The Blyth Standard, 1961-04-26, Page 1VOLUME 74 - NO. 11
Church School Perfect
Attendance Records
Announced
Forty-one members of the Sunda
Church School of the Blyth Unite
Church have qualified for perfect a
tendance records for a period of si
months, Those receiving their pin fo
reaching this record for the first tim
aro Carol Mason, Linda Hamm, Gar
Hessolwood, Wendy Hessclwood, Diann
Popp, Kevin Tasker, Douglas Popp
Billy MacDougall, Sharon Mason, Pats
Bndley, Wayne McDougall, Caroly
Ilaggitt, Kenny Radford, Archie Mason
Evelyn Haggitt, Don Walsh, Jane Po
lard, Ray Madill, Murray Walsh, Gore
on Haggitt, Margaret McCullough, Jim
Pollard, Terry Madill, Barbera Was
son, Ivan Cook, Ken McGowan, Gordo
Shobbrook,
E
Authorized as second class mail
Post Office Department, Ottawa; BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, APRIL
School Board Meeting
The regular meeting of the Blyth
Public School Board was held on Mon-
day evening, March 24, at 8,30 o'clock,
y All trustees were present.
a The minutes of the last regular and
t• special meetings were adopted as read
x on motion of Trustee Madill, seconded
r by Trustee Ycung, Carried,
e A letter from J. fi Kinkead, Inspee•
y toor•, re teachers contracts was read
e and discussed,
A motion was made by Trustee Ma-
y dill, seconded by Trustee Young, that
n R. Higgins, Mrs, M. Holland and Mrs,
, K. Marshall, sign premanenl contracts
1• Carried,
• The following accounts were present-
ed and ordered paid on motion b
• Trustee Manning, seconded by Trustee
n l.ltrect, Carried.
Blyth Hydro, $25,74. M , Cu nings
In addition, the following have main
tallied record attendance for at least
one year and have now achieved an
other half year of perfect .attendance
Mrs. C, Shobbrook, Dale Tasker, Kenny
McVittic, Reggie Badley, Jim Webster
Ann Howson, Keith Webster, Nancy
Johnston, Sharon Jackson, Susan Wight
man, Larry Radley, Doug Howson, Bil
Howson, Ruth Warwick,
An additional 19 have achieved per-
fect attendance for the past 3 months.
Linda Warwick, Bruce Brown, Mark
Vincent, Ann Stewart, Clap Wasson,
Mrs, C. Johnston, Margaret llowson,
Bruce Howson, Doug McVlttie, Cheryl
Ann Wall, Sharon Riley, Joyce Riley,
Delbert Holland, Brian McNeil, Warren
Cook, Wilfred Button, Emma Gregory,
Grant Elliott, Cheryl Madill,
• 7.50; Elliott Insurance Agency, 9 73;
W. Thuell, 40.44; Educator Supplies,
. 4,31,
Following a discussion on the Budget
for 1961, a motion was made by 'Trus-
, tee Street, seconded by 'Trustee Stew-
art, that the mill rate be sot at 19
. mills, the sante rate as for 1960, Car -
1 rlcd.
The Principal reported the 'attend-
ance for the month of March was 96 01
and the present enrollment 152•
A discussion on Bus trip for grades
7 and 8 followed, and it was agreed to
have Principal get more information
re cost and report to next regular
meeting,
Adjournment followed.
FARM ORGANIZATIONS UNITE IN
AN EFFORT TO REMOVE SALES TAX
Officials of the Ontario Federation
of Agriculture and the Ontario Farm-
er's Union are taking action to get the
11 percent sales tax removed from
wire fencing by the federal government,
Tho decision to make this move came
at a special mee`ing between execu-
tives of the two farm organizations
held in Toronto on April 20, It was
the second top level meeting held in
the past six months between the OFU
and the OFA in an effort, to seek an•
swers to some of the farm problems.
The OFA and the OFU will ask their
national counterparts, the Canadian
Federation of Agriculture and .the Nat.
ioqal Farmer's Union, to make a joint
appael to the federal government to
have the soles tax on farm fencing re-
moved, This project is viewed as im-
pertant to both organizations, as it will
be the first time joint action will have
been taken.
The Ontario meeting also discussed
• a number of needs of farmers among
them such matters as price stability
quality production, production planning
and development of export markets.
The relationship of the prices for goods
and services which farmers use and the
prices they receive for their products i
came in dor some preliminary exam -1
'nation, as did the cost of education to
farm taxpayers.
The executives of the two organiza-
tions were pleased with the meeting but
declined to make further comment, ex-
cept that another meeting would likely
be held some time in the future.
',HONG THE CHURCHES
Sunday, April 30, 1961
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CIIURCII
Rev, D. J. Lane, B,A., Minister.
1:00 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday
School.
ANGLICAN .CHURCII OF CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector.
‘Sunday after Easter
Trinity Church, Blyth,
10,30 atm•—Metins,
St. Mark's, Auburn.
11,30 a.m.—Sunday School.
12,00 o'clock—Matins.
Trlr,ity Church, Belgrave,
2,00 p.m.—Sunday School.
2.30 p.m. Evensong.
MN I
THE UNITED CIIURCII
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario.
Rev. U. Evan McLagan • Minister
Miss Margaret Jackson • Director
of Music.
Senior Citizens' and Shut -Ins Sunday
9.55 a.m.—Sunday Church School.
11.00 atm.•—Morning Worship
"Do not give dogs what Is holy!"
8.00 p.m.•—"I'dl Sing, not Cry."
CHURCH OP GOD
McConnell Street, Blyth,
John Dornier, Pastor
Phone 185
10.30 a.m.—Sunday School,
11.30 a.m.—Morning Worship,
7,30 p,m Evening Service.
8.00 pan,—Wed,, Prayer Service,
$,O0 p.m. Friday, Youth Fellowship.
Mr. and Mrs. J. Riehl
Married 53 Years
Mr, and Mrs, Joseph Richt, Morri
, Street, Blyth, quietly marked their li31'
' wedding anniversary Saturday, Apri
22nd, but on Wednesday evening, Apri
20th, they entertained at a family din
her, which included their only son
Donald and Mrs. Richt, Goderich, ani
their granddaughter, Mrs. Ralph Gra
ham, and Corporal Graham, and their
grandson, Christopher Graham, Quebec
Cpl, Graham spent four years in
France with the R.C.A.F. where their
son was born, returning one year ago
with his wi;e and baby, and has since
been stationed at SL Adoli:he de How-
ard, Quebec, but has this week termin-
ated a course at Clinton Radar School,
and left Friday with his family to 're-
turn to St. Adolphe de Howard.
Other guests at the dinner were, Mrs.
Riehl's sister, Mrs Lillian Bull, ani
Mrs. L, M. Scrimgeour, both of .Blyth,
Mr. and Mrs, Richt are both natives
of the West bfonkton area, but were
marired at Sandusky, Michigan, return-
ing shortly afterwards to their native
Ehna township where they took up
farming and Mr. Riehl was engaged at
his trade as a stone-mascn,
Mrs, Richt who was formerly Fannie
Geiger is in her 74th year, and proudly
displayed two lovely quilts she head
made during the winter, also three
rooked mats
Mr, Riehl is in his 83rd year and
)oth are in very good health.
Five years ago they moved to tIielr
present home in Blyth, where they
will soon be busy tending their beau—
iful flower and vegetable garden.
Besides their son, they have three
r•andchildren and one great grandson,
NDARD
.26,19(11 Subscription Rates $2,50 in Advance; $3,50 hi the U.S.A.
Move Clock AHEAD This PERSONAL INTEREST 'Still Time To Help Crippled
Weekend Mr. J. J. Walden is a patient in Sea• Children
us when we 'forth Jlositpal with pneumonia.
s The time Is again upon
d Afr. and Mrs. R, D. I hila visded on Perhaps if you have not yet given
move our time pieces ahead one hour at Sunday with their son and daughter -in- your donation to the Raster Seal Cun-
t 12 01 a.m. this Sunday, April 30th,law, Air, and Airs. Ronald Philp and paign in aid of crippled children, the
I It is believed that most communities Stephen, of London. ( thought has occurred that time has
• in Western Ontario have chosen this hint Douglas Whitmore spent the now elapsed and the Blyth Lions Club
, Sate for the time change in an efforr week -end end with Air, and Mrs. Clifford are no longer taking donations. The
to alleviate the confusion that has been 1'� Ish, Layton, Warren and Kathy, of treasurer of the campaign, Mr. R. W.
• apparent other
years, ;Sarnia Madill, informs us that this is not so,
Daylight Saving Time will he in ef• Mr. Bert Lyddiatt won $25 Kinsmen I and any donations forthcoming from
feet until Sunday, October 29 at 12.01 Club Stanley Cup hockey pool at Code.'
local residents will be graciously ap•
a.m., when S'.andard 7•irne will again rich. I predated,
be resumed.
i ,ngagements Announced
Mr. and Mrs, J. W. Andrews, Au-
burn, wish to announce the engagement Miss Anne Jeanette Watson visited Laster Seal Committee are very anx•
of their daughter, Margaret Ruth, to rous.to make the 1961
William Benson (Sam). Brown, son el with. her sister, Mrs. W. J. Lyons, R.
campaign as slit
N, in Toronto durin the week bins. cessful as the previous year, and at,
LOND II SBORO
The Explorers met in the church g
Sunday schoolroom on Thursday. Chief
Explorer, Betty Lou Carter called the W MEETING
'explorers to an expedition. The Ex.
W. • -
I plorer Purpose was repeated and "This The regular meeting of the Blyth Utt-
i is my Father's World" was sung. Roll
ited Church W. A, was held on Tues
-
I was answered by 18 members, day afternoon! April 25, at 2.30 ues-
followed by the lrcasurccr's report, and opened with the theme hymn anti
• collection and prayer. Mrs Jack prayer.
Lee led the study period, Lorna Mil-, The secretary read the minutes of
ler and Donna Yoturgblttt were in'the last meeting and the roll call taken.
charge of the worship service and a The chairs which were ordered last
short time was spent on crafts. Then. fall have been delivered, The members
"Children who walk in Jesus way" was of the W.A. are to go to Winthrop on
sung, followed by the Explorer Prayer. lay 3rd to the semiannual meeting
Chief Explorer Betty Lou declared the of the Women's Association, Mrs. Bain.
expedition ended,
The W.I. will hold their May ince
ing on the regular day, May 4th,
2 p.m. The losing side of the atten
ante contest, recently finished, ente
tamed the winners ,at a scoial eve
ing last Monday. Court Whist w
played, with winners as follows; Mr
Viola Lawson, high lady; Mrs. Ru
Vincent, low lady; Mrs. Jack Mead
lucky chair. Corsages were present°
to all the ladies and a dainty lunch wa
served at the close,
Miss Margaret Tamblyn, of Loam
ington, spent the weekend with he
father and Jack.
Miss Maxine thinking, of Londo
spent the week -end with her parents.
Charlie Crawford Left on Monday fo
Manitoba where he will work with hi
uncle for the summer.
Mrs. Nelson Lear went to Toronto or
Sunday to spend a few days with he
daughter and faintly.
Mrs. Wilmer Howatt spent Frida
with here mother in Cromarty
Miss Marguerite Lyon, of Kitchener
and Miss Dorothy Little, of Toronto
spent the weekend at their homes here
Mr. and Mrs, Reber Schutt, of Kirk
ton, visited with the Gordon Howatt
on Sunday,
Mr, and Mrs, J. S. Hann and family
of Waterloo, spent Sunday after•itg
with Mr, Wm. Govier and Mrs Lil
Webster.
t• and and Mrs, Higgins gave a reading on
d Citizenship. Mrs. Lawrie gave the re-
port of the manse committee, Roses t
t•' are to be purchased again for the shut -
n' ins. Plans were discussed about having
as a supper and bazaar in the fall.
The meeting was then turned over to b
th Group 4 who had charge, of the: de- e
e' votions. The hymn "Rise Up 0 Men 11
a of God" was sung. Mrs, A. Pierce had b
s the scripture reading, Lesson thoughts s
and prayer were taken by Mrs. C. 1-11g• z
gins. Bonnie and Connie Laidlaw fav b
•
r ored with a duet "Daffodils" accom-
n ' panied by Mrs. Walter Buttell. Mrs.:
,
on, convenor, reported on Stewardship
Mrs, Fred Cook attended the wed - Down $200 From Last Year
(ling of Austin Cook and Ruth Scott at The total received to date in this
Belgrave on Saturday, April 15th, and year's drive amounts to $400.50 as cow
spent the week -end with her sister Bared to $59490 las! year. The mem
-
spent
George Cook, , bers of the Blyth Lions Club and the
Mr. and Mrs. Benson Btake
, Port Al -Lyons returned with her and spent the
bort The marriage will take place in• weekend with Anne Jeanette and Paul,
May. ^' o wi h her father, Mr, W. N. Watson,
al (tic Wingham General hospital.
VOLUNTARY PLAN IS HOPED TO friends of Mrs. Lyons will be glad to
IMPROVE BEEF CONSUMPTION know she is recovering after being a
Beef producers in Ontario will be r''tient in the Orthapedic and Arthritic
asked some lime in the coming year Hosl:t(al al Toronto.
to take part in a voluntary plan to InaM'ss Josephine Wcodcock, Mrs. W.
prove beef consum;:tlon and the heel (Good, bins, Luella McCowan, Alts.
industry generally, as u result of a Charles Johnston, Mrs, Ben Wals'1 at•
resold;lon passed at the annual meet• landed the executive meeting of the
ing of the Ontario Beef Cattle Produc I West Huron Women's Institutes at
ors of the. tion hi 'Taenia cn April 14. Dungannon /set week to arrange for
The proposal is basad on a deduction their annual meeting to be held in
of 10 cents on every head of cattle, W Ingham on May 17th.
including elves, sold for slaugcter,., Mi' Harry Lear is to apreor o
This to include beef cattle sold at mem Focus on Talent" oa C Messrs
,1:nV o
muniiy sales for feeder and slockci Thursday. April 2711x. Messrs ,1:m an
purposes, even though they may be hen Scott also were contestants re
subject again to a deduction when they Gently,
are ultimately sold to packingplants Mi', and Mrs. Robert 11rich, % s
01' 011 public stockyards, I Larry and Marlene, of Goderich, vis
The proceeds, which might reach a ilei last WO.: C11 with Airs, .lame
maximum of $70,000 per year, are to McDougall and Mr, and Mrs. Mervi
be used by the bevy; cattle producers Govier.
organization for adm4ristrat'.on and for
a greatly improved program of promo-
tion and research. Delegates listened Wayne Jackson Best All -
to an outline of scmc major objectives Round Student At W 0 A S
of the plan waich included market re• -
sttarch, production reasearch such as Mr, Wayne Jackson, son of Dr, I{
pasture studies, beef bull testing, feta
Jackson, Blyth, who has been attend
addfever, ives and prevention of shipping, ing Western Ontario Agricultural School
The program Is also to provide for at Ridgetcwn, graduated last week,
neegetiations re freight raps on live placing seventh in his class, and was
awarded the W. G Thompson prize
s
n
•
•
cattle verses dressed beef, .standards. Cor hest all-round student. fie has se•
zation of yard and commission charges,' cured a position as )read herdsman at
grade difefrcntials, shrink on hot ane W O.A•S„ Ridgetown.
cold weigh:s and other prcb:ems of
he ,beef industry. Mr. Kenneth Moon, son of Mr, and
Retiring president, A A. McTabish, Mrs Carman Moon, I1.R, 1, Londes-
Paisley, Ontario explained that the Loro, was also a 1961 graduate,
deductions would be made voluntarily
y the shirper, and would be collected Passing their junior year was William
nd, paid. over; to the organization by
le packing plants and community sales
erns. The hills of lading used by the
hipper would carry a special authori-
tion clause If this plant is accepted by
eef producers, ,
Dr. H. L. Patterson, chief, Economics
Branch, Ontario Department of Agricul-
' tore, cited a number of challenges fac-
ing beef producers in Ontario. lie said
that efforts to improve marketing prac-
tices must take into account the dairy
1 oatle sold for slaughter purposes In
ntario. His research shows that dairy
girds account for approximately 50 per
en1 of total markethtgs for slaughter
n this province, •
He reviewed the strong e6:ects that
hain. stores have in price deleriuiira•
ion and in consumption of different
roducts through promotions. lie said
hat one chain Is reported to buy all of
s livestock in Western Canada, where
is killed and shi1Ped to a central
tuarohouse This reduces the demand
ar Ontario beef, and producers should Donhald. Mrs, Ray Madill gave a rcad-
iscuss the matter with the chain and' ing and Mrs, Walsh closed with prayer.
packers to find out why this condition I The May meeting will be held in the
xists. church schoolroom, with a special
W. P. 1Valson, Ontario's Livestock speaker.
omnlissioner, examined the potentialMrs Fred Howson showed very in-
n• beef cattle production in Ontario. i teresthtg slides on Florida Boston arta
11c noted that in past studies some beef terest Washington
cattle producer's have received a labour I Mrs, Walsh directed contests, after
Income of about $1000 per year. T7ris which a delicious lunch was served• .
low income had forced them Into other Mrs, Harold Vodden thanked the hos-
lines such as dairy cattle, during the fess and connrdltee.
past five years. He said that size of
the business, proper use of capital, and
labour, plus total volume of marketings
would determine how successful a pro•
ducer could be He felt however that
the prospects of the beef producer oi, •
the small faun are not too bright, par-
ticularly as the amount of feed he could
produce at home was a limiting factor.
Another resolution passed at the meet•
ing asked for the Department of Agri.
culture to arrange to have all carcasses
graded and weighed by government
en, and the producer paid on a warm,
dressed weight basis. This is, in effect,
it grading, much as hogs are sold by,
ve The same resolution asked to
ve prices published on the basis of
rill dressed weight,
Delegates also asked the federal end
ovincial governments to work out
muton licensing and load limits in
stern provinces to facilitate ship•
ents of cattle,
�1 further resolution asked the dirge•
tor
to continue their efforts for a re-
justnrent of rail rates.
No directors at large elected were:
13. Mehlenhacher, Cayuga, who was Rev. D. bfcTvish, of London, will ba
o elected the new president, and Mr. the guest preacher at the Sunday School
Ste
wart Brown, Shedden, Ontario. The , Anniversary )service in Knox United
training dh'ectnrs were elected to Church, Auburn,on Sundayevening,
it rearesentative zones. They are: May 7th. g,
W K• Janes, Watfcrd; Mr. V. .
ufman, Woodstock; Mr. Rcss Beatty, Rev McTavish, a former president 1
yncr; M''s, J. A, Berry, Dunrobin, of London Conference. His sermon sub-
. (.', Hamilton, Lakefield; Mr. 11. feet will be "God rt the Fireside," a
cGttgor, Kippers; and Mr A. A. plea for hotre rclit;iv 1. It will be basad
'ravish, Paisley, A tenth direSto► on Robh?e Burns' pot "The Omer's
pointed by the other directory Was Saturday Night," and will be to mos
rvey •hit:kllart, hjncardine, ,, sage interesting to both young and old. I
Laurie Scott gave a reading "The Gold -
1 en Isle of Prayer."
1': The Meeting closed and a lovely
s lunch was served, Group 1 will have
charge of the May meeting,
)
1101
Y CONGRATULATIONS
, Congratulations to Mr, Thomas Cron-
, in, who celebrated his birthday on Tues. 4
, day, April 18111.
• Congratulations to Mrs, Cleta Lyons, • p
s of Toronto, who celebrated her birth- it
day, April 15th.
, Coonguatulatio» s to Mr, Harold •Wight• it
on man who celebrates his birthday on fo
y Friday, April 28th, (1
Congratulations to Mr. Glenn Tunney
who celebrants his birthday on Satut•
day, April 29th °
Congratulations to Mr, Freeman Ttut-
• ney who celebrates his birthday on C
• Sttncjay, April 30th,
1 Congratulations to Mrs. Beatrice
r Ilesse}wood who celebrates her �birth-
• day on Monday, May 1st.
• Congratulations to Miss Karen Cook
1 who celebrates her birthday on Wed-
nesday, May 3rd,
TO HOLD MAYTIME TEA
The canmittce in charge met Tiles
clay afternoon at the home of the con
vener, Mrs. Grace McCallum, to plan
details for a Mayiime tea and 'flowe
display, sponsored by the local Horti
cultural Society at the. home of Mrs
McCallum, Friday, May 12 h Watcl
for advertisment in next weeks' Issue
of the Standard,
llowson, yon of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Howson, Blyth, and" John Lawrie, sen
of Mr, and Mrs. James Lawrie, Blyth.
Friendship Circle Meet
The regular meeting of the Friend-
ship Circre was held on Tuesday ev-
ening, April 11 at the home of Mrs.
Norman Gowing. Mrs. Ray , Madill,
president, opened the meeting with a
poem eulllled, "April," after which the
hymn, "This is my Father's World''
was sung. Minutes of the last meeting
were read and approved.
The roll call was answered by a pen-
ny for each letter of your birthday
month Items for the bazaar for the
May meeting to be green thumb 01
preserves. June 24th was set as the
date for our annual smorgasbord,
Mrs. Ben Walsh opened the devotion-
al period with the call to worship, fol-
lowed with scripture by Mrs, Ken Mac•
Assistant Summer Ag. Rep
Appointed
It has been announced by Mr. K. E.
Lantz, Director of Extension for the
Province of Ontario, that Mr John C.
McTaggart, of Aurora, has been ap•
pointed as Summer Assistant Agricul•
tural Representative in the County of
Iiuron.
Mr, McTaggart has completed his
third year at the Ontario Agricultural
College and will commence his duties
in Huron on May 1st.
Mr, McTaggart has been raised 'on a
livestock farm in York County were
Aberdeen Angus have reigned supreme.
Johns' father Is a graduate of the 0. A.
C, and is well known in 'livestock cir-
cles throughout the Province of Ontario
and Is usually found in attendance at
all events connected with Aberdeen
Angus. Jahn has lad a wide exper-
ience 4n 4-I1 activities 4n York County
and has been a contender for the
Queen's Guineas at the Royal Winter
Fair on several occasions He has rep-
resented York County In the inter -
county competitions at Guelph. Ile was
chankpion beef showman at the Col-
lege. Reyal at the Agricultural College
h1 1957 and reserve dairy showman in
1961
�A';, McTassart will be associated
wild Mr. D. G. Grieve in carrying out
the 4.1I and Junior Farmer programme
durhtg the sumo',
SPECIAL SERVICES AT UNITED
CHURCH
The annual series of services for the
Easter and Pentecost period, during
which each member is asked to keep a
record of his church attendance, is be-
ing held again this year in the United
Church in Blyth. During this series the
minister, Rev. R E. McLagan, is con-
sidering some of the commands of
Jesus and how they can be obeyed In
this 20,11 century.
Next Sundlny is Senior Citizens' and
Shut -Ins' Sunday. Recognition svill be
given to all worshippers who have
reached the proud age of 80 and to the
eldest worshipper present. Visits will
be made by members of the congrega-
tion to all Senior Citizens and Shut -Ins
who are not able to attend.
During this series each member of
the congregation Is also asked to spend
time each week reading and studying
an extensive passage of the Bible,
Other Sundays in the series are:
Babies' Sunday (May 7); Family Sun-
day (May 14);. Pentecost Sunday (May
21); Farmers' S;mday (May 28),
m
ra
no
ha
wa
pr
co
the
to
nd
L.
alp
St e
ret
the
Mt
Ka
GROUP 1 TO MEET stn
Mr
Group 1 of the Untied Claud W. A. Ma
Will meet at the home of Mrs, Cecil' Mc
Wheeler on Monday, May Jst, at $,M a
p.m. ' I Ha
urgent appeal is issued to the people
of Blyth and district to please send
your, donation to Mi'. Madill. In doing
so you will, help make it possible to
maintain the medical attention needed
to the crippled children of this area.
Store Hours Change
Commencing May 6, the local mer-
chants will revert back to their le
o'clock closing on Saturday evenings.
During the winter months, from Jan-
uary Ist to May 1st, local stores have
been observing the 9 o'clock closing
lteur. This will still be in effect (his
week, with the extra shopping hour
commencing a week (ram Saturday,
May 6,
LADY BOWLERS FINISII 6th IN
TOURNAMENT
A team of lady bowlers from the
Blyth Legion Ladies Auxiliary finished
in sixth place in a group of 36 teams
entered in the second annual bowling
tournament at Walkerton last week,
The team played on the second day of
the two-day tournament.
The team comprised, Comrades, Mac
Badley, Verna Garniss, Jean Little,
Eva Wellbanks, Phyllis Cole and Jean
Fairscrvicc, captain
BIIRTHS
McClinchey--h1 Goderich Hospital on
Sunday, April 23, 1961, to Mr. and
Mrs David McClinchey (nee Ruth
Moss) of Auburn, a son, Jeffery
David,
W. I. TO MEET
I The regular meeting of Blyth Wo-
men's Institute will be held In the
Memorial Hall, Thursday, May 4, at
2.30 p.nt. Meeting in charge of Miss
Josephine Woodcock,
There will be a demonstration. Roll
Call "Pennies for Friendship," Every.
one welcome.
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY MAKES
PRIZE LIST CIIANGES
Mr, and Mrs, James McCall, Hullett
township, opened their home Monday
evening for a meeting of the directors
and members of the Blyth Agricultural
Society.
The main business of the meeting
was the revising of the men's section
of the prize list, which was completed.
The committees in charge of the
Field Competitions reported they are
assured of at least twelve members in
each class—Shield oats and ensilage
corn,
John Tamblyn WIS suggested to rep.
resent the Agricultural Society on the
Community Centre Board.
Engagement Announced
Mrs, Loretta Petteplace, Tecswater,
wishes to announce the engagnent of
her youngest daughter, Donna, to John
Murray Govier, only son of Mr. and
Mrs. Murvin Govier, Blyth, The mar-
riage will take place the latter part of
April
Congratulations to Kenneth McVittio
who celebrated his birthday on Mon-
day, April 24th.
Congratulations to Mrs. Malcolm
Somers, Winnipeg, Manitoba, who will
celebrate her rbirthday on Wednesday,
May 3rd. Many happy returns Kay.
Conguatulations to little Miss Mar-
lene McDougall, of Goderich, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert McDougall,
who will celebrate her 1st birthday on
Saturday, April 291.11.
H INGHAM HYDRO WORKER
ELECTROCUTED
tloitn Alfred Foxton, a Wingham Ont•
ario Hydro employee, and father of
seven children, was electrocuted by a
4,800 -volt live wire while working on a
)ole near Ripley on Tuesday afternoon.
1t Is believed that Mr, Foxton, n
lydro employee for more than 11 years,
was doing routine work when his hand
tote t a "live stick". •
Fellow wwt'ters and Dry J. B. Tin-
dale, Ripley, it'orked with a resuseita•
c r for more than two hours in an at.
emit to revive the victim.
MO
When Breakfast
Was A Real Meal
What has become of the tur-
rnidable family breakfast of
yore?
I frequently meditate on ..`.1s
matter as 1ride to the ct,i r
these chilly mornings, tortifird
by nothing more caloric than a
hot beverage and tnaybc, it I
have been a good boy, an al., lc.
RIy breakfast used to include
one boiled egg — nu toast — ai
well. But the egg seemed lone-
some without the comp:lny t,f
anot,itr.r egg, bacon, :oast, but-
ler, r.nd Marnlal,:dr. So
we drifted apart.
What rc;tw,tkened nv intcrc,1
in the subject was tee rc-._nt
"Johnsonian Br( akfast Cathor-
ing" in a London hotel.
200 persi,ns v'ho ate( ndcd sore
confronted with a rgant'la n
and, to illy, :non1:1-watr'.'1hg
Jncrning 111111U MIiCil rl•p(lI'tt d.3'
included a choice of:
Oysters, shrimps, prawns, I:cll-
id eggs, mutton cutlets, ba cf-
nteaks, kidneys, tongues, ribs of
beef, turkeys, squabs, teal, game
pie, muffins, baked potato( s,
rice, and cheese.
1 am surprised kippers were
not mentioned, but - especially
pleased to hear pbout the kid-
neys. Somehow to me, English
country life cf a generation ago
was epitomized by the drawing -
room play in one scene of which
the characters were bound to
come downstairs in the morning
in scarves and blazers, make a
beeline for the sideboard, raise
the silver cover, sniff, and mur-
mur appreciatively: "Ah, kid-
neys!"
Maybe millions actually exist-
ed on toast and tea or fried bread
and dripping, But my ideal Eng-
lishman always had .kidneys or
kippers, Didn't yours?
The JohnSonian breakfast was
the idea of actress Edana Rom-
ney, who is campaigning here to
revive the tradition of the hearty
morning meal. I know she can
count on the enthusiastic sup-
port of certain children of my
acquaintance, who recently
munched their way from Boston
to St. Louis and back on a star-
vation breakfast diet of pan-
cakes, waffles, and kindred
dishes. And during the Christ-
mas holidays, a boy I knew re-
gularly assuaged the pangs of
hunger by having a fig bowl of
cereal before his parents arose,
'Phe arrival of the milkman was
his alarm clock, writes Henry S.
Hayward in the Christian Sri-
ence Monitor.
A substantial British break-
fast nowadays is likely to in-
clude porridge, kippers or plaice,
b: con or sausage and egg, toast
or rolls, and marmalade. The
only place I ever encounter su,.h
a breakfast myself, however, is
on a train — which may be one
reason 1 am so fond of trains.
To set the record straight, a'ld
more important to retain the
good will of the provider of my
substantial evening meal, 1 must
say that my sparse breakfasts
are self-imposed. Train and bus
timetables are deterrents. So is
the prsopect of a three -course
business lunch,
But the greatest contributor to
the decline at the kite pf break-
lasts, I suspect, is the decline of
the servant, Who put those
steaming kidneys on the side-
board? Not the wife. Not the
husband. 11 was Jeeves, of
course, And who provided Dr,
Johnson and Boswell with their
colossal repasts? Why, it was
the comely serving - wenches,
And the muffin -man brought in
the muffins, The Stilton cheese,
my father used to say, could
walk in by itself,
Those were the days! What we
need now is "Instant Servant."
Meanwhile, let's draw straws to
see who washes the dishes.
WATCH THE NOSEI — This looks
Rke o kitchen mixer, but it's
the latest 'beauty treatment in
England. Elizabeth loughton,
of Birmingham, demonstrates
the steam bath facial, given
mechanically,
WATCH THIS MAN — The pedestrian in this picture has lust robbed a bank. Photographer in
Eureka, Calif,, snapped his picture o few seconds after holdup. Police arrested Charles
Peterson, 36.
TABLE TALKS
i
dare Andrt:%ts
Bernard L. Troup, a 49 -year-
old electronics specialist won 'he
U.S, Men's National Cook i n g
Championship recently with his
"potato chip lasagna,"
For his efforts, Mr, Troup won
a week's all -expense trip to Mi-
ami for himself and his wile and
was awarded a $1,000 check by
the Potato Chip Institute, spon-
sor of the championship search.
4
The missile man's recipe which
sent the judges into orbit fol-
lows:
POTATO CHiP LASAGNA
Meat Sauce
(This may be prepared a day
ahead and refrigerated.)
tablespoons vegetable oil
3 pounds lean ground beet
2 cups finely chopped onion
)�1 teaspoon black pepper
1 teaspoon salt
2 garlic cloves crushed
2 No. 2y cans tomatoes
4 6 -ounce cans tomato saner
3 teaspoons basil
1 teaspoon oregano
1 whole bay leaf
Heat oil in large heavy skillet
and saute beef in oil until pink
color disappears, stirring fre-
quently. Add onion, garlic, to-
matoes, tomato sauce, and sea-
sonings. Simmer gently 1 hour,
Other ingredients:
',; pound potato chips, crushed
slightly, combined with
1 13 -ounce package corn chips
crushed
4 8 -ounce packages Mozzarella
cheese
1 G -ounce package Romano
cheese, grated (for topping)
2 pounds small curd cottage
cheese
Paprika
Parsley
Butter a large flat baking dish.
Place ingredients in baking dish
in this order; 1 of meat sauce;
' of potato and corn chips; 1
Mozzarella and cottage cheeses.
Repeat these layers. Place Last
% of meat sauce on top, Sprinkle
top with grated Romano cheese,
Bake 45-60 minutes at 328° F.
Garnish top with paprika and
13Atsley,
A basic French dressing for
salads contains 4 ingredients --
oil, vinegar, salt, and pepper,
Sometimes a little garlic Is add-
ed. One part vinegar and 3 parts
oil are often used, but for some
tastes only 2 parts of oil to 1 part
of vinegar is more agreeable,
Add to this hard -cooked eggs,
anchovies, chopped onion, chop-
ped chutney, tomato catchup,
mustard, Worcestershire sauce,
Tabasco sauce, cheese, chopped
olives, capers, fruit juice, honey,
chopped green pepper, chopped
red pepper, or chopped parsley
for the dressing you like. In the
same manner, basic mayonnaise
may he made into some other
dressing by the addition of one
or two of the following—chopped
celery, chopped green pepper,
pimento, whipped cream, horse-
radish, chopped pickle, chili
sauce, chopped stuffed olives,
chopped parsley, or caper 9,
Cooked salad dressing also nas
just as many variations, By ex-
erimentation, you can arrive at
your own favorite dressing for
almost any kind of salad.
• • -
Lemon juice may he used in
all dressings instead of vinegar.
Here is a recipe for this type of
French dressing.
LEMON FRENCH DIRESSih(;
31 cup olive or salad oil
'a cup fresh lemon Juice
'a teaspoon sugar
1 teaspoon salt
14 teaspoon black pepper
clove garlic, mashed
'i teaspoon powdered dry
mustard (optional)
Combine all ingredients .end
.,hake or stir until well blended.
Strain to remove particles of
garlic. Chill. Shake again be-
fore using. Makes I cup drr s-
ing. • • .,
A sour cream salad dressing
aids interest to such fresh vege-
tables as cucumbers, caboage,
and lettuce. To make a simple
one, (nix ','a cup pineapple juice,
1' teaspoons lemon juice, 1,
teaspoon salt, and 1 tablespoon
sugar. Add to this, 1 cup sour
cream and mix until smooth.
A more elaborate sour cream
dressing is this one: Combine
bite -size pieces of iceberg let-
tuce with canned garbanzo or
other cooked dried white beans
which have been drained and
marinated in tart French dress-
ing for several hours. Serve with
this;
SOUR -CREAM VEGETABLE
DRESSING
1 cup commercial sour cream
1,4 cup finely diced onion
14 cup finely diced green
pepper
14 Cup finely diced celery
1 medium peeled, diced
cucumber
Combine ingredients and chill
thoroughly. Se r v e on crisp
greens.
• •
MACEDOINE SALAD
1 small cooked cauliflower
6 stuffed Spanish (lives
1 cup cooked carrots (cut In
cubes)
1 cup cooked peas
Separate cauliflower in small
pieces. Marinate each vegetable
separately in French dressing
and let stand in refrigerator. Ar.
range vegetable on crisp lettuce
leaves. Sprinkle with sliced
olives, Serve with French dress-
ing. •
ARTICHOKE SALAD
1 can artichoke hearts
1 tablespoon chopped red
pepper
!/1 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon chopped green
pepper
Drain liquid from artichokes;
add salt and marinate In French
dressing, Chill. Arrange arti-
chokes in nests of crisp lettuce
or water cress and sprinkle with
chopped peppers. Serve with
French dressing.
* • •
U you want a party vegetable
salad, try this Borsch ring; it Is
truly unusual. Unmold it on a
platter that Is lined with lettuce
and fill centre with cucumber
slices that have been moistened
with sour cream. Surround the
ring with cooked or canned vege-
tables that havo been chilled and
marinated in French dressing —
green beans, asparagus tips,
cauliflower carrots, or zucchini
strips,
BORSCH SALAD RING
1 envelope (1 tablesp(on)
unflavored gelatin
14 cup cold water
1 can julienne beets
2 bouillon cubes
I tablespoon grated o111on
2 tablespoons lemon juice
I teaspoons prepared horse-
radish
2 tablespoons sugar
Dash of powderE1 drives
It teaspoon monosodium
glutamate
Salt and pepper to taste
Soften gelatin in cold water.
Drain beets, reserving liquid.
Measure feet liquid and add
enough water to make 11/2 cups.
Heat mixture to boiling; add
bouillon cubes and softened gel-
atin; stir until dissolved, Add
remaining irgredients, exer.p1
beets. Cool, then chill, When
mixture begins to thicken, fold
'
in beets, Turn into oiled 1 -quart
ring mold; chill until non.
Serves 6.
Don't Get Neurotic
Over Your Weight !
"i caught a glimpse of myself
in the mirror this morning," a
roan who had long been over-
weight told the psychiatrist. "1
was surprised how fat I have
become." Boasted another fat
man: "I'm a good-looking guy."
These responses may come as
a surprise to many weight -
conscious people. Yet they aren't
unusual. Drs. Albert Stunkard
and Mycr Mendelson of 1116' Uni-
versity of • Pennsylvania have
talked to more than a hundred
overweight men and women,
aged 20 to 64, to find out: Are
fat people neurotic about the
way they look? In the current
issue of the Journal of the Amer-
ican Dietetic Association the psy-
chiatrists offer their finding:
Three-fourths of the Heavy-
weights who were interviewed
looked upon their fat selves with
relative equanimity.
But the remaining obese peo-
ple were in bad emotional shape.
"Just looking at myself in a store
window makes me feel ter'r'ible,"
a 300 -pound man said, "I just
look at myself and say, 'I hate
you, you're loathsome'."
The psychiatrists believe that
for a fat person to become neu-
rotic about his weight he must
have become both obese and
emotionally unstable during
childhood or adolescence, and his
parents must have poked fun at
his avoirdupois, Only prolonged
psychoanalysis will help. The
reason: Neurotic feelings of self -
loathing are constantly being re-
newed by every glance in the
mirror—and in a fury of self -
punishment, the fat person goes
on overeating.
Sa VC Il -Year Cyc'e
For Famous Movie
Like seine benign version u.1
the seven-year locust. it ',vas
beck again. On the clay it came
in Atlanta, Ga,, people started.
lining up to see it al 7 a,m , an
hour before the hex office open-
ed, In 1' nclxviIle, 'Tenn., h00
pcc.ple had to be Turned away
the first night. This month, al-
ready seen by 90,000 Atlantans,
it had infiltrated every major
Southern city, and in mid-May
it would ba heading North, As
it had every seven years since
its premiere in 1939, "Gone With
the Wincl" had risen again,
During its life span, however,
"GIV'I'\1" has undergone a meta-
morphosis, On the way down to
Atlanta last month for the gala
"Second World Premiere" of the
movie, a friend remarked to Vi-
vien Leigh, otherwise known as
Scarlett O'Hara, that the movie,
the city, and even the mayor
were the same — that, in fact,
nothing seemed to have changed
in 22 years, "Well, God, 1 have,"
said Miss Leigh, smiling grimly.
She could have- said the sane
thing for the picture.
Miss Leigh still gets Mail
(from as far away as Japan)
addressed merely to "Scarlett
O'Hara, Hollywood." To South-
erners, Scarlett and Rhett (Clark
Gable) are less fictional charac-
ters than flesh -and -blood famili-
ars, as much a part of their heri-
tage as grits and hush puppies,
and as real as the folks next
door. In Atlanta, several people
told producer David Selznick
that they had mel him when he
was filming there, and that such -
and -such a house, which ho used
in the movie, was still standing;
this was awkward for Selznick,
since he shot the movie entirely
in Hollywood. At Southern cos-
tume parties, an almost standard
figure is Aunt Pittypat, a lesser
character whom most Northern-
ers remember with difficulty.
Some devotees havo seen the
movie 60 times.
For all Its familiarity to iti
fans, the most common reaction
among those who see It more
than once, including Muss Leigh
A Fourth Front Against Cancer
— Science Advances Toward The Goal
By DR. GEORGE E. MOORE
Director, Roswell Park Memorial
Institute, (Written for News-
paper Enterprise Assn.)
BUFFALO, N.Y, — (NEA) —
A lot of things cause cancer —
radiations from the ground be-
neath us and the sky above;
chemicals in the air, food, water
and drugs we take, perhaps even
the substances our bodies pro-
duce. Some viruses may cause
cancer.
Everybody Is exposed to can-
cer-causing agents but only one
In four people comes down with
the disease. Three don't, Of
those who do and are treated
for 1t, one of three is cured,
It is quite apparent that,
some people have great resist-
ance to cancer; others are very
susceptible to it. Between these
two extremes, the rest of us
probably have varying degrees
of resistance and susceptibility,
When a normal cell becomes
a cancer cell, its genes often
change. In human cells, the
number of chromosomes may
increase from the normal 46 .to
50, or 70, or 90 or almost any
(lumber, Chromosomes are bags
of genes which control the in-
herited characteristics of the
cell and of the person.
Scientists are finding that all
of us have some • cells with odd
numbers of chromosomes. In
those of us who don't develop
cancer, apparently something in-
side us destroys these cells or
keeps them in check so that
they don't multpily and destroy
W.
The surgeon and the scientist
see innumerable instances of re-
sistance to cancer — and the
lack of resistance. Here are some
common examples:
Patient A is shot through
with cancer. 'rhe surgeon re-
moves the original tumor; but
he leaves numerous cancerous
masses in other areas of the
body, To his and the patient's
surprise and delight, the cancer
colonies throughout the body
shrivel up and disappear.' The
pr.tient may live several ,years,
sceminhly without cancel, be-
fore the disease recurs and kills
the patient.
P.ttient 13 seems to have only
a small, slow-growing, localized
cancer. The surgeon removes it
and, for good measure all the
adjoining tissues to which it
slight have spread. To his dis-
may, hidden colonies come to
life, spread rapidly and soon kill
the patient,
Patient C is the most rcmark-
:.hlc — and unrortunatcly the
caret'— of all In the last ste:;es
nl' cancer, he develops on acute
infection, and for a few days,
his life bungs by a thread, Hie
recovers from the infection —
and the cancer, which was about
to do him In, no longer can be
found, Apparently something in
his resistance to the infection
overcame the cancer as well,
There are buts of evidence —
t•ome seen every day in a busy
cancer centre — which point to
natural resistance to cancer.
Some of us take it as a good
sign when we find that the pa-
tient's cancer is surrounded by,
and his blood loaded with, the
cells and substances which pro-
tect us during infection, These
include, white blood cells which
eat up invading viruses, and
germs and antibodies which des-
troy the infecting "bugs."
When a cancer patient does
not develop a fever or show
other signs of resistance to an
infection or when, as has hap-
pened in a few experiments, he
will accept and grow a skin
graft from another person, we
know that his outlook is most
unhappy, Healthy people over-
come infections and reject grafts.
We can depress animal resist-
ance to Infection, tissue grafts
and cancer transplants in several
ways — with large doses of X-
rays or of the hormone, corti-
sone, or by subjecting the ani
mals to stresses such as other
diseases, poisons, or extensive
surgery.
The big problem is to raise
resistance. If this can be done,
cancer may be beaten.
1t is likely that some human
incl (:)linin dr IL,\:Ihind 1' I-
aniel, is that Cory luld cubic
scene.; lvhirh I,hc3' have for,;,,t-
ten. Even i;ulliliru' scenes .,urnr-
times inspire new reactions. The
most famous line in movie his-
tory is probably Ithctl's parting
remark to Scarlell: "Frankly, my
dear, 1 don't give a damn," "AI
past shcwings you could alwnyi
hear rt murmur from the crowd
at that line," says The Aflonlq
Constitution's movie editor Pau)
Jones, "\Vomcn would say;
be back.' This time there wni
no murmur. It looked as though
they were no longer on Scar-
letl's side, but had switched over
to nett,"
"How rho women make iiio n-
lains out of molehills?"
reader, They merely add a little
dirt,
CONGO HOPE — Differing Con-
go factions see In Gen, Victor
lundula, army commander in
Stanleyville, a possible key to
solving the nation's civil strife.
lundula is a conservative re•
garded as most Influential
member of Stanleyville govern.
ment, including leftist Premier
Antoine Glzenga,
ISSUE 17 -- 1861
cancers within the foreseeable
future may be controlled or
cured. (but not prevented) by
vaccines made from cancer cells
or cell components, I believe that
other human cancers may never
respond to this treatment be-
cause either they resemble nor-
mal cells too closely for anti-
bodies to form against them, or
they produce potent poisons
which suppress the body's forces
of resistance.
It is barely conceivable that:
the patient's own healthy lymph
nodes or a well person's lymph
nodes, which have been remov-
ed and incubated with a portion
of a patient's cancer, may be
transplanted to the patient and
will destroy his cancer, This has
been done in animals with occa-
sional success. A great draw-
back to this technique is that
the new host — the patient —
produces antibodies which quite
rapidly destroy the anti-cancer
lymph node transplants from an-
other person,
In the last 10 fast-moving
years, great strides have been
made in the field of cancer im-
munity.
Animals have hcen vaccinated
successfully against specific can-
cers and against viruses which
cause cancer. The first faltering
steps have been made in efforts
to cure Terminal cancer patients
with vaccines made from their
r.wn tumors. While no miracles
Have been achieved, the results
warrant expanded study.
Perhaps the next 10 years will
bring even greater progress.
(NEXT: Human Cancer Val!.
clues.)
D. MOORE o4 work in his laboratory at the Roswell P
Institute.
Wolves Reared
This Indian Boy
Tho Wulf Buy of India will
never beanie la superman lila
Tarzeit, that fictional charmer.
with :tttiuml 'ulster -parent;. He
will never find a luscious human
Male, or rule the creature.; of
his jungle with biceps of steel.
There have been many tiles
of children reared by wolves
:from Romulus and Items, the
legendary founders of Holm, to
Mowgli, the wolf -boy of Kip-
11ng', Jungle Books.
But the reality i; stark l•'a-
gedy, For heredity in hnntans i.
a Ve1'y fragile thiilg.
A cat w i 1 I harsher puI!,ice,,
hens will carr for ducklings oral,
when the young grow up, they
will become almost normal
members of their own spryics,
This seldom, il' ever, huppe'1, in
the c,re c'r a child %vile has been
brought up by an animal with
maternal feelings.
If he has missed that essential
something the human env i'on-
tnenf g i v es a baby, he will
probably remain at least hall'
animal, Hr is unlikely ever to
learn to talk.
One cf the worst eases is that
of Baum, the Indian Wolf Bey.
Today, seven years after he was
found in the jungle, he is still
in 13a1t'anlpul' Hospital, Lurk -
/IOW. Most cf the time this six-
teen -year-old boy lies in bed
playing with toy animals like
an infant, When taken for ern
airing in a wheelchair he can
now smile his happiness,
'!`hal, however, is about the
extent of lianul's progress to
normality!
Despite every care and atten-
tion he remains pitifully deform-
ed. He cannot walls upright, let
alone talk. Yet tests show that
Rannl's brain must have been
slightly above average when he
was born.
He has wild, yellow-brown
eyes, long double incisor teeth
and claw-like fingers, He can
shuffle along on all fours, whim-
per, snarl or growl.
Doctors who have examined
hint over the years doubt it he
will ever be any better. Indeed,
it is feared he may die between
eighteen and twenty - a wolf's
usual life span!
Ramu was discovered in a
part of India where wolves are
the only large wild animals.
other evidence of his strange
upbringing is;
One: Ramu laps milk or water
like a dog,
Two: He can smell raw meat,
which he loves, before seeing it.
Three: When taken to Luck -
now Zoo, he tried, with excited
yelps to scramble into the
wolves' cage.
Four: The tuberculosis bacilli
with which he is infected us of
an animal type quite different
from that of the human,
When Itanlu was first brought
to the hospital, emaciated, hun-
gry and with long matted hair,
he was terrified of his own kind
and so scared of the light it was
assumed he had been living in
a den, His body was filthy and
badly scarred, writes Basil Bai-
ley in "Tit -Bits."
He almost starved in his railed
cot until he was given raw meat
and a pan of water to lap. At
the first attempt the patient's
teeth bit deeply into ward at-
tendant's hand!
One day Ramu caught sight of
an alsatian dog and yelping with
joy, tried desperately to reach
it.
Today he will take a vegetar-
Upsidedccc• ' la Prevent Peeking
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TULIP TIME IN OTTAWA
This bed - one of many - contains 121,000 of the bright, showy blooms.
tan diet and even wear clothes.
But it is most unlikely he will
ever leave hospital. His arras
and legs are still crippled, His
brain, too, remains dc'fornled.
Nevertheless, Ramu has a !lost
of admirers. He has long been
the pet patient of the hospital
and has attracted hundreds of
visitors. Many couples have tried
to claim him as their son,
In letters from abroad, a
French girl proposed marriage,
and an American organization
once offered two hundred thou-
sand dollars to exhibit the boy
in the United States,
But the hospital do not want
to lose Ramu, who they named
after Rama, a Hindu god, He is
the first such boy to be studied
scientifically and a huge file of
data has been compiled which is
confidential pending further
tests,
Meanwhile, he tas been made
a ward of the state.
Dr, D, N. Sharma, the medi-
cal superintendent at Balralltpur,
says that X-ray examinations of
bone formation prove that Ramu
must have been about nine when
he was found,
He believes, the boy was rear-
ed by wolves from about the
age of two,
"The years between two and
nine are vital to development,"
he declares, "Because Ralntt ac-
quired few human habits then,
he is unlikely to acquire them
now."
Children who have been rear-
ed by animals and missed htunettt
companionship during their for-
mative years seem quite unable
to catch up. Nor, as a rule, do
they live long.
For Ramu's case is not unique.
Many, of course, are unautben-
ticated, There is, however, im-
pressive evidence concerning
two little girls, one about two,
the other eight, who were dug
out of a wolf den in another
part of India.
They also moved on theft el-
bows and knees and ate meat
raw. The younger was gradually
humanized by a missionary, 4,ut
died a few months afterwards,
The elder, who lived for nine
years, stayed little more than an
sal ins a 1,
Then there was the boy found
some sixteen years ago running
with a herd of gazelles in the
Arabian desert. He was captured
with great difficulty because, al-
though only about fourteen, he
ran as fast as the deer!
In a Damascus hospital he was
persuaded to eat food other than
grass and milk,
But he could only slake noises
like a gazelle in pain to the
end of his short life,
Statistics can be used to sup-
port anything - especially sta-
tisticians,
HIS WORST ENEMY - This pugnacious peacock unleashes his
fury on his own image in a mirror. The jealous bird clawed
and pecked in vain.
TIIHMN FRONT
Discriminating tastes of the
Canadian consumers are being
pampered - even to the shade
of yellow of egg yolks.
Though the color of the yolk
has no effect on the food value
of the egg, many people find a
pale yellow yolk unappetizing
and others object to a dark yel-
low color.
With this in mind, the Pouts
try Products Division of the
Canada Department of Agri-
culture has come up with a yolk
color chart which may yet be-
come a standard in the industry.
« •
Color of an egg yolk is de-
termined by the pigment in the
feed offered to the hens.
Thus, if the eggs being laid,
by a specific flock are proving
unpopular with housewives be-
cause of the color of their yolks,
the problem can be overcome
easily by altering the diet.
•
D. A. Fletcher, special pro-
jects officer with the Poultry
Division, started the task of
creating a new yolk color chart
more than three years ago.
Worsting closely with the
National Research Council's
paints and oils research labor-
atory, he tested about 200 shades
of yellow before settling a» a
representative group of 15.
Having determined the 15
shades of yellow, Fletcher and
his colleagues put the colors
on metal disks, each of which
contained a hole the size of a
yolk to facilitate the job of
identifying the kind of eggs
preferred by the average con -
Rimer. • ,
Visitors to the Royal Winter
Fair in Toronto, asked their
preference in yolks, unanimous-
ly selected numbers six to 10
on the color scale - rejecting
the top five as too dark and the
bottom five as "anaemic,"
«
* •
Not only could the new color
chart set a standard for all of
Canada, but it could be used
to good advantage in the frozen
egg business where the color of
the yolk is an important factor,
Given wide application, the
chart should result in even
more palatable eggs for the
breakfetst table.
Charts can be procured from
Canadian Government's • Specifi-
cation Board, Montreal Road,
Ottawa 2, at a cost of $15 per
set.
• •
One of the many jobs that
should be carried out on a
farm in spring is the treating
of green fence posts, states Dr.
W. B. G. Denyer of the Canada
Department - o f Agriculture's
research station at Saskatoon.
And just in case you did not
know it, green posts and sea-
soned posts require different
treatment, Both are satisfactory
if treated properly.
« « •
To treat green posts effective-
ly, says Dr, Denyer, the butts
are stood in a tank of unheated
preservative for three or four
days in warns spring weather.
The butts should be immersed
to about eight inches above the
expected ground level.
The preservation solution re-
commended by hint for green
posts is made with half a pound
of dry chronlated zinc chloride,
or one pound of a 50 per cent
commercial solution of this
chemical in one gallon of water,
The posts must be fully green
)VJJAY SCIIOOI
LESSON
Ry Rev, K. Barclay Warren
ILA„ 11,D.
When God's Wisdom 1'revails
Joh 42: 1-12a
Memory Selection: Let not the
wise elan glory in his wisdom,
neither let the mighty elan glory
In his might, let not the Heil m;ut
glory in his riches: but let him
that glorleth glory in this. that
he undershuuleth and knowcth
foe, that 1 am the Lord.-Jerenli-
ah 9: 23-24.
We learn a great deal through
affliction. Someone has said,
"Sometimes God has to lay us on
our hack so that we can look
up." We see life's meaning and
purpose and its real values more
clearly when we look up to God.
Job was a better than when
his affliction was over. He said,
"I have heard of thee by the
hearing of the ear: but now mine
eye seeth thee." While he was a
good man at the beginning of the
trial, he was a much better man
at its close. As his understand-
ing of the greatness of God in-
--. creased, so did his humility.
God commanded the so-called
friends of Job to offer up for
themselves a burnt offering and
Job would pray for then. This
was a complete exoneration of
Job in spite of all the hard things
which these hien had said about
him, Then we have this signifi-
cant statement, "And the LORD
turned the captivity of Job, when
he prayed for his friends: also
the LORD gave Job twice as
much as he had before," Pray-
ing for one's critics is good
therapy. It helps to cleanse the
mind and spirit, If he had en-
tertained a bitter attitude toward
them, -and by worldly stand-
ards, he had good reason to do
so, -he would have died very
unhappy. It's the forgiving spirit
that wins. If we do not forgive,
we cannot be forgiven of God.
Following the standards set up
by our Lord Jesus Christ by His
example and teachings Is the
best way to live, for spirit, mind
and body, But how can we do
it? We must be changed from
' and should be peeled immediate-
ly before treatment,
•
Seasoned posts must be peel-
ed and dry before treatment
and may be treated at any
time. They are effectively treat-
ed by standing in a tank of
creosote for one or more days.
The creosote will penetrate
better if the tank is heated for
about four hours, After standing
in the heated creosote the posts
should be transferred to another
tank of cold creosote and left
for a few how's,
• • •
It is not necessary to use pure
creosote, says Dr, Denyer Half
creosote and half diesel or fuel
oir, or waste crankcase oil, is
satisfactory. Another solution
that has proved satisfactory is
a mixture of diesel or fuel oil
with five per cent, by weight, of
penthachlorophenol added. Also
recommended by Dr, Denver is
copper napthenate nixed with
diesel or fuel oil to give a solu-
tion with two per cent copper,
Poplar, pine, spruce and tam-
arack all give long service as
fence posts if properly treated,
he reports,
• • •
A Montreal man and tr meal
wholesaling firm were fined at
Montreal for misbranding and
offering for sale several cats of
beef,
Pleading guilty to charges
that he misbranded the beef
as "Canada Good" when it was
of an inferior grade, L. Abramo-
witz, of Montreal, was fined
$200,
Melrose Packers Corp. plead-
ed guilty to having misbranded
beef in their possession and
offering it for sale. The firm
was fined $100,
The beef was sold by Abramo-
witz to Melrose Packet's who
delivered it to the DVA Hospital,
St, Anne do Bellevue, Que.,
Canada Department of Agricul-
ture graders who were called to
examine the beef, had the
charges laid under the Canada
Agricultural Products Standards
Act. , a, «
Pleading guilty to six counts
of selling and possessing butter
containing fats other than milk
fat, Laiterie Picard and Fits,
Inc., St. Gilbert, Pot'tneut Co,,
Quebec, paid fines totalling $450
In a Quebec City court.
Judge Henri Jolicoeuu' fined
the firm $75 on each of the six
counts. The adulterated butter
was ordered confiscated.
Neccore and Aft
the Traffic flow
then Decide
When toGoO
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS
1. hiatus
4. Apportlo•t
3, Full of life
12. one (dial.)
13. Ferrous
14. Exact
15. nutlandlsh
17.1'errets
19. Courtyards
19. Disable
20. Siamese coin
;'t.Admit
24, (lode's of
discord
21. 1'Inc Tree
State
17.Exclamation
nt 4grorlso
13, Rachet
19. Framework
::0, son of
flet
31. Nero•
!, \1nolcp1
lament
91. \lag•Ictnn'•
stick
94. Sea -col.'
90 Amateur
radio noel ter
37Windmill
ails
29. Large gra,+
container
11. Smiles
broadit9'
43. (*begs niece,
44. Roof edge
4 Bewildered
49. AdfecUre
suffix
47. Went sn•Iflh
43. Pay one',
sharp
19.1;. Tndlnn
eight
our sinful nature by the miracle
of the new birth. If we turn
from our sins and fully commit
ourselye., in faith to Jesus Christ,
we shall have the disposition and
the power to live the life that in
pleasing is Clod's sight.
Let us remember the patience
of Job. If we keep loving God
In the midst of our afflictions,
we shall come through victori-
ously and shall receive the
crown of life.
i Anniversary Of
A Great Bible
'('here have been good and
poor Bible translation;. Some
have contained ludicrous errors
which have marked them for
posterity. But 350 years ago this
year, in 1011, one of the recog-
ni•redly !treat translations was
published --the King James Ver-
sion.
It isn't without its obscurities
and its errors -one whole chap•
ter is used twice. But its lan-
guage not only fitted its time but
echoes until today. Probably
most Bible quotations in English
come from the King James Ver-
sion becau, e it is the most quota-
ble.
1t was written in the style
horn in the Elizabethan Age. It
is filled with passages stated so
memorably that they have be-
come a part of the thinking ut
every English-speaking person,
Modern versions may set forth
in simpler words such utter-
ances as Ruth's to Naomi -"whi-
ther thou goest, I will go" - or
Paul's injunction to the Ilebrews
that it is better "to suffer afflic-
tion with the people of God, than
to enjoy the pleasures of sin for
a season." But no translation is
ever likely to capture the imag-
ination of the faithful as has the
King James Version.
It had a number of things in
its favor from the start. It came
at a time when English-speaking
Christians were hungry for a
Bible of their own, It gave its
readers mind -filling phraseology
which has endured through 31/s
centuries. It had the name and
the blessing of King James, "the
most high and mighty prince."
It was accomplished by indubi-
table scholars who went at their
task humbly, "supported within
by the innocency and truth of a
jr'bod conscience T' 1
This is not to detract from the
Revised Standard Version or any
Pf the othertranslations of tilt
rotestant ible, nor from th
Douay Version of the Catholic
Bible. But it is to agree with Dr.
Geoffrey Fisher, the Archbishop
of Canterbury, that the band of
scholars who put together the
King James Version produced "a
version of such superb merit that
it (has) entered imperishably into
the j_anguage, thoughts and lives
of nglish-speaking peoples ever
since." -A r i z o n a Daily Star
t Tucson )
ISSUE 17 - 1981
9. First-rate
30, Regret.
11, Ittoa
111. Rivet' ldiJrl i
17. Kind of
velvet
19. Watered
DO1V1\ silk
1. Putf 21. To beg
S. Architectural 22, Anon
Ater 23. Diffuse
S. Relate to 24. Kind or
Cheese
4. Amer. 26, Girl's 11R III
anatomist 29. Female
5. Work e, it'a horses
6, Pedal digit 29. Quotes
7. English letter 30. Strolls
5, Contention 39. Grew light
33. Small
protuberance
33. Unsophisti-
• cated
36. Urgency
3S. Deposit a
ballot
39. Bacteriolo-
gist's wire
40. Belgian river
41, (Troup of So.
Amer, Indians
42. Judicial
sentence
(slang)
49. Study
45, Singing
syllabi,•
Answer elscwhree on this page
LET'S CHECK THAT OLD MAP AGA'N - These people aren't on a detour. They're demonstrate
ing a dual purpose auto in la! ;Ili :Il. Four -passenger convertible is capable of 90 m.p.h.
on land and 10 knots in w- er, accurd'ng to its West German manufacturer.
•
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Answer elscwhree on this page
LET'S CHECK THAT OLD MAP AGA'N - These people aren't on a detour. They're demonstrate
ing a dual purpose auto in la! ;Ili :Il. Four -passenger convertible is capable of 90 m.p.h.
on land and 10 knots in w- er, accurd'ng to its West German manufacturer.
•
PAGE 4
THE BLYTH STANDARD
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all the Cancer Canvas.
sers of Blyth and Mr, Wm. Gow and
his canvassers of Auburn, for their
loyal support in the recent Cancel
Campaign.
Wm. Moffitt, Chairman.
CARD OF THANKS
I wish.to thank all those who remenr
bored the baby and I with cards and
vlsits while in Clinton hospital, Also
the nursing staff,
—June Hull.
11.111.
CARD OF THANKS
I with to thank all those who remem-
bered me with cards, land Mr amu
Mrs. Alex Wells for the beautiful plant,
while a patient in Wingham liospital.
—Mrs. II. J. Mosak.
11.1p.
5c - $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
BOYS' SPRING SOCKS cushion sole, reinforced
heels and toes per pair 49c
BOYS' LIGHT SUMMER HATS each 20c
MEN'S LIGHT SUMMER IIATS each 25c
SUMMER PURSES-- new shipment just arrived.
OUR SPRING SALE ends this Saturday, April 29,
just a few days left to pick up these bargains.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 73.
REDUCTIONS ON
WINTER CLOTHING
YARD GOODS, ETC.
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M.
.s"
COTTONS FOR SPRING
Boys' Jeans, Jackets and Shirts.
Girls' Dresses, Skirts, Blouses, Car Coats, Slim
Jims and Pop Tops.
Teen •Dresses, Skirts, Blouses, Slim Jims, Pop Tops
and Car Coats.
See our Cherub and Ladybird T Shirts, Underwear
and Socks.
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
' Open Ever Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTI'TON.
C.K.N.X. WIN -A -DRYER
STORE
"WEEK -END SPECIALS"
Women's Spring Coats, 20 percent Off.
Women's New Spring Jackets, in cords and lamin-
ated materials.
Dresses, large selection of Summer Cottons at
reasonable prices.
Tailored Slips (Stanfield's) .non -static $2.98
Men's Suits, 2 pr. pants, all sizes , , Spec. $33.95 up
Men's Hydro City Engineer and Wellington Boots
all sizes Special $11.95
Men's Hydro City Work Boots, army style, extra
top sole, with steel heel plate, Reg 11.95
Special $9.95
Men's Work Boots from $4.95 up
Black and White Running Boots for Men and Boys
Large Selection of Men's and Young Men's Dress
Pants.
Men's White T Shirts Special A9
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
1 The Arcade Store
PHONE 211 I3LYTII, ONT.
AUBURN NEWS
Wednesday, April 26, 1961
1141.11.11,11111411611.44 . ALM 1.11141144.114411.44114,111401116-1141.• 1.04 Man MINN' NMI 1441411414.41.14 4* rrrw414/.11414.+.4411141•11414••+1•1-•ww11Y14w.....w
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon 11, Taylor and lor, accompanied on the piano by Mrs. -
Mr. and Mrs, Ben HIamilton visited Robert J. Phillips The secretary, I -
with Mr, and Mrs Ilarvey Andrews Mrs, Bert Craig, read the roll call and
and Mr. David Hamilton, at Cromarty, each member revealed the name of ,
last Sunday. her secret sister and presented her
Mrs, Howard Wallace, Nita and John, with a gift. Mrs, Emmerson Rodger 1
of Brampton, were guests of her par- and Mrs. Norman McClinchey sang a
ends Mr, and Mrs. Bert Marsh and duet, "April Showers." The guest of _
f -
Miss Betty Marsh last week -end. the evening, Miss Edythe Beacom, o
Mr. and Mrs, Fred Youngblut ann Lendesboro, showed her pictures taken
family, of Woodstock, visLed with re- during a month's trip last summer and _
datives in this district last week -end. gave an interesting conunentuy of her. -
tr'ip to the Western Provinces, and the'
U.S.A. Mrs. Keith Machan thanked
Miss Beacom. An orchestra selection
was played by Mrs John Deer, Mrs,
Everett 'Taylor and Mrs. It. J. Phillips., -
'lho lucky dinner tickets were held by
Mrs, Maud Frcmlin, Mrs. Andrew
Kirkconnell and ,Mrs. Ben Hamilton. _
This was in charge of Mrs. William
Dodd. Mrs. Frank Raithby thanked the
church group for their dinner and Mrs
Thomas Lawlor replied. The commit- -
tee in charge of planning for this annu-
al event was Mrs. Bert Craig, Mrs.
Ed. Davies and Mrs. William Dodd.
They arranged to have a photographer
,)resent who took pictures of the group.
Women's Institute Meeting
Agriculture was the interesting topic
riven at the April meeting of the Au.
num Women's Institute by Mrs. Frank
itaithby, when it met in the Orange
fall last week. The meeting was in
charge of the President, Mrs. Thomas
lfaggitt, and the. SecretaryTreasur•e:, .
firs. Bert Craig, gave her reports
Plans were completed for the Needle-
• ,vork Course to be held in the Orange
MialI this week. Mrs. Don. Raines was
appointed delegate to attend the Dist-
rict Annual to be held in Wingham on
May 17. Mrs. Ed. Davies gave a pa-
per on the Life and Work of Adelaide
Hoodless, the founder of the hnstitute,
Airs. Don Ilaines gave a reading. Plans
were made for the !May meeting when
Horticulture is to be the topic. The
roll call will be answered by bulbs,
seeds or flower slips The pot luck
lunch will be in charge of Mrs. Bert
Craig, Mrs. Gordon Dobie and Mars. R.
J. Phillips. A successful auction was
held at the close of the meeting. Lunch
was served by Mrs. W. Bradnock, Mrs.
L. Craig, Mrs II. Mogridgc and Mrs.
G. Powell.
Executive Meeting WILD. W. I.
The executive meeting of the West
Iluron District of the Women's Institut-
es was held last week in .the Dungan-
non United Church Sunday school
room with Mrs, Otto Popp, District
President, in charge. District Direc-
tors were present along with executive
members from Kintail, St, Helens,
Wingham, Blyth, Bclgrave, Clinton,
Tiger Dunlop, Goderich, • Londesboro,
Auburn and Dungannon The meeting
AIr, and Mrs John Weir, Joan raid
Bob, of London, wcrc recent visitors
with 1)r. Weir and Mr, and Mrs, Dun-
can MacKay, Barbara and Johnny.
Mr, Ifarry Eve, of Leaside, spent the:
weekend with his wife, who is with her
mother, Mrs. Herbert Govier, since she
has left the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Allurbrigg, of Listow-
el were recent visitors with Mr and
Mrs. Robert J. Phillips.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibbs, of IIaniil-
ton, are visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Wilfred Plunkett this week.
Congratulations to Mr, and Mrs. Dav-
id McClinchey, nee Ruth Moss, on the
birth of their son in Goderich hospital
on April 23rd,
'Air Bob Youngblut, of Western Uni•
vcrsity, has been studying at the here.
of his mother, Mrs. Ralph D. Murno
and AIr. Munro for the past week.
Mr. and Mrs, James humbly werc
Toronto visitors last Saturday.
Mr, and Mrs, Clifford Brown and
family visited in Straford last Satur-
day.
Mr. and Mrs Allan Billings have
sold their farm home south of the vil-
lage to Mr, and Mrs. Clare Longhurst
and their four children of St. Thomas.
Mr, Longhurst is a former railroad
man land will take possession on July
1st. AIr, and Airs, Billings and Wayne
have purchased a home and will move
to Mitchell where Mr. Billings and
Wayne have been employed for over
a year They purchased this farm
from Mr. and Mrs. Wellington Good
four and one half years ago, coning
here from the Aurora district. Mr,
and Mrs. Ralph Fortune, Randy, Mike
and Candy, who have occupied an
apartment in her parents hone, wilt
move to Goderich where Ralph has
been employed for two years.
Mr, Clifford Brown has commenced
to build his double bubble ice cream
stand on the western side of his Fina
station on the Goderich to Blyth high-
way. The building is 20' x 20' and he
plans to serve harnburgs, hot dogs and
coffee along with ice cream.
Sunshine Sister Banquet
Bouquets of golden daffodils, forsy-
thia
orst'thea and pussy willows made a pretty
setting for the seventeenth annual Sun-
shine Sister Banquet of the Auburn
.y
i
Women's Institute, held last Friday ev- was called to plan for the District An•{
ening in the Sunday schoolroom of nual meeting which will be held on I
Knox United Church. Fifty ladies sat May 17 in the Wingham Town Hall.
down to a turkey dinner prepared by Regristratioon to begin at 9.30 a.m.
the Naomi Group of the W.A Mrs. with the opening session to begin at
Thomas flaggitt was mistress of core- 9.45. The nominating committee con-
monies and proposed the toast to the posed of Branch Presidents prepared'
Queen. Mrs. Ed. Davies proposed a the slate of officers for this annual =
toast to the Institute and Mrs. W. meeting. The chairman 'of this coin-
Bradnock responded. A lively sing- I mittee, Mrs. H . McWhinney, of Dun- -
song was led by Mrs. Gordon R. Tay- gannon, will present it on May 17. =
'Walton News
Thomas Telfer McDonald
'Maras Tel'er McDonald, 70, Muir.
Land district farmer died recently after
= l a brief il'.',ess, Funeral service, con -
.
ducted I.; the Rev. 13, Summers, was
held in Muirland United Church and
burial made in a Saskatoon cemetery
with Clements Funeral Bone in charge
of arrangements. Mr. McDonald was
- born at Brussels and came west to
Muirland district nee: Zcalandia with
his father in 1907. In 1917 he married
- Miss Bethesda Freethy and with the
exception of from 1037 to 1992 when
they lived et Sovereign, have resided
on the farm in the Muirland district.
Mr McDonald was active in church
A and community affairs. Ile was a
= member of Muirland United Church
. which he helped to organize, and was
. an elder at the time of his death. IIe
also served on the Marriott Council
and on the Dolly Bre Schoolboard. Mr
McDonald is survived .by his widow,
three daughters, Beatrice, Mrs. Sin-
clair Milden, and Dorothy, Mrs. R.
Linklater, both of Sovereign; two' bro-
thers, John and James, Brussels', and
one sister, Mrs, Grace McCuaig, Sea -
forth,
:.; ef.iar`{'S�hSrlJ"r��i,,i:`r�i.�..+:: .:K;w:s.�Ke..'Tt..•:�':`Y c'r• �
Walton Group
Twenty-seven ladies of the Walton
group met at Mrs. Walter Bewley's
. home Wednesday evening, April 19,
for their monthly meeting with assist-
, ant leader, Mrs Emerson Mitchell,
presiding, Hymns 081 "Unto the hills
Around do I lift up" and 471 "Art Thou
weary, heavy laden" were used, Mrs.
Elarl Watson read the scripture from
(Johns message to the churches) in
Rev. 3:1, Mrs. E. Mitchell gave com-
ments on _thus scripture. Mrs, D. En-
nis led in prayer Mrs, Jim Clarks
Topic was from the story of "Fred
Sloman's School in a railway coach."
The secretary, Mrs. Herb Travis, gave
a report of the March meeting and
road thank -you notes. The topic for the
May meeting is in charge of Mrs.
George I-Iibbert, The roll call was
answered with an Easter verse. The
W.M.S. and W,A reports were given.
The vice-president thanked the ladies
for making the larch bazaar a success
and told of the W. A. Presbytery annual
at Winthrop, May 3, when Mrs. Joiner,
vice president of conference will be
the speaker; she also reminded mem•
hers of the Church's Capital Fund do-
nation for year ending April 30 to be
in by that date, elso of the bale to be
packed first week in May.. Articles
for this are to be 'left at the church
prior to that date. Usable material
cut with pinking shears from worn
garment:; are acceptable and are it-
be
sbe aceo npa red by sewing cotton, also
good used clothing or any new materi 1•
Mrs P. McDonald and Mrs. W. 13road.
foot are le buy 10 yds, of flannelot'
also spools 'd needles for bale. The,
piacceds r: in bazaar are to be itiveti
to the W.A. treasurer, a small balance
to. be retained. Several articles left
over from the bazaar were sold at this
meeting A butterfly quilt is still to be
sold. Mrs. Doug Ennis conducted a
Bible study and the meeting closed
with the Benediction. Lunch was
served by Mrs. W Bewley, Mrs. II.
Ti}avis and Mrs. A. Searle.
McKillop Group
The April meeting of the McKillop
Group was afield at the hone of Mrs,
Gordon McGavin, Wednesday evening,
April 19, with twelve members and one
visitor present. Mrs. Jack Bosman
presided, . opening with hymn 112, "Re-
joice the Lord is King," with Mrs.
Campbell Wey as pianist. Prayer was
offered by Mrs. Merton Hackwell
Psalm 145 was the scripture passage
read by Mrs. David Watson, __ Mrs.
Stewart McCall chose as her topic,
"Obedience of the Cross, not as I
will—but as Thou wilt." Mrs. Norman
Schade gave a review of the book of
Mark and conducted a quiz. Following
the business session a successful mis-
cellaneous sale was held, Articles for
the bale are to be in the first of May.
Used Christmas cards, Sunday school
papers, Missionary Monthlys and etc.
are being picked At the May meet-
ing there will be a sale of perennial
plants, bulbs, • vogdtable plants, etc.
The W.A. annual is to be held in Win-
throp May 3, The closing hymn "There
is a green hill far away," was sung
and the Lord's Prayer repeated in uni-
son. A delicious lunch was served by
the hostess, Mrs. Norman Schade, Mrs.
Chas. MCGavin, Mrs Russell Barrows
and Mrs. Stewart McCall.
C. G. I. T. Rally
A C G.I.T. Rally was held in the
North Side United Church, Goderich,
April 15. Fifteen members attended
from the Walton Group, In the even-
ing a grladuation service was conducted
by Mrs. R, S. IIlltz, of Exeter, Mrs,
Jean Thur•low, of the Stratford Teach -
ors' College, was guest speaker Mary -
Lou Kirkby, Anne Achilles and Marion
Turnbull were among those receiving _
'graduation certificates,
Corpral Fred Walters flew home -
from Calgary to attend his grandfath- -
er's funeral, Mr, Geo. Raper,- of Lon-
don, last Monday and remained till =
Thursday with his parents, Mr. and -
Mrs. Frank Walters. Fred has just -
completed an Electrical Mechanical
Engineering Course at Edmonton.
Mrs Hilda Sellers, of Lucan, spent
the past week with her daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Herb Travis. 1
AhliSs Norma Iloegy, of St, Marys Hos.'
pital, Kitchener, spent the weekend
uher parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. u
Ilocgy
•
-
Miss Jean and Ruth Walters have -
acceptcd positions at and near Listo• t
1
SALE MEN'S SPORT !:
JACKETS .
with zipper and button encloser, in corduroy and
dan-river materials, red, black, grey and blue.
Regular up to $11.95
12 Only to Clear at $5.99 and $7.99
CHILDREN'S
R WN OX
with composition sole and rubber heel
Sizes 9 to 101/2 $3.39
Sizes 11 to 3 $3.69
R. W. Madill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Good Manners"
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON,
PHONES:
CLINTON: EXETER:
Buslness—Hu 2.0006 Business 41
Residence—Iiu 2-3809 Residence 34
ANNUAL MEETING
HURON COUNTY TUBERCULOSIS
ASSOCIATION
North St. United Church, GO'DERICH
Wednesday, May 3, at 6:45 p.m.
VAUGHAN DOUGLAS, Farm Editor, C :NX
Guest Speaker '
DINNER TICKETS — $1.00 EACH
WE'VE FOOD TO SUIT YOUR MOOD ...
from the tastiest sandwiches in town to a delic-
io>is full -course meal.
A snack is a real pleasure here. The service is
speedy, atmosphere congenial ... and the prices
thrifty!
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG. Pronri.etur.
II I
MUNICIPAL NOTICE
Township Of Morris
I hereby give notice that nomination of five
school trustees to serve the Township of Morris
will be held at Morris Township Hall Friday, April
28, 1961 from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. Standard Time.
All persons wishing to qualify must either be
present at the nomination by 9 p.m. or have a writ-
ten consent for nomination signed by him or herself
in the hands of the returning officer by 9 p.m., April
28, 1961.
If necessary a poll will be opened at the follow•
ing places on SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1961
Polling Sub -Division No. 1
School House S.S. No, 1
Polling Sub -Division No. 2
School IIouse USS No. 11
Polling Sub -Division No. 3
School House SS No. 5
Polling Sub -Division No, 4
Morris Township Hall
Polling Sub -Division No. 5
School IIouse SS No. 7
Polling Sub -Division No. 6
School Housq SS 1•It1. 10
D.R.O. Mrs. John McNichol.
P.C. Mrs. Laurie Scott.
D.R.O. Mrs, Frank Walters
P.C. Mrs. Arthur McCall
D.R.O. Mrs. Richard Procter
P.C. Mrs. Earl Anderson
. D.R.O. Mrs. Ernest Pletch
P.C. Mrs. Jos. Smith
D.R.O. Mrs. Milton Fraser
P.C. Alex Campbell
D.R.O. Mrs, Graham Campbell
Mrs, Wm. Peacock
POLIS TO IP (PEN FROM 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. D.S.T,
oEORQn minim Returning Officer,
1 1
1
1
Wednesday, April 26, 1961
.+_ -11.Mama ..,...,.... vM14mM-, .,.Aamanmeal .
>
TRI; af3LYTA STANDARD PAGE t'►
'111...11•r -Orr
.ar11YMRran saw timmeYarmesmuraws llfmy w IIN*N Yt"PIO AO, 04 4AO,. r.N
Elliott insurance Agency
BLYT; I — ONTARIO,
.M.^Vs WW a./.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCI-IES
Automobile, Fire, ';.''asu4ity, Sickness, Accident,
Windstol Fa, I; arm Liability.
WE SPECIALIH IN GIVING SER. TICE,
i Office Phone 104. Residence ?hone 140
:4311111111111[111111111E7111111110111.1., L \n111111l.?.� -1/11rail i.4w.nM.rY.2LL..11x
FOR SALE
Baled hay. Apply A.
phone 40It9, Blyth.
WANTED TO BUY
We pay best prices for: glass top
cupboards; chests of drawers; toilet
sets; glassware; hanging lamps, etc.
Write to Ye Olde Country Store, Bay
field, Ontario, and let us know what
you have. 10-4p.
•••~1141 rNI+N1I.I411
NW I.NM.•Par/..1..1.1.1/4.4•++44•1v.+
W George, Clinton Community
1 l -1p
BLYTH BILLIARDS
"Your friendly meeting
place."
Tobacdos - Soft Drinks
Confectionaries
open 9 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Doc Cole, Proprietor
..~.11-.0#4",.. I *4 •4•4,41.1 1+11+N+V+
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hollinger
Phone 143
TV ANTENNA REPAIRS
TV Antenna Repairs and Installation.
Year around service, Phone collect,
Teeswater, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser-
vice.
FIIJFER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to All Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners, Bob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensel!, 696R2. 50.13p.tf. '
9AN111ARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL.
Septic tanks, cesspools, etc., pumped 11
Ind cleaned. Free estimates, Louie
Blake, phone 42120, Brussels, R,.lt. 2
CRAWFORI) &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J, 1I. Crawford, R. S. IIetherington,
�►.(:. Q.C.
Wingham and Blyth.
IN BLYTII
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located in Elliott Insurance Agenos'
''hone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 4
G. B. CLANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOR APPOINTMENT PROM 33,
GODERICH t6•ei
1A
/SNP* aPa14,84e44-#4.4.0%/41,.4 4y.....,+11wr...i.r.'
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERY FRIDAY AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 2 p.m.
IN BLY'rn, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
oe Corey, Bob McNair,
Manager, Auctioneer]
O5-tf,
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Hogs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 162, Blyth
DEAD STOCK
WANTED
HIGHEST CASH PRICES paid In
surounding districts for dead, old, sick
or 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, if busy phone Leroy Acheson,
Atwood, 153, Wm, Morse, Brussels,
5J6. Trucks available at all times
34- 1, Mar.
1, E. Longstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — .Clinton
HOURS:
:sforth Dalry Except Monday & Wed
9:00 a.m, to 5:30 p.m.
— 9;00 a.m. to 12:30 p;m.
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 • 5;30.
Phone HU 2-7010
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETR EST
n A.TRICK ST. • WTNGHA M. ON'I
) ,t'ENTNGS BY A PPOINITM FNT
!For Apointment please phone 770 -
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Service..
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICH, ONT,
Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 — Box 478.
DR. R. W. STREET
. Blvth, Ont.
OFFICE HnTR9-1 P.M, TO 4 P,M,
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS,
7 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"WIIERE BETTER BULLS ARE
USED"
Farmer owned and controlled
Service at cost
Choice of bull and breed
Our artificial breeding service will help
you 'to a more efficient livestock
operation
For :service or more Information call:
Clinton HU 2.3441, or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9.5950. -
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
IiEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTII, ONT.
OFFICERS:
President — John L. Malone, Sea•
forth; Vice -President, John -11, McEw•
ing, 'Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth,
DIRECTORS
J. L. Malone, Seaforth; J. 11, McEw•
ing, Blyth; W. S. Alexander, Walton;
Norman Trewartha, Clinton; J, E. Pen.
per, Brueefield; C. W. Leonhardt,
Bornholm; H. Fuller, Goderlch; R.
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Raforth,
AGENTS:
g'Tl!i'rm T ether, Jr„ Londesboro; V,
,i. Lane, H.B. 5, Seaforth; Solwri 13a-
io.r, lirttsst''ti; James Keyes, Seaforlh:
Harold Squh'ufi, Clinton,
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
IIIGIIEST CASII PRICES.
PAID FOR SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value
Old Ilorses-4c per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels,
BRUCE MARLATT
24 Hour Service
Plant Licence No. 54-R.P.-01
Colector Licence No, 88-G61
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR '
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 231112 Brussels, Ontario
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes o[
cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen
Sales, Varna. Tel. collect Hensel] 696112,
50-13p.tf. e
00:
1
Jackson Aluminum Ltd.
Seaforth
is colecting wool for grading and sale'
on the co-operative plan. Shippers may i
obtlzin saik and twine free of charge
from the above or their Lircnscr Oper-
ators.
Any Government Deflsicmy Payment
will apply only on Properly Graded
Wools.
Secure the utmost by Patronizing the •
Organization that made this possible.
Canadian Co -Operative
Wool Growers Limited
217 Bay Strec • Toronto
CONTACT US
For All Your
ELECTRICAL PROBLEMS
Free Estimates Given On
WIRING CONTRACTS
Fast and Efficient Service
on all
ELECTRICAL REI'AIRS
BILL'S ELECTRIC
1Ym, Ilull, Proprietor.
Picone 171
- i LYCEUM THEATRE
Wingham, Ontario.
Two Shows Each Night
Commencing at 7:15 p.m.
Matinee Saturday afternoon at 2 p.m.
s
Thurs., Fri„ Sat„ APIIIL 27, 28, 29
Double BILI
"BATTLE OF OUTER SPACE"
Science Fiction ,Story
"COMMANCIIE STATION"
Randolph Scott and Nancy Gates
Western Action Picture.
f 1.11.N1MIV11.1N11M►N1NN11 N1
ROOFING
We Sell and Apply Asphalt Coating
for Felt and Steel Roofs, backed by
8 Years Guarantee by Southwestern
Petroleum Co. of Hamilton. Ben
Fowler, phone 188, Blyth, 10.4p
AUCTION SALE
Estate Auc;iun Sale of Property and
Household Effects of the Late Mex
Patterson, Queen Street, Blyth, on
SATURDAY, MAY Glh
at 1 p.m.
Gibson Electric stove; International
Harvester refrigerator; Easy washing
.machine; electric toaster; electric iron,
electric frying ran; vacuum cleaner;
' ouch; 9 piece dining room suite (like
new); propane gas heater (new); coal
and wood stove with oven; 2 kitchen
cabinets; day bed; antique cupoard;
!oilet set; antique rocker; bedroom
ulte; kitchen table and chairs; tables, I
hest of drawers; motor; seal-
ers; garden tools: garden hose; extol).
sion ladder; dishes; mocks; trunks,
ether •articles too numerous to men•
tion.
HOUSE AND PROPERTY
1',i and 1 story frame dwelling with
hath, garage and small stable.
Properly will be offered for sale Sub-
ject to reserve bid,
Estate of Alex Patterson,
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer,
George Powell, Clerk,
1111 , 11 . , 1, 1 111 . .i1 1 I 11 1 .1 1 IN 1. 11 1
rownie's riveln
Theatre Ltd., Clinton
THURSDAY and FRIDAY APRIL 27 and 23
DOUBLE FEATURE
"VICE RAID
11
(Adult Entertainment)
"RABBIT TRAP
Mimic VanDorcn -- Brad Dexter
Ernest Borgnine
(ONE CARTOON)
SATURDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY APRiL 29, MAY 1 and 1
(Adult Entertainment)
THE UNFORGIYEN
But: Lancaster - Audrey Hepburn and Audie Murphy
(COLOUR) (CINEMASCOPE) (ONE CARTOON!
WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY MAY 3, 4 and ,i
HOLE IN THE HEAD
(COLOUR),. (CINEMASCOPE)
Frank Sinatra . Edward G. Robinson - Thelma Ritter
and Eleanor Parker
(ONE CARTOON)
.I I I. II 11111111- I. I, . I
1 ale IN 11
The public is invited to attend the
ANNUAL MEETING and BANQUET
Huron Liberal Association
(as consituted for Federal Purposes)
Canadian Legion Hall, CLINTON
THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1961
" Dinner 7 p.m. ' Meeting 8:30 p.tn,
GUEST SPEAKER;
Hon. Lester B. Pearson, M.P.
Leader of the Liberal Party
Tickets for the Banquet availlable from Municipal Chairmen.
ANDREW Y. McLEAN, Seaforth ROY LAMONT, Zurich
President. Treasurer.
HAROLD SHORT, Goderich, Secretary.
l it
(ars For Sale
11. 1 IN. 1
1960 PONTIAC 2 Door
1958 CHEV, half -ton.
1958 CHEV. Sedan
1958 PONTIAC 4 door
Wagon.
1956 PLYMOUTH Sedan
1955 I1ORD Hard Top
2.1954 FORDS
1954 DODGE Sedan
1953 PONTIAC Sedan
1953 STUDEBAKER V 8
Sedan,
1952 FORD Sedan Deliv.
1950 FORD Coach
Hamm's . Garage
Blyth, Ontario,
New and Used Car Dealers
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Clearltig Auction Sale of Farm S'ock
and Machinery, at Lot 29, Concession
10-3
J
MEET YOUR NEIGIIBORS AT THE
ammo, PARK THEATRE Phone 3A4.7811 -
NOW PLAYING
Now—Thurs., Fri., Sat., Apr, 27, 28, 29
"HANNIBAL" In Color with Victor Mature.
Mott„ Tues., Wed., May 1, 2, 3
"FROM THE TERRACE"
in Scope and Color A Conroversial Hit:Admit once Restricted to Persons 18 Yeors of Age ►ntd Over
PAUL NEWMAN • JOANNE WOODWARD . MYItNA LOY
In John O'llarra's novel of family conflict
One Showing Nightly Starting 8 o'clock
Thurs., Fri,, Sat., May 1, 5, 6, — Double Bill
"FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE"
Scope and Color
with Richard lfasehart . Stu Erwin and Johnny Bravo
also
"RODEO"
In Technicolor
Starring John Archer and Jane Nigh
Conning—"OCEANS ELEVEN" — Technicolor — Frank Sinatra and
Dean Martin
FOR SALE 1
3 -piece wine colored frieze Chestor• _
field suite, In gocd condition, 1 chair -
4, Morris. Township 1%, north and V.:green_ Phone 1221 Blyth 11-1p i
mile west of Brussels, on
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3rd SPECIAL SEEDS
at 1 pm,
CATTLE -50 Hereford steers from
850 to 900 lbs.
PIGS -2G York chunks; 1 York sow
with litter.
' MACHINERY—Ford tractor, recently
reconditioned; Dearborn 2 furrow CERT, SELKIRK IVIIEAT.
plow; Ford spring tooth cultivator
with scuffling attachments; Waterloo
double disk 32 plate; steel land roller; CANADA NO. 1 ALFALFA (locally -
i Cockshut manure spreader; Case 4 bar
• side Voice; Litz feed grinder; Case 7 ft,
binder; John Deere heavy duly wagoti
16 ft, flat hay rack; 1933 half -ton GMC
truck; 32 ft. corn crib wire mesh; DAY . PASTURE MIXTURE.
other articles too numerous to mention,
'1'E4t114S CASII
Thos. Pletch, Proprietor,
'Harold Jackson, Auctioneer
REG. CLIMAX (Eligible to grow Cer:. -
Timothy).
THANKS
HURON
Thanks for helping us help the nation-
wide fight against cancer.
Complete returns aren't in yet but we're
hoping to meet pill' big objective.
If you weren't in when the canvasser
called, we hope you'll make a special ,effort
to do your part. Your donation will be
accepted by your local bank.
Remember, our branches throughout the
county are ready to give effective, confi-
dential help to cancer patients. Don't
hesitate to contact us; we know the prob-
lem. ,
Proclamation
BY RESOLUTION OF BLYTH COUNCIL
and in co-operation with neighbouring
municipalities,
I HEREBY PROCLAIM
DAY -LIGHT SAVING TIME
to commence
SUNDAY, APRIL 30th
at 12:01 A.M.
and end on
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29th
at 12:01 A.M.
SCOTT R. FAIRSERVICE, Reeve.
To Investors
Enquire about London, Kitchener and Sarnia
Debentures at 51/2 percent
Dominion of Canada 3 one-quarter percent 1979
77.25 per 100.
Dominion of Canada 3 three-quarter percent 1998
77.25 per 100.
grown). Australian Bondas 5.88 percent.
• BI lit Ont,
Y �
09.3p
FOR SALE
t,�li1 ;r
v“.41, pressure system puirp )
c-roplrte vii tank, Apply, Seers Body
Shop, phone 7754, Auburn, • 11-1
FOR SALE;
1 Ilolstein hull calf, ideal for vealing,
,Apply, A, Sicttmm8, phone
FOR SALE
Used l'a'niture: 2 piece wine chester-
field; 6 piece chrome kitchen set; 6
Cum -
piece dinette set; dresser and vilest of Phu►IG91
dtaWer;i Apply, errs. Michael Curr
ntillgki, 11lIuue 171112, 1311 h, 11.111 111111 �fr31 .i ik ' ; ,, 011011M
I1''(;. and COAT GARRY OATS.
R. N. ALEXANDER
LQMDES1i0RO
IIl1 g-7173
Bell Gouinlock And Company. Ltd.
Bankers Bond Corporation Ltd.
44 7 ing Street West, Toronto, Olit.
GEORGE SLOAN--- Local Agent.
i
1
New First lady
`Afire A Princess"
Always, whcn01'er they s:nt
finer, her heart tvaS higil and he;
eyes were bright. Her smile war.
radiant -- but not for them. SIR
swept regally past, her eyes
looking far ahead. Yet the
crowds loved it.
"She': like 0 princess," said
one Point,' man, "She'a the
closest thing to ioyalty art Anwri-
can girl can he•"
This wa: J:n'queline 13uuyie:'
'Kennedy last month — back in
New C'or'k for the first time since
she mored to the White House
and enjoying a pre -Easter shop-
ping Spree in the finest shops.
It tt';t. an :1 hrigh( \1t)nday
afternoon that tht' first Lady
planed into La Guardia airlietd
She was accompanied by her
equally beautiful sister. Princess
Radr.itt'iti, White House secretary
Anne Lincoln. and Iwo Secret
Service men. Mrs. Kennedy held
a shiny cr,;)y of Vogue in her
1i iiid and ware a plum -colored
suit, inc.se-fitt-d and understated
as are ail of her clothes.
A NOW 1'or).; eir1 (SLIM rner, in
East Hampton. winters on Park
Avenue), Mrs. Kennedy checked
into her hotel. the elegant Car-
lyle at itith and Madison. She
1110yrd into her sister's a'):)1't-
lnent 14E while her entuuraee
took over the Presidential snit's
on the 34th and 35th floors Then,
first thinii.i tt;'st. of course. ,'i
call trent Out for .lir. Kenneth,
the hair -stylist at Lilly Dacht:'s.
The ladies kept him h).tsy until
6 p.m.
Having nlan i od to avoid mak-
ing a statement to the press at
the airport, Mrs. Kennedy kept
up the silent. treatment. 12 Tport-
ers ani photographers, ignoring
the glares of Carlyle patrons,
camper; out in the hotel lounge
only to suffer one disappoint-
ment after another.
The First Lady herself slip-
ped in and out through back en-
trances and once, to elude the
press — with the help of the
Secret Service — she switched
cars. Tooling down Park Avenue
in one Cadillac, she stopped as
soon as she had eluded eager re-
porters, and stepped into another
Cadillac. (This was because the
license plates of the first car —
a White House limousine with
District of Columbia tags read-
ing JK 102 — would be a give
it if reporters caught up to
ser again.)
She planned luncheon for six
,at Le Pavillon but did not at-
tend, to the great regret of Ali
he doorman to whom she always
peaks in French, "I know her
or many years," Ali said. "Nice
ady, very, what you say simple."
Mrs. Kennedy, wearing a blue
wool dress, blue reefer coat and
alligator shoes with nonteetering
middle -size heels — the kind a
Wonsan can wear if her legs don't
jteed high heels - spent that
fternoon shopping, Sha stopped
n at Fifth Avenue's F.A.O,
chwarz toyshop where she
bought two dolls for Caroline.
Later the President's wife look-
ed at a velvet -collared Princess
Margaret -style coat and leggings
for Caroline and then dropped
by one of her favorite antique
shops, S. Berges, There she
bought a jardiniere, an 18th
century French flower bowl for
use in the Kennedy's Hyannis
Port summer home. The First
tady also found time during her
stay to look at the post-impres-
flonist paintin)'s cf Maurice
rendergast at the Whitney Mu-
seum, a collection of contenlpor- .
'ry art at the Sagittarius Gal-
ery and some primitive art ob-
ects at J. J. Klejnsan,
Tuesday evening, accompanied
rAdlai Stevenson, Mrs, Ken-
edy attended the City Center
ailet where the director, George
ISSUE 17 — 1961
11,0,H... Ling .;a l4 bei! his pro -
gran: to include three 111 h,•r f,+
sort; "Pas de Dix" ht til i,:-
ttnet, asLetat:ilun\
Bizet. and the "Li, he. I. -der
tt'c)l/er." w)th music bt 11)'.1011•.
:1 crowd "t 511t) eathcrcd out icie
the hall t0 see ;Intl wave to her.
She flashed theta and 'I'V cam-
era:nthn a radiant smile hetore
taking her seat at dead center in
rot;' G. The first Lady was not
die"( .i to the nine: for the ucca-
sion; .she ;;'ore a simple bine-
gray brocade theater' suit. The
iricket had a tmvl nee!: and the
skirt was day length. Her only
jet'.'e',ry' tt'as aii!terina earrings.
Other theater•;;us.; trumped up
and down he aisle; ogling; her.
b11t none ;poke 1st her. She chat
led gaily aitd seamed to he hay-
ine a tine time.
'1'h: n ' t nt 'nurse twa ides
an .1 tw.) naidel:. :ill resolutely
, refusing to give their ;lames, ap-
pealed at the Carlyle, laden frith
halhuxes and garment bags, The
hats canna front 111r. John, the
clothes from Oleg Cassini, Mr's.
Kennels'.; favorite American de-
Sie,rer. Because of a White
House frown Oil -publicity about
her clothes, there was no official
n•ord on what Cassini was show-
ing her, but she had already ap-
preyed mast of the designs in
sketch f'u'ns. The selection rang-
, ed from sl comer dressC3 and
sp.Tl,1ve)1* t) woolen dresses
and 511iis needed to finish out the
500, -on in 1Va=hineton. Her East -
el' outfit was to be summery and
any (she planned to spend Easter
in Palin 13:acht and reflected
nvl•') cxnert: n'tcd was a new
eireha=is on color. It was pre -
sowed that a print dress she
we^'e recently at a Latin Ameri-
can reception was a sign of Mrs.
Kennedy 's experimenting in
styles and colors not as under-
stated as those rhe has favored
in the past.
Newsmen were still kept in the
dark about her schedule as well
as her new wardrobe. I"Who
docs this dame think she is?"
was a common complaint.] But
she spent the late hours of the
day readying the Presidential
Suite for a small cocktail party.
The guests included Robert Dow-
ling, owner of the Carlyle, Col,
Serge Obolensky, the hotel exe-
cutive who is also known as "the
best waltzer in America," Henry
Ford II, Princess Radziwill and
her husband, tyho is a London
businessman, the Leland Hay -
wards (she is the former Pamela
Churchill), and Mrs. Kennedy's
stepbrother and his wife, Mr. and
Mrs. Hugh D. Auchincloss Jr.
The party broke up at 8:30 and
the President's wife, with her
sister, left with the Auchinclos-
ses. They dined at L'Ermitage
on East 58th St., where Mrs.
Kennedy wore a blue wool suit
with white trim, white gloves,
blue pumps, no coat, no hat, It
was the sisters' last night togeth-
er in town but the First Lady
still had more fittings and more
clothes to look at the next day.
This time a new group of models
displayed the wares. In the af-
ternoon Mrs. Kennedy shopped
at Sloane's furniture store, and
had a friend pick up some things
for her at Saks Fifth Avenue.
She was back at the hotel at 3
p.m., again avoiding the press
and, with her sister, checked out
at 4:15. She went through the
rain to het' car, where a photo-
eraphet' caught an appealing
Renoir -like picture,
Back at the airport, homeward
bound, Mrs, Kennedy again gave
her famous smile to the still -
pursuing press—but still she re-
fused to talk. She climbed into
her plane, again with a copy of
Vogue in her hand. Not until she
reached home in Washington did
she have any statement to slake,
Then all she said was: "I didn't
buy too much, The weather was
awful." From NEWSWEEK.
DRIVE CAREFULLY — The
life you save may he your own,
CAROLINE'S CAT — The White House cat, Tom Kitten, has new
masters and a new names Tom Terrific. Mrs. Kennedy decided
the Executive Mansion was too lonely for the cat and gave
• him to her personal secretary, Mary Gallagher, Gregory, 3,
-id Christopher Gallagher, 4, find that Tom adapts easily.
NATURAL CURTAIN STRETCHERS — living cactus fences that.
surround most rural homes on the island of Aruba, Netherlands
West Indies, make handy "clotheslines." The laundry is draped
over the prickly plants and the warm Caribbean trade winds
do the drying.
HRONICLES
iINGERFRM
GmLott,ndtn>: t
If you are not interested in
dog,; don't read my column this
week.
As you may know my special-
ity in dogs is Welsh Corgis. Un-
til recently I thought we were
the only ones in this district to
own a Corgi, Then I saw an
advertisement In a Toronto pa-
per -- "For Sale — registered
Welsh Corgi pups". And the
owner of the dogs lived only
about three miles from here, So
I phoned, explained my interest,
asked if I might see the pups and
if I could bring Taffy along with
me, I was cordially invited to
conte any time. So away I went
the very next morning. Only
two of the puppies were left and
they were the cutest little things,
one of thein very like Taffy. But
the mother — she was a perfect
match for Taffy. They were very
friendly towards each other, so,
who knows, it might be the be-
ginning of a future romance.
A day or two later I saw an-
other "for sale" notice in the
paper, This time of a cocker
spaniel for a very reasonable
price. I immediately phoned Dee,
because ever since Honey died
the boys have been begging for
another dog. Dee had to go to a
Guide meeting that night so Art
and the boys went along to see
the dog. What they saw was so
different from what they expect-
ed Art decided he wasn't going
Easy Sun -Style
If/ r4'IULh VYI e
Sundress or pinafore! It's easy
to sets of crisp cotton — opens
flat for speedy ironing.
Ruffles and colorful embroid-
ery, in running and single stitch,
delight a little girl, Pattern 599:
transfer of bands; pattern in
sizes 2, 4, 6, 8 included.
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 'Ibr-
onto, Ont, Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS,
JUST OI'F THE PRESS!
Send now for our exciting, new
1961 Needlecraft Catalog, Over
125 designs to crochet, knit, sew,
embroider, quilt, weave — fash-
ions, hotnefu'nisllings, toys, gift';,
bazaar hits. Plus F'1(f `;—in Irur-
tions for :=ix smart veil cap.,.
!furry, send 25t' now!
to taste any chances—Dee should
see hint first. Ile was the colour
of chocolate and quite a bit big-
ger than the avers'e cerise';'
;;?aniel, Next morning Dee and
the three boys went by str'-c't-
car to see the pup and Dec fell
for him on the :pot. Ile was such
a friendly, lovable little fellow
she just couldn't resist him. So
the dog was bought and paid for
-- the next problem wits to get
him home. Not only the clog but
his dishes, brush and comb, col-
lar and chain and some dog food.
However Dee is the type who
will tackle anything al tittles and
this was one of those occasions
, all the way home 011 the
Queen street car! The worst part
was getting dog and boys all
assembled in the same spot al.
the sante time to get off the
crowded street -car. That sante
night, after Friday night shop-
ping, they all came along for
their accustomed visit — with
the pup of course, so we could
see what we thought of hint. i
am glad to say we liked hint as
much as they did, Ile is longer
i►1 the leg than the average
spaniel. From his appearance I
would say he is a mixture of
water spaniel and Irish setter,
His name is "Gustav" and he is
six months old, Already ise takes
a lot of good-natured mauling
from the boys. They just love
hint, Dee will need to love him
too as he isn't house-trained!
His former owners were Finnish
folk and they bought him as a
wee pup hoping to overcome
their little girl's fear of dogs.
But it didn't work so Gustav
spent a good deal of time in the
cellar. With a timid, three-year-
old child to look after and an-
other on the way the lady of the
house couldn't give the dog the
attention he should have had.
However, I think Gus will now
find he finally got the better of
the bargain,
Friday night, of course, we
were faced with the problem of
keeping peace between the two
dogs — Taffy and Gus, Taffy
had never had another dog in-
vade his home territory — ex-
cept poor old Honey who was so
old and fat Taffy treated her
more like a stuffed toy, . There
was a little snapping and snarl-
ing on Taffy's part when Guns -
first came in but then he decided
it was really fun to have some-
one to play with and after that
they got along fine, I'm telling
you what with three boys and
two dogs this place was little
short of a madhouse Friday '
night. Ditto, I might add, took
to the front bedroom and didn't
show up again until after the
crowd had gone.
Well, the last few days we
have had a greater problem than
dogs to contend with. Our town-
ship water supply is contamin-
ated. I'm not sure "contamin-
ated" is the right word to use as
we are told whatever has got
Into the water is not in any way
poisonous. Poison or not it has
)))arta the ;tater (Vile urtctruik•
able. Even dishes after being
washed have the phenol odour
;Tinging to them. We understand
seepage from the oil refineries
Inas somehow reached the totvn-
shjp filtration plant, 13ttt are \1.1'
lucky ... right next door to es
is a neighbour who still gets his
water supply Prom a good old-
fashioned well In the backyard.
We go over there In the morning
and get our water supply for the
day --- that is, for drinking and
cooking purposes. Some people
are making trips to a natural
sprint; a few miles front here,
Pilling ears, pails and bottle and
bringing it borne. So 00w wr
know mine of our modern con-
veniences are really fool -proof.
Yesterday a (nail order catalogue
came in the mall. Looking
through it Partner said-. •'1lere's
sumcthine tt•c' had better send
for right away." 11 was a Iw0-
burncr
011,101.0. 1'111 ;Ill for
With that on hand we can at
least make 0 cup 01• tea or boil 0
tett' potatoes such time as the
hydro goes Of.
Mass Production
Honeymooning
!'here ars. it seems, two kinds
of kW( 1121.110.:3 011 a honeymoon.
There is the togetherness of a
(Otrpie who want to be alone to-
gether, gazing into each otter's
eyes and all that kind of thing.
Then there is a real togetherness.
The second kind was what in-
spired more than 1,000 newly-
wed couples who swarmed into
Britain's Channel Island of Jer-
sey recently. A British in,titu-
lion known as "the tax man's
wedding" was responsible for
the big splurge. Easter, always
a popular time for weddings,
coincided almost exactly with the
end of Britain's fiscal year, and
any bachelor married before
April 8 got his personal income-
tax exemption raised from $392
to $672. Thus, he could count
on a big enough tax rebate to
finance a honeymoon. And when
it came to choosing a spot, he
knew his stoney would go far-
ther on Jersey because it is a
self - governing dependency,
which doesn't like loo many
taxes. Cigarettes cost 20 cents,
compared with 57 cents in Bri•
Iain; the rost of whisky is cut in
half.
Well aware of the profits to
SEASONAL -- With the sun get.
tIng hotter, the beach is a
pleasant place to be, as Sheila
Bailey proves.
. 14'1 ;;tittle, Jar. '�',; tuts; fel Ilia ':ell
and hulelLreper; 111ye irtaugnr•
aced special honet tnuon features.
Island bars servo "hone} ,11001,"
cocktails Id : ;ret recipe), hits
tours are arranged, an(i roots
television S1t.s fere installed, til
ease of bad tyeather. And thu
honeymooner,; have re, punded
by spending $200,000.
(11any couple; arrived with no
lrlen that so 100113' other.s were
going to he there at the s uua
time. ''We thought we were go-
ing to get away from it all," said
Glen Brown, 23 -year-old engi-
neer from \V1ti)1)0rne, 1)orset.
"We're not disappointed though,"
added his pretty wile, P0,ltty•
"it's fine to have so many other
happy people around."
I3ric1egrnum Itoger Pryor had
another victt'. "5 I r 011 0, 4 1 y
enough," he said, "n honeymoon
could be lonely. tart 1101 here,
We've Made friends with tttn
other couples and are Isatin:; a
grand time,"
'l'ltis was the sort of 1u}:ether•
gess that delielitcd hotclkecper
Strut Mtl$nti, whose \lemon hotel
was tilled with 414 newlywed;.
"It's like 0 tonic.," he said, "to
see so many people liking ea011
other 50 mach. K eps you
young."
Modern Et clue' fe
By Anne Ashley
Q, Butt' many vegetables 1, it
considered "really necessary" to
serve at a well-prepared dinner?
A. 'Pwo vettctablea, ustt:di;;
Q. Isn't 11 the girl's privilege
to select the table when enter-
ing a restaurant W11 11 her male
escort?
A. No; she should allots her
escort t0 do tilis.
Half -Sixes --look!
PRINTED PATTERN
4566
SIZES
121,4-22 1/4
4/Atetit. 44,4
Side -draping softly accents
this graceful afternoon dress.
Wear it belted or not—there are
no waist seams to interrupt the
smooth and slimming line,
Printed Pattern 4566: Ifal(
Sizes 12 Ss, 141,(2, 161/2, 181, 201,
221/4. Size 161/2 requires 2$s yards
45 -inch fabric,
Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for safety) for this pattern.
Please print plainly SIZE,
NAME, A I) I) R E S 5, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont,
ANNOUNCING t h e biggest
fashion show of Spring -Summer,
1961—pages, pages, pages of pat-
terns in our new Color Catalog—
just out! Flurry, send 350 nowt ,
E'•J:,iY INCH IS A HONEY — The preidential yacht is refurbished at an Annapolis boat yard.
Pros:dent Kenne,ay hos changed the name front the "Barbara Anne" to the "Honey Fitz," in
hone- of h6 I'to gr'ondfether, John Fitzgerald, '+lrmer mayor of Basso').
Musial Reveals
Batting Secrets
Stan Musial was sitting in the
shade of the Cardinal dugout,
and naturally it wasn't long ht! -
fore the conversation re oround
to hitting.
"rhe only time I ever had eriy
T ea I trouble was in the simile,"
began the great SI. Louis vet-
eran, whose 3,204 base hits are
SPeOncl only to Rogers Ilmnsby
in the National League, "I'd Leel
strong and think about hitting
home runs and I'd get fouled up.
"I'd be thinking my body gen-
trilled the power and I'd start
lunging. But you get your power
with your wrists. If your bat is
still back when you take your
step, you'll snap wood into any
pitch,"
A 'fellow suggested that the
Cardinal star was seldom fooled
on a curve ball.
"Well," he continued, "when
--1 first came up I really could hit
the fast ball. 1 mean, nobody
could throw it by me. So they
started curving me, Then, when
1 learned to hit the curve, those
pitchers were in trouble,"
Musial's listeners laughed with
him for a moment, but then the
veteran suddenly got serious
woe
"However, it isn't as eai as
that," he went on. "It used to
he ycti'd see the fast ball, the
curve, and the change of pace.
Now they have the pesky slide.r.
If yeti don't watch out, it can
yet you all fouled up. It's an
uptical illusion, You swing end
it isn't there; and it's always
hitting you on the fists,
"If I was a young hitter just
starting out, I'll tell you what
I'(l do. I'd get a big bat with a
thi'l handle and I'd choke it,
and maybe I'd handle a few of
thrse sliders."
But they all want hone runs;
they all swing for the long hall,
wn around the end of tile
bet.
"Sure," Musial said. "Well, I
tett to change, When 1 first got
started in this league, during the
early years, I just tried for base
hits. I used to talk to myself up
there at the plate. I'd say to my-
self, over and over again: 'Get
the fat of the bat on the ball and
hiit the line drive,' 1 figured that.
if I got good wood on the ball,
it would drop in there solve -
where."
Stan laughed again, "But then
everybody started going for ihe
home runs and I had to change,
too. That's where the money
was,"
Joe Garagiola, the one-time
Cardinal catcher turned radio
'sportscaster, broke in with: "Af-
ter I'd been traded to Pittsburgh
and would catch behind Stan,
got o I could tell when he
was going to give the ball st
vide. I'd see the ball coming,
right down his groove and I'd
almost want to turn my head
sway, so I couldn't see what he
was going to do to it,"
"I trained myself early,'' Mu -
slat continued. "I developed a
zone of vision about eight feet
out in 'front of the plate and I
knew just how hard every pit-
cher could throw. So I'd follow
the ball until it reached that
zone. Then, if it kept coming,
1 got the fast ball flash, If it
hesitated, I'd say to myself:
'Curve.'
"But as 1 said before, now
they're throwing that slider and
t isn't as easy as it used to
REEL SOLDIER - Jacques Cher-
rier, former husband of actress
Brigitte Bardot, fudged out of
the French army, but he's in
uniform again - for the movie
cameras. He's shown on loca-
tion in Milan, Italy, where he
pays a member of a fascist
unit during World War II in
the film "Pigeon Silooting,"
.- -
\Vas it true that he could see
the ball coining off the bat?
asked Ed Rumill or the Chris -
hall Science Monitor.
"Oh, yes," replied the man
whose 5,591i total bases and 675
doubles are NL records, 'rhe
outside pitch, which 1 hit into
left field, is right in my line of
vision and 1 can see it come Off
the bat, Picking up other pit;hes
is tougher, because they're not
in the line of vision."
''But gelling back to the hone
run, I think a young player has
to make up his mind in the be-
ginning. If he isn't built for pow-
er — if he doesn't have the
leverage and the strength to
reach the fences - if he doesn't
have the tools, he's writing his
release by swinging down at the
end of the bat.
"A young hitter should first
concentrate on getting one hit
every four times up. Then he
should think about two for four
and three for four.
"In 1947 I'd hit 19 home runs,"
Stan said. "The next year 1
jumped to 39. So in the speing
srf '49 I couldn't wait to swing
that bat for the fence. I was
going to break Babe Ruth's re-
cord, But about the first of July,
when I had only a dozen homers,
I got smart and went back to
hitting straight-away - and fin-
ished with 36 homers.
"I've changed my stance a lit-
tle from time to time."
"How could anyone tell?" put
in Garagiola. "You always look
all wrong with that coil spring
stance of yours."
Stan smiled. "Yes," he said, "I
opened up my stance one year
and nobody even noticed it."
"I don't know," the wiae-
cracking Garagiola, went on, "I
don't think Stan ever, got much
fun out of playing, My big thin
was to walk over to the lineup
card on a dugout post and see
my name was written in. There
was nothing quite like it, But
Stan: well, he never had to look.
Ile knew it was there, He doesn't
know it, but he missed a lot."
WIDE STORY — Sure enough, as suspected, those scary apes
yehlrh appear on TV shows ars usually only human after all.
One of them is George Barrows, shown above on a Hollywood
*et of the Jim Backus show. George, an actor -stunt man, made
the suit himself of yak fur and plastic.
Boy Scouting
Greenland Style
Boy Scouting isn't whet it
toed to 1,e,
nvo just eut
beck Irom Greenlend, 800
from the North Pole, v here tor
five months they 'wiped !he
United States Army cep 01-
ing the Arctic.
Wht t dd they (107 Build kies,
p:Ith 1, Ms, breve trade find
wtitei"? Wi.s it 1 ettgle.'
lieportere, wiet,wr es -110y
Smuts or not, lad(
ready l'or a tale cl Cie Nvild,
T'ne two youthful eedeffers,
Kent L. Gocrine, 18, Neiele-
sha, Ken., and Soren Cie (i 0.
also 18, of Korsor, Denmark, a
citizen of the milieu e,iich pies
host to tin' Ariny 111 Crcen'end,
displayed the smde: ot men who
have .brel o;le primitive
question teo many ae( ut eerie.
plex subject.
In their tapaeity as gime jun-
ior scientific aides to the United
States Army Corps of Engineers
research city, Camp Centwy,
Greenland, they reported they
learned how to;
F'ind water -- by boring into
the thick ice with huge eteem
drills. The water being melted
in subterreneen caves that way
was found purer than distilled
water; the ice from v,hiLa i! is
made has lain uner:pc cd lir
centuries,
Blaze trails across the lee —
tvith porallet wires, buried in the
snow, which brCedellft 5'H:rats
that keep martin vehielee
course even when Arctic free or
wind -driven snow cuts visibility
10 Uro.
Build "firtei" — by learning
how to operate the master eon -
trot of a portable atcmie reactor
which saves the need forhauling
in huge quantities of diesel fuel
for heat end power.
Build shelters — by eseav,,t-
ing huge trenches (with special
tractors) similar to the way too-
dern coal mines are dug,
the trenches complete barracks
are erected and afterward the
trenches are covered with coeru-
gated metal roofs and the snow
is blown back on with machines.
Find ways to store gasolilo,
machinery, and other supplies
in unlined ice reservoirs. Gas
can be pumped into the ice
caverns without losing its quoi-
Hy. Tools can be stored without
rusting.
There was at least one touch
of the old Scout life, though.
'rhe boys built an igloo, cut -
ling the ice slabs "with mach-
etes." They slept in it one night
when the temperature was 64
below zero outside, 30 inside,
writes Frederick W. Roevekdm:p
in the Christian Science Monitor.
"We took off our Arctic wear
and went into double sleeping
bags, in our underwear," said
Kent. "We slept all right."
Nor was this all just a Scout
experience, however modern.
Both boys are interested in
natural science and technology.
Kent "probably" wants to be-
come an engineer, Soren, a 1,11 -
clear physicist.
"1 was pretty sure of that be-
fore I left for Greenland," he
said. "Now I am sure."
This summer, Kent .plans to
return to Greenland -to work as
a scientific assistant. Was it, be-
cause he liked to so mueh?
"Yes, and because of tise
money, you know," Kent •said.
Assistants get $650, practieally
all of which'they can save.
"I like the money, too," said
Soren. "I am trying to get back
there myself."
On their return to New York,
the two Scouts were each pre-
sented with a specially engraved
Boy Scout 50th Anniversary.Me-
dal to show the fellows back
home at the campfire.
Great Discovery By
High -School Boys
Embedded in the slab of black
shale were the Upper Triassic
age (175 million years ago) fos-
sil remains of a gliding reptile,
perhaps nature's first experi-
mental attempt at aerial locomo-
tion. It was one of those rare
triumphs of paleontology - a
skeleton that was ancient, per-
fectly preserved, representative
of a key moment on' the evolu-
tionary clock, and so unexpected
no one had a naine for it.
Under any circumstances, the
discovery announced last week
by the American Museum of Na-
tural History in New York
would have been exciting. But
what gave this finding its parti-
cular charm was the fact that
the discoverers were not pith -
helmeted paleontologists on sa-
fari but three high-school sopho-
mores named Alfred Siefker, Mi-
chael Bandrowski, and Joseph
Geiler. And their dig was not in
Tanganyika or in the Shanidar
caves, but in a northern New
Jersey quarry being excavated
to make way for a suburban
shopping center,
"The construction company did
most of the heavy digging," said
the 17 -year-old Siefker, who,
like the others, is studying bi-
ology, enol hopes to become st
- - CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING :
AGENTS WANTED
STEADY PROFITS
SELLING inade In measure elMhes di.
reel to wearer. Flinn established 1933.
Attractive cloths easily sold. Generous
Commhsions, low prices, free Stilt
bonuses, t oil or part time. ExPerlence
not necessary. Tremendous opportunitY
%Vrite for samples. Rodney Tailoring
Co. Dcp1 XIII, Box 30111, hiontreal.
BABY CHICKS
BRAY has good assortment breeds, lit
started pullets, prompt shipment. Day.
olds, including Antes IniCross, some for
prompt di livery, and hatched to order.
broilers, order now. See local
agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 120 John
North, Hamilton, Ont.
BATTERIES
BATTERIES REPAIRED
ritoee,N easeq. 'Ito:, covers, cells re.
p11, tc. Free arid delivery
within 75 lillle E 1.10111. 011. 1.
St ::11old. Phone 1111 2 0 HI
BERRY & ROOT PLANTS
ONTARIO'S LARGEST
STRAWBERRY GROWERS
ALL COMMERCIAL VARIETIES
12 MILLION PLANTS
Returns of up to $2,500 per acro tinder
our new growing system.
For complete information and price
ilst, virile:
11.11.F. BOS'I'ON BERRY FARMS 111EG 1
R. No. 1, WILSONVILLE, ONTARIO
PHONE; NVATERFORD HICKORY 3.6807
BOOKS
MAGAZINES Bic, 13 la) orders prepaid.
%ye:Ault, rom,-,nce, detective, w a r,
incelmnies, humor, sport, educational,
movie, French, medical, men's, home,
sciritce, Slate wants, Fatima's, Corn.
Ont.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
TEXACO :fatten, tobaccos, confections,
groceries, meats, novelties; fully equip -
tied modern building, 4 -room apart-
ment with piece bath. 2 acres, picnic
tables, 111011 Highway 9 at 23, 111 health.
Private. J. Church, R.R. No, 1, PM
merston.
IDEAL FAMILY
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
GENERAL store, post office, snack bur,
pumps and four bedroom home. On
main highway between North Bay and
Quebec border. 823,000 plus stock. Con.
tact, E. C. Allpeter, Feronla, Ont.
•
FARM EQUIPMENT
- • -
DEXTRA Ford diesel, used 185 hours,
*2100.00 Holland 611 haler, slightly used,
$1100.00. Spring tooth drag 3 point
hitch, new, 8150 00. Ray Sider, ee Eliza-
beth St., Welland( Ont.. Phone lt,E.
2-5562. POULTRY Equipment and Farm Stip-
plies. Write now for your free cata-
logue. Rideau Specialty Co., Bus 277.
Smiths Fails, Ontario,
19E0 LANGEMAN asparagus harvester,
used less than 30 hours. Reasonable.
Lot Smith, 3285 Watkins Rd., Colutnbus,
01110. BElmont 5.0149
-
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
MINNEAPOLIS Moline 445 tractor, 3.4
plow sive, vilth torque amplifier, line
power take off, 3 pt. hitch, power steer-
ing and belt pulley. Like new with
only (100 hrs. Real bargain. Walter
Swanstun, R.R. 3, Rockwood, Ont. UL.
69711.
WD9 DIESEL
INTERNATIONAL tractor, top eon&
tion, Good cash buy. Ernie Duckett,
coneession 3, Leamington, Phone FA
6.6405,
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
FOR Sale - One bog concrete mixer
with hydraulic bucket with or without
1Visconein motor. One bag tilting con-
crete mixer, both In excellent condi-
lion. One concrete block machine 1n
new condition. Write; Enos S. Martin,
11.$, Wtillensteln, Ont.
HUNTERS I
FISHERMENI
CAMPERS I
Tne sportsman's best friend - safe,
economical, Don't be caught In the wet
or cold with nothing to start a camp
fire. Carry one of our resinous wood
blocks In your Jacket or tacicle box.
Will light and burn instantly, even
when wet! Four (4) blocks - 10 ounces,
$1.00 postpaid, Results gunranteed or
money refunded. Cariboo Pitch Chips,
Box 672, Williams Lake, British Co.
tumble,
PHONOGRAPH
RECORDS
YOUR record requirements are as close
as your own mellhox! Safe delivery
guaranteed. Send 25 cents in coin or
stamps today for our op -to -date eata•
logue listing everything recorded in
Popular Hits, Country and Western,
Latin American, Polkas, Classical Folk
and Foreign Language Music. Bob
Destry's Music Centre, Dept. W L,10,
P 0. Box 747, Montreal, P.Q.
paleontologist. ''We did the usual
-dug down about 2V2 feet
through some shale. Then found
this rock, split it open -and
there it was."
The find will go on display at
the museum. "Actually it's still
theirs," explained the museum's
Dr. Edwin H. Colbert. "They
have lent it to us, but I hope
they will give It to us."
How Can 1?
Ity Roberta Lee
Q. How can I avoid the disagree-
able odor from rendering fat?
A. By placing the kettle con-
taining the fat in your oven.
Start the fat on the top of the
stove, and when heated through,
place in a moderate oven until
it is finished,
MERRY MENAGERIE
"You have to 'be tall and alini
to wear Cheeks'!"
HORSES
FOit Side: Happy Peter, male, foaled
June 11)58, dem Goodwill Sandra, sire
Happy Honor. ile is broke and very
quiet. Price $500. Flying Herbert, fe•
male, foaled May 1959, dam Goodwill
Stindra, sire Danny B. Herbert. She Is
very quiet, been hooked 5 few times
Price $400. Ernest Bernhardt, Hawke.
elone, Ontario.
CONSIGNMENT SALE
SATURDAY, APRIL 29, AT 1 P.M.
OVER 100 HEAD
HORSES, ponies and equipment.
CIRCLE 51 Ranch.
HIGHWAY 27, Kleinberg, Ont.
HORTICULTURE
DAYLILIES
NEW WONDER FLOWER
111.0051 all summer, sub -zero hardy -
last a lifetime hush name and address
Orr coloured catalogue of these mar -
log flowers. Florldel Gardena, Port
Stanley, Ontario.
INSTRUCTION
EARN Mure! Bookkeeping, Salesman.
ship, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc, Lets
sons 50e. Ask tor free circular No 33.
Canadian Correspondence Courses 1290
Bay Street. 'Foronto.
JAPAN DIRECTORY
JAPAN Directory, 145 Japanese manu•
facturing exporters, Japan and Hong
Kong trade Journal information. Asia
importunities. Send $1.00 today. Nippon
Annal, Box 6266-M, Spokane 10, Wash-
ington.
• ^
LANDSCAPING
TREES and plants for home and gar-
den. Write or phone for free catalogue
or visit Witutover Nurseries, Petrolia,
Ontario, Ph. 6.
-------
MONEY TO LOAN
-- •
MORTGAGE Loans. Funds hv tillitble on
suitable farms, homes, stores, apart-
ments, hotels, motels. Pleasant cour-
leous service, For information write,
phone; or drop In. United County In-
vestments Ltd., 3645 Bathurst St., Tor-
onto 19, Ont. RU. 9.2125.
...._.... . _
MEDICAL
--- -
ARTHRITIS, Rheumatism Suffering! 1
cured myself with simple Home Rem-
edy. 111 send complete information to
you for $1.00. Russell, CIVR, 604 Kerr,
Columbus, Ohio.
SATISFY YOURSELF - EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG STORE
335 ELGIN OTTAWA
$1.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you Itching, scalding and burning ece•
ma, acne, ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment, regardless
of how atubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt el Price
PRICE 53.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1545 St. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
NURSES WANTED
REGISTERED NURSE
ONTARIO Homes For Mentally Retard.
ed Infants, Inc., Plainfield, Ontario, (7
miles north of Belleville) requires im.
mediately, additional trained staff. 8
hour duty, Night or Day, Salary $3,600
to ;4,500 with car allowance and fringe
benefits. Apply In writing with refer.
ences to Mrs. Leonora Velleman, P.O.
Box 100, Plainfield, Ontario.
THREE REGISTERED OR
GRADUATE NURSES
Required For
1S bed hospital, situated on the beau.
(Hui ARROW LAKES, B.C. Standard
salaries, holidays and semiannual in-
creases, 40 hour week and living In
accommodations at low cost,
APPLY TO ADMINISTRATOR
ARROW LAKES HOSPITAL
NAKUSP, N.C.
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
Viten purchosing Nutria consider the
following points which this organize.
lion offers:
1. The best avallable stock, no cross•
bred or standard types recommended,
2. The reputation of a plan which is
proving Itself substantiated by files of
satisfied ranchers.
3._Full Insurance against replace-
ment, should they not live or Itt the
event of sterility (ail fully explained
In our certificate of merit.)
4. We give you only mutations which
are In demand for fur garments.
5 You receive from this organization
a guaranteed pelt market in writing.
6. Membership In o u r exclusive
breeders' association, whereby only
Purchasers of this stock may partici.
pate In the benefits so offered.
7. Prices for Breeding Stock start at
$200. a Pair.
Special offer to those who qualify:
earn your Nutrria on our cooperative
basis Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R. No. 2, Stouffyllie, Ontario
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant. dignified profession; gond
wages Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates
America's Greatest Svstem
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write oi Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
355 Bloor St. W. Toronto
Branches:
44 King St. W.. Hamilton
72 Rideau Street. MAWR
PERSONAL
601 B hours sleep Nervous tension
(fly cause 75s1, of sickness Partiett•
larly sleeplessness. illteryness and in
ritability Sleep calm your nerves with
"Napps" 10 for Si: 50 for S4. Lyon's
Drugs, Dept 20 471 Danforth tomtit°
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TES l'ED guaranteed, mailed in
parcel, including catalogue mid sex
hook free with trial assortment lh lot
51.00 (Finest quality) Western Dlstribu
tors, Box 74.TPF. Reoina, Sask.
. _
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT ONT
Films do eloped AM
11 magna prints
12 magna prints lillt
Reprints 56 each.
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 90c mot Including
prints Color prints 300 each extra.
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m nt 20 ex.
posures mounted in slides 51.211 Color
prints from slides 320 each. Money re•
funded in full for unprInted negatives,
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
57,500; LOW taxes, new 11 -room bunga•
lows, treed lot, 15 mins Peterboro; also
10 acres garden land, terni l Kitts -
man, 11.11. 1, Fraser\ ille. Phone 214321
Millbroolt.
ISSUE 17 -
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
DELAWARE, corner and 2 Highways,
21/2 acres land with 3 bedroom house,
bath, 011 heated, also 25 acres, Iced 101,
fully equipped for self feeding cattle',
running stream. F. J. Brennan, Del'
were, Mt. Budges, 322-11•39
MT. ALBERT
MUST be sold to settle eatate. 4 -bed-
room family skied home, plus large
barn. Situated on main Myer!, $6,900
or closest offer. Earl V. Stewart,
Broker, Aurora. I'A. 7,5076.
3 REGISTERED lots, Maple Bench, Lake
etmsee, $1,000 Apply 609 Carneele Ave ,
Oshawa, 11.111131.
GEORGE W. STRAIN, Realtor
Box "N", Gore Bay, Ontario, PH45.
FOR SALE: Farms, ranches, summer
cottages, touristresorts, modern homes,
lake shore property and hunting rights.
- • -
Haliburion Highlands
SACRIFICE price Just $4,000 cash Dyna
Uranium Mine closure forces t
sale. Two bedrooms, full high base-
ment partitioned for recreation tom,
automatic ell heat, pressure system,
automatic hot water, heavy (bac wit,
ing, plenty of kitchen cupboards ;11Id
low, low taxes. Write G. W, Bat IleS,
504 Bolivar St., Peterborough, Ont.
RECIPES
20 DIFFERENT BEER and WINE
Recipes, over 100 years old. Complete
instructions for easy home mocha:don
81.00. Russell, CWB., 694 Herr. Coluin-
bus, Ohio, U.S.A.
SALES HELP -WANTED
"INTERNATIONAL Housewares Inc.
has an opening on the sales stall fur
representative In this area. Eighteen
top quality Brand Name products such
as Melinine Dinnerware, Silver and
Stainless SD el Flatware, Antoinette
Electric Cooking Utensils, Caning Sets,
Famous Kitchen Queen Stainless Steel
CookIng Utensils, Sewing Machines ;Ind
Vacuum Cleaners, plus other ;Inc items.
Car necessary. Will consider part-time
as well at; full-time opplIcant F. i''or In-
terview Write: "Vice President, 997
Harrison Ave., London, Ont."
_ .
SHOW BUSINESS AGENTS
ACTORS, SINGERS, WRITERS -- why
not get on the show business band
wagon by contacting recognized, cram.
chised agents. Long lists have been
specially prepared for you. Hollywood
$2; New York, Chicago, San Francisco
$1. each. All four $4. ICurrency only
pleaset KONTAK, Box 3301-C, South
Station„kustin 4, TeX,,,.
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•STAMPS
— - -
200 CANADA stamps; all different,
used, $1. Interesting set, 1 each, $1.
11 J. Wilson, 1260 Canterbury Rd.,
Port Credit, Ont.
_
SUMMER COTTAGES FOR RENT
VELLA - VILLA COTTAGES
2 or 3 bedroom housekeeping cottages,
city convenience; open April 15 to Oct.
15 Reasonsble. Phone 1Vasaga 45G or
write Robert Brown, 11 R. 1, Wasage
Beach, Ont.
TEACHERS WANTED
-- ---
CATHOLIC teacher required for girls'
private school, chiefly for English and
History, in Grades IX and X. Apply to
the Principal, stating qualifications and
salary expected. Loretto Academy,
Hamilton.
QUALIFIED Catholic teacher for Graf-
ton separate school, to start Sept. 1961.
Eight grades, about 36 to 39 pupils.
Salary 53,200 plus qualification extras,
or state salary required. Reply to Fred
Calnon, Sec..Treasurer, Grafton. Ont.
--- -
PUBLIC SCHOOL SECTION
NO. 5, COLCHESTER SOUTH
Requires experienced teacher for Sept.,
1961, 7 grades, salary according to
qualifications, substantial allowance for
experience. Address replies to Mrs.
Robert Rayner, R.R. 3, Harrow, stating
qualifications, experience and last in-
spector's name,
SOUTH BRIGHTON Twp. School area
requires a Protestant teacher for Sept.
1961. For four grades. Salary schedule
in effect. Apply, stating qualifications.
salary expected and last inspectorate,
to Mr, Cecil Alexander, Sec.-Treas.,
R.R. 1, Brighton, Ont.
Qualified Teacher Wanted For
RYDE TOWNSHIP
SCHOOL AREA
Duties to commence September. 1061.
Salary $3,000.
Apply stating experience, 11111110 and
address of last inspector to
MRS. FLORENCE REBMAN
R.R. 3, GRAVENHURST
MUSKOKA, ONTARIO
PRECISION j
FERTILIZER '1
DISTRIBUTOR
AND SEEDER
Now available In 3 models — 3.point hito
P.T.O. driven as illustrated, Tow typ
g ro LI nd driven and Tow type P.T.O. drive
'topper capacity up to 1000.pounds. D
Your own "Bulk•SpreadIng" now and haV
these plus features tool
• Speed - spreads up to 50 feet wide, does
25 acres en hour,
• Economy - adiustoble pattern, wind control,
no waste.
• Versatility ant spreader for all your
nes& — fertiliser, lime, seeds, pelletized
24D eta,
• hand Investment - you get heller crops
for1.0du. to the owning accuracy of the
Alk your nearest dealer for a demonstration
or write tor
LELY LTD,
Agricultural Machinery
P.O. Box 235,
Burlingtea, °Mode, Canada,
Branch and Wer91191.110...Dovit, thlowom, U.S.A.
t'AC1 8
'SHR RLYmf1 STANDARD
ossalsommemseess
11111110111110111
Wednesday, April 2G, 194
ANOTHER "SUPERIOR" VALUE -PACKED FOOD SALE
SALE DAYS!
THUR., FRI., SAT
APRIL 27-18 29
DOLLAR DAYS
ST, WILLIAM'S ASSORTED JAMS
6 - 9 oz, jars 1.00
CARNATION MILK, 7 lge. tins 1.00
HUNT'S TOMATO CATSUP
6 - 11 oz. bottles 1.00
MINNETTES OR NATURES BEST TOMATOES
5 large 28 oz. tins 1.00
YORK HOMOGENIZED PEANUT BUTTER
6 - 15 oz. tins 1.00
York Choice DESSERT PEARS
7 oz. Sherbet Glass 4 for 1.00
Maxwell House INSTANT COFFEE
10c off label deal 6 oz. jar 99c
IIENLEY'S CHOICE FRUIT COCKTAIL
'1 - 15 oz. tins
E. D. SMITH'S FANCY APPLE SAUCE
7 - 15 oz. tins
SWIFT'S TEMPT DOG FOOD
12 - 15 oz, tins 1.00
INTERLAKE WHITE CROSS TOILET TISSUE
91ge. rolls 1.00
REGULAR OR CHUBBY KLEENEX, 200s or 300s
6 pkgs. 1.00
1.00
1.00
PHONE 156
MONEY
SAVING
PRICES
LIGHT BULBS, Westinghouse, 25.40. 60 watt
5 for
AIM
1.00
Top Crop POPPING CORN, 8 Ib. bag 1.00
CIGARETTES, All Popular Brands
3 pkgs. of 20 1.00
Fancy Golden, Cream Style STOKELY'S CORN
6 - 15 oz. tins 1.00
Swift's Golden Dew MARGARINE
Reg. Twin Bar Pkg., 4 for 1.00
Clark's Fancy Quality TOMATO JUICE
4 Ige, 48 oz. tins 1.00
SUPERIOR FOOD. MARKET
BLYTH
FREE DELIVERY
WESTFIELD
Mr. and Mrs. 'Lloyd Walden also Mr.
Wm Walden visited with Mr. Jesse
Walden, who has been quite ill in Sea -
forth Hospital, Sunday evening. They
also called on Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
IVAIden.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Cook, Belgrave,
" called on Messrs. Jack and Leslie Bu-
chanan recently.
Mrs, W F. Campbell called on Mrs.
N. Carter, Clinton, on Monday.
Mr.-' George Radford's crusher has
moved into Mr. R. Redmond's gavel
pit and are gravelling the lost and
West Wawanosh boundary road.
Mr. Ivan Blake, Blyth, visited with
Mr. and Mrs Lloyd McDowell on Sat-.
urday,
Mr. J. Buchanan reports that the
East Wawanosh Council on their annual
inspection of the roads, found them in
the best condition in 10 years.
,Mr, Alva McDowell viisted with Mr,
Torrance Tabb, Auburn, recently.
•Mr. and Mrs John Geer and family,'
Waterloo, spent the weekend in the
community.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Smith were
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smith, on
Brussels, on Tuesday.
Mr, Armand McBurney has returned
to his home after spending the winter
in Texas.
Mr and Mrs. Arnold Cook were in
Waterloo on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper McBrien, Goae•
rich, called on Mr, and Mrs, Gordon
Snell and Miss Jeanetta, recently.
Mr. Franklin Campbell and Miss
Lorna Buchanan, London, spent several
days with their parents.
Mr. Colin Fingland, Wingham, was
supply minister. on Auburn Charge Sun.
day Rev. R. Sweeney being ill.
We are pleased to report that Mr.
Leonard Cook returned home on Mon -1
day from Clinton Hospital where he has
been a patient since February 23rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Walden, Garth,
Gary and Linda, of Westfield, visited
with Mr. and Mrs, Walter Cook on Sat-
urday evening.
Mrs. Jean Kechnie, Mrs. Walter Cook
of Blyth, Mrs Fred Chapple and daugn
ter, Julie, of Kippen, visited on Thurs-
day with Mr, and Mrs, Amos Ball, of
Goderich,
Mr, and Mrs. Alva McDowell, West•
field, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Cook on Tuesday evening.
Messrs John Lawrie and John Gal-
braith left on Sunday from Malton for
Calgary and have secured a position
on a farm at Airdie, thirty miles from
Calgary. '
Mrs Minnie Jones and Melvin, of
Dungannon, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cam-
eron, of Elmira, visited Mrs. Cameo •
on's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Lorne
Scrimgeour, on Sunday.
Mrs. H. A. McIntyre, of Clinton, vis-
ited on Sunday with Miss Josephine
Woodcock
Mrs. Wm. Whitehead and sons are
visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs.
George Pollard,
Morris Township Council
The Council met in the Tcw"s;r;p Hall
on April 3, with all the .embers pros•
ent. The minutes of fl Last meeting
were read and ado; t"1 on motion. o[
DOLLAR DAZZLER
IT'S THE BIG DOLLAR DAYS
CELEBRATION AT
STEWART'S RED & WHITE STORE
Blyth Phone 9
We Deliver
Large Farm Iceberg Head Lettuce 2 heads 23c
Florida Grapefruit, pink and white 10 for 45c
California Sunkist Oranges, 180s 2 doz. 79c
Firm, Ripe Tomatoes 2 pkgs. 39c
Cuban Pineapples, size 12s2 for 55c
Cooking Onions, No. 1 Grade 3 lb. bag 19c
Bananas, golden yellow, No. 1 ' per lb. 14c
Smoked Reary To Serve Picnics per lb. 47c
No. 1 Chickens, 3 lb. average per lb. 35e
Jubilee Small Sausage i11b. pkg. 39c
Sliced Pork Liver per ib, 29c
Special Sliced Bacon Side per Ib. 49c Back pe r lb. 59c
Maple Leaf Head Cheese 3 lb, tin 1.00
Lean Hamburg per lb. 49c
Pea -meal Cottage Rolls ' per lb. 49c
EXTRA SPECIAL
8 Weiners •
8 .Buns
All For 49c
asp
Come in and see displays -
of Bargains.
Read Sale Bili sent
through mail.
Gea your CKNX Win A
Dryer coupons,
EXTRA SPECIAL
R. and W. Bonus Offer -
7 sup Coffee Perculator
for only 1.69 with a pur-
chase of pound of coffee
NOTICE
Beginning May 6th, during the sum-
mer and fall months, we will be open
until 10 p m, on Saturday night only.
Knox Produce, Blyth, phone 209 1.1-2p
BACKHOEING
Eiackhoeing and trench work done
promptly and efficiently. Harold Con -
gram, phone 1079, Wingham,
11-12p,
WANTED AT ONCE
Rawleigh Dealer in part of Huron
County. Write Rawleigh's Dept, D-13641
4005 Richelieu, Montreal.
SANITATION SERVICES _
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired.
Blocked drains opened with modern ,
equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin _
Coxon, Milverton, Telephone 254. -
iItf.
Wm. Elston and Ross Smith.
The following petition signed by the:
ratepayers of U.S.S. No, 12, was receiv.'
ed by the Council: We, the ratepayers
of School Section No, 12, Morris and -
Hullett, are opposed to building a new
centralized school in Walton, and in
the event that debentures arc being -
issued for such request a vete on the
ciuestion of withdrawing from the
Township School Area.
Moved by Walter Shortreed, second-
ed by James Mair, that the Municipal
Liability, Spriay Liability, Non -Owned
Auto, Liability on Graders and Equip-
ment Policies be renewed with the
Frank Cowan Agency Company. Car-
ried.
Moved by Walter Shortreed, second-
ed by Wm, Elston, that we charge ten
cents per head per spray for warble
fly spraying !and sixty cents per pound
for ono pound bags for scrubbing, Car-
ried.
Moved by J. Mair, seconded by R.
Smith, that the road accounts as pre-
sented by the Road Superintendent be
paid, Carried.
Moved by W. Shortreed, seconded by
W. Elston, that the general accounts
as presented be paid. Carried.
Moved by R. Smith, seconded by W.
Shortreed, that the Engineer's report
on the Bryant Drain be provisionally
adopted and that the Clerk be instruc-
ted to prepare By -Laws and that the
Court of Revision on the Bryant Drain
be held on May 1, 1901, at 2:30 p.m.
Carried.
Moved by James Mair, seconded by
Walter Shortreed, that the meeting ad-
journ, to meet again on May 1, 1961
at 1 p.m. Carried,
The following accounts were paid:
Frank Cowan Co., insurance, 360.63;
relief account, 100.00; Town of Wing -
ham, fires and repairs to fire truck,
454.44; S. H. Blake, Municipal Officers
Association, 20.00; Brookhaven Nursing
Nome, 185.50; T. B. Marshall, Warble
Fly Powder, 251.55; Callander Nursing
Home, 185,50,
Stewart Procter, .Geo, C. Martin;
Reeve. Clerk,
WALTON
Mrs. Ed. Bryans returned home last
Saturday from the Wingham hospital.
Mr, Malcolm Fraser spent the week-
end with Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fraser,
• Stratford, and Mr and Mrs. J, Living-
' stone, Preston.
Mr. Edward Dougan has returned
home from Clinton Public hospital.
Mr. and Mrs, Carl Dalton, of Sea -
forth, were guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Smalldon on Sunday
CROP REPORT
f'ontinuous cool wet weather .ltias cur-
tailed seeding operations and it will be
a few days before the farmers can get
back on the land. Growth of pastures
1 4,-1 fall wheat is sloW, although they
are greening up considerably. The
a r: cent rains will have helped gencrrl
moisture conditions
Ag. Rep.
ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS
We Carry a Full Line of the Well Known
NIXON PRODUCTS
Scourex Tablets $1.75, $3.00 and $8,50
New Scourex Tablets $1.50
Preventex Tablets $1.25 and $2.25
Gargetex for Mastitis, Herd Pak of 6 $3.50
Pellagrex Mix $2.56
Calcium Phosphate with Vitamin D
Bloat and Colic Remedy $1.50
Ringtex Ointment (for Ringworm) .85c
Cow Pox Ointment $1.00
Keratex for Pink Eye $1.50
R. D.PHILP,Phm,8
ali�', M
.GO
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER - PHONE 7,0, BLYTH
MAXWELL ISE REO POWER
MOWERS
QUALITY COMBINED WITH ECONOMY
FREE- with every sale of power .mower
1 BARBECUE
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
(1 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair,
Blyth, Ont.
•
Call 71
4
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP & SAVE
Clark's Pork and Beans, 20 oz. 2 for 39c
Tip Top Canned Tomatoes, 28 oz. 2 for 45c
Tip Top Tomato Juice, 48 oz. 2 for 55c
Cheez Whiz or Ingersoll Cheese Spread, 16 oz., 59c
Big Saving-- Jiffy Chocolate Drink, 2 Ib. ., , . 95c
Grapefruit, Pink or White 10 for 49c
Golden Ripe Bananas 2 lb, 25c
Spy Apples bushel 4.99 per Ib. 15c
Country Sausage, Home-made, Order Early
3 lbs,
Smoked Picnic Shoulders
Pork Chops, fresh and lean
Home -Made Head Cheese
1.00
per lb. 39c
per lb. 65c
3 lbs, 1.00
•