The Blyth Standard, 1930-03-06, Page 5PAGE 5—THE 13LYTI3 STANDARD—March 6, 1930
H, A, McINTYRE, L. D. S., D. D. S
DENTIST
Office hours -9 to 12 1 to 6
BLYTH—Tuesdays and Wednesdays
Evenings by appointment.
'Phone 130.
Dr. W. Jas. Milne,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON,
CORONER COUNTY OF HURON.
Office—Queen Street
Residence—Dinsley Street.
BLYTH, ONTARIO
J. H. R. ELLIOTT,
NOTARY PUBLIC & CONVEYANCER
Fire, Accident, Sickness, Employer'e
-Liability, Plate Class, Automo-
bile and Live Stock insurance.
BLYTH, ('Phone 104) ONTARIO.
LOF'1'US E. DANCEY,
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR,NOTARY
PUBLIC, CONVEYANCER,
MONEY 'FO LOAN.
Office— Queen Street BLYTH, ONT
SUN LiVE ASSURANCE CO OF CPA,
PitOSPE11OUS & PROGR.ESSIVP
it leads the Bold among Canadian
Companies.
H. 1t. LONG, District Manager,
0oderieh
'17O\IAS GUMMY,
AUCTIONEER,
coorruOH, - ONTARIO
Farm Stook Saiea a.pelalty.Order
lert at Ore Blyth Standard °Mee will be
promptly attended to. Telephone me
sates at my expense.
Dr. J. C. Ross,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON
Office hours -10 30 to 12 2 to 4 7 to 8.30
Except Wednesday evening.
Phone No.—Office 51; Residence 69
BLYTH, ONTARIO
MY OPTICIAN
Willie Mg Drug Store
IDR, W. J. MILNE,
Fine Spectacle Ware and
Accurate Lens Work
a Specialty.
- QUEEN ST., BLYTH
nit W1NGl;AM MCNVMt; WORD
has the largest and most complete
stock, ths most beautiful designs to
choose from in
MARBLE, SCOTCH AND CANAD.
IAN GRANITES.
We make a specialty of Family Mon•
uments and invite your inspection.
Inscriptions neatly, carefully and
promptly dont.
Electric tonfs For carving and letter.
ing•
Call and see us b'fore placing your
order.
Uobt. A. Spotton,
7VINGHAM. • • ONTARI(
no Industrial Mortgage and Savings Co,
SARNIA ONTARIO
Money advanced on first mortgages on
lands. Parties desiring money on farm
mortgages will please apply to the under-
signed.
J. H, R. ELLIOTT, Agent.
BLYTH, • ONTARIO.
C. E. TOLL, L.D.S. D.D.S
DENTIST
Hours 8.30-12 1.30-6
Wednesdays at Monkton.
'hones 124,4212 '
James Taylor
License A tioneer for the County of
Huron. s attended to in all parts of
the co Satisfaction guaranteed or
no pay ders left at The Standard
promptly attended to. Belgrave Post
Office.
PHONES:
Brussels, 15.13. North Iluron, 15.623
The ' Standard Club
bing List:
Standard and Daily Globe $6.75
Standard and Mail and Empire6.75
Standard and London Advertiser 0.75
Standard and Free Pree 6,75
Standard and Toronto Daily Star 6.75
...Standard and Family Herald 3.00
Standard and Farmer's Sun 3.50
Standard and Can. Countryman 3.40
Standard and Farmer's Advocate '3 00
Standard and Wlek'p' Witness i.85
Standard and World Wide 3.90
Standard and Presbyterian 4.50
Standard and Poultry Journal 2.90
Standard and Yo'rth's Companion 4.50
Standard and Northern Messenger 2.55
Standard and Can. Pictoral 3.95
Standard and Rural Canada.....,, 2,701
Standard and Farm & Dairy 3.00
Standard and Saturday Night 5.50
Standard and McLean's Magazine 4,75
Tho Blyth Stanc&ard, i
0444.44444444.1444140.144.444+14444444444444+4414444444
SCHOOL.
SUPPLIES
We have now in stock a
complete line of Public and
High School supplies:
Text Books,
Scribblers,
Drawing Books,
Loose Leaf Books,
Exam. Pads,
Rulers, Inks,
Rubbers, Paints,
Water Colors,
Compasses,
Slates, Pencils, &c
•
The Standard Book
and Stationery Store
114+++4+4+++44+++4+4++++++4 444.4414444+++14++444•11+444
It Costs No More'
To Fireproof
Your Building
WHEN you build a new house or
repair an old one bo sure to use
Gyproc.
Gyproc also gives quick construction;
insulation against cold and heat—and
fuel economy.
Write for free book; "Walls That Reflect
Good Judgment," containing interesting infor-
mation on home planning with Gyproc; Roc -
board and Insoles.
CANpAL
ADA GYPSUM AND ADASTINE, LIMITED
43
F Rpm) , al board
-fingi For Sale By
f1 Blyth Planing Mill - - - _ Blyth, Ont.
SEE OUR FINE LINE OF GOODS
FOR
olYday Gzf6s
CONSISTING OF UP-TO-DATE
Footwear, Men's Furnishings,
Garters, Arm Bands, Ties,
Scarfs,, Caps, Braces.
A FINE DISPLAY OF
Towels, - Handkerchiefs
Ladies' Scarfs.
G. A. MACHAN,
Phone 88 BLYTH, ONT.
The Standard Real
Estate Agency
The following very desirable properties
have been listed with us at very low pric-
es. We aleo have a number of farms and
village lots which we are offering for sale
Get In touch with us when you are in the
market to buy either village or farm pro-
perty:-
13 storey brick dwelling on the corner
of King and Wilson Streets, Three.
eights of an acre of land. This property
is in excellent state of repair and can be
purchased at a very reasonable figure.
13 storey frame dwelling on Morrie St,
Three-fifths of an acre of land. This is a
desirable property for anyone requiring a
comfortable home at small price,
13 storey frame dwelling on Dingley
St. In good state of repair and most do
sirsbly located. This property can be
purchased on excellent terms.
13 storey frame on Dlnsley St. (known
as the Graham property). This can be
purchased at a very low price to close up
the estate.
13 storey brick modern equipped dwel-
ling on Dinsley Street. Desirably actuat-
ed and can be purchased at little more
than half the present cost of construction
A real snap for anyone desiring an up-to-
date home.
13 storey frame dwelling on Morris SI,
Half acre of land with small stable. This
property can be purchased with only a
small payment down.
2 storey brick dwelting on Dlnsley St.
Modern in every particular. quarter of
an acre of ground on which there la a
good stable and garage,
1 storey frame dwelling on Queen St,
North. Quarter acre of land with stable.
Get our price on this property.
1 storey frame, ashpalt clad dwelling
on Morris St. In splendid repair. A
good buy for small money,
13 storey brick dwelling on Morrie St.
In splendid repair. Three -eights on an
acre of land on which is situate a good
stable and garage.
2 storey brink dwelling on Queen St.
Ten acres of land. Good brick ,table. A
most desirable property for anyone desir-
ing a small acreage of land.
A very desirable 2 storey brick dwelling
on Queen St. One quarter acre of land.
Property in excellent condition. Most
desirable location. This property can be
purchased for little more than half the
cost of construction today.
1'z storey frame with cement kitchen.
stable on premieee, 14 acres of land, A
good buy.
10 acres of land on which is situate a
good comfortable frame cottage, barn.
driving shed and the land in a first-class
state of cultivation.
The property known as the old fire hall
on Outcast aide of Queen Street, Thi, -
building is now used as a garage, It can
be purchased at a very reasonable figure.
Frame cottage on Mill Street, l acre of
land, A very desirable and comfortable
place for persons .requiring on a small
home.
13 storey frame dwelling on Drum-
mond Street. Stable on the premises,
Can be purchased at a very reasonable
figure.
The Standard Real Estate
Agercy
BLYTH, ONTARIO
DOUGLAS 1) MAJOR, L. V. C. M.
Organist, Choirmaster
Knox Church, Goderich
Supervisor Music Public Schools.
(Certified.)
Teacher of Piano, Voice, Organ and
Theory.
A few vacancies for pupils Apply
mow, Mrs Poplestone,
Phone 80, Dinsley St., Blyth
FARM FOR SALE
100 acres of good land, being lot 21 on
the 12th con. of the Tp. of Mullett. 10
acres of bush and pasture. On the farm
is situate a good ti storey brick dwelling;
frame barn 16x50 with stone stabling and
water in stable. Cement driving shed
50x30 fret. Cement hen house. Drilled
well. Al land in good state of cultivation.
Hydro pastes the farm. Farms situate l,3
miles from Blyth. Twenty. five acres fall
plowed; 3 acres fall wheat. For particui.
ars apply to Fred Austin, R, 12. 1, Blyth.
FARM FOR SALE
100 acres one and a half miles from
Blyth. Comfortable house, good barn
and outbuilding., 6 to 8 acres of bush.
Apply to N. Radford. Executor of the es-
tate of the late John Scott.
FARM FOR SALE
100 acres of land, being North 'z Lot
40, con.3 East Wawanosh, On the prem
ises is situate a good lir storey frame
dwelling; barn 50x60 and 40x60 with
stone stabling. Hen house 20x30, driving
shed 30x30, all in good repair. One and
a half acres good bearing orchard. The
farm is in splendid state of cultivation,
well fenceddrained end watered. For
particulars apply to Walter McCill, R. R
No. 5. Goderich.
NOTICE
I am starting up painting. decorating
and paper hanging and would appreciate
any orders, which will be given prompt
attention. All winter work will be done
cheaper, Apply to
GEORGE BLACKBURN,
Care Geo. Lawrence
Londesboro
Phone 42 on 250 Seaforth
FOR SALE—Three roosters, 2nd cous-
ins to Lady Victorine who holds egg record
for world -358 eggs in 365 days, Apply
9 Jos. Postill, 'phone 21.10.
SALEM' Cg -FIC
HATCHING EGGS FOR SALE
FROM CONTEST WINNERS
Our pen won first prize for the largest number
of points, also for the highest hen at the Nova
Scotia Egg L tying Contest. Our pens are
mated to male birds from registered hens. It
does not cost any more to feed a good pullet
than a poor one. It only takes one extra egg
next fall to makethe difference in cos, price.
Barred Rock Chicks per 100 $18
White Leghorn 4t it if $1 16
JOHN FAIRSERVICE
Blyth, Ring 153. Box 13
_
SEA'S FLOWER R)if 1V t.
Beneath Surface of Tropical Sear 140
a Veritable Fairyland.
Although the wafters of the sea
seem devoid et plant life to the cas-
ual observer, there float on the very
aurfaoe countless billions of mioro-
acopte particles and planta that sere*
to form a marine pasture for the
deniaens of the deep, says the Boston
Evening Transcript. Beneath the our -
face of the tropical ems one ran find
a veritable fairyland in which the
dowers are usually biological 'peels
mens that gladden the beanie of the
aclentiste, and the erratlos are actu-
ally living creatures and not merely
boulders transported from their orig-
inal beds by submarine volcanic or
ether action.
Beautiful as are the Ichthyological
specimens of submarine waters they
Vs outclassed, in gracefulness and
delicacy, by the Lipid growths --the
allverr.white, pink, and purple sea. -
fans that nod beneath the waves is
perfect unison with the aurgit% sea
I�tst the tide ebbe or flows off the
,hors. In semi -tropical and tropical
waters there lie, on the sea bottom,
*oral -line formations of red, vivid
green, bright yellow, brilliant orange,
Jeep brown or virgin white, whoa,
wore form part of an immense sub-
marine kaleidosoope, to which
mycoses add hues that vary from red
End green to yellow and black. To
this riot of color add an abundance
of anemones of exquisite beauty and
4slteacy of color, and the picture is
donaplets, Neptune's sea -gardens are
under the waves and one of thew
lies off Bermuda where submarine
lite lea veritable wonderland. Aa
one treads the ocean 11oor, fish gorg-
eous In blue and purple, green and
red, orange and white, dart by plain-
ly visible even at a depth of twenty
feet. The royal turbot, with Its mag-
nificent coat of sky-blue and orange
shading Into gold, the angel -fish of
almost like coloring, with blue and
yellow streamers, give additional
charm to a scene which the hrilltent-
ly colored parrot -fish, accompanied
by the sergeant -major, In stripes of
black and gold, enhance as they roam
fn and ons or the garden growths on
the ocean bed.
BEAUTIFUL BELL TOWER.
Mountain Lake, Florida, Has One of
Finest Carillons in World.
What is considered one of the
world's most beautiful bell towers Is
to be found at Mouteaiu lake, Flor-
ida. It took five years to build and
houses one of the finest oarillons in
the world.
On an upper floor of the tower da
the bellmaster's room, from which
the bells are played. The present
bellmaster is Anton P,rees, one of the
moat eminent of Belgian artists, who
is In residence at Mountain Lake
from December 1 to May 1 of each
year,
0n"'the next floor is the bell -
chamber Itself, where hange the ca-
rillon, the largest ever cast by its
English makers. There are seventy-
one bells, covering five octaves, the
largest single hell weighing eleven
tons, the smallest weighing 7 lbs.
This carillon has been pronounced by
Jef Denyn, the carllloneur of the
cathedral at Malines, Belgium, him-
self at the head of hie profession, to
be the most perfect, from a musical
standpoint lie has ever heard. The
bells, which may easily be heard ane
mile away, are played each afternoou
and broadcast; they are played at
noon on each Sunday.
Thos have the people of the Unit-
ed States a new place of pilgrimage,
one to which over 10,000 people air.
already Journeying each week, a na.
Ronal shrine that has been develop.
ed through the closest collaboration
of nature and art.
Nowthe basis of a promisrng VEIL
fnduetry, the date palm was ton years
ago little more than a botanical
curiosity in the United States. Ap-
proximately 2,600 acres have been
planted to dates in America while
260 acres are now in commercial
hearing.
Warships vs. Education.
Capper's Weekly bas figured out
chat the $6,000 to 46,000 a day re-
quired to operate one U. S. battleship
would in a year send 2,000 boys and
brio to college, giving each $1,000.
Uniforms for Classes.
A regulation of the Hungarian
iKlalatry of Culture prescribes that
all school gfrle must wear sailor
Mottoes as part of their classroom
attire.
Britain's New Books.
The number of new books publish-
ed in the United Kingdom last year
ass 14,399, or on the average of 46
3eske.s day,.
limbers of Pioneers' tette Are A!1
Ex-('onvicts.
There are all sorts of clubs In
London which call themselves "ex-
clusive," het there is one which real-
ly la exclusive. Its membership lite
present limited to thirty; it is caned
the Pioneers' Club, 1s run by a. wo-
man, and Its members are all ex-
00114'lete,
Ito membership committee is com-
posed of one-time first offenders, wee
"blackball" any pereon seeking ae-
mittance who 1s not one of them-
selves, and any member who has n.tt
the greatest appreciation and adne:-
etton for the club founder, Mist, Mar-
Jeri° E'vnn-rho inaa.
Miss Evan -Thomas, one of the joi-
Heat and most charming people ono
could wish to meet, founded the club
nine yeaes ago as the result of a
chance meeting with a burglar!
Speaking of this burglar, Miss Evan -
Thomas claims him to be one of the
moat attractive mien, both In appear-
ance and manners, she hes ever met.
"Before the war," she says, "he
was Just a kid, without any definite
training, moral or otherwise, and had
drifted Into burglary In much the
same light-hearted way that another
boy would have drifted into running
errands. Then oame the war. Ile
Joined up at once, got his chance,
and made good. Demobilized, he
carne home with a splendid army re-
cord, lots of ambition, and plenty of
grit. But --he had been In prison.
Ile had been a burglar, It was im-
possible for him to find a lob.
"I lilted him and helped him, and
between us we thought out the idea
for the Pioneers' Club,
"At first it was all done by oorre-
apondence, with ocolsional meettns a
in the Crypt of St, Martin's Church
In Traialgar Square, or at All Hal-
lows In Mark Lane. IAA year we
found this house at 285 Old street,
and 1 tools it for the club premises."
It is not very large, but scrupu-
lously clean. One could eat one's
meale oft the floor -boards. It has a
billiard - room, a small library, and
several tables fitted up for ptng-
poug, table croquet, and other social
amenities, including plenty of packs
of cards and ash trays.
Social evenings and dances are
held once a week, To these members
may bring their wives, sweethearts,
mothers, aunts. During the rest of
the week the club is resenvod for
men. All the arrangements and work
of the hoose and club rooms are un-
dertaken by the members, and at-
tended t by them daily,
New members may only be "put
up" by old members, and there is a
period of four months' probation be-
fore any new member is elected. They
have to promise to be honest and
loyal, to play the game, look to the
future, forget the past, and make
good. A defaulting member may only
, re -join the club once. Should he err
a second time his name is scratched
off the books, and in the event of die-
honeety he le expelled for 111*.
WINDOWLESS HOUSES.
Engineer Predicts Than by 1950'll'e
Will Live in Eloctric Meuse..
What was characterized as an elec-
tric house, in which windows wit
have only an artistic value, will be
common by 1960, it was forecast tp
D. E. E. Free, consulting engtnce
in an address dellvered recently b -
fore the Electrical Association ,t
New York. Sunlight lamps, artifice.).
weather and soundproof rooms wi 1
then be the vogue, Dr. Free declared.
Moreover, such houses, with the
electric ventilation and their glare -
less Illumination, in which rays are
given off In controlled proportion to
sunlight, could be provided at pricer,
well within the roach of persons of
moderate means, said Dr. Free.
"Such houses are no dream of
Utopia," he added, "but something
ou which construction could begin to-
morrow if the industry decided to
do it."
13y far the great majority of pres-
ent-day American homes, he contin-
ued, are either too hot or too cold,
too moist or leo dry, too drafty or
too stuffy, and the correction of these
faults, along with those of improper
lighting, will he had, he declared.
,rules 1'orne Outdone!
A one-man submarine which can
search for wrecks on the bed of the
ocean has been built at Milan. It le a
torpedo -shaped boat, 03 feet long and
10 feet wide, with twin propelle,s
operated by electric motors capable
of devcloping 400 horsepower,
The underwater detective sits in a
steel chamber like a conning tow, ',
and a similar chamber behind hint
contains enough oxygen to allow six-
ty hours under the water.
The vessel U equipped with a mov-
able reatchllght, a mechanically -
operated camera for taking photo-
graphs, and a telephone to give the
coarse ,ed distance steered. Dial
reoorde;s give thr depth, and there
e lore to record the tgitogo.