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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1961-11-16, Page 2PAGE TWQ ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS. ZURICH Citizens NEWS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING at ZURICH, ONTARIO HERB TURKHEINI -- Editor and Publisher ('RANK McEWAN -- Plant Manager Authorized as Second Class Mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa Member: CANADIAN WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION Member: ONTARIO WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS ASSOCIATION Subscription Rates: $2,50 per year in advance, in Canada; $3.50 in United States and and Foreign; single copies 5 cents THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 What is "Buy Canadian" What does the slogan "Buy Canadian" riven to von? We feel that "Buy Canadian" is basic- ally a declaration of common sense. It is an appeal to exercise intelligent self-inter- est. It is a proclamation of good citizen- ship. It is a demonstration of vision. It is a bulwark against unemployment, "Buy Canadian" is not a plea to emo- tionalism. It is not a bugle call to senti- ment. It is not an appeal to selfishness. It is not a presentation. of unsound econom- ics. Advocates of the slogan "Buy Canad- ian" have never at any time suggested that Canadians should "Buy Canadian" regard- less of price, quality. delivery time or per- sonal choice. To have done so would have been to insult the intelligence of every man and woman in this country. What they have done 'ever since the campaign's inc ration is to urge Canadians,. whenever and wherever they could con- scientiously do so, to show a positive pre- ference for goods produced in Canada as opposed to foreign imports. Every success achieved by the "Buy Canadian" campaign has had the effect of making our country less dependent on for- eign sources of supply. • This particular point has troubled many people. How, they ask, will other nations be able to buy from us if we stop buying from them? The answer to this is that no one has suggested for a single moment that we stop buying from other countries altogether, There are a great many things we must import and will have to continue to import for some time to come. Suport for "Buy Canadian" is in no way contrary to recognition of the fact that we are also a primary producing nation that must sell primary goods such as minerals and lumber to other nations of the world. The essential aim of 'Buy Canad- ian" is to get people to voluntary cut-back their consumption of those foreign imports which have already had serious consequen- ces for certain of our industries, In Canada today, apart from the one in every four persons on the labour force employed in the manufacturing industry, there are literally hundreds of thousands of others whose jobs are hitched directly to manufacturing's star. When manufacturing slows percepti- bly, and workmen are laid off in any num- ber, every other segment of the economy feels it — the fisherman does not sell as much fish, the farmer does not sell as many potatoes, the bricklayer does not lay as many bricks, the carpenter does not hammer as many nails; furthermore, work- ers in other primary industries — miners and loggers, for example — soon feel the chill wind when orders for manufacturing' plants start slowing up. Our freedom to buy as we choose is part of our way of life. Our choice is norm- ally determined by quality and price. When our choice lies between a product of dom- estic manufacture and a similar imported product, our best buy, providing the qual- ity is comparable and there is not an ex- cessive difference in price, is always to "Buy Canadian." By doing so, we will be helping to safeguard our jobs, create new jobs, encourage enterprise, raise living standards and keep our country strong; (Stelco Flashes). keep 'em healthy STOP MASTiTI LIQUID Terra ycin FOR MASTITIS r gels cows back to profitable milking sooner No other drug or antibiotic is effective against more mastitis - causing organisms than Terramycin. In fact, no other mastitis preparation, at any price, can compare with Liquid Terramycin's complete solubility, rapid diffusion in the udder and quick effective control of mastitis. Liquid Terramycin milks out completely within 72 hours. Con- tains no grease, wax or oil andieaves no residue in the quarter after treatment. Liquid Terramycin. for Mastitis comes in coni venient, ready -to -use applicator tubes -- dosage and directions on every package. The fastest, most -effective, treatment for mastitis and so economical -- Liquid Terramycin for Mastitis! 'TW URSDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1961 40 YEARS AGO NOVEMBER, 1921 The council of the village of Hensall has decided not to sub- mit a by-law for the voting on a new high school combined with public school. The reason. for waiting is that labor and material are both too high at the present time. The 1921 census figures show that both South and North Hur- on show a decrease in the po- pulation over the past ten years. Wilbert McBride, who has been carrying on business in the blacksmith shop of James Fowlie, in Bayfield, over the past year, has sold his interests to Mr. Thomas Brandon, of Wingham. A large number from this area attended the big fowl sup- per in Hensall last Friday night. Mr. Conrad Siemon has dis- posed of his 100 -acre farm he purchased from Mr. Charles Redmond last year, to Mr. Hen- ry Adkins, who gets possession next April. W. H. Pfile Zurich, shoe mer- chant, has recently purchased the building lot corner known as the Bender block, and in- tends building a new • store thereon, OIw- YEARS GONE BY 25 YEARS AGO NOVEMBER, 1936 Dr. Eugene Tiernan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ezra. Tiernan, of Dashwood, has decided to take up practice in Tlavistock, and has already moved there, .A. very bright and energetic young man, he should do quite well in the medical field. . Herb Mousseau and Welling- ton Johnston, of Zurich, took in a few days of hunting for deer in the north country, but unfor- tunately they were not able to come into contact with any of their prey. The weatherman has ditshed up considerable variety during the past week. Early in the week it was quite pleasant, but by the end of the week resid- ents of the district were hav- ing to shovel snow away from their homes. Mrs. Ann Hudson, the oldest resident of Hensall, celebrated her 96th birthday on Thursday. She has been in quite good health and very active, Mr. J. C. Salmon has pur chased the 100 -acre farm on the Babylon. Line, from the execu- tors of the T. Wilson estate, and gets immediate possession. The council of the village of Hensall has purchased from Dominion Road Machinery a sidewalk snowplow with tongue and shafts for the sum of $75. BLUEWATER Mr. and Mrs. Richard Erb spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs: Edward Deichert and Ricky, at Scarborough. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Ducharme and family, Riverside, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ducharme on Wednesday last. Funeral service for Mr. Clif- ford Talbot, was attended by a great number of relatives and friends at Bayfield Baptist Church on Monday afternoon. The sympathy of the commun- ity is extended to Mrs, Talbot and family. Mrs. Gladwin Westlake, Mrs. Bert Greer and Mrs. Russell Grainger; called on Mrs. Betty Carnie, in Tweedsmuir Hall, last Thursday. Mrs. Carnie has been confined to her bed for the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. William Sparks, Seaforth, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dunn. (Intended for last week) Mr. and Mrs. Edward DeichEnoteamosmni - Per a my in ANIMAL HEALTH PRODUCTS Animal Formula • Poultry formula with Anti -Germ 77 New Liquid Terramycln for Mastitis « A & D Scours Tablets • Terramycln Injectable Solution. \"C'al ING Pfizer Research Contributes 10 More Profitable Farming! ert and Ricky, Scarborough, spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Deichert and Mr. and Mrs. Rus- sell Grainger. Helen Grainger, Phyllis Schade, Ruth Geiger, Joan Ra- der, Gerald Merner and Wayne Horner, attended the Youth Fellowship Rally held in Water- loo from Friday to Sunday. Misses Ann Westlake and Louise Talbot, along with sev- eral other young people, were in Brantford over the weekend at a Young Peoples Rally. Miss Helen Stewart, Clinton, spent Saturday and Sunday at the home of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Turner and family. Mrs. George Campbell left a week ago Tuesday and is spen- ding several days in Stratford with her brother and sister-in- law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tur- ner, before going on to Hamil- ton to spend the winter with her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carl .Barber and boys. t doL ,1 you want to more money? WELL DON'T WASTE TIME ON THAT OLD AND TROUBLESOME CHAIN SAW ON A BRAND NEW CANADA'S .1cHArHsnW complete with tWO 16" chains IN HENSALL, YOU CAN BUY TERRYMACIN FROM WILSON'S • REXALL DRUG STORE NOM SAWS LID, 1,1110000000140•1. COMPLETE WITH 12" ATTACHMENTS ZURICH HARDWARE and BUILDERS' SUPPLY LTD. PHONE 63 -_. ZURICH After nearly 15 years of corn plete bewilderment, I think I'm beginning to understand the Old Battleaxe at last. This summer, I took a course in psychology, and it fits her like a suit of wet long underwear. I used to think she acted the way she did because she was a woman. Or because she had a large dollop of pure Irish in her. Or because I wasn't mak- ing enough money, or wasn't a good enough father, or did- n't do the chores around the house. But •it wasn't any of these things. It was because she's just about as psycholog- ical as they come. It's all beginning to fall into a pattern. When I began tak- ing these lectures, there seem- ed something familiar about them — as though I'd taken the course before, Then I realized that my wife was a walking case history, and that she'd had practically every one of the neuroses we were discus- sing at least once. SUGAR and SPICE By Bili Smiley - your leg around theirs, so they can't kick you on the shins, This requires a good deal of facility in standing on one leg. Just call me "Stork." Another little gem I've cul- led from the course is: "Reason and emotion don't mix. Apply reason and it will eut down on emotion." Well, I've tried that with the Old Gil. When she gets emotional, I get reason- able. I'm afraid they're going to have to remove that maxim from the books. Maybe there's something wrong with the reas- on I apply, but every time I do it, it's like applying a torch to the drapes. ', *: Strangely enough I'm scar- cely psychological at all, my- self. However, in all fairness, I must admit I've found a coup- le of labels that apply to me. When I am frustrated, I have what is known as the Indirect Reaction, instead of the Emo- tional Explosion. In this bit, you can do one of several things to compensate for fail- ure. One is having Delusions of Grandeus. This one I have never managed. It's impossible for a father and husband in these times. A second reaction is the Suffering Hero. This is one of my favorites, and I use it often. I see myself lying there, after the accident, covered with blood, cold, stiff, amazingly handsome all of a sudden, and my wife hurling herself, weep- ing bitterly, on my chest. She shrieks, "Darling, come back to me! I didn't mean a word of it. You've been a wonderful husband!", while the kids stand by bawling piteously and, for once, not wanting me to take them swimming. The other type of Indirect Reaction is Rationalization, and it fits, too. This consists of convincing yourself of some- thing that is not necessarily true, But this I've been doing (continued on page 3) Only last week, I realized that all these years, she's been suffering from an inferiority complex. As the fellas say, ya coulda fooled me. But now I'm trained in psychology, I can see the signs. It says in my notes that the person who is over -compensating for failure to achieve his goal — a typical inferiority -complex case --- may become pugnacious and bel- ligerent. That's my girl. Of course, sometimes the per- son who cannot solve a pro- blem, or reach a goal, succum- bs to another way out, it says. This results in the Emotional Explosion, or, as you old-fash- ioned lay people might term it, the tempertantrum. This is us- ually produled in babies by a restriction of some sort, such as holding their arms. It is pro- duced in exactly the same way in ladies who are trying to clob- ber you. They become even more violent when you wrap Business and Professional Directory AUCTIONEERS ALVIN WALPER PROVINCIAL LICENSED AUCTIONEER For your sale, large or small courteous and efficient service at all times. "Service that Satisfies" PHONE 119 DASHWOOD DENTISTS DR. H. H. COWEN DENTAL STTRGEON L.D.S., D.D.S. Main Street Exeter Closed Wednesday Afternoon Phone Exeter 36 INSURANCE For Safety EVERY FARMER NEEDS Liability Insurance For Information About All Insurance --- Call BERT KLOPP Phone 93 r 1 or 220 Zurich Representing CO-OPERATORS INSURANCE ASSOCIATION HURON and ERIE D'EBE T DF CANADA TRUST CERTIFICATES IS% -- 3, 4, and 5 years 43'i%e -- 1 and 2 years GENERAL INSURANCES• Fire, Automobile, Premises Liability, Casualty, Sickness and .A ceident, etc. An independent Agent representing Canadian Companies 4. W. HABERER Authorized Representative Phone 161 .-: Zurich OPTOMETRY J, E. LONGSTAFF OPTOMETRIST SEAFORTH: Daily except Mon. Phont 791 day 9 a.m. to 5.30 p.rn Wednesday: 9 a.m to 12 noon. CLINTON: Monday Only Phone HU 2-7010 Thursday evening by appointment G. B. Csaney, O.D: OPTOMETRIST JA 4-7251 — Goderich FUNERAL DIRECTORS WESTLAKE Funeral Home AMBULANCE and PORTABLE OXYGEN SERVICE Phone 89J or 89W ZURICH LEGAL Bell 8z Laughton BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS & NOTARY PUBLIC ELMER D. BELL, Q.C. C. V. LAUGHTON, Q.C. Zurich Office Tuesday Afternoon EXETER PHONE 4 VV. G. Co hraIile, BA BARRISTER and SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC Hensall Office Open Wednesday and Friday Afternoon EXETER PHONE 14