The Blyth Standard, 1961-07-19, Page 1VOLUME 74 - NO. 23
ELTY
ST NDARD
Authorized as second class mail, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WED NESDAY, JULY 19, 1961
Post Office Department, Ottawa,
Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
M.P.P.NK NITS WINNERS
Charles MacNaughton,tAAn excellent,crowd took Nite Draw last Saturday evening, Sunday ��eeves u ett■■wil'n once again all prize money being
Will Open Blyth Fair, September 20th with cl:Wayne McDougall, $bein
Alis, A. A, Ewing, 5.00; Sharon Ben -
Blyth Ip Barn
Blyth Agricultural Society held their • Inger 2.00; Kel McVittie, 2.00; Jack W.
monthly meeting in the Library of LADD FAMILIES IIOLD RE -UNION Brown, 2.00; Judy Taman, 1.00; Mabel
Memorial Hall Monday evening withA.r Bl.l„plf Smith, 1.00; Allan Grant, 1,00; Vikki
a record number of Directors in at• Fowler, 1.00. - A severe electrical storm which
tendance, for an enthusiastic meeting. The second annual reunion of the The same prize will be offered CELEBRATED 35th WEDDING- PERSONAL
across Western Ontario last
'1 he resignation of Director Orval descendants of the late John and Eliza• again this week and again the draw ANNIVERSARY PERSONAL INTEREST Sunday afternoon was instrumental in
McGcwan. owing to ill health, was ac- beth Ladd was held on Sunday, July will be held at the Memorial Hall at Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd Miller, of Lon• causing a fire at the farm of Mr. and
cepted with regret, and.\Villiam Carter 16, 1961 at the hcme of Mr, and Mrs. J 1)•rtt• Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Sillib celebrat dot, and Mr. Joseph Miller, of Godo• Mrs. Jaynes Scott Sr., which complete-
don,
to fill the vacancy thus created. Clayton Ladd, Blyth. There were eight ed their 33th wedding anniversary on rich, were visitors here on Monday. ly destroyed their 40x80 ft. barn.
It was with much pleasure the Di• of the eleven families present. July 15. They were married in Grate tU . and Mrs. Scott were away when
l , 1 rich. Mrs. Sal) was the former Eller Mr. and Nil's. George Anger and the lightening struck the barn, and ten
rectors welcomed Mr. George Batt A bountiful luand
was served at one FRIENDS BID FAREWELL TO Dit, Jones, daughter of the late Mr. and daughters, Onalee and Dorothy, of lire as first noticed by Mr. Ross Alill•
past president, at the meeting, also o'clock. Games and contests were en.ANN AIcCItBARY PRIOP. TO Mrs. Charles Jones, of Slieppardtcn. Lcndon, who are vacationing at their son, of Kinburn, who was driving past
Mrs, Watt. joyed in the afternoon, between show. EMBARKING INC x�ta
The Secretary announced Mr. Chart- ors, which included: pie eating contest, Mr. Sillib is the only son ct the late ge at Bluewater Beach, South o' the farm. Mr. Millson drove to the
es McNaughton M.P.P. will open the balloon on a plate; nail drivea-Kanga- Mrs. Harold Phillips entertained some Mr. and Mrs. Alex Sillib, of Sheppard-
ton.
visited con Sunday wag Mr. neighbouring farm of Mr. Frank Kon -
Fair September 20th, with Harold roe hop; wheelbarrow race; clothes ton The couple resided near Pert Al. and Mis. Lorne Scrimgeour. arski, who the immediately placed a
Ttwenty friends at her bonne on llednes• pert for 25 years before moving tc Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bruce returned call to the Blyth Fire Department.
Jackson
Scciety askingall business nose; kick;then Opine.; birthday mb; near 'lay evening on Westmorland Street Blyth almost 10 years ago. 'sine on Sunday after spending ten Incidentally, Mr. Konarski had suf-
Y tt•ho gathered to wish her eldest daught- 'lhc hate 2 children (Marjorie) Mrs Sound,Toned rather experience prior
men, Societies, and Organizations, tr Est the day; guessing marbles in jar, Y ) Jays at Cwen Ferndale andshocking
boost the fair by entering •floats or hidden parcel; spct; ending with a er, Dr, Ann McCreary "Bon Voyage'Ronald 'Treleaven, of Kitchener, andto this, when he had been walking very
I chermcry.
participating in ,some way to make a peanut scramble, Prizes were given prior to her leaving to visit many one son, Elwin, of Carlow, and fourclose to a tree which was also struck
Mrs. 11iIcla Sellers, of Lucan, ane
grand parade, • for each event. countries during the next thirteen grandchildren. ]rs. Perc • Holman, of Barrie, visite( by lightening during the storm. He had
The business of the day was chaired months. On Sunday, July 9th, a family Bath n Tuesday with Mrs. Leslie Johnston been working in the bush and was on
;y Mrs. Ladd, with the following of Di'. McCreary attended Blyth Public ening was held at the home of theh his tray back to the house.
PRIME MINISTER TO BE AT 201h c � tlso called on 1hs. K. Whitmore.
TTL deers elected: president, Itlr. Jack and Continuation Schools also Clinton son, Elwin, anal ulrs. Sit.fh, of Carlut, When firemen arrived at the scene
ANNIVERSARY OF CATTLE when a tui'ke dinner was served. The Mrs. Jim fierce and Terry, r,f B'yth any hoe of saving the barn was im-
BREEDERS Ladd, Goderich; secretary, Alrs. 1'hon Collegiate. Sha graduated this spring r.d her mother Mrs. I earl McNall, o. i
as Park, Dungannon; treasurer, AIr with a Doctor's Degree from Cornell table as decorated with pink roses and rediately disbanded, and a successful
a three tier wedding cake, which was Goderich, visited over the. week -ere ,fort was made to save the driving
Gordon Schultz, -Dungannon; Entertain University, New York.;ci.h Mr. and Mrs. Leo Racine ane
The Rt. Hon, John G. Diefenbaker xl:alted and decorated ty Mrs. Eltvie :bed just 15 feet away. liter the 501
meat, and lunch committee, convener, She left Blyth Thursday to visit amity, of Amhertsburg, also visite(
oral land visits rs. linefKitchener will
and Waterloo Mrs, Gordon Schultz, ATrs, Verna Cul friends in New York, from where she 'SrMrs, Sillih was presented with a cols ,ting Mr. and Ahs, Ken Turner arty :he bur ldingywater was pumpedused
from
on Wednesday, July 26th. They wit! beet, ATrs. Thomas Lawlor, Alrs. Jack will embark July 18th on rho liner sae of )ink and white carnations, ane amity, of ,Uathroy. They were ac 'he cistern to the fire truck with the
arrive at the Dominion Pig Testing Ladd and Mrs. Bill Park; Beverage Stavangefford for Oslo, Norway, where anelectricfrying pan. Mr, Sillib ryas :om:'anied by John, Doug and Bread, ,uxiliary pumper. After this was dis-
c , committee, Mr. Thomas Lawlor, Mr, she will attend an international meet ,, Racine, who had spent a week witi
tation and the Waterloo Cattle Breed -,presenter.) with a white to carnation , 'rased of, a 1500 gallon tank truck of
Bill Park and Mr. Wilbert Lawlor, A fon Educational Research from -heir grandmother, Mrs. McNeil.
ing Association at 9:30 p.m., when he ing . boutonier, and an electric shaver. , he Radford Construction Company
decision was made to hold the 196: . Mr. and Mrs. Sillib in a few wellTaster Larry Kress, Bryanston
will make a tour of the headqaurters lugust 7th to 12th.31yth, was brought into service to
reunion on the 3rd Sunday of July) 'a'Wendy Kress, Kathryn Kress, ?.Yrs. 1'.
of both. Then to the,TJniversity of Stockholm chosen thanked their family and craw water to the fire, with 3,000 gal -
the home of Mr. and Mrs. ThomaiE. Kress, Millan, ATrs. George Dennis
The Waterloo Cattle Breeding Ass° Park, Dungannon; alternate, AIr, ane wveden, for a Dost Doctoral Scholar grandchildren for their gifts and hes( Brantford, spent two week's a' .ons being drawn in the afternoon. The
ciation is Celebrating its 20th Annivet Mrs, Jack Ladd, Goderich. A collet ship for eight months to study reading wishes,holiday !times had subsided enough by 6 p.m.
sary on July 26111 with a beef harbecut , utd teacher training. From there her Antherly with Alis. W. L. Ki' ss• .o allow the firemen to return to Blyth.
by Master Chef, Tom Hays lion was taken to defray expense. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Mason and Ar However, at 7 p.m., when it looked
prepared 1 light supper was served at 6 p.m, :laps are to visit schools and study chis, left on Wednesday for a hGliday
at 5:30 p.m. where the Prime Minis- WEDDINGS' as if the fire might revive enough to
after which the happy families wend educational systems in Europe, India, trip to Sault Lookout, Kenora ane
ter will be a guest. The evening pro T Siam Japan,Ha- spread to other nearby buildings, Mr.
ed their way homeward.
Nepal, Phillipiues, Rainy Rivet,
gram will begin, at 7:30 p.m. when Mr These attended were Mr. and Mrs. waif, before returning to Sari Francisco WILSON—JEFFERSON AIr, and Mrs. 1Vm. Tonne of Tor Scott again called the Fire Department
Diefenbaker will he the guest speaker George Lawlor, AIr, and Mrs. 'Phoma, in September 196 , y and they remained at the scene until
following a historical panel. In theDonnybrook United Church was dee. (into, acccntpanied by her sister, Mrs 11,30 that night, when another 1,500 gal
Lawlor and son Jim, all of Auburn. The evening was pleasantly spent orated with baskets of delphinium, Jelin Crozier, cf Sheetsville, spent Ions of water was also used.
time between the barbecue and even Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Park, Mrs, Verna visiting and entertaining with human- madonna lilies and Shasta daisies on tete days, this week with the former.
ing program as many as possible o1 Culbert, Mr. '1'hcmas Hallam, AIr, andmother, Mrs. glary Taylor. Lost in the fire was this year's hay
thepublic will have the opportunity ofIca selections by Mrs. Mary Taylor, Saturday alterncoa, July 15 at 2:30crop, several tons of grain, 20 pigs
pT Mrs. Gordon Schultz and three daught- accompanied at the piano by Mrs. R. p.m., when Rev. R. Al. Sweeney, of Mr. and Mrs, G. 0. Bradley, Roger near market size, forage wagon, binder,
ntintraddilionPrime
theMinister.
Prime Minister. ors, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Park, two sons I) Philp Selby, Urinrio, boiled in tnarrrage. Bruce, Bonnie Suzanne, E+ie Allen g
and two daughters, all of Dunganncr} forage blower, milk cooler, milking
the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Asseci Mr.and Mrs. Jack Ladd and I atric,i Dr. AlcCrear 's sisters Alrs. Lundy Louise Marilyn Jellerson and hurray and Timothy James, of Aieaford, cis machine, and other milking equipment.
Breeding y James Wilson in a double cin (ere- ited on Sundayuwith Mrs, Bradley':
ation has invited other guests whichMcKay, Mrs. Ray Vincent and Miss galong with an electric roller.
include M.P.'s and M.P.P.'s In the Ann, of Goderich. Paige Phillips served refreshments. moray. The bride is the daughter or �� (the it Mrs.AlrSadie Cuming,
nal unclso es Mr. Frank Konarski, Mr. Ed. Bell.
area they operate, also the minister of 1h, oral Alrs. Ifilliard Jefferson Joel g and sons, Brian and Douglas, and Mur -
Agriculture for Ontario, as well as groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert, Archie and David Rimers.
ray Howatt were successful in saving
W.M.S.1111ISMEETING James K. 11'ilson, alt of R.H.2, Auburn. Visitors al the home of Mr. and Airs. g calces and 2 cows from the fire.
officials from other Artificial Insemin- Cecil orsaslet this week were: r
alien Organizations, O.A,C., O.V.C.. President, Mrs. Wm. McVittie, was JULY MEETING OF HURON COUNTY. The organist, Mrs, Willis Van Esmond The loss is partially covered with
both Canada and Ontario Departments in charge of the WAILS. meeting in the LADIES AUKILLIARY of Clinton, played •traditional .wedding and, Mrs. Everett Robinson, Wendh insurance, and the Scott's are as yet
of- Agriculture and the Breed Associa• United Church School room, when the lutrsic and accumpauied lite soloist and Michael. of Minneapolis, Mi'. am undecided as' to any re -building plans.
tions and others. It is expected that 2 Society' Was hostess to the Baby Band Huron County Ladies Auxdlllary td Ars. Donald Andrews, who 'sang "The Mrs. Rob _Taylor, Air,, and Alis. 11'ii
large crowd will be on hand for this and their leaders, Monday afternoon. Hutonview Ilotne held their July meet- Lord's Prayer," before the ceremony Gillespie, of Galt, Miss Marilyn KO occasion. People wishing tt the business was cut to a minimum ing Monday afternoon in the Craft and "0 Perfect Love," during the sign- patrick, of Alison, Miss Helen Luxton a
partake of the barbecue must purchase but Mrs. McVittie announced the three RO°m of the Home, with a very goer ing of the register. of Fergus. En agement Announced
thei rtickets one week in advance frotr. Societies, the W. A., the Friendship attendance trent Goderich, Blyth, Clin The bride, given in marriage by her Al r, ar.d Airs. Jack Tasker, of Ham Mr. and Mrs. Bert Shobbrook, R.R. 1,
any of the staff or by ordering from Circle, and the W.M.S, would each toil and Hullett Township. father, looked lovely in an Original Ilton, are holidaying with 1lrs. A. 1' Auburn, wish to announce the engage -
the read barters. However, for those contribute to the Provisional Commit. Owing to the absence of the presi Design [lour length dress of peau dt
Tasker at her cottage at Point Clark
the prem of their daughter, Muriel Dora,
attending the evening program only tee....dent, Mrs. Fred Thompson, the meet sole with lace applique and lily point Sgt. and Mrs. Glen Tasker and Tonal` to David Ross 'Wilson, son of Mrs.
previous notification is not necessary. She alo welcomed the mother's and ing was chaired by Mrs. 1V. C. Bennett sleeves. The veil was held with a pearl of the R.C,A.F. Station, Greenwood
babies, stating this would be the last of Clinton, tiara. She carried a cascade bouquet N.S. have been transfered to ()dam David 'Wilson, and the late Mr. Mill -
()dam
meeting the .M.S, would have the Thehe birthday parties' sponsored each of pink roses, ivy and white rose bads and are spending hyo weeks holiday: 'on, of R.R. 2, Seaford). The wedding
IV
FINDS PETRIFIED CLAM privilege of being hostess. month by Huron County Women's In• The bride's sister, Miss Mary Jeffer• with his mother before taking up resi o take place in Londesboro United
Mrs. Harold Cook, Baby Band lead- stitutes, are being taken care of by son, of Donnybrook, ryas maid of gun Bence there. :hunch, Saturday, August 12th, at 12
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Berth and er, presided for the program and grad Auburn, n, Gerrie and Goderich, until or. Her dress was white organza over Alis, Frank Marshall is a patient it ;'clack noon.
Sandra, returned last Sunday from a traUon exercises. Piano solos by Ag September. —
white taffeta with mauve organza Clinton Public Hospital having under
two week trip to the West where they nes Lawrie and Kathy Kechnie were Any W. 1. branch wishing to' sponsor sash, mauve petal hat and while ae. gone an operation on Tuesday. We wisl
visited with .friends and relatives. enjoyed, also a duet by glary and Atar, a party after that. date should contact. cessories. She carried a cascade boa- her a speedy recovery. r g
• Arnold returned with a petrified„ h s W. C. Bennett, Clinton, for a IIs' _ Mr. and Mrs. Vere D. Cunningham,
clam which he found in the Red River Karel Howson "Happy Little Band of all residents who claim that niontlu q The f bridesmaids, idesmaids,r»Miss Sharon Jef- 3.R• 5, Goderich, wish to announce the
district, Alberta, close to the Dinasour Mary Lynn Galbraith contributed a , . igagcment of their twin daughter,
recitation. An interesting story of the as their birth month. Terson, Donnybrook, sister of the bride. HURONIlE1S ItESIDENIS ENJOY t.ois Evelyn, to Cornelis van Vliet,
fields, on top of a hill. Ile also reports honorable family of Wong was told by Mrs. Bennett announced that articles and Miss Eleanor Smith, of Blurvaie - BUS TRIP TO GODERICiI LIdest son f Mr. andCMrs. Gamin van
seeing several specimens of petrified Airs. Robert Henry. Mrs. Harold Cook to be embroidered would be appreciat cousin of the bride, ware idenlica'
wood, which became uprooted duringed by some of the lady residents, who dresses to that of the maid of honor Fifty-five residents of the )luronview t'liet, of Neuwerkerk aid Ysel, Holland.
blasting cpet•ations, led in prayer. do very good work, and have run out and carried the same flowers. Miss H°me enjoyed a bus trip to Goderich The marriage twiil take place the mid -
Those promoted from Baby Band toIle of August.
The clam Is on display at the Stan Mission Band were; Patsy Badley of articles to . embroider, such as pit- Linda Jefferson, youngest sister of the last Tuesday afternoon, followed by a
dard office.Connie Bowes, Billie Burkholder, Brian !memos, tea toivels, and luncheon bride, was junior bridesmaid and wore picnic at Harbor Park.
IV. Bell, Sandra Clare, Velma E. Fear, cloths, and old nylon stockings are al- a similar dress and carried a nosegay Many of them took part in games HOPE CHAPEL DECORATION
Roger Allan Garniss, Brian G. Johns -ways appreciated, to use for Craft of yellow mums. and contests during the afternoon SERVICE
HOME FROM HOSPITAL , work. Mr, David Durnford, of Willowdale after which supper utas served in the
ton, William K. McDougall, Sharon
Mrs. Percy Vincent, who has been Mason, Wayne McClinchey, Dorothy The Auxilliary decided to have a Ontario, brother-in-law of the groom. pavilion, The annual Decoration Service of
a patient in Clinton Public Hospital Nicholson, Marcel Stadelman, Donald kitchen utensil shower at their August was best macs and the ushers wen The outing was made possible by The
Chapel Cemetery, Hallett Town -
for the past five weeks, returned to Stewart, Kevin 'Tasker, Shawn St. all- Zlst meeting for use in the new kitchen Robert Jefferson, of Do my br ook, the sale of Arts and Crafts made by ,lull), w'fli be held on Sunday, July 30th
her home at 1Valkerburn last Saturday clvael, Franklyn Wilson, Barry Young, of the Craft room. Lawrence Smyth, of Stratford, the residents louder the supervision of
For the reception held in the churcl, at 3 p.m., and will be conducted by
evening. Barbara Young, Johnnie Brown; Cathythe craft supervisor, Mrs, Harvey the Rev. D. J. Labe,
parlours, the bride's manger wore
Burkholder, Garry W . Ilessehvood Johnston.
AMONG THF CHURCHES Linda Hamm, Anna Marie hull, Linda LEGION PICNIC mauve printed silk dress under mauveThe weather was perfect and every
C. Johnston, Kenneth McLagan, Dianne organza with a matching stroller -length
, , ,
Sunday, 23, 1961. The Blyth Legion and Auxiliary coat and a corsage of white mums. one thoroughly enjoyed the outing. INJURED IN CAR ACCIDENT
y July C. Mc gall, I{eilh Manning, Raym°rad Branch members and their families will She was assisted by the groom's moth
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN C. McNichol, Maurice T. Nesbitt, Mark Blyth friends will be sorry to hear
CHURCH Vincent, Linda M. 1Varwkk. hold a picnic at Balls Grove on Sun er, who wore a green printed silk chess , ,UI that Mrs. M. F►ilzley is a patient in
Rev. D. J. Lane, B.A., D,D., Minister. The mite boxes were presented an day, July. 23 at 2:30 p.m. Ladies with matching accessories and a yellow I��Ii�I}H„�I�, �n,
please bring lunch. Bring your child -mum corsage, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Youngblut and 1 Victoria Hospital, London, after being
1:15 p.m.—Church Service and Sunday *refreshments served bymembei's o' hin a car accident two weeks ago, She
School. the W.M.S. group in charge.ren• The bride's table was centred with Mrs. Fein Kennedy and family visited has a fractured leg and other injuries.
a four -tiered wedding cake, The on Sunday with the former's cousins. We hope for a speedy recovery,
ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA church parlours were decorated with Mr. and Mr's. Henry Younghlut, of
Rev. Robert F. Meetly, Rector. OBITUARY HURON COUNTY SOiL & CROP pink and white streamers and the Stratford.
8th Sunday after Trinity IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION tables were lovely with bouquets of The sympathy of the entire commie.
Trinity Church, Blyth, JAMES ERNEST MEDD TWILIGHT MEETING sweet peas. The wedding dinner was fly goes out to Mrs, Jennie Lyon in her BIRTHS
12.15—Litany and Sermon. served by the ladies of the church. recent bereavement.
St, Mark's, Auburn. Funeral services were held last Wed W'ltile some damage has been done For a wedding trip to Eastern Ont. Mrs. Bert Allen and Mr's. Etta Crisp BARRIE—ht Clinton Public Hospital
8 p,m.—In United Church (in connec nesday, July 12th, at. 2 p.m., from the to the experimental plots at the }Juror ario, the bride donned a green dress visited friends in Exeter an Saturday. on Tuesday, July 18, 1961, to Alt,
tion with the Bible School). Ball and Mutch funeral hone, Clinton, County Home Farm by the Sunday with matching jacket, beige accessut Sympathy is extended to Mr. and 'and Mrs. Bruce Barrie, the gift of a
Trinity Clnch, Bel rave. for James Ernest Medd, of Mullett rain and hail, it is planned to carry 0” ies and a corsage of bronze mums, Mrs. James Scott and Kenneth in the son, Danny George, a brother for
'10.45—Litany and Sermon, Township, conducted by Rev, H. rtunge with the Annual Huron County Soil and Mr. and 'Mrs. Wilson will reside or toss of their barn by fire on Sunday. Roger.
12,00—Sunday School. of Londesboro United Church.Crop hnprovement Association Twi the groom's farm on the sixth conces also to the farmers who suffered crop
The pallbearers were; Wilbur Jewitt fight Meeting as previously scheduled stun of West Wawanosh, damage due to the hail. )
THE UNITED CHURCH JameslFlynn, Lorne Lawson, Bernard ora Tuesday, July 25th, commencing at A special guest was the groom's The Londesboro Ball Park was full CONGRATULATIONS
OF CANADA Tighe, Milton Little and George Carter. 7:30 p.m. grandmother, Mrs. Crawford, of •Ken of action on Friday night when the
Blyth Ontario. Flowei'bearelfi were: Morris Medd 1)r. Stan Young of the Field Husban• ora. Other guests were from Toronto, Londesboro boys were hosts to the Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.
Rev. R. Evan McLagan • Minister Allan Finch, Bruce Johnston, and Da- dry Department, O.A.C., Guelph, wit' Owen Sound, Clinton, Newmarket, Sinu• Blyth boys in thein' first game. The Robed Brown, Blyth, who celebrated
Miss Margaret Jackson - Director yid Medd. discuss the hay and pasture mixtures cue, Port Arthur, Fullerton, Wood- trays are of Pee Wee age which is 9 to their 9th wedding anniversary on Wed-
of Music. Burial took plata In Clinton Ceme established at the fat•nt in 1959 and stock, Dunnville, Stratford, Listowel. 12 years. Some of the hays are showing nesday, July 19th.
9.55 a.m.--Sunday Church School. very. 1060. Mi'. Jack Murray, Soils Special. Bluevale, Brussels, Wingham, Kitchen great improvement and some interest- Congratulations to Miss Mary Milne
11.00 a.m.—Morning Worship, mfr. Medd was in his 78th year and ist for this area will discuss the Rod er Belgrave, Govie, Seaforth and Wit- ing games are in store for the sunier. who celebrated her birthday on July 13.
"Green Fields Far Away, was born in Hullelt Township, the sou Row and the Drill Width. Tests using lowdale. Londesboro 28, Blyth 12. Boys playing Congratulations to Mrs. George
Rev, Duncan McTavish, of bunion, of John Henry Medd and Elizabeth spring wheat In the mixtures, The La- Prior to her marriage, the bride's w•rre: Dale Kennedy, Robbie Snell. Hamm who celebrated her birthday on
Guest Preacher during July Bruce. Ile was married in 1910, to dies Program will feature Miss Few• mother held a tea at her home. Larry Snell, Jeff Shaddicl;, Raymund July 19th.
----- - -- Annie Louise Lawson, stet• of the Dairy Foods Service Bureau. Serving the guests were Diane Cham Radford, Maim!' At'drie, Ted Little, .1. Congratulations to Brian MacDonald
I CHURCH OF GOD Suririviug are his wife and to sons. She is planning an interesting program ney and Wanda Wilson. The gifts Sprung, lino McDougall, Bill Vincent who celebrates his birthday on July 21.
Me( onnett Street, Blyth, Lloyd and Jack, of Ilutlett Township for the ladies. were displayed by Misses Dorothy Jackie Vincent, Garry Radford, David Congratulationh to Miss Ida McGow-
John Dormer, Pastor and two daughters, Mrs. Ray (Clete) At the Joint Meeting on the lawn in Noble and Kathleen O'Malley, friends Lee, Robert Anderson. Coach, Jack an who celebrates her birthday on
Phone 105
Flitch, of Hullelt, and Alts. Robert front of the new County Home a ins of the bride. Lee, assisted by Jack and Deng Snell. July 22nd.
CHURCH OF GOD CAMP MEETING (Phyllis) Johnston, of Grand Valley; play will be pill on by the Ontario De- Mrs. Andrews, of Clinton, honoree] Mr. and Airs. Wm. Hamilton, of Congratulations to Mr. Ben Walsh
Sunday evening, July also 15 grandchildren and 3 great partnten.t of Transport, of interest tc Miss Jefferson with a shower and the Moorefield, spent a couple of days last who celebrates his birthday on July 22.
Beginning next St y gall farmers and tarot wives, Mr. W. K. Do nybluuk United Church honored het week with their daughter and family Congratulations to Mr. J. 11. Phillips
all services at the Church of God,
16111,
grandchildren, and a sister, Mrs. Net -
Min the Agricultural Represents• when they presented her with a mantle "The Thompsnns.” who celebrates his birthday on July 22.
Blyth, will be withdrawn, through to lie Layt°n, of Exeter' tive from Middlesex, will show his clock, coffee table and two step tables Misses Donna Sinclair, of L°ndun Congratulations to Mrs. Diana Cowan
and including Sunday, July 23rd. The pictures and discuss his recent trip tc from the church and choir. Many Girlie, Elaine and Vicky Perry, of St. who clebrates her birthday on July 22,
local con7,t'egatimt will be attending Congratulations to Mr. Millar Rich• England, Scotland and the Continent. other beautiful gifts were also re- Thomas, are holidaying with their Congratulations to Mr. Wm. Cocker-
the Church -of God Camp at Camp mond who celebrates his birthday July The County Junior Farmers will be ceived from relatives and friends in grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, Harold line who celebrates his birthday July
McPherson at Durham. 16, serving lunch to all present. the surrounding community, Livingstone, at present. 23,
Prr:tit:es Are The
Ort:y Drawbrck
11 ';•1111S'e tv1meti c:;:11101
land
to see :nything 'g,1 'u twast� ,
gourmets have .seta given a
new d,'lleney• ca.';uls t•'Ily i't,ls
might 112`'et have het n otfeled to
the palalr s of roulnili-.sear: if
an active. Ohio pre—iii \'t o 'ser
had not ane to I'ey.c's
Mrs diary Thorne ipenecl It
restaurant in :Alpin:, cIu•e to
Big Ilene! National Park, 11 t'e:rs
ago. lir•:. 'Thorne h;:d l'w .cs
been isnot(n u) Toledo for 'ser
exquisite preserves rnd je,iy
rnd. noting that I1;:rally t,.ns
of thorny pr Ickly g:c ars \v •n1 to
waste •,n lanchcs around ,1!pinc
she de, rded to see trheti1.1 tin se ;
eactu< p.;urs rnrrtd 11.1t he imt
togot rt.i
Ar eed tt'.111
glove: ;rd „'e long: :he .;,,cher•
ed some pr,ekiy p,:;r ,,nil, atlet
some tsp rinnentat:,ln came up
With a re,ipc ;nr ;{ dehci(1,:
tUS Jelly
she :armed It in
het rale l d
sold it by the jar to customers
who having tasted it, begg, d to
buy some to take home. S -on
cactus jelly became wanted all
around Alpine and travelers (who
had it for breakfast wrote ask.
ing to be sent some. Becalm- ut
its clear red color cactus icily
is often mistaken for wild plum
jelly at first sight, but its taste
is unmistakable.
Thrilled by the reception al,en
to her new jelly Mary Thorne
has sold her restaurant and is
opening a cactus jelly factory
The cactus pear harvest st: :t-
ing about July 1 in the hot. ow
area around the Rio Grande,
wfth the pears continuing to
ripen for the next three months
in the mountains, Mary Thorne
is now busy checking the vast
growth of prickly pears along
the river trying to guess when
the fruit will be ripe.
She is often helped in tier
survey by her first enthusiastic
customer, her six-year-old grand-
son, Mike Bryan.
Unlike most factory owners
Mary Thorne does not have to
worry about the price of raw
materials. Everywhere ranchers
welcome the "Cactus Lady" to
help herself to all the pears he
Wants.
The only thorns in the cactus
jelly business are the ones one
acquires while harvesting. In
spite of gloves and tongs tiny
cactus thorns seem to float
through the air and just stick
into you. Maybe because she nas
to battle the thorns on the field,
or then be transformed into a
pincushion, Mary Thorne does
not make any attempt to remove
the spines from the pears She
simply crushes them and ;trains
the juice through several thick-
nessec of cheesecloth
Hemingway
—He
Balanced
Words
With
Action
Ernest Hemingway
lived a life of action
as well as words, cis
this portfolio of nota-
ble pictures demo n-
strates. He was a
hunter and fisherman.
In bull fighting he
found the very essence
of the adventurous life.
He loved Africa and
spent many of his later
days in pleasant life in
Cuba. These photos
show highlights of his
active career.
NO PEEKING, NOWI — Students taking examination extend in all directions in a building in Nice,
France, These tests are important to determine who goes on to higher education,
TMLE 1 1
Jane A cines.
Fruit pies dif;er not only in
the crust u s e d, but in the
amount of fruit used and in the
seasoning added to the fruit.
CHEER Y PIE
3 cups fresh, pitted red
cherries
!:{ ctip sugar
1 tablespoon cornstarch (ur 2
tablespoons flour)
1/6 teaspoon salt
1 tablespoon butter
Pastry for 2 -crust 9 -inch pie
Combine sugar, cornstarch,
and salt, Sprinkle mixture over
cherries and stir gently until
well coated. Pour cherries into
pastry -lined pi e pan and dot
with ' butter. Cover with top
crust in which you have made
slats for stearal to escape. Bake
at 450 degrees F. for 15 minutes,
Then lower temperature to 350
degrees F. and bake for 20 min-
utes.
Cherry pies are favourites all
the year, not just in fresh cherry
season, and may be made with
canned cherries. Try this recipe
with a lattice top: Make dough
for a 2 -crust 9 -inch pie. Roll rh
the dough and line your pan;
then roll other half (it is easiest
to do this between 2 waxed pa-
pers, 12 -inch square). For lattice
top, when fruit filling is in pie,
take top paper off rolled top
crust and cut dough into 1z -inch
strips. Weave strips criss-cross
on the waxed paper. Flip this
quickly over filling and seal finds
and flute edges.
CHERRY FILLING
1 No. 2 can red sour cherries,
drained
2 tablespoons cornstarch
LI to ''c cup sugar
Dash of salt
Cherry Juice
1 teaspoon almond extract
2 tablespoons butter
Combine cornstarch, sugar,
and salt, Stir in cup cherry
juice, Cook until thick and clear.
Add almond extract. Pour dram -
ed cherries into pastry -lined pie
pan; add thickened juice and dot
with butter. Cover with lattice
pastry. Bake at 425 degrees F.
for 40 minutes.
Here is a blueberry pie that is
chilled in the refrigerator and
served cold with whipped cream.
BLUE ANGEL PIE
1 package (3 ounces)
grape -flavoured gelatin
1 cup hot water
1 cup cold water
); teaspoon almond extract
1 pint blueberries
1 baked 9 -inch pie shell
Sweetened whipped cream
Dissolve gelatin in hot „(rater.
Add cold water and almond ex-
tract. Chill until slightly thick-
ened. Fold in blueberries. Spoon
into pie shell, Chill until firm.
Serve with whipped cream de-
corated with blueberries.
Rhubarb is another 'favourite
In 1929 when "Farewell to
Arms" appeared.
fruit pie. You'll enjoy making
this one.
RHUBARB NE
Pastry fur 2 -crust 9 -inch pie
112 cups sugar
tablespoons flour
!i teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons melted butter
1 egg, slightly beaten
4 cups (13/4 pounds) 1 -inch
pieces rhubarb
Beat together the sugar, flour,
salt, butter, and egg until well
blended. Spread the rhubarb in
a pastry -lined 9 -inch pie pan.
Spread the sugar mixture even-
ly over the rhubarb. Cover with
slashed top crust, folding edge
of top crust under edge of bot-
tom crust. Flute edges securely
together. Bake at 425 degrees F,
about 40 minutes.
Serge this fresh peach pie with
dips of vanilla ice cream, if you
like, It is best when served cold.
FRESII PEACH PIE
4 cups peeled, sliced fresh
peaches
1 cup sugar
1 tablespoon lemon Juice
2 tablespoons flour
!i teaspoon salt
!!' teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter
Pastry for 2 -crust 9 -Inch pie
Wash, peel, and slice peaches
into a large bowl, Sprinkle with
lemon juice. Stir together the
sugar, flour, salt, and cinnamon,
Pour over peaches. Toss togeth-
er, coating each peach slice with
the sugar mixture. Place peach
slices in pastry -lined pie pan
and sprinkle remaining sugar
mixture over top. Dot with
butter. Cover with top crust and
2
Britain Shocked By
Red Union Frauds
The biggest Communist con-
spiracy in the history of the 13ri•
Hsi! trade -union movement has
been publicly unmasked.
'I'lle nation is shocked,
it is shocked by a judge's find-
ing that a handful of cunning,
fanatical individuals were able
to maintain themselves and their
alien creed by controlling
through fraud the seventh iarg-
est union in the country -- the
240,000 strong Electrical Trades
Union.
But most of all, perhaps, the
nation is shocked by the fact
that it look five years 10 brig;
the culprits to ,judice. And even
then it was done primarily
through a gradual build-up of
press revelations about rigged
elections and through the conra-
gcouS aetion of two i:'1'U mem-
bers who brought the matte: to
court.
Nothing was done by the gov-
ernment and next to nothing by
the Trades Union Congress, rul-
ing body of the trade -anion
movement,
The disturbing thought for a
nation which prides itself on its
freedom and its absence of cor-
ruption is that the membership
of the union, which is said to be
99 per cent non-Communist, al-
lowed this situation to continue
long after the essential facts had
become public knowledge.
Most of the leading newspa-
pers of the country have editor-
ials on the court finding. They
are deeply concerned with how
this situation was allowed to
persist and how it can be pre-
vented from occurring again.
seal, Bake at 425 degrees F. for
35-40 minutes.
4. 4.
Ifere is a filling for an ti -inch
apple pie, For a 0 -inch pia in-
crease the amounts slightly.
APPLE PIE FILLING
cup sugar
!a cup brown sugar
1/.! teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons flour
!.2 teaspoon cinnamon
1,.1 teaspoon nutmeg
2!.:2 cups sliced apples (If you
use canned apples, drain)
Mix dry ingredients together.
Sprinkle half of mixture over
botom pastry which has been
rolled and placed in pie pan, Add
apple slices. Sprinkle remaining
mixture over slices, Place top
crust over apples, Trim edges to
)h -inch beyond edge of pan, Fold
edge' under and flute with fin-
gers, Prick or slash top crust.
Bake at 450 degrees F. for 15
minutes. Reduce heat to 350 de-
grees , F, and continue baking
35-40 minutes.
The 'Times of 1. rods n sug-
gests that the I?!c. ;11 Trades
Union mcn)bcr: ;,!iu(wcd its
Communist leaders ld remain
fraudulently in office not nrre-
ly through apathy but also be-
cause from tin inclustl int point
of view that /011(1(1=1)4) appealed
fo he both efficient and effec-
tive,
Here there is -c.n to be
big moral question. '1'o „chat ex-
tent will trade union) in allow
fraudulent practices :,i rontiouo
under their very noses provided
the members think racy aro
benefitting materially?
The 'Times says t, i 1t ; r rase is
made out for le,r slatien to en-
sure that trade -union 1 tiles tut -
fill certain minimum 1 eou.rc-
n;ent.5 in the conduct of (f,ec-
tions. It advocates ':lat soma
ciuthorily like the t'nia f Hews -
trait crf Friendly Si;,:c:.'.r be giv-
en putter to inwe t:,i'c and ,real
with complaints ot n c usher,.
The Financial Tim, -2 .:.!so sup-
ports legislation to 1.uleet the
democratic machinery c'1 11 Ido
unions. It examines :he Austra-
lian law on union c canons and
the Atitrnlian regg::'rar system,
(writes Peter Lyn( in :tic Chris-
tian Science Monitor.
' But it says the 'I t dc_ Union
Congress may ;Ai .t 1 govern-
ment legislation tin i.011(hllun
that it covers elections ;0 every
sort of nrgantzn:tion including
the Oxford Union del:wing
ety and the local :0t\ n te''ris
club. The trade -union movement,
as suggested, rnr^h; thus feel
itself not being uict.mlied.
Britain's chief haler ('arty
paper the Daily 11u';'id c'a'ged
the banner headlin(. June 29:
"Communists' grip of ETU is
broken." 1n 00 cd:t.orial rho
Herald says the 1: <,de -union
movement of 13ritllin must exa-
mine its procedures :0 ensure
that this cannot happen in ter er
anions. I1• not, it warns, the
state nay find it nc,essary to
ilCi;
The high court finding of Ivlr.
,iustic (Winn was that the five
defendants had conspired "by
fraudulent and unlawful de-
vices" to prevent John Thumas
Byrne being elected general se-
cretary of the union ;n Decem-
ber, 1959.
Mr, Byrne was given judgment
for loss of salary on th:s account.
A salesman decided elle day
that he had enough of selling
and became a policeman, A few
months later a friend met nim
and asked how he lilcrcl his new
job. "Great!" said the cx-sales-
man, "What 1 like best about it
is that the customer is always
wrong,"
ISSUE 29 — 196)
The author poses with his close friend Gary Cooper and their guide, dogs and equipment after a day in the field at Sun
Valley, Idaho. This photograph was taken in 1942.
Big game held its fascination, Here the author is in Africa
shortly before his 1954 plane crash.
About to take off for a flight over France from North Africa
in 1944. Hemingway was a correspondent,
His bearded face in a grimace)
as he talks to newsmen.
Work And Fun On
A Tibetan Farm
At midday mother would 1.11“
food out to the fields for m
father and the labourer, and
sometimes also for one or two
neighbours who happened to be
helping him in the fields, Shc
would carry the basket ir, :t
shoulder sling, or on her back
with the help of a rope.... We
used to like going with her on
these journeys into the flail:;,
dancing and playing around her
on the way.
Our small farm was made up
of separate strip;, of land situate.i
in different places. This carie
about by ancient custom, because
as the soil was not all good many
generations of peasants had di-
vided it up so that each family
should till both good and cess
good patches, always sowing and
planting various crops in a set-
tled sequence. The hard work
would naturally make the men
hungry, and they would devour
their food eagerly. Their obvious
hunger would make us hungry
too, and we would join happily
In the meal. When the men were
finished we would go back to the
house again with mother, who
.still had a lot of work to do,
On arriving home she would
exchange the food basket for the
ordinary water -carrier in which
she fetched our daily supplies
from the well, which was about
ten minutes' distance away from
our farmstead at the other end
of the village.. , .
It was lively and jolly there.
The women gossiped and told
each other the latest new,, and
they were so occupied with each
other's tales that they would
leave the children to do as they
liked -and the wet clay was a
wonderful plaything. We would
make it into the most fantastic
shapes, and, of course, get our-
selves smothered with it as the
same time,
The "well" was really only -:
depression, not more than a coo•
pie of handbreadths deep and
.perhaps four or five feet across.
. Mother would stoop down and
scoop up the water with a large
dipper used for the purpose, tak-
ing great care not to stir up the
mud of the bottom, and transfer
it to her own container, which
had a wooden cover to prevent
the water from slopping over on
the way home. If she' happened
to forget the wooden cover, a';
she sometimes did, she would
just pluck a fete branches from
nearby bushes, and they would
have to serve the purpose.
This excursion woulde usually
make us children hungry again,
but as it would not be time $.o
eat, mother would give us a cou-'
elle of stone -hard rolls, which
we would then soak in a basin
of hot water and devour with
great appetite. -From "Tibet Is
y Country"; The Autobiogra-
phy of Thubten Jigme Norbu,
brother of the Dalai Lama, as
told to Heinrich Harrel.. Trans-
lated from the German by Ed-
ward Fitzgerald.
In 1929, Joe Sewell struck
out only four times in 152 games.
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
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11
111 ' Duys of
rain, floods leave
240 dead, 300,000
hones wrecked
I in Japan.
3,000 flee
homes as forest fires rage
in 300 square miles of
Newfoundland,
�1r1a4•I� Maritimestrlke
ties up New York, spreads
to other coast government
appoints fact-finding board,
pT,.14#11 X•15 sets
another speed record:
j 3,690 m.p.h.
I I
JUNE'6 • South
Korean military junta
decrees absolute rule.
french farmers revolt In
Brittany over government's price
policies; unrest spreads through
France as farmers block roads,
clash with police.
�� �� 'i:'or !'a41'hS,.r.a41 ,,L...t.'irq'L•.t, +rJ����l
st, magi Khrushcher reports on Vienna sl
muting overTV; promises treaty with
East Germany with or without
co-operation of West,
JUNE 3
President
Kennedy, Premier
Khrushcher meet in
Vienne for first time.
'R1J1=
launches
three-in-one satellite socket,
IgnaariTwo
Americans arrested in
Mexico for blowing up three
communications towers in west,
till', lJ I Castro rejects offer of 500
tractors for invasion prisoners; U.S.
committee disbands but Castro sends
prisoner delegation again,
".N
s ' Congress passes
administration's housing bill.
LUNE 29 Liberalized social
security bill passed.
Ways To Control
The Rabbit Pest
Last year, after a deluge of
complaints about trying to keep
rabbits out of the vegetable
patch - and every other part
of the garden, for that matter -
members of the Pennsylvania
Horticultural Society were asked
to send in reports of their suc-
cesses (and lack of them) with
this problem.
The most popular control ma-
terial proved to be dried blood,
a fertilizer product availablle in
most garden centres. By ring-
ing individual plants, beth or
a whole garden with this ma-
terial, you can create a sort of
rabbit "no man's land." Evi-
dently, rabbits do not like the
odour•. One member reported
especially gratifying r e s u l t s
where he had been losing many
tu lips.
Black pepper, s p r in k led
around choice plants, seems to
work, too, as do partially sub-
merged coke bottles (the air
passing over the open mouth of
the container is supposed to
make a sound unpleasing to rab-
bits) but we received no reports
from members using any of the
commercial repellents.
For vegetable plots, where
plants are set in rows, black
plastic mulch is repotted to keep
rabbits away. This is especially
useful in the week -end garden or
in one which is left untended
for long periods, but extended
use of black plastic mulches can
lead to other problems, such as
a build up of root attacking fun-
gi,
One enterprising member hit
the key to rabbit control, we
think, when she noted that if
there is plenty of clover nearby,
the rabbits do not bother other
plants. While some lawn matters
loathe the presence of clover •in
their grass, it might prove to be
the ideal turf where the rabbit
exists, In areas at the edg; of
the garden you could serve up
a succulent feast before the
trouble - makers advance far
enough to reach the lettuce and
phlox.
This same approach to rabbit
control in winter was suggested
by an 'enterprising nurseryman
who had placed cut bran 'hes of
old apple trees and similar prun-
ings around choice crab apples.
The rabbits ate the bark from
the cut branches and the trunks
of the choice trees carne through
the winter unharmed - "If you
can't fight 'em, ..."
DRIVE CAREFULLY - The
life you save may be your own.
"DON'T SEND ME BACK" - A three -month-old lion cub gives his
mistress, Mrs, Vada Stovall, a pleading look. But the Stovalis
must send their pet to the zoo because it's growing too wild.
They nurtured the animal when it was too small to get along in
the usual environment.
JUNE 4
Adlal Stevenson
begins tour of South
America in Caracas;
report. U.S, prestige
at low point,
/ /
Iraq lays
claim to newly
independent oil
sheikdom of Kuwait;
Britain sends warships
to area,
JUNE 20 Adolf Eichmann
testifies in his own defense;
says he wan small -fry paper
shuffles in Nall organization.
TIILFMN FRONT
Jo Itaaett
Nowadays, if you want the
very best milk, you have to have
not just a cow and a farmer to
milk her, but also a computer.
The computer has not physically
entered the barn, but it dictates
from afar what the cow will eat,
when she needs a rest, when she
should be bred, and exactly how
the farmer should treat her.
* * is
None of this is the least im-
personal, either. Each cow so
pampered is listed by name in
the computer's vast and infalli-
ble memory, and nothing con-
cerning the cow's daily routine
escapes recording. One farmer's
monthly record carries the names
Mabel, Revely, Faith, Patsy, Fa-
tima, Dawn, Minnie, etc., making
the cows seem as individual as
people.
Beside each name stretches the
relentless record concerning that
cow's consumption, her produc-
tion, and finally, the figures
which show whether she is earn-
ing her keep. - On the basis of
these figures, the computer "pre-
scribes" for each cow.
While such records are pri-
marily a tool to enable farmers
to become better managers and
thereby increase their earnings,
they benefit the public, too, by
aiding the production of tastier
and more nourishing milk.
* * {
Nothing less pastoral could be
imagined than the clanking,
humming Dairy Records Process-
ing Laboratory at Cornell Uni-
versity, which now is housed in
an impressive new building
named Frank B. Morrison Hall,
to honor Cornell's famous pro-
fessor of animal husbandry.
As it has in other fields, IBM
equipment has taken hold of the
dairy industry and appears in
some measure to be revolution-
izing it. One machine at Cornell
handles records for about 45
cows per minute. One day's run,
it is estimated, would require a
year to do if handled by a desk
calculator, writes Helen Henley
in the Christian Science Monitor,
For this service, the fanner
pays about 50 cents per month
per cow, The reports processed
at Cornell coupe from supervisors
who make a monthly visit to
each farts to weigh the milk and
test it. The whole process is part
of the Dairy Herd Improvement
program, a federal project in
which state agencies and cooper-
atives work together. Cornell
serves not only New York dairy-
men, but fanners throughout
New England, New Jersey, De-
laware, Maryland, and West Vir-
ginia,
Closely cooperating with the
DHI program and Cornell is the
New York Artificial Breeders'
Association which exists to help
farmeas produce better herds,
The production and feeding data
stored electronically by compu-
ters such as those at Cornell not
only result in guidance for farm-
ers but also provide some guide-
lines for researchers in genetics,
it was stressed by Dr, Charles It.
Henderson and Dr, Wilmot Car-
ter, both professors of animal
'husbandry at Cornell.
* * *
They pointed out that although
dairymen have decreased, these
fewer dairymen keep larger
herds, so that the number of
cows retrains about the same.
But records show that over-all
production of milk per cow has
gone up about 50 per cent during
the past 15 years, The nation's
milk supply is thus expected to
keep pace with the needs of the
increasing population.
Should vast more numbers of
cows be needed, the professors
anticipate that the developing
science of artificial breeding will
be able to meet that need, They
cited ane bull which has pro-
duced well over• 40,000 progeny,
and quoted one estimate that
within a single year one bull
quite possibly could, by artificial
insemination, sire 100,000 calves.
* * •
Careful selection of these bulls,
they said, would almost guar-
antee production of cows that
would be high producer's of milk
with a high percentage of butter
fat.
Genetics research with large
animals like cows is usually slow
and costly, the professors said,
but the data provided by the
computers is speeding up the
process and putting into farmers'
hands the findings which enable
thein to do a better job both for
themselves and for the public
which depends on thein for milk.
These professors take pride in
the fact that, although similar
efforts are going an in other
states and at other agricultural
institutions, Cornell's records on
cow testing go all the way back
to 1908.
Not satisfied now with what
looks like the last word in mod-
ern equipment, they plan next to
convert their entire mass of re-
cords to magnetic tape.
They keep records now on
about 300,000 cows, comprising
approximately 7,450 herds, but
expect to increase to half a mil-
lion cows in the near future,
Dairying "by the numbers"
may someday become almost as
exact a science as mathematics
itself. 4, ,, 4,
Pleading guilty to charges that
he misbranded several ribs of
beef he sold to a restaurant, Aldo
Vistorino, of Victor Meat Market,
1076 St, Clair Ave,, Toronto, was
fined $50 and costs.
The charges against Vistorino
were laid by the RCMP under the
Canada Agricultural Pro a u c t s
Standards Act following com-
plaints by the restaurant owner
to the Canada Department of Ag-
riculture.
W. B, Ellsworth, a federal gov-
ernment neat inspector, said the
beef he inspected on the restaur-
ant premises was "old cow qual-
ity" and not "Canada Good" as
indicated by the brand murk on
the meat. The beef sold to the
restaurant, he said, had nut pre-
viously been graded by govern-
ment grader and was Emu. ma-
ture, hard -boned cows.
A Canada B -Good brand, own-
ed and registered in the name of
a large Canadian packing com-
pany, was found on the Vistorino
premises and had been used to
misbrand the meat.
4+ *
A new method of preparing
sweet cucumber pickles has been
developed at the Canada Depart-
ment of Agriculture's experimen-
tal farm at Morden, Man Slices
pickled by the new method are
firm and crisp and the color is
evenly dispersed,
Describing the process, R. B.
Hyde says gases are removed
from the sliced cucumbers under
a high vacuum and replaced by
water or a dilute syrup. Sikes are
packed into jars containing a
sweet spiced vinegar solutior, and
pasteurized.
Cucumbers pickled by this
method weigh up to 10 per cent
more than when fresh, in con-
trast to cucumbers pickled by
the usual methods which gen-
erally shrink considerably
The Morden method appears
to have considerable commercial
possibilities.
It would enable the thick cu-
cumber slices used in sweet mix-
ed pickles to be packed directly
from fresh cucumbers without
shriveling, eliminating the custo-
mary slow fermentation method.
Also, the quality and yield of
pasteurized pickles from fresh
sliced cucumbers may be improv-
ed by adding a vacuum treatment
to the regular commercial pro-
cess.
Tipsy man to workman in
B1oor Street excavation: "What
are you doing do w n there?"
Workman: "We're building a
subway." "When will it, be fin-
ished?" "In about three years."
"Oh, the heck with it, Pll take
a taxi."
Q. What would be the correct
way for two unmarried sisters to
register at a hotel?
A. They should register: "Miss
Shirley Adams, Miss Sue Adams,
Detroit, Mich."
AY SCIIOOI
IESSON
By Rev. 11. Barclay Warren
B.A., R.A.
Mary and Martha, Friends of
Jesus
Luke 10:38.42; John 11:1-5;
12:1-3.
Memory Selection: Yea, Lord: 1
believe that thou are the Christ,
the Son of God which should
come into the world, John 11:27.
Martha and Mary appear in
three different scenes in the
ministry of our Lord. But one
feels that on other occasions
Jesus may have made this peace-
ful home a stopping place when
he was ministering in the Jeru-
salem area. The stories blend
• together making• an atmosphere
that suggests that from the time
that Jesus went forth from Naza-
reth to teach, this was 'home' to
him more than any other place.
In the first scene Martha was
troubled about serving while
Mary was more concerned about
the spiritual blessings to be, re-
ceived from Jesus while he was
there. Jesus said, "Mary hath
chosen that good part.:',., Women
often unwittingly take fr`oin- the
pleasure of guests by fussing un-
duly about the 'eats'. When it
is over the hostess may realize
a spiritual wilting, too.
When -Lazarus became ill, the
first thought of the sisters was
to send for Jesus. But he didn't
come at once. Lazarus had been
dead for four days when Jesus
arrived. Nevertheless, at the
word of Jesus,. Lazarus came
forth from the grave alive, This
caused a great commotion among
the religious leaders. Such a
thing had -never happened be-
fore. There was no way of keep-
ing this miracle quiet, But a
few days later they were to ex-
perience greater consternation
when Jesus Himself arose from
the dead in resurrection power
and glory.
The third scene takes place in
the Bethany home with Jesus
again as guest. Mary showed her
gratitude by--anointinC ; the,. feet
of Jesus with .costly ointment
and wiping• them with the hair
of her head. Lazarus was there.
This time -criticism came from
Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve.
Judas, a thief, was thinking of
the money he might have had.
Mary was pouring out her love
in thanksgiving to Jesus. The
odour of the'ointment that filled
the house, has gone wherever the
Gospel is preached.
ISSUE 29 - 1961
17, Nothing else 03, Rubbers
but
CROSSWORD. �e,,� -_-,
PUZZLE ; Made
e
Ai. Medloal
utde
vee spot
if:
idad
ed
777ippll78. forth
r10. ego. for
food •
ACROSS I. row'
1. Seal 7, Cover.
of "thou" Ii. Obieotive 04Hcompl to
s. State t,
r.)
9. Cases or
medicine
10, Unclose
(poet.)
11. Espouse
9, Intimidate
. 2. Make eyes
8. Traveled
4. Simian
15. Horse's gait
10. Pitched one's
tent
18. Determine
20. Sweotsop
21. Mineral veins
23. Iron corrosion
26. Frozen rein
29, Merrymaker
31. Slack
32. Succinct
4, Prior in time
35. Beg earnestly
37. Analyze 01 e
39. Cancel
40, Muddle
12. Single thing's
44. Pit for servicr
43. hawkers
51. knot of wool
or 31111
62• Windmill soil
53. Unruly child
64. Soft murmurs
55.• --River
valley
66. Catch sight of
57. Ancient slave
DOWN
1, (hreat number
2. Mythical
monster
3, Coagulation
4. Cauldron
5. Mot :real for
•'nllp
30, Glve
temporarily
23. Spiritualist's
meeting
11, Powdery 4
43. German river
45, Sounds of
disapproval
15. King of beasts
47. Besides
48. Average
49.heep
50. The least bit
• (colloq,)
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OLD AND THE NEW IN RUSSIA - A camel -borne peasant watches trucks roH past in a bleak 'sec=
tion of the Kzylkum region of Soviet Russia, The truck carries pipe to be used on gas lines.
I
PAGE 4 '
Si $1.00 STORE, BLYTH
SUMMER TOYS AND BEACH ITEMS:
Beach Balls,Rubber Balls, Swim Rings, Softballs,
Large Gas Balls, Softball Bats, Sand Pails and
Shovels, Toy Boats and Airplanes, Cars and Trucks,
Space Kadet Planes, Canteen Bottles, Cowboy Hats,
Kites, Metal Shovels, etc.
GIRLS COTTON BRIEFS, Srze''816'14, each 29c
LADIES COTTON BRIEFS, small, medium,
and large each 45c
"SUMMER SALE
BEGINS THURSDAY, JULY 20
20 to 50 percent Discount on all Summer.
Merchandise.
Boys' Jeans, 2 to 14 • 1.58 to 3.18
Girls' and Teen Slim Jims, 2 to 181... 1.58 to 4.95
T Shirts, Girls' and Boys', 1 to 14 79c up
Shorts, Girls' and Boys', 2 to 18 59c to 3.18
also: Pedal Pushers, Bathers, Skorts, Blouses,
Shorts Sets, Dresses, Skirts, Pajamas,
Sport Shirts and,Sunsuits.
NeedlecraFt Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
101 1. 1..Ill
Wingham Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 85 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPO'ITON,
11i 1 III. 1111 1 N., II . 1.11. 1...1 11 I . 1.11 1 .1 11 1 .1 1 u 1 . ill !MI. .
'tl
Clinton .Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON - EXETER -- BEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE -
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON, /
tig4 PHONES; - y U1'
CLINTON: , ,, EXETER:
Business --Hu 2-6606 Business 41
Residence -Hu 2-3869 ' . Residence 34
FOR A COOL AFTERNOON' TREAT ---
Visit Our Restaurant For. A ,Refreshing
SUNDAE; MILK SHAKE, SODA, LIGHT LUNCH
Meals At All Hours.
HURON GRILL
BLYTH - ONTARIO
FRANK GONG, Proprietor.
411 r1 11 ..11 . 1.1.11 1 II. 1 11 .1 d Y 1 I 1111.:11.7.
J 1 1 ...111...1 .... .. 1 ... .. 1 .. .! �... a I I 1 . .1 1.• ( .. . .. n
Clearing; Of
SUMMER GOODS
20 % Discount On The Following
DRESSES, all Summer Cottons.
PEDAL PUSHERS.
SLIMS
COTTON SKIRTS
SHORT SLEEVE SPORT SHIRTS
MEN'S DRESS STRAW HATS
NYLON HOSE 69c
SHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY
Save your Sales Slips or Black Diamond Stamps
. and Bank Nite Tickets.
"The House of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
Th.e, Arcade Store
PHONE 211 BLYTH, ONT.
THE BINTIt STANDARD
AUBURN NEWS
Guests last weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph D. Muro were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest McBride, Brantford, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Youngblut and Lorie
of London, and Miss Marilyn Ling, oI
Guelph.
Rev. and Airs. William Alatnes, o'
Granlen, and Mr. Ronald Mains, oI
London, visited last week with Mr. ano
Mrs. Hebert J. Phillips,
Idiss Erma Symin_ton, of Toronto
a fernier Auburn resident, called or
friends in the village last weekend.
Miss Gwen McDowell, of London
and Master Wayne Alcllcwell, of West
field, visited last weekend with Ah'
ind Mrs. Norman McDowell.
Mrs, Chester 'Taylor and son, Don
rid, of St. Helens, visited on Sunda
with Mrs. Maud Frcmlin.
Congratulations are extended to Airs
Annie Walper, who celebrated her 91s1
,irthday last week at Huronview, where
,he has been a patient for some time.
-ler only daughter, Mrs. John Daer.
along with Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell
iisited her that day. She had been LI
.ife-long resident of Auburn commu»
ty until she went to Clinton owing t1.
11 health, She is the daughter of the
ate George Walper and Elizabeth
'laetzer and was horn in the Alait!ano
3lock of Ilullelt Township. She wan.
.carried to Peter Walper 53 years ago
wentyeight years ago he passes
.way and she moved to Auburn where
he resided until five years ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner ancr
;amity attended the funeral of his bro.
:her, Ivan, who passed away in Chn
ton last week.
Visitors last week with Miss Mar.
garet R. Jackson were Judge Frank
Fingland, of Clinton, Dr, William
Fingland, Niagara Falls, and Mr. Mtn. -
ray Fingland, of Cochrane.
-Air. and Mrs. John Daer and their
daughter, Mrs. Ralph Jackson, and
Mr. Jackson, of Mitchell, are on a trip
to North Bay and other Northern On•
tario points, this week,
Mr, and Mrs. Frank Raithby visited
last Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Gran!
Raithby and family, at Collingwood
Master Tommy Raithby returned with
his grandparents for a visit.
Recent visitors with Alr. and Mrs.
Emerson Rodgers and family were
Mr. Ralph Rodgers, of St. Isles, Que.
hes, Patti and Paul Helesic, of Gode•
rich, and Mrs. William Rodgers, War-
ren and David, of Vancouver. L.A.C.
William Rodgers has been 'posted to the
Clinton R.C.A.F. Station.
Mr. and Airs. George Bousum, of
Detroit, visited last weekend with hip
cousin, Mr. Frank Raithby, and Mrs
Raithby.
Correction -In the report of the Rose
Tea held last week by the Auburn
Horticultural Society, we are sorry
that Alrs. Gordon R. Taylor's name
was omitted from those who assisted
in serving in the evening. She was also
the convener of the advertising corn•
mittee.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Miller, of Lon-
don, viisted .last week with her par-
ents, Mr. and Airs. Percy Vincent, and
his brother, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mil-
ler and Gail.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Bastla and
Miss Eleanor Alonck, of London, ane
Mrs. Dorothy Bowey, of St. Thomas,
were weekend guests with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed. Davies. Miss Eleanor re•
mained for a longer visit.
W.M.S. Meeting
The Woman's Missionary Society o!
Knox Presbyterian Church entertained
the members of the Ida White Group
of the C.U.C. and the C.G.I.T. at their
July meeting held in the Sunday School
room of the church, The president,
Mrs. Donald Haines, was in charge al
the meeting and gave the all to won
ship followed by prayer by Mrs. Ed.
Davies, The devotional period was in
charge of the girls and the members
of the C.O.C. Jannett Dobie read the
scripture lesson and the meditation
was given by Darlene Stewart. Rose
Marie Haggitt led in prayer. A solo
was sung by Margaret Ilaines with
piano accompaniment played by Mrs.
John Houston. The offering was re-
ceived by Margaret Sanderson and this
was dedicated by Marian Youngblut.
A piano solo was played by Mary San.
Berson. An interesting film was shown
on the work and life of John Williams
a missionary of the South Seas, with
the script read by Mrs. W. Bradnock
Mrs. Alvin Leatherland read the min.
utes and gave the financial statement.
Donations of Christmas gifts to be sent
in the hale are requested to he brought
to the church soon and it was announc-
ed that a Training School for Leaders
will be held at Blyth on September 27,
Mrs. Gordon Dobie reported on the
Memorial Fund, The roll call was an
swered by each member naming a
brother of the Bible. The meeting was
closed with prayer by Margaret Young-
blut,
The Ladies Aid of the Presbyterian
Church met with the president, Ahs
Ed. Davies, in charge, Owing to the
secretary, Mis.,Roy Daer, being a pa•
tient in St. Joseph's hospital, London,
the minutes were read by Mrs, Gordon
Dobie, It was deckled to send a dona-
tion to the Deaconess Training Horne
to assist buying the furniture at this
new school, in Toronto. Lunch was set'•
ved by Mrs. W. Bradnock, M.S. John
Graham. Mrs: M. Youngblut and Mta.
M. Chopin.
The Ladies' Guild of St, Mark's .An-
glican Church net at the home of Mrs.
George Schneider with 19 ladies ano
16 children present. The hostess was
in charge of the meeting which opened
by singing, "Jesus Loves Me," with
accordian accompanyment played by
Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor. The study
book chapter on the refugees in Hong
Kong, bringing to light the horrible
truths of their conditions in that
country was taken by Mrs. Lewis Bud-
dy. Mrs. John McNichol, of Blyth,
was the guest speaker and spoke on
"Why we have a prayer hook." She
also spoke on the new revised An -1i•
can Prayer Book, Mrs. G. 11. Tayloi
played several accordian solos. The
president, Airs. Thomas Haggitt, took
charge of the business part of the meet-
ing and the minutes were read by the
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SERVICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
cleaners and polishers. Filter Queen
Sales, Varna, Tel. collect ilensall 696112.
50.13p.ti,
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all those who remelt)
aered we with cards, hewers, and vis-
its, while I was a patient in Clinton
:Iospital. Special thanks to Dr. Street
and the nursing staff.
23.1p. -Mrs. Percy Vincent,
FOR SALE
Frigidaire Refrigerator, cheap for
quick sale. Inquire at Standard (Ace
23-111
CUSTOM WORK
Grain Swathing, done reasonable ono
Aticiently. • Apply Millar Richmond,
Rhone Blyth 13R6. ' 23-2.
FOR SALE .
10 pigs, 8 weeks old. Apply Russell
MacDonald, phone 17X13 Blyth, 23-1
WANTED TO BUY
6' Massey Ilarris binder. Apply Don
Fraser, phone 377J6 Brussels. 23.1
FOR SALE
2 Registered holstein cows, one due
'a freshen anytime, other fresh for
'gree months. Apply A. Siertsema
:hone 83 Blyth. 2223:
2 11'
FOR SALE
Artificial stucco fireplace, very good
condition. Phone Blyth 41. 23-1
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Clearing Auction Sale of Farm Ma-
chlnery and household Effects
At Lot 26 Concession 8, Morri;
Township, 11/4 miles north and 1n west
of Walton on
SATURDAY, JULY 29111
at1p.m.
1951 Massey Harris self propelled
combine, .Model No, 26, fully equipped
in excellent condition; 1951 Ford trae
tor; 1951 Cockshutt tractor; 1951 Dear•
born manure loader; 1951 Dearborn
6 ft. mower; 2 Dearborn 2 -furrow
plows; Massey Harris side rake; 11. C.
manure spreader; cultivator, 3 point
hitch; rubber tired wagon and 16 ft.
hay rack; 120 bus, grain box; hay and
:rain Harvey elevator, 40 ft; garage
12x20; 18 ft, cabin house trailer, fully
equipped; snow blower; oat roller; 1
H. P. motor; 3 ch'uni steel roller; el-
ectric cream separator; water heater;
power drill; 2 small motors; 2 feed
carriers; 200 ft. of litter carrier track
and new bucket; chicken equipment;
forks; shovels; chains; etc. household
Effects; other articles too numerous
to mention.
TERIAIS CASH
Proprietor: Ross McCall.
_Auctioneer: Harold Jackson. 23-2
CARD OF THANKS
;We wish to extend our sincere thanks
and appreciation to the Blyth Fire De-
partment, our neighbours and friends
for their assistance at our fire last
Sunday; also to Mr. Lovell McGuire,
Surge dealer, of Wingham, for the
loan of a portable milking machine.
-Mr. and Mrs. James Scott Sr
WISTF I'ELD
Messrs, John Buchanan, Cecil and
Franklin Campbell attened the wed-
ding of Miss Theresa Audette and Mr.
Aldrich Richard in London on Satur-
day. Following their marriage Mr. and
Airs. Richard left on a honeymoon in
New Brunswick.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Cook and Shar-
on, were London visitors on Tuesday.
Mr, and Airs. Stanley Cook, Belgrave,
visited with Messrs, Jack and Leslie
Buchanan, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Gear and child.
ren, Waterloo, arrived at their sum•
mer home here on Friday. Mrs, Gear
and children remaining for the holi-
days,
Union services were held in West-
field Church on Sunday with a large
attendance. Rev. E. Taylor, Goderich,
and a former Westfield boy, was guest
speaker. There will be no services it
the charge next Sunday. The induction
service for Rev. Charles Lewis will be
held July 28th, in Auburn Church.
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Smith and
Margery, were guests of Mr. and Mrs
Murray Cardiff, Brussels, Sunday ev
ening:.
Miss Hollis McBurney, of Cass City
Mich., is the guest of her brother, Mr.
Armand McBurney.
Mr, and Airs, Harvey McDowell and
David were in Toronto on Thursday.
111r, and 14h's. Gerald McDowell ane
Mr. and Airs,' Lloyd McDowell holiday•
ed at a cottage near Bayfield over the
week -end.
111lisses Annie and Collena Clark, and
Mrs. McIntosh, Toronto, -are visiting
their sister, Mrs. M. McDowell and
Graeme.
Master Wayne McDowell spent the
weekend with his grandparents, Mr.
and Airs. Norrrn McDowell, Auburn.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to Leo Hoogenboom,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hoogenboom
of Auburn, who won a cash prize don-
ated by the Oatholic Women's League
of Goderich, for top standing in Latin
receiving 90 marks, at Goderich Dis-
trict High School.
secretary, Mrs. Ed. Davies. The fin-
ancial statement was given by Mrs.
Gordon R.. Taylor. The members voted
to give a donation to the D.V.B.S., a
children's program with prizes given
to the winners. A successful auction
was held with Rev. R. F. AMeally and
Mrs. Ed. Davies in charge. A delic-
ious lunch as served by Mrs. Schne;•
der, her daughters and girl friends,
I
1., •. I II d1.
Y•'
Wednesday, July 19, 1961
1 II II 1 1 111 1 1 11 1
CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES
AT MADiLL'S
15 PERCENT DISCOUNT ON OUR ENTIRE
STOCK OF WOMEN'S ANi) CHILDREN'S
WHITE SHOES
MEN'S 2 -PANT READY -TO -`PEAR SUITS
Regular $38,00 and $35.00
Our Store will
i
SALE $33.00 and $29.95
Alterations Extra
he Closed from July 31 to August 8
inclusive.
R. W. Madill'_
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Good Manners"
4
•
111 111 1 1.1 S.. hiI 111wu..I1 n . e , 1 01 11.101.1111.111.111.1.04 -I 11 11 r I 1 1 1.1 1 ,.
WALLACE'S
DRY GOODS ---Blyth--- BOOTS & SHOES
Phone 78.
YARD GOODS, CURTAINS, BABY BLAN-
KETS, DRESSES and SWEATERS
JEANS and OVERALLS.
DRY CLEANING PICK-UPS
TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS 8.45 A.M.
1 ....n II- • II
•
1.gill ,I 1.1 . •I1 111-III4111.1111111111.1 11 l.11Wni 1,1...11..111111 III III 1 11 m• 1 .1 ... J
Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED"
Regarding our 201.11 Anniversary Celebration being held on July
26th at our headquarters, tone -half mile east of highway 85 on Lex-
ington Road on the North East edge of Waterloo. May also be reaches
from the east through Bricleport).
The Rt. Hon, JOHN G. DIEFENBAKER and Mrs, Diefenbaker
will be present at our beef barbecue prepared by Master Chef, Toni
Hays, Tickets are $1.00 and mustbe purchased one week in advance.
We can handle 3000 people it the barbecue and therefore only 3000
tickets will be sold,
The Barbecue will be held from 5:30 p.m. to 6:15 p.m, Come
Early!
At 7:30 p.m. (sharp) the evening program will continence featuring
the Rt. Hon. John G. Diefenbaker as guest speaker.
If coming for the Barbecue buy your tickets from any of our
branch offices or staff members. If coming for the evening program
only, previous notification is not necessary.
•
.1.16•41 1411111.1 1 .111 I.
11
,l 11.Ld111.ld all 1. 111 1 .111 1... .1. :.1111. W 1 HAW 11111.1,/1d 111.1, 1111,.11y1.y11,
.. 4
I I 1
VILLAGE OF BLYTH •
Proclamation
At the request of citizens, and in co-operation
with neighbouring municipalities, I hereby pioclaiiu
!MONDAY, AUGUST ith,
A CIVIC HOLIDAY
and request citizens to observe it as such.
.1.1:14.11tl 1111111 1
S. R. FAIRSERVICE, Reeve.
11111 I I1 I IIII I I 1 , Ill.. 11 ■111111 I II I , 1..111111I11YI0.111111W111II11IYI!5
11
. COUNTY HOME, CLINTON
CROP -IMPROVEMENT TWILIGHT
MEETING
Tuesday, July 25, 1961
7:30 Men's Programme in the field.
7:30 Ladies' Programme - Dairy Food Serevice
Bureau.
9:00 Joint Programme - Trip to Europe and more.
1
Y
Wednesday, July 19, 1961
Elliott Insurance Agency'
BLYTH ONTARIO.
INSURANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile, Fire, Casualty, Sickness, Accident,
Windstorm, Farm Liability,
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE, .
Office Phone 104, Residence Phone 140
1 1 11,111110.1i a 01j1 ;
SANITATION SERVICES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired.
Hocked Chains opened modern
equipment. Prompt Service. Irvin
Coxon, 111ilverton, Telephone 254.
11 tf.
r --
BLYTH BILLIARDS
"Your friendly meeting
place." -
Tobaccos - Soft Drinks
Confectionaries
open 9 a.m. to 12 p.m,
Doc Cole, Proprietor
I 041.
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and .Styling.
Ann Horlinger
Phone 143
TV ANTENNA REPAIRS
TV Antenna Repairs and Installation.
Year around service. Phone collect,
Teeswater, 392-6140, TV Antenna Ser-
vice. 45-tf.
FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE
Repairs to All Makes of Vacuum
Cleaners. I3ob Peck, Varna, phone
Hensall, 696112, 50•13p.U,
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc., pumped ACHESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE
and cleaned. Free estimates, Louis $1.00 per 100 lbs. plus bonus for
Blake, phone 442W6, Brussels, R.B. 2. fresh dead, old or disabled !Buses and
cattle. Please phone promptly to At-
wood, Zenith 34900 (no lull charge) or
Atwood 356-2622, collect. Seven day
service. License No. 103C61.
•'4,44, • • ."0-#.?ir 41.0.1.144 .11.0#•••• I#.t
Clinton Community
FA MERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERL FRIDAY EVENIN AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 7:30 p.rn.
IN RLYTH, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150111.
Ice Corry,
Bob McNair,
Manoger, Auctioneer.
05•11.
4...T.,01.11.1.1.7.1. .6 ......
P& WT 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
CRAWS &
TIETH ERIN GTON
BARRISTERS & SolicTTORS
J. H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Hingham and Blyth.
ir BLYTH
EACH THURSDAY AMINO
and by appointment,
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham,
DO YOU HAVE BUILDING OR
RENOVATION PLANS
For a First Class and Satisfactory Job
Call
GERALD EXEL
Carpentry and Masonry
Phone 23R12 Brussels, Ontario
FOR SALE
Raspberries. Apply, Harold Cook.
phone 61 Blyth, after 6 p.m. or at noon
hour. 23-1 [s Your Subscriptiion Paid?
THE !MYTH STANDARD r."- PAGE
BROWNIE'S
imarresmihr,_ A
V DRIVENIN
THEATRE
CLINTON, ONTAR 10
Thurs., and Fri,, July 20 • 21
"SINK THE BISMARK"
Scope — One Cartoon
Kenneth More - Dana \Vynter
Sal., Mon., Tues., July 22, 21, 25
"Carry On Constable"
Kenneth Connor - Joan Sims
1 Short — Colour — One Cartoon
Well., Thur., Fri.„InlY26, 27, 28
"Dentist In The Chair"
Kenneth Connor • Peggy Cummins
One Cartoon
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and body repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance. Undaspray
for rust prevention,
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No, 8 Highway. Plume ,j/\ .1.72A
Gotlerkh, Ontario.
20-tf
I 110 PE 111 I ES FOR SA LE
WILFRED 111eINTEE
Real Estate Broker
‘VAI.IERTON, ONTARIO
Agent; Ile Kennedy, Myth,
Phone 78.
PUBLIC NO'fICE
TAKE NOTICE that a meeting wil'
he held in the O -range Hall at AI:burn,
Ont., in Cie township of Hullett, 00 the
26th day cf July, 1061, at 11.N P.M., for
the purpoF.0 of electing a frIFt P0 (Or
Ball's Cemetery, in the ltexte.hip of
Hullett.
The plot holders are rere--ted te
attend the mreiing. Date.] at Au' urn,
the 10th day of July. 1911..Frank
Hernrn McDowell, Gordon
Taylor, Plot IkIders.
GODERICH
MEET YOUR NEIGHBORS AT THE
PA IL K THEATR E
NOW PLAYING
Phone JA4-7811
Ncw Playlng—'"fhe Magnificent 7"—In Technicolor with Yul Brynner
7,11)11.. Tues., Wed., .Inly 21, 25. 26
Ciregcry Peck, Ava Gardner, Fred Astaire and Anthony Perkins
IF YOU NEVER SEE
Another Motion Picture In Your Life
YOU IUST SEE
Stanley Kramer's Production of
"ON THE BEACH"
July 27, 9, 29
21-2. ;
THE \VEST WAWANOSII
FIRE INSURANC E COMPANY
Head Office, Dungannon
Es'abl!shed 1373
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, Brewn Smyth, 11.11. 2
Auburn; Viee-Pieident, Her -on Irwin
Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, 11. [1
1, Dungannon; George (2. Feagzni
Goderich; Noss McPhee, 11 11. 3, Au . E. liiingstaff, Optometrisi
burn; Donald MacKay, ItipleY; John F Statorth, Phone 191 — Clinton
'MacLennan, 11.11. 3, Goderich; Frank HOURS:
Thompson, RR. 1. 11,,13'i ood; W11i. cqi forth Daily Except Monday & Wen
Wiggins, 11.11, 3, Auburn. 9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
ved. 9:00 a.m. to 12:30 p:m.
Clinton Office - Mond.iy, 9 - 5:30.
I'hont IIU 2-7019
.1E11111' LEWIS IN
"CI DERFELLA"
%vitt! 3 specially chosen shorts
Coming,—Frank Sinatra—"HOLE IN 'THE HEAD"—Scope and Color
with Eleand Paa.er.
G. B. CLANCY Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"WHERE 13ETIER BULLS ARE
USED"
Farmer owned and controlled
Service at cost
Cla.1'.e of bull and breed
Our artificial breeding service will LIP
you to a more Efficient livest: ck
operation
For .,..ervice or more information call
Clinton 1111 2.3441, or for long distance
',lint on Zenith 9-5650.
BEll'ER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
McKII,LOP MUTUAL
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
Successor to the lute A L. Cole,
Optometriffi
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
GODERICH t5.I
For information on your insura:ice,
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
••••~~4~#4.041.#44.1N`M4,44,011.1,41414 Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
411.
CHICKEN BARBECUE
at
Londesboro United Church
TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1961
Supper served 5:30 - 8 p.m.
Adults $1.25
Children 6 - 12 65c
wow ..pa Ida I.. aJ N.. • mar
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASII PRICES
PAH) FOR SICK, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cnws and Horses At Cash Value
Ohl Iforses—ie per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels.
BRUCE MARLATT
011
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15R9, Blyth
21 Ilour Service
Plant Licence No. 54-11:P.-61
Colector Licence No. 88-061
lo 1 11 1111 1111 11111•11
Maw ami.imaib4
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
oUPT01111-47RIT
PATRICK ST. • ONT
F,VEN1NGS 13Y .A.PPOINTMF,NT.
IFor Appointment please phone 770
\\Ingham).
Professional Eye Examination.
Optical Services.'
HOY N. BENTLEY
Public Accountant
GODERICIT, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4-9521 — Box 478.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE 1loURS-1 P.M. •r0 4 P.M,
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS.
7 P.M. To 9 P.M,
rUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAT
•
FIRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - SEAFORTIL ONT.
OFFICERS;
President — John L. Malone, Sea,
forth; Vice -President, John H. McEw.
ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS
L. Malone, Seaforth; J. H. McEw-
mg, Myth; W. S. Alexander, Walton:
\lorman Trewartha, Clinton; J. E. Pep.
per, Brumfield; C. W. Leonhardt,
Bornholm; II. Fuller, Goderich; R.
.1rchibald. Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Seaforth,
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Ir., Londeshoro; V.
1, Lane, R.11. 5,- Seaforth; Selwyn Ba-
ker,. Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth;
Harold Squires, Clinton.
•••wiew•• ...........................1.1.6,1.1.....m..................m....161.••••,,•1166.....Jii.......mmo. a ima.a.L.aelo,u.........J. akaorolmorat,"
i
Everything! Positively Everything Must Be Sold As BOB PHILLIPS,
of Auburn, Is Going Out of Business After More Than 30 Years
of Serving Auburn and istrkt!
Real Buys in Men's Wear
A Few of Our Grocery Bargains
Sockeye Salmon Carnation Milk
Maple Leaf - 7 314 oz. tins!
Reg. 67c
54c
111111•111111 1 III 11 111 11111 I . 11 1 Id.1 .5 1 111.111 ,
- Aylmer Catsup
11 oz. Bottles - Reg. 25c
2 FOR 35c Reg' 55c 47c
16 oz. Tins.
6 FOR 82c ,
. .1 di t.1419.4 . 1 1 111 I1.1 11 11 .11
Cohoe Salmon
7 314 oz. Tins
1 11 1.11 1
I 1 I . "1.1.. la . . I I 1.I.L .!, 1,
Scores Of Money -Saving Bargains!
Early Shoppers Get Best Selection!
ALL SALES FINAL -NO REFUNDS
NO ALTERATIONS or EXCHANGES
I 11 111 1 WINN ,1 11 1111 WI 11,64,1 ii11 1161ii • mil 1 11,1 1111 1
1 1 1 111 1 1 11 1 h, ic
BO
1
ALL GROCERIES
Including Well -Known Brand Lines at
TREMENDOUS SAVINGS!
IPS' GENERA
. 2 r '" ,intainamooncr .1\/C .
t.
•
Men's Smocks ::Men's Blue Jeans
Reg. 4.95 3179 :Reg. :3.95 289
1 11 '16areir
-,wahrama-amiaArkaa.....amaikiiaaatalasall
3 Colors Available --
111 en 's Trott tin a n
Pants anci Shirts
4 '_,SALE PRICE
25c
Reg. 9.25
6.9
Men's
Summer Work Caps
SALE STARTS
SAT., J
LY 22nd
11 mai 1 I adito in 1111111 111 1 1 11 1.11 11 1111 11111N11 11' Li WI"It171 )111 11-11'11(71111111 11111111111 1 11 Ma 11111•11 1
T�'E
61110 .1 11. • I 1. ... I.1 1 1.1. ..1 1161.16111101121.1fflinal t mmtmommonamourummumunsomomoimr.
RN
a
Shoppers Need To
Carry A Slide Rule
The family shopper tr.s been
pictured before a U.S. Senate in•
vestigating committee as a bewil•
dered Alice in a duhiot,: super-
market wonderland, trying to
decide between the "jumbo half
quart," the "full half quart,' the
"giant -sized halt quart, ' of the
"king-sized half quart,"
Having made this decision, she
may then be confronted frith an
even more difficult one Which
Is the better buy — a box con-
taining 1513 ounces (of cereal
Dr other packaged food) selling
for 47 cents or a box of the same
product containing 161_ ounces
priced at 53 cents?
"It shouldn't be neceQsary to
provide every shopper with a
slide rule so that price compari-
sons can be made," protested
Senator Maurine B. Neuberger
of Oregon.
Or, to put it another way, as
Mayra Mannes, "writet and
housewife," did: "Most of us are
simply too busy or too tired or
too embarrassed to take a com-
puter, a slide rule and an MIT
graduate to market and figure
out what we're buying."
The occasion was a hearing
before the Senate subcommittee
investigating packaging and
labeling practices in the market
place.
While these protests inanot
actually represent consumers'
revolt, they do, it is said, reflect
r general confusion and irrita-
tion on the part of today'.; shop-
per who is beginning to suspect
that food products, along with
books, cannot always be judged
by the cover.
The Senate subcommittee,
under the chairmanship of Sena-
tor Philip A. Hart (D) of Michi-
gan, is not making accusations at
this point; it is simply seeking
information.
If this information indicates
present packaging and labeling
practices are deliberately mis-
leading, Congress will consider
whether there should be a law
to require more uniformity in
both packaging and labeling.
It is no secret, as Dr. Persia
Campbell, professor of econom-
ics at Queens College, . brought
,out in her testimony, that today's
3 -cent candy bar is a smaller
0 -cent candy bar than Ameri-
fans used to buy.
In other words, instead of in-
creasing the price to cover ris-
lLg costs, the manufacturer has
uced the size,
This Dr, Campbell calls "con -
Wattled inflation." Many prod-
tltcts, she says, have been reduced
Week's Sew -Thrifty
.PRINTED PATTERN
4915 SIZES
12-20
WONDER blouses — sew -easy
and so smart! They take so little
fabric, you can whip up all three
tor practically pennies.
Printed Pattern 4915: Misses'
Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, Size 16
top style 1h yards 35 -inch; mid-
dle 13a yards 35 -inch; lower 13/4
yards 35 -inch.
Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for safety) for this pattern.
Please print plainly SIZE,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER,
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth Sl., New
Toronto, Ont.
ANNOUNCING the biggest fa-
shion show of Spring - Summer,
1981—pages, pages, pages of pat -
term in our new Color Cata-
logue — just out! Hurry, send
350 now!
in quantity and pe rp ii:,• ,'relit\
in order to hold prier: towel
and meet c.nnpetiti n
She feel: that the hoo'c'h&
ee ,:u!d prefer it the other way.
"A price rise is something you
can handle in the open in con-
trast to an unannounced reduc-
tion in size or quantity," she ex•
pia ins.
Dr. C a In p b e l l finds that
"people are confused and be.
v, ildered as to what is going on."
Packages today are designed, she
reminded the subcommittee, not
for the advertised "economy," but
to catch the shopper's eye on the
supermarket shelf.
It all amounts to "over pack-
aging" as far as she is concerned,
with the consumer opening "one
cellophane wrapper after another
until eventually she exclaims,
'Oh, there it is!' "
As for the "jumbo full pound,"
of the "giant half quart" Dr.
Cr.mpbell feels the subcommittee
"would serve a useful purpose
if it did no more than under-
tr,ke a jungle rescue operation
for the English language."
The subcommittee had assem-
bled an exhibit of products to il-
lustrate the subject of the in-
quiry, including:
• A box of soap pads which
used to be advertised as having
1� to the box, but which now
contains only 10. The number is
printed in small print on the
back of the box.
• Three boxes of paper nap-
kins successively put out by the
same company, the first box
containing 80 napkins with the
fact prominently announced on
the front. The second box still
has 80 napkins, but the number
is printed inconspicuously on the
back. The third box has 70 nap-
kins, with the number in fine
print also on the back.
• Five boxes of detergent all
the same size but put out by dif-
ferent companies, all varying in
price and in content from 1
pound 4 ounces, 1 pound 13/4
ounces, 1 pound 53/4 ounces, and
15 ounces plus a wash cloth.
This investigation into the
maze of packaging and labeling
reflects the Increased sensitivity
on the part of Congress, as well
as the administration, to con-
sumer interests, writes Josephine
Ripley in the Christian Science
Monitor.
In this case, the stake. is high
— affecting a national, annual
grocery bill of $53,000,000,000!
Parents Pushing
Children Too Fast?
Should sixth graders go
steady?
No, says the new president of
the U.S. National Education As-
sociation who believes that dat-
ing by pre -junior -high students
at parties constitutes unwarrant-
ed status -seeking by their par-
ents, Shortly -.before his installa-
tion in Atlantic City last month
as the new head of the 765,000 -
member NEA, Ewald Turner
told reporters:
"It concerns me that parents
push their children into adult
activities too soon, moving for-
mal dances into the elementary
school and allowing dating by
sixth -grade pupils at parties."
Turner, a vocational -guidance
counselor and former junior -
high teacher from Pendleton,
Ore., sharply criticized those
parents "who give their young-
sters too much, too soon in the
way of social life so that Junior
can properly fit into the status
society."
The 38 -year-old bachelor also
had unkind words for some
schools which put "too much
emphasis on the big production,
on winning tournaments, on
hoopla and band which take
students away from their regu-
lar class programs. Interscholas-
tic athletics have their place, but
the tail should not wag the dog."
Queen -Mother's
Quick Come -Back
Well aware of her country's
love for sport, Queen Mother
Elizabeth's quick-wittedness re-
stored her to the good graces of
the citizens of Rugby, England,
recently, after a mild faux pas.
Townspeople of Rugby—where
rugby was invented --had pre-
sented the Queen Mother an
oval-shaped football for Prince
Charles. And she replied:
"Thank you very' much, but
I'm sorry to say my grandson
is rather fond of soccer."
As faces fell she quickly add-
ed:
"I feel, however, that this gift
may convert him."
Of course, then, everybody
went away happy from the cere-
monies, at which the Queen Mo-
ther opened the new town hall,
A man took his Great Dane
to a vet. "Doctor, my dog does
nothing but chasesmall sports
cars." "Well, that's only natural.
Most dogs chase cars," the vet
replied. "I know, But mine
catches them and buries them
In the backyard."
GAGARIN'S FAMILY — Valentina Gagarin and baby Galya, wife
and daughter of Soviet's spaceman Maj. Yuri Gagarin, are pic-
tured at home in Moscow, U.S.S.R.
HRONICLES
4,rGINGoEBFAitM
This has been the craziest
holiday week -end we ever knew.
Dominion Day, as you know, fell
on a Saturday this year and
was ostensibly a holiday. We
didn't expect any mail on that
day but we got it just the
same. And delivery men came
around just the same — the
baker, the milkman and so on.
Local stores were all open and
business went on as usual ex-
cept for department store s.
Schools, of course,, had already
closed for the summer; leachers
and students alike joyfully start-
ing the long vacation. School be-
ing out meant families with cot-
tages are now free to get• away
from it all — away to the lakes
and beaches; to boating and fish-
ing and living in sunsuits and
swimming trunks. Now their
number is legion with mothers
willingly sacrificing the com-
forts of normal living fot a few
carefree months• and odd t•eek-
ends at the lake.
With farm folk it is dit;erent.
For them summer means more
work and longer hours and often
an influx of visitors. People who
don't have a summer cottage to
go to are only too happy to spend
a holiday on the farm. And the
children love it.
Last week we spent a day on
a farm ourselves. It was good
to be back among the cows, the •
pigs and the chickens 2nd to
sniff once again the smell of
new mown hay. It was close and
oppressive when we left home,
with a light rain falling, but as
we approached Orangeville the
clouds lifted and the air became
delightfully fresh and invigorat-
ing. That is what we .notice more
ti an anything — the change of
air. We certainly noticed when
we got home too! Ninety degrees
the next day and the humidity
about as high a; it ,could be
with storms all around us Poor
Taffy was terrified; wouldn't
leave me at all and refused to
eat until the storms had passed
over, I had every sympathy for
him because I don't like storms
either. Before and during a
storm I feel awful. After the
electricity has spent itself, or
passed over, I feel like a dif-
ferent person.
One thing we can be thankful
for — the recent rains have
given the gardens a new lease_
on life, If only it would rain
over the prairies and give the
parched crops new life too. Rain
can work miracles. Shrubs here
that didn't look too promising a
few weeks ago are now making
headway. The iris are past their
best but the rambler roses are in
full bloom. In a couple of weeks
we shall be enjoying peas and
beans from our own garden —
that is, rabbits permitting! Back
of our property there is plenty of
wild hush and scrub land. It is
a haven for birds and rabbits.
The birds we welcome but for
the rabbits we have no love at all
especially as t h e wretched
things are so tame. Even the
baby rabbits will sit in the
middle of the lawn with Taffy
harking and the cat watching,
They look cute, I must confess,
but that's the only good thing I
can say for them. They will prob-
ably be pretty busy this week-
end because nearly everyone
around here is away — except
ISSUE 29 — 1961
ourselves, And we are not mov-
ing around very much this wea-
ther — not with the humidity at
102! Dee and family left for
the cottage Saturday. Art will be
coming back but Dee and the
boys will be staying for the. sum-
mer. Why don't we join then?
Well, it isn't through lack of in-
vitations. We like being by the
lake when we're there — it is a
beautiful spot — but we don't en-
joy the long drive back and
forth, However, we may make it
some day. I guess we are just
cld home -bodies anyway —
especially Partner. Maybe 1
would go more if he wou.d, but
he enjoys his own home. I sup-
pose I should be satisfied to have
him so contented. He very rarely
expresses a wish for anything
more than we've got but last
week he did — and it didn't take
me long to work on it. He said
he wished he had a trar,sistor
radio — he would like to Le able
to keep up with the news —
wor•ld-wide and political — any
time we are on the road going
somewhere — or even when he ,
is working outside. The very
next day I went shopping for a
radio, complete with carrying
case. Now he can hoe the garden
and have the radio hanging from
a tree; we can also sit outside
in the cool of the evenirg and
hear all the latest in music,
sports and news, Partner is very
sports -minded. Last Sunday he
and Bob went to the Stuck Car
races at the Exhibition grounds.
Partner enjoyed it — except for
the fact that all around him
young folk were guzzling the
whole time — pop, hot dogs,
chocolate milk and potato chips.
Partner was appalled at the
waste of money, especial:y at a
time when there is so much talk
of strikes and unemployment.
When he told me I was more
appalled at what all this in-
discriminate eating and drinking
was doing to the stomachs of
those concerned,
Here's my book -note for the
week. I can highly recommend
"The Living Spirit" by Daphne
du Maurler, author of "Rebecca".
You can get it in a fifty cent
paper -back.
He had just completed a long
prison sentence and on that
great day when those big gates
opened and the Whole world lay
before him, his joy knew no
bounds. "I'm free," he shouted,
"I'm free!"
A little girl who was playing
nearby gazed at him for a few
moments and then came over,
"That's nothing to shout about,"
she said. "I'mn four."
SALLY'S SALLIES
"He said it's too bad I didn't
get the glasses before
I met you,"
Wayne And Shuster
—An American View
:1 little more than three years
ago, ,t pail' of bumptious Cana-
dian comedians descended on the
U.S., drenched in the ballyhoo of
a twenty -show 'contract with Ed
Sullivan and sounding almost too
bad to be true, Described as the
'most chucklesome twosome on
the whole Canadian Broadcast-
ing Corp. network, the pair spe-
cialized in literary buffoonery
and brought with them a bagful
of sketches, which they them-
selves had written, taking off
everything from "Julius Caesar"
to 'The Scarlet Pimpernel," It
all promised to be, as they say
in sporting circles, a boat race.
Instead, their unlikely intel-
lectual burlesque, which filled the
air with iambic pentameter one
minute and custard pie the next,
turned out to be both funny and
fresh. Shakespearean baseball
players screamed at the umpire
that "So lair a foul I have not
seen," and a couple of characters
in togas got off the only Latin -
root joke in the history of tele-
vision: "Bartender, give me a
Martinus"—"You mean Martini"
—"When I want two, I'll ask for
them." 1f their stuff was all a
bit collegiate, it was nevertheless
not sophomoric, and U.S. TV
watchers had reason to be re-
stainedll' grateful,
By last month all reason had
been withdrawn. Johnny Wayne
and Frank Shuster (for it was
they) have immersed themselves
in a numblingly banal, summer -
replacement situation comedy
called "Holiday Lodge," and any-
one who knew them in the old
days could only mutter: "So foul
affair I have not seen." Wayne
and Shuster play a pair of social
directors at a summer camp for
retarded adults, a pretext that
enables them to become involved
in endless varieties of false faces
and limp contretemps, like mis-
taking an undertakers' meeting
for a gathering of the Mafia or
playing musical lounge -chairs
with .a predatory heiress. Their
scriptwriters, Hal Goodman, Lar-
ry Klein, and Ed Simmons, have
unstintingly emptied their joke
files of everything but the cooky
crumbs, so that the onetime
heroes of "The Brown Pumper-
nickel" now find themselves
peering over transoms and ex-
changing dialogue like:
"Find out anything?"
"Yeah — this is the wrong
room."
Wayne and Shuster are just
becoming aware that this is also
the wrong show. Never entirely
sure of what they were doing—
they liked to think of themselves
as satirists, with a point of view,
when at best they were lam-
poonists, with a frame of refer-
ence—the Canadians went to
Hollywood thinking they might
get someone else to do their
homework. Now they are head-
ing back to their typewriters.
"We went along with the ex-
perts," Johnny Wayne said sadly
last month, "Now we find they
weren't so expert. It has been
a clichewritten shot, but it's
being changed. The fine Cana-
dian hand of W. and S. will soon
be evident." From NEWSWEEK
Modern Etiquette
Ily Anne Ashley
Q. Is it obligatory for a bride
to entertain those friends who
have given her wedding gifts?.,
A. There is no OBLIGATION.
But most brides do like to show,
off their new homes to all their
good friends.
Q. Are the candles on a dinner
table lighted before or after the
guests are seated?
A. Before, They should be
lighted immediately before din-
ner is announced.
Jiffy -Crochet
•• • /r/,
pqF
Oilft be• 4t 4 '*:4.:1;
Cy Zatke. WW1,
STAR framed by a circle of
lacy mesh—brilliant background
for dining on a round table.
Who'd guess a cloth so magni-
ficent could •be JIFFY CRO-
CHET! Pattern 946: directions
for 58 -inch cloth in double
string; smaller sizes given, too.
Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS
stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note 'for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box 1,
123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto,
Ont. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and AD-
DRESS.
JUST OFF THE PRESS! Send
now for our exciting, new 1961
Needlecraft Catalogue. Over 125
designs to crochet, knit, sew,
embroider, quilt, weave — fash-
ions, homefurnishings, toys. gifts,
bazaar hits. Plus FREE — in-
structions for six smart'veil caps.
Hurry, send 25¢ now!
THE WORLD'S LARGEST ANNUAL EXHIBITION OPENS EARLIER THIS YEAR
AUGUST 18 to LABOUR DAY, SEPT. 4
TORONTO
CANADIAN NATIONAL
EXHIBITION
It's the "Show Window of Canada." See the newest industrial and menu•
factured products on display . .. agricultural, science, the arts, crofts and
hobbles and Canada's natural resources, There's music, entertainment and
sports for everyone,
WIN A NEW
CHEV. BEL -AIR SEDAN
14 FREE CARS.
EVENING
GRANDSTAND SHOW
"THE GLORY OF
CANADA"
a dazzling spectacular
with a live cast of 500
produced by
Jack Arthur
featuring the Royal
Canadian Mounted
Police in their
Internationally famous
Musical Ride
Showtime 8:15 p.m.—
August 18 to Sept, 2
GIGANTIC
FIREWORKS DISPLAY
MAMMOTH SHRINE
CIRCUS
AT THE AFTERNOON
GRANDSTAND SHOW.
one each night at
the Grandstand
AUG. 21 to SEPT, 2.
Clowns, aerialists, ant•
mals, top acts from all
over the world in this
famed three ring cur•
cus.
Write now for advance
ticket order form
WORLD FAMED CNE
MARATHON SWIM
See top swimmers cam.
pete in gruelling 15
mile swim,
SEE MEDISCOPE
DAILY
Learn from doctors
themselves how your
heart and body work
—the complete story of
medicine with models
of the human body.
Two buildings house
this great exhibit un•
der the auspices of the
Ontario medical Asso-
ciation.
U.S.A. SCIENCE
• EXHIBIT
See the newest opera.
tlonal and experinten•
tal satellites in this
amazing display.
MIRROR ON THE
WORLD OF WOMEN
Fashions, furs, furnish.
Ings, cooking schools
arts. crafts all malt
you in the ultrn•mod•
ern Queen Elizabeth
Building and theatre.
QUEEN'S LITTLE HOUSE
See exact replica of "Royal Cottage" where two little Princesses
once played. Situated in centre of Outdoor Flower Show.
A1VIiLE OF NUM ON THE 1VIiDWAY
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION • TORONTO, CANADA
FRI. AUG. 18th TO LABOUR DAY SEPT. 4th ,
W. P. Freyseng, President • Hirani E. McCallum ,',General, Manager
Wild life Thrives
In Spite Of Man
'Co give ratan credit where
precious little is clue, it should
be pointed out here that 'x'rtain
creatures, almost in spite of nim,
thrive with the advance of civili-
zation. 'l'hc city species --largely
hard-bitten Old World sophisti-
cates such as the house sparrow,
starling, pigeon, Norway rat, and
the redoubtable house mouse,
Mus nluseulns — accompanied
the white elan to the New
World and require no dLscrip-
tion, but certain native species
also fare very well.
The majority of these are
songbirds -- the orioles are a
cheerful example - of which
the preferred habitat is wood
(lige, orchard, and cultivated
land, rather Than that unbroken
wilderness forest which once, it
is said, would have enabled an
ambitious gray squirrel to tra-
vel from the Atlantic to the Mis-
sissippi without setting paw to
);round. The gray squirrel, like
the deer, skunk, raccoon, red
fax, and cottontail rabbit, none-
theless prospers at the edge', of
civilization, and where not un-
duly persecuted, these species
have increased.
The kill of this latest, in the
East, was extensive and very
rapid, for what could not be put
to use was easily exported, and
1Intl clearing was indiscriminate
and wasteful. The dense sy'va
of varied hardwoods furnished
the implements of survival -
gun stocks •of black walnut, boat
, ibs of oak, ax handles, single -
trees, and wagon hubs af, hickory
and black guns, birch canoes ,
black ash fish baskets and chair
bottoms, flexible spade handles
and oars of the white ash. But
the finest ti'l'e was an evergreen,
the great white pine, which, two
hundred feel and higher, soared
over the northeast wilderness
and stretched south in the Ap-
palachians as far as the Caro-
linas; the 'white pine waf the
light, strong stuff of houses, of
boat planking and ship masts,
and, in company with fish and
fur, was the leading resource of
the colonies.
In one short century oC set-
tlement, this wilderness was
broken, William Penn was an
early defender of the trees, and
parts of Pennsylvania, not long
after his death, already suffered
the Tong -lived effects of ruthless
tutting - erosion, flood, patch-
ed summers, and pbor crops.
The clearing, indeed, was fever-
ish, for the settlers dreaded the
Clark monotone of trees ... the
wind-borne, whispered reminder
of a wilderness unconquered.
For every tree that was put to
use, countless others knew only
the manic ring of axes, and,
prostrated in their prime, were
left to rot in the tangles of
recond growth, — From "Wild -
We In America," by Peter Mat -
Thiessen.
Stan The Man
Still Swinging
In a night game against the
Milwaukee Braves, 40 -year-old
Et. Louis Cardinal star Stan
Musial slammed a double off the
center -field wall and passed a
]rare milestone: His 10,000th of-
sflcial time at bat in the major
leagues. Even an umpire — Al
Garlick — deferred to the occa-
sdon by shaking Musial's hand at
hone plate. Among the jewels
from 10,000 duels: 2,053 singles,
(184 doubles, 172 triples, 438
home runs, Musial said after-
ward: "It's a lot of times to go
up there, but I still get a kirk out
of swinging that bat."
Card -playing can be expensive
— but so are most games in
which you hold hands. •
CHOW'S ON — A 17th century
custom is revived in London,
England's, Middle Temple
School. The ancient horn calls
:students to dinner,
DAPPER — Winston Churchill
strikes a dapper pose in ton-
, don on his way to the horse
races at Ascot,
A Frenchman Who
Saved London!
At the end of 1943: Hitler
cherished a scheme for peppering
England every month with 5,000
'C';eltungswafl'e) — fearsome
new flying bombs which might
have changed the course of the
war. But fate schemed ditterent-
ly 13efore these killers - later
known as V -1's - could get off
the ground, the British got wind
of them, sent the Royal Air
Force over the launching sites in
Occupied France, and bombed
the installations out of commis-
sion. Eventually the V -l's were
hurled against England from
other sites, but this was so late
in the war that they failed of
their full effect. Whoever tipped
, off the British to the original
plan probably was the savior of
London.
The man to thank, according
to "The Man Who Saved London"
by George Martell, is Michel Hol -
lard, a fortyish Frenchman who
declined to be conquered with
his country, Under cover of his
job as salesman for a charcoal -
burning automobile engine, Hol -
lard assigned himself the role of
master spy and organized his own
far-flung espionage netwurk in
France to feed information to the
Allies. Ninety-four times, he
crossed the French -Swiss border
on foot, once even managing to
escort safely a member of his
underground who had broken
his back In three places leaping
from a German prison,
When Hollard's fantastic luck
ian out -and his own turn for
capture arrived, the Germans
treated hint to the baignoire — a
combination , beating and half -
drowning In a bathtub — packed
him off to an extermination
camp, and finally imprisoned
him in the hold of a merchant
ship which they planned to
scuttle at the approach of the
invading Allies. He somehow
managed to survive all this and
now wears the Distinguished
Service Order, Britain's highest
decoration for a foreigner. If he
had his rights, L(, Gen, Sir Brian
Horrocks suggests in an intro-
duction to the book, London
would put up a statue to him.
Terrible Ordeal
Of Teen-age Hero
For Terry Wayne McClelland,
as for any eager 14 -year-old who
had just finished a bout with
the books al Huntington Beach
(Calif,) High School, there could
hardly he a better way to start
a longed -for summer vacation.
Itis grandfather had rented the
3d -foot )motor cruiser Tim C, and
was going to take Terry on the
boy's first ocean -fishing trip, 30
gloriously free days of angling
for albacore in the Pacific off the
rocky Baja California coast of
Mexico.
Grandfather, 48-year-o1a Rus-
-fell Bradford, would know where
they were striking, too, Before
he became a plastering constrac-
tor in Huntington Beach, a shore
city 35 miles below Los Angeles,
Bradford was a commercial
fisherinan, 1 -ie and the older
friend he was bringing a1Lng, 57 -
year -old A1vin'Hartman of Santa
Ana, also were familiar with the
Tim C., which they had often
cnted for other such fishing
trips.
It was a happy party of three
who sailed from Newport Beach,
Calif,, recently, The Tim C was
provisioned, laden with tackle,
and — just as an afterthought —
provided with a war -surplus life
'raft, a flimsy balsa -wood anti
cork affair 3 by 6 feet As it
turned out, the raft was needed
sooner than any could hive ex.
pected.
The first night out the Tim C.
was caught in a run of heavy
swells, The fishermen tried to
ride it out at anchor, but two
great seas tossed the bot,' and
the anchor ripped her biw out.
Terry, his grandfather and Hart-
man had barely enough tonne to
get onto the raft before the Tim
C. sank.
Thus began three terrible days
-- days of disappointment, delir-
ium, and death. Without !nod or
water, under a blazing ;nn, the
two older men and tl:e boy
frantically hailed passim boats
None heard or spotted them.
Hartman was the first u go.
Crazed by heat and thirst he fell
into the water and the raft turn-
ed over, "Granddad got h m back
on the raft and gave him mouth-
to-mouth respiration," Terry re-
called half -coherently later on,
"but it didn't work," The friend
died on We*sday and Terry
end his grandfather lash( d his
body to the raft.
"Then," 'ferry continued ''my
grandfather went crazy from
seeing Al go crazy. Ile kept
screaming and yelling aid fall-
ing into the water. I kept telling
him; 'Granddad, don't die don't
leave me here alone'." Exhausted
from his ordeal, Terry fell
asleep. When he awoke, Mrs -
day dight, his ,t:i'.ln:Mather V(i
dead. The 130 -pound Boy Scout
and high-school football player
lashed the body to the raft with
Al Hartman and drifted 0.1 alone,
the frail craft tossing in the cold
Pacific swells,
Next morning Terry saw his
rescuer, the fishing boat Ruth
Marie, looming out of a fog The
boy was brought aboard suffer-
ing from shock, cxposul •'. and
malnutrition, and given some
broth. Transferred later to the
submarine Diodon, he was taken
to San Diego that night and a
tearful reunion with his .mother,
Mrs. Verna McClelland, All he
could say was: "I'nm all right,
mother, but I don't want to talk
about it."
Sensible Plan To
Help Unemployment
In Illinois, as in many other
northern American industrial
states, the ranks of the unem-
ployed are )made up mostly of
unskilled laborers, These are
men who arrived late (often
from the iural South), got jobs
at the bottom, and were the first
to be laid off during recession
times,
Meanwhile, ironically, many
businesses with nd more room at
the bottom are actively seeking
workers to fill job vacancies on
the next layer upward,
To settle this imbalance, the
Illinois Governor's Committee of
Unemployment has begun ex-
ploring a very sensible and
promising solution. This group,
made up of business leaders and
educators working with govern-
ment agencies and labor, pro-
poses to retain the more apt un-
skilled workers who are still
employed so they can move up
into the vacant positions, This
upward )movement would then
leave openings to be filled by the
present unskilled unmeployed in
the state.
The committee found, for in-
stance, that local restaurant
chains have been hiring em-
ployees from as far away as Ire-
land to fill second layer jobs,
when, with help from adult edu-
cation centers and the firms con-
cerned, the more alert busboys,
sweepers, etc., could have been
trained for the jobs,
This proposed system of re-
training to make room at the
bottom should be applicable in
many other areas of heavy un-
employment. — From the Chris-
tian Science Monitor.
111.'"11••••
Al ASSIFI D IIS11EG
T :
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS PET STOCK •
BABY CHICKS
P1(01111''1 shipment, many v.lriettes,
(tray started chicks. !Wolds •a few
early shipment or to order. Broiler
chicks available, Order soon Siclocal
agent, or write Bray Hatchery, 170 John
North, Hamilton, Ont,
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
FEED business, mill, brdgs office, ex
tra storage sheds, double garage, Pru»
vale railroad skiing, $20,1100 down,
Hawkins Bros., 10 Wakefield Parry
Sound. 111 6.5231
COINS
WANTED, NVillIt101 coins, we're (buying,
no need to write. lust send tont coins
insured, Enclose 25e stamps Money
order sent sante day or your ^.1,1115 re•
turned. honest appraising wllllmn
F'eyer, ('obi Exchange, 161 W(andotte
Street East. %Tindsnr. Ontario ('I,
2.11(27
EDUCATIONAL
EARN degrees, home stuck', nFvinns,
Science, 'Theology. Free tutor:n ation
Seminary, 423 1Vilson, New 15'e•tnin
ster, British Columbia.
FARMS FOR SALE
FARM for sale, Glengarry County 8)
acres good land, buildings and water
supply. Near Highway 34, nun vegan
Road. 1) 11, McGillivray, Box 91 nun.
vegan, Ontario.
136 ACRES, 6 rooms frame house gond
condition, hydro, phone, barn for 5,000
broilers, pressure system, bulk bin,
propane brooders, automatic warners,
wired 6611 ft. water frontage on Smith's
Ilay, Prince Edward County, hard and
soft wood lots, 80 acres workable. price
$15,000 cash. Charles Young, II 9 1'ic•lon.
Ont:
FARM EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
FOR Sale - Wisconsin air cooled, four
cylinder engine IV.F.•) with »starter,
In 'good condition. Hay rack. 9 ft by
21 ft. of Oak construction, new last.
year. Lorne :Augustine, lilt No. I fort
Colborne, Ontario,
202 MASSEY Ferguson with 102 loader
and 210 backhoe; Massey Ferguson 35
with 102 loader and Auburn trencher.
1951) Ford 600 110011) truck, All priced
to soil and ready to work• ,tact; prerace,
Clinton, Ont. 11(1. 2.9734,
FOR SALE - MISCELLANEOUS
SIIOTSHELLS $2.03 box. Free delivery
on group orders. Free demonstration
samples. XL Explosives Ltd., Il;awkes•
bury, Ont.
First TV Commercial
Cost Nine Dollars!
1t all began 'at precisely
2;29;50 ppm., ten seconds before
the baseball game between the
Brooklyn Dodgers and the Phila-
delphia Phillies got under way
on station WNBT-TV one July
afternoon twenty years ago last
month. A picture of a clock with
a second hand sweeping toward
the 2:30 ppm, mark appeared .on
the tiny screens of the few thou-
sand television sets in the New
York City area. An announcer
intoned: "Bulova watch time."
The television industry had run
its first paid commercial.
The Dodgers have long since
left Brooklyn for Los Angeles,
WNBT-TV has become WNBC-
TV, the agency that placed the
advertisement is no longer in
business, and the cost of a ten -
second afternoon spot on a local
station has soared from the $9
that Bulova paid in 1941 to
$225,
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. How can I remedy leather
seats that have become sticky?
A. By using some solvent such
as gasoline. Imitation leather,
however, might be injured with
gasoline. One way to prevent
leather from becoming sticky is
to sponge it with a mild suds of
borax soap and, when perfectly
dry, apply a thin coat of white
shellac.
Q. )low can 1 clean ivory
objects?
A. 1f these ivory objects are
all in one piece, it's safe to clean
then) with soap and water, If,
however, they are glued togeth-
er, it is better to take a piece
of raw lemon, dip it into salt,
and rub the surfaces with this.
Let the juice dry on the ivory
before wiping off with a damp
cloth.
It's a great pity that because
of the force a1 gravity it takes
more energy to close the mouth
than to open it.
CAMP Stools - $108, Barbecues -
$6.95 Chaise Lounge Cots
810.95,
Portable Water Softeners and Ihu•iflers
- $29,00 Radios, and many Ohm lines.
Express Paid. Satisfaction guaranteed
or moue) refunded. Catalogue.
TwEUULI: h1ER('IIANDISING CO.
F'ERGIJti 18,ON'FA1110 -
MALE HELP WANTED —
11EIin551AN wanted for 60 -cow herd
registered hnlsteins. Married num fur
permanent pusitlon. Farquhar Fauns,
Mindentoya, 1lodloulln Island Ont.
Phone 311 11 1211
MEDICAL
GOOD RESOLUTION •- EVERY SUFFERER
OF RHEUMATIC Pn'115 OR WORMS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMLrY,
i,;'JMP.^. 5 1)'1011 5T(4')
335 LICIW, OiiAWA
51.25 Express Collect
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of drs eczema
rash.. and weeping skin troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve w111 not disappoint
you. itching, scalding and burning eezo'
ma, acne; ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema wIll respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment, regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless then' seem
Sent Pest Free on Receipt of Price
PRICE 53,50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue East,
TORONTO
MONEY TO LOAN
8% Mortgage Investment
FIXED return with interest paid
monthly All funds handled through
trustee Security deposited with trust ee.
For further information write or call
G 51.5 INVESTMENTS
Exclusive Agents
Day GE 856.15 Ev'gs.
447 1UNDAS S'I' , LONDON
Member 0.51.II.A.
• NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
11'hen purchasing Nutria consider 'the
following points which this organize.
tion offers'
1. The best available stock. nu 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 in the
event of sterility tall fully explained
In "our certificate of merit 1
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 our exclusive
breeders' association, whereby only
purchasers of this stock may partici.
pate In the benefits so offered
.32.(7)0.
2 07.0 n Pricesnett for Breeding Stock start at
Special offer to those who qualify;
earn your Nutria on our cooperative
basis. Write: Canadian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R, No, 2, Stouffvllle, Ontario,
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND WOMEN
BE A HAIRDRESSER
JOIN CANADA'S LEADING SCHOOL
Great Opportunity
Learn Hairdressing
Pleasant dignified profession; good
wages. Thousands of successful
Marvel Graduates,
America's Greatest System
Illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St. W., Toronto
Branches:
44 Ring St W , Hamilton
72 Rideau Street, Ottawa
PERSONAL
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED guaranteed, )nailed in plain
parcel, including catalogue and sox
book free with trial assortment. 18 for
$1.00. (Finest quality). Western Distribu-
tors, Box 24 -TPF, Regina, Sask.
BUI)GiES, annual sununrr rale Itlgh•
grade -healthy stock, brecdrls, normals,
virgin, or nested_$11). Italy. 6 pal) 130,
Jther varieties available :Also babies
for pets. hlr•s. 'F. Inroad, 114 r:10111 Street
East, Oshawa, °MHario.
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT ONT
Films 110(, loped and
8 magna p01115 40,»
12 magna prints a,),.
Reprints 5r cotta
KODACOLOR
Ilcvelopnl;, lull 90c 'not int holing
prints). Chinn prints Y» , n•1 »• tin.
Jlnsco and I'ktiltdimne :15 a )i to ea.
posures mounted in sink. '91 color
Prints trot.' slides '12; reel' 'don, y re
funded in lull fol upprint ct ,,Utes
PROPERTIES FOR RGIJT
S'1'O11112. for rent, in the t., • n 01 :1c1 -
mer Approxdnudrly 1:15 Ie. 25 plus
warily—nisi.. Spare Exrelleui Inc +I tun nm
main street Ila'- modern it"nl 1!
Sheppard. 250 John St Smith 5'Itner.
tint.
PROPERTIES FOR SAI.0
•
FRA NEI. 0110. Ont ; 6 room, all town
cotvenicraces, large lot n at Trent
River, t'»rnns Contact J (C Stempel.
Colborne Out or call 1 110,rn,• 66.
evgs
FOR sale: (1 acres, 3 rbieh n houses
and 1 barn, 20 x 40, lata; and 111'hls
in stable Small orchid,' and ...mall
fruits; f,•ruom house, 1•Picc5' 1151(110)0);
heated by oil furnace; caput tank pr's•
aunt system; shadv lawn; »W'nlinnnn
storm wlndowc and door,; 5 (1111,», north
of Alliston. Price 57.501) \lr Robert
Burbidge Everett 11.I). 1, tttrarin
Motor Camp For Sale
IIi.UE Top 1lotor Camp cffin, r•'inc 6
or more acres on No. 11 th h •nn 3''x
miles north of Urlliia, ov, rl's, i•'' Lake
Couchichiug Suitable for hotel. motel
and markt garden '1'01' proper(, I1,s
a•roonl !nyder') residence, ''I siauenr•1
cottages, all modern eons( nip le , . :.qd
1 (1onble and 5 ,ingle 10:• cabin, for
summer tourists. For f1110h0,r •in' '0)•e
Roel 811015 0. Chas, :1 Ann), It It 3,
Orlllla, Ont
RUBBER BELTING 6 HOSE
AL1. types al rubber twain. too hose
for sale; belts repaired within ''1 hours
Remnants at t'pecial prtre, 50 farm
belt 6" wide 545110. Smesdon indus-
trial Rubber a: Plastics. 91 Rap, Street,
Oshawa, Ontario, `
TEACHERS WANTED
HAWK Junction public school requires
Protestant 1eachct fat grade, h 1' one,
two and three Approx. 21 points Sal-
ary $3000.111 to 5360000 Send particulars
to IV E 'Trainor, Secretes' hawk
Junction, Ont
TEACHER wanted for September in
new 2 room It C. separate 'chool, 1
mile east of Cotton on No 1 ntcl;•t:r:
State qualifications, salary expected
and name and address of Iasi In5per1,,r.
Ulrect inquiries to Gerald Delmore,
Se^retary 5t. Imelda School all 2
Itulhven, Ont,
TRADE SCHOOLS
LEARN IBM
SPECIALIZED INSTRUCTIO'4 NOW
AVAILABLE ON
IBM KEYPUNCH
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITERS
SPECIAL TRAINING PROGRAMS FOR
THE BEGINNER
SHORT CONVERSION & REFRESHER
COURSES FOR THE EXPERIENCED
LOW RATES - BUDGET TERMS
Business Machines Training
Institute
55 BLOOR ST. E., TORONTO
(At Subway Entrance)
925-3884
VENDING MACHINES
CIGARETTE Machines, 8 column, for
sale, $150.00; also Multi purpose mach-
ines vending six 250 items, 590 00. Con-
tact Teric Wholesale Ltd„ 17 Belfleld
Rd., Rexdale, Toronto Ont.. or phone
2490781.
ISSUE 29 — 1961
IIANDY TIP --When that fellow motorist has his turn sig-,
nals going winky-winky and doesn't know it, he'll appreciate
it if you'll give him this new sign. Thumb and the four
fingers are nnoved'toward each other several tinges, It's an •
unofficial wigwag suggested by the American Autinnobile
Assn. 111 Vs'a Y;illton ns a way to encs this disconcerting and
dangerous ti afflc situation which everyone gels into now
and then. .
See !vroiie and Save!
0
() New CUNARD Excursion Rates 25% Lower
(l
SEE YOUR
LOCAL AGENT —
NO ONE CAN
SERVE YOU
BETTER.
Beginning Nov, 1st, Cunard's new low round-
trip excursion rates will take you to Europe
for. 25% less. Leisurely flue -week excursions
will give you three full weeks in Europe during
the gala off-peak season,
Meanwhile, Cunard's regular weekly service
via the sheltered, scenic St. Lawrence yields
special dividends in summer pleasures.
Mk about Cunard Eagle Airways Service to London, Bermuda and Nassau.
Corner Bay & Wellington Sts,, 0 C
Toronto, Ont, 67
Tel: EM ire 2.2911
p PAY LATER IF YOU WISH
(l41
Sailing from Montreal every Ffifiay to:
HAVRE, SOUTHAMPTON
OR
GREENOCK, LIVERPOOL
CARINTHIA • IVERNIA • SAXONIA
UNAR'D
()
FACE $ '
. .JI. • .11
411111111,161111111111111111111111110
*FOOD MARKET*'
1
•
HEINZ TOMATO SOUP '
4 - 10 oz. tins 45c
QUAKER MUFFETS, king size 27c
GOLD SEAL FANCY RED SOCKEYE SALMON
7 314 oz. tin 51c
ROSE STRAWBERRY JAM
large 24 oz. jar 39c
WHITE CROSS TOILET TISSUE
4 rolls 49c
For Superior Service
Phone 156
J.111 111 111
1
IMMO
See Fairservice
We Deliver
- - 11 11111 1.I dill 1.1, I:1,.4.
I.►111W1.11 . 1111YJ141.n.1ald.1 11.11 11111111 11 111 1 111111 1.114.1114.1 1 11,1 1101 le 11111111.101111 IN a..✓
POWER . CHORINpt,
CATTLE -FEEDING
Jamesway
• Volumatic Silo Unloader
with Three -Point Suspension
e Feed -Flow Auger Feeder
with no Hanger Bearings
FREE FOLDER
on
Push -Button Feeding
J. E. HUG1LL AND SONS
DISTRIBUTORS
FAMOUS JAMESWAY LINE OF PUSH BUTTON EQUIPMENT,
STABLE CLEANERS, BULK MILK COOLERS, and ETC•
Contact Us At Once By Phone Or Letter: -
PHONE CLINTON HU 2.9822
From 10:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M.
11 141.111 1 .1
141.
NOTICE
All Accounts Owing Stewart's Red and White
Food Market are Now Due and must be settled on
or before July 31st. 4 •
V „111J 11 .11111.111111111111111 1,111111.• 11411111-1 1111 110 111 1 ■ 1114111. 11 111-1 1 1 VIII 1 1 11- 111111/ 111411 I 101111
Stewart's
Red White Food Market
Blyth 1 I Phone 9 We Deliver
ORDER NOW--- i AI ' d.'
RED and BLACK CHERRIES IN PAILS.
11 I
Golden Ripe Bananas per lb. 19c
Choice Watermelons each 99c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes, New 10 lbs. 39c
Monarch Cake Mixes, pouch pack 1. , , 8 pkgs. 99c
BAR-B-QUE TIME ---
1 lb.
IME---
11b. Hamburg, 1 pkg. Weston's Rolls 69c
8 Weiners, 8 Weston's Hot Dog Rolls 49c
•
,.a
•
•
TRE SIXTH STANDARD
Walton News
25th Wedding Anniversary
On Saturday evening fifty relatives
friends and neighbours gathered at the
farm home of Mr. and Mrs. 1Viltian:
Taylor, Stella, for a surprise party
honouring Mr. and Mrs. R. Achilles
R.R. 3, Walton, on their 25th weddinf
anniversary. Progressive euchre wa:
enjoyed and Mrs, Robert Cole, R.R, ''e
Clinton, the former Margaret Murray
R.N., read a well worded address tc
the bride land groom of twenty -live
years ago. Many lovely and usefu!
els were presented to the couple.
Roily made a very suitable reply
thanking everyone. Mrs. Bill Taylor
Anne Achilles, Mary Lou Kirkby, Mrs.
Reg. Ellictt and Dorathy Taylor serv-
ed a lovely lunch. These attending
from Walton were; Mr. and Mrs. James
McDonald, Mr, and Mrs. 1Vm. Sholdice
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bolger and Lar
ry, Mr. and Mrs. Allen McCall and
Beverley, Mr, and Mrs. Frank Walter;
and Larry, Mr. and Mrs, James Short
reed, Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Mitchell
Mr. and Mrs. George McArthur, Mrs.
Margaret Somers and Cathy, recent
neighbours 'also attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Achilles have two
dae,,:hters and two sons, also ane grand-
son. Mrs. Wm. Taylor (Margie), Slat -
fa; Anne, who is at present employed
.at the Toronto Dominion Bank, Sea -
forth; Don, of Red Lake; and Gerald,
cf Staffe,
Group Meeting
The regular monthly meeting of the
17th and Boundary Group of Duff's
United Church ,was held at the home
of Mrs. Clifford Ritchie with sixteen
members present. Airs.. Harold Small -
don was in charge of the meeting which
opened with the singing of hymn 490,
"I am Thine, 0 Lord, I have heard
Thy voice." Rev. Higginbotham then
led in prayer. Scripture reading, from
Isaiah 55, by Mrs, Roy Williamson and
comments on the scripture passage by
Mrs. Smalldon. A poem was read by
Mrs, Henry Armstrong. The minutes
and reports were read and approved
Rev. Higginbotham then gave an ex-
planation of the changes that are go-
ing to be made in Woman's organiza-
tion in the church. Business was at-
tended to and the meeting was closed
with hymn 503, "Pass A1Ie No 0 Gentle
Saviour," and the Alizpah Benediction.
Lunch was 'served by the hostess anti
the lunch committee and a social hall
hour enjoyed by all,
Miss Marybel Archibald, of Tara
visited with her friend, Miss Nora An-
derson, last week.
Airs. Margaret Humphries visited on
Monday with her cousin, Mrs. Ken
Rae, of St. Pauls.
Master Gary Bennett is holidaying at
the hone of his grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. 1Vm. Merkley, Belmore.
Airs. Alf. Anderson and Nora attend-
ed a shower at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Holman, Monkton, last
Thursday evening in honour of Alis:
Yvonne Holman, bride -elect, whose
marriage takes place this month to Alr,
Jack Anderson, Streetsville.
Miss Jean Walters, Kitchener, spent
the weekend with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Walters. ,
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Pryce, of Van-
couver, B.C. renewed old acquaintances
in this vicinity recently.
Mr. and Airs. Ernie Stevens visited.
on Sunday with relatives In Hespeler,
Mrs. Percy Holman, of Barrie, and
Mrs. Hilda Sellers, of Lucan, wert
weekend guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Herb Traviss.
Mr. and Mss'. Glenn Fraser and fam-
ily, of Stratford, visited with ?Ir. Mal-
colm Fraser on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Coutts, Robbie
and Ricky, of Toronto, were weekend
guests with the former's parents, Air,
and Mrs. Andrew Coutts and Mr. anti
Mrs. E. McCreath.
rliss Joan Ryan, R.N., of Montreal.
is holidaying with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Ryan.
Mr. and Airs. Wm. Elliott, of Mit-
chell are at present visiting with Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Buchanan.
Mr. and Mrs. Torrance Dundas vis-
ited on Sunday with,Mr, and Mrs. W.
Stutz, Kitchener,
Aiiss Sharon 1Alerkley, of Belmore
has accepted a position at the F.+gg
Grading Station with Air. Ronald Ben-
nett.
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Sholdice have
moved to their new home in the vil-
lage.
Mr. Robert McMichael and Audrey
'spent the weekend with relatives at
- Niagara Falls.
The July meeting cf the Walton Wo-
men's Institute will he held in the
Community Hall Thursday evening,
July 27, with Airs. Joe Ryan and Mrs.
Russel Barrows as co -conveners, Miss
Tillie Butler, of Mitchell, will hold a
demonstration on Tupperware, Sea•
forth and Londesboro Institutes have
been invited as guests to this meeting.
The services for the next three Sun-
days in Duff's United Church will he
conducted by Mr. Colter Fin'eland, of
Wingham, a former resident of Walton,
Mr. Bob Hahkirk, of Ingersoll, is
FOR SALE
• A corner lot on Morris Street. Apply
Mrs. Sadie Cuming, phone 106, Blyth.
23-1
CARD OF THANKS
I wish to thank all those who remem-
bered the baby and I with cards, gifts,
- flowers and visits while in Clinton
- Hospital and since returning hone,
Also Dr. Street and the nursing stall
23-ip. —Mrs. Joan Watson.
CARD OF TIIANKs
We wish to express our sincere
thanks and appreciation to friends.
neighbours and relatives, for the kind-
ness and sympathy shown to us at the
time of our recent bereavement.. Spe-
ctral thanks to Ball and Match funeral
home for their kindness and consider-
ation.
23-1, —Annie Medd and family,
visiting with his grandparents, Mr, and
Mrs, Wilbur Turnbull.
A very successful Sunday school pie-
nic of Duff's United Church was held
last J hursday evening in the Commun.
ty Park. Following the supper, games
were played and races were conducted
y the young People and Rev. A, Ilig-
;irl otham.
Aiiss Shirley Turnbull, of Orillia, f:
holk aying• with her parents, Air. and
Mrs, Wm. Turnbull,
FORMER BLYTH PRINCIPAL HAS
SUCCESSFUL YEAR AT GRAND
BEND
Friends and former pupils of Mr,
Wilfred McNaughton will be pleased
`o learn, he has had a very successful
year, as Principal of Grand Bend pub-
ic school, when nearly 100 percent of
:he students were prcmot.ed on their
year's work.
Out of two hundred and twenty-two
students enrolled at the school, only
live will have to repeat this years
work, Already sixteen children have
reistered for Kindergarten next year.
Mr. McNaughton reports that all
members of the teaching staff will re-
turn next year.
All 26 members of the entrance grad-
uating class will be attending either
Exeter or Forest Collegiates in Sep-
tember,
The Senior boys from Grand Bend
public school easily outdistanced com-
petitors from .Centralia and Mount
Cartmel in the first annual track meet
between the three schools. In the after-
noon events the Grand Bend schools
scored 13 of a possible 24 paints.
WEDDINGS
ALTON—PROCTER
Belgrave United Church was dec-
orated with baskets cf pink peonies,
whi'.3 orange blossoms and ferns on
Saturday, July 8th, at 2.30 p.m., when
Ruth Procter became the bride of Ken-
neth Alton. The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs, Stewart Procter, R.R.
5, Brussels, and the bridegroom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Alton, R,R.
7, Lucknow,
Rev. J. H. Anderson officiated and
Mrs. John Nixon was at the organ and
played the processional "Praise 'My
Soul the King of Heaven" and Lohen-
grin's wedding march as a recession-
al. She also accompanied the soloist,
Mrs. George Procter, Brantford, who
sang "0 Perfect Love," "Wedding
Prayer" and "Wedding Hymn."
Given in marriage by her father, the
bride chose ,a gown of white silk or-
ganza over bouquet taffeta trimmed in
alencon lace and fashioned in princess
lines. The portrait collar of alencon
lace framed the neckline and formed
a deep V In the back of the waist. The
full skirt featured a long circular train.
A cluster of wax orange blossoms on
a ring held her elbow length veil of
silk illusion, The bride wore a brooch
which had been worn by her grand
mother at her wedding. she carried a
bouquet of pink roses, white chrysan-
themums and ivy.
As matron of honor for her sister,
Airs, Charles Thomas, of Brussels,
chose a street -length gown of white
organza with a headdress of pink and
white flowers and a short veil, and she
carried a bouquet of pink roses and
white chrysanthemums.
As bridesmaids, Miss Mary Alice
Armstrong, of Wingham, and Miss
Eleanor Walsh, of Belgrave, chose
ensembles the same as the matron of
honor,
The flower girls, Dianne Thomas and
Louise Procter, nieces of the bride,
were dressed alike in frocks of white
organza with pink sash and white
floral headdress, Each carried a bas-
ket of pink roses and white chrysan-
themums,
The best man was Douglas Hackett,
R.R. 3, Lucknow, and the guests were
ushered by Charles Procter, Halifax,
brother of the bride, and David El-
phick, Lucknow, brother-in-law of the
bridegroom.
For a wedding dinner in the church
parlor, which was decorated with pink
roses and white orange blossoms, the
bride's mother received the guests in
a blue lace dress with a pink carnation.
corsage. The mother of the bridegroom
assisted in a green organza over
flowered taffeta with a corsage of
white carnations.
The wedding dinner was catered to
and served by members of the Evening
Auxiliary of Knox United Church.
For travelling the bride chose a
green organza duster over figured taf-
feta dress with beige accessories and
a corsage of Talisman roses. On their
return they will reside at R.R. 7, Luck -
now.
Guests were present from Detroit.
Halifax, Stratford, Brussels, Brantford,
(Toderich, Chesley, London, Lucknow,
Wingham, Burlington Port Credit and
Listowel,
converting our grain into livestock, but
only if it provides the producer with
a profitable inccmo,
The hungry millions certainly prove
that there is a patential market but
there is a big question on the "profit-
able" part of the statement.
It is rumored that the Meat Packers
Council, at present, have a representa-
:ive in Britain attempting to de\elol
a market for pork products. However,
I am told that in order to export to
Britain the price of Ontario 1-Icgs
'.vould have to drop to $18.00 per Cwt.
tressed, Profitable? Yes, to the pro -
:Tsar who operates on a cost plus basis
.n volume of business. Price has little
3i;nificance. But at present costs of
she means of production, it would cer-
'ainly not be profitable to the produces.
The writer sunmied up his statement,
'It is hoped that enthusiasm for export-
ing grain will not divert attention
rcm building up a sound and profitable
livestock industry."
A little over a year ago when there
vere so many hogs going to market
WEEKLY FARM REPORT
(by J. Carl Hemingway)
There are some interesting state-
ments in the last letter on Livestock
Products published by the Meat Pack-
ers Council.
In discussing the grain markets and
livestock, the editor of the letter
seems concerned over the sales • of
grain to the export trade in face of
reduced crop prospects in Western Can-
ada. He indicates that the export of
burdensome surpluses is desirable -
"0n the other hand the desirability of
converting as much grain as possible
into livestock, for which there are po-
tential, profitable markets, is self evi-
dent."
I can agree with the first part of
the statement on the desirability of
ecdriesdsy, July 19, 19131 1
ve heard on all Bides, "It's too bad
hog prices are so low hut the farmers
can only blame themselves, If only
they would control production, like the
rest of us, they could have a goon
price." (and -the privilege of being
unemployed).
Now, when the weather man, not
the farmer has taken a hand in limit-
ing production, there is pressure being
exerted to curtail the export sales of
grain.
The livestock industry is profitable,
as is indicated in the financial state-
ment of one of our packhng companies,
which seems to indicate that 23 execu-
tives and directors were paid an aver-
age of $16,700 last year. Farmers
aren't so sure.
When farmer's have set up their owe
processing plants, we hope there will
he more consistent advice as to the
quantity to he produced and the.profit-
ahle and potential markets.
(s Your Subscription Paidt
11 .111.:11. II .1.4-1,111 .1114 41J1 11 11 11 4 141141.1111, s 1,111Pill 1I 1 WAI. 4 111 1 11 111Y4 J1 411 1111 11.1 INF 1111JII.1111Y111111.1 1. 1
VACATION TIME
NOTICE
I will be absent from the store from July 24th
to August 7th, inclusive. All customers requiring
PRESCRIPTION ITEMS or MEDICAL SUP-
PLIES, please secure same before JULY 24.
The store will be open during my absence for
the sale of regular drug supplies and sundries.
R. D. PHILP, Phm. E
DRUGS, SIINDRTES, WALLPAPER —, PHONE R0, iSLTTH
111,111 1 41 1 11111...11.1I 4 1 1'1 11
11 1 . 11, I • 1
PAINT SALE ,
July 15th to 31st
10 Percent Off On All Cash Sales.
WESTINGI'IOUSE SUMMER SALE---
10 cu. ft. Refrigerator $199.95
Westinghouse Washer $109.95
- Westinghouse Clothes Dryer $179,95 '
1
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
(3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Call 71 Blyth, Ont.
_ . _ _ . _ 'x.' -' •—.1 IL—IC.-'4"":.!',.'k1��!'.�...T1LC.1'.�...di:'AG," '�I..L.�...� .:.:- .
1.14 11 1 11 '11 11I1 1 1 . IN. 1 1(11 1" h -r I 1 11. 14 \ 1.1 11. 411
Cars 'For Sale
1961 FORD SEDAN
1961 CHEV. SEDAN
1959 CHEV. SEDAN
1950 PONTIAC SEDAN
1958 FORD 6 CYL.
1957 FORD 6 CYL,
1955 FORD
1955 DODGE
1954 CHEV.
1952 MERCURY
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
' New and Used Car Dealet's
111 J11111 1 1111114 1 1 1111 11.111 1.11 - -- 11 111 11 1 .. 1111111 1.111..1 .,1141111 1111 wn IJ 111 YILY � Y 1.11. i 14.
J �
,. 1 .. 11 .1 . 1..11..1 11111...11 111. I I -.1111I 1 M. 1 114 III 1 I I11 -n1 ... 1 In 1 I..11 ...14.,1 141101.1 .111 -11 111 -. 111111111 .111
SMELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP E3 SAVE
Libby's Spaghetti, 20 oz. 2 for 39c
Maple Leaf Sockeye Salman, save 6c .. per tin 59c
Tip Top Canned Tomatoes, big 28 oz. 2 for 55c
Puritan Cooked Ham, 11/4 lb. tin 1.35
Kraft Cheez Whiz, 8 oz. jai 33c
Squirrel Peanut Butter, mason jar, 16 oz. ., . , 39c
Weston's Chocolate Wafers, reg. 6 oz. 29c, t
Spec. 1lb. ' - 1 39c
Maxwell House Instant Coffee, reg 1.49, Spec 1.39
Carnation Instant Powder Milk 31b. box 99c
New Super Ajax, large size 2 cans 29c
Country Style Sausage 3 lbs. 1.00
Smoked Cottage Roll per lb. 65c
Coleman's Large Bologna per ib. 39c