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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1946-07-19, Page 5fi ' Q 6' • ,e,rtrM•,pn�. •n4we+5M11 `•fYiPY .e.;��'.l�.�Y 7 e+tM }i,�<i" 1�' iS. 11> all: pfi 04.014 O bei dtti•x1tq , an„d Miss liza'bet ?Wehl•re ,,, To.OndOn. ,exa kr4la;l ''Yi140074 �''�t?itert, C3..S.B., itglkte,as Institute; itochester, N ;, witld Itis r mother, Mii Teresa Eoltd;t't; Rev Father,: ing, -"RUIN*: Nei' "RUI ;, wit 4:4:41e`�4s' beret: Fr Leilltage recently, crrdatned in New :"'°u ,; lea'ves on Septsnsker• 1 ter Sao Panic Brazil to • 0444e; in mission - r ary'work amongst the ortug ese .,Mrs... Katherine B.enniriger, London, 'with , Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Benninger; 'Mrs. Leonard Bader and two children, De- troit, with her parents, Mr, .. and Mrs. Martin Feeney Mr; and Mis. Den. Mdl3.03,9 suis, Chicago, with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ,T,, iolyneaux; Mr and 4 Mrs. Harvey Dantzer aid son, Wind - ser, with William. Dantzer .and Mrs. John Nagle; Mr. and Mrs. Leo. B01. - ger and four daughters, Detroit, with Mr. and Mrs: James Jordan; Mrs, Earl Healy, Blyth, with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Donnelly; „Mrs. J. McMann, Chicago,. with her .sis- ter, Mrs• -'Barbara Holland, and tither relatives; . •Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mc - 'earthy, Toronto, with Mr. Michael And dwell stay healthy teams Blatehford'a Chick Starter hoops 'em healthy --makes them grow faster-aasures vitality—and pwys me bigger Blas Noir... Strengthened with 'Pita -Din. The neer On plentent for Raster vitamin sJ content..•sreater nutrition! Blatc ford FeedsONTARIO —"LOCAL- DEALERS - We also handle the. following ?' ' Blatchford Feeds: Poultry don- centrate, 'Poultry Mash Pellets, .... Call Meal and -Calf .Meal Pellets, Pig Starter, Hog Grower and Hoge Concentrate, - Dairy Concentrate, • Oil Cake Meal and Chick Starter. SEAFORTH•: PRODUCE • LIMITED • Phone 170-W s Seaforth M+C:GIport$> J' ; rs Zrioyd ktue aad Bail ierk Jeanne, ' Zurich,• with; Mr, ana Mrs n .Thos. J MoIY„'iealix; zygx,- Atid Mrs ' %will:," sieki»and dough . te>s, icit.4he4ei,!, with ro, Thomas '+a;Qifl l x attd yrs PON Pin and 11::04 9F . Pig:1;0. Vila .;M¥ . Katil<ar, 14eBr�te �etherndl 014000; 040. , ivlaiQne, duel:..,, w;ltii i tp; Malprle.•awi faintly is l?:•, :Cos,4.@l10 RA mss xop,.. , Costo. o T40nel}tn, 4r. and Mrs. Palmer. and two BOA, of >detroii, were gtreste •of . TO. and M.fis ��trielc Wptgts lies Kay W'oode retur#ed to Detroit' with them for a week's vacation. • Mr. and Mrs. William Devereaux, Rev, William J, Devereaux aad blids Virginia Devereaux, of Chicago, v'i'a= ited Mr, and Mrs. 'DA:McConnell. Mr. and Mrs. James Curtin attend- ed the Butson reunion at London„ ' 'Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Burke spent the' ,week=fid with Toronto friends. Patrick Burns, ' of 'Detroit, visited with Mr. and Mrs. William Flanagan. Miss Helen Flanagan returned with. him for a week's vacation. Mr. Garnet Kearns, London, spent the week -end with Mrs. Kearp.s, Gayle, Mrs. Morris and Miss Rita McIver, Toronto, is spending her vacation with her. par - entail Mr, and Mrs. William McIver. Mrs, William Ackroyd and children, of Toronto, were guests ,of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 'O'Rourke. ' Mr. and Mrs. -Walter Burke visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Burke the past week. BLYTH ' - • The Mission Band of Loving Ser - vibe met in the school room of the United Church. The program *as,..tu, charge of Mrs. Calvert Falconer, Mrs. Frank Marshall read a chapter of the study book, "Nyanga's,..Two Villages;" Leslie Hilborn has returned to Westminster Hospital, London, where he is a patient. Personals: Mr. and Mrs. Hernard Hall, Marguerite and Rhea; at Que- bec City; Scott Fairservice, Sarnia, With .his wife and son,- Allan, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs: John F'airser- vice; Bernice and Doris Johnston ith Mr. and , Mrs.. M. Cook, Benmil- ler; Mrs. Alberta Bender . Toronto; with Mrs. Robert Wightman Mr. and Mrs. James Johnston and Mariene, of London, Mrs. George Johnston, Mr - and Mrs. Charlie Hallam, Dungannon, Mr. and Mrs. R. Riley, Londesboro, Lol•ne Johnston, Exeter, Phillip Wil- liams, Parkhill, Arthur Fulford; Clin- tor-, •Mr. and Mrs. Mansell Cook, Ben - miller, with Mr. and "Mrs. E. John- ston; Miss Ethel Taylor, •Kitchener; with Mr. and Mrs: A. Taylor; Mr. and 'Mrs. A. Taylor, Mrs. Minnie Lyons; with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lyon, Thorn - dale; ' . STAFFA Butson Reunion The Butson femily reunion was held in Springbank park, London, with a goodly number ' present.' 'Dinner was, served at noon, followed by a' busi- ness •meeting. The officers for 19,47 were elected as follows: President, Miss Marion -Euler; vice-president. Ed, Butson;' secretary, Mrs. L. Butson; program committee, , Law.rence Cooke; Harris Butson, Mrs. "G. Coulson; lunch committee, Miss Yera . Ilaiubly,•, Ml•'s.. Rof Butson, Mrs. Loril Bdtson, 'Mrs. Ed, Butson: The oldest person Pres-. ent .was William Ogden, Lucan; and the youngest was Lloyd Wagg, Port NEW MASSEY-HARRIS. MACHINES. 1 New 6 -foot Massey Binder 1 New 6 -foot Massey Mower 1 New 30 -tooth Dump Rake 1 New Stiff Tooth Cultivator with power lift and tractor hitch 1 'New Spring Tooth Cultivator 2 New 2 -furrow Tractor Plows 1 New No. 4, Corn Cultivator. 1 • New 10 -inch Tractor Grinder 1 New 12 -inch Tractor Grinder 1 Ne_Massey_I3 miner Mill- 1 ill 1 New 2 MP. Gas' Engine 1 New Electric Grinder l 1 New Rite -Way Milker , 1 New Massey Cream Separator -(Electric) 2 Sets 6QOx16 Wheels. and Skeins for Wood Wheel' Wagons. • ' a ALSO -- 1 Used 6 -foot 'Clipper Combine 1 Used 5 -foot Oliver Combine SEAFORT-H MOTORS CHEVROITETAND O'LbSMOBILE. SALES & SERVICE Prone :141 Seaforth Peid,yo , •:decided to; d '�� ' 1947 fella g #; Str"attord op t 0,1.14lsfie�` �Nar.l rl a an,d Hp Qrext Atraut h ' people front Staffs, Crotam arty; and; t :so tl tk 0134 D b ert To P Ott ipd0 da, zn zuity re- ceptiop.had In Statfa li',aU Friday night for Mr; and Xrd, ,Tulin N'prpis:,. OX Cronzhrty, Mrs,- Fortis,' a British. War bride, arrived, in Canada recently., tf, join 'her husband. A' program of'' round and' square dances continued', from 10. prn until after 3 a.m., with'. Music provided by a local.orcheetra, A gift of cash subscribed by the com- munity. generally Was presented to, Mr. and Mrs. Noris .by B. O. Mac-' donaid, . and ani address of welcome was read ht "Robert Hamilton, Crone arty, - M'r and Mra. Norris' are now living in Ailsa Craig, where Mr, Nor- ris is employed as a garagpman. ZIQN Mr. and Mrs. Bob Roney ,and family, of Imperial., Sask., and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Roz of Mitchell, visited on Friday witis). Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roney. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Gordon, of Sea - forth, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. James Malcolm. Miss Gwen Britton is spending a few days with her auntie, Mrs. Nor- man Stanlake, and Mr. •Stanlake,. In Heii'sall, • Mr. and Mrs. George Pepper and Ross and Mr. and Mrs. Glen •Pepper and family spefiti ' Stinaay with Mr. and Mrs. George Moore, Staffa. Mr. aid Mrs. Fergus Lanvin were called to her home in , Atwood on Thursday her. father, Mr.- James Broughton, having fell from a• load of hay and fractured several ribs and inj red hisleg. and Mrs., Dalton Malcolm and Mr. Ken Mills, of Regina, visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Erb; Sebringville. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Roney, accom- panied by Mr. and Mrs. 'Mac Scott and son, of- Mitchell, spent Sunday at the lake. BAYFIEL» - - • --.. ._ Miss Elva Dewar„ of Toronto, is spending her: vacation- with her par- ents,' Mr. and Mrs. Dadid Dewar. Mr.. A. Ford King, of Toronto, is the guest• of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George King• Mrs. M: Volume bas returned to Kingston after. spending the past month with Mrs. David Volume. . Miss Mary Gray, of London, is •vis- iting ,Mrs: F. A. Edwards. ' Mr. 'and Mrs.' Jack Ferguson and three sods, Charles, Bob and Jim of Trout Lake, Sudbury, tire the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L. Ferguson. . Mr. Stuart Sturgeon has accepted a position, in ' Preston. Mr. Len Smith, who' spent the past week with Mrs. 'Charles -Parker, re- turned to London on 'Suniiay. He was accompanied by Ilia _..sem; Glen. who had spent the week -end here. • • 'Special services will be held in Trinity Anglican "-Church on • Sunday .next• to commemorate the 98th anni- versary of the founding of the parish. Rev. Beverley Farr, of ,St. George's, Church; Godericb.; will be the speak- er at the morning service, and 'ley. J. Geoghegan, of .Woodstock, will be in charge of the evening service. Mrs: Mary ,Th'ornton..of Detroit: is a guest at the Albion•Hotel this week and renewing old acquaintances in the village. - Mrs. R. Watson; and- son, Edwards, of Broadview, Sask., arrived' last week to spend the summer with her mother, Mrs. F, A. Edwards, • f ProOamation TOWN' OF SEAFORTH On instructions from the Council, rhereby proclaim that: • • .No Dogs shall be allowed to run at large in the Town of Seaforth during the months. of 'i, JUNE, JULY AND AUGUST • &ga riti':,tou7iOnhning at *lege'be ,. rtintrary to this Proclamation shall • Irtable ICY; lie iliid atdcY'tlte Omer or.harborer prosecuted. SOS. : CLUFF, Mayor VA,RNA • One of the oldest and; most respect- ed' residents of this community, in the person of Thomas Dennison, was »stricken with paralysis in his home Wednesday night and was removed -to Scott Memorial Hospital, •Seaforth, where he passed • away • Friday night in his 90th' year. The funeral was held Monday from the Bali funeral home, Clinton, .with interment in Bay- field cemetery. • • Mr. Harry Thompson, of Goderich 'Township, in company with' his •'son, Rev: .T. R. Thompson, of St..Cathar- ines, called Monday on the former's sister, 'Mrs. L. Beatty.. Mr. and Mrs. Doherty; of Guelph; -called Sunday on the' latter's' aunt, Mrs..M.• Reil, of Listowel. Mr, and Mrs. R. J:• Woods and son, Bobby, Called Sunday on friends. -• VJ"is'e `E'sler', of ffiitieapoli fh ,. a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.'A. MCConneli. Owing to anniversary service in Trinity Church, Bayfield, there will 'be no service in St. John's Anglican Church here oh Sunday. - Master Jimmie Lee Argo is holiday- ing with, his aunt and uncle, Lee Mc- Connell. Mrs. Dedsworth, of London, spent Tuesday with her mother, Mrs. • E. Smith. - The fifers entertained the 'villagers Friday morning before ,setting out 'for Blyth to celebrate the 12th. , Mr. J. F. Smith 9.nd; family' visited on Sunday With Mrs.- Smith, Who Is ,now a patient in Victoria Hospital London. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Wiley, of De- troit, were guests of the former's sis- ter, Mrs. (Gertrude Reid. Master Billy Pilgrim' holidayed last Week with friends, i.n Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. James Perry, son Scott and daughter Betty, are guests at the home of Mrs. M. G. Beatty and Miss Mossop. German Economy (Daily Herald, London) It is no question of beiiig "sorry for the Germans." 'That is irrelevant. It is hard economic proposition. Either we crust lift German produbtion to the point at which she cart pay us our £100,000,000 a year, or we must con- tintl'e to pay it,,ourselves. And the same le, of course, trite of the Other Allies. For the only other course would be to abolish Allied control, to withdraw the troops, and to run all risks' of a resurgence Of German tary power within the next twenty tear.. (} #y e !' r ?".>, in wa,la; ip' B ivoe Pa kwo There are va,'rlo#Isl+..�r. 'mjss dna 'alta. 't.i ¢g here ai th.��. ti ros0 Vanacla atudyrgeducation, . '° Manitoba the investigation its conhlted, to adult ells t;;atiq9, , YD Qntario 3,; a :Mrge contrals- on is tuthe e °; xoblem aa, whole. I : **4.41410ah;Q; a .ld, if. the 1 •ov: erpmenta is' Wise, •red4t in an over- hauling, •„ re-vaMPizxg:pf the whole% great Costlyy edticatLgna1 syatemrl , of. that rich and populoge province. • It is high time s {ethin'g of the. ,kind were done. 41' democracy' de= pends; upon its education in a basic sense. The uneducated citizen — no great menace hi a letatorship-••-•is a' threat to the theors o government, If the consent•a;at+%ilrtelligent, the. whole state suffers F,very man's vote is as good as his brother's or his siss ter•'s. If the voter .1S.:not wise, his' vote is not wise anfl the society in which he lives is thereby damaged. Everyone is Against Sin This generelization will probably, ,meet with general agreement. Like .President' Coolidge, , everyone is against sin. But we venture the re- mark that something has gone wrong with our educational., system, .sopie,. thing fundameritallywrong. We are turning hoys and girls .and mer: and women out of our educational System without being educated:. They are, in thousands and tens of thousands,, tech- r:ically equipped to do this job or that. Their training in that respect is sup- erb. But techniques, important as they are, are not enough,. • There must be something more. We want, we need, citizens as well as technicians. But what do we get? We get engineers who cannot even spell. We get doctors whose only notion of culture is that you.8nd it in a test- tube. eattube. -We' get political illiterates by the thousand, in this •sense that they do not know, they thi not understand anything of the whole wide.world they live in. Mankind has not climbed to where it is without building upon the trea- sure house„the heritage, of the past. Mankind has always ',been able to }iuild"-fires, 'to grow food, to hunt, -to shelter itself. Today all this is done in the grand manner. The forces of ",the universe are harnessed to «o our bidding. Materially our technicians supply and forestall our needs. . But •the society resting thus upon so se- cure a technical basis' is losing sight .of, the vital needs to understand the "why" and the "whither” of life. In a word, what educationists call the humanities are being' forgotten. The whole trend of education is toward the development end production of use- ful; skilled tradesmen. But -the fun- damental reason why all this activity is. worth while is seldom recognized or thought of. This evil is widely recognised Birt the experts collapse when they 'stop to consider cures. It takes now some- thing like seven year..to ' bring a young medical . student to the point where he has the slightest 'grasp of the vast accumulation of, medical knowledge and techniques. Small Wonder: that he has not read fine lit- erature, studied his nation's history, at least dipped into the economic theories upon which society depends.. Is he .tobe asked further ,,to expand his almost endless yearsof student- ship for suciAan aim? Too Often Infantile • Similarly in other professions and ill other crafts and skills, So great is the technical background required that the . student, emerging qualified with his degree; has had no time at all to know what really it is all about- Hia'conversation, when it slides out of shoptalk, is too often infantile. His judgnent of events in his community, in the nation, and in the world is juv- enile also. Hence lo a great degree the shocked surprise when the even tenor of tris professional life, the prac- tising' of hishard won techniques+ is interrupted 'by a war. Whence came it?, Whither does it go? He knowsnot•,, even though the reasons for it have ''been clear for years had he but had the time,some time in his life, to learn not the, techniques but the working of the scrotal sciences and of Ike. humanities. 'Here then: is somethidg for educ'a-• tiouists to concern themselves with. Can we, somehow or other, combine the. 'acquisition of techniques, the de- uei'pment of the trade School; with a baste training in the meaning Wand significance of the existence of man• 'kind here upon the earth? If we da not, a price' will be du;y paid, ,for no nation. no raceor culture --can "afford thus to neglect •the fundamental rea- sons for our being, how we came here and where .we go. Education staggers before the task. 'We have even, developed a science •of education itself—another technique added to the long list of them •from school to college and to' university. But We cannot live by skills and. tech- niques. These mast have meaning. The meaning is there to be learned. But the -young man .and the young woman, each one hurrying toward some gainful goal, do not stop along the. *ay to ask ':Why." It is a ques- tion they or their children must an- swer some day. • It is perhaps a duty of 'the educator to try and provide it for them without too great delay. You Can Flit Off Your Porch A one-man helieopter, powered by a 40 horsepower two -cylinder engine, is being produced experimentally .. in Seattle, Wash. The test Model is fly- ing every day, according, to Horace T? Pentecost, its inventor and'prin- cipal exponent. It picks " up a 180- poundman and .takes biro wherever he wants to go, en short errands, .elect town, leaping lightly over. fences and buizing along a bity street just over the heads of astonished motorists. What will happen• if this thing appears in quantity is too dis- maying to think about. Its inventor claims it is .practical because he has sowed the teeha4cal problem of co-ordinating three sets of controls. His eyice has tten coun- ter -rotating winks, or propellers, eight feet in diaftletet. They (took like pro- pellers -'but they are airf0118', whieh When revolved at high speed produce lift. Thea craft is controlled by a sin- • -ereee�nev:� p weds 'S IN FOUR EXCITING .SALE 'GROUP'S. �' • 9. • I 10. Plai Plain or Floral Jerseys,,, Fine Celanese Crepes, Washable Spuns a'n'd Linens, as, well as. Navy Chambrays and - better tub fast cottons .in a" wide range , of colors and patterns of this season's best , sellers. Sizes 11 to 44. - ._._REGULAR TO $3'.95 TUB FAST COTTON. DRESSES; , ..:.... : REGULAR VALUES. TO. $10.95, FOR REGULAR VALUES" TO $14.50, FOR REGULAR .VALUES TO $19.50, ' FOR ...: ::.. - 2.98 6.95. 9,75' 1.2,65 CLEARING—WOMEN'S SPRING COATS ONLY REGULAR •AND •SHORTIE COATS, in Swagger, �J au Slip-on or Dressy Coats, in a fair range of popular Spring Z5"/O DISCOUNT • colors.- Sizes 14 to 28 Phone 32. • Seaforth Ont. g e rod extending downward from the gear -box over the pilot's head. He has a. throttle control' beside his left hand. The "hoppi-copter" is only what'its name implies; a small device employ- ing the helicopter principle and used nrostly'for short personal flights. The improved model now being construdt- ed' will have a payload of 250 pounds v•ith the same power plant, ,allowing a 200-pblind operator to - carry fifty pounds of .merchandise -if he is using the Machine- for deliveries, for ex- ample. • The technicaladvantage of the de- sign lies in its single control: a sys- tem impossible • in large helicopters. The counter -rotating airfoils simply provide lift, nothing more. 'Direction, al control is obtained by Verging the tilt of the whole rotor assembly, which pulls the machine fed -ward, backward, or 'lets it hover. Reports from the Seattle experi- mental plant say it flies easily, with no special training required to oper- ate it. On level flight it is said to achieve about 60 miles an . hour, It will take off or land 'in any space 10 feet square or more. • The little experimental model, with a one -gallon tank, . flies in and out of Seattle backyards, lands in downtown parking lots, and flits about like a Mechanical dragon -fly. It provides the first practical approach 'to the problem of individual flight,which has intrigued the imaginations' of writers for many centuries, A man in such a machine can fly like a bird, with- out the .restrictions imposed on him Eby an airplane, a landing field. high flying speeds and distances required to take off and land. He can fly this device off his front porch. commute in 'it, deliver mail or parcels in it. Housectrives can fly it to stores. Aviation traffic men wonder what will happen if the "boppi•copter" is introduced into existing traffic. Some motorists bade trouble enough re- membering to stop at stop' Hghts and Maffked intersection's, give the right signals for turns, etc. The sight of one of these things buzzing down to a landing right in front of them, or 'hovering overhead, will upset many motorists. • " -" Within its limitations it 'seems like a workable deylce. It doesn't belong to the aviation industry as much as,• perhaps, to the motorcycle or motor - shooter industry. It ought to be a lot of •fut>' to operate.. It certainly will revive the use of the phrase: "Drop in on me some time," - • AUDITS ,!INVESTIGATIONS- TAX CONSULTANT Bookkeeping Systems and Servige` " Bernard A. Galbraith ACCOUNTANT — AUDITOR• - Established 1942 • 52 Albert St., - Phones -=2427-W Stratford, Ont. Res. -2427-J NOTICE Town of Seaforth All persons in the Municipality, owning or harbouring dogs, must purchase. 194$ License for same on or before July 31, 1946. Licenses ,will be issued from the Treas- urer's Office in the Town Hall, or from the Tax Collector, J. Cummings. After that date .summonses through the court will be issued to owners or harbourers of dogs not having licenser. ALL DOGS. MUST WEAR LICENSE TAGS ANIMALS �Itt$an quickly removed in Clean Sanitary trucks. Phone collect. 219 M1TCMI LL - ns Limit W'�ll�a>r�► Stone So