HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-05-30, Page 1E BLYTH STAND.
'VOLUME 75 - NO. 13
401
RDS
Authorized as second class mall, BLYTII, ONTARIO, WED N ESD \ Y, MAY 30, 1962 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa.
and for payment of postage in cash.
OBITUARIES
ARCHIE A, SOMERS
Funeral service was held in the Tas•
ken Memorial Chapel, Blyth, on Mon-
day, May 28, 1962, for Archie A. Sime
ers, who passed away in \Ve ti ninetet
Veter'an's Hospital, Londe:), on Fri-
day, May 25, 1962, in his 72nd year.
The Blyth Branch of the (loyal Cana.
(Ilan Legion, of which air. Swners war
a member, had charge of the fune'a
service, under tiie direction of their
Padre, Rev. R. F. Aleally. The Last
Post and' Reveille was setndcd by t
trumpeter from the 11.C.A.F., Clinton,
Interment was made in Blyth Union
Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Aiessi's. Seal Fair.
service, Kclland AIc\'illie, Stewart
Johnston, George 11aggitt, 13ruce Snlill'
and 11'm. Murrill
hiowcrbearers were, Messrs, hid.
Hell, Walter Mason, Stanley 'Lyon ant;
Tom Thompson.
Standard hearers were, Messrs. 11nt'
old Badley, Wm, ilichl; alternates.
Borden Cook, Arthur McClure,
Al'. Somers was a native of Blyth
residing here all his life but for his
services overseas during World \Var I.
Ile enlisted its 1916, training in the
baud of the 161st Huron Battalion and
went overseas with the regiment in the
svinter of 1910. He was transferred lc
the C.A.\f.C. and set vcd in France and
was discharged on July 5, 1919,
Formers Was a member of the
Blyth Presbyterian Church and at one
time was a member of the choir. Ile
also took an active interest in sports
Up to the time of his death.
Surviving are three brothers and two
:sisters: Malcolm, of Winnipeg, Mani•
soba; David N'., of Alidlaud; Unbent it
of Blyth; Mrs, A. A. Ewing, of Scar
boro; and Mrs. Sadie Coming, Blyth.
LiBEIRAL LEADEN WILL visa
]N BLYTII NEXT WEDNESDAY
Liberal Leader Lester 13. Pearson
twill be making an official visit to
Blyth next Wednesday, June 6. He
will arrive at the local Public School
•at 10 a.m., at which time he will meet
the§dreg( children and any' local per.sons who wish to be present.
AIr. Pearson will start his trip from
\Valkerton at 9;00 a.m. and will he
merle at 10:00 (flock. From Blyth he
will' journey to Clinton at 10:45 for a
coffee and donut reception at the
town hall park. ile will arrive in
Goderich at 12 for a noon luncheon
at harbor Park and will lour two
Goderich industries, the Goderich Man.
ufactnring Co. Ltd., and the Dominion
Road Machinery Co, Ltd. Mr. 1'earsoa
Will then leave for Zurich, via St.
Josephs, for a reception at 2:10, then
on to 1Iensall, Exeter and concluding
itis trip al London.
Engagenielt Announced
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas 13. Allen, Lon•
desboro, wish to announce the engage-
ment of their elder daughter, Gloria
Anne, to Mr. Wayne Keith Jackson.
Iticlgetown, son of Dr, Kenneth Jack-
son, Blyth, and the late Airs. Mei
Jackson. The marriage is to take
place June 23, 1962 at 2;00 o'clock in
the Londesboro United Church,
AMONG THE CITURCIIES
Sunday, June 2, 1962
ST. ANDRE\\"S PI1ESII1"1'EIIIAN
CHURCH
Rev. D. J. Lane, 13.A., D.1)., Minister.
1.00 p.m.—Church Service and Sun.
day School.
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Itcv. Robert F. Molly, ifector,
Sunday after Ascension
Trinity Church, Blyth.
9,30 a.m.—Sunday School.
9,30 a.m.-11o1y Communion and
Sermon.
St, Mark's, Auburn.
12,15 o'clock—Holy Communion and
Sermon.
Trinity Church, 13eigrave.
10.45 a.m,—Holy Communion and
Sermon.
12.00 o'clock—Sunday School.
THE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA •
Blyth Ontario,
Rev, R. Evan McLagan - Miuister
Mrs. Donald Kai
Director of Music.
Senior Citizens' turd Shnt•Ins' Sunday
9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church School.
11.00 a.m.—Public Worship
"An Even Score."
Supervised Nursery at Airs. M.
]Holland's- for children under 3
CHUiRCH OF GOD
Met'ot(nelt street, Dlytit,
John Donner, Pastor
Phone 185
10.00 a.m.--Sunday School.
11.00 a.m.—Worship Service.
0.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service,
8.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship,
MRS. EI)YTHE STURGEON
Mrs. Edythe Sturgeon passed away
on Friday, May 25, 1962 at Iter late
re :tenet', Dinsley Street, Blyth, in her
72nd year.
Bern in Blyth in January 1891, Ahs,
Sturgeon was the former Edythe Gert-
rude Gidley, daughter of the late S.
11. Gidley and the late Rebecca Taman.
`he attended school in Blyth and later
moved to 'Ibrottto, where she Wil; a
resident for a number of years. She
also raided ill Agincourt and Thorn.
(kite for brief periods, returning to
Blyth nine years ago.
In Scptcn.ber, 1944 she was married
to Jo:;el'Jt Sturgeon, Midland. Ile pre•
deceased her in 1959. '(here were no
children,
While in 'Toronto Mrs, Sturgeon was
an active incmlier of 1,cona Lodge No,
83, 1.0.0.1,, where she was a past
Noble Grand. She was also n mem.
her of high 1'ark United Church, Tor•
onto.
arriving ary two sisters, Mrs. Albert
11cVillie !Maude), of llespeler, and
Pearl, at home, and one brother, lite;•
ro
sell. Tonto. 'There are aim) two
nephews, William 1lcVittie, llespeler
and Ken Somers, Midland, and one
:;iece, Airs. Oscar Stager, hnlithville.
;'he was also predeceased by sisters
llrs. D. 11'. Somers (Effie), and Nora:
!a infancy, and one brother, Harvey
C. Gid -ley.
J1ev. R. Evan Mc1-a:,pan conducted
funeral services Alcnday, May 23 al
the 'l'askcr ATenorial Chapel, and war.
asilcd by Rcv. R. t'. Aleally. Mrs.
Harvey Brown was pianist. Interment
w'a_, in Blyth Union Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Messrs. Altai. cart,
er, lien Walsh, Sant Burgess, Wallet
L'uttetl, ,1. 11. Watson, Earl Noble.
P'lowcrbcarers were Messrs. J, Stew
art, Gordon Caldwell, Hubert Alowry.
Stanley Chellcw.
Rcl:laves and friends from 'Toronto
Dearborn, ,\Iic;tigan, llespeler, Smith.
villc, Midland, London, 'Tottenham.
Goderich and surrounding area attend•
ed the services.
'fours '\Yiil Feature 3rd
I uronvie\v Anniversary
lIuron County Ladies Auxilliary to
Ihu'onview held their A1ay meeting in
the craft rcont of the home 'Tuesday
afternoon, May 22nd.
The treasurer's report was most
gratifying having been recently, aug•
melted by $125.00, which was won by
three of the members with superintend-
ent, Harvey Johnston, having taken
peal as contestants in the '1'V program
over C'1"I'L London 'Take Your
Choice." 'Those taking part were, Mrs.
Fred Thompson, Mrs. W, C. Bernelt,
Clinton, Airs, Lorne Se'intgcuur, Blyth,
and- tMr. Ilar't'c'y Johnston.
Airs. Gordon Cumtinghatu reported
Lloyd holland had presented an en-
joyable concert for the residents ul
liuronview, and several musical even.
blip are promised by other artists.
The Kipper Women's Institute will
sponsor the June birthday party at tic
]tome. Letters of appreciation were
read by the secretary, from i1Ir. N.
Drew, provinical director of Montes for
the aged, also from Huron County
Council by their secr'etar'y, Air. John (1
Berry. '['hese letters commended the
Auxilliary on the fine work they are
doing for the residents of liuronview.
Plans were finalized for the third an-
niversary tea sponsored by the Auxil•
liary to be held at 1Iuronview June 6th
from 2.30 until 4.30, Conducted tours
of the donne are being arranged during
the cftct'Itoon.
An invitation from 11r. and Mrs, (tote
(ion Cunningham to hold the June Aux-
illiary meeting tat their summer cot-
tage at Hayfield Wednesday afternoon,
June 201h, was accepted.
Ed. Bell (hakes Outstanding
Additions to (lis Dairy herd
M1'. Edward Bell, a 1I(lJ tcin breeder,
of 11.11. 1, Blyth, this \week grade some
important additions to his herd with
the purchase of 2 dam -daughter
combinations at the Shore holstein dis-
persal. The 4 head were purchased fur
$4,050. Most important ht the group
which Mr, 13eIl purchased was the t
year old cow "Shore Aggie Countess'
at $2,050. This cow has classified Very
Good for type, has an outstanding ped-
igree and has produced an All -Cana•
than and an Honour List producing;
daughter. Alt'. 1341 also bought her
yearling daughter by Bosate Citation
11.
'('Ire others purchased were a prune
isiug 3 year .old cow and her Senior
Heifer calf by Snlithcroft Snowball
Rocket.
At the same sale Karl Decker, Zur-
ich, purchased 5 head, and 'Phomas
Ilern, Woodham, purchased 2 heifer
calves,
PERSOIAL INTEREST
Mrs, Mary A. 'Taylor returned hcnle
on Saturday from \\Ingham 1lcspila0
where she had been a patient for the
past six weeks.
Al'. and Airs, Kenneth Taylor left
May 20111 for tVestern Canada where
they are visiting with their son and
daughter -in -Taw, It, and Airs. Mac
Taylor, of Dawson Creek, 13.0.
Air. and Airs, Jack Creighton and
Alt's. Jean Craig left for Swift Current
t:askr'.chewan, on Sunday to visit with
Mr. Harold Creighton and also attend
his wedding on June title.
Air. and ;lb's. 1t. D. Philp visited en
Sunday with the tatters' mother, lb's
MacCurkindalc, of Owen Sound.
Miss Marjory Stewart., of 1lamillon,
spent. the week -end with her brother
Air. Jack Stewart, Mrs. Stewart and
family. She aIso altended the funera:
on Monday of the late Mrs. Edythe
Sturgeon.
Airs. 1:. \Vigillntan and Miss Susan
Wight 01011 1010n(Ic(1 the ve(lding recent.
!y of Prtutic MacDonald, Jr,, and Sandra
Cowley, of Goderich, in the Knox Pres-
h'tcritnt Church.
Past. Grand Master Bro. Carl Smith.
of the Orange Order, from Kitchener
and Past County Master Charles Stew
art were in Auburn and Goderich Mow
day afternoon and evening in the inter-
est of Orange 1n:.ut'ance.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Morrison, of
'('rail, B.C., returned home on Monday
after visiting with Air. Douglas Alon'i-
sen and Mrs, Diana Cowan, of Blyth
Ale, and Mrs. Chester Morrison and
Ales. Ada Morrison, of Palmerston
Air and Airs. Lynn Morrison, and Aliss
Joyce Morrison, of \\Ingham, and Air.
and Mrs. Gordon Aiurrisun of 'Toronto.
Relatives and friends calling on Sun-
day, and attending the funeral on Mon.
day of the late Mts. Edythe Sturgeon
were: Miss Al;u'joric Stewart, Ifomil•
ton, Airs. Evelyn Buchner, Air, and
Mrs. Ilarold Burt, Robert and Barbara
of Dearborn, Mich,, Airs. Rhea Carter,
Will Emigh, Tottenham, Air. W. S. \Ic-
\'ittie, Mrs. Maude AlcVittie, llespeler.
11r. and ,Airs. Oscar Stager, Smithville.
Air. and Airs. W. C. Hudson, London
.lir, \Vin. Andrew, Autos Andrew and
hiss Frieda, of Guderich.
MARILYN RILEY GRADUATED WITH
BACHELOR OF ARTS DEGREE
Marilyn Riley, eldest daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Riley, Londes-
borough, received her Bachelor of Arts
degree in Honours Alathenhalics at tie
University of Western Ontario at the
Convocation in Thames flail, May 25,
1962. Attending the Convocation were,
Mr. and Mrs. 13en Riley and Mrs. Sel-
ena Riley, Clinton.
Marilyn has accepted a teaching po-
sdliou at the Forest District High
School for September and is at present
observing and doing some teaching al
Forest.
On the same day another daughter,
Miss Dorothy Riley, a member of the
Nurses' Assistance Class at \Vingham
Hospital received her cap.
Attending the capping were, Mr, and
Mrs. \Vnm. flunking, Auburn, and Mrs.
Gerald Riehl and Ales. 1.3111 Alcock,
both of Goderich.
Sunday visitors at the home of Mr.
and Ales, Ben Riley were, Al'. and
Mrs, \Vm. Thinking, Mrs. Selena Riley
Mr. and AIrs. Gerald Riehl and Kim,
Mr. Delmer Bedard, Dorothy and Mari-
lyn Riley.
SOD 'TURNING CEREMONY HELI)
AT C,D.C,i, ANNEX ON SATURDAY
A puhlic sod turning ceremony will
be held at Clinton on Saturday at 2:36
for the $1,500,090 vocational addition
to the Clinton District Collegiate lnsti•
tut 0,
'faking part will be members of the
school board headed by chairman John
1.avis, of Clinton, and the advisory
vucalioial romniticu chaired by Ken -
tient McRae, of Clinton, Jerry Ginn,
of Goderich, Alt'. Alclrae and 1Vtu.
Hearn, of Clinton, are on a committee
to arrange the event.
'l'lle addition when completed by Sept
ember of 1963 will serve secot(tary
school stridents of Seaforth, Exeter,
Goderich and Clinton. 'Total capacity
for the entire institution will be 1,250.
Attended Graduation
Exercises , I
Air. and Mrs. James Lawrie, and
Agnes, Blyth, Air. and Al's. Owen
Fleming, West Alonktot, Mr. and Alt's.
Waller BtRcll, and Miss Ann Jeanette
Watson, of Blyth, attended graduation
exercises at Itidgelown Agricultural
School on Tuesday, May 15, when Mr.
John Lawrie, of I3lyth, was a graduate.
John is employed near Itidgetown
wills Mr, Hobert Spence.
Contents of Cornerstone
Disdosed at Sod -Turning Ceremony
Agriculture Minister
Outlines Farm Policy
Agriculture Mini,ter Alvin ilantilton,
speaking at Witt l:am Saturday night.
urged Huron farmers to sui;ort the
1'C's progi:un to ;•.t'nlulatc export of
sur; lea er;,db:cte and to build up the
beef c' 1k' indestty.
Ile r :lid the t;overnuu'nl's selling ai
preach to the surl,lus problem was the
only alternative to the (theta and con
t►'ol 1:1111(103 advocated by Libel al ane
Nl)I' I art it's,
l xlu:4t stile, he state(, "can tab.'
the pressure ref the surpluses on 001
den:: fk market." Ile tell there was n
large mrrket for Canadian farm goods
in 1Veetc::n I?uropc anal that tt:ulevcl-
ol,e:l cnuntrie3 in Asia, Africa ane
South America offered tremendous sat
ea potential.
Ale. 1lanli:ton criticized the quote
=y terns advocated by si:okesnlen lot
other I:eilies. "Pd hate to see a police
state setup under which farmers are
told whet they have to produce — a s.1.
ciali zed Ittarkeling system wall regu-
lations restricting production. We pre-
fer the selling arproach."
The ntinietcr urged farmers to be.
come export conscious. "'1 he fact must
be faced 'that you no tenger will find
the domestic market sufficient. We
Must find relief outside Canada."
Encourage !wiled sales
The gnv't, he said, was encouraging
food gn'ccess ing companies to juin to-
gether in a united effort to export their
products. 'this teas exemplified by
the recent est'ablis'hment by cannin;
firms of a fruit and vegetable exl;ort
ing corgi any which would be strong
enough to compete in international
markete.
Ile stressed the importance of the
government's food institute in develop-
ing naw products for changing market
"conditions and the negotiation of trade
agreements with undeveloped countries
to provide then with funds to buy the
Canadian protein feeds they require.
Amid applause, he defended the
China wheal sale, which "helps every-
one
veryone in Canada," As a Christian nation
Canada could not refuse to sell its food
products to the starving people in
Communist countries. Besides, he ad-
ded, it was better for these nations lc
spend their money on food for their
people than to use it to build up their
armic:. •
Beef program
The minister outlined his depart•
tents policy to build up the beef fie
duslry which is being faced with in•
creasing demands.
"The period we have been waiting for
for 30 years in the cattle industry is
here. The fact is that the population
is grouting at a faster pace than our
ability to find grass to feed the people
of North America,"
Cattle will need 15 million cattle by
1975, he predicted, requiring all annual
increase of 500,000 head a year. This
will !neon a steady boost for farmers.
'1'o help farmers take advantage of
this opportunity, the government was
encouraging greater production of feed
grain both in the west and east, along
with the development of more storage
facilities,
Use of community pastures, already
popular in the west, will be encouraged
in the east to enable farmers to in-
crease (:heir beef herds, (Under This
program, farmers send their female§
and calves to community pedlars, op
crated at cost, to permit production ol
more feed grain and fodder of Their
farms.
Anctlhe' plank in the government's
farm program involves co-operation
with provincial governments in the
conservation of Ovate' resources. Ef-
forts utast he made, he said, to hold
and collect surface water, as well as lc
develop bigger Bounces of supply such
as lake pipeline systems,
'the difference in attitude toward
agriculture between the Liberal, and
the present govt was demonstrated ;n
farm credit leans, Mr. Hamilton stated.
In 23 years, the Liberal provided a to•
sal of $120 millions to farmers: the
I'C's loaned over $130 million in twc
years alone.
lIuron AIP Elston Cardiff, who was
the minister's parliamentary secretary
for a year, called Air, Hamilton "the
hest agriculture Minister Canada has
ever had." Other tributes to the mini•
sier were paid by 1loI. C. 5, Mae.
Naughton, Muret All'Y, and Elmer 1).
Bell, QC, president of the Ontario PC
A`sodatoit.
lIuron Warden, George i1cCutcheon.
Brussels, was chairman for the meet-
ing, which attracted only a small
crowd. 1\1arvin limes Wellington.
Huron MI', introduced the speaker,
WEDDINGS
GERRITS—McDOUGALL
Londesboro United Church decorated
',v,th Caskets of spring flowers, utt Sat.
urday, May 26, 1962, at 3 o'clock, for
the tvc(lding of (.;Icnda ,)can \IcDougall
:f theme:t, daughter of sirs. Jaincs
MrDemeall, and the tete, Mr. McDoug-
all, of RR. 1, Auburn, and Henry John
,eerril;, son cf Airs. Way C;cults
and the late Mr, (lentils, of Clinton.
Ike double ting ceremony was perfont-
cd by Rev, 11. A, hinge, of L.ondcsboro.
radit'ot.al \vcdding music was played
by Miss Barlaara Snell,
The bride, given in marriage by het
another, Murray AlcDougali, of Wing.
..
w orc.Io rc
tngot
nofnylot
net over taffeta, lace panelled b:atflant
.Id rt, lace bodice 1t'intnmd with peary
and sequins, scalloped neckline, long
lily -point sleeve_;. Her cinneeldere;
French illusion veil was held in place
ey a pearl amt sequin trimmed crown.
:he carried a I;ouquct of red cows and
tcplumetis.
Miss Joan \IcDottgall, sister of the
bride, was maid of Itoucur, wearing 0
elrcet-length crystal charm blue gown
with matching blue nylon organza ov
er .kirt, with matching blue headdress
and shoes, and she carried a basket ul
Shasta daisies with blue net.
1 he hi idesntaids were, Miss Sibyl
Caste, of Clinton, and Miss Norma
.\ichcugall, sister of the bride, wear-
ing dresses similar to the maid ol
honour.
Alias Judy Jelmslon, of Goderich
niece of the bride. was Clower girl,
wearing a blue organza dress and car•
rigid a basket of elnest.a daisies.
Master Larry McDougall, of Gode-
rich, nephew of the bride, was ring
bearer.
The groom was attended by his broth-
er, \Villiam Gerrils, of Clinton, and the
ushers were, Douglas ,McDougall, of
auburn, brother of the bride, and Don-
ald Galls, of Clinton, brother of the
groom.
A reception followed at the bride's
house, which was decorated with white
wedding bells, white and blue stream•
ors and bouquets of lily -of -the -valley.
with the three -tiered wedding cake in
the centre of the table.
Traitresses for the luncheon were,
Airs, Harold Dalrymple, of Seaforl.h,
Misses Bernice McDougall, Allyn Pow-
ell, 11.11. 1, Auburn, Helen Bulfinga,
of Londesborough.
The bride's mother received the
guests wearing an acrd aqua dress and
a corsage of pink carnations. She war,
assisted by the groom's mother wear•
ing a green figured dress with beige
accessories and a corsage of pink car.
nations.
Ea a wedding trip to Northern On-
tario, the bride donned a brown sheath
dress with mat riling three-quarter
length plaid coat, white hat and acces-
sories and a corsage of pink carnations
with matching shaded brown ribbon.
On their return they will reside in
Clinton.
Gue:ts were present from London,
\\'ingham, SIrathroy, Stratford, Sea-
i:ot'I11, Blyth, Goderich and Clinton.
Previous to the wedding the bride
was honoured at several showers by:
her office friends of London Life Insur-
ance; Mrs. Harold Dalrymple, at her
mothers home in Londesboro; Mrs.
Norman AlcDougall, her aunt.
Mrs. ,1lcDougall held a troussca tea
last Thursday in honour of her laugh•
ter,
School Board Meeting
'I'lle regular meeting of the 13lyth
Public School Board was held on Mot.
clay evening, May 28111 at 8;30 o'clock.
Trustees Manning, Webster, Young.
Madill and Street were present,
The minutes of the last regular and
:pedal meetings were read and passed
on motion of 'i'rustee Madill, seconded
by 'Trustee Webster. Carried.
The following accounts were present
eel and ordered paid on motion by
'I'ras?ee Young, seconded by Trustee
Street. Carried.
Blyth Hydro, $19.03; R. 1). Philp,
37,03; Sparling's Hardware, 9.46; Wm,
Thuell, 12.36; London Soap Co., 8.24;
J. Stewart, 1.85.
The principal reported the percentag:
attendance for the month of April al
96.20 ad the enrolment 160.
It was agreed that the Blyth School
13oard meet. with the Boai•d from Hui
lett, S.S. No. 4, at the regular June
meeting.
NORTHERN LIGIITS I Nrr TO MEET
tithe June meeting of the Northern
Lights Unit of the Blyth United Church
will he held at the home of Ales. J.
McNichol, Members are reminde(1 that
the roll call vi1l be ana.wered by a Bi
ble verse beginning with the letter "1".
A rare experience was shared by the
congregation of Blyth United Church
on Sunday when they were able to see
tae contents of the Foundation Stone
of their former church building. Many
people have shared in placing docu-
ments in a corner stone of a new build-
ing but not so many have actually
been able to see the documents that
for many years have been stored in
suit of stone.
In 1877, when the former building
was erected, copies of newspapers,
coins and church documents were
placed in a half -gallon jar which ways
then layed in a cavity that had boon
chiseled out of the foundation stop('.
The stone may presently he seen at
the eastern end of the church lot.
Last Sunday Mr. Jas, Lawrie, sec-
retary of the Board of 'Trustees, and
Mr. Ray Madill, chairman of the Com•
millet, of Stewards, each removed a
tightly -rolled document from the jar.
included in the documents was what
appears to be a historical account of
the church but which was almost com-
pletely pulverized with the effect of
age and moisture, A scroll was still
legible on which was written the !lattice
of the various building contractors, the
names of the first village council, the
representatives to parliament, a list
of the papers enclosed in the jar and
the name of those who had contribut-
ed 50c for adult and 5c to children to
the Building Fund for the privilege of
having their names recorded.
Papers included in the jar were 1877
editions of The Globe, The Mail, Sea-
forth Expositor, Goderich Star, Gode-
rich Signal, Wingham Advance, Wing -
ham 'Times, Brussels Post, Clinton
New Era, Blyth Review, British Amer-
ican Presbyterian, The Presbyterian
Record. If you can imagine all of
this contained in a half -gallon jar you
will visualize how lightly each docu-
ment was rolled and packed.
Coins which had been placed in the
.jar were a farthing (1799), a large
one cent piece (16761, a small 5 cent
piece (1874), a 10 cent piece (1874),
a 20 cent piece (1858), and a 25 cent
piece (1874). All of these documents
will be on display prior to and follow-
ing the service of Public Worship next
Sunday or at the Manse.
As the congregation gathered around
the area where their new building will
be erected, Mr. 11. C. Gerster, repre•
senting the (ferret Construction Co.
handed a spade to Air. Jas. Lawrie,
who dug it into the soil. Mr. 13, Madill
turned the soil symbolically conplel-
ing the excavation. The basic contract
for tine building to be completed by the
end of September is $73,486.00. With
furnishings and healing equipment the
complete cost will be less than $90.
000.00.
I3IRTIIS
KNOX—In Clinton Public Hospital on
Monday, May 28, 1962, to Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Knox, the gift of a son,
Jeffrey Thomas, a brother for Den-
nis.
BROWN—In Brentwood Bay, B.C., on
Saturday, May 26, 1962, to Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Brown (formerly of
Blyth) the gift of a sort, Mark. A
grandson for Mr. and Mrs. William
Brown, Blyth.
W. 1. TO MEET
The regular meeting of the Blyth Wo-
men's Institute will be held on Thurs-
day, June 71.11, in the Memorial Hall, at
2.30 p.m. Alts. 0, Higgins and Mrs. C.
Ladd will be in charge of the program.
Capt. Newman, of the Salvation Army.
Wingham, will be the guest speaker.
Members and visitors welcome,
GIRANDMOTHER PASSED AWAY IN
ENGLAND
Airs, Elizabeth Smith, of .Milldes-
borgh, England, grandmother of Airs.
Scott 1nairser\'ice, passed away the
middle of April. She celebrated her
97th birthday last Alarclt.
Congratulations to Randy Babcock,
who celebrates his birthday on Friday,
June 1.
.1
DEA'rlls
JOHNSTON, CHARLES, 79, Belgrave,
passed away at \1'htghaiht General
Hospital, on Sunday. Survived by his
wife, Mabel; sons, Clarke and Mait-
land: sister, i11t;s, -Mary Jane Sltoe-
hot.lom, all of East 11'rtwanosl► '(town-
ship; also P011011 grandchildren, Fun -
mail service at R. A. Carrie funeral
home, \Vinghant, on Wednesday, May
3011t, at 2 pan.
Bingo's Booming
In Britain
The hunlblc pemty may not
scent to have much vault' thr<.e
(lays, hut. to amusement caterers
it is the prop of their lives
sold never more so than today.
A. many people will no 'Leila
ht' Ila\'illtt ttlll for their IIL"Ie\ ;i)
seaside t:liN ;inti .n ;o. IJ I
snnunl'r,
1 derided In ", vii
was new at tilt` repeal ;In!nl;ll
Anlu: • Ureal Tr:ltic< 1?\!rr ;I Ion rn
Lend"n, \\hich did .I r:1111W
ht'lllt' ;alit uyefr:'a> I`liFllle:��.
('her. Is no tionl'1 Ih,lt both
buyt r
and
WIlrr,• h;t\ r III'\ rl
had II !:ood The kill that
'liligo la 111111'
nl;nl\ fortune:.
In the l.I:I, this ;;,ochre lie.
pended on the tthiul of the l cal
Thief constable. List summer,
h I\\ rcr: ";arcs Lee I1I;lI•kpool's
e;oldrn AI:Ie werL .Ible to enjoy
a renlarkabl., inn rt l nau pro:
pertly
I'ht:.;r;Islln tlit re \\1!i 1',' inure
th;:ll I0.0ao bingo stalls operating
in F:neland alone - about 6,000
more than the previous year, Us-
ually there are about forty play•
ers ;it a time in the seafront ar-
cades - at the permitted six-
pence per go.
And the .came has been speed-
ed up ;;s nttlt'll as possibly
Nowadays you just slide a
plastic etvcr across the number
called, and the numbers are sel-
ected at random by electrical
gadgets, not fished by hand out
of a bat:
if business is brisk, twenty
gtatiles may be crowded into an
hour Which means that one stall
-- helped by the longer summer
evenings -- van take roughly
..200 during a ten -hells' day.
From this, of course, has to
Corm' t running expenses, in-
cluding the post of quite valuable
"gifts."
Women are particularly addic-
ted to this form of amusement.
They are attracted by the lights,
the jollity and particularly by
the largo selection of prizes on
show, Often, the more \gins they
register, the bigger t h e prize
available. This encourages pley-
irs to stay put. So does the fact
that bingo if a remedy against
the widespread disease of lone-
liness.
But the days of bingo's great-
est popularity may be ending.
"1lorsey-horsey" (no relation to
"llousey-housey," t h e British
Army's name for bingo) is the
latest American craze to reach
this country.
Films in sealed containers and
especially shot on U.S. race-
courses are shown, with each
horse renamed on a racecard
held by members of the audi-
ence, who may buy up to foul'
tickets, ata shilling a time, after
they have picked their fancy
After the bets are on, the cans
are opened. A race is then
screened to the shouts and cheers
et the backers.
At the Rialto in York ret'ently,
two pretty girls wearing shorts,
jockey shirts and caps, handed
out the race cards. Nearly 1,000
punters Booked to the "Tote" to
buy tickets before the 'off."
After the first filmed race,
several hundred people collected
10s, ;ti. for a shilling.
This synthetic cinema racing
looks like being one of the top
new attractions this summer.
Another may be a modified form
of roulette. Indeed, seaside fun
fairs are gradually beginning to
resemble little French casinos!
But balk to the humble penny
. for the penny -play machine
dominated the Amusement
Trades' Exhibition, The trend is
e11 towards est' tronlatic, nuilti-
Coin units with twenty-four slots
at \\hich six of more people can
play at a time, writes Basil
Rail. ul ':'I':lilIs."
Yon simply pees, a hidroa and
Ilickrrou;
hod:, It'll vv'Itctltt•l 1'o11
iLi c non If you've lost your
Lu ant, ir's
probable that •:•nue.
one nex: 1,1 you. of Ia 'Ing ,you,
h;I, tern t!eche;,• I r own, with
Th;,. pmts to hilv-c .. I);u'Iieu•
lar :II'; rill io family p:. Ittts on
hohd;i\ '
Thr:, "tlatit n,1 :.peeling"
In:Whines, as they are known in
the tt•.Ide, may not, by law, pay
out !note thiol ;I ,,h hill: for
penny
The he‹1 also in the jargon
of the trade "make for quick
pennies" and have Input)' of
"flash" (coloured lights file
fastest of the 11e\\ ele.lrit' inod•
els taken three seconds flat from
the 111111` you insert \'trier penny
to \\•herr you either pick up some
winnings or don't.
One of the most p. -coral mean
tions for extracting: your cash
this slimmer is likely t he the
big "\\'heel'ctn in." l'ustotners
throw pennies on to the moving
bands and, it they drop on one of
the payout squares, the odds, in
pence, are thrown hack at then)
over the top!
"'The compelling seduction of
fruit machines" (particularly the
sixpenny "one•arnled bandits"
now legal in clubs) \vas referred
to in a London court recently,
when a thirty -six-year-old fitter
Pleaded guilty to two charges of
fraud.
Said the defending sotoiter:
"Ile has become a complete
hill of of these one-armed bandits.
He goes straight to them with his
wages and loses t he lot. not
having a penny left for food or
rent."
Not long ;ago it was :!Iso alleg•
ed in court that a \\'iltshsire
nurse spent her entire salary on
fruit machines and, when that
was gone, stole from her col.
leagues
:\ famous Haley Street psy-
chiatrist offers this explanation:
"The special attraction fruit ma-
chine gambling holds for its ad-
dicts is concerned with a primi-
tive fantasy. The virtm kids
himself that he can control
things merely by looking.
"In time he really believes he
has the magic power to stop the
fruit machine where he wills it
to stop. The sante things hap-
pen to the roulette addict.
"Such people feel an urge to
substitute magic for hard work."
Back to the seafront — where
lawful gambling is on a much
smaller scale, and still mainly
for amusement only.
The big. problem, according to
Johnny Ketteley. "king' of
Southend's Golden Mile and
busily extending his "empire" b
getting seasonai staff.
The jobs are well paid, but it
takes months, for instance, to
train a good, accurate bingo call-
er, who must possess quick rcac-
tions and a ready wit as well as
leather lungs.
This latter problem is, how-
ever, being solved by means of a
"robot" which will call out the
numbers as they are indicated!
SALESMANSI1i1'
Another realty salesman had
just closed his first deal, only
to discover that the piece of
land he had sold was completely
under water
"That customer's going to
conte back here pretty mad," he
predicted to his buss. "Shall I
give him his money back?"
"Money back?" roared the
bis. "What kind of a salesman
are you' anyway Get out there
and sell him a. motorboat."
MD
FIESTA OF FLAGS — Fee beauties hold the flocs of fin's
notions %hich hcye flc%n o\er Pensocolc, Fla. They ore,
Leh to right: Sue Baldwin %ith British flag; Linda Stroke
French; Janice Baenen, American, Sue Scarbrough, Spanish,
end Ann Morse, who holds the Confederate flog.
TOUR OF DUTY — These members of TOUR (Teen-age Organization for Urban Renewal)
helped to paint 300 benches in Boston, Mass. Sue McLennan, 16, forgot and rested on a
bench she hod just pointed. Her three fellow painters found the incident hilarious.
► �'.: �� TABLE TALKS
It Is easy enough to find s ug-
r.estions for adult meals, but
mother's \vht1 cook for small cail-
d t'ii often find is hard 1,1 find
nes\• dishes which will be b.)th
;,l\p,aling and nutritious For
them we h: -' '1 soli csti,tn from
:he home frit, ...sts of Canada's
Department of Fisherit..
Fish is ;in expellent food for
children. It is one of 111. best
source: 01 protein for growth, is
t isy to Thew, pa5y 10 dlgl'st, and
p'p;asii'g to young folk bppause of
i..s delicate flavour. A fish dish
which they will enjoy is Fish
11'iggac. Thongh the name may
t';:use theta to giggle, just witch
them clean up their plates'.
Fish Wiggle is an old English
dish consisting of equal amounts
of cooked or canned fish and
peas in a creamy sauce which is
served on toast. Crisp celery and
carrot sticks which the children
can eat out of hand are good ac-
companiments.
FISiI IVIGGLE
]
can t '.: ounces) salmon OR
1 cup other canned fish
4 tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons flour
1.2 teaspoon salt
2 cups milk
l tablespoon lemon juice
1 cup cooked or canned peas,
drained
Toast slices or toast cups
Drain and flake fish. If using
canned salmon, save the liquid
and add enough milk to it to
make the required 2 cups of li-
quid. Molt butter and blend in
flour and salt. Add milk gradu-
ally. Cook and stir until smooth
and thickened. Add lemon juice,
fish and peas. Cook gently un-
til mixture is thoroughly heated.
Serve en buttered toast slices,
cut its points, or in teas: cups.
Makes 4 to 6 s. rings.
J ,
Supp :r r, fun for everyone
when the Main Coarse pane: t0
the table wrap\ed in incivid:lal
foil packages. The child: n en-
joy the element of surpr s. a -)d
mother can have the afternoon
free from meal p:c: ars:ions A11
she need do is arrange the foods
in their wrappings (hours ahe::d
if she likes) then stow the pack-
ages in the refrigerator until
time to cook. The food is cooked
and served right in the foil, and
may be brought to the table un-
opened.
Fish is one food whim e oks
quickly and deliciously in foil.
Encased in foil it liter:11y s:.ams
111 its own juices and nolle of the
fine flavour is lost For an ed.
venture in geed eating. ,:'t' the
following foil package se inh.na-
tion recommended by t he home
economists of Canada's Dopa, .•
went of Fisheries.
FILLETS IN FOIL
1 pound frozen fish fillets
14 teaspoon salt
1: cup packaged precooked rice
14 cup water
14 teaspoon salt
14 cup grated Cheddar cheese
1 tomato, cut into 4 slices
Thaw fro:en fillets .i:tfdent•
ly 10 allow :he hope to be cut
into 4 portions Sprinkle with l;
teaspoon Thorough ly e e' •
l•.:,s. ,:ce. water, ,ind 1a :e .-t n
Add o f ese and 1 '
l
ly :o t.:x. Have rcad\ foul:. 12
inch squares of aluminum toil.
greased on the inside Pi. ct 3
tablespoons of r;ce-cheese
ture in centre of each square,
Top vv th a fillet portion and
then .i shoe of tomato. Lightly
sprinkle tomato slices with salt.
Bring two edges of foil together
over food and double fold to
snake a tight seal. Also double
fold outer edges. Place packages
on a baking sheet and bake in a
hot oven t500tF.). Allow about
30 minutes cooking time if fish
is frozen and 15 minutes if com-
pletely thawed. Makes 4 serv-
ings.
A famous chef once remarked
that, "the egg is the eealent
which holds the castles of cook-
ery together'." In combination
with other foods they can be
counted on to make many a de-
licious and inexpensive lunch or
)•upper dish. The combination of
ks!1 and eggs is an especially
good one for growing children,
since both foods are rich in pro-
1,-in.
ro-
1,in. One such combination
which has a high popularity ra-
t:ng With the young crowd is a
Salmon Souffle,
SALMON SOUFFLE
1 can (i;t 1 ounces) salmon
3 tablespoons butter or other fat
3 tablespoons flour
1,2 teaspoon salt
1 cup liquid (salmon liquid
plus milk)
2 tablespoons chopped green
onions and tops
;l eggs, separated
1 teaspoon lemon juice
Drain and flake salmon, say.
ing liquid. Melt butter. Blend
in flour and salt, Add liquid
gradually and cook until thick
and smooth, stirring constantly,
Remove from heat and stir in
salmon and chopped onion. Beat
egg yolks and add lemon juice,
Stir into salmon mixture. Beat
egg whites until stiff but not
dry. Fold gently but thoroughly
into salmon mixture. Spoon into
an ungreased 11/2 -quart casser-
ole. Bake in a moderate oven
(350'F.) for about 45 minutes,
or until set, puffed, and lightly
browned, Serve immediately.
Makes 4 servings.
It's a well proven fact that
young children are not gour-
mets, but menu variety and im-
aginative preparation when
geared to their level will def-
initely increase their interest in
meals. :1s a general rule they
like delicately flavoured foods,
simply prepared, and presented
with a dash of colour. The foods
should be served in small por-
tions and be easy to handle with
only 11 spoon or fork.
A dish which meets these re-
quirements admirably is Fish
Timbales, a custard type of main
dish cooked in individual cups,
The recipe for it follows and has
been supplied by the home econ-
omists of Canada's Department
of Fisheries.
FISIi TIMBALES
2 cups (1 pound) cooked or
canned fish, drained & flaked
1 tablespoon lemon juice
cup chopped green onions
and tops
2 tablespoons butter, melted
2 tablespoons flour
1 cup milk
2 eggs, slightly beaten
q to 1 teaspoon fall
Dash pepper
cup grated Cheddar cheese
t,z cup fine dry bread crumbs
1 tablespoon melted butter
Sprinkle fish with lemon juice.
Cook green onions in 2 table-
spoons melted butter until ten-
der but not browned, Blend in
flour. Add milk gradually and
cook, stirring constantly, until
smoothly thickened. Remove
from heat. Stir in eggs and sea-
sonings. (If using canned fish
add 1;z teaspoon salt, If using
lightly salted home cooked fish
use 1 teaspoon salt,) Combine
sauce with fish and mix well.
Spoon into greased custard cups
or ramekins, Sprinkle with
cheese, Combine crumbs with 1
tablespoon melted butter and
spread over cheese, Piace cups
in a shallow pan of hot water.
Bake in a moderate oven (350°F)
for 30 minutes, or until firmly
set. Serve in cups, or turn out
on heated plates, Makes 6 cups.
Everyone is ignorant, only on
different subjects.
ISSUE 22 -- 1902
Should They Bring the A -B -Cs Back to the
By HAROLD SIIEEHAN
Newspaper Enterprise Assn,
New York — There is noth-
ing more simple than A -B -C So
says a group of disgruntled edu-
cators \vho want the alphabet
hoisted to its once sacred status
in the schoolroom.
The group calls itself the
Reading Reform Foundation.
Here is what they say:
A third of the nation's youths
do not know how to read.
Another third read poorly
The cause is the "madness" of
the system of reading instruc-
tion in use almost universally
today in public schools.
The solution is to kick out
this "modern" or "contour" sys-
tem \vhich is putting us behind
the Rua fans, and bring back
the A -B -Cs (called phonies)
At the same time, there are
ntaay Voices in support of the
present reading techniques, rn-
cluair , •\' teechers college in
book, "Tomorrow's Illiterate: "
Claims Walcutt: 35 per cent
of American youths are serious-
ly retarded in reading; 40 per
cent more are deficient. Fur-
thermore, Arthur S. Trace Jr.,
author of "What Ivan Knows
That Johnny Doesn't," says that
children in Soviet Russia at the
age of 8 or 9 are taught alpha-
betically. They are "several
years" ahead of American chil-
dren in reading.
Trace claims "With a vocabu-
lary of 10,000 words and the
ability to use a dictionary, they
can read and enjoy the master-
pieces of Russian literature,
while American children, lim-
ited to the painfully memorized
contours (pictures) of 1,500
words, have to struggle through
textbooks of incredible banal-
ity."
Trace points out that half of
the Russian children begin learn-
ing English in the fifth grade.
Schoolroom?
object" on p •per. The Reading
Foundation objects, They want
the sounds of the. alphabet
learned, thea combined \'tth
other sounds to achieve reading
proficiency,
Not necessary, says Gates. A
pupil does not need to under-
stand the sound of a letter to
read. Evidence: Gates has made
completely deaf children superi-
or readers — children who have
never in their lives heard s
\word spoken.
"The modern method uses
many educational devices," said
Gates, "These include phonics.
Nobody has abandoned the al-
phabet."
Gates trundles a battery of
statistics to the firing line:
:tem: A 1957 survey in a
New York City suburb among
pupils taught by the phonetic
method. Conclusion: Children's
reading ability lagged behind
!heir mental ability.
�,i t•.:. - f••t•.rt .mitt• — t.l., W•
E.,i• .1 •t,:t•w, .u:.c,c.--e rte,
11.ta n1-F*.e•,,°, Ma•
..n.m
Ce --u -e &'eoal / 'CFO, , .•a rota
11 :eft i„i ti' t nrjV«.a.- 110(11/-.11.
Erc.)r• rrtlet/, /-i-t--0ts11 rota.
E:,ar.., e•:.1 :•.-r •r t* •.v
1 trFee.
1..10 .eteri/a.t) ta.U• teeth .t;.
Ir!e •e -.t) e '.1 -. 1 Lipp'.•- c1)c-urea,
nv.ae•u.11i•a- .rP
- C.L) 1 'i' ',
C,,.--P:-e-'
/ vr.. ,.r •,
't ut.i. -1 ^l.e•.
•+e t«a-Cc-:-1
+rc. tehu.t.
.,- ttt,a•t'
/.1. Ire 1,1.•'
•flcr-' wry
IVAN'S ELEMENTARY READER: Is Johnny os for behind os they say?
the Cn:tcd Staits. The Russ:i.ns,
..icy say, are no: forging ahe.:d
in the Go!di',`cks-an:,-the-t ' e -
bear s doper hent. Phonics
"Tae dr eadfu!ing h started
t
abaut 40 years ago.” :he Reading
Foundation's preside'n t. \\'a:ran
\\'a s.1,bt rip said. "At that time.
a few rifen deeidea to co a1\'; y
wire. +!: alpret e:.
\\'h t was substituted in its
p:aze' "The 'contour' aeth=.::"
1t'ashb•irrt. "A chi:d was
compelled to memorize each
word as an entity — tike learn-
ing Chinese. It's mad :e .s. It's a
cancer in our educational sys-
tem."
And what about the thousands
of a:hcc•i superintendents, teach-
er;. schtvl boards and teachers
N:leges which, support the
"modern" method?
"Brain;rac:'*d," snapped Dr.
Char:es Walcuys.'lleadir g Foun-
dation trustees and author of the
He :Hakes the startling claim
that Russian children by their
third year of English are read-
ing :more difficult, but more in-
teresting, English la ng11aga
st: res than the average Ameri-
can fourth grader.
S? the lineup is impressive,
determined and vocal. But, like
all problems involving the de-
velopment of the human mind,
it is not as simple as it seems,
On :he other side, advocates
of the "modern" methods are
armed with facts and figures. A
spokt s nan for this group — in-
cluding the overwhelming ma-
jority of educators — is Dr, Ar-
thur L Gates, profes. or emeri-
tus at Columbia Univ. Teachers
College and head of the Insti-
tute of Language Arts.
Gates says what the Reading
Foundation recommends is "pre -
19th Century."
In the tiirtt place, according
to Gates, a word is a "visual
Item: O h i o Slate University
researchers have founds that
better thtun two- thirds of the
nation's fourth graders can read
and define 4,302 words — four
times as many '1S 'I'ri:pe gives
them credit for knowing,
Item: 'i'11e nation's sixth grad-
er's generally t'titl 1'epog1117P at
least 10,131) words -- more than
the total of 8,000 found in the
writings of John Milton,
1tenl: Eighth graders ;an spot
15,000 words -- equal to the to-
tal appearing in Shakespeare's
works,
"'.Those days when a pupi
spent 33 to 40 per cent of hit
reading instruction time pound
int: away at word lista is :oyer,'
said Gates,
Of course there are reading
ptvblenns today. But member
of the Reading Foundation an
wrong in thinking you ;an g'
backward in history to s o l v •
them,"
Frogs Don't Tell Any
Les In The Spring
It' pretty hard every year to
re..i-( repeating sow perennial
lh+,ughts about the spying prep -
err:., a ha are the little frogs that
111711:': a noise a thousand 1IU1es
bigecr than they ore, and prove
to, be the only true harbingers
of the rearming season, The
pe(pet , 1 am told, peep only
when. the water temperature (;els
up to a certain degree, and when
this point is reached the general
pattern of the vernal return is
in hand.
Thus, you can have a radiant
btuel,ird, full of the ginger that
maize:, hint holler hi> head off,
aid lie can be a liar of the first
degree, Ile is going by the air,
and the way the sun shines, and
he had a tailwind up from Ilart-
fere, And the budding of a few
crocuses by the shed makes him
thick spring is here, but he
lacks the scholarly approach of
the lowly amphibia.
The spring peeper, being a
cold-blooded creature, snoozes on
in his niche under a rock, and
wishes the garrulous birds would
go away. The birds are like the
wiseacre in the railroad depot,
who jumps up from his seat,
grabs his valise. and rushes out
onto the platform as if the train
were coming. Everybody jumps
up and grabs his valise and
rushes out, too, and the train
isn't due for another 20 minutes,
The peeper is the seasoned old
traveler who believe.; the time-
table, and doesn't stir from his
magazine until the board turns
to green over the dispatcher's
desk,
The board, with the peeper, is
a more basic signal than the rest
of us use. Having within. him
(or more properly, her, as we
shall see) no central heating
system to augment the metabol-
isnl relationships, he responds to
temperature from the outside
only. A warm breeze, which
makes the rest of us toss off our
sweaters and go to raking twigs
from the lawn, doesn't interest
him, The water is his native
element, and it doesn't respond
solely to the wind, The ice in the
pond melts when the "roll-over"
of the water goes above 32°, but
with frost still conning out of the
ground, snow water still melting
in from the woods, and perhaps
even a snowstorm yet to come,
the built-in know-how of the
little frog -he's no bigger than •
your thumb nail -spares him the
absurdities that plague birds and
humans,
But one day all the portents
are congenial, This Is the day the
water that beckons has risen in
temperature to a point consistent
with the age-old rites of procrea-
tion, Like Easter, this is a
movable date, but it is not com-
puted by equation on an arbi-
trary calendar -it is computed in
the tiny awarenesses. of one of
our smallest, animals, and he
never slakes a mistake.
As to the "she," it is the fe-
male. who rouses to the occasion,
wriggles from. the winter quar-
ters, hops to the pond, and sets
up the clamor. The male peeper
is mute, I -le doesn't have to study
the ministrations and. attempt an
estimate, he knows. that the
alarm clock will go off when it
is Brite to get up, He is a slug -
a -bed, and his mate will rouse
him when breakfast is ready,
sort cf. The spring chorus of
lonely females, from the pond,
will assault his slumber and
bring him hopping in the next
day or so to sec what the' noise
is all about.
The other frogs we have in
this latitude operate about the
same, except that they don't
make quite so Hutch noise. The '
spring peeper has a formal
name, the hyla crucifer, because
he is a hyla, and he has a defi-
nite'nmark of a cross on his back,
He has a cousin, another hyla,
ISSUE 22 - 10(12
the luta., ir:,g v;filch ncatte7; a trill
rather than a peer,, and is nearly
as loud. But the other frogs and
toads, the ones that don't have
the little suction cups nn their
toes, advertise lt'. s audibly and
some of them you can hardly
hear at all, l ut their pattern
seems to he ail the same, and
they weal to mingle mt,re or
less in our little pond.
Later in the season the bugs
and pollywogs take quite a
browsing from "natural enemi-
es," Since ours is a made pond,
and we have watched it. from a
newly dug mudhole to a weedy
and shaded pool, I've watched
this, and my observation is that
the frogs hold their own, and
increase. We have our own little
flock of domesticated mallards,
and they like frogs. These, in
turn, toiler in wild birds off and
on, and they like frogs. A stake -
driver or bitter wings in now
and then for lunch, and we have
had the long-legged blue heron
now and then, standing on 'one
leg told waiting to stab a morsel.
I've seen our common snakes,
all the harmles kind, coursing
the weeds at the edge, hoping to
meet a sunning old green frog
whose destiny played hits dirt,
'i'hen I've seen a heron catch a
snake, and so the drama goes on
and on. But every year more
frogs come back, and the cycle
starts again, and 1 guess I'm not
supposed to do anything about it
except watch,
This, I find, is a recurring joy.
I lie low and say nuffin when
the rest of neighborhood is
convinced spring is back, I listen,
and if noGspring peeper's voice
is abroaJ' in the land. I see
people going with golf clubs, and
farmers are hauling fertilizer,
and.Mother starts housecleaning,
and the -bluebird yells by the
lilac, There is a boom in the
fishing license business, I seem
to be one of the few who truly
knows when spring is sprung, I
let the frogs tell me, and they
have never muffled yet, - by
John Gould in the Christian Sci-
ence Monitor.
How Peter Pan
Came To Be Born
Peter Pan holds a peculiar po-
sition: his is the only story of
recent centuries to escape from
literature. into folklore, For
every one person who has seen
the play or read the story there
are. hundreds who know perfect-
ly well who and what Peter
Pan is, Besides being a fairy-
tale character, he is also a sym-
bol - of what, precisely, even
Barrie could not find• words to
describe: "I'm youth, I'm joyl
I'm a little bird that has broken
out of the egg!" cries Peter -
and Hook cannot understand,
but says blankly, "Oh . , , Well,
to it again," as he raises his cut-
lass.
Peter Pan was created in Ken-
sington Gardens, in the course
of stories told to a party of
small boys. day after day ' and
week after' week: but how he
began neither Barrie nor any of
them could ever remember "I
made Peter by rubbing the five
of you violently together, as sav-
ages with two sticks produce a
, flame."
The boys were the children
of Arthur Llewelyn Davies and
Sylvia, the , daughter of Gecrge
du Maurier and sister of Ger-
ald, who played Captain Hook
and many other leads in Barrie's
plays. Barrie, with his big dog
Porthos, met them in the Gar-
dens and told stories that began
with the old fairy tales and wan-
dered away, in and out of le-
gend and literature, introducing
himself, Porthos, the boys and
occasionally other young friends.
For anyone brought up on this
book Kensington Gardens has
become an extra province of
Fairyland. - From "J. M. Bar-
rie," by Roger Lancelyn Green,
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1, Possessive
adjective
•4. Protective
garment
D. Work unit
tl. reline
12. Daughter of
one's slater
14, Passing
through
16. Card game
17, Dormant
O. Critical
nituatlone
AL Verb form
28. Pastoral
poems
At Preposition
25. Dispatch
boat
28. Hitherto
30. Name mean-
ing watchful
83. Guaranty
35. Merchant
87. Since
88. T;tornity
4, Perspire
41, Not so
43, Stat cnee
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2. Diplotnncy
3, Headliner
4. Counterao-
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8. Godliness
6. Concerning
7. Pdlble tut.+er
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grosses a lace
11. Open- 39.Ot entvork
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18, incite 42. Sturdy tree
18, Yarn measure 44. (Drown girls
23. Coterie 46. Poisonous
26.11111.d king tree
of Judah 48, Clothea (Sp,)
26. Cavity In a 47. Liberal or
rock Indica! •
27. 81ocktng 49, To slump,
29. Destitute of 60. 1 r, rivet'
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NEW ROAD ALERTS DRIVERS - Paving surfaces which
"talk back" to the drivers are helping to cut accidents along
old U.S 40 in California. The areas are called "rumble
strips," and are squares of small stones glued to the road.
They alert drivers to changing road conditions with an in-
creased sound and a different "feel" of the road beneath
the wheels Where used, accidents have decreased by half.
TIIEFAIN FRONT
JokilQu&ea.
"When farming stops being
fun, that's when I'll sell my land
and move to the city," a typical
New England farmer will tell
you,
Farmers in this area retain the
rugged individualism for which
they have been noted for cen-
turies. But at the same time they
are adapting to modern agricul-
tural methods,
Many of these farmers run
successful farms that could be
operated from a pine -paneled
downtown office, Yet, like their
forefathers, who cultivated the
land with a one-horse plow, the
New England fanner can often
be found on the seat of a trac-
tor plowing a field early in the
morning or working side by side
with his "hired hands" at har-
vesting time, They do it because
they like it.
a a A
"In spite of modern inventions
farming is still hard work," an
observer who has watched New
,England agriculture develop and
change for over 50 years, points
out, "Farmers make less money
an hour for the amount of time
they put into their work than
most Americans,. You have • to
have a love of the soil to farm."
In an urbanizing area like
New England, a farmer can al-
ways sell 'his land at a profit, if
he grows tired of tilling the soil,
But many don't want to,
* a a
"Real estate people just can't
understand why I turn down of-
fers to buy my land," says Aus-
tin Snaith, owner of Brooksby
Farms in Peabody, Mass, "I en-
joy the farm; It pays for itself
and I see no reason for giving
it up."
Mr. Smith's farm has one of
the largest 'apple, pear, peach
and plum orchards in the North
Shore area. Brooksby' Farms,
named after a very •small com-
munity near the farm in colon-
ial days, was started in the
1640's, Several of the houses on
the property today date back to
that time.
a * a
Like many New England farm-
ers, Mr. Snaith doesn't truck his
fruit and eggs to the city. He
sells his product at a modern
roadside stand. Far from the
small wooden structures of the
past, stands of today are usual-
ly large and closely resemble
modern grocery stores.
From Brooksby Farms' hilly
slopes neat rows of houses can
be seen completely surrounding
the land, They seem to repre-
sent the constant, encroachment
of urbanism on New England
farms. * *
h'or ,Harold Rogers of Ward
Hill, Mass., the urban march has
meant the loss of 23 acres of land
to state highways, Bulldozers
roar daily as wide furrows of
brown soil carve up the once
green pastureland, part of a pro-
ductive daily farm.
"Fortunately the farm is bor-
dered by the new roads and only
a few acres have been cut off
from the main farm," says Mr,
Rogers. "This whole area was
once isolated from the city
(Haverhill) but now we are
finding ourselves closer and
closer to urban living."
Mr. Rogers' father started the
farm with only two acres some
60 years ago, The farm now has
some 230 acres. Besides the ac-
tual dairy farming operation,
Mr, Rogers also has a dairy
which bottles milk for the Ward
Hill area, He is one of the few in-
dependent dairying concerns left
In the northeastern section of
the state, writes Mike Born in
•
the Christian Science Monitor,
In spite of a reduction in num-
ber the future• still looks bright
for many New England farms.
In many families youngsters are
growing up who are interested in
farming. Mr, Rogers' son Richard
a teen-ager, is now in charge of
all the machinery on their farm
and is beginning to take over
most operations. '
"Farming nowadays is a chal-
lenge in every way," Richard
says, "I feel a young person can
find farm life rewarding in that
you're your own boss, There is
also a feeling of accomplishment
when crops are good or milk
production high,"
a a •
With three ag.icultural high
schools in the state (Norfolk, Es-
sex and Bristol counties), many
Massachusetts farm youngsters
can learn modern :arm tech-
niques at an early age, They also
have the opportunityy t0 go on
to the University of Massachu-
setts School of Agriculture,
These youngsters will be. am-
MiGHTY HOT - The biggest
flame on earth roars skyward
from the blazing Grassi-Touiil
natural gas well in Algeria.
The flame was finally snuffed
out by a blast of dynamite.
ong those who will carry on New
England farm traditions, There's
no doubt land will become more
valuable and temptations to sell
off the old homestead more al-
luring but love of the soil will
keep farming an important part
of New England life for the fore-
seeable future.
Ocean Depths Are
By No Means Quiet
The depths of the ocean are
traditionally thought of as
serene, calm, and quiet, As any
submariner or skin diver knows,
however, the animals that popu-
late the sea are anything but
silent. It has already been deter-
mined that more than 50 per cent
of the fish of the sea are noise-
makers, producing an unending
cacophony of grunts, knocks,
clicks, and whistles. New purrs
and whirrs are constantly picked
up as research progresses.
As a result, an increasing num-
ber of investigators are dangling
hydrophones in the oceans and
taking to skin-diving gear to
record and identify the noises.
Among them is Dr. Howard E.
Winn, zoology professor at the
University of Maryland. The 36 -
year -old researcher is currently
visiting the University of Ore-
gon in Eugene, working with
biologist Melvin J, Cohen, an
expert in the physiology of hear-
ing,
After a morning spent catch-
ing catfish recently, Winn re-
ported on his research: "We have
found three different types of
fish communication. The first
is a warning, when an enemy
is in the neighborhood. The
second is a defense call, as when
one fish approaches another in
his territory, The third is a
spawning signal to attract a
mate."
So far, Winn has concentrated
on three species: The fresh -water
minnow, which he found emits a
knocking sound for defense and
a purring sound during the mat-
ing season; the squirrelfish of
Pacific coral reefs that grunts
for dense and produces a long
chattering call as a warning; and
the toadfish, which also grunts
in defense, but whistles at a
prospective mate. That whislte,
Winn reported, is so loud that it
has set off acoustical mines,
Winn says that this communi-
cating does not go unheeded. He
points out that although not all
fish "talk," they all have hearing
organs. In the lab, the catfish
is a favorite because of its ex-
cellent listening apparatus.
"There are usually no external
parts as on mammals," Dr. Winn
xplained, "just an inner ear,
and the sound is conducted
through the tissues of the head.
The questions are, what fre-
quencies and intensities can •they
hear, and what information do
the sounds convey to them? In
order to get the answers, we are
making recordings with under-
water microphones, and playing
back the sound to isolated spe-
cies in tanks in the lab, For one
thing we have found evidence
that fish orient themselves in the'
direction of the sound, in con-
trast to past belief."
In the future, Winn hopes to
implant electrodes in the brains
and auditory nerves of some fish,
After wiring them for sound, he
will set them loose in the ocean,
and record the electrical im-
pulses transmitted from the in-
ner ear to the brain, "I've got
ten years of work ahead of me,"
he said.
But some of Winn's findings
are being put to practical use
now. Under the sponsorship of .
the Office of Naval Research, a
team of scientists is trying to
construct a complete chart of the
sourds of the sea, including the
times of year and the places
where they are heard, During
World War II, the Navy found
that it couldn't tell an enemy
sub from a school of snapping
and clicking shrimp. With anti-
submarine warfare now an even
more difficult and vital opera-
tion, Navy sonar technicians
must be able to tell the differ-
ence between the amorous purr-
ing of a school of minnows and
the spinning propellers of a man-
made intruder. - from NEWS -
WEEK
II)IIAY SCilOOL
LESSON
By Rev. It, Barclay Warren,
B.A., B.D.
Christ Speaks to the Churches
Revelation 2:1-29; 3:14-22
Memory Scripture: Behold, 1
stand at the door, and knock; if
any than hear my voice, and
open the door, I will come in
to him, and will sup with him,
and he with me. Itev,3:20,
The seven churches of the
Revelation are fairly represen-
tative of the church of any peri-
od, Ephesus has lost its first love.
It sometimes happens in marri-
age. So the Christian who does
not grow in grace and in the
knowledge of our Lord and
Savipur Jesus Christ, leaves
himself open to temptations
which he cannot resist, Love
wastes away,
Smyrna, the suffering church,
is one of two which receives no
reproof. So often suffering is the
experience in which man draws
close to God. Peter writes (1
Pet. 4:1,2), "Remembering that
Christ endured bodily suffering,
you must arm yourselves with a
temper of mind like his, When a
man has thus endured bodily
suffering he has finished with
sin, and for the rest of his days
on earth he may live, not for the
things that men desire, but for
what God wills." (N.E.B.) For
such there is encouragement
rather than warning,
Fornication and the lusts of
the flesh have entered the church
at Pergamos. Alas, there are
still many professed Christians
who walk after the flesh, and not
after the Spirit. Repentance is
the remedy,
Thyatira is the church attempt -
to please God by good works.
Many would sooner attempt to
work their way to heaven, than
repent of their sins and trust
fully in Jesus Christ as Lord and
Saviour.
Sardis has some worthy names,
but for the most; part, has a name
to live but is dead.
Philadelphia is a small church
but is loyal and aggressive, To
this church the Lord says, "I
have loved thee."
The most pathetic picture of
all is that of Laodicea, These
people are well-to-do. They are
smug and self-satisfied. This is
the only church of which Jesus
makes no commendation, Their
luekwarmness is revolting, Their
only hope lies in repentance,
But, t0 tllig ghuych, Jew; pre-
sents himself in the most drattle-
tic entreaty. Jesus knocking at
the door has been celebrated in
art and in song.
For every church Jesus pro-
mises a reward. He loves the
church.
Where do we locate ourselves
in this severe -fold picture? Clos-
ing our eyes to the situation will
not help, Sitting back in hostile
criticism will only aggravate the
condition, Let us live right. and
in love reprove and encourage
others.
SAVING IN REVERSE
Deep in the Canadian Rockies,
a motorist was having his gas
tank filled at an isolated service
station. "You're the last one
through here to get a tankful
at the old price," the attendant
told him cheerfully. The motor-
ist felt pretty good about it till
the attendant added, "Yup, five
minutes from now the price of
gas goes down three cents a gal-
lon." '
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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9213 No21d
READY FOR ACTION - With a bumper wheat crop in prospect for Kansas, there will be
plenty of combines available for the harvest. This used combine lot of one machinery
dealer In Hutchinson is an example. Many small farmers huve been forced to sell the
expensive machines, while other hire "custom cutters" to bring in the grain harvest.
PAGE 4 TLE BLYTH STANDARD
"NEW FOR THE BEACH"
Look smart at the beach in the Latest Style Bathers
just arrived,
GIRLS' $2.19
TEENS and LADIES' $6.95
FOR THE TEENS ---
CLAM
DIGGERS, in white Only $3.98
Girls' coloured $2.98
SLEEP WEAR --
BABY DOLL PAJAMAS, in Drip Dry Cottons,
GIRLS' $1.98
LADIES' $2.98 and $3,49
NeedlecraFt Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'I'TON,
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON -- EXETER -- 'WORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON,
.
CLINTON:
Business -Hu 2-8806
Residence -11n 24989
PHONES, •
••)fir•
y r Z ! EXETEBt
Baines 41
Residence 34
FOR AN APPETIZING TREAT visit our -Rest-
aurant any day or evening and try our tasty full -
course meals, light lunches or home-made desserts.
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
THE MsKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Office -- Main Street
SEAFORTII
Insures,
* Town Dwellings
* All Classes of Farm Property
* Summer Cottages
* Churches, Schmitt', Halls
E:etended coverage (wind, smoke,
water damage, falling objects, etc.)
is also available
•
AGENTS: Janies Keys, RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5, Sea-
d'orth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Har-
old Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eaton, Sea -
forth.
BELGRAVE NEWS
Mr, and Mrs. Jack VanCamp and
family moved into their new hone on
John Street in the Village,
Mr, and Mrs. Russel Walker, Gcde-
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE ESTATE OF ISAB'E'L LONG.
MAN, LATE OF 'I11E VILLAGE Ole
BL\"I'll IN THE COUNTY OF IIU1tON
WIDOW, DECEASED
All persons having claims against
the Estate of the above named wit
died on the 27tH day of April, A.D. 1902
are required to file full rarticular�
thereof wi;h the undersigned on or be
fore the 15th day of June, A.D. 1902
utter wh;ch date the assets will ht.
distributed, having regard only to tht
cl:'tms of which the tuulersigned shat:
then have notice.
Dated al Clinton, Ontario, this 2400.
day of May, A.D. 1962.
E.B. MENZIES, Clinton, Ontario
solicitor fur the said Estate. 13•.
Week - End Specials
Mens and Young Mens 2 -piece Suits of latest
Spring Fabrics ...... , . , . $24.95 Up
Hydro City Work Boots in large selection of styles,
at last year's prices.. The prices now have gone
up.
Large Selection of Men's Cotton Slacks and Shirts
to Match, in Kitchens and Big Swede.
Large Selection of Men's and Boys' Sport Shirts
of long and short sleeves by Bluestone, For-
syth, Currie and Bradshaws,
Women's Sun Dresses in New Summer Patterns
priced at $2,98 up
Large Selection of Women's Slim Jims, Shorts and
Jamaica •Sets at Reasonable Prices.
Women's 2 pc. Better Dresses, 14 112 to 24 112
Supp -Hose (by Kayser), in Seemless, Dress Sheer
Large Selection of Men's, Women's and Children's
Summer Footwear at Great Savings.
Your 5 percent Sales Slips are redeemable at any
time, up to and including $100.00 worth or less.
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
The -Arcade Store
PHONE 211:
BLYTH, ONT.
rich, visited on Sunday with her moth-
er, Mrs. Robert Stonehouse.
Mrs, Charles D, Cox, Teeswater, vis•
iled 00 Saturday with Mrs. Thomas
Smith, Mrs. James Lamont and fain -
and Mrs, Ralph McCrea and [am•
ily.
f11:r, and Airs. Alan McKay and tam-
Wingham, visited on Sunday with
her parents, Mr, and Airs. Harry Ale
Quire.
The regular meeting of the Afternoon
and Evening Unit of the United Church
Women have been cancelled and the
general meeting will be held 00 June 7
in the evening.
Michael MeNall visited on Sunda)
with his sister and brother-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs, John Thompson and family of
Bluevale,
Mr. and Airs. 11. Plotzke and fancily
London, visited on Sunday, and Mrs.
John Gordon and Mrs. ivy n Telfer, nl
Weston, visited onSaturday, with Mr.
and Mrs. John Anderson.
Mrs. Margaret Lowry and Fred Low.
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
0f Finance Co, Repossessions, Clank.
rupt Stocks, Bailiff Seizures and Per.
sonal Consignments, Consisting of Mod.
ern Household Furniture, TV's, Appli-
ances and Brand New Clothing, at
THE CLINTON LEGION HALL
SATURDAY, JUNE 2nd
at 1.30 p.m. sharp
SPECIAL OU'T'STANDING ITEMS—
Large chest freezer; 2 5 -piece bedroom
suites, complete with box springs, neat
tresses and bookcase beds; large con
sole model chord organ; 2 -piece foam
rubber zippered cushion chesterfielu
suite; Al ton air conditioner.
ALSO -- 6 TV sets; refrigerators,
ranges; washers; dryers; 3 chrome
kitchen Suites; 2 2 -piece davenport
suites; 2 39 -inch continental beds;
desk; radio and record player; bunk
beds; platform rockers; hostess and
arra chairs; tri -light and table lamps;
step and coffee tables; quantity of
brand new clothing; plus many marc
items which will be released before
sale day but not available for publi-
cation at this time.
NOTE: This is another outstanding
sale of quality merchandise with most
of it brand new or nearly new.
TERMS — CASA Cheques accepted
3 1 Sales Tax in effect
FRANKLIN BUUCK — Auctioneer.
CARD OF THANKS
Mrs, Townsend and Dorothy wish tc
extend thanks and appreciation tc
friends, neighbours, relatives and the
Hullett Masonic Lodge, for their many
lovely messages of sympathy and kind
ness shown at the time of Bob's death.
13.1.1:
ry, Dundas, visited ever the wrek•eiu
with her sister, Mrs. Cora McGill.
Miss ilargarct Higgins, London, and
Mr. anti Mrs. Jerry Higgins and family,
Wingham, visited over the weekend
with their parents, \Ir, and Alis, Rob-
ert Higgins.
Miss Patsy Logan, Toronto, viited
ever the weekend with her parents,
Mr and Alrs. Clifford Logan, and boys.
Mr. and Mrs. N. T. Armstrong, Lon -
ion, Mr. and Mrs. V. Ilrovat and Su.
;an, visited on Sunday with Mr. and
MI's. Alark Armstrong•
i\lr. and Mrs. Lorne Harmer, Fullar-
ton, visited on Wednesday with her sis-
ter and nieces, Mrs, Thomas Smith
Mrs. James Lamont and family ano
Mrs, Ralph McCrea and family.
Mothers Guests At Cub Meeting
The Belgrave Wolf Cub Pack inti•
ed their mother's to attend their reg•
ular meeting last Tuesday evening in
the Community Centre, A new china.
Ken Hopper, was welcomed to this
meeting loo. Mrs, Kenneth Wheeler
leader, conducted the opening exercis
es, and the Grey Six again held the
most points for inspection so their pen•
nant still stays on the Totem Pole. The
group of boys and their mothers enjoy
ed several games outside. The leaders
held instruction period as usual. It was
announced that the Cubs would be go-
ing to Camp Martyn for their week -end
of camping on the week -end of July 20.
A lunch of cookies and chocolate milk
was enjoyed by all. Mrs, Bert Fear
expressed thanks to the leaders on be.
half of the mothers, for the evening
and a''.so for organizing the outings that
the boys have each year. The singing
of Taps closed the evening.
On Sunday the Belgrave Wolf Cubs
and Boy Scouts attended the Saugeen
District Annual Church Porade held al
Ripley, thele were over 400 Cubs and
Scouts at this event.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all my neighbour)
and friends for the lovely cards ane
treats, also the Women's htstitute, talc
United Church and dile Ladies Auxin•
liary. Special thanks to Dr. Street ani
Dr. McKim, and the nursing. staff of
Wingham General Hospital.
13-1. —Mary A. Taylor.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks to relatives friends and very
kind neighbours for the beautiful flora;
tributes, sympathy cards and many
acts of kindness during our recent ger-
eavement in the loss of our dear sister
Mrs. Edythe Sturgeon. Special thanks
to Rev. Evan MeLagan, Rev. RobesM
Meanly, Airs. Harvey Brown, Dr. It. W.
Street, the pallbearers and flowerbear•
ers.
13-1p. —The Gidley
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to relatives,
friends and neighbours for the beautifu'
floral Aributes, sympathy cards and
many acts of kindness during our re-
cent bereavement in the loss of'a dear
brother.
13-1.
—The Somers family.
Reception & Dance
For Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Garrow
(nee Joanne Middegaal)
FRIDAY, JUNE 1st
Londesboro Community Hall
JIM SCOTT'S
ORCHESTRA
Admission at Popular Prices
Everyone Welcome
Third
Anniversary
TEA
Huronview
Women's Auxiliary
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6
2.20 to 5.00 p.m.
at the Home
Guided Tour will be taken
during the afternoon.
Everyone Welcome
SILVER COLLECTION
"Wednesday, nilly 30, 1002 11
AUBURN
Large congregations attended the
annual anniversary services held hi
Knox United Church last Sunday. The
church was beautifully decorated with
bouquets of white lilacs, blue iris, and
rcd peonies, and Rev. Charles Lewis,
the pastor, conducted the morning sae
vice. The music for the occasion was
under the direction of the church or-
ganist, 1\Irs. Norman \Vightnan. 'The
soloist was Mrs, George Wilkin who
substituted for her brother, Mr. \Vin.
S. Craig, Clinton, who was ill. During
the service Mrs. Wilkin and Mr. Elliott
Lapp • sang the duet, "Precious Biline
Place." Mr, Lewis spoke on the
subject, "Footsteps into His Kingdom"
and showed how the lives of His Disci-
ples in the Bible clays can be adapted
in to -day's world if we are faithful
enough to believe, patient enough to
wait and then he His witnesses.
At the evening service Rev, C. L.
Lewis, Kitchener (Father of C. Lewis)
brought an inspiring message and the
music VMS supplied by the choir. A
double quartette sang, "1 have Been
Alone With Jesus" by Misses Linda
Wilson, Marsha Koopnlans, Anne
Speigelburg, Betty Youngblut, Mar -
FANCY CHECKS
FOR TI1E WELL-DRESSED 11IAN
Really -To -Wear 2 -pant suits in the latest shades
2 and 3 button styles
ONLY $38.00
MAUE•TO-MEASURE SUITS
BY HOUSE OF STONE
Hundreds of Swatches to Choose From
PRICED AT $69.00 $79,00 $85,00 $95.00
SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION OF
MEN'S SHIRTS
by Arrow and ;Millbrook
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- 11'IEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Good Manners"
5c • $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
FOOTLETS, Ladies' Cotton and Nylon.
ANKLE SOCKS, Cotton, Size 6 to 10 1.2, assorted,
Price per pair
Ladies' COTTON BRIEFS3 pair for $1.00
BATHING SUITS, Size 2 to 11x.
SU11IIlE 1LJEWELLERY, a fine assortment.
PURSES for Sumner for Ladies' $1.98 and $2.98
Our Store will Remain Open Every Saturday Night
Until 10 p.m. throughout the Summer.
IIIESSZIMESW
McCALLUM'S MEAT
MAR ET
Phone 10 -- Blyth, Ontario
FEATURING
VEi,
. THIS WEEK
As Well As A Full Line Of
FRESH and CURED MEATS
ij;e Konpncans. Elva Gross, 13ernice
1.1c1)augall, Airs, Kenneth Patterson and
Nil's. Norman AIcClinchey. Another
number was sung "Nearer 1\Iy God '1'o
Thee." The ushers for the day were,
Kenneth McDougall, ilarold A1cClin•
chcy, Wayne Alillian, Keith Arthur,
Ronald Gross and George Durnin.
COMING
TO BLYTH
Wednesday,
June 6th
HON. LESTER B. PEARSON
Will be visiting Huron County and will call in Blyth at the Public School
Grounds
AT 10 A.M. WEDNESDAY, ,TUNE 6th
Everyone is cordially invited to hear and see Canada's Liberal Leader
Published by the Huron Liberal Association
%Vedifosdiijr; ilIny 30, 1)02
THE UM STANDARD
PAGES
Ernie Fisher, the Liberal Candidate
for Huron, is shown welcoming the
Hon. Paul Martin, Liberal Member
Tor Essex East, as he arrived at the
Goderich airport last Friday evening.
•;Mr. ,1lartin later spoke at. a Liberal
rally of close to 100 persons and charg.
ed that the Progressive Conservatives
had not leen faithful to promises made
to the Ontario farmer.;. Ile specifi•
cally I;oinled out that the devaluation
of the dollar would increase the price
of farm machinery by at least 9 per.
cent. In a blistering one hour attack;
on the I)icfenhaker government ue also
kr lied out at the ('onservativc's fin•
nurial, iuclulrial and unemployment
politics.
LOCAL YOUNG LADILs WERE
AMONG WINGIIA,M GRADUATES
Misses Jean Manna, Belgrave, Anna
Marie Schneider, Auburn, Helen Young.
blut,
'oun -
1)lut, Auburn, and Dorothy Riley, I,on.
desboro, were among the twenty-one
certified nursing students at the Wing.
hand General 1lospital who received
their caps last Friday.
Nit.. and 11rs. ,lack Leith, of Ilmnil•
Ion, were Ulylh visitors on Wednesday.
SI jirt — III4AR
Jim
Donnel y
(►udei'ieh lawyer
CKNX-'1'V CHANNEL 8
Tuesday,
,Tune 5
6:10 to 6:15
On Behalf of Elston
CARDIFF
X
Huron PC Ass'n
Boxed &Potted Plants
FOR SALE
Petunias - Salvia - Zinnia - Pansies - Tomatoes
Hybrid Tomatoes r Cabbage, etc.
(ieraniulns - Tuberous Begonias - Rooted Canna, etc
Jouwsnna's Market Garden
Wing•ham, Ontario - Phone 583
♦lN/MI
Walton News
Agriculture was the topic of the May
meeting held in the 1Valton Community
(fall Drat Wednesday evening with the
new president, Mrs. Ken McDonald, in
charge. The meeting was opened by
the Ode and Mary Stewart. Collect.
The minutes were adopted as read bs
the secretary, Mrs. Harvey Craig. The
1-11 Achievement Day for the junior
girls will he held Saturday, May 26
in Brussels, It, was decided to hold a
short course in the fall having two
choices to send in: (11 Choosing Fab.
rigs; 12) Medicine Yesterday and 'I'o•
day, Committee in charge are Mrs.
11. 'l'raviss, Mrs. If. Bolger, Mrs. H.
Mettler. Conveners for the evening
%t ere Mrs, Roy Williamson and Mrs,
Donald Buchanan. A letter from Hong
Kong pertaining to our adopted child,
\% as read and pictures were displayed
and discussed by Mrs, Buchanan, Mrs.
ft. SViltiain on look as her motto,
"Africa Proper," and in ecnclus'ion in-
treduced our guest speaker for the
even°ng, Mr. II, Gordon Green, editor
of the Family Herald, Ile chose for
his discourse the problems of the
small farms and what is happening to
them." We find the smaller farms
are being left and the larger farms
are being taken over. Small towns
Mr. and Mrs. Alan McCall and Bev.
rely, Mr. Russell Currie, I)on and
Douglas, spent Sunday in 13urlington
with Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Lemon and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jenkins, of Nor.
IIETIIER1NGTON, IIA MIA', 70, form
er resident of Morris 'Township, pas•
sed away at Iluronview Yonne, Clin•
ton. Survived by a sister, Mrs. B. A.
Coutts, Winghann. Funeral service
at the S. ,1. Walker funeral home.
Wingham, on Monday, May 28, at 2
p.m.
Elston Cardiff
gets things done!
Experience has
no substitute
L. Elston Cardiff
THE HURON RECORD
FEDERAL ASSISTANCE TO
HURON COUNTY, 1957.62
CONSTRUCTION
Post offices and
public buildings
HARBOR and RIPER
IMPROVEMENTS
ASSISTANCE TO
HOSPITALS
PROJECTED (1962.63)
Goderich Harbor
(Removal of Ship
Island)
Clinton Public
Building
Bayfield --Repairs
to Pier
$ 375,000,00
$ 500,000.00
$ 120,000.00
$ 700,000.00
$ 90,000.00
$ 65,000.00
$1,850,000.00
ON JUNE 18, RF -ELECT ELSTON
I•FF X
Published by the Ntu'on Progressive Conservative Association
with, visited over the week -end with
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin.
and small farins help to keep up the
ingenuity of the country. It is a prob-
lem the family farm is in peril. Ii
the family farm has been lost, it has
lost a great deal more than fancy
poetry. Be also told us considerable
about his family life and experiences
that had taken place. 'I71e roll cal
was a written suggestion for a W. 1.
project to mark Canada's centennial
(19G7) at either federal provincial or
local level. ' Later these were read.
It was decided to give a donation of
$10.00 to Duff's Church for the use of
it in entertaining the East Huron Wo-
men's Institute. Mrs. James Nolan
gave an interesting report on the Dist.
riet Annual held in Walton last Thurs.
day. A report on the Officer's Con-
ference held in Guelph was given by
Mrs. Ken McDonald, giving us dif•
lerent ideas and views of the Institute.
A bus trip for Monday, .lune 11. wa 3
planned, with Mrs. W. Shortreed and
Mrs. Gerald Watson in charge of ar-
rangements. The meeting closed with
the Queen. Lunch hostesses were Mrs.
J. Bryans, Mrs. H. Bolger, Mrs. C.
Martin, Mrs. J. McDonald, Mrs. K.
McDonald.
Bus Trip to Include Interesting Stops
A bus trip is being sponsored by the.
Women's Institute with Mrs. Wilfred
Shortreed and Mrs, Gerald Watson as
co -conveners. The bus will leave the
Walton Community hall at 7:30 a.m,
Monday, June 11. The following places
will be included in the trip: At Colling-
wood we will visit the canning factory,
Georgian china factory and Hiawatha
Inn for dinner. On to visit the dress
factory and shrine at Midland and the
Midhurst Park. Supper arrangements
have been made at an eating'place on
101 highway. Institute members please
notify Mrs. Wilfred Shortreed and Mrs'.
Gerald Watson. For convenience, mon-
ey may he left with Mrs. T. Dundas
or the Ennis store.
Reception for Newly -Weds • .
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald • Ennis were -
guests of honour Friday evening at
a reception held • in the Walton Com-
munity Hall. During the lunch 'hour
the newly-weds were escorted to the
platform for _.he highlight of the ev.
ening. An address was read by Mr.
Herbert Kirkby and the presentation
of a well-filled purse of money was
made by Mr. Neil McGavin. Ron re.
plied, expressing his thanks for .1110.
gift of money and all who had lmado
the evening a success. Music for dan-
cing was supplied by Ian Wilbee's or.
chestra. Mr. and Mrs. Mac Sholdicd
were in charge of arrangements.
Guests attending from a distance were
Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Loveridge, West
1I111, Mr. Gerald Dressel, Rexdale, Mr.
Gregory Kaiser, Scarboro, Mr. Ken-
neth Thompson, Hamilton, Miss Rosalie
Bedard, Reg. N., Goderich, Mr. and
Mrs. Murray Kirkby, Port Credit, Mr.
Herb Kirkby, Woodstock, . Miss Ruth
Ennis, Reg. N., Kitchener, and Mr,
and Mrs. Ronald Ennis, Hamilton.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fraser and fam4
ily, Stratford, spent Sunday with I!r4
Malcolm Fraser.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Martin and fame
ily, of Burford, have. been visiting
with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin
prior to leaving for Napanee where
he has been transferred to the Toronta
Dominion Bank.
• Mr. and Mrs. Elias Kostenuik Ieft'
last week for a two week visit to Win.
nipeg, Manitoba, where 'they will visit
with Mr .and Mrs, Dick Tyssen and
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kostenuik ah
Sheho, Saskatchewan. Peter, David
and Steve will remain in London with
friends.
A number of ladies from this vicine
ity attended the Trousseau Tea • fob
Miss Marie Johnston, of Bluevale, Sate
urday evening.
Mr, and Mrs. W. Stutz, of Waterloo,
spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs,
T. Dundas.
Mr, and Arrs. Bill Dinsmore, of Kit4
ehener, visited over the week -end with
Mr. 'and Afl's. Gordon ItleGavin.
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Rutledge and
family, of London, visited with rela.
tives in the village.
FREE FREE
4
A hardy 'Munn for everyond
this week ,only
with a $2,00 order
HERE'S A FEW RO '62
•
Evergreens
Roses
Insecticides
Marigold, Petunias
Snaps, Pansies
Tomatoes, neighs
Onions, Geraniums
•
Clinton Greenhouse
and Garden Centre
Irtg 2.7168
• 182 Church Street
John Sjcely. Sulitb
PAGE 6 i'77r
TAB BLY7+H S'T'ANDARD
Wednesday, May 30, 19U2 1
AUBURN NEWS
Guild held Successfv.l Bake Sale
The Ladies Guild of St. Mark's An•
glican Church held a successful bake
sale and afternoon tea last Saturday
afternoon in the Orange Hall. The bake
table was in charge of Mrs. Thomas
Iiaggitt, Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor and
Mrs. Robert J. Phillips. The rummage
table was in charge of Mrs. Andrew
Kirkconnell, Mrs, John Daer and Mrs.
Orville McPhee. Afternoon tea was
served by Mrs. George Schneider, Mrs.
Robert Meallee Mrs. Sam Deer, Mrs.
Lloyd Humpiireyes and Miss Shirley
Brown, The fish pond in charge of the
A.Y.P.A., was run by Eileen Schneider
Ruth Schneider and Carole Brown.
Mr, and Mrs. George Il,aggitt attend-
ed the graduation ceremony held by
the Stratford General Hospital for Miss
Marilyn Keen, of Stratford. 111r. and
Mrs. Lawrence Nesbit also attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald King and fam-
ily, of Strathroy, visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs. Russel King.
Plans to end their year with a wein-
er roast were made at the CGIT meet•
ing held on the lawn of Knox Presby.
terian Church with a goof attendance.
It was decided to hold it on Friday
evening, June 1st and to begin with
a scavenger hunt at 8:30 p.m. Later
they will go down to the banks of the
Maitland River for the Weiner roast
and all are inviting a friend for this
occasion, The conunittee in charge
are Judy Arthur, Gail Miller and Marg-
aret Sanderson. The girls decided tc
make an autographed quilt and to start
it during the summer months.
U. C. W. Held General Meeting
The United Church Women of Knox
United Church met in the Sunday school
room of the church for their genera,
meeting. Unit 2 was in charge of the
program with Miss Elma 11Iutch pre-
siding. The meeting was opened with
the hymn, "From all that dwell below
the slates." The scripture lesson was
read by Mrs. Jack Armstrong and Miss
Mutch presented the meditation follow.
ed by prayer. The offering was receiv
ed by Mrs. Robert Turner and Mrs.
Norma McDowell, and dedicated. Mrs.
Norman McClinchey favoured with a
vocal solo. Mrs. C. Lewis showed
a film entitled, "Pay the Piper," ilt•
ustrating the problem of alcoholism
among teenagers. Mr. Keith 'Arthur
gave a demonstration on how to use
the new fire extinguishers placed in
the church. Mrs. 'McDougall, the pres-
idem, took charge of the short busi•
ness period. A donation was made to
the refugees in Hong -Kong. After the
benediction was pronounced lunch was
served by the Unit in charge of the
meeting,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hestia, of Lon•
don, were recent visitors with her sis-
ter, Mrs. Ed. Davies and Mr. Davies.
Mrs. W. H. Shepherd, of Bright's
Grove, and Miss Eileen Fells, of Tor-
onto, visited last week with Miss Laura
Phillips and called on other friends.
Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Dobie, William, Jannelt and
Ross were, Mr. and Mrs. Leo McLuhan
and Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hanoway, Tor-
onto, Miss Marie Knight and Gerald
Dobie, of Goderich.
•Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Davies attended the
graduation party at Belmont of her
niece, Miss Norma Taylor, over the
week -end. Miss Taylor graduated
from the University of Western Ontario
with her B.A. degree, and had the
honor of being the youngest girt to gra-
duate with her degree at the age of 20.
Allis Taylor has accepted a position
on the staff of a Hamilton High School
and will teach mathematics.
A large crowd of Teenagers attendeo
the Teeiwille dance last Friday even-
ing in the Auburn Community Memorial
Iiah. The music for the dance was
supplied by the Comet Teens and many
novelty dances, jiving and the twist,
were enjoyed by the Teenagers, The
chaperones were Mr, and Mrs, James
McPhee and Mr. and Mrs. Duncan
McKay. The refreshment stand was in
charge of Mr. and Mrs. Wes Bradnock
and Miss Laura Phillips.
Mr. Gus BIshack returned home last
week .after staying in London with his
son, Calvin, who is a patient in Victoria
hospital following a car accident. Mr.
Bisback reports that Calvin is improv
ing since surgery was done on him.
Several members of the Auburn Sig•
ana-C attended the week -end camp at
Goderich Summer School, and all re-
port a good time. They are planning
two film evenings program on Friday
and Saturday evenings of this week,
The films are "The. Great Locomotive
Chase" and Nature's Hill Acre."
Anniversary Services In Knox United
' Patients In Hespltats
Mr. Russel King.is a patient in West -
spinster hospital, London. Mr. Percy
Walden is a patient in Victoria Hosp-
ital, London. Mr.. John Sprung is a
patient in the Clinton Hospital. We
wish all these a speedy recovery.
Received B.E,Se. Degree
Word was received here by relatives
that George E. Raithby, son of Mrs.
Glen Raithby, and the late Mr. Halal -
by, of London, that he has received
hie B.E.Sc. degree from .the University
rrf Western Ontario. He was success-
ful In winning the Merit Award for
Scholastic and Extra Curricular Acti-
vity. He also won the Board of Gov-
ernors
overnors Medal for Mechanical Engineer-
ing Option.
ANNTJAL SPRING RALLY HELD AT
AUBURN
Over 135 members of the Mission
Band and Explorer? Groups met fon
their annual spring rally in Knox Pres
byterlanan Crumb, The groups were
from Goderich, Blyth, •Seaforth, Clin-
ton, Hensall, Bayfield and Auburn. MI's.
Wellington Good, of Blyth, Children's
work secretary of the Huron Presby-
terial
resbyterial of the Presbyterian Church in
Canada was in charge of the afternoon's
program.
The guests were welcomed by Mrs.
Donald Haines and Mrs. Kenneth Scott.
the leaders of the Ida White Group of
Auburn, and the meeting opened by all
.wring the lard's Prayer and the
beanie, "God sees the little ,sparrow
fall," with Mrs. D. Haines at the piano.
Greeting from the Huron Presbyterial
were brought by Mrs: !Rev! Ross Mac-
Donald, of llensell, in the absence al
the president, . Miss E. Somerville
Goderich.
The devotional period was taken by
the Auburn Group. Marion 1'oungblut
welcctrned the guests and the scripture
lesson, M'atthcw 1ti, was read by Joyce
Lcatherland, followed by prayer by
Marion,
The Blyth group sang a chorus.
"Jesus loves the little children". A
recitation, "Sing a song of Jesus, was
given by Sharon Mason and a duel
"\1'hioh side pre you on," was sung
by Helen Adams and Mavis Bailey
A piano , solo was played by Linde
Caldwell and a recitation, "The Lord's
niy Shepherd," was given by Archie
Mason.
The Clinton group presented read•
ings with each member telling about
the Bible and what it contained and
closed with a chorus, "Jesus the Friend
of Little Children," The roll call was
answered by each group standing with
their leaders.
The Hensall and Bayfield groups pre-
sented readings and a solo was sung
by a small member, ''How Great Thou
Art". Hensall presented an interest-
ing skit on "The Good Samaratin" in
costume worn in bible days. Faye
Troyer played the "Rock of Ages"
hymn on the piano and was also com-
mentator for the skit. Those Laking
the different parts were Charles Sch-
walm, Michael Hoy, Billy Hoy, Man
Armstrong, 'Douglas Armstrong, John
Skea, Janice l3onthron, Louis Wright
and Marjorie Schwalm. Charles Seh-
wahn played iwo piano solos, "It. is
no secret," and "Blue Bells of Scot-
land."
The Goderich group sang several chor-
uses and Marcia Lumby explained
what the words were in the Spanish
song they sang, "With Jesus in the
family.
Seaforth group sang • the chorus,
"Children of the Church," and gave
readings. The offering was received
by Eddie Haines and Wayne Scott, of
Auburn.
The highlight of the afternoon was
the film "Sugar and Spice" shown by
Mr. Donald Haines. It was an inter-
esting story of two small Indian twin
girls. Sugar and Spice told how they
lived in India and went to the church
where the missionary was preaching,
An invitation to hold the 1963 Spring
Rally at Blyth was accepted and will
be held on the last Saturday in May.
The leaders of the different. groups
were as follows: Goderich, Mrs. 1\'nl•
liam Ln.lniby, Mrs. Russel Bradford,
pfrs. Stewart Sutherland, Dies. Leonard
Watson; Hensall, Mrs, Frank Wright.
Airs. Gordon Troyer, Mrs. Gordon
Schwalm, Mrs. Harold Bonthron; Clin-
ton, Mrs., Donald Webster, Mrs. Clar-
ence Nielans; Seaforth, Mrs. E. Riv-
ers, Mrs. W. Hodgert; Blyth, Mrs.
Wellington Good, Mss Mary Machan;
Auburn, Airs. Donald Haines, Mrs.
Kenneth Scott. •
During the lunch hour a very inter
esting filet on "The monkey is king"
was shown to the children. Mrs. R.
McDonald closed the meeting with
prayer and thanked the Auburn ladies
for being hostesses,
FEDERATION NEWS
This is a Alberta Wheat Fool Crop
Report of April 28th, 1962.
Early season conditions are almost
a mirror image of those of last year,
good moisture reserves in the north
and very dry in southeastern and east -
central Alberta. But now that the
drought • has built up over a longer
time period in the south, the extremes
are much more pronounced. Sub -soil
moisture reserves around Medicine
Hat have ,dwindled to almost nothing
and the surface is dry enough to causs
some concern over gerrnin'ation. On
the other hand, reserves in the Edman•
ton district and in the Peace River re-
gion are at or near levels which pro-
duced excellent crops last year. Gen.
erally speaking, this has not been en-
ough to balance the declining moisture
supplies 1n the south, with the result
that the provincial average has declin-
ed. Sub -soil moisture on summer -fal-
low is estimated at 60 percent of capa-
city compared to 70 percent one year
ago.
Returning to regional conditions, the
dryness In the south persists' as far
west as Lethbridge where summer fal-
low sub -soil moisture is rated at only
40 percent of capacity, Il is also very
dry north to Hanna in eastern Alberta.
As was the ease last year, however,
the extreme south west corner of the
province stands In marked contrast to
the gr1in situation of the surrounding
area, Moisture re,erves are excellent
in the Cardslon•Glaresholni area.
Although dry conditions are most
severe in the south, moisture reserves
in central Alberta are once again de-
oidely below normal. Surface moist-
ure is adequate for germination in the
Calgary -red Deer districts, but sub -soil
reserves have not yet been restored by
adequate precipitation. In general,
timely seasonal rainfall will be an Im-
portant requirement for crop develop-
ment over most of the province south
of Wetaskiwin avid Wainwright.
Seeding progress so far is similar to
that of last year with noticeable 'ant•
ounts completed only in crop districts
1 and 2 in the southeast corner of the
province. About 46 percent of the
wheat in district 1 has been planted
and about 21 percent in crop district 2.
Many farmers in this area are now
holding up seeding operations in the
hope that future rainfall will improve
conditions for germination. In addi-
tion, con;dderable wind erosion has oc-
curred across the southern part of the
province.
Preliminary agents' estimates indi-
cate a prospective 6 percent increase
in Wheat acreage in the province this
year. Sharp declines are slated fur
barley and flax which will he about "r
and 12 percent below last year's acre-
age. Other grains will see small de.
clines. Although the bulk of the winter
wheat in the traditional growing area
of the south west corner of the paw.
ince came through the winter fairly
well, there was considerable winter -kill
on expanded acreage outside of this
area.
BLYTII MEN TOOK IN
INDIANAPOLIS CLASSIC
Messrs. R. D. Philp, Gordon and
Frank Elliott were among the passen-
gers who travelled by chartered bus
from London to Indianapolis to see the
running of the 500 mile speedway race
dee \\'ednesdey. They left London at
6 p.m. Tuesday evening and are ex•
peeled to arrive home early Thursday
morning.
we can well imagine the thrill at
having watched the fastest running a!
the event in the history of hhe race.
'tee�ssur
NOTICE
1 will he collecting Hydro anti \Vater Bills at
W. Thuell's Shop on the afternoons of the 11th to
15t11 inclusive of each month by order of the Hydro
ConiillitSsioll.
1. WALLACE, Secy.-Treas.
T KE STA
VOTE THE t LIE ERAL TEAM
ERNEST C. FISHER
Liberal Candidate -- Huron
The Mayor of Goderich has been active in local
politics and organizations for many years.
HON. 1. B. PEARSON
Leader of the Liberal
Party of Canada
Distinguished statesman, winner of the
Nobel Peace Prize, Mr. Pearson has attracted
good candidates to the Liberal team.
WE NEED A MILLION NEW JOBS. 415,000 Canadians, on average, have been out
of work every day since July 1957.
We are making less — real income per Canadian is smaller — than six years ago.
This waste and suffering of people did not have to happen. It must not be allowed to
continue.
The right government policies can get things moving and keep them moving.
The Liberal party is pledged to full employment. Its policies are built for an expanding
economy.
An expanding economy will create the million new jobs our growing population needs for
the next four years.
You can take a stand for better jobs and greater opportunities in Canada ... vote for
your Liberal candidate on June 18.
A NEW KIND OF LEADERSHIP ...THE KIND OF GOVERNMENT WE NEED
VOTE FISHER
Best peal Evert
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r SHELL FEED MILL
BLYTH, Ontario
�'el. No. 46R
SVeuitesday, May 30, 1962
vosisaraigaridlasir
Elliott Insurance Agency
BIRTH -- ONTAIUO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sieknt;ra, Avident,
Windstol'm, Farm Liability, Life,
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 1.04. Residence Phone 140
TIIE 11'1.S'1' 1VAIVANOSII M l'1'UAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Dungninion
Established 1870
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brown.,Smyth, 11.13.. 2,
Auburn; Vice -President, Berson Irwin,
Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, R.R.
1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan,
Goderich; Ross 111c1'hee, RR. :1, Au.
burn; Donald 111acKay, Ripley; John F
MacLennan, 11.11, 3, Goderich; Frank
Thompson. R.R. 1, 1lolyrood; Wm.
Wiggins, 13..11..1, Auburn.
For information on your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
48.
DEM) STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASA PRICES
PAID FOI3. SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value
Old Ilorses—Ie per pound
Phone collect 133, llrussels,
BRUCE 11ARLA'TTT
OR
GLENN GiIISON, Phone 15119, Blyth
24 (lour Service
Plant Licence No. 54•11.13. -GL
Colector Licence No. 118-G61
VACUUM CLi:ANERS
SALE; ANI) SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaners and polishers, Filter Queen
Sales, Varna. Tel. collect Ilensall 696112.
50-13011.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WILFI3.ED McINTEE
Real Estate Broker
WALKEItTON, ONTARIO
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance. Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No. 8 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231
Goderich, Ontario.
20-tf
BINGO
Legion Bingo every Thursday nite
8:45 sharp, in Legion (tall, Lucknow.
12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share•
the -wealth and a special for $50,00 must
go. (no limit to numbers). 4011
ACHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE
Highest prices for dead, old or di;•
able( horses and cattle. Phone Atwood
356-2622 collect. Licence No. 156C62.
P & W 'TRANSPORT L'111).
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Bogs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
On Friday
Call 162, Blyth
SANITA'T'ION SERVICES
Septic 'faults cleaned and repaired.
Blocked drains opened with modern
equipment. Prompt Service, Irvin
Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254.
1111,
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS— 1 p.m. to 4:30 pan,
EVENINGS:
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(BY APPOINTMENT)
ROY N. BENTLEY
Publlo Accountant
OODERICII, ON'r.
Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478.
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST, - WINGnIAM,. ON'1'.
(For Appointment please phone 770
Whnghant),
1'rofessinnal Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
PItOI'ER'I'II'5 10011 SALE
IVII.I'13.ED AltINTEE
Real Estate Broker
1Valkerton, Ontario
200 acres in last 11'cnv;cnush '11vp„
two set of buildings, 2 silo;;, hydro.
100 acres in Ilullelt Twp., good build-
ings and silo, hydro,
100 acres in Morris Twp., good build•
ings, hydro, 1 mile from Blyth.
100 acres in Hugel'. Twp, good brick
house and harn, hydro,
350 acres in Kinloss Twp., 50 acres
hardwood bush, (1 miles from Teeswat'
er, two set of buildings, hydro.
Large cement. block hon: a and gar -
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
'Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Beaforth Deily Except Monday ik Wed
0:00 n.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. — 0:00 a.m. to 12:30 pan.
Clinton Office • Monday, 9 • 5:30.
Photo IIU 2-7010
Imp
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
(IODEItICIi 26-11
age in Relgrave 0n Nn. 4 highway.
97 acres near Auburn, 10 acres of
hush, gaol buildings, hydro.
101) acres near Brussels, good build-
ings, hydro, 1 mile to school.
VIC'T'OR KENNEDY
Blyth, Ontario
BLYTII BEAUTY .11AIt
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann l-Iollinger
Phone 1.43
FOIL SALE
1919 (low. '2 ton pickup, and 11)0)
('hrysler 1Vindsur Sedan. 1011 vehicles
in )good conditions. ('arts for 1950 Cher.
pickup including two ltoad 6011x1(3 tires
;:nal two good 6Sux-I6 tires, Arthur
Bros., Auburn, Oatario. 13.11
THE I3LYTI1 STANDARD ,,
BROW NIES
CLINTON, ONTARIO
Two Complete Shows Nightly
Children tinder 12 in Cars Free
Tuesday and Wednesday, May 29.30
"Pleasure O'f Itis Company"
(Colour)
Fred Astaire Debbie Reynolds
1'cnh hunter
(Cartoon)
.•M/•0"4"4 /vv vvvy/.M/•MM/•N
Thursday, Friday, May 31 and June 1
—DOUi3LE BILL—
`t'I'all Story"
(Adult Entertainment)
Anthony Perkins •• Jane Fonda
"Cash McCall"
(Colour)
Janus Garner •• Natalie Wood
(Cartoon)
+• .•. •.•. •t% /V•n/•fne. is new
Saturday and Monday, June 2.4
—DOUBLE BILL—
"G.I. Blues"
(Colour')
Elvis Presley
"Boy Who Stole A Million"
Virgilio 'Taxer((
(Cartoon)
Tuesday and Wednesday, Jute 5.6
"CINDERFELLA"
(Colour)
Jerry Lewis
Anna Alnrie Albcrghchl
(Cartoon)
ADVANCE TICK El's .JUNE 5 FROM
ANY MEMBER CLINTON 110SPIT'Ah
AUXILIAiRY
Proceeds for Hospital Addition.
pisomonomosesomannassimemscsoarmsomm
1 4-4 1 4 114-► 11-► $-4"/"1 M 1-11+1-1 1, 1-1.11-1-1-t-1-11-1+1-41-1.1+1-1.4-1- +4+'
When Presented at the Box Office of
BROWNIE'S DRIVE-IN THEATRE
CLINTON
This Coupon Admits the DRIVER of the Car Only
E IE
ANY MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEI)NE.SDAY or 'THURSDAY NIGHTS
for the Month of June Only.
(except on June 5 1lospital Auxiliary Theatre Night)
,"1 -11"4 -d -1 -t -t-4.141-11--1-44♦.* 1, 4-1 1 11 44-4 1 -4,4 -14 -114 -1+444 -44 -4 -1 -1 -1 -4 -4 -4 -44 -
HOUSE FOR SALE
5 roots ranch style house, built 2
years, drive-in garage, automatic oil
lurnace and all modern conveniences,
in Blyth. Apply Mrs. E. J. Churchill,
Mossley, Ontario, phone llal'rietsville
269-3377. 51-tt.
ELLIOTT ILEAL ES'T'ATE AGENCY
Gordon Elliott Broker
Myth — Phone 104 or 1.10
Following Blyth Residential Property
11. storey, frame nletalclad, instil•
at ed dwelling, :1 piece bath, hydro.
water, good location.
11'2 storey, brick dwelling, oil fur-
nace, aluminium windows and screens.
3 lots.
11/2 storey frame dwelling, furnace.
3 piece bath, in good repair.
2 storey brick dwelling, 3 apartment.,
2 - 3 piece bath, furnace and stoker,
rental investment.
112 storey frame, instil prick dwelling
and garage on good lot.
CRAW:FORI) &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS d' SOLICITORS
J. 11. Crawford, 1L S. Hetherington.
Q
Vfln`hnni and Blyth.
IN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located in Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wiughatn, 4�
'1'OWNSiiIP 0E IIULLET"I
TENUEIis
'I'ENDh,RS will he received by the
Township of Mullett for the construe•
lion of approximately R1(11) lineal feel
of open drain, consisting of approxi:
nudely 3,00)) lineal feet of new con.
sI ruction and approximately 11,030 lin•
eat feet of clean out. The work i>
situated un the 13Ih and 14111 conces•
:dons in the 'Township of Mullett, and
is known as the Murray -Lamb Muni-
cipal Drain.
Plans and specifications can be seen
at the Clerk's Office. 'fenders must
be in the clerk's office not later than
12 o'clock noon, Saturday, June 2, 1002.
and must be clearly marked as to the
contents.
Lowest or any lender not necessarily
accepted.
HARRY F. 'i'E13BUT'I', Clerk,
11,13.. 1, Londesboro, Ontario.
12-2.
oN•►IJ tJI•IIII•►IV I ♦r I•I.MIIaNNNIN!
FARMERS
Clinton Community
AUCTION SALES
FRIDAY EVENING A'1' 7,30 p.0).
AT CLINTON SALE BARN
Bob Henry,
Bob McNair,
Joe Coley,
Manager, Auctioneer. e
05-1f. t
-I NI NIINI"♦IIIlPI.Mt' *414`0III4,4VIv
FIELD .DAY
and
AUCTION SALE
PERFO1RMANCE, 'I'ES'I'EI) BULLS
Agricultural School, Itidgetown
Tuesday, June 5th, 1962
Field Day program continences al
1;30 P.M. DST
Sale of bulls starts at 4;30 P.M. DST.
1''or sale catalogues apply to
E. A. Starr,
Parliament Bldgs., 'Toronto.
FOlt SALE
Westinghouse Frig; 1leintzmann
piano; dining room suite; bedroom
stole; Moffat Gas Range, excellent
condition. Donald Snell, phone 46R17,
Blyth. 13-1p,
BAKE SALE POSTPONED
Bake Sale at home of Mrs. Ben Walsh
postponed until a later date, sponsored
by Friendly Unit. 13.1.
AUCTION SALE
Of Household Effects at the hone of
,\Ir. Jaynes IV. Roberton, in Auburn, on
THURSDAY, MAY 31st
at 1.30 pan.
Dining room table and chairs; side-
board; chesterfield suite; couch; dish-
es; tables; kitchen cabinet; Interna-
tional refrigerator; beds; springs and
Mattresses; dressers and stands; elec•
tric washing machine; tubs; set of
scales; pots; pans; pails; bedding;
cushions; sewing machine; wheelbar•
row; ladders; shovels; forks; hoe;
numerous other articles.
TERMS CAS11
Proprietor, James W. Roberton,
Auctioneer, Edward Elliott. 12-2
Old 'Tyiue
DANCE
FRIDAY, JUNE Sth
Londesboro Community IIall
Sponsored by Regal Chapter
0. E. S., 'Blyth
NORRIS' ORCHESTRA
Admission 75c
Lunch .Counter
Everybody Welcome
FOR SALE
1954 Dodge, automatic transmission.
Ar -ply Paul E. Watson, phone 46, Blyth,
on Saturdays only. 12-1p.
HURON COUNTY COUNCIL.
JUNE SESSION
FOR SALE
Sebago Fotatues, $1,25 bag. Apply
Jasper Snell, i'unie 3`1t25, Blyth. 13.2
FOR SAi.E
9 pigs, 8 weeks old, Apply, Russel;
MacDonald, (.hone 171113, Blyth. 13-11:
FOIL SALE
1fod1rn tw.) story, (Lice bedroom,
home in the village of Auburn, in ex•
ceptionally gocd eonaitian. Priced yeas.
unable. Apply, Mrs. Latina Fowler
('hone 520.7218, AuLu'nt. 13.1
WANTED
Bicycle set1table fur 0 year old boy.
l'hcne 242, Blyth, 13.10.
FOR SALE
One floor cottage on Din.sley Street
Blyth. Living room, family size kit.
clicn with new built-in cuplwards. Two
bedraonm, three piece I:athrocm and
one spare room for laundry or storage.
New furnace and chimney, Insulated
and heavy duty wired. Clean and tidy
condition. Apply, Ken Hamm, Blyth,
13.1
CARD OF THANKS
We tvi"h to thank Mh'. and Mrs. Jim
(lardy and .1in1 and Bob Gloushcr fon
their assistance at the time of the acci-
dent of our sen, Calvin. Also Mr. anti
NTrs. Ray Perdue for their kindness 3.r.
Gus while lie was in London.
13-1p, —Gus and Irene Bis';ack,
PAGE
GODERICH
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
PARK THEATRE
NOW PLAYING
Phone JA4.7811
Now Playing—Gregory Peck • Gia Scala and David Niven
"TIIE GUNS OF NAVARONE"
In Color
The greatest World War II story you ever will see!
ONE SHOW EACH NIGHT STARTING at 8 o'clock
Mon., Tues., Wed., June 1, 5, 6—Adult Entertainment
(lope Lange - Stephen Boyd and Joan Crawford
with Suzy Parker • Martha iloyer - Louis Jourdan - Robert Evans
Presenting a dramatic story based on Rona Jaffe's novel
"T'I-IE BEST O1'' EVERYTHING"
In color
Thur., Fri., Sal., June 7, 8, 9—Double 13111
Richard Todd • Anne Aubrey and Jamie Ulys
A British made story of pioneer life in South Africa
"TIIE HELLIONS"
Scope and Color
Also:- "QUEEN OF THE PIRATES"—Adventure Drama
Corning—Nancy Kwan • William Hoiden in "The World Of Suzy Wong"
Restricted to persons 18 years of age and over.
BOAT FOR SALE
8 feet long, $20.00. Apply Ken Cole
Mill Etreet, Blyth. 13-1
FOR SALE
35 pigs, 7 weeks old. Apply George
Haines, phone 53813, Blyth. 13-ip
The June Session of Huron County
Council will commence 011 'Monday.
June 11, 1962,6at 10:00 a.m.
Notice of any documents or deputa-
tions must be in the hands of the Clerk
no later than 12:00 Noon, Friday, June
8111.
JOI1N G. BERRY, Clerk -'treasurer,
County of Huron,
Court house,
Goderich, Ontario.
aseemniemnumnrommounnommuumr
VOTE
ERNIE
FISHER
for
YOUNG
AGGRESSIVE
REPRESENTATION
What the riding of Huron deeds is young aggressive representation and
this is exactly what you will get if you vote and elect Ernie Fisher, your
Liberal Candidate.
During the five years that Ernie has been Mayor of Goderich he has work-
ed to the limit of time and endurance to further the progress of that town.
This is precisely what he will do if he is fortunate enough to successfully
contests this riding of Huron.
SOME EXAMPLES OF HIS AGGRESSIVENESS
In the time that Ernie has headed up the Goderich Municipal Government he has
made sseveral trips to Ottawa and set up many Inter -departmental meetings in Gode-
rich with govertunent officials, This tvork was all relative to the removal of ship
island which is now underway,
In his representations, Ernie Fisher constantly pointed out that the removal of
this shipping hazard was vital to (he continued prosperity o[ both Goderich and Huron
County.
With the island removed Ernle saw possibilities to facilitate the storage of much
more grain at the Harbour. This in turn would mean that trucking could, be used
more broadly with a resultant savings of at least 2c per bushel to Huron County farmers.
Without being your federal representative Ernie has already done touch on
behalf of the riding of Huron.
* During the year. Ernie attended close to 300 meetings each of which constituted a
speaking engagement.
* IIe has made ninny, many trips to various cities in an effort to obtain industry for
the town he represents.
* Ile also made many trips on natters that required the attention of either the Provincial
Government or the Federal Government. Keeping things constantly in front of right
people is the way that things have been attained for Goderich and this is the way
Ernie intends to represent you the people of Huron.
Vote for young aggressive representation on June 18. Vote for Ernie Fisher.
QUESTIOAT
ANSWER
you may be asking yourself; What can an opposition
member do for a riding? (Assuming the Conserva-
tives are returned.)
Huron 'was represented by an opposition member
during 17 years of Liberal ,Administration.
SEE-BEAR-ERNIE
CFPL TV Ch. 10 June 5 at 6:15 p.nt. CKNX TV June 8 at 6:10 p.m.
JU E 18 VOTE
FISHER ERNIE X
(Published by (he Huron Liberal Association)
Honeymoon Mixed
With Murder
The beautiful, raven -haired
illadame Giraudin had married
again, With her new husband
went a social uplift, for he was
Mr, Vere Goold, of a noble Irish
family,
After the wedding they honey-
mooned in Monte Carlo — and
lost heavily at the tables. They
were forced to borrow from a
rich Danish widow, Mrs. Levin,
whom they had met at the ca-
eino.
When the Danish woman de-
cided to leave Monte Carlo, she
sent a note to the Goolds, re-
questing the return of the
money.
Mrs. Goold was proud of her
new position, and did not want
to lose face with the interna-
tional set. She worked out a
plan.
The widow always carried a
good deal of money and decked
herself with diamonds. She
would come to the apartment to
collect the loan before leaving
the Riviera.
Mrs. Goold decided that the
Danish woman would not leave
alive. The temptingly rich Mrs,
Levin, carrying a parasol, left
her expensive Hotel Bristol suite
to collect the debt they could not
possibly repay.
And Estelle, the young Gi-
raudin niece they had invited to
live with them, had gone to visit
friends.
Airs, Goold received the Dan-
ish widow smilingly, and rapid-
ly appraised the diamonds she
wore,
Her husband found it hard to
smile. He had been into the town
to buy, among other things, a
hammer, a carving knife and a
pair of saws.
"Come drink this brandy,
darling," she had urged, handing
him a tumbler, "It will give you
the courage." Trembling, he had
drained it, and felt better.
Now she was saying: "Cheri,
please go and get what you have
to give Madame Levin!"
He went into the next room,
and re-emerged with the ham-
mer, Mrs, Levin was chatting
casually with his wife, He dared
not hesitate a second.
As he struck at the woman
she gave a stifled scream, His
wife sprang forward to make
,cure she could not reach the win-
dow.
The frantic, deadly blows sil-
enced Mrs, Levin, She slumped
In a heap, staining the floor with
her blood,
Mrs. Goold poured more bran-
dy for them both. Then they got
busy, with not a moment to lose
before Estelle's return,
When Estelle got back, her
aunt had a plausible story ready
to explain the stains on the car-
pet. Her poor uncle had sudden-
ly been taken ill with a serious
haemorrhage, They must leave
her and go at once to Marseilles
to consult a specialist. Their
trunk was packed and locked,
ready.
Mrs, Goold had a story, too,
for the concierge, who might
have seen Mrs. Levin arrive.
"What do you think? This
friend carne here asking for
money, At such a time! I was
terribly upset, and she left in a
fit of temper by the side door."
The guilty pair caught a train
that same evening August
6th, 1907. They deposited the
trunk in the luggage room at
Marseilles and told the clerk
that they would be taking it on
to Lyons the following day. They
put up at the Hotel du Louvre.
Mrs. Levin had told the man-
ager of her hotel that she was
leaving, but she had not taken
her luggage. That was the
Goolds' first mistake, writes
Trevor Allen in "Tit -Bits".
And why should the pair want
to take a heavy trunk with them,
merely to consult a specialist at
Marseilles'
They did not know that the
Danish woman had told a friend
that she was calling on the
Goolds.
She had told a Mine, Castel-
lazzi, who made a point of calling
at the Hotel Bristol that evening,
and when Mrs. Levin had not re-
turned by midnight, went to the
police and demanded that they
make inquiries,
A startled Estelle received the
officers in her nightgown and
explained why her uncle and
aunt had gone to Marseilles.
The policemen nodded and be-
gan looking over the apartment
— casually at first, then more
thoroughly after noticing the
hastily cleaned -up bloodstains on
the carpet. Pushed out of sight
in drawers, a cupboard and odd
corners, they found the stained
hammer, knife and saws wrapped
in newspapers and blood-soaked
cloths.
They also found a parasol
which Mme, Castellazzi instantly
identified as Mrs. Levin's, and
the Danish woman's note saying
she would call.
The luggage clerk at Marseilles
noticed blood oozing from one
faulty corner of the large trunk.
As soon as he could, he went
along to the Hotel du Louvre to
report the matter,
"Oh," said Mr, Goold affably,
"that trunk has poultry in it,"
and tipped him for his trouble,
But the clerk decided to tell
the police. They told him the
trunk was not to be removed,
The clerk then went back to
the hotel to inform Mr. Goold
of the decision, and found him
and his wife ready to resume
their journey. Goold did not ap-
pear to be greatly concerned
about the trunk. Whatever was
decided about it, he said airily,
he and his wife intended catch-
ing their train.
They took a cab to the station
— and there they found police
officers guarding the trunk.
Goold was still seemingly unper-
turbed, but his wife turned pale.
In the trunk police had found
the dismembered limbs of the
Goolds' victim. Mrs. Goold was
wearing some of the widow's
jewellery.
Arrested, Goold said that the
Danish woman had quarrelled
with a jealous lover while visit-
ing their apartment, and had
been, stabbed,
He and his wife, fearing that
they would be accused of mur-
der, had panicked and disposed
of the body.
But, when he heard that his
wife had told quite a different•
story, he confessed. He said. that
he alone was guilty of the mur-
der.
The trial, however, left no
doubt that the woman was the
instigator of the crime. She was
condemned to be guillotined. He
was given a life sentence.
A reprieve enabled Mrs, Goold
to join her husband in the penal
colony, and there they died —
she of fever, he committing sui-
cide soon afterwards.
MADE -OVER TALE
In this year's version of an
oft -told tale, according to Ben-
net Cerf, it's Brigitte Bardot
who stepped out of a shower in
her Paris Ritz suite and found a
window washer gazing raptur-
ously at her from his perch out-
side the bathroom, Miss Bardot
was reportedly too stunned even
to reach for her traditional
towel; she just stared and stared.
Finally, the window washer
broke the impasse by hollering,
in colloquial French, "Whatsa-
matter, lady? Ain't you never
seen a window washer before?"
LOOK-ALIKES -- Two ladies in the British spotlight show a
' titrikIng resemblance to each other, Rita Tushingham, new
movie star, poses against a tree near London with a serious
bok-alike expression of Princess. Margaret right, who leans
(epainst a pillar at Clarence House, her London residence.
ROYAL NUPTIALS — Don Juan Carlos of Spain and Princess
Sophie of Greece were married in Athens, Greece
HRONICLES
1NGERFARM
It pays to have a bird feeding
station. This past week besides
the usual run of sparrows, rob-
ina, and starlings we have seen
an ,oriole, a downy woodpecker,
flickers, brown thrashers and
dozens of red -winged blackbirds
- and a budgie bird! At first I
thought the latter was a blue
bird, Then I remembered a -
neighbour had put her budgies
out for an airing and somehow
or other the cage door came
open and away went the budgies.
Our neighbour hopefully set the
cage on a table but so far the
budgies have shown no inclina-
tion to forego their new found
freedom, Who can blame them
•, but how long can they sur-
vive, find their own feed and '
escape prowling cats who look
upon, birds as legitimate prey?
Fortunately our Ditto does not
bother much about hunting birds
but she will crouch motionless
for ever so long out in the field
watehing for mice,
Well, 1 expect green thumb
experts have been busy in the
garden just lately. We 'are not
experts but we have been busy.
In fact Partner was up at .Bob's
for two days putting in shrubs
for them as he and Joy decided
to do a little landscape garden-
ing at the front of their house.
While Partner was away the
grass and dandelions at home
really took a jump and I also
had a new shrub for him to plant -
when he got home, It is a viburn-
um. I saw one in a friend's
garden; she told me it had beau-
tiful white blossom heads and a
perfume that spread all over the
district, That was enough for ane
— I love flowersthat smell
sweet as well as look nice.
One way and another it was a
busy week, One day I was at a
Press Club luncheon to hear
Vida Peane tell about the plans
that are being made by the Cen-
tennial Committee for celebrat-
ing Canada's Centennial in 1967.
Apparently it is something to
which every organization should
be giving some thought — in fact
many have made tentative plans
already. Sonie are arranging to
finance scholarships of various
kinds — for science, music,
medicine, literature and so on.
Others are making a point of
having local histories written
and published — which I think
is a grand idea. Too much his-
tory ras already been lost, and
so many lovely old buildings
have been demolished to make
way for modern industry and
super -highways. We should at
least have pictures and records
to show these places at one time
did actually exist.
The next night our doctor
came in for a social visit and
stayed until nearly one o'clock,
arguing with Partner about poli-
tics and world affairs, He was
born in Central Europe and had
many unpleasant experiences
during World War II, including
going home one time after an
absence of eighteen months to
find his father had been taken
away and killed by the Com-
munists, As regards Canadian
politicis he contends that none
of the political parties in Canada
have a man to head the party
who can really qualify as -a true
leader. Then we got on to social-
ized medicine to which he is
naturally opposed, not only for
the sake of the doctors but for
the patients themselves. But ha
does think that' medical benefits
111
ISSUE 22 — 1962
a n d hospitalization generally
could do with an overhauling.
That some patients are in hospi-
tal who shouldn't be there, tak-
ing up beds that are urgently
needed by more serious cases
still on the waiting list, With
that I agree because I know of
several such instances. It is
often less trouble for the family
to have those with chronic com-
plaints in hospital than to look
after them at home, And I can't
see that socialized medicine is
likely to help that situation at
all.
Well, in lighter vein, you often
hear the expression — "What
you give you' get in return." It
generally refers to some form of
retribution as the result of a
mean or unkind act. But you
know it can be just'the opposite.
For instance Saturday I was do-
ing some last minute shopping,
which I generally try to avoid.
At the grocery store there was
the usual line-up at the cash
registers. At my desk I was
second in line, Presently I turn-
ed around and there was a lady
with just three items in her
hands. Well, you know how ir-
.ritating it is to buy just a few
things and. then have to wait
while customers ahead cash in
with a whole cart -load of gro-
cerrics. So I said to this lady
— "You go ahead of me — you
have so little." .At first she pro-
tested but in the end she accept-
ed my offer. Then after she had
cashed in she turned to me and
offered me her stamps. Then it
was my turn to protest but she
said — "No, you take .them, I
have no use for thc►n." (I pre-
sume she was not a regular cus-
tomer at that store,) So you
see what I mean — I gained a
few stamps by being just a little
bit considerate of another per-
son, And I rather fancy we both
felt glad things happened the
way they did. It's the sort of
thing that gives one a nice com-
fortable feeling.
Q. Is it proper do use the ab-
breviations — Chas., Jas., Robt,,
or Wm. — when addressing en-
velopes or In the writing of
salutations to letters?
A. Abbreviated names are
never proper in salutations, But
if a man usually abbreviates his
name in his signature, you may
follow suit in addressing your
envelope to hien.
You Can Help Nab
Hifi-Anel-Run Drivers
11,1 Patrol Sgt. I)on Saunders
as told to 11AL 't'ENNAN'I'
As the noun in charge of the
hit -tai d -run squad of Metropo!i•
tan 'Toronto Police, 1 have the
kind of job where you never
know what's going to happen
next Just the same, 1 can confi-
dent ly make one prediction, dur-
ing the next 30 days, at feast 200
motorists within our jurisdiction
will become hit-and-run drivers.
It doesn't make any difference
whether an accident is fig or
small; whether only a fender was
creased or a pedestrian killed;
whether the fleeing driver is to
blame for it or not; whether he
hit or got hit; or whether he
stepped on the gas a moment
after the crash or got out and
lingered a while at the scene —
any driver who leaves without
identifying himself or offering
assistance to the injured is com-
mitting an offense under the
Canadian Criminal Code, and the
police must try to catch him.
If you're surprised to hear of
any city averaging 200 or more
hit-and-run cases a month you're
probably going by what you see
in the newspapers and hear on
the air. Quite naturally, only the
really spectacular cases ever get.
much publicity. Car for car, Tor-
onto is probably no worse than
most Canadian cities and towns,
and better than some„ in its rate
of hit-and-run cases. Conserva-
tive estimates for all Canada, ran
to 15,000 cases last year with one
out of every _seven hit-and-run
accidents involving bodily injury,
When it has reached those pro-
portions, hit-and-run is obvious-
ly a crime that no police force,
however efficient, can hope to
control without considerable help
from citizens at large.
Most people when they stop to
think about it, realize that hit-
and-run—more than armed rob-
bery or murder—is a crime in
which we are all potential vic-
tims and may become actual vic-
tims at almost. any time, by the
sheerest chance. It's easy to
visualize your own parked car
being smashed by a hit-and-run
driver. It isn't hard to imagine
somebody in your family as a
hit-and-run victim left lying on
the street, perhaps dying for
want of medical attention or in
danger of getting struck a second
time. We don't have to spell out
such possibilities when we ques-
tion bystanders and ask for their
help. But we often wish that
more people at the scene had
known before the accident what
they could do to increase our
chances of catching the wanted
driver and presenting a full case
in court.
"Whodunit" writers a l w ay s
make a big point of the fact that
the 'tiniest and most sGpposedly
trivial scrap of information or
evidence can be enormously im-
portant in police work. But it's
true, and both police and public
would benefit if everybody real-
ized how true it can be in hit-
and-run .cases.
The fact that the driver was a
young -looking pian, for instance,
can be enormously useful to us
as we piece together the "details
of a case. Suppose we are given
that fact and then, from another
witness, we get a license number.
We may find that the registered
owner is a middle-aged man,
We'll knock at .the owner's door,
and when a middle-aged man
answers, we may ask, "Is your
son home, please?" Nobody of
course has told us the man has a
son, much less a son who was
driving the suspect car at the
time of the accident. But if we've
guessed wrong, nobody is hurt.
On the other hand, if our hunch
is right, the son will figure we
know a lot more than we really
do. He may agree at once to come
to the station and make a state-
ment,
Naturally, the first thing we
hope to get from witnesses at a
hit-and-run scene is a description
of the hit-and-run car—the 11
cense number, the make, the
model, the c.;lur, But it oou're
ever at tics udeot . all
maim tha; t:;:' pelta :it: :,!so
anxious to know whether tit. 1 lr
had any distinguishing markings
(such as a broken window) or
equipment or ornaments (such as
a foxtail on the radio antenna).
We want to know whether any-
body got even a glimpse of the
driver, whether he was alone, in
what manner he was driving,
whether he switched off his
tights (somebody farther along.
the street might remember seeing
a car go by with its lights out).
and even the direction the driver
was headed.
Some witnesses would be w lot
more help to us it they would
write down what they see —
especially license numbers, which
are harder to remember than you
think. If you're ever a witness
and you don't have a pencil or
paper when you see the license,
concentrate on the first three
digits and scratch all the num-
bers your see into the, dart at the
roadside, or write them with
your finger in the dust on the
side of a ear or building and
guard them until you do gel a
pencil. One very prominent eitt-
zen was dismayed, one night a
couple of years ago, to find, the
police knocking ani his door with-
in an hour after he had commit, -
ted a hit-and-run. It was no, feat
of magic on our part an client
witness had accurately recorded
the man's license number as he
was fleeing from the scene. (An-
other motorist, however, gave us
the best license identification v e
ever expect to get in a hit-and-
run case: his license plate foil off
right at the scene!')
On the other hand a woman.
once sworn that a certain hit-
and-run car had a license begin -
ring 153'-4, Twoof our men spent
hours copying down the names.
and addresses of car owners
whose licenses began with these
numbers—taken in any order, in
case the woman had the order
confused, Since we knew the
make of the ear, our men were
able to eliminate a, lbs o8 mantes,.
but even at that,. they came back
with about 200 names and ad-
dresses. We had to check out
every one, It was an enormous
jiob, but this case was a fatality,
and we were determined to. solve
it. We checked every name —
and got nowhere, Later, the
driver turned himself in. His li-
cense didn't contain even one of
the numbers the woman gave tug
Even so, we would rather have
false leads like that than no leads
at all. Except for hit-and-run
drivers and their companions,.
people seldom give us false in-
formation on purpose, and it's a
matter of professional thorough-
ness with us to check out every
tip. Metro Toronto police aren't
unique in this way. No matter
where you live, you can be sure
that any information you give
your police force about a hit-and-
run accident will be followed up
exhaustively.
Just as seemingly trivial recol-
lections of witnesses can be. im-
portant, so can tiny scraps of
physical evidence. It's incredible
what scientists can deduce in the
lab from bits of glass, paint,
metal and mud—the commonest
pieces' of physical evidence in
hit-and-run cases. It therefore
behooves you, as a witness or
bystander, to leave such evidence
undisturbed.
(Continued Next Week)
"Do you think a light bu ning
in the window would loo- ""
•
JET SMASHES HOUSE—Firemen look at the ruins of a house in Pittsburgh, that was sliced
in half and set afire when struck by a Michigan Air Notional Guard F 84 jet. The pilot
safely bailed out after the plane developed engine trouble while coming in for an emer-
gency landing. Two women in the house were injured.
Sonny Prepares
For The Big Bout
Charde; is,Tony) Liston took
:+ sip of hn: tea and jabbed a
giant finger ill. a black -at -A-
im In i 1 e poster showing all the
heavyweight champions since
1730. "When I win the chain.
pionshlp, 1 want my picture
r1.;b1 here in the middle," he
said. "I want it hugger than all
the others and I want it 1vilh
'.tai's around it."
After his first week et light
training in tine Catsl(ill.;, 1,0 011,
the troubled top c0nten(lei who
fight, Floyd Patterson fun the
heavyweight title in September,
wa.; supromely confident. "i'11
knock out Patterson in three Or
foto' rounds," he said. "I'm lust
as fast and 1 hit hv,rder. No
fighter hits harder than ole. The
only way Patterson'd bounce up
against Inc is with one of those
. . , those bouncing . "
"'Trampolines'.'" suggested a
wi iter.
"'Trampolines," said Liston,
uniting.
At times smiling a n d serene,
Liston can also be sulking and
solemn. Unsweetened by the
pink petunia wallpaper in his
room at The Pines hotel golf
clubhouse, he was irritable the
day after his 30th birthday last
month. He snapped at a sports-
writer, shouted at an adviser
on the telephone ("How can you
advise me if you ain't here?"),
and scowled at a gym assistant
("Who you working for, me or
newspaper people?"). In or out
of the ring, Liston, 6 feel I, 225
pounds, two prison terms, is a
menacing man.
"He's got to give hell to some.
body," explained Teddy King,
the assistant who was scolded
for not timing Liston's workout
properly. "But when Sonny gets
angry, he cools off fast. He's a
wonderful guy who'll make a
great champion."
Not everyone considers Liston
wonderful, In refusing Liston a
license in A.prll, the New York
rto Athletic Commission stern -
y announced: "The history of
ston'a past associations pro-
vides a pattern of suspicion .. ,
We cannot ignore the possibility
that these longtime associations
continue to this day." Convicted
of armed robbery in 1950 and
of assaulting a policeman in
1956, Liston has also been ac-
cused of being associated with
Philadelphia racketeer Blinky
Palermo, heir transparent to
Frankie Carbo, boxing's under-
world czar.
Liston lately has confined his
assault and battery to the ring.
HIe now has won 33 of 34 bouts,
including 23 by knockouts, and
has been the No. 1 challenger
for two years. "Liston will be
the greatest fighter I've ever
fought," says Floyd Patterson.
"His record speaks for Itself."
One item on which the record is
silent: Can the Philadelphia
strong man take a punch? "I
hope people never find out,"
aays Liston.
Preparing for the biggest
fight of his life, Liston fortifies
himself with two meals a day
(five strips of bacon, three soft-
boiled eggs, two glasses of fruit
Juice, and two cups of tea for
breakfast; 2 pounds of steak for
dinner), walks 7 miles in 7 -
pound shoes,' shadow boxes four
rounds, and skips rope nine min-
utes to a jazz recording of "The
Night Train." For diversion, he
watches television, pitches nick-
els with members of his entour-
age, or stands on his head. Some-
times he rides a red bicycle.
*The bike beats walking," he
maid, "Someday I'm going to try
to ride it to Philadelphia (dis-
tance; 192 miles). If I make it,
then I'll know I'm in shape "
0.
ISSUE 22 1962
OVERTHROWN — It appears that 10 -year-old Jackie Ingle,
mascot of the United A.W.C. Clapham Bulham Institute in
London, England, can hold his own as he "russles" with
this beefy fellow Jackie hopes to follow in the footsteps of
his father, who is an institute instructor in wrestling.
Horne -Made Bombs
A Menace in Britain
"Courts are having the in1-
nlense problem again of dealing
with violence in youngsters,"
gravely announced the chairman
of Middlesex Sessions, Mr,
Ewen Montagu, Q.C., recently,
He was jailing for four years
an Enfield youth who had made
his own home-made bomb to
blow up a car.
"It was bad enough when It
was iron bars and knives," said
Mr. Montagu.
"Now it is• bombs!"
The bomb which caused the
grave warning was made by a
twenty -year-old labourer who
wanted to blow up his father-
in-law's car after his wife had
walked out on him.
With a short length of two-
inch tubing filled with chemical,
he completely destroyed the car,
blew one mudguard a distance
of twenty-five yards and broke
windows in nearby houses . .
The bomb was made on the
kitchen table from piping pacxed
with weed -killer, sugar, and a
solid fuel used to power model
aircraft.
Many schoolboys have been
maimed and killed in the mod-
ern craze to make bombs. This
was spotlighted recently when
a fourteen -year-old public school
student died in Welwyn Garden
City after the explosion of a
weed -killer bomb, and his friend
was seriously hurt,
Supt. George Dear, of Hertford
C,I,D., told me: "All evidence
shows this craze of making
bombs is widespread.
"Usually they are weed -killer
bombs. But in some rases boys
are making 'bottle bombs,' and
detonating them by catapault!
"We appeal to parents to keep
chemicals which could be used
as explosives out of children's
way. Parents who find any tins
which might have been used to
make an explosive mixture
should phone the police at once
"And, if they find any of these
home-made bombs, they should
place them in a bucket of s;.:nd
or earth, handle them as little
as possible, and on no account
put them into water."
In Supt. Dear's area, a tele-
phone kiosk was wrecked by
a bomb which a child had ob-
viously made.
On the other side of Britain,
in Wyllie, Monmouthshire, a boy
of thirteen is 111 in hospital with
'a shattered hand. He was lucky
THAi PREMIER — Field Mar-
shal Sarit Thonarat is Thai-
land's strong man - premier.
to escape with his life. From a
twelve -inch -long piece of piping
and a mixture which, for once,
was not weed -killer, he had con-
structed a formidable bomb,
When he tried to close the end
of the tube with a hammer, a
spark from the steel hammer-
head exploded it.
There are three reasons for
this spate of dangerous idiocity.
Schoolboys quickly learned
the secret when a well-known
juvenile publication gave the
formula for a weed -killer bomb.
Others gleaned the idea of s.
bottle -bomb from a TV pro-
gram dealing with Sir Winston
Churchill, Millions of viewers
were shown how an anti-tank
bomb can be made from an old
bottle filled with petrol, and
fused in a manner I have no in-
tention of repeating, writes
Chauncey Jerome in "Tit -Bits."
T1en;°_crooks have discovered
the -ginner weakness of the old
Explosives Act — a law which
has not been changed since 1875,
when it was first put on the
Statute Book.
Even a few years after the
Act became law, it was not
enough to stop • a maniac blowing
up a public convenience in the
forecourt of New Scotland Yard
itself!
This was in 1883,.at the height
of an Irish bomb outbreak, and
in panic our legislators rushed
through the "Explosives Sub-
stances Act," which helped to
bring in other dangerous sub-
stances, such as picric, acid and
THE U.S. MARINES DROP IN -- Members of the 1,800 -man Marine battalion that landed
tin Thailand are shown during "Operation Tulongun" on Mindoro Island in the Philippines
fest month f=ive men are carried in each helicopter and descend a rope to land in isolated
M ECOS.
ugtllrl woge. !HI „Ill ul
perhaps not r..• :: 11 /1 (1 a:• dais!;
crow by, thr nlrl;n ENI)
Act,
I'ulire adinit the old Art i
lull of difficulties. l'or insta:.ct,
.011Citrii's nave managed to gel
:1l M1111tlal 1)11(';111 f a ,nh=L;;ir.e
usc'c1 in a Miro, -il:+(!r. bond,
(.001(1 not be prove _I ❑n t'xpl'>-n'f
within the nl^aninc ut the Ael.
Other lawyers nuulagcd to
eel an accused elan oft through
loophole, which ,ay= that
chemical eNn( rinlcnl, arc ex-
cn,pt!
A group of
Oydun schist
goy: recently discovered this
loophole., and began lltuliing
themselves a nlonslei "space
rocket" which, had it he en
launched, night have blow up
a street of house::.
Fortunately the police heard
of the attempt in time. and raid-
ed the rocket site.
"'We were only planning to
do experiments!" the police
were told. Then one of the boys
admitted they were planning
"scientific" experiments .
sending the rocket up with a
camera to study the stars,
"Right," said the police's tegal
advisers. "Now the boys can. be
warned they run the risk of ar-
rest.
"A scientific experiment, in
law, is not the same thing as a
chemical experiment!"
So the rocket was dismantled,
and the explosive washed down
the drains.
One man who knows a lot
about the hazards of home-made
bombs is Mr. V. J. Chancey, of
the Armament Research and De-
velopment Establishment at
Woolwich Arsenal.
He is usually called in by
Scotland Yard when famous
people are threatened by do-it-
yourself parcel bombs, and mys-
terious infernal machines.
"We have devised a remote -
control apparatus for opening
this sort of device," he told me,
"But we usually X-ray the par-
cel first."
An expert, with many years'
experience investigating explo-
sions caused by "the big stuff"—
R•DX, gelignite, and plastic ex-
plosives such as Nobel 808 — ad-
mitted to me: "The most dang-
erous thing of all the home-
made explosive, We never know
where we are with it. Yet often
they manage to pack it into par-
cel bombs."
Of all the dirty, dangerous and
cowardly ways of bringing harm
to your fellow man, the parcel
bomb is the worst.
In the past three years, Scot-
land . Yard and regional C,LD.
forces have investigated seven
major attempts at murder by
this method.
One of the luckiest escapes
was that of a Nottingham man,
He opened the parcel and saw to
his amazement a jumble of can-
isters of chemical. He phoned the
police, who discovered this parcel
bomb was intended to be deton-
ated with an ordinary mouse-
trap.
On opening it, the coil -spring
of the trap was supposed to
strike a little mercury -fulminate
detonator, which would then fire
the main charge, The parcel had,
however, been damaged in the
post, fortunately without causing
an explosion. The mouse -trap
had been pushed out of align-
ment.
When Michael Sheldon, a Sus-
sex detective -constable, received
through the post a coffee -box
bearing the words "Requiescat in
Pace" (Rest in Peace), he thought
it was just a practical joke.
The bomb went off with only
a small explosion, which dazed
the detective. But investigation
showed that some screws had
come loose. Had it functioned
correctly, it could have been
deadly,
The Government should find
time NOW to amend entirely the
olcl Explosives Act of 1875, and
the 1883 Explosive Substance Act.
A new law la needed to deal
with twentieth-century amateur
gangsters.
Sale of all chemicals such as
sodium ehlorate should be strict-
ly controlled. And there should
be stern sentences, up to life im-
prisonment, for people who steal
or misuse Army and mining ex-
plosives, or even chemicals such
as the ammonium nitrate used to
make then!,
Somehow, the idiot and crim-
inal section of the public must
be stopped from having easy ac-
cess to saltpetre and other potas-
sium nitrates which are so often
used to fuse home-made bombs,
SOB STORY
Two old friends met for the
first time in years. "How goes it
with you, Pete?" asked one. "Not
good at all," mourned Pete. "My
wife ran away with the letter
carrier, my son is a juvenile de-
linquent, my bank failed, and all
my teeth have come out." "Gosh,
I'm sorry to hear that," sympa-
thized the friend. "What business
are you in now?"
"Same old line," answered
Pete, "S a 111 n g good - luck
charms."
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BOYS' CAMP
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Buys 7.15
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9 CAI•LAIS AVE.. DOWNSVIEW ONT
Cli 9.4517
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
SNACK bar with 3 bedroom apartment
main corner, year round business 550011
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Port Dalhousie WE 4.0013
BUILDING MATERIALS
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Refer Inquiries to
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Distributors across Canada
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READY made wears and assorted
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soda. rice, potatoes, onions, electric
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musical Instruments, porf.land cement,
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LABCO EQUIPMENT LIMITED
44 Chauncey Ave., Toronto 19, Ont.
FARMS FOR SALE
NEAR Owen Sound, 300 acres early
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100 acres bush. Price $23,000. Write or
phone between 7.8 a.m.,Henry Ruhl,
RR 5, Owen Sound, FR. -7524, •
100 ACRES Shelburne district, good
clay loam, i3 acres bush, all workable
with tractor. barn 100'x70' good stables
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brick house with modern conveniences,
30 rod from hwy. 1 hr. from Toronto,
This farm has averaged over 100 bus.
grain to the acre for past 12 years,
and Is outstanding farm In the district.
Close to town and schools. First time
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York Rd., Mimico, Tor. 14 CL 9.2137.
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BEFORE YOU BUY
GET THE FACTS!
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HORSES AND EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
2 -yr. -old Palomino registered quarter•
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1 silver mounted saddle, excellent con.
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1 Nearly new German silver saddle and
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1 3 -yr. -old Palomino American saddle.
bred gelding, This is an exceptional
horse registered 4 ways. This horse
may fie seen at Markham. Telephone
Unionville 69, ask for Miss Rae
FOR quarterhorse and saddles contact
Box 321, Belleville. Ont.. or call WO.
2.4034 Belleville.
PEST CONTROLS
KILLS THEM BY MILLIONS
Mosquitoes, Block Flies,
b.4 -.'hs, Flics, Bugs
Nn gases, poiso
or odors! Hernile• •
to birds, animals,
humans! Posill• s
electric insect ki:
!ng grid! Ornansen•
tat — hangs an/.
where! Low prize J
— fully automatic
— works 24 hours
a day for about 1fc
a month, Don't
suffer from hnsec''s
a day longer! Sen 1
for illustrated circular now to
A,&F. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR
60 Stanley Ave,, Toronto 14, Ont.
MEDICAL
PEOPLE ARE TALKING ABOUT THE
GOOD RESULTS FROM TC KING
DIXON'S REMEDY FOR
RHEUMATIC PAINS AND
NEURITIS.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczems
rashes and weeping skin troubles
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching, scalding and burning eczc
ma, acne, ringworm. ulntple.3 and iont
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price.
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto
MONEY .v LOAN -
MORTGAGE LOANS
Money available for immediate loan
on First and Second Mortgages, and
Agreements for Sale on vacant and
improved property, residential, Indus-
trial, city, suburban and country, and
summer cottages. Forty years exper-
fence.
SUMMERLAND SECURITIES LIMITED
112 Slmcoe Street North,
OSHAWA, Ontario. Phone 725.3568
NURSERY STOCK
GOVERNMENT certified Latham sec-
ond yur raspberry plants 560.00 per
thousand, 57.00 per hundred, James
Radbourne, R 4, Tara, Ontario.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great 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 SL W., Toronto
Branches:
44 King St W., Hamilton
72 ;JRideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
OVERWEIGHT?
Try the effective "Way -Les" Tablets
Reducing plan 1 month's supply 57.00.
Lyon's Drugs, Dept. 32. 471 Danforth
Ave„ Toronto
SAVE 15% ON ALL DRUG
STORE NEEDS BY MAIL
Including Vitamins, Cosmetics, Per-
fumes, Patents. & in.lectahles. etc. En•
471nto1rDanforth, Toinvited roDn's rng. Dept 34,
TEECHERS WANTED
TEACHER required for September to
teach intermediate grades In three-
room school In North Cochrane Dis-
trlet. Minimum salary $3,000, annual
increment 5200 to maximum. State
experience age and denomination.
Arthur G. Stiles, Sec.•Treas.. Clete
Ont. - —
Schreiber Separate School Board re-
quires one lady teacher for Septem-
ber term.
Salary schedule Is as follows:
Level 1 — 53,200 to 55,000
Level 2 — 53,400 to 55,200
Level 3 — 53,600 to 55,500
Level 4 — 53,800 to $6,000
Increments $200x5. then $300 per year
to maximum for all levels. Previous
experience 1n Ontario 52111x5 for nl1
levels.
Applicants please write to Mrs. G.
Mullins; Schreiber, Ontario, Stating
qualifications end name of nre'rious
Inspector.
SPRAYING EQUIPMENT
HAHN
ALL PURPOSE JE1 SPRAYER
Covers up to 50 foot swath includes
hand gun end broad let, pressure head
and hoses. Complete with Hahn 15 gal-
lon per minute self•priming pump 1150
lbs. pressure) For use In field spray.
Ing, fence rows, livestock, washing
buildings, etc. 812000 complete Spray-
ers for every purpose. Write: Central
Spraying Equipment, R R. 4. London.
Ontario
VACATION RESORTS
PAIGNTON HOUSE
Motel and Cottage Units
Lake Rosseau, Muskoka.
Open June 23rd,
For complete Information on summer
vacation write for free colored folder
or
Phone Port Carling, 765.3155
IT PAYS TO USE
OUR CLASSIFIED
COLUMNS
CENTRAL ONTARIO HEFRD
ASSOCIATION
THiRD ANNUAL SALE .OF
Carefully Selected and Government Inspected
HORNED and POLLED HEREFORDS
10 BULLS • 30 FEMALES
Tested Bulls Qualify tot 0 D.A. Premiums
NEV! COW PAM,",CE, 5-V :. JFFViLLE, ONT.
Sale S: ras 1 p 111. — Wed , 6th June, 1962
. i.. , r C: tr Le to
W, D. ATKI"'0N, Au 'Irn•-r or C A. t'^"-GOMERY, Sec.-Treas.
C • R.R. 2, Stouffvllle, Ont.
PAGE.10 ='
110.
THE BLYTIT STANDARD
Wednesday, May 30, 1962
3rd ANNIVERSARY
WEEK •
F'11EE PEANUTS 1
'10 EVERY CHILI) f
(When Accompanied hy an Adult)
Three Big Days Of Tremendous Savings•Thursday, Friday, Saturday, May 31, June 10 2
York Fancy Whole Kernel Corn, 11 oz. tins, 5 - 79c
Tip Top Choice Peas, 20 oz. tins 4 for 79c.
Van Camp's Pork and Beans, 15 oz. tins, 6 for 79c
Stafford's Strawberry Jam, 24 oz, jar .. 2 for 79c
Miracle Whip Salad Dressing, 16 oz. jar 39c
Ereeswcet Orange and Grapefruit Juice, 4, oz. cans
2 for 79e
Tip 'Ibp Canned Pumpkin, 28 oz, cans .. 2 for 69e
Carnation Evaporated Milk, 16 oz. cans, 7 for $1.00
Snowflake Shortening, 2 1,2 lbs.
69c
Salida Orange Pekoe Tea Bags, 60's pkg..... 69e
Maxwell Mouse Instant Coffee, 10 oz. jar .. $1.39
(olden Dew Margarine 4 lbs. 89c
Kleenex, 400's I Kotex
per box 29c 12's Reg,
I Ballet Toilet Tissue,
39c 2 Foul pack., 2 for 45e
ISunkist C ranges, 163's
2 doz, 75c
Bologna, in pica I Weiners
per lb. 30c per lb. 45c
Phone 39 SNELL'S FO
Jello Powders
WalnutsCream of Wheat
,� for
• 25c 7 oz. pkg. 39c I 28 oz. 2 for 65c
sumoopmaperammerrommisunsourrannens
(J rapcirni.t I Spy Apples
$1.00 I 10 for 49c 5 lbs. 19c
..o IMIRIMMINKINFIPPIRNIMNIMEMORINNIII
A Large Sausage
lbs.
MAR
a
We Deliver
CROP REPORT
Scattered thunder showers last week
helped soil-1rLufsture in some areas.
however, mast of the County still re•
mains dry. Most of the corn in the
County has been planted and planting
of white beans is in full swing, Some
farmers will be starting to make grass
silage this week.
—D. G. Grieve, Assoc. Ag. Rep,
"SPECIALS"
NABOB INSTANT COFFEE
1 - 6 oz. jar
WHITE SWAN TOILET TISSUE
2 roll pack. 23c
KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING
32 oz. jar 59c
HEINZ KETCHUP, 11 oz. bottle 21c
CHASE and SANBORN COFFEE
1 Ib. bag
HEiNZ TOMATO JUICE
2 - 48 oz. tins
HEINZ SANDWICH SPREAD
8 oz. jar
83e.
65t.
53c
29c
For Superior Service
Phone 156
ONO
•5
See Fairservice
We Deliver
OUR COMMITTEE ROAM IS MOBILE
Ask for Mobile Operator YJ -3154
and we come to you
W13Y IS SOCIAL CREDIT SWEEPING CANADA?
Social Credit has the answer's. This week our leader "Bob"
Thompson is explaining the two price system (somtimes called
Parity Pool) to farmers in Western Canada. Basically, it
bypasses the "financiers" the "world bookkeepers" or
"money jugglers" and maintains parity between say, a bushel
of Canadian wheat against a Sheffield knife and fork.
WHY CAN WE SAVE 40%'0 ON PUBLIC BUILDINGS,
schools, hospitals, etc, (mentioned in last week's adv,)?
The Municipal Bank we propose to do this (see Alberta's Act
re: loaning funds at 2 percent) is already found in Federal
Legislation of 1938 but quietly shelved in 1940. Why?
Would you like to think you'd paid $1,000 for each $2,400 car
you purchased since 1938?
More about this next week,
A few copies of "CANADIANS IT'S TIME YOU KNEW" are still
available at 50c, and does supply all the answers,
Vote Social Credit
EARL DOUGLAS In Huron
LON D ESBORO
The Ainwell Evening Unit of the
Londesboro U. C. W. met at the home
of Mrs. Ross Lovett on Monday even.
leg, May 21 with 21 present. Mrs. Don
alt AleNall, unit leader, took the won.
ship service, using -as her theme.
"What is the task of the church??'
The study book was given hy Mr's.
Ross Lovett and a questionnaire, con•
ducted by Airs. Barry Snell. Bible
study was given by :tits. Russell Good
and Airs. Neville Forbes conducted a
questionnaire on Luke 17 to Acts ('i.
Business was then taken care of and
the meeting closed with hymn 16.
Messengers, Explorers and C. G. I. T.
groups please meet at the church en
Sunday morning at 10 minutes to 1G
o'clock for the cetcmony of dedica•
tion to minions. Please- wear your
uniforms.
The W. 1. will hold their next meet-
ing on Wednesday evening, June Glh
at. 8 o'clock. Boll call will he some
item of information which can be used
in the Tweedsmuir Book, it. is expect-
ed there will be a speaker form Chalon
hospital.
.Me. and Mrs. Frank George an;
Isabel, of Wataskiwan, Alberta. spent
the past week with the Fairservice r'cl
atives in the vicinity.
.Miss Mar'gar'et Morrow, of Owen
Sound, was a guest for a few days last
week with the Gaunt family.
Airs. Thomas Millar is a patient in
Clanton hospital, having suffered a
stroke a few days ago.
A number from the village attended
the shower for Miss Gloria Allen al
the home of Mrs. Bert Shobbrook last
Saturday evening, Mrs, Ross Willson
and Mrs. John Jewitt were hostesses
to about 50 guests. Everyone enjoyed
the evening and Gloria was the re-
cipient of many lovely and useful
gifts.
Mr, and Airs. Archie Weber and
David, of Exeter, were Sunday visitor's
with Mr. and Mrs. 1larry Durnin.
Judge Campbell Grant, of Walket
ton recently purchased a cottage lot
at liabermill Lake from Mel Kingston.
of Elmwood.
W'ESTFIELD
Many members of Westfield Church
attended anniversary services in Au-
burn Church on Sunday, The pastor
Rev. C. Lewis, had charge of the morn-
ing service, while his father, Rev. C.
Lewis, of Kitchener, was the guest
speaker at tie evening service.
Mr. and Mrs. C. de Ilaan, Trow
bridge, called on Air. and Mrs. Peter
de Groot on Friday.
\1r. and Airs, 1Iowar'd Campbell and
Harold visited in Guelph on Sunday.
lir. Gordon Bailey, Princeton, and
Alt's. Agnes Cann, Galt, visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Cook on Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs. Peter de Groot and
family visited with Mr. and Mrs, Peter
Meinstra, Tiverton, on Sunday.
Mr. Gordon Smith was a member of
the graduating class of University Col-
lege at the University of Western On-
tario, friday, Aiay 25th. He received
the Bachelor of Arts Degree after con-
pleting four years Honor Math. Course.
Itis parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Smith, his brother, Lyle, also Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey McDowell attended the
graduating ceremony, and reception.
which followed. Gurdon will commence
a year of study at Ontario College of
Education, Toronto, in September, in
preparation for secondary school teach•
ing.
Mr. and Mrs. John White, Aylmer,
were guests of Mr. and lb's. Gerald
McDowell on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter de Groot and
family were visitors with Mr. and Airs.
Bill Dykstra, Goderich; recently.
M11Ir. Franklin Campbell, London
spent the week -end at his hone here.
Airs. Garth lleClinchey, Sandra and
Brian, Mrs. Edna Cook and Mrs, Wal-
ter Cunningham called on Airs, Arnold
Cook on Saturday.
Mesdames L. Walden, 1i. Campbell,
J. L. McDowell, M. AIeDowell, '.;.
Snaith, 1I. Blair, and Miss J. Snell at•
tended the regional meeting of the U.
C. W. in Blake's Church on 'Tuesday.
They report a very interesting meeting.
-Mrs. Thomas Wilson, Goderich, spent
the week -end with Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
man 1Vightman.
41st Birthday Party
of Red & White
SENSATIONAL VALUES IN
Groceries, Meats, Friuts, Vegetables and
Frozen Foods
A BARAGE OF SAVINGS
Grade A Chickens, average 3 lbs. per lb. 33c
Maple Leaf Pure Pork Sausage . , . 1 lb. pkg. 49c
California Sunkist Oranges 2 doz. 59c
California New Potatoes 5 lb. bag 39c
Frozen Peas 2 lb. poly bag 49c
Birds Eye Frozen Orange Juice, 6 oz. tins, 4 for 79c
FREE ---With every $15.00 purchase a free Birth.
day Cake.
4-41-•+4---44-••-4-4*-44-4-1+144— 444-44+4-4•-•4+1++-4-61-4-4-4+4-44
Ste- - art's
Red (4 White Food Market
Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
111111lqt®
ARE YOU READY FOR SUMMER
Moth Killer Crystals 59c
Moth Blaster 99c and 1.69
Insect Killer Bomb
and 1.39
Raid 1.69
Tat Ant Traps 25e
Ant and Grub Killer 90c
6-12 Insect Repellant 69c
Tantoo Cream Repellant 69c
'Tantoo Liquid Spray 89c
Sta-W�nray Repellant 29e
Body Guard Tissues29c
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER — PHONE 20, BI,YTII
SUN SHOWERS
Your lawn sprinkled while the children shower
ONLY $1.29
CHAISE LOUNGES
Folding; Chairs .for the lawn.
Filler and Drainer for your wisher $2.25
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
I3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair,
Blyth, Ont.
CaII 71
S.P.F. PIGS AVAILABLE
.ATTENTION ALL MODERN FARMERS
THE HEALTlil' HOG LABORATORIES NOW HAVE 1'I'S FACILITIES
IN FULL OPERATION holt THE PRODUCTION OF S. 1'. F. PIGS
This proven prncecdure is rapidly becoming a necessity for swine
raisers due to increased profits resulting from this program.
MAKE 1'OUlt APPOINTMENT NOW — WRITE OR CALL:•
Healthy I-Iog Laboratories
Romeo and Park Sts.,
Stratford, Ont.
Tel. 519-271-6040
WHY WAT — DEAL NOW
1961 CHEV. Bel Air,
• Sedan, Radio.
1960 CHEV, Coach
1959 FORD Coach, auto-
matic and radio,
1959 FORD 4 -door, radio
1958 FORD Ranch Wag.
1957.PLYMOUTH Wag,
1956 PLYMOUTH Sedan
1953 FORD Coach
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers