HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-04-11, Page 1STANDAR
VOLUME Th • NO, 06
Authorized as second class mall, BLYTIIONTARIO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11, 196 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $,3,50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Deparltneet, Ottawa. '
and for payment of postage in cash,
Daylight Saving Time Begins April 29,
Ends On October 28
The regular meeting of the Mimic'.
pal Council of the Corpc'ation of the
Village of Blyth was held hi the Mem-
oriel }fall on Monday, April 2n(1, at
8 p.m. with Itecve Fairservice, Coin.
oillors Cook, Elliott, Howes and Me•
Vittic present.
Melton by Cook and McVittde that
the mituttes of the last regular meet -
big be adopted. Carried.
(Motion by Howes and Elliott that
correspondence he filed, Carried.
,Nation by Cook ail:.l Elliott that wr
adopt Daylight Saving Time, to come
'nonce on Stuuday, April 291, at 12.05
il,m. 41,01.1 cud on Sunday, Octibcr 28111
al 12.05 8,01. Carried,
Motion by Elliott and Cook, that ac
counts as road be paid. Carried,
Fred Gregory, hart ;.clary sl., fore.
nso, 140.00; Fred Gregory, part street
foreman and caretaker, 57.00; II. Le-
t.herland, wveighmaste', 50.00; l3lyth
I'estmaste', Unenp. Ins, stamps, 6.00:
G. Hcffron, garb, collection, 117.50;
13ainton Limited, are. rendered, 7.50;
13lyth Municipal Telephone, rentals
7.1,16; 1, E, Tasker, ace, rendered
20,00; Snell's Grocery, 2.50; C. R. Brig-
ham, cutting wood, 24.00; Sperling's
Hardware, 2.63; Jack Creighton, 6.00;
Earl Noble, 61.00; Elliott Ins. Agency
prem., 16,00; Blyth lfy(h'o Commission.
sl. lights, 428.86; Welfare accounts
448.00.
Motion by McVitlie and Cook, that
we do DOW -adjourn. Carried.
George Sloan, Clerk.
LONDON LADY iS (WEST SPEAKER
AT UNITED CHURCH. ON SUNDAY
Mrs. John Y. MacKinnon, of Loudon
will be guest speaker at Blyth United
(;hurcll next Sunday. Easter Thank.
(offering Services have been arranged
by the United Church Women of Myth
cungrepatlon.
Airs. MacKinnon has given (Iodic -ate('
leadership to many phases of Christian
sverk and witness in Canada aim
through world-wide organizations. As
the wife of a clergyman she gave in.
Eviration to the various congregations
with which they served. ALacKinnon
House, a residence for United Church
Elttdealts in London, was nansed as a
tribute to their service to students. M
the time of her .husband's death she
was •acivc in women's• groups in Firs'
St, Andrew's United Church, London
and in the community. Site has given
leadership in 1V.A. rand \V.M.S., is in•
mediate past -president of the Danliniou
Council cf the W.A. of the United
Church of Canada, and `vas 'a menlbei
of the Co111111itis 011 which made recut.
nlendations fo rorganizing "lite United
Church Women." She hos travelled all
across Canada and to many areas of
the world and is presently a member
cf the Executive of the World Fcdera•
limn of -Methodist Women.
The 'Thankoffed'hug Service will be
he'd at 11.09 8.111. next. Sunday and a
Rally will be held al. 7.90 p.m, Every-
one in the community is Invited tc
hear .Mrs. AIac&Ci1n1un's messages a'
these Thautkoffering Services.
i.ONf) SROiH)
Mr. and Mrs. Amos 13511, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Adams 80(1 Larty, nth
Godcrich, spent. Saturday evening with
Mr. and Mrs. Berl Shohbrook and Mr.
Wesley Vodden, Mr. Vodden celebrated
his birthday.
AMONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, April 15, 11)62,
51'. ANDREW'S PIt1';S111"1'EIt1AN
CHURCH
Rev. 1), J. Lane, B.A., 1).11., Minister.
1.00 p.m,—Church Service and Sun -
(lay School.
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Measly, Rector.
Palet Stuldny
'trinity Church, Blyth.
10.30 a.m.—Sunday School,
10.30 -a.m.—Matins.
St. Mark's. Auburn.
12.00 o'clock—Matins.
8.30 p.m,—+A.Y.I'.A.
Trinity Church, Belgrave.
2.00 p.m.—Sunday School,
2.30 p.m,—Evensong,
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev. R. Evan McLagan • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kal
Director of Music.
Baso Sunday
11:00 a.in.—Thanluffe'ing Service
1lnited Church Wooten.
Airs. John Y. ALacKin.ntnl, of
London, goes.. speaker.
7.30 !raft.—Thnnkoffcu'itig Bally.
CHURCH OF GOD
McConnell Street. Dipole
John Dornier, Pastor
Phone 1115
10.00 a.tn.—Sunday School.
11.00 a.m.—Worship Service.
7.30 p.m.—Evening Service -
8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service.
8.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship,
PERSONAL INTEREST
Air, and MI'S. Harold Stewart, Mr.
and Airs. i3ert Squire, all of Golerich
visited with Mrs. Maty 'Taylor last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. David Stored.' and
daughter Julie, of Etobicoke, spent the
week -end wiilh their parents, Alr, and
Mrs, Frank Slorach, of Blyth, -and
Mr. and Mts. (Gorge Bayley, of Chu
ton.
Airs. E. Pollard vend Airs. Ad. iter•
of Mount Forest, called on Sat•
tu'ckly with Mr. and Mrs, Cannan Bow -
alt anll other Muncie in Myth.
Ml'. David \V. Somers, of Midltincl
is visiting with Rosen and Archie
Smilers, 811(1 Mrs. Coming, fdr a ('004)l(
cf weck_I.
111'. and Mrs. Cecil Wheeler and Nit
aril Airs. D. McKenzie returned honee
two weeks ago after spending three
menth:3 in SI.. Petersburg, Florida,
Mr. and ,Mr's. it. W. Madill amu
Kathy, visited on Sundply with the
fornlcr's brother, Mr. harry Madill
'Mrs. Madill and family, of Oakville.
Miss Carole ,Marks, Windsor, spend
the week -end with her grandparents
Mr. and Ma's. Lorne Scrimgeour, and
her uncle, Everett, and Mrs. Scrim-
gcotu', Doug and Don. Carole is a
student at Western University, Lon•
don.
Mr. and Alis. A. G. Anthony, of
Oshawa, visited for a few days last
week %vith Air. and Mrs, Lundy McKay
rind I)el.
Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Atkinson and
lamely, of Godcrich, visited Mr. and
Alt's, Bruce Switzer, of Blyth, over the
wwcek•eul.
;11.r:;. Alaalgarrl Biggins ;Mended the
furcral of her cousin, Mas. Lynn Hoy.
of \Vinghem, oil 'Tuesday, who was
killed in a car accidents neer Kitchen-
er on Saturday. Messrs. 1101011(1 1lig•
ons. Lloyd \Vaticcr Jim \Varwick ant,
Archie Montgomery, are also comas
Of the deceased.
0.13111'UARY
MRS. JOHN RICIIl11OND
- Mrs. John Richmond, formerly• Eliza -
Jane (Lyda) Garrett, of Lac chi Bonnet,
Ananitoba, passed away suddenly in
Winnipeg General Hospital, on Monday
April 2nd, in her eightieth year. The
funeral service • was held from St,
JGhn's Anglican Church, Lac coli Boll.
nal, 011 Thursday afternoon, April 5111.
of 2,00 p.m. 'the service was conducted
hy Me Reverend 1,. E. Fryer, assisted
by the Reverend P. C, 110t1111.11g6C11,
of 1lcausejnut' United Church,
Although the tale Alrs. Richmond had
not been in the best of health for :;ono:
little lime, :she had been up and
around as usual, and it was not until
about a week before her death that she
had been confined to bed with a severe
pain in her chew. On Friday, Airmen
30311, sh0 suffered a bad heart attack
and was taken to Winnipeg Genera,
Hospital, where she passed away early
(Aloday moa'ninl;, April 2nd.
The late Alrs. Richmond was horn
near Londesborough, Ontario, on No-
vember •I, 1882, a daughter of the late
Joseph Garrett and Martha Broadbent
On June 9, 1909, she Married John
Itichullond, of Blyth, and in 1910 went
West to take up homesteading in Sas-
katchewan, For the past several ycetrs
they have lived at Lac du Bonnet.
about 70 miles frons Winnipeg.
S tu'viting Mrs. Richmond are her
husband, Jahn Richmond, three sons
and two daughters, namely, Ernest of
Lac du Bonnet, Clifford o9 Chi.11iwack•
13.0„ lAcyd of Winnipeg, Airs, T. 0.
Badger (Lille Mae) of Atelier', Sank,
and Mrs. N. Nysledt (Mary Evelyn) of
Lass flu Bonnet, Site is also survived
by one hroler, Alvanley Garrett, of
('limon, and (fifteen grandehilda'c.n. A
Mister, Ms's. Joseph Webs•Io►', of Clinton
predeceased Air:;. Richmond on Feb -
Emmy 22nd.
Before her marriage All's. Richmond
was a faithful member of Lonwlcnhor•
ougln (then Methodist) Church, Mr. and
Mrs. Richmond are -well-known in the
community, having both lived in the
Blyth district before their marriage.
The sympathy of 11100' many friends 111
the connitlIdly goes out to the rda•
lives and family.
UNIT 1 MEETING
The April meeting of Unit I was held
at Mrs. John Campbell's on April 2
with 13 member's present.
The meeting opened with Mrs, Camp-
bell reading a poem..Ahs. Gordon Ala
soh ljave the roll call dual minutes u'
the last meeting, The name chosen
for the unit was gemming 'fids. Airs
Shaw gave the. treasur'er's report. Airs
Bruce Falconer look -the worship ser'
vivo from Corinthians. Ilyum 46 was
sung. Mrs. Vodden look the Bible
study. 'rhe ladies read the first and
second chapters of Acts land then an.
swcred questions on the text. Hymn
311 was repeated in (0nisan and Airs.
Falconer gave the benediction. A de•
lielotis lunch was served by Mrs. Wal•
lace and Mrs. Shaw.
The next meeting will be held at
the 'hone of Mrs. Ha•old Vodden on
May 71 at 8;15,
UNITED CHUIRCd1 CONGREGATION,
WALL CONSIDER BUILDING PLANS
The congregation of Myth United
Church will meet on Thursday, Apirl1
12 to consider proposed plans fore- a
row church building. The Build6le
Council has been meeting regularly CO
the past several months -and has pile -
pared a suggested plan for a new
church.' The congregation will considei
these plans alld 010 recemmondatiot)
of the Council concerning a contract for
the erection of tie now buildhlg,
tt
JOHN W. McDOUGALL DECEIVES
r
$7.,400 FELLOWSHIP
Joint W. McDougall, son of .Airs.
oma A, 'McDougall and the late (JOIID
G. 11. McOcllgall, is the recipient of til
1962 Naliunal Research Council Eckk."
Iow drip of $2,400, This award is to
be used toward a doctorate of scie ere
degree train Queen's University.
John also with (1 $2,000 1"e110w'Slhiiip
from Quccat'a University in 1960 (amd
in 1951. 52,200 front the National Re•:
.'aarc'h Council, 11e completed his
Master of Science Degree in 1961.
IIL1"111•Bi';LGRAV1: 4.11 CLUBS
ORGANIZED
The organization meeting of Blyth-
Belgrave 4.11 Beef Club and Blyth
Lions Dairy Cub was held in the
Belgrave Arena rooms on Thursday
evening, April 5 at 8:,10.
Den Grieve, assistant ag. rep, for
Huron County, was in attendance and
explained the meaning of 4.11 and what
was expected of the members during
the club year.
Beef Club officers elected for the
coming year are: Fi'esident, Ken Black;
vice-president, Marie Goalies; secre-
tary, Murray Scott; press reporter,
Li;a Black.
Alt•, Grieve handed out supplies ane
the meeting was adjourned.
HOCKEY DRAW WINNER
Cliffca•d S11obbrcok, of the 13111
ccstct•s:inn of 1Glllett Township, was
the winner of the $50.00 on the Blyth
1.ices Cub hockey draw Last weekend.
The draw this week will he on t.ltc
Sunday night game in Chicago.
U,CM', OF BURNS UNITED CHURCH
MARCH MEETING
The March meeting of the United
Church Women of Burns Church met
at the -home of Mrs: Ilal'veyi Taylor -on
Thursday, March 29,-
Mrs. harry Tebbutt opened the meet•
ing with the Oaii to Worship, The theme
being "Tete Church In Our Conlmtutity."
Hymn "0 Master Let Me Walk Wita
'thee" was sung. Alrs. Hoggltrt gave
a reading. Mrs. Tel hunt gave a impel'
011 "Our Church." 13ihle quotations
were given by Alt's. Howard Cartwright
Mrs. Flynn and AIt's. George Carter.
Alrs. Tcbhutt led in prayer. hymn,
"The Church is one Foundation" was
:tu)s;. and the Lord's Prayer w01; re•
le,adc•rl tat unison, followed by 1110 ben.
diction,
Mrs. 'I'cbbttt was in charge of the
Study Bock. The chapter being, the
"Uneven (toad" stating that swine
years hack the church stood out in the
community or town as Ilse most beau•
tifu l building there, to -clay many pub-
lic buildings :,•tido as bowling, theatres
and large restaurants outshine the old.
(ler church, The churcth should be the
hub of a c(oinautulfty, a centre from
which the character of a commtmil,y
is formed. Our world is changing sr,
fast, many of the old standards al' the
church and religion are being left out,
Alrs. Watt led in a Bible Study, "In-
troduction into Acts." Taking part
were Mrs. Watson Reid, Miss Gladys
Leiped', Miss Rita Leiper, Mrs. Ran-
dolph Laurie, Mrs, Jamieson and Mrs.
Roe.
'1'hc roll call was answered and the
minutes of the last meeting read. Miss
Jean Leiper slated that the two quilts
had been sold, 'Treasurer's reports
were given by Miss 90(111 Leiper and
Airs. llarvcy 'Taylor..
1I oras deckled that the money from
quilts and bake sale would go lowward;,
our allocation, Alrs. Watson Reid read
the correepuudelCe.
The Blyth United Ohuroh women In.
vllcd Burns to their spring tally in
Myth United Church, Sunday, April
15 at 7:30 pin., when Mrs. McKinnon,
of London, will Ile gliest speaker. An
invitation was received from. the Sea.
forth Presbyterian W.M.S. to meet with
them on Tuesday, April 24111 at 3 p.m..
when Mrs. MacDonald, of llensall, will
be the speaker. Members will accept
both invitations.
A letter was read from Exeter where
a Program Planning Workshop will be
held on Thursday, April 12th at James
St. United Church at which 3 members
may attend. Members are asked to
work and plan for 'n bazaar this fall.
The roll call in the coaling months
is to be answered by a Bible verse.
The month of April i5 10 have a verso
with the word Faith in it, 'There is
to he an Easter Lily put, in the church
en Easter Sunday (nil given to a shut-
in later. 'The toys for our allocation
were out display.
Alrs. George Carter gave a vCI'y i11•
le'csting paper on the meaning of a
Steward and Stewardship, The offer.
ing \as received. Cards are to be
sent to all sick in the church. hymn
400, "Fight the Geed Fight," was sung
and Mrs. George Watt closet with
prayer, A bake sale was held with
Airs. Bert Iloggart as auctioneer. A
lovely lunch was served by Group 2.
IIL'LLEIT TO\\NSHI!'
CE11E'I'GRY TO BE CLOSET)
Later this marl another little
country cemetery will be closed fel
burials. The Evangelical cemetery
situated on the 141 cuecesS.dun
of 1lulle.1 Township, michvay be-
tween Auburn and Blyth will have ix
more internments after the body of the
'ci:e Airs. Peter Waiver is remove(
from the Blyth Mausoleum to the ram•
ily plct there.
In 1370, Air. John Piactzer donates,
'about an acre of land, at the front o:
his farm, to be used as church proper.
ty, 'rhe church huiid'ng and horse
sheds were bi1i't en the part next to
the road, and the balance of the lana
ovrr 000.hn'f acre was e:lclosed by (
good fence lo be used as a cenulery.
'9'111:; Evangelical c.e,.gt'cg;(tion had
its beginning al:uul 10611 when a few (0
the early seitlets gathered for wnrshil
in the farts hone of Jc!len I'laelzet', 1 a
tel I'8 11370, the congregation was organ
ized by Rev, Ccnrea'l Pieper, who was
the father of Jelin 1'1c1fer who live
on the farm where Roy Easuut eta
resides. The first officers of the chore`:'
were, August Waiver (grandfather 01
Alts. ,11:1331 1)ael', Auburn), John Eggert
:and John Plaetzer.
A nturn')cr of 1;cople living in this
:com11111tt1n:ity (during those years also
Used this cemetery for burials. Among
/names of early pioneers appearing or
the headstones are, Daer, Youngblut
1.?,aetzer, Rueger, Llgold, lldllcr, Lau.
tenschlager, Sphul, Wolper, Classe'
Beker, Lehr and C'lausius.
I''or a number of years the member•
ship of this congregal1011 numbered
out 75 but after 1900 the membership
egan to declii e so by 1910 the nicnl-
liersoh) was so FirrIll tIiat they (1ecide(
tq cicse the church and have the build -
lags removed.
:The Tale George Gress purchased Ili
farts 011 which this cemetery is located
1110'1 from the 1810 John Plact'ze'.
5o111e veal',; 1'(Ilel', AICs soil, \\'illlan'
Gras, became the proprietor and since
19,11 Its and his SODS have cared fu's
the cemetery.
.EV'Eif•IiEADY UNIT 01'' U,C.11',
'l'!tc E'vcr•llcady Unit of Blyth Un-
ited Church Women met at the home
of Alrs. John F'airservice of April 411i.
with 20 members present and 2 visit-
ors.
Alt's. W. McVittie was in charge of
the devotional period and opened the
in: ing by offering ' prayer- • after
which Iiynln 87, "There's a Green Ihh
For Away" was stung and scripttu'e
verses frons Leviticus acid Matthew
were read. Readings pertaining tc
Spring and Easter were given by Alis.
Higgins, Mrs. Pierce and Mr's. McKen-
zie.
cKeezee. 'I'lle second chapter of Acts was
read responsively led hy Mrs. Burnell
after which Alrs. AleVittie led in an tn-
tet'eli:;,; discussion and left one vital
question which thein(' stimulate much
thought. from each individual "Are we
wiIrcising for mini church a:; wwc
should." Alrs. Kress was in charge of
the swine., when filial arrattgcmctits
were made for lite SKIN: 'J'ca, April
11111. 'I'he treasurer's repoa't was given
by Miss 1. Fox and the minutes read
by the secretary.
The next meeting to be at the hone
of Airs. A. Dexter, Lunch was served
by Airs. Higgins and Airs. Kress, and
a vote of thanks extended In AIts. Fair -
service and her hostesses, by Alis.
McVitt ie.
4.11 IIOMEA1AKING CLUB
'i.te fifth meeting of the Myth Swill.
sle's was held at the home of Alt's. Got"
den Mason on April 3rd, with 10 neem'
hors present.
The meeting opened with the 441
Pledge. Helen Hollinger read the nein•
rites of the last. meeting. The roll cal)
was taken. flans for Aclhievement. Day
were oohs. (Airs. Good gave a discus
skin on when to wear shorts. Ahs. M,a.
son demonstrated reinforcing curved
scams. after which some of the girl'-
rcidorred a curved scam and practiced
1iw slip stitch for the hens. '1'10 meet-
ing closed with the Mary Stewart Col.
Ice'.
EXPLOl1ER 01111,8 LEARN 'TIi;E
11,1,KING OF MAPLE SPRUP
"Explorer" girls from Blyth United
Church nude a trip to Shell's at West-
field last Saturday to learn of the pro-
cess of collecting maple sap and the
snaking of maple syrup. The girls
cadged the trip' and appreciated the
hospitality of Mr, and Alrs. Gordon
Snell.
L.C. FISHER IIUitON CHOICE
OF LIBERALS
Mayor Ernest E. Fisher, of Godcrich.
last. Friday was elected as Liberal can
(Iidaate for 1lut'un in the cutting federal
election,
Bcfcre a crowd nr about. 400 person,
111 the Clinton Legion Ball, he vowed
10 5W001) the county for the Liberal:;.
Ile defeated Gordan McGavin of Wal-
ton for the nomination.
'1'\vo Others, Andrew 1'. Niel -eau, of
So;Iforth, and Kcnttctit hunter, of Gude•
rich, declined to stand for election.
'.I'here were 250 voting delegates pit's-
col,
(Liberal defence critic Paul Hellyer
(MP—Toronto-Trinity) spoke at the
meeting.
District President Of W. I. Was
Guest Speaker At Home Institute
SEVERAL 1,111'IIOVE,1IEN'1'S
PLANNED FOR It11111 AND
BF.LGRAVE CHURCHES
At a recent beard meeting of the An-
glican Churches of Blyth and 13elgravc
the following improvements were sa:tl
Honed,
At Blyth a new carpet for the Chan.
cel at a cost of nearly $500.; a new
cluu'ch sign beard to be erected on
1110 church grcuutd:; and paid for by the
Altar (:wild. The grounds around the
church was cleared last fall acrid will
".c covered twills gravel, leant for by Iht•.
L':yfh itoyeal t::t radian Lo ion; the
brick work on the exterior of the
(boo't'h trill Le Feinted Icy the men nth
the parish; ((ltd a new hot water lack
fir the rectory ga. a ro:t J $100.
'The entire interirn' of the flelgrave
C'hin'ch wi}1 be painted, at an approxi
mate $500.
BIRTHS
CALDWELL—ht Clinton Public llospi•
tal on Thursday, April 5th, 1962 to
Air. and Ma's. Ralph Caldwell, 11.11.
3, Blyth, the gift of a son, Stephen
Jelin, a brother for Anne, Leslie and
Wayne.
WESTNELU
Saleirday eliciting Air. and Alrs. Ron
Bao, Carlow, Miss Gwen Mitis, Kh•k•
ten, visited with Alr, and Mrs. Gerald
M.•cDowcll.
Alr, \Vin. Ltsloy, Clinton, was the
guest cf Airs. J, I,. McDowell and Ger.
(1011 en Sunday.
The \Vestfickl Farm Forum \ettnd up
anu'llct' season with their a?ldlll(11 Falls
sly Niglst on Friday. Each family
present contributed al nuhn:')cr which
was much et•j0yed. Mr, Franklin
Campbell gave a talk 011 the Sut'viival
Course which be attended in Landon.
1t was quite instructive, bait is doubt-
ful if any family present \will order a
Fallcttt Shelter. The program was fo,
lowed by a bowltiful lunch of cake and
ice cream.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith were
Louden -visitors recently, -
AIr. and Alrs. Carl Mills, Miss Iielen
Ilunnphreys and Md•. Mervin Schutz, of
Kirkton, also Mr. and Alrs. J. Arm-
strong and Fred, Auburn, were guests
of Air. autd Mrs. Gerald McDowell on
Sunday.
Alr. and lbs, Arnold Cook and Janet
visited on friday with Alr, and Airs.
Bev, Robson and Lynne, at Et. Marys.
Mr. 1'1'anklin Campbell, i,ondon.
spent Friday and Saturday with his
paent.
The April meeting of "'flee Alessen-
Sers" ()pencil Sunday afternoon with
the Call to \Vorshdp, Miss Audrey Shell
as leader. Scripture lesson Joint 19:
1.8 was read by Norma Smith, The
Messengers motto and prayer was in
unison. Elaine ,Snell led In prayer. Miss
Jeanette Snell told the story in the jun-
iors. The offcrng was taken by Carol
McDowell and deities:ttett by Judy Ale -
Dowell, Roll call was taken by Mar-
jorie Stilith. Story Utile was given by
Mrs, Harvey McDowell. Meeting (los.
cd with prayer by Airs. IL McDowell.
The April meeting of the U.C.W. will
be on April 18th at 2,30 p.m. Mrs. How-
ard Campbell and her group will be in
charge.
Ali'. 1Vnl. Walden is at present visit-
ing with Alr. and Airs. Sydney A1sClin-
chey, of Auburn.
A speedy recovery is wished for all
sick folk in the vicinity.
AI'. Jasper Snell, All'. Nelson Dow,
Alt's, E. Dow and MIS, Russ '.Taylor vis•
iced out Stuiday with Mrs. Jasper Snell
in Victoria hospital, London.
1101,1' 1VLEK SERVICES TO BE
CO,N1)UCI'EI) BY ANGLICANS
Services will be conducted in the
myth 'Trinity Anglican church each
!light from April 16 to April 20, by the
reeler, llcv. R. F. Measly.
011 Good Friday, April 20, services
will be conducted in all three churches
of the parish, Blyth, Belgrave and
Aubut'n.
MR, AND AIRS, VARA', 1VELLS
(RECEIVE GIFTS FR011 FORMER
NEIGIIIIOURS
Mrs. George Watt and Mrs. Janes
McCall called on Mr, and Alt's. Marys:
Wells last Thursday afternoon and pee-
scnted thetll wills gifts of behalf of
former neighbours of the 9111 conces-
sion of Morris and the bolutdaly.
Mt'. and Alrs. Welds moved ft'on1 Iheii
farm on the boundary road to Lodes.
bore.
CONGRATULATIONS
('0115t'•alllatUOtIS' 01111 many ltappl'
col tuns to Airs. Ilugh C. Somers, (tt
Winnipeg, Alaniloba, who celebrated
her birthday en Tuesday, April 10.
Congratulations In Air. and Ahs,
Lorne Ilaelley who will celebrate their
2511i wistdiug anniversary on April 14.
Congratulations to Me. and Mrs, Ger-
ald lleffroat who celebrate their wed-
ding atntivetsay on Sunday, April 15.
The roll call used by tate Blyth AVo-
men's Institute at their May meeting
held in the Memorial lull on May 0
\vas, "Why 1 am a member of the
Women's Institute," The consensus et
opint the responses way
"Becainionuse of theexpressed friendly hlfoi'nlcll got.
together each month," and "The come
rllllttily spirit which is evident,"
A minute of silence was observed
in memory of the late Mrs. Harold
Phillips, who was a former president
cl'
Blyth branch.
'Three choices were made for a short
calcic al the district level: Ise, "113
Ihs. til areal."; 2nd, "Home Nursing ',
3t'd, "Window Drapery." .The final
selection will be made at the district
senu(11 electing in Wesley Willis Unit•
ed Chinch, Chalon, May 1lih.
1t was also decided to donate $30.0'i
to the provincial bursary, honouring,
the t',ith year of \Vometl's Institute-,
in Ontario. The report of Standing
Committees was given by the conven-
ers.
Mists Josephine Woodcock, district
president, was guest speaker and chose
for he' theme, "'I9tc Mary Stewart
Collect."
In part, Aliss Woodcock stated, Mist:
author of this Collect was a member
of a local club, and being disturbed
to hear much criticism and fault find-
ing among the members, was inspired
to write what is now used as a prayer
on thousands of women's- programs
and is so worded it couldn't give of-
fense to any religious group or sect.
The concluding sentence sums up the
total, "Anil 0 Lord God, let us not
forget to be kind."
As this was the close of the fiscal
year, the treasurer's report showed a
gaud year with much community wnu'k
being done and a gratifying bank bal-
ance.
Alts, Lorne Scrimgeour, a past dist.
riot president, presided for the elec-
tion and installation of the followim,
cfftccrs for 1962-1963: least president,
Mrs. Charles Johnston; president, Mrs,
Luella McGowan; 1st vice-president,
Aliss Josephine Woodcock; 2nd vice-
president, Alrs. Keith 1Vebster; secre•
Lary -treasurer, ,Mrs. Ben Walsh; dist-
rict director, Mrs. Wellington Good;
branch directors, Afrs. Edith -,Logan,
Mr Gustov:. Kurnoth, Mrs. Charles
Jol,iston, Mrs, Pearl Walsh; pianists',
Miss Pearl Gidley, Ma's.- Dan Balla -
Ilan.
Conveners of standing committees:
Agriculture and Canadian Industa•ies,
Mrs. Keith Webster, Mrs. Peter Boon.
aril; Monte Economics and Health, Alt's.
11'vine Wallace, Aliss Josephine Wood-
crck; Hislo'i.,rl Researh, Mrs. John
Young, Alrs. Lorne Scrimgeour; Citi-
zenship and Education, Airs, Margaret
Alt'ss. Clayton Ladcl; 'I\veens•
I0tlil' Vil'.,a;e history, Alt's. Edith Lo-
gan, Mis. Lorne Scrimgeour, Mrs.
John McNichol, Mrs, Kenneth Taylor,
Mrs. Ida Petis.
'The May meeting will be held May
3rd at 7:30 p,rn. and will feature the
4 1I Girls Club with their leaders, Mrs.
Wellington Good uutd Maes. Gordon Ma.
soft.
Fcllowinry the meeting a pat -luck sup-
per was enjoyed and the sunshine sis-
ters of the branch exchanged farewell
gifts and revealed their identity, Names
were dr'awin by those wishing t0 con-
tinue as Sunshine Sisteres,
Alt invitation 4.o visit Auburn Branch
on April 17311 was accepted,
llllt'I71LAY AND WEDDING.
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATED
A very ple,lsant day was spent on
Sunday, April 811t, at the home of Mrs.
(label llaggitl, of Blyth.
'De occasloll being the 81st birthday
of Mrs. 11051511, and also being the
5.11 wedding anniversary of Alt, and
Ails, Bert Jackson, of uliorl'is Township.
During the (lay 'congratulations end
hest wishes were received from 30
friends and relatives who called, ins
clouting friends from Toronto, London,
UM'igdrn, Witgham, Luckrtow, Clinton
and Blyth. Al. 430 p.m. w7 ddu'key din-
nr ,w'as so'l'ed.
NORWESTERS GROUP MEE1'1NG
The Norwestt'ti"s group of the United
Church Wooten met AIonday evel.ing
al the home of Alr, and Mrs. Keith
Webster with a good attendance.
The Call to Worship was in charge of
,Airs. Mel MtVittie, and the Bible Study
based o►1 the first and second chapter
of the Acts of the Apostles was lad by
Mr's. Lorne Scrimgeour. This result-
ed in t1 very good discussion.
Owing to the amalgamation of an-
other group with the "Notwvester's" a
1corganization was necesteu'y, and the
b lluwing officers were elected: Lea-
der, Alis. Aubrey McNichol, -assistant,
trade', Alt's. Keith Webster; secretary,
Mrs. Jinn Cartwright, assitallt secre-
tary, Mrs. Jack Caldwell Jr.; treasur-
er, Af1's. Millet' Richmond; community
friendship and visiting committee, Alrs.
,iim Walsh, Alt's. Laurie Scott. The
newv name chosen for the group was
"'J'ht Norncerne's.,,
An invitation to hold the Jtute 711i
meeting at the home of AIt's. Aubrey
McNichol was accepted, with Mrs. Gor-
don Carter and Ales. Robert Marshall,
hostesses. The Bible Study to he led
by Mrs. John McNichol,
In Memory Of
A Great Comedian
In Dan Leno Englund lost a
man of genius whose untimely
and melancholy end was yet an-
other reminder that great wits
are sure to madness near allied,
Not that he was precisely a great
wit: rather a great droll; but
great within his limits he certain-
ly was, and probably no one has
over caused more laughter or
cleaner laughter.
That was, perhaps, Dan Leno's
greatest triumph, that the grimy
sordid material of the Music Hall
low comedian, which, with so
many singers, remains grimy and
sordid, and perhaps even becomes
more grimy and more sordid In
his refining hands become radi-
ant, joyous, a legitimate source
of mrth. In its nakedness it was
drunkenness, quarrelsomeness,
petty poverty; still hunger, even
crime; but such was the native
cleanness of this little, eager,
sympathetic observer and reader
of life, such was his gift of show-
ing the comic, the unexpected,
side, that it emerged the most
suitable, the gayest joke. He
might be said to have been a
crucible that transmuted mud to
gold.
It was the strangest contrast—
the quaint, old-fashioned, half -
pathetic figure, dressed in his
out-landish garb, waving his
battered umbrella, smashing his
impossible hat, revealing the
most squalid secrets of the slums;
and the resultant effect of light
and happiness, laughter irresisti-
ble, and yet never for a moment
cruel, at anything, but always
with it. The man was imma-
culate.
In this childlike simplicity of
emotion which he manifested we
can probably see the secret of his
complete failure in New York.
In that sophisticated city his
genial elemental raptures seemed
trivial. The Americans looked
for cynicism, or at least a com-
plete destructive philosophy —
such as their own funny men
have at their finger-tips — and
he gave them humour not too far
removed from tears, He gave
them fun, that rarest of qualities,
rarer far than wit or humour;
and, in their own idiom, they had
"no use" for it.
In the deserts of pantomime
he was comparatively lost: his
true place was the stage of a
small Music Hall, where he could
get on terms with his audience
in a moment. Part of his amaz-
IN THE SWIM — Keyhole
back is an added attraction to
popcorn stitched suit, done in
red orlon knit for 1962.
ing success was his gift of taking
you into his c(nitidencc. The soul
of sympathy himself, he made
you sympathetic too, ile address-
ed a Hall as though it were one
intimate friend. 'tle told you his
farcical troubles as earnestly as
an unquiet soul tells its spiritual
ones. You had to share them.
His perplexities became yours—
he gathered you in with his inti-
mate and impressive "Mark you";
and you resigned yourself to be
played upon as he would. The
bright security of his look told
you that he trusted you, that you
could not fail him. You shared
his ecstasies too; and they were
ecstasies!
No matter what Dan did to his
face, its air of wistfulness always
conquered the pigments. It was
the face of a grown-up child
rather than a man, with many
traces upon it of early struggles.
For he began in the poorest way,
accompanying his parents as a
stroller from town to town, and
knowing every vicissitude. This
face, with its expression of pro-
found earnestness, pointed his
jokes irresistibly. I recollect one
song in the patter to which (and
latterly his songs were mostly
patter) he mentioned a firework
explesion at home that carried
both his parents through the roof.
"I shall always remember it," he
said, gravely, while his Lace lit
with triumph and satisfaction,
"because it was the only time
that father and mother ever went
out together." That is quite a
good specimen of his manner,
with its hint of pathos underly-
ing the gigantic absurdity.
Irish (of course) by extraction,
his real name was George Gal-
vin: he took Leno from his step-
father, and Dan from an inspired
misprint. His first triumphs were
as a clog -dancer, and he danced
superbly to the end, long after
his mind was partially gone. But
he will be remembered as the
sweetest-souled comedian that
ever swayed an audience with
grotesque nonsense based on na-
tural facts.
From "A Wanderer in London"
by E. V. Lucas,
Don't Let Lobsters'
Feet Get Singed!
The human is the most compas-
sionate animal on earth with the
possible exception of some tame,
lovable pet.... The rest of the
earth's creatures kill or main, eat
each other without a qualm..
As New Englanders, we love
to dine on lobsters, crabs and
clams. Our common habit is to
bring a pot to a rolling boil and
toss them in.... We excuse our-
selves by the thought that they
are among the lower forms of life
— but, they do feel pain, ob-
viously,
This pain to crustaceans ... is
all needless, according to au-
thorities!
They point out that the large
crustaceans, who inhabit our
cooler sea waters, die quietly,
peacefully and automatically if
the temperature of the water
should rise slowly to about 100
degrees — a temperature that is
only warm to human hands... .
So, the recommended method
is to put these creatures into coal,
fresh water and let then stay
there for a while. This, itself, 'tas
an anesthestic effect, since the
fresh water dissolves the' native
salt from their bodies. 'f'hen turn
the heat on and bring the water
to a slow boil and then cook to
the recommended time.
According to authorities, there
won't be a quivering sound come
from the pot, As an added touch,
they recommended that a metal
mesh be put at the bottom of the
pot, so that the feet of the lobs-
ters or crabs cannot touch the
sudden, quick heat on the bottom
of the pot....
Here's to more, humanely
home -cooked crustaceans. — Ar-
lington (Mass.) Advocate
MISSILE HOUND — Reporter Don Cosgrove "interviews"
Dingo, a five-year-old Weimaranet trained to track down
small missile ports which bury themslves in the sand at
White Sands Missile Range. The parts are sproyed with
shark liver oil before the missiles are launched,
TABLE TALKS
Jam Andve.ws.
Folks who come to our house
for dinner always ask how we
cooked the vegetables, because
they are invariably crisp and
tasty, full of flavor, never flabby
or overcooked, limp or watery.
"We cook them with lettuce
leaves," we explain, "and with-
out water."
First requirement for this is a
heavy cast - aluminum saucepan
or a casserole (glass or ceramic),
with a tight, heavy cover, writes
Edrie Van Dore in the Christian
Science Monitor.
• o
Melt butter or bacon drippings
in the container — or use salad
or cooking oil if you prefer —
about.two tablespoons or more.
Place vegetables (frozen or
fresh) in the casserole or sauce-
pan, add seasonings but no wa-
ter, and cover completely with
washed and dripping wet lettuce
leaves — at least two or three
large ones, enough to cover com-
pletely the other vegetable. I use
the outer leaves. It's important
that they be wet, for this small
amount of moisture provides the
steam necessary for the cooking.
Now put the lid on, and set the
pan over low heat, or the cas-
serole in a slow (325°F.) oven,
for about 45 minutes. You need
to practice this method a little to
learn your own timetable, but
the results are well worth the
effort. Peas, beans, corn, or any
other vegetables are delicious
this way.
Before they were being packed,
frozen, in combination, we cook-
ed our peas with fresh diced cel-
ery in this fashion, added shred-
ded onion and green pepper to
the carrots, or celery and green
pepper to the corn.
And here's a secret: a surpris-
ing texture is added to sliced
cooked carrots if you add diced
raw green pepper and slivers of
crisp raw onion just before serv-
ing, The color accent is pretty
too. * *
incidentally but importantly,
do you plan your meals in terms
of color? It's so easy and such
tun to think of vegetables espe-
cially in terms of their color
value, and it's nice to have a
guest or husband remark, "That
looks delicious!"
Probably, if the truth were
known, that's hots the well-
known team of peas and carrots
got together, hard - boiled egg
FIRST ONE — Bobby Cutair, 6, seems resigned to his fate as he helps entertain his 1 -
,year -old quadruplet sisters, who are, left to right, Annette, Bernadette, Celeste and Denise.
came to be sprinkled on spinach,
and a blob of sour cream depos-
ited on the plate full of borscht.
o + •
We never serve carrots at our
house with sweet potatoes, or
cauliflower with mashed ones,
for ins t a n c e, but vice versa,
Cauliflower looks better on a
plate with yams, and carrots
nestle nicely next to mounds of
mashed potato. The interesting
thing is that when you choose
vegetables for color, you usually
get a contrast of texture, too,
and then your guest or husband
says, "It tastes as good as it
looks!" *
Strudel is made by rolling a
special pastry paper -thin, spread-
ing it with filling, and baking.
Traditional strudel made this
way is superb; but so is a strudel -
like cake made with yeast -raised
dough, The Fruit -And -Nut La-
den Roll below is a fine example,
and far easier for the home ba-
ker to turn out. Its sweet dough
holds a delicious filling of rais-
ins, cherries - and almonds. The
recipe was developed to appeal
to strudel fans and home bakers
alike. • „ .,
One tip: Roll the dough out on
a floured cloth. Then, after
spreading it with filling, pick up
the long side of the cloth and
hold it so that the strudel rolls
easily into shape. Then pinch the
seam and ends well, so all the
filling stays right inside the
dough where it belongs.
FRU1'1'-R-NUT LADEN ROLL
Yield—One Cake, 16 Servings
2 cups (about) pre -sifted all-
purpose flour
cup granulated sugar
' teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons chilled butter
eup lukewarm water
2 teaspoons granulated sugar
2 envelopes active dry yeast
cup milk
1 egg separated
2 cans (15 ounces each) sweet-
ened cherries, well drained
1 cup seedless raisins
1 cup fine dry bread crumbs
'.1 cup granulated sugar
9i cup finely -chopped blanched
almonds
1 teaspoon almond extract
1 tablespoon butter, melted
3 tablespoons granulated sugar
Combine the flour, ','a cup su-
gar and salt in a mixing bowl;
cut in the 2 tablespoons chilled
butter finely. Measure lukewarm
water; stir in the 2 teaspoons
sugar, Sprinkle with yeast. Let
stand 10 minutes, then stir well.
Scald milk; cool to lukewarm.
Beat egg yolk. Add dissolved
yeast, lukewarm milk and egg
yolk to flour mixture and mix
well, adding a little more flour,
if necessary, to make a soft
dough. Turn out dough onto
floured board or canvas and
knead until smooth and elastic.
Place in greased bowl. Grease
top. Cover. Let rise in a warm
place, free from draft, until
doubled in bulk — about 45 min-
utes.
Meantime. combine the well-
drained- cherries, raisins, bread
crumbs, the 1 cup sugar, cup
of the almonds and almond ex-
tract. Punch down dough. Turn
out onto a lightly -floured canvas
and roll out into a 16 -inch square.
Brush with the 1 tablespoon
melted butter. Spread cherry
mixture over dough to within 1
inch of edges. Lift canvas at one
side and roll dough jelly -roll fa-
shion. Pinch seams and ends to
seal well, Place roll, seam side
down, diagonally on a large
greased cookie sheet. Brush with
ISSUE 15 — 1962
Times Have Changed
In Tin Pan Alley
Richard Rodgers wrote his first
song for a Broadway musical
when he was 17. Forty-two years
later he got around to compos-
ing his first lyrics, "No Strings,"
a new musical with the novel
phcnomer►on of Rodgers words
set to Rodgers music, opened
II few weeps ago al 54th Street
Theater.
:Mr, itodgel's, his fellow pro-
fessionals, and the public re-
garded his decision to try on a
second hat :a venturesome,
There are 12 musicals currently
on Broadway, In only two others
has a composer dared to double
on the lyrics,
11'e do indeed live in the t:.ge
of the specialist. And when a
composer and a lyricist — Fred-
erick Loewe and Alan Jay Ler-
ner, according to the legend —
can walk into a Rolls-Royce
showroom and casually write
checks for two $28,000 cars, who
will dare suggest that he alone
_can fill both their jobs?
Is any man worth two Rotls-
Royces?
At the turn • of the century a
singing waiter named James
Thornton wrote "When You
Were Sweet Sixteen" for a profit
of $15, which — to make the
vehicular comparison — might
have brought hint a new bicycle.
If he had been so rash as to split
the fee with a lyricist, he could
barely have afforded the rear
end of a second-hand tandem.
Behold the rise of the song-
writer, from rags -times to riches.
Fifty years ago — remember
those bad film biographies? —
he was the man in the striped
shirt with elastic armbands and
a derby hat, thumping out musi-
cal illiteracies on a battered up-
right.
His qualifications as a lyricist
were based on an instinct for
sniffing out new rhymes for
moon and June.
One imagines him' writing
'bout that noon shining above
the Wabash, coming over the
cowshed, and puffing through
other pastoral and romantic ex-
ercises while he faces the blank
r
egg white, sprinkle with the re-
maining chopped almonds and
the 3 tablespoons sugar. Cover.
Let rise in a warm place, free
from draft, until almost doubled
in bulk — about 1 hour. Bake
in a moderate oven (350 degrees)
30 to 35 minutes. Serve warm or
cold.
wall of a Broadway ,l,rs.haft. The
window shade is fly -specked.
The smell of cooked cabbage
rolls in waves from the hall-
way. A representative of the
Philistine public bangs the rads
iator downstairs whenever the
composer -lyricist tests it phrase
against a melody on 011 out -of -
tune piano whose black keys
stick.
Time fox-trots on, (Calendar
leaves flip on the screen. The
sound track advances from "Tur-
key Trot" to "Charleston.")
In one short generation the
image of the composer is trans-
formed into a debonair colleg-
ian who begins by writing frd.-
ternity musicals while studying
law (Cole Porter), engineering
(Vincent Youmans), or architec-
tecture (Harold Rome).
His working quarters are the
Ritz, a Riviera villa, or a re-
constructed new England farm-
house, writes Melvin Maddocks
in the Christian Science Moni-
tor.
The scores of Broadway musi-
cals are musically correct, even
demanding. The 32 -be r song is
an antique.
The lyrics are sophisticated.
The day has long since passed
when grammar teachers smirked
over titles like "Alone Toge-
ther," Only on the Twisting
fringe can they find targets as
ripe as the aforementioned Mr.
Thornton's "It Don't See Like
the Same Old Smile."
Today's composer measures
himself against Leonard Bern-
stein ("On the Town," "West
Side Stoxy").
Today's lyricist competes with
a Pulitzer -prize poet 'Richard
Wilbur, "Candide"),
Tin Pan Alley has become an
apt dead phrase, applying to s
world that has largely ceased to
exist.
No one has contributed more
than Richard Rodgers to this so-
cial, economic, and stylistic revo-
lution in songwriting.
Now he has returned in just
one respect to the older jack-of-
all-trades tradition, and a New
'York reviewer solicitously won-
ders if double duty is "using up
some of Mr. Rodgers' composing
energy."
It is ironical enotto sug-
gest one i h of those gently disillus-
ioned songs that Mr. Rodgers
writes so well .. • with lyrics, of
course, by somebody else.
Lady on the Bus: "I didn't
know what this pay television
business was all about until w.
got the first bill from the televi-
sion repairman,"
Fashion Hint
FOR
WARMER WEATHER
Famous Astronaut
Talks About Luck
l.,uclt, says the dicli.;nar,y, Is
„that which happens to a person,
as if by chance, in the course of
events." This is scarcely the defi-
nition Astronaut Alan B. Shep-
ard Jr, placed on the word when
he appeared to testify before the
House Space Committee, the first
of three astronauts to do so.
Ile had been asked frequently,
he said, "Where do you got your
luck?"
"We make our own luck,"
Shepard told the members of the
committee, "by careful attention
to details and duty and design
and qualification tests,"
There i:; a lesson here for all
of us. A first rate mechanic, for
example, gets a raise. ,Why? 13e -
cause the boss thinks he has paid
attention to detail and knows
what he is doing. This is what
makes hial a gaud mechanic,
hence eligible for a raise,
We, in America, are accused of
doing much of our work in pretty
sloppy fashion and when one
finds missing part; in the body
of a brand new automobile, it
certainly seems sa, It is true in
many fields, Many of us do not
pay the attention :o detail we
should pay, and we are much ton
inclined to think that anyone
who is moving ahead is lucky,
Luck, in the opinion of Cmdr.
Shepard, is not something which
happens by chance, but some-
thing one makes happen. if the
luck is good it simply indicates
one has been on his toes, doing
the things he should have done,
and doing then! well. And bad
luck happens, not by chance, but
because one has NOT been on his
toes and has NOT dine the things
he should have done.
If this point of view could be-
come widespread throughout the
nation as a result of Cmdr, Shep-
ard's testimony, he would have
contributed fully as much to the
nation's morale and brighter fu-
ture as he did when he was
whirled through space in subor-
bital flight. - Cleveland Plain
Dealer
FADING STAR
Her long blond curls veiling
one eye, half-pint actress Ver-
onica Lake catapulted to Holly-
wood glory during World War II,
and plunged from stardom almost
as abruptly, Last month, The
New York Post found the former
peekaboo girl -now 42, with her
hair drawn back -working as a
hostess -waitress -barmaid in the
taproom of a woman's hotel in
Manhattan. She spoke vaguely of
writing an autobiography and of
trying a comeback in show bus-
iness, and she joked about her
three divorces. Of her old
movies, which she sometimes sees
on television, Veronica said: "I
don't believe anybody was ever
that young."
Q. How can I clean patent -
leather shoes or belts?
A. Mix up a solution of two-
thirds vinegar and one-third
Water. Apply this to the leather
with a soft cloth, and polish it
with a dry cloth. Petroleum
jelly, applied with the same pro-
cedure, will do a good job, loo.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACrtoss
1. Larva of
horse fly
4. Seraglio
9. Age
12, Always
(poet.)
1:1. Sprit: btI '
14. Afire
16. linmI y.
16. Begin cc.
grow
17, Cerulea a
19. 1 -Ind of
• chess.
31. Cube root
of ono
21. vast
24. Lover of one's
country
28. Artificial
language
29. More
courageous
(colloo.1
81. Heraldic
hearing:
32. Feminine
name
34. Small candle
96, Append
37. never cluck
30. Ore deposits
41. Pn�t ease
ending
42. Detains
44. Relentless
46. Little girl
47. October
birthstone
48, Drees the
feathers
61. Corroded
62. Salamander
66. Of ue
66. Stomach ache
18, Teachers
association
lab.1
10. Through
60. Strict
61. First decimal
number
DOWN
1. Sewing party
2. Above I poet,)
3. Clay,
4. Natural
locality
1. C,ille and
fever
6. Dissolve
SOWER OF SEED - An airplane is used to seed strip mine
pits near Montrose, Mo. A combination of brome grass,
orchard grass, fescue, alfalfa and Iespedeza is used in effort
to restore vegetation to the strip coal mine pits.
TllEIAN FRONT
f..Jokaussea
That chemists have been ex-
erting themselves on behalf of
the farmer is apparent from the
fact that 10 new chemicals ap-
pear among the pesticides reg-
istered with the Canada De-
partment of Agriculture in 1961,
Additional evidence is that
about 350 new pest control prod-
ucts are registered each year.
*
For the first time a living
organism - Bacillus thuringi-
ensis Berliner - has been reg-
istered for control of insects, It
kills caterpillars on tobacco and
vegetable crops and is contained
in a dust and a wettable powder
available to Canadian farmers
through commercial channels,
$
Dominion Bureau of Statistics
records a jump of 24 per cent in
the sale of pesticides in the 12
months ended Sept. 30, 1961.
Total value was reported by 500
Canadian distributors to be $33.7
million, compared with $27 mil-
lion in the corresponding period
in 1959-60. The total has gone up
70 per cent in four years. About
95 per cent of the sales are made
by 150 firms.
Increases in sales were made
in all classes of pesticides, Last
year's sales involved: agricultur-
al sprays and dusts $12.3 million;
livestock treatments $2.4 mil-
lion; herbicides $10,3 million;
household and industrial insec-
ticides $7.4 million; rodenticides
$0,56 million; and miscellaneous
products $0.67 million.
* $ *
Bacterial ring rot is present in
all potato producing areas in
North America, says a govern-
ment expert. To get a crop free
of this disease, the grower
should: use only Foundation
seed; dispose of all contaminated
potatoes; and avoid recontamina-
tion by disinfecting all equip-
ment, machines, gloves, sacks,
that have been in contact with
other potato crops.
* * *
Breeding is under way on
mink ranches across Canada.
With 450,000 females held over
for this purpose last fall, opera-
tors are looking for a production
of 1,500,000 kits which, after
normal losses, will give a crop of
-4
7. Elevated 30. Graffiti used
railway lab.) for brewing
6, Intended
',Australian 33, Swiss river
bird 36. Treat with
10. Robot drama deference
11,1 rust drink 38, -maims,
18. Naught high treason
20. Rooting piece 40. As it stands
21, Equipped (mus,)
with oars 43. Before now
22. (ler. 45, Scented
diminutive 47.Ot the ear
of Margaret 48. Small
21. Dog's name explosion
24. f.lourdr 49, Bitter herb
25. One oi' David's 50. Alalce a
rulers mistake
20. Of former 51, Raman ronin
times (poet.) • 53. TIP .
21 Nirlc nn in' 64. Gypsy tent
for Theodore 17. Draft animal
1
2
3
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4
5
6
1
8
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9
10
11
12
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13
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20
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21
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37
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bo
Pt
(.1
Answer &!sew lore on this page
a
some 1,350,000 pelts 'for sale at
auctions,
By the end of March this
year, fully 95 per cent of the
domestic pelt crop will have
been disposed of at satisfactory
prices and breeders are conse-
quently facing the future with
optimism.
* * *
The Record of Performance
program for beef cattle showed
a substantial increase in activity
in the 1960-61 test year.
Although the number of herds
on test increased only to 133
from 120 the previous year, the
number of calves tested rose to
3,373 from 2,565, The total com-
prised 983 Aberdeen -Angus, 2,109
Herefords and 281 Shorthorns.
Number of herds and calves
tested last year by province
were; New Brunswick, 11 and
88; Manitoba, 6 and 187; Sas-
katchewan, 44 and 1,076; Al-
berta, 63 and 1,798; British Col-
umbia, 9 and 224.
* * 1
In pre -weaning tests, male
calves showed an average daily
weight gain of 2.0 pounds and
females 1.8 pounds, Post -wean-
ing gains averaged 1.96 pounds
daily for male calves and 1.28
pounds for fe►nales.
The dip in weight gain for fe-
males in post -weaning is the re-
sult of a lower level of feeding
provided in the winter months.
During both pre- and post -
weaning periods, difference in
performance between top and
bottom one-third of the calves
tested was half a pound per day.
This provides ample scope for
selection based on performance.
• .
The federal -provincial ROP
program for beef cattle, launch-
ed in 1956, enables breeders to
compare rates of gain of anitnals
in their own herds as a basis for
herd improvement. Under the
plan, a breeder must have a min-
imum of five calves of the same
sex from the same sire and born
within a 90 -day period. In addi-
tion, they must get the same
treatment up to weaning.
Recommendations made last
fall by the National Advisory
Committee have been incorpor-
ated into the 1961-62 ROP pro-
gram.
The recommendations were:
1. Use of age -of -darn correc-
tion factors, determined from
ROP results, to adjust rate of
gain in the pre -weaning period,
2. Elimination of the practice
of adjusting the weaned weight
to a standard age of 180 days.
3. Extension of the acceptable
age range for entry on test to
cover from 160 to 250 days of
age at weaning. (Previous limits
were 150 to 210 days).
4. Acceptance of Charolais
herds for test on the basis of
a sex -sire group of five calves
eligible for registration. The
calves must be produced from
purebred dams or recorded darns
with a minimum of 15/16 Char-
olais breeding.
5. A federally supervised car-
cass appraisal program for ap-
plication in ROP beef herds.
A federally supported and
supervised progeny testing pro-
gram for beef bulls in AI service.
NMY SCIIOOI
SON
By Rev. 11, Barclay Warren,
18,A„ 13.1).
CHRIST REIGNS
Matthew 28:1-10; 18-20;
Hebrews 1:1-14
Memory Selectlont Worthy Is
the Lamb that was slain to re-
ceive power, and riches, and wis-
dom, and strength, and honor,
and glory, and blessing, Revela•
Ron 5:12
The Easter lesson is the climax
of the first four lessons of this
quarter. They have been focussed
upon Christ: Christ as the centre
of our faith; growing in the grace
and knowledge of Christ; our re-
sponse to the Cross of Christ;
and now, the reign of the resur-
rected Christ.
When Christ arose from the
dead, the chief priests and elders
bribed the guards to lie. and tell
that the disciples had stolen the
body of Jesus while they slept.
How foolish! A corpse In the
hands of the disciples would have
witnessed to the failure of Jesus,
But instead, they heard from his
lips, a commission to tell all na-
tions about hirn. We have been
slow in the task.
The last portion of the lesson
starts with the Son, then pro-
gressively shows him as the "Heir
of all things," Creator .of the
worlds, the brightness of God's
glory and express image of His
person, sustaining the worlds,
making atonement for sins and
finially taking his position at the
right hand of the throne.
My friend, Claude Horton, wri-
ting in Arnold's Commentary,
tells again how the news of Wel-
lington's victory over Napoleon
Peached England. It came by'ves-
sel to the south coast and by
semaphore was wig -wagged over-
land toward London, Atop Win-
chester Cathedral the semaphore
began to spell out the message,
"W -e -1 -1 -i -n -g -t -o -n D -e -f -a -a -t -
e -d," Then dense fog settled over
the land. The incomplete mes-
sage went on to London, blank -
ISSUE 15 - 1962
eting the country in gloom. But
soon the fog lifted and the rest
of the message was received. It
was, "Wellington Defeated the
Enemy." What rejoicing!
As Christ died on the cross,
darkness deepened fur His fear-
ful followers. Calvary seemed to
spell out, "Jesus Defeated." It
appeared that Satan had tri-
umphed, Then suddenly, on Eas-
ter morning the darkness lifted.
The gloom - dispelling n e w s
spread: "Jesus Defeated Death!"
We rejoice in the triumph of
our Savour'.
Unfortunate Deal
In Real Estate
An astronomy buff since boy-
hood, TV's Dave Garroway set
up an observatory - cornplete
with 121/2 -inch telescope - at
his summer place in Westhamp-
ton Beach, N.Y. But a constant
salt spray corroded the alumin-
um -surfaced reflectors, and Gar-
roway packed up his scope and
put the property up for sale.
Last week, he sold it for $39,500
to 43 -year-old Gerald Fisher, a
$35,000 -a -year New York box
manufacturer. Less than 24 hours
after Fisher took title, storm -
swollen seas demolished the
seven -room house and its fur-
nishings, the two garages, the
observatory - everything but a
solitary fence post. Although in-
sured, and hopeful of recovering
his monetary losses, buyer Fish-
er seemed shaken by what he
called "the .psychological aspect"
of the housebreaking. Sympa-
thetic seller Gareoway said: "I'm
very sorry for him, naturalip,
But you can't call off a sal•
that's been made."
Upsidedown to Prevent P(.eking
gar i SAW-
IN RSD CHINA
(First of Series)
By FERNAND GIGON
Written for Newspaper
Enterprise Assn.
NEW YORK - The "Great
Leap Forward" once extolled by
Chinese propaganda is finished.
The back yard blast furnaces
which dotted the Communist
Chinese landscape are no more.
They were to supply the nation
with its iron and steel, but in-
dustrial smelters with Soviet
machinery have taken over the
job. Gone, too, are the dormitor-
ies where men slept on one side
and women on the other. Gone
are the community kitchens
where peasants ate the same
meal cooked in an immense
cauldron, Gone are the work
brigades of 250 to 350 persons
who would fall on a field like
a flight of birds to till and har-
vest the land. No longer are
children raised away from their
parents.
In less than two years these
features of the rural people's
commune have disappeared,
The super -brains of the Com-
munist regime, who perhaps
have never set foot in a field,
are forced to admit the failure
of their policy which they im-
posed on 500 million peasants.
But, despite failure they will
not admit defeat. They still
maintain that they will "straight-
en the thinking of each Chinese
and raise his ideological con-
science."
I asked officials for permis-
sion to visit a rural commune
and perhaps to stay there two
or three days. The official an-
swered my question with only
a shrug of his shoulders.
Several future requests were
in vain. The People's Republic
of China cannot bear to display
the evidence of its disastrous
policy, visible in the furrows of
the grain fields and rice paddies
of the south,
Finally, however, I succeeded
in visiting three communes
during my 750 -mile trip from
Wuchang to Shanghai down the
Yangtze River.
* * *
They were, of course, rich
and prosperous communes
which work well, They can be
shown to a foreigner who will
be led to believe that they rep-
resent a 11 24,1)09 communes
across the face of China.
One of these communes which
I visited was a community of
23,000 persons under the leader-
ship of Kwang Yong Fo, an able
director who rose to his position
from the laboring class. Kwang
is very popular with the work-
ers in his commune. In the prev-
ious year he had distributed to
the commune members an aver-
age of 247 yuan (a yuan is worth
about 40 U.S, cents). To the local
citizens he distributes the har-
vest of the commune. Only then
does the government receive its
share.
On Kwang's commune, called
Tang Wei, three of the four
community tractors were park-
ed broken in a yard. Until me-
chanics could come to repair
them, the • peasants hauled out
their old wooden plows, and at-
tached their buffalo to thein as
their ancestors had done for
generations. Muscle power is
still the main source of energy
in China - as it has been for
centuries.
Tang Wei is a singing com-
mune. I asked Director Kwang
for a translation of some of the
workers' songs. Some of the
titles" The Song of the
Clothes"; "Song of the Cotton";
"Song of the Vegetables."
Heavy with propaganda, some
of the lyrics went like this:
"Previously we had holes in
our hats ,and shoes. without
soles. Our skin was our only
dress. Today our heads are cov-
ered by a new hat and our body
is clad in seven layers of cotton.
We also hhve seven pairs of
shoes."
A team of girls was busy at
Tang Wei when I arrived, spray-
ing insecticide on the fields. An
increase in the insect popula-
tion had been' the result of a
program to massacre crop -de-
stroying birds, The successful
bird eradication program killed
the bugs' natural enemies.
* * *
Money is now used as a
strong incentive to increase ag-
ricultural and other production.
Because of this capitalistic -type
competition there often exists a
black market in reverse in the
rural areas. Sometimes the
amount of produce which a pea-
sant has for sale is so great that
he must keep his prices cut well
below the official level. Chick-
ens, rabbits, pigs and fruit are
offered for sale in the market
places,
At a collective called the Oc-
tober Commune, an autocratic
director named Wang pointed
proudly toward the fields. "Here,
whoever works hard makes big
money," he said, "Look what the
peasants do with the land the
government has given them and
where they can grow whatever
they want.'{•
Wang, not a very capable ad-
ministrator, made up for his
ignorance by thundering at his
32,000 peasants. But he under•
stood his directives well from
Peiping.
In another commune, at the
village of Ho Chen, I walked .
with a group of commune lead-
ers to the fields foa first-hand
look at the Chinese peasant at
work. Suddenly I saw a small
child run ahead of us and disap-
pear into a corn field, He was
to alert the workers that we
were arriving.
When we reached the peas-
ants they were, indeed, hard at
work. But not a single drop of
sweat was on their faces, and
their new shirts were still sharp-
ly creased.
* •* * .
This artificial display of zeal
does not diminish the quality
of the Chinese peasant in my
mind. I consider hint one of
the best farmers in the world.
What is embarrassing is this
mixture of propaganda and work
offered as a spectacle for the
foreign visitor to China.
So goes life in the people's
communes in China. They are
prosperous if well directed, but
miserable if the local direct
incompetence. combines tvi h
the delirious policy of the
party. But whatever their fail-
ures or successes, the agricul-
tural communes adapt tht•nl-
selves well to the earth and
mentality of 'China.
Next: The Black 11Iar!:et
MUSCLE POWER: Much .of the work in China Is done as it has been for centuries - by
sweat and naked muscle.
1
PAGE 4
JOIN THE EASTER PARADE
111
Boys' Jackets, checked or plaid, sizes 3 to Gx
$3,98 up
Boys' Flannel 'Trousers, sizes .: to 8 , , , $3,98 up
Tots Coat Sets, wool and rayon, sizes 1 to 3x
$S.95 up
Girls' Laminate Coats, 8 to 11 819.95
Teen Coats, laminate, wool and all weather
$17,95 up
also:- Hats, Scarves, Dresses, Socks, Suits, Blouses
Needlecraft Shoppe
Blyth, Ont.
Phone 22
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON E1l;ETF8 — SEAPORTS
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
'THOMAS STEEP, CLIN1ON.
PHONES: ,r ;t6;t'1'—
CLIN'ION: ' i,tt ' ?UTERI
enslneu--Hu t-eeoe ' Badness 41
Residence—Hu 2-3869 Residence Si
FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our Rest-
aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full -
course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts.
HURON GRILL
BLY I1 p ONTARIO
FLANK GONG, Proprietor.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ...Blyth-- BOOTS & SHOES
Phone '(S.
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,
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON.
"NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE"
Women's and Misses New Spring Coats
priced at $24.95 and $29.95
Ladies' Car Coats, new laminated fabrics.
Full -Fashioned Nylons, seemless, first quality,
priced at 79c up
New Spring Dresses $9,95 up
Ladies' New Spring Slacks $1,98 up
Lge. Assortment of Woinen's. and Misses New
Spring Blouses,
Men's and Young Men's New Spring Suits, 21,95 up
Young Men's Reversible Top Coats.
Men's and Young Men's New Spring Sport Coats,
Windbreakers and Jackets, in the latest
patterns.
Ncry Spring Shoes- and Work Boots, at the lowest
of prices.
Save 5:percent Saleslips or Black Diamond Stamps
for Premiums,
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PHONEr211 BLYTH, ONT.
THE IILYTI1 STANDARD
-- _ r-- ____
BELGRAVE NEWS
Mira. Carl Procter - was able to re-
turn to her helm; last oak after being
a patient in i'icteria Iteepita3, Louden,
Lho last few menthe.
Mr. and Mre. (Sint::e Wheeler and
F xnily, Leeden, sreeet the went-entl
W..1.11 his parents,* Mr. ,and ;Mrs. Herb
1\'heels. ,
Mr, eel Mrs. Rue. -,e1 Walker, Gude.
rich, sp'e+:i, the weelete d wi'.h Mre.
Robert `Janette -we and otter relatives.
7.1n...r3, It, E. steine,te. t'.r ('sol;sl'ilte
vis ted cit `;a:u!+!ay 1t'rilt Mr. and Mrs
L !e IIt!rl`er.
Mr. and Airs. Ray Ilunktng and fain.
ily, of London, spent the week -end
with Mr. and .Airs. James Lamont, and
tair.!1�1,
'MLai Margaret Higgins, d; Landon
!pent the tack -end with her parents
\1r. and Mrs, Robert lli.ggine.
Air. and Mrs. David Armstrong were
able to return to their own home last
\seek after srcndiug the reet. nioltlie
with their son-in-law Sind d2uglitcr,
and Mrs. Robert '(it•a b3
Mr, and Mrs. Ronald -Campbell anti
S'tcl hen, of LotitIOne event .012 week -end
with Air. attd Mrs. h`layd eair'k11.
Weekly Euchre
There were' 9 -tables' its play at . the
regit'ar weakly eurhro. un' \\'elnesday
evening in the Cttlitniunity Centre.
liigh price wieners wore Airs. J. M.
Ccultes and Jit!sk Aicl3urncy. Novell)
prize winner;; were :firs. C, Il, C'oultes
and Alex Leaver. Cottsolat:icon prizes
went to Mrs. Alex Leaver ,ami J. C.
Procter.
Afternoon Unit Regular Meellhg Held
The afteratoott unit of the United
Church Women met. at the church o:
Wothtesday aft ernoon, 'Mrs. Stove rt
Procter conducted the worship service
with scripture reading, prayer and
hymns appropriate to EaLter, This was
followed by 41 business meeting, aftct
which Mrs. :Leslie Bolt concluded the.
study, "Getting By To -Day," which
covered the problems of laxnes.s in
moral responsibility, Airs, Walter Scott
gave the Bible Study from Aets 1!►,
the subject being, "The .Church lit
Canada," Mrs, Earl Anderson agreed
to take the Bible Stucty for the next
meeting.
11', I. \\'III Meet April 17
'rite Easter meeting of Ilse Beigrave
1\'onu'n's Institute will he held on 'fries -
+l ry afternoon, Aril 17 with Rev.
Robert Aleally giving the; 'address, The
roll call to be answered with au Eater
vert• to
Ladies Guild Will Paint, Clenn Church
The regular meeting of the Ladies
Guild of Trinity Anglican Church was
held ,at the home of Mrs. Cocper Nel.1t
pry on Thursday afternoon with a ioocl
attendeenco. Mrs, Alex Ncthery was
in charge and opened the meeting with
the hymn, "The Strife is O'er," fotlew-
od by prayer acrd the Lord's Prayer
in tuti`oit. Miss Mary Isobel Ncthcry
read the scripture 'lesson. The ruin•
Utes were road by Mrs. Richard Proc-
ter and Mrs. Cooper Ncthery read the
fi►aancial statement.. It was announce)
:hat two more.. quilts lead been done
since the last meeting. It has been
decided to decorate, pain and clear
the church attd Mi's. Lawrence Vannen,
Mrs. Al 3radhurn sand Mrs. Robert
Higgins were named.a commLdce to ar-
range for this. Mrs, :Richard Procter
was in charge of the program and the
roll call was answered with an Easter
verse. Airs. Clare VanCamp read e
poem, "\\'ere there not Easter." Mrs,
Procter read a paper on Ancient Ensl-
er Cus:eoms, Mrs. Robert Procter read
3 poem, "What does Easter mean- to
you?" The meeting closed with pray
er, grace was sung end lunch served
by the hostess.
Mrs. Margaret Lowry and Fred Low•
ry, of Dundas, spent lite weekend wit;,
the forntcr'a sister, Mrs. Cora McGill.
COUNTY OF IIUIRON
AUCTION SALE
OF
CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT
AND TRUCKS
A pubile auction sale of used con•
struction equipment and trucks wilt
be held an Tuesday, April 17, 1962, ai
2:00 p.m, al the Huron County lard at
Auburn, Ontario.
Items to be .old include:—.
tt • 19;:0 Chevrolet 9 passenger station
wagon.
4 - 1958 Ford '4 tot pickups-, 1 -193e
It:;erteeticrral panel truck,
2 •4915 Dodge truck`,; with box and
hum.: (19,500 GVW).
1 • 1954 i ,,tornatioial II.190 with box
and hoist,
1 • Rotary blower snow wing.
1 - •1947 Allis Chalmers HD -10 dozer
with angle blade and V plow.
2 • old motor graders (not in run•
ning order-,
2 - 1949 International KJ3.11 truck
chassis.
.1 - 25 tun King float.
1 • 7 en yd dump body and hoist.
1 —International TD9 with Pe yrs
Drott loader.
Quantity of used bridge planks end
Psis. •
Ali equipment will be sold "as is and
inhere is" and is not guaranteed road-
worthy.
Terms of Sale — Cash, cheques will
be accepted.
Equipment may be inspected at, the
Huron County Yard, Auburn, Ontario.
on or after April 9, 1962.
Auctioneer, Alvin Walper,
+1/ashwcod, Ontario
J. W. Britnell, P. Eng.,
Huron County Engineer,
Crcderich, 'Or."Vario. 06.1
111,ednesday, April 11, 19(
Miss Lorna Boll, of Kitchtener, spent
Pee week -end with her parents, 1h-.
arta Mrs. Leslie Bolt.
WAIA'ON
Wigs 1L4':on 'Turnbull has accepted
a position as stenographer in a cleat
in Listowel.
Mr. and Airs, Cameron Dennis, North
Bay, sheat the weckend with tite Dein
ni r fainilic .
Mr. and Mrs. 'fatty Aieriely, Cern-
n all, Mr, aitd Airs. Win. Merkley, 13e1
more, si'cnt Fatttrday evenLag with AL.,
and Mrs, Ronald Bennett,
?iieees Ruth and Jean Walters, M-
eitner,
eitener, visited ever the weekend with
their parents, Mee and Mrs. Frank
\\alters.
.Mr, Jerry Meese], 'Toronto, Air. Icon
Ennis, 1lamilton, :pent the weekend al
their homes,
Three carloads of ladies from the
Walla. W. I, aticndei the cooking
echool In Blyth •Mcnterial Ball last
Friday o'enng.
The Bible Study class concluded
'hc`.r• course last 'Monday eventing. A
social both• was held at ithe epee o!
`ho. 3t:ucly Iperiod when a sing•scng with
Mrs. If, Brown as aceotuparist was cm
joyed with all joining in with great en•
t hin:bent. A :Snail token of appreciation
was ,presented to Itev, 1Ligginbelhan,
by Clarence Martin on behalf of the
group. Everyone sat dgwn to a table
.arranged with a great variety of veru
delicious food.
Miss Joyce Divides and friend al
Glencoe, spent Sunday with Air. and
Mrs, George Dundas.
Mr. Morgan Stewart, Vancouver, vis
itcd with Mr. and Mrs. II, .Craig on
Stuiday.
25th Wedding Anniversary
and Mrs, Wm. Dennis were
guests of honour at the Walton Com.
mwtity Hall last Saturday night on the
ocoastion of their . 25th wedding .anni-
versary. The early part of the evening
was spent in playing progressive euchre
with the following as prize ,whiners:
TKadies. high, Miss' Jean Millen; ladies
low, firs. lfnry Agar; gents high, Mr.
Jack ,AlcIlwain; gents low, Mr. Alvin
Stimere. Mr. Campbell Wey acted as
chairman for a short program crnsist-
ing of duet, Mrs. Jack Mellwain and
Airs. David Ifackwell; saJo,Miss Mar.
garet Ifillc4l'accompanied by Mass Jciar.
If:iilen; monologue, Douglas McSI:+adders
of Otterville. Air. and Mrs. Dennis
bole their places on dile platform tr
the strains of the wedding march. Airs.
Don Gray, Sratford, react a very fit
ling address. They were the recipients
of manly useful and beautiful gifts. Mr.
end Mrs. Dennis each replied in a very
capable manner, Tho gifts were then
opened and displayed. A very bount1ui
lunch was served alter which the bride
and groom of 23 years least the wed•
ding cake. Mrs. David 'Hackwell was
in charge of the guest book. Guests were
present from Sarnia, North Bay: .St..
Pauls, London, St. Thomas, Staffs, Lis.
towel,- Stratford, ' Seaforth, Brussels,
Oltorville, Mitchell and Toronto.
Federation Report
(By J. Carl Hemingway)
Ihn'on County Beef Producers held
their Amunaul Zone meeting Tuesday.
April 3rd at Centralia.
Bob McGregor, of Iei:ppen, was re
elected as Zone director and In accept•
ing the position expressed the hope
that diu'ing the next few months the
voluwttaJy deductions through 'the Bill
of lading would ire in operation,
Unica a better supply of money Is
available it is useless 'to try to do .any
thing in the way of research in feed
conversion to make beef more compe-
titive with other meats or to do any
promotion work to improve the indus-
try.
.Again a resolution was passed re•
questing Government grade and weight
on all cattle sold on dressed weight
basis, This has been requested several
times in years past but apparently it
will take concentrated pressure an the
part of the farmers to get government
action. It would require no extra grad.
big as practically all carcasses are
now government graded wholesale- lc
retail. 1t would only require that the
reeds he made available to the pn•o•
ducer for settlement. This was done
with hogs over a period of time before
hog producers decided to sell all hogs
this way therefore it Ls not too difiictdd
to administer,
It was also urged that government
provide Federal pnspectlons immed•
lately to all plants who expressed svil
tintless to come to Federal require
mentct.
After all it is the Inspection a( meat
that Is'Jntportant. Size of plant ant'
even the plant equipment need in no
way harm the meat. \'et if these
smaller plants fail to get this inspec
tio►t during the •time necessary to make
alterations they will be bankrupt. ,Till
would certethily curtail competition
for livestock drastically,
On Thursday evening the County Di.
rotors .of "Fame" along ,with a good
number of shareholders met in the Ag-
riculture Board Rooms, Clinton.
The report shows that Iluron County
is now within .15 or 20 shares of the
halfway mark in .their share sales.
A suggestion was accepted wheretty
each shareholder will bo itnged ,to i b.
lain one new shareholder. ,This should
it't be a very difficult job. 1f e•verycnc
pats forth T tittle !effort, a big job can
be accomplished. The majority of far
niers are realizing that production is
not enough.
"'Ilho product ,roust be sold."
MORRIS SCHOOL BOARD MEETING
Regular meeting of Morris School
Beard was held in the Township Hall
April 5.
Minutes c,f March meeting were ed.
opted an a motion by C. Raines and G.
Nicholson.
The various items contained in the at:.
cident Insurance Policy were studied on
moron of B. Elliott and C. Haines, This
policy will remath unchanged,
Give us a chance to show you our large selection of
MEN'S WORK BOOTS
YOU NADA, .IT --. WE HAVE IT
A SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY
ON LY
YOUTH'S BLACK OXFORDS
with moulded sole sizes 11 to 3
Reg. $1,95 • (save $1.00.... .. Special $3,95
R. W. rs'ladill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"'I'he Store With 'I'hc Good Manners"
Silt:
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Parish of Bly (.h, Auburn and Belgrave
tuij 1flt'ik 'ritir
April 111 - 2110
Trinity Church, Blyth, at 8 p,m.
MONDAY -- "The cleansing of We Temple."
TUESDAY -- "The final challenge,"
WEDNESDAY — "The final meal at llethany,"
'CiitritSl►AY Ifbud
ilutton of Ute lioly Communion
anti ti'e Betrayal,"
GOOD I'I+IDf1]' -- "Thr truclfl!lon,"
:111rk'„ Auburn 12:00
Trinity Church:, lirlgra'e 2.30
Trinity Church, 13Jytlt 8:00 p.m.
MUSICAL PROGRA.M
FEATURING THE OPERET'T'A
"SNOW WHITE',
presented by Senior Grades of Blyth Public School
Tuesday, April •
in the BLYTIiH MEMORIAL HALL
at 8:00 pall,
DANiCING an(1 RHYTHM BAND NUMBERS
by the Junior Grades
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURAtl(E COMPANY
jag
FIRE INSURANCE
COMPANY
Office . - Main Street
SEAFORT11
Insures,
Town Dwellings
All Classes of Farm Property
Sumner Cottages
Churches, Schools, Halls
Extended coverage (wind, smoke,
water damage, falling objects, etc.)
is also available
AGENTS; James Keys, ltd: 1, Seafur'th; V. J. Lane, ItR 5, SIM -
forth; Win. Leiper, Jr., Londesbero; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Har-
old Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eaton, Sea -
forth.
Si - Z00 STORE, BLYTH
NEW SPRING CUR'T'AINS - Nylon Cottage Sets,
Plastic Cafe Curtains, Lined Plastic Drapes
SALE VALUES - a few bargains left until 'otic' sale
ends Saturday.
LADIES' FANCY PANTS 4ldc
BOBBY SOCKS - Combed Cotton ... per pr. :i3c
2 pr. 85c
INSOLES, Felt per pr, 31c
ENGLISH TEA POTS, (i cup size 94
GARDEN GLOVES FOR MEN per pr. 37c
FOR LADIES tier pr, :33c
DISH CLOTHS each 19c
BOYS' SPORT SOCKS per pr, 53c
'rwo representatives of the Belgrav+
School hair were present and :discus
sed matters relating to lite school fob
with the trii tee:,.
The Heeled decided to have (lie ex
..crier of two echouls re -painted, alit
to heave EQT119 caves troughing repair!
and replacements made. The contracts
fee tis work to be let at a later dale
Payment of the fallowing bills wa,
•.t.i1horized on motion by B. Elliott and
1t. 'Purvey:
G. Roniienbcrg, Insurance premium,
$446.91; Grey T.S.A. No. L, $'3037.33;
Lexande'r's Hardware, 12.05; -Coal
. ac rl 370.28; l fodgins Lumber 20.5-I;
)ldfiehl',` Hardware, 12,20; Ross Mann,
1.30; Hood Supplies, 3.05; Machan
Il'ardwa, t', 877; 11. '1'Itulnas; 4.00.
'the -next board meeting will be at
1.S. A on May 3, •
Janie.: l'llstuti, 1t, S. Shaw,
Chairman. Secretary.
Order Your Counter Cheque
Book;; .(printed or blank)
At The Standard Office
iVednegday, Aptil it, 1962
T'r, P,INTN STANDARD
for complete
protection ...
WAWANESA
LIFE INSURANCE
Here'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 Wawauesa service!
ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGENCY
"INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES"
Blyth, Ontario
FOR SALE
900 bushel Garry Oats. R. Fangrad.
phone 481110, 13lyth. 05,2p
TEACHER IS'ANTED
A .Protestant leacher for S.S. No, 0.
Hullett, Iluron County, Rural School.
18 pupils, oil furnace. Duties to com-
mence September 1902, Apply stating
qualifications, last Inspector, and sal•
ary expected
John H. 11ci;wiit.,, Secy. -Teas.
11.11, 1, Blyth, Ontario. 04.3,
(HOUSE FOR SALE
5 room ranch slyle house, built 2
years, drive-in garage, automatic oil
furnace and all modern conveniences,
in Blylh. Apply Mrs. E. J. Churchill,
Moss1ey, Ontario, phone 1larrietsville
269-3377. 51-11.
FOR SALE
Farm 119 acres, good Diable, well
drained land. Large barn 40 x 80, 2
storey house, garage. Sprint well with
pressure system. Close to Public School
and Bus to Collegiate. Lot 9 and 10.
Con 10, Morris Twp., 2 miles east of
Myth. Apply Mrs, Mervin Richmond.
04,3p.
BINGO
Legion Bingo every' Thursday nite
8:45 sharp, in • Legion Itall; Lucknow.
12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share.
the•wealth and a special for $50,00 must
go.- (no limit to numbers), 40tI
ACiHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE
Highest prices for dead, old or dis•
abled horses and cattle. Phone. Atwood
356•'1f3 collect. Licence No. 15&62.
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
• Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Hogs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 1G2, Blyth
SANITATION SERVICES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired,
Blocked drains opened with modern
equipment, Promni Service. Irvin
Coxon, Milverlun, Telephone 254.
1111',
I)R. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS— 1 p.m, to 4:30 pan.
EVENINGS:
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(BY APPOINTMENT)
' ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
(IODERICo, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 -•• Box 478.
• G. 'ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
I'ATUECK. S'C. - W'INGII.AM,. ONT,
(For Appointment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination,
Optical Services.
J. E. Lonl;staff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 •— Clinton
HOURS:
8eatnrth Daily Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 n.m. to 12:30 p:m,
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 6:30.
Mono, IIU 2-7010
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT CIIONR 33,
(IODERIClI !d•11
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITOR$
J. 11, Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q C. Q,C.
Vltnyham and Blyth.
IN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Loratnd In Elliott Insurance Agency
none I31;tth, 104 - • Winghatn, 4�
FOR SALE
Quantity of Propane Gas Brooder's,
glass water fountains, tube feeders.
Apply Russell Cook, phone '254, Blyth,
52-1
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
CARPENTER WORK
Of all (cinch. Specializing in kitchen
cabinets, call 7531, Auburn. 05-3.
AUTOMOTIVE
11cclia:deal and body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance, Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No. 8 Highway, Plume JA 4•'1231
Goderieb, Ontario,
20.1.1
DO 'YOU HAVE BUILDING Olt
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
. GE1;RALD EXEL
'Carpentry- ani Mnsonry .
Phone 23812 Brussels, Ontarlo
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WiLFRED MeINTEE ..
Real Estate Broker
WALKERTON, ONTARIO
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES ANI) SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaners and polishers, Filler Queen
Sala, Varna. Tel. collect. Ilensall 096112.
50.13p.lt.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES '
HIGHEST CASA 1'R10EJ
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN oIt
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value
Old horses -4c per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels,
BRUCE MARLATT
011
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth
24 !lour Service
Plant. Licence No. 54•It,P,•61
Coleclor Licence No. 08-G61
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, Cess•pOOls, ole., pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, 11.11,. 2,
Clutton Continuity
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AFTERNOON
CLINTON SALE IBARN
at 2 pan,
IN I1LY'L'II, 1'IIONe
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Carey,
13ob McNair,
Manager. Auctioneer.
05.11.
,►rrw►r+�✓rN�
TILE WEST 1VAWANOSi! MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
head Office, Dungannon
Established 18711
HOARD OF DIRECTORS
]:'resident, Brown Smyth, I1.It. 2,
Auburn; Vice. -President, person Irwin,
13elgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, 11.11,
1, Dungannon; George C. Foagau,
Gotlericlt; floss McPhee, RR, 3, An.
burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F.
111acLennan, 11.11, 3, Cioderich; Frank
Thompson, 11.11, 1, llolyrood; 11'u►.
Wiggins, 11.11. 3, Auburn,
For information ort your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Dank'
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
40,
HOUSE FOR SALE
7 room house, sun porch, two piece
bath downstairs and 3 piece upstairs,
garage and some land. Apply, Mr's, J.
C'loantou, phone 13, Blyth, 05.2
.m•..r-..-
PAGE 6
Brownies Drive -In
Theatre Ltd., Clinton
OPENING
THURSDAY, APRIL 19
• FIRST SHOW AT DUSK •
TWO COMPLETE SHOWS EACII NIGHT
Children Under 12 til Cars Free
THURSDAY & FRIDAY — April 19.20 — Double Bill
"FULLER BRUSH MAN"
Red Skelton
"FULLER BRUSH GIRL"
Lucille Ball
(Cartoon) '
VW1 -I- - .�• ��/'N WYNw�Ntilrl.N.n1..�W
SATURDAP ONLY --• Apr11.21 -••• Double 13111 •
"FIVE GUNS •T0 TOMBSTONE"
James BMW]] •• John Wilde •
•"OPERATION-B01'TL1FNECW'
Rom Foster •• •I%Iilku Mita
(Cartoon:
WATCH. '11115 .!'ACE EVERY WEER I'011 'l0!' ENT 1;TA!NMLNT
CAItD OF TlIANKS
1 with to thank all•,who remembered
Inc with cards, flowers and gifts whilst
i was a patient in• Sick Children's.IIos-
pital, London,
Maralyn F airscrvict..
06.1p.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS •
IN THE ESTATE OF JOHN DOERR
ALL PERSONS having claims
against the estate of the above mein
Honed, late of the Village of Blyth, in
the County of Huron, Retired Farmer,
who died on the 17111 day of March,
1902, are required to file proof of same
with the undersigned on or before the
21st dray of April, A.1), 1962.
Atter that date the Executors will
proceed to distribute the estate having
regard only 10 the claims .of which
they .:hall Then have had notice,
DATED at Wingham, this, 31s1 day of
March, A.U. 1902•
CRAWVI' ORD & J!ETIIERING'roN_
Wingham, Ontario, .
SOLICITORS FOlt THE EXECUTORS
Oti•S
ESTATE AUCTION SALE •
Clearing Auction Sale. of . Property,
Farin Machinery and Household Effects
at .Lot 31, Con. 13, McKillop Township;
8 miles North of Seaforlh, and 114 West
or 2 miles South of Walton and WI Wast.
MONDAY, APRIL 16 . •
at 1.30'p.m. , ••' -
MAOHINERY--Dump rake; Packer;
14 ft.' hay rack; steel tired Wagon;
gravel box; hay loader; wooden land.
roller; 9 section of harrows; 3 stret•
errors; 2 set horse drawn disks, one
intlu•ow, one • outthrow; • walking 'plow;
fanning mill; seeder; scales; 1 set
house scales;' I1CW roll of wire fence;
new .roll now fence; grail box; tri-
cycle; stone 'boat; grind stone; vice;
pig crate; ladders; 2 lawn mowers;
sugar kettle; w11ee1 . barrow; cutting
box; barrels; aluntintun scoop shovel;•
approx. 2.5 bundles cedar shingles;
prank; horse collars; .harness;' •fenc,
ing tools; garden tools; ropes; graiin
bags; cistern pu1111! Champion Snow
Blewes.
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS -1 new, 2.
piece chesterfield suite;.1 good 3 -piece
chesterfield suite; Oak dining room
suite; buffet and book case; mantle
radio; Bell organ; phonograph am
records; studio . couch; 3 bedroom
suites; commode chair; rocking chairs;
wardrobe; several small tables; nal,
chairs; tri -light, lamp; fernery; kitchen
cabinet; cupboards; foot stools; dish•
es; fruit jars; crocks; antique clock;
coal oil lamps; picture frames; quilts,
feather ticks; feather pillow's; cushions;
old sofa; trunks; mats; large Sunshine
tabletop electric range; coal and wood
range; stove pipes; • small kitchen
range; hlectrolux vacuum. cleaner;
r
Beatty electric ironer; Singer sewing
machine; 2 good panel door's; window
screens; creast cans; quantity of wooer;
otherarticles loo numerous to mention:
Properly will be -Offered for. Sale at
4 p.m.; Parcel 1, Lot 30, con, 12, 100
anew: ht McKillop 'Township, .all ui
grass; frame drive shell, good well and
windmill; Parcel 2, part of lot 31,
corn. 111, 50 acres, approxinrately 12 ac-
ro:a ploughed; part of lot :11, eon. 13
471/ acres all In grass, 2 story red
brick house, cement drive shed.
i'roperly 10"1, down balance ill '10
days, sold subject. to reserve bid.
Immettiale possession,
Possession of house to be arranged.
CHATTELS CASA.
Proprietor, Estate of late Russell
Barrows.
Executors; Cora S:'Barr'.ows, T. Bar.
ry
Mansholt,
Auctioneer, Harold Jackson,
Clerk, George .Powell. 05.2
1'IIOPERTIES FOlt SALE
WILFRED 111cIN'I'EE
Real Estate Braker
Walkerton, Ontario
200 acres in East Wawanosh Twp..
two set of buildings, 2 silo:,, hydro.
100 acres In Hallett Twp., good build-
ings and silo, hydro
101) acres in 1lurris Two., gond, build.
lugs, hydro, 1 mile ft'olit ;Myth,
100 acres in Mullett Twp, good brick
house and barn, hydro,
350 acres In Kinloss Pwp.', 50 acres
hardwood bush, 6 miles from 'I'esn'at-
er, tura set. of buildings, hydro, -
Large cement block hotise•..alul gar-
age in 13elgrave 011 No, 4.1liginway,
97 t1Cl'Cs Ileac' Aubul'i1, 10 acres of
bush, good buildings, hydro, •
100 acres near Brussels, good build•
ings, hydro, 1 mile to school,
VICTOR KENN1 l)\,
Blyth, Ontario_ . r.:..
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
OF DAIRY CATTLE
For George Nesbitt, Lot 10, Con, 0,
Morris Township, Pi utiles East of
Myths,
WEDNESDAY, APRIL. 18
1:3(1 p.m.
CATTLE— 3 Ifolstein cows, 7 years
old, fresh, with carves at foot; Itolstein
CGW, 7 years old, clue April 10; 6 Ilol•
:tC1tt COWS, 3 years old, flesh, with
calves at foct; 1 Holstein cow, 3 years
•old, clue Jury 4; 2 holstein cows, 4
years old, clue May 15; 2 Ifo!ste!n
COWS, 4 years 01(1, fresh, with calves
at fret; 2 purebred Holstein cc',vs,
years. ol'l, fresh, ralves al feel; 2 Ilul•
stein cows, 3 years old, due Amit 30;
1 Jcr;cy cows, 6 years old, fresh:
Iloi'stcn heifers, 2 ;wars old, fresh
calve;; at feel; 110.lelti heifer, 2 )'ears:
old,* due time of a!e; 4 holstein hei-
fers, 18 months old; 4 Holstein heifers
1.. year old; 8 holstein ;:Leers 400.500
5 Hereford steers 400-500 lbs.
'DAIRY EQUIPMENT— 1 Universal
n`.ilacr w;:h" 1 :idle tuna, 2 surge un-
its; It:tcrJ.•!ti_:371 cream.' scpanatot
Je:c•r.,tric); pa°:ls; ttraincrs;•
No reserve, as Pr'epiictor is Giving
up Panning.
'I',f fHM5 CASA
Geot•ge..NC:zhi;t; •Proprietor.
EdWard E' iota, Auctioneer.
_Join Cc,`ey, Clerk. •
« - . FOR 'SAW 1
I bicycle, large size, in good condi.
ten. Apply Mrs. Lundy McKay, phone
112,' Blyth. • 08.1
- IN MEMORIAM
BELL— loping memory of a dear
ntotl)er a,td grn:.dn'c'hcr, E?:zc')cth
Bell, who passed away 5. years ago,
April 11, 1957.
God called her hoard', !.t was his will,
1110 .11 our hearts, we love her still;
iter memory a:, dear to -dray,
A. in the hour she passed away.
-•Always remembered by her son, Ro•
be'rt and family. 06.1p
CROP REPORT
411any.-Fairly. warm, dry days a' lowed
farmers to do sonic spring plowing and
the odd field of grain was sown during
the latter and of the week cd April 2.
MJET YOUR NEIGIIBOIZS-AT TTJE
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone 'JA4•7811
NOW PLAYD G
NOW—Rhonda Fleming and Stewart Granger 1n "GUN GLOBI."' color
and on the sante bili—Jane Wyatt In "Two Dille Bears,"
Mon., 'lues., Wed., April 16, 17, 18—Adult, Entertainment
MAit1LYNIIIONROE • CLARK GABLE THELMA BITTER
Three active cowboys and a young divorcee add a new slant it,
gra:r io romance.
"'PILE MISFITS"
Thur., Fri., Sat., April 19, 20, 21
ONE SHOWING EACH NIGHT Starting at 8 o'clock
"THE ALAMO"
In Ciuemascope and Color
An unforgettable story of the immortal defence of a mission fortress
John Wayne • LInda Crystal and RIchard Widmark
' GREAT ENTERTAINIMENT •• UNSPONSORED s -
WANTED
Geed used baby stroller. Apply,
ptlone 71 Blyth. t'i.1
FOR SALE
19:01 Chevrolet, motor o rerhaulee,
geed belly, ilio.;, Apply {.hone 501(11
t;,'y;h. • • 06.1p.
FOR SALE
Nixed grain, baled hay and baled
straw. Apply Charles Shobbrook.
phone 431112, Blyth. 06-1p.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE ESTATE OF MERVIN
RUSSEL RICHMOND
ALL PERSONS having claims
against the estate of thc•above men•
Boned, late of the Township of Morris.
in the County of Iluron, Farmer, whc
died 011 the 18th day of March, 1962
are required to file iwoof of same with
the undersigned on or before the 211n
day el' April, 1962,
After that date the Adntinhtratrix
will proceed to distribute the estate
hawing regard only to the claims of
which she shall then have had nc'ice
DA'Z'ED at. Wingltam, this 5th clay oI
April, A.D. 1(102.
('13AWFoHi; & HETIiEIt1NG'ToN
1Vinghant, Ont rig.
Solicitors for the Administretrix.
06-.0
FOR SALE
Electric Wringer Washer, 2 tubs and
l:e_teli; 11CClary. electric range;' 4, burn•
er, high oven; kitchen table with fold.
iet.e.leaves; 1 chair;. telephone ,table
and elle':; occasional chair; living-rocir
table; bedstead, mattress. nd . springs.
Phone 87, Blyth. - 06-1p.
CARD OF THANKS.
We :wvo ticl like to take • thl oppot tu,a•
ily to thank cur neighbeiirs of the 9th
ccnccssion of Mca'ris' townsthip end t1e
boundary for the lovely gifts presented
to ars and extend a cordial invitation to
el to visit us in Londesbero. •
CO-ip.-•llarve and Jean Wells
WANTED
2 male ratifies would like a good
home, Apply, 'Ali'ss. Milton Litt'e, phone
45135, ,Blyth. O6•ip
FOR. SALE
Kao Bed, Columbia Rock pullets, 13
hooks old• Arrly J. ilowani Cantr'ec:l
phone 41.7, Blyth, 1.11. 1, $elgr•ave.
• 06-,
TOR SALE
400 bales of hay. 'Apply Jack Flair••
service, phone 153, Blyth. 06•.
{WANTED TO RENT
. 25 to 100 acres of land, suitable for
clop. Also will do custom ploughing,
sowing and working up of land, Apply
Lyle illentgomery, phone HU 2-7231,
Ciir;len.' • 06.3p.
EUCHRE PARTY
sponsored by Blyth O.E.S.
in the
STAR LODGE ROOMS
FRIDAY, APRIL 11
at 8:30 p.m.
EVERYONE' WELCOME
C. G. I. T.
BAKE SALE
SATURDAY, APRiL 1.1
in Berthot's Butcher Shop
from 2 to 4''p,m.
FOR SALE
Ccdvr. foack 'peals; 4 to8" tops, also
1)tftber of :anchor posts. Apply Jun
Cartwright. 06.11,.
FOR SALE
200' bales of good mixed alfalfa and
timothy hay. Torrance Dundas, Wal -
lea, phone Brusscis 3905'1'5. 06-1
FOR. SALE
Pink Bengaline Coat. and Bonnet, size
1. Apply Mts. 'lt."-1V." AMU, photic
212, Blyth. • • • • • • • 06.1p.
WANTED
Navy Blazer in excellent condition,
size 6x' or 7. Apply to phone 5684,
Blyth. 06-1
FOR SALE
4 man's suit, charcoal, like new,
worn 4 times, size 40, sell reasonable.
Apply to phone 5084, Blyth, 00.1
Save time ...Save money
Buy your fertilizer in polythene bags and
store it outside...where you'll use it:
You'll save both time and money when you buy fertilizer
in polythene bags, Here's why:
Polythene bags are waterproof --you can truck fertilizer in
any weather without tarpaulins. You can store fertilizer
.outdoors, in fields where ,you'll use it.
Polythene hags are tough—they don't absorb moisture and
weaken. They are easy to handle and stack.'
Polythene bags arc closed with a heat-seal—there's no lint
or string to plug your drill,,
Polythene bags are transparent—you can see the fertilizer
you are buying without opening the bag.•
MASTEX
FILMS UNIT
PLAZT1CS • DIVt81Ott
•CA,N1',plAN INOVSTRIES_4JMttE01
Northern Cabins
And Sled -Dogs
Since Fred's project that year
was a documentary film of life
In an Eskimo village from freeze-
up in fall until the break-up in
spring, and since I worked with
hint, I soon began to share the
respect and warn) regard for the
Eskimos held by my new hus-
band, I felt the same reluctance
he did when the time came to
leave Unalakleet and Alaska for
lecture tours with the movie,
And the sante eagerness to re-
turn to Alaska, after each season
ended, for more filming, more
writing, more painting, and to
search out a location for a home,
We found what we were look-
ing for in the Matanuska Valley.
Here, to us, was the most ap-
pealing scenery in all Alaska.
We selected the view we lilted
•the best, centered it in a picture
window and built a log cabin
around the window. The fact
that it happened to be in the
heart of three thousand acres of
forest was surplus good fortune,
. as was the fact that it overlooked
a perfect blue lake.
There was still another inci-
dent that upped our fortunes
from merely good to that of ex-
traordinary.
While looking for our home -
site, we had bogged down on an
unfrequented narrow lane. We
had hiked to the nearest farm
for help and had come away not
only with a former on a tractor
but with a !handsome white sled -
dog puppy.
Neither Fred nor I had known
we wanted a dog until we sow
this one leaping straight into the
air and howling to go with us.
Suddenly '.we had wondered what
the fun was, '.i\'ing in a tent
(which we ‘ ere doing )chile
building our home) without a
dog? . ,
We called the puppy Seegoo
because that was the Eskimo
word for ice and December first
— a time of ice — w:_s his birth-
day,
The cabin was finished a- win-
ter set in and '.ve took possession,
And Seegoo' He took possession
of the high ridge upon ;which
the cabin sat, for lt: •,wa- now
a gangling ado'.esc nt with her-
olc ideas of protecting his master
and mistress from the porcupines
and announcing in loud clear
barks when moose and bear were
about, so his master and mistress
could protect him if they wanted
to.
Seegoo w,n ewer fe!thful,
ROAD DEMONS — Vic Jowers
and Alaine Houbert try to
hitch a ride on the Watson-
ville Santa Cruz freeway in
California. It was a promo-
tional stunt to focus attention
on his outdoor theatre, which
was denied a permit to run.
When his master and mistress
found It necessary to leave he
always watched the spot they
had last been seen, until they
returned.
Seegoo was gentle.
From humans he wanted only
affection, nor did he pleasure in
fighting his own kind, Were he
attacked, he would fight, but
mostly happy trying to please —
both humans and dogs.
Seegoo was adaptable.
When the lecture tours came
around, he )would walk across
lobbies and into elevators with
as much aplomb as if he were
on the snow carpeted floor of a
spruce forest. He appeared on
television and on the lecture
platform and instead of becom-
ing spoiled, he accepted the ad-
ulation of his audience with
kindly dignity, In one month he
would total as many miles of
travel by auto as other sled -
dogs would average in a lifetime
on trail.—Frons "The Howl of
the Malamute: The Story of an
Aleskan Winter," by Sara Ma-
chetanz.
Looks Like Time
Lady Stayed Home
Anything India could do for
Jacqueline Kennedy, Pakistan
was convinced it could do better.
The Pakistanis could scarcely
match India's "Holi" festivities,
when Prince Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru and Mrs. Kennedy ob-
served the ritual of daubing
each other's foreheads with red
paint. But the Pakistanis had
their own Republic Day, and
more than 100,000 of then) turn-
ed out in the streets to cheer the
First Lady when she arrived
last month in Rawalpindi. India
had provided Mrs, Kennedy with
her first ride on a rouged and
golden -tusked elephant named
Bibia. ("What fun!" said shits.
Kennedy.) But President Ayub
Khan `new that Mrs. Kennedy's
true love is horses, and he took
her to one of the most specta-
cular horse shows in the world.
Ayub escorted her to the stadi-
um in Lahore in a state coach
drawn by six gleaming bays
)with red tassels on their manes.
The show itself included a camel
that did rock 'n' roll and a troop
of dancing horses that Mrs, Ken-
nedy pronounced "beautiful and
fascinating." As a finale, Ayub
gave her a ten -year-old bay
gelding named Sardar (chief)—
thereby topping India's gift of
tiger cubs, both of which have
since died of enteritis. After
riding Sardar, Mrs. Kennedy
said: "No one is going to be al-
lowed to ride hint but me."
Amid such pomp and circus
dance, the heavy pressures of the
tour inevitably caused some
strains, Stephen Barber of The
London Telegraph said the trip
"has fizzled miserably," and Wel-
les Haagen of NBC, who was for-
bidden to cover Mrs. Kennedy's
elephant ride from the top of an-
other specially rented elephant,
called it "far from a smash hit,"
Their criticism reflected a con-
cern, felt ,more by .visitors than
hosts; that ..Mrs, Kennedy had
seen only the •pageantry of the
Indian subcontinent, not its po-
verty.
Mrs. Kennedy herself, obvious-
ly tired at times, canceled a
sight-seeing tour of Lahore and a
lunch among the ruins in Taxila.
One day, she overslept while
thousands of Pakistani school
children patiently awaited her
for three hours. On one occa-
sion when Mrs. Kennedy got
away front her security men for
a motorboat ride in Udaipur, she
spotted some children and said:
"Let's get out and speak to them
before they think up some reason
why we can't." But U.S. officials
feared the children might jostle
Mrs. Kennedy and knock her into
the water, so the First Lady just
waved at then as the motorboat
sped on,
GLASS BALLET — Sketch of this octagon -shaped building
shows the futuie home of En-11:Ind'N Ram':ert Ballet. It will
be a beacon of light at nig'tt in London. Will seat 1,100.
WiNS FINALS — Janis Martin, 23, is shown with Metropoli-
tan Opera general ,manager Rudolph Bing, after winning the
Met's 1962 audition finals. This mezzo-soprano receives a
scholarship and a contract to appear with the company during
the coming season.
HRONICLLS
1NGERFAIZM
Go+¢ndoline D.Clack¢
My address — still the same.
The date — of that I'n1 not sure,
except that it's near the end of
March. The day — Sundey, And
the tine — six -thirty 'A.M.
In the hospital the activities of
the day are just beginning. In
some rooms patients are talking
back and forth to each other; in
other nurses are plunging thter-
mometers into the mouths of
sleeping patients. Outside the
sun is shining; birds are flitting
to and fro — apparently "God's
in his Heaven — all's right with
the world". If only it were so.
Unfortunately we know it isn't. I
haven't read a newspaper in over
three weeks — can't concentrate
— but I have my radio and man-
age to listen to the news two or
three times a day — that is, with
interruptions. Being in hospital
isn't like it used to be years ago.
Patients now are encouraged to
be up and around as much as
possible. So we wander up and
down the hall at will and wisit
in each other's rooms. It breaks
the monotony but it also makes
it impossible for a person to con-
centrate on reading, writing or
even thinking. There are also
other interruptions. Lunch and
supper trays — very welcome, of
course — but so often just as the
lunch tray arrives, so does the
doctor — I often wonder when
the doctors eat — afternoon tea
nearly always coincides with vis-
itors. Breakfast is my • favourite
meal of the day, at home or in
hospital..I just long for my toast
and coffee.
My, but there's a lot to see and
learn in a hospital. The patients
that cotne and go, their charac-
teristics, appealing or otherwise.
They are all interesting, When I
go clown for X-ray i am some-
times left for awhile in the corri-
dor. But I don't stay there. I
trundle any chair around and
take a peek at the emergency
ward; the laundry; the labora-
tory and the admitting office. I
want to know as much as I can,
inside and out, And why not?
After all, about four doctors and
six nurses want to know ME in-
side and out! Surely what is
sauce for the goose is also sauce
for the gander. And the things
doctors say, The other day I was
on the operating table, more or
less under the influence of a
sedative, but still very much
alive and alert, Suddenly I start-
ed to chuckle — that was as
much as I could manage, I
couldn't "shake" with laughter
because I was strapped down by
my hands and feet, But I did
manage to chuckle, and this was
why . , suddenly any surgeon
said: "Now, Mrs, Clarke, shut
your mouth!" I -Ie meant it liter-
ally but maybe the was glad of an
excuse to say it!
Well, 1 have just got through
talking to Partner. Ile says if I
don't soon get hone he'll be a pa-
tient in hospital himself! Appa-
rently he has been quite busy —
washing and waxing floors,
cleaning windows and tidying up
the front porch — also baby-sit-
ting, I asked if Taffy and Ditto
seem to miss me and he said
Taffy goes running Into my bed-
room first thing every morning
to see if I am there. Ditto has
started her springtime habits —
ISSUE 15 — 1962
wants -to sleep all day and stay
out all night. That we don't al-
low but occasionally Partner goes
to bed and then get.; up in the
middle of the night to let her in.
I am sure that pletees him im-
mensely.
The other day he went grocery
shopping at Cloverdale Mall and
almost got himself lost. Shopping
is one thing Partner isn't used to
but I guess he wanted to do it
just to shote that, he could, When
I get hone we'll be fighting
about who's to do what.
111,y room -mate and I listened
to the hockey last night — to
that last big tussle between the
Leafs and Detroit. 'Thank good-
ness I shall be home to watch the
play-offs on T.V. After three
weeks without it I know now
how lost Partner and I would be
without it — even though we
sometimes disagree in our choice
of pragran's. I-lowever, for a 1if-
tle while at least, when Partner
has his "westerns" 1 can go to any
desk and get a few "thank -you"
cards and letters written.
Flattery is the most profitable
form of lying.
misiliI.hMA
World Language
Every now and then somebody
suggests that everyone shmtci
learn Esperanto or some other,
synlil,lic Intern'ntiewit
so all could understand' one an-
other. Well, they are too late.
An International language al-
ready exists, understood in some -
degree by 000,000,000 people on
all continents,
It is the English language.
Two years ago this corres•
pondent remarked, in a Mullin,
nnn,
that in inter'vienwidng nine na-
tional leaders in nine nations of
Asia and Africa, seven of the in-
terviews were conducted in E')g•
Hsi), Yes, Messrs, Nasser, So-
karno, Nehru, Kishi, Nkrunlah,
Abdul Rahman, U Nu, Ben-
Guriou, alt converse ably in Eng-
lish.
Now scholarly Lincoln Bar-
nett, )wri.ting in Life magazine,
reminds us how far and fast
English has spread in our own
lifetime. The Soviets and Chi-
nese even use English in their
best broadcasts to the Far East
and Africa, The Bandung con-
ference of neutrals was conduct-
ed in English. I knew of an Is-
raeli conference of Afro - Asian
experts on co-operatives which
had to be held in English, That
was the one language everybody
— or almost everybody — un-
derstood.
English is the language used
by international pilots and air-
port control towers in all parts
of the world. It also is used by
airline stewardesses more often
than any other because most
tourists know some English —
and because some Americans do
not know any other language.
It has surpassed French as the
No. 1 language of international
diplomacy.
In Poland people would as
soon study English as German or
Russian, because it offers the best
"window on the West." In Indo-
nesia when the inhabitants said
goodbye to the Dutch — and their
language — they welcomed the
English language into their
schools, When Prime Minister
Jawaharlal Nehru met the Dalai
Lanza fleeing from Tibet, they
conversed in English.
Why this recent wartime and
postwar spread of English? For
one thing, it had a kind of head
start. The British had carried
English with them through all
their vast colonial empire — to
India, Burma, Nigeria, Egypt,
and Malaya, Then, too, the Eng-
lish were great traders and used
their own language in commer-
cial transactions. And of course,
once a language gets going and
is widely accepted, others want
to learn it to be in on the con-
versation, so to speak, writes
William H. Stringer in the Chris-
tian Science Monitor.
English is an especially vital
(maybe becau_e Ameri-
cans speak it). Anyway its words
have penetrated all sort of for-
eign tongues, from beisbol in
Russia, to le jazz in French. In
Itltosioa''' this ,1.0t1:'.'11)001 -'ie 11 n "
tett) a itaatell- iiMitiitll .114;11. 1' ' (t. I'1'
lg' for hrrfestriau)a;. ioildi lit lttt
Ott tn.tervall;. 11, re1111, in 110ssi un
CTO)1)1, "What, 1 'It;k:`dl inn nu
tourist, guide, "d'oes rind sub'.''
"It's the English, wards
she replied. "And' iv means utbpl'
Inseam central. core oh 1,0(11
words and this fills, all the lutitit
needs of conversation. Ar retia
so foreign soldiers studying it
the United Shales have disruv•
cued, Leave out most ,I1 the
verbs and a person still cm, (nth
hi
Some persons have heti rle-
aeived into thinking that one fuer
for in the spread of English b
1,
however, wrong on two groun,ts.
The first is that opportunity and
availability ore far more impor-
tant factors in the spread nl tan•
guage,
'l'he second point is that I';ng•
lish speech, far from being sup-
ple, is one of the most compli-
cated tongues of the advanrt',1
modern world, True, It Is n11t of
the easiest of languages to be-
speaking,
But it is one of the hardest to
speak well. Beside it, French
and German are models of eaQ,
older, and logicality.
The United States helps along
this swing to E n g l i s h. The
United States Information serv-
ice. has 381) cultural centers in
some 80 countries, and in mast
of them are English - language
l.ibrartes and courses in English
to he had for the asking.
Does all of this data give an
American a mellow feeling'' 11'e
got in on the ground flint --
knew the language from, ilti0no',
Other languages, however, hova'
their great roles — lrl'ench, a.
mark of culture anywhere; Rus-
sian, 111 which litany scientific.
treatises are published, and so ora
and on.
But it is also significant that
English has been the language•
vehicle for expressing some of
mankind's most spiritual) cn')-
cepts, beginning v-ith that grand'
masterpiece, the King James.
Version of the Bible.
Q. Is It correct, to have. one's.
monogram engraved on the en-
velope of social stationery"
A. No; the nmonogram should:
be engraved only on the note-
paper itself.
"They're love birds, you know,
eo I'm giving them soma
privacy,"
���- �ll)'cC � `��.,,.y:Ili.",',� rl�•�,
10'111N �Itl,�,M'I�IIq MMAIw "�.
. rtrtillicinal iWNN oro w�w'r r -r
ud�i Ilii I �Ilhp IpU ��!,lG Iuuulnl ti i Its
��nliruli�ir„t,I'I!t111,l„,„
I
� I
11`
nIu0011runlli%4
RHEINSTEIN CASTLE, near Bingen Rhine; Narrows afford excellent view of German'"'s
romantic Rhine region. Phot° courte.y of LUr•r:11NSA c:. ;'.IAN AIRLINES
Sterling's Car
Always Breaks Down
"If you want to interview me,"
British race driver Stirling; Moss
told ft reporter the (lay before
the twelve-hour Sebring IFIa.)
Grand Prix of Fnduranee last
month, "see me a few hum's after
the race starts. After my car
breaks up, It will break up, you
know."
Moss was wrong, His red No,
28 Ferrari, a three-year-old,
front -engine model, held up well
enough (or Moss and his team -
.mate, Innes Ireland of Scotland,
to lead the race after seven
hours, Then their. hopes ended
abruptly, No, 26 was disqualified
for refueling without completing
the required twenty laps be-
tween pit stops, "That wasn't
very fair," said Moss, "We had
tome in for brakes and tires.
When the pit steward opened the
tanks, the mechanics put in gas."
With Moss out, the Ferrari
driven by Jo Bonnier of Sweden
and Lucien Bianchi of Belgium
won the race, Once again, Moss,
physically, technically, and psy-
chologically the best driver
alive, had been thwarted,
The previous day, in a three-
hour race for Grand Touring
cars under 1,000 cc,, .vioss had
another unhappy c';pericnce.
Early in the race, on a wet
course, where skill meant more
than power, Moss's superior han-
dling kept his Austin -Healey
Sprite ahead of the faster Fiat-
Abarths. But once the course
dried, no amount of skill could
compensate for a lack of horse-
power, Moss finished third; New
Zealand's Bruce McLaren, in an
Abarth, won. "Oh, well," said
Moss. "It was fun while it last-
ed."
Moss, 32, has grown accustom-
ed to disappointment. His failure
to get the best cars hurt him most
in Grand Prix competition, the
matches 'among purebred racing
machines which determine the
world driving championships.
Moss refuses to sign with a fac-
tory team; the factories, in turn,
refuse to sell him their latest and
best cars, So he often competes
In one- or two-year-old models,
Despite this, he has been runner-
up to the world driving champ-
ionships four times. "It doesn't
frustrate me any more," he said.
"After all, suppose. I, won the
championship. What would be
left? I'd have to retire,"
How They Try To
Hoodwink Police
Although hit-and-run drivers
frequently try to hoodwink po-
llee with a variety of ruses, it's
a losing proposition. Police are
on to all the tricks, and all the
errant motorist can expect 15 to
further incriminate himself.
Here are some of the ploys and
ruses, and why they don't work.
Driver phoning in and report-
ing his car has been stolen. But
it police are looking for a hit-
and-run car resembling h i
"stolen" car, they will ask for
every minute detail of the
"theft". The driver who begins
contradicting himself or "can't
remember" crucial dethils will
be warned that giving a false
report to the police is an offense
(public mischief) carrying a $50
fine. Few drivers persist in lying
beyond this point.
Deliberately getting into a sec-
ond minor accident to cover up
the damage from the first: (Po-
lice on the lookout for a certain
hit-and-run c a r keep cross-
checking the descriptions of cars
involved in other accidents.)
Claiming that somebody had
borrowed the car and must have
been driving at the time, (This
alibi becomes shaky when police
demand a list of all the people
who might have borrowed the
car.)
"Forgetting" who was at the
wheel during the accident. (At
best, this is only a stalling tac-
tic.)
Admitting knowing who was
driving, but refusing to say,
(Police parry this one by quot-
ing a little-known amendment to.
the Criminal Code that makes a
passenger in a hit-and-run ear
just as culpable as the driver.)
Freely admitting full knowl-
edge of the accident but insisting
that all the proper exchanges of
names and addresses took place
— with a person whose name
has now been forgotten of mis-
placed, (This is a tough story to
MERRY MENAGERIE
• feti l p47 AN a ill
tf a m.,
'I'll thank you to stop refer-
ring to our place as your
RonFl"
SNOW SCULPTRESS—Secre-
tary Margaret Taylor forgoes
her tea break to fashion a
miniature snowman on win-
dow sill outside her office in
very wintry London, England.
shake when all the other circum-
stances make it feasible — but
they seldom do.)
Reporting in as a victim of a
hit-and-run, (This one is the ul-
timate in nerve and gall, It must
sound plausible, must be con-
firmed by evidence police find
around the fictitious scene, must
seem to negate evidence gath-
ered at the real scene, and must
account in detail for the damage
to be found on the phony com-
plainant's car. But rarely docs.)
Invisible Poor in
the United States
It was 25 years ago that Frank-
lin Roosevelt looked out and saw
one-third of his nation ''i11 -
housed, ill -clad, and ill -nourish-
ed." Today, in an America cele-
brated for history 's highest
standard of living, few would
argue that the conditions depict-
ed in Ron: evelt's second inau-
gural have not vastly improved.
And yet in an eye-opening new
book ("The Other America,"
Macmillan), a young social critic
named Michael Harrington has
turned up an "economic under-
world" in the U.S. with no fewer
than 40 million to . 50 million
inhabitants. Harrington's claim
to be heard Is based on two years
with a Roman Catholic -social-
service group on New York's
Bowery and past studies of
American poverty for such mag-
azines as Commentary and the
Partisan Review.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Sta-
tistics figures that about $6,100 is'
an "adequate" annual budget for
an urban family of four. Har-
rington takes half of this figure
as his standard of poverty, and
arrives at the staggering numbers
above, Over-all, however, he says
that. "the new poverty ... oannot
be defined in simple statistical
terms." Harrington tries to do it
through revealing detail;
"Poverty Is often off the beaten
track. The ordinary tourist . , .
rides interstate turnpikes. He
does not go into the valleys of
Pennsylvania where the towns
look like movie sets of Wales in
the '30s."
"Death plays a peculiar role in
the life of (Harlem) . . , Under-
takers are among the most re-
spected member's of the Negro
middle class , . , Dying is a mo-
ment of style and status, at least
in the impoverished world of the
racial ghetto."
"Clothes make the poor invis-
ible , , , America has the best -
dressed poverty the world has
ever known . • , It is much easier
in the United States to be decent-
ly dressed than it is to be decent-
ly housed, fed, or doctored, Even
people with terribly depressed
incomes can look prosperous."
"Once depression hits an area;
its very life seems to leave .
And then the vicious circle be-
gins to work. Because a place is
poor and dispirited, manufactur-
ers don't want to locate there;
because of this, the area becomes
even poorer."
"For most middle-class Ameri-
cans, aid to 'farmers' is a gigan-
tic giveaway, a technique for
robbing the urban millions and
giving to the countryside. Yet
the poor farmers do not, for the
most part, receive a cent as a
result of these laws,"
According' to Harrington, the
political and social facts of U.S.
life dictate that only the Federal
government is capable of acting
to abolish poverty ("in saying
this, I do not rejoice , . .") But
he is less than hopeful that it
will be done. For while there is
information enough for action,
Harrington says that political
Will is lacking.
Whether or not readers agree
with 1-Iarrington's answer, his
presentation of the problem is
impressive. It is a shame that
"The Other America" will prob-
ably not sell very well. The com-
fortable majority isn't interested
enough, and the people who are
can't afford $4 for a 191 -page
book. From NEWSWEEK
Rhinos breed only once In ev-
ery two or three years and usual-
ly Have a single calf,
Listening To A
Porpoise Chorus
We were 2 miles oft the north
coast of Florida on the blue
waters of the Gulf of Mexico.
The white sands. of the beach
gleamed in the distance. A few
leathery clouds were scattered
here and there across the other-
wise clear sky, I had just shut
off the motor, and our boat — a
gray Navy speedboat known
technically as a "24 -foot plane
personnel boat" — was drifting
In the light swell,
We had stopped because we
had sighted a school of dolphins
or porpoises playing or fishing
about half a mile away, Our mis-
sion was to listen to the under-
water noises made by free or
wild porpoises in their . natural
state and if possible to obtain
tape recordings of their sounds...
There must have been nearly
twenty in the group — a rather
large number for this locality,
When within 50 qr 75 feet of our
craft, they all submerged and
swam directly beneath us. Look-
ing down through the water, we
coud see dark shapes streaking
swiftly past.
During all this time, the only
noise we heard them make in the
air was (h.' "whoosh" of exhaling
breath as their blowholes were
momentarily out of water at the
top of each arc — and even this
was audible only when they were
close to the boat.
But the underwater listening
gear told a very different story.
The intermittent tapping or sput-
tering which had been barely
discernible from the speaker
when the animals first turned in
our direction grew in intensity
and in continuity as they ap-
proached. When emitted by a
single porpoise alone, this noise
—as we had learned before—is
a concatenation of clicks or
clacks such as might be produced
by a rusty hinge if it were open-
ed slowly. It was soon apparent,
however, that a number of the
animals were making the sounds
together, and more seemed to
join the chorus as they came
nearer. Superimposed upon this
increasing clatter was an occa-
sional birdlike whistle resembl-
ing the "cheep" of a canary.
As they came still closer, the
sputtering noises continued to
grow louder and still " louder.
Taken together, they suggested
the roar of an approaching rail-
road train, except perhaps that
they were more irregular. By the
time the group was about ready
to make its final dive, the cre-
scendo from the speaker in our
boat had become a clattering din
which almost drowned out the
human voice,
Then abruptly, as if by prear-
ranged signal, it stopped comple-
tely and left us in shocking sil-
ence. At that moment, they swam
beneath the boat. A single bark -
like sound was now repeated
once or twice, and the porpoises
with their underwater chorus
were gone.
Never before that time—and
never since—have we been for-
tunate enough to capture such an
auditory event on magentic re-
cording tape.—From "Porpoises
and Sonar," by Winthrop N. Kel-
logg.
How Can I?
fly Roberts Lee
(1, How can I save the paint'
that invariably collects in the In-
dented rine of a paint can, flows
down the outside of the can, :tad
is wasted?
A, Punch a couple of nail holes
in the bottom of this indented
rim, and the paint will run back
into the can again.
Q. Ilow can I remove old water
paint from a concrete wall?
A. Dissolve one pound of tri -
sodium phosphate in one gallon
of hot water, Apply this solution
very liberally, soaking the walls
thoroughly. Then scrub with a
stiff wire brush, removing all
the paint from : the crevices and
cracks.
NIP
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BABY CHICKS •R HATCHING EGGS
";;US'I'OM hatching - all khuls of eggs,
any quantity. Govc !Merritt, nmilhvillc,
phone WA, 6.3456,
GET your egg .pcclallsts, Ames, Sykes
eud .Gomel, (rain Bray, to reach best
egg markets. Dayold to rendyto•1ay.
Best dual purpose varieties, and Leg•
horns, mixed chicks, pullets and cock.
erels. Request I rlccllst. See local agent,
or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North,
Hamilton, Ont.
•
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
VALUABLE dealership available In
various ports of Ontario, honest and
reliable persons who have. $675 to in-
vest In n short hour business of their
own required, No selling. Send all par.
ticulnrs and phone number to (lox 240,
123 • lltth Street, New 'Toronto, Ont.
•
HIGH CLASS
HAIRSTYLING SALON
Hamilton
Owner retiring. Good opportunity for
skilled hairstylist. Equipment at de•
predated value, stock tit cost,
Batten. 5 Third Line 5., Oakville, Ont.
Aim for High Profits
with Canada's latest In the amusement
machine business, Recently advertised
on 'I'.V., Radio and Newspapers, Mr,
Qwik Draw Is a mechanical life • size
gunfighter complete with live action
and electronically controlled. He talks
—Ile shoots—just like real. Ideally 10•
cated by us In Super Markets, Shopping
Centres, Bowling Lanes, Amusement
Parks end 'travel Terminals.
This Is a high profit business which
requires a very minimum of time and
supervision and can be handled as an
additional business.
The low Investment of $1,500 may be
financed on liberal terms. For a per.
sonal Invitation to the first Toronto
showing of Mr. Qwik Draw of Canada
Interested parties contact the National
Marketing Director, Mr. Qwik Draw of
Canada, executive office, 71 Bank St.,
Ottawa, Ont.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GENERAL !TORE
LOCATED In Village South of City of
Barrie, near Lake Simcoe. Solid Krick
building 40 x 60 with modern living
quarters above. Illness forces owner to
sacrifice this thriving business for
$22,000.00 plus stock at cost. Down pay.
ment $5,000.00 plus stock. Yearly turn.
over $51,00000. Phone or write for fur.
ther particulars. This is a wonderful
buy.
SERVICE STATION, GARAGE WITH
GENERAL STORE
RESTAURANT & CABINS
THIS fully equipped business Including
living quarters located north of OR.
ILLIA on No. 11 Highway, Owner
wishes to retire. Full pricce $00,000,00
plus stock at' cost. Down payment
$25,000.00' with 1st mortgage for bal.
ance at 6% with fair principal pay-
ments. Yearly turnover $90,000.00 and
all records to confirm. Phone or write
for further particulars, See this bus!.
nese first before ever considering a
new venture.
On evenings for the above call Wm.
Adams, Severn Bridge, MU, 9.2341
.I. W. "Joe" MacDonald
Real Estate and Mortgage Broker
39 Peter St. South
ORILLIA, ONTARIO
Phone FAlrvlew 5.5679 ANYTIME
CATALOGUES
FREE
CANADA'S
MOST WANTED
NURSERY CATALOGUE
Over 1,000 guaranteed selections. 80
page all -color catalog featuring the
newest and the best in roses shrubs,
trees, flowers, evergreens, fruits, bulbs
from Canada's largest grower•to•vou
nursery Write today:
McCONNELL NURSERY CO.. LTD,
65 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
Coins, 1811 Church St., Toronto 2, Ont.
DOGS FOR SALE
SAMOYEDS, St. Bernards Scotch Col-
lies, German Shepherds, Bernards, Terriers,
etc. All purebred and registered.
Agents for all breeds. Terms to 20
months available. Jerdon Kennels 47
St. Paul Street, Brockville, D1.2.3441.
LAB. RETRIEVER
PUPPIES
CKC Registered
Excellent show and field stock.
Pedigree furnished.
Health guaranteed.
'helped 17 Dec., '61.
The world's best Retriever and coin.
panlon dog.
Also some trained pups, 9 months
old, from champion stock.
' STUD SERVICE •
HAWKRIDGE KENNELS Reg'd
1110 Lakeshore Rd.
Sarnia, Ont. — KI 2.5270
Hope is the desirable and valu-
able quality which spurs the
baseball fan into a new season
with the idea his home tabor may
come out of the cellar and into
the sunlight of the first division
In league standings.
ISSUE 11 — 1982
FARM HELP NA.NTEQ--44At•R'^"r
WAN'I'EI) - oto roan 40 !work Dalry
Poultry f o m. • !burse available Must
luav,r experience. Good. wages Apply:
Air . Steven Dings, lilt No. 1, SI Anns.
Ontario.
FULLY experienced married roan Aor
purebred Holstein Dairy Farm. Helm.
rate house. Write, stating wager aN
experience, to first tetter; also refer.
Price from a previous employer W
Wesley Werry, RII 1, Hnmplon, Ont.
FARMS FOR SALE
150 ACRES excellent state' cultivation•
4 acres 1n maple bush, seffing• creek,
good house, bank barn 50x611, hog pen,
lien pen above, 311x50, water,, hydro
throughout. $17,000 Apply Irene Gil.
Iles. RI( 2, or 51ilford Dowling. Fergus
St., Ph. 49111, Mount Forest
FARM FOIL SALE: 100 acres under cul•
Ovation. (louse and buildings are In
good shape: Apply: ltlr. Clayton Retch.
cld, RR No. 1, South Cayuga, Ontario..
GENTLEMAN farm near Oshawa.
Large brick home, modern kitchen, 2
bathrooms, 30' living room with broad.
loom, 100 acres of rolling medium clay
loarn, trout stream running through
cedar bush. Contact Howe and Peters,
Realtors, 67 King St. E., Oshawa. 725.
4701,
FARM, 145 acres, complete with stock
and equipment, 2 houses, 3 Karns, 2
silos, spring water. Mostly new power
machinery with 2 tractors, '20 milk
cows and 10 heifers, mainly Jersey, 4
sows and 'purebred Landrace boar.
Health reason for selling. Government
approved farm. Leonard Parker, 'filet).
ford
SALE due to Illness, 100 acres good
land, self drained, Modern 7 rooms and
both, half new 4 years, all new aluntln•
um siding, and Storemore storms and
screens. Bank barn 35x75, upper part
new 4 yrs., other buildings School
buses • mall - milk routes past door.
in Warwick Twp., Lamhton Co., 4
mile No. 7 Hwy. immediate possession.
Owner Wn,. Wallace, 43 Wigle St.,
Leamington. Ont Reasonable down
pigment.
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
$1.49 TABLE Bowling Alleys on alum-
inum hoses, Five balls in cups tno pins),
Orbit, 28 Esgore Drive, 'Toronto 12, Ont.
GOATS & LAMBS WANTED
PALETTA BROS
MEAT PACKERS LTD.
- WANTED -
Baby goats and spring lambs.
Highest prices according to quill.
ity. Write 600 MOUNTAIN BROW
BLVD„ IIAMiL'I'ON OR CALL
FU 11.7474.
GRASS SEED
GREEN PASTURE SCARCE?
SORGHUM GRASS MAY
ANSWER YOUR PROBLEM
Nine foot growth 1n sand and gravel
soil. Farmer at Enderby, B.C. pastured
stock calves In Sorghum until snow
fall. Dairy 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 deliv-
ered, Requires about two to three
pounds per acre for row crop. Place
your order now, All No. 1 seed.
e. 5, KINGSTON DIST. CO. LTD.
Box 424, Kamloops, B.C.
LISTENING DEVICES
INVESTIGATORS! Write for free bro.
churo on latest subminiature electron -
lc listening devices. Clifton Electronic
Devices . 11500 NW 7th Avenue. Miami
50, Florida.
MALE HELP WANTED
GYPROC Lathers & Roofer for new
houses & experienced farm hand for
dairy farm. Goreskl Roofing & Lathing,
Port Perry, Ont.
MECHANIC
An excellent opportunity exists for em•
ployment of u mechanic or automotive
machinist in Hamilton, Ontario, Our
shop operates 52 weeks per year, we
have a pension plan, 2 group Insurance
plans and excellent wage scale. Apply
with full details to: P.O. Box 89, Sta.
Hon "C", Hamilton, Ontario,
MEDICAL
NATURE'S HELP — DIXON'S
REMEDY FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS,
OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY
DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashos and weeptng skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itchingscalding and burning ecze•
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.S0 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto
MONEY TO LOAN
MORTGAGE LOANS
Money available for Immediate loan
on First and Second Mortgages, and
Agreements for sole, on vacant and
Improved property, residential, Indus.
trial, city, suburban and country, end
summer cottages, Forty years expert.
encs.'
SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED
112 Simcoe Street North
OSHAWA, Ontario
Phone: 725.3568
• " r MUSIC
•
.:MUSIC* to three poems, all tai,e•record•
ed, copies sent to you, $12. All songs
fionsldered for Pledge Itecords. C.
Brewer, 1166 Chelsea, Memphis, Tenn.
NURSES WANTED
•
REGIS'I'EIREi) Nurse required for the
Arrow Lakes Hospital, Nakusp, B.C.,
fifteen bed, standard wage rates, hall -
days, seml•annurtl increases etc., 40
hour week. Room and board avullnble
at Hospital.
Administrator, Arrow Lakes Hospital
Nakusp, B.C.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Groat Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession, good
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
illustrated Catalogue Free ,
Write or Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PARTY GAMES
PARTY Games! Adult's, Children's!
Both 84 -page hooks postpaid 50c. Ar -
ane Book 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-
ment. 36 for $2.00 a finest quality).
Western Distributors. ilox 24•T1' Ile.
gine, Sask.
OVERWEIGHT?
A sate, eftecttve reducing plan with
"WayLes" 'Tablets Medically approved,
1 month's supply $7 00 Lyon's Drugs,
Dept 32. 471 Danforth ave. 'I oronto.
RUBBER STAMPS
For only 51.001 You ern have your own
3 -line personalized rubber stamp Send
order to Archl,'s Rubber Stamps, llol•
gate, Ohio.
STAMPS
1011 DIFFEREN'l stamps 10c
To Collectors Requesting Approvals
Winston Philpot!
Box 306
Botwuud, Nfld., Canada . -
PROJECT :11ERCUIIY stamp on souve-
nir cover postmarked Cape Canaveral
date and hours of John Glenn's recov•
ery, 15e each; With engraved cachet
35c - 3 for SL .11. 7,1111s, 28 Dunnlni
St., Dundas, Ontario
$1.00 MIXTURE
56,00 cat.
American and Canadian
Commemoratives
A few good foreign. One order only,
please.
SMALL FRY STAMP
Trenton Ontario
SHEEP FOR SALE
KARAKUL
FOR SALE: Karakul llllack Persian:
lambs and ewes. Edward E. Dickey,
R.6, Brampton, Ontario,
SWINE FOR SALE
THE Ontario Landrace Swln Assoc!&-
tion's 10th Consignment Sale will be
held on the 14th April at the Brampton
Livestock Exchange, Snelgrove, All ani-
mals government inspected. Bred gilts,
open gilts and boars will be offered.
Mrs, Dorothy Simmons, Secretary.trear
urer, R R. No. 1, London. Telephone
552.3567.
TRACTORS FOR SALE
INTERNATIONAL TRACTOR
Clearing a completely rebuilt 1940 In-
ternational Farmall Tractor, complete
With side cutting mower attachment —
Sacrffice Price $395.00. Standard En-
gines, Equipment & Supplies Limited,
516 Parkdaie Ave. N.. Hamilton, On-
tario.
TRADE SCHOOLS
ACETYLENE, electric welding and
Argon courses. Canada tVelding Can-
non and Balsam N., Hamilton Shop
LI 4.1284. Res. LI 5.6283
WELDING MACHINES FOR SALE
200 AMP
PORTABLE WELDERS
We are clearing our full stock of Lin.
coin & Hobart Portable 1Velding Mach -
Ines. A11 overhauled., 5400,00 each and
up. Standard Engines, Equipment &
Supplies Limned, 516 Parkdale Avenue
N , Hamilton, Ontario.
WILD ANIMALS
YOUNG OTTERS WANTED
Society tor Promotion of Wildlife and
Forest Conservation inc., R.R. 2. Stev-
ensville, Ontario.
IT'S NEWI The Aqua pen is a new
concept In writing instruments. Sub-
merge the 14K gold point in ordinary
tap water (diluting the highly concen-
trated ink In the cartridge) presto —
you're ready to write with genuine
Ink. Cartridge lasts about two year•
(refills 3 for $1.). Manufacturer's life-
time service guarantee for free re-
pairs. Black, grey, maroon, red, green,
blue, 52.98.
BETTY SMITH ENTERPRISES
Dept, 6, 29 Brightside Avenue
East Northport, New York
Ne JO, JO. ArJ,s0•aL-1S .a—Vi-.Ms Z f - 4‘Z .'M,s6 s�J� amts—L
_ ALL THIS T"
ONE
and Europe too • WAY
10% REDUCTION ON ROUND TRIP
MM�
•
FROM THE MOMENT YOU STEP ABOARD
• FUN, PLEASURE, RELAXATION
• MEMORABLE MENUS
• DANCING, FIRST -RUN MOVIES
• SUPERB CUNARD SERVICE
• 275 LBS, BAGGAGE ALLOWANCE
PAY LATER IF YOU WISH
See Your Travel Agent
Cor. Bay & Wellington Sts.,
Toronto, Ontario
Tel: 362-2911
tU
*IN THRIFT SEASON
EARLY MONTREAL SAILINGS
IVERNIA
APRIL 13, MAY 4, 25 COBH, HAYRE, SOUTHAMPTON
SAXONIA APRIL 20, MAY 11 HAYRE, SOUTHAMPTON
CARINTHIA APRIL 27, MAY 18 GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL
STARTING MAY 4, IVERNIA CALLS AT COBH ON ALL SAILINGS
Alto by the QUEEN IIZABEToHand tailings
UEENN MARY, York
� orld's largest liners
CUNARD
FLY CUNARD EAGLE TO BERMUDA, NASSAU AND EUROPE ^h
: 9r2r ..or "w ! VP
PAG1e A
THE Bum sTM A ED
STOKELY'S HONEY POI) PEAS
2 • 15 oz. tins 35c
NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT
lg. 18 oz, pkg. 29c
KEN L RATION DOG FOOD
3 • 15 oz. tins 39c
KLEENEX TISSUES, Regular or Chubby
2 pkgs. 29c
1 lb. 18c
BURNS PURE LARD
QUICK QUAKER. OATS Ige. box 41c
ALMER VEG. SOUP l - 10 oz. tins 19c
KRAFT CIIEESE WHIZ 16 oz. jar 59e
MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT COFFEE
10 oz. jar 1,49
SIL VERWOOD POWDERED MILK
~ 3 lb. box 88c
Get your Easter Candy Early while it lasts.
Garden and Flower Seeds on display
For Superior Service
Phone 156
See T'airservice
We Deliver
AUIJURN
Judy Arthur presided for the C.G.I.
T. meeting held recently it the Sunday
sche.ol rcoln of Knox Presbyterian
Church. There was a good attendance
and Margaret Sanderson was the pian-
i:t.. The sleeting was opened with -the
call t0 worship followed by the hymn
"Birds are Singing", the Lord's Pray-
er and the Purpose. The scripture les.
son from St. Luke 22: 1-22, was road
alternately with Patsy Reed being the
leader, The meditation on the events
leading up to Easter was giver by
Mrs. W. Bradnock. The minutes were
approved as road by the secretary, Gail
hiller. The offering was received by
Mary Sanderson and ciedieattxl. '1'h%
roll call was .answered by quoting a
eonunantdinent. Plans were made to
make plaques and the designs were
picked. A story of a C.G.LT. girl al
camp was read and after this _very
member was presented with a C.G.LT.
pin, The meeting was closed by sing.
ing "There is a happy Land" and Taps.
Miss Margie Wright, R,N., and friend
Miss nary Stewart, RN., both al
Brantford General Hospital, visited
this week with Mir, and Mrs. Robert
Arthur, Jayne and John Wright, Mr.
and Mrs, George Wright, Kathryn and
Richelle, of Exeter, were also guests
on Sunday,
Stewart's
Red 8 White Food Market
Bly till k , A. , Phone 9 We Deliver
4.4.44 4.4.4-44 +44444 4-4.4 644.44 0•+44++444$•S++444♦* * -$+#
Burns Pure Lard per lb, 21c
Success heavy Duty Liquid Wax 1 qt. 95c
Bravo Spaghetti or Macaroni .. , . , , . , 2 pkgs. 35c
Aylmer Fancy Peas 2 tins 37c
Nestles instant Quick 1 lb. tin 53c
Javex Liquid Bleach, 64 oz. 43c
Ballet, Tissue 6 rolls 69c
Robin Hood Cake Mixes 3 pkgs. 1.00
Burns Picnic Shoulder 1 112 lb. tin 1.29
Aylmer Choice Quality Corn 2 tins 39c
Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c
Fresh Cut Asparagus per lb. 33c
New Garden Fresh Carrots 3 lb. hag 29c
Hot House Cucu. nbers 2 for 29c
No, 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 lb. bag 99c
10 lb. bag 29c
California Oranges, 163's
California New Potatoes
Fresh Rhubarb
2 doz. 89c
5 lb, hag 29c
per lb. 29c
Grade A Chickens, 2 112 •3 lbs. per lb. 39c
Grade C Turkeys, 6 to 8 lbs. per lb. 43c
Peameal Cottage Rolls per lb. 49c
Ready to serve Picnics per lb. 49c
Lean Hamburg per ib. 49c
Burns Weiners 2 lbs. 85c
Fresh Pork Liver per Ib, 29c
Lean Chuck Roast Beef ' per 1h, 69c
Wallace's Turkey Pies 3 in box 59c
'4 -4• -4 -M -4•N4.4.44»$4-444$ 444.., .,. 444-#4-►4-N•M 4 44-I►N I
This Week's Red and White Bonus Offer••.
Heavy Plastic Garbage Containers, 10 gal,
size, Reg. 5.95 for only 2.99 with 5.00 order.
.ware sees • , .r. ,.•-,suit. .,...•.-...r .. .,.,s..
AUBURN NEWS
Mrs. Baer Honoured On Birthday
Mrs. Sam I?acr w3S guest of honour
at: the home of her grandson, Harold
lookovniell, Mrs. li.irkeennell and sans.
Deesld and herald, oi Gode.rhheit, to
observe her bathdny. 1t was also her
great grandson, Leuald'!;, t'itleir;
this Wee'c too. Other guests were his
pare::t, Air. and Mrs. Andrew Kiri
rennet!, and Dianne and Airs. Herbert
Gavle: ,
Air. and Mrs. Thomas Jt:Iuston ant'
Aliss Laura Phillip} attended the 13. A
Convention held at [Kindel) hest week
ei:l. Air. Harry Att.11ur and 11x. rtubert
Arthur .also 'attended the same cc tvcu
t' -•Ci.
Pancake Supper huge Success
The annual pancake sapper held it
the Sunday School rconn of Knox Un
'ted Church last week was a huge suc
cess with many present from Goderich
1Vi.nghain„ 13c'grave, Lunde.L'oru, Clin
to and Rly:h.
1Ir. and Airs. Reny Farrow ,sod 11t
and Mrs. Jack Veune, of A1ilohell,
:Iocl last Saturday wi:lt Ali, and Airs,
atonias Johestcn,
Air. and Airs, Karl 'i'cichert, Karl
Petra, Peter and Terry, visited or
Steelay tvilh her 1prcnl•, Air. Ment
Ars. Walter 1Vei main, at Seder tit,
and Airs. Arthur utl.r. 1alet
a ccnvenlion al Kitchener last. Friday
Word was received dere Ihat. Air
Hiram 1.ind'ay i:; .! patient. in a Guelph
hospital. His friends wish him a sl:ecdy
recover'.
'Mr. and All's. 'Net'Itlae S.teiheaun
[dicky, Crinnie and Terry, Goderich, vis
-!:d en Sunday with 'Air, and Ali,
Themes Johnston.
Airs, i.;eorge Hamilton visited last
week with her sister-in-law, Mrs. 3,
J. Robertson, I1,R, 5, Goderich, Mrs,
Walter Stafford, Dungannon, is staying
phis week with Mrs, Robertson.
Mrs. M'argarct ,Arthur is visiting
with her daughter, Mrs. Gordon Wall.
Mr. Wall and family, at Langside.
Six members of Court Dufferin 46,
of the Canadian Order of F arresters
were initiated at 13clgrave last week
along with ten other members of the
Belgeave Court, The initiation team
were from the Constance Court with
James Neilans as the leader. The
Members from here are, Charles Ma•
chat), Robert Machan, Gordon Gross.
Ronald Gross, Gordon Powell and
Thomas 11aggit.l.. These new members
bring the enrollment of the Auburn
Court up to nearly 50, Thittecn mein
bers from here.attended the Belgravt
meet lag.
Robert Daer, Gordon Llaer and Geri
on Powell attended the Foirester's
District Council last Thursday at Ben.
hiller.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert .1. Craig and
family, of Ilderten, spent the week -end
with his parents, Air. 'and Airs. William
J, Craig,
Mr. J. J. Robertson is a patient it
Victoria Hospital, Landon, where he k
recovering from surgery,
Mrs. Thomas 1laggitt, Mrs,. Cliffuro
Brown, Miss Shirley and Nancy Brown
and Mr. and Mrs. Beverley 1 rcnch
and Jimmy, of Detroit, visited on Sun-
day with the ladies' mother, Mrs.
Come Beadle, of 1luron:view. .
Airs, Ed. Davies, Mrs. Gordon R.
Taylor and Mrs. Arthur Clark attend.
ed the Grand Organist Night, O:E.S..
of MacDonald Chapter, Tillsonburg,• of
which Airs. Davies is Past Worthy
Matron, last Friday evening,
• 'Air. and Mrs, Artirray Taylor :ono
son, and Miss May Ferguson, of Wing
hale, were recent visitors with Mr's.
Aland Prentis• s
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Soule, of Madi-
son Heights, visited on Sunday with
her nieces, Ali_ss Rose Marie Ilaggitt,
Airs. Gurdon Powell, Mr. Powell, Wapiti
Bobby and 'ferry.
• Mrs, Clara !flaunty has returned to
her pc/silica as ftnsteses at the Caledon
Trout Club after a week's visit with
her brother, Mr. Oscar Ament. and
Airs, Anlent.
'Mr. and MIs. James Rice and fain.
ily, from near Toronto, have recently
moved to their farm home which they
purchased from Mr, Mel Sleep, This
farm is known as the David Ilatnilton
faro,
I\Lr. Donald Baines anti Mr. Kenneth
Scott attended the assessors convention
held in' Wingham last week,
Mrs. Charles .5traughan spent last
week -end in Godericit as guest of Miss
Ethel Washington and Mr. and Mrs.
Amos Andrew,
Several Ladies from here attended .the
cooking school alt Blyth when Airs. 5..
of .CKCO-TV conducted the echnol t.ha!
\"as spcnlsot'ed by the IDlyth W. I. Mrs
Thomas Lawlor was one of the winners
of the prices.
A n orga:hord pct luck supper ail'
be served Friday evening April 13 al
7 p.m, In the Community Aletrtoria'
Hail when a family tight will be heir'
by the Auburn Women's Inslltute.. The
program will be kin charge of'Miss
Itobca-t J. Philips and Mrs. Gorden R
'Ilaylor, 'I'he games of euchre will
be convened by Mrs. Ed. Davies crud
Mrs. Thomas Ilaggitt; crokinole, Mrs
Wes Bradnock; bingo, for the. children
Mrs. Thomas Lawlor and Mrs, Don,
stet Ilahres,
Celebrated Silver Wedding
Anniversaries
Over thirty neighbours from the
west end of the village gathered recent-
ly to celebrate two :silver wedding an.
itiver'iarics at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed, Davies. Mrs. Daviesaeass the
mistress of ceremonies for the short
program which was begun with :a sing•
song led by Mrs. Gordon It. Taylor
Airs. -Reboot J. Phillips 'accompcmirrl
on lite harp. A reading •w,'i given by
Mrs. harry Arthur. Mr. 1Vuli'ain Strati
glum gave to snort address to Mr. and
Mrs. Mims fi.aggitt, c;rnnn'a1.Ulati.tll:
them en their 25th nodding ;ntnivcr•
:i.sry and presented them with :r silver
pose of silver. Mrs, 1Vos Bmadnock
spoke a few words to Mr. awl Mrs.
Tomas Joinstan who bort observed
their 21'th wedding anrlversary a few
months age but owing to ill health nl
Mrs. Johnston, no celebration mill be
held. They were also presented with
a ,sliver purse of silver. Both couple;
thanked their neighbours for the gift:-.
Gannoa of bingo were played with Mrs,
Lloyd Tfunnphreyes in charge and af-
ter several contcwts wore given by Mrs
141003, A dainty !WWII in keeping with
Y
the silver anniversaries MIS served
I.y
MrS, Gordon R. Taylor, Mrs. Ken-
neth Scott, Atha Lantra Phillips, Alla.
Davies and AL s. W. • 13radeoak.
Auburn' Ladies Euloyed Aluminum('nUtSe
Sixteen ladies of this community en•
joyed a two-day course of nu.:king al•
nannun trays sponsored by the Auburn
',1•elnell's ln:l.itute. Mrs. Robert J.
Phillips and Airs. Norman Alel),weh
were the committee in charge of the
u•rangelpents and the instructors were
Mrs. Wilmer Hardy and Mrs. T. Lamb
torn the 'Tiger !hullo') .Branch. The
'miles mating the lovely trays were
ills, Bell Marsh, Airs, Robert Arthur.
lfrs, '1'hon)ns IIago_lt, Mrs. Ed. liay.
'es, Mrs. William Straugllau, Mrs.
.1harles Scott, Mrs, Gordon Dobie, Mrs.
'somas Lawlor, Mrs. Gordon Chanrley
drs, William 1'. Robison, Ass, Oliver
Uulerson, Mrs. Kenneth Scott., Mrs.
lert Craig, Mi's, Norman McDowell
,Irs. Robert J. Phillips and Airs. Wes
..rad» ock.
Air. Lloyd liailhhy and AL'. George
'th,'!hby, of London, visited relatives
n the village last week,
Mr. and Mrs. Fordyce Ularlc and
Miss Carolyn Clark were Toronto vis•
101'S over the the^Ik•cttd.
Airs, William Stewart rciirned iso
ter hone after being with her sister.
Airs. Marlin, at Port Albert, for a few
day.
AIr. and Airs. Rebut J, Phillips at
tended the birthday party of Mester
Johnny Fisher at Beruniller last week.
East Wawanosh Council
The East Wawanosh 'Township Coun-
cil niet April 3rt1 with all members
present excepting Reeve Hanna.
On motion .by Snell 'and Pattison,
Cotmoillor Buchanan was appointed
chairman in the absence of fIhe reeve
and the minutes of the meeting held
Larch 6th were read and adopted on
emotion by Robinson and Snell.
The Reeve arrived at two o'clock and
teak the chair,
Moved by Buchanan and Pattison
that direct relief of $92.00 he given
for the month of April, Carried.
The clerk was instructed to write
the secretary of the Goderich Collcgi•
ate Institute Arca hoard for inure in-
formation about the school roof costing
$23,000,00 Carried.
Moved by I'altison and Buchanan
ilial she road and general aecotulls
as presented he reseed and paid.
.
Moved by Robinsonn and SnellCarriedthat
the Clerk sign the letter to the I3e11
Telephone Cu. cif Canada. Carried.
Bylaw No. 5 was read the first and
second times.
Moved by Snell -Robinson, that by-law
No, 5 be read the third time and pas.
sed
Carrico.
Road Cheques;
Stuart McBurney, sal., 185,00, bills
paid, 2,30, $187,30; Alan 'AleBurney,
wages, 167.26, 2 hrs, with truck 4.00,
171.26; Jim Robinson, wages, 10,00;
Phillip Dawson, welding, 12,25; 'Reg.
Schultz, sanding, 12.00; Gordon E.
Smith, sanding, 4.00; Alex Coulter, 7
hours snow remove], 35.00; George E.
Radford, .snow removal 270.00; R. 1I.
Thompson, 'truck license, 2,00; harry
Williams, 90 gals. fuel oil, 34.74; W. A.
Tiffin, 1 gal. break-in oil, 1.10; '1110
W:inghain Advance -Times, adv. gravel
tenders, 3.51; The iluruln Expositor.
adv. gravel lenders, 5.05; Donn. Roach
Mach. Co., grader repairs, 80.23; liar.
old R. Congraute snow removal, 37.70,
culvert, 11.25, •18.95; Ree. -Gen, of C' n•
Lada, Jdlceino tax, 12.50.
General Cheques:
11. C. MacLean, Insurance Agency.
Treas. Bond, 12,00; Petty clash, 31.16;
Brookhaven Nursing Hume, train. pa-
tient, 84.25; Tho Blyth Standard, 'adv,
and supplies, 28.02; Dircet Relief, 92.00.
Moved by Buchanan -Pattison, that
council adjourn to ,meet May 1st, at
one o'clock at. the Belgrave Commun-
ity Centra Carried.
C. W. Ilaauya, R„11, 'Thompson,
Reeve. Clerk.
Morris Township Council
The Morris Township Council met on
April 2, with all the members present.
The minutes of the last meeting and
the special meeting were read and ud•
opted on notion of Walter Roamed
and ,James Muir. '
Moved by Wm. Elston, seconded by
Ross Smith, that we renew the Muni-
ctipal Liability, Spray Livability, Non
Owned Auto, Liability on Graders and
Equipment. and Burglary Insurance
policies with the Frank Cowan Com-
pany. y. Carried.
Moved by Elston, seconded by Short -
reed, that we purchase two safety 'l,an-
t.evn.s from Geurge Mutter, Carred.
'Moved by Smith, seconded by Mair.
that we accept the Auditor's Report
for 1961 which shows a deficit of $405,35
on the ;years work as 'agains't a deficit
of $5557,74 for 1960, Carried.
Moved by Mair, seconded by .Elston,
that the road accounts as presented by
the Road Superintendent be paid, Oar•
vied,
119ovcxl by Shottreed, seconded by
Smith, that the general accounts as
presented be paid. Carried,
The meeting adjourned on motion
of Shortretxl, and Mali', to meet again
onAllay 7, 1962, at 1 pan. or al the call
of the Rec'v<e.
The following accounts were paid;
General Accounts:
Win. McArte', fox bounty, $4.00;
Bernard Hall, Insurance, 4110,76; Ad-
vance -Trines, adv. 2.70; Relief. account,
100.42; Town of Seaforth, Debentures
on Ifilh School, 319.66; Brookhaven
Nursing Monne, 160.60; Callander Nttrs•
i ng Home, 84.25.
Roach Accounts:
Wm. McArter, wages and mileage
218.41; wages; Jos. Smith, 60.95, Mel.
Craig, 136.65, Clarence White, 56.10;
Ideal Supply, repairs, 21.61; Whngltan
'fire Service, repair to tires, 26.42;
Glenn Snell, snow plowing, 91.00; Alex
Inkley, . fuel ail end tax, 303.80; Pol-
lards Chain Saw, repairs, 61.06; Old.
field 1Iwea t:'ho'vel handle& and .pad•
11,
lock, 7.16; Morris Twp., 1lryrant Drain,
41.65; Dominion Road Machinery, mala
axe.l 'and seals, 401.42; J. C. McNeil,
repairs, 12.70O Gro. Radford, repairs
and blowing Snow, 120.50; Daily Cum.
mercial News, adv. 16.80; 13ernara
Hall, Insurance, 666,60; Geo, Alutter,
2 safety lanterns, 0,11,
Stewart Procter, George Marlin,
Reeve, Clerk,
VITAMINS give Villi, Vigour and Vitality'-•- ,
Help build resistance to colds and flu.
Paramettes Tablets, 8.00 value Spec. 6.00
Paramette Syrup, 7.50 value Spec. 5.50
:.'.50
Wampole's Extract 1,59 and 2.89
One A Day Multiple 1.:19, 2.75 and 4.49
Scotts Elnillsion 1.00 and 2.00
Vi Cal Fer Capsules 1.95 and 4.95
Vita Pops 2.50 and 5.95
Alphiunettes 100,1.85 and 3.50
Cod Liver Oil Capsules .98e
Halibut Liver Oil Capsules 1,15 and 2.29
11'laltevol
R. U. PHILF, Phm. B
!)RUGS, SUNI)i(.IES, WALLPAPER - !WOKE 70, BLT'I'O
For The IIIan Who Likes 'I'o
STEP OUT IN STYLE
MEN'S 2 PANT SUITS
in the latest checks ONLY $38,00
Made -To -Measure Suits By
IIOUSE OF STONE
Cottle in and see our samples in the Newest Fabrics
R. W. MADILL'S
WEEKEND SPECIAL
19" ROGERS MAJESTIC PORTABLE
with Automatic Picture dimension
no trade-ins $229.95
DUST MOPS, while they last 98c
. 1 i' I ..Ill ; 0--•1.•
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
. (3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair,
Blyth, Ont,
Call 71
YOUR BEST BUY IS HERE!
1956 PONTIAC Sedan, 6
cyl., automatic
1958 CHEV. Sedan
1956 CHEV. Coach
1956 DODGE Coach V8
1956 CIIRYSLER Sed.,
V8 automatic
1955 BUICK Sedan, auto.
1955 CHEV. Coach
1953 STUDEBAKER,
Sed., V8
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP f3 SAVE
Culverhouse Choice Peas, 20 oz. 2 tins 39c
Garden Patcli Whole Kernel Corn, 14 oz, 3 tins.45c
Van Camp's or Clark's Pork and Beans, 20 oz.
2 tins
35c
Tip Top Tomato Juke, 48 oz. , . , . 2 tins 55c
Mother Palters Coffee ,balloon deal, 6 oz. jar 89c
BIG MEAT SPECIALS •••
ase
Smoked Cotlaire Rolls, 112's, cry o vac, per 111.59c
Pean'eal Cottage Rolls, 112's, cry o vac, per lb. 49c
Sliced Side, Bacon per Ib. 49c
Country Style Sausage, per lb. 39c . , , 3 lbs. 1.00
Potatoes, cook up white 10 lbs. 25c