HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-03-28, Page 1THE BLYTH STANDAR
VOLUME 75 - NO. 0'1
Authorized as second clans mall,
fust Office Department, Ottawa.
and for payment of postage In cash.
BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1962Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Popular Life Of John W. Hanna
Ended Suddenly Last Friday
.The life of a highly respected Huron
County citizen was ended last Friday,
March 23 when John W, Hanna, 72,
of Wingham, was the victim of a heart
attack.
Mr. Hanna had been the Progressive
Conservative member in the Ontario
:,ogislalure for H ronBrticu Riding
since 1943, and was a friend of all who
knew him, regardless of political feel.
Ings, Ile was often referred to by
local residents as "the greatest ol
campaigners."
ile was the owner of Hanna and Co.
1 Id, A1can's Furnishings and Hanna and
Co. Ltd. Ladies' Wear and was a Wing.
hints businessman for over 40 years.
John W. Hanna was the son of the
late John datura and Mary Young, 01
Colborne township. His wife is the
former Esther Campbell, of Woodstock.
His only son, John, died in a tragic car
accident in 1954.
•
He was a member of the Wingham
Lions Chit) and Masonic Lodge and
served his community as mayor during
the period 1936 to 1941. Ile was elects
ed to the Ontario Legislature in 1915
and reelected In 1945, 1948, 1951, 1955
and 1959,
Friends and governmental dignitaries
from the entire province attended the
fune+al service in St. Andrews Church,
Wingham, on Monday afternoon, con-
ducted by Rev. Gordon I,, Fisher,
minister of the church, and Rev. W.
A. Downer, DIT'P for Dufferin-Sinicoe.
A Manic service was also held on
Sunday 'light in the Currie funeral
home. Burial took place in \1'inghunt
Cemetery.
Fireside Forum Held Final
Spring Meeting
On Monday, March 26, Mr.' and Mrs.
- IIarvey Taylor entertained the Fireside
Farm Forum for their final night 11
adults were present. After listening tc
the broadcast. _ of . the .summary of, the
season's triples, the questionnaire was
1, answered and some appointments made
for next year's work.
.The social committee for a picnic or
evening party was Mr, and Mrs. Eric
Anderson mid A1r. and Mrs. Don 13u•
hanan; to start Farm Forum next fall,
get a home and plan lunch, Mrs. How.
and Cartwright and 114ts. Jinn IIowalt;
reporters, Airs. Oliver Anderson and
Mrs. George Canter. Mrs. Don Buchan.
qui was appointed t0 seed MINIS 10 the
sick and bereaved, '17►e ladies served
pie and ice cream.
Following are the prize winners in
euchre: most games, Gordon McGreg;
ere; lone hands, Mrs. Jim Howatt; con -
solution, Mrs. George Carter,
• IN WINGIIAl11 HOSPITAL
Mrs. Jean Kcelinio is a patient in
Winghan Hospital, We wish her a
speedy recovery. •
11MONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, April 1, 1962.
S'1, ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Itev. D. J, Lane, B.A., D.D., Minister.
1.00 p.m. --Church Service and Suri'
day School,
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Ilev. Robert F', Meanly, Rector.
41.11 Stutday hi Lent
Trinity Church, Blyth.
10.30 ran.-•{Stuulay School
10.30 a.tn.-aIo1y Cotmutwtian and
Sermon,
St. Mark's, Auburn.
.12.00 o'clock -holy Communion and
Sermon,
8,30 p m.-A.Y.P.A.
Trinity Church, 13etgravo,
2.00 p.m. --Sunday School.
2.30 p.m. -- holy Communion and
Sermon.
TIIE UNITED CIiURCH
OF CANADA •
Blyth Ontario.
Rev, I3. Evan McLagan • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kai
Director of Music.
9,55 a.m.-Sunday Church Scheel.
11 a.m,-Morning Warship,
CIIUItC[I OF 001)
Mct" nnneu Street. Blyth,
John Dormer, Pastor
Phone 105
10.00 a.m.--Stutday School.
11.00 a.m.-Worship Service.
7.30 p.m. -Evening Service.
8,00 p.m. -Wed., Prayer Service.
1,00 p.m, Friday, Youth Fellowship,
Auburn I Iall Will Be Turned
Over To Hullett
A good crowd attended the last card
party of the season in the Auburn
Community Memorial Hall for the
building fund, in charge of Oliver An•
dcrson and William L. Craig.
Prizes for progressive euchre were
presented to: high man, Charles Mills;
high lady, Mrs. .Tack Creighton; low
man, Kelland McVittic; low lady, Barb -
are Sanderson; most lone hands, Fred
Seers. In 500: high man, William J.
Craig; high lady, DIrs. Ed. Davies;
low ratan, Elliott Lapp; low lady, Airs
W. Chisholm. Lost. heir: high, Sid-
ney DfcClihchey and Bert Taylor; low,
1311'y Lapp and Allan McDougall,
It was,announced that the present
Hall Board %VIII turn over the Hall to
Mullett Township at the end of March
and plans are being made for the
official opening this spring. A beauti-
ful ect of law furniture has been
made and donated, with the draw to
take place at that time. Tickets are
available from William J. Craig, Wit•
liana . L. Craig and Oliver, Anderson,
Mother Passed Away
At Chatham
Mrs. Elizabeth Ellen Clark, 86, of
Chatham, mother of Mr. Arthur Clark,
R.R. 1, Auburn, passed away on Tues.
day, March 20, 1962. The funeral was
held on Thursday, March 22.
Other survivors include Ilu'ee sons
incl one daughter, (Vatter, of Windsor,
Garnet, Ilarold, and 'Mrs. Vera Shuttle-
worth, all of Chatham,[.
1'RIENDLY BUSY 11's TO MEE'1'
The April meeting of the "Friendly
Busy B's will he held at the home of
Mrs. John Manning on April 5111 'at 8.3t
p.m.
Public School Board
Deals With Business.
Pays Bills
Tho regular meeting ,of the IIliyth
Public School Board was held on Mon•
day evening, March 26 at. 8:30 o'clock.
Trustees Manning, Madill, Webster,
Stewart and Street were present.
The minutes of the last regular Meet -
Mg were road and passed on motion
by Trustee Madill, seconded by Trus.
tee Webster, Carried.
The following accounts were present.
od and ordered paid.. on motion of
Trustee Stewart, seconded by Trustee
Webster, Carried.
Blyth hydro, $21.15; Sparlings' IIard•
scare, 9.10; Bill's Electric, 15.27; A.
Manning and Sons, 11.38; Blyth Tele.
phone, 37.08; Vodden's Hardware,
249.95; Geo. Lhunnr, Sr., 300; Elliott
insnuence Agency, 188.71; Superior
Food Markel, 3,62; It.. Higgins, 1.25.
Principal It. Higgins reported ;tic
percentage attendance for the inbuilt
of February 89.88 and the enrolment
156. Ile also informed the Board that
the date for the operetta had definitely
been set for April 17th,
A motion was made by Trustee Ma-
dill that the next regular meeting ; be
hold on Monday evening, April 30th,
seconded by Trustee Stewart. Carried.
A motion was made by Trustee Madill
that the 13oar'd advertise for a Grade
One teacher Immediately in the London
Free Press, also the Stratford Beacon
Repaid and applications to be received
by April 19111, seconded by Trustee
Webster Carried,
Acljourninent,
Young Lad Piling
Hockey .Dlaw
Jeffrey Watson, young son of Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Watson, was the whiner
Of the P,lyth Lions $50,01) hockey drew
last Saturday when ids ticket produced
the correct score, 2 to '2.
The next ch'aw will be held on the
Sunday night. 'Toronto -New York game,
and !tickets are now available from any
member of the club. -
Church Of God Revs rts'�:'
To Two Services
The Church of God through the wint-
er months had only one service in the
aftercnoon on Sunday because of the
uncertainty of the wearlher, But since
most of the winter storms are over,
we are going hack to our morning and
evening services.
Rev. Don Snell will be the speaker for
the first Sunday evening service, this
Sunday, April 1st. '!'here will also he
special 'nncsic, All aro welcome to
have fellowship with tis -we are just
it group of happy Christians meeting
together lo sing praises to God and to
learn more of His truth from His Word.
We have 110 membership card to sign,
so don't lel, this keep you from coin-
ing.
0'n Thursday, April 5111 et Dight p.um.
we 'are having two missionaries on
furlough from Kenya, Africa, with us.
ifirttntng Cif +dent
By Itev. R. F. Meanly, Rector of the Parish of Blyth, Auburn, Belgrave
1st Thessalonians 1: 11. "And that ye study to be quiet,"
This is lite season of Lent, which ,the Church asks un to observe
by prayer, fasting, self-examination and repentance, self-denial and
reading and meditation of God's holy Word. We are asked to think
upon the things of eternity, to stock -take of what growth aur sands
have made within a year. 11 is a time to stand and pause and a Liuh.e,
as in the words of our text, to be quiet; a time to reflect upon how far
we all have fallen short of the requirements of our God.
To some people Lent means nothing but they forget that the Church's
seasons grew out of needs and necessities and :o are an Invaluable aid
to religion. They were not made to a plan but to meet a need and con.
smutty the Ghuroh has seasons of discipline las well as joy. In this
way life is kept in balance.
.The chief call of 'Lent is to self discipline, This first means tweets
ance after a careful but not morbid self-examination and Lent Balls us
to face the fact of she To many Christians the ward sin generally means
the large sins but all sin, whether It is big or small, Is the discord ol
our will with the Will of God,
It is the small things of life that always make the difference and so
it is with shh. Small sins -yes -think of that bill you forgot to pay; the
business transaction that was not quite accurate; taking the Lord's
name in vain; your delight in small talk. Even worshipping and profes-
sing Christians need to pause and kneel before the Holy Presence and
think once more of sin. No evasions, no shifting the blame, no useless
excuses can alter the fact that we have chosen the lower instead of the
higher and have set up our own will against the Will of God. It is no
wonder that the Church prays daily in her Liturgy, "But thou 0 Lord,
have mercy upon us miserable offenders."
.1.0111 offers the opportunity to all of us to think upon our mistaken
notions and ,notions, our sins, and confess them to our Father. The
tasks Of life prnvs on us on every side and they aro such that we Dail•
''not neglect them yet all of us who value the spiriltoal life must find
some periods of solitude in which to nourish that life which is Immor-
tal and that is what the Church Ls asking you to do during this season of
Lent.
If one thing is needed today it is a grip on religion, what it really
means to be a child of God and a member of that Divine society which
He founded, The Holy Catholic Church.
(omitted from last week's issue)
Raithby Home Levelled
By last Thursday Afternoon Fire
Lions Add Finishing Touch
To Hall Basement
Tho entire 'lower floor of the Mem.
oriat Hall, Blyth, is now toasting a
brand new coat of paint which has cer•
fainly gone a long way in hnproving
the al'l.earance of the building, an.
has at least ween that portion of the
structure brought up to the expccla•
tions of such a structure.
The final tomb was added this week
witlt the pain'11ng of the walls of the
library a lovely shade 01 pink. 'I'I►e COSI
of this portion of the building is also
Icing handled by the local !tions Club.
United Church Women.
Meet For Second Time
The second meeting of the Blyth
United Church Women was hold on
Tuesday evening, March 27111. The
president, Mrs. II. Vodden, opened the
meeting.
Mrs. Wm. McVittie led the group in
u devotional service. The scripture was
read by Airs. C. Higgins. Mrs. J. Mc-
Dougall contributed a delightful piano
solo, a transcription of the hymn
"Come Ye Disconsolate." The roll call
showed each unit well represented.
Minutes were rend by the secretary,
Mrs. C. Galbraith; and the treasure'.
Mrs. U. 1lowes, presented the financial
statement. Mrs. J. Fairservice, con•
responding secretary, and Mrs. 1). Me.
Callum, flower convenor, each gave a
report. Mrs. Wm. AlcVitie gave a
very interesting' report of the history•
making inaugural meeting of London
Conference United Church Women held
receelly.
Announcement was made of the Eas-
ter 'Phankoffering and Spring Rally to
be held in the Blyth United Church on
.ti nday, April 15111, at -which Mrs: J. Y.
MacKinnon, of London, will be the
special speaker.
An e ccellcnt firm entitled Treasure
et Bethany" teas shown.
Lunch was served and a social half•
hour followed.
HOME ECONOMIST VISITS WITH
BLYTII HOMEMAKING CLUB
The fourth meeting of the Myth
Scramsters was held at the Koine ol
Mrs. Good on March 24 at 2 p.m.
The meeting was opened with the
4.11 fledge. The run call was taken
and the minutes of the lavt meeting
were read by Shirley Mullion.
Miss Gilchrist fitted the separates
which the girls had basted for fitting.
She then demonstrated how to put a
facing on and uudcrstitch it.
Mrs, Good told the girls about assem-
bling' the garment, explaining basting
sand dhow to press vertical and funder•
atom darts.
Plans for Achievenment. Day were
made and the meeting closed with the
Mary Stewart Collcet,
Blyth Lions Hell
Business Meeting
The regular meeting of the Blyth
Lions Club was held last Thursday in
the Memorial hall and was strictly in
the form of a business meeting.
Proceedings were opened by prrsi
dent, Edward Watson, with the sungint
of Tho Queen, and toast to the Queen,
Lion Robert 11‘ically said Grace.
'l'ime Blyth Branch df the Ladies Aut.-
catered to a lovely meal, and
Ken Scott, of 11,11. 1, 131yth, contributed
several entertaining solos while accom•
ponying himself on the guitar.
Considerable clisctissiotn took place
.concerning matters of importance to
the Club, It was deided to continue with
.the lucky draw through 'the play offs.
It was also the feeling of the members
that the library should be painted and
decided to go ahead with this proposal
if no other offers were forthcoming.
The meeting closed with the "Roar.'
Toll horses Returning
West
host's. Aubrey and Lorne. 'l'oll r+int
Charles Brigham are leaving this
Thursday for Brandon, Manitoba,
where they will be showing Aubrey's
horses in the Brandon IVinte' Fair,
April 2.7. The trip is being made at
ter tan extremely successful journey
to the sane fair last year,
11tSON AL 1NTERES7
Mr. Oswald Pollard, Godorich, spent
Stmday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs,
Lorne Scrimgeour. Mr. Pollard worked
as a barn framer and carpenter with
Mr. Scrimgeour from 1908 to 1918.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook visited on
Friday with lir. Thomas Ccok in Wing.
haat,
AL,,:; Bennie ;moll, of Westfield, spent
N)oulay with her grandparents, All.
and Airs. Walter Cook.
\irs. Edna Cook is visiting with
and Ml's. Garth ,McOlinchcy, Auburn.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Watson, Kenneth
and Jain, of London, 'visited on Sunday
with the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. 13 Watson.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook visited
with Mrs. Lloyd Walden and family, of
Westfield, on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Racine, Bob and
Kenneth, of !Goderieh, visited on Sun-
day with the latter's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. B. D. Philp,
Mhs. J. 13, Watson spent a Sew days
last week with her son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John-Gummow
and daughters, of Don Mills.
Mr. Walter Mason and Mr. Tit...eas
Thompson, Mrs. Walter Masan and Mrs -
Gordon Mason visited in London our' , anise of tic fire is uuknmvr► but
Monday. '1'I►c ladies visited with Alrs. I thv'ioss was estimated at. over $12,000.
y Some insurance was carried, but. fur-
nishings fu the fop floc' wore'complet'
ely destroyed, i::4.1aithby was de -
liming syrup in Godcrk i., at the time
f Tuesday, March
fir
Fire completely destroyed one of the
oldest farm homes in tate Auburn dist-
rict last Thursday afternoon belonging
to Mr. and Mrs..Frank Raithby, one•
half mile cast of the village in Ifullett
township, and noted.for its production
of maple syrup.
The blaze was discovered by Mr.
and Mrs. Ted East, of Haat Town-
ship, as they drove to Auburn about
3;30 p.m. On investigation Mr. East
found no one at the home, and seeing
the flames coining through the roof al.
the back of the house, stu»ntoned the
Auburn and Blyth Fire Departments
Mr. Robby with his son, John, were
in the hush at the time boiling maple
:.yrup and were told of tate fire by a
neighbour, Calvin Bisback, Who ran
the distance to the bush through the
them.
snow to inform en.
The 90 year old insul brick covered
house, 38 by 80 feet, was burned to
the ground, but neighbours and friends
were successful in removing the furni-
ture from the first floor of the two-
storey building. A nearby building and
garage housing a tank of gasoline and
the tractor was saved by firemen with
water' pumped from a pond at the out-
skirts of Auburn to the Blyth truck
with the Auburn ptunper. Mr. Raith-
by took his stand on the high barn
roof and watched for flying cinders
while the blaze was at its peak.
INJURED IN BUSH ACCIDENT
Mr. Gordon Carter' was taken to Clin
Lon hospital Thursday, March 15, when
he was injured while cutting wood in
the bush. Gordon was felling a tree
when it split and fell to the ground,
crashed into a stump and hit him on
tlie•hit>'. 'He=was able to return home
the following Sunday.
Ladies Committee Revise
Prize List
Several members of the Women's
committee of Blyth Agricttlttu'al So•
defy, stet in Memorial Hall, Friday
afternoon, for the purpose of revising
the sections of the prize list pertaining
to !tonne Er:enemies, Arts, Crafts and
Needlework, and thereby compiling
the advanced list in 1.1030 classes.
The nc%why ,appointed Secretary-Treas
liver, Mrs. Robert Marshall, was in at
tcndance. Plans were made to hold a
sale of hone made baking in May.
BIRTHS
YOUNG -In Winglnam General Hospital
onTuesday, March 22, 1962, to Mr.
'and Mrs. William Young, RR 1,
Blyth, the gift. of a son, e brother tut
Alan and Karen.
RAITIIBY-In Wingham General Hos-
pital on Tuesday, March 27, 1962, to
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Raithby, the
gift of a daughter.
GBf IUANUS�-In Clinton Public lion
pitat on Sunday, March 11, 1962, to
Mr. and Mrs, Jim Grcictamius,
1, Londesbo'u, the gilt of a son.
ATTENDED MEMORIAL SERVICE`
•Past County Masters Walter Scott,
Charles Stewart, Robert Wallace, and
I4mne►tson Wright last Monday evening
attended a Orantge Memorial Service
for Reeve ATclvin Crich hold in Bali
and Mutch funeral ikat'lor , Clinton,
The service was of a very fine order
and, was very ably conducted by the
members of Murphy Clinton Orange
Lodge, of which Bro. Crich had been
a staunch and faithful member for
many years.- Bro. Crich will indeed
be missed as he always lived and un
held the principals of the order to the
full.
ROBINS MARK I� HIST OIC FICIAL
SPRUNG DAY
Mrs. Lorne Scrimgeour received a
pleasant reminder of the first official
day of spring and an early indication
of the pleasant weather we are now
witnessing when she sighted four robins
on her lawn last Wednesddy, March 21,
0 0. %
The home was built in 1872 by Thom-
as
hornas Errant and was bought by John
Iinilhlry in 1920 from 0. E. Erratt, all
of whom are deceased. Several years
later Mr. Frank Raithby took over
the farm •from his father..
Mr. and Mrs. Raithby and John mov-
ed into the former's sister's home,
Mrs. Mary Johnston, the • evening of
the fire. Several men of the commun-
ity and neighbours took turns keep-
ing watch over the smouldering em -
hers in the event of wind causing their
direction towards the remaining build-
ings. Many neighbour ladies, friends
and members of the Auburn Women's
Institute gave Afrs. Raithby a gener-
ous shower of fritit, pickles, jams,
bedding and linen on Saturday to help
compensate for their loss.
BLYTH RECTOR WILL BE GUEST
ON RADIO DEVOTIONAL PROGRAM
Rev. R. F. Meanly, hector of Trinity
Christi, will be guest minister on the
devotional program, CKNX Radio,
Wiligham, Friday, Saturday, and Mons
day, March 30, 31, and April 2nd, from
9 to 9.30 a.m.
FRIENDLY UNIT TO MEET
Tlie Friendly Unit of the U. C. W.
will hold their April meeting on Mon-
day, April 2 at the hone of Mrs. George
Hanna, Sr, (note change of meeting
place).
WALTON
Miss Ann Shortreed, of Western Un-
iversity, London,.. spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Short reed.
hiss Jean Mills,. of Toronto, spent
the weekend with her father, Mr. Llarl
Alills.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Walland, of Wat-
nus, Sask, spent a few days last week
with the latter's aunt and uncle, Mr
and Mrs, Edward Bi'yans.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to Miss Gladys Flaw -
wit, of Toronto, who celebrated her
birthday on Friday, March 23rd.
Congratulations to Bob Jennings,
Garden Oily, on his.bitthday March 30.
Congratulations to Mr. Bob Hall, of
New Hamburg, wtio celebrates his
birthday on Monday, April 2.
Congratulations to Mrs, Malcolm
Pease, of Yuma, Arizona, who edl0'
prates her birthday on Tuesday, April
lith.
Congratulations to Gary Walden, al
Westfield, who celebrates his 1401
birthday on Friiday, March 30,
Happy Birthday to Bonnie Charlene
Snell, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Alvin
Snell, Westfield, who celebrates her
Gth birthday on Monday, April 2,
•
Child Actors As
Scene Stealers
Patty Duke, age 14, happens
to be the only member of the
cast to have star billing in "Isle
of Children," recently opened on
Broadway,
It is an accomplishment which
would have brought W. C. Fields
no end of anguish.
There is a legend that when
Fields was asked how he liked
child actors he growled: "Par-
boiled,"
Fields — never a patient man
— was forced on one occasion to
offer his round, eminently dis-
illusioned face as target for
Baby LeRoy, sharp - shooting
with spoonsful of oatmeal for
the pleasure of the camera, and
doubtless himself.
The irascible old rascal had
his provocation,
Still — allowing for exaggera-
tion — his answer may not have
been wholly unrepresentative of
those adults in the craft who
have to compete with child ac-
tors.
There is no scene stealer like
them, Even trained dogs and
mugging chimpanzees are help-
less in their company. From the
first child in the first medieval
morality play down to Caroline
Kennedy, they need merely
walk onstage in high heels and
the audience's attention is in-
stantly and completely bemused.
The adult actor can only sulk
in a corner, as Fields used to,
and mutter vague, injured com-
plaints against an outrageous
injustice.
Meanwhile, the child actor
prospers as he has not since
fuzz-cheeked boys held the mon-
opoly on women's roles in the
Elizabethan theater, and those
who feel that the United States
is a child-dorninated society find
documentation in cast listings.
An ambitious mother would
hardly know where to begin.
This Broadway season her pride
and joy could have led .a goat
onstage in "Milk and Honey,"
played a cruise. ship's Dennis the
enace in 'r'Sail Away," or
strummed a guitar in "A Gift of
Time."
And then there is always "The
Sound of Music."
The adult actor's personal
grievance, it should be acknowl-
edged at this point, is not en-
tirely without a broader basis.
When a child actor steals a
scene, he momentarily steals the
play along with it. He steps out
of the dramatic frame, as it were,
to present himself: a dimpled
actuality, in rivalry not only
with adult actors but with the
basic illusion of theater itself.
Few playwrights or directors,
once they have admitted a child
into their world, can resist the
obvious sorts of exploitation, It
Is so simple, so deliciously illegal
Away to hold an audience. Just
one or two rituals of cuteness
and the most mediocre play-
wright can have a popular scene
— and the best playwright can
Tuln the tone of a whole play.
The pay-off Is tempting, the risk
it perilous, writes Melvin Mad-
yfocks in the Christian Science
Monitor,
In television family comedies fn
cute child is still the norm.
n Broadway and in certain
11ms — like, for instance, "The
nnocents," the recent film ver -
pion of "The Turn of the Screw"
— the treatment can be differ-
ent.
The difference may be mea -
sured by the distance between
Shirley Temple in "Rebecca of
Sunnybrook Farni" and Patty
Duke in "The Bad Seed."
In the image of bliss 'Temple
we had confected for us the
child as sugared innocence.
In the linage of Miss Duke
the cliche was upended into a
melodramatic paradox: we were
given the innocent face, the ma-
licious heart.
The transition has been, all too
typically, from one excess to
another. And both these excesses
interestingly illustrate the gen-
eral imbalance that exists in the
portrayal of human nature by
today's dramatists.
Do they not too regularly veer
— with adult characters as well
as children — from willfully
wide-eyed extremes of sentimen-
tality to equally naive extremes
of depravity?
And, as usual, do not these
distortions in the theater simply
reflect the confusion of the
society in which the theater
lives?
Japan Squawks
About U.S. Television
On Japan's six -channel televi-
sion sets, the shows that pull the
biggest audiences are often West-
ern, if not Westerns,' Such Amer-
ican staples as "Dennis the Men-
ace" and "I Love Lucy" are as
popular with Japanese viewers
as they have been with Ameri-
cans, and an American TV actor
without honor in his own country
may be mobbed by screaming
fans if he visits Japan, as the
stars of "Rawhide" did this year.
The enthusiasm of the masses,
however, is not always shared by
their self-appointed spokesmen.
Last week, Tokyo's official Com-
munist newspaper launched a
heated attack on the U.S.'s "ever -
tightening cultural offensive by
radio and TV."
in a single week, reported
movie critic Yumi Yagawa, writ-
ing in Akahata (Red Flag), he
had counted 94 made-in-U.S,A,
items on Tokyo stations, taking
up as much as twelve and a half
hours in a single day. "At any
time of the day," Yagawa wrote
ominously, "there is at least one
channel from which these propa-
ganda beasts are waiting -sharp-
ening their claws — to pounce
upon us.,."
The programs Yagawa feared
have sometimes been criticized
by Western watchdogs, too—but
for radically different reasons.
Among Yagawa's bates noires:
Crime shows like "The Un-
touchables." "Although on the
surface taking the form of prais-
ing ,the efficiency and capability
of American police authorities,
(they) are actually aimed at
promoting anti -Communism and
anti-Soviet thinking,"
Situation comedies ("home do -
ratite") like "Father Knows
Best," "Based on domestic daily
happenings in urban and agri-
cultural petty bourgeoisie . , .
(they) aim at propagandizing the
American way of life . , ."
Westerns like "Rawhide." "Al-
though they are made to, show,
on the surface, sympathy toward
Indians, (they) actually are de-
signed to exalt white supremacy."
The danger to Japan, Yagawa
warned, is subtle and pervasive.
"Our land is now completely
enveloped," he wrote, American
shows "slyly slip into our homes
—in the guise of amusement or
artistic expression — and insidi-
ously, inch by inch, inject Amer-
ica's imperialist policies into our
ochanoma (tea -drinking rooms),
OOP
BRUSH -UP — Ready for an orbit around mirth, papier macho
version of cosmonaut Yuri Gagorin gets a brush -up by q
Viareggio, Italy, artist. Figure is part of one of the carnival
flouts, which lampoon current world events,
MOTHERLY LOVE — Blondie, a two-year-old dachshund
couldn't resist "having kittens," She adopted them after
their mother was run over by a car.
Well, here I am, still holding
down a hospital bed—and think-
ing myself lucky to be in it.
The doctors got busy on me
last week'— that is doing a job
of plastic surgery on me, face.
To avoid complications after-
wards it was done under local
anaesthesia so I knew exactly
what was going on although I
didn't feel a thing. I told the
doctors it was up to them to
make Tennyson's words cone
true — "A thing of beauty is a
joy forever" — although I have
not yet reached the stage of be-
ing a thing of beauty and prob-
ably never will. But there's al-
ways hope!
Apart•from a little discomfort,
I am more or less enjoying my
stay in hospital — "Dr. Kildare"
and "Ben Casey" are not in it
when it conies down to the real
thing, and Partner tells me that
neither of those so-called medical
dramas has been ery good
lately, They seem to be getting
away from orthodox situations
and creating others for the sake
of making a good story, which is
a pity as they were both good
programs before the producers
began trying too hard for effect.
But. let's get back to the real
thing. I am allowed to wander
around this floor at will so of
course I go visiting in other
rooms. Such interesting patients
as there are. The body functions
in 'a peculiar way. One part of a
person can be really sick and the
rest healthy and active. So I find
a diabetic patient sitting up in
bed, or in a chair, working away
at account books for the business
with which she. is connected. in
another room a poor soul with a
skin allergy makes use of her
time — when she is able -- by
creating floral arrangements for
table centre -pieces. With artifi-
cial flowers, of course. So far I
haven't ventured into any of the
men's rooms. One patient did
just that and she ended up with
A "special" at nights whose job
it was to keep her in bed.
Incidentally, in case you think
I am one of the lazy patients,
perhaps I should tell you I am
knitting baby bootees and send-
ing them down to the Gift Shop.
I find knitting much easier .than
reading. Interruptions make it
impossible to lose oneself in a
book. Even writing this column
has its problems, Since I started,
one nurse came along to change
my surgical dressing, another to
take my blood pressure and now
a ward maid is mopping the
floors, And of course doctors are
liable to come popping in any
time, especially as I have one G.
P, and two specialists. So that's
the way It goes. .Life in hospital
boring to its patients — not on
your life. To an ambulatory pa-
tient it is interesting. On tho
other hand, all a seriously ill pa-
tient asks for is to be taken caro
of and that is done in all cases.
Doctors, nurses and staff mem-
bers are kindness personified, i
have sometimes been guilty of
criticizing doctors — after being
kept wafting overly long in a
doctor's office — but with this
IS$UE 13 — 1963
opportunity of seeing the hours
doctors put in and the wonder-
ful work they do, I feel I shall
never criticize again. There is
no doubt a good doctor has to be
a dedicated man to stand the
pace.
Incidentally, I wish you could
see the chest of drawers in my
room—it looks more like a flor-
ist's shop. Besides bouquets from
family and friends, two of the
members from the W. I. branch
to which I belonged before we
left the farm cane in last night
with a lovely chrysanthemum
plant. Possibly being remember-
ed by old friends is what one ap-
preciates most.
Well, I think I'Il draw this to
a close. Maybe next week I'll be
writing from home. Whether that
will be easier or harder for Part-
ner is a question! In any case,
I'm not making it an issue. How
long I stay is a matter for the
doctors to decide. One thing I
know — it would be quieter.
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. Some of my friends have
told me that it Is improper for
a person, even when dining
alone in a public place, to read
at the table. True?
A, Not true. There is nothing
at all wrong with a person, who
is dining alone, reading at the
table.
Q. A close girt friend of mine
recently eloped. W o ti1 t1 it be
proper, under these circum-
stances, for rare to •give a shower
forher, every though she is al-
ready married?
A. This would be a very nice
gesture on your part, especially
since she probably will not re-
ceive very many wedding pre-
sents.
For !)ebt
In C c) k:naianci!
\ti'l ca i mc,nth old C u•aI Day
dial cl pncunu:nia in a hospital
in it!th, her father %va.; net al-
lowed to attend her funeral. He
was serving fourteen days in jail
for failing to meet a $17.60 in-
stallment -plan payment,
"The ridiculous thing," protest-
ed 38 -year-old David Colin Day
as he regained his treedonr and
told the story last month, "is
that, had •I committed a crone
and been a convicted prisoner,
permission would have been
granted,"
Debtors' prisons have a long
and inglorious history in Britain,
Hogarth depicted their squalor
in ''Rake's Progress," and Dick-
ens railed against them in "Little
Dorrit." Parliament finally de-
creed in 1869 that no Englishman
could be imprisoned for debt,
Yet the growth of prosperity has
brought the "hire-purchase" (in-
stallment plan) and a British
consumer debt of $2.6 billion.
Creditors today can take a debtor
to court and have him imprison-
ed, not for debts but for con-
tempt of court. In 1951, 499 peo-
ple were jailed by this proce-
dure: ten years later the number
had soared to 5,057.
Usually, the debtors have some
excuse, but not enough to save
them, Engineer Arthur Arnge,
• who rented a car while his own
was being repaired, didn't pay
the bill because he believed it
was the responsibility of his in-
surance company. By the time he
emerged from Brixton Prison, he
had lost his job.
Irene Simnor kept ordering
appliances and selling them to
pay the deposit on new ones. She
was sentenced to four years for
ordering 48 washing machines,
twelve refrigerators, twelve spin
dryers, and twelve TV sets, To
police, she sobbed: "I've forgot-
ten the number of things I've
had, I just paid the deposits."
Hoping to make some sense of
what he calls "a jungle" of in-
stallment buying, Laborite Wil-
liam Thomas Williams has intro-
duced a private bill in the House
of Commons which would curb
high-pressure salesmanship, pro-
vide a 48-hour cooling -off period
during which a purchaser can
change his mind, and forbid re-
possession when more than one-
third has been paid. He has little
hope for this session but vows to
"go on nagging them until some-
things gets done."
And he has won considerable
support. "This is no way for a
civilized society to allow its
citizens to be treated," declared
the Daily Express, "This dis-
grace should have died with
Dickens."
He's Been Married
123 Times ! ! !
A fifty - seven - year - old man
who lives in Novi S'ad, Yugo-
slavia, should go down in history
as the holder of a unique world
record..
For the man, Petar Vladisav-
lev Nikolic, has been married
123 times!
What's pore, the white-haired,
prune -faced Petar, who looks
more like seventy-five, is happy
to talk about his romances,and
give advice to bachelors on how
to win a feminine heart.
"Women," Petar maintains,
"like to be lined,'"
And he adds, "Any man who
keeps this fact in mind will have
no trouble in winning. the heart
of a woman."
However, despite his being a
charter member of the fraternity
of professional bridegrooms, Pe -
tar can never match the score
established by Don Juan in Moz-
art's opera.
In the opera, Don Giovanni,
the lady-ch.ising nobleman made
1,01)3 conquests in Spain alone,
according to the first aria -- if
his servant's statistics ring true.
Unlike Don Giovanni, a noble•
ratan, Petar was born a gypsy.
I3ut, like his operatic counter-
part, his women have been of
all nationalities, although, by
and large, from countries behind
the Iron Curtain,
Besides Yugoslav women he's
led a variety of Czechs, Hungar-
ians, Russians and Bulgarians in-
to his matrimonial stable,
The only time he ventured
forth into the West was when he
chose a German for his bride.
But the marriage lasted only
three days, The reason, as given
by Petar: "We were incompat-
ible."
Yet this same reason has pre-
vailed in all his marriages to
date, except in his current one
to a forty -one -year-old Serb
peasant woman,
Petal's shortest marriage was
to a Croatian gypsy, which la: ted
three hours. "We were incompat-
ible," say Peter.
His longest marriage, to a Rus-
sian girl, lasted for two years
before the break-up. It was his
first wife, and he married her
when he was only fifteen,
Petar divorced her two years
later because — they were in-
compatible.
There have been only twenty-
two children from his many
marriages, The oldest one today,
a Hungarian, is thirty-eight.
And he's a bachelor!
Petar can't remember any
more which child belongs to
which wife — but he insists it
doesn't really matter, as they
know,
Although he's been a husband
and a father many times over,
Petar claimt it hasn't interfered
with his basic purpose in life:
the pursuit of leisure.
Peter hasn't done so much as
a day's work since he was bern.
As a gypsy, he shares the fierce
point of view of his Romany
brethren. Let the women do the
work!
BUSY WEEK FOR ROYALTY
It was a diverting far-flung
week for Britain's royal family.
At a film preview of "West Side
Story," Queen Elizabeth match-
ed her glitter with that of glossy -
domed actor Yul Brynner, who
spear -headed a delegation of
movie stars attending the pre=
miere. On a second theatre ex-
cursion, the Queen registered
amusement at a royalty irrever-
ent revue called "Beyond the
Fringe." In Bolivia,. Elizabeth's
touring consort blandly answer-
ed personal questions, at a press
conference. Was the Queen ex-
pecting a baby this year? Prince
Philip: "No, it is not possible,"
Why wasn't ace cameraman Lurd
Snowdon, Philips brother-in-
law, covering the tour? Philip:
"Britain is a democracy. I get
what photographer I'in given."
Meanwhile, back in Parliament,
a crimson -robed, miniver -collar-
ed Snowdon took his; seat in the
House of Lords, Cost of the Tony
outfit: $882,
SALLY'S SALLIES.
"rd like everybody to beak it
me; let's eco a sane horst"
SHAKE HANDS — Italian President Giovanl Gronchi, left, shakes with U.S. First Lady
Jacqueline Kennedy as she ploys a courtesy call on the Italian official. in Rome.
Giant Footprints
Create Mystery
Giant, 1lin v -meet R otprfit,,
believed to have hien mode
more than 100,000,(100 ,cars ago
by one of the great dinosaurs,
probably an iguanodon, have
been 1.010d in a .;tone quarry at
Lncgton ;1lnt'aver., near Swan-
age, Dorset.
'!'here are thirteen prints and
they were unearthed by work.
men. They stretch twenty six
feet across the quarry floor be-
fore disappe'.ring tinder a plass
of rack and experts believe they
fora) the largest sequence of pre-
historic animal footprints ever
discovered in Britain.
The huge cr; ature tient made
them could hay.' measured forty
fret from nose 13 tail and stood
op to twenty net in height. The
)(imprints are only fifteen inches
apart and cic;u'sy show the walls
anti gait of the creature.
Says on expert: "It looks as
though when they were m; de ale
was just waddling along;.„
Fossil remains of mammoth
creatures which existed many
millions of years ago are occa-
sionally uncovered in Britain,
usually in quarries. But the find-
ing of such remains is hecsnung
rarer l,eesuse cf th; i ,c s-ssing
use today of mechanical excss,a-
tors,
But less than four years ago
ran ichthyosaur's, a marine rep-
tile which 130,000,000 years ago
filled the place in the seas now
occupied by whales and por-
poises, was uncovered in Nor-
folk. A special day and night
guard had to be mounted over a
Warwickshire quarry in which a
100,000,000 -year-old, three - eyed
monster's remains were found in
1b28,
It was a plesiosaurus. Thrilled
by news of the find, amateur
geologists crowded to the spot
and some of the earlier arrivals
succeeded in reaching the fossil
and tried to get "souvenirs."
The fossil had to be fenced off
while arrangements were made
/or transporting it to a museum,
.Another strange creature which
was found in Oxfordshire must
Jim been about sixty feet high
In its prime at least 200 million
years ago. It was so heavy that
II had to remain half submerged
In water to support its weight,
In a garden at Codling, Notts.,
which was formerly part of Sher-
wood Forest, nen found in 1923
the huge bones of a prehistoric
anlunmoth, They were in an ex-
erellent state of preservation.
The mid runner, a cuckoo
ffaniotls for its ability to kill rat-
tlesnakes, is also known as a
"snake - eater."
MERRY MENAGERIE
inlrw? 140
"You're the leaning tower of
Tat Galileo, and we're
the law of gravlty—
okay T"
NOW
POLITICAL POLL — Lamp-
post in Calcutta can hardly
be recognized because of
many posters end banners on
it. Large numbers of the peo-
ple cannot read so parties rely
upon simple symbols rather
than names in their vote -
getting campaigns.
Trout Fishing
Made (?) Simple
There are two ways of fishing
for trout—and this holds whether
you're using fly or spinning
tackle. One is the fine -and -far-
off method, The other is—stalk
'em carefully and fish close, the
sneak -up -on -'end method,
The fine -and -far-off way orig-
inated on the chalk streams of
southern' England, especially the
famous Test and Itchen. These
are practically never muddied by
rain, which soaks into the chalk
soil and comes up again filtered
crystal clear.
In that flat country, the cur-
rent is slight; it often resembles
a lung, mirror -still pool. There's
really too much natural foods, so
the fat brown trout are always
overfed and can afford to be shy
and finicky. Result of all this:
Perhaps nowhere else does trout
fishing call for such high skill.
An American angler, fishing
there for the first time, usually
511011S ill derision at the ritualis-
tic fuss and feathers, the long,
fine leaders—sometimes as much
as 18 feet long. That's not how
they fish back home where the
American came from! He'll show
'end about such nonsense.
jle sees trout dimpling the
whole surface of the river, feed-
ing hard. Ile walks up and makes
one cast, what he thinks is a very
nice one. Suddenly, the whole
surface of the river becomes un-
broken, not a single trout feed-
ing. Nor will one for a long time.
Spots where this fine -and -far-
off method is necessary are ex-
tremely rare in this country. But
always rernember that the higher
you are above the water's sur-
face, the farther fish can see you.
Now for the sneak -up -on -'end
method, which calls for practical-
ly no casting ability, and which
will get you most trout In a very
L
BOTTLE -NECK — The cyclist has to fling rings around th•
necks of a row of bottles without stopping, This event is part
of the Winter Cup Tournament of Hungarian cyclists In
Budal-rest,designed to exhibit the cyclist's riding skill. '
gr. lnaj:,rity of plsees in lhk
Coll ar,.
Supposing that there's a tine -
looking spot that you can only
reach, without a fish there seeing
you, from behind a boulder or
mall bush—hut that the trout
would see you crossing a wide
gravel bar going there, Clet up
there quietly and slowly; fart
movements ' always 0101111 fish,
Then crouch out of sight until
you think the trout has forgotten
about your coaling and has start-
ed feeding again. You'll have to
do your own guessing on how
long that is; alight he a few min-
utes if he's small and not shy,
and it might he an holo' or more
if he's really old and 'foxy and
not too hungry.
Very small, bushy stream.
(ilte') have 0 surprising number
of very large trout for the simple
reason it's 'difficult to fish such
places successfully. • Spinning
won't do, for there's no room to
work the lure without its hang-
ing on the brush, So, how would
you go about catching some of
them?
13y "dapping," a method pretty
common. in Ireland but rarely
heard of elsewhere will work.
It's done merely by dropping a
dry fly straight down from the
rod tip so that it, but practically
none of the leader„touches the
water. Larger live flies on tiny
hooks work.
Here's an improvement on the
Irish way that I worked out.
Have you ever seen a fly bobbing
up and down a few inches above
the water, occasionally dropping
lower to touch it? It is said that
it's a female laying an egg at
each touch. Try using the same
movement with your dry fly —
not overdoing it.
I found that this sometimes
murders 'em in a small, bushy
stream when just floating the fly
produce little or no results, The
movement must draw more at-
tention to the fly, as well as
making it seen more lifelike.
Naturally, to do well with dap-
ping on a small, bushy stream,
you must do extremely careful
stalking, and keep out of sight.
As stated before, the higher
you are above the water, the far-
ther a fish can see you, and, of
course, the reverse is also true.
So when you can't hide, keep as
low as possible, both during your
approach and while casting.
by Jason Lucas, Angling
Editor of "Sports Afield”
German Women
Beaten As Witches
Innocent women in some vil-
lages of West Germany are being
beaten up and insulted by ig-
norant villagers who believe
they are witches.
Witchcraft is growing so rap-
idly in these country areas that
10,000 so - called witchmasters
have set themselves up in busi-
ness there in recent years, says a
report of the German Medical
Association.
Silly mel and women who are
not satisfied with the treatment
they receive from their doctors
visit these witchmasters who
have persuaded then that all
their ailments are caused by
witches.
The witchmasters even name
village women as witches. These
women are usually too poor to
take legal action against then.
A witchmaster often charges a
fee of $25 or more to perform a
ceremony and provide a "cure,"
According to an ancient Ger-
man legend all the country's
witches hold carnival on April
30th — the eve of May Day. This
Is known as Walpur'gis Night.
No superstitious villager leaves
the shelter of his home on this
night without carrying a sprig
of holly or mountain ash as a
"safeguard against witchcraft"
Even by their own hearths
some people are not sure of safe-
ty, for witches are reputed to
hover on' the threshold of many
homes, trying to Influence them
with their "evil eye."
In some areas villagers flock
from their homes to make noises
which will drive away Walpur-
gis Night witches.
Church bells are rung, pots
and pans are clattered together,
dogs bark and children scream.
How Can 1?
fly Roberts Lee
Q. ilow can I soften :t stiffen-
ing' hairbrush.
A. By giving it a lengthy rinse
in two quarts of lukewarm wa-
ter to which a tablespoon of
olive oil has been added.
Q. How can I Blend a broken
lipstick??
A, All you have to do is heat
the broken ends over a gas,
match, or cigarette -lighter flame
until they melt enough to Ad-
here when you press them to-
gether. Then don't use the lip-
stick •until the 'ends have had
enough time to get together and
cool oft.
Q. How can I remove coloured
eandlewax stains , from • table
linens?
A. Atter scraping off as much
et the excess wax as you can,
- : - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING -
BABY CHICKS
1111A has good varieties, Including
Ames, Sykes and Comet egg specialists
hvalhtble prompt shipment, day-old to
readyto•lay. Reach the best egg mar-
kets, order now. Also mixed chicks and
day.old cockerels Request price llst.
See local agent, or write Bray Hatch-
ery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont.
r_
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
EXCLUSIVE Franchises open In various
parts of Ontario for 1.P.H Factory
Built Homes & Sumner Cottage display
court or tittles outlets. We will help
you get started and provide major
financing. We can finance all sales,
no flown payment necessary -
INTERPROVINCIAL HOMES
113 Ferguson N., Hamilton
HIGH CLASS
HAIRSTYLING SALON
Hamilton
Owner retiring. Good opportunity for
(1(1114(1 hairstylist. Equipment at de-
preciated value, stock at cost.
Batten, 5 Third Line S., Oakville, Ont.
ATTENTION MEN WITH INITIATIVE
AND DESIRE TO GET AHEAD.
SMALL investment requited to get
started In a very profitable bust•
ness right In your own home town.
Limited number of dealerships
available In t owns and cities
throughout southern Ontario. If
you have the required desire to
succeed we may have the option.
tuntty you have been looking for.
For, fall information contact
BRUCE SMITH, SUN•GLO PRODUCTS
LTD., 1 VANCOUVER AVE., TORONTO
CATALOGUES
P`::
CANADA'S
MOST WANTED
NURSERY CATALOGUE
Over 1,000 guaranteed selections. 80
page nll•color catalog featuring tha
newest and the best In roses shrubs,
trees, flowers, evergreens, fruits, bulbs
— from Canada's largest grower -to -you
nursery. Write today:
McCONNELL NURSERY CO. LTD.
05 Nova Scotia St. Port Burwell,
Ontario
COINS WANTED
•
YOUR old coins may be valuable, high•
est prices for Canadian and American,
Illustrated Catalogue 50e, Coronet
Colas, 1611 Church St., Toronto 2, Ont,
DOGS
SAMOYEDS, St. Bernards Scotch Col.
Iles, German Sh'pherds, Bernardo,
Terriers,
etc. All purebred and registered.
Agents for all breeds. Terms to 20
months available. Jerdon Kennels 47
St Paul Street, Ilrockvllle, D1.2.3141.
LAB. RETRIEVER
PUPPIES
CKC Registered
Excellent show and field stock.
Pedigree furnished.
Health guaranteed.
Whelped 17 Dec., '61.
The world's hest Retriever and
companion dog.
Also some trained pups, 9 months
old. from champion stock.
• S'I'UD SERVICE
HAWKRIDGE KENNELS Reg'd
1110 Lakeshore Rd.
FARMS FOR SALE
354•ACRE farm in Northumberland
County, Ont,, 180 acres top producing
work land, tiled, balance good bush
and pasture; barn 50' x 100', all steel,
milk contract, 950 lbs. per day, sten-
clitoris, water bowls, stable cleaner,
pipeline and bulk tank for 50 cows,
Other buildings, 13 -room frame house
In good repair with all modern con-
veniences. School bus at door. A never -
failing spring creek supplies water to
cattle. 'this creek Is large enough for
Irrigation and has 2 Targe trout ponds
with room for more. This farm Is the
best farm set-up within many miles.
Write Doug Dorland, Mitten, Ont. Phone
ilrighton 111213.
S.SLE due to illness, 100 acres good
land, self (haine0. Modern 7 rooms and
bath, half new 4 years, all new alumin-
um skiing, and Storemore storms and
sereens. flank barn 35x75, upper part
new 4 yrs., other buildings. School
buses — mall — milk routes past door.
In Warwick Twp., Lampton Co., 114
mile No. 7 1Iwy. Immediate possession.
Owner Wm,Wallace, 43 Wigle St.,
Leamington, Ont. Reasonable down
payment.
DAIRY FARM
LARGJi nillk base, 186 acres clay loam
with stream through property. Large
L-shaped barns will accommodate over
100 her 0 cattle, steel stabling, water
bowls, 2 silos, 42 -can Delaval cooler,
7 -unit Delaval pipeline milking system,
automatic washing, excellent water sup-
ply. 2 good brick homes with baths.
This Is an excellent dairy setup. Priced
at only $35,000. Stoutt Agencies I.td.,
Realtors, 10 Collier SL, Barrie. Phone
PA 1,.5901.
place the stained portion be-
tween two pieces of blotting pa-
per, and press with a warns iron.
Most of the grease •will be ab-
sorbed by the blotting paper.
Then sponge with denatured al-
cohol to remove the dye.
The four -horned antelope of
India and Burma is the only wild
mammal in the world with four
horns. Only the males have horns.
FARMS FOR SALE
FOR sale, $6,500 cash, (00 titres. Itol,
land township, Grey county, 90 miles
north of Toronto, For further particu-
lars apply Willner Clark, Route 1.
Berkeley
15u ACIIhS excellent stale cultivation.
4 acres In maple hush, spring creek,
good house., bank barn 50x61, hog pen,
hen pen above, 30x50, water, hydra
throughout. $17,000. Apply Irene (;g1•
Iles, i(0 2, or Milford Dowling, Fcrgns
St., 1'0. 49111, Mount Forest.
FARM HELP WANTED — MALE
FULLS' experienced married man for
purebred Holstein Dalry Farm, t8epa-
rate house. write, slating wages and
experience, In first leiter; also refer-
ence front a previous employer W.
S'esley worry, lilt 1, Hampton, Ont,
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
1'1BRAT(UNti REALLY ARE GOOD
FOIL Y00
Ile in heaven
SLEEP ON A CLOUD
Help yourself
RELIEVE YOUR TIRED BACK
Look forward to bedtime
RELAX AND SLEEP DEEP
and Friends
Wako 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 Hanmilton Rd. (Rear)
London, Ont.
GOATS & LAMBS WANTED
PALEYrrA 'mos.
MEAT PACKERS LTIL
- WANTED ---
Baby goats and spring lambs.
Highest prices according to quad.
Ity. Write (100 MOUNTAIN BUM
BLVD., HAMiLTON 011 CALL.
FU 37474.
GRASS SEED
GREEN PASTURE SCARCE?
SORGHUM GRASS MAY
ANSWER YOUR PROBLEM
Nine foot growth in sand and gravel
Boll. Farmer at Enderby, )1.C, pastured
stock calves In Sorghum until snow
fail. Dalry farmer pastured his cows
on Sorghum when his other pasture
failed, through drought. Prove to your-
self what this grass may do in your
area. This annual grass is good for
pasture or hay. Easy to bale and cure,
Ten pounds delivered, for $15.50;
Twenty-five pounds, for $37.50 delle-
ered, Requires about two to three
pounds per acre for row crop. Place
your order now. All No. 1 seed.
C. E. KINGSTON DIST. CO. LTD.
Box 424, Kamloops, LC.
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.
LISTENING DEVICES
INVESTIt1A'TORS! Write for free bro•
chore on latest subminiature electron--
le
lectronle listening devices. Clifton Electronic
Devices, 11500 NW 7th Avenue, Miami
50, Florida.
MAPLE SYRUP
MAPLE Syrup — 6 gallons $29.75; 4
gallons 020.00 — smaller quantity 65.22
gallon, F.O.B. Made by Howard Hasler,
Flhrion, Ont.
MEDICAL
DIXON'S REMEDY
FOR NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC
PAINS. THOUSANDS SATISFIED.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1,25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment 01 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 03.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto
MISCELLANEOUS ^—
RECEIVE Big Mail, Catalogues, speclal
offers, money -malting opportunities
gift offers, samples, 10c. Get listed
permanently 25c. A. P. Enterprise -29,
'1652 Dounton, Philadelphia 40, Penna.
MONEY r0 LOAN
MORTGAGE LOANS
Money available for Imntedlate loan
on First and Second Mortgages, and
Agreements for sale, on vacant and
Improved property, residential, indus-
trial, city, suburban ,and country, and
summer cottages. Forty years expert -
owe.
SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED
112 Simcoe Street North
OSHAWA, Ontario
Phone: 725.3565
ISSUE 13 — 1962
NURSES WANTED
W5OlED: Two );radu:r11- nut's,, for
601(14,) hospllal, Good salary schedule.
Generous t11nge benefits. Stine dale of
graduation and phone number. stridor St Joseph's General 1lnsplt:11,
Little Current.
REGIs'I'EOF:It Nurse required for the
Arrow lakes Hospital, Nakusp, (1.C.,
fifteen bed, standard wage rates, holi-
days, sentlannnal Increases, ete., 4(1
hour week It"nu1 and hoard avallab!e
at hospital.
Administrator, Arrow Lakes Hospital
Nakusp, B.C.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession. good
(cages Thousands of Successful
.Harvel Graduate
America's Greatest System
illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St - W Hamilton
72 Rideau Street. Ottawa
PARTY GAMES
• PARTY. Games! Adult's, Children's!
(loth 64 -page hooks postpaid 50e, Ar-
cane nook Mart, Riverdale Station, Box
529•C. Dayton 5, Ohio,
PERSONAL
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS Tested,
guaranteed, mailed in plain parcel In -
:
eluding catalog free with trial assort-
inent 36 for 52.00 1finest quality).
Western Distributors. I;"t 2-)'I'F 1)e-
gina, Sask.
OVERWEIGHT?
A sale, eftocllve 'reducing plan with
"Way -Les" tablets Oled)eally approved.
1 month's supply $7 00. Lyon's Drugs,
Dept 32. 471 Danforth :1ve. 'inronto.
PHOTOGRAPHY
NEW ROLL OF FILM
with each flint developed. printed
or mounted.
Black & White Moll Film'
0 exp. 51.00, 12 exp 51.25
35mm 20 exp. 51.85, 36 exp. 52.85
Kodacolor 8 ex 03 75, 12 ex. 54.75.
20 ex. S5 75
Anscochrome Ektachrome 211 exp. 52.115
Get alum Color Movie Film Incl pro-
cessing $2.04
:Money order or C.O.D.
Photo Service, Box 1t1, Midland, Ont,
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
MARKET Gardener's Opportunity —
Acres, sandy loans, 6 room house stone
foandatlon, newly decorated and land•
scat'efi, paved road, bus from gate to
new cc,,tral school. Selling for business
reasons. 47,000 or best offer fur quick'
sale. Apply'R. Mullen, MR. No. 1, Cold.
springs, 6, nuts 6'1110 of Cobourg, via
Ontario Ft.
RAZOR BLADES
100 GUARANTEED Double Edge Blades
51.00 postpaid. Write for Catalogue.
I Sample 10c. Walter Funk, Mahopac 6,
New York.
SHEEP FOR SALE
KARAKUL.
FOR SALE: Karakul (black Persian)
lambs and ewes. Edward E. Dickey,
11.6, Brampton, Ontario.
SPORTS ATLAS J` -
FREE infortnatlon about exciting, new,
"Sports Atlas of America." Guide to
Sou(1 Fishing, Hunting, other outdoor
ports In Canada and U.S. No obli;n-
(Jon! Elchenberg, U.S.V.A.11 , Liver-
more, California, U.S.A.
STAMPS
100 DIFFERENT stamps Lyle
'1'o Collectors Requesting :Approvals
Winston Philpott
Box 306
Botwood, Nfld„ Canada
TRADE SCHOOLS
ACETYLENE, electric welding and
Argon courses. Canada Welding Can-
non and Balsam N., Hamilton. Shop
LI 4.1284. Iles. LI 5-6283
TRUCKS FOR SALE
'53 MERCURY tow truck, power winch,
rear controls, small steam Lenny with
.stnall repairs. E. Lloyd, Phclpston, Ont
WANTED TO BUY
HIGHEST Prices Paid for .oil 'Canada,
U.S., Newfoundland stamp se o 1 n s. '
Write, Joe Morgan, Dunkirk; N Y -
•
CASH ON THE LINE—Detroit Tigers first baseman Norm Cash, the American League's
1961 batting ,champ, .is a„picture of power and concentration as he smashes the bail ,
during the Tigers•St. Louis game In SY,• Petersburg, Fre-
PAGE 4 �~
SPRING IS HERE
with
Girls' and Teen Suits, 8 to 1.1';. teen , , , . 11.95 up
Girls' Coat Sets, wools and all weather, 1 to 6x
5,95 up
Girls' and Ten Coats, wool, all weather and lam-
inate ,,,,..., •,..,......,13.95 up
Boys' Jackets, plaid and check, sizes 3 to 7
1. 98 and 5.93
Dresses, newest materials and shades, 1 to 11
3.98 up
Also:. Hats, Scarves, Gloves and Socks.
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
tin
Clinton Memorial Shop
1'. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON -- EXETER — NEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRL'I ENTAT1VE --
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON. 7
PHONES; ....16;1731,1
CLINTON: •.�, t:.^,. EXETER!
Business --Ru z-etee
Residence—Hu 2.3Re9
Stillness 41
Rosldence 34
FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest-
aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full -
course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts.
HURON GRILL
BLYTII. ONTARIO •
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS .--Blythe-. BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 73,
YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN-
KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS
JEANS and OVERALLS.
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M.
Wingham Memorial Shop
• Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY, LETTERING,
I Phone 256, Wingham . R. A. SPOTTON.
i
SPRING •SPECIALS
10 Men's Suits in the Latest Styles, 36 to 48
Regular $35.00 Special $24.95
15 Ladies' Spring Coats, Reg. $39.95, Special $21.95
Women's and Misses Print dresses of the latest
Spring Fashions Special $1.99 to $1.95
New Sprung Footwear for the whole family at very
reasonable prices.
Nylon Hose, seamless or. plain .... Special .59c
New Patterns in Print or Cottons and Ginghams
now in stock.
Men's Felt Hats $3.95 up
4 Boys' Sport Coats, Reg, $13.95 , , Special $8.95
Ladies' New Spring Foundation Garments for all
your needs.
"(The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"-
The
rices"-
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211
r._
BLYTH, ONT.
THE I3LYTIl STANDARD .
Wednesday, larch 28, 1962
AUBURN NEWS
Air, and Mrs, 11. Midden and family
spent the weekend with their son, .101111
and Airs, :Midden, al Essex.
Guests 11'111 AILS. AI'Ihut' Grange and
family are Ler brothers, \M'. Frani
Walters, of Ingersoll, and Air. Ilensua
Wall ors.
Mr, null' Mrs, Julni AlcNi,hul and
riesstroary Nrtit, of A1•.a'ris 'flan hit,,
visited last 'I tau stay evcnL'3 with All
and Mrs, Ed. Davin.
1Ir. '1erranee'1'abb arrived last week•
e!:d f1 :!n 1\'!?ae Praia., it,C., where
he Ila, Hun vtsttieg all lvadter• 1h.
a;L•rct.•,t3 ill lllakll'.� 11?'3f: e yl111'
:1 the bush of Alr. Frank lio:thi:y.
Air and M's. 11'..11, C'cata;, of Flint,
1_c1t?g3n, were gussets over the week•
end with 1\1r. and \firs. 11ai land i\Ik'n
and Mr, and Mrs. William ,I. Craig.
Misses Patsy and Mary Within en•
tcrtained with 11ighland dancing at
the 0.E.S,, Blyth, birthday party last
week.
Air. and AM's. Jlac Allison, I'ackhill.
were nucsls over the weekend with
\M• and Mrs. Ben 1Innl.illun and vis.
'tea w::;h AM: Reg 1!an dlton and Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor,
\h', and AIrs, 11'illialn) Straughan arc
visiting in \\ lghtlnl with \h•. and Mt'.:.
Mantas Jardin and family and attend•
ed the funeral of the former's eeusit',
the late 11I' -John Manna, M•I',
11iss Barbara Brindley, of Bcnluii•
ler, is peactice teaching at U.S.S. No,
5, Mulled..
;sir, Allan Craig, \Vingbau►, who is
taking the militia course in \Vinghanl,
spent the weekend with Ids parents,
Mr, and Mrs. William. J. Craig.
11liss "glary Houston, of 11amillon, and
Miss Frances Houston, RN., of Ldnt•
don, spent the weekend with their pal
ents, Mr. and Mrs, John i[ousston
Mr. WilHanl Gooier, of Devlin, vis•
ited last week with his brother-in-law,
Lawrence Nesbit, Airs Nesbit and fan.
ily. 11r. Govier and his family moved
late 'last fall to the northern Ontario
distriot where he is farming a 31t!
acre farm.
Mr. and Mrs, Ronald Rathwcll
Michael and Janice, of Owen Sound,
spent the weekend with her parents,
Air, and Mrs, Gordon 1t, 'Taylor.
Knox United Church was filled to
capacity last Sunday to hear the pupils
of U.S S, No. 5, )Idlest, supply the
special music. This choir of over 'JO
voices, under the direction of their
musical instructor, AIrs. Enunerson
dodger, and leacher, Alr. Duncan Mac.
Kay, sang "Bless this house" and
"Unto the Hills," The organist was
Airs. Norman 'Wightman. Rev,. Lewis
spoke on the text., "For charity's sake,
for conscience sake, for God's sake, do
something."
Mr, and Mrs. Ralph Jackson, Shur.
on and Murra, and Mr. and Ars
Lorne Jackson, all of Mitchell, viit•
ed on Sunday with the former's par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Daer and
other relatives in this community.
Mr. and Airs, \Ves. Bradnock attend•
cd\• the founding convention of the
Oils rio Numismatic Association held
last meek sal Kitchener.
C.O,C. (.roup Collecting Stamps
The C.O.C. Group of Knox Presbyter.
ian Church arebusy collecting used
postage stamps to assist the Canadian
Bible Society In the distribution of 11th•
les in Foreign lands. These are soul
to Ole Stamp Cornet' in London, which
at present supports four Colporlcur:
;!bread, These four workers are in the
northern (art of Burma, Viclnlau, Al
geria and L'olivia, In 1960 the E 1au1;
Corner rased the sum of $:1,243.00 111
which Canada co!ttribulcd $201,00. It
1961 the t:um of :11 ,b .OIJ w;as mints
of which Canada raised $335.00. Any.
one w•is.hing to contribute to this gnus(.
please leave the stamp on the origuia.
taper with a small margin all around.
This prolccl ; the :damps and as a
!great miry aro sold by weislit it is
(lefind ath'iantage to have them this
way.
11', 1, Meeting
The importance of making your last
11'i11 and 'I'estanlc►rt was the thane ul
the 1larch Women's Institute when it
slut for its March sleeting in the Con.
nlunity Memorial Ilan. The president,
Mrs, Ed Davies, was in charge of the
meeting and Mrs. Hobert .1. Phillips
hvas the pianist. The meeting was op•
encu with the Ode, Mary Stewart Col
Icel. and 0 Canada, The president
gstye a short reacting "'Thoughts for the
Day." The minutes seers accepted as
read by the secretary, Mrs, 'Phomas
Ilaggill, Ma's, W. J. Craig repotted
that the markers had been placed oe
the cupboard doors in the Hall. 'Thr:
members of the 'I'weedsnlnir Book
committee reported on their visit. In
!:be Londe:;koro Braech recently, Plans
were made to hold a family night on
April 13 with the directors, Mrs, Barry
Watson, Airs. Arnold Craig and Mrs.
George Hamilton,. assisted by Mrs.
Gordon Dobie, Mrs, .1Villianl f)udd and
Airs. Titonuls Lawlor, in charge of the
evening, 1t was announced that six,
teen ladies had registered for the
course. on the making of aluminum
trays on April 2nd. An invitation to
attend the cooking school at Blyth on
April 6th was accepted. Mrs. Shrivcr,
of CKOC TV, channel 13, Kitchener.
will be in charge of the demonstration.
A letter was read concerning the Dist.
Het Executive sleeting at Blyth on
Tuesday, April 3 and the members vat•
cd that the project, "143 lbs. of meal'
would be the first choice, with "win•
dow treatment" being Me second choice
Mrs, Gordon R. Taylor, secretary-tl e.ls•
urer of the Conmuulily Memorial Hall
Board, thanked the Institute for their
donations to the building fund. Mrs.
Audre w Kirkeonnell, the convener 01
the card committee, reported 011 cards
sent during the past month and also
the letter of thanks for the gifts oI
bootees sent to new babies of the dist
riga, Mrs, Bradnock reported that
there had been six meetings of the 4.11
Club, Mrs. W. J. Craig was appointed
to purchase a picture of Prince Philip
to match the one of Her Majesty Queen
Elizabeth 1I, Mrs, Roy Epsom favored
smith a musical Irish reading "My Irish
Walking Cane" with musical accompan•
invent played by Ails, \V J. Craig.
Airs, Robert J. Phillips convener of the
Sunshine Sister Banquet which will be
held in the new hall on May 3rd. Ml
ex -members are cordially invited to
.attend this banquet at 6.30 p.m., and
RADFORD'S GARAGE
LONDESBORO
For RENT or SALE
3 Poiret Hitch Equipment
DANUSER POST HOLE DIGGER
REAIt MOUNTED 3 POINT BLADES
IIERD BROADCASTERS
Ideal for spreading Grass Seed and Fertilizer
• TIIIS EQUIPMENT IS A'1' OUR GARAGE IN LOr DESIIOltO
OUR REPRESENTATIVE FOR BLYTII AND D(S'1'ltlC'l' 1S
LLOYD WALUEN, R.R. 3, Blyth
'1'clel)lloIle B1yt1i • 35116
"Gordon Radford"
Londeshol'o, Ontario
'TOUR DEALER FOR OLIVER, FAIRM EQUIPMENT AND
FIRESTONE CAIt TRUCK AND TRACTOR TIRES
NNW
FEDERAL RIDING OF IILItON
LIBERAL
NOMINATING CONVENTION
Friday, April filly at 8:30
LEGION HALL, CLINTON
The meeting. will he addressed by Mon, Patti
Hellyar, M.P. for Trinity, former Associate Minis-
ter of Inter'ilal Defence.
HURON LIBERAL- ASSOCIA'T'ION
A ItO
y �lii L1 /AN, Y LAMONT, JIAROLD SHORE,Fad ,ideas Treasurer
Secretary
WESTFIELD NEWS
lir. and Mrs. Murray 'Taylor and
Douglas, \\Ingham, visited with Air.
and Mrs, Gerald 1Iulowell Sunday ev•
''silk",
Mfr. and Mrs, Douglas Campbell and
Itov, 01141 Alts. 1)o1it1d Snell attended
a conference in London on Sunday,
AM'. and Mrs. Gordon Smith and
Douglas were guests of Mr. and Mfrs.
Hoy Pahlavi' (111(1 11.r. and Airs, John
Gear, Kitchener, on Sunday.
Mr. George 1\'ighlman, fine River,
called on A1r. and Mrs. Charles Smith
on Monday.
P'arm Forum was held as a social
evening al. Air. Norman \Vightinan's on
Monday. Final plans were made for
family night in the church basement
April Glh
Mrs, 1'. Campbell was the guest of
Mrs. N, ('after, Clinton, on Sunday.
151r, and Mrs. Arnold Cook, Sharon
011d Janet, visited with Mrs. Cook's
father, Ah'• Gordon Bailey, 1'rinceioh,
and Mrs. Grace Ross, Woodstock, also
other friends and relatives on Wedncn-
d,ly.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Campbell ano
Harold were London visitors on Sun,
clay.
all members may invite a friend if they
Nish, elks Anna McDonald, woman's
editor of CNN,C \Vi►tgham will be the
guest speaker. All tiekels should he
purchased from the committee by the
April sleeting. A solo, "When i dream
of Old Erin" was sting by Mrs. Gordon
Chanuhey, AM's Donald Maines, the
public relations officer introduced the
;nest speaker, Mr. E. 1f, Rowland,
manager of British Mortgage and Trust
Company of Godei'ich, He outlined the
history or his Trust Cutnpany which
was futmded in 1877 in London, (Int.
and told about the many services they
have to offer the public. Ile cletined 0
Will as qui expression of desires which
one wishes to he cai'i'icNl Hitt after ono
(lies. He, gtid many people worry fol
years before making their Wills and
feel so relieved when it is written. Ile
advised lo make your will while you
aro well and to choose carefully your
Executors, making sure they are ex•
perienced and have lots of time to look
after your business. Ile related 111011)'
instances where families did not tint
derstand the laws concerning the pro•
hating of Wills and urged all the lad
les to be sure to make their Wills and
concluded his interesting taddress by
saying, Where !.here is a Will there is
a Way. Mfr. Rowlands was thanked by
Mrs. Gordon R 'Taylor and presented
with a gift from the Institute. The roll
call was a11.Sw'ere(1 with an Irish joke.
The election of officers took place
with Mrs. \Ves Bradnock presiding.
They are as follows for the year 1962
1963: Honorary presidents, Mrs, Edgar
Lawson, ili's. Herbert llv);rirh;e, Mrs.
\V. Good, Air;;, W. Bradnock, Mrs,
George Millian; (:past president, Mrs,
'Phomas fiaggitt; President, Mrs. Ed,
Davies; 1st vice, Mrs. Bert Craig; 2nd
vice, Airs, Frank Bait.hlry; secretary
treasurer, Mrs. Thomas Ifagigtt, assist.
ant, Mrs, Thomas Lawlor district di-
rector, 1h's. George Millian; pianist3,
Airs. II. J. Phillips, Mrs. W..1, Craig;
directors, Mrs, harry Watson, AM's Ar.
nold Craig, Mrs. George 1i01)1511,00; tis•
dilors, Airs. Win. 1)odrl, Mrs, John
Doer; nominating committee, Mrs.
Gordon Dol Airs, Clifford Brown,
!Mrs. Andrew' liirkconncll; visiting coin.
mince, Mrs. Aud rtnv Kirkconnell, Mrs,
Clifford Brown, Miss Viola Thompson,
Mrs. Herbert Govier, Airs. itobert
Chanlncy; standing committee moven.
ci's Agricul(ole and Canadian Indus-
tries, Mrs, (Gordon Dobie; cilizensl'.ip
and education, AF's John [Iallain; his.torical research and current events,
Mrs. Gordon 11. 'Taylor; 110n1c ecoilonl•
ics, Alts, Gordon Chamney; health,
Mrs. W. ,f. Craig; public relations °M -
ger, Mrs, Donald Haines; resolutions.
\11's. Norman AlcDowell; 'Tweedsmuir
book committee, Mrs, G, II, Taylor,
Mrs, R. J Phillips, Mrs. Wm, Straugh-
an, Mrs. Charles Straughan, Mrs. Ed.
gar Dawson and Mrs, Wes Bradnoclt,
The installation ceremony for the new
officers will take place at the An:'il
meeting when the Blyth and Londes'
baro Women's Institutes will be the
guests. A dainty 11111011 was served by
\hs. Clifford Brown and Mrs. W .1.
Craig. ill keeping with SI. Patrick'~
day, March 17111, The Hall was beauti-
fully decorated with the green in keep•
ing with the Irish celebration,
MADE TO MEASURE SUITS
.111' HOUSE O1'' STONE
any shade, any pattern
Priced:- $69.00; .$79.00; $85.00; $95,00
TWO WEEK DELIVERY
READY-TO-WEAR SUITS
with '2 pair of pants
in Green, Brown or Blue, Checks, Plain Charcoal
ONLY $38.00
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- I11EN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Stole With The Good Manners"
z!4'y
ii;4 -^c�
Crown Trust
GUARANTEED CERTIFICATES
L1 y? www
Safe 5% Investment •
ASK FOR A BOOKLET Phone
GE 8.8314
Quecns
Ave„
London
STri
Applications will be received by :-
1IUBERT P. MOWRY
Blyth, Ont.
Phone 2
esto
Clinton District Collegiate Institute
RED & BLUE REVIEW ■ 62
TIIURSDAY, APRIL 12 -- FRIDAY, APRIL 13
C,D,C,1, AUDITORIUM — 8:15 P,nl,
TICKETS
• NOIV ON SALE TIIROUGII ALL STUDENTS
I(cscrved $L00 General Admission ,75 Children .5(1
AUCTIONEER
�. RO..ERT HENRY
(Graduate of Reicsll American Auction School,
11Zasoll City, Iowa)
FOR COMPLETE AUCTION SERVICE
Phone 150111, Blyth, Ont.
Mlw+wuauarw;Y.wmraa,.wu,Orlin..ae. •re.. ..n. . ,y.wr. ...W�.�rs+++•••�W""•.
4roitte§day, Mardi 28, 1962
C. W. Le 11EI;TING achilia island. A rlis'ILS>icn ,teri0I
This month's meeting of Ihe 1' \1' I,.
Nvai held on 'I'Itur.,d;ty, Mnre11 I:rtlt, nl
;1 p -m. al the bran,' io lar:,. l;rrtriirIr
Cronin.
Tate• meet.ittg \c:l; ritrrnrll \\ill Inaycl
led by rather Itcrd Lc\\i::. The min•
urn; of thte hast mewing were read hy,
the acting seere1ary and alio n can•
stdee'ahle amount of (rr1'i spot.lence.
Miss Nora Kelly gave the financial tc
port, Thank -you notes were received
from Alr. Norman Knopp, Anne and
Jane and from the 111issionary in Mani -
f1 ".1;1t '11 ntul Six ni the dutdii \V( ,l
alq 1:inked In callVa:, Illy I111cs in 1110
Parish for ial). rril tioir; to the t';'," 11
clic IIe);L ler, \Cabral : tl"1111 he all
1, y hutnc. 11 w:! ; 11'•t^reel In 11W11
;1 hake 5"111' in J1;ly, lnrparlIiuiis Icfl
tlV'tn' Int' ilte 111`\1 011':1111;;,
Tr',l ;11111 rill [IT \1rrc : crvI1l ht• lin'
hn;l(:,,, Aar, t;rl:min, and liiv, hnlitcr
bezel 1,1wis closed serf Ihe Marl Lint' ttilh
League i'r;l;\'cr.
Ian Oh rut] 111.1r horse for the uaNI
meeting onl
meeting 1, r11 t Il 10, which \sill be Ihe
a,n'nurhl meeting, ri'he mystery prize
w: s won L•y ales, Tltoma s E. Kelly,
400 ...... r wow -owe ••. woo lam w. r,. r r.. ... w. r m., w-,lN
MARCO ORCHARDS I
Started
Pullets
•Chicks' J
The superb lacihtie,. nl Pne Farms aro new
II work ',inducing the limens Nana ( hV 1s
black Ser•Links , . !hs anusunl later that has
made headlines fn' fig p,odorl,nn and all•rcund
tum rerfermance Ire ever 20 rears.
Order as das old• rr as 'lamed pullets Item
2 weeks el age right up to 'uli to lay•
every one hatched and reared under POE rAPLIS'
teuallty prol;tam,
c,•.k f; lest prrn, yl:',n ,!�,r(I 119m the
breennr rn1 bv,sei t Pec farm;' yore' nt et.
penri enr . n r' : ,,g the ! rest snartno PflleI
and is, !'!1 tural•, and chicks that tan tis
1),141,1 avrdlelf.
nth•r lamnus etra•ns also o a table as day old
end starlcd pulI•ts
Bile of fhr.ro for details and donn•l0 earth
ROE FARMS LIMITED
Atwood, lint. Phone 356 2211
Nia
frn nttrirt SfrANnAtri
PAGE 5
County Snow flowing In
1930 Won i'raise Fiona
11:inch('ti1er Residents
No (' omit lain1'; Aloud ('aunty Roads
No vimi !;lint: ;Ii,out the C-11111
ht lfl 1111' 11')111 ,Craw' 1401
to the !;cod Bonk Commission this
year ns u'; c; the case in 1.1311. ,\ Ieltrr.
acdllrr,,sed to Hie Into Jar, llt(y I';tit« r•
sou, then County Engineer, dated 1(1)
tarry 3, 1930, and written by the lata.
:1Ir. Char:es Asquith, Auhurn village
clerk at that tine, has recently been
given to Mr. L'crt Craig and read as
Below Ls a copy of a motion passed
this morning by the Trustee Board
cf the Police Village of Manchester,
\1'hich we desire yeti to present to tht
Gcocl Roads Comntissioan,
"Plover by James 1I, ,Johnston ants
seconded by \V, T. Riddell that this
Board petition the Gond Roads Com-
mis::!on cf the Comity Of Huron In
cooling(' Ihe mc of the snowplow hr
t\ct"ru (hilt! ch and 1'lanrhesler (lut-
ing the balance of the winter. Thai -IL.
to the untiring effinis of snowplough
rice!';.titlf�, the road mentioned
blocked only one ilei: hast \vinler, hal
wa:i opened Inr traffic lou.; befurc Ill'
ns.ltu hi;;hway., w(.0 made pa:;:,able,
STAR LIGiI'1' ('IIlCLIs I\1 E1:'L'lNG
The \larclh (meeting of the Starlight
Crate Cirri!, 111 ;II liar Roane of 11rs,
111, Iur1.::.;1 In \larch 01, of
p nl \+ :`l the to n ulr Itlller., prr'rnl
'II." vva., Iricnrrl with flu!
Ln; 1l. 1 ,:t \It, 'its:l..l'-:Jot ill tit
rt 1,1 tt;r ((IF h'li Period ;dict'
\ , ,
�II Fred Ilul,,,1n 1:11 in prayer'
Ilya : 'V ten 1 `,i i 'y Hie \Vunnl'uu.
Cru \t, • sang, ,r11,;1 \lr Frank 1,111i1it
rt';:al a r'; ' IIrri ll 111 trio E:hc." The
cullet til n \t rest.:ted by 11rs, llarold
C,:ar; 'iota t.r, 'I'hc roil call was taken
and the na:at;es of aha last nteetititg
wore read by the secretary, and a;>•
rcvr:1 by Mrs, Ilonald Iliggins, Air's.
llarcld C:Int;.bell trace the Ire::a:rer's
report, A discusion w:!s held on how
to ra!1e money fcr the group? 1l was
decided th4: we would he''p with lard
ct.tering at the church and net outside
grout:s,
I?i;,1a new nte_n;hers joined Lite Unit
and titre a: fol'.c\1's: lits. Harty Bryan!.
Airs. George ll;: ;lit lar,, int 'Ale -
Call, \11's. 1,'r,1' t llcl)nnsld, Ales :1r'
four., 'Mrs. 11111 l'r.un , llr.
Hey Yount', ' ,'arc! \ir.i. llaitland Henry
;[1 r ; \rl:trait cf!ered her It in,'
for Ile 0c1.1 Illrrl 111;' rirl ,\rril 1t1,
1' 1. 11'1 rtr,'r r' r _,c1 h': tepealall ; th'
I•rn,"linear). Ofh,' \s11' ltlltOti war- bel•
\cd I.c 1.r 1)41 )' l'anll'a:Il, 'Al()
Ile.' Ir!II (',tirt.ht II ` r.. \Ir:. Winona \lc
I)nu,'ai! 7..1r', ,tun i'irrcc ih;tt•rd
Ilse rowawl't'l' a.:1r1 hr;..',(:'t'S fur the`
Inn( h
Walton News
Wanton's Institute
Il,:toric;rl Ite.•csarcti and Curren
Ft et , tt;t, the Iltcrtttt of the Waiter
11'notrrn's; lIl tdutc fon' Ihe,Mar'ch. nut
in '1, 1itrsftny''evening -in the 'fi1►it
mtnlily Hall The president, Airs
J;Jnr ; Nolan, presided tor the 0051
rc .; and members answered tate r61
:all with "flow -I chrssc_my daughter's
't• son's name."' Mrs. II, Craig teat
.he minutes of the January and Febru
ary meetings, also the financial , re-
: t was given by Mrs, \Vni. Humph.
its. It was decided to accept the in•
y:utiles to attend the cooking denton-
'1.r;ttian in Blyth Memorial 1fall, un-
er the auspices of the Blyth Wi, Fri•
'ay evening, April 6, conunencing at
p.m. 1Irs. Scriver, of CIiCO
Kitchener, will be present. Meat was
::osrn from the different courses for
he h•c;II leaders senior training school
n the fall of 19t;3. The committee to
ri; ;fare r the euchre for March 23
'« •t:, 'At.. \. \h"I h" gild, lairs GMc.
;r«t to )1r•• 1t' I.h'arlreed ar?d Mei:. K
Apt 11 meeting will have
the official vI;it :if the District Pres.
dent, rc :rrtn'nrin : with 0 pot. luck
'tu71x•r n1 'i p.m. sharp, The roll call
tc'1 le 1 rnruf 1,1 fees and a gift for
1.:4'/.Y/ !tel!!%!t/.%tit/r ///// , j r _. _ _ t
...... 011!/1, r ii...rr' :&r'=111
a ta,+r ",xss rr Zrapllb'aM+kYti iwli, - '
n Wilzprtla. ahrt rvms.mt,:za:a zt:Emm 1 • rs
Ir Air ,. 3 ygRtide raY�\a7,sa:::rs�WA*,7444"7164"r"4""1.14"141;11
g47tC7s^arA is �Vlaf#alt c t
tq �> s.c A' rad �5 •e�ra,.��N.'Av>gt ' V+sa- a. iyys amu, , in '"NAu >Jq�t1a '°p �t si 141; sr
1 i^r .ottya c � h.rat ryi ..tl`mirw.. �'.+,eil iez• �k:�1Rr.
t bRaGY Wf65:VJITi} tT�1 +�. , �` iAiG�t►
,.ya.L.,.u,' Nr.+/ ` •• ys� a NIi71 + 7,( !RV rtA:Pre l 4p '''a11'�. 5...
Ib .,. Y+� .^"•.MM
kat
r3 riclhtl
choose
n opportunities to
01119
of What you
Chevre delivers more room
Chevrolet more on the
., more pouter ' comfort More
:.• -- more L C1totCe
more {earn' e�
ust u mutter 'pro all right!
four It'schoices and they
fourteen . ,, ,:•' '....., ...>��., .�.,`_
size
e etre 11 comfortable, ne p to
Ther 's With responsive
motor-
inge t nuts the full 0 pleoti r-
ing of ce that fingertips. Eye -pleasing - 0111
be ut Your a ride you'd expect y
and costing much, much more,
l7eautY , x
from u car
:fi,,nr.toy+:ta • -
9 M« V MRSI
trac-
tion
the cats -paw dime,
This 1s the cur rough'tough
ion -- the elle that cornets s 1711
t s through ulll There's style,,
that leap
gut that s not and
going' dependability, economy octan
comloi't, 1 sornething p
ct feeling of cleaving
at
".r..�"n'..„.•._ _. -,,,,:•;::::::;•; --
aaTre,lA:din n -:,„,,,,,:;',....,,,,,,,,,,,m,,,,,:,,
"1 j dti S _ _ \
xx f <
iQ,l, Cela )sc.2.?,.t.», f° ... ..
n air f t l •r
614::. ItS:':r+'.y'h+..nt sil??tt.�'it s -• ,,,�,�
riias . ;,ya,4ssaycaaaaw%a
_____.,______---_,:„..,......,...„1::•4,7
,,^Yee
"er,?
=0,, i
-7raca¢^:'cl ^...-t+-,r► R*gra
1
.�. rfte•vwy.+.we
CIIf1'1' 11 AVIA ,100
'
4 -Door 2 -tical
sfuf1an urian
.,fatally new!
COlt 1411t 1110:17,1
4 -Door Sedan frith sporf..rar flair!
ss
Whitewall tires optional at extra cast A U1:NE NAL 1IOTOItS VALUE
Be bare to see Bonanza on the CIiC•'TV network each Sunday. Cheek your local liNtilli; for channel and time.
LORNE
30 ONTARIO STREET . AMMON ONTARIO''"PHONE *Hi/. 21321
M
T
S Ltd.
your sun, hhit 'sinter, A penny auction
will also be held at this meeting, A
(Iiscu.siort followed. oil the adoption of
'their, refugee child for the coming
'$'car and it was decided to ask other
societies to juin with us and if possible
(lave the sante child to support. The
district annual will he held in Walton
in. May, celebrating the 60 anniversary
of the W I,' r Tickets for dinner meal
will be $1,00 and arrangements will
be made to have a cake made and iced
for the occasion, " Changing of the
meeting date was left till the next
meeting. The conveners of the meet-
ing, Mrs. Jan Van 'Vliet, Jr., and Mrs,
Wm. Turnbull, then took over the meet-
ing. Mrs. 'Turnbull was in charge of
the lucky door prizes, which were won
by: adult, Mrs, ,lames Clark; child-
ren's, Stephen Hibbert. Mrs. Van
Vliet impersonated as Miss Joyce as-
sembled t'he, children in a circle and
played action games, "pop goes the
Weasel," and "Im a little tea pot,"
;also a candy scramble. Mrs C, Ma(1t•
cson,. of Brussels; told a very interest•
ing story to the Junior Children, "Pal-
tYrs Little Pets." Other games fol-
lowed v\rilh Ali:•s Joyce, "Aly Old Flit..
or, ' "Spider Son," "Simon ;lays," and
a tweet •session, Everyone joined in
a big circle for' "Farmer.s in the
Dell." Balloons were presented to all
the children present. Lunch conunit•
tee consisted of Mrs. T. Dundas, Mrs.
N. Marks, Mrs. G. Hibbert, Mrs. A.
Anderson, Mrs P. McDonald, Mrs, N.
Reid, Mrs, Herb Williamson. Mrs.
Martin brought in the slate of officers
as follows: past president, Mrs. James
Nolan; president, Mrs. K. McDonald:
1st vice-president, Mrs. G. Corlett; 2nd
vice•presldent, Mrs. Ed. McCreath;
secretary,secrelary,A Mrs. 1L Craig; treasurer,
Mrs. W. Humphries; district director,
Mrs, James 'Nolan; assistant district
director, Mrs, 'Ron Bennett; branch
directors, Mrs. S. Humphries, Mrs, A.
McDonald, Mrs. -Wilbur Turnbull, Mrs.
Mlargaret 1lumpltries; pianist, Mrs.
,lack Brans; assistant pianist, Mrs.
Ilerh Traviss; press reporter, Mrs. 1.1
Ennis; auditors,' I1t•s James MA.
Mrs. Geo. Williamson; convener;; of
standing committees, Agriculture and
Canadian Industries, Mrs. Roy \Vii•
hamson, Mrs. Donald Buchanan; Cit.
izenship and Education, Mrs, N. Marks
Mrs. T. Dundas; Historical Research
and Current Events, Mrs. W. Turn-
bull, Mrs. F. Walters; Home Econ-
omics and Health, Mrs, G McGavin,
Mrs. G. Fox;. Resolutions, A'Its, G.
Watson, Min's, W. Shortreed; Public Re-
lations, Mrs. Wm, 'Dennis, Mrs. Geo.
Love, Airs. H. Travis, Mrs E. Stevens.
Sunshine Committee, Mrs. A. Coutts;
Brussels Fair Board Directors, Mrs.
Jho McDonald, Mrs, R. Traviss.
The Ball Board and Women's Insti-
tute held a progressive euchre party
last Friday evening with the following
as prize winners: ladies high, 'Mrs.
Clifford Ritchie; •gents high, Jack Mc.
Call; ladies .low, :Mrs, G. McGavin;
gents low,.John Simpson, Lunch corn.
lattice, ,Mrs, .A McDonald, Mrs. K.
McDonald, Mrs. G. McGavin, Mrs, W,
b'Itortreed.. , • '
'Mr, and Mrs. Jim Anderson and fain.
`fly, of London, visited over the week.
end with the former's.parcnts, Mr. and
Mr's. A.' Anderson.
Mrs. •Margaret Iltunphries is at pres-
ent visiting in Windsor and London
Miss Ruth Ennis, R,N,, of Kitchener,
spent the weekend with her parents,
Mi'.'.and Mrs. Doug Ennis.
1\Irs, Les, Oliver head the misfortune
to fall and fracture her hip and is at
present confined to the Victoria Hos-
pital, London,
Y. , P. U.
.,The TPU invited the congregation
to join with theta last Sunday evening
when the film, "Martin Luther" was
hewn. Miss L'utda Bryans conducted
the meeting. Mary Helen"Buchanan
read the scripture . passage,' and Miss
Geraldine Dennis oferlid the prayer,
Mr. and Mrs. A, H. • L;overidge, Char-
lotte and Albert, of Westhill, and Mr.
Ron Ennis, Hamilton, visited on Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Doug Ennis.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Pritchard . and
family, Toronto; and Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Maier•, London, spent the week-
et>,d with Mr, and Mrs, David Webster.
Miss Carrie Ruiyter, Stratford, spent
the weekend with_ •Mr. and Mrs, Jan
Van Vliet Sr: '
•
McKillop U.C,W.
The March meeting of the McKillop
1.1,C,\V. unit was held I\Iarch 14 at' the
home of ,Mrs, Andrew Colitis with Mrs.
,1, Boman presiding. The opening
hymn 112 "Ilejtiice the Lord is King"
was followed withprayet' by Mrs. A'lcr•
ten Hack -well Mrs. W. .1. Leeming
read the scripture passago from Psaltn
966. Mrs. M. llackwell was in charge
of the topic ft`om the study book "Sig-
nals for the Sixties," Reports were
Beard and business 'conducted. Imita-
tions were accepted to attend n Thank -
offering meeting at. St, John' Anglican
Church, Brussels. do March $7'at 2.30
pini,• • and the Walton Unit Bazaar
March 211 at 2 pint. Used Christmas
dards were brought to the meeting. The
meeting 'closed with hymn 945 "Now
the hay is Over" aftcl l>eayer. A de-
licious lunch was 'served by the hos-
tess, Mrs. George Eox and Mrs. David
Sholdice,
&'AGt K ""-*
Trig 13LYTUt STANDARD
WALTON
Walton Willing Workers
The Rt.h meeting of the Walton Wil-
ling workers was held Saturday, March
24th at 9.31) a.m. at the home of the
leader, Mrs. 11. Craig. The 'recline
began by the members repeating the
4.11 pledge. The minutes of the last
me:tung was read by Carol Wi!bee.
Sherrill Craig was to be press report
The coli call "010 occasion when shln'l;,
mu be suitably worn" was answered
by 11 metnbers. The next meeting is
to be Iit'!d at, the 1lornc of 'Airs. II.
Travis the fir.,!, week m May, Our
!knee Econunti:.t, .at
tended ;Ind gave the girls touch need.
91
Needlework list
1962 BLYTH TALI FAIR
CLASS 20-r•BAKIN
Mrs. D. lialialtan, Mrs. Edwin Wood, Mrs• C. Galbraith
1, Chiffon cake, not iced . 1.00
2. Banana layer cake, iced 1.00
3. Dark fruit cake 1.511
4. 5 cup cakes liecorated .85
5. 1 large jellied sand fruit .115
6. 3 individual._jellied salads, 1 fruit, 1 veg., 1 other .85
7. One half Ih, maple cretin cantly 1.00
8. One half lb. ehoceletc fudge 1.00
9. leintphil pie 83
10. Raisin pie •8:1
11. Cherry pie, lattit'e Lop .«,
12. Tarts 3 butter .11.5
13. Tarts 3 Iemtm 8'`'
14. White bread 1 ioaf .85
15. Bun,, Clover Leaf, (6) .55
16. Pan Chelsea .Buns .85
17. 7 tea b,iscults ' w,
18. Date and Nut Loaf •F5
19. 5 bran muffnls, no fruit .83
20 7 fancy Coolies, assented, baked .85
21, 7 macaroons .85
22. 7 oatmeal squares •85
23. Best decorated cake 1.00
.75
1.00
.3',
.50
.75
;(1
.50
.50
.50
S1
.50
.30
.30
.Jul
.50
.S(J
5,J
.50
,'75
CLASS 21 -CANNED OR PRES'ERVED .FRUIT, PICKLES, ETC.
Fruit and pickles to be exhibited in pint sealers. Jams and Jellies in
tmiiortn jars, seal on jars to be unbroken.
1. 1 pint canned, tomatoes .75 .5(1
2. 1 pint O1nn sl'. plums .75 .50
3. 1 pint canned 'pineapple .75 .5t,
•t. 1 pint. cold meat;relish .75 .50
5. -1 pint peaches i- .75 .50
fi. 1 pint rasplap.t•ries .75 .5(1
7. 1 pint canyied pear, .75 .50
3. 1 putt restneel cherries, red .75 .51,
9. 1 pint,6anned cherries, black; .73 .50
10. 1, ' ?bit sweet cucumber pickles .75 •54
1.t +1 pint dill pickles .75 .54
'1.2. 1 putt tomato juts• .75 .et,
13. 1 pint applelaucr, . .75 .50
14. Marmalade, 2 varieties .75 .50
15. Jan, raspberry .75 .50
16. Jam, strawberry .75 .50
17. 1 putt salad dressing .75 .50
18. Jolly, apple ' .75 .50
19. 1 pint maple syrup .75 .50
NEEDLEWORK
Mrs. George Watt, Mrs. 5. Chellsw, • Mrs. John Young
Al work to have been done during past two !years, except quilts. Ouitts
to be alloa'sd three yiears. All Centre Neees must be mounted on
Bristol Board.
CLASS 22
1. Quilt pieced. cotton, two colons
2. Quilt pieced, cotton, mixed .unlors
:t. Quilt appliqued
4. gliilt, fancy quilting
;t. Quilt, any other
6. Crib quilt, ninety design
Mat, hooked with rags
8. Mat, hooked 'with yarn
9. Mat braided
10. Mat, any other
7.
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.25
1.00
1. (KI
1.00
1.00
1.05
CLASS 23-LIVING•ROOM FURNISHINGS
1. Living roam Cushion, satin, complete .75
2, Living room cushion, wool, complete .75
3. Cushion, beSt new Edea, caompiote .75
4. Cherterfield set, 3 pierces .'75
5. Table centre, ani other.75
DINING -ROOM FiJRNI.SIiINGS
8. Buffet, set, 3 pieces
7. White table centrepiece, crochet flat, 12" or over
8. 4 place mats, (not foam rubber)
'3. Fridge cloth, 36" square; fitted !corners
BEDROOM FURNISHINGS
10. Pillow slips, embroidered in color ,'75 .50
11. Pillow slip„ lace trim .75 .50
12. Pillow slips, cross stitch .75 .50
13, Vanity sot ,. .75 .50
CLASS 24 -PERSONAL WEAR-
.1.
EAIt.1. Lady's pyjamas .75 .50
2. Stoller ,and Daughter apron .75 .50
3. Work apron (most practical) .73 ,10
4. Fancy apron . , .. , ... .75 .50
5. Bt made over, garment (state from shat it
is made) t .75 .50
6. Mien's g'jam'aa .75 .54
7. Men's A•'tirk shirt .... .75 •51)
t Boy's Mott shirt .75
9. Child's cotton dress .75 .50
10. Child's 1)4- doll pyjamas (4 to 10 year';,) : .75 .50
11. ''.11d'§ fops i .75 50
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
,7.i
.75
.75
.110
.60
.60
.60
,60
.50
.50
.50
.o
.50
.50
.30
,50
.50
CLS 25 -KNITTING
1. Men's work soaks .75 .50
2. Men's fine socks, vele colour .75 .50
Men'a fine 5ot`Yts, fancy .73 .30
4. Men's mitts .75 .std
5. Child's mitts .73 .50
13. 'lady's knitted sweater, new .75 .50
7. Baby's jacket bonnet and booties, knitted .75 ,50
a. Baby's jacket,, bonnet and booties, erouliet .75 .50
9. Ankle socks, 2 - .3 years, no cuff .75 .50
CLASS 26 -MISCELLANEOUS
1, Kitnhen hableolgtlt
2. Two embroidered t,ea towels
3. Pot holders, 3 different
4. 3 hand4rimmed handkerchiefs ...
5. Article of Huck weave ' •
6. 3 lxandimad aolies,'10" sand under
7. 2 hot plate pads, different
GLASS 21 -ARTS AND CRA.FT9
1. Etched Aluminum Tray
2. (Jopitr Meting
3. C�.s etch plctitre
4. ijnbroudered picture
S. Number Pa.frriing, winter scene
13. Number- Pf,aintin ;, sl1.ninter scene
7. .Bout bouquet of foam rubber flowers
3. BO, article made from plastic
9.
Arlaf}cial ( J)?' , AN/ 11311, ri j
.75 .50
.75 .50
.75 .50
• .75 .50
.75 .50
.75 .50
.73 .50
1.00
1.00
1.40
1.00
1.00
1.M
.75
.75
.7a
.75
.75
.75
.75
.73
.50
,60
.55
AUTOMATIC LAUNDROMAT SERVICE
IS A NEW FEATURE 1_''I.)IZ 1)IS'i'Rl(" C L.,_11.11T.'
I'be (1144'..incvatinn it w.a;on!
drying of c:,''Itc: I'c> . hcen added 10
110 )'u.'ine,_s section of 111'111 in 1110
loren of an auleulat.ic !aundry eet•vtc.
operated by ;lparling's 1!df vire
Two w a: h and dry salts have been
:tat are new. 1n opEr alto!! in
ll,e Deherly hied; 11n 1)o'..!'•, Sttt;-t
add:aer.31 un•!L, will be added
,thortl,', and if the servf%e hrcve; to
::'e a popuhar one, Mr ; parliug toil!
instal more units 'a; the need arise.:
nodular prices will be in effect and
the •service will be available 21 Muir
Ilaay.
ROG PRODUCERS TOLD OF NEED
HOG QUALITY 'I'0 ASSURE MARKET
Over three hundred hog producers
attended the 21st annual meeting (11 Ilte
Ontario !log Producers Association and
at Illi.. meeting directors were elected
to Ike Jlarkeli,t hoard.
Ono director Iva:; elected in each 01
thn rle1ell 2011(':; 111 Ontario. Suv'en
runts elected (directors (Of) favored
I.hc !lres.tnl hu„ marketing Ulan 'floret'
directors were elected al large lo the
marketing beard and these three also
favored the pr(::ent I1(' marketing
i'lan•
The directors at large were Alfred
Warner, Huron, 'Thos. Pringle, Grey,
and John Barnett, Perth Cotulty. This
leaves the marketing board with 1 e
of the fourteen directors favoring the
present hog marketing plan.
Perth County has the distinction ni
having two directors on the OIiPMB.
one opposed to the present plan and
the other favoring the plan. Zone 10.
Which comprises 1110 counties of Huron
and Middlesex, elected Mr. Emmerson
Crocker as direclor.
Mr. bickiesun, director of the 0111'
ALIS, said the biggest development to
report for this year was the selling of
Ontario produce by teletype and this
utcthud of selling offers hogs in the
most competitive manner possible.
Mr. Boynton, secretary of the OIfPA.
gave a very detailed report of the ec-
tivities of the Association and report
ed that over 2,900,000 hogs were pro-
duced last year in Ontario, valued at
over $90,000,000,
A number of resolutions were dealt
with, the most important one being
as fo'1ows: Whereas p11/ccssors through
vertical integration could raise all (:I1c
hogs they need on a few farms, and
Whereas this is being attempted in
some other field of production, anti
whereas this would ntca►1 that a small
producer of 25 to 200 hogs would be
forced out of business.
Therefore 'Be 11 Resolved That all
hogs produced continue to be consigned
to the 0I1PMB and sold by teletype
regardless of whether they are owned
by .0 processor or a small producer.
This resolution was carried with 1.
large majurily,
A Panel cunsisl.ing of producers and
two agricultural specialists from the
OAC :tressed the need for Ontario pro•
(Myers to improve the qualil.y, of their
hogs if we are to hold our place in til.!
CXiwl'I. market.. It was pointed out that
we export. 7000 hogs weekly to the Un•
ited States at premum prices. Produ•
eors in the United State.: are following
a quality program to improve the
quality of their hogs.
ed help for Achievement Day. The
girls then tried on (heir separates fur
her and received individual continents.
The meeting adjourned a1 11.30 a.m.
NASTY I''.1I-I, ('AI.'5f';1 INJURY
1'O ALBS. ALilEtt'I' N ; ll!'i't'
'two fraeturod wrl:a rxass the re.
4.r!It of an a lfarttut1le 1kt11 heal 'I
clothes ':,land t(:htle Mss Albert rde hitt
u•az hanging her w a:h!.ng out to dry
on Monday morning.
'I11c mishap occurred when the hooks
fastening the line lo the house pulled
free of 1110 building. She was taken
10 Clinton hospital and it, is hoped
an early return home tvi t be po;, ible.
AUBURN
('nurt Dufferiu Meeting
C'ourl 1)uf(erin 46 of the ('anadi:ni
Order of Fot'resters met in the
JIal1 with 1Iie (Idol hanger Robert
ltaer in dame, and Ronald (gross in
the Vice Chief Banger's chair. The
minutes were adopted as rcail by
d(111 1)11er. 'Me financial secretary, 1304'!
1.)acr, ,g11vc' his report.. The treasurer,
Tom Cunningham, paid $27.50 to the
Auburn hall !bard, the proceeds from
a recoil card party. The members de
cided to change the date of the meet-
ings from the third Tuesday of the
month Io the second 11`ednesday. Plans
to organize a hall team when spring
0011105 was (discussed and it is hoped
that. a hall team league 0.1111 be formed
with the surrounding districts. l'lans
were also made to hold a dance in the
110110 future. Lu11c11 MIS served by
Gordon Daer and Robert. Daer.
PENS 1'i(ISSEN'J'ED 7'0 ,SECRE't'AIRY.
TREASUIRER. OF MORRIS
FEDERATION
The regular monthly meeting of
Morris Federation of Agrieuhure was
held on '1'lllla'S(1C1y evening at. the home
of Mr. and Ana's. Thomas 1lendcrtimt
with 15 present. Minutes of the pre-
vious 1)1eetiillgt were read V1.11(1 11doplttll.
A report on the fame Canvass was giv.
en, much interest. had been taken as
ihown by the number of shares sold.
The Park at. liodmin was discussed
at length and the same committee was
re -appointed cn motion of Robert Gras
by and William Elston. The committee
is as follows: R. 11. Coulles, Stanley
Hopper, Kennett! McDonald, Bert Fear
Glen Smith ,and Mervin Richmond, The
Committee is to interview 130(1111in Ltd.
as lu how much land they could .ulnare.
It. was decided not to participate i1 the
Conservation Authority Project.
Albert Bacon wished to thank all
those who had made the Bog Vote a
success on March 6. The president re-
ported on a complimentary bus trip
and dinner .10 be held in London on
March 17 by the C.I.A. A special meet-
ing of Councils and Federation Dims
tors is to he held in Clinton on March
27 or 20 concerning laxation and assess-
ment.. 'Phe new Farm Siachtnery Act
was discussed but ,left over for an-
other meeting to gather more informa-
tion on it.
A presentation of Waterman felts
was made to Ah'. and Mrs. Earl An-
derson who had romplcted 21. years as
secrelal;y•lreasurer of Niod'ris Federa•
tion. It.oberl. G1•a;hy rc;d an address
and Alt's. Bert Fear mule the preset'.
t.ation•
The president, Stanley Moppet', thank.
ed Mr. and Mrs. Henderson for the use
of their home for this meeting. The
next meeting will be held on Wednes-
day, April 18, at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Block. Lunch was served.
(s your Subscription Paid
AMY
Wednesday, Mal'eji 2S, 1062
HAY AND PASTURE MIXTURES...
P'ie'iipho# Mitect
GREATER YIELDS
Now -more than ever -the Co-op 13ig Bonus Hay and
Pasture Program takes Lite guesswork out of selecting
seed -mixtures for higher yields, and hence higher farts
profits. How? Simply by taking advantage of our new
prescription mix seed service. And it's so convenient
too ... right in your own area! Here's how it; works: just
pay a visit to your Co-op and discuss your particular
seed requirements with its Soil and Crop Specialist.
Based on Department; of Agriculture recommendations,
high quality no seeds will be accurately blended
in our NEVi SEED MIXER! These specific
mixtures will allow for maximum
yields of the hay and pasture required
in YOUR livestock program.
COO Our objective is to make You more successful
UNITED CO.OPERATIVES OF ONTARIO
Belgrave CO -Operative Association
Phones: Wingham 1091 -- .Brussels 388W10
111111111111111111111111,
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
FIRE INSURAIEE
COMPANY
AGENTS:
(forth;
old Squires,
forth.
'i
Office -- Maul Street
SEAFOi{'I'll
Insures.
Town Dwellings
All Classes of Form Property
Shooter Cottages
Churches, Schools, halls
Exltencled coverage (wind, smoke,
water daruage, falling objects, etc.)
is also available,
James Koys, 11.11 1, Scaforth; V. .1. Lane, IRR 5, Sea -
Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Her.
Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eaton, Sea.
BLYTH LAUNDROMAT
IN DOHERTY BLOCK ON DINSLEY STREET
NEW AND MODERN EQUIPMENT ,
IN OPERATION
'2.1 IiOUR SERVICE
REGULAR RATES
operated by
SPARLING'S HARDWARE Blyth, Ontario
till$aWitt rittr''o'13i'.i :rY Ii.,lin...f"' 111 11A124Biit.'4ll.i.'1: 4..(. :.ai?Y.Z1c11,111rMr.1tr11:?l::ro'd:c-4 '4,:3, i1ii11Ai1 3.tt'L 4' W era;
1 N�jv,,i ,...da':,:r..:i1C_110.,xtnik '^i•'.lil.
Wednesday, Mareh 28, WOG
1
for complete
projection ...
WAWANESA
LIFE INSURANCE
mT�n TiT tnrrTY
Orr nr
Mail: tt'Es'i wA1�:•Nu..11 .,1(;'rt ..►
FIRE INSURANCE COb1I'ANS'
Head Office, Dungannon
Established 1878
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brown Smyth, 11.1t. 2.
Auburn; Vice -President, Ilerson Irwin,
Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, 11.11.
1, Dungannon; George C. Fcagan,
Goderich; Ross !McPhee, RR. 3, Au
burn; Donald Mackay, Ripley; John F.
MacLennan, R.IC. 3, Goderich; Frank
Thompson, 1I.R. 1, Iiolyrood; Wm,
Wiggans, 11.R. 3, Auburn.
For information on your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dunganuon
48.
BINGO
Legion Bingo every Thursday trite
8:45 sharp, in Legion Hall, Lucknow.
12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share.
the -wealth and a special for $50.00 must
go. (no limit to numbers). 40t1
I'iere's your opportunity for complete
protection --auto, fire, property, and
now LIFE -- through the agent you
know best. We suggest you call us,
let us tell you more about this import•
ant new Wawanesa Service!
ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGENCY
"INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES"
Myth, Ontario
AUIt URN
ida While Group
The Ida While Group of Knox Pres•
byterian Church met in the schoolroom
of the church with the president, Mari.
an Yotutgblut, in charge. Erie Scott
was the flag bearer, while all repeated
the Pledge, The Lord's Player and the
Apostle's Creed. The scripture lesson
was road by Margaret Youngblul
and the worship service was
conducted by the leader, Mrs. Donald
1faines, on "Things to remember at
Easter." Prayer was given by Eddie
Halves. The minutes of the prezious
meeting were approved as read by
the :secretary, Keith Scott. The roll
call 1Va5 answered by each telling an
Easter event. The offering was i'cceiv-
e(1 by IVayne Scoit. and a't repeated the
offertory prayer. 'l'he story "So long
to wail," wets told by the assistant
leader, 'sirs. Kenneth Scott. The meet-
ing was closed with the benediction.
Never gamble your life on one jack,
unaes the Ontario Safety League. Use
blocks if you have to work under the
car with the wheels off, No .lack is in•
fallible, and it is easy for a car to slip
off a hand -jack, even in a garage. Nev.
er crawl tinder a car without visualiz•
ing what would happen if the jack
gave way.
ACHESON'S DEM) STOCK SERVICE
Highest prices for dead, old or dis
ailed horses and cattle. Phone Atwood
356.2622 collect. Licence No. 156062.
P & W TRANSPORT LTU.
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 SERVICES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired,
'Blocked drains opened with modern
equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin
Coxon, Milverton, Telephonic 254. 11tL
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE 1IOUiRS— i p.m. to 4;30 pan,
EVENINGS:
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(BY APPOINTMENT)
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
0ODEI(ICII, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4.0521 --• Box 4'18.
G. ALAN WILLIA.MS,
OPTOMETRIST
iS;T
PATRICK. s'L'. 1ViNCt1IAlM,. ONT,.
(For Appointment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
J. E.1Lo �gstaf f, Optometrist,
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seatorth, Dally Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5;30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOB APPOINTMENT PHONE 34.00DERICII
It
CRAWFORD &
%HETHERINGTON
aAnnit?'1rus k SOLICiTORS
J. H. Crawford, It, 5, Hetherington.
Q,C,
Oltlncham and Blyth.
iN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY HHORNING
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agenci
Plane lllytle 104
FOR SALE
Quantity of .Propane Gess Brooders,
glass wader fountains, tube feeders.
Apply Russell Cook, phone 254, Myth.
52.1
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
FOR SALE
Good table potatoes. Apply Jasper
Snell, phone 351125, Blyth, 02.2.
AU'I'OMO'I'iVI'.
111ecIi iik'al anti body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel halunce, Lndaspray
for rust prevention,
DAVIDSON'S 'Texaco Service
No. 8 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231
Goderich, On(ario.
20-1(
DO YOU HAVE BUiLD)ING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
I'itone 23It12 Brussels, Ontario
I'IROPERTIES FOR SALE
WILFRED I1IcINTEE
Real Estate Broker
IVALKERTON, ONTARIO
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaner's and polishers. Filter Queen
Sales, Varna. Tel. collect llcnsall 696112,
50•l3p.lf.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASH PRICES
PAID FOIL SiCK, D01VN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cow's and Horses At Cash Value
Old horses—le per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels,
BRUCE MARLA'1''It
OR
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth
24 Hour Service
Plant Licence No. 54•II.P.-61
Colcclo►' Licence No, B1i•G61
SANiTAIti' SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., primped
and cleaned, Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, 11.R. 2.
HOUSE FOR SALE
7 room house, sun porch, two piece
bath downstairs and 3 piece upstairs,
1t'a'age and some land. Apply Mrs. J.
Collinson, phone 13, Myth. 03-2p.
.+NJ.rI004t4vrw4,0041,0 NNIIIN
1
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERT FRIDAY AF'i'ERNOON
CLINTON HALE BARN
at 2 pan,
JN BLYTiI, I'IIONE
BOB HENRY, 150111
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manoger. Auctioneer
05-tf.
'I'EACIIEIt 1VANTED
An experienced protestant .teacher is
required for S.S. No. 7, Mullett. Fir-
teen pupils. Duties to commence in
September. Apply slating qualifies.
Lions, experience and salary expected.
All applications to be in hands of the
secretary by April '2, 1963,
Mrs. Leonard Shobbrook.
Secret tu'y •Trea surer.
11.11. No. 1, I3lyth, Onl,
02-3.
FOIL SALE
Farm 110 acres, good (liable, well
(!raided laud. Large Karn '10 x 80, 2
storey house, garage. Spring well with
pressure system. C!use to Public School
and Bus to Collegiate. Lot 9 and 10,
Con 10, Morris Twp., 2 miles cast of
Blyth. Apply Mrs. Mervin Richmond,
01.38.
TEACHER WANTED
A protestant teacher is required for
S.S. No. 9, Mullett. Nineteen pupils. Du-
ties to commence in September. Apply
stating salary expected and qualifica
lions, to Ilenry flunking, Secretary-
Treasurer,
ecretaryTreasurer, It.11. 1, Auburn, Ontario,
03.3
FOR SALE
Spy and Pippin Apples. Apply, J. B.
Nesbit, phone 53115, I3lyth. 03.3
AUCTION SALE
Of Livestock, Implements anti House-
hold effects for Leo .1, Kelly, Lot 12
and 13, (,'oucession 7, Morris 'i'ownship,
2' miles North of Blyth, 3 miles East
on No. 4 Highway, on
THURSDAY, APRiL 5
at 1 p.m.
CATTLE—Roan cow, 4 years old, due
in May; red cow, 5 years old, due in
April; roan cow, 5 years old, due iin
April; roan cow, 5 years old, due in
pril; roan cow, 5 year's old, due in
June; red cow, 5 years old, due Ap•
nil 1; roan cow, 6 years old due April
1; Hereford cow, 6 years old, clue in
April; Hereford cow, 6 years old due
in May; roan cow, 5 years old, due Ap•
rii 1; 2 Hereford steers, 1000 lbs.; 3
Hereford steers, 700 lbs; 6 Hereford
heifers, 700 lbs.; purebred Shorthorn
13(111, 1 year old.
PIGS -7 York chunks.
HORSES—Black I'ercheron mare, 12
years old.
11f1'i.I \IEN'1',ti—Rubber-t110(1 wagon:
set of sleighs; 6 ft. McCormick Deer-
ing mower, 3 years old; \McCormick
Deering side rake; steel land roller;
2 gratin chills; wagon box with stock
rack; 1 set of 5 section harrows: turnip
;;ower; set oI' 2,1)90 lb, scales; walking
p?ow; riding plow; 2 short ladders; 1
25 tt. ladder; hors() drawn disc; scut -
flet; rubber lined wheel barrow; 1 rub-
ber tired buggy; brooder stove; colony
heusc; 2 range shelters; sap pan and
buckets; quantity of used lumber; sev•
el/al used doors; De Laval cream sep-
erator, 3 years old; lawn mower; gaud-
en hose; feed drums and numerous
other articles.
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS -4 West-
inghouse washing machine; 1 Wesl.ing•
house refrigerator, 9 cu. ft., like new;
1 Beach electric stove, 4 hunter, like
new; 3 bedroom suites; 1 toilet set; 2
iron keds; 1 glass cupboard; 1 side
board; 1 dining room set; kitchen tie
blo with 4 chair's; 1 studio couch; 1
mall rack; rocking chairs; odd tables;
and other a.rticics loo numerous to men•
Om of antique value.
No Reserve 1}arni Sold
'I'E11M1i CASII
Leo J, Kelly, Proprietor.
George Nesbitt, Auctioneer,
George Powell, Clerk.
03.2p.
DANCE
Sponsored by Blyth
Intermediate hockey 'Peau
In The New
COMMUNITY HALL,
. AUBURN
FRIDAY, MARCH 30th
Jim Scott's Orchestra
.Lunch Counter
PAGE 7
The Annual
PANCAKE
and
FULL -COURSE SUPPER
in Knox United Church,
Auburn
WEDNESDAY, APRIL '1
from 5 to 8 p.m.
Spoflsoi'c(i by Knox. United
Church SuM(la,y School
COOKING SCHOOL
lilyth Memorial Hall
FRIDAY, APRIL (ith
Sponsored by Blyth Women's Institute
Conducted by
MRS. "S" OF CKCO TV, KITCIIENER
Prizes Will Be Given
8 p.m, Admission 50e
EVERYONE WELCOME
Attention Farmers
Upright Concrete Silos
Built to Your Specifications
ARNOLD IIUGILL
92 CAMBIt1A R1). — GODERlCll
Call Collect — JA 4.9137
FOR SALE
Universal Milking Machine, 2 single
units, pipeline for 12 cows. Apply Geo
Noble, phone Brussels 336J13. 04-lp
HOUSE FOR SALE
5 room ranch style house, built 2
yoars, dri've•in garage, automatic oil
furnace and all modern conveniences,
in Blyth. Apply Mrs. E. J. Churchill,
Mossley, Ontario, phone Harrietsville
269.3377. 51.4f.
FOR SAI,E
eolouy house 10 12 and brooder
store, in good condition, also 3 rain
shelters. Apply L, Archannhattlt, 11hotie
3(11119, Blyth, (31.1p.
CARD ()i' THANKS
1Ve tvi 11l to express nut' sincere rip
ercciation to neighbours and filen&
for (hell' many kindnesses extended to
us during our recent. ;gad bereavement.
for the many cards and letters and
the beautiful floral tributes, with spe-
cial thanks to the ,pallbearers and Ar-
thur's funeral home.
--Family of the late -Alice Arch-
auibault, _ 01.1p.
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
0f Farm, F'ornt Stock, Dairy Equip-
ment, 1lachhtery & Ilousel►ol(1 Effects
At Lof 6, Concession 9, Morris 'Town.
ship, Its miles east of I3lyth, on
11'EDN1irii)AY, APRIL 11
at 12 o'c'ock
CUM'S --.lynx hire, 'Reg.) hretl I'ol.
Hereford, Aug. I::t.: Ayrshire, bred
Poll Hereford July 14; Ayrshire, bred
Poll herelerd July 13; Ayrshire (Reg.!
bred Ay'r:l'irc Cavity it July 7; Angus
Swiss, bred Poll Hereford July 11; Ayr•
shire•Herc'lord, bred Poll Hereford
Sept. 1st.; Ayrshire•ilereford, bred Poll
Hereford Sept. 9; Ayrshire Meg.) brei.
Ayrshire Gully II Oel, 7; Ayrshire,
bred Pall Hereford Nov. 9; Holstein-
1Icreford, bred Poll Hereford Dec. 12;
Ayrshire, bred Poll Hereford Dec. 19;
Ayrshire, bred Poll Hereford liar. 6;
Ayrshire heifer, bred Poll Ayrshire
Mar. 22; Holstein, fresh, 6 months,
open; Ayrshire (Reg.) fresh 2 months.
open; Holstein -Swiss, fresh 1 month.
open; Angus Swiss heifer, fresh 1
n.nti1 AyrFhire heifer, bred Poll Ayr"
shire Dec. 16,
CA'i"I'LE—S Ilcrefnrd steers, 1,20(,
lbs.; 2 Ayrshire -Hereford heifers, ,300
lis,; Ayr:;hire steer. 1351) lbs.; Ayrshire.
Hereford heifer, 630 lis.; 3 1)urhanr
1Icrclord heifers, 1,1(10 lis.; Ayrshire
heifer 600 Ibis 2 Hereford steers, 551;
lis.; 4 Hereford heifers, 400 lbs.; 2
Ilcrefnrd story's, 400 Ihs.
CALVES --Ayrshire bull calf, unit,
ns;rdli ,; Angus -Swiss -Hereford heifer;
Hcrcrford•Swiss heifer. Pall Calves:
2 I1ereford•Ayrsliire steers; Ilerefordl
heifer.
DAIRY EQUIPMENT— Massey liar.
ris Perfection milking machine, 4 years
old, 2 single units, stall calks for 2'
cows; No; 11 Massey Harris cream see;
orator; 5 can ni'.k cooler, water ea
ersion; 4 milk cans; wash stand for
milk cans.
IMPLEMENTS—Champion oat roller,
1 hp, motor air cooled, dust proof with
feed bin; Papec hammer mill, 13 inch
with quantity of screens; Robert Bell
thresher, like new, 24.40 with cutler
and 150 x 7'' drive belt, almost new
and 20 ft. grain elevator; 16 ft. Hai
rolling rack; 5 ton Massey Harris wag.
on (6 ply tires, Firestone); 0 ft. Oliver
laurl packer; 0 ft. Massey tandem
disc (18" Western); 5 ft. Cockshutt
1 way disc; International hay rake;
Massey Ilarris 44, gas, A4 condition:
Massey Harris 6 ft. power mower;
Piercer 'Truitt chain saw, new chain
and sprocket; heat houser for Massey
Harris; .2 electric fencers; 3 furrow
ace bottom plough with scimnners;
111 sscy Harris 7 ft. hinder (5 B); Mas.
sey Ilarris hay loader, like new; 2
wheel trailer; pig crates; hand clutch
for 44 gas tractor; work bench; quanti-
ty of electric steel fence posts; 2 sets
4 section harrows; log boat; gravel
box; cedar posts; anchor rusts; 12"
cutting box, reverse gears; T•45 Inter•
national hay baler, power take -off;
logging chains; gas cans; grease; oil;
block and tackle stretchers; 2 heavy
steel blocks: fencing wire; shovels;
2 pig self -feed troughs; 3 cement pig
trough°;, 4 ft. long; 6" holt splicer,
vice type; cattle dehorner and solder•
ing head (large); bench mandril and
stone; beach vice; broom, pails and
numerous articles; 300 ft. '2" water
hose; set 2000 lb. beam scales; water
trough, galvanized, large size; 50 ft 6"
belt; hay fork; quantity draw rope and
trip rope; quantity hay, grain and
straw; grain bags and box holder.
POULTRY EQUIPMENT -2 800
size electric brooders; 400 size electric
brooder; electric pig brooder; colony
house, double boarded, 10 x 12, insul•
ated; quantity of feeders, trough, foun-
tains and heaters.
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS—chest of
drawers; dressers; beds; springs; writ-
ing desk; electric lamps; dishes; other
articles.
FARM—at the same place, 3:30 p.nls
farm will be offered for sale subject
to reserve bid. 95 acres of clay loam
wettable land, 2 storey brick house
with modern conveniences; large bank
barn with milk,house, drive shed, hen
house and garage.
'PERMS — Cl1A'l".l'LES CASI3
Properly made known (1,ly' 01 sale.
Proprietor, Glen Gibson,
Auctioneer, Herold Jackson.
('Jerk, George Powell. 04.2,
TEACHER 1VANTKI)
A Protestant leacher for 5,5. Nn, 0
1lultetI,
Huron County, Rural School
18 pupils, oil furnace. Duties to com-
mence September 1962. Apply stating
qualifications, last Inspector, and sal•
ary expected
John H. McEwing., Secy.•Treas.
R.R. 1, Blyth, Ontario, 04-3.
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
GODERICII PARK TIIEATRE Phone JA4.7811
NOW PLAYING
Now Playing—"THE COMANCIH;ROS" John Wayne & Stuart Whitman
In Scope and -Color: a great adventure story,
Aron., Tlet,e., 11'cde., April 2. 3, 4
Margaret Rutherford and Arthur Kennedy
will held your interest with a new crime mystery
"MURDER, SIIE SAII)"
"i'ce Wets on Ice" in color; alsu 3 stooge comedy and cartoon
Thur„ Fri., Sat., April 5, 6, 7
Pat Boone , Shirley Junes and Dolores Michaels
"APRILwinning drains
Present a Blue Ribbon o
In Scope and Color
Coining—"PARRiSIi"—Adult Entertainment—with Claudette Colbert
BELGRAVE NEWS
Women's Institute Meeting
The Ihanrical Research and Current
Events meeting of 1110 Belgrave \Vo•
MOWS Institute ,was held in the Com-
munity Centre nn 'I'ue'tloy afternoon
w!1'h the president, Mrs. Richard Peas
'e0, in charge. It was announced that
'.Ire District Executive meeting is to
5e in Blyth on April 3 at 1:30 p.m. and
the District Annual is to he on May 11
2t Clinton. It was decided to remember
the Veterans at Westminster Hospital
with a birthday gift. Mrs. Earl An-
dersen, Mrs. Stanley Cook and Mrs.
CARD OF THANKS
The family of the late Mrs, Arthur
\\ard wish to express their apprecia-
tion for the acts of kindness given then,
during their recent bereavement. Spe•
vial thanks to Re'. McLagan, Mrs. 11.
Brown, the pallbearers, and the ladies
who served lunch and Mrs. Mamma for
the tlse of Iter linnne.
FOR SALE
Dark red Shorthorn hull, 111 months
old, from accredited anti blood tested
herd. Appy Edgar 1Vilhtm,an, Bet -
grave. 01.111.
CARD OF THANKS
\Ve wish to extend ' our heartfelt
thanks and appreciation for the many
1('3 cf kindness, messages of synn, a•
beautiful renal tributes, Gideon
?ores,'donation to the heart fund from
ur relatives, friends and neighbours
1 our recent sad bereavement in the
oss of a beloved husband and father.
7inecial thanks to Dr Street., Rev. R.
1Mclagan, pallbearers, flower bear.
ers, also these who helped at the home.
—Mrs. Iola Richmond and family
01•lp.
CARD OF THANKS
1 wish to thank all those who remem-
bered me with cards, treats and thos(
who helped at Iieme while I was a
patient in Clinton Public Hospital, also
Dr. Street and lite nursing staff.
Gordon Carter.
CARD OF THANKS
Mr and Mrs. Frank Raithby wish to
express their sincere approeetion for
the assistance rendered by Blyth ono
Aubura Fire Brigades in their- efforts
to save oto• house from destruction by
fire. Also to all those who assisted
in removing furniture etc., providing
hunch and keeping watch through the
night, Also to The many thoughtful,
kind, assistance given since the firt.
FOR SALE .
300 bales of hay; also 1 Surge milk-
ing machine. 2 single units. Apply
George Haines, phone 531113, Blyth.
04•1p.
CARD OF THANKS
1 wish to thank all those who retucrn
tiered me while In the hospital.
04.1p. —Keith Richmond
IN MEMORIAM
CRAIVFOIRI)—In loving memory of a
dear husband, Fred Crawford, who
passed away one year sago, April
1st, 1961.
What would I give to clasp hi$ band,
Ills happy face to see;
To hear his voice and see his smile,
That meant so nntclt to me.
—Lovingly remembered by his wife,
Pear, 04•lp.
FOR SALE
Oak office desk, in good condition
.Apply George Nesbitt, plhune 431113
I3lyth. 04-1
FOR SALE
Misses spring coat, blue, in goni
condition, sire 16. Apply Mrs, Charles
Allusion, phone 30, Blyth,
04-1
NO'TiCE
For Plumbing and heating Repairs
and New Installations, also Water Pres
sure Systems, Call L. Whitfield, phone
150, Blyth. 04-1p.
.1. 11. Coultcs were named as the nom-
inating committee. Mrs. Walter Scott
was convener of the program and the
roll call was answered by naming some-
one who owned or clerked in a Bel -
grave business. Mrs. Clifford Logan
gave the address on the history of Bel -
grave and several of the surrounding
towns. Mrs. Stanley Black gave a
reading, Grandmother's Perfect Day,
and Mrs. Ivan Wightman gave a read-
ing, What is a Farm. Mrs. Stanley
Cook gave the current events. Lunen
was served by Mrs. Clarence Hanna,
M's. Walter Pocock and Mrs. Stanley
Black.
Weekly Euchre
Mrs. Gershom Johnston and Alen
Leaver were the high prize winners at
the regular weekly euchre party held
in the Community Centre on 1Vednes-
day evening. Mrs. Earl Noble and
Grunt Elliott were the novelty prize
winner's and Mrs. Gordon Higgins ant
Jesse wheeler ,were the cotnsolatlon
winners. 'there were 11 tables in play.
Mrs. .Julia McNeil visited en Sat-
urday with Mrs. Charles Hallam at
Lucknow,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McCrea. Mau-
reen and Douglas, visited on Sunday
with Mr. and 11rs. Joint Nanning and
family, al Blyth.
Mr. William McNeil visited with his
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McNall, Lucknow, on Saturday.
111r. and Mrs. Lloyd Taylor and fam-
ily, of Sarnia, visited over the week-
end with his mother, Mrs. Orval Tay!.
or, and other relatives;
lir. and Mrs. E'd,. llar'tlin and family,
of Toronto, spent the weekend with
her parents, 11r. and Mrs. Dart Ander-
son.
Michael McNall spent the weekend
with his sister and.brother-in-law, Mr
and Mrs. John 'Thompson and family,
of Bluevale.
Little heather McDowell, of Cooks-
town, granddaughter of AIr. and Mrs.
Gordon Walsh • has returned lo her
home after being a patient in the Sick
Children's Hospital, Toronto.
Murray McDowell, formerly of Bel -
grave, now of Cookstown, attended a
three day course at the Dairy School,
;,urge T'rai)nhng Centre, in Chicago, last
week.
Mrs. John Anderson is a patient in
Victoria Hospital, London, having the
dergone an operiation there last week,
Misses Marlene and Eleanor Walsh,
Kitchener, spent the weekend with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs, James
Walsh,
Miss Lorna Bolt,. Kitchener, spent
the weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Bolt
The BclMait Branch of elle Fores-
ter's sponsored .i progressive euchre
party in the Forrester's Hall on Friday
evening with 19 tables in play. IMigh
prizes were won by Ethel Jackson and
John McKinnon. Novelty prize winners
were, Mrs. Kenneth Wheeler and Char-
les Coultes. Consolation prizes went to
Mary Iiclnn and Russel Gaunt. A social
time was enjoyed and lunch was serv-
ed.
The fifth meeting of the 1Vawianosh
Wardrobe Workers was held in the
Belgrave Arena rooms, on Mach 24,
at 7.00 p.m. Members wrote notes oa
"Fitting" and then the president, Dini
Ncthery, took over for the business,
The '4.11 pledge and motto were re-
peated. The Roll Call was answered
with "One point I learned about cutting
out or marking a garment " Mrs. John-
ston showed tete members several sam-
ples which are required for record
books. The minutes of the last meet-
ing were read by Doreen Pattison.
Linda Coultes demonstrated how to put
a zipper in a garment and Dini Neth-
ery showed how to place the waist-
band. The meeting closed with Taps
and lunch.
FOR SALE
200 acres in East 1Vawanosh Twp.,
two set of buildings, 2 silos, hydro.
100 acres in ihilielt Twp., good build-
ings and silo, hydro.
100 acres in Morris 'I'w'p., good build-
idgs, hydro, 1 mile from Blyth.
100 acres in Hullett Twp, good brick
house and barn, hydro.
:150 acres in Kinross Twp., 50 acres
hardwood bush, if miles from Tccswat-
:r, Iwo set or buildings, hydro.
Large cement block house and gar-
age iii Belgrave on No. 4 Highway.
97 acres 110,1' Auburn, 10 acres of
bush, good buildings, hydro.
100 acres near Brussels, good build-
ings, hydro, 1 mile to school.
VICTOR KENNEDY
Blyth, Ontario - _
The "Twist" As Seen
By British Eyes
"A degrading, decadent and
obscene ritual which outrages
human decency."
"A healthy, exhilarating ex-
ercise which, when performed
skilfully, produces graceful and
attractive movement."
"The biggest thing since Asian
'flus."
"Synthetic sex turned into a
sick spectator sport."
All these things have been
maid about THE TMST — the
latest, liveliest, zaniest dance
to hit this country.
What is the truth?
To get to that, you have to
ask sir=t "What is the Twist""
First :inn to make a record of
the dams! ',w:is tits twenty -year-
old rolnr<d >incer front Philadel-
phia. "Cisubby" Checker. Ile
says: "Yea move your feet as
if you v, ere gime]:ng out a
couple et cigarette butts, .end
move your amts ;is it you were
towelling your back ;:.ter a
bath.
"Actually, it is no more than
swaying naturally to musical
rhythms."
But is the dance really no
more than that?
The El Morocco nightclub in
New York has banned it.
So has the city of Pampa,
Florida. And the Rev. William
J. Penfold of Decatur, Indiana,
calls it ''an excuse for depraved
people to stake lewd and las-
civious movements to music with
the aim of stimulating sexual
passion,"
Since it bit Britain, the Twist
has been danced in the best
places by the best people. But
Mr. Bernard Stetson, managing
director of the London Dance
Institute, has banned it from his
studio. He declares: "It is not a
dance at all,
"This abandoned, suggestive
and uninhibited ritual belongs to
the African bush."
Replies the man who has done
most to popularize it, Chubby
Checker: "Of course it's sexy.
All dances are based on sex.
'The great thing about it is
that everyone can do it. Anybody
who's got rhythm has got the
'twist."
Back to Mr. Stetson: "The
Twist is a complete negation of
ballroom dancing because peo-
ple don't need partners.
"I've seen as many as fifty
men and women dancing it all
independently, completely ob-
livious to each other.
"It has an obsessive, self -sat-
isfying effect, I would compare
it to taking a dangerous, stimu-
lating drug.
"At first we were prepared to
allow an approved version of the
Twist, suitable for the ballroom,
in our school, Then we realized
it might become more and more
abandoned and suggestive, so we
decided to ban it altogether."
But debonair Victor Silvester,
one of Britain's ballroom dancing
What Do You Know
About
CENTRAL AMERICA?
HARDY. VIKINGS — In the maritime tradition of their ancestors, these kindergarten tots
play in a boot supplied by fishermen in a small village in the northern partof Norway.
pioneer says: "Uninhibited: Sug-
gestive? Well, I must be both
because I've been performing it!"
And nightclub owner Helene
Cordet, whose floor is packed
every nicht with dedicated
Twisters, asks: "How can a
Glance be immoral when you
don't even need a partner for
it?"
Certainly, the T w is t has
spread from the United States
like wildfire, writes John Elliott
in "Tit -Bits."
A sure-fire selling line is that
the dance is supposed to be
slimming. C h u b b y Checker
claims to have lost forty pounds
since he began doing it,
Dr. James. Cyriax, a Harley
Street orthopaedic surgeon, warns
that Twist devotees are liable
to end up with slipped discs. And
some London hospital are re-
porting increases in such cases
following the importation of this
crazy dance.
Millions of Twistrecords have
been sold, and millions of copies
of Twist sheet music — although
it is no different at all from or-
dinary rock 'n' roll!
Listen to Checker again: "I've
just been smart enough to ex-
ploit something which the public
failed to recognize was no more
than swaying naturally to musi-
cal rhythms.
"Right now I'm looking for
something else that's been done
for years so that I can exploit it
in a way the public won't recog-
nize.
"Do you know a better way of
making money?"
And so the Twist goes twisting
on. Meanwhile, how to assess it?
Immoral? Possibly.
A health hazard? Certainly, in
some cases.
A lucrative publicity gim-
mick? Undoubtedly.
For instance, the Twist is rap-
idly bringing fame and fortune
to thirteen -year-old Vivienne
Lee and fourteen -year-old Derek
Diamond from Kenton, Middle-
sex, who recently made their TV
debut in BBC's Conte Dancing
programme after turning profes-
sional.
It is, however, a sad reflection
on Western civilization that mil-
lions of people are desperately
keen to spend millions of dollars
to perform antics which, to quote
one observer, "makes them look
like dervishes towelling them-
selves after a bath while simul-
taneously being bitten hard be-
tween the shoulder blades."
The loons have exceptional
diving ability. Their legs are
placed so far back on their bodies
that they can't walk erect on land
but move by sliding on their
breast.
i•
PARTY RIDE — Reed Zari celebrates his seventh birthday
with his schoolmates aboard the Western Pacific's Collfor•
nia Zephyr while rolling between Oakland and Pleasanton,
Colif Reed was born on the Zephyr when his parents were on
route to Chicago. A good time was had by the children.
es",
;
SABLE T
Jam Andrews.
Over the years, the two most
popular luncheon dishes at a fa-
mous olid -western tea room have
been cheese souffle with rabbit
sauce and scalloped chi c k e n
served in individual shells,
CHEESE SOUFFLE
WITH RABBIT SAUCE
6 tablespoons butter
t„ cup flour
:i cup milk (or a little morel
Dash salt
Dash white pepper
•i tablespoon mustard
4 drops 'Tabasco sauce
!.2 pound grated cheese,
Canadian
12 eggs, separated
Melt shortening, add flour and
blend. Add milk, and seasonings
with Tabasco and bring to boil,
stirring constantly. Boil 1 min-
ute while continuing to stir. Re-
move from heat and cool slight-
ly. Add cheese, then egg yolks.
Beat egg whites until stiff and
fold into first mixture. Pour into
well greased baking dish, Bake
at 300° F. for 40 minutes, or until
spatula inserted comes out clean.
Cut. into 12 servings and serve
with cheese sauce.
CHEESE SAUCE
1 quart milk
4 tablespoons flour
'-i
pound butter
2 cups old English style cheese
1 cup Cheddar cheese
Dash 'Tabasco saute
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
Salt to taste
2 teaspoons mustard
2 teaspoons paprika
Make a white sauce of the but-
ter, flour, and milk; add sauces,
and seasonings. Add cheeses.
Serve over souffle.
• * •
At the already -mentioned Tea
Room the scalloped chicken, a
favourite luncheon dish, is served
in ceramic shells of different col-
ors, This recipe serves 12.
SCALLOPED CHICKEN
4 cups diced chicken
1 pint thickened chieken'gravy
Salt and pepper
1 teaspoon celery salt
:, cup buttered crumbs for
topping
Combine chicken, gravy, and
seasonings. Place in individual
baking dishes, Top with buttered
crumbs. Place in 350° F oven
until chicken is heated through
and crumbs are brown.
• * •
If you want to make a chicken
shortcake that has a new taste,
try using a bran cereal in the
shortcake. This recipe also puts
ground cooked ham right in the
batter.
SHORTCAKE
HAM AND CHICKEN
IA cup whole bran ,cereal
'!S cup milk
1% cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
i cup shortening
1 cup ground, cooked hast
!f, cup butter or chicken fat
lea cup flour
1 teaspoon salt
cH teaspoon each, pepper and
nutmeg
'/4 teaspoon celery salt
1 cup chicken stock
1 cup milk
V2 cup light cream
3 cups diced, cooked chicken
2 tablespoons pimiento cut h►
strips
Combine bran cereal and milk:
let stand until most of moisture
Is taken up. Sift together flour,
baking powder, and salt, Cut in
shortening until mixture resem-
bles coarse corn meal. Stir in
ham, Add bran mixture, stirring
only until combined. Spread in'
8x8 -Inch pan. Bake at 425° F.
about 30 minutes. Cut into 4x
llt�,-ill. pieces.
Melt butter, stir In flour, salt,
ISSUE 13 — 1962
pepper, nutmeg, and celery salt.
Blend well, Add liquids gradual-
ly, stirring constantly. Cook un-
til thickened, stirring occasion-
ally. Stir in chicken and pimi-
ento; heat. Split shortcake and
place spoonfuls of chicken mix-
ture on bottom halves. Cover
with tops. Spread remaining
sauce on top. Serves 6.
Mystery Of The
Ready -To -Eat Cake
TO THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR:
For dessert the other evening,
we had a "ready -to -eat" cake.
Here is a partial list of its ingre-
dients: Carboxymethyl cellulose,
glycerol monostearate, sodium
aiginate, gum arabic, gum traga-
canth, agar -agar, sodium citrate,
sodium phosphate, polyoxnteth,y-
lene, sorbitan monostearate, : odi-
um benzoate and sodium propi-
onate. For all we know, these
might more properly be found at
Cape Canaveral than in a cake.
To deepen the mystery, the
name given this creation is
"Chocolate Creme Butterfly,"
But lo, neither chocolate nor
cream are to be found among the
ingredients.
\Vhat with so many chemicals,
1 guess there just wasn't any
room left in the concoction for
food.
I.<AWTON D. WOLF
Getting A Toaster
The Har:! Way
Technology has its minor mo -
Monts, ,Inst Its it has Its epics.
I thought of what Colonel Glenn
said about the adaptability of
human life to unprecedented
conditions ups I studied our new
toaster. I decided that nostalgia
for the simpler days must he
unjust i1 ied.
For a minute, though, I won-
dered it' snaking toast as we
used to make it — in the oven
— wasn't better. It had the ele-
ment of adventure, inasmuch as
the chances of burning the bread
black were 10 to one. It took
character to make toast when I
we.; to boy. Now it takes a push-
button.
The early toast -Maker '1va.i a
resourceful person, 1 mused,
and if he didn't have an oven,
thele were other ways, He could
hold a piece of bread on the end
of a fork over the campfire with
one hand and shield his eyes
from the smoke with the other. 1
remember a time when the gra-
cious wife of one of my col-
leagues, determined to slake a
small budget produce a large va-
cation, learned how to make
toast over the gas heater in the
hotel roost,
But here we were, my wife
and I, after more than two dec-
ades with a toaster that had been
a wedding present, beginning
life anew electronically. We
pondered the instructions. We
pressed the gadget that said
"Open" and the gadget that said
"'Start" and I began to think
that adventure had gone out of
our lives. Then I remembered
Colonel Glenn and I also remem-
bered what was involved in ac-
quiring this shining new con-
traption.
It took, precisely, 11'z books
of trading stamps. To gather
that many, for our small house-
hold, required nearly two --years,
Anybody who thinks they were
not without romance, 1 said to
myself meditatively, needs his
sensibilities sharpened,
Take their demand on me.
Trading stamp people say they
have a hard time persuading
men to accept the stamps. 1
know. Some hidden timidity
pops forward every time I ask
for them. I say, 'Thanks — my
wife is saving them," Or, "You
know how women are." Or, "I
wouldn't dare go home without
them." The man at the gasoline
pump usually smiles understand-
ingly. Sometimes he says, "Sure,
they're worth more than money
these days, aren't they?" If he
has consulted the new Webster,
he says "ain't."
Again, 1 have driven 10 miles
uut of my way, nearly running
out of gas, to tart ss:;n i! . orites
)Cimtatisl Hendrick in .-r. Chiu•
tin Science Monitor. I ,cm
l)er once we drove , ;, 100
Miles beyond the point et
tion during a desert trip .. order
to find stamps. 1: glv<< is
real pioneer feeling to that
far on the Mojave with,ust any
assurance the gas will aced out.
You are justified in <aying at
least once 10 your w;f1,, and
somewhat truculently, "I hope
you won't mind 11311011:"
011e devastating exile:,(nce 6e-
rurred recently, \\'c wr:c clear-
ly in a no -stamp region, and 1
was wishing we wou'.d t01. tae
toaster and forget about '1 ensu
when suddenly we saw 1•u sign.
I said, „Full, pieslsc," feel Mg
genial enough so tea:. the
"please" was quite spontaneous.
When l signed the ticks t, lne at-
tendant said solemnly, "\'t'e'.e
out of stamps,"I took my wife
and nuc three minutes to r'. asci
equilibrium.
Now that we have tat. t.e;ster,
though, it is nice to nasi these
memories. The toaster does ev-
erything but talk, If i; could
talk, I think it would 1=:nbabiy
remind us that Colonel Glenn's
words of wisdom arc app'icable
even to household devci(p100115.
I l certainly wouldn't need to in-
sist that the good old days are
getting better. The way the glass
door opens when the t(..ast is
golden says enough.
rr
HEADS UP —George Ed-
mondes cheerfully occepts a
kiss of gratitude from Susie
the sun bear, at the Chess-
ington, England, Zoo. He had
just cleaned Susie's cage.
Britons Dffer on Prince Charles Schooling
By 'J'OM A. CULLEN
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
London—The decision to send
1 3 -year-old Prince Charles to
Gordonstoun, his father's old
school on the Scottish Moray
coast, is not meeting with uni-
versal favor here.
Gordonstoun may have been
all right for Prince Philip; the
Duke of Edinburgh, it is argued
in court circles here. But it is
hardly a suitable school for
Prince Charles, who as Prince
of Wales, is heir to the British
throne.
Why, he might have to mix
with the sons of ordinary fisher-
I3aden, the Kaiser's last chan-
cellor?
When Gordonstoun was first
mooted as a possible school for
Prince Charles, the London Daily
Express had this to say; "Gor-
donstoun is like a piece of Ger-
man culture in Britain. And
German culture in Britain is
not desirable."
Ln this matter, the Daily Ex-
press speaks for many Britons
who have not forgotten Ger-
many's role in two World Wars.
What bhe newspaper failed to
point out is that Dr. Kurt Hahn
refused to compromise with Hit-
ler.
Rather than make a deal with
as it does character building.
Prince Charles's day starts at
7 a,nl, with a run around the
track, followed by a cold shower
and a frugal breakfast of por-
ridge and a roll.
After classes, he might be set
such chores as chopping wood or
building a pigsty. If he disobeys
rules, his name will go up on a
bulletin board for the entire
school to see, thus: .."Prince
Charles, extra coal -carrying for
not taking shower."
But there will be no csseck
on Charles to see that he carries
out his punishment. Gordon-
stoun operates on the "honor
system," which leaves such mat -
•►tom• m 1.
,fir• se;„:„. <4: "< <
EXERCISE TIME at Gordonstoun: The royal hands may build a pigsty after class.
n1e11, instead of mingling with
young aristocrats, these same
palace diehards claim,
The old Etonians are feeling
miffed, too. They feel that Eton,
with its snobbish connections,
would have been the proper
choice.
But the principal objection
comes from those who see in
Gordonstoun a plot to give
Prince Charles a German -type
education,
Isn't the founder of Gordon-
stoun, Dr. Kurt Hahn, a Ger-
man? And didn't he once serve
as secretary to Prince Max von
Hitler, Hahn fled to England
as an anti -Nazi refugee, Among
the original governors who help-
ed hien found the Gordonstoun
school in Scotland was the late
Archbishop of . Canterbury, Dr.
William Temple.
Even more insidious is the ob-
jection that Gordonstoun is dedi-
cated to producing an "elite"
along Teutonic lines, a Sparton
race of supermen who are des-
tined to govern,
The only thing Sparton 1 can
find out about Gordonstoun is
its schedule, which emphasizes
body hardening almost as much
ters strictly to the boy's cons-
cience.
At Gordonstoun the Prince of
Wales will wear gray shorts, in-
stead of long pants, with a pull-
over and either sandals or shoes.
He will sleep in a 12 -plan
dormitory just like the other
400 boys. He will learn to handle
a boat and to stand watches with
the local coast guard, He might
even have to shovel manure, as
his father did in his day,
"Not afraid of dirty, arduous
work," was the commendation
earned by Prince Philip, Gordon..
stoun's most famous ilumnu&
PAGE 10
THE BLYTH STANDARD Wet iter clay, Marek 8, 16h
OB1I 1ARY
' Mrs, Jobe McPhee
Funeral services were held on 'Tues
clay afternoon at the ,1 Keith Arthur
Funeral Home for Mrs, John McPhee
who passed away on ,Sunday • in the
Goderich hospital after a lengthy ill
new. She MIS iu lice Nth year anti
was born in \Vest. Wawant»h tow'shtl,
the daughter of the late David Mell-
wain and Jane Johnston. Before her
marriage she was Ellen Jane Mell•
wain and since her marriage' she has
reified i:1 Colborne township, making
her home with her son, Clifford, since
the death of her husband. She was
a member of the Nile United Church
and nisi) of the \\'AES. She is surly-
ed
urelyed by two sons, Clifford, 11.,11. 3, Au-
burn, and Ralph, of London. Also
three, step children, Mrs, John (Laura)
Jackson, Goderich, Thongs, R.It.3,
Auburn, ani David, of Vermillion, Al.
berla,
and one sister, Mrs. Julu1
11.1Ijit 'Tiffin, of Goderich, 'Iii' ,fun-
eral service was cenducaed by Rev W.
J. ten Reopen, of Goderich, with burial
taking place in Colborne cemetery.
The pallbearers were Frank McI1wain.
Earl MoIlwain, Harold Jackson, Orval
McPhee, Harold Mcllwain and harry
Watson.
I SILVERWOOD INSTANT IIANDIMILK
3- lb. box
Vtetineoneemionmoimmummosmer
vuommumiliermariewier
�SUPE,RI4R
FOOD FT*
"WEEK -END SPECIALS"
88c
KRAI''T DINNERS '1!
2 pkgs. 29c
E. 11 SMITH CHERRY PIE FILLER
2 - 20 oz. tins 63c
CARNATION D'IILK
2 large tins 27c
IVORY IIAND SOAP t'
12 bar bag 95c
CLOVER LEAF SOLID WHITE TUNA
7 oz. tin , 39c
ALLEN'S APPLE JUICE
48 oz. tin . . 29c
For Superior Service ,1 ••• i See Fairservice
Phone 156 r -•- / ! We Deliver
Stewart's
•
Red IS mite Food Market
Bly th Phone 9 ,/ We Deliver
•-*4*4 44444•• 14414-,+,1+4 PN• • 11,4-4 / 14 4 1-14 •-44* .4 4-44
Jewel Shortening, 1 lb. pkg. 3 for 79c
Iieinz Cooked Spaghetti, 15 oz. tin 3 for 49c
Aylmer Tomato Soup, 10 oz. tin ! 6 for 69c
Prem Canned Meat per tin 39c
Aylmer Peaches, 20 oz. tin 2 for 49c
Scott Toilet Tissue .4 rolls 39c
Kellog's Corn Flakes, regular 29c pkg,, 2 pkgs. 41c
Pillsbury Deluxe Cake Mixes 3 pkgs. 83e
Monarch Margerine ' 4 lbs. 1.00
Redpath White Sugar 50 lb. bag 3.99
Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 33c
Florida Grapefruit 1 10 for 49c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 lbs, 99e
Meaty Ribs per lb. 49c
Lean Hamburger , per ib. 49c
Peameal Cottage Rolls
per lb. 49e
Bacon Ends, side , , , , 49c Ib. Back . , . , 69c lb.
Fresh Picnic Shoulders, 5 lb. average, per lb. 39c
Burns Weiners 2 lbs. 85c
Burns Bologna per ib. • 29c
Wallace's Turkey Pies, 3 in box , 59c
Grade C Turkeys, 6 - 8 lbs. per lb. 39c
Fresh Pork Liver per ib. 29c
Hit *4+44,44 4-1 L 4.0 0-1♦44 44 Hi 44,, •
••- EXTRA SPECIALS -••
Clearing; 200 bags Xmas Creams and Gums,
regular price 59c 1 lb. bag, now on sale while they
last 2 bags 59c
4-44-44-444-4-44-44-444 4- 44-44-44-44 44-44-44-4i 444 -1.4.4 -W --/-N-4
King Size Surf, save 48c plus 40c coupon inside
Only $1.05
14.1.E1.w .044.41, Alt, 1.
1
LONDSBORO NEWS
Mr. and Mrs, Earl Gtaunt returned
home on Wednesday morning, having
enjoyed 0 three-week motor trip Ike
the Southern States. Points visited
were Sanding°, Los Aagek , Mexico,
1'Iicoiiix, Arizona, On their return
her visaed the Grand Canyon it) Not•
there Arizona wine') is one utile deep,
thirteen mules across and own hundred
and ,oretrteen milts long, 'I1ie Petri•
find forest was another point of inter•
also orange, grapefruit and Imam
orchards, dale and hanana grove:,
Every date tree had a ladder as the
fruit grows at the tort of the tree and
the elates have to be picked as they
ripen and do not all ripen on the bunch
al, the same time. The temperature
was 60, 10 degrees below usual, The
Arizona climate wlis much more coo'
[eatable. They also visited the old
Lute of Wyatt Earp at Tombstone,
CAR•CiIECK DRIVE BEGINS
IN APRiL
1'rcvious'y confined to Al ay, the au•
nu^I car -check campaign of the Cana.
dial Highway "afct.y Council and of a
cumber of the provinces, will strut Ap-
1 it 1 this year and run through to May
31, Featuring the slogan "Check Youi
Crag, Cheek Your '.Truck, Check Yout
Dr'.vingg, Prevent Accidents," the chive
is tl he known as the "Spying Cant
p'aign." CiISC's Vehicle Safely Cont-
na'.ttc3 arranges 't.
The purtmse of the drive is to make
the motorist aware of the urgent need
to check his car thoroughly after a
winter of driving. Dealers, service
station and garage operators ea -oper-
ate fully with the Council in this cam -
pain which coincides with a similar
drive in the United States,
Arizona, and the church he attended.
Airs, Gaunt played 41 hynut ea the or•
g••all,
Mrs. Mervin Eckniler, of Pine River,
(nee SusieSampson) who has been
a patient • in Kitchener hospital for
over two months following rl serious
car accident, ha.; been moved to Vic•
Ieria IIespital, London. Iler condition
Iola' not improved.
late annual meeting of the Landes.
koro W. I, will be held in the hall en
A10111 brit at 2 p.m. Mrs. Robert fair•
service will install the offitxrs and
Mr. Cliff Epps, of Clinton, will be
guest speaker. Afanbers please bring
bulbs, slips or plarts to be !auctioned
at the close of the meeting. There
will he a special collection taken for
"Pennies for .Friendship."
Explorers Meeting 1
The Londesboro Explorers met in
the church basement at 4,30 p.m, on
March 22, Barbara Burns, Chief Ex.
plorcr, calla) our meeting to order.
\Ve said our purpose and sang 'This is
Aly 1'iather's World," following this li
members anstvnral the roll call. Next
Mrs. Jack Lee lead our business, study
011 worship period. Sharon Little, Su.
sail Clark, Beverley Lee, Heather Snell,
Pattie Lillie, Janice Little, Barbara
Burns, Shirley 1itnking, Donna Young.
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
Mr. and Mrs, Albert. Stryker, 11.11. 1,
J.iruccfield, amwumce the engagement
of their daughter, Evelyn, to Evert
l olko Aliddei, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Reinder Middel, R.R. 3, Auburn. The
marriage to take place iii Clinton
Christian Reformat Church on April
14, at 2.30 pan, Rev. L. Slofstra, of•
fdciating,
Hullett Liberals Elect Officers
At Londesboro Meeting
I?ullett Township Liberals mel un
'Monday evening In the Londesboro Com•
!minify flail to elect their officers fee
the conning year. 1Villiam Leiper was
again named president, with 1lugi)
Flynn as vice-president,
Poll Chairmen, with their vice- chair-
men, were elected for seven polls with•
un the township: Poll No. 1, chairman,
Wilbert Jewitt, vice-chairman, Donald
Buchanan, alternates, Oliver Anderson,
Elgin Noll; Poll No, 2, chairman,
George Watt, vice-ul>tairntan, John Mc.
Ewan, alternates, Kenneth Brigham,
George Smith; Poll No. 3, chairman,
Bernard Tighe, vice-chairman, Tom
Flynn, alternate., Lloyd AEecltl, John
Flynn; Poll No, 4, chairman, John
Armstrong, vice-chairman, Dave 7 An•
ders'on, alternates, Mrs. Joe. Shaddick,
Mrs, Carman Moon; Poll No, 5, chair.
man, Clark Ball, vice-chaiinrul, Iva,
HoJgarth, alternates, Jim Enell, -Nev.
iilc Forbes; Poll No. 6, chairman, Bert
Shabbrook, vice-chairman, Raymond
Snell, alternates, 13111 Govier, Lorne
'hulking; Poll No. 7, chairman, 11'il-
liam \Vaguer, Elliott Lapp, alternates,
\f1's. W. Bradnock, Major Younghlut,
Among the speakers at the meeting
were Andy McLean, president of the
Huron County Liberal Association,
Hugh Hawkins, president of the West-
ern Ontario North, and Lill Jewitt,
vice-president of the Huron County
Liberal Association, W. L. Whyte and
John Armstrong,
It was aintounced that the neinina-
t.ian meeting would be held on :.April
6 in the Legion Hall, Clinton, at 8:15
p.m.
Huron Resolutions Find
Approval At Ontario
Meeting
(By .1. Carl 1Iemiigway)
Ontario Wheat Producers held their
Annual 'Meeting in Toronto, March 2l
and 21st.
Perhaps 1 am slightly biased Jail i
did find it mast interesting to find live
resolutions which originated itt Iluron
getting approval of the Ontario Wheal
Producers.
The first was the old one that has
been on the go for the past four Or five
y'ear's namely, Resolved that the
Freight subsidy on Western feed grain
into Ontario be discontinued.
The question can be reduced tc
whether or not farmers are benefitted
by low priced grain.
Unless you purchase mere than hall
of your feed grain supply there will
be no advantage in having the freight
subsidy.
I think you are familiar with all the
old arguments but I ran across a new
angle after hours,
I was told by a Municipal Assesso,
that regulations under the Municipa'
Act state that a person who..produces
less t*in 10 percent, or the equivalent.
of his feed requirements can be sub.
ject to business tax. 1 wonder how
many people who call themselves far
niers would be affected by this? A few
of us dict some rather wild guessing
011 td,n Beef feeding operation of Sea-
gram:: at \' aterloo and concluded that
they could be subject to a business tax
of betty oen 6 and 7 'Thousand Dollars on
thio operation. If this were applied In
Rural Municipalities it might act as a
deterrent to vertical integration.
The second resolution was approved
to give the Ontario Wheat Board itow-
er to obtain a percentage of wheat de•
livered at lrarvrrt time,
•tf your Wheat Board could get this
wheat for Se tein,er and October ex•
Presbyterian W.M.S. Will
Gather At Hamilton
Central Presbyterian Church, Ilatnil-
I0n, will be the host chtu'ol1 for the
Hamilton and London Synodical W.ALS.
of the Presbyterian Church in Canada
on 'I'uesdlay, Wednesday, 'Thursday,
April 3rd, Ith, and 5th, 1962. '1'lte theme
of the meeting will be "highways for
Our God."
Following a board meeting on Tues•
day afternoon, Hamilton Presbyterial
will provide a complimentary dinner
for the delegates. 'they wilt be wel-
comed by the president of the I11anul'
ton Presbyterial, Mrs. W. E. McCut-
cheon. Greetings will be extended by
the moderator of Ilamilton Presbytery,
Rev. Wayne A, Smith, by the Mayor of
Hamilton, Mr, L. D. ,Jackson; and by
Rev. A. Lorne MacKay, B.D, Rev,
George Aia1eoln , on leave from the
Formosan field, will be the guest spea-
ker. Family worship will be conducted
by Rev, R. IL Armstrong, B.D.
\Vednasday morning will feature fout
consultation groups led by Mrs, A. S.
Cut'\', president of the Cenci' Emu -
live, Mrs. W. E. McCuteheon, and the
Iwo regional sccrefjaries, Miss Ruby
Walker and Miss Clara Hanes.
Highlight of Urn afternoon sessioi,
will lie an address by Mrs. A. S. Curr.
and the evening speaker will be Rev.
Dr. Ilugh MacMillan, who has served
its a•Missionary in Formosa for several
years.
Others takhig part in the three-day
program will be Air's, W. C. Wheaton.
immediate past president, and minis-
ters from the various Presbyterian
Churches in Hamilton,
Order Your Counter Cheque
Books (printed or blank)
At The Standard Office
port it could be moved out much more
cheaply. Under present conditions the
Board can only get wheat when the
trade is willing to assign" it, This
night be in time to use the full nevi,
gallon season but ft is mealy during
February that the hoard is asked to
remove the surplus. This means oral
tate Board has to pay top storage char-
ges and has to stove the grain by rail
rather than beat.
Since it was necassary for me to
shuffle back and forth between the
Wheat Producers and the Hog Produc-
ers Annual only one resolution of the
Hog Producers caught my attention.
Resolved that all market hags must
continue to he marketed through the
Marketing Agency,
The delegates no doubt realize that
this is of most vital importance but l
question If the average producer knows
this fact. I am thoroughly convinced
that it is this clause in your marketing
plan that has prevented Corporation
control of Ifog Production. Yet there
area coni►le of flies ht the soup,
First the resolution implies that ALL
market hogs are presently being sale
through the Agency. Enough eetaldouce
was produced at the meeting to cause
some doubt, of this.
Second if the Law is being broke,
who is to "Bell the Cat."
To my mind these two faults can 011'
ly be removed by extremely strong
support an the part of Hog producers.
You did strengthen your position al
the March 6th. Vote. Brit •11 is neces-
sary that you continue. Give expres-
(ion to Yaur determination In this mat.
ter. "Loud and Clear,"
hint, Lorna Antler, 1Vondy Caldwell
and Lloy Shaddick were presented with
their second gold star. Margaret
Stewart received her blue star. Paul-
ine Airdrie, (lellyce Ande17:on, ani
Grace Longman received 1he.:r second
reel sl.ar. Barbara Burns declared the
expedition ended.
Air, and Airs, Wes Jefferson and
children, of Westfield, were. Sunday
visitors with 111., and 1lrs. Willows
ldMlilttaiIi,
Mr. and Ai'r. John ,lrntsllung stent
the weekend with Mr, and 11Irs, Win.
'Iowan at Brampton.
Miss Joan Mowatt spent a few days
recently with her grandparents, Mr.
and AA's Wilmer Ibwalt,
The Gllt meeting of "The Ten Twist•
crs" was held on AEat'ch 2411) with '►
girls present. President Nancy Cald-
well opened the meeting with the 4.11
Pledge, and the minutes were real)
by ,Marie Riley, The roll call was an-
swered by each Member telling an
occasion when shorts may he worn.
The correct procedure for making asci
attaching a waist band was (Iolll'111•
stinted by the leaders. Next meeting
will be April 7th.
veseermtmeemmermeramenmer
VITAMINS give Vim, Vigour and Vitality -•-
Help build resistance to colds
Pal'amettcs Tablets, 8.00 value
Paramette Syrup, 7.50 value
Maltevol
Wampole's Extract
One A 1)ay Multiple 1.49,
Scotts Emulsion
Vi Cal 1''er Capsules
Nita Pops
Alphamelt es
Cod Liver Oil Capsules
and flu. .
Spec. 6.00
Spec. 5.50
2.50
1.59 and 2.89
2.75 and 4.49
1.00 and 2.00
1.95 and e1.95
2.50 and 5.95
100,1.85 and 3.50
.98c
HIalibut Liver Oil Capsules 1.15 and 2.29
R. D. PHILP, Phm, B
DRUGS, SUNDIISES, WALLPAPER — PRONE f0, BLYTH
--- PYREX SPECIAL ---
SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY
Pie Plates, reg. 59c 39c
4 Cup Measures, reg. 1.39 1.19
2 Cup 11leausrer, reg. 89e 69c
1 Cup Measure, reg. 49c 39c
Pyrex Coffee Tots, 8, 6 anti e1 cups Specially Priced
Also Pyrex Tea Pots, reg. 9.50 for 3.75
VODDEN'S EIARDWARE
L ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Blyth, Ont.
Call 71
YOUR BEST BUY IS HERE!
1962 PONTIAC bard 'top
196 2 MERCURY Coillel
coach.
1961 CHEV. Sedan
1958 CHEV. Coach
1958 FORD 6 cylinder,
Sedan.
1956 DODGE V8 Coach
1956 DODGE 6 cylinder,
Coach.
1956 CIIEV. Coach
1956 FORD Coach
1954 STUDEBAKER Sd.
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP F3 SAVE
Special This Week-end--Westott's Chelsea Butts
per pkg. 29c
Tip Top Green Cut Beans, 20 oz. tin . , 2 for37c
Tip Top Canned Pumpkin28 oz. tin , , 2 for 35c
Tip Top Canned Peaches, 28 oz. tin . , 3 for 1.00
Treesweet Pure Grapefruit Juice, 48 oz. tin, 3 -1.00
Betty Crocker Family Size Cake Mixes, 3 for 1.00
2 lbs. 49c
Junior Poly Vegetables
5 pkgs. 1.00
f
Wallace Turkey Pies
Box of 3 59c
immuniammimpomminampm
White Grapefruit
10 for. , , , , 49c
Country Style Sausage Side Sliced Bacon
lbs. 1.00 1 lb. 49c
$2.00 Orders of Over --10 lbs. White Sugar for 79c