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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-02-21, Page 1E B 5 ANDAR 'VOLUME 74 • NO, G1 Authorized DA second class mail, ISLE"I'H, ONTARIO, WED NESDA `, FEB, 21, 1962 Subscription Rates $2,50 in Advance, $3,50 in the U,S,A.. Post Office Department, Ottawa, and for payment of postage in cash. Quantity And Quality Improving At Blyth UeD,P.�e The annual meeting of the patrons - of Winglham•B1yth U,D,1', Co -Ops Was well attended In BlythMemorial Hall I'uesc'ray afternoon, February 201h, and wail oponed with an iILt restinc fiber "The r'tory of 1\I11t," leliartin Haan, Walton, the press• duet, chaired the meeting. Jack Cur• tie, IVingham, vice-president, gave the viten committee 'report, George Powell introduced the special speaker, Mr. Bruce Scott, IJ,D,P,C, Jic(;0aax h Markeline Director, lvho ,laid, "1t has been neccsesary for tie.), P.C. to progress rapidly, and the tux mediate problem is to establish the, sales program, lit reply to an inquiry as' lo whether U,U,P.C, three, had been shipped out side the Dominion of Canada he said yes'. The first, ,ship - meat ef 5,000 1h., had boon shippt'd tc the United State;, land had been fay. drably received, but. the marketing director has to work under a very strict embargo." ll'Ir. Russell Bratlfurd, Area Fieltl• man, spoke on "Milk Quality and ethic Control" and in reporting on the Blyth plant stated, ,from November 10 Jan• nary the quality of milk received here had impre'vod considerably from sot• teen percent to 20 percent, IIe suggest• e(1 that milk producers pay close at- tention to such equipment as lines and milk hoses, as 90 percent of their trouble with low grades are due to this part of their equipment, and any pro• ducer who is not producing grade A milk would oto well to inspect his equip. meet carefully, „Three 1hou;jand niembers are being served shy 1.J,1),P.(:', but he sure you ae•k for your own products at the elm - ea you palro'nize." Ocoee a manufate. ured at the Blyth plant has been inn• proved sixty percent tinder cliecse maker Hugh Cleland. Chccre making is a very sensitive process. 11 may not he the fault of the cheesc-nwaker or thegtlality of the milk but so twiny little things can go wrong, The Blyte plant is so equi}:i ed .they can pro• duce as much -cheese now In January ae they formerly could Ln June, Peter Cutter,' Wingharn, plant mana- ger, gave a concise report and stated he'was happy, about the improvement in .quality of theme in Elyth. A' motion- was 'made to inorease the plant coninittee from teal to eleven, end- elections resulted as follows: Harold Erb, Zurich; Martin Bean, TL R. 3, Walton, chairman; Jack Currie, 11.]1; 2, Wingliait; EJntor Ireland, 11, R. 5, \Vingllant; George Powell, IR.,It. 1, Auburn: Leslie Fortune, RR. 1. Wingliam; David Ireland, 11.11. 2, Tees. water; Maurice Hlullahan, R,It, 1, Bel. grate; Eric Hackett, 11.11, 3, Lucknow; Pugh McKenzie; 11.11. 3, Goderidl; Wilfred ,Shortreed, 11.11, 1. Walton. A lunch of eliet,:e, eeffee and crack - e -s ryas enjoyed, 441 HOMEMAKING CLUB MEETING The second meeting of the Blyth 'dametcrs was held at the home Of eerie .flood, Fcte uar'y 17, at 2 p.m,, with 13 girls attending. The meeting was opened with the 4-lf: I'loclge, Minutes .of the last 'meet- ing'were read by Shirley Meehan, Mrs, Good had. a discussion on Pat- tern Selection according to figure type, The following term of mercerization. eanfonized, resin finish, and how to wash.drip-dry fabrics, were explained, Mem, Mason demonstrated how to study tee pattern, pattern alterations and how to prepare material before cut• ling. Mary 'Meehan and Helen Holljn• ger demonstrated measurements, The next meeting will be held al the home of Airs, Good, March 10 int 2 p.m. The meeting was closed with the \1ni'v Stewart Collect, A111ON(.;<'I'11E CHURCHES Sunday, I''cbruery 25, 1912 ,ST. ANDRI IV'S PRFSIIIIEIUAN C1111RC'11 Rev. 11 J. Lane, B.A., D,U., Minister, 1.00 p.m. -Church Service and Sun' day School, ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Rev, Robert F, Meetly, Rector, Sexagesinla Sunday Trinity Church, Blyth, • 10.30 n,meeeSunday School. 40:30 a,ni,--Mattins, Ft. Mark's, Auburn, 12,00 o'clock -•Mantis, Trinity Church, Belgravo, 2,00 pan, -Sunday School. 2,30 pen -Evensong, THE t1NI'1'.ED C1i111RC11 0I'' CANADA Myth Ontario. Rev. 11. Evan elcleutan elinister Mrs. Donald leaf Director of Music, 9.55 a.m.--Sunday Church School, 11 a.m.--Morning \Vorehip, CHURCH OF GOD MrCotlne1l Street. Blyth, John Dornier, Pastor Phone 1115 1,00 pen. -Sunday School, 2,00 pini, -Worship Service. 8.00 p.m. -Wed,, Prayer Service. 11,00 p.nt, 1''1'lday, Yu* leellowship, PUBLIC SCiIOOL IIOCKEY RESULTS Rangers 5, Black Hawks 2; Leafs 3, Wings 2, Ranger scorers, Finch 5; Loafs, Riley 3; Hawks, G. Cowan 1, D, Cowan 1; Wings, I[ow'es 2. Standings Rangers llawks Red \Vuigs Leafs 5 On Saturday February 21--Play-Offs hangers vs Wings at 11:0(1 tulle 7 r, 6 Leaf's vs Hawks of 10:(11) a.m. Pkiy oils, hest 1 vo out of three, 1V A1,'I'ON McKillop Group The February meeting of the McKie• lop Unit was held Thursday afternoon. February 15 at the home of Mrs, Gerd. on McGavin, Mrs. Jack Bosnian pre• sided, opening with hymn 37, "0'h J.,ove tia.t will not let me .go," with Mrs, Merton Ilackwell at the piano. Mrs, Norman Sciade led in prayer, The sere -Jure passage was read from Ito. mans 12: 1.12, by Airs, Andrew Coutts. The topic from the new study hook "Signals for the Sixties," was given by Airs, George Love, 11'e were re• minded that the World Day of Prayer would be held March 9. The following committee was ,appointed to look after the program .for the March Social: Mrs. Jack Bosnian, Mrs. Tod McCreath and Airs. Campbell \Vey. '1'he mystery mother banquet for mystery daughters ('as announced for Saturday, February 17. Programs were planned fur 1962. \Ve are to bring our used Cdu'istame cards ID the nest imaging. The meet ing closed with hymn 370, "Blest be IIie lie that hinds," and prayer. A err. licions'WWII was served by the hostel: and Mrs. Jack Bosnuau, Mrs. 1Vu1. Deft Ms and Alis. '1'0x11 Rockwell. C, 0. 1, T. Banquet The CGIT. girls and their mothers wore treated to a banquet by the la• dies or the \VMS of Duffs United Church on Saturday 'evening, The tables were aCpropri'ately' decorated fee Valentine's Day. Mrs. Ed, McCreath and Miss Shirley Bolger, the leaders, with the CG1T girls, had •a bowling party in Seafor'th Bowling Alley prior to the banquet, Ruth Ritchie moved a vote of thanks to the ladies for their tasty supper will Airs, D, Watson replying. McKillop Lost heir A Lost Heir .pa.rly was hold at S.S. No, 9, Mcliillop, last Thursday evening with a good attendance, The following; were prize winners: ladies hig'l, Mrs. Cordon Wood, \Villowrgrovc; ladies low Miss Audrey 1[cllichacl; lien's high Stanley hitless men's IOW, Neil Me Nicol; lucky chair prize, Alex Dennis( word contest, Airs, G. \Vaud and La. verse Godkiu; Valenl.iie.ganne, Gerald - in: Dennis. A short progeanl was pre• seders; piano duet, Belly and Jean Roe; recitation, Donnie Dalton; recitation Faye Dalton, Lunch was served at the close of the evening, 111r, and Mrs, Bob Pritchard and gamily of Toronto, and Mr. and Mrs, Donald Maier, London, spent the week• oid with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson, Mr, Cosby Ennis, of London, visited on Sunday with his mother, Alis, Ethel Ennis, Mr Charles Shannon and friend, of Toronto, spent the weekend tvith Mrs. Mary Shannon. 'Mr, Reid Hackw'ell attended the eiont• real -Detroit hockey game at Detroit Sunday afternoon. 1Vlltug Wolters The second meeting of the Walton Willing Workers was held at Mrs. iialpl Travis' Monday evening, I''ebr'uill'y 12 wrilh 1(1 iiembet's present, 'The leaders, Mrs. ll. Craig and AIrs, It, 'Travis, de. scribed the texture of various materials that, can be purchased, Also (different colour's and patterns suitable to each indivi(Inal girl. Mrs. 'Travis showed how to shrink materials, Next Tues- day evening, February 27 will be the third meeting, lo be held at .Harvey Craigs, Each girl was to go ahead as far as possible with hooks and patterns. Walton Unit Hers, Emerson Mitchell was presiding officer for the February meeting of tit Walton Unit of the UCIV, with Mrs. 11, Teals at the piano. Hymn, "I've wan• detect faraway from God," was used. Scripture tvilh meditation was from tiro 0111 Psalm, with Mrs, R. Achilles in Via.rgel and prayer offered by Mrs. We-Broa(l'oot, There was an attend• ince of 10 members. Mrs. herb 'Traviss gave tie secretary's report, followed by the treasurer's report. by Mrs. R. Achilles, Business was discussed con• ccl'ning the. Walton Unit Bazaar to be held Minch 28th. A program for the so• eial in the church by the New. was also planned and the following commit. tee will be in charge for our group, At'i . J. Clark, ;Iles. A. McCall and Mrs. Ethel ilackwcll 1Vorld 1)ay of Prayer will he held Alarch tt al 3,00 p.m. with regular monthly meeting at 1,30 'Topic was take) by Airs, Ethel Hack - well from the Study Book "Signal of the Sixties" followed with a brief discus- sion of several questions. The roll cull tor Marcel meeting will be faith. The meeting closed with the benediction with hostesses Mrs, N. Marks and Mrs, R. 'Tlaviss and Airs, F. Walters in charge of lunch, Mr, and Mrs. Hon\ace Rutledge and fancily, of London, spent the wcek•cnd with relatives here, OBITUARY MRS, J. 0, IIAROLD PHILLIPS The Blyth district was deeply sad. dcned on Saturday, February 17, 1962, to learn of the death of Mrs. J. G. Har- old Phillips, who passed away in the 1Ving1lam Genesi Hospital in her 65th year. Mgrs. Pllilites was the former Edythe Selina Stains, and was born in Surat. ford on the Avon, England, the daugh- ter of the late Jahn Staines and Annie Nash, ,and was born on Augutt 27, 1897, She was married In London, England, on April 4, 1919, to Mr. J. G. Harold Phillips, and they then moved to Strat• ford, Ontario, also residing In Tee3. miter and Brussels before moving to Myth thirty years ago. Urs. Phillips has been a beloved and varied ntenhe' of this community, evidonced by the beautiful floral tributes from the many orgiillizatioll.`; of which she way; 11 member. lie' ex• ca(; t leadership ability was always available, not only locally but nt the district level as well. She had been choir leader at both the United and Presbyterian Churches during past years and her lovely spits stoat renditions will never be forgotten by those who have had the privilege o! hearing her sing. Mrs. Phillips was a past president of the 131yth \V,A, and of the Huron Pres- bytery of the VA.. tact president of the Blyth Women's Institute; past pre• sident of the I3lylh Ladies Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion; past matron oI legal Chat:ter 0.E,S., Blyth, and past district deputy of District. No. 5, O,E.S. Surviving besides her husband, are six daughters and two sons: Sgt. Phi( Philips, of Greenwood, Nova Scotia; Dr. Anne McCreary, of Stockholm. Sweden; Mrs, G. 1(. (Jeanne) Harris. of Southampton; \1rs, Lundy (,1essic1 "tltKay, of Blyth; Alts. Jack (Doreen) 1led11, of Mullett Township; Cpl, liar - old Phillips, of Richmond, 1.1, C.; Mrs. 1thy (Shirley1 Vincent, I3lylh; 3nc1 Miss Paige Phillips, of London, Also ten grandchildren. Funeral service was ' held at the Blyth United Church on Tuesday, Fe- bruary 26111, at 2 p,nl., conducted by the minister of the church, Rev, R. E. McLagan Mrs, Belly Wilkin, of Au• barn sang "I Will Pilot Thee," Rega' CJeat:ter O.E.S, held ea service at the Tasker Memorial Chapel on Mondey evening at 8,30 p.m, Prior to this sets vice the Blyth Branch Ladles Auxil- lary to the Canadian Legion paraded to the funeral home to pay their re. spects. Pallbearers were, Messrs. Joseph Shaddick, Ifarvey Sillih, Laurie Scott Caravan Maines, Harold Vodden and Bert Shob:brook, Flowc'bcarers, Messrs. Emerson Wright, Wellington McNeil and William Carter, SAMUEL ALEXANDER KECIINIE A life -kits resident of Myth, Mr. Samuel Alexander Kechnie, passed away al Iltnonview'Clinton, e11 Sat- urday, February 20, 1962, in his 79th year, Funeral service was conducted at. the. Tasker Alemotiai Chapel by Rev. It. E, ilioLagan. Intea'nlent was made in the Blyth Union Cemetery Chapel. Pallbearers were, Messrs. JalneAs Lawrie, Walter Buttell, Illarry Grasby, Millar Riclnnond, 11, D. Philp, and Leonard Cook Samuel Alexander Kechnie was bort; In East Waivanash township to 1885, the soli of the late William Kechnie rand Mary Eggert, In June 1913 he married Caroline Jschc and they lived in East Wareemosh until moving 10 Blyth in 1933, Mrs. Kechnie predeceased hint in July, 1930, Ile went to live. at Iluroiview just prior to his son, Sgt, Glenn Kcchnic's trta,i61(m' to Saskatoon, After coming to the village AIr. Re• chits held postions as caretaker of the Blyth United Church, Union Cemetery and Public School, 'These activities were (1iseoalitnted ,ahout le'!) years ago, owing to i11 henllh. Survivors are ane sun, sgt. 0101)1 leclln'i:e, .11,C,A.F, Station, Saskatoon, Sask.; four grandchildren, Stephen, (airily, Katherine and Betty Sue Keclutie: ono sister, Min, Clara Bradley, of Port Credit, .and three brothers, Ezra and George, of Kitchener, and John, of M delicti, MRS, PERCY VINCENT I'euncgal service conducted by Rev. C. Lewis, were held on Wednes- nesday afternoon (11 the J. Keith Arthur Funeral Home, Auburn, for firs, Per- cy Vincent who passed away at her hone an R.B. 1, Auburn, after n lengthy illness. She was formerly Elizabeth Ann Meilen, (slaughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. 3, McBrien and was horn in 1889 in the Maitland Plock of Mallett Tow nship, and attended 8.5, No. t School, Hallett. Following her mar'• riage she resided 011 a farm in East \Vawanosh until they retired to their home at Wcllkerburn. She Was a mom• her of Knox United Church and of the \Vtalke4lurn Community Club. Besides her huslklnd she is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Jumes (Ma. ric) Annis, Ottawa, Mrs. Lloyd (Verna) Miller, London, and Min. John (Evan- geline) Murch, Clinton; thyro grand- daughters and one grandsrna; sister, Mrs. Beatrice Lovett, Sl, Catharines two brothers, Mr, Oliver McBrien and Mr. Jasper Mcl3rien, both of Godericlt, Pallbearers were, Messrs, Guy Cun- ningham, James Jackson, Joseph Ver - way, George Schneider, Elliott Lapp, William Moor. TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH HONOUR THREE WARDENS Members of Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, lne•t at the Rectory on friday evening, February 16111 to honour three Church Wardens. The Rectors present Warden, Mr. Albert Nessbtt and Mrs. Nesbitt were presegted with two prayer books in honour of their recent fortieth wedding anniversary, The Peoples Warden, Mr, John B. Nesbit and Mrs, Nesbit wore also pre. seated \vitt) two prayer books in honour of their recently celebrated twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. For a great number of years Mr, Gilbert Nethery was an active, faithful Church Warden and retired from This office al the end of least year. Ili loyally Io Iles church and hi; many year:. and cfl(L t' entio'e., (levered eery - ice will hen;; be remembered by the nlemhrr:: of 'friuity Anglican Church and serve as a wr'uderful example to those who follow in the years to conte. In paying Dilute t'1 111 r. Nethery, the Rector, Bev, 11, h'. Afcnl'v expresser the sincere gratitude of the parish On behalf of the congregation Ala Al. bent Nesbitt presented Mr. and Mrs Nethery with a handsome table lamp A very happy evening was brought to a close with a delicious lunch sere• ed by Mrs. Mealy and the ladies, "I;ifa(.eNAf, Mr. and Mrs, Freeman Tunney and family, of '1'eeswaler, spent. Sunday with his mother, Mrs. Mary Taylor. Mr, Frank I3e11 retuined home from Stratford Hospital after being a patient for two weeks. Mr. and lane. Fred Howson returned home on the weekend alter thee; weeks holidaying in SI. Petersburg, I''lorid;e, J 1i . Jtnhcrt Carter is recuperating at the hemp of her parents, Mr, and Alts. (Invite Cruder, of Illyfil, re turning ern Sunday floral \'icloria 1los p101, tendon, after being a patient fora month. Mr, Kenneth Ahatowan rdurncll to his home front .t. ,lnncph's Hospital, London, 0;1 Sued;ly where he had been a relicnt icer ten day:. Mer. R. 11„ Branton, of Whitewood Bask., Is visiting with firs, J. Collin - ;n this week, Mr, Henry Marlyn, son of Mr, and l'Irs. John Marlyn, has recently joined the -Royal Canadian •Navy and is sta Boner' at Cornwallis, Noire Scotia. 'Airs, Hazel Bateman was in Toronto attending .the funeral of her sister. Miss Olive S, Simpson, who passed away February 17, after a long Illness. Mrs, Inez MacDonald left on 'ties• day for Richmond 11i11 to spend some time with her daughter, Mrs J. C. Mitchell and family, after visiting with her sister, Miss Margaret Ilirons and brothels, ,lames and Hubert. Ah% Gorge D. Leith, of Listowel and Mr. Barrie 111cElroy, of Palmer. ston, were in Blyth on Tuesday attend. ing the funeral ef their cousin, the late. 5ainel Kabure, 11r. and Mrs. George Caldwell are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs, ,i ruse Cardiff, Brusse's, while Mrs. C'a.ldw'ell is recovering from her ilhle s Alisses Ann and Jane Knapp are a,( the heal' of lir. and Mrs, George IIaum] Sr, rAnv MR,'i, 11'11, .1. D. CARDIFF Mabel Elizabeth Bruce, wife of Win. 3. D. Cardiff, passed away suddenly in her 01111 year on 'Thursday, Febru- ivy 15 at the home of her daughter. Mrs, Harold Campbell, Blyth. Burn on lire 17Ih concession of Grey 'township, daugchter of the. late Mr. and M's. Andrew Bruce, SIU; was miu'ried to Wm. Cardiff, of the 7th concession of Grey, in 1910 where they resided until three years ago when they moved lo 13rtlssels. She is survived by her husband and one daughter 1Adeline1 Mrs, Harold Cantebell, Blyth, one brother, John, of Scalar( 11, and one sister (Selina) Mrs. Joscj:li Bolger. of Edmonton, Alberta; also four grandchildren surd tow' great grandchildren. 'I'Ine funeral service was bell al the D. A. itann Funeral ilonrc, Brussels on eatu'day, February 17, at :. p.m. and was conducted by Rev, Kenneth Griffiths of the United Church. Al.rs, Kenneth Griffiths sang "What A Friend We Ilave In Jesus." Palibuarers were, Mack Cardiff, Al- bert Cardcff, Sam Sweeney, Lloyd Wheeler, Gordon Stiles and Graham Work. Interment was male hl Brussels Cemetery. MRS, MARY FRANCES GALLAIIEII Airs, Mary Frances Gallaher passed away in \Vinehanl 110spital 011 Wed. nes(lay, Fcbrtf:lry 14111 in her 86th year. She was formerly Mary Frances Higgins, daughter of the late Joseph and Mary Higgins and was born in 'l'urnbe•ry township, residing in Go'ric for the kat 35 years, St11'Vi1'ing; alt' one sister. Miivl, nl Gorric; a brother, Edgar, of Brussels and a sister-iu-hew, Alis. Chester Hig gins, of 1313111. Also Iwo nieces, Mrs t.lttt'1'i.".)II Sheri(, of \Vingllani, ;and Alts Higgins, R.N., London; two iepliews, Alvis, Biggins, of Brussels and Joseph Iliggins, of Mitchell. She was pre• deceased by one sister, Mrs, 1_cnnux, of \Vinghain, and a brother, Chester. of Biel'', Funeral service was he'd from the Moir Funeral Monne in Gerrie on SeI- urday, February 17, conducted by Rev. F. Taylor, interment in Gorrie. Cen- etory, Midgets Take First Game From.. Zurich By 8 m 2 Score JACK LEE JOINS LEGIONNAIRES The Blyth Legion intermediate hockey team played the first game in their ;cur out of seVe;t series with Lucknow ast Friday night in the Lucknow arena, The game was very close all the way and saw Lucknow edge Blyth 8 to 6. Jack Lee, who has been coaching the 'cell team lb`s year, darned the blade: for this cosiest and carne up with ' ; al ;old an assist. Jack's return t( telt' ice'. should give Myth a lunch ,trungct' contcnder for IIIc' group liter net his appearance hill he a plca:;ing igeit to thole who have followed be hockey (areer over past yea:;. The next 'came will be played in Ltn:kluow on \V d'ic:.e;::ey night a:rd the action wilt switch to Myth of Endue' and Monday nights. 1VEI)DING AlcC'LINCIIEI'-11'YLLIE A pretty wedding was solomized al Centennial United Church, Victoria, B. C., when Mary Alice Wyllie became the bride of William John McClinchey of Victoria, 13.C. The bride is the daught er of Mr. and Mrs. James 1,. James el' Spruce Lake, Sask., and the groom is the son of Mr. and .Mrs. Gordon AleClinchey, 1,11. 2, Auburn. Rev, G. Parsons officiated for the double -ring e0I'e111(lay, The bride wore a two-piece street - length sheath of brocaded latteta in cha►Ilp'agne shade and wore beige and Coffee ;ic(.'es`ories a11(1 a corsage of red roses. She was attended by 11rs, Eleanor Wigen ore, as her matron of honor, who were a neuiVe 'heath dress, llunne 111,1 black accessories and a enr5ag;t' of yet., low reschuds. Grconeenan was Edward Kraft. of Victoria, 13 C. A reception followed in the banquet racrn of the Sidney hotel where baskets of daffodils, pink candles, vile bells and pink and white streamers decorated the room. After a trip to Island points they \vile reside 111 Victoria, B.C, Guests frons a distance were his brother, Robert McClinehey, Mrs, Mc. Clinchey, and his sister, Mrs. George iraggitt, all of Blyth, and also his sis- ter, Mrs, Alvin Plunkett of Auburn, FIRESIDE FARM FORUM Oa Fe'lruarry 19 Mi. and Mrs, Eric Ar„'.erson eetertaine•d the I'iresicle r arm F'orurn. 11 adults were present, [he subject ice discussion was 'Trans- 1'urlr;ticrl aril the 1''armer, , \1•e 1/0110/0 with such a large cclritry. l'altaila the railways will always be needed, although they may be tune - honing at a loss. They will be especial- ly t.'redcd for transporting coal, grain, turnips, sugar beets, and western cat- tle.- '1'ran;sporlation for grain is nock cheaper by water if it is art ailable. If the small branch lines were removed it would net drastically affect the people in fhb neighbourhood because of the rcareess of Godcrich harbour and the use of many trucks and cars. \Ve be- lieve the railways have tco many Merl ill service, '('1)e ,railways are used in this locality by some passengers, but the ears have the most of ,Use trade, The trucks give bener service by go- ing to the farm and delivering the pro- duce when it. is wanted. The trains Should have been planning this service 'ninny years ago as they can operate more safely during whllcr months, Mrs. 1[awaa'd Cartwright invited Lhe group for next week, \\'shiers 111 euchre were, most gables. Don Buchanan; Ione hand, Mrs. 1loward Cartwright; consolation, Mrs. George Carl c r. malls FALCON'EI1--In Clinton Public Huspi• ta1 on Monday, February 19, 1962 to Mr, and Mrs. Bruce Falconer, the gift of a son, Douglas Keith, a bro- ther for Ronald, WORLD DAY OF PRAYER The public are cordially invited lc attend the World Day of Prayer Service in Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, in conjunction with the other churches in Blyth and vicinity, on Fridoy afternoon. March 9. at 2.30 p.m. 'The topic being "God's Love for the 1Vo1'ld." The guest speaker will be Airs. (Rev.)1'ung,e, Londesacro. The pa'o• g,ianl for the a,ftc'nocu will he mulct the Ieadch'hip of Mrs. ilarry Gibbous ,vsisted by Airs, W. Good and Alt's. Ilarold \'uddca. 1;1,1"1l1 WI. '10 Myth \\rumen's Institt(te will nree' 'Thursday afternoon, Alarch 1. al. 2.1' 0.111, in the AI':morial Ball, and Ilii be in charge of Mrs, L. Scrimgeour anti Mrs, John Young, convenors r• 'r'=ter reel 11.eeearch. Special music ' '.circ; "re"ared. '*ueO ereaher will be Mr. J 1' Crswtford, Q.C„ whose subject will be "The Importance to Wooten of Making a Will." Everybody welcome, The Blyth Lions Club midgets extend• od their winning streak to four games when they came up with a decisive 8.2 win over Zurich in the second round of the play-offs last Friday night at th; Blyth arena. A very good crowd of local support- ers attended the game and for the first time realized the brand of hockey they had been missing lall season. Many were heard to say 'If I had known the boys were playing hockey like that I wouldn't have missed a game, Blyth came out in the first period determined for a win on home ice aid were rewarded for their efforts with a 2.1 edge when the period ended. The eeci ttd stanza 1i'oVed the bis one for Myth a:; they 'Acapped in :1 unanswered counters and could blew; added several mare had their mask: nutr:ship been keener around the ep' Posing net, They held control of 111e puck for the entire period and their passing plays and team effort had the crowd cheering almost constantly. The continued their strong attacic in the third period and notched three mare goals while Zurich were held to 0110 The fine work of the three Blyth de- :'encemen, Don Appleby, Ron Elliott and Floyd Smith, and their little goalie, the "mighty mite" of the league, 12 year old Allan Howes, was the highlight of the game. This defensive display, coupled with excellent hack checking and rushing of the forwards kept Zurich completely off stride and they never were able to put together a sustaining al tack. The buys make the alum trip to Zurich on Wednesday night of this we"k, and if they continue to play as they have lately, the series should eel with two straight. Blyth victories, How. ever, Zurich is a big team, and if they should happen to come up with a sol:'. rcrue effort, could prove tough to handle. lllyth goal; and assists Were by: ataeli(1 (Pletch); Appleby (unassisted); Ileffron (Appleby); Madill (Heffron); Lawrie (unassisted); Plotch (Heffron); PIetch (Madill); Ileffron (Madill). Blyth lineup: goal, Howes; defence, Appleby, Elliott, Smith; forwards, Jiadill, Ifeffron, Plotch, Lawrie, Scrim- geour, Grant, Griffiths and Logan. CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Mary Louise Law- rence who celebrates her 4th birthday on Saturday, February 24th. Congratulations to Robbie Lawrie who will celebrate his birthday on Thursday, February 22nd, Congratulations to Miss Sharon Jack- son who celebrates her birthday on 'Thursday, February 22nd. (',lugratulations to Agnes Lawrie who celebrated her birthday on February 20, Congratulations to Airs. Mary Hay- man who celebrated her birthday on Monday, February 19th. ( oiigrial.ulations to Sharon Mason who celebrates her birthday on Sunday, February 25111, Congratulations to Mrs, E►tntner Den- nis who celebrated her 83rd birthday on Saturday, February 17111. C.ongratulations to Jackie Vincent, of Londcsbor'o, who celebrates his birth- day on Thursday ,February 22nd. Congratulations to Nell Henry who celebrated his 2nd birthday on Mon- day, February 1.9th. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Cartwrigld who will celebrate their wedding anniversary on Friday, Feb- ruary 231•(1. Congratulations to Miss Sharlene Walsh who celebrated her birthday on February 16111 Congratulations to Steven Walsh who celebrated his birthday on February 20, Congralulal.ions•lo Warren Walsh who will celebrate his birthday on February 2'1111. EXPLORER (.ROUP MEETING The Explore' Group of Blyth United Church nmol in the church schoolroom on Wednesday, February 11, with 12 gills present. Trite Opening Ceremony was conduct- ed by Mrs, It. E. McLagcm who also gave an explanation of the Explorer Purpose, Airs. Frlank Elliott was in charge of the business program. Tile minutes wore read by Shirley McCul- lough end the offering received by Brenda Shaw. Nancy Stewart played a Acute solo and a Vnlentine poem was read by Lynn Elliott, The worship ser- vice was conducted by Airs. Elliott, with Betsy Elliott, Bonnie and Connie Laidlaw. I3uinie i1eVittie, Jayne Pol- lard and Joyce Riley each reading a verse of scripture. During elle craft period, the girls started to make covers for their Ex - ,)lore' books, A Valentine treat of homemade cantly was enjoyed by all. 11ULLE'l'T F,O,A, CARD PARTY Tic Mullett Federation of Agriculture end a card party in the Londesborn 'tall. 'There Weis a good attendance ut(I everyone enjoyed a very rsociable sveuing. 'I'Ite lady's high Mize was Wort by `les, (::evil Cartwright; lady's low, Mrs. "wine. Ferbes; indy's lone hands, Mrs. ' oree Carter; men's high prize, Mr, 'obert Townsend; men's low prize, "es Betty Jean McGregor (frilling in s a man); men's lone hruids, Master Don Jewitt; lucky ticket draw was won by Mr, Keith Ctutwi'ight! ,�., Arabian Nights In Boston, Mass. To many a proper Bostonian, the very proper Copley Plaza Hotel — which has presided for decades past, like a doughty dowager, over Copley Square— is still a hallowed and dignified landmark. (The hotel's correct name today is the Sheraton - Plaza, but among Bostonians few but the cabdrivers really recog- nize this.) In this hotel tea dances were held, and debu- tante parties; and along its flower -decorated entry corridor, prim Boston ladies used to sit the afternoon through watching the passing throng. The essence of proper Boston- lanism, however—a fact that is sometimes forgotten—is its com- plete sophistication. And so, re- cently, the gray-haired ladies still sat the length of the flower - decorated entry corridor barely looking up as the exotic. Arabian - nights world of one of the r;ch- est men on earth passed before their eyes—the world of Saud ibn Abdul Aziz al Faisal al Saud, bearded, white -robed King of Saudi Arabia. Along the hotel's corridor, moved the princes of Saud's train in gold -threaded ghutra head gear, flowing robes swirling, in flashes of red and blue and white and black; their body- guards wore scimitars, and ban- doliers across their chests. And, each night that week a small convoy of Cadillac limou- sines drew up in front of the hotel, after a 1 -mile run from the Nile Restaurant in Boston's s Chinatown, Busboys and liver- ied chauffeurs took piping -hot dishes, neatly wrapped in alumi- num foil, from the cars and up to the hotel's sixth floor. It was dinnertime for King Saud. His Majesty's meals (served also to his retinue of 30) includ- ed such delicacies as: Roast peacock stuffed with rice (at $16 each,) Roast lamb—the entire animal —stuffed with lamb chunks, rice, and nuts (at $180 each.) Rolled grape leaves (imported • by the barrel from Damascus ) stuffed with lamb and rice. Squab; quail; a favorite appe- tizer called hoomis bi tahini (a seasoned mashed chick-pea); a favorite dessert called baglaiva (made of 26 paper -thin layers of pastry dough filled with walnut meats and drenched in honey). Ever since 61 -year-old King Saud arrived at Peter Bent Brig- ham Hospital in November for the removal of cataracts on both eyes and what was described as "minor" abdominal surgery, even the staidest Bostonian had been awi:re that he was in town. First, there were the reports of the four -room, $50 -a -day suite in the hospital, then the stories of the richly bound leather address books and leather key cases that the King gave the 179 other pa- tients in the hospital when he was discharged. The King's son, 81/2 -year-old Prince Mashhur ibn Saud, also underwent an operation for the transplant of a tendon in a hand crippled at birth. The Little Prince, who had been treated at Walter Reed Hos- pital in 1957 at President Eisen- hower's behest, was recovering too, But he was the most western- ized of the group, dining on steak and potatoes and watching shoot - 'em -up horse operas on televi- sion, Before the King left the hos- pital, the Sheraton -Plaza prepar- ed for his convalescence by re- decorating his private quarters in white and gold, replacing hotel -style furniture in the suite of Queen Umm Mansour (one of Saud's four wives) with rare French antiques. The hotel also put down an Oriental rug in the royal party's private elevator, A dining room for twelve was set up in the King's section and a chair upholstered in gold bro- cade was obtained to serve as his temporary throne, Then the royal party's rooms were eut off from the rest of the sixth floor by a partition, while the eight - room section for the women ND How Weil Do You Know SOUTH AMERICA? (who accasionally appeared in public, heavily veiled) was fenc- ed off from the men's quarters by a floor -to -ceiling curtain. Clearly money w'a4 no problem. King Saud was paying $71.50 a clay for each of the three-room suites, and the Nile Restaurant, by appointment victualers to the exotic party, hired three more cooks. The daily hill was paid by the Arabian -American Oil Co., the concern which has the oil concession in Saudi Arabia. As King Saud convalesced, the seventeen adult princes in the party junketed through Boston's somewhat low-key night spots; the King himself made motor trips to Massachusetts North Shore and to the Wayside inn in Sudbury. But by now the tales about the King and his court were beginning to sound like the "Thousand and One Nights." Tall, thin, bearded Baker You - nus, whose title of Royal An- nouncer proclaimed him as King Saud's Pierre Salinger, seemed to delight in feeding conflicting stories to the press and it was hard to separate rumor (that the King had bought fixtures for eight bathrooms) from fact (that his party purchased $11,000 worth of watches to hand out as tips). Boston's small colony of Arabian descent had scheduled a dinner for the King and 500 -odd guests, which promised to be one of the gustatory high spots in the his- tory of a city famous for such bland dishes as baked beans, codfish, and Indian pudding. As an added fillip, the Sheraton hotel chain planned to ship in a $50,000 gold dinner service from which Nikita Khrushchev dined when visiting San Fran- cisco. In the confines of the Plaza, all this was pretty much taken in stride. But the doormen at the entrance had their troubles when those who gathered to gawk at the King's free -spending adult princes. Back in the grand days of the Copley Plaza, Harvard boys called it the "Costly -Plea- sure," The old nickname was never more apt. From NEWSWEEK Has Gun! Will Travel!'—Fed Up!!! "It's sad, like seeing a Ray Robinson after his best days aro past, You wish he wouldn't fight any more and you could just keep your memories." This was Richard Boone last month, talking about his own show. In his fifth season as star of CBS's "Have Gun, Will Travel," Boone virtually runs the series himself, As Paladin, the world-weary gunslinger, he is its sole drawing card; as its sometime director, he has called his own shots 26 tunes in the past three seasons, But he is not happy. "There is no such thing as an adult Western," Boone once told an interviewer. Yet, in an art form as stylized as a sonnet, actor Boone has achieved some adult entertainment. The special Paladin character has, of course, given him a leg up to begin with, Here is a hero who is a wencher, a bon vivant, and a mercenary —who even wears a mustache, the badge of the Western heavy, But "Have Gun's" success de. rives from more than the novel character of its hero, Trying to account for it in part, Boone said; "We usually have twenty scripts when we start shooting for the year, That way, we have time to repair one if it's no good. and we use new writers—hungry writers. Established w rite r might sneeze out something con- ventional," Even with hungry writers, however, Boone himself is by now fed up with the Western formula. "Every time you go to the well," he said, "It's a little further down, The show has car- ried one or two seasons too long," By the end of this month, CBS will decide whether to stretch Paladin over another season, If the network doesn't want him, Boone nevertheless keeps right on collecting on a $1.3 million contract that spreads his five -season earnings over twenty years, One night recently, B'oone's controlled, lucid narration of "John Brown's Body," with a forceful cast behind him in a stark TV adaptation, proved anew that he can act without a gun in his hand. He wants next to star in a stage play based on a harrowing novel about the dis- integration of German troops in World War II. After that, more specials, more plays like "The Rivalry," in which he played Lincoln on Broadway, and more films. His only worry now Is that Cl38 won't shart his low opinion `of "Have Gun," "One of those bush-league Napoleons," he said, "planted settething in Dariery about the sponsor being diseatia- fied with the show. That's my only hope," ISSUE $. — .114 CANDY COUNTER — Robert Lang's dream came true when he became president of a candy company for a whole day. The lad won the honor as a TV show prize. After Robert sampled the product for a few hours, he sent several cases of candy bars to pals, neighbors, school, church and vet- eran's hospital back home, T LE TA"' JawtAndrews. After many years of making cakes by the creaming method, the one -bowl method of mixing was developed. This method eli- minates several time-consuming steps in mixing and also saves using several mixing dishes, Softened shortening is mixed with sifted dry ingredients and the liquid and eggs are added, usually in 2 portions, then beat- en f or a specified number of strokes, Best results are gained with this method when all in- gredients are at room tempera- ture. Here is a yellow cake made by this one -bowl method. GLORIA YELLOW CAKE 2 cups sifted cake flour 11/2 cups sugar VA teaspoons baking' powder 1 teaspoon salt j2 cup shortening 1 cup less 2 tablespoons milk Pi teaspoons vanilla 2 eggs, unbeaten Sift flour, sugar, baking pow- der, and salt into mixing bowl. Drop in shortening. Add ?a cup milk, then vanilla and beat 150 strokes. Scrape bowl and spoon often throughout entire mixing. Add eggs and beat 250 strokes. Add remaining milk and beat 80 strokes. Pour into 2 greased 8 - inch cake pans and bake at 175 degrees F. for 25-35 minutes, (If you are mixing with an electric beater, add % cup of milk, then vanilla to dry ingredients and shortening and beat a low speed 2 minutes; scrape bowl and beater. Add eggs and remaining milk and beat on low speed 2 minutes). Frost with chocolate frosting and decorate with pecan halves. , Another quick -mix cake is tinted pink for birthdays or other festive occasions. This is baked in a 13x9x2-inch pan. PINK PEPPERMINT CAKE 3/ 2!/i 1!/i 4 1 1 .ii cup shortening cups sifted flour cups sugar teaspoons baking powder teaspoon salt cup milk teaspoon vanilla teaspoon peppermint extract 3 egg yolks 1 egg white Few drops red fond cater+ng Place shortening in bowl; -cift flour, baking powder, and -call into the bowl, Add :;:r cup of milk and beat 2 minutes on me- dium speed of electrir 0 'r, or 150 strokes by hand, 'Through- out mixing time, keep batter scraped from side.s and bottom of bowl, Add remaining VI cup milk, vanilla, peppermint ex- tract, 3 egg yolks, 1 e.g. white, and red coloring, Beet an addi- tional 2 minutes on nc(hum spec d, or 150 strokes, Scrape bowl and beaters, Pour batter into a 13x9x2 cake pan ( bottom lined with 2 layers cf waxed paper). Bake at 350 degrees F. about 90-95 minutes, Cool slight- ly. Loosen cake by running spa- tula around edge of the pan, then remove from pan by plac- ing tray on top of pan and turn- ing upside down. F r o s t with pink fluffy frosting (use remain- ing egg whites for this frost- ing). . * - At a glamourous party which I attended recently, there w;i, a table laden with delicious and beautiful things to eat, inciud- ing a French chocolate cake — the kind you chill and do not bake, writes Eleanor Richey Johnston in the Christian Sci- ence Monitor. It was made in a circular ring mold. It was filled• with whipped cream, and the center, where the •cake and cream met, was ringed with deep red maraschino cherries, This was the most popular dessert at the party, and I have the recipe for you. It is easy and good; here it is: UNBAKED FRENCH CHOCOLATE CAKE 2 pound semi -sweet chocolate • �a cup water 4 tablespoons powdered sugar 1114 sticks butler (melt over low heat) 5 eggs, separated 5 tablespoons grated ground almonds 2 tablespoons corn soya (a breakfast cereal) 1 tablespoon powdered sugar Break chocolate into medium chunks in saucepan; add the water and place over very low heat. When chocolate is melted pour off water and discard, Place the 4 tablespoons powder- ed sugar in mixing bowl; add melted chocolate and melted butter; mix well by hand, Add egg yolks, one at a time, mixing after each addition. Add grated ar almonds and cereal a n d mix. Beat egg ``whites until stiff and dry and add to thein 1 table- spoon powdered sugar. Carefully fold egg whites into first mix- ture. Pour into grensed ring mold and put into refrigerator; chill, When firm, turn out 011 serving p la t e and fill centro, with whipped c r e am or ice cream. , Here is another cake which will make your friends say, "Please give nie the recipe," af- ter they have eaten it. It is de- corated with green 1 ea f gum- drops and red maraschino ever• ries. MARASCHINO CHERRY -NUT CAKE 11 cup butter Pi cups sugar 3 cups sifted cake flour 3 teaspoons baking powder ?z teaspoon salt 1 cup. milk coup chopped, drained red maraschino cherries( about 16) cup chopped pecans ?.i teaspoon almond flavouring 3 egg whites Cream butter; r.c'.d sugar gra- dually incl cream w'cil together. Sift flour, baking p:7wder, and salt together and add to (cream- ed mixture alternate:y with the mills, beginning and ending with dry ingredients. Add the well- drained ell- drained nrarvschino cherries, nuts, and almond flavouring. Beat egg whites until stiff but not dry. With a rubber spatula or a s p o o n, fold in the egg whites with an up -and -over mo- tion. Divide batter evenly into two 9 -inch cake pans that have been oiled on the bottom. Ba':e at 375 degrees F. for 20 minutes or until inserted too:h dick comes out clean. Cool on racks until pans are cool enough to handle, then turn out on reeks end cool before frosting, F r o s t with 7 - minute icing and cic;corate, With all of its electric and telephone wires burled underground, this residential Ares has en open, uncluttered look. t'' 0l fie When a Town Goes 'Wireless' Conventional electrification requires a Jungle of boles Three subdivisions in the Cedar Falls, Iowa, area have 9ove completely "underground," That is, their electrici- ty has. There isn't a wire or pole to be seen, except for street light poles, Municipal Utilities of Cedar Falls and Northwestern Bell Telephone Co. co-operated in the ex- perminent to see if the idea was feasible. They found that their first subdivision of 38 lots cost $9,366 for under-, ground installation, $2407 more than the estimated and wires in this subdivision. Transformer And service fa. e i l i t i e s are inconspicuous, above ground cost, Fears of costly maintenance proved highly exaggerated. In a severe ice storm, 300 overhead services were lost but none of those underground. The companies are solid backers of underground wiring and feel that improved appearance, greater safety, low main- tenance and customer satisfaction make the slightly in- creased price per lot ($100 flat fee in this case) a bar- gain for both homeowner and community. Advances in the system will make it even more desirable. She Raised An Orphan Hummingbird Thu Cooleys' home Is about 20 miles from Eugene, near Lea - burg, Ore,, where they have an sero of ground on the McKenzie River, with flowers, trees, and hushes which provide practically K bird sanctuary, for they permit no cats on their premises, There are usually many hummingbirds ?bout ,getting nectar from their flowers, and Mrs. Cooley had al- ways watched them with keen interest. She learned that on dull days, when the flowers did not yield enough nectar to .sustain their swift flight, the, tiny hununers went into a kind of torpor, con - .serving their energy for another try at the flowers. Early one !winners ;he found one on a wire quietly, his eyes closed, liiheo2h he seemed aware of :ser , .,e approached Ilial he ciid not move but, 03 she barely leeched him, he opened his eyes ;-.rid Herr: to nearby flower:. She •.v:=he.l then that she might eemeten? it 011e to light on her ]Land On 1 Sunday afternoon two sesselei !Ater, r, she had her wish. H r next-door neighbor came over holding something out to less, "De sou want this? See what 1 found," she said, placing in the pain) of Betty Cooley's hand the tiniest halos,. featherless little bird sale had ever seen. It was a baby hummingbird which had f::.ilen front its nest. From what cies latsr learned about hum- mingbird., she entimated it must have been about 10 days old, She knew baby birds must iee fed every 15 minutes and de- c:ded this one's first meal should be .sugar :and water as tl;c near - es:', thin:; to flower nectar. It i•.ccepted this eagerly from an eye dropper. Then she called Dr. Ralph R, 1luestis, professor of biology at the University of Ore - g ori inEugene, who advised that some protein should be ad- ded, So she pressed out the juice of a ,little hamburger, combining it with the sugar and water to soske ea acceptable baby -bird t+o, l p Apparently no mother birch could Have provided better meals, for the little fellow, less than an inch long when she got him, grew amazingly that first week. She made a soft little nest for him of cleaning tissue and got a cago in which he could move about safely, His feet and legs were so slender you could hardly see them, she said, and les used his wings and bill like ittle walking sticks, She devised his bath from the shallow base of a butter dish ouch as Is used to hold a quarter - pound of butter, It was too slip- pery for him to light on, so she put adhesive tape on sides and BUILDING ANGLES - Novel apartment houses in Lahr, West Germany, will house French soldiers and families stationed in the area. The angular buildings built by the Bonn government contain 24 apartments grouped around a centrally located stairway. bonsai. But he still needed more support so she taped strings across the bottom for his tiny feet to hold to and this was per- fect, as he indicated by frequent use of it. As he grew, he gave greatest attention to his wings, preening them and removing hits fo dark and removing the bits of dark covering in which his little fea- thers had been encased. Wings are of first importance to baby birds. When ire started to fly from his cago he would go as far as he could and then just drop onto whatever was beneath him, He learned to light on Betty's shoul- der, or on one finger, If, in the morning, she had her hair in curlers, he made for them as though they were intended espe- cially for him to perch on. The intelligence of this feeth- et'cd mite was always a \Vender to the Cooleys. Ile expressed his pleasure when there was niu.ic on the hi•fi by delighted little chirps. After being fed he al- ways chirped a satisfied "thank you," ]jetty had a small bell which she rang at feeding time and he quickly learned to re- spond to the call. [le also discovered around the fireplace tiny little spiders, the size of a pinhead, of which there are many in that part of the country. When he could find no more, Betty, using one of the tiny feathers he had dropped, got on her hands and knees and brushed minute spider:~ out of the corners, putting them in a small bottle. Then, when he wanted one she would shake it out on her finger and brush it off. As it dropped down at the end of a slender thread of web, the bird would dart from the lampshade or cur- tain rod and have it in an instant. They called hint Sniidge be- cause he was so small, in the morning when Betty greeted him with, "Good morning, Smidge," he held his wings close to his side, mouth wide,_ and swayed slightly from side to side, always acknowledging the greeting the sante way, 1[e had his little games, too. When her husband was at the table and she rang the bell for Sniidge 11e was apt to head straight for Phil's head like a lithe dive bomber, then swerve just in time to whir past his ear. When he flew toward a wall, it always looked as though he would go right into it, but he banked like a plane, turned, and was headed the other way before you knew it, Fruit flies, like little spiders, were a favorite food, Betty usu- ally cut a peach in half and let it lie on a saucer till the fruit flies appeared, Smidge knew right where to go for then but the flies, warned by the whir of his wings, crawled underneath where lie couldn't get them, He then flew to Betty, hovered in front of her and flew back to his perch, going back and forth until she turned it over for hint so the flies were on top or scattered so he could get them in flight, Big flies he would chase -not to Gatch, but to drive out of his ter- ritory. Then came a September day when a door was open for a mo- ment and little Smidge ventured into the wide world with the hummingbirds outside. Although he had learned how- to take nec- tar from a dropper, he had no experience getting it from flow- ers, but Betty and Phil feel sure he learned from his brother birds and they' hopefully await his re- turn when the hummingbirds come back in the spring from Mexico, to which they migrate.- By Jessie Ash Arndt in the Chris- tian Science Monitor, Q. How can I quickly make my own "sour milk" for sour -milk recipes? A. Two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice, added to one cup of sweet milk, sours it to the acidity de- sired for sour -milk recipes, CROSSWORD PUZZLE AC'itO.-iS DOWN 1. 7. 4 !. if day 1. RabbitIii. 1.�.ur 2. negln 9. impair 1. Accustatard 12. Part of a 4. Iieclination church 6, Noted the 13. Mahe speed obdurate 6. rn lividuale 16. Sand bar 16. Cotnmunlra. tions 17. Tolerates 1P. Aunt (Sp.) 20. Turf 21. Chemical used In dyer 24. Acenee 27. Shahs 22. Artiflelal language 29 Precious Pln,IP 80, Bit 41. Conceited ersou 82. Title 88. Demure 84. Cubic meter 86. Beetle 87, Equal tooting 18. Ask payment 18. Non-metallto element H. Crested 40. Cover oontpaotly 47. Relating to old times ell. Fenoing sword f1, Simple sugar 4 Thinly eoattared IML. Dispatch 7, Small fish 8. Brilliance 9. Periodical 10. Devoured 11. Thing ( Law) 14. Shower 18, Masculine nalne 21. Cudgel 22. Scent 23, hounded appendage 2.1 Arctic explorer 25. llerolo 26. State of blies 27, Happiness 30, Chore 31, Chevrons 33. Percentor 34. Salt 30. Corrosion 37. Fragment 39. Commotion 40, Promontory 41, Baking chamber 42 Exigency 43,.1ap moaeure 44, Rise (old Bug.) g.) 46. Constellation 1 2. 3 4 nil R.10 5 6 7 5 RI NKR 'I 10 11 Iz � 13 111 14 111 J..IE lb ■..1111 17 ..... ter $�$ 20 . 21 .. 22 23 24 25 2627..128.1 29 ■..$30....31■11 go 32 am 33 II4 { 34111■ 35 3bM t:44.: -M 444 43 way 45' ..•.:�i46 y: 111 0111111 It':}i� In 'Answer elsewhere on this page SUCCESS LADDER - This mouse uses a convenient toy ladder to reach his gool, a Gouda cheese, in Ottawa, Ont. TllIPMM FRONT Through its own long-standing and burdensome wheat surplus is rapidly dissolving under the attrition of inclement weather, poor crops, and increased ex- ports, Canada watches with anxiety the development of agri- cultural policy in the United States. A survey of the Canadian wheat situation by Prof, David L. MacFarlane of McGill Uni- versity, a leading authority, con- cludes that Canada's sudden spurt of exports to Conimurist China has hardly begun to solve the prairie far'mer's prob- lems. An end of the Canadian wheat surplus is in sight, but this, says Professor Macl?arlano, "implies little further price or income im- provement." Only when the United States can reduce its massive surplus and modify its policy of dumping wheat, he charges, "is there a chance for optimism about the world situation," For that reason Canadian agri- culture is intensely interested in the recent statement of two Re- publican spokesmen, Sen, Pres- cott Bush of Connecticut and Rep. Thomas B. Curtis of Mis- souri, who suggest a radical change in United States farm policy. Their proposal that the United State should not confine a policy of tariff reduction to industrial goods but should begin to dis- mantle the high walls of pro- tectionism around its farms is highly relevant to Canada's agri- cultural problem, . . At present, says Professor MacFarlane, "United States dumping of wheat in otherwise commercial Western European markets is hurting Canadian ex- ports. "In the last crop year the United States exported 140,000,- 000 bushels to western. Europe. This compared with about 60,- 000,000 bushels the previous year. Inquiries about the me- chanics of the pricing formula used by the United States Gov- ernment In these sales go unan- swered." • B u t, Professor MacFarlane asserts, "the gigantic United States (wheat) surplus is affect- ed only slightly by a vast scale of give-aways and dumping. Ex- ports from that country in the 1960-61 crop year were 669,000,- 000 bushels, b u t supplies still stand at nearly 2,000,000,000 bu- shels." * * * As the United States surplus overhangs the world market, Ca- nada finds its own wheat situa- tion drastically changed. The great Canadian surplus built up since 1952 probably will disap- pear this year, Professor Mac- Farlane says. In the past decade the annual carryover of unsold wheat aver- aged more than a 1,000,000,000 bushels but in the present crop year it dipped to 788,500,000 bu- shels. This, was the result of two fac- tors: 1, A sharp increase of exports to 354,000,000 bushels, including exports of 60,000,000 bushels to Communist China, a new cus- tomer, and a crop of only 262,- 000,000 bushels in 1961, the low- est since 1937, 2, Moisture conditions on the prairies this winter threaten an- other light crop. . . All these factors combined, Professor MacFarlane warns, do not mean that the disappearance of the wheat surplus will cure the farmer's troubles. His net income remains relatively low and "grain prices at the ,farm have lost ground in relation to cost of goods farmers must buy. "Nor is all bright on world markets. Supplies still exceed commercial needs, United States dumping policies hurt, Britain's entry into the Common Maiket may bite into our business." • . 1 In the wheat industry Cana- dian governments have refused, so far, to consider anything like the United States's price -sup- port policies, though the farmer has been assisted by a crop -in- surance program and by grain storage at state expense, writes Bruce Ifutchison in the Chris- tian Science Monitor, . . . Without direct, government support, wheat prices have been edging upward in the last year to a new high of over $1.80 _a bushel for the best grade. Over the last five years the • farmer received between $1,25 and $1.30 a bushel at the farm as an average for a 1 1 grades. ONLY A ROSE -- Trailing a full-blown organza rose, a high - crowned miller's cap perches precariously atop a high hairdo in Paris, France. This compares with a price of $1,50 to $1.60 ten years ago. Even an increased price re- cently is not enough to compen- sate the farmer for his rising costs. "Considering that the things farmers buy have risen by 25 per cent in the last 10 years," Professor MacFarlane argues, "the financial squeeze on wheat producers has been se- vere•" Under these conditions a Ca- nadian government concerned with the political as well as the economic facts of wheat will fol- low closely the agricultural de- bate developing in Washington as part of President Kennedy's tariff initiative. Grace's Husband Gets Hot and Bothered Monaco's Prince Rainier 11I drew himself up to his full 5 feet 9 inches, his brown eyes blaiing in anger. As Europe's last ab- solute monarch Lind as the man who three years ago suspended his country's constitution, he was not accustomed either to being told off, or told what to do. But this time he had to take it -be- fore giving it back. Laying down the law, Emile Pelletier, F'rance's Minister of State to the park -size principal- ity, demanded that Rainier re- voke his recent decree restricting free trading on the Paris Bourse of stock in Radio Europe No. 1- a privately owned Monaco -based station in which the French Gov- ernment wants to buy a control- ling interest because it considers its news broadcasts "loo inde- pendent." 1f trade in the com- pany's shares was forbidden, Pel- letier indicated, the French Gov- ernment could retaliate by turn- ing off Monaco's elcetricity, halt- ing all rail service,- and closing the border to tourists. Rainier capitulated but he was • furious. The dialogue between - the two men -as somewhat free- ly reported in the Parisian press -is said to have gone like this: IIAINIE,R: "I used to be a Francophile but I damn sure regret it now." PELLE'I'IER: "Sir!" RAINIER: "You aro a salaud, (s.o:b.)." PELLETIER: (wish dignity). "I cannot tolerate your speaking of France in such fashion, 1 ant going to withdraw." - RAINIER: "Darn right you are -you're fired." At that, the first French min- ister ever kicked out of Monaco huffed off to Paris. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking dNa S 3 d 3 a d 3 tV NO, 3d 3 0 a 81113 0 1 S S 0 1 d S 111 a v d s N n• a a V 80 M 383 1 s A 0 D a s 9 0 N s 1 O 1 V d O 0CI 1 s a 0 a 1 d b( 1 d 3 d zrI39:. (OS VI1'S3anaN3 9Vss3W daaa dancNI ride W 1101 8h0h a r V UI1L%Y SCilOOl LESSON By Rev, R. Barclay Warren, B.A., 8,1), No Stealing Exodus 20:15; Joshua 7: 19-25, Memory Selection: Let him that stele steal no more; but ra- ther lel him labour, working with Iris hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to hint that needeth. Ephesians 4 :28, Stores give fantastic figures about losses from stealing by customers and employees. A friend who is a store detective says, "You'd be surprised at some of the people I find slipping ar- ticles into their clothes. It isn't just the poor by any means." Stealing usually begins with little things. .Just as the person will be faithful over a few things, he will likely be faithful over many things, so the person that will steal a little, will like- ly steal a lot if he has the oppor- tunity. Many steal from the govern- ment unabashed. But in the eyes of God, it is still stealing. We shall give 400011111 of it some day. One person said, "The person t:ave 1110 too much by mistake. I didn't steal it, Should 1 take it back 1 said, "If by error, I received fifty dollars of your money, what would you expert, nie to do about it?" You can guess the answer. A ten -year- old boy asked his father for a definition of ethics. His father said, "I cannot define ethics, but J can give you an illustration. It's this way. Your Uncle Henry and 1.are in business together, Now suppose a pian comes into the store and buys a five -dollar ar- ticle. He gives me a ten -dollar bill thinking it's a five, and leaves the store. I am thinking of something else at the time and do not notice the mistake until he's gone, Then I find the ten -dollar bill, and I say, 'That man gave me five dollars too much.' That, my son, raises a question In ethics. Shall I put that five-spot in my pocket or split it fifty-fifty with your uncle?" An evangelist bought a street car ticket. He noticed that he had received ten cents too much. He went back to the conductor, and reported it. "1 knew it," said the conductor, "I heard you preach last night. I wanted to see 1f you practised what you preached." People steal from God, too. :,,Joshua took of the silver and gold consecrated to God. So, many rob God of the tithes and offerings. No wonder there is so much more money for liquor than for the cause of the King- dom. We need a spiritual awake- ning, ISSUE 8 - 1962 PERSONALIZED POSTS--- Original, entertaining and functional are these four imaginative moil boxes which reflect the individuality of their owners in Rockford, III , top photos' Buena Vista, Ga., lower left, and Alden, N.Y., lower right. They're eye openers for passing motorists, too. PAGE 4 T~ Congratulations to Airs. C. J. Scott Ccngatulations t.o lfr, Laurie Scott who celebrated her birthday February who celebrated his biriidiiy on Feb, zg Autry 161h. WINTER BARGAINS 9 Coats Only, 10 t& 1. -IN teen 9.95 1 Rack Dresses 1.98 and 3.98 1 Rack Skirts 1,98 to '2.98 20 percent discount on all coats and coat sets, jackets and snowsuits, NcedlecraFt Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Ont. 1 1 Clinton Mernoria! . Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON -•- EXETER — REAF(JRTH LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -- THOMAS 9'I'EEP, CLINTON, CRONES( • CLINTON! EXETER! Business—Hu 2.66U6 Rosiness 41 Residence—Hu Z•3869 Residence fl4 p FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest• aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full - course meals, light hunches or home-made desserts, HURON GRILL BUM a ONTARIO FRANK GONG, Proprietor. Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day, CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON. 'WALLACE'S DRY GOODS •--Blyth.' ; BOOTS 8 SHOE Phone 73, YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN. KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. immommimmommu ATTEND OUR MONDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1962 BRING IN YOUR COMPLETE 'TICKE IliVirlD UNITS Est floe Irfiiettiontind Adfu frtontt bins 11ARdPersonnel." Ne IabiTcharge, You 'poy only f>or partsn j i 73 �eplaCe ihoee.doi aged or.worn,,>foserv4_ihis 4iv Coff€ and Donuts at 10 a.m. Belgrave C® -Operative Association $tdkatiuku.,: astaiik. - 4155.'1:.„ioa:Lit i,:..:SJk x .id;:Z k:YSICLFk?ItSit ttaLeGtilt$ THE I3LYTII STANDARD AUBURN NEWS autl NH's, Howard Tall and Cin• dy, tool lira. Charles Nivins visited recently with Mr, and Mrs, !fuss N oho; al, Paul and Louise.. lir, and llrs, Ji; In Ntenhuore and son, Steven, of 81. Columba'', risiled last ,'oatur(lay with her mutt, Airs, W. head• nock, and lir, Bradnuck, Muny item this district. attended tit': funeral of (he late firs, Edythe Phillip,: in Blyth on Tuesday. 11'eelt•end visitors in the district were, Mr. John 'Hamilton, of Toronto, with ht parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ilamilt:m, lliss Shirley 1i►'a•,'u, Strolford 'reach ers' College, with her parents, Mr. atl(1 11rs. Clifford 13rc\vn and faniily; Alis Margo Grange, Stratford Teachers' College, with her mother, 1lrs, Arthur Grange and family; Miss ilelen Yount; bird, of \\'irp,,hain, with her parents. NH.. and 11rs. Major Younehlul an l family; hiss Carol Beadle, of l.on(lun. \with her parents, ,lir. and ltrs. harry, Beadle. 11is warner Andrews is a in Victoria Hospital, \\'e wish yecdy recovery. paticul her 0 Allan Bowles Word was received here last week of the death of Allan lljwles at \'ancnm or, 11,(,, in his 85th year, Born In Sal' nia, he was swell known in this cum. flaunty hiving visited dere 011 'a nom. bee of tines with his wife the former 'Pena Sprung, Avho \\Nas horn in this (lis. trict. She spent her early yen's en the Baseline on the farm owned by her father, the late Richard Sprung, Fol• lowing his graduation frwu university of Toronto in 1908, he went to Van eouvcr 111 4910 where he taught iligh Schools until he retired in 19•12. Dur- ing his retirement. he taught special mathematics classes for the RCAF nod lectured at the University of British Columbia. Surviving besides his wife is a daughter, Alarm (Mrs, Clifford Ware), two grandchildren and several relatives in this community. Card Party Well ;Attended Over eighty persons attended the see'• and card party in the llenwrial Com munily hall \when progressive cuelu•e. lost heir and five hundred was played. Air. Oliver Anderson. Mr, William L. Craig and lir. Robert Arthur were in charge of the games. The prizes were won by: high lady, Mrs. Charles Mlills; low lady, Miss Elma Mulch; most lone hands, Mrs. Bob Gloushcr; high than, Iloward Tait; low mato, Sidney Lansing; lone hands, John Mt:Cliiiehey, Five hundred: firs. George i1'3Inhton, Dir, William J, Craig Lost heir: high lady, Miss Bernice McDougall; kw lady, Miss Marie Letherland; high 111311: Nornuln McClinohey; low mein, hen 110th McDougall, The prizes for these winners were donated by Dir. and !fry, 1\'illiam L, Craig. Thu holder of the lucky ticket for the 211 pouted turkey teas Frank McMichael, of ReunlWer. The second draw, a box of chocolates donated by lir. Gordon 11. Taylor, was \ton by ,111'. John Seers. Lunch \va:, :er'r'ed by Mrs. 11'illialn L. Craig, Mrs. Oliver Anderson and Mrs. Wes. Bract aock. flans were made to hold an• other card party on March 9111 to raise funds to cemplctc the financing of the new hall, 4.11 Club 1Ieeting The Auburn 4.II Club rued for their Spring project, " Scpaca'tes for Stun - 'tier" at the home of the leader, Mrs. \\',es Brndnock, The fourteen members 'read their election of ,officers which results were as follows: president, Car. ole Brown; vice president, Rose Marie Il: ggill: secretary, Margaret Sander• son, as;;istaul. Toni De Jong; telephone committee, Alary Sanderson, Laura Doer. The members decided to 1101d their meetings on Thursday evenings al 7 p.111, '111e 0551510111 leader, 111.0(;. Gordon Dobie, d.ittributed The leaflets and beds to the members. A demon. ,tratiun followed on taking measure. inerts and swaths of 111ate1'01s were tried to each member for becoming. ness. Plans were made for their Record Books, One point to consider when buy- ing uyint; cotton for Summer Separates an• swercd the roll call for the second meeting when all girls were present. All repealed the 4•JI Pledge and Carole Brown presided for the meeting. A study Was taken of patterns and Ala• terdals to make their blouses and ,Skirts and some of the girls plan to make Jamaica and Bermuda shorts to cont• plete their sports ensemble. Each girl is required to bring their pattern and mialterial to the next meeting. The meet- ing was closed by all repeating the Mary Stewart Collect, Anglican Guild Meeting The 51. Mark's Anglican Guild nut at the home of Mrs, Thomas Recent for (.heir February ulr0tiiig with 16 present. The hostess opened the meet Ing with the hymn, "Unto the hills," '1'hc scripture lesson was read by Mrs. George Schneider and i\Irs, Ilaggitt led in prayer. Mrs. Clifford Brown read the chapter of .the Study Book and a piano solo was played by Mrs. John Ilouston. This was very (ouch enjoyed. Mrs, Ed. LlavJes gave the topic on World Peace. A musical guessing contest was con- ducted by Mrs. Robert J. Phillips. Mrs, }iaggitt thanked all who had talc• en part in the program and the presi• dent, Jars. George Schneider, tools charge 01 the businese,s period. The secretary, Mrs. M. 1)avieF, read the minutes of the January meeting and 111e financial statement, was given by Airs. Gordon 11 'IC:y;ur. Final arrangement_ were made for the. Wnrld':r Day of Prayer In he held Thu, ycar in rd. 51ark's Anglican Church on March 9. 'the Benefit Apron was passed around and Ito' lathe,, dropped money in lhf: picket for goi1 bcallh. '1'110 meeting was closed by singing "The Lord is 111y Ei1C:pherd." airs, Gordon It. Taylor Was pianist, throughout the meeting. Rev, Robert Neatly closed the electing ' Vednek!ay, Feb, 21, 1061 with prayer, At aha close, a sucecssd ful auction was Wel and the hocttess served a delicious lunch, assisted by her sister, Airs, Clifford Brown and Mrs. 1:;d, Davies, IN 11 LlMOII I,1,1I ' \VI)I'i'J1O1t1 --111 loving memory of a dear husband and father, Kenneth Whitmore, who passel away four Years agu, February 'L1, 19,8. True tt+as his lmaet, his friendship sound Laved and re'pc:c.ted by all around Just as he was he will always be Trcasurted forever in otu• memory. --Lovingly remembered and sadly missed by wife, Gladys, and sou, Douglas. HAUGHS WORK CLOTHES GREEN PANTS and SHIRT TO MATCH PANTS, Reg. $5,5() Special $ L95 SIIIR'I', Reg. $3.98 Special $3.79 Vit, N'. Diz��lllPe SHOES -- MIEN'S & BOYS' WEAR Ile Store With The Good Manners" 5c • $1.00 STORE, BLYTH ---SPECIALS--- LEOTARDS for Misses and Ladies. PAJAMAS, HOUSE COATS, NIGIITIES and SLE ETERS. 1l) 9recenl Discount until February 28 on the above items, All sales final. NEW ASSORTMENT of S1:'RING FLOWERS -- Roses, At'1•kan Violets, Sweet Peas, Daf- I'odils, Narcissus and Ferns. rtUMF'Y CUSHIONS, assorted colours, , , each 97c HOW MANY HAVE A BANK ACCOUNT? Chances are they all have/Because nowadays practically everybody its a bank customer. And they go to the bank so often and for so many reasons: to deposit savings, arrange a loan, buy or sell foreign exchange, purchase money orders , , . In fact, Canadians seem to use banking services more than the people of any other country/The chartered banks, for their part, do their utmost to make each branch a friendly, efficient centre for every kind of banking service, TTIE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY t?htgtny, Veli, 21, 1962 THE BLYTH STANDARD PAGE 5 CRR LICENSE TIME The Ontario Government now demands $20,00 from uninsured car owners in addition to the car license fee. This is NOT Automobile Insurance You will still be liable for damages and can be ruined by a serious accident. A low cost policy with Tho Economical Mutual Insurance col may save your future Phone or write G ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGENCY "INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES" Blyth, Ontario P & W TRANSPORT LTD. Local and Long Distance _Trucking Cattle Shipped Monday and Thursday Hogs on Tuesdays '!'rucking to and from Brussels and Clinton Sales on Friday Call 162, Blyth SANITATION SISItVICES Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired Blacked drains opened with modem equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin Coon, Milverton, Telephone 254. 11,1. McKILLOP MUTUAL 'FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT, OFFICERS: President — John L. Malone, Sea - forth; Vice•President, John H. McEw Ing, Blyth; Secretary'•Trcasurer, W. 1:, Southgate, Seaforth. DIRE(:TOlts J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. 11. McEw. lag, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton. Norman Tretvartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep. per, 13rucefield; C. W. Leonhardt, 'Bornholm; IL Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broudfoul, SFufortll. AGENTS; 1Villia►n Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; V. J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seaforth; Selwyn Ba ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth; Harold Squires, Clinton. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont, OFFICE HOURS— 1 p.m. to 4;30 p.m, EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (13Y APPOINTMENT) 11, ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant anutEWfl, ONT. Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 -» Box 478. G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST. - WINGIIAM,, ONT, (For Appointment please phone 770 1Vinghaw), Professional • Eye Examination. Optical Services. 3. V. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 -- Clinton Seaforth Dally Except Monday da Wed . 9:00 a.m. to 0;30 p.tn. Tre41. — 9;00 a.rn. to 12;30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 0;80. Phone, AU 2.7010 G. B. CLANCY - Ofl O1tI11TR1ST -- OPTICIAN (Succcasor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) IOR APPOINTMENT rfuoNB 83, OODERICH 15-81 Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Parma owned and controlled Cervico at cost Chcirc of b)11 and breed On/ ah tificiat•breedhig service will help you to a Moro dfffcfent livestoc operation Icor service or more information call: Clinton HU 2-3441, or for long distance Clinton Zenith 9.5650, BETTER 'CNrrL1 roll Bl '1'1'E11 LIVING CKAWFORU & HETHERINGTON 1BARRIBTtERS tb SOLICITORS J. IL Crawford, R, S. Ifetherington, Q C. Q.C. 'Muslim rind Blyth, iN BLYTt EACs THURSDAY MORNING end by appointment. Louslid, In Elliott Insofenue Amity ('bone 111,ptb, 104 W114110=1 11/4' NOTICE Applications will be received for caretaker for Blyth Horticultural So• ciety by the Secretary, Mrs, Emerson Wright, up to and including February to state hourly Mrs. E. Wright Secretary. 23th, 1962. Applicant wage expected. Mrs. L. Scrimgeour, President, AUTOMOTIVE alerhanlcal and body repairs, glass, steering and wheel balance, Undaspray for rust prevention, DAVIDSON'S 'Texaco Service No. 8 highway, Phone JA 4.7231 Godcrich, Ontario, DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR RENOVATION PLANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Job Call . GERALD EXEL Carpentry and Masonry Phone 23R12 Brussels, Ontario PROPERTIES FOR SALE WILFRED MCINTEE Real Estate Broker WALKERTON, ONTARIO Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78, VACUUM CLEANERS . SALES AND SERVICE Repairs to most popular makes of cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen Sales, Varna. Tel, collect Hensall 696112. 50.13p.lf. DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASII PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and HORSES also Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old Horses -4c per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth 24 Hour Service Plant Licence No. 54•I1,I'.•61 Colector LIcence No. 8B.G61 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 412W6, Brussels, R.R, 2, f;linton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLINTON BALE BARN at 2 p.m. IN 13LY'ru, PHONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer 05 -it. .114444.#01141.144.0441~1.4,444141k. 100.3.4.4P~44... TIIE WEST 1VAWANOSiI MUTUAL FIIIE INSURANCE COMPANY IIend Office, Dungannon Established 1870 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President., 11rown ,Smyth, IL[1, 2, Auburu; Vice -President, Herm Irwin, Bclgrava; Directors: Pnul Caesar, B,R, 1, Dungannon; George C. )Fagan. Goder(clt; Ross McPhee, It,It. 3, Au. burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. Maclntmtan, RM. 3, Goderich; Frank Thompson, RR. 1, lfolyrood; Wm Wiggins, II.11. 3, Auburn, For htformatlon on your insurance, call your nearest director who Is also an agent, or the secretary, Durnln Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon 48. BINGO Legion Bingo every Thursday Hite 8;45 sharp, In Legion Hall, Lucknow, 12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share• the -wealth and a special for $30,00 must go. (no limit to nulubers), `_ 41311 GRAVEL TENNIS WANTED MORRIS TOWNSHIP Tenders .for the contract of supplying, crushing and hauling approximately 15,000 cubic yards of gravel for Morris Township will be received by the uu• dorsigned until 12 o'clock noon, Marco :i, 1.901. Crusher is to he equipped with a three quarter incl! screen. A certi- fied cheque for $200 must accompany each tender. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. George C. Martin, Clerk, 11,11. No. 4, Brussels, Ontario. 51.2 101111, APPLICATIONS WANTED Morris Townshlp Applications will be received by the undersigned until 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1962 for WVArble Fly Inspector, Truck Driver, and Helper for Morris Township to work under the Warble Fly Control Act. ' Goon, C. Martin, Clerk, R.R., 4, Brussels. 51.2 1111.1111, GRAVEL TENDERS Township of East Wawanosh Sealed tenders will be received by the undersigned until 12 o'clock noon on Tuesday, March 6th for crushing and hauling approximately 8000 cu. yds. live•eighlh inch gravel. A certified cheque for $300.00 trust accompany each tender, Lowest or any tender not neces::arily )accepted, Stuart McBurney, Road Supt,, '1'own_ltip of East Wawanosh, 51.2 Wingltarn, Ont. TENDERS Tenders will be !received by the un- dersigned up to one o'clock Mauch 6, 1962 for Warble Fly Inspector, must find own transportation; sprayer oper- ator and operator helper for Township of East Wawanosh, Tenders to state Hourly wages expected. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted, Dated at Belgrave February 15, 1962, R. H. Thompson, 51.2, Township Clerk. Township of Ilullelt TENDER Tenders will be received by the Town- ship cf Ilullett for the Spraying of Cat Ile for Warble Fly Control within the municipality. All 'fenders are to be Marty marked Os to contents and to state the price per head per spray, and must. be in the Clerk's Office not later Than March 3rd at 6:00 o'clock p.m., 1962, All persons tendering for this position must comply with the terms and conditions of the Warble Fly Spray Act, Lowest or any tender not nec- essarily accepted, llarr'y F. Tobbutt, Clerk, H.R. 1, Londesboro, Ont. 51.2. Township of 1!Iullett TENDER Tenders will be received by the Town• ship of Mullett for the supplying and delivery of 800 Lbs. of Warble Fly Powder. 750 Lbs. to be in 15 Lbr-Bags and 50 Lbs. to be in 1 Lb. Bags, De• livery to be made to the Township Garage in Londesboro, All Tenders to be clearly marked as to contents and are to be in the Cleric's Office not later than March 3rd at 6:00 o'clock p.m., 1962. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted, Harry F. Tebhutt, Clerk, 11.11. 1, Londesboro, Ont. 51-2. pmm®'"" 1m oLt fl"N f MARCO ORCHARDS 1 1 Started Pullets r►' '� Chioka the superb facilities of Roe Farms are now el work producing the famous Harco Orchards black Seer•llnks , , , the unusual layer that has made headlines for egg production and all-round farm performance for over 20 years, Order es deyold, or as started pullets from 2 weeks of age right up to reedyto•ley , , . every one hatched and reared undor ROE FARMS' mighty program, stock is first generation, direct from the breeder, end backed by Roe rem' years of ex. perlence In producing the finest started pullets end day-old pullets and chicks that can be bought anywhere, other famous ,trains eno available se d,yoid and started pullets. Mile or phone for Molls and down•taieerth prices. ROE FARMS LIMIISD Atwood, Ont., Phone 356.2211 ACHESON'S DEAL) STOCK SERVICE Highest prices for dead, old or dis• abled horses and cattle, Phone Atwood 356.2622 collect. Licence No. 1511062, BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling, Ann Hollinger Phone 143 FOR SALE House in Blyth, 11 r story brick Ven• eer, Inquire at Standard- Office. 49.19 MEN WANTED ,Man Wanted for customer service for Huron County Area. No investment. For Interview and information write B. W. Sercombe, Apt. 5, 1015 Adelaide Street, London, Ontario. GRAVEL TENDERS TOWNSIIII•` OF GREY Tenders will be received by the un- dersigned until 1 part„ • Saturday, March 3rd, 1962, for crushing and haul- ing 15,000 cubic yards, more or less, of gravel for the 'Township of Grey, Crusher to be equipped with % screen. Gravel to be supplied by the township, A certified cheque for $300,00 must accompany tender, Lowest or any ten- der not necessarily accepted, DYTHE M. CARDIFF, Clerk, Township of Grey, —« Ethel, Ontario, ii0 2. CON GRA TULATIOINS Congratuahionv to Mrs. Charles ,Johnston tviu► celebrated her birthday o.t Feb:'nary 17111. Cong►'t::.u!:.linrs lo lir; 1'. Crravfnrd who cell:waled her birthday on Fele ruary 17th. MEE'ru G The (2.G.1,'1'. of lily111 hell an enjoy- able njoyable Valentine Pally in i'ylli United Church on the 14th c:1 February with an attenda.rce of nineteen girls and guests. A pleasant evening w.is spent a':ilh several contests and games. Valett1itu•e were exchanged and lunch served by the leaders, ;11: s, K. Wc. star and .Mr.s, J, Hewson, The girls are hoping to begin an autograph quilt, in the near future. 110 CARD OF THANKS A sincere thank yen to those typo sent e.rirds, treats and flowers to me while 1 was in the hosp:All. Also to my neighbours for !'.heir acts of kind. Bess while 1 waj Chore and since re• turning home. Marg McCullough 51-1. t.'A111) OF 'TIIANI S I wish to take this opportunity to thank my many friend:; for rcnfem bering 1110 With treats, letter..(, card: fltwra•s and visits while 1 was a Irtliatl in 5... Ju-epin's 11n:r1 ital, London. Ken McGowan 51.1, Township of Mullett TENDERS FOIL GRAVEL Scaled tenders will be received by the undersigned until 5 p.m. on Satur• day, March 3, 1962 for crushing an'I delivering approximately 12,000 cubic yards of three-quarter inch fresh gravel. The gravel will be supplied by the Township and must be delivered under the direction of the Road Super. intendent. Certified cheque of $200. must accompany tenders. The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted, Len Caldwell, Read Supt., Rn. 1, Londesboro, Ilarry F. Tebhutt, Clerk, R.R. 1, Londesboro, County of Huron TENDERS WANTED ON SURVEY STATION WAGON Sealed tenders on forms available at the office of the undersigned will be accepted until 5 00 p.m. en TUESDAY, MARCH 61.1, 1913 The lowest or any tender not necessar- ily accepted, This lender replaces tender IIC•62.101 which was not awarded. J. W. Driblet!, Huron County Engineer, P.O. Box 910, Goderich, Ontario. HOUSE FOR SALE 5 room nanch style house, built 2 years, chive -in garage, automatic of furnace and all modern conveniences, in Blyth, Apply Mrs. E. J. Churchill, Mossley, Ontario, phone liarrietsville 269.3377. 51•tf, CARD OF THANKS 'We wish to extend sincere thanks for the thoughtfulness and sympathy ex• tended to us in our recent bereavement. Special tanks to Mr. L. Tasker, Rev. It. E. McLaga.n and Dr, J. C. Ross. —Sgt. Glenn Kecilnlc and family. LOST L•ariies wrist watch on Saturday al - tenon in Blyth, reward offered. Fin- der please contact Mrs. Jim Mason, phone 51R11, Blyth, 51.1 CARD OF THANKS I would like to express my thanks to all my friends and neighbours who sent flowers, cards, letters and gifts, while I was a patient in Wingham and Vic- toria Hospitals, Special thanks to the doctors and nursing staff who were all so kind, and to neighbours and friends who helped at. home during My absence, Your thoughtfulness alas sutccrcly ap- precinted. 15.1. —Mrs. Robert (Nancy) Carter, CARD OF THANKS I would like to drank all those who remembered me with cards, flowers, visits ;rad gifts while I was a patient fn Wingham hospital. Special thanks to Dr. Street and the nursing staff, We would also like to thank all those who remembered us wills so many beautiful golden wedding anniversary curds and gifts which we received just prior to my illness, Sincerely, Mrs. George Caldwell. 51•lp. CARD OF TI1ANIlS I wish to thank those who sent Bards, letters and visited me while a patient in Stratford General hospital and since returning home. Special thanks to Blyth 10.L. for their box of treats, Dr. Ingham, Dr. Scratch and the nursing stuff on second floor, !''rank Bell. 51-1p, FOR SALE Twin Stroller, in good condition, Ap- ply phone 32I1.10, Myth. 51.1. FOR SALE In Bclgrava, Single Storey Ruin house with one 3 -piece bath and orae 2 -piece bath. Forced air healing. Ful' sized lot, priced right to sell, Apply Ralph McCrea, phone Brussels 372.15 51.1 Township of Ilullelt APPLICATIONS Applications will be received by 1,5i. Township of Mullett for the Pesit.iot of Warble Fly Inspector in the 'Tcavn slip for the Year 1962. The Salary of feted Is .95 cents per hour and .55 cent per mile while on Municipal Busine,t and the Inspector must be familia: with the terms and conditions of 1.h1 Warble Fly Act. All applications tints( bo clearly marked as to_ the content: and be itt the Clerk's Office not late: than March 3rd at 6:00 o'clock p.m. 1962, llarry F. Tcbbutl, Clerk' R.R. 1, Londe boro, 011 51.2. t' .rr WESTFIELD Mr. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell and David motored to 'Toronto on Tuesday. David remaining in the Ifospitial for Sick Children for obr;ervalian mid 1i'<ta p7r. Harold Campbell :.pent Saturday tu'l Sunday visiting in London. We are pleased to report that lir. and Mrs, Lloyd McDowell were able to bring their daughter, Rhea Mare,tta, hone froth the Ilo:,pital one da;; last Mr. Win. Wallen is the t uu_t. of %Ir and Mrs. Frank Harburn, Iten:.a!1. Arr, Gordon Smith, London, teas'vitt, his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Smith over the week -end. Farm Forum was held at Mr. Alvin Snell's on Monday evening, when it was decided that our transportation needs were well looked after at present, mostly by trucks, Forum will be at M'. Lloyd Walden's next Monday, it being review night. Mrs, T. 11. Wilson, of Goderich, was gest of Mr. and Mrs. N. W'iglttman aver the. tveeleend, Air. and Mrs. Marvin Smith and fain - illy, of ,South 1Vood,ley, visited with Mr, and Mrs Gordon Snaith Saturday an'.1 Sunday. Mrs. .Ii per Snell and baby son re; turned to (In' home of Mr. and Mrs (Jerrrhn Snell on Monday from Clinton Public llnspit:rl. Conga tidal ions ' 'Fhe sympathy of the correspondent 's Wended to the bra: haul and fanlil . •:f the lade Mrs Harold Phillips t'n•t ether relative... The February meeting of The Mes- sengers took l ''ace in the church base- ment Sunday afternoon, February 10. Call to worship, "Let us wrn•rhip Gcd,' Scripture lesson taken from 3 different chapters in 1st John of the Revised Standard Version and ned'tation on Dame given by Miss Jeanetta Snell, 'oll Call was taken, after which Jan- 'ce McDowell took up the offering. `it sang "Father b'ess the gifts we 'ring Thee." Mrs, Harvey McDowell told the seniors a story and Miss Jean- etta Snell told a story to the juniors. The meeting was closed with prayct by Miss Snell. LONDESBORO The Londe. boyo 1.11 Sewing Club met al 11re home 01 Mrs, M. Little on Sat- urday, 1.'ebruary 17, at 2 p.m. with ten members pre.ient. The meeting opened with the 1-11 Pledge, followed by the answering of the roll call "one point to consider when buying cotton fur "Sumner Separates." The name chosen for the club was 'Me Ten Twisters." :From the pattern books which were provided, the girls were able to choose their patterns from a wide selection of styles. Lunch was served by the hon- ess, Two new Elders were inducted en Sunday morning namely, Mr. Lorne Hunking and Mr. Grant Snell, the two retiring elders Mr. Wm, Ilunking and Mr. Hebert Townsend were made hon. orary elders of session. The W. I. will meet on March 1st at 2 p.m. Topic is "Historical Research," Guest speaker will be Mrs, Neville Forbes, Roll Call will be answered by bringing and introducing a guest. There will be a penny sale, for which the heft half of (he members 011 the roll will provide the articles. Program cote. mittee, Mrs, A. Clark, Mrs, W Jn'icl, Mrs. 11. Burns, Mi's. J. Siiaddick. Any one win ran contribute any item.', tor the '1'weedalnuir Book kindly do so. The Crokirtole Party under the our,• paces of the Sunday School will be laid this Friday evening, February ?rJ. Anyone who has a beard kindly bring it along. Tables are also requh'c,l. 'I'Ile Mullett Federation of Agriculture held a card party in the hall on Thu►'i• day evening. There was a good 2t• tendance and a social time was enjoyed, Lady's high was won by Mrs, Cecil Cartwright; low, Mrs. N. Forbes; lone hands, Mrs. George Carter; men's high, Robert Townsend; men's low, Betty McGregor (playing as a man►; men's lone hands, Don Jewitt; -lucky ticket draw, Keith Cartwright, ;am► MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE GODERiCH PARK THEATRE Phone 3A4.7811 NOW PLAYLNG Thur., Fri,, Sat., Feb, 22, 23, 21 Anthony Hall • Joyce Taylor and John Dall The amazing story of a civilized nation that vanished. "A'I'LAN'I`l5 TILE LOS'!' CONTINENT" In 'Technicolor Mon„ '!rues., Wed., Feb, 26, 27, 26 — By Request Carroll Maker • James Shlgeta and James Yogi Filmed in Japan and telling the story of a Tennessee bride, "BRIDGE TO THE SUN" 111 Thur., Fri., Sat„ March 1, 2, 3 — Double Bill Bill Travers • William Sylvester and Vincent Winter Depict modern London under attack by a prehistoric ,lemon, "GORGO" In Scope and Color Also—The Bowery Boys in "HOLD THAT BABY" s piorifur}titvHthaVe a "(Ob''tliHetirs" and pi.freedoim and an r isfIC integrity, that are very' rare•, less rinks., , yctaf ler, Maclasdn!s Magazine 1� " I�hcleYsy Wt;,s retreading to �Ct)'FV programming ,i'Wo sugL, , gst'itti vbry`qutzlitiea he3fountliao_ `irabl'e Stn our YV presilntatlono 1 - U I 'resent In nur.1$pogtam$ �8ii pe lta, )t, ray >#t Wh1t 11 !neve 14911 r� i}t T�tritlb► itl uv�tlrds uaid prizes .$, 1!P tf,a ik dila�eIienCsb l a. Here are JusA a few ,,CBC STAGE/Sundays Dir TALENT FI3STIVAL/Sundays . . 1D ,FARM BROADCASTS/Mon-Sat ',NATIONAL FARM FORUM/Mondays i, 'CBC:SYMPHONY/Sundays CITIZEN'$ FORUM/Thursdays GSC. NATIONAL NEWS/Nightly DON MESSER/Mon-WedrFri - .TOMMY HUNTER/Dally R`ANS-CANADA.MATINEE/Dally , :�.EIt�W,EtD►N�.'1f NEV1r8/Sundays • .. 0UNitiAY. 0116R0040-MAt3A2INE/Suhdayt tr' t0JpCT 'O /"Sul days & Tuesdays . ly►EiViettitiACV IN 'AMERICA/Thursdays C E!t2 WEDNESDAY NICHT isl°NG' .OV=; MY PEOPI.. / Mondays Harpo Marx Tells Of Practical Jokes I've spent a lifetime as a clown in the theatre. I've played the harp on concert stages, I've writ- ten'a book called Harpo Speaks! And now I find that I'n) in danger of going down in history as a practical joker, The trouble is that in my book j casually recalled a few pranks that I took part in. Now, I don't mind practical jokes as long as they are good- natured (some can be pretty cruel, and those I hotel. So 1 don't resent being classed as a practical joker—except that 1 really don't rank with the great practical jokers, such as the late Charlie Mact\rthur. Hugh 'Troy, and Jin) Moran, MacArthur lninlsc•!t thought the best practical joke he ever heard of w:.s vn.lu;llt by \i':.Ido Peirce, artist, poet-, and bohenu in. MacArthur's favourite spoof flashes back to Pence's Paris days. Knowing his concierge liked pets, he bought her a turtle. Ttvo day., later he substituted a turtle a larger, Next day he switched that for one which wa:,von ln_te•I.ti!l. Madame to •is overjoyed that the little creature vwas thriving, but day le, day the tiirtle grew until the geod lady round herself sharing the apal•ur.cat tvith a 30h -pound Garga n'uen. Ai that point. Peirce beitan re- ducing tha turtle until it grad- ually returned to its original size, Peirce 70!,:i the ltov :.0 truth just in tint to keep p her from going out of her mind, One of r y favourite pioneer practical jokers on this side of the Atlantic was a roly-p_i!y Nevt Yorker, Brian G. litethcs. On rainy clays, tidies would enter a bir or restaurant, leave his timbrr!'l in a 'enlptine :pot, Warm -Up Wonders (l1 s:ea41G V It hizi2 1. Warm, smart, easy - knit! All men — from the college crowd up — love these cozy chill - chasers. Ideal for sports, snow shovel- ling, outdoor world Pattern 506; directions for helmet, cap, mit- t e n s, wristlets in men's sizes small, medium, large included. Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St,, New Tor- onto, Ont. Print plainly P A T - TERN NUMBF,11, your NAME and ADDRESS, FOR THE FIRST TIME! Over 200 designs in our new, 1962 Needlecraft Catalogue — biggest aver! Pages, pages, pages of fa- shions, home accessories to knit, crochet, sew, weave, embroider, quilt. See jumbo -knit hits, cloths, spreads, toys, linens, afghans plus free patterns. Send 25c. Ontario residents must include lc Sales Tax for each CATA- LOG ordered. There is no sales tax on the patterns, SAttY'S SALES 'It must be felts—the speed 90 bringing US together Ilke and watch for someone to pick it up. As the culprit stepped outside Hughes would follow, for his umbrella put on a remarkably spectacular performance. When it was opened it unfurled a gaudy banner announcing to the world "This Umbrella Stolen from Brian 0, Hughes." The most efficient practical joke is one that delivers a mes- sage without a word being utter- ed, . One year I was at Alec Woollcott's summer retreat, Nes- hobe Island in the middle of Ver- mont's Lake Bongoseen, Alec's Island was well off the mainland and only specially invited friends were ever expected to set foot on it, One day Alice Duer Miller, the novelist and a member of the in- ner circle, \vent for a walk and rushed back with harrowing news—a group of tourists had rowed over to the island and were having 0 picnic. I volunteered to deal with the interlopers. I stripped off 11)3' clothes, put on my red wig, smeared myself \with mud and went \whooping and war -dancing down to the shore, making goony grimaces and brandishing an axe. The picnickers snatched up their belongings and rowed away fast enough to win a boat race. This gag not only scattered the poechers but started a spate of juicy rumours about the maroon- ed maniac of Neshobe Island, which effectively snuffed out all picnic plans for years to come. Slot shirts are the best tar- gets f01' practical jokes. Years Wath an air of suave dimity, I Avenue jewellery Store, was noted for its solemn, stuffy atmo- sphcle. I couldn't resist trying to deflate the place a bit. Here's what I did. I went to Woolworth's and boo^ht practically all the fake emeralds, rubies and diamonds in stock and dumped them all in one I;ag. 'Then 1 went to Tif- fany's, \With an air of Sauwe dignity, I askeri to he shown some dia- nunuls. The clerk drew out a tray of thousand -dollar gems. While 1 examined them 1 gently turned over the bag from Wool- worth's behind my back. Jewels went spilling and bounc- ing all over the joint. Instantly bells rang, buzzers buzzed, arid detectives jumped out of the woodwork, All the other custom- ers were hustled out. The doors were locked. 'Mean while the whole sales staff, including the manager, down on their hands and knees retrieving my sparkling gems. I stood holding out my hat, and they put all the loose jewels in it As he. dropped in the last emerald, the manager understood at last. Abruptly, his attitude - chanr;ed, The store detective hustled me out of the door, with the recom- mendation that I never return to the premises. Tiffany's, by the way, denies to this clay it ever happened. That's their joke on me! I'n) indebted to H. Allen Smith, the Boswell of practical jokers, and his book, The Complcat Practical Joker, for refreshing my memory on the details of some of these 'gags,' like this one pulled by'Lucius Beebe. Beebe brought a ventriloquist friend of his to Yale University and introduced him to the college chaplain as a famous preacher from the Far West. As Beebe had hoped, his friend was invited to deliver a sermon in the Yale chapc;1, Working himself into a froth of religious fervour, the fraud- ulent preacher suddenly cupped his hands to his mouth, raised his eyes towards heaven and shouted: "Ani I right?" Down through the roof floated a voice from afar: "You are right, my son!" The American college campus has been the breeding ground for some of our most spectacular practical jokes. It was at Cornell, for instance, that Hugh Troy, the most eminent practitioner of the art, really got his start, At Cornell he is chiefly re- membered for .his rhinoceros joke, Troy and a friend had found a wastebasket fashioned from the foot of a rhinoceros. One snowy night they made rhinoceros tracks leading down and into Lake Beebee, tine local reservoir. Next morning the university's zoology professors confirmed the fact that the footssteps belonged to a rhino. According to H. Allen Smith, • half the university population quit drinking tap water, and those who drank swore they could taste rhinoceros. • Troy also owned a skeleton packed In a suitcase, As he strode through some busy spot like Grand Central Station he would let the suitcase fall open, the skeleton clattering all over the building. We need more free -wheeling spirits, more impractical jokers, in this grim twentieth century. to piaster a few smiles on the crush' old face ,of the globe, • ISSUE 8 — 1963 BOBO AND FIANCE — Bobo Rockefeller, 44, is kissed by her fiance, Charles Mopes Jr., 41, shortly after they an- nounced their engagement in New York, Mapes will be Bobo's third husband. Her second mate was Winthrop Rockefeller. Last Gwe d.ol%n.e P. Clot, ,e week we had just about everything in the way of wea- ther — ice, snow, high winds and below: zero temperature. It was, uncomfortable for everyone but wors.J for some than others. For insta0ce our five-year-old grand- son Hess went into the hick Children's 1-Iospital last Monday for a ton:silectemy. The. doctors had reason t:) expect there might be complications so he was under observation for fleetly three days before they operated. Joy and Cedric stayed with Dee and h'r family so Joy could spend as much time as possible with Ross. He was as happy as a lark the fit ;t few days. One day his mother took hint to a telephone booth so he could talk to ole -- and to his Daddy. Was he ever excited! This was part of the conversation: "Grandma — do you know what? I'm in a big, big hospital. There is another little boy in my room and are we having fun! And tomorrow I'm going .to have my. tonsils out," Needless to say the next day he wasn't talking much, either on the telephone or elsewhere, He has had a rough tithe, poor little fellow, but I think he is coaling along all right now, although he will be in hospital for a few days yet. We haven't been able to eel in to see hi mas I was practically blind in one eye most Cf lett week, I always have this trouble in winter — bright sun on the white snow is my undoing, Last eek I wrote about good neigh- bours we had had in the past. Well, we have good neighbours here too. One of them is always bringing along bones and nc'ds and ends for The dog: two others will do 11113' necessary shopping for us — or drive our car if I am unable to handle it myself. In return Partner shovels their driveways, keeps ac eye on the children and goes down to the road for their mail every day as the husbands are away all day, 1 have heard people say — "Oh, I couldn't live in a subdivision. There is nothing to see, nowhere to go and no one to talk to!" Well, you know the ans'.: er to that cne, To have friends you have to be friendly. Shut yourself away from everything and everybody and you naturally create a vacu- um. One time we had neighbours like that on the farm but we broke down their reserve and since then we have been the best of friends. One time they even lived with' us for three months between moves. However being friends doesn't necessarily mean being in agreement all the time, We have often had sharp differ- ences of opinion. with many of our friends, especially in regard to politics! Partner starts a little good-natured needling and be- fore you know it a real argument is • in full swing. The best joke around here lately stems -from the fact that at the last.municipal. election Partner voted for one candidate and I for the other! That I kept to myself for, quite awhile but eventually, for pure' devilment, I let it leak `out, Of course I was told we killed each other's vote and might just as well have stayed at home. With that I don't agree. We exercised our franchise; as -loyal citizens we cast our vote. How, and for whom, was our.own business. Right now I am more concern- ed with past generations; their trials and tribulations in their fight for political freedom. That is to say 1 am, busy gathering material for our W.I. Tweeds- muir Ilistory and, as usual, I am getting more benefit than 1 give. ft is siillpi, amazing that one can move 1011) 0 Ile w• 10eality, know- ing little of its history, and then find stories as fascinating as any recorded in history books of the past, Felt instance ail, one living wee( c1 Toronto h:::, probably he_,rct et a subdivision known as "Credit Woodlands". We live just ; eros the coed from it. It wed to he a lovely wooded sec- tion that we hacl admired for years. What we didn't know was that it was also the site of a huge dairy farm — "Price Brother's Dairy" — with a herd of 400' cows, Eventually City Dairy bought Price's out — they in turn sold to Bordens, Price Brothers,. deprived of their cows, turned their 700 acres into a. fruit farm,. planting 1,000 apple trees. By those who should know I have been told they made wonderful cider. Only one of the four bro- ters is now riving — 90 years old Tont Price,' who spends most of his tiine in Toronto but has a wonderful log cabin about a mile from us, the interior of which I ani hoping to see before too long, Another thing, every fall we find wonderful mushrooms on our acre lot, Why wouldn't we .. . it was hart of a mushroom farm( Far too much local history is beim, lest and I an) glad Lady Tweedsmuir had the foresight to realize it and to encourage coun- trywcnleu across Canada to make every effort to preserve records and stories from pioneer. days to the present. Churches, hospitals and so on erected during the last few years should not be consider- ed too modern for local histories, otherwise, in a few years, their origin may also be forgotten. Modern Etiquette Ely Anne Ashley Q. If a combination breakfast and lunch is served after a morn- ing wedding, is it all right to call this "brunch" on the recep- tion invitations? A; No, it would not be. At or before noon and until one o'clock, ' the correct word is "breakfast, After that, the word is "reception." Q. (low can I prevent eggs from bursting when hard -boiling them? A. The eggs will not burst if one end of each egg is pricked with a needle before placing in the water. This makes an outlet for air. and prevents the shell from cracking. Q, If, guests "overstay" their welcome and you are becoming tired, is (there any tactful way you can remind then that the hour is late? A.. If surreptitious glances at your watch, or a stifled , yawn, don't work — you can always begin emptying ashtrays and collecting, used glasses, This may be somewhat obvious, it Is true, but if your guests have been thoughtless enough to drive, you to it, there's little else you can do, short of falling asleep in your chair. Some people are no good at counting calories — they have the figures to prove it, Who Would Be A Royal Princess? For most unroyal people com- ing home from holiday the bills are the most serious problem they have to meet, Princess Margaret, home on January 28, from a three-week holiday in the West Indies, had to face repercussions of public criticism 00 two major counts, which point up the intricacies of life for a royal Princess who does not conform to the accepted royal pattern, A storm had broken out over her husband Lord Snowdon's ap- pointment to a big -circulation Sunday newspaper„ The Sunday Tinges. Though many sympathize with the Princess in her desire that her husband should have some outlet for the artistic talent which made hint a successful pro- fessional photographer, some here feel she should have fore- seen the c',ifficulties which his acceptance of a newspaper posi- tion tvould make for the Royal Family, Scarcely had 1he repercussions of this furore blown over than it was a1n1n01111Ced 111 Parliament the royal home which the 11iinistry of Works is renovating for the Princess and her husband in 0 wing of Kensington Palace, is to cost the British taxpayer $1115,000, $15,000 more than was originally estimated a year ago. In addition Queen Elizabeth II pays $60,000 toward the cost of repair since the house is one of her "grace and favor" resi- dences, These are royal proper- ties which the soverign gives to near relatives, or to those who have rendered personal service to the Crown. It is unfortunate the public has been reminded of the cost of restoring the Princess's new 1)01)10 at a time when the Lon- ' don County _ Council is under pressure to find homes for thous- ands of homeless people, and the government is having the great- est difficulty in holding down r "pay pause" for workers in the interests of the national econr- 0111 y. "Is this ( the increased charge for the restoration) the contri- bution the minister is making to the solution of national economic problems''" Labor M.P. William Hamilton asked in Parliament when the supplementary esti- mate came up for payment. Actually, though, there are other reasons for refurbishing of this house, apart from its use as a residence for Princess Margar- et, her husband and infant sol David, No, IA Kensington Palace is a Wren house which has been allowed to deteriorate since it was twice blasted by Nai bombs in air raids. The reddish -brown, 20 -room •stone residence is one of the finest examples of Sir Christopher Wren's domestic ar- chitecture, built in co-operation with the famous carver Grinling Gibbons in 1(189, writes Melita Knowles in the Christian Science Monitor. The cost of restoring this home comes under a plan by which, since 1953, the Ministry of Works has renovated many historic houses for private owners. Such buildings are considered part of the national heritage which would be lost except for an Ex- chequer grant. Some of. the re- storations have cost the taxpayer more than the sum needed for the Snowdon repair. Castle How- ard, for instance, in Halton, Yorkshire, home of George How- ard, cost $249,000 •to restore. 'fhe main idea in such renovation is that damage caused by' age,• weather, dry ref and so 'on may be charged to public funds, Im- provements such as painting electric light and decorations fall to the owner, So if 'Lord Snowdon does take up his new appointment, a re- portedly highly paid post, he will have to dig into his salary packet for decorations to No, iA, Other- wise Princess Margaret will have to pay the bills out of her pri- vate income, The block for the Prime Min- ister's residence off Whitehall, with less al'chtectural claim to ho preserved than the Wren wing at Kensington Palace, is being rebuilt inside its original facade at six tines the cost of the Snowdon restoration. It's general- ly accepted the Prime Minister must be housed in accordance ‘with his station, hug he could have had a wonderful new house for much less than this sun) if the Ministry of Works had been prepared to sacrifice historic architecture, VIM SATILE A'l'IILE'I'C Laconic report of 0 jui leu h1ghi school basketball game from an Illinois publication, t h e h:a Hark Quill: 'The Terra haute l Ica - weights defeated Co!usa 1X to 2,. and Ted Kern was high point elan for both teams, scoring 12 for Terra Haute and 1100 points at the wrong basket for Colusa."' For a New Doll PRINTED PATTERN INFANT DOLL 1 WARDROBE ' 4870 �----!2:4N FOR DOLL \-�/'�U 10"-20" �1� TALL 1 ,te. 444 Delight a little girl with this beautiful baby - doll wardrobe, Easy -sew pattern includes bunt- ing, snow -suit, overall set, coat, hat, dress, slip and panties. Use thrifty scraps. Printed Pattern 4870: For dolls 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 inches. Please state size. Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please .print plainly S I Z E, NAME, A I) I) It E S S, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, ,Box 'L.:123 Eighteenth St., New Tomato, Ont. CAPITAL CHITCHAT Mrs, Pierre Salinger, left, wife of the White House press secretary, and Mrs. Alexi Adzhubei, wife of the editor of the Soviet newspoper, Izvestia, engage in some small talk in Washington Mrs. Adzhubei is the daughter of Soviet Russia's premier, Nikita Khrushchev. Not So Sunny In 1 California Ft.;; rho,'.; d the Iarrribuid; and blotted out the villages, 1t riose(1 the retools and elet::11 the high- ways. For six days r(•i'cnlly, a gloomy — and deadly — miasma hung over the entire Central Val- ley of California, from Redding on the north to 1hktr. field, 447 miles to the south. The thick pall turned each rued crossing into a potential death trap, and by the weekend the toll of dead in traffic accidents stood at 28, Of those, eleven farm laborers died as their farm bus collided with a freight train at the fog- bound grade crossing of a coun- try road and the Southern Pacific railrcad tracks near rural Men- dota. And elsewhere on the roach of the valley, the fog spawned ghostly mayhem. A massive chain -reaction t.. ci- dent involving 41) autos and tut trucks land, luckily, only :ix Flight injuries) was the twist spectacular of innumberable sint- ilar accidents which p1:.guc,d Route_ 99, the fast, multi -tuned freeway which runs the length of the valley. This incredible hash - up was set off when a fog -dazed motorist became confused as a car ahead turned into a side road. The motorist swerved into the opposite lanes, highway patrol- men reported, and cars and trucks began smashing together. A plethora of lesser misadven- tures was recorded in the fog- bound valley. Sent to meet his father at a house 300 yards away, 6 -year-old Roland Soares of Mod- esto, not noticing that he passed his father en route, became lost, wandered fourteen hours before being located 4 miles from home, Industries reported thousands absent from jobs or late in arriv- ing T.t wort.. Many, presumably, took the advice of the highway patrol to stay cff the highways. Store sale; dropped sharply as steppers ventured out only for necessities. housewives learned to keep the porch lights burning as many an auto -borne commuter tooled past his domicile acciden- tally in the murky gloom. The why of all the fog remain- ed as simple as it was incurable. Weathermen said that a nearly stationary high-pressure area es- tablished itself over the valley. Each day at dawn the stagnant cool air under it combined with the moisture rising from the sur- face of the rich black flatlands. "Tule fog"—a low-ceilinged va- riety which affects travel in the air only occasionally but ground traffic incessantly. "How can you tell when a man is really rich?" asks a read- er. 1Vhett he's not afraid to ask the store clerk to show him something cheaper. Five Guideposts To Traffic Safety 4,LEAVE YOURSELF 5. MAKE SURE 4#IEY'SfE • Auto safety experts offer these driving tips to help you stay alive. Drawings from Du Pont Better Living magazine. i,A,f4 j ) , r, • it so t y : at q ,<<• o Ilta,,h„ kkf py 1 ""y(t "' GALLIC INGENUITY—Wing- like defector tubes on twin statics of French Line's new luxury liner SS France will bow smoke and soot far to the sides of vessel for benefit of passengers taking a turn around open deck, The $80 million ship sees service soon. Babe Ruth's Widow Talks Of Old Times it was May ti 1935, that George Herman (Babe) Ruth, then in the uniform of the Bos- ton Braves, played his last major league baseball game, at Cincin- nati. Being an Ohioan, I might be tempted to stretch territorial jurisprudence a mite and say I remember it well, except for the fact that 1 was barely six months old at the time. However, for any young base- ball writer, it's just as much fun ar;d an honest privilege to sit in with veteran scribes and base- ball notables, as were gathering for the 23rd annual mid -winter dinner of the Boston chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America. Two of the head table guests first to arrive were Mrs, Babe Ruth and Bill McKechnie, who was managing this colossus of all hems run hitters when the Babe closed out his celebrated career. For 1\'Irs. Ruth, here to present an award to Roger Maris, this was her first visit to the Hub in over 26 years. And she, like her husband, who had a farm in nearby Sudbury, Mass., had come to know Boston "as a sec- ond home." "The Babe was never a city man," Mrs. Ruth divulged at a Wednesday p r e s s conference. "That's why he never spent much time in New York City itself, when he was playing for the Yankees, We would always leave for Florida two months before spring training started. And, oh!" she enthused, "how he loved the road trips, We always travelled together'." Naturally, the questions soon got around to home runs and the record of 61 which Maris pro- duced in 162 games this past sea- son, writes Bob Gates in the Christian Science Monitor. "No," she replied directly, "I didn't want to see Babe's rec.= ord taken, It seemed to belong to him, And many people, my- self included, still feel that it hasn't been broken, that Roger has just set another mark for others to shoot for. Who knows," she laughed, "maybe in a year or two we'll be playing 170 -game seasons, or perhaps only 145." The "we" in the above quote is no mistake. This petite one-time Ziegfeld beauty is still an avid baseball fan, heavily partial to the Yankees, but armed with as pretty good idea of who hit what and for whom, "How many would Babe hit it he were around today? Well .. ," she thought, "that would be pret- tyhard t4 say, }ha I, kn • he' rally have i ball, He'd 'd sfl swing that heavy bat, too, I be- lieve, He wanted wood in his hands, not those toothpicks (slim handled bats) they're using to- day," Mrs, Ruth recalled, also, that the Babe was often more pleased with his early pitching feats than his home run records. 'He was especially proud of having once struck out Ty Cobb, Sam Crawford, and Bob Veach on 10 pitches with the bases loaded, And he gained six 1-0 vic- tories while pitching against Wal- ter Johnson," she added, beam- ing, "Perhaps his greatest disap- pointment," said Mrs, Ruth of the man who stroked an amazing 714 home runs, "was not being able to manage in the major leagues, That's something he wanted to • do very much, "The Babe," she said, "loved his baseball, To him it was more fun than work. "At home? Well," replied the one who must have known • him best, "he neverworried about ISSUE $-1ua the game. 11e rarely grumbled when he had a bad day. And; at the pante time, he wasn't one to crow about it, either, \via rl he hit a couple," Ruth, who began his big -league career in Boston as a pitcher for the Red Sox and ended it here, too, as a BraVCS 011tfietd"'r, l9 remembered as having once said: "If i had listened to I3ill Mc- Kechnie, people could have look- ed at my record. in years to come and :left 111 ,,1 I had hit three horse runs : nd a single in my final glum•" Bill, here 10 be howl.: i f .r managing p:.nnar1 \v inn!_ • in three diffcrint eiC(.; (the oily one ever 10 do s't), rera!!s t)e statement. But. as it ht,ppencd, the Bo he went out and played again — one more game betnre he finally retired — and ho w, tit 0 -for -4, striking out three tames, Happily, Mrs. Ruth, and mil- lions more, have fonder memor- ies. And one of the first things she wanted to do upon her re- turn to Boston was to take a stroll down Boylston Street, leisurely, perhaps to recall a few. Silent Bowling By A Champion We don't know whether there is a great moral lesson in the news item about Marge Merrick of Columbus, Ohio, the new queen of women's howling, but It is interesting to note that ;he does very, very little talking on the lanes in major tournaments. ''F o 1 1 o w i ng the qualifying rounds in the world .tournament last month, I determined I wouldn't talk except t.) .say 'hello' and 'goodby' while bowl- ing," she explained. Friendly bowling — as dis- tinguished from championship bowl i n g - is something else again, and Miss Merrick admits that failure to talk under such circumstances "might be taken as downright unfriendliness." We believe the lady has a point — a good bowler must concentrate, and a lot of useless chatter interferes with concen- tration. We hope it is not too ungallant to suggest t h a t less talking and more concentration well could be applied to things other than bowling — driving a car, for example. — The Plain Dealer (Cleveland). CAPITAL GAIN Whatever a person saves from his revenue he adds to his capi- tal, and either employs it him- self in maiptaining an additional number of productive hands, or enables some person to do for a share of profits. As the capital of an individual can be increased only by what he saves so the capital of a soctety can be increased only in the same manner. —Adam Smith, How Can 1? By' Roberts Lee Q. Ilow can I make my own putty? A. By mixing some linseed oil with some 'softened whiting to the proper consistency, Q. How can I clean rust off a sewing needle or pin? A. By pressing it, tip first, into a piece of soap. The soap removes the rust and sterilizes the needle. Q. How can I prepare lay thread for easier and more effi- cient quilting? A. Immerse an entire spool of your thread into hot paraffin, and let remain about five min- utes. This will \vax all the thread on the spool, and, since the thread will not then knot, you can do it better job. IMO MERRY MENAGERIE "It'a a new technique! You give 'em a flower in a pot in- stead of a sock on the jaw!" 011, = CLASSIFIED -ADVERTISING BABY CHICKS 1 •:1 a it for early iia rket . Order 1 , -,,ring chicks now. Full range va• n h l l available. promptly. Pullets, 3 r, I, old to readyto-hay, promo' thin• 1,o tit. also doyold cockerels. Request wive list. See local agent, or write Bray Ilalchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE 1101)1 I1N 3 choir barber shop, brand new equipment, well established In downtown area. Good clientele. Selling due to death of owner. Apply Mrs. Ted I:als, 158 Eason Street, Stratford, Dial 271 3719 • BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BOWLING lanes, 8, completely equip. ped, excellent condition, automatic foul lights, complete snack bar. Purchaser to remove lames from municipality. Owner moving to new location open for offers. David's ilowl•O Drone, 31 Duni as E., 'Trenton, Ont. CHAIN SAWS • MANUFACTURER'S CLEARANCE BOX 823, NORTH BAY, ONTARIO matched Chain & Sprocket Comhltut• tion, for all popular makes of chain saws Specify make and model and bar length. 15 ' Chain & Sprocket 512 00 18" or 20' Chain & Sprocket 514410 24' Chain & Sprocket 516.00 Sprockets to fit any Dlrcct Drive how $3 50 Quantity of Reconditioned Chain Silvis, completely Rebuilt and Repainted, as new Various makes and models ('fear• but at 569.00 each. Same day servlre on all orders re. cawed, COINS WANTED ('GINS VAN'I'ED • Pay for Canadian cents Fine or better, 1922, :x4.50; 1923, $6,75; 1924, 51.50; 1925, 55.00, More prices In the 1962 Coln Catalogue 25c, Gary's til) 9910 -Jasper, Edmonton, Alta. Ice Fishermen And Their Antics ice fishing has chat' m of a Fort, but some of its elements are tedious, tiresome and pro- ductive of boredom a; web as very few fish, This winter a stu- dent of hut.:an oddities has been observing Maryland ice fisher- men at play and has concluded that the fishermen are more interesting than the fishing. For example: Reuben Levin of' Coatesville, Pa., was fishing with a sawed-off billiard cue. Just the right s i z e and backbone for jigging a lure up and down. Donald Dinges of Pascoag, R.I., was keeping nine holes from freezing over by squeezing drops of antifreeze into them from a syringe. Five or six drops in each hole every half hour did the 'job. Alan Soule of Lancaster, Pa,, had fitted out a bicycle wheel as a reel. With tire removed and mounted on a sled, the wheel permitted hint to reel in his :ine four times faster. J o e 1 Turner of Philadelphia had added cardboard sails to the lines of his tic -ups. The sails let the wind do the jigging while Turner kept his hands in his pockets. Several fishermen were equip- ped with metal discs,.These were bottoms cut out of metal waste- paper baskets, At the end of a clay's fishing they fitted the bas- ket bottoms into the holes. Re- turning next day, they built fires •on them and the holes were re- opened without chopping, And there was one fellow who was soaking his lines in his whisky flask. Kept them pliable in cold 'weather, the fellow painted out, - a warm, friendly glow' suffusing his features. — From SPORTS ILLUSTRATED. Straight Advice To A Would-be Bride A magistrate has ruled at Folkestone, England, that a .19 - year -old girl must learn how to cook a "tasty meal" before she can marry her 19 -year-old fiance. In doing this, the magistrate backed up a stipulation made by Barbara Cairns' father which prompted Barbara and her hus- band -to -be, Eric Goldsack, to take the issue to court because they are under 21 and need per- mission to marry. The magistrate said Barbara would have three months in which to learn to cook before he grants the couple permission to wed. "You can't expect young hus- bands to live on tins of sardines. They need a substantial meal," he added. The court made no ruling as to who would judge Barbara's cooking. FARMS FOR SALE HERE !s the farm you have been look• Ing for 150 acres, no cattle, fully equipped fur seed production. "Founda- tion Climax Timothy specialty." Prac• Wally new modern machinery. Modern six room house Rural mall, School Bus, 4 nilles southeast of Bourget, Ontario, R. Bernard, Bourget, Ontario. FUR SALE, 320 acre dairy furan, 150 acres cultivated Complete set of Linn buildings and machinery. 11 o 1 s 1 w t n• - dairy herd, new bulk cooler and six can milk quota. Located 14 utiles from New. Liskeard, For further Informatkm contact: Donald Dellne. Box 71. F•arl• ton. Ontario. F'AIIM 100 acres, Lot 14, Con. 13, McKillop Township, Huron County, seven room modern house with new dooblo garage. 50 x 70 steel barn, never been used, Drilled well has never been dry Good land and good fences. School on carni. Buyer gets first chance of 117 acres of grass farm across the road with 40 acres work. able land, sluing water front and back, good fences, gravel pit Price, 5311,000, Apply Fred Glanville. RR 2, Walton, Ont. FLORIDA VACATION RESORT SUNNI' Florida vacation on beautiful Redington Gulf Reach Fishing, sports, free '1'V. heated pool, low rates, free folders, prices, Efficiency ants, hotel roosts. El Morocco 31ote1, St. Peters- burg 0, Florida. FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS 't 1.IBS. Velveteen or print cotton 51,98. Henunainls. Assorted colo'n's. 3L'ake kid- dies' clothing, quilts, hats, doll clothes, caps, overalls. Also 20 yds. quilted silk remnants 52.08, 4 lbs. yard pieces, no batting necessary, 3 lbs. leathercloth or millings 5.3 98. Embroidery yarns, 2 lbs. 51.08 Elastic 1.1".2" width, 2 lbs. 52,511. Satin ribbon, 4" to 7" wide, 20 yds. 5100, printed, 12 yds. $1,00. Nar• row ribbon, 300 yds, 51.110. Cotton bias, navy brown, black, 300 yards $1.00. lie• mit 5100, balance rolled. Shaefer, Drummondville, Quebec. CROSSWORD puzzle wordflndlr! Arnaz• Ing dInl•a•word guide! Guaranteed $1,00. Agents inquiries invited Mrs. 31. Sint. on., 215A lona Ave., Hamilton, Ontario. CUT YOUR OWN HAIR With Penn's "Easytrim" haircutting comb. No skill required Saves barber's fees. For sten, ladies' and children's hair Only 51.50 prepaid. llughsons. \V., 16, August Avenue, Scarboro. On. tario WOULD you Ilke to receive our month- ly Tweddlc MoneySaver? If so, write us and we will put you on our 'nailing list to receive the '1'weddle Money - Saver each month. Prices In our Money•Saver are even lower than our catalogue prices, which In many rases are lower than regular retail prices. For example, for March we offer two 65e tubes of Pepsodent Dental Creast for 09c; .and 25c off men's boys' and ladles' hose, Also many other bargains. Postage Paid. Moneyback guarantee. Catalogue. 'I'WEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FERGUS 11, ONTARIO HELP WANTED FEMALE DIETICIAN Required by Metropolitan Toronto for a Home for the Aged. Must be a gradu- ate of a recognized training course with postgraduate Hospital course prefer. red. Permanent position. 40 hour week. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply Per- sonnel Office, 387 Bloor St. E., Toronto, START AT•ONCE We require several single young ladles 17.23 for circulation department of MaeLean•lfunter Publishing Company, Neatness essential, No experience ne- cessary. Complete training given. $200 monthly to start with rapid advance. mcnt. Write Mr. S. Birch, 5th Floor, 210 Dundas St. W., Toronto. Please enclose photograph and phone number. Stewardesses TRANS -CANADA AIR LINES WE ARE SEEKING ATTRACTIVE, CONFIDENT YOUNG LA DIES WHO ARE INTERESTED IN A REWARDING CAREER. AGE 20 TO 26 INCLUSIVE HEIGHT, 62 to 67 INCHES WEIGHT, 105 'TO 130 LBS, (IN PROPORTION) EDUCATION—SECONDARY SCHOOL GRADUATION DIPLOMA SINGLE NO GLASSES OR CONTACT LENSES IF YOU MEET THESE REQUIRE- MENTS, WRITE OR PHONE FOR AN APPLICATION FORM. T.C.A. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE 663 YONGE ST, — ?24.2101 'TORONTO MEDICAL POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema mhos and weeping skin troubles. Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you, Itching scalding and burning me.ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless, odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeleaa they seem. Sent Post Free en Reselpt of Price PRICE ELIO PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East Toronto st® MAKE MONEY! SAVE MONEY! Make window glass one-way glass, 1: q S cents a pint make spray -on Wipe -off window cleaner. White wall tire clean- er for 3 cents a pint. Hydraulic brake fluidfor pennies a gallon. All ' from grocery and drug store materials. Formulas $2.00 each. Write for list of 31 others, PERSONALIZING SERVICE Box 53 Gardner, Mass. e MEPICAL • PROVEN REMEDY -- FVt RY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 135 ELGIN OTTAWA $1,25 Express'CoPecr "OPPORTUNITIES FOR - MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity . Learn Hairdressing .Ple,asilnl dignified erol'estlon, good 'cages Thousand,. •ol successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest Ssstcln ,g .e Illustt•atrd catalogue Free Writs tit Call Marvel Hairdressing School 358 Bloor St W., Toronto Rr ant hes; 44 King St W . Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, (Mae, PERSONAL AUTHORS invited to subotlt 51MS all types tineluding poems, for book pub. llcution. Reasonable It rots Stockwell Ltd., Ilfracombe, England testi 1101)i, SAVE 1 y shopping in England! Gentle- man willing to btty for you In any field. Also happy to consider tory form of overseas trade. Springfield, Gracious Lane, Iluby, Sutton, York. England OVERWEIGHT? A sate, effective reducin^, pl:,n alta "\VnyLcs" '1•ablet. Alettically approvt:d 1 month's supply 87.1111 Lyon's Drugs, Dept 32, 471 Danforth Ave., 'Toronto. HYGENIC RUBBER GOODS TEs 1 ED guaranteed, mailed in oIton bparcel, Includin= c;,talvgne and sex ook free with trial assortment, 111 for S1 00 IFinesl qua] ftv1 Western Dishabu• tors, Box 74.TPF, Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SPECIAL Portrait 1 x 10 hand col- oured - from your favorite Snapshot. for only 52 (15 Any 3 pictures $5 00 ihas Ont. Sales •1•ss Send colunrtng nstruction, to ST PAWAN SALES P.O. Box 5118, London, Ont. SORRY, NO C.O.D. PROPERTIES FOR SALE $6000 cash will buy 198 acres facing Hwy 69 fourteen smiles south Parry Sound Hunting with trout stream on property. Call or write R, Harris. 110 Dundas Hwy East, Cooksvllle, Phone No 277.3086. PROPERTIES WANTED WAN'T'ED' Bush lots, abandoned farms, wild acreages. Send location, descrip- tion and price to D F. Mullin Box 156. Station F. Toronto 5, Ontario POULTRY CRATES FOR SALE HAULING poultry? I)o it with Sled Poultry Shipping Crates. Write today for your free folder and price list. Stad Manufacturers, Box 53, St. Jacobs. On- tario. -T._-- PUZZLES_- --- DIFFERENT! "Loglcalectric," the Bi- nary Puzzle fascinates family and friends, children too! Clear plans and complete Instructions, $2.00. Loglk, Boa 15063, San Diego 15, California. STAMPS STAMPS Free 100 foreign. Send 25c cover mail- ing. 100 American commemoratives $1.00. Penny approvals. Small Fry. 110 Queen, Trenton, Ont. SEED FOR SALE THERE IS NO NEED FOR YOU TO BUY DISCOLORED OATS THIS YEAR. Ask for quality - Ask for KiNG'S Gold Seal Seeds when you visit your dealer. He will gladly show you a representative sample of the oats the have to offer. For all your seed grain requirements, it's King Grain and Seed Company Limited, Chatham. On- tario. RUSSELL OATS ONTARIO'S newest and most outstand- ing oat outyielding 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 from us. Alex M. Stewart l4 Son Ltd., Seed Grain Specialists, Ails, Craig, Ont. TREES SCOTCH and Austrian Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce, White Spruce, Ornamen- tals aid. seed. Seven varieties Nut Seedlings. Keith Somers, Tillsonburg, Ontario, TRADE SCHOOLS ACETYLENE, electric welding and Argon courses, Canada Welding. Can- non and Balsam N., Hamilton. Shop LI. 4-1284. Res. LI 5.0283. lee OR We don't like to boast, But frankly YOU Owe it to yourself to TRY PRIDE CORN This year. Contact your dealer today, Ask him about Pride 5, Pride 11, Pride 20, Pride D57 and Pride 63. THEY'RE THE MOST, —Write us for literature today-- Pride Hybrid Company of Canada 352 Queen St. Chatham Ontario GAP—Signals were crossed somewhere and en..ef the pests has no sea gull in scene from London's Battersea Pork. i 46iiAIiCTIMsf1 NABOB COFFEE 1 lb. bag 69c STOKELYS PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT DRINK Large 48 oz. tin 39c PUREY TOILET TISSUE, white 8 roll pkg. 93c STOKELY'S FANCY CREAM STYLE CORN 2 - 15 oz, tills 35c ROBIN HOOD QUICK OATS lg. bag"' )Ir STOKELY'S FANCY TOMATO JUICE 18 oz. tin 25c STOKELY'S APPLE SAUCE 2 • 15 oz. tilts 29c STOKLEY'S FANCY PUMPKIN 2 • 28 oz. tins 45c BURN'S TIN OF BEAD CHEESE 3 lb. tin 8Jc For Superior Service Phone 156 u. See Falrservice We Deliver BLYTII FIREMEN'S ANNUAL DANCE BLYTII MEMORIAL HALL Friday, February 23 111US1c by HANK NORRIS' RANCH 'BOYS Door Prize Spot Prize Lunch Counter, Admission at Popular Prices, Stewart's Red 1.4 White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver 44404-11-404-044-0-6444.44444444444 4444-4114444.4 P44 N f4+44 -4.I Choice Quality Bananas 2 lbs, 29c Utopia Hand Parked Tomatoes, 28 oz, tin, 2 for 419c Redpath White Sugar, 5 Ib, bag 47c Blue Bonnettt Quick Margarine, 2 lbs. 69c Giant Blue Breeze per pkg. 73e Purex Toilet Tissue 8 rolls 99e Walker's Saltines 2.1 lb. pkgs, 49e Duncan Mines Cake Mixes, 10 varieties, 3 pkgs. 99c Btodey's Cream Corn, 15 oz. 5 tins 89c Kaiser Foil Wrap 2 rolls 59c Kleenex, Regular and Chubby 6 pkgs, 99c Velveeta Cheese 21b. pkg. $1,13 Domestic Shortening 1 lb. pkg. 31c Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c Florida Oranges 1 doz. 39c Grade A Chickens 21/2.3 lbs. per Ib. 33c Grade C Turkeys, 6-7 lbs, per lb. 39c Leant Hamburg , , per Ih. 49c Buns Daisy Bacon 1 lb pkg. 59c Burns Link Sausage per lb. 43c Supreme Cookies 3 pkgs, 89c Liptons Chicken Noodle and Tomato Vegetable Soup 3 pkgs. 35c Inger'roll Cheese Spread 16 oz. 61c Birds Eye Frozen OrangeJuice,, 11.11 -6 oz, tins 89c No. 1 Ontario Potatoes " 5 lb. bag 89c ...• .w.,...1e»J..u.....,..nr.r•vr....�.a...«..v...a...• __ t.. uW 1 1111. ,..•.r.• . pA61"dE, Gift tit MOM' BELGRAYE NEWS ;Miss Nancy VanCamp, who has been a patient in I.he \Vinghanl General llos pall \lith 0 broken leg for the bast two weeks, was able le return lo her tome last \•rok, -Aar and Mrs. C1rotrlie Jehn;,ton, 01 lllyth, visited on Saturday evenitr; w;lu and Irs. • Lewis Stonehouse. '1r. and Mrs. Mussel Walker, of Gotle rich, v!::ted on Sunday with AU. ant Mrs. !Larry 'McGuire. 'Robert Anderson, of l.on'i'nl, sr'rrut `.ho weekend with his parents, Itev, 31!d Mrs. J. 11. Andcrs•on. :Mr. and Mr's. Janes A.nder•son and family, of Guelph, and Mr, and Mrs Keith Anderson and family, of Downs' view, spent the weekend with lir, and Mrs, Earl Anderson and Karen. Mr and Mrs. Charlie Johnston and ramify, cf Woodstock, visited over the weekend with AL', and Mrs. George Johnston and fami'y. Mr. and Mrs. John 'Thompson an(I family, of 11111cvalc, visited on Sunday Air, and ',qrs. William ,11.vNall and Michael, Bclgraye l'ce Wee hockey leant put 011 (1 good gallle of '1l1II1.5(t)y ()veiling and defeated Brussels Pee Wiles a to 1 in the Belgravc Arena. Knox Choir Hold Annual Meiling Mr. and 'Mrs, 1,cslie 11011 welcome(' 'le members of the Choir of Knox :hilted Church 10 their hone oil E ri (lay evening for the mutual sleetiny a11(1 social evening. 211 members were present and routine reports were read by the scctetriry-lreasln•er, hurries Scott. The election of officers was a:, follows: president, George Johnston; secretary • treasurer, Murray Scott; Music committee, ]toy Mundy, AIrs. George Michie and Airs, George Johns- ton; gown committee, Mrs. Stewart Procter, Mrs, Earl Anderson, Mrs, J. i1. Anderson with power to add more members; social committee, Lorne Campbell, Belen Anderson, Karel! An- derson , Ruth Mettle and Murray Scott; lunch committee, Mrs. James Walsh. Mr's, George Michie, Mrs. Leslie Boll and Miss Alarilyn Campbell; choir re. cording attendance secretary, floss An- derson; auditor, Mi's. George Johnston. Games and contests were conducted by the social committee and 0 lunch or sandwiches, Cake, ice cream and cof. fee was served, Benefit Dance A twin:lit dance was held in Ihr Ver. ester's Hall on P'rtday evening for I\ lir. ray Shrills, who was injured while playing broonuhall• 'the evening coin' menced with progressive euchre will) 6 tables in play. High prizes were won by Mrs. (loss llobin,:on and Mrs. Gordon 1jnsnr)u• C'ou:0tatioI1 prints went to Airs. Lewis Cook and A1_rs, Roy Patterson. '1'iffi!Is Orchestra sup plied music for dancing. Meals Federation Aieeling 'Ihe directors of the Morris Township Federation of Agriculture ,.net at the home of Mr. and Airs, Ted Fear on Thursday evening. 'I'he minutes of the last meeting were read by Richard Procter. The leadership training school to be held in Soaforth, February 26, 27, 28 was discusse(i and it was decided to send one or more delegates to this for the three days. Albert Bacon gave a repot of the flog Producers Annual meeting held recently in Clinton. Mr. Carl 1felllinglway, secretary fieldim n of Huron County Federation of Ag►•icul tore, was guest speaker, and spoke about the proposed poultry vote .and canvass, also on the selling of FAME shards in the 1OIVIIhhip, Joe Itlack expressed thanks lo the speaker. The Public 11'Iceting A public meeting will he held t! the Forester's Hall, I3clgravc, Friday, March 2nd, 1962 at 8 P.m. to discuss hog marketing, 'rhe Hog Producer:; Associatlorl, the Federation of Agrlcul• lure and the Fanners' Union are h►vlt• ed to have representatives present lu take part in the discussion. HUiION COUNTY GROUT' OF ONTARIO FREE ENTERPRISE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCER president, Stanley Ilcpper, expressed Ihanks to Ali' and Mrs bear for liav' ing this luecI'UIg, and the next. meet ing is to he uu March 11�, itAurcll wa, �Cr\ ed huclu'c 'There wore six tables in play at 14 regular weekly euchre party held 11. the Com/mutiny Centre on Wednesday evening. • Mrs. Cora McGill and Charles B. Coult0 were the high prize winners, with Mrs. Clarence Hama atiti George Jordan winning the novelty prizes. Con» c_atinit prizes went 10 Mrs. Jesse Wheeler and Martin Grasby, 50tH Anniversary Another of Belgrave's well known couples celebrated their 59th tveddung a11IIIVCd'Sal'y quietly al home on Wednes- day, February 14, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vincent, Mr. Vincent was born in Uiborne Township in 11185 and Mrs. Vincent, 1110 former Bertha MCDcwell was born In East Wawanosh in 1086 00 he farm where, her brother, Alva now resides. They were married 0n the tarn where she Was born. Mr. and Mrs. Vincent started married lite on homestead in Alberta, at Milk diver', Where Air. Vincent had been five years - prior to tieing married, They spent five years there, then dune back to this community in 1916 and in the spring of 1917 started farming on the 9111 concession of East 11'awanosh on the Garin that now is owned by Mr. Vincent's sou Haruki, Eleven pars -ago they retired to Belgrave. As Alts Vincent has been ill and confined tc hospitals the pa31 few months and just able to return to her Thome about a month ago, ne celebration was held at this time. 'Their family called on them In the evening and presented both with a wrist Watch. Members of their family Include AMrs, Clifford (Dor. only) Logan; Harold on the farts his parents lived on; Leslie, of London and Mrs, Boy (Edna) McSween, of Wing - him. 'There 4l1'0 12 grandchildren and one great grandchild. BELGRAVE DISTRICT CREDIT UNION LTD. ANNUAL MEETING Thu annual sleeting of the Bel!; cavo District Credit Union Limited was held on Tuesday evening in the Forrester':; Hall, Beigrawe, commencing with 0 dill ger catered to by the Ladies Guild of Trinity 'Anglican Church. The president, Albert Coupes, was in charge and opened the sleeting with the National Anthem followed by a toast to the Queen, Peter de Groot thanked the ladies for the splendid dinner and the president, Mrs. Alec ,Nrlhery replied. Musical numbers were supplied by Mr. and Mr's. Albeit liernan. Calvin Bob. in5011 and 11055 Robinson, John Nixon introduced the guest speaker, Mrs. William Elliott, of Park- hill, secretary -treasurer of the Park. hill Credit Union, and showed a flannel. graph on Credit Union beginning with parts of a credit union ••• members aVI11I;S, loan, loan interest, income, guarantee fund, dividends, loan and share inslu,allce, thrift, The Credit Union is helping people to help them- selves. Mrs Elliott likened the Credit Union to a wheel, the different spokes being, I3oard of Directors, Credit Com- mitlee, Supervisory Committee, Edu- cation Committee, and Secretary-Treas. deer, everyone hulling his fair load. Henry Pattison expressed thanks to the speaker. C. E. Coulte.s Introduced 1.Ile direr. tors amt supervisory committee and other numbers ()I' the different cool. minces. The secretary. Kenneth Wheel- er, read the mInuutes of the last annua Meeting. Albert ("'odtes gave the directors re' port, staling that they had held 12 meetings during the year•. There had been a gain in membership as well a_, share capital, but they would like to see as still greater gain. The directors recommended that a 3 percent dividend be paid again this year. George Michie, treasurer -manager, gave his report, stating, that the Bel. grave District Credit Union Limited has completed its 9t11 year of operation, The share account advanced by $6500.00, The average savings per member is $188.00 which is $228,00 per member bet. ATTENTION HURON COUNTY HOG PRODUCERS :11'or orderly, competitive belling under a free enterprise system Vote for the following' March 6. ADAMS, GEORGE Ti.irnberry Twp. ADAMS, JAS. Morris Towp, ADAMS, HAROLD Ashfield Twp, 'BATEMA.N, CECIL Grey 7'wp, CAMPBELL, GEORGE McKillop Twp. COULTES, C. 11. E. Wawanosh Twp. DUNCAN, JACK Osborne Twp. GI.ZEB, MELVIN Stephen Twp. JOHNSTON, HUGI-I Grey Twp, KERR, CAMERON - Colborne Twp. LAMANT, MELVILLE Grey Twp. McGREGOR, RONALD Tuckersm, th Twp. PROUTY, MILFIIED Hay Twp. WILSON, WM.Howick Twp. WRIGHT, GORDON J-lowick Twp, A vote for all of the above producers will in- sure a plan whereby costly assembly • yards which entail extra delays in 1i1►ndling and much bruising will be reviewed, which in itself will ensure a more stable higher net return. HURON COUNTY GROUP Of ONTARIO FREE ENTERPRISE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCER At the recent evalninations conducted by tha Royal Cor orvatory of Music at Illylh, Mrs hazel Bateman rmsed '1;a(I0 111 Theory 1)!armany and Ills' !orwwith 1('it' 1 C'las,s 1lunuurs. 'or than 191411 'There is a gain of about ;.,ne menthe,. per month. A tolid of •r29,230,0o was loaned to members in 1961. ;'te\wart Procter conllurler] the elec• !con of officers as follows: Uireclors for three years, Albert Coultes Ken- neth Wheeler, henry Pattison; other :Lteators aro Ted fear, John Nixon, Peter do Drool, ru Robinson; flat• tin Grasby was re-elected to the Credit Committee for three years; other 1110m• leers are C. R. Coultes and Kenneth Barbour; Lone Ciimpbell was re-elect; ed to the supervisory conlnlittec, other members of this committee are, Stew- art Procter and Lewis Stonehouse. Following elections more musical numbers Were enjoyed by the same 1•(n1p. 1.06 iN VICTORIA 1106PI'TAL Mr. Norman Knapp Is a patient in Victoria hospital, London. We wish him a speedy recovery. ARENA SCHEDULE' Thursday, February 22 - Beginners Free Skating, 2 to 4. Public Skating, 8 to 10. Friday, February 23 --- Inlerina(liate Play-off hockey Lucknow vs Blyth, Saturday, February 24 -- Public Skating -2 to 4 and 1.30 10 9.30 )t.m. Monday, February 26 ••- Interincdi)ate Playoff gook'ey Lucl(now vs 'Iilyth. Tuesday, February 27 ••• Rural hockey, 1;'th tis Kinburn, Wednesday, Febrttnry 28 ..• Broonlball. VITAMINS give Vim, Vigour and Vitality -- Help b1111(1 resistance to colds and flu. i'araniettes Tablets, 8,0() value . Spec. 6.00 1'araniette Syrup, 7.50 valise Spec. 5,50 111altevol 2,50 Walupo1_e's Extract 1.59 and 2.89 One A Day Multiple L19, 2,75 and 4.49 Scotts Emulsion 1,00 and 2.00 Vi Cal Fer Capsules 1.95 and 4,95 Vita Pops 2,50 and 5.95 Alphamettes 1,00, 1,85 and 3.50 Cod Liver Oil Capsules .98c Halibut Liver Oil Capsules 1.15 and 2,29 R. D. PHILP, Phm, B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER TI3t)NR ?O, IBL.1f'CIt SALE OF HOCKEY STICKS-- foRegularr 69c for 5 5c Regular 75c for 60c Regular 89c for 69c Regular 1.09 for 88c Regular 2,25 for 1.79 'r. CLOTHES DRYER, Marchand Made by Maxwell" 5 heat selector This Week Only $119.95 1 SEABREEZE '1 -Speed PLAYER, 10 records in carrying case $42.95 ,.-,1111--1111, VODDEN'S HARDWARE & ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Blyth, Ont. Call 71 YOUR BEST BUY IS HERE! 1962 CI1EV. Sedan - 1958 FORD Sedan 1961 CIIEV. Sedan 1960 CHEV. Sedan 1958 CIIEV. Coach 1956 DODGE Coach 1953 I'ONTIAC Sedan 1953 STUI)1BAKER Hamm's garage Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers SMELL'S FOOD , MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP f3 SAVE BIG DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS Kounty Kist Sweet Peas, 1.5 oz,. 7 tin 1,00 Summer Pride Cream Style Corn, 15 oz., 7 titin 1,00 Van Camps Pork and Beans, 15 oz, , , 7 tits 1.00 Kant or Prem Canned Meat 3 tins 1,00 Clover Leaf Pink Salmon, hall's 3 tins 1.00 St.. 1Srilianit's Cherry Pie Filling, 20 oz. tins, 3.1.00 St.okev's Pineapple and Grapefruit, 48 oz., 3 • 1,00 Scluteider's Crispy Flake Shortening . • 4 lbs. 1.00 Use Schneide's Stamps for Shortening •