The Blyth Standard, 1950-06-07, Page 1'HE BLYTH STANDAR
VOLUME 55 . NO, 37,
Auburn Athletic Association
Receiving Athletic Field Donations
The' (o'low•ing (lunation;, acknow- ; --- -----.--•-- ._.-___-.-___----
kedgcd with thanks, have been rcccitcd' ii
I31ylh 11uiiiClplll Council
(Late by the :\uburu AthleticAss.)-
dation for the purchase of the .\thle,ic 1 '111. rc,,ular ineethiLt of the Aluiicipal
Held, This cantass is 11 1 c1)ntple c �Cunucil of the Corporation l' lion of the \'i
and a further list will follow; talo' of lil)th was held \lunday even-
ing,
R. J. Phillip's 1. 1(1.(1(1 lJune 5th, in the Nletnorial hall,
Thos. S. Johnston , 10 11) ;It S:3(i u'clucl:, t\illl Reeve \lnrrill.
C,•I:, Asquith ................. 5.11(1 l:uinacillnrs Sen iiigeuur and \'olden
J. "IVa: kir ...................... 5!'•1
A, Uullins.t ........ .111.('0 present.
NI of last tc:;alar meeting pas -
:i, \(mallet' ......._, 5.'0 :.rd on motion of \'olden and Scrim
II. Mogii.lge ...... 5.1;11
11. I3cad:e ...... 5.lIJ ,
geom.
1 Communication from ►that( Agricnl-
.\Irs, C. \I. Stiaughan ........ ..._ LI,O 1tliril Society askiii for a grant to
\Vic. 1'ung11htt 1.(,1) Blyth lair.
Arthur 1"un;;blul ...... 5. 0 \I r. I':. Pollard \vas present, regard
J. C, Stuaz ........... S.11(1 in ; repairs 11) drain on ,\I ill sl,
AI, Alter ...... 5.'U \lotion by II. \'udllcn. and I., Saint -
George Railhby LOU geom. that ice give the usual grant to
John 1'ungblut ._....................... LI 0 111'. tli Fair, Cart led.,
1:, Patterson 1.1111 \lotion 1'3.'
p\ I.. Sct;nn;r. 1)r aunt 11. \'1)d
Il, 1), NI intro ................................... 5.(11 dcu that
own ('1nulcil as it whole inspect_
.Irs. \\';.u. Dodd, 5.................09 drain on Mill si, Carried,
Thus. NIc\lichael 2.(1(1 \Indio( by II. \'uddru and I:. Scrim
Jt bit J. \\•iLun ..... .................. 5.111 1,e' i r that the civil; fill out Depart•
11. :\rllmr
............................ .?,Ill rain( of 1111;111\10's rcpurL sante anu,uu'
Clifton \IeUonald ............,. 2.11(1 ah 19:9. Carried.
1)r, 13. C, \Veit- .. .... ................ 5.00 \lotion by 11, \'oddcn ;and 1.. Scrim-
\irs. Alice \\'ItflesI.II'I geour that %sell un Calmly., sr„north
11'c I:n.aun . .. -....-
.. - 25.00.1(1 he filled 1)t', ;1)u) J. Staples supervise
(lisle.; C. and \I. ('ollinso11_. 2.01Iltis work Carried.
\\'illiani Corey ............................ l.((O Motion hr L. S• vii i t' 1)r ;and 11
James Cr,lig ...... 5,11(1 \'t•d,Ien that ,loth Staples collect dog
Niel. Craig .... ...... 1.01) las for 1950. l''arricd.
lletb, Giiv er 2.1111 titin by II. 1'n'Idcn ;and 1.. Srrint-
T, W. ..\Ic\;all ... .. 5.1(1 neoir 111;11 Bylaw No. 7, 1950, to con -
J. K. Scutt .... ..... . 2.00 firm Ili" appoinlmm lit of Gcurge Sloan
it,hil Houston . ....... .... IIVI :is Assissot• for 1950, and also Issue I:IX
Joe hickey 2.11'1 notilc, for I"5U lazes, in ;ucrurdanrc
Orval \►►-Thee _.. ... 5.(1'1 •%ti,h the I" -l') assc,snleit roll, as note
\\', \\'a:•hingiou ,....... .. 1(-251),.(((01):.'))11
910► re Id in open conned, le finally passed
\Van, J, Sten art . ...... ,.,... 5.00 and conte into) t'ffert this 5th day of
(,;verge 1billam ............. 2.01 lune, 11'59, Carried.
\Vin. \loss .... 3310 \loti.,ti by IL \'o•(den and I., Scrim -
\\'m. Good .. 5.(1() maim. im' Ilett accounts as read 1'e pai I.
1:e.l. 11antilltn .... . . ... .... 2.0 Carried.
Teti Mills ..... ..... ... ...... 5.(Y,1 The tolluwiu:; are the ;tumults:
Elnut Ni Melt ..... 2.11(1 Inlet St;1p,'es, strict foreman 9"1,5 i
\\'lit, Andrews, Godcriclt ...... 1.011) \\'nl, 'I'llucll, salary P.U.C. .. (MID11'ilutcr. Nicholson ......................... 1.0'1 John Stap'Ies, eatelakii .. _, 25.11)
1?arI-\\'ightman ...... 3.09 II, Lethctland, wei 'roaster - ... .'5.))9
11, Lindsay 3,)10 Itlytlt 'Telephone Si limit(1.11"!
Robert Chaney . 5.0(1 I?'Tott's Sunoco) Satire St•I-
E. 1)m•nin1.00 ti','n, (ire truck .. ....... 1195
Ilarold \\'chstc(' ..... ........... 2.00 trio neial 'Treasurer, insulin ..... 3.11
John ►)urn;u 5,(1(1 Dr„I. A. Addison. 1"49 aril. --. 10"1`1
\\'m. \\'atsun 111.00 Dr. F. G. 'I'homp:,',n, 19.19 acct, 1'1.111
\Vit, Dodd, jr, 5.(111 tTntoi lit spilal, 11'19 ac':I.. 31.7.
Ben. Johnston .... 2.1)1) Cu. of Huron, It►I') acct. . .. 7,8.;
Stewart Plunkett ...................... 1.00 ,los. I?win•;, fox bounty ........ 1.50
Thos. \\'ilson 5.011 P+ stat aster, tntcntpl"v'neut
\\'n,, Clark...... ........... ...... ..... 5.00;lanes 2ti8
Elmer 1Z0bertsan 5.11(1 hydro-I?lectirie 2,3(141
Antos Andrew ..... .......... .... ....... ,.,5,00 Gerald Ilefhon, garbage colt..... 5`1.2
I'ctcr Patterson 2.; (1 In!;. ,Alorliil, lawnmower.. 2,1)11
\V. \'estcr(clt ..... 2.117 \'. Speiran arra...... 11,1)1
11'111. Watson.... lin Stewart l th'tt on acct.2,71
1010( Robertson ... 2,11(1 S. Johnston, cleaning street '1.0)
Fordyce Clare: 5,110 .\roold I3ertiol, neaten; st, - -.. 23111
Gordon Taylor 10.111 Arm -iron,: & \\'al,lt, fire truce: 18.11;
W. ilradnuek 3.00 Harold Phillips ace'. . _ :........... 2,0')
Rev, A. G. Hewitt 2.11(1 ' Frank Benninger, st. wok ....... 1(1511
Hiss \I. R. Jackson 2.(10 Albert Nicholson, sl. work- ....... 13.5'1
Bert Craig 1(1,00 Alf, \lachan, st. work .... ....... 2,11
Robert Arthur 5.(V,) George Sloan, Clcrl:
Fred Seers 2.(1(1 v..._. _
\1'nt, \\'agree l.C(1
John Dacr MORRIS FEDEItA'C1ON 1'1CNIC
...
\\'artier• Andrews 1211() 2,00 The \►naris Federation of .\gricnl
\\'alter \\Vaguer 5.110 olide \vill hold a picnic at the !billion
Art' I Ia!lain i , n Iit'il)tt . Mk lint 0f Morris, is, on Satin
Stanley hall ........._.,..- 2.00 (lav, Jutte 10111, at 2 pan. Conte and
Harold Stanbury 1.00 enjoy a social time. Therewill be
Fred \\"ogre( 5.10 putties and spurts for all. Bring your
Auburn \\Rumen's Institute 25.09picnic lunch and a community supper
Nelson Patterson - 1(1•(11) will he served at 5;30,
Gordon McClinclie ' ....................... 5.11()
Fred Toll ................._.. _...............,..._. 5. 09
13LYTII, ONTARIO, ` I IJNESl)AY, JUNE 7, 1950 Subscription Rates $1.50 in Advance; $2,00 in the U,S.A,
Son Of Mrs. II, McElroy, '' ' CONCERT NETS $65,0() !LIONS I'14E1)GE $2000.00
River `lletilll 4'1'U14'1't9 JO'1"1'IN(;iS ll'Olt FL(101) VIC'1'1MS COMMUNITY CENTRE
\Irs. Herb. Mrl::ruy received the :i05.(11 was icaliic'I by the IllytIt Officers Installed
:ad news on Saturday (bait her son, I)UK1:S COME OUT BESTIN TWO \\'onn•n's Institute from their cuttct'rt
I'te. 1 ha'lt's \Irl'Ittnunt Rintoul, age . FIt1:.E•5C01t1NG GAMES sla::c I last l'i lay night for the \1;11ti-
20, had 11ccn the victim of a curer :it Iona FI.'nd \('lief Fund, Regret was
Si ciran's I)nkcs got in the tirtury
violent and tea, I�aicscd drowned fol- 1spttsel: that the audience ;Intl the
groo,e (luring the past week, with awn
lowing a boating t accident 1 t iday night response was ti it more pronoun, cd
in lin, "lima Iri\er, near• l'ei;tsva 'i day
now
tthe
st,c+,nd�ulntthe (Inoue but a t:uttipuur of rain jtt;t 11efurc the • (ibet. Phis is a real boost for this
I'uint, '11 ken Ike 11nat in w11ic11 Pie. c,lurrt :aartcd u;ay 11atc kept lunar (un 1, and the. Lions are to be ir,m-
dianu,nd against Union', \lunday night.
Rintuul and lite others were tiding, att,ly, ►mended Cur their cfiurt,
In Im it casts they did it the hard
C)ie other soldier, tits, I.. I), \lartin, 1'hr tourer( itself was a splcnditl) J I1. Riukt til insperlur of Public
tray, pilin; up an early kill that Ink stns, cool u'i,in ; all 110011, talrut, of
of Liverpool, \.5., is also missing,, til rulficicnt enunt;h to t\in, thin hit 1 1 tichuuls tt';i• the ,!,caber at thr nteet-
hre'_' of the (-sur survivors u,;utagett lili. torr shad, as the opposition drew tab it 111cre i, au nnlinliled quatiit) ' in :ilia an,l gave a sp(itidid atltlress on,
to swim to shore awl the 9111(11' re to ;llllln,l ('(Vett (VFW,. III hulk itisitIIe ill's ttIlllllltllitt•. Snlllenlle t't'tlntt'kt'tl "New Itt'Inls ill Education," stressing
lu:lint.'I with (Its Iu,II.
out the) hoer\ 1)l n1) other place \it11 the last that the sclu,ul is just one of
cs 1111, (Juke' 11;01 emotmit left to eke ;a , ntanv line ,i;
\Irs. Riolan( left immediate!). on re- (tin, all11uu''It Alnnday night ;1s;ainsf 1 ulisls.• 'I here is never many intpurtaut fat firs in the cdnca-
rript of Ihr tibt i�l for I'ctaw:u\.;t a lark of at'c+'' ir,tni,�t,, ;tntl (;1)111 ones, tion of the chill. lie with introduced
l`ni, it, ata', in •t about as close a, the at ;n1y local Innclinn, and Ow (utucc
She was acruulpanicll I,y her two 0th- shay( yuu'il get \lith a new r,,i:,t I'. Lion "Blot" Hall, and thanked by
it cons. in this Icspc.t scents secure too with Lion Les. Rutledge.
Pie'
blGldll!t in to the eighth inniti., against iII'll \+ 1111'' ttl!'t'lltti prl'luI111111; quite Lion Stan. SihtIti l'p,l' rl'Iitlercil one
IIs. Itlntunl \a, 11tnn in Itru,sel
itt 1'✓'I I lc scrtetl "'else"' fur 4 ap aItt at this concert.
t L nion, the Dillies were cua,,tin g of n I, c' \\'..I, ho cr • presides' of his carr popular rural solus. Ile
ye:u:;. Contin', li tine in 19.15. Ile re-! comfortable 154b lead. .\I this jmtettre I ideal a� chair- was accompanied on the piano by Lion
enlisted a year Later. His wife is ilte. man f,'r the rtcnin;, and besides in Pianist Norma flair.
l unnc) was removed from the nwull`I ►ensue tei the various nimilsers, cx
fnrn•er, hull) \\•alters, 1)i" Scafurtlt. land replan d by Dolt Pollard, to let Fines collected during the evening
Ile has four ennui -et', 3 ,;iris and a the taller stretch his pittlling arnl, and 1'res.etl appreciation on I'cictlf of IIIc were given t1 Lion Carman 1Iod;;lits,
boy, Joanne, the oldest, age 1111 \lar3 In 1i:n,e to those \'Ie, Were contrib.. ;Is a (ill for George truss 1ltt ins,
as it were., get in a (its practice pit, n'i'l: I''w.u'11s the concert both by \hu beano' 't member of the Hudgins'
Ellen, NIaxine, and \lichael, theyoutn•..,. '1'hc Lnf,n batters were most nh•
'It, one year old. Ile has to brunt- !i;aim+; ;old before iht inning \ra, over. l''lu'li1,t 111c!r'taltnts ;1)l+l hl It ititu', family uta tiaturd;is tititiut expres
yrs, tic :In;011 of I' it 1i nor, and ('aol tit adnl,. s t n. •\pp? it tttitul x;1) al- .cd appreciation.
.I,il,ped. 1111, ball all otic the park to) t,t 11(';,',1 t" Ion' 11;111 ►hoard for the.
tion, of \litchell, flit, father died in',,rure III run; aunt take !111, lead In to) 15. 1 1 itt incunlin'; officers for the year•
:yl'1 free use of the hall, and to others were duly installed by Mr. Kinkead as
'►'nous')• nit., called back 11) squelch 111e x111 baro bel u
No further word on the missing men newel' promote the concert. follows:
(ire, and in I he last of the eighth atm "I"ht' n,. , . „
had reached here when this item was program, \11icll was varied and 11st-I it inert: britt ilnwsoi.
multi, Uikcs were fortunate, with „(a hig11ly roll rtainin;. nature, was as
\'rif!cll' 11tc ass start e of >cst't tt errors by 1 ti President : \'ern Speil•an,
int! I" pil;!1 aern,s a flan ill t'arh illlllitl; tt'111,\%•s; 1st Vice: hank '1 vrentan.
1'lontbonr sults 1). :\, Mekettrfe,
Church
t for their margin of victory, 17 -In• i \tarpmerite hall accompanist ; \'ural
I"111, oil satin'., "oder change lint- ltlylh \laic 1luarlcttc', Miss .\tire Rng-
Unilcll Gllurch 1V.117,5. ,
tit's ill 111111-;itralll," \•n111(1 sot'tll In hold el',,,Il aco.,,ill• anis(; Mouth organ sel-
Meetlllg (;1)'d in sofl11all, ;as troll as politic';.
`i't_tiunmt.,. s. Ilea. 'Taylor, Airs. 'truce
The June meeting will be heldin the Lin" -up: ►(hall—Richt, 211; (;r;as, t•; Smith acct'n1Pan!st; I'ianl instruluctt-
srhonl coon( of the church 1)u Mont
in 'lluin'y,�1) 111(1 ''s; Juhli-1911Dolmahua lean Sihthorpe; `I'ronthone
afternoon, June 12th, at ? t' clock.stoti. of ; \\•'alson, If ; Pollard, llard, ss and p; solo, \\'eulell. Grant, Loraine Handl-
'
\int ill, Ili; \rul,troti rf,
This mating is a special 25th Ansi- It'n arrunlpanul; \'oral solo, Donald
I Union; Ginn, ,gib; J. .Inhnslon, If : I \Ir\;III, accompanying uhimself on the
vers;u•y Inciting, celebrating twenty- \tt''by, el.; Speiran, p; Orr, 2I'; ►lar -!
(ire years since union of the Cougt'e-iris, 'b; ,t ,..p....,... o.. (.11.4;/.1, ,.r, guitar: Cornet tinct, Dennis \1'ey.
gational, \Ie:l d:st and Presbyterian I nl!ei., c.
Mi:,sinu;urv' Societies.
The slis;ion It; tt t will (;ire the pro-
gram immediately ;lite'• school is out.
.\11 mothers of \lissiun Hand members
arc asked t0 be present,
.\ hearty invitation is given to ail
to attend, especially those who were
members 25 years ago),
\Irs, Irvin. Bowes has been visil'In1;
I•el;atir: s in Ayr, also ;attending the
marriage of het' fiend, \kiss Jean
\\'1).'d, to Janes this, on Jut, sunt
\Irs. It: wes I er(n•:mc 1 the role of utat-
tun of honour f1):' her friend,
.\t the regular meeting of the Blyth
Lions Club, held on 'Tuesday evening,
$2,IJo0.I'11 tt:ls pledged towards the
t.'oiuuuiity :\retia► Fund, I1,($0,11,00 now
available, ;old a sccoml $11X1().00 iii Oc-
Ltgicn. colic Plans Advanc-
ed At Reg'ttlar Meeting
The regular monthly meeting. of the
Myth Branch No. 410, Canadian. Leg-
it'n, It.l?,S,I.,, was held in the Legion
Hume on Thursday evening, June 1st.
Comrade- Brute Smith was in the chair.
and ;1)t enthusiastic Inciting (let:elop•
ed, Plans for the annual trot!. and
(!rata' to he held Thursday, June 22111,
were furthered, and a 1.'rnnntattl:meet-
ing w•;ts called for 'Thursday, Janie title
at 9 p.11t., to complete these pulls, awl
collect ;all unsold tickets for redistri-
bution.
The meeting voted $rtl,llt) to the NI all-
ito1'i Flood Relict Fund, and a pprt'y-
ious motion 11) restrict the use of the
(home, was rescinded. it was decided
to give the use of the hunte to church
lir ttat•i(ablc groups (lir small meet-
ings if these groups desired to use it.
The meeting closed with "The King,"
v
On Friday night the Dukes rune out
on the top curl of a 17-11 scut'e in n
nan• played at';ainst .\ithtn'it, out the
latter's diamond,
This vim c was similar in many as•
pees to the cite f'lay'ed against t'niun
Behind the mystifying twirls of Free-
man Tenney the Dukes piled up a
substantial lead. 'I'unuey has pitched
good bill for the I).nLes s1) far this sea-
son. Ile has alt",e'npetl p'a'nt\' of curve
and, has more than his usual "hops' on
the_ball. Ile was removed (rout the
ntountl ltt give Don, Johnston, a bud.
din; prim.; pitcher, a chance Io try hit;
slants, The :Winn b;'\•; took Limit
to his (1ff,'t'illgc, and 1'tlli'trll \VIII'
WOK' costly It'yllt errors I)ot ttas able
11) stand Ilia ao'In only part 1)l (nt'
innings at \ Mich time 'Turney \•as\cal-
1(11 back hi the nnnie'. It w,lfree
bitlin'.; affair ill! the way its is ;t the score
wotdd urticate,
Glen Tasker, Utikes second hasctuan
had the 11r.s(ortune to crack some ribs
'n ata aeridt'nl at second base, and \'ill
be absent from the line-up for a \'bice.
Auburn 'tied t\•1) hurlers, Brophy
starting, brio•; relieved b_t' Keith ,\r-
Ihut in the filth iuuing,
Linc-iii's:Illyth: (;ray, e; 'I'unttc%, p:
\latlill, ilia 'I'asl,t'r, 2I'; Riehl, ss; 1)0-
I'crly, 311; \\'atsutt, 11; Johnston, cf;
\\'Irtnu'rc and :\t•ntstron', rf.
.\uburn; Ilat:nitt, r; Brophy and Ar-
thur, p; Patterson, tat; Iiradii'ik, 2I';
t'itt;tirtn, 21,; Arthur, ss; Beadle, If;
Rohit', rf ; \lachan, 1'f,
l'mpires: ;\'tgnstine at the plate;
Wilson nu the bases.
ILYTI I•LONDESIIOI(0 BALL
GAME MUST,BE REPLAYED
icd by \Irs. J, G. b'. \Icliougall; \'u•
rat sole, Harry Lear, anon,; arum) by F1O1'lner Resident Glad To
\Irs. S. II, Brenton, 1,1,11,leshoru; 19-
Note Action On Itellef Fund ii struntcnt:tl, Ron. Philp,; Scotch
,o!1), 1in!ntie Lawrie, Ron..
by \Vi• are always glad to hear from
\kiss Alice Rt,get•s.'ut; Trumpet solo our former esteemed townsman, now a
lomni Ilo'Igins, accompanied by \Irs resident of \Irdicint' Hat, Alta.,' Mr,
\IiI)on(rall; \'it'lin selection, ,lulu) Nle- Leslie 1IilI'orn, tthot writes to renew
1)t'ugaII, accompanied b\• \Irs. 31c- his subscription. \(r, Million' notes
Dougall Vocal solo, Alive Rogerson with pleasure the effort in Blyth to help
iced ipanied ty Ws, 31-1)nugll; Sato. the stricken people of \la nitolta, \1'..
phone sola, Rn -sell Fear, accompanied (tan imagine if he were here hr would
hr \kiss NIarjoric \\Val(; Vocal solo in. foremost in organizing projects to
!'hilus Fear, accompanied hr \I:u'joric help this fund. 'lis litter follows;
Watt Scotch vocal solo, Jijnmic Law- Dear l,ru--twit will notice Ity the
tic, aecnnlpanietl by Alive Rogerson: :(bore (Late that 1 have left the remitt-
3lnttth organ seleetion, \Irs. Ilea. Tay- int; of my snbscripion to The Stand•
tor, accompanied by \Irs. Smith; Viol- ar'1 to the last minute. It is due in
'ti seltrii'nl, tattles 1'iert•e, art(iotpau- lune, (q -morrow, (the letter is dated
'ed by Harold Turner; Carnet solo. .\Lay ,IIsi), I would hate to think that
\lat•jurir \\'att, accompanied by \Irs. any delay of 'aline Wright sunt• up the
\\';ttt; \'orai solo), Carl ("ming, ac- Linotype machine in your office and
•tonpan!t'tl by \Irs. \Iel)tugall. rt'alizr Healy such delay, would do
*'he National Anthemclosed the just that, ,
•,rt'gt•:uti. \\'ell the west, as well ;Is the cast,
Anyone wishing t1)' tonttihnte fir• is slow this spritnt
in providing suitable
!her In t')ie \lan;toba Relief Fund \rather for speedy growth, but condi
-
may leave their donations at The Can- lions hire ill the city have improved
adiau 'lank of Commerce, lately, altlu,neh playing the hose on
lati and gardens is a necessary part
Itai'e 'l'tilip 13109111 I)iticovel'• of oarolening in this semi -arid arca.
t Glatt to note the effort in Blyth to
C(113,y 11'Ii's. D. IIIC(,lllllllll help the people of \\'iittipet; and
\Irs, Duncan 3icl'allunl presented srulher(t \Ianii,Ia, and ;also that you
a very rare Whit bloom to the editor are interested itt building a rink for
of 'I'ht' Standard last week. recreational purposes.
She was prompted in her action by \\'c expect our fancily out to see us
an item and pirl11re which appeared itt Jul) —haven't sects Ivan for three
i1) nuc of the daily papers itt which a tears and they hope to arrive itt time
lady had' line tulip; stalk with 5 bloouts, for our annual stampede,
Nits. N1(.1%1111111' pretrnfe,l its with Kittd regards,
a stalk with font very beautiful and LESLIE II11.11ORN'.
well developed blooms. Still at home
w
OLD !JOYS TO 11101.1) PICNIC with two blooms11c had two stalks Willi (beer blooms BIRTHS
. �-
2
Al'TENDED WEDDING each, and (me stall- The bloom, which were planted in a 1IUDGI\S—I1) Clinton Hospital, on
1\', Sanderson.UJ ANNIVERSARY'1'111, Iluron, County (11,1 !tors .\slue- Harry 1.. Sturdy, convenor of 111.
Norman 1\'ilsci. '0'1 'idiom of Toronto is hnl,ling it's annual local group of the intermediate (() chimp by themselves, belonged to the rd, 1'151), to \!r. and
Stanley Johnston S.(10 \Irs. Alice Fawcettitt attended the picnic on Fri('ty, time 1i1II1, at high Mews group, \\'.0.:\.:\., has annontic- Cottage Tulip Family and the variety Mrs, CarmanSaturday,Saturday, lune 3rol,ns, of Blyth, the
II. L, Shinty 5.119 50th wedding anniversary on Sunday 11;0'1:, just south of Morn sl., at 4 p.m. rd that the. game Hayes( on the lilylll is Ni at Hide,gift of a son—George Ross,
\\'e displayed the 1111',(0 itt our front
Keith Arthur B1.IY) for \I t, and Mrs. James Livermore. of Simper 5;,311 p.m. There will be titres diamond ntt' Inns 2pth, between Illyth whitlow' fora day, but the intense stat -CLARK -1n Clinton Hospital, on Wed- '
Harry and Robert Armstrong 5.00 Clinton, \Irs, lratrcctt is a sister of an l contests for all, Bring your Pic- and I, tttdcsboro, (hats( be replayed, at light was 'uin' t1, shcrtrn it's lift sty- ncsdayl
Ni ay 31st, 1959, t0 Mr, and
Emerson Rodgct• 5,00 NI r, Livermore. . air basket, Yoffie, itilk and itc recall(' a date to he arranged between the of- ` ('
C. J. Cox 5.0'1 -----\'---•-_it was removed to a more suitable \Irs. Jack ('lark (nee Eileen Dark,
will he supplied. \ hearty invitation finals of the awn teams. It will he re• climate i1) the confines of the house. R.N.), R.R, 1, ; ubut'u, the/gift of a
E. Itiggingbottom 2,00 + t t t t' a c (� v is odditietl to all limonites :1)u) their membered that the game ended i1) a Such a display of i es bloom !s very daughter—Sus:t Elizabeth.
Oliver Anderson S,(Y,) 11111ONC, 'HIE (,111)111.111.,5 (encu__. Look for the 'Imam Old Boys •lispmted play and a replay of the game
r S 1', ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN rare, indeed.
\l ors Got\ 19,(1(1 banner, has been ordered 11y the convenor is SN 1,1.1.-1m Clinton hospital on Tiles -
1. Lockhart ..._ 200 Rev, 1, I-Ioueyolatt, l!.A., 13,1)., Minister -u r -_--•- Fortner 1 ' l Girls' 1115• Donald Snell, Inc Shirley Radford),
`tiunday School and Bible Class at l I3 1 (l C 1 1 o) c c r
F. 'I'aylnt•......... .................. 3,10 F. Graduates t11e gill 1)l' a 5101,
Re„ Schultz 2.10 2 )\•III, ML's, 1t . J. 1Iollyittiltt I3ALL GAMES T111S WEEK: band
Carl Goyim- 2.110 Service at 2::U p.m. Entertained , :lnuntt� those graduatin on hrid;ty Parents Asked To Bring
�i•_..._,._,, luny �: Auburn at Union. Beginners To School
Wm. Govier ... 2.10 '"' ' lune 11th, at Iowa► State college, ,tones. �,
linrtna•tt 1'inccnt 2.01 Ott \\'clues+lay evening, ;\Cat. 31st, lame 0: Dungannon' at Saltforll' ' 110.1, was Garnet Ernest MiC'rc;u•y., 't'hc co-operation of ,arcual is asked'
A. 'Poll ....-. 3.(Nl T31,Y'l'll UN1Tlib CHURCH
Nits, Chas. Bell, assisted by her sister, lune !►: Port .1111Crt at Myth, Nit-. McCreary received his 1'II,D. in by the Illyth School itlte i1) is asked' 2.10 • Itct, \\, 1, Roofers, Matt( �et.
Mrs. Bailey, entertained the 5(X1 Club Imre 13: Sanford at Lnndcsbaro. 1,
J.--Raithby litYCII UNtI'I b CHURCHlour 1.3: Illyth at Dungannon. 1 Nt;ltistia with Minors iii Mathcutatics children who will. 111, of school age at
Ilarold Carter 5.IN) to In roan Mrs. 1 lollrnuut, Who is soon Economies,
the beginning 1)i the fall term. l0 the
t REV. 11', J, ROGIERS, MINISl't?R'
leaving hlytll, to take up residence at lour 13: l'niun at Auburn. tar. \Icl'rcar) receive,' an honour school 1)u 'Thursday, lune 22nd, at
FINANCIAL ItEPORT •ll);i5; Sunday school.
Auburn Atltctk Assecintlont Rutin -en, The rtt•uiIt was sprit in
Girls Gement' 111..\, and \I..\, from Queen's l'nivcr- which time the county health nurse
11:15: 5111 Anniversary irsary of the Unt playin:. 507, and to the ti. 011 of the l June 7: Blyth at Dublin, Icily in Ktit ton, ()atah;t, coming is will be. present. Kindly conte between
Total Receipts for 19.19 ......... $850,15 led Church of Canada. Rev, G. Oli- ladies, Alts. Hayman won high score, �_ _ l lura for post graduate work in h14(i the hooey of 1:39 ;and 3 p.m. Children
Total I.xpeuditttres for 1949... 812?-' ver (guest preacher), Sacrament of receiving
from her hostcsscs, \its. S lis thesis was "Coo Functions trolls urn eligible for school in September must
Baptism. Bell and Mrs, Ilail1.\ a lovely gift. J o v1itl�;' Season 011 Sample Surveys." Dr. \Iiirrary will be ;i years old by January 1st, 1951,
Cash balance on Maud37.93 1?tenitt:,' ServlCe •withdrawn until 1'hr hostesses to provided a very Iran.' over the l .5..\. during the sum- �'
11, L,. Sturdy, 'Creasttrer, Septettt,hr. artistic ant d.It toes lunch, which cv- :\ large work part' did asp splendid
Win. J. Craig, President. CHURCH OF LNGLANb evening's work at the 110\011'; rein mer "'millts, r'•ndictim. a survey for
crrtme enjoyed. :Niter lunch Irs., (' General Mills lite. AN EGG ODDITY
Auditors' Statement TRINITY CfIUkLI1, 1111•'1'11 1ktllymau was presented with a very 'n •\(onlay ni'.ht. brush earth was \Irs. \31t'rc:trt lure :\)rte 1'hiSli's1
Auburn, May P. 1950 Miss Aller Rogetsells Organist, lovely cup and saucer, •a gift (runt the (Ionil into the green, with the anal 0f rlau�'hirt ni \I r. and N11 -s• 1. lt. Phil= 1 holt at the faint of James Crates
7:311 ,t1).: Alice, SCO club, and ,resealed 1 t Mrs. iis11 rquiputcnt' borrowed from the \\'itis;. fort', lltllett, was in a joking -mood re=
We the undersigned auditors have I' 1 ham Lawn Dowling C!uh. The new lips, 1)i Myth, Will arcrntPaccy hint. ccntty and as a result came up with ah
examined and audited the books• of lite-TRISITN' CHURCIT, BELGRA\•E \ft's• itogyman. thanked the ladies i _-__t,_ _ r
Auburn Athletic Association, and have Urs, C. \Voda Organist, ;also iter hostesess, for the very enjoy -.power roller is prating it's worth, with! VISITING WEST tilt appearedltworthy
rtlbr of ttmf'misthcd pro-
found thein correct. 11).10 :t o)1.: The Holy l'0nunnniort able evening. the result that on Tuesday night a curl:
Mrs. Edgar t,a\esott. of Trebles was Played, just to try out Mr. lira) \\ heeler telt l'hur„Iay duct, with a soft leathery shell, and to
Margaret R. Jackson. 5T. ACr\i�K'S CT1UJ.C11, ;\U11Ult�' — the green. 'Chose participating were horning to visit hi, brother, 11'. Ern- each end was attached a smaller egg, -
Since the audit approximately 375.00 Mrs. Gurdon Taylor, Organist most satisfied, tout a splendid season ,est N1 heeler, of Lethbridge, Alta., for giving it the appcarance•of a tuiniattire
has been raised and collected. 11 :30 a.m.; Matins, Cs Yourbubscriptioll Paid? of recreation is looked forward to. two weeks. teddy bear,
ml \'ice : It, roan'(► I tall.
,-'irtl
Secretary: t ;or'lon :\u(:us(ine•
'I'riasitrt'r: Norman Garrett.
Tail 'Twister: Arnold Bet'lhut.
.\ssidant : Moody 1 loll;utd.
Lion Tamer: Ii'.rt Gray.
\,si•tant : Statn. Sibt11nrpe.
\\'illi:tui \\'atsom, \\`illlam
Ileffrnti, Don. Ulric;, Les. hullrdge.
The nmcting ihtst•d with the hoar.________
oar.
You will be delighted with
this fragrant tea
"SALADA
012EIME
Riders for the
Hoot -Owl
Pool
by 0, H. SHARP
CHAPTER THREE
(Continued From Last Week)
The bedded herd was a huge, dint
blot, The sound of deep -breathing
steers mixed with the distant yap-
ping of a coyote.
Webb and Hank Roberts rode
around its one direction, the two
other riders going the other way.
"We got 'em," Webb said in a
quiet voice to the two men he mel.
And he took the guard watch
handed him.
Out across the sleeping herd, d
cowboy was singing a lonesome,
lulling song.
There is an indefinable spell
about night guard. It creeps into
a cowboy's heart like a plaintive
melody. it is on starry nights,
when the herd is quiet, that the
cowboy dreams as he rides, singing
his song to his cattle. Always his
song carries that note of lonesome-
ness that is the cowboy's lot. These
night hours are when he remem-
bers bits of things, things that go
to make a cowboy's life,
He rides around at a swinging
walk, eased its his saddle. He
thinks, perhaps, of town and its
brief pleasures at shipping time. He
thinks of home, a home he left to
drift along a lonesome trail, Past
pleasures, past regrets. The stars
overhead and a good liorse between
Itis legs. A sweetheart who waits
for hint, So he sings his song to
his cattle.
Old Hank Roberts had chosen
his hour for talk. Wise in more
than one way was that grizzled old
sheriff of Rimrock.
"If I cared a heap for a woman,"
he began, "I'd do all I could to
stake her happy, 1 wasn't more
than about your age, Webb, when
I met the girl I married. She was
teachin' a little old cow -country
school and boardin' with some
ranch folks. 1 was workin' for the
old Circle C at the foot of the Little
Rockies. The outfit had sent me
out to rep for 'cut with the Circle
4542
SIZES
2-10
Pretty as a little dress can bel
One straight piece right down to
heat, shirred at top. shirred at the
waist or held in with a Iutgc sash.
Just add rufllaa and tics!
Pattern 4542; sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10,
Size 6 sunfrock. 2 yard; 35 -inch
fabric; bonnet, 1a yard.
This pattern, easy to use, simple
to sew, is tested for I'it. IIas
complete illustrated instructions.
Send twenty-five cents (25c) in
coins (stamps cannot be accepted)
for this pattern, Print plainly size,
name, address, style number.
Send .order lo Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth Street, New Toronto, Ont.
ISSUE 23 -- 1950
Diamond. 1 was on my tvay to
the outfit, which was camped north
of Milk River, Kazin' along my
string of ponies, when I stopped at
this ranch for the night.
"It was a Saturday night; no
school of a Sunday. ). Now, my
night horse was a plumb gentle,
biscuit-eatin' feller. A black -and -
white paint horse called Blackfoot.
I laid over and took Iter horseback
ridin'. Monday morning' I rode on
to where the Circle Diamond wagou
was camped. But 1 was shy a night
horse. Blackfoot stayed therc at
the ranch. When we got married
at the end of the round -up, the old
gent at the CircleC give Iter that
fat paint pony. Yep, we got mar-
ried. 1 quit spendin' my money
over the bar, quite gamblin',
"The old gent talked nu into run-
nin' for sheriff and 1 got elected.
Settled down and stayed thataway.
Yep, when a man cares about a
woman, he's got to quit his fool
cowboy ways and act like. ire was
human. 'fake a young feller your
age, for instance, with one of the
finest and gamest little girls that
ever lived, a -carie' for him so touch
she can't sleep nights for wor-
ryin' about hint. 11 that feller was
smart, he'd quit tryitt' to go bronco,
He'd quit herdin' with outlaws and
he'd quit bucltin' a losin' gams.
He'd sell out and starry that girl
and take her to a new range and •
make a home for her, He wouldn't
go chargin' around all over the
country parkin' a gun and Inuttin'
trouble.
Webb Winters stared straight
ahead when he answered the slier-
iff. "You're talkie' through your
hat, Hank. Taikin' loco. You don't
savvy the layout. Mac don't care
about enc like that. Man, she was
goin' to marry Bob Anderson. Bob
just naturally worshipped her, He's
kepi me awake many a night
tcllin' me how he was goiit' to
make their home so that she'd be
content to live on a ranch. Bob
and me had planned on addin' .t
big roost to his cabin. A big stone
fireplace and some Injun rugs and
bear hides on the floor. Real dishes
instead of the ones he had.
"I helped him pick the furniture
out of the catalogue, Fancy dishes,
a whole set of 'em. Crockery and
new cookie' hardware. A real stove.
A sofa and easy chairs for the big
room. A talhin' machine with a
fancy horn. We put in half the
nights last winter markin' out in
the catalogue •what he'd need. The
catalogue and the list is in Bob's
cabin right now. 1 never saw a
mean care for a woman like Bob
Anderson cared for Mac.
"'Then the dantned skunks mur-
dered him. Bob is dead. I'm goin'
to live long enough to pay 'eat off
in their own kind of money. Bob
was my pardncr."
Webb \Vinters had spoken quiet-
ly. Too quietly to suit old Hattk
Roberts, who knew how to read
sten. He caught that note of final-
ity and he knew that nothing he
could say or tlo would alter \Vebb's
plans. He made one last effort,
however.
"Webb, son, did yon ever ask
Mac to marry you?"
"No."
"But you thought a heap of her?"
"So dill Bob. Bank, he just
plumb worshipped Mae."
'And you rode off and let Bob
do his courtiti'. I don't reckon it
ever struck you that it was you, not
nob Anderson, that she cared most
for. I don't reckon it ever got
through that thick skull of yourn
that she wa; niarryitt' Lob because
she figured that you'd nrrer r'ome
around, courtin'.
"Webb, that girl is s'.orry-in' her
heart out these days. She looks
peaked and she cries when she's
alone. Iter eyes give her away.
She thought a heap of Bob Ander-
son because he just sort of wor-
shipped her. Bob got killed and
she'll never quite git over it, be-
cause Its always treated her so
great. But it was you she wanted
to marry all the time.
'Continued Next Weal
IN INDIANAPOLIS, a couple's
kitten made its disappearance at
about the same time their car de -
%eloped a strange squeak. It was
the lost kitten, hungry ,an ; with a
frost-bitten tail,
FATHER'S DAY
_:{r::rss'�:>Si;3:;:r1ti�?�f:,.•:t':zt:"�;f'.`;:,;fin;�:;:is'"°+" '.�:
"1 Know It's A Dream—BUT DON'T WAKE ME UP!"
Atiftkik
HRONICLES
hNGERFARM
e endolir e. P Cts rhe
Since last week 1 have learnt a
little more about painting and a
tut more about birds. When 1 left
you last week I was painting the
hall and also watching three littic
robins in a nest over the front door.
Iffy, how those little birds grew)
Ten days and they were all faith -
creel out and getting ready to leave
the nest. And by that time they
had become nice looking wee
things with bright speckled
breasts. They kept Mother and
Father Robin busy from !,awn to
dark satisfying their hungry needs
and the parents knew with unerr-
ing instinct just what the little
birds could digest. For Ilse first
few days they were fed tiny pin -
size worsts and grubs, then, as
the birds grew bigger Mr. and Mrs.
Robin brought bigger and better
+worms, twirled around their beaks
kr convenience in carrying. After
iter babies had been fed Mrs, Rob-
in often got into the nest behind
them, pecked away for a few mtin-
tltes and then fly off again, What is
she doing, 1 wondered? To find out
1 watched more closely. Now what
do you suppose was happenings'
Well, believe it or not, Mrs. Robin
was housekeeping! Her method was
to hunt for the droppings of her
offspring, Then pick than up in
her beak and fly away with them.
11 only chickens cottld be trained
that way! Another thing 1 found
out .. , when little birds are feath-
ered out Mrs, Robin leaves them to
themselves all night. But corse the
dawn, she is back again v ith an
early breakfast. And indeed, these
robins grew so fast there was no
room in the nest for mother any-
way. When they were ab,tut eight
days old the young robins began
making chipping noises and some-
times they would stand up in the
nest and flap their sturdy little
wings. One time one little fellow
hopped on to the Icdgc, but soon
got nervous and cuddled down in
the nest again. '\'hat is, until today.
Today was their big day ... and
Imine, too. The parent robins, hour
after (tour, flew around from tree
to tree, and back and forth to
the ledge near the nest, chipping,
chipping, all the tints—calling to
their babies in bird language -
-Contc, it is time you Icft the nest.
Spread your wings, little fledg-
lings. Conic out here in the open
—we wilt take cart of you. We will
show you where the best worsts
ate found and the safest trees and
pushes in which to hide until your
.xings are stronger."
So our by one the little fledg•
'Anus, chipping nervously, flew down
to the nearest tree. When the first
ore made the grade the parent
herds left the less venturesome ones
still its their Inst while they en-
ticed the first adventurer away from
the house—away from slinking cats
and a playful pup. That done, they
would return again and start chip-
ping as vigorously as .ever. The
little birds that were left in the
nest would answer shrilly in re-
turn. It took quite a lot of . coax-
ing to get the last one to leave
but finally it took to its uncertain
wings. Now they arc all away; the
cosy, rather shaggy nest is de-
serted, and, believe it or nut, I feel
gstite lonesome without my little
It rds. But then, I have also finished
the lower hall, so 1 wouldn't have
had them constantly under observa-
tion much longer anyway.
Yes, soon I shall be starting o:t
the tipper hall—in England we used
to call the upper hall "the 1r -tiding"
--if that is of any interest. How-
ever, before 1 start out with the
paint brush again there is a tv -
eeks' wrath that has to be at-
tended to and other work to catclt
up on,
1 mentioned having learnt a little
more about painting—that was in
the mixing. For the floor of our
hall 1 had chosen an enamel that
called itself "leather brown." May-
be newly tanned leather would look
that colour and be 'attractive in
some rooms but on our hall it wis
horrible. I did one strip and it made
me feel billious to look at it. And
then, company came to call and that
finished toy painting for that night.
slut I went to bed and worried about
it. I felt I couldn't live with that
paint and like it. But what to da
about it the only othAr shade
was dark brown which 1 didn't
want. Next ,Horning I looked over
my paint supply with a view to
trying a mixture—maybe a bit
of black would do tite trick. Or
this gray porch paint—what col-
our would grey and brown pro-
duce "Well, there's only one way
10 find out," said I to myself. So
after stirring the quart .If grey
et;atnel I dumped half of it into
my quart of leather brown. Result
—a nice, soft shade of brown, about
the colour of fumed oak.
It is rather fun mixing colours,
never being certain what the out-
come will be, But halfway measures
arc 'no good—if you start mixing
you have to mix enough to finish
your job—or put up with a patch
work effect,
DRUGS SPOIL CHEESE
Wisconsin cheesemakers have
had trouble with mills in their vats
during the curdittg process. The
trouble has been traced to cattle .
that were being treated with peni-
cillin or aurcotnycin for mastitis,
an udder disease. Dr, W. \' Price
found that the drugs halt the
growth and upset the normal bac-
teria necessary for good cheese
production.
AFTER ESCAPING serious in-
jt'ry in a collision, a Newark motor-
ist was bitten three times by his
t'.og, which had been riding with
hint. When an ambulance arrived
to take hint to hospital, it caught
tire.
Here it is! ,
The Best Paint Value
Its Canada Since 1939
Home Paint Co.
Mrs /on the kind or value sou sot
O T'llltts the wet—remembctt'—ltllsl•
ening 'taint (lint (lowed rat amoolltLv—
cow'red nnlldlT—oral stared bNs6t mrd
colourful for fears; Quellt, pnlnl or
Olin III/ comet at Ibr some Inn "rare.
3.,5
I'Llt UAI.LUN
Name /out own col,
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choose from. Or Rend
for coiner short.
FREE—Paint Brush
Specially made for dome taint 1'o ,
these thick, smooth, lona-bristle oalnt
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decorators throughput Can
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With each 0 gallon order
Send today for a 0 gallon triol order.
(.:arb with order will care O.O.U.
ebareea,
HOME PAINT CO.
313 RUSHTON ROAD
TORONTO — ONTARIO
LANN'E FiRST
ut,,,r _.,.;oq ti'c4m4teot.
"Dear Anne Iiirst: Two years ago
I gave my husband a divorce, so
he could "starry a woman he went
with all the
time we were
married. 1
thought he
would tire of het
and come back
to me and the
children.
"Instead, they
arc happier now
than ever! All
my friends tell me about their new
home, their car, and other luxuries,
When he has our children, they
can't do enough for them, andel the
youngsters like the wife fine, \\'hen
he comes after them, I nearly diel
"1 still love hint. Surely he must
think of ere, the mother of his Here's Prompt Relief Beyond
children? Belief from the Pains of
► how entirely happy he is with his
• new wife. To attempt to destroy
• that happiness could only leave
+ you with new humiliations, and
•• an inconsolable regret that you
• ever tried. ,
• You say you love your bus-
* hand, 1 do not doubt that. But
• isn't it the real truth that you
* want hint (rack—wheher he waists
• to conte or trot? If he has wanted
+ to, he would have told you long
4 ago,
* When we know true love, we
t want the other's happiness more
;than lye want our own.
Your husband is happy now.
Can't you quell your jealousy,
and conte to rejoice that he, at
least, is geting.what he wants out
of life:
\Vhcn you accomplish this, you
* will knots' the consolation of
* peace, Rid of this harrowing
* jealousy, you can approach life
* with the assurance that you are
* a better Christian, and through
* new faith in yourself, conquer
your loneliness and make a good
* life for yourself and your chit-
* dreu.
* Seek help in this through your
* church. I think your minister
* can help you in your struggle,
* and bring you peace,
When you have been hurt almost
beyond bearing, your emotions will
not let you be fair, That is why
it le wise to ask Anne Hirst to help
you find peace. Write Iter at Box 1.
123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto,
Ont.
•
HELP FOR WEAK EYES
A device which will permit poor
eyes to read ordinary newspapers,_
magazines and books is now in the
final testing stage, This new in-
t.truntent, known as a "projection
magnifier," was developed at the
Franklin Institute Laboratories for
Research and Development. The
projection magnifier weighs a little
more than 17 pounds, measures 21
inches high, 14 incites wide and
27 inches deep and contains two
40 -watt bulbs, with a pair of 100 -
watt bulbs as alternates. When a
page is placed on a movable tray
at the, bottom and a lens lowered
against it, an illuminated magnifi-
cation appears on a ground glass
slanted at the correct angle for a
reader in a chair. If vision is very
slight it is still possible to read
by moving closer to the screen.
"Do you think I could talk to
hint and get him to come back to
its? '
"After all, this woman tools him
from us, Why not give her surae
of Iter own medicine?
.,S K„
RISE ABOVE IT
* To want to "pa)' tltis tvontan
* back" and wreck her marriage, is
* the first reaction of a disappointed
'' wife. But even if you could ac-
* complish this, surely you arc too
* fine a person to try.
* You took a chance in divorcing
" your husband.
* You lost,
* Why not admit it, and lose like
a lady?.
* You could not persuade yottr
* husband to come back to you,
* you know. You have learned
IMMATIN
RIBS
Try Prompt -Acting
Easyto-Take
i DOLCIN®TABLETS
• to relieve the agony
41t1 of ARTHRITIS,RNEUMA•
TISM, SCIATICA and
other ARTHRITIC and
RHEUMATIC disorders \
DOLCIN is fau•acdns, reliable, harm•
leu to the heart or any other organ and
teases no unpleasant aftereffects. Get
DOLCIN today—to help you find comfort.
ins relief frons ART111011C and RHEUMATIC
paine fa
cost—bottles td
of100 tablets—the new 1200.
tablet bottle—and the economical 500.
tablet bottle,
DOICIN LIMITED . TOMIiITO 10.ONTIIRM
yaiy!CheIsea Bun Loaf
can make easilywith
A treat you
new fast DRY Yeast
Now you have Fleischmann's
Fast Dry Yeast, forget about
the oldtime hazards of yeast
baking! Always at band
always full-strength 'and fast
rising! Keep a month's supply
in your cupboard! Make this
delicious Chelsea Bun Loaf —
cut in slices for buttering, or
separate the buns.
CHELSEA BUN LOAF
Make 3 pans of (nuts front this
one recipe—dough will keep
in refrigerator for a week.
Scald 14 c. milk, 14 c, granulated
sugar, 1 % tsps, salt and % c.
shortening; cool to lukewarm,
Meanwhile, measure into a large
bowl % c, lukewarm water, 1 asp.
granulated sugar; stir until sugar
is dissolved, Sprinkle with 1 en-
velope Flcischntatut's Royal hast
Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10
titins„ THEN stir well, Add cooled
silk mixture and stir in 1 well•beaten
gg. Stir in 2 c. ouce•sitted bread flour;
beat until smooth, Work in 21/2 c. once -
sifted bread !lour. Knead on lightly.
loured board until smooth and elastic.
Cut off ?f/ of dough, knead into a smooth
ball, place its greased bowl grease lop of
douggh, cover and store in refrigerator
tttil wattled. Shape remaining 1/3 of
dough into a smooth bale place in greased
bowl and grease top. Cover and set in
arm place, free from draught. Let rise
nail doubled in bulk, Cream 3 tbs, butter
r margarine and blend in 1/2 c. brown
ugar (lightly pressed down), 1t/a tsps.
round cinnamon and 3 tbs, corn syrup;
mead about ya of this tnixture in bottom
of a greased loaf pan (4> * x 81/2") and
sprinkle with pecan haves. Punch down
risen dough and roll-out Into an r
square; loosen dough. Spread with re-
maining sugar mixture and sprinkle with
'/s C. raisins. Loosely roll up like a jelly
toll, Cut roll Otto 6 slices. Place in pre-
pared pen. Crease tops. Cover and let
Ise until doubled in bulk. Bake in moder-
ate oleo 3$0°, 25-30 thins. Let stand in
pan for 5 tnins. before turning out.
($c GREEN
t THUMB
GordonSmilh
At the back of the flower beds,
along fences or in place of fences,
one can use growing screens. Even
a fence or wall in gond condition
will look 'snore attractive if parti-
ally hidden in this way, and as
for the more common type which is
not so atttractivc it can be com-
pletely screened by annual or per-
ennial vines. 'fhcre arc all sorts of
planting material available for this
purpose and found listed in any
,good catalogue, The perennial types
arc well known, fany people do
not realize that one can get quite
good and quick results from an-
nuals too. Dahlias, ornamental sun-
flowers, cosmos, spider plants, are
only some of many things that
will reach three or four feet in
height in a few weeks, And there
are quick -growing vines, loo; like
scarlet runner beans,/ sweet peas,
hops and morning glories,
9 9 *
First Plantings
1n every garden there is one
spot or corner which (Ines out be-
fore the rest. This is the place to
plant the very early things—hardy
vegetables and flowers than can go
in the ground just as soon as one
can get out and dig, Frost and snow
later on will not hurt these, and
some of them must make their
first growth while soil and air are
cool.
Among the vegetables in this ca-
tegory will be radish, leaf lettuce,
spinach, early onions and the hardi-
est of the garden peas. Of course,
this refers to first planting only,
Main plantings should go in later
and final plantings after that, With
vegetables it is important to string
out the plantings so that the har-
vest will be equally extended. All
the vegetables mentioned can be
planted at least three times, a fort-
night apart, and some lik: lettuce
and radish, carrots, beets, beans,
etc., can be planted at intervals
right up to July,
Among the hardy flowers will be
things like cosmos, marigolds,
pcnsies, sweet peas and mlytlting
else listed as very hardy in Cana-
dian seed catalogues, Some of these
are so resistant to frost that they
sow themselves and come on as
volunteer plants in the spring.
• 9 *
Spread Them Out
A really imposing showing can
be made with a few annual flowers
and with a minimum of effort, .Cos-
mos, giant marigolds, zinnias, pe-
tunias, portulaca, nicotine, calen-
dula, alyssum, nasturtiums, etc,, are
easily grown almost anywhere in,
Canada. Some of the larger flowers
can actually be used in the place
of shrubs. Cosmos,, gladioli, dahlias,
giant marigolds and zinnias should
have about two feet each way—
petunias need about a foot of room.
New And Useful
For Bed Smokers,
Nevtdevice to eliminate tire haz-
ard of 'cigarette smoking works on
similar principle to miner's lamp,
Mesh tubing protects burning
cigarette, takes off heat while keep-
ing below "flash point." Said to
prevent cloth, paper, etc., from
igniting if cigarette conies in con-
tact with them, Maker recommends
for hospitalized persons, outdoor
sportswear, smoking in open car,
etc.
* • r
Fists Turn on Light,
One -cell flash -light bulb device
attaches to fishing rod, flashes when
, tug comes on line, After light
flashes, Zine—which has been slip-
ped through special clip preparatory
to casting—comes free so fisherman
man battle with fish.
• *
Better Mouse Trap?
Mouse catching device features
pads covered with harmless, odor-
less pitch, says firm. Pitch lures
mice, which get stuck to gummy
material,
• •\•
Black Snaps in Flash,
That Polaroid camera that pro-
duces a positive picture . within a
minute after exposure of the film
now will be available for black and
white prints, ,Previousy turned out
sepia prints.. Gives semigloss fin-
. ish, of sante permanence as ordinary
pohtographs, says inventor,
* • •
Light Waders
New ' Vinylite plastic waist -high
waders are said to 'have only frac-
tion bulk, weight usual, For fresh
water or surf casting, duck hunt-
ing, trapping, won't deteriorate in
sun, salt water, arc highly flexible,
says maker. For use with tennis
shoes, felt -soled wading shoes, have
seamless double -weight feet, pock-
ets said waterproof.
Retards Fire
New (tante retardent chemical is
said suitable for farm buildings,
grain elevators, homes, hotels, etc.
R:ported to he used by U.S. Navy
for "flameproof" hospitals and by
Atomic Energy Commis,rn.
*
Garbage Bounces
New rubber garbage pail springs
tight back into shape if iropped,
jumped on, etc.
`ms's w •
He Buys 'Em By The Pound—Garage owner •Eines :1, Cham-
bers presents a new dog, just rescued from the city pound, to
little Ann Marie Williams, Learning that the pound had hun-
dreds of pets that must be disposed of, Chambers put up the
stoney for 200 youngsters to bail out" dogs and claim then; for
their own,
Modern Etiquette
By Roberta Lee
Q. When it the proper time for
the bridegroom to give the minister
his wedding fee?
A, The bridegroom does not give
the fee to the minister personally.
He should place the money or check
in an envelope and give it to his
best man, who will hand it to the
minister following the ceremony,
Q. What is the proper way to
point the prongs of the fork when
cutting food and when eating it?
A, The prongs of the fork should
point downwards when cutting the
food, upwards when conveying it
to the mouth,
Q, Should salads always be cut
• and eaten with' tlic fork?
A, All salads are cut and eaten
with the fork. If hard hearts of let-
tuce are served, however, and they
cannot be managed with the fork,
it is permissible to cut them with
the knife,
Q. 1f there are several male mem-
bers of a family, may one invitation
to a formal affair be addressed
jointly to include than all?
A. No; each man, other than the
husband, should be sent a separate
invitation,
Q. Is it still customary to use
black -edged correspondence .when
one is in mounting?
A. Yes, this Is still done, although '
it is not done quite as much as
formerly,
Q. Would you consider ;t cour-
teous and thoughtful to fill in a
word for another person who is
talking, or to finish a sentence for
hint? '
A. No; this is exceedingly rude
and is most annoying to the speaker
—unless, of course, he asks for
assistance.
Q. 1•Iow. should one serve and
cat potatoes that are boiled in their
skins?
A, They should be served in in-
dividual dishes, The skins may then
be left in the dish, the potato placed
on the meat plate for eating.
Q, 1-Iow can a bride-to-be thank
the friends who attended showers
that were given for her?
A. She may thank each guest as
she opens the gift, and then write
a note of thanks a day or two later,
Q, Is is obligatory that relatives
and friends send gifts to a newly
engaged girl?
A. Not at all, Of course, it is
perfectly all right and is sometimes
done, but there is nothing obliga-
tory about it. Usually the receipt of
the wedding invitation is time
enough for gift -giving,
Grandma Was Right
Grandma was right about catch-
ing coldl Remember how she used
to say; "Keep your feet dry and get
a good hot meal Inside von, and
you'll he all right."
Now the scientists are catching,
up with her.
Iliocheniists report that chilling
and overexertion "snake it easy for
vi:uses to infect an organism."
One 'group of rats was kept at
below freezing tempeartures. An-
other group was given a thorough
workout on a treadmill, A thin'
group—the control—was left alone,
Overexertion was worse than
chilling in encouraging the virus,
Both were bad.
What was that Grandma said
about a hot meal?
Another group of scientists fed
chickens on low -protein and highs
protein diets, The high -protein
chickens fought off disease better,
Maybe' Grandma should have
given us more bacon and fewer
wheat cakes. Otherwise, she had
things pretty well sized up.
HOW CAN I ?
By Anne Ashley '
Q. How •can i givean added
flavor to my coffee?
A, Try adding a few drops of
vanilla to the coffee immediately
before serving,
* * *
Q, How can I remove lesion
juice and other acid stains from a
garment?
A, By the use of ammonia, This
also applies to perspiration stains
which have changed the color of a
garment.
• *
Q, How can I prolong the wear
cf silk hosiery and silk underwear?
A, Add a small amount of vinegar
to the last rinse water. The vinegar
will dissolve the soap and ensure
longer wear.
• * *
Q. flow can 1 prevent cracking
of linoleum when rolling it?
A, Do not try to roll linoleum
for storing until it has been placed
before a fire for a few hours and
lias become thoroughly warm.
Otherwise, It is sure to crack,
Q. How can I keep baby's month
clean?
A, A solu'ion of one teaspoon of
boracic acid to twenty teaspoonfuls
of water is excellent for this pur-
pose, Use a clean swab made by
twisting clean absorbent cotton
tightly around a toothpick, and
wash out the mouth twice daily.
This may prevent many complica-
tions of the stomach,
"If you want to
be really bright
brush up with
NUGGET"
Nugget Shoe Polish
gives a perfect
shine .. ► preserves
leather . , . makes
shoes last longer.
OX -BLOOD, BLACK, AND ALL SHADES Or BROWN
°0��'1�ttIGG
T,, YOUR SHOES-
THiS
MORNING?
TABLE TALKS�elm Arwirews.
Fresh, green salads— rhubarb—
wall berries—there isn't much need
of any introduction to a cookery
column fcaturit,g such things.
1Io•%ever, just in case som: of you
have forgotten it, I'm going to
sticl: in a few lines froni one of
, my ;ell -time favorites in the way
of
books,—'f 11E 111STOttY OF
MR POLLY,
"It was a profusely budding
Spring day, and greens such as God
had never permitted before in hu-
man memory (though indeed they
come every year and we forget)
were mirrored vividly in a mirror
of unprecedented brown,"'
Now for those recipes.
GARDEN MEDLEY
Serves 6 to 8
Toss together lightly ;led chill.
1 quart young beet greens,
coarsely torn,
2 cups fresh spinach
coarsely torn (any fresh
greens may be substituted
for the above)
;1/4 cup chopped onion
1/2 cup chopped celery
6 hard -cooked eggs, si'ced
1% teaspoons salt
1/2 teaspoon pepper
Add just before serving
TA cup French dressing
'foss again a11d serve iminctli-
utely.
$ d 4
GREEN -AND -WHITE SALAD
Serves 4 to 6
Combine _
11/2 cups shredded leaf
lettuce (or any greens
desired)
1 cup sliced raw cauliflower
3 tablespoons chopped sweet
pickle
Chill thoroughly,
Combine
3 tablespoons salad oil
3 tablespoons vinegar
/ teaspoon salt
21/2 teaspoons sugar
?e teaspoon pepper
teaspoon paprika
1/2 teaspoon grated oninn
Shake thoroughly in covered jar.
Pour over greens, 'foss lightly.
Serve immediately.
•*
RHUBARB CREAM PIE
Makes one 8 -inch pie
Melt
2 tablespoons butter
.Add
2 cups diced rhubarb
1 cup sugar
Cook slowly until shift arb is
lender,
Combine
% cup sugar
2 tablespoons cornstarch
2 egg yolks, well beater,
Ya cup light cream
IA teaspoon salt
Add to rhubarb and cook until
thick.
Cool; pour into baked 8 -inch pie
shell.
Top with meringue.
Bake at 350° (moderate) 12 to
15 minutes,
RHUBARB BUTTER CRUNCH
Serves 6
Combine
3 cups diced fresh rhubarb
1'cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
Place in greased, 6 x 10 -inch
baking dish.
Combine
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup raw rolled oats
11/3 cups flour
Cut in
/ cup butter
/ cup other shortening
Sprinkle over rhubarb mixture,
Bake at 375° (nmorlente) 40
minutes,
Serve warns with cream
• • •
STRAWBERRY -RHUBARB
SALAD
Seves 6
Combine
2 cups rhubarb, rut in 17, -inch
pieces
;�a cup sugar
3/4 cup water
Cook slowly until just tender.
Sweeten
2 cups sliced strawberries
with
2/ cup sugar
Soften
2 tablespoons unflavored
gelatine in
1/4 cup cold water
Dissolve gelatine in (tot rhubarb
mixture.
Add the strawberries acd
PA tablespoons lemon juice
Chill nu 111 slightly thickened,
Pour into molds; chill until firm,
Unmold on drained pintapp!,
rigs on crisp lettuce leaves.
Pass mayonnaise.
•r r r
STRAWBERRY CREAM PIE
1 cup sugar
4 tablespoons cornstarch
r/, teaspoon salt
2% cups milk, scalded
2 eggs, slightly beaten.
3 tablespoons butter
teaspoon vanilla
1 nine -inch baked pie shell
1 pint strawberries, sliced
Method: Mix sugar, cornstarch
and salt, Gradually add milk and
cook in a double boiler until thick,
Add a small amount of hot mixture
to eggs; then stir into remaining
hot mixture, Cook until thick, stir-
ring constantly.
Remove from heat; add butler
and vanilla; chill, Pour into baked
pie shell, Cover with stra•,vberries;
chill. Top with sweetened whipped
cream just before serving,
* * *
STRAWBERRY -RHUBARB
PIE
1 cup beet or cane sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
2/4 teaspoon nutmeg
3 cups cooked rhubarb
1 recipe plain pastry
1 cup strawberries, sliced
2 tablespoons quick -cooking
tapioca
Method; Combine sugar salt,
nutmeeg, tapioca, orange juice and
nutmeg, tapioka, orange ;nice and
rhubarb. Place in pastry -Bred pan.
Top with strawberries and dot with
butter, Arrange pastry cut ini shapes
of daisies over top.
Bake in 400 -degree oven for 10
minutes, then in 350 -degree oven
Inc 30 minutes.
t
FOR BETTER CITIZENSHIP • • • MAKE RAD YOUR PAL:
% Cup Sugar
6'Tablespoons Cnnnda Corn Starch
1,4 Teaspoon Salt
4 Cups Milk
1%Teaspoons
Vanilla
Mix sugar, Canada Corn Starch
and salt in top of double boiler.
Gradually add milk, mixing until
smooth. Place over boiling water
and cook, stirring constantly,
until mixture thickens. Cover and
eontinue cooking 10 minutes lon-
ger, stirring occasionally. Bentove
front heat. Add vanilla; cool.
Pour into moulds or serving dish
and chill. Makes 0 to 8 servings.
Other variations including FloatingIsland,
Chocolate plane Mangge, CustarBlanc
Mango and Pistachio Blanc Mango are in-
cluded in Jane Ashley's Recipe Folder
entitled "For Finer—Delicious Desserts".
FREE. Jane Ashley's Tested"
Recipes—Send postcard to Ifonio
Service Department CC 20,
The Canada Starch Company,
Limited, P.O. !los 129, Montrealr
1
.111%.0111_,-4, - �, THE NT,AgbAitn
WESTFIELI) 1 The meeting was closed with "The
1(1111,' and sandwiches and tarts were '
served by the hostesses, .
FORUM GROUP HELD he Si1fiIIei°
(J'giie
I'hc Liyc Wire Farm Forum
runt held
their picinde at Gudericlt park oit Sat-
urday, June 3r11. .Su:lhall and races - 1S
were enjoyed by all, with Lorne and
iienplclt+at;iduct'u clutrllcotahlc for 5a CANVAS FOOTWEAR TIME
picnic supper, -
LADIES
Summer Dresses, Skirts and Blouses,
SHORTS - $2,98. BRAS • $1.19
MIDRIFF SHIRTS • $1,79,
Lingerie • Bras - Girdles,
Boys' Cowboy Hats,
MEN'S DRESS -TYPE STRAW HATS • 79c
Baseball Caps.
Sport Shirts - Odd Trousers • Tee Shirts,
Overalls and Work Pants,
Stanfield's Underwear.
MADE-'1'O-ALE.\SURE SUITS.
W. J. Heffron
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Taylor were
gties:s at the McKee -Smith wedding at
NI.deswor1h on Saturday. Their
daughter, Mrs. Edgar Dane, of \Vrox-
eter was matron of honour.
Miss Dorothy \Iarteus of London
visited last week with her friend, Mrs.
Rus'e1 Cc ok.
\\'r (ding (tells are loudly ringing.
Mr. and \Irs. Howard Campbell
Wednesday June 7,1050
Lois, liegh and Harold, t•isited
Smithy with Mrs, .\, E. Johnston,1
CARD OF THANKS
\\ est \\''awanosli, I \Irs. George Charter wishes to thank -
M rs. Charles Smith, \trs. Ivan all the friends and neighbours wlni so 1
:ay:h
htinan attended the JleI ee-Smith 16indly assis'ed in any way during her
1edin"; at the home of Mr. and Mrs ;trcitlent, especially AIr. and Nits. M. -
uSntith of Molesworth on Satur- \Ic\'ittie, liev. Rogers ha his thought-
fulness in phoning to Mildred and, -
Rev. Wm, Taylor and Mrs. Taylir 'riving the family to the 11:sitital the'
of I). rcltcster, visited on Sunday at right of the operation; also all who 1 -
the home of Mr, and Mrs, Elwin Tay- rent f,owe'•s and gifts, including the '
lor. \V. A. group of the church and Group
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Bosnian 4, flower's from the McKenzie f;nil".1
• rent a con' le of days last week with Mildred's class states, the Marshall • 1
\I r. awl Mrs, Duncan McNichol of unn Iy, Carter family and Mrs. J. Coll:,1 -
\Valton, hex of treats, Ella and Orval Me- I 1
\Icssrs. Harvey \Vightntan awl Gowan, and othersfor cards and let- ! '
Harry Buothntan, of Niagara, visited lets. Dr. McLachlin and staff of the i
ever the revel: -cud with Nit. and \Irs.-. hospital,
Phone 211---Sanitane Dry Cleaning--- Blyth.
SMOKED PORK
ROLLS
65 cents a pound
SMOKED PICNICS
55 cents a pound
Arnold Berthot
11'IEAT
8111.111
Telephone 10 --- Blyth,
FISH
I MIN. . 1 •.
STEW ART JOHNSTON
Massey-I-Iarris and Beatty Dealer.
See our Complete Stock of Pipe Fittings, Beatty &
Massey -Harris Repairs - Pump Repairs, all. kinds.
Dealer for Imperial Oil Products.
WE HAVE A GOOD STOCK OF YOUR
Fencing Requirements
On Hand
Standard 8 -Wire Woven Fence.
Hog Fence.
Poultry Fence,
SteelPosts and Clips.
Staples, Large and Small,
Gates in Various Lengths,
Barbed Wire, Light and Heavy.
We also carry Electric Fencers.
Insulators and (Batteries.
Carman Hodgins, Manager.
Blyth Farmers Co -Op Association
TELEPHONE 172 • I3LYTH.
Jet Fighters Features Clin- guests
ess.
ton Air Force Day I \lAs the home of RC:\lr's Radar ant'
Jet "Sabre" fighter planes will roar 1 Ccininupications School, the Air Force
overhead as part of a plant air show Day show at Clinton naturally will feat -
at RCAF Station, (Clinton, on Air urc those things associated with radi
herce Day, this Satut day, June 10. "the yoke of your Air Force," and ra-
In ade':4tion ,aircraft of various types day, "the et•CS of your defence teams."
will feature aerobatics, formations, The electronics display promises to be
tactical flying, low flying, evasive "tops." ,
fighter tactics, etc. I Other features during the afterno7n
Each person entering the Station will include: Aircraft on the ground
will receive a free draw on an eight-' 1-familton Aquatic Club swimming and
tube FM 1 AM rdio and three speed I (living exhibition; TCA salutes the
record .player valued at $300, including RCAF; Airborne Television; Kiddies
FM antenna and installation. Draw Karnival; Labatt's Safety Driving;
will be made at the dance at midnight Gymnastics : Softball; Bugle I3and Tat-
- Representatives of the press, who toos; Hollywood Cartoons in the stat -
were given a preview Friday last of I ion Theatre— free.
what ,tight he expected this Saturdays In the evening there will be a base -
were much impressed with the tom- hall match and also a monster bingo
pleteness of the preparations for rho in "Roundel Terrace," the new Rec-
celebration of Airforce Day at Clin- reation Centre.
tun. Datrcin' until midnight to Bnyd Val -
Flying Officer E. C, Mailloux, pub- least and his Orchestra front Casa
lic relations officer of the Station, was Loma, Toronto, will coticlttcje the day's
in charge of the group who .were , activities.
i?arl \\'fghttnan.
Mrs. Fred hook, Misses Violet an
IN MEMORIAM
Muth Cook, \Icssrs.:\rnold and 'Torn IiO\Y FS—In loviI' ntenlory of our
Cook, and Gordon McDowell, visited clear son and brother, Arnold, an
rnt Sunday tvith Mr. and Mrs. James On' lads who died with him, June
11111, 194.1,
l.f
We have a Complete Range of
RED, BLUE, BROWN AND BLACKCANVAS RUNNING SHOES
FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY,
SPECIAL FEATURES:—
Men's Softball Shoes (with cushion insole) , .$3,95
Fleet -foot Basketball Shoes $5,95
by Dominion (with built-in arch)
Madill's Shoe Store Blyth
"Be Kind to' your feet, WearMadill's Footwear,"
•
Beak of Crewe.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith and \ beautiful ntennyy, It••u•cr Beth gold
children were week -end guests at the of a son and. brother, whose worth can
Invite of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Sntith, never he told.
of Leamington..\lone, unseen, Ile stands h`• our side
Congratnlatinns are extended to Ler- And tt•h'spers "don't grieve, death can-
na and .lith Buchanan who were sac- not divide.,'
ccsslnl in icing prontolcd 0n their Deep in our hearts his memory is kept
years' wort: at Goderich Collegiate. Of one we loved and can never forget.
Mrs. Frank Campbell, Miss \Vinni Antl though the years be many or fen
fred, Muses. Cecil, Franklin and Lac`' \Ve will always he Ildnkiug, dear Ar-
rence Campbell, visited on Sunday with nol�l, of you.
\Irs, N. G, Ainslie of Goderieli' —Always rrntcmhere l by \(urger, tits
\t r. and \Irs. \V;n. \fc\'ittle visited ters, and Brother. 37-1p.
on Sunday, with Mr. and Nits, \\'nt. .--
East, Of London.
Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Gear and children
of Kitchener were week -end guests al "Yon don't have to drink" -was the
the home of Nit. Armond \Iclturney heading of an editorial that brought
and \Irs. J. 1.. licDowell, favourable comment from people in
'I'Ite \lission hand met on Sunday every walk of We, 11 is time that it
Ifiernoon with ;i good attendance. The was admitted on every ham' that drink
meeting was in charge of Donna \Val- , ing is not a necessity either for impu-
te!' and opened with the members' put- lazily or success, Von don't have to
',ono. Scripture was read from Luke 2 drink to belong to the hest society,
40-52 by Lois Campbell, Prayer by Mrs. You don't have to drink to he a sue -
('has. Stung. Reading by Gord•ur cessful sa'esntan. You don't have to
Smith. Soule hoot: was taken h)• drink to have a good time. "You
Nits. C. Smith. Minutes of \lay meet- don't have to drink". Advt.
in:; were read and approved, Story -------
The Voice Of Temperance
war"• told by Norman McDowell. Meet_ , FOR SALE
ing closed with a hymn and prayer. Duck eggs, Rouen variety, 7c each,
\Icssrs, George Lee and 'I'e'I Clalt- Apply to Russell llentlev, phone 3.1-'3
burn, of 'Toronto, visited recently with 131.01. 36-2p.
I\ir. and Mrs, Earl \\'ie Coxa. __-` AUCTION SALE — _
Mr. and Ales. Clarence Cox attended Of Household Effects,
the Staples -Phillips wedding at At -
The undersigned has been instructed
wood on Saturday cvcnitt(;, •to sell the icllowin•, household articles
Mr. and Mrs, John Boyd and. family
at the home of Mrs, Jane 5tinwrc.
and Mrs. John Lloyd, sr„ of \\'hlton. Walton, on FRIDAY, JUNK. 9th, at
with Mr. nd Mrs, Douglas Campbell 1:30 p.m.:
on Monday. Electric washer (yr. old); Electric
Mr. and Mrs, Nelson Patterson at radio, Sp;utun' Electric •table lamp; '-
tended the Staples -Phillips wedding at I -
\two d on Saturday evening. burner ,taut plate; Diana (tanner cook
The sympathy of the community is stove; Quebec heater; brooder stove "
extended to Mrs. Gordon Snell and J-lnirncr, coal oil stove with oven;
family in the passing of her brother, ehesterfie1d; buffet; 6 dining room
chairs; (i kitchen chairs; 8 -ft. round
AI r. ,loin 1'ounghlut, of Auburn, table; 8 -ft. square table; kitchen cup -
Mr. and Mrs. Noaks of Hensall vis board; 3 bedroom suites; organ; Ray-
mond on Sunday with Mr. and \[rs. lnond sewing machine; 2 rockers;
Lloyd \oaks. leather rocker; couch; 3 small tables;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Godfrey, of Guilt box; garden tools ; larva ntnttcr:
Dungannon, were guests' on \Innday I step ladder; 2 coal scuttles; chop box -
at the home of ,Mr. and mrs, win. 1 '
es; barrels; chicken feeders; water
\fc\'ittie. �'T" fountains; about 2110 sealers of fruit
\ir. and Mrs. .Alf. Nesbit visite`( and empty scalers; large aluminum
last week end ttith their daughter' cooker; several cooking utensils; sev-
\Irs. George Gray and Mr. Gray of eral pieces of floor covering; large
at luncheon in the OfCcers•
I orotito.
BORN—Mr. and Mr;'.. Donald Snell
are the proud parents of a italic boy,
who arrived at Clinton hospital on
Tuesday, June 6th,
LONDLSBORO
The regular nteeti:4g of the Lon es•
horn \\'.A. will he held in the base-
ment of the church on 'Thursday, June
15th at 2:30 o'clock. 'The roll call to'
be answered by "Ary Maiden Name
sand Birthplace.; Program committee:
\Irs. L. flunking, Mrs. J, Lyon.
Conte prepared to quilt.
:\ cordial invitation is given to all
to be present. Hostesses are: Mrs, \V.
Brunscdon, Mrs. T. Adams, Mrs. C.
Adams and Miss Lily Adapts,
The regular meeting of the Woolen's
'nstitttle was held in the Community
1 tail, Londesboro, on Thursday after -
loon, June 1st, Mrs. Robert Fairser-
•ice, the Presdent, was in the chair
•nd opened the meeting with "0 Can -
v18,' "the Lord's Prayer," "institute
lde;' and "Mary Stewart Collect."
The urinates of the last meeting were
-cad and approved by Mrs. Allan in
'he absence of \tt•s. Anderson, the
Secretary, Mrs. Fairservicc notified
the members of the District Annual to
he held in \\'ingham on June 16111 and
hoped for a gond attendance front
Londesboro. The Londe boro instit-
ute were invited to Blyth for their
(grandmother's Day on Sept. 1st.
Plans were trade to tune the piatr)
at the ilall. have the grass cut, and
',lie swing's and slides put in repair.
Miss Clare McGowan gave a very
interesting talk on her work with the
Children's Aid and Miss Marjorie \Vatt
a cornet solo, accompanied at the pi-
ano by her mother.
An• anneal was made for the ManL-
toba Relief Fun•1 anal it was• decided
to take a collection at the next meeting
July ,(.tit.
Mrs. Pipe gave Current Events and
Mrs. Cowan and Mrs. Pipe had charge
of the Cockie Recipes. Samples were
passed and the recipes given.
rug; hall tree; .kitchen clock; also ar-
ticles too numerous to Mention. 'Titre
will also be offered for sale a 1929 Ov-
erland \\'(tippet sedan,
'PERMS CASA,
\Irs. ,lane Stinlore, Proprietress,
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer,
E, P, Chesney, Clerk. 37-1p.
Skinny men, women
gain 5, 10, 15 Ibs.
Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor
What it thrill, Sony limb, 011 out; ugly hollows
1111 up; neck no longer scrawny: body loses half-
atarved, sickly "bean -Vole" look, Thousand, of
girls, women, tarn, who never couldain before,
aro now proud of shaely, healthy -looking bodies.
They thunk the specialvigor-bei ding, dealt -building
tonic, Ostrex, Its tonics, atimulnnt, Invigorators.
Iron, vitamin nu, calcium, enrich blood, Impruvo
appetite and digestion so food gives you moro
strength and nourishment; put flesh on bare bones.
Don't tear getting too tat. Stop when you've gained
the 8, 10, 15 or 20 lbs. you heed for normal weight.
Costa little. Nen "get acquainted" Otto only 00o,
(Mel Tonic
Trp famous OTablets tot new Vigor
and added pounds, Ulla very day, At all druggists,
")4•••111101••••••111110011001101100111•/1-11.11••
1
FOUItTIi ANNUAL
LEGIOR FROLIC
BLYTI-IBRANCH NO, '120, 13.E.S.L.
A(iRICU1.TUltA14 PARK, I3LYTII,
THURS. JUNE 22nd
Featuring the
ELMIRA VETERANS BUGLE 13ANI)
In Musical Selections and Precision Drills.
DRAW FOR VALUABLE PRIZES:
1st ---Purebred Hereford Heifer, Registered,
Value $200,00.
2nd ---Chest of Silverware, Value $50.00.
3rd---Spring-filled Mattress, Value $10,00.
(Tickets available from any Legion Member.)
MONSTER BINGO & REFRESHMENT BOOTH.
Other Games for Everyone to Play and Enjoy.
SOFTBALL. GAME---.131y1h i,egionettcs Vs. one of
the LEAGUES' LEADING TEAMS --6:30 P.M.
DANCE AFTERWARDS iN MEMORIAL HALL,
MUSIC BY W1LBEE'S ORCHESTRA.
Plan To Spend This Night With the Legion Boys.
I
1
.-♦ H-1-1-♦-♦-♦ 1 -♦-,-1-♦ 4-4-1-.4-1 ♦ • ♦-1 ♦ 1 ♦-1-4 1 ♦ ♦ 1-•`1-•••••-10 t• ♦ *4-* ••• t•-•4+4-4'
AUCTION SALE
Of Farm Stock and
:\t north half Lot II, Concession 5,
Alorris top nship, on
FRIDAY, JUNE 1011, et 1 P.M.:
Cattle, i lorses, Bred Yorkshire Sows,
Iotpliments, inclnditr, a 1948 Ford trac-
ltnrlemente ' tar, pith 2 -furrow plow,
'PERMS C:\SIi
I larold Jacl;>on, Auctioneer.
.\. R. Sacro, 1'rnpricter. 37-2p.
•
A hr4 #4, •
COUNTY COUNCIL
.The next sleeting of' the 11ul'9ni County Council
will be held in the Council Chambers, Court House,
Goderieh,. commencing,
MONDAY, JUNE 12th, at 10 A.M., D,S.T.
All accounts, notices of deputations and other,
• business requiring the attention of Coul cit should
be in the hands of the County Clerk not later than
Saturday, June Loth,
. N. W. MILLER, County Clerk,
36-2. •Goderich, Ontario.
MIThsO APAWWWIW•WWNW4P~, IM4Pe..***~ (III 4~41~044•M
DO YOU HOLD
FIRST VICTORY LOAN
BON D5
THIS ISSUE HAS BEEN
called for Redemption on June 15th, 1950
at $101 for each $100
It is in the interest of all holders to present their Bonds promptly for paynient
on or soon after June 15th, 1950 because after that date this issue will no
longer earn interest. Arrangements for redemption may be made through invest-
ment dealers, banks or other savings institutions.
The Governnfent of Canada
By: BANK OF CANADA, Pistol Agent.
Ottawa
Rei
Wednesday dune 7, 1950
FOR SALE
Bed, spring and mattress, Dresser
alt' :•11,111o, 111 good .. t1111l1uIi. \npl)'
1,, \Irs. F. J. 1lollytllau, phone .il,
Blyth. 37-1p.
FOIL SAt E
\\'e still ha.c a its hn',hrl;.'I Capi•
nal ` u)',r,ul., 1:111,;11 f, In t (:;;,fere 1
Fred. R. N. .\I, x.lnder, Lumdr•I a u.
phone 111,th ? r;3. 37-1.
FOIL SAL!;
f,-rnum i11s1.1I In'el: Is ms-, ,i piece
bath, pressure s..stent, hot air f111 II C
c,rncr 1+•1, 1111,1ey ;t,. !,hone ,IS o:
write I':. F. l hap' a1, th. ,t7 1t.
F011 SALE
1941 India► 1.11 with sidecar. Ila,
just been completely overhauled, new
rill's, %•;tl'.cs ' roan 1, new brake din•
ings bac!::ul'I front \diel', n,,.v au•
meter, switch, etc. ti' 1llX► cash or
nearest t!► c•. 1 !';d .lii'.dy, \\'.'l -
ltasn, Plume 510,
T11111 NT -MAO eimr. MI 11
I: .I 11 t4t.11.1f1/11111111.111t11i11111Itftttlt111/1111ffi1*11it1i111t11t1/11.1 ti 1111t11iNif1lN.iifNtlNtN�t+
' ,' " ROXY'1'1iEN.1'l(L, 'r1IE PARK THEATRE CAPITAL THEATRE lt1:G1:;N'1"1'IIEATRE
1,1(.Ltllll l IiI�A 1 It1,• rLINrOtr. GOQ fUCH. I SEAFORTi4.
N1rtGHAM-- .N rAt310, GODERICH •• PHONE 1150 _-__ 1
JUNE 8711 '1'O 10TH: NOW: Abbott and Costello in; NOW: Randolph Scott in: NOW: Sabo and Jeanne Pao in:
wo Shows Each Night starling A(. GREGORY ANNE .. "A FIGHTING MAN of the PLAINS" "The Man -Eater of Kun r_un.
7:15 PI'itICA SCREAMS."
II:lu::cs ;II time ‘‘III he nolo' below - PECI( BAY'1'Elt
u-Monday, Tuesday, Wcdncaday_ I Monay1 Tcede7, Wednesday I Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
'"
"YELLOW SKY" Wiliam Po�1lhscleyWintcra and Katherine e Hurbe and`:Ittdar latinrc at 2 p.l, h,yJIVIucC1OCK HIGH
�raalFel iarryn
June 8,9, 10
'Thera, IV„ Sit„ _ with
„ Richard Wii malt,. Henry Murgar GREGORY PECK, Where a dignified professor solves the With Iturhi at the piano and vocals by
. 'BLUE (''Jt A` S OF KENTUCKY"
Monday, Tuesday, June 12, 13 -
"Ti l 1., I'I' '1'0 THE .;URGE" -
•Rob"and Itusacl1, Robert Cummin'r
We:'m adav, TIrtrttl:ty, Jun^_ 14, 15
' EAST SIDE WEST SIDE"
I \'nit I':ntc.taimuenl)
Jetties 111-•r,.n, B4;bar,, Stanwyck
I i
Fr'd,y, Elatnrdy, June 16, 17
'111,Wi'.)It':'S AERO"
Penn/ Sin ;'ctov, As Thur Lake
,rywrrrae xeassur. s,aumarts.terfa ssurim.
` ;.:.aae-, pdrti 6.:;Q121KINERVasse4 "
Commercial Restaurant
i1ROP IN ANY TIME
and try our
Hamburgs and Coffee
ANI) I"()It A SPECIAL TREAT
have one lir our
CHEESEBUR- ERS
--Mrs, Helen Luke,
Arthur Reath,
•114i.A.PP 4.411101 N 1I 44y
ALL NEXT WEEK: All unforgettable acltieveinettt by 1113 stay 11 :I missing blonde 10 thrill I.IIl/.0 you will enjoy and re -
JUNE 1211 '1'O 17TH .I wentetll t.entury 1" x that :lysin, as sate his own reputation. I member this 'Techniculore l musical
MARJORIE MAIN, hit;lt as 1114 •screen can reacts. \Vith TAKE UNE II'AIs S'I'EP' "'1'i111t Midnight Kiss"
KILI3RIDE, Hugh Marlowe, Dean Jagger and 1__ `_ ` - - _____ -t --- -
I'aul Stewart.
! Thursday, Friday, Saturday Thursday, Friday, Saturday
'1•harsday, Friday, Saturday I hill Williams, Ralph Morgan and Gre;ory Peck, Anne Baxter,
Spencer Tracy, James Stewart and ( Jane Nigh Richard Widmdrk.
Valentina Coricsa The rolling hill, and verdant country \ super adventure talc tells of the
unique and entertaining adventure
of a storied slab ferns the barb- \\'est and it's desperadoes in
ground fora romantic adventure
story Amu. :1 gl'llp of people trans-�I post -civil -war dill S.
111151.1 iittt, a st•an_e and t�ird country "Blue Grass of Kentucky" i "YELLOW SKY"
"MALAYA ( - _
"MA and 1'A KETTLE
GO TO TOWN"
JUNE 191'1.1 • 21ST:
EDMUND GWENN,
DONALD CRiSP
in
"CIIAI,I,ENG11,' to LASSIE"
COMING: "Tight Little Island" COMING: "'rho Leidy Gambles," COMING: All Week: 'FRANCIS,"
\Tats Salm 11;1 s and i1 )Mays ';31 ,.111, ans�ltu• to n ' Stirring Barbara Stanwyck. 11 c rl
i'l', tale of a talking mule.
{ nt rtna molests. ursts.
•44\4•4,•••44101.•••••••••••••••v.v•vv1,y>9y1,••yv♦yv•$•$11♦••♦•♦♦♦♦•••♦'1.4 ,, •••••1•••11♦♦•••It1•t••1N1•ttt11
V •••N I••1 • •f1N N4'4P4.•I4•N•••N••e
I Ci1EST ERII'II;L•I)S AND )
= OCCASIONAL ClIAI1tS Renfrew Cream ,
REPAIItEI) 2 t Separators and 11lilkers.
and
RE-COVEREI),
I FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY
21 - DAY SPECIAL
Grocerie'•I,t)11 ' tA1L FARES
[
to
EASTERN QU EBEC
(Megantic, Levis, Diamond)
atiti '
MARITIMES
Fruits
Vegetables
Cooked Meats
Nursery Plants Take that vacation "Down
East" this year,
Inexpensive holiday fares
S�E RT' I ;ivc ,\'uu ,l 3l -(.lay limit with FOR SALE
s .;toll -(!Vet's permitted,A frame house, 0,1 north ILII( lot 17,
, ('on. 8, ,tltn•ris township, otttsidc di- 1 -
GROCEGRCC
RY Effective alit, c8ns ':'x:O'. lutcrior distnsutllcd 1
,l June 1!)lh to September dth with cusltcnl. s11'rrd iII tile. :\pply to
Discs, Plows, !!manure
Spreaders,
For Further information Enquire al c Lillie and Fertilizer Sow -
J. Lockwoods ei's, Spring -tooth Harrows
Furniture Store, lllyth ( Lilnd I ackees,
Rubber -tired Wagons.
Oliver Tractors,
both \\'heel tractors and
crawlers,
Plows, Discs, Spreaders,
111o\vers, Ilay Loaders, ,
Smalley Forage ![lowers
Agent, Stratford Upholstering Co
.I.IIMIN
.dN••N• N•• *Is, NI MI
.1. I '1 1 I. .1 1 11
For Infol'mation You
Require on;
Wiring, Plumbing, and
Healing, without piac-
i i'ig yof.il'se't' under an;;
obligation, See---
SI,YTH
ELECTRIC
Washing Machines and
AH Otlie►' Appliances
Skillfully Repaired.
We Specialize in
Servicing Our Saks.
and Ilanunr Mills,
1V(.' 111sO have repairs for . 11ux
Oliver-Cot'kshutt Tractors 11
S;
WI 'SAP ♦'TIN
CEMENT
BLOCKS
Immediate Delivery
HURON CONCRETE
PRODUCTS
Phone 64,1
s Seurorth
i
WII-1!.IAM CAMPBELL,
TILE DRAINAGE CONTRACTOR
R K:\SON:\ III.E h:\'I'I1:S.
• • 4
5EAFORTH.
508. Telephone 48(,',\', Evenings
33.3,
1 1110Rit1'r'r & WRIGHT
IMPLEMENT DEALERS FOR
- OLIVER IMPLEMENTS
Telephone 4 and 93. Blyth, Ontario -
1 4 .6 ., mi...., 1
A'I°i'EN'l.'ION, !
If you and going to be in the market
for steel ruufill:, we ate local agents
for 'I'ISSON S'I'T' F.I,, manufactured by
RUIIINSO' IR\\'IN, ur Hamilton.
1'Ro\I PT SKI.\'I(.'.h.
\\'e do the \\"ori( If Desired.
If int prefer .\luminnut to Steel, we
have it
WE DELIVER - !'HONE, 9,
CARD OF '11IANK5 ('unsnll
Irs. Harold IErrin ;Inn wishes. 10
thank all her friends who were sl, kind
to her and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
McGee, during; her stay itt the \Ving-
han hospital. I'indnca' like these arc
not soon forgotten. 37-11, 1
inclusive
any Canadian Pacific Railway
sr;col.
110
YOUR DOMINION ROYAL DEALER
Armstrong II Walsh
Blyth --- Phone 26,
\Irs, Ferre Patterson, \\'alto', Ont.
35--p
:\1l Ohl 1lor'.es anti Dead Animals.
If sn!tablc for mink feed will pay more
than fertilizer ,prers. If not, will pay
fertilizer prices. If dead , hone at once
Phone collect, (filbert Bros, 11tiik
Ranch 930x21 or 9,!t r.2, Goderich.
•
SAVE'111111E!
SAVE LABOUR!
ORDER A
Choremaster
(ONE -WHEEL
GARDEN TRAC'T'OR)
TODAY!
It sells at a new
LOW Price,
• See
R, N. Alexander
LONDESBORO.
2.1-111
made from theta,
Silip Your Wool To
H. 'M. Jackson
SEAII,ORTI-I
Write. for Sacks and Twine.
Phones; 3-W and 3-.1.
LEONARD COOK,
Phone 177, lilytIt 35-I0p.
wool
Wanted
All Wool shipped to
JACKSON'S
is Graded 111 eilforth
and full settlement
Raggedy Nan
presented by the Auburn
Athletic Association
under the auspices of
Trinity Church Ladies
IGuild,ifilyth, on
Fri. June 16
at 8:15 pan,
In the Memorial Hall,
BLYTII
' I`•••-•••1.1.1.4•••1••••••el
i
Return Engagement!!
of
"RAGGEDY NAN"
in the Forester's Hall,
AUBURN
FRIDAY, JUNE 9th
This is all opportunity '
for those who missed this'
popular play, to conte and
enjoy it, 36-1,
•••141.1'1.4-4.414.44.444•:
NGTICE of I)iSSOLUTION
OF • PARTNERS! -IIP
Nt)i'ICF, is hereby git ell, th•tt th
1 a:1'ereship llereto`tsrre snl'sistin 11e
Iween its, the un Iersigncd, as "i11.VTI
I?I.I?C'I'RIC'' ilr the Villa"e of myth
in the County of aura,, has this dai
been dissolyc,l by unttlal consent.
All debts ow•fu: t to the slid partner
ship are to be pa'cl to Ross T'huell, Ili
ck:ntinuimr partner, and WI claim
sv;a:n .1 th0 slid parirerslhip are to hi
presented 1-.)1 the said F -,ss 'I'h.IcII, h`
551,0111 the same will he settled.
Admission, 35c and 15cI Dacca at Myth th's 15th day of
\ray, A.D., 1950.
Si{;ncd-\V, 1. Thtitoritl,
•#�Nr. 35-3, 1�. \\', tcs,
Gurdon Elliott J. II. R. Elliott
ELLIOTT
Real Estate Agency
BLY'1'II,
1'11F. FOLLOWING DWELLING
I'(.)R SAI,l' \\'1'1'11 IMMEDIATE
l'ossl;ssloN:
11, -ii storm frame, instil -brie': clad;
dwelling, situate on \lilt street,
lllyth ; seta'' rooms and kitchen.
.li deo, soft water inside; chicken
mouse that will house 50 chickens.
I his is a desirable property anal 111•
III sl illlllll'lliate pl)SSeSsiull can be
y1ye11,
150 acre farm on lith eon, Mor-
ris Twp., 2 -storey brick house, 7 t
rocas; barn •10x51, ccnlcult stabling,
i.nt cast -half of 34 in the third
s concession of til" Township of (East
\\'awalosh, IOt► aeres of land, about
5 acres second -growth bush. On
the premises is t•-eoulfl t'tablc frame
Ittcllint;, barn on stone wall, with
good stabling. Possession.
One -aid nrr-half storey Mich
hvelli,i on Morris street. (hie ar-
e of land, Small stable. :\ good
tty, and ldlssesSiull as 1•cgtiired.
1 storey Ir.4.1; .k and cement Id. ch
'building on the west side of Queen
street in Village of 1113th, Imme-
diate possession.
A number sof other properties for
ale, 1'articul,.rs upon request,
.•••NN••N,.,,.. NnN•••N••N•,
14114N•••N4"#NNN444,4N.•444N••N444440i
SEED CLEANING AND
t 'TREATING
(•)t!I. sl1)1)ERN SEED CLEAN-
ING PI.:\N'I' IS rt\t:\II.:\It1.E TO
F.\RNIERS OF 'I'11E DISTRICT.
PLEASE \I.\KE ARRA NGE-
\I IE\ I'S IN ADVANCE
IF POSSIBLE.
CORDON FLAX, LTD.
!'hone E.\RI.E NOBLE,
114, myth. '
IMNN••N.•N+#1NNd••tN11N•t
1#44~,#######~#############4#####
CASH
FOR DEAD
ANIMALS
COW'S - - - $1.00 Each
HORSES • - $5.00 Each
IIOGS over 250 lbs.
ea, - - - 50c per cwt.
Accord ng to size and condition
Phone collect:
WINGIIAM - 561J
GODERICII - 936R21
INGERSOLL - 21.
William Stone Sons Ltd,
iNGERSOLL, ONTARIO.
+•ie‘••I+•,r-,-•-Pee INN•,
Reid's
POOL ROOM.
:,SMOKIi;R'S SUNDRIES
'Tobaccos, Cigarettes, Pop,
i and Other Sundries,
••••••••••••-4.4••4.4••♦••.
FOR SALE
The \tanagers of St..\udrew's Pres-
byterian Church, Myth, have for sale
all or part of church shell, 50 ft. by
(1) it, This building is of timber frame
construction, with 8 11. lumber siding, '
This building woubl 'sake one or two
rl(P4ul i;i,1llctlll•nI shells. :\;1;111• to \\'al-
-ter Slnlrt•ced, It.ls. 1, \Valium. 3',-2.
FOR SALE
Masse -Harris side rake, in good
working order. Apply In George NIc-
:\rthur, phone 18-13, Brussels. 3in2p,
FOR SALE
Singer sewing machines, cabinet,
portable, electric; also treadle ma-
chines. Repair to all stakes. Singer
, Sewing Machine Centre, Guderich,
51-tf,
R. A. Farquharson, M.I).
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Ho'ira
Daily Except Wednesday and Sunday,
2 p.tu. 0 4 p.m.
7 p.m. l0 9 p.m.
Telephone 33 •- 111yt11, Ont.
47-52p.
Doherty Bros.
GARAGE. -.
Acetylene and Electric
1Velding A Specialty.
Agents For Intertuitional-
Harvester Pal'ts & Supplies
White Rose Gas and Oil
Cal' Painting and Itepa'riiig.
,,•. NJIN1••ININNN*IM!
A. L. COLE.
OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN
Godcrich• Ontario • Te1ephons V
Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted,
With 25 Years Experience
N.•IYNN
ATTENTION r
If you are in need of Building Ma-
terials, contact the undersigned:
\Wc have for your requirements,
.Lumber, Francs, Sash, Doors, 'Trim,
instil Brie Sidings, Asphalt Shingles,
Instil Board, Builder's Hardware,
Plumbing Fixtures, NIT 81111 Fittings,
Stock 'troughs, \Ictal Burn Roofing,
'!'rough and Pipe, Shallow and Deep -
well, Pressure !'limps. All the afore-
mentioned in stock.
Estimates on our Requirements
cheerfully given on request.
L. SCRIMGEOUR & SON
P. O. Box 71, Myth. Phone 3fi.
29-4
'TIE I1IcKILLOP MUTUALI T� IRE INSURANCE CO,
HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORT'H, ONT,
Officers:
I'risidemt, E. J. Trcwartha, Clinton;
Vice -;'res., I. L M ;lone, Seafurth;
\Ialager and Sec -Treas., .M. A. Reid.
Directors:
E. I. T'rew•arilia, Clinton: J. 1.. ?\lal-
onc, Vie; forth: S. 11. \\'ltitnore, Sea-
ford': Chris. 1.eomlta-,11t, Bornholm;
Robert Archibald, Seaford': John 11.
\Irh:w•in.,, Myth; Frank \Ic(;Iegor,
Clinton; \\'nt, S. Alexander, \Valton;
Harvey Fuller, Gtslct•ich.
Agents:
J. E. Popper, liruceficld; 12. F.:1fc-
I�ereher, Dublin: (.en, A. \Vat•t, lllyth;•
I. F. 1'rueti•r 1Irodhagen, Selwyn ilak-
er, Brussel,.
I Parties desirous to effect insurance
or transact other business, will be
protnply at'ended to by applications
to any of the above named officers
addressed tt their respecti,1 post t�
Iikea
Historic Canadian Beauly
t
Stanoing at Tadoussac is this Blockaded log hu;, a replica of one in which French Traders
passed the Winter of 1599.
As one who has for many years
bele—and spilled—1 he iron opinion
that baseball gives the customers
less real action for their money
than any other game, tournament
chess possibly, excepted, we were
recently both surprised and heart-
ened to notice that one diamond
magnate not only holds similar
views, but is prepared to do some-
thing about it.
* *
Hank Greenberg was a smart ball
player—smart enough to quit the
game before the game quit him;
although, of course, the fact that
he married a girl worth several
millions might have made such a
decision somewhat easier 'for hills
than it is for the average profession-
al athlete. For one of the saddest
things in sport is to see a former
star trying to hang on long after
everything else but the urge has
departed, As Lorelei Lee's maid
said, in GENTLEMEN PREFER
BLONDES, "The time lo leave
then' is %('hen y'ou'rs still looking
good."
* *
Anyway, the aforesaid Nfr, Green-
berg is now general manager of the
Cleveland Indians—a club that per-
forms in a ball pasture which takes
a heap of lilting, especially when
the Icahn isn't going so good, and
more particularly in times like
these when the sports dollar is get-
ting a bit more choosey about what
it gets spent on. At all events,
Greenberg has purchased a jeep for
his relief pitchers, to save them—
and the fans—that long, funereal
trek from the bull -pen to the pitch-
er's mound.
* * *
Now, at first sight this might ap-
pear to be nothing more than a
piece of smart showlivanship—like
telling the strip -teaser to go into
her routine when your theatre
catches fire—anti designed to take
the Cleveland clients' hinds off the
fact that the Indians were winning
just about as many games as they
lost, and getting nowhere fast, But
Greenberg seems to be really sin-
cere in his desire to speed up a
sport which gives every evidence of
becoming slower and slower to
watch,
* *
In the interests of science, we re-
cently did a lot of tedious research
—a whole three minutes of it—
checking up on the elapsed times of
eight major baseball games contest-
ed on a certain afternoon and eve-
ning. Those eight averaged pretty
close to two and one-half hours
apiece -2;25 to be exact—which is
a lengthy stretch of time for any
but the most ardent bugs to hold
still, looking at a couple of teams
trying to get through 8l' or 9 in-
nings of run -of -the -mine ball.
* * *
In addition to his jeep innovation,
Hank Greenberg is also suggesting
that pitchers should await their
turn at bat in the "on deck" circle
like other players, instead of sitting
in the dugout 'til the last possible
second; also that umpires should be
instructed to make the players
hustle when changing sides be-
tween innings, All of which would
indicate that flank, for one, really
realizes what a menace to the cash
customer these marathon contests
are becoming.
* * *
Just who or what is responsible
for the slowing-up—well, your
guess is -probably as Rood as ours,
or even better, There are some
who blame the lively ball, on the
grounds that it gives the batter too
Lig all edge over the pitcher. But
Uncle Ed Barrow, whose views on
baseball we respect more than
those of any other man, reminds us
Dramatic Gesture ---A wife's "long shot" and the generosity of
Hollywood star combined to'give actor Tom Colburn of Lon -
Jon his big chance for a break, Actress Jeanette McDonald is
seen taking down her own caricature from the wall of Holly-
wood's Brown Derby restaurant to make rootn for Colburn,
Mrs. Colhurn wrote Bob Cobb, Derby owner, asking hint to
post her husband's picture in hopes some producer might see
it and bring the actor to Hollywood. After several Hollywood
personalities had turned down Cobb's request to give up their
spot on the wall, Miss McDonald consented graciously, and
even volunteered to appear in person to make the switch.
in his highly readable reminiscences
now running in Colliers that the
souped -up horsehide teas introduced
l;v the short-lived and long -defunct
Federal League,
o * *
And you don't need to go back
Nearly that far to recall when they
hustled through games in 90 min -
Ices or so, and one could enjoy a
Saturday afternoon double-header
of two nine -inning gauzes and still
get (tit in plenty- of time to do a
little tonsil -cooling before the oases
shut down for the Sabbath week-
end at 6 p.m,
* *
'(here are others who put the
blame on the Sports writers who
torn out books on baseball at tine
rate of—judging from publishers'
lists—something like one i minute,
'these authors have written so much
about "inside baseball" and the
like, that the managers are so busy
with their master -minding they en-
t:rely, lose sight of those folks in
the stands and bleachers whose cash
contributions retake their large sal-
aries, and larger reputations, pos-
sible, What is laughingly known a3
a duel of grits between a couple of
bench managers may Blake very in-
teresting reading. But looking at a
parade of 10 pitchers in one game
—as happened in a game reported
in today's paper—can be, as the
Englishman put it, nothing but a
beastly bore,
9 9 *
As for our omit personal opinion
--well, we would just paraphrase
the old saying, "All of the world's
troubles began when they first
taught women to read," by sub-
stituting "ball players" for "wom-
en." Not so long ago we sat at a
hall gamF, right next to another
ancient. I'w'o batters in succession
had made hits, and the pitcher could
be seen glancing, first at the bench
and then toward the bull -pen, plain-
ly expecting—and wanting—relief,
CHILDREN
SHOULD BE SEEN
—NOT HURT
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
AGENTS WANTED
SELL popular H. fire extinguisher wholesale
or direct. Liberal profits excluslve territory.
rum-KIr.1.SR, 6042 Roslyn Are., Montreal.
IIE OUR AGENT, sell Dry'good* from our
Illustrated catalogue, 26'. comml'tdun. Re-
liable Salem, 204 Spadlnn Avenue, Toronto,
STOREKEEPERS AND DEALERS
Write for Phillipa Illustrated Wholesale Cata-
logue featuring largo veriely of every daY
sellers In dry goods, small wares, household
Items, ale, Phillipe Soles lteg'd, 72 Craig
Street West, Montreal 1, tweeter') and
Whpleanle Dtstrlbutoru of General 5lerchan-
dlse,
•
IIA111" CHINES
THE MOST Important thing to consider when
buying chicks le the breeding, The mnlorhy
of 'l'weddlo pure bred ,brake ere tired by
BAP. pedigreed cnekertl, front high record
hens, Reduced priers for June mrd July.
Prompt dellvcrY on day old or t1nrted two,
three, four end five %reek old non•s,xe,l pul-
lets, cockerel,, also liar old not etnr1rd''1'ur-
ke-ye, Older pullets. fere u", int,,gue. Tu•e,ldle
('hlek IlnlcherienLlmitcd, Il•Nue, ()Mario,
LET'S NUT kid euro lvte We nil n•nnT'-the
marl for our money, You'll get the most
for your money If yon order '('op Notch gov-
ernment Approved 'Mirky or Turkeyo from
i'ullurunl free stork, Prices reduced for June.
Day old, two, three, four or five week old In
non -sexed, pullet', cockerels, or toots In chicks
and Turkeys. Older pullrle, Free catalogue.
Top Notch Chick Sales, Guelph, Ontario,
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
START your own big paying buslnet's 'harp
ening lawn mowers. Sparc or full time
Experience unnecessary. 51avlIne coals onlY
1128, . 'teal money maker, Literature free
Islington Machine Company, Islington 9, On-
tario.
DYEING ANI) CLEANING
RAVE) YOU anythtns needs dyeing or clean.
Ing? Write in ue fin Infnrmarinn. We are
glad to answer your queetMne Department
H, Parker's Dye Work, Limited, 791 Triage
Street, Toronto, Ontario
•
•
"Imagine," we said, ''guys like
Dicky Rudolph, Joe 11cGinnity, or
Nick Altrock hanging out the white
flag iu,such a spot, Why, the man-
ager practically had to knock them
down anti drag then) orf the mound
when he thought they had had
enough."
* * r
"The Ivholc trouble is," growled
our seat -mate in reply, "that most
cf these modern pitchers go into
the game unable lo do themselves
justice, TIHEY'RE SO TUCK-
ERED .OUT SIGNING AUTO-
GRAPHS AND PASTING UP
THEIR PRESS CLIPPINGS IN
THEIR SCRAP BOOKS, '1'iHA'l'
THEY JUST 11A\'EN''T 'PITH
STRENG'I'l1 'I'O GO MORE
'TIiAN THREE OR FOUR iN-
NINGS,"
9 * ,
So, for the time being anyway,
we'll lot it go at that—with a deep
bot,' in the direction of Bank
Greenberg who is at least trying
to step .on the gas in an age when
everything else seems 4o be speed-
ing tip with the exception of
".lmerica'S National Game."
Soap From The Skies
A, Cardiff housewife had a shock
lite other day, In one of her top
roonts she found a mysterious quan-
tity of ice, It carne from an "ice
bomb" which had crashe(i through
the roof.
A quantity of the ice was taken
to the city analyst, trlio examined
it and found that it consisted main-
ly of soapy water. It is said that
he even identified the brand of
soap!
Further inquiries pointed to the
theory that the "ice bomb" came
from an aircraft—a liner on its way
tronr the United States to London.
It is believed that the ice formed
in the waste pipe of the liner's
washbowl While it was flying about
20,000 ft, over the' Atlantic.
The aircraft began to 1 cscentl
in readiness to land as it approach-
ed England, it is reported, and in
the warmer air at lower levels over
South Wales the ice block in' the
-,taste-pipe started to thaw and the
core of it' was the "ice bomb,"
WHEN A MOTORIST whose
car had plunged into a swamp near
St, Paul, refused to pay the bill
for having it pulled out, the towing
service promptly returned the auto
to the scene and pushed it back
into the swamp,
WHEN A PASADENA, Calif,,
patrohnan flagged down a motorist
who was zigzagging dangerously
across the highway, the driver. ex-
plained: "Everything is all right.
Just shaving,"
OUR 85T
LAR
TORONTO MAPLE LEAF STYLE
BASEBALL CAP
Special Value $L10
(Please Mention Cap
Sloe When (rdeting)
Please Add 10e fir PoRtage and Handling —
THE HAROLD A. WILSON COMPANY OF, TORONTO LTD.
ELgIn 0381-299 YONGE STREET, AT DUNDAS STREET
JITTER
VIWAT*I 111E TROUBLE
WHY I9 JITrEn GOING;
1
TWiT7AAN %oar
LEr US SLIDE ON
THE SIDEWALK.)"
/NE vaml;WC TEE? wau,It's AFREE
COUNTRY ANP I OWN THIS WALE[ SO
�r5 SBR NIM KICK ME OPP/
CAMP HO-BA•CHEE
FOR HOTS
HALIBURTON HIGHLANDS
()Merle
On Three Brothers Lake; acceesiblc by bus,
car or train, Constructive programme 01
camp acllville* assurer your sou a hennas,
happy holiday. Resident doctor In attend.
once, and experienced supervislon, 'rants and
cabins Recreation Lodge, good wholesome
loud. Mutes 130 per week of 1100 per month.
Write for (older to—Chnelcs \Ven, 11 Ash-
land Avenue, Toronto, Ont,
EARN MONEY AT IIIh11C
SPARE or hull -lime money-makhig. Learn tai
mnko cnndy at home; sawn while you learn,
Free equipment impelled, Correepondence
renew, National Inatitute of Confectionery
Iteg'd., DeLorimler P,0„ Box 162 Montreal,
Que.
1:611'1.111'MENT WANTED
EXUII(YNCED, reliable Holland immigrant"
avallhblei arriving soon, Write to L. Van-
denhurg, Ilan 92, Brockville, Onto phone
2554 (after 6 o'clock),
FOR SALE
DAIRY for Bale, New De Level equlpm
Apartments above. No opposition, Mlelhou'en
Moe, !.lone Head, Ont,
TARPAULINS ANY SIZE
IN heavy waterproofed duck, complete
Uu ropes, your name stenciled on each
and delivered to your nearest 'tnllon, 9
18,76; 10x12, 113,25; 12x15, 119,76, See
alma made to your order at 12a per mu
foot. Please enclose money order or the
with your order, All Inquiries nnswe
promptly, Canvas Specialty Company, 1
Yonge Street, Toronto,
UNWANTED HAIR
PERMANENTLY eradicated with Seca Pc
The meet remarkable dlecovery of the a
Saco 1'elo la guaranteed to kin the roots
any hap', and contains no drugs or chemlea
Ler-Geer (.ah„ 679 Oranvllle, Vancouver, R
YOU are nut too lute to gel our Lire
Breasted Bronze or llelteline Small w'h
Turkey 1'oultu during June or July, 1\'r' n
have ono week old rind two week old you
for Immediate shipment. Phone, once or wr
today. '''Merest 'turkey Farm, Route 0, Pe
broke, Ontario,
MOTORCYCLES, Barely Davidson, New and
used, bought, sold, each/kneed. Large stock
of guaranteed used motorcycles, ilepnit•, by
factory -trained mechanics, Bicycles, and Com-
plete line of wheel sonde, niso (funs, Boats
and Johnson Outboard Motors, Open evenings
until nine except Wednesday, Strand Cyclo
d, Spurts, Ring at Sanford,lhunitton,
'1r1'l'HIRTUA'ITIES FOR MEN AND WOMAN
TA11,01tiNG, DrcfinlakIne, Dcelgning laugh'
In your home. Send for Free Booklet, Letcoat, ZEl'111111 'S SCHOOL OPAPPIAN,
ARTS, ltoulo No. 1, Box Jit, Berlin, New
Jersey.
- PATENTS
PETHRRS'FONHA0011 A muumuu Pet.
Solicitors Established 1890. 160 Ray 841tt,
!Wow'kle
Boot nt Infnrmntlen an request.
A, id, LAIDLAIV, il.Se„ Noun Attorney,Patents Patents of Invention, 68 Sparke St„ Ottawa,
PERSONA 1,
PLAZA TI:.NI'I:R,INu1 HOTEL6UY Jervis Street,
TorontoMake rebervallomi for tour Toronto rlalb
Free l'arking,
TEACHERS WANTI:U
THE AUGUSTA Township School Arca
Board invites applications from qualified
teachers, duller' 10 begin September 6, 1950,
Apply stating qualllle tion,,, salary expected,
and mime of your Inst inepegtor to J, 19,
Knapp, R.R. 2, !h•eueett, Ont.
cot, SALES AGENT tt'AN'I'Et)
SALESMAN required for exclusive house.;
ware and hardware Innes for surrounding
- territory, Conunleelon or nnlery to the man
w'Ith who has an excellent following amongst, the
side retail 'Untie, Remitter Sales, 72 Prince Ar -
clot x10, - thur Street E uat, Montreal, Que,
aro tl'ANTER
red
QUO WANTED Approxlnmlely 1100 Acres, Suitable
110 for grnln anti beef cattle. Good building"
and water supply. Appraleal by Veterans'
Land Act, Apply Box 01, 123 Eighteenth St.,
New Toronto.
le, rIt(1(11(I(EI:I'IN((R ACCOUNTING tiERVIOR
go. Irving N, Shoon, 77 "Victoria 81., Toronto.
of
lo, . WITCHCRAFT
.0. Storywrlto' wishes to buy old Dream and
n,i Fortune 'l'ellhtg Rooklcls contnlning deecrlp-
Ito (ions et derma anti omes, 'three booklets of
lea popular humbug need lo be bold widely; you
Its may have one, Please help In ,hie rerearch
Ito on common superstlllons, Morse Robb, Trent
m- Road, Belleville, Ontario,
IRON RAILINGS
Guilders, Home (Inners
INSTAI„ yourself, with speelul kit and in-
stt•uctlons. 1Vrite for (elder, Modern Rail-
ings. (rept. 1:,, 05 hraadvieu' Ave., Toronto.
'HMS EV' 1'Ill'L'1'4
1111 HAVE available front 1 to 8 weeks old,
Marled, Inroad Breasted Breeze 'turkey
P6ults, from Government approved dock, and
under Hatchery approval, at reduced prices
fora quirk sale. Ii, Ynuck's 0xelnelt'e Tur-
key Porn' end hatchery, Sub U, Windsor,
Ont. or phone 5.5964 after 5 pini
IN FLORIDA — C'ount'y names, furnished,
Ilglue, gond road', Llenutlful water front
sites and acreage, 8mtt11 trncta Illack lend
Citrus, ole. Lovely year-round climate, health
resort country, For talo by et Canadian—come
and gee ate. S, Gibson, Fort Walton, Fla,
YOIl SALE 11ydro find 'telephone Pelee, Any
number, John Illndoarsh, 11.ft. 2, OoderIeh,
Onterie.
— AMAZING HUT 'TRUE —
HOT WATER for anybody anywhere, coon
try. town or city, Nu storage tank re-
quired; no body et water to keep hot; what
it Bering of fuel. Just turn 1he Inv, and
there Is your hot water, The ItANALAiI and
ASCOT Intlentnneous Water Heinen' will
operate w-Ith Easetttnc; Propane, Natural or
city (In,, Write for purticutnre to IIUIINERS
AND EQUIPMENT LTD, 37 DeGraael St.,
Toronto 8 Ord., or phone Hargrave 0029,
hl I:UIOA L
CHESS CORN SALVE—Fur mire relief, Your
Drugglrl belle Crer,. Cnlluue Salve relieves
quickly too.
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
Daniel the torment of dry edema rashes and
weeping akin troubles, Poet',, Eczema Salve
will not, dleappolnt you,
Itching, healing, burning eczema, acne,
ringworm, pimples and nlhleto',, toot, will
respond readily to the etninle,,, odorleae 'Ante
meet, regardleee of hots Stubborn or hopeless
they seem.
PRICE 11,00 PEn JAR
Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price
POST'S REMEDIES
880 Queen St, E„ Corner of Logan
Toronto
GOOD RESOLUTION—Every suf-
ferer of Rheumatic Pains or Neuritis
should try Dixon's Remedy,
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE,
335 Elgin Ottawa
$1,25 Express Prepaid,
SCA i,Pn EA r,
The wonder remedy for the head. It you have
dandruff, fulling hair or going gray—(JET
SCALI'IILAL at once, eicnlphenl ointment
82.50, Sealpltenl Lotion 12.60 or 14.50 for the
two treatments, I'ostpaid..Sralpheal Company,
01 Centre SI., Chatham, 'Ont.
SIOOKING worries? Is smoking ruining your
health? Write for free Information on ab-
solutely sate method to atop, Ilepllee strictly
confidential, Arm -Rus Co., 1'.0, 209, Ottawa,
Ontnrle.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR MIEN A NI) WOMEN
BE A 3002CANADA'S ILE DI GSSSCHOOl-
Greet Opportunity Learn
llalydreeeing
Pleasant dignified prnfeeeton, good wages
America's
thousands eucceaetul Marvel graduates
greatest eYetem. Illustrated cats
loges free. Write or Call
MARVEL'HAIRDRESSiNO
SCHOOLS
150 Bloat Sl, W„ Toronto
Branches, 44 Ring SL Hampton
A 72 Rideau Street, Ottawa,
ROLL YOUR OWN
BETTER CIGARETTES
WITH -
SAFE
Protect lour IIUIIGS and O,1SII from
F11116 and THIEVES, We bMv' n size
and typo of Safe, or Cabled, far an,
purpose, Visit us or write for urlcca,
etc„ In Dept. 1V,
J,&J,TAYLOR LIMITED
TORONTO SAFE WORKS'
115 Front St, R„ remote
Estnbliehl'd 1865
HARNESS & COLLARS
Farmers Attention — Consult
)'Our nearest Harness Shop about
Staco Harness Supplies, We sell
our goods only through your
local Staco Leather Goods dealer,
The goods are right, and so are
our prices. We manufacture In
our factories — Harness, Horse
Collars, Sweat Pads, Horse Blare.
keta, and Leather Travelling
Goods, Insist on Staco Brand
Trade Marked Goods, and you
get satisfaction. Made only by
SAMUEL TREES CO,, LTD.
42 Wellington St, E., Toronto
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
WANE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE'—
Whhout Calomel — And You'll Jump Out of
Bed in the Morning Ruin' to Go
The liver should pour out about 2 pints of
bile juice Into your digestive tract every day,
11 this -bile Isnot 'lowing freely your food may
not digest, It may Just decay in the digestive
tract, Then gas bloats up your alomeclt, You
got constipated, You feel 'tour, sunk and the
world looks punk.
It takes those mild, gentle Carter's Little
Liver
l2elto!loggreeyto nakt eyoufe"up and flow.
Get a package today, Effective In making
bile flow freely, Ask for Carter's Little Liver
PID,, 350 at any drugstore. -
GLASSES at LOW factory Prices
SAVE.
up to
so',.
(9
cfrom factory Seefachoose
Reeadcaetprnt
Thread finest needle. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Send name, address and age for 30 -day free
FREE I
Trial, Eye chart, !ales( style cafe.
loguc and full Information,
Toorrontto
VICTORIA OPTICAL'CO$AI'6 ytOVlDe
273 Yonge Street De , 635
, OSI,
ISSUE 23 — 1950
CIGARETTE TOBACCO
By Arthur Pointer
Valuable Products
From Fish Waste
Of the fourteen million toes of
fish taken yearly from the sea, Tess
ahan fifty, per cent is used as food.
From salvaged waste and from
fish not fit for human consumption,
`many valuable products are ob-
tained.
Every year large quantities of
phosphorus and potash are tvashed
from the land into the rivers and
sea. Fortunately much of it is
recovered. front the fish. The fish
waste which contains these minerals
is turned into fertilizers. These are
usually free from unpleasant odour
and rot quickly, stimulating bac-
terial action. Also, they yield up
plant foods during the whole of the
season,
An increasing quantity of fish
waste is being turned into meal to
feed live -stock. 'l'Itis meal is made
after the fish oil has been extracted
by heat and pressure. It contains
approximately fifty per cent protein
plus a minute quantity of mineral
salts.
Most fish, especially herrings, are
rich in oil. The importance of this
oil has increased considerably since
imporved methods have been de-
vised to remove the fishy taste and
smell, A few of the products in
which it is used are paints, var-
nishes, soap and margarine, Print-
ing ink and lubricant manufacturers
also use it.
A valuable medicinal oil tvhich
contains vitamins A and D is ob-
tained from the livers of cod and
halibut, This was a mystery to
scientists for sonic time, because
the ultra -violet rays of the sun
which produces these vitamins
could not reach deep-st,a fish.
But it was discovered that the
capelin (small fish) on which the
cod and halibut feed contains these
vitamins. The capelin gets its vita-
mins from the microscopic animal
and vegetable life which lives on
the surface of the ocean, and is
constantly' exposed to the sun's
rays.
The method of extracting oil
from the livers is by steam (teat,
which ruptures the cells, For the
best results this mast he done while
the livers are still fresh; oil ob-
tained front stale livers is of indus-
trial use only.
When Norway was invaded fish-
ing became restricted, and Allied
stocks of oil were seriously reduced,
It became necessary to find an al-
ternative source of supply.
This was discovered in sharks'
livers, which previously had been
used only as fertilizers, Up to one-
tenth of a shark's weight may be
liver, and the quality of the ex-
tracted oil is many times richer
than cod.
A San' Francisco wholesale fish
dealer was responsible for this new
discovery, which resulted in a fan-
tastic increase in' the price of these
livers, It soared from $8 to $1200
a ton, The shark, which had hither-
to been considered nothing but a
nuisance by fishermen, became the
most popular prey,
Apart from oil, there arc various
by-products extracted front sharks,
including leather, prepared from
their skins,*and walking sticks, made
from their backbones,
Fish -glue is another valuable pro-
duct, It is obtained from fish heads,
offal and bones, and ways have
been discovered to mask the odour
and destroy the bacterial content.
JUDGMENT RESERVED
Many distinguished Churchmen
have been famous for dry wit, This
story of Archbishop Frederick
Temple, is a good example.
A woman told hits how her aunt
t.iissed a boat on which she had
booked a passage. The boat sank,
grid most of those on board were
drowned, "Wasn't it providential,"
she finished, "that my aunt 10isse,i
'he boat?" The Archhishop'replied:
1 don't know your aunt."
0 Iv
•
Cars are not killers by themselves ...
you can really trust an automobile these days, Mechanically, they are a pretty safe
proposition. But you can't always trust the man or woman at the wheel,
Most of the traffic accidents this vacation season — by a tremendous margin
will be due to HUMAN FAILURE , , , not to anything going wrong with the car
itself, Drivers will fall asleep, They will pass on hills and curves, They will take
their eyes off the road for just a little instant, They will do other foolish things,
forgetting that the impact of a collision at 60 miles per hour is precisely the same
as driving a car off the roof of a fourteen story building,
We feel it will be helpful and in the public interest as the summer driving season
begins to list a few time tested reminders, which, If followed, may save a good many
lives this year — perhaps your own,
1, Don't drive when tired or sleepy. Pull off the road and take a nap.
2, Reduce speed after dark, Reduce speed drastically in fog, storm or wet weather.
3, Turn on lights at sunset, Dusk is a dangerous time to drive without lights, Dim your
lights when approaching oncoming traffic, Keep all lamps, windshield and rear window
clean.
4. Check tire pressure frequently on long drives, especially in hot weather.
5, Never take a chance,
6. Don't drive after drinking, You may not feel those "two beers" but your reaction time
is dangerously slowed,
7. Always take it for granted that the driver in the "other car" is stark raving crazy—
and drive accordingly,
8, Caution your teen-agers to drive carefully.
9. Urge your high schools to teach a "safe driving" course, if they are not already doing so.
SAVE LIFE -BE CAREFUL
Abraham Maybe Lived In
A 2 -Storey "Modern" Brick House
"For sale," Wright read an ad-
vertisement in any modern news-
paper in the diddle East, "Desir-
able two-storey brick residence,
built around spacious courtyard.
Twelve rooms, Lavatory and ser-
vants' quarters on, the ground floor,
Owner and his family moving to
another state," writes Thomas L.
Leishman in The Christian Science
M onitor.
There is nothing particularly un-
usual about this advertisement ex-
cept one thing. It describes accu-
rately the type of house which stood
111 street after street of Ur, in
southern Babylonia, nearly 4,000
years - ago when Abraham lived
there, Properly translated into the
Sumerian dialect, it Wright have
been used by Abraham's father
'feral, when he was about to move
with his fancily to hfarau, in Meso-
potamia,
For centuries upon centuries, the
very site of Ur was unknown.
Now we know more of Abraham's
Itcnne town than most of us know
of many parts of our own country.
It was a gccat city with a popula-
tion of at least a quarter of a
million. The excavations of Sir
Leonard Woolley have brought to
i:ght indisputable evidence of
schools, temples, libraries — large
and .prosperous homes.
One of the reasons for 'long delay
in identifying lir was the tact that
the Book of Joshua suggests that it
lay "on the other side of the flood"
(literally "the River") when viewed
from the standpoint of Palestine,
There was no need to name "the
River," which in those days meant
the Euphrates—just as surely as in
American folk song "Old Man
River" is the Mississippi.
The ruins of Ur are now sonic 11
miles to the west of the Euphrates,
but aerial photographs clearly show
that at some time in the distant
past the river had changed its
course to where it now flows, In
the patriarch's day, Ur was indeed
"beyond the River," but so close
to it as to be almost on its banks,
The River was the main highway
of the Ur known to Abraham (or
Abram, as he then was called),
Ships plied between the city and
the Persian Gulf 100 miles distant.
These, or connecting vessels, trust
have sailed the Indian Ocean, for
anlazonite beads unearthed at Ur
could have come only from the
Nilgiri hills in southern India. Lapis
lazuli had been brought overland
from the far-off Pamir Mountains
on the borders of China and the
Soviet Union, just north of Afghan-
istan.
Among the discoveries at Ur was
a bill of lading dating from about
20.10 B.C., not long before the time
of Abraham, It lists the cargo of
•a ship which had just completed a
two years' voyage, and which had
brought with it ivory and alabaster,
copper ore and gold.
Statues and beautifully wrought
gold and silver ornaments, also'
found nearby, attest the artistic
ability of the patriarch's fellow-
townsnien. One of these, a delicate
golden representation of a ram
caught in a thicket, provides a
striking reminder of the Bible pas-
sage which tells how Abraham all
but sacrificed his son Isaac.
What first attracted explorers to
the site of what later proved to be
Ur, was a great mound in what is
"now largely desert, due to the
liver's change of course. Here and
there, even before the digging
began, ancient brick walls pro-
truded. As the digging went for-
ward, at last the outlines of a great
building began to appear, and clay
tablets cleverly hidden for safe-
keeping in the courses of masonry
positively identified the city. From
then on its story gradually was
pieced together by the scholars.
This great building was the Zig-
gurat—the sanctuary of the moon
god, chief deity of Ur, if, as the
Bible assures us, Abraham's father
Terali "served other gods," it seems
clear that outstanding among them
was Nannar, _ the moon god of Ur,
although numerous other deities
also were worshipped there.
The filing of receipts, . reports,
papers of all kinds, is an important
part of the work of any efficient
business office of our own day. The
businessmen of Ur were equally
meticulous, in spite of the fact that
their records consisted not of paper
but of bulky clay writing tablets.
Quantities of such tablets have
been recovered at Ur, faithfully set-
ting down both what had been
received and what had been with-
drawn from the stores of goods on
hand
Startlingly modern are the rec-
ords of ,a factory at Ur where
women were employed to spin wool
and weave it into cloth. Monthly
and quarterly balance sheets were
unearthed, together with details of
costs, lists of employees, and of the
pay which each received,
Strange as it may appear, many
of these records were found in the
local temples. This would indicate
that the priests of Abraham's day
demanded tax stoney of the people,
and did busines on behalf of the
"gods" whom they were supposed
to represent.
Education was by no means negs
Iected at Ur. Indeed, the ruins of
a single elementary school yielded
as many as 2,000 clay tablets, Many
of these have been deciphered, and
they give us some Idea of what was
studied by the children of the day.
Reading, writing, and arithmetic,
of course, had their place. 'There is
also evidence that the older pupils
trent on to wrestle with square and
cube roots and with geometry,
Perhaps Abraham himself was
among them! •
WHEN a man's car stalled near
'htiladelphia, a stranger helpfully
stopped and helped push. The
stranger then suggested he take the
wheel and tvork the starter while
the motorist pushed. \\Then the
motor started the stranger made off
with the car.
bEUTSCN EBIINOESPgSt
New Stamp --This design was
chosen for Germany's new 20 -
pfennig postage stamp in com-
petition at Frankfort, Depict-
ing a matt raising his arms to
a dove of peace, it won first
prize for Prof. Johanties Wohl-
fart.
TllFMNFROT
J \A(Naelr,
Back in the days when we used
to sing that ancient ditty
''HOW'RE YOU GONNA KEEP
THEM ON TIIE FARM AFTER
THEY'VE SEEN PAREE" it
seemed to be a question that had
no satisfactory answer. And even
today there are plenty of chronic
head -shakers and viewers - with -
alarnt who—while constantly de-
ploring the tendency of country
boys and girls to flock citywards
—end up by saying, "Guess there
isn't much anybody can do about
it."
* * *
Well, they're wrong. There are
people who are trying ta, show
young people that farming, done in
a modern manner, can be a career
that has no equals for real satis-
faction and happiness. One of these
is the SALADA TEA COMPANY
that recently sponsored a sight:
seeing trip for the four boys who
constituted the two top. winning
teams in the Salada event at last
year's International Plowing
Matches,
* * *
Herewith I am publishing pic-
tures of the four young chaps, also
one of A. G. Skinner, the Ontario
Agricultural Representative at Ca-
yuga, who planned the trip and
personally conducted it. And to give
you an idea of what an interesting
journey it must have been, I am
also lifting several sections from
the "play-by-play" reports the tra-
vellers sent back,
* * *
COSHOCTON, OHIO
'Front there we went to the
Hydrological Station located near
Coshocton, This station consists of
a farm of 1,000 acres maintained by
the Soil Conservation Service of
the U.S,D,A. and was established
for the purpose of studying water
control problems from the smallest
farm field to entire drainage basins,
"It was a privilege to meet Mr,
L,
L. Harrold, Project Supervisor,
and to have him discuss a number
of the projects with the boys dur-
ing the visit to the Hydrological
A, Gordon Skinner
Cayuga
Station, Mr. Harrold is a scientist
whd impresses one as being capable
of applying science to practical
agriculture. It was quite evident
that no information of a definite
nature will be forthcoming from
that station until it has been thor-
oughly proven to be sound and
practical.
"Methods of preparation of the
soil for cropping in relation to water
conservation were discussed and
were of intense interest to these
boys who were experts h, their
own right as plowmen, The ques-
tion was raised as to whether plow-
ing was the proper methort to fol.
low if the highest percentage of
:rater was to be kept for crop
growing purposes. It was suggested
that perhaps our methods of plow•
ing should be revised so that a
deeper furrow of probably ten
inches would be turned not over
but on its edge. ,The theory was
that this would tend to mix the
organic matter more thoroughly
with the entire depth and also pro-
vide openings or slits for the mois-
ture to get down and be retained its
the soil,
"The Lysimilers proved to be
highly interesting equipment for the
treasuring of runoff, percolation and
evapo-transpiration. It has been
discovered that the Torn :rap uses
one huh of water in 5 days dur-
ing the month of May and one inch
in 3 days during July."
* * *
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
"During the morning lire had the
opportunity of visiting much of the
Department of Agriculture at the
Ohio State University, including
the Administration B u 11 ding
(Townshend Hall), the various
'amts and class rooms, greenhbuses,
Agricultural Engineering. While
most of the livestock was out on
pasture we did see the $25,000.00
Angus ball of which they are very
t•.oud. It seems this bull Las only
been beaten once in the siu.w-ring
and then by a brother or half-
brother. It would appear that a
good deal of meat work s being
done here. At least that was one
subject that tvas emphasized as far
as we were concerned. Much of
that is with hogs and it would ap-
pear that they arc trying to get a
hog with less fat and more of the
higher priced cuts. \Ve, in Ontario
achieved that years ago. However,
they are of the Dpinion that much
of the trouble is with the feed
they are using. Corn is naturally
a common feed and this to ods to
produce fat.
"We have discovered that the
horse business in the state is fast
going the same way it is in On-
tario except that it has gone farther,
v
ery few heavy horses are now
being kept at the University; they
are mostly riding horses and horse
riding is one of the subjects taught
in physical education. In our dis-
Earl Bacher
Cayuga
Robert Nixon
Ifagersville
_•ussion with Mr. Blubaugh on
Monday we learned that there were
not more 'than about three teams
of horses in his country and in some
of the surrounding countries there
wer no horses at all."
* * *
KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE
"During the afternoon we were
taken out to see one of tate Test
Demonstration Farms. This is one
of many such farms that have been
selected to act as demonstrations
of what can be accomplished
through the following of approved
farm practices. It would appear that
the secret of the luscious pasture
that we saw both on the University
farm and out at the Demonstration
farm was the heavy fertilization
treatment that it was given. Sante
of the fields had received as ,much
Ps the equivalent of 270 lbs, of
P205 or in the neighborho'i of 500
lbs. of 47% P206. Other fertilizers
evidently had also been applied at
similarly heavy rates. It utas also
quite apparent that it was paying
dividends to make such heavy ap-
plications. In the case of the co-
operator at the demonstration farm
the yield of corn had been increased
from around 16 bushels per acre
to 100 bushels per acre through in-
creased fertilization and the .ap-
plication of sound farm practices
such as the maintenance of a high
organic matter level and -conserva-
tion of soil moisture. Incidentally
this demonstration farm of just
99 acres is maintaining a herd of 19
Hereford cows and 13 calves and
last year the co-operator had some
hay to sell and his only feed pur-
chase was 100 bushels of corn.
Formerly this was a truck garden-
ing farm and touch of the soil
was being washed away. Under the
new system the gullies are being
tilled up, the earth is staying where
it belongs, the farmer is having to
work a lot less, and his farm is in
.t touch greater and better state of
fertility. Its 1949 itis cash balance
at the end of the year was greater
than his whole income when he was
in the truck gardening game. He
has bought the farm, paid for it and
also has paid for Itis livestock and
equipment. The equipment includes
a combine and a pick-up baler. He
is also maintaining a fair standard
of living. Only 5% of his land has
been plowed this year. The entire
balance is in hay, pasture, and over -
winter crops such as whcat and
barley.
"Mitch of what we saw today
Eugene Timbers Norman Watson
nlilliken
Woodbridge
might not be applicable to Ontario
conditions but the importance of
good pasture of highly nutritious
grasses and clovers is certainly be-
ing emphasized in our minds. One
other thing that has been heavily
underscored during our whole trip
ao far has been the importance of
keeping as much of our land as
possible under sod and to maintain
our soil in such a high state of fer-
tility that fewer an few•tr acres
are required. to produce the grains
that we nerd to maintain nor live-
stock.
I regret that space 111011a1.005 will
not permit me to quote at greater
length from thesg interesting rg-
ports.. Holt ever, I think there is
enough here to prove that the Sala -
da Tea folks should be congratu•
latest for their efforts to provide
a satisfactory answer to that old
'saestion 110\\"RE YOU GON-
NA—ETC.
PAtIll 1
1
3
•
g� MTANOAltai
..N. ....N... ^ PERSONAL INTEREST 1..N.............,.....+w►'..'..+'.k
e NI r,, F. II, Metcalf of Fort William, 1pp
\liss E:la ,Ictcal( of Loud. it, visited Beaus S hoe
the I,Iltc'r's
\IIs, 1. \Ivtcali,
WALLACE'S
Dry Goods -Phone 73-- Boots & Aries
SEW and SAVE
\\'hen you spend your precious time sewing, you'll want to use
dependable materials. We try' to carry the best,
J• & P. COA'T'S SHEEN AND COTTON,
CLARK'S STRANDED COTTON,
LIGHTNING ZIPPERS,
NEEDLES, DOMES, HOOKS and EYES.
All so necessary with your Prints, Itrt'ndeloths, a full range of colors.
Reach Cloth, I'oplina, Crapes, Woollens, plain and I'laitl,
♦.I.4..14N.I.N..I '4444'
mother,
on. Thor, .ay.
Sunda:, visitors at the home of ND-.
and ,AIr,, James Crufol'll were, Nlr
and Nlrs. l'e.e Crawford, \Ir, and Ntrs
George Simi sot, \lis,i fsobellc Sintp
sun, Miss Sandia Cra\1 ford, \I iss \lar
gie Venus, all of London, \I r. and \lr.
'Phos. Cronin, \1r, Ita)'utund \IcCol:
tell, NIrs. H. J. Crawford, and Johnst_ h
t'r;111 ford, all t•f Milieu, and Mrs. Fred
t'rest, of 1.l'u'Icslwro.
are tl':nl to report that NI: s
James (.1;n\fortl, who lids had :t lid
".i. in`c, tion, is diiprolcd.
NI r. and Mts. Gordon i'lliott and so
John, of Kitchener, spent the Hoek -ctrl
with their mother, Nit's, '1', I':hiolt,
AIi•s Le, na \\'ats nt of I.'j tI In a. cut
the week -call with her parents, \Ir
;11111 \Irs. Earl \\ :I:st,:l.
.;•• •, •,
Nit'. and Nil's. uttat McCallum vis-
64.144.4.4,++444444+4.4+4•TTTylety •.•.i.,••,;•,,OHS 444/ 1811:141.••.•••„1•;•..•.
.� itctl lir, Cr the we:'k-ctrl with the let•
•, ter's brother, AIr. and NIrs, 1la:'ycy
NI g - • ii
Ilo\cr, of III:i ln, t' i with tl;rir
�• d:r;h!cr, \li-s Irene NlrCallunl.
•- FOOD STORES --
"; AIr. and NI r,, Leslie Johnston spcn'
111" \1' r!. end w'llh the l.,l'llll'r ti ,Istel
'\Ir>. (lark. and \1r, Carl,, cif I omlon.
The).yere areun I,anicd home by Ai
y rs
\'lark, who \rill visit herr.
• For Thursday, Friday, Stllltl't111y, June 8, 9, 10 t111
1 Al lin ("ole visited on Sunday
", Willi het' daughter, ,NI iss Ilene Cole, of
W Kitchener,
• Nlr, \\'illiatt Hamm, of \litcliell,
visiting \lint his It'othl•r, Mr, licuri e
IL'onil and AIr.. Matto and, family,
and his sister, Alrs. J. Cole and \lr.
Colt'.
;• Alt's. I. F. Ellis of Listowel is vis-
"
,., it'll„ with. Ilio;ltl:, li re.
INlr. and AIrs. Stanley \'ounghlllt of
1iuilph 'lest the week -end ssitII their
t -• ; parents here, and in Londesloro.
n .\1K. 11. .\. Alcliit re, of Clinton
her (wither, \Irs, lrnkin,, of 'forit,'
'
LIFEI'ERIA Olt NEV,'1,11.1E FEED. .,
K• AIr, and Nlrs, Herald NeIson an l
dntr;I,tcr, •of tit, l'allulritte , visited
J• \t ill! Mks Josephine \1'uodcocl< un
>• Sunday.
:1 Nliss 1ila,ly>. Fawcett spent the week •
end \lith Ito- mother, AIrs..11ice Vaw-
R.4441•+•i•S'•11••iH'+++.4•b•1••�• 4.4.•. 4.4. 4,444. I, 4. 44 4.4. 4.44.4.44 44, 4.4, 4,4,4•+ 41 a est,
NIi'.:\ltter! Reis. All', and Nits. Jack
i tris, AIr. and Alis. J. I:elterburti. AIr
\\'alter Huffman, of Alilverlult, visitc'I
ug. 1.;untlay \lith Alt, awl NIr. John
I )oerr.
Nits. Janie, l'r:nvfurtl was dinner
winan'r. ,nt .I pro' rain heard daily over
ra'di ,ration CKNN.
Ali •.l s Laying and OIvens Brigham
and Nlrs. .\tl'tnt, of Clinton, Mr. awl
Airs, h:Ipson of Iletrnit, lvere guest.
of Mrs, J. \\'. ii 1!. (hiring the heck,
Rev. and NI rs. 'Thomson of Nova
Scotia, 'i•.itrtl at the S:mirrs' honk.
Office Phone 104, Reeidenco l'huuc, 12 or 140 Nli's I:ilyrm Itobi'l,un, of Toronto
GARDEN PATCH CHOICE TENDER PEAS, . .. 2 15•uz, tine 25v
CAMPIIELL'SC 'I'OMA'I'O SOUP .. _ .. 2 TINS 2Ie
CLARK'S PORK & BEANS 2 20.02, 'PINS 27c
FRAY BENTOS'CORNED BEEF. .. ., (1'e), TIN 45:.
BELMAR CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP MIX .. ... 2 PKGS. 25c
TIDE OR OXYDOL ... ... ....... . LGE, PKG. 33e
GIANT PKG. , . Vic
KING'S CHOICE RASPBERRIES . . 15 0'. TIN 79e
GOLDEN NET REI) COIIOE SALMON . 3 CIF. -LB, TINS $1,00
DURHAM OR CANADA CORN S'I'ARCII . PKG, 15c
"IT" WHITE SIIOE CLEANER, Reg. Bottle 15c; Large Bottle 25c
FRESH FRUIT -- FRES!' VEGETABLES.
We Deliver. -- E. 5. ROBINSON, -- Phone 156
Elliott Insurance Agency
13LY'I'II - ONT.
INSURE NOW! AND BE ASSURED.
Car - Fire - Life - Sickness - Accident,
J. H. R. Elliott Gordon Elliott
COURTESY AND SERVICE,
.? Myth, -_
Rlr3tAiatit btAtkpl t a+liD'tia+ata't,rata+acacia•;ataratAPll atatataiNDtMaiitPtatatitataiDtAlI Nliss Etlitll Lockhart, of Sarnia
spent the \\ eek -end \villi relatives in
!:,ul! dll , •t � . 4 .1 it I Illvlh.
•w^•w--w;.•.ii;;- ,• wr-w• mw +-;sF••-r••,r 1 NI r. and \I rs. t;eoree E. Cowan
spent the week -end With relatives in
llanvjlle Hammerton
Portraits, \Veddings and Commercial Photography,
• WE SPECIALIZE 1N CHILD PORTRAITS.
Films Developed and P1'inted. 21 -flour Service,
PHONE, WINGHAM 199,
,•. J. J. .-. .� -- - -�- .. ......Jh..I�,..1V„•AI,..N...f�1...M..I'f..l�! •Mu.�....1..I,•
TURKEY 1
I'e'llly :Im'I lire'try, of Ilt"'tnn, sp:t,t
tltt• neck -end :It the form..r's home,
They \yen! i,t,, u'npanied bolt. Iry NI r•.
and Nl rs. I ie'n•:;r ('u\\t:t+, sr., n ho had
been visit•ito the It Iw.t r.'eel:s at
Becton. Nlit;la nl an I Toronto,
Nlr. and Mrs. I'r.+n4 l.in''lutd,
of ("iut'IIt, spent Sunday with Mrs. F.
Alctl•alf.
l AUIBUItN
I \Ir. and Mrs. 1. O. Alcllveen at
Kin':stun, where they \l ill attend the
graduation csrrrises at ()liven's L`ni-
1cr,ity \\licit heir son, Gilbert, will
graduate as a I )odor,
ON SUNDAY
OR EVERY DAY AT
THS
HURON GILL
51.00 Per Plate
Served From 11.39 to 2.0o •• 5.30 to tf.00
PROMPT SERVICE -• NO WAITING
Form a Party and
TAKE ADVANTAGE of this SPECIAL
•
• PERMANENTS •
Machineless,
Culd Waves,
and
11'Il'cl,ine 1Vavcs,
Finger Waves,
5 tIllput.b,
11Lit' Cuts, ll"d
Cliches.
Olive McGill
phone 'Myth, 52,
► 1.II
414 44.0440
I I. 1 110410111111111.11.6111.111...
'ANYTHING FROM A
STOOL to a S'T'EEPLE--•
if ycu have a faint Job to be done
wily not place your order N'O\\' -
an I not be disappointed,
(►' 11' 1)1.1► Il':I.I:\It1.1'.
▪ I':I(I.\I.S (I' THE III(illl':S'I'
tj('.\1.311'\'
The hest' is none loo goal for that
job til you s.
I can also treat those tyrak struts
for ntoislnrr and Termites,
tirnllortlly t\ 1\'atcrfast \1'allpapers
. faints, Enamels, Varnish, lac.
Venetian !diads,
Brush and Spray Painting.
F. C. PREST
Phone 37.213,
'tf
LOfWESOORC
110.,,, q4 ..p1 i
Nf
BEAUTY SALON..
NEW DEB -U CURL
COLE WAVE
PERMANENT
/` Iso Machittc1 ee and Mac''ino
Wa ce. ''c 'Ip 'Freatntcn's, Nal!
C• t-, Shalnpros, a n d Finger
Wit roe.
Wednesday quite 7, 1950
immommemmiseuemereileat
MOTIIOCIDES alul INSECTICIDES
Start now to repel the Moths & Insects this Season,
Below is a partial list of supplies to help you:
Parricide Moth Crystals
Lat'vex l'or Moths 85c
Sapho for Moths 35c
Wood's Moth Blocks 10c and 25c
llavok Illy Spray 25c and '15c
Havok Surface Spray 25c and '15c
6-12 Insect Repellent 59e
1)' -Ter Insect Repellent 59e
Aertlsol Insecticide liotub.. ►1,98
Flower Spray , .. 30c
419C
R D. PHILP, Phm.
11R1iGS,
3r.1N111t!117,A. K'AI.I,1'AI'FR-•-PIInNF ?o
, II I I. , .t . . M,
a.
•• lw NrrIN I.14.•1...N.N.N•.1NI4.04 I•
'1'1tY OUR FRESH
RASPBERRY OR CIHERRY PIES.
HIGH RATIO CAKES.
' BUNS AND PASTRY.
FRESII W1I1TE AND BROWN' ,IIREAD,
Plain O1' Sliced,
YOUR PATRONAGE, I5 APPRECIATED,
The IIOME BAKERY
11.'11• Volltictl,
VNN1.N1. 1.0.0. 04•0IN..111J..I1
1°4"}ij
Proprietor Blyth, Ontario
RAY McNALL,
Phone 53, Myth.
1N400..1 NNNJI+
Nl1, and \Irs, Gordon R. 'T'ay'lor atm
Marion Taylor at London,
Dowd(' and I?rntst McKenzie o'
1iodcrich were renewing, acquaintance
in the v;llatte.
\Ir, and NIrs, John Finlayson o';
Seaforth with \I t'. and NII's. ldg a'
Lett son.
John I. \1'ilson has returned Iron
Port .\ !bet tvhtre he was visiting AIr.
atilt Nlrs, Thigh Bennett.
Nlrs. John Howson, of Vancouver
with Mrs, Charles :\. Howson, and Mr.
and Nit's. R. J. Phlillps,
I'atl Jardin of ! t'Ii rave with Mr
Intl All's. \\'iill:ull Strat ;Tool. N11..I.NN,IN.N&NN11.1.1yyla
\\'illiant S. Graig with relatives in
Flint, NI ichivatt.
Airs, I'I't'tl Ross and Donald Ross
attended the graduation exercises at
\\'esters t_'niv'cl'sity on Saturday. I)ott-
I received his !t,A. degree at these
exercises.
.11 I.NN1...N.JI•I
IN.f. NNJ ..0,1NN4,I•1.
► I N1111.
•
Speiran'sHardware
PIM: 2.1, BLYTH,
E V EItY'I1I1ING 1N HARDWARE.
BOTII LIGHT & HEAVY BARB WIItE
IN STOCK,
STEEL POSTS 72c EACH
SllUlt SHOCK & GEM ELECTRIC FENCERS.
FENCE INSULATORS.
110'1' HOT BATTERIES $3,85
WE REPAIR FENCERS,
1 -PLY GARDEN IIOSE (any length) per foot 10c
RAIN -KING LAWN SPRINKLERS.
! al
.11
1
HURON GRILL PHONE 57 BLYTH -
UI 14(RAVt
Rev. G. 11a7r1tvood of \\'altos con•
ducted the services in Knox Ui'ted
Church and Brick on Sunday. 1
\li'.s Lois NleGiiire of Toronto id
.pending, her vacation at her hone
berg
\Ir. and Nlrs, Bettye 1.eys and baby
Marilyn, of Varna, \vert. Sunday vis t-
ors with \I r. and \II's. K. 1\'. \1'1tccl-
e r,
:Nil-. I), C. Scott of Detroit with t•c•
latices here.
1)r, and AIrs, Gordon Stonchou,r
and daughter, of i'hr'elt'x, Arizona, are
5Itcrl:IiIt ;t holiday tyith his paten's
Mr. and \Irs. l?. Slont'housc and oil'.
et members of the family Rete.
EAST 11'A11tANOSll
-Airs. George Charter was :title to he
brought home by car on Sunday, June I
4th, from Victoria hospital, London
where she was rushed by ambulance
on \lay lith, following. a fall at the
I• 116.. ,.i I.,
Holland's
,G.A. Food Market
1
McCormick's Peanut Mallows per lb. 39c
• Bright's Tomato Juice 2 for 19c
Pink Seal Salmon • 41c
Stokcicy's Fano' 'Cream Corn t 2 for 25c
Stokeley's fork and Beans 2 for. 27c
Talisman Strawberry Jute 41c
1, G. A. Peanut Butter - 35c
'Trifle, Oxydol 33c
Drel't 1,,,, 32c
Lushus Jelly Powders 3 for 25c
Dewkist Peas, (20 oz.) '. 2 for 19c
'barn. An operation was performed fory
I
a fractured skull follnw'ctl by oyer a!
1 Sweetest Name 1 ]vto\v,„ on the piano.
dozen convulsions and several hours' i Approximately three htutdred people Another beautiful littitiber by the Nor
use of the oxygen tank. .She be
make
to leathered at the high school ill Clinton tis family, "Rock of Ages," was eu-
make favourable pet toss, I on Saturday night for the Clinton Area .J
dozen
by all.
\h•. and \Irs. King Irish and son, Youth for Christ Rally, The meeting
are visiting at her brother's home, Mr... was opctteli with the thecae song
Ernest Parker and sister, Mae.. Christ For Me.t'
\I1. Aubrey 'full has the foundationl Several familiar hymns were sting
laid for his new barn and silo Conn- after which the Director led rut prayer.
dation. The Norris family favoured with the
Nit... and Mrs. Arthur \1'ard, now hymn, "Cleanse \ly heart, Oh God,'
residents of the former Gow farts ul with Lance playing- the xylophone
the \\'iron Estate, had the telephone Margaret, 10 years old, :at the piano,
installed last week with the 'number 'and Bob, 13, wth the cornet. '
being 12-11. Sgt. A. R. Persan sang two beauti-
)liss Mildred Charter is enjoying her ( fol numbers "Victory in Jesus," and
vacation. . "Just Over in the Glory." Margaret
HOLLAND'S
Telephone 39 •- We Deliver
oath Rally Well Attended Norris favoured with "Jesus Is the
The, speaker of the evening, Dr, Al-
bert llughes, of Toronto, gave a very
interesth...1 and instructive message..
11e spoke of the Transformation in the
Life of Paul, taken from Acts, Chapter
9.
There was a good response to this
message, and the hope was expressed
that Dr. Hughes would again return
to Clinton.
The next tiieetin'; will. be held in
Exeter in July. Watch your local
paper for further details.