Loading...
The Blyth Standard, 1962-11-21, Page 1'VOLUME 75 - NO, 36 STANDARD IIMMIMPROP. VI Authorized aa second elan mall, Post Office Department, Ottawa. BLATH, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 21, 1962 Subscription Rates $2,50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. and for payment of postage in cash. Lorne (ronin Badly Burned In Truck Mishap Mr, Lorne Cronin suffered serious burns to most of his body in a truck accident last Thursday night, Lorne, who chives a truck for Struthers 'Transport, of Belnlore, was un his way to North Bay for a load of lumber when the truck he was thriving side-swiped a narrow bridge near Shelburne. immediately fol lowing the impact., the gas tanks on the vehicle, which had just been re• filled, exploded and the cab of the truck burst into flanges, The only possible way Lorne had of escaping the burning inferno was through the windshield, and by the time this was accomplished, his clothes had been ignited and were only extinguished when he rolled in the grass at the roadside, Rcst(Ietlk in a nearby house heard the explo sin and immediately came to his aid He was taken to the Shelburne hospital where he' is still a patient suffering Froin'severe burns to his face, back, hands and legs. 11 is ex• petted he will have to renlain in Shelburne for several more (lays be. fore removal to a hospital closet' to home is possible. Mr. Cronin is married alid is the father of two children. Charles Brigham Also Hospitalized Another resident of Blyth who also drives for Struther's Transport, fig. tired in an accident recently when the truck he was thriving missed a (getout' on No. 4 highway south ol Clinton and plunged into the open culvert. Charlie was taken to Clinton hos, pital suffering from painful back in. juries, Ile has been released but has still not returned to his normal physical condition. ORANGE AND BLACK SUPPER DECIDED SUCCESS On' -Friday evening, November 9th the Blyth Memorial Hall was the scene of a very enjoyable banquet which was attended by close to one hundred members of Blyth L. 0. L mol Royal Black Perceptory, their wives, families and friends. Past County Master Charles Stewart acted as chairman and master of ceremonies and after Grace was said by Rev, Robert Meanly and the toast to the Queen, all sal down to a sumptuous turkey dinner served by the ladies of the Anglican Church Guild. Following the meal, a fine and interesting program was enjoyed, Bro. Waller Scott., P.C.M. of North Huron and Grand Sensor of the Roy. al Black lits. of Ontario West, intro clued the head table guests which included Vry. Wor. Bro. Dave \Vord ('n and Airs. \Norden; 111, Wor. Jiro Oliver Jacques and Mis. Jacques; Past C.M,, Wor. 13ro, Elston Cardifl and Mrs, Cardiff; Rev. Robert and Mr's, Alcaliy; Vry. Wor. Bro. ]toss Errington, County Master of North Huron, and Mrs. Errington. The pian ist was Mrs, Cardiff, of Brussels. Also included at the head table was Vry \Nor, Bro. Walter Scott and Mrs Scott and Wor, Bro. Charles Stewart and Mrs. Austin. Bro. Scott also conducted a short memorial service in memory of the Brethren who had made the supreme sacrifice in recent wars. AMONG THE CIIURCIIES Sunday, November 25, 1062 ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Nov. 25, Service at 1 p.m.—Mr. Al- bert, Farthing, Student al \Vaterloo College, ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Rev. Robert F. 'Meetly. Rector. 23rd Sunday after 'Trinity Trinity Church, Blyth. 10.30 a.m.--Sunday School. 10.30 a.m.—Mattins, St, Mark's, Auburn. • 12.00 o'clock—Mattius. Trinity Church, Belgrave, 2.00 p.m.—Sunday School. 2.30 p.m,—Evensong. TIIE UNITED CiIIJRCH OF CANADA Blyth Ontario, Rev. 11. Evan McLat;an • Minister Mrs, Donald Kai Director of Music. 9.55 a,m.—Sunday Church School. 11,00 rm.—Morning Worship. "What is Freedom?" 7.30 p.m.—Evening Worship in the Assembly hill. "Alan on the Doorstep." CIIURCIi OF GOD Mc(onnet Street. MMMybtt, John Dormer, Pastor Phone 185 10.00 a.nl,--•Sunday School, 11.00 a.m.-Worship Service. 8.00 p.m.—Wed., Prayer Service. 8.00 pan, Friday, Youth Fellowship, CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH In The Presbyterian Church Gerry G. Iioytema, Student Calvin College, Grand Rapids 10.00 a.m,--Morning Service, Eng• lish, Sunday School. 3.00 p.m.—Afternoon Service, l)ttt(li WEDDINGS , SEERS—ANDREWS A pretty fall wedding was solcnl• sized on Saturday, November 17, 1962, at the Clinton Presbyterian Church Manse when Dr. 1), J. Lane officiated for the marriage of Aliss Marjorie Kathleen (Kaye) Andrews and John P. Seers. The bride is the daughter of Air. and Mrs, W. J. An. (trews, Auburn, and the groom is the sun of Mr. Fred Seers and the late Airs. Seers, Auburn, The double - ring ceremony was performed at 3 1.111. The bride chose a floor -length gown of nylon net over taffeta, %vitt' long lily pointed sleeves. The chair tilly lace bodice with square neckline %vas enhanced lavishly with sparkling cup sequins and simulated pearls. The large bouffant skirt featured chantilly lace to the hipline and this was topped with a double row of scab loped lace. Her bouffant shoulder• length veil of french illusion was held in place by a crown of simulated pearls and sequins and she carried a cascade bouquet of yellow rose buds. Miss Lynda Andrews, sister of the bride, was the bridesmaid, wearing a street -length strapless gown of blue teal nylon sheer over taffeta, with matching jacket and accessories, She carried a cascade bouquet of blue 1111te(1 mums. The groomsman was William Seers, Auburn, brother 01 the groom. For a wedding reception which fol• lowed at the Auburn Community Memorial lull, the bride's mother received the guests wearing 0 sheath dress of figured green aquilan crepe, black accessories, and a white noun corsage. She %vas assisted by the groom's grandmother, Mrs. Caroline Seers, of 'Mitchell, wearing a navy blue ensemble and a white mum corsage. The hall was attractively decorated with bouquets of yellow and bronze mums, and the dinner was serves by Misses Jannelt Dobie, Auburn, and Joanne Kinahan, Goderich, cousins of the bride, and Misses Junc Baech• ler and (lose Marie Iiaggitt, of. Au- burn, For a trip to Southern Ontario, the bride donned a teal blue knitted suit with black accessories and a white mune corsage. On their return they will take up residence in the groom's house in Auburn. The bride is a member of the staff of the Clinton Public hospital. Guests were present from Toronto Mitchell, Lucknow, Goderich, Dun. grunion, Winghaun and Auburn. WOMEN'S INSTI'T'UTE RECEIVES COMMENDATION FOR WORK WITH CHILDREN'S AID The following is the letter received by the Secretary'I'reasurer of the West Huron Dilsrict concerning the Children's Aid Society of Huron County. The members of the Women's fn stitules of Huron County are to be highly commended for the project they have been working on 'during the past two years. It is already bean ing fruit. At their 1960 annual rally the W. I members unanimously- decided to es tablish a bursary for a lluron County, girl or boy in the care of the Child rev's Aid Society, to learn a trade by by which he or she could earn a liv ing by working with -his hands, 'Thi: fund is called "The Huron County Woolen's Institute Bursary Fund' for the Children's Aid Society for Hu, rim County, and is not to be used for the higher education bracket teem age'. Anyone wishing to contribute to this fund may do so, The Bursary is to be used at the discretion of the Children's Aid Society Board, and upon recommendation of the Local Director. '!'Itis year two girls have been assist• ed by this fund in courses at schools of hair design. '!'his cost approxi mately $400.00 for the first six months. Included in this amount is tuition, .uniform and kit. It usually "takes about eight months to complete the course and examinations. Both girls chosen this year have no one but the Children's Aid Society to help then. '!'hey are most appreciative of this opportunity to achieve their chosen career's, and are doing very well in their work. The Children's Aid have received splendid progress reports from the schools. 1ltu'on County can well be proud of their women who are undertaking such worthy projects through the Women's institutes, PAVING COMPLETED !raving of No. 4 Highway between 131ytht and Clinton was complete(! on Tuesday noun of this week. 'l'1►e work was done by the Mare!. tette Bros. Construction, of Windsor. One coat of asphalt was laid with the second coat planned for next spring, at which thine the Main Street of Blyth and Londesboro will be widen. ed and paved, SA'TURDAY'S THE I)AY FOIL 'I'IIE 1'OI'ULAR RUMMAGE SAL! One of the larger events of the fall season, as fan' as the local Lions Club is concerned, takes place tali]; Salmi -- day afternoon at the Memorial Hall and is the annual Lions rummage sale, The event has always been po. pular and is one of the major money making projects of the local organi• nation. The sale is on Saturday, but actu• ally commences on Friday evening when the members of the club canvass the community for articles to sell. The success of this canvass naturally results in the success of the sale and everyone is asked for a donation. Anything received will be greatly welcomed, and no article will be loo large or too small. Rural residents wishing to donate articles may do so by contacting Lions Walter l3uttell or Edward Wat- son, or any member of the Lions Club, and pickup will be arranged for Friday evening. The rummage sale wiill be followed by the weekly bingo. OBITUARY JENNIE COWAN Miss Jennie Cowan passed away in Victoria Hospital, London, on Friday November 16, 1962, in her 78th year. She was born in Thornhill, Mani- toba, 0 (laughter of the late Mr. Thomas Cowan and Eliza Wells. Forty-nine years ago she and her father moved here and made their home for a time with Jennie's sis. tors. Miss Cowan was employed at Clin• ton and in the 0.S.B. Brantford, and for a number of year's in the Seaford) Hospital and made her hone with Mr.' and Mrs. Frank Little for the last seven years. Surviving are sisters, Mrs. Nettie Armstrong, of the '1'abo►' hone, Den. mo'den, Manitoba;, Mrs. Prank Little. Londesboro; Mis. Millin Bentham, ol Oshawa; Al's. I(Ia 'Townsend, Lon(Jcs• born. Funeral service was held in the Londesboro United Church of Mon. day, November 10th, at 3.30 p.m. con• ducted by Rev. II. Funge, assisted by Rev. E. McLagan of Blyth United Church. Interment in Blyth Union Ceme• tory. Pallbearers: 'Messrs', Alex Wells{` Varve Wells, Robert Watson, Clar- ence Crawford, Edwin Wood, Charles Bromley. Flowerbeae'rs: Messrs. Don ald MeNall and Clifford Sh(bbrook. JOSEPH 11EWING Air. Joseph II. Ewing passed away in Victoria Hospital, London, on Thursday, November 15, in his 72nd year. lie had been a patient in Clin' ton Public Hospital for three weeks and three weeks in Victoria Hospital. Mr. Ewing was born in Quebec a son of the late Samuel Ewing and Anna Neill He served in the armed forces during the period of 1914-1918. Re• turning to Ontario after the war, and a resident of Blyth for 25 years, mak. ing his home at Grand View Lunch for lige last 10 years. Surviving are one son, Delbert A. of Winghaun, and five grandchildren; also four sisters, MrS. Royal (Gert- rude) Walker, Gou, Quebec; Mrs. Lloyd (Nettie) Ruiter, of Sweelsburg Quebec; Mrs. Max (Ethel) Miller, 01 Richmond, Quebec; Mrs. Dwight (Su- san) HIutchins, Flint, Mich; three brothers, Purley and Fred, of Cobalt; Maurice, of Richmond, Quebec. A brother, James, of Warslow, Maine. ',asset away November 3, 1962, and t. sister a number of years ago. Funeral service was held at the Tasker Memorial Chapel, Blyth, on Monday, November 19, at 2 p.m. con• ducted by Rev. Robert Mcally, rector of '!Tinily Anglican Church, Blyth. Interment in Blyth Union Centre tory. Pallbearers were: .1. B. Watson. Robot Henry, Louis Whitfield, Rus, sell Dougherty, James Barrie, Ben Walsh. HOSPITAL ROOM FURNISHED JN MEMORY OF IIIJtS, I:DY'TIIE 1'IIIL,LII'S A hospital room has been furnished in lite new wing Of Clinton Publi4 Hospital by Regal Chapter No. 275 of the Eastern Star, Blyth, in memory of the late Al's. Edythe Phillips, al a cost of $750.00. The project %vas undertaken a short time before Mrs. Phillips passed away and it was hien decided by the on ganization to furnish the room in her memory. Mrs, Phillips was a charier Meng ber of the Blyth Eastern Star and held office in the fraternal organiza• lion since its conception. She was a Past Worthy Matron and at the time of her death was secretary. She was also District Deputy of District No 5 for one year. Included in the $750M0 cost of the semiprivate room, the stoney for which was raised ill 0110 Year, tea - beds, two tray tables, two night stands, one dresser, two chairs, and one easy chair. 'J'hc entire project was (order the direction of the "Ways and Means Committee," with Mrs. Elsie Shaddicl•• as chairman. PERSONAL INTEREST Several members of the Blyth Orange Lodge, accompanied by Im►en• bers of Belgrave and Hensel' Lod• :g'es, ,journeyed to Cape Croker. last Week where they exemlified the Blue and Arch Degrees at the Indian Lod. go. The chief of the reserve was one 'of the candidates. Following the meeting the ladies of the reserve ser .vel a lovely hunch. Ml'. and Mrs, Hugh S. Cuming, Glor ia and Bill, of London, visite(! on Sunday with the former's mother. Airs, Sadie Cuming. Mr. and Mrs, Austin Dexter attend- ed the 951h anniversary at the first Presbyterian Church. in Seaforth on Sunday and were guests at the hone of their son-in-law and daughter, Mt', and Mrs. Nelson McClure and family. Mr, George McNall returned home last Friday from Westminster Hos. pital, London, were he had been a patient for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. 11. D. Philp, accom• panied by their son-in-law and laugh. ter, Mr. and Mrs. \Vm. Racine, Bob and Ken, of Goderich, visited on Sun. day with their son and daughter -in law„i Mi'.- and :Mrs. Ronald Philp. Stephan and Michael, of London. Mr. and Mrs, Bill Zimmerman, of London, spent the week -end with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Borden Cook, Betty Jean and Robert. Mrs. Jean Kechnic spent a few days with her daughter, Mrs, Fred Chappel, Mr. -Chappel and Julie. While there, they all attended the wedding of Mr. Wayne Chappel and Miss Betty Bloedow at Killalou on Saturday, Ah'. and Airs. Walter Cook and Mrs, Edna Cook visited the fo'nler's brother, Alr. George Cook, Mrs. Cook and Annie, of Belgrave. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Cook visited Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walden, West- field, on Wednesday. Mr, and Mrs, Robert McClinchey Patricia and Wayne, and Airs. Holly man visited over the week -eel with Mrs. Hollynlan's daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Stewart, Cathy and Karl, of Woodstock. S'1'ARLIGII'1' CIRCLE MEE'T'ING The November meeting of the Starlight Circle was held in Blyth United Church Parlour on Tuesday November 13. The president, Mrs, Ronald I-lig• gins, opened the meeting %villi a poem followed by worship period "Tile Church and This Day” led by Mrs. Fred IIowson. Mrs. David Webster read the scripture and hymn 386 was sung. Mrs. Harold Campbell fay. oure(1 ale group with n solo "Bless This House" accompanied by Mrs. Winona McDougall en the piano. The study' period "Declining Standards' was conducted by Mrs. Evan McLag- an. The roll call "A penny for each inch of zipper. on members (tress' was answered by 14 members !yes. ent. Volunteers offered to help sup• ply tarts, sandwiches and relishes for Thank -Offering Service, Tuesday. November 27, in the Church Mall. The meeting closed with the bene. diction. A contest prepared by Mrs. Higgins • was enjoyed by the group and a tasty lunch was served by Mrs. Maitland Henry, Miss Anne Jeanette Watson and Mrs, Donald Lee, Those conducting worship and study periods, and soloist, Mrs. liar - old Campbell, were thanked by Mrs. Hugh Cleland, BISHOP APPLEYARD CONDUCTED CONFIRMATION SERVICE Last Sunday evening in the Angli- can Church in Belgrave, the Bishop of Georgian Bay, the (light Rev. alar• old Appleyard, held a confirmation service when eight persons were re• ceived into the Anglican Communion by the Ancient Apostlic Miles of lay- ing aying on of hands. Those confirmed were: Nancy Lorraine VanCannp, Brenda Louise VanCan1p, Frank 111• chard Procter, Janette Elizabeth Johnston, Raymond Matthew Van. Camp, Diane Marie VanCamp, all of Belgrave, and Albert James Gibbons and James henry Gibbons, of Blyth. '1110 13ishop was received at the em trance of the Church by the Rector's Warden, Mr. Glen VanCangp. The service commenced as the combined choirs of the three Church es in the parish, under the direction of Alrs. M. Vanillin, organist at Bel. grave, entered the church singing the hymn "Stand Up, Stand Up Fel Jesus," Miss Alice Rogerson, organ. ist of the B1ytI1 Church, was at the organ. Following the choir carne the candidates, The Bishop was preced• cd by his staff bearer, Mr. Alex Neill. et'y. The candidates were presented by the hector. The bishop explained what the ser• vice should Olean to those who who'd being confirmed. Before the lay ing on of hands, the choir and con• gregation sang the hymn "Breath On Me Breath of God," all kneeling, in his sermon, he congratulated the eon• gregation on the beauty of the Church, and thanked them for all the work they had done. Ile also remind• c(1 those who where confirmed here tonight, that as they had promised to live a christian life, that could on. ly be dote by regular attendance at the Lord's house and at the Lord's Table. Before the blessing the choir sang the anthem "The Lord Is My Shepherd." As the congregation left the Church, they were introduced to the Bishop by the People's Warden, Mr. Mex Nelhe'y. Many Visitors Join Ladies Auxiliary In celebrating 15th Birthday LEFT FOR ARIZONA Ah', Scott Fairservicc left Myth Last Wednesday for Yuma, Arizona, where he will join his family who have been residing there since last May. Scott operated the Superior food Market until it was recently pur chased by Mr. Borden Cook. Mr and MI's. Fairservice decided to move to Arizona when their daughter ;liaralyn, contacted arthritis and they were advised to move to a drier climate. \Ve understand that this hal been of considerable benefit to AJara syn. The Fairservicc family will be 111i8 ;ed from the community and it is hop ed that their return to this country will be in the not too distant future. SCIi0OI, BOARD MEETING The regular meeting of the Blylu Public School Board was held ou Monday evening, November 19, al 13:45 o'clock. All Trustees were prey cat. The minutes of the 1ast-regulai meeting were read and passed on 1110 lion by 'Trustee Madill, seconded by Trustee Stewart, Carried The following accounts were pre• seined and ordered paid on motion by 'Trustee Stewart, seconded by Trustee Madill, Carried. 13. Hall, 45.59; Doherty Bros., 2,05; 131yt1 Hydro, 27.67; Bill's Electric. 2.00; Sparling's Hardware, 34.56; Hu roil County Library, 67.50; J. Bcrthol, 200.00. The Principal reported the per• e'elttage attendance for the month oI. October 1)4.50 and the enrolment. 183. The date for parent -teacher night was set for November 21 from seven to nine o'clock, A motion was made by Trustee Madill, that a prize of ten dollars he given to the room with the highest percentage parent attendance, second, ed by Trustee Webster. Carried. A motion was trade by Trustee Stewart, that Blyth Public School participate in music festival as plan- ned by Mrs. Wm. King, music super• visor, seconded by Trustee Street Carried, • Adjournment %vas moved by 'Trus tee Street. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED Mr. Glenn Gibson wishes to aur flounce the engagement of his eldest daughter, Yvonne Marie, to Mr. itobet. William Henry, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Henry, R.R. 2. Blyth. The wedding will lake place on Saturday, December 15, 19(32 at 1.he Blyth United Church at 2 p.m. C. W. L. MEETING Mrs. Dan IIallahan was hostess for the November meeting with 12 Ogen►• bers present.. '1'%vo thank you notes were read from Mrs. Marlyn for the departure gift that she received and the Confir- mation gift receives by Pete'. An he vitation was react from St. Ambrose Altar Society to attend a social ev. ening with Miss Anna McDonald as guest speaker. Father McGuire gave an inspiring talk on Our Lady of Good Council patron saint of the Catholic Women's League urging greater attention and devotion to op• ening and closing prayers. Mrs. Vina lleffron and Mrs. Berl Van Lam meran will visit the sick in November. A pot luck supper is planned for lite next meeting at the home Of Mrs. Gertrude Cronin with an exchange of Christmas gifts. Mrs, Vine lleffron won the mystery prize donated by Airs. Bert Aliddegaal. FIIRESIi)13 FARM FORUM On November loth, the Fireside Farm Forum met at the home of iCir, and Mrs. Jim Howatt. As it was the fourth night there were no questions for discussion. After the broadcast euchre was played. Most games, George Carter; Lone hands, Linda Riley; Consolation Gordon McGregor. The gathering will be held next week at Ilowatt's. Tuesday evening, the 13th of No- vember was a gala evening for the members of the Ladies Auxiliary to Blyth Branch No. 420, Royal Can- adian Legion, when they entertained eight Auxiliaries at their 1511t Birth• day party, held in the Myth Mem orial Hall with about 110 ladies at- tending. Seated at the head table were Miss Dorothy Hoyle, first Zone Commander, Mrs. Marg. Bogden, Pro- vincial Sports Officer, Mrs. Mary Me - Cann, Zone Commander for Zone C 1, Mrs. 1,0011a Hall, Past President and fast Zone Commander, Mrs. Ethel Gibbons, President, and Mrs, J. C. Richards, who was the first Standard Bearer and wlto carried the flag on this ocacsion. After the opening ceremonies, pre- sided over by 117rs. Gibbons, the guests ware introduced and Miss Hoyle pre- sented special pins to three charter nnenlhe's: Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Mabel Smith and Mrs. Gibbons. Three oth- er charter members were unable to attend: Mrs. Phyllis Cole, Mrs. Wil- liam 'l'huell and Mrs. Wellington Mc. Nall. Gifts were presented to the guests by Mrs. Hall and Mrs. Luella McGowan. Entertainment, lander the able hands of Mrs. Ruth Vincent, consist- ed of solos by Mrs. Muriel Bell and Mrs. Vincent; recitations by Mrs. Audrey Sprung. The proceedings were greatly enlivened by a few well• chosen selections played on the tfiouth organ .by Mrs. Mary "Gramma Tay• lor, very ably accompaniers by Mrs. Mabel Snlilh. A draw for some very lovely prizes took l)lace,with winner's being Mrs. Bertha Walker, Walkerton. Mrs. Isabelle •German, Blyth, and Mrs. Helen Clark,. Howick, Following a penny sale, a very de- licious buffet supper was served and a number of prizes were awarded to Mrs. Mary Cutting, Exeter, birthday and having hair pin in her hair. Lucky plate went. to Mrs. Mary Cart.- er, Stratford, wedding anniversary. Mrs. Edna Doak, Goderich, oldest lady, Airs. Mary 'Taylor, hole in the stocking, Mrs. Inose hill. The visit: ing ladies expressed their thanks for a very lovely evening and hoped to be invited to another birthday party, CONGRATULATIONS Congratulations to Cathy Madill who celebrated her 4th birthday on \Vednesday, November 21. Congratulations to Al's. Israel Good of Winghanl, who will celebrate her birthday November 22nd. Congratulations to Mrs. Georg( Fear who celebrates her birthday November 21st. Hearty Congratulations to Mr. \V N, Watson who celebrated his birth day on 'Thursday, November 15th, a' Victoria hospital, London. ]Hearty Congratulations to Alis). Anne Jeanette Watson who celebrat er her birthday on Wednesday, No vembe' 14th-. Congratulations to 111-'. Murray 11anun wino celebrated his birthday on Monday, November 191h. Congratulations to Wayne Campbell who celebrated his 3rd birthday on Tuesday, November 20t11, SEVERAL FROM AUBURN ATTENDED COIN SHOW Several from Auburn were present %when over 500 attended the first Coin Show sponsored by the Huron County Numismatic Club at the Le- gion hall at. Clinton last Sunday. The gold exhibit belonging to Mr. Lloyd T. Smith, of London, drew much praise and the other displays were very interesting. During the afternoon, Mr. Frani; Uttley, of the Waterloo Club, told how coins could be shown and dem- onstrated on different backgrounds and cases. Mr. Lloyd '1'. Smith was in charge of the auction of the 57 lots and bid- ding was strong throughout the ses- sion. Nunlismists and friends from London, Kitchener, Waterloo and as far north as Owen Sound attended the show and the banquet, which was held in the Commercial hotel, Clin- ton. Mr. Jack Dietrich, president of the Club, was master of ceremonies and introduced the guests at the head table. Mayor Miller brought greet- ings from the Town of Clinton. Mr. Rod Rekofsky, president of the On- tario Numismatic Society, was the guest speaker following the banquet. Ile gave a very interesting address on photography and coins. Isis illustrat- ed lecture was very informative on his coin collection of early Ronan and English currency dating back to Caesar's time, 44 B.C. AUBURN C.G,I,T, CANDLELIGHT SERVICE DECEMBER 9th I)ecennber 9th was named the Sun- day for the annual Christmas Vesper candlelight service of the Auburn C.G.I,T. to be held at 2.30 p.m. in Knox Presbyterian Church. Miss Judy Arthur, the president, will be the leader of the service and there will be a special speaker. This day was naed, at the regular meeting of tale girlsm The meeting was opened with the call to worship by the president, and 1 welcome was extended to two new member's. The hymn "The Great Physician" was sung with Margaret Sanderson at the piano, followed by the Lord's Prayer and the purpose. The minutes were read by Gail Miller 'n the absence of the secretary, Betty Moss. The scripture lesson from the first book of Ruth was read by 13renda.I3all and the interesting Bible ;tory of Ruth was given by Mrs. Wes '3radnock. The roll call vas answer - 'd by each girl telling their favorite winter sport which most answered by ;hating. A short business period ''ollowed in which the girls planned 'or their vesper service and made Arms for their autographed quilt. rhe offering was received by the treasurer, Mary Sanderson, and the meting was close(! %vitt' and hymn "Birds are singing," the benediction and Taps. The next meeting will be held on Friday, November 23rd at 7:00 p.m, Royal Photographer Reveals Secrets Mrs. Lisa Sheridan recently took a series of photographs of Prince .Andrew, younger sou of Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip, tvhich delighted readers of newspapers and maga:.ines the world, over. In this interview with a Christian Science ,Monitor correspondent, she talks of her • experiences in photographing children, and of her "Dat] with Prince Andrew," the title of a book of her pictures recently published in London. • • • When Mrs. Lisa Sheridan open- ed the door of her private office to let me out, a chubby baby in blue rompers hopped in. "Hello," she said. The babe reached up with 1WO hands and gave a smile which woulci have rejoiced the heart of aty photographer. "1s she a model?" \Ir.s. Sher- idan asked the mother. She had brought her along to see %vhether she would lir suitable. the moth- er explained. "I think site's a certainty." Airs. Sheridan ;old her assistant. "Book her up." I would have been surprised at all this if I had not seen the no- tice in the studio window: "If you think your child is photo- genic bring her along to the studio any afternoon between 2:30 and 3:30.'. Mrs. Sheridan's pictures of Prince Andrew and Queen Eliza- beth filled the window. In the pring of 19(32 she trent io Wind - For Castle and Buckingham Pa- lace to take the first major series of pictures of Queen Elizabeth's youngest eitild, and the result delighted people throughout the world. Mrs. Sheridan has photograph- ed Queen Elizabeth and her sis- ter Princess Margaret since the Queen was 10, and the Princess five years of age. She was invited to Royal Lodge, Windsor, by the Duke and Duchess of York four years after she and her husband came to London—penniless. Mrs, Sher- idan set up her photographic studio and her husband worked In a bank. Thuy had both been brought up in St. Petersburg (now Len- ingrad). They left at the time of the Bolshevik Revolution and were later married in Paris. The Queen, remembering how successfully Mrs. Sheridan had photographed her and Princess Margaret while they were grow- ing up, sent for Mrs. Sheridan when it came time to take photo- graphs of the young Prince Charles, Princess Anne, and later Prince Andrew. The most popular picture was one of the young Princess Anne in long trousers climbing into a small window from a ledge, pull- ed in by the Queen and with Prince Charles outside alert to catch her if she slipped. Then Prince Charles climbed in by himself. He is seen in the photo- graph holding on precariously with the Queen ready to give a hand from the window but watching first to see if he can manage without aid. "Royal pants slipped a bit showing a few inches of bare back," Mrs. Sheridan said. "Peo- ple loved the informality of it." The most popular picture in her new book, Mrs. Sheridan feels, will be one taken in what she calls the "peekaboo" series, where Prince Andrew crept onto the floor behind the nursery couch and peeped over the top looking very mischievous. Her albums include many charming studies of Prince Char- les and Princess Anne when they were young. The young Prince Andrew, she says, is naturally fearless, and not at all shy. He is fortu- nate in having parents who do not hamper his efforts. When he climbs he is encouraged to be self-reliant. If he falls there is no anxious rush to soothe and examine him. When additional safety measures have to be tak- en, this is d.no v, t ;u, t ' con meal ur e:nl.h Queen Eliz:cbeih's insiAcnce on letting her children develop in a natural, boisterous manner makes for good pictures, Mrs, Sher- idan feels. The young Prince's attack on the high ;tone steps on the ter- races at Windsor Castle gave some good action shots. He climbs over the lawns round the central fountain at Windsor, "not so easy for a small boy always in a hurry," she says. He falls down, rolls back with a merry laugh, dogs tumbling atter him. He tiles again and again as long as his interest lasts, Animals help to produce a good picture, Mrs. Sheridan feels, since they take the child's atten- tion from himself. She pointed out a picture of the Queen and Prince Andrew with the corgi clogs cn the castle steps. Prince Andrew is looking at the dogs to see bow they are behaving, The result is sn un=elfc;rsHous pic- lo e o' 'Po be with the young Prince, Mrs. Sheridan says, is "a merry experience." Far from having to wait for a smile, she often found herself having to wait for a less boisterous mood. One of the quieter moments came when the Prince, holding his Teddy bear upside down, put a chubby finger across his lips and whispered "Ssssh!" indicating his favorite bear was asleep. "He finds adventure every- where," she said, "whether lean- ing over the pond, romping with the 'big Fellah,' his favorite toy rabbit, or standing up in his nur- sury chair shouting, 'Look, no hands!' Prince Andrew, like the other royal children, loves to ride with his mother in the ponycart which delighted Princess Marg- aret when they were young, "W h e n photographing chil- dren," Mrs, Sheridan said, "I think the main thing is to make them feel at home. I do not am- use them. They should amuse themselves." Then she added with a chuckle: "I have my tricks, of course. One is here." She turned to a picture of Prince Andrew examining the harness of a pony.rr I put a daisy under the harness, which imme- diately excited his curiosity," she said. Mrs, Sheridan invites mothers to bring babies to her studio. From their photographs she chooses those seen in the adver- tisements of many nationally known baby foods. "I love all young things," she said. "In fact I love every living thing." "She feels that between two and three is one of the best ages to photograph children; they lack self-consciousness and yet have a certain amount of showmanship. He Gave A Finger For The Cause The Japanese, it is often said, are prone to go off the deep for a cause. Star-crossed lovers leap with arms entwined into the crater of Mount Fuji; during the last war, Japanese kamikaze pilots gained world fame for their suicidal dives on U.S. war- ships; hara - kiri (disembowel- ment) is still considered an hon- orable way to die in the land of the Rising Sun. In fact, such devotion to causes, lost and otherwise, is so commonplace in Japan that last month's illustration caused hard- ly a ripple. Police picked up a 17 -year-old ultra -nationalist stu- dent named Kiyoshi Tsujiyama near Premier Hayato Ikeda's office, He was carrying a bloody envelope. Inside was Tsuji- yanla's little finger, which he told arresting officers he had chopped off only a few minutes earlier in order to show Ikeda the evidence of his "determina- tion to fight against Commun- ism," With a muffled yawn, the po- lice turned him over to the Tokyo juvenile court authorities. EVER HAPPEN TO YOU? -fHE PO WHo SLEEPS UNDER "ME COFFEE TABLr -- STANDS UP! By Blake 4-D Li IGl,,; features Syrrlicnle, 15C., 1062. Warrigtdn leeteed. I0-23 IN A FAST LEAGUE — Geraldine Page and Dean Martin ore bent in topnotch performances in this scene from their new film, "Toys in the Attic." Costarring with them is Wendy Hiller So aware is Dino of the acting competition by Wendy and Geraldine, that he actually studied his lines. Getting The News For 112 Years When Abraham Lincoln fell to an assassin's bullet in Ford's Theater, Washington, April 14, 1865, the news took 11 days to reach Europe. But it helped to make the reputation of a man whose name is probably more widely known today than any other in the field of international journalism. He had "scooped" all his rivals with the news that shook the world. The elan was Paul Julius Reu- ter, whose pigeon -post begin- nings in Aachen, Germany, more than a century ago were be cele- brated this October by the'world- wide wire service which bears his name. A ceramic plaque unveiled on a house in that ancient Rhine- land city recalled that there in 1850 Paul Julius Reuter, a young German of humble origin, laun- ched what today is a great news empire on the wings of 40 mes- sage -carrying pigeons. Today the name Reuter sign- ifies a global organization com- manding a complex system of news collection and distribution aided by the latest techniques in radio and cable communications. It is a name printed daily in thousands of newspapers throughout the world as the signature on news messages. Irl the Aachen ceremony Julius Reuter's pigeon post was com- memorated some three months after his successors marked the organization's entry into the space age—in August, 1962—by "bouncing" messages across the Atlantic via the American com- munications satellite Telstar. Reuter's pigeon post was mere- ly a brief chapter in the colorful career of a man who contributed more than most of his European contemporaries to the develop- ment of world communications and present day -standards of news reporting, In these days of cable and radio channels spanning contin- ents it is difficult to appreciate the impact of the newly invented "electric telegraph" on the world of Julius Reuter more than a century ago, That its wonder is now taken for granted is a measure of the achievement of Reuter, who had the genius to seize on its possi- bilities when many others thought it nothing more than an unreliable and costly "gimick." Until Reuter literally electri- fied it with his telegrams, the transmission of news had been a lcistliely business. The report of Napoleon's pass- ing reached Europe from St. Helena nearly two months alter the event. A London newspaper claimed an astounding record in announcing Wellingston's victory at Waterloo, 240 miles away, only four days after the bottle. In a few brief years Reuter transformed the transmission of news—and more besides—by his visionary use of the new means of communication, which prob- ably had more potent effects on the social fabric of the world than any since the invention of the printing press. Reuter was born in 1816 in the German town of Cassel, the son of a rabbi. • Restlessly in search of scope for his talents, he traveled to Paris, where he set up a small news agency which sold extracts from leading French journals to provincial newspapers in Ger- many. The enterprise failed, Ile went to Aachen, still deter- mined to find success in the ex- panding Europe of the amid -10th century with its ambitious poli- tical intrigues and feverish fi- nanc'al activity. A telegraph line from Paris stopped at Brussels. Another from Berlin ended at Aachen. Renter saw his chance in the 100 -mile gap. In a dovecote above a house belonging to a friendly brewer, baker, and pigeon -breeder Reu- ter, his wife and 13 -year-old son Franz eagerly untied small silken bags secured under the wings of Heinrich Geller's pigeons as they flew in from Brussels. In the bags were tissue -paper reports of the latest Paris stock prices telegraphed to Brussels from Paris. Reuter himself ran with the messages to the station telegraph office to pass therm down the line to Berlin and other German cities, But the telegraph gap gradual- ly narrowed. When it was only five miles wide Reuter gave up hos pigeons and installed relays of horses. The gap closed — just after Christmas, 1850, some nine months after Reuter had waited for the first pigeon, Reuter, his pigeons, and his horses were out of business. From Aachen, Reuter went to London in 1851, and the telegra- phic era in news transmission dawned. A telegraph line link- ing England with the continent of Europe had just been com- pleted. The stock exchange welcomed the fast and reliable service of commercial news Reuter started to bring in from the continent, but when he tried to set up a general news service he met with much resistance from the English newspapers. It was not until 1858 that he persuaded six newspapers to take two weeks' free trial service. It was an instant success, and at the end of the trial period Reuter was able to sell his news to the London press for a total of $120 a month, With the outbreak of the Civil War in America the 1360's brought fresh challenges and tri- umphs for Reuter. News from America was car- ried on the mail packet from New York, available equally to Reuter and his rivals, So he set up his own cablehead at the furthermost tip of south- west Ireland. Dispatches were packed in watertight phosphor- escent canisters, which were dropped into the ocean off the Irish coast and picked up by a Reuter agent in a small tender. The news was then telegraph- ed from the lonely Irish outpost to Cork, whence it was relayed over the normal Irish cable to London. Reuter thus established a lead over his competitors of al least eight }tours, By 1872 there was a Reuter office in every important world center, with the impatient foun- der of the organization laying his own cables %%there goo official communications existed. Cable laying — across moun- tains and deserts and under the seas—was a hazardous venture. Whales became entangled in the wires, nomadic tribesmen carried off the posts, but somehow the news got through, But, however else Reuter gave rein to imagination and ingenu- ity, he never took risks with the facts. He knew that accuracy, honesty, and impartiality were the only possible foundations for his news service. These princi- ples are still those of the present- day Reuters. In 1.891 Queen Victoria recog- nized a German barony which had been conferred un Reutor, who had become a British sub- ject soon after his arrival in England, Sociable, restless, ever -active --- a popular figure in Victorian so- ciety—Baron Reuter passed on al his villa in Nice, South of France, in 1899, aged 82, and his own or- ganization carried the word to London. During World War 11—in 1941 —control of Reuters passed into the hands of the newspaper in- dustry itself and it became a non- profit co-operative with a board of directors appointed by the newspapers. After the war the United Kingdom newspapers were joined by those of Austra- lia and New Zealand. 'Today Reuters distributes its news over a far-flung network of leased cable and radio channels —some 8,500 miles of physical telegraph tine in Europe alone. When Kit Carson Kept A Promise Kit and his good friend Dick Owens for some time had "con- cluded they had rambled enough" and wanted to settle clown. They had talked of getting a land stake on the Little Cimarron about fifty miles from Taos and building a ranch which might one day grow into a settlement. Dur- ing the winter they made their plans and started building in the spring, After four months of hard work they had put up a house, several small huts for the Mexi- can workers, and fenced in a large corral. A crop, sown in the rich bottom land, showed pros- pe'ets for a good harvest of grain. . Everything was progressing well when the unexpected hap- pened, An express arrived from Captain Fremont reminding Kit of his promise to join any future expedition he might make. Fre- mont was then at Bent's Fort preparing for a third expedition to the West, this one to last per- haps two years, with significant political as well as scientific pur- pose. It was not easy for Kit to put aside his dream of a hone and a life of comparative tranquility for another long absence from Josel'a, but his word once given was honor -bound. Owens was eager to go along, They sold their holding for less than half the value, sacrificing four months' labor as well as the funds used to purchase stock and equipment, Within four days after Fremont's message was received, the two pioneer farmers had made an about face and were spurring their horses toward Raton Pass. — From "Great Westerner; The Story of Kit Carson," by Bernice Blackwelder. Twinkle, Twinkle Brand -New Start With its bright lamp.. winking like monster fireflies, a new U.S, satellite orbited the earth last month, providing mapnmak- crs with a subtle tool to make the first precise measurements of the true distances between cities, the location of ocean is- lands, and the exact size and shape of the earth, The lamps arc filicd tvith xenon gas, which is sparked upon radio command by an elec- tric current to produce a light of 8 million candle potter. 13e - cause the beacons will be off most. of the time, and since each flash lasts only one -thousandth of a second, it is all but impos- sible to see the satellite, chris- tened ANNA 1-13 (ANNA 1 fail- ed to orbit), with the naked eye But scientists throughout the U.S., 0y photographing the flashes against the background of the stars, will he able to de- termine the exact po=sition of the satellite Then, using star charts, slide rules. and :hula, trig- onometry, they will 1)1 able to pinpoint the exact distances be- tween the stations Other na- tions, -including thk Soviet Un- ion, are being invited to help track ANNA. Eventually, with such worldwide cos Aeration, geodesists hope to work out the precise distances between any two points on earth. "Right now estimates of the distance between such places as New York and Al, oscow are near- ly as much as ;1 rnile off," Owen Williams of the Air Force Cam- bridge Research Laboratory said last month. Williams, who di- rected the design of the beacon system aboard ANNA tan acro- nym for the sponsors, Army, Navy, NASA, and the Air Force), predicted that the satel- lite would cut this inaccuracy to less than 100 feet. "The military implications of this are obvious," he commented. "But the scien- tific aspects are far more intri- guing. For the first time in man's history, he may finally learn where everything is on his planet," In skating over thin ice our safety is in our speed. —Ralph Waldo Emerson ISSUE 41 — 1962 King Tut Was Headline News 40 Years Ago Discovery of the treasure tomb of Tutankhamen in Egypt's Valley of the Kings 40 years ago this November was the stuff of which headlines were made in o less crisis -ridden time. Lord Carnarvon and British archaeologist Howard Carter brought to light perhops the most comprehensive collection of ancient Egypt's art and craftsmanship ever to be found. The then tremendous valuation of $50 mil- lion was given as an estimate of the trove's worth. Fash- ions followed the headlines, and for a while milady in- dulged in hair styles, cosmetics and clothing designed to give the "King Tut" look. Above entrance to the tomb. Below: "sacred cow," ornament from the burial couch, PAGE 4 THE BLYTH S'T'ANDARD IVednesday, Nov. 21, 19d LONDESBORO NEWS The sacred night of music which was sponsored by the Senior Group of the C.G.LT., last Sunday evening was well attended. The numbers by the Pilgrim Singers, solos by Harry Lear rind Karen Allen and duets by the Snell family were all enjoyed and appreciated by lovers of good music. We hope we will hear again soon from these young people. The community extends sympathy to the sisters of Miss Jennie Cowan, who passed away in Victoria Hospit. al, London, Friday evening. She was of a kindly and gentle disposition and will be sadly missed in her circle of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Allen were guests at the Collins•Fletcher wed• (ling at Centralia on Saturday. Mr. Harry Brown, Campbellford, and Mr, Keith Allen, • students at the O.A.C., Guleph, spent the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Allen and Karen. The Intermediate C.G.LT. Group are holding a bazaar in the Sunday Schoolroom on Saturday, November 24th. The Messengers will be in charge of the candy booth. The November meeting of the Ben can Unit of the U.C.W. was presided over by Mrs, Clarence Crawford, Mrs. Stanley Lyon has been appointed secretary in the absence of Mrs Harold Livingstone. Hymns 16 and 280 were sung, followed by prayer Mrs. Townsend rend the first 1C verses of Matthew 13th, with com ments from Mrs. Crawford. Minutes of the October meeting were react and approved. Mention was madc of Mrs. Funge's appeal for mitten: for the mitten tree at Christmas, The Social Committee secretary made mention of the banquet for the Hol - ten Federation which the ladies cat ered to. Mrs. Penfound then took charge of the program. Scripture was taken from Jeremiah 10: 11.16. Mrs. Penfound commented un the chapter, "God the Creator." "Each 411111.1111111111Olr Teens Orlon, Permanent Pleat, 2 pee. Dresses in beige, black and turquoise. Velvet Dresses, sizes 2 to 11, in red, blue, aqua, green and brown. Boys' Shirts, cowboy, cotton, flannel or L. sleeved, collard T Shirts. Ladies' Sweaters, bulkie or fine, several styles and shades. A small deposit will hold any article until Xmas. Needlecraft Shoppe Phone 22 Blyth, Ont. Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP, Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON, Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER--�E�ORTi3 0pon Evory Aftenloon PHONE IBJ 2-7112 Local Reprettentative — A. W. Sleep — 1111 2.6642 Phone Exeter: Business 41; Residence 34, yeemaimemosieiv FULL COURSE MEALS LIGHT LUNCHES Available At Any Time HURON GRILL BLYTH • OIVTA1tI0 FRANK GONG, Proprietor. 10% Discount SALE 'STORE WIDE CHOICEmo JUST IN TIME FOR YOUR FALL NEEDS, BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY • AND SAVE SALE CONTIN[IING Your 5 percent Sales Slips are redeemable at any time, up to and including $100,00 worth or less, "The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices" The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT, AUBURN NEWS Sixteen Registered For Fall Project Sixteen ladies registered last week for the fall project "143 lbs, of meat' sponsored by the Auburn Branch 01 the \V, I. through the ilume Eeonon► its Services of the Extension Branch or the Ontario Department of Agricul• ture. The leaders, Mrs, Thomas Law for and Mrs. Lloyd Humphreys, were in charge of the classes which intro duced this meat course. They ex plained that the purpose of this course is to extend the homemakers knowledge of meat and meat cookery so that, she can plan and serve meal which give the greatest enjoyment and satisfaction in terns of money and time spent. The ladies were in strutted on the laws regarding the sale of meat for human consumption the grading, how to identify the dif ferent cuts, and how to cook them. Those ladies attending these classes were: Mrs. Ed Davies, Ahs. Thomas llaggitt, Mrs. \\'ni. Empey, l\lrs. Gor• don Chamney, Airs, Harry Watson ,Mrs. Donald Haines, Mrs. Gordon 1)o• bie, Mrs. George Schneider, Mrs. El. liott Lapp, Mrs. Roy Drier, Mrs, Nor. man McDowell, Mrs. Arnold Craig Mrs. Robert Turner, Mrs, Frank Raithby, Mrs, R. J. Phillips and Mrs. Wes Bradnock, Celebrated 86th Birthday 111r, and Mrs, 'Thomas Lawler and son, Jimmy, entertained relatives in honour of Mr. Thomas Parks' 86th birthday, with a fowl dinner. Follow• ing the serving of the decorated birthday cake gifts were presented to mark this occasion, Those present were Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Parks Dungannon, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton FOR SALE "Wright" piano. Apply Mrs. Ida Townsend, Londesboro, phone 37117 Blyth. 36.1, one of us have different talents and are required to make use of these talents." A poem on Remembrance Day, "Thanks he to God," was read. A splendid review of the 1st chapter of the Study Book "On Asia's Rim," was given by ;firs. Crawford. The poem, "A Prayer for Christian Unity' was read by Mrs. Durnin. Prayer hy• Mrs. Penfound closed the meet. ing. Ladd, Blyth, Mr, and Airs. George Lawlor, of Auburn. AM', Allan Craig, of Wingham, and his father, Mr. Win. .1. Craig, visited on Sunday with the latter's brother Mr. Ernest Craig, of Godcrich, who is n patient in Westminster hospital Horticultural Society Executive Meet The Executive of the Auburn nor. ticultural Society met at the home of the president, Mrs. Ed, Davies, with 'ten nie►nbers present. The minutes were approved as read by the secre. Wry, Mrs, Gordon 1t. Taylor. The fin• ancial statement showing a balance of $133.07, prepared by the treasurer Mrs. Bert Craig, was accepted as read by the secretary. Much praise was given to Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Straughan who had been in charge of the Man. chester Garden this year, for keep ing it in trim order, also to Wilfred Collinson for trimming and cutting the grass around the letters at the western approach to the village. A nominating committee of Mrs. Dun. can MacKay, Mrs, 11. J. Phillips and Mrs. Frank Raithby were named to bring in the 1963 slate of officers at the December meeting. Plans were made to hold a Christ. mas party on 1)eccniber 3rd with Mrs. G. 11. Taylor, Mrs, 11, J. Phillips, AL's Frank Raithby and Mrs. Wni. Straw. than to be in charge of the potluck lunch. An exchange of 25 cent gifts will be held with Mrs. W. T. Robison and Miss Elma Murch in charge, and Mrs. Duncan MacKay and Mrs. Wes 13radnock will be the program tom mince. The correspondence was read by Mrs. Taylor and she presented the tax notice on the Manchester Garden which the Executive instructed the Treasurer to pay and also the Ontario Horticulture dues. A letter was read concerning the school for judges 01. flowers to be held in IIamilton, This was left over as no members could be found that wished to attend this twc day school. The Society wishes to let all con• testants in the contest "My Garden Scrapbook" know that their entries must be in the hands of the secre- tary, by the first of December, in or• der to qualify for the money prizes. The president requested that all men. hers and friends in the village would decorate their homes and grounds for the coming Christmas season. The hostess served a delicious lunch. LAYAWAY NOW FOR XMAS $1.00 WILL IIOLD ANY ARTICLE 4-•-•-•-•-•-•-•4-1-44-44-$44- 44 N4+1 •11 1-••1.1••-4-+ 14+1 1 1-4+4-1 41-04-0 ... FREE GIFT WRAPPING .. , EXPERT WATCH REPAIRS .. • 44-4-4-•-•-•-•-•-••-•-•-•-•-44-•-•-•-•-•-•-••-•••••-••• 40+144 *4+4 444 4 N 4-/ • ANSTETT JEWELLERS CLINTON 1VALKERTON SUAFORTII WHAT a SAW! PIONEER'S SUPER 6.20 Yes, we made last year's favourif pw"even better, Our engineers have refined p id improved on the famous 6.20 to produce a superpaw, The 1962 Super 6-20 is a much better saw. 30%FASTER! SEE f0AY0URSELf! PIONEER Snell Feed Mill•Dlyth Ont. T,911.? LARGE SELECTION fItIIN1 9.!,„,s,! INNIII ARROW & MILLBROOK SP01UE SHIRTS I''OR XMAS GIF'T'S MEN'S READY-TO-WEAR SUITS (2 pr. pants) Green, Grey, Blue Check and Plain Charcoal Priced fl'oln $36,00 to $39,95 1'1AD1.1:-TO-MEASURE SUI'T'S (i-Iouse of Stone) (2 week delivery) $69.00 FOAM LAMINATED JACKETS (Men's & Boys') DOUBLE THE WARMTH OF ANY FABRIC To WJIICil IT IS BONDED — VERY LIGII'l' IN WEIGHT --- in Green and Tobacco Brown MEN'S SUBURBAN COATS in Grey and Winter White Priced from $15.95 to $21,00 SKATES Are Ideal XMAS GII'''I'S SEE ALL THE DIFFERENT S'T'YLES ON DISPLAY IN OUR STORE. •41.11/.1•.1.1.1•••1.1.1H-4+4•••-••••♦$-1110•1•+•N 5 PERCENT DISCOUNT Ou All Purchases Made hor Children With FAMILY ALLOWANCE CHEQUES •1-44-1.1-1•-,+41.11••11111.4$-1.111111111111-1.1-4-1-1.4 www R. W. Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR "The Store With The Good Manners" i 5e - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH XMAS CARDS --- fine assortment, 29c to 98c a box XMAS GIFT VANITY SETS --- for Children, Youths and Ladies 89c to 2.59 PLAY TOY RATTLES FOIL CHILDREN --- Sani- tary, durable, non -inflammable -- large assort- ment to choose from. VICEROY PLAY SAFE TOYS --- soft - safe washable --- fine assortment, CLASSIC STORY BOOKS --- large asdort tent, GIFT, SETS FOR ALL --- towels, pillow cases, tablecloths, baby sets, baby blankets, billfolds, and key sets, Cameo lighters, etc. BLYTH LIONS CLUB Annual RUMMAGE COLLECTION (3 SALE MEMORIAL MALL, BLYTH SATURDAY, NOV. 24 Sale to start at 1:30 p.m, AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF MISCEL- LANEOUS ARTICLES WILL BE DISPOSED OF You are reminded that the Lions will call at your home on Friday evening, November 23, for your donations. Contributions of 1-lome-Made Baking and Preserves will be gratefully received. Rural Contributors may phone Lions Edward Wat- son or Walter Buttell, or any member of the Lions Club, and arrangements will be made to pick up their contributions, PLAN TO ATTEND ON SATURDAY, NOV. 24th McCALLUM!S MEAT MARKET FEATURES: LAMB LEGS - LAMB SHOULDER OR CIiOPS Smoked Picnic Hams Pickled Cottage Rolls Why tcs Bolo Sauerkraut, in bulk or 3 lbs. for Mincemeat, in bulk or 3 lbs. for No. 1 SELECT Breakfast per lb. 49c per lb. 59c 3 lbs. for 1.00 per lb. 25c 59c per lb. 29c 79c BACON, per lb. 59c Phone 10 For Delivery. - .• i/ a....•. a ... -.4..M ..S S44 i�r. �r .�.1 .r..a. . ..a- WedI1 Hiay, Nov. 21, 1962 THE BLYTH STANDARD Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH —ONTARIO. V1MOV"I....IVHMNM/. N VVWW'•IWN41/•Nw INSURANCE IN IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, SicknesK, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability, Life. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE. Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140 AIM BLYTII BEAUTY BAR 1 I E.1lnrtnenta u • tt i C ng, and Styling. Ann Hollinger Phone 143 THE WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY ]lead Office, Dungannon, E.stablislux1 1879 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Brown Smyth, Dungan. non; Vice -President, Berson Irwin, Belgrave. Directors: Paid Caesar, RAI. 1, Dtcngaaton; George C. Feagan, Goderieh; Ross McPhee, R..11, 3, Au. burn: I)cnlald P. Mackay, Ripley, R.R. 1; John F. Madonna, R.R. 3, (. o Ie - rich; Allan Macinlyre, Lueknow, 11.11. 5; Wm. Wiggins, 11.11, 3, Auburn, For information on your insurance, call your nearest director who is also an agent, or the secretary, Frank F. Thompson, Dungannon, 45 DEAL) STOCK SERVICES HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR DISABLED COWS and IIOIRSES also Dead Cows and IIorses At Cash Value Old ITorses-4e per pound Phone collect 133, Brussels, BRUCE MARLATT •011 GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119, Blyth 24 Hour Service Plant Licence NO. 541R.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 liensall 696112, 50.13p.tf. SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc. pumped and cleaned, Free estimates. Louis Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, R.R. 2. AUTOMOTIVE Mechanical and body repairs, glass, steering and wheel balance. Undaspray for rust prevention. DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service Nn. 8 Highway, Phone JA 4-7231 Goderleb, Ontario. 2041 ACIIESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE Highest prices for dead, old or dis- abled horses and cattle, Phone Atwood 356.2622 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 pm. EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday (BY API'OIN'I11MENT) ROY N. BENTLEY Pubilo Accountant (}ODERICII, ONT. Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 — Box 478, G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST, - WINGIIAM,. ONT, (For Appointment please phone 770 WfnghnrnL Professlonnl Eye Examination. Optical Services, J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaiorth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Beaforth Daily Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Wed. — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30. Phony HU 2-7010 G. B. CLANCY OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometrist) FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE MI, (IODERICII CRAWFORD & IIETHERINGTON BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS Crawford, 11. S. Hetherington. Q.C. Q.C. Wingham and Blyth. IN BLYTII EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointmen. Located In Elliott Insurance Ageney Phone Myth, 104 Wingham, 4\ SCOTCH PINE CHRISTMAS TREES Every tree carefully selected, For quality as well as lowest price order direct from Georgian 13ay'1'ree Farms, Owen Sound, Phone FRanklin 6.6254. 33.4, FOR SALE Ladies hand made leather purses, billfolds, belts and key cases. Contact Walter Mason, Blyth. 35.1 p PROPERTIES FOR SALE WILFRED McINTEE Real Estate Broker Walkerton, Ontario 200 acres in East 1Vawanosh 'Town- ship, 2 sets of buildings, 2 silos, hydro. 100 acres in Morris Township, good buildings, hydro, 1 toile from Blyth. 100 acres in Mullett Township, good brick house, hydro, barn. 97 acres near Auburn, 10 acres bush, good huildings, drilled well, 27•lf. VICTOR KENNEDY Blyth, Ontario ww. CLINTON SALE BARN Sale every Friday at 1:30 (a good livestock market) Bob Henry, Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager. Auctioneer 05•tt. •41...".....•44,•••••••,++.1,041..1. MNN ELLIOTT REAL ESTATE AGENCY Gordon Elliott Broker Blyth — Phone 104 or 140 Followiug Blyth Residential Property M storey frame, insul brick dwelling and garage on good lot. 1 story dwelling with asbestos sid- ing, complete bath and shower, oil furnace, aluminum windows, built-in cupboards, Dinsley street. DOREEN'S BEAUTY SHOPPE SPECIAL --- on Doreen's Personalized SPRAY NET 14 oz, tin $1.00 Phone 260 for Appointment FOR SALE 'fable potatoes, will deliver. Apply, Mason Bailey, phone 54115, Blyth. 32.6p FOR SALE Beady to lay IIy-Line Pullets, vac- cinated and debeaked. Apply, Bruce Roy, Lo)desboro, phone 28116, Blyth. 36.1p AUCTION SALE To be held at the farm, lot 14, con- cession 2, Stanley Township Wt miles west and 1/1 mile south of llrucefield TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 at 1,30 pit,. Consisting of: 40 head of Choice Dairy Cattle; 25 grade Holstein cows and heifers. fresh and springing; 15 Registered Holstein hcifcrs, fresh and springing; 20 young calves; 1 Holstein Bull. This is an outstanding lot of heifers of high producing dam. TERMS CASA Anyone wanting to buy on time should contact us several clay's before sale. Proprietor; D'Arcy Bothwell & Sons. Auctioneer: Ilarold Jackson. FOR SALE New High Grade Pianos of reput- able names such as Sherlock Man- ning, Bell, Lesage, and Mason and Risch, also the new sensational Elec- trohonte Kinsman, electric organs in Four Prize ranges, all represent ex- ceptional x•ceptio al value. Contact, Garnet harrier, Piano and Organ Sales, Whitechurch, Phone 4041V21 Wing - ham, Tracie -ins accepted, 30.4p IN MEMORIAM ItOBINSON—In loving memory of a dear another and grandmother, Mrs. R. H. Robinson,who passed away November 13, 1948. The blow was great the shock severe We little thought her death so near Only those that lost can tell The sorrow of parting without fare- well —Sadly missed by daughters, sons and grandchildren. • 36.1 CARD OF THANKS '1'o the Ladies Auxiliary of (lie Blyth Legion also the Legion and those who sent me flowers and cards while In Westminster hospital during my last illness. Thank you so much. 36.1. George McNall STRAYED Hereford steer, 800 to 900 lbs. Count your cattle, he may he with yours. William Manning, Landes - bore, phone 241(4, Blyth, 36.1p BLYTII. LIONS CLUB CASH BINGO Blyth Memorial hall SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24 8:30 p.m. Standard Time 12 games for ;5.00 2 Share -the -wealth $55,00 JACKPOT (55 CALLS) Admission 50c - Extra cards CAItI) OF TIIANKS The sisters of the late Jennie Cowan wish to express sincere thanks to their relatives, friends, and neigh - hours, for kindness shown and also for floral tributes and messages 01 sympathy. We especially thank Mr. Lloyd Tasker, Airs, Clarence Craw- ford, Rev, IL lfungc and Rev. E. Me - Lagan, 36-1 HOUSE FOR SALE 0 room house on Queen Street. Apply Robert Bell, Blyth, phone 152. 36.I p 1111.._. ._- PAGE 5' CUS'T'OM BUTCHERING Cattle Pigs Sheep PLANT LICENSED BY HURON COUNTY HEALTH UNIT We Also Sell Fronts and Hinds of Beef and Side of Pork Cut and Wrapped for Freezer W. L. BAEKER and SON 1irusscls Phone 291 CAI(D OF THANKS I wish to express my sincere thanks to friends, neighbours and relatives for remembering my friend Joseph H. Ewing, while a patient in Clinton Hospital and Victoria Hospital, Lon- don. Also to his Doctors, Street, Wy- alt and Cole and attending nurses. Thanks to all who sent cards of sym- pathy and floral tributes in our re- cent bereavement. Including special thanks to Rev. R. 1'. Meanly and Mr. Lloyd 'Tasker. --Edith L. Creighton, Prop. at Grand View Lunch. 36-1p VILLAGE OI'' BLYTII Municipal Nominations NOTICE Is Hereby Given that the Animal Meeting for the Nom- ination of Candidates to fill the Offices of Reeve, Fou' Coun- cillors, 'Three School 'Thurstees and One Public Utility Com- missioner, will be held in the BLYTH 111E11010AL HALL MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26 From 7 p.m, to 8 pm, AN ELEC'T'ION, IF NECESSARY, WILL. BE HELD ON MONDAY, DECEMBER 3 Polls Being Open front 9 a.m. to 5 p.m, IN 'TIIE BLYTII MEMORIAL HALL 1 GEORGE SLOAN, Clerk. .44-4-4444-4-4-4 4 4-4-4-44 44'!• 4-4444-44 1.1 i 4 • • • • . • • • • 6 4 4 • • i 444,404 • MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT TIIE GODERICII PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.75t1 NOW 1'1 AYING NOW—Nov. 22 • 23 24 — Adult Entertainment "1'11E INTERNS" SUZY PARKER and CLIFF ROBERTSON Sat., Matinee Only — William Holden and Glenn Ford In MAN FROM COLORADO" Mon., 'I'ucs.,Wed., Nov 26 • 27 • 28 "TOWN WITHOUT PITY" Filmed i nEu•ope: from Manfred Gregor's shocking novel, Starring ADMITTANCE R 5 T 31 3 C T E 0' TO PERSONS 11 MRS Of AGE OR OVER Kirk Douglas, Christine Kaufman, Robert Blake Thursday, Friday, Saturday, November 29.30 December 1 An Edgar Rice Burrough's adventure in Technicolor Starring Jock Mahony and Simi Jai You Will Never Outgrow The Need For Milk IN TIIE EVENING OR BEFORE GOING TO BED Blyth Dairy can supply you with the Best * Cream Top * Homogenized * Skim Milk * Chocolate Milk - * Whipping Cream * Table Cream * Cottage Cheese We Try To Produce a Good Product for your Health WANTED Used Leli. grinder. Contact Robert Marshall, phone 121118, Blyth, 36.1 1VANTF.I) Small coal heater. Apply Mis. Glenn Kechnie, phone 60, Blyth. 30.1p. CHRISTMAS CARDS & GIFTS Now is the time to purchase your Christmas Cards at the Standard Of- fice while the supply is complete. Don't delay—buy today and get your pick of the lot. Also personalized stationery for excellent Xmas Gifts, printed to your own specifications. Callearly and look them over ,phone 89, Blyth. T EIsELIA LES UGLY CHEVROLT OIFER$ THIS PROVEN PAYOFF IN POWER, PERFORMANCE AND DEPENDABILITY. 1963 Chevrolet trucks proved their mettle before they went on sale. To do this, six Chevrolets worn taken across the continent for a 2,000 mile shakodown run through some of the wildest terrain in North America—the Baja California peninsula in Mexico. Chevrolet's power, performance and depend- ability paid off — the entire run was completed without a breakdown, failure or delay; and with only normal maintenance! That's how '63 Chevrolet trucks got the name "Tho Now Reliables". This proven reliability is built into every '63 Chevrolet truck. Whether you run 'em cross- country or cross-town, '63 Chet/los will deliver what they promise! Get the facts today, from your local Chevrolet truck dealer, then you'll know— Chevrolet pays off! Ore' NEW POWER for '63, Chevrolet has two new engines — a 230 cu. In, Six (140 hp) and a 292 cu. In. Six (165 hp). Both are equipped with 7 -bearing crankshafts, positive crankcase ventilation, full -Row oll filter and Detcotron gen- orators. They're the newest additions to Chevrolet's complete line of proven performance - tested engines, TWO NEW SUSPENSIONS. light Duty Chevles feature Independent coil spring front suspensions for top comfort and increased durability. Standard equipment for Mediums end Heavies is Chevrolet's new Varlable•Rate leaf spring front suspension. Based on Chevrolet's work -proved Varl-Rate rear suspension, It pro- vides better tracking and handling with reduced maintenance. —. -- --u---. MN OM — alma* -- -•1 — .- WI-. k. NEW FRAMES. Stronger, more durable ladder- .11:1\1:,,,‘ frame, In each series, has been specifically en• type frames are '63 Chevrolet's backbone. Each glneered and built to meet the demands of load and road conditions. It's Chevrolet's way of mak- Ing sure that every payload pays off in profits for you I A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE 13 CHEVROLET TRUCKS Be sure to see Bonanza on the CBC -TV network each Sunday. Check your local listing for channel and time. LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED 30 Ontario Street # i �' CLINTON, ONT. 11U. 2.9321 He Was Fast But Death Was Faster At Le Mans last summer, rash, brash Ricardo Rodriguez, Mex- Ico's til:ost driver and one of the best in the vvorld, laughed when an interv'ie\\er asked hint about death. "There are a thousand ways to die," said the young man of 20. "Me 1 never think about it. I just want to he the hest possible driver in the world. 1 think I can achieve it one day." Before the start of the first Grand Prix of Mexico last month, 5 -foot -2 Rodriguez, who had been racing motorcycles and cars since he was 12 but had never won a Grand Prix, had reluctantly changed his hind, Pressured by his attractive wife, he made a promise. "I ant already entered in this Grand Prix," he confided to her, But after 1 win it — and I am determined to win it — I'll retire from racing forever." Always exceptionally daring ("If he lives, I'll be surprised," said one rival), he seemed deter- mined to outdo himself at Mex- ico City's Sports City Speedway. Even when Britain's John Sur - tees turned in the fastest trial time Thursday afternoon, Rodri- guez, standing near his mother. father, wife, and racing brother Pedro, remained supremely con- fident. "I can beat that," he said. "I will heat that now." After a brief pit stopover to have his carburetor adjusted, Rodriguez climbed back into his blue and silver Formula One Lotus and returned to the track. Moments later, when track officials franti- cally tried to signal him to slow down, Ricardo answered with a signal of his own: "I'm going flat out," Heading into the track's most treacherous corner, Rodriguez's speed at the 46 -degree turn was nearly 125 miles an hour. "All I could think of was 'He's going much too fast'," said Dutchman Carel Godin de Beaufort, driving a Porsche behind Rodriguez. "'He'll never snake it.' Then sud- denly it was all over." Bouncing off the steel rail on the right, the Lotus caromed off the left rail and rebounded into the right crumpling in half and hurling the youngster 45 feet down the track. Before the am- bulance could carry him to a hos- pital, Rodriguez, his skull shat- tered, his abdomen torn open, was dead. His final race was over — ironically, one day before Mexico's national holy day of mourning, Dia de los Muerto3 (Day of the Dead). For his oountrymen and his competitors, it was a tragic and senseless loss. "I have never worried about other drivers, but I have always worried about Ricardo," said de Beaufort. "He always seemed so terribly young, so terribly en- thusiastic, and so anxious to win at all costs, If Ricardo Rodriguez had lived he would have been one of the great ones." CHURCHILL STEPS OUT For the first time since crack- ing his left thighbone in Monte his left thighbone in Monte Carlo last June, 87 -year-old Sir Winston Churchill felt up to a night .out. The occasion: A Lon- don gathering of The Other Club, co-founded by Churchill in 1911 as an alliance of political - minded bons vivants. Dining on soup, fillet of sole, fillet of beef, pears, and ice cream—and drink- ing champagne with every cc.urse—Churchill chinned hap- pily with old chums and topped off the evening by smoking a 7 - inch cigar. It was nearing mid- night when the ex -Prime Minis- ter Left, but a crowd still waited on the sidewalk for a glimpse of him. With one hand on a cane and with his other arm support- ed by a detective, Churchill was in no position to flash his "V" greeting. Instead he called out to the throng: "Goodnight, goodnight." LITTLE SHAVER — Keith Drake, 2, wants to be a base- ball player when he grows up, so he gets in a little practice with dad's lather at his home. Blame The Weather On The Moon! When raising crop.; was more an art than a science, many farmers planted potatoes or corn at the full moon, in the belief that rain was sure to fall in a few days. Meteorologists, of course, dismissed the idea as a quaint holdover from pagan times when the moon was wor- shipped as a deity with influence over the weather. Now it seems that the farmers were right all along. Using an IBM 650 computer to analyze U.S. rainfall data over the past 50 years, an astronomer at New York University's College of En- gineering has found that rain ac- tually does tend to fall a few days after the new and full moons. When the moon is only a half circle, Donald Bradley and his associates report in the jour- nal Science, there is a corre- sponding tendency to dryness. "Our findings surprised and shocked a lot of meteorologists, at first," Bradley said wryly last month, "but they're checking their own records and they con- firm our findings. One meteorol- ogist in Texas wrote that the lunar influence holds true for his records of 40 years of heavy rainfall in San Salvador. He also has noticed that flash floods in Texas are most likely to occur just after a full moon." Bradley started amassing his figures back in 1957 when he noticed some "odd coincidences" between the positions of the planets and weather. But not un- til two years ago, when he join- ed Dr. Max A. Woodbury's re- search group at NYU, was he given the computers to check out his "crazy" ideas. "We really just stumbled on the moon cor- relation," said Bradley, who still doesn't know the explanation for his discovery. "At first, I couldn't believe it, Surely, I fig- ured, it would have been noticed by now, I put off completing the study for eight months." Actually, the correlation had been noticed—and disregarded. The Jewish Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur, always falls in the second week of the lunar month, and among devout Jews there is an old saying that "it never rains on Yom Kippur." As one of Bradley's Jewish colleagues told hien: "We had it under our noses all along, and missed it." How Can 1? By Roberta Lee Q. How can I tenderize steaks? A. By mixing a small quantity of. vinegar and olive oil thor- oughly, rubbing this on both sides of the steak, then allow- ing it to stand for about two hours before cooking. SOVIET SUBS ON PATROL -- U.S. Defence Department photo shows Soviet submarine flying "Red Star ensign, with personnel in conning tower observing aircraft which photo- graphed it in vicinity of Cuban operations. Death Tree Claimed 50,000 Victims it vva: once a peaceful, tiny village in the midst of sweet- smelling fields, hedgerows and elm trees where 011 moonlit nights maidens strolled with their lovers beside a gently rip- pling brook. But it became 0 place ref con- stant death! 11 was tlw site of the dreaded, "never green" Ty- burn 'l'1'ee \v'hiclt t'as not a tree, but the grim and ghastly gallows where over a period of 000 years some 50,000 people were hanged — many also drawn and quar- tered. What a contrast! The gallows, sometimes called by criminals the '"Prrple Tree" or "Three-leg- ged Mare," was a permanent structure and a common place of execution not only for the whole of the city of London but for al- most all Enuland. Wooden galleries were erected near it to accommodate hundreds of morbid sightseers. They flocked to watch murder- ers, traitors, robbers, highway- men, religious martyrs — as well as miserable wretches who had been caught trying to pick pock- ets — publicly hanged at Tyburn. Today the new spotlight is fo- cused on this once -gruesome sight because it is the centre of a great reconstruction and improve- ment scheme — one of the great- est in modern London's history — at Hyde Park Corner and Marble Arch. For Tyburn Tree, a historic site marked for the curious in recent years by a small, hardly visible, triangular stone embed- ded in the roadway, stood at what is known today as the north-east corner of Hyde Park, the traffic -ridden junction of Marble Arch and Edgware Road. Oxford Street, leading up to Marble Arch, is thronged by thousands of shoppers. today. Centuries ago it was called Ty- burn .Road and was filled with people watching the pitiful daily procession of cursing or praying men and women as they .were marched or dragged along it to the ever -ready Tyburn gibbets. They came from• the Tower of London or Newgate Prison which was on the •site of today's Old Bailey. The crowds jerred at some, cheered others. Tearful women sometimes gave the 'hangmen's. victims flowers 'or fruit as they went to the gallows. • Others were plied with intoxi- cating drinks. Many callous sight- seers bawled coarse jests. or threw stones when they recog- nized notorious criminals bound for the scaffold, writes Ashley Brown in "Tit -Bits." Highwaymen were usually popular with the crowd. Famous robber and jail breaker Jack Sheppard's execution at Tyburn attracted a "gate" of 200,000. He had planned another sensa- tional getaway at the gallows it- self and had concealed a knife about him, intending to cut through his bonds and dash through the crowd to safety. But the knife was detected. Sheppard then implored friends close at hand to obtain posses- sion of his body immediately it was cut down. 'Try to revive me by putting ARTICLES FOR SALE HOMEMADE 11011 clothes Gift Ixtx at ten $"2.110, Sati.sfactiorn (lwranteed. II enctnse tic for nailing Enclose length and waf.1 of doll, Mrs Scrim- shaw, Box 551, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR SALE COMMERCIAL property consisting of living (mailers, store and three•chair barber shop. $1'.25 hair cut. Good. bust. MSS, cciTtrntl1 I'ucatell. Gond 1111' for person 1(111) capital. Good investment. Write A. Prick. 269 Charlotte St., Peterborough, Ont. BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Ili LARGE four bay service station & garage, In Highgate, Ont. Located ane mile from 401 Highway and six miles from Rldgetown, present gallonage 70,000, Tires, oil, parts, Tabour over '11111(3' thousand dollars, Full price twenty•0ne thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, Down payment sew enty-five hundred dollars, there is a, wonderful opening far electric welder In Ihfs area, (2) 110 acre 'Tobacco farm, two hones two greenhouses, all equipment including three tactors, close to 60. acres of M B, Rights, Full price $711,- 000,00 711;000,00 down payment $20,000,00. Rod. ney, Ont district, (3) 375 Acre General Farm all work. able and level, located at West Lorne on highways 401 & 76. Ftill price. $60; 000,00 w'llh $20,000,00 down. (4) Three - 100 acre farms for sale at approx. fifteen to twenty thousand with 25';) down payment, West Lorne, Rodney & Dutton area. (51 We have space available for sale for small factory with. 18,000 square feet of floor space, rail\way siding, ihke water, lou' taxes, Close to markets, 09 nines from Windsor, 1'50 miles from Toronto. Also available in spring of 1963 two stores that can be built to. your own specifications, which we will rent with heat, hydro and natural gas, (6, We have an excellent opening for dentist stn West Lorne, Ont, l'hls area will corer a 20 nitre radius, a new of. flee will be made available and we wl1'1 arrange for n home on rental or pur• chase basis and also w111 arrange for a loan to purchase equipment required for the Waitress. (7) The same arrangements may be made for a medical' doctor In the MZ` lage of Rodney, Out. For Particulars Phone or Write GEORGE R, JOHNSTON REALTOR West Lorne, Box 244 or phone 764 me quickly in a warm bed," he yelled to them desperately. This plan also failed. The crowd was delighted when a condemned man did cheat the gallows. After a criminal named Dual had been hanged in 1740 he was cut down and it was then noticed that he showed signs of returning. life. Eager hands helped to revive him further and the mob sur- rounding him refused to allow him to be •re -hanged, They car- ried him off on their shoulders in triumph to his home. It's on record that when an- other Tyburn "victim," Dr, John Story, was hanged in 1571 the executioner bungled the job bad- ly, After being cut down, the doc- tor rose'to his feet and struck the hangman "n the head, knocking him off the scaffold. • The last person to be hanged at Tyburn was John Austin. His hanging took place on November 7, 1783. Then the Sheriffs of London decided to abolish Tyburn and ordered that executions should take place outside the prison at Newgate on a new gallows with an impl'oved type of "drop." There they continued until public hangings were abolished. But not till May 26, 1868, did Eng- land see its last public execution. Optimism: Be it ever so home- ly there's no face like your own. Before You Buy That Used Car Just as the proof of the pud- ding is in the eating, so the real test of the used car is In the driv- ing — over a period of time. This means after you own the car. But before you buy you can give it some thorough, on -the - spot tests (just as Grandma sam- ples the plum pudding while it is "in the making") that will give a reasonably complete pic- ture, • If the salesman has a sound car for sale, he will not object to the tests. If he does object, you've flushed your bird without even beating the bush. The following recommended tests were published in the Sep- tember, 1962, issue of Consumer Reports (a publication of the nonprofit, noncommercial organ- ization, Consumers Union, Mount Vernon, N.Y, These tests are vital in the final stages of buying a used car. After many of then] the range of possible repair costs will be giv- en, writes Donald G. Murch in the Christian Science, Monitor. Study highlights and reflec- tions along the body sides (omit:- ting omit-ting fenders) and top, Do this in a good light, Repainted or ripply areas on the metal indicate pos- sible damage to the car's basic structure, Probe by . thumb or finger pressure along the lower edges of body, doors, and trunk area for signs of weakened or rusted metal, Bubbles, blemishes, or flaking of paint, as well as ac- tual rust, are indications of in- ternal rusting, which is difficult and expensive -- and may in the end be impractical - to repair structurally. Run windows up and down; it they do not work, repair is fair- ly expensive, Open the doors and close them without slaming; if they sag, or do not fit, or drop down on opening, or must be slammed to close, they will us- ually be hard to fix, and, worse, may indicate a bent frame. Check the car's interior for signs of hard use or abuse (brok- en cushion springs, worn pedal pads, paint off steering wheel). Check the tires, including the spare. If they are badly worn, and the car is a new model, it probably has run up at least 20,- 000 miles, Unevenly worn treads on any tire indicate that the front end has been, 'or is, out of line. Realignment costs up to $15. Rebushing, up to $90. Press your foot steadily on the brake pedal for a minute or Fo. If it sinks slowly under pressure, there is hydraulic leakage. Fail- ure to repair is hazardous, and repair cost runs from $10 to $50. Start the engine and check all instruments, flashing lights and gauges to make sure they are functioning. A warning li#it or ammeter can show that the gen- erator is not charging. Cost to repair or replace $20 to $50. Stand broadside to the front wheel, grasp it at the top with both hands, and shake it to and from you with vigor. Clunking sounds, or a lot of free play, is a sign of loose or worn wheel be:1r- i,ngs or of worn suspension joints. Repair of the latter $20 to $90. Push down rhythmically at Inc' corner of the car at a time, so as to set it bouncing. The car should, when you release it, movo up or down and then stop at an equilibrium position. Freer continual motion — as up and down -- signals worn shock ab- sorbers, which should be replac- ed for safety as well as comfort (at $15 to $20 a pair.) BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES Markeferia-Post Office WELL eelablished business, 10 miles north-east of \le(ro on No. 7 Hwy. Large 33'x122' store plus 211'x24' stor- age room; 6 large modern roonns above store foi living quarters; additional 70' of highway commercial land for further development. $1,500-:$1,600 weekly Una• over, Equipment valued at $5,0110. \'en - dor guarantees $U),000 of stock $47,5)10 buys land, building, equipnnmt and stock, 319.01111 rlo\vn. Additional revenue, C'entacl broker Willson Realty Co„ Real. tors, 4560 Kingston Rd., West 11111. AM' T•3326, NEW INVENTIONS NEW' PRODUCTS MONEY' NEW IDEAS WE develop lina"ure and sell ANY PROFITABLE IDEA HU' 9.4443 BO'X 154', POSTAL STA "K" TORON I O I r Write SCOPE LINLIMl 1 ED COINS COINS wanted, pay highest prices, 11163' Coln. Catalogue 25e. Gary's (8) 9910' Jas. per Ave, Edmonton, Alta. FARM HELP WANTED WANTED man for large dairy farm, Must be fully experleneed. Modern' house, or good home Niagara district. State wages. John Konyn, RR. 1 Stevensville, Onh. FARM EQUIPMENT KRAEMAR FEED TRUCKS. HUNDRREDS. in use, Solidly constructed( with heavy wooden• hose and' sides. One. piece 20 gauge galvanized iron bottom and ends (no joints), Mounted on. two; 2'.75• x 10" semi-solid' rubber wheels and; one 0" swivel rubber enst'or. From fat• tory to; vou. No' Dealers. You make the savings. Two sizes 32" and 26" wide both• 72" long x 36" high. Only $67,501 and $65,00.. Cash with; order' or ( 0tD) F;0113. St. Jacobs. Kraemer Woodcraft,. St, Jacobs, Ont, Phone Mohawk 4.2052; FOR SALE — MISCEL'L'ANEOUS OIL portraits. Big 8 x 10 Size Hand painted from Snapshots to. your eolburs. Only $6',95, tIland Traders„ 134' Dieppe - Avenue, Pointe Claire, Quebec, NO MORE BATTERY TROUBLE for the life of your car. VX6. when added to your buttery dissolves the. bead sulphate which 1's the soft spongy fllh that forms on the battery and' also on the plates, el'osftyg' the pores and choking the tottery to• death. VX6: is fully guaranteed. Send money order for only 52:98 (pins 3'"i, safes tax) to, !toward E. Tuckey, P.O. Box 4021, Lon. doe,. Ont. »AALD9CRAFTi — 10421211161 PROFITABLE HOBBY MAKE Ireauttfnl brooches, earrings, melklaees at lrano-. Easy to. do, Sell' to, your friends, Excellent profits. Leann more about Jewel -Craft. Write L. O. Murpatroyd Co., Dept. W-5, Agfncowt, ons, HELP WANTED — MAUI • TEAR gas pens earn you instant do- lays. Just supply the demand! $&90, re. tail Rush $5,00 for sample pen free shells, big profit details. Safety -Guard Products, 4024 Weequahic; ' Newark 12, New Jersey. 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. HORSES REGISTERED Arabians and crosses, yearlings and weanings. For listings send stamped addressed envelope to A. d B. Kingscote, R.R. 5, Rockwood, Ont. LIVESTOCK POLLED shorthorns put more profit to 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 DON'T DELAY! EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN, OTTAWA $1.25 EXPRESS COLLECT ISSUE 47 — 1962 MEDICAL 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, pimples and foot eczema, will respond readll3 to the stainless, odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn of hopeless then seen Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3'.50' PER J'AR' POST'S REMEDIES 2865 St Clair Avenue East' Toronto MISCELLANEOUS TIMBER WANTED' STANDING tinier wanted send all de' tails, Price on the stump. McGuire' Sales, Box 458, Alex, Ont. NAME AND ADDRESS LABELS 1000 PEIRSONAI, printed gummed name• and address labels In handsome rete• able plastic box. Amazing value $1.00. Postpaid. Toppaul, Dept, 2.4, 6587 Pearl; Cleveland 30, Ohio OPPORTUNITIES FOR' MEN AND WOMEN' BL A HAIRDRESSER 301N CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Iluirdressing Pleasant dignified profession good; wages Thousands of successful; Menet Graduates America's Greatest' System ilhIst'ate(I Catalbgue Free Write or Call Marvel Hairdressing School' 358 Bloor Si: W. Toronto; Branches 44 King St W., Hamilton, 72' lttdlnu Street', Ottawa OF INTEREST T01 A{Hs REPTILE folks gift! Letter from Santa,, plus wonderful' anibrnd; Ideal gift any child. Mail' each, chilli's name, address, $1.00. Box' 2; Two RIVors, Wisconsin. PETS CANARIES,high class winning etraln bred' rolltrs, also beautiful' reds. and( frosted reds, J. A. Raymond, WiiiIanls• town; vat, PROPERTIES FOR SALE 31.00 ACRE Itinds, forms, cottages,. hunting fishing sites . ranch lands, selh lig for taxes, Send' $1100 hill for huge' Bet. Taxi ILand Sales, Box 201W, Cold: water, Ontario. PHOTO. STAMPS gti011106OAMPSI Your photograph, or negative mode into. real; 100 sting. date photos. High gloss, pontonatod and gummed, hocks. Fast service. lour or. tginal' returned' unharmed, 101 Plloto- stamps $2:00. Toppaul Cbl, 6151' Peers, Dept. T•3` Cleveland 30: OHlo, STAMPS SfiIIAIISMc Empire,. Latin' Amortize, W.orldi. Unusual appro'al8 for' seribus. aollbc'• tors. Col. W.. Gramm. ItilbwRtli Sell A115, ALL different packets: 100. IA& eomr mein,. ill 00 25042'•0'01 25. Y'a and S1.40' 50 Vatican 3100` 2000 World w1tl*. 82:50, ARMONK STAMP CO. ArmNdt•, Newt York. SWINE KAYMOORE Farm, English Tarkshlres, An foundation stock from tel* Mood lines ShurGaln Farms aid Walker. Farms Herd Sire Champion ?Writ 7311 Currently offering yarns gerrtce•ag• boars and open gilts. R.R. No. 1, ca. Agatha, Ontario. Phones: KHeltimer: Slit 11.7887; St. Agatha: 7421715. TRADE SCHOOLS COMPLETE business machine train - Ing including I.B.M. Key Punch, dais processing, comptometer and Marchant Burroughs Monroe cnrculators. Moltf lith dictaphone may be taken at Well, Academy. GE 2.3481 or visit the school at 304 King St., London, Ont., for full information. STATIONARY ENGINEERS Prepare for your mama Write SCHOOL OF STATIONARY ENGINEERING 93 BEAVER BEND CRESCENT • ISLINGTON, ONT. "LI thls the society editor? Well, I have some news for you." UP IN THE AIR — With a leup Delc'mare prepares to parachute He dangled in mid-air for 95 mi channel. He was sort of chuting and the roar of motors, Gil across the English Channel. nutes ali the wuy across the the It ;)ids the hard way. Abs Vin ;;'ret 1'4' 77:',t 7 li lc Ali I ..1. o r o III. 11VL`t' Tlee l('.: , 1 mil, Cone: August. 1912 A girl in a v,iluminons sprig- ged muslin che;::, a ll3;t straw !slat and patent shoes le!ins hoick dreamily on the Pu limns punt, llcr escort, in :,tripod blaz- er and ‘white flannel t'' stands up propelling the punt with sweeping strokes of the ling pole, Scene: Toe same, Time: August, 1962. A throb - bin g little cruiser an:ied:; up - Stream. A girl in hln:' sl; chi. is at the wheel, 11er escort, in open - necked shirt and :hurts, is cut- ting sandwiches. From depcndince to partner- ship in 50 years --the Rvo .;(Piles OD the Ti\arnes 'liver seen) to epitomize t h e metamorphosis which has taker, place in the re- lations of men and women, In 1912 Mrs. Emmeline Pank- burst and her militant suffra- gettes were stili chaining them- selves to railings of the 'louse of Commons in an effort to ex- tract from, an unwilling male legislature the privilege of vot- ing ID an election, "From dependence to partner- ship—yes that about summarizes the position, especially for wo- nien oI the so -Called upper and middle classes," said Miss Irene F. nitron, former president of the International Federation of University Women, Miss stilton comes from a Liverpool family of progressive thinkers. "In my family," she said, ''and especially among the rnen, the suffrage question was never one of sex, but one of social justice." Little success was achieved un- til the onset of World War I took thousands of men to France in the fighting services. The women met the challenge to do men's work, in the munitions factories, vs bus conductors, chimney sweeps, in the services for the first time, in nursing, Red Cross work, as postwomen, women po- lice, and in many other fields. As a reward, legislation was passed in 1918 which enabled women of 30 to vote for the first time In the General Election of 1919. Ten years later, the age was reduced to 21, writes Melita Knowles in the Christian Science Monitor. As a schoolgirl 1 remember bearing "votes for women" dis- dussed in the family circle when my grandmother wondered "what the world was coming to," and my mother felt "perhaps it was n good thing to give women the vote." In the early 1920's their doubts about the wisdom of letting up on the strict disciplines of Vic- torian family life might seem to have been justified. The irre- sponsibilities of the "Napper" age were only too apparent. Changes in the social structure suddenly slackened the rigidity of society. Noel Coward's plays dramatized the plight and inertia of the "poor little rich girl." The changed status of women brought the end of the formal afternoon call. Church parades in I-Iyde Park went out of fash- ion with the conning of the mo- torcar. People in London devel- oped the habit of spending the weekend in the country, The day trip to the seaside by motorcar from London, I remem- ber, started to be popular in the 1930's. Living on the northwest side of London I often drove the 60 males to Frinton -on -Sea and back in one day, in a little Aus- tin -7 tourer model. Despite the faster motorcars, many would lielate to do Ibis ,journey al weelierds 1:l(law hccau-e of the tr,;ifie holdups. 1:1); Oily ,.,,:! l , i., ,;r (Irk in;., 'I'hcrc \';I r+: na 1. :11t0 tag f n learner driver. The Iran 1 purc'his, (I !0' Ibis! ,;null car troll drove h311' \\'lib 011 , "nth ion go,'' he ,ilio, ;Old m.ncd Over su that I could take the wheel on the 20-miiu hcnnc\ward jour- ney. 1 had only driv en a two- stroke motorcycle beforii. it is hard 1 imagine those empty roads \\•hen going over the same grolu,d 30 ye:,rs later, Adeam\•hile. with the change in fortunes of the rich, depleted by taxes, the London "seas.in" was almost gone, Some of the great town houses were still in the hand; of the uWnct:; MID lived and entertained in thorn, but many had hccn turned into hotels or ciuhs. in regard to Imshions, I have an old print of my smother and her sister as young girls, with 20 -inch wails, wearing what were called "Russian" blouses trimmed \illi braid 311(1 gored skirls with frills at the bottom, which trailed the ground behind, i remember as a child seeing red marks behind niy mother's ears ri;ade by the bone supports in her high collars. She did her hair "big" in large swathed puffs. For specs:1 onosions she used pad to fill out the puff, and ac- hieved a result. rather like the e" hairdos o • cen-' ge 's "bndcai,_ haltdo. 1 t- .i 1. t today! • My mother used hatpins 10 inches long in her large ostrich feather hats. She often sported a boa and wore long, black stockings and short button boots. Under :ler long dresses she wore lace petticoats with many frills, crimped with a goffering iron heated over a coal tire. 'The revolt from tight lacing came in the 1920's, with the low waist and the loose "jumper" suits—similar in shape to those worn by young women of the 1960's, People by then were beginning to eat in restaurants a great deal. There was usually dancing dur- ing meals in the evening. The fashion started when the lan- guorous tango reached England from South America before World War T. Tango teas and suppers set a fashion for tread- ing a measure between courses. The Charleston and the Black Bottom crazes which canoe later were as hectic and lamentable as the 'Twist sessions of today. This was the age of the bicycle and the tennis club, Cinemas still were called the "flicks," a hang- over from the days when early files flickered as the comics rol- licked through their boisterous scenes in black and white. The open -top buses and the old electric trams were a popular means of transport in London when I was a child. London's tramways have all gone and rails have been torn up, Glasgow, one of the last cities to keep them, abolished its tramways earlier this year. The modern "Red Rover" buses on London Tran- sport would hold two of the old open -topped buses with their slatted wooden seats exposed to the elements. On a visit to a south London social settlement recently I was told of the rich women who worked there in the middle of the 19th century. Their fathers allowed them to stay overnight during the week provided they took their maids as chaperons. The settlement therefore had to provide sleeping quarters both for the voluntary workers and their maids, The young woman who showed me around in 1962 wore scarlet slacks and a black knitted polo sweater. She was the wife of the warden, a young social work- er and youth -club leader. To- gether they run the centre, as a meeting place for the teen-agers, the old people in the Derby and Joan Clubs and the mothers who bring their babies in the after- nouns—a happy example of'part- nership in the 1960's, • SHAPE OF WINGS TO COME — The 160 -foot -long basic outline of wings for the C-141 jet cargo transport is traced by a line up of master tooling gouges. The gauges, pro- duced by Lockheed Aircraft were later shipped to sugcontroc- tors building the various portions. RIB TICKLERS — High voltuge comedy jolted television view- ers when Lucille Ball teamed with Dunny Kaye in a special show Kaye has been signed for v,eekly one hour television shows planned for next season TABLE e1'� ,y Jam CHRISTMAS PUDDING 3 cups (1 lb.) seedless raisins 3 cups (15 ozs,) currants 'y cup chopped nuts 21!' cups sifted all-purpose (bread) flour 4 eggs 2 cups light molasses 2 cups buttermilk 11/2 cups finely ground or chopped suet Vs cup fruit juice with favorite flavoring added 21A cups fine dry bread crumbs 2 teaspoons baking soda i;i teaspoon cloves 1 teaspoon allspice I teaspoon nutmeg 1 teaspoon cinnamon 2 teaspoons salt Combine raisins and currants In a saucepan. Cover with water and bring to boiling point. Inn- nnediately drain or dry. Add nuts and dredge in 1 cup of the flour, Beat eggs until light and fluffy. Gradually add molasses, but- termilk, suet and fruit juice with flavoring. Stir in bread crumbs, alfted flour, soda, spices and salt. 'Fold in fruit and nuts, Mix thor- oughly. Pour into two well greased 8 -cup moulds and one 3- oup heat -resistant bowl. Cover tightly with greased foil. Place puddings on a rack In boiling Water In steamers, Steam for about 21/2 to 3 hours. Cool puddings, wrap carefully, label and store In a cool dry place. To serve, re -steam and serve hot with your favorite sauce. b M * LIGHT CHRISTMAS 'CAKE I cup dried apricots 2 cups dark raisins 2 cups golden raisins 8 ozs, (about 2 cup) sliced almonds 8 ozs, (about 1 cup) halved candied cherries 16 ozs, (about 21/ cups) diced mixed candied fruits and peels 12 ozs, (about 2 cups) diced candied pineapple 11/4 cups shortening 1'% cups liquid hooey 6 eggs 21/2 cups sifted all-purpose (bread) flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 11/, teaspoons salt 1 teaspoon cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon cloves Line a greased 10 -inch tube pan with 2 thicknesses of greased brown paper and one of greased waxed paper. Cover apricots with boiling water and let stand 5 minutes. Drain and, using scissors, cut apricots in slices, Comines apricots, raisins, nuts, cherries, candied fruits and peels. Mix thoroughly. Blend shortening and honey. Beat in eggs, one at a time. Sift together flour, baking powder, salt and spices, Blend into batter. Stir in fruits and nuts, miring well. Spoon into prepared pan, Bake in very slow, 250 -degree, oven, with shallow pan of hot water on floor of oven, about 4 • hours. Makes 1 tube cake about 71/2 lbs• , DARK CHRISTMAS CAKE 3 cups chopped dates 2 cups raisins 8 ozs, (about 1!.'. cups) sliced mixed peels 8 ozs. (about 114 cups) sliced citron 8 ozs. sliced glace pineapple 9 ozs, (about 2 cups) coarsely chopped nuts 1 Ib, butter 21/2 cups sugar 8 eggs ISSUE 47 — 1962 S 1 cup thick tart jelly I,s2 cup apricot nectar 5!.i cups sifted all-purpose (bread) flour 2 teaspoons salt 11 teaspoons baking soda 3 teaspoons cinnamon 1 teaspoon allspice teaspoon cloves 2 teaspoons mace 2 teaspoons flavoring Line three 9 by 5 by 21/e inch loaf pans with aluminum foil. Grease well. Pit and slice dates. 'Rinse, drain and dry raisins. Combine all fruits, peels and nuts. Mix thoroughly, Blend butter and sugar, Beat thoroughly. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add jelly and apricot nectar and heat well. Gradually add sifted dry ingredients and flavoring, Fold in fruit mixture. Pour into prepared pans. Bake in very slow 250 degree degree oven for 30 minutes. In- crease oven temperature to 275 degrees and continue to bake about 1 hour 45 minutes longer, Makes about 71/2 lbs, cake after 'baking, . ,; ,, MINCEMEAT 3 cups seedless raisins Vs dips currants 2 cups granulated sugar 1 pound finely chopped suet 5 medium apples 1 teaspoon salt ',i teaspoon ground cinnamon 'A teaspoon ground cloves !.i cup cider or grape juice 1 cup browned, blanched almonds Wash raisins and currants, Wash, core, peel and chop apples. Combine all ingredients except nuts which should be added just before using mincemeat in pies, etc.' Store mincemeat in a covered crock or sealers in the refrigera- tor or other very cold place. Mince pies—use 3 cups mince- meat and 1/4 cup of the browned almonds for a 9 -inch double crust pie. Bake in a hot oven of 425 deg, F. tor 40 minutes or until crust is delicately browned, Fruit cake pans may be lined with 2 thicknesses of greased brown paper and one thickness of greased waxed paper or they may be lined with one thickness of greased foil with the shiny side turned down and away from the cake. Lining the pans pre- vents a heavy crust forming on the cake. * * A pound of raisins, prunes and dried apricots all measure from 81/4 to VA cups. One dried fruit inay be substituted for another in rnost recipes as long as you keep the total amount of fruit the same, * 4 All - purpose (bread) flour Imikes a more sati•'la."lury butler which holds the fruit \',c:'1 dis- tributed throughout the cake. The cake also scents to 'Vice better. , r * 'rube and loaf pans are pop• ular for fruit cakes but almost any shape of pan may be a -,Pd. Empty coffee, baking powder or fruit cans make ideal pans for fruit cake gift giving. Never fill the pans more than 1/2 -inch from the top. 4 4 4 To prevent fruit cake 11'Urn "crumbing," chill it several hours before cutting it. If it does crumb, use these deliciously flavored crumbs as topping for ice cream or sherbet. 4 * 4 Glazed fruit cakes always look very gala. Just bring corn syrup, molasses mixed with three times as much water, or honey to a full boil then spread or- bru.sh on warm cake as it is cooling. 4 4 * A shallow pan of water placed on a lower shelf of the oven un- der the cake will help prevent the cake drying out. 4 4 4 With Christmas and New Year dinners coaling along soon, you may want a new cranberry sauce to serve, Here is one using fresh cranherries. GINGER CRANBERRIES 4 cups (1 pound) fresh cra,iberries 1 large orange, quartered (remove seeds) 1 cup raisins !'i cup honey as cup sugar 11/2 teaspoons ginger Put cranberries and orange through food chopper. Mix with raisins, honey, sugar and ginger. Chill in refrigerator several hours to allow flavors to blend. Makes 2 pints. Modern Etiquette Ry Anne Ashley Q. IVhen you help yourself from a service dish which is ac- companied by a fork and spoon, how do you manage the two lntplenients? A. Fork in right hand, spoon in left. Sales Pitch To The U.S. Negro Market For years, U.S. businessmen have been keenly aware that the $20 billion Negro market is a lucrative one. And, with an eye on the strengthening economic power of colored people, many companies have beamed special pitches toward potential Negro customers, Thus, singer Dorothy Dandridge may be used in adver- tisements to tout rice, baseball player Willie Mays may suggest a pancake syrup, and footballer Roosevelt Brown may be a Marl- boro man. The importance of a good "image" when trying to tap the Negro market was underscored again in a new survey released recently by the Center for Re- search in Marketing of Peekskill, N.. It was made for a number of firms in the food, cosmetics, automotive, beverage, and other industries. In talks with 3,016 Negro families this spring and summer, the interviewers (all of whom were Negroes themselves) found, for instance, that Negroes like "to buy where they can work." A full 42 per cent of those polled indicated that they patronize stores in their areas because of "positive" attitudes toward Negroes. Almost a third said that they will specifically select the brands of companies which they believe to have fa- vorable policies toward Negroes. More than a quarter frankly ad- mitted that they would not buy the products of a company that they thought had a "poor" atti- tude toward Negroes. Indeed, the studies showed that many Negroes consider their purchas- ing power a weapon in the battle for equal rights. Such findings are becoming increasingly important to busi- nessmen trying to make a sale. As William Capitman, president of CRM, summed up: "Under- standing (Negroes' attitudes) will open the ;way to more effective advertising, promotion, and dis- tribution policies for those manu- facturers who want to take ad- vantage of this growing market." iscf . /le Looms On N' . tion Front I1:;vv lar can the UnlIcd States government 'Jo in curling what a leading nutritionist has called "no tI•ilh inial nonsernse"7 A tug-of-war test possibly reaching crvl:n 10 the courts — is in the offing. It revolvers around some of the ('1aine- made today for the so- called "health foods"; the promo- tion of certain food products on the basis of claimed benefits; and the claimed nutritional necessity for various vitamin products, 'l'o,tching off the fray was a proposed new set of regulations by the ]rood and Drug Adminis- tration governing the labeling of these products, It is the responsibility of the agency to see that foods are pure and safe and that they are truth- fully and informatively labeled. All the new regulations have to do with labeling claims. The $1,000,000,000 industry af- fected by these stringent regula- tions has declared war, Never before, it is said, has the Food and Drug Administration been bombarded by so many pro- tests •— more than 30,000 from industry, piling up into some 225 volumes, not to mention the 70,- 0(11) or more from postcards showered on Congress, ,. • Producers of safflower oil pro- ducts, "sea salts," and protein hoosters were alarmed, Business- nien who sell these products saw profits dwindling, writes Jose- phine Ripley in the Christian Science Monitor. The Food and Drug Adminis- tration finally issued a statement of denial that the new regula- tions would have or were intend- ed to put people out of business or cut profits. All it wants to do, it has ex- plained, is "to discourage the ad- dition of needlessly large amounts of vitamins and minerals to food supplements simply as a sales - promotion device." It seeks t0 prevent consumers "from being misled by a listing of ingredients which have no slue as food supplements, "Such 'shotgun' formulas now contain 'as many as 50 to 70 in- gredients, only a few of which are recognized as essential in nutrition," says the agency. The proposed regulations also are directed at "false or mislead- ing labeling which inay lead con- sumers to believe that the aver- age American diet results in ill health and that nutritional sup- plements are required to prevent or cure this." With respect to foods, the agency is out to crack down on the use of "nonfattening" or "low -calorie" or other terms suggestive of benefit in weight control. ABSTRACT ATTRACTION -- Stonny Van Baer, former Miss International Beauty, add. even more attraction to thli sculpture in Ontario, Calif. WAVEWARD DRIVE — Skimming over the water of the Grand Canal, Venice, an auto. mobile is viewed by astonished passengers of a motorboat. Raft is placed under auto. a PAGg THE IILYTII STANDARD Wednest;lliY, Nov, 21, 1962 ' WALTON Mr, Tom Somerville, of Guelph spent the weekend with his parents Mr. and Mrs. Walter Somerville. Mr, and Mrs, Roy Bennett visited with relatives in London for a few clays last week. - Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hackwell and family moved to their new home east of the village on Saturday. Mr, and Mrs. Jinn Lamont and fain• ily, of London, visited with the lat: ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Porter, last Saturday. Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Ritchie and Larry, of Egmondville, visited with Airs. Fred Ennis on Sunday. Mr. and Airs. Frank Marshall and family, of North Bay, were week -en( guests at the home of Mrs, Luella Marshall and Air. Malcohn Prase'. Congratulations are extended lc hisses Catharine Buchanan, Norm! Ilaegy and Bernice Glanville on pas sing their examinations for the reg istration of nurses in the Province 01 Ontario. Catharine and Norma art graduates of St. A1a'ys Hospital, Kil chener, and Bernice is a graduate of the Stratford General Hospital Schou, of nursing, COOK'S \su PE RIOR) *FOOD MARKET* Nabob Coffee 1 Ib. bag 67c Mother Parker Orange Pekoe Tea Bags, 60's . 75c Shirriff's Instant Mashed Potatoes, 4c off 6 oz., 24e Green Giant Fancy Peas, 15 oz. tin .... 2 for 31c Heniz Strained Infant Foods •-- Fruits 8 Vegetables, Buy 9 tins at regular price, get 1 Tin Free. Weston 5 Variety Pkg. Cookies 99c Marra's Hot Dog Rolls, 8 with 8 weiners , , , 49c Chicken Breast 5 lb, box 159 Stuart House Instant Gravy Mix, chicken or Beef, 2 for 29c Fresh Stock of Xmas Cake, Fruits. Always a Fresh Stock of Fruits and Vegetables. We Deliver Phone 156 Stewart's Red .C3 White Food Market Blyth, Phone 9 We Deliver NF+/•FN-•-+•+444+ 444444 M+++++4444-•-•-• Tallman Sweet Apples per bushel 2.69 6 quart basket 69c Florida Grapefruit 10 for 49c Golden Ripe Bananas . 2 lbs. 35c Fresh Selected Carrots, 3 Ib. bag 2 for 35c No. 1 Cooking Onions . 10 Ib, bag 39c Crisp Iceberg Head Lettuce each 19c Grade A Chickens, 3 lb. average per Ib. 39c Schneiedrs C Turkeys, 7. 9 lbs. per lb. 49c Burns Bologna per Ib. 33c Burns Sausage 6 lb. bbx 2.69 .1.1100.1111, ...Irr.ONIVMrW w. immemo.ry Airs, William Humphreys attended Robert McLaren, of Hensel', the Guelph Area Women's Institute convention held in the War Memorial Hall, Federated College, Guelph, on Thursday and friday of last week Mr. and Mrs. W, Stutz, of Water loo, were' weekend visitors at the' home of 11r. and Mrs. Torrance Dun dos. A1iss Mary Mowbray observed bei 93rd birthday at the home of Mrs 11auc1 Leeming on 'Thursday, Novei n ber 15, Guests who were from a distance for the dinner and to offer congratulations, were Airs, Mary Mow• bray and A1rs. Hattie Glenn, of Tor• onto, and Mrs. John Linton, of Wind, sor. Other guests who called during the week were Arr. and Mrs. Milne Ren nie, Ah'. Bill McDougal and Mos Mrs, Harvey Craig enjoyed a two - clay trip to the Royal Winter Fait last Thursday and Friday which was sponsored by the Department of Ag• gricu1ture for the 41i leaders. Mrs. Isabelle Boyd, of McKillop. is visiting with her sister-in-law, Airs. Aland Leming, Iltis week. Mr, and Mrs. Gilbert Gregg, 01 Moose Jaw, Mr. and Mrs, Geo, Mc Arthur, Mrs, Margaret Somers and Cathy, of Seaforth, called on friends in the vicinity Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Jim Gillespie, Peterborough and Mr. and Airs, Gordon Kerr, of New Alau'ket, We'e guests at the home of Mr, and Ars. Nelson Reid last Saturday. A little get-together oI friends and relatives was held in the afternoon. BELGRr►\'E An elderly Belgrave resident, Wil• liana Albert Manna, 77, was the ob ject of , an extensive search Sunday afternoon in East Wawanosh Town. ship, Mr. Hanna had left the home of his son, Clarence, to go hunting Saturday morning with his pet dog and did not return. The search was organized by Constable Jack Parkin• son of the Wingham Detachment 01 the Ontario Police, at noon on Stun clay. Between 200 and 300 men comb ed the arca before he was found safe and well about 3 o'clock by Fred Deacon. Despite a night in the cold Air. IIanna was nate the worse for his experience, Belgrave C.G.I.T, Meeting The Belgrave C.G.I.'r. Group afters games led by Janette Johnston began their meeting with president, Mari• lyn Campbell having hymn and scrip• lure reading. Minutes of the last meeting were read by Helen Ander. son. This was the initiation service with five girls becoming member's. Margaret Pattison, Nancy VanCannp Rhonda fear, Audrey Coultes, Brett. da Coultes. Mrs, 11, J, Anderson was in charge of the service, , Offering was received by Donna Grasby and Doreen Pattison, The groups divided for study. The singing of taps clos• ed the meeting. Cub Report lst Belgrave Cub Pack stet for their regular meeting in the Com. munity Centre. Aiecting opened with Grand Howl with Airs. Ken Wheeler in charge. Tawny Six had the most points for inspection and seconder Neil Vincent put their pennant on the totem pole. Bagherra led in games and instruetion was given by Hasksha and Bagherra, while Baloo and Ak hela were putting the cubs through their tests. Three Chums were invest. ed, Stephan Fear, Grant Vincent; Keith Black. Ronald Taylor receiv- el his Gardeners Badge and Gordon Rinn earned - his collectors badge. Mrs, Wheeler reminded the cubs who have not brought their 50c registrar tion to please bring it in as soon as possible, The meeting closed with taps, Euchre Club Started Belgrave Euchre Club started the winter in the club roosts of the Com munity Centre, Belgrave, with 9 tab. les in play. Iligh prizes, Airs. Harold Procter, Ross IeEwan; low prizes. 'Mrs. Stanley Cook, Carl Procter; nov elty prizes, Mrs, Carl Procter, Oliver Campbell. Mr. and Airs, James Masters, of Parkhill, visited one clay with Ah'. and Mrs, Stewart Procter. Air. and Mrs. George Sargeant and Mark, of Seekonk, Mass., were recent visitors with her another, Airs, A. Perdue. Visitors from Belgrave at the Royal Winter Fair included Air. and Mrs Ross Anderson and family, Mr. Stew. art Procter, George Procter, ]111r. James Coultes, Air. an(1 Mrs. Ray flunking, Lon- don, visited with Mr. and Mrs. James Lamont and family. Bob Grasby had a painful accident on Saturday, He was helping to de.' horn cattle when a beast kicked him causing internal bruises and extern• $AVE X11. FARMERS Again this year we are holding our Annual TOPNOTUI FEEDS DAIRY MONTH NOVEMBER 1 TO NOVEMBER 30 This is your 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. . BETTER GAINS -- 'MORE PROFIT ALL CATTLE FEEDS ARE REDUCED OFF CARD' PRICE (Regular Retail Price) $5.00 per Ton Dairy Month Discount. $5.00 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 BRUSSELS - , O.PNOTCH FEEDS LIMITED "THE MOST VALUE FOR THE FARMER'S POLLAR" PHONE 199 al bruises to his leg, on which a cast was placed 14 inches above his knee. He is expected to be confined to bed for some time. 'I'he United Church bazaar will he held in the church basement on Fri- day, November 23. Miss Lorna Bolt Honored at Showers A large number of girl friends of Miss Lorna Bolt held a miscellaneous shower in Patricia Heywood's recrc• ation room on Friday evening to hon. our Miss bolt on her coming min' riage. The centre of tate room held a large pink bell. Miss Bolt was seated in a chair decorated with pink and white streamers. Mrs. Neil Me Gavin, of Walton, read the address and friends carried in the gifts. While they were being opened and pawed around for friends to see, Mos, Elaine Nixon played soft music. Miss Bolt thanked her nanny friends for the beautiful gifts and several contests were enjoyed and lunch served. A miscellaneous shower was held al tine home of Miss Karen Klawittet'. of Kitchener, in honour of Miss Bolt bride -elect for November. A variety of beautiful gifts were received and the guest of honour made a suitable reply. Lunch was served. Miss Bolt was also presented with an electric mixer, electric toaster and silver bread tray from employees of the Mutual Life Assurance Co, where she worked. Sunday School Concert Planned The teachers and officers of Knox United Church met in the church on Monday evening and decided to hold the Sunday School Xmas Con• cert on Friday, December 21 in the Forresters Ilall, Belgrave at 13;15 p in. The following committees were named to take charge: choruses, Mrs George Johnston, Miss Eleanor Walsh Airs. George Michie, George Proctor; tree, George Johnston; decorating, lli-C Group; candy, Mrs. James Cold. tes, Mrs, Lewis Stonehouse; men and women's number, Cliff Walsh, Bob Grasby, Mrs. John Nixon, Mrs, Wil liam Coultes; each class to provide one number; Santa and suit, Mrs. Cliff Logan; doorkeepers, Lewis Stone• house, Mark Armstrong. It was also decided to hold ,a white gift service with tentative elate set for December 16. The new book, hocus Magazine was ordered for all the teachers, WESTF IELD Ai', and Mrs. John Gear, Marie and Warren, of Waterloo, spent the week end with Mr, Armand McBurney. Ah'. and Mr's. James Book and Cheryl, of Crewe, visited with 111r, and Airs. Arnold Cook recently. Farm Forton was held at Mr. Gcr• aid McDowell's Monday in the form of a social evening. Next Monday Forum will be held at Mr. Norman McDowell's, Auburn, with the topic to be discussed "Dairy Policy." Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell and boys were guests of Mr. and Mrs, Carl Mills, Kirkton, on Sunday. Mr. Gordon Smith, Toronto, and Air. Lyle Smith, Waterloo, spent the wcek•end with their parents. The members of Westfield School Section have forwarded a purse of money as a gift to Seaman and Mrs. Barkley Speigleberg, newly-weds, sta. tioned at Ilalifax. Our belated con. gratulations. B. Speigleburg, of the Royal Canadian Navy, is on the Do stroyer Buckingham at present on pa. tt'ol on the Atlantic. Miss Dianne Jackson and Mr. Garth Walden visited Sunday even ing with 11h'. Wm. Walden who is 0 patient in Clinton Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harburn, of Hensall, also visited Sunday evening with Mr. Win. Walden, '1'lne November meeting of UCW was in charge of Airs. Lloyd Walden and her unit. The call to worship and opening prayer were given by the leader, Hymn "Tlnc Church's One Foundation" was sung. Mrs, Gerald McDowell read the scripture lesson, Silent prayer for Remembrance day and leader lel in prayer. Mrs', Ilan'• vey McDowell gave a rcading;The fast chapter of the study 'hook was taken as a panel discussion, leade1 Mrs. Lloyd Walden, with panelists Mrs, Gerald McDowell, Mrs. Harvey McDowell, Mrs, Marvin McDowell; Mrs, Hugh Blair and Mrs. Thomas Biggerstaff, .entitled "Strength of the Nation." Mrs. Charles Smith Chet read a letter from Miss Lorraine Mc. Dowell who has returned to Africa following her furlough this past sum. mer, Hymn 310 was sung and presi- dent took over for business. Mhuttet were read and approved and roll call answered by Ill and there was one child present. Mrs. Charles Smith gave a reading on temperance "The Case of the Intoxicated Cat." Special and regular collection was taken. 11 was discussed and decided to par- chase the two books, "The Word and the Way" and "On Asia's limn." An invitation wa$1 read and aceepteu from Blyth UCW to meet with then on November 23rd. The special group appointed at October meeting have charge of December meeting. The treasurer's report was given. The new sla1.e•of officers to be brought in at December meeting, and it was de• tided to keep groups same but change the leaders. Hymn 290 was sung and president pronounced the benedic• tion. VITAMIN TIME Start now to fortify against coughs and colds. We recommend the following Vitamin Products. Mutlevo! $2,50 Wampolcs Extract $L59 and $2.89 Paramette Syrup $7.50 Value - Special $5,50 Vi Cal Fel. Capsules $1.,95 and $4.95 Vita Diet Tablets $2.98 One-A-1)ay Multiples $1,49, $2.75 and $4:19 Geritol - Liquid or Tablets $3,29 Cod Liver Oil - High Test 90e and $1.50 Waterbury's Compound $L50 Cod Liver Oil Capsules 98c Halibut Liver Oil Capsules $1.15 and $2.29 P. D. PHIL.P, Phm. B DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER •- PHONE t,O, OMB N -1-N • • • • • • •-1+•••••-•-•-•,-e• +•-•-•+••••++ • •1-1 +1 +•-• 1••-1 +.-.-'i'-4, •-• ♦ BLYTII CIIEESE and MAITLAND BUTTER Capture 8 Awards in 8 Entries in Butter and Cheese Classes at the Royal Winter Fair, Congratulations go to Hugh Cleland and his staff to turn out such fine Gay -Lea- Cheese at our Blyth Factory and to the Staff of the llraitland Creamery, our congratulations in producing such fine Gay•Lea Maitland Creamery Butte'. Also our thanks to our Producers for producing the fine qua!- ity Milk and Cream to stake the winning of these awards possible, United Dairy & Poultry Co -Op Ltd:;, Wingham -- Blyth "Makers of Fine GayLca Cheese and Butter" PETER D. CUTTEII, Manager. .1+1.1••-111/•••• N.••1.1-4•1-•/•1Na•11-•• 1-••4-6.1•11-••••1♦ Need Money You Receive $1600 2000 2500 3000 No Bonus You Pay Monthly Number Months Principal & Interest $10.08 60 Months 50.10 60 Months 62.62 60 Months 75.11 60 Months Business Loans against 30 to 90 day Accounts Receivable Capitol Loans 'ro Business Special arrangements nook on larger loans up to $250,000 each Bluewater Acceptance Limited Phone FIt6.7324 037 • 2nd Avenue East, Owen Sound, Ontario SNO-CAR SHOVELS $2,49 CHILI)IREN'S SHOVELS $1.89 PLASTIC STORMS 29c and .49c November 22 to •December 1 --- TOY SALE ••- Generous Discounts on All Toys. VODDEN'S HARDWARE C3 ELECTRIC Television and Radio Repair. Call 71 Blyth, Ont. SNELL'S FOOD MARKET Phone 39 We Deliver STOP, SHOP & SAVE Georgian Bay Dessert Pears or Peaches, 20 oz. 4 for 85c Stokley's Fancy Tomato Juice, 48 oz. 29c Stafford's Blueberry Jam, 24 oz. jar , , , , 2 for 95c Habitant Veg. or Pea Soup, 28 oz. 2 for 39c Carnation Evaporated Milk, 16 oz. , , , , 7 for 1.00 Giant Size Tide with snap of world, , , Spec. 85c S1'd, Side Bacon jWeinersChickens per lb, .... 49c per lb. , , , , 45c1 per lb. .. , , 39c Snow ApplesCooking Onions Celery Stalks 41b, bag . , , 35c1110 Ib, bag .. 43cl large bunch 25c Every $5.00 purchase • 1 pr. Nylons at Half Price.