HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1959-07-10, Page 2Since 180 Serving the _Community First
ublished at SEAEORTR, OliTABIO, every Thursd7 !limning by
McLean Bros., Publishers
ANDREW McLEAN, Editor
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SEAF,OR'TH, ONTARIO, JULY 10;1959
a N,Zta
Self Help May Be Answer To Crop Surpluses
Member, of -
Canadian Weekly
Newspapers .
Association .
One of the most effective self-h,elp
organizations is the, Dairy Farmers
of Canada. By Sustained year -in,
Tear -out promotional campaigris,• fin:
anbed by the- producers theniselVesi
the. dairy industry• has raised the con-
sumPtion of dairy products. in -Can-
ada to new levels.
Typca1 of the promotions is the
"June is Dairy Month" campaign
• just completed. The dairy story was
told in thousands of words in papers
and magazines across Canada. Dur-
ing other months in the year em-
phasis is on a partibular product, as
for instance, the "October Cheese
Festival".
Time Magazine2 -thl1s how United
States farmers, too, are Vlore and
niore-tryingpri va te -enterprise -meth.-
ods to sell crop surpluses. Br-oducers
are appreciating the fact they, as in-
dividuals, have a responsibility to:.
dispose of their production. Like the
d. dairy farmers in Canada, they' are
' •
assessing themselves - th _provide
funds with which to carry -on sell-
,
ing campaigns.
• One of. the mos_t -aggressive farm.
groups in this field has been the
Nebraska Wheat Growers Associa-
tion. Four years ago, alarmed at the
-loss of overseas markets, the Nebras-
kans started levying a quarter -cent-
.
a -bushel tax on all -the wheat produc-
ed and sold in their State. The funds
were -used to run wheat laboratories
in Lima and New Delhi to test ocal
• grains, in the process show mills
• what good .U.S. wheat grades to or-
der to make' more nutritious, more
• bakable bread.
Employment and Community Depend on on Profits
Profits in manufacturing industry -ed citizens to uphold, defeml and in -
slumped badly in 1958, for the second terpret theroleof profits' in a' coin-
-- successive year, the St Marys Jour- petitive society vigorously and un -
nal -Argus points out At 4.6 cents' -ashamedly. Instead, there is w ten-
oi sales dollar they were easily defieY-t-O-§-6-ft-peda-TI.
the lowest in the eleven years the gize for them:
Canadian Manufacturers' Associa-Such an approach has nothing to
tion has been surveying them. - Of commend -it Industrfs-profits,--af--
this .4.6 cents, shareholders got 26 ter = all, are the very lifeblood of our
cent's, the remaining 20 cents being economic system and the reason our
retained in the business. standard' of living is what it is. With -
Unfortunately, all too few -people out profits there dan be no prosper- -
• realize that the tninufacfuring pro- •ity, no expansion. In short, from the- '
fit Margin is as modest a.s_it-is. Num- stiklpoint of its employees and •-of
erous opinion polls; for instance,Thave the community- at large, the worst
• for a long time consistently reported thing Ay_ business, he a sP1.4.11'
'Impressed -by the wheat -campaign,
- • , ,
the Grain Sorghum ProducersAsso,
• ciation of Amarillo ,debided:to spend
$3.:0,000• in the -next, twoyears to en-
. dgorage European, feed mills and
•far -niers tO ;:buy more coarse
•
'Financed cotton producers
"Miss Maid of Cotton" is visiting
C-Ountries around the world demon-
° strating the benefits of U.S.A. grown
cottoii in an effort to boost ,the cur -
'rent 5,700,000 -bale foreign market.
• Feed -rowers -are prowling Europe
, looking for new markets to serve
Europe's growing livesteck industry.,.
•free samples of U.S. fried chicken,.
, cigarettes arid- doughnuts are being
--handed out at trade, -fmrs;--Tlahan
,spaghetti manufacturers are being
U.S. wheat, instead- of - their tradi-
tipnal but scarce durum wheat.
As in Canada, such re efforts a still
small. But there is enough evidence
in the results obtained by the dairy
farmers here to suggest that an an-
swer to the farm surplus problem
may, well lie in a move away from
owing crops to d -un .htli& goy-
erifinent and toward producing what
people want to, buy.
an't Blame the Bull:
A meeting of_parents was_called to
discuss the poor quality of milk be, ,
ing served in schools. "What this
town needs," shouted one mother, "is
clean, fresh pasteurized milk and we
must take the bull lv the horns and
• demand it."—(Wolfville-,- N.S Aca-
dian).
that while most of -those questioned store, a farm, a gas station„ or ,a
thought thatc.a "fair" Profit for the large corporation employing thou -
manufacturer would be from 15 to sands can do is'faillo -make 'both a
20 cents on the dollar, a big major- bontinuing profit and a good one.
Ity- firmly believed that manufactur-
ers actually took- more than twice.:
that much! -
The journal -Argus goes on to point .`-". It is 'disquieting to learn that im- ,
• out that this wild (but Widely held) • *migration is down.. , With Canadian
misconception' doubtless goes far, toexports-,facing serioup- difficulties in
explain many things, including the 'world markets, the importance of
bad odour in which profits are held adding to Canada's domestic market
by many Canadians and the allied by -increased immigration cannot be
notion that wage Inereases are pos- over -emphasized. Immigration adds ;
sible without price -increases. It may , far more people to number of con -
also be a factor : in the seeming re- sumemin the conntry thanit does to
luctance of some businessmen, poll- 'n-urnber of those seeking employ -
educators and other inform-' ment.7--(Shneoe Reformer),
Fewer Consumers
1957. DODGE IVIA-YEAIR ii -DOOR SEDAN
1956 DPDGE FOUR'- DOOR
1'955 --DODGE IVIAYFAIR 4 -DOOR SEDAN
1955 PLYMOUTH CLUB cpupt,
19.53„FORD TWO -DOOR
1952 PLYIVIOUTII SEDAN
1952 OLDSMOI3ILE SEDAN
19§7 FARGO 1/240N EXPRESS •
ritoo-i67
owclItte *tors
DODGE DE SOTO SALES and SERVICE
4
Seaforth ,
FHALPAST TEEN
rtiouGHT: mff TEWPHONE
WAs Oar OF, ORDER ,p,4a.:43ur
ir$ FoR4 YOVI.
7, 7
SEE
THE COHN
Win SafetY,AWards1„..,_s_s' the„Bienntal•ProVincial Legion ion -
Two girls :PfSITS,S, NO. '11 East vention,.-Cluiton News Record
Wawanosh-; 'Henry,. , of the •'••:•Chosen Qu •
een
'senior- 'class; - and . Marion- Youngs
-iiluts-ofstliesjniiior-elass-,--tron Etats- ier•year-oldHExetersgirls Mar,
fie s s afetySaWards sat the. Wingliani- cho s en Tris
Ccqlegiate. Institute on •Wetinesday, County; Yeuth' for Christ 'queen --at
everring, of last week Sheila's prize: ;a . banquet Wingham United
was . reeord player, and Marion Church.,SattirdaY nights ;She. ''vvaa
wen a ra.die. The .contest was 'Snits' selected from arneng • 1:4,009.:' high.
sored by thelyinghani detachment ,schopl, students - and. members =o
.the provhicial police, ad was ,seven ;Bible clitha in three connties
carried on ;among somei; 2,0 pub- on the basis Of .activity 'church
lie" school pupils of: 'Wingha and 'Work apdsscholastic achievement
,sturtninding districts.-7-Blyth,,Stand:' Daughter of Mr; and Mrs. Gerald
ard'• , Marilyn was crowned,
; ' ' • a ,deterriony witnessed:by 150 :per,-
juvestigate ,Accident sons at the banquet. She rebeived.
,ProvinCial Constable Ross 'Ball. Yeuth. Por Christ Bible ; 'and a
was'. Called lathe scene of anaccis dozens red roses -Exeter TiMess
dent • about ' one-half:inailesseutli_sef, Advocate.' -
Lucia:low-over' the' weekend. A , car S.'ss'rss' „•
s,
driven' -by. William ;:Miigford, of ils" .15 -um ',in.'
l‘iewgate Street,. GOderich irag' in theedore •,SathtsSon of *lir:. mid
collision, with .a vehicle -driven by Mrs.s Fred sam sEdward Street
John Irwin 11,R, 2 ,Lucknow. The received a nasty cut oh, the under
Irwin car was being owe when e o is arm ‘in an accident, a
1Viagfords pulled into the left-
hand lane to:, pass, and, :Mrs Irvvin's
car swung- ant into the =path of his
ear; -No one was hurt, but damage
is estimated --to 'amount to
Goderich Signal Star
-
, .
, •
Captures Speaking Honors -
r
Miss Barbara Inder captured
first place in the junior high school
class of thepublie speaking finals
held by the Canadian - Legion in
Princess 1Vkargaret Schools Oranges,
-vine; dn. Saturday evening. - Her
speech ohs, the St. Lawrence ,Sea-
way. was indeed well, 'presented_
Pamela Silcok, Toronto, placed sec-
ond: These finals included Districth,,
C, D and E of the 'Canadian Legi.on.
Ontario- finals .will be held- in Kit-
IhTer771-1owson; dam on...Monday, '0,.Atis,
' parently •the boYs who, ha Ye„ :been
swiinmihg at the ;.tlain
'.a.s.diving, :board., and: as • Theodore
:di:tree:filth), the Plank:his' armwas
. „
.‘gashed by •• the, jagged ' end: �fs
.1nOktproleVtio6 under; the water.
Several; atitchei: Were'. ,, needed to
elOsethe Woiiiid ;, and 'it ivtrass state,d
that.rhad the :gnt''been'a•fraetiohs of.
an inch deeper' he'jnight,haVelilid
:tee , de ath. fro rn, a- .= severed artery.
, The : :waters s the .nond., :18
*ArY;.-1,thv•at'preserit:iarS, repairssares
beirig :made. at. -the -dam and :the
pilings • Of the olds:GP-a::: trestle:
bridge re being reinoved:'.Parents.
,Wotild., be :wells advised to forbid
swiinthing •there, iintil,", the water.
has been : raised,--Wirigham
chener in,August in cennection,with Advancel'Times.
. .
,
YEARS
From, Tire ‘IIiiroir Expositor
july 13, 1934
While helping to, ;unload a. car Of
ell sat- the Sunertest ! yards The:4,0r
morning, ,Tliornas Hablak, Seas
forth manager of that tompany;
, a ins foot,badly Set-fished:and `a
large-hOtehf•eiceii7He-was
rolling -
barrels of oil down a plank. when
- a- barrel. ilipPed and struck him 4:in
the foot •• '• .„,
, „
A freak Of nature is, „reported
from the farm of Albert McGee,
Ashfield township, Where4 Ltwin
calves haYe, been -horn to' D
-ham Cow three weeks- apart. After,
the birth of the first, ea -It -the cow
failed to freshen and a veterinark,
treated the animal for milk fever.
On the nneimected arrival • of the
•secorid, calf three weeks later, how-.
ever, themilk flowed= copiously and
the mother tow arid her tWin heif;
ers are doing fine.
COngratulationa. are ,exterided to
Mr.' Charles Dieksons soil of Mr.
ami 'Mrs: , Therhas DicksonSef Sea.:
forth,i,who stood first in • the class
of 1934 at the London Technical
School. Mr„.1Dickson had ,an aver-
age Of 89 per 'Cent on all 'papers
at the retent examinationS,
Workmen are this week,reshing-
ling the town barn at the old wa-
terworks plant The buildings -which
has been iri .need of 'repairs for -
some ;time, will also have some
footings renewed;
Alma, theslittle daughter 'of Mks
and Mrs, William. R. Bell of Here
sall, had tbe misfortune While „plaY-
ing recently,have hersese frac-
tured, requiring riaediCaMttention;
From The Hon Expositor
,
•
.ruisf 9, 1999 •
Sundy intends inoVing his
grocery . ator e from the. old Bank
Of Commerce block to: the Camp-
bell block. Mr: W. Somerville, who
has had his 'office in the Cortirrier
cial block, will ;seamy the north
half of the Store being vacated by
Mr, Suntly. '
• G.,114cL. Chesney and W. A. Pick--
ard, are noW thespossessors of a.
fine. sailing yacht. The boat Was
made entirely by themselves, all
the work ibeing doneafter, business
hotirs. It Was completed last Week-
end and taken to Bayfield and giv-
en its initial sail on Dominion Day.
Mrs. George Hutisert, of Seaforth,
had the misfortune to rfall while
crossing he railway tracks
Monday evening last, bruising' her
hand and ehest so badly that she
Is stiff eonfined to her bed,-
(By REV.YROBEIIT HS:HARPER)
• ROM OF AGES
High in the wall of some church-
es, in it glass windows, may often
be seen the -picture Rock of Ages.
Lowering black clouds roll along
the vast horizon, and the lurid
lightnings flash =athwart "the„`ebon
Masses of the sky, And a great
cross of rock is lifted above the
Wild waves' play: And •a woman,
with flying garments and wicrelY
streaming _hair, clings with both
hands to the cross of rock. ,
On a cottage wallm th coun-
tryside was seen a picture very
like that which hat described
--the 'same storm -swept expanse of
the great deep, the same lightnhigs
zigzagging the -sky; the seine crosa-
of rock lifting itself above the wild
waves' play. = But there is, one dis-
tinctive difference -she clings to
the cross with only one hand while
with the other she lays -firm hold
uponanother who- =but for her-tithe7.-
ly aid vvouldsbe swept away into
the-StormY deep. Rock of Ages it
IS; but let it bear another names --
Saved to Save Someone Else.
If we would insure the many
blessings' that we have we must=
share them with the other fellow.
•We must share the good in our
Lives to ,preserve and multiply. it.
And the final triumph of the -
church will `tome as our attitude
and our service are shaped by the
fact that we are Saved to help save
someone else.
FEDERATION
„ By • IlElyfiNGWAY
_ Asineetusg. of ' the .toWnsliip • threc-:
tors of ',the 'poultry AssoCiation -Wag
held :in the- .; agricultural -,'Isearci
reems;• Ulinton, •Wednesdays. : Al-
lah Wedows .of :HahaversSzone di-
rector, 'raised. several ,question,s ; for
iliSeuSsiOns s;^ ; ' ' '•`. •
• Defeciency payinenti -aeemed, to
be a.,doubtful .solution. to the
lent Of -proiriding •Satisfactory sre-
'turns to •the sproducer.- However,
since details-sait lacking, no
ite Opitripn eouldbe formed's.% •
Eggs 's cern fhgTliitd,-2Qntariosfrom;
other.proVineeS are. a prelilentsbut.
virith , greater •ensphasis ;Ori snialitY
it Was .,felt7that'_thisi'moalti ,not be
.teo.-Seriairas The groins was surPris-
edto learrissthat, seirerar. thousand'
eases 'Of„ eggs ; hadbeen. • hiOnghtiii
from:the .United States to ',Toronto.
With tlaes.GoVerninent. actively- Sups -
porting ' • price Of . eggs, this,
seems ,"Mireasonahle inatiOrt
permits could be: required *Medi,'
; (bac:kissing the ' 1Viarketing .
which'-thP Ontario Ekeeutive was
in.Strticted. annual .'irrieeting
drafts: .the, are not ',et fire
alized,'hut a Dutch Clock ..system is
beirig•Seonaidered,-sBY--thisssineanS
the, egg grading stationsWopid place
his eggs ',oh. the market and; sold
tes;the highest bidder. These :eggs
would . be. identified and=the;,huyer
would:kilo*: from ,whieh-'egg grad:'
,er,he was .baYings Thus the station
out 'the' ::best quality :Of
iild be p'aid accordinglY.
Inorder to -provide furidS tb con -
Interesting items gleaned froin three in the • deirelopment of the
.
The Huron Expositor of: ss, sty I organization and to find out the
, and 75 years ago, I support the producers are Willing
- to give to bell) themselves; it was
decided to carry out a voluntary
Messrs. 11/IcEsVen and Geiger, of membership campaign. Thes On-
Ilensall, have leased the Seaforth tario- Poultry Producers' Associa-
flax• mill and sold their flax crop. tion have _ 'printed membership
to, the Canadian„,..,Flax-Mills-Ltd.,
,and it is rumored the company
will start a Cordage factory in the
old woolleh mill building,
_A-fewstlays ago is Mr. Davi&
Stewart as walking • into town
from, Roxboro, arid when opposite
the residence of Mr. Robert Gar-
roW, he picked up a copy of The
Huron Expositors -hearing the date
1870. • The paper is still in a gOod
state of preservation, hitt where it
stamefrorn or tis Whom it belonged
Mr. Stewart had no idea.
• While worlung in the Clinton or-
gan fadtory', Arthur..., Mann • met
with a painful accident the other
day. was putting a board
•through a rip -saw whensitssprang
back and- struck him the stom-
ach:: Ile was laid" off work kr
some days.
. From The,Iluron. Expositor.
JulY 1.1., 1884 Mr, Thomas Little, of the 13th
concession of Hullett, is having a
large frame barn erected -on bis
•
premises,
On Sunday • as Mrs. Richard
Brown, ot the ah coneession of
Hullett, accompanied ,Isy, several
members of the family,- Were on
their way to church, their horse
took fright :and ran away, throw-
ing them all out The only serious
injury as a small bone broken in
the ankle of Nil's. Brown.,
Fall wheat in this vicinity is al-
ready dammencing to turn
many places and will be readyfor
the .reaper before two weeks.,
• Mr. Peter CoWan, of Egroond-
ville, met with a painful accident
on Tuesday. He wa,s riding on a
load of hay on the farm of Mr,
Creiswell, in Tuekersmith, wheii
the load imset, and in the An lie
broke e hdiasy, Ileags.t weak as a, cow tie.
longing to George Armstrong, of
Brussels, was being taken home
when for some reason she turned
ugly mid chased everyone wbe
came her way. After fighting for
some time she got to the river and
rauxisdhiciniged,i,n -to the water, lay down
, .
As a natural resource our forests
are beyond prices to the nation.
Woods operations of the pulp and
paper industry provide winter work
ter farmers. -
-eardssi1.00- of -theseStiall-beSmaded;
tothe poultry represenWive,...; m
ech :Own:ship.; and -sit is left With
him, to .contact the.Producer iri his.
If there is Arcing support-. this
ineney yvill'benSed to promote the
marketing of 'eggs , in Ontario. '
": : • •
atorsrualm inws
•
The Ontario 'Department of -Ag-
riculture- for Mixon,: County: has
'been:notified brtlie-LiVestock'ComS,'
nsiSsioner Ws P. .Watalth that .he
has received:a.letter from, the Vet.4.
erinark :General Of Canada
nating Huron CAiuntY , Brucellosis
Control Area, 1:Notice of this aes
.tion had been published in theCan-
ada, , Gazette on june 10;1959.
• Mis• Watson .goes on state:
• obifortpthately I ain; not in, a posi-
tion to'ativiSe yen when testing will
conimentes• as Matters Pertaining
thereto rest, with the Health of An-,
imalS Braiich!!'
WORDS.
Biad:AndersON
.or Just Eleiligyuulan.
THOUGH TS
5.00 CAN AY -Tr;
AGAIN'
otrrtE,T FAC.6•11-,,,-
Ar)d h6 —. ")
.aoir), and again , e
and aga
•
--SUGAR' AND SPICE
ty W. (Bill) B, T. SMILEY
•4a,
•
Eath year I look forward to sum-
mer, as a camel must look forward
to the next waterhole. Each year,
withchild-like faith, I anticipate
golden months of a gentler life, an
escape from, the controlled chaos
that -normally makes up our fam-
ily life.
• "What': do this suminer," I
muse in bleakest Aprils"is get an
early start on things. Fix up the
place al bit, right off the bat Get
that fence propped up, get the
fbackyard plowed and sow some
seed. Clean out the -shed' and the
cellar in May. Get some •stone
laid in -the patio.' Get that hedge
trimmed up.' And so'on. ,
"Then " I' dream op "I'll be all
set to get some fishing, andssome
golf, and s,asne swimming. Haven't'
sWiim more -than once a year in the
last ten years,. • It'd be good for
-me.- And this year -Em going, 'to.
"get ih some sitting, too,' on the
lawri, under the shade trees with
a goodhook and a tall drink. Going
to sloW- it dovva, get easy, restore
my youth and vigour." • '
0, *
"Sure -will be nice,", I maunder
on, ."to have the kids on holidays,
No more pressure, of school and
music lessons and Cubs and hock-
ey games and exams. They'll just
drift around with the other kids
in the rieighlxnhood, way we used
to when we were kids, And- we'll
hardly know they're alive." ,
:Strangely enough, I can start
thinking likethis in April,: and in
the first Week in July still be tell-
ing; myself that summer, and, easy
living, :are just, arpund, the ter-
ner. Then, one fine hot crisp day,
come out oc.the anaesthetic and
realize that • summer iss;nots only
here bitt' noW; and. life is: Mit' a -bit
slower,: easier;failer.sithas_ineres
ly :changed its cosMrne;sfroirrthat
of ;a 'son guard -to that Of an,' at -
'tend in a mental inStitution.
,
Ask me the kings of lEnglapd,
and I'll, get moSt • of them.. Ask
me -the, Ten Conithandthents and
I'll.reel Off six or eight of thern.
But: don't ask, mewixere Mayand
:June have ''gones:s.They_ ,havelled
doWnthe foo,tlesa. trail...With all the
frenZied Months that Went:before.
And .-the •werk, Eve Ilene
,areund; the ,piace ,issthe annual job,
of filling the canyons in tbe lawn,
left by teal tnick., ..;
The fence- still leaps ;at an aleo-
holic angle The undug•borders are
, a- riot .of peonies: and .plantatn, hur-,
dock aild•begiesiasS The hack Yard
IS a 'Veritable jungle 'ef • hays re-,.
lievecl only by the presence of 89
feet Of eavestrougha, ;deposited
there in March when ..!they came
off'' with the ' ice, ;
In, the ' midst of 'this jungle. liVes.,
,one Wildanipaal; iirieriarch,- of all
he surveys.. :And, all - he surveys .
is a ineleeof.,ragss bories,, hottles,
old:Shoes and -anything ..elte, apan-
The back Shed the answer to
an -arsonist's, dream. Beneath„the
house crouches the cellar, looking
and, smelling like some loathsome
monster which has just crawled
out of the primeval ooze. The
only time I've been into the -"patio"
is to' dig some Worms. You'd
need a helicopter to clip my cellar
hedge.
And it isn't as though I've. been
neglecting things. • I've been fish-
ing twice, golfing /hardly at all:
tried swimming theether day vvith
the kids. Got in as far a/..tuY knees
and they splashed me. Ran white
and quaking to the car and had to
have an immediate restorative to
prevent shock. Once, just once, -I „
have had. the lawn chair' out. The -
dog knocked over my drink and
then -the phone rang, which finish -
As for- the -kids, I used to, thinks
they were around a lot vvhen they
were still in schdol. But now, you
can't turn., around without falling ,
over a kid. They're up with the
blasted birds in the mornitig, and
iogub t aTnhtei Their careconversationthein t .bed
donlyat
two themes; "What is there to
dd?" delivered in -whining adcents,
and "When are you going to take
vein.
us, swimming?" in threatening
Summer, you're 'just teaser,
You promise and don't produce,
You beckon and when we run,
your thumb, drifts to your nose
and you wiggle your fingers. =
• SEAFORTH Ts -PICNIC
, ,
ThesSeaforth. Women's Institute
-held +heir picnic 'at -the, home_ of
Mr., and Mrs; Harold. 1-lugill on ;
Monday evening. with about 60 in
-itteifdance;
rented by -1Viii.111-. Doig -and -Mrs:- --.
Wilfred_Coleman.
Results *ere •as 4ollows: six
RyeaarlPhs 'aWndhitumnoderer; RelegkYht yMecaKrsel•lzianIn;
imder, Ricky IVicKenzie, Sharon
Strong; 11 years and under, Sans
`dia Hagill, Helen Elliotts 1.4 years',
and •under,:Roba Doig, Elsie Doig;
y-Oung men's race Kenneth Pap-
ple, Douglas HugM; married lad-
ies, Mrs. R. J. „Doig, :Mrs. Gordon
McKenzie; ,married, men, R. , J.
Doig, 'Gordan Pappl.e; three-leg-
ged -race, Roba Doig and •Elsie
Doig, Mary Lenient and- Helen El-
liott. • ' -
Shoe scramble, Linda Papple,
Sharon McKenzie; - kick the sill).
per, ladies, Mrs: Eldon Kerr, Elsie
_sDnie; kick the slipper, men, Wayn.e
flOgill; Douglas 1-lugill; Weighh
guessing for -ladies,- Mrs -s -Gordon
McKenzie; for .Arni.e. Taylor;
hit the: Jiggs, Mrs. Lorne Carter;
biggest 'fibber, Men,, 'Jim -Keys, ,
Arnie--TaylorS- balloon race, Mr,
and Mrs.:Jim Keys. -
-A delicious hinch was served lin-
• der the' convenershirbf Mrs, Go's;
flan, =PaPple.
lel pup who is chained to the The pulp' and paper industry
clothes line, can pick up within his ranks firat in production, exports
orbit and wages paid.
MOUFVOTTAVVA:REPORT
, , , , . , - - ..,. - • ,
WHO'LL:STOP THE 'GIANT? . ister John Diefenbaker spoke . in
•' OTTAWA-sDown,through'rthe g.. glowing terms �f the Hoover Com
es, the rcaiiiese isayo=, developed ; -a r1::clis,S. i.Teaar,,,e,a, 111:0i.ii4iv.oewsti. g:trat:;Y: ,thexpemayrneirts-',
tnem,l.one,that haa,'Weathered•Well' -
Ws aiYtlii II:. the ' ef o' Yr 'e .ea vr years, Sr. .1 '''s .1:-. c''q'? "TheStral1.):e s°t11: eg 0' :I': how to t, ht, ea, save::'rs t:::=14.4 a it through
n1:1; !g:?hf:: „ tax:sprocedures,llitIl.'dollarsnn',1' ' 1
ernnieut is 'the' leaSe goVernment." by ;healltl,u4nn:,s4owuta :3-,:tah.sel• -niugti•sgOevrrethrtl,,,'„ ,.
'
Few can ,dispute • the wisdom of •
these. Wards's- silt, in; OttaVas and, ;Or,.
in 4 facts.,:thisnighont; the World the 'growth of that countrY'S Civil ser- '
trend. is toward Big Governinent. vice;--
*oPli.isekiveAsdi'liZ;1":145-1's, gietteir...st.' well
olli :wine. b'eMeinrn:n1:174keyt!';01.'.ta. :e'r°7guir;sivt:25:1,u4:teli:tvviistot.on'sise'raisitte-i
: The --penderons ' ; maChineris '.
bureaucracy: tlireatens to -engulf
every ' ' freedenii"..:we .:;hasre.: won. of 'mil -liens' of sdel-14.rs'am111411Y.' '
thrsncearshatah4a,T=pcernobturcieitstsoGoovuerriionsyeeg. tvelo4Pivp,eordh!a, hpg4.3sowvsnerncthhina,elord.oemmralisspl:oioyngeli,sbeidinin1;:',. ,
action; Inspectors .and agents and.
IlLfeelitItit7.
officials: •at every level- peek 'ancl c:zialsd., ,.c,:vaecrepe:ti4 .af;:wchaeqgtioey.efr.
t317; tramping
through' ever InAh's $93e:t7c.efrntroinact74 TPhreiv,:eell'efi:
castle - as ; thOUgh personal liberty •
was a. meaningless phrase. Legions, In
cover legal ,mearcs for its 'accepts
land, and their ' '' numbers grow ofSeivil, servants. are ,abroad in:the •J'et0, because no one, -Could- dia..,
'T.Inthe'ciVil service, the-sisiSteM"'-•7
i.' evoythipg: MPs who develep. a .
. It is 'a tragedY'4 our time that *
no one is attempting' to stem ; the
encounter, again. and again. the, re..
growth :. of- government, It' has OW' •WAY, of handling - _a:, sitnation
reathed, the 'point Where tai'„dol-
never been .done before.' ". ' ' .
. Here:is one 'Campaign' Mr, Dief.
ions . items as a pamphlet on "The
lars arebehig spent on suchridicu.',-. frain "we can't -do -it that way.
enbaker • ' could: '• implement • that •
Effeets Of ;Fin -cutting ..on :, Gold,. '
would have the CoMplete• Stipport..
fiSIL"?' ' More ,serimislY;, -government
of 'we long-sufferinE taxpayers.
• .
is inereasinglY Worming its. way in -
The, civil; service :haS' 'been,' for
to .fields that are the traditional
preserve �f private enterprise.
Canadians•politice. It has estalyksh- '
'ed itself m a .position of inviolabils
hiStorsr, there was '
The god of -sOurity rules 'sus
, :At an, earlier stage • iii, , Canadian t'et° long,. a time, a :seared eow sin
for • the: intrusion- :government.
urerne, Now •ia': the tithe to, topple •
Trans -Canada Airlines' is a notable itY•
the old. :gods ;and shake sim the .,
example. But once bureaucracy
enters a; -fields it.; never • retreats,
Wartime regulatiens' . and controls, 'btii.e•Mlei!ats• s, ,,, ,. . '
•are the only excePtions Once the: 7,L.', :. - - ' - -
pital UM Capsul.es,,
army or civil iervice-.ik...entrench. '. '.6'.. - • . ' ' •
External. ,Affairs, Minister How., .
ed,' its lieSitiOn established, it ,be-- ' - .
comes impregnable. . ‘, . • ard Green is already showing the, '
Surely, it is time for 'Members
Stiain of 'handling two of the big -
of Parliament to ,hold the onrush 'gest jobs. in .gpvernrnent. A . man
of .bureaticrets iri:.=ch*eck. Someone wasm-that.re..
:Whnormally shuns the o "-.;Secial
must. say -w& have enough ;gov- '
whirl, he_haS been: caught 'up in. a - •
eminent!' Instead'of,passing new long' round of official dinners and
laWS, authorizing' new cells of self- functionS involVed in the externals ,,
multiplying civil seryants,, why
affairs' job. At the same time, he
doesn't Parliament ;devote More
still slagging it out as acting,:
time ees'erix*. thq' iiroPth.radmini; ''m'inisteir Of pnblieworks, and hands
strnatoiorna:oafroexiaoswthiLlaowoos?civit-i,serv_. ling .the dozens. of chores required:,
manott5'e.'atnhatnh'thfeedreewalerileasYirri,119468,?'0rs. '',Irfediliel'il'1:;: s ''government
lic''lls:!
Dr. Parkinson theorized, they Mutt-. r' `.;',', ... s '• . * '',' ,
iply ,euch year Whether Ahere ia. an : Ones ofthe strangeat fatets, of the
increaSe in. the Wark load, ornot,„ eBe-furOi.bver cancellation of the
, - As Pleinlyers of Parliainenehave Political . Commentar3r, , 'Preview - ;
discovered, it IS all:haat imposSible ;Conirnent,ary",-- Was the reaction of
to nut this • ponderous giant into the 0.13Cs news department. ,-,-At
fareotijnoheaDblin:rtTr
et,iainstndie:trexplicit take
itorddaeyrss 'first, it hired' entside -reporters , to
to reach the correct level in the •coevnet;trhhenp,roacteetdhienpsePk„..Pofar, lithae
In
.'iliachnaayitna'elej7ellia:11.1aaritad.;'sAe,ntide'n, 7, htei,site, leirfa„.".' . goe ov vr 1 zolscti 8::,nettpwof s:tuinnedgm: pj courage,olobyeSthonc:ngdhe.l.tes:.riitihtee , . ,
(lets bear no relation to tile ..orig,. show,, The eoneensus:• they did ,a
• Imagination plays no part in the :,CeliserVative MP'S expressed their .
rocesg: In fact, Many eivil serv- allneYance.-' . . •
ants will, tell you they are qUitting:' , . • , ' : * .
the'Service ‘becatiSe 'they refuse to - Look for a break Soon in negotia...
boeome part "‘ed the machine; -," a lions over the COltinibia River. U.S.,
nameless; . aminynious , cog rtwg, negotiators are "rapidly falling into '
slaWlY-grOUnd'into shape. line, Sand an agreelnelit :Will' be ' •
BefOre his electieh,Prime Min-- signed within" a, totiOle ' of .rtionths„„
, . .
, . .
rtiouGHT: mff TEWPHONE
WAs Oar OF, ORDER ,p,4a.:43ur
ir$ FoR4 YOVI.
7, 7
SEE
THE COHN
Win SafetY,AWards1„..,_s_s' the„Bienntal•ProVincial Legion ion -
Two girls :PfSITS,S, NO. '11 East vention,.-Cluiton News Record
Wawanosh-; 'Henry,. , of the •'••:•Chosen Qu •
een
'senior- 'class; - and . Marion- Youngs
-iiluts-ofstliesjniiior-elass-,--tron Etats- ier•year-oldHExetersgirls Mar,
fie s s afetySaWards sat the. Wingliani- cho s en Tris
Ccqlegiate. Institute on •Wetinesday, County; Yeuth' for Christ 'queen --at
everring, of last week Sheila's prize: ;a . banquet Wingham United
was . reeord player, and Marion Church.,SattirdaY nights ;She. ''vvaa
wen a ra.die. The .contest was 'Snits' selected from arneng • 1:4,009.:' high.
sored by thelyinghani detachment ,schopl, students - and. members =o
.the provhicial police, ad was ,seven ;Bible clitha in three connties
carried on ;among somei; 2,0 pub- on the basis Of .activity 'church
lie" school pupils of: 'Wingha and 'Work apdsscholastic achievement
,sturtninding districts.-7-Blyth,,Stand:' Daughter of Mr; and Mrs. Gerald
ard'• , Marilyn was crowned,
; ' ' • a ,deterriony witnessed:by 150 :per,-
juvestigate ,Accident sons at the banquet. She rebeived.
,ProvinCial Constable Ross 'Ball. Yeuth. Por Christ Bible ; 'and a
was'. Called lathe scene of anaccis dozens red roses -Exeter TiMess
dent • about ' one-half:inailesseutli_sef, Advocate.' -
Lucia:low-over' the' weekend. A , car S.'ss'rss' „•
s,
driven' -by. William ;:Miigford, of ils" .15 -um ',in.'
l‘iewgate Street,. GOderich irag' in theedore •,SathtsSon of *lir:. mid
collision, with .a vehicle -driven by Mrs.s Fred sam sEdward Street
John Irwin 11,R, 2 ,Lucknow. The received a nasty cut oh, the under
Irwin car was being owe when e o is arm ‘in an accident, a
1Viagfords pulled into the left-
hand lane to:, pass, and, :Mrs Irvvin's
car swung- ant into the =path of his
ear; -No one was hurt, but damage
is estimated --to 'amount to
Goderich Signal Star
-
, .
, •
Captures Speaking Honors -
r
Miss Barbara Inder captured
first place in the junior high school
class of thepublie speaking finals
held by the Canadian - Legion in
Princess 1Vkargaret Schools Oranges,
-vine; dn. Saturday evening. - Her
speech ohs, the St. Lawrence ,Sea-
way. was indeed well, 'presented_
Pamela Silcok, Toronto, placed sec-
ond: These finals included Districth,,
C, D and E of the 'Canadian Legi.on.
Ontario- finals .will be held- in Kit-
IhTer771-1owson; dam on...Monday, '0,.Atis,
' parently •the boYs who, ha Ye„ :been
swiinmihg at the ;.tlain
'.a.s.diving, :board., and: as • Theodore
:di:tree:filth), the Plank:his' armwas
. „
.‘gashed by •• the, jagged ' end: �fs
.1nOktproleVtio6 under; the water.
Several; atitchei: Were'. ,, needed to
elOsethe Woiiiid ;, and 'it ivtrass state,d
that.rhad the :gnt''been'a•fraetiohs of.
an inch deeper' he'jnight,haVelilid
:tee , de ath. fro rn, a- .= severed artery.
, The : :waters s the .nond., :18
*ArY;.-1,thv•at'preserit:iarS, repairssares
beirig :made. at. -the -dam and :the
pilings • Of the olds:GP-a::: trestle:
bridge re being reinoved:'.Parents.
,Wotild., be :wells advised to forbid
swiinthing •there, iintil,", the water.
has been : raised,--Wirigham
chener in,August in cennection,with Advancel'Times.
. .
,
YEARS
From, Tire ‘IIiiroir Expositor
july 13, 1934
While helping to, ;unload a. car Of
ell sat- the Sunertest ! yards The:4,0r
morning, ,Tliornas Hablak, Seas
forth manager of that tompany;
, a ins foot,badly Set-fished:and `a
large-hOtehf•eiceii7He-was
rolling -
barrels of oil down a plank. when
- a- barrel. ilipPed and struck him 4:in
the foot •• '• .„,
, „
A freak Of nature is, „reported
from the farm of Albert McGee,
Ashfield township, Where4 Ltwin
calves haYe, been -horn to' D
-ham Cow three weeks- apart. After,
the birth of the first, ea -It -the cow
failed to freshen and a veterinark,
treated the animal for milk fever.
On the nneimected arrival • of the
•secorid, calf three weeks later, how-.
ever, themilk flowed= copiously and
the mother tow arid her tWin heif;
ers are doing fine.
COngratulationa. are ,exterided to
Mr.' Charles Dieksons soil of Mr.
ami 'Mrs: , Therhas DicksonSef Sea.:
forth,i,who stood first in • the class
of 1934 at the London Technical
School. Mr„.1Dickson had ,an aver-
age Of 89 per 'Cent on all 'papers
at the retent examinationS,
Workmen are this week,reshing-
ling the town barn at the old wa-
terworks plant The buildings -which
has been iri .need of 'repairs for -
some ;time, will also have some
footings renewed;
Alma, theslittle daughter 'of Mks
and Mrs, William. R. Bell of Here
sall, had tbe misfortune While „plaY-
ing recently,have hersese frac-
tured, requiring riaediCaMttention;
From The Hon Expositor
,
•
.ruisf 9, 1999 •
Sundy intends inoVing his
grocery . ator e from the. old Bank
Of Commerce block to: the Camp-
bell block. Mr: W. Somerville, who
has had his 'office in the Cortirrier
cial block, will ;seamy the north
half of the Store being vacated by
Mr, Suntly. '
• G.,114cL. Chesney and W. A. Pick--
ard, are noW thespossessors of a.
fine. sailing yacht. The boat Was
made entirely by themselves, all
the work ibeing doneafter, business
hotirs. It Was completed last Week-
end and taken to Bayfield and giv-
en its initial sail on Dominion Day.
Mrs. George Hutisert, of Seaforth,
had the misfortune to rfall while
crossing he railway tracks
Monday evening last, bruising' her
hand and ehest so badly that she
Is stiff eonfined to her bed,-
(By REV.YROBEIIT HS:HARPER)
• ROM OF AGES
High in the wall of some church-
es, in it glass windows, may often
be seen the -picture Rock of Ages.
Lowering black clouds roll along
the vast horizon, and the lurid
lightnings flash =athwart "the„`ebon
Masses of the sky, And a great
cross of rock is lifted above the
Wild waves' play: And •a woman,
with flying garments and wicrelY
streaming _hair, clings with both
hands to the cross of rock. ,
On a cottage wallm th coun-
tryside was seen a picture very
like that which hat described
--the 'same storm -swept expanse of
the great deep, the same lightnhigs
zigzagging the -sky; the seine crosa-
of rock lifting itself above the wild
waves' play. = But there is, one dis-
tinctive difference -she clings to
the cross with only one hand while
with the other she lays -firm hold
uponanother who- =but for her-tithe7.-
ly aid vvouldsbe swept away into
the-StormY deep. Rock of Ages it
IS; but let it bear another names --
Saved to Save Someone Else.
If we would insure the many
blessings' that we have we must=
share them with the other fellow.
•We must share the good in our
Lives to ,preserve and multiply. it.
And the final triumph of the -
church will `tome as our attitude
and our service are shaped by the
fact that we are Saved to help save
someone else.
FEDERATION
„ By • IlElyfiNGWAY
_ Asineetusg. of ' the .toWnsliip • threc-:
tors of ',the 'poultry AssoCiation -Wag
held :in the- .; agricultural -,'Isearci
reems;• Ulinton, •Wednesdays. : Al-
lah Wedows .of :HahaversSzone di-
rector, 'raised. several ,question,s ; for
iliSeuSsiOns s;^ ; ' ' '•`. •
• Defeciency payinenti -aeemed, to
be a.,doubtful .solution. to the
lent Of -proiriding •Satisfactory sre-
'turns to •the sproducer.- However,
since details-sait lacking, no
ite Opitripn eouldbe formed's.% •
Eggs 's cern fhgTliitd,-2Qntariosfrom;
other.proVineeS are. a prelilentsbut.
virith , greater •ensphasis ;Ori snialitY
it Was .,felt7that'_thisi'moalti ,not be
.teo.-Seriairas The groins was surPris-
edto learrissthat, seirerar. thousand'
eases 'Of„ eggs ; hadbeen. • hiOnghtiii
from:the .United States to ',Toronto.
With tlaes.GoVerninent. actively- Sups -
porting ' • price Of . eggs, this,
seems ,"Mireasonahle inatiOrt
permits could be: required *Medi,'
; (bac:kissing the ' 1Viarketing .
which'-thP Ontario Ekeeutive was
in.Strticted. annual .'irrieeting
drafts: .the, are not ',et fire
alized,'hut a Dutch Clock ..system is
beirig•Seonaidered,-sBY--thisssineanS
the, egg grading stationsWopid place
his eggs ',oh. the market and; sold
tes;the highest bidder. These :eggs
would . be. identified and=the;,huyer
would:kilo*: from ,whieh-'egg grad:'
,er,he was .baYings Thus the station
out 'the' ::best quality :Of
iild be p'aid accordinglY.
Inorder to -provide furidS tb con -
Interesting items gleaned froin three in the • deirelopment of the
.
The Huron Expositor of: ss, sty I organization and to find out the
, and 75 years ago, I support the producers are Willing
- to give to bell) themselves; it was
decided to carry out a voluntary
Messrs. 11/IcEsVen and Geiger, of membership campaign. Thes On-
Ilensall, have leased the Seaforth tario- Poultry Producers' Associa-
flax• mill and sold their flax crop. tion have _ 'printed membership
to, the Canadian„,..,Flax-Mills-Ltd.,
,and it is rumored the company
will start a Cordage factory in the
old woolleh mill building,
_A-fewstlays ago is Mr. Davi&
Stewart as walking • into town
from, Roxboro, arid when opposite
the residence of Mr. Robert Gar-
roW, he picked up a copy of The
Huron Expositors -hearing the date
1870. • The paper is still in a gOod
state of preservation, hitt where it
stamefrorn or tis Whom it belonged
Mr. Stewart had no idea.
• While worlung in the Clinton or-
gan fadtory', Arthur..., Mann • met
with a painful accident the other
day. was putting a board
•through a rip -saw whensitssprang
back and- struck him the stom-
ach:: Ile was laid" off work kr
some days.
. From The,Iluron. Expositor.
JulY 1.1., 1884 Mr, Thomas Little, of the 13th
concession of Hullett, is having a
large frame barn erected -on bis
•
premises,
On Sunday • as Mrs. Richard
Brown, ot the ah coneession of
Hullett, accompanied ,Isy, several
members of the family,- Were on
their way to church, their horse
took fright :and ran away, throw-
ing them all out The only serious
injury as a small bone broken in
the ankle of Nil's. Brown.,
Fall wheat in this vicinity is al-
ready dammencing to turn
many places and will be readyfor
the .reaper before two weeks.,
• Mr. Peter CoWan, of Egroond-
ville, met with a painful accident
on Tuesday. He wa,s riding on a
load of hay on the farm of Mr,
Creiswell, in Tuekersmith, wheii
the load imset, and in the An lie
broke e hdiasy, Ileags.t weak as a, cow tie.
longing to George Armstrong, of
Brussels, was being taken home
when for some reason she turned
ugly mid chased everyone wbe
came her way. After fighting for
some time she got to the river and
rauxisdhiciniged,i,n -to the water, lay down
, .
As a natural resource our forests
are beyond prices to the nation.
Woods operations of the pulp and
paper industry provide winter work
ter farmers. -
-eardssi1.00- of -theseStiall-beSmaded;
tothe poultry represenWive,...; m
ech :Own:ship.; and -sit is left With
him, to .contact the.Producer iri his.
If there is Arcing support-. this
ineney yvill'benSed to promote the
marketing of 'eggs , in Ontario. '
": : • •
atorsrualm inws
•
The Ontario 'Department of -Ag-
riculture- for Mixon,: County: has
'been:notified brtlie-LiVestock'ComS,'
nsiSsioner Ws P. .Watalth that .he
has received:a.letter from, the Vet.4.
erinark :General Of Canada
nating Huron CAiuntY , Brucellosis
Control Area, 1:Notice of this aes
.tion had been published in theCan-
ada, , Gazette on june 10;1959.
• Mis• Watson .goes on state:
• obifortpthately I ain; not in, a posi-
tion to'ativiSe yen when testing will
conimentes• as Matters Pertaining
thereto rest, with the Health of An-,
imalS Braiich!!'
WORDS.
Biad:AndersON
.or Just Eleiligyuulan.
THOUGH TS
5.00 CAN AY -Tr;
AGAIN'
otrrtE,T FAC.6•11-,,,-
Ar)d h6 —. ")
.aoir), and again , e
and aga
•
--SUGAR' AND SPICE
ty W. (Bill) B, T. SMILEY
•4a,
•
Eath year I look forward to sum-
mer, as a camel must look forward
to the next waterhole. Each year,
withchild-like faith, I anticipate
golden months of a gentler life, an
escape from, the controlled chaos
that -normally makes up our fam-
ily life.
• "What': do this suminer," I
muse in bleakest Aprils"is get an
early start on things. Fix up the
place al bit, right off the bat Get
that fence propped up, get the
fbackyard plowed and sow some
seed. Clean out the -shed' and the
cellar in May. Get some •stone
laid in -the patio.' Get that hedge
trimmed up.' And so'on. ,
"Then " I' dream op "I'll be all
set to get some fishing, andssome
golf, and s,asne swimming. Haven't'
sWiim more -than once a year in the
last ten years,. • It'd be good for
-me.- And this year -Em going, 'to.
"get ih some sitting, too,' on the
lawri, under the shade trees with
a goodhook and a tall drink. Going
to sloW- it dovva, get easy, restore
my youth and vigour." • '
0, *
"Sure -will be nice,", I maunder
on, ."to have the kids on holidays,
No more pressure, of school and
music lessons and Cubs and hock-
ey games and exams. They'll just
drift around with the other kids
in the rieighlxnhood, way we used
to when we were kids, And- we'll
hardly know they're alive." ,
:Strangely enough, I can start
thinking likethis in April,: and in
the first Week in July still be tell-
ing; myself that summer, and, easy
living, :are just, arpund, the ter-
ner. Then, one fine hot crisp day,
come out oc.the anaesthetic and
realize that • summer iss;nots only
here bitt' noW; and. life is: Mit' a -bit
slower,: easier;failer.sithas_ineres
ly :changed its cosMrne;sfroirrthat
of ;a 'son guard -to that Of an,' at -
'tend in a mental inStitution.
,
Ask me the kings of lEnglapd,
and I'll, get moSt • of them.. Ask
me -the, Ten Conithandthents and
I'll.reel Off six or eight of thern.
But: don't ask, mewixere Mayand
:June have ''gones:s.They_ ,havelled
doWnthe foo,tlesa. trail...With all the
frenZied Months that Went:before.
And .-the •werk, Eve Ilene
,areund; the ,piace ,issthe annual job,
of filling the canyons in tbe lawn,
left by teal tnick., ..;
The fence- still leaps ;at an aleo-
holic angle The undug•borders are
, a- riot .of peonies: and .plantatn, hur-,
dock aild•begiesiasS The hack Yard
IS a 'Veritable jungle 'ef • hays re-,.
lievecl only by the presence of 89
feet Of eavestrougha, ;deposited
there in March when ..!they came
off'' with the ' ice, ;
In, the ' midst of 'this jungle. liVes.,
,one Wildanipaal; iirieriarch,- of all
he surveys.. :And, all - he surveys .
is a ineleeof.,ragss bories,, hottles,
old:Shoes and -anything ..elte, apan-
The back Shed the answer to
an -arsonist's, dream. Beneath„the
house crouches the cellar, looking
and, smelling like some loathsome
monster which has just crawled
out of the primeval ooze. The
only time I've been into the -"patio"
is to' dig some Worms. You'd
need a helicopter to clip my cellar
hedge.
And it isn't as though I've. been
neglecting things. • I've been fish-
ing twice, golfing /hardly at all:
tried swimming theether day vvith
the kids. Got in as far a/..tuY knees
and they splashed me. Ran white
and quaking to the car and had to
have an immediate restorative to
prevent shock. Once, just once, -I „
have had. the lawn chair' out. The -
dog knocked over my drink and
then -the phone rang, which finish -
As for- the -kids, I used to, thinks
they were around a lot vvhen they
were still in schdol. But now, you
can't turn., around without falling ,
over a kid. They're up with the
blasted birds in the mornitig, and
iogub t aTnhtei Their careconversationthein t .bed
donlyat
two themes; "What is there to
dd?" delivered in -whining adcents,
and "When are you going to take
vein.
us, swimming?" in threatening
Summer, you're 'just teaser,
You promise and don't produce,
You beckon and when we run,
your thumb, drifts to your nose
and you wiggle your fingers. =
• SEAFORTH Ts -PICNIC
, ,
ThesSeaforth. Women's Institute
-held +heir picnic 'at -the, home_ of
Mr., and Mrs; Harold. 1-lugill on ;
Monday evening. with about 60 in
-itteifdance;
rented by -1Viii.111-. Doig -and -Mrs:- --.
Wilfred_Coleman.
Results *ere •as 4ollows: six
RyeaarlPhs 'aWndhitumnoderer; RelegkYht yMecaKrsel•lzianIn;
imder, Ricky IVicKenzie, Sharon
Strong; 11 years and under, Sans
`dia Hagill, Helen Elliotts 1.4 years',
and •under,:Roba Doig, Elsie Doig;
y-Oung men's race Kenneth Pap-
ple, Douglas HugM; married lad-
ies, Mrs. R. J. „Doig, :Mrs. Gordon
McKenzie; ,married, men, R. , J.
Doig, 'Gordan Pappl.e; three-leg-
ged -race, Roba Doig and •Elsie
Doig, Mary Lenient and- Helen El-
liott. • ' -
Shoe scramble, Linda Papple,
Sharon McKenzie; - kick the sill).
per, ladies, Mrs: Eldon Kerr, Elsie
_sDnie; kick the slipper, men, Wayn.e
flOgill; Douglas 1-lugill; Weighh
guessing for -ladies,- Mrs -s -Gordon
McKenzie; for .Arni.e. Taylor;
hit the: Jiggs, Mrs. Lorne Carter;
biggest 'fibber, Men,, 'Jim -Keys, ,
Arnie--TaylorS- balloon race, Mr,
and Mrs.:Jim Keys. -
-A delicious hinch was served lin-
• der the' convenershirbf Mrs, Go's;
flan, =PaPple.
lel pup who is chained to the The pulp' and paper industry
clothes line, can pick up within his ranks firat in production, exports
orbit and wages paid.
MOUFVOTTAVVA:REPORT
, , , , . , - - ..,. - • ,
WHO'LL:STOP THE 'GIANT? . ister John Diefenbaker spoke . in
•' OTTAWA-sDown,through'rthe g.. glowing terms �f the Hoover Com
es, the rcaiiiese isayo=, developed ; -a r1::clis,S. i.Teaar,,,e,a, 111:0i.ii4iv.oewsti. g:trat:;Y: ,thexpemayrneirts-',
tnem,l.one,that haa,'Weathered•Well' -
Ws aiYtlii II:. the ' ef o' Yr 'e .ea vr years, Sr. .1 '''s .1:-. c''q'? "TheStral1.):e s°t11: eg 0' :I': how to t, ht, ea, save::'rs t:::=14.4 a it through
n1:1; !g:?hf:: „ tax:sprocedures,llitIl.'dollarsnn',1' ' 1
ernnieut is 'the' leaSe goVernment." by ;healltl,u4nn:,s4owuta :3-,:tah.sel• -niugti•sgOevrrethrtl,,,'„ ,.
'
Few can ,dispute • the wisdom of •
these. Wards's- silt, in; OttaVas and, ;Or,.
in 4 facts.,:thisnighont; the World the 'growth of that countrY'S Civil ser- '
trend. is toward Big Governinent. vice;--
*oPli.isekiveAsdi'liZ;1":145-1's, gietteir...st.' well
olli :wine. b'eMeinrn:n1:174keyt!';01.'.ta. :e'r°7guir;sivt:25:1,u4:teli:tvviistot.on'sise'raisitte-i
: The --penderons ' ; maChineris '.
bureaucracy: tlireatens to -engulf
every ' ' freedenii"..:we .:;hasre.: won. of 'mil -liens' of sdel-14.rs'am111411Y.' '
thrsncearshatah4a,T=pcernobturcieitstsoGoovuerriionsyeeg. tvelo4Pivp,eordh!a, hpg4.3sowvsnerncthhina,elord.oemmralisspl:oioyngeli,sbeidinin1;:',. ,
action; Inspectors .and agents and.
IlLfeelitItit7.
officials: •at every level- peek 'ancl c:zialsd., ,.c,:vaecrepe:ti4 .af;:wchaeqgtioey.efr.
t317; tramping
through' ever InAh's $93e:t7c.efrntroinact74 TPhreiv,:eell'efi:
castle - as ; thOUgh personal liberty •
was a. meaningless phrase. Legions, In
cover legal ,mearcs for its 'accepts
land, and their ' '' numbers grow ofSeivil, servants. are ,abroad in:the •J'et0, because no one, -Could- dia..,
'T.Inthe'ciVil service, the-sisiSteM"'-•7
i.' evoythipg: MPs who develep. a .
. It is 'a tragedY'4 our time that *
no one is attempting' to stem ; the
encounter, again. and again. the, re..
growth :. of- government, It' has OW' •WAY, of handling - _a:, sitnation
reathed, the 'point Where tai'„dol-
never been .done before.' ". ' ' .
. Here:is one 'Campaign' Mr, Dief.
ions . items as a pamphlet on "The
lars arebehig spent on suchridicu.',-. frain "we can't -do -it that way.
enbaker • ' could: '• implement • that •
Effeets Of ;Fin -cutting ..on :, Gold,. '
would have the CoMplete• Stipport..
fiSIL"?' ' More ,serimislY;, -government
of 'we long-sufferinE taxpayers.
• .
is inereasinglY Worming its. way in -
The, civil; service :haS' 'been,' for
to .fields that are the traditional
preserve �f private enterprise.
Canadians•politice. It has estalyksh- '
'ed itself m a .position of inviolabils
hiStorsr, there was '
The god of -sOurity rules 'sus
, :At an, earlier stage • iii, , Canadian t'et° long,. a time, a :seared eow sin
for • the: intrusion- :government.
urerne, Now •ia': the tithe to, topple •
Trans -Canada Airlines' is a notable itY•
the old. :gods ;and shake sim the .,
example. But once bureaucracy
enters a; -fields it.; never • retreats,
Wartime regulatiens' . and controls, 'btii.e•Mlei!ats• s, ,,, ,. . '
•are the only excePtions Once the: 7,L.', :. - - ' - -
pital UM Capsul.es,,
army or civil iervice-.ik...entrench. '. '.6'.. - • . ' ' •
External. ,Affairs, Minister How., .
ed,' its lieSitiOn established, it ,be-- ' - .
comes impregnable. . ‘, . • ard Green is already showing the, '
Surely, it is time for 'Members
Stiain of 'handling two of the big -
of Parliament to ,hold the onrush 'gest jobs. in .gpvernrnent. A . man
of .bureaticrets iri:.=ch*eck. Someone wasm-that.re..
:Whnormally shuns the o "-.;Secial
must. say -w& have enough ;gov- '
whirl, he_haS been: caught 'up in. a - •
eminent!' Instead'of,passing new long' round of official dinners and
laWS, authorizing' new cells of self- functionS involVed in the externals ,,
multiplying civil seryants,, why
affairs' job. At the same time, he
doesn't Parliament ;devote More
still slagging it out as acting,:
time ees'erix*. thq' iiroPth.radmini; ''m'inisteir Of pnblieworks, and hands
strnatoiorna:oafroexiaoswthiLlaowoos?civit-i,serv_. ling .the dozens. of chores required:,
manott5'e.'atnhatnh'thfeedreewalerileasYirri,119468,?'0rs. '',Irfediliel'il'1:;: s ''government
lic''lls:!
Dr. Parkinson theorized, they Mutt-. r' `.;',', ... s '• . * '',' ,
iply ,euch year Whether Ahere ia. an : Ones ofthe strangeat fatets, of the
increaSe in. the Wark load, ornot,„ eBe-furOi.bver cancellation of the
, - As Pleinlyers of Parliainenehave Political . Commentar3r, , 'Preview - ;
discovered, it IS all:haat imposSible ;Conirnent,ary",-- Was the reaction of
to nut this • ponderous giant into the 0.13Cs news department. ,-,-At
fareotijnoheaDblin:rtTr
et,iainstndie:trexplicit take
itorddaeyrss 'first, it hired' entside -reporters , to
to reach the correct level in the •coevnet;trhhenp,roacteetdhienpsePk„..Pofar, lithae
In
.'iliachnaayitna'elej7ellia:11.1aaritad.;'sAe,ntide'n, 7, htei,site, leirfa„.".' . goe ov vr 1 zolscti 8::,nettpwof s:tuinnedgm: pj courage,olobyeSthonc:ngdhe.l.tes:.riitihtee , . ,
(lets bear no relation to tile ..orig,. show,, The eoneensus:• they did ,a
• Imagination plays no part in the :,CeliserVative MP'S expressed their .
rocesg: In fact, Many eivil serv- allneYance.-' . . •
ants will, tell you they are qUitting:' , . • , ' : * .
the'Service ‘becatiSe 'they refuse to - Look for a break Soon in negotia...
boeome part "‘ed the machine; -," a lions over the COltinibia River. U.S.,
nameless; . aminynious , cog rtwg, negotiators are "rapidly falling into '
slaWlY-grOUnd'into shape. line, Sand an agreelnelit :Will' be ' •
BefOre his electieh,Prime Min-- signed within" a, totiOle ' of .rtionths„„
, . .
, . .