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The Blyth Standard, 1976-01-14, Page 1
.`r ..r:• ... ..................... ...... 'tiff': t e \\ :titi�,r-''}t:+?!,.{ti: :�'yr'i: "'}•":J??,.;. :rr}: :;:r:; ••;•� ?.{}�:}'r:?{:ytwIgglgilgr};J.:•f •: F'f.•' fir:' } ::•kms.. BLYTH, ONTARIO PRICE: 20 CENTS Brussels reeve elected Huron Warden Jack McCutcheon, Reeve of the village of Brussels was named warden of Huron County on Tuesday in a close victory over Allan Campbell of McKillop township on the second ballot. Harold Lobb of Clinton had been eliminated on the first ballot. But the second ballot ended in a 28.28 split between McCutcheon and Campbell with Goderich Rccvc Stan Profit, a barber by trade, ,using Goderich's extra ballot (because of the larger population) to break the tie, "I'd like to thank Reeve Profit. He got me out of a close shave," the new warden joked, adding, "I guess l know where I'll have to go to get my hair cut this year." It was the second time Reeve Campbell had sought the county's top post and the third time septi -retired farm implements dealer Reeve Lobb had run for the position. Warden' McCutcheon, a five-year veter- an of county council, was chairman of the county planning board " in 1975 and a member of _county council's restructuring committee. He pledged that Huron County would remain in the forefront of Ontario counties in the fields of planning and provision of services. As for restructuring county government, Warden McCutcheon said he is opposed "to change for the sake of change." "But we still have to keep the door open on restructuring," he added. "We need a detailed study of any benefits we might receive and we. might also be able to pick out what we feel is best for Huron." County municipalities should overlook their geographical boundaries to consider more widespread sharing of services and recreation facilities, he said, Referring to the announcement that ijoderich Psychiatric Hospital will be closed, he said provincial cutback of such services "is totally unacceptable," "We must be better informed by the province before changes are made in vital services in this county," he said, During the ,fight on inflation in 1976, local governments owe it to the public to "provide the highes level of service as economically as possible," he said, • County clerk -treasurer Bill Hanley said after the voting that several times in its history county council has had its warden chosen in tie -vote situations by the reeve of the county's largest town, Goderich. The most recent was four years ago. , The Brussels reeve replaces Anson McKinley, reeve of Stanley Township, In the voting, former warden McKinley supported Reeve McCutcheon. Council adopted Warden McCutcheon's choice of a striking committee to select members for the county's various committees in 1976. Members are Rccvc Bob Gibson of Hawick Township, Reeve Fred Haberer of Zurich, Deputy Rccvc Joe Miller of Hay Township, Deputy Rccvc Jim Mair of Morris 'Township and Deputy Reeve Norman Durst of C'olh'orne Township. Council's inaugural session resumes today. . VOLUME 86 • NO.at WEDNI✓SDAY, JANUARY 14, 1976. Inside Editorial ;Church Classified Entertainment Page 4 Page 7 Page 14 Page 15 Work begins Work began Monday on the rejuvenation of Memorial Hall theatre under a Local Initiatives Program grant from the federal government. Here workmen fit a piece of plywood for the new cover for the stage floor. The project is under the direction of the Blyth Centre for the Arts and is ,jointly funded by that eroua and by the Blyth recreation committee. Some. money for materials still must be raised and any donation would be welcomed either by leaving them at The Standard office or by sending them to Mrs. E. Battye, treasurer of Blyth Centre foil. the Arts. --staff photo. Board chairman sees tough year ahead In his address at the inaugural meting of the Huron Board of Education Mon(la, chairman Herb Turkheint said 1976 would probably go down in history as the toughest year trustees on any Board have ever faced. Turkhcim continued, "We are looking at increased costs of operation with less provincial funds available and this can only mean increased "costs to local taxpayers, whether we like it or not." He outlined a few of the highlights of the new grant structure announced recently by Ontario's Education Minister Thomas Wells as follows: -The ceilings on ordinary per -pupil expenditure eligible for provincial grants will be increased by eight per cent for elementary and secondary students with an additional $80 per pupil to be added at the elementary level. In 1976 the maximum ordinary expendi- tures per pupil which will be recognized for grant purposes arc $1,080 for each elementary school student and $1,556 for each secondary school pupil. Any per -pupil spending that exceeds a board's grant ceiling will not be eligible for provincial assistance. To thc•se regulations, the Huron chairman added, "What this really means is that any spending beyond these grant ceilings is a direct responsibility of the local school board and the additional funds can only be raised by increasing the local mill rate, "Believe me, local taxes in Huron will increase sharply in 1976, so we must be willing to do our part in trying to avoid any unjust spending. Contmittments made in 1975 will already use up more than our increase in grants, so we must examine any further expenditures very carefully before approving than." • Turkheim said despite the cut in Provincial monies, he was hopeful that the building project at Exeter Public School will be allowed to go ahead sometime in 1976. He added, "The regional office in London tells us they propose to approve this project -which is in the sketch plan stage - from current funds in 1976. "There is no doubt, however, that some of our capital projects such as the facilities at Huron Hope, the Science Lab at South Huron, Industrial Arts and Home Ec facilities at several locations and the much discussed computer project will suffer from the restraint programs." Turkhcim urged his fellow trustees to strive for equality of opportunity in all Huron Count). Schools. He added, "At all times we must consider what is best for the entire county and not .only for our individual areas. This is the basic principle of a county system." In closing the new chairman said, "We have in our teachers and administrators people who have dedicated themselves to educate our children and their work must be made known to give parents a better understanding of what is being accom- plished for their families. Also speaking briefly was Huron's retiring warden, Anson McKinley of Stanley township. A large number of Huron reeves were also in attendance. Opposition to' psychiatric hospital closing unsuccessful Despite organized opposition to the move, Goderich Psychiatric Hospital will be closed as scheduled on April 1, according to a story in the London Free Press, • The Frec Press said it learned Friday from an official in the provincial ministry of community and social services that it is now "firm government policy that the. plans of Dec. 19 are going ahead..." Dec. 19 was the day notice was given of the closing of the hospital which will be turned into a new regional centre for the mentally retarded. Last week a meeting of 750 persons protested the proposed closing and a delegation from the area met with Health Minister Frank Miller who indicated he might reconsider. Mr. Miller was away from Queen's Park and not available for comment Friday. However the community and social services ministry report was understood to be factual. The ministry of community and 'social services spokesman said Friday t'te . Goderich facility will be taken over April 1.. and ' become a resources centre for the mentally retarded similar to one already in operation at Oakville. , It is understood that the more than 200 psychiatric patients now et Goderich will be transferred to Owen Sound and London psychiatric hospital facilities. The official said it is expected that the number of persons employed in the new resources centre will be "roughly equal" to the number working at present at the psychiatric hospital. He said those working at the psychiatric hospital will, where possible, he given priority for work at the new operation, which will employ between 200 and 250. '.onttnued on Paso 2 2, 1'111? H1.Y'1'11 STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976, Psychiatric hospital closingwill go ahead on schedule Continued from Page I 1 iM‘ cV rr, it Was not immediately known 11 the workers at the n'v resource centre, which will hr run by a community named Ward, will hr civil servants. The ministry spokesman said it is c\l)ccted that the disruption of the conomic life of (ond rich will be minimal and that the changeover niay be "on the positive side." Charles Darrow, president of the Ontario PUblic SErvice Employees Union, said earlier Ili t closing of the hospital would result in a Toss of up to $60,000 annually "out of the pockets of town 'merchants." He said employees' annual salaries total S3 million. The ministry spokesman said Friday that while he was not saying each employee would be replaced "body for body, job for job', the number of employees involved in the new operation would .be in "the same general arca", as at present. The new facility, he said, would combine the traditional functions of a training residential setting for the mentally retarded, plus the community involvement side and the training of parents as to how their retarded child's mind works. Diagnostic facilities would also be available, he said. I would be up to the community appointed board of directors to design what facilities Ott services were needed, he added. The friendly neillhbnur• hood exercise. 11,114 Mi. M:I1.L,e. BUSINESS DIRECTORY ELLIOTT- REAL ESTATE AGENCY Gordon Elliott, Broker R. John Elliott, Salesman PHONES: Blyth Office 523.4481 Res. 523.4522 or 523-4323 WANTED Listings on Farms, Homes and Businesses REID & PETERSON Chartered Accountants 218 .IOSF:PI11NE ST. WINGHAM ONTARIO 357.1522 Resident Partner: K. C. LENTZ Phone: 357.1087 N.T. DALE SEPTIC TANK PUMPING SERVICE CLINTON PHONE 482-3320 or 527-0284 WARD UPTIGROVE CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS J.C. WARD C.A. R.E. UPTIGROVE C.A. LISTOWEL ONT. 291.3040 Village .Restau rant . BLYTH We specialize in Steak and Horne Cooked Meals and Businessmen's Luncheons. 011:,1' o .1 ..11 . I (1 I: P.11. TOM DUIZER Plumbing & Heating Oil Burner Sales •Service Installation and Motor Repair Myer's Pressure Systems & Water Conditioning Equipment Sheet Metal Work LONDESBORO, ONT. PHONE BLYTH 523.4359 LYLE YOUNGBLUT OIL BURNER SALES & SERVICE "Your Oil Heating Contractor" BLYTH ONTARIO PHONE 523.9585 UCG BELGRAVE rCzOD M, YOUR I'AR' 1 SUPPLY CENTRE Feed, Bulk Ucliseo or Bagged Fertilizer, Custom Blending, Bulk Spread, Farm Fuels, 24 hour Ilome Heat Service, Hardwire, Appliances, Feeding and Watering Equipment, Work Clothing and Boots. 887.6,153 357.2711 NESBIT ELECTRIC KIRKTON & BLYTH Specializing in: •Farm Installation *Residential *Commercial *Pole Line Construction *Farm Ventilation Installation •Magnate Generators *Mix Mill Sales & Service BLYTH DAVID NESBIT, KIRKTON 523-9595 LICENCED ELECTRICIAN 229-8222 o A B WE NEED Ail TYPES Br A REGULAR 8L0011 DOI'OR ELLIOTT INSURANCE AGENCY BLYTH ONT, Phones: Office 523.4481; Res. 523-4323 INSURANCES IN ALL BRANCHES Fire Windstorm Court and Other Bonds Automobile Burglary Plate Glass Liability - All Kinds Life Guarantee Inland Transportation Accident & Sickness All Risks Furs, Jewelry n OLD MILL IN BLYTH Factory Outlet Bainton Limited, Blyth Monday to Thursday 9 am • 6 pm Friday and Saturday 9 am • 10 pm Sunday • I p.m. • 6 p.m. WOOL AND LEATHER PRODUCTS. YOUR CHOICE FROM ONE OF THE LARGEST INVENTORIES ON THIS CONTINENT. Telephone 523.9666 , . Fred Lawrence Electr ical Contractor HOME, FARM AND COMMERCIAL WIRING PHONE AUBURN 526-7505 J.E. LONGSTAFF Optometrist 20 Isaac Street • Clinton BY APPOINTMENT ONLY At Clinton, Monday only 9:00.5:30 At Seaforth, Tues., Wcd., Thurs. & Fri. 9:00.5:30 3ray Chiropracti'- Office • 197 Josephine Street Wingham, Ontario., Phone 357.1224 ' ,'Phoine'357=1224 BP GENERAI. REPAIRS OF ALI, TYPES TOWING SERVICE: 24 IIOURS A DAY GRIFFITH'S BP Blyth 52? -4S01 • 523.9635 GORE'S HOME HARDWARE 523-9273 Hardware, .. Gifts, Philips T.V._ & Stereo & Westing- house appliances. Get your rear in gear. Take a walk. Ngfl Anj wi,Ik d Ii.'w.ILIA,. CATCH THE DATSUN SPIRIT DATSUN 1111. Gerald's Datsun Ltd SALES SERVICE LEASING OPEN 8 A.M. - 9 P.M. Ph. 527-1010 SEAFORTH DOREEN'S BEAUTY SHOPPE STYLING TINTING CUTTING & COLD WAVES DOREEN McCAL1,UM Phone Blyth 523.4511 OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY DGM HOME MAINTENANCE • Small plumbing repairs, humidifiers, sold and installed in your furnace, recreation rooms and renovations, aluminum doors, and windows sold and installed. Stop those winter drafts, lets its weather strip ,your home. Phone 526-7794 Auburn WESTWARD TOOLS and WEBSTER AIR COMPRESSORS also Grade 5, plated nuts bolts. Ron Carter Ph. 523-9377, Blyth after 5:30 p.m. New relationship between banks and farmers today, banker says The relationship between farmers and profitability of the purchase, If a machine hankers has changed for the better in .the can't pay for itself, he said, then it is a past few years 1ocr Smith, manager of the luxury. Exeter branch of the Royal Bank of Canada "We don't say you ean't have a Iifc of told members of the Huron County luxury," he said, but the bank tries to lit its Federation of Agriculture meeting at the financial help to the needs of the farm Exeter High School On Thursday night, Operation. 'Today purchases must be Mr, Smith said that the attitudes of backed by "reasonable" security rather banks has had to change since he was a boy than total security as in the old days, he growing up in Saskatchewan when said. He said it makes life much harder for entering a bank was a little like entering a bankers, he said, because now they must church: it was a sacred institution. There use much more judgement. were many complaints in those days, he said, that bankers weren't human and he recalled even in his early years in the bank 'that he heard bankers treat farm customers in a way he •.,rlldn't tolerate, Still, he said, the bank and the farm customer Aare an equal responsibility in the financing of the farm. He said that new farm plans with most chartered banks help meet the needs of the farm community much more than in the past but that the farmer must still act and plan responsibly. It used to be, he said, that a banker judged whether or not a loan should be made simply on the basis'of the assets of the borrower. If the borrower was unable to pay, did he have enough assets to recover the debt, was the question the banker asked himself. Now the banker judges the But to make r'asonable judgements, he said, tic banks must have mCi more information on the state of the Farm and the future plans than in the past. The farm plan offered. by his bank, he said has four. portions to be filled out: 1. a statement -of affairs giving a picture of what is owned and what is owed: 2. an operating statement, giving a moving picture of the finances of the farm: 3. a cash flow projection and. 4, a debt servicing work sheet to sec if the operation %till he able to pay its debts. Banks, he said. are not in the reposession game. lie said that if dais document is completed straight through "I hane vel to say no to a farmer." If the loan should not he granted. he said, the farm r can usually see this for himself alter completing the Mr. and Mrs. Henry Glousher of Blyth celebrated their 50th Wedding Anniversary, December 22, with an open house. McKillop Mutual ire Insurance Com. any Established 18 6 AIYq EAD OFFICE: Seaforth, Mrs. Ma ' aret Sharn., Sec. Trea . Phone 527.0400 t Only Costs A Little To Be Safe • gFire, Extended Coverage, °i Windstorm, Theft, Property Damage, Liability, Etc. Directors and Adjusters: Lavern Godkin, RR!, Walton Robt. Archibald, RR 4, Seaforth Ken Carnochan, RR 4, Seaforth Ross Leonhardt, RR 1, Bornholm John McEwing, RR 1, Bfyth Stanley Mcllwain, RR 2, Goderich Wm, Pepper, Brucefield J.N. Trewartha; Box 661, Clinton Donald McKercher, RR 1, Dublin Agents: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforth K.J. Etue, Seaforth Wm, Leiper, Londeshnro Steve J. Murray, RR 5, Seaforth Phone 527-1877 527.1817 527.1545 345.2234 523.9390 524.7051 482.7534 482.7593 527.1837 THE BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. P(;. 3. form, Falsifying forms to try to get a loan despite the figures, he said, hurts the farmer more than the bank, Once the forms are completed and the plan taylored to the needs of the individual borrower; he said, the :plan should be reviewed frequently to see if everything is ,;oing according to plan. 'If a farmer is having trouble repaying his loan he should go to the bank and explain the problem before the loan is due, Mr. Smith said, and probably something can be worked out. If he doesn't go before the payment is due both he and the branch manager will be in trouble with head office and that helps no Otte, The lender, Mr. Smith says, likes to see his client get ahead but sometimes an expansionary program can get out of hand. Perhaps, he said,' you should try to get better before you get bigger. Has your productivity improved, he asked? t\1r. Snaith was asked how he judges a younger farmer who may need money to get started without having much security to offer. Ile admitted that it is hard for a young farmer to get started and that he is going to hat c to come up with some capital of his own \t hauler from a parent or some other source as dell as giving a lot of hard +.tock..\s an individual hanker, he said, he tries to look at the character of the borrower when considering a loan. He tries to look at the credit history of the borrower and at how he communicates, He also looks at the reasonableness of'thc request, at the capital behind the borrower, at the borrower's net worth, at his capacity to raise money, and at the health of the borrower and how well he is looking after the land and equipment he already has. He was asked how high land prices might go and pointed out that in the Dakotas of the U.S., land is selling at $4-5,000 an acre and people have the philosphy that it will never be paid for in their own lifetime. His own feeling, he said, was that you have to recognize the productivity of the land and that land should pay for itself in one generation. There were fewer than a dozen people present at the meeting. because of stormy weather. The rest of the meeting because of stormy weather. The rest of the meeting was rather brief but did sec the tabling of the budget for 1976 which showed the Federation with a deficit of $1336, Fund raising, projects were discussed to overcome the deficit such as a lottery and collection of $1.00 from each member in the county, but the decision was left to a later meeting when attendance would be higher. Giving them back their bodies 1 he act of restoring to a good condition, regenerating or slaking over in an inlproted form i, %that • rehabilitation is all about. 1\'heii it conics lu rehabilitation of 1hr physically handicapped, the idea is to get the disabled pct son hack into the mainstream, coping. as soon as pussihlc. ' l chahililatiun .cruces focus on returning people ss ho hate suffered some kind of physical handicap hack to their former lifcst�le pat - tet ns; or, if that's impossible. to assist them to adapt to a nett life style. \Vho needs rehabilitation'! Jus! about atm hod who has undergone some phlsical trauma -- al11piIIces. paraplegics (people %%hose (osier linihs are paraly/cd). quathiiplcgics (those with all four limbs palm 11/cd1. people ,ttho hate s111I'c:ed strokes, fractures. spinal 1111111 les or certain forms of arthritis. \nn \\'inter. the Ontario \linisiry of Health's senior consultant in rehabilitation. sats Ileal medical ieltahiliratioll ser%ices in this pito- ince ale ttidel4 asailablc::mond'. shpt consist of phtsiolhciapt. tier Lower your taxes Raise you savings with Reg : tered Retiremen Savi NOW PAYING VG Mamba, Canada O.pmlt Insurance Corporation VICTORIA,,ndGREY TRUST COMPANY SINCE 1089 MANAGER J. D. (DAVE) CROSS GODERICH 524..7381 cupatiunal therapy. speech therapy and social work. t'hcsiotherapy utilizes exercises. heal treatments and electrical stim- ulation to help patients regain strength and mobility and relieve pain in affected parts of the hody. Occupational therapists teach appropriate activities such as car - penury and other work forms to help patients regain mobility and strength and also to relearn the activities of daily living — how to cook a meal 1ron1 a wheelchair, for instance. /� NWWW�I�I�Mi'Y V� For all your plumbing. :-ds contact: E. Par -r PI mbing R.R. #4 Brussels ing hone 887-6079 sk for this folder from Dur repre -entative, Davi ' . . cr who ill be at: Parker I- ousc Motel, CLINTON on JANUARY 22 11 you require financing to start, modernize or expand your business and are unable to obtain it elsewhere on reasonable terms and conditions or if you are interested in the ' FBDB management services of counselling and training or wish information on • government programs available for your business, talk to our representative. FEDERAL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT BANK For prior information call 271.5650 or write 1036 Ontario Street, Strafford. C.'''; ►. �• g new doors to small business. PG. 4. THE' BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. : \:• :�ti:• ':\••';;': :�ti{.;:. ;•\:• :•}:•: .}\ti'i �,:•ti:':4 :. \t.:Yl:•:4'1•}}L4S.;�;y'M.:': :.Y.\Y•;.:•�: ii{'ii •'.'i•:'i '• j i,: • h'� j'�'• 11�•1'1'•i'• 1'ii'i �!•'\' •N the - .stan •ar ' Editorials KEITH & JILL ROULSTON, Co•Publishere Published every Wednesday at Queen Si., Blyth, Ont. Subscription rates (In advance) • Canada, $8.00 Outside Canada, $10.00 Single copies: 20 cents Authorized as second class mall by Canada Post Office. Registration number 1319. Box 10, Blyth, Ontario. Telephone 523.9848. ....................::.ti :'.} � }.::•:.v •: •:..... ...:':4}:•::•: Y: �: �'r:v'+::::::{•}:•}:•}:{:;i: is •:. :.}:•. Figur-in' their figurin' doesn't figur When the Ontario government decided to close the Goderich Psychiatric Hospital back in Mid -December, it seemed to be an obvious part of the plans to cut government spending. Well either our arithmetic is wrong or it's obvious the closing must be for some other reason. First of all, the 200 patients at the hospital will be transferred to other institutions. More staff will have to be hired at these institutions. Some of this new staff will be from the old Goderich staff. The government is making noises to make the union happy, that all the old staff will have the opportunity to have new jobs in the other hospitals, ' If such is so, then saving on staff salaries can't be contemplated, Well, what about saving the overhead of the building? Fine, if the building wasn't to be used. But the government is also trying to placade local residents by using the nearly -new building. They'll set up a regional centre for the mentally retarded. So there will still be overhead costs. Also to keep the natives from being restless over the harm to the local economy by pulling the hospital but, Government officials are hinting that there will be as many jobs in the new life of the hospital as in the old. In other words, it appears the building will still be in use. and there %will be twice as many people employed as before, either in Goderich or at the hospitals replacing the Goderich facility. Now that's some saving. Sports in the courts It used to be that only two major sports were played on a court: Basketball and tennis. Today they're. still the only games played on courts but it seems nearly every sport is In the courts these days. The latest sport to attract attention in the legal field is baseball where the movement of the Giants from San Francisco to Toronto is threatened by numerous suits and injunctions in the U.S. Baseball has become in recent years, if you'll excuse the expression, a political football. For instance, two baseball teams have starved to death in Washington in the past decade, yet baseball officials are busting their corsets trying to put another team into the city because the U.S. government members are making threatening noises about the lack of a team in the nation's capital. Seattle is sure to get a team in the next year or so because the city is threatening suit because a, team was moved from the city because nobody watched the team. And now San Francisco joins the waiting line in the courts because it wants to keep the Giants in that city. . One would think that in the great old U.S.A. where free enterprise is both an economic system and a religion, the only thing that would matter would be whether or not people showed up at the games. Apparently it just isn't so, just as so many other things once thought sensible aren't so anymore. Certainly we can see that the city should be compensated for the unpaid portion of the lease the Giants held on the city -owned stadium, But the object in San Francisco seems to be not to get back the money, but to keep the team in town, even if even the players wives stop showing up for the games. In fact in these cities it seems there are more people in court than at the games. Mixed up rules Frantic efforts have been made in recent weeks b5' the hierarchy -of the tederal Progressive Conservative Party to try to prune the list of candidates vying for the job of Robert Stanfield. One can see perhaps the reasoning. We, for instance, would not want to be a delegate to the convention and have to listen to hour after hour of diatribe by a dozen and a half or more candidates trying to win votes with impressive oratory. A little speech making can go a long way. But at the same time the Tories are not making themselves look all that good by closing the door on many candidates. Supposedly, we have a nation where anyone can still be prime minister'(although the Conservatives must wonder after trying so unsuccessfully to unseat Pierre Trudeau). Yet here we have a major party trying to rig the rules to limit the ability of all but those in major positions of power in their party to have even a chance of standing for the leadership. The rules of the race seem to change from day to day. One has a certain suspicion that some of the rules are not even explained to some of the candidates who arc not ardently sought by the party bigwigs so that these candidates can be eliminated early for not obeying the rules they weren't informed about: The Conservative party likes to port -ay the Liberals as a party run by a dictator, Pierre Trudeau, They like n portray themselves as a free and open alternative. As such they need to appear open and democratic. Arc such backroom maneuverings helping that image? Weedy beauty The perils of abandoning education to the professionals By KEITH ROULSTON The education situation in Toronto ;,t present is a sad one. It is easy, of course, to knock the teachers as many have. ' Teachers once were one of our most honoured professions. To- day they have lowered themsel- ves in the eyes of the public to the same class as mail men and garbage collectors. One teacher said the teachers were trying to gain respect by the strike because people only respected you when you had a big pay cheque. How wrong he was. Yet the saddest thing isn't the , actions of the teachers or even the bitterness that the strike has brought, it is the fact that we let ourselves in for this kind of action, not only in Toronto but in our own back yard, because people were willing to give up all say in the education of their children to professionals. Today parents know little of what goes on in the schools and seem to care less. If teachers in moments of bitterness think they are regarded as little more than a ' baby sitting service by most parents, they probably are right. As education became more complex, it was obvious that the teacher was going to be more and more important in providing education but the present set up leaves the parent just about no way to b. :ome involved at all. Turnint education over to the professionals was a necessary thing in the cities in many ways Inn it was only with the demise of munity. It should stop being a the local community school board system where professionals say to system in rural areas of the parents; we know what's good 'for province that the parent and your .lohnie and you should just taxpayer was virtually told 'to go butt out. mind hitt own business and let the That goal will be a hard one to professionals get on with the task reach, however. Perhaps the one ' of giving education. Until then small step that can be made is for the school hoard was still a Very the parents to get more involved meaningful thing. 'Trustees even provide a better education sy- helped keep the school in working stem. 'teachers, in most cases, order, usually without pay. would welcome such interest. But the coming of the county Co-operation of that kind will not school board system wiped out only help improve education of this final input of the community. children, it should increase Sure we still have trustees but understanding between the edu• most people hardly know their errors and the parents. • own respresentativc and even if they do, he or she has only one in their own local schools through vote. Most of the real decisions parent -teachers or home and about education are made by school societies. This, as any professional bureacrats either at teacher who holds a parents' the county board level or from night knows, is not so easy. Many Toronto. It used to be a thin laver parents just don't seem to give a damn, But those, that do must of administration in the old clays. start working with the teacher to particularly in the days of the one -room school house. Today the Le t t e r teacher spends more time filling out forms than getting to know , If the education system is to get to the pupils and their problems. back on track, if teachers are again to have pride in more than e d their paycheque and parents are again to have the feeling they i have some input into the Dear Editor:to r education of their children, then On behalf of the Goderich and action is needed now. Parents and District Pro Life Group, I would taxpayers have got to stand up like to "Thank You" for the and demand more power in the excellent news coverage given to : education system. the Goderich and District Pro 1 ifr. Ideally there should be policy Group during this past year. boards set up with input from Wishing everyone a Han)). parents. There should be more New year. ' effort to cut the red tape and Sincerely; bureaucracy; to return education Mrs. Teresa Courtney, more 'a one to one relationshi1974.75 Publicity chairman, P Goderich and District again; to put it back in the Pro I,Ife Croup, community, not above the coin- _ • BY BILL SMILEY We are well into another season of what passes these days for that once -thrilling Canadian sport of hockey, Far more interesting than being a spectator at games will be watching from' the sidelines some renewed and determined at- tempts to decrease the potential mayhem 111 the former sport. As any intelligent eight•year- old knows, hockey is no longer a sport, it is an entertainment, superior to professional wrestling in this department only because it is faster, bloodier. and most of the participants, though not all. are not fat and nliddlcagcd. Sono. are fat and young. Some are also mi(I(Ileagcd. Some are old enough to he grandfathers. And 8(1 per res( ul the so-called athletes in this nett TIW IILYTII STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 11176, P(,, 5. Hockey's gone crazy in Canada today Iornl 111 (;and (;ulgnol vaudeville are grossly overpaid, A few discerning sports writers and a good many former falls 111' the g;une, 011 sick at heart over whal has happened to what was once the fastest and most ((willing game on earth, The great majority of the so-called fans. however. along with most sports writer's and nearly all of management, deride any attempt to restore the skills and thrills of what used to he the most skillful and thrilll•ul spurt 1►I' then( all • professional hockey. Perhaps that is because the current crop of fans consists ut' yahoos looking for blood, the sports writers are sycophants looking for an angle, and the • rnt ners Ole stupid. as they have adtt ays been, looking only for a buck. in rale. Ontario has new Attornet •General. Rt>v' 1cMurtry 0 former athlete of some ability, ;tend he i, determined 11) stamp out the ,icunlvless that has turned pro hoick. t into 0 Roman circus. Ile had the 011110llilli audacity to declare publicly that assault Donnybrook Many visit Intended for lust week Visitors on the Christmas Eve with Mr, and Mrs. Sam Thomp- son and family ,vcre Mrs. Clarence Chanlnev of Bclgravc. Mr. and Mrs. John Mecornlack. Christie and Emilie f'ronl Orange. 'IIIc, Mr. and Mrs. Fred McPherson of Winghanl, Mrs. Claire Rainer of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Haggitt of Blyth and Mr, and Mrs. John Thompson, R.R.2, Lucknow, On Christiiws Day Mr; and Mrs. Gordon Haggitt, Mr. and Mrs. John Thompson and Mr. George Lockhart of Lucknow were, guests at the same honk, Visitors over the Christmas holiday with Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Chamney and family were Mr. and Mrs.. Warren Bridge of Palmerston, Mr. and Mrs. Dun 13osnlan of I3rucefield, Mr. William Webster of Lucknow Mr. Kevin Pletch of Ifelgra,e. Mr. Jamie Strong of Wingham. 'Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Henderson and Laurie of 13rueelield and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pepper. Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Hilliard Jefferson over Christmas were Misses Gladys and Irene Jefferson of Goderich, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Lcddy of Donnybrook. Misses Mary and Linda Jefferson of Toronto, Miss Sharron .Jeffer- son of Godcrich, Mr. and Mrs. Murray Wilson, Gregory, Scott and Darryl of R.R.2, Auburn Mr. Robert. Jefferson, Craig and Teresa, 11,11.2, Lucknow, We are sorry to report Mrs. Robert Jefferson is a patient in University Hospital, London. Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Robinson, Judy and Janice over Christmas were Mr. Sunshine Unit The January meeting of ,the Sunshine unit was held Tuesday afternoon, January 6 at 2 p.m. in the church parlour. Mrs. Grant and Mrs, McInnes in charge of devotions. Hymn 382 was sung. Scripture lesson Job 13.18.33 was read by Mrs. McInnis. Mrs. Grant gave a reading on "Beauty". Offering was received and dedicated. Ilynln 15 was sung. Mrs. -Webster took the study on I{thopia, Mrs. Grant closed with prayer. • Mrs. Snaith took the chair for the business sleeting. Roll call, 18 present, one visitor. Treasur- er's report was given. Card report was given by Mrs. Snell I:xeculive meeting• to he I1('l(I Monday, January I2 at 2 p.m. in church parlor Lunch was serve(( by Mrs. 'Roy {a•,onl and Mrs. , Millar Richmond. 011(1 battery on the ice would be treated the sank as It is on the streets, with a criminal charge, He look the unparalleled step of putting cops in the arenas and laying charges against the goons who try to decapitate an opponent with a stick or emerge from a spearing duel with the .rnenty's guts wrapped around the point of their sticks._ is making political hay out of it, but I, and a lust of others, don't cage, and say: "Go to il. boy," As expected, his edicts have been greeted with hoots of scorns by the yahoos, the sycophants and the manipulators. Or as Variety, the showbiz nlagaiine, alight put it in one of its succinct headlines: "HOCK JOCKS MOCK SOCKS." Trans. lated. that would mean that hockey people stake fun of any attempt to slop the fighting and violence in the game. , Solidly behind McMurtry, how- ever. is a majority of the people remotely interested in the game: the better sp1►t'ls V lrilers, w11(1 have seen it go steadily downhill: kids who want to play hockey for fun. 66ithoul being terrorize((: parents of kids who play hockey: real fans 111 the ganle, tthu have seen their I'M 0Iite sport turned into 0 c;u•nage 111. duct 11s. and 11rs. Clarence Ritchie and Surelt the rubber barons I;amilt of Rijllcy. Mr. and 1'lrs• ,,1 hock( nil(. uttuers. ttith their aim Robinsnnt and Mn'. and 111., I`►th noir% n►enlalilt, can see 13i11 Robinson all of Kitchener. th(. h,ul,lttritl11;.',In Ih(.tt;dl, large Intl" , I, .I►;. 1 hi' _;Illlt• is !i1oillg Visilnrs 661111 51rs. (11;t'Ies Ilett 11 1h,• ,1r.1u1 Jefferson on Christmas l)av here 1, 1 HI, 1,, .,,1111` Inr insuutres. Mr. 011d Mrs. 1Veslcy ,lelletsun 11 h, 11 1 ,t.1, t;• h. our lotto had and familt ul 1►,Iturtbrook. Mn'• .1 I11nl„r 1 1•.1111. Ihet planed i1 and 11r`. II• ” .Ieffersrnl anal t0.1 .111,1 1„11_11 .11111 ,•1(.;111. 'the 10111116 1 1 Illn,tnl ;tllll (lar` 1,'t, 1,• . Iulull, ,I „II sl;lsl1111g, \,iltl,l. .11'111.. kllet•itlg. Fights were infrequent. In a• town of 4,000, there were 1,500 at every game, A hundred cars would accompany the fans to play-off games 50 miles away. Today, I live in a town of 11,000 which boasts a pretty fair Junior 13 team, The crowds at games run around two or three hundred. Hockey Night 111 Canada used to bind this whole nation together, from radio days well into television, Its ratings have dropped disastrously. What's happened? A lot of things. First, the quality has gone down and the price has gone up. That's a no -no in any business, Sixty per cent of the pros today couldn't have made a fair -to -- middling senior amateur team 25 years ago, Arena owners, egged on by greedy players and those para• sites, their agents, have hoisted the cost of tickets to the point where ticket scalpers are com- mitting suicide, But most important of all, the sheer viciousness of today's game, with its Nazi storm-trooper techniques, its open support of "Intimidation,” its appalling • message for young players that violcncc beats skill and speed. has made a great segment of real fans turn their backs on 11 in disgust. When the players are all millionaires, and the arenas arc half empty, maybe the morons who control the sport will Oct the message, •••••••••••••••••••••••••••e•••• 1 • • • • • • • • • • of Fabrics cont s ues K ONLY: • • • •. • • • • • rints - 20% off • - 20% off • ats - $6,79 owels - $2.59 • ets-80x100-$7.99 • J. Fabrics• Blyth, Ontarfoi ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • (s►rx�-ss-:r.�-5+--�-:�-:etc-:�-,r.�-i�,-...;,-.,,...•,...•�.'..:�.�•...,^•�.,•...,�,,�,...-.... r-.,.,•,--,�,,.;..��►��,-tr-•��t�?���������►����� 11 1 a'1 1 'I sA\sk ffiI 1111 IM1::,, 11e;P,SiialIPJ. at STEWART'S d & White Food�•rket W Blyth, Ont. 523-9451 liver 31st ANNUAL et 'I'A\(i 1 ORANGE FLAVOUR CRYSTALS MAXWELL IIOI'SI•: INSTANT COFFEE KELLOGGS CORN FLAKES' 16 OZ. PK . 69c YORK SMOOTH OR CRUNCHY PEANUT BUTTER 16 •. JAR 73c VAN CAMP 1 OZ. TIN BEANS WITH PORK 2 FOR 69c "KRAFT PARKAY MARGARINE 3 LB. PKG. $1.59 RED ROSE ROASTED COFFEE 1 LB. BAG $1.28 READY CUT 2 LB. PKG. MACARONI aR SPAGHETTI 59c FLEISHMAN'S SOFT MARGARINE 2.8 OZ. PKGS. 95c KLIK PURE PORI(' . LUNCHEON MEAT 12. OZ. TIN 95c PUNCH POWDER DETERGENT • 5 LB. PKG. $1.99 WILKINSON BLADES 2 FREE WITH PKG. OF s 69c CHEESE SLICES SCOPE MOUTH WASH• 17 OZ. BOTTLE $1.49 STEAKETTES !MOPES WHITE 'FROZEN' BREAD PKG. OF 5 $1.25 BEEF PIES r.I Ctrl runt-ort!-tt ort -9-t ►tt!-irtt!itntA. t•:u t. t it-ton!-1t-tit-tr-tr,l,r•-vnt-,!-,mt- -•-vat-, t -N PK(;. OF 4 607,. JAR $ it QUET CHICKEN, TURKEY, FISH, SALISBURY STEAK 1 11 oz. 69c PLUS DEPOSIT i1 3 FOR 99c 11, PLUS DEPOSIT 3 FOR 89c 11 5 I.B. BAG 69c it 1/: GAL. $ i .29 3 LOAVES $1 .19 I! PKG. 59c fj SCHNEIDWEEK AT �t RED &V1171 TE IT Il WIENERS 1 LB, PKG. 79c 11 NO. 1 1 LB. PKG. BREAKFAST BACON $1.59 BUCKET OF CHICKEN $2.9911 DINNERS LARGE (BOTTLE KIST DRINKS LARGE•BOTTLE COCA COLA "C GRADE" MACS, SPYS, DELICIOUS PLES SIL . ' WOODS MEADOW GOLD ICE ► REAM WESTONSRESH BREAD WESTONS APPLE BUNS LLED SNACK 1 L13. $1.19 'l :1 11,B, PKG. 89c11 PKG. 6 $1.0911 Ott ♦ , ,. ., t.... K. 6. THE BI.YTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. 'Tis Show Biz Can this be called entertainment? BY YONNI LEE ' "Beauty", one is often led to believe, "is in the eye of the beholder." Four people can look at a painting. One can see beauty; to the other three, it may only be a conglomeration of color. plan can. unfortunately, take a think of beatrty and turn it into something less than the Creator intended. A breathtaking sunset can be marred with smoke from the burning of leaves. A clean shimmering river meant to dance in the sunlight can be a hiding -place for garbage. Unfort- unately, the human mind can also he polluted with garbage. • When Sammy Cahn wrote the words, "The world is a stage. the stage if a world of entertainment" he had in mind many different ways in which a performer could lift a person out of himself and transpose his mind from a state of worry and doubt to a magical moment when cares and trials could be forgotten and he could retreat to a world, be it all too briefly, of laughter and fantasy. Since these words were written. entertainment has taken many new forms. The question again arises: is THIS entertainment??? Last summer. we visited a California city. The main thor- oughfare. which used to be a bustling shopping arca with department stores. gift shops and nice restaurants. now, consists of blocks of night clubs, strip joints. burlesque houses and massage parlors. The majority of the city's shoppers now travel to the outskirts of town to shop in the clean and modern plazas. Times have chanced and some think we have to change with them. With the change of times, however. and for many modern people who ;cel the change calls for then( to he \\t,ridk and swinging. there has also been a lowering of moral values. Hight is always right wrong is wrong only when volt want it to be...or only when you are told it is. Seger;►) rears a110. 1il:l\htn Hugh Hefner built an cnnpirc an,t became a millionaire \\ L•en lit. decided to exploit womanhood and use her as a toy ,..1„r },•. t,1,h ', entertainment. 1 htr'- always the \\t!men.io ,o•+,hcr.,lc • for a price. Sonictan tht 1,.1,1, ,,1 one centrefold. be, trite stars. Playboy publications .Int; ni_ht clubs thrived and Heftier Ii; cd like a king surrounded h\ plush -covered walk and 1.1l.11n2 jaunts in his pris ate lets. •1L a\ s surrounded by a be tit I'Ll;hat, bunnies. On the heels o{ the I'Lnl,o, publication. carie Penthouse. ;1 little more modern. a bait kinkier, it dared to go a step beyond Playboy. walking the tine line between decency anti obscenity and very often stepping over that line. The paying public, though, being as fickle as they are, soon got tired of it all, Basically, they figured, "When you've seen one, you've seen 'em all!” and sales started declining. Hefner couldn't play as fast and pretty girls had to start relying on talent to get them to the top of the success ladder. (Not many have made it! ! ) Declining though the sales may be, these and other publications like them are still being shown on some local newsstands, When the December issue of Penthouse was published. a Niagara Falls com- pany was the first to ban it and in moves prompted by many inter- ested and concerned people, many other Ontario cities follow- ed suit. But that issue. which was termed pornographic by morality - officers. was being displayed in Western Ontario places of busi- ness. And adults, offkilter in their thinking and juvenile in their mentality, were supposedly being entertained. While some of these merchants agree that business \\null no; suffer if they did nol sell then►, they continue to do so, supposed. ly because money talks. P. T. Barnum once said. "There is a sticker horn ever‘ n►inute' and the people \t ho display this trash on their net sst;utds ha\ c evident• ly found Man' of 111csc suckers who are willing to be used as pawns and an\il,ns to spend hard-earned atone\ n+! m.d.1 Iht publishers rich. told(( then. 'tt fantasies and satisfy ,t v1.111 ill 11\ l's \\ ilich oh\ II,I1,I\ art l,It hill_ 111 mraninglul i I.,tiou,hlps. ant wt•il a\\alt Iltat tt rt.++l' lh'ohlt' 1\111 cunt11Snt 11101 disturb, r.tt . ht,,.t that 111 rit,lrl`. I11.1, , lhtst litil,ht.tti+'u' \ let 1,1 1111' \ et,. ; oIl li the\ wish. /14 4, 11110:;..1 e;1'11 put.. !last I Ili. n' 111 rta!Iio'.t a!{+let L 1„ 1,t ,,,11,;, „1. tit( v to tilt ,.111,:v 1. " lit;;'. i "( h!I,II.t+H • bass int, tt tl 11. t ..r, !t.,..11.1i int++ „1,s:t 111;, 11,+rn,;a1.11,11; .lull ,;11.tt th, 1(1(11_ iti oar ,t,,tt1\. nl,u ll,Ot!s th.t Iht., ,o•c tit-stl,,\. int:nl.1tI.t1 (Ilrl,ii.ni lutal.!? :11111\. t1.1il++l:.11 1111. 11\ ,flit: 12,d, .1, raft.,;, !1 .. 1 s 1st+rlto„I;,I,h, 1, port I;.:. I : til poi noLo.iply. +,l.t t'd t films t oltlll it It t; i,. , 1111+; ft 11 .I, ‘011112 a, '$. i II. ' ho.,. 1!1 _ :1 1.1ou link ht. lwet•n potn,,_r,ll,ttt, hittaturc ,tett ,�� lie; 0. to „I Chars vulgaris x.4 Spirogyra x150 Marsh World Ducks Unlimited (Ctnatld) ALGAE — We commonly think of algae as a smelly, yellowish -green scum on the surface of shallow ponds and lakes. In fact, however, the algae comprise a very large and diverse group of plants which play a very important role in the complex interrelationships of living organisms. As so-called "primary producers,” they use the sun's energy to produce food substances con- sumed by various aquatic animals. These in turn provide food for larger animals such as fish and waterfowl. Occasionally during summer, algal "blooms" (production of large masses of algae) occur in response to a combination of factors including water quality and weather. r4.i •'75 criminal rapes, 37 per cent of sex. crimes. In ten years, rapes increased 700 per cent. Ms. Eagles' research also - showed that U.S. children under 17 commit SO per cent of serious crimes, In 1974, there were one million unwed teenage mothers, 300,000 of them below 13 years of age, while 500,000 teens contract- ed VD. Canadian figures may be determined by dividing by ten. Another proof of the influence that pornography can have on young minds vas made evident recently in Ottawa when a young student sadistically tortured and. murdered a female classmate, then went on a shooting spree that took two lives, including his own. For the past few years, he had collected pornographic litera- ture and magazines that dealt in detail with sex crimes and torture techniques. A tragedy that could have been averted had responsible people taken their heads out of the sand long enough to do something about his problem. *** It is difficult. in this modern Nth -century -thinking world. to lint) something warns and mean- ingful \\ ith which to surround our children \\ ho are so badly hallt'rcd about by the outside world. They need assurance that the love, understanding and dt \ otion that exist \\ ithin a family unit are something special: that relationships Item een people are based on respect and genuine low. not animal nta,gnetisitt and Inst. Most tit all. the roust know 111.it 11 is \\1'nllg Io abuse a t +,•,i -_i\ en 2111 \\ high. if channel{•. 111 the right direction. 1. ' t .lutittil. right and wood • not .t 1, Intl dirt\ ,t' these I,h,.tln,n, tuakc i1. Uur young people need a sense, little what This is doing in the of direction and a sense of values. `` thinking of the younger genera - They are facing problems we I lion? Why are we so amazed at never had to face, We may not the increasing number of sex -re - have all the answers but we can at ; (bled crines when we will not least hope that their lives are take a stand against this touched by more good things than damaging evidence? evil; by more sharing people than Too many of us' take the selfish; by more enlightening attitude, "Nothing I do will help! thoughts than demoralizing ones, Why bother??" WHY indeed? In it has come to my attention that Ms, Eagles' words: "Shake off business places have received your apathy, and whenever you complaints from parents who ask encounter obscenity and porno - that these publications be remov• ',ropily, 'speak out, phone, write ed from children's sight. 'There , or lodge a complaint with the has been nothing done. Has the 1 police or others against it,,,Act Almighty Dollar trampled the now. Tomorrow may be too late!" conscience? Are our businesses Speak up for the sake of our so money hungry that they care youth and clean up our towns! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • 1 CILLAILASCIE SALE'! 1/2 Price 8. e • ON AL ► STATIO AND OFFIC • ' PLIES. ERY BLYTH PRINTING; PHONE 523-9211 • • • • • • •• • 0 • • • 0, • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CONESTOGA COLLEGE Clinton Centre LIST OF PART-TIME COU,? SES ACADEMIC Mathematics • Level III or IV Wednesdays 7:00,• 10:00 p.m. 12 weeks Starts: January 28 Fee: 527.00 COMMERCIAL Shorthand (Basic to Advanced) Monday 7:00 • 10:00 p.m. 12 weeks Starts: January 26 Fee: 527.00 Typing Wednesdays 7:00 • 10:00 p.m. 12 weeks Starts: January 28 Fee: 527.00 for Winter of 1 976 GENERAL INTEREST Drawing & Painting .Mondays 7:30 • 10:00 pall. 10 weeks Starts: January 26 Fee' °'30.00 Silkscreening Wednesdays 7:30 - 10:00,'.m. 10 weeks Starts: January 28 Fee: 530,00 TECHNICAL Blueprint Reading Wednesdays 7:00 • 1000 p.m. 10 weeks Starts: January 28 Fee: 523.00 REAL'ESTATE An Introduction td Real Estate Segment 1 , Monday to Friday 9:00 a.m. • 4:00 p.m. Starts: January; 26 Fee: 560.00 Real Property,Law (A Broker Certfificate Program Course) Wednesdays,9:00 a.m. • 10:00 p.m. Wednesdays 9 :00 a.m. • 1:00 p.m. 10 week Starts: January 28 Fee: 58 ,00 MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM Manufacturing, Planning & Confrol Mondays 7:30 • 10:00 p.m. 10 weeks Starts: January 26 Fee: 550.00 Planning for Profits Wednesdays 7:30 • 10:00 p.m. 10 weeks Starts: January 28 Fee: 550.00 Advance registration can be completed by mail form on this page. Registration forms are also accepted at the Clinton Centre during the following times: 8:30 a.m, • 4:00 p.m., Monday to Friday. COURSE APPLIED FOR 2ND CHOICE El Mrs. Mess El Mr. (Last Name) Type or Print ( First Name) ADDRESS Phone; Residence CHEQUE OR MONEY ORDER ENCLOSED FOR $ Payable to Conestoga College, Clinton Centre P 0 Box 160 Clinton t_ Phone 482.3458 Business: Seaforth band gets aid from Board of Education for Florida trip The 1111roir Board of Education will be paying a small portion of the expenses incurred by the Seaforth District High School girls trumpet band when they travel to Florida in February. Out of a total cost of $7,000 to st.nd the band to Fort Meyers, Florida the Board agreed unani- mously to pay up to $800 of any deficit, Principal Bruce Shaw in a letter to the Board said the girls had raised $3,000 and will be providing another $2,205 them- selves, This left a balance of about $800 after an expected Wintario grant' of $1,000 is received. Chairman Herb Turkheim said, A.C.WII elects Mrs. McLeIian president A.C.W. of Trinity Church, Blyth met at the home of Mrs. John B. Nesbit on January 8 for the regular meeting. President opened meeting with Invocation, followed with Scrip- ture reading from St. John, Chapter 3, verses 1 to 24. Mrs. George Ives read the Meditation followed with Litany and prayers. The secretary gave the report followed with treasurer's report. Mrs; Lottie McLellan read a poem entitled "The Touch of the Master's Hand," The meeting was then turned over to Rev, Carson for election of new officers for 1976: President, Mrs, Lottie McLellin; Vice President, Mrs, George Ives; Secretary, Mrs, John B. Nesbit; Treasurer, Mrs. Kenneth Taylor; Press Reporter,- Mrs. John B. Nesbit; Rectory Committee, Mrs. Lottie McLellan, Mrs. Annie McNichol; Catering Committee, Mrs. R. Lcibold. The next meeting is at the home of Mrs. Annie McNichol on. February 12 at 2 p.m. Rev. Carson closed meeting with the Grace. Hostess served lunch. CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1, Free ticket 5. After a while 10. Mine entrance 11.42 Across, to Popeye 12. Seasonal greeting 13, Original cards 17: Think 14. Ham it up 18. Came 15. Small in Indus- first trialist" 19. Far- , 16. Golly! away 19, Hautboy 20. Sheep 23. More talk impecunious 21. Danube 28, Is victim tribu- to Cupid's tary arrows 22. Young (3 wds.) pig 30. Make obese 31. Still snoozing 32. Tsia or darjeeling 34. Anthem preposition 37. Binge 42. Candidate for 12 Across 45. Slowly (music) 46. Similar 47. Command 48. Singing Horne DOWN 1, Prepare a path 2. Eliot's "- Bede" 3, Farm structure 4. Proof- reading direction 5. Destiny 6. Moham- medan name 7. Actress ---- Louise 8, Balanced 9. All that's left .I 2 10 12 14 19 20 21 20 30 3 • 24, Pal- Today's Answer myra leaf 25. Prey upon 26. "All About 1950 film 27. Incar- nadine 29. Immov- able 33, Powdered lava , 34. Norwegian metropolis 35. Pitcher 36. Break into pieces 38. Sound of thunder vN3..1 81308'0 N11 )4'V�01'N13'1 1b V 31,H13'3M,S 33adS 830 v 311 0,348(VN 3 Liv j 3,Av0 1 N 1'S-1 83tlOOdMo 3080 1�N;V 310113 9] N 1 1 N'3,1'V:A 3,A 1'10 1• I'0v 83'.1v'1 ssv'• 4 f% 13 39. Tidy the 'lawn 40." Go Bragh" 41. Sicilian volcano 43. Summer (Fr.) • 44. Anderson's play, "High 5 b 1 e 9 7 11 15 Ib 11 15 %//;' 22 ' 23 29 //31 33 '/3/c 37 se 39 40 41 Blyth personal Mr. and Mrs. Ross Radford of Port Colborne and Mrs. Donald Snell of Kitchener spent a couple of days last week with their mother, Mrs. Norman Radford, Euchre winners Six tables were in play at Monday nights euchre Winners were as follows: high lady, Pearl 'Tamer; high man, Margaret McCullough, (playing as a nlan); low lady, Mrs. Harvey Sillih; low man, Shirley Glousher (playing as a plan); ladies Ione hands, Mrs. Fairscrvice; mens lithe hands, Ilarvcy Sillih. Euchre next Monday night al t3 p.m. Everyone welcome. ab 4B "We as a Board should be proud of the Seaforth girls. This is the , first high school band from Canada invited to participate in the annual Edison Pageant of Light. *** In order to clear up certain problems being encountered particularly at bus loading time on a private driveway in front of F. E, Madill Secondary school at Wingham, The Huron Board of Education approved the erection of two double sided signs. In addition a resolution was passed restricting use of the driveway between Victoria and John street on the school property 10 vehicles authorized by the Board or its representative in the person of the principal.. *** A seminar for principals and vice -principals will be held March 11 to 13 in Sanilac County in Michigan when schools in the CI'osw‘cl•Lcxington district %will- he visited. In other business, the. Board: 'Referred the question of 1976 mileage alio ances to the newly appointed management commi- tter for (discussion x11(1 recom- mendation to the 130ard al the pint regular meeting. *'Turned (1rnyrt a request from the 'I'umkn of Clinton of financial consideration tor Costs incurred in .111e new prow isiun or the to►%n's adult creasing guard program. •:approved three apI►li('aliutt� for :Ippruwal . of plans for suhtliyisions ithin Ili' (uunlw of I Laron. •1 hew arc for .I. 1'. 1)uehal'n)e in Bayl'ivhl: R. Tong in the lel%n5hil► of'fuekersnlilll and C. 13. Thomas in (urea 1o((n511ip. 'w1r. Thomas (( ho 15 l nee eln;lirntan oI the Board declared a conflict of interest and Bill not participate in 111e discussion. 1)irvetot' uI Education O. .1. oelu•ane said the Board is asked olll% to consider 1he inlllarl on I11•esl•lll school facilities and Io decide l‘ hl'l her ''1 not die suhl!i� idor should he required to make pro( isiun fora school site in his plan. (orinrane said all schools ser( ing these Olive areas had present enro11111Cnts 11111 helot/ the effeelil1' Capacities 31111 srho,,l sites %% Mild 1111 he nveessar\ . .A1)1/1."\ 1.(1 a hurro\Ong I1Vla11 in the amount of eight million dollars 1,, meet neees"arcurrent t•.w11en11itures until Current r6en- Ite is rerei\ ed. •Learned that Brian Ilate( a grade 12 student al Scal'urih District rics I l igh School 11 as the 11111111',' or a 'di) for Iwo 111 is'1i' ico in a recent London Art (�:tllerw Conk's!. •\Vei'v 10111 h1• superintendent .lint Couper that a metric workshop for trustees would he held al the 13o:u•d offices in C'Iinionim March 17 beginning at 10.8.111. SUNDAY, JAN. 8 REV. WALLY ANK of the NEW TR S MISSION will speak PLUS THE NEW TRIBES SINGERS B P.m. HURON MEN'S CHAPEL AUBURN Evil Prevails When Good Men Do Nothing THIS BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. PG, 7. Minister's Study Are you a Christian? THE REV. FRED 11, CARSON BLYTH ANGLICAN CHURCH Are you a Christian? OI1, you may have attended Sunday School regularly when you were a child. And you may even be presently sitting in Church on most, if not every, Sunday. So, then, when do 1 ask such a question of you? Well, perhaps if I were to rephrase the question you would have a clearer understanding. Do you know Jesus Christ? Is your life a wonderful experience or is it a mere existence which will one day end in a state of hopelessness? Have you had a personal encounter with the one who said, ",..unless one is born anew, he cannot see the kingdom of God."? (John 3:3), In otherwords one has to be born of the Spirit in order to experience the living God in His life. And only then can we say, "yes, I know Jesus Christ. He is my Lord and- Saviour." But how do we come to this personal knowledge and experience of the risen Lord? Very simply, we. must acknowledge the fact that we arc sinners and repent of those sins (naming each as we become aware of it). We need to then ask Jesus to come into our lives cleaning the crap out of each area of our being. (Revelation 3:20). If you have made this move, you can now stand firm on the promise that, at the very moment of your rebirth you receive the indwelling of the Holy Spirit and arc given the "right to become children of God". (John 1:12). Don't be fooled into thinking that an intellectual acceptance of the Christian doctrines is enough. And don't think that because you attended Church and/or Sunday School at one stage in your life, nothing else is required o1' you. Jesus said. "I ani the. way, and the truth, and the lite; no one comes to the Father. but by me." (John 14:6) To be a Christian • a disciple bf Christ • you need to deliberately open your heart for the Saviour to enter, far .Icsus aid, "He who is not with 111e is against pie..." (Luke 11:23). Whi}'h side arc you on? To repeat. ARF YOU A CHRISTIAN? M\r\••V\.•\.w\..\••\M\,.\ •.1,.\,I\I.\1111 �..\1111\1111\I. x..\1111 �..\1111\ CHURCH OF GOD McConnel Street, Blyth CHINCH SERVICE: II a.m. ..\..\..\..\..\..\..\,.\.•\•. \..\1111\1111•••••• \1111\1111\ THE ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA Rev. Fred H. Carson ST. MARK'S. AUBURN (1:39 a.m. S'1'..IO1IN'S. BRUSSELS I I:IS a.n1. TRINITY ('fIt'R('H. HI:l.GRAVN 1:00 P.m. For information, please phone 523-9334 1..1..\1111\..\1111\1111 , THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA THE REV. CECIL L. WITTICH SUNDAY SCHOOI.-9:50 8.111. ('11UIWII SERVICE -I I a.m. "O ('OMI', LET US WORSHIP" ,1111 \1111 CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH WORSHIP SERVICE -10 a.m. SC'RIPT'URES: IS 58. 13-59. 21 SERMON:" THE MIGHTY WIND OF THE LORD" • WORSHIP SERVICE -2:30 p.m. SCRIPTURES: ROM 11. 25-36 SERMON: "AMONG THE ELECT OF GOD" F/4...I\•.•••......V.\1111\1111\..••..V. VI\1111 \1111 Pft... \..x....1.1 ••••4.••••• ,, 'S... ..,......- 1 WESTFIELD FELLOWSHIP HOUR Special Speakers Family Bible Study Hour -1 p.m. Family Worship Service -2 p.m. INTERDENOMINATIONAL • ALL WELCOME IY•\1111\•.•\.I.141..6..•.•••\1111 .1.•A.AI.1.M ••\1111•••••••••b•.'\.•••••••\1111\••\•/11..•�I• THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA PASTOR MURDOCK MO1 BISON AUBURN, . DONNYBROOK 1111•\•11\••\..•••..\...11.11 \.I\•.1.\1111\1111\1111\.1\1111\1111\1111\1111\1111\1111\1111 ST. MICHAEL'S 'ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH FATHER JOSEPH F. HARDY 'Mass at Blyth every Sunday at 9 a.m. 1111... 1'l.. t!. 1'111; MATH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. I4nr,iu riblu, MRS 111 \N Mt CAI I W.I. plans farm meeting The, Agricultural and Canadian Industry meeting of the Walton Women's Institute will be in charge of conveners Mrs. Harold Bolger and Mrs. Mack Sholdice. Thc guest speaker to be Mr. Martin Band, a local farmer who will speak on Agriculture and Dairy Industry. It is hoped that interested farmers of the com- munity will plant to attend, guests are welcome. Thc Roll call to be answered by "An Industry unknown to our Grandmothers." with the Motto • "The farm is the food factory of the nation, let's keep thq assembly line rolling." Lunch hostesses are Mrs. Ron Bennett, Mrs. Frank Kirkby, Mrs. Jack Gordon and Mrs. Trevor Smith. Mission Band holds meeting The January meeting of the Mission Band was held in the church basement on Sunday morning. with a good attendance. John Hucther gave the CaII to Worship. Hymn 405. "Stand up! Stand up for Jesus." was sung accompanied by Laura Dennis at the piano. The scripture lesson was read by Nanci Bennett, followed by prayer by Dcryl Hoegy. Thc treasurer's report was given by Cathy McGavin and Peter Bennett gave the secrc• tary's report. Hymn 588, "God sees the little sparrow fall" was sung. Doreen Hackwell and Marie McGavin led in a sing song. The children went to their classes with teachers. Mrs. Ross Bennett, Mrs. Merton Hackwcll. Mrs. Mac Sholdice and Mi•s. Neil McGavin. Walton U.C.W. begins .new year Thc U.C.W. members held their first meeting in the New Year in the church basement on Wednesday afternoon with 14 ladies present, Mrs, Alvin McDonald was in charge for the 8th and 16th unit, opening with a New Year's thought on "Turning over a new leaf," Mrs. Don McDonald read the scripture from the Gospel of St, John, verses 1-9, Hymn, 571 "Standing at the Portal" was sung ' accompanied by Mrs. Martin Baan at the piano. Mrs. D. McDonald led in prayer. Mrs. A. McDonald gave the meditation referring to the New Year. "1 am the light of the world," We shall not walk in the darkness, but in the light of the world, go into the New Years,with high hearts, that we may walk with assuirance." She closed the devotions with prayer. Mrs, Neil McGavin presided for the business, reading a poem, "Today is, here", The minutes were reaby the recording secretary, Mrs, Herb Traviss, The treasurer's report was given by Mrs, K. McDonald. The offering was taken and dedicated, A thank -you note was read by Mrs, A. McCall, It was voted to donate to John Milton for the Blind, The annual meeting is set for Sunday, January 25 following a pot luck lunch after the morning church service, The Walton Unit is to set it up, the 8th and 16th unit to clean up. It was decided to order the slides taken at the 50th anniversary service by Phillip Dunk. These are to be shown at the annual meeting. Thc World Day of Prayer is March 5 at 2 p.m. in the church basement. The theme will be Walton and area news briefs Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Smith and fancily were: Mr. and Mrs. Phil Moulton of Verschoyle, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Moulton of Hamilton: Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Brady and Michell of Aurora. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Haase of Sault Ste, Marie spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Murray and Susan. Other guests -for New fears at the sante home were Mrs. Gcrtie Bennett and Charles Murray. 'Mr. and Mrs. bill Humphries a nd I'antily mel with the McDonald families at the Formosa Hall for their New Year's gel together. The euchre ‘k as cancelled Friday e\ ening due to the stormy %kcatht'r. it is hoped lo have it ill t►►" %1t'eks. Huronview Tesidents entertained during holiday season A group of ladies representing the Evangelism department of tilt' Clinton Christian Reformed Church visited the Home during the holiday season and presented each of the residents will) a Io\ 'l\ Christian calendar. Reverand McWhinnte. (.hap. lain of the Home, is convalescing in Godcrich hospital and %%e all wish hint a speedy recover\ . Re\ . Wildfong. i►l' Clinton,' took the Sunday service and Mr. Nelson Lear sang a solo accompanied h\ Mrs. Henderson. The Bradley Family. of Clinton. entertained on "Family Night". This family of seven singers Winnil'rcd. Marie. Eugene. Ans• berth, l)ontain..lohn and Jacque - BEEF FOR YOUR FREEZER! SID=S 98c Ib. H I N t' S $1.15 Ib. rice Includes: g, wrapping and ast freezing Cu. ••m cutting, wraopllg and fast fre:(in• .08c Ib'. Farmers: The egg grad- ing station is operating for your convenience. ondesboro Locker Service Londesboro - Ph. 523-4478 Clinton - Ph. 482-9951 litre itt' accompanied h\ their father I:ugt'ne1\ilh lilt' acr"rdtatt. Thc Hradlt' came to Canada front Ircl;tnd ah1)t1I Ihrt't' years ago and lit t' hct'antr ►\t'll 101011it t'otert;tillers. 1lit' rt',idrnts enjoy lilt lint' singing of the Irish. Scottish and Canadian songs and their appreciation %%as e\pressed 1%1 MI's, I1'\hnurnt' a flake or II•t'laurin. Education for all of life with Rcv, Ed Baker the speaker, It is hoped that each member will bring a neighbor, The executive meeting will be changed to Monday, February 2 as the Annual Presbyterial meeting is set for Wednesday, February 4 at 13ruceficld United Church starting at 9:30 a.m, A noun meal will be served. Thc allocation has been 'raised to $1500 for 76 also the membership fee is 50 cents. Rev, Baker closed the meeting with prayer, GET .Nw 1975 Chrys er, 4 door sedan 1974 Chev I pala, 2 door har o top 1974 Dart Swi ger, 2 door hardtop 1974 Chrysler,\4 door sedan 1974 Coronet 6,automatic" 1974 Dodge Dar\ , .2 door' 1973 Dodge Daft, 4 / door, 6 automatic 1973. Valiant, 2 do 1973 Duster, 6 aut atic 1973 Chryslers, 2 d,o r, hardtop 1973 Javelin, 2 door ardtop • 1972 Chev, 2 door h -a top 1972 Plymouth,/4 door 1972 Toyota 1971 Chryslep, 2 door hardtop i CRAWFORD MOTORS CHRYSLER . • DODGE • PLYMOUTH WINGHAM ONTARIO 357-3862 SNELL'S GROCERY can afford la eat hearty with these F,aaValues! Wl'S'I'ONS SOUTHERN STYLE. ROLLS WESTONS FRESH BREAD A1.1. VARIETIES SAVE 10c R LOAF. CHALLENGER COHOE sal on , 'S 89c REG. SSc WI:STONS APPLE F SNACK BUNS REG. 75c F SCHNEIDERS GROUND BEEF IN 6 LB FROSTE ' FOODS: HIGH LINER OCE 1 LB. PKG. PERCH FILL -TS // 89c SILVERWOODS MEADO ' GOLD ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL. $1.29 SILVERWOODS DELUXE ICE CREAM 1/2 GAL. $1.69 OR 45c LED R 55c FRESH 80c LOTS PER LB, FRESH PRODUCE: FRESH WHITE OR PINK GRAPEFRUIT NO. 1 ONT. CARROTS 10 FOR 99c 2 1,11. 23c BORDENS MILK 3 QUARTS BAG HOMO $1.48 3 QUARTS BAG 2% $1.44 SCHNEIDERS FRESH CHICKEN LEGS NO. 1 QUALITY LII. 99c SCHNEIDERS LARD+ I LB. PKG. 2 FOR $1.00 DARE'S CHOCOLATE CHIP OR FUDGE COOKIES 2 LB. PKG. $1.69 AYLMER CHOICE 19 OZ, 2 FOR CREAM CORN 79c SYLVANIA 40, 60, or 100's, REG. 2 FOR 69e LIGHT BULBS 4 BULBS $1.00 DON'T DELAY Bring in your colour film to -day! FREE 5 x 7.Enlargement with each colour film processed offer expires Januar 21st 11I• lit' f- . •1 ABUR,N .NEWS Ilumau edam MRS I:I.r,NOR IURADNtx'N Auburn euchre THE 131,YTII STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 197(,. I'(.. • 1. . Auburn and area news briefs Mr, and Mrs, Andrew Kirk- anniversary at the Saltford Valley connell were guests last Saturday Hall for Mr, and Mrs, Harold evening to the 50th weddine Good, McMillan family entertainers at Huronview winners namedThe McMillan Family of Goderieh entertained with a Winners at the weekly euchre musical program for "Family party in Auburn were: high lady, , Night" on December 23rd, Don Mrs, Frances Clark; low lady, and Shirley McMillan and their Mrs. Major Youngblut; high man, familyErnie, Eleanor and Eliza - Donald Haines; low man, Judy beth layy their instruments in Van Dongen, playing as a man; harmony and solos as, well as novelty winner, Mrs. Robert vocal trio and duet numbers, Mrs, Arthur. I Art Hemwood played the piano 6. Savoury cookies are both made Nish inrported)lolland ( hectic, but textures are quite different. One is crisp and crunch, %%bile the other is softer and'shorthread•crunlhly. Corn crisps and shortbread Savoury cookies make a nice change and have a few less calories than sugary ones. 13ut not team less. so don't get carried away when nibbling on then' special goodies made with Dutch cheese. The 1loiland crisp is crunchy like a potato chip — and just as "nmre-ish" --- while the shortbread•has a softer. crumbly texture. Dutch Cheese Shortbread I, cup (4 ounces) imported • Holland Edam or Gouda t/: cup butter 1/I cup all-purpose flour rh cup whole wheat flour 1/4 teaspoon salt Cream •shredded cheese and butter; blend in flour and salt. Work with hands until the mixture forms a smooth hall. If it is too sticky add a little more flour; if too dry add a few drops of water. Lightly butter one 9 -inch square cake pan or one 9 -inch round layer cake. pan. Press the dough firmly and evenly into the hot - tom of the pan. Cut the short- bread into squares or wedges. Prick with a fork. Bake in 400° oven 20.25 minutes until golden. When cool cut down lines again and remove from baking pan. Makes 12 squares or wedges. holland Crisps 112 cups boiling nater I cup cornmeal ,1 teaspoon salt 144 teaspoon curry powder !;a•:, cup butter !% cup t2 -ounces) shredded imported Holland Fdant or Gouda Pour boiling water on corn- meal. Stir to make a light hat- ter. Season with salt: blend in butter and shredded imported Holland i:d;am or Gouda. Pre- heat oven to 425°F. Grease baking sheet. Drop the batter by the half teaspoon about 3 inches apart onto prepared baking sheet. Dip metal des- sert spoon in water. Press each mound with the hack of the wet spoon into a thin wafer. Bake 5.6 minutes in 425°F. oven until :lightly browned. &lakes. about 4 dozen crisp wafers. accompaniment, This annual visit by the McMillans at Christmas time is enjoyed by everyone and Mr. George Feagan expressed the appreciation of the residents, The residents were entertained with an afternoon of organ music on Wednesday with Ed Stiles of Goderieh at the console, Mrs, 13etty Rodgers sang several solo numbers and led the singing of Christmas Carols. Mrs. Scratch thanked Betty and Ed on behalf of the residents. Mr. I)ick Roorda led the Sunday evening song service sponsored by the Clinton Christ• tan Reformed Church and Mrs. Elsie Henderson played the piano 'for the 'sinuini oi• Christmas music, The Jun1or Choir provided their oN n guitar accompaniment for several seleellous a lilt a weal duet by Ann .Junkman and ('uhic Amsing. Mrs. Elsie I Iendersun and Norman Speir provided the old tvnle music for the first pat of Montan\ afternoons program.'I'ht• second ,part Of the program consisted of musical numbers ha the lhnl band, vocal solus 1)5 Ilrlen Fischer and Morgan Dalton. • Mario 1:15 1111 of Chilton ;n'rang• etl a t;uiet� program till' "Tamils `fight" twill; 1 i1.t Hort•\ for the earning. Mrs. Fall Russ. Jetsam 114)55e ;Ind 1larold Black plaseJ acronlp;Inimt nt 1111. the program. There tt era' tl;olct' 111oniturs ha 111e ('rnlenni,ti 11e1►p� rs: duets J't .I;utt• ;mil 1 auric Bell. I );Itt n Lla 1111 1ml .Io;ulne .Johnston; ,Mats ht Debbie Ikon. Iori 11ronw ;Intl nlnulh organ sel•tlions Its 11$111c 1 ;nt soli. Mrs. Itt•11 a r;utnlothcr of 111c lit•11 Qirts tllankctl all (hose resp�nlsihle fur flitcoat I'Iuinnlent till )t'hall uI Illy I't•sttt'llls. "/#W 4' TV! Cfl' tr,c Thor; BE A REGULAR Its nail WAR • THE TOTALLY W *+ AUBUINGRQERY& VARFETY'$TORE IS NOW OPE OR BUSINESS MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9-9 SUNDAY 12.4 COME ON IN AND SEE US •t Mr. and Mrs, Donald Cart- wright, David, Derrick and Lorie visited last Sunday with Mr, and Mrs, William Yule, Chris and Stephen at Exeter. Christmas Eve and New Year's Day visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Lorne Popp, Robert, Paul, Debbie, Betty and David were Miss Dianne Popp of Toronto, Mr, and Mrs, Douglas Poppa do Cathy of Auburn, Mr, and Mrs. Donald Treble, Brian, Barry and Bruce, and Mrs, Meredith Young of Goderich and Miss Bertha Webster of Toronto, Mr, Gerry Beimers returned honk last Thursday frorn Wing - ham District hospital where he had been a patient for a week, Mrs. Donald' Rea and Christ- opher of Listowel spent last weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Dobie, Miss Dianne Popp of East Toronto General hospital spent the last two weeks with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Murray Popp and family. Mr. and Mrs. William L. Craig returned last Tuesday after a ten -clay holiday in Florida. We arc sorry to report that Mr. Robert Chantey is a patient in Clinton General hospital. His many Auburn friends wish hint a speedy recovery. Christmas Day visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Lorne Popp, Robert Paul, Debbie, betty and Dave were Miss Dianne Popp, Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Popp and Cathy, Auburn, Mr. and Mrs. Murray Popp, Sandra, Kenneth, Steven, Brenda and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. Brian Hallam, Gregory, Anita and Keith, all of RR 1, - Auburn, Mrs, 'Amber Popp, Clinton and Mr. George Walker, Clinton. Mrs. John Daer is a patient in Stratford hospital where she underwent knee surgery on Monday. The sympathy of this commun- ity is extended to Mrs. Garnet Farrier and family of White- church on the sudden death of her husband, Mr. Garnet Farrier who was well known in this community Mrs. Eleanor Bradnock attend- ed the executive meeting of the London Convention area held fast Monday at the Ontario Agricul- ture and Food Board room in Clinton. The Executive of the Auburn Branch of the Bible Society wish to thank all those who supported the fall canvas and also those who collected in the different areas. Four hundred and seventy -live dollars has been forwarded to support this worthwhile project. 0 C(/TTOORDER Sunlight Liquid Detergent Libby's Fane Peas 14 oz. 3 for Aylmer 48 oz. Fancy Tomato J ice Fair lady 1 Ib. Soft Margarin Weston's Bread 24 oz. 3 Canada Packers =roz Chickens 6 - Canada Packers Wieners Canada Packers Side Baco Canada Packer Summer Fresh Beef He We also ha Canada Pa Side B Schneider 32 oz. :9c 1.00" 59c tub 49c for $1.19 n Roasting lb.1.09 A lb. 59C rifty nds lb.89c ed Black Ib. age $1.69 sli au rts (T ckers) Ib.59C e tickers :nd swishers ers Devgn con lb. $1.59 Pork Pies (Pkg. of 6) 99c Canada Gr. Al or A2 cut & wrapped Chucks of Beef ib.79c .65-80 Ib. size BLYTH MEAT MARKET Blyth 523-4551 "Featuring our own home made Country Pork Sausage." PG, 10. THE HLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. Cubs .learn about Brazil The lst Londesborough Cub Pack welcomed two visitors from Brazil to their meeting on Thursday evening Bette and Jess are in the district for a few months and are attending school at Seaforth. They showed colour- ed slides and spoke of their country and customs and answer- ed questions from the boys. Bob Hulley and his Red Pack opened and closed the meeting with Bruce Vincent, the sieer, leading in the Pack Call. 1 Londesboro and area news briefs Rev. McDonald visited on Sunday afternoon with his aunt, Mr, and Mrs, Andrew Bremner, Ethel who had celebrated their 50th wedding Anniversary on January 4, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Vodden, Bayfield visited on Friday night with his sister Mr, and Mrs, Bert Shobbrook, Congratulations to Mrs, Tom Knox who celebrated her 96th birthday on January 9 at the home of her daughter' Lavina in Toronto, Earl Johnston is a patient in Clinton hospital having had appendix surgery on Wednesday, January 7. We wish him a speedy recovery, Large congregation for baptismal service , A large congregation attended the Baptismal service at the United church on Sunday Morn- ing. -Greeting worshippers into the Narthex was .Bert Shobbrook. Ushers were Bev Bromley, Dennis Fothergill, Kevin Hulley and Darrell Shobbrook. Junior congregation leaders were Wilma Vincent, Cathy Peel and Muriel Sewers, The choir anthem was, "Sweet melody of Love", Mrs, Margaret Whyte, clerk of session introduced the parents to CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Jacob's favorite wife 7. Castle ditch 11. Off ship 12, Bullets and such, informally 13. Survey closely (4 wds.) 15. Attention 16. Scandi- navians 17. "Art of Love" poet 20. Region of Spain 23. Pain 27. Ogler of a sort (2 wds.) 29. Fencing foil 30. "- for Sergeants" (2 wds.) 31. Wagers 32. Houston baseball player 36. Romanian monetary unit 39..Having been punched (2 wds,) 43. Pair of horses 44. Excite 45. Unemployed 46. Kindling DOWN 1. Remove, as leaves 2. Cruising 3. Singers, Sonny and 4. High school dance 5. Epoch 6. Football star, -- Dawson 7. Actress, Virginia 8. Ancient Hebrew measure 9. O.T. prophet 10. Resiliency 14. Purpose 17. Leer 18. Solemn pledge 19. Silly 20. Mature 21. Sunder Today's Answer 22. Metric land 03014 111 3 Idiy O sure fl 3 -1 23. Vaude- ville 3. fea- tures 24. Greek letter 25. Haw's part- ner 26. Sooner than 28. Add up 31, vivant 32. Italian city 33. Germ 34. Shade of blue N ,3'3, V d)l 3)1.0H,S v 11 3 1.1 0. v 35. Frost 36. Praise 37. Gaelic 38. Consumer 40. Pistol (slang) 41. Indian title 42. Cargo weight 1 Z 34 5 b %////, 7 e q to 1► i 12 13 14 1 \ / % Ib ��/l////� li I B 19 /P/ 25 FY/20 2b 21 22 23 24 27, 2b 29 j 30 r / 31 l//J % 32 33 34 35 j�`bb / 37 jB 39 ' 40 41 2 43 °,,/j// 44 . 44. 446 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••o' GETTHEMQST ROM YO R HEA ING S STEM • • • • • • • • .• lin ''Co.Ltd. Co • ;B Iyth, Ontario Phone 523-42 • • 1, • •• HUMIDIFIERS 'ROM GE and ELECTROIHOME • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• present their children to Rev. McDonald for Baptism: Angela Lynn, daughter of Leo and Lynda Horbanuik and Annette Michelle, daughter of Bill and Lorna Vincent. Rev, McDonald's mess- age was "Manners for today," Sunday School workshop held A number of Sunday School leachers, along with Rev. McDonald attended the Resource Center work shop held in Ontario Street United church, Clinton, on Tuesday, January 6. The work- shop was in charge of the Resource Team of the Huron - Pert h uron-Perth Presbytery. Mrs, Alf Bell and Heather of Prince Rupert, B.C. returned to their home on Thursday from spending three weeks visiting her aunt, Mrs, Joe Shaddick and her father Mr, Stanley in Clinton hospital. Mrs, Jessie Jones spent a couple of days last week with Mr. and Mrs, Will McCutcheon, Brussels, Mr, and Mrs. Bert Shobbrook visited on Tuesday with her brother Mr. and Mrs,. Fred Vodden and Bill, RR 1, Clinton. Mr, and Mrs, Allen Shaddick went to Toronto Airport on Sunday morning with Corporal and Mrs. Richard Shaddick who returned ' to their home at Burnaby, B.C. having spent past three weeks with their parents Mr, and Mrs, Allen Shaddick and Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Scott, Seaforth, Mr, and Mrs, Eric Anderson and family, Mr, Oliver Anderson, Mrs. Vicki Horbaniuk and Connie and Rev. McDonald were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Horbanuick on Sunday following the Baptismal service at the United church when Angela Lynn Horbanuick was received for Baptism, co.op Mr, and Mrs, Norman Alex- ander returned home on Monday night, January 5 from spending the Christmas, holiday with their daughter Mr, and Mrs, Don Consineau, Donald, Jim and Tammie, Sault Ste. Marie, Miss Edythe Beacom and Mrs, Laura Lyon visited on Tuesday with their cousins Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bhemmer at Ethel who had celebrated their '50th wedd- ing anniversary on Sunday. Mrs, Elsie Shute of Kirl ton spent last week with her sister Mrs, Ena Howatt. Mr. and Mrs, Bill Vincent, Elvis and Annette were Sunday dinner guests of formers parents, Mr. and Mrs, Clare Vincent following the Baptism service at the United church when Annette Michelle was received for Baptism. • Mr, Tom Sleevwenhoek of Kitchener spent Thursday to Sunday with his Aunt Mr, and Mrs, Aire Duizer, Mrs, Corea Alabas of Wood- stock is spending two weeks with her cousins Mr. and Mrs. Aire Duizer. Chastity, Colquhoun, Clinton spent Monday with her great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Shnhhrnnk C9-OPANIMAL HELTH PRODUCTS pr� ect your profits • Refrige • Wide ran IMP MEM ,ra ROW solution ST OMASf r it w•o ' '.0 TYLAN 50 1 „ Il I, ted storage e of leading medications Scour so tion For th prevention and tre tment of scours acterial enteritis) Mixes instantly ith milk or water. Tylan 50 \ and 20 Effective for the treatment of contagious calf pneumonia and erysipe ds, pneumoni and vibr' nic dysente y in pigs. f •-* �w so .nlnul health Orr DAIRY I oars .WIN/ P.nIcAAn 0 Procaine Cri © rrtrnow( Mastltls r...1. A Penicilli Is indicatein the treatme t of a bro • • spectrum • f livestock /diseases and infections. Particularly useful in cases -t, of pneumonia and foot rot, Mastitis Formula A Combination of four antibiotics is especially effective against organisms ro found it difficult cases 9nd • '-r_"2 in reducing IIIMOSP inflammation. Pick up th se FREE desc iptive product folders.•' t �• W like to know our customers by name! L 887\-6453 357.=71; BELGRAVE .BRANCH UCO UNITED CO.OPERATIVES OF ONTARIO Blyth Midgets win one, On January 6 Blyth played Drayton in Drayton ending in a 8.8 tie, Drayton took the lead with 5 goals in the first period. Blyth scored one, In the second period each team scored one, However in the third period Blyth outplayed the Drayton boys scoring 6 goals to Draytons 1. Goals scorers for' Blyth were: Terry Pierce assisted by Dale Whitfield; Terry Pierce assisted THE BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. Pt;. 11, tie twoin past week by Larry Howatt and Dale Whitfield; Dale Whitfield assist- ed by Larry Howatt; Brian Bromley assisted by Ken Stewart and Steve Bromley; Brad Bromley assisted by Terry Pierce and Baintoneers win at tournament The Blyth Baintoneers went to Seaforth again last Wednesday night, January 7, 1976 to play another hard fought game against Seaforth, whom they defeated by a score of 1.0. Marg Heffron scored this Atoms lose to Parkhill The Blyth Atoms travelled to Forest last_ Friday night. They were eliminated from further play by Parkhill. Blyth allowed only six shots on their, net but lost the game 2-1. The lone goal was scored by Brent Andrews. Blyth controlled the entire first period missing shot after shot. Parkhill scored on a breakaway in the second period to take the lead. Then in the ; with Blyth a man short; they scored again. Blyth pulled the goalie with about 2 minutes left and 30 seconds later scored, The boys put on a good effort but could not even the score. The next home game will be Monday, January 19. The boys will attend the Seaforth Atom tournament this Saturday. They will meet Clinton at 10 o'clock in their first encounter. Your suii•' port would be greatly appreciat- ed. fantastic goal, by shooting from the red line. Sue Kolkman, Rosie Fidom and Joyce Carter all took turns in net and did a fine job. The Baintoneers also went to the ' Chesley Tournament in Desboro on the weekend, January '10 and 11, The first game they played was at 5 p.m. on Saturday against the Mount Forest Rookies, whom they defeated by a score of 6-1. Goals were scored by Joyce Carter with 2, Linda Hamni, Shirley McDougall, Mary Anne Cook and Debbie Coultes all with one. Sue Kolkman and Annette Carter took turns in net and did an excellent job. The second game they played was on Sunday at 12 noon against the Elora CC Riders', whom they also defeated by a score of 2-1. The first goal was scored by Debbie Coultes to tie the game 1-1. Then the game went into overtime and Sue Kolkman scored the winning goal. The third game was on Sunday at 7 p.m. against Keady, whom they defeated with a score of 1-0 to vin the tournament. The winning goal was scored by Mary Anne Cook. Sue • Kolkman and Annette Carter took turns in net and did a line job. UP YOUR BLOCK (and back again. That's as far as you need to walk to be a bit fitter than you are now). PanTI(/PD(Tion 111 It'a11c a hluck.Iotl ty. Recent changes to Canad's Unemp ment insuranc c may affect YOU. They concern s ch things as. • voluntarily quitting yo.r job (effective January 4, 376) • flexibility in sick► ss benefits (effective July , 1976) • coverage fo ersons'aged 65 and over 1976) ffective January 1, • the dependency rate of bi ,efit (effective January 4, 1976) • flexibility in maternity benefit\ (effective February 1, 1976) \ If you would like more information about these and other changes, pick up the brochure "What happens now..." at your local UIC office, Unemployment Insurance Canada Robert Andras, Minister, Mar1power'antIrnmigra(iotl,;,r.,, Assurance-chomage Canada Brian Bromley; Glen Johnson assisted by Ken Stewart; Dale Whitfield assisted by Steve Howson and Brad Bromley; Brad Bromley assisted by Brian Bromley. • On January 9- Blyth played Milverton. in Milverton again ending in a tie 4-4, • Scoring for Blyth were: Dale Whitfield assisted by Terry Pierce; Steve Bromley assisted by Brad Bromley and Brian Bromley; Steve Bromley assisted by Brian Bromley; Larry Howatt assisted by Terry Pierce, On January 12 Drayton played in Blyth with Blyth winning by a 7-2 score, Terry Pierce led the scoring with three goals. Goal scorers for Blyth were: Dale Whitfield assisted by Larry Howatt and Terry Pierce; Steve Howson assisted by Steve Brom- ley and Brian Bromley; Terry Pierce assisted by Larry Howatt and Brian Bromley; Brian Brom- ley assisted by Glen Johnson; Terry Pierce, unassisted; Terry Pierce assisted by Larry Howatt and Dale Whitfield; Dennis Knox unassisted. Sandy Marshall and Terry Powell played excellent in the nets for all the games. Blyth Peewees win over Milverton On January 8, the Blyth Peewees played the Milverton Peewees in Milverton. This was a hard fought game with end-to-end hockey and both teams missing a lot of good chances to score. The game ended 8 to 5 for Blyth. Goals Scorers were Fran) Van Dongcn tvith 2, Bruce Hunking with 2, Kevin Coultes with 2, Donnie Reid with I and Robbie Plunkett with I. Assists went to Robbie Plunkett with 2. Ricky Scrimgcour with 1, Kevin Coultes with_ I.Jim Oster with -1, Frank Van Dongeb with 1, and Wes Burkholder witlr I . On January 9, the Blyth Peewees played in 131011 against Milverton. This game started very slowly, with Milverton taking most of the play for the first two periods. The first of the third period Blyth came out and scored a quick goal and never looked back, The Blyth boys won 5 to 2. Goal scorers for Blyth were Kevin Coultes with 2, Robbie Plunkett with 2, Bruce Hunking with one. Assists went to Jim Oster with 2, Neil Elliott with 1, Frank Van Dungen with 1 and Bruce Hunking with 1. Andrew Ives and Tom Cronin shared the goal keeping and played very well in both games. ,played home game is January 17 at 7 o'clock against Ripley. • JOHN DEERE) attend Farming Frontrs Farming Frontiers '76 -the year's most outstanding farm- oriented film program—is coming your way. See the latest in agricultural developments, and new John Deere Tractors and equipment. These filnis were made in many parts of the U.S. and Canada. Be sure to come. • PIR Blyth Service Centre Tuesday, January 20, 1976 7:30 p.m. Huron Tractor Ltd. PG. 12, THE BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our city had g three-day art fair recently. The weather was perfect and the fair drew large crowds. One artist had six paintings on easels. The *rest were on the sidewalk, resting against a building. A woman came by with a poodle. He was on a leash (we have leash laws in this city) but she wasn't paying much attention to him. Suddenly the dog lifted his leg, and you guessed it -- all over the artist's watercolor landscape. The woman seemed in no hurry to jerk her dog away from the painting. She waited till he had finished and then she said to the artist, "I'm sorry. 1 hope it dries up O.K.," and walked on. 1 witnessed the whole thing and have the clod's name and address. Should I give it to the • Dog shows no appreciation for art artist and encourage him to sue?—Thoroughly Disgusted DEAR T.D,i Such lawsuits are usually more trouble than they are worth, but if the lady whose dog did the dastardly deed reads this column, I hope she will contact the artist and purchase the painting whether she likes it or not. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please don't take what I am about to say as an insult. What 1 seek is information. i realize you are of the Jewish faith, .but certainly it has occurred to you. that many of your readers arc Gentiles, Every now and then you come up with a Jewish word that baffles the rest of us. Please translate: 1. What is a,"Briss"? 2. What is a "meshugcner"? 3. What docs "chutzpah" mean? 4. What is a "klutz"?••Connectl- cut Yankee Doodle Dandy DEAR DAN: (1) A "Briss" is the Judaic ceremony at which a male child is circumsizcd. (2) A "meshugener" is a grazy person. Swinging Seniors elect Mrs. Webster president The Blyth Swinging Seniors enjoyed a real banquet when they met on January 7 at Memorial Hall. After dining on roast beef, scalloped potatoes, vegetables. salads, relishes, rolls and biscuits and a great variety of pies and tarts the members enjoyed a singsong, led by Mrs. W. McDougall and Mrs. M. Wight - man. Mr. Howard Campbell present- ed the following slate of officers for 1976: Pres., Mrs. E. Webster;' vice-presidents, Mr. Del Philp; and Mr. Russel.Wilson; Secrct4rs Mrs. Gladys Johnston; Treasurer, Mr. Clarence Crawford; Program Committee, Mrs. Del Philp; Mrs. Mary Wightman. Mrs. G. McClinchey, Mr. Wm. Carter and Miss Melda McElroy. Mr. Harvey Sillib is to be euchre convenor; lunch commit- tee is Mrs. Roy Easom, Mrs. E. Wright, Mrs. R. McDonald. Mrs. H. Campbell, Mrs. John Nesbit. Mrs. M. Grant and Mrs. Chas Souch; card convenors arc Mrs. J. W .I. learns more on metrics McNichol and Mrs. Molly Grant. The Transportation ,committees Mr. Roy Easom, Mr. Wm. Carter and Mr. Howard Campbell. Music is under the charge of Mrs. D. Philp, Mrs. Geo. Watt, Mrs. A. Montgomery and Mrs. W. McDougall. A hearty vote of appreciation was tendered to the lunch committee for their excellent service. Members were requested to write) out program suggestions and bring them to the next meeting on January 2tith. • Mrs. Roberton, who is a nurse with Huron County Health services will be at the nutting on the 28th (weather permitting). Members are also looking for- ward to sharing some of the trip Mr. and Mrs. Harold Campbell enjoyed in the Canadian West. The afternoon was spent in playing, euchre. scrabble and shuffleboard. Visitors of any age are always welcome. . The January meeting of the W.I. opened with the Ode and Mary Stewart Collect. Mrs. J. Hesselwood opened the meeting in the usual manner and welcomed the visitors . Mrs. M. Richmond was at the piano. Mrs. L. McGowan read the minutes of the last meeting, it was passed that we purchase a first aid kit for the memorial hall, also plans were made for a card and (crokinolc) party on February 5 at 2 o'clock. Mrs. J. Hesselwood turned the meeting over to Mrs. M. Richmond and Mrs. Easom, Mrs. M. Richmond read a poem, "the old year and the new year." Mrs. M. Richmond then turned the meeting over to the guest speaker, Mrs. Mary Wightman who spoke on the metric system which was very interesting. Mrs. f:asom read a poem about the old year. Mrs..1. Hesselwood closed the meeting alter which a social time was spent. (3) "Chutzpah" means guts •• or unmitigated gall. (4) ' "klutz" is a clod or an inept, clumsy oaf. Sorry 1 threw you, fluster, but I figured the folks who didn't know what those meant would ask an M.O.T. (Member of Our Tribe). From now on, I'll be more considerate of the Goyim. (THAT means Gentiles,) DEAR ANN LANDERS: this letter is being written by three admirers who heard you speak at the Central Women's Club meeting in Lexington recently. GET SOME NEW PICTURES MADE, The ones in the paper are awful. You should sue for libel. In • the first place, you look much younger in person. Please do something about this dreadful injustice.—We Speak For Many DEAR MANY: Every year we send new pictures to all our clients, If they don't want to run• them, there's nothing we can do. All papers got a new picture Jan. 1. if you don't. see it in your paper, complain to THEM••not me, CONFIDENTIAL to Is It Smart To Be Dumb?: l never believed that old canard but Talleyrand made an interesting observation. He said, "If you wish to be • • agreeable in society, you must consent to be taught many things which you already know," *** Parents, what should you do if' your tcenaser is havinu sexual relations? Ann Landers' new 'booklet, "High School Sex And How To Deal With It •• 'A Guide For Teens And Their Parents," gives no-nonsense advice on how to handle this delicate. situation. For each booklet, send 50 ccnts in coin plus a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 1400, Elgin, Illinois 60120. ©Copyright 1976 Field Enterprises, Inc. It's farm record bookanalysis time It is farm record book analysis time again. Anyone wishing to have their completed 1975 Farm Record Book analyzed should direct it to our office prior to February 15th. However, we ,vould.appreciatc having as many as possible turned in during early January. • As before, the completed farm record book will not be leaving our office, therefore, it will be available to you at any time. The Blyth • news briefs Miss Sandra Watson, R.N., of London, spent Christmas holidays with her narents Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Watson, Anne and Mary and with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Watson. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Watson, Mr. and .1rs. Gerald Watson. Miss Sandra Watson, R.N.. of London spent C'hristnias Day wit h Mr. and Mrs. James Sanderson of Wroxeter. Ontario. Mr. David Watson, has return- ed to Western uniyersary after spending the Christmas holidays with friends in Regina. Sask. Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Rawle' and family nl' London, spent New Years with Mr. and hies. Gerald �%'atson. ,1nne and Mary. also Mr. and Mrs. burl Watson. checking of the book will be done by our local staff and a summary' card forwarded to the computer at Guelph for analysis. (It takes approximately one day to check each book and do' the transfers). Your book may be brought to the office or mailed in. If you are in the office, be sure to pick up a new record book • or we will mail you a 1976 record book upon request. If you would like assistance on the book while you work, please call for an appointment. Every farmer in Huron County who has completed an Ontario Farm Record Book in 1975 is welcome to make use of the "no fee" analysis service. n Conti Sit Janar e :tock suntil day_, 16th LL'S &BO WEAR ICK U{' ATM)ILL'S ON R.W. MA SHOES, EN'S • CLINTON DRY CLEANERS P ' THURSDAY AND FRIDAY En F OD WM KELLOGGS orn Flakes KRAFT 24 OZ. PKG. ,MAPLE LEAF SIDE 93c Bacon MAPLE LEAF SLICED 1 LB Miracle Whip 32 0/ G.$1.09 Bologna.l--' JOLLY MiLLER MAPLE LE / • • range Crystals4'sPK LIBBYS DEEP BROWN Beans LIBBYS COOKED Spaghetti LEAVERS PIECES & STEMS Mushrooms SCHNEIDERS SOFT .- Margarine SCHNEiDERS PURE Lard 83c • 14...0Z—TINS-.-. 2 • 19 OZ. TINS -2 • 10 OZ. TINS 1 LB. TUB 1 LB. PKG, 1 '$1.6• LB. PKG. 89 dked .Picnics LB. $1.10 WESTONS APPLE FiLLED SNACK Buns \ SUNKIST 113's 89c '0 ra ng es � FRE,SIJ� 99c Radish FRESH GREEN 55c Onion NO. 1 49c Turnips PKC. 55c 89c 2, PGK. 25c 2 BUNCHES 250. DOZ. LB. 8fh COOK'S SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET. Phone 523-4421 We Deliver 4 BELGRAVE NEWS liurr,ni 1'd11ur 1116 I1 WIS SIONI:1IOUSI Euchre winners named Due to the inclement weather only two tables of euchre were played in the Belgrave Commun- ity Centre. Winners were as follows; High Lady, Mrs. Lawrence Taylor, Low Lady, Mrs, Ella Johnston, High Man, Lorne Jamieson, Low Man, Lawrence Taylor. Many .visit in Belgrave Miss Janet McIntosh visited on the weekend ,with Miss Sheila Anderson, Mr. and Mrs, Les Shaw and Pamela of London visited on Sunday with Mr, and Mrs, Ross Anderson and family, Mrs, Roy Robinson and • son Steven are patients in University Hospital, London, We wish them a speedy recovery. Miss Winnifred Farrier, Mr, and Mrs, Carman Farrier, Brian Farrier of Long Branch, Miss Colleen Farrier of Toronto, Miss Carol Farrier of Kingston spent a few days at the home of Mrs, Nelson Higgins and attended the funeral of Garnet Farrier of Whitechurch on Saturday. A Consumer Affair meeting of the Women's Institute will be held in the Community Centre on Evening unit visit nursing home Members of the Evening Unit of Belgrave United church were invited to Brookhaven Nursing Home, Wingham last Tuesday evening. They entertained the patients with several numbers: Taking part were Kelly Loug- heed, Sheila Anderson and Alison Roberts. TODAY'S CHILD BY HELEN ALLEN THE TORONTO J JJ'J SYNDICATE Derek is a handsome nine•year•old Indian and white in descent. - He is healthy and active, enthusiastic about outdoor things like camping, swimming, hiking, fishing. Ile likes sports though he is not particularly good at them. . Because of some unsettled years, Derek is now in a treatment centre for emotionally distressed children Ile is ready to leave but he needs a family to go a warm. loving adopting family Derek is in special education, taking some subjects in the regular classes. it is expected he will need to finish this school year in the special class but he is eager to he moved entirely into the regular stream. Ile is considered to he low average Ile tries hard and is capable of doing hetter.when he feels settled. wanted and loved. Derek has a friendly. winning manner which appeals inr mediately to adults. His relations with children aren't so happy because he resents having to share attention with them He should be the youngest in his adopting family hut it will be good if there is an older brother to take an interest in him. To inquire about adopting Derek, please write to 'Today's Child, Ministry of Community & Social Services. Rox titin. Station K, Toronto. 114P 2112. In your letter tell something of your present family and your way of life. For general adoption information, contact your local Children's Md Society. OUR MAIL ORDER SERVICE 1 S AS LOSE AS YOUR ■t�;l � TELEPHONE DRUGS D " UG SUNDRIES VETERIN Y MEDICINES Phone 482.9511 Clinton, Ontario The Primary Class of the Sunday School sang, "This Little Gospel Light of Mine", and did an action song. A reading by Mrs. 1 Ross Anderson, -solo by George Procter, guitar solo by Alison Roberts, accordion solo by Mrs. George Procter. Musical numbers by the Lougheed family. The program was concluded by Mrs. Ross Anderson leading in Community singing with Mrs. George..1vhnston at the piano. Following the program the %win ' returned to the home of Mrs. Cliff Logan where they held their .hutu:u'meeting with 16 ladles present. '1 he meeting opened '% ith 11‘1)111 "Sa%lour Like a Shepherd I caul us". Tuesday afternoon at 2 p.m, January 20, Mrs. James Hunter will be the convenor. The Roll call is "A suggestion for serving unexpected guests". Music for the meeting by Mrs, Archie Montgomery. Speaker on "Nutrition" is Mrs. A. Statia. Lunch was provided by , Mrs. George Procter, Mrs, Peter Campbell, Mrs. Garner Nichol- son, and Mrs, Earl Anderson. Mrs. James Coultes was in charge of the worship service. The minutes were read and adopted, Mrs. Kenneth • Wheeler had charge of the Program. A Thank You note from Mrs. Jack Taylor was read. Collection was received follow- ed by lunch, The February meeting will be at the home of Mrs, Albert Bicman. ISM rte,. (1 All AcA.,1! 4IV. ifif rats r Weddings et Well Fun, niversaries I Fre deli -ery to Tasker' F eral Home 524.7885 81 CHURCH ST. GODERICH Ready to serve you y days a week ILET US MAKE YOUR OLD FURNITURE • BETTER THAN.N 1 1.1111■■a` For a free estlte and a look at our newest sam ' es of materials —CALL "Put Your Upholstering Ph. 5 ••3272 R. Cook, Prop. Needs 1n Our Hands" Blyth, Ont. WI', 11;111•; I'RE:F. PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE The Management of HURON TRACTOR ,F,e�.,, ua. Extend To You An Invitation To Attend The RAND OPENI Of Th HIGHWAY RTH OF EXETER FRI., JAN. 16 — 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. * See Our Unique New Facilities * See Farming .Frontiers '76 A Continuous Film Showing The Latest Developments and Research in Agriculture * Full Display of John Deere Equipment In Our Spacious, Heated Showroom FREE DOOR PRIZES - FREE REFRESHMENTS PG, 14. 'I'IIE 111,YTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. Classified Rates Effective Juhe 26, 1974 WORD COUNT Charges are based on the number of words. Sets of numerals as for serial nuritbers, street' numbers, phone number's or prices count as one word per, set. Words joined by hyphens count as separate ‘ti'•rds. . ' SEMI -DISPLAY 5 cents per word, minimum charge of $1.25. Box numbers to this office will be charged 50 cents per insertion,. E3irths, marriages, engagements, deaths are free oT charge. DISPLAY $1.40 per column inwh, after 10 consecutive insertions with no changes, $I.00 per column inch. 25c DISCOUNTFOR CASH PAYMENT ON OR BEFORE MONDAY NOON OF WEEK • FOLLOWING FINAL INSERTION Deadline for classified ads is 'Fuesday neon PHONE 523.9646 For Sale 1975 CHEV VAN. 16,000 MILES, 6 cylinder, standard. Call 523.96.10 aftcr.6. v 2 TWIN CYLINDER 24 H.P. Aloxvctte snowmobiles, used cert' little, also sleigh and double trailer for snowmobile. Ron Dunn. 392.6724, 'Teeswater.02- I p \t ground pools. t_ '4; Ih h% 32. complete. ar old. Repossess by hat, ,,raft' hall Brice til 519•t, • •lr. r,, 13E PREPARED FOR PO\\'FR failures. For P.F.O. alternators call Glen Sch%%arti'ntruhcr.. 357.2608. 01-3 A OUANTTI'1 '-OFJFURNA(•F coal, will sell reasonable. Knox. 523.9382. 01- '11111111111111 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII I3' OADLOOM CLINTON'S, CA PET CENTRE *Wall to wa installations ►r area carpets *Samples shoes t In you home *Free estimates •Guaranteed Inst Ilat' ins There's a Celanese rpel for every room in t h me, "Quality yt can rust" rom BALL & MU Cil FUR tTURE MITED \ Phone 82-9505, Clinton, ,IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Help 'Wanted PART-TIME SECRETARY '1'0 work half days. Must have means of transportation. Apply to Box 18, Clinton News -Record, Clin- ton, Ont. 02-2 Card of. Thanks AMI,N'T. I would like to thank all who sent cards, treats and visits while I was a patient in Clinton I(ospital and since returning home. Also thanks to Dr, Baker, I)r. Street and the nurses on 2nd floor. -Mildred Anterit. 02-1p Notice Notice NOTICE A 5% discount will on 1976 taxes & a•id o January 15, 197 BLYTH VILL E Notic Application form accommodation Citizens He sing a able at the • erk'•. BLYTH L Du refrain the street NOTIC g snow rem om parkin e allowed or before COUNCIL for rental for Senior e now availa; off ice. GE CO N IL val, please your car on BLYTH - ' ' GE COUNCIL ItltU0II1 I \XI. \\'I\till.\\I. all passengers IuII% insured 24 hour ser% 15--I23.1_. 51.11 n At Your Service Sales Instal • Barn Cle • Bunk Feeder t♦ Stabling FREE ES Donald G:Iv : s R.R. 2, BLYTH Phone Brussels 887-9024 D ► ACLEAN C • RPET RE C A NG Free E • 'mates Phon $ 482- 71 Clinton CONCRETE WORK Expert chimney and roofing repairs; specializing in stabling. Don Ives, Phone Brussels,' 887.91024. tfn • SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED New modern equipment. Over 20 `• years experience, Phone Louis Blake. 887-6800 RR 2, Brussels. tfn Memoriam CRAIG. 111 loving memory of a dear wile and mother, Ellen, whc passed away one year ago, •.lanuary 11th. Sadly missed along life's way, ytiietly remembered every day. No huger in our life to share, Ind in our hearts she's always there. -Sadly missed by htishand John M. Craig and family. ' 02-11) Real Estate Rea 82 Alhe t SI eel C'lin Phone: 4 2 9371 MASON 11 ILEI' BROKER/NI NAGER to t'nder 211.000 siorcv home in bedrooms, double lot. %%11 hu% this 2 B1%11. ' rooms. 2 %% lot (Ill' pool. 2 store% brie home in B1%111. N rooms. carpe ed lig iuL room and dining coon . oil ht'; ling. sire large lot. ***** 1 floor duplex with 2 separate units, Ioca ed near til school, Priced atid.r $30,000.0( ***** 20 acres nt rah of Blyth. I' insul-brick home, 10 ro bedi'oonr,. Property wooded. ***** 94 acres cash crop land near Gort'ic, 61 acres workable;. ***** 2 storey brick school house on 1/2 acre of land on the Walton Road, new oil furnace. ***** near Londesbort, 30 rkable, balance lard - h, spring creek. ***** lots for sale in Clit ton. ***** x. ID FOR 'I'HOUGFI'I' storey 1111., 5 nostl% 50 acres acres w wood bu 2 huildin • FO C'ouragc•is like love -it must have hope to nourish it. rhel ��g oodthings hapPen. First aid competitions St, John Ambulance has announced that the 1976 Provin- cial Open First Aid Championship Competitions will be held at 2 p.m. on April 24, 1976 at Moss ,Park Armoury in Toronto, There are five categories in which teams enter. They are Senior Men, Seniiir Women, Senior Mixed, Intermediate and Junior. To qualify for this competition, teams compete in competitions such as the Industrial Accident Prevention Association competi- tion for Industry, the McCrar Hanov Holi ay Tou s HAWAII On FEBRUAR Day, fly with HAWAII. This sp tour will be based i and will include Cruise and th Tour. Optional Islands can be date is March 8, 14; Valentine's s to romantic cial long stay HONOLULU Pearl Harbour ity Punchbowl ours to the Outer ranged. Return TEXA This 21 day FEBRUARY 21 t at SOUTH PAD newly develope vacationer's para commodation will be BAHIA MAR CONDO part of the $20 mt 1 Resort Comp spend time a HOUSTON, & La. departs spend 8 nights E ISLAND, as a se. Ac - at the INIUMS, Bahia Mar x. Enroute we SAN ANTONIO, W ORLEANS, FLORI ► A This state has Ig been a 4avourite with Ca dians and we have 11 mor • ' ter departures to take you there: JAN. 17 • : days; Long Stay Ormond Beach reduced rates) • FEB. 1- 28 days Long Stay St, Petersburg (5 night & Ormond Beach (15 nights) FEB. 15 • 27 days Long Stay St. Petersburg & • and Beach (only 3 sea .-maining) • FEB. - 13 days; Florida Circle (only • seats remaining) FEB. 21 • days; Florida Circle - MAR. 6 • 21 y ; Deluxe Florida Circle MAR. 6 • 15 da s; Deluxe Florida Circle (air r. urn) MAR. 6 • 15 d s: Ormond Beach lair retu • MAR. 19 • - days; 9 nights; Ormond Beac MAR. 20 • 9 days; Ormond Beach (air) MAR. 20 • • days; Fort Lauderdale (air) For reservations; con ct: LISTOWE Trove : : an Li towel 29 4100 JIM COUTHEY ravel Service Listowel 291.2111 Trophy contpe'..ion for Mines and the Ontario I't'Ip and, Paper Makcrs,Association for the paper industry. Other competitions are those organized for the Ministry of Natural Resources, the Cana- dian National Railway, the Canadian Pacific Railway, the Fire Fighters,' the Armed Forces, Police and youth teams such as the Girl Guides and Boy Scouts. Winners and runners-up in these competitions are then eligible to enter the Provincial Open. , A team has 5 members. one of ,whorl is a spare, and a coach, In the Provincial Open competition they are expected to solve three separate First A iil problems within a time limit of 20 minutes each, Casualty simulation is used to portray realistic injuries and casualties arc coached to act out their parts. 'Iwo judges are assigned ti) each team for each problem and no judge marks the same team twice. The public is invited to attend and spectators enjoy an overall view of the competitions from the gallery around the main Door of Ilse Armoury where die teams all compete al the sante tints. Rules and .entry forms can be obtained from St, John Ambul- ance, 40 Wellesley Street East, Toronto. ('losing date t'ot• rcceiv: Ing entries is March 15. 1976. School enrollments will decline Ontario's secondary school cnrolnment %% ill decrease by more than (01).0011 111 the next 10 years. 1 ducatiin Nlinisler Thomas \)'ells said last %reek. \h•. \)'ells said that :1 Ministry , enrolment projection indicates lIlat secondary school enrolment re,teln•d its peak last year and is pc, led to fall from 581,650 to a lots of -1'9,526 in 1984. Ile said ,Ilial school hoard ollicials across the prix ince 11a%1' been warned Io prepan'� themul�l's to deal aith tilt' suety prohlcnts ssuriatcd tt 1111 declini,tg enrolnu•nts. Ito proiceliins indicate that rlentenlary school enrolment, Ilieh began to drop a few years ago. %% ill cornute to decrease by another 100,000 between now and 19.811)1.%. projection forecasts that elementary school enrolment will drop from the 1,404.839 of last vicar to. 1.303,884 in 1980. l towever. the study foresees an ,increase of 55,719 elementary students between 1980 anti 1984. Ian•olntent in Ontario's elemen- tary and secondary schools has been dropping 'steadily since the 1971.72 school year when it reached an all-time peak of 2.031,360. RADIO T.V SERVI Haailton St. Blyth; `Ontario Ph: 523- 640 (*Note: If o answer phone -fter 6:.00 p.m. or faster'servic; please br'ng T•: residence. Y COMING EVENTS RI CFI' I'IUN AN!) DANCE FOR Nlr. and Mrs. Rick Konarski (nee Brenda Dale) on Friday, January Ito at "Family Paradise Hull Margie by Ken Scott's Orchestra, 1 it itch provided. Everyone ‘N'eleume. 01-2p BENEFIT DANCE WILL BE. held I'ot' Nellie and' George Burkholder, January 23, Blyth !Memorial Hall, ,THE BLYTH SNOW TRAVEL- ' lers will have their trail rides and steak barbecue on Saturday, January 17, 1976 at the Conserva- tion Club House at 8:30 p.m. Anyone interested please phone by Friday noon January 16, 523.9386 or 523.9564, -THE HURON COUNTY HEALTH UNiT invites you to attend the Expectant Parent Education Classes, being held in the Heath Unit office, Shipley St., Clinton commencing Thurs- day, January 15, 1976 from 7:30 - 9:311 p.nt. Would anyone who is interested please >, pre -register' by calling 1.8110.265.4485 tol .free or the Health Unit office at 482.3416. Both husbands and wives are invited to attend and partici in the discussions.': Today's health Caf'e coronary can be easily. avoided CASH BINGO, SEAFORTH EG1ON HALL, Friday, January 16, 1976 at 8;15 p.m. sharp, 15 regular games at $10.00 each; three specials for $25.00 each and a $75.00 jackpot to go each week. Admission $1.00; extra cards 25c each or 7 for $1,00, (Children under 16 not permitted), Pro- ceeds for Welfare Work. Sponsor- ed by Branch 156. Seaforth Royal Canadian Legion. tfn NEW BINGO, CLINTON LEGION. HALL, 8:30 p.m. January 15. Admission, $1.00 each. Three Share -the -Wealth games. One. jackpot for $200 in 54 calls.or Tess gr, guaranteed $25 consolation. One call and $10 added weekly if not won. tfn by David Woods Choking on food is one of the commonest - and also one of the most easily preventable - causes of accidental death in North America. The cafe coronary = so-called because the collapsing choke victim is often assumed to have suffered a heart attack - claims some 4,000 lives a year on this continent. Most could be avoided, with knowledge and quick action. While there's agreement about the importance of speed. experts are divided on the best method of removing the obstruction from the windpipe. The traditional way has been to slap the victim's back, then place a finger in the person's throat to try to dislodge the food. A newer and quicker method is Heimlich's manoeuvre - a tech- nique developed by a Cincinnati surgeon, Dr. Henry J. Heimlich. Stand behind the victim and wrap your arms around his waist: make a fist with one hand and grab it with the other. Then place your fist above the victim's navel and below his rib cage, and press it forcefully Into his abdomen with a quick up- ward thrust. This can be repeated several times, if necessary. What Heimlich's manoeuvre does is to bush air under pressure out of the lungs, and this forces the piece of food to be elected, in the words of one person who has wit- nessed the technique, "like a cork from a champagne bottle." How do you know whether some- one's having a "cafe coronary" or a heart attack? Well, it's not infal- Iible, but, if the person is conscious and can't speak, it's almost certain he's choking than having a real coronary. The important thing is not to delay, and above all not to let the person out of your sight. He must Westfield- News estfield News BY MRS. CHARLES SMITH Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Howatt visited on Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Mel Bogie and family of Godcrich. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fidom and family of Wingham visited on the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fidom and family. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Camp- bell visited on Monday with Rev. and Mrs. John Campbell and family of Grand Bend, Mr. Brain Vella of Toronto visited last week with Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Snaith and Michael. be given immediate, on -the -spot help followed by medical advice from a doctor. Heimlich's manoeuvre, if applied immediately, offers n unique oppor• - tunity to reverse a fairly common, and potentially fatal, problem. The . technique is an easy one to master, and everyone should he aware of it - just In case. ' Of course, we've all, at time or another, eaten something that's "gone down the wrong way," and the problem is usually solved by drinking water ... or by coughing. The "cafe coronary" is caused by food being swallowed too fast, and in amounts that are too big, so that a piece becomes lodged in the windpipe. The solution is simple. Don't kite off more than you can chew. Then . chew thoroughly. The "cafe coronary" is just about the most avoidable health problem around. THE BLYTH STANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. PG, 15, Does. your tummy ever grumble If it didn't hit y this morning, it'll probably hi you one da sooner or later - THE RUMLES that 11 o'cloc -in-the-morning message from your tummy saying "I'm hungry", Once 't starts, that's it, You look at the time, Still ages until lunch. You start looking for something to nibble on (fattening, of course); Your mind wanders off what you're doing. You slacken off. 'Then, , bang. Before' ouhow it, the morning's EW" BINGO MO DAY, 8:30 P.M. JA UARY 18, 1976 AI YANAST1 .RfCSIATION'CIN J A POT - 5 2 iN I CALLS with a cons latldh ' iie of $35.00 f no won, iJackpot grows b ' 510.00 and number of callincreases by one, each we 1 5 RIOULAR MES A '10." EACH 3 SHARI HE -WEAL OANIS Adnhis.,I 1 • $1.00 • Int toles one free a II. Additional c rds 25e ,neh or 6 for $1.01. Aerrt{.o. IIOTUK1SO 10 eMOSe 15 TIAN{ Of Me 01 0011 Blyth Lions dingo SATURDAY NIS HT 8:30 BI Me Hal I or�ial "LISTEN" If a can's contents.spult out when the can is opened this could be the.result of a pressure buildup in the can by gas produced by bacteria. BEWARE! IT'S PARR CODERICH I„IIN4 I•M 1 10 141 500051 P10111 0241111 AIE CONDITIONED 141 .AI UA 1110 • ands 10 PM 13 TE TH LLET GENE HA KMAN CANDICE ERGEN JAMES tOBURIo SUN. IAN. , PM ONLY it. I to TUB. JULES VRO oln.nrnd. I D I 11011101111111 d Adull FnIettmnmrnl 011 Adult Plias "Ona of the B'ist Movies -Gene IAA 'n of 19%4," uonwcei tv • CaIt "11AA►AY&TO TO LAl o. CO ING WED. JAN. 2 R bort Redford in "T REE DAYS HE CONDOR" All 0100:oelt .OLP 1110111,0n11 1 ,IACJ<'l'() I' $150 IN 00 ('.\1tI.S IAItEll! I•:•N'i':r1l.I'I ANI) It I•:GuI.AR GAMES gone, and you've hardly got anything done. TFIE GRUMBLES have got you! What you need is a way to put together a good breakfast in no time flat, to stop the GRUMBLES getting you and your family' And the amazing thing is, you've probably got the things to .do it at home right now. Just suppose you hard - cooked a half a dozen or so eggs during the evening while you're cooking dinner:. That's easy. You put them in the fridge, and next morning you can give everyone a delicious breakfast of hot, buttered toast to eat with one or two eggs; some fruit juice, and coffee, tea or milk. That takes practically no time flat, and there's hardly any cleaning up to do either. ' Lyth Inn)ioteI FOR YOU .NTERTR FEATURING FRj JA -N-. 16,SAT., JAN. 17) JIM ST e o. a 0 t . '{ t. ' EN RECEP- • N Open ception f/ Clint Wilson and Doreen - . • [Bridal Couple] Saturday, uar A 1976, 10 to 1 p. . at the Clinton -!egion. Music By: "The Moran Brothers" ARENA SCHEDU JANUARY 15 4:30-5:30 Girls Broomball 7-8 Blyth Baintonccrs 1irooniball 8.9 Belgrave girls Broomball 9.10 Cadets 10.11 ill Godcrich hockey J)\NUARY 16 • • 7.8:3( 'eewec Game 8:30.1( antam Game JAN t ARY 17 8-1 Mit rr Sports 2-4 l'uhl • Skating 4:30.5:3( I'ee vee Practi h-7 Junior 1 oombal 7.9 Public S Itin 9.11:30 CR JANUARY 18 2.4 Public Skating JANUARY 19 5.6:311 I'eew cc l'r;Irt i,e E 7-8:30 Atom .ante 8:30-10 M' gets 10.11 Christ' n Reformed JAN ARY 20 3:30-7 igure Skating 7-8 • 'ginners skating, onsored by Lions :30-11:30 Broomball JANUARY 21 3-4 Preschool skating 5.6 Tyke Practise 7-8 Atoni Gmc 8-9 Peewee Game 9-10:30 Clinton Hockey JANUARY 22 4:30-5:30 Girls Broomball 7-8 Blyth Baintoneers 8-t) Belgrave girls broomball 9-10 Cadets I (1• I 1:30 Godcrich Hockey t... t, MI NI ON ■. MI MI III MI MI l•.■ 1111111111 1MMI tta MI Ell I= 1111111•1111111•1111111 NIB MI I ALL I. FRIDAY MIDNIGHT JANUARY 16th^ ALL 1 In 1918 a man traveled the south with a portable electric chair! SEA He will put you.away, sizzling like a piece of bacon!! SEATS ADYIIIANC{` 1 S1.5o "THE TRAVELING EXECUTIONER"«. 51.50 1 FIRST AREA WING! mmumionsmmom LY7 Sun. 18; Mon. 19, Tues. 20 WedJan. 14 to at., 1 Jan. 17 IJ UBLETBiii ST RUN Dally., at 1.00 and p.m. `s i ne 1Y1s�a Prisoner of 2nd Avenue at 7:30 p.m, DJ A O 1 ONE OF THE YEARS B T! Drowning Pool at 9:00 p.m. 1 1 1 1 1 "FUNNY,JAUNTY!" 1 -11, C.t11. 11-1 YI,III0. 1 "One of (hose happygo•Iucky pltlureu that los 1 mikes you feel good." 1 •.1.1. .0... .(rIf011101SeeMtV S.; - "A FUNNY MOVIE ABOUT Ili DAYS (OF HOLLYWOOD)...A PLEASURE AND A PLEASER. 1*• 1 "t)ne of the 1• , season's niftiest 1 comedlesl' -hUM 00111..Mn11„ •0... Wirl. MCC.1V rods, s4o 'The Best Comedy This Year!" -Berin Senders, WABC•TV 1 1 1 1 1 "A nostalgia comedy. Delayed -reaction slapstick," -1.1,1....111, M1, Io.1,1 "You couldn't ask for more... farce, romance, suspense and nostalgia. „. Ia1 Y."WI HILARIOUS! Laughs all the way, every funny comedy. Don't miss i1!" -Stewart Vern, WNEWTV "Pay dirt here, with .11 the hekery el early nrierukiag to double the /ua." -d.+. C.M,.1M.q AM, l 1 J7I6per days are here again.,, 1` 1 1 Paul Newman in"ihe 1 owning ool" - 1 1 1 1 ' 'fel, a n t, and you think you have problems!! ® Joanne Woodward HorstWEST rtit.MIDCES•ANDTGRIIITIN•DOh0I0M1ASENEE•NiTNEDANNFA,IIL41el, • ADULT ENTERTAINMENT .;;Zu, MGM 6;171;1 t4mi I. . 1111.11.11 1.11 MI ti III WI MI1t1111 t1• I• 1t1111 11111 11111 O IIII MI III NEI II • MI MI t>• 111111 1a1 1111111 11101;♦ Jack Lemmon Anne Bancroft The Prisoner of Second Avenue ADULT ENTERTAINMENT N. 16, TUE 111.1TII S'T'ANDARD, JANUARY 14, 1976. anuary Tashion QiveYourWardrobe...and`Your Budget. . . #Lift 11/. „fa W'A mens half size dresses a d long party gowns zes 141/2 - 241/2 THIS . S GROUP: 50%0 Save 2 i - 50% On Dresses, "ant Suits, Coats, Jackets, eaters, Blouses, Skirts, Li erie and Housecoats. DRESSE Misses & Juniors 20 - 30% off Reg. Price Playtex, Wonderbra Exquisite Form Bras - $1.00 OFF AtIoN Girdles - $2.00 OFF .b. • ' o off Infants We nowsuits, sleeper 'v) Panty Hose Socks 6eArVE6. ffANDI3 06 20% OFF. ats • Blyth, Ont. dresses; pant suit Beehive Knitting Yarns Sayelle Double Knitting Sayelle Baby Yarn Beehive Knitting Wool 3 & 4 ply Sale Starts: Thursday, January 15 at 9 a.m.. JEAN , Tee -Kays Boys, Gitls, Junior, Miss ALL SALES FINAL Weedieerait 20% . of reg. Ladies & Infants Wear Phone 5234351 , • p ice