HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Blyth Standard, 1962-11-07, Page 1THE BLYTH STANDARD
VOLUME 75 - NO. 34
Authorized as second elms mall, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOV 7, 1962 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A,
Post t Office Department, Ottawa.
and for payment of postage In cash,
Blyth Nominations Se(For Nov. 16;
The regular meeting of the Blyth
Municipal Council was held in the
]\tentorial Hall on Monday evening at
8 p.m, with Reeve Falservice, Cont•
cill01's Cook, Elliott, and Manning
present.
Motion by Elliott and Manning that
the minutes of the last regular meet-
ing be adopted, Carried,
Mr. John Young was present to dis-
cuss Parks Board finances with the
council,
Motion by Cook and Elliott that
we give the Parks Board a grant of
$100.0U to pay outstanding bills. Car.
rigid.
Motion by Elliott and Cook that
correspondence be filed, Carried.
Motion by Cook and Manning that
the Village of Blyth Nomination
Meeting for the purpose of nominal.-
ing candidates for the position of
Reeve, School Trustees, Councillors
and Public Utilities Commission be
held in the Memorial Hall on Mon-
day, November 26tH from 7 p.m. to
8 p.m., and election, if necessary.
to be held on Monday, December 3rd
with the poll being open from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. in the Memorial Hall. Car-
ried.
Motion by Elliott and Manning thal
accounts as read be paid. Carried
The account of Mr, Lorne Script-
geour for cutting weeds, shovelling
snow and gravel was rejected as he
had not been engaged by the street
foreman, Carried.
Accounts:.
Fred Gregory, salary, street fore-
man, $192,00; Fred Gregory, salary.
caretaker and ace., 56,20; Blyth Post
master, unetnp. ins, stamps, 6.00;
Gerald Ileffron, garbage collection,
98.50; Doherty Bros., ace. for gas anc
oil, 13,23; S. M. Johnston, 10.00; Muni•
cipal World, 8,79; Blyth Standard,
printing and advertising, 159.19;
George Radford, Const, Ltd., 1131,95;
Earl Noble, street work, 44.00; Russel
Bentley, 10.00; Mrs. Mary Vincent.
9,27; Blyth Branch Canadian Legion.
33.20; Trinity Church Treasurer.
14.60; henry I)aly,' 227.69; Blyth
Park's Board, 100.00; welfare accounts
404.75.
Motion by Cook and Elliott that
we do now adjourn. Carried.
George Sloan, Clem.
FIRESIDE FARM FORUM '
On November 5th, the Fireside
farm forum met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. George Carter to discuss the
subject "Vertical integration." 12 ad•
ults wero present.
We thought some of the Molina.
tion was confusing and contradictory,
Many of the statements they made
regarding vertical integration were
not forecasts of what we might ex-
pect, but were facts true to many
farms at the present. We believe
that farms under the management of
the owner and his family usually be-
come larger and more efficient. The
owner is more vitally interested than
hired employees, The lack of funds
or easy credit is the chief cause 01
farmers agreeing to contracts, There
is no world surplus of foods, when
so many people never get sufficient
food. Tntnips are the chief crop
grown under contract in our neigh.
bourhood, and they are often not
profitable, Supply and demand still
set the price of most products and
weather Is a chief factor in produc-
tion,
Court Whist was played with the
prize winners being, Mrs• John C.
McDonald and Don Buchanan; 'con.
solation Mrs. Alex Riley,
Airs, Oliver Anderson invited the
group for next week,
Congratulatiens to Mrs. Sadie Cum.
ing who celebrates her birthday. on
Friday, November 91h,
AMONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, Novcmbcr 11, 1962
ST. ANDREW'S PRESll1"PERIAN
CHURCH
Nov, 11, 1.00 p.m.—Albert Farthing,
student at Waterloo College.
Nov. 10, 1.00 pan.—Rev, Robert, U.
AleLean, B.A. Petrolla, Ont,,
preaching for a call, -
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA
Rev, Robert F. Meally, Rector.
21st Sunday after Trinity
Trinity Church, Blyth.
9.30 a.m.—Sunday School.
9:30 a,tu,-1I, C. and Sermon,
St. Mark's, Auburn,
12:15 p,m,--Mattins.
Trinity Church, Belgrave.
200 pan,—Sunday School,
2:30 pan.—Evensong,
4:00 p.m. --Confirmation class,
THE UNI'1'Ei) CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev, R. Evan McLagan • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kai
DIrecto' of Music,
9.55 a.m.--Sunday Church School.
11.00 a.m. — Remembrance Day
Service.
7.30 p.m.—Dominion Life Choir.
CHURCH .OF GOD
McConnett Street, Myth.
John Dornier, Pastor
Phone 185
10.00 a.m.—Sunday School.
11.00 a.m.—Worship Service.
8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service,
8.00 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship,
SUNDAY SCHOOL PUPILS
ATTEND SERVICE
IN UNITED CHURCH
The Sanctuary of the Blyth United
Church was again filled to capacity
last Sunday when pupils and stafl
of the Sunday Church School joined
with other members of the congrc•
gallon for a special church shoo] serve
ice.
Miss Clare McGowan, Goderich
formerly a member of the Church
School staff, spoke of her visit to
the Ifoly Land, referring to many
customs of the people which are still
the same as during the lifetime of
Jesus.
Children from Auburn and dist•
rich, under the direction of Mrs. E
Rodger, formed a choir and sang
"Bless This house" and "Dear Land
of hope,"
On behalf of all the members of
the Church School, Susan \Vightntan
and Nancy Johnston, both of whom
have a record of four years perfect
attendance, presented the flower and
fern stands to the congregation
These were received and dedicated
by the minister, Itev.R. Evan McLag
an.
Sallntan's painting of "Christ, Our
Pilot," for their new classroom, was
presented to the Junior Boys' Class
III who had achieved the highest
percentage of attendance of them•
selves and their parents at the Christ-
ian Family Day Service last May.
In the evening, members of other
congregations in the community met
together for a Community Service
itev. R. 1''. Meally of Trinity Angli-
can Church, Blyth, was guest preach.
cr, reminding the congregation el
the dedication of Solomon's Temple
Rev. D. J, Lane, the former minister
of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church,
Blyth, read the scripture. Again for
these "opening services," Mrs, Win
ona McDougall joined with Mrs, Kai
for piano and organ duets.
Special services will continue nexl
Sunday with the Legion Rcnmembrance
Day Service in the morning and with
an evening concert of sacred music
being presented by the Dominion Lif
Choir of Waterloo,
•LONDESBORO
The WI held their November meet-
ing on 'Thursday with the president
opening with a poets. Airs, Stanley
Lyon has been appointed delegate-
to the area convention at the Hotel
London on the 5th. The annual ha•
zaar will be on November 14th with
a 25c tea following. Mi's. Glen Carte
gave a report on the Social Commit
tee and the County Federation ban-
quet is coming up on November 28th.
Mrs. Dora Shobbrook and Airs. Addie
Ilunking were appointed to get. a
Christmas parcel ready for the little
Korean girl, aged 7 years, The roll
call was answered by mashing sonic•
thing grandmother used which we do
not. Mrs. Audrey Sprung gave two
readings, "A man's point of vice
of the W. I.," and "'1'hc Old Violin.'
The president read a few amusing
excerpts from Harry J. Boyle's book;
also a reading "Who will take Grand
ma," by Mrs, Clare Riley. Mrs, Rohl.
Fairservice showed pictures of scenery
In Quebec which David had taken
also giving an interesting talk on the
trip she and Ann had enjoyed in
Quebec this summer. Anyone who
would like a bus trip to the Royal
Winter Fair 0n November 13th could
contact Mrs, Good in Blyth, the cost
being $3.00 and time of leaving 7:45.
Visitors over the week -end with
Mrs. Townsend were Miss Dorothy
Little, Air, and Airs, Edwin Baker
of 'Toronto, and Airs, Milly Bentham,
of Oshawa.
Mrs. Mary Reid, who has been vis•
iting with Mrs, Bert Allen for a few
weeks, returned to Toronto on Sat-
urday,
The Legion met for a special seta" -
ice fit Londesboro last Sunday morn
ing with Rev, henry Fu nge officiat-
ing.
NORTHERN LIGII'L'S UNIT MEET
The Northern Lights Unit of the
UCW held a well attended meeting at
tine home of Mrs, Bert Fear on No-
vemher 5th,
Airs, L. Stadlenan opened the meet-
ing using "The Church in this Day"
from the devotional booklet. Mrs. K.
Webster read the scripture. The roll
call was answered with a 13ible verse
beginning with the letter "n". Mrs. A.
McNichol, the president, presided ov-
er the business. She expressed her
appreciation for the help and dons
tions of food for the Building Fund
Turkey Supper. Plans were made for
catering to the Lions on November 8;
also to help with a supper for the Do-
minion Life Choir on Sunday, Nov:,
ember -11th,
It was deckled to hold- a family par-
ty for the members of the Unit and
does' families on the 10th of Deects.
her. Mrs. J. Wilson, Mrs. C. Baines
and AIrs. Al. Richmond were appoint-
ed to arrange the Christmas Party,
The hostesses, Mrs. 13ob Carter,
Airs. L. Stadelman and Airs. Fein'
served lunch,
STARLIGHT CIRCLE TO MEET
The Starlight Circle meeting is to
be held November 13, in the United
Church. basement at 8,15.
PERSONAL INTEREST.
Mr. Albert Walsh has returned
home after being a patient in Vic-
toria Ilospital, London, for the past
two weeks.
Visitors last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Aicerea, Maureen and Douglas,
were Mrs, Harry Garniss, Wingham,
Mrs. Thomas Smith, Mrs. Julia Mc -
Nall, Air. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper and
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McGuire, all et
Belgrave,
Miss Maureen McCrea visited on
Sunday with Mrs. Julia McNeil and
Michael, at Belgrave.
Mrs, L. R. Plummer and son•in•la%
and daughter, Mr, and Mrs. Don Bail-
ey, of Windsor, were guests over the
week -end with the former's sister,
.lis. Luella McGowan, and brothel
Mr. Borden Cook, Airs. Cook and fain.
ily,
Visitors with Mrs. Gertrude Cronin
on Sunday were: Ah', and Mrs, Harry
Cronin, Mr. Angus McIntyre, Mon
treal, Miss Mary Logal, London, Mt'
and Mrs. Nelson Meyer, Joan and Ann
of Hamilton, Mr. and Mrs, James.
Cronin; I'hresa and Joan,' Walkerton
Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Le Souder and Deb.
bio, Stratford, Mr. and Mrs, Jerry
1Ieffron, and Margaret, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Cronin, Mr, and Mrs, Lorne
Cronin, Cathy and Mary, Blyth, Mr
and Mrs. Harry Miller, Teeswatcr, Mr
and Airs. George Miller, 'Toronto.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph McCrea and
Douglas, visited on Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Clyde Robinson and fang
ily, Mr. and Mrs, Bernie Williamson
and Mrs, Thyra 'Towsend and John
Allen, Toronto.
Miss Mary Nesbit is attending Paul
Pogue Beauty School at London. She
and her sister, Miss Mary Nesbit, of
London, spent the weekend with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Nesbit:
John and Robert.
Mr, and Mrs. Wm, Cook, of London,
spent the week -end with the former's
sister, Mrs. Luella McGowan, aha
brother, Mr. Borden Cook, Mrs. Cook
and family,
Mrs. L. R. Plummer, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Bailey, of Windsor, visited the
former's aunt, Mrs. Mary Taylor, on
Sunday, -
Mr. and Mrs. John Aiartyn, 'John
and Peter, moved to Wingham on
Monday where Mr, Marlyn has secur-
ed a position. They have resided here
for seven years.
Mrs. E. W. Vipond and Miss Marg.
aret, Vipond, of Atwood, Mrs.
Townend, London, visited with the
former's daughter, Mrs, L. Wightihan
on Friday evening.
Mrs. C. G. McCrea has returned
home after spending the past month
with Mr. and Mrs, Bernie Williamson
at 'I'o'ohto,
DONATIONS TO AGRICULTURAL
SOCIETY
Special donations to Blyth Agricul
tural Society since last publication'
J. B. Nesbit, $1,00;, George Sloan;
2.00; Win. Carter, 2,00; Edgar How-
att and Son, 5.00; Bill Hull, 5.00; Ruth
Dougherty, 2.00; Bill Manning, 4.00,
Irvin Bowes, 2.00; L, E. Cardiff, MP,
10.00; Ralph Caldwell, 3.00; 'Phomas
Lciper, 10.00; Airs. L. Stonehouse:
2.00; John Young, 15,00.
WESTFIELD
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Vogl and Mark,
London, were with Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Smitit over the weekend.
Mr, and Mrs. Roy Pajunen and Paul
of Kitchener, were guests of Mr, any
Mrs, Gordon Smith on Saturday.
Farm Forum was held Monday ev-
ening
vening at AIr, Lloyd Waldens with
the topic for discussion, "Vertical In
legration." Next Monday forum will
be held at Alt•. Howard Campbells
with discussion on "farm organiza-
tions."
Air, and Mrs, David Pilblado and
girls, of Toronto, were guests with
Mr. and Alrs. C. Van Vliet at the
weck•eul,
Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell visit-
ed with Ah•. and Mrs. Hurray Mello -
well at Cookstown over the week-
end.
Air. and Mrs. Arnold Cook attended
a Yorkshire sale at Bridgeport on
Saturday.
On Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Wightman, Mr, rand Mrs. Bill
Taylor, Mr. and 'Mrs. Ross Taylor and
Muriel, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith
and Margery attended a Smith re.
union at the home of Mr. and Mrs
Murray Cardiff. Brussels.
Air. and Alrs. Howard Campbell and
Harold were -London visitors on Sun
day,
Miss Judy McDowell visited her
cousin, Miss lIcather McDowell, nl
Cookst own.
Air. and Mrs. Arnold Cook and
children were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
13ev. Robson, St, Marys. on Stlday,
Sunday visitors with Mr. and Alrs,
Gordon Snell and Jeanetta were Mr.
and Mrs. Mansel Cook, II,R, 1, Lon.
desboro, in the afternoon, Mrs. Is -
reel Good and boys, of Wingham and
Phyllis Biggerstaff in the evening.
We ire sorry to report that Mr.
Win. Walden is confined to his -bed
at the home of his -daughter, Mrs. Sits
McClinchey and Mr. McClinchey, of
Auburn.
Airs, Lloyd Walden, Mrs. T. Big•
ge'staff, were Goderich visitor's on
Wednesday.
The UCW will hold their November
meeting on Wednesday, November 14
at 2 p.m. Mrs. Lloyd Walden and her
Unit will be in charge.
IIULLhl"I' COURT GRANTS
ASSESSMENT APPEALS
The regular monthly meeting 01
the Council of the Township of Hulled
was held on Monday, November 1
in the Community Ball, Londesboro
and as it was also the date set for
the Court of Revision to convene
to hear appeals against the1963 assess
ment roll, the members of the Court
of Revision subscribed to the Oath of
Office and appointed Donald Buchan-
an as chairman of the court.
Two appeals were presented to the
court, one from a ratepayer asking for
a reduced assessment and the other
from the hydro Electric Power Coin -
mission requesting that they give a
grant to the municipality in lieu of
taxation.
Both of these apeals were granted
by the collet. The ratepayer's assess
ment was reduced by $200 on his
buildings as be had suffered seine
wind damage after he had been as
sensed. The request of the Hydro
Electric Power Commission -'Nay ;Ilse
granted as this procedure of giving
a grant in licit of taxation is author
ized by legislation contained in the
Power Conunissiotn Act. 'These ap
peals being settled, the Court of lie -
vision closed.
The (late set for the annual rate-
payer's meeting and nominations lot
Reeve and four Councillors has been
set for November 23, 1962 and if an
election is necessary, it will be held
on the Third Day of December, 1962.
SIIOWEit FOR BRIDE•ELECT
Baskets of colorful chrysanthemums
decorated the Sunday School roost ol
Knox Presbyterian Church, Auburn
when neighbours and friends of Mist
Kathleen Andrews gathered to a
shower- prior to her marriage this
month. Misses Margaret and Mary
Sanderson received the guests at the
door.
Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson was the
toaster. of ceremonies and the pro
gram began with a rousing sing•sone
led by Airs. Duncan MacKay with Mrs
.Robert J• Phillips at the piano. ,!\
reading was given by Alrs. Thoma;
1aggitt and Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor
sang a solo, "Love me 'fender, Love
me True." A cake contest was led by
Miss Marilyn Deer, and a piano solo
was played by Miss Margaret Haines
An amusing mock wedding of Aliss
Clara Delphinum -•Aster -Peabody to
Athos Timothy Alfalfa 13a11 was held
with the role of the bride taken 1)
Alt's, Kenneth Scott and the groom
was played by Diane Kirkconneli
Bridesmaid was Mrs. Wes Bradnock
and the hest man was Mrs, Ben I-Iam
Ilton. The preacher was Mrs. Rod
Finnigan and the bride's mother, Mrs
Gordon Dobie. The soloist was Mrs
Duncan MacKay dressed as a male
soloist and the organist was Airs. Ro•
bert J. Phillips who played the ira
ditional wedding music, The amusirg
costumes and the queer ceremony
drew notch laughter.
Corsages were pinned on the guest
of honor by Miss Margaret lIaines
and Miss Barbara Sanderson pinned
a corsage on Miss Linda Andrews
and they were escorted to the plat
forst where an address was read by
Alisis Marie Leatherland. The gift:
were presented by Misses 13a'barc
MacKay, Rose Marie Iiaggitt. Mari
lyn Daet', Barbara Sanderson, Mat'
garet Sanderson and Mary Sanderson
Kathleen thanked her friends for the
many gifts and lunch was served.
POPPY WEEK
The Ladies Auxiliary to the Blyth
Branch will be selling poppies for
the week, (3 to 10 November 1962, in
l3Iyth, Londesboro and Auburn. So
whet approached to purchase a Pop.
py, think of where this money is used
not a cent Is spent on anything except
NOVO. it is designed for, which is
Welfare For Needy Veterans and
Their Families.
ANNUAL CHURCiI PARADE
HELD AT LONDESBORO
The Blyth Branch 420, Royal Cana-
dian Legion, attended the Londesboro
United Church for their annual Sun-
day
unday before 11 of November service
Rev. 11, A. Funge welcomed the Le-
gion and Ladies Auxiliary and gave
a very enlightening address, The
Standard Bearers for the occasion
were: Comrades Harold Badley, Clift
Sundercock, Mrs, Arthur McClure and
Alts, Eva Wclbanks. The parade
Marshall for the parade was Comrade
Harry Gibbons, who also with Rev
]''doge arranged the parade. Conrado
Clare Vincent read the lesson.
LOCAL FAIR OFFICIALS
AT'T'ENDED DiSTIIICI' MEE'T'ING
Among those attending the annual
meeting of District No, 8 held Wed
nesday in Stratford from Blytlt Agri
cultural Society was, president, Al
best Bacon, Wm. Gow, George Watt
Ladies directors, Airs. George Watt
Airs.. Wellington Good and Mrs, Lorm
Scrimgeour.
Mrs. Scrimgeour resigned the 01
lice of secretary -treasurer for tht
Women's division of District 8 whicl
she has held for the past four years
'I'I1e new officer's for the Woolen'!
Division for District 8 are, Distric'
representative, Mrs, Roy Coulter
Milverton; associate representative
Mrs. Delmar Skinner, Seaforth; se
creta'ytt'easurer, Mrs. W. Smith, Lis
towel,
Varied Array Of Costumes Featured
Lions Hallowe'en Party
THRESHER'S REUNION AGAIN
SLATED FOR BLY'II
NEXT SEPTEMIBER
Huron Pioneer 'Thresher and Hobby
Association held their first annual
meeting and banquet, in Memorial
Hall, Blyth, the evening of Octobei
30th.
President, llarold S. 'Turner, Gode-
rich, chaired the affair, and in his
remarks stated, "The Threshers re
union held in Myth, September 7th
and 81h, was a decided success, and
created a touch greater interest. in
museums and antiques, "It prover]
we needed a Pioneer 'Thresher and
Hobby Association, and the reunion
was a grand time to get together.'
"It also proved, that then are just
+;town up boys, and no matter what
you are interested in, you will find
kindred spirits."
It was decided to hold the 1963 re
union in Blyth recreational centre
at approximately the same dale, early
September, and will be a bigger and
better show. .
The various committees gave their
reports and the treasurer's financial
statement showed a gratifying bal
81100,
There is approximately 1,500 mem
hers in the Huron Pioneer Threshers
and ]lobby Association,
Vaughan Douglas. farm editor ol
CKNX radio and TV station, Wing -
ham, brought greetings. Miss Anna
McDonald, Women's Editor of CKNX
sang several much appreciated solos.
Gordon McGavin, Walton, presented
an interesting colored film of pie
tures he had taken at the reunion
Ross Cardiff, Brussels, entertain-
ment
ntertainment chairman, was in charge of a
social hour. which included, music
by an impromptu orchestra, Air, Ton
Wilford, of Cross Hill, and Stewart
Muir, Paisley. were proficient violin
isits, with accordian accompaniment
by Moss Cardiff and his daughter
Miss Dale Cardiff, pianist. These
artists also provided music for square
dancing, polka's, schottische's, and
,valtz quadrilles, with floor manager
George Jordan of Belgrave, keeping
everyone in line.
.On behalf of Blyth Alunieipal Colin.
cil, Councillor Borden Cook, assurer]
the Association of a warm welcome
when they return next September
for their 1963 reunion and the co-op
eration of Blyth Municipal Council.
The ladies of the Agricultural So
eicty catered for the banquet.
Members of the association were
present from' Belgrave, Blyth. Brus
sols, Crosshill, Glamis, Goderich. Lon
deshoro, Paisley, Sarnia, Walton, Wat
ford and Wingham.
AUBURN
Miss C. McClinton, Mrs. Sharyn
Mr. and Alrs, Wm. Helesic and fam-
ily and Miss Jane Carter, all of Godes
rich, visited last Sunday with Air.
and Mrs. Emmerson Rodger and fans
ly.
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
William J. McClinchey on the birth
If a daughter on October 27th at
.he Jubilee Hospital, Victoria, B.0
AIr. and Mrs. Charles Scott spent
the week -end visiting friends and
relatives in Kitchener.
Mrs. Ed. Davies. Airs. Lloyd Hum
phreys, Airs. George Milian, Airs.
Wes Bradnock, and Miss Josephine
Woodcock, of Blyth, attended the
Area Convention at London of the
Women's Institute tliis week.
Local deer hunters, Mr. Gordon
Beadle, Alr. George Iiaggitt and Air.
Clare Longhurst all got their deer
early Monday morning,
Misses Gail and Faye Seers spent
the week -end with their grandparents
Mr. and Alt's, James Blake, Bcnmiller
Celebrated 891E Birthday
Congratulations are extended to a
former Auburn resident, Airs. James
Roberton who recently celebrated
her 89th birthday at I-luronview. She
was formerly Mary Townsend and was
born in Mullett Township. After her
marriage to Ah'. James Roberton they
farmed for many years on the 13th of
Hullett, before retiring to Auburn.
When illness befell trent they lived
for a couple of years at the McDonald
nursing home before going to Huron -
view, Airs. Roberton is a devoted
member of the W.M.S. of Knox Un.
Red Church, Auburn, where she is
also a member of that church.
Ait'. Wilfred Sanderson and Mr,
Thomas Johnston attended the spe•
eta' Orangeman's church service at
Belgrave last Sunday.
Rev, Walter Katcher, 'of Rodney:
preached for a call last Sunday at the
three point charge of Clinton, Blyth
'End Auburn Presbyterian Churches.
Miss Elma Mutch returned to het
'Ione last Friday after a few days in
Clinton hospital to recuperate from
t fractured arum.
Airs, Sam Dacr spent a few days
'his week visiting friends in London
Members of the Sigma -C and Ex
)loser's of Knox United Church girth
'sect pennies for UNICEF which am
ranted to over $38.00. Over 50 ol
'hese young folk gathered in the
iunday School room of the church
111(1 enjoyed games unlet' the dime
'ion of Rev. and Mrs. C. Lewis assist
,d by Airs. Robert Arthur and Mrs
Hurray Wilson. Unit One of the
UCW served cookies and chocolate
:hill:.
An excellent representation of
children from the village of Blyth
and district, along with many of their
parents, were on hand last Wednes•
day evening in the Blyth Memorial
Hall for the annual Blyth Lions Club
Ifallowo'en Party.
Judges for the evening were, Miss
Isabel Fox, Mrs. James Phelan and
Mrs, Ab, Radford, and their job was
certainly not one to be envied as all
children were dressed in exceptional•
ly fine costume and picking winners
trust certainly have been a problem.
Ilcv, Robert Meally, a member of the
local Lions Club was master of cere-
monies and Miss Pearl Gidley dis-
played her talents at the piano for the
parading of the different events.
After the judging was completed,
several members of the club were on
hand to present each child attending
with a bag of candy and an apple.
The results of the different classes
were as follows:
Best original couple, boys or girls,
Jean and Linda Caldwell.
Best Fancy dress, public school age,
girls, Sharon Mason, Irene Konarski,
Marie Cummings; boys, Dale Tasker,
Ricky Konarski, Kevin Tasker.
l3est comic dress, girls, Linda War•
wick, Ruth Cleland, Debbie Hicks;
Boys, Barry Young, John Hull, Kenny
Radford.
Best Costume, Kindergarten age,
Judy Ives, Dee German, John Watson.
Best fancy dress, pre-school, Linda
Ives, Jane and Kinn Watson, Nelson
Caldwell.
Best. comic dress, pre-school, Cathy
Aladin, Blane Johnston, Ricky Cole.
BIRTHS
JONES—In Clinton Public Hospital
on Wednesday, October 31, 1962, to
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Jones( nee
Rhea Hall) of Clinton, the gift of
a daughter, Peggy Lynne, a sister
for Stephen.
HALLOWE'EN PARTY AT
U,S,S, NO, 5 MULLET'
U.S.S. No. 5 ilullett was attractively
decorated in orange and black last
week for their annual I-Tallowe'en
party when tile' pre-school children
of the section were the guests. The
program was in the form of a Junior
Red Cross sleeting with the president
Laura Deer in the chair.
The meeting was opened by sing.
ing 0 Canada with Jennifer Grange
at the piano. Judy Arthur read the
minutes and called the roll when 45
answered by quoting their favorite
expression.
The teacher, Ah', Duncan MacKay,
Alrs, Clare Longhurst, Judy Arthur
and Gail Miller acted as judges of the
costumes and awarded 111e prizes to
Murcen Longhurst, for fancy dress;
second prize to Marie Plunkett. For
the comic dress Alary Wilkin won the
first. and Linda Longhurst, the sec.
end, A musical contest conducted by
Brenda East with the prize winners
in this being Joyce Leatherland and
Karen East. A candy hunt was held
for the junior pupils and the small
guests.
The following program was enjoyed
by all: piano solo, Shelly Grange;
riddles. Ronald Arthur; reading, Ma-
rie Plunkett, "five little pumpkins."
Duct by Betty Moss and Jennifer
Grange "Bless This House" and "The
Woman in the Graveyard,"
After the collection was taken by
Wanda Plaetzer the meeting was
closed with the Queen and candy
treats was served to all.
NINE FARM FORUM
DISCUSS VERTICAL INTEGRATION
The Nhncrs Farm Forum met at the
home of Alt•. and Airs. Henry flunking
Monday evening. Subject of the
meeting was "Vertical Integration."
The Forum generally agreed that
the trend towards larger and more
efficient operation would continue up
to a point where it could still be op -
crated as a family farm and not as a
corporate as in a family run farm
stock and machinery is better looked
after by the owner.
Crops in this area that lend them-
selves to vertical integration are reg•
istered seed grains, malting barley,
cucumbers, sunflowers and other spc.
cialized crops such as canning factory
needs canning cern, etc.
This helps some of the smaller
farms with help to specialize in these
crops through contracts.
We think that if there must be
some contracts they should be drawn
up by government' lawyers that would
be fair to the farmer as well as the
contractor.
We think that the farmer who Is a
good manager, who keeps a close rein
on costs, and who is prepared to shake
changes with the tinges and who will
expand to make full use of his land
and labour, and buildings .does not
need or want vertical integration,
Next sleeting to be at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cunningham.
Friends will be pleased to know
that Air. Alvin Plunkett arrived home
last Saturday after three weeks treat.
meet in Victoria Hospital. London,
Ah'y Windmill, of Scotsburn.
Nova Scotia, and Mr, and Mrs. Ilarold
Windmill, of Ottawa, spent the week.
end with their cousin, Alr, and Mrs.
Gordon 11. Taylor,
Pigeons—The Poor
Man's Race -Horse
A slat -sided truck drove into
a field near Charlottesville, Va.,
one morning last month and
bumped gingerly to a halt. A
man got out, walked to the tear
of the vehicle, and raised the
sides, At once dozens of beaked
heads on gray, feathery necks
shoved forward, beady eyes peer-
ing suspiciously. The Tuan jump-
ed back a; a few birds flapped
out of the stacked crates, follow-
ed immediately by more and
then still more -1.400 in all, fly-
ing truck -high for several yards
and then swarming upward, their
wings beating out an angry roar,
like a baseball crowd greeting a
Roger Maris strike -out,
This was the start of one of the
big homing -pigeon races of the
East Coast fall season. The birds
would travel all day at about 40
miles an hour—with occasional
tail -wind sprints up to 75—and
reach their home roosts around
New.Yorh City, 300 miles away,
by sundown,
Sal Rus: o figured his best bird
for a likely winner, but she fin-
ished fifth. A Bronx accountant,
Russo is an example of the new
type of pigeon fancier and a far
cry from the stereotyped slung
boy wistfully tending_ his half-
dozen birds on a tenement roof.
"Kt pine pigeon_, is an expensive
hobby." he s:(vs. "With training
and shippieg caste, 1 spend $40 a
week duriaee reedng seasons, and
about S1.000 ell year around on
100 pigeons. Some of the racing
birds are worth $200. I've turned
down $500 for a female breeder,"
But the returns arealso
high
these days. At some of the larg-
er meets, prizes and betting
pools yield thousands of dollars
to the owners of successful birds,
If the financial stakes have
risen. the hazards of the sport
remain the same. For pigeons
are not the roost dependable of
creatures, and they : re capable
of disastrous mistakes. Thirsty
racers in California have been
known to swoop low over oil
sumps, thinking they were water,
and oil -log their wings, One pi-
geon, released outside Los An-
geles and aimed for his hone 25
miles away, was ultimately dis-
covered perched in some bewild-
erment on a tree beside a lock of
the Panama Canal. And once a
bird gets lost he's forever useless
for racing; his confidence is gone.
Some fanciers go to great
lengths to coax maximum speed
from their racers. For example,
they use motherhood ruthlessly.
A setting pigeon will suddenly
become an are that one of her
eggs—which she had assumed
was several days from hatching
—has mysteriously become al-
most 'a point. Not realizing that
a substitution has been made, the
birch will be outraged when she
is taken abruptly from her nest,
crated, and transported to the
race, Once released, she will fly
back to her eggs with the great-
est possible speed.
Such tactics are condoned in
the best pigeon -racing circles,
from; California and Texas to
Michigan and Pensylvania. The
fanciers hale matter-of-factly, ac-
knowledged their fierce competi-
tiveness by adopting cheatproof
mechanical timers for their con-
courses, where victory margins
are measured in split seconds.
The lure of the sport bras caught
very simply not long ago by
Paul Bothner, a California high-
way patrolman who has raced
pigeons for nearly 30 years. "A
racing pigeon," Bothner said as
he baited for his own birds to
finish a concourse," is a poor
man's race horse."
—from NEWSWEEK
WINDOW CLEANING — Arno Meyer, who built this large
sailing model of the "Eagle of Lubeck" is really a window
cleaner. He builds the ships in West Berlin, Germany.
Tough Year For
Channel Swimmers
Upwards of $60,000, according
to ono reliable estimate, has been
spent this year by swimmers
from as many as a dozen coun-
tries trying', to conquer the Eng-
lish Channel. Yet not one has
made it.
If anyone does make it now,
he or she will set a new record
for lateness, In 87 years of Eng-
lish Channel swimming nobody
has managed it later than Oct.
14. That was as long ago as 1927
when a Yorkshire housewife,
Mrs. Ivy Gill, crossed from
France to England in 15h. 9m.
After mid-October the water
gets progressively colder and
conditions generally more uncon-
genial. Not that they have been
at all congenial in the period
that passed as summer, 1962.
Water temperature was seldom
more than 61 degrees Fahren-
heit (16 Centigrade) and favor-
able tides and winds rarely com-
bined.
The only successful amphibians
at the time these lines went into
print were those artifically aid-
ed, On July 11, New Yorker
Fred Baldasare fulfilled three
years of frustrated effort by
making all underwater journey
from France to England in 19h.
Olm, Eighteen Jays later, Lon-
doner Simon Paterson, also wear-
ing a frogman's outfit, completed
the same journey in 14h, 50m.
There is no official record of
channel challenging kept. Any-
body can walk into the sea at
Dover and strike out for the
coast of France, or vice versa.
Some. people do just that very
thing, requiring no fuss at all.
Others, usually sponsored, seek
all the publicity they can get,
In most cases, however, an
authentic aspirant to swim the
English Channel is one who has
proved himself in other waters.
He wants to pit his strength and
skill against a strip of water no-
toriously unpredictable and re-
garded as the supreme test by
most of the world's greatest long-
distance swimmers,
Shortest distance between Eng-
land and the continental main-
land of Europe is 21 miles, But
NEW SLANT—Three of France's leading ski champs exhibit
their skill on a man-made ski run, which forms the centre-
piece of the International Winter Sports Exhibition held in
England's Alexandre Palace in London. -
GROWING PAINS — Joe Sny-
der, 5, is almost ready to take
part in a football game, but
he'll have to grow a little, first.
a swimmer must be expected to
cover a distance at least half as
much again on account of tidal
currents that sweep up and down
the Straits of Dover. A good
swirnmer can turn these tides to
advantage, leaving on an outgo-
ing one and sweeping in on an
incoming one.
To get best advice in this di-
rection it is necessary to engage
the course in an accompanying
motor launch. The pilot knows
the times of the favorable tides
and proposes that the swimmer
should be ready dto go at a speci-
fied time. The swimmer orders
the boat and boatman, an experi-
enced pilot, He plots calls for an
observer from the Channel Swim-
ming Association, and retires for
eight or nine hours' rest before
embarking,
During that nine hours a great
deal can happen. The winds
whistle up and the currents,
liable to sudden change on ac-
count of the ever -moving Good-
win Sands. play havoc with the
best -laid plans, writes Sydney
Skitton in the Christian Science
Monitor.
Between Aug. 7-12 this year,
for example, when the neap tide'
were favorable and several well-
known challengers were encamp-
ed on the coast, gales of such
ferocity whipped up the channel
that ferry boats were stopped a
number of times.
Despite this, and as a matter
of interest on the growing vol-
ume of traffic between England
and the mainland, a record 2,-
200,000 passengers had crossed
by Aug. 20. It was 170,000 up on
the previous stnmer.
For the channel swimmers, of
course, it was disastrous, They
.spent money engaging boats and
pilots and in most cases had
spent their allotted waiting time
too,
One who remained longer than
others was the 25 -year-old Amer-
ican girl from Detroit, Mary
Revell. She made an attempt as
late as Oct. 10, but after getting
halfway to France retired on ac-
count of cold after five hours.
Temperature of the water was
then 55° degrees Fahrenheit (13
Centigrade).
Miss Revell, who arrived there
with successful conquests of the
Straits of Gibraltar, the Darde-
nelies, and the Bosporus to her
string, first tackled the channel
on Sept, 24, She wanted to be-
come the first woman to make it
there and back. But she gave up
alter about si:t 'Hiles in 4h. 33m.
Argentina's Antonio Abertondo
made history last year as the
first Iran to make it there and
back,
Miss Revell's boat and crews,
pilots and board, are understood
to have cost something in the
region of $1500. That upwards of
$60,000 has been spent through-
out the year gives some idea of
the number of people who still
believe there to be a future in
challenging the channel.
Paying For Damage
Not Sufficient
There are in Monte Vista, as
in all places, recurring incidents
of vandalism. The problem is
worse at some times than at
others, perhaps worse now than
in earlier days. But the most
worrying aspect of the problem
is that nowadnys so many of the
vandals, when caught, seem to
feel that paying for the damage
—a broken window, for instance
—"makes everything all right."
They don't seen to feel that the
vandalism was wrong, but simply
that they erred in getting caught,
Irrespective of the dollars and
cents damage caused, which may
be minimal or great, vandalism
shows a lack of respect for the
rights, as well as the property, of
others that augurs a lack of
moral values. The tradition) li-
berty of Hallowe'en has been
borne with and conducted for -
many years—but we can't have
Hallowe'en all the year around.
And even on Hallowe'en, tricks
should no longer be considered
within bounds when they be-
come destructive.
As Christians, and as members
of a democratic society, Ameri-
cans have traditionally believed
in the right of the individual,
But this inalienable right carries
with it the obligation of accord-
ing to the rights of others the
same rights which we enjoy our-
selves. Individual rights do not
include the right to destroy the
peace or property of fellow citi-
zens—even if we're willing to
pay for the damage, if caught,
It is to be hoped that we will
never allow the "Ahnighty Dol-
lar" to replace the Ten Com-
mandments.
—Monte Vista (Colo,) Journal
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. Ilow can I remove old var-
nish from furniture before re -
varnishing?
A. By using three tablespoons
of washing soda to one quart
of water, and applying this with
a rough cloth.
Q. How can I remove paraf-
fin easily from a container in
which it has been melted for
some canning?
A. Fill the container with boil-
ing water, then allow this to
cool. The paraffin will float on
the surface of the water.
Q. Is there any way to re-
move scorch stains from gar-
ments?
A. If the material is white cot-
ton or linen, moistening it and
exposing to direct sunlight may
take out the discoloration —
provided the scoroh is a light
one. Unfortunately, scorch can
seldom be removed from colored
articles.
PERFUMED GASOLINE!
If anyone manages to steal
gasoline from a United States
naval base in Florida, it won't
take the Navy long to get on
their scent.
To thwart potential thieves the
Navy is adding quantities of
sweet and pungent perfume to
the gasoline in all the base's
storage tanks,
All the sentries at gates on the
base have been instructed to
question drivers of cars and
other vehicles which smell too
sweetly of perfume as they ap-
proach the various exit gates.
Officials report that several
arrests have been made in recent
weeks.
•
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
NEW INVENTIONS
NEW PRODUCTS — MONEY
NEW IDEAS
WE develop finance and sell.
ANY PROFITABLE IDEA
HU !•4443 BOX 154, POSTAL STA. "K"
TORONTO t7
Write SCOPE UNLIMITED
FOR SALE
LOCKER storage & butcher equipment.
231) Kceprite Steel Lockers, waxing
tank, 2 Defiance computing scales
frozen toed counter, llobburt mons
grinder (11/2 H,P'), Berke) meat slicer,
Rerkel power saw, shelving, meat block,
kettle stove Griffith smoke house, Na.
tfonal cash register, Beatty pressure
system Esso oIl burner. Gilson furnace,
Write Box 347 Tavistock, Ont.
DOGS FOR SALE
ALL my own breeding Black & Tans -
2 females 1 male, 11/2 yrs. beauties,
females $30.00. males $40.00.
Reg Bluetick pups 2 males, 2 lcmalea
4 months Sire Vaughans and Pilot
breeding. Dams side strong in Old
Drum breed Bred for coon will make
good deer or fox dogs $30.00 each,
Clifford Symington
Watford, Ont., RR No 3
FARM HELP WANTED
WANTED man for targe dairy farm.
Must be fully experienced, Modern
house, or good home Niagara district,
State wages
John Ronyn,
RR. 1 Stevensville, Ont.
HELP WANTED — MALE
TEAR gas pens earn you instant dol-
lars. Just supply the demand! 50.05 re -
tall (tush $5.00 for sample pen free
shells, big profit details. Safety -Guard
Products, 4024 Weequahic; Newark V2,
New rersey.• --
CONSTABLES
CADETS
MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS
AGE 17 TO 35
HEIGHT -5'9"
WEIGHT -160 LBS.
EDUCATION — GRADE 10
APPLY IN PERSON TO
METROPOLITAN
1ORONTO POLICE
Personnel Office
92 KING STREET EAST
OFFICE HOURS: Monday to Friday
8 a.m. to 4 p.m,
LIVESTOCK
POLLED shorthorns put more profit In
beef raising. For information, where
you can and why you should examine
this old breed with modern look, write
C. V. Weir, 305 Horner Ave., Toronto 14.
MEDICAL
WANTED -- EVERY SUFFERER OF
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
TO TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 EXPRESS COLLECT
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching, scalding and burning ecze•
ma, acne ringworm, phnples and foot
eczema, will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn of hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
2865 St Clair Avenue East
Toronto
MISCELLANEOUS
HOME brewing the easy way, 50c brings
you complete Instructions for a quality
brew. T. Passey 13091 — 106 A Avenue,
North Surrey, B.C.
MORTGAGES
WE WILL BUY YOUR MORTGAGE
IF you sold your louse and hold a
mortgage we will buy it from you.
Write or phone Morgan & Co. 67 Rich-
mond St. West, Toronto. Phone number
EMplre 3.8747,
NAME AND ADDRESS LABELS
1000 PERSONAL printed gummed name
and address labels to handsome rens•
able plastic box. Amazing value $1.00.
Postpaid. Toppaul, Dept, Z•4, 6587 Peart,
Cleveland 30, Ohio.
NURSES WANTED
REGISTERED
NURSES
REQUIRED Immediately for small mod.
ern hospital in northern Ontario. Ex-
cellent personnel policies and working
conditions. Residence accommodation
and usual facilities available in progres•
sive comintmfty. Salary 5346.00 to $422.00
monthly up to $50 00 allowance to•
wards travelling expenses to Smooth
Rockfalls after satisfactory employment
has been established, Please give tele•
phone number if possible,
Apply To Personnel Department
ABITIBI POWER & PAPER COMPANY
LIMITED
SMOOTH ROCK FALLS, ONTARIO
NURSES WANTED
REGISTERED nurses & certified nut*
Ing assistants required for 52 bed hos.
pita' — Good salary — Accommodation
— Nurses' residence.
Apply Superintendent —
KINCARDINE GENERAL HOSPITAL
Kincardine, Ont,
OF INTEREST T0' ALL
FINE gifts for mother raid baby, rot
free catalogue address post card to —
Don Summers, P.O. Box 6415, Charles.
ton, West Virginia.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest System
illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
Marvel Hairdressing School
358 Bloor St, W.. Toronto
Branches
44 King St. W., Hamilton
72 Mean Street, Ottawa
OPPORTUNITIES
MEN & WOMEN
RAILWAYS must have young men as
Agents and 'Telegraphers. Fist pay
around $350, a month with .nob security,
U train at home with loan of Self -
Teaching Code machine. Free folder
without obligation. Cassan Systems 10
Eastbourne Crt., Toronto, 14, Ont.
PERSONAL
UNWANTED HAIR
VANISHED away with SACA•PKLO.
SACA•PELO Is dilterent It does not
dissolve or remove hair from the stir
Lace but penetrates and retards growth
of UNWAt''I'ED Hr1111. l.or•neer Lab,
Ltd . Ste 5, 079 Granville St.. Vatican.
ver 2, B.C.
PHOTO STAMPS
Pt10'POs'PAMI'S! Your photograph or
negative made 1nnla real, 100 stamp
size photos. nigh gloss, perforated and
gummed barks. hast service. Your or-
iginal' returned unharmed 11)0 Photo.
stamps $1t.00, Toppaul Co., 6587 Pearl,
Dept, Z-3 Cleveland 30, Ohio.
PHEASANTS AND WATERFOWL
PHEASANT breeders $7.95 trio Other
birds, waterfowl. Eggs•adults
Northern Pheasant Farms,
Hilton Beach, Ontario
•
STAMPS
AL1, d1ffetent packets: MO U.S. com-
ments. 51.1)0 151).52.00, 25 Vatlean $1.40
50 Vatican $3.00, 10(10 World wide St. 50.
ARMONK STAMP CO. Armonk, New
York.
SWINE
KAYMOOIIE Farm, English Yorkshires,
All foundation stock from top blood
lines Shur•Gain Farms and Walker
Farms Ilerd Sire Champion Turk 731t
Currently offering young sen'tce•age
boars and open gilts. R.R. No. 1, St.
Agatha, Ontario. Phones: Kitchener: Ste
5.1887; St, Agatha: 742.3715.
VACATION RESORTS
VACATION IN FLORIDA
RENT modern 40 ft. trailer, quiet park,
available October•February 11 Cotton,
11 Battranl St.. 'Phomas.
ONTARIO VACATION RESORT
• FOR SALE
IIESOR•I• on Mtanitoulln Island accom-
modation for 71 guests owner wishes
to retire, substantial down payment re•
6fie. Wt
Sunset Motelulred,nce andrCottages,edt Little Cur
rent, Ontario.
ISSUi? 45 — 1962
1
HOT SITUATION — Steel
beams and guard roil of over-
pass on Chicago, III., express.
way begin to buckle from heat
of blazing gasoline truck,
THE BLUE GOOSE EXPRESS — Two thirds automobile and one-third locomotive, a unique
vehicle transports personnel between U.S. Gypsum Co.'s plant and quarry at Plaster City,
Calif Dubbed the Blue Goose, the 34•foot-I',ng, 6,000•pound ruil car rides along at 40
m.p h. on eight steel -curd tires with flanges attached to tl•te Irinet hubs It's powered by a
160-h p engine positioned between two 1953 Chrysler bodies and features automatic
emergency brakes, insulation, air conditioning and two way radios No need to turn the
Blue Goose ,Jround after its 26 mile run, for each•cab has separute controls.
That >lr;sh Chcwrn
6s
Rearof Something
i)n niy 3:,-. t visit 10 Ire faud
five or six yeers age 1 :Kim] 0
taxi driver if he th eueht he
could drive 1110 on a tour of
Dublin's historic sites for 30
:;billings. We were standing by
the side of Si. Stephen's Green,
that pleasant, tree -shaded park
opposite the admire lee Shel-
bourne hotel,
We set oJ1: We saw the noble
green - lo '.v nti1 quadrangle of
Trinity College, Dublin's Prot -
talent Elizabethan University,
where 13urke and Goldonith, and
more recently Samuel Beckett,
were put into the ways of
learning, we went past the two
cathedrals of the oily, St. Pa-
triek's and Christ Church, both
of thea) again Protestant; we
looked at the Roman Catholic
University, whose original col-
lege was founded by Newman.
And we saw a lot of other
things, too, the General Post Of-
fice, Phoenix Park, Dublin Cas-
tle.
As we passed these the driver
recounted to my daughter and
myself historical reminiscences,
all of which involved some disas-
trous or disgraceful activity on
the part of the British, here the
British had run a w a y; there
they had set some villainous am-
bush for patriot Irishmen; here
they had pillaged, there they
had murdered. All these things
about the wickedness of the
English were related with im-
mense relish.
When we got back to the
Shelbourne Hotel the taxi me-
ter registered £2 10s. (50 shil-
lings, not 30). But 30 :shillings
was all the driver would take.
1 concluded that the joy of
pointing out to two English peo-
ple the misdoings of their coun-
trymen against the Irish must
have been well worth losing 20
vh,illings.
On another visit to Dublin I
took a taxi from Dublin to Pa-
kenham Hall, which is not far
from the middle of Ireland. One
of the famous tiheaters of Dub-
lin, rendered celebrated by Mi-
chael MacLiammoir and Hilton
Edwards and the late Ford
Longford during a quarter of a
century, is the Gate, At each
performance, in one of the aisles
of tthe theater, a stout man,
wearing an old blue stilt (un -
pressed), and a tie that always
deemed to be slipping down his
!hint, used to stand with a col-
lecting box.
This was the Earl of Longford
himself. He was not, as ignor-
ant visitors might have thought,
making a collection on behalf
of his family (he really had no
What Do You Know
About
NORTHWEST AFRICA?
MAURITANIA
FED UP — These children got a little fed up on these witches mixing their respective brew
at a candy factory. Halloween would bring on a new appetite however.
need to do this, because friends
have calculated that his private
income was not far short of
£ 1,000 ($2,800) a week), He was
raking in odd sixpences on be-
half of the theater, to which he
devoted his life, writes Harold
Hobson in the Christian Science
Monitor.
IIis country home in Ireland
was Pakenham Hall, and, as I
say, I decided to go and have a
look at this enormous house,
with its 83 bedrooms, I prudent-
ly asked for an estimate before
setting out, and was told (I
think) :L'9, Anyhow, when I got
back the taxi clock registered
£2 more than the estimate, But
the driver took only £9. He
had fought with the British
Array in two wars; he felt that
in refusing to allow the British
the use of Irish ports against the
Germans — i refusal which cost
the British many lives -- Ire-
land had betrayed Britain, (Ire-
land, it should be remembered,
is much nearer to London than
Cuba is to New York; and Brl-
etafn was engaged in a life -and -
death struggle, But Britain
never asked for firm measures
against Ireland, even so,)
This driver, unlike the first,
thought that the fault was Ire-
land's, So I concluded that he
refrained from taking the money
due to hien for the sheer plea-
sure of talking to English peo-
ple.
But on my latest visit I have
been forced to the conclusion
that politics had nothing to do
with the action of these taxi dri-
vers, An American travel agent
has just said that the true at-
traction of Ireland is not Dub-
lin's 18th -century squares, fine
though these are, nor Irish but-
ter and haat, nor Killarney, but
simply the charm of the Iridh
people. To this I would add their
uncomniercialism. I have no
feeling here that tourists are
looked on as fair prey. The im-
pression that the traveller has
in other countries, that everyone
has an eye on his pocketbook,
is in Ireland totally absent. Irish
people are friendly, without ap-
parently any expectation of eco-
nomic gain. It really is a very
remarkable thing.
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. Upon being introduced to
Miss Carter for the second time,
15 1t proper to say, "I know Miss
Carter?"
A. This would seem to sound
as if it were too much trouble
to make a second acknowledge-
ment. Much better to say, "I
have already had the pleasure of
meeting Miss Carter."
TABLE TALKS
Jam Anarews.
1t': the little things that count,
so the adage goes, and this
sometimes seems more true in
the cooking field than in any
other. It's the sugar and spice
that make cookies "nice"; it's the
colorful garnishes that make
dishes appear tempting; it's the
menu planning that makes meals
satisfying; and, for some people,
it's the hot bread at dinner that
makes the meal perfect.
Many homemakers feel that
they must have bread on the
table at every meal, others will
not serve it if potatoes or rice
is on the menu, believing that
one starch is enough. If you be-
long to the first group, you no
doubt serve hot bread as an oc-
casional treat, To be a real treat
this must be served oozing with
butter and topped with jelly or
jam; this makes it the ultimate
in treats, some people contend.
* *
Speaking of bread and of
treats, what has ever become of
the bread -and -butter -and -sugar
after-school treat that has been
described by grandmothers as
one of their most happifying
childhood - memories? "Home
made bread, buttered thick and
to the edges, then covered with
as much sugar as the butter
would hold," the way this has
been described by one who used
to enjoy it daily, It was no trou-
ble to fix because all the ingre-
dients were right at hand. I think
It's about time this wholesome
snack came back into the lives
of our little ones!
* M
A reader once asked me:
"What temperature is luke-
warm?", writes Eleanor Richey
Johnston in the Christian Sci-
ence Monitor,
I looked this up in Webster's
Unabridged Dictionary and this
is what he says, "Lukewarm:
Moderately warm; neither cold
nor hot; tepid; ..." It is not nec-
essary to be exact to the hun-
dreth degree in this matter --
simply neither hot nor cold will
do when dissolving or softening
yeast.
* *
"FIere is our favorite recipe
for rolls; it is quick and just the
thing for the busy homemaker,"
writes Jean F. Swinney, "No
kneading is required, and it is
only necessary to rise once. I
have kept this dough in the refri-
gerator for as long as three
weeks, using small r.mounts as
we needed tolls for a meal,"
FISH STORY — French-Canadian fishermen caught these codfish on hook end Zine WITH•
OUT buit during the biggest run in 10 years off the Gaspe Pereinsulk Schools t"ere s) t irk
that the fish sn' pped est just the shiny hooks Here are three tors c t cod dr, irg on r.:c,s
near Madeleine Quebec. Each of the fish weighed about eight pounds
YEAST CRESCENTS
4 cups flour
!fi cup sugar
teaspoon salt
1 package dry yeast
! i cup warm water
pound (1 cup) melted butter
1 cup commercial sour cream
2 eggs, slightly beaten
Sift flour, sugar, and salt to-
gether. Soften yeast in warm
water and add to butter, eggs,
and sour cream, which have been
mixed. Add liquid mixture to
flour mixture and stir until
dough leaves side of bowl. Cover
and put in refrigerator overnight.
Divide dough in 4 equal parts.
Roll each portion, round like a
pie about 1/4 inch thick, Cut in
pie -shaped wedges, 12 to 18
wedges per circle, Spread melt-
ed butter over each wedge. Roll
up, butter side in, beginning with
small end and rolling toward
top; place in lightly greased pan.
Let rise for about 11/2 hours.
Bake at 375°F. until golden
brown. (Note: I sometimes
sprinkle sugar and cinnamon and
raisins or nuts over part of the
dough after spreading it with
melted butter, just before it
rises.)
Does anybody remember the
old-fashioned egg biscuits? Mrs,
Olive Armstrong sent in a recipe
for these, writing, "These biscuits
are delicious!"
EGG BISCUI'T'S
2 cups flour
3 teaspoons double-acting
baking powder
',z teaspoons salt
1 tablespoon nsugar (optional)
1 egg, weil beaten
2 tablespoonns shortening,
melted
IA cup water
Sift together the flour, baking
powder, salt, and sugar; add
well -beaten egg and melted
shortening to water and add this
to the dry ingredients to make
a soft dough. Roll out on flour -
"ed board to 1 -inch thickness;
cut with biscuit cutter. Bake 25
minutes in a 350° F. to 400° F
oven.
* M *
Want a recipe for scones to
serve as an afternoon snack with
a hot beverage? "Delicious when
served slightly warm," writes
Mrs. Winifred B. King, who sent
the following recipe.
SCONES
2 eggs, beaten until light
3 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons sugar
2 cups sifted flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
IA cup milk
Sift dry ingredients together;
cut in the butter. Beat eggs until
light and add milk. Fold lightly
and slowly the dry ingredients
into the egg -milk mixture. Roll
very thin and cut into 3x3 -inch
Nunes, Brush with melted but-
ter and foIcl over into triangles,
Bake 25 minutes at 375° F.
When baked, open the fold and
place jelly on lower half of
triangle and fold back top again.
The following recipe is for a
long -keeping Ginger Parkin. It.
should not be eaten when first
made, but it's superb in a few
clays time, and will especially
appeal to readers with an 110g-
lish backward.
GiNGEIt PARKIN
le pound self -rising (lour
r„ pound fire oatmeal
la pound Demerara sugar
le teaspoon ground ginger
le teaspoon hic;trbonate of soda
10 ounces golden syrup
4 ounces lard
1.2 cup milk
:Melt lard, syrup, sugar. Mix
in di y ingredients. Add milk.
Bake one hour in moderate oven
in tin lined with waxed papers.
When baked, leave in tin. If
needed qu;ckly, place in contain-
er tt ith a elide of fresh bread or
half an a_)ple, where, to use a
Derbyshire term, the parkin
"canes n';:rin" in about 12 hours.
Thi: '::':;.in iteep.;, in a tin, in -
tic; in itc;y,
They Bless His Name
—And Small Wonder;
In the villages near the town
of Mangalore on India's western
coast, drunsbeats sounded a joy-
ous message. They announced
the arrival of k.tnuu
11,tolla anna
"Otir brothel' who eye-
sight." Soon, to /.laAgolorc's brick
school building, 1)r. M11i'O plre
Chennaveerapprt Morii turned a
meeting hall into an operating
(oom, anrd classroom', into hospi-
tal wards, 13y foot and by bul-
lock cart, 15,000 villagers visited
the 43 -year-old surgeon's temp-
porary clinic last month and
more than 500 underwentlir-
gory,
In India, where 6 million per-
sons are sightless, largely as a
result of poverty and lack of me-
dical care, eye surgeons are in
great demand. During twenty
years of running free treatment
clinics throughout Southern In-
dia, Dr. Modi himself has won
the ultimate acclaim: To many
villagers he is an avatar, or "in-
carnation of God." But the mod-
est, slightly built surgeon is
humble: "My patients are my
God, the operating room my tem-
ple, and my surgical instruments
my sacred bell,"
Dr, Modi's assault on India's
massive blindness problem began
in 1943, shortly after he comple-
ted surgical training in a Bom-
bay eye hospital, Shocked - that
many patients were forced to
sell their daughters' dowries or
their cattle to reach his clinic, he
• gave up his own private practice
to start a "Touring Free Eye
Hospital," with headquarters in
the Mysore town of Davangerc.
Loading his instruments on
oxcarts, bicycles, or elephants
and, more recently, a $12,000
mobile van donated by CARE),
Dr. Modi has traveled the south-
ern coast of India, treated more
than 2 million patients and op-
erated on more than 100,000.
His clinics, each of which lasts
fifteen days, are usually conduct-
ed in towns having a modern
school building. On the first day,
Dr, Modi examines patients and
hangs colored cloth tags around
their necks to indicate the type
of treatment they will receive—
eye drops, eye -glasses, or sur-
gery, Most surgical cases 'are
treated for eye -clouding catar-
ac ts.
Then Dr, Mode's massive oper-
ating schedule, a marvel of deft
handiwork cembined iwith team-
work, begins. One assistant lines
eep Six patients and administers a
local anesthetic; another trims
their eyelashes; a Third prepares
then: for surgea;v 00 •ix tables
with sterile drapes, 1"1 nkLd by
three other Ma,- 'KC! and g+,/", nt•d
:11-1.'1 51/11'08, Dr, Modi move'• 1 the
first table and carefully Lr.:ilis
the minute liaenit nts n j!dir._ the
mi-ty diseased liens in the r 11-
ent's etc. ltetnoving he
quickly stiteeao the eec e 1 .n,
white packet balk ,n pla'v ,.nd
marcs on. Each i.or.: a1 en
just 50 seconds. Ur. :.Jodi': i .-
cord for operations O 1'10rmed in
a sir:glc day: 7:15 relict -its, For
the rem,ainine cea.e; of thin caned,
he
watches eel r the recovery of
his surgical piitlent- and bre-
scribe; for the ,hc,usandz. of ad-
ditional patients wric,e
lest seriously af:lictc :1.
State and keit h' Ill, d.: t-
ment:,--as well as wealthy citi-
zens in the tcr,vns- ,rheic Dr.
Modi's clinics are held--:)ro'.;de
food and lodging for hi: pale s1ts.
Dr. Modi charges no !cc
During each year's, three-r:::.nth
monsoon season, Dr. Moth tr-:cels
abroad to study new techmirenes
in eye surgery, W icr: L:1 he
goes. he is recognizrdl a- :.1.1 of
the e.orid'.; ieacine ceeene r:,eio-
gists. For his own part. the
titudc of his patient is re g-
ition enough. One, e 11i-yt rn -old
Kerala giri cahoot he 1reeted for
strabismus (squint t-reeH s,eid: ''1
used to bend 107 head whenever
1 was paraded belorc a pro: pce-
tive mother-in-law. New I can
face them with coure e."
—From NE\CSW EF,K
11'IiA'1' HAPPENED) '1'0
LOVE?
There once was 0 time n'iren
most successful pop tunes includ-
ed in their titles at least one ro-
mantic catchword — "love," per-
haps, or "heart" or "stars" or
"moon" or 'sky." Not any more.
Among the top titles on Variety's
list of best-selling singles this
week: 'Monster Mash" (No. 2),
"Green Onions" (No. 3), "Alley
Cat" (No. 10), "Limbo Rock"
(No. 12), and "Surfln Safari"
(No. 15). The word "heart," in
fact, appears only twice in the
entire top 50 tunes, "love" only
three times. •
r
ISSUE 45 — 1062
Fashion Hint
Mink Paws
PAGE 4 ~'
THE lLY'I'll STANDARD
Wednesday, Nov, 7, 11102
STOCK UP FOR WINTER NOW, With
Snowsuits and Pram Suits, 1 and 2 pee, washable
nylon.
Girls' and Ladies' Car Coats, sizes l to 20, in suede,
corduroy and laminate.
Boys' Jackets in wools and nylon.
"Ladybird" Thermal Sleepers, dommed with plas-
tic feet.
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
A Real Treat!
READY -'I'0 -COOK
RABBIT FRYERS
NOW AVAILABLE IN BLYTH DISTRICT
McCALLUM'S MEAT MARKET
QUEEN STREET — BLYTH — Phone 10
This new, exciting meat is raised and prepared by the
Huron Rabbit Breeders Association
It's different . . it's all white meat . , only 8 percent hone ,
high in protein but low in calorics . .. TRY SOME TODAY,
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.
1 Clinton Memorial Shop
4
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH
Open Eery Afternoon
PHONE HU 24712
Local Representative — A, W. Steep — HU 2-6642
Phone Exeter: Business 41; Residence 34,
FULL COURSE MEALS
LIGHT LUNCHES
Available At Any Time
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
10% Discount
SA'LE =
STORE
WIDE (HOKE••
. JUST IN TIME
FOR YOUR FALL NEEDS.
BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY AND SAVE
SALE CONTINUING
Your 5 percent Sales Slips aie redeemable at any
time, up to and including $100.00 worth or less,
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211 ! BLYTH, ONT.
Walton News
Miss Ruth Walters, of Kitchener,
spent the week -end with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Walters,
Mr. and Abs. Bert Loveridge anu
AL, of West Hill, and Mr. and MN.
Ronald Ennis, of Hamilton, were Sun
day visitors at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Ennis.
Miss Ellen E. Love returned to the
home of Mrs. W. A. Campbell st
Ariss, after spending the past few
months at the hone of her nephew,
George Love.
The second meeting of "One Hun
dreml and forlythree lbs. of Meat" was
held last Monday night at the han►c
of Airs, \Vilbur 'Turnbull with twenty•
one ladies present. '1'I►e care of nkat
and the cuts of beef, veal, pork and
1an►b %vere discussed, Ground meat
was used in making various dishes
which were afterwards sampled.
The October meeting of the McKil
lop Unit was held at the home of
Mrs. David Watson with twenty-five
ladies present. Mrs, Jack Busman
presided,
presided, opening with hymn 15, "Flo
the Beauty of the Earth," after which
Mrs. George Love led in prayer, '1'he
scripture lesson was read by Mrs,
Norman Schade from psalm 106 vers
es 1.12, Mrs, Stewart McCall was in
charge of the topic from the study
book "Signals for the Sixties," when
the last chapter was studied, AI's
Gordon 11cGavin, Mrs. 'Phos, flack.
well and Airs, Wm, Dennis were ap.
pointed for the nomination committee.
Plans were made for the fowl sup.
per Wednesday, November 7. Hymn
445, "All the way My Saviour leads
Me," was sung as the closing hymn
and prayer was offered. A delicious
lunch %vas solved by All's. Andrew
Coutts, Mrs. E. McCreath and the
hostess, A successful bazaar and
bake sale was held following the
meeting.
Shower Held Saturday:-
\1rs, Don Dcl10n, the former Jean
\Vi, of hn, vas
honourllersata miscellKitceaerneowas
shoguestwer 111of
the Community Hall, Walton, last
Saturday evening. Mrs, 11. Achilles
was mistress of ceremonies for the
evening and presided over the fol•
lowing program: duet, Gail Traviss
and Sharon Marks; accordion solo
Geraldine Dennis; duel, Nellie Baan
and Cheryl Craig; piano solo, Mary
13ewley; dance, Janet Turnbull) Mary
Helen Buchanan and Linda 13ryans;
piano solo, Glenna Houston; treading
Mrs, Clarence Martin; skit, Mrs. \Val
frcd Short'ecd, Mrs. N. Marks, Mrs
G. Watson, Mrs, Allan A1cCal1 and
Mrs, W. Bewley; musical contest
Aileen \Villianison. Following the
program, Miss Jean Shorteed read
a congratulatory address and a num-
ber of her former school mates pre.
seated the gifts, Jean replied, thank
ing all for the lovely gills received
and those responsible for the even
ing. Miss Aileen Achilles had charge
nI the guest book at the door. A
dainty lunch was served.
Mr, Norman Love and Mr. M. Nich.
olas, Of Milestone, Sask.,. visited al
the home of Mr, and Mrs, George
Love recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Prank Dundas and
family, of Toronto, were week-eno
guests with the forn%cr's patents, Mr
and Mrs, George Dundas.
McCALLUM'S MEAT
MARKET
SPECIAL FEATURES
Kitchener Packer \Veincrs per Ib. 39c
Lean Smoked Kitchener Packers Picnic Hams,
per Ib. 49c
No, 1 Bacon per lb, 55e
Phone 10
For Delivery,
CARD OF TIIANKS
I wish to thank all those who ►'e
membered me with flowers, treats
and good wishes while a patient. 111
Victoria hospital, London, and \1' ing.
ham uospital,
Albert Walsh.
3•l-1 p
CARD OF THANKS
To all the kind friends who re-
membered us with cards, letters and
CARD OF THANKS
Sincere thanks to all who helped
In make 0111• reception a success, al-
though tunable to attend,
Cecile and Jerry Cole.
31.1p.
visits and especially the Eastern Star
for flowers and cards, in our recent
bereavement. 'Thank you,
Merle and Maitland Henry,
34.1
MEN'S READY-TO-WEAR
— 2 PANT SUITS —
in the Mutest Cheeks of Green, Blue and lii'own
size 36 to 46$.36,0(1 to $39,95
MADE -TO -MEASURE SUI'T'S
BY HOUSE OF STONE
(2 vveek delivery)
R. W. 1SladilI's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Good Manners"
Si - $1oO STORE, BLYTH
SILICONE IRONING • PLASTIC MIXING
BOARD COVER BOWLS (3 in set)
88c 88c
SQUARE PLASTIC PLAS'T'IC PAPER
DISH PANS TOWEL hIOLDERS
88c 88c
SEAL -TON PLASTIC I BOYS' STOCKING
BABY PANTS SPONGE SOLE
88c 2 pair for 88c
CHOPPING
BOARDS
S8c
'METAL or PLASTIC
WASTE BASKETS
88c
HOW MANY WENT TO A BANK FIRST?
Probably most of them/Experienced travellers have learned that a chartered
bank can add greatly to the enjoyment and contentment of travelling.
Here you can get answers to currency questions, leave valuables in
safekeeping, obtain letters of introduction. Travellers Cheques are ideal
for day-to-day expenses. For larger sums, you may prefer a Letter of Credit;
or arrange to have funds forwarded to you/A chartered bank has many
ways of caring for your travel needs. See your local bank before you go
THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY
iVednesi1uy, Nov. 7, 1962 THE MATH. STANDARD
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
1/V.M"W. N..W v1iV..VV,.V,I,iV V.ev�N�M!•
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability, Life.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
BLYTII BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
THE WEST WAWANOSII MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Dungannon.
Established 1878
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brown Suiyth, Dungan-
non; Vice -President, 1le'son Irwin,
Belgrave. Directors: Pant Caesar, I(.IL
1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan,
Goderich; Ross McPhee, R.R. 3, Au.
burn: Donald P. MacKay, Ripley, R.R.
1; John F, MacLennan, It,R.. 3, Godc•
rich; Allan Macintyre, Lucknow, R.II.
5; Wm. Wiggins, RR. 3, Auburn.
For information on your insurance,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or bhe secretary, Frank F.
Thompson, Dungannon. „414,,44~#,,4.4
SCOTCH PINE Citl(ISTMAS 'TREES
Every tree carefully selected. For
quality as well as lowest price order
direct from Georgian Bay Tree Farms,
Owen Sound. Phone Filanklin 6.0254.
33.4.
FOR SALE
Large Bronzelone kitchen set, table
extends to 04", eight chairs, one year
old, in excellent condition, Apply
Russell Cook, phone 254 Blyth, 33.3
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WILFREI) Mc1NTEE
Real Estate Broker
Walkerton, Ontario
200 acres in hast Wawanosh Town.
ship, 2 sets of buildings, 2 silos, hydro.
100 acres in Morris 'Township, good
buildings, hydro, 1 mile from Blyth.
100 acres in Hullett Township, good
brick house, hydro, barn.
97 acres near Auburn, 10 acres bush,
good buildings, drilled well.
27•tf.
VICTOR KENNEDY
Blyth, Ontario
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGiHEST CASiI PRICES
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Hoses At Cash Value
Old horses -4e per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels,
BRUCE MARLATT
OR
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth
24 Hour Service
Plant Licence No. 54•R.P.-61
Colector Licence No. 88•G61
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen
Sales, Varna. Tel, collect Hensel] 60682,
50.13p.tf,
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc. pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates. Louis
Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, MR, 2.
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance. Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No, 8 Highway. Phone JA 4.7231
Goderich, Ontario.
20.t(
ACHESON'S DEAL) STOCK SERVICE
Highest prices for dead, old or dis-
abled horses and cattle. Phone Atwood
316.2622 collect, Licence No. 156C62,
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,
lltf,
DR. R. W. STREET .
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HOURS-- 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
EVENINGS;
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
(13Y APPOINTMENT)
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
OODERICII, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 478.
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST. - WINGHAM,. ONT.
(For Appointment please phone 770
Winghaml.
Professional Eye Examination. ,
Optical Services,
CLINTON
SALE BARN
Sale every Friday at 1:30
(a good livestock market)
Bob Henry,
Joe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager. Auctioneer
05-tt.
ELLIOTT REAL ESTATE AGENCY
Gordon Elliott Broker
Blyth — Phone 104 or 140
Following Blyth Residential Property
11/2 storey frame, insul brick dwelling
and garage on good lot.
1 story dwelling with asbestos sid-
ing, complete Ixillt and shower, oil
furnace, aluminum windows, built-in
cupboards, Dinsley street.
J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaiorth, phone 791 -- Clinton
HOURS:
Beatorth Dally Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a,m. to 6:30 , p,m.
Wed. -- 9:00 a.m, to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 6:30.
Phone HU 2.7010
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
• Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICIi !3.11
FOR SALE
Table potatoes, will deliver. Apply,
Mason Bailey, phone 54115, Blyth.
32-4p
HOUSE FOR RENT
With all conveniences, centrally lo-
cated in Blyth, immediate possession.
Mrs. Wm. 111orritt, Blyth, 25.1
BLYTII LIONS CLUB
CASH BINGO
Blyth Memorial Hall
SATURDAY, NOV, 10
8:30 p.m, Standard Time
12 games for $5.00
2 Share -the -wealth
$60.00 Jackpot (60 calls)
Admission 50c - Extra cards
TOWNSiIIP 01'' HULLETT
CLERK'S NOTICE OF FIRST
POSTING OF VOTERS LIST 19112
Notice is hereby given that I have
complied with Section 0 of the Voters'
List Act and that I have posted up at
my Office at Lot 16, Concession 0.
Hullett 'Township, on the 22nd Day
of October, 1062, the List of all Per-
sons entitled to vote in the said Mun'
icipality at Municipal Elections, and
that such List remains there for in.
spection.
And I hereby call on all Voters to
take immediate proceedings to have
any errors or omissions corrected ac-
cording to Law. The last Day for op,
peals being the 15th Day of Novem-
ber, 1962.
HARRY F. TEBBUTT, Clerk,
Township of Mullett,
R.II, 1, Londesboro, Ont. 33-2
BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATOR
The Clinton District Collegiate Ins.
titute Board invites applications for
the position of Secretary -Treasurer
the Business Administrator. Know-
ledge of accounting, purchasing and
personnel management, preferable.
Duties to commence on or before
January 2, 1063 and applications to
be submitted by November 12, 1962
and marked accordingly,
Apply staling age, qualifications,
educational background and salary
expected to:
11. C. Lawson, Sec.-l'reas,.
Clinton, Ontario.
DOREEN'S
BEAUTY SHOPPE
SPECIAL ---
on Doreen's Personalized
SPRAY NET
11 oz, tin $1.00
Phone 260 for Appointment
WANTED
Experienced boiler man with elec
trical knowledge.. Apply MOrelattR.ttt
Bros., No. 4 highway construction,'
CRAWFORD &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS da SOLICITORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q.C. Q.C.
VrIn ham and Myth.
iN BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment,
Located in Elliott Insurance Mena,
£bone I31;yth, 104 Win ihira, 4`
easy work...
when
1 r T c �r'A � �° n X• .,r t
you
own
a
PIONEER
NU -17
The NU -17 k the only com-
pact chain saw. For a low
investment, this quality com-
pact will make easy work of
all your woodcutting chores.
See it today. A demonstra-
tion will prove its versatility
and simplicity of operation.
The compact NU-17—com•
piety with 12" attachments
$1590
PIONEER SAWS LTD.
PETERBOROUGH, CANADA
A ONOV°iQoIMMAii,� OMP t°:�.vx7+�n�•ori'k7iR@G i4 f.. an. , ' 'i' 't.4
DEAL DAYS SPECIAL
EXTENDED TO NOVEMBER 17th
This coupon is worth $10.00 k
on the purchase of any new k
Pioneer chain saw, Trade-ins ki
are accepted on this offer
which expires Nov, 17,1962,
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t K v..•.� M a �!Q.`.. \ a:a•:..•,.• . ti:.
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Snell Feed Mill•Blyth Ont.
MUM
PAGE
BAZAAR and TEA
Wednesday Afternoon,
NGJVEMBER 11th
at 3 1),111,
Sponsored by the
Londesboro W. 1.,
in the Community Mall
DRAW for Hostess Chair
and Christmas Cake
BAKE SALE
At corner room, Mrs. Daly's, Sat.
urday, November 10th at 3 p.m,, span•
saved by Sl. Michael's Church Ladies.
34-1
Huron County Council
NOVEMBER SESSION
'1'Ite Huron County Council will coot.
mence on Monday, November 10th
1962, at 10,00 a.m.
Notice of any documents or deputa.
tions must be in the hands of the
clerk no later than 12.00 noon, Fri-
day, November 16, 1062.
John G. Berry, ClcrkTreasurer,
County of Huron,
Court House,
Goderich, Ontario. 31.1
FOR SALE
Litter carrier and 200 ft. of track
also manure loader in good condition.
Apply Anton Passchicr, phone 521113
Illyt h. 34.1.
FOR SALE
Iiard and soft tops. Apply Wm
Wagner, R.R. 1, Auburn. 34 -Ip.
FOR SALE
Varnished extension table with 3
extra leaves. Apply Mrs, Bob Mc-
Clinchey, phone 120 Blyth. 34.1p.
FOR SALE
Boy's blue suburban coat with zip -
pe' closing, size 0 or 0; boy's dark
check sports jacket, size 10 or 11
both dry cleaned and priced reason.
able. Phone 1284, Blyth. 34.1p
TENDERS
FOR TRUCK
Scaled _'!'enders will be received by
the unddersigned for the 'Supplying of
Trucks for the Huron County Library
'Co -Operative,
Specifications may be secured from
the undersigned.
'!'enders to close 12:00 noon, Nov-
ember
ovember 10th, 1962.
Lowest or any tender not necessar-
ily accepted,
101111 G. Berry, Secretary,
Huron County Library,
Co-operative Board,
Box 640, Goderich, Ont. 34.1
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
APPLICATIONS
Applications will he received by the
Township of Hullett for the position
of Helper for the 'Township Snow
Plow Operator at a salary of $1.00
Per Ilour.
Applications are to be clearly nark-
ed on the envelope as to contents and
must be in the Clerk's Office not
later than November 16, 1062,
• HARRY F. TEBI3UTT; Clerk
IR. 1, Londesbro, Ont.
mosomonomillmillw
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS A'I' TBE
GODERICiI PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811
NOW PLAYING
Now PIaying—"I(IDE '1'111; HIGH COUN'i'ItY"—Color
with Randolph Scott and Joel McCrea
Mon., Tues., Wed., Nov. 12 • 13 • 14 — Memorable!
PAUI. NEWMAN and GEItALDINE PAGE
In a picture to enjoy and remember
ADMITTANCE
RESTRICTED'
TO PERSONS
11 WS Of AGE OR OVER
"SWEET BIRD
of
YOU'I'I1"
Scope and Color
Thur., Fri„ Sat., Nov. 15 • 16 • 17 — Double Bill
"'1'11E THREE STOOGES iN OBlu 1"'
with Carol Christenson •'
Plus:. Frank I.atifore and Alex Nicol In
"THEN THERE WERE THREE"
Coning—"THE INTERNS" — Adult Entertainment
You Will Never Outgrow
The Need For Milk
IN THE EVENING OR BEFORE GOING TO BED
Blyth Dairy can supply you with the Best
'" Cream Top
* Homogenized
* Skim Mille
* Chocolate Milk
* Whipping Cream
* Table Cream
* Cottage Cheese
We Try To Produce a Good Product for your Health
REMEMBRANCE
DAY SERVICE
WILL BE HELD ON
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1962
AS FOLLOWS: -
Legion and Auxiliary Members of Blyth ;Branch
No, 420, Royal Canadian Legion and visiting Le-
g•ionaires, are asked to report at the Legion Home,
10:40 a,nl. Standard Bearers report to Comrade
H. Gibbons 10:30 aan,, sharp. Berets and Medals.
Parade stove off at 10:10 a.nt., parade to Blyth
Memorial Hall where the ceremony of Laying
Wreaths will be conducted by Legion Padre, Rev.
Robert Meally.
After the sounding of Reveille, the parade Will re-
form and march to Blyth United Church where a
Community Service will be conducted by the Legion
Padre, Rev. R. Meally, and Rev. R. Evan McLagan,
minister of United Church, Blyth.
The citizens of Blyth and surrounding locality are
asked to accept this intimation.
"Lest Lest We Forget"
-A•V-E X11.00
FARMERS! Again this year we are holding our Annual TO---PNOTCH FEEDS DAIRY MONTH
NOVEMBER 1 TO NOVEMBER 30
This is ylour chance to buy Top Quality, Energy -Balanced Cattle Feeds at Special
Savings !
Plan your Winter feeding programme now and make extra profits this year on all
Dairy and Beef Feeds by saving $11.00 per ton on every ton bought in Dairy Month.
*MORE PROFIT
• BETTER GAINS
ALL CAT'T'LE FEEDS ARE REDUCED 'OFF CARD PRICE
(Regula' Retail Price)
$5,00 per Ton Dairy Month Discount. $5.0() per Ton Bulk Discount..
$1.00 per Ton Pick-up Allowance at Mill. $11.00 SAVINGS TO YOU !
ENQUIRE AND BOOK YOUR ORDERS NOW !
Take delivery before November 30th
III
TOPNOTCH FEEDS
BRUSSELS
"THE MOST VALUE Font THE FARMER'S DOLLAR"
PIIONE 199
Conquered Cannibals
With An Umbrella
Tall, handsome, muscular, with
granite -hard jaw and steel -blue
eyes ... That's the sort of nten-
tal picture some people conjure
up when thinking of those dar-
ing men who explored and open-
ed up the Continent of Africa.
But did yon know th:a1 it took
a Victorian spinster to face up
to this sinister c,:uiery of savage
tribes and teeming animal life—
and to like what she saw?
While the !nen refused to lin-
ger, Mary Kingsley faced the
constant threat of death at the
hands of cannibals, And her only
Weapon was an umbrella!
Miss Kingsley, the etntenary
of whose birth I'eil last month
went to West Africa in 111113
straight f in her Kensington
home.
She didn't even stop to chaotic
her thick black clothes, which
consisted of an ankle -length
skirt, lona-!eeved, high necked
blouse, and a little black mole-
skin hat tied under her earn by
wide ritbons.
During her two visits 10 West
Africa, Mary faced so many
dangers that her escapes from
death were little short of mira-
culous. She penetrated far into
the Congo, where no whites had
dared go, and mixed with the
fierce Fan tribes — notorious
cannibals.
To contact them she posed as
aA trader, and persuaded some
ivory hunters to canoe her many
utiles up river to the tribes'
haunts.
As they neared their destina-
tion, they heard blood -curdling
yells and saw a native brandish-
ing what they took to be an ele-
phant tusk. When they got near-
er they saw it was a human leg!
Undaunted, Mary entered the
cannibal village, and the canoe
went on without her. That night
a huge hippo ran riot, crashing
the native huts in all directions,
and wrecking Mary's with the
rest.
Worse followed, for the canoe
took so long to return that she
ran out cf trading goods, and
remembered that Fans thought
nothing of killing empty-handed
traders to regain possession of
their barter ready for next time.
So she was obliged to dispose
of her blouse, which looked co-
mical worn by savage warriors
alongside red paint and bunches
of leopard tails.
Her stockings, too, were popu-
lar stuck capwvise on the head,
and Mary :had nothing left but
a toothbrush when the canoe ap-
peared, and she was saved.
On the return journey, with
no goods to barter, they had to
hide by day, and travel silently
by night. For any non - trader
risked death. To approach a vil-
lage on foot meant danger from
the swarming forest animal life.
But there were other hazards,
as Mary discovered o n e day
when she fell fifteen feet into
a spiked pit.
Only her thick skirt saved her
from serious injury, and she was
able to enter the village the pit
was protecting.
There she was well received
by the chief and. worn -out by
adventure, she was preparing
for sleep when she noticed some
bags hanging on her hut wall.
Taking one down, she peeped in-
side and, to her horror, saw it
contained a hand, toes, and other
bits of body.
Later she learned that canni-
bals like to keep mementoes of
peole they eat!
One day Mary disturbed a
group of natives wearing extra-
ordinary headdresses, and, fear-
ing them to be a secret society
practising black magic, she tried
to creep away. For no intruder
BRIGHT HOPE — Actress
Catharine Spook, teen - age
• niece of NATO Secretory -Gen-
eral Paul -Henri Spook, won
an owurd for being "the most
promisirty starlet' of a film
festival het din Rome, Italy.
int: eros;ting steal rite, aver le es
to tell the tale.
The pad of feet behind her
told Mary she was discovered,
and she was made to return i1'
the group which set off through
the forest taking her with them,
writes Francis Col!ingwood in
"Tit -Bits."
Presently all stttlatied dow11
under sense trees, and were re-
warded by monkeys dropping
down among them to be picked
i1 off by native arrows.
Then i\lary understood what
the exercise was about. Those
tribesmen had decked them-
selves out to attract inquisitive
monkeys down from the trees,
and thinking Mary the queerest
objeet they had ever seen, they
rightly judged her to he excel-
lent monkey bait!
To others her appearance
brought terror, as when two
magnificent ww'grriors, covered in
war paint, with four spears each,
saw her approaching the village
they were guarding, they fled in
terror to their huts, where they
evidently told "mother" what
they had seen. For it was a little
old tvontan who came bravely
out to parley.
Later, those same warriors
proved their courage by defend-
ing Mary against a charging gor-
illa!
One native thought she looked
so entertaining that he grabbed
at her canoe intending to use
her as a curiosity to amuse his
friends. But she soon ended his
hopes by sharply rapping his
knuckles with her paddle,
1\Iary treated all ferocious
animals with the same consider-
ation she used for cannibals, But
not all were so friendly as the
hippo she tickled behind the ear
with her umbrella in a success-
ful bid to make hint go away
She had several alarming
brushes with leopards. Once,
while staying in a native village,
she was awakened by a violent
uproar, and arose' to interrupt a
ferocious fight between a leo-
pard and a boar -hound.
With two well -aimed stools
she broke it up, only to face an
enraged leopard poised to spring.
Flinging a water -cooler at him,
she fetched him such a crack on
the head that he was thankful to
slink away.
In another village, she was so
disturbed by the howls of a cap-
tured leopard that she decided
to release it. As she pulled up
the stakes to which it was bound,
the frenzied animal made furi-
ous rushes at her, ripping her
dress.
Undeterred, ,t/1 a r y continued,
expecting it to dash away when
free. Instead it crept closer to
her, snarling and spitting. Even
at this terrible moment Mary's
commonsense did not forsake
her.
Standing her ground, she
shouted angrily: "Go home, you
fool!" And the leopard obeyed
her!
Instantly a native prostrated
himself at her feet — he had
watched the incident from the
safety of a tree.
At the outbreak ca' the Boer
War, Mary Kingsley volunteered
for work at the front, end was
drafted to a prisoner -of -war
camp at the Cape. 'There, l'or
two months, she nursed Boer
prisoners amid swarming bugs
and the stench of rotting bodies.
She, who had been strong
enough to withstand countless
dangers in West Africa, now
succumbed to enteric fever and
died. She was only thirty-eieht.
According to her wish she was
buried at sea, the coffin on a
gun -carriage escorted to a war-
ship by soldiers. It was a pom-
pous way to bury her, and quite
out of keeping for one whose
only weapon had been an um-
bretl a.
A Sharp Tongue
Says Farewell
Advised that he will be drop-
ped after 1903 as an Oxford Uni-
versity lecturer, A. J, P. Taylor,
a self -described "veritable ty-
rant" whose television appear-
ances and articles have bruised
many a political and academic
ego, mildly began his valedic-
tory series of lectures saying, "I
want to give you my reflections
on the nature of history, as (his
will be my last opportunity to
do so." Why had Oxford failed
to renew the special lectureship
he'd held for ten years? Not the
least of reasons was his sharp
tongue. Some samples: Describ-
ing Sir Winston Churchill — "a
pigheaded old man"; on Roman
Catholics -- "in the service of a
foreign power"; on rival Oxford
history professor Hugh Trevor -
Roper — "his methods of quota-
tion might do harm to his repu-
tation as a serious historian, if
he had one." Taylor probably
will remain as a Fellow of Mag-
dalen College, if not required
to teach full time. But if worst
comes to worst, "I think I can
gamble on making a living else-
where," he said.
ISSUE 45 — 1962
THAT'S THE RUB — It seems French actress Michelle Mer-
cier prefers the cold nose of u giant dinosaur to rub noses
with It all happened in a moment of jest at the Zoo Museum
in Rome, Italy. Anyway, dino seems to like it:
Women's Hair -Do's
Get Even Crazier
In an ornate ballroom at New
York's I'Iotel Pierre last month,
a dapper, precise man made deft
passes with a tortoise -shell comb.
Clutching a fistful of hairpins,
Alexandre, France's famous coif-
feur, quickly transformed a
model's cropped black hair into
a towering construction laced
with orange blossoms and yards
of tulle. The whole process took
only seven minutes — and three
coils of additional hair. At the
end, the applause from the
knowledgeable audience — mem-
bers of the Pan-American Con-
gress of t h e Internationale des
Coiffeurs de Dames — was long
and loud.
During a h:df-hour display of
skyscraping now hair styles,
Alexancirc's gir,s modeled ccif-
fures tht t rac_-•cd front a ,sur-
realistic brioche to a foot -high
number tep; cd by an a •.gein.y
loop like the handle el' a Mar-
tini pilcher. "Revolution, c'esl
non principe1" cried Alexandre,
who was visiting the U.S, as a
guest of the coiffeurs' congress.
After tile ::tow, Alexandre
kicked off his black silk pumps
and collapsed on his bed in a
hotel room littered wwi,h cham-
pagne bottles, wigs, and tufts cf
newly shorn hair. The typical
American woman, he announced,
is too sluggish about changing
her hair style. "She gees to her
first ball and to her marriage in
the same coiffure," he cemph fin-
ed. "I would like the American
women to have more faith in
their coiffeurs." They seem to
have faith in Alexandre — at
least when they go abroad.
Although the high-rise hair -do
still has a long way to go to
match the popularity cf an ear-
lier Alexandre specialty, the
beehive, one look at last month's
opening -night audience at the
Metropolitan Opera season made
the trend clear: The prevailing
coiffure theme was onward and
upward fcr off - duty sopranos
like Roberta Peters as well as
the non-professionals.
For all their splendour, how-
ever, the new tall coiffures have
already antagonized theatregoers
who would rather see past them
than look at them. Since the
opening of the Broadway season,
the drama pages of The New
York Times have been a plat-
form for such critics. "A gentle-
man," wrote one theatregoer,
"cannot ask a lady to let her
hair down in public . . . Can't
some hairdresser design a lady's
coiffeur (sic) especially for at-
tending the theatre?" A lady re-
cently marooned behind two big
hair -do's side by side was in
favour of a more direct ap-
proach. "I was ready," she wrote
testily, "to stand up and shout,
'Off with their heads!'"
But the n e w high style
sometimes has its advantages in
the theatre. At the Broadway
premiere of a woeful play called
"Stop on a Crack," The N e w
York herald 'Tribune's critic
spotted a woman in the audi-
ence "with one of those cotton-
ct'ndy coiffures."' Kerr asked
himself: "How does she expect
ar:yone to see?" In his review he
ac'mittecl: "I took it all back, 1
wished ere was sitting in front
of me." ---
Mesar -Deafness
Hasn't Stopped Her
Just before opening in Irving
Berlin's new musical, "Mr. Pres-
ident," star Nanette Fabray men-
ti ..... 1'.'a; she could barely hear
the . ., wil;iout a hearing aid
concealed under her chestnut
hair, The bouncy, 40 -year-old
soubrette told of her nearly total
deafness since childhood while
visiting a class of deaf students
at Gallaudet College, Washing-
ton, D.C. "We're in the same
boat," she told then, "but re-
member—you can be anything
you want to be," When the story
of tier handicap reached the
press, Miss Fabray laughed it off:
"I've never made any secret of
the fact that my hearing is handi-
capped," she said. "I've talked
about it for years and I've visited
a lot of schools,
Russians Proud
And Tighten Belts
Vtinya was a had bey %vk„
would not learn hie lessons, One
clay his teacher scolded hint, and
Varve ran away to hide, Ile hid
in a Soviet spaceship, altd what.
do you think happened? Whoosh!
The rocket took oft and there
was Vanya inside, ratable to con-
trol the rocket because he could
not read the instrument panel.
Vanya thought and thought, and
pushed button after button, The
rocket veered first toward Mars,
theft toward Venus. \Tanya cried.
Finally, as if in a dreamt. he re-
membered his teacher drawing
the earth symbol on the black-
board. He pushed the right but-
ton, returned to earth, and is
now the best. student in his class.
So :'tau a current television
prvgrioit for Muscovite moppets,
reports News -week's Whitman
Bassow, and, indeed, if you walk
down almost any street in Mos-
cow you find yourself in a curi-
ous kind of SpuIniklaltd, Toy -
shop windows display blue and
yellow celluloid spacemen dolls
and parcheesi-like games whose
prizes are imaginary trips to
Mars and Venus. A stationery
shop sells gleaming chrome sput-
nik paperweights, and picture
buttons of all four Russian astro-
nauts. From a rickety wooden
fence that shields some equally
rickety shanties, glows a flaming
red and orange poster: It shows
a cosmonaut of heroic mien, his
helmet emblazoned with the Cy-
rillic initials for U.S.S.R, and a
caption that proclaims: "Gloey to
the Soviet People!" Within hours
after Nikolayev lifted into orbit,
Moscow TV exhibited four tou-
sle -haired poets who declaimed
their latest verses—on the new
astronaut.
The Space Age has also inspir-
ed and provided a cover of sorts
for a small group of younger
painters who have been working
clandestinely in abstract style.
Working now in th@ open, they
are painting what they call "com-
mie art." This consists 0f °blotto,
reclangles, jagged shapes "which
do not exist on earth, but only
in space and on other planets,"
ono painter explained.
lfow far the party's cultural
watchdogs will permit this trend
to go remains to be seen; but
as another painter speculates,
"Gagarin in the long run may do
more for Soviet art than Pi-
casso."
Undoubtedly the greatest int -
peel has boon on the younger
generation, but 0 national feeling
of pride makes it easier for many
Russians to accept the : acrifices
they are ntakine to stay ahead in
the space race,
As one thoughtful architect
said: "Of course, the sputniks
haven't att'crtecl my persnnal 1111'
directly, noir that tf my family.
We have been living in this same
11)otll for nine years. We still
share 0 bath with four other
famil;Iy wile ,til waits o
line for'ies. nt\_at, apple:., and melons,n
But," he added with a quick
gesture, "this is not important.
What is i,oportant 1s that we
have been able to send tolls' :nen
around the earth. .tad they' have
come back, This is a great ac-
hievement."
"Listen to hint talk," snorts his
wife, a snot's energetic woman
who works in a hat sere, "He
can wait, but 1-1 cannot! I want
nt,y own apartment, my own
kitchen—alai my awn hathreom.
It's important to nke care of
things on earth — they are bad
enough, When everything is ar-
ranged Ileac, then we can worry
about Venus,"
This kind of domestic squab-
ble sums up prevailing altitudes.
"Vot nashe myaso!" ('There's Oto'
meat!) says a young taxi driver,
sarcastically thrusting his thumb
skyward as he rolls his cab clown
Herzen Street.
In short, the Russian people
know the space race means belt -
tightening,
WARTIME TOGETHERNESS — Oscar -winning Simone Sig-
noret and Stuart Whitman embrace in a scene from their
new film, "Today We Live." Whitman plays the role of an
airman shot down over France, Simone that of a French-
woman who harbors and protects him with her love.
A QUEEN OVER BEAUTY — The RCAF's Yukon, Queen of Air Transport Command, pictured here over Niagara Falls,
will star in a combined Army -Air Force operation this year with the rotation of the 4th Canadian Infantry Brigade Group
from Canuda to Europe Yukons of 437 "Husky" Squadron at Trenton, Ont., will airlift 2,700 army personnel to Dussel-
dorf, Germany, with a similar number being returned to Canada.
Some Home Thoughts
About Sweet Corn
A certain member of our fam-
ily, having pled nolo, is current-
ly detained in the uncongenial
(to him) precints of Kansas, and
his notes home indicate no great
enthusiasm sr the situation I
would gather his military obli-
gations are not unduly burden-
some, but that he wishes the
war might be waged ,vhere he
can get some sweet corn.
To tne, the juxtaposition of
Maine and Kansas, over sweet
corn, is not unamusing, for we
are always hearing about the
wonderful corn they grow out
that -a -way, and my chuckles
have been disturbing people all
up and down the valley, I realize
there are differences in corn, of
course, but I chuckle anyway.
The lad's earlier letters home,
as you might expect of a farm
boy transplanted to greener pas-
tures, dwelt on the mighty pro-
duction of Kansas, He wrote of
the grain fields stretching to the
limits of sight, and commented
accordingly. Later, he said there
was no point in going for a ride,
because after you drove all day
you were still in Kansas. Ile :aid
he couldn't understand how any-
body made an original decision
as to where anything was to be
located - that with a given
choice in all directions, why did
anybody pick one spot in pre-
ference to another? I could see
that the plains were working on
him,
And from time to time he men-
tioned that he supposed we were
having a pleasant tenting trip to
Eagle Lake, or were watching
the sun set in splendor over West
Kennebago Range, or were
comfy by the billowing sea,
hurled on the granite ledges
with tiles wafting of tideflats and
bayberry, picking hot lobsters
from a galvanized pail over cat
spruce embers. There was so far
no element sf complaint in this,
1t was merely an expression of
home -thoughts, but it happened
to be the truth. We did fillet a
tongue for him at Eagle Lake, and
we did watch the sunset cplors
on Kennebago Lake, and we did
tryst with the hot lobster at Win-
ohenpaugh's Point. And then
came the sweet corn letter.
He said they had somehow not
expected sweet corn in Kansas.
But as he and his wife were
thinking how the silk was sear-
ing back home, and the wispy
edges of the husks. were turning
white, and raccoons were prob-
ably moving in for a feast, there
appeared in the Kansas market
a large and soul -stirring display
of sweet corn. Their hearts leap-
ed as they beheld this, for it re-
called for them the cookouts on
the farm, when three and four
pails of golden ears would be
boiling on the fire at a time, and
a pan of softening butter would
wait close by. I.t reminded then
o- the gathering of the clan,
U fe le iri,k1 r, to Prevent Peeking
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DOG ATTACKED - A golden eagle, far from usual haunts, attacks o dog in Chicago,
as dog's owner, Fred Goodman, swings at it with broom.
-when everybody came for a corn
feast, and great platters cf ears
stood on the table under linen
napkins to keep it warm, and
buckets were set about the floor
for cobs. This much, in Kansas,
could be had, they thought, and
they gathered up two dozen
ears of thi. wonderful Kansas
product and retired to the pri-
vacy of their off -base apartment
to rsncw their lost pleasures.
'I'he little wife scrubbed out
her scrub pail, for she knew
there is but one true way to cook
good corn, and she set it on the
stove with some Kansas water
in it with a smallish handful of
salt added to create the allusion
of seaside joy. They heard a
gurgle, and stood with butter
spreaders poised for the on-
slaught.
I am positive you know the
outcome. 1 will spare our Kansas
readers the exact wording of the
letter home. P was to the general
effect that sweet corn should not
be attempted by people who
have no place to do it. That
sweet corn in Kansas is a hoax,
unless perhaps all you know is
Kansas sweet corn. They told
how they buttered, and bit in,
and backed away. Twenty-four
ears of Kansas sweet corn ap-
pearcd in the orts next day, two
of which had one bite removed.
I can only report that the
sweet corn has been very fine
this summer. 1 took a package
each cf Seneca, Golden Rocket
and Mother's Joy, mixed thein
together, and planted a half
acre. The ground was mellow,
and just enough on the side hill.
It would probably look most
pindling to a Kansan, and hard-
ly worth the work. It did at-
tract the racoons, and I had
Jimmie Griffin come with his red
hound and chase them away.
They cane back, but Jimmie
would come and chase them away
again. Althcugh they ate some
and spoiled more, we've had all
we wanted, and there is plenty
left. I picked three bushels last
afternoon, and we had the clan
for a feed under the maples, be-
hind the house. We pushed the
cobs away in a wheelbarrow. It
took eight pounds of butter. It
was good,
And as 1 gathered for this feast,
I kept an eye peeled, and each
time I saw an ear that was
straighter and truer and longer
and thicker I tucked it in a bas-
ket apart. This morning I mailed
two dozen of these to Kansas,
It cost me $4.80, but what's
money? - by John Gould in the
Christian Science Monitor.
Q. Is it all right for a man to •
use only his initials when sign-
ing social correspondence, ns for
instance, "J, II, Harding?"
A. No; he should sign his fulfil
name, or at least as, "James H.
Harding."
AWAY FROM HOME - The black swan may be a native of
Australia, but she certainly seems to be at home in Naples.
TllEKM fROT
M2us ll
There are possibilities of ex-
porting Canadian chicks of egg
production and broiler stock to
some parts of Asia, said A, Drew
Davey, director of the federal
government's poultry division, on
his return from the 12th World's
Poultry Congress in Sydney,
Australia.
He said Singapore, Malaya and
Hong Kong are importers of shell
eggs for consumption and chicks
for egg production. Even surplus
egg producing countries like
Thailand, the Philippines and
Japan import chicks of egg pro-
duction stock. In some of these
countries too there is a small but
increasing interest in broiler
chicken, Some processed poultry
is imported, chiefly for the non-
native populations of these coun-
tries, « * «
Mr, Davey said United States
suppliers are active in most of
these countries. There are defin-
ite possibilities for Canadian ex-
porters too, but "they will not
conte easy" and careful planning
and some knowledge of local con-
ditions are necessary. He said he
is willing to give what assistance
lie can.
Ise noted that Australia and
New Zealand have a rigid ban
on imports of poultry breeding
stock, eggs or poultry products
frcni the North American con-
tinent, *, * «
Mr. Davey was the leader of
a 24 -member delegation corn -
prising mostly representatives
of the poultry industry. Canada
also had an outstanding exhibit.
At the Congress, Mr, Davey
described the development of
integration in the marketing of
poultry products in Canada.
At the First International Egg
Marketing Conference that fol-
lowed, he outlined . his govern-
ment's deficiency payment pro-
gram for eggs as a means of
attaining balance between pro-
duction and consumption,
* v: *
Work is under way on speci-
fications that would provide
uniformly high-quality contain-
ers for shipping poultry packed
in ice.
The project is being under-
taken by the Poultry Products
Container Committee to pro-
vide stronger containers to
handle this traffic - expected
to top 200 million pounds this
year. * * *
The committee, formed to es-
tablish specifications for sturd-
ier containers to protect poultry
products in storage and transit,
consists of representatives of
the Poultry Division of the
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture, the Forest .Products Re-
search Branch of the Forestry
Department, and the container
manufacturing industry, Chair-
man is E. D. Bonnyman, of
CDA's Poultry Division.
Specifications covering 30 -
dozen cases and 15 -dozen boxes
for eggs have been drawn up
by the committee and are in the
process of being incorporated
into regulations governing the
handling of shell eggs, The
cases are used in cold storage
warehousing, and domestic and
export shipments; the boxes in
domestic' shipments only,
Earlier, standards were set
and adopted covering corrugated
paper boxes used for storage or
shipping or eviscerated poultry.
Specifications are adopted
only after a one-year perform-
ance test and approval by the
trade, * * *
Studies directed at making
better use of natural potash in
soil materials are being pressed
at, the new Soil Research La-
boratory of the federal Experi-
mental Farm at Charlottetown,
Prin^e Edward Island. The
results will be of use to other
Eastern Canadian provinces
where the breakdown of soil
minerals permitting the release
of potash to plants occurs very
slowly, * t «
In Prince Edward Island the
soils of most farms contain a
reservoir to' at least 12 to 15
tons of native potash per acre
within a few inches of the sur-
face. Yet fanners applied about
6,500 tons of fertilizer potash to
their crops this year, However,
Dr, D. MacKay of the La-
boratory staff points out that
the small amounts of potash
released naturally, still repre-
sents a considerable saving in
fertilizer costs.
i * «
Two points have been estab-
lished; the presence of other
chemicals in the soil influences
the amount of potash that be-
comes available; soil manage-
ment is also a factor.
Research is needed to find
which practices will make more
native potash available to crops.
1. * *
Vineyards are for the birds -
or so the birds seen to think.
In the NiEgara district, birds
found happy pickings in some of
the newer varieties of grapes,
particularly the French hybrids
used in making wine.
The hybrids, apparently more
attractive to starlings and rob-
ins, are also more susceptible
than older varieties to damage
by the birds, reports Dr. A, B.
Stevenson, of the federal re-
search station at Vineland Sta-
tion, Ontario,
« • is
The fruit in some vineyards
night be destroyed completely
if it were not for the use of
bird -scaring devices. And the
steady explosions of "bangers"
have become a familiar sound
throughout the Niagara district.
i,
As a result of increasing
damage by birds to grape and
other fruit crops, a study of the
problem is under way at the
Vineland Station laboratory.
Dr. Stevenson points out that
the monetary loss caused by the
birds is greater because some of
the grape varieties attacked are
ones drawing premium prices. In
addition, crop quality suffers in
cases when growers are forced
to harvest early to prevent fur-
ther damage,
Brutality Hidden
From Public View
It is probable that as individ-
uals no people in the world lova
their domesticated animals more
and yet collectively treat them
more indifferently than do the
people of the United States, The
brutality which results from this
neglect does not occur on the
farms and in the hones of Ameri-
cans but, according to the Society
for Animal Protective Legisla-
tion, is bidden from public view
in the numerous laboratories to
which animals are used for ex-
perimentation,
On the basis of a ten-year sur-
vey of many such laboratories in
various parts of the country,
Christine Stevens of the Animal
Welfare Institute reports a pre-
valence of shocking abuses in
which animals are subjected to
needless cruelty and neglect.
As the need for experimenta-
tion in animals increases - 8 mil-
lion animals are used annually in
the Maryland -Virginia -District of
Columbia area alone - and as
the standards of humaneness
drop, the need for a federal law
protecting animals used in exper-
imentation increases. (The feder-
al government provides the
greater part of all funds used for
medical research,) Senators Jos-
ephS. Clark (D., Pa,) and Maur-
ine Neuberger (D,, Ore.) and Re-
presentative Martha Griffiths
(D., Mich.) are sponsoring identi-
cal bills which would establish
standards for the humane treat-
ment of laboratory animals and
license scientists using them..
Such legislation is long over-
due; Great Britain adopted legis-
lation protecting experimental
animals 86 years ago. Yet we,
who talk so much about rever-
ence Nr life, have done nothing
to protect the animals whose
lives are so oaten sacrificed in
efforts to improve men's health
and who have no recourse against
cruelty and neglect. - Christian
Century.
Too Much Chatter
Out In Space
It is interesting to observe that
among the comments offered by
astronaut Walter Schirra after
his successful .six -orbit space
whirl whs the complaint that he
didn't have sufficient "quiet
tine" during his journey. Or
perhaps "complaint" is too strong
a word; Comdr. Schirra was
merely observing that there was
a lot of chatter to and from the
ground stations while he was cir-
cling the globe in his capsule.
This lack of quiet time in the
heavens, as on earth, may be
something worth noting. One as-
sumes that most of the messages
shot back and forth between the
spaceman and those tracking his
flight were necessary, but some
of then probably fell into the
realm of astronautical small talk
-conversation exchanged just to
make sure the space vehicle was
still functioning properly, and
the spaceman was still going
strong. Even an experienced
technician on earth must still get
a thrill out of actually convers-
ing with a man hurtling through
the heavens in a space vehicle.
But the astronaut, apparently,
has the same need for silence and
repose that the rest of us do.
Indeed, he may feel it even more
keenly amid the splendor and the
solitude of space. There, appa-
rently, small talk seems even
smaller than usual. No one yet
knows what the space age will
bring to mankind, but if it serves
to cut down on general chatter,
prattle, jawing, gabble and bab-
ble, its benefits may be even
greater than we realize.
-New York Herald Tribune
}4JJilY SCIIOOI
LESSON
iffy Rev ft. Barclay
13.1)
ltedemplion: God's Call
Ephesians 1: 3-10; Colossians
1; 15-22; 2 Corinthians 5: 18-21.
Memory Scripture: For there
is one Cod, and one mediator be-
tween God and men, the man
Christ Jesus; Who gave himself
a ransom for all, to be testified
in due time. 1 Tnnottry 2: 5-6.
The theme of the Bible is Gud's
provision for our redemption In
the first part of our lesson we
see that even before God ere:,ted
the world He had in nand the
plan for our redemption. Ile
knew that man would fail to the
test and fall into sin. Lie piLue-
termined that He would gsve tiffs
Son to lift us out o1 the bond.,ge
and mire of sin and reclaim us
for Himself, So it was that be-
fore the foundation of the wt.! td
h' oris( i tlwt =huuld ue
holy and without blame nett me
him in love. We are called to
live a pure life unto His praise.
And I like the expression, "with-
out blame before him in love."
A child may in erre► pull out
the tomato plant instead of the
weed. But if he does it end'-av-
ouring to express his love Col his
father, the father freely forgives.
We make a lot of blunders. But
if our heart is perfected in love
to God, in fulfillment of the
great commandment, our Father
counts us blameless. 0f course,
we shouldn't repeat the same
mistake. We are called to grow
in grace, ,and in the knowledge
of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ.
When we find forgiveness for
our sins and respond to the call
to holy lying, we must continue
in the way. Notice the 'if' in the
following: "And you, - hath he
reconciled in the body of his
flesh through death, to present
you holy and unblameable and
unreproveable in his sight: if ye
continue in the faith grounded
and settled, and be not moved
away from the hope of the gos-
pel." We must go all the way.
Jesus Ohrist is the one Media-
tor. No one can hinder us in our
approach to God. The way is
open. Let us come boldly to the
throne of grace. Then we will
have a message to give to others
of the wonderful saving power
of our Lord Jesus Christ.
A committee of three is .just
the right number of people to
get things done - especially it
two don't show up.•
Obey the traffic signs - they
are placed there for YOUR
SAFETY.
ISSUE 45 - 1962
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. Brace
1. An attempt
(oolloq.)
9 This minute
12. Ir. lake
13. Of great
stature
14. Sheep
16. Court bench
18. 8ivident
18 Designate
20. Lily before tht
wind
21. Motion of the
- sea
18. Seaweed"
66. Lowest story
80. Rook•founded
city of Edom
31. Ohio college
town
22 root lever
84. Oriental sane'
86. Slavic) nurse
87. Professional
performers
89 Jackets
41 Anarohists
42. Whistle blast
44. Highly
corrosive geld
48. Climbing, as
a vine
11 Burbot genu*
52 Work unit
58, Opposite of
aweather
54. Preceding
nights
11 Scrutinise
56. Coasting
vehicle
57. Membership
Instook
exchange OWN
1. Small
armadillo
8. River in
Armenia
8. Taverns
4. Tell In detail
I. pLunoh counter Indies jaw
F
f aucet
7. Lofty
mountains
ustomers 98. Intentional
destruction
29. Gifted
88. Napoleonic
victory
8 .Soon
28. Mexican fiber
tants
. bark
nneoeseary
i... Acknowledge
oast
. egrets
ress-
t�rplmmta
1B. Witch of•• •
. ntrfgue
y iters
* . ntant
1 , utoh E,
40. Sort drinks"
11. Narrate
. Wander
. Willow genus
Throw
8.Observe
49 Shout
60• Rorn
11111111111164111111111KIIIIII
VAN :VA NW VO
imammintimumi
11111■=yti■11rsf11111■
Answer elsewhere on this page
FISHY STORY -- Grigori Khokhlov threw his line overboard from his car, which he de-
signed himself The amphibious car, which will travel over the rough roods in Novosi-
birsk, in Siberia, and which will also take to the water has o motor which runs the four-
wheel drive and propeller, This photograph is from an official Soviet source.
PAO $ N.
BELGR,AVE
Stewart Proctor, accompanied by
his sons Ross and George, attended
the Louada Sale of Shorthorns north
of Peterborough and purchased one
of Louada Bulls to head their Short-
horn herd.
Mr. and Mrs, Harold Proctor have
moved into the:home they purchased
.'---,WooritiffINftel
their farm has been sold to Bodmin
Ltd.
As the winter season approaches.
Belgrave people again have been hard
hit with sickness. Gary McSween had
his appendix removed in the Wingham
General hospital and Donald Walker
has pneumonia and is also in Wing
ham Hospital. Mr. Albert Vincent
is in Victoria hospital, London. We
from Ralph McCrea in Belgrave and sincerely wish a speedy recovery for
COOK'S
Campbell's Tomato Soup, 10 oz. 8 tins 99c
Liquid Javex Plastic, 1 gal. jug 79c
Maple Leaf Liquid Detergent, 12c off, 21 oz, 65c
69c
Klear Floor Wax, 16 oz.
Champion Dog Food 8 - 15 oz. tins 1.00
Shirriff's Lushus Jelly Powders 3 pkgs. 26c
Micelle Tissues, large pkg., white or pink, 2 - 49c
Penny Matches, 50 carton 25c
Grape Fruit, "96" per doz. 59c
Hot House Tomatoes per lb. 30c
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables -- In Stock.
We Deliver
\ '_ Phone 156
111111.11.....
Blanket Sale
luxurious Satin Bound Blankets
4 lb., 72"x90". Made from 100% Pure
Virgin Canadian Wools.
Reg.
$16.00 Value AT
Colours -- -'Gold, Green, Rose, Blue, Red, White
1/2 PRICE GLOVE and MITT SALE
... EXCEPTIONALLY FINE
MEN'S GOATSKIN
Hand sewn dress glove. Colours: natural and tan. $2.50
Reg. $5.00 Sale Price
.50
LADIES' KID
Hand sewn, lined and unlined, Colour:
tan. Reg. $4.00 Sale Price
LINED CHILDREN'S MITT
Deerskin tanned to always dry soft.;
.00
Reg, $2.00 Sale Price
Also , . . MEN'S WORK GLOVE
Genuine Goatskin. 50e p%
natural and $2.00
Only
1.-044-44-644-4.4.44-•44444-44+++.4-+++++44+7
MEN'S WOOL WORK SO
Heavy Weight — Nylon Reinfor
L+4,44++,,,...4241). for $1.00
44444+4+14+11 F44444+1
Bainton Limited
Blyth Phone 6
These Offers Available November 1 to November 17
w'.
DEiMoKTE'
ROUNDUP
This Week is the PARADE of the FAMOUS
DEL MONTE
CANNED VEGETABLES, FRUITS and JUICES
Specially Priced For This Occasion
Habitant Pea and Vegetable Soup 2 tins 35c
Fancy Pink Salmon per tin 59c
Snowflake Shortening lbs. 53c
King Size Surf 97c
Supreme Cookies 3 pkgs. 89c
Grade A Chickens ' per ib. 39c
Grade A Turkeys per lb. 49c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes 50 lb. bag 1.29
Snows and MacIntosh Apples 6 qt. 59c
Tallman Sweets 6 qt.. 69c
Stewart's
Red (3 White Food Market
Blyth, Phone 9 We Deliver
•
THD 13LA'1'II STANDARD
all these folks.
Mr, and Mrs, Les, Straw, Brian and
Sharon, of London, spent the week
end with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ander.
sun.
Airs. Tom Smith, Air. and Mrs, Ralph
McCrea, of Blyth, spent ,Sunday with
Mr. Jack Allen and Mrs. Thyra Tows -
CLEARING AUCTION
SALE
OF FINANCE CO. REPOSSESSIONS, BANKRUPT STOCKS,
BAILIFF SEIZURES and PERSONAL, CONSIGNMENTS of MOD•
ERN IIOUSEiIOLi) FURNITURE, 'i'1"s, APPLIANCES and BRAND
NEW CLOTHING on
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13th, at 7;30 p.m.
BLUEVALE COMMUNITY HALL
CONSISTING OF 'I'IHE FOLLOWING — two 5 -piece bedroom
suites complete with bookcase beds, boxsprings and mattresses;
2 -piece foam rubber 'zippered cushion chesterfield suite; 6 TV
sets; chrome and dinette suites; automatic washer and dryer; con-
ventional washer; two 2 -piece davenport suites; refrigerators; large
chest freezer; large console model chord organ; electric ranges;
coffee and step tables; tri -light and table lamps; platform rockers;
continental beds; odd chairs; and other pieces of furniture quant•
ity of hrand new clothing, and many other itenns which will be
released before sale clay but not available for publication at this
time. Large selection of new toys.
TERMS CASH, sales tax in effect. Cheques accepted,
Non: 'i'his is another outstanding sale of new and nearly
new merchandise,
Franklin Butrck, Auctioneer,
11.11. No. 2, Gadshill.
GUARANTEED INVESTMENT
CERTIFICATESik'
Company
LONDON,
200 Queens Avenue — GEneral 8-8314
CLEARING AUCTION
SALE
OF FINANCE CO, REPOSSESSIONS. BANKRUPT STOCKS,
BAILIFF SEIZURES and PERSONAL CONSIGNMENTS of MOD,
ERN HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE, TV's, APPLIANCES and BRAND
NEW CLOTHING on
SATURDAY, NG'VEMBER 10th, at 1:30 p.m.
CLINTON LEGION HALL
CONSISTING OF .TILE FOLLOWING -- two 5 -piece bedroom
suites complete with bookcase beds, boxsprings and mattresses;
2 -piece foam rubber zippered cushion chesterfield suite; 6 TV
sets; chrome and dinette suites; automatic washer and dryer; con-
ventional washer; two 2 -piece davenport suites; refrigerators, large
chest freezer; large console Model chord organ; electric ranges;
coffee and step tables; tri -light and table lamps; platform rockers;
continental beds; odd chairs; and other pieces of furniture; quail•
tity of brand new clothing, and many other items which will be
released before sale day but not available for publication at this
time. Large selection of new toys.
TEIRMS CASH, 3': sales lax in effect, Cheques accepted.
NOTE: 'I'Ihis is another outstanding sale of new rani nearly
new merchandise.
Franklin Buick, Auctioneer,
I1.R, No, 2, Gadshill.
•
need Money
You Receive
$1600
2000
2500
3000
No Bonus
You Pay
Monthly Number Months
Principal & Interest
$40.08 60 Months
50,10 60 Months
62.62 60 Months
75.14 60 Months
Business Loans against 30 to 90 day Accounts Receivable
Capitol Leans To Business
Special arrangements made on larger loans up to $250,000 each
Bluewater Aeptance Limited
Phone FR6.7324
937 • 2nd Avenue East, Owen Sound, Ontario
�...._ .
gr.a. ._..
lorarbokidirsiloodorairrormainik
'1Vedttesday, Nov. 7, 190 1
end, of Toronto, Mrs, Nell McCrea
returned to Blyth with them.
Mr, and Mrs. Robert Grasby and
111r, and Airs. Dave Armstrong spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Roberts, of Listowel. Atr. and Airs.
Armstrong stayed for a few days to
visit friends and relatives.
Roy Jewell, farm commentator for
CPR, London, will show pictures
of his recent trip to Sweden, Norway
and Denmark at the Morris Federa•
tion of Agriculture annual meeting.
The CGI'I' group of Belgrave would
like to thank the people of the cont.
munity for their support on hal•
lowe'en night in their collection for
UNICEF. The group collected a total
of $45.00.
'I'he ladies of the Anglican Guild
held a very successful bake sale and
bazaar on Saturday in the Foresters
Hall and would like to thank all who
attended.
Mrs. Cliff Logan is attending the
Area Convention of the Women's In.
stitute being held in London.
George Proctor was the guest of
Brant County Junior Farmers In Paris
on November 2 and entertained with
several Scottish numbers. ile also
spent Saturday in Brantford and vis.
ited nvitlt the president of the Junior
Fanners.
FOR SALE
11 feeder Hereford steers, 66D to
700 lbs. Apply flay Finch, phone
Clinton IIU 2.3234, I1.11, 1, Clinton.
34 I p.
MORRIS FEDERATION ANNUAL
MEETING & TURKEY SUPPER
Morris Federation of Agriculture
Annual Meeting and 'Turkey Supper
to be held in Forrester's ILall, Bel -
grave, Friday, November 16, at 7.00
p.m, Guest Speaker, Roy Jewell,
Farm conunentator C.F,P.L. London,
Tickets, $1.50, 34.2
!s Your Subscription Paid
VITAMIN TIME
Start now to fortify against coughs and colds.
We recommend the following Vitamin Products,
Matlevol
$2.50
Wampoles Extract $1.59 and $2,89
Paramette Syrup $7,50 Value - Special $5,50
Vi Cal Fer Capsules $1.95 and $4.95
Vita Diet Tablets $2.9S
One -A -Day Multiples $1,49, $2.75 and $4.49
Geritol - Liquid or Tablets $3.29
Cod Liver Oil - High Test 90c and $1.50
Waterbury's Compound $1,50
Cod Liver Oil Capsules 98c,
Halibut Liver Oil Capsules $1,15 and $2.29
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER w PRONE 20, BLYTD
Another Rogers Majestic Bargain
WITH TOP QUALITY
Stereo and Radio Combination --- A.M. and F.M.,
solid wood cabinet in light walnut
Thursday, Friday and Saturday Only
$90.00 Reduction
1 Sea Breeze Player with Extra Speaker, record
case For $44.95
1 Sea Breeze Player Only $25.95
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE ---
1 Used Oil Burner, with pipes
1 Used Electric Stove (3 burner).
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
L3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Call 71 Blyth, Ont.
THE PRICE IS RIGHT — —
Now's The Time To Buy and Save on These Specials
SPECIAL---
Chev. Impala Convert.
h'ully equipped — Big Discount
1962 Demo ENVOY
Full Warranty
1959 PONTIAC $1650
4 door,. Radio
1958 PONTIAC $1350
4 door, Radio
1957 FORD 750
6 cyl., Automatic, Radio
1957 FORD 750
8 cyl., Radio
19581/2 ton Chev. Pick-up
19551/2 ton Chev. Pick-up
Long Box and Helper Springs
SEE
BEN WALSH --- Blyth Agent
or Phone Clinton HU 2-9321
Lorne Brown Motors Ltd.
CLINTON, ONT, -- "Your Friendly Chev. & Olds. Dealer"
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP &SAVE
St, William's Raspberry Pic Filling,120 oz., 2 - 89c
Crown Brand Corn Syrup, 51bs. 79c
Club House Peanut Butter, ice box jar, 16 oz, 39c
Dele Monte Pineapple or Grapefruit Juke,
48 oz. 35c
Black Sugar Ripe Eating Figs, 12 Oz. pkg., 2 65c
Sunbrite Margarine, 1 lb, pkg. 4 for 85c
Maxwellkouse Instant Coffee, 10 oz. 1.39
Special Prices on all Christmas Baking, Needs ---
A Full Stock Ott Band.