HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-06-27, Page 1yP4
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VOLUME 75 • NO, 17
Authorized as second class mall, I3LYTII, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 27, 1962 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Past Office Department, Ottawa.
and for payment of postage in cash,
Gifts Dedicated At Anglican
Church Last Sunday
Trinity Anglican Church, Blyth, ob-
served its 84th Anniversary on 'Trinity
Sunday, which also Was the occasion
of the Dedioation of several recent
gifts to the church.
Through a bequest of the late Ars.
McArter and a generous response of
the members and friends of the con•
grogalion, new broadloom carpet has
been laid in the Chancel.
Through the generosity of Mr. Wil
Jim Watson and Mr, Paul Watson,
a beautiful new blue drapery velvet
Dossal curtain %vas presented for the
stain Altar. This was indeed a very
appreciated gift and adds much to the
beauty of the Sanctuary. A tllatchin:.'
Dossal was made for the side Altar.
Four seats .from the old United
Church were refinished for the Choir
Stalls and the Rector expressed the
al:preciation of the members to Mr.
Grant Spalding for these, Ile also
remarked that "for the sake of sent=•
stent" was were pleased to have these
from the old United Church.
The Altar Guild presented a sub-
stantial Church Sign Board, which has
been a long needed addition to lhr
church property. '\'his is lettered in
Old English gold leaf and was an ap
predated gift,
The Rector, Rev. It. F. Wally, S.
Th., spoke on Psahn 84, v.I, "Hoe
lovely are Thy dwelling, 0 Lord of
Hosts" in which the Psalmist was e'(
pressing his thoughts on the ancient
temple at Jerusalem and which has
been an inspiration to all to inakt
God's house one of beauty and order
in which to "Colne and Worship." 1le
also spoke of the rich heritage we
possess and which We specially ack-
nowledge every anniversary Sunday
when we re -dedicate our lives to the
service of our Lord and Itis Church
and to the "faith of our fathers."
Rev. and Mrs. NI -early invited the
congregation to the Rectory following
the service where a very happy social
hour was enjoyed. A vote of thanks
was expressed to them by Miss Alice
Watson and Miss Ella Metcalfe, ol
London, a former member of this
congregation, who was present for this
occasion.
PERSONAL INTEREST
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marshall spent
the .week -end svith' their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and ,Mrs, Donald Yung.
blut, Lorie and Barry, of London.
Master Sandy Marshall spent a week
and a half with his grandparents, Mr.
and Airs. Frank Marshall, and Miss
Sherri Marshall visited her uncle ono
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Johnston
and family, while their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Marshall and Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth MacDonald were on a
trip out 'West to attend the wedding of
Mr, Harold Creighton, at Swift Current
Sask. They also went on as far as the
Rocky Mountains in British Columbia
Miss Ella Metcalfe, of London, is
visiting with Mrs. F. Rogerson and
Miss Alice Rogerson.
Mrs. J. Pettis spent the week -end
with her daughter, 'Miss hazel Pelts
of London.
Dr. J. A. Wright and sister, Iabel
visited last week at the home of Mrs
J. Gipson and Glenn. Dr, Wright whr
has been lowing the European Count
ries for the past two years has just
returned to his hone in Galt,
AMONG 1.114 CHURCHES
Sunday, July 1, 1982
ST. ANDREW'S I'RES13Y'rERIAN
CHURCH
Services at 1 p.m.
Rev, Lockhart Royal, B.A.
Interior -Moderator
July 1 -• ]lev, T. J. McKinney,
'l'eeswater,
July 8th -• Closed for Auburn Anni-
versary.
July 18, 22, 29 • Rev. T. J. McKinney,
ANGLICAN CIIURCII OF CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector.
2nd Sunday alter 'Trinity
Trinity Church, Blyth.
9.30 a.m.-Sunday School. •
9,30 a.m'.-elioly Communion and Ser-
mon.
St. Mark's, Auburn.
12.15 p.m. -1101y Communion and
Sermon.
3.30 p.m. --(Memorial Service at Ball's
Cemetery.
Trinity Church, Belgrave,
10.45 a.m.-41o1y Communion and
Sermon.
(12.00 o'clock -Sunday School.
TIIE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev, R. Evan McLngan - Minister
Mrs, Donald Kat
Director of Music.
Services held in St.. Andrew's Preaby•
terian Church until further notice.
9,55 a.m.-Sunday Church School.
11:00 )a,m, Publie Worship
"Judging"
)Supervised, Nursery at. home of Mrs.
F. Howson for children under 3
CHURCH OF GOD
Mc(onnelt Street. Blyth,
John Dormer, Pastor
Phone 185
10.00 a,tn.-Sunday School.
11.00 a,m.-Worship Service,
8.00 pant, -Wed., Prayer Service.
1,00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fllowship,
WEI)D1N GB
JACKSON-
ALLEN
A lovely summer %wedding was sol•
emnized in the Londeshoro United
Church on Saturday, June 23, at
o'clock, when the Rev. 11, A. Funge
united in marriage Gloria Anne, elder
daughter of Alr, and Mrs, 'Phomas 11.
Allen, Londesboro, and Wayne Keith.
elder son of Dr. Kenneth Jackson
lilyth, and the late Mrs. Ethel Jackson.
Mrs, harry ),car, Myth, %vas organist.
playing traditional wedding music and
accompanied the soloist, AU. harry
Lear as he sang, 111 \Valk Beside
You, The Lord's Prayer and 0 Prom -
Me.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, chose a floor length gown oI
white peat' de sole over taffeta, fcatu►'•
ing embroidered applique at the round
neckline and on the full skirt, which
formed an apron effect in the back.
the slaves were long and pointed at
the wrist. She wore a string of cul-
tured pearls and carried a crescent
aouquct. of American Beauty roses and
stephanotis.
d\liss Karen Allen, Londesboro, was
her sister's staid of honour. She wore
a street length dress of blue nylon
sparkle organza over taffeta, with tuck•
ed bodice and full skirl, a matching
circular bowed headdress and while
accessories.
c\liss Sharon Jackson, Blyth, sister
of the groom, and Miss Nancy 1,ee
:.anlpbell, London, bridesmaids, wore
similar gowns of pink sparkle organza
.ever taffeta and Misses Glenyce and
ado Anderson, Londesboro, as judo'
bridesmaids, %yore identical gowns le
that of lite n'(:.tid of honour. All the
altcndants wore drop pearl necklaces
and carried crescent bouquets of white
carnations with tulle,
Mr. ,John Shaddick, Simcoe, was best
111011, and Messrs Keith Mlett, Condos'
Moro, brother of the bride, and Graham
Jackson, 131y1h, ,brother of the groom.
ushered the guests.
A reception followed in the Church
parlors where the •Londesboro U. C. W
served a delicious turkey dinner, 'l'hc
€ uests were receival by the bride':
'nether, who wore a dross of coffee
beige nylon lace over taffeta, with
matching and green accessories and
a corsage of Chalice roses, She w'1;
assisted by the groom's sister, Mrs.
Charles Shohhrook, Blyth, wearing r
two-piece costume of beige linen, with
matching and moss green accessories
and a corsage of Chalice roses,
For travelling on a honeymoon dowr
the St. Lawrence Seaway and point:
east, the bride changed to a two pied
eta:enble of pale beige linen will'
green flower hat and brown accessor
ies. She wore a corsage of lawny
gold roses.
On their return \lr. and Mrs. J;tck
son will reside in 11id lelotvn, when
the groom is on the staff of the Onlark
Agricultural School.
BLYTII U.C.W. JUNE MEETING
The U.C.W. of 13lyth United Church
held their general meeting on Tuesday
evening, June 26th, in the schoolroom
'if the Blyth Presbyterian Church, with
.he president, Mrs, 11, Vodden, pre-
siding.
The worship service was conducted
by Mrs. K, MacDonald and Mrs, G.
Oster, A delightful piano solo was
contributed by ,Miss Barbara Wasson.
The president called the roll by units.
and minutes were real by the sccre-
':ary, Mrs. C. Galbraith, Mrs. .1. Pais -
service, corresponding secretary, re-
ported of cards sent, and read thank -
you notes, Title treasurer's repot %vas
given by Mrs. D. [[owes. The presi-
dent announced that there world not be
another general meeting until Septet•
bet' and wished all the members a hap•
py holiday. She also thanked the lo -
dies for their co-operation with the
very successful Smorgasbord and Ba-
zaar which was held of Jute 23rd.
Those present were reminded of the
Sunday School picnic to be held in
Clinton on \Vednesday, July 4111.
A very interesting report of the
First Regional meeting of the United
Church Women, held in Blake's Church
on Alay 29t1t, was presented by Alt's. C
Johnston, Mrs: C. Falconer and AIrs.
E, Mebagan,
Mrs. Vodden closed the meeting with
prayer after %which n very inspiring
film "A Wonderful Life" was shown
A delicious lunch was served by the
Friendly Busy Bees.
BALL'S CEMETERY MEMORIAL
SERVICE IS TIIIS SUNDAY
'I'lte annual 11femor'inl Service at
Ball's Cemetery, 1lullctt Township
%'.'ill be held on Sunday, July 1st at
3:30 p.m, Rev. R. F. Meanly, Rector
of the Anglican Churches of Blyth
Auburn and Belgrave, will be in
uhargo of the service.
LETTER FItOAI A SUBSCRIBER
45 Norfolk Ave.,
Galt, Ontario,
Dear Mt's, Whitmore:
Once more it is time to renew my
subscription for the Blyth paper. 1
look forward to getting it each week,
1 meant to get up to Blyth in person
to pay for it, so enclosed find money
for same.
Sincerely,
Mrs. Wm. White.
Congratulations to tAfr, and Mrs. Wm,
George who celebrated their 251h wed-
ding anniversary on Tuesday, June 26,
lilyth Lions For Salvation
Army Tonight, Thursday
This 'Thursday evening, June 28, tite
members of the lilyth Lions Club will
be calling on the residents of I3ly'th
in aid of the Goderich branch of the
Salvation Army.
'the campaign gels under way at
7:00 p.m, sharp and any time follow-
ing that hotu' you can look forward
to a visit from a Blyth Lion.
The club conducted a similar cant-
paigu in Blyth last year and receiver)
excellent response from local residents
and it is their sincere wish that the
stone results will be encountered this
year.
111(, AND AIRS. GORDON IVIGI1'l'11AN
HONOURED ON 50th ANNIVERSARY
Mr, and Mrs. William Nichol, Grand
Isle, Vermont, entertained in honour
of the 5011t wedding anniversary of the
fornner's sister and brother-in-law, Mr
and Mrs, Gordon Wightman.
The beautiful hone overlooking Lake
Champlain, was attractively decorates
with daisies. 'l'o the delight of all a'.•
tending a replica of the wedding of 5(.
yet'i's ago was enacted by four nieces
and nephews of Mr. and Mrs. Nichol
Linda, Hobert, Paul and Cindy 'Thome
son.
Miss Linda hosed as the minister
and read a suitably composed address
based an the Lincoln's Gettesburg ad-
dress - two score and ten years ago
etc, A copy of the address was pre
soiled to Mr. Wightman to enable him
to follow the ceremony, which was )tel(
on the lawn, duplicating the marriage
of the honoured couple,
After the anniversary festivities hat
subsided, " pictures were taken and a
delicious buffet dinner was served
The anniversary cake was adorned
with a stalue.of the bride and groom
reproduced from the initial wedding
photo.
Owing to failing health Mr. and Mrs.
Wightman were unable to receive their
many firends, but were overjoyed by
the more than one hundred cards and
letters of congratulations to )nark the
happy occasion. Mr. and Mrs. Nicho
also presented each of the guests with
a gold token enscribed with the initials
of the couple and the (10105 of line wed
cling and anniversary,
Mr. and M's. Ivan Wightman, of
Est 1Vawanosh township, were amour
the guests present
0I3ITUARY'
EDGAR BEGLEY
Thomas Edgar Begley, 71, passed
rtuietly away in the Assiniboine hos-
pital, Brandon, after• an illness of a
few weeks duration.
Edgar Begley was born in Blyth, On.
(alio, on February 5, 1891, and received
his education there.
As a young matt, 11e learned the bak
ing trade and followed this work most
of his life, first in Ontario and later
on in the weal, Ile baked in Crow -
burst's Bakery, Boissevain, for. several
years and baked for a time in Brown's
Bakery, Killarney. 1Vitlt the exception
of a few visits to tris .former hotlte, he
speul the rest of his life in Manitoba
Of a quiet, retiring nature, his unas-
surin€; manner won for hint the respect
of his friends and acquaintances.
ile is survived I),y two sisters, Nina
Begley, and Lela, Mrs, Jackson, both
of Port Dover, Onl.. One brother, Mil
ler, predeceased him in September ol
1981.
Funeral services were held on Friday
Jute 1, at the I3oisevain funeral hone
conducted by Re'. J. Wood,
Pallbearers were, Alex Jacks, Martin
Crowhurst, Bruce Oke, Jack Blanchard
Melvin Blanchard, Gordon Mauer,
Interment was trade in the Ning,
Cemetery.
BIRTHS
VOKES-In Montreal on Saturday, Junc
9, 1962, to Mr. and Mrs, Robert
Vokes, the gift of a son.
PROPERTIES CIIANGE IIANDS
Several property changes have be•
come effective in Blyth in recent week,
with the buying and selling of loca
residences.
.AIr. and Mrs, George Carter have
-sold their properly to Mr. and Mrs
Alvin Snell. Mr. Stanley Glousher hat
purchased the property of Alta and Airs
Sol, Shannon.. The sales were mad(
through the Elliott Ileal Estate Agcit
cy. Mr. Lloyd Glousher has purchase(
the Mr, Thomas Colson residence.
KINDERGARTEN CHILDREN
ENTE.ItTAiNED PARENTS
The children of the Kindergarten
class of the Blyth Public School and
their parents enjoyed a1 social evening
In the. Kindergarten classroom of the
school last I\Iouloy evening.
The twenty-one parents were enter•
tamed when the twelve children of the
class, sang, 'played games and per•
formed their exercises. The year's
%York done by the children was on dis-
play for the parents to view. The ev-
ening was planned by the teacher, Mrs.
Frank Marshall,
RECEPTION AND DANCE
In the Blyth Memorial hall for Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Youngblut (nee Yvonne
Rath) on Friday night, June 29th. Mu-
sic by Jint Pierces Orchestra. Ladles
please bring lunch.
On PROMOTIONS
'1111reillerluan's Reunion
Slated For Biyth Sept. 7 • 8
A sleeting of old 'I'hreshermen was
held i,t the Orange hall, Blyth, June
20th, for the purpose of organizing a
Steam Threshers Reunion and to set
up an organization.
'Ir. Harold 'turner. of Goderich, cal-
led the :meeting to order and introduc-
ecl himself as being an old Thresher,
thrashing for a number of years %vest
of Seaforth. Ile was raised on the farm
on which 'I'urnrrs Church was built.
[le then called fur a motion to appoint
a Secretary. It was moved by George
hook, of Belgrave, seconded by John
Ilallahan, that Sinton Ilallahan act as
secretary. Carried.
Mr, 'Turner called on the secretary
to introduce all those present, and also
asked for a motion appointing 0 Press
dent. Harold Turner was unanimously
chosen as president.
A considerable discussion look place
and a motion to forst an organization
was porde by Robert Beatty one of the
oldest 'l'hreshers at the meeting, am
W. J. ilnllahan, that we do forst an or
ganization and the name to be Iluro;
Pioneer 'Threshers and )lobby Assoc'.
talon. Motion by 11. Marks, of Walton
who had also on display at the meet
ing a Steam Engine which he buil!
himself, that we have a 'fhreshernten':
Reunion in Blyth on 7 and 8th of Sep
teeta-er, This motion was seconded by
Dan lfallahan, and unanimously car
Tied.
The following committees were ap
pointed:
Steam Engine. Committee, Hugh
Chisholm, Sarnia; grounds committee
George Cook, George Baillie, IIugI-
Blair, \Vm. Gow, George McBride an(
Joe llogarth: entertainment commit
lee, Alex Manning, Harvey Brown anti
1V, J. Ilallahan; transportation, Hug!.
Blair, ,1, '1'. Hallahan and W. J. Valla•
ban; advertising, Ilarold Turner, Wal
ter Scott anti Sinton lfallahan.
President adjourned the meeting
The next meeting to be Thursday, July
2601, in the Orange Ilall, Blyth, when
a programme will be set up. 'l'hc
above committees will appreciate a;
interested in this project to attend ais
we Plan a whistling (Illy as well a.
smoke and steam in Blyth on the Btu
acplembe'.
MISS LiNDA SIMS HONOURED
AT BLY"flt SHOWER
Miss Melda McElroy held a shower
last Saturday evening in honor of hei
niece, Miss Linda Sims, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James Sims, of London
and formerly of Blyth, whose marriage
takes place on July 7th, in St. Pauli.
Cathedral, London,
The twenty-lwo guests attending
from Blyth and Seafortlt took part ir
several entertaining games, after which
Linda was presented with many
miscellaneous gifts. She was assist
eci in the opening of the gifts by he;
mother,
The guest of honour thanked every
one very graciously for the lovely
gifts, after which Mclda served a de
licious salad plate lunch.
W. 1. JULY 11EETING CANCELLEi)
The bus trip sponsored by the Wo•
moms institute which was to be July
5, will be left. over until a later date.
There will not he a meeting in July
our next meeting will be on August 2
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED
\Ir, awl'h's. William Hamilton, Lot•
leshoto, wish to announce the engage
:nett of their daughter, Lenora Ann.
`o Mr. Charles Everett. Lamont, son of
111•, and Mrs,, Calvin Lamont, 11.11, I
Llolyrood, The marriage is to take
)lace on July 21, 1962, at 2:00 o'clock
in the Burns' United Church, Ifullett.
Ws A Great Year For
Softball Enthusiasts
There is certainly no lack of enters
'ainment around Blyth this summer
'or local softball lovers as two teams
are playing their home games at the
'0001 ball park.
The Blyth-Belgrave Legion juveniles
are playing in an intermediate group
and to date have conte up with a very
connteldable three Win and no loss
record. The three games won were
an 18 - 16 win over the Blyth inter.
mediates; 25 - 3 over the Nile inter•
mediates; and 12 - 9 against Moth
cl=ef intermediates. `The boys are
playing an excellent brand of ball ant
truly deserve the support of the cont
Ittlllnily.
The local intermediate team is else
riding high ou a four game winning
streak, having won all contests since
their first game defeat with the juveu
ile squad. '\'hey have defeated Mat.
cricf 9 - 11; Monkton 26 - 10 and 23
8; and Nile 10 • 9.
iuvenile Schedule
Jlttle 28 Blyth-Belgrave at Monkton
July 3 Blyth-Belgrave at Atomic(
July 5 Blyth Int. at Blyth-13e1grave
Jttly 10 Monkton at 13lyth•Bel.grave
July 16 Blyth-Belgrave at Nile
All games are held under the lights
in the Blyth ball park.
Congnatulations to Mrs. Mary Taylor
who celebrates her birthday on Sunday,
July 1st.
11 -Denotes overal average of 75 per
cent or hello.
C -Denotes Conditional Promotion,
GRADE 9
Linda Adapts, Judfllt Amy (II), Mary
Ellen Andrews, 'I'rudy Armstrong I C ),
Barbara Ball, Brian 13e11, Dwight Ben-
der all, Sharon Benninger (C), Gary
Black (0), Murray Blackie (111, Fran-
ces Blacker 1111, Mary Boyce (C).
Debra Buck, Ralph Buffinga (C'), l'al•
licit' Burns (CI, John Buruma (0:
Ann Caldwell, Faye Carter, Ronald
Carter, Belly Cartwright (C), Keith
Cartwright, Elaine Clyniek (C1, Linda
Cole IID, Craig Collier (C), Ethel Col
!ins (C(, Gayle Conine (C'), Betty Jean
hook, Gayle Coombs (1.1), Robert Coop -
'r (ID, Michael Cowan, John Cox IC''
)tarry Cummings (11), Dianne Currie
Claire Dale, Shirley Darnbrough
I'eena Delmer, Adrian Decoo, IVilliatr
Dougherty IC), Catherine Draper
Audrey 'Sulzer (C), Denis Durand (0)
Bradley Dutot., Grant Elliott, Shirley
'loot, Patricia Fletcher, Barbary
Flea, Susan Frelts 111), ,1ohn Geiger
Diantre Gcrrits, Dwight Ga son, Barry
:;lazier, Glenna Cawing, Janet Gra
rant (CI, Judith (iralrant, Gwilym Grif
ilh, Murray Grigg, Monica ifaspecl
CI, Kevin Henley 1111, Ronald Iltb
test (ID, Murray llo%w.att (C), Larr
'toy (C'), Barbara Irwin (III, ,loa(
'rwin (II), Bonnie Johnston IC), Nancy
Marie Johnston (C), Shirley Johnston
Veil ,losling IC) Elwin Kingswell, Aum(
altar's, laricka Koetsier 111), Bele)
.,ivermore (0), James Livermore (II
11an Lowe (II ), d Ludwig, Bruc(
ic13ride 1111, DougFrehty 11cCaintt, Ken
telh McCowan (CI, Douglas ,AlcCul
sough (0), Norma McDougall, llichellr
\Iclienzie IC), Jean McVittie, Jame.
AracDonald, 'ferry Aladin( Clarence
11a,fee (I1), Steve Maguire (CI, Clare
\fattin (If), Edward AMartiu, Aaillot
.lfartin, John Martyr, David Medd
iandra Middleton (111, Barrie Miller
Trevor Aloon (C), Linda March, Lind:
\hu•phy (11), Nancy Alustard, Brian
Nelson (C), Linda Nicholson, Rona:c
)verholt (C), Nicole Paquette, Larry
Pearson, Robert Pearson (C), Donn
Peck (11), Barbara Pegg (11), Ronak
Plumsteel, Bonnie Pollock, Marion
Porter (C), Douglas Proctor, D}'it
Pugh, Karen Radford, Lynda Rath
,yell (11), i.,at'ry Reid (C), Melvin
aichl, Patricia Robinson, Dennis Rog
:'rs, Sheryl Rozell (0), Elaine Runt
'411 (C), Terry Rut(°dge, Marlene
icltultz (C'), Afyr•na Scott (C), Donate
;crimgeour, Barbara Semple (II), Pan
sla Servos, Robert Shaddick, Lyne
;her (11), Barbara Sharp, Lynn Sher.
,wood (C'), Donna Lynn Shobbrook
iteve Smith, Susan Smith, Boleti(
=pelt, \Payne Sprung, Dick Steetstra,
William Strong (C), Donald Swan
3anch'a Switzer (C), Ronald Sytnicl;
'0), Gordon Tait (C), David Turner
Ilarjorie 1'ttrner (I[), Fred Tyndall
John Vanderhaar, Josephine Vanlam
nte•en, Tony Verburg (11), Dianne
Verhoef, Nellie Verhoef, Elna Wench
IC), Lents Yoe (Hl, Murray Young-
blut, Bertha 'Londag (C), Fred Zwaan
GRADE 10
Margaret Addison, Margaret Aiding
on, Norman Amy (C), Janet Arm
drong (C), Keith Ashton (01, Richard
3adley, James Baker (CI, Lauric
Bates (11), Beverley Beck (0), Gai
Bennett ((11), Ivan Blake (C), Elaint
Brodeur, Lynn 13rown, Susan Brown
(01, Iiose 13rubacher (iI), Andre:
Buck, Betty Bylsnta (C), Donald Cal
(lerbank, Karen Calde•hank (II), Alla'
Cleave (C), Laurie Colquhoun, Steve
Cooke, John Cooper (C), Barbara
Corey, Adrian:I Cormier IC), Joann(
Cuclnto'e (C), Douglas Currie (1L'
Ruth Culler, Douglas Darnbrough
Gwen Davies (Il), Belly Jo Deeves (C'
Lorraine Deveau (11), Barbara Draper
Norman Eckel, Ronald Elliott, Diann(
Faber (Il), Donald Freeman, Donnldo
Freeman, Douglas Fremlin (C), Phyl
lis Fyvie (111, Eileen Garrett, Ray
:rilfillan (C), Donald Gingerich (C)
William Graham, Helen Grainger
Fred Gregory, Joyce Ilayler, Sandra
lleury, Bev. Hill, Morris Hoggart, Val
arie Holland, Bernice Bunking (C)
Glenyce Jewitt (I1), Faye Johnston
IC), Patricia Johnston, Gwyn Jones.
Bonnie Kennedy, Meh'in Knox (0),
Bryan Lavis, Michael Lebeatt (C), Lars
ry Licence (C), George Lindsay (11)
Douglas McBean, David McCall (C).
Ann McCowan (11), l3ordon McRae
Shirley Meehan (C), Joan Mills (11).
Gayle Mote (C), Thomas Alountford
Christine Mulse (1I), Shirley Mustard
.James Patterson, Dianne Peck, Yvola
Pigeon, John Powell, Patricia Reyn
olds (C), Terry Richmond (C), Jour
Rogerson (C), Meanie Roorda (C),
Susan Roorda (Hl, John Ross, Michae
Scotehmer (C),,Margaret Semple
Richarl Shaddick (11), Denis Shipp
Paul Shorey (11), Dianne Selling (C)
Gerda Skov (C), Kenneth Smith, Kath
ryn Sparks (11), James Steckle (C)
Bonnie SIlrling, Catherine Stirling,
Sharon Switzer (C), Karen 'falhot IC)
Carol Taylor, 'Marilyn Tebbutt (0)
Larry Thompson, William Thompso'
IC), Bernhard Toews (Mi), Alice Tref
''ors, Margaret 'i'rcwarlho (ID, Shnr
'one Turner, Maryke Vanaltena (CI
Mary Vanderdool (II), Jayne Vos (11)
Carol Wallis, Rett' 1Va mos, Barber:
Wasson (Hi, Philip \\'hite (C), Health!'
Winter, Eleanor Wright. Janice Wright
(C), Gwen Yeats, 'Marilyn Yoe.
Binns, Kaye Carter, Jeh•id Cartwright,
Donald Colquhoun, Victor Cornish, Pat-
sy Cox (11), Ruth Crich (C), Dianne
Cudrnore, Morris Darling (111, Tony
Decoo (CI, Hilary Dymond, Barry El -
holt, Donald Elliott (C), Gaye Elliott,
Joan Elliott, Alan Fairservice, John
1 `arrell, 1Villiam Ferguson (C), Sylvia
Fitzsinnons, Pita Flynn, John Gal-
braith (('), Betty Ann Gibbings, Mar-
garet Gliddon, 'Theresa Goldsworthy
(11), Sharon Gray (II), Bernhard Grey.
danus, Stuart Grigg, William Hamilton,
Janet Harris, Jill Hawkins, Maureen
Ilayte', Sheila Henry, Carol Ann Hill
Bonnie Iionuth (I1), Joyce llood, Pa-
tricia Horbanuik, Jo -Anne I[ulls, Ken-
neth Johnston, Lyn Johnston, Edward
Land IC), Cleo Langdon (C), Stanley
Lesnick, Robert Livermore, Hugh
Lobb (C), Isobel McCowan, Jean Mc-
Cowan, James McCullough (C), Joan
McDougall, Wendy McGee (II), Rose-
mary MacDonald, Cheryl Madill, Pris-
cilla Marlin, Sharon Marlin , Terry
\tuise, Nancy Olde (H), Gordon Par-
ker, Shirley Pierson, John Powell (H),
Gary Poxon, Dick Roorda (I1), Lloy
Ann Rutherford (C), Sylvia Sanderson,
'amen Schefter (01, Nancy Scruton (C),
Lynne Shipley, Susan Shipp (C), Con-
nie Snaith (C), Barbara Snell, Lorie
Spano, Fern° Steckle, Nancy Stirling,
Michael Sutcliffe, Lorraine 'Talbot,
Anne Marie Tate, Peter Thompson,
William Trevena (Irl, Neale Trewart.ha.
Robert Trick, John Turner, Louis Van
Lantaneren, Cathie \Vallis, Douglas
,Vents (ill, Ronald Westlake (C), San•
h'a 1Vestlake, Sieb►'and Wilts, Carol
young, Ineke Zondag.
GRADE 12
The following students have been re -
:unintended for their Secondary School
Jraduation Diplomas subject to the
approval of the Department of Educe-
tiotl.
Murray Adapts, Elaine Alexander,
Keith Allen, Agnes Baker, Paul Bate-
man (H), Janet Batkin, Corrie Brand,
Ted Bridle, Elaine Brown, Nancy Cald-
well, John Carew, Judy Crich, Sally
Deeves, Ian Dudley, Lena Dougherty,
Douglas Dunn, Barbara Durst, Bram
Eendenburg, Kenneth Engelstad, Don.
ald Frenlin, Gail Gotving, Patricia
Harland (11), Brenda liomttth (H), Re -
gene 1[orbanuik, Joanne Johnston,
Nancy Johnston, Ron Levett (H), Fred
Livermore, Gail McBride, Maralyn Mc-
Cullough, Douglas Mair, Maurice Alar -
shall, Diane Murphy (11), Carol Plum -
steel, Cathie Potter, Wayne Reid, Don-
ald Scruton, Tom Siertsema, John Sta.
vin, Margaret Smith, Charles Steph-
enson, John Stryker, John Vandetas-
sem 1111, Tony Verhoef, William Vod•
den (11), Barbara Watkins, Betty
Youngblut (If),
GRADE 12 SPECIAL CONDIERCIAL
The following student have been rec-
ommended for their Secondary School
Graduation Diplomas subject to the ap-
proval of the Department of Education.
Margaret Bevan (H), Marion Dale,
Merlyn Hough, Barbara Howard, Sher -
in Jackson, Donald Johnson (11),
loan McClymont, Mary Macaulay.
Pamela Aluise (II), Judith Persan.
Effie Plumsteel (H), Gertie Postma
(II), Marie Riley (H), Elaine Taylor
!II), Barbara Yoe (H).
GRADE 11
Huth Adams, Karen Allen, Nigel
13ellchamber (11), Sandra Betdhol (C)
James Roughen, Bayne Boyes, Budd
Boyes (C), Suzanne Boyle, Paul Brod-
eur, Ernie Brttbacher (111, Michael
LON DESBORO
Rev. Fuatge on Sunday morning ex-
tended
x•to ded an invitation to anyone to call
at the parsonage this Friday afternoon
after two o'clock, to see the new cup•
boards and other improvements which
have been done recently.
Mrs, Cal Siraughan, of Goderich, vis -
tied on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. \Vii
lows Mountain and the Josling family.
AIr, and Mrs. Mervin Durnin and
Karen, of Stratford, spent last week-
end with 'Ir, and Mrs. Harry Durnin.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kerslake and
family, of Elimville, spent last Sunday
with the Durnin's.
Mrs. Marjorie Davey and Aliss Mary
Hage' visited with the "fortner's par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Hesk, recently.
Sympathy is extended to Mrs. Wil-
mer Howatt and family in the loss of
her mother, Mrs. David Gardiner, who
passed away on Monday evening in
Sctaforih hospital.
11 Ir, Walter McGill went to Victoria
Ifospitatl, London, on Monday for treat -
meat. We wish Walicr a speedy re-
covery.
'The EXplo•ers met last Wednesday.
Barbara Burns calling the graduation
meeting to order. Poems were given
by heather Snell and Helen Good Ah•s,
Edwin Wood was guest speaker. The
girls who graduated were, Lorna Mil-
'er, Wendy Caldwell, Donna Youngblut.
Lloy Shaddick, Shirley llunking, Heath -
Snell, Helen Good, Janice Little.
Patty Little, Sharon Little, Beverley
Lee, Susan Clark and Barbara Burns.
Lunch Was served by the girls,
The general meeting of the U.C.W.
mot last Thursday evening. Opening
with the devotional period. Airs. Lear
rave a temperance reading, Among
items of business was a recomnienda•
lion from the afternoon ttnit to re-
plenish the dishes and silverware for
the church kitchen.
The Women's Institute will hold the
July meeting next Wednesday evening,
July 4, at 0 o'clock. Guest speaker.
Miss Gilchrist, of Clinton, on Home Ec-
onomics and Health. There will be a
demonstration of Sunshine Sister des-
sert, ,Roll Call will be household hints,
Program, Mrs. George Thornason, Airs.
Bowes, AO's, Milt Little, Mrs, Fother-
gill,
Collti31 J11 i -1tl
Power Of Suggestion
A recent i sue of Today'
Ili;'!tut, published at the head-
quarters of the American Medical
A_sociation, contains an interest -
in, „c emit of the findings of a
l'nivcr: tty of Illinois medical
'1's,;,; bri.f acc:nit relates that
Hr:;ecr= G. Jackson and asso-
c!:;': in G.
university tested
ve :miner- min an infectious
eo:d seen ':cl. These volunteers
verre divided into two groups—
tilu_c vvho .sty they "got colds all
the lisle" .ind these who don't.
'Colds developed," the iteral
said, "in 21 per cent of those who
didn't often get colds and in :32
per cent o1 the 'aly; a;; s -lave -a -
cold' group."
"Then," the c ci punt continues,
"they used a noninfectious ma-
terial, with only 1 per cent of
the no cold people ,setting any
symptom, compared v: ith 2.1 per
cent of those \\•ho feels colds pick
on them"
C,..mmentmg on the study, Col-
tii11nist Sydney J. Harris, in the
Chicago Dail News, says:
"What this strongly indicates
is that autosuggestion is the
cause of 'having a cold' in many
cases. If you believe you are
likely to girt one from sitting in
a draft or walking through a
puddle, you will get all the
symptoms—even though the cold
virus is Inot present in your
body."
Army tests have indicated an-
other side of this, too: soldier,
have been drenched in water and
exposed to drafts, with no colds
developing.
A few months ago Today's
Health reported on a study by
Dr. Harold Diehl, "one of the
best-known scientific studies of
cold remedies."
The study lasted five years and
Included thousands of students at
the University of Minnesota, ac-
cording to Godfrey Sperling Jr.
in the Christian Science Monitor.
Some of the students received
one of the known remedies; some
received onl a sugar pill. None
knew which he got,
At the et;r: o: the study, Dr.
Die:ll Iuund that about as many
sL:''..nts taking sugar pills as
ti.ltlng medicines repelled that
their c lds lett them in x ..ay or
se. "In fact.' :ay.; !h'' a,r cut=,
"the most e,"'— ' eacl•n�`a
weee th s_ gar pills!"
The writer ct t:':! :::title then
gives this expl'a ,11:
"This Ls what is :::: \\'n as the
placebo effect: at riautiilz to a
Tnnedicine the powers you wish it
;lad. You buy a cold remedy
where you buy all your drugs; it
s packaged like a drug; it looks
Ike a drug, and it even tastes
ike a drug. You have an illness
tend its label says the medicine
will help. Furthermore, you
want it to. The placebo's power
#TARTLING—Teal Train° in-
terprets the cloak-and-dagger
look in dresses at a fashion
showing.
PRIZE SPECIMEN — What's good fcer the ostrich is good for the g a n d e r, The prize
speciment at a famous South African form, Oscar, is shown here posing with one of his
own feathers, while Joey Geldenhiws models summer bonnet made of ostrich feathers.
is really your own power to de-
ceive yourself."
In that sante issue there is an
article by Bruce Bliven on "What
We Know About Colds." Says
the author: "There is some evi-
dence which seems to suggest
that psychology may be a factor
in almost all colds. I know a
public lecturer," says Mr. Bievin,
"who invariably came down with
a cold whenever he had to make
a speech. Once he had frankly
faced up to the fact that he didn't
like public speaking but had to
go on with it, the symptoms dis-
appeared."
Blevin continues: "Whenever
large numbers of people are
given medicine—or even sugar
pills—and are told that it will
cure existing colds, or prevent
future ones, the number of colds
in that particular group of peo-
ple is reduced, for a while, by
about two-thirds. This fact has
led to various triumphant an-
nouncements in the press, from
time to time, that 'a cure' for
colds had been discovered — an-
nouncements not verified by sub-
segent experiences.
Mr. Harris cites an interesting
case in point in his column:
Preston Lecky, the psychol-
ogist, once reported the case of
a man and his wife who were
bitten by their pet dog. The man
became convinced that he was
going to develop hydrophobia,
but the woman was sure she
wasn't.
"In three days," Lecky said,
"the man was sick in bed, his
throat muscles were becoming
taut, and he complained of dif-
ficulty in swallowing. His wife
was up and well. At the end of
five days, the man reported all
the symptoms of hydrophobia,
and a physician saw that he was
actually on the verge of dying
from a disease he didn't have.
"Finally, on the eighth day, the
doctor persuaded him that no-
body with hydrophobia had ever
lived more than six days, He
jumped out of bed and soon was
as well as before the dog had
bitten him."
Harris goes on to say that a
person cannot be hypnotized
against his will: "The subject
must meet the hypnotist at least
half way, must want to be put
in a trance, Much of the 'sug-
gestive power' of the hypnotist is
based on auto suggestion in the
patient.
THE SCIENCE OF MEDICINE
She had six sons and died in
childbirth. The doctors of the
period had a theory that to have
a child was beneficial to a
woman suffering from consump-
tion. She was thirty-eight. —
Somnerset Maugham
BUILT FOR TWO, OR MORE — "And baby makes three,"
could be the title of this bicycle built for two with side -car
for baby. Mr, and Mrs Jim Cross, of Cardiff, Wales, solved
the transportation problem when their now 15.month-old
arrived, but expect another little "problem" late this year.
For the first time that I re-
member I am able to sit outside
in comfort, Why? Because this
year there have been no mosqui-
toes — not around here anyway
-- and we are generally well
supplied. I suppose the spring
was too cold to hatch the larva
or eggs, or whatever it is that
produces young mosquitoes, And
am I glad! We have a lovely
shady spot at the back of the
house and we are enjoying it to
the full, When we came here
five years ago it was a thick
clump of ash trees which, para-
doxically, Partner reduced, and
yet enlarged, by transplanting
small trees from the middle of
the copse to the outside. It is
from here I see so many birds.
Yesterday I saw one I had not
seen before. It was a red car-
dinal. We had visitors at the
time and one of them said —
"Oh, look at that beautiful bird.
It's bright red — whatever is it?"
I was so glad it paid us a visit
at that time because I had been
boasting about the lovely birds
we get around here. So , , . see-
ing was believing. But don't get
the idea either Partner or I just
sit out in the garden and watch
the birds. Partner is busy with
the lawn and garden' most of the
tune but he does sit down to rest
in the shade when he feels like
it, And I made three pairs of
pyjamas for my grandsons last
week, using the sewing machine
at night and saving the hand-
work to do in the garden.
One of the visitors we had last
week was a lady from Yorkshire
on her first visit to Canada. Our
Ontario countryside impressed
her as being so similar to Eng-
land. Which I suppose is per-
fectly true and yet we' seldom
realize it. Peel and Halton, for
instance, are very little different
from. Essex and Suffolk. And our
inland lakes vary little from
some of the lake districts in the
British Isles.
You know, I sometimes wonder
how this neighbourhood got
along before we came here! That
sounds awful, doesn't it? But
don't misunderstand me— I only
mean because Partner gets so
many odd calls for help, mainly
I suppose, because he is country -
born and bred and knows how to
deal with odd situations. The
other night a grass widow phoned
about eleven o'clock because a
raccoon had got into the garage
and knocked the lid off her gar-
bage can, Hearing a noise she
had phoned the police. A young
officer came up and decided it
was a raccoon and not a burglar.
But yet she wasn't satisfied until
she had got in touch with Part-
ner.
The next day another neigh-
bour — this time a man -- asked
Partner to go up and see what
he could do to destroy a hornet's
nest... And yesterday he was
asked to call our Ditto home be-
cause she was after a bird's nest
in a tree near the house next
door.
However, the calls are not all
one-sided. When we have minor
electrical troubles we ask the
advice of a neighbour who is
well versed in the intricate prob-
lem concerning electrical appli-
ances. The same' applies to win-
ter car -starting problems. In any
neighbourhood there is always
something that one person can do
better than another. The thing
is to know your neighbours. Even
advice was to whom to call for a
repair job is very welcome to a
stranger in a strange district,
And of course among the women
opportunities for neighbourliness
are unlimited, But sometimes a
"limit" has to be set, For in-
stance it is great for a young
mother to come to the rescue of
ISSUE 26 — 1962
a neighbour by baby-sitting in
an emergency but it should be
expected ONLY in an emergen-
cy. And it is only natural for
pre-school children to congregate
in one another's backyard. But
that, too, should be kept within
limits. Mother, for her own con-
venience, shouldn't suggest to
her little ones that they go and
play in Billy's backyard. It may
give her an opportunity to get
on with her work — but what
about Billy's mother? No young
mother can have a yard full of
children without feeling she
must keep an eye on them. And
that is a situation that does
develop, especially if Billy has
an extra lot of things to play
with in his backyard, including
a sandpile and a slide. I know
of one young mother who Some-
times had as many as ten chil-
dren around day after day. And
of course she couldn't blame the
children. It was the mothers who
were at fault.
Well, the foregoing was writ-
ten Sunday morning. And then
in the afternoon we had a storm.
Real rain, no less — for over two
hours. The best rain we have
had this year. Now we shall see
the garden stuff grow. I knew a
storm was coming as Taffy
wouldn't leave me for a minute.
Even Ditto was uneasy, As for
me I had my usual "thunder
headache" Queer how some peo-
ple — and animals — sense a
storm more than others. It does
not affect Partner in the least.
But Taffy — we never had a dog
so petrified of thunder as Taffy,
I always feel so sorry for the
poor little tike. Now Partner and
I are going to don rubber boots,
wander around outside and take
a Zook at the garden.
Consider the postage stamp, Its
usefulness consists in the ability
to stick to one thing till it gets
there. Josh Billings.
Ki er Joe
Pins It M vde BIG
"'1'ou might ,ay I organized It
and put it te,;eihur." 'the speak-
er was dance nta:tcr "Killer
Joe- Piro, Itis .ubjcct; 'l'hc bully
tinily, a colse.'-twist - square -
d:u;c.' ;ort of a step that i, the
(newest rage from 1lal'!e,u 10
Palm lit a 1. lay way of ti nn-
uustratinn, Piro flicked on a
phonograph and began a sched-
uled private lesson. kicking,
corkscrewing, teaches' and
pupil ruthlessly punished the
floorboards of Piro's Manhattan
walk-up studio, An hour niter,
his black hair still as sieek as
a newly Simonized Hulk -Royce,
Biller Joe told a visitor: "Me
bully gully unravels tensions,
You are free to solo, free to
swing your hips."
To the cognoscenti ul the
popular dance world, it comes
as no surprise that pint-size (5
feet ti inches, 133 pounds) Piro
should have enriched civiliza-
tion with the hully gully, Killer
Joe, in fact, is something of a
hip -swinging legend. An ex -jit-
terbug champion, he ruled New
York City's Palladium Ballroom
as the mambo king, later helped
fire the pachanga fad, still is
many a working • gal's idea of
Valentino 011 a dance -hall floor.
The 41 -year-old dancer's repu-
tation is just as big in the jet-
borr.e international set. Itis stu-
dir clients — who pay $03 for
si.: lessons — include Eva Go -
or ("cute"), the Duke of Bed-
ford ("a live one"), and the
Duke and Duchess of Windsor
("Duke has a nice soft move-
ment").
Indeed, acting as a sort of
patron St. Vitus as cafe -society
shindigs, Killer Joe is fast be-
coming as popular a stimulant as
vodka on the rocks. "People
want someone to make them
gay," he says, Piro made per-
sonal appearances at 30 balls
and private parties last winter
and so delighted guests at a re-
cent charity hop in Palau Beach
by dancing the twist with all
corners that, along with his us-
ual fee of $300, he got a diamond
butterfly stickpin that he now
flaunts in his narrow black tie.
(One prominent Nassau hostess,
unable to present him in person
at a party, stuck his silver -
framed picture on the buffet
table.)
"It's wild," says Piro, his big
brown eyes gleaming. "The
Duchess of Windsor introduces
me at a ball as her dancing
teacher, and someone else inter-
rupts, saying: 'What do you
mean? He's mine, too'."
Killer Joe's early life was no
ball, Son of an impoverished
Italian tailor, he took his teen-
age knocks in East Harlem,
eventually began to cop $15 and
$20 prizes at the Savoy Ball-
room, proving -ground for the
lindy hop. "I wasn't good-look-
ing, so I had to learn to dance
well — otherwise no dates," ex-
plains Killer Joe. In 1940, he
won the annual Il:u'vest Moon
,jitterbug title, and during the
early part of the war, his gyra-
tions at the Stage 1)oot CaiOeetl
Were SO Wild that he \von 1.113
nickname. Show -biz folks reck-
oned that, like a great bull-
fighter, he should he seen to-
day before lie knocked himself
out tomorrow, but good.
Coast Guard tout' in the Pa-
cific left Killer ,toe with malar-
ia; he was, however, far from
floored. Ile hooked on at the
Palladium as emcee and dance
master, started his oven studio,
and soon got tapped to tedeil
other instructors the latest Latin
American steps. When the twist
became the torque Of New York,
Killer Joe could usually be
spotted stomping at the Pepper -
I111111 Loiunge — for his own
pleasure. He looked so good that
gradually, by word of mouth
and gossip -columns, he made a
name in high society as a twist
master. He hasn't stopped Pir-
ouetting on parquet floors since.
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. is it correct, at a cocktail
party, for the women to remove
their hats?
A. If they wish. And, of course,
they may even conte without
hats.
Q. is it proper to write a few
lines of good wishes on the card
that you enclose with a wedding
gift?
A. While not necessary, this
is a quite proper and nice thing
to do,
LABOR OF LOVE — Busy at
her knitting, Los Angeles
housewife Mrs, Leonard W.
Eaton shows why she is known
as Korea's "sweater girl,"
Over the past nine years, Mrs.
Eaton has warmed the hearts
and bodies of countless Korean
war orphans by knitting almost
1,000 sweaters and "hundreds
and hundreds" of caps, mit-
tens, stockings and other
clothing.
Pomona Builds a City for the Sixties
Pomona, Calif., 30 miles from Los Angeles, is undertaking a 10 -year renais-
sance of the city and surrounding Pomona Valley Heart of the plan is a nine -
block -long pedestrian mall, shown in drawing, above, expected to be completed
by September, 1962, Construction involves building traffic underpasses, reloca-
tion of railroad rights of way and establishing off.street parking districts, among
other things. New buildings and shops will line the mall, which will be decorated
with trees and fountain and will include recreation areas. Overall view of the
new Pomona, below, shows a transportation center, which train is approaching
at right, and a civic center, The Pomona plan is unique in being financed and led
by private enterprise, without relying on state or federal aid, The city grew from
35,000 in 1950 to 227,000 in 1961 and expects a half -million population by
1980.
Paris Has A Real
Gold Mine In The Sky
tourists oevt.;r think about such
things, but the Eiffel 'Power;
that iron exclamation mark that
points up the beauty of Paris,
is a fine business proposition In
fact, the gloriously grole; (nue
structure on the Left Bank of
the Seine is a blue-chip corpora-
tion that has become a hit of a
gold mine in the sky for 3 000
Frenchmen,
Only nineteen of then) .showed
up recently for Societe de la
'four Eiffel's annual stockholders
meeting in the handsomely dec-
orated gray and green board-
room on the ground floor of the
tower's north pillar Charles
Vannesson, a member of the
nine -elan board of directors, ex-
plained the small but congenial
turnout thusly: "Holding stoi ks
in the Eiffel Tower company is
like having stocks in tranquility
— no worries, no problems"
That hasn't always been so
with the engineering masterpiece
that Alexandre Gustave Eiffel
built for the Paris exposition
of 1889, Parisian beauty lovers,
condemning the tower as a mon-
strosity, campaigned right up to
the eve of World War fI to have
its 7,300 tons of lacy iron dis-
mantled. But when the Nazis
talked about cutting it up for
scrap iron in 1942, even the es-
theticians suddenly realized that
the tower was dear to the heart
of every Frenchman.
The world's seventh tallest
structure easily outdraws such
centuries-old classics as the
Louvre Museum and the Cath-
edral of Notre Dame. Its three
platforms — at 187 feet, 377
feet, and 899 feet — were visited
by 1.8 nl i 111 o n persons last
year, a figure topped only by
Lenin's Toznb in Moscow which
drew 2,3 million reverent Com-
snunists, (The Washington Mon-
sment attracted 1.6 million vis-
itors and the Empire State
Building 1,5 million,)
.Although the tower Is techni-
rsally the property of the city
of Paris, it has In fact been
Erivately operated ever since
iffel formed a company to
raise the $1.6 million he needed
o put it up, The city contributed
$300,000 of the funds, was given
title to the tower, then In what
is one of the earliest lease -back
arrangements on record, gave
the company the concession to
operate it.
The tower was such an im-
mediate hit with sight -seers
that Eiffel was able to pay off
his bondholders within a year.
He later issued 15,300 shares of
stock which now sell on the
Paris Bourse for about $140
each. They are hard to get, en-
joying so much status that they
Bre often passed from father to
von a special legacy. Alexandre
Gustave Eiffel's own shares now
belong to his grandson, Rene Le
Grain Eiffel.
In recent years, the stock has
paid a 5 per cent ($7) dividend.
in 1061, gross receipts totalled
$1,2 million. After cutting the
city In for its share of the re-
turn, then deducting the cost of
operating and maintaining the
tower, the company showed a
net profit of about $89,000. Ad-
mission tickets account for most
of the gross, but the company
Iso earns a profit on space it
eases to two fashionable res-
taurants and from the radio and
television antennas that have
boosted the tower's height from
084 feet to 1,009 feet.
As director Vannesson noted
}sappily: "Everything just gets
better and better."
Alimony is like buying oats for
a dead horse, hugs Baer.
STILTED — Fred Berry says
that using stilts helps him to
reach the ceiling better than
scaffolding fortouch-up jobs,
Here's The Oldest
Show On Earth
It is the world's longest -run-
ning and most popular play. It
appeal to people of a I 1 ages.
Punch and Judy have been en-
tertaining in Great Britain for
three centuries and Britain's
showmen are celebrating the fact
this year.
The first recorded Punch and
Judy show is thought to have
been 300 years ago on the por-
tico of the "actors' church" —
St. Paul's, Covent Garden, Lon-
don, A special tablet was placed
in the portico at a service for
Punch and Judy men and their
clogs a few weeks ago.
The traditional melodrama has
changed little. Mr. Punch gets
tough with Judy, outwits a
beadle, an undertaker, a ghost
and the devil himself, and hangs
a hangman in his own noose.
Although Punch and Judy
shows in Britain can be traced
back reliably for only 300 years,
references to Mr. Punch have
been found in ancient Egyptian
hieroglyphics. His must be the
oldest show on earth,
Mr, Punch has also been dis-
covered in Italy at the time of
Julius Caesar, when he is be-
lieved to have been a red -nosed
hunchback who earned his living
as a jester.
A legend says that Punch or-
iginates from Pontius Pilate and
Judy from Judas Iscariot. In
most. Punch and Judy shows
Punch triumphs over everyone
except the jester, hence the
phrase "as pleased as Punch,"
Somehow, the play is always
up to date. Wherever there is a
Punch and Judy show, it attracts
a crowd. The performers are all
puppets, except for the dog,
Toby, which is usually live.
The showman produces the fa-
miliar high-pitched voice of Mr.
Punch with a "swazzle" — a
squealer which he places in his
mouth, and must be careful not
to swallow.
A south coast Punch and Judy
TILT — Squeeze play takes place as workmen ease a garage
between a hoose and o tree in Topeka, Kan. Mr, and Mrs.
A. L. Meyer wutch their garage play the bi9gest part. ,
showman who used to give more
than 1,500 shows a season on the
beach says that ho usually swal-
lowed his swazzle about two or
three times every season, hut al-
ways managed to retrieve it.
All good dog 'I'obys must have
stage sense. Some showmen say
that training a Toby Is the most
difficult and trying part of the
whole business, One man bought
a dozen dogs before he could find
one that would take to it.
One of the most intelligent
'l'obys on record was: Billie, a
Yorkshire terrier, it was stage -
st'uc'k from the start, said its
owner, and obviously loved its
job,
l3illie lived to the age of four-
teen and appeared in more than
5,0(10 performances up and down
the country, writes Ashley
Brown in "Tit-13its."
Some old records say that
Punch and Judy shows were par-
ticularly popular in Britain in
the days of Queen Anne, In those
days Judy was often called Joan,
A clause in the Magna Carta per-
mits Punch and Judy shows in
the streets of any town.
Secrets of presenting the per-
fect Punch and Judy show have
sometimes been handed clown
from father to son in families
for many generations.
For years the strong -roots of
a London fire) contained a cen-
turies-old hook of words for
Punch and Judy — complete with
all stage directions,
During the 1939-45 war a Czech
showman made so many quips
against the Nazis during each
performance that the Gestapo ar-
rested him. He was interned, and
the puppets were locked in an
underground safe.
The effect of seeing Punch
knocking his wife about in the
traditional manner is questioned
frequently. Many adults have
complained about the violence of
Punch, but most psychologists
say that it does not harp) young-
sters.
"The presentation in Punch
and Judy of a man and woman
quarrelling appeals to the pri-
mitive in all of us, but it does us
no harm because in such inci-
dents lies the germ of domestic
comedy," says an American psy-
chologist,
Teenagers Have
A New MODEST Hero
At 22, Neil Sedaka well re-
members his boyhood in Brook-
lyn, where, as he says, "I was a
social flop. A big square!" The
son of a taxicab driver, a bright
boy with a gift for music, he
wanted to be popular. At parties,
they laughed when he sat down
at the piano to play Beethoven
and Chopin. "They wanted to
hear things they could dance to."
He opened, last month in New
York at Jack Silverman's Inter-
national, a Broadway nightclub
as large as some Catskill resorts.
Performing such songs as "Stu-
pid Cupid," "Happy Birthday
Sweet Sixteen," and "Little
Devil," he whipped. out a refined
rock-and-roll charm that has
sold some 8 million records and
earns his) a quarter of a million
dollars a year, as well as a pop-
ularity that is all but overwhelm-
ing. He has had to abandon rid-
ing in the subways, for the kids
at those old Brooklyn parties
have turned into an adoring,
omnipresent mob. He has had
5,000 fans swarming to meet his)
at the Rio de Janeiro airport,
breaking down the police bar-
riers and braving the fire hoses,
.and has played to 30,000 people
a night for a solid week in the
Philippines. Munching a wedge
of pizza at Coney Island he over-
heard one teenager squeal to an-
other: "Look, it's Neil Sedalia
and , , . he eats!"
What is left for him? The 140 -
pound, green-eyed singer sat be-
hind a huge walnut desk in his
Rondak Enterprises office and
said baldly: "I want to be more
popular. I want Sedaka to be a
household word."
The Manhattan debut at the
International represents a turn-
ing point. Sedaka wants to move
up into the adult market, with
ballads and folk songs. But he
wants to keep the rock-and-roll
numbers, too, with the heavy
beat and the triplet piano, Those
will be for the teenagers, And
he wants to write a Broadway
musical, And he wants to keep
up the serious music (he studied
at Juilliard and was once .chosen
by Artur Rubinstein to play on
VGQXR), The move lilt° popular
music, hoWever, he judges now
to have been a good thing, "not
just financially, but • namewise,"
Some of his peers at Juilliard
may have scoffed when he
brought in "Stupid Cupid" to
play in class, but they were
"snobs." The hardest thing in
the world, he claims, is to, write
a simple tune.
Sedaka, pore, is out of the taxi
(he is road manager for his son),
and Sedaka, fils, is in a white
Cadillac convertible with black
leather seats, but he still wants
to be popular. "I want to be
treated as a normal human be-
ing," he says, gesturing with a
hand which casts a glint from a
large tourmaline ring. "I want
people to accept me for just the
old Neil. But'I guess it's impos-
sible."
- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
BABY CHICKS
BRApY has dual purpose and Ames
avellable, prompt shipment. Also broil.
ere. Let Os know your requirements,
lee IOcaI Agent, or write Bray Hat.
*fiery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont,
BOATS
CATAMARANS
UF:11(NS'I'1tA'rORS AND 'I'RADE•IN
Outboards Volvo Outdrlves
Bargains 17' Cat ae Low as $1 300
AERO SIAItINE INDUSTRIES LTD.
21 Walker St., Oakville, VI. 43301
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
II1LII.DING for stile or leese In town
of Forest. Suitable for almost any
kind of business. Approximately 3,200
sy tt. selling space with about. the
same for storage. Alr conditioned. W111
remodel to suit tenant. Situated be.
tilde post office and across the street
from new IGA supermarket, For more
information, contact Ted Roberts, For.
est IGA, Ont.
(00D family clothing business for
sale at sacrifice price. )reason for eeN-
ing, owner moving to another city For
i'urticulars, please write to Box 121.
'ort Stanley, Ont.
--
HOTEL, 12 -bedroom, concrete block;
exterior complete, interior partially;
11 acres land, 8 cleared. 40 ' scenic
frontage, sandy beach; surrounding
property value $2 000 an acro. Sacri-
fice quick sale. 111 health. Invested
$21,000 $15,000 would buy it. Prost.
mlty of Trans-Cunnda Iiwy makes
valuable Investment for stunrner hush
Hess now. W Stepovik. Batchnwana
Bay. tint,
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
GENERAL Store Business with large
living quarters - stock - fixtures,
fully equipped-- oil heated; gas pumps,
also ISO Sacrificing clue to disable.
menu. in good hunting and fishing dis•
trlet. Write C. J. Hoffman, Golden
Valley, Ont.
WELDING and machine shop and rest.
dence, Full complement power tools,
good business, In rich southern Ont,
farming area Box 55, Melbourne, Ont,
A thriving general store operating on
A cash basis offers a golden opportu.
nity to secure a splendid living. Ile.
rides a well equipped store It has ex•
cellent modern living quarters, a com.
pletely modern comfortable brick
home. You will enjoy this spotless
home which has all modern convent.
ences. The property includes store,
house, garage, b a r n, store fixtures
and half an acre of choice garden and
lawn. Wonderful business potential.
Failing health reason for selling, Vou
must see this property to appreciate
It. Priced at a sacrifice fur quick sale.
Box 251. 123 nith Street, Toronto 14,
Ont.
MEDICINE HAT, ALTA.
MODERN floor covering and uphol•
stery shop. Floor space 40'x30'. Good
living quarters upstairs. ideal buss-
ness location of any sort, Full price
$28,500, down payment $10,000. Town
population end district 40,000. GRO•
CERY, meat and confectionery store,
3 -bedroom home and store on 1 lot,
including stock and equipment. Ap-
prox. turnover $40,000. Full price $28,.
500, down payment $10,000, Owner has
other Interests Please notify Mr, W.
Schwenek, 544•C Princess Ave, Med•
(rine fiat, Alta.
CATALOGUES
SEND for new free Illustrated ental•
ogue and 'Meddle Monthly Money
Saver. You save money on men's, wo.
men's, children's and baby's wear, also
electrical appliances, summer furnl•
tore. and hundreds of other items.
'1'WEDDLE MERCHANDISING
COMPANY
FERGUS it ONTARIO
COINS AND STAMPS
JUST released June 0 edition of "Cash
' for Your Canada, Newfoundland,
Great Ihttaln & United States Coins",
50 pages, 505. Now paying $11.00 for
Cdn 1923 cents; for 1925 cents 57,00.
For Cdn. 1940 dimes $4.25. Countless
others The Guidebook of Cdn. Coins,
224 pages, 23110 full illustrations, 2nd
Revised Printing, Apra, 1062, with
latest prices collectors will pay for
Canadian coins In all conditions, 51.50,
REGENCY COIN, 157 RUPERT
WINNIPEG, MANITOBA
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
$$$ SAYINGS $$$
25 different American spin cast fishing
lures $11.95„ reg, 522.70. World re•
nowned battery portable transistorized
tape recorder 534,05, reg. $49.50. Bat.
teryless rechargeable flashlight 55.95,
Superb battery razor $14,95. Amazing
new pocket lighter, men, ladies 52.95.
7 day money back guarantee. Postpaid,
Dealers interested send 51,00 for par-
ticulars. Ontario residents add 3%
sales tax Send cheque or money order.
'trans Canada World 'Traders. Box 217
Station 0, Toronto 1G.
FLORIDA PROPERTIES FOR SALE
FLORIDA
Orange Grove
NEWLY planted, $1,150 per acre. 4:1
down, Capital gain opportunity. Excel.
lent for retirement income.
H. SNOEK REAL ESTATE BROKER
4928 YONGE ST, WILLOWDALE, ONT.
212.2581
You can tell how healthy a
man is by what he takes two at
a time—stairs or pills. Abe Mar-
tin.
HELP WANTED MALE
TWO tag press operators minted Inv
mediately, by well established enbur•
bon printing compuny, experience on
Now Era, Young or International tog
presses vuluubie, but not essential
rigood starting salary, with opportunity
or advancement, 5 -day week, all bene.
to If you are ambitious, have a me•
ehanical aptitude and want a steady
job with a future. Apply In person to
Mr. Ronnetta, Atlas Trig Company of
Canada Ltd., 72 Bayly 5t., Ajax, Ont,
INVESTMENTS
50/
,C
Interest
Paid On
GUARANTEED
TRUST
CERTIFICATES
3, 4 OR 5•YEAR TERM
$100 MINIMUM AND UP
Sterling Trusts
CORPORATION
172 BAY ST., TORONTO EM, 4.749$
GUNS
SHOTSI(ELL reloading components at
lowest price. Reload your own shot.
gun shells for as little as $1 per box,
Morton Bros. Limited,Mt. Albert.
Carry full line of Toos & Supplies.
Write for price Ilst,
LIVESTOCK
1 have another herd of registered Jer•
sey cattle for sale. WIIi finance on
terms of 36 months, so they w111 pay
for themselves. Apply Immediately to
Ross Butler, 742 Pavey St., Woodstock,
or telephone LE. 7.8155, Woodstock,
MEDICAL
FRUIT JUICES: THE PRINCIPAL
INGREDIENTS IN DIXON'S REMEDY
FOR RHEUMATIC PAINS, NEURITIS
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching, scalding and burning ecze•
mu, acne, ringworm, pimples and toot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem,
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 03.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St. Clair Avenue East
Toronto
NURSES WANTED
One Matron with knowledge of X-ray
and two General Duty Nurses required
immediately for 15 bed ifospitai, 40
hour week statutory holidays and reg.
ular vacation. Roan and board 040,00
per mth. Beautiful location Apply with
full details, salary B.C. Standards,
Administrator, Arrow Lakes Hospital
P.O. Box 87, Nakusp, B.C.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession. good
wages i'housnnds of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches
44 lung St W , Hamilton
72 Rideau Street. Ottawa
OLD COINS WANTED
COINS WANTED! Paying 5100 for
1912 brass PI'omhacl Nickels. Buying
other coins Tell me what you have,
Coleman Coins, 545 "E" Street. San
Bernardino, California.
PERSONAL
A modern way to help you reduce.
Eat 3 meals a day. Lose pounds and
inches fast. Clinically tested Slim -Mint
helps satisfy your craving for fond —
Slim•hlint plan snakes reducing easier
than you ever dreamed possible 52 00,
2 evecks' supply.
LYON'S DRUGS, 471 DANFORTH,
TORONTO
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
CI1YS'I'A1. Beach. 7 room house, bath,
gas furnace, possession immediately,
Price $4,995.00. M Lemont, 285 Lan.
caster W., Kitchener. Sherwood 2.5355,
$32,000 Beautiful location on Perry
Lake, Kecrmy, 22 miles northeast of
Iluntsville: custom-built fancily rest.
dence insulated throughout Spacious
living room, native stone fireplace, din-
ing room, kitchen; 2 bedrooms 3 -piece
bath on main floor, 2 bedrooms, 3•plece
bath 2nd floor, Full size basement with
bedroom and storage space. 011 heat.
ing garage and boathouse. 00' front.
lige on lake and suitable for exclusive
home or lodge. Terns, (:all G. M.
Deans, Broker, Sprucdalc, Ont„ 05.
ISSUE 26 11162
PONY SALE
CONSIGNMENT PONY SALE
at Clinton Sale Barn
ON SATURDAY, JUNE 90, AT 1 P.M.
For Information or consignments write
JOE COREY, R,4 CLINTON ONTARIO
Phone flUnler 2.9889
TEACHERS WANTED
A Protestant teacher fur S S. 4 and 14,
Hillier and Amelrasbutg.
DUTIES to commence In Sept,
APPLY 0: nriling, senting qualifica-
tions and salary to:
C. K. BLAKELEY, SEC; TREAS,
CONSECON, ONT, R.R. NO 2
VACATION RESORTS
WONDER GROVE CABINS
110USEKEEPINt; cottages; accommo-
date 2.6; all cOnvenlences, cabins for
4, 540 weekly, Centrally located. Write
or phone 24 M. Douglas, Grand fiend.
MINNEHAHA CAMP
Housekeeping cottages on Pickerel
River waters. thinning water. refrigera-
tion, showers, beach boats, good fish-
ing. Write. Hartley hloore, Loring, Ont.
PAIGNTON HOUSE
Motel and Cottage Units
Lake Rosseau, Muskoka.
Open June 23rd.
For complete Intorntatlon on summol
vacation urite for fl'ee colored folder
or
Phone Pori Carling, 165.3155
Le
vloniclair
IN THE LAURENTIANS, P. QUE.
MOST OUTSTANDING RESORT IN
FAMED STE, ADELE VILLAGE
1, LARGEST SWIMMING POOL IN THE
LAURENTIANS; 3 DIVING BOARDS,
SLIDE.
1, ILLUMINATED RUBICO TENNIS
COURT.
3, MEALS BEYOND COMPARE.
4. RIDING, BOATING, MOVIES, GOLF
AND DRIVING RANGE NEARBY.
REASONABLE RATES
WRITE FOR FOLDER
T. S. COUILLARD
LE MONTCLAIR, STE. ADELE, P.Q.
VACATION PROPERTIES FOR SALI
DEER PARK
COTTAGES
Bayfield, Ont,
9 COMPLETELY FURNISHED RENTAL,
COT!'AGES, and OWNER'S COTTAGE
located on a beautiful site just north
of Rayfield on Highway 21, 300 feet of
private sandy beach, excellent motel
Otto and play area included.
Numerous guest reservations now
made, will be transferred to purch-
ser.
For complete information and appoint-
ment to inspect. Call or write.
HAROLD W. SHORE
REM, ESTATE BiROKEIR
38 HAMILTON ST
GODERiCII _. PHONE JA 4.7272
COLLECTORS' ITEMS —
Three special 5 -yen stamps of
the Olympics series go on one-
month sole in Tokyo, with 5 -
yen surcharge for the 1964
Tokyo Olympic Fund. From
top: Judo, dark red; Water
polo, dirk green; and Beom,
printed dark brownish purple.
EMPTY CELL tt'i ALCATPAZ -- These photos show different views of a cell In Alcatraz
Prison where tai ce bank robbers mode an escape, At left is a guard's view of the cell
showing a c,.rtrt►ny heud on the pillow. At ri ght a guard looks at hole through which
the convicts escaped.
PAGE 4
ANNUAL DRESS SALE
Begins Thursday, June 28th
1 Rack Dresses, all sizes 99c
1 Rack Dresses, sizes 2 to 14x Teen $1.98
1 Rack Dresses, sizes 2 to 14x Teen $2,98
1 Rack Dresses, sizes 2 to 14x Teen $3,98
All Dresses sizes 2 to 16 Jr. Reduced to Clear,
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
1
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP,
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING,
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON.
AINEEIESIMMEIMINIMik
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — EEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE — ,,
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES;
/ATP-
CLINTON:
. TP- EXETERI
CLINTON: i;,1;,�,:
Easiness—Hu 2.6606 Easiness 41
Residence—Hu 2.3869 Residence 84
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 MKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Office — Main Street
SEAFORTIL
Insures.
* Town Dwellings
* All Classes of Farm Property
* Summer Cottages
* Churches, Schools, Halls
Extended coverage (wind, smoke,
water damage, falling objects, etc.
is also available
AGENTS: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5, Sea-
eorth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Har-
old Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eaton, Sea -
forth.
Annual Summer
CLEARANCE SALE
Of Entire Stock
REDUCTIONS UP TO So%
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" -
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211
, BLYTH, ONT.
THE 13LYTII STANDARll,.r,.,.,_ .. 11. as _.—.... Wednesday, lube 27, 1962 '
11110.1111111, Welk. ININIMINMV
BELGRAVE NEWS
Mrs. Ray Crawford and Mrs. Jack
Lcwe attended the Rebekah Assembly
at the Royal York hotel in Toronto re-
cently. Mrs. Crawford received her
commission for district deputy presi-
dent for Huron :strict 23.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Ansley, of Punta
Gorda, Florida, who have bean spend
in; eune time with their son and
r.augl tcr•in-law, Mr. and Mrs, Ly;s
Ansley, at Thcs.-alon, are visiting with
her parents, Air. and Mrs, Ira Camp•
bell, their two grandsons Terry anti
\lichael Ansley are also with them. '
Visitors last week with Mr, and Mrs.
Lyle Hol:rcr were, Mr, and Mrs, liar•
vey Cascmore, of reboil, Michigan,
Mr. Harvey Dake, Northville, Michigan,
\ir. and Airs. Charles (topper, of Bruce
Mines, the latter attended the Hopper
reunion in Seaforth on Sunday.
The regular meeting of the Belgrave
Wolf Cub Pack was held in the Con.
inanity Centre on Tuesday evening
with 26 Cubs present. Mrs. Kenneth
Wheeler was in charge and led in
the opening exercises. The Tawny
Six had the most points for inspection
and their Sixer, George Johnston.
'laced their pennant on the 'Toter
Pole. Mrs. Gordon McBurney read a
story, alter which the Pack divided
into two groups for instruction. Mrs.
Gordon McBuriwy and Mrs. Clare Var
Camp led in games outside. The
meeting closed with the Grand Ho.v.
and the singing of Taps.
Mr. and Mrs, Clare VanCamp were
!costs to a family gathering on Stuiday
afternoon at their home when 37 mem-
bers enjoyed a social time and picnic
supper. Guests included Mr. and Mrs
Robert Helm and family, Lucknow.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd \1'hytock and fan
ily, 1\'ingham, AIr, and Mrs. Ronald
Campbell and family, London, lir. and
Mrs. Man Campbell and family, Bel -
grave, Mr, and Mrs. Stewart Cloakey
and family and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Oampbeli, Brussels, also Mr. and Mrs.
Ira Campbell, Belgrave.
The annual Memorial service will
be held in Brandon Cemetery on Sun-
day evening, July 1 at 8:30 p.m. with
the Knox United Church in charge al
the service and the Wingham Corps nl
the Salivation Army i3and in charge
of the music. In case of rain, service
will be in Knox United Church.
Friends of Wayne Vincent will be
sorry to hear that he is a patient in
Victoria Hospital, London. Wayne is
a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Vincent.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Schrieber and fam-
ily, of Milton, spent the week -end witli
tier parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ander-
Son,
Mrs. John Nixon, Mrs. James La-
mont, Mrs. Laura Johnston and Mrs.
Ralph McCrea spent last Tuesday is
London.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Fear and family
and \h's. Julia McNall spent Sunday
in Stratford.
Mr. and Mrs. Goldie Wheeler and
family, of London, with lir, and Mrs,
Herb Wheeler on Sunday.
Mrs, Margaret Lowry and Fred Low-
ry, of Dundas, spent last week with
Mrs. Cora McGill.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hill and fam-
ily, of Toronto, and Mr, and Airs.
Alan McKay and family, of Wingham,
visited on Saturday with AIr. and Mrs.
Harry McGuire.
Miss Eleanor Walsh and Miss Mar-
lene Walsh, of Kitchener, spent the
weekend with their parents, Mr, and
Mrs. James Walsh.
Miss Lorna Bolt, of Kitchener, spent
the week -end with her parents, Mr,
and Mrs. Leslie Bolt.
Couple Honored on 25th Anniversary
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McSween were
hosts at a surprise party honoring her
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Logan, on Saturday afternoon.
for their 25t11 wedding anniversary
which they will have on June 26. The
afternoon was spent in a social time
and a picnic supper enjoyed by all.
Mr. and Mrs. Logan were presented
with a silver tea service by members
of their families. Mr. and Mrs. Logan
have three Children, Miss Patsy La-
gan, of Toronto, Barry and Ralph at
home. Mrs. Logan is the daughter al
\h'. and Mrs. Albert Vincent, and Mr.
Legpn is the son of Fred Logan and
the late Mrs. Logan, of Blyth. Present
were, \l.r. and Mrs, Harold Vincent
and family, and Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Vincent. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Vincent
of London, were unable to he present
because of illness in their family.
C,G,I,1', Annual Mother and Daughter
Banquet
The Canadian Girls in Training held
their annual islot.her and Daughter
banquet on Thursday evening in the
parlotu:ti of Knox United Church with
43 present. The president, Miss Mark
Coultes, was in charge of the evening:
activities and opened with words of
:welcome, grace was sung accompanied
by Doreen Pattison, and a bounteous
('inner which the girls had prepared(
was enjoyed by all present. The din-
ner was served by several of the ladies
of the church. Mrs. J, 11. Anderson.
leader, welcomed all present and in-
troduced several of the guests, Donna
Grasby paid tribute to the church, and
Rev. J. H, Anderson replied. Candles
were lit by Betty and Florence Minn.
Jeannette Johnston and Donna Grasby.
Doreen Pattison, Sharon Reavie and
Lunda Coultes formed a trio and sang
"Don't Forget To Pray" accompanied
by Helen Nicholson. A tribute to the
Mother's was made by Margaret Ni•
chclson, singing "Mother" accounpan-
:ed by Joyce Procter, Marilyn Taylor
also paid tribute to the smothers. Ahs.
Richard Procter replied for the moth
ors. The C.G.I.T. song was sung by
the girls accompanied by Helen An-
derson. Marilyn Campbell introduced
the guest speaker, hiss 1. Gilchrist
home economist for Huron County, who
spoke on "Leadership." She was thank-
ed by Wendy Fear, and Dianne Van -
Camp presented her with a gift. Joy-
ce Procter and Ruth Michie gave a
cornet duet accompanied by Helen
Anderson. Mrs. J. II. Anderson gave
a few remarks and told of one of the
girls, Florence Rhin, graduating from
the C.G.LT., the first girl to gradu-
ate from Mrs. Anderson's group, who
was presented with a picture to mark
the occasion by Brenda VanCamp.
The meeting closed with a hymn, -
W. I. Meeting
The Hone Economics meeting of
the Belgrave Women's Institute was
held in the Community Centre Tuesday
evening with the president, Mrs. Ri
chard Proctor, in charge of the busi-
ness session. It was announce.( that
the members would hold a birthday
party at Ihuronview on August 22, and
the following conunittee's were named:
lunch, Mrs. Leslie Bolt, Mrs. Herb
Wheeler and Mrs, Earl Anderson; pro-
gramme, lb's. C. R. Coultes, ,firs. Al
hert Vincent and Mrs. James Michie;
to buy gifts, Mrs, Stanley Cook, Mrs.
Cora McGill and Mrs. Carl Procter.
The group agreed to Cater to the Huron
County Credit Union banquet on Oc-
tober 18, Plans were made for the
annual bus trip on July 10. Members
were reminded of the August meeting,
when Miss Anna McDonald, of CKNX,
would he guest speaker and tell and
show slides of her trip to Jamaica.
Each member is asked to bring a
friend as their guest to this meeting.
It was announced that the annual Mem-
orial services will be held in Brandon
Cemetery •on July 1 at 8:30 p.m. with
the Wingham Corps of the Salvation
Army Band in charge of the music.
Mrs. Stanley Black was convener of
the program, opening with everyone
singing "The Maple Leaf Forevar."
Miss I. Gilchrist was the guest speak-
er and told "The real meaning of
4.11," Miss Lila Black gave an illus-
trated skit, 'Separates for Summer,'°
Seventeen 4-H girls were present and
modelled their operates which they
had nlade and told the cost of the
same. Mrs. Walter Scott gave are -
port of the district annual meetinsi
at Clinton. Grace was sung and lunch
served by Mrs. George Michie, Muss.
James Michie, Mrs. Leslie Bolt and
Mrs, Earl Anderson.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank friends, neighbours
and relatives, who rememberod n'v
twill cards, flowers and visits while a
Patient in. Victoria lospital, London.
Also Dr. Walden, London, and the
nursing staff.
17.1p, —Perry \l'aden.
FOR SALE
7 cu. ft. Refrigerator; Westinghouse
10" electric stove. Apply Mrs. It. Vin -
CARD OF THANKS
i wish to expross my heartfelt thanks
to all those kind friends who remem-
here;l me with cards and flowers and
to 'Trinity Church for the basket of
flowers sent to Dundas for the funeral
of my dear sister, Mrs. W. M. Dawson.
All these were greatly appreciated and
will always be remembered by nue.
—.Josephine Woodcock,
cent, phone 62, Blyth,
17.1
CLEARING AUCTION
SALE
OF FINANCE CO. REPOSSESSIONS, BANKRUPT STOCK, BAILIFF'
SEIZURES AND PERSONAL CONSIGNMENTS of modern HOUSE.
HOLD FURNITURE, TELEVISIONS, APPLIANCES AND BRAND
NEW CLOTHING on
SATURDAY, JUNE 30
at 1:30 p.m. sharp
BLUEVALE COMMUNITY HAIL
4 miles EAST of NINGHAM on 36 IIIGIIIVAY
CONSISTING OF' THE FOLLOWING:.
2 • 5 pe. bedroom suites complete with bookcase beds, boxsprings and
mattresses; 2 39" continental beds; 2 • 2 pc, davenport suites; 2 pc.
foam rubber zippered cushion chesterfield suite; large console model
chord organ; large chest freezer; 6 TV sets; combination radio and
record player; refrigerators and electric ranges; conventional washer;
automatic washer and dryer; 3 chrome kitchen suites; coffee and step
tables; tri•light and table lamps; hostess and arm chairs; platform
rockers; other odd pieces of furniture; quantity of brand new clothing
plus many more items which will be released before sale day but
not available for publication at this time.
TERMS:. CASH on day of sale, 3 percent sales tax in effect, cheques
accepted.
NOTE:. This in an outstanding sale of new and nearly new merchan.
dise.
FRANKLIN BUUCK, AUCTIONEER
Do Your Feet Hurt?
VISIT OUR STORE FOR A FREE
PEDO-GRAPH OF YOUR FEET
WE SPECIALIZE in fitting Dr, Scholl Arch
Supports,
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
Ile Store With The Good Manners"
McCALLUM'S MEAT
MARKET
Phone 10 -- 131yth, Ontario
A GOOD DELIVERY SERVICE IS NOW AVAIL-
ABLE TO OUR CUS'I'OA'IE1tS
So Phone 10 for your Order and Prompt Delivery
Will Be Yours
FRESH BEEF ANI) PORK
Lean Fresh Ground Beef for your Barbcque
and hamburger,
Canada Packers and Schneiders 3 to 4 lb. Grade A
Chickens
Full Selection of Frozen hoods and Fish
5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
T SHIRTS for Boys ---Super Special ... , each 28c
2 for 55c
VACATION LUGGAGE ---Outstanding Value,
22 x 16 112 x 7, Reg. 10.98; for 7.77
1912x131j2x6112,Reg 9.98 for 5.99
"IT" WHITE SHOE POLISII 21c
Black Flag INSECT SPRAY, 16 oz. 47c
Black Flag SPRAYERS each 37c
Children's BATI-TING SUITS, size 2 to 6x
Misses BATHING SULTS, size 8 to 14x
Boys' SWIM TRUNKS, size 2 to 14
WE HAVE SOME REAL BARGAINS ON THE
FOLLOWING ITEMS:
* STEEL ROOFING
* ALUMINUM DOORS and WINDOWS
* ASHPHALT ROOFING
ON CASH AND CARRY
WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNT STORES
PLYWOODS, CEMENT, LUMBER, FURNACES,
PLUMBING
"A Complete Building Supply Yard"
A. MANNING & SONS
PI30NE 207 ; BLYTfI, ONT.
Wednesday, June 27, 1962
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTII — ONTARIO.
vw.ese%nniwvvw.r.,.i-vvwwvvw.r.,vvvwvww+�rwwv..nvvW-
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability, Life.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
THE WEST WAWANOSIi NiUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Dungannon
Established 1878
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brown Smyth, R.R. 2,
Auburn; Vice -President, Verson Irwin,
Belgrave; Directors; Paul Caesar, R,11.
1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan,
Goderich; Ross McPhee, ILR. 3, Au.
burn; Donald MacKay, Ripley; John F
MacLennan, R.R. :1, Goderich; Frank
Thompson, ILJ(. 1, IL lyrood; Wnt.
Wiggins, II.R. 3, Auburn.
For information on your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
48.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
IiIGHIEST CASiI PRICES
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN 011
DISABLED COATS and f10IRSES
also
Dead Coss's and horses At Cash Value
Old Horses -4c per hound
Phone collect 133, Brussels,
BRUCE MARLATT
OR
GLENN GiBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth
24 flour Service
Plant Licence No, 54-R.P.-61
Colector Licence No. 08-G61
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES ANI) SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen
Sales, Varna. Tel. collect Hensall 696112,
G0.13p.tt.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WILFREI) McINTEE
Real Estate Broker
WALKERTON, ONTARIO
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechauical and hotly repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance. Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No. 8 highway. Phone JA 4-7231
Goderich, Ontario,
20-tt
BINGO
Legion Bingo every 'Thursday nite
8:45 sharp, in Legion Hall, Lucknow.
12 regular games for $10.00; 3 share -
the -wealth and a special for $50.00 must
go. (no limit to numbers). 4011
ACHESON'S HEAD STOCK SERVICE
Highest prices for dead, old or dig-
ahleci horses and cattle. Phone Atwood
356-2622 collect. Licence No. 156062.
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Hogs on Tuesdays
• Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 162, Blyth
SANITATION SERVICES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired
Blocked drains opened with modern
equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin
Coxon, Milverton, 'Telephone '254,
11tf,
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS— 1 p.nn, to 4:30 p.m.
EVENINGS:
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(BY APPOINTMENT)
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 -• Box 478.
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK. ST. - WiNGIIAM,. ONT,
(For Appointment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed
0:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office • Monday, 9 • 5:30.
Phone ITU 2-7010
G.13. CLANCY
OPTOP(ETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE EL
OOnE1UClt 15.111,
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
IIARRIS'TERS & SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, It. S. Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
vringhntn and Blyth.
IN ULYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING .
and by appointment.
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone MA, 104 Winghanl, 4t
PROPERTIES FOit SALE
IS'ILER 1 1) MciN'TEi3
Real Estate Broker
SS'alherton, Ontario
200 acres itt East Wawanosh Twp.,
two set of buildings, 2 silos, hydro.
100 acres in llullelt Twp., good build•
ings and silo, hydro.
100 acres in Morris Twp., good build -
lugs, hydro, 1 mile from Blyth.
100 acres in llullelt Twp, good brick
house and barn, hydro.
350 acres in Kinloss Twp., 50 acres
hardwood bush, 0 miles from Teeswal'
er, two set of buildings, hydro.
Large content block house and gar-
age in 13elgrave on No. 4 highway.
97 acres near Auburn. 10 acres of
bush, good buildings, hydro.
100 acres near Brussels, good build-
ings, hydro, 1 utile to school.
VICTOR KENNEDY
Blyth, Ontario
BLYTII BEAiJTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
IIOUSi4 FOR SALE
5 ronin ranelt style house, built 2
years, drive-in garage, automatic oil
furnace and all modern conveniences,
in Blyth. Apply Mrs, 1. J. Churchill,
Mossley, Ontario, phone Ilarrictsville
23i9.3377. 51.11.
ELLIOTT REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Gordon Elliott Broker
Blyth — !'hone 104 or 140
Following Blyth Residential Property
1',z storey brick dwelling, sun-purch,
furnace, Huth, garage (Ilttniilton
Street).
1'. storey, frame melalclad, insul-
ated dwelling, 3 piece bath, hydro.
water, good location.
1t+� storey, brick dwelling, oil fur -
mice, aluminium windows and screens,
3 lets.
2 storey brick dwelling, 3 apartment,,
2 • 3 piece bath, furnace and stoker,
rental investment.
1►2 storey frame, insul Krick dwelling
and garage on good lot.
FARMERS
Clinton Community
AUCTION SALES
FRIDAY EVENING A'I' 7.30 p.in.
AT CLINTON SALE BAIIN
Bob Henry,
Bob McNair,
Joe Corey,
Manager, Auctioneer
05-tf.
NI.MIIJ.PI.. M.••I" .,111/. is•••••••41.4/ f,
SANITARY SELVAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc. pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, R.R. 2
SUMMER PRICES ON SLAB WOOD
During, the months of June, July and
August we will be delivering truck
loads of hardwood slabs at $25.00 pen
load. Order during the summer and
save $3.00 James '1'. Craig and Son
phone 526-7220, Auburn, 16 3.
MY
THANKS
i#t Trt MfYA1U
BROWNIES
DRIVE•IN
THEATRE ) I`
CLINTON, ONTA1110
Two Complete Shows Nightly
Children under 12 in Cars free
Thursday and Friday, June 28.20
"TWIST ALL NIGU,I"'
Louis Prima -- June \Vilkeinson
i'Ius '"1''1S'1' CRAZE"
"Prisoner of the Iron Mask"
Michel Lenloine
(Colour—Scope) 3Car'loon)
Saturday Only, June 30
"FRONTIER UPRISING"
Jinn Davis - Nancy Radley
"Gun Street"
James Brown - Jean Willes
(Cartoon)
nnnnnn nn non... ...,• nn/%rJ.MI.
Sunday Mithtite and Monday, July 1-2
at 12:05
"DEVIL'S PARTNER"
Edwin Nelson
"Creature from the Haunted
Sea"
Anthony Carbon
(Cartoon►
Tuesday and SI'ednesday, July 3.1
Shown al 9:35 and 11:00
"PARIS BLUES"
Paul Newman -- .Ioanne. Woodward
Sidney Pottier
(Adult ,Entertainment)
(Cartoon)
COMINfi: "MiS'I'1"'
t0 wonderful story of a rebel colt)
"THE TWO 141171,F, REARS"
1 a cennedy fantasy)
FOR ,SALE
1959 Glendale Commander 32x10 wide
Mobile home, 2 bedrooms, 4 -piece
bath, 4 burner gas range, Westing-
house fridge, hot water heater, etc.,
in A-1 condition inside and out. Cheap
for quick sale. Apply, Wm. Ilanun,
131:yth, Ontario. 17-1
WESTF'IELD
Mr. Bill Buchanan has secured an
office position with Ontario Hydro and
is stationed at Timmins. We wish Inion
success with his new work.
111rs. W. F. Campbell visited with
Alrs. Norman Carter, Clinton, on Sat-
urday.
Alf. and Mrs. Harvey McDowell vis -
it'd with AIr. and Mrs. 'r. Jardin,- of
Wi:ghanl, Saturday evening.
Mrs. John Gear and Marilyn, of Kit-
chenei', called for AIfs. J. L. McDow-
ell and Gordon on Wednesday, Alr.
Gear, Marie and Marilyn brought Alrs.
McDowell and Gordon home Friday
evening.
Mr. and Alrs. IIoward Campbell and
Harold, Mr. Gary Walden, attended a
picnic al Fanshawe Damn, London, on
Saturday.
Rev. and Mrs, Don Snell and Mr, and
Alrs. Douglas Campbell returned Mon -
(',ay evening from Anderson, Ind, On
Monday they visited with Mrs. Camp-
bell's sister-in-law, Mrs. Ed. Good, al
South Bend, Indiana.
Mr. and Mrs. Peter de Groot and
family visited in 1Voodstoock with Mr
and Mrs, Peter Keizer on Sunday.
Mrs. Israel Good and boys visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Alrs, '1'. Bigger -
staff and 13111,
'Mr. and Mrs. Jack East and family.
of Auburn, were Sunday visitors with
Mr. and 1Mlt's. T. Biggei'staff and Bill.
'l'hc June meeting of the Messengers
opened on Sunday afternoon with Call
to Worship; "Serve God with Gladness"
Come before his presence with singing.
Psalm 100, verse 2. Scripture lesson
WALTON
McKillop Unit
'1'113 McKillop U.C.W. Unit of Duff.
United Church met at the home of Alrs
Norman :.'chade Wednesday evening
June 13 with 16 ladies present. A1rs.
Jack Bo.3maa presided. Mrs. Russell
Barrows read the scripture from Psalm
139. Mrs, Andrew Coutts gave the top-
ic "Enlarging Our Community" from
"Signals For the Sixties." Mrs, N.
Schade gave the treasurer's report. A
total of $03.57 was realized from the
copper contest captained by Alrs. \Vin.
Lecnning and Alrs, Wm. Dennis. A
delicious lunch was served by Alt's.
Gordon Ms:Gavin, Airs, Merlon Hack -
ell and the hostess.
Candidates from this district who
have been successful in examinations
held recently 1•y the Royal Conserva-
tory of Alusie 01 'Toronto in Blyth were'
Grade VI13 piano, Brenda lloustoe
(honours); Grade VI piano, Glenna
Houston (honour's), also Grade i
Theory, 1st class honours. 'These are
the pupils of Alrs. Frank 'Thompson
Brussels. Grade 1 'Theory, Linda
.Somerville, 1st class honours, pupil
of Alrs. 1.. 1), Thompson, 13russeLs.
.Mrs. Fume Patterson, of Seaforth
spent a few days with Alrs. Walter
Broadfuot.
Ai', and Mrs. Lewis Kirkby, of Lan
don, visited ill the village and attended
the household sale of Ah'. herb. Kirkby
on Sa,ttr(;ay. The property has recent
ly been sold to Mr. Leonard Leem-
ing.
Mr, and Mrs. James Lamont and
family, of London, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Alrs. Lloyd Porter,
Alrs. Walter Broadloot visited over
the week -end with relatives in '1'oronln.
Mrs. Arthur Ifell and children, of
Minneapolis, Minnesota, are visiting
with Alr. and Alrs, Les, Oliver.
A number front the vicinity attend-
ed the decoration service at toe Brus-
sels Cemetery last Sunday.
Miss Alice Ilinitplu'ey, of Rodgetown
'visited over the week -end with Alr.
and Airs, Martin Baan and family.
The Sacrament of the Lord's Suptc"
will be observer( in Duff's United
Church on Sunday morning,
17111 and Ilnundtu'y
The rcgn'ar monthly meeting of the
17th and Boundary Unit of the U.C.11.
Walton United Church, was held at
the home of Alt's. Clifford Iloegy with
15 members answering the roll :pit
also 1 visitor. hymn 502 was sung
with Eileen Williamson at the piano.
Alrs, Ritchie presided and opened the
meeting with prayer. Mrs. M. Baan
read the scripture, Proverbs 3: 19.3.i.
The topic taken form Signal for the
Sixties, was led by Mrs. Ritchie and
Mrs. H. Craig. Business was then
conducted, thank you notes read attd
the meeting was closed with the sin;
ing of hymn 503. Lunch was serves!
by the hostess, assisted by the lunch
committee and a social time enjoyed.
GIRL) OF THANKS
The parishioner's of St. Michael's
Catholic Church would like to thank
all those who so kindly expre Ved
their'sympathy on the death of our
beloved pastor, 1(cv. L. r, Reed -Lewis.
1Vc especially wish to thank Rev. R,
F. ,1lcnlly and Rev, R. E. McLagan for
their very kind letters which were
read from our pulpit as they were
received, All these expressions were
deeply appreciated.
—The Parishioners.
17-ip.
FOR SALE
1000 bales of mixed clover hay, baled
and in the stook, 8 miles from Blyth
Bob Henry, phone 150R1, Blyth. 17-1p.
FOR SALE
One Holstein heifer, clue to freshen
July 1st. Apply Percy Walden, phone
526-7208 Auburn. 17-1p
by Norma Smith Palm 23. Roll call
was taken. Prayer by Mary Snell.
Reading by Janice Mcowell. Carol Mc-
1)nwell took the offering and all re•
prated "1Ve will sing Father Bless
These Gifts we bring Thee." Linda
Walden gave a reading, Alt's. Iiarvey
McDowell told the seniors a story and
Miss ,leanetla Snell told the juniors 0
story. The meeting closed with prayer.
To all those who voted for
Inc and supported me in the
recent campaign. I wish to
extend Illy sincere thanks.
ERNIE FISHER
IN MEMORIAM
TURBERVILLE—In loving memory
of the late AIr. John 'Turberville who
passed away 2 years ago June 30,
1960.
We who loved you sadly miss you,
As it dawns :another year;
In our lonely hours of thinking
Thoughts of you are ever near.
—Ever remembered by his sisters.
Airs. Mary Daer, Mrs, Alice Harris,
Mrs. Florence Rennack and families.
17-1
THE BLYTH
LIONS CLUB
WILL BE CONDUCTING THEIR ANNUAL
SALVATION ARMY (AMPAIGN
Members of the Lions Club will call door-to-door
on village residents on
THURSDAY, JUNE 28th
commencing at 7:00 p.m.
YOUR SUPPORT WILL BE APPRECIATED
'thank yott all for the opportunity of presenting the alternative
to communism: Social Credit, Great advances have been made for
freedom!
Nlany thanks to those who voted for Social Credit. To those
who didn't, I can only repeat the words of the late 1Vtlllann Aberhart
whom history will record with Abraham Lincoln as one of mankind's
greatest benefactors.' A littron County native, ile said, "1f you haven't
suffered enough now, it is your God-given right to stiffer some more."
EARL DOUGLAS
Social Credit Candidate
FOR SALE
4 heavy duty 4 burner electric stove
with coal or wood annex. This stove
has been used less than 2'2 years and
is a real Largain for the right person.
Apply to the Standard Office. 17-1.
►� PACt 5
ATTENTION
Why not you? Earn a steady tome,
Be our Representative in full time Di.:•
trict in townships Ilowick, Grey and
Morris, Write R.awleigh, Dept. F-136'
AIM, 4005 Richelieu, Montreal 17.1
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
GODERICD PARK THEATRE Phone JA4-7811
NOW PLAYING
Now—June 28, 29, 30 Thur.. Fri., Sal.
In Color—"A ,MA.IOitI'1'Y OF ONE"—slarring Rosiland Russell
and Alec Guinness.
Mon., Tues., Wed., July 2, :I, 1
Olivia De llavilland • Rossano Brazzi • Yvette Mlmieux
Combine for a romantic comedy filmed in Florence, Italy
"LIGIIT IN THE PIAZZA
In Technicolor
Thur., Fri., Sat., July 5, 6, 7
Bill Travers - Spike Milligan • Gregoire Aslan
A 13t'itish-made tale of four hospitalized army officers
"INVASION QUARTET"
flus and exceptional list of short subjects
9 ;.
Coming—"ALL FALL DOWN"—Great Dramatic Cast—Adult hnter-
tainment.
rieaae, A--s-Iw--------.f_q mmm,
GIL,LICM
E ER1T
P
INT
Yt;.
TEM
Ontario Department of Transport announces
changes in Demerit Point System
effective July 1st, 1962.
The Point System has been changed to encourage better driv-
ing habits and to correct dangerous drivers by strengthening
the demerit point scale, l he changes are designed to save lives
—including yours.
NEW DEMERIT POINT.SCALE
Points: Violation:
7 Failing to remain at scene of accident
6 Careless driving
6 Racing
6 Exceeding speed limit by 30 m.p.h. or more
5 Failure of driver of bus to stop at railway crossing.
4 Exceeding speed limit by more than 19 m.p.h. and
Tess than 30 m.p.h.
4 Failing to stop for school bus.
4 Following too closely.
3 Exceeding speed limit by niore than 10 m.p.h. and
less than 20 m.p.h.
3 Driving under, through or round a railway crossing.
barrier.
3 Failing to obey the directions of a police constable.
3 Overcrowding driver's seat,
3 Improper passing.
3 Driving wrong way on one-waystreet:
3 Driving wrong way on a divided highway.
3 Failing to yield right-of-way.
3 Failing to obey stop sign, signal light or railway cross-
ing signal.
3 Failing to report an accident.
2 Failing to lower headlamp beams.
2. Making U-turns where prohibited.
2 Making turns where prohibited.
2 Towing of persons on toboggans, bicycles, skis etc;
2 Failing to obey signs.
2 Pedestrian crossover violations.
2 Failing to share road.
2 Improper right and left turns.
2 Failing to give signals.
2 Unnecessary slow driving.
2 Improper opening of vehicle door.
Upon conviction, points are recorded against the driver for the
offences listed in the Point System Scale, Demerit points re-
main on a driver's record for a. period of two years after the.
date of conviction.
At 6 points The driver is informed of his record and urged to
exercise greater care.
At 9 points l'he driver is required to attend a personal inter-
view to discuss his record and give reasons why
his licence should not be suspended.
At15 points Accumulated within a 2 -year period—the driver's
licence is suspended and retained in the Depart-
ment for one month.
At the conclusion of a period of suspension—the number of
points on the driver's record is reduced to 7. Until the driver
has cleared his record, a furtheraccunlulationof15points within
a 2 -year period will result in suspension for sjx months.
ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT
Hon, H L. Rowntree, Q.C., Afinlster
A. 0, MacNab, Deputy Minister
CLIP AND SAVE FOR FUTURE REFERENCE
Ltit innoNamum Mil Ell ua1111 MI MInas Rya Min 114 PP "Id
TABLE TALKS
~,,'Jam1 AC1.Cilt'C,WS.
Drinks suitable for serving to
a crowd range from fruit punch
to homemade ice cream sodas,
coolers, or freezes. A big bowl
of citrus punch with lemon and
orange slices floating on top is
always refreshing. Orange and
lemon juice — and sometimes
cherry juice—sugar, ginger ale,
and ice neike a good punch: add
lemon or orange shit bet at the
last minute fore special t•eet, if
you deeire. A really special ire
cream drink is the following:
S'TRAwiwnitl' BLOSSOM
I quart chilled milk
S4 cup honey
2 cups crushed fresh straw-
berries or 1 pound defrosted
frozen strawberries,
undrained
teaspoon almond extract
(optional)
3 pints strawberry or vanilla
ice cream
Combine milk, honey, straw-
berries, almond extract, and 1
pint ice cream. Beat or stir un-
til well blended, Pour into tall
glasses; garnish with ice cream
and sprigs of mint. Serves 6-8.
11
+ •
ORANGE -LEMON PUNCH
6 cups fresh orange juice
1 cup fresh lepton juice
4 cups water or ginger ale
cup Maraschino cherry ,juice
cup sugar
1 lemon and 1 orange, sliced
Combine all ingredients ex-
cept ice cubes. Place ice cubes
in punch bowl and pour first
mixture over them. Float. orange
end lemon slices en punch.
Makes 25 ama1l servings,
• • •
Every day of the year, it is
estimated, we eat 100,000,000
tar,dwiches, Because they can be
made in so many forms, sizes,
shapes, and flavors, they appeal
to practically everyone and can
be used for both formal and
informal occasions. For instance,
the teenagers in your family
might enjoy a "stack -your -own"
sandwich party outdoors, on the
patio. There's a minimum of
beforehand preparation rind al-
most no cleanup afterwards,
writes Eleanor: Ii;:,key Johnston
in the Christian Science Monitor.
* •
For this party, you'll need an
array of sausage, luncheon meats,
cheese, sardines, smoked salmon,
pickled herring, pickles, olives,
canned spreads, and salad dress-
ing. You'll need several kinds of
sliced breads and buns, and
v; hile you're shopping for these,
remember you'll want the mak-
ings of a green salad and several
kinds of soft drinks. Perhaps
corn and potato chips will add
to the general popularity of the
food at this party, too,
* *
To set up the sandwich center,
you'll need a large tray or board.
Arrange overlapping rows of
meat slice' and cheese slices up
and clown or diagonally. Garnish
the tray with parsley sprigs. On
another tray, have tomato slices,
tliced onion, and lettuce leaves.
Arrange spreads and relishes in
low jars, In low dishes, serve
butter blende dwith garlic or
onion or musard or lemon. Place
bread: first. then butters—then
your meat -cheese tray, then your
tray of sliced tomatoes, etc.
Serve salad also.
ISSUE 26 — 1962
.telly roll type sandwiches are
made this way: Cut crust from
a loaf of unsliced bread. Cut
lengthwise into ':t -inch -thick
slices. Spread surface with de-
sired spread; roll up tightly as
for a jelly roll, Wrap in waxed
peer, foil, Saran wrap, or a
camp cloth, Chill. Just before
serving. cut roll into l'I-inch-
thick slices.
Before eeing into the aubjcct
of spreads that you nuty want
to use in the jelly roll sand-
wiches let's talk about open-
faced sandwiches, for you may
want to use the sante spread for
both. This is the way to make
them.; Remove crusts from bread
slices; lightly butter the surface;
cut in desired shapes with a
sheep knife or with cooky cut-
ters, Top with desired spread.
Garnish.
PL\iIEN'1'() 11U'f'l'I?lt SI'RE:11)
' z cup butter
12 cep drained, chopped
pimiento
1 tablespoon grated union
Cream butter until soft and
fluffy. Stir pimiento and onion
into butter.
1
1;.
is
1
$ •
OLIVE CREAM i 1 SPItEAI)
package (3 -oz.) cream cheese
teaspoon grated onion
(optional)
cup dairy sour cream
can (7 -oz.) pitted ripe olives,
drained and chopped
Beat cream cheese and onion
until mixture is soft and smooth;
stir in sour cream and olives,
• • $
CHEESE AND PICKLE
SPREAD
1 cup butter
2 tablespoons mayonnaise or
salad dressing
tablespoon prepared mustard
cup drained sweet pickle
relish
pound Canadian cheese,
shredded (11 cups, loosely
packed)
Cream butter until soft and
fluffy; blend in mayonnaise,
mustard, and relish. Fold in
cheese.
1
1:t
« r •
If you're using nut or orange
bread for some of your sand-
wiches, or if you have just made
date bread, here is a filling you
will enjoy:
EGG AND PINEAPPLE
FILLING
cup well -drained crushed
pineapple
1 3 -ounce package cream
cheese
2 finely chopped hard -cooked
eggs
Salt and pepper
Blend pineapple and create
cheese; combine with the chop-
ped egg. Season to taste with
salt and pepper.
RICH PICKINGS
E. P. Taylor was hurrying to
a directors' meeting in Toronto
one day when he was arrested
for speeding. "Let's see your
license," demanded the cop.
When he saw the name on sane
he gave a low whistle. "Zowie'"
he exclaimed. "Looks like this
time we've really hit the jack-
pot."
You can tell how healthy, a
man is by what he takes two at
a time—$tains or pills. Abe Mar-
tin.
LITTLE COSMONAUTS — Like their counterparts in other
lands, these Moscow youngsters are space-age enthusiasts.
Here, at the Moscow Planetarium, Russian boys and girls
ilxamine on impressive Soviet satellite similar to Sputnik III.
is
By '1'Oi 1 A. CULLEN
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Madrid — The tourist conies
to Spain in search of sunshine,
bull fights and flamenco sing-
ing. Ile comes because every-
thing is dirt cheap.
The tourist comes to have fun,
not to do social research, He is
not looking for poverty or
slums, though he can hardly
avoid a few beggars. Nor is he
looking for evidence that the
Spanish people are fed up with
Generalissimo Franco and his 23 -
year -old dictatorship.
For this evidence the tourist
would have to stray from the
tree -shaded rambles of Barcel-
ona and the bright lights of
Madrid's Puerto del Sol and
plunge into dark alleys and by-
ways.
At the moment the back
streets of Spain are in a curious
Spain in search
and the archaic.
for hundreds of
seeing telephone
stands, billboards,
stations.
of the ageless
One can drive
miles without
poles, hot dog
motels or gas
Here are a pecple who appear
not to give a fig for the material
comforts of the machine age.
That woman in black with the
pitcher on her head might have
strayed from Biblical times,
But nothing could be more
misleading. For Spain is in the
midst of vast social changes.
And one of the greatest agents
of change is the impact of Ame-
rica.
In the past 10 years, the
United States has contributed
$1.1 billion to Spain in various
public and private aid programs
that are transforming its econ-
omy, This is in addition to $503
million in American military
FOR TOURISTS — The Catholic religious procession, such as
this one in Toledo, is an intimate aspect of Spanish life and
a favorite attraction for visitors.
state of ferment, with everyone
eseming to talk at once. In the
coal mines of Asturia and in the
steel mills of Bilbao the talk is
of higher pay. Skilled workers
who average less than $100 per
month are demanding a bigger
slice of the national cake.
* * *
But the talk is not confined
to economics. Demands for free
trade unions, the right to strike,
free speech, freedom of associa-
tion are being voiced.
Altogether the present wave
of unrest rolling over Spain rep-
resents the greatest challenge to
Franco since his Civil War vic-
tory in 1939.
What snakes this social pro-
test different is the moderation
that has been displayed on both
sides.
Demonstrations by students
and women have been of the
passive resistance type used its
sit-ins in the American South
and "ban -the -bomb" rallies in
Britain.
When a :;roup of Francois
prominent ()elements — includ-
ing; menarehist leader Jose Mar-
ia (.til Robles -- returned ec-
e1111y frcnl a meeting nvel':caS,
they wcl'e given the choice of
forced residence in Spain or
exile abroad, But they were not
arbitrarily jailed.
The 1'' r a n 0 0 government
handled the strike of the 60,000
Asturian miners with ]ticl gloves,
although it had emergency
powers to deal with the work-
ers ruthlessly, for strikes are il-
legol in Spain.
The strikers, in turn, have
won a victory. Not only have
they forced the government to
give consideration to their pay
claims, but they have paved the
way for future collective bar-
gaining, as the government ad-
nllts.
+ '.
Tourists also corse to
Spain must modernize or die.
It has the highest birth rate in
Europe (the population has in-
creased by 5 million since the
Civil War) and one of the low-
est agricultural yields.
* ,f *
Less than five years ago
Spain was on the verge of bank-
ruptcy, Her total exports in 1957
were the same as in 1935 and
one-third less than in 1928. Her
balance of trade at the end of
1958 was the worst in her his-
tory, Agricultural production
had declined worst of all. Olive
oil had been one of Spain's chief
exports, but she had to import
edible oils.
In this emergency the United
States stepped in, and a $400
million International loan, main-
ly to finance imports, was nego-
How Well Do You Know
NORTHEAST ASIA?
P77.7-.777=!7,7711,11,7rrrr
MILES
0 100
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tiated in July, 1959. The loan
was made by a consortium of the
international Monetary Fund,
the Organization of European
Economic Cooperation and cer-
tain American banks, Spain, in
turn, was required to devalue
the peseta, balance the budget,
end restrictions on foreign in-
vestment and reduce govern-
ment spending.
The result has been what the
Franco people call "the Spanish
Miracle," From showing a de-
ficit in 1959 Spain now boasts
over $1 billion in foreign ex-
change reserves. Inflation has
been halted and the cost of liv-
ing stabilized, though at the
price of austerity and hardship
for the Spanish industrial work-
er,
Foreign investment in Spain
amounted to $1 10.5 million for
the six-month period ending in
May, 1962, as compared to $37.4
million for the entire year 11161.
Spain has applied for as,o-
ciate membership in the Euro-
pean Common Market, which
has revolutionary implications:
Common Market countries are
sure to insist that Spain estab-
lish free trade unions as a con-
dition for membership.
But the biegeSt revolutionary
agent of them all is the foreign
tourist in his quest of bull fights
and flamenco singing. His num-
bers 'nave increased from 2,018,-
687 in 1957, to 5,495,370 last
year, and he is now an import-
ant source of foreign exchange.
More important is their mere
presence which gives rise to
such questions as:
How is it that this bus driver
from Coventry, England, can af-
ford a two-week vacation in San
Sebastian?
And this factory worker from
Dusseldorf, how can he afford
to drive a Volkswagen?
And this schoolteacher from
California, why does he have
enough money to travel 6 000
miles to Madrid while our
schoolteachers earn only 3,480
pesetas (about $58) a month?
But the tourists, camera shut-
ters clicking like glad, breeze
through Spain totally unaware
of the questions they leave in
their wake, They are looking for
sunshine, corridas and guitars—
let others worry about the so-
ciology,
(Next: Hob' Franco stays on
top.)
NAME DROPPING
The prestige you acquire by
being able to tell your friends
that you know famous people
proves only that you are your-
self of small account. — Somer-
set Maugham.
Sioux Indians
And Their Children
The first Indian that 1 remem-
ber was far back in my child-
hood, soon after I learned to
walk, i was very shy with peo-
ple but apparently I had the tod-
dler's daring and fondness for
exploration, 1 liked to slip back
to something I had been shown,
perhaps a bird's nest in a thistle
or the first brush roses, This day
it was the wild plum thicket
clown the slope, with the fruit
ripe and sweet, that tolled me
from my grandmother's side, 1
recall some uneasiness about the
wasps buzzing over the rotting
fruit on the ground. 'Then some-
thing startled ine—a face peer-
ing through the fall leaves. It
was a brown face 1,5't tit dark eyes,
and although there were braids
like my grandmother's, and no
such beard as my father wore, I
knew this was a man.
The face was down at my
level, the nun'nnuring sounds of
the man friendly and laughing,
the hands reaching for me with
no anger in them. I felt shy but
I let myself be drawn nut of the
thicket, lifted high up on the
man's shoulder, and given a
braid for each hand, like reins.
Then the man nl:ucle the "Tchlch"
sound that started horses, and
prancing a little, but gently, he
went up the slope toward our
house, where there were more of
these brown -faced people, a
whole confusion of them, as I
recall now—men, \c,111011 with
babies, some as large as 1, on
Behr backs, and many boy's and
girls running everywhere. Sud-
denly I became shy again, per-
haps of all the people, and was
clutching the elan about the head
with my arms so that everybody
laughed. 13ut my plump little
old -country grandmother hurried
up, as excited and alarmed as if
1 were being scalped, The man
stooped so she could reach me...
Later I saw much of this
amused and playful way of the
Sioux with smell children as the
Indians came end went from
their old ctunping ;;round near
our house. They liked to return
to the place that they said was
already smooth enol warm from
long living when the tribe first
reached the Niobrara country al-
most two hundred virus before.
The Indians mede names for
us children in their teasing, way.
glee:,use nun' very bt v mother
kept my heir cut short, like my
brothers', they called plc Short -
Furred One, painting to their
hair and making the :igen tor
short, the right hand with fin-
gers pressed close to,: ether, held
upward, hack out, a1 the height
intended, With nue this was about
two feet tall, the Indians laugh-
ing gently at my abashed face.—
From "'These \'.'enc the Sioux,"
by Mari 51111(307..
Which Way Does
That Water Run?
During a recent meting of
geophysical scientists some of
these savants got into a discus-
sion as to how bath water runs
out of a tub—clockwise or coun-
terclockwise.
The debate apparently dates
back to 1955, when a member of
the Imperial College of Science
in London announced after study
that water pours out counter-
clockwise in the Northern Hem-
isphere and clockwise in the
Southern.
Writes a gentleman actually
crossing the equator on his way
to Australia: "1 experimented by
running a bath and letting the
water run out as we crossed the
equator. The vortex swirled
clockwise."
CAT ON A HOT TINTYPE — Fuzzy picture above that re-
sembles a cat is not a radar photograph of a hurricane. It
IS o cut. In fact, it's a block cat in a coal bin at midnight.
A new infrared device "sees" objects by sensing the faint
infrared or heat rays they give off. These rays are normally
invisible to the human eye The detector tube is intended
primarily for military uses, such as missile tracking, night
aerial mapping.
Claints "Abominable
Snowmen" Exist
I'eopl,% are always saying to
me: "You don't really think there
is such a thins; as ;an Abomin-
able Snowman, do yeti"
My reply is always the same;
"No, I believe there are hued•
reds, it not thousands of tin -
known rutihropnids of tit !t':ISt
half d dozen kinds. running all
over five continent;,
"But they're not men, none of
them litre's in snow, and we have
no right to call tient abomin-
able."
'ro begin with, let us dispose
of the ridiculous title "Abonin-
able Snowman," It i:: a complete
and extremely misleading mis-
nomer.
Worse, it k usually prefixed
tvith the article ''the," as if there
was just one lone, mateless, child-
less and parentless monster that
has been pounding ubout the
eastern Himalaya and South 'Ti-
betan upper snowfields for fifty
years,
Whether they may be called
men is also debatable. In my
opinion, some are and some are
not,
I am firmly convinced that
they range from extremely pri-
mitive humans, without true
speech, tools or knowledge of
fire -making, and still in varying
degrees hairy, to one or two st ill
undiscovered large apes in Af-
rica.
But it is the word snow that is
really misleading, Many tracks
have been found on permanent
mountain snowfields - but there
is nothing at all under these
snowfields which could sustair
any living creature,
While they cross them to move
from one place to another, thus
leaving the tracks which have
been seen by Sir Edmund Hil-
lary, among others, they actually
live in the forests which, admit-
tedly, often border the snow -
line.
I will now answer the second
question which is always asked:
"But how on earth could there
be such creatures running about
all over the world?"
In the first place, a very large
part of the land surface of our
earth is uninhabited. A consid-
erable part of this is still un-
mapped, and has not even been
explored.
About a seventh of it is said
to be covered with permanently
frozen soil, and over most of
this, which lies in the Arctic and
sub -Arctic, there sprawls an end-
less forest of tightly packed
spruce trees known as the tlaga,
This runs right round the top
of the world from northern Rus-
sia through Siberia, to the Bering
Straits, and then picks up again
on the lowlands of the Canadian
Northwest Territories and con-
tinues unbroken right across to
Labrador,
It is virtually uninhabited, and
only in the last two decades
have roads been driven into it.
Of the remainder of the land
surface, a third is either unin-
habitable hot desert or its sur-
rounding scrublands.
Even in Europe there are great
tracts of complete wildernesses,
but even more fantastic are the
uninhabited blocks in sub -tropi-
cal and tropical countries like
southern China proper and India,
which the think of as positively
bulging with population„
Another reason why I ani so
certain that "Abominable Snow-
men" can be existing in many
areas of the world is that many
huge creatures Have been dis-
covered - even in regions where
the local people had no idea that
they existed.
In 1960, for example, the reg -
War "Mountie" air -patrol spotted
In the Canadian Northwest Ter-
ritories herds of what is either
the second or third largest form
6f the ox tribe,
These were groups of pure -
ISSUE 26 - 1962
blood woodland bison (Bison
alhahasca), an enormous ice -age
species not known to exist in a
pure strain anywhere.
At this point you may he say-
ing to yourself: "Yes, this is all
very well, but those are real
animals, 'These snowmen are
nothing but stories, is there any
definite physical evidence of
their existence?" The answei is
definitely "Yes." Fool tracks are
fairly definite, so lei's begin by
taking another look at those of
AI3SI11 (as 1 will refer to them
from new on), and at the cir-
cumstances in which they were
found,
Despite all the fuss ;about
those found 'in snow, far noel's
have been found in mud and
sant!,
Eric Shipton, t h e famous
mountaineer, was exploring a
range of mountains near the
Everest Block named the Gauri
Sankar, on the South Tihetan
Rim.
On the afternoon of November
8th, 1951, he and his party
stumbled upon a fresh track
made by an ABSM,
This was in powdery snow on
the south-western slope of the
IVlenlungtse, The individual im-
prints were absolutely clear-
cut. Their maker walked on two
feet, writes Ivan T. Sanderson
in "Tit -Bits",
The tracks and prints were
photographed, and the form of
these prints and the stride of
the track corresponded with sim-
ilar discoveries of others made
both previously and since,
When we consider that tracks
have been reported by Mongol-
ians, Chinese, Nepalis, Tibetans,
Russians, Persians, Africans, Ma-
lays, Dutch, Belgians, and mem-
bers of most other European na-
tionalities all ' over the world,
and by Canadians and other
North, Central and South Ame-
ricans - year in and year out
for over a century, it becomes
very hard to see how anybody
can really doubt the existence of
ABSM,
Apart from tracks, the physi-
cal evidence for the existence of
ABSM consists of scalps, a few
whole skins; reported by Mon-
golian scientists; some mummi-
fied hands; several collections of
fresh droppings; a considerable
number of hairs and some an-
alyses of old blood,
But perhaps the most concrete
evidence we have are two or
three mummified hands. Two
are preserved in a monastery in
a small place in Nepal called
Pangboche,
This brings one to the question
which follows from this: "'Then,
why hasn't anybody seen one?"
This, to one, is an astonishing
question because there are lit-
erally dozens of reports of all.
kinds having been seen all over
the world.
The first definite sighting in
modern times was made by the
famous explorer and mountain-
eer, Col. C. K. Howard -Bury,
during the first real attempt to
climb Mount Everest in 1921,
On November 21st of that year
the party was on the way from
a placed named Kharta to the
famous Lhapkala Pass, when
somebody spotted a number of
large, dark objects proving about
on a high snowfield well above
them and some distance away,
These were observed by the
whole party through binoculars,
but they were too distant to
identify,
When the mountaineers reach-
ed the area the next afternoon
they found a large number of
huge tracks which they des-
cribed as being "three times as
big • as normal footprints,"
SPEED REQUIRED
A beggar accosted a lady with
a time-honored, "Can you spare
a quarter for a starving man?"
The lady fumbled with her
purse, whereupon the beggar
urged her sharply, "Hurry up,
lady. I'm double-parked!"
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
region 31. New-born
7 Mottled lamb
8, Part of the eye 34. Vapor
9 Smooth 37. Terrestrial
10 Binding 39. E. Indian
11 Ger, river mahogany
16 Low caste treo
I-Ilndu 41, Noblemen
ACROSS 58, Cutter 20 Separate
1, Mischievous 59. Spread to dry 29 Make
child DOWN manifest
4. Succulent part 1. Arab. tribe 23 Batter
of fruit
8,
Quote
11, Horizontal
stripe
1/, P, I, termite
4. Toward the
mouth
0. Appropriation
1, Hawser
8. D. 10. Indies
measure
11,
Beautiful girl
(oolloq,)
11. Danish
weights
M, Three minus
two
06. Advent
8. Dark fur
19. Insect's egg
01. Mature insect
8, Turmeric
/, Senior
member (Fr.)
11. Newspaper
caricature
40. Jot
11. Peek
18. Recoil
17. Woodwind
Instrument
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section
01. Purlfcing
establishment
04, Methu'elah's
t;rnnd'on
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67,Mat.�
nlpt•nnnte
43, Frog genus
44. Black
46, Leaping
amphibian
2, Manufactured 25 Conjunction 46. Lime tree
3. Ownership 20 Brazil: 48, Wine measure
4. Exactly seaport of Tr este
suitable 27 Milk (pharm.) 49. Scrutinized
5, Plainly woven 29 13u ly 52. Oppo tent
6. Indo-China 30. Zodiac sign 53, Intik (poet,)
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STILL LIFE - Wide-eyed kitten poses with miniature spin-
ning wheel in Ottawa, capturing a still life effect.
TIIEFARM FRONT
Farm forestry in New Zealand
has been encouraged recently
by legislation to lend farmers
about $2,000,000 for planting and
tending softwood stands on their
lands,
Announcing the national gov-
ernment's plan to encourage New
Zealand farmers to be part-time
foresters, Minister of Forests
Richard G, Gerard told the New
Zealand Farni Forestry Associa-
tion that Dans would be granted
to farmers in timber -hungry dis-
tricts such as Canterbury Pro-
vince in the South Island,
The program aims at establish-
ing 10,000 acres of new farm
forests by 1966 with repayment
of principal and interest by
farmers spread over a 20 -year
period and with interest set at
5 per cent (3 per cent on capital
and 2 per cent on fire insurance),
The minimum area to qualify
under the loan plan is five acres,
and the maximum is 20 acres a
year or 100 acres in any five-year
Period. The total amount of pri-
vate planting is limited in any
one year to 10,000 acres to
preserve a proper series in age
classification of trees. On the
other hand, a lower rate one year
may be made good later.
* *
Paralleled with this encourage-
ment of private farm plantings,
the New Zealand State Forest
Service planting program will be
increased to provide 600,000 acres
of the additional 1,000,000 acres
of new trees needed by the year
2000.
By that date New Zealand is
expected to have 3,000,000 acres
of exotic species developed with
an annual surplus sustained yield
of 150,000,000 cubic feet of wood
for export,
New Zealand has acquired il.s
present exotic -forests industry in
the comparatively short span of
about 25 years, Concerned over
the depletion of native forests in
the early years of this century,
the government evolved the pre-
sent afforestation policy, which
has paid off so well,
Both private enterprise and
state organizations are encour-
aged to plant trees under this
policy, but World War I prevent-
ed earlier development of official
plans, The result was an un-
planned delay in establishment
of the present great forests of
exotics, * *
However, this delay worked to
the good of many New Zealand-
ers in the depressed 1930's when
workers found welcome and re-
warding employment in planting
the more than 500,000,000 seedl-
ings started in that period,
The cost of bringing these
early forests to maturity was
about $40 to $50 an acre, Today
the cost is more than five tines
that amount. Thus the men who
planted these forests in the so-
called depression years made a
huge contribution to New Zea-
land living standards.
The unforeseen extent of the
treasure locked in this great soft-
wood chest has inspired careful
thought among New Zealand for-
esters and economists. Some hold
that forestry in New Zealand to-
day has at least an equal claim
to the country's capital re-
sources ' as grasslands farming,
the principal export industry,
writes Albert E. Norman in the
Christian Science Monitor.
* *
It is argued in this context
that increased additions of farm
products to world markets would
serve to depress world prices,
whereas a New Zealand addition
of pulp and paper products at
export would not have a com-
parable depressing effect.
In short, there is more immedi-
ate room for New Zealand forest
products on export markets than
for new amounts of farm prod-
ucts, Australia, for one, can
absorb more New Zealand for-
est products, but it will not en-
tertain imports of New Zealand
butler, for example, to compete
with Australian domestic butter,
* * *
The cubic footage yield per
acre in New Zealand exotic for-
ests is three tinges greater than
the highest yield in Canadian
western forests and five tinges
greater than those of Scandina-
via, Moreover, the technical
quality of the predominant New
Zealand softwood (radiata pine)
is equal to any known softwood
species in the world,
'Phis productivity ratio is an
important factor in the forest -
versus -farm argument in New
Zealand land utilization, Poor
lands under forest are yielding
financial 'returns 2'/2 times great-
er than those of better lands
under grass. Forestry experts
accordingly are asking what
would be the productivity ratio
if good lands were under forest?
Rich river lands, it is estimated,
would yield as much as 600 cubic
feet of wood per acre per annum!
By world standards, this yield
would be impressive.
« * *
At present, New Zealand
exotic -forest industries are pro-
ducing approximately $70,000,000
worth of goods annually, Most
of these goods are either saving
or earning overseas exchange, a
contribution of more than purely
cash value considering the diffi-
cult nature of the problems fac-
ing New Zealand in its present
balance of payments,
It is possible, it is believed to
double this output by 1975 and,
in fact, to increase New Zealand
Scandinavian countries as pulp
and paper producers.
The farmer's wife called to
her husband, "Tout, that M.P.
you don't like is coming up the
road. What'll I say if he wants
to kiss the children?" "Don't
say anything, IIurry up and give
the kids bread and molasses."
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)1MY StilOOl
LESSON
13y Rev, R, Barclay 11'arren,
B.D.
Jeremiah Announces impending
Tragedy
Jeremiah 1:1-8; 7:1-71 25:1-1,
Memory Scripture; Turn ye
again now every one from his
evil way, and from the evil of
your doings. Jeremiah 25:5,
The prophet of doom is always
unpopular, 'Phis was tho role
which Jeremiah had to play for
forty year's, He began hLs min-
istry in the thirteenth year of
Josiah's reign, about ' the begin-
ning of the reformation, Jere-
miah was probably intimately
connected with this reform but
he saw that it did not go far
enough. God's wrath would be
poured out upon this people who,
when they had committed abom-
ination, were not at all ashamed,
neither could they blush.
Jeremiah attacked sin wher-
ever he saw it, Of the prophets
and priests he said, "Every one
dealeth falsely. They have heal-
ed also the hurt of the daughter
of my people slightly, saying
peeve, peace; when there is no
peace."
Jeremiah was truly called of
God to this work. He was con-
scious that he was delivering
God's message, "Thus saith Je-
hovah" is repeated hundreds of
times by the prophet. On one
occasion he cried out, "1 am in
derision daily, Everyone is mock-
ing one." But he kept on. It
requires a lot of courage to con-
tinue as God's faithful messen-
ger under such circumstances
Jeremiah delivered his mes-
sage in great tenderness and love
far his people, This is seen clear-
ly in such cries as, "Oh that my
head were waters, and mine eyes
a fountain of tears, that I might
weep day and night for the slain
of the daughter of my people!"
By the yardstick of populari-
ty, Jeremiah was a failure, Nei-
ther did he witness a great turn-
ing to righteousness that would
avert the outpouring of God's
wrath. He exclaimed, "The har-
vest is past, the summer is end-
ed, and we are not saved." Yet,
his predictions came true with
amazing exactness. He did his
part but the people would not
heed. God who judges right-
eously, will have an abundant
reward for Jeremiah. He was
faithful.
Are Those Mountains
Still Cursed?
Snowbeard t h e Dutchman
turned up in the saloons of
Phoenix, Ariz., in the 1870s,
flaunting a nugget -fat poke and
boasting of the rich gold mine
he had found, Jacob Walz (or
Wolz), for that was his name,
never filed a mining claim and
discouraged, with well -aimed
rifle balls, the prospectors who
tried to trail him eastward into
the Superstition Mountains.
When he died in '1891, he either
did or did not, depending on
which deathbed legend one pre-
fers, discloes the location of his
mine.
Over the years since, many
a hopeful prospector, armed
with crumbling map, a fragment
of myth, or simple faith, has
explored the Superstitions for
the Lost Dutchman Mine, If any
of them have found it, they have
kept the secret as well as Ja-
cob did.
Perhaps the most persistent
of the searchers is Ed Piper, a
slow - spoken, quick - shooting
prospector of 67, who encamp-
ed five years ago at the base of
Weaver's Needle, a 4,435 -foot
volcanic spire in the shadowy
Superstitions. Since then, with .
time off for weekly hikes to
nearby Apache Junction for sup-
plies, Piper has recruited s
small crew to pursue his patient
explorations.
Three years ago, Piper got
some competition, a group led
by Celeste Marie Jones, a Negro
singer who said she had abatl-
doned the concert stage to seek
the Lost Dutchman 00 0 tip
supplied by 11 Los Angeles
astrologer. Almost immediately,
charges of claim -jumping flew
between the camps and, since
both parties were armed, bullets
soon followed. On the grounds
that only pistols were necessary
"for snakes and things like that
and possibly for self-defence,"
Norman Teason, the justice of
the peace at Apache Junction,
ordered all rifles confiscated.
Despite the judge's order,
Piper subsequently reported, he
saw Robert St. Marie, one of
Mrs. Jones' crew, approach him,
rifle in hand. Piper shot and
killed him. "I figured I'd rather
stand trial for murder than
him," Piper laconically explain-
ed. The Arizona authorities, true
to the code of the Old Wt.st,
decided Piper need not stand
trial.
With that, the War of Weav-
er's Needle subsided into uneasy
truce, interrupted only by an
occasional stray shot, and pre-
sumably Piper and Mrs. Jones
resumed their search for the
Lost Dutchman Mine, Up until
last month, that is.
First, Piper strolled into
Apache Junction, carrying four
rifles which he said he had
taken from the Jones camp.
"You told us no rifles," he said
to Justice of the Peace Teason.
Next, the Jones contingent
lodged charges of armed rob-
bery and burglary against Piper.
Justice ' Teason, tentatively
scheduling .a trial for this week,
said he didn't think Mrs, Jones
and her crew would appear to
testify a:Oita-Piper. If they do,
the U.S. Forest Service intends
to charge them with setting a
brush fire. As a result, the judge
said, "I don't think anything
will come of it (the case against
Piper),"
But the search for the Lost
Dutchman Mine has been inter-
rupted again, Perhaps there is
some truth to another part of
the Lost Dutchman legend -
that the Superstition Mountains
are cursed, - From NEWS -
WEEK.
FAIR QUESTION
A lady had just taken over her
car from a parking attendant,
but paused at the gate to call out
a last query to him, 'fell me,"
she urged, "just what do you
fellows use to clean the grease
off your hands when you run out
of steering wheels?"
BIG DADDY Haystack Cal.
houn, 601 -pound .wrestler, is
a mighty proud father as he
looks at. 6 - pound, 11 - ounce
daughter, Kathy Elizabeth, at
a Charlotte, N.C., hospital.
;APHING A CHANGE -- Weather front pushes cold winds to southern California from
Canada, causing snow in the mountains and a spectacular cloud display along the coast.
All happens as Mrs, Henry Butz walks her dog along Redondo Beach, Calif.
PAG( g
AUBURN
"Health" Was W. I. Topic
Health was the topic at the June
meeting of the Auburn Women's Insti-
tue held in the Auburn Memorial Com-
munity Hall with the president, Mrs.
Ed. Davies, in charge. The meeting
was opened with the Ode, Mary Stew-
art Collect and 0 Canada, with Mrs.
Robert J. Phillips as pianist. The
minutes of the previous meeting were
abated as read by the secretary, Mrs.
Thomas Haggitt. She also gave the
financial statement, Mrs. Andrew
Kirkconnell, convener of the card come
mlttee, reported that three sets of
bootees and baby congratulation cards
had been sent as well as several get
well cards. She also read thank you
notes. Trio numbers were sung by
Lorraine, Douglas and Eldon Cham-
ney, accompanied on the piano by thee(
m;then, Airs. Gordon Chamney. A
reading, "They told me it wouldn't
hurt,' vas given by Mrs. Davies, The
guest speaker of the afternoon was
Mr. William Empey of the Huron
County Health Unit, Ile was intro-
duced by the convener of Health, Mrs
William J. Craig. In an interesting
way Mr, Empey explained his work
in connection with restaurants, snack
bars regarding cooking and kitchen
health where the public is served. He
showed a film, "Beyond Town," sani-
tation for rural areas, prepared by
the Department of Health and Welfare.
Airs, Clare Longhurst thanked Mr.
Empey for his informative message
and on behalf of the Institute presented
him with a gift. A solo, "My grand-
father's clock," was sung by Mrs.
Wes. Bradnock. The roll call was
answered by each member telling
"«'hat they liked about the month oI
June." Most answers were "the beast-
iful flowers, trees and gretn grass."
Mrs. George Hamilton was the holder
of the lucky door prize ticket which
had been donated by Mrs. Thomas
Lawlor. At the close of the meeting
a discussion took place concerning the
40th anniversary celebration and it was
decided that a smorgasbord luncheoe
will be held on October 3rd. A de-
licious lunch was served by Mrs. Are
old Craig and Mrs, Thomas Haggitt.
St. Mark's Anglican Guild Meeting
'The ladies of St. Alerk's Anglican
Church Guild and the United Church
Women's group of Smith's Hill met fo:
their June meeting at the home of Mrs.
Fordyce Clark. The hostess opened
the meeting with the hymn "Dear Lord
and Father of Mankind." The scripture
lesson was road by Mrs. Tait Clark and
prayers were led by Mrs. Robert Meal,
ly. Mrs. John Daer and Mrs. Andrew
IUrkconnell favored with a vocal duet
"In the Garden." Mrs. Robert J. Phil
lips was the accompanist for the after.
noon. Mrs. Lloyd Young gave a read
ing "How to Pray Aright." Rev. Ro
bert Meally,.gave an interesting nes
sage on "Prayer." Mrs. Orval McPhee
read an article from the Living Ates
sage in keeping with the meeting. Mrs.
F. Clark thanked all who had a`sisteel
her with the meeting and Welcomed all
to her hone. She closed with the ben.
ediction. The pres!dent, Mrs. George
Schneider, tcok charge of the business
period and the minutes were approvec
es read by the secretary, Mrs. John
Doer. In the correspondence it was
decided to accept the invitation to at-
tend the special meeting at Westfield
In the absence of the treasurer, Mrs
Gordon R. Taylor, Mr. Meally gave the
financial report. The meeting was
closed by singing the hymn, "Blest Be
the Tie That Binds" and the hostess
w'th her daughter, Mrs. Lawrence Nes-
bit served a delicious lunch,
[*FOOD MARKET*
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1 11? lb, tin $1.37
ROSE BRAND SWEET MIXED PICKLES
lg. 32 oz, jar 43e
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2 pkgs. 45c
ELLMARR PURE PEANUT BUTTER
16 oz. jar 29c
BALLET TOILET TISSUE, white, yellow, pink,
2 rolls 23c
8 rolls 89c
CLOVER LEAF FANCY PINK SALMON
2. 7 314 oz. tins 65c:.
DONALD DUCK ORANGE JUICE
48 oz. tin 39c
LIBBY'S FANCY TOMATO JUICE
48 oz. tin • 29c
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Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lbs. 29c
California New Potatoes 5 lbs. 39c
Burns Weiners 2 lbs. pkg. 89c
Meaty Ribs ••• good for berbecuing , , , per lb. 59c
Kraft Cheese Slices 2 pkgs. 59c
Rose Sweet Relish 16 oz. jar 25c
Libbys Cooked Spaghetti, 15 oz. 4 tins 59c
Del Monte Peas, 15 oz. tin 5 tins 89c
St. Laurence Corn Oil 25 oz. tin 55c
Ballett Toilet Tissue 4 rolls 49c
Supreme Mixed Cookies 3 lb. bag 89c
Gem Margerine , 4 lbs. 89c
Clark's Pork and Beans, 20 oz. tins 1. . , 5 tins 99c
Crown Corn Syrup 3 lbs. jar 53c
Stokelys Cream Corn, 15 oz. 7 tins 1.00
Sun Spun Ice Cream half gal. 85c
1
'AHD BtYTII STANDARD �n,tv zk.. i • .��....�. Wednesday, June 27,196 1
AUBURN NEWS
The Auburn Ball Team came up with
another victory on Monday evening
and this time it was the Kippen team
which they defeated, 12 to 11, Those
playing the game at the Auburn park
on Monday evening were: John Seers.
cf; Thomas 1iaggitt, c; Kenneth Hag.
gild, 2nd; Kenneth Deer, ss; Tom Cun-
ningham, Lst; George liaggilt, p; Sam
Beadle, If; Allan Webster, rf; Lorne
Daer, 3rd base. A good crowd of fans
attended the game and cheered the
locals to their victory,
Air. John Hamilton, of Waterloo Col-
lege, spent the watt -end with his par -
eats, ;lir, and Airs, ilen ilamilton,
Mrs. Maud Fremlin is visiting this
week in Wingham with her sister, Miss
May Ferguson.
Mr. Bob Chamnoy, of Goderich, is
visiting title week with his geandpar•
eats, Air. and Airs. Robert Chimney.
A'Ir, and Mrs, Gordon Chimney vis -
hod over the week -end in Niagara
Fails with his sister, Al's. Verna Doerr
and family.
Alis Lila Youngblut, R.N., of Gode-
rich, spent last week visiting with
her brother, Arthur Youngldut, before
leaving on her holidays in Vancouver.'
B. C.
Masters Warren and David Rodger.
of Ottawa, are visting this weak with
their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Em-
merson Rodger and family.
Installed As Master
Mr. William J. Craig had the honour
of inetahling his son, William S. Craig
of Clinton, as ALaster of Clinton Ma-
sonic Lodge, for the 1962 year. Con.
gralulations Bill,
Mr. William Seers, Gail and ]Faye,
visited last Sunday with the former';
grandmother, Mrs. Caroling Seers, al
Mitchell.
Rev. Robert Neatly, rector of St.
Mark's Anglican Church, officiated for
'ho service of lfoly Baptism last Sun.
d2y morning for Phillip Todd, infant
son of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown.
The godparents were Mr. William
Brown and Miss Shirley Brown, broth-
er and sister of the infant child.
,Air. and Airs. Alan Hoge, Billy
Garth, Pat, Ian and Craig, of the RCA
F station Clinton, visited on Sunday
with his aunt, Airs, Charles Straughan
and Mr. and Mrs. W. Bradnock.
Airs.
Jacob C. Sto_tz is visiting this
week at Bluevale with her friend Mrs.
Catherine Dokie and Mr. and Mrs
James Johnston.
Mr. Donald Hess, of Oakville, visited
friends in the village over the week-
end.
Congratulations to Miss Betty Moss
on obtaining honours in her Grade 4
music exam of the Toronto Conserva-
tory of Music, She is a pupil of Mrs.
Ray Vincent, of Blyth.
The 36th annual Memorial Service al
Ball's cemetery will be held on Sun-
day, July 1st at 3.30 p.tn. The service
this year is in charge of tlhe Anglican
Church with Rev. Robert F. Meetly
conducting the service assisted by
other clergy in the via!'age. The organ
1st will be Miss Margaret Clark.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Black (nee Ed-
ith Turner, who used to live here) and
is the daughter of a former Methodist
minister, of Toronto visited here fast
week with /her cousin, Mrs. James
Jackson, and Air. Jackson, and Air. and
Mrs. Charles Scott.
Mr. and Airs. Kenneth Cameron, of
Lucknow, were Sunday guests with
Mr. and Mrs. William J. Craig and al•
so visited the beautiful rose garden of
Mr. and Airs. Robert J. Philips.
Mrs. William Moss and daughter.
Miss Betty, attended the decoration
service on Sunday at Harvey's ceme-
tery, Logan Township, near Moncrief.
Later they were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth McLean, of Moncrief.
Congratulations are extended to
L;A.C. William Rodger and Mrs. Rod-
ger on the birth of their daughter, Vic-
toria Lynn, on June 21st, at Ottawa, a
sister for Warren and David.
Visitors on Sunday with Mr, and
Mrs. Emmerson Rodger and family
were, Miss Chris McClinton, Mr. and
Mrs.: William lfelesic, Patty and Paul,
and Miss Jane Carter, all of Goderich.
Dr., William Fingland, Niagara Falls,
Judge and Mrs. Frank Finglund, of
Clinton, visited last week with Miss
Margaret R. Jackson,
Mrs. Thomas Haggitt and Mrs. Clif-
ford Brown visited last Thursday with
their mother, Mrs. George Beadle who
is a patient in Victoria Hospital, Lon-
don.
Friends of Mr. Percy Walden are
pleased to see him home after several
weeks in Victoria Hospital, London.
Mr. William Welsh, of, Detroit, spent
a couple of days last week visiting his
cousins, Mrs. Charles Straughan, , and
Mrs. Durnin Phillips, and Mr, Phillips;
at Dungannon.
Mr, and Mrs, Charles Cook, Gerrie
Mr. and Mrs, John Baylor and small
granddaughter, Corrie, Miss Irene
Ament and Mrs. Evelyn May Zeigler.
Goderich, visited on Sunday with Mi.
and Mrs. Oscar Anent,
Mr, and Mrs. Andrew Kirkconueil
and Diane, Mrs. Herbert Govier, vis-
ited friends In Kitchener last Sunday.
Plans are nearly completed for the
Daily Vacation Bible School which will
open on July 2nd in St. Mark's Angli-
can Church, The school this year is
under the direction of the Anglican
Church where the opening sessions will
be held -at 9 aen, From there the child-
ren will go to their different class-
rooms. The theme of the school this
year is "Adventuring with Christ." The
pre-school class under the leader, Mrs.
Wilfred Sanderson, will have the theme
"Children of the King," Assisting in
this class will be Mrs. Maurice Bean,
Mrs, Thomas Haggitt, Airs. Louis Rud-
dy, Mrs. Leonard Archambault, Mrs.
Gordon Dobie, Jannett Dobie, Margar-
et Haines and Sharon Bali. The Print-
ery class children 6.8 will study un-
der the theme "Friends of the King"
with the leaders being, Miss Betty
Marsh, Miss Margaret R. Jackson,
Rev. C. Lewis and Mrs. Arthur Grange
and assisted by other helpers. The
Junior 0i4ass theme is to be "Knights
of the King" with Mrs. Lloyd Hum-
phreyes as the leader. She will be
ei ]&ted by Rev. R., Meally, Airs. Ro-
bert Arthur, Mrs. Orville McPhee, Car-
cle Brown and Mrs, George Schneider.
The Junior class is for children 9 to
11 years of age, The Senior class for
children 12 and over, have their theme
"Crusaders of the King" with the lead-
ers being Mr. Craig Peters, Mrs. Lloyd
Walden and Mrs. Murray Wilson. The
school will close daily at 11:15 a.m.
The 102nd anniversary services )l
Knox l'r•csi vtcu•ian Clrul'h will be
held on Sunday, July 0 with services
at 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. Rev. Thomas
McKinney, of, Teeswater, will be the
guest speaker.
School Children Enjoyed Bus Trips
School bus tries seem to be the order
of the day in this district. U,S,S. No.
5, Hullett, pupils, with their teacher
Mr, Duncan MacKay, went to London
last week. They visited the London
Fire Mall, the Kellogg's plant and
had their lunch in Vietoriia Park.
Alter lunch they went to the Institute
for the Blind where all were given a
sample of the alphabet in braille. The
interesting Story Book Gardens was
the next stop and then they paid a
'visit to a tropical friut centre. Later
they had an opportunity to go through
Eaton's Mall and had their supper al
the Three Little Pips restaurant. On
the return trip the bus travelled
through the grounds of the University
of Western Ontario where all the pupih
hope to go in future years.
S.S. No. 9 Hullett pupils and their
teacher, Air. Wilmer Errington, went
to Toronto for their annual trip, They
toured the Maple Leaf Gardens, Casa
Loma, Rosedale Zoo, and all hacl a
ride on the subway. Later they went
to the Malton Airport where the giant
jets were caning and going, and all
had supper at Kitchener. Some of the
parents of both schools accompanied
them on these trips.
Sunday School Picnic
Auburn Knox United Church Sunday
School hold their annual Sunday School
picnic at the United Church Stunner
School grounds north of Goderich. At•
ter a picnic supper was enjoyed a
program of races was held under the
direction of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cut•
ning igen, Miss Jane Mills and Allan
Webster. The results were as follows:
Girls, 6-9, Marie Plunkett, Shelly
Grange; boys 6-8, Kenneth Empey.
Raymond Hildebrand; girls, 10.12, Pat-
sy Malian, Brenda Archambault; boys
9-12, Billy Lapp, Billy Empey; young
ladies' race, Mrs. Alvin Plunkett, Lin-
da Andrews; soft ball throw, girls 6-9,
Marie Plunkett, Donna Baechler; boys
6-8, Kenneth Empey, Raymond Hilde-
brand; girls 1042, Patsy Milian, Pat-
sy Reed; boys 9-12, 13111y Lapp, Wayne
Arthur; ladies' kick the slipper, Patsy
Milian, Mrs. Alvin Plunkett; eating
soca biscuits and whistle, Mrs. Law-
rence Plaetzer, Paul Gross; relay, pas-
sing ring on toothpick, winners wore
the small girls and boys; driving the
nail, Mrs. Robert Arthur, Airs. Alvin
Leathonland.
Roses Formed Attractive Setting For
Horticultural Rose Tea
Roses, roses and more roses decor-
ated the Auburn Orange Hall for the
annual Rose Tea sponsored by the
Auburn Horticultural Society. The
front of the hall was an attractive
garden scene backed with a white
trellis fence entwined with green ivy
and red roses. miniature garden
pond containing pink water lilies and
shells was centred with tall reeds
growing out of the water. Surround-
ing the pool were small colorful
gnomes, a garden table and chairs.
In one corner evergreens formed a
lovely background for the small imi-
tation wooden deer, ducks and duck-
lings. Imitation green grass complet-
ed the scene with a small picket fence
to keep the young guests away from
the attractive setting, arranged by the
decorating conunittee under the eon-
vonership of Mrs. William T. Robison.
Others on the committee were Mrs.
Robert J. Phillips, Mrs. Frank Ratth.
hy, Mrs. Norman McDowell and Mrs.
William Straughan. The guests were
welcomed by the president, Mrs. Ed.
Davies, and Mrs. Norman McDowell
pinned a rose corsage on each visitor.
All the guests were taken on a conduct-
ed tote' of the rose garden by Mr. and
Airs. Robert J, Phillips. They were
assisted on the tofu's by Airs. Raymond
Redmond, Over 150 persons viewed
the lovely roses of every color on the
fifty rose bushes in the garden. Tea
was served in the hall under the con-
venership of Mrs. Ed. Davies, assist•
ed by Mg's, Lloyd Humphries, Mrs.
Bert Craig, Mrs. Arthur Grange and
Airs. Wes. Bradnoek. Mrs. Herbert
Govier and Mrs. Sam Deer assisted
in the kitchen. During the afternoon
pnd evening prizes were given away
every half hour to the guest with the
birthday nearest that date. Prizes of
bouquets of roses in containers were
given to the following: Mrs. Ed. Far -
guitar, Sharon Cook, Airs. Robert Ar-
thur, Miss Joan Craig, Mrs, (tarry
Armstrong and Mrs. Harry Sturdy.
The prize for the guest coming the
farthest went to Mrs. Walter Black
of Toronto. Guests were present from
Clinton, Blyth, •Londesboro, Goderich,
Toronto, Carlow and Owen Sound,
Young People Held Final Meeting
The final meeting of the Young
People's Society of the Auburn Charge
of the United Church was held in Knox
United Church with a good attendance,
The meeting was in charge of Betty
Youngblut, who gave the call to wor-
ship, The hymn, "In Christ there is no
East or West," with Bernice AIcDu
ugall presiding at the piano. The scrip•
turo lesson was read by Marsha Koop-
mans followed by prayer by Betty
Youngblut. The offering was received
by Donald McDowell end Clifford
Snell. Marsha Koopmans introduced
the guest speaker, Rev, R. E. Me -
Lagan, of Blyth. His topic was on
the "Opportunities that young people
have today," He spoke of their re-
sponsibilities that have to be fulfilled
in the world situation today and sires-
sed the part that the Young People
have to play in the church. Betty
Youngblut thanked the speaker for
his interesting message. The president
Marsha Koopman, took charge of
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to thank those whc
remembered me with cards, heats and
visits while a patient in Seaforth hos-
pilaf. Special thanks to Dr. Malkus
and the nursing staff.
Donald (toward
17.1p.
the business portion of the neetieg
Final plans were m0cle for the Y. 1'.'s
dance on Friday evening in the Com-
munity Memorial Hall. Invitations to
other groups have been sent out. The
executive also planned a Weiner roast
for the members on July 4th at Sunset
Beach. lunch was served by Shirley
Snell, Marsha iCoormkans, Bernice Me.
Dougall and 13etty Youngblut.
BIRTHS 1
\iEBSTER.—Mr. and Mrs. George Web.
sler are happy to announce the birth
of a daughter, Laura Lynn, on Wed-
nesday, June 20 in Victoria Hospital,
Loudon,
CROP REPORT
Haying is progressing very slowly
because of continued wet weather.
flail did considerable damage in some
areas last week, Most crops are mak-
ing excellent progress and yields of
all crops with the exception of hay
should be average or above ►average.
Alilk production continues to be above
fast year.
—D. 11, Miles, Ag. Rep,
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Tantoo Liquid Spray 89c
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WHY WAIT - DEAL NOW
1962 FORD Galxie, 4 dr.,
6 cyl.
1960 BUICK, 4dr., hard
top.
1959 FORD Fairlane 2 dr.
1958 FORD, 4 dr., 6 cyl.
1956 FORD 6 cyl. auto.
1958 METEOR, 4 dr wag-
on.
1957 PLYMOUTH, 2 dr.
station wagon.
1956 CHEV. Sedan
1955 FORD Coach
1955 DODGE Sedan
1953 FORD Coach
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
- New and Used Car Dealers
SMELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP f4 SAVE
Libby's Deep Browned Pork and Beans, 28 oz. 29c
Miracle Whip Salad Dressing, 16 oz. jar ' ' 39c
Ingersoll Cheese Spread, 16 oz. jar 59c
Maple Leaf Cheese Slices, 8 oz. pkg. 25c
Cadbury's Instant Chocolate Drink, with free bars,
2 lbs. 89c
Delmar Margarine, 1 lb. pkgs. 2 for 49c
Sweet Pickled Cottage Frozen Ilamburg,
Roll, 112's pkg. Hamburg Buns
per lb. 59e both pkgs. 69c
8 Reg. Weiners ••- 8 Weiner Roots , . both pkgs. 69e
WEEK -END EXTRA HOT SPECIAL--.
King Size Super Suds Powder, Stainless Knife
or Fork in each pkgs., Reg price 1.69
SALE 1,39