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The Blyth Standard, 1959-10-14, Page 1ti BLYTH S1ANc'AR VOLUME 71 - NO. 38 Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa. BLYTR, ONTARIO, WEDNESDAY, OCT, 11, 1959 Baptismal Service at United' OBITUARY PERSONAL 1NTER EST Church On Sunday , Mrs, A. 13, Grainger, of Regina, . GEORGE B. MAINS Sask,, is visiting her mother, Mrs, The Sact'an:e•a of Infant Bapt'snt A well known Lifetime resident of the ,Mrs. Dianna Cowan. was given to Wise ch ldre ► en Sun ay Blyth and Mullett district in the person Mr, and Mrs, Fred Fawcett, of' Tor - at the Blyth Unite;( Chem). Children onto spent the week -end at their ho,t:c bapt'zed were; Dehh'o Elaine, daughter tlf, George B. Mains passed away at here,� 1 Gli nton 1 ublic hospital on Thursday, of Mr, and Mrs, John Alex nder; Ro• October 8 in his 88th ' u•, He hal Dr.o J. T. Armes, of Toronto, Was a e gcr Bruce, sot of Mr, and Mrs. T r. ce y" , Bartle; Anretl�; E a'n�, d ug'•tcr of lJCen a patient at the Clinton Ilospilal visitor on Tuesday with ALss Joscp�ll.tc for one week. Woodcock, Mr, and Airs, Go don Cat•tar; Lo f Ana,He was horn on the farm being lot Mr. and Airs, J: A, Watson and son, ('.aughter of M', asci Mrs, Rig ileac( thirty, on the 14th concession of Hut- Kenneth, and daughter, Jan, cis Los - weed; Gary Wayne, son of M'. and , lett, on June 28, 1972, a ,son of tate late tion, were visitors on Monday withthe Mrs, Wm, Hull; Dori Lynn, drug' ter James Mains and Margaret Lovett, roomer's parents, Mr, aad M.s. h the J,13. of Mr. and Mrs, IC_nn't 1 Joli s on; He resided and farmed on this farm; Watson. Alexander James, s''n•or Mr, and Mrs. until 1951 retiring to Blyth.I Mr. and Mrs. Ross Tasker and daugh- Robert Marshall; Darrel G rdon, s•n During this ster,, eat L e of Mr. and Mrs, G rdut Shob'r-ok; Mail Delivery service in the Blyth and week -end with the former's n,thcr, William Man, son of Mr. and M s. Westfield district. Il•2 Was a staunch Mrs. A. It, 'Tasker, and Mr, and Mrs, Wm, Young, Lloyd Tesla ns Dae and Kevin. In his Thanks^even^, tncss-g� Ai, member of the consei•vativ party and a member of the Loyal Orange Order Air, and Mrs. Carl Cox, Go:a,d 'Lye' jlicLagan mention^d four reasons for No. 863 Londesboro 101'11 years during Craig, of Clinton, visited on Sunday giving thanks, First bee -use ws have which time he missed only one walk, with Airs, K. Wh oale and "ieslin. minter an abundance of advantages, Also a ter of the Rising Star Mrs. Lvodttttt Coate and h'loteitce material and w'i:it'.ra'; secondly be Black Percepctary 1226 Blyth. Wilkinson, of London, visited on ;.un - cause it saves us from fill. Il ding Mr. Mains was married on December day with Airs. J, Collinson, and better criticism of other,. We 27, 1910, to Florence B. Jackson, who Mr, and Mrs, John Collinson, Maty should learn to think ro l ivr ly as(' survives, also one daughter, Tillie, R. Lou and Jackie, of Kindel, visited with lock for the goof points in othsrs l!:• N of 1 onc'on Mrs, J Collinson on Sunday The body rested at the 'Tasker Mem- p.m. from Fa, Funeralheld Ft eddy evening. On Saturday at Lions Paper Drive '1'hc Blyth Lions Club are holding a paper chive on Monday evening, Wu - her 19, and the members will I:e on the ,job commencing at 6 p.m. sharp. Pickups will also be made in the neighbouring conintunities of Londcs- born and Auburn. As hutch a tete Work will be carri:cl out in the dark evening hours, dents ate asked to make 0 special ef- fort in tieing their 1.unc'1es, as p..oriy tied paper wall he harder to distinguish than in daylight hours. "No bundle too large or loo small", B1R'1'IiS DEIVA R—In Listowel I: ntori al l irs- pilal on Saturday, Octcbcr 1st, 1959, to Ah'. and Mrs, James Dewar (ncc Delphine 'Bunking) of Atwood, the gift of a son, Glenn Elwood. W.M.S. To Meet The W.M.S. of Blyth United Church stead of being herb! 1t I d will hold its r�^alar ntceting on 'Phut• the mhiis'cr, Thirdly,t and Mtn Kenneth Wilkin, of I IL f or' client spent the week end with Mr. saves its from -comet 6 w c•her in to a _ _ ____ And finally, thankrgi' in; saves us ;3,00 p.m, funeral service was conducted IN VICTORIA HOSPITAL from despair. If wa look, Tan h the by his pastor, Rev. McLagan, of the her mother and father-in-law, 111x, and Mrs, Murray }Lamm is a patient in midst of tt acedy, le rsion and se^m Blytlt United Church, of which the de- Mrs, Grover Clare Sr. • ( Victoria Hospital, London. We wish her ingly increasing troubles in the world, ceased was a member for many years. Mr, and Mrs, John Jackson and Miss a speedy recovccy. we can find c•ruso for tltnnt•s i i vt. Inte nritent in Blyth Union Cemetery. Nitta Begley, of Port Dover, visited on "A lhoughful heart Is a ra• t cf Ile - Pallbearers were, 'Phomas Johnston, Saturday with Airs. Mary Ilollyman salvation we find in Chris" eminent. Alajor Youngblut, William 'l'huell, and :Diss Sarah Gibson. td the Miiiiiaer, George Baillie, Robert Townsend and Mrs. James Leach, of Toronto, form- 1'he male quarto( y tri ca , state giving thanks -complain'ng M '. I day, October 15, at 8 p.m. 1111S '.t and Mrs, Thomas Cronin Jr 1 Mrs. Grover Clare Jr, spent the , weekend in Gananoque visiting with ' the home, in busiress or in the chime'(, , cons s n; o , I. Ira Rapson. Flowcrhearet•s were, Dr. Wallace, teror, W. Buttell, lead, J. Kenneth Jackson, Roy McVittie, Her - Lawrie, baritone, and G. Kec'ini', bent Glousher and Percy 1'oungblur bass, gave an inspiring rend'tion r[ t':e anthem "Great and Marvellous, „ MOVED TO LONDON Mrs. Alice Sne'l who has been an operator on the Blyth Municipal Tele. phone System for the past seven year;, tendered her resignation last week to take a position in London, leaving la -t Thursday. The staff presented ha with a gift before' her departure. She will be geartly missed and we hope she will be happy in her new surroundings. Preaching Mission To Be At Auburn United Church "A Preaching Mission is to be cost• ducted in Knox United Church, Au- burn, each evening during the week November 2nd to November Gth. The preacher will be the Rev. Andy Els- lace, minister of North 'Street United Church, Goderich. His general theme for the week is "The Uncertainties of Religion." • Assisting in the services will be the' Rev. Harry Funge, of Lon'esborough, the Rev. Evan McLagan, of Blyth, and the Rev. R. M. Sweeney, of Auburn, Choirs from Auburn, Donnybrco's and Westfield, will participate." AMONG THE CHURCHES Sunday, October 13, 1959 IT. ANDRCW's ruESnYTERIAN CHURCU • Rev. D. J. Lane, B,A,, Minister. 1.00 p.m.—Church Service and Sun- day School. THE UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA Blyth, Ontario. MRS. ALEX INKLEY Funeral service for Mrs, Alex Inkley was hell Saturday, October 10, 1959, at the Ball and Match funeral home at 3 p.m., conducted by Rev. J. A, McKim and Rev, D, J. Lane. Airs. Inkley passed away in Victoria Hospital, where she had been a patient for five weeks, on Thursday, October 8th, She was horn at Burks Falls, a daughter of Mrs. George Campbell, and the late Mr, Campbell, of Clinton. She martial Alex Inkley, of Clinton, in 1928. Surviving besides her husband • are one daughter (Ardyss) Mrs. Grant Daniclls,"'of ICitchener, and six' grand- children, also her mother, one sister, (Jessie) Mrs, Leonard Bastock, of St. lluberts, Quebec,. three brothers, El- wood Campbell, of Port Credit, George and Bob Campbell, of Clinton, CIIARLES JAMES SCOTT Funeral services for Charles James Scott were held on Saturday afternoon, October 10, from the C. Ilaskett and Son funeral home, Lucan, Mr. Scott had lived in IIantilton for sonic years and his death occured at the Nora Francis Henderson Hospital there, on October 8,1959, after a long illness. Rev. T. -A. Griffin, of Ilderton, offi- ciated. Pallbearers were: 'Phomas A. Hodgins, Clifford Hodgins, David Ash- worth, Ernest Morrow, Alnter Ecdy and A, S, Garrett. Interment was in Birr Anglican Cemetery. Deceased was born on concession 15, London 'Township and spent his early life farming in that area. Ilis parents were Francis J, Scott and Fannie Loy• - ett. . Surviving are his widow, formerly Loretta Gowan, of 61 Stanley Ave., Hamilton, and two sons, Grant, of Bur- lington, Lewis, of Toronto; a sister, Mrs. Harold 13. Hodgins, (Avice) of London township; two brothers, Frank Scott, of Lucan and Culbert. Scott, of Ottawa, Burn's Church Mission Band The Burn's Church Mission Bird Rev. R. Evan McLagan - Minister, met the first Saturday in October with 15 members present. Meeting opened by members repeat. ing the Mission Band Purpose, follott ed by hymn "Jesus Loves Me," Min- _ ales of last meeting were read by Di - Laymen's Sunday - anne Roe. 'Treasurer's report was given 10,00 a.m.—Sunday Church School. by John'Alblas. Story of Ana the little 11,15 a.m,—"You Have Been Called." African Baby, was read by Dianne RV, Mr, Martin Baan, speaker.,(Scripture Luke 21: 1-4, was read by No Evening Service. Joyce Roe. The story of a rich young 8,30 p.m.—Young Peoples' at Church ratan was read by June Govier, Story of Junes Gift was lead by Jane Alblas. Story of Widows Mite was read by Mrs. Babcock, followed by discussicn and meanings of . these stories. Collection -was taken by Betty Jean McGregor. Offering song was repcale ' in unison, "Let's 1)o It" a story of Stewardship was read by Mrs. Babcock followed by -prayer for childern of or.et' lands, Meeting c'osed with the Lord's prayer and benediction, Games were played before the children c'.eparted Miss Margaret Jackson - Director of Music, WEEKS OF WORSHIP ANGLICAN CIIURCH 21st Sunday after Trinity Blyth: 10,30 a,ni.—Mot•nhtg Prayer Auburn: 11.30 a.m,—Sunday School. 12 o'clock—Morning Prayer. Belgrave: 2.00— Sunday School, 2,30 p.m.—Evening Prayer, Pt:;acher: Mr. Piekford, (11C11( 11 111 111)1) Mcronnett Sheet, Blyth. Special Speaker. 2,00 p.m.—Sunday School. 3.00 p,m,—Church Service. FRESIi RASPIIEI(111E5 LAST 1VEEK crly Flo Williams, of Blyth, called at the Standard Office on Tuesday on her way to Wasaga Beach, While a resi- ednt here she was emplcycd at the store of Mr. Ilantilton and Mr, Robert McKay. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Walsh, I,ay- ton and Warren, Mrs. Mary I. ila:old, spent the week -end in Sarnia, visiting with Mrs, hippold's daughter, Ahs. bisher Bay. where she has been po.s(_d ill was absent as he was attending the Jean Kintmerly, Jim and Connie. Airs,for the oast two years Her i^anuri o' Gocal Roads Convention in Vancouver. Lippold stayed for a longer visit. `i Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A. Laymen Speak At Arca East WTawanosh Council Churches District United Churc''es, 011 Sun- day, October 18111, wal juin more th'ln 100,000 others in Cana'a and the Us - fled Stales in the ob:;crvanee cf Lsy- tnen's Sunday, Mr, Marlin Basil, of Walton, w:Jl speak at Blyth United, Air, Char!ei Nelson, of Clinton, at Bel;ra•, e, Mr, Keith Snell, of 1Veslficld, at Auburn, and Mr. Gco:;e L'tvis, of Clinton, at Walton. At Londesboro a Laymen's service will he Irld at a la'er date. One of the fastest growing; mc,vc- ments throughout the Pl•c tc:1acl cde• ncntinations on tlrs enlincnt, 1,ry. Wren's Sunday was observed by a ; ca•t 30 cringregalior's in 1912. This year more than :•,001 times that many will stress the importance of the layman's Christian witless, not nn'y in leis church but at hone, at work and in every phase of daily life. At the local United Chorea tl ere will k: an all male choir with Mr. Brock Vi„iden and Mr. Ian Gril'iths at the organ and the piano, The International I11'nte for Lay- men's Slln''ay thi: year is "You have Been Called." 'Ours is a CI'u"ch I 's - cd 00 the nries1hcod of al believer;, said Mr. McLagan, of B'yta Unit td, fn speaking to the Session con" coning Layman's Sunday. "Wo are cal'cd to minister and set. a Chri>tian exam& every day and in every walk of life. ------ 'Laymen's Sunday is therefore not es - RETURNED FROM TRIP TO 11'ES'P sentially different ficin ary other, l'ul • COAST it gives public sxpression to these facts," Mr, and Mrs. ,Ioseph Thompson, of Gaterich, formerly of Blyth, have re - The East Wawanosh Township Coun- cil met on October Gth, with Reeve Manna presiding, '1'Ie minutes of the meeting held o►. September 1st were read and adopted on motion by Buchanan and nallahan, !110'; ed by McGowan and Buchanan that the road and general cheques be passed and paid. Carried. 13y -Law No, 11 was read the first and second limes. ' Moved by nallahan and Buchanan that By -Law No. 11 be read 1110 third lime and passed. Carried. (toad Cheques Stuart Mclitn'ney, salary, 183.00, bills paid 1.7:1, 186.73; Chas. Hodgins, charg- ing battery, 1.0(1; Dult:rfy Bros., weld- ing manifold, 1.00; The IVorlcmen's Compensation Board, assessment, 43,19 L'elgarve Co -Operative, salt, 12.50; W. S. Gibson, insurance, 84.21; harry Wil- ilams, fuel oil, 77.20, anti freeze, 13.10, 90.;10: W. C. Becker Equipment Co., gardcr repair, 131.25; Dom. Road Mach. Co. grader repair, 96.87. General Cheques The Workmen's Compensation Board, assessment, 6.33; \Vaitct' Scott, 1 cord wood to relief account, 4.00; Eldon Cook, trucking wood to relief accottn, 3.03; Snell Grocery, to relief account, 24.56; McKay's Rest home, to main. of patient, 1111.25. Mov-:d by Buchanan .and 1[allahan that council adjourn to meet Novem- ber 3rd, at one o'clock, and Cout't of Revision on the 1959 Asst-sment Roll at three o'clock at the Belgrave Cont - entails, Centre. Carried. turned home atter a three weeks boli- LO)NI)E l)OIO IIULLETT COUNCIL The Sunday School From was tiled day. 'They visited with relatives in to caeacily on Friday evening ivl:e r r, The 1'c`�ttlrrr monthly meeting of the Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan,' splendid meeting was held by the Al's- (' 1!ie of Il Wily township was bele and with Air, and Mrs. Russel Beadle, sion Band. Several Of the chilrlr r, in the Community Hall, Londesboro, at of Vancouver. Their uncle, 111'. Jack gave readings and Miss Claire 'Taylor•r1 p.m. on October 51.1), All the council Beadle reluincd home with theta. of lilylh, presented pictures of Fro. ION were present. Reeve William Jew- CONGILI'I1 rLATI ONS the work aniong the Eskimos proved '1'110 meeting opened with the reading 'thanksgiving visitors with Airs. ELI- very interesting. . of the minutes of the previous meeting ythe Sturgeon and Miss Pearl Gidley Congratulations to Alark Vincent who Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. and the following 111011011: were, Mrs. Maude McVittie and W, S. celebrated his 3r,1 birthday on lues- Lloyd Pi -e wee, Mr. rn 1 A'rs. Ot\i I: r1 elution by Emmerson IIesk and 11icV[ttie, of Ilespeler, also Air, E. day, October 61.11.Hooper.,Air. and Airs. Bob Hooper and \rchie Young, that due to the absence Fitzsimmons and daughters, Joan and lilephen, of Ansa Crois, Mrs. Lr'urn of our Reeve, w appoint Thomas Le- Elcanor, and Mrs. A. Ashwell, of Faundcrcock d Brh, Mi'. and As, tper as acting peeve. Carried. Thorndale, • WALTONv Cliff Sanneterc-ck, ad - Alt 1 ad ma, A motion I:y' Emmerson Hesk and Dr. and Mrs. W. 13, Nleldrutn,' Lynn. i[ugh•-F1}'nit, that the minutes of Sep - Ottawa, spent the week -end with Ai►.', Miss Amye Lu"e, of Toronto, spend Mr. and Mrs. Knax.'Wliiiants and (ember. 7lh.mcetin; be adopted as read, and Mrs. It. D. Philp. the '1'1ianks'_ iviI; holiday with her sis- , daughter, of I •hence, with Mr. and Carried. ` Isms, Mrs. Fern Patterson and 'Mrs. Mrs. Ed. Yew:" U.. A motion by Emmerson Hesk and Mr, and Airs, Jack. Page, of Brace bridge, visited on Thesday and 1Ved- Walter Broadfoot and Mt'. Broadfoot ma, and sirs. \V'a'I, cs Fhmnn• n a••d Hugh Flynn. that we provisionally ad- Katlty. of Sarnia, \site(( wall \Jr. a d opt the Engineer's report on the Storey - Wesley with Mrs, A. Stxlcrcock. Alr. and Mrs. (worse Ki kby, Bever - Air. and Mrs. Fred ]jailey and sol, ley and Palsy, of Burw.lsh, Hurray Keith, of London, visited over the Kirkby, loft Credit, and Ian, of Ec w - week -end with his parents, Mr. and II, B. bot u, were week end 1011' relatives. s with ,:r, Mrs. Joseph Bailey, of 1Vingham. On 1. ri::,y, and other r Monday Air, Bailey called at the Stan -Miss Olene D,ldas, of -'Toronto, lis- dard Office to renew his subscription Ted with her . f.,.. 'its, Mr. and Al s. and informed us that he and five T. Dundas, over t, tvccl( end. friends from London, had gone fishing Air. 1'rayue 11c11ich, !, of 11'iudsor, Monday morning and caught 25 pike. spent the week end w'''' his parent;, The largest weighed 9 pounds and the Alt' and Mrs. Robert 11011 c'' tel. smallest 3, Air. and\Airs, Borne Ruth ' fe and family, of '.undon visited wilt rela- Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Il aymouth and lives over tI ' ire. 4 end. Mrs, R. Christie, of 'Toronto, spent the Mr. 1V C. tai.. �, f n d t spent - ].r l n tn, .l cat week end with Mrs, Ann Sundercoek, . ,llmiday with I i !.c1', Alt' . E. En - Mt'. and Mrs. Don Baird and Dong'( ..• Jean and Joan, of Windsor, visited with Air. herb Kirkby, of 'l'nronlo, sreat tt Airs. Ann Sundercock on Sunusly. the holiday with his father, Mr. Frank Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Petts, of Nia- Kirkby. gara Falls, •visited •with the former'sl lit, and Mrs. Jiro Lamont and fain - mother, Mrs, J, Pelts. Miss Hazel fly, of London, were guests of 111•. and Petts, of London, also spent the holt- Mrs. Lloyd Porter, over the wcr!c end. day with her mother, 1 Morris Township Council Air, Jim Ilirons returned borne the Mr. Ron Ennis, of London, and Miss Ruth Anne Ennis, of Kitchener, sl1e nt 1111'. and Airs; 13:r 1 Lyon. They a'so The Council met in tete Township first of October, after being confine Thanksgiving to Westminster Hospital, London, fo•Thanksgiving with their parents, lir. ;(;tended the ba•lisn-al cf their new hall on October 5, with all members the past three months with a fractured' and Mrs. D. Ennis. grand datinlacr at. the S •ncd y ssrv'ce, i present. Alt 1Vallace Shannon, of Sart' , rs. i mor otv'r spent 'T tanks. Mrs. Earl Alen o • Sa(u tl y. Dixon Municipal Drain and hold a '110 \I' 1I.S. held then" Fall 'Iv1. I1'c- Court of Revision on November 2c d, Offering meeting on 'Thursday after 1!159, at 9 o'clock p.m., in the Commu- nity (verba and :Ter flits. Ivan nity Hall, Lendesbot'o, and instruct Carter I rcs'del, After tl'e I using•s was the Clerk to prepare the By -Law for taken care of, several rear in>='s and a the sank. Carried. fine silo 1 y sir,. \'i leen' and actor- A motion by Hugh Flynn and Archie ,lion mu.5ic I y Vi's. Tom Alt111 wa; Young, that we accept the Asesssment cnJuyea. sirs. Ncvi'le Forbes as guest I1011 for 1960 and hold the Court of Re- sp.•'.Jl•er, ave an iu'crc ti• g talk on vision of same on Nnven'ber 2nd, 1959, "No Alan tanc's P lone.'' Ye tine c'o�•- at 10 o'clock p.m. in the Community ed with 0 hymn anal Haver. Lunch was hall, Londesboro. Carried. served by Group 1. A motion by Emmerson IIesk and Air, and Mrs. Stanley Craw^or;l and Archie Young, that the accounts as baby son, of Toronto, also Aliss Da' iv read be approved, passe;, and paid. Lear and fri••nd, of Hamilton, spent Carried, the Thanksgiving ho'.i�lay with their parents, Air. and Mrs. rNel:ael Lrrr•. Alt'.s. Il. Townsend, Aliss I li,h 11 a• on and Miss Dorothy Little ;p- nt the week end 11 Detroit. Alr, a -d Mr:. Rosi Easem s te::t Sun- day wit'i (kir da'trhte2 and family A notion by Archie Young and Hugh Flynn, that we do now adjourn to meet November 2nd, at 8.00 p,nt. Carried. hip. uta vis- \1 lV' I How* f I Hie minutes of the last. meeting and Mt aid Aits that 11'eslbetg inti fled with his patent.~. Mr. and Mrs• given, with her daughter', _Alt's. I10(1 the special 1(11 a(lg of eptember 21, Salm.- daughter, Cmutir of Stayner, holt- John Shannon, last 1 t (day, and Saler re react and adopted on motion by t t , . ` , clay. (laying this week with the latter's Alr. and Mrs, John AlcGavfn dna parents, Mr, and Mrs, Harold Badley, and Ilichat•d. daughter, of Hamilton, and Miss Eliza - Miss Lorna Barrie, of Sarnia. spent beth McGavin, Nitel o Wer, were week the holiday week -end with her parents, end visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Mr, and Mrs. James Barrie. McGavin, Mr. William Henry Wilson, of 23 Hi- ' Alt. David Kirkby, of 'Toronto, spent verside Drive, Sault Ste. Marie, re- Sunday and Monday with his grand - tired stock broker, visited friends and! father, Mr. Herb Kirkby, and other relatives in Blyth, Goderich, Auburn, friends and relatives. Dungannon and WiI1'2h1 111. Alt', Gerald Dresscl, of Ilantilton, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Pelts, Niagara Falls, Airs. Edna Cook and Mrs, Garth. spent -the week end at his icon:e here. McClinchcy and babe, of Auburn, Were 1Ir. Glen Oliver, of Western t►niver- visitors with 1st'. and Mrs. Walter say Medical School, was a walk end Cook, guest with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Oliver. Friends will be sorry to hear that Miss Joyce Hamilton, of London, Airs. Isaac Snell, of Clinton, is not as sl'ent Ih0 week -end with her mother, well as usual and is in. tine hospital atI Mrs. Kay Hamilton, and fancily. the County Home. Miss Audrey llackwell, of Stratford !'Teachers' College, visited at iter bene 'over the week -end. Misses Catharine Buchanan and Nor- ma 1loe;:y, student nurses at St. Marys Ilospilal, Kitchener, spent the week- end at their homes. Miss Isabel i,yddiatt,' rf London, vis - The Londesboro Orange Lodge held a iled with her parents, Alr. and ,Mrs. chicken bingo Friday evening, Octohei Cecil Lyddiat1, over the week -end, 9th. 'Those winning chickens were: Mr. and Mrs, Frank Dutt:las and Andrew Lawson, Pauline Airdt•ie, fancily, of 'Toronto. spent the week -end Tom Airdrie, Mrs. Ilarvey ilunitin:,( with the former's parents, Alr. and Nelson Lear, Ted Fothergill, ;firs, Ras- Airs. ('orge Dundas. Londesboro Orange Lodge Bold Chicken Bing'b sel Dout;herly, Alt's. Gordon llc/hic•, Roll 'Thompson '(21, Mrs. Berl Allen, Alr, herb Dexter prescnled the Murray Adams, Bo) Townsend 1:1', S'andard office with fresh ras;+bcrt'ics Cliflor»l Adams, Mrs. (10ddard, Mes• the home of Alt.. and Alt's. Clarence That he had arc' r' f •o!1 h'() res'o'rt( Pori Mel van, Alt's. Ezekiel Phi'iir Marlin. Inst Saturday. 'J'hcre wet: alp tot ort;' Nelson Parlrrnn won lite turkey WI Alt'. and Alrs. Stuart Ritchie, Bruce, dozen nice juicy berries on t''e branch.' the 'awl y draw mid C Brenta, 11 '1 1 "-u las and Anne, of Hamilton, with Let's hope this is a sign of 113111 win- Clinton, won the chicken far s.0 1.d P'I' John Ritchie and Mr. and Mrs. ter months ahead. , prize. Cliff Ritchie, Alt', and Alt's, Floyd Jenkins and ba- by, and Alt'. and Mrs. Frei Marlin, Burford, spent 'Thanksgiving holiday al gcrl, of 'Thames Bond. 111•. and lir::. Drug Radford, or. Ni! agara, spent the wek end with Goreo1 Rafnrd and fanii'y. Mr. and Mrs. Jo'ln Arm-lt'cng, Mr, and Airs, Glen Carter and family spent Thanksgiving day with Air. and Mrs. James Arrest"o•'g, cf Cl'1101. Wihncr 11otv;tt1, Hobert G•u'dine George Carter and Jim Mowatt left for Alberta on Friday n;orni:'g to Cttend the cattle sales. Alt'. Peter B••otvn of W'nlsor•, is spending a few days with Alr, Dave Ewan, LETTER PROM A SUBSCRIBER • hollowfrlc rs a Ictlrr tt'e rece'v d from Mrs, Ella Bentley, 35t Grey St., London. Enclosed find a afore' order for• the years subscription 1) The 5101da' (1, now are your getting along:' You fo'ks an, doing a fine job oa the paper. I would miss cons'de:'a1'lc aulottnl or. news without i1, i Inst one of try d a•• rr^ndrlaugh• let's in July, and one is in llos;lit.il tt present. wit i, t'hI.VititATE 95111 UlllT11P `' ('nnrft•aleInlions extende'l In Alt' Rnherl 1Valdeo, of 1Vinilipee, Ma'ri'oba nn 1110 0t'1'0Cin11 of his nit birthday or October 161 h. • f\r,"lett'ri'nA1, 11myTyNn The Blyth 1' tricultur•al Socicly will meet in the i,fhr•v'y 00 Thursday, Oc- tober 15, at 8.80 n.tn, All ntenibers re- quested to attend. Gordon Wilkinson and Stewart Procter. Aloved by Walter Shortrced, second- ed by Ross Duncan. that Addison Fraser he paid $350.On of Ifs salary. CMoat 1•fcvcld• ehy Ross Duncan, seconded by Stewart Procter, that we pay the following library grants, Belgrave, $20.00; Walton, $10.00; Bluevale, $15.00. Carried. Moved by Stewart Procter, secondec4 by Gordon Wilkinson, that tete road ac- counts as presented by the Road Su- perinlndent he paid. Carried. Moved by Ross Duncan, seconded by Walter Shorlreed, that the general ac- counts as pr(•scnlcrl he paid. Carried. Alovcd by Stewart Procter, sec0ndect by Gordon Wilkinson, that By -Law No. 10, 1959. selling the Nomination for November 27 and the election, if ne- cessary, he hell on 1)0001111)er 5, 1959, and appoinlinn Deputy Returning Offi- cers and Poll Clerks, he passed as read lie first , second and third times. Carried. The meeting adjourned on motion of Stewart Pcnctcr and Boss Duncan, to meet again on November 2, at 1 p.m. The following accounts were paid: Brussels Fair, grant. $200.00; Blyth Fair, grant, 100.00; 13clgrave Fair, 'rant, 35,1)0: 1). Cassidy, Mustard Drain '2.00; F, Mustard, Mustard drain, 11.00; l'hanner Nursing Home, 92.75; Blyth itandat'd, advertising, 1.613; John Irntvn. Alilis drain, 4.00; Bailie Par- •oll, ' Mills drain, 4.00: John van der Braves drnilr.' 8.110; Baker Con- ' ;ilrscrtlt 1lonue, 176.50: Relief account, 1500: George Michie, idalhers and Ma- son drain, 6.00; 1Vinghanl Postmaster, unemployment stamps, 0.00; Addison Fraser,' part salary, 350.00; Belgrave Library. 20.00; Bluevale Library, 15,00; Wallah. Library, 10,00, AN NE I4IPS'T Alotat Famay Compusekt "Dear Anne Hirst; ,1 am near- ly 18 and I've never written to a stranger before, so I feel a little foolish, I want you to tell me what to do; I guess what I mean is, I hope you'll be on my aide. "I am in love with a wonder- ful man, He is 32, He is so much more interesting than any of the boys I've known. Lie's been in Europe and all over, and I just sit and listen and I'm so thrilled that he pays any attention to me that I just about worship him. "All the family respect hint a lot—but they won't give their consent to our marriage now. If I wait till I'm 21, they promise to. "Anne Hirst, I just can't wait that long! Wouldn't it be all right to run away and get mar- ried? I know he will do any- thing nything I want, and I want that, But I thought I ought to ask somebody first. Please say yes! LOVING GIRL" + WHY CHEAT YOURSELF? • From the time a girl's heart • is touched by love and she • realizes, however dimly, the * meaning of life, one day shines • clear before her. It is her mar- ' riage morning. • The picture is clear: In shin- • ing white, decked with or• • ange blossoms and veil, she • floats along the church aisle • on her father's arm, preceeded • by her attendants. Proudly • she walks to the altar where * her bridegroom awaits her. • Surrounded by her family and Glad -Plaid Look PRINTED PATTERN 4549 SIZES 6-14 It' 4.b kig, 444 Plaid 'n' plain add up to A - PLUS fashion for bright schol- ars. This gay dress has a front - pleat skirt. Easy-sew—pretty in one colour. Printed Pattern 4549: Girls' Sizes 8, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 takes 2s yards 35 -Inch; 5'e yards contrast fabric. Printed directions on e a c h pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (500 (stamps canna be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern. Please print plain- ly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. * his, the pews filled with their • guests, she repeats her vowl * in all their , holy meaning, * Blest by her pastor, glowing • with good wishes, she embarks • upon her new life with su- • preme confidence in her mate • and the love she knows will • last as long as she lives, • It is the most solemn mo- • ment she has ever known, and • with all her heart and soul she • dedicates herself to her bus. • band's happiness. • Compare this sacred scene * with the elopement that tempts • you today. Sneaking out of ',your parents' home, driving • madly about to find a justice * of the peace who will go • through the motions the law • demands and you find your- * self the wife of a man you * hardly know. . . and what • then? You must creep back • and confess to your parents the • thing you have done, They * will be shocked beyond words, • and you will be sick with * shame—and this shame is the • beginning of a marriage that • should be consecrated in dig- * nity and honor. • The contrast between these * two pictures is not the only * reason your parents ask that * you wait, Three years will * prove whether your love is • real, or you are only blinded * by the man's sophistication. • You will grow to know each * other better, learn the man's * faults and virtues, find out • how to bring out the best In • you both. When that happens, * you will be really ready to * marry, or you will know that * what you feel is not the love * of a lifetime. • Three years will prove, too, • whether you, now 18, will * mature sufficiently , to find • complete companionship with * a man nearly twice your age, • or whether the difference in * your ages is really important. * Read this piece again, my • young friend, and think — * hard! * 4, * INDISCREET DAUGHTER "Dear Anne Hirst: ' My prob- lem is my daughter;'24;. and her boy friend. When -:they come in from a date, he stays•:until well after midnight! "This is a one -floor house, and others like to sleep. As for me, I have to get up early and go to my school job the next day. And should they be alone all that time? MRS. A.B.C." + Your daughter needs to be * reminded that consideration • for others (especially the fam- * ily) ranks high among the vir- • tues of young people. She * should know without being * told that keeping such late * hours is not conducive to a * quiet household, and certainly * is doing her no good physical- * ly — two reasons why sne * should discontinue these long * hours. It would not surprise * me at all if one grateful * friend will be the young matt * she keeps up so late, • It is always the duty of the * girl to adjust her hours to ac- * comodate others affected by * them, and if the lad knows * his way around he will appr.- • ciate having his time cut short. • Your daughter has overlook- * ed one factor: Nothing is su * important to her social pro- * gram as her reputation. Neigh- * bors have eyes and ears — also * tongues. * * * Even though you are sure It Is love you feel, don"t cheapen that love by eloping. You will, be sorry the rest of your life. Anne Hirst is here to advise you in any vital situation. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont. FINGER OF ACCUSATION — Pointing fingers pick out 16 -year- old Nestor Hernandez as the accused thrill slayer of a New York youth. Three other teen-agers were also booked on charges of homicide, as police staged a city-wide crackdown on juvenile crime. OOP -LA — No bore this boar. "Luke," a nimble porker, indeed, takes life's hurdles in stride under the tutelage of his trainer, Bob Nelson. HR.ONICLE 1NGERI7AJZ? even.doline P. Clo►,r e Farmers are throuph with their harvest; holiday folks are home from the cottage; children are back to school; the C.N.E, is over—and the weather, at last, is normal. What more could anyone ask? Dee, Arthur and the boys were here last night.— the first time we had seen David, .Ed Ile- and Gerald for two months;;__.They all looked well and had:•. plenty to talb about, especially -Dave. Eddie's winning ways are still, apparent. "I like you, Grand- ma," says he, as he followed me into the kitchen. Jerry is still belligerent, determined to get what he wants in spite of every- thing and everybody. Thank goodness his parents now realize he can't be treated as a baby any longer ... he will be two next month. So they act accord- ingly. Loud howls of frustra- tion from Jerry are the inevit- able result, They all show signs of battle against mosquitoes and poison ivy and they have a standing joke against Dee who cast anchor from the motorboat a short distanc from shore and then fell backards into the lake while trying fto raise the anchor out of thednud, Cousin Betty reported at) she saw was a pair of legs in Jthe air. Just recently I have had quite a stint of baby-sitting. Our next door neighbour came over in ' hurry last Saturday—brought hi' five months old son with hin . Would I look after the baby and could he borrow our car—his wife had gone shopping and locked her keys in the car, hence an S.O.S. to hubby to go and rescue her, This morning an- other neighbour had an appoint- ment with her 'doctor. Husband was working overtime a n d couldn't get 'home—so of course there was the usual baby prob- lem. In this case the baby raises Cain with most of the available neighbours except me so I pack- ed mother and baby into the car and off we went to the doctor's. Could be there are drawbacks to being popular with children. Maybe that popularity will even- tually extend to our youngest grandson. You may remember our session with him a few weeks ago when he cried con- tinuously for two and a half . hours. Since then baby-sitting for him has neither been re- quested nor offered. But don't make any mistake, we still think he is a lovely baby—at least when his mother is around. Last week 1 was bemoaning the fact that I couldn't go to Ottawa on account of what 1 thought was shingles or prickly heat. It was neither, but a drug rash. Seems some of us have an internal mechanism like an old car—fix one thing and something else goes wrong. However, Ber- ing the time I should have been in Ottawa we had another spell of ninety -degree weather so 1 consoled myself with the fact that I was more comfortable at home anyway. Several days two of our neighbours who couldn't stand the heat of their own homes any longer came End spent the afternoons in our basement, where we had a cup of tea in comfort. Our basement cannot %oast a recreation ro,rn but it is cool and 1 have part of it curtained off, And then, wouldn't you know, AFTER the weather changed our electric stove gave up the ghost. And of course it had to be on a Saturday night, after six o'clock. It was nine before I could get any response to emergency calls. I had visions of a cold,. coffee - less breakfast Sunday' morning and maybe a cold lunch,. How- ever, our very obliging plumber came to the rescue, put in a new cartridge fuse and then we were able to boil, bake or fry to our heart's content. Actually 1 wasn't too worried, We could still use the electric kettle and eggs can be coddled very nicely if left in boiling 'water for five minutes. When conveniences break down I think we -should accept the oc- casion as a challenge to our ingenuity. Nothing is so bad but what it could be worse. 1 hate the thought of being absolutely dependent upon modern conven- iences. We need a breakdown in services once in awhile to shake us out of our co iplacent acceptance of all that we take for granted. Mrs, Dorothy P., 1 enjoyed your letter and got a great kick out of your baby-sitting experi- ences. Thanks for advice about F.M, radios. At the moment I have one on approval, just to find out what it 'has to offer in the way of programmes. It is wonderful not being .told what to take for an up -set stomach; what soap to use to get things really white and how to find out "where the yellow went". Any- way, an F.M. set would be a means of escape from T.V. west- erns. Partner and I agree about music and drama—and education- al features—but I am a long way from liking his westerns. As for wrestling, I feel every hammer - lock and every twist of the muscles that are shown on the T.V. wrestling bouts: When they are on I can't concentrate on anything else—if I am in the sane room, But with radio it is a pleasing accompaniment to working, reading or writing. This Worm Thinks With Both Ends A flatworm, James V. Mc- Connell learned when he was s graduate student, is a "rather magic sort of beast." Cut an inch -long, mud -brown specimen into two pieces and a couple of weeks later you will have not one dead worm but two live wiggling ones — the old tail grows a new head and the old head grows a new tail. This is the well-known phe• nomenon of regeneration, com- mon to salamanders, newts, and starfishes, But here the worm tale turns complicated. McConnell, who received his doctorate in psychology and joined the University of Michi- gan faculty, continued . study- ing flatworms with a classic stimulation -response apparatus, A water -filled trough is fitted at each end with electrodes and topped by two 100 -watt light bulbs. A flatworm is put in the trough; the light bulb flashes and an electric shock pulses through the water, causing the worn to contract. Usually in less than 300 trials, the worm "learns' to contract (response) as soon as a bulb flashes even without the expected electric shock (stimulus). Surprisingly, when the worn was cut into two, and then al- lowed to regenerate, the tail retained almost as much of the response lesson as the head, where the rudimentary but measurable central nerve gang- lia, or "brain," rs located, Then, McConnell reported re- cently to the American Psycho- logical Association, Miss Reeve Jacobson,a 21 -year-old senior honors student took over, She cut a flatworm in half, threw away the tail and conditioned only the head. Then she let the head grow a new tail. This sec- ond -generation flatworm was cut into two and the separate halves each allowed to regen- erate into complete worms. Now came the key conditioning test: Bulbs flashed and the two "grandchildren" worms both showed retention of the learn- ed response. This was not to- tally unexepcted in the worm on the right — it, after all; possess- ed the original brain. But how was the performance. of the worm on the left, made of en- tirely reformed tissue, to be ex- plained? McConnell conjectured that "some sort of chemical condi- tioning may take place" which can be transmitted to succeed- ing generations. If this should prove to be true for men as well as worms (and there seems to be no reason why it shouldn't be), then memory and learn- ing would appear to have a chemical, inherited basis. It may well be that in the schools of the future, students will facili- tate their ability to retain in- formation with chemical injec- tions. — From NEWSWEEK Modern Etiquette by Roberta Lee Q. When a visitor brings candy to a patient In the hos- pital, should the candy be offer, ed about? A. Yes; and the nurse should be included, too, if she is pres- ent. Q, Is it proper to take your place card and nut cup from a banquet table as you leave? A. You are privileged to take anything that is obviously an individual favor of the occassion. In fact, a hostess is usually pleased if you do show your ap- preciation of her good taste in selecting her place cards by wanting to keep yours as a me- mento. Be sure, however, that you are not taking any of your hostess' permanent equipment) Hunt For Ancient Hairy Ape Men A five -man Australian expedi- tion, headed by Dr, John Prinedu, of Sydney, is to track down a tribe of "hairy ape nien," said to be running wild In the little- explored forests of Northern Manchuria. Although remote from civilize- tion and apparently untouched by its influences, they may hold a key to how man's ancestors be- haved and managed their com• munity life 500,000 or more years ago, - Known as Alamas, these semi - human creatures talk only in growls or guttural noises, but allow themselves one civilized re- finement: they wear skins as loin- cloths. A Russian scientist, Professor B, Porshner recently confirmed their existence, basing his evid- ence on reports collected from , nomadic tribesmen who, in their wanderings, have penetrated parts of this mountainous hinter- land, But by staging the first full- scale scientific search, the Aus- tralians hope to discover, photo- graph and get on friendly terms with these Stone Age survivors. Having hired Chinese guides, Dr. Prineas' is using Mongolian packhorses to carry his party's baggage and scientific equip- ment, Somewhere in the hills he hopes to find his quarry anti . study on the spot the social struc- ture of a sub -human race, be- lieved to be behaving very much as Neanderthal Man did a mil- lion years ago, Smart Sailor Gy S 4WLa Wit Sew 'n' save ! Make this smart sailor dress of remnants — gay in navy and white with red trim. Do one version with embroi- dery — other in plaid 'n' plain. Pattern 922: child's sizes 2, 4, 8, 8, 10; tissue pattern; transfer; easy directions. State size. Send THIRTY = FIVE CENTS (Stamps cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for this pattern to • Laura Wheeler, Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto, Ont, Print plainly Pat- tern Number, your Name, ,Ad- dress and Size. Send for a copy of 1959 Laura Wheeler Needlecraft 13 o o k. It has lovely designs to order: em- broidery, c r oche t, knitting, weaving, quilting, toys. In the book, a special surprise to make a little girl happy — a cut-out doll, clothes to colour. Send 25 cents for this book. ISSUE 42 — 1959 HEY, TAXII — Transporting a truck from one place to another is getting about as easy on water as it is on land. Above, the ocean-going cargo carrier, the USNS Coffn (right), demon- strates its roll-on, roll -off shipping technique by moving a big truck onto the Distharfe lighter. The shallow -draft Page then tranfers vehicles to the dry land of the beach. :lrly Days In Brit;sh Radio In the early days of broadcast- ing howlers were horribly fre- quent, There was even one on what might be described as the birth of radio as a medium of entertainment, when the great Dame Nellie Melba was persuad- ed to appear before the micro- phone on June 15th, 1920, It was a nerve-racking role for the man who had to escort the temperamental prima donna to the Marconi studio at Chelms- ford. And as she sailed through the works yard he pointed to the two enormous masts towering above them, from which the aerial 'was suspended, and re- marked, hoping to impress her: "From up there, Dame Melba, your voice will go out and be heard over most of Europe," The singer stared upwards, then snapped: "Young man, if you think I'm going to climb up there at my time of life, you're mistaken!" "To describe activities in the studios in those early days as erratic would be putting it mild- ly," says Freddie Gr'isewaotl in his Story Of The BBC". He des- cribes that first famous 2L0 studio at Marconi House, Lon- don, as ", , , a dingy room twenty feet square, with a faded green carpet, a grand piano and a worn-out settee with the horse- hair coming through." A programme of songs was frequently interrupted by a re- quest for, "One moment, please, while we move the piano," And if a singer was too short to reach the mike he had to stand on a pile of books, One tenor, reaching for a high note, toppled backwards and finished up on the floor! Conditions were so cramped at that first 2L0 station that the studio had to be used as an of- fice during the day, then hastily tidied up for the evening's broad- cast, while the music library was housed in an old kitchen range. On one occasion, says Freddie Grisewood, during early days at Savoy Hill an orchestral concert was overrunning its time so seri- ously that he, had less than ten minutes to fit in •songs by a celebrated woman singer. What could he do? He couldn't cut the singer in view of her reputation then she came to his rescue with dramatic suddennes by fall - Ing in a dead faint at his feet. Hastily dragging her away from the microphone, he cut in to apologize for her "iledisposi- • tion," then waved the orchestra Into their final item, "For 'iince In a way," he says, "the pro- gramme ended dead on time," There was the classic "clanger," too, of a former•Bishop of Lon- don who, after pronouncing the Blessing at the end of a religious service, added to the announcer: "I don't think I spoke too loudly, did I?" The harassed announcer dived for his bell -push to cut them off the air -- too late, What the astonished listeners heard was neo CHRISTMAS RAILROAD LAUNCHER — ,A highly mobile system for launching • of intermediate range and intercontinental ballistic missiles is illustrated in this launching car model shown at the Air Force Assn.'t "Aerospace Panorama". The system would be capable of launching retaliatory missiles from railroad sidings or spurs or be able to "stop-and•launch" from any point on a railroad line. the Blessing followed by . "Amen , .. I don't think." Early gramophones were anti- quated contraptions that had to be wound by hand, and one day Freddie Grisewood caught his sleeve on the regulator when put- ting on a record of the "Tann- hauser" overture and was hor- rified on reaching his listening cabinet to hear it being played at full speed. Too "green" to the job to apologize and start the record again, he foolishly allowed it to run its full course. The result was he received a shower of indignant letters, But there was one listener who wrote in most kindly vein to say he had found the experience extremely ex- hilarating — that he had never heard "Tannhauser" played bet- ter. His name was Sir Thomas Beecham, It's fatal for an announcer to panic or to get over -excited, Like the memorable occasion when John Siingge got carried away by a thrillingly close finish in the Boat Race, "It's impossible to see who has won," he ex- claimed, hoarsely, "But it's either Oxford or Cambridge!" A memo about a cycle rally in Europe circulated by an airline company gives this fuller ex- planation: "For the purpose of freight accounting, tricycles may be regarded as three -wheeled bicycles," WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS 1N THE OLD COUNTRY Your festive season starts the moment you step on board your CUNARD Christmas sailing ... superb service and comfort at Thrift Season rates . Father Christmas will be on board , , , Christmas trees children's parties and Yuletide menus to tempt your sea.sharpened appetite ... fun galore for all, Remember, when you go CUNARD . , . Getting There is Half the Fun! See your Local Agent — No one con nerve you bolter Cunard Line LOW THRIFT SEASON RATES Tourist Class from $179 Round Trip from $344 CHRISTMAS At tiNGS YANNA Nov. 7y frontrL Montreal to Greenock ad Overrun' and Quaker 18 font Nov, ---3AX0NIA t0 le Havrerand�SouthamontrealptonQuebuu ialal/flQj N MARY n f oil Europe." Der, 10 b °ndSouthamptanr0fk to The,. CARINY'NIA Dec ► Dec, 11 , trOrn New rork °nd Liverpool froof Halifax to Grrena,k "Christina in Ireland ferur,' Der. i? Det. 13 from New York on„ to Cobh, le end dxSouthampton Corner Bay & Wellington Sts,, Toronto, Ont. Tel: EMpire 2-2911 BRANCHES AT: Halifax • Saln, John • Quebec • Montreal • Toronto Winnipeg . Edmonton • Vancouver One Doctor Who Kept His Oath It was 4 o'clock of a very dark morning. in 1865 when Dr, Sam- uel A. Mudd, asleep at his farm near Bryantown, Md., was arous- ed by two men seeking medical aid. A horse had fallen, they said, and one of the men had broken his leg. They would pay $25 if Dr. Mudd would set the break and .give them a room for the night, Dr. Mudd agreed, and thus be- came a key figure in one of the great tragedies of history. For one of the two men was John , Wilkes Booth, who only about six hours before had shot Presi- dent Lincoln at Ford's Theatre. (Booth's companion was David E. Herold.) In fleeing, he had caught a spur in the flag cov- ering the President's box and had fallen, his leg broken. Yet he had succeeded in escaping, and so brought the country doc- tor into the awful event. Ever since, Dr, Mudd has been defended as innocent of treason by some historians, and branded as Booth's accomplice by others. Even last month, when President. Eisenhower signed a bill provid- ing for a bronze memorial hon- oring Dr, Mudd's service to yel- low -fever victims at Fort Jef- ferson, Fla,, the question of the doctor's innocence was careful- ly skirted, Was Dr. Mudd indeed an active and willing accomplice? Mucid had known Booth personally be 'fore the assassination, thought he claimed that he had not rec- ognized the man at his door. Tried by a military court (not civil, as was his constitutional right) against a background of highly indignant public reac- tion, Dr. Mudd was found guilty of treason, He was sentenced in 1365 to life imprisonment at Fort Jefferson on one of the desolate Dry Tortugas islands, 60 miles west of Key West, Fla, Battered by the unbearable climate, foul food, omnipresent insects, and inhumane jailers, Mudd once tried — unsuccessfully — to es- cape by hiding in a ship's can- non. But in 1867, when yellow fever decimated the fort, Dr. Mudd passed up a chance to flee, instead 'fought the epidemic sin- glehanded, For his great human- ity, the garrison asked President Johnson to pardon him. The pardon came through in 1869, and Dr., Mudd deturned to his neglected family, farm, and medical practice. In 1883, at the age of 50, he died in a quiet sort of glory — of pneumonia, as a result of visiting his patients in freezing january weather. Inno- cent or guilty of treason, Dr, Samuel Mudd never betrayed the oath that made him a doctor, How Can 1? Rv Anne A::htey Q. How can I cut I'oaiu rub- ber more easily? A. Foam rubber is very awk- ward to cut neatly with an or- dinary knife or scissors — but if compressed tightly beforehand by pressing it down hard with a Ilat board, it will slice easily with a long -bladed sharp knife. Q. How can I quickly test the quality of a broom tv1ien buying a new one? A, Press the edge of it against the floor. If the straws remain in a solid mass, the broom is good — but if they bend and bristle out, it is of inferior quality. .:. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING .: . AGENTS WANTED EARN Cash m your Spare 'Time Just show your friends our Christmas and All -Occasion Greeting Cards (including Religious) Stationery, Gifts, Write for aamplea. Colonial Card Ltd. 169•13 Queen East, Toronto 2 BABY CHICKS DRAY has Ames In -Cross pullets, day old started, ready -to -lay. Dual purpose and Leghorn chicks, dayold and started, Send for list. Order now for fall dolly ery best broiler varieties, See local agent or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont. BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE GARAGE and service station on High. way 30 near Campbellford, includes living quarters. A real opportunity for a good mechanic. W. If. Brady, Realtor. Box 212, Campbellford. Phone 209, BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE GROCERY CHOICE location, one mile froth town on main highway, Doing a thriving business. Fully equipped with meat counter, electric slicer, scales, Ice cream unit, pop cooler. Excellent living quarters with three bedrooms, living room, modern kitchen, modern four piece bath, furnace heated. Full basement, On VA acre lot. Ideal for couple, Grossing $35,000. Books open for inspection. Full Price $12,000,00. CONTACT JOHN L. DIRSTIEN & CO, REAL ESTATE BROKERS 399, 10th Street Hanover, Ont, Phone 390 DEER HUNTING ATTENTION deer hunters! Excellent food, guides, dogs, accommodation, Phone LE, 4.9676 or write Sherratt, Emsdale, Ont, FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE NEW CHAIN SAWS SAVE $100.00 BRAND New Remington Silver Log- nmasters, 6 H.P. class, 18" cut, only $125,00, Shipped Prepaid anywhere in Canada. BERGER EQUIPMENT, ARNSTEIN, ONTARIO FARMS FOR SALE 300 ACRES, 100 tillable, balance bush, beside Calabogie and Lanark Highway, Ilydro, Mrs. Edwin Stewart, Calabogie Ont 250 -ACRE dairy farm; 6 miles from Kingston, 200 acres tillable, 3 houses, 2 barns etc. Livestock and machin- ery, available, $26,000, 'terms. Morris J. Rosen Realtor, 105 Princes St., Ring. st on, FARM 100 ACRES with 65 acres choice level land workable. 15 acres swamp. Creek and farm pond, 3 miles from Durham. Groom brick home with modern kit- chen. 4 -place bath, furnace heated. Good bank barn with lean. Litter car- rier, water bowls, all cement partb tions, milk house, implement shed, 1,14 Interest in thresher. Excellent farm Full price $16,000. CONTACT JOHN L. DIRSTIEN & CO. REAL ESTATE BROKERS 599, 10th Street, Hanover Ont, )'hone 390 FINANCIAL 6 % interest Paid On GUARANTEED TRUST CERTIFICATES ANY TERM, 1.5 YEARS THE Sterlinq Trusts Corp. 372 Bay St., EM, 4.7495 GLADIOLA BULBS CHOICE champion assorted Gladiola bulbs. Produce 5 inch blooms. 100 for $5.00. Postmasters, 10% Discount, Adams, 1Vasaga Beach, Ontario. HELP WANTED FEMALE WIDOW to look after elderly lady, live in, light housekeeping, good pennon. ent home, remuneration, Box 197 123. 10th Street, New Toronto. Teen-Agers And Cars A new psychological test has confirmed what a good many ny harried laymen suspected all al- ong: Teen-age traffic violators subconsciously tend to regard an automobile as a weapon.' Dr. James L, Malfetti, execu• live director of the Safety Re- search and Education Project at New York's Teachers College of Columbia, reported last month that he has developed a pilot test to elicit emotional reactions to such key words as man, woman, home, money, car, and weapon. The project is still in the experimental stage, but a signifi- cant number of teen-age traffic offencahs alfetti wouldn't say prechsw many) reacted to n much the same "wea t man>aer' they responded to "car.", ' �< "If this pen -and -pencil test has the potential we at Columbia think it has," Dr. Malfetti said, "a practical psychological test may at last be available for dealing with the potential vio- lator." In short, fender bashers height be identified before they ever get a driver's license. SALLY'S SAtiiES "petit be upset, dear; 'he Wants to matelt you double or nothinC:' FEMALE HELP WANTED NURSES AIDES REQUIRED for the Kitchener -Waterloo Hospital, A six week course will corn- mence on Wednesday, October 16, Minimum age — 17 years, Educational requirements grade 10. Salary paid during training course — $25.00 per week, Minimum Salary at ter training course — $140.00 er month, Applicants are required to re- main on staff one year, Information may bo obtained from the Director of Nurses, Kitchener -Waterloo Hospital. Kitchener, Ontario. INSTRUCTION EARN morel Uoofkoeptng, Salesman ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Les sons 50¢, Ask for free circular No. 83. Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290 Bay Street. Toronto. LIVESTOCK SALE GREY Bruce Hereford Breeders fall sale. Coliseum Owen Sound, Friday October 16 1;00 p.m. 15 bulls, 6 fe- males. Bulls performance tested ellg- title for grant 331' to $200. Lunch available, ^� LIVESTOCK AYRSHIRES offering young bulls of serviceable age, bred heifers, and foundation stock of all ages. Alex Wallace. Smiths Falls, Ont. LARGE herd of Holstein heifers, fully vaccinated and T.B. tested freshen from October to January. Also open heifers. Phone 740 R, Petrolla, Ont. Peter Ferrari. MEDICAL SATISFY YOURSELF — EVERY SUFFERER OF RHEUMATIC PAINS 011 NEURITIS SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY, MUNRO'S DRUG STORE 335 ELGIN OTTAWA $1.25 Express Collect POST'S ECZEMA SALVE BANISII tho torment of dry eczema rashes and weeping skin troubles, Post's Eczenia Salve will not disappoint you. itching scaling and burning ecze- ma, acne, ringworm. pimples and foot eczema will respond readily to the stainless odorless ointment regardless of how stubborn of hopeless they seem. Sent Post Free on Receipt of Price PRICE $3.50 PER JAR POST'S REMEDIES 2865 St. Clair Avenue East ' TORONTO NURSERY STOCK TREE Seedlings, Scotch and Austrian Pine 3 year old seedlings for Christmas tree production, windbreak planting or reforestation. $14.00 per Thousand, $8.00 per 500, Huronln Nurseries. Wye val,e, Ont. OPPORTUNITIES FOR AEN AND WOMEN WANTED, Young men train for Teieg• rapper with $75 machine we loan you, Advance to Agent more salary Express Comm'ns & Free house. SPEEDHAND trains in 10 weeks home - study fou Stenographer. Free book either Course. Cassan Systems, 10 East. bourne, Toronto 14. BE A HAIRDRESSER T JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL Great Opportunity Learn Hairdressing Pleasant. dignified profession;ood wages. Thousands of successful Marvel Graduates America's Greatest System illustrated Catalogue Free • Write or Call MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL 358 Bloor St. W., Toronto Brunches: 44 King St., W., Hamilton 72 Rideau Street. Ottawa PERSONAL Prophet Elijah COMING BEFORE CHRIST CONVINCING Bible' evidence, Free Book. Write: Megiddo Mission, Dept. 80, Rochester 19, New fork, ADULTS! Personal Rubber Goods. 36 assortment for $2.00. Finest quality, tested. guaranteed. Mailed In plain sealed package plus free Birth Control booklet and catalogue of supplies. Western Distributors, BOX 24TF Regina,Sask. Words Of Wisdom It was a big occasion In a cer- tain Eastern university when Salvador Dalt, the Spanish sur- realist painter, was persuaded, along with his Russian -born wife, to address art lovers there in connection with a showing of his work. The hall was packed with students when the painter and his wife made their appear- ance. But the crowded sleeting was rather put out when Dali be - PERSONAL UNWANTED HAIR VANISHED away with Saca•Pelo, Soca- Pilo 1s different, It does not dissolve or remove hair from the surface hut penetrates and retards growth of un•' wanted hair, Lor -Beer Lab, Ltd., Ste, 6, 679 Granville St. Vancouver 2, B,C. GREY HAIR! WHY? WITH Grey -No Hair Color Restorer you can restore grey hair back to its orig- inal color and beauty. This is a tested and approved product, sold at all leading drug and department stores. Trade mark in Canada and U,S. $2.69 per bottle, Money order or C.O.D. ARNO Laboratory Inc., 999 De Sala - berry St., Montreal 12, Que. Sold on a Money Back Guarantee, PET STOCK SIAMESE KITTENS DACHSHUND AND SIB. HUSKY Registered, health guaranteed Havel. ask, Jerseyville, Ontario. PIGEONS MATED Pairs Adult Racing Homers $4.00. Three Pairs $10.00. Youngsters ready to train, $1.50 each. Crosses & Mismarked.Fancy Pigeons Dozens $7.00. Half Dozen $4.00, A. B, Warder, Loch - lin, Ont. POULTRY FARM FOR SALE "MODERN thriving poultry ranch. 3500 capacity. Automatic equipment. 50 acres. Good water, soil. Retail market, Good weekly net. $6500 down. J. 'I'Ichy, Angus Ont. Alliston, HE•5.7562," PHOTOGRAPHY SAVEI SAVEI SAVEI Flims developed and 8 magna prints In album 40e 12 magna prints in album ON Reprints 5e each KODACOLOR Developing roll $1.00 tnot including prints) Color prints 35e each extra. Ansco and Ektachrome 35 min 20 ex. posures mounted In slides $1 25 Color prints from slides 35C each. Money refunded In full for unprinted nega. tives, FARMERS' CAMERA CLUB BOX 31 GALT ON1. PULLEY'S FOR SALE HY-LINE Pullets, 3,000 five months Oc- tober 10th. We deliver, Apply Willy Vanaverbeke. 11.11 1 Stratford. Phone 536•W-4.___. RESORTS PHEASANT HUNTING OPENING date Sept. 1st. No bag lima, Guides and dogs supplied. Pheasants In natural cover. Original game farm In Ontario to have public pheasant hunting, Bungalows with private bath, excellent meals. For details write Gol- den Pheasant Lodge and Game Farm, Huntsville, Ontario. STAMPS AND COINS WEST Germany Berlin, 50 diff com- memorative fittest quality. exchange against 31.00 mint Canadian commemo- ratives, Will mail from United Nations with comm. set. Gerber, 680 Fort Wash- ington Ave., New York 40, N Y ASDA WE PAY MORE NOW! LARGE 72 page coin catalogue, pictur- Ing and pricing all Canadian, New- foundland coins, plus generous U.S, listing. Price $1.00 unillustrated 25e. Philacoln, Regina, Sask, SWINE WH.LOWDALE Farm Yorkshire Herd has six sows with scores of 91 and bet- ter. Also two boars whose dams have scores of 96 and 97 respectfully. Young stock for sale. Edgar Dennis, Aurora, Ontario. HYBRIDS GET the famous blue spotted pigs now. Farmer's price $45,00. Gilts or boars $35,00, 3 months old. Excellent stock, Lorne Stretcher. R. 1 Milverton, Ont. VACATION RESORTS FLORIDA vacations, Reasonable rates. Efficiency apartments, week or season. Central to Clearwater, St. Petersburg Tampa, Bayfront. Private fishing dock. Write Davis 2 Wilson St. Dunedin, Clearwater, Florida. gan to give his speech in his native tongue, which very few in the hall could understand. However, they maintained a po- lite interest throughout and were greatly relieved to hear 'him announce in English at the end: "My wife will now give a translation." The students listened intently as Mrs. Dari translated the speech — in her native Ukrain- ian! ISSUE 42 — 1959 IT'S ALWAYS FAIR WEATHER — New, tent for -two provides fair weather and cozy quarters, whether it's raining, snowing or blowing during the football game. Hunters and other outdoor types may find use for the creation, too. Made of an opaque plastic with clear viewing window, it folds into a lightweight carrying case. PAGE 4 _______Il_— itamom Wingham Memorial Shop Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP. Open Every Week Day. CEMETERY LETTERING. Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'I'TON. 1 1 9 r i Needlecraft Shoppe BLYTH, ONTARIO. "The Shop for Tots and Teens" OUTFIT NOW FOR FALL AND WINTER Boy's Jackets (split hoods) 4 to 12 years, $9.95 Up Boy's Lined Jeans, 2 to 12 years , , $2,98 and $3.98 Girl's Lined Slim Jims, 2 to 14 years, $2.89 to $4.98 Long Sleeved T. Shirts,1 to 11 98c to $2.98 Girl's Jackets (split hoods) 4 to 7 $9 95 also Coats, Skirts, Dresses, Junipers, Blouses, Sweaters, Underwear and Sleepwear WALLACE'S DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES FOR YOUR FALL SEWING NEEDS, Zippers, Etc., Drip Dry Broadcloth, Prints JEANS and OVERALLS For Boys And Men By Haughs and "Big B" Dry Cleaning Pick -Up Before 8.45 a.m. Tuesdays and Fridays. Phone 73. w.MNNM/h.. NM• .••,I+ N-1+• .+ +N-• • e t 4 ++•-1 4-N 4-4 -4+4•-s-•+4 #4 • +44-•-•-•-•-•-4-•-•-••' 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4. •4 Y • Also in stock is INSULLATED SIDINGS In Scores of Colors and Patterns. PREPARE FOR WINTER With the cold winter months fast approaching Now Is The Time To Prepare Your House For The Long Cold Nights Ahead. It is a proven fact that Insulation can turn a cold house into a warm home. You can also expect Great Savings On Your Winter Fuel Bill. We Carry LUMA FOIL, FIBRE GLASS AND ROCK WOOL, in 2 and 3" bats, LOOSE WOOL and Zona Lite — All Reasonably Priced. 4 • Contact Us Now To Insure Quick Delivery. A. Manning & Sons Phone 207 --- Blyth, Ontario • THE nLYmn smnrtnnnn News Of Auburn Mrs. Lewis Ruddy has accepted a 1 taining Thanks. Plans were comp! erect pcsiliot at the home of Dr, Crawford,' for the church organ which has been Wingham, • repaired, also for the annual congre- 14tr, and Mrs, Keith Arthur and son, gational supper which will be held in Philip, with friends: at Tot•otto Iasi November. The meeting was closed by Thursday. singing "Rock of Ages" followed by AJr, Lorne '1'011, Mr. and Mrs. Fred the - benediction, After a successful auc- Toll, Air. and Ars, Kenneth McDougall, tion a delicious lunch was served by Bernioe and Allen, were visitors with Mr, and Mrs, Stewart Toll and family MBrwrs, nIlaggitt, assisted by Mrs, Clifford at Ryckman's Corners' TI►anit•Offering Altering 111r, and Mrs, William Rollinson, of , Toronto, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Prouse Truth and Freedom was the theme and family, of Goderich, spent the hots for the Autumn Thank -Offering meet - day with Mr, and Mrs, Everett Taylor. Ing held in the Sunday•School room of Mr, and Mrs, Elwin Rutledge, of De- Knox United Church, Guests were pt•es- troll, were recent guests of his sister, ent from the Londcsboro W.M,S., Knox Mr. Fred Wagner, and Mr, Wagner, y Presb terian \V,M,S,, St. Mark's An - Mr. Gerald Nide, of London, spent glican Guild, and the Baptist church, the holidays visiting with his parents, The call to worship was given by Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Dobie and fain- Harold Webster who presided forthe meeting, followed by the hymn Lift ily. s nYour hearts"s,raig at the � with Mriano, Mrs, Ernes, William Friends here were sorry to learn of 11p the death of Mr, George Mains, of Blyth. Ile was a former resident of Ilullclt township. Air. and Mrs. Ed. Davies, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Lawlor and son, Jimmy, visited with friends at Belmont on Sunday. Airs, Ray La Vignie, of 1Vindsor, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ilamil- 'ton and son, John, Holiday visitors were: Mr. and Mrs. William Ilamilton, of Granton, Miss Ehma Clark, of London, with Mrs. Wil- liam 'Tabh and Mr, 'Torrance, 'I'ahb; Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Weston, of Tor- onto, Mr. Murray Rollinson, Air, and Mrs. William Medd, of Goderich, with Mr. and. Airs, Alfred Rollinson; Mr. William Stoltz, of Preston, Mr. Edward Cloltz, of New Dundee, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Stoltz, of Galt, with Mr, and Mrs. Jacob C. Stoltz; Mr. and Mrs. George Gray and fatuity, of Toronto, with Mrs, Alfred Nesbit and Mr, Lawrence Nes- bit; Air, and Airs, William J. Craig, Mrs, George Wilkin and fancily, with Mr. and Mrs. William S. Craig and famiy, at Clinton; Air, and Mrs. Bex Hamilton, Mr. John 1Iamilton and Mrs. Ray Vigne, at Parkhill; Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Robertson and Karen, of Sue 44444.4 .+•-•-•*-4 •-•-.+.+. +. ....4 4-#4+-$-++4-4-+j New Fall Wearing Apparel See Our New Fall and Winter Coats in Misses and Women's Sizes. Blouses of Tereylene. Fall Skirts and Slacks Reversible Plaids in Skirts and Plaid Slacks. Women's Ban -Lon Sweaters, Twin Sets or Separates. New Foundation Garments Complete line for a Fashionable Silhouette. Gloves (Chamoisette) in Black, White, Navy, Wine, Green, Brown and Beige. Jeans, Lined and Unlined, Boys, Girls and Ladies. Shoes, Galoshes and Rubber Boots with Insoles. Ask for, and Save, your Sales Slips. They are re- deemable at 5 per cent on all merchandise throughout the Store. The Arcade Store PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT. • 6 Durnin welcomed everyone lo the meeting. Mrs, Guy Cunningham gave the devotional message followed by prayer by Mrs, William Straughan, Duets were sung by Mrs, George Wil- kins and Airs. harry \Versell, of Gode- rich. The thank -offering was received by Mrs. Kenneth McDougall and Miss Viola Thompson, and alt sang the of- fertory hymn. The hymn "Behold the Mountain of the Lord" Was sung and Mrs. Sweeney introduced the speaker Rcv. Fttnge, of Londcsboro. Ile spoke en the refugee problem in the world today, and said that the -freedom Of the West is the big attraction for the New Canadians. Ile told of the work of the World Council of Churches and how they are working to win the world to Christianity, and how thankful ev- ery Canadian should be. Mrs. Fred Toll thanked the speaker and the meeting was closed by singing "Will Your Anchor Ilold?" followed by the benediction pronounced by Rev. Sween- ey. A delicious lunch was served to all. Thanks was extended lo the la- dies and the speaker by representa- tives of all the guest societies present. Mrs. Oliver Anderson, the president, bury, and Mr, Douglas Robertson, of replied, Over 60 ladies were present, Aurora, with Mr. and Mrs, William Fall Thank-Offerhtg Straughan and Mr, and Mrs, J. J. Ito- The annual Fall Thank -Offering of hertson; Mr. George Timm, Miss Ern. Bethke, of Gorrie, Mr, Peter Brown, of Windsor, Mrs. Ilarold Allen, of Gode- rich, Mrs, Kenneth Stowe, of Goderich, Miss Anne Marshall, of London, with AIr, and Mrs. Maitland Allen; Air: and Mrs. Ray Perdue and fancily, of Lon- don, with Mrs. Stanley Johnston, Mr. and Mrs, Wes Bradnock, Mrs, Kenneth Scott and Mrs, Clifford Brown and Carole, spent 'Thanksgiving week- end with relatives in Detroit. Walkerhurn Club Meets The Walkcrburn Club met for their October meeting at the home of Mrs. Arie Duizcr. The president, Mrs. George Schneider, opened the meeting with the "Maple Leaf Forever" follow- ed by prayer by Mrs. Leonard Ar- chambault. The minutes of the pre- vious meeting were read by Mrs. Ted flunking and adopted as read, 'I'he roil call was answered by each member telling when and where they joined the club. '1'he lucky draw was won by Wednedsay, Oet, 14, 1950 MI L.J 1 I .. IMxIIIi COME IN AND LET US OUTFIT YOU FOR WINTER Complete stock of Rubber Footwear for the family Men's and Boys' Parkas, 'Suburban Coats, Jackets Men's and Boys' Underwear and heavy Shirts "MEN" buy your Top Coat Now and be prepared for the Cold weather. R. W.' Madill's SHOES -- MEN'S.& BOYS' WEAR "The Home of Good Quality Merchandise" 1 IIURON CO.OPERATIVE MEDICAL and SURGICAL SERVICES "The People's Own Plan to Provide Medical and Surgical Care at Cost" Patronize your County Organization which provides Major Medical and Surgical Benefits as well as a $1,000.00 Life Insurance Policy. Our members may pay their Ontario Hospital Services Premium through u; at Six or TWelte month periods. For further information contact your nearest director. DIRECTORS: MRS. 0. G. ANDERSON RR 5, Winghant MRS. LLOYD 'TAYLOR Exeter KENNETH JOHNS Wuodltam GORDON RICHARDSON Brucefield LORNE ROUGES RR 1, Goderich RUSSELL KNIGiIT RR 2, Brussels President Vice -President ROY STRONG FORDYCE CLARK BERTRAM KLOPP Zurich GORDON KIRKLAND Lucknow RUSSELL T. BOLTON Dublin FORDYCE CLARK RR 5, Goderich IIOY STRONG Corrie BERT IRWIN Clinton Secretary -Treasurer BERT IR\V1N the Women's Missionary Society was held in the a abbath School room of the sectional boxes for accessories. The Presbyterian Church with the first vice- Women's Institutes sponsor these president, Mrs. Wilfred Sanderson, in worthwhile projects, RcpresenlativcG change. After the call to worship the ware present: Blyth, Mrs. Luella Mc - ere "0 Set Ye Open Unto Me" was Gowan, Mrs, Wellington Good. Auburn. sung with. Mrs. Duncan MacKay at the -Mrs, Belli Machan and Mrs. Ed, Da - piano, Rev, D. J. Lane led in prayer vies; Colwanosh: Mrs, J. B. Ritchie, wasthe scripture lesson, Psalm 118 Mrs. Alex Hackett, Lucknow; Dun'an- was read by Mrs, John Graham. The non, Mrs, Gt•altann A1cNeo, Auburn, meditation was given by Miss Minnie Mrs. Hugh AicWhinncy, Li ort ,Albert; Wagner, Mrs, Alvin Leatherland and St. Ilelcns: Mrs, James Curren Miss Irma Forrester, Luknow; Londcsboro: Mr•s, Keith Machan, followed by pray- A, Milton Little, Mrs, Percy Car or by Mrs, Frank Raithby, A musical terlrs• Clinton: Mrs. Norman 'Tyndall, selection was sung by eight Goderich Mrs. Charles Elliott. A turkey banquet ladies, Mrs, Madeline Edward, Airs. was given to the leadels and thr -Avice Bissett, Mrs. Elizabeth Ilill, assistants by the Department of Aleiri• Mrs. Gertrude Kaitting, Mrs. Mary culture to which the ladies of the Au— Henderson, Mrs, Pauline Lowrey, Mrs. burn Women's Institute catered. Helen Baxter, Mrs. Grace Cranston, Light -Bearer's Mission Band with Mrs. Marian Mills as pianist, The Light -Bearer's -Mission Band of Mrs. John Houston introduced the guest The United Church met last Sunday speaker, Rev, Douglas Black, of At- for their October meeting. John Arthus wood Presbyterian Church. Mr, Black presided for the meeting which was was student minister here about six held in the Beginner's room. After the Airs. Lloyd McClinchey.. The programyears a",;0. Rev. Black expressed ins opening hymn and the Call to Worship, for the November nicotine will he Mrs. appreciation at being back and gave Linda Wilson read from. Psalm 95 Joe linking and Mrs. Guy Cunning- a very inspiring message on "Ye arc which WaS read altcrnatelY. John then ham, and the lunch committee will he the salt of the earth." In his remarks I led in prayer. Sharon Ball, BrendaMrs. Elliott Lapp, Mrs. James McDou- the stated that Christ is giving netr l3all, Martie and Klaske Koopmans gall, Mrs, Lloyd McClinchey and Mrs. hope to the world to day and we Airs, Arthur Grange and Miss Ai, R. { Jackson acted the pay from the Octo Garth •McClinchey, This part of the should show thanks for the many mer- I ber World Friends called 'f'hanks;ivic' meeting was closed with the Queen and cies He has bestowed on this land, Never heard of it, 'Phis was an interc',i- the Lord's Prayer. The program of Mrs. Ed. Davies thanked him for Ins'ing story of a whin girl asking a little contests and quizzes was conducted by' informative address and Mrs, Roy from Japan and India to share in the Mrs, L. Archambault and Mrs. Percy Daer presented 111111 with a gift from observance of Thanksgiving and to Vincent. Plans were completed for the ladies. More music was given by come to dinner, 'These girls had the bus trip to Kitchener on October 15 the Goderich ladies and Mrs. W. Brad-' never heard of such a day so it was when the Club will be guests of the nock gave a reading on 4"rhanksgiv-' all explained to them. Linda Wilson Chamber of Commerce and also attending," The offering was received by and Judith Arthur received the Thank - Bazaar on TV. A delicious lunch was 1 Mrs. Leatherland and Mrs. Daer, and Offering and all sang the dedicatory served by Mesdames William Hunkingd the offertory prayer given by Mrs. prayer. Miss Jackson then told the Ted Honking, Joe Hopkin; and James Sanderson. The meeting was closed story of Lupi. Showed pictures of Mex - Jackson. by singing, "0 God of Bethel," and the ico and. Mrs, Grange told about their Mr. and Mrs, Norman Townsend, of benediction pronounced by Rcv. Lane. orante ettpcnsive churches. Items from Alliston, spent a few days last week A delicious lunch was served and a \Vorlct 1"'riends were discussed and the visiting Miss Margaret R. Jackson. social hour spent. meeting was closed with prayer. Miss Eleanor Lawson and Mr. Stan- Untended for last week) The sympathy of (his community is extended to AL•s, Donald Haines on the Icy McIntyre, of Dundas, spent the Funeral services were held last death of he' mother, Mrs, 1NIIIran weekend with Mr. and Aii's. Gordon Thursday morning for the late Mrs. Rathbun, of 1lillshurt', She passes Powell, Wayne and Hobert, I' Miss Mary Sanderson is a patient in Sick Chi!di en's hospital, London. We wish her a speedy recovery from her sickness. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ross mid fam- ily, of Oakville, called on friends in the village last Saturday. • Mr, and Mrs. Harry' Arthur, Judy, Mark and Greg, spent the week -end with Mr, and Mrs, Ronald Pentland, at North Bay. Anglican Guild Meets The Guild of St. Mark's Anglican Church met at the home of the presi- dent, Airs. Thomas Ifaggill, for their October meeting, witli a good attend - mice. Mrs. Ifaggill opened the meet- ing with the hymn "Breathe on ine Breath of God" with the pianist, Mrs. Gordon 11. 'Taylor, accompaninu for Me hymn. Prayers were taken by Mrs. Clifford Brown. The scrilau►'e lesson, Psalm 41 was read by Mrs, Andrew Kirkconnell, A beautiful .talo was song by Mrs. 'Taylor "The Garden of Peace and Prayer" accompanied by Mrs. Robert J. Phillips, The tonic was Liken by Mrs. Ed. Davies and she (ave a very inspiring 'thanksgiving message, reminding the ladies of all +rue good things they enjoy. Mrs, Geor- ge Schneider gave a reading "The Un- welcome Guest" followed by the riir- ing of "My God I Thank Thee." The minutes of the previous meeting were aseeeled as rend by the secretary, Mrs. Ed. Davies. Mrs, tics *e lor, treasurer, gave the financial state- ment. The roll call was answered by all repeating a verse of scripture con - John Redmond, who passed away in Victoria hospital on September 281)1, in her 851h year. She was the daugh- ter of the late Mr, and Mrs. John Rcd- niond,- and was born 111 Goderich. Fol- lowing her marriage to the late Mr. Redmond they took up residence on their farm in West Wawanosh town - hip. She was predeceased by her hus- band 25 years ago. She was a menthe,. of the St, Augustine R. C, Church. She is survived by one daughter, Mae, of Windsor, three sons, William, Gus and Theodore, all of West Wawanosh, also 7 grandchildren, and one sister, Mrs. 11u01 King, of London. Requeim high mass was sung at the St. Augus- tine R, C. Church, with burial in the cemetery there. Pallbearers were Messrs. Wilfred Kinahatt, Thomas Web- ster, Charles Kin;, William J. ila la- han, Mason McAllister and Brown �.mytli, Training School Held In Auburn The 'Training School for tin fall pro - leo. "Clothes Closets up to Date" was held last week in Auburn f::: t!'o Wesl. Huron district, Miss Bette 'Tillman, Ilome Economist for Huron County was in charge of the school assisted by Mrs, Shirley McAllister, of ,Zurich, This inte•estin, 4-11 project is spon- sored by the Department of Agricul- ture is available to all girls 12 years to 26. This project takes 8 meetings and the Achievement Day will be held in January. in this project the girls will have an opportunity to renevate their present clothes storage and make some accessories for their closets, including sssisc:-t ,. ,.,,., la,,rdr ban a enveren hanger, shoe packs, hat standard, and hat box. If the girls wish they may make shoe pockets, shoe racks, or away suddenly in Gude!' flu 'iilal af- ter being burned while preparing din- ner at her home, when her sweater took fire, She was in her 75th year and was before her marriage, Margar- et Ellen Gibson. She had been mar pied to Mr. William Rathbun for i,6 years. She was a member of SI.. An- drews Presbyterian Church, Hillsbue t, where she was church organist, fot over 35 years, and was also life mem- ber of the W.M.S. Besides her husband she Is survived by 2 sons, Arnold, of Gcor;ctown, Nelson, of 11illsburg, and 2 daughters, Enmily, of Bowmansville, N.Y. and Lois, of Auburn, 11 grand- children and 8 great-grandchildren. The funeral took place at Ilillsburg Presbyterian Church, conducted by Rev. Wilson with burial laking place in Iluxlcy cemetery. Celebrated 9'1lh Birthday Congratulations are extended to Airs. William 'Tabh of the Baseline, Mullett township, who on October 4t1, cc1 brand 11.e 0991 birthday, quietly at her home one mile south of rt,,;,;::•s She is the daughter of the late Mr, and Mrs. Benjamin Witmer, and was born at Westfield. She was married to Mr, William Tabb in 11199 and resided at Wcstr'e1d for 7 years, then movie: 0 Maple Creek, Faikalchcwan, where they made their home for many years. 13eturnin; to Ontario they farmed in Colborne township for 6 years and in 1943 they moved to their present farm, Mr. Tah) passed nwtiy five years ago, Mrs, T'hh is enjoying fairly, good health and recalls ma':,' "f her ex periences in the Canadian West, and is able to do her own housekeeping Hundreds of happy users Will tell OU... YOU CAN'T TOP CO-OP ANTI- FREEZE • Won't evaporate 1 • Non -foaming, • Non -corrosive , (! Contains rust-inhibitor9 BELGRAVE CO-OP ,BIJLGIiAVE, ONTARIO Phones: Wingham 1091 •- Bnrssels 388W10 APPLES Order your--- Macintosh Free Draw at Blyth Fair Display. Contact us now B. TAYLOR, Phone 15R5 Delicious N. Spy Tab an Sweet he'sel-, and her only son, Torrance, residr ; with her. I;hc has one daugh- ter, J irs. E'la Plain, cf \Vh"tc Rock, B,(1„ 4 urmtdchiidren and 10 gree'. grandchildren. Also two sisters, Mies Rose Witmer, or Mi'!'en, nnlaria, mrl Mrs, Fred Tabh, of Wnlsley, Sask. Mrs. Tab') is a devoted member of tite Auburn Baptist Church which she at- tends when health permits. VVednedsay, t1 t,14 1D 1J Elliott Insurance Agency BLYTH �-- ONTARIO. INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident, Windstorm, Farm Liability. WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE. Office Phon.e 104. Residence Phone 140 TOWNSHIP OF IIULLETT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE that the Township of Hullett will hold a Court of Revision on the Assessment Roll for the year 1960. The Court will convene on Novem- ber 2, 1959, In the Community Hall, Lcndecboro, at 10 o'clock p.m, All persons wishing -to Appeal their Assessment are to have their appeals into the Clerk's Office ten days before this date so that their appeals may be considered. 38-1. HARRY TEBBUTT, Clerk. WANTED Old horses, 31c per pound. Dead cattle and horses at value. Importeat to phone at once, day or night. GIL. BERT BROS, MINK RANCH, Godcric , Ptiuue collect 1483J1, or 1483J4, BLYTII BEAUTY BAR Permanents, Cutting, and Styling. Ann Hoilinger Phone 143 CRAWFORI) & HETHERINGTON BARRiS'TERS & SOLICITORS J. H. Crawford, R. S. IIetheringtoc Q.C. Q.C. Wingham and Blyth. iN BLYTH EACH THURSDAY MORNING and by appointment, Located In Elliott Insurance Agent') Phone Blyth, 104 _ Wingham, 4, G. 13. CL A NCY OPTOMETRIST -- OPTICIAN (Successor to the late A, L. Cole, Optometr'latl FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33, GODEitICH 25-111 J. E. Longstaff, Optometrist Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton HOURS: Seaforth Dally Except Monday & Wed 9:00 a,m, to 5:30 p.m. Wed — 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m. Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5:30. 1'honi HU 2-7010 G. ALAN WILLIAMS, OPTOMETRIST PATRICK ST, • WINGHAM, O.N1 • FVENTNCS BY APPOINTMENT (For Apointment please phone 770 Wingham), Professional Eye Examination. Optical Services, 44.4.4.44 ROY N. BENTLEY roue Accountant GODERiCIii, ONT, Telephone 1011 — Box 478, 110.4444 DR. R. W. STREET Bivth, Ont. OFFICE nnURS-1 P.M, Tn 4 P.M. EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS. 7 P.M. TO 9 P.M. TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION "Where Better Bulls Aro Used" Artifci!al Breeding Service — All Breeds of Cattle — Member owned and controlled, Cost Low — Efficiency High. Use of the bust of bulls. Dis- ease controlled, Safety. For service or more information phone: Clinton, 11U 2-3441 or for long distance, Clinton, Zenith 9-5650. Between: .7.30 and 9.30 a.m, week clays, 6.00 and 8,00 p.m, Saturday 'evening wil be serviced on Saturday evenings. Calls .received on Sunday morning, For.cows In heat on Sunday morning, DO NOT call until Monday morning, BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING • McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO; .HEAD OFFICE - SEAPORTH, ON'I OFFiCERS: President — Robert Archibald, Sea. forth; Vice -President, Alistair Broad, foot), Seaforth; .Secretary -Treasurer,. W, E. Southgate, Seaforth. I)IRECTOItti; J, L. Malone, Seaforth; J. II. Maw - Blyth; W. S. Alexander, .Walton, E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep- per, Brucefield; C. 1V: Leonhardt, Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderich; R. Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot, Seaforth. AGENTS: William Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; F. Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; James Keyes, Scaforth; Harold Squires, Clinton, K. W. COLQUHOUN iNSIII ANCF AND REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada CLINTON PHONES Office, HU 2-9747; Res. HU 2-7594 • Phone Blyth 78 SALESMAN Via Kennedy • •P# x.•.•4444+.4444.. Clinton Community FARMERS AUCTION SALES EVERY FRIDAY AT CLINTON SALE BARN at 1,30 p.m. IN BLYTH, PHONE BOB HENRY, 150R1. Joe Corey, Bob McNair, Manager, Auctioneer, 05 -If. �r.MIN►M'-1 Massey Ferguson Fully Reconditioned 44 M -Ii Tractor, No. 20 Good Used Tractor. Allis Chalmers Tractor. Farman C Tractor and Loader, with Cultivator and Bean Puller, 1953 Ford Station Wagon. 1954 Plymouth Sedan, Ilomelight Chain Saws, Lloyd Walden, Proprietor Queen St., Blyth — Phone 184 ••.••w•w' DEAD STOCK WANTED HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid in surounding districts for dead, old, sick Jr disabled horses or cattle, Old hor- ses for slaughter 5c a pound. For prompt, sanitary disposal day or night, phone collect, Norman Knapp, Blyth, 211112, it busy phone Leroy Acheson, Atwood, 153, ,Win. Morse, Brussels, 15J6. Trucks available at all times. 34- 1, Mar, DEAD STOCK SERVICES Highest Cash Prices PAID FOR SICK, DOWN 011 DIS- ABLED COWS and HORSES. Also Dead Cows and Horses At Cash Value Old Ilorses — 5c Per Pound PHONE COLLECT 133 BRUSSELS BRUCE MARLATT OR - GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15119 BLYTII 24 110011 SERVICE 13tf, the HOIVIELITE CHAIN SAW, • Weighs only 18 lbs. • Fells trees up 10 4 ft. In diameter. . • Cuts 18" Trees in 18 seconds. • Full power In any cutting position. • Flush cut handle for ground -level cutting. • Low fuel and mainte+ nonce costs. • Famous Hematite quality construction. See your .dealer for a free demonstration. LLOYD WALDEN Blyth - Ontario ▪ SANITARY SEWAGE Ut6POSA1. Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumpee and cleaned, Free esttnidtes. bout Blake, phone 4210, Brussels, 1LR, 2 THE 13L'TH STANDARD - _&--..-. ESTATE OF JOHN CHARLES WjLSON The Public Trustee for the Province of Alberta is desirous of contacting the following people:— Margaret Kelly, of Blyth, Ontario. William Henry Wilson, of Auburn, Ontario, Jane Elizabeth Cathcart, of Toronto, Ontario, Anyone having knowledge of any of the above please contact the Public Trustee, Land Titles Building, Edman- Thurs., Fri„ Sat., October 15.10.17 ton, Alberta, 37.2 FOR SALE 200 Rhode Island Red Light Sussex pullets, ready to lay. Apply Charles Scanlon, phone 55118, Blyth, 38.1 FOR SALE Winter carrots, $1.00 per bushel, Ap- ply Mason Bailey, phone 54R5, Blyth. 38•Ip 4+4.4+-•+4 ♦-•• • 4-• •-•-•-4 .• •-•••-4 LYCEUM TIIEATRE Wingham, Ontario. Two Shows Each Night Commencing at 7:15 p.m, FOR SALE Boys winter station wagon coat, size Blyth,8, as good as new. Apply, phone 55R141 BLYTH LIONS CLUB 30. Andy Griffiths Myron McCormick in "No Time For Sergeants" A highly amusing service comedy. .+•••-•4- • • •44-•-•-4-••-•-•44-•-4+-• 44 - Mission Band SUPPER C3 BAZAAR Byth United Church SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Children 35c Adults 70 CARL) OF THANKS • The family of the late Alma Inklcy . of Clinton, wish to thank their man relatives, neighbours and friends fo their many acts of kindness, messag of sympathy and floral tributes rcceiv led prior to and during our recent sad bereavement, Special thanks to Rev. .1. A. McKim and Rev, 1), ,1, Lane, at- - tending physicians and nurses of Clin- ton anti Victoria Hospital and the Can- adian Cancer Society. 38-1p PAPER DRIVE will be held on MONDAY EVENING 7 OCTOBER 19 Residents of c Blyth, Auburn, Londesboro . are asked to have bundles . securely tied and sitting at Y the street curbs. cs CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank those who sent cards and gifts while a patient in Victoria Hospital, London. Also the Doctors ane nursing staff. 38-1p. —Mary Sanderson, CARD OF THANKS I would like to take this opportunity to express my appreciation to all those who sent flowers, expressions of :ynr pithy, and helped at the home during my recent sad bereavement. Special thanks to Rev. McLagan, Alrs, Harvey Brown and Lloyd Tasker, 38-1, —Mrs, Collinson CARD OF THANKS Mrs. George Mains and Tillie wish to express their thanks and apprecia tion to relatives, friends and neigh- bours, for the many acts of kindness, messages of sympathy and beautiful floral tributes received in their recent sad- bereavement. Special thanks to Rev. McLagan, Dr, Street, the nurs- ing staff of Clinton hospital, pallbear- ers, flower bearers, Tasker Memorial Chapel, and those who helped in any way. 38-1 CARD OF TIiANKS I wish to thank all those who remem- bered me with cards, and tl:e Blyth Legion and Auxiliary for gifts while a patient in Westminster Hospital, 38-1p. —Jim Ilir•ons. CARD OF TIIANKS'� 1 wish to thank all those who remem- bered the baby and I with cards, gifts, and treats while in Clinton Hospital and since returning hone. Special thanks to Dr. Street and nursing start 38-1. —Mrs. Joan Watson. FOR SALE Muscovic ducks. Apply Charles Ma- chan, phone 10119, Blyth. 37-ip 1 1 Story White Frame House on North side of Dinsley St, 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, 3 -piece bathroom For Details Contact S. C. GALBRAITII , Phone 66, Blyth. FOR RENT Newly decorated 4 room apartment, 2 piece bath, hot and cold water, cup- boards, Apply W. Cook, phone 213, Blyth. 33-1 FOR SALE Blue gabardine suit, sports jacket and leather jacket, size 16; and also several 7" and 6" stove pipes, Apply phone 21, Blyth. 33.1p APPLES FOR SALE Spy apples, sprayed, reasonable price, bring container and pick your own. Apply, Percy Walden, 11.11. 1, Auburn. 30-1p• NOTICE TO All, EGG CUSTOMERS We will remain open Saturday nights {until UcWhcr 3Ist, after which we will be closed .'nr the winter months, or until fort ter not 38-3. KNOX PRODUCE, BLYTII, FOR SAI': -Clover honey, 20e a T. and Amber 15c a lb., in your own cont:irnrs, pails extra, add 5c a lb. Apply Ile, Schultz, phone 341112, Blyth. :30.2p► KITCHEN SUITES Select from the 5 and 7 piece ;;uitcr, at the Mildmay Furniture, Sh wronms, including larger ty''e tables 'I'ra'e-ins accepted. G. E. Schuelt, Alilchnay. 38.2 FOR SALT; Spy apple, by the bushel, tie bring containers and pick you rown a; a low- er price, Apply J. B. Nesbit, phone 13115 Blyth,• 30.4-p 44.4.4+•+• • •+4+•+4 • •-•-41 •-4.4•• 4+44 • • • ••• • • • N • • • •-•+441+•-4 • f BLYTII LIONS CLUB Annual RUMMAGE COLLECTION U SALE MEMORIAL HALL, BLYTII SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24 Sale to start at 1:30 p.m. AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF MISCEL- LANEOUS ARTICLES WILL BE DISPOSED Ob You are reminded that the Lions will call at your hone on Friday evening, October 23, for your donations. Cntributions of home -Made Baking. and Preserves will be gratefully recicved. Rural contributors may phbne Lions Charles St. Michael or Walter Buttell, or any member of the Lions Club, and arrangements will be inade to pick up their contributions. PLAN TO ATTEND UT SATURDAY, OCT. 24 ••-•1.1+••1••••a1-•••-•i-•-•••J-•-•-•J•• •-N •+414••••P1••-•+1444+44+4-•1441 PAGE; 144+•+44 Fre-• •-•-444 44++-4-4-/-$-44••-•••-•+•44+ ROXY THEATRE, PARK CL,r Tor , GODEBICII, Now Playing: October 15.16.17 "Sheriff Of Farctured Jaw" The laughs will fracture you for sure Jane Mansfield, Kenneth More, llenry hull Mon„ Tues„ Wed„ October 19.20.21 Double BIIi "Rodan" Weird flying monsters thunder out of the far -distant past All-star Japanese cast and "1-Iell In Korea Ronald Lewis, Stephen Boyd, Victor Maddern Now Playing: George Montgomery and Talna Elg in "WATUSI" In color Mon„ Tues., Wed„ October 19-20-21 Lana Turner, Jeff Chandler and • David Farrar "The Lady Takes A Flyer" Chientascope and Technicolor Thurs., Fri., Sat., October 22-23.24 Two Action Dramas Steve Cochran, Gale Robbins and Diane Brewster "Quantrill's Raiders" Bill 1Villiams, Dawn Richard and Anthony Caruso "Legion of the Doomed" 44-44 ♦ • • •• •.•-•4 • ♦ • • ♦ • •-44-•44 •-444+4-•4 •4 4444-4 • 4 •-•-•-4444-•*' 4-• 1..4.44.4.44441 14•-•-•-•-•+•4 ♦+•+4.4 •+4+•i-4-4-4+4 4.44+4-4+.-• • • • • �' BROWNIE'S 1 DRIVE-IN, LIMITED Clinton -- Ontario FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16 AND 17 REAL FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT — DOUBLE BILL ,— "IT HAPPENED TO JANE" (COLOUR) Doris Day -- Jack Lemon -- Ernie Kovacs "THE TALL 1°' Randolph Scott •-- Morten O'Sullivan (ONE CARTOON) 4.4 .+144+4+4 •-4-• 4-•-+4 4411+• • • 4+1-•+4 • •+•+• .-•-4 44-•444-44-•44-44 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE Vi ESTATE a John Co'i nsthe RENTAL SERVICE late of the'Huron,on, Retired Farmer, Deceased. All persons having claims against .the Estate of the above deceased, a:t required to file the sane with the un. designed Solicitor for the said Estate, on or before the 2nd day of November, A.D. 1959, after which date the assets will be distributed amongst the par- ties entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims of which -notice shall have been given. Dated at Clinton, Ontario, this 13th day of October, A.D. 1959. E. B. MENZIES, Clinton. Ontario, 38-3. Solicitor for„the said Estate. WES'1`I�I ELD Dir, and Mrs. Harvey McDowell and S parlingsHardware fancily visited with Alr. and Mrs. Har- old \'intent at Bel rave, on Sunday. Many from the community attended the 'Thanksgiving Anniversary at Don- nybrook on Sunday. The Services wert enjoyed by all. Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Rodger over the week end were, Airs. Wm. Rollinson, of 'Toronto, Miss McC:inion, Mr, Sharpe, and Air. and Mrs. Wm. llrlesic and daughter, all of Goderich. Mrs, llcicsic is stay- ing for a week's holiday. Air, John McDowell spent the week en.: at the home of Mr. Bob McPhail, in Wingham. Air. and Airs. ?red Boyce and child- ren, Ellen, Melvin and Stuart, of Bruce - field, visited with AIr, and Mrs. Charles Smith and fancily, on Sunday. AIr. Barry Logan, of Belgrave, stay- ed with Donald McDowell over the tvicek end. A1r. and Airs, Marvin Snaith and fancily, of South \Voodslce, Ontario, Mrs. Laura Hayden, of London, and Miss Edna Smith of, Kitchener, were guests at the honcc of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith and fancily over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. John Boolhman, of Port Perry, Ontario, his mother, Mrs. Edwin Boothntan, of England( who has been in Canada for 2 or 3 months, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl \Vightman, of Luck - now, visited with lir. and Mrs, Norman WVightman and family, on Thanksgiving DY. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Taylor visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hanna and fanilY, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Redmont, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Pat O'Mal- lcy, in Kingsville, over the week -end. :Too late for last week) Air. Harvey Wightman, of Kitchener, visited with Mr. and Mrs. llar'Vey Mc- Dowell an Saturday c"cning. Mrs, Harvey McDowell and Mrs. Alva McDowell visited with Mrs. Bert Wingham, were guests of Mrs, J. L. Vodden, in Clinton, on Friday. McDowell and Gordon on Saturday Mr, and Mrs. Melvin Brown, of evening. Mount Forest, visited with Mrs. J. L. Air, and Mrs. Austin Bailey, of 1\lcDowell and Gordon on Wednesday. Princeton, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Norman McDowell ana Arnold Conk and Sharon on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell were Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Mackie, of London visitors on Thursday. Emhrn, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ar - The W.M.S. spent a very enjoyable nold Cook and Sharon last Sunday. lime at lc1grave United Church an Mrs. J. L. McDowell and Gordon Wednesday evening, 'Their guest speak- visited with Mr. and Mrs. Waller Cook cr for the 'Thank -Offering service way' at Blyth, on Sunday afternoon and ev- \lrs. (Rev.) John C. Britton, of Seaming. forth. We all enjoyed her talk ver, Srv-cral from the community attend - much. A delicious lunch was ,served ed the service at Blyth United Church Air. and Mrs. Gerald McDowell vis on Sunday evening where they saw the itcd with Mr. and Mrs. Murray Taylor file» "Martin Luther,” at CVham last week, Mr, and Mrs. Fred Slater, of Lake- Mr.ingand Mrs..lack Cewan, of Exeter, side, visited with Mr, and Mrs. Arnold Mrs. F, Kershaw and Miss Gladys Me- Cook recently. Dowell, of Goderich. visited with Mr. A1r. and Mrs, Keith Snell and child - and Mrs. Marvin McDowell and Gra- ren,` visited with Mr. and Mrs. Garth cmc, on Wednesday evening. McClinchey and Sandra Marie and Mr. and Mrs. Murray Taylor, of, Mrs. Fred Cook on Sunday afternoon. CATTLE CLIPPERS, CEMENT MIX- ER, (with motor), WHEEL BARRO\V, VACUUM CLEANER, FLOOR POLISH- ERS, BELT SANDERS, is ITEAVY DUTY ELECTRIC DRILL, WEED SPRAYER (3 gal.), EXTENSION LAD- DER (32 feet), PIPE WRENCHES, PIPE DIES & CUTTER. GARDEN TILLER LAWN ROLLER Apply to Phone 24, Blyth BANKRUPT AUCTION SALE Of Properties, Livestock, Machinery And Poultry Equipment Will be held at l.o1 25, Concession 14, 01 the Township of McKillop, 1,42 mile south of Walton on the County Road, MONDAY, OCTOBER 19th at 1 o'clock LIVESTOCK -3 Holstein cows, re- cently fresh; Jersey cow, fresh; 3 hol- stein cows, milking and retired; Dairy Hol - heifer, rising 2 years old; 3 holstein spying calves, MACIIiNEIIY—La Iloi Tractor, 1949, with hydraulic plough; rubber -fired wagon, with flat rack; 42 ft. grain auger; circular saw; large grind stone; quantity of lumber, square tim- bers and vanillin!. POULTRY EQUIPMENT — 2s Auto- matic waterers; 50-50 lb, feeders. PROPERTY: Parcel 1 — 394.2 acres in the Town- ship of McKillop, in the County of Ilu- ron, being composed of South half of the North Iralf of Lot 25, in the 14th concession of the Townshihp of Mc- Killop. There is said to be on this pro- perly a bank barn with accommodation for approximately 8000 broilers. One and one half story brick house with bathroom and furnace. Clay loans land well drained and all workable. Parcel 2 — In the Township of Grey, in the County of Huron, being com- posed of part of Lot 1, in the 18th con- cession of the said Township, contain- ing three acres. 'I'het'e is on this pro- perty a frame barn with accomodation for 6000 broiler's. TERMS — CIIA'T'rELS CASA Property sold subject to Reserve Bid. 10 per cent down, balance in 30 days. For further particulars contact F. 0. Kime and Company, Trustee, London, Ontario. Harold Jackson, Seaforth, Auctioneer 37-2 Indian Prince Having Hard Time It •is just twelve years since India won its independence from the British and ousted some 600 Indian princes from their feudal domains. What has happened to the Indian princes? From New Delhi, Newsweek's Larry Collins cabled this ac- count of the 73 -year-old Nizam of Hyderabad, the richest and most 'fabulous of then all. When he was young and in his prime, the Nizam of Hydera- bad was the richest man in the world. He lorded it over 83,000 square miles of central India with palaces, Rolls-Royces, ele- phant hunts, his own whisky distillery, four wives and 42 concubines, not counting the per. fumed and be-satineti girls his mother used to give him on his birthdays, As absolute ruler of 16 mil- lion people, the Nizam kept scores of tailors busy running up sarapas (knee-length jackets) embroidered in precious jewels. He had one each in diamonds, emeralds, rubies and pearls. He also had his own jazz band which he led from one palace to another while wielding the ba- ton to the tempo of his favorite tune: "I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles." Then came Indian independ- ence. Government troops in an action aptly named "Operation Polo," overran Hyderabad in four days, killed 832 of the Nizam's soldiers and left him with the empty title of "Gover- nor." No fool, the "Governor" promptly inventoried his wealth and counted up at least $500 million, mostly in gold bars and jewels. He invested it in 33 dif- ferent trust funds. As compensation for the loss of his lands, the Indian Govern- ment agreed to pay the Nizam an annual income of $500,000 in lieu of rent. But in 1954, Prime Minister Jawaharlal Neh- ru cut off the stipend, and the Nizam was left to struggle along on his own resources. He began to economize, first by cutting the $12,000 -a -month al- lowance of a son the Prince of Berar, to a mere $4,000, then by ordering hint to reduce his harem ("a lot of worthless wenches," snorted the Nizam) to ten. The Nizam also cut down his own annual grocery bill from $100,000, and moaned: "I am no longer a rich man." But the 110 illegitimate off- 7prings of the Nizam's 42 con- cubines refuse to believe him Fed up with their reduced al- lowances, they have formed an anti-Nizam union, composed of all relatives receiving less than $15,000 a year. The union's de- mand: A trebling of all allow• ances and the use of the Ni- zam's cars. Grumpily the Nizam set up a three -car motor pool from his collection of five Rolls-Royces, seven Cadillacs, 22 lesser cars. But the union is far from satis- fied. Last month, when India's President Rajendra Prasad visit- ed Hyderabad, the children petitioned him for the right to bargain collectively with their father. What can the Nizam do? Hunched over with age, his teeth richly browned from chewing betel nuts, his jeweled sarapas exchanged for cotton jackets, he sits on a rocking chair on the terrace of one of his last two palaces, contemplat- ing his plight. His distillery has long since been torn down to make way for a mosque; he can- not remember the names of his concubines; the only music is the jingle of bells as he sum- mons servants for his medicines. NOT HIS BUSINESS A flustered little woman ap- proached the manager of a pet chop and said: "I have a pair of canaries — one female and one male, but how can I tell which is which?" "Easy," said the manager. "Put s pair of worms in the cage. The male bird invariably picks the l'emale worm and vice versa," "But how on earth will 1 know which is the male worm?" "Madam," said the man, coldly, "this is a bird shop. I suggest ou take that question at a wormchop!" An Idyl In The Scots Highlands The baby bull lay quietly Ie his straw, His long legs, not yet completely under control when standing, were folded neatly un- der him. His Tight brown and white coat, smooth along his back, had a tendency to roughen and curl on his blunt little head. The baby bull was not quite a day old. He had been born the night before in a corner of the pasture, and almost immediate- ly he had been fondled by kindly human hands. He ac- cepted the benignity of man as a fact with passive acquiescence and without question. His brown and lambent eyes, gazing around hint without either inquiry or apathy, had a timeless look in them, as though the moment was only an incident in his ageless- ness. The other calves moved away at the approach of humans. But the little bull lay still and watched. He had not learned fear, for all of his short life he had known nothing but gen- tleness — the caress of his mother's rough tongue as she examined him carefully, inch by inch, before they took him away, and the caress of human hands, rubbing him in all the right places. The other calves were just livestock. Nobody It a d stroked them and talked to them. The subtle contact had not been made, and so at the approach of humans they snorted and when pursued, however gently, backed away with startled, ner- vous gestures. Their fear brought no dis- turbance to the baby bull, and he watched the human come up to him quietly, with outstretched hand. He liked the feeling 01 having his head rubbed,. and the low encouraging noises the hu- man made to him. Some feeling of response — an unconscious instinct — stir- red in him, and he begah to struggle to his feet. His legs were very wobbly, and some- times their joints would give way without warning, and sorne- times they would shoot from under his sturdy little body as unexpectedly. But after mom- ents of frantic scrambling he was at last erect, swaying slight- ly but pleased with his prowess. He could examine the human more easily from this height, He found a finger, and sucked at it hopefully. He soon realized he was mistaken, but he kept the finger in his mouth and gradu- ally drew in the other fingers, washing them with his tongue. He liked the familiar smell of the straw, and the strange small of the human, and indeed the whole peacefulness of a High- land summer Sunday afternoon, writes Rosemark Cobham in the Christian Science Monitor. He stood stock still with con- tent while other humans came and fondled him also. Sometimes he would rub his head againa4 them, or follow them a few steps if they moved away. Occasion- ally he gave a high-pitched lit- tle cry of welcome and interest. The other calves huddled in a corner against the wall, uncer- tain and on guard. The baby bull had nothing to be on guard against. He had no defenses, for he knew of nothing to defend himself against. He also had no special needs, He was a very self-sufficient little bull. There was milk when he wanted It, and he needed nothing else. The humans withdrew, chat- tering and laughing among them- selves. He heard their steps clat- tering on the stone floor outside, and listening to their voices growing fainter as they return- ed down the lane. The other calves relaxed and drew away from their corner. With the jer- ky movements of the very young, the baby bull law down again, his front legs folding up first. In a few hours he would be a whole day old, but the baby bull did not know that. To him- self he had existed forever, and so he had no special wonder- ings about what tomorrow would bring. Quiet flowed hack, and the long Highland evening set in. The baby bull lay very still, very peaceful, and utterly trust- ful, as his first day drew gently to a close. ONE WITH MUSTARD — Appearing like an oversized hot dog, o streamlined motorcycle is guided to a world record of 210 m 7,11. Driver is Bob Berry et Pendine Sands, England. 1 "NEVER AGAIN" - Parading through the streets of Hamburg, West German men protest against a new draft law, which could require military service of many men who served in World War II. Demonstrator in foreground bears a pair of army boots and a sign reading, "Never Again." ' TARLE ,...�, TALKS ,1111:r o.Jat And.t'ews. Here's the recipe that won Mrs. Eunice Surles of Lake Charles, La., the top prize of $25,000 in the 11th grand na- tional Pillsbury bake -off this week. She calls it "Mardi Gras Party Cake." ,3 cup butterscotch morsels 14 cup water 21,4 cups sifted flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon soda ! teaspoon double-acting baking pewder 1 cup sugar cup firmly packed brown sugar % cup shortening 3 unbeaten eggs 1 eup buttermilk or sour milk Melt butterscotch morsels in water in saucepan. Cool. Sift flour with salt, soda and baking powder; set aside. Add sugar and brown sugar gradually to shortening, creaming well. Blend in eggs, beating well af- ter each. Add butterscotch mor- sels; mix well. Add dry ingre- dients alternately with butter- milk, beginning and ending with dry ingredients, Blend well af- ter each addition. (With mixer use a few speed.) Turn into two 9 -inch round layer pans, well greased and lightly floured on the bottom. Bake at 375 degrees F. for 30 to 35 minutes. Cool; spread fill- ing between . layers and on top to within /-inch of edge. Frost sides and top edge with sea 4oam frosting, or whipped - cream. Makes two 9 -inch layers. Butterscotch Filling Combine 3 cup sugar and 1 tablespoon cornstarch in 2 -quart saucepan, Stir In Y cup evapor- ated milk, 1/2 cup water, 1/t cup butterscotch morsels and 1 beaten egg yolk, Cook over me- dium heat, stirring constantly, until thick, Remove from heat;. add 2 tablespoons butter, '1 cup cocoanut, chopped, and 1 cup pecans or walnuts chopped. Cool Sea Foam Frosting Combine in saucepan 1A cup sugar, 1/ cup firmly packed brown sugar, 1/3 cup water and 1 tablespoon corn syrup. Cook until a little syrup dropped in cold water forms a soft ball (236 degrees F.). Meanwhile, beat 1 egg white with 1/4 tea- spoon cream of tartar until stiff peaks form. Add syrup to egg white in slow, steady stream, beating constantly until thick enough to spread. 1' 4 4 * From Kenya Colony, East Africa, Mrs. Anna Fitzgerald writes to the Christian Science Monitor on the subject of using cream instead of butter in cake -making. "1 did not like wasting the effort of churning butter, only to turn it hack into a cream when making cake ..." Then she explains: "Since in Chicago, sentenced to a yerr's probation for passing bad cheques, Edward Gallaga was re- arrested after he paid his first visit to the probation officer, while there cashed a stolen $100 money order, A San Diego, Calif., man trav- eled to London in search of a man with a 19 -inch mustache 'Thr, reason: he wants to find the nine with a longer (Inc than hiq, 18 inches,. cream is roughly hall butter fat and half liquid, I use twice the amount of cream as the recipe calls for in butter, and cut down the amount of liquid call- ed for by half the amount of cream used, I usually use water for a n y additional liquid re- quired, as it tends to lighten the grain of the cake." Mrs. Fitzgerald then gave her recipes for white, g o 1 d, and chocolate cakes, The white and gold cakes are similar except that 4 egg yolks are used in the gold cake and 2 eggs in the white cake. Here are the re- cipes for white and chocolate cakes. White Cake 1 cup cream 1 cup sugar 2 eggs, with 1 tablespoon water 2 cups flour ! teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder Flavouring Water to thin Whip cream and sugar to. gether until it resembles butter and sugar when creamed. Whip eggs with the 1 tablespoon wa- ter until light and fold into cream mixture. Mix dry ingre- dients and fold in. Add water if required for medium batter. * * M Chocolate Cake 1 cup sugar 1% cups flour Y4 cup cocoa 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon soda 1 tablespoon vinegar ?!t cup cream % cup water 1 teaspoon vanilla Mix dry ingredients and add vinegar, cream, water and van- illa. ("This cake is moist and keeps well — nice with coco- nut frosting made by adding cream to a mixture of icing su- gar and shredded cocoanut.") EdItor's Note: Mrs, Fitzger- ald gave no baking- directions We suggest 350 degrees to 375 degrees F. for temperature in baking these cakes. Lima Bean Casserole. 2 pounds large dried lima bean 1% to -.2 pound pieces of slab bacon Catchup Brown sugar Soak beans overnight. Cut rind off bacon; slice bacon into 1/2 -inch -thick pieces. Cook with beans and water until beans are almost (not quite) tender Remove bacon from pot; drain; fry until brown on both sides. To the beans, add catchup and brown sugar to taste; salt, if necessary. Put beans in casser•• ole and top with browned ha. con. Bake at 375 degrees F fur about 90 minutes. Serves 8-10. May be doubled easily. Want to make some banana bread for school lunches this fall? Banana Bread r s cu shortening 2 1!r 2 1r: cup sugar eggs, beaten cup bran caps stashed ripe Banana, cups t'Iour teaspoons baking; powder teaspoon soda teaspoon vanilla teaspoon salt Engine That Uses Hot Air As Power A century and a half ago, a Scottish clergyman named Rob- ert Stirling built a new kind of engine that used hot air as mo- tive power. Because it was in- efficient (used too much fuel for the power it produced) the en- gine was never more than a curiosity, Last month, however, the Allison Division of General Motors in Indianapolis reported the problem had been licked and showed a model engine to prove it. No larger than a desk tele- phone, the Allison model boasts 40 per cent efficiency (as com- pared with 15 to 30 per cent for the internal-combustion engine) principally because the contbus- tioncprocess is moved outside the engine head. This eliminates all but one major moving part, The heat generated is transferred to the engine where it forces an operating gas to expand. This is subsequently cooled, The rapid changes in pressure brought about by the heating -cooling process drive the work piston. The engine's advantages: I1 uses any fuel, is virtually noise- less, and can run unattended for' two years. Engineers suggested it for such diverse jobs as an in- flight satellite power plant and a power source in lawn mowers. 2 tablespoons water A4 cup chopped nut meats Cream shortening and sugar; add well -beaten eggs; mix well. Add b r a n, vanilla, and nuts. Add water to mashed bananas. Sift flour, baking powder, soda, and salt. Add alternately with banana -water mixture to short- ening -egg mixture and mix well. Pour batter into soup or baking powder cans, filling cans half full, Bake 1 hour at 350 degrees F. * * * "Potatoes are so adaptable; not having a pronounced fla- vour of their own, they take kindly to additional flavours," writes Mrs. Edna B. Richards. Italian Potatoes 4 slices bacon 4 cups thinly sliced raw potatoes 1 onion, sliced 11,E teaspoons salt 44 teaspoon pepper teaspoon celery salt 1 teaspoon prepared mustard 1 teaspoon sweet basil leaves chopped fine (or Ya teaspoon dry sweet basil) Fry bacon in heavy skillet until brown; drain. Add pota- toes and onion to bacon grease and cook about 10 minutes, turn- ing once or twice. Add remain- ing ingredients and simmer un- til potatoes are tender and to- mato juice thickens — 20-25 minutes. Break the crisp bacon over the top; serve at once. Serves 5-6. Fighting Terrors Of The Deep The terror of the deep, the creature that Australian and Persian Gulf pearl divers ,fear most, is not the sleek razor - toothed shark but a huge fish with mumbling lips called Prom - 'crops Ianceolatus — the Giant Cod or Queensland Groper, Strictly, it is not a cod but a bass. Nor is it Queensland's exclusive property because it prowls throughout the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean, In Queensland waters (and those of northern New South Wales) it grows up to seven feet long and tips the scale at per- haps 800 lb, One caught in the Persian Gulf weighed over half a ton. In northern Australia they'll tell you plenty of stories of pearl divers who have tangled with sharks, giant rays and octo- puses and got away with it. But you'll hear very few accounts of divers getting away from these reddish brown, hump- backed monsters with huge mouths that can bite off a diver's leg or arm — or even swallow him whole. What makes the groper doub- ly dangerous is that this cor- pulent monster is completely without fear. Divers can hope to send the nervous shark skitter- ing away with a few jets of bub- bles from their head valve. If it persists in coming on the diver will even tap it on its sensitive nose. No such measures affect the groper. Is just comes on with mumbling lips, dropping its lower jaw to give its victim a sight of the serried rows of crooked conical teeth and a maw into which a man might step — !f he was so minded! Gropers have immense heads. A diver once reported that he saw one In London, after a court order- ed him to stop cars from coming to his pub because of the noise they made on the cobblestone street, Geoffrey Berner•d hired three rickshas to transport his customers, WORKS BOTH WAYS A Polish court recently deliber- ated on the finer aspects of its ourrency laws so far as concern- ed foreign money. They finally decreed that it was perfectly legal for a Pole to win dollars from a foreigner in a card game, but if the luck alter- ed and the Pole was obliged to use the dollars to pay off his losses he would then be liable to imprisonment. At two consecutive marri.t.ra- in the parish church at Ardfert, Ireland, the two bridegrooms, the two brides, best man, brides- maids, and the officiating priest all answered to the name of O'Sullivan! ISSUE 42 — 1959 For the "Junior Miss" Accent on the cury-y waist in a romantic, dance dress that's di:signed to stagger the :Aug line. Problem of fraying fabric is solved by using '1'riIn1cx rayon scam binding to finish hems and srtuus. P'inted Pattern 1907 in itnior Miss Sizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. To order, ;, cul hilly Cents (stamps cannot be accepted, use post 1 rmtr for !;afr'ty) to ANNE ,1 DAMS, Box 1, 12:1 Eighteenth St., Nev., 'Toronto, Please print plainly NAIIE, ADDRESS, S'I'1'I,I: ,\'t;,11HER and SIZE. Ex -Slave Trader Captured Warship handsome, muscular, with a pair of roving eyes, Paul Jones was the adored hero of the love- liest ladies of Paris, Yet in real- ity he was a gardener's son from a humble * village and had run away to sea, In the prime of manhood his love for the Duchess de Chartres, the richest woman in France, was merely an episode In a ser- ies of swaggering escapades. Even before he made his way to the American Colonies -this was In the year 1760 -there were Scots lassies in his native shire who bitterly rued his kisses. Yet lithe, good-looking Paul Jones resented their coarse lips. He dreamed of the languorous caresses of women reared in great palaces, even of winning perhaps the love of a princess. They were strange dreams for a boy from a village school, though destined to be fully realized. Three years after running away from home, Paul was chief mate in a slave ship, learning the rich profits to be made by smuggling slaves into America Another five years and he had made a small fortune, running brandy, silks and sugar as well as slaves under the guns of the excise men. Then came the revolt of the American colonies against the British crown. Every sailor of fortune jostled for a place in the new -formed American fleet, Paul Jones had good friends who secured him a commission. He was charged with carrying despatches from Congress to the American commissioners in Paris -and to sink or plunder every British ship he found on the Atlantic. By the time he reached Paris news of his exploits had preced- ed him. Almost in sight of the French coast he captured two British ships laden with food and wine. These were the days when, in the whirligig of history, every British surrender seemed a victory for liberty. As his daydreams had fore- told, Paul Jones was received with praise and- flattery in the most gorgeous court in the world, Above all, the lovely Duchess de Chertres consented to receive him and was %soon sweetly conspiring to see him alone, '� • Paul Jones did not know that she was .a vain and vapid wo- man, bored by an unfaithful husband, always eager for amor- ous conquest. "You are my Achilles, my knight of the sear she told him, in one of their secret love -letters that have survived. And when Paul had to resume his naval duties at Brest, the Duchess fol- lowed. Hungrily seizing her kisses one night, he vowed that he would lay an English frigate at her feet. A ship, the bold Rang- er, was being refitted for him. When it was ready at last, Paul and the aristocratic Parisi- enne made their tender fare- wells. As a keepsake she gave him a watch, gold and jewelled. Within the lid was her portrait set in pearls, "I shall wear it all my life," Paul promised. Yet oddly enough he had al- ready met the woman who, in the tangible terms of domestic happiness, was to mean far. more to him. Aimee Thelusson was a beauty of piquant dark eyes and red - gold hair. On their first intro- duction, Paul Jones largely ignored her. Preoccupied with the Duchess, brooding on stolen kisses, he did not recognize the loving devotion that destiny had brought to his path. Roving the seas again, he was delighted to hear that the British CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACIIOSS 2. Laver In 1. Swectsop No. Carolina 6. IIebrew 3. Do wrong month 4. Committed 9.I:uropern fish theft 12. Small pre 5. Like 13, Legendary 6. Little, neat tale and active 14. Creek 7. Post 16, Dart 8. Whips of n 17. Friable certain Icind 19. Jump 21. Suggests 22. Cripplell 25. Note of the settle 26. Winter peril 27. Season 115 28.itldfettlo 30. Exclamation 32. Surgical Instrument 34, Lower 22 23 '24 36. Alternative 87.6fusle dratnns 89, heavy ,swell 40. In laver of 41. Pronoun 42. Musicai symbol 43. Pert, to Mari 45. Pineapple fiber silk 47. Abounding 49. Egg-shaped 63. Some 64. Ono nt Columbus' ships 56. Paradise 67. Cow genus 68. Trial 69. Country TOWN 1. Luzon nativi warship Drake was out hunting him. The pursued turned pur- suer and, catching up with the Drake, the Ranger brought her under such withering fire that her wounded captain was forced to surrender. Back to Brest returned Paul with the captured ship he had promised his charmer. But the new American government re- fused to pay for the maintenance of his prisoners and Ills naval honours turned into an Inglori- ous squabble. Paul Jones was relieved of his command, It took months of pleading, intercession and nego- tiation to gain another ship. Without sufficient funds In France, Paul was forced to bor- row money, Aimee Thelusson offered him everything that was hers. Paul refused, and borrowed from the Duchess de Chartres instead. As soon as he had received the money she allowed him to see her scoffing contempt. He put to sea at last, deter- mined to lay yet anther prize at iter feet. In the North Sea he caught up with three British men -o' -war. The desperate bat- tle was to become one of the most famous sea -fights in his- tory. Before the action Paul gazed long at the portrait of the Duchess set in his watch. But it wase -Aimee who waited for him in Paris, weeping when couriers brought news of his death, The report was false, Paul Jones' vessel was set aflame un- der him and had to be abandon- ed. He lost all his books, clothes and papers. In Paris the Duchess offered hinr rooms over her stables -but Aimee Thelusson offered him her home and her heart. What demon was it in Jones, urging him to refuse the love of a good woman, constantly driv- ing hint to seek the vanity of a woman who was capricious? But at last his friendship with Aimee turned to love. When he was sent to Russia her letters followed him to the cold, dark northern regions. To Aimee he confided the care of a good sword given him by the , King of France. Yet whenever talk of marriage blossomed in the tenderness between them,. Paul Jones always deftly turned to other topics, He yearned to find marriage with a princess, someone perhaps superior in birth even to the Duchess de Chartres. He did not know Aimee's own amazing sec- ret, that she was, In fact, the daughter of a king. Her mother, daughter of a voor Provencal nobleman, had been King Louis XV's mistress at Ver- sailles until dismissed -with her child and a pension. Aimee did not tell, for she wanted to be loved . for herself alone and not for her royal parentage or high social standing. So the strange drama went on. In the capitals of Europe Paul Jones sought the hands of the highest -born beauties and yet returned again and again to the tranquillity of Aimee Thelus- son's little home. "The whole world may forsake you," she once wrote to him, "but I am eternally yours," Paul Jones never married her. Yet it was in her house that, tired out at last, he coughed away his life. They , found him kneeling be- side his; tied ,one morning. In his lifeless hand was the Duchess de Chartres' :watch. On • a Hollywood set, Actor - Singer Pat Boone, 25, took a swift kick at what seemed a papier-mache rock, but he should have taken it for granite. The rock was real, Boone broke a toe. The male prairie chicken has a wind sac on his throat with which he makes a booming call. 10. Filth 11, Utters 16. You and I 33. Marine zoophyte 35. I'ract;ce 38. Matures 18. Cut Into 40. Famous small cubes diarist 20. hugged 42, Unit nit mountain 43.I(Ind of hone crest 11. City of 22. Fr. musical ' divorce composer 46. Not any 23. Seaweed 48, Cravat 21. Chesss plcce: 50, Ohio college 28. One who town testifies 51. Base ot the under oath dem Ica) 29. Angry system 30. Expert 52. The yarn of a %yarn 56. fly 14 {:tip 18 aviators 9, Peace ;oddess 31. %Vernal' 11 2 ]• 4 5 6 7 8 12 27 ,19 I] 16 17 • 20 ��• 21 25 �'�26 28 10 II Answer elsewhere on this page ,FOOLISH FATHER! - Eleven -year-old Robert Dow Hamilton Jr. shows his lawyer father the fine points of a real western gallows he and some friends built in the back yard of his Columbus Ohio, home. Hamilton Sr. explains that the boy is always building things - tree house, soapbox racers, etc, - so he gave the O.K. on this project. THIPARM FROM Joklawe4,_ Sheep production in Canada, regarded as a minor livestock enterprise, has a potential greater than most other classes of livestock. Given adequate attention, support and organiza- tion, it would readily assume the stature of a major farm en- terpriS;e< • ;;' * * * ' : This; ie the opinion of a special committee appointed by. Agri- cultural Minister . Harkness in July, 1958, to study Canada's sheep industry, The committee's report, outlining current condi- tions and making recommenda- tions, has just been published. In visiting each of the ten provinces, the committee held 23 meetings and made 22 field inspections on f arms and ranches. Ten briefs and numer- ous letters were carefully con- sidered, « 4, « In addition, the committee traveled through the mid -west areas .of the United States; visiting packing plants and farms en route and studying Iamb feedlot operations in sev- eral states. • • * A total of 631,668 cows were bred by artificial insemination last year, reports J. D. Baird of the Livestock Division, Can- ada . Department of Agriculture. This represents a 20.5 per cent increase over 1957. And, with a cow population of 5,036,100, this means that about 12.5 per cent of the na- tional female breeding herd was bred artificially. 4. « • Mr. Baird says organized arti- ficial insemination businesses operate in every province ex- cept Newfoundland. Bull studs in six provinces supplied the bulk of the seinen used through- out the country. The balance was imported from the United States. There were 16 semen produc- TIIE ONLY WAY There was a sale at the big store and a surging mass ot ex- cited women elbowed their way through the packed aisles A lit- tle red-faced man managed to wtygglp. out of the crush and fotlnci" Himself in front of the hosiery counter. Gazing around him anxiously he mopped the perspiration from his brow. "What can I do for you, sir?'' inquired a pretty girl clerk. "Would you mind if I just talk- ed to you fol a few minutes?" he said, "I don't want to buy anything - 1 just want to ,talk to you." "But . don't understand, sir," replied the astonished girl. "I'm terribly busy, What do you want to talk to me about?" "Anything! Anyhting!" said the unhappy man, desperately. "You see, I've lost my wife somewhere in this crowd and I can't (Ind her. But if I talk to a pretty girl site will be sure to turn tip!" Ing and 147 semen purchasing organizations. •, • • Number of first services per- formed with frozen semen was 176,856, an increase of 47,586 - or 36.8 per cent - over the previous year. The number of "artificial In - ,semination" calves registered as purebreds in 1958 was 47,072, a boost of 6,161 over 1957. * * • Number of herds serviced was 71,509. And, reports Mr. Baird, from a survey made in 1956, it is estimated that seven per cent of the herds serviced were tested on Record of Per- formance or Dairy Herd Im- provement programs. • • « There were 321 dairy, 21 dual purpose and 104 beef bulls in service during 1958. The average number of services per bull in each of these classes was 1,474 for dairy,' 750 for dual purpose and 1,427 for beef. Forty private individuals ob- tained 153 import permits for semen, and '14 inseminating businesses obtained 342 permits. All permits were for seinen from the U.S.A. Semen was exported in five shipments totaling 465 vials to Germany, Australia, New Zea- land and the British West Indies. Artificial insemination t1f swine, says Mr. Baird, did not progress beyond the research stage in 1958. The horned toad is not a toad but a lizard. It does not lay eggs but gives birth to living yong, Currents In The Atlantic Ocean One night imagine there were innumerable possible mixtures of the various 'sorts of water' in the vast basin of the ocean, But this is not so, The investigations show that in the Atlantic there are relatively few great layers, clearly distinguishable from each other, First of all, beginning from the bottom, there is the cold deep water, which comes from the Antarctic. The enormous ice masses of the South Polar Con- tinent reduce the temperature of the surrounding sea almost to freezing point. The cold, salty, heavy water sinks to the bottom, to a depth of many thousand feet, and creeps slowly to the Equator and beyond it. In the Arctic, too, cold water sinks to the bottom, mixed with and salted by the last tentacles of the Gull Stream. But much colder masses off Greenland and Labrador press forward along the bottom of the ocean in enor- mous quantities, at the rate of some 2,600,000 cubic yards a sec- ond. When still a long way from the Equator the deep water of the North Atlantic meets the colder water coming from the South Pole and con- tinuing on its way along the sea's bottom. The deep current coming from the north is conse- qpently compelled to rise above the current from the south. It then meets another stream coming from the Antarctic, which consists of water formed of melted ice and therefore weak in salt. This flows above the stream from the north, so that we already have three streams one above the other. The middle layer of the South Atlantic is matched by a simi- lar layer in the North Atlantic, which also consists of melted ice, weak in salt, from the Po- lar regions and finds itself drawn from the calmest to the liveliest part of the world's waters. That makes four huge streams of water, one above the other. . The North Atlantic •has a fifth intermediate layer, coming from theMediterranean. There the surfaee: , water is subjected to great' evaporation from the sun and' has a high salinity. Sinking to the bottom through its greater weight, it rinds its way to the exit through the Straits of Gi- braltar, where it spills over the threshold and rolls away down the slope into the ocean. There it sinks to depths of as much as 3,000 feet, takes up its position above the colder, deeper bottom - water, and flows on as far as the Sargasso Sea, In its place less salty Atlantic water flows over the Gibraltar still into the Mediterranean in the form of a strong current which some investigators consider to be a branch of the Gulf Stream. - From "River in the Sea," by Hans Leip. TOUGH BATHING The way of the pioneer can indeed be hard! For introducing a bathtub to his home in Cin- cinnati, in 1842, Adam Thomp- son, met with scathing comments from all and sundry. The State of Virginia went one better and imposed a hefty tax, plus in- creased water rates, on anyone who installed a bath. Boston made bathing illegal, except un- der doctor's orders; while Phila- delphia unbent officially to al- low bathing between March 16th and October 31st - baths taken on "off" dates were unlawfull IINMY 5(11001 LESSON Rev. It. Barclay Warren, 13 A., B.0. Peter and John, Undaunted Witnesses - Act 4:1-14. Yes, this is the Peter who de- nied his Lord when a little girl identified him as one of the fol- lowers of Jesus. But what a dif- ference! Here is a leader, un- daunted by prison itself, It is a thrilling episode and the very rhythm of the writing of it em- phasizes the invincible courage of these Spirit -filled men. The priests and Saducees were thoroughly fatigued with the continuance of the preaching by Peter and John. Their minds suffered more labour, through vexation at the success of the apostles, than the apostles did in their fatiguing exercise of preaching during the whole day. They were disturbed because of the preaching through Jesus of the resurrection of the dead, The Saducees did not believe in a resurrection. Peter, facing them, did not hesitate to charge them with the slaying of Jesus. Of Him he said, "Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby' we must be saved." The leaders could not deny the reality of the miracle. There stood the 40 year-old man who before this healing had never walked. But they feared this continued preaching in the name of Jesus. They commanded Peter and John to cease teaching in the name of Jesus. The apostles answered in the words of Acts 4:19-20, which form the memory selection for this lesson: "Whe- ther it be right in the sight of God to hearken into you more than unto God, judge ye. For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard." Here is the secret. These men couldn't keep the good news to themselves. They had an inner compulsion to tell it. We don't see enough of this today, How quiet we are! What's the matter? Jesus said, (John 7:38-39 - Phil- lips' paraphrase), "The man who believes in me, as the Scripture said, will have rivers of living water flowing from his inmost heart." Then .John adds, "Here he was speaking about the Spirit which those who believe in Him would receive." Before Pente- cost these very men forsook Jes- us and fled, Tom Allan, who was field organizer of the "Tell Scot- land" movement says it is "idle" to speak of lay visitation to men and women who have no first- hand knowledge of the Christian experience. We must have before we can share. In Sydney, Australia, the Rev. Jack Leonard, who is also ven- triloquist, showed up for Sun- day school with a wooden dum niy on his lap, obliged his youth- ful parishioners to listen while it delivered a 20 -minute sermon. Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking ISSUE 42 - 1959 ALL WASHED UP - All wet and enjoying every minute of it, Minyak the circus elephant gets a thorough dousing with a spray washer, Giving the modern bath is circus performer Antonietta Bisbini of Milan, Italy. 'A4t 8 COLD DAY SPECIAL Quick Quaker Oats, lge. 5 lb. bag 51c Lipton's Chicken Noodle Soup Mix, 2 pkgs , , , 23c Catclli's Spaghetti, 2 - 16 oz. pigs 31c Success heavy Duty Paste Floor Wax,1 lb. tin 59c Aylmer Tomato or Vegetable Soup, 2 - 10 oz. tins 25c Dairy Case is full of Choice Selection --- Drop in and see for yourself MONDAY, OCTOBER 19th is LIONS CLUB PAPER PICK-UP ,,H 4+N ••♦ 4 4+ *-. • •••-+$+Ns- -.-•-• • •*.-ft4-4-•-N.44- -4-44++44+' EXCELLENT FOOD AND MEALS At All Hours. WE SPECIALIZE IN FISII & CIIIPS t 4 HURON GRILL BLYTH - ONTARIO 6 FRANK GONG, Proprietor. j..+.4.-.-.•..4-.+.'. N-. • .. • •44 -4 -*4+.++++-•-.-44+++444+• • •+. •i k.'4464 -164•46-f N o-. a. -..-.•r+.-. • *-• ••-• -•Ge4-+4-4..+•,-+4-4444•04+4+4 411 4. M i 4 4 4 4 4 •t : t Stewart's Red & White Food Market SHOP RET) and WHITE and SAVE Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver "The 'Best For Less" -- "Values Unsurpassed" WESTON'S FEATURE SAVE 4.c PA Y ONLY 29c Cinnamon Buns GRANT POTATO SALE at Red and White 50 lb. bag 1.35 10 Ib. bag 35c FRESH FRUITS - VEGETABLES - GROCERIES MEATS - FROZEN FOODS 1 IIE BLitt! STANDARD, ,re - Weditedsay,Oct, 14, 1050 . - _- -- tivttoly c,'r,n, COMMITTEE I• VITAMINS ENTREES VIEWS On Friday evening the community . Help keep the whole family in the best of health by The following article h: s I:c•cn pub- honored Mr, and Mrs, G'.ritld McDo- lislted by the Standard by re ILst.well, newly-weds. Mr, Harvey Mc- building resistance to colds and other ills. Many . As result of a pdilioa for r XII of Dowell and Air. Harvey Wighlma,, well recommended vitamin supplements are listed here WEsrtp><ELD :444 4+...+.+4 1-•. 4-.:t.......4...x.•..04.....,,•.+♦..-.,4. the Canada Temperance' Act in Ilu showed movies and slidc'S which we illi son, the federal authoaacs have an- enjoyed, Then Judith McDowell gave rotated a vete on NovenT or 30, "insofar as the lint o:h Cana a Tem -1 recitation, after which Rev, Sweeney • Ostoco Drops $1.45, $2.40, and $4.25 . , payed two lovely selections on his vin. hu'unce Act Comnn.11ce is eonterne t," lin. 119x, John Buchanan Jr. came for - , or Tri -Vi -Sol $1.65. and- $2.95 said Chairman Frank R, l'o,lsoa, of ward and asked Gerald and Carol to 1VinChanl, "this iafornhatlmi canto come to the front, Ile then read the Vi-Daylin Drops and $4.25 from the new..par ers, It Butts sup' I following address: Illiitlltol porters of the Act without conlflcte.i Dzar,Carol and Gerald:• organization and little lime to I't':pare' 1 We your friends and neighbours of : Wa)npoles Extr; for the vote: ` Westfield have gathered here tonight Maltlevol Liquid $1,25 and $3.50 $2.89 i $2.50 $2.29 and $4.29 $1.95 and $4.95 tct Cod Liver , , , , $1.59 and "There has hecn confusion a; to the to extend our sincere congratulations • issue itself, and some mishlfo. nnaliou'on your recent marriage. Carol we' Halibut Liver Oil Capsules, • $1.15, welcome you to the community, Cc -.i" Vi Cal Fer Capsules aid we are glad to know you and Car-' , of are going to remain with tis. Ger- ' One A' Day Multiple ald, you have always been active in 4 Cod Liver Oil • the church wort(, the choir, Young' ", Peril 1school,Y 1 1 Scotts Emulsion so it is desirable to rest, a briefly certain facts, 'rhe Canada Tett Pa- nne Act is not proh'biLon; It ! •:`.nl is the bringing of liquor 1' to the count) by cou:mon carrier' or by an rind:vi - ual for f':rcoual er fan I'y u.,e, It does forbi:I sale or ex;:osure fee sale of any intoxicating Lquor with n the cont,' y, It discourages drinking by snaking access to liquor le'Fs co.n'en. ient, This is important in retro ion to formation of the habil, by your; pa): le, "Advocates of C.T.A. repeal ha e reiterated that it is "oatnlo(1 (1" be cause passel many years ago. Thi implication of this statement is tha' the Liquor Control Act of Ontario, providing for eight different tie hods of sale, is nut outmoded. It shou,d be pointed out, therefore, that w.w:pafers all over the Province carry 1nw:. headings on hens about teeing:: drink ill,;, put'chase by minx s, rai. 5 00 youth chinking paritcs and so on a 1 under the Liquor Control Act; '1'Ihc Chatham News said editorially not long ago, that Kent county "has more bootleggers in a week than Huron in a month," and that Huron r•Irul1 not vote out the Canada 'f'cmperanc: Act "under the delusion that the L C.A. will automatically rid-- the sour ty of la lies and Sunday ay You have ' also been active in some of the lighter veins, such as, brooniball, baseball and charivari gangs. I personally was' glad to hear of your marriage in many , ways, especially next spring when sheepshearing time conies we can spend more time shearing sheep and not so much time at Jack Armstrong's. In closing, we just want to wish you 0 Ion happy, healthy and prosperous -married life. Please accept these gifts on our behalf. Signed by your friends and neighbours of Westfield, Mesers Lloyd and Garth Wallen, Harvey and Lloyd McDowell, with John McDowell accompanying thein os the piano, sang this song after they presented Carol and Gerald with the gifts: 'Phis Is married life now, Mr, McDowell The clays are past when you could howl You've had breakfast in bed before with delight 13ut they won't jingle much any more. You are now a married woman, Mrs. McDowell bootlegging excessive drinking and It won't do any good for you to scow! drinking by minors," You'ves had breakfast in bed before "Certain provisions cf the Liquor But you won't have tt there any more, Control Act complement the C,T,A:, You area married man uou', Ills, Mc - and would greatly assist cnforcenl.nt Dowell if applicable, 'These formerly were + With the married) man you've threw in applicable in C.T.A. Yeas, but in the I the towel. tune of the Drew Government ihw You've had a father to light the fire valuable aid was withdrawn, L:fort But he won't light your fire any nwrc, has been made and will be continued You are a married lvontan now, Carol to have Premier Frost consent to re- You won your wan with cute apparel mo' al of this disability. But even Os And, you've had a mother to sweet. things stand, your committee fells your floor strongly that Iluron is best served by But she won't sweep your floor any the Temperance Act, more, "Thi public will be told during the You are now a happy couple, Gerais, campaign that numerous liquor owlets and f'o'ol would not necessarily be estabished Anil we howYou'll get aloe; very in this county upon repeal of the .Act, well The fact is that liquor stores and As your gets bigger, we'll all brewers' warehouses Could he issued kec;t scot'efamily at once •- and does anyone think they And your life won't be .quiet. any snore, would not? The liquor trade is eager Gerald thanked everyone for their to gobble up this territory, now re- kindness and gest wishes. The evr n- stricted by the C.T.A. Peel, a county in,' closed with hutch, somewhat similar to Huron and with Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. ' no large cities, was without licenses Arnold Cook over the week end wort. 1 unedr the Canada Temperance Act. di's. Grace Ross, and her daughter -in - The voters repealed it, and now, un- law, Mrs, John Ross and Lyn, of Wool - der the Liquor Control Act, Peel has stock, outlets in Brampton, Bolton, Streets- Masers Norman and Gerald Mc- i ville, Albion township, Toronto Gore Dowell were Toronto visitors a week and Toronto t' wnsh'p, The 'asl•alnn.d ago last Monday. municipality has nine! John and Ralph Campbell spent the i, "Huron has a good record in pro- week end at Grand Bend where they uounccn-ients upon rzstrictire legista- attended a Youth Convention. 1 tion. It pave 21)03 majo:ity for the M`.sses Gwen M'eDoweil, Barbara i • Canada Temperance Act hi 1914, al- Smith, Donna Walden, Messcrs Gordon 1 ", most 12,010 for the Ontario 'Temper- ° R. Smith and Franklin Campbell spent once Act to prohibitory law) and the week end at their homes. . when the beer and wine amendments Mr. and Mrs. John Gear and family, Of 1934 were put tlu•oueh the Le;isla- of Waterloo, were visiting in the corn. lure, both Duren numbers voted munity over the 'Thanksgiving week against them. end. • I "If all the facts earl be adequately Miss Lorna Buchanan, of London,' presented to the public in Huron before and girlfriend, Miss Barbara Buchanan polling day, the Canada Temperance. Act should receive decisive endorse. 1110111 and a majority of votes be cast AGAINST rev'oc::lion. 1 44•-•-•-•-• 44-•-•-44 • •-•444 •-•-•-• •-•-•-•-•-•44- • •-•-•44+.+.-0-.4-•-.-+644-+-+r 1. IIURON COUN'fl' CREAM PRODUCERS ANNUAL MEET:NG FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23rd at 8:30 p nt Its The Council Chamh:r3, C i t n ONTARIO CREAM PRODUCERS')) MARKETING BOARD REPRESENTING 50,000 CREAM PRODUCERS •' 4N.IN.INI. 131'.LGRA\'E Miss Stella Nethery has returned from the West where she attended celebrations in Saskatoon of the Un!- veristy of Saskatchewan and visited with friends, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Scott and fam- ily, of Midland, spent the week -end will) relatives here. Maitland Johnston and family, of Aylmer, spent. tie week -end here. Mr. and Mrs, Russel Walker, of GOdel'ich, with relati'; s here. Itoy McGee, of Kilclienxt', with his brother, Gordon McGce, Mr. and Mt's, Leslie Shaw and daughter, of London, with her parents, Mr . and Mrs, J,G.Ancle son, Knox United Church was nicely de- corated with autumn flowers on Sun- day when anniversary services were Al held. Rev. Will Taylor, of Dorchester, tvas the special .speaker and delivered two splendid addresses, The choir sang special anthems which- were notch en- (joyed. At the evening service a nna'e choir led the service of song and sang I.N..IINm"'"1 two anth('n1S. Ah'. and Mrs. Leslie \'ineenl, nr Lon- don, with 111r. and Mrs, Albert Vincent. Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Taylor and fam- ily, 01 Sarnia, trial 1'Cf:;::\'CJ, Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Procter, of Goderich, with Mr. and Mrs, J., C, Procter. The members of Trinity Clutch hod a Rummage Sale and sale of Bakints in the Arena on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs, John Purth'e and fam- i y, of Toronto, spent the week end with relatives here. Air. and Mrs, Goldie Wheeler and ' family, of London, with relatives here. 11ir. and l':i.;. P,.,.. nig 41,,,,',, testi r:nn- ily, 'Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. J. 11, Irwin, and other relatives. Mrs. Johnston and daughter, of Lon. SPECIAL OFF"ERS - OCT. 9 - OCT. 10 - ONLY 1 Model, Blyth United Church Front, Regular $24,95, For .. $15.95 7 Pair (only) No. 1 Men's work socks, Reg. 98c - S9c 7 Pair (only) No. 2, Men's work socks heg. 89 - 79c 4 Fire Extinguisher Tubes, Reg. $300 $1.25 7 lbs. only Rug Wool, lteg 1.29 per lb. lb. S0c PELTON'S VARIETY STORE BLYTH, ONT. JI N ON..MI.NINIIII.II P P. I.IIINNM#4.MI...NI• es#4, INNI+. Eenew your Subscription to The Standard Now of Godcrich, spent the holiday week end with the tatters father, Mr. Jack Buchanan, don, with Mr, and Mrs. J. C. Proctet . Airs. C. W. Manna attended the Wo- men's Institute Area Convention in Lou don, on 'Tuesday. Untended for last week) The Autumn 'Thank -Offering meeting Of the W.M.S. of Knox United Church was held in the auditorium of the Church on Wednesday night. Mrs, W. Scott, the president, welccmed the guests who came front societies iii Wingham, Calvin prick, Westfield and the Bclgravc Evening Society. The worship service was i11 charge of Mrs. 11. Irwin, Mrs. R. It. Coultcs, Mrs. C. A. Krug and Mrs, M. Armstrong. Mrs. Alex Robertson and Mrs. Gordon Me - Burney, from the Calvin 13rick S::cicly, sang a duel., accompanied by Mrs, N, Coultcs. Mrs, J. C. Britton, of Sea. forth, was the guest sneaker, and the theme of her address was "Giving Thanks for the Innaortant 'Things in Lifc." Mrs. Clarence Hanna gave a report on her stay at the Alma College school for leaders held recently. A lunch was saved in the hasennent. During this time a duet was sung by Martie Koopman and Norma Snaith, accompanied by Mrs, Gotdo,t Smith of the 'Westfield group. The Church and basement were nicely • decorated tcf!lh baskets of autumn flowers, Rev. C. Krug had charge of tae world wide communion service in Cal- vin Brick mid Knox United Churches on Sunday. A baptism service was also held when Janice Elizabeth, daughter Of Mi', and Mt's, Wm. Coultes, and Wayne Thomas, son of Mr, and Airs. Norman Conk were baptized. BeIvravc Eloy Scout Troop organized i nLLe N. ring al 1958 is working 00 se- cond class scout tests each Tuesday night, '1'Ihe group enjoyed camping not several tinges in the past summer and ,Ii L 1mu11 I;a.t LI a :1;1d Durham, Lorne Campbell and ,John Nixon are leaders. Patrol leaders are $1.49,'$2.75 and $4,49 90c and $1.50 - $1.00 and $2.00 P. D. PHILP, Phm. UIIUGI3, SUNDRIES, WrtLL1'AP'CR PIIONE ?.0, BLYTH ++4464-* • + r. i f r++ 4 .-•-a.... + • • • .4 4 1•. N 404-• •-••••-• • 4.46444-•-• 1 4444,44•4~411.,46.440,4444414144•444404.4? /444.444448444,4•404444.44441~41#40 • STOP & SHOP at Snell's Food Market This Week -End. Clark's Tomato Soup, 10 oz. 4 for 35c Ilolly Fancy Peas, 20 oz. 2 for 35c Robin Hood Cake Mix, Choc. or white, .. 1 pkg. 47c 5 ib. bag 53c 1 lb. bag 33c. 75 Ib. bag 1.75 2 for 45c Ogilvie Oatmeal Angelus Marshmallows Can. No. 1 Potatoes Flashlight Batteries Snell's Food Market AND L(CK14,11 SERVICE. WATT FEEDS Telephone 39 -- WE DELI'V ER '44444 INII.NNNI 14~04444440MI NN.N•4•4444,444~44~4~44194.. N•+.+4+4÷M+I•04++*+++++4- 4 s--++4-. 44444444444-444444444f ftT • 1 f. +44-4•44-4-•-•444-•-•4444 • •-•-•-• 4.++4-•4++4•-++4-+N-+-.++++4-+1.4-ti TELEVISION SALES & SERVICE RADIO REPAIRS BENJAMIN MOORE PAINTS AND VARNISHES TOYS and HARDWARE IIOOVER APPLIANCES VODDEN'S HARDWARE, (4 ELECTRIC PHONE 7182 --- BLYTH, ONT. 1 BLYTH PLUMBING & HEATING Telephone 47 Blyth, Ontario A beautiful bathroom - more comfortable, more convenient - can be yours at budget cost. in o choice of gorgeous colours or In spotless white. •4-N.444 •-••4444-44-+4.4 4.++.+,-4-.+-+-.-+..+••-.-4.4+-•4+.44.4+.4' Clinton Memorjal Shop T. PRY I)E and SON CLiN'I'ON - EYE'1'Elt - SEAFOIETII LOCAL 1tE1'ItESEN'I'A'1'1VE -- 1'llUtlle►ti STEEP, CLINTON. PHONES: CLINTON: Business -flu 2-0090 11., tIdenr,•-ltd 2-;0(t;9 oe ,.,4..,...•., 44..44,.4••4.4.4+4•..+4444....,.1.44 44.444.4-♦ Lonnie Nn holson, Douglas Jnhnsl,ul, Currh 1) vitt l!e•'s r ft, Al 'n B»s111711, an 111 'Ion a (1 J 0.11 Marks, Mrs, 1I. Inti 1 a d 111 s, Purdo 1 11'• 1c:tdc I t; c 1'al i its sc`ool held ia. Brut cels as lea a:'s cf the Bel.rave 1 Won en's ltts!i'u'e for t' e 4-11 rout'. r'i^kers Club "Clu:hes Closets Up TJ Dale," EXETER: Bush:eas 41 1 John do Jong and Wayne Pieter, Other utenhbers are, Max and 1';tqh 1'letch, Murray and Wayne Cou'.1es, Gary and )filly Itobinsun, Barry and Ralph Le;;an, C:::•'^'1 Pohinson, llugh 11hl3urney, Reg Pur(lon, George 1111;1 Douglas Bicmmn, Barry Scott, B:uce