HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1959-04-24, Page 2Since 1866 Serving .the Community First
ablb;tied"at SEAFORTII ONTARIO, every Thur$day inOrning by
• McLean Brea., Publishers
ANDREW Y. 1VIcLEAN, Editgr
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SEAFORTH, • ONTARIO, APRIL.24,, 1959'
ere
Ther:e is unich meritin the On-,
phasis vvhich is placed 'on the Slogan,•
"Buy Canadian". Certainly,. prOVid-.
ing the price is cbnipetitiive, the bene-..
• 'fits whiCh result from :the purchase
--
of Canadian -made produCts are,--farr.
reachin,g.
Pointing -up the argument support-
ing the "Bui‘Canadian" program, is
an interesting story. in _Stelco, the
official publication of the- 8teel
pally of Canada Limited,' whichi•
Canadian chicken pie as an ,exainple..
'There is. more than -just meat,
crust and •gravy in a 'chicken
There are `many forms of employ-
ment,"- '
including:
"Farmers, who raise the grain
feed- tile- chickens:
"Farmers who raise chickenS.
Tran§portation- people .who move
'grain; eggs, liVe 'chickens, dressed'
chickens and Chicken pies. ,
"Manufacturers who make incuba-
tors. and the Material for the
:ingafld.eqUipthent in, which •the
chickens are raised;
•"Paper makers make the
paper for, the packages
"Package 'makers who Make the
.PaCliageS for the pie maker.,
"Printers, who print the packages
"Bakerwho make -the. pie.
"Salesmen: who:sell the pie. •
"Middlemen of inanfkindS,
:ing-bnikers bankers insurance then •
,
'vine salary is torty_dollani "Week but we'd
1
kire anybody snitpid enough to accept it."
• Good, Weather -.En courageS ,EaSy, Money Scheme's
The Acton Free Press recalling , the ,:.merchants - established' in
. . .
busi-
Woes that follow a too ready accept- ,ness" It is hardly to ,add-
ance of the_ storyApid by_the'door4O.,, that by dealing in .;:thiS ...fashion the •
door_sal_esmari,:-has2-a-wordL-of-,adAxie-e--L,-:,--purCliaSer-harecoiose--i-T-2ar.1-AhTnT'tTL-7-
_
which is particularly apt at this time , goes wrong You know where yoUr„..,
of year: local Mei-chant; 'Yonr. local supplier
"With the good Weather, a Strange ' -
breed- of.-m-ent-U7d7*-6-riiefir wff1 be a7indin-,entif-there.,,is a complaint. It
abroad = they are already.showing is only 'common sense' to buy wisely
themselves at the doors Of holiSeholds by buying locally.
in nearby towns, possibly, even. here. •
"These are the people who believe ewspaper Ads• Las•t•
• the old saying, 'There's a sucker born • •
every rninute', and. enjoy going about Roy Thomson, prominent news -
the .,country proving the truth of it paper publisher who .is the owner
"One style of Salestalk they have. and pubhsher of the Scotsman in; Ed -
is that they .can sell you something-_ -___inburgh,-,Seotlanct as well as a long
cheaper than you'. can get it anywhere - list Of dallies,. and weeklies in Can -
else. Then, when you take them up
on the offer, they eitheileave a shod-
dy piece of merchandise with you, or
they go into the second -part of the
spiel, which runs down the first pro --
duct, and substitutes a more -expen-
sive one. Too many people seem to
think that because they approved
purchase of the cheaper mo el, they-, phasi§ and in the tone bf voice lie
are honor -bound to pay for the more chooses. It is not at the Mercy Of
expensive itemsomeone else's diction or Manner. It
"The other style of salestalk is the does not die on a sound wave, clisaP-
one that suggests some sponsorship pear with the fleetness of passing
by the government. These men__ gen- traffic, or go dark at the flip of a
erally say they are goVernment in- switch.
spectors, and go on to inspect a chinl- "Ilere is a message that will last
ney or a roof- Then they decide it in the hands of its recipients as Jong-
., needs repair, and they, say it has to as the- choose tO keep it, to read and
be done at once. They extract a discuss and re -read. It is on hand in
cheque, or cash from their victim;do the home to be read at any hour of
a poor job of repair (if they, do any- the day or night that snits the Con -
thing at all), and then vanishvenience of, the reader, and if there
"Either of this type of ‘salesinan' are tWo or ten in that family they
or 'inspector' is dishonest. all May read when and as they choose
"Don't you be a -sucker!" Or if they wish they may have fain-.
The Acton paper concludes its com- ily consultation :whew and as they
merit by advising its readers to 'deal choose—for the advertisement lives
with the people you know. 13tY from until it is destroyed at their desire."
•d-a;,h.a.is:.this.titeafiii the Scotsman
Advertiser
"Here-iS''.the only medium,' (your
.newspaper)',: that the public. in -sur-
eYS'.,OVe.r ..oy11.ave.: said they
want, with- adVertising, not,without.
Here IS the niediuni tha speaks a
merchants ..ineSsage. with
vptitiT.SALt*
• RUY NOW AND ON.:.:
INDOOR AND OUTDOOR PA[Nt PRODUCTS'
0:w isthe time to think;�f all tha,t'Spil.ng.
- Paintingthat should be done 'around Your -
'
home, barn or Place of busines&--
WON'T DRIP
RUN or SPILL
• e 13, est
PAINT
-T-O-Ttset
THAT - WO1‘I'T DRIP t
Avaitable hit Over 75 Shades'
For F1j, s8,, Gloss, Vinyl, Latox an
Bliterrof Ext,erior House Paints.
OlVE 70
•14104 GL;S;ENA/40,
o otOlTE•-
our. Searle °THIX" Dealer
D BLIN, ONT.
tarly.Dip .
When Bob Argyle..vvas helping to
put tooIs int a.'beat„..at.'Groderich:
harbor en 1111onday; heslipped and.
fei1intteicywaer. • A goad .
,SWiMMet-; 'lie-'scrarritiled:baok
the' d.ock.,aild. ,safety after: lininten-'
tiOnally, ,openingthe,.swituming•seaL,...
onLaf
, • .
Receive -Resignation,
.
',Thef.elintoir Publie.Sehoet, Board
as -receive a resignation • from
Mrs. Thomas Prydei who .pilanS to
tsachat the publie school,. . RCAF .
Station,. Centralia,..-thiS. Septernber..
is, means thatone teacher, is re-
united for Ythe,Sclipol Staff.- 'Salary
sChednie.'at..the Clinton .schOl has
been fixedmirdmum
$3.-,000;'>in axininur $4,600,, and .,
an-
nual increnient: of: $200 'An
, mace: of :$100. per, year is given, lot'
.exPerience;.:. up.: 'to eight ,
• dlinton News -Record_ ".'
•NaMe.,,Seerotary*easpirerL.,_„....
At -a- Special, nieethigof..the board,
ef.'direptors.Of .the,Zurieh
inal::SOCietY :last Tlitirsclay'night:,
Mrs..Ilitbert..Schilbe.Vres:appOinted.:
fhe position Of: SecretaryAreas.:'.
nrer,ef t.he .Organization;. replacing
Elinore,F. EloPp, who has retired,
after: 35 yrfsrvice: Mrs.
Sehilhe takenyer7-th-i-)36SitiOn• .
inirriediatelY;'.as there. is -a :rat, herr
of ,iniportant ntatters . to -be a lid
'ed. to sin the' nearfuture. She s:
had cenaiderable .experience at.
Mg secretary, sverk:Zurich,,
7ens.News.
InVestigate:Sewera- °
.At the .regidar April meeting of
the Village'couneil a „tetterwas
rebeived E. •,Berry,:
'Of• the ': 'Ontario.' 'Water: :ReseureeS
Conimission,I.pointing out the next
Step Jr' the matter .6f.Sevvage,
posal' ii Lueknow. Dr, Berry • stat‘.
od he 'was' arranging. to ' have...an"
VieW.the Wholequestion Of •SeWag'e
wprks ancl,partigul,arly on methods
• From The Hiu•on Expositor
Aftril 27, 1:934 -
Fireinen were called out on two
Ise-alarms--last-week. •nes::
day evening a call came in from
the box oil East Walliam Street at
the old Orange Hall, and early Sun-
day morning' another alarm was
turned in from a box on.. Railway
Street. In each case it was thought
the alarm vvas purposely, turned in.
• Messrs. J. Wesley Beatffe,-13ev-
erley F. Christie, 3. W.,Pree, Gar-
net Free, and N. -Knight were in,
Hamilton on Wednesday • atten mg
a demonstration of meat eutting in,
Mr, Benjamin Snell, Constance,
while trimming a colt's' foot on
Monday, had the" misfortune ,to
lose ,part of the forefinger on his
left hand and injUring some of the
others. •
Afthert. . 13_01 and
Threat -le? CO: Ltd. of Seatorth,
purchased the MacDonald Thresh-.
er Co., manufacturers of,threshing
machinery; Stratford,
A. neW business will open up in
the Frayne Block in Exeter at -the
end of This week, under' the_ name
of "The People's Cash Shoe .Store."
Mr. Ralph (Cooney) Weiland and
Mrs, Weiland are visiting .at the
lome,of his,parenfs, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Weiland, -:Egroondville,
after a successful season With the
Detroit Red 'Wings. •
Froth The Huron Expositor
-
- • April 23, 1909 ,
Mr. Will Gillespie, of Exeter,
has lately ° suffered _considerably
from an affliction of the throat
and an operation was SuCcessfully
performed by Dr. McGillicuddy,
when a foreign substance 'was re-
moved., ,which it is hoped will re-,
eve the trout) e. -
• Mr. J. Devereaux, of Tuck-
ersmith, had ,a narrow eseape front
serious injury. on Saturday Morn-
ing last, by being attaeked by a
bull. A bull, belonging to L. G.,
Van Egmond, was hi the
stockyards, here and Mr. Dev-
ereaux walked into the yards when
the bull attackedhiin. It struck
ef dispoSal -env. asis on the
feasibility 'of. a lagoon.: Dr, -Berry
• statedbe Would also dedi With -the
question of buildingSnelf`WOrkS in
,stages, 'sothat the .ebst.. Wilt not
be to "
, • -Use Now Adthton
fn,rchtwilr.use7itS7-irew additieir.
the building ..for „.the first tune,
on. Sunday. The 'new.. •two-storey
•wing was.offidially opened on Sun-,
'daYInerning -by Rev john McNab,
D 'Of Toront07-inoderator
.,the General- Assembly ofthe Pres-.
.byterian Chinch in; Canada... The
additiea of. Cement iblOck,and: brick
laced ceristruetien.' measures r.403.00 '
feet, aad, wilt be :used for
•Sunday School. rooms; new .choir
rooms. and a . small ,assetribly'redria.
•Anew idtelien:.haS also. been. in-
stalled, , this. area, DeitgoedbY
R. H. . who -.with • NV. .T.'
Cruickshank headed ..the buikling
Cominitted, :the' iieWS23,000 seetion
wasetected hyWilfred"White; gen-
MeNah Was :guest: Speaker . at -„the
'inettiing Service and brought.greet-
.ings:..floin.the Geper,a1,, Assembly,
.4,-,Winghapi."AdVarice:TimeS. .•., •
- '
Try To Lwense
Steps :are being ',taken te 'tern
the croiiie. :patients', wing of Alex,
,anelra7Marine--and-General JIOspi
tal :into.: a lieensed nursing: name.,
This ;is. being ' done in Order. ,:t6
solve A 'sOiaus:iiiraxiqiat :problem
arose...after"the . new Ontario.
hosintal maurance plan . went into
.operatiOn: Tfie problein came to
liead,.after • . the "'' Ontario R�apital
Services :Corninission served ..notice
• that it will'. not Pay benefits for
Most of the: elderly Chronic pa-,
tientS,„ now • in the local hospital.
Out.of.31 ehronie Patients here,
only One,has dchnitelY recog-
nized by the -,conarnisaion.: On .
'Commendation of a Commiss
doctor,- there is A possibility th e
',Mere 'will' be -deelared-,eligible for
the ,hasPital insurance benefits.=
Goderiah Signal -Star ,
, • •
EARS. :.AGONE
• Interesting items 'gleaned from,
The Huron Expositor of 25, 50
75 years ,ago.
MM. and `knocked him into a niiid
hole "and, was about to gore 'him
when L. G. Van Egmond and Robj„,.
time, came to his rescue and drove
the animal off. To their assistance
aid. the fact that, he 'fell into a
• Soft, hole saved Mr. Devereaux
from seriousinjury., He, was 'hurt
about the abdomen and back, and
although. still sore, he is able to
be 0ut and around. -
• Mr. William Patteron has sold
his cottage on James Street to
Mrs McGregor. The price. paid
• Wasr$.111Qn. Daley• '
•
M , Who has. been
employed- with the Seaforth
ing company for a. number Of
years', has purchased the cartage
business and outfit of Mr: James
Hughes.
* *
-From'i-The--Ilur25,onifittmxpositor._.:-
April
• Mr. Peter Mitchell, had, his left
hand very severely:injured ;by
coming in contact with the mach-
inery in conneetion -with' a saw in
•Coleman's sawmill on Friday.
• It is said the Salvation Army has
made over 300 converts, since. they,
pened_fire in this_town
Mrs. J. Shipley;.of Ilullett, near
Clinton, has a hen sitting,, and
whenever it goes eff the nest 'a
cat takes its place: -
The market "vices during this
Week Were; butter, tub, 16c to
ise lb..; .eggs, 14c; flour, per 100.
lbs., -$2,60 to $2,65; pork, per 100
lbs., $7 to $7.50; and potatoes,: -pe
busltel; 55c to Mc.-
Egmondville river has, been fill-
ed • with lake -suckers, and the
sportsmen, for miles around have
had . a high time 'spearing"and
'Mr2-George Whiteley was offer-
ed $1,50Q by two 'different, persons
for his "SWallow" horse last week,
buQelid not accept the tempting
offea•
pond, iieS
Be'• r
pears at present ie. be the head-
quarters for black bass. Some of
the.sportsinettwere busy t14 Week
with the spear', •
McDuff:
OTTAWA
• Report
THE BOWS, TIM NOUS,
:AND .QUEBEC-
• OTTAWA -In' spealdng of earn-
ings, it's the . bonus that's nice;
but When, it conies to taxes, give
us the "bonus" of a minus every
time. Finance Minister Donald
•Fleming spoke of precions few
minuseswhen he:. presented his
tax ;:increasing budget.;:. 'Actually,
there. was- one -Inge minus he dis-
creetly did not mention, a Saving
to the taxpayers of Canada ,of $50;-
000;000. • TbiS :the. Mtn
us", the ,amount of federal aid
,w,hich.Quebec refuses to accept and
for which the taxpay,ers therefore.
don't have te-pay, Federal taxpay• --
eh in .Quebec contribute their
Share,..of Course to federal aid ac-
cepted by the other provinces. -
The amount of the Quebec Minns
has soared this year. because Que.,
.hec has not joined the Hospital' In!
suranCe Schemes a saVnig td the
federal -goVernment of ant estimat--
ed $30,000,900;,.Rough .estimates of
other... miniiSes., Owing.' -to. Quebec'
non -participation are: '$8,000,000 in-
uneinPloyment relief;! $3;000,000 in
aid. .to, techniCal and, .'.vocatiOnal.
training; - perliana, ,-$5;900,000..
Trans -Canada: Highway.* aid:. $i,-
500,000 in the Roads-tp-Aesources
program; and the teat in'•lesser
jeint, Progranis Sueh as 'forest in-.,
ven.tory aadprotection. The feder-
al.:government does not save the
more than -$7.5000,00.(0n, University
grants to Quebec.; alitiongh,..these
are mitaecepted by .Quebec ubi
'versities, they are paid MM.:a trust
fund against the day When t4e.110,-.
accept- them.
Tte ,
Qiiebed. Minns ainounts to a
little- More than ,either the .$45,-'
.000,o00 which Mr. Fleming expects -
,-to collect:in full' year through
.higher ,..ineome taxes on the ,$.4:67;
000;00er im higher taxes ..an cigar-
eftes, cigars' and 'liquor; .86...Que=
bee might.'be. Seen .aa'' Saving:Abe
t,axpay-er-frotriLdouble_theinexcas-,,
-6=n-either ot' these fields
from a higher deficit or higher tax.
-eain some-OtherfieldS..Its im-
possible to say juSt lio* Mr. Flem-
ing ,'Would '.haVe-raiSed --the extra
money if he'd :had to. ,
Next.• year he will probably. at'
least.. e,toraiSe the.. Money for
-Quebecfk. share -of the ..ilespital' In.-,
-Snrance Selierrie. Indications from
'Quebec have:been that'. the .prov-.-
ince vi1lfind some way ,of ,jenung -
and, OttaWa officialdom is... cotk..
• Vinced that it,will. premier Maur-
ice DiiplesSis is- due,,,,te go to.. the,
cotmtry an electieho next year,
and the. ,betting that,: hospital
insurance will be On .ita :Way.
• There • ha S' also beeti an indiel-f;
tic* that ,the governMent..partY irf
• Quebec: may taldiara-,-newleek
-at the question of federal:proviii-:
"cial. relations, to now. Mr.',
Dunlessis' , National ; Wen has
' sPUrned. all and any federal': money
'withs t gs 'attached"- which.
they feel •interfere rfth the. extent
of self-gOverninent guaranteed, t�
'the:provinces in the. BritiSh.Nerth
America Act of .1467, Canadals,
b .a s c. 'constitutional docitnient,
-They':held-that • inciirSiona. pn the
letter of the censtitution In' order
•to: Participate. in, ,§07, the„ Trans- .
C a .n- a da Highway Agreement,,
.might set a 'precedent, for inter-
ference 'with- religious, language
and education rights.„ which are
regarded' as the ba'sic guarantee
to the " French-speaking Canadian,
minority.. '
. in'the budget debate in. the
,Commons, MauriceAllard," the
on
Cservative MP- ele Cted• .'
tional 'Union Sher-
brooke, suggested . that . this_ int:
passe conld, be broken by amerid-
ing the "material" parts of -the
'• BNA At. Since 1867, he said,, Can-
ada has outgrown the constitution •
economically,. It should be antend-
cd to provide for 'Dominion -Pro-
vincial economic ce-operatiOn,
while still guarariteenig ekclusive
proyincial jurisdiction.* the field'
of -education. Quebec could they
• co-operate in schemes, such -as
Hospital Insurance, • Trans,Cariada
ilighway And Roads -to -Resources
without feeling that -it :was under -
education rights.
:One can assume that Mr. Allard
did not make his ,suggestion with-
out consultation with 'colleagnes in
the federal.party and in the Na-
.tional tYnion. If it is indeed -ac-
.ceptable to both- federal and Qiie-
bec governments and wins approv-
al born the, other provinces, the
Allard proposal could be the key
to putting- A solid constitutional
base under the rainshaelde admin-
-istrative structure, of the etonomic
side of Cariacliati federallam. More
ininiediately important; it eould
relieve the greatest strain put on
federalism in receht* years - the
intransigence •of Quebec. -
The extra three per eent share
of the income tax seems to be all
the'prevint es- will-gereirtzof -Ot-
tawa until present Dominion -Pro-
vincial agreements "expire in 1962.
The boost'fronis 10 to 13 -per cent -
is being carried on -for anoter
year and the goverment sehhs
to have droppedthe idea of, resum-
ing the short-lived Dominion -Pro-
vincial conference of November,
1957. The,plan now. is.probably to
hold the conference_before the fed-
eral election' expected in 1962; so
that the Conservatives can go to
the country with A "new deal" for
the provinces.', '
_Delay an trying to fhid a so n-
eon 'to Dominion -Provincial prob-
lems gifes the government time to
try to:workout a plan which will
include;Qiibec. Most of the 50
Quebed Conservatives in, the Com -
Mons seem to -have been -allow-
in a 'trough between their Na-
tional -Union "mentors Quebec
and thir Conservative mentors in
Ottawa. But the Allard 'speech and
teniarks from -ND leaders in Que-
bec ---to the eifeet that the present
federal government IS 'Sympathetic
to Quebec's stand --, indicate that
plenty of work toward a rapprodlte,
merit is going on behind 016 8e,ems:
he delay in 'strengthening the
, woefully weak Quebed,representa-
-SUGAR ANIP SP.IC
By 7. (Bill) B. T. SM EY
I have a big- brother. I've hacl
bhf ever since I eau remember,
and he's always been big. Right
now, he's about „six feet twa, and
weighs about. 190. When J was 12,
he was at least seven feet tall, and
stronger than Jack Delnpsey.
Next Week I'm' going'to Toronte
to see him off for South America.
As long as I can- remember; -I've
been _4geing him off 'for, some out-
landish, exotic place or other.
, -
1.1VS--7�ne,:of those characters -
whose figtiratiye necks. chafe un-
der the -tight collar ' of eiYilized,
In another ray. arid .agei..
he'd. have been a. buffalo. hunter,
Or a. buecaneer,a lumberjaek, a'
goldseeker, a sailor, or.a cow.bey• ,,
But living .in this stuffy, inhibit,
ed, :'colorlessi Canada the iritellee,
tulars tell, us- weinhabit, he has.
Merely „been able t� be: a° banker,
• a .;hardroa nailer,a soldier' who:
.loSt- an :eye in. World War a
shift boss in Canada's", first uran-
iume mine iri the far tiorth,.;_a..Well-:.
'ephstruetibn: superinten-
dent, and is OW .• off -to-Sitrinain.
develoP ,a gold mine' -Pretty
•.We're ,fdrici Of each Otlier„ as
.,brothers go. For.the past 20.:years
we've kept in touch, ina .deStiltory.
• sort of way, Seeing each other-otice
or twice a year, semetimeS, not for
twOnt. three .Years -at a time. When
I'm hard, up, hp 'lends, me money,
.atid Inever pay ithaek,:: When he,'S
hard up lend him A 'syirmliath'eti6
But .fie'.. annoys:, Me,. thoroughly
EyerYthne.11.,,think,I haVe. hint -Set;
tied doWiljn a, geoct,'Job";, with se-
curity, a finure,,a-Perlaionplaitand
• all the attachments, be informs
.me out ofthe'bine that he's jug'
quit and: iS:i' heading n'for a jeb.:, at
Great orDutefr Guiana,
or ,soiiieplace. •
•
;Another' thing .,thatneVer, 'faits
to: :infuriate rite is hisattitude ..that
ain 'a skinny; freckle -faced, scar
ed,' :rornantic;, 1 oolish ndiriadO
:anate..SMali boy of :nine,. who needs'
:protection: -• What bugs . -the; • of
course, is that he doesn't. realize'
Ahat.Poi.' looking afterhim' all the
lae's looking after
Me, 'This eaa beasarritating as•
having .. ladY take'l ye-near/lit
and lead- you „across the. ,street,
right in front of a .. pack of .:Bety
' '
•
'We disagree'. on Practically ..
erything, .',.Except . thefact „that;
'foreweWere-irrarriekbeek inthe
days when we'd Meet in a London
Dab for a Jeavetoietber.''''.Ald I'd
•' my. Whole. '1;daire. ,taking, the'
fat, giggly one, or :the 1nean,
scrawny One, While theitving dells
went:. fpr my 'big,. geed -looking,.
.ctirlyhead.ed.brpther.,:„•,.. •
• And•of course, spealung of wives,
my big -.brothercouldn't marry a
nice; intelligent; reliable, hayvvire.
-Canadian: girl as did.' 011_31o;
not him. He had to be ,different
and inarrY a nice,. intelligent,
haywire -Dutch gut
•* * '*.
_
ietinI mighty good
t -hewWasasa nevert°nie
Wh
• forgive him. 1 mean forget it. I'm
One of the best oarsmen, in Canada,
and if my -big brother hadn't let
flier -ow him around for hours, and
hours, while :he trolled' for trout,
Might have been a mediocre man
with the
* *
•
Andhe taught me practically all.
I- know -about guns. Every Satur-
day we'd go hunting in the Long
Swamp. --He'd let me carrythe .22
rifle all the way to .t.he, bush, and
after he'd- hunted there for a. eou-'
„pip of hours, all the way home.
Sometimes, he'd even let me have
a -shot at a tree, Which . probably
explains why I've never shot any,
-thing but a tree since despite num-
erous blasts at all manner of wild -
0
Then he used to let ie helis.hlta
of -interesting things,
Sometimes, ois, s tor m y winter
nights; he'd even let me deliver
his paper routeLAnd 1 remember
one time; when he was making
maple syrup, he'd let me go out
every day and _empty the sap
cans, and just as like as not, he'd
giye me a drink of sap, When -
Huron Juniors
. • , , . •
Study Meetings
auro.- County Junior Institutes
attended their annual rally at Sea
-
forth ,Distriet High 'School for a
prograni of group and panel dis-
cussiens focusing attention on the
preparation and conduct of rivet-
ings,
- Shirley' McAlliater-,"- home
economist for -Huron, shewed a
film on parliamentary procedare.
In a program planning period; lcd
by Miss Eleanor Walsh, ideas pre -
•seated bymembers were chosen
as discussion topics. The selectd
topiCs were; to you choose,
topics for your meetings?"' sug-
gested by Mist Shirley, Morley;
"Different methods of presenting
topicS," by Miss iiorss . Johnston,
and..."Recreation and joint meet-
ings," by Mits ',Marjorie Papple.
• A panel, composed of Miss San-
dra Doig; Miss Helen Wilson and
Miss Ethel RieS, with Mrs. Me -
Allister as chairman,- clis,eussed the
Junior Institute constitution arid
the Junior Institute's relationship
to the Women's Institute. '
In charge of • recreationwere
Miss Muriel Gowdy, Miss Doris
Brock and Miss Doreen Brock.
Miss RieS, president of the Hur-
on County Junior Institute, was -
chairman.
tion. in the cabinet and giving the
Qgebee MP'sa focal'oint probab-
ly also results from the, tittle 'tak-
en to •find a "Quebec police?,
When. ono is found, 'Some figure
will emerge, as the Champion of it
and a4 Dief b k ' "right -bend
inan" in .(tuebee,
brought the big ,buclmt
never think aoything, of. it,,,
*
He certainly -taught me ,rilenty, -
that brother of mine. Fortunately,
I Was able to turn a great deal of
it to the bet advantage in train-
ing -my little, brother, with whom
we shall deal on some other occa-
sion There is a kid who doesn'tt
know how lucky he was to have,
not one, but two big brothers, to
teach him things. . •
Anyway, my big brother is head,
'nig- , somewhere ,south of -the
Equator, and I want to be sure to -
see him_ before he leaves.
to -do hirn a favour. He's got a '
lot of bulky. Stuff that would "only .
impede him in the juogle, and if'
he did get it there 'it might -go
inouldyin that hot, damp climate.
Like his Zeiss binoculars,TV set,
Leica camera, that beattiful Mau.
ser rifle, all his fishing tackle, that
shotgun with the silver mountings,
mid' a lOt of old heavy stuff like
We have lots of • storage space
around our place and it would be -
nice to know that someone in the
"family was looking atter his•
useless junk like that just in Qase,
the fever, the „poisonous snakes,
or the 'Indians, uh . you know,
ank
o r s
- weepy a,rticle contriebostedea.'
by. m
._ a member of th
• forth and.DiStiict Ministerial
_ALseciation.
,
' 03y H.. "AA/VIES,
St., 11,-Aotnlas' Anglican ;Churchi,
• To the Christian.* arrival of --
Spring '.becomes: a -very' intimate
pictare,of the 'Resurrection'Faith'....
For if the hard, frozen earth of -
winter'. can .hold the . 'Promise
-delicate' spring flowers ,and 'Warm
surnmer ' days; if God an work
this Miracle, then it .becomes Iess
difficult t� understand how God
can take our cold, setfish human
'hearts . and.' transform -them . with .
the warm Joilsings,ofilleavem----It----
beciaiiie's'rless: difficult to, under:
standthat though. inan's May ,
--seem-to--be-held.4ri4the2grip-Of..A.n.-- •
unfriendly, enemy, 'Oed's go-a:Hine
will come When it will be released
and : floOded .,with -the inirniile Of.
HisLoving PnrPOSo.
,
'In, Spring, we always • seem to
stand on :,:the. brink •of.'diseoVery,..
and'yet it is not the, discoveryof
the `unknovin'.. .0iin hearts 'antici-
'pate With ',.delight.' What •.ive .,:knoWT
is Teeming; we; even make our sec',
ret • Plans in " anticipation of the
warm summer day s which We feel•
re ee arti'wilt:yieage b Weh
i:the' ra• the enjoyment‘ai; • •
•
all•the good things summer holds
ifiGo• AdsritsL.rpee.ii' Il-i'%flea.cnr;irreisc.ttiobne;Faith,
More than the ,prorniSe of heavenly'
things; it becomes 'their very pres.-
ence. God's' purpose is, notsoroe'
far-off Divine 'event towards which ,
We look. ;with longing; it becemes.
-.the conteinfOrary '
luirrian 1iistor3r., andhuman life to-,
day.' Wedo.not watch 'and Wait.
•
forit witheut faith; we eagerly an-
ticipate,- its lconning -, and plan our
lives as if it were already here:
• The Gad wbo .is able to 'bring to
the. .service -of His Purpose all the
.mYriads of forces, ,invOlved
:change -from .winter to suminer,.is
quite capable- of bringing ..to, the
service of His ,PurPose, all -the mY-
riads of thuman.elements' involved
in th change from a world 40m-
inated .bk man to a world ruled
'by His Christ: . Christians are peo-
ple should he living- in eager
--anticipatiolt 'oi this CERT
change. This .is ,our Resurrection..
Faith -the Faith which the World
today •needs "So desperately. ,
.1n the middle of -.winter 'all, the frees of. nature • seemed to- be ....
denying' the-poSsibility, of siimmer, '
and yet once, agaiii it ishere.--And-
"So in our World today, 'all the fore -
es of the human heart and the
man mind' seem to.be",denying the
possibility. of . Christ's Kingdom,
and Yet through Rim' We are tot..
'only certain ofits coining, we are
cortain of its presence,-
We are livirig teday in a verit-
able Winter, of denying,
Political-
ly, our worlddenies the 'brother-
hood of man; -in economics; our ,
world 'denies the equality- of man
and substitutes the service of self
for the service of'.God;
our -world -abandonst---the, responsis:-
bility of the individual for the mot', -
al complacency of the- mob; Mtel-
lebtually, our world:exchanges the'
Light ,f ReaSon. kr the statistics
of. ektiediency; aesthetically, our
• world forsakes. the beautiful; for
• the eizeiting; aesthetIcally, our -
'World 'wanders in a fog of stpersti- •
tien and the,black•magic of ehande.
-Not only does our world elettY God
the right, te be; not only
it deny God His right' of poSses-
sion, but transfers His title.to it-
self. And these , cold whiter, winds
of. denial, 'IraVe "ehilled our world
With- a joyless * hope .of survival,
frozen over the" -well -springs of
itlifet7Wthheitefl,luwittastnelagndvtli
stranded osi s
with little. eagerness ' for summer,.
• to come..
Vet the Christian' knows' that God
• can change all this -transform ancl
revitalize human history and hu-
man .hearts; melt the snows Of hiu. .
man indiff,ererice and. selfishness'.
,thaw out the 'soil _of our cold caf4
Ottlated reedandlust, to let the.
flowers grow. Jle' Will send down
the rain and sun and touch the-
werld with the miracle of Its life- --
giVing, 'until 'man; -lost in eager-
anticipatiOn of 'Christ's :world that
is -In be, 'will forget that it is not:
hoe, and plan his life as 11 tt'Were..