The Blyth Standard, 1950-01-11, Page 1s-0 —
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Ott Thitrsday evcning last;the.'
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-ConratttIationsto
T. (ritar,460,` 11•416 wilt oel,ehrak their.
57th tydlAiti; anhirersail-b`ti Weanotii Bala
, itay, Jatiluitv 11011.;' I Att
Congratulations tO,z,tfr.' Sim". coat
of Seaford'', who celetfatmAjs ishoul
jay 011 Sunday, jaquary 15th; ' 'told
. •
tree to raise ,-Ff
mixt ocetittOti In week's fine 6
%%doh liobert Patterson weeks- with A a -
(I have been etiutitert.ivith SOO, tend best wisltet
for ant
John Paer wliui $3.0O. ery,
NI 11 I II I 1 1111. I
ie • In 10 11 osimol millonsis
pay'
haa
the
get
r
frity ASvx
After a lot of argument, in which
isonsitlerably more heat than light
Ives generated, the burghers of
'1•1;pronto„by a small majority, have
-deckled in favor „of., Sonday, Sports.
Now,, befor4.. !,r,ovIncialLI.eg-!•,:
'shore gives4helikthead
lt-,.Ln;ght ii,e.tftildly interesting, to
iptielibLtc.,,e 'just what lovers of ,
atid.ip what branches of
thereof, will atteiript, to cut in on
the promised jackpot,-
• *
"The Whattis Theatre should do
gll right," said a friend of our thc
morning after the balloting, 'taming
a certain Toronto Temple of Art
where a line of show girls, very
lightly bandaged, forms the regular
piece de resistance, or main dish
as we say in that dear France.-
* a •
We looked at him in mild amaze-
ment and inquired just where the,
Whatzis Theatre could possibly
figure in a purely sports picture,
Simple enough," quoth our friend,
'All they got to do is stage a bout
betweena Couple of these dime -a.
dozen wrestlers. 'fliat would make
it on athletic event, Then there'd
be nothing to prevent them tossing,
in' heir regular show for free,
there?"
And,maybe he has an idea there,
Rt that, Searching through the wel-
ter of memory we seem to recall
that the first modern or "all -in"
estling we ever witnessed was et
berlesque house entitled the • Star
rheatre in that same city of Tor -
alto, more years ago than we'd
those who attempt to control sold
'ports are going to run up. against,
• *
• (For instance, if it's OK to
, charge money to see sc, baseball
gaine, why will it ,be sinful 10
hoiv a telecast or movie of the
sametar,R sirnilar ganie, at a price?)
*„ * 4
In °Ilpo
Oneo1
ostrrthe
nevcr-e)idIIlg chores
Is
that of picking out, for the readers'
edification, the outstanding events
of the year, It is a chore much
like milking the cool or cleaning
out the horse stable on -the farm—
you no sooner get it over with
than it's thereto do again,
*
And it is a chore which we
personally try to dodge, partly
through sloth and partly because
,there isn't much sense in dohig
what ,so many others are bound to
do better, But for once • we are
going to get well ahead with the
job, So here and now, fifty or so
weeks allead of the deadline, we
opine that the finest football game
—United States brand, that is—of
Anno Domini 1950 was the one
Played on January Second of that
year out in Pasadena, California.
* * *
Naturally, old Father Time may
prove us to be wrong, as the old
rascal often has before. But, al-
though we have never been a great
admirer of American football, if
it better game than that between
the California Golden Bears and
the Ohio State Buckeyes happens
to come up, we should greatly like
to be among those personally prep
Cana.
'favourable
he 'said,
well be expected -to
our cheese in tutu
the quality and price areO.
lf we can assure the buyers
continuity of supply.
4
The farm cheese industry in the
United Kingdom has declined until
now it is only about a quarter of
its pre-war peak. This is partly
because of the drift away from
farms of the young folks who ordin-
arily would make the product, and
also because of the big demand
for fluid milk over there.
* $ •
When the figures are all in Bri-
de' production of cheese for the
year just ended is expected to be
around 56 million pounds, or about
one-half of pre-war production; and
• of that amount not more than ten
or fifteen per cent would be of
• farm' production.
• • •
Only two types of cheese—
Cheddar and Clheshre—were manu-
factured in any real quantities; and
these two only when surplus milk
was available. So that, all in all,
domestic production was only a
small part of the 'total British re-
quirement of something like 408
million pounds. • .- •
• * •
In 1948 the Llnited Kingdom im-
ported slightly more than 352 mil-
ilon.pounds of cheese, as compared
with 328 million pounds during the
pre-war year of 1938. Before the
wir-Cottsumption was nine pounds
per person, and this rose to 14
pounds during the war. At present
consumption is down to about 04
pounds, on the basis of a ration
mounting to 2 ounces weekly per
person. So it is easy to see that
it the British ever get back to,
anything like their former cheese.'
eating habits, they're going to need
a whole lot *of tonnage from some-
Int
dian cheeses being too Iieav Soflie
of those exported weig d 112
pounds, The United King ni trade
does not .want cheese eighing
more than 90 -pounds, n d would
even prefer them fiv4 tools
lighter than that for cad r mott-
ling.
* 4 *
Another beef was about our
cheeses being too large for the
boxes - they're packed in. This
causes thein to go short on proper
ventilation with resulting excessive
mould growth, dampness and faulty
rind formation,
• • *
Many Canadian cheeses exam-
ined, boxed as described, were
found spongy when pressed with
the thumb, in decided contrast to
those from New Zealand, in the
'open -crate. These latter showed
some slight mould, but were very
firm and dry,
* 4
In addition, with cheese packed
as tightly as ours, it is almost Im-
possible to remove the box with-
out breakage. This is particularly
so when the cheese is higher than
the box, and the contents get
squashed from piling, The trade
feel, and rightly so, that the top
of the cheese should come below
the top of the side of the box, so
that when the cheese are turned,
the ends will be ventilated.
* *
Exatnination of Canadian cheese
for quality found that, on the whole,
the original grade was pretty well
maintained on flavour. There was,
however, some complaints of de-
fects, presomably caused by heat-
ing, and these ,complaints are being
studied by the Department, with a
view to eliminating the cause.
Finishing Touches—Wenzel Beck, refugee from eastern Europe
living in Frankfurt, Germany, and his on put the finishing
fondles en their latest ship model—"Arkona"—before testing it
out in a swimming pool. Father and son worked 300 hours to
make their ship seaworthy, using just their hands and a few tools
a
-
British Challenger Top -class- racing driver Raymond Mays
speeds in his British racing motor ear during speed trials at
Folkingham, England, airfield. The car, made from parts as-
sembled by over a hundred British firms, has been designed to
ure world supremacy with an expected speed of 200 m.p.h.
rcadil3jadinit. Of course, in those
days, wrestling was just an
added attraction, with the hoofers
and strippers constituting the main
event. 13et it might work equally
well, or badly, the , other way
around.
to 4 *
"My wife is just aching to know
when them big Sunday Bingoes
are going to start," said another
gent with whom we discussed the
situation and prospects. "That's the
thing she's fondest of, next to
bawling me out from corning' home
late to dinner, and she can't hardly
wait to get into action."
• 4 *
Here again we expressed a meas-
ure of surprise. "But Bingo," we
objected, "con hardly be classed as
an athletic event," "It is the way
my wife plays itl" replied our
friend. "Oh, brother, any time she
makes Bingo and starts waving her
arms in the air, the folks on both
sides of her take more real •minish-
ment than Joe Louis has handed.
out in his last eight bouts,"
• *
But enough, for the present, re-
garding a subject that has beeo
thrashed out sufficiently, in the
press and over the air, during re-
cent weeks, and that is liable to
receive plenty more flailing before
It's all finally settled, But we do
take the liberty of thinking that
even those most strongly in favor
of Sunday sports, are going to be
a trifle astonished as to how many
different and unexpected, angles
ent, rather than take it via 'radio,
as we did the one we are writing
about,
• *
For 'that New Years tangle alio,-
pored to have Jost 'about every,
thing; plenty of action—Mixture of
plays -shifting' of . lead—suspense
right down to the dying moments
—with enough miscues and fumbles
'to make 3•ote feel that it was human
beings 'playing, not a bunch of
Tarzans and Supermen.
* $ 4
Ando from the listener's stand-
poitit, it had the immense advan-
tage of being described by a broad-
caster who didn't try to make you
believe that war h1tI been declared,
or that Joe Stalin had been asses,
sinated, every time one team
gained a couple of feet—a very wel-
come change from some of the
microphone maestri we have suf-
fered tinder, here and there. ,
• * *
Besides, that game' gave us one
of our rare moments of personal
triumph. Someone who was • list.
ening along with us, and who heard
Ohio described RS the "Bockeye
State" happened to ask us just
what is a buckeye. And we hap-
pened to know, and remember, the
correct answer. We wonder how
many of you could do aa well.
• * *
- For a buckeye is nothing more
or less than what we rude 'Canes
dians call a horse -chestnut, Sure
—you knew it all the thliel
ISSUE 2 — 1950:
lione and Hank
,
Ad • vertisipg
11••••••••
AGENTS WANTED
• USEWITES IVELC05115 THE FAMILIA:
AN for the wide and varied range of inter -
Weed necessities; reaeonable prIcee; preml-
ume1 quality Ind nnvioy, 13ecome & pyrite.
Porous business min by using and Nattier
Fondles producte, Write today and we will
tell you Dow.—EANIILEN,, 1600 Delorimier,
Montreal.
OAR' 0111Ulite
PCOULTRYeKEPERS
Be ;lure 0 it good healthy bunch of baby chicks
thie coming mention, Coed chicks mean good
hancsnd more eggs. Place your order now and
teke edvantege of the early order diecount,
All breeders are government banded and pull.
°rum -tented, Satisfaction guaranteed, Write
for our 1050 catalogue and prices. Monkton
Poultry Farms, Monkton, Ontario.
FISHER ORCHARD CHICKS
NY old chicke, pullete, and cockerel* available
weekly 'year round le 8 leading breccia and
croons, The chicks are 'Wet claim, the Price
moderate, the stock accredited, Write for 12 -
page coloured cniendar and Oleo liat, Fibber
Orchards, 11,0.P. Breeders, Freemen, Ontario,
HOW WOULD you like to get your pullet
chicks tree? How? Buy china aired by
ILO P. APProVed Melee from high producing
families, One dozen extra eggs per pullet will
more than pay the whole cost of the chick,
Protect.yourself by buYing 11.0.1), sired chicks.
Collect Your dividends in extra eggs and better
ment lype this fall, The maority of Twaddle
Pure Bred Chicks, are sired by 11,0,P, Petit -
greed Miles. Free cetalogue, Alro Droller
ehlcite, Turkey Pout's, bluing Pollute, Breed -
Int; Cockerels, Tweddle Chick Hatelierlen Lim-
ited, Pergint, Ontario,
PRODUCTION inheritance, ThnVe all von buy
In VOW eldeliti—Inberltanee. It you get
gond me and ment prelim:Hon Inheritance ynn
get value, It you don't you get 'nothing—noth-
ing that Is but trouble, expense, lost efforts,
wasted feed if you want etre egge,, better
meat Write end at less emit of production, send
for full details about TOEI Notch R,O.P. Sired
Chicks, Alen Turkeye, Broiler chicke find lay-
ing pullet*, Free CatalOalle, TOP Notch Chick
Salem, Outdo)), Ontario.
BABY CHICKS from blood teeted high egg
Producing stock, Livability guaranteed,
Mixed 515.00 per 100. Pullets 528 to $30. 'Yen
percent oft for order* 600 and over, Goddard
Chick Hatchery, Britannia Heights, Ontario,
_ .
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
AN 0-i'VER to every Inventor—Lisi of Invert,
lions and full Intornintion eent free. The
RUMMY Co Regletered Potent Attorneys. 273
Bank Street, Ottawa
DYEING AEI) CLEANING
HAVE YOU anything needs dyeing or clean -
Mg? Write to us for Information, We are
glad to answer your queatione. Department
17, Parker'a Dye Work. Limited, 701 Yonce
Street. Toronto, Ontario,
rim SALE
_
SOLID heave tinnen mile yell, filled 40 the,
golden light amber honey (no buckwhent),
25.76 each, 2 pane ill, Ontario Honey Pro-
ducers co-operative, 5 Detries Street, Toronto.
FORD Tractors, Nov and used, Fordson
MaJor Tractor*. 1944 Bus Chattels—care—
truck..° 31, Chapman, 21111brook, Ont,
NEW JOHNSON Outboard Motors. Canadian
Canoe Co., Peterboro Mato, Cenoea, Trail-
ers, bought, eold, exchenged. Large Meek used
motors. Repairs by tnetorptritined mechanics.
Open until nine except Wedneeday, strand
Cycle, HamIlton,
OUNS—Large etimortment new and need.
Bought, sold, exchanged, Oluiranteed repair,,
Scopes, MON Inetalled., Fibbing Tackle. Hunt-
ing Equipment, Sporting Conde, Special Team
Prices. Open milli nine except Weeinealley.
Strand Cycle, Hamilton. .
Mo'rollcVet,i0s, Harley DavItleon, New altil
need, bought, sold, exchanged, Urge Mock
of guaranteed timed motorcyclee, Repairs be
factory -trained mechanics, Bicycles, and com-
plete line of wheel goods. OPKI evenings until
nine except Wedne.tday. Strand Cycle k Sports,
Bing at Sanford, Hamilton',
RESORT—flood Fishing, wnriderfal location;
Write. Hrs. L. Chrletink, 13ox 573, Butterfly
Lake, Sioux Lookout, Ontario, Canada,
SIX BEGISTEBED Jersey bulls, frorn nix to
twentf-four menthe, for stile. Apply Arthur
11. Maley, Berwick, Ont.
1836 PER A.CREI buys clear title to 160 auras
unimproved land, 11 miles northweet of
nears, Alta, Make cattle ranch. Near big
g ime, tratiPing, L. C. Merrimen, 10111 Seven-
ty-fourth Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta,
HARROW Creamery, Harrow, Ont.; 40 ice
cream cuotomerat clefts 3.000 pounds butter
Per week In county. Apply W. 0, Fielding,
1100 HMI Ave., Windsor, Ont,
_
• TRUCKS FOR SALE
1942 DODOE 2 Ten Truck, in good condition,
High Stake locks. Priced reasonably.
1944 INTERNATIONAL Truett, 'Masts with
alb. Long wheel Mule, In good eundltion,
SHALE OIL C031PANY, 011itEnEVILLE
COR SALL
111031ESPUN VARE--macie of long Virgin wool
—extra wenn—long wearing—imitable tor
.oecaktez2B-113r-n4a. ph l ya.wlevahliet er s. galaedy, ,o rot h ye ar wbol oulel.e npagdadr.
y
green accarlet, maroon, Yellow, brown, heather,
black, fawn, white and grey twist, $1.98 lb.,
10 lbe. or over, 51,80 lb. delivered. Northland
sweater Patterns 25c each, Adultet deer, bear,
Indian design, curling,. Childet deer, bear, dog
and' equIrrel, dancer, Indian denten, knitting
needles 215a pair, 5Iary IfaOIni, Box 120 Sifton.
Manitoba,
1917 Commercial Jeep — thirteen houeand
Mlles. Half top; heater, would trade on Ford
tractor.'800 gallon Spramotor sprayer, Waller
type -power takeoff, 450 lb measure, tOur-rovt
boom, high crop clearance. LeRoy Coleman,
Blenheim, Ont,
ORDER now tor your White Holland Poulin,
broad Notated type. All breeders blood
tested and troVernment approved, Shoreline
Turkey Ranch, Harrow, Ont, t,
_
1141' WANTED
FARMERS, obtain farm labourers tor avriag.
Experienced Atoned or practical tarn labour,
tamillee and single will be avoilable for yotl
when needed, Contact POMO Belief Maeda
-
Mon, 320 Bay St, Rome 1304, Toronto,,•Ort,
HAIIIIIBP COUPLE Without young children— -
wanted tor ountry 11JUSe pear Hamilton,
Separate house •proy ded, Woman' required le
work part time. M n must have experience
with riding home, tate pg. Box No, 51,
125 -16th St., New o, Ont,
elEDICAL
NATURE'S HEI4P—Dixon's Remedy
for Rheumatic Pains,, Neuritis, Thou-
sands praising It.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 Elgin, Ottawa •
surFErt S from Itheumatto or Arthritic'
;11,25 Express Prepaid
paw; I you cannot get relief, write' ex
829. Tranbbona, Manitoba,
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
Hanieh the torment of dry eczema ranee,'
and weeping skis troubles Posl'e Weems
Salve will not dleappoint 1100
tching. scalingburning eczema. ache. ring
-
wenn, pimple,/ end athlete's foot, will respond
readily to this stainless, ndorless ointment,
regardless of hnw stuhimrn nr booties, the,
seem.
PRICE 51.00 PER JAR
Sent Poet Free on Receplt of Price
POST'S REMEDIES
880 Queen St E., Corner of Minn
Toronto
OPPORTUNITIES $'011 31)3N AND WIINIEtt
—
RE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Oreal Opportunity Learn
Ilairdrataing
Pleaeant dignities, profeeelon, geed waves
thousands sucCessful Marvel graduates
America's ,greatest eyelem. Illustrated OW
lone free; Write or Call
kf WEL HAIRDRESSING
SO110014S
350 [Moor St, W 'Patent°
Branches, 44 King St HantlIton
21 12 fildenu Street, Ottawa.
PATENTS
FETHERSTONHAUOH A Company Patent .
Solleltore Ealabilehed 1800 360 Say Street.
l'ornnin Ronklat nt Information no request
—
PERSONAL
WHY VOW 'gray ,halr? Write " for MY Fret"'
Folder: )Jog 320, Tranecona, Manitoba.
SA LESHAN WA NTElt
CAN YOU TOP THIS?
THE reason we healaa
at!aesucceesful. -lake
av
0100 AEI) 310RE
A wee); In conmilicelons and benuses• lo
because;
1—alle'cetao,
teach sou how. ExPectence
eaa
2—Our nntional and 'International advertlk
In newennpere, magnetites, radio bread.
coots lulus you,
3-11apid advancement to the right oersun
It you are over 23 Years' of ago write Box
No, 50, 023 -18th Street, New Toronto. Indult,
your name, addrese and phone number
WA NT Ell
WIRTH Holland Turkey Body feathers wanted.
Particulars on Illuetrated folder. 11. l' Holl-
ander, 701 .11end tJuIidiiig, Nlontreel. Quebec.
WANTED; Light hormee, Paluminee or some-
thing with white notrkings or (fealty voter.
A. H. floug, 337 York SI„ ',entice), Ontero,
1LEs tr atif ler any
longer. For quick
relietc=;treift— painful piles with
medicated Dr, Chase's Ointment,
r soothes as It heals. N safe home
treatment for over gi years, 33
DR.. (HASE'S
Antiseptic OINTMENT
How I Subud
Wild Fiery Itch
r, Dennie' ainazincilly feet relief —D. D. P
reseriptIon— did the trick, World populer,
this pure, cooling, lquid medication speed4.....s. ,
peace and comfort from cruel Itching Faus_or"
by eczema, pimples, rashes, Athlete s t ot
and other licit troubles, TOO bottle, 35$.
First application checks even the most Intense
Itch or money back. Ask druggist lor D.C. D.
Prescription I ordinary or extra strength) now.
Coughs are dangerous If neglected
Get Reid Usually.., QUICKLY, PLEASANTLY
WITH
OUGH SYRUP
AT ALL DRUGGISTS He CAM
0.11.
11 I II INN! 1•11114 I
"Green Flies, Powdered Rhubarb,
Ground Cuttlefish Bone"
fitudaitta at the Ontario College
of Pharmacy live In a world of
iiloggY green •fflos, powdet•ed rhu-
barb, ground cuttlefish bone, and
wine 8,000 other items which are
the tools of t heir profession.
The flies, Ipboriously collected
Itt Spain, are for blisteringplas-
ters. The rhubarb is for tonics, the
euttlefish bone for canaries.
The undergraduate must become
fatnillars with the Chinese beetle
and many *other insect; tree hark
such as cascara wood and cinchona
(which yields quinine); and a wel-
ter of liquids, oils and chemical
salts from which pills, 'emulsions,,
tinctures and infusions are made.
So complex has pharmacy become
that the course now demands four
years of intensive effort instead of
the three nit:nabs considered long
enough in 1882.
The College of Pharmacy is af-
filiated with the University of Tor-
onto. Curricula, admission stand-
ards, and examiners are under the
jurisdiction of the University Sen-
ate. Many lectures are given by
' Varsity professors.
Located near the junction of
Gerrard and Church, the three-
storey College is in a one-time
"fashionable' area which has be,
come part of busy downtown Tor-
onto, Students have a tight sched-
ule of about 28 hours a week of
labs and lectures. In addition to
studies during the academic year,
students must 'Work 18 months in
it store or a plant as "interns"
(usually during the summer
montha). After they graduate
many will spend seven or eight
years in retail stores before they
inn afford to start In business for
themselves.
VVonten who graduated front the
college in 1906 ars Still among
Canada's 4,000 practising pharma-
aisle and 50 women are enrolled
this year, In 1948 the first and
second prize winners were women,
something male graduates of that
year would rather not discuss.
The College is proud of its high
standards. At most of the 69 att.
et•edited collegee of pharmacy In
the United States, the entrance re-
quirement is junior matriculation,
• In Ontario it li third class honours
in senior •matriculation. -
Students in pharmacy spend half
their time in University buildings
taking sup}, subjects as botany,
pharmacology, chemistry, physics,
zoology and English. At the Col-
lege itself they take vatious courses
itt pharmaey, pharmaceutical chesn-
lefty and materla medioa. The last
le a grouping of courses In physiol-
ogy, first aid, the study of 'animal
and plant source' that yield orude
drugs, and the study of biologioal
products.
Also taught, of course, is the ob.
breviated Latin that makes up the
language of the prescription. The
scrawled note a Canadian doctor
hands his patient makes easy read.
ing for a druggist beoattse there
are only about 200 abbreviations to
memorize.
Orders front overseas aren't so
simple, A good many people, in
Central Europe are sending pre•
seriptione foe relatiVes to have filled
here and Ontario druggists ' are
having quite a time with them, And
itt Bolus •Ontario contmunities mid.
Europeatts„ buy as many as 100
leechesa Month at $1.50 a leech
front one atore.alone, •The leeches
(bloodsuckers) are used to reduce
the swelling in black eyes.' „
Pharmacists fill prescriptions that
may range itt price, front less than
a tent to $4 for a single pill, •
Ingredients come from- all oyer the
world. and stndents are taught to
pick them out at sight, "No' two
"mums look exactly alike and
neither do any two of the sub-
stances we use,' pharmacists say,
though to the layman many of tbs
bottles carefully stacked side by
aide seem to contain the same mat-
erial. After firat becoming familiar
with- their materials, pharmacy stu-,
dents work in a lab where the
bottles are • numbered. If a student
isn't sure, he can cross to the other'
side of the rooln where a list Idea-
tifies the substances, -However, the
monitor system train, Ids power of
observation and after 'a while he
knows at a, glance what a bottle
con tains.
The College musenin has a fas-
cinating . display of old utensils,
prescription books and preparations.
For instance, there's a, packaged
`commercial product of the early
part of the nineteenth • century
known as "Electric Beans", The
legend on the package says beans.
Create Rich Red Blood. Pills were
potent in the old days; one patent
medicine was labelled, "Anti -Pill
Cure." Then there's a poison regis-
ter kept by a Toronto druggist in
1/377. At the top of one page, in
a long straight hand, is .the sig-
nature of Sir John A. Macdonald,
The first Father of Confedera-
tion bought an eyewash solution,
one ingredient of which was
poison,
=From Varsity Graduate
Trees That Weep
Priceless Tears
--
Perhaps the greatest dollar -earn-
ing asset in the Empire is rubber,
most of it front troubled Malaya, a
British possession, There the rubber
trees weep to bring in 60 million
pounds worth of dollars a year,
This most versatile and widely -
applied of all the earth's natural
products, is indispensable to twen-
tieth century civilization, and in a
world plagued with shortages it is
almost the only essential commodity
of which there is an abindant sup-
ply. Otte can hardly count its present
um, 'Or set bounds to its possible
future use, so fast are we finding
new ways of employing R.
During the war alone, several hun-
dred new uses were discovered,
ranging from "pliofilin," which pro-
tected aircraft engines sent to dis-
tant battlefields, to conveyer belts
now used by the milein up-to-date
mines.
The United Stites uses well over
a half of the whole world's produc-
tion, for natural rubber is one of the
few commodities she has found it
hnpossible to produce herself.
The, rubber plant is not a native of
British Malaya, It catne originally
from the New World—one of the
. first products of America to be
noted by explorers and one of the
last to be exploited,
- Columbus himself, during his sec-
ond visit flora, was astonished to
set ,native Indians amusing them-
selvei by playing with heavy black
bails made from vegetable gum, In
1740 a French scientist, Charles
Marie -de la Condatnine, sent back ,
specimens of this amazing "bouncIng
gum," He called it "caoutchouc," a
variation of the Indian name for
"weeping tree," and caoutchouc it
still remains' in the French diction-
ary,
Then in. 1770 Joseph Priestley, an
EOM chemist invited attention to
a material which lit found to be
"excellently adapted to the purpose
of wiping from' paper the marks of
a black -lead pencil".
Englishtnen tried It and promptly
gave it the Mime '"rubbir." It. or
Igin they • Indicated by the prefix -
"India", (tneaning front the Wed
Indies), and thus the label "Indian
rubber" came into being. Samuel
Peal patented a process for making
waterproof fabric by using rubber
dissolved in turpentine then in the
1820's Thomas Hancock and Charles
Winter's Worst Hazard: SKIDDING
When the roadway is a skidwaY, beware of rapid necelemtion.
quiek stops and sudden awerves. Also deadly are excessive speed,',
especially on turns, and uneven braking.
.1.
To slow down, pump the brake gently; don't hold It down stab.
Under skid conditions, never try to stop suddenly, but eked' your
speed a little at a time.
Macintosh established rubber fac-
tories itt London and Glasgow.
Everyone to -day . associates the
Scot's llaille with waterproof gar-
inents.
"The tree that weeps" became the
most precious timber in the world,
and Brazil, where It' had been first
discovered, still held the monopoly
of supply, But in that country the
natural rubber forests had been
ruthlessly exploited,' Many millions
of trees had been "bled" to death,
and the price of rubber rost steadily
am It became necessary to penetrate
deeper and deeper into.the Amazon
forage to tap new supplies. ,
The Braziliatts. hung on grinny
and refused to allow the precious
seeds to be taken from the country
so that plantations could be laid
down elsewhere,
Several unsuccessful attempts;
wort made to smuggle seeds out.
Finally it was left to the resource of
an Englishman, Henry Wickhatn
• (who -was afterwards knighted), to
go through with it in the goOd old
Elizabethan way.
He undertook to procure by hook
or by crook a sufficient nuntber of
'seeds to ensure the future of rubber,
Chartering a steamer, he succeeded
in entuggling'70,000 seeds out of the
coutttry packed..between leaves of
the banana tree, He reached Liver.
pool, where a special train was wait.
Ing to rush the seeds to Kew. There
some: of them germinated and the
plants were sent out to India, Cep
• lon, and Malaya.
Total cost of Wickman's expedi-
tion was £1,500. Out of it Itave
; grown 700 million trees, producing
800,000 tons of rubber annually.
Even to -day we are far front ex-
hausting the possibilities of latex or
rubber "milk." Apart front its well-
known uses, patettts art out for its
use as a perservative for eggs, fruit,
and plants. It Is also extensively
employed for upholstery, flooring,
road surfacing, wallpapering.
The tapping of the rubber trees
for this precions latex still 111119illA
a simple process carried out bY Mall'
tialiabottr. It is useful to reflect how
many of our great industries, which
in later stages depend almost en-
tirely on giant, complicated mach-
ine*, rely in the first place on the
work of one matt the unskilled
, Malay labourer, for whorn. there can
be no mechanical substitute.
Ins work consists of cutting the
JITTER
ave*,04•1 voevg um IN
IV* , luoW You* CAUeso
the011.0. mew tfr ON THAT
Mot
arNe
YoU.
bark and setting a cup to catch the
white latex which runs between
bark attd wood, At the end of the
day he colleen, these .cups and pours
their contents into a large tank—a
pritnitive fortn of labour which c,an
in no way be mechanized or hurried,
Calcium Spurs
Milk Production
A 46 per cent. increase in milk
production as a result of supplying
sufficient calcium in the ration of
dairy cows is reported in a 16 -year
study of R. B. Becker, dairy hus-
bandman of the Florida Experi.
mental Station. Cows given rations
containing too little calciutn pro-
duced an average of Only 4,816
pounds of ntilk in 218 lactations,
whereas cows getting sufficient cal-
cium yielded an average of 7,092
poonds of milk in 73 lactatious.
Florida and other states where
pastures and other feed crops Itre
grown on acid, sandy soils may be
inadequate in lime, which supplies
calcium,
To overcome the shortage, Beck-
er and his co-worker, P, T, Dix
Arnold, added two per cent, of
finely ground steamed bonenteal to
the dairy concentrates, In addition,
the heavy milk producers received
a limited amount of alfalfa hay.
These supplements afforded enough
calciutn for Jersey cows in conuner-
cial herds. More recetttly, however,
one per Cent. each of bonemeal attd
kalsite (marble dttst) replaced the
two per cent. of bonenteal.
Deficiency of calcium may be
corrected by spreading linte on im-
proved pastures. Then, too, lately,
manufacturers of mixed dairy
feeds in the Southeast are tnaking
up for the lack of calcium by In-
cluding bottemeal and finely ground
limestone in their feedstuff". —
country Gentleman.
Mrs. Brown: "For months I
couldn't discover where my Intsb'and
spent his evenings.".
Mrs. Smith: "How (lid you find
out?"
"Well, one evening I went home
and there he was."
Where "Holy Cow"
Isn't Slang
11.1,••••••...11
"Holy cowl" exclaimed my Amer-
ican friend casually, not realising
that in India title expression would
not sound funny, for to moat
duo the cow Ip a sacred animal.
Yet it le surprising how quickly
a young Hindu, when away from
home, starts eating beef and thinks
nothing of It, Miles away from the
Influence of hie orthodox elders,
he views the cow ite a very useful
animal, but fails to sea the halo
about its head, writes Chaturi Vas.
weal in The Christian Science Mon -
hot..
In America, the cow is pastured
on farms and dairies, In India, it
has as much right to walk on the
crowded streets of a city as any
person. It is not uncommon to see
a cow holding up traffic while it
nonchalP ttly crosses the street or
forces pedestrians to detour off the
sidewalk while it .gazes at the store
displays — window shopping as it
were. The cow even wanders into
the crowds at the food market and
helps itself to the food,
4 * •
Now, why does the Low in I n-
dia have privileges that even a
human being cannot claim in any
country? Jaywalking, food steeling,
and becOming a 'hindrance on the
man street are Illegal acts. However,
titer man-made laws do not affect
the cow in India. But there, the cow
is "sacred" and the man is not,
Economically, the cow and the
bull are the two most valuable ani-
mals in India, The .cow furnishes
milk and all its by-products. Farm -
ere harness the bull to plow the
land. India,. therefore, depetids en-
tirely on the cow for its food supply
and so treats the cow with a revel-.
ence due • to the mother who pro- .
vides food for her children. In fact,
the cow is often called"mother
cow."
However, the idea of reverence
has in some cases been carried too
far. Temples have been built for the
worship of the cow, Many religious
ceremonies include the feeding of
the cow as one of the important
items -of the ritual. Hindu women
often start their day 'by feeding the
cow. Any stray cow is welcome in
their back yards.
The real motive behind this rever-
ence has, been forgotten. Being a
useful animal, the cow has to be
perserved for its practical value.
Reverence is one way of protectittg
the animal from physical harm by
men who might kill it for meat.
That is why beef is taboo among the
Hindus, most of whom do not eat
any kind of meat anyway.
But to believe that it le sacri-
legious for a Hindu to use anything
of the cow; including the milk, le
a misconception. Milk is widely used
when available, the oow's skin it;
used for leather, and It. horns All
carved into beautiful figut•es for
living-t•oom decoration,
*. * •
The only real offense against the
cow ie. killing It for food or for
anything. In .sonte parte of India
the penalty for killing a cow, even
by accident, is a few years in jail.
People have established homes for
the aged cows where they are well
taken oat•e of, That is mere than
they done for human beings.
1.• •••••• ••1 1
I .I1119. •• 100 I
But thl tiM,Uhave ;hanged 0114
thi old *61itonil'oguot continue for
long,. The population of the Coil,
M Qt people; bas Increased Mimeo -
Rely la India. Not enough fodder la
grown. Moreover, the modern me-
terialistic Indian works his' attitnal
to the bone and triee to get as much .
OW of it as possible.
One criticism levied against the
Hindu. is: Why can't they let some
of these miserable -looking creaturee
be slaughtered and fed to million'
of starving people?
The answer to this criticism is
that it is hard to change traditions.
For a people brought up in the
tradition of .respecting the cow, it
will be years before any change of
attitude is brought about.
However, some daring young mut
have broken away. They ,Itave seen
better cattle and better farming me-
thods in other countries and wish
India would adopt similar practices.
•Fhey no longer consider the cow •
a sacred animal. Their prejudice
against beef -eating has vanished,
too, for they -eat beef as willingly
as any other meat when away front
home. For this they have to :lc:
count to their elders ott returning
to India, Bur they get away by
saying, "We were eating American
cows. They aren't ....aered,' are
they
Expert Advice
Visiting the farm for the first
time in bet city -bred lite, little
eight-year-old Rebecca, the daugh-
ter of a filling station operator, was
thrilled by the many things her
grandfather showed her, The big
turkey gobbler, soon to be killed
for Christmas dinner, frightened
her; and she was astonished to dis-
cover that the ice on the pond was
thick enough to bear her weight,
Most of all, however, she was
fascinated by the cow, Several
afternoons she went wi 11 her
grandfather to the barn and stared
wide-eyed as he milked. On a nippy
December day when site was
anxious to return to the %varmth of
the farm house, she ventured to tap
him on the shoulder and' suggested,
"Grandpa, if you'd put alcohol in
her radiator, you wouldn't have to
drain her faucets every night I.°
"Wool" from Rocks
British geologists engaged itt re-
search work itt the Hawaiian Islands
found a fluffy fiber made of the
sante substance as thi rocks on the
slope. of the volcano. Since this
fiber was probably produced front
lava during a volcanic eruption, the
British scientists concluded that
"wool" could be made front other
rocks too. After two years of en-
periments at the Matlock, England,
works of a British Ilmestonedfirm,
a method has been evolved whereby
limestone and other silicious rocks
are transformed into a fine wooly
substance which is a first-class heat
and sound insulator and is fire-
proof and vertnin-proof. The wool
will be used primarily in heat In-
sulation, but It le probable that it
will also be used as a heat conserver
in all building construction,
An infallible way of Impressing
people favourably is to let them eta
ho'w much they imprese you.
11=•••
Boy Electrifies Farm—After running the gamut 9f 16-year-ojd
Johnny.Williams' dusting and counting machine, gladioltts bulbi
are carried tip by belt conveyor and dumped onto the screen
in foreground. Johnny, was one of 35 winners in the "Better
Methods" electric contest.
.%"
Ry Arthur Pointer
,
Ns-)
MADE -TO -MEASURE
SUITS
$52,50, $59,50, $65,09,
• #.44,4*########~0*##0."*".0"" fVf••••••#1,~#######f#INI NV*/
EXTRA TROUSERS
WITH ANY SUIT, ONLY $5.00
O J. effron
Phone 211 ---Sanitone Dry Cleaning--- Blyth.
Pure Pork Sausage
LARGE 43c LB.
SMALL 45c LB.
TRY OUR HEAD CHEESE --
LB.
3 LB. LOAF
35c
LB. 32c
COOKED PORK HOCK
30c LB,
Arnold Berthot
MEAT
Telephone 10 --- Blyth.
AUBURN
Mrs. Thomas McNall is
Godericlt hospital. Her son, Stanley
McNall, of Wellasil, visited with her
and the family during the Nveek-ed,
Mrs. Donald Fowler and Mts. Roy
Finniean were London* visitors on
Thursday.
;Mrs. NelSon Hill of Goderich, with
Sadie and Joseph Carter,
Aubrey Toll, farmer of East Wawa -
nosh has recently sold 43 heifers which
he had fed for 121 days, during which
,time each animal gained 265 lbs. each.
How is this for a record breaker.
Mrs. S. IL Daer of the Auburn -Blyth
road had the misfortune to fall during
aidsweek and has broken a bone in
her foot, which will necessitate a cast
being used,
Mrs. Joseph Irwin
FISH
1
1
TIM 1 SIMARD Wed., 3mivary 11) 1950, '
Beattie, William Stranghan, and Jalttes I
RobeEtson, The many beautiful floral '
tributes were carried by Clayton An,
tlerson, Billie Parks, Tom Lawlor,
Wilfred Lawlor, Jack Lad(, all grand-
chidren, and Nfurray Rollinson. Bur-
ial was made in, BaTs cemetery,
Friends ani reLtives were present
from Galt, London, 1)utigatTott,• Gotle-
rich, Myth, and the surrotmding dis-
trict,
'Holtz:hatter. She was born in Howick.
I township on November 6th, 1872, For
the past 50 Years she had resided in
i Auburn. Mrs. Irwin was. an active
'member of Knox United Church. She
wac tw.ce married. Her first husband,
'John I -add, died in 1911; and her se-
cond husband, Joseph Irwin, died -h.
1934. Surviving are one son and two
darghters, Clayton Ladd, Arlan -en; 1Irs.
1Thomas Park, Dungannon; and NIrs.
George Lawlor, Auburn. There, are
also nine grandchildren; six great-
grandchildren; ono brother and two
s,'sters, Moses Holtzhatter, Blyth; Mrs.
!Christina Scliaus, .Clifford; and Mrs.
Thomas Willoughby. Five brothers,
John, William, Eli, Samuel, and Hen-
ry Holtthatter, predeceased her, as (lid
!two sisters, Mrs. Pelz, and Mrs.
Agnes Pullen.
Funeral service was held on Wed-
LtRAVE
The Guild of Trinity Angnean church
met at the home of Mrs, A. M, Perdue
with a goodi attendance, ReV. J, M.
Wyatt coradteted the opening prayers.
The tuestsbe.-s stood in silent tribute to
two of their faithful members who hal
died recently, Mrs. W. Cole and Mrs.
11. Perdue, The secretary's and treas-
urer's reparts for the previoes year
were received, the latter .showing a
h OS! ant:al balance. The rector expres-
sed regret that he and ,Nirs. Wyatt are
leaving soon for .Kentora, and thaWied
the members for their sympathetic Un-
derstanding and co-operation; Nifs,
F. Shoebottom and MrS. J, IM cGlII
were atided to the visiting committee.
Mrs., Shoehottotn gave an account of
some of the. early yiears of the Guild,
which was started 48 years ago. Only
four of the original members are still
living, hut tiny are still active in the
s^ciety, Mrs. J. Vancamp, Miss
Procter, Mrs. F. Shoebottont, and Mrs.
T, Shoebottont, A d-serstiosi of .
tem e-ass1 to the Heron College Bull(17
ing Fund, London, Lunch 'as served
by the hostess and NIrs, L. Vannan,
The menthlv meeting of the Bel -
grave womeds 1nsdtt,,te win be bed
at the home of Mrs, Herb Wheeler on
January 17th, at 2;30 p.an,, with vie
concencrs, NIrs. G. Ilimins and Mrs.
1.11. Coultes in charge. The Roll Call
A ma for a satsivich Wad
combinatior: a detronstnatien fold'n
a shirt, by Miss E. Procter; Quiz con'
dmoted by Mrs. J. Ms Centtes. Read-
ing, -NIrs.„.W. Scott ; and music by NIrs.
A, Se -4i ; will be gice"i 1)7
Mrs, Geortse Michie and the refresh -
wrist commIttee. Nfrs. C. Prxdon, Mrs•
A. Scott, Mrs, L. Horper,
A joint tracer meetinsr will he held
the Trinity Wean Church ott
Wedeesalac„lati'arc llth, at 8 oseloe'r,
in"which the three cherches of thevl-
WESTFIELD
Mr, and Mrs, Russel Cook and El- I
eauor were, Loudon vistto;s o t
week end.
isses Noma Taylor, J ean Guerney
and Sandal MacLean of Winghatu
s'pent the week end whh Mr, and Airs.
Elwin Taylor,
The McDoWell brothers sh'pped a
loatl of cattle tor Toronto on Saturtay,
and 01\13.11(14Y ir..911:11rA Mesers W111.
McDowell, Norman, Murray and Alva
McDowell and Arnolal Cook motorel:
Ito Toronto to look after the sale of
r
The cattle.
Mr, and Mrs. Byron McDonald of
Michigan and Mr. and Mrs, Hearn of 1
Saskatchewan spent a few days with
Mrs, Fred Cook and othar friends.
Mr, and Mrs, Earl Wightman; Nor,
man andllattie visited on Sunday \cid];
Mr,. and Mrs. Wesley Stackhouse of
13rneefield,
MrS, Harold Sprung
Townsh%) is visiting her
Clare'nce Cex,
Mr, lfarsey WI.,,,litman returned to
his WOr'k at Niagara on Sunday.
We are pleased, to be Wde to repot
that Harvey Snell, sots of Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Snell, and DavieMeDowell, son
of Mr. and Mrs, Harvey McDowell,
are recoverhjg front prentuonia,
- The common'ty was, sa blened and
shocked on Monday evening to hear o'
the sudden pass'ng of a hiAhly-esteem
ed resident in the person of John L.
lteDowell, •who passed away at Pel.
grave on Monday, January 9th; at the
home of his sister, NIrs, Josie Canter -
:on, in Ws c7111 year. His Fi'dden paS'-
' sing was caused by a heart attack.
The 'ie Mr. 11eDowel was born in
ntst Wawanosh, the third son of the
late John 11cDowell and Ann Jane Mc -
anion, 811 1 had lived all his l'fe in the
ownship. He was married in Febru-
ary, 1912, to Miss l'Izabeth Snell, of ,
he thirst concession of East Wawa- I
• nosh, who with three datt titters, Mrs,
Charles, Smith (Evelsm) of the 0.11 colt-
edeosusic'SnInDitth,Eaosft t\IN;e4"(1,11t1ItingclolirieNelsrsisi'mG1 :.°1' rot
• East Wawanash, Mrs. John Gear
(Jean) of Kitchener, and ore son, Gor-
don, at • home, stuvives to mourn their
loss; also 7 grandchildren awl five
sisters, Clara (Mrs. \Vim Waltkn) of
0111e sN'ifanintot v; jtl(iasie( 1(f rNsi.rs13. erKt.17chillenettrt
of ilullett
sister Mrs.
parj1,-..apate, Rev. George
11P,ee vice the address. Every-
one is invited to attend.
1<-erns-rh.1<illettgli of l'It-ingan-
non is visiting her -sister, Mrs.,-Ken-
neth Canter,'It _
Mrs, H. Wheeler_ has returned te
her bcrre, aftsr s-cidilys a few weeks'
with her daughter in St. Thomas,
HULETT
;bite:1'71'ml In3e,enatIrtscr of the Board of Stew-
. •
IThe Fireside Farm Forum met -,on
I Monday! night at the home of Mr, .01.4 ! The funeral service- will be held on
Mrs, Bert Hoggart stath etgliteen ,t -td Thursday afternoon at 2 p.m, from the
tdts present. They decided.that- Abe', \\rollick! United Church, with Rev. A.
resolutions criticizing the. assessor's G. Hewitt, the paltor, cond.uctins the
manual, had been sent in by people who 'serclee, Interment will beonade in
had not made a careful study of the Ball's cemetery. ,
manual, Also that it is unwise for TliQ sincere sympathy of the en' Ire
fanners to change their business ever' neighivnIteod is extended to the be-
Yisue the markets _f_luctirate, but that. reaced
the wise farmer should study the times •
and the market,„ trends anl be read; Lemmilp,Bortn
,to change his p'al.ls with flecidod chats- Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth ,Scot ,and
on) of Ilelgrave; Arnie (Mrs. -J;
lough) of Dungannon; Ella (Mrs, f.ce
Bair) of Milk River, and three bro'11-
ers, Albert of Tus.can, Arizon11; INTR.
liam and Alva, of Westf-ield. Two sis-
ters predeceased Wm,
;Mr. 1feDowell was an active, con-
scientious, and loyral member of the
Westfield, United .Church. He served
his church as Sunday School teacher,
• and a memher of the choir for manty
Yew's, as well as beiing a member of
the sets:or quartette. For the -past yeas!
he was a. member c.f Session aril has
gcs in markets. .fatully of St. Catharines spent last
I The following ,were whiners 111 Pro- week 'at the home of Mr, aril Mrs, • .. I 11.1 ' VI II :41 11.1 hi.,1111 I h • 1.11
ark, and 1Ir5, Lloyd Pipe, '11r. Stewart is at present 111 in an-
•
Outstanding Values
FOR THE LADY WITH SMALL FEET,
SAMPLE. SH *ES
, SIZE, 4 ONLY
ALL THE LATEST STYLES
REG: UP TO $9,00 $309
COME EARLY AS THE SUPPLY IS LIMITED,
a percent. Off on All Purchases made for Children
with Family Allowance Cheques,
SKATES SHAR:PENED.
Madill's Shoe Store Myth
"Be Kind to your feet, Wear MadT.'s Footwear,"
ViNI~1.11.6441,A lattil4.101ainionagaimAR141111/3111001.1111611111.111WM
INJWIV4V,I,..~.#.•#.444~.~..0.."0.04###.4""~"~""e""*"."
HOOT MON!! BeGORRA
IT'S THE IRISH AND SCOTCH
COMING UP!
FRI AY, JAN. 20th
. In the Memorial Hall, Blyth,
Sponsored by the Blyth Lions Club
; FEATURING FRANK McGREGOR,
outstanding Scotch Comedian, of Lucknow, _
- - AND CLARK JOHNSTON,
Belgrave's (Own)* Irish Comedian.
Scotch and Irish Dances, Pipers, School Choruses,
Cornet, Baritone, and Saxaphone Selections
Quartettes and Solos.
INCLUDING MANY LOCAL STARS.
The Program will commence at -8:15 p.m. sharp.
Admission, Adults 40.c, Children 25c.
NININI~INIM44,44~~##########•~44,4,1
. 1.01.4,11 N1,1111111,11116 .4.11 .1, i.111 ,161114 .1 di 1,11i LIM. ...I. It, I
pplications
anted
FOR THE POSITION OF CLERK -TREASURER'
OF THE VILLAGE OF BLYTII,
SALARY $500.00 PER ANNUM,
DUTIES TO' COMMENCE FEB. 10th, 1950,
Applications to -be In the hands of .the Clerk,
- by January 286, at six o'clock.
16-2, BERNARD HALL, Clerk,
gressive mitre; High, Betty Addison John Scott.
nes! ay, Jan, (1, an( was arge ) a - an es e) pgg r ; o c tam s, et- mr, and. Mrs, •tervy•n pipe and rant.
Death Sunday, January! -1st, claimed ,tended, Rey, A. G. Hewitt was in Ity Addison and wesley Reggart; cots- -ily of Brussels spent Sunday at the
a resident of long standing in the per !charge. A ..duet, "Good Night and -Solution, Mrs, Geo. Hoggart and Keith - home of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Vodden,
5011 of Mrs. Joseph Irwin, following a
dengthy illness. Mrs, Irwin was for-
merly Era' eth Hol'zhater, the daub.'
Iter of the late Mr. and 'Mrs. John
Good Morning," was sung by Mrs.
Donald Fowler and Miss Sadie Carter,
The pallbearers wore Donald Fowler,
Charles Scott, Ralph Munro, Harry
Hesetwood,
Mrs. Robert Jamieson incited the
group to her home for next 1IondaT
night,- •
CANADA'S FIRST PASSENGER DIESEL7Shown above is Canntia's first streamlined diesel passenger locomo-
AceCanadian Pacific's 1800. iDelivered to the C.P.R. by General Motors, (the 2,2E0 -horsepower locomotive was
one of the first of the new E-8 desists to come off the assembly line of the G -M plant .at LaGrange, Itlinios, She
will be joined shortly by two sister engines, completely dieselizing Montreal to 13ostots passenjger -trains. Freight
service en the line between 'Montreal and Mils River Vt., clas already'been dieselized. N. It Crutup (left inset),
vice-president of the Canadian P,acifie Railway is shOwn receiving a' goldp reversen handle , froM C. R. Osborn,
cice-president of General Motors and general instaager of the:Electre-Moti*e 0:v:skit at LaGrange, at the cere-
monies when the giant dies:l. was turned over. 111-r. Osborn said that the memento was symbolic of the inaugurs
ation of diesel -powered passenger service in Canada, .
I The Mission Band will hold thelr
monthly meeting next Sunday morn-
ing, January 15th, at 10:1), in the base -
trent of the church. The roll call .will
be answered by paying Of fees..
The regular motithly.nseeting of the
W
:cnten's Association will he heldn
I
the bailetrent of the Londesboro Uni-
ho
(ted Churc, n Jantory 19th, at 2;30
pan The roll call wby
ill be answered
s'acityr of the fees. All the. ladies of
the,cotigregation fire
Invited to attend,
Tlic Itostr;sses are Mrs. If. ti's.
Jas, Fairservide, Mrs, Laura attader-
Mr. Guy Longman n
of Saskatchewa
and Longinan of -Drayton vis-
ited with Mr. -andMrs, James McCool
on Monday,
• •
CLINTON F1IEM7N SAVE
CHARLES STEWART HOME.
.A chimney fire in a farm home yes-
terday called the Clinton volunteer fire
'brigade into action. The brigade went
,with one truck to the home of Charles
Stewart, in Holiest township, a mile,
north of Clinton In response to an al-
arm telephosted by ,Mrs. Stewart. The
fire was 'attritted to the eitinmey, a.:(1
eh
there was Ito .mage• done, - I
ton Puble Hospital; what 1Irs, Stew-
art diseoVered the chimney Crei, she
was quick to call for heti:
IOwnership of two. fire. 1.:-Iteas 'KO
mp
makes if * ossilde for the Clinton fire
department to ans,ver rural cal!,
while. still Imaaor
taining prtection fo
the town itself,
WALTON
Bert Kelley has retstrnerl heine after
visiting his ,sister, - Mrs, G, $1111t11, of
South PocCu, pitte. • .
Fred 1latst'n, sett of arid Afrs,
,Clare ice Martin, is 111 the Clitttan .1tos-
pital for an appendix.operatioct
S"tte
stess„t
CP:A. ORDERS HUGE J'ET
-land Comet jet-proyelled air liners, pte
, jet 'planes, .first to be ordlcIfed' by a
MbCortschie, president of C.P.A.
ule of 40000 feet, almoSt eight tniles,
lit 10 how% with twO stops for
. •
S t—Cannd'ati Pacific Air Lines have 'ordered' two Str!--.1111e-att-hour
Dared abo"e,' for serdee front , Vanden vet to TOkyo and: I-long...Kong.' .The
Nerth Anteritan ate' V!p.e, be dell vortd'hiii.02, 4-4tituaitt*ed, W'.
Powered by 'him dellaviland GhOst jet "etight6S,..t4..1-11ine:,e'rtt'ses:.at .att
ahil-
and Wili'ibi:able,,toseatryt 48 passengo: tt.- front attc.p0er --Tokyo,..,4,700
retuellibg.
,*antlaty
Commercial Restaurant
_WHERE ONLY THE BEST FOOD
OBTAINABLE 1S SERVED,
COOKED TO TASTE,
PRICED TO SUlT YOUR PURSE,
.1
HAVE YOU TRIED OUR DELICIOUS -
ICE CREAM SUNDAES?
Cliff, Elliott, Proprietor,
AtCWEIC41414141C110“1110(1144141141CteletitkIkeiteletterePitktektICICKWIIIKIEWIKAtet4411%
"OLD CUSTOMS AND OLD FRIENDSHIPS
:
HEED NOT THE FLIGHT OF TIME,"
With each passing year we realize more. fully
the meaning of this old adage, and sincerely hope
r. that in all our dealings during the year now draw-
ing toa close -that we have merited your confid-
ence and friendship,
Our Yuletide wishes are that you will have peace —
for your pathway .and friends for your fireside,
-health in abundance, and prosperity in the years to
come, . • I '
James Lockwood
FURNITURF - COACH AMBULANCE - FUNERAL SERVICE
Phone 7 or 69, Blyth
100111111110MMODit13049MD**1110/100011101141474,11117004014101,00111,01101101
FERTILIZER
A SPECIAL SAVING
ON YOUR FERTILIZER
If Taken During January
Don't Pay till -end of April 1950
CONTACT THE OFFICE AND GET YOUR
ORDER IN EARLY TO OBTAIN
THIS SAVING.
Carman Hodgins, Manager.
•
Blyth Farmers Co -Op Association
TELEPHONE 172 • BLYTH.
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH— ONT.
, 42,
INSURE NOW! , AND BE ASSURED.
Car - ,Fire - Life -.Sickness - Accident.
'1 J. H. it Elliott' ' Gordon Elliott
1,,
- ? Office Phone 104. , 4
Residence Phone, 12 or 140
7
n COURTESY AND SERVICE. • , •
7 . ,
i'
sktitkilaltliktlitWiln?tIt9lhanktdakikt)tkhtkinatAla)4400**Iint7t1DiktAktinktIllItitkit
f's-s••••te-•#-•44~4
Seed Cleaning Attention Farmers
OUR • MODERN- SEED CLEAN- -'
ING PLANT IS -AVAILAI3L1?..TO It ,you are going to:he in the market
PA RM EPS - OP - THE 'DISTRICT, for steel rooarig, we are local agents
- PLEASE . mAk.n .ARRANGE. for TISSON STEEL, manufactured by
NIENTS IN -ADVANCE ' ROIHNSON-IRWIN, of Hamilton,
IP POSSIBLE, '
GORDON FLAX) LTD.
•
:Phone- EARLE NOBLE,
114, 13lyth,
‘e`
HOLSTEIN MEN PLAN 13W1 TOUR
-14o,t-aqi Trewantha, preSidette of the
Iltircit l4oIscln Clttb, Yesttrday czn-
theeting'tif the directors of
'the clrb at Clinton, at was
decided to et:gentlea lilts tette ,10- be
Prompt .Service, We do the work.
LEONARD COOK
Phone 17/, blyth: 14-4p,
held June L The tour will,take Huron
Hoisteln melt to visit outstanding herds
hi the Brampton and Oshawa areas.
'The &rectors decided': to hold -the
cltIj'satit:$uat ladies>:nbt.at CI:utcn
April 6th..- A twilight meeting is to be
I 1 I ol 11111 1 1 1
* , ,
STEWART.:jOHNSTON
.'Xiiiseyollarkii." and .Beatty :Dealer. .
-
'See our COmplete Stoek..of PiOa_Fitt.ings, Beatty 'Az
= MasseHlarris Repairs Pump Repairs, all ,kindsi.
,»�a1erf�r ifitUerial Oil -Products*'
- trosionomminumaimargoommommommir
•
4~0MIMM•st#,e~emme..##••*, IIP".."'N't Jr•••••14~~~04,4,4*~~#~44t
CAPITATHEATR
ROXY THEATRE,
L E
1 CHESTERFIELDS AND! . . CLINTON,I GODERICH.
OCCASIONAL CHAIRS N. -ow .1AYJNG; JAN. 12-14: ---- NOW; Bobby Driscoll and Barbara
REPAIRED ROBERT SHIRLEY Hate in "TH,E WINDOW."
and YOUNG and TEMPLE -Mon., Tues., Wed., Two Features
RE-COVERED
. •
"Adventure In Baltlinore" Robert Monigomery, Van Hcplin and
— _
Tues, WeJ., January 16.18
FREE PICK,,UP AND DELIVERY Ole 6:!.5 Commetiee at 7 o'clock
Gregory Peck
For Further Information Enquire at
J. Lockwoods
Furniture Store, Blyth
Agent, S'ratfard Upbol2tering Ca
-/-#•""PCIPIP I 1St 4.9'. ird'ihrf 114^#4`
1 I 1 1 kl 1 I ii I1.
y BMW
ELECTRIC
In Stock
FOR lutiR CHOICE
RADIOS, RANGES,
WESTINGHOUSE
WASHING MACHINES,
RANGETTES,
OIL BURNERS,
HAMMER MILL5,
: ROLLERS and GRINDERS,
'Contact Your Electric Shop
!
- for Satisfaction in
A;pliances, Se:Vice, ,and Wieng,
0,111
in
"THE PARADINE CASE"
with.Anw Todd,
Th.:re, Fri, Sat., January 19,21
George Brent and Ann Blyth
"RED CANYON"
JAN, 3t JUDY GARLANIT; "IN THE
GO: D OLD_,AyMMERTI±)1E___ I
Mat, 'Saturdays and llolida-ys 2 :30 p.m.
Robert Taylor
itar-at'ng one of the world's most dar-
irk; ailyentnres into the tinko.own
Tccluficolor
. "THE SECRET LAND"
St:n Latvel and Oliver Hardy
send along their moat riotous
fea1ire-leng41; conwdy
"NOTHING OUT TROUBLE"
T
M—au-rechn"0!)-I;Yir.aFrdY
,'Fr'ed;SMcaMturueri'Y
L-ra-y-a-n-d
Rudy Wee
'FATHER WAS A FULLBACK'
COM I liumphrei Bogart
.divr POE ti
REGENT THEATRE
BEAFORTri,
NOW: Bobby Driecd1 and Barbara
Hale in 'WINDOW",
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
Adu;t Entertainment
Cary Grant, Ann Sheridan and
Randy Stuart
A blue-ribbon award winner puts 4
new and Itilarions angle to the old
matrimonial tri.
"I Was A Male War Bride"
Thuraday, Friday, Saturday
Dick Powell, Marta Torea and
Vincent Price
Feattririg the world's most colorful
figliting unit in a strange and
deadly conquest
"Rogues Regiment"
— _ _
111*
"KNOCK ON ANY POOR" ; COMING; Gregory Peck & Ann Todd
Adult Entertainment. in THE PARADINE CASE" •
.••••••••...4~~44•11
.4•40 ##,94N1o*APMANI, 114* "VW**, •••••••.#4,e -~~4,"0-I• "et*
...•••••%, "ON,
( 1 1 •
Renfrew Cream
Separatcrs and Milkers.
. Dit:c3, Plows, Manure
Spreaders.
Lime and Fertil!zer Sow -
6•3, Swing -tooth -Harrows ,
Lpd Packers,
Rubber -tired Wagons.
'Oliver Tractors,
bah wheel tractors and
- crawlers,
Plows, Discs, Spreaders,
- Mowers, Hay Loaders,
FEED CORN FOR SALE Smalley Forage Blowers
I and Hammr Mills.
We have a good supply of corn on We also have repairs for
Cracked Com at all times, Oliver-Coekshutt Tractors
the Cob: Ground Corn Meal and
Custom Corn Shelling and Grinding.
Anyone wanting alfalfa meal ground,
get ,in touch with us,
H. McCALLUM,
Phone 204, Illyttt,
Groceries
Vegetables
Fruits
Cooked Meats
STEWART'S
GROCERY
WE DELI'V'ER - PHONE 9
CARD OF' THANKS
wish to thank all the kind friends
1‘,110 remembtred tfle with beautiful
flowers, plants, and other gifts, while
I was ill in the Clinton, hospital. I al-
so wish ,to thank my nurses for their
kindness; also Dr, Oakes, Dr, Weir,
and Mrs. Nelson Patterson, Again
thanking you all, -Mrs, Jack Carter
16-1,
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to express. my sincere appre-
ciation- to all the kind people who
.tvorked, so -diligently in establishing
and conducting the publk subscription
fund on tny 'behalf, I wish also to
thank most s'neerely the organIza-
' lions trud adieus who so generously
cencributed.to the fund, and, also those
who remembered me in many different
ways while I Was hospitalized, as well
as the doctors, and nurses at the hos-
pital, This, great kindness will never
be forrgotiten, -Hatts Untcr, nahrer.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our s':rrere
(thanks to all those who scot flowers,
arcl to all who helped in any way in
kite recut death of our mother.
was very much anprectated.
-The Gi'lesgie .Familx.
arranged for June 8, probably at the
Hu -en county farm, sotttlt of Cliniion
on No, 4 Highway,
. The directors deckled to .oitt'inte. in
195.0 to sponsor the Huron' Holstein
Calf Club; ,tis an eirleouragetnetit ho.
boys to undertake the raising of pnrc-
brr calves.
The meeting was attend'ed by 1, E.
Terip. I-Iclste'n-Eriesiatt field titan
forWestern Ontario, by Gordon Ben -1
nett, agrIcitItural representative for
Huritit, .0714 by Harry .Reitt, Varna, re-
presentitive hi Huron of . the Oxeord
artificial lusemination
Ititit-
MORRITT & WRIGHT
IMPLEMENT DEALERS FOR
LOLIVER IMPLEMENTS
Telephone 4 and 93. Blyth, Ontario
••• I 'WNW
AS
FOR DEAD
ANIMALS
COWS - - • - $2.50 each
HORSES - • $2.50 each
HOGS over 250 lbs.
,
ea.- 50c per cwt.
Accordig to size and condition
Phone collectt
WINGHAM • 5613
GODERICH 936R21
INGERSOLL - 21.
William Stone Sons Ltd,
INGERSOLL, ONTARIO,
1
EUCHRE AND DANCE
Auspices of
• BLYTH L.01, NO, 963,
Blyth 'Memorial Hall, on
THURSDAY, JAN. 12th,
Music by a Good Orchestra,
Old and New Time Dancing.
Euchre from 8 to 10 p.m.
with Good Prizes.
FREE LUNCH
LYCEUM THEATRE
WINGHAM-ONTARIO. •
. Two SlyAyi. Sat, Night
Pictures suNect to change
without notice,
Two Shows Each Nigk starting At
7;15
_Chanues in time will be noted below
Saturday Matinee at 2 p.m,
ir11,49:44,4,4111,4•414,4
-1
• FridlY, Saturday, Jan. 13, 14
"CUTPOST IN ,MOROCCO"
George Raft, Akim Tamiroff
MoncliY, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 17
"THE LOVES OF CARMEN"
Ewerla'nni,-?:19
Rita Hayworth, Glenn Ford
Wane -de-, Thursday, Jan, 15, 19 -
'THE DOCTOR AND THE GIRL'
Gloria DeHaven, Charles Coburn
A . I 6
#######A to
f########+##..•e4,
Gordon Elliott , J. It 'R, Elliott
ELLIOTT
Real Estate Agency
BLYTH.
THE FOT.LOWING DWELLING
FOR SALE WITH IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION;
1 storey frame, instil brick and
metal -clad dwelling, situated oni
the
m
Jorth side of Hamilton st., Blyth.
104 acre farm, near Walton, first
lot off highway, small instil brick
house,..hydro, 4 -piece bath, hard-
wood floors, drilled well, barn 40x50,
:ement stabling; 94 acres, level,
arable land (medium clay loam).
drive shed 20x20,
150 acre farm on 6th con. Mor-
ris Twp., 2 -storey brick house, 7
rocnis; barn 40x59, cement stabling.
Lot cast -half of 34 in the third
concession of the Township of East
Wawanos11.100. acres of land, about
5 acres second=trowth bush. On
the premises is a.comfertable frame
!welling, harn on .stone wall, witlt
good stabling. Possession.
One -and -ore -half storey brick
dwelliwzr on Morris street, One 'ac-
re of land, Small stable, A good
buy, and possession as required.
A number of other properties for
' sale Particulars upon request.
11 Reid's
m POOL ROOM,
i.
SMOKER'S SUNDRIES
Tobaccos, Cigarettes, Pop
%, and Other Sundries.
A Happy New Year .
Kifii44E++444.14+0.44.44we++ .
J. C. BLACKSTONE
January,
1S-3.
FOR SALE
Baled straw, Apply to Gordon Flax
Limited, phone 114, Illyth 10-tf.
FOR SALE
13 .pigs, 6 weeks old. $8,09 each.
Apply to George Dubs, phone 27-5.
Blyth. 1 16-1p.
Piano and Organ Tuner, will be in
Blyth the first week in
Phone 119,
FOR SALE
1 Oak Dining Room Suite, cheap
for quick sale, Apply • Commercial
Restaurant, Blpth,
FOR SALE
1931 Chevrolet sedan in good con-
dition cheap for quick sale. Apply to
Lloyd Longnian, 24 Worsley St. Strat-
ford. 16-1p,
1.
FOR RENT
I 109 acre grass farm with"water and
shade, Apply, G. R. Augustine, Myth,
s 16-2
FOR SALE
Singer sewing machines, cabinet,
portable, electric; also treadle ma-
chines. liepair to all makes, Singer
Sewing Machine Centre, Goderich.
51-tf.
R. A. Farquharson, M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Hours
Daily Except Wednesday and Sunday.
2 p.m. o 4 p.m,
7 p.m, to 9 p.m.
Telephone 33 -- Blyth, Ont,
47-52p.
mdi Doherty Bros.
AUCTION SALE GARAGE.
OF HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS
At the resichnce of Mrs- Isabella
Cote, King street, Blyth, od
SATURDAY, JANUARY 21st,
at 1:30 p.m., as follows;
Dinittir-room table; 6 dining-roont
chairs; buffet; couch; 3 dressers and
Anirrors; 3 wash stands ; 3 -piece par-
lour sulte-; settee; 4 small tables; desk;
CongolentW rug, 6.0; Parlour rug, 9x12;
fern stand; book case; 2 rocicIng
chairs; Bisset sweeper; 6 kitchen
chairs; 2 iron beds midi springs; wood -
011 bed and springs; 2 feather mat -
'tresses; 3 mattresses; 3 toilet sets;
kitchen range; glass cupboard; kitchen
%table; lawn mower; 2 tool chests;
wheel barrow; clock ,(8 (Lay); large
Admission, 50 Cents. bureau; 2 electric plates; electric ir-
on; flour bin; ash sifter; cross -cut
,saw; 2 large barrels': step ladder ; long
EVERYBODY WELCOME, ladder; clothes wringer; quilts; cush-
ions; mats; pillows; dishes ; garden
itools: and many other articles too
numerous to mention.
TERMS CASTI.
Mrs. Isabella Cole, Proprietress%
Msorritt, Auctioneer, 16-2,
God Save The King,
• FOR SALE
Victor safe (small size); writing cle.sk
and china cabinet cOmbitted; 3 med-
ium-sized tables; hall rack with nth-,
tror ;• cliesterfidld suite; • Wilton rug,
6112' by 8112'; large Tapestry -covered
;easy chair; several table lamps with
!shades; mantle clock, Apply to Olive
McGill, phone 52, Blyth. • 16-1.
The Voice Of Tentperance
LTON.
Mr, and Mrs. Laivrerice Cum'
and son JameS, \Varwiek, with
here.
•
1 Robert Vettttg is spendirer
weells Ids son, Ivan, of Por
ton, 'Mich.
Mrs. G?o-ge McArthur 1sa pat'ent
. in ScOtt Memorial' Hospital, Seaforth.
AUCTION SALE
0( 30 Young -Cows
At Lot 31, Concession .6, Goderich
township, 1 nite south of Porter's 11111,
TUESDAY, JANUARY 17th,
at 1:30 p.m., cotts'istittg of the following
Acetylene and Electric
Welding A Specialty.
Agents For International -
Harvester Parts & Supplies
White Rose Gas and Oil
Car Painting and Repairing.
A. L. COLE
R.O.
OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN
Goderieh, Ontario • Telephona %.1
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted,
With 25 Years Experience
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTH, ONT.
Officers
President; Chris Leonhardt;
Vks-
Pi esident, Hugh, Alexander; Secretary
Treasurer, and Manager, Id, A. Reid,
Seaforth,
Directors
Robert Archibald, Seaforth; Prank
McGregor, Clinton; Alex. Broadfoot,
ISeaforth Chris. LeonRardt, Borne
holm; .E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; John
Between 1931 and 1941 the business 20 Dunhams and Herefords; balance L. Malone, Seaforth; John H. McEw-
Myth; Hugh Alexander; Walton;
of the retail stores' of Kincardine in- I Holsteins and Jerseys; 2. freshened, ; ingo
some iprhigers, balance due in Feb- S. H. Whitmore, Seaforth; Harey
creased bp 26.04 percent. iKittear,:iine
Irtutry attd ",\Iadelt. Fuller, RR, 2, Goderich.
IS a dry- t ------------------ period
ke
Walkerton increased by 2.05 percent. 1t,y, 1.0. tested, and are eligible to en- t
tIlfeKercher, Dublitt;Prtietet
nings t
,
-- alkerton is a wet town Ti.e liquor :tor tesled Iterd area. Brodhagen; Geo. A. Watt, Blyth; Set,
W
riends TE
The business of the retail stores ok These cattle are young, of good mudJohn EPeppertit:afieldR. P
store drains off the business that in a
(fry town would go to hardware stores
and gioeery stores. The Huron Tem-
perance Feder %thin eongratulatel tile
merchant§ of 14ttron becatn:e they do
not ',met to compete wtth liquor
few
t Hu-
• , „
wyn Baker, Brussels.
A. E. Townshend & Son, Props. • Parties desirous to effect insurance
Edward AV. Elliott, Auctioneer. or trans
K. W. Colgtrhoun, Clerk. 16-1. , Prom*
— I
ts Your Subscription Paid?
act other business, will • be
aPended to by applications
to any of the above named officers
addressed tt their respective post 06
fke 1.
mm111.11Mi. I I PI II
Asik your friends
to afternoon tea
"SALARA:
TEA
AN NE 141IRST
-?o FainL4i
Catuoelot---
11111 I •111
"Dear Alitile Hirst: My problem
is different. I'm 20 years old, and I
am interested in marrying. I make
friends easily,
but when I ask
girls•for a (late
they begin mak-
ing excuses.
"Pm six feet
tall, with blue
eyes, wavy black
hair, and (not
o 111 plimenting
myself) older
people say I'm nice -looking. I have
no bad habits.I have a fairly good
job. I've a good personaliy and love
to make friends, and most of all,
love to buy, nice furnishings for my
home,
'Of course there are always some
girls waiting for the question. But
1 ant very particular about the girls
I choose to go out with. I want to
ge married, not waste my time On
00111e silly girl.
Soni et hing really spectacular!
New new casual has a wide wide
eollar, and deep wing -up cuffs! The
aldrt is a beauty, too, with a grace-
ful flare, and a wide band!
Pattern 4655 cotnes in sizes 12,
14. 16, 18, 20, Size 16 takes 4,1/4 yards
39-inclt fabric.
This pattern, easy to use, simple
to sew, is tested Inc fit. 1 las com-
plete illustrated instructions. -
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
(25c) in coins (stamps cannot, be
accepted} for this pattern. Print
plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER to 13ox 1, 123
Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
Ar ttrts
1, Mockery
4. Hat rim
le. pethirin
12. utoPlan
13. Fortification
11. Celine strokes
16. Small and
weak
H. Fragments
18. Ambassador
20. enn of Seth
21. Wild sheen
23 r,,,x.m tribes-
man
24. Droops
26. Ohl card
fT AO
24 Flowers
18. thorii
pher
SO. Northwestern
State
82, Angel
84. Plural ending
f.
j4dat n
38. Spire onto-
mente
40. Purpose
41. Reverse curve
42. Blemish
48. Temper
45. Tr
46. Sleigh
47. Pheasant
brood
10.1!;(”dasy
58, High regard
53. Past
54:',1ewel
85. Tidal wave
DOWN
.Proper
I, Ohio college
town
3. Put back
4. Container
6. English letter
B. Crup:
1. Clamor
(Scot.)
R. s
s.monouo
"What's y'ou answer?
BLUE EY ES."
* * *
CI{ ECK UP
* 1 R111 SW), tltat I cannot give
* personal. interviews any more, or
* it Might be easy to answer your
* problem.
* Something is wrong with your
* approach to the girls you want to
* date. It obviously is not your ap-
* pearance-unless you/ are one of
* these modern youngsters who
* think it smart to forget garters,
* leave their shirt -collars open, and
* go without ties. Or whose clothes,
* however smart, are not properly
* pressed, nor shoes shined to a
* high polisk-Or whose skin, hair
* and hands show neglect.
• Where can the trouble lie?
* Are you careless in your speech?
* Think it's sophisticated to swear
• now and then? (Nice girls will
* slum you.) Do you swagger about
* a bit? With all these- physical and
* economic advantages, that would
* be a temptation.
* Are you the kind of lad whom
* girls would be proud to introduce
* to their parents?.
* Do you boast about who you
* are, or your job?
* Do you love to talk abont 3,0tir-
* self?
* Do you air your opinions tut-
* asked': -
* Are yon a good dancer?
* Do you ask for date as a favor,
* or make the girls feel you think
* you are God's gift to women?
* Are you .popular - .*With other
* boys, or do --;you feel yourself
* superior and assume an arrogant
* manner? (Why don't you ask one
* of the boys where he thinks you
* fail with the girls?)
* Check each of these questions.
* If you are honpst with yourself,
* you may find the answer..
▪ Remember that girls like to be
* deferred to.° They expect good
* matmers in a young Mall. They
* like to be consulted as to places
*Tim' want to go. They enjoy
* compliments, but they expect
* them to be sincere. Petting on
* short acquaintance offends them;
* kisses are precious and saved for
* tried and true friends,
* 1 take it for granted that you
* attend church. That you are not
* a "wolf." That you don't try to
* pick up strange girls. And that
• you show in everything you say
* and do, that you think girls are
* worth all your thought and effort
* to please them.
* Ponder on these facts,.and con-
* duct yourself accordingly. I think
* you will not be lonely long,
One tvarning: Don't rush into
* marriage, Few young men marry
* their first sweetheart, Date a girl
* for months or a year or so before
* you propose; it takes a long while
* to know a young wOillati well
* enough to be sure she is for you.
* • •
We all want to be popular. If we
analyze our faults and correct them,
there's no reason to fail. .. ..Anne
Hirst has dozens of ideas that will
help. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St., New Toronto, Ont.
10. rfuge prehlet-
toile anlinals
II. Indiana
14. Archbishop of
canterbury
90. (1reen film on
copper
19. Lively dances'
20. Believe
21. Foot covering
22. Boisterous
sport
24, Plan
27. Paining
29. Arabian
garment.
11 Foot move-
ment
33. S4ag0rug
36. 14Ind of coal
39. Splendor
42. European
native
48. Turkey bus-
zard
44. Small wild
05
46. Young dog
40. June hug
49. Before
61, For
12. Thai Illafl
)1
-Answer elsewhere on this page.
• Same Boy! Did You Help Save Him? -The horribly starved
European youngster at left above is a living demonstration of
what outside aid means to %%Par's innocent victims, The chubby,
bright -faced child at right is the same boy five months after
he was given special care by an agency of the United Nations
International 'Children's Emergency Fund, At first, body-
building fluids were injected directly into his bloodstream:
later he Was put on a carefully -controlled protein and calcium
diet. Almost 6,000,000 such children have been helped by the
UNICEF, but there are still millions who need aid.
HRONICLES
liciinqiFeFc/Tei
wen, by. the tiiiie this gets into
print Christmas and New Year's
will be -1 hope -just another happy
memory, added to those which have
gone before. And, until 1 get myself
organzied so that I can personally
acknowledge the lettet's and cards
which came to me through the kind
thought of some of the readers of
this column, will you please accept
my sincere appreciation for your
good wishes. When each of you has
your own circle of friends to re-
member I do appreciate your kind
thought in thinking of me al all. It
certainly gives me a nice v.'arin
feeling to know that we have reach-
ed this friendly footing.,
Have you got all those lovely
greeting cards_ gathered up ready
to put away --or have you.another
use for them? Perhaps you do as I
do -take time out after the rush and
bustle of the festive season to look
them over once again and really
enjoy them. It seems to me some
folk get far more out o( greeting
cards than others. For instance, one
elderly lady to whom I always send
a card, studies every detail in every
card she gets -so I naturally choose
a card for her very carefully. After-
wards 1 always get a "Thank )'ou"
note, giving me her interpretation of
the design and the greeting, She is
a person with time on her hands
and 1 imagine her Christmas cards
are a real joy to her for several
weeks every year.
.Did you know that the very fit'st
Christmas card was produced as•far
hack as 1846? 11 appeays that a cer-
tain Englishman by the name of
Henry Cole (later, he was knighted)
wattled some original way to cott-
vey greetings to his many friends,
so he commissioned an artist friend
by the name of Horsley to design
a special card for him, It was then
lithographed and printed, and then
coloured by hand. This first order
for Christmas cards was for a
thousand cards! First of all people
thought it was a crazy notion but
gradually the idea "caught on" and
soon developed into good business
for some people, as, of course, the
cards were very expensive. How-
ever, greeting cards soon became
less elaborate and more popular as
time went 011, although, as you may
have noticed, fashions change, even
in cards. In the Victorian, era cards
were vcrY ornate, even to silk fring-
es and ribbons. Then came the
"frosted". cards -the frost effect be.
ing produced by crushed glass -re-
member Brent? Froni England the
idea of sending greeting cards
spread to the European continent
but by that time the quality of the
cards had deteriorated- considerably, \
In 1874 a Boston manufacturing
company started the Christmas card
industry itt the U.S.A.-brining out
cards with a high artistic quality
.but with scenes that often had noth-
Ing to do with Christmas. However,
soon after the .iurn of the century,
Christmas cards became really
Christmassy - with allow • scenes,
Nativity pietures and holt)'
evergreen designs. It is also to the,
U.S.A. that we have to say thank
you for picturing the chem."y poin.
settia as typical of the Yuletidei
season. Another American innova..
tion was the matching' envelope fot.
each card, which is just about thi
handiest thing that ever was .
with that you will agree. if you
,have ever had the experience of toty-'
ito cards and then hunting etivci- r
oiss to match .their Asa, u 1 re -
0
member we had to do 1101 80 very.
many years ago,
Attother thing which probably did
a lot to popularize the exchange of
greeting cards -at least, in the Old
Country -was the adoption of the
Penny l'ost. in Great Britain,..which
first came into force on the birth,
day of the Prince of Peace in 1898,
Sending Christmas cards must have
been an expUsive business previous
to that date. •
So there you are, friends, -that,
briefly, is the story of the origin of
the Christmas greeting card, And
1. ant sure if you think of it when
You are Putting away your cards,
you tvill be grateful to Sir Henry
Cole, for inventing, such a good way
of speeding our messages of affec-
tion and goodwill from one to an-
other,
Maybe someone had a btain-wave
in regard to calendars -some of the
calendars are so pretty, I also like
the appearance of this year's calen-
dars for another reason, 1950 looks
so much better than 10491 It is not
only the beginning of a new year,
it is also the closing year of a half
century that has brought us two
world wars and, let us hope, will
eventually bring about the end of
unrest that followed in their wake.
The tery figures "1950" have a
finished look if you know what I
mean, whereas 1949 looks odd and
ragged, or maybe like a blind road
that leads nowhere. I never -did like
a group of figures that was tin
-
divisible by a digit., . maybe just
a hangover front the days when I
had trouble with at.ithmetic.,
Holy Year
In /1300 A.D, the Church was in
difficult straits, The temporal power
of the Pope was threatened by local
rulers. There was a struggle with
the King of France over taxation of
clerics. It' that year Pope Boniface
VI t proclaimed the first Holy
Year of Jubilee, and pilgrims flock-
ed to Rome for prayer and indul-
gences, Holy Years, Boniface said,
were to be held every 100 years;
later Popesitshortened the interval,
until in 1470 Paul 11 set it at twenty-
five years,
iitir
ltteRonte, on the morning of De-
cel2411i, the bells of 500 chtu'elt-
es pealed together, Pope Pius VII,
befot.e an audience of Vatican offi-
cials and distinguished guests, tap.
ped three times on the Holy Door
of St. Peter's Basilica, The Holy
Year of 1950 -the twenty -fifth -was
officially begun.
1,11e impact of the year is to be
primarily ,spiritual -a year of re-
dedication ancisti•engthening for the
Church. But it has political over-
tones, born of the political struggle
be communism and 'Roman
Catholicism, In an address on the
Holy Year, Pope Pius called for a
"return" to the Church of Rome to
oppose "the united front of militant
atheisin.".The Jubilee will also show
important economic results. Close
to a million pilgrinis are expected
in the Holy City -many of whom
will spend dollars,
Frogmen
A new way of making motion pie -
tures of submerged wreaks, subma-
rines, parts of shipsit fish and other
forms of marine life has been dove!.
oped by the British Admiralty.
"Progmen," as they are called, wear
self-contained breathink apparatus
and weblike robber shoot, need in
the war, and swim like fish without
stirring up ntud, so thkt fielt oan be
stalked,with cameras, The Frogmen
have taken good moving pictures by
daylight or artificial light deep In
reasonably clear waters.
They Argue Over
Clotted Cream
There's an age-old argument be
-
tweet' Devon and 'Cornwall as to
which of the two counties first pro-
duced the delicacy known as clotted
Cream,
Devonshire claims the honour, but
Cornwall denies it, alleging that
Devoniani smuggled the recipe ac-
ross the River Tamar from Corn-
wall in the first place.
Even if this is true Cornwall's
claim is not altogether substantiated,
for CotItishmen were taught the
secrets of making scalded cream by
. the • old'merchant adventurers of
West Africa who jotn.neyed froin
Carthage to buy Cornish titt long
before the Romans came to Britain,
To -day the _method of making it
are essentially the satne as those that
have been used by the peasants of
North Africa for the past two thous.
and years.
In the Shallow Pan system itn-
mediately the milk has been re-
moved from the cowshed, and while
it is still wariu, it is strained and
left undisturbed in a cool place un-
til the cream has risen -for eight to
twelve hours according to the rich-
..ness of the cream and the tline of
the year. •
• The milk is then scalded. SiMplest
method of doing this is by using two
pans of different sizes; The smaller
• pan containing the. cream Is stood In
the larger one and surrounded by
water.
- The water is heated to a tempera.
ture of 180-190 degrees F. In winter,
or .185-195 in summer. This takes
about 35-50 minutes, the length of
the scald being stiffielent to cause
the cream to break away slightly
from the sides of the pan.
11 insufficient time is allowed for
the scalding the cream does not ac-
quire the characteristic "Devonshire"
flavour or show tlie desired crinkled
appearance.
When the correct temperature her
been reached, ,the pan la' left 'tan&
Ing in the hot water for 15-20 tnin-
utes before being taken to the dairy
to cool. (
The tints; during which the .pato
should stand' before 'the arum 1s
skimmed off varies lvith the season
- of the yeer. In summer, ekimming
takes place the ntorning after scald.
Ing, while In winter .the pan citt
atand for as long as 315 hours.
The result Is a delicacywhich,
added to West Country strawberries,
was world-famous before the we..
To visit DevonorCornwall without
regaling. moult with_ "Isahings". of
delicions !oddest cream wee un-
_
tipSide JOIA011 t� preveol peeking,'
9 2 V d 0111
No Haa-Been - Admirers of
Rosemary La Planche, who
was elected Miss America in
1941, are of the 9pinion that she
has lost none of her charms
since then and could- Still win
anybody's beauty contest at the
age of 36. Standing at poolside
itt '..tts Vegas, Rosemary flashei
het winningest
9
iv I
a
8 3
9
9V
N
7
3
11
3
7
3
7
fr
9
9
1
3
9
d3
3 0
7
3
0
H
3 0
.L'
NMI/ I
By The Rev, R. Barclay Warren
FELLOWSHIP IN THE
EARLY CHURCH
Acts 2;42-47; 4:31-35
Golden Text; "And the multitude
of them that believed were of one
heart and of one soul; neither said
any of them that ought of the
things which he possessed was hi.s
own; but they had all thipgs cont
mon." Acts 4:32.
No, it wasn't Communism; i.e., it
wasn't the brand that is in vogue
in Eastern Europe. It differed itt
several important respects. These
people were believers. They had
turned from sin and believed on the
Lord Jesus Christ as their Lord and
Saviour, They worshipped Hint.
Moreover, there was no cotE;sca-
tion in this instance, All giving to
the common cause was purely vol-
untary, Peter' said to Ananias,
"\Vliiles it remained,- was It not
thine own? And after it was sold,
was it not in thine own power?"
Acts 5:4. Ananias' and Sapphint
died, not at 111e hands of the Christ-
ians, but at the hand of God. Ile
was angry because they acted as
'hypocrites, lying' and saying that
they were giving all when they
were withholding a part. They were
the first ton record to mar the bean'
tiful fellowship existing among the
believers who had received the
Holy Spirit, sent bv the Father,
This sacrificial giving was an in-.
tense expression of the Warm fel-
lowship of the early Christians.
Here was Divinelove one for au.
other, But it is important to note
that there is no command in Scrip-
ture that this order'should be.dupli.-
cated today. Believers are to care
for one another and indeed to du
good works in behalf of all; to
feed the hungry and clothe the
naked. But it is not evil to pos-
sess property.
The disposing of property alt
' turned out for the best. A great
persecution fell upon the disciples
after the death of Stephen and they
were scattered abroad. Their lands
had been sold attd the money turneil,
into good use. .The temptation to
deny their Lord was lessened for
they had already madf. the break.
Spiritual -interests were tuore im-
portant than ntaterial. It should be
that way with us all.
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE--
WIthout Calomel -And Jim* Out ell
Bed in tie Morning Ratio' to Go
Ths liver should pour odt about 2 plate of
bile Moe into your dilative trial every day;
It this Weis not Bowing freely, yotourmfat maaol y
kaet, Then mni bloats up your s
diggst. It may just doom, in the tin
set constipated, You (eel sour, sunk and tbs
frorld look. punk,
It tekes Moos mod, gentle Cart,'. lettla
User rille to net *sae 2 plots of ea. Bo*
sotitielvisith
freely to ma youirel "up nadabili
Abi go Ay
-Andtha
-111.1111 If ,
Thereiti oni thing r9t thi headache
- the Jinni:Wet aohss and palm
Shat often- stoirtiPartyrit.,sold .1
IllIffANTINII,1144112).24211411britIga nay ' -
toot toilet front'pain and -the retie
Is prolonge4L.' _
So get INOWANTIN2 and get quick -
comfort, IfleTANTINII It tottipoundeil
Ms 'a doctor's prescription of three
prottsn medical Ingtedients; You Cad
&pint' on Ito fait .ectioif In setting*
relief from every day tithes &lid 114611,
hisdachlwrheunistier"-Pain, for nen.
ritte or nentsigic-
_
• est Insisstins lodsy
and slivers -.
- kelp II handy_
tri $11101-iiii
I 2-tablef Ito 2S
Economic'aia13-Tablpt
- -
- Inge/
...
ve.
.
-
28
.•.....
a
-:?..,0:61
x.',.::;,.
:::,:,;:,
a . 27
SO
3
'..*
IIIII::•:1 3
•:::•:-:-
'c*:'..:4•:::::....
:::::;:i::41•M
; .e.,•38
39
1111:2 '
V
ii.'ir. 43
44,y
.
42
4EIf4.1.
se
;:::::::;"
50
NI
N.
:
2
F.t4
4.ke
54
55.
-Answer elsewhere on this page.
• Same Boy! Did You Help Save Him? -The horribly starved
European youngster at left above is a living demonstration of
what outside aid means to %%Par's innocent victims, The chubby,
bright -faced child at right is the same boy five months after
he was given special care by an agency of the United Nations
International 'Children's Emergency Fund, At first, body-
building fluids were injected directly into his bloodstream:
later he Was put on a carefully -controlled protein and calcium
diet. Almost 6,000,000 such children have been helped by the
UNICEF, but there are still millions who need aid.
HRONICLES
liciinqiFeFc/Tei
wen, by. the tiiiie this gets into
print Christmas and New Year's
will be -1 hope -just another happy
memory, added to those which have
gone before. And, until 1 get myself
organzied so that I can personally
acknowledge the lettet's and cards
which came to me through the kind
thought of some of the readers of
this column, will you please accept
my sincere appreciation for your
good wishes. When each of you has
your own circle of friends to re-
member I do appreciate your kind
thought in thinking of me al all. It
certainly gives me a nice v.'arin
feeling to know that we have reach-
ed this friendly footing.,
Have you got all those lovely
greeting cards_ gathered up ready
to put away --or have you.another
use for them? Perhaps you do as I
do -take time out after the rush and
bustle of the festive season to look
them over once again and really
enjoy them. It seems to me some
folk get far more out o( greeting
cards than others. For instance, one
elderly lady to whom I always send
a card, studies every detail in every
card she gets -so I naturally choose
a card for her very carefully. After-
wards 1 always get a "Thank )'ou"
note, giving me her interpretation of
the design and the greeting, She is
a person with time on her hands
and 1 imagine her Christmas cards
are a real joy to her for several
weeks every year.
.Did you know that the very fit'st
Christmas card was produced as•far
hack as 1846? 11 appeays that a cer-
tain Englishman by the name of
Henry Cole (later, he was knighted)
wattled some original way to cott-
vey greetings to his many friends,
so he commissioned an artist friend
by the name of Horsley to design
a special card for him, It was then
lithographed and printed, and then
coloured by hand. This first order
for Christmas cards was for a
thousand cards! First of all people
thought it was a crazy notion but
gradually the idea "caught on" and
soon developed into good business
for some people, as, of course, the
cards were very expensive. How-
ever, greeting cards soon became
less elaborate and more popular as
time went 011, although, as you may
have noticed, fashions change, even
in cards. In the Victorian, era cards
were vcrY ornate, even to silk fring-
es and ribbons. Then came the
"frosted". cards -the frost effect be.
ing produced by crushed glass -re-
member Brent? Froni England the
idea of sending greeting cards
spread to the European continent
but by that time the quality of the
cards had deteriorated- considerably, \
In 1874 a Boston manufacturing
company started the Christmas card
industry itt the U.S.A.-brining out
cards with a high artistic quality
.but with scenes that often had noth-
Ing to do with Christmas. However,
soon after the .iurn of the century,
Christmas cards became really
Christmassy - with allow • scenes,
Nativity pietures and holt)'
evergreen designs. It is also to the,
U.S.A. that we have to say thank
you for picturing the chem."y poin.
settia as typical of the Yuletidei
season. Another American innova..
tion was the matching' envelope fot.
each card, which is just about thi
handiest thing that ever was .
with that you will agree. if you
,have ever had the experience of toty-'
ito cards and then hunting etivci- r
oiss to match .their Asa, u 1 re -
0
member we had to do 1101 80 very.
many years ago,
Attother thing which probably did
a lot to popularize the exchange of
greeting cards -at least, in the Old
Country -was the adoption of the
Penny l'ost. in Great Britain,..which
first came into force on the birth,
day of the Prince of Peace in 1898,
Sending Christmas cards must have
been an expUsive business previous
to that date. •
So there you are, friends, -that,
briefly, is the story of the origin of
the Christmas greeting card, And
1. ant sure if you think of it when
You are Putting away your cards,
you tvill be grateful to Sir Henry
Cole, for inventing, such a good way
of speeding our messages of affec-
tion and goodwill from one to an-
other,
Maybe someone had a btain-wave
in regard to calendars -some of the
calendars are so pretty, I also like
the appearance of this year's calen-
dars for another reason, 1950 looks
so much better than 10491 It is not
only the beginning of a new year,
it is also the closing year of a half
century that has brought us two
world wars and, let us hope, will
eventually bring about the end of
unrest that followed in their wake.
The tery figures "1950" have a
finished look if you know what I
mean, whereas 1949 looks odd and
ragged, or maybe like a blind road
that leads nowhere. I never -did like
a group of figures that was tin
-
divisible by a digit., . maybe just
a hangover front the days when I
had trouble with at.ithmetic.,
Holy Year
In /1300 A.D, the Church was in
difficult straits, The temporal power
of the Pope was threatened by local
rulers. There was a struggle with
the King of France over taxation of
clerics. It' that year Pope Boniface
VI t proclaimed the first Holy
Year of Jubilee, and pilgrims flock-
ed to Rome for prayer and indul-
gences, Holy Years, Boniface said,
were to be held every 100 years;
later Popesitshortened the interval,
until in 1470 Paul 11 set it at twenty-
five years,
iitir
ltteRonte, on the morning of De-
cel2411i, the bells of 500 chtu'elt-
es pealed together, Pope Pius VII,
befot.e an audience of Vatican offi-
cials and distinguished guests, tap.
ped three times on the Holy Door
of St. Peter's Basilica, The Holy
Year of 1950 -the twenty -fifth -was
officially begun.
1,11e impact of the year is to be
primarily ,spiritual -a year of re-
dedication ancisti•engthening for the
Church. But it has political over-
tones, born of the political struggle
be communism and 'Roman
Catholicism, In an address on the
Holy Year, Pope Pius called for a
"return" to the Church of Rome to
oppose "the united front of militant
atheisin.".The Jubilee will also show
important economic results. Close
to a million pilgrinis are expected
in the Holy City -many of whom
will spend dollars,
Frogmen
A new way of making motion pie -
tures of submerged wreaks, subma-
rines, parts of shipsit fish and other
forms of marine life has been dove!.
oped by the British Admiralty.
"Progmen," as they are called, wear
self-contained breathink apparatus
and weblike robber shoot, need in
the war, and swim like fish without
stirring up ntud, so thkt fielt oan be
stalked,with cameras, The Frogmen
have taken good moving pictures by
daylight or artificial light deep In
reasonably clear waters.
They Argue Over
Clotted Cream
There's an age-old argument be
-
tweet' Devon and 'Cornwall as to
which of the two counties first pro-
duced the delicacy known as clotted
Cream,
Devonshire claims the honour, but
Cornwall denies it, alleging that
Devoniani smuggled the recipe ac-
ross the River Tamar from Corn-
wall in the first place.
Even if this is true Cornwall's
claim is not altogether substantiated,
for CotItishmen were taught the
secrets of making scalded cream by
. the • old'merchant adventurers of
West Africa who jotn.neyed froin
Carthage to buy Cornish titt long
before the Romans came to Britain,
To -day the _method of making it
are essentially the satne as those that
have been used by the peasants of
North Africa for the past two thous.
and years.
In the Shallow Pan system itn-
mediately the milk has been re-
moved from the cowshed, and while
it is still wariu, it is strained and
left undisturbed in a cool place un-
til the cream has risen -for eight to
twelve hours according to the rich-
..ness of the cream and the tline of
the year. •
• The milk is then scalded. SiMplest
method of doing this is by using two
pans of different sizes; The smaller
• pan containing the. cream Is stood In
the larger one and surrounded by
water.
- The water is heated to a tempera.
ture of 180-190 degrees F. In winter,
or .185-195 in summer. This takes
about 35-50 minutes, the length of
the scald being stiffielent to cause
the cream to break away slightly
from the sides of the pan.
11 insufficient time is allowed for
the scalding the cream does not ac-
quire the characteristic "Devonshire"
flavour or show tlie desired crinkled
appearance.
When the correct temperature her
been reached, ,the pan la' left 'tan&
Ing in the hot water for 15-20 tnin-
utes before being taken to the dairy
to cool. (
The tints; during which the .pato
should stand' before 'the arum 1s
skimmed off varies lvith the season
- of the yeer. In summer, ekimming
takes place the ntorning after scald.
Ing, while In winter .the pan citt
atand for as long as 315 hours.
The result Is a delicacywhich,
added to West Country strawberries,
was world-famous before the we..
To visit DevonorCornwall without
regaling. moult with_ "Isahings". of
delicions !oddest cream wee un-
_
tipSide JOIA011 t� preveol peeking,'
9 2 V d 0111
No Haa-Been - Admirers of
Rosemary La Planche, who
was elected Miss America in
1941, are of the 9pinion that she
has lost none of her charms
since then and could- Still win
anybody's beauty contest at the
age of 36. Standing at poolside
itt '..tts Vegas, Rosemary flashei
het winningest
9
iv I
a
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9
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7
3
11
3
7
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.L'
NMI/ I
By The Rev, R. Barclay Warren
FELLOWSHIP IN THE
EARLY CHURCH
Acts 2;42-47; 4:31-35
Golden Text; "And the multitude
of them that believed were of one
heart and of one soul; neither said
any of them that ought of the
things which he possessed was hi.s
own; but they had all thipgs cont
mon." Acts 4:32.
No, it wasn't Communism; i.e., it
wasn't the brand that is in vogue
in Eastern Europe. It differed itt
several important respects. These
people were believers. They had
turned from sin and believed on the
Lord Jesus Christ as their Lord and
Saviour, They worshipped Hint.
Moreover, there was no cotE;sca-
tion in this instance, All giving to
the common cause was purely vol-
untary, Peter' said to Ananias,
"\Vliiles it remained,- was It not
thine own? And after it was sold,
was it not in thine own power?"
Acts 5:4. Ananias' and Sapphint
died, not at 111e hands of the Christ-
ians, but at the hand of God. Ile
was angry because they acted as
'hypocrites, lying' and saying that
they were giving all when they
were withholding a part. They were
the first ton record to mar the bean'
tiful fellowship existing among the
believers who had received the
Holy Spirit, sent bv the Father,
This sacrificial giving was an in-.
tense expression of the Warm fel-
lowship of the early Christians.
Here was Divinelove one for au.
other, But it is important to note
that there is no command in Scrip-
ture that this order'should be.dupli.-
cated today. Believers are to care
for one another and indeed to du
good works in behalf of all; to
feed the hungry and clothe the
naked. But it is not evil to pos-
sess property.
The disposing of property alt
' turned out for the best. A great
persecution fell upon the disciples
after the death of Stephen and they
were scattered abroad. Their lands
had been sold attd the money turneil,
into good use. .The temptation to
deny their Lord was lessened for
they had already madf. the break.
Spiritual -interests were tuore im-
portant than ntaterial. It should be
that way with us all.
WAKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE--
WIthout Calomel -And Jim* Out ell
Bed in tie Morning Ratio' to Go
Ths liver should pour odt about 2 plate of
bile Moe into your dilative trial every day;
It this Weis not Bowing freely, yotourmfat maaol y
kaet, Then mni bloats up your s
diggst. It may just doom, in the tin
set constipated, You (eel sour, sunk and tbs
frorld look. punk,
It tekes Moos mod, gentle Cart,'. lettla
User rille to net *sae 2 plots of ea. Bo*
sotitielvisith
freely to ma youirel "up nadabili
Abi go Ay
-Andtha
-111.1111 If ,
Thereiti oni thing r9t thi headache
- the Jinni:Wet aohss and palm
Shat often- stoirtiPartyrit.,sold .1
IllIffANTINII,1144112).24211411britIga nay ' -
toot toilet front'pain and -the retie
Is prolonge4L.' _
So get INOWANTIN2 and get quick -
comfort, IfleTANTINII It tottipoundeil
Ms 'a doctor's prescription of three
prottsn medical Ingtedients; You Cad
&pint' on Ito fait .ectioif In setting*
relief from every day tithes &lid 114611,
hisdachlwrheunistier"-Pain, for nen.
ritte or nentsigic-
_
• est Insisstins lodsy
and slivers -.
- kelp II handy_
tri $11101-iiii
I 2-tablef Ito 2S
Economic'aia13-Tablpt
- -
- Inge/
...
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lee
Q.11 it proper for a girl to walk
aJong the 1/4 street smoking?. '
A. This is 'still frowned upon by
good society, although what the dif-
ference is between smoking on the
street and in any other public place
is hard to figure, However, to be in
perfectly good taste, it is better for
the girl to refrain , from smoking
while on the street.
*
Q. What is the proper way to ask
or person over the telephone?
A. The proper manner is to ask,
'May I speak to Helen, please?"
And when the person replies with,
"Just a Moment, please," or "I'll call
,ber," don't forget to add "thank
you."
Q. Should a man who is signing
A hotel register use the'prefix "Mr?"
A. No; he should just sign "j, L.
Porter, Cleveland, Ohio."
4 *
(..;0, In it considered improper to
adea postscript to a social letter?
A, There is nothing improper
abont it, but it is far better to in-
clude everything in the body of the
letter, thus indicating more thought
and less haste in its composition,
*
Q. Should a ,girl light a man's
cigarette for him?
A. If she has just lighted her own
and the match is still burning, it is
all right, Otherwise, he shottld al-
ways light hers,,,
*
Q. What should one write on a
eard enclosed with flowers sent to
a funeral?.
A. "With Sympathy," or, "With
deepest sympathy" is sufficient.
* * *
Q., Is it proper for a divorcee to
wear the engagement and wedding
zings of her first husband, after she
has become engaged again?
A. The wedding ring should be
discarded, of course. The engage.
orient ring may still be worn, on
the right hand, if the new fiance
does not object,
, * * *
Q. Is it always proper to smoke
bi another person's home?
A, Not always. It is 'still &mid -
tired bad manners to light a cigar-
ette, cigar, or pipe in the home of
a stranger when no one else is
smoking—and especially at the table
# there is no prollsion made for
smoking.
0i Course, Course, It's the Lord's Will' Betty Lou Marbury, cot
ageous 10 -year-old farm girl who asked the »ation to pray to
help make her well, underwent surgery in a hospital for re-
moval of her diseased right hand, Said Betty Lou when told
that amputation was necessary, "Of course it's the Lord's will,
I'm sure the operation will help Inc get well,"
Q. Does the receiving of a wed-
ding announcement require a gift?
A. No; nar does it require any
civility beyond sending a like an-
nouncement if a marriage takes
place in your own family.
* •
Q. If you have sent a gift to
someone and have received no ac-
knowledgement after a reasonable
time, would it be- all right to ask
this person if he received it?
A. Yes, you are pertectly justi-
fied in asking, as the gift may have
gone astray, And if th't person real-
ly did receive it, maybe your ques-
tion will remind him of his extreme
'rudeness,
.1 A
TABLE T
tame dam Andrcws.
ak, ,
kettiv1P-7,214 k
, - • ,
Whenever I lain across 'a new-
.
looking recipe which Calls for ap-,
pies, 1 first try it out and then—if
It suits my folks—pass it along in
the ,hope it will do the same for
yours. (After all, we Canadians
grpw the best apples in the world,
lillagi--..and-*V shouldn't we use them in -
every Manner possible?)
So here's a fine recipe for
APPLE CAKE WITH
MERINGUE
Apple Cake With Meringue
Cream together
lc. butter
lc, sugar -
Mix With
3 egg yolks
Stir in
1 tbIsp.• grated lemon rind
Sift together
2 c. sifted flour
.2 tsp.- baking powder
1/4 tsp. 'salt
.Atld dry ingredients to first mixture.
'Add
1. C. 'dry crumbs'
Blend with pastry blender, knives, ,
oefinger tips, until the titixtore re-
sembles $6rn meal. • ' ,
Divide- dough' into two , part's.
Press half stitoothly over bottom of
hi -inch ,baking pan, Cover with:
Apple Filling
Peel, core; glice
- 4 large 'apples'
$pread apples over pastry layer
Sprinkle with
c. sugar
1 ,tbIsp, cinnattion
Y4 • e!, chOpped. pecan!,
34 c. melted atter
Cdvet with remaining pastry, r
Bake in 380 deg oven 45
Top With tneritigue 'Made front
" three .egg whites !eftfrom,pastry,
Drown in hot oven (425. deg) 4)4
Militia Serves ft. .
* *
You'll- have to look elsewhere 0
yottere expecting to lee apologies
• for all the cookie and doughnut re-
cipes that appear hete or hereabouts
- front time to time, When you have
to make thetn to often ai some of
tti-do, and they disappear so quick.
It you're glad Of any flew 'Twist' to
them. So here we go,
' Filled Dotighttuta •
tiakes 2 dozen •
Silt together:
14/4 cupti hour
4 tealpotnie, baking Powder
1 teriipoott soda
1 teaspoon
. Add gradually:
11/4 cupti illgar to
2 eggg, Well beaten; mix
Blend iii1.
134 tin* gout milk
tableapitotta melted butter
2 teatie6tig Anetat
Add dry ingredients; blend.
RollIA inch thick on flowed
board.
Place filling on cut circles.
Fold dough over filling; seal
edges. -
Fry in deep fat 350 deg. Drain on
Paper—
* *
FRUIT COOXIES
Va cui) butter or shortening
1/2 cup sugar
1 egg'
1 cup Five Roses Flour
1 tspn. baking powder
lAt tspn, salt
.1/2 tspn. cinnamon
Wa cup chopped pecans
Ya cup raisins
1 tspn. vanilla
Method: Crean together the but-
ter and sugar, Add beaten egg; milk
apd,vanilla, Sift together flour, bak-
ing powder, Salt and cinnamon, Add
:to the creamed mixture, Add nuts
and raisins, Drop from teatpoon
onto a greased cookie sheet, Bake
at 325 deg.' F. for 15 minutes on un.
"tit golden brown. Makes -2 dozen
cookies.
* * *
Cream Doughnuts
Makes 2 dozen
Sift together:
'21/2 tuns flour, sifted
2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
Ve ,teaspoon nutmeg:
Add
cup sugar to
'4 egg -yolks, bratin
Stir h -i'‘
'/'cup thick cream
Add dry ingredients- to *team
- mixture, .
Roll g, Inch thick on floured
board, .
'Fry itt deepi fat at 33 deg, oboist
3 minutes.
Turn only onte. Drain on paper.
Top with chocolate frosting, klub.
* * *
Banana Doughnuts •
Makes 3 dosen
Mit togethet:
5 Ova flour, sifted
4 teaspoone,baking powder
I, teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon nutting_
Add -
3 eggs, well beaten, t�
14 cup shortening, Creamed
Blend with shortening mistUte:
2 Medium bananas, mashed
3.4 op lour milk
134 teaspoone
Add dry ingredienti and mix well.
Knead lightly on floured board.
Roll 1/2. Inch thick. Cut.
IrtY In deett fat it OS deg., about
3 mintitet. • -
Turn only'. once. Drain on paper.
HOW CAN
By Anne Ashley
Q. How can I add weight?
A. There are many remedies tot.
this, but a few simple rules are: Eat
Iwo raw eggs before breakfast every
morning, Eat boiled meats, fats, oils,
butter, and starchy foods. Drink
plenty of milk and water, The 50..
est plan in some cases is to consult
your physician.
*
Q, How can I remove varnish?
A. Use a sponge or a brush and
apply a solution made of one part
caustic soda turd three parts luke-
warm water. Allow the solution to
'remain for a minute and then scrape
off.
*
Q. How can I prevent bacon
from shrinking so mnch?
A. Dip the slices of bacon into
flour or cornmeal before frying.
* * *
Q. How can I shrink cotton ma-
terials before making into gar-
ments?
A. Soak in salt water, 44 -cup of
salt to each gallonof water; then
hang straight on the' line in a shady
place, This will not only insure ma-
terial against shrinkage, but will Set
the colors,
* * •
Q. What can be done if too much
milk or water has been added to
the confectioner's .sugar when mak.
Ing frosting?
A, Merely add a little flour to
thicken it. The taste of the flour
will not be noticeable, It isn't neces-
sary to add more sugar.
* * *
Q. How can I make a good rem-
edy for burns?
.A, Use equal parts of linseed oil
and lime water, applied on a soft
cloth, then covered with another
soft cloth to keep Out the air, It is
well to keep a bottle of this solu.
tion.on hand for 'emergencies.
* * *
Q. How can I bleach white ma-
terial that has turned yellow after
being stored for a long time?
A. Dissolve two tablespoons of
borax in one quart of water; boil the
goods in this solution; then place
in the sun to dry, Repeat this pro-
em if necessary.
* *
Q. How can / darken brown
shoes that' are lighter In color than
/ wish?
A, Rub them with milk, to which
a hitt drops of household 'atnmonia
have' been added. When they are
dry, polish with a clean dry cloth.
* *
Q,1 How can 1 elean the soiled
leaves .of house plants?
A. Apply equal partsoltnuIk and
watm water, the a sponge, and nib
gently to prevent breaking. the
leaves.
•=.111111•••••••••••••••
PENNY
9'8-
K WILT
a
Ate Roasted Bats
And Liked Them!
In the remote hinterland of New
Caledonia, one of, the larger lc
lands of the South Pacific, art el.
derly English spinster hp having
the titne of her life today, blazing
a trail through unexplored Jungle.
Clad in tensible woollen stock-
ings and knickerbockers, 68 years -
old Miss Evelyn Cheestuan has be-
gun another of her insect safaris,
headed for an insect "lost world"
lodged 3400 feet up in the dark
and challenging mountains.
When her superstitious native
bearers tremble at the risk. of en-
countering devil -devils or falter at
the prospect of meeting the pritni-
live bushmen, she goes forward
alone, just to rally their confidence
by proving she is Iambi:, or devil -
proof. She has been treed by wild
beasts, lost in the swamps, watch-
ed and followed by cannibals. Once,
when her native boys were too
seared of ghosts to stay with her,
she even slept in the bush alone,
comfortably curled beside the bra-
zier she uses to trap eight -inch
moths.
Once, as she was wading up a
stream in the Cyclops Mountains
of New Guinea, a torrential thund-
erstorm turned the river-hed• into
a sudden tumbling flood. Half -
deafened by, the noise of the water
over the boulders, absorbed in the
insects in the shallows, she did not
hear the bo3is' warning, shout, and
thq, force of the water -bore wept
lttr from her feet. Narrowly tniss-
ing a rock, she caught at a loop
oi overhanging vegetation, climbed
i»to it and clung there for hours.
Insect -hunting on the little
known island of Waigeu, she re-
cently spent months on a steaming
monsitainside in a hut sketchily
built of tree branches and tarpaul-
ins. The thunderstorms lasted fif-
teen hours a day and every storm
brought swarms of huge biting
flies and midges, fighting for she -
ter. Characteristically she reported
with enthusiasm that they included
several new • types.
,No other wOmatf—and few men
—can have endured such consistent
hardship, discomfort, and danger
for the sake of strange beetles and
'bugs, flies and fleas.
Ift the library of the Royal En-
tomological Society the experts
speak of lier„with respect as a lead -
mg woman scientist who has helped
close some of the widest gaps of
knowledge in mankind's ceaseless
war on the predatory, insect world.
There was the time when, climb -
;no on to a narrow ledge on a
3,000 -foot precipice, she found her-
self face to face with a python,
"It was a shock to us both," she
atlmits. Then she swiftly realized
the baneful effects if her timorous
bearers caught sight of the snake
in a region reputedly. haunted by
six -legged serpents.
Kicking a piece of wood, she hit
the snake on the head, It drew
back sharply into the deepest
shadows under a heap of faded
branches, ,By that time her boys
were beside, her and sat innocently
on the branches for a smoke. Every
time she looked she could see the
bright shining eyes 'Of the snake,
"The boys laughed happily when
they saw me smiling," Miss Chees-
I man commented, "If only they had
known,"
I Again, on the enchanted isle of
' Erroinanga, the natives prepared a
feast in her honour, To her horror
she found that the main dish con-
sisted of black bats roasted in
leaves. When she pleaded for
tinned herrings instead, her hosts
were so tearful that she changed
her mind. "We saved, the plumpest
bats for you," they explained.
Miss Cheesman asked only that
the bats should be beheaded and
then summoned courage for the i
first bite. It was quickly followed
by surprise, "They were delicions,"
she says. "Tender -fleshed with a
game flavour like duck,"
First White Woman Seen
In Dutch New Guinea she yen-.
tured into regions where a white
woman had never been seen. From
the thatched inland villages the
wotnen flocked and asked her to
let down her "grass" (her hair).
Idles Cheesman cheerfully complied
—in return for the jewel-like beetles
they wore as necklets.
Strangely enough, Evelyn Chees.
man had scarcely set foot out of
England before she was forty. She
confesses that a youth spent in
hard work and study had landed
her high and dry es Curator of the
Insect Eons* at the London Zoo.
Versed in tbe ways of everything
'that erawled, she learned to handle
—and even inille—bIaok widow
spiders and other horrors. Her bfg
donee same at forty-three when
she sailed as entonioogi,st with a
Pee& survey. ,
New and Useful Too
lisie Ladder
Ladder combines nonconducting
propertio of wood with lightness
and otrength of aluminum. Side rails
ore spruce; aluminum rungs are re-
cessed in the rails, secured with
locking pins. Result odd to be safe,
lightweight ladder which comes in
10 -ft, to 22-11. lengths, single, or in
20 -ft. to 44 -ft, extension sizes.
* * •
Tip -Proof Baby Cap
Tip -proof baby cup, weighted at
bottom, is molded of tasteless,
tough, chip -proof Lumarith, Has
transparent disc with small drinking
and air holes which fits in the cup
and keeps fingers out, maker states.
* 4. •
Burn•Proof Oven Mitts
Burn -proof mittens, offered by
Toronto firm, are said to eliminate
all danger of hand burns, blisters,
scalds, because of asbestos facing,
Hotest dishes, pots and pans may
be handled with perfect safety and
freedom, it's stated. Come in a var-
iety of colors, tsimmed with bright -
colored cloth and are lined with
non -creeping material, to stand in-
numerable washings without ithpair-
mem of appearance or efficiency.
'4 *
Zipper. CMOs Apart
Zipper which can't tangle in
clothes is offered. Fixed retainer at
'bottom of: slide is swivel case that
turns to an open position. When
'swivel is opened, the zipper can be
pulled apart to untangle the cloth.
Versatile Saw
Hand saw which is also a com-
plete layout working tool, features
plastic handle on which are assembl-
ed a level vial, a plumb vail, a wide.
range protractor calibrated in 15 de-
gree stages, and outside and inside
-
On- the isle pf Malektiela, she
found that even local officials had
never visited the unexplored inter-
ior, inhabited by fierce cannibal
bushme» who hated whites. Of
course, nothing would suit her but
to go inland.
Inside the Secret Huts
Patiently she overcame the bush -
men's suspicions, making friends
from one village to the next. The
beating jungle drums told of her
coming. Ultimately she was per.
mitted to see the sacred huts where
the tribes kept the skulls and bones
of their enemies and then, in his
hilltop village, she met the dreaded
Ringapat himself, king of the can-
niba Namba tribe:
Never willing to overdramatize
her experiences, Miss Cheesman
reports that she found him "amus.
M." In the end she gained Ringa.
pat's confidence to such, an extent
that he brought out one of his
most cherished possessions and
showed her his frying -pan. Now,
, he expained, he ate "all the same
as a white man."
Evelyn Cheesman tells the story
herself in her vividly exciting book,
"Camping Adventures on Cannis
bat Islands". As a loyal subject,
promising not to eat white men,
Ringapat wanted to send his frying -
pan to King George. Miss Chees-
man persuaded him to part with
an ancestral poisoned spear instead.
Yet Miss Cheesman in turn re-
ceived her own tribute on her last
trip when she made a canoe Jour-
ne'y down the New Guinea coast
into mandated territories, She was
amazed at the crowds of natives.
"They have come to see you,"
her navigator •beamed, "They have
come to see the woman who walks
in the jungle)"
RIM=
layout square. Also included is a
carbon -steel blade deeply etched on
either side of the top with inch and
metric rules,, and, at the tip, a sur-
face incision point to permit surface
cutting without necessity of boring
holes. Saw available in eight and
ten -tooth crosscut and five.and-a-
ialf•
Dormant Spraying
By using fuel oil or kerosene as
a carrier for the weed -killing chem.
ical 2, 4, 5;T, brush may be control-
led by spraying during the dorntant
season, Canadian firm states. In one
test last winter at a concentration
of 8,990 parts per million in fuel oil,
brush failed to produce any leaves
in the spring, it is reported. Farm-
ers will ,profit 'from dormant spray-
ing, according to company spokes-
man, because they can spray when
they are least busy with other farm
chores and without risk to sensitive
crops that may grow near the brush
to he sprayed.
LOSS Owu
F VOICE
MENACES PROGRAM
Friend Solve: Singer's Problem
Withizy_Lnoid: 1
Pa few bowl before wearies oa the sir
developed Leanne% writes p Audio
d
nem "Os a frienhadrior, I hies 410108
ma*as awcilyrollevel,"
Oa Quick relief *A
LYSIOIDS7'he
Itediriliel oils of thlesoothing fareoue
proparellonhelp toquickly re-
uov ehooreeatie sad 0464
Ificet storm len ZYMOID3
but it unobledoeNe, Bead
los to elanve or 001A, to
Teroato,
MOMS, II9 Pearl
Lel
TRY
FOR QUICK RELIEF
BEYOND BELIEF..
COME OUT FROM UNDER
THE SHADOW OF PAIN!
For relief from the paid of ARTHRITIS,
RHEUMATISM, NEURITIS, ot SCIATICA
...get a bottle of DOLCIN Tablcts
today. DOLCIN has relieved the pains
of thousands of sufferers. DOLCIN
%bleu ate not barmthl, easy -to -take,
reasonable In cost- 100 tablets for
12.391 the large economy -size bottle of
,00 tablets, $10, 11 your
druggist cannot supply
DOLCIN write to DOLCIN
LIMITED,Torooto 10, Ont,
DOLCIN
TABLITS
hunted 1940, totata is the P.C.
letend tredemerk c4 WI/ PrOdUltl.
MAGIC CHICKEN TURNOVERS
Combine and chill 13i 0. finely -diced cooked
chicken, h e. medium -thick white eauce. Mix
and sift Into bowl, 2 o. once -sifted pastry flour
(or o. once-glfted hard -wheat flour), 3 tap..
Magic Baking Powder, 3( tap. salt, 1 tbs. grants -
fated sugar. Out in finely, 8 tbs. shortening. Mix 1
beaten egg and 34 a, milk. Make a well In dry
ingredkotta, pour in liquid and mix lightly with a
fork. Roll dough out to thickness; cut into 4*
rquaree. Piece about 2tbs. chicken mixture on each
square, near oorner..Fold dough over diagonally,
making triangles, Seal edges by pressing with
fork tines; prick tops. Bake on greased pan In,
hot oven, 450°, 16 min. or until golden brown.
12r.ALLY 7
kFiEbSTrUCEHD
ACTUALLY WELL,
INSULTME', I NSAN ARE
NE SAID 1/.1 . YOU
PICKL.e
RONALD,
PRA
AT
LLNAXI I
mg*: ONE
`--7-1(
Sy Harry Hetnigses
MarMitti5sORZY
:11
PA0118
WALLACE'S
Dry GOods -Phone 73- Boots & hoes
Agent For
French Dry Cleaners
GODERICH,
COMMENCING THIS WEEK THERE WILL BE
TWICVEEKLY PICK-UP AND DELIVERY,
TUESDAY MORNING & FRIDAY AFTERNOON
1
S#44-.0*.f.#0-44•••#######.1•~444.4441.14,44.•••#044###,,#,p,444444•44,~?“44•41N1•9,4-#44-4,‘,4"##44
'4101.140011101.11-i . . •
1 W
. 110 W
- FOOD STORES --
For Thurs,, Fri,, Sat,, January 12, 13, 14
Aylmer's Tomato Catsup . 2 11 -oz. bottles 31c
Hart's Blended Orange Grapefruit Juice, 48 oz. 43c
Bright's Fancy Tomato Juice , . , .2 20.oz. tins 19c
Niblets Corn per tin 17c
Nabob Coffee 1 lb. bag 89c
Redbird Matches 3 boxes 23c
4 Jello Lemon Pie Filler 2 pkgs. 17c
1 Aylmer Tomato or Vegetable Soup 10c
Utopian Hand -Packed Tomatoes .. „ 28 oz, tin 17c
Royal York Orange Pekoe Tea ... Hf. lb, pkg. 47c
Libby's Cooked Spaghetti 15 oz. tin 14c
Fresh Fruit -- Fresh Ventables.
Pioneer and Lifeteria Feeds,
I'. ---- ---
t We Deliver. -- E. S. ROBINSON. - ' Phone
Ith StANDAitili
114111111111111111i1611111 • m • IC.14 11 1 1
- •
pERSONAL INTEREST
Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Genttner and
children, Mr. Fred Genttner of Dash-
wo: d, spot Sunday with Mrs. Fritz -
ley and Mr.- E. Pollard,
Mr. Ray Dobbyn of Sarnia spent
the week end at his • home here.
.ijrs. Geo:ge Cowan spent last week
with menliters of her family, Mr. and
Mrs. George Cowan, of Becton, and
Mr. and Mrs, Benson Cowaoi, of
Stratford. She motored home with
Mr. and Mrs. Benson Cowan and fam-
ily on Sunday.
Mr, and Mrs, Bruce Fletcher had
Mrs. Dobbyn, of Glencoe, spent Fri-
day last with Mrs. Fletcher's brother,
Mr, C, T. Dobbyn and MN. Dobbyn.
Mr. and Mrs. George Fritzley and
Donna Lynne, of Burford, spent a few
days with the former's mother, Mrs.
Fritzley, and Er, E, Pollard. The'Y
WCrls accompanied home by Ronne
Fritzley who had spent the Christmas
hadays here,
Mr. C. Wightman, of '['or -
onto, ,s;:eitt Saturday with his mother,
NErs. R. Winhtman,
Air, and Mrs, Lerne Riehl and child -
s. rem of 1.ordon, spent New Year's
!, with the latter's brother, Mr. E. Pol-
>‘.. lard: tent NIrs. Fritzley,
Wed., JimtAry 11 150.
ri
!beauty 3.noppe
PERMANENTS
Machineless,
Cold Waves,
and •
Machine Waves.
Finger Waves,
Shampoos, -
Hair Cuts, and
Rinses.
Olive 144,111
, Telebhone 73r2, Blyth
•
4 '1 . m • • i 1 . o , 1 0461641.11601.0000 11 •
1 IT'S NOT TOO EARLY--
; . To start you Spring de -
The Annual
coration plans. Nothing ,
; adds as much happiness
to the home as bright,
rfulwalls and ecu-
;: will be held at the home Of ! ciihigees..-
-- the President
. ' . Wilen thinking of de-
!: MRS. LYDDIATT- E corating, either walipa-
,.
i tier or paint, include us
,., • on i in your plans. All work
THURS., JANUARY 19th . completed with nutness
" ! and reasonably.priced,
:i: at 2:30 p.m.
HORTICULTURAL
MEETING
Ask to see our samples.
y A full attendance is Request -
156 ed.
44+0 4:4 4:4 4:4 484444:444 +44444:4, 0:084 4:0:444 4+ 11 1:1446:4 44.4 4:. 4.1 4:1 1!4,...4.6t4 40:44:4444 4,4 4:0:4 1:44:0114:44:44/
UiL 41.1141
- Ott
• .04 • 7
- 001 iiiiii to
ttttttt
th••••••••••11.0
tttttttt
4100804
11.111.• •••••••
OM•
et OOOOOO
•
O ttt 01
-FROM THE MiXER 10 YOU
BALANCED FEEDS
They're always fresh because they are made locally.
POULTRY, HOGS, CATTLE, ALL THRIVE ON
SHUR-GAIN, made by feed experts from the high-
est quality ingredients, and scientifically tested
each step of the way. MILLED LOCALLY, you
can always be sure of SHUR-GAIN freshness.
EXPERIENCED FEEDERS KNOW THE
VALUE OF FRESH FEED.
Distributed in Your District by
T. B. ALLEN
9,
LONDESBORO, ONTARIO: -
4414•44,414••••#•414###~44.414•#--#414444.1k#41,414•••••••#•••44‘~~41444,14,1~4t4P4P#441.,41.1#44.44.
Huron County Council
The next meeting of the Huron County,Coun- '
cil will be held in the Council Chambers, Court
House, Goderich, commencing
TUESDAY, JANUARY 17th, AT 2:00 P.M,
. All accounts, notices of deputations, and other
business requiring the attention of Council. should
be in the hands of the County Clerk not later than
1 Saturday, January 14th, 1950.
N. We MILLER,
. 15-2. ,Clerk, Goderlch,c • •
Canada's Champion Plow-
men Heading Overseas
When Canada's champion, plowmen
tail on January 12th to participate in
matches alanaad thely will take maple
trees with them to plant in, Great Bri-
italu, Holland, Denmark and, \Vest
Germany,
In addition to the maple trees the
Canadian plowmen will carry with
them a quantity of maole sugar srp-
Flied by the Province of Quebec for
disur:butic,n, to friends. The trees are
furnbilled by the Ontario 1)epartment
of Lacels, and Ferests.
Canada's champion plowmen are
Ronald K. Itlarquis, 28, of RR, 1, Sun-
derland, Ont„ and Japes M. Eccles,
30, of RR, 2, Bramoton, Ont., EFsa
gold medalists in: the. horse ad tractor
Classes respectively at the- Interination-
o! 11 -wing hela reor Brantford
last October. Olie pair are accompan-
ied by Alex .1c1<ittney, jr., of Bramp-
ton, as coach-mana-ger, -
The tlree sail from New York on
the Queett Mary .for a mcitth's tour of
the Pritisti biles as guests of Itiipz.thtl
Oil. In addition,. to takittg part in
plowkig matchei theyl st,etly Brit-
ish methods of agriculture and rls1
many places of interest, At the end of
V -.e flush IFICS -tour they plait to .risit
1101180t4 Denmark and \Vest Gennany
at their own expense. They Will fly
, back to ,Caf-oda.
None of the three have ever been.
eiroldt bin they ;re atl'of 13ritislt
stock. They represent fourth and
fifth eerlrations of families. -that MI-
-to Can-adat more than- a century
ago awl they plan to topic up family
connections when overseas.
- -
East Wawanosh Girl Looses
Life Saving Friend
*A 14 -year-old East Wawattosh foWdl
ship girl died San.day afternoon- and
her 10 -year-old chum lies itt Win.gliain
General Hospital tomght as the result
oil a tragedy' occurred a mile
from her home.
Dead -is Lois Dawson, daughter of
Air. and Mrs. Phillip 1)awson, of East
Wawatiosh, and in. -hospital is 13illie
1Reavie, son of Alt, rind Mrs. Ruther-
ford Reavie, also of East \VaWanosh..
A story of trkzeilly andheroista was
unfolded as the father of the rescued
boy, 'Rutherford Reavie, Robert,. Ar-
buckle andi Fireman Nelson Nichols
!-endetworetcl to rescue the two young-
sters from, the ice -coated watersof a
I, willow swale,
The swale is located ,at the. rear - Of
George Kert-',s farm a mile front the
J)awsott home and 24 Miles west of
\\Ingham,
1
a
Stock Tonics and Remedies
We carry a full range of
ROYAL PURPLE AND DR, BELL'S TONICS,
Royal Purple--.
Stock Tonic,•60c & $1,75, Poultry Tonic, 60c & $1,75
Hog Tonic, 60e & $1,75; Roup Remedy, 30c & 60c;
Horse's Cough Powder „ , •„ tt tt , t tt . t , 60c
Diarrhoea Tablets „ „ „ , ,,,,,,, 50c and $1,25`
Dr, Bell's --
Tonic Indigestion Powder , „ ,,,,, „• , , , 60c
Kidney and Blood Powder , „ ,,,,,,,,,, , , ,60c
Distemper -and Couvh Powder ,,,,, , , „ . „ 60c
Bell's Medical Wonder _ 61,25
Penicillin BoUgies, Cooper's Dri-Kil
Green Cross Insect Powder. Creolinc,
R D. PHILP, Phrn. B,
nRUGS. SUN DRIES. %YAMPA PNR-PTIONE 20
-
44* /4444.0"•444.04PW#004,414~4NPerNNP.,
TRY OUR FRESH
RASPBERRY OR CHERRY PIES,
HIGH RATIO CAKES,
BUNS AND PASTRY.
FRESH WHITE AND BROWN BREAD,
Plain or Sliced,
YOUR PATRONAGE IS APPRECIATED,
/O • .1 l• 4014 1 1.11.11 .1..1 • 411 6 .• • 1...6.. 1.4.1.4.1 ol• 11, 1.. •
FB C PREST
0
The HOME BAKERY
hone 37-28,
"BRUSII AND SPRAY PAINTIII. T. Vodden, Proprietor
LONDESBORC
NG
- Sunworthy Wallpaper
Paints and Enamels,
3
•44.41414,~~0.4.~1/4/~4WD*4.4..#~440444‘,/~~#####44~4W4./...~.~...
4":";"•` '44 t$1. 444. 1;":' 114i. 4-44,0+
Blyth, Ontario
V..:'44..t,••••••••##,FtS4.#4,444~41,444•44‘.14,41,##1
Glorify Your Hair with a
NEW PERMANENT
NOW $3,50 UP.
ALSO FINGER WAVES
AND SCALP TREATMENTS.
Please mane
RAY'S BEAUTY SALON
Phone 53, 131yth,
40.444W4P444414~~•~•~INOMMI
her own.
Rt-st news of the accident was re-
vealed by Six-yOar-old Gary Re,avie
it wIto ran a mile through the fields to
the home of hi -s patents, to Sound the
alarm Ilis father who wa.s siek in be
with the flu, dress,ed all ran to the
bltt WaS tIlliable to get close to
'the two itt the \valet',
After notifying his father, Gary
Reavic that told the Dawsons. A gen-
eral maim . \vs ,sottiliitzli with the
\\Ingham fire brigade and neighbours
rushing- to the scene.
Rals, los and ,boands were placed
oat the ground in an effort to make a
temporary float but e*iiirts proved
fruitless, Finally a, horse 11116 brought
into 1.15,2 froin'the Dawsont farm and
rriddeti by. Fireman Len Rheinhart,
who had to break, the ice .and wade
'through the water up to (he horse's
neck to rescue the 11(1y, The restated
lad was placed air the horses back and
brought back- to the firemen, -
An uncle of tlie Reavic boy„ .13ob
Atbuckle, broke the ice and waded
through water up to his neck- to reach
the girl who was reported to be float -
ling on the water face (knit 7 - •
Arbuckle became exhausted while
Iiinging the unt-onselous girl back and
.hattdcd her to Fireman *Nelson Nichol,i
who 1.i.d atf.4) Wittliell011 .the resale,
13rought to la -:el, was 'rushed by
car to \Vinglittot Gettoral,' Hospital
where tL resuscitator and att oxygen
tettt were -ttsed itt an effort to revive
hor but she died ono-and-a:quarter
hours 'after admittance. . It is belie;Yet1
clhe bad been under wate-r for, more
than ats hour befcre being rescued.
Irrontro-Nichols was- confinott to hos-
pital suffering front 'shook, white' Ro-
bert Arbuckle and the boyi's father.
1 utherf6rd. Reavie,. are' bothcoulfined
ber'l at the Itome of Airs. Charles
Kerr in Whigluttn.
Dr. ,IV, A. Crawford -who attended
the ,gl,t41, conducted a, post tuortein, andr,
attribilted death...to accidental drOwn-
ing. ' - - -
Lois- Dawson, who attended h
htttt High Scliool, is survived, by. her
-parenAs, three sisters, Airs. Alex. Neth,.
'e0;: 131,ut1t; .Mary and Florone,
. .
601'0:4 Mild two 'brothers, Roy ,aittl.
liforold,ttlsvo at twine. -
"-Funeral service wits held\Vettieday
at 2:30 min,itt the. A. Currie '-fttn1-
. et -al e • the ren -tains restett,attlil
home. parents, lot -.14, eon,- 13,
lEak 1yawanosh Wednestlay.-titr,
tat
s as itt Witighant -
•
• Leaving their homes shortly ,after
11 tun. for a stroll with their tWo
(kgs, the Dawshn girl, Billie Rcavle,
and a six-year-old brother, Gary, set
out 'through the fields to the smile. A
creek also inns through:the farm at
this point.
, When one of their pet dogs". ,fell
through the ice some 20f) feet firmnthe,
land, Billie Retitle set out to.., respite
the anhttal but crashed' throttgit the
ic-e himself. , • ." _ ,
I In ,going to ltisr twine, the, girl. 'also
brobe iltrritvli the iCd a nk hvas ttltittg
ed into the water up to her arni4t5.
Her licroic effort in hoisting- the 'Rea.,
vie lad ap onto the limb of
no doubt saved his life at the cos if
• N GRILL
4
BLYTH ONTARIO.
Special Low Prices on tull Course Meals
4
4
Meals at All Hours.
45 Cents And up
FRANK GONG in• !theorem o
4"8":":1+.14 t:"*.• 4444,44444Ht•
Spiiran's ar ware
PHONE 24:
' MTH.
EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE. r
NOW
is the time to use
SOOVNE
to keep Tour,
PIPES AND CHiMNEYS CLEAN
See the new. EVENING STAR-.
Community Plate .Silverware Design: -
34 -piece service for 8 in tarnish proof chest, $56,75,
, Cooper's Dri-Kil • per lb.,30c,
Cocoa Door Mats , . , . ....... %., .. .... ,.. :, . ,$1.95
Coal Hods * . 95c, $1.10, $1,30, $1,55
i 1 Flashlights with Batteries , ,'„.. . „ . :'$2,15
SNOW SHOVELS
.....,.......m.,"~...,.......m.,....,....................,
I1 11 1.i1061
.1,064.4141. I 41 .414:1, 64.,1,16.:•11
Hollands'
•
.1. 611. 11, oil 1.6 ..110.1.•11.
1.116.1161 . 11111 14111 1.. 61 .11 11 1
. '
ood-:Market
11 11 .1111 ,T1 kg 1
Stokeley's Tomatoes .....-, „ 20 oz,', 2 f(ir 25c
'Blue and Gold tialier Wax -:Beans , . 2 for. 27c
Campbell's Tomato Soup:. . . 2 for 21e
• Clark's' Pork and Beans „' 2 for 25c:
• Kelloggs All Bran 6 1 4 •1i 14 I i 0,1'11'1 1 1 0 0- I' 23e .
_ Aylmer Choice Bantam Corn - , 2''for
Libby's Tomato Juice , (20 oz.), 3 for -25c -
I - Fels Naptha Soap , , „ „ „-... 10c
Brunswick Sardines , .4. „ 3-lor 25e
7 Farmer's Wife Milk „ , , , 2:fot 27c
• 1. a:A. Peanut Butter
, 1 1466161116411' 3
, Jello (all flavours) , ;• •'-. 6 6 2. for.,
Fresh Shipment of Bird s* Eye Frosted roo
Green Beans, Cauliflower, Green Peas, Spinae
7 •
Lima Beans, Blueberries, Strawberries,,
_ - RasPber.ries.
_ Fillets of Ocean Perch, Pactfic-Sole; -Hadd6e