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The Blyth Standard, 1962-03-14, Page 1
N VOLUME 7u • NO, 02 Authorized as second class mall, Post Office Departtnenl, Ottawa. and for payment of postage in cash. I3LYTII, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1.1, 1902Subscription Rates $2,50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. Vocational School Will Not Operate Until September 1963 I{, 13, McRae, chairman of the Ad ,'isoty Vocational Committee, Clintor ')istrict Collegiate Institute, has issuLc .he following release in regard to tit new Vocational Training School to be erected to addition to the C,D,C,I. ' Mince it will lake must of a year t construct, the one and one-half milliut dollar Vocational addition to C,D,C.i. cool since construction will probably not start until May, the Vocational ad. dither 10 C.D.C,I, 1vd11 NOT be open 11 classes until September, 1963, hi order that :Students presently en rolled in Grade 0 who had anticipate(' enrolling in Grade 10 of a Vocations purse will not he penalized and tis• ippeinted, special permission to eon. act Grade 10 preparatory courses Much will lead to Grade 11 Technical lone Grade 11 Vocational Cu ercia' Courses in September 1963 has been ob. :rained from the Department of Educe. tion, This permission has been grant• ed for a perkxl of one year only. Due to limited shop facilities in the ;)resent schools, those Grade -10 Tech. :deal Courses will lead to Grade 11 spe. cialization in the fields of Carpentry ;Ind Drafting only, The Grade 10 Commercial Course will load to full Grade 11 and Grade 1; Commercial Courses, It will he necessary to make certain minor adjustments to Grade 9 courses to be offered in September, 1062. Pupil: and parents may rest assured however ',hot these cotteses (common to the fou: 13ocondary Schools involved) will lea( to All Branches and Programmes of the reorganized courses of study arc' will in no way affect the pupil's oppur amity to persue the career of his or her choosing. YILYTiI FIREMEN ASSIST IN t'IL1GIC.CKNX BLAZE • Blyth firemen were again called on I y 1Vinghtam for assistance last Thurs (:ay morning who: fire broke out it the CKNX Radio and TV Station. The call Dame at 6;30 a.m. and the loca t'remen made the 12 mile run tc inghaun and had three lioses to the i,re in record time, The fire started after ail explosion i1 the electronics lab, and within min• t tes flames had made their way to Inc top of the older ix)rlion of the build. hg, wvhieh was formerly the Wingham '.:igh school, 1Vlten the Myth brigade arrived on the scene chance of saving (he old truclurc was impossible and their cf lolls were confined to the new, one storey notion, at the north end of 'lu bwkiuig, The radio and office section were completely destroyed and the televis- im portion suffered very heavy losses '-'Dial damage was estimated at three- quarters of a million dollars. The radio station continued to 0per. ale from thea' mobile unit and tele - 'vision carried network programs in the evening. Sparks from the main blaze else ignited the roof of a near by house tut damage was kept to a mininuun ly the quick action of firemen, GROUNDHOG *SIGHTED aigns of spring ,are beginning to op year nround the countryside and will them comes the hope of an early Meal through tine long awaited spring sea son, Riley, of RR. 1, Londesboro ,_eported-seeing-wgI liiidtTig• on.Thus clay morning, search 0 behind Burn. Church In 1Eullott township. A number of other local residenll have reported seeing •grotnulhogs sine( that. time. AMONG THE C11U1tCIIE; Sunday, March 18, 1962 ST, ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. D. J, Lane, B.A.', D,D,, Minister, 1.00 pain. --Church Service and Sun. day School. ANGLICAN CIiUIICiI OF CANADA Rev, Robert 1'', Meally, Rector, 2nd Sunday in Lent - T'rinily Church, Blyth, Friday—Altar Gtrild in Rectory, Stutdoy—S,S, 10,30 a,m. Matins 10.30 a.m. St. Mark's, Auburn, Thursday—Leiden Service 0.30 p.m. Sunday—Meths 12.00 o'clock. Trinity Church, Belgrave. 6.00 p.nr,—Sunday School, 2.30 pan,—Evensong, TILE UNITED CHURCH /1F CANADA Blyth Ontario, Rev. R, Evan McLagan • Minister Mrs. Donald Kai Director of Music, 9.53 a.m.--Sunday Church School, 11 a,ut.--Morning Worship. CHURCII OF (101) McConnell Street, Blyth, John Dornier, Pastor Phone 185 1.00 p.no-Stmday School, 2.00 pm—Worship-Service, 0.00 p.m.—Wed,, Prayer Service, •0.00 p,m, Friday, Youtli fellowship, Fireside Members Disuss "Taxation for Education" 011 Alau'ch 12111 the Fireside harm 1011111 stet in Londesboro Community Hall with the Directors of the Fedora. tine of Agriculture, the Township Cotltt ell, and other interested ratepayers, to listen to 1Iie broadcast 'Taxation fur Edtu'alion." Foto' groups were formed to study the guide, discuss the subject and an- swer questions, 'There %vas a fine attendance and many interesting; facts were learned. '1'Ite British North American Act gave each Provincial government, to make lows, governing education Within its own province, So there is considerable variety in Canada, Population, living costs and education expenses have in- croaaed greatly within tate lust fen years and will likely continue to do so. We believe in equality of opporlun• ily. This we do not have in C1,inada. Newfoundland spends an average o; 122 dollars per student per year on education, while Alberta spends 367 dollars per student per year and Ont. ario 209 dollars per pupil per year. 1'otung people no longer stay in theii home community which educated them, Last, year sixty thousand per- sons moved from their home province in search of greater opportunity. 'The United States received many of IheSe. By law, students nmst remain long• er in sellout and retarded and handi capped children are ,now receiving in. 'A:nie(fon. All expenses o1' education have greatly increased and the fat'tn• int, community is paying loo high a percentage of the cos(. The educational lax for the High School ureas has be- come an unjust burden as farmers pay both per capita and per assessment nine's higher high school tax than at urban dweller in the same locality. Grass farms should not be taxed as high for educational purposes as other property in the townships. It is the people that receive the benefit not the land. Business now demands higher education for its employees, so should pay some educational tax but not as high as residential sections, If books and subjects were standardized edu- cation costs would be less and more uniform throughout tic nation. If the Federal Government bore the expense of building new schools it would greatly lessen the burden on the ratepayer. The Federal Government, has the money from Income Tax and a large share of the re,anurces of the nation Farmers are now i11 (1)1) group with some net incomes, as machinery, taxes and liv• 1119 ext'ellsc3; are so high and their pro- fit from sale of their products is low 'flay receive less for labour Thant the average urban dweller. Sonic believe that a special sales lax fon' educalior silents' he used, to equalize the expense, Airs. Howard Cartwright invited the group for next week. WORLD DAY OF PRAYER SERVICE AT 'TRINITY ANGLICAN CHURCH The World Day of Prayer service was held last Friday afternoon at 2,30 in Trinity Anglican Church, i3lyth, with the president of the Ladies Guild, Mrs, 'I, Gibbons, presiding, The 1962 WorldDay of Player Scr• vice wva$ prepared by Christian women of Uruguay with the thence "God's Love for lho Whole World," Mrs, Gibbons was assisted by Airs, 11, Vod(le11 of the United Church and Mrs. W. Good of the Presbyterian Church, these ladies also are leaders of their church groups. Quiet music was Inlayed by Miss Pearl Gicliey while the women assemblers She also played foil' the hymns, 'Re guesst speaker was Airs. 11. A.-Funge, of Lunleshoro United (lurch, who gave an interesting ane inspiring address, A duet composers of Mrs. I1. Voddcu and Mrs. Ken McDun• alcl was very much enjoyed, they close "Sweet Hour of Prayer" very appro- priate; for the occasion. The offering was taken by Miss. R. Measly and Mrs, W. 11leVittie and will be sent to the Women's Inter-ehu rch`Council of Can. Ma, There was a very small attend - Mice, it scents tlie'yotmger .women (lo not attend, just the faithful few, UNIT I RECEIVE EIGHT MEMBERS The March sleeting of Unit 1 of the United Church Women was held at the 11019e of Mrs-, William Knox on Monday, March 5 al 8:30 p.m. with 10 members present. The meeting opened with Mrs, Joh. Campbell treading a poem. The min ole:, of the last meeting were read and approved, It was decided the Unit would cater hitt \\amid help with large caterings: There were 8 new members who juin' ed the Unit as follows: Mrs, Ray (grit• Piths, Mrs, Tem Pale, MI's. Jini Laid- law, Mrs. Jiro Mason, Mrs. Larne Batt ley, Mrs. llarold Badley, Mrs. George Wasson and Mrs, Wm. Blake. Ma's, Donald Young- gave (I)0 Bible Study, .Luke 9, tush prayer, Mrs, Wight - man look the study period, "Youth its Transition," and a story of Problems ol Young People. Mrs, John Campbell closer! '' fog with the Benediction P. lunch was served well and The r Jr' OBITUARY MRS, MURVIN GOVIER Following a lengthy Hiltless which confines her for many weeks to her Immo and hospitals, Mrs, Murvin Gov ler a life-long and highly esteemed res• Mont of this community passed away on Thtusday morning, March 8, 1902 in Victoria Hospital, London, wore she had been .a patient for lire past two weeks, Formerly Margaret Caldwell, a daughter of Mrs. John Caklwell and the -late Mr. Caldwell, She was born or concession 2, East Wawanoslt township on December 20, 1915, 1)n ,lune 9, 1937, she married Alul'vin Cult'''. Following their n1111(9ag0 they look Ftp re idenee 011 the lith concession of Alorris township. .hutviving besides her husband arc two slaughters, Airs. Robert (Joan) McDougal, of Goderich, and Carol Anne, at honk, one sou, Murray, ol Blyth; three grandchildren, Gary Go. vier, Larry and Marlene McDougall; her mother, Mrs. ,icihn Caldwol1l; twc brothers, Earl and Ralph, vast Wawa• n0s11; two sisters, Mrs. Orval (Ella; McGowan, East 1Vawanosh, Mrs, Lau ric (Dorothy) Scott, of Morris On Saturday, March 10th, a private funeral service was held at the 'Tasker Memorial Chapel followed by a public service at 2 pant. in the Blyth Unite( Church conducted by Rev, R. E. Mc Lagan. Mr. Aubrey Toll sang "Neal to the lIeart of God." Temporary entombment in the Blytt Union Cemetery Chapel. The pallbearers were all neighbours Messrs. David Craig, John Nesbit, all Nilson, Millar Richmond, Albert Nes• bits and George Nesbitt, Fl owe rhea laws were six hophewvs John Caldwell, Robert Scott, Donald Scott, Kenneth 1lcGowan, Keith Good and Gerald Gale'', Beyond Life's Gateway Thes'e's an open gate, al the end of the road, 1'hlo' .which each must go alone, And there in a light, we cannot see Our hauler claims His 0W11 Beyond the gate, our loved one Finds Ilappinncss runes rest, And there is comfort in the thought, That a loving God knows best, Festival Officers Named At Belgrave. Meeting The annual meeting of the Belgrave School' Fair Association was held' on 1'Ionday afternoon in the Community Centre and was opened by the pros'. tient, Edgar Wight man, The minutes of the last meeting and 1110 financial statement were read by the secretary -treasurer; Stanley flop. per. 1t was decided to hold another fah 011 September 12. Ads again to be sold and the Directors in each section to bold suite entertainment to rause fund: fon' the school fair. J. 11. KKinkea I was present and spoke briefly remarking the children should be commended on the excellence of the work book and other fair exhibits, Don Grieve -assist• ant agricultural representative spoke a few words on exhibits other than the school exhibits and would like to see more livestock and stressed showman. ship, Mr. Grieve conducted the election o.' officers as follows: President, Stanley Black; 1st vice pres., Bill Elston; 2nd vice pres., ilarold Vincent; secretary. treasurer, Stanley Hopper reappointed to obtain on assistant; aiditors, Mrs. Jack 11'ickstcad and Mrs, Jack Higgins ,Directors from Morris School Sec lions: 1, Jini Wilson and Louis Phelan; 3, Clarence fulls and Mrs. 1Iowari Smith; 4, James Smith and 1Irs. (:;corgi Smith; 5, 1Vilbert Procter and Mrs, Ito• bort Grasby; 6, Ross Duncan, and Mrs. •fames Mair; 7, Wilfred Maines, Mrs, 11111 Elston; 11, Ross 'Purvey, Mrs. Char- les Mathers; 9, ,i1lr's, J. 13ryaus, Alan Earle; 10, 11rs, R. Pullman, Carl Gov Ing; 11, Kenneth McDonald, Mrs, lion 13ennelt; 12, Raymond Griffith, Airs. George Nesbitt, Dir'ector's ft'oni East 1Vawanosh School Sections; ' 3, Alex Nethery, Mrs. Berl Fear; 6, Alvin Snell, Mrs, Gordon Sniith; 7, Albert Rieman, Calvin Rob. loser; 0, Harold Vincent, Mrs. Kennett Wheeler; 9, henry Pattison, Mrs Ron. aid Coidtes~and Mr's. Gordon NieBur; ncy; 10, Ralph Caldwell, Alt's, 0, Cold. loll; 11, Bob Henry, Mrs. Bruce Fa colter; 13, Borden Scott, Mrs. Jack Taylor; 16, Bob Lockhart, Mrs. Oliver Anderson; 17, George Johnston, Mrs. Clifford Pua'don, Music Festival committee: Mrs, George Johnston, Mrs, George Michie, Mrs, Norman Coulies, Mi's, J, Short - reed, Iiarvey AlcDowell, Mrs. Gordon Mel3ul'ltey, Mr's. Ted Fear, Kenneth Wheeler, Ross Anderson, Lloyd Walden and the music supervisors, 11t's, Nora Moffatt and Mrs, Emerson Rodgers, The presidents are to look after seq. ling the ads, and Mr: Kinkead and the following teachers, Mrs, Bob Henry Mrs, Clarence Chaninly, Iw11•s, Gordo►; Bosnian, Bev Evnls and Clem Stefflei are to revise the school prize list, There will be a (Erectors' meeting; on March 20 at 8.30 .p.m. IMOD LETTER Elmo', Dear., v PERSONAL INTER i'S1' Mr. and Mrs. G. 0. Bradley and son Timothy, of 11[eaford, were guests 011 Sundity with her mother, Mrs. Sadie Cunning, also visited with her uncles Messrs. Robert and Archie Somers, We are p:eased to report that Mrs. Cu►ning Is gradually improving after a bout With shbigles, i Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mason and Mrs. Gordon Mason and Carol visited in London on Monday. , Mr. and Mrs. Jim %rightnian, of Lis. Wowwel, visited with Air. and Mrs. Albert alsh on Sunday. CON(lRA'I'U1,ATIONS Congratulations to Miss Bou►l10 Suz tune Jiradley,, who will celebrate het birthday on Tuesday, March 21)1l1• Cong;rrrlulatioll to Air. It. W. 115dill Who celel)rat'!s his birthday on Alarch 1611h. Congratulations to Airs. Allan Grant )oho celebrates her birthday on ,share!: 111. Gt • Congrattt niers to Mrs. R. D. Phii•r who celebrates her birthday on Alarcl: 17tH. Congratulations to Mr. borne Bogart who celebrates his birthday on March 171h. Congratulations to Mrs, Leslie Nal tel who celebrates her birthday 01 March 17t11. Congratulations to ,11r, Albert Walsi ts'lio celebrates his birthday on Friday 1larch l6tl►. Congratulations to Terry Pierce whc will celebrate his 3rd birthday on Marcl 22 Congratulatiots to George Snell sor of Mr. 111111 Alis Jasper 811011, who cel cbralcd Ills 51li birthday on March 13 Cengratulatinns to 1U'. and Airs. Ilan ry I3ryaut who celehrate their iwcddiu}; anniversary March 15111, .1015 14 EIM GRAVEL '1'f;N1)I:R A(.'( FJ''1 Eh) IN EAST IVAW'ANOSIi '1'hc East. \Vawanosll Council met o. 11arclt 6th with all the members pres- ent, 110eve Hanna presiding. The loin utcs of the meeting, held February 6 were read and adopted on motion by Buchanan -Robinson. The auditor's report was receive, Showing the revenue for 1961, $109,638.31, and expenditure, $103,3111,27, leaving 'stu'p1tis of $6,257,12, Moved by Snell -Pattison, that, coin. 1gll. accept the auditor's report and pay, him his fees 'of $300.00. Carried: - 'The gravel tenders were opened then being six in all, Moved by Pattison Buchanan; that council accept the ten der of Joe Kerr at 59 cents a cu. yd. o inch gravel crushed and delivered C:aied. lt' a000unt of the 11'iughtnn d'{ura Fire ('onwillllve for $212.05 was paid on motion by Snell -Robinson. Carried. Moved IT Buchanan -Plaids -on, lila the Assessor alh'nt the Municipa Asse_srueut School at Gudericll en Ma;, 1 and 2. Carried. Moved by Robinson -Snell, that lir road and general aecetnits as pi'esente( be passed and paid. Carried. Moved by Pattison -Buchanan, uta' Frank 'Thom'pson be Warble Fly Inspec tar at $1.25 an hour. Frank Coope, spr'ay'er operator at $1.25 and Ken Scot operator helper at $1.25 an hour. Cat ricd. Moved by Buchanan•Snell, that coon cul give a grant of $100,00 to Attburi Memorial hall. C'a.rried, Ro1111 Cheques: Stuart 11lcl3urnry, sal. 185,00, conver, tion expenses, 50.00, bills paid, 3.27 238,27; Alan McBurney, wages, truck big and radiator repair, 312.59; Ale> Robertson, wages, 5,00; Arnold Bruce wages, 80.00; Jim Robinson, wages 171.65; West Wawanosh Fire Insurance sited, 12.50; Charles Hudgins, call alt repairing lights, 0.53; Winghani 'I'irt Service, tube and labour, 21.03; Camp bell's Garage, Battery, etc. '/1.51); liar t;y Williams, fuel, oil and stove oil 174.37; W. S. Gibson, sus, prem„ 332.12; bleat Supply, lail light 12,28; Doul Road Mach. Co., grader repair, 82.33; Listowel Banner, auly, gravel tender 3,30; W. C. Becker Equipment Co., 1. filters, 19.67; Harold Congram, soon removal, sub -div., 12,00; Mex Coulter snow removal, sldcl'oad, 165,00; Georg( ,E. Radford, snow removal, 1,716.00; Bic .'1, on; of Canada, Income tax, 55,50 General Cheques: 'tyle Winghanl Advance -Times, adv W/10.• tenders, 3.51; Brookhaven Nurs• ills Home, Main, of patent, 70,75; Towr of %ingham, to Rural Fire Committee 21205;541, M. Harper & Co., audit fees 1901.account, 300.00; Convention expels• ses: C. W. Hanna, 50.00, Roy Pciitison 50.00, Ernest Snell, 50,00, R. 11. Thomp son, 50.09: Auburn Memorial Ilall grant., 100.00; Direct Relief, for Alai eh 110,00. Moved by Robinson -Pattison, that council n1,jotu'n to 111001 April 3rd, a' one o'clock at the Belgrave Commun. ity C'calrc, Carried. C. W. 114111.11;i,1(. 1I. ThompsonReeve.Clerk. Unit 1) Meeting Unit D of the Nor 1Vestel:s (the name they have chosen) met at th.e, Thome o' ••'•• awl 1,M . Airs. Keith Webster CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES TIED AT ONE GAME EACH Names New Caretaker Horticultural Society The application of Mr. Leslie Fear as caretaker of Blyth Horticultural Park and other Ilorticultural projects was accepted at a Directors meeting o;attirOay afternoon held at the honk of Mr. and Airs. Elnersol Wright.. Plan:; were made for extensive plant - Mg in the Park, and also the purchase o1' 11 Dogwood Free for the Park was teliuncd. The president, Airs. l.rl'ne crinigeuur will attend IJie Provincia' lorticu'_tu1'al Convention to be held al Niagara Falls, March 15 Jand 113. The invitation to Mild the annual meeting ,1 District No 8 Horticultural Societies Ani lust 911i has been accepted by the District, The annual May-'l'ime tea wil )e held at the home of Mr's. Grace Mc L)alluni, definite (late to be set later Iepending on the weather and sprint lowers. The committee in charge served r ielightful lunch, GEORGE RADFORD CONSTRUCTION LTD. TO SUPPLY GItAVEL TO MORRIS TOWNSHIP The Council stet on March 5, with all the members present. The minutes of the last meeting were read and adopted on motion of Walter Sltortrced and 1Vm, Elston, Moved by Will. Elston, seconded by Ross Shins, that the tender of George !tailor! Construction Ltd, to supply, crush and deliver approximately 15,000 ':uhic yards of gravel at, 66 cents per yard be accepted subject to the ap• proeaal of the District Municipal En- gineer. Carried. There were foto' tenders received; (he highest tender being 72 cents per yo rd. Movers by Smith, seconded by James' Mair, that the application of Charles Souch as Warble Fly Inspector, be ac- cepted, rate of 'lay to be $1,00 per hour plus seven cents.per mile; the appli- cation of Clark 'Thynne as truck driv- er river be accepted, rate of pay to be $1,10 per :tour and the application of Walter Bacon as helper be accepted with rate of pay to be $1.00 per hour. Carried. Moved by Elston, seconded by Short - recd, that we charge telt cents per head per spray for warble fly spraying and sixty cents per pound for powder for .crabbing. Carried. Moved by Shor'treed, seconded by Mair, that we purchase 1000 lbs. of Warble Fly Powder to he divided equal- ly between Belgrave Co -Op and '1', 13 1lat's11011, Walton Carried. Moved by Mair, seconded by Shorts reed, that the road accounts as pre• _cntecl by the Road Superintendent be para, Carried. Moved by Smith, seconded by Elston, that the general accounts as presented he paid. Carried. 'The sleeting adjourned an motion of Elston and Mair, to meet actin on Ap- ril 2, 1962, at 1 p.m. or at the call of the Reeve, • The following general accounts were paid: Ronnenberg Ins. Agency, Bonds on Treasurer and Tax Collector, $49,50, Relief Account, 166.79; Pinecrest Man• or Ltd., Lucknow, 70.75; Gorge Mar. tin, hydro for hall, 6.09; Winghaln Dist. rict Fu'e Arca, calls and deficit, 287.05; Provincial Treasurer, Insulin, 2,12; Daily Commercial News, advertising 16.80; Callander Nursing Hosie, 70.75; Brookhaven Nursing Home, 141.50; Municipal World, supplies, 21.09; Town- ship of Ihtllett, Bryant Drain, 1121.22. Road Accounts: Wn1. M.cArter, wages, mileage, 0.0. R.A. and truck license, 241.00; wages: Jos C. Shull:, 293.25, Mel Craig, 294.40, Clarence White, 101,50; Wiugham Tire Service, lubes and service, 67.49; Alex lukley, gas, fuel oil and tax, 686.70; Western Tire, Klein Flo, 3,71; Ideal Supply Co. Ltd., starling fluid, 4.9.1; t'urdon Motors, light switches, 3.45; Dominion Road llktchinery Co., repairs 148,35; Glenn Snell, snow plowing 1244,75; J, C. McNeil, repairs, 32.65; Pollards Chain Saw, welding, 16.82, Doherty Bros., towing, 10,00; George Martin, hydro for shed, 11.86. Stewart Procter, George Martini. Reeve, Clerk. COUNTY FITLDMAN SHOWED FILMS TO IIULLETT hEDERATION The Huliett Federation of Agriculture held their regular meeting in the Com• hlwtily Hall, Londesboro, with a good attendance, 1[.r, Carl Hemingway wvas present sunt' showed a 1!1111 on "Farm Safety" w111101 was enjoyed by everyone.. lit his remarks following the film, he :cave food for though(. when he said "The warnings are there if we wotdc lust heed (111111." --•how true!! There was also a discussion un "lin :axa.tion of education," This is getting' to be quite a serious problems an( everyone Will have to stand togcthet in older to get sot w + 7 1e Iltilt+•" The final series for the WOAA Midget D Hockey Championship between Blyth and Mildmay now stands tied at one game each, with the final game this Friday night in Blyth, ice conditions permitting. If the current warm spell continues arrangements have been made to take the game to artificial ice in the Clinton Arena. The first game was played In the Blyth arena to a fairly good represen- tation of home -town fans, and pravea to be a ding dong battle all the way, with Blyth beating the visitors by a 5 to 4 score in 10 minutes overtime )flay, Blyth jumped into an early lead in the first period with a goal by Madill on an Iwsist from Pletcdt. Mildmay tic'J the score just before the period ended. Blyth came out strong in the second period and scored three goals, being able to hold Mildmay to one counter. Terry Madill sparked the Blyth atback with two goals, assisted on both by Tommy IIeffron. Pletch scored the other marker from Lawrie to make the score board read 4 to 2 in Blyth's favour at the end of the second. The two teams battled evenly for the first half of the final period then 12ildtnoy broke loose for a goal, making the score read 4-3 for Blyth. With only seconds left in the game the vis- itors pulled their goalie in favour of an extra forward and managed to lie the score in a goal -mouth scramble. in the overtime play a close check• ing duel prevailed until Don Appleby' took a pass .from Madill, broke over the Milcdmay blue line and scored the wining goal 09 a neat shot into the Mom left hand corner of the net. From this point on the local lads were in complete control of the game. The two seams renewed their battle the following night in Mildmay and saw a much better conditioned home- town learn win easily over Blyth by a 5.2 score. Mildmay scored two goals in earl• of the first two periods and \veto leading the game 4-0 going into the final frame. Blyth showed signs of a come -from -behind effort when they scored two quick counters on goals by Pletch from Heffron and Madill from Pletch. The fire was quelled when Mildmay broke loose for their fiftl• goal midway through the period. 4-I1 HOMEMAKING CLUB The Third meeting of the Blyth Seam - suers was held at the home of Mrs. W. Good 011 March 10 at 2;30 pain. and opened with the 4.11 Pledge. The roll call was taken and the nlhitttes of the last sleeting were react. There was a discussion on pinning the pattern on the material, cutting and narking. Mary Machan demonstrated how ma- terial is to be folded lengthwise off centre and pinning the pattern on, Mrs. G. Mason demonstrated stow to stay stitch and putting in a zipper, The next meeting will be at Mrs. Good's on March 24 at 2:15 p.m. when we will have the pleasure of having Miss Gilchrist, The meeting closed with the Mary Stewart Collect. EXECUTIVE MEETING The executive of the Blyth United Church Women will meet 011 Monday March 19, at 8.15 at tho home of Mrs. Grace McCallum. EVER -READY UNIT OF U,C,W, Unit, "A" the Ever -Ready Unit of the tT.C.1V, held their March meeting at the home of Mrs. Alex Logue with sew• enteen members present. The Devotional period was conducted by Mrs. Wm. McVittie wwhu opened the meeting with the singing of "Let the Beatty of Jmus he seen in me" follow- ed by prayer. Tine Scripture was rend by Mrs. M, Higginis and Mrs. Galbraith rave the '11iougllds for the Day entitled "The Man Up Stairs." Mrs. Buttell con- tributed a reaching and the third chap- ter of the Study Book "Youths inTrans• inion" was dealt with by Mrs. Wm, Mc - Vatic and proved very interesting when a discussion followed on ques` o": which the chapter presented, Hymn or,� was sung, The business period w^r 1" charge of Airs. Kress and plans were made to help cater to the Eastern Star banquet, It was also decided to have a Spring Tea in April at the home of 111:s, Kress, The Ever -Ready Unit will have charge of the regular March meet• ing in the church and plans were made for thin;. The April iii( .ing will be held id the !longe of Mrs. J. Fairsetv'ice when the Easter theme will be carried out. Lunch was served by Mrs, A. Pierce and errs Fairsetv'icc, and a vote of thanks extended to Mrs, Logue and the hostesses by Mrs. Win. 11IcVittle, Why All The Stir About Oscars? In Hollywood an Oscar means lull more today than just an ward for cinematic achievement. t is the sun and stars and Alad- in's lamp lumped into one rigid, mpassive, gold figurine. It can ;make careers. And in cold im- personal box office cash it is quite literally worth a million. It is only human, therefore, that people no longer merely wait and work and hope and pray to win one. They campaign for it. Ncminations for the 1961 Acad- emy Awards are now known. Performers and craftsmen in two dozen categories are now within reach of this most coveted award in the motion picture world. And the "campaigning," which began with the New Year, will continue in the weeks between now and April 9, when at least two dozen dreams will come true in a misty -eyed climax before millions of television viewers. It was not always thus. Back in 1927 the Academy Awards were established as a family af- fair. The idea was that the award ceremonies would be quiet, un- pretentious occasions in which performers would be honored for jutstanding achievement by a ury of their peers. There was never any intention or expectation then that it would become newsworthy. Motion pic- tures in those days were held in low repute, widely regarded as mostly frivolous timekillers, in- tellectually only a cut above pro- fessional baseball and perhaps a cut below the Chautauqua. But as the years rolled by radio began to cut in on the last 15 minutes of the ceremonies to record who won the acting awards. Then radio began airing the entire ceremony, and the Academy Awards began moving toward its present mixture of sober recognition of quality and TV spectacular. Last year's Academy Award presentations drew a larger TV audience than the Presidential inaugural. And in direct propor- tion that the Hooper ratings have 'increased, so has the yearning after an Oscar within the film in- dustry. Actor Wendell Core y, the handsome, affable president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, says with can- dor: "An Oscar must mean some- thing or people wouldn't struggle so hard to get it." The most obvious outward evi- dence that people do indeed struggle hard to get it, or at least to be nominated for it—which is almost as good for egos and ca- reers as winning—is the adver- tising campaign hopefuls wage in Hollywood trade publications. One observer who has followed the Academy since its earliest days estimates that the number of ads run each year in the trades has increased 10 times in the past 10 years. Only five years ago, before nominations, 77 full pages of ads appeared in the trades calling attention to potential awards win- ning performances or pictures. Another 77 pages appeared after nominations. Last year a whop- ping 321 pages of ads ran before nominations and 2171/2 between nominations and awards night, Nobody in the Academy really objects to this. It's not the quan- tity of ads that irks, but their sometimes offensive quality. "We don't really care how many ads a person wants to run urging Academy members to see his picture," says one high -rank- ed Academy official. "What we object to is when a performer or somebody comes out flatly and says 'vote for me'," Last year quality became par- ticularly offensive, causing the Academy's board to promulgate a code of advertising ethics, This code was aimed not at stemming quantity, but at cutting out ques- tionable quality, There is no proof that "cam- paigeing" for an Oscar has ever influenced any outcome, People repeatedly win who haven't spent a dime, And despite some admitted faults, the Academy has kept the Oscars in the cinematic world the Oscars free from taint, No award in the cinematic world is so enduring or so dearly covet- ed. And this would not be so If the winners were determined by full page ads in Daily Variety. There is little doubt, however, that an Oscar can skyrocket ca- reers and fill pocketbooks. And nobody in the Academy really objects to that either. An Oscar is widely conceded to be worth an extra $1,000,000 at the box office for whatever pic- ture wins one. "And if an agent had a client who had won an Academy Award or a nomination," adds Mr. Corey, "and didn't use that fact as a level for negotiating contracts, he would be a pretty lousy agent." But none of this is really so important as another question that is often widely overlooked: Have the Academy Awards in their 34 years done anything to improve the quality of motion pictures? That was the main reason they were established in the first place. But anybody who tries to assess the success or failure in this fundamental goal must r e - sort to hunches, impressions, and dead reckoning. Nobody knows for certain if films have become better because of Oscars or not. Mr. Corey can't even say for certain if they have, But he will say that "an award for excel- lence is bound to upgrade some- thing. More people are trying now to win Academy Awards. And you've got to make a good picture to do it." How You Can Kill Any Organization 1. Do not conte to the meeting; or, if you do, come late. Do not think of coming if the weather does not suit, or if you have another engagement of less im- portance. 2. If you attend a meeting, find fault with the work of the offi- cers (Particularly the secretary) and other members. 3. Never be nominated for the committee. It is far easier to criticize than to do things. Be sure, however, to be annoyed if you are not appointed to a com- mittee. 4. If you are asked by the chairman to give your opinion on an important matter, tell him • that you have nothing to say. After a meeting tell everyone what should have been dont. 5, Do nothing yourself. If other members get busy, grumble and declare that the association is run by a clique. 6. Do not listen to the business, and afterwards say that nobody ever tells you anything. 7. Vote in favor of something, and then do exactly the oppo- site. 8. Agree with everything that is said in the meeting and dis- agree outside. 9. Get all the benefits you can through the work of the asso- ciation, but do not contribute anything yourself, 10. If you are asked to pay your overdue subscription, re- sent such impertinence and ten- der your resignation. ADVICE FOR YOUNGSTERS—Astronaut John Glenn, in his comments before the Senute Space and Aeronautics Com- mittee, advised young men who want to take part in the space program to get the finest general education they can. ._ s Well, have you all caught your second wind? Who would have thought last week would be so momentous , .. John Glenn final- ly going into orbit? For the next few days we heard of little else so I won't add to what you al- ready know — except to say this, To me the most heart-warming incident of the whole marvellous achievement was the attitude of John Glenn himself. His modesty, and his generous insistence that the success of the entire project was the result of good team work from start to finish. No doubt he was right but a man with less personality might have been ex- cused had he retained a little more of the honour and glory for himself. Another thing 1 like about him is his delightful sense of humour — which he certainly needed to help hint endure all the publicity that came his way. So, like everyone else, I am glad to say "hats off to Lt. -Col. John Glenn". Now I hope the public will show a little understanding and give the poor fellow a chance to get a little peace and quiet- ness, As you know,, after the Glenn excitement, almost everyone in Ontario towards the end of the week came out of the clouds and down to earth with a vengeance — to an earth that was covered by ice and mountains of snow, driven by a strong east wind. This morning our driveway was completely filled in and the back- door blocked by a huge snow- drift. It was a mercy it was Sat- urday so that fewer people had . to fight their way to work. Even so driveways had to be cleared from every house, so shovels were soon in action, Then after a double wheel track was clear- ed to the road the inevitable hap- pened — along came the snow- plough and blocked the entrance to all the driveways. More shovelling! But yet everyone, around here anyway, seemed to be in good spirits, neighbours resting on their shovels once in a while, joshing each other about our nice Canadian winters, In one house there was a temporary grass widow with two small chil- dren. Naturally the men rallied to her assistance although she insisted on helping with the job herself. Partner was busy most of the day and had wheel tracks dug before the delivery men. came around. As for the things I meant to do during the week, some of them got done, some of them didn't. Between storms I man- aged to get to the hairdressers for a "perm" so I now feel like a different person. Wednesday was such an awful day — snow, rain, fog and drizzle — that I went to bed quite sure I couldn't make it to Toronto next day, But in the morning it began to clear and I was able to catch the ten - thirty bus. After all, you think twice these days before cancell- ing an appointment with an eye - specialist, And am 1 glad I kept it! I thought ,my glasses needed been satisfied. His patients were in and out of his office as if they were on an assembly line. He asked little and said less. I start- ed making inquiries and a friend told me how much she liked an- other eye -specialist, So I made an appointment with him and liked him immensely. Instead of a ten-minute consultation I was in his office two hours. As I said before he didn't change my glass- es. This doctor said my main trouble was dry eye -sockets — terribly dry. "Don't I know it," 1 exclaimed, "I have been trying to tell doctors and oculists that for five years. I don't suppose I could cry if I wanted to!" "And that's a pity," said the doctor, "a little cry sometimes does a lot of good," He gave me a prescription for some kind of eye -drops to act as a lubricant for the eyes. In less than two days there was a tremendous im- provement. I suppose the human body is much like any other form of machinery — and we know ball -bearings won't work with- out lubrication. . That was the same day I was supposed to stay overnight with my daughter and to go to the Girl Guide Festival with her. But I phoned her that I was go- ing straight home — I couldn't take the mud and slush any long- er. I never saw Toronto in such a filthy mess. While waiting for the bus if I stood near the kerb I got plastered with slush; if I stood well back there was a chance of missing the bus. But I finally made it — and was never so pleased in my life to get back home. Next day there was promise of more bad weather on the way so I got the car out and rushed around paying bills and shopping. The storm came all right but it found our refrigera- tor well filled. Today is Ross's birthday , . , more excitement. And weather "probs" are for an- other storm from the east! There's never a dull moment any more. If variety is the spice of life, we're getting it! ! Even the Maple Leafs managed to wrest a game from the Bruins! She Prefers Love To Liberty The family of Paulius Leonas would never forget that reunion at Chicago Midway Airport two short years ago. It was a raw, gray, and windy day — but a joyous one, Reporters, photogra- phers, and more than 200 Chi- cagoans of Lithuanian extraction crowded around Paulius and his wife, Elena, as they waited for the big DC -7C to touch down. Then at the top of the plane's ramp, pausing for just a second, stood blond, blue-eyed, 20 -year- old Regina Leonas and her tow- headed, square -jawed, 17 -year- old brother Tomas, For fifteen years, they had been separated from their parents by the Iron Curtain. The crowd cheered and ap- plauded and the two children raced down the ramp into the arms of their parents, All four wept and embraced as micro- phones were thrust at them from every direction. "1 can thank Khrushchev and the American press," said Paulius, "This is a joy. This a free and wonderful • country. This is the most excit- ing day of my life. They are free ,,, they are free ,.," Paulius Leonas did, indeed, owe the Soviet Premier thanks. The Leonases, Lithuanian -born American citizens, had fled the Russian wartime advance into their country, leaving Regina and Tomas with grandparents. When Khrushchev visited the U.S. In September .-1959, the Leonases caught up with him in the lobby of a Des Moines hotel, tearfully begged him to let their children conte to America. Khrushchev promised he would and after a four-month delay, kept his w )rd, Yet even as Regina radiated smiles at the reunion with her parents, there were strains of sorrow in her heart. Left behind in Lithuania was her schooldays' sweetheart, 25 -year-old music teacher Stasys Bikulcius. As time wore on, Regina went to work as an inventory taker in a downtown Chicago clothing store, attended night classes to learn English. But she was shy and refused to date American boys. She thought only of Stasys, and in the two years since their separation they wrote about 160 letters to one another. She also tried to have him brought to this country, but her efforts failed, Having reached a hard deci- sion, Regina was interviewed one day last week in the red -carpet- ed living room of the Leonases' new, two-story brick combina- tion home and real-estate office on Chicago's South Side. Her talkative father sat on a sofa on one side of her, her quiet, ner- vous mother on the other. Re- gina, too, seemed nervous, and spoke in Lithuanian. Her father acted as translator for the inter- view, Having failed to bring Stasys here, she was going back to Lith- uania to marry him, "I think she is taking a very big chance," her father said. "There's a great pos- sibility she might not be allowed to leave, I think she's making a mistake, and if it were up to me, I'd stop her from going. But it is inevitable, So I have to live with that. "When they are married, she. will apply . for his entry. Since he is her husband, he will not come under any quota. Whether the Russians will let him leave is to be seen." If her husband is refused permission to leave Lith- uania, Regina will remain there with him, Late .the next afternoon, Re- gina went to Chicago's O'Hare airport to begin the long jour- ney back behind the Iron Cur- tain, Her parents were there, her brother, seven family friends, and a priest. There were no smiles this time. ISSUE 11 — 1962 "'Phis is Bite a funeral to me," said Paulius Leonas, Will Begin• return with Stasys? "I have no grudge against Khrushchev, lie fulfilled his original promise. But if he wants to be 150 per cent, he can do this and let them return." From NEWSWEI 1C Idling Along Old Ontario Roads This begins with praise of certain roads in southern Ontario as they were thirty or more years ago. They were not considered important roads, Some had been marked off as what the province called concession lines, but for one reason or another they had never been opened to traffic — roads in intention only, Other. had fallen into partial or cotn- piote disuse. Some were not properly roads at all, but aban- doned railroad rights of way. But they all shared this one peculiar- ity that, for the few human trav- elers who frequented them, the road itself was a destination, in- stead of merly leading to one. They were for those who believe that it is better to travel than to arrive . They had no particular beginning or end, and to hurry along them was impossible.. , . One of the best of these roads ran from east to west through part of the township of Enn. - ismore, a long peninsula between two lakes of the Kawartha chain. Ennismore had a casual, easy- going way about it, and this par- ticular road was steeped in the very essence of Ennismore. It ran and dipped and turned as if to a S_ e W rw. Mr-oa.� .r,,. 1.,1 ~' ' ' and don't behforget wash behind the fenders," l 4 al fiddler's tune, It afforded glimpses of the blue lake to the south, and the smell of the lake was in the air. Farms did not face upon the road but backed up to it, and wild ducks often flew in from the marshes along the lake's edge to feed in the grain fields. That road stays most clearly la memory as it was in October, with a lively wind out of the west sending the fallen leaves flying across it, and apples on the neglected old trees along the way already touched by frost, The lake had changed colour, reflect ing the clearer blue of the sky, and those were good days for watching the habits of clouds. The land lay bare, and its beauty, now that the hardwoods had lost their leaves, was rather of line and form than of colour, Only the wintering birds remained, and toward dusk of a gusty day the. sky would fill with the honking of Canada geese, their wedges pointed south. To one on foot, whose only concern was to fill his ek"e, and his mind, there was nothing sad about October w eether. It tingled with life, and yet it was leisurely — which spring never was. Just possibly, this idling along old roads may be condemned as escape, as an attempt to get away from duties -end responsibilities. But the workaday world is only part of an older and much wider world into which we are born. If this is escape, it is to a rich and living freedom. It is the return a prodigal, the resumption of a birthright, It is going back to a place we may .leave but never wholly lose, -From "Speak to the Earth," by William A.:,Breyfogle, SESSION — The Earl of Snowdon and his wife,.Princess'Margaret, ord Snowdon's firstattendance at a session of the upper ur after he took his seat in a quairt and colorful r controversy over his job on a London newspaper. ret" that he had joined another union, Ono Winner Who Knew When To Stop Among all the big-time gam - b : rs w113 111' ''C r:. iii fortune's at Mont^ C:'rio e::sino, the number who had the st..cn"th of will not. to try their luck any further can hr. counted nn enc Chief (f lh .:: strung-mindr_d exceptions was t: ugh, American - born Wit lirm Ncl:on Darnhor- oii In six months' continuous play, he w o n nearly $250,0(10. 113uueclictily afterwards, this one -bine profcssienal baseball player gay e cup gambling for (rood — to win the hand 01 0 beautiful English girl! That Dill Darnborough was a rale exception is shown by Inc fate of a fellow -sportsman, the great jjc::'l:cy Toot Sloan. In tcn years' racing, Sloan m c.e $250,000, Most of it went oe betting or stocks which prov- ed 1) be w: Lrthless. During his first year on the British turf, he had the amazing total of forty-three winners ,and twenty-one seconds out of only ninety-eight mounts. But in 1900 the racing author- ities learned that he had backed him cif to win $300,000 on his mount, Codoman, in the Cam- bridgeshire, and he was advised not to re -apply for a licence. (Codoman, incidcntallly, carne In second.) To get over this blow, Sloan went to Monte Carlo and em- b114►,ted on a wild gambling spree. Soon lie was down to his last five dollars. Undeterred, he borrowed $75 to enter a big shooting contest, which he won. Now $2,500 in pocket, he made straight for the tables and, by the end of the .'ening was showing a profit of nearly $15,000. But the ex -jockey made. the mistake of thinking he had struck a long run of luck, ile returned to the casino next eve- ning. Two days later, he was broke. Sloan's up-and-coming gambl- ing fortunes continued to the end, Playing baccarat at Los Angeles in August, 1933, he lost $3,500 in an hour, Four months later, he died at the age of fifty:nine_ once,again, a poor. man.. One of the biggest winners was Andre Ardisson, known as the "King of the Cardsharpers." Though nobody ever detected his method of cheating, he was barred from all casinos, But he was so skilled at dis- guising himself that he continu- ed to gamble at will. Once, dis- guised as an elderly nobleman in t! wheelchair, he made $15,000 In a single night at baccarat In another week-long session, dress- ed as an Indian prince, he won $30,000. Ardisson's d o w n f a 11 came when he convinced himself that he was invincible at any form of gambling — even the Stock Exchange. He invested heavily, but bad luck seemed to dog every share he touched. Soon he was penniless. In 1022, unable to bear the stigma of poverty any longer, he com- mitted suicide, Where Bill Darn - borough differed most from the big gamblers who didn't know when •to stop was in his deter- mination and long-term plan- ning. His v©ry career as a gambler was the result of a youthful vow of revenge, It started after he'd become a _prof ., onaL--1•laseball player as a youth of eighteen, earning what was then big money. His first month's salary was $150. Exhilarated by such a large sum, he decided to have a tling at roulette. Twenty minutes la- ter, every penny had gone, Bid Darnborough swore to have his vengeance on the tables, To get the necessary capital, he entered the' hotel business, and for the next few years built up his savings. Finally, in 1900, he sailed fpr Europe to put his vengeance plan into operation. He started in a shabby little gambling club in .Rotterdam, learning everything he could about all the games' of chance played in European casinos. When he considered he was ready, he descended on Monte SAVE A LIFE — Police Chief Adolph Jaggi follows the Bib- lical proverb "A good name, etc.," in making Argyle, Wis., a model of traffic safety. At his own expense he provides jolting road signs at village gateways, eschews electronic traps which, he says, "give a town a bad name. Signs bring no fines, just save lives," Carlo. The ex - baseball player gambled far more heavily than the other glamourous figures who attracted most of Monte Carlo's fame, writes David Bra - ham in "Tit -Bits," The total sum of money pass- ed back and forth between him and the croupiers often reached over a million dollars a day. At. such times, spectators would be packed six deep behind his chair. I -Ie had a preference for num- bers ending in nine, particularly number twenty-nine. When the instinct moved him, he would relax and wait, not even touch- ing the piles of gold coins on the green baize cloth in front of him, Then suddenly his hands would flash out at lightning speed, straddling number twen- ty-nine in every possible way. In seconds, with his gold coins placed" on 'the number in full, on the corners; and straddled with adjoining numbers, he would have s t a k e d anything up to $5,000. Although Darnborough seem- ed to be casual about money, it was really just another exam- ple of his careful planning. He always collected his win- nings in cash and returned straight to his hotel. 'There he gave $0,000 or so to the mana- ger, asking him — in a loud voice so that any potential thief could hear — to lock the money in the hotel safe. Then, before going to bed, he went out for a breath of fresh air. In reality, though, he strolled round to the garage and put the bulk of his money — sometimes $50,000 or more — under the mat in his car. Even his own chauffeur knew nothing about it. And so Darn - borough was never robbed. Naturally, his luck was not always so good. In October, 1910, however, he returned to Monte Carlo with $5,000 and settled down to the most intensive gambling session of his life. He still found time during this period to fall deeply in love with a beautiful English girl, Frances Shaw, But her family would not hear of her marrying an American — and a gambler. Darnborough, with a wry grin, observed that his farming par- ents were descended from York- shire immigrants — and went on gambling, At last he decided to call a halt. In the preceding six months, he and the croupiers had tossed to and fro the fan- tastic sum of $250,000,000 on which he had made a profit of just under $250,000, He invested more than half his winnings in reliable stocks and used the rest to set himself up in a car business. Then he sought out Frances Shaw. "I'f yoti marry n10," he said, "I promise never to gamble again." She agreed — a.nd 13111 Darn - borough kept his promise till the day of his death, in his ninetieth year, just three years ago. Q. Ilow caul I add a dainty aroma to our blankets, chenille robes, spreads, and the 1lice? A, When laundering these articles, add some of your fa- vourite bath salts to the last rinsing water, and let them soak for about 10 minutes, They will be nice and fluffy, and smell wonderful, too. ISSUE 11 — 1110* Getting Away With Murder The wife's hometown weekly newspaper arrived yesterday morning carrying news of a drunken driver who drove on the wrong side of an unloading school bus, struck and killed a six-year- old girl getting off the bus at per farm home. The penally meted out to this "businessman gone astray" was a $1,000 fine and a five-year sus- pended sentence. It cost him less to kill a first grader than it did to buy the car that killed her. A rare miscarriage of justice? Not at all, It happens every day of the year in this enlightened country of ours, Last year a local driver re- ceived an identical sentence, less the tine, for killing a mother and two children of a family in an accident on the freeway south of Eugene. Returning home from an all-night party at Cottage Grove, the young driver entered the wrong lane of the freeway and struck the family station wagon, killing three of five members of the family. Questioned, the judge said that Oregon law forced him to be concerned with rehabilitation of the convicted killer rather than punishment. A few years ago we were in- volved personally in the after- math of an accident in which the mother, father and two of thcee children in a family were killed on a.vacation trip by a drunken driver roaring down the wrong side of the highway at 80 miles an hour, Part of a two -car caravan go- ing to the lake for a two-week vacation, the family driving in front hit the ditch to avoid the onrushing drunk, The second car was a sitting duck for a head-on crash, The penalty for this quadruple murder was a $100 fine and no sentence, suspended 'or otherwise. And so it goes .. , ad nauseam. Who's to blame for this accept- ed state of affairs? You are . , , the smug, compla- cent citizens who cluck like an old hen over murder at their back door and neither say nor do any- thing about it. The drunk driver is still "so- cially acceptable" . , , a poor, unfortunate critter who has simply had one too many and too little sense left in his befuddled head to know better than to drive. Their hands dripping with the blood of innocent bystanders, these killers have no more right to be returned to a "normal" ex- istence by our courts than the "mad dog" killers who wander loose with a shotgun. The drunk driver is just as mentally crippled as the insane , just as potentially dengertnls to the people around him as the psychopathic maniac . . with one significant difference, The drunk driver makes Isis own mental instability , , . delib- erately and with ill-considered forethought. Ile gets drunk by his own volition , .. his deadly condition is self-induced. The insane might be excused for a condition over which he has no control . , . the drunk driver does not have this excuse. Nine times out of ten he'll loudly pro- claim his fitness to drive even if 11e can't talk. Yet our courts, under existing laws and social pressures to keep them ineffective and hamstrung, mete out suspended sentences and relatively insignificant fines for bloody murder and thousands of crushing, crippling pain - wracking injuries day in and day out, Concerned about rehabilitat- ing the poor, unfortunate drunks who drive, the courts turn them loose to kill again , , , turn them loose where other potential drunken killers can take heart from their freedom , , , can see how little it costs - to drink and drive and kill, Why shouldn't the drunk drive? What has he got to lose if the Ile • • - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING - AGENTS SALES OPPORTUNITY SALESMAN required for outstanding line of calendars and advertising sFle• clalties. Generous commission and bo nus contract Ivor active man who %vents high earnings and repeat buslrtess. No objection to another non•competitive line. Write Nichols Advertisers Ltd„ 23.29 Janet Ave„ 'Toronto 4. BABY CHICKS REACH best egg markets by ordering now, Bray has for prompt shipment Amts, Sykes, and Comet egg special. Ists, doyold to readyto•lay. Also mixed chicks and dnyold cockerels. Request trrlcelist. See local agent, or Write BraY Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ontario. BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE FOR SALE - Grocery Store at Sauble Bench, 11 ft. meat cooler, furnished ru'ldence, arcade room, gas pumps. Easy terms. Apply Mrs 'Theo Semmon, 600 f, Ave., West, Owen Sound, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES BOWLING lanes, 8, completely equip. ped, excellent condition. nutomalle foul lights, complete snack hers Purchaser to remove tones from m,miclpalltY• Owner moving to new location Open for offers. David's Bowl•O Drnme 31 Dundas E . Trenton. Ont. ATTENTION MEN WITH INITIATIVE AND DESIRE TO GET AHEAD. SMALL Investment required to get started In n very profitable bust• ness right In your own home town. Limited number of dealerships nvallnble In towns and clues throughout southern Ontario, If you have the required desire to succeed we may have the oppor• tunny you have been looking for. For full Information contact BRUCE SMITH. SUN.GLO PRODUCTS LTD., 1 VANCOUVER AVE., TORONTO EXCLUSIVE Franchiser open In various parts of Ontario for 11,11. Facto•v Built Homes & Summer Cottage dlspla• courts or Sales outlets We will help you get started and provide major fine/icing We can finance all .sales, no down payment necessary. INTERPROVINCIAL HOMES 113 Ferguson N„ Hamilton LADIES' SPECIALTY SHOP BLENHEIM, ONT, Thriving, prosperous town, rich agri- cultural area. Excellent location. Good lease, low overhead., Good turnover with great potential. inventory and fix• tures for sale of rood clean stock. Owner must sell on account of 111 health, Write to Carolynn Shop for appointment CONSTRUCTION BUSINESS FOR SALE Full line of Construction machinery - Bulldnzers, Dragllne shovels, Bridge building equipment, Dam building equipment and Plle driving equipment, with some contracts for sprint/ Phone Port Burwell 874.4301 or write P.O. Box 30, Vienna --.COINS WANTED COiNS WANTED Pay for Canadian cents Fine or Netter, 1922, $4.50: 1923, $6,75; 1924 $1.50; 1925, $5.00. More prices In the 1962 Coln Catalogue 25c. Gary's 18) 9910 Jnsper, Edmonton, Alta. DOGS LAB. RETRIEVER PUPPIES CleC Registered Excellent show and field stock, Pedigree furnished. Health guaranteed, Whelped 17 Dec., '61. The world's hest Retriever and companion clog, Also some trained pups, 9 months old, from Champion stock. • STUD SERVICE • HAWKRIDGE KENNELS Reg'd 1110 Lakeshore Rd. FAMOUS RECIPES 18 'TREASURED family Recipes from the old South, including Colonial spoon bread, crab !Renville, creamy pralines. Send $1.00. Aunt Val, Box 4554. 1(o• bile, Alabama. worst happens'?. \Vhat is there to make him pause before getting behind the wheel or to ask some- one else to drive? 1:'s a matter of court record right here in the Emerald Em- pire that he can get away with minder far relatively nothing.— Emerald Empire News (Eugene, Ore.) ' How Can 1? Ily Roberts Lee Q. !low can I prevent macar- oni er spaghetti from sticking to the hnttonl of the pan in which it is cooked? A. By lightly greasing the in- side of the pan before putting the water on to boil, Q, What can I do when I have inadvertently added too much salt to food while cooking? A. Stretch a clean cloth tight- ly over the vessel and sprinkle a tablespoon of flour over the cloth. The flour will absorb the salt, if allowed to steam for a few minutes, FARMS FOR SALE FOR sale, $6,500 Cash, 100 acres, Hot• land township, Grey county, 90 miles north of Toronto. For further particu- lars apply Wilmer Clark, Route 1, Berkeley FARM, 100 acres near Brooksdale 8,00(1 sq. ft. bank {earn, excellent land all workable, Donald J Innes, Embro, 475.9673. TOBACCO farm, 109 acres, fully equip. ped,aVien9 na, phres one R.Good Burwelltion 874• 9301 or write P 0, Box 30, Vienna. _ FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE D.2 CATERPILLAR crawler, Bulldozer and Suhsotler, used 2,600 hours; new i.11.C, Farman 960D; new T.D.5 I.H.C. Crawler; Cockshutt 40D and Super C fast Hitch with cultivator and mower. 12 used Tractors to sell; 70 Inch Rotor Tiller. Special prices and terms Os• trander Sales & Service. 901 Talbot St., St. Thomas. Phone ME 1.0307. FOR SALE - David Brown 850 Dem. onstrator, 1957 Ford 'tractor with Dear. born loader and blade excellent, Mas• sey 44, Massey 101, Dozer blade with pump and controls, Davis 1'66 Trench. er demonstrator, Howard 317' Rota vator demonstrator, Seaman 50" Til. ler, 90 Inch Rotary Mowers, Holland Transplanter demonstrators, Post Aug. ers, Sprayers, Full Line of used Spread.' ers, Plows, Discs, Rototillers, Tractors, Pumps, Phllhrick Form Equipment, Vineland, (.Ogen 2.4513. FRUIT PLANTS HOME GARDENER save on quality perennial fruit plants - 20 Strawberry plants, 12 raspberry, 2 grapes, 10 as- paragus, 2 black currants, 2 red cur. rants, 2 blackberry, 1 gooseberry and 2 rhubarb roots. All nine varieties for $12.00 postpaid. Order direct to Spring Valley Nursery, Box 722, Milton, On. tarlo, for Spring planting, FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS CUT YOUR OWN HAIR With Penn's "Easytrim" haircutting comb No eklll required. Saves barber's fees For men, ladles' and children's hair Only $1.50 prepaid Ifughsons, W., 16, August Avenue, Scarhoro On. tarso CURE LEAKING FAUCETS Fix any standard faucet In 3 minutes. Stops leaks Instantly. Doesn't ..wear seat of faucet. Solid brass and net). prene. Seal replaces old screw and washer. Lasts 10 times longer. 5 seals post paid $1.00. TUCK ENTERPRISES 621 Willard Ave., Toronto 1 or R.R. No. 1, Milton, Ont, S LBS. Velveteen or print cotton $1.98, itetnnants. Assorted colours. Make kid. dies' clothing. quilts, hats, doll clothes, caps, overalls Also 29 yds, quilted silk remnants $2.98, 4 lbs. yard pieces, no batting necessary. 3 lbs.• leathercloth or sultings $3 98. Embroidery yarns 2 lhs. 81.98 Elastic V4"•2". width, 2 Ins. $2.50 Satin ribbon, 4" to 7" wide, 20 yds. ribon,p300tyds,l2 $1 yds. Cotton bias, navy brown. black, 300 yards 51.00. Re. mit $1.00, balance collect. Schaefer, Drummondville. Quebec. • •- • VIBRATIONS REALLY ARE GOOD FOR YOU Be In heaven SLEEP ON A CLOUD tlelp yourself RELIEVE YOUR TiRED BACK Look forward to bedtime RELAX AND SLEEP DEEP and Friends Wake up more refreshed than ever be. fore. No ridiculous prices, just a good product manufactured with a low over. head so as to make It available to one and all, Budget Plan If necessary: for further Information,. write EXCELSIOR AGENCIES 522 Hamilton Rd. (Rear) London, Ont. HORSE SALE Quarter Horse Sale APRIL 14, 1962 3rd Annual MICHIGAN STATE FAIRGROUNDS Detroit, Michigan. For Catalogues Contact Bud Leetch or Tom McKinley Fenton, Mich., U.S.A. JOB OPPORTUNITIES SUNNY Southern California lobs In• terestfng, plentiful, varied. 13y return mall big help ‘‘'anted Ads Send $2.00, \'ern Ardiff, 323 No Soto, Los Angeles 33. California MEDICAL GC'OD RESULTS—EVERY SUFFERER FROM RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS .SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.. MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1,25 Express Collect TRUSSES! For ruptures, Boston style elastic. self fitting First time offered. Direct from maker to wearer, Haga Appliances, 609 East 3rd Street. New- port, Kentucky. 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 13.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 1865 St. Clair Avenue East Toronto OPPORTUNITIES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BE A HAIRDRESSER JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing.. Pleasant dignified profession, (food wages Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System Illustrated Catalogue Free Write or Cal Marvel Hairdressing School 358 Bloor St, W., Toronto Branches: 44 King St W., ilamilton 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa PERSONAL CHEAP Living under *60 monthly beautiful Guadalajara, Informati booklet with complete fuels, figure only $2.00. Herbert Schulstadt, 4 Juan de Zumarruga, Guadalajara, Me leo. HYGIENIC RUBIlE R GOODS - 'Tested, guaranteed, mailed In plain parcel ht: chiding catalog free with trial assorrtt ment. 36 for $2.00 illness - quality Western Distributors, Box 24•'1'1'', lie- gine, Sask. OVERWEIGHT? A safe., effective reducing Plug with "Way -Les" 'Tablets Medically approved, 1 month's supply $7 00, Lyon's Drugb, Dept 32, 471 Danforth Ave., 'I oronto. COUPLE WANTED CATHOLIC COUPLE TO LOOK AFTER APPROX. 6 CHILDREN IN TORONTO. PREFERABLY A CHILDLESS COUPLE OR WITH GROWN FAMILY. 1N GOOD HEALTH AND WITH LIKING FOR CHILDREN. WOULD PRE- FER HUSBAND TO HAVE REG- ULAR EMPLOYMENT DURING THE DAY BUT BE WILLING TO HELP EVGS, AND WEEKENDS. WILL ASSIST IN FINDING A SUITABLE HOUSE AND PRO- VIDE R E G UL fi•R REMUNERA- TION FOR SERVICES. - POR FURTHER INFORMATION CALL MISS A. S Z A M M ER 6, • CATHOLIC CHILDREN'S AID 60- CIE•TY, 26 MAITLAND SREET, TORONTO; -WA. -5.6641, •••- --- PHOTOGRAPHY NEW ROLL OF rILM -- with each f11rq developed, printed or . mounted. - Black & White Roll Film 8 exp, 1100, 12 exp. $1.25 S5mm 20 exp. $1.85, 36 exp. $2.85 Kodacolor 8 ex. $3.75, 12 ex, $4.75, 20 ex, $5.75 Anscochrome Ektachrome 20 exp. $2,88 Get 8mm Color Movie Film incl. pro- cessing $2.94 Money order or C.O.D. Photo Service, Box 10, Mldland, Ont. PROPERTIES FOR SALE EXECUTIVE dream home 1n Hfghlant( Park Preston. Private master bedroom 3 outer good sized bedrooms, one knotty pine, entrance hall and dlnln area In lovely panelling. Living room Ideal for formal entertaining, all thtw desired bunt • Ins In the kitchen, two fireplaces, game room, utility room, storage room. Call, collect, or write John Reeve, Real Estate Broker, 444 King St. E., Preston, Ont.. Dial 03 -5450. POULTRY CRATES FOR SALE HAULING poultry? Do It with Stott Poultry Shipping Crates. Write today .for your free folder and price list, Stag Manttfactttrcrs, Box 53. St Jacobs. On- tario.� _ SEED FOR SALE DO \'OU WANT QUALITY? You pa no more for the best 'That's "Gold Seal Seeds" for all your seed grain re- quirements this year. Ask your local dealer to show you a sample of the Russell, Rodney or Garry oats We have to offer. Compare and then place your order Be sure to specify "King Gold Seal Brand" King Grain and Seed Co Ltd. Chatham, Ontario STAMPS 35 DIFFERENT stamps of Ghana. used, no Gold Coast, some overprints, SI. Itldgeutotint, alit Spence, \\'fnulpeg '2, Manitoba, TRADE SCHOOLS ACETYLENE, electric welding and Argon courses Canada Welding Can- non and Ilaisant N., nonillion. Shop Li 4.12114 Res 1,1 5.4283 WANTED TO BUY 111 GILiST..Prices Paid for 01(1 Canada, U.S„ Newfoundland stamp s•e 0 ins, Write. ,lot 1lorgan..1)tUlkfr6. N \' MERRY MENAGERIE :' '., ; ,; •Ii1' ' - 1 1 r {ca M Jii ' i I "I've always wondered how 1 would feel to be kissed by someone WITHOUT a , mustache!" ALL THIS - and Europe too! FROM THE MOMENT YOU STEP ABOARD ▪ FUN, PLEASURE, RELAXATION • MEMORABLE MENUS • DANCING, FIRST -RUN MOVIES • SUPERB CUNARD SERVICE • 275 LBS, BAGGAGE ALLOWANCE PAY LATER IF YOU WISH See Your Travel Agent Cor, Bay & Wellington Sts., IToronto, Ontario Tel: 362-2911 ------------ X19 5 0* ONE WAY 10% REDUCTION ON ROUND TRIP *114 THRIFT SEASON ?EARLY MONTREAL SAILINGS IVERNIA APRIL 13, MAY 4, 25 COBH, HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON SAXONIA APRIL 20, MAY 11 HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON CARINTHIA APRIL 21, MAY 18 GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL STARTING MAY 4, IVERNIA CALLS AT COBH ON ALL SAILINOS Also regular killings from New York by the QUEEN ELIZABETH and QUEEN MARY, world's largest Ilners CUNARD 4000006 PLY CUNARD EAGLE TO BERMUDA, NASSAU AND EUROPE ----------./ ye PAGE 4 SPRING ILAS COME TO OUR STORE bringing Children's Coats and Coit Sets, 2 - 6x Girls' and Teen Coats, wools, all weathers and laminates, newe,+l Girls' and 'Teen Suits Hats For Al!, lovely spring shades Dresses in the newest materials and shadeE. NeedlecraFt Shoppe Phone 22 111)ill, Ont. 4.1 Clinton Memorial Shop T. PItYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — $EAPOSTH LOCAL ttlLPRESEN'1•AT1VE — THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES; CLINTON: Bossiness,--Sa 2•8603 Residence --Bu 2-3869 Business 41 Residence 34 Arnaminstommosomsolommik FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest- aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full - course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts. HtJRON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO FRAN K GONG, Froprietor. W A LLA CE's DRY GOODS —Blyth— BOOTS & SHOES Phone '13. YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN- KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS JEANS and OVERALLS. DItY CLEANING PICK-UPS TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M. Wingharn Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day, CEMETERY LETTERING, Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'YION. • ST, PATRICK'S DANCE Sponsored by Blyth Legion Branch 420 BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL FRIDAY, MARCH 16th • music by PIERCE'S ORCHES'T'RA Lunch Counter Admission at Popular Prices 4z' • Used STEEL PIPE ALL �n, STRU(TURAL STEEL 143EAMS -- ANGLE IRON — PLATE USED CAR PARTS Electric Motors - h• to • Goderich Salvage Prop., K. Kempf JA 4.8741 20$ Nelson L„ Cotner ,Maitland -- Gotlfrfch HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR YOUR OLD CARS, SCRAP LEON, BATTERIES k METAL Check 1Vith lis Before You Shc Your Scrap %ai..JA.. -.J.. '..t --. .. r- ICK.al-..L'..:-.�N..,.N.,L .41.. THA STA'tARt) _,114.:.••w�.�. - YE .11r. and Mrs, William MeNall anti Aliehael vis?ted on Friday with A1r, and Mrs. John Thompson ax(I family, at 131uotale, Mr, and Alra. Gordon llc,;; and fang ily, of 'i'oroio, t'is1Jleti revel',tly with hear I areutS, Air, rind \11';, Albin Itt•u(( Air. and Airs, John 1',. AteCaIIt m arc sttrnd!II,, ;l fzty days with their in•iaw and dau4 '.ter, Air. and Mrs. George Juts(,; and lrcl'?, at l.e l.o.t. Mr. and AIH:. Cir?din WIr.:,..".er and fanny, of 1 car::'n, spent. fte WC:2l:110 :111.1•, and Mrs. Herb Wheeler, Alis Loma Boil, of 1(r4.c'.?ever, s;:1.'nt the. tvo(,kend with her parents, Alr, and Airs, Leslie BoltMr. and Aire, Rta_sel Walker, of G'rdcrieh, visited on Sunday with Airs. llobert Stonehouse .and ,Air, and Airs. Lewis Stonehouse, Air. and Mrs, Lloyd 'Taylor and fan) ily, of Sarnia, vie!(cd on Saturday with his mother, Airs. Orval 'Taylor and other relative:-., Ali'.ses Marlene and l,Ionnnr U'nt'il 1<itchcnrr, spent the wc.kelltl with their parents, ,11 r, and Airs. Jollies Walsh. There were 10 IahleS III play at the regular weekly euchre party held its the Continually ('entre un 11'ednes day evening, 1I!git prize w'ir::;1'r:, rt'ew, Airs, George Walker and L'ul'l N1•hie. Novelty I rime \Duna' Were Mrs. .1. 11 (:on'L.cs and Lewis Cnnlc. ConStda. bion prizes went It, Mrs. t:;1ant Elliott 'and John 1':. AliCalluul. W. 1. il'III i►Icct- The Iii torical Research and Current E.vcnts meeting of the Belgrav'e Wo. man's Institute will be held on 'Fuel - day, March 21 with Mrs, Walter Scott as convener. The roll call' is to be answered by naming "Someone who owned or clerked in a Belgravc 13us;• Homemaking Club The 5th meeting of the 4.11 Home. making Club, ''Thrifty Thimbles" was held at the Conllnunity Centre on Aloft• day evening otl(1 was Opened with the pledge and 31)0110. Marilyn Campbell read the minutes. The roll call was answered with "One point 1 have learned Mahout cutting out and marking a garment." The nest meeting will be on March 10 at 1:30 p.111. at the home of Mrs. 'fed 1car. Miss Isabel Giiclirkt, hOlne econunlisl, tvaS present and explained about the achievement day and the judging to be done That tiny. Tho girls did practice judging on material for shorts. A demonstra- tion on the correct. method of putting in a 4il1per was given and as a group the girls did this for the record book. The home assignment was lo work on their garments and record hooks, AUBURN Air, and Mrs. John 11. Weir, Juan and Bub, London, visited last tvecl(.end w:l his father, 111' 13. C. Weir, and 11.r. and Airs, Duncan Alru'h;ty, Bar bara and Jchnny. Air. and Mrs. George Iia;l; R and 11r. rand Airs, Kenneth l'altursnn were '1'or- uutu viral '+ ! Keck-ce:1 end a:lend NI the Detroil-Toronto 1lochey g.inte r.! \LipJe Leaf Gardens, Mrs..). C. ;rtc'.t/ and AIrs, 11arinerite C2tol:at t i:_'.cQ ,on with friends in village. bfi�. C'!tar!e Et:rat i:n visited la_t Sunday wi'.h her niece, Mrs Harold R'.a:raron, Alt'. I'fichc'Ecn and G-ary a't Seaforta. Alia. Itrar:ter Andrews returned hem( 'a_st Saturday aster several weeks r patient in Victoria lfosp.tal, l.ottdott. Wcck-curl 't'J� furs tt':'.;t Air. acrd Airs, John lkii won and Aims Ulive Young were Alis Mary I, lloutiton, llntull•1011 rind Alis l'raiic s1(atr.lun, It,N., Lon- don. AIr• 11'lLliaht J, Crag; was a 'Parnate visiltr recently and took in a hockey ga n►e, ,11x. and Alec, Lloyd Humphreys spent the week -end with relatives al Brussels. NB's. 1;d;7:ir Lawson and her (laugh ter, ;Airs, Oliver Ander on, \ t:'1 1'l Iasi Sunday tt'itit Airs. John Sclater, Sea. or'lh. Airs. Donald fowler returned to Int Tonle on Sunday niter It few days. a patient. in the Goilerich hu,iril111. ICe tv`:it 1101' a Spccdy recovery, lir.; I red 1'i;.t<Izcr returned hunn: ia;4 v eekciid fur tt few do a'. her bonne here. She has been in Clanton (or several mouths. :ZITS. Johtt O:irvnt of Wingitaln, re. mewed acquaintances in the vi11 ge last Sunday, Several from this district attended the funeral last Saturday for the lilt Airs. Murrill Gorier at Blyth. Robert Hallam h.ceelvcd Diploma Hobert IIallan1, eldest son of Mrs. flay Hallam, B.R, 3, Auburn, recently received his diploma from the Trade School hi Toronto and graduated as a meeli;anic. Ile is at present visiting his mother and other members of his family. 'Mc Librarian of the Auburn Public Library' would like all County books in by Saturday, March 17, Mrs. A1ary AlcNal.l, a former resident of this district, now living at Welland was elected President of for Progres- sive Conservative Association for the riding of Welland, at its convention recently. Mrs. MeNall had been the president of the City of Wetland P, ( . As:;ociatiotl for four years before she resigned to lake this new office. Meeting te1'iat'ds1Lip and Training was Ilse topic for discussion when the Y.P.U. Wednesday, March 14,146 rnet in the Sunday School room of Knox Church, 1larvcy Snell, the con. t'ellel', was in charge of the program and Jews AlcDon'eIl Kris the pianist The srri):lure losson wa; read by Run, ald Snell followed Ity I!' (3tt' by Clifford Snell, Thr offering was received by Donald JtIrllntcell a: tl il,trvin Snell. The tunic ";ire you 0 sinner" was I:iv• en by Ilan 03 Snell, and a discussion ad period followed on "Your itolationstilp with (od" with Rev. Charles LeWIJ assisting the leader. llarslta Hoop, mats, the president, took charge of the hii inr: s period and Lite minutes were road by Mantle K(H,pntans, I'Ituts were! completed to print. I:hn A',P 5. atety 8ta• le• +ehieh will be Clone during tlth; month Thr rex' nter,tinlf will he (11) :11:111 1;:t tt;lrn a film will be shown, N MEN'S REA1)V•T0,-WEAR -PANT SUITS in Brown and (:green Check, Charcoal, 13lue, Grey ONLY $38.00 R. W. rIadi11's SHOES -- Ii1EN'S & BOYS' WEAR Ile le Store With The (Good Manners" Clinton 1)ititrict Collegiate Institute only A Month To Wait Min Jot Down The Date THURSDAY, APRIL 12 •- FRIDAY, APRIL 13 RED & BLUE REVIEW - 62 An Evening Of Entertainment By The Students AUC'I'IONEE1t. J ROBERT HENRY (Graduate of Reicsh American Auction School, Mason City, Iowa FOR C01:IPILE'1'.E AUC'T'ION SERVICE' Phone 150111, Blyth, Ont, 444,41011.4r4/44 MrY-.,. NOW MANY BANKING SERVICES WILL BE ,AVAILABLE HIRE? A complete range of banking services—because this is the site of a new branch of a chartered bank /Future customers will conte here• to do all their banking, because only in a chartered bank is it Tensible for all banking to be done under one roof /Each branch, large or small, offers a full banking service, from cashing a cheque to financing foreign trade, Each has a staff trained and eager to tender the high standard of service that features chartered banking in Canada. THL CHARTEREDBAN S SERVING YOUR COMWJNITIY Oedriegay, March 1,4, 1962 THE flLYTIT ST i NDARD PAGE 1i for complete protection .,. WAWANESA LIFE INSURANCE Here's your opportunity for complete protection—auto, fire, property, ant:' now LIFE --- through the agent you know beat, We suggest you call us— let us tell you more about this import* ant new Wawanesa service! ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGENCY "INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES" I3lytll, Ontario ACItLSUN'S MLAi) STOCK SERVICE Highest prices for dead, old or dis- abled horses and cattle, Phone Atwood 356.2622 collect, Licence No, 156C62. 1 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 SANITATION SEItvlCrs Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired Blocked drains opened will) modern equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin Coauu, Milverton, Telephouc 254, 1111 • McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE. INSURANCE CO. BEAD OFFICE c SEAFORTII, ONT. OFFICERS: President - John L, Malone. Sea. forth; Vice -President, John II. McEw Ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E Southgate, Seaforth, DIRECTORS J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. 11. McEw• Ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton. Norman 'I'rewartha, Clinton; .1. E. Pep, per, Ilnicofleld; C. W. Lconhardt, Bornholm; 11. Fuller, Goderich; 11. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoul, Seaforth. AGENTS: William Lelper, Jr., Londesboro; V. J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seaford; Selwyn Ba ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth; Harold Squires, Clinton. DR. R. W. STREET Blyth, Ont, OFFICE HOURS-- 1 p.tn, 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 I'A'I'RICK .. S'1', -- •--WINGI1AM, . ONT, (For Appointment please phone 770 Wingham). Professional Eye Examluatlou, Optical Services, J, 1.1A)ngsstllff, Optometrist Seaiorth, Phalle 791 -- Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 5:90 p.m. Wed. •- 9:00 a.m. to 12:90 p:nl. Clinton. °like - Monday, 9 • 5:80. Photic HU 2-1010 a B CL..kNGY OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE a', GODERICII MI) Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "IVIIERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Farmer owned and controlled Service at cost Chctce of bu l and breed Our artificial breeding service will help you to a more ctfficient livestock Operation For 5e('vice or morelltfuriuutlon call: Clinton 111.1 2.3441, or for long distance9 Clinton Zenith oro. BETTER CATTLE FOR 111V1'11a1i LIVING .4 CRAWFORD & UETHEIIINGTON RAIuus'YERS . Etnl lemon It, 5. Hetherington, J, H. Crawford, R.C. Q.C. Vlingiam and Blyth. IN BLYTH EACH TUURSDAY MORNING and by appolIlttnenL FOR SALE 1 joi,act. planer, 6 inch, Apply pliont 146 L'ly;h. 02•lp FOR SALE Quantity of Propane Gas Brooders Wass water fountains, tube feeders Apply Russell Cook, phone 254, Blyth 52•: WANTED Secretary-Treiusurer for Blyth Agri cuaural Society for 1962; duties tt commence immediately. Contact Mr Albert G. Bacon, 11.11. 1, Ilelgrave. 52•� AUTOMOTIVE Mechanical and body .repalr3, glass steering and wheel balance. Undaspra� for rust prevention, DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service No. 0 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231 Goderich, Ontario, 20-t( DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR RENOVATION PLANS For a First Class and Satisfactory Jo Call GERALD EXEL Carpentry ani Masonry Phone 231112 Brussels, Mari PROPERTIES FOR SALE WILFRED McINTEE Real Estate' Broker {VALKERTON, ONTARIO Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth, Phone 78, VACUUM CLEANERS SALES AND SERVICE Repairs tri most popular makes o cleaners and polishers. Filter queen Sales, Varna. Tel. collect Ileusnll 6901)2. 50.13p.t f. DEAD STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASII PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and HORSES also Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value Old Horses -4c per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels, BRUCE MARLATT OR GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth 24 Hour Service Plant Licence No, 54•R.P,-61 Colcctor Licence No, 80•G61 SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cesspools, etc., pumped and cleaned. free estimates, Louis Blake, phone 442W6; Brussels, 11.11. 2. •41VAIJPI•IMNWV'NI•IN.IIJIP,S ~ Clinton Columwlity FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVER Y FRIDAY AFTERNOON CLINTON SALE BARN at 2 p.m. IN MTV, PHONE B013 HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer, 05•tf. I . N HII.MI�VM.MVM.N•I NVNANN11 ~* THE WEST WAWANOSII MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Mend Office, Dungannon Established 1078 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Brown Smyth, 11,11. 2, Auburn; Vice -President, Ninon Irwin, Ilclgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar', R.1). 1, Dungannon; George C. Fcagun, Guderich; Hors McPlice, 11.11. 3, Au - writ; Donald Mackay, Ripley; John F. MacLennan, R.R. 3, Goderich; Frank 7'hounpson, II,R, L llolyrood; Win. Wiggins, R.R. 3, Auburn, For Information on your insurance, ;all your nearest director who is also n agent, ur the secretary, Durnln 1i111ips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon l8. BINGO Legion Bingo every Thursday nite '45 sharp, in Legion 'tall, Lucknow. 2 regular games for $10.00; 3 share. ll,oretetl !u Elliott tneurance AKcuey Ile -wealth and a special for $50.00 must Pose MAL 104 'Vidian, 4 got (110 limit to nttmbers), 40tf NOTWE TO CitEDITOR8 IN THE ESTATE OF WILLIAM FEAR ALL PERSONS having claims against the estate of the above mentioned, late of the Village of Blyth, in the County of Huron, Retired Farmer, who dial on the 29th day of January, 1162, are required to file proof of sante wit h the undersigned on or before the 17111 day of Starch A.D. 1062. After that date the Executors will proceed to distribute the estate having regard only to the claims of which they shall then have had notice. DATED at 1Vinghain this 23rd day oI February, A.D. 1962. CRAWFORD & IIETIIERINGTON . Winghani, Ontario Solicitors for the Executors 52.3 I BLYTH BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Arin Hollinger Phone 143 HOUSE FOR SALE 5 room ranch style house, built years, drive-in garage, automatic oi'. furnace and all modern conveniences, in lilyl.h. Apply Mrs. E. .i. Churchill. AIossley, Ontario, phone 1torrid sv'iIle 269•3377, 51-t f • NOTICE 'r0 CREDI'TORS IN THE ESTATE OF ALBERT LOUIS SELLERS ALL PERSONS having claims against the estate of the above mentioned, late " of the Village of Blyth, in the County of Huron, Gentleman, who died on the 27th day of January, 1962, are required ' to file of sante with the udder• proof signed on or before the 17th day of , March, A.D. 1962, After thiat elate the Executors will , proceed to distribute the estate having ( regard only to the claims of which they shall den have had notice. DATED at Wingham this 23rd day • of February, A.D. 1962. l CRAIVFORD & HETIrERINGTON, Wingham, Ontario Solicitors for the Executors, 512.2 1 AUC'T'ION SALE Farm Stack and Implements 11o1, 13, Concession 10, 3 miles East • of Lolldesberu. WEDNESDAY, MAI(CH 21, 1962 at 1:30 pan. 1 Holstein cow, due March 29; 2 Ilol- stein cows, due April 6; 1 holstein cow. fresh in January; 1 Ilolstein cow, fresh bred January 20; 3 Holstein cowl, due in July; 1 Holstein cow . duo April 30; 2 Jersey cows, due time of 1 sale; 2 Holstein dry cows; 2 Holstein heifers, 2 years old; 2 Holstein heifers, 1 year old; 4 Ilolstein steers; 1 roan heifer; 1 blue heifer; 1 red steer; 5 fall Polled Angus calves. IMPLEMENTS Faring' tractor; -1 11 1 3 --furrow Oliver plow; Massey Harris 2•furrow plow; 1 set 8 ft. International discs; 1 circular saw; 1 steel_ land roller; turnip pulper; quantity of Hent• lock plank; set scales; Surge milking machine in good condition, TEItt1IS CASII NO - RESERVE FARM SOLD ROBERT GOVIER, Proprietor, GEORGE NESI3I'i'T, Auctioneer, (11.2 INTERIOR RENOVATIONS and flooring, linoleum and coralon Sheets, linoleum tiles, vinyl ask -otos tile and ceramic wall tile installed and repaired. Bob Caseunore, Shuter St., Wingham, phone 872M. • 01.2p. APPLICATIONS WANTED MORRIS TOWNSHIP - Applications for the position of Truck Driver at $1.10 per hour, to work under the Warble Fly Control Act, will he received by the under- signed until 10 am. Friday, March 16, 1962 GEORGE MARTIN, Clerk, 11.11. 4, Brossels, Ont. • 01.2. ST PATRICK'S SUPPER in the 1 Bly th Memorial Hall SATUR:DAY, MAI{CII 17 from 5 to 7 p,111, Menu: POTA'T'O CROQUETTE'S •• HA1iI SALADS 110111EMAJ E BARED BEANS PIE .• TEA Sponsored by Blyth Women'a Institute Admission: Adults 75c • Children 50c Your Support. Will Be Appreciated NOTICE Please return alt Iiuron County Books to Library no later than March 17111. -Mrs, A, Fear. 02.1, CARD OF THANKS We wish to extend our heartfelt thanks ,and appreciation for the many acts of kindness, messages of sym- pathy, heautLful floral tributes, dona tions to the heart fund from our friends, neighbours and relatives in our recent nnil bereavement in the loss of a be- o-loved wife and mother. Special thanks loved to licv. It. E. McLagan, ,soloist Aubrey Toll, pallbearers, floworbearers, the nurses and staff of Clinton Public Hos- pital and Victoria IIospital, London, Dr Street and the iLbndon doctors, also those who helped at the horse and the Tastier I' 11neral Home. • --Marvin Govier and family. Mrs. J. Caldwell and family. 02-1p. CARD OF 'THANKS 1 wish to thank those who remem- bered ale with cards while a patient in Clinton Public Hospital, also Dr. Oakes and the nursing staff. ' -John Dove. TEACHER WANTED M experienced protestant 4eacher is required for S.S. No, 7, Hallett. Fit teen pupils. Duticu to commence in ,C.epte911be1'. Apply slating (ivalifica• tions, experience and salary expected. Ali applicalions to be in bands of the secretary by April 2, 1912. Air.; Lcsol'ard Shobbroolt Secretary. l'reasu t er 11.11, No. 1, Blyth, Ont. 02-3. WANTED Ilcusekecper companion for elderly lady in small apartment. Apply 13o:c 52-1, Gcdericlh. 02.1. THANK YOU I would like to thank all those who sent cards, gifts and treats while 1 was a pationt in the Clinton hospital. Special thanks to Dr. Street, the nurses and the Blyth Ladies Auxillialy of the Canada» Legion for the three lov• cly roses, Mrs. Jim Pierce. 02-1p, FOR SALE Good table potatoes. Apply Jasper Snell, phene 35825, Blyth, 02-2, FOR. SALE Everything at 1AFER11E111.,'S JEW- ELLERY EWELLEHY in ‘Vinghanh. Don't i1 S cur Fourth Anniversary Sale on NOW! 02.2 FOR SALE No. 1 table potatoes, will deliver Apply Mason Bailey, ';hone 51115 Blyth. 021p WANTED Sewing summer dresses and skirts for children and Misses, Apply phone Blyth 76. 02•lp, SEED GRAiN FOR SALE Iferta Barley and Garry Oats, mix- ed, grown from registered No. 1 seed. Apply Reg. Schultz, plume 341112, Blyth, 02-11;. wereerr. Royal Conservatory of Music o/ Toronto MIDSUMMER EXAMINATIONS 52 JUNE, 1962 Applications and two mutt reach the Conservatory not Tater than APRIL 15, 1962. 175 COLLEGE STREET TORONTO 26, ONT. MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE GODERICB PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811 NOW PLAYING Thursday, Friday, Sahirday, March 15.16.1.7 (tory Calhoun and Lea Masser! A :.tory of inicient Rhodes and the invading P'imenicianS 'FI -IE COLOSSUS RHODES" — Scope and Color -•• Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, March 19.20.21 - Adult Entertainment Paul Newman, Jackie Gleason and Piper Laurie From Coast to Coast, everyone's talking about "T1IE HUSTLER" In Cinemascopc Thursday, Friday, Saturday, March 22.23.24 - Twin Bill CHUBBY CHECKERS, King of Twisters, and Jimmy Clanton, In "TEENAGE MILLIOAIRE" 11 Color on the sante program, Virgiuia Elg and Tont Pitman, In "IIIGIL SCHOOL BIG SHOT" CARD OF 7.11:1N1' S i wish h1 thank all diose who remem- bered the Fahy and 1 wi::h cards, gifts and visits tvlti'e in Clinton Public Hos. dal. Also 1)r. Street and Uie nursing -•Airs. Alvin I'cn':elly and Heather. 0'2.1. FOR REFI' Apartment, all freshly decorated arc' mnolern. Apply, AL's. Fart'ish, phohtc 23, Blyth. 024' CARD OF TIIANKS Nies. harry Gibbons, President el '3'yth Trinity Church Guild, would like ::o thank everyone who helped in any way with our annual Pancake Suppe: also the fine turn out of the public. II wa; the best ever and all was greatly appreciated. Thanks again. 02.1p SIAI'LE SYRUP ORDERS A reminder tical. 'e will he making; Maple syrup again this year. Order: 1akon now for later delivery. Lloyd McCliuchey, phone 526.7591, Auburn. 01.2p ACCOUNTS All accounts owing Stewart's Red and White Food Market are now da- wn! mut be paid by March 31, 1962. r HARCO ORCHARDS Started FROM Pulletsla* :I 'Chicks. 0.4 the superb facilities of Roe Farms are now at work producing the famous Marco Orchards black Ser.1Inks ... the unusual layer that has made headlines for to production and all-round farm performance for over 20 years. Order as dayold, or as started pullets from 2 weeks of He right up 10 readyto•Iay , . , every one hatched and mored under ROE FARMS' quality pregram, Stock Is first generation, direct from the breeder, and backed by Roe Farms' years oI es. perlence in producing the lines) started pullets and day-old pullets and chicks that can be bought anywhere. Other famous strains also available as dayotd end started pullets. Write or phone for details and donn•loeaflh rtes. ROI FARMS LIMITED Atwood, Ont. Phone 356.2111 LON.D I:SBOR0 Miss Margaret Talnblyn, of Learning• ton, spent. the week -end at her home, Air. and Airs, Gerald Johnston and family have moved to the Alexander apartments last week. We welcome them to the village, Mr. Johnston is connected with the R.C.A.F. Station, Clinton. Aln:s, flunking and son, Donald, visit- ed with Mr, Harvey Hunking who is st'tl a patient in Westminster Hospital, London. We are pleased to hear he is making good progress. Airs. Walter McGill spent the week- end with her sister, Mrs. Gordon Mc• Phee, of the Nile. The afternoon unit of the UOW con• ducted a short business period prior to the World Day of Prayer service. Mrs. Edwin Wood occupied the chair as leader. Rev, Clifford Parke, of IVesleyWillis Church, Clinton, gave a fine address on the theme, "Gist's love for the Whole World." Mrs. Gord- on Shohhrook contributed a beautiful solo, "Sweet flour of Prayer," in keep- ing with the themhe. A social half hour was spent at the • close. The Explorers met un March 8 ,op• (ming with the hymn, "This is my Father's World," followed by roll call and the treasurer's report, worship and study period, The meeting closed with "Children who walk in Jesus Way," and the Explorer's Prayer. On March 9 a meeting was called for The World Day of Prayer. The Londesboro Explorers invited the Blyth Explorers and Lon- desboro CGIT invited the Blyth CGIT, Mrs. Carman Moon, Miss Beacom, Mrs. Lee and -Mrs. Murray Lyon led in the service. Mrs Funge and Mrs. McLagan, of Blyth, showed an interest- ing film on the bales of clothing which go to the needy people of the world. Lunch was served by the Explorers. Mr. and AA's. Chris Kennedy, Mrs. Thomas Fairservice and Mr. Dave Ewan spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Bagaent, of Ingersoll. Mrs. Thos. Adams is spending a few days with her son, Mr. and Mrs. Clif- ford Adams and family. She has spent tno %%inter with her sister, Airs. John Vincent, of Goderich. FAST FERTILIZER SERVICE throughout seeding time from YOUR LOCALSHUR-GAIN SERVICE PLANT! Right tkrougll seeding time you can be assured of fast service from Shur -Gain's fmodern handling facilities right in your own area. Consider -these advantages offered by your Shur -Gain Fertilizer Service Plant— Cs SHUR-GAIN JN BULK SAVES $3.50 PER TON - the fast modern way to handle fertilizer, leaded speedily (on your own truck if you wish) and checked on government inspected scales, ® SIIUR-GAIN BULIC SPREADING SERVICE ---precision spreading on your own farm savingyou labour• -•at Cho salve or vary lite more than the coat of bagged goods delivered to your farm. • SHUR•GAIN'S LELY SPREAD1t11S- pull typo broadcast spreaders which will evenly spread up to a 40' swath -available for a nominal rental fee, • SLUR -GAIN SELECTED -GRANU- LATED FERTILIZEIR:- more uniform plant growth because Shur -Gain is not just granular but G1;ANULATEU3 Will not bridge in the drill - dust free - easy to clean from equipment:, SHUR-GAIN IN PAPER—POLY--BULK, See your SHUR-GAIN FERTILIZER AGENT or tali N -GAIN TELEPHONE MITCHELL. ,OSCAR ROGER$ • MGRI; 348'4012 SERVICE PLANT IFERTILIZER SERVICE' - ._ Nanny Reigns Supreme in England In The Dell, a i;rie y rend:z- yous in London's Ilyde l'firk, a 'luster of nannies sat gossiping ,recently amid the rows of park- od and gleaming prams. On occa- sion, the hum of talk was abrupt- ly cut through by commands that Crackled with the authority, if sot the tone, of a sergeant ma - or: "If you please, Master Dom- inic!" "Hillary, adjust your leg- gings!" In childhood, well-born Bri- tons snap to obey such orders like guardsmen on parade. For nanny—proud, starched, impreg- nable in her sturdy walking ahoes — stands supreme in the nursery world. From Bucking- ham Palace to Chelsea, where - ever she takes command, chil- dren are soaped, spanked, fed, potticd according to her brisk, no-nonsense edicts. In many ways, nanny is a prosaic crea- ture. She is sometimes more sen- sible than sensitive, usually a snob, occasionally a bit illiterate, and peculiarly anonymous (a nanny is known to her friends by the surname of her employer). Often she' is heartily hated by her charges. Yet sociologists and historians sometimes muse whether modern Britain would be possible with- out nanny. "Much of the whole system of democracy and the Welfare State is but an enlarge- ment of nursery rulings," declar- ed a correspondent recently in The Times of London. If the Welfare State had its beginnings in the nursery, then it paradoxi- cally planted the seeds for the demise of nanny, for eurtax and death duties have licked much of the frosting off British afflu- ence. But status -conscious Brit- ons today cough up nanny's weekly £7 ($19,60—and more— with nary a murmer, In Nursery World magazine, three pages of want ads last week offered posi- tions that included such un- Dritlsh fringe benefits as a per- sonal radio and TV set, washing machine, and central heating, wen a car to run the children to the park. "Good nannies want :ne, explained the head of one employment agency, "preferably with a listing in De- b_•ctt's P. c;•^• At the p..,Ir of the nanny aris- tocracy is Mabel Anderson, 35, the Scottish nurse who cares for Prince Andrew, Still others reign in top families from Athens to Rio de Janeiro, while some 200 nannies migrate yearly to the U.S, alone. Among these is Maude Shaw, a hearty 56 -year-old na- tive of Sheerness in Kent, who runs the White Horse nursery. Thr prestige of nanry is ob- vious; her life, however, is hard- ly a lark. For one thing, she is pigeonholed precariously bo- tween servant and master, For another, she is sometimes re- sented. "Sonne mothers see us as a threat," says Patricia Green- halgh, 24, a nanny who works for a London lawyer. "They suspect us of trying to win the affections of both their children and their husbands." Additionally, most nannies move to new posts after their charges reach 4 or 5, and the emotional wrench is consid- erable. "Time is the only heal- er," admits gray-haired Dorothy Williams. The nanny with first-class credentials is a graduate of one of the eleven English schools in the Association of Nursery Train- ing Colleges, Perhaps the most elite of these training centres is Norland College, founded in 1892, in Kent, This school (motto: Love Never Faileth") takes only 50 girls a year, turns away three times that nutnber, and can fill only one -twelfth of the requests it gets for nannies. "A Norland nurse has higher status than a Rolls-Royce or swimming pool," asserts Miss Joan Kirby, the college principal. For 21 months, the girls earn their fawn and brown uniforms — the chic mark of a Norland grad—by caring for children placed in the school by everyone from divorced parents to Niger- ian diplomats. "We want clever girls Who are not intellectuals," says Miss Kirby, "They must be able to write and talk reasonably decent English and have a deep love of children, Above all, nan- ABOUT THE SIZE OF IT -- Joanne Stropoli displays the largest and smallest buttons being used on the 1962 market. The big one is a fashion item for milady's coats; the little one is used for detail work on kiddy clothes. TABLEA�QwsTALHSn. Jam An expertly seasoned sauce can enhance a food and often make it a gourmet's delight, This is especially true when the food is fish. Put together a smooth curry sauce and some fine Cana- dian canned salmon, serve over fluffy hot rice, and you have an unqualified mealtime success, in this country as well as in the Orient, ny must avoid becoming a sub- stitute mother," A nearly impossible align- ment? Not to most British nan- nies. Indeed,. they manage so competently that, although few mothers would envy the frustra- tions of their life, they are prob- ably the most chased -after wom- en in Britain. — From NEWS - Millions of British Viewers Live Life on `Coronation St.' THE BATTLE-AX: Violet Carson (centre) ploys By TOM A. CULLEN Newspaper Enterprise Assn, London—Not since the death of King George VI has there been such a publio outburst of grief as Occurred at the funeral of Ida Barlow, t]te little woman who never was. Ida Barlow existed only in a script writer's fertile brain. But to millions of viewers who watched the television serial, "Coronation Street," she was more real than reality itself. What happened was that the actress who played Ida got tired of the role and asked to quit, so the TV producer obligingly had her run over by a bus. But the producer reckoned without Ida's following, Women in tears called the studio where "Coronation Street" originates to protest the cruelty. Scores of grief-stricken viewers sent wreaths and sympathy cards, Girls In a Lancashire factory started an "Ida Barlow Memorial Fund" and sent the money off to a local hospital, This is a sample of the sort of thing that 'has been hap- pening to those connected with the program since it started in D e c e m b e r, 1960. "Coronation ,street" offers a twice -weekly slice of life as it is lived in a enu"001- Lancashire back street. There are hundreds of Corona- tion Streets throughout Britain, which probably accounts for the program's s u c c e s a. Ironically, when the program was given the first of its "dry runs," the pro- ducers thought that it was the greatest disaster they had ever made. Only the faith of a few people saved it from the ax. To- day it leads the "Top Ten." The heart and soul of "Coro- nation Street" is a sharp-tongued tight-fisted shrew named Ena Sharples, who has become a na- tional institution. Ena is what every comedian has in mind when he jokes about. his mother-in-law, Whenever her crumbling face appears on the /1 -inch screen, 20 million view- ers gasp: "The old battle-ax is at it again." Old -tine music hall actress Violet Carson, who plays this role, complains that she is in danger of losing her own iden- tity. "I'nm Ena Sharples to every- one 1 meet. They shout at me from buses and wave to me from rooftops. If I shop for a tube of toothpaste, I'm kept waiting 20 minutes signing auto- graphs while a crowd gathers. Sometimes I forget what I went in for." Other actors who appear on the program complain of being "prisoners of Coronation Street." A recent script called for actor Peter Adamson, the tough guy of the serial, to beat up a uni- versity student in a pub brawl. The day after this episode was shown Adamson received shoals of threatening letters, Typical comment: "You are a loud- mouthed nit." Says Adamson, plaintively, "I wish people would realize we are only actors." "Coronation Street" consists of seven houses of the back -to - hack variety that share outside lavatories, a corner shop, the hack wall of a raincoat factory, a pub called the Rover's Return, and the Glad Tidings mission hall, Whenever a , house becomes . vacant in the story, viewers write in asking if they can rent it. Welfare organizations keep a close eye on the street. Pension- ers' groups write to protest that the street's pensioners seem to have too much money to spend. Dog lovers complain of anti - dog references. Temperance so- cieties say that too much liquor is consumed at the Rover's Re- turn. Originally scheduled as a six- week serial, "Coronation Street" apparently will be running as long as there are back streets of this kind in Britain — and crusty characters with hearts of gold like Ena Sharples. CREAMY SALMON CURRY 1 can (7a/ ounces) salmon • 2 tablespoon,; butter or other fat 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon curry powder teaspoon sugar % teaspoon ground ginger 2 tablespoons minced onion �% teaspoon salt Vs cup liquid (salmon liquid plus milk) I/2 cup light cream 1,'1 teaspoon grated lemon rind 2 cups cooked rice Drain salmon, reserving liquid. Break salmon into bite - size chunks, hIeat butter blend in flour, curry powder, sugar, gin- ger, minced onion, and salt. Slowly add mixed salmon liquid and milk, followed by cream. Cook and stir over low heat until sauce is smooth and thickened. Do not allow sauce to boil, Add salmon and lemon rind; heat. Serve over hot cooked rice. Makes 4 servings. * A steaming bowl of chowder is a meal in itself, and just the right kind of meal on a chill, blustery day. Chowders are made from many foods, but fish and shellfish have been foremost in- gredients since the arrival of the first white settlers on this con- tinent. All the tang of the great open sea with the salt spray run- ning high can be transported to your table in a hearty seafood chowder such as the following, SEAFARER'S CHOWDER 1 pound fish fillets 2 tablespoons butter 1 medium onion, chopped ?-42 cup chopped celery 2 cups diced raw potatoes cup sliced carrots 2 cups boiling water 1 teaspoon salt IA teaspoon pepper 2 cups milk Cut fillets into bite -size pieces. Melt butter in large saucepan. Acid onion and celery: cook until tender, Add potatoes, carrots, water, salt and pepper. Cover and simmer until vegetables are tender, Add fish and simmer 10 minutes longer, Add milk, Re- heat, but do not allow to boil, Serve piping hot, garnished with a sprinkling of finely chopped parsely or a clash of paprika. Makes 6 servings. Seafarer's Chowder is delicious made with almost any variety of fillets, including smoked fillets, "It makes an easy main dish for lunch or supper, Good accom- paniments are crackers and raw vegetable relishes or a salad. • • 4 Seafood croquettes are a happy choice for a Lenton luncheon. Elegant but thrifty, they are easy to prepare, now that electric deep -fat • fryers have become common, Like many other good things to eat, croquettes originated in France. The word, croquette, comes from the French word, "croquer," which,means to crunch, Crisp and cruchy on the outside, yet soft and delectable How Well Do You Know SOUTH AMERICA? ISSUE 11 — 1962 on the inYide, Fc:.feed-;,Insc►nd Croquettes are a new tate treat. 8EAFOO1)-A1,.\U)NI) CROQUETTES 2 cups cooked or canard fish or shellfish 3 tablespoons butler, melted IA cup flour r,4 teaspoon salt Dash pepper 1 cup milk 2 eggs ?.1 cup bl:uuhed chopped almonds 1 tablespoon minced orlon 2 tablespoons chopped parsley . 1 teaspoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon water fine dry bread crumbs Drain fish or shellfish; mince. Combine melted butter, flour, and seasonings. Add milk gradu- ally and cook until thick and smooth, stirring constantly, Beat 1 egg; add a little of hot sauce to it; blend with remaining sauce, stirring constantly over low heat for 1 minute, Remove from heat and add fish, almonds, onion, parsley and lemon juice; mix well, Chill, Shape into croquettes of one- quarter cup size, For shaping, croquettes are usually rolled into balls first, then formed into cones, rolls or flat cakes, Beat remaining egg lightly with water. Coat croquettes with crumbs, beaten egg, and again with crumbs. Let stand for 30 minutes to set coating. Place in wire basket and fry in hot deep fat (375cF,) for about 2 minutes, or until golden brown, Drain on absorbent paper, Makes 10 cro- quettes, • A hunt for Lenten dishes which are meatless, filling and good may well introduce you to food combinations which will be family favourites all year around. The following recipe for Fisher- man's Pie teams fish and pota- toes in a Maritime version of the familiar Shepherd's Pie. The complete dish is both attractive and delicious. Picture it for your- self—meaty chunks of halibut in a savoury sauce, crowned with a golden, cheese -crusted topping of fluffy, mashed potatoes, FISHERMAN'S PIE 2 pounds halibut 14 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon chopped onion 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce 11hcups liquid (fish jukes plus milk) 2 tablespoons butter, melted 2 tablespoons flour teaspoon salt 3 cups hot seasoned and whip- lied Imo -lied potatoes !:2 cup grated cheese Sc:)son with tcayaon rill, \tiap in steam tight enve- lop of ;11=1nunt toil, lightly grea,ed en the inside, Bake in hot (,ven (450°1,), allowing 15 minutes cooking time per inch thickness of fish, if fresh or thawed, and 30 minutes per tacit thickness if frozen, \4'hen cooked, drain, reserving juices. Flake in- to greased 2 -quart casserole, dis- carding any sl:in and tante, Sprinkle with nci, n and \Von• cc,;tershire sauce, Add milk to fi h juices to make 11,i cps li- quid. Bic:ul melted butter, flour and ''2 t_'spoon sa:t, Add iquid gradt;Ay, Cook and stir until s►nooth and thickened, Pour sauce over f:: h, Top with r' ':cles. Sprinkle with cheese. Ba':c in a moderately hot oven 1375°F.) for 25 minutes. Makes 11 serv- ings, HIGH COST OF SKIING At the last survey, presumably by Blue Cross, some 4,000,000 persons were skiing in the United States. To pursue this pastime they were spending roughly $500,000,000 a year, Scholars studying these figures are undecided whether the grow- ing interest in skiing stems from an excess of leisure time or from tensions created by the Nuclear Age. Whatever the explanation, the sport is causing uncommon concern in -the White House. As fast as the President's physical fitness program puts a man into shape, skiing puts one into trac- tion, It is a standoff that could eventually reduce us to a second- rate power, — From the T.V. Guide PIP• OF ,A PIPE. —.. Papuan woman in Hollandio, Nether- lands New Guinea, enjoys puf- fing on her briar pipe. Wir Fashion Hint Trying To Untangle Official RRd Tape NO WS that the electricians In New York have "won" them- selves a five-hour day causes due approval up here in the country, and turns my thoughts to the time I was an electrician. My experience tends to show that no price is too high for this worthy service, and I'm sorry I didn't know my own strength. I wired a house once. It wasn't my house, but circumstances had set up a situation where I thought this was a fine thing to do. We couldn't get an electrician to do it, because there was no money in it, and while I had no know- ledge and no license, 1 did work cheap. What I'm talking about was war -time, and the country was under both kinds of restric- tions — proper and WPB — so the nuances are intriguing. and the venture was a vast challenge. I wonder, at the new union scale, just what that summer would have cost. Well, it was not only a chal- lenge to find the wires and fix - titres, and not only a challenge to figure out how to put things together, but it was a greater challenge to fight the accumu- lated order s, regimentat:on, codes, zoning rules, union ccnm- pliances, stop orders and OPA directives, What I was about was illegal, improper and un- American. But I felt it was a decent ambition and that I would do it, whether I could or not. I went to a friend in the power company and he said no service could be extended unless the house (he said "housing unit") were ready for it prior to July 1, Since it was now June 29, I had to rush back, bore an inch hole through the beam by the underpinning, and get to the OPA so they could stamp my pa- pers. The hole sat there staring at the road until September, but it was "ready" prior to July 1. Then I found that the entire pro- ject was a semantic manifestation of cerebra; loopholes in Wash- ington, Not one thing was done in this -entire project which was "illegal," but even at this late date when time has mellowed the perspective 1 am not eager to argue the morality. 'found, for instance, that a refrigerator plugged into an out- let is a "temporary" thing, but that the same refrigerator be- came "permanent" and lawful if you soldered the connections. Thus any frivolous, or "unes- sential," contrivance became es- sential and approved if soldered in. So we soldered the toaster, er CHARLES EVANS HUGHES 1862 1962 '`��'_'"•'�Cav,:':'�Lx*��"a�s�"+,Y�tke. Y;:"�,�.�t.�".�it:if JURIST HONORED'— A con memorative postage- s t a m p• portraying the late Charles ans Hughes will be Issued by the U.S. Post Office Depart- ment cm Wednesday, April 11. electric clock and doorbell. Each in turn was approved by the OPA. I found that permits to buy unavailable things were easy to get, and as long as the OPA thought you couldn't get any- thing, they'd approve it. Arrayed against them was a certain main - ability of about anything you wanted if you knew where to look. "Don't tell the OPA 1've got one, but if they OK your or- der I'll have one." The wording of government directives took study, and sometimes an electri- cian is driven to distraction to find peripheral meanings, The challenge grew daily. So tar I knew nothing about doing the actual wiring, and wondered it I ever would, Strangely enough, a clerk in the OPA solved everything. He was denying me a permit to buy cables and switches, but he said there was a storekeeper up at East Overshoe that I ought to call on and get acquainted with. Now this storekeeper was canny and foresighted, Before the government clamped down on anything, he had bought is about three carloads of electrical effects, and he had trucked then out over a back country road to an old farmhouse he• owned and in which nobody had lived for 30 years. The farmhouse was seven miles beyond any power lines, and the only electricity they'd ever have there would be the battery in a jacking flash- light. But the storekeeper heard my story; and agreed with my charitable motives, and we got in his truck and drove out to the farmhouse. He had 13 miles of ,Romex cable on the porch light alone— all coiled up and tucked over the piazza, Down cellar he had five 6M ass of fuse boxes nailed on a wall. The old parlor had over 500 .lamps in it, all wired up. There isn't a hydro - plant in Maine with capacity enough to have fed into the lines he nad in the kitchen. And, you see, everything was installed and wired up, so it became "second - handed," and the OPA directives didn't apply. IIe looked at my wiring diagram, cut off all my cables to length, and counted out the junction boxes, connect- ors, sockets and switches. I spent the summer, off and on, wiring the house, It was a lot of fun, I learned to "snake" wires, and I kept my circuits on the right side, I never worked more than five hours a day, which is long enough at a time to fiddle with wires. I finally put in fuses and screwed in the bulbs. Then I went down to the office of the power company and I showed them any OPA permit, and I stirred up quite a touse over their slowness to respund. "This job has been waiting since June!" I shouted at the poor girl behind the counter. My friend, the manager, winked at her, and we all smiled. That afternoon a lineman came around and shoved a cable through the hole in the beam and I tied it into the box. Everything worked fine, and still does, but I'd want electrician's pay if I ever tackled anything like that again. The house? Well, it was old and vacant, and some refugee people who had been through quite a lot were coming, and they were elderly, and I never felt the WPB meant them any- way. —By John Gould in the Christian Science Monitor, Q. When dropping in on friends In their new home or apartment, is it all right to ask to see all of it? A. This suggestion should al- ways come from the host or hostess. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 57, Hindu 1, In what Vey6 o of is 5.1. Operatic 89, Negative soprano DOWN 1. Owns 2. Palm leaf 9, Clain the 13. Foreign victory /, Shaft of 4. Marsh light black -bird 6. Tree 6, Untruth II. Stakes 11. Mohammed's son -In-law 16. Delicacy of feeling 11. Stray, from truth H. A unit of • weight (ah,) 11. Possessive pronoun :f1. Common metal /6. Elderly 38. Anger 29 Happen again 81. Scout unit 82. Needlefish 89. Passing fashion 54.Girl's name 15 :Agri mountain 16. Closed oar 8. Meshed fabric 2, Sallor'e coat 1. Snuggle 1. A wedding anniversary 11, Concerning 4b. The persoh addressed 41, Makes radioactive . Ito. Period of time UI, Anglo -Saxe% emailIN, a guess /. Man's 17, (rowing out nickname 30. Bounder I. Pollen -boar., Ing part 88. body 1, Chief executive 37, Sinews 10, Boat 40. Mueloal 11, mod of etre 49. Ocean sky 46, However 16, Summit 46, Italian day 20, At home breeze 11, Roll of 49. Chinese tobacco rolled tea 19. Papal aced 49. Hebrew letter 23. Eternal 60, Anglo-Saxon 14. Allude king 25, Country 61, Wine cask mouth of 63, High in the Egypt meals 16, Plat 69. Utter 1111111111111111111111gilii111111 1irr1lrrrr11g f or ®11©r1161 .' 11rrrhiilii irr 1 iiiiiiri 11111= a6lrr iiirr IIs :.: W111 JIMl •1 rriii: :!�! :':i ,i rg!�';!1,,;�i ��rfr�awrrc11iiia II�=��wrrrr.:�rr llir wrrrr 61rr 40 Answer elsewhere on this page SLEIGHT OF HAND—This jackhammer seems to operate by magic. Actually, the operator left his gloves on the mo - chine's handle when he went out to lunch. TIIIIARN FRONT Jok12u&seLL. Nearly 8,000 ewes have been shipped under the federal gov- ernment's program of transporta- tion assistance to sheep produc- ers. The federal - provincial pro- gram, announced in December, 1960, by Agriculture Minister Alvin Hamilton, is aimed at bol- stering Canada's lagging sheep industry by helping to establish larger, more economic flocks. The federal government pays up to 50 per cent of the transportation costs on ewes bought for breed- ing purposes, with its share hing- ing on the amount paid by each province participating in the plan. • • a In Ontario, Manitoba, Saskat- chewan and British Columbia, agreements provide for equal di- vision of transportation costs be- tween the Canada Department of Agriculture, the provincial gov- ernment and the purchaser, In Quebec, the cost is shared by federal and provincial gov- ernments on a 50-50 basis. * • • Of the 7,946 ewes shipped last year — nearly all of them in the autumn prior to the breeding season — 6,326 went to Ontario; 1,020 to Quebec and 600 to Brit- ish Columbia, The majority of shipments came from Alberta and Saskatchewan. The 6,326 ewes shipped to On- tario went to 55 producers, who took from 40, the required mini- mum, to 280 head each, Meanwhile, officials expect that last summer's drought and consequent shortage of feed will sharply curb shipments of sheep. to and within Saskatchewan and Manitoba, • * • Arthrobacter, a group of soil • bacteria common throughout the world, produce significant amounts of plant, growth hor- mones, or auxins, This was discovered recently by two Canada Department of Agriculture scientists at Ottawa, Dr, H. Katznelson, Director of the Microbiology Research Insti- tute, and J. C, Sirois of the Plant Research Institute. • • a As many as 3,000 million bac- teria may exist in one ounce of soil, Moreover, they are five to ten times more numerous In the soil surrounding plant roots, The plant itself contributes to the growth of . the bacteria by providing them • with food from dead or dying, root fragments, sloughed -off cells and root ex- cretions, These include amino acids -- the "building-blocks" of proteins—some of which stimu- late the bacteria to produce 60 times as much hormone. • All types of these bacteria tested produce readily detectable amounts of the hormone, chemi- cally -known as Indole - 3 - acetic acid, Other ,soil bacteria and many molds also produce this hormone, but are much less abundant. • • • Plant growth hormones are produced naturally in higher plants. In minute amounts, they control' growth and other physi- ological functions of the plant. Studies are being made of the effects of the amounts produced by soli bacteria on plant growth, • and their probable effects on re- sistance to disease, • * • The embargo on export of La- oombe swine was lifted by the federal government last month. The ban was imposed at the and of 1908 when 'distribution of the first breeding groups to Ca- nadian farmers got' underway.. • a a The new swine: breed was de- veloped by the' Canada Depart- ment of Agriculture for crossing with commerical types but it was feared that, without export con- trol, the supply might be de- pleted before the breed became established in this country. Several thousand Lacombes are now registered with the Ca- nadian National Live Stock Re- cords, Breeders recently answered a questionnaire expressing satis- faction with the Lacombe and requesting freedom to sell it in the commercial export trade, • • • Barring known grub - infested cattle from entering Canada is routine, but importing them de- liberately is news. It happened though, at Leth- bridge where 14 Herefords in- fested with warble grubs were recently received from Oklahoma in the interests of science, Explained J. Weintraub of the Canada Department of Agricul- ture's research station: "The ani mals will be studied to see if the grubs they carry can adapt to the Canadian climate." • • • Warble grubs mature and are dropped by cattle in Oklahoma in December and January; in • Canada they are dropped in April and May. The question arises: Can the grubs dropped in mid - winter survive in Canada? At Leth- bridge, they have survived brief exposure to —40°F. but ,it is not known if they can survive long exposures under natural condi- tions. • • • It is important to know if grub -infested cattle ' from'. -the south could re -infest those areas where the grubs have been practically eradicated by con trol measures, It is important also to determine if new cattle grazing areas in the north could become infested. Rearing the Oklahoma grubs in the laboratory will provide a supply of warble flies in winter whereas they are available lo- cally for only a short period in the early summer. With this ad- ditional supply the work on the reproductive behaviour of the flies and on tests with chemi- cals that may inhibitreproduc- tion will be expanded, The flies will be used also in an intensified study of the anti- bodies produced by cattle as protection against infestation by grubs, Such information may help development of a control vaccine. Socialized medicine—when the gals at the bridge table get talk - Ing about their operations, KOAYSCIIOOI LESSON By Rev. R. Barclay Warren, B.A., MIL The Greatest Comuandment Leviticus 19:18; Matthew, 25:35- 37, 19:16-21 Memory Selection; '1'llou shalt love the Lord thy God" with all thy heart, and with alt thy' soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy tnlnd; and thy neigh- bour as thyself. Luke 10:27. It is appropriate that follow- ing our study of the ten com- mandments, we should turn to the great commandment, which 1s sometimes stated in two parts. Jesus said, "On these two com- mandments hang all the law and the prophets," Matt, 22:40. Il is easy to see that if we have this love as emphasized in the great commandment, it is natural for us to keep the ten command- ments, With such supreme love for God we will have no other gods, we shall reverence His name, keep His day holy and honour our parents, 11 we have this pure love (the word is used to describe the nature of God; for God is love) toward our neighbour, we shall not hate him, defile him through adultery, steal from him, lie about him or covet what is rightly his. If we keep the great commandment we will keep the rest. One of the great inadequacies of the English language is that we use the same four letters to describe the attitude of a man toward a steak, a woman toward a hat, a boy toward a girl, a mother toward her child, and a saint toward God, Of course, we usually can tell by the context what a person means when he uses this word 'love', but there is danger that the consistent low use of the word may dispel some of the higher meaning, The Greeks had three words for 'love'. 'Eros' meant the kind of love which seeks to possess its object and stood for all lustful desire on a physical level, It does not appear in the Bible. 'Philia' meant a mutual friendship and solicitude. The word used in the memory selection is 'agape'. It is the kind of love which goes out toward another in a deep concern folr his welfare without any ex- pectation of return. It is express- ed in John 3:18, Man is inherent- ly selfish but when we share of God's 'agape' toward us, then we have this kind of love toward Hina and toward our fellowmen. If this love prevailed in the hearts of men, this would be heaven on earth. Traded A Door To Get A Painting In recent years the 87 -year-old storyteller Somerset. Maugham has been increasingly worried about the safety of the paintings at his Villa Mauresque on the French Riviera, The immediate area, St. Jean -Cap Ferrat, has long been a favorite hunting ground with art thieves; After last rummer's thefts, amounting to some $8 million worth -of art, • Maugham came to the painful decision to sell his fine collection of 35 paintings at auction. On April 10, some 2,200 con- noisseurs, reporters, and sight- seers in London will jam Sothe- by's auction rooms, where chair - Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking CS:17 ©©61175: trlt7l] UM 17017O© .LVA 203111M®o d aar5 DV CM ©k7®©©© ~- ©©©©F4 5IGv©� ��E by ©0� gl10161MEI mamma ©0© ©dMEI EZIMNg Pot./ d ei©© ©rn b V man Peter -Wilson expects to ells- . pose of the collection—works by Renoir, Picasso, Monet, Gauguin, Matisse, and others — for about .$2,240,000, Meantime Maugham has recalled some of his experi- ences with art in "Purely for My Pleasure," soon to be 'pub- lished In London, In one notable transaction de- -aides"001n""'1'a11111;rile traded a u%ooden'iiSot`' Wil 7iative for three panels of a glass door, on which ,94uguin had painted an Eve, By the 'time 'Maugham met Matisse, the old painter was bed- ridden. Maugham bought two of his paintings. "One is known u 'The Yellow. Chair'," he writes. "It gave one the impression that a happy inspiration had enabled him to paint it in a single morn- ing. When I said so , . , he . , . told me that he had scraped his paintings down to the canvas three times before he could get the effect he wanted. The colors were brilliant , , . It made pic- tures close to it look rather drab and I had had to hang It by itself on a white wall. 1 said: 'You know, I buy paintings to brighten my house.' Matisse gave. an angry grunt. 'That is only deco- ration,' he muttered. 'Decoration has no importance,' I thought this nonsense, but was too polite to say so." Show exactly how to dog the job safely, without strain, Wear adequate clothing as protection against spray s. Prohibit loose clothing that could catch in machinery. Match youths to the job; ban the "thrill kids," show-offs, FARM SAFETY — Farmers across the nation soon will employ thousands or young people, many of them unfa- miliar with farm work. Prop- er safety supervision is essen- tial tc reduce the toll of death and injury among young work- ers. The above sketches illus- trate some sound sofety prac- tices. ISSUE 11 — 1962 WHIRL 'ROUND—Nature seems to draw rings around man when it comes to design, at is shown by this circle of flouting ice on, the Kaskaskia -River, The 30 - foot .diameter circle, which may have been formed by a whirlpool, remains in same spot. Plitt SUPERIOR *10.0 MARKET* "WEEH•END SPECIALS" BALLET TOILET TISSUE, White or, Pink 2 roll pkg. 22e BLUE BONNET YELLOW QUICK MARGARINE 2 • 1 lb, pkg. 59e NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE 6 oz. jar 89e ROBIN HOOD DELUXE CAKE MIXES 2 pkgs. - 63e KItAF'!' CHEEZE WIIIZ 16 oz, jar 59e KELLOG'S NEW O,K, CEREAL 1 giant pkg. 29c JAVEX, 1 • 32 oz. bottle 23c For Superior Service Phone 156 ■A• See Fairservice We Deliver RADFORD'S GARAGE LONDESBORO For RENT or SALE 3 Point Hitch Equipment DANUSER POST HOLE DIGGER REAR MOUNTED 3 POINT BLADES HERD BROADCASTERS Ideal for spreading Grass Seed and Fertilizer THIS EQUIPMENT IS AT OUR GARAGE IN LONDESBORO OUR REPRESENTATIVE FOR BLYTII AND DISTRICT IS LLOYD WALDEN, Illi. 3, Blyth Telephone Blyth 85R6 "Gordon Radford" Londesboro, Ontario YOUR DEALER FOR OLIVER FARM EQUIPMENT AND FIRESTONE CAR TRUCK AND TRACTOR TIRES Stewart's Red I3 White Food Market Blyth I Phone 9 We Deliver -4-4-4-4.+411 4I4 -t4+4 -4#4-4.4+.4-4-t4- -44.4-4-4-.4-14-4.4.44 4-411#•-. Carnation Milk, tall tins 1111.... • 5 for 69e 19c Aylmer Catsup, 11 oz. bottle Libby's Spaghetti, 15 oo. tin 3 for 47c Robin Hood Oats, 51b. bag 59c White Swan Tissue 8 rolls 95c Maxwellhousc Coffee, 1 lb. bag ; G9c Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 25 lb. bag 65c Fresh Celery Hearts per pkg. 30c No. 1 Cooking Onions 2 lb. bag 25e California Grapes per lb. 19c Fresh Rhubarb per Ib. 25e Burns Weiners 2 lbs. 85c 1-4 4-1444 444444 •444-1-1,-4444444-t t-•! 4 e-# 4-• 4-$4/-e 4 4•-A A-1 -s BEY KIDS '1111• A New Cereal ••. Kellog'rl O.K.'s , .31c per pkg. and a free ticket on the Big Yogi Bear displayed in our store window, THE BLYTII 8T DA1D ' u_ iitetliteAtLY., karet WESTFIELD Farm Forum was held Monday ev ening l.1 Atr, Charles Smith's when "Taxation for 1 mention" was discus• sed. 11 was (lc,cidcd that the rural pup- u!ation paid t(o ranch educational tat in cuntpariscn with turban It was sug• gestod that income and Later, taxes be u ed fur that j'url'o_e. Next Monday Schen wilt be held at .1r. Norman Hit;t,r,,,;an's with the subject "I he Ag• tc(•u Aura1 fiehabt::lalion and Develop meat Act." Lome plans have. been made for family Night. whia!t will be corning up sucul. Mr, and Mrs. Norman McDctit•ell, Au burn, were gueEts of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sniath on Thucrsrlay. AU, Franhlln Campbell, London. spent 1Vednesday with his parents, also Mr, Cecil Campbell, Exeter, was at his home en Sunday. Mr. and ,A tis. llarvcy 'Maracalso Mgrs Alva McDowell motored to Tor• onto un Thursday. David returned home with then attar spending two weeks in Sick Children's hospital. Afr. Bill Rodger who has heel' !idle with Ills parents, 11r. and Mrs. Emilio.. S.011'Rodger, fur the past new months lett on Thursday for B.C. Bill is with the R:C.A.h'. and was studying at the Clinton Rader School, is posted l0 13. C. again. 1Ir, Ken Gaunt., 1 unclesboro, visited with 'Mr, and Mrs, 12eyd McDowell on Mr, and Mrs, Arnold Cook, Sharon 'and Janet were at Gland, ruceul:sly. ,Master Wayne .1leDowcll celebrated his 2nd birthday With a party Saturday evening .at his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Norman 111eDoweli, Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. David Webster and babe, of Blyth, were guests of Mr. ate; Mrs. Alva McDow©ll Tuesday evening. Messrs. Arnold Cook,•, and Normar Wightman made a business trip to Waterloo and Guelph on friday. Mr, and Afrs, Eric Vogle and Mark London, visited with .her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Smith, recently. iMr, \Vat, Walden is visiting with his (laughter, Airs. Sydney 11IcClinchey, McClinchey and family, Auburn, Mr. Israel Good, Carl and Kevin. brought Phyllis 'Biggelstaff home Sun• clay afternoon spending a little time with Mr. and Mts. Biggerstaff and 13111. Mr. Gordan Snell has started le tap for the 3202 maple syrup Season. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Melillo' and Mr. Mater Atcl3rien, Godes ieh, visited recently with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Snell and Jermetta, .A speedy recovery is wished all the stick folic in the cemu unity, AUBURN Card Party A large crowd attended the card party Last Friday evening in the Com- munity Memoripl Hall sponsored by the members of Court Dufferin of the Canadian Order of Forrestcrs. The prize winners wore: euchre, liiv'h lady. Mrs, Bert Craig; low lady, Mrs, El. liott Lapp; high gent, Jack Creighton; low gent, Ross Wilson; most lone hands, Gordon Powell; 500, high lady, lfrs. \Vi'liant J. Craig; low lady, Mrs;. W. Bradnock; high man, Kenneth Mc. Dougall: low man , Wes :Bnadnock; Lost. Heir, high lady, Mrs. Alvin Plun- kett; low lady, Mrs. Lloyd Craig; high ratan, Mrs, Harold McClinchry tplayinf IIS a ratan); low man, Allan McDougal. Several ;tables of crokin ole were alit enjoyed. Lucky chair prizes were '.von by Mrs: Bert Direr, Harold McClin• chey and Mrs. Bert Craig. Lucky eups were held by Mrs. Alvin Plunket`. and Bob Madan, The progressive .games were in charge of Bob Doer. Gordon Deer, Harold McCl neltey, Gord. on Powell and Bill Seers. Prizes were donated by Maxine's I1 sLaurant., Bob Doer and Mr, and ?drs. W. L, Craig. • The door prize donated by Bill Seers was won by 'Mrs, James Gloushcr. Proceeds of the evening were donated to the Building Fund of the new hall. WAITI'ON Mrs. , James Sauderson, Wroxeter,spent the week -end with AIr, and il1rs. latus W Oras Hiss Betty Ilueg^y, of Listowel, vis ad over the weekend with her parents Mr. and .Mrs. Cliff Ifaegy. 111r. and Mrs, Dcna'd Mater, of Loa- doa, visited last wer'kend with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cardiff, of Pet- rclia, Visited on Saturday with Mr. and A1r�: Wa er J3 t idfcat. A large number from Walton at- tended the combined Lenten service in Melville United Church, Bru:Eels, Sun• day evencng, Aliiih ers assisting In the service were Rev, 11. L. Jennings, Ilev, K. Griffiths, Rev. W, , J. Morri- son, ltov, A, Iligginbu:ktarn delivered the address. 'rhe different Units of the UCIV (11 Duffs United Church at•e busily en- gaged in practicing for the annual Iris) Kogram and sovJal evening Friday: March 10 at 0;15 p.m, Lunch wit' be serve(i. Anglican (;hutch llccting 'I'lic March meeting of the Guild of St: George's Church was held id the home of Mrs. S. Humphries. The meeting opened with the hymn, "Jesus keep Inc near the cress." Mrs, Jen- nings have the prayer an(1 scripture rending. The secretary is to send for roman's and we hove more quilting 10 (10, The World's Day of Prayer is this Friday, the 0th, Invitation to the United Church Bazaar under 111e aus- pices of the Walton Unit on March 20 also one to 111e St. John's Anglican on March 27 to see sCides an this year's study hook. Mrs. Jennings closed with prayer, World Day of Prayer The World Day of Prayer was held, March 9 in Duffs United Church, '1'lie theme "God's .Love for the Whale World" was taken by Mrs. Nelson Reid and Mrs, Margaret Iunphries, hymns "0 Love of God how strong and true!" "Love Divine all love Excelling" and "Lord Speak to me that I may Speak" were sung with Mrs. M. Baan at the piano. Prayers were offered by Mrs. A, McDonald, Mrs. D, Buchanan, Mrs. D, IVatson, Mrs. II, . Brown, Mrs. S. Humphries. A duet "When 1 kneel Down to Pray" MIS rendered by Mrs. N. Reid ant Mrs. II. Traviss, accom- panied by Mrs. 11. Brown. Mrs. A. Higginbotham introduced the guest speaker, Rev. 11, Griffiths of United Church, I3russels, He spoke on the theme for the World Day of Prayer and told its of Gocl's love and how it works in our own lives, our homes and gave us a very interesting experience of God's Love in his own life when he was 11) a pr'isoner's Camp for 5 years. Hymn 'The Day Thou Gayest Lord is Ended" was sung. Rev, A. lliggiubolh am closed the meeting wag the Belie. diction. Another card party will be held in two weeks, Communism -Topic At A. Y,1',A, Meeting Communism was the topic at the A. Y. P. A, meeting held at the home of Mr and Mrs, AlldrCW Kirkconnell, Due to Hie absence of the president, Miss Eileen Schneider, Rev. Robert 'Molly took charge of the meeting. The min• ules of the previous meeting were read by Hie secretary, Carolyn Clark, Mr. Meally gate an interesting address on CunumuIisIn ailed expla'inwl w'h'at. MIS meant by it, and how people lived in countries Elim by Communists. After giving out Lenten cards the meeting was !cloned with prayers. A dainty lunch %tai served by Mrs. Kirkconnell. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Fordyce Clark on April 1st. Order Your Counter Cheque; Books (printed or blank) At The Standard Office SERVING IN SO MANY WAYS The Red Cross Looks to You The humanitarian achievements of the Red Cross depend on your generosity. Your dollars provide and carry on the essential Red Cross services and programmes in your community. This year—think of the many ways the Red Cross serves you and your neighbour —then plan your donation or pledge to the best of your means, A generous donation will do so much for so many in 1962. Red Cross Needs 'lour Help Now BLYTII LADIES' AUYILLIARY Mrs. Harry Gibbons. Pres., Mrs. L. 1VIcGowan, 1)h9le 1071Z2 .. M. _ Phone LOG VITAMINS give Vim, Vigour and Vitality•• • Hell) build 1'esi[d I11CQ to cola alld flu. Parainettes Tablets, 8.00 value Spec. Spec, 1'ara)uette Syrup, 7.50 value Maltevol Wdmpole'fl Extract One A Day Multiple Scotts Emulsion Vi Cal tier Capsules Vita Pops Alphamettes Cod Liver Oil Capsules Halibut Liver Oil Capsules 1,59 and 1.49, 2.75 and 1.00 and 1.95 and 2.50 and 1.00, 1.85 and 1.15 and 6,00 5.50 2,50 2.89 •1.19 2.00 4,95 5,95 3.50 .98c 2,29 R. D. PHILP, Fhm1 B I)RUGN, suNI)RIES, ivALI,rArra r1IONe 2n, MGt1'I'H *Nag .ay ,fid Crown Trust GUARANTEED CERTIFICATES sgo 200 a Safe 5% Investment Quccns Avo,, ASK FOR A BOOKLET Phone London GE 8.831 4 Applications will be received by :- HUBERT P. MOWRY Plume 2 1111_, I31yl11, Unt. THINKING OF i-IOUSECLEANING? While you are at it why not trade-in your' old Stove and Refrigerator on a new modern Westing., House Appliance. Housecleaning Specials Just In: 12 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator, cold injector model, automatic defrost, $349.00 less your old refrigerator. 30" Westinghouse Range, with rotisserie 249.95 VODDEN'S HARDWARE �3 ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Blyth, Ont. Call 71 YOUR SETT BUY IS HERE! 1962 MERCURY Comet 1962 CHEV, Sedan 1960 CHEV. Sedan 1959 CHEV. Sedan 1958 FORD Sedan 1956 DODGE Sedan 1956 DODGE Coach 1954 STUDEBAKER V8 1953 CHEV. Sedan 1953 CHEV. Coach 1953 PONTIAC Sedan Garage - Blyth, Ontario. New and Used Car Dealers SNELL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP d3 SAVE Holly Fancy Peas,_15 oz. . 2 for 35c Garden Patch Whole Kernel Corn, 14 oz,, 2 for 29c Campbell's Tomato Soup, 10 oz. tins , . , . 4 for 51c Dares Apple Juice, 48 oz. 2 for 55c Bine Ribbon Coffee, 10 oz. jar 1.29 Stulhritc Margarine 4 ib,,. 95e J.lostess Potato Chips, twin pack, Reg'. 69e, Sale 59e Smoked Cottage Roll, Chicken Legs whole or half i)er lb. per lb. 65c 1 49c Potatoes Tomatoes, vine 75 lbs. , , . 1.50 ripen, , lb. 29e Grapefruit 10 for , , . , 49c Lettuce • Fancy Spy 2 heads • , • 45c . Apples 5 Ib. 49c Cook'g Onions 3lbs. ..', 29c