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The Blyth Standard, 1962-02-28, Page 1
THS BLYTK STANDAR .1 VOLUME 71 • NO. 52 Authorized as second class mall, Past Office Department, Ottawa. . and fur payment of postage in cash, BLYTII, ONTAIRIO, WEDNESDAY, FEB, 28, 1962 Subscription Rates $2,50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. School Board Meeting The regular meeting of the Blyth Pu- blic School Baud was held on Motley evening, February 26, at 0.30 o'clock. Trustees Madill, Manning, Young, Weh• stet and Street were present. The minutes of the last regular meet• ing were read and passed by Trustee Webster, seconded by Trustee Young. Carried. The following accounts were ordered paid by Tnustce Madill, seconded by Trustee Street. Carried, Blyth Hydro, 27.45; Educator Sup• plies, 4.40; George Hamm Sr., :1.00: Philp's Drtig ,More, .67; Vorlden's Ilaixiware and Electric, 43,83; A. Man - Ding and Sons, 141.(YJ; It. Iliggins, Ex• pre.;;, 1.25; Elliott Insurance Agency, 4.00. The Principal reported the percent- age 'attenclt :l,ce for January, 119.13 and the enrolment was 1116, Mr, Higgins a(IV eel tho Board lath the school was, planning to hold an operetta in the Memorial Hall. April 13th, was the tentative date, The reignalion of Mrs. E, Carroll was aceei'ted, effective Jude 29, with regret. on motion by Trustee Street, se- conded by 'trustee Madill, Carried. • A motion teas made by Trustee Ma- dill that ten or twelve fills be pur- chased for the school, seconded by 'Trustee Young. Carried. A motion was made .by Trustee Ma• dill, seconded by Trustee Street, that a Television set be purchased, Carried. A motion was made by Tr'uatee Web- ster, secon(led by Trustee Young, that the Board leaves advertising for a grade one teacher until the end of March. Carried. Alotiun to adjourn by 'Trusty: Madill. LETTER 'T) 'I'll!: EDITOR . Seaforlh, Ontario. 1"ehri cry 19, 11162. "Ate Editor, Blyth Standard, Blyth, Ontario. Dear Sir: On behalf of the Huron County Tu. borcuiosis Association we would appre- ciate your publication of this letter in your newspaper by way of extending thanks to all who have helped nlde our- 1961 Chrie.tmes Soni Campaign a 6tUCee:3. Wo appreciate the gc terosily of those, who, by their contributions, are assisting in the control of this dread disease in cin' county. The present can ,•rigs ends I''ehruary 28th. Contri• buttons to date amount to $11,981.35. Such contributions finance comforts for patients white in l:he Sanatorium, re 1 ihilital.ion of firmer patients, free chest clinics which are held mutiny in five county cendrev, wnl a health edit teatime' pregrom, The officers of the Ateeciativat would particularly like til thank all volunteers who helped in preparing tie seals for ell:tribution, the postmasters and their as:cistan'tas In delivering the seals, and Station CKNX, Wingham, (for their eon tribii(lon of advertising, The officers of the 'Asaociation a'so want to thank you, Ma'. Editor, for the publicity that you have freely given this important pause. Yours sincerely, J. C. 'M'eKinley, President, Huron Cc u my Tuberculosis Association. i;MONG'I'I11!; CILLIRCIILS Sunday, March 4,1962 ST, ANDREWS PIt1::511Y'rERIAN (11RJLtC1I Rev, 1). J. Lane, 11.A., 1).D., Minister, 1,00 p.m.—Church Service and Stu• day School.. ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Rev. Robert F. Measly, Rector, Quin u'agehna Sunday Being the Fiftieth Day before .Easter Trinity Church, Blyth. 10.30 'Sang—Sumlay School, 10.30 a.m.—Holly Cununtuuwt and Sermon, St. Mark's, Auburn. }'Tiley and March •• A.Y,P,A, In Rectory at 0.30 p.m, Sunday ••• 12.00 o'clock—Holy Communion and Sermon, Trinity Church, Belgrave, 2.00 p.m, --Sunday School, 2,30 pan.—Holy Communion and 7'IIL UNI'1'Ef) nitinCII Ill' CANADA Blyth Ontario. Rev. Il, Evan McLagWu • M[ulster Mrs, Donald Kai • Director of Music. 9.55 a.m.•--Sunday Church School. 11 a.m.—Morning 1Vorshlp. C'HU1U211 OF GOD Me:Dea rr Street. Blyth. Jolty Donner, Pastor Phone 185 1.00 p.m. --Sunday School. 2.00 p.m,—Worship Service, 8.00 p.m.—Wed„ Prayer Service. 8.00 pare Friday, Youth lrlalluwship, 19.13,11 RCAF' Champions United Church !bonen Reunited In Toronto IIo1(1 February Meeting Mr. Sect! Fairservice was in Toronto en Saturday attending a reunion of the RCAF hockey, te;un of which he Was a member during World War II, The team wenn Fite overseas RCAF cham- pionship in the 1913.44 season and had many outstanding hockey players in its ranks. A very enjoyable day was spent, r'c• hewing acquaintances and reliving many past experiences. A lovely km quer was held 3n the dining room of the Westminster Hotel and was topped oft by attending the Toronto -Boston game at Maple leaf (;rrdrtls. Members of the 1943.44 championship leiun were: Al.ilt Sc tnlidl, Boston; Bob Bauer, Waterloo; 'Poly Greer, Luck - now; fete Place, Almdreal; I'c'ed Vic. pry, Sault Ste. Marie; George 11'rray, Sault Ste Marie; 1''ird Scott, Folietang; Ken ;;smith, Ilespeler; !lank Ilanowski, Winnipeg; Rocky 'I'honlpsee, Montreal; Howie Sells, Calgary; Scott f airser• vice, Blyth; Ircd Pickering, Montreal; \Vtm. Craig, Auburn; Jack Bl'ianohinc, !bluest, Alberta; Norman McDonald, Toronto. OBITUARY AIRS. JOSEPH WEi3STER Mrs. Joseph Webster, 87 Rattenhury Street West, Clinton, formerly Alice Maud Garrett, passed away suddenly on Thursday last, February 22nd, in Goderieh, al the home of her daughter. Mrs. Percy Riley. The funeral was held from the Beat• lie Funeral Ilene, Clinton, on Settee day afternoon, February 24th, and Hie r.crvrce was conducted by itev. C, G. Park of 1Veslcy•IVillis United Church of which Alrs. \Vch,Jer was a member, -Interment was in 131ytil Union Ceme- tery. Pallbearers were, Clarence C'rawfurd, Harold Lc:tgman and Bert Shobbrook, of the 131;1 Concession of Hulett town- ship, 'ancl. Edgar Armstrong, Jelin Mc. Farlane and James Turner, of Clinton. The late Mrs. Webster wes bets at ILarlock, Hallett Township, on October 12th, 1385, a daughter of the late Jo - Lech Garrett and ALar'tha Broadbent. On March 17, 1909, Mrs. Webster mar- ried 'Joseph. Wexler; and upon their marriage, took up farming on the 1311i Concession of Hunett Township, where they resided until they retired and came to Clinton twenty years ago. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Meredith (Mary) Yong, Auburn; Mrs. Percy (Elizobcth) Riley, Gode'ich; Niro Ralph (Gladys) Caldwell, Blyth: and Aliss Bernet Webster, of Toronto; also cue ::inter, Mrs. Jilin Richmond, of Lac cit !sonnet, 111:a.nitoba, and one brother, Alvanlcy Garrett, of Clinton; nine grandchildren and five great gr:x;iaohildret. A daughter, Airs. Jack (.isabc4) Partridge, predeceased Al's. Webster on February 27, 1956, Messengers Meeting The Messengers of the United Church met in the schoolroom of the church on Mc:iday, February 26, after school, with 21 members present. The president, Mary Howson', opened the meeting with the Call to Worship "Let us love one another, for love is of God." After the response, hymn 613 was su;:g. The Seniplure is s read by Ite,aald AIclagan and prayer given by Cane:roll Manning, The offering was received by Sharon Mason and Ruth Alcl.ngan. The minutes were rend by the secretary, Agnes Lawrie. A. tiltnrt impromptu program followed which consu.ed of a song by Debbie Melts and Berry Young; piiutu solo by Ruth AteLagen; reading by Agncs Ipnvrie; plane solo by Ronald McLogan, Bushress was in charge of Mrs. But. Loll and Alrs. Cleland 'read the bewail chapter in the Study Book. The suet• seg closed with repealing the Aleml- Lter's Purpose after which games were played. The following officers were chosen for 1962: President, Mary Rowson; vice president, Cameron Manning; Sure. fury, Agnes Lawrie, assistant senor tary, Margaret Howson; Treasurer, Ror at1d McLagam'; Stamp Collector, Rueh A'Ieliegan; World Friends; Glen Riley; Memberstup Committee, Archie Mason, Mary Lyn Galbraith, Charles Cleland, £Charon Almon, First Robin Sighted Airs. Shirley Shobbrook, 11.11, Wall cm, has repurled to the Standard of seeing a robin on their farms on Mon• clay, .February 26th, and had t!te lis• I ime:ivah of witnessing the first sign of the approaching 1962 sluing 3n the Blyth district, 'I'dtis will nv doubt he welcume hews in residents, kilo like ourselves, are becoming completely disgusted with the old fa:Aided blttstry weather centre uing since the frost of the year, l'cr. haps we clan lock forward to an early spring break-up, • Mrs. John McNIc'hol, of .Morris town• ship, reported seeing a crow on Tues• day. The February meeting of the Blyth United Chiral 11'onlon was held in the church schoolroom on 'Tuesday even- ing, February 2711h, with over forty women present.. The president, Mrs. If. Vodden, presided, Mrs. F. Howson and Mrs. I. Wal- lace conducted the worship period, A trio consisting of Mrs. K. AlacDon• ald, Al's. 1l Vodden 'and AUi's. C, Johns - Ion sang two very 'pleasing number, "The Lord is My Shepherd" and "How Great Thou Art," accompanied at the piano by Mrs. D. Philp. interesting reports were given on the Presbyterial [neugural meeting held in Glomes on January 24th, by two of the delegates, Mrs, C. C;ailhreith and Ales. D. !Imre. Mrs, f:. Alcf.,agau introduced the guc•t breaker, Mrs. A. If. Jc'hneton, w,:'o:,c husband is lite minister of Bruce - field United Church. 'The theme of her very inspiring adch'c was "All God's Family." She was thanked by Mrs. K. Webster It w,'is announced that the World Day of Prayer Is to be held in the Blyth Anglican Church on March 9111 at 2.30 p.m. Mrs. Vodden closed the meeting with prayer, after which a social half hoar was enjoyed. Auburn May Possibly Ap- pear In "Believe It Or Not" Column "Det'evc it or not" a column publish• cd by King Features Syndicate of New York City has written 4a Fetter to Clif- ton AlcDonald, Clerk of the village el Auburn, !asking for detail; and a pic- ture of the main street, in the village. The letter refers to '''l.'he town that is named Auburn to the villager:; and Manchester to the government, 'Phe Clerk and the t'il'lage 'Trustees 'outlet how far the story that was written In the weekly papers has gone as requests for lucre information has come from Toronto and many other points. In the letter to Clerk McDonald they wanted the following statement confirmed: The Ontario Government says the''vil, lige of Auburn does nch exist, It Is listed in the municipal directory as Manchester, The 195 villagers have called the place Auburn for the past 50 years. The railroad station, since 1900, has been named Auburn, and the rot office was putt in and also called Auburn. Clerk McDonald is going In reply and, send a picture and maybe tic little �brry of our village will appeal' in the New York rapers in the "Be. lieve it or not." column I'a3' Ripley. Unit "II" ll'Ieetillg Eleven members of Unit II who have chosen "Starlight Circle" as their name met at the United Church manse at 8,15 on February 13. The meeting opened by our leader, Mrs, Ronald Higgins, reading a !toes!. Mrs. Jack Stewart gave the call to worshlp. Rev, E. .rvleIngan then showed an interesting filth on the "Church and it's Family," Hymn 39.1 was sung after which Mrs. Allan Grant led in prayer. The minutes of the last meeting was read by the secretary. Airs, ,la.tues fierce, and the Poll call was taken. 'I'he meeting closed with the benediction, A delicious lunch was served by Airs. Higgins, Mrs. Cleland and Mr's. Me' Lagan, and a social half hots' was spent, Airs. Dwight Campbell gave a vote of thanks for the use el' the nlnnse and the hostesses for the lovely lunch. The next meeting will he held al the home o1' Ma's. Winona McDougall at 8.15 p,ur, on March 13, UCIwr Unit "D" Meeting The organizational meeting of Unli- t) of the United Church \Pesten of Blytll United Church was Ilcld 'I'hurs. day evening al the home of Mr, and Airs. Keith Webster with a very good attendance, Airs, Webster was in charge of the Call to Worship. Mrs. Lorne Scrim- geour led in a most interesting round ,cable discussion on the first chapter of the study book, "'Signals for the Sixties." 'fire following officers for the Unit were elected: Leader, Mrs. Keith Webster; asst. leader, Mt's. Wetter Oster; secrctaty, Ales. dim Cartwright; asst, eecretac ; All's. Jack C;lld'c.11; program convenor, Airs. Bert Fear; visiting and card con- vener, Mrs. Jill Walsh; press report- er, Mrs. Lorne ticrim,gcou'. It. was decided -10 uneet the first Atom. day evening of each month in the homes of the van'ions nlembtn's. 'I'lie Unit to be known its the "Nor' West. ors." The March meeting will he held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Webster with Mrs, Lorne Scrimgeour study book leader and Mrs. Karl Whitfield and Mrs. Jim 1Valsh program convenors and hosteeses, fidgets nter W.O.A.A Finals, Defeat Zurich 2 Games To 3 !'1'URSONAL ;NTLItFS'1' Rev_ and Mrs. Robert e[eally rcceiv• cd word lata Wednesday that the tat• ter's hrnlher, Air. Robert Gibb, of Bris• Fol, England, had passed away. Mr, and errs. Walter Cnok, \l•s• 1';d• uta Cook a'el ,111' Hervey Snell visited with Alr. 'Phonics ('.colt inn Rrunkhavc l ntu'Irie:1 'hemp, IVile:diemt, un IVrtlnc;; day. AIF`( Robert Crai;:, 1 endue, A1r..'!)1 Air;;, (;corse Pollard, Drus':el', al.:.e:il• ell the rvereleg eercn,naies at. l un:h u Victcr,a Iluspit';tl Selma! of fv'ur:;sal: when Mees Yvonne Pt,'l.lerrl was among the 95 girls taki::g Earl. Ah'. Archie Somers is able to be out agein after being confined to his harm through i1'nes's fur the Past three weeks. The Standard has learned that the dote', of Miss Lottie Bentley, Mrs. Alexander, has fallen in her home and fractured her leg. Older residents of Blyth will remember Miss Lottie Bent. ley as a teacher in this area many years ago, It is interesting to recall that the Bentley family were the first occupants of the 'hone now lived in by Mr. and Airs. Frank Elliott and family, Aliss Bentley was delighted to learn of tlic restoration of her cid home by Mr. and ell',. Frank Elliott. Maurice 1Ullahlln SC' ie (;i t'y Treasurer Of Huron County 41.11 Club Hamm Ilam, of Granton was e:ocled pt'enide,nt of the Huron County 4.11 Club Lender; Association ,It its annual meeting held in Clinton, He succeeds George Ltr lerwoe:l, of Wingh~m, Other officers elected: vice-presi- dents,- Clifford Bray, Brussels, and Ted Gunn, Bayfield; secretary-treas• trier, I\k'u':ce Ha:llahan, Belgrave. NRiecl directors: Beef,_George Kon- hredy, Lttckerev; dairy, Ronald McMi- chael, Wroxeter; shire, Doetald Dcdds, Worth; grain, Murray Iloover, Brus- sels; field crops, Bruce Coleman, Sea. forth, Intermediates Ousted The Myth Legion Intermedia:tc hock• tv leant hung uta their skates for the current season w11cn they were defeat- ed in futu' straight games by Lucknow in their battle for the group cl'.an1i`)oIi- slllp. Injuries and lack of evadable play• oro was the major factor in the learns poor showing in the group finals, All sweaters and seeks are to be handed in immediately for cleaning and storing. Reception And Dance Jn I3'yth Memorial Hall on Friday, March 9th, for Mr. and Mrs. John Elliott (nee Beverley Beattie). Music by Jim Pie'ce's Orchestra. Ladies please brie;;; lunch. Everybody wcl• count. i:3uil(liltg Purchasct1 ('antphell Transport have purchased the residence and garage on Queen Shreel, [3!ylh, owned by Mr. Russe Dougherty, Air. and Alt's, Harold (amp. hell Sr. and dauglhlcr::, Naney Lee autct France:;, are now residing there. 11'ILh VISIT GE1tAIANV Al'. and Mrs, (Hubert Hobo, Ralph and Michael, will leave on Saturday from Melton airport for several weeks vi'ssit with friends and relatives in Ger. ninny. They will return to Blyth on May 15th, FIRESIDE FA1U\I FORUM On February 26, the Fireside Farm Forum was entertained by Al'. and Mrs. Howard Cartwright. Seventeen adults were present., The interesting brcat:lcat was a revtety on tie recent subject s. 11'inancrs of the euchre games were: most games, Mrs. Jack AleEwing; lone hands, Ales. 1kti'vey Taylor; consola- tion, Clifford Acidi:oil, FORMER TEACHER PASSED AWAY Mary Estella Wel li, a former leach et• (11 the tP'Ih Public School, passed aw;ty ut the keine of her sister, Mrs 0, II. Moxley, 101 Bloomfield Dr., Lon - den, Oren., on Sunday, February 10. The deceased was the daughter of the late John Bell Welsh and Sarah Mills Welsh, Funenal service was held at the hone of her sister and interment was al Guelph, Two New Members Installed Into Blyth Lions Club The regular meeting of the Blyth Lioee club was held last Thursday ev. ening, February 22, in illc Blyth ;11em erinl 1Ia!; with plc:sident, Edward Wat in char,4a'. 'I lei mutate; of the J 1'cviot1; lnert.;ns. .erre read by the 1td1'et,ary, Donald -1'0tr•1;;, I!n.it. t' of the United Chui'ci' \Varnr i c„tent to a delicious, linnet. •cl here t: JIIkc'I on behalf of the club y Lien Ray Madill. Zone chairman, el'. Jack McDonald. :f Brussels, made his yearly visit t,: ;he club, and along wilt his regulee .series, installed two new members, 1Ial'old Cook mid \Vin. Hal. IL was decided to hold draws on the :•emaiating Saturday night hockey gam- es in Toronto. A letter of thanks was read frons a distant family who have received help trent the club in the form of medical assistance. The meeting closed with the "Roar,” UCIti' Gr»up "F" To fleet The regular meeting of the (:;roup J� of 1h.e women o[ the United Church wit] I:ce held on Monday, March 51h, at the lime of .Airs. Winnie Jonston al 13.3 p.m, LONuF51M)ItO Mr. and Mrs, Earl Gaunt, accom- panied by Mr. and Mrs. Ward Shick• tuna land daughter, of Kingston, left cu Sunday afternon 011 a inator trip .o California. They expect to be away a month ca' six weeks. - Mrs. Archie Young visited with her _.seer and family, Mr. and Mrs. IIarry roll, for a few days last week. AIr, Ken Gaunt visited friends in Lucknow en Sunday, The Londesbcro 4 -II Sewing Club stet in the Community Hall on February 21 with 10 girls pros ens, The meeting ''vee opened will the 1.11 Pledge and was followed by the treading of lie 1hlintlles of the la_t nhect'ng. Thi: leaders and Mrs. Dave Andersen as• sited the girls 1n altering and cutting tut t.heh• pattern;. The cermet irca Colin Of ',inning and cutting out patterns was discus: cd. Lunch was &•eru'cd by lIa!'ie Riley and Linda Well - banks. Master Nelson Underwood, of Wrung. hang, is at present visiting with his grand parents, Mr. and Al's. Neleon Lear. Murray Gaunt Nanied President. of Huron Juniors The annual meeting of the Huron County Junior Fa.t•utcrs was, held in Clin feat last. Thursday. Alu ray Gatd, of \i iugham was elected president, Other officers include: vicepresi• dents, Ivan Uow, \1'in.ghein, and James Dougall, Ilcns'all; secretary, Tom C'tnn- ninghaul, Auburn, Miss Marjorie !nipple, of Scalar -1h, was elected president of the ,hider 1n• stitule, t;t tltc :ante meeting. Also warmed to the ht4itue's eaeca• ive were: vicc•preeidcnts, Jalttuie Al, toot, Lucknow, Doreen Strong, Seaforth: secretary, Bessie Johnston, Bluevale, Huron's Assistant Agricultural Rep• resentativc Don Grieves, said the coun- ty drama festival will ba held March 9 at the South Huron District high School at Exeter, in connection with the llu• ton C'ouny Seed Fair, I)IST'RiCT OPTOMETRIST WILL ATTEND MID•WINTEIt CONGRESS Mr J. E. Longs(aff, Optometrist, will Im attending lite Mid -Winter Con- gress of the Optometrical Association of Ontario, being held in Tof'on(o March S, 8. 7. in addition to discussing the stilet• nal affairs of 1110 profession, the meet- ing will include several cdueational ,•ehlli172d;S al11 ('.fillies dealing wee new Saki improved aspects of the practise of optometry as well as :new instrument 0. lien that has leen developed over tit past few years. BIRTHS 'ITTEY—In Clinton Public Irospital on Thursday, February 15, 1962, to Mr and Mr's. Ben Riley, R.R. 1, Londes• bole, the gift of a daughter (Lorna Jean), The Myth Lions Club Midgets have Ammo(' to the finals of the WOArt Midget I) hockey championship be winning their three game senu•fiaal series with Zurich 2 games to 1. The Blyth boys made the trip to Zurich last Wednesday night, riding on the creel of a decisive 8l victor:r on home ice and feeling quite collfideet of victory. Tlicir spirits were semi dampened however, tt1ie11 Zurich, fight- ire, ight•iane with their backs to the wail, slap. ped in four quick goal:; in the first ten minutes and Bald control of the gamat t.hroucuiteut it:; entirety. The excelletne number of home town supporter; vies travelled to the game wore only re. warded once wilen Terry Madill :Asap• peal in a pass from Tom Heffron mid- way II:rough the second period. Zurich ',vent on l0 win handily with a goal in the second and two more in the third period, slaking the score board read 7 to 1 in their favour. I31yth lost the toss for the tti,'d game and were forced to travel to Zurich on Saturday night for the fin- al encounter. '\'his time the local lads looked like an entirely• different team when they stepped on the ice and Blyth fans who followed the team all year could literally see viotory sticking out all ever them, The first period was an even, hard Night battle, with neither team able to add a score. IVe might add al this p01111 that the Blyth coach, Ray Madill's insistence on neutral t'efoi'ce was a major factor in keeping the tulortbio dox actions of the Zurich team well under control. In the previous games home and home referees had been used, and in the first encounter is Blyth the visitors brought along a young chap who 'lad never acted in that capacity before. In the game back in Zurich they produced a referee that plays for their junior team and he seethed unable to roticc any of his -team's infractions. The result of this was the Blyth ref- eree, Ed. Watson, calling Zurich pen- alties and the Zurich referee calling Blyth penalties, The third game saw an entirely dif- ferent situation when two WOAA ref- erees from Stratford were sent to ofiicia:te. In tae first few minutes of the game they (handed out 3 penalties to Zurich alid this was apparenly er.uu gh for thewn to realize that a continuance of this style of play would !'e_ttt in farther firm lin the penalty box. We might also add that several of the Blyth players were unable to escape the iron hand of the officials. When the second period started Blytb took command and went en to score two goals, with Zurich scoring their only tally of the game in this period. Robbie Lawrie, assisted by Grant and Scrimgeour, and Pletch, from lieffron and Madill, were Blyth marksmen. 'ferry Aladin added the insurance marker in the third stanza when Blyth were short handed. IIe broke loose from the Zurich defence and skated alone the length of the ice to neatly beat the opposing goalie. 'Tommy Ilei- Iron stilted the garno away when he scored on a pass from Madill, Again Allan Howes was outstanding in the nets for Blyth as he withstood a rlcspera to attempt by Zurich in the latter stages of the game. Air, Donald Young dill a commendable ,job cd handling the team in the absence of the regular coach, Ray 111adil . Blyth n'iII now meet the winner of the Ali1dnrgv1'aisley series which is now under way, fol' the WOAA Midget I) Championship and the right to con- tinue into the. OMIL1 playoffs. It is expected that this will be a i out of 3 selves and will c011nllellce 60111e time next week. The whole of Blyth is requested to he on hand at the local arena to 1101p cheer the boys on to Blyth's first championship in present day sports, CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Billie Hamm who celebrates his 4th birthday on March Isl. Conguatulatiens to Kevin Geed, son of Air. and Mrs. Israel Gooch, of Winng• it;uu, who will be 3 years old on March 21111. lhnlluday greetings to Miss Vonnic 13rv:rnt, daughter of ALr, and .Mrs. har- ry Bryant who celebrated her birthday Mlonday, February ,136th, ENJOYING FRESH TOMATOES Mr. Emmerson Dennis reports to the itamdard office that he is now enjoying tomatoes for his meals from a tiny nim tomato pliant the has been growing in his house during the winter. The plant is loaded with 28 tomatoes, 7 of which are airoady ripe, , Prince Charles Won't Be Pampered Imagine a group of boys swinging hand over hand along a rope thirty feet over a lake, with nothing to stop a cold - water ducking but the strength of their own muscles and a mea- sure of cat -like skill. Well, that's the kind of thing Prince Charles will do when he begins school as a new boy at Gordonstoun. There'll be nothing cushy for him at the extraordinary Scot- tish school where his father was once a star pupil, Out of bed at dawn, a quick freeze under a cold shower, a run round the grounds before breakfast trying to reach Peak athletic speeds. Then making his bed, cleaning his shoes and doing part of the housework — this is the tough- ening' prospect for the teenager who will one day be King of England, No Palace official has con - f i r m e d that the heir to the throne will be going to Gordon- stoun. But in Royal circles it is well known that Prince Philip in- tends to let his son follow in his athletic footsteps. Some true blues may have doubts about sending the Prince of Wales to a school where games, as a head- master s a i d, "have h e e n de- throned!" Yet Dr. Kurt Hahn, the school's German founder, drew his ideas from a school run by Prince Phrlip's uncle. Prince Philip went to Salem bef. re joining the first contin- gent of forty boys who switched to Gordonstoun. Curiously, Gordonstoun is the most expensive school in Scot- land and yet parents fix their own fees. They are asked to decide what they can afford to pay, from £37 a term upwards. The Queen can pay up to £519 a year for Charles, But scores of boys get in cheaply on schol- arships. Prince Charles may thus churn up with a miner's or shopkeep- er's son, or a boy from one of the poorer regions of industry. In any case, he will mix with the local day -boys, sons of farm- ers and fishermen and railway- men, boys from all strata of so- ciety. Prince Philip joined the local coastguards, spending his quota of four hours on chilly watch Charles may prefer the Gor- donstoun fire brigade, founded since his father's day. Later on, if he takes after nis father, Prince Charles might be- come an athletics coach at some of the local schools, rushing off to his o w n physical training groups on a bicycle. In Duffus village the local smithy is manned entirely by Gordonstoun youngsters. Farm- ers may one day have cause to point out machinery repaired by the Prince of Wales. Among more menial tasks Prince Charles might well find himself fixing a soot plate in a chimney stack or carrying out 'small local plumbing repairs. "To free the sons of the rich and powerful of the enervating sense of privilege," is still among C'ordonstoun's avowed aims. Cheam Prep, School cast a sense of exclusiveness around the young Prince, but his Scot- tish school will adopt the atti- tude that he's just as good se he can make himself, and no bet- ter. In physical training, for in- stance, Gordonstoun boys are each encouraged to beat their own previous best, and not to c Q p1 e against each other? writes Helen Cathcart in "Tit - Bits," Two years from now, if he takes after his father, Chillies will be able to walk five miles in an hour, run two miles in thirteen minutes and do the 100 yards in 12.6 seconds. At worst, he won't be far be- hind these attainments. Few Gordonstoun boys are. In the Training P 1 a n, as it is called, Prince Charles will conscienti- ously tick whether he has kept certain rules. Has he rationed the time spent listening to radio or watching TV? Can he satisfactorily tick that he hasn't "chewed" between meals? He's bound to discover that no one ever checks his answers. Yet this lesson in self-reliance is necessary before he can be- come a Room Leader, or climb the rungs of the ladder to be- come a Colour Bearer and, fin- ally, Guardian, the highest hon- our of the school. Twice a week Prince Charles will enjoy a half-day given over to a project of his own choice. It may range from making a kitchen table alone in the car- pentry shop, to joining others in planting a new woodland, Prince Philip specialized in making architectural ar ship models, a hobby he still enjoys on rainy afternoons at Balmoral or Sandringham. The choice for Prince Charles will now be wider than it used to be. He can paint a picture in the art room or carve new pews for the chapel. Perhaps he will pick up his Uncle Tony's flair for photogra- phy or furniture design. He may even join the school orchestra — and he's bound to act in the annual school play, Gordonstoun spec i s li z e s in seamanship. Prince Charles has already gained a lot of sailing skill. Now he'll take sail drill with nine other youngsters in the school's o w n dipping lug cutter , , , and later on he'll go to sea in a schooner named after his great-grandfather, Prince Louis. Commonwealth leaders have often urged that Prince Charles should travel abroad, sharing o n e of h i s mother's overseas tours. But Prince Charles is more likely to sail to Norway as a member of the ship's crew, just as his father did. What Charles will do at Gor- donstoun, in fact, is have the time of his life and have the Palace gloss scraped off him, The Queen fully understands the Gordonstoun system of turn- ing a boy into a self-possessed man and won't be surprised if he turns up at Balmoral, hav- ing walked all the way. The Gordonstoun report lists not only classroom results but "Ability in the face of danger, discomfort, mockery . . Ability to deal with the unexpected . Fighting Spirit . . Endurance . .." Few potential kings have ever undergone training on this scale. ISSUE 9 — 1962 HEAD OF STATE — Workman applies finishing touches to papier mache head of West German Chancellor Konrad Ade- nauer for a huge carnival floot in Cologne, West Germany. a CHINESE SPAGHETTI — Ac- tress Nancy Kwan brews up a batch of spaghetti, perhaps with her next movie role in mind, that of an Italian girl. TABLE TALKS clave Anthems One of the worst things that can happen to a vegetable is to be overcooked. The exact point at which vegetables become ten- der is the point to remove them from heat—then they are not only done but they have retained color and their often delicate flavor. A general rule is to use as little water as is practical to get the best results. Strong fla- vored vegetables such as cab- bage, onions, and turnips are best cooked without a lid. . * When your vegetables are on, season them with imagination. Make your own combinations of vegetables to serve with differ- ent meats, and if you must serve certain vegetables often to satisfy your family, vary the way of cooking them. ,M . . . One way of varying your vege- tables is to serve them with dif- ferent sauces. Combine hot vege- tables and hot sauce lightly, just before serving, and use about 1 cup of sauce to 4 cups of vege- table. Medium white sauce (made with 2 tablespoons each, flour and butter, to 1 cup milk and salt to taste) is the best white sauce to combine with vegetables. With this as a base, here are several others. Mock Hollandaise Sauce Make medium white sauce. Beat 2 egg yolks; stir in 1/4 cup of the hot sauce, then pour back into remainder of sauce. Add 2 tnblespoons butter or margarine and stir and cook over hot water about 1 minute. Remove from heat and stir in 1 tablespoon lemon juice. Serve immediately, Good with asparagus or broccoli, Mustard Sauce This sauce is especially good with snap beans, cabbage and greens. Just stir 2 teaspoons prepared mustard into medium white sauce after cooking. Egg Sauce You may want to serve this with brussels sprouts or greens. Just before serving, add to thin white sauce 1 teaspoon lemon juice and 1 chopped hard -cooked egg For a convenient—and good— way to serve green vegetables, try, scalloping them. This is a new dish when you use more than I vegetable such as beans and broccoli, asparagus and cab- bage, spinach and ulna beans— or any combination you choose. Here is a basic recipe. SCALLOPED GREEN VEGETABLES 2 cups drained cooked green vegetables 1-1V2 cups medium white sauce Salt to taste Pinch of dry herbs 1/ cup dry bread or cracker crumbs 1 tablespoon butter or meat drippings Combine vegetables, sauce, and seasonings in greased casserole. Mix crumbs with butter and sprinkle over vegetable mixture, Bake at 350° F. until sauce is bubbly and topping is slightly browned -20-30 minutes, Serves 4. Variation: Put vegetables and sauce in baking dish in separate layers with a sprinkling of grated cheese or finely chopped parsley or onion or cooked mushrooms between layers, Top with 1,z cup small bread cubes and dot with tat before baking, . Want to make a main dish of a green vegetable? Then combine it with eggs and cheese and bake it either in one dish or in indivi- dual dishes. BAKED CHEESE BROCCOLI 2 cups broccoli 110 oz, package, frozen) chopped and drained 1!: cups cottage cheese 6 eggs !i cup butter 2 tablespoons grated onion 11 cup flour 11/2 cups milk Souvenir Hunting And Its Tricks, - Ashtrays are such popular momentoes with souvenir hunt- ers that London's West End theatres are ;arced to replace over 5,000 of !'tem in their bars each year. The British owned Aviz Hotel in Lisbon, Portugal, at one time had special ashtrays made which proved such a successful gimmick that the initial order from the makers had to he doubled. On the reverse side of the 1 cup grated, sharp processed cheese 2 cups corn flakes (or 1,fj cup packaged corn flake crumbs) 1 tablespoon butter, melted Spread broccoli in bottom of 6 greased individual casseroles or a 2 -quart casserole, reserving 1/4 cup for garnish, if desired. Beat cottage cheese with a rotary beater until smooth. Add eggs and continue beating until well blended. Melt butter in heavy saucepan; stir in flour and on- ions. Add milk gradually, stir- ring constantly. Cook until thick- ened. Add 3/4 cup of the grated cheese and stir until cheese is melted. Fold in the cottage cheese -egg mixture. Pour over broccoli. If using corn flakes, crush into fine crumbs, Combine corn flake crumbs and butter, Sprinkle crumb mixture and re- maining cheese on top of casse- roles; garnish with reserved broc- coli, Bake at 325' F. about 55 minutes for individual casseroles, or 11/4 hours for 2 quart casserole, until knife inserted in center comes out clean. Serve at once, as this is a souffle -type dish. Serves 6. green and gold r5111r'0.s appear- ed the words "honourably pinch- ed from the. Aviz Hotel," 13y conlrast,.when the Ritz Ho- tel in London decided to us. plain ashtrays in their public rooms, losses fell almost immedi- ately, Drinking glasses are another favourite "perk" of the souvenir hunter,,'l'here is an old sailor in Leicester who has a collection of over 700 glasses taken from pubs visited during the course of his travels, At a Defence Ministry canteen in Bonn, Germany, so many tea- spoons were being stolen that the spoons now have holes in the bowl. This makes it impossible to use them for guests in private homes, Visitors to Ireland were at one time unwilling to buy souvenirs marked "made in Japan," but the versatile Japanese have since rec- tified this by stamping the slogan in Gaelic! Papyrophilists or serviette col- lectors have become so numerous in this country that a special Papyrophiles' Club has been . formed. Members swop serviettes and paper table mats with collec- tors in other parts of the world, Even the Dean of Canterbury Is not safe from the souvenir hunter. He has lost so many umbrellas to their clutching hands that he has recently bought himself a lady's brolly -- complete with blue handle and red tassel. To date it remains unscathed, FIND YOUR ROLE Man is not born to solve the problem of the universe, but to find out what he has to do; and to restrain himself within the limits of his comprehension. Sloppy Joe's Bar. Yields Treasures In Key West, Fla,, hard -dig- ging Mary Hemingway paid pur- poseful visits to an old hangout of her late husband's. The place: Sloppy Joe's, a downtown bar where Ernest Hemingway whiled countless hours in the 1930s, and' where he stashed a hodgepodg of belongings. In dungarees and apron, the anther's widow rum- maged through a dusty store- room hour after hour last month. Among her discoveries: The skins of a grizzly bear and a brown bear, souvenirs of a long -ago Hemingway hunting expedition, in the Northwest; numerous let- ters and photographs; and parts of the original drafts of "To Have and Have Not," "Death in the Afternoon," and "The Fifth Column," as well as notes on "A Farhwell to Arms," Grimy but gratified, huntress Hemingway said: "Most of what I have found DRIVE WITH CARE I How Well Do You Know SOUTH AMERICA? "AMERICA PROVING OF A PRINCE, MAKING Of A KING: THIS IS LODGE AT GORDONSTOUN, Spartan -strict prep school in northern Scotland, where Charles Windsor, the Prince of Wales, 13, will be quartered when he begins school in May. Pupils begin day at 7 a,m, with a wind sprint followed by a brisk, cold shower. THE PRINCE will make up his own iron bedstead in austere dormitory he will shore with 11 other boys. School's aim, to build character, is pursued with a rigid schedule of academic and physical activities. The school is steeped in rigorous maritime tradition. GORDONSTOUN PUPILS prepare their lessons in cheerless cubicles clearly not designed for comfort They arise at 7 a,m,, doily, but as a special treat may sleep until 8 on Sunday. HEIR to British throne follows in footsteps of his father who attended same prep school. -" Harvesting Ice From The River --- king clay came as a welcome break in the drab monotony of these dark clays. Ice was a neces- sity, not a luxury, with us. My father was a wholesale beefdcaler long before the days of the big Chicago packers. Every Monday he drove to Reading, a matte: ot five miles, boarded a train foi Boston, took a horse -car to Brigh- ton and there at the stockyards bought a bunch of wild' Texas steers. Drovers brought them on the hoof over country roads every Tuesday in the safety of the night, reaching our place Wed- nesday morning, With -January my father kept close tabs nn the river for all the ice he would need, 'The Old FarnlC1's Almanac" was care1nily read and weather signs were studied, I think I can quote more weather -lore rhymes than any superstitious old Yankee living, They really weren't superstitions. They were compiled observations of years of New England weather patterns, For our purposes we liked hest an ice cake of twelve by four- teen inches, We had no equip- ment for planing, so we watched the formation of ice on the cove in the 1pswitch River for the proper thickness. The ice had to be piled tier on tier in the tall icehouse and must be of uniform thickness to pack well, to pre- serve an even balance and pre- vent sliding. As the tiers got beyond a man's reach a horse drawn pulley was used. The job of handling the horse fell to my brother. It sometimes went into Febru- ary before we could get sufficient thickness to harvest. Once it went into March. That year the river failed to produce ice thick enough to bear the weight of horses and the necessary machinery. We had to harvest in Swan Pond -that little jewel of a lake secreted in the deep pine woods a mile back of our house. There in the se- cluded shade of the tall forest trees we harvested 29 -inch ice -- a difficult thickness to handle and a long hard pull over rough wood roads for the horses, But January was the usual month for icing. The ice house itself packed 150 tons, the dry storage at one end of the long barn cellar took about 50 tons, and the refrigerator box held 28. So, as a matter of simple arithmetic, our harvest was 228 tons, And it was handled in a night and a day. Preparations at the cove began the day before harvesting the Ice. If snow had fallen on top of the clear crystal, it had to be scraped. This was done with horses and scrapers in the after- noon. The horse -shoes all had to be sharpened at the blacksmith shop three miles away, It needed sharp calks to prevent them from slipping on the pond. ice and to give them purchase on the slip- pery snow -packed road from the cove to the hill - a good half mile. At midnight the ice plows started work scoring the pond. By morning the 24 -inch blocks were plowed, ready to be broken up into 12 -inch cakes and floated by pike pole down the channel and lifted or skidded. into the.sleds backed down to the river bank. Each sled carried a load of 20 Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking .'S�N©Meelinn©o©oow ©012019 ©©diii):,. Einooe ©©0©©� ©©©EI®o N O©© ©00 g o s Jn V -uCi ©©. _ mkA OM ©© ©©© M© fE' U© ME mammaa no 0000 ©oo©ora© ©ri NEMM DDD blocks, about two tons to the trip. We usually had six two - horse sleds, seven if we could get them. And it was a steady procession all day long of horses with proudly tossing heads con- scious of their gleaming buckles and polished harness, colored plumes on their bridles blowing in 1he brisk air hauling the load- ed sleds, the teamsters shouting encouragement, gay bells jang- ling. Strange as it may seem, every string of bells is distinctive yet all chime and blend harmoni- ously. What magic there is in a string of sleigh bells! With cold white winter in the sky! The colder the day the better men and horses liked it. When the thermometer registered around zero the ice dried as soon as it left the water, It could be han- dled all day without the men even dampening their clothing. It slicl well and presented 00 problem, But if the mercury, as sometimes happened, climbed above the freezing point it spell- ed trouble, A rise in the water would leave two or three lcet of ship ice near shore to be bride - ed. with planks, clothing got wet and so!,'y, and ni n got chilly and morose, writes Elizabeth Hay- ward Gardner in the Christian Science Monitor, The high point of the day was reached at 12 o'clock, The men knocked off work; bits were re- moved from the horse's mouths and feed bags tied on. Man and beast alike needed respite. The Hien trooped somewhat self-consciously into the old kit- chen where my mother had been busily at work all morning A little sheepishly they dipped hot water from the copper broiler built into the back of the big stove, washed at the old iron sink and trade a stab with a comb or a brush at the mirrored wall pocket. Bashfully they filed into the Middle Itoonm where the long table waited. Martin Hayward never had any trouble getting men to har- vest the ice (though it was a job not well liked by teamsters). Ills wife always had a dinner they 'remembered from year to year. I can smell now the mouth - wafering odors, see the long i.4ble with its snow white cloth, the English china with its brown Chinese pagoda pattern, and live over again the pleasure my another took in feeding twenty- five hungry men, Four big chines of fresh pork came from the oven, roasted to a tender golden brown perfection, quarts of good golden gravy for the snowy potatoes bursting their brown jackets, winter squash, savory onions, fresh-baked bread or, better still, raised biscuits with generous slabs of butter, pickles sweet and pickles sour, chili sauce, piccalilli, apple, grape and barberry jelly from the cel- lar shelves, And for dessert the old New England standby no one could make better than my moth- er -berry slump, a steamed pud- ding swimming in blue -berries, drowned in vanilla sauce. To bal- ance the sweet a 'glass of cold apple cider from the barrel in the cellar, No man got up from that table hungry. The bells again began their gay chimes as the endless pro- cession of iceladen sleds moved once more, As the evening star blossomed forth in the sunset sky the men once more trooped into the kitchen for the final act in the icing day parade -the pay.. Then the crew of tired but happy men followed their bells down the hill and homeward, The great day we had all been waiting for was over. The ice crop was housed for another year. We were assured of the means to preserve the meat, the milk, and the vegetables which would feed a vast number of people in the. city of • Salem for twelve months more. DRIVE WITH CARE I BIG BULLY -DOZER - What looks like a fight between two mechanical monsters actually is the result of a freak accident. The small bulldozer was being used to help weight down the larger as it tried to lift its block-long,boom The boom was too heavy, and the weight lifted the cub off the ground, with the little one trailing behind in Dallas, Tex. END OF THE ROAD -The main highway between Areo and Blackfoot, Idaho, was cut oy flood waters, The Northern Rocky Mountain's worst floods in memory have left 6,000 persons homeless in six Western states. Idaho, where 4,000 have been driven from their. homes, has been hit the hardest. TIILFARN FRONT In till. nuclear ago strontium 90 has ,s.rot,e a household term • and its ; c sible c;%nfamination of milk has been the subject of widespread 5pcculation. Is there a droller? With each glass of milk that we drink, are we running the risk of radio- active contamination? The answer is a„n e:iphatic no: The safety of c ur milk sr.pply is not in jeop rdy. • • • Why, then, have scientists teamed up to determine methods of removing strontium 90 from milk? And why focus attention on milk, rather than other foods? One reason for using milk as a measure of strontium 90 'is that samples can be taken . throughout the year representa- tive of a large volume of pro- duction over a wide area, Thus, it is common to see figures about the strontium 90 level in milk, * • • ' There is another important consideration. People are dis- turbed about strontium 90 in milk because of the large con- sumption of. milk by children. Actually, milk is one of the • safest foods so far as strontium 90 is concerned, Cows take into •theilr systems only five per cent of • fife strontium 90 they ingest and secrete .only a fifth of that five per cent in their milk, The danger of humans getting strontium 90 from milk produced by cows eating contaminated grass is. infinitesimal compared witli the danger from humans eating leafy vegetables which have had the ' same amount of contamination. • • * Furthermore, strontium 90 is deposited in the bones, as is cal- cium. 'The more calcium one eats, the less strontium 90 will be taken up by the bones. Since milk is high in calcium, .this is a further safely factor as far as humans are concerned, • ,. t, Canada pioneered research in the removal of strontium 90 from milk. Three years ago, Dr, B. B. Migicovsky, a scientist on the staff of the agriculture. depart- ment's research branch, discov- ered a method of removing this long-lasting contaminant. T h e - United States Department of Ag- riculture became interested in this Canadian research and car- ried it through the pilot plant stage, Under Dr, Migicovsky's system, upwards of 98 per cent of the strontium 90 that gets, into milk can be removed, It is a highly technical filtering process • which leaves treated milk relatively un- changed with respect to compo- sition and flavor. The method in- volves the use of certain chemi- cals known technically as ion - exchange resins. • * '• Present levels of strontium 90 in the world are so minute they can hardly be measured, The . need to remove it froin any food product does not exist today. It is still comforting to know that should the need ever arise, Dr, Migicovsky's technique for ridding milk of this component of radioactive fallout could be quickly put into effect on a com- mercial basis, r . • • Fallout on the Farm is to be reprinted. This "best selling" free book- let, prepared by the Canada De- partmen; of .agriculture at the request of the Emergency Meas- ures Organization, has been in steady demand• since its publi- cation in April, 1961. The first 200,000 copies have been dis- tributed, and English and French editions will be reprinted to bring the total to 400,000 copies, Fallout on the Farm offers ad- vice to farmers on how to avoid the immediate• dangers of fall- out from an atonic attack. It does not go into the long-range prob- lems or the effects on future generations, it describes a nu- clear blast only to make the rec- ommendations understandable, and it emphasizes what can be done to protec: family and live- stock during the first few days after an attack. WATCHFUL EYE -TV cam- era silently scans movement of copper ore deep in an Ari- zona mine. Device enables one operator to control sev- eral moving belts. Waiting For Moon To Do Its Stuff . :The great total eclipse of 'Feb; 5 has answered the prayers of American solar physicists, While millions of Asians.sought to fore- stall the end of the world with offerings and sacrifices, an eight - man scientific team from the Hight Altitude Observatory at Boulder, Colo., the Sacramento Peak (N,M.) Observatory, and the National Bureau of Stand- ards hoped to record it photo- graphically from a seashore at Lae, New Guinea, Twice before in the last five years, the U.S. team had traveled thousands of miles to record the totality and capture an unparal- leled view of the solar chromos- p h e r e, the little - understood boundary between the visible disk of the sun and the encirc- ling corona, 1n 1958, rain wash- ed out the attempt from Danger Island in the South Pacific; a year later in the Canary Islands, clouds masked the suer seconds before totality occurred. This time the heavens parted. "When we went out to the cam- eras after breakfast," Dr. John Firor of Colorado reported, "it was rraining. At 8 aria. the rain stopped but there were several layers of clouds. We were feel- ing terrible." Then, at 8'48 - two minutes ISSUE 9 - 1962 before the 162 seconds of total- ity' were to begin - the clouds cleared. The day became night. 'The pearly white corona leaped out around the black of the moon, Why all the , interest in eclipses? Firor gives three rea- sons. First, the moon blocks out the main light of the sun, and permits detailed investigations impossible at other times. Sec- ond, since the moon is travelling across the face of the sun at 300 miles per second, the cameras can be set to take three pictures a second and give photographs of 100 -mile areas, Finally, with this good detail and fine resolution, the physical processes that go on in the chromosphere can be anal- yzed. ' "We have enough material for a decade of study," Firor conclud- ed happily. This "Game could-- - Kill -Millions It is no secret that U.S. Stra- tegic Air Command crews - and no doubt. their Soviet counter- parts - constantly rehearse their deadly roles: Scrambling upon a simulated alarm, flying 36 - hour missions, and "bombing" an assigned objective. - Every element is as realistic as possible, with one obvious ex- ception: There is no practice over the real targets. Now, the Air Force's deadl' game has been given an added. refinement. Within the last fif- teen months, the Air Force has quietly planted.tv'o fields of' tele- phone poles in isolated prairies in. the Western United States,. One is 70 miles southeast of Rapid City, S.D., and • the other is 25 miles northeast of Glasgow, Mont, Each field contains 18fr poles and covers 4 square•miie5,i. Each pole is topped by prism - shaped aluminum sheets 4 feet square. By adjusting the reflec- tor angles in a carefully calcu- lated pattern, ground teams can duplicate the "radar image" of any city in the world. The trick is not unlike the flashcard patterns of college football cheering sec- tions: instead of a school insig- nia, however, the SAC patterns show rivers, factories, and entire cities. Which cities are the pilots and bombardiers practicing on? "Pro- tocol wouldn't allow me to be specific," a public -relations of- ficer answered, "taut you can use your imagination." Children are wonderful mimics. They'll act exactly 1ike'.their pa- rents, no matter how hard you try to teach theni manners, ?4JAY SCilOOl LFSSON By Rev. It, B. %Warren, B.A., R.D. The Obligation to be Truthful Exodus 20:15; Matthew 12: 33-35, 26: 69-75a Memory Selection: By thy words thou shalt be Justified, and by thy words thou shalt be con- demned. Matthew 12:37. The n in th commandment is o [-t e n disregarded; sometimes carelessly, sometimes deliberate- ly. • We -have become so accus- tomed to blurring the truth to suit ourselves that the white of trtith and the black of falsehood have intermingled to form a grey. Let us consider a few ex- amples. A man who has just ta- ken some heavy drink, tells his wife that ifthey call him to go to work, say that he is out. Now, he is 'out' alright, 'knocked out', But he is giving instructions that are intended to deceive, and that is lying, A call comes from the hospital to come, that the sick one has taken a turn for the worse. The next-of-kin arrives to find that the loved one died half an hour before the call was made, Now what is ' gained' by telling half the truth, and holding back the most significant part. We know there are circumstances when such information should not be delivered by phone, •Why not just summon the person to the hospital without any misrepre- sentation. Authorities are trying to check misrepresentations in advertis- ing. Claims for the product are so often made that are contrary to fact. Many people are de- ceived. In the United States some tobacco companies have had to make drastic changes. Liquor companies .are very wary.' They do -not iinake such claims as: "Guaranteed not to lead toward alcoholism," "Will. make you a better driver," "Will„ improve your morals," "Will snake you •save your money for things you need." They do not, make such claims. They just urge people to buy their bf•and, -`" • -- Propaganda is often a type of lying, Many people are gullible, prior to an election. But the ma- jority don't go to political meet- ings any more because of the frequent presentation of half- truths. Promises, yes; but little emphasis on th cost. Each party is conceited about their own ability, I would like to see an election run, keeping the ninth commandment in mind, and also the Golden Rule. Undoubtedly some .individual politicians en- deavour to do this. But the over- all picture is riot a good one. SPRUCING UP-Mihailovitch, a Russian wolfhound or borzoi, gets the brush from Mrs. M. Malone, his owner, in Windles- ham, England Dog was en- tered in London 'show. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACIIOSS 1. 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Electrified 7. Stain particle 36. Still 39. Snow runners 41. Operatic solo 43. Greedy 45. Dry tvar.► 46. Fore?lt growth 47. Famed southerner 48. Frequently 49. Weep 50. Relatives .4 Mvselt 1 3 14 ti 5 6 1 8 9 to II 12 13� 14 IS'''''''''''::49:\:,.:0; 1 ��Ib 17` 18 19i2o: • ; � •; `ti 4 5' 21, ' 2B 29' - 4�, 30 31 • �. 32; .;X 33 3� �rr�� 35 •3., % . 37 4! ::.."\\ 42 43 r� `' 44 45 46 47 48 49 5O `4 51 52. y�53 54 55 _ �1',\, \t 5b �ti I.5 57 Answer elsewhere on this page PAGE 4 WINTER BARGAINS 9 Coats Only, 10 to 1 l 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. NcedIecrat Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Out, Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON -- LIElEK — IIEAFOETH LOCAL R.EYRIIIN1A'1`IVE ••� 1140MAS HELP, CLINTON. ,• PHONNI CLINTON: E>IE' RIR te ensises6—Hu T -64O4 Daetnese 41 Reetdence—Hu 2-38e9 Residence 34 Amillsounwilmlimew d. FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest- aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full - course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts. HURON GRILL BLYTI! - 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 It. A. 81'OT'TON, Ae>MMINIte A WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ...Blyth--• HOOTS & SHOES ' Phone 78.- YARD 8.-YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY ILAN• KETS,{ DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8A5 A.M. i FINAL CLEARANCE Of A11 Winter Goods In The Store SAVINGS NOT LESS THAN 20 PER CENT AND UI' TO 50 PER, CENT. It's Like Buying For Less Than WHOLESALE COST. "The house of Branded Lines, and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PRONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. ,,.yr ,.•,.ut xw...rr r:itlr.,... �1.r..,.a-.:..•.f•Y•AAad1'+-.ea,:441+,1C/. 4 ra.J.....:LL Y.YYM' r r.. 1.•...& NLY'Cti STAb,1ith BELGRAVE NEWS W, I. Plans for Future Functions The Citizenship meeting, of the Bel. grave \Yemen's incl:tole was held in the CWtllllunity Ceetr'e r',a '1'ueetloy at to noen with the pro: ident, Airs, Rich Lord Procter, do cherge of the business. Mrs. J. M. Coupe., Mrs. Lyle harper and Mas. Jilin Andersen were nano i e cc!nrn...tee Io plea for the Ilelgrave Co-Oecrative h nquet w 1Mareh, 11 was decic'•ad to tend the pooling fee far ediicers for the Conference at Guelph, also to contribute $50.00 to. I,he Prenvutciel Project. 1t was an• flounced that repairs to the piano had been !rade. A1rs, Earl Anderson Is to look alter the special Woolen's heti' lute prizes for those elas5c'3 at tate 13e'grave School fah'. Mrs, Harry Bien was present ,and reported that there were 24 girls taking the short cettr: e now in progrees. Mrs. J. M Coultes was convener of the Irrogranrnte 0th the roll call being answered will! "What 1 like about my Community.. 11irs. Leslie Boll have tate motto it he form of a quiz , "The citizen in he community, as lei individual end is a parent..' Rev. .1 I1. Anderson ;ave the address ea "Citizenship.' qrs. Walter Pecoek sang Iwo s ulo no S,c'rct.. and 4 \ 1Vinl.er• won Ier'land." Ltuu:lt vas screed by Mr.. Leslie Bolt, Mrs. lticltard feeder and Mier. Charles h. Coultes. Thrifty Thimbles Meet The Betrave Group 2 Thrifty 'flim blots 4.11 Homemaking group mot at the home of Mrs. Richard Procter on Monday evening, February 10. The president, Donna Graeby, opened the meeting with the 41l Pledge and 1lot to. Marilyn Campbell read the min utes of the last meeting. Six ntentbers answered the roll call with "On pat• torn alteration I had to make on my oto pattern." Miss i. Merest, will visit the girls on March 5 at the Com• inanity Centre, The next meeting will be held on February tri at 7:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Garner LNicholsen. Airs. Ted Fear told about l.he culling out and Marking the Rattan. Mrs, ftiohard Procter explained about bust• big and slay elitchiug. As group work the girls pirated on their patients and out out their garments, The meeting claeed with Taps, Weekly Euchre Mrs, Chris Nelhery and Rees Mc- Ewen were the high prize winners at the regular weekly euchre held in the Community Centre on Wednesday ev- ening. There were 0 table; in play. Novelty prize winners were Mrs. Charlie Coultes and Clarenoe llaruta. Connotation prizes went to Mrs. Os- car Holmes .and 1lerson Irwin. While talking with Mr. Albert 13aoan on Saturday he mentioned he had seen Iwo crows in the Goderich area ••• Spring 1U3y be coming. Mr. Jatnas R. Coultes flew to Regina from Mallon to attend the annual meet• ing of the Canadian Hereford Assocla• !foot, Mr, Coultes was one of two di- rectors from Ontario on the Canadian Board, Lorna Bolt, of Kitchener, sent, the week -end with her !parents, Air. Fwd Mrs. Leslie Belt. Mies Margaret Wightnran, who is Public Meeting A public meeting u111 be held In the Foreste►'e Hall, Belgrave, Friday, March 2nd, 1962 at 8 p.m. to discuss hog marketing. The Hog Producers Association, the Federation of Agricul- ture and the Farmers' Union are invit- ed to have representatives present to take part In the discussion, . HURON COUNTY GROUP OF ONTARIO FiREE ENTERPRISE AGRICULTURAL PRODUCER attending Teachers College, at Strat- ford, spent the weekend with her par• Nits, A1r, and AL;S. Edgar 1Viglitinan. Misses Marlene and Jk' utnr 11'rr'sh, of Kitchener, spent the week -end with their parer:te, AIr . and Mrs. James iVahih. Little Dean Cainibell, 01 Lcnli n spent last Week with his grandmother. Mrs. Floyd Campbell, rc,ttuning with !tie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alan Camp- bell, en Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Alcock and fam: ily, of Nuestadt, spent the week -end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle I topper. ;Ir. and Mtu, James Letlnont went to Leaden on Sunday to see their soap David Thoines, a patient in the Child' rcn's Hospital there, they also visited with 1lrs, Carl Proctor a patient in Vitt orito l lispit al. W. 1. LADIES CELEBI(ATE 85th ANNIVERSARY AT TORONTO Women Institute members front all over Ontario trot et. the Queen Eliza. 'Toth Building C'.N.K, Grounds, 'Toronto, en Monday afternoon to (observe the truth Anniversary id its fowidiug. cvhielt took, place at Stoney Creek on February 18, 1897, Nearly 1500 guests :at down to the noon 'luncheon with about 25 present representing several branches in Huron County, Speakers Hat the. lunelteen and throughout the afternoon spoke with elide of the .Women's Institute pioneers who had laid the foundation 65 years ago which is now the largest woolen's organization bt the world with the Pres• ent nt'embershIp being 6,500,000 in 26 countries. Duo to the Moment weatli er throe Stoney Creek charter members were lovable ' to make the trip to Tor• oitto, but a granddaughter of lho four• der of the W. L, Mrs. Adelaide Hood - less teas presoatl for the birthday cele. oration. The guest speaker, was Mrs, haven Srpith, of Chappell, Nebraska, who is a'viee-president of Associated Country Women of the World, of which every W 1. member is also a member of this woad wide orgtanization. She reminded the members of their heritage, and ur• ged that the work of the group continue in these tunes of international stress. In her witty maturer she told the story of her grcat•awtt, Aturahcl, who had been a pioneer on the Nebraska prair- ie, 75 years ago, and told the assembled W. 1. members that they too stand at the crass -roads of destiny. She stated that it is up to Christian women to face the responsibility of rebuilding the faith and the integrity of tate world. Elie said that Russia is not the problem of to -day. U Russia should drop out of the picture, the greatest danger would be 61111 here. The greatest danger is our- selves and the moral dtsintogration and 1,ankrttptcy of integrity which we face. We must learn what freedom is, all of us trust do the best job we possibly can, of living to•ckay, Mrs. Smith also urged that wotricn hold fast to the spir. it of neigllbotirliness that has been tate spirit of the fotutcling Of the United Stales and Canada. By understanding and friendship we can slowly bring about change ie the world in which we live. One of the spcwlicers of the afternoon was Hon. Charles McNaughton, minis- ter without portfolio, who represented the Minister of Agriculture, W. A. Stew- art, who was unable to attend. He brought greetings from Queen's Park and best wishes frrmt the Prime Mini - seer Diefenbaker, Congratulations were read from many countries around the world and a special message was read from Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth Il. Some of the countries sending greetings were sister organizations hi Australia, Now Zealand, England, Wales, Holland, India, Pakistan, Rhodesia and the ten provinces of Canada. At the conclusion of the program, a li stor•loal pageant was presented de. picting the costumes worn at that first meeting on February 19, 1897, The his• tory of the growth of this organization ATTENTION IIUItON COUNTY HOG PRODUCERS For orderly, competitive selling under a free enterprise system Vote for the following March 6. ADAMS, GEORGE Turnberry Twp, ADAMS, JAS. Morris Towp. ADAMS, HAROLD Asltl'ield Twp. BATEMAN,CECIL Grey Twp. CAMPBEL, GEORGE McKillop Twp. COULTES, C. R. E. Wawanosh Twp. DUNCAN, JACK Usborne Twp. GREB, MELVIN Stephen Twp. JOHNSTON, HUGII Grey Twp. KERR, CAMERON Colborne Twp. LAMANT, MELVILLE Grey Twp. MeGREGOR, RONALD Tuckersmith Twp. PROUTY, MUTED Hay Twp. WILSONWM. Howick rI'wl;, WRIGHT, GORDON Howick Twp, A vote for all of the above producers will in- sure a plan whereby costly assttrbl-,y yards which entail extra delays in handling 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 ` I ‘10(inestIay, ire . if; 1962 Federation News (By J. Carl Hemingway) 1'cu'haps the most important event ill Agricultural circles in 1hn'ou County will flake place next 'Tuesday, March 6th, This of course Le the vote for the Committee . !ten for the Hee, Pro• duelers Marketing lctlyd. The sucxrts with tvhich wo sell our products deter- miner, the income of farmers to a very h^gh degree. It is about tune that we as farmers decided whether we want to accept the major responst• bility in lies field or give it over to other.. In order 1.o give a firm decision we !mist vote. Polls are eel up so that it, will net be necessary to drive too far. Lot's do everything in our power (0 Cel every able bodied hog producer out to the !rolls. At the Federation of Agriculture's [''ebrualy 21st meeting Alf Warner re- ported the CFA annual had approved I turn Cotlniy's resolution that the mar• ket reports quote dressed carcass prices cu ,' 'Brown and corn on bars �f Red, Blue, lac, 13►o n a mcrcial grades for light. 'and heavy cur cast, weights, '1'Ite CAF also recommended that le gal action be token to prevent and was recalled by the tactics froth lite Guelph Arca who preeented it for this 6th anniversary. The chairmen for the afternoon was the F.W.1.0, presicdenl, Mrs, L. G. Lyne burner, of Port Colborne, and she was assisted by KWIC. president Mr's. Jantcs Ilaggerty, of Napanee, and elle er members of the executive of the Fe. derated Women's lnsitutes of Ontario. Atrs. Ed. Davies, president of the Auburn Branch, and Mrs. W. Draclnock, secretary -treasurer of the West -Huron District, attended this luncheon on A[on. day at Toronto, disolve mergers In parking urdurtry, The introduction of machinery nets and prov Wen for testing of farm nm• chinrry twits urged fur drone pt'ovinees that have not already taken riled e til this direction. The direetves from the various loam• ships expressed their willingness to aseitt in the circulation of the petitions requesting the drafting of an egg ntarkeing plan. Mrs. iVarlen Kurbrigg reported on the OFA 1Vontcal's Conuttitl.ee which recommended that the Women's Cotn- mittee. promote Cooperatives, Medical Services and give publicity to the ac- tivities of the Federation through the \Vonten's Institutes. At the beef producers annual mating February 23rd., Chairman, Bob Mc. Gregor, outlined the use of Bills of Lad. ing That are now being required for the trucking of liveslock. The beef producers will have the opportunity ct having a deduetlun or 10c per beryl c12• ducted for the pui'pu;e of financing their orgaeicatinn. He also recoup denoted that feelers shreed Make ri point of marketing their eattle just as soon as individual animals reached a market finish just as we dr with our hogs. Too ntwiy beef feeders wait un- til a large lot 0f cattle can be sold. ht this way sornn are over finished attd others are not quite Its good as they Should Iar. Guest speaker Gerd. Bennett, Chief of the Marketing Division of the Ontar- io Department of Agriculture, pointed out that skill in production had far our- passed our accomplishments in selling our products, It is time out selling eG ficiency caught up. Afa-rkethng has be. cow, too complex for i;ulividttal effi- ciency. BUY YOUR CHILDREN SAVAGE SHOES FOR THE WORKING MAN— SISMANS are best for comfort and wear. WEEKEND SPECIAL MEN'S GREY FLANNEL 2 -PANT SUIT size 40 Regular $35,00 SPECIAL $28.00 R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Good Manners" YOUR BEST BUY IS HERE! 1962 C1IEV. Sedan 1961 CI-IEV. Sedan 1960 CHEV. Sedan 1958 CIIEV. Coach 1958 FORD Sedan .4",o 1956 DODGE Coach 1953 PONTIAC Sedan 1953 STU i`BAKER .� Hamm's Garage Myth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers Admiral and Rogers Majestic STEREO and RADIO COMBINATIONS At New Low Prices Admiral PORTABLE DISI! WASHER, no instal- lation necessary. Esmond electric . blanket FREE with every machine sold $199.95 1 Used McClary Easy Heavy Duty 2,1" Range itt good condition. VODDEN'S HARDWARE CS ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Blyth, Ont. Call 71 '(tydlir�ilfay, Feb, 28, 19G2 ZOM&'IiMES 1T'S WISE, 'To GET IN A T'IC'KLE Di.] you know that your body, at this moment, contains a pound of more of salt? 'fu keep up this vital :,lork.pil(' est tall, the avcl'a ee eet'Sen normally heed, 10 grams of Sall deity. thetcr condi lions of heal, violent exercise, or !lard work, which induce perspi: atien, you'll need n great deal mere. For hardworking people, herr':; :I tip from James S. •Uua!Lp, preside; t cf 1lttllhcws•11'ells C01111x1 y, Ltd., of Guelph, producers of •tlte famous Rose Brand pickles. "\Vllon your body uee.ls mere salt, it's wee to get in a pickle," says Mr. Ilunlep, "A mt:ditun size dal Pickle, fear example, pro\;dcs Leif el the wean - al daily salt requirements in pelalah'.c form—phis other essential nutritive victuals as well." 'vn(1L PAYMENT DOWN 11NJL CENT I'TtOyI torn A defielency 1 ayrnent of 22 cents a pound \vitt he pallet en lite 1961 tv0'11 !i)>• -r -:e cc;:l 1' IL;In ills' hayutc; l i121 Il.' i.lr , 1, yi ai'. ',Yid l pirulutina lh!:� lists ,Ia ou':rx:rl In tin Ileal:,c ut C'.11tll:!I:; i 011 Felt tl;'Iry 12, 1962 by tie.. lion. .1ne1!s 1Ia:Lean, Actio; llinistei f A;;'•ir'_Illul'e. The deficiency Tey alert is calculat el as the rlilference hetwcen the sic:, hilIzaticn p11('1' t.1 60 eeets it pound and the averaye in•u'ktl price 1)es peeled f.o.b. '('creeto for the base;' grades, 11'i'tirn Jtaltgc Choice, h✓ill blosel staple, eel J.:1si: re 1)omistic quarter hlrul :Ae ale roiuhinerl. 11 is esetinlafr•1 that 1!ntt pt'O ttctic•O of '.\Ort ill (';.d i wi'1 he ahlproximat cry n million ren :,l', ittaLTIESFNAPVINIAMIWATIFIXIIIIW J X1'EN;il Vla (IF ,A i{INC, OF FINANCE CO, R1;POSESSIONS, I;ANKRI'P'1' S'Tocss, L';UI,I1'F 13EIGUltEs anti PERSONAL CONSIGNMENTS Consisting of Slodcru Household Fitrnilurc', TV's, Appliances and Brand New (Tolling in the CLINTON LEGION IIALL on Satur ar �: ,r ':1 G rch 3 at 1:30 p.m. t;I)al'i) Special Outstanding items-- La•ge. I rcItnhon►e 11161 ;ousels' model Stereo combination AM F11 radio and 1 -speed record changer in beautiful baud rubbed cabinet, only 1 months old and cast $IOni new; 20 cu, fl. chest freezer; 2 pc. locum rubber kippered cushion chester- field suit; large eohsole model chore! oreale Also— 2 • ;, pr, bedroom sidles complete with bootie:er' bed:,, box springs and mattresses; 6 '1'V :arts, all have been cherkcd Over amt fit ,11 condition; 2 two -pc, davenport suites; 2 • 39" eo►Nincntal beds; 1 set of maple bunk bode; 3 chrome !i.ilcite! rattle,,; I sea es:n•cr; refrigerators; 2 electric rangy conventional wa.ylifi; automatic. washer and dryer; 1 other electric dryer; platform ro,a,('rs; hostess and arm chairs; trl•1Iglit anti table lamps; step and coffee tables; odd chrome chairs; Westinghouse dish washer; a Large selection of brand new clothing; plus anany other pieces of furniture and applian- ces which will be released before sale day but not available for publication a( this time, DO NOT MISS TII15 OUTSTANDING SALE OF NEW AND NEARLY NEW FUIRNi'TURE AND APPLIANCES. DUE TO TILE LARGE OFFERING, SALE TIME IVILL BE 1:30 SHARP, TERMS-•- Cash on clay of sale. 3% sales tax in effect. Cheques accepted. FRANKLIN BRICK, Auctioneer, 13,13. 2, Gadshill THE BLYTII STANDARD PAGL i3 moureassiammommeasssaArg Auburn News Of The Week I'ricm.'. in this di,;irict followed with the a',y,u•cl given to Bliss Jean Jour ;, of 11'ihgharm, the Gold Curd in t;ui.lirg Ia;t neck, Ilcr parents, 11r. ::.1d 'Mrs, Cherie:, Jeses were farmer t'c;idcnts 1n thi; (I.:Str•ict. iii s. ,i, mc; ,Jackson is visiting this ,•l; with her date -thaw, Mrs, Donald I:ai, and lir, Kai, al Oakville, Mrs. Laura Fowler was. taken Sun• clay evening to Go:le:deli ho:;)!tal. Iter n';1ny friends with her a speedy re• cevel Mr. C1;rrles Scott slipped on the ice early o:h Alea lay morning while Baine to Ilio Lain. After eX•rays were taken Ile was nllrwed to return to his home lo rccui ('rate from injuries received. 1.11 Club Meeting The Auburn 1.1i Club met in the (':unuhnt:dy llriner'al )Call wil.h I: it nt e:: 1.re:i:;t. The 1>rcsidoul, ('ar- ele Brien, opeeed the !nert.i!I am II!!! n.,"I'e : wore marl by Hereat E;rndr r.r.n. 111'.1 Ica on preparing the material for cutting was given and the girl; cal out their blouses and for their spring project "Sep• crates fur Sunnier." Carl Sievert To Be Guest Speaker lir, Carl Sievert, of Gorlerich, will he the guest speaker let the Auburn ilcrticultrral meeting in the Cemllltlll• ity 'Menmca'ial Hall en Monday evening, March 5, et 0 p.m. He will speak on the ('rowing of flowers a11(I tell of the Ag• ricullural methods used in his native '0n(I. Iie will also render several 11)10 sacra selections. Everyone is welcome to attend this meeting. '•,• n and .f•. ! Tin )set an.l lfc tic lis. Carl t m , 1 1 family, (>f Stratford, visited last Sun• day with her irarents, Mr. and Mrs. George 1lfllian. Sir, and Mrs. Lloyd Young, eif C'Ibl tem, visited friends in the village last Sclurday. Mrs Verna Doerr and sons, Brian a:.J Harold, of Niagara halls, spent hat yveekcld with her parents, Mr. a'd Mrs Robert. Chanulry, firs Beatrice Lovell, of SI. Cathar• !urn, spell a few days last. week with Man Mere:net 11. ,laeksun, F'r'_cnds of friss Barbara MacKay will be pleased to know that she is unprovin.g and is expected to leave Goderich hospital in a few days. Mrs. Ed. Davies and Mrs. Wes. Bradnock attended the affiliation ser• vice of the I-Iensell Carmel Presby. tcrian Church CGIT Group of 10 girls with the 1VMS of that church last Wed• ee..0ay evening. Con'natulaticros are due to Miss Car- ole Brown for successfully passing her Toronto Conservatory Grade II Theory. She is the pupil of Mrs, Donald Kai. Douglas and 1Vanita (nee Young) Pearce are happy to announce the birth of their daughter, Elizabeth Anne, at 131''nden li apical, \Vil.'uw(lale. A gra)1(1 daughter for Mr. and 11r3, 1Vot'l.hy Young, FAST FERTILIZER ER SERVICE throughout seeding time from YOUR LOCAL SHUR-GAIN SERVICE PLANT! Right trough seeding time you can be assured of fast service from Shur -Gain's modern handling facilities fight in your owl! area. Consider these advantages offered by your Shur -Gain Fertilizer Service Plant -- O SHUR•GA1N IN 13ULIC SAVES $3.50 PEIt TON — the fast modern way to handle fertilizer, loaded speedily (on your own truck if you wish) and checked on government inspected scales. • S1:IUtt•CAIN ]3UM( SPREADING I3E14V10E••-ln•ecision spreading on your own farm saving you labour --at the: sante ui' very little more than the cost of bagged goods • delivered ' to your farm. ' ® SHUR-GAIN'S LELY SPREAI)1,12S— pull type broadcast spreaders which will evenly spread up to a 40' swath —available for a nominal rental fee. (� SI111R•(lA1N SLLEC'I'! 1)•Gl(ANtJ. LAT E1) F131ell 1,l%ER--• more uniform plant. vomit beetaise Shur -(lain not just granular but (;11ANULA'1'Et1. \4ritt not iiridge in 1,1)0 tlr'ill --• dust free —.easy to clean from equipment; SHUR,GAIN IN PAPER—POLY—BULK See your SHUR-GAIN FERTILIZER AGENT or coil TELEPHONE MIT C H E L L 348-9012 SERVICE PLANT OSCAR ROGERS FERTILIZER SERVICE Voting People's Sleeting Pollee Chief Fred \Basilan, of (lode - rich, was the guest s]'oaker at the Young l'ecp 1:'s meeting held in Knox United Church un Sunc:ay evening. The meeting was 11 Ct'1 rge of the vice -pre. side t, Betty 1'otulghlul, who gave the call l:) wu: ,hit). Bernice McDougall eceen-ssanied on the piano for the sing* sing I,f the hymns, The scripture lesson was read Ly li:.rc:.a Kcnpmaas follow. .:d by ',sayer I,y Betty Youngb'.ut, The ffe is g was received by Harvey Snell as:l 1V,aytie :1hllian. Police Chief Min. !,all was i..t:odaced by Marsha Kcop. mins :, ile chc::a for his interesting ad• i:scls, "Hew to acquire your driver's lice•._;, " 110 outlined the new system ort tel last year w•h:n y(r1 go to Ciia. Ica 11) try Il:, test in driving to get your ;;r; m1:1. Ile gave out h m1;::lt:e'a crtecreieg driving cl'(:I the lutes of Cu rcarl. Ile stewed an i 1 r:e tl1: filer, te 1 d,.','." 11. sty Young hint th ehed (hie( 1Ie:'_hall fit his ed dress: and sirevine the flint. The p:•esi dent, lime: h.t Iioopmane, hre.;idc.l I z the businc:s paled. Plans were corn. pleled Icr the skatin,e early alld broom ball game on Saturday cvenrag, March 3, when the young people from the Nile, 13elgrave, and 5t. Mark's Angli- can and Knux Presbyterian churches will he the guests. The meeting was closed with the benediction and hutch was served under the conver,ership d Shirley Snell. 'I'eenvllle Club Organized Repre enSctives from Bennlillcr, Car• low, 1Vc+-tfield, and from the churches in the village gathered IasiFriday ct ening at the home of Miss Shirley Brown to organize a 'l.'cenvillc Club for this dis!tict. It was decided 11 hold a sleigh•rid!ug party on March 10 al 11 pan, and the teenagers are to conic to the Community Memorial hall to sI;iri their ride behind 0 team of hereve. After Meth, chewing to rec• crd:, will be enjoyed, with 11'. L. (:rat;; a:, master of ceremonies. The age of this 'i'ccmville was set from high School age to 2). Plans were orale to play floor hockey and other indoor games and also to get films of hockey games and Grey Cup games lo help with the enterhaLninent of the Teenagers. They plan to meet every two weeks and will elect their officers in the near future. A small admission fee will be charged to pay for refreshment served. Cal:Is:tin Alice Bailey and members of the Salvation Army Corps of Gode• .rich, held their weekly prayer meeting service at the home of Mr. Murray Rollins -on last week, W, h Meeting Historical Research was the theme Cf the .luburn W010111'6 I1131.itutc when they met for their February meeting in the Cormntmity Memorial Hall. The I:residcat, Mrs. Ed. Davies, was in chcrge and Mrs. R. J. Phillips was eccr,nlpanist for the 'afternoon. The nl:rules of the previous meeting were read by the secretary, Mrs. 'Phomas !la,gg(tt. All the members were re• n,ll:ded to watch Open house on Chan - tie' 10 TV April 12 when the F,W.I.O, • resident, Mrs, L. G. Lymburner will gve a message to all W.I. members. It was decided to send the president, Mrs. Ed. Davies, to the president's ccnfererce at Guelph an May 9 and May 10. !las, Andrew Kirkconnet.l gave the report of the card committee and Mrs. W. Bradnock reported that 14 girls are taking the spring project, Sep :rate;, for Summer. The members decided to take a course on the making of alulnnnunl trays and Mrs Robert ,f. Phillip:: and Mrs. Ncrivan McDo• well etre named a committee to as - ranee for t!i e classes;: Mrs. Donald flame:, Had an 'acccurt of a W. 1. mating cut from a weeldv paper on .July•2',', 1912. This was very inlercF1.• ing and is it was the article where new !:all curtains were bought for the lb: Tester's hall, These same wine vc'cur curtains were stored since the old hull nes torn down and have now been hung in the front of the stage in the new hall. A piano duet was • iayed by Mrs. Janes Jackson and her daughter, Mrs. Donald Kai, of Oakville. The convener of historical Research, Mrs, Gordon R. Taylor. Rave an interestingnn account of the doings and accomplishments of the past War which has been prepared for the Tweedsmuir hoak. It was re• voted that there has been uvee •2C clumps in real estate in this village and berdcl'iug farms during the past year, and the Sheol lights have been changed from 100 to 150 watts. A residue of the umsical education with eeven teachers in;truc;tieg pupils in this di•.trixa, the link's change in personal, the hall board and the churches was all recorded to go clow!! with the history of this ccmniwuty in the Auburn 'Tweedsmuir Book. Mrs. Charles Straughan gave a short sum• mary of harry J. Boyle's latest book. "Mostly in Clover," and spoke of the back written by henry Leishmen. "Pioneer days in IIuron County." Mrs. Tay'or was assisted in her account of the history by other members of the committee: Mrs, R. J. Phillips and !Mrs: W. Bradnock. Mrs, Charles Straughan is also 'a member of the Tweedsmuir Book committee. A cur• rent event was an account of the trig The following solicit your support in the March (ills Hog Producers' Eeleetion. 'These Hien support Regulated Illarketing by which Farmers control the Sale of IIogs to All Buyers in the Province. ROBERT ALLEN MARTIN BAAN ALBERT BACON Wfl, COLEMAN GORDON ELLIOTT RAYMOND FINNIGAN LEONARD FISHER GEORGE CAMPBELL CARL Gov1L11. HARRY IIERN ED, IIENDRICK ELMER IIA.RDLN'G ELMEIR IRELAND R0.SS LOVE ALEX McGREGOIt ROBERT McALLISTEL3, HARRY MULVEY LLOI'D STEWAR T ALFRED IVARNER TUESDAY, Ill ARCII 6 Polling time: 11 11,111. to G 1),111, Voting Places will be as follows: EXETER TOWN IL1LL, EXETER AGRICULTURAL iBOARD ROOM, CLINTON C;OI[RI1, COMMUNITY HALL, GORRIE SI'AL'TON COMMUNITY HALL, WAL'TON SIIERWOOD'S IIOUSE, DUNGANNON Old System Copy of expenses taken from a 1953 Hog Carcass .grading certificate ('nndeninal inn .11) Transportation ins. .(13 Commission .20 Pro -Rating .03 yardage .02 exchange Bart dehls _03 '1'0'1'AL ,59 Administrative Sales Yards Board New System EKI'LN1 Ef; at .10c per hop, TOTAL .11 .0a ,16 ,05 ,90 to 'Toronto last week to attend the rah anniversary luncheon of the founding of the W. 1. by Mrs. Bradnock. It was decided to hold a family night in March, and plans were made for the Sunshine Sister's Banquet in April. TJie leiter regarding the Internaticaal Scholarship Fund tsas laid over until another meeting. There was an inter- esting display of autographed quilts, one trade 40 yeiars ago and owned by Mrs. Robert J. Phillips which she wishes to sell for the Hall Fund; also another quilt 30 years old and ono Nude 10 years ago, owned by Nil. Gordon R. Taylor. The roll call was answered by each member telling este thing that people did during the reign of Gouge VI. The members voted to give a donation of $100 to the 11 ill Board Fund. Lunch was sei vel by Mrs. Andrew li.irkconnell and Mt s. 1) :old 11aiucs. Diplomas and Seals Presented Diplomas and seals were presented la t "tuhday 11 Knox United Church to the pupils of the Sunday school by lir. Chcr'.cs Scott, superintendent, and 1frs, Robert Arthur, in the absence of Ml's. W. L. Craig, Those receiving diplomas for.the first year were the following: Douglas Chutney, Jayaia Arthur, Larry Plaetzer, Donna Bach. ler, Gail Seers, Eldo Hildebrand, Ray mond Hildebrand, Murray Wighhna:t, Randy Meehan, Keith Lapp, Paley Milian, Kerry Toll, Vaughan Toll; so. cond year seals: Linda Andrew.;, Cheryl Toll, Brenda IEast, Gail Miller, June Baechler,Wanda Ple zet , Iar• raine Chalnney, Trudy Machan, Lynn Turner, Sherry Plaotzer, Dance 13e;1, Delights Durnin, Arva Ball, Karen East.; 11112(1 year :seals: Betty Malian:, Larry Chantey, Paul Ch'amney; fuurin year seals: Barbara Carter, 13i11 Lapp, Nancy Lapp, Clary Ament, John Koop• mans, Shirley Amen?, Belly Yottngl)lu;; fifth year swats: Mark Arthur, Robert 1Villtin, Allan McDougall, Urian Orat,:r, Stephen Ilaggitt, Patsy 1Vilkin, Mario Plnkett, Mary Wilkin, :toss Wilson; sixth year seals: Shelley Grange, Rick- ey Archamnbault, Wayne Arthur, Breit. da Ball, Derek Ball, Daryl Ball, Lia. da Wilson; seventh year seals: Betty Moss; eight year seals: Judith Arthur, Jennifer Grange, Nancy Anderson, Ronnie Arthur; ninth year seals: Laura Daer, Brenda Archambault, Klaske Koopmans, Allan Speigelburg, Ronald Durnin, Glen Webster; tenth year seals: Sharon Ball, Anne Speigel- burg,: Wayne Duhnin, George Durnin, Betty Durnin, Jack Durnin,• Joan Mills, Jeune Mills, Brian Speigelburg, Martie Koopmans, Marsha Koopmans, Douglas Archambault; eleventh year seal: John Wright; thirteenth year seal, Tom Cunningham. Bernice McDougall; six• feeuth year seal: Margo Grange. C.G.I.T. Group Meeting The Auburn C.G.I.'T. Group met in the Sunday School room of Knox Pres- byterian Church with Marjorie Young• OA in the Their in the absence of the.. preeident, Judith Arthur, Margaret Sanderson accompanied on the piano for the singing of the hymns. After the call to • worship the diyni.n, ''.Lent a little band and lowly," .was sung. Following the Purpose and the Lord's Prayer, the minutes were read by the secretary, Gail Miller. The roll pall was answered by each girl telling what line of craft work they \\bold like to do this sluing, The scripture lesson was • read by. nary Sanderson and the offering was received by Mar- ian Yoluigbhtt, The topic, "The Girl God -would have ire .be," was given by tlhe leader, Mrs. W, Bradnock. It teas the story of Mariam, the sister of Moses, and continued to. show how girls of today Can bo 'as. faithful :and obedient to` God and their parent;:. The meeting, was •elosed by singing "Whither Pilgrims are you going," the benediction and the singing of Taps HINTS FOR I101EMAKERS All vegetables retain more nutriontn when eaten raw, Have you ever used Ontario turnips in ah salad? Try coarsely grating them, Serve in com- bination \vitt' grated carrots or beets previously marinated in French dres- sing. * * k To make the bast French fried On- tario potatoes, the temperature of the fat should be just righta3d5 degrees F. At this temperature an inch square of bread browns in 60 seconds, Another method is to par -fry ahead of lime at 300 degrees for 4 tout one-half minutes. Drain. Just before serving brown in the hot fat at 375 degrees for 1 and ole !half minutes or until done. An easy rule to remember when buy- tag ut'ta'.y, uncooked neat is tl>kit a quarter round of meat without bone or waste malces a good average serving. Fut bony cuts or those 1havthg much waste ui':-half to tlhree•gilarter potnld per person may not bo too much, To develop the• rich, full flavor of park and 4o kill any undesirable or• gandsms wlhiclt might be present, al. ways cook it, to the well-done stage ar 195 degrees internal temperature, if.' Yeti tare a .meat the¢ c111fitel'. PA671 6 - Excellent Crowd At auburn Banquet Nerel;T 250 enjoyed a hot turkey ban- quet last week in the Community Mem- orial Hall epensored by the Hall Board numbers. Rev. Charles Lewis pro mraneed the Grace and the first vice- president, icepresident, Keith Arthur, welcomed the guests in the absence of the president, W. L. Craig. who was ill. Following the dinner, the program was started by singing 0 Canada, with Mrs, Robert J. Phi li at the piano and Mr. Ftp mend Redmond on the violin. Conn inanity singing was lei by !lits, Gord. on It. Taylor, Rev. Charles Lewis spoke a few words am:1 .congratulated the community on its sues in build- ing the hall and hoped that there would be marts' more strut occasions. The chairmair of the finance ccrnmittt'e, Mr. 01h -or Anderson, gave tlx: final. tial statement as of February W. He started that so far $20,000,00 has been ... eat. ani an estimated d $1630.00 will be needed tea cannilete the project. He stressed that overycrx uce the hall atd pope:.cd that the &trior Citiiens a3;.',�.td Pl=y C5& m the carmittee rca.nr• A lure divas dab cenlei be fenzaed arm also a Tea^. Age Club. lie 'said that he thought the Signe C Boys group, ,the C.G,T.T. and tact: 4•H Crab ceu'.d use ;the hal! o:: wee- . tions. Mr. Anderson stated that es ISO " ''s 'lib neee scary money is raised m official Hall Board will be form - .ed and The business r,vii be operated ,by them. He said that over 165 tam ilies had contributed to the dinner. Other diviner speakers were Sheriff ,Harry L, Sturdy, of Godorich, who hind been the first president of the Hall Hoard; Reeve Harvey Culbert, West Waswauosh; Simon IIallahan, East Wawash; F'rdyce ark, Colborne ,croTown_,hip; and John 'Livermore., clerk of the tutvm of CUrytuli. �1r. R'illia►n 3. Craig thank d the ladies who leo prepared the dinner and served it ,and ,Airs. William L. Craig replied.. The dear prize was wont by Mrs. Norm- an McDowell. This was donated by Mrs. 'William 'T, Robirxin. The draw vas made by Brian Craig. Dining the evening Me, R. J. Phil1+4p6 and Mr. R. Redrnea:d played •:terml music- al seleet.:ons. 'This dinner was in charge of the ccnvera5r o! the Woz en's Committee of the Hall Board, 'M.rs. W.0 Lm T. Robison, the representative of the 1W.1., Mrs. George liilUarr, Mrs. Gordon R, Taylor, the tickets, i1Lrs. Jack Armstrong, convener of the table. and Ws. Beat Craig convener of the kitchen, In the absence of the presi• deaf, William L. Craig, 111r. and Mrs. t1�i11latrn J. Craig welcomed the guests at the door. Donations Donations received for Conununity 'Memorial Hall since publication Feb- ruary 1, 1962. 1iaiir;v Armstrong and Sem .. $25.00 Nornan Wightman 5.00 Rivard ICoopnna.ts 20.00 Ray Hanna 5.0C John Hildebrand 2.00 .Cos Buchanan , . • ... , 5.00 Gerald MoDowe.0 ..... . , , , 5.00 Norman McDowell 10.00 Arnold Cook 5.00 Jack Armstrong and Son .. , 50.00 Roy neer 10.00 Wilmer &Tinton 5.00 112.1ott 'Lapp 5.00 Joseph Veriway 5.00 Percy Vincent 2.00 Wm, Wagner •10.00 Elmer Robertson 23,00 Wm. Gow 75.00 Rev, Cllas, Lewis 5,00 Lmvrtinve Nesbit 5.00 Lloyd Humphries 25,00 Women's Institute, Auburn , 100,00 Harold Catier 25.00 =--Mia.. Gordon R. 'Taylor, Sec. Treas FREE CHART 11tEAStIttS EGG • VALUES A housersife buying Grade A eggs and seeing the different pn'keas of Large, !tedium and Small sine, in this !;rade is at. a Ions to =pare the values offered. ---that is, urtlevs Eine has the Canaria Department of Agriculture's free egg price Ready Reekonerl With t his in be possession, she can thntantly make the comparison and decide which is the best bargain. Ear instance, If Large are 6eiling at 47 cents, the Ready Reckoner would show that Mediums at 41 cents or Smalls at 35 cents would be coo mak in value as determined by calculations of the poultry merchan- dising section of the. CDA. Thus, if 11Ledituns were offered for 40 vents when Large were priced at 47 and SmaJis at 35, Mt diume 'would be the hest buy. When Mediums and Smalls aro in surplus :supply. prices aro sometimes reduced. Only a bandy Ready Renck• oner can tell the shame:- quiz-r>,v vitt Cher the reduction, makes them better value than Lamb eggs. The Really Reckoner inlotunation-Is Printed on I cardboard disc four Mies across and an a• st a]]er atialikei disc vv4tigil cin be ted. Int bid sent Free an rated. to: Information Min- ion, Canada Deparhett of A teal• tore, (khesNi. Of .tilye 70,000 dLecs in Mei& end Frestth. that have be made, Some 50,000 bare beta distributed., rnaet(y tineough exhibitions a'rd egg grafts otatonn. CHILDREN'S ALD SC)CTE'1"1' :t.NN1L'.1L. 11EETLNG The HUM] C4aunty Children's Aid co• clety held their annual nu!Ung at the Court Route, Godcrich, on 11'cxi*tes• day, Fohnrary 14!.11, ut 2:30 p.m. Due: to weather condition; only a small number of people were ea hand. l' Ir, jewl.tt, the and Vire President, ccmducted the sleeting In the absence of the President, M'. if. Berry. Mr. Jetvitt complimented ted l.he Dinect.crs on the work dtir.ng the past year slaking special mention of Mr. 11. Berry, Mr, J. Winter, Mr. G. >•'t;'ter tinct ALr. F. Sill: and fie also made special mention el the services rendered by the late \Vru AR:Kenzie, of Exeter. Mr. M. Reeve of Clinton, on behalf of the Board presented 'a silver tray to thy: See,;'e a'y, Mr. J, G. Berry. T BLYTI STANDARD.,, hitiesdo ah, Oh itl reco+'..i)ical of 10 y'•aars service a: a Board xnclnber• The Trcrlsurcr's Report fur the cat showed reeeipts of sT: I1 :.7 t.nnd cr.ditisre..; of $74,112.01 and a orrplus r.; $011.13. ;ti is 31cG�A'';aa prccalted her report reviewing !did act.'vitit ; of Cie.:ic.viet;, over the pat year. The election of officer:..fer t_:e year 1962 was confuute:a by Werdc•n George leQ'utcheon and the. result: are a' fo'lows; President: \\n. Jewitt; hi vice pre. side.nt: Mrs. JC, John6: 2n;1 vice, 11rs. A. Taylc•r; hcnuraly secretary; A, M. Robertson; secretary: J. G. Beery; tacastU'er: ll. G. Manly; daec .i s: Mrs. George Johnston, Mrs. Frank Fiuglan>d, lir:. H. li!umpp, Mrs, 1)au Murphy, MN. \lett yn Cudnlur'e, Fret Davidscu. 11'..1, Hamilton, James 1)olg, Melvin Crich, Gua. file{ utchocn, Juan r)urnin, fc:,.rry Wenger, Clayton Smith, Canon N. E. Taylor, Clarence Hanna; \Juuia:� 1teprt:_cnt.utivc: R';:n 1{as. k.ino; as: oe!.I t,e mnernI;t:':;: Miss J, 1''tll cul:�a, lioy Cousins, 11!.r h t;u:ly, Cusp Many Skin Meat InspectionAcandal Results Ln the fir's!. six 1,Yeoks et 1952 the Federal Iioa:th of ,lrrienal-s division ha: n:•celveci ur^:e ll;an 70 applications lyes1 lira'!; fur i!1-11r1'hon of killing er.1 moat prc•cessing plants, Ur. K. F. Wells, Veterinary Director General of C anad'a, .sanouneed today. The influx eculd be traced directly to the recent outcry against unleencet. ed neat allegedly beingretailed to the public, he .acid. Previously appli• cations 1):1111C in at. the rale of one or Iwo a month. Dr, Wells pointed out that the DM 'squires the Meat Inspection Service of the division to inspect plants from which the product is shipped out of the ptnvirlce ar out of the country. lain A. Hailey; execnl.ive committee: 1Vm. ,Jewitt, Airs. A. Taylor, Mrs. IC. Johns, i;, G. thinly, J. G. Berry, Ivan Haskins; publicity., 13ar'ry 1Vuuuer, Mrs. 11. lUiiie.pp, Mn. I'. Ping:rind. -woo -dee -•e reale--r -cog -tet ' ten AurnIN -sae weierfigl •41.1111f1 wievitte -0••.1111 ....01111116 .arl1 .eae!ltrl ..no1l1 -1e ..el1111! -*�ot11 -yam ....041111111 -■11wt11 w.eMlw '•-111111 W,inallq •ore ll -tee woweresi +1111111111 •-•es�el mirmin ••+�1tel •-1•141e -mss ..w11 ••.ma111 --r -■we modal wane -wo1 Stich t r,..luc:; carry the Ganada Ar' - Rol r:cl L'an:p. Meat c:aabltthmcr:'.s in Canada un• !Lr ftile' d int:i'.ectic:t fetal 210 and tempri3e 01; large animal slaughter plants, 63 poultry slaughter and pro. cessing plants, and 97 meat processing plants. Dr. Wells said the growing list of ap• plications for federal meat inspection is ntsalo up of firsts volunteering for ir:_pcelion to sislis{y retailers who want the Canada I pprcv'ed stamp on the product, and consumers who have begun expressing the same wish, Ile added federal inspection has already been extended to some applicants; other al:plicant.s were in the process of qualifying. killing plants require t•etcrin.ary in spectioll of every animal and bird be. fore slaughtered and in the course of slaughter. Some phases of in: p e. tion are cantle;d out by trai.ttcvl a;; a,t• ants. There is a shortage of veterin• arias in Oarada and the Health of :Animals divisions strengih of approx. imat.c'y 5,10 veterinarians, is not rtuf- flCiEnt for all the Department's pro- grams. Dr. Wells added that this shortage wa3 rot actually, withholding federal inspection from any plant at present. A more serious delay is the need for the applicant firm to bring its prem- ises, plant and staff up to federal state dards. in score cases this would in. .'olve considerable clapital outlay. It is necessary to ascertain that such slianclards ihave hccn reached before acquiring the staff to carry out the inspecticat. Most of the new opplications are inn Ontario, with Quebec second and a *tinkling front other pruvi►toes. LI your SUbUta'iptio1I Paid ? • I ONTARIO w,r,wrrrrr,wiwr. IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT about your ONTARIO HOSPITAL i S The need to obtain a bed iti hospital is a matter of urgency to .i seriously i1.1 person. It is vital, therefore, that every hospital bed in Ontario be used only when it is essential in the treatment of a patient. Proper use of hospital 1-ieds i;; a matter of concern to every resident of the province. 7o !gulp rnalse MOPS hospital beds available e e . the Commission will provide Ontario Hospital Insurance benefits to an insured person who receives hospital care, as art out• palicul, for which he or she, otherwise, would require admission as an. in-patient to Stay in hospital overnight. IMPORTANT These benefits will be provided only i1 the hospital has the required facilities and after these facilities have been authorized for such out- patient use by the local hospital board on the advice of its medical stall, Here are the details: e Benefits will cover only the /to3pitarl charges for medical and surgical treatment procedures which, otherwise, would require the patient to be admitted to hospital. Examples of these piocedutes are cer- tain minor operations, electro -shock treatments, blood transfusions, etc. E • It is up to the patient's doctor to decide whether the treatment will be given on an in-patient or out, patient basis, • Visits to established regular clinks in hospital out- patient departments are NOT coverer!. Extension of EMERGENCY Out -Patient Benefits l iectivc March], 1962, when an insured person has received emergency hospital treatment for a fracture within. 2.1• hours of an accident, Ontario llospital Insurance also will cover subsequent out-patient services for check 1 -rays and the change or removal of cast, until treatment of the fracture is completed. Hospital treatment fur emergency conditions other than fractures will NOT be covered beyond the first visit to hospital within 24 Lotus of an accident. 1.. •y i iH`f! ;i`td ��Ill� l�1� � 1. Ontario Hospital Insurance in-patient benefits cover the regular and usual hospital services (use of operating room, X-rays, drugs, laboratory services, etc,) in standard ward accommodation for as many days as such services are nredicatly necessary. 2. Dependent children cease to be covered under the. parents' certificate when they reach age 19, or marry. 'They must then register separately at the applicable Single or Fancily premium, Application forms are available at all hospitals, most banks, and all Commission offices, . 3, Married persons must pay the Family premium. '4. There is no change in Ontatin Hospital Insurance premiums: they remain nt $2.10 a month for a single person and $4.20 a month for a family, More than 6,000,000 Ontario residents (over 95% of the people) are now insured in the plan, Ontario Hospital Insurance does NOT cover... • any hospital charges for semiprivate or pri- vate accommodation. • any diagnostic services which are nut part of insured treatment procedures or which do not, by themselves, normally require admission as an in-patient. • any medical, surgical, or private -duty nursing fees, take-home drugs, home care, or ambulance and other transportation charges. ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES C©MNMISSION *i94 Y1 NON STRIIIITI TORONTO 71 ONTARIO SUOOL8TIONg Keep ill's inforrnettlet; 'for future ref Nee nee ro•- r«� rim-�•- cam.., 1t12010* 111912•.• 11111111101.. t�- w 1w.•- tt9lle�•-• e11e er-. 1 ttw mra- pro▪ nate+..-- M▪ enu- 11s• .r�0- 11118m.- rrtarM-- t1- IM- mac...... tam-• Moen- 111111.1m.- mesm- t1• tea.""-- tsM•�- es~-- 1 tit.•r..• 11a▪ •.. tva- OectiesaL», "elle 29, loG2 TITE BLYflI STANDARD PAGE 't for complete protection .. WAWANESA LIFE INSURANCE Here's your opportunity for colnpleto protection --auto, fire, property, and now LIFE -- through the agent you know best, We suggest you call us— let us tell you more about this import. ant new Wawanesa 8ervieel 1 ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGEN(Y "INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES' Blyth, Ontario FOR SALE 9 week old pups, part German Shop. herd and Ilusky, .Phone 214, J3lyth. 52 1p P & W TRANSPORT LTD, Local and Long Distance Trucking Cattle Shipped Monday and Thursday Hogs on Tuesdays Trucking to and from Brussels and Clinton Sales on Friday Call 162, Blyth SAN1TATION SERVICES Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired. Blocked drains opened with modern equipment. Prompt Service, Irvin Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254. lltf. nMcKiLLOP MUTUAL FIRE 'INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT, OFFICERS; President — John L. Malone, Sea - forth; Vice -President, John H. McEw Mg, i3lyth;,fiecretary'I'reasurer, W. E Sout.Iigato, Seaforth. DIRECTORS J. L. Malone, Seaforlh; J. 1T. McEw big. Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton, Norman 'I'rcwartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep. per, Brumfield; C. W. Leonhardt, Bornholm; 11. Huller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seafortie Allister Broadfoul, SeaforUi, AGENT'S: 1�'illlatnt Letper, Jr., Lundsshoro; V, J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seafortlt; Selwyn Ea ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforlh; Harold Squires, Clinton. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont. OFFICE HOURS— 1 p.m, to 4:30 p.m. EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (BY' APPOINTMENT) ROY 'N. BENTLEY Public Accountant OODERiCH, ONT, Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 470. G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK. ST, • WINGHAM,. ONT, (For Appointment please phone 770 Wingham), Professional Eye Examination, Optlenl Services. J, i.>,iTn i1r tuff, Optome rist Seafurth, Phone '191 -- Clinton HOURS; Benfnrth Dally Except Monday & Wed 9.00 alit, to 5:30 p.m. red. —• 8;00 a.m. to 12:30 pant, CiIntnn.Office • Monday, 9 • 6;90. Phoru 1111 2.7010 G. B. CLAN CY OPTOMBTH'IBT — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A. L. Cole, Optometrist) FOB APPoir41MENT FU0NE 63, OODERICH 26.13 Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS AItE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost : Clicice of btj1l and breed Our artifieIni.broeding service will help you lo a more caffieient livestock operation For service or more information cull: Clinton IIt1 2.3441, or for long distance Clinton zenith 9.5650, 131! 1°1E13 CA'1TLC 1r0It Barra LIVING CIZAW11'OIt.II & HETIIERINGTON IlAWU 'TERS & SOLICITORS J. 11, Crawford, R. S. Hetherington, QC, f.C, Vlinlbam and Birth. IN BLYTII EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment. Located In Elliott Insurance Ageno' Fhane Myth, 104 • Wlughomr CARD OF THANKS The family of the late Mrs. Percy Vincent wishes to thank everyone for the kindness and expressions of sym' pathy extended to us, during our re• cent sail bereavement. Special thanks to Rev, ,Lewis, the pallbearers, Kath Arthur, Dr. Street, and especially the very kind neighbours whose thoughtful- ness alas so much appreciated by all of us; 522.1 APPLES FOlt SALE ;spy and Pippin, ripply, J. 13. Nesbit, phone 53115, 131yth, 52.1 AUTOMOTIVE; Mechanical and body repairs, glass, steering nud wheel balance, Undaspray for rust prevention. DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service Ni'. 8 Highway, Phone JA 44231 (uderich, Ontario, 20-tf 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 IIIcINTEE Real Estate Broker WALKERTON, ONTARIO Agent; Vic Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78, VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND" SERVICE Repairs to most popular snakes of cleaners and polishers. Filler Queen Sales, Varna. Tel, collect licnsall 690112, 5u-'3p.1L DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISA13LaED COWS and HORSES also , Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old Horses --lc per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels. BRUCE MAItLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, ('hone 15119, Blylb 24 Ilour Service Plant Licence No. 54-11.P.-01 Coleclor Licence No. 88•G61 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 4421V0, Brussels, 11.11. 2. e41M4P0444410Nrr.w41,4,40•P• •f•e~PP • Clinton Continually FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLINTON SALE (BARN at 2 p.m. • IN l3LYTH, PHONE BOB HENRY, 150111. Joe Corey, 13ob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer. 05•tf. M THE WEST WAWANOSiI MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Herd Office, Dungannon Established 1878 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Brown Smyth, R,lt, 2, Auburn; Vice -President, person Irwin, Belgrave; Director's: Paul Caesar, R.R, 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan, Goderielt; Moss McPhee, 11,11, 3, Au- burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F. MacLennan, R.11, 3, Gudnt'let); Frank 'I'hoinpson, R.R. 1, Iaolyrood; Wui. Wiggins, R.R. 3, Auburn. For information on your Insurance, call your nearest director who is also an agent, or the secretary, Durnin Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon 48, BINGO Legion Bingo every Thursday wile 8:45 sharp, In Legion Hall, Lucknow. 12 regular games • for $10,00; 3 share - the -wealth and a special for $50.00 must go, (no limit to numbers), 4011 dRAVEL TENDERS WANTED MORRIS TOWNSHIP Tenders dor the contract of supplying, crushing and hauling approximately 15,000 cubic yards of gravelforMorris Township will he received by the tin• derslgned until 12 o'clock noon, Marco 5, 1902, Crusher is to be equipped with a three quartet' inch screen. A call. Pied cheque for 1200 must accompany each tender. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. ' George C. Martin, Clerk, I1.R. Nu. 4, Brussels, Ontario. 51.2 APPLICATIONS WANTED Morris Township Applications will he received by the undersigned until 12 o'clock noon, March 5, 1962 for Warble Fly Inspector, Truck Driver, and Helper for Morris Township to work under the Warble Fly Control Act. Geoe, C. Martin, Clerk, R.B. 4, Brussels, 51.2 GRAVEL TENDERS Township of East Wawanosh Sealed tenders will be received by the undersigned until 12 o'clock noon on 'Tuesday, March Gth for crushing and hauling approximately 8000 cu. yds. fivc•eiJhlh. inch gravel. A certified cheque for $300,00 must accompany each tender. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. Stuart Mellurney, Road Supt., Township of East \Vawanosh, 51•2 11'intltarn, Ont. TENDERS Tenders will be received by the tun' deraigned up to one o'clock March 6, 1962 for Warble Fly Inspector, trust 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, 11, Thompson. 51-2. 'Township Clerk. Township of Hullelt TENDER Tenders tvill be received by the Town- ship of Ilullett for the Spraying of Cat- tle for Warble Fly Control within the municipality, All 'fenders are to he clearly marked as to contents and to state the price per heaid per spray, and must be in the Clerk's Office not later than March 3rd at U:00 o'clock p.nt., 1962. All persona 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. Harty F. Tebbutt, Clerk, R.R. 1, Londesbero, Ont. 51.2. Townsltlp of Hallett TENDER Tenders will be received by the Town- ship of Mullett for the supplying Mid delivery of 800 Lbs. of Warble Fly Powder. 750 Lbs. to be In 15 Lb. Bags and 50 Lbs. to be hi 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 ho in the Clerk's Office not later than March 3rd at 6:00 o'clock p.m., 1902. Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted, Harty I'. Tebbutt, Clerk, 11.11. 1, Londesboro, tnt. 51-2. HARCO ORCHARDS Started $ I 'Pullets ; 1 Chinkspm ea in lei :"r•_ it The superb facilities of Roe Firms are now at work producing the Iamoui Marco Orchards black Sec links .. . the unusual layer that his made headlines for egg production end altround farm performance for over 20 years. Order as day.old, or as started pullets from 2 weeks of age right up In readylo•ley every one hatched and reared under ROE FARMS' quality program. Stock Is first generation direct from the breeder, end backed by Roe farms' years of ex. and•deyoldprpulletsgthe end chicle tthetdcanl bye bought anywhere. Other femoue strains else available es day-old end started pullets. Write or phone for details and down•to•earth prices. ROE FARMS LIMITED Atwood, Ont., Phone 356.2211 ACIHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE Highest prices for dead, old or dis- abled horses and cattle. Phone Atwood 356.2622 collect. Llceuce No. 156C62. BLYTII BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 MEN WANTED Man Wanted for customer service' for Huron County Area. No investment. For interview and information writs R. W. Sercombe, Apt. 5, 1015 Adelaide Street, London, Ontario. CARD OF TIIANKS 'I'Ite family of the late Mrs. Harold Phillips, wlshcs to extend shtcere. t.hauks to their neighbours and friends for I.ltcir Minium and sympathy ex- tended to promo ' during their recant bereavement. Spcciol thanks to Dr. Street and Mrs Clarence Crawfo'd not only for their professional services but also for their personal interest, the \Vinigilan t hospital and their conlpetaunt nursing staff, the Order of the Easteu'n Star and other organizations. It was deeply appreciated. - - • —Harold Phillips and family. 52-1p. EUCHRE AND 500 PARTY Come and enjoy an evening of Euchre or 500 In the Eastern Star Rooms, Wytll Fftsay evening, March 2, at 8 o'clock. Lunch will be served, Admission 50c. Everyone w;lcomc'. 52-1p 11111 SALAD, Quantity of Propane Gm Brot ier3, g'ass water Iountahns, tube feeders. Apply Russell Ccok, phone 254, Blyth, 52-1 CARD OF THANKS We wish to expre:3 our sincere thanks for the th.ughtfulness and sym• pathy extended to u3 by our neighbours and friends during our recent bereave- ment. 1t was all greatly appreciated. -Adeline Campbell and family. 52.1. FARM FOR SALE 100 acre farm, all in grass, good well and w! ldmill, frame drive -shed, locat- ed at lot 30, ecoces,sion 12, McKillop Tcwnshp, 8 miles north of Seafort.h, 2 miles 10u1h of Walton, 'Located h ex- cellent forming area. Apply, Barry Mar:ihaU or Mrs. Cora Barrows, Walton. 52-1. WAN'T'ED "ecq'etary•Trmurer for Blyth Agri- cu''tural Society for 1902; dut es to commence ittufled iately. Contact Mr. Albert G. Baton, 11.13.. 1, licl rave. CARD OF 11IANKS• I u'Lh to take this opl.ortuni.ty to thank all those who remembered the baby and I while in Clinton Public lIcspital, Special thanks to Charles Machan, Hob Henry and Ben Walsh, for their assistance on btonday morn - Ing, also, to Dr, Street and the nursing staff. 52 -Ip, —Gail Falconer. NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF ALBERT LOUIS SELLERS ALI, PERSONS having claims against the estrite of the above mentioned, late of the Village of Blyth, in the County cf Huron, Gent',ennan, who Wed on the 271.11 clay of January, 1902, are required to file proof of sane with the under- signed on or before the 17111 day 01 i1lareli, A.D. 190. • Alter hist date tate Executors will proceed to di tribute the estate (having regard only to the claims of which they shall then have had notice. - DATED at rWiugham this 23rd clay of February, A.D. 1962. (tRAWFORD & IIETIIERING'1'ON, Wingham, Ontario Solicitors for the Executors. 52.1 • NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE ESTATE OF • WILLIAM FEAR ALL PERSONS having claims lagainst the estate of the above mentioned, late of the -Village of Blyth, in the County of IJuron, Retired Farmer, who died on the 29th day of January, 1962, are required to file proof of same with the undersigned on of before the 17th day of Murch A.D. 1962. After that date the Executors will proceed to distribute the estate hawing regard poly to the claims of which they shall then have had notice. DATED at IVingham this 23rd day ol Febrttai y, A.D. 1962. CRAWVFOIID & ILETHERI.NGTON Wingham, Ontario Solicitors for the Executors 52-3 DANCE in the New Community Hall 111 Auburn on Friday Evening, MARCH 2nd music by Pierce's Orchestra Admission at popular prices, Lunch Counter in Hall Proceeds for Building Fund EVERYONE WELCOME Township of Hullelt 1'Ii;NDEItS I''OIt GRAVEL., Sealed tinders will be received by the undersigned until 5 pm, on Satur day, March 3, 1962 for crushing and 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. trust accompany tenders. The lowest or any lender not necess'iu'ily accepted. Len Cokhvell, Road Supt., RR. 1, Londesboro. Harry F. Tobbutt, Clerk, R,R, 1, Londesboro, HOUSE FOR SALE 5 room ranch style house, built 2 years, drive-in garage, automatic 011 furnace and all modern conveniences, hn Blyth. Apply Mrs. E. J. Churchill, Mossley, Ontario, phone Ilarriotsville 2(39-3377. 51-11. Township of Hullelt APPLICATIONS Applications \rill be received by the Township of Ilullett for the Position of Warble. Fly Inspector in the Town• ship for the Year 1902. The Salary of fered is .95 cents per hear and 5 cents per niile while on Municipal Bushiest: and the Inspector must be familiar with the tarots and conditions of the Warble Fly Act, All applications must be clearly marked as to the contents and bo In the Clerk's. Office not later than March 3rd .at 6:00 o'clock p.m., 1902, Harry F. Tebbutt, Clerk, R.R. 1, Londesboro, Ont. 51-2. MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811 NOW PLAYING Thur., E rt„ Sat., .larch 1, ?, 3 -- Double Bill 13i11 Travers • William Sylvester and Vincent Winter Depict Modern London under attack by a prehistoric deuton. "GORGO" Int Scope and Color Also --The Bowery Boys in "IIOLD THAT BABY" Mon., Tues., Wed., March 5, 6, 7 -- A Rib -rocker) Andy Griffith • Myron McCormick and Nick Adams One of the screen's all-time greatest laugh producers "NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS" Thur., Fri., Sat., March 8, 9, 10 Rory Calhoun and Lea Massarl A story of ancient Rhodes and the invading Phoenician.5. "THE COLOSSUS OF RHODES" Scope and Color asernifelffiA "Letter To The Editor" I)c•ar Editor: L)ut'irg the year 1962 Farulers arc going to tal,.e a good look at Producer controlled marketing and throughout the year then; will he a number ol marketing piians presented and voted upon by the producers. The hog pro- ducers are being given an opportunity to endorse the hog marketing plan. Egg producers are not satisfied with the returns from their laying flocks and will be given an opportunity 10 Jign a petition requesting a vote for an egg marketing plan, Due to the large surpluses of butter .and skim milk powder which we have on hand today Milk Producers have agreed among themselves that there Fhout?cf be an overall milk marketing plan and a vote on this plan will likely be taken 1ator in the year. Turnip ±fruwcrs .and promsors agree that a marketing plan would help their in - IN MEMORIAM DOE1tlt--fn loving memory of a neat wife Louisa Uuerr, who parsed away one year ago March 1, 1961. Time may heal the borken heart, Time may make the wound less sore; But time can never stop the longing, Fer the loved one gone before. —Lovingly remembered by her husband 52•lp, MAPLE SYRUP ORDERS A reminder that we will he nyaking maple syrup " again this year. Orders taken row for later delivery. Lloyd McClinehey, phone 526-7591, Auburn. 52-1 NOTICE The Annual Meeting of the Belgrave School Fair will- he held on Monday, March 12, cit 2 p.m. in the Conummily Centre, Belgrave. 52-2 dustry. Potato growers are also con• sidcring a marketing plan. Many large Beef Producers and .com- mission agents are advising prodtt''ers to send all finished cattle to the open market. I ant convinced that only then will we be able to obtain the high- est possible price for our beef 'cattI' . I believe that if all producers would agree to place their livestock on the open market a marketing plan would not be necessary for beef cattle. I have been associated with the Fed - citation of Agriculture and have attend- ed the short course on Marketing and Co-operation at Guelph. I have been .peeking an answer to the problems which face the farmers today and to date the only answer I can find as a solution to our problems is to support marketing plans. I believe it is unnecessary for me t't advise the producers regarding the arc,.; vote on March Gbh, Being a produce0 for many years i know the hog market- ing plan is beneficial to the produce,, and deserves our support, We have only to look at the broiler producers to see what can happen to la commodit:7 that docs not have some sort of orderly marketing, I regard it my duty to provide somo initiative and to express my views rtt producer marketing and I therefore advise all producers to support the marketing plans for all farm commodi- ties that will come before you in the near future. --Elmer Ireland, President, Huron County .Fed, of Agr. Counter Check Books (printed or blank) The Standard Office, iopiiii"dearanc"e" PCS, MARCH 1, 1962 REG. SAL><` PRICE PRICE 1 BREAST DRILL (Lge.) 2•Speed 7.95 4.98 7 FLEXIBLE SCREW DRIVERS (Cluthe) 2.25 1.49 26 VISE GRIPS 10" 2.55 '1.79 100 OPEN END WRENCIIES 318.12 .35 .20 29 NO. 22 MASTER PADLOCKS .70 .50 26 COILS ROPE 114 • 5116 . 3 8 • 112 20% off 18 TOBBOGGANS, All Sizes .. , • 20% off 2 STEEL STABLE BROOMS , .. 3.85 2.55 2 FAIRFIELD BAROMETERS . 12.00 6.79 2 4 -Burner Electric COUNTER TOP UNITS in Stainless Steel , 129.50 74,50 8 Plastic VEGETABLE BINS_ 1.95 1.29 8 Electric TEA KETTLES . , . 11.95 8.95 4 Premier PINKING SHEARS . 3.29 2.05 1 Wood Folding IRONING BOARD with pad and cover 6.95 5.15 1 Wood Folding IRONING BOARD "Beatty" 7.95 6.45 • 4 Rd. Bamboo LAUNDRY BSKT. .98 .59 2 Oval Willow LAUNDRY BSKT. 2.35 1,49 17 PLASTIC MATS, 60" x 30". , . 1.69 .89 '1 PLASTIC DOOR MATS 2.49 1.29 5 STEAK KNIFE SETS 40% off 1 White SEWING MACHINE 105.00 69.00 1 White SEWING MACHINE ZiT Zag 169,64 129.00 SPARLING'S HARDWARE'. Telephone 24 BLYTII, ONTARIO One Way Of Making A Parking Problem In the old barn, third step down from the top as you went front the grain room to the tie- up, there was a loose board, The barn had been around a good deal longer than 1 had, and the board was probably loose most of that time, so life on the farm was geared to it, i believe this is important. There are people in this world who, having a loose board, would set in motion a great program of restoration, and would fix the board, lfove much easier it was simp- ly to make mental note of the matter, and in all goings and comings to allow for it. Coming up or going down tairs was not impeded, and so lona; as you con- trived to miss that particular snot affairs proceeded in orderly fa- shion and no hare; done. We all knew about the loo:; board, .cul had known all about it for years. Perhaps you are anticipating me. An uncle who was neat and orderly came home after many years in a far place, and the first time he used the stairway he no- ticed that a board vas loose, He got a hammer and a couple of nails, and he fixed it. As a result my dear old Grand- father, pa.ssit g that way in the evening to fondle a cow, miscued at the repaired step, not being aware that my uncle had fixed things, and fell• the length of the stairs, ramming his head into the milk pail and dumping three quarts of meal inside his shirt. This was the first time anybody had ever tripped and fallen be- cause of this board. The cow, ac- customed to the gentle approach of my Grandfather, became al- arnied when he arrived at her side in this precipitous fashion, and climbed up in the manger and put her head under her arms, and refused to be consoled, This necessitated milking her in Gem Among Cloths r.wkes...,.. It's rare to find a design so graceful, so beautiful—truly an heirloom of the future. Lace -stitch mesh in filet cro- chet—superb setting for roses, tulips, , pansies. Pattern 537: chart; directions cloth 72x90 in string; 54x68:inches in No, 50: 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 Toronto, Ont, Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and AD- DRESS, • something of a horizontal posi- tion, which is difficult even with co-operation, and she was not . co-operating. And, after all this work, it was disheartening to find that Grandfather had milk- ed her with his hat still in the pail. So, what with this and that, the evening was strained, and my uncle promised he would never fix anything again, The other clay I stopped in the village to see if the merchants were trading, and an unhappy gentleman attracted my atten- tion. He was holding a parking ticket in his hand and he said to me with a forced smile, "I stop three minutes to spend eight .dollars and your policeman says 'Welcome!'" Our town needs parking rules and regulations the way Athens needs history, and the hard -times merchants along the main street need customers and friends, so I took the ticket from the man and said, "Go with fond memor- ies, sir, and return another time in confidence — this is a wretched mistake, our policeman is young and ambitious, and he has just fixed the barn step," I remember one time Grand- father stepped into a new store to look the stock over, and it was a lovely store with a good stock, and the proprietor was proud. They shook hands and the proprietor said, "How do you .like it?" "You won't last a year," said Grandfather. "Olt? Why not?" "Because there's no place out front to hitch a horse." History bore Cramp out; the store folded up within the year. Anyway, I talked to the police- man about this business of pick- ing on strangers in our midst, and found the police have an odd philosophy about the functions of society. In the first place, it was clear lie had some kind of feeling that a motorist is by nature a heinous criminal, whose presence leads only to "viola- tions," and that stopping an automobile in the village in or- der to pursue the business for which the village is set up is per se suspect. Parking, to him, ap- pears to be some kind of game in which he wins or loses ac- cording to the number of tickets he can give out. There is now a "problem." "You know," I said, "I've seen Main Street on a Saturday with more horses and wagons parked on it than you have autos park- ed there now on a Saturday. There was no problem. Coming to town was a pleasant event that everybody looked forward to. We had more stores then, and they did good business and made money. You don't know that be- cause you aren't old enough. What would you do if sone farmer came in here now with a team of horses and parked a hayrack in front of the cobbler shop?" Anyway, I gave the lad some- thing of a lecture, on the values of being nice to people, and how important it is to have friends who want to come back, r gave him the' ticket he had given the man, and he told me I'd have to pay the 50 cents charge, because it had been entered in the books and there was no way to "fix" it. "How would I know this man was a stranger?" he said. He .said .if, I didn't pay the 50 cents he'd have to go find the man and. bring .bim in. Besides, he said, what difference does it make if the man is a stranger or a resident if he still parked with his wheels more than eight inches from the curb, Yes — I paid the 50 cents, and I don't know why. Put. I had something of a som- ber feeling that a nice little back country town which has been negotiating its barn steps safely for many years has had a board fixed, and we've just taken a header.—By John Gould in the Christian Science Monitor. INNOCENT BYSTANDER: This girl was one of 10 members of a wedding party injured when an SAO bomb exploded at the city hall of Courbevoie, outside Paris. • 40,4 w m ( :i rk • SWINGING — Using the movie props for her latest film, "The Children's Hour,." pctress Shirley MacLaine entertains herself with a swinging cession near Hollywood. Ross is still in the Sick Chil- dren's Hospital but I imagine he will be out in a day or two. Joy has been staying at Dee's place so she could see Ross every day from three to six -thirty. In be- tween she was visiting the den- tist and finally came down with an awful cold so at the week -end she and Cedric went hone and Bob came along to keep Ross company during visiting hours over the week -end, ' And we have been busy too. Tuesday was our wedding anni- versary.• Besides cards and good wishes we got a phone call from Montreal — from former neigh- bours whose anniversary was the same as our own. Generally we get together but J — now has a government job and was leaving by air next day on a special as- signment in Britain. So that was that. Next day two other friends dropped in to'spend the day with us so • we celebrated all over again. We were so glad to see them as they, too, expect to be on the move in a few weeks. Thursday I got a bit of work done on my Tweedsmuir history. In the middle of that one of our W.A. members came along and wanted some sewing done for the church. That same night Partner was "baby-sitting" and I had the pleasure of watching a hockey game on TV which ended in a two -all tie for Toronto and Bos- ton. Ever since I can remember the Leafs and Bruins have al- ways had a battle royal in every game .they played. There must be a psychological reason for it. We can understand the Leafs los- ing to Canadiens but to the lowly Bruins , , . that's another story. However, we had "Ben Casey" to watch afterwards so we did got some pleasure from our TV viewing, Friday , , well, Friday was one of those days.. . ..you know. The phone started ringing at eight -thirty in the morning and there was one call after another for the rest of the day,• We also had a couple of friends drop in for afternoon tea and before we had finished supper a young mother came in to let off steam about how awful it was to be shut in with two children all day long! During the evening neigh- bour Bill came along for a visit. So now, who says life is dull in a sub -division? Saturday morning, inbetween chores, I was on the phone chas- ing a few leads for local history. After lunch I thought I would lie down — just for a little while — but I slept until three o'clock! My eyes were still tired and my voice had almost given out, after a busy but most enjoyable week. But COLD! I Morning tempera- ture below zero every morning except one. 1 didn't go out at all but Partner took Taffy for a short walk every day, Saturday night I had quite a time doing my weekly accounts because with so many counter -attractions I had omitted several daily entries and found myself five dollars short. Did I hear someone say — "But why keep accounts? I couldn't be bothered." Well, I agree it is a bit of a chore but believe nee it is well worthwhile. However, our accounting is not too rigid as we don't attempt to keep a bud- get. We spend according to what we can afford and by keeping track of where the money goes we know pretty well what we can allow for extras. At the end of the year we know exactly. what it has cost to heat the house, run the car, pay taxes, keep food on the table and so on, The difference between income and expenditure during any cur- rent year is our guide to what we can allow for home improve- ments the ensuing year. The fact that we don't budget doesn't mean we are against it. It is wonderful for those who can do it. But we haven't enough pro- tection to ;Hake it work. Natur- ally we have hospital insurance but we are not eligible for P.S,h which means our medical ex- penses could be $10 or they might be $500. If they run high that means less money available for home improvements. Heat, food and clothing has to be pro- vided for no matter what, but a paint job can always wait an- other year. I am telling you this so that anyone who doesn't keep ac- counts may be tempted to do so. They don't need to be complica- ted. Just get a three -column ac- count book and make up a, sys- tem to suit yourself. Summarize your expenditure under specific headings each week, then you can get your totals at the end of the year with very. little trouble. I just use a scratch pad for every day use and then at the end of the week copy it all down into my account book under the pro- per headings, It's work — but it's fun too — and saves many an argument. Until you see it in black and white you may not realize how much you spend at the beauty parlor, or, if you smoke, on cig- arettes — or Father on tobacco. Believe me, start keeping ac- counts and you'll get quite a few surprises - both kinds, good and bad too! Why can't life's problems bit us when we're eighteen and know all the answers? 'If you don't eat your cereal you wore t grot•; up to be a big n, m 11! D;'day." RUST IN PEACE — Looks like a pair of old burnt-out televi- sion sets, but it is a sculpture called "Enclosed Space" ex- hibited in London. Katie's Romance Ended By Gunfire 'One day last August, Ira Travis Sutton, 35, and Waller Lee Han- ey, 46 — two holdup men — sawed through the bars of their cell in the Natchitoches, La., jail, and fled to Atlanta, At almost exactly the sante time, slender, blue-eyed Katie Ruth Gladden quit her job in Birmingham for another in Atlanta. In Atlanta, Katie moved in with her cousin, L, D, Gladden, and his wife, Martha. A couple of weeks later, on the sidewalk in front of the Gladdens' apartment building, Katie met two 0100. One of them, a slim, dark-haired man, introduced himself as Joe Patterson Jr. and his friend as Leo Hanley. These were Sutton and Haney, Sutton told Katie they were salesmen for a home - repair firm, and that they lived in the apartment next door. Just before Christmas, the ra- diant Katie accompanied "Joe Patterson" to a justice of the peace to be married, The newlyweds set up house- keeping in "Joe's" apartment. "They'd come over for dinner every now and then," said Mrs. Gladden later, "and he always insisted on washing the dishes. He'd light your cigarettes for you and everything, just like a real gentleman." One night recently Sutton told his bride, now two months preg- nant, that he was wanted by the police. She begged him to sur- render, but he and Haney fled. With tears streaming down her cheeks, Katie knocked at her cousin's door, "I married some- body who was in trouble with the law," she wept. "I rove him and I tried to get him to give up, but he wouldn't".: The next day, after telling the FBI what had happened, Katie went home to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Gladden, who live on a small cotton farm near Gadsden, Alla, She trade the trip with another cousin, Gerald Jones, and his wife, Linda, in the gaudy, pink and coral 1956 DeSoto Sutton had been driving when Katie met him. Katie told her story to her parents, then decided to go to Leesburg to visit an aunt. As she packed, a tall, sandy -haired FBI agent named W. H. (Hill) Major stood on a knoll near the hone, with a .30 -caliber carbine under his arm, keeping the house under surveillance, When the Joneses, and Katie came out and got into the car, • in. the gloom et a rainy twilight, Major mistook Jones for Sutton. As the car started, the FBI elan leaped into the road in front of it and tried to stop it. Major, who said Iater that he thought he was being run down, jutnped aside and opened fire. Twenty-four slugs tore into the car. Wounded, Katie screamed: "It's a crazy pian and he's got a shotgun. Keep going." A short distance down the road, Jones careened to a halt, Not until lie had caught up with the car did Major realize his fatal mistake. Katie, shot six times, was dead, Mrs. Jones had suf- fered a slight wound in the thigh. Later, Katie's lather pressed ' a first-degree murder charge against Major, and the FBI agent was released on $3,000 bond pending grand -jury action, A father of three small children and an FBI . man for six years, Major .was obviously stunned. He told authorities he thought he heard shots from the car, per- haps a backfire, but a relative of Katie who had witnessed the shooting, Mrs J. C. Gladden, said she heard no such sound, Two days after Katie was bbried, Ira Sutton and Haney were captured by FBI agents as they were driv- ing a stolen car on an Atlanta expressway. Not a shot was fired. Insects have no lungs. They breathe through tubes running all through their bodies. ISSUE 9 — 1961 Something The U.S. Shouldn't Forget! Whatever the Administration recommends and Congress de- cides to do about tariffs and trade, with their eyes on the ex- panding European Economic Community, they had better ort lose sight of our trade with Canada. No other single country comes close to equalling Canada as a U.S. trading partner, This is one of the reasons, no doubt, that five U.S, cabinet sec- retaries met in Ottawa (recently) with four Canadian cabinet min- isters. "No two countries in world history have ever had the S111110 flow cf goods across their com- mon border, we are reminded by R. A. Farquarson, press offi- cer for the Canadian embassy "i don't think it is gener..'ly realized that trade with Can,ida has been greater than U.S. tirade with the six countries that form- ed the Common Market. 1t is only with the proposed entry of Great Britain that the Com- mon Market Group equals the sum total of Canadian trade with the United States. Canada is also a larger market for U.S. goods than all 20 countries of Latin America put together." Canada is a better customer for U.S, goods than all 20 na- tions of Latin America, although overall U.S. trade with Latin America is slightly higher loan that with Canada. Over 50 per cent. of Canada's exports go to the United Stales, and over 65 per cent of Canada's imports are from the United States. Canada's half - billion - dollar deficit in trade with the United States is a problem which trust be correlated with such regional complaints as those in the North- west against Canadian lumber imports. The President asked for authority to make across-the- board changes in tariffs, rather than to negotiate changes item - by -item as under the existing re- ciprocal trade act, We must be informed what effect such au- thority might have, not only on our regional industries such as lumber, but on U.S.-Canada trade relations .as a whole. The (Port- land) Oregonian. Modern Etiquette By Anne Ashley R. When a man is invited by a woman to escort her to a dance, banquet, or some such affair, is it proper always for him to bring her a corsage? A. Only if the affair is to be a formal one, and he knows she is wearing an evening dress. Q, Is it considered polite to. refuse a cigarette someone has, offered you, if you prefer• your• owns brand? _ , . . •A. Yes; but refuse graciously. saying, "Thank you, but l have some." For Sunny Days PRINTED PATTERN 4958 SIZES 2-8 alASY — just a straight fall of pleats swinging out front the shoulder yoke. Let daughter wear this gay style sashed at the waist or free. Flower em- broidery is simple, so dainty. Printed Pattern 4958: Child's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 t,..+Aes 1 V yards,39-inch. Transfer included, Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plainly SIZE, NAME, A D D R E S S, STYLE NUMBEIt, Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth SL, New Toronto, Ont. Fritz Was The Tops -- Now He's Gone ! "Nnb•)dy can be claimed ,as the first violinist in the world," Fritz Kreisler said a doz: n yer.rs ago, "There isn't any one most beau- tiful woman in the world either, and there isn't one pair of the most beautiful legs in the world," he added with obvious relish. Although he was 75 at the time, and was never again to play his violin in public, there w a s little doubt in anybody's mind that Kreisler had, as al- ways, h e e n loo modest. There was a first violinist in the world, and for at least half a century it had been Fritz Kreisler On oceasinn, Cthcr's night have played with more dizzying dex- terity or blinding speed, but no one had a warmer, sweeter tone, a nobler sense of purpose, Or a finer feeling for the instrument itself, As his friend Bruno Wal- ter observed: "He did not play the violin, he became the violin," Kreisler was the one violinist about whom his rival virtuosos could! agree, Although his aristo- cratic elegance was typical of his native Vienna, he favoured no school of playing over any other. II i s influence was universally felt, even in Russia, whose con- servatories have turned out such fiddling giants rs Jascha Heifetz, Nathan Milstein, and David Oistrakh, To this clay, the m a g i c of Kreisler's style has not dimmed for the Soviets. When it was an- nounced in New York last month that the violinist had died of a heart attack just four clays before his 87th birthday, Rus- sian violinist Igor Oistrakh, the 30 -year-old son of David Ois- trakh, s aid with great feeling: "As far as I'm concerned, he's the ideal of a musician," Young Oistrakh, who has just launched his first American tour, said his father, too, revered Kreisler, "He knew him personally. My father teaches at t h e Conservatory of Music in Moscow, and last year gave an evening devoted to Kreisler, discussing his records." Kreisler, who was as loved by the multitude as by the music- ally informed, deplored the fact that young musicians w ere "afraid of sentiment." Because of his unblushing sympathy for schmaltz, there were many mu- sicians who felt that Kreisler, the composer of such Viennese bonbons as "T h e Olcl Refrain" and "Caprice Viennois," suffered from an overabundance of emo- tion. As a composer, however, Kreisler could work up pieces in the most approved classical style, as he did early in his ca- reer when he perpetrated the now -famous K r e is le r "hoax," For y ear s he had programed "arrangements" of such old mas- ters as Couperin, Vivaldi, and Pagenini, in 1935, he confessal d he had written them all himself. "I was desirous of enlarging my progran)s," he said. "I found it impudent and tactless to repeat my name endlessly on the pro- grams." A wonder -child who made his American debut at 13, Kreisler nonetheless •believed that an artist should be a ronnully deve:l- oped man. Forswearing the fid- dle for a time, he studied medi- cine, became an Austrian Army officer, and was nearly killed in action in World War I, Twenty years ago, he again narrowly es- caped death after a truck hit him as he was crossing New York's Madison Avenue. Miraculously, he lived to play again, "1 would still play the violin," he. once said, "even if 1 were fined and punished," • HEAD FOR THE GAME -Dave Downey seems to have a head for basketball in this quick ac- tion photo. Dig Up Relics Of Alfred The Great ! In Cheddar, the small Somer- setshire village over which the., gorges of the Mendip Hills rise dramatically, w her e primeval rock face flanks modern cottages and gardens, the excavation of a remarkable series of buildings throws light on the dark pages of King Alfred's Saxon England. Excavations on what is thought to be King Alfred's palace at Cheddar are to be resumed in March. Bad weather in Decem- ber, 1961, stopped the dig, which is uncovering. a succession of royal palaces over a large area from the time of Alfred, King of Wessex from 871 to' 899, to that of King John of Magna Carta fame, 1199 to 1216. On rebuilding, each king chose fresh ground for a new palace, a few yards from the old one. One of the most important finds is reported to be the remains of a Saxon timber hall, 80 feet by 18 feet, the largest Saxon build- ing found south of the Northum- brian Saxon district between the Tyne River and the Cheviot Hills, The building now uncovered is believed to have, been the great hall of Alfred's palace, the dining hall where the thegns and the thralls gathered to hear the words of the sagas chanted by the gleemen as the smoke drifted skywards. All too few of the words of these Old English storytellers have come down to us. Not till medieval times, when Chaucer and other ballad mak- ers wrote of the lives of the peo- ple, of their joy in wood and flower and meadow, of the ex- hilaration of the tourney and the hunt, can we imagine what it was like to live in the England of these clays, It FeenS sad, therefore, t0 read that the diggers are engaged in a race against lime to complete the dig before handing the site back to the builders of a modern school. Over the great hall of Alfred's palace, they have found a small 10th -century wooden chapel, and above this a stone chapel repair- ed in the 13th century. 'l'he.cxcavators also have found the kiln which supplied the inn. - tar for this repair and the pit for the casting of. a 13th -century • ISSIJE 9 - 1962 bell, The mold was made of peat ind hill c )nlained traces of bell :'natal flag. To the south of the site, more buildings have been found, One is a massive aided hall, 11(1 feet by 50 feet, the largest timber hall so far known in England end probably built by Henry I, youngest son of William the Con- queror. The hall had been re- built, partly in stone, Some ex- perts think this may be the work ref. rued to in the Royal Roll for 1209, when King John spent £50 on "his houses of Cheddar" and the timber was brought from Wales, writes Melita Knowles in the Christian Science Monitor, Two ditches crossing the noi•th part of the site and thought to be part of a defensive earthwork yielded valuable small finals. They include coins of Ethclwulf, King Alfred's father (about 845), Burgred t'f Mercia (870), Athol - sten, Alfred's grandson (930), and Ethelred II (1100). Royal occupation of the palace first built by Alfred ended in the reign of King John about 1213, when it was given to the Bishop of Wells, The Witenage- mot (Meeting of the Wisemen or Parliament) took place at this royal stead in 960 and 968. King Alfred the Great was the first warrior king in the great feudal tradition. He and his son welded England together fur the first time. In the custom of the chaotic times, when the King must lead his people in peace as in war, King Alfred was the great pioneer of education, a man who although a King, himself taught and governed and fought with his pe:ple, Ile was administrator, scholar warrior, in an epoch when the Danes must be fought and before professional men could give themselves over entirely to learn- ing. Alfred the warrior built an English fleet. He made standby soldiers available to fight when needed. He put permanent garri- sons into earthwork, Danish - style forts, Alfred the adminis- trator .set up a council which worked through the shire and its offices. Alfred the scholar began Eng- lish prose literature by translat- ing Bede's Latin into Anglo- Saxon and by translating and compiling handbooks of history and geography for his subjects' use. He initiated the keeping of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, the first historical record ever' com- posed in England, Alfred, more- over, founded the first "public schools" for teaching letters to the sons of noblemen and thegns. He trained the laity for the first time for tasks of administration. Trumpet Player Gets Bum's Rush It has happened to every out- door bandmaster who ever post- ed an off-stage bugler in the bushes, but the other evening it happened in London's Albert Hall, Stationed high up in the gallery, trumpeter Elgar Howarth of Ine Philharmonia Orchestra raised his horn to sound the spine -chilling off-stage fanfare in Beethoven's Leonore Overture No, 3, At the very l'ir.st notes, an usher grabbed Howarth and administered the bran's rush while the hapless trumpeter tried to splutter out his part. Battling with tongue and limb, Howarth fought his way back just in time 10 blow the overture's second horn call. "Next time," proclaim- ed Ph1lharmonia conductor Ken- neth Jones, when the fracas wa.s over, ''we shall have armed se- curity guards around our trum- pet player." A fellow only not realize what he has picked. up unlit he car- ries her across the threshold, PONDERING HIS ROUTE - John Glenn studies a "globe within a globe" as he awaits launching from Cope Canaveral. - - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING BABY CHICKS (10(11) early markets demand that you order your limy spring chicks now. Prompt shipment on full range vari- eties Pullets, 3 weeks old to ready -to• lay, promptly; also day•old cockerels. Ask for price list. See local agent, or write (tray Hatchery, 120 John North. Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE LICENSED nursing home, completely furnished end equipped, Markham vsl• gage, I1 beds, 100111 (Or more, new oil hot .haler heating plant. Nearly new roof. Endre building In good renal!, 11, acre of land. 1 Klock from main street, quiet location. Priced at $29.000, / cash, balance 1 open Gu2c/, mortgage. F'or complete details call 110. 9.0000, 0. I.. Raymer, exrluslve agent, 09 (lose Park Dr., Toronto. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BOWLING lanes, 8, completely equip• ped, excellent condition. automatic foul lights, complete snack her. Purchaser to remove Innes from municipality. Owner moving to new location Open for offers. David's IlowI.O•Dromo 31 Dundas E., 'Trenton, Ont. CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS FOR SALE Full Zinc of Construction machinery - Ilulldozers, Dragline shovels, Ilridge building equipment, Dam building equipment and Pile driving equipment, with some contracts for spring. Phone Port Burwell 874.4301 or write P.O. Box 30, Vienna. COINS WANTED COiNS WAN'T'ED - Pay for Canadian cents Fite or better, 1922, $4.50; 1923, $6.75; prices inthe 1962Coin 1925, Catalogue125c. Gary's 18) 9910 ,Jasper, Edmonton, Alta, DAIRY EQUIPMENT FOR SALE FOR SALE. McCormick power washed Cream Separator, 750 lbs. capacity, only used n short time. 2 single units I11n. men milker with pipe line for 15 cows. CLARE iiAGLE }'hone Arkona 3549 11114, Forest, Ont. FARM HELP WANTED MARRIED MAN for poultry and beef farm Experience preferred. House with modern conveniences supplied. Yearly employment, Start March 1st. John S. Trott, 11114, Mt. Brydges. Phone 301r. 1717. FARMS FOR SALE FARM, 100 acres near Ilrooksdale, 8,0011 sq. ft. baulk Turn, excellent land all workable. Donald .1. Innes, Emhro, 475.4673. TOBACCO farm, 109 acres, fully equip. ped, 39 acres M.B.R. Good location neat' Vienna, phone Port Burwell 874. 4301 or write P.O. Ilox 30, Vienna. FARM 100 acres Lot 14, Con 13, afcKlllop 'Township, iluron County, seven room modern house with new double garage 50 x 70 steel barn, never been used. Drilled well has never been dry Good land and good fences, School on farm, Buyer gets first chance of 117 acres of grass farm across the road with 40 acres work. able land, spring water front and back, good fences, gravel pit. Price, $30,000. Apply Fred Glanville. RR 2, Walton, On. FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE FOR SALE - David Brown 850 Dem- onstrator, 1057 Ford 'tractor with Dear. born loader and blade excellent, alas. sty 44, Massey 101, Dozer blade with pump and controls, Davis '('66 Trench- er demonstrator, Howard 3PT Rolo- smto' demonstrator, Seaman 50" Til- ler, 90 inch Ilotary Mowers, Holland Transplanter demonstrators, Post Aug- ers, Sprayers, Full Line of used Spread- ers, flows, Discs, ltototillers, 'Tractors, Pumps. l'hllbrick Farm Equipment, Vineland, LOgan 2.4513. FLORIDA VACATION RESORT SUNNY Florida vacation on beautiful Rcdington Gulf Beach Fishing, sports, free TV. heated pool, low rates, free folders, prices. Efficiency opts , hotel rooms. El Morocco Motel, St. Peters. burg 11, Florida FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS CUT YOUR OWN HAIR with Penn's "Easylrlm" haircutting comb No skill required Saves barber's fees. For men, ladles' and children's hair Only $1.50 prepaid 1Iughsnns. W'., 16, August Avenue, Scau•boro. On. sarin How Can 1? By Roberts Lee •Q, Ilow can 1 prcvcul ice-CUhe lays from sticking in the frecz- ine compartment of my refrig- erator? A. You can avoid this sticking if you'll rub some oil or grease nn the bottoms of the trays. Or, t..ke a piece of double -thickness waxed paper the same size as the tray, and keep it under the tray in the compartment, Q. flow can I renew the fin- ish on some of my furniture? A, Equal parts of boiled lin- seed oil, turpentine, and white vinegar, applied with a hit of woolen rag and polished with a silk cloth, will renew the finish 00 furniture and also help to conceal some of the smeller blemishes, Q. now can 1 take propel' care of a chamois that has been used for cleaning' windows or wash- i ng the car? A. 111 ince the chamois out at least three times, shake well, and hang up to dry. Pull and shake it several times while dry- ing, and this will keep it sooft. The chamois should dry slowly and never in the star. MERRY MENAGERIE a AsalAgl it :k:, _J•i'F l'':+1r000rw, w "By golly! It certainly le s ROOMY D acol" FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS 3 LITS. Velveteen or print cotton $1.011. Remnants Assorted culuurs. .Hake kid. dies' rlothang, quills, hats, doll clothes, cap,, overalls Also 211 yds, quilted silk remnants $2 98, 4 lbs yard pieces, no batting necessary, 3 lbs 1eathercloth or sultings $3 90. Embroidery Yarns, 2 lbs. $1.08 Elastic ! ''.2" width, 2 lbs. $2.50 Satin ribbon, 4" to 7" wide, 20 yds $100, printed, 12 yds $1.00 Nat, row ribbon, 301 yds. $1 00. Cotton bias, navy brown. black, 300 yards $11111. Re. reit $1.00, balance collect. Schaefer, Drummond l IIIc Quebec Why "nn we sell for less? We buy In Targe quantities for cash, we have a large turnover, selling to every Prov ince In Canada, we sell for cash, have no had accounts, and we take a small margin of profit, We Ilse a few of our savings, Two $4,00 white dress shirts for $5.96; two $5.511 Spun Rayon plaid sport shirts for $7.90; two $3.00 plaid flannelette shirts for $3,95; two pair $1.25 all wool work socks for $1.70; and hundreds of other Items listed In our Illustrated free catalogue. Postage paid, satisfaction guaranteed or money re- funded, 'MEDDLE MERCHANDISING CO. FEIRGUS ON'T'ARIO HELP WANTED FEMALE START AT ONCE We require several single young ladles 17 • 23 for circulation department of MacLean•Ilunter Publishing Company. Neatness essential. No experience ne• eessary. Complete training given. $200 monthly to start with rapid advance. meat. Write Mr. S, Birch, 5th Floor, 210 Dundas St. W., Toronto Please enclose photograph and phone number. HELP WANTED MEDICAL.. DICTAPHONE • TYPIST Required for X.ray department, Must he thoroughly conversant with medical X.ray terminology. Apply to personnel director North York Bronson Hospital 655 Finch Avenue West, Wlllowdalc, Ontario. REGISTERED MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN NEEDED A'r THE Branson Hospital CONTACT Mr. Burton -ME. 3-9420 JOB OPPORTUNITIES SUNNY Southern California jobs in- teresting, plentiful, varied. By return mall big Help Wanted, Ads. Send 52.00. Vern Ardlff, 323 No. Soto, Los Angeles 33. California. MEDICAL DON'T WAIT - EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1,25 Express Collett POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISH the torment of dry eczema rash,s and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint you. Itching scalding and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless, odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn or hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East Toronto MINERALS A'1"1 EN'fION IIOCKHOUNDS! Fifteen exceptional Mineral Specimens, boxed, identified, and sant postpaid $1.25, Special, Genuine Star Rube (India) un- mounted, $15 011. Green's, 900•l3th, Golden, Colorado. OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity (.earn Hairdressing Pleasant dignified profession, good wages Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Call Marvel Hairdressing School 358 Bloor St W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St. W . Hamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL PRAYER. Future black, overcome by worry, temptation? 'Thousands have found help, joy. Write: Gospel Ads, Surrey, New Brunswick Enclose five cent stamp Rush you Free message and will pray. OVERWEIGHT? A sate, efteetive reducing plan with "Way•Les" 'Tablets Medically approved. 1 month's supply $7.00 Lyon's Drugs, Dept 32, 471 Danforth Ave., 'Toronto, PERSONALIZE your hooks and station. ery with beautiful Golden Rays. Letters look and feel as engraving. Process Kit $1. Braugher. 729 REC. Gray, Louis- ville, Kentucky. HYGENIC RUBBER GOODS TES'IED guaranteed, mailed In plum parcel, Including catalogue and sex book free with trial assortment, 18 for $1 00 (Finest quality) Western Distribu- tors. Box 24•TPF, Regina, Sask. PHOTOGRAPHY SPECIAL - Portrait 8 x 10 hand col- oured - from your favorite Snapshot for only $2.00. Any 3 pictures $5.00 plus Ont. Sales 'fax Send colouring Instructions to PAWSTAN SALES P.O. Box 5118, London, Ont. SORRY, NO C.O.D. PROPERTIES FOR SALE $6000 cash will buy 108 acres facing Hwy 69 fourteen miles south Parry Sound Hunting with trout stream on property Call or write R. Harris, 110 Dundas Hwy East, Cooksville, Phone No 277.3086, POULTRY CRATES FOR SALE HAULING poultry? Do 1t with Stad Poultry Shipping Crates, Write today for your free folder and price list, Stad Manufacturers, Box 53, Sl Jacobs, On- tario. SEED FOR SALE RUSSELL OATS ONTARIO'S newest and most outstand• Ing oat, outylelding Garry and Rod-. ney by 0 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 31. Stewart tw Son Ltd., Seed Grain Specialists. Alla Craig, Ont. TREES SCOTCH and Austrian Pine, Colorado Blue Spruce, White Spruce, Ornamen- tals and seed. Seven varieties Nut Seedlings. Keith Somers, 'rillsonburg, Ontario. TRADE SCHOOLS ACETYLENE, electric welding and Argon courses. Canada Welding Can. non and Balsam N., Hamilton. Shop LI 4.1204. Res. LI 5.6283. EUROPE SPRING Go Cunard! Early Spring Sailings from Montreal and Quebec IVERNIA APRIL 13t SAXONIA APRIL 201 CARINTHIA* APRIL 27 HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL IVERNIA MAY 4 COBH, HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON plus sailings every Friday all season *From Quebec the following day. 110% reduction applies on round trip bookings. You step into spring the moment you step aboard any of these gracious CUNARD liners, An alternate route to Europe is ayailable aboard the magnificent Queens, sailing regularly from New York. See your travel agent. Enquire about the Cunard Pay -Later Plan, 00 CUNARD Nezayeefea 1/ Corner Boy & Wellington Sts., Poronto, Ont, Tel: 362-2911 PAGE 10 THE i LYTI1. gTAN DA1tD �V Tednes ay, Feb, 28, 1Y62 dowirommemisimmemiewahar STOKELY S TOMATO JUICE MINNETI'ES CHOICE TOMATOES 8 - 20 oz, tins 1,00 6 • 20 oz. tilts , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,, 1,00 GREEN GIANT NIBLET3 CORN GOLDEN DEW MARGARINE 6 • 14 oz. tins 1.00 1 4 - 1 lb, pigs. 1,00 RED SOCKEYE SALMON 1` 1 TOP CROP POPPING CORN I- 2 • 7 3,4 oz. tins 1.00 8 - 1 ih. pkgs. 1.00 MONARCH POUCH PAR CAKE MIXES FANCY WHITE SOLiD) TUNA 8 pkg. 1.00 f 3 • 7 oz: (ins 1.00 KLEENEX TISSUES, Reg, or Chubby 7 pkgs. 1.00 VAN CAMP PORK and BEANS 7.1_5oz. tins 1.00 imegrrirterirrworrnrwars 37 AYLMER LMER VEG. or TOMATO SOUP 8 10 oz, tins ELLI11AR P1 AN UT BUTTER 3 - ].(i oz. jars 1.00 1.00 ST. WILLIAM'S ASSU'1ZTE1) JAM 5-9oz. jars 1.00 MOUNT ROYAL CREAM STYLE CORN 6 - 20 oz. tins 1.00 WKSTINGHOUSE LIGHT, .BU LBS 25-4(1.60 5 bulbs 1,00 C11RISTIES "Fireside" SANDWICH. BISCUIT 41 cello pkgs. 1,00 "SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET" For Superior Service See Fairservice ARENA SCIIEDULE Thursday, March 1 Beginners Free Skating, 2 to 4, Public Skating, 0 to 10, Friday, March 2 Hockey. Saturday, March 3 -- Public Skating --2 to 4 and 7,30 to 9.50 p.m, Monday, Mach 5 Hockey. CARL) OF THANKS We wish to express our sincere appre- ciation to neiglibiurs and friends fur their many kindnesst extended to n:; during our roient sad bereavement, for the many carols and letters .alicl the beautiful floral tributes, with special thanks to Rev. C. G. Park, pallbearers, Dr, Newland and Dr. Wallace, -Family of the late WA, Joseph Webster, 52.1 Tuesday, March 6 ••• Public Skating 7-9 p.m, Wednesday, March 7 ... Brooinball. r Stewart's Red I3 White Food Market Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver. 44 4.0444-4+4-444-• 1+4.144-6•14-4-.+44-a4-•$ 1 r! (•4•44 H • ••N "DOLLAR DAYS" .• FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES Florida Grapefruit, 96's 10 for 49c Large Firm Lettuce 2 heads 33c No. 1 Grade Carrots 2 pkgs. 27c No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 Ib. bag 99c Delicious, Spy, Mac and Courtland Apples 5 ib. bag 5(J MEATS and FROZEN FOODS Fral crvale Fish and Chip, 24 oz. pkg. 59c Libbys Mixed Vegetables, 2 lb. poly bag 49c Lean Hamburg, 1. lb. bag 49c heady -to -Eat Picnics per lb. 49c 1. pkg. Weiners; 1 pkg. Sausage; 1 pkgBologna all 3 pkgs. 1.00 Breakfast Bacon 1 Ib. pkg. 57c Grade A Chickens, 2 • 3 lb. 33c Grade C Capons, 5 • 6 lbs. 45c MOW EXTRA SPECIAL -•- 8 Wei.ners 8 Huns All for 49c ILEI) ,and WHITE BONUS OFFER Terry Tea Towels 89c per pair BUY AND SAVE WITH DOLLAR DAY BARGAINS on Groceries, Fruits, Vegetables and Meats, PRONE 156 WE DELIVER tuomisionmemer ..al...,+.MIL Walton News 17t11 and Boundary' The regular monthly tneeting of the 1?Ih and Boundary Uunit. of I)uifs Unit- ed Church, \',gallon, was held at the home of Mrs, lic'i't \Villia+mson, Six- teen ladies answered the toll call. 'I'lte leader, Mrs, Cliff Ritchie, preaded as the faceting was opened with hymn :515, A i oem, "Blessings that Be- ulah)," was read by Mee, Wui, Coutts. Airs. T, i.eeii ng read the scripture, 1 Corinthians O; 19.27. Mas. Ritchie led in prayer and gave a. reading, "Oto' Task." A skit on Christian Cit- izenship was presented by Mrs, Roy Williamson, Mrs. I). Buchanan aiin Mrs. M, Baan. 'Minutes and cones• poneeneu were read and several items of buelness attended to. The meeting was closed with hymn 148 and Bene: diction, Lunch was served by the hostess and the lunch coniinittee and the afternoon was spent quilling, Mr. and Mrs. C. Miller, of Lelia• bridge, Alberta, spent the past ween with the forager's mother, Mrs. Paul. inc .Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Dotdes Ennis before attending (he Canadian conference on l chication in ivlontreed; A family bil'thdey (lilltil`r honouring AIr, Malcolni Fraser was held at his hame Saturday evening when the fol• lo;vin£ guest: were present; Mr. a+itl Mrs. Jeff Livingstone and family, Preston, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fraser and family, Stratford, Mr. and Mr's. Douglas Fraser rand family, Grey Township, and Mrs. Ethel llackwell, Mr, and Mrs, Ken Ritchie and \Fire ry, of Egtnondviite, spent Sunday with Mrs Ethel Ennis, Mi.. and Mrs. W, C, Bennett, Cline ton, and Mr. std Mrs. Bruce Walters and family, of Sarnia, visited whh Mr. and Mrs. Ron Bennett. Miss Ruth Ennis, DN., of Kitchener, si'cnt Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs Doug Ennis. An Easier Cantata, "The Sunrise Sunk" will be presented by tJic choir of Duffs United Church Easter Sunday evolving. Euchre Tho !yell Board and Women's Melt - lute hc?d a Euchre party in the Com- munity 1la11 Friday night tvilh twenty• tow tables at play. A short meeting; el the Women's Institute was held prior to the euchre on acrinnit of having to postpone their meeting the night be. fore, .Joint card parties will continue through the month of March, being heid Friday evening;, March 2 and 23. The conmii.ttee foe i[arch 2 wilt be AIrs, W111, 'Turnbull, ,Mrs, George Love, Mrs. George Williamson caul Mr's. Stewart lfuniphries, A Nominating Committee was appointed ti) draw tip a new slate of officers for the ctivnug; year as fol. trays; Alrs, C. Martin, Mrs, George !libber!., Airs, E. Stevens, Mrs. John Van Vliet Sr., Mrs. 3, Nolan. '1'he next meeting will be Children's night and Mrs. 1lcrb Williamson and Mrs, Net. son Reid wind be added to the list for the lrch. Huron County Seed Fah will be held March 9111 and loth .at Ex• cl.er and Honourable Wm., A. Stewart, Minister of Agriculture, will be guest speaker in the Exeter High School on Sattuxlay at 1.30 p.m. March 10th, The following were prize winners far the Progressive Euchre; ladies high, Mrs, A. McDonald; ladies low, Mrs. Ron Bennett.; Gents high, Bob Humphries: gents low, Neil McClure; Mrs. Wm. Turnbull won the prize for the person having a birthday nearest to March 231x1. A very sticeeseful penny ;na!lion was carried on at the close of the euchre with -Mrs. A. McDentild and Mrs. Nel• son Marks in charge. 1'he prize wit tiers were, Mrs. J. Gordon, Ales. 1Vil btu' Turnbull, Neil McDonald, Carolyn Fraser, DiVinne Fraser, '1'. Dundas, Lawrence ltynn, Mrs, D. Ennis, Wen da Humphries, Mrs, A, McDonald, Mrs. F, Waltere, Airs, J. McDonald, Mrs. C. Martin, Don McDonald Graeme Craig, Larry Walters, Bob Iltnnpluies, Sitar• on Marks, Glenna Houston, Mrs. G. Watson, Jock McCall, Mrs, J. Nolan, ShetTill Craig, Mrs. George Pollard, Mrs. Ed, Miller, Mrs, John Simpson, Gary Bennett, Mrs, Kon McDonald, Ken Pollard, Barbara Bryans, Mrs. Nelsen field, Mrs, Clarence Bennett, Neil Ryoii, Andy Turnbull, Airs. L. R,y. an, Mrs. A, Coutts, Mrs. Wes lIackwell, Mrs. A, ,Anderson, Mrs, Les Oliver, Nies. ilarold Bolger, L. 1tyan, '1'onnny Williamson-, Shirley Williamson, Mrs. if, 'Praviss, Mrs. F. McKay, Mrs. 1Vni Humphries, 111r1;. \Aran, 'Turnbull, Ltuteh wits served with the following commit,. Lee in charge, Mrs. L. Ryan, Mrs. J. Ityan, Mars. Fox, Mrs, F. McKay, iMis. Stewart Humphries, Mos, 3, Nolan. WESTFIELD News Our best wishes for a pleasant jour- ney go to Mr. 11Koopneans, who !lies to Holland this week to visit with rela- tives and friends, especially his moth- er, who is 84 and in good health. Mr, and Mrs. Arnold Cook and girls. also Mr. Alfred Cook visited with Mr, and NITS, Walter Cook and Mrs. Edna cook, Blyth, on Friday. In the \Vestfichl Sunday School on Sunday, Bibles were pres:cnt(i(i to Ann de Groot and Dou.g'as Smith by Mrs, Alva McDowell. Diplomas and Seals wore also presented as follows: Dip• lenia No. 1, to Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Walden and Janice McDowell; diploma No, 2, to Menai•$. Edgar .liowa'U, Char- les Singh and John McDowell: ;seal:; for different years wore given to AI's. Charles Smith and Margery, Misses Jeanetta, Audrey, Shirley and Elalne Smell, Donrcthy llowatt ai,:l Linde Wal• den, Mrs. J. L. McDowell, Mrs. Edgar Howatt and Mrs. Alvin Snell, Messrs, Graeme, C;erdon and Mori McDowell, Ronald, Marvin, Clifford and Billy Snell, hen, Ronald end Douglas How. .att, Gary and Brian Walden aivi John, Buchanan. Mr. Laurence Campbell left 'Thursday NI his return journey to Alberta after a two week visit with his parents and Mends, Mr, Franklin Campbell, Lon. don, also spent several days with his parents during the past week. Mrs. John Fungate Carrow, called on M's. Gerald McDowell on Monday. Mr. and Nit's. Arnold Cook and girls called en Mr, and Mrs. James Beak, el Crewe, Saturday afternoon. Mr. end Mrs. Beak are slowly 'Teeming from their accident. Farm Forum was held Monday even- ing at Mr. Lloyd Walden's with a good attendance, Next, Monday Fortin will be held at lir. H. Cwnpho\I's with the topic for discussive "I}ririffs and Trade." Miss Gladys McDowall and Mr. D. Ferguson, C.,oderich, galled on Mrs. M. McDowell and Graeme on Sunday. Several families 'attended \Vthgharr. High School Variety Concert Thursday and Friday eveniaigs, where there was a large nbtenclamce despite inclement weather. lJnit 2 of U.C.W. with Miss •Jeanetta $11(.11 as deader, had charge for the Fe- bruary meeting Wednesday at 2.30 o'clock in the church basement., Call to worship by hauler. Scripture lesson by 1rs. Alvin Snell. Prayers were given by I's. Thomas 13iggerstaff, itis. Lloyd Walden and iliss Jeanette Snell, and ,all r'e'peated the L'ar'd i Prayer. !tyrant 2 was sung, Airs, Charles Snaith gave the introduction to the New Study Book "Signals for the GO's." Mrs. Wm. Traylor review entitled "Church and community," Hiss Jt iitet.la Snell read peen' "Go '1'o Church," A panel (lis• cuss°on on the question "11'hy I go to Church" led by Miss Jeianctta Snell svitii panelists Airs. Charles Snaith, Mrs. Alvin Snell, Mrs. Win. 'Taylor and Nies. Arnold Cook. lleit 3 with Mrs. liloy(1 Walden, as leader, will have charge of.March meeting to t'c held en IV,orld's Day cf Prayer, March 9th. Mrs, Howard Campbell to sond for pro• gnain leaflets. Miss Jeanette Snell thanked all who took part and Mrs. Chides Smith then look charge of the business, opening with call to worship. Minutes were read and approved and roll call tutswel'cct by 10, The uffr!itg was received n?xl dedidxted, 'I'Jte ijullt• ink; i:, to be on iSliu•rtie lith,.Our Teliet allocation of one dark, Heavy quilt., and Iwo dolls was discussed, and Mrs, Ar- nold cook is 10 see about prices. One member on each phone circuit alas lire pointed to collect for March of Dentes. Money to be in by 9111 of Aybrele A cal - lection to be taken at rcxt rico ling !ler money for dolls. The :pinging of hynsn 275 brought meeting Lo a close and the president pronotuieed the benediction. Is Yuur Su bsci'iptioii'Paid'" VITAMINS give Vim, Vigour and Vitality-•- I-Iell) build resistance to colds and fin, Paralltettes Tablets, 8.00 value Spec. 6.00 Paraim t t:e Syrup, 7.50 value Spec. 5.5(.1 Maltevol 2.50 1Valltpole's Extract1.59 and 2.69 One A Day Multiple 1.49, 2,75 and 4.19 Scotts Emulsion 1.00 and 2.00 Vi Cal Fres Capsules 1.95 and 4x95 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, Phrn, B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER PHONE 20, IMLY'1'H +NULL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP 1.1 SAVE Tip Top Canned Tomatoes, 28 oz. 2 for 45c Tip Top Canned Peaches, 28 oz. ' 2 for 69c Puritan Beef or Irish Stew , , . , 1 1;2 lb. tin 39c Golden- Dew Margarine 2 lbs. 45c Pillsbury Grand National Cake Mixes, 3 for 1.00 Mir Liquid Detergent, save ale, 24 oz. , , 2 for 89c Peanuts in the shell , , . , 4 lbs. 1.00 Onions 5 IbIA, 19c termEmearepAmeme Sausage 3 lbs. Oranges Potatoes, 10 ib. 180's, 2 doz. 69c bags . 2 for 45c Weiners 1.00 2 lbs. 1.00 i Bologna Side Bacon (� 3 lbs....,,,,,. 1.00 2 lbs. ' 1.00