big Lubumbashi cop-
per plant, site of what is possibly
the tallest smokestack in Africa,
Some of Union ?1iniere's orange -
stucco buildings went up in
flames. its cluster of modernis-
tic offices in the center of the
city were occupied by U N.
troops. Its electrolytic copper re-
finery near Kolwczi, most mod-
ern of its type in the world, was
strafed and knocked out of op-
eration by a Swedish jet, Air
attacks on its fuel dumps and rail
lines forced Union Miniere to
close Mining operations at Kol-
wezi and Jadotville, principal pit
areas in a complex that produces
nearly a tenth of the world's
copper, almost all of its radium,
more than half of its cobalt, and
a quarter of its germanium. The
company, whose 1961 earnings
are expected to pass the $50 mil-
lion mark, said it didn't know
when it would get back in opera-
tion.
While Union Miniere appeared
a hapless pawn caught in the
Congo turmoil, there were critics
—including many U.N. officials
—who charged that it was actu-
ally a sinister behind -the -scenes
power operating from a sedate
nineteenth-century headquarters
near the Palais Royal in Brussels.
There, the.critics said, the signals
were called for Katanga Presi-
dent Moise Tshombe's rebellion
against •the. Central Congo Gov-
ernment and for the pro-Katanga
pressures that erupted in Bri-
tain's Parliament, Union Miniere
was accused of paying Katanga's
white mercenaries, arming its
soldiers, supplying military com-
munication and transportation
systems.
Union Miniere categorically
denied that it had anything to do
with political manipulations. it
supported its arguments with
impressive logic, but still sonic
persistent questions remained.
Just what has been Union
Miniere's role in the Congo? Who
shapes its policy? What is its
future? Some of the answers are
simple; others won't be forth-
coming for a long time, if ever.
Financially, Union Miniere is
undoubtedly Tshombe's c h i e f
bulwark (in fact, helped launch
him on his political career).
Through taxes, franchise charges,
and dividends, it would turn over
some $0 million last year to the
Katanga Government, " That is
only slightly less than the total
revenues collected by the Congo's
five other provinces. It's pretty
obvious where the money goes.
But a� the company president,
Herman Rohiliart, points out:
"Union Miniere is subject to the
laws, regulations, and taxes of
the authorities in the area in
which it operates. It is unfair to
base criticism upon or draw in-
ferences from this kind of rela-
tionship which must prevail with
any private company anywhere,"
But in Elisabethville, a com-
pany official admits that "some
• of our Belgian workers have
'tided with Katanga." And when
Tshombe declared Katangan :in-
dependence, Union Miniere offi-
cials in the Congo were enthu-
siastic, at least in ' private.. In
fact,. there seems to have been . a
basic split between company of-
ficials in Brussels and Elisabeth -
with the latter encouraging
secession.
Th: _ (.. EIl'al,elhville official;,
tun`s v'( r, were heginnint i look
With murr tay.1r en a unified
Centro last month, For one thing,
some members of thu 'I'Aoa)be
government were talking shoot
nationalizing union Miniere: Jot.
another, Tshombe seemed to be
losing control over fanatical sup-
porters who demanded a scorch-
ed -earth policy.
Even if its plants and mines
were put to the torch, Union
141iniere's 1.2 million shares of
stock would still be valuable, No
one will speculate on what might
happen to the 18 per cent bloc
now held in escrow in Brussels
for the Congolese until a stable
government takes over. A con-
trolling 28 per cent bloc is own-
ed by the Societe Generale de
Belgique directly and throe gh
holdings in the Compagnie du
Katanga and 'Tanganyika Con-
cession's, Ltd., a British. financial
group. The other 54 per cent, a
Societe Generale spokesman said,
is owned by 120,000 small inves-
tors in Belgium and France. "It's
a widows and orphans stock, just
like AT&T," he said,
Those "widows and orphans,"
who will collect a 1961 dividend
of about $30 a share on a stock
which sells for some $220, are in
good company. Societe Generale
is a holding and investment com-
pany which controls corporations
with an estimated worth of some-
where between $1 billion and $2
billion. Only about 6 per cent of
its holdings are in Katanga.
Through interlocking director-
ships, its interests in Union
Miniere coincide with those of
some of the most powerful finan-
ciers in Britain and South Africa
—men who turned the old Suez
Canal Co. into a successful in-
vestment and holding company
after it was nationalized. If need
be, similar strategy should work
again. Come what may, the in-
vestors underscored their faith
in the future of Union Miniere
last month by bidding up the
price of its stock on the Brussels
exchange.
Ancient Bells
Peal Again
"When will you pall me?"
Say the bells of Old Bailey .. .
"I'm sire I don't know,"
Says the great bell at Bow.
The old English nursery
rhyme's great bell, the one which
inspired poet -preacher John Don-
ne's resounding lines (". , . never
send to know for whom the bell
tolls; it lolls for thee"), rang out
for the first time in more than
twenty years last month. The
historic tones — which have
sounded in London since the fif-
teenth century—had been miss-
ing since World War II when
German bombs blitzed St. Mary -
le -Bow, sending Bow (as the
great tenor is known) crashing
down with its eleven fellows.
Recast from the fragments, 2
1/10 -ton Bow is now back in the
belfry with (going up the scale)
Cuthbert, Pa n c r a s, Timothy,
John, Augustine, Faith, Mildred,
Margaret, Christopher, Fabian,
and Katherine. •
After •the rededication cere-
mony, at which the Anglican
Bishop of London presided,
Prince Philip gave Bow's hell a
pull. That was :the signal for
twelve bell ringers to start the
peal.
London, and much of England,
would hear Bow Bells .next on
New Year's Eve at a televised
watch -night service in St. Mary's,
"What could be better for Eng-
land," says the rector, the Rev.
Joseph McCulloch, "than to ring
in the New Year with Bow
Bells?"
Q, Dow can I, add a better
flavor to baked apples?
• A. A delicious dish to serve
with roast pork is baked cran-
berry apples. Fill the cavity left
in the apple after the care has
been removed with cranberry
sauce, and bake.
CYRO-NOSE—Jeffery Hunter acquires an impressive Pinoc-
chio-like appearance as he examines a loaf of French bread
between scenes of a new picture, now shooting in France.
TABLE TALKS
.1aneAnceews.
Raw cauliflower has become
increasingly popular for salads
in the last few years and you'll
find this one unusual and re-
freshing,
RAW CAULIFLOWER SALAD
:'.; cup ground nut meats
Iii cup ground raw carrots
:! cup ground raw cauliflower
cup ground raw celery
2 teaspoons lemon juice
lz cup mayonnaise
Salt and pepper to taste
iceberg lettuce cups
Cauliflower, florets and
shredded carrots for garnish
Mix -together ground nut meats,
carrots, cauliflower, and celery.
Add lemon juice. Combine with
mayonnaise, salt, and pepper.
Chill thoroughly. Spoon into let-
tuce cups and garnish with flor-
ets and shredded carrots. Serves
6-8, * * °
If you like fresh cranberries
in salad, try this recipe that
combines apples, celery, and
nuts with the ground cranber-
ries.
JEWEL SALAD
2 cups raw cranberries
cup sugar
1 tablespoon unflavored
gelatin
1 cup boiling water
2 tablespoons fresh lemon
juice
cup diced raw apple
cup sliced celery
cup chopped nuts
Lettuce
Grind cranberries and mix
with sugar, Soften gelatin in
cold water; add ' boiling water
ancl' stir until dissolved, Add
lemon juice and cool. Add cran-
berry mixture; when gelatin be-
gins to congeal, add apples, cel-
ery, and nuts, Pour into mold.
Chill, Unmold on crisp lettuce.
Serves 6,
Another salad that is seasonal
looking is the popular jellied
tomato aspic. An easily made
aspic — one given zip with a
little Worcestershire sauce —
follows:
JELLIED TOMATO SALAD
2 cups tomato juice
1 small onion
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
'1 tablespoon gelatin
la cup cold water
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
Cook together the tomato
juice, onion, salt, and sugar (boil
"i
�t•i
?%
FING'S BETTER — Actor -singer Bing Crosby and his wife, Kathy, prepare to drive to
the airport ofter Crosby left St, Joseph's Hospital in San Francosco. Bing had entered
the hospital 10 hours earlier with what his doctors called o case of "stomottt flu."
gently for 10 minutes), Mean-
while, soak gelatin in cold water
for 5 minutes. Strain hot mix-
ture, add gelatin and stir until
dissolved. Add lemon juice and
Worcestershire sauce. Pour into
large or individual molds and
place in refrigerator to harden.
Unmold on crisp lettuce. Serve
with mayonnaise,
* „ *
MOLDED BEET SALAD
1 package lemon -flavored
gelatin
1 cup hot water
Liquid from canned beets
plus water to make 1 cup
1 No. 303 can diced beets
3 tablespoons vinegar
1 tablespoon prepared horse-
radish
i% teaspoon salt
1 cup finely shredded cabbage
Dissolve gelatin in hot water;
add cold water and beet liquid.
Chill until syrupy; add remaining
ingredients. Pour Into individual
molds and chill until firm. Un -
mold on crisp lettuce leaves.
Serves 6. * * *
PINEAPPLE COLE SLAW with
WIIOLE CRANBERRY SAUCE
Small Cabbage (11/2 -lbs.)
8 tablespoons shredded pine-
apple
is cup mayonnaise
4 tablespoons whole cranberry
SAUCe
1 stalk celery, chopped
Y2 teaspoon onion, minced
Salt to taste.
Remove outer leaves of cab-
bage. Cut into quarters. Let stand
in cold water 20 minutes, Cut
out some of the center, shred
remainder, add celery, onion,
pineapple, cranberry sauce, may-
onnaise, and salt, If not moist
enough, add a little pineapple
juice, * * *
GLAZED APPLES
6 rosy apples
:)y cup boiling water
'%t cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon (op-
tional)
Cream, plain or whipped
Wipe apples, core, and remove
skin from top, one-third of way
down. Place close together in
saucepan, peeled side up, Add
water and cover closely, Cook
slowly, testing occasionally un-
til they are easily pierced with
a skewer or toothpick forced in-
to center. Put into a baking dish,
peeled side up, Sprinkle with
sugar and cinnamon and put in
a broiling oven or very hot oven
(425° F.) and baste frequently
with water in which the apples
were cooked until sugar is dis-
solved and tops are crisp and
delicately brown, Chill and serve
with cream,
* * *
PEANUT BUTTER APPLES
Core 1 apple for each serving,
place in shallow pan on 8 -inch
square of aluminum foil. Put 1
tablespoon chunk -style or
creamy peanut butter in apple
center. Fill hole with maple
syrup, or a pitted date. Bring
up foil around apple (to hold
in juice and keep skin from
breaking) leaving 2 -inch open-
ing at top, Bake about 1 hour in
375° F. oven.
Q. What can 1 do when a glass
stopper becomes stuck fast in a
bottle?
A, In the first place, don't try
to force it, Tap it gently with the
stopper out of another bottle. If
no other stopper is unstuck for
the job, pour a few drops of
glycerin around the top of the
stuck stopper,' It may take a few
minutes, hours or days to soak
through — depending upon how
badly stuck the stopper is — but
eventually it will enable you to
withdraw the stopper with case.
Ancient Art Of
Hopi Pottery
Castenada, who chronicled de
Tovar's visit to the Hopi villages
of northern Arizona in 1540, men-
tions Hopi farmers but no Hopi
arts. The first mention. of this
Indian tribe's great achievement
in pottery making occurred 42
years later when Espejo and
Liman arrived at Walpi, where
"1,000 souls came laden with very
fine earthen jars containing
water,"
The art of Hopi pottery mak-
ing has flourished and languish-
ed by turns, and the greatest
practitioner of the art in modern
times, Nampeyo, twice exhibited
her work in Chicago and twice
on the South Rim of the Grand
Canyon at Bright Angel: but
she never, more's the pity, re-
ceived medals from American
architectural g r o u p s or the
French Palmes Academiques.
Hopi women have always been
the accomplished artists of the
Pueblo tribes, leaving the farm-
ing and the governing (at least
in its outward aspects) to the
men.. By reason of their remote-
ness from the Rio Grande pueb-
los, where Spain strongly influ-
enced all the native tuts, Hopis
have worked more closely with
their own ancient designs than
have any of the other Indians,
and decidedly to their own bene-
fit,
Nampeyo's husband, a 'I'ewa of
Hano, worked with the J, `~Walter
Fewkes Archaeological Expedi-
tion of 1895, which uncovered
much undamaged pottery of ex-
quisite design, and Nampeyo
copied these for awhile. But she
was too much the original artist
not to depart later from the old-
er designs, which her own more
than equaled.
Although most of the eleven
Hopi villages made pottery at
one time or another in the
past, only women of the First
Mesa work at it today, The three
great Hopi Mesas begin about 100
miles northeast of the San Fran-
cisco Mountains and spread along
parallel with the valley of the
Little Colorado beside the wash-
es tributary to it, beginning with
Moencopi Wash in the west and
ending with Polacca Wash in the
east. (The entire Hopi reserva-
tion is only a small plot in the
center of the vast Navajo lands
of Arizona and New Mexico,)
Hopis are an old people. They
call a village established In 1700
a "new" village, Unlike Euro-
peans, who look back on the six-
teenth century as something al-
most out of time, Hopis are them-
selves a sixteenth century people
walking about In an anachron-
istic twentieth century, writes
Frank Daugherty in the Chris-
tian Science Monitor,
ISSUE 2 — 1962
Pottery making unfortunately
is still in the grip of the com-
mercial interests which have for
many years diverted it into a get -
rich -quick manufacture of cheap
articles for tourist trade along
the great highway to the south;
but the Museum of Northern Ari-
zona is doing much to acquaint
interested people with the best
work of the IIopi potter. They
exhibit it each year in Flagstaff
in early July and take orders for
the potters during the rest of the
year,
The clay for the vessels is first
soaked and kneaded and its large
lumps are removed, Then long
coils of the clay are fashioned
and the vessels built up, as it
were, layer by layer, Hopis never
use the conventional potter's
wheel, Afterward the vessel is
shaped, thinned and the potter
works the clay with bits of gourd
shell or wood, When it has been
polished, white,• dark • red, and
yellow paints are ground in small
mortars and applied with yucca
brushes. After firing, the vessels
have become a golden orange, a
a fine while, or a deep rust red,
according to the clay used. De-
signs are never drawn out in a
preliminary fashion, but are ap-
plied as they occur to the artist,
usually determined in some mea-
sure by the shape of the vessel
—very much as Picasso applies a
design to a piece of ceramic,
Archaeologists believe IIopis
were making and decorating clay
vessels before recorded history,
but they began to make the yel-
low clay pottery they make to-
day about 1300, A good piece of
Hopi pottery has walls of uni-
form thinness which will ring
when lightly tapped, a superb
shape, and inimitable design.
How Well Do You Know
SOUTH AMERICA?
Buzz The Baby
More Sleep For
Into Dreamland
Papa And Mama
By ARTHIUIt.AMAN
Newspaper Enterprise
Association
ST, PAUL, Minn, — From the
back seat of an automobile and
a kitchen workshop comes a
story of hope for parents accus-
tomed to pacing the floor with a
crying infant.
Dr, Robert Horton's electrical
invention is about the size of a
hamburger bun, With it he hopes
to send agitated babies back to
the psychological peace of their
placed beside his daughter in the
crib, the buzzer induced a deep
sleep:
Horton, an obstetrician and
gynecologist, notes that "fussing"
in babies usually begins about
two weeks after birth. The buz-
zer achieves its success because
it duplicates the sounds that the
baby senses while in its mother's
body. 'Turn on the buzzer and
security returns.
A battery -powered refinement
of the invention (marketed as
BABY AND BUZZER: Back to security,
pre -birth environment. In so do-
ing he would give countless ad-
ditional hours of sleep time to
harried mothers and fathers,
The doctor's idea was born in
the family auto, IIe noticed that
his youngest daughter usually
dropped off to sleep in the back
seal. A combination of noise and
vibration, he reasoned, promoted
her slumber,
On the kitchen table he fash-
ioned a buzzer device to dupli-
cate the auto vibration.
"It sounded awful," the doctor
admits, "but it worked." When
Slumbertone) is encased in a
lighc plastic case. Its sound (B
flat below middle C) is similar
to a telephone dial tone. Tests
on 1,000 babies in hospital nurs-
eries showed 90 per cent effi-
ciency.
All of which makes the old
story of the sleepless parents
even more archaic:
Father: I thought you'd never
get the baby quiet. How did you
do it?
Mother: I rocked him to sleep.
Father: What size rock did yo*
use?
Eight Nazis Who
Came Here To Kill
For eighteen years tee
script of the trial of the , ;hl.
Nazi saboteurs, on which 1'1is
book is largely based, rem •u d
sealed in secret government Nes.
Now i?ugene Rachlis, in his hook
they came to kill r e v e :,
detail for the first time how po-
tentially deadly a menac• • to
Canada and the United States
this group might have pr,ven
but for a bizarre turn of events.
The author describes the 'end-
ings of two separate groups of
saboteur's In June, 19.12, from
German U-boats, One of these
groups landed near Amagaasetl
on the shore of Long Island and
the other at Ponte Vectra jest
south of Jacksonville, Florida. In
Florida the saboteurs were at+le
to bury their cache of explosives
and detonators and to make their
way north undetected,
Things might have gone as
smoothly for the group on Long
Island but for a chance encoun-
ter with a young coastguardman,
The Germans' inept handling of
this threat to their security was
to prove a fatal mistake. Alerted
by the coastguardman's report,
Naval Intelligence and the FBI
swung into action, Discovery of
the buried explosives and the
discarded clothing revealed to
the American authorities that
several men were at large.
Th author dramatically re-
traces the movements of the va-
rious members of the group lrorn
the time of their landings to their
apprehension by FBI agents, Ob-
viously most of this information
was obtained from the testimony
of the men themselves although
from the first alerting the FBI
had their known former contacts
under surveillance,
Tho deliberate betrayal of the
group by two of their number
points to one of the recognized
weak links In the Nazi espionage
system, Not infrequently, agents
were chosen with little or no
regard for their morals or their
loyally to each other in the event
of capture, From the evidence
presented it would appear that
the eight men were an all -assort-
ed group, lacking confidence in
their leader and victims in some
measure of the feud between the
Abwehr and the Gestapo.
Several chapters are devoted
to the secret military trial of the
saboteurs and reveal in consider-
able detail the proceedings — the
transcript of which had remain-
ed a classified government doc-
ument until 1960.
With the memory of the Black
Tom and Kingsland disasters and
scores of other acts of enemy
sabctage during World War 1,
United States security forces
even prior to Pearl 1-Iarbor had
considered the possibility of sub-
marines landing enemy agents.
Ilundreds of miles of coastline
offered countless stretches of
beach where men in considerable
numbers could be put ashore,
Fortunately for the United
States, in the years between the
'two wars, the FBI had become
a very potent arm of the Justice
Department, As the author points
out, it was the effective roundup
of. Nazi agents and spies early in
1941 by tie FBI, thereby depriv-
ing the Germans of their sources
of nformation, which precipi-
tated their decision to put into
effect Operation Pastorius, That
it was foredoomed to failure be-
eomes increasingly clear in the
llgh' of some of the facts dis-
closed, The book constitutes a
ma; er contribution to public
knceeledge of what was probably
tho war's grer • est threat to Am-
eric-'s internal security,
Experience Is what you get
wImn you're looking for some-
ihll:y else,
O.ey the traffic signs — they
are placed there for YOUR
S"Ar TY,
'HUMAN' MAILBOX — This
eight -foot high mailbox in To-
peka, Kan., dispenses stamps,
makes change, talks back. It's
all purt of speeding Christmas
mailing. A postman works in
the heated cubicle.
TllHAM FROM
hell
Canadian hog producers will
turn over a new leaf in 1962 in
regard to any deficiency pay-
ments that might become neces-
sary for hogs sold in the corning
year,
The Agricultural Stabilization
Board has decided to adopt a new
and simpler method of procedure
—but it will require farmers to
retain all their grading certif-
icates for at least 12 months.
If it should become necessary
to make deficiency payments on
hogs marketed in 1962, produ-
cers will be asked to claim for
payments,
The application for payments
would be accompanied by a copy
of the hog carcass grading certif-
icate, Farmers are therefore
urged to keep all 1962 grading
certificates issued to then by
slaughtering establishments and
to keep them until the end of
1962 in case they are needed for
deficiency payment purposes.
Of course any hog premium war-
rants should be detached from
the hog grading certificate and
cashed by producers.
4 • •
Producers would be well
advised to market all hogs
throughout the year under the
name appearing on their hog
registration certificate.
Those who have not yet reg-
istered as hog producers should
apply to the Data Processing
Service, Canada Department of
Agriculture, Ottawa.
There were no deficiency pay-
ments made on hogs in 1960 and
it would appear that none will be
necessary in 1961 as the cumula-
tive national average selling
price for hogs is about $27,50 per
cwt., well above the national
support price level of $22.65 per
cwt,
A warning to farmers not to
spray dairy cattle with insecti-
cides that may contaminate the
milk has been issued by the
Canada Department of Agrieul-
The Foocl and Drugs Act does
not allow pesticide residues in
any amount in milk or milk
products, explains R. 11. Painter,
CDA scientist at the Lethbridge,
Alberta, research station.
• • 4
DDT, 131 -IC, lindane, chlordane,
aldrin, die 1 d r i n, toxaphene,
heptachlor, and .related conn -
pounds should not be used as
sprays on dairy cattle or in barns
or milk houses, Only pesticides
that are labeled for use on
animals or in barns should be
used, The labels give directions
for use of the products on cattle
or in buildings,
ISSUE 2 — 1962
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1, Cnrtogr,rnh
Owns
7. Become active
42. Since
E Vase with
feet
14, Underwater
worker
b, Predicament
7, Habit
18. Cousternatlen
9,
Straight edge
1, Hilarity
3, Possessive
ndJoctive
26, Seed used
for flavoring
27. Anguish
28, Articles
81, Thin surface
layer
28, Outer
covering
04, Alnrlced
occurrence
86, Evergreen
tree
87. Essential
41, Collect
together
48. W Indlnn
tree •
44, Challenged
46, Throwing
48, Definite plan
49, }lead of suit
l0. cnvlar
Refinement
+2, Dejected
i3. Ancient
Asiatic
country (ab,)
DOWN
1. Married
woman's title
2. Nimble
3. Arctic
4. Buzzing
6. l"ortify
0. Entangles
I 2
12.
15
3
7, Brown up
8. Sensible
8. Cupidity
10, Small barrel
11. Rather than
16. \fission
20, Rough
22, Money
hoarders
24. Article
21, E. Indian
weight
27, Capers
28. Experiment
16
13
5
6
••1,,
7
14
17
29. IIasten
30. Toward the
center
32, Covered
completely
35. Views
37, Italian priest
'18. Spans
39. Vex
40, Beer that
hasih,aged
42, Congregate
1. Dowty
1, Macaw
47. Edible tuber
8
9
10
tt
18
Ig
20
2)
22
23
24
n3�,'`Cti
6.16
25
26
27
28 29
33
36
30
37
34
35
31
32
:he.ile. `�.••� y'i
38
39
40
41
42
43
44 45
49
:•:`4
ti`s!
44
47
44)
50
51
53
Answer elsewhere on this page
A guide for the safe use of in-
secticides for a dairy herd is as
follows:
—h'or cattle sprays: pyrethrins
nixed with either piperonyl
butoxide or MGK 264. Some
suitable sprays also contain
repellents, , • .
—For spraying the walls and
ceilings of barn s: Diazinon,
ronnel, and malathion are effec-
tive in most areas. If these do not
give adequate control,use one of
the recommended baits. In milk
houses, use only the sprays
recommended for use on cattle
and protect .the utensils, cans,
tanks, ere., from the spray
material, . . •
—For sprays against horn flies:
pyrethrins mixed either with
piperonyl butoxide or MGK 264,
or use Lethane or Thanite. If
preferred, sprinkle the backs and
necks of • animals every three
weeks with methoxychlor wet-
table powder or weekly with
malathion dust, Animals should
not be dusted with malathion
within five hours before milking,
For cattle grubs, rotenone is
recommended,
• * *
For pastures and forage
crops: use only recommended
insecticides, Also observe . the
rates and times, number of appl-
ications recommended. Do not
allow spray drift to contaminate
pastures 017 forage crops that are
near orchards or canning crops.
For the recommened practices
consult your local agricultural
authorities,
—.Do not feed pea vines, apple
pomace, corn wastes, sugar beet
tops, or other by-products unless
you can be sure that they do not
contain residues that will pass
into milk.
•. •
Canadian beef producers can
jack up their profits through the
use of hormone implants.
'This is the conclusion of Dr. S.
E. Beacom, a Canada Department
of Agriculture scientist, Ile found
that hormone implants increased
gains of steers on good pasture
at the Melfort, Saskatchewan,
experimental farm, by an aver-
age of 45 pounds,
And, points out Dr, Beacons,
only a couple of pounds of extra
gain are required to pay for the
cost of the implant,
•
•
Two pellets, each containing
12 milligrams of diethylslil -
bestrol,were implanted Into the
ear tissue of 600 - pound steer
calves at the start of the pasture
season. Cost was about 25 cents
per head.
During the 1960 pasture season
of 117 days, 16 implanted steers
out -gained their untreated part-
ners by an average of 45 pounds.
Though all treated steers outgain-
ed their untreated partners,
differences ranged from 3 to 97
pounds in favour of the treated
member of the pair, The implant -
,ed steers averaged 301 pounds of
gain on pasture.
• • •
In 1961, a dry year, gains of
implanted steers on an old pas-
ture averaged only 61 pounds
extra per head over a 45 -day pas-
ture period, On a newer stand
the implanted steers gained 241
pounds more than did the un-
treated ones during a 74 - day
grazing period.
NMY SdilOOl
LESSON
lty Rev, it, 8, Warren, B.A., 8,1).
GO!) IS SPIRIT
Exotttis 20:4-52 5a;
John 4:7, 9, 10; 19-23
The ten commandments are
easy to understand. The second
is, "Thou shalt not make unto
thee any graven image, or any
likeness of any thing that is in
heaven above, or that is in the
earth beneath, or that is in the
water under the earth: Thou
shalt not bow down thyself to
them, nor serve thein: for I the
Lord thy God am a jealous God."
Isaiah, in the 40th chapter of his
prophecy, describes the making
of a graven image, How foolish
for man to worship that which
man has made,
Jesus teaches us spiritual wor-
ship. Our memory selection are
words which He spoke: "God is
a Spirit: and they that worship
him must worship him in spirit
and in truth." John 4:24. This
came in reply to the Samaritan
woman's statement, "Our fathers
worshipped in this mountain; and
ye say, that Jerusalem is the
place where men ought to wor-
ship." Jesus' answer shows that
the Important thing about wor-
ship is not where we worship but
how we worship.
In the great church building
boom since the war, there have
been many innovations in the
architectural designs of churches.
And why not? Neither the parti-
cular hill or the node of the
building can in themselves either
induce or hinder spiritual wor-
ship. We build more convenient
homes than our grandparents
did. We should improve on our
churches, too. One minister after
signing the contract for nearly a
quarter of a million dollars for a
new church acknowledged a feel-
ing of unhappiness that so much
was being spent on a luxurious
building when so much of the
world is hungry, In our building
of a new church last summer we
had to make many important
decisions. We decided that we
wanted a church that would be
beautfiul in its simplicity. When
choosing light fixtures we con-
sidered that the purpose of lights
in a church is to give light and
not just ornaments to he ad-
mired. We like our lights. We
had to borrow money to finish
the furnishings but our people
advanced it from their savings as
loans at 5%, We go to church not
to wonder at the vast amount of
money lavished on it, but to wor-
ship God in spirit and in truth.
Let us keep the second com-
mandment.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
�S
a
V9 — L9b1
0
V 2/
3
a
v
7
3
N
N
v
N
1
d
d
a
SS
Dv
0
111
l�
1N
N3
N
1 a
S
S
3
A
a
n
5
S
/
5
daN
9
N
N
e
S
37
N
n
3
39
3/1 /a
a1VMV
sa•v
w
r
w
w
I! M
H
1111M
7
w
a
/2
H
Oe)
dv W
7
The Magic Touch of Frost
yrs y,
n the chill hours of early morning, hoarfrost adorns the countryside
with icy needlework,. • ,
• • • brings temporary grandeur to a
sway -backed fence .....-
For those who live in northern climes there come, at
infrequent intervals, days of witchery. As if a magic
wand has been waved, the entire world becomes an
entracing fairyland and familiar objects take on in-
describable beauty, These are the mornings of the
hoarfrost. The dictionary calls this phenomenon "a
• crowns a majestic tree with a
halo of silvery tinsel.
silvery white deposit of ice needles formed by direct
condensation at temperatures below freezing, due to
nocturnal radiation." Hoarfrost and its delicate em-
broidery is worth waiting for as these striking photos
by Angus M •nougoll reproduced with permission of
the Harvestl 'orld, -prove.
PAGE 4
T111t; 1°1LY'1'II S'T'ANDARD
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALT
BEGINS THURSDAY, JANUARY Ilth
1 Grolip Teen and (iil'Is'(.1oat.s $9,95
1 Group Girls and (toys .Jackets , , $1,95 to $9,95
Snowsuit;, Sizes 1 to 7 $5 95 Up
1 Rack Dresses To Clear - $1,98 to ifi3,9iJ
170% Reductions on .M''''inter Wearing Apparel.
Needlecraft Shopp¢
Phone 22
Myth, Ont.
Clinton M
Memorial
Shop
T. PR1'1-)E and SON
CLINTON -- EXF'LFR -- SEAPORT'S
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
THOMAS S'IEEI', CLINTON,
PHONES:
CLINTON:
Business—Hu 2.6603
Residence--Ilu 2-3363
EXETER:
Bnt!Llees 41
Residence 34
I
FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit, our Rest-
aurant any day or evening' and try our tasty full -
course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts,
HURON GRILL
BLY Til • ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
Vingharn Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'f'TON.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS •--Blyth--• BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 73,
YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAH.
' KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS
JEANS and OVERALLS.
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M.
1
JANUARY SALE
CONTINUING+
Mens Leather Thermo Laced Snow Boots
Regular. $18.95 Special $13,95
Mcns Felt Boots Special $3,95
Mens 4.1.3ucklelOvershoes, Sizes 6 to 12, Spec. $3.99
Boy's Car'€oata, Suburban and Nylon Parkas,
Reg. to $1195, sizes 8 to 16 Spec. $8,95 to $9.99
Men's Hydro Parkas, heavy wool lined, Spec. $11.95
Men's Overshoes, shearling, collar and strap, black
or browns sizes 6 to 12 Spec. $3.99
Boys' Oveshoes, shearling, collar and strap,
sizes 11 to;5 ,-Spec. $2.99
'Boys' 100 percent Wool Pullover Sweaters and
100 percent Orlon Pullovers, sizes 8'tir16'yrs.,
Reg. $3.95 Spe,,e; $1.98
G '
Men's Flannel; llpprk Shirts, (Kitchens),
Reg. to $.1,'19 Spec. $1,99
Women's Rubber Boots, red soles, Spec. Value
(insoles free), sizes 6, 7, 8, only $2.99
"'rhe 1-Iou;3e of Branded Lines andLower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PRONE 211 BLYTII, ONT.
Ammar
AUBURN NEWS
11'illinm ,1; N'ilsou hist week alter several weeks sprat to
Ila' Qudcrich hospital with 0 Iraclurcrl
ankle.
Air, anti Airs, Colin Poing, of 'for•
roto, were reccat visitors with 1)r• fl,
C. 1Vcir, Air. anti Airs, Dttncan )locKuy
raid Lundy.
(11rs. Iu4Rt Machan visited her mole-
er, ,Airs. 11'arner Andrew:;, kid Nott
cc,day in \'icicria Iles).:Mal oval re.
l's led that she is improving since She
tt:'tlet wt'!l s•ts'1'ery tit week ase.
)1t;,, Alatsnerite Chopin, of 11'0,
visilcd friends in the village Iasi
Saturday.
Air• Caro:eau Schultz has returned
Irist, Mrs, W. 13radnock, Airs. Hugh 1:ate from his sumuir on the Urea)
lientictt, 1'orl Albert., and )1.s. Harold 1.a.'ses and is visiting with his brother
Nic;lul'on, Scafurlh, 1)uc:al tuok place Mr. Reg Schultz, Mrs. Schultz and fail
satisfactory progress in til. Joseph huff
at litaniey, A}hetto. 111,111. harry 11'chsler is visilin;
nell who visited with his sister, Mrs -
)
hie
Friends in this mummify are pleas hruther, Rov, 111 s. 11'cbster noel tam
ed to know Hoe Mrs. Gus Redmond. el Hy this week til Niagara Fails, Ile war
the St. Aut:ttstine district is maktl, aceanpan!ed by I. Andrew Kirkeon
1Villiast .1 11'ilson l:nssc,l away re.
(curly iu 1dutorto t, AIl,c'rta, alter at
month's in his ; Ilt yt an'. III.
was the sill id the Isle .Ishit 11'11; r;► arca
Filen Jac' son, told was bent in
' (Tiro noity awl attended ll.ti.S. ^;o•
I'ol'rll. ,11 the a_c of 16 Ire anal In
:1 •i.::: i0 Nos", he a'tt:, 0111, toyed int'
many years with the C.P.R. His w:.;n
' I•retleeea,r.'cJ 1)110 many year:, at'o, Ili'
l:1 taa't iced by lour sons and two (Legit.
ter)) and one br:.titer, Shearer Wilson.
of Lander, and three nieces in this tIi,-
• pital, London, following the accident ,lack Snelling, lit'. Snelling and family
\viten she tv.ts hit by it i'ar driven by :it Port Coll.nrne.
Murray Wilson, KR 2, Atl':urn. Mts. Sant 1)acr and her granddaugh
M.r. and Mrs. James Roberton, who ;e1', Hiss Lura 1)aeis attended the
have been ninny mottle; in a Nursing wcdditli of the former,
s sister, the
How al t'lintou moved Inst week to former Mrs. 1'lurencc 1lshnran, of 1)e
troit, ou New 1'ctu''s Day.
Nh'. and Mrs. 1'arry Dodd, (loderk'.h
were recent visitors with his mother
Mrs, 'William Dodd, Mr, and Mrs, Wil
limn Dodd .ir, and Mrs. J. C. Clark.
.Al'. and Alt's, Cliff McDonald visited
in Hamilton over the wccic-cud,
Several in this community tvatchen
with interest to the S(tl0) Iy nlornin)
serice on Kitchener 'I'V from St. An
(lrews 1h'esbylerhin Church when 1)1*
Findlay G. Stewart gave the sermon
and one of the ushers was William
Kruse a nephew of Mrs, Edgar Law.
son, who often visits here.
A special meeting is being planned
by the convener of Citizenship and Ed.
healon, Mrs. Oliver Andersson, at the
January meeting of the Auburn Wo-
men's institute on .Itanuary 10 at the
C'omnlunity Memorial Hall al 2 p,m•
Polkaing the business period on edit.
cal:oral demonstration by Mr, I), A.
MacKay is being- planned and some of
his pupils of U.S.S. 5, lItlliclt. A pct•
luck lunch will be served and there whit
be an auction.,
The 1' aril Fot'tmt of the Miners from
the 13111 of Mullett, met on Monday ev•
enilig at the home of \1r. and Mrs. Guy
Cunningham. 'fool Cuutliu;ham., the
President, presided, The topic • was 0)1
"How can 4.11 Club 'Work be Iinpcov•
cd,"
1ltlrot1t•t('w, 11yn nLhI.t former I c' i
dents, Air. and Airs, henry I.cishutan,
of (;oderieh, have also sone to Huron.
1 irw.
Alt'. and )Irs, 1Villivn .I. (''r;ti;; veinla'a w�echcnd with their son 'Robert
\Ir:. C"ni; , (';►I ulyn, lira and Jc'f a;.
Ihlcrt'.n.
,)dais Alal'y has secure/.
t lositiou al the huhu' td )Ir. and Atrs
George 1''. 'McKinnon, I1.lt. 1, furl
Albert.
United Church '''omen Mold inaugural
The inau;ural meeting of the newly
formed United Church lVonten tool,
place in Knox United Church with a
large number of the ladies of the tun•
gee atio► present. Nit's. Arthur Grange
presided fat' the devotional period with
Airs. Norman \Vi;'ht.nunt at the piano.
Aller singing the hymn, "Slanting on
the Portal," 11ev. Charles Lows led
in prayer. Ales. Oliver Anderson gave
n very linu'Iy reading, after which
1trs, Kenneth Plulerson favoured. with
a solo, "holy Great Thou Art." The
offering was received by Hiss Ehna
Mulch 1111(1 Airs. John Hildebrand, The
scripture lesson and meditation were
taken by Mrs, Boy Easton and Mrs.
�N'ornuaa McDowell. The devotion)iil per.
iod was closed with the singing of the
hymn, "Through on the changing
scenes of life," Rev, Lewis showed
a film entitled, "Full House," a very
vivid story of what goes on at the Fred
Victor 'Mission in 'T'or'onto which is
supported by theMissionary and Alairt-
tcnance Fund of the United Church,
Following the film, Mr. Lewis Presided
for the election of officers of the newly
formed organization. IIe called on
Mrs. Arthur Grange,- convenor 'of the
nominating committee,- to present the
slate of officers, as follows: president,
Airs. It:enneth NTc1)ougnll; 1st vice•pres•
ident, Mrs. .1ohn Dut'nin; 2ncl vice-
president, \Irs. John Armstrong; re•
cording secretary; Miss Ehna ,Hutch;
assistant rec. sec., Mrs, Everett Tay.
lora correspoudin; sec•. Miss Margaret
R. ,Jackson; Ireasprer, Mfrs. 'Norman
\1c1)ow'ell;• "mission treasurer, Mrs,
Harold IVcbsler; Christian education, that in a fele centuries a .creat nation
'Iris, Ted East Christian citizenship, would .be loaned on This discvvercd
1 Mrs, 1Vihiam T. Robison; , Christian continent, as also the early pioneer's of
stewardship, Mrs. Oliver Anderson)! this district when they settled here a
finance, Airs. Gordon AfcClinchcv, sup.: cent:11'y or so ago. The Great Purpose
ply, Mrs. Roy Easorn; literature and of Life, the Bishop stated, was, "'1'b
conulurnierttiutt, Mrs. Charles Stt,tttelo i Glorify God and .Lnjny i1011 C'nrever"
an; visiting, Airs, .inwrence I'laelzer; and Ile calls his people to seek Him
flowers, Mrs. Robert Arthur; manse, attd Ile will lead if they try to find
Mr's. Arthur Grange; nominating, Mrs, llim. Ile said Iltat everyone should
IViiliant Dodd, Jr.; kitchen, Ml's. IVs!- stand in awe and reverence and par -1
ham Straughan; press, Airs, William take of holy Communion. At the close
of the service the Bishop administered I
the rites of holy Communion to the
members of St. A1ark's parish. Rev.
Robert Meally, rector of this parish,
was in charge of the. service and Miss
Alat'garet Clark,. of :• Toronto, was or.
ganist. The 'ushers were Gordon R.
Taylor and Robert .1, Phillips.
Several members from here attended
the reception in the Blyth Memorial
Hall al 5 p.m. on Sunday when luno
cheon was served. Rev. and (Mrs. Evan
McLa;an, minister of the Blyth United
Church was also present, Rev. Robert
1Ie/lly expressed his pleasure at hav-
ing the Bishop visit his prn'islt of Au.
burn, Blyth and llelgrave. 'Phe Bishop
flanked the Rector for his kind words
and staled that he is starling the sec-
ond retool of visits of the Parishes in
his Diocese since his appointment as
Bishop of Georgian Bay a year tt;o.
Right Rev, Harold Applryard Visit
The Great Purpose of Life was the
Theme of the messa'_e of the Bishop of
Georgian Bay, the Right Rev. Harold
At:'pleyard of Owen Sound, when he paid
hls second visit to SL Mark's Anglican
Church last Sunday. Despite the stormy
weather a goodly number braved the
elements to hear their Bishop ,give a
message basing his sermon on the visit
of the three wisemett as related in
the 13ib10 by St. Matthew. Ile staler!
that these Ihrec Magi, the learned then
in those days, Went searching for a
Great Person, as told to them by the
Star, but diel not know lite Importance
of their mission, Ile: refcrrcdto the dis-
covery of Ainerica'by Christopher Col•
umbos in 1492 and that he had no idea
L. Craig. Mrs. Alcl)ougall was then
called upon to take charge of the short
business period, It was decided to
hold the monthly meetings on the fourth
Wednesday of each month, 'Three
units composed of active and house
members, are to be formed al an ex•
ecutive ineelitr , Mt', Lewis closed
the sleeting with prayer, after which
the ladies of the Provisional Committee
served a delicious lunch. A speck('
installation serice will be held at 1hr
morning church service on ,3anllat'y
14 at I1 a.m. for the officers of this
newly formed organization.
Mission hand lIeeting
The January meeting of the Light
Bearer's ,Mission Band of the haus
United Church were held in the Sued;ry
school room with Judy Arthur pre,sid
ug. The scripture lessen front .1111
avelityfifth ellaiacr of the Gospel o.
t. Matthew, *as read responsively
Gall -Miller" led in prayer. The story
':f "The Empty Bowl" was told by the
uperintcndcnt, "Mrs. Arthur Grange
It was a true life story of children in
India as told by a "Missionary. The
World Friends were distributed awl
the meeting closed with the bcnedtc
Hon.
Separate School Board Appointed
The newly appointed school board
for the St. Augustine Separate School
consists of R,ayon:n(1 I3oyle, Herbert
De Bruyn and Miles Et, Marie. This
school, which vsts built nreund 1886,
has 11 pupils and the teacher is Mr.
fbnynwttd Redmond,
Broken 11'rist Results from Fall
One accident in this district caused
by the icy roads Iasi Friday occurred
when A1rs. Sidney Lansing slipped rind
fell breaking both boars in her Irq
wrist. She was taken by ambulance
tco'Clinton Public Hospital whet'( she.
had 1110 hones set and rclurned',honc
last :iaturday evening. Mrs. Oliver An -
demon is supply leaching at 14.5. No.
'tri hast 14'tnvettxl:,li while Mrs. Lansing
is recuperating from her fall,
Mrs, William T. Robison returned
last week from ar visit with her family,
4t'. and ,llrs. Mel Osmond and family.
Ah'. and Mrs. Ivan Stephenson and tam.
Hy, Rev, and Mrs. Harold Currie and
family, of Toronto and Hamilton.
Mr. Cur 13akclltar returned hone
S.S. No. 2, West 1Vnwanosh
The Nativity Scene was Played by all
the pupils 'at their annual Christmas
concert held in the school with Orval
McPhee as chrah'ntan, and teacher
Mrs. Murray Wilson; Recitations were
given .by Kathy Hallam, Terry Foran
Dougias'Dulnnt, Janice Foran, Cathy
Pura(, Ronnie McPhee; a number of
choruses; duet, Ronnie McPhee and
Randy Kerr; 'dialogue, Jimmy Moss,
Con Foran, Cathy Hallam, Ronnie Mc.
Phee; song by Randy Kerr, I''rank For-
an, Terry Foran, Ronnie McPhee, Con
Foran; dialogue, Ronnie Durniu, Ran-
dy Kerr, Cliff Hallam, Prank Foran;
fashion show with Ronald Durnln as
commentator, following boys fashioned
the styles, Ronnie 'McPhee, Jimmy
Aloss, Con Foran, Randy Kerr, Frank
Foran, Clifford Hallam. Santa arrived
and gave out. the 'gifts and candy,
l)EA'111Ib
BARRROWS, Russell ,1., 61, of Conces-
sion 13, AlcKillop 'Township, at IVinit-
ham General Hospital on Tuesday,
January 0, 1962. Lifelong resident
of AlcKillop 'I'otvnship, Survivors;
Wife, former Cora McCulcheotts sis•
ter, Mrs. Luella Marshall, Walton,
Al the D. A, Rant funeral home,
Brussels. Service Thursday at 2 p.m,
at Duff's United Church, Walton, 13u'•
hat Brussels Cemetery,
Wednesday, Jan, 10, 10112
LONDESBORO NEWS
(:'t.mlrtution Service was I,bst'rvetl nut
`tisilays lire. henry loose delivered
;,n impressive sermon "Fellowship at
ilcv. 1?tau 11111.:t:_in el
hly;It, and Nev. Ileory l''u,!:11 1i' II
clhatgc pulpits un Sunday, Iatn•'ry 11.
11rs. 1VIn• Ra^;ac,tt :,;)(111 sevrrai
da, last week with her tuclhcr, Ales.
fhou,.ts l'airscrvice.
Mr. \VIII. (;u1'it.r attended the funern
in 1 olld'tll on Sisittirday 1;f his niece
tit's. \\'tn. Bile, tt 'c I'I,; t IVnhaun!
rrmcr'.y of Lo:tt 3t oto, who pa:;: eft
att)ty on Wednesday evutin', Jaututt'y
:'i d, in Victur'a hospital, after r
lc;:si,tl►y illness. Sym; allty of the com-
munity is extended to her husband
daughter and sisters.
Mr. and Airs. 1ktt'old I)alryuple aid
'amity, of E(pnnndville, spent Satin'.
:lay evening with the latter's parents,
\Tr. and Alrs. Earl Gaud.
Ah. James 1lc(.'ool has spent the pas'
two weeks with his datrhter and fans
.1y, Ah'. and Ales, John Burr, of Hyde
('ark, the oceasion being the arrival
if a now granddaughter on Christina,-
!ay.
Sympathy of the community goes out
'o Airs, John ''ellen, brothel's and sks
iers, in the passing of John Vodden on
Thursday lnurn1ng in Clinton Publi
Hospital. John's cheery sniffle will bt
ulisscd by his friends in the village,
Guests for New. Vca's with )Ir. and
'Mrs. Robert IValson acre, Ah'. Wm
1
c
I
(soviet, \N's, Lily 1Vehsler, Mrs. Addi
un
and Mr, Harry Webster,
The °nurse Lodge No, 8(13 held their
regular meeting in the Lodge rooms on
lantvti'y 3rd. al 8.3o, Visitors; from the
Be'rave Ledge were present, After the
meeting adjourned a social hour was
spent.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Vodden and
family, of Paris, attended the funeral
of his uncle, John Vodden, on Saturday
and visited with Pert Shobhrook's for
the weekend,
11', 1. Meeting
The W. 1. he'd- their January sleet•
ins on Thursday. A New l'eaf's purist
was I'(sttl by 1110 111'0Sitl(a1t. '''Intl; -yl tr
cards were read from the shntins who
received Cartstnua treats from the W.
I. 11 was su ;.:('sled that the listen
'in the Parol 1' urun► radio 1n'o;trleasl on
Ihr' Cvc:Troia of f'ehrtcary .i, when ladies
id the W. 1. will he on the progra111. A
committee of 3 holies was appointed
to check nn the kifcttett ecµtilmon( in
the hill for nec,.Illll utensils, A W3.
flay et dressc3 w''ticlt were made and .
Iuode'.Ie l by 3 of the girls who attended
the instructions on "Focus on Pin.
Lilies," Airs, Tom Allen gave an inter-
esting chapter on the facilities and
benefits which hospitals a'ffcrd, Mrs.
.lint Mowatt gave a reading on "friend.
ship." 11rs, 11t.het't l"1irservice gave a
sp:endt(l New \'cars messa;'e. A short
course „Ilene Care of the Siek"-tau'!hl
by Miss Grace E. Hamilton, of the
Home Extension Service, will he held
in Ills 11011 on January 24:111, at I p.0t.
noel on 'Tuesday, January 2,I h, front
111 0.111. to 4 p.m, h:very::ody welcome
not restricted 11) W. 1. tiwnlhers. Those
interested please contact Mrs, Toni
Allen al an earl. date.
('ndet Olficet' Bob '''bon•:cisun,
Manitoba, is spooling a months \e'en-
tlon with Itis t•arcttts hare.
11'ESTI.'1ELI)
mi., Harvey MCDow'cII visited with
Mrs. Clifford Logan, Bclgi'ave, Suter.
clay evening.
Farm Vomit) was held Monday even-
ing ;it the home of Mr, Norman Mc.
Dowell, Auburn, with discussion on 4.1i
Sell/ices for Teen -risers. 13e'tet' leaders
was one of the biggest needs. Forum
will be held neat week at Mr. Harvey
McDowell; with discussion to be on
Farm Management.
Services were not held in 11'estiield
Church on Sunday clue to the first
heavy snow storm of the season.
�> Genuine
)AHUARY (LEARAH(E
SALE
CONTINUING AT
MADILL'S
R. 'W. IN!Ldi119S
SHOES --MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"'l'lle Store With The Good ''Tanners"
OTIC
TO CAR OWNERS
All car and truck owners in the village of Myth
are requested to refrain fom parking' on Village
Streets from 1 a.m. until 8 a.m., and anytime tltu'-
in, Snowplowing operations.
Persons failing to comply frith this request do ,so
at the risk of being liable for any vtlaivage,,caused
to their vehicle during allow plowing operatioltt3.
•
ANIONNIMINNOM
Signed,
FRED GREGORY, Chief of Police.
NOTICE OF ANNUAl, niPI:TING OF TIIC
fast Wawanosh Township
FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE
WILL BE d113LB ON
WEDI, )ANUARY 97th, 1962
IN BELGRAI'E ARENA ROOM AT 1.30
Purpose of Meeting:.
1. To receive fitratickil report.
'2. '1.'o elect directors for the ensuing year.
3. For the discussion of any other business which inty properly arise,
GUEST SPEAKER:
Alurrny Gaunt, CKNX Wingham,
A nteiltber of the Farm Union will also be present.
Mtn 1t. 'I'ayl(tr, President. Sinton IInllahan, Secretary,
,� ,..• .o.. .r.,.
Wednesday, allot, 10, 1062
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTII -- ONTARIO.
IN U RAN CF IN A LL BRAN CIi.ES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Siekiiis. Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability, Lil'e,
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and body repairs, glass,
Meering and wheel balance, Undaspray
for rust prevention,
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No, 0 11igilway, Phone JA 4.7231
Goderich, Oularie.
20•tf
AC111sSON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE
Farmers! Are you interested in
getting the hest and highest cash prices
for your dead, old or disabled horses
and cattle? 11 so, phone Atwcod, Zcniln
34900 (no toll charger or Atwood 350.
2622 collect, and ;'ire our company a
try. Seven clay service. License No,
183C61.
ItLY'111 BEAiJTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 1.13
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
Icor a First Class anti Satisfactory Joh
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 231312 Brussels, Ontario
P b':. W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
'logs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 162, Blyth
SANI'T'ATION Sh;It1'lt'is8
Septic 'Tanks cleaned and repaired.
13locked (halms opened with modern
equipment. Prompt ;service, Irvin
Cuxon, llilvcrlun, Telephone 254,
• lllf.
11'IcK I LL() i.' Al U'1'U A L
FIR 1NSU11AN(.1' CO.
!WAD OFFICE • SI:AF0RT1i, ONT.
OFFICERS:
i'resident — John L. Malone, Sea.
forth; Vice -President, John II. 111cEw
ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E
Southgate, Seaforlh.
l)IRE("1'ORS
J. i,. Malone, Seaforlh; ,1. It Mchw
ing, Blyth; 1V, S. Alexander, Walton,
Norman 'I'rewrarl.ha. Clinton; .1, E. Pep.
per, liruet-1'ield; C. W. Leonhard!,
13arnholnn; 11huller, Goderich; 11.
ArrWhald, Seaforlh; Allister 13roadfool,
Self orlh,
AGENTS;
William Leiper, Jr., Landcsbo'o; V
J. Lane, 11.11. 5, SeafurI11 Selwyn lla
ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaford.
llarold Squires. Clinton.
DR. R. W. S'I'REE'I'
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS-- 1 p.m, to 4:30 p,m.
EVENINGS:
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(BY APPOINTMENT)
ROY N. BENTLEY
roar, Accountant
(IODERiCii, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4-05'21 -- I3ox 478
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
(PT()M ETR iST
PA'i'RIC1 S'I', - \viN111IAM, ON'1'
(For Appointment please phone 770
Winghann).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
J. E.1;ongstaff, Optometrist
Seaforlh, Plume 791 •— Clinton
HOURS:
13eaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:(10 a nt, to 5:30 p.m.
Wr rl. -- 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 pan,
Clinton Office • Mondas, 0 • 5:30.
Poor I1U 2=7010
G. 11.' CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
_ Optometrist)
1►OiZ A1'POINTMF.NT Pi1ONE 13,
QODERICII 364
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
" Association
"W11EItl; BETTER BULLS ARE
USED"
Farmer owned and controlled
Service al Cost
l'hcice of bop and breed
Our artificial breeding service will help
you lo a more efficient livestock
operation
For service or more information evil;
Clinton 111J 2.9441. or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9.11650,
IBETTEIt CAr1'LIg FOIL BET1'Ell
LIVING
, CItAWFOB,l)
HETIIERINGTON
HARRI1i'TEUB 14 ElOLIC:iTORB
J, 11. Crawford, It, S, Hetherington.
RC. Q.C.•
VVInghan( and Myth.
IN BLYTII
EACi, THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Mirth, 104 Wit(ghattt, 4v
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to take this opportunity
to thank my many friends who remem-
bered Inc with cards and gifts al
Christmas, as I am unable to thank
Ihcnl peps Orally.
—Mrs. Annie Bernard, Iltu'on'ieww
Clinton, Ontario.
45.1
1
CARD OF THANKS
I would like lo thank my friends and
nc' .Id;ours who rcrllcnthcrl(I nut with
cards, gids and treats (luring the holi-
day sea;o:1. Your kindness will long be
remembered.
13.1p, --Mrs, Ai, Quinn.
PR01'ERTIi�S FOR SALE
WILFRED AIcINTEE
Ileal Estate Broker
WALKERTON, ONTARIO
Agent: \'ic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular snakes of
cleaners and polishers. Filler Queen
Sales, Varna, Tel. collect Ucnsall 696112.
50.13p.t1.
DEAL) STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST ('ASII ('RICES
PAID I-()11 SICK, DOWN 011
1)ISABI,ED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value
Old Ifo'ses—•le per pound
Phone called 133, Brussels.
BRUCE 11IAR1.,A'1''I'
011
GLENN GiBSON, Phone 1589, Myth
21 (lour Service
Plant Licence No. 54.11.1'.-61
Coleclo' Licence No. 110-661
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cesspools, ere., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
I31ake, phone 412W6, Brussels, JUL 2.
ti+ rNrNI.MNVN4.*
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 2 p.ui.
1V iII.S"I'it, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150111.
Juc Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager, Auctioneer •
05=tr.
'Y .r.f• 4,444r rr r r rwr.r..�
..
THE WEST WAWANOSII MUTUAL
1''11RE INSURANCE COMPANY
(lead Office, Dungannon
Established 1878
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President., Brown 5myl11, R.R. 2,
Auburn; Vice -President, person Irwin,
Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, R.II,
1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan.
Goderich; Ross McPhee, R.R. 3, Au-
burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John I''.
MacLennan, R.R. 3, Goderich; .Frank
Thompson, - RR, 1,, llolyrootl; Wm.
Wiggins, I1.11. 3, Auburn,
For hnfornlntkm on your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
411,
BINGO
Legion Bingo every Thursday nits
8:15 sharp, in Legion Hall, Lu cl(now,
12 regular gauges for $10.00; 3 share -
the -wealth and a special for $50.00 roust
go. (no limit 10 numbers). 4011
TYPE BLYTII STANi)ARD
•
CLEAVING
AUCTION SALE
of harm Stack and Implements
will he held 011
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1062
1 p.m,
one Mile suulh of Ilelgravc on IIijhway
No. 4
:Massey Harris hack'. 44, equipped
with a super (i 1011er; 3 furrow plough
'(i,usc(; John Dere 8 It. hinder, used
5 yrs.; John Deere cultivator, used
4 yrs.; International power mower; 111'
:crttatieral side delivery take; New
Idea manure spreader; Massey Ilarris
No. 11 eLLctric cream separator; Uni-
versal milking machine; rubber tired
wagcn, 16 ll, flat rack with half rack.
1800 bus. mixed grain; 20 ton loose
mixed hay; 1700 baled hay; 8 section.
roost pits, each section 6' x 2' x 14';
6 range she'le's,
12 Durham and holstein cows; 20
beef cattle, 2 years old, yearlin2s and
calves.
TERMS CASH
Cameron Walsh, Proprietor,
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer.
George Powell, Clerk,
45.1
IN MEMORIAM
C,1LI)WEL,'L—•1n fond and loving mem-
ory of a char husband, dad and
zrandr a, ,John Caldwell, who passed
away Iwo years ago, January 12, 1360
Loving and kind in all his ways,
Upright and ,hist to the end of his days
Sincere and true in his heart and mind,
Beautiful nlentcries he left behind.
—Always loved Lout sadly missed by
his wife, fanilly
and grandchildren.
FOR SAI.E
6 3') ar old 11olyletn r:•v', due in a
t(t'ck. ;1;; ly, Juhn Nonke,, 1:hone 57111;
I11yih. 4:;-1
IN AlElltlIHAAI
11(11O1 (i 1LL-...hl luvit ; tnetrery of
do u' hwh:lnrl and lathy'', J;'ti. 1V
\1t1)cu;all,
wit() 1•asscil away 1 yea:
a (;, J nnr'u'y 12, 11101.
Ile Lade no one 11 last farewell,
Ile said greti!-ye to neve,
The heavenly gates tyre opened,
A lot'in , wi rc r.airl "Come."
11'l1(2n tics 01 love are Ilro',eil,
Anil loved ones Lave to hart,
11 leave: a wound that never heals,
It loaves a broken heart.
lie had a nature you could not help
lcvhl*,
And a heart that was purer than gold,
And to tilde who knew him and loved
Mill,
Its tnctnory will never grew cold.
Rut ccnleday we hope to meet hon,
59111e (t)y we kiicw rot w\'he'i,
'I'o etas;: his hand in the hotter lana,
Never to part again,
—4 an iu, ly remembered and r-dly nli►,
sell by Inti \wife, Nolte, and fareTh..
4.i l p.
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT TiIE
Gul►EItJCH PARK TIIEATRE Phone JA1.7H11
NOW Pt:AYJNG
Thio'., Fri., Sal.. ,tan. 31, 12, I3—'fwin hill
Siewart (;ranger and Hayti 11arareel Iii "Secret Par'tner'."
plus a second feature "High School ('aesar,"
Mon„ Tuns., Wrti„ Jan. 171, 16, 17
Anthony Perkins • Gary Cooper • ,Marjorie Main
One of the hest good pictures, An all-time classic,
"F RIENDL YPERSUASION"
Ju Color
Thur., Fri„ Sat., Jan. 18, 19, 20—Twin 13311
Richard Boone and Luana Patten
Co-starred in an Arizona adventure with Apache Indian raiders.
"THUNDER OF DRUMS"
In Color
with "FIRST ROUND•L' ' featuring tate Little Rascals.
ION
Cnin!ng _.-"RING OF FIRE"—Adult Entertainment, with Joyce Taylor.
Walton News
Eduard Rey Douwan
F,rir','rd (key Don, -..:.an, 63, Wa't-)n
passed away early 'Tue_day lnoruiu;.
Janllaly 2, 1902, in Win_'ham (.genera;
llo:y i!.:Il. He had been in rating healL-,
for Ilio 1:1:,t two years and serio:lsly tl
4,1.1-g. for tldt l ;et weft( Frier to lis death
Beni in Morris '1'owushtg:, he was Pic
sou (3 the tate 'Thein;ts Deutan atm
Mary Cowan, and'gt;l his education i1;
131yl11 Continuation and Clinton Colle-
giate S;Iicols, A'. Dolt an spent most
ll It's lilyin Ilul'e t 1'' vi:s:'ip unli':
retiring l0 \Tallon in 1916. Ile is stn'
rived try his Hite. the former Eva An
(ICNQIl, 10 whom he married ,Rote 14
1924. Iic was a member of SI. George':
Anglican Church in .'';Plan. The burly
rested at the D. A. Rana func,':d hone
FOit SALE
While enamel stove, for coal or wood,
in good condition. Apply, fa. Vessels,
phone 151110, Myth. 45•lp
F011 SALT;
1leally \I'ushillg N1acl(ine, and, 'Tread-
le Singer Solving Machine, priced for
quick sale. Apply, Mrs, Eva Welbank,
phone 3907, Blyth. 45-1
CARD OF THANKS
Alay 1 lake this opportunity of thank-
ing all my kind friends for flowers.
Peals, cauls and letters, also Dr.
lilts, Dr. \Valuers, Hiss hila Young-
blul, R.N., and the .staff of the (lade -
rich Hospital for all their kindnesses
while 1 was a patient. All was deeply
appreciated.
I5 -1. --Airs. Tom Johnston.
DANCE
Sponsored by Clinton
1.0.0.1'.
Loldesboro Community hall.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12
Modern and Old Tynle
Dancing
Admission 50c each
Proceeds for Building Fund
FOIL SALE,
1!0:11 'and woad f(u'nace, in real good
condition, with air circulator and auto:
matte damper controls. l'houe 31.
Myth. 45-1.
FOR SALE
1iadies winter coal, dark green, size
40, worn twice. Apply, phone 56, Blyth.
45.1.
EUCHRE and 500 PAR'T'Y
Will be held on the Eastern Star
rooms, Blyth, at 8 p.m, on Friday.
January 12. Admission 50 cents,
43-1.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank the Blyth Lions Club,
the Women's Institute, the C.W.L. and
all her friends fof._the lovely cards and
treats received clueing the Christmas
Season. All were deeply appreciated.
--firs, Frank 13cninger,
FOR SALE
'fable potatoes, Apply, Jasper Snell
phone 351125, I3lyth. 45-2
FOR. SALE
Coleman floor furnace, \will tank, in
good condition, Apply Laurie Scott,
photo 1384, Blyth. 45.11).
NEW LOCATION (Clinton)
J. E. LONGSTAF1F, OPTOMETRIST
BEGINNING JANUARY Sth, 1962 CLINTON OFFICE WILL BE LO•
CA'I'ED IN C'LIN'roN MEDICAL CENTRE (Dr. Addison's Office)
New office will be equipped with complete set of instruments for.
examining eyes and filling glasses,
OPTICIAN—Oculist's prescriptions filled locally offers you convenience
when adjustment or repair needed,
Clinton Office:- Monday 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.nt,
Seafo'lh Office:- Balance of week.
1
. FOR SALE
SNOW BLOWERS
WITH IMPROVED FEATURES
CHOICE OF TWO MODELS
Made By
ALVIN WALLACE
PHONE 31111 BLYTII, ONTARIO
I31.
us:sc1s, 1111111 I" girl:ry afternoon when
funeral services trete conducted by
Rev. 11. L. Jet'nir':s, of Ft. John An;gii•
can Church. Burial IeIlrwrd in Bros
cls ('rmcIcry. 'fhu h;lllhcarct's were:
Stewart 11(10:::fhr;es, Dou;lns Ennis
Torrance bundas, Nelson Marks, harry
1101) •1. '1'l:ceras Shortreed.
f!i.u►ol Section No. 12 Aielci(lop was
cicscd L::d wveeh owing to the death 01
Mr•ti, ,Irhn ht:ai , of ll',wirlc 'I'ownrsnip
int Ibi t' of the teacher, Alps. James
Smith, of Grey Township,
A1r. I\'ilfred Dennis is a patient ir,
Ecot1 Memorial 1lospilal, Seaforlh.
Al's. 13, Achilles receival the sacs
news 4hal her brother, AaLti; AlcCal
lum, of California, U.S.A., had pas!
away during a fire (nl hoard shill las:
Thursday.
Mission Band will be held Sunday
morning, January 21, at 11 a.m,
Al'. Bussell Barrows passed away
early Tuesday morning after being
confined to his hoose for several
months.
Inaugural ,Mating
The inaugural meeting of the United
Church Women's orgallirallon was held
in the school ronin of Dud's United
Church Thursday afternoon, January
4 will( the minister lice. A. Jligginhotll•
ail, presiding. 'I'Itc devotional service
opened with silent meditation by all
mcnahcrs. The nnen'iug; hymn "Saviolrr
Let 1t Shepherd lead us," w followed
with the Lor'd's Prayer. The scripture
passage was taken fl'oin licro:ins 12:
1.13 and 1 verse of Chap. 1:1. A med.
'talioa entitled "Vision of Ile Future.'
The General Thanksgiving and General
Confession et Sin were recited by the
Inc-nrbera, folcww'ed with prayer by the
minister. hymn 427, "1 know not what
the future hath," was sung in closing
the devotional service. Mrs. Ronald
13enuel3 was appointed secretary for
the sleeting, Minutes of the last gen-
eral meeting were read by the lucre -
Lary, Mrs. 'l'. Dundas and W. A, secre-
tary, Airs, 11. Bennett, who reported
11 t families were rceeivieg the Ob-
server. Mrs, Gordon Mc'Gavin gave
a very full • report of the provisional
cinlnl'llec, The results of the nomin-
ating committee were read by Mrs.
Nelson Reid. These were discussed and
approved. The some nominating com-
mittee will function through the year
should any vacancies arise. The Ex-
cettive will be composed of the pre.'_i•
dents, secretaries and treasurer and
a'I conveucrs of committees. 'Tule
group accepted the constitution as laid
clown in the hand book. A duet was I
sung; by Mrs. Douglas Eraser and Mrs.
Rae Houston, accompanied by Mrs.
11. Brown. The following recommen-
dations as suggested by the provision-
al committee, was discussed, It was
decided to have a strict schedule for
each meeting as requested, such as
opening and closing on time etc. A
unified study fn each group and - the
boon; "Si_'ntlls rm. the Sixties," was
suggested and accepted for the gel•
(pal meeting and smaller pamphlets
for group meelin_s. All persons who
have paid 'heir fees by January I will
be charter members and will have
(heir names placid on the charter roll:
Mrs. Nelson Reid, the new president,
spulc0 of the responsibility involved in
her new office, but also felt highly hon-
oured as her aunt \was the first presi-
dent ul' the \V.21.S. when organized.
The annual Presbyterial Meeting • will
he held in Ontario Street United Church
Clinton ori January 24. An inaugural
service and meeting will he held. Del
IN 11E11O1(1111.
1rc1)OUGA1.I —hl loving ulcunlnry e.1 11
dear brother, James Mci)ou,iall,
was called Tonle January 12, 1961.
God took hint bene
11 was his Mil,
Hut in our hearts
Ile livellt still.
—Sadly missed and ahvtiys remem-
bered by brother, Norman, Alargareg
and family. 45.1
c'ates to this meeting v:ill be Mrs.
Doug Fraser and Airs. .Alwin AlcDon•
=lid. TIT Annual Cuagregatienal hoer l•
u(;, will be held 'Thursday evening, Jan -
wiry 13 at 8:15 p.m. when lunch will
be served of andwichcs and squares.
The 8th and 1101 group will prepare
the 11111011 and Walton group will tidy
up, F.0011 or;Tnizalton will present one
number. The secretary, Mrs. It. Ben•
nett, read a number of thank you
c1'''ds. The tr'easur'er, 'Airs. A, Coups.
grave 11 very gratifying yearly report.
The utfcr:n1 111(5 r'cciwcd by i21r. 1�.
Alcl)o'ald, flans were discussed to
entertain the mystery girls and mys-
tery mothers. The executive of the
W.M.S. were left to slake at'r1n160'
nrc:,ts. "Faviour again thy dear name
tve. rake," was sung and beundiclinn
pronounced. Inaugural ser\'icc will be
held Sunday nr:;rnir , January 14 du,'.
in..; the llnrr'lllg sc,vice. The officers
arc as Icll:.ws: president, Mrs. Nelson
Reid; fast vice -(resident, Mrs. Ern.
arson 21ilelle'1; 2101 viee•presidenl, Mrs.
Gordon 2k'Gavtn: 3111 vice-g;resitlenl,
\lis, Alvin Alel]oti:Ild; 4t1 vic'L'•presi•
'1011. Mrs. Roy 1Villiluu::on: eo:-respand-
I(Ig secretary, MI's. 'Torrance Dundas:
recording secretary, Mt's. Renal(' 1101•
'felt; Iry:usurer, Mrs. Kenneth 11cDen•
alit; assistant treasurer, Airs. Wilbur
I'urnbutl; sltwa1'dship convener, Mrs.
11dy Coin ts; Christ. an citizenship
.Mrs. Clifford Ritchie, . Mrs. (Martin
Baal', Mrs. George Lo'c;Christian ed•
1)0)3100, AIrs. W. Ilackwell, Mrs. James
smith, convener; community friend
flip, Mrs. Herb 'Praviss, Mrs, Les
Oliver, Mrs. Maud Lcemin,q, Mrs. C.
Wey; manse committee, Mrs. E, Stev
ens, Mrs. RRae. Houston, :Mrs. W. Bew
l;y, Mrs. 11. Craig; literature,
\V�atson, Mrs. N. Schade, Mrs. Jas, Mc.
Dr:tald: finance committee, Airs. Alvin
McDonald, firs, A. Coutts, Mrs, E.
Stevens, Mrs. Ken McDorald; mission
ory and mnintenancc, Mrs. Ken Me.
Donald; program committee, Mrs. A.
Higginbotham and four group leaders;
social function, Mrs. K. McDonald and
two from each group; supply and social
assistance, Mrs. Clarence Martin; press:
secretary, Mrs. George 1Vilhamson and
Mrs. IVm. Coutts; pianist, Mrs. Martin
Baan, Mrs. Wilbur 'Turnbull; nietubcr-
ship, Mrs. lion Bennett.
Morris School Board Meet
At tIic January meeting of Muria
School Board held January 4, in the
Township 11(311, James Elston was re-
elected Chairman and Ralph Shaw as
Secretary -Treasurer, for 1962,
Abilities of the December meeting
were read and approved on a motion
by 13. Elliott and R. Turvey.
Only five applications were received
for school caretaker's. 'These were ten-
tatively approved and trustees were
detailed to ar'r'ange for caretakers for
the other four schools.
Motion by R. 'Purvey and B. Elliott,
ihat trustees salaries remain uuchang'
cd.
;tenon by C. Maines and G. Nichol-
son, that pay for supply leachers be
$15.00 per (lay when sn employed. Alt's.
13. Gartriss and Mrs. Al. !blether to be
listed as supply leachers.
Payment of the following bills was
authorized:
Machu Hardware, $21.63; Snarling
(lard ware, 3.04; Alexander's Hardware
11.66; Manning & Sons, 34,37; Ontario
Trustee. Association, 311.25; Municipal
World, 4.31; If, Clark, 30.00; C. Souch,
5.00; C. White, 2,00,
At the February meeting nlem')ers
of the Board plan on visiting caclt of
the Township Schools. The date to be
set by the Chairman after consulting
Inspector Kinkead,
James Elston,
Chairman,
R. S. Shaw,
Secretary,
RING?
11 DO IT NOW
WITH A HOME IMPROVEMENT LOAN
Home Improvement Loans are available through
your bank under the National Housing Act for
alterations and repair's to the exterior or interior
of a home and for a wide variety of other improve-
ments. You may borrow up to $4,000 with up to
ten years to repay. These loans are also available
to the owners of rental properties.
111 DO iT NOW
WITH A FARM IMPROVEMENT LOAN
Farm Improvement Loans, backed by the Domin-
ion Government are available from your bank --
up to $7,500 at five per cent simple Interest and
up to ten years to repay.
These loans cover the purchase of all types of
faun equipment and Improvement to the farts
house and farm buildings.
111 DO iT NOW
WITH A SMALL BUSINESS LOAN
Enquire about Government -backed loans for
Improvements to small business establishments
through the chartered banks—up to $25,000 and
up to ten years to repay.
For advice and assistance, cell your
local National Employment Office
Issued by authority of Hon, Michael Starr,
Minister of labour, Canada
Those IQ Tests
Are They Any Good?
There is a growing suspicion
among American educators and
Parents that we have gone to
an extreme in our faith in or-
ganized testing. From early
school years to college entrance,
our children and young people
etre made to face batteries of tests
that are supposed to measure
heir intelligence, their abilities,
their achievements, and their
possible success. Of urgent inter-
est, therefore, is the vigorous arti-
cle by John Kord Lagemann in
the December PTA Magazine,
"Let's Abolish IQ Tests,"
The subject is frankly contro-
versial. The PTA Magazine in-
vites ''Opinions by Post," The De-
cember Reader's Digest is carry-
ing a condensation under the
title, "Lets Look Again at Those
IQ Tests." There is bound to be
a wide reaction,
Outside the United States, we
are told, only Great Britain
makes extensive use of standard-
ized tests to grade and classify
talent. "Many countries, includ-
ing the Soviet Union," Mr. Lage-
mann says, "have considered
them and rejected them com-
pletely."
It is common knowledge
among educators that children
who test with an average or low
IQ get different educational
treatment throughout their
school years from those who test
high, "A low IQ may exclude him
from the opportunity to discover
and develop his talents," the arti-
cle says, "He may score low be-
cause he can't read well, and
then be hampered in his chances
to learn to read well because he
has a low IQ. Scores that are
designed 'average' may give him
an image of himself as an un-
promising person, and he may
act accordingly."
The article lists and discusses
some of the "fundamental de-
fects":
Unreliability: Scores vary er-
ratically; within a six-month pe-
riod a child has scored as gifted
and merely average. Inaccuracy:
A whole classroom takes them
at once. They are short, about
half an hour, and contain only a
limited number of short ques-
tions, Therefore, the answers to
BOOK BONANZA—Forgetful
Chicago and North Western
Railway commuters "donated"
more than 1,000 paperback
books to Chicago area hospi-
tals. Dawn Runge stacks the
books which have been collect-
ing dust in the railway's Lost
and Found department.
a few of these, according to the
article, make a big difference in
the score; yet much depends on a
child's motivation when taking
the test.
Statistics have indicated that
IQ tests favor children of well
educated parents, For example,
In prosperous suburbia, where a
child's home environment ex-
poses hint to books, magazines,
conversation, and cultural inter-
ests, one out of four children
scores above 125, while in poor
neighborhoods only one out of
16 does so. Thousands of bright
youngsters whose home environ-
ment is culturally negative are
deprived by low IQ ratings of a
chance at college and college
scholarships, writes Millicent
Taylor In the Christian Science
Monitor.
Cited as the worst wrong this
mass testing does to children —
and serious for the future of the
nation — is that "tests favor the
conformist over the creative
mind." Mr. Lagemann gives this
example: "When asked to define
language, a high IQ student
wrote, 'It is a form or manner of
expression.' A high - creativity
student wrote, 'Language is the
window through which we see
experience,' an answer that would
never get by in a standardized
test,"
"What an. aptitude test (and
this includes IQ tests) does mea-
sure is the quality of a pupil's
performance in a number of
mental tasks," says Dr. Henry S.
Dyer of the Educational Testing
Service. The score "tells how
well he can cope with tasks like
those on the test at the time he
takes the test, and it tells noth-
ing more."
A group of top scientists were
asked to evaluate a list of 28
specific mental abilities and rank
them according to their impor-
tance in scientific research, Their
number one was "the ability to
abondon conventional problem -
solving methods that have be-
come unworkable and to think
of an original solution," (An ex-
ample of this was to put the eye
in the point of a needle and make
possible the invention of the sew-
ing machine.) This ability is not
measured by IQ tests, Another
was the ability to recognize prob-
lems — once defined by Einstein
as "inability to accept the ob-
vious."
Similar to IQ tests are the ap-
titude tests, most of which are
of the "multiple choice" type —
that is, the child must choose one
of several proffered "solutions,"
If he does not get a certain num-
ber of "right" answers it is as-
sumed that he will not do well
in college.
There is much more in the
article than I have space to
share here. A visit to your pub-
lic library or school to read it in
full in the PTA Magazine can be
rewarding. The Reader's Digest's
able condensation is also worth
your perusal,
A final quote on the defects
Mr, Lagemann sees in standard-
ized IQ tests: ". , , they favor
one limited kind of intelligence
— the kind that is fast and sharp
and knows the correct answers—
while they discriminate against
such central aspects of intelli-
gence as imagination, creativity,
insight."
Modern Etiquette
13y Anne Ashley
Q, I have been invited to a
wedding enc' reception, and the
bride says I can bring my boy
friend with Inc. Should he send
a gift, or would it be proper for
hien to share the cost of mine?
A, I -Ie is not expected to do
either of these.
Z96I — 2 IflSSl
GOES AFTER CAMERAMAN FOLLOWING TRIAL -- Dr.
Albert L. Weiner, 44 -year old osteopathic physician con-
victed on 12 counts of manslaughter in the hepatitis deaths
of a dozen patients, lunges at photographers in Camden,
N. J. At upper left Is Weiner's wife, Helen.
TiNY CHAPEL—This sidewalk in Falmouth, Cornwall, Eng-
land, squeezes through a narrow passage under the famous
Chapel of Gyllyngdune, which was built in the 19th century.
HRONICLES
i1NGERFARM
Gv¢ndol[ne D. Clark¢
As you know, every year on
the Saturday before Christmas,
the National Hockey League,
puts on what is known as
"Young Canada Night." To us it
points up the changes that have
taken place over a period of
years, When we first started
listening to hockey broadcasts It
was from a second-hand battery
radio, with Foster Hewitt calling
the game, Then came the year
when, as a special attraction for
Young Canada Night, Foster had
his young son come to the mi-
crophone and take part in the
broadcast, Bill was then about
eight years old, Obviously Bill
took a genuine interest in hock-
ey so the time cane when he
also became an announcer for the
hockey games, not replacing his
father but supplementing his ac -
TV Turtle Hassock
I y f4WLA%At
Protect the furniture and de-
light youngsters with this gay
cushion that's perfect for TV!
Use thrifty scraps — the
brighter, the better — for this
plumply padded TV turtle, Pat-
tern 504: pattern pieces; direc-
tions for 151/2.x19 -inch cushion.
Send Tl1IRTY-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
evert Pages, pages, pages of fash-
ions, home accessories to knit,
crochet, sew, weave, embroider,
quilt, See jumbo -knit hits, cloths,
spreads, toys, linens, afghans plus
free patterns. Send 250,
Ontario residents must include
10 Sales Tax for each CATA-
LOG ordered. There is no sales
tax on the patterns.
tivities, That is to say Foster
broadcasts by radio and Bill on
television. This last Young Can-
ada Night marked another mile-
stone in the Hewitt family. Bill's
young son also took part in the
broadcast just as we remember
his lather did many years ago.
No doubt it was a proud night
for Grandpa Iiewitt, and most
certainly a family record in con-
tinuous broadcasting.
That brings back to mind the
early days of radio. I remember,
back on the farm, when we had
our first radio, It was a big
cumbersome affair, and of course,
it_ was battery operated. It had
a number of knobs that had to
be adjusted every time we turn-
ed it on and then often it would
squeal and whine until some-
times we couldn't hear any pro-
gram at all. Worse still were the
times when the battery, without
any warning, would give up the
ghost. That necessitated a trip
to town to get the battery re-
charged — and in winter a trip
to town often meant going in by
horse and cutter, or team and
sleighs. A few years later we
got a smaller, more compact
radio, We did get better recep-
tion but we still had to depend
on batteries as it was long before
the time that we had hydro in-
stalled at the farm.
What a difference electric pow-
er makes in a home! Almost at
once we got an electric radio—
no batteries to worry about, just
occasionally a tube would burn
out and had to be replaced, Now
radio and television sets have
been improved to such an extent
that only occasionally do they
give any mechanical trouble.
Which is marvellous when you
think of the use — and abuse —
they receive, with children turn-
ing the controls on and off, this
way and that, with both radio
and television. What would hap-
pen if youngsters today were
faced with the same conditions
that were prevalent in the 'thir-
ties — no television and radios
in only a few homes? Who is to
say which period encourages the
better personalities. Certainly
children a generation ago were
more creative — less dependent
upon commercial toys and en-
tertainment,
What tvould mothers of pre-
schoolers do today without TV?
In dozens of holies you hear the
salve story — "Conte on, now —
eat up your breakfast then you
can watch 'Popeye"' 'Television
to young mothers is as good as
a part -lime baby-sitter.
Well now, for you people who
read this column, Christmas is
now a thing of the past, We, on
the other hand, have another two
days to go before the big day
arrives, For you it is a time for
catching your breath again, You
can now collect all those lovely
Christmas cards, put them into a
box until the beginning of next
December, Then you will bring
them out - once more and go
through the sante ritual all over
again. That is all part of Christ-
nhas.
I was talking to Daughter this
morning and she said they got
their greatest kick out of taking
the boys to do their own shop-
ping, They each took money
from their penny boxes to buy
presents for Grandpa and Grand-
pa and for their cousins, Ross
and Cedric. Dee took then to
Woolworths and they were al-
lowed to choose the presents
themselves. Dave had two dol-
lars to spend but what he picked
out came to just over four dol-
lars so he went after his Dad to
make up the difference! His
father allowed him an extra dol-
lar but also insisted that some of
the things must be put back on
the shelves. Naturally that was
to make him understand the
value of money.
We generally think that chil-
dren have too many presents and
take too much for granted, But
apparently, given the opportun-
ity, they get just as much pleas-
ure out of giving as receiving.
And that is something that
should be encouraged.
Well, Happy New Year, every-
body, See you again next week.
Little Plane That
Flew By Itself!
Eddie Remington, a large, mild
man who operates restaurants in
three towns scattered up and
down the Sacramento Valley,
was annoyed one day last month
when he got to the municipal
airport in Chico, Calif., and
found the battery dead in his
four -passenger Tripacer, Rem-
ington had to get to Marysville,
50 miles to the south, and check
on his restaurant operation there,
"I turned on the switches, set
the throttle, printed it, climbed
out and chocked the wheels, and
then started to crank it," he said,
The engine started with a full-
throated roar and the light plane
leaped out of the wheel chocks.
"1t came right for mc," Reming-
ton said, Iie jumped aside and
clutched desperately at the pilot-
less machine, first at a wing strut
and then at the tail, "When I
realized I was becoming air-
borne," he went on, "I became a
little panicky, I just let go,"
Aloft before it had gone 500
feet, the plane climbed graceful-
ly in two big lazy circles and
vanished into a cloud layer at
1,000 feet. Remington, scratched
and bruised from his fall on the
'OUT'S SALVES
"Out of the sack, Sir Slugt
bed, Thin) is Monday,
'not Sunday!"
runway, marveled: "Il flew just
as though someone was in it,"
And then the official flap set
in. Remington notified the Fed -
era) Avialton Agency, the Air
Force, the Butte County sheriff's
office. Frantic authorities cal-
culated that the craft, fully, fuel-
ed, would fly three to four hours
before exhausting one tank of
t asolin;: and then, hopefully,
would be unable to switch over
to the other, Meanwhile, Pacific
Air I.,in; held up a southbound
flight out cf Medford, Ore. The
Ait' Force kept a 13-52 bomber
wailing high over Beale Air
Force Base for an how' for fear
it might meet up with the pilot-
less plane on the tray down.
They might have saved them-
selves the trouble; the plane had
simply vanished, Radar units to
the south at Beale and to the
north at Red Bluff picked up not
one blip of it. No commercial
plane spotted it, Nobody report-
ed a crash, Presumably it will
turn up one day in the northern
California mountains.
But it will be a long time be-
fore Remington shakes off that
feeling of fritsh'ation when he
saw it fly away—the raging
frustration that all men feel
when they have been outwitted
by a machine. ''All I could think
of was 'crash and burn, y.0
s.o.h.'," he said.
DRIVE WITH CARE i
Soft and Slimming
Pis INi no PATI I:tiN
4970
SIZES
14?-24ti
A touch of the unusual — tiny
gathers soften a face • framing
collar. This style is so flattering
to short, fuller figures, you'll
love it for day 01' night.
Printed Pattern 4970: Half
Sizes 141/2, 161, 181/2, 201/2, 221/1,
241/2, Site 161 requires 4' yards
39 -inch fabric.
Send FiFTY CEN'T'S (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for,safel3') for this pattern.
Please print p1 a i n 1 y SIZE,
NAME, A 1) f) R E S S, STYLE
NU111MR,
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
lc Sales Tax for each CATA-
LOG ordered. There is no sales
tax on the patterns.
•
r.: � 4• t , :;.4 ;. .:., ,>.: `--�•''• r - x t w , .gid..
IKE IN DISNEYLAND—Former President Eisenhower, accompanied by Mrs. Eisenhower
(left), a carload of grandchildren and other members of his family, tips his fire hot to
the crowd as he drives a fire truck during a visit to Disneyland at Anaheim, Calif,
When Wild Geese
Fly Back North •
The April migration of Lha:
gcere, snow gee:.c, l,nd whistling
swans through Traverse County
In western Minnesota draws
many hired watchers from the
'r vin Cities to witness a unique
and thrilling spectacle. The
marshes in this region afford an-
nual resting and feeding stations
for from ten to two hundred
thousand of the great birds on
their way from the Gulf of Mex-
ico to the arctic tundra where'
they breed,' For a few spring
days the skies are laced with the
long, wedge-shaped strings of
flying birds, and the marshes are
filled with the rustling and beat-
ing of wings, and the honking of
many Voices, Against a vivid
sunset sky the orderly concen-
tration of flying birds, and the
swooping and alighting in dark-
ening marshland can he a sight
lo remember all one's life.
After a few day; the handsome
birds vanish as mysteriously as
thye come, llow they return to
the South in the fall is not cer-
tainly known, but, like the gold-
en Mover, they probably make a
nonstop flight down the East
Oast to the Gulf. Certainly there
is no concentration in the fall
cotiir,rable to the nia=> flights of
the spring.
Sometimes 0 stray wedge of
geese will fly over the Twin
Cities, but the wild ducks are
.seen much more commonly near
urban areas than are the wild
geese. In fact many wild clucks
have become tame residents of
the city lakes, On Lake Cornelia,
in a newly settled area near
Southdale in Minneapolis, the
property owners began to feed
and tame the wild ducks that
cane to the lake, , . Now the area
is almost overrun by affection-
ate mallards and canvas -hacks
which nest at the edge of the
rose gardens and tramp, quack-
ing and scolding, across the lawns
to solicit food at the kitchen door.
The ducks enjoy the life of ease
so much that they would rather
not bother to fly South for the
winter.
Last winter an interested ob-
server reported to the newspaper
that he had seen on Lake Harriet
not only hundreds of mallards
and canvasbacks but American
goldeneyes, black ducks, gad -
walls, redheads, and blue bills
swimming around in water which
was kept open by body heat and
constant motion, while the ice on
parts of the lake was several
Inches thick. Residents of the
area provided bushels of shelled
corn and even shoveled paths
through the snow to make life
easier for their wild friends, —
From "The Twin Cities," by
Carol Brink,
Q. Can you suggest a decorat-
ing idea that will help to "lower"
an old-fashioned, high-ceilinged
room?
A, You can make the ceiling in
this room appear lower if you'll
paint the walls a dark color, the
ceiling a very light or white.
MERRY MENAGERIE -.
tatfastg;T 11.2e
"Albert wants to be a
submarine:"
THEY NOSE EACH OTHER — Jimmy Durante and former
Vice President Richard Nixon were the center of attraction
as they met nose -to -nose at the Hollywood premiere of the
film, "Judgment at Nuremburg,"
Snowstorms Don't
Keep On Schedule
- One, particularly in Maine,
should never presume about the
weather, It may well happen
that by the time 1 have penned
this lament, and sealed it in an
envelope, 1'11 have to wade
chest -deep in new -fallen snow
to mail it. But in late years
nothing like that has happened,
and there has definitely been a
thinning clown of our Christmas
climate,
Along about the second week
in December the spirit moves
nhe, and I draw an edge on the
ax and wander up into the
woods after o u r Christmas
greens, I first did this in the
days of horse, when we'd startle
the beast, who hadn't done any-
thing since the turnips were in,
by leading him forth to be at -
Cached to the pung. He thought
he was going to take things easy
all winter, and the first thing
he knew he had a jingle -hell
on his hames and was off in
gay holiday spirit with a pack
of youngsters calling the plays,
By the 'time my own children
were joining this we had a trac-
tor, but otherwise the errand was
the same.
But what I wanted to say is -
that we always did this with
considerable snow on the ground,
Enough for the pung, and often
with the .tractor we'd have to
break a road where the drifts
were deepest with a shovel, The
snow would pack up under the
housing and the wheels would
spin, and we'd drive back and
forth two -three times to tread
things down,
Right now, by contrast, the
ground isn't even frozen. There
are places in the wood road I'd
have to.skirt wet spots that dry
out fn summer and freeze over
in winter. Spring and fall we
don't go that way much, so I've
clever tried to haul in rocks, A
, SAIL -PLANE --A small drone version of the experimental
Flex Wing aircraft is being investigated by the U.S. Marine
Corps at its desert facilities at Twenty -Nine Palms, Calif,
The plane would be powered by a gasoline engine in the
rear. Launched by troops in the field, it would serve as a
reconnaissance or spy plane, Like its larger counterpart,
• the drone has a "wing" 'of fabric and is a light armful
for Ryan Aeronautical Co. employe Cecil Craigo to carry.
tractor can get mired in these
places the wrong time of year,
huh December ought to be =afe.
A worm fancier told me one time
that if 1'd follow his practices
a few worms would quickly
remedy this swampy condition,
but I'm no hand to lay out work
for others,
So, from long ago we'd rig in
mittens, boots and earlappers,
usually taking the snowshoes.
The air would be crisp and
sharp, and we'd churn up over
the hill and down through the
hardwood to the black growth
beyond. In the really older days
I tear there was a utilitarian
complexion to this, for fence
posts were in demand, A Christ-
mas tree and a few garlands
made the excuse, and permitted
frivolity, but the farm could al-
ways use a pile of fir poles any-
way, •
I still bring back all the poles
I can, because they are still use-
ful, but the tree itself is the mo-
tivating purpose now, Around
amongst the pines and hemlocks
and spruces we'd hunt out the
firs, known also as balsams, and
the best and bushiest was to
adorn our hearthside, We'd al-
ways get a half dozen or so be-
sides, to hand to friends, and
over the years certain friends
have made a habit of this, We
stand them in the dooryard, and
if they don't like 'what we've
cut they can harrow the ax and
go get their own. The fir is a
fast-growing tree, not too val-
uable as 'either pulpwood or tim-
ber, and it's good for pineland
to thin them out,
Then we always cut some big-
ger firs, lop the limbs off, and
bring the tips back for gar-
lands and wreaths; Some years
we've joined the commercializ-
ed aspects and sold such, al-
though I always felt snaking
wreaths was a slow way to get ,
rich. After lopping off the limbs
we'd bring the pole home — if
you don't use it for a fence
post, a prop, a pry, you can al-
ways saw it into stovewood.
So, we'd wander around in the
snow, and whenever we drove
the ax into a tree the shock
would loosen all the snow on the
limbs, and we'd get a shower,
Right now the firs are standing
up there as snowless as they
were last August, and I can't
feel exactly Christmasy without
the shrieks that, in former ,years,
went up Os the snow came down,
As I cut the limbs off the down
tree, the children would carry
the branches to the trailer, and
afterward they would grab on
and help me bring out the pole.
A .green fir trunk, even if not
too big, can be quite heavy. so
while I took the thing a -balance
in 'the middle they would pick
up each end, and the way lever-
age works I would be carrying
the whole thing, Once in a while,
naturally, I would sag off, leav-
ing them with the whole weight,
and they'd go down in the snow,
log and alt, and accuse me of
guile. There isn't much I think
of that makes more fun than
gathering greens with the young-
sters,
No doubt we could get all we
wanted in an hour, and be home,
but we had to make the job last
through dinnertime. We'd start
a little fire and toast our sand-
wiches, fix some hot cocoa, and
yarn our apples. Then we
could ride`home singing "Deck
the Halls," and hatch to .set' if
they were watching us from the
house. All this, mind you, v'as
done in. snappy winter weather,
with ice fringing the open spring
by the sugar house, where we
always stopped for a •drink. The
long,.blue shadows ,on' the snow
set off -the red house as', ,we
, topped the rise by the pasture
bars and started downhill for the.
.dooryard, Often the woodsmoke
•from the chimney would, be go-
ing straight up' into the sky. But
.sometimes a .brisk wind would
whip the ashes and maples along
: - CLASSIFIED ADVERTgS!NG -
BABY CHtCKI
•
b1lAY has 0-I8 week old Ames and
other good pullet varieties, Order now
and flet r hexad start un egg prodnetien
(or 1962. (troller chicks also available,
Day olds to order. See local agent, or
write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North,
Hamilton, Ont.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
IIILLiAI(DS, lunch counter, two apart-
ments, 56,000. Going concern. Lawrence
Walsh, Drayton, Ont: ' •
I'OOL room and equipment for sure,
4 5'x10' snooker tables; 1 4'x0' Illus•
ton table, All in good condtllen. 'No
opposition Lease. Apply to Gerald
Keller, Marine, Ont„ Phone 613.473.2968.
the lane, the limbs threshing at
tis, and often we would hear
111esqueaks,
Anyway, my sporty neighbor
was in last night and told of two
birdies he had in a round of
golf, and he said it was wonder-
ful weather for golf. The fields
are bare, the grass is green, the
ground is soft, robins still linger
in the lilacs and the ducks still
swim in the open pond. Every-
thing is fine, except that I must
go get a Christmas tree, and, it
isn't Christmas tree weather, To
each his own, and I trust you
may receive what you want the
most; for my Christmas present
1'd like to get a blizzard. A
good Christmas - tree - cutting
snowstorm that would seem like
tittles gone by, — By John Gould
in the Christian Science Moni-
tor,
Dreamville, U.S.A.
And if this doesn't leave you
muttering to yourself:
A golf club in Blair, Nebr,, for
years rented to farmers 14 acres
of ground not needed for its fail' -
ways.
Last year club officials enlarg-
ed the course and took the 14
acres back,
"Then," reports Sen. Young
(D -Ohio), "most unexpectedly,
the golf club received a Govern-
ment check for taking out of
production land previously plant-
ed to corn. The amount was
$288,"
You say it,
—Rocky Mountain News
(Denver)
How Can 1?
By Roberts Lee
Q: flow can I remove grease or
oil stains from wallpaper?
A. Make a paste of cornstarch
and water, apply, let remain on
until dry, then brush off. If this
doesn't work to your satisfaction,
try a paste of fuller's earth and
carbon tetrachloride. Use in the
same manner,
Q. How can I preserve soft
rubber goods?
A. Suspend these articles, or
rest them on a rack, several
inches from the bottom of their
enclosure, in which place a small
quantity of kerosene. The vapor
will prevent cracking without in-
juring the rubber:
Q. How can I keep the bright
bands of metal on my kitchen
sink and counters from staining
my apron black?
A. By touching up these metal
bands with some colorless lac-
quer, or with colorless fingernail
polish.
Q. ilow can I prix a wallpaper
paste?
A. Add one tablespoon of pow-
dered alum to one quart of water.
Sift flour into the water, stirring
constantly, until it has acquired
the consistency of dough. Then
pour in boiling water until the
paste turns; then dilute to the
desired consistency, if a little
creosote or carbolic acid is add-
ed, it will prevent decomposi-
tion,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
1)ON"I auv stock 10 vendtttgUluild u p
your omit company! Ambitious and fl
nunclully responsible sten can get luta
vending now on a full lime or part time
oasis A once• n -a IR'etlme opportunity
to earn u good Income and get a good .
return on your Investment. Let us start
you in a business tailored to your
needs Send detalis to "'tailored In.
vestments" 2110 BuY SL, Toronto, Suite
103 or phone 239 7378,
OPPORTUN ITY:
For alert keen salesman.
To associate with successful
OiRDINARRY AGENCY,
REQUIREMENTS:
1. Desire to work •
2 Presently employed
3. Age 28. 45 — own car
4. Marriot preferred
8. Al•references
6. Resident of area
OUR RESPONSIBILITY:
1. To train you for your career
2 To give you guidance, d4rectbon
and assistance In the field
3. To provide you with all welfare
benefits, including contributory
pension
4 Ta maintain your standard of
living until you become estab-
Ilshed In our industry
If you are desirous of establishing
yourself in the Sales and Service field,
we Invite you to write us, in confl-
dente, giving full details of your ex•
perfence, marital status, education and
any relevant information.
• RUX 2411, 123 • lllth STREET
TORONTO 14, Ont.
FARM HELP WANTED — MALE
MARRIED or single rnen for Jersey
and beef Bruce County farm. Separate
house on highway with ifydro and
bath. Hoard for single men. Top wages,
good working conditions, workmen's
compensation. State privileges, wages
for winter end summer, names of at
least two previous employer. Must he
good with cows and machinery. Imme-
diately or January second. David Jef-
frey, North Ilruce, Ont.
•
FARMS FOR SALE
200 ACRE Dairy Farm with Milk Quota
for sale 2 modern 8•room homes, two
sets of farm buildings, good drilled
well, hydro, well drained, 20 acres of
good Wish. Close to St. Thomas, with
school 11/2 miles and 'church 1 mile,
For lurther informntlon apply Mr,
Donald Soper, RR No, 2, St. Thomas,
Ontario. This advertisement Is pub•
llsed free as one of the many benefits
of: The Allied Farm Services (Canada),
P,0 Box 1029, London, Ontario,
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
NEW TYPE HAYING MACHINE
CUTS LABOUR IN HALF
LUNDELL•MAYNARD three-In•one flail
type processor, 00 -inch cut; cuts, con-
ditions and wlndross all In one opera-
tion. Write for prices and Information,
C. E. Maynard Wholesale, Schomberg,
Ont,
GUNS FOR SALE
GUNS
MODERN OR ANTIQUE
BOUGHT—SOLD EXCHANGED
EXPERT REPAIRS—PARTS SERVICE
Poly -Choke Installations
TRADE DISCOUNTS
MONTHLY CATALOGUE 25e'
The Modern Gun •Shop
"CANADA'S GUN ROUSE"
3006 DANFORTH AVE„ E. TORONTO
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY
TOY Pomeranian Kennel Also lovely
home with same for sale. Owner re.
tiring. Good income, Write: Box 152,
Crystal Bench, Ontario,
MEDICAL
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching scalding and burning ecze•
ma acne. ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema Ivitl respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St Clair Avenue East
TORONTO
PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE
GOOD RESULTS FROM TAKING
DIXON'S REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC
PAINS AND NEURITIS,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
MUSIC
LEARN to play the piano in 6., weeks
with Symprovised Music, Details Free
write P.0. Box 873, Montreal, Que,
NUTS FOR SALE
PECAN MEATS --New crop, bulk prices:
Extra large halves $1.10 lb, 30 -pound
eases, F013 Camp Ing. Broken pieces,
$1.00 lb„ 30-ppund cases, FOB. Add 254
1b, for 3•pound boxes, postage psfld.
Money refunded If not satisfied, Howell
Orchards, Camp Hill 1, Alabama (USA).
NURSING HOMES
BLUE Lodge Nursing Home. Kindly
trpl7l d nursing Good food, licensed,
265 flay 'Sr, I1nmllton, Ont JA 7 2652.
GOLDEN YEARS Rest home, 104 Brant
Ayr;_ Brantford. Member Associated
Nursing -Homes, Kind competent care
for your loved ones. Moderate rates,
PH, 752.51159
OPPORTUNITIES- FOR
— ' ' • MEN'AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER --
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn IJalydressing
Pleasant dignified profession. good
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
1Vrite or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St W•, Toronto
Branches:
44 King St W., !Winton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED, guaranteed, mailed in plain
bparcel, including catalogue and sex
ook free •,vtth trial assortment. 18 for
$1.0Box2,
c4•TPFtReg naWestern
SaskD(strlbu•
tors,
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR RENT
ATTENTION DENTISTS
NEWLY remodelled dental . offices of
the late doctor tor rent on main street
In Landon, Ontario. Complete equip•
ment in for 2 to 3 dentists sharing.
Also workshop completely equipped for
dental mechanic. Please apply to Mr.
Ellett', 533 Dundas St., London.
SALESMEN WANTED
TOP FLIGHT SALESMEN.-
For
ALESMEN•For directory cover promotion in West-
ern Ontario. Must be mature, have
proven sales record, bondable, have
own car and capable of high earnings.
Salary while training, Personal inter-
view will be given to applicants wt.,.
have above qualifications. Apply to Box
247, 123 16th Street, Toronto 14, Ont.
STAMPS
FIIEE' 110 Worldwide Stamps with Ap-
provals. 'Thousands Ilegidners' Bargains
2f. each! Advanced Collectors' Selec-
tions. Accessories, Packets, Albums.
Argent Stamp, 52 Bonnechere, Scar-
borough, Ont.
SEED FOR SALE
RUSSELL OATS
ONTARIO'S newest and most outstand-
Ing oat, outylelding Garry and Rod-
ney by 6 and 9 bus. per acre this year,
with shorter straw, thinner hull and
bigger grain, Ask your own dealer to
get Russell or any of our other seeds
for you, front us. Alex M. Stewart &
Son Ltd , Seed Grain Specialists, Ailsa
Craig, Ont •
SWINE FOR SALE
GOVERNMENT approved Yorkshire
Boars, Low • feed consumption, long
$atop type. Also Young' Sows and
Boars. Apply to Morris W. Shellard,
R 6. Galt, Ont. •
ISSUE 2 -- 1962
MAN OF PEACE — Commem-
orating the late Dog Hommar-
skjold's self-sacri ficing achieve-
ments in behalf of world peace,
the Hammorskjold Fund in
Stockholm has issued this
special medallion, The front
has a relief of the late U.N.
secretary-general; the reyerse,
the emblem of United Nations.
TALK::ABOUT GAS MILEAGE—This car g,es a long w.ay on a thimbleful of gasoline --
if somebody pushes it. The car has no engine no trcn:mission. They were removed by •
'ca'r•strippers working in Forth Worth, •Tex. Tile c:r ;,;-'s 14;',n from a dealer's lot aid,
after recovery, cot salesman Cleston M',ra s ,n.'S used to be. The car had
been driven but seven miles wlett=stdalr.-----•'•• - • ~~ ---
PAC's t�
.�. u ...«-:..1....K.w. «1•wwv 46 4. 14•41.114.44...........n..14.1. +..1..r
"WEEKEND SPECIALS"
CHEERIO PORK & BEANS,
8-15 oz. Tins
LIBIBY'S FANCY TOMATO JUICE
3.20 oz. Tins
SWIFTS PREMIUM CORNED) BEEF
12 oz. Tin
CHEERIO, REA DI TO EAT OAT CEREAL
Large Pkg.
D1 LSEY'I'(1lLET TISSUE, Pink otivltile
2 Doll Pkg.
DUNCAN IIIN ES CAKE MIXES
3 Large Pkgs.
KRAFT JAM, JELLY, HONEY
3 Jar Pkg.
MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE
2-6 oz. Jars $1.89
•
89e
►r
'17c
27eM
27e
$1.00
lV's, •
For Superior Service
Phone 156
1.111111
•••
See Fairservice
We Deliver
Farmers' Union Hear Health Minister
The re! ulallons of the Ontario Hos-
pital Services Commission will not be
el anged to include Registered Nursing
Homes, Dr. Dymond, Munster of
Hoalth, told a delegation of Huron
County Farmer's Union in Toronto re-
cently. The Toronto meeting was re•
quested by the Minister of Health to
further discuss a Resolution followed
by a Brief previously presented by the
Huron County Farmers' Union request.
ing that Hospitalization Insurance Ben•
efits be made available to Patients of
Licensed Nursing Homes which meet
the requirements of Government reg.
ulations.
The Farm Union Group cited instate
ces where hospital accomodation was
not available to sick persons because
of crowded conditions in local hospitals.
The $fief contended that ,some hos.
pita! patients could he adequately ear;
er for in Licensed Nursing' Homes al
considerable less cost and also releave
the critical hospital bed shortage. This
Union Group stated that, many elderly
persons who pay hospibalization pre.
!Mums are unable to secure hospital
accomodation when they are ill and
must enter a nursing home and pay for
care. The Union Group e'tated that,
this is unfair,
111 reply, Dr. Dymond, slated, that
four Iionpll aI .hats per thousand pope
talion were considered adequate, A
survey by. the Department of Health
showed that in Huron County the ratio
of hospital beds exceeded this amount.
The lfinister also mid that the Hospi•
taliaation Plan' was not intended to
cover every person who was sick but
only those persons ill enough to require
the specialized care available only in
hospitals.:, Dr,. Dymond that in. his
opinion other services were more ur•
gently needed such as Diagnostic and
out-patietif."sciVices, = He also plated
. out the cost of the Plan to the Provin.
cial Government and stated that a large
share of the Provincial Sales Tax would
be required to maintain present ser.
vices,
The Union Delegation consisted of
County Director, Itay Hanna, Aulitn'n;
Lady Director, Mrs. Thomas Goven.
lock, Seaforth; Secretary, Carl Guvier
burn, Mrs, Carl Govicr, Mr. Gordon
Hill, Varna, and wore accompanied by
Mr. John Hanna, M.P.P. and the Hon.
Charles McNaughton, Minister without
portfolio in the Robert's Cabinet.
Stewart's
Red I'3 White Food Market
Blyth Phone 9 We. Deliver
•.v..-✓..ww..v.�vvw.i.fw•.ivvviwv. •.•.:.. �.r.,-.•..�...•r.�.r..v�.v.wr.•wv
Heinz Ketchup, save. 5c, 11 oz. bottle .. 2 for .15c
Libby's Deep Brown Beans, save 7c, 20 oz. tin, 2-39c
Good Luck Margerine, save 10c 2 lbs. 59c
Kleenex Tissue, reg. or chubby, save 30c,7 pkg.1,00
White Swan Toilet Tissue, save 9c , , . , 4 rolls 49c
Kraft Dinner, save.. 8c ' ' 2 pkgs, 25c
Burns Bologna ' ' per lb. '25c
Burns Weiners 2 lb. pkg, 83c
Devon diced Breakfast Bacon , . , . 1 lb. pkg. 63c
Red and White Bonus Offer—
Cannon Pillow Cases $1.39 per pr. with $5,00
order,
vw.iw+nr,.w.n/v.r.•.�r.i..w..v-r.i_.r.r.wt.'..-r,f.vv-.—-'-.,-.J..,.r:..•-w�.v.
-•- EXTRA SPECIAL ---
MONARCH GOLD CAKE MIX, fancily size,
1 pkg. for ONE CENT
YOU SAVE 38c
2 pkgs. 78c
All Three Pkgs. 79c
CALIFORNIA SUNKIST ORANGES.
2 dozen 98+c 1 doz. for ONE CENT
ALL THREE DOZEN 99 cents. Size 180
-FLORIDA PINK GRAPEFRUIT, 48's, 10 for 49c
OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRIES, 1 Ib
TIlt Bata STANDARD "Wi~r rit tiy, Jens A, 101
House Moved To
Blyth
F, the Aura.*^ Cerrr roede~t)
AL. 'urn residents were surprised lest
week end to see a house being !rived
dcwu the north toad from the.11'estfield
distrit to ire now location in the vil
:age of Tette 'Ft, sante lieu: e w as
n eved frau Auturn ober el years age
by Howard and Deur'1a•, Ganiebell, an:
\,9s r,t. that lane ca the prate: ty whet:
re..w be.ionga to !leery Beadle beteied
house w'llere 1:17s. Charles Etrrauh
an re3!des. It lead been uerueied for
ai any years ly the late Mr. a!!d Mrs.
Archie 1lobineen, and to older resi-
dents of the dist.rkt it was lueevn a'
the old Searles property.
This two-story frnrtte house on tltc
farm of Douglas Campbell had been
purchased by husc1 Cook and they
bed cl.'c:upietl it for the past three
Months. W. R, Parsons and Sans, u
:g'i'lt, moved the sIructure ie Iwo sec
Lions. The household itu'niture even tc
the decorated C.'luist0T ati tree remain
ell in p'.4rce during the proving, a dist
;Ince of ten miles, Tllry carne by the
houneory read to At:!:uru and then or
the I: alley !toad to Meth,
e:emy r;' Ihe reeideets recalled the
thee morin.: which took place t'1 let
m:n!lh of June and two s'eant engine:
were u:c+1 to haul the rump part of the
heusc winch led been placed ou who
i,r c
tiled bnr!Iric_;, These] eke in engine
':c!o::cd to the 11'_s:'it'd 4yn+'dc:t
and Alex \voile. The kitchen and w-ull+l
sled were heeled on wagons again Inet
week similar to the way which_ they
had left the village.
Ifydro and '1 clephone crews assieled
' ' 'r'm'itir r►„.(,• Tyles and the clietr'ict
was wr,...,1„-;,ydi'o are, ,.'.;,phone ser•
vice fc,r some time,
Celebrated Golden Wedding
Anniversary
t11r. and Mrs, George Caldwell were
guests of honour al the home of their
son-in-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs.
flack Cardiff, Brussels, on the occa•,
:ion of their Golden 1Vedding miniver.
sary December 271h, As firs. Caldwell
tuts not. been enjoying the beat of
health they celebrated quietly with the
members of their family, 1tr. and Mrs,
13i11 Uictoul and family, of 1 uc:know.
Mr. and efts. Gordon Caldwell and
family, of Myth, were present, lief"ides
thole son ,;uid two (laughter, Norma
and 'rheltua, the couple have et;_►tl
l{ 1';uidchi1dren.
The room was decorated \villi white
and gold candles, bells golden chrys-
anthemums and a threetiered wedding
cake. They were the recipiotrts of a
Kroehler rocker the gift from their
family.
Air. and Mrs. Caldwell were married
at the home of the bride's permits, Mr.
and Mrs. 1Villimn Radford, East. W;1•
wanosh township on December 27, 1(111.
They resided were their sen Gordon
of East Wawanosh, row resides, unti
1949` when they took up residence in
Blyth.
11Ir. Caldwell's parents were 1fr. `ane
Mrs. Janes Caldwell, of Hallett town-
ship.
EXE'1 RIt REEVE I)1ls AT 17
Peeve \Pillion ,1. 11cl(cnzie, 47,•
member of Exeter council for 10 year.
diad On 'iueeday at Victoria Hospital,
London, after a two-week illness.
Reeve McKenzie wa solected to conn
cit in 1952, and had served m; reeve
for the past ticvet ynars. Ile Itad ine
tended. to stand for election as warden
of Huron Ceunly this year.
OE31'E!J ARY
MRs, .GEltli.UDE IRENE JOHNSON
The passing of Mrs. Gertrude Irene
Johnson, age 75, occurred in the Uni•
versify J1copital, Saskatoon, December
30, 1961. The funeral service was
held Wednesday, January 3 at 2 o'clock
from Biggar United Church, conducted
by Rev. D. Weatherburn, Mrs, Shirley
Rowland srang "Beyond the Sunset"
and ales. E. Davidson was organist..
ilonorary pallbearers were Messrs.
D. Augustin, F. Radford, F. Arnott, W.
Penley, T. Moore, D. Bateman.
Active pa'dhetn'ers were Mesers, 11.
McGowan, C. Wcc;,e, 1. Soiniiwrfeld,
G. Kelly, J. Moore and J. 1'[urtins.
Burial took place in Biggar Cemetery
with the 13i,;gar Funeral Home le
charge of arrangements.
Mrs. John:ou was holm in Morris
Townehip, Ontario and calve West to
ICelfield in 1916, In 1918 she married
Henry A. Johnson and in 1355 they
moved to Biggar where they resided
With her death.
Mrs`.-kalunson was an active workol
in the community and church affair:'
beinieh life member of the W. M. 5,
member,. of W. A. and at one time r
Sunday school teacher in Kelfiel!
church.
She is survived by her widower,
three daughter's, Mrs. Melda 1ldngston
Covell, lies. Leone Baker, Denzil.
Mrs, Beth May, Fiske; one brother:
J. C. Bielby, of Biggar, and one sister
Airs. M. Calder, Edmonton. Alson len
grancichildren.
In lieu of flowers donations were
made 10 "Heart Foundation Fund.”
ller quiet and reserved peapod^ made
her a beloved friend anti relative and
won the love and sympathetic tinder•
standing of her fellow worker's.
LETTER FROM W. J, SIMS
Seaforth, January 5, 1962.
I did miles my last w'eeks paper. But
hope you had a nice holiday. 1 am not
feeling too, geed it is SO cold 1 don't go
out at a'1.
I here* to have another birthday Jan-
uary 15, will be E9, 11+1 Eton he an old
man, but will never forget Blyth. I bet
you have no idea where do'i hnuts were
first made, they were first made in
Greece. All for new Haply New Year
to both of you.
— V,', J. ;:,inns.
County Warden To Be Elected Next
Tuesday
The 1962 Huror. County Warden will
be elected at the January session of
Huron County Council in Gederich next
Tuesday, The election has turned into
a fire -plank race and. residents of this
immediate area hive a keen irtere;!
a: Reev(] Clarence Manua, of the neiele
tering East Wawano:h Township is
t: eking the wardenship.
:ttr, Manna commenced he political
career in 1950 when he was elected on.
lho township council. In 1958 he was
named reeve when the late Orval Tay
;cr was forced to retire due to 111 health
and has held the position since that
Time. The last time the Intron County
Warden carte from East Wawanosh
was In 1919 when lir, W. N. Campbell
held Tile position.
The other four reeves in the election
ere George McCuteheon, Brussels; Roy
,Adair, 11'ingleenl; Valentine Recker,
Hay To nrship; Harvey Coleman, Stale
cy
Township.
lteeve IVillinin 11.clienlie, of E:Letcr.
VON also seeking the wardenship and
.(l5 death on 'rnnsrlay was a great
hock to the council members.
BRUSSELS. INQUEST NET FOR
MBE VICTIM
Dr, It, W. Stephens, coroner, said
Tuc•s'Jay evening there will be an in -
(1.0(4 into the New t'ear's Eve fire
death of Mrs, Donald Currie, Brussels.
The fire, which swept• through the
house with fierce intensity, was first
scan, shortly after 5 p:m. Firemen and
others who tried to enter wore driven
back by fierce smoke and heat. Exp1o•
sion of two oil drums stored in the
woodshed added to the fury of the stub-
born flames w'hieh firemen were unable
to bung under control for several
hours. It was 9 p.m. before searchers
were able to enter the ruins, after walls
were pulled down, and it was midnight
before Mrs. Cu'rie's body was brought
out. 1'Ir. Cur'1'ie escaped the flames.
Their three suns were not at home at
the outbreak of Ihe blaze,
Mrs, Cul'rie'ss body was Laken to Kit-
ehener fur a post mortem examination
and has just now been released. A pri-
rate funeral service will he conducted
Thureday at D. A. Itann funeral !tome,
'Brussel,, at 3.30 p.m, Burial will be in
Brussels cemetery,
Mrs. Currie, the former Janet Mte
Lean, is survived -by her hustlland,
three sons, Douglas, John and Barry,
all at honk; mother, Mrs. Daisy Mc-
Lean,
aLean, Brussels; sisters, Mrs. Win. Er
win, Wawanosh Township; Dlrs, George
Somers, Miss Grace McLean, Brussels;
Mrs. John' Pennington,, Grey Township;
Mrs, Wm. Stewart, Mitchell; Mrs.
Frank Alcock, Morris 'Township; and
n brother, Donald McLean, of Morris
I.'owuship.
FEDERATION NEWS
( By J. Carl Hemingway)
Huron County Federation of Agricul-
ture wall conduct a second Leadership
Trainieg Forum January 23, 26 and 27.
It will be held in the Cwninercial Ifo•
tel, Seaford',
This course is basically planned to
assist, executive' Members of crganiea-
tions hi leading discussions, distribut-
ing information, conducting tneetings
and encouraging organizations to an
rive at decision for action.
There will be acconunodation for
some 35 persons to attend but only
overnight accomodation for about 25.
This rneans that we need to have agi•
plloatlons just as soon as possible. For
further information contact your town.
ship Federation president, or the Coun'
ty Secretary, Box 310, Clinton,
For the past three days I attended
the O.A.C. Short Course on Marketing
and Co -Operation. The basis of the
discussion was the report of the Co -
Operative Union Coninmission on Re-
lationships between Co-Oper'gitives and
Marketing Boards.
The reason tor this investigation
sterns to be the resolution.accepted at
a Co -Operative Union Board of Direr.•
tors meeting rcquectitTg a study of the
question. We were not told were the
resolution originated,
Dr. Hopper of the C.F.A. In introduc
Ing the discussion stated that Market.
ing Boards should not oval storage or
processing facilities but should be con•
fined to selling only. Ile pointed out
tlrfat monopolies were dangerous. Sup•
ply and demand should control the
market. Ile seethed fearful that ton
much power in the hands of Marketing
Boards would put too much pressure
on the market.
I will now try to give yott statcmetits
from the panel that followed.
1)1'. Palmer • Co -Operatives should
not sacrifice. in favour of Markctine
Board Regulations and suggested that
an Agricultural hoard composed of
producers, one processor and one cote
super plus It judge should resolve:
differences.
sAln, 'Tilden pointed out. that Market,
inti Boards had come into being be.
cause Co-operatives had been toe slow
in doing a marketing job for the farm-
ers,
Art. Musgrave was quite firmly of
the opinion that areas of agreement far
out weighed the disai3'reement and wt
should not let this controversy make a
mountain c'ut of a molehill.
Bruce McCutcheen pointed out that
the power of direction of product made
it difficult to retain the close contact
with the CceOp, membership since their
product didn't necessarily go to their
FINAL BARLEY PAYMENT
Agriculture Miui ter Alvin Hamilton
has anroinicerl diet the 1960-6! barity
reel dosed December 8 and the final
peyme!1t to producers will be $7,701,131
and average of F.38 cents per bushtl.
'Ihe 1959.60 pool wee not closed Inti',
March 30, 1961 and final rayment then
was $2,022,170—or an average of 2.1
conks per bushol,
Mr, Ilatnlllon said that producers
delivered 116,1 Million bushels to the
1960.61. pool.—� �._....__.
Cc -Op..
Charles 1IcLnnis stated that there is
plenty of room for both. Ile, however
felt titat there was a very real need for
farmer owned Co•Operalivc processing
AMA f!1CUEDULE
Thursday, January 11 --
Public Skating -8 to 10 p.n1,
Friday, January 5
Friday, J*inuary 13 •--
Midget Hockey, Ludata•.v at Blyth,
at 0 p.m.
Saturday January 13
Public Skating -2 to 4 and 7.30 to
9,30 pan,
Monday,. Junuary 15 •••
Rural LE:31,1.1e, Brussels at Bleelt,
at 8,30 p.m.
Tuesday, January 16
Public Skating --7 to 9 p.m,
Wednesday, January 17 •-•
Brcomball, Belgrave at Blyth and
Jameetcwn and Itch line Morris at
Blyth.
"1
plants since Marketing
only allowed to live al.
of governments which
cdtan',e.
Boards were
the discretion
Can and do
AHIM#L HEALTH PRODUCTS
Nixon's Scuurex. Tablets 1.75, 3.00 and 8.50
Nixon's New Scourcx Tablets .. , . 1,50 and• 3.75
Nixon's' Pellag'rex Paste for Pigs 1.50
N ixon's Calcium Phosphate 1.25
Perri Mycin Ointment, herd pak 3.75
Peni Mycin Bougies 2,00 and 3,00
Vio-Zine Solution 2,00
Ayercillin (Penicillin Injectable) , .. 65c and 5.50
Fortimycin 1.50 and 8.50
Stock Cod Liver Oil per gallon 2.75
PET SUPPLIES ---we carry a full line of Martz
Mountain, Justrite and Sergeants Products for
Canaries, Budgies, Dogs and Cats. '
R. D. PHILP, Phm, B
URUCS, RUNU1(I10, WALL1'Af r.R -.• MUNE ?0, BUTLI
STOCK -TAKING SALE
6 foot Werlich Toboggans, Reg. 12.95 , . SALE 9,50
Ski-boggans FOR ONLY 2,19
Hockey Sticks front 69c up
BARGAINS THROUGHOUT 'i'IIE STORE
--- 98c 'I'A131.E ---
Discount on All Paints and Varnishes.
YODDEN'S HARDWARE
U ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair,
Call 71
Blyth, Ont,
..................w.�.waw.�.......w, w... -...-.w.,. ...r...rurat.. o..•......•...».. .., ......... ......w
Bargains Of The Year
1961 CHEV. Bel Aire Se-
dan, 6 cyl., automatic
and radio.
1961 PONTIAC Sedan,
radio.
1961 FORD half ton,
large box.
1957 CONSUL Sedan
1956 FORD Sedan, 27,000
miles.
1956 CIIIEV. Coach,
19(i DODGE Coach V8
1953 METEOR Coach
Hanim's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP & SAVE
Garden Patch Whole Kernel Corn . 4 tins 59c
Libby's Spaghetti, 15 or,. 2 tins 35;;
Clark's fork and 13eans, 20 oz. 2 tins 37c
Puritan Stews, 11/2 lbs. per tin 39c
Tip Tim Choice Peaches, 28 oz. 3 Tins $1..00
Allen's Pineapple and Grapefruit, 48 oz. 3 tins $1,00
Oyaatgcs, size 180'8 3 dor. $1,00
Potatoes 10 lbs. 29c
Chicken Legs, per lb. 49c Pork Riblets per lb 29c
Smoked Cottage Roll, Whole or Ilaif, per lb. 65c
Schneiders Dressed Pork, Sliced ready to serve,
per lb, 75c
Coleman's head Cheese, in piece , 3 lbs. $1.00