The Blyth Standard, 1961-10-04, Page 1THE BI- S1ANDAR
VOLUME 74 • NO, 32
Authorized as second class mall, BLYTH, ONTARIO, WDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1961 Subscription Rates $2.50 in Advance; $3.50 in the U.S.A.
Post Office Department, Ottawa,
Membership Chairman Visits Blyth
Lions flub
Mr. Derek Nlnd, of Atwood, chair-
man of the membership committee of
District A 9 of Lions Clubs, was guest
speaker at the regular' meeting of the The regular meeting of the Blyth
Blyth Lions Club last 'Thursday evening Couucil was held in the Memorial 11alt
in the Memorial Hall. on Monday, October 2nd, at 8 p.m. with
It is Mr. Nhrd's duty to visit the Reeve Fairservice, Councillors Cook,
Lions Clubs In his district and inform Elliott and McVittie present.
them of the plans of the International Motion by Elliott and ,MeVittic, that
President for the coming year, who this minutes of last regular meeting be
year is asking all Clubs to increase adopted, Carried.
their membership by six, with a mini- Motion by Cook and Elliott, that cor-
mum membership of twenty-six. respondence be filed. Carried.
The speaker told of the invaluable Motion by Elliott and Cook, that
service the organization offers to the Court of Revision for Blyth assessments
world as it Is in its own rights a pro- be held in Memorial Hall on October
gram for world peace, through friend• 30, at 8 p.m., Standard lisle, Carried.
ships formed by members from forei=n Clerk was instructed to arrange for
lands and the supply of eye glasses a meeting in Toronto, as requested by
and milk to needy countries. Several Water Resources Commission, for fur•
times the International Presidents have then discussion on proposed Sewage
been called upon by world organizations System for Blyth, which was approved
such as the United Naiiuns lo discuss in principle by the commisison in No -
and give opinions on matters pertain- veiniest. 1959,
ing to the entire world. ile said that at Motion by Elliott and McVittie, that
accounts as read he paid. Carried.
Fred Gregory, part salary Street
Foreman, $140,00; Fred Gregory, part
.it'eet Foreman and caretaker, 58.14;
IL f.elherland, wcighmaster, 40,00;
Blyth Postmaster, Unemp. ins. Stamps,1 farm at 3.30 that afternoon when (hoe
noticed smoke rising up between the
two barns which are only a shatter of
feet apart. They proceeded directly to
the house and informed Mr. Bailey ni
the fh'e and further investigation by
the men proved the fire to be in a pile
of rubbish between the barns.
A call was immediately placed to the
131yth Fire Brigade and the men were
able to keep the flashes under control
with a hose from a water system Mr,
Bailey had just installed, until firemen
arrived.
'rhe cause. of both fires is uncertain,
RLYTii COUNCIL MEETING
no time the work of the Lions Club
should interfere with church activities,
but felt that the teachings of the Bible,
such as the story of the Good Samar-
itan, were carried out through the work
of the Club,
Mr. Nind also urged the members oI
the local club to put forth a supreme
effcrt to bring new members Into their
organization, as no -club In any com•
munity could continue to be a strong
and uscLul organization without lb(
addition cf new members each year.
In thanking Mr. Nind, Lion Robert
Meally felt that his talk had been ar
inspiration to the members present ant
expressed the gratitude of the Blyli
members for his visit.
The meeting was chaired by Lion
President, Edward W'atson, with Walter
Buttte acting as Lion Tamer, leading
the club through several lively songs
and Lion W. L. Kress, extracting a
few painless pennies from several
members in his duties as 'fail Twister.
Group 4 of the United Church W.A
were caterers for a delicious meal and
were thanked by Lion Ray Madill.
Close to $50.00 was realized from the
peanut and key cutting stand at the
Blyth Fall Fair and the L'ous are vers
grateful for the support they received
The Club decided to held three cast
bingos in the Memorial hall, the firs;
of which will be held this Saturday al
8.30 p.m. If this venture proves suc-
cessful further bingos will be cortin.
uecl. Lion Franklin Rainton donated
three satin bound blankets to be used
as door prizes.
The popular Rummage Sale, a yearly
fall event, will be held on the 28th of
October, and the Lions are again hop•
ing for the fine support of the local and
district residents to maintain the pop•
ularity the Sale has gathered over the
years.
A donation of $25.00 was voted to the
C,N.I,B. and the meeting closed with
the Lions Roar.
CONGRATULATIONS
Congratulations to little Nelson Cald-
well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cald-
well, who celebrates his 2nd birthday
on Friday, October 6th.
Congratulations to Mrs, Earl Caldwell
who celebrates her birthday on Satur-
day, October 7tli.
Congratulaltons to Mrs, Jack Caldwell
Jr., who celebrates her birthday on
Monday, October 91h,
Congratulations to Mr. Stewart
Ament who will celebrate his birthday
on Monday, October 9,
RECEPTION
There will he a Reception and Dance
in the Londesboro Community Hall on
Friday, October 13, for AIr. and Mrs.
Ross Millson (nee Muriel Shobbrook).
Pierces Orchestra. Everyone Welcome,
(Please note change of date),
AMONG TAIL CHURCHES
Sunday, October 8, 1961
ST, ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN
CIIURCH
Rev, D. J. Lane, B,A., D,D., Minister,
1.00 p.m. -Church Service and Sunday
School,
ANGLICAN CHURCii OF CANADA
Rev. Robert F. Meally, Rector•,
19th Sunday after Trinity
Trinity Church, Blyth,
10.30 a.m.-Matins.
St. Mark's, Auburn.
12.00 o'clock -Matins,
Trinity Church, Belgrave,
2.00 p.m. -Sunday School,
2.30 p.m. -Evensong.
TIIE UNITED CHURCH
OF CANADA
Blyth Ontario,
Rev. R. Evan McLagan • Minister
Mrs. Donald Kai
Director of Music.
Thanksgiving Sunday
9:55 a,m.-Sunday Church School.
11;00 a.m.-,"Only One-"
7:30 p.ut,-"Why is Christ the Light?"
CHURCH OF GOD
Mcr'onneu Street, Blyth,
John Dorrner, Pastor
Phone 185
11.00 a,m.-Morning Worship.
10.00 a.m.-Sunday School.
7.30 p.m, -Evening Service,
8.00 p.m. -Wed., Prayer Service,
L00 p.m, Friday, Youth Fellowship.
ALERT NEIGHBOURS AVERT
POSSIBLE TRAGEDY IN TWO
LOCAL FIRES S
The Blyth Fire Department were cal-
led to what could have been a very
disastrous fire al the home of Mr, and
Mrs. Kenneth Johnston and family In
the Terrace apartments on Dinsltry
Street last Friday afleroon at approxl•
mately 5 o'clock,
The fire started in the back kitchen
of the home and went unnoticed by
Mrs. Johnston and the three small
children who were sleeping in the up•
stairs of the building, Efforts by neigh-
bours failed to awaken the family anti.
they remained unaware of the dangdt
until. a phone call from !heir neighbour
Mrs, Gerlie Cronin, warned them et
the impending danger.
When firemen arrived the entire back
kitchen was a mass of flames and twit
lengths of two and one half inch hose
were needed to extinguish the blaze.
Damage was confined to the one room
where much of the family's winter
clothes and children's toys, along with
several of Mr. Johnston's work took
including a new power drill. were de•
stroyed.
'I he second near disaster was on the
farm of Mr. and Mrs. Mason Batley
when fire threatened to burn two barns
on the premises.
Messrs. Bob McDougall and Murvhn
Govier were driving near the Bailey
4,00, George Sloan, part salary, 500,00;
S. Johnston, gas account, 6.82: R. 1V.
Madill, account, 18,39; G eorge Radford
Construction Ltd., 42.10; Earl Noble,
it. work, 59.00; Welfare accounts,
401.50.
Motion by Cook and McVittie, that we
to now adjourn. Carried.
--George Sloan, Clerk.
OBITUARY
ORVAL E. TAYLOR
Funeral service was held on Wed-
nesday, September 27, 1961 at the R.
A. Currie and Sons funeral home,
tVingham, for Orval Elwood Taylor.
Mr. Taylor passed away in Wingharn
hospital on Sunday, September 24111
where he had been a patient foe three
,weeks,
lie was born in East Wawanosh
Township, a son of the late John Tay,
:or and Agnes Bell. Ile married Ruby
Robertson, of Winghnm, on December
•
WOMEN'S INSTITUTE COUNTY
RALLY AT ELIMVALE
Miss Marjorie Kieffer was presented
with the Huron County Scholarship at
the Huron County Rally held on Mon-
day at Elinn'ale United Crureh. Over
100 delegates from the three districtp
in the County were present and Mrs,
Harry Strang, the president for South
and, 1915 and after the marriage lived- Huron, was in charge. Greetings were
where their son John now resides, ou
concession 7, .East Wawanosh, until
three years ago when they moved to
Belgrave,
Mr. Taylor was actively Interested
in the affairs of his municipnlity, hay-
ing been on the township council for
three years from 1948 to 1951. Isis
civic pride and ambitious nature push-
ed him on to contest the reeveship of
the township and he served in that
capacity for seven years during 1951
to 1958. IIe was also very keenly inter•
ested in the East Wawanosh Federation
of Agriculture and Hog Producers
Association.
Surviving besides his wife are two
sops, John, of East Wawanosh, and
Lloyd, of Sarnia; also eight grand-
chitdren and a sister, Mrs. R. M.
(Anne) Collins, of Sarnia, and a bru•
then, David C. Scott, Fort Lauderdale,
Florida.
Pallbearers were: Messrs. Marshall
Stonehouse, Simon llallalhan, Joseph
Dundar, Albert Coultes, Lewis and
Stanley Cook. Flowerbearcrs were:
Messrs, Clarence Rath, Clarence Hare
na, Bert Thompson, Eldon Pardon,
Stewart Mcluruey, Mex McUurney and
Berson Irwin.
HARRIET WALLACE
Funeral service was held in Knox
United Church, Pilot Mound, Manitoba,
August 29, for Mrs. J. W. Wallace, who
passed away suddenly on August 26,
Rev, II, B. Gibson conducted the ser•
vice and interment was In Pilot Mound
cemetery.
Mrs. Wallace was born in Whltevale,
Ontario, in 1884, costing to the Silver
Spring district at an early age and lat.
er moving. to the Londesboro district,
Manitoba. In 1018 she married Wilfred
Wallace and has since resided on the
home farm.
Besides her husband, she is survived
by one son, Joe, of Pilot Mound, two
daughters, Mrs, Albert Legary (Elean•
or), Pilot Mound, and Mrs. Harvey
Smith (Jean), Crystal City; one adopt.
ed daughter, Mrs. Wm, Winram (Myr-
tie), Pilot Mound; two brothers, Wil.
hoot and James Simmonds, Pilot
Mound, and one sister, Annie (Mrs. A,
B. White), Vancouver. Also 12 grana -
children,
'rhe above obituary was taken from
The Sentinel Courier, Pilot Mound,
Manitoba, Mr, and Mrs. Wallace vis•
Red here last Thanksgiving with their
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. L•vine Wallace
and other relatives,
brot .111 to the Rally by Airs. Hewett
Barris, +East Ihu'on, Miss Joseph*,
Woodcock, from West Huron,' and Mrs.
Greer Ilislop, Provincial Board Mem•
ber from F,W.I,O.
Reports of the districts were given
by the secretaries, staling, that there
were 31 Senior Branches with 1284
Members, and four Junior Institutes
in the County. Small white flags were
placed on the trap of IIuron County to
mark where each Branch is situated.
Mrs, Kenneth Johns, representative
of the Rally and Children's Aid Society
member reported that the . Bursary
would not be used this year. This Buie
sary which was established this past
year for a Ward of the C.A.S. is worth
$590.30.
Mrs. Otto Popp repotted for the Blind
project, and stated, that the Institutes
had not been called upon to help this
past year with the picnic. Mrs. Stanley
Lyon, the Rally delegate to the Lead.
ership Forum sponsored by the Fed -
oration of Agriculture, at Goderich
last January, gave an Interesting re•
port on how to conduct meetings and
how to create co-operation between
farm groups.
'Mrs, Arthur Clark was again appoint.
ed Secretary -Treasurer, and the mem-
bers voted to again raise the Bursary
Fund of tfifly cents per member. A
letter was read from Hm•onvlew invit•
ing more Branches to take charge of
the monthly birthday parties. An in•
vitation was extended by Mrs, Howard
Barris to hold the 1962 Rally the first
Monday in October, in East Huron. A
film, Assignment Children, with Dan.
ny •Kaye, showing the work of U.N I.C.
E. F. brought the morning session tc
a close.
Rev. Hugh C, Wilson, minister of the
church, opened the afternoon session
with a short devotional period and
spoke on the subject, "Moral Is the
huiness of women," Mrs. Lou Short, of
CFPL•TV., was introduced by Mrs.
Wilfred Mack, of Crediton. Site spoke
to the ladies on Physical Fitness antl
stressed the Importance of posture,
dict and exercise. Later in the pro -
grant she gave demonstrations on how
to take the proper exercises on how to
keep fit. A native of Holland, she
staled, that her training had started at
four years of age.
Mrs. 1i. Bore presented the Scholar•
ship to the mother of Miss Marjorie
Kci{fcr, who is now a student at Mac•
Donald !fall, Guelph.
Miss Isabelle Gilchrist, Home Econ-
omist, brought greetings from the De
pertinent of Agriculture, and reviewed
BLYTiI AUXILIARY OF THE W.M.S. the work done the past year. She slat.
TO MEET cd, that 460, 4•H Club members had
d that a
The regular meeting of the Blyth
completed
has their
formed jects ►sponsnred
Auxiliary of the W.M.S. will be held by the Tieer Dunlop Branch in Col -
October 16th, in the school room of the borne Township. -church at 8 p.m. Please note change of The special speaker was Mrs. N.
date. This will be a meeting of special In Coulthard, president of South Perth,
terest to all members and we would held this swho gave ummen r that Vaunt of ncouver, ehe r, I to WOMENS INSTITUTE TO MEET
welcome all members of the W.A., and Odd
she had been delegated to at The regular meeting of the lilvlh
the members of the Friendship Circle tend, Mrs, Stanley Bride, of hoed 1Vetncn's htslilulc will be held in the
to this meeting. which, extended the courtesies ant` lite Memorial Hall 'TODAY, Thursday, Oc•
Another date for the WAS. members meeting was closed with the Queen,
to remember Is October. 10, when the (ober , r
,, at 2.30 pen. Mrs. 1), llallaitan
have an invitation to attend the Lon- and Mrs, K. Taylor, Public lirlalinns
desboro W:M,S, Thankotfering meeting Conveners, will be in charge of the
at 8 p.m. Mrs. Tiffin, of 1Vingham, will Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McVittie, of Blyth, meeting.
be the speaker. It is hoped that many,were the guests of Mrs. J. L. McDowell Hostesses will be Mrs. Iligglns, Mrs,:
of our members will be able to attend,. and Gordon on Sunday, _ Thuell and Mrs. Wallace.
SUNDAY SCHOOL MEitIBERS GIVEN Plan Caf h Iiing(l Saturday Night
ATILNDANCE AWARDS
Telephone Company Expect More falls
Twenty -live members cf the Sunday
Church School m the Myth United
Twenty -live members the Sunday
hutch Schon! or the
lllyth United
Church received crus ctu\tn pins or
bars last Sunday fa perfect attend•
ante during the past 12 months.
Sharon Jackson received the 6th
year bar and Larry Badley the Mb
year bar, Nancy Johnston and Jini
Webster each received their 4th year
of perfect attendance; Reggie Badley
his 3rd and Deug Monson and Ruth
Warwick their 2nd,
'those achieving their first year of
unbroken attendance were: Gordon
5hobhruok, hen McGowan, Ra! hard
Wasson, Alar;aret McCullough, Murray
Walsh, Mrs. Keith Webster, Delbert
1 lland, Jayre Pollard, Don Walsh, Ev.
elyn Haggilt, Archie Mason, Caroiyn
llaggitt, Wayne McDougall, Pall Bed-
ley, Douglas Peep, Dianne Popp
Wendy Ilesst:hwocd, Gary Hes_el-,food.
Those receiving pins ler 9 months
perfect attendance were: Joyce Riley
Sharon Riley, Shirley McCullougu.
Bruce Rowson, alargaret Howson, lilt-
lie McDougall, Mark Vincent, Dianne
McDougall,
Six month pins were given to Emma
Gregory, Mary lLwson, Patricia Me-
Clinchey, Ruth McLasan, Wayne, Me.
Clinchey, Kenneth McLagan, ruce
Brown, Linda Warwick.
,A record of 3 months of perfect al- HONOURED BY FAMILY ON
tendance was achieved by 'Thelma lid- 251h ANNIVERSARY
Ronald Alcl.agan, Murray Alarming, \Ir. and Mrs, Edgar liowatt, of West..
Franklyn Wilson,Airs, Jinn Wilson, field, were honoured on the o'casion
Keith Manning. I of their 25th wedding anniversary when
Robert ltaike cc►li[icates and seals !heir family entertained them to a love.
were presented to these who had not b' bullet dinner at their home last
missed more than 5 Sundays during:
Sunday., 'Their daughter, Mrs. Ruth
the past year, as follows: Webster, Naked and iced a two-tier
15 year seal, Mrs. Charlie Shrhbrooh:. cake, cculplete with candles, to mark
13 year seal, Sharon Jackson, Nancy the happy event at which the =pie
Johnston, Susan 1Vi;htman. received many lovely gifts.
12 year seal, Sandra Henry, Mrs. Don Ihase alter.(lin_ the celebration were,
Craig, Ahs, Ilc\wall's sister, firs, James Rud•
10 years, Rill Howson, Doug Rowson, I dell, Mr. Rudde!l and family, of Sault
Mr. Keith Webster, Ann Howson, Shetla Ste Marie; Mr. Howell's sisters, 'it's.
Henry, Mrs. 1Vnt. McVittie.
9 year, Jim Henry.
8 year, Jim Webster.
7 year, John Henry, Mrs. Keit;! Web-
ster,sen, who was the officiating minister _
6 year, Larry Badley, Reggie Bad-
ley, Ron Henry, Muth Warwick, Mrs.at the wedding, was unable to attend.-
Charles Johnston. Mrs. Howatt is the fernier Ferne
5 years, Ivan Cook, Margaret ale -Plowman and was married to Edgar
Cullough, Murray 1Valsh, I Howatt 25 years ago at the United
4 years, Fred Howson, Bruce Hcw- Church Manse, Auburn. They have
son, ; lived most of their married life in the
3 years, Ken McGowan, Barbara Westfield district. The bridesmaid was
Wasson Terry Madill, Leslie Caldwell. Mrs. James Ituddell, and the best man
.Warren`Cgok:, Shirley AicCulleu'h, l'un was barb Plowman, of Toronto,- also
Walsh, Kett Radford, Mary Ilwwson, unable to attend the anniversary.
Clara Wasson, Sharon Mason. I The Howells have six children, Mrs.
2 years, Gordon llaggilt, Jayne Pui• David +Butltr Webster, Doreen, Ivan,
lard, Evelyn ilaggitt, Archie Mason, Dorothy, Douglas and Ronald.
Margaret Howson, Dianne McDougall,' -- - --
Linda 1Vnrwick,
When Diel (hange Finally Made
LARGE CROWD OF SHOPPERS ON
HAND FOR FINAI, BANK NITE
DRAW
The largest crowd of the season was
on hand for the final Bank Nile Dian,
at the 'Memorial Hall last Satin de)
right winch saw the biggest and best
prizes of:ered for the series.
tee money winner of the evening
.vas Mrs. Thelma aleDeugall, when her
ticket was etre wn fcr the $2,,00 tog
ries. 11c4 Hessel.vcod was the lucky
"innr.r cf the $10,00 prize; and Jear
Bell wen the $.00: $2.00 winners includ.
tVarren Cork, 1), German, and again
Ilesse'v,u•rcl; $1,05 went to Lillian
\pet:.by, Lillian Appleby, Bruce Fat
toner and !:!la alcGo(ren.
It (vas a much needed shot in the
mu ler iccat merchants to see the ex-
cellent crowd at the draw, and pros.
meets 1_r a future draw later this fall
,cern very geed.
ey, Ronnie fleury, Cameron Mannino
Norman Snnder.on, London, Mrs. Or -
vibe welsh, and At•. welsh, of wing,
ham; and brother, Mr. George llcwatt
and Mrs. Howatt, of Mullett Township,
also many friends. Rev. Hugh C. \Vil•
1st year, Gordon Shobbrook, Jint
Pollard, Emma Gregory, Wilfrid But-
ton, Delbert holland, Carolyn Haggitt,
Steven Walsh, Wayne McDougall, Ruth
McLagan, Patsy Badley, Billie Mc-
Dougall, Douglas Pcpp, Dianne Popp,
Mark Vincent, Wendy Hesselwocd,
Gary Ilesselwaod, Linda Hamm, Caro.
lyn Mason, Kenneth AIcLagan.
FORMER BLYTH RESIDENT
HONOURED ON RETIREMENT
Close to 200 friends of Mr. and Mrs,
Mike Emigh gathered at Little Norway
Lodge oh Eagle Lake Saturday night to
bid the active Vermilion Bay couple
farewell on their departure for Vancou-
ver, The Emighs have been residents
of Vermilion Bay for 14 years.
Visitors cane from Dryden, Port Ar -
Thur, Chicago, and numerous district
points.
A presentation was made to Mr. and
Mrs. Emigh by Arne Bratland on be.
half of those In attendance.
Mr. Bratland said the Emlghs "would
be very greatly missed in the commun-
ity,"
"They have been more active for the
betterment of Vermilion Bay than
many people realize," Mr. Bralland
commented.
Another speaker was Oscar Perduss,
who dedicated a poem to the couple,
As part of the ceremoniees, well -wish
ers joined in the singing of a special
song to the Etnighs.
Speaking on behalf of himself and his
wife, Mr. Emigh said they would miss
Vermilion Bay very touch. "We have
met nothing but nice people since cone
ing here," Ah'. Emigh stated. "We will
miss our fishing trips, bon( rides, the
tasty walleyes at the end of the day
the beautiful lakes and streams.
Mr. Emigh has been station agent al
the Bay since 1947.
Mr. Emig)) was born in Blyth, and
beta known to his school pals as Carl,
lie moved %villa the family to White-
wood, Sask., where he eventually took
up operating, and later was station ag-
ent for a number of years at Broad-
view, Sask., later taking over at Ver-
milion Bay, where the duties were
lighter.
Mr, and Mrs. Emigh expect to visit
at 'Tottenham this month with his
mother, Mrs. Wm. Emigh, his sister.
;firs. Bites Carter, and brother, Jim, on
their way to their new home in B.C..
rvhere their two married daughters re.
side. Carl Is a cousin of Mrs, Edythe
Sturgeon and Miss Pearl Gidley, Blyth.
PERSONAL [NTEREST
Week -end visitors at the home of Mr,
and Mrs. Albert 'Walsh were, Mr. and
Mrs. Clare Niergarth, of Wingham, ann
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Campbell, of Ayl•
mer,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Moore and fam-
ily and Mr. Gordon Moore, of Acton,
spent Sunday with the tormer's uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cook
and family.
Mrs, Rose Inrig, Mr, and Mrs. Ar-
nold Newton, of Detroit, were guests
over the week -end at the hcme of Air.
Joseph Miller.
Mr, and Mrs, Earl Caldwell visited on
Sunday with Mr, and Airs. Ernie Porter,
of Goderich.
Miss Josephine Woodcock was guest
speaker at the Dungannon Women's
Institute last 'Thursday.
Mrs. J. Pelts, accompanied by her
dao=bier, Aliss IIazel Pelts, of London,
who is on a months holidays, returned
to the forhner's home here after they
spent an enjoyable two weeks at Dorset,
Niagara Falls and London.
Mrs. Bert Craig, Mrs. Wes Bradnock,
Mrs, Frank Raithby, Mrs. Thomas liag.
gill, of Auburn, Mrs. W. Good, Miss
Josephine Woodcock, Blyth, attended the
Huron County Women's Institute Rally
at Elimvale on Monday.
Visitors at the hone of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Cook the past week were,
Mr. and Mrs. Len Schmidt and Mr.
Melvin Ford, of Clifford, Mr. and Mrs.
John Phillips, of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs.
David Hynes and baby, of London;
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Farrow and Janie
of Galt, Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Wardlaw
and Susan and Carol, of Brantford,
F'S and Mrs. L. R. Schroder and Kar-
en, of RCAF Station, Clinton.
On Monday afternoon Mr. and Mrs,
Alex Harvey, of Fenlon Falls, Mr Sant
Krchni°, of lluronview, Clinton, Mr.
and airs, John Philips Toronto, and
Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Cook, Blyth
visited in L(tcknow with Atr, and Mrs.
Robert Finlay and Sandra,
Mrs, Iola Bailey, of Sarnia, visited
over the week -end with her son, Mr
Mason Bailey, airs. Bailey and family.
1 BIRTI'IS
SiIORBROOK-Charles and Shirley (nee
Jackson) are proud lo announce Ile
!drib of their daughter, Julie Ann, a'
Clinton Hospital on October 2, 1901.
BRINDi.•EV-in Goderich llospital on
Tueedoy, Se; tenthcr 20, 1901, to Mr.
and Mrs. i oonard Brindley (nee V1-
elel Gow) the gift of a blighter, sis-
ter for Rennie and Larry.
TROUSSEAU TEA
Mrs. 1?deor Nowell will hold lrnus-
sran tea in homier of her daughter,
Derrell Etaint, on Mondn3', October
lath from 2:00 In 4:00 in Ito afternoon
and from 7;30 to 10:00 in the evening.
Everyone is cordially invited.
tit
If the popularity of the dial telephone
exchange in the village of Auburn is
any indication, the Blyth Telephone
Commissioners expect subscribers re
this system to place many more calls
through the local office when the
change over is finally completed.
The 175 subscribers on the Auburn
exchange have made a total of 154,Gle
calls during the six-month period freta
March 15, 1961, to September 15, 1961,
the system has been in operation. Thera
have been 99,941 local calls made:
22,300 incoming calls; and 32,443 out-
goirg calls, making up the 154,684 total.
This is an average of 5,05 .calls per
phone per day. No' comparative f
ores are available but this is a try•
mindeus increase since the change to
dial i,hcnes.
The exact time of the switch -over !s
as yet uncertain, but will in all proba-
bility' he the latter part of 1962 or early
in 1963.
Al the present time plans for the dial
.ystem are progressing rapidly and all
work being done by the linemen is with
a view la the change over, New lead in
wires will have to be installed on the
595 fhenes in the Blyth exchange, and
already much of this work has been
completed on rural lines.
Present plans call for a new brick
vereer 18'x24' building to house the
dial equipment to be erected directly
behind the present office. The building
now in use will be for office and ster-
age facilities.
New cable will be strung throughout
the village, at which time many of the
old poles will be taken from the main
business section and new ones erected
behind the buildings. This work will be
the combined effort of the Blyth Muni-
cipal 'telephone System and the local
P.U.C., who also plan to erect new
hydro lines on the pales, a slave that
will add greatly to the appearance of
Blyth's business section.
A display of new dial phones of dif-
ferent shapes and colours is on di;-
in the Office for those
in early view of
play
interested
their future
Telephone
getting an
phone.
WESTFIELD
• Rev.- apd• Mrs. Donald Snell, Leslie,
Paul and David, who returned to
Westfield several weeks ago, have
moved to their owu hone. We \vel -
come them on their return to this
community..
Visitors over the weekend with airs.
Marvin McDowell and Graeme were
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clark, Ottawa,
Mts. Alex McLennan, Chicago, and Mr.
and Mrs. Bub Aiclntosh, of Ilderton.
'Its. McLennan is remaining for a long.
er visit.
Messrs Cecil and Franklin Campbell
visited with their parents, Mr, and Mrs.
11. Campbell on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Campbell, Ayl-
nler, called on Mrs. J. L. McDowell and
Gordon and other friends on Saturday.
Mr. Gordon Smith, of London. spent
the weekend with his parents, Mr. ana
Mrs. Charles Smith.
Mr. John McDowell played on the
Whitechurch ball teams in Oshawa on
Saturday.
PRESBYTERIAN LEADERS MEET
IN BLM'TH
Over twenty-five C.O.C. and Explorer
group leaders of the Huron P. esbyter-
ial met last week in St. Andrew's Pres-
byterian Church, Blyth, for their fall
Conference.
Registration was in charge of the
Children's work secretary of the Pres-
byterial, Mrs. Wellington Good, of
Blyth, The dinner was served by the
ladies of the Woman's Missionary So-
ciety.
Following the dinner a devoteonal
period was led by Miss Barbara Wood-
ruff, deaconess of Knox Church, Gado
rich. The leaders were divided into
groups with Miss Woodruff, Miss Clare
Haines, a W.M.S. children's warier ut
the Synodical, and Miss Lily McAr-
thur, of Goderich, Miss Haines inti:'
duced the new study book on Africa
and an interesting display of handcraft
was made bls -the "Blyth leaders, which
their members had made during the
past year. Delegates were present from
Seaforth, Hensel, McKillop Group,
Auburn, Goderich and Teeswater.
11'11Y7
Did I join the Lions in my home town
Because of its record or high renown;
Did 1 see the job that it tried to do,
Was 1 impressed by the way it grew?
Did I admire the men who planned
And built for youth, in this growing
land:
Was by intention to pull my share,
Was that the reason I signed up there?
Or was my motive baser stuff,
Did it look like a chance to pull a bluff:
Could 1 covet' up, with a gay glad hand,
While i promoted by personal "Brand"?
There's only one man that I can't trick;
Ile can look inside me, and see Inc tick,
Ile's the Lion 1 sec when 1 shave each
day;
Al the end of the week, he draws toy
pay'•
if he's not pleased with the job I do-
ff 1 can't fool him, 1 won't fool you,
For the ancient truth is valid yet:
"The more 1 give, the more I'll get."
of
Tragedy On a
Scottish Mountain
As the train sped north from
the smoke and heat of London
the young, athletic -looking man
smiled to himself, Edwin Robert
Rose was looking forward to his
holiday in Scotland. A London
clerk in his early thirties, he
was a keen climber and he loved
to get away to the solitude of the
mountains,
From Glasgow he took the
steamer down the River Clyde to
Arran, the island resort in the
river's mouth.
Over Arran broods the Mow).
tain of Goatfell, a great grey
cone of granite, majestic and
forbidding. Its glens and rug-
ged peaks are no place for the
timid, but to the adventurous
the mountain is a challenge.
It was one that Rose accepted.
He would make his way to the
top and stand there nearly 3,000
feet up
He set off with a young Scots-
man. Annandale was the name
the other gave in the lodgings
the two young men shared. In
contrast with the easy -mannered
Rose, the Scot was silent and for-
bidding.
Local people said he was li-
able to dangerous outbursts.
Rose was warned against him —
on no account should he climb
Goatfell with Annandale as his
sole companion.
But the warning went un-
heeded. Together the young men
set out By six o'clock in the
evening, that summer day in
1889, they reached the summit
and stood there admiring the
view, one of the finest Scotland
has to offer.
They began the descent
through the Coire-na-a-Fuhren,
the Glen of Fire, a lonely, wind-
swept gully. Here Annandale
turned killer, His greed has been
roused by the other man's pos-
sessions — his clothes, his gold
watches and chain, and his
money,
Annandale had often scram-
bled on the Goatfell slopes and
the tracks were familiar to him,
It was by his choice the path
was chosen that led through the
Gully of Fire, -
It was the place for a man
with murder in his mind, an
awesome spot, set amid preci-
pices,
Rose was going down ahead
When a sudden blow caught him
on the head. As he lay ;Animal,
the killer struck again, using a
stone as weapon, He rained
down fearful blows that smash-
ed in one side of the head and
made the face unrecognizable,
Alone, aloft among the clouds,
Annandale considered his next
step. His first plan had been to
attribute death to a fall, for
there were precipices on either
side. Amid the boulders he scat-
tered Rose's stick, knife, pencil,
cap and coat. Then he realized
that the damage he had done
in his savagery ruled out injuries
from a fall. His villainy must
be concealed,
Almost at hand was an over-
hanging ledge. Here the body
was stowed. To screen off what
was still exposed to view there
were stones in plenty to fashion
a wall and seal off the cavity. He
set methodically to work.
Nearly fifty stones and bould-
ers of varying size were piled
up. To complete the screen, turf
and heather were pushed into
the clefts.
Three hours later Annandale
was back in his lodgings. A shep-
herd saw him emerging from the
wood and noted that he was
"awful tired and worn-out, like
as if he had spent a day of hard
travelling among the hills."
That night Annandale slept in
the lodgings he had shared with
Rose. In the morning he took
the steamer back to the main-
land, carrying Rose's bag and
belongings as well as his own,
and wearing some of the Lon-
doner's clothes. A yachting cap,
a pair of slippers and a tennis
racket were left behind in the
lodgings, all the landlady had to
meet the unpaid bill.
His holiday ended, Annandale
went back to his job as pattern -
maker at a Glasgow works. Ile
could reckon himself safe while
the cairn preserved his secret,
Three weeks passed. Then the
headlines proclaimed that the
missing Arran tourist had been
found, writes Cedric Garth in
"Tit -Bits"
Systematic search had gone on
day after day among the waste
of screes and corries. A nause-
ating odour drew a fisherman to
the gully and the remains in the
tomb were revealed.
The hue and cry was raised for
Annandale. By that name he was
unknown, but a chance meeting
in Glasgow with another Arran
visitor directed attention to the
pattern -maker whose real name
was John Watson Laurie.
The police were told, but
Laurie had decamped.
For some weeks he was on the
run. He had Rose's money to
support him and he travelled
south. Among Liverpool's thous-
ands he might have lived in safe
obscurity, but in his vanity he
had to advertise himself by writ-
ing to the Press.
Again he fled and for the sec-
ond time he betrayed himself
to the newspapers.
At last the police were on his
heels, He took to the woods. A
police sergeant dragged him from
his hiding -place, In his hand was
a razor and his throat had a
superficial cut; it had not gone
deep enough to cause harm..
At the trial the evidence was
circumstantial, but It seemed to
point irresistibly to his guilt, But
when the verdict was returned
the Scots jury were found to be
divided — eight voices for "guil-
ty," seven for "not proven."
By Scots law a majority ver-
dict suffices, Laurie was sentenc-
ed to death.
After the majority decision
doubts began to spread. Was a
man's life to be forfeit by the
majority of one in a vote of
fifteen? And then, was Laurie
sane?
A medical commission was
ordered to report. It pronounced
Laurie to be insane and a re-
prieve was ordered. He was re-
moved to prison to serve his life
sentence.
Strangely enough, Laurie was
a well-behaved prisoner, His
voice earned him a place in the
prison choir, of which he be-
came the mainstay.
Then carne a chance to escape.
The good -conduct man was over
the wall, making off in a dense
sea -fog. He was soon recaptured,
however.
In those days, escaped crimin-
als, when recaptured, were fet-
tered at wrists and ankles to
make any further flight impos-
sible, And the chains remained
night and day.
Laurie passed more than rorty
years in prison. He was sixty-
nine when at last death released
him from his servitude.
SHIRTS FOR SKIRTS — The fashion scene is seeing a big change
when a skirt is replaced by a long, long shirt. The flannelette
muu muu, left, has hit the "at home wear" scene. Blazing red,
green, gold and white stripes accent the tent effect, For
lounging and sleeping is the beat•knit shirt, right. Finished
with crew neck and push-up sleeves, it sports black, red, olive
and blue stripes.
OUT OF CHARACTER — Two mistakes in spelling on the sign
at Mira Costa High School reddened some faces at Manhattan
Beach, Calif. Errors were quickly corrected,
iTABL E TALKS
ciane
The following recipe, using
cottage cheese, make's a really
hearty dessert and we think
you'll like it.
Bake this in two
plates, or in an .8
spring form pan.
CHIFFON CHEESE CAKE
3 cups creamed cottage cheese
(24 ounces), sieved
1 cup sugar
15 cup sifted cake flour
>i teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 eggs, separated
1 cup whipping cream
Combine sieved cottage cheese,
3/4 cup sugar, flour, and salt.
Stir in lemon juice and vanilla.
Beat egg yolks until thick. Beat
egg whites until stiff, gradually
beating in the remaining 1/4 cup
sugar, beating until mixture
forms stiff peaks. Whip cream,
Fold egg yolks into cheese mix-
ture; fold in whipped cream and
then egg whites. Turn into
crumb -lined pan. Top with 1/
cup crumbs, if desired, Bake at
325° F. 1 hour. Turn off heat
and let cake remain in oven 1
hour with door closed. Cool on
cake rack, remove sides of pan
and let cake chill In refrigerator,
(If you bake in pie plates,
shorten baking time to 40 min-
utes).
Crumb Crust
1! i cups firmly packed Zwie-
back crumbs
2 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons softened butter
Blend all ingredients together
and press evenly on sides and
buttom of pan (save 1/2 cup of
crumbs for top, if desired).
9 -inch pie
or 9 -inch
N •K N
Speaking of cottage cheese,
have you ever tried this for a
hurry -up dessert: Place a big
spoonful of creamed cottage
cheese in a sherbet dish and
top it with strawbberry jam,
sweetened apricot puree or tiny
pineapple chunks. Pretty and
good. . , 4
Here is a plum pie that is not
only delicious but beautiful to
look at on the table. It might
well fit into a party color scheme
for you this fall.
PLUM CHEESE I'IE
12 fresh purple plums, pitted
and quartered
1 package vanilla pudding mix
(not instant)
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
2 3 -ounce packages cream
cheese, softened and whipped
1 9 -inch baked pie shell
1:f cup purple plum jelly,
melted and cooled. •
Place plum pieces in frying
pan, skin side down. Cover with
boiling water. Heat only until
skins start to shrivel. Using s:ot-
ted spoon, carefully lift fruit
from water and place on paper
toweling at once. Cool, Prepare
vanilla pudding by package di-
rections. Add orange rind. Cool
slightly, stir frequently, Blend
together the pudding mixture
'riots the cheese; tightly whij•witb---
a fork. Pour into baked shell.
Circle plum pieces, skin side
down, spoke fashion over entire
top of pie. Drizzle melted jelly
over plums, Chill until set. Serve
plain or with slightly sweetened
whipped cream garnished with
grated orange rind. Serves (i.
Long experience in conking for
large numbers at clubs, restaur-
ants, and a college have taught
me some special "tricks of the
trade" that I'd like to share with
Christian Science Monitor read-
ers writes William A. Hagan:
Here are three recipes that give
commonplace dishes an uncom-
mon flavor:
COLE SLAW
Remove outer leaves from
small head of cabbage and cut
it in four pieces. Let stand in
cold water for one hour, then
drain well and shred not too
FRUIT SALAD — Avocados,
lemons and a peach are all
mixed up in this display at the
Los Angeles County Fair, Di-
ane Munch is the feminine in-
gredient,
fine, Marinate cabbage with the
following:
1 tablespoon vinegar
1/ teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 teaspoon salt
IA teaspoon pepper
1/1 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon chili sauce
1/2 tablespoon dill pickle relish
Add 1 teaspoon chopped onion,
1 tablespoon chopped celery, 1/4
cup chopped green pepper, and
grated carrot,
* * *
POTATO SALAD
2 cups cooked potatoes, sliced
or cubed
I tablespoon finely chopped
onion
3 tablespoons celery, chopped
not too fine
1 teaspoon grated cheese
2 tablespoons French dressing
a teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 tablespoon sweet relish
1,(i cup mayonnaise
• 1 tablespoon chili sauce
Salt and petter to taste.
Rub bowl with garlic (option-
al). Mix potatoes with French
dressing and Worcestershire
sauce and let stand one hour.
Add onion, celery, mayonnaise,
chili sauce, grated cheese, relish,
salt, and pepper.
* *
MASHED POTATOES
4 medium-size potatoes
1 small onion
3 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoon grated cheese
114 teaspoon sugar
!j cup hot milk
Few grails pepper
Cut potatoes in eighths. Cut
onion fine and cook with pota-
toes, When done, drain and mash.
Add hot milk, butter, grated
cheese, sugar, salt, and pepper.
Famous Family
Publicity -Shy
1Z dbo k -- magazine Iret tud
readers of its October issue to a
liberally illustrated story on
three of the world's most pub-
licity -shy young adults: 27 -year-
old Canadian quintuplets Cecile,
Annette, and Marie Dionne, The
layout included photographs of
the sisters, their ehildren—in-
eluding the first published pic-
tures of Cecile's 2 -month-old
twin sons, Bruno and Bertrand
—and even a stern-faced shot of
Mania Elzire Dionne cradling
one of )ler twin grandsons, (The
f
o t h surviving quintuplet,
Yvonne, is now a nun; as for
Papa Oliva Dionne, he just
didn't want his picture taken.)
Cecile and her husband, 30 -year-
old Philippe Langlois, now have
four boys—the oldest only 3—
and when Redbook interviewer
Robert J. Levin inquired about
her plans for the inescapably
hectic years ahead, Cecile smiled
wryly and said; "Survive."
What Folks Eat
in Great Britain
The Scotsman is the champion
cabbage -eater of the United
Kingdom, Ile also eats more eno-
colate biscuits, the Welshman
consumes most cauliflowers, and
the people of East Anglia top
the brussels -sprouts truing fra-
ternity.
These are some of the fascin-
ating details in the pattern of
food eating as shown by Minis-
try of Agriculture figures for
the years since rationing and the
effects of rationing on standard-
ized eating habits during and
after World War 11.
"A pattern of eating seems to
have emerged which has been
constant since 1955," a Ministry
of Agriculture spokesman told
this correspondent.
The consumption of green ve-
getables increases as one comes
south. Londoners eat more leafy
salad than any other group,
Scotland eats three times as
many buns, scones, and tea cakes
as Londoners, and puts more
preserves on its bread. The Mid -
lander has the sweetest tooth
and the dweller in the Home
Counties eats most marmalade.
Londoners eat twice as ouch
fruit as people in Scotland.
The wartime rationing of rood
continued to influence British
eating habits till 1955. From die
time food restrictions were re-
laxed until 1955, housewives
filled their shopping baskets
with the type of food they were
not able to buy in quantity dur-
ing rationing. By 1955 the abnor-
mal demand for these foods was
aj5peased and a more normal
pattern emerged.
In the matter of bread for in-
stance, the "staff of life," Lon-
. doners and those in the Home
Counties lean far less heavily
on this "staff" than rural dwell-
ers in Scotland and \Vales. In
the Southeast more whole -meal
bread is sold than in the North
although the Northwest eats as
much brown bread as London.
The average consumption of
all kinds of bread in the United
Kingdom is roughly 3 lbs. a
week, Wales and Scotland con-
sume an additional quarter of
a pound, whereas Londoners eat
on an average only 21,i pounds
a week. Though Yorkshire is
noted for its "high teas" the
consumption of bread in the Rid-
ings is still one ounce below
the national weekly average.
Talk of "high teas" leads one
to the section of "buns, scones,
and teacakes." Here — as might
be expected in a country fanned
for its bakery — Scotland is way
out ahead with 3,10 ounces a
head per week compared with
London's .74 of an ounce, In
"cakes and pastries" it is the
Northwest of England which is
at the top of the list with 5:10
ounces a head a week. In this
respect one remembers teas of
home-made delicacies eaten in
lakeside inns in Cumberland and
Westmorland. Scotland a n d
Yorkshire come next for con-
sumption of cakes, and London
not far behind,
In addition, still in the bakery
ISSUE 40 — 1981
section, Scotland has a loonier
ration of oatmeal from whI h to
concoct delicious "oatcakes" and
the "porridge" which appears
on breakfast menus north of the
border. Scotland's oatmeal con-
sumption is 2,05 ounces a head
a week compared with .85 in
London, writes Melita Knowles
in the Christian Science Moni-
tor.
For oatmeal porridge one must
have salt. The caster sugar on
breakfast tables in Scottish ho-
tels, we are told by Scotsmen, is
a concession to visiting Sassen-
aehs. This extra usage mignt
count for the fact that Scotland
consumes an average of 124
ounces of salt a person a week
compared with .92 in London,
except that the Welsh consump-
tion is slightly higher than that
in Scotland and their oatmeal
allotment too low to allow for
much porridge,
When it comes to meat and
fish, however, Scottish •.un-
sumption is down, Their meat is
12 per cent below the average
while London's 11 per cent ,tp
on the national average. ScJts-
men prefer beef, bath as nkat
and in their sausage. Sc',tsin n
eat six beef sausages to every
one pork, while in most other
districts the proportion is re-
versed,
Yorkshire, a country with a
penchant for "fish and chips,"
tops the fish -eating groups with
7.15 ounces a head a week com-
pared with the over-all aver.ige
of 5.93. In the matter of "ctii s"
Yorksire is also above the aver-
age with 2,08 ounces a head
compared with only .65 in Seot-
land, .62 in London, and 31 in
Wales,
0f fresh fruit London eats 32
per cent more than the average
and Scotland 31 per cent less.
Londoners buy most oranges,
lemons, and grapefruit, apples,
pears, soft fruits, bananas and
fresh tomatoes.
CONFIDENCE — that feeling
you have before you know het -
ter.
UNCLE SAM NEEDS WHO? —
Swept away by the glory of
joining the Marines, Mike, 5,
and Casey, 6, Gibson tried to
enlist. The Covina, Calif,, boys
didn't understand when the
local recruiter told them they
were too young,
�t+ YnttlM6k. L4fv�ix than Yc14.
HAWAIIAN HONEY — Honolulu dancer Rose Marie Alvaro
smiles prettily to match the pictures of herself on posters 'put
out by the Hawaii Visitors Bureau, Rose Marie, of Chinese -
Hawaiian Portuguese -English ancestry, will promote Hawaii all
over the world through the new posters,
Bean -Hole Beans Are
Just Plain Beans
Why people do things contin-
ues to puzzle people, and this
brings us to the subject of bean -
hole beans, which are enjoying
an astonishing renewal In Maine
and elsewhere. This bids us pause
and ponder. The bean -hole bean
is just a baked bean, and offers
no partieular excellence you
can't get more easily in some less
tedious fashion. But all at once
people seem to be baking bean -
hole beans with new vigor and
enthusiasm,
I suppose we would look ask-
ance at some lady who, equipped
with modern laundry, insisted on
pushing a wheelbarrow of dirty
clothes to a brook and pounding
shirts with a board. But we ac-
cept the odd activities of the
Patio Cook who leaves a fine
range in his kitchen and goes out
on the back lawn to burn frank-
furters on a wire rack. Me. I
sense a big difference betwt:en
that and the kind of orderly
home -cooking we do on a camp-
ing trip when we are miles in
the wilderness and make -do.
Our outdoor cooking attempts
to achieve on our primitive
equipment what we might do if
we had a stove with us. Thus,
if we were on a wild mountain
somewhere, and wanted some
baked beans, we would dig a
hole, gather some rocks, and be-
gin the long, drawn-out program
of bean -holing with the idea of
having, come supper, something
like what we would have if we
were home, The point may be
worth extended analysis:
The baked bean had a humble
origin. Historically he was asso-
ciated with near -famine and the
stringency of Puritan days, He
thus suffers by comparison and
has a rude and unenviable con-
text which he does not truly de-
serve,
The long faces of meditative
piety with which our early set-
tlers are always depicted have
a willy-nilly connotation of die-
tary monotony. That their larder
was limited in both quantity and
variety is remembered by the
scholar while more stalwart nu-
ances are neglected, Much of this
becomes the tradition of beans,
although I may have stated the
thing badly, I think we have
a national ambition to eat some-
thing better than beans, born of
our pioneer reliance on same and
our great belief in progress.
I think to some extent, how-
ever, the bean -legend about Sun-
day cooking can be discarded,
We have been told that Satur-
day baking of beans was to set
up a laborless Sabbath, and it is
a pretty tale and perhaps so. But
beans are an item that are best
baked in concert, and the labor
of preparing a pot in bygone
tines made it wise to do a lot
at once.
Beans baked on Saturday
could sustain the body on a
laborless Sunday, but this doesn't
take into account that beans
baked on a Saturday are better
on a Sunday, anyway, and also
on a Monday, and continue to,
get better right up to a Wednes-
day, when they should be used
up, The early folks, if this had
been their reasoning, might have
continued several days before
lifting a finger. So, I think a
bean -hole bean baked specifical-
ly for Sunday, if that had been
the intent, would often have been
baked on a Thursday, and thus
the whole pretty notion ex-
plodes.
Apart from that, however,
baking beans presupposes a
bean pot, and this created a
problem. The open hearth on
which the settlers cooked offer-
ed no way to handle such a pot
for baking purposes, They could
use a reflector and make pies
and cakes and bread, but the pot
of beans was too big, and need-
ed too long a fire, The answer
was a bean -hole,
A hole in the ground was lined
five, }!!M 4 •
pFturtir raits1 Sint
BEAR FACTS — This bruin stop-
ped to talk to a friend, but
'discovered that it was only
a sign. He, however, would be
quick to agree that forest fires
are dangerous and a menace
to his way of life, Smokey turn-
ed out to be a better friend
than he thought.
United Nations Agenda Is Long and Crucial ---
REO CHINA
Perennlol question 0 mating
Communist regime grows hotter,
IEIILIN
Thlt focal polat 0 East-West
struggle could become
most important U,N, test
'HI IOMII
Ressia's renewal 0 testing
give' new urgency to Neckar
test boa and disarmament.
• UOS
East•West seek accord on
futon 0 Alt jungle land.
GAZA
U.N. «au•firo troops
still patrol this bottle•
growl between Israel
and Egypt,
' SOUTH VIET N
Bloodshed continues as government
fights attacks by guerrillas
from Communist North Vitt Nom.
IIZERTE
Tunhia wants
hod withdrawal,
ALGERIA
Violence still punctuate
Negotbtiau between Franca
and Algerioa rebels.
'KASHMIR
Indian -Pakistani claims to
territory contain
germ of war.
WEST NEW GUINEA
Netherlands, Indonaio both
lay claim to this territory.
ANGOLA
Portugal It ander Are for
bloody suppression 0 rebel
seeking Independence.
THE CONGO
U.N. control grows, but
'situation remains unstabk.
AGONIZING AGENDA --Opening of the 16th session of
the United Nations General Assembly finds. no less than
77 pressing international problems on the agenda. News•
map lists 12 of the more important ones, some new and
some old. While the problem of the future of West Berlin
is not officially or, the agenda, it is expected to dominate
with selected round rocks and
a fire was kept burning in the
hole until the rocks were hot.
Then a pot of beans would be
set in and covered with earth,
precautions being taken that no
dirt sifted into the top, Then the
pot of beans would derive heat
from the rocks and would con-
tinue to bake for a couple of
days or more.
But, when an oven of any
kind became available to the
pioneer woman, she naturally
gave up this outdoor, bother-
some, primitive bean -hole. Some
of the first ovens were stone,
such as Quebec folks still use to
make bread for tourists; and
then they got the brick ovens
that were built into chimneys,
The principle of these was exact-
ly like the bean -hole's — a fire
that heated things up, and bak-
ing with the residual heat. The
difference was the convenience
of being above ground, or in the
house. Next came iron foundries
and stoves with ovens and con-
trolled heat, Woman undoubted-
ly hove a sigh of relief and con-
sidered her burden greatly light-
ened. Never again would she
have to go out and use a make-
shift hole in the ground.
So, emancipated, why do peo-
ple now go out back and dig a
hole and haul rocks and bake
bean -hole beans? My guess is
that we are in a left-handed re-
discovery of the art of cooking,
and we are fumbling somehow
with the great truth that food
has glamour and its preparation
is an art. We have been led
astray by the grocer, who told
us food should be quick and un-
complicated, much as a litho-
graphed reproduction on a cal-
endar offers us the talent and
skill of a great artist, but not
exactly. Somehow, baking bean -
hole beans lets us reach back
and grasp the spirit of cookery,
Because of the way things have
trended, what once was drudgery
and make -do becomes something
of a miracle—who would even
suppose that a great, wonderful
supper could be brought up
from a simple excavation in the
ground?
The great lesson from this,
perhaps, is that you must never
discount the reactions of man-
kind. Just as the space age
bursts upon us, and we are
about to project into a new era
of amazement a n d wonder,
everybody starts baking bean -
hole beans again, This doesn't
prove anything, perhaps, except
that humans are wonderful peo-
ple, — By John Gould in the
Christian Science Monitor,
RUZ'S SECRET
At an age (49) when most
women are ready to loosen the
stays and let down a little, hy-
peractive Rosalind Russell,
whose energetic singing and
dancing galvanized the Broad-
way musical "Wonderful Town"
in 1953, is busily making three
movies in a single year ("Ma-
jority of One," "Five Finger
Exercise," "Gypsy") while run-
ning the household for her hus-
band, producer Fred Brisson,
and 18 -year-old son, Lance. The
way to keep the pace? "By ris-
ing a half hour before I normal-
ly would," she said. In fact, Roz
went on, "sleep is highly over-
rated."
Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking
A.N 21313C1 COCA
ad3_ Ss3_.Lfl
i9d_°1.I I.7 .LV
HSV
S3D
discussions in the assembly. The question of admission
of Red China may be one of the most fiercely fought ave*
issues. Russia's attempt last year to turn the office of
Secretary-General into a three -headed affair may be side'
tracked thls session, but almost any minor issue—such al
seating new members—could erupt into a major crisis,
TI1IFMN FOT
1ilialaeL
What happens to a highly
selected flock of laying birds
when selection ceases?
A, P. Piloski, of the Canada
Department of Agriculture, re-
ports that fewer eggs were pro-
duced but the eggs were larger
and the shells thicker,
This was one of the changes
observed when two strains of
highly selected White Leghorns
were bred without selection for
five generations, Albumen qual-
ity remained unchanged but the
number of eggs dropped rapidly
at first and egg size and shell
thickness increased with each
'succeeding generation,
The occurrence of blood and
meat spots varied in the two
strains, these being peculiarities
which are not influenced by
selection for egg production,
said Mr. Piloski.
* *
A commercial producer with
a flock of specialized laying
hens should get a feed conver-
sion ratio of at least five pounds
per dozen eggs when using an
all -mesh feed program,
This was the conclusion reach-
ed by CDA economists after
tabulating results of independent
tests by breeders and feed com-
panies and CDA poultry feed
experts.
An examination was also
made of previous relevant sur-
veys in Canada and the United
States. Froni these data it ap-
peared that feed' constituted
about 65 per cent of total cost
of production for an enterprise
of more than 1,000 birds, and
approximately 50 per cent of
the total cost for a smaller
enterprise. „ • *
Court Action by Canada De-
partment of Agriculture live-
stock officers to uphold the beef
grading regulations was recently
successful in Toronto,
Magistrate Hugh D, Foster
imposed fines of $400 each on
Globe Meat Packers Ltd. of
Tecumseh Street, Toronto and
two of its officers, Leon Diener,
62, and Aizelt Triebicz, 53, for
selling, offering for sale or
possessing for sale an agricul-
tural product under a grade
name that did not meet the
requirements of the Act for that
grade.
Acc Ing to evidence, a num-
ber of s and a carcass were
found to ave been illegally re -
stamped from one grade to a
higher grade in November, 1960.
The official grade marks had
been stamped over or partially
removed, „ * *
The leaf -roll virus may pos-
sibly be spread by aphids that
overwinter on stored potatoes,
states N. M. Parks, a potato
specialist with the Genetics and
plant Breeding Institute, Central
Experimental Farm, Ottawa,
Last spring a severe infesta-
tion of aphids was found on
small sprouts in a batch of
potato tubers stored at 40
degrees F. in Ottawa over, the
winter,
Three weeks before planting
they were placed in shallow
trays in lighted storage at 70
degrees F. for green sprouting.
When the sprouts were one-half
inch long they were found to be
infested with both winged and
wingless forms of the aphid
Myzus persica-.
These aphids, Mr, Parks
points out, are known to spread
the leaf -roil virus, Outdoors
they ret•'v become infected frotn
dir; d :grouts and, in storage,
from the sprouts of infected tu-
bers.
Producers of certified found-
ation seed potatoes, he warns,
should keep a close watch for
aphids in their storage rooms.
Aphids inay enter the storage
with the potatoes when harvest-
ed and remain dormant all
winter, Winged aphids can enter
the storage when it is opened in
the spring,
Because aphids can enter the
storage on other vegetables, Mr.
Parks does not recommend use
of the potato storage as a com-
mon storage. He also believes it
is important to clean the storage
thoroughly during the off-season
so that no vegetable matter
remains.
Fragrance From
Your Windowsill
Among flowering bulbs there
are several of the more un-
usual kinds that can be grown
indoors for winter flowering,
or planted outdoors in frost -
free locations, Window -sill gar-
deners can add interest and fra-
grance to their potted plants by
including some of these lovely
flowering bulbs.
Best known, of course, is the
polyanthus narcissus, which can
be grown in soil or among peb-
bles in water, The Paper White
Grandiflora is very fragrant,
bearing clusters of dainty flow-
ers at the tip of each stem, There
is also a yellow variety a bit less
hardy, Allow about six weeks
from planting to blooming. Keep
then away from the light at
first until roots have had a
chance to grow, Planting a few
more at intervals keeps these
flowers coming into bloom from
November into February.
B1g amaryllis blooms among
one's house plants are a drama-
tic addition to the indoor gar-
den, The Giant American hy-
brids are of immense size on
strong stalks, several on a stalk,
They conte in scarlet, crimson,
bright red, and rose, or with red
and crimson markings on white.
Another variety is called the
South African (although orig-
inally all were from South
Africa), It is an earlier bloomer,
equally handsome, Bulbs are
big, and should be planted one
to a pot, a tfiird out of the soil.
After blooming, they put out
leaves and should be watered
and fed until the bulb ripens.
Oxalis makes lovely hanging
baskets. Plant six to eight of
the little bulbs to a six-inch
container, in sandy, loamy soil,
covered with about an inch of
soil. Keep close to the light to
prevent spindly foligae. Bermu-
da Buttercup is bright yellow,
Bowiei a deep pink, The dwarf
Grand Duchess is available in
lavender, pink, and white, writes
Millicent Taylor in the Christian
Science Monitor,
Freesias are deliciously fra-
grant, filling a whole room with
perfume and of the daintiest
form. They will flower from
January onward in the house.
A six-inch pot will hold about
a dozen little bulbs, set upright
about two inches apart and
barely covered with good, fi-
brous, sandy loam. The Teco-
lote Hybrids are blue, pink, red,
rose, white, yellow, lavender,
and purple.
Ixias are seldom grown but
not a bit difficult, They, too,
are of several colors, dainty,
about a foot high, with con-
trasting centers. Plant them
three inches deep, four to six
inches apart. African Corn Lily
is their other name. Sparaxias
are somewhat similar and very
popular for outdoor planting in
Southern gardens,
White and yellow callas,
anemone, ranunculus, and the
spring -flowering Dutch bulbs
usually planted outdoors in
Northern gardens at this season
can also be raised indoors as pot
plants, Try crocuses, grape hy-
acinths, or scillas.
Forcing the Dutch bulbs for
indoor blooming during the
winter includes early planting
and a period of dark and cold.
Burying the pots under leaves
outdoors until January or so Ls
often done in the North.
Large hyacinth bulbs also
can be grown in special hya-
cinth glasses. Lilyof-the-valley
bulbs specially bred for raising
indoors will come into bloom
Planted in bulb fiber.
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
ACROSS DOWN
1. To speed
4. Lawful
9. 11nndfe
roughly
12. Tavern
13 Staring
open-mouthed
14 Thorough-
fare (ab,)
16Kinrl ret
buoy
16 ludinn fetish
17 1tv'gatePp
18.
20 r)fe
nrho sun
22 tressed Into
rnnkr
25 rerunning to
a knot
21 Hitter
20 African
monkey
30
ill
3:1. Isnot edge,
35 Stitch
36 Now;
. h
4038Chairs
fnsterter
42 6Vater gates
46 Bracing
48 Rubbish
49 Anchor tackle
50. Restrict
53. Cr, letter
54 Shoshonean
Indian
55 liusical study
66. Splice of corn
67 Couch
58. Discourage
59gypsy
n'nntlet}}an
1. Allusions
2. Harden
3, Come In
4. Framework
of strips
5, Sell
0, Channel from
MY SCIIOOI
IESSON
By itev, R. Barclay Warren
B.A,, B.B.
flow Christians Grow
Philippians 3:%-17
Aleatory Selection: I press to-•
ward the mark for the prize of
the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus, Philippians 3:19,
We cannot grow into the king-
dom of God; we must he born
into it. Jesus made this clear in
his talk with Nicodennus. John,
chapter 3. But having come
into the kingdom by the new
birth it is essential that we
grow. Paul lamented the slow
growth of the Christians in
Corinth. He said, "And I, bre-
thern, could not speak unto you
as unto spiritual, but as unto
carnal, even as unto babes in
Christ. I have fed you with
milk, and not with meat: for
hitherto ye were not able to
bear it, neither yet now are ye
able. For ye are yet carnal: for
whereas there is among you
envying, and strife, and divi-
sions, are ye not carnal, and
walk as men?" 1 Corinthians
3:3. How often in church cir-
cles the sarne situation exists
today. I heard of a place where
they were redecorating the
church, Three different groups
of the metnbers wanted three
different shades of green paint.
They concluded by using all
three, Sometimes when an in-
dividual or a group insists that
a thing should be done a certain
way, the real question is, not so
much which is the better way to
do it, but who is going to have
it his way, Personal pride has
done a lot of damage.
Our lesson shows how Paul
grew as a Christian.,He was
made conformable ' tChrist's
death. He died to self and be-
came alive to Christ. He count-
ed all things but loss for the
excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus his Lord. He re-
nounced his own righteousness
which was of the law and revel-
led in that which is of God
through faith in Christ, He was
completely surrendered to
Christ. And this was no mere
passive surrender. He put ev-
erything he had into the endeav-
our to fill the purpose which
God had for him, Like an
athelete he was on the stretch
for the prize of the high calling
of God in Christ Jesus. Christ
was all to him. Nothing else
mattered but to be more like
Him and to carry out His will.
This is the happy Christian life;
when we are completely sold
out for Christ,
Q. When eating' a soft -fried
egg, is it all right to put a small
piece of bread on the end of the
fork and use this to dip up the
yolk?
A, Thfs is 'cute all right.
ISSUE 40 — 1961
shore inland 34. Stammer
7, Mimics 37. Jap. ooln
8. Frust 39. Title
9, Processions 41. Covered with
10. Mean baked clay
11. Rainy 43, Frolic
19, Constellation 44. Try
21. Tennis stroke 45, English
23, Epochs county
24. Plunges Into 47. Quota
water 49. Young
28, Regulation reporter
28, Allot 51. worthless
30, Gibbon
81. Ferment
32, Faithful
dog
51. Cyprtnold
fish
/ 2 3 ••,.
S
6
7
3
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9
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12 ..Y 13
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21
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22
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Answer elsewhere on this page
_ia:,mwate iro�•�ip. �, 3C t:181t�""`... .. .. .�Edin
"j F i
FOR SMALL FIRES — The compact craze seems to be gong to ridiculous lengths, 'or lack
thereof. Actually, however, this miniature fire truck (No. '.a) was built so that it is exactly
one-third the size of the 100 -foot big brother bzhind by the city of Miami, Fla, It will
make a planned 6,500 -mile trip across ccuntrv, stepping off at some 31 cities so that the
Miami claw can demonstrate the cnlazing ve.li:la.
ti
CARD OF TIIANKS
1 wish to express my sincere thanks
to all my relatives and friends for
sending me cards, gifts, treats aad
flowers, while 1 was a patient in
toria Hospital, London.
32.1, —Mrs. James Cronin.
NEEDED
A Rawleigh Dealer for Huron County.
Over 1500 families, where Product:
sold for years. Real opportunity for
permanent, proiftable work. Sta:•t
promptly. Write Rawleigh's, Dept.
J-136-232, 4005 Richelieu, .Montreal. 321
NEW FALL APPAREL
Wool Coats, sizes 2 to 6x sets and 7 to 16 Teen
for girls.
Hats, Scarves, Gloves and Bags
Dresses, Skirts and Tops
Slim Jims, Sweaters and Blouses
Boys' Jackets, Jeans, Skirts, Sweaters
Needlecraft Shoppe
Phone 22 Blyth, Ont.
Clinton Memoria!Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAPORTS
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE —
THOMAS STEEP, CLINTON.
PHONES:
CLINTON: EXETER:
Easiness --Ha 2.6606 Business 41
Residence—Hu 2-3669 Residence 24
I
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.
i!!•
WANTED
DE LAVEL COMPANY LTD.
require an agent for Huron County
Salek and Service on everything for Farm
DAIRY MILKING MACHINES
SEPARATORS - PRESSURE SYSTEMS
BADGER BARN CLEANERS
SILO UNLOADERS - SANITATION SUPPLIES
Box 300
. Apply:- •
B. PITTS
4 . ;, i ,i Meaford, Ont.
BE WARM
PREPARE FOR COLDER DAYS AHEAD
Fall Dresses, for Women and Misses,
New Fall and Winter Coats,
Car Coats, three-quarter length, of wool or suedine
nylon pile lining.
Men's Combination Overalls in Navy, Green and
,Dairy Stripe.
Men's Lined Green Windbreaker Smocks.
Mtn's Flannel Shirts for Work or Sportswear.
Children's Lined Corduroy Jeans and Shirt to
match : Special per set 2.98
Men's Lined Fishing Caps in Olive Green.
Boys Leather Mitts (Lined).
Shoes and Rubber Footwear for All The Family,
Save Black Diamond Stamps for Premiums,
or 5 percent Sales Slips for' Merchandise.
"The House. of Branded Lines and Lower Prices"
The Arcade Store
PHONE 211 ; BLYTH, ONT.
THE BLY1f STANDARD
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank the Blyth Fire B1'i
gade and all those who carne to um
assistance last Sunday afternoon.
—Mr, and Mra. Mason Bailey.
COURT OiI' REVISION
TOWNSHIP OF iiULLETT
The Council of the Township of Mullett
will hold its first sitting of the Ccurl
cf Revision o i the 1962 Assessment
Roll. The date of the first sitting will
be on the 6th day of November, 1961
at 3 p.m, IE.S.'r.i iii the Cumntn0
Hall, Londesboro.
Any person wishing to appeal his
Assessment must notify the Clerk of
the Municipality in writing within 14
days after the 30th day of September.
HARRY 'i'EBBUTI', Clerk
WALTON
Mr. Wayne McMichael left on Sun. ;
day for Waterloo where he will tai! a
ccurse 111 Mechanical Engineering al
waterloo Universily. I =
Airs, Fred Ennis has returne,l hone _
after spending the past moul'1 with -
her daughter, Airs. Kenneth 11i1;:111e,; -
of Egnrondville.
Air, and Airs. Sam Davidson have
returned to their home at Portage La
Prairie, Manitoba, after spending a
few weeks with 111r. Ed. and Hiss Bes•
k Davidson. °
11r. and Mrs. Samuel Love and Steve
Kwasnitza have returned to Madentl, -
Saskatchewan, after visiting for the
past month with lir. and Alrs. Walter '
3roadloot and other relatives. -
• Won't evaporate
• Non -foaming
• Non -corrosive
• Contains rust -inhibitors
Give Your engine the
permanent protection
of CO-OP ANTI -FREED
Belgrave CoOperative Association
BRUSSELS 388W10 PHONES WINGHAM 1091
LONDESBORO
The W.M.S. are holding their Thank-
Offeririg service on October 10th, with
Mrs. Tiffin, of Wingham, as guest
speaker. A good attendance is hope -3
for.
1Ir. and Mrs. Treble, of Carlo.v, vis-
ited with Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rad-
ford on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Howatt, Mr,
and Mrs. Gordon Howatt and Mr. and
Mrs. Jini Howatt, and families, 'attend-
ed the baptism of the infant son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mac IIodgert, of Thames
Road, a unique feature of the service
was the use of water brought for the
occasion from the' river Jordan by
Mrs, Hodgert Sr.
The Intermediate and Senior groups
of the Londesboro and Burns' C.G1.T.
have received their chevrons for the
year 1959.00. On Sunday the group was
represented by Linda Thompson and
Janice Wright who presented a guest
book to the United Church.
The Londesboro Church Ladies will
serve a Turkey Dinner in the Commu-
nity Hall on the evening of October 1'J.
Burns' Church is holding their anni-
versary serivees on October 8th. Rev.
Higgenbotham, of Walton, will be
guest speaker.
Mrs. Laura Lyon visited with friends
in Toronto on Sunday.
Mrs. Gordon McPhee, of the Nile,
visited with her sitser, Mrs. McGill, on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Sibthorne, of
Mitchell, visited with Bert Allen's on
Sunday.
- Visiting over Sunday with the Ho-
bert Burns family were, Mr. and Mrs.
Irving Keyes and family, Mrs. Mary
Vaillancourt and daughter, Glamis,
also Mr. Herb Tripp, of Westminster
Hosiptal, is visiting over the week -end
with the I3urns family, he Is one of the
adopted Veterans of the Royal Cana.
dian Legion, Ladies Auxiliary, Ulylh
Branch 420.
Mr. Henry Younghlut, of Niagara
Falls, Ont. visited a few days last week
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Joseph
Youngblut, of Londesboro,
"11MALE" HELP WANTED
LOCAL MAN REQUIRED
To be our Representative in this
County, pleasant, dignified work with
top earnings, Full or Part time, repeat
sales year after year, no lay offs. no
slack seasons, age no barrier, car
needed. Territories are filling fast, rush
your name and address for full infor-
mation. No obligation. Development DL
rector, Box 817, London, Canada. 32-4
IN MEMORIAM
HOLLYMAN—In loving memory of a
dear husband, father and grandfath-
er, Mr, Frank Hollyman, who passed
away October 5, 1956.
Our lips cannot tell how we miss him,
Our hearts cannot tell what to say,
God alone knows how we miss him,
In a home that is lonesome today.
—Lovingly remembered by his wife,
Mary, daughters, Ddr othy, (Frances
and their families. 32-1p
Wednesday, October 4, 1961
1111, .11 IJOY 111.1 .Ilow •1 •111 A..II.Y...YlilO
13th Anniversary
SALE
CONTINUES A'1' OUR STORE UNTIL
SA'T'URDAY, OCTOBER 7th
See Our Sale Bill For Bargains
MEN'S RTI) SOLEI) RUBBER BOOTS
AT ONLY $2,99
y
A FRIDAY MORNING SPECIAL -
T11e first 10 customers on Friday morning
CAN PURCHASE A PAIR 0:11 MIEN'S DRESS
PANTS FOR ONLY $1.99
A SATURDAY MORNING SPECIAL
The first 10 customers on Saturday morning
CAN PURCHASE A PAIR OF WOMEN'S
FIRST QUALITY NYLON THOSE
. AT .25c
R. W. M.adill's
SHOES -- MEN'S & BOYS' WEAR
"The Store With The Good Manners"
veznizesaracarzassamagiumaj
Huron County Holstein Club's
FIF'T'H ANNUAL .BRED) HEIFER SALE
AT FAIR BARNS CLINTON, ONT.
Thursday, October 12th, -- 1:30 p.m.
Carefully selected first calf foundation females that will he fresh
or near fresh al Sale time.
They include prize winners at the Iluron County Black and White
Show, Many are rom dams with good records. Sired and bred to the
top unit sires.
All are vaccinated and most are listed.
BO SHORE, AUCTIONEER
ALLEN BFLTTLES, for catalogue write S. C. GALBRAITH,
Bayfield. Blyth.
.YY .1 yY.i n,u1.1Y11111 1. 11 I,.11.11 1111I•1./1 1111 h.
Live Better Electrically
SIGN OF THE TIMES!
The Medallion Symbol of Electrical Excellence
This Ilydro-approved Medallion tells you
that progressive builders are providing for
extra comfort and convenience through a
new high standard of electrical living ...
even in modestly priced homes. When you
buy or build a new home the 'Medallion will
help to protect your investment in these
important ways:
POWER CONDITIONING. A 100 ampere
service entrance and a `full housepower'!
distribution panel provide the capacity
needed to operate your household services
efficiently, economically, and safely . s . now
and in the future.
APPLIANCE CONDITIONING. Circuits
and outlets for those work -saving, time-
saving appliances arc plentiful, Every Medal-
lion Horne anticipates your future needs,
And at your immediale service is a new fast.
recovery, two -element, flamelcss water heater
... ready to keep an abundance of hot water
"on tap" at the lowest possible cost.
LIGHT CONDITIONING. Another irn-
portant "extra" is the planned lighting
which adds charm and beauty both inside
and out . , . makes work and play areas
brighter and safer,
A "Gold Medallion" Home is all -electric,
including heating.
Information about the Medallion Electric
Homes in your community can be obtained
from your electrical contractor or your local
Hydro office,
} HYDRO
is yours
'fit 2;,�,^::�a: ��A✓:
Wednesday, October 4, 1961
Elliott Insurance Agency
BLYTH -- ONTARIO.
INSiJRANCE IN ALL BRANCHES
Automobile. Fire, Ca ttalty, Sickn(6aa. Accident,
Windstorm, h'arnl Liability, Life.
WE SPECIALIZE IN GIVING SERVICE.
Office Phone 104. Residence Phone 140
WALTON
Mrs. Harold Smalldon, Mr. and llr`l.
Alex Gulutzcn and Michael altl:ndecl
the Waken-llamillon wedding at Cal-
vary United Church, London, on Sat-
urday, The reception was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robinson Ham-
ilton, London, an uncle and aunt of the
bride,
Rev, Arthur Higginbotham will con-
duct anniversary services at Burns
United Church next Sunday morning.
Rev, N, A. hinge, of Londesbol o and
Burns' charges will be in charge of
the 'Thanksgiving service in Duff;
United Church, Walton, and lloncreir
rtxt Sunday morning,
SANITATiON ShitViCES
Septic Tanks cleaned and repaired.
Blocked drains opened with modern
equipment, Prompt Service, Irvin
Coxun, Milverton, Telephone 251.
111 f .
i,J,Jref ,JJJJ,JJJM, NJ JJNI
BLYTH BILLIARDS
"Your friendly meeting
place."
Tobaccos - Soft Drinks
Confectionaries
open 9am. to12p.m.
Doc Cole, Proprietor
MJ,JN,'JJJdM,J, I .11,44P414"."411 NN'MNN
BLYTH BEAUTY BAR
Permanents, Cutting,
and Styling.
Ann Hoflinger
Phone143
McKILLOP MUTUAL
FiRE INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE • SEAFORTJI, ONT,
OFFICERS:
President — John L. Malone, Sea -
forth;. V1ce•President, John II. McEw•
ing, Blyth; Secretary -Treasurer, W. E.
Southgate, Seaforth.
DIRECTORS
J. L, Malone, Seaforth; J. II. McEw
ing, Blyth; 1V. S. Alexander, Walton.
Norman Trewartha, Clinton; .1. E. Pep.
per, Brumfield; C. W. Leonhardt,
Bornholrn; H. Fuller, Goderich; R.
Archibald, Seaforth; Allister Broadfoot,
Sealorth,
AGENTS:
William Leiper, Jr., Li ndesboro; V
J. Lane, R.R. 5, Seaford'; Selwyn 13a
ker, Brussels; James Keyes, Seaforth:
Ilarold Squires, Clinton.
DR. R. W. STREET
Blyth, Ont.
OFFICE HnURB-1 P.M. TO 4 P.M,
EXCEPT WEDNESDAYS,
7 P.M, TO 9 P.M.
TUESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY
ROY' N. BENTLEY
row Accountant
GODERICH, ONT.
Telephone, Jackson 4.9521 — Box 418,
G. ALAN WILLIAMS,
OPTOMETRIST
PATRICK ST, 1VINGID1lI, . ONT,
EVENINGS 13Y APPOINTMENT.
(For Appointment please phone 770
Wingham).
Professional Eye Examination,
Optical Services,
J. E. Langstaff, Optometrist
Seaforth, Phone 791 — Clinton
HOURS:
Seaforth Daily Except Mondry & Wed
9:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
Wed. — 9:00 an, to 12:30 p:m,
Clinton Office - Monday, 9 - 5;30,
Phone 11U 2.7010
G. B. C.L ANCY
OPTOMETRIST — OPTICIAN
(Successor to the late A, L. Cole,
Optometrist)
FOB APPOINTMENT PHONE 33,
OODERICH t3•1r
Waterloo Cattle Breeding
Association
"WI[ERE BETTER BULLS ARE
USED"
Farmer owned and controlled
Service at cost
Choice of bull and breed
Our artificial breeding service will help
you to a more efficient livestock
operation
For service or more information call:
Clinton HU 2-3441, or for long distance
Clinton Zenith 9-5650.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER
LIVING
CRAWFORI) &
HETHERINGTON
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
J, H. Crawford, R. S. Hetherington,
Q.C,
Wlnitham and Blyth.
iN 'MYTH
EACH THURSDAY MORNING
and by appointment.
Located In Elliott Insurance Agency
Phone Blyth, 104 Wingham, 1�
AUTOMOTIVE
Mechanical and hotly repairs, glass,
steering and wheel balance, Undaspray
for rust prevention.
DAVIDSON'S Texaco Service
No. 8 Highway, Phone JA 4-7231
Goderich, Ontario.
20 -ti
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
WILFRED 111cINTEE
Real Estate Broker
IVALKERTON, ONTARIO
Agent: Vic Kennedy, Blyth,
Phone 78.
AC1IESON'S DEAD STOCK SERVICE
$1.00 per 100 lbs, plus bonus for
fresh dead, old or disabled horses and
cattle. Please phone promptly to At-
wood, Zenith 34900 (no toll charge) or
Atwood 350.2622, collect, Seven day
service. License No. • 103C61.
VACUUM CLEANERS
SALES AND SEIll'ICE
Repairs to most popular makes of
Ieaners and polishers. Filter Queen
'ales, Varna, Tel. collect Hensel 69682.
50.13p.1f.
DEAD STOCK
SERVICES
HIGHEST CASII PRICES
PAID FOR SiCI(, DOWN OR
DISABLED COWS and HORSES
also
Dead Cows and Ilorses At Cash Value
Old horses—lc per pound
Phone collect 133, Brussels.
BRUCE MARLATT
OR
GLENN GIBSON, Phone 15R9, Blyth
2.1 ([our Service
Plant Licence No, 54-R,P.-61
Colector Licence No. 88•G61
SANITARY SEWAGE DISPOSAL
Septic tanks, cess -pools, etc„ pumped
and cleaned. Free estimates, Louis
Blake, phone 4421'6, 13russels, R.R. 2.
.4.I41#4.46,HN04.�-K640P4oMI./4J
Clinton Community
FARMERS
AUCTION SALES
EVERL FRIDAY EVENIN AT
CLINTON SALE BARN
at 7:30 p.m.
IN BLYTH, PHONE
BOB HENRY, 150R1.
Joe Corey,
Manager,
Bob McNair,
Auctioneer.
05-tf. a
THE MLi'/ STANDARD
N '4'JN0I++4"N.10rMItNNMJNJ.N 1
BROWNIE'S
imaiNIONInim e
DRIVE•iN
1t THEATRE
ikodtiVii
CLINTON, ONTARIO
FrI, and ,Sat., October 6,
BARGAIN NIGHT
THREE BIG FEATURES
"The Littlest Hobo"
(Show at 8,00 only)
Buddy Hart . Wendy Stuart
"Bull Whip"
Colour—Scope
(Show at 9,30 only)
Guy Madison .'Rhonda Fleming
"Speed Crazy"
(Show at 11.00 only)
Bret llasley . Yvonne Lime)
(One Cartoon)
Sunday Mldnite October 8
Double Feature
"How To 11lake A Monster"
Adult Entertainment
Robert Harris . Gary Conway
"Teenage Caveman"
Robert Vaughan • Darrah Marshall
(One Cartoon)
.vJ',r.Mr,JJ.,J'r,.M
P & W TRANSPORT LTD.
Local and Long Distance
Trucking
Cattle Shipped
Monday and Thursday
Hogs on Tuesdays
Trucking to and from
Brussels and Clinton Sales
on Friday
Call 162, Blyth
FOR SALE
"Enterprise" cook stove, white enam
el with warming oven and reservoir
like new. Apply Allan Searle, phone
368J4, Brussels, 32•lp
FOR SALE . .
In the village of Auburn, a two-storey
solid brick store, 40 feet by 22 feet,
with good shelving, a good (basement,
and steel roof, could be converted to a
dwelling or two apartments. Also a
warehouse in connection with the store
building, 27' by 13', a good building lot
t the rear of the store, also one
oledo fan scale, 30 Ib. capacity.
ob Phillips, Auburn, Ontario, phone
26-7560 or Box 90,
JNJ.JJ,J,.,.,.,,,,,,',,••..... .0 T
B
WANTED TO BUY 5
A girl's bicycle in good condition.
Apply Mason Bailey, phone 54115,
Blyth. 32.1p.
FOR SALE
Dining room suite, large round table
with four boards, buffet and six chairs.
Apply to phone 7271, Auburn, 32.1p.
CARD OF THANKS
After 34 years of being in business
n Auburn, we wish to convey our
thanks and appreciation to our many
customers and friends for their loyal
support and patronage.
--11It', and Mrs. R. J. Phillips,
RUMMAGE SALE
Be sure to attend the Blyth Lions
ub Rummage Sale in the Blyth
cmorlal Ilan on Saturday afternoon,
ctober 28,
FOR SALE
20 pigs, 8 weeks old. Apply John Cl
Frankest, phone Blyth 3885. 32.Ip. M
0
IN MEMORIAM
BENTLEY—In loving memory of a ,
clear husband, father and grandl. wi
father, Mr, Earl Bentley, who passed , we
away October 7, 1955. pts
God knows how much we miss him,
Never shall his memory fade,
Loving thoughts shall ever wander,
To the spot where he is laid, an
Just a thought of sweet remembrance, net
Just a memory sad and true, ne
Just the love and sweet devotion, ion
Of the ones who think of you, we
—Sadly missed and lovingly remem• me
beret) by wife, family and grand- ate
daughters, 32-1
FOR SALE
Mint green snow suit trimmed with
site fur, size 1; man's gabardine all.
ather coat, grey, size 44. Apply to
one 155, Blyth, 32-1p,
CARD OF THANKS
Ve wish to express cur sincere thanks
d appreciation to our friends and
ghbours for the many acts of kind -
ss, floral tributes, donations to Gid -
Bibles and sympathy cards which
received in our recent sad bereave-
nt, Everything was much appreci•
d,
—The Taylor family.
NOTICE RE: PLUMBING
For the convenience and protection of the pub-
lic, a uniform plumbing inspection service is pro-
vided in Huron County under the auspices of the
Health Unit, Commencing October 15th, 1961, per-
mits will be required for all work covered by the
Provincial Plumbing Code. Inspection Fees are
based on the Schedule adopted in County By-law
No. 58, 1961, under authority of the Ontario Water
Resources Commission Act.
For further information, please wriat or phone
W. L. Empey, Chief Inspector,
Court House,
Goderich,
Telephone JA 4-7441,
.t
HONEY FOR SALE
Clover 20c Ib.;Amher 15c Ib.; III yaw:
own containers, Apply (Reg. Schultz
phone 341112 Blyth, 31.21:
THE WEST WAWANOStI MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Head Office, Dungannon
Eslablished 1378
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
President, drown ,Smyth, 11.11. 2,
' Auburn; Vice -President, 1ler,on Irwin,
7 Belgrave; Directors: Paul Caesar, 11.11,
1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan
Goderich; Ross McPhee, R 11, 3, Au
burn; Donald 11acKay, Ripley; .John h
MacLennan, R.R. 3, Goderich; Frank
Thompson, R.R. 1, 1l:ayrood; Wm.
Wiggins, MR, 3, Auburn.
For information on your insurance.
call your nearest director who is also
an agent, or the secretary, Durnin
Phillips, Dungannon, phone Dungannon
48,
NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTH-
ERS IN 711E ESTATE OF LENA
LIVINGSTON
ALL persons having claims a:. ainst
the Estate of Lena Liviugsten, late of
the Village of Blyth in the County ni
Huron, Unmar4ied Woman, who died
on or about the 14th day of April 1961
in the 'Town of Rid;etocvn, are hereby
notified to send particulars of same to
the undersigned on or before lie 1st
day of November, 1961, after which
date the Estate will be distributed with
regard only to the claim which the un-
dersigned shall then have notice.
DATED A'1' Toronto the 2;,t11 day of -
September 1961. I
THE STERLING TRUSTS COI1POR.
ATION, 372 Bay Street, Toronto, Exe-
cutor, by MESSRS, HAYS, PRFST R '
HAYS, 33 Montreal Street, Gcderich
Ontario, their solicitors herein, 31-3 -
FOR SALE
7 room brick cottage with 3 -piece :
bath, hardwood floors, heavy duty wir-
ing, situated on 11111 St., Blyth. Apply,
Alex Wells, Londesboro, phone 4988
Blyth. 29.1!'. _
WANTED
Reliable girls or woman for part
time housework, 3 or 4 clays a week.
Apply Mrs. Jack Stewart, phone 38
Blyth, after 6 p.m. 32-1,
tri PAGE 5
.. 1 11 • 1 11 11 1 1 I . 1 .1 1 1 11
MEET YOUR NEIGHIBORS AT THE
GODERICH PARK THEATRE Phone JA4.7811
NOW PLAYING
Thur„ Fri„ Sal„ October 5, 6, 7
PAT BOONE - (RUDDY HACKETT and BARBARA EDEN
" ALL HANDS ON DECK"
Scope and Color
Mon., Tues„ OeI, 9, 10 — Tow Pays Only
ESTHEIt WILLIAMS . DAVID NELSON and CLIFF ROBERTSON
Filmed in 31unich, story of a circus family.
"THE 13IG SIIO1V"
Scope and Color
Wed„ lhru .`sat., Oct, 11,
ONE SHOWING
12, 13, 14
EACH NIGHT Starling at 8 o'clock
"GONE WITH THE WIND"
In Technicolor
A Screcn Clastic with Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh
Coming—"WHERE TiIE I1OYS ABE"--Scope and Color
Adult Entertainment.
BELGItAVE COMMUNITY CENTRE
ANNUAL TURKEY BANQUET
Wednesday, October lith
at 7:00 p.m. (D.S.T)
Tickets Available at Belgrave Stores
Children 50c
Adults $1.50
�Yn,I iiw IIi,UI1.C1YlY�iL16Y WidIIIIJi II,,1,4J I,,hII 1 .1,,.I,I, •..111 W6.1111.l ,. n, a,,I. ..., .ib.i.,lmiiY.W.I .. Li11 inI,i r,l 1
FOR SALT: t APPLES FOR SALE
Apple juice in your awn containers.) Pippins and St. Lawrence. Apply J.
Apply Boyd Taylor, phone 15115. 32-1 B. Nesbit, phone 5385, Blyth. 32-1
r
044
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4`/2/ s
INTEREST
INTEREST
1NTEREST,IJxA
•'�fY.l'i2L��:::f:LYrH� fl?yA
INTEREST at +
41, %
INSTANT CASH
whenever you need it!
It's nice to know that if you should need moneys in. a hurry,
your Canada Savings Bonds are cashable instantly. It's also
nice to know that, as long as you retain them, the interest
steps up from 414% for the first year, to VA% for each of
the next six years, and then to 5% for each of the remaining
three years.
Available in denominations of $50 up -- to a limit of $10,000
per person — for cash or on instalments at banks, investment
dealers, stock brokers, trust of loan companies — or on the
convenient Payroll Savings Plan.
BUY THE NEW
CANADA SAVINGS BONDS
good for You—mol Canada tool
4
i
4
Elegant Bandit
Finally Trapped
The short, profitable reign of
"The Elegant Bandit," as his
victims in Mexico City describ-
ed him, has come to an end. Se-
cret Service operators closed in
as Alfredo Quiroga Gonzalez at-
tempted to rob his seventh vic-
tim in less than two months as
the latter left the offices of the
Bank of Mexico,
Nattily dressed, giving the
impression of a university gra-
duate rather than a ruffian,
Gonzalez, aged twenty-four, told
the police how he operated.
He concentrated on halt a
dozen main banks in the city.
His habit was to enter a bank,
and on the pretext of obtaining
change for a high-value note,
mark a victim who was with-
drawing what seemed to be a
"profitable" amount of cash. He
usually selected a man or girl
aged about eighteen to twenty-
five; someone who could be bul-
lied. Gonzalez would step smart-
ly out after his intended victim,
flash false credentials inferring
he was a bank investigator, and
frighten the person with a fanci-
ful tale of a transgression of
banking rules.
He was — and had to b: — a
fast, convincing talker to fluster
and frighten his intended vic-
tim, Skillfully, he would guide
his prey into a quiet allay, out
of public view.
Then his charming manners
would drop for, at pistol or
knife point, he would order his
victim to turn over the with-
drawn funds.
When Gonzalez successively
robbed two senoritas in this
way, the firms employing, ane
girls insisted on stepping up po-
lice action. Till then, because of
the wide area over which he
operated, he had escaped police
traps, The robberies brought
comparatively minor financial
rewards with amounts never
exceeding $250 or so. Gonzalez
freely admitted that he did not
want greater hauls.
He thought the smaller losses
would be written off by busi-
ness firms and forgotten.
He sold or gave away personal
valuables of his victims in case
they led to his identification,
The youthful trickster, who
thought he had found a way of
having a plentiful supply of
funds without working, told po-
lice that he spent the proceeds
in houses of ill -fame, in drink-
ing, and in holidays in Acapulco.
He will be "holidaying" in the
Lecumberri penitentiary f o r
aom: time now.
And ss guest of the city he
will not be provided with the
fine cloth ng or expensive toilet
preparatk ris he used "to gain
the confit ince" of his victims.
Pays For The Fence
Aftbr 183 Years
Hcw these Welshmen stick
to tiler!
P fter 183 years Lloyd the
Mor:,y pays up for Williams the
Fire.
1'•3 mean of course, Selwyn
Lloy d, Britain's Chancellor of
the Exchequer, who has sent a
perscnal check for £6 8s. Id
($18) to pay for a church fence
burned by order of Maj. Ed-
ward Williams of His Majesty's
Royal Artillery in Philadel-
phia, 1778.
The wooden palings were
sitround St, Peter's Episcopal
Church on Society Hill in the
city of the Liberty Bell. George
III's "redcoats" were cold, The
inajor ordered them to take the
Wooden slats to make a fire. He
wrote the rector he would get
"a reasonable allowance" for
the fence.
Chancellor Lloyd is an ex -
gunner from the Royal Artillery.
He served as an officer in the
•ame unit as the men who warm -
T ME PIECE — This figure of an
old Puritan clockmender of the
1 830s was part of a historical
curiosities display at Kensing-
ton Town Hall in London, Eng-
land.
cd them,elves round the wood
fire. He„ too, is a Welshman.
When the Rev. Joseph Koci
wrote saying he had found the
unpaid account when clearing up
vestry records in preparation for
the church bicentenary on Sept.
11, Selwyn Lloyd sent a per-
sonal check for the current equ-
ivalent of $18.
In regard to the clergyman's
further claim for upward of
$730.000 interest at 6 per cent
per annum, the Chancellor
whimsically refutes this by
suggesting the rector should see
what he could get from the
Commonwealth cf Pennsylvania
or perhaps Douglas Dillon,
United States Secretary of the
Treasury, as representing the
federal government of the ex -
colonies, according to Melita
Knowles in the Christian Sci-
ence Monitor.
C. J. Carey, 111r. Lloyd's pri-
vate secretary, gently recalls
"that as this is said to have
occurred before the 'Treaty of
Versailles in 1783, Pennsylvania
was at that time a British colon-
ial territory. The convention is
that claims by citizens of col-
onial territories against the
government, which have not
been settled by the date of inde-
pendence, lie against the succes-
sor government unless a special
arrangement is made to the con-
trary."
in reply to the rector's pro-
nouncement: "An officer's word
should be his band, even though
it was a long time ago," the
priv:.te secretary, e q u al 1 y
tongue - in - cheek, observes:
"Claims lapse by passage of
time according to English law."
In more serious vein, how-
ever, the Chancellor sent his
perscnal check "as a token of
his deep regard for the Ameri-
can people." The letter con-
cludes with the Chancellor's
wish to commend to the Rev.
Mr. Koci the words of St, Paul
in I Cor. 3:15:
"If any man's work shall be
burned, he shall suffer loss: but
he himself shall be saved; yet so
as by fire."
The rector reportedly has said
he considers the account closed,
and that "he will forget the
$750,000 for the sake of Anglo-
American unity", which was no
doubt received with sighs of re-
lief in Treasury circles in
England.
Rarely can a national debt
have been settled with such
finesse. The only criticism is
from economic pedants who
wonder if the Chancellor has
contravened his own Treasury -
exchange control regulations,
School -mates
PRINTED PATTERN
4945 SIZES
2-10
Three to mix -match happily
every school day. Pop -over -top
and skirt are sew -easy and so
gay in plaid or checks with sim-
ple, white cotton blouse.
Printed Pattern 4945. Chil-
dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6
top, skirt 1% yards 45 -inch;
blouse ?s yard 35 -inch fabric.
Send FIFTY CENTS (stamps
cannot be accepted, use postal
note for safety) for this pattern.
Please print plainly S I Z E,
NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE
NUMBER.
Send order to ANNE ADAMS,
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New
Toronto, Ont.
FALL'S 100 BEST FASHIONS
—separates, dresses, suits, en-
sembles, all sizes, all in our new
Pattern Catalog in color. Sew
for yourself, family, 35y'
Ontario residents must include
1¢ Sales Tax for each CATA-
LOG ordered. There is no sales
tax on the patterns.
A PEA IN A POD — There's power in this pod, and it takes
the form of the center "pea." Actually, it is no pea at all,
but is a silver oxide battery system used to power electric
wrist watches and hearing aid instruments, The new battery
which maintains its performance in both cold and hot weather
was shown recently.
HRONICLE
1NGERFARH
Gw¢ndoUne D. Clarke
We are as happy as sandboys.
Why? Because the weather has
finally changed. Gone is the
heat and humidity. In its place
we have cool, breezy, bracing
weather. The outside tempera-
ture dropped to forty-eight dur-
ing the night so this morning
we had to step up the heat
considerably. Now I suppose
fruit farmers and home garden-
ers will be worrying in case we
get a frost some time that may
nip late garden produce. It just
seems that if one person wins
another loses.
Well, folks, put your thinking
cap on I have a problem for you
to consider. that is if you live
in the country or far enough out
from your nearest town to make
rural mail delivery necessary.
It is this. Are you satisfied
with the way in which it is de-
livered? Are your papers, mag-
azines and advertising circulars
stacked one on top of each other
and your lettere wedged in be-
tween? Or are your letters
slipped into whatever magazine
happens to be delivered that
day? Have you ever lost any
mail that you know of?
Generally we have no com-
plaints as we have a morning
paper that comes by post and
the mailman puts our .letters
just inside the folded paper so
when we open the paper we
immediately see the letters.
However, one week there some
mix-up • in .paper def{Very so
when we got our mail there
was just a magazine ..- . or so
we thought, It came in just at
noon so naturally I was busy
and threw the magazine down
on the hall table. It was a wo-
man's magazine so Partner
wasn't sufficiently 'interested to
pick it up. Later in the day I
found time to look at\it and lo
and behold when I opened it
there were three letters en-
closed—one a business letter,
the other two personal. Before
our paper was delivered reg-
ularly again the same thing
happened on two other occa-
sions. 1 said to Partner—"Well,
I don't like getting mail that
way—letters could so easily he
lost,"
Time passed and I forgot the
incident. Then at our W.I. meet-
ing last week one member ask-
ed our President how many
members had signified their in-
tention of accepting the invita-
tion of a neighbouring branch
to visit them at their next
meeting the following week.
"What invitation?" asked
Madam President, "I haven't
heard of any invitation!"
Well, it turned out a written
invitation had been sent but she
hadn't received it. But she did
recall one day getting a maga-
zine and no other mail. She was
going away for the week -end so
the magazine was put on one
side. The point is, this parti-
cular lady is in a different rural
area from us. Iter mail is sent
out from a different post office
but apparently mail carriers in
her area do the same thing as
our mailman — tuck the letters
inside papers or magazines, We
never had it delivered that way
on the farm.
Is this casual way of treating
mail spreading and what do
rural boxholders think of it? I
suppose you might say if we
know what is being done with
the letters it is a simple matter
to look for them. True, but in
some families it is the children
who pick up the mail. Can they
be expected to realize how im-
portant it is to check over what
is delivered? Or maybe if you
get the mail yourself it some-
times happens to be a windy
day — and you know what can
happen in a wind — almost any-
thing, Or there might be a
parcel to carry home or bulky
mail order catalogues. In which
case letters could easily slip out
unnoticed. In fact it is easy to
think up a dozen situations to
complicate picking up one's
mail.
So what is the answer? I
suppose having said this much
you expect me to say what I
think should be done, Well, 1
would say letters . should be
placed in the mail box separate-
ly — either on top of papers and
magazine or underneath them
so they can be seen directly the
mail is lifted, Still better would
be to have the letters held to-
gether by a rubber band, In that
way there would be little danger
of invitations not being received
— a truly embarrassing situa-
tion.
Letters sent through the mail
are a public trust. It is the duty
of postal authorities to see that
all mail is safely delivered in
post office boxes, rural mail
boxes or remain in charge of
general delivery at the post of-
fice until called for. There
should be a definite ruling at
local post offices as to how rural
mail should be delivered. If you
have reason for complaint con-
tact your local postmaster. If that
does not work write to the
Postmaster General in Ottawa.
Never lose sight of the fact that
your mail is important to every-
one concerned.
MIL
Vaccine Victory
Over Measles
There i' little doubt that the
men: 1 a CCine developed by
Dr, John F. Enders, Harvard
Nobel Prize winner, is effective,
Since 1958, thousands of chil-
dren in the United States, Rus-
sia, Nigeria, and Panama have
been inoculated in mass tests,
and results show that the End-
ers vaccine, made of weakened
live viruses, produces immuni-
ty against measles in almost 100
per cent of the cases, The trou-
ble is, the shots produce side
effects. In one group, four out
of five children ran fevers,
some as high as 106 degrees,
while half developed rashes,
In Philadelphia last month, re-
searchers announced that they
have found a way to wipe out
these side effects, in what
could be a major step toward a
government - approved vaccine.
Dr. Joseph Stokes Jr., physician -
in -chief of the Children's Hospi-
tal, and Dr. Maurice R. Hilleman
of the Merck Sharp and Dohme
Research Laboratories gave
about 300 children the Enders
live vaccine in one arm, and a
shot of gamma globulin, a blood
derivative, in the other. The
globulin fought against the
virus hard enough to keep down
the fever and the rash but not
hard enough to kill all of the
vaccine's measles virus. Only a
few children had any fever,
only one out of 50 any rash.
What's more, the 300 children
(mostly from Haverford Town-
ship, near Philadelphia), went
through two measles epidemics
without getting the disease,
while among 300 other Haver -
ford children who were not
given the live vaccine 68 got
measles. Dr, Stokes said last
month: "Every child ought to
have vaccine and globulin at
seven months."
The two -shot method of pro-
tecting against measles could be
available to American children
in 1962, according to Dr. Hil-
leman. A final decision on this
and twelve other vaccine tests
being conducted by universities
and drug companies awaits the
results of a conference in Wash-
ington in November, Some time
later, the U.S. Public Health
Service will license one or more
vaccines, which could cost pa-
tients up to $5 a shot. Whatever
the,,. cost, the vaccine should
eradicate a disease too often re-
garded as minor, but one which
c a tis e s 4,000 brain -damaging
encephalitis cases and 4,000
deaths a year.
To Reign In Spain
Someday — Maybe!
In sailing races on the Medi-
terrian last month, blond -haired
Spanish Prince Juan Carlos
teamed up with an Olympic
yachting champion, Crown
Prince Constantine of Greece.
From now on, Juan Carlos will
team up with Constantine's sis-
ter's, 22 -year-old Princess Sop-
hia; news of their engagement
came recently from Lausanne,
Switzerland, where Sophia, her
parents, and her 23 -year-old
suitor were on a visit. (A some-
what nonplussed royal Greek
physician, pressed into service
as a spokesman for Sophia's
family, described Juan Carlos's
exuberance: "He was so delight-
ed that he seized me and kissed
me on both cheeks, and I'd
never met him before,") Raised
in the Greek Orthodox Church,
Sophia will turn Roman Cath-
olic to marry Juan Carlos, who
is expected to occupy the
Spanish throne if Generalissimo
Francisco Franco ever gets
around to restoring the mon-
archy.
The reason women's hats are
all different is because most
milliners don't make the same
mistake twice.
ISSUE 40 — 1961
Modern Etiquette
By Anne Ashley
Q. Is It really had manners
for a tvonuu► to file her nails in
the presence of a guest? A friend
and I are having an argument
about this.
A, '1'o file a broken nail that
is catching on things is all right
— but to give yourself a mani-
cure in the presence of guests
is in extremely bad taste.
Q. A couple called at our home
a few evenings ago, and the wo-
man had her hair set in pin -
curls with a scarf tied around
her head, Am I right in thinking
this was poor manners on her
part?
A, You are more than right!
Q. My wife and I have re-
ceived an engraved card from
distant relatives, announcing
their golden wedding anniver-
sary. What obligation does this
Impose upon us?
A. Your only real "obligation"
is to send them a message of
congratulations and good wishes.
Q. When a man meets a wo-
man on the street and walks
with her, and she is carrying
packages, . should he . offer to
carry them for her?
A, Only if the packages are of
considerable size or seem heavy.
Otherwise, this is not necessary.
Q. Is a person really obligated
to give his reason for declining
an invitation?
A, Although not exactly obli-
gatory, a logical reason does
have a way of softening a refusal
of this kind.
Favourite Handcraft
Wketat
So simple, a child can help
you with this handcraft! Use the
gay Swedish designs for quick
gifts of towels, potholders, mats,
b a g s; larger articles for your
own home.
Pattern 566: charts, directions
for Swedish weaving 4 different
designs — on anything of hucic.
Send TIIIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(stamps cannot be accepted, use
postal note for safety) for this
pattern to Laura Wheeler, Box
1, 123 Eighteenth St,, New Tor-
onto, Ont. Print plainly PAT-
TERN NUMBER, your NAME
and ADDRESS.
FOR THE FIRST TIME! Over
200 designs in our new, 1962
Needlecraft Catalogue — biggest
ever! Pages, pages, pages of ta-
shions, home accessories to knit,
crochet, sew, weave, embroider,
quilt. See jumbo -knit hits, cloths,
spreads, toys, linens, afghans
plus free patterns. Send 25¢,
Ontario residents must include
1¢ sales tax for each CATALOG
ordered, There is no sales tax on
the patterns.
CHURCH ON THE MOVE — The . Progressly Ba - •
concrete structure, is being Inched to a new t
Chicago, on rails specifically built for the I
irch building, a 1,700 -ton steel and
le block from its original site in
I job.
A World More Silent
Than The Sea
My two favourite kinds el'
places in this world are canal
teefs and rain forests, 1 d m't
know how I would vote if 1 pad
to choose between them, had to
decide that I could go only to
reefs and never to forests again,
or vice versa. My idea has long
been to live by a broad, sandy
beach with a rain forest behinc)
me and a coral reef offshore be-
fore me, with either open to
exploration or contemplation.
Maybe someday I'll achieve the
ideal. There are places wnere it
is possible.
Certainly they are diflcse:tit
enough, the rain forest and the
coral reef. They have no inhabi-
tants in common . , . They have
this in common: one is the pro-
duct of the most favourable pos-
sible conditions for life in the
sea, the other for life on land.
Sunlight, warmth, moisture, are
always abundantly present, sta-
ble, and favourable throughout
the year. Moreover, they have
remained about the same over
long stretches of geological time,
As a result, there is a tremen-
dous. variety of different kinds
of orga.nisms in both environ-
ments — and these or•r! lnisms
among themselves, have develop-
ed a tremendous variety of dif-
ferent kinds of relationships.
"Rain forest" and "jungle" are
frequently taken to mean the
same thing, But I have never
liked the word jungle, It has all
the wrong connotations . .
The true rain forest, untouch-
ed, almost untrociden by man, is
a very different sort of place,
The forest floor is open, carpeted
with the richly variegated
browns of many different kinds
of fallen leave s, sometimes
brightly spotted with blue or red
or yellow from flowers that have
fallen from unseen heights
above. The carpeting is thin,
easily scuffed away to show the
red lateritic clay soil so charac-
teristic of the equatorial regions,
There is no thick accumulation of
leaf mold like that of northern
forests, no rich accumulation of
humus. The processes of decay
are too fast to permit much
organic accumulation in the soil.
There is little vegetation on
the forest floor since the light
is too dim for plants. There is
a thin growth of tree seedlings
(which have no chance to grow
unless some catastrophe to a for-
est giant should open space),
terns, sometimes dwarf palms,
or scattered thickets of huge -
leaved aroids, the sort of plants
that also grow well in the dim
Nght of hotel lobbies, But basic-
ally, the forest floor is open,
with vistas of a hundred feet or
more, vistas framed and closed
by the straight trunks of the
trees that disappear into the
vaulted green canopy that they
support above.
The rain forest is perhaps
more truly a silent world than
the sea, The wind scarcely pene-
trates; it is not only silent, it is
still. All sound then gains a curi-
ously enhanced mystery.—From
"The Forest and the Sea," by
Marston Bates.
Imagination -- something that
Nits up with a wife when her
husband's out late.
MERRY MENAGERIE
.;,' , �'t .
UIMI -Att 1• �.f� � t
"Stop beefing about the heat!
It was YOUR idea that travel
Would be educational f or
Junior!"
13 YEARS AGO — Another
United Nations official killed
in the quest for peace was
Count Folke Bernadotte. Leader
of the U.N. team to arrange
an Israeli -Arab truce, he was
assassinated Sept. 17, 1946, in
Israel — almost 13 years to the
day before the death of Dag
Hammarskjold.
Here's A Really
Big Fish Story
"Boil fifty minutes for every
100-1b. of fish." That's not an
extract from one of Mrs. Bee -
ton's recipes. It's the secret of
cooking a 731 -lb, tunny whole—
discovered by chefs at a big
London restaurant.
That tunny was so large Coat
it was found possible, when it
was cooked, to serve both hot
and cold fish from it. At a spe-
cial luncheon guests were serv-
ed from the head, carved over
a hot plate, or from the tali, in
ice — the whole tunny still ly-
ing in the tank in which it had
been boiled, Tunny even larger
than that have been caught in
British waters. Many magnifi-
cent specimens are captured in
the North Sea off the Yorkshire
coast during the tunny -fishing
season in late summer.
This could be a record tunny -
fishing season around British
shores, say the tough men who
practise this strenuous sport, It's
a rule peculiar to the British
Tunny Club that this mammoth
fish must be taken from a row-
ing boat.
Fishing elsewhere is from
power craft, although when a
tunny has been hooked the en-
gine is switched off and man
and fish fight it out.
It's fairly common for a tun-
ny fish to grow to a length of
over ten feet and weigh hall a
ton. Only an expert fisherman
can deal with these monsters of
the deep. There is considerable
risk of injury in catching them,
but the sport has always attract-
ed the robust angler.
A founder -member and first
president of the British Tunny
Club in 1932 celebrated the in-
auguration by landing a 798-1b.
fish, beating the world record
of Zane Grey, the writer of Wild
West stories. The president (Sir
Edward Peel) later beat his own
record with an 812 -pounder.
The season this year in Bri-
tish waters is expected to last
into Odtober — unless very high
seas suddenly make fishing im-
possible.
Tunny fishing remains one of
the few types of big -game hunt-
ing which the Englishman can
still practise in the waters of
his homeland.
After hooking a tunny he may
tow you in a small rowing boat
for four or five hour's over rhe
waves of the North Sea — and
at times, it's like a prolonged
trip on the giant racer,at a fair-
ground.
When first hooked, the tunny
tries all the tricks it knows It
makes short, swift rushes and
frequent doublings. Sometimes
WRONG BUT RIGHT — Reversed sign on hood may be con-
fusing for a moment, but seen in another vehicle's rear-
view mirror, it reads correctly, This is an innovation by the
Suffolk Veterans of Foreign Wars on the ambulance they
operate in Medford, N.Y.
it dives as a preliminary to a
outwit -straining up and down
tug 0' war. No wonder tunny
fishing is ea I led "the strong
man's sport,"
\'et the tunny is no more than
a giant mackerel with a girth
double the thickness of ,a nor-.
mal plan's body. The contour of
the tunny's body is said to be
the most perfect specimen of
streamlining known in nature.
'funny feed largely on squid
and smaller fish and when first
sighted early in August they are
usually from thirty 10 sixty
miles from land, but as the sea-
son advnaces they come as near
as ten miles,
Salted tunny was a great deli-
cacy among the Romans, and the
Phoenicians established a fish-
ery in Spain at a very early
period. Tunny fish are depicted
on some of their medals.
Fashions In Dogs
Over The Years
To the elderly who live alone,
a dog is another heartbeat in the
house. To the modern American
family, the dog is the capstone
of togetherness, No one doubts,
then, that there are sound rea-
sons why people like dogs. But
less sound are the reasons why
they prefer one breed to an-
other. As Jerome Van Wiseman,
the proprietor of Gimbels' pet
, department (which sells more
than 5,000 dogs yearly), put it:
"It's like falling in love."
Mulling the riddle among the
New York department store's
noisy pup populace last month,
Van Wiseman ventured sotne
general notions: "The mother of
the family is usually the deci-
sive factor, in whether to get a
dog, and in what kind of dog
to get. Nowadays, poodles are
first, then beagles, then dachsh-
unds, then Chihuahuas. Poodles
don't shed, and the next three
are all short -haired dogs. The
dog shows don't have much to,
do with what breed is popular.
Last year at Westminster, a
Peke took Best in Show. We
didn't get a single call for Pekes
all that week. But when Dis-
ney's "101 Dalmatians" opened
in New York, we got 101 calls
for them.
Outside the city at the West-
chester Kennel Club show last
month, it was a 100 -pound
bloodhound that won the day,
While dog fanciers milled about
in sun helmets improvised from
Inver t e d cardboard dogfood
dishes, a high-born hound nam-
ed Short Bred's Marc of Giralda
took top prize in the country's
largest one -day show. Still, Ed-
win Sayres, manager of the
Giralda Farms kennel, admitted:
"It's unlikely that the breed will
become more sought after as
pets. They can get very unhappy
in confined spaces."
Presidents, Van Wiseman ex-
plained, influence pooch pop-
ularity. Charlie, the Kennedys'
Welsh terrier, upstaged as he is
by Caroline, has still managed
to start a small Welsh terrier
flurry. "But it isn't what it was
with Coolidge's airedale, or
Roosevelt's Scotty. Poodles lead
now, but that's partly fashion,
and partly that poodles are fine
dogs. Very intelligent,
It was for those same reasons
— intelligence and character —
that German shepherds were the
most popular breed 40 years ago.
With the crash, though they
gave way to the Boston terrier
which eats less. The cocker
spaniel, mournful and affection-
ate, caught the nation's fancy
from 1938 to 1952, as\the world
went from bad to wars. Then
the energetic beagle became the
totem of the '50s until the
poodle ascendancy in 1959,
There are, of course, quirks
in dog buying that are impos-
sible to explain, Gimbels gets
ten or so letters a year from
men, enclosing locks of their
wives' hair, for Van Wiseman to
match with a poodle. Psychia-
trists frequently call up to pick
dogs for their patients. General-
ly, for high-strung people, a
beagle or a hound is prescribed.
Terriers are good for lethargic,
depressed people. "Pugs," Van
Wiseman said, "are coming in,
in New York—the Duchess of
Windsor keeps pugs, German
shepherds are still popular . .
they're good n'atchdogs,"
it was at the great Dane ring
of the Westchester Kennel Club
show, tvhere 105 of tine huge
dogs loped about or suffered
the judge to examine their
teeth, that Van Wisernan's ideas
had their most pointed illustra-
tion. A harried mother spoke
firmly to her little boy: "No,
you can't have one," and steered
him off to the beagles with a
lure of ice cream. — From
NEWSWEEK
It's President Gibbs, president
of the famous secretarial school
that quipped, "If you know
where to put a comma, it's a
sign of education; if you know
where to put a semicolon, it's a
sign of culture."
Obey the traffic signs — they
are placed there for YOUR
SAFETY.
- CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING • : -
EASY CHICKS
DRAY has started Anespullets, end
other good varieties, available quick
shtptnent; also some dayolds, Order
October4evember broiler chicks now.
Your requirements Hatched' le order,
See local agent, or write Bray Hatch-
ery, 120 John North, Hamilton, Ont,
BUSINESS PROPERTIES FOR SALE
PHOTOGRAPHIC Studio and Camera
Shop; fully -equipped; established 15
years; P.0 Co:: 100, Forest, Ontario.
COINS
GUARAN'T'EED TO PAY — $10.00 for
1925 .050. $4,00 for 1923 010. 10 Page
Illustrated buying list .250 refundable
on first purchase 'Toronto Coln Box
397 Terminal "A" 'Toronto, Ontario,
CHINCHILLAS
LIQUIDATING Chinchilla herd, and
all equipment. Best offer. Dullo Chit
chlilas, 1875 Chandler, Windsor, Ont,
DEER HUNTING
BURKS Falls, Algonquin Park arca,
for deer; everything supplied. C. Sher•
ratt, Emsdnle I'hnne Burks Falls,
152W5.
DOGS FOR SALE
SPRINGER Spaniel puppies, also cocker
Spaniel, Shelties and German Short
Haired Pointers. Registered, well-bred
stock, healthy. reasonable. Ormstrunt
Head Kennels, R.R. 2, Tecumseh, Ont.
WEIMARANERS — Registered males
and females, 6 milts. to 18 mths. old.
Contact Clarence Holmes. "Ghost Inn
Kennels" Reg. RAI, No, 1, Blenheim;
Ont. Call OP. 6.5757.
Polite Message Gets
Polite Answer
In London, The Journal of the
Institute of Chiropodists report-
ed recently that a member of the
organization, highly exasperates]
and frustrated, parked his car
in a no -parking zone, He left on
the windshield a message that
read: "I have circled this block
20 times. I have an appointment
to keep. Forgive us our tres-
passes."
When the gentleman returned,
any hopes of official leniency he
may have had were dashed by
the following note: "I've circled
this block 20 years, If I don't
give you a ticket, 1 lose my job.
Lead us not into temptation."
The chiropodist got a rejoinder
in kind that still managed to
maintain official integrity.
It is agreeable r a the r than
otherwise to find relations be-
tween offender and police con-
ducted on such a genial basis
and far be it from us to contend
that the chiropodist put his foot
in his mouth.—(Memphis) Com-
mercial Appeal.
How Can 1?
By Roberta Lee
Q. What is the best way to
remove rain spots from a felt
hat?
A. Rub the surface of the hat
with steel wool until the nap is
raised, and you'll find the spots
have disappeared.
Q. Is there any way I can re-
pair leather table tops that have
been marred by deep eigaret
burns?
A, Sometimes melted wax will
do the trick. Use wax of a color
that matches the leather as
closely as possible, and drop the
melted wax into the burn hole,
then smooth it flush with the
leather surface, using a warm
knife blade. Although this re-
pair is not perfect, it will be al-
most unnoticeable, if your colors
are well matched.
... Q, How can 1 go about remov-
ing the old whitewash from my
basement walls preparatory to
painting them?
A. Soften the lisle in the
whitewash with a solution of one
part muriatic acid and five parts
water. Afterward, this should be
brushed down with a stiff wire
brush, followed by a hosing with
clean water. CAUTION: Wear
rubber gloves when working
with muriatic acid, and be very
careful not to splash any of it
on your clothes or skin!
DISTRIBUTORS WANTED
UNUSUAL
OPPORTUNITY for men and women
to build their own business. Products
have national promotion, Commissions,
Bonus, Lifetime overrides. Write R.
Dahmer, 30 Wiliiam St. West, Water-
loo, Ontario,
FARM CATALOGUE
FREE fall farm catalogue, write Wil-
liam C. Campbell, Realtor, Listawet,
Ontario.
FARM HELP WANTED
FULLY experienced single man for
dairy farm Good wages and steady
employment. Apply Andrew Carter.
Phone 843.2750 Snelgrove, Ont. -----
FARMS
FARMS FOR SALE
100 ACRE farm good hunting and fish-
ing urea. Apply Joe Robins. R R 1.
Gravenhurst
F1F'1'Y acre farm, level, good build-
ings, conveniences, 11/2 i miles west of
Palmerston on town line. For infor-
mation contact Roy Turton, phone
607.3, R.R. 2, Palmerston,
DAIRY farm, 100 acres, modern build-
ings, 1200 pound milk contract. $35,000
Cull price.
BEE}' farm, 300 acres clay 1 o a m
stream, buildings are good but need
modernizing, Asking $22,500.
POTATO farm, 160 acres sandy loam,
stream, $22,500.
STOCK farm, 190 acres, modern home,
scenic location, $27,500. Call Jack Will-
son, Shelswell Real Estate, Parkway 8-
9961, Barrie,
FARM MACHINERY FOR SALE
DITCHER FOR SALE
SPEICHER TANDEM TRACTION, two
years old, with hydraulic ground eon-
veyor and 14 in. buckets. Roth Bros.
Phone 217. Wellesley, Ont,
END OF SEASON
CLEARANCE SALE
1--31.11 Clipper $ 575
1—Cockshutt "132" Self -
Propelled, 10 ft. .... $2,300
2—M-11 No, 27, 12 ft. .. :02,300
1—M-11 No, 26, 10 ft. $1,800
1—Allis Chalmers No, 66 PTO $ 500
Pickups Available For
All Machines
Lloyd Beckham & Son
WOODSTOCK & INGERSOLL
Located 2 Mlles West of Woodstock
On the Governor's Road
--------------
FOR SALE — MISCELLANEOUS
GRIMM Evaporator 5 x 20 feet, also
buckets, lids, spites, tanks, draw -off
cans, sleighs. Priced low. Earl Thomp-
son, Colborne, Ont,
SURPRISE Boxes Value $2.00. Now
selling for $1.00. Useful articles for all
the Family. Send $1.00 to: Mr. Gerald
Gillett, Herring Neck, Newfoundland,
JUNIOR PHONE $8.95
COMMUNICATE from main building to
bern, garage, boathouse or basement.
C.O.D., F.O.B., Montreal. Gemsoc, P.O.
Box 345.. Snowdon, Montreal 29, Quebec.
ALADDIN KEROSENE HEATER
For barns, sheds; cellars, summer cot-
tages, camping or emergency heating.
Operates on non -explosive kerosene,
burning up to 25 hours on a single gal-
lon. Produces up to 9,320 BTU's per
hour, enough to heat 3,000 cu. ft.
It burns with a blue flame, hence no
smoke or odour, Perfectly safe, quick
to heat, easy to operate. Completely
portable. No flue pipe needed.
Ruggedly constructed of heavy gauge
steel with green enamel finish.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Only $29.95, we
pay freight 1f cash sent with order.
Aber & Sons, 36 Van Horne, Montreal.
HELP WANTED MALE
HOSPITAL ORDERLY
PERMANENT position open for man
Medical, and exerienc.
qualifie) Hospil llninand Sickness Benefit
Insurance, Pension Plan, 40 hour week,
$200,00 per month to start. Apply: DI -
rector of Nursing, District 3femorial
Hospital, Leamington, Ontario.
STATIONARY ENGINEER
(4th Class)
PERiiANEN'r position to satisfactory
applicant with papers. Mainly on shift
work, but interesting opportunity to
learn maintenance of hospital equip-
meat. Medical, Hospital, Sickness Bene-
fits, Pension Plan, 40 hour week, start -
Ing salary $225 monthly Apply: Ad-
ministrator, District Memorial Hospital.
Leamington, Ontario.
MACHINERY FOR SALE
DODGE power wagon 4 -wheel drive
complete with winch ,portable derrick
and leg, Jack arms and connection for
electric trailer brakes. Good condi-
lion. Louts Lejeune, R.R, 1, Fort Erie.
Phone Fort Erie 871-2332 evenings.
MEDICAL
POST'S ECZEMA SALVE
BANISH the torment of dry eczema
rashes and weeping skit troubles.
Post's Eczema Salve will not disappoint
you itching scalding and burning ecze-
ma. acne. ringworm, pimples and foot
eczema will respond readily to the
stainless, odorless ointment regardless
of how stubborn or hopeless they seem.
Sent Post Free on Receipt or Price
PRICE $3.50 PER JAR
POST'S REMEDIES
1865 St. Clair Avenue .East
TORONTO
ISSUE 40 — 1961
MEDICAL
DON'T DELAY! EVERY SUFFERER 09
RHEUMATIC PAINS OR NEURITIS
SHOULD TRY DIXON'S REMEDY.
MUNRO'S DRUG. STORE..—. -
335 ELGIN, OTTAWA
$I.25 Express Collect
NURSES WANTED
ASSISTANT
DIRECTOR OF NURSES
REQUIRED for 54•bed hospital 1n West.
ern Ontario. Addition planned Must be
qualified. Salary open. Liberal fringe
benefits, Apply • in writiner --elating
qualifications and salary required t1)
J. F. Mills, Administrator, 'Groves
Memorial Community 1tospltaf, Fergus,
Ont,
NURSERY STOCK
GOVERNMENT certified I.r,th,un s,.c.
and year raspberry plant l ttu per
thousand, $7.00 per bun' -.ft .launes
Radbourne; It 4, 'Para, lntlario
NUTRIA
ATTENTION
PURCHASERS OF NUTRIA
When purchaasing nutria constrict the
following points which this nre.,nh:r
tion offers:
L The hest available stick. no cross
bred or standard types r^eummende.l
2.'l'hc reputation of a plan which is
proving Itself substantiated nv fila of
satisfied ranchers
3 Full insurance against replacement,
should they not live or In the event
of sterility tall fully explained to nor
certificate of merit
4. We give you only imitations which
are In demand fou fur garments
5 You receive from this ireanuzation r
guaranteed pelt nu.rl;et In writing
6. Mhp hn our cuavhr•l•
ers'embersessoefiatinn theree<byi1)111e5 ouree,•
chasers of this stock "Cay nartirinafr
In the benefits so offered
7 Prices tor Breeding Stock start at
$200 a pair
Special offer to those who quality,
earn Your Nutria on our couperathe
basis Write: Can-dian Nutria Ltd.,
R.R. No. 2, Stouflville, Ontario.
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
MEN AND VlOM N
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 Svstem
illustrated Catalogue Free
Write or Call
MARVEL HAIRDRESSING SCHOOL
358 Bloor St W., Toronto
Brunches:
94 King St, W Hamilton
72 Rideau Street. Ottawa
PERSONAL
AUTHORS invited submit MSS alt
types including poems) for hook publi-
cation. Reasonable terns. Stockwell
Ltd., Ilfracombe, England, (estd. 18981.
HYGIENIC RUBBER GOODS
TESTED guaranteed, mailed In plain
parcel Including catalogue and sex
book free with trial assortment. 18 for
$1.00. (Finest quality) Western Distribu-
tors, Box 24 -TPF Regina, Sask.
PHOTOGRAPHY
FARMER'S CAMERA CLUB
BOX 31, GALT, ONT.
Films developed and
8 magna prints 40e
12 magna prints 60e
Reprints 50 each
KODACOLOR
Developing roll 900 (not including
prints). Color prints 30e each extra.
Ansco and Ektachrome 35 m.m 20 ex-
posures mounted In slides $1 20 Color
prints from slides 32e each Money re•
funded In' full lot unprinted negatives.
PROPERTIES FOR SALE
HALIBURTON, solid house, chicken
coop, 300' x 3110' lot on Hwy. 28 near
Bancroft. Ideal business site. $3,000.
Ian Gillies, R.R. No. 3, Bancroft.
REPAIRS
RAZOR AND PEN REPAIRS
FACTORY authorized repair depots.
Overhauls and parts for all makes ut
electric razors, Ronson, Philtshave.
Schick, Remington, Sunbeam, etc. Pat
ker, Sheaffer, Waterman Pens. Mall t,
SHAVER SHOPS
88 Hing St. West, Hamilton or 410
Talbot St., London.
STAMPS
SPECIAL offer — 100 different select-
ed Br. Colonies used stamps — $0.50,
200 different $1.00. T. H. Graham, P.0
Box 378, Beaverton, Ontario•
LEARN WELDING
NO TIME LIMIT
Also
Certificate Courses in
SUPERVISION — INSPECTION
QUALITY CONTROL
A.R.C. SCHOOL OF WELDING
92 John St. N,, Hamilton
JA, 9-7427 JA. 7.9681
ATLANTIC CITY GETS A TASTE OF ESTHER — Man at right runs
rush under boardwalk and crash against a seawall in Atlantic
and gale -force winds hit the New Jersey Coast in the afternoon
up the Atlantic.
for cover as huge waver
City, N.J. Torrential rains
as Hurricane Ifsther roared
mame
*FOOD MARKET*
STUART HOUSE FOIL WRAP
1 large roll 29c
STOCKELY PUMPKIN Fancy Quality
28 oz. tin 19c
AYLMER MINCEMEAT
24 oz. jar 43c
LIBBY FANCY TOMATO JUICE
48 oz. tin 27c
MONARCH Pouch Pak CAKE 1VIIX
8 paks. 1.00
2 large pkgs. 65c
DUNCAN HINES DELUXE CAKE I111IXES
2 pkgs. 75c
YORK FANCY SALTED PEANUTS
STOKLEY'S HONEY POD PEAS
2 - 15 oz. pkgs. 39c
For Superior Service ••- See Fairservice
Phone 156 ••• We Deliver .
4.111 III_11.r110.1..... -+11.1. 1 .. ._. ..
11 11 1 . 1•1..•••1.1111 .. _ .1 .,. . ._101. 1. 11
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.
11116.
1
(ars For Sale
1961 PONTIAC Sedan
1959 PONTIAC Sedan
1957 CONSUL Sedan
1957 CHEV. 2 door hard
top.
1955 METEOR Coach
1954 CHEV. Coach
1955 FORD Sedan
1956 CHEV. 2 door
Older Models for Cheap
Transportation
Hamm's Garage
Blyth, Ontario.
New and Used Car Dealers
11 1.10.. W ...1..1.
Stewart's
Red 8 White Food Market
Blyth Phone 9 We Deliver
THANKSGIVING VALUES
No.1 Ontario Blue Grapes, 6 qt. bsk. 89c
No. 1 Ontario Potatoes, 50 Ib. bag 99c
No. 1 Ontario Cooking Onions, 10 lb. bag 39c
Ocean Spray Cranberries, 1 lb. pkg. 23c
No. 1 ggintosh. Apples, 6 qt. bsk. 49c
Clean Sweep Broom and Plastic Dust Pan , . 1.00
Utopia Tomatoes, 28 oz. tins 5 for 1.00
Red and White Jelly Powders 7 pkgs. 49c
Green Giant Peas 2 tins 35c
Aylwer Whole Kernel Corn 6 tins 1.00
Blue Bonnett Yellow Quick Margerine .. 2 lbs. 61c
Culverhouse Pumpkin, 28 oz. 2 tins 35c
Maple Leaf Mincemeat. 28 oz, tin 43c
Reynolds Foil Wrap per roll 33c
EXTRA SPECIAL —Monarch Pouch Pack Cake
Mixes, 8 Varieties 8 pkgs. 99c
No. 1 Grade Turkeys, 8 to 16 lbs. per lb. 43c
Long Island Ducks, 5 lb, average 1.. , per lb. 57c
• Grade A Chicken, 3 Ib, average per lb. 33c
41b. average per lb. 37c
TM MATE STANDARD
1 1 1111 1111.11 il.`1..I10r10.a1rr....who 111111. 1 1101 I.. 11 11 1 .!11111. 1111 1111111111411 14111111111114111111 1 1 1
BLYTH LIONS
CLUB
CASH INGO
IN THE BLYTH MEMORIAL HALL ON
SATURDAY, OCTOBER ith
Commencing at 8:30 p.m. (D,S,T.)
15 REGULAR GAMES for $5.00 EACII
3 SHARE -THE -WEALTH GAMES
1 - $55.00 GAME IF WON IN 55 CALLS
(winner after 55 call will receive half proceeds
from the game)
Admission at the Door 50 cents
(extra cards available)
PLAN TO ATTEND AND SUPPORT THE
BLYTH LIONS CLUB
SNELL'S FOOD MARKET
Phone 39 We Deliver
STOP, SHOP E3 SAVE
BIG 59c SPECIALS FOR THANKSGIVING
WEEK -END
Kounty Kist Peas, 15 oz. 4 Tins 59c, .
Sumner Pride Cream Style Corn, 15 oz., 4 Tins 59c
Clark's Pork & Beans, 15 oz, 4 Tins 59c
Southern Cross Solid Tuna Fish, 7 oz3 Tins 59c
Kani or Prem Luncheon Meat, 12 oz. 2 Tins 59c
Allen's Pineapple and Grapefruit, 48 oz., 2 Tins 59c
Carnation Evaporated Milk, 16 oz. ; 4 Tins 59c
Betty Crocker Cake I'Iixes, Family Size,
assorted 2 Pkgs. 59c
MEAT SPECIALS
Bologna, 3 lbs. 1.00; Country Style Sausage, 3 lbs.
1.00; Smoked Cottage Rolls, per ib. 69c; Fresh Pork
Butts, per lb. 55c; Grade A Fryer Chickens, lb. 29c
AUBURN
Our village missed the bright lights
and the courteous welcome that await
ed all customers at the Superior Store
each Saturday evening, this being the
first Saturday the store has been
closed since R. J, Phillips had his
closing out sale. This store, which has
been operated for 34 years, was built
originally by the late J. F. Youngblut
who made and sold shoes for many
years. Ile later sold to the late John
Arthur who carried on the shoe busi-
ness and did repair work.
Residents of this community for the
past sixteen years, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Easom celebrated their 30th wedding
anniversary with . a family dinner at
the Tiger Dunlop Inn, Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Lyon, Londesboro, and Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Baer„ of Colborne Town.
ship, were present for this celebration.
Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Stepanson, Brian,
Bradley and Bruce, of Stoney Creek,
visited last weekend with her mother,
Mrs. William T. Robison and Mr. Rob-
ison,
Miss 1Hattie Murray, of Seaforth, vis-
ited last week with her friend, Mips,
Edgar Lawson,
Mr. Keith Arthur, Mrs. Raymond
Redmond and Miss Laura Phillips
were in Toronto last week to buy new
merchandise for his new furniture
store which will soon be opened.
Miss Helen Youngblut, of Clinton.
spent last week -end with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Major Youngblut and
- famIly.
Walkerburn Club Meeting
'The Walkerburn Club met at the
home of Mrs. Ariel Duizer with the
_ president, Mrs. Leonard Archambault,
in the chair. It was opened by sing-
= ing, 0 Canada, and followed by prayer.
In the absence of the secretary, Mrs.
Lorne Bunking, Mrs. Worthy Young
read the minutes and the treasurer,
Mrs, Stanley Ball, gave the financial
statement. The draw that was donated
by Mrs. Stanley Ball, was won by
Gary Duizcr. Mrs, Bert Ilunking pre•
rented Mrs. Guy Cunningham with a
parting gift from the Club. Two letters
of thanks were read from Mr, and Mrs.
Donald Kai and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Cunningham for wedding gifts recoil/.
_ ed by them. The members voted 'to
donate $5.00 to C.N.1.B. Mrs, L.
Archambault conducted two contests
and a successful bake sale was held
with the auctioneer being Mrs. Fred
Cook and Mrs, Lloyd McClinchey as
clerk, Plans were made for the next
- meeting at the home of Mrs. Herbert
Dulzer and the roll call to be "Some-
thing I have to be thankful for." The
program will be in charge of Mrs.
Garth McClinchey and Mrs. Jack Hal.
- lam. The lunch committee for this
meeting will he Mrs. Herbert Dulzer,
Mrs. Lorne IIunkie", Mrs. William
• Bunking and Mrs. henry Bunking. An
- invitation to attend the bazaar of the
Londesboro 1Vomen's Institute on go-
vember 15 was accepted by the Clyb
and the meeting was closed with lunch
- served by Mrs. Guy Cunningham, Mrs.
Roy Daer, Mrs. Ariel Duizer and Mrs
Carman Gross.
1:
AW'ednektflly, oetober 40 Ali
PARAMETTE BONUS PACK
Paramettes contain essential Vitamins, Minerals,
and Trace Elements necessary to overcome
Nutritional Deficiencies.
Paramette Tablets, 100's - 25 day supply Free, $6.00
Paramette Syrup, 16 oz - 4 oz bottle Free .... $5.50
Other Sizes of Paramette are as follows:
Paramette Syrup, 132 ounce $9,85
Paramette Syrup, 8 ounce $3150
Paramette 'I'ublets, 50's $3.50
Paramette Tablets, 25's $2.00
Paramette Juniors (up to 6 years) 60's $3.50
Buy Paramette 'Bonus Pack and Save $2.00
R. D. PHILP, Phm. B
DRUGS, SUNDRIES, WALLPAPER -- PHONE 70, MATH
.1 ..u11u11
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Fall Specials.. ..
ADI111IRAL 5 TUBE RADIOS
in four colours $22.95
ADMIRL STEREO and RADIO COMBINATION
10 tube radio $229.95 .
VODDEN'S HARDWARE
�3 ELECTRIC
Television and Radio Repair.
Call 71 Blyth, Ont.
.....1. _. ._..... ..! .......l,.1... 1.1..........._._.. 1. 1. •••••......1.. ...r 111 u-.1..1011111
Wingharn Memorial Shop
Your Guarantee for Over 35 Years of
QUALITY, SERVICE, CRAFTSMANSHIP.
Open Every Week Day.
CEMETERY LETTERING.
Phone 256, Wingham R. A. SPOTTON/
., ••
keep' em
healthy
Terramycrn
ANIMAL FORMULA
FIGHT M i ' E
ISEASES FASTER
Terramycin Animal Formula saves you money by maintaining
health, promoting growth, preventing stress setbacks and
fighting specific diseases such as scours and respiratory
diseases in livestock and poultry.
Terramycin gives you unique two-way action against profit -
robbing diseases. First, it goes to work instantly In the stomach
and intestines against germs that cause scouring and other dis-
eases; it stimulates appetite, gets animals back on feed faster.
Secondly, Terramycln is also absorbed into the blood stream
where It continues to fight infections throughout the system.
Terramycin Animal Formula acts faster against more diseases.
When added to the drinking water It dissolves instantly — and
unlike ordinary products — stays In solution longer. Complete
directions on package.
Available wherever animal health products are sold,
SINC91849
Terramycin
ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS
Animal Formula • Poultry formula with Antl-Germ 77
blew Liquid Terramycin for Mastitis • A & D Scours
Tablets • Terramycln Injectable Solution.
Pfizer Research Contributes to More Profitable farming RDA