HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1953-03-06, Page 74
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Ate recent debate, In the fed,
era] „dart lenient POine
•1,401141 St., L. Oren entlinetd woe
•Oberaeteristice of the bond ,of
• Unity ad loyelty v,ghich exist*
between' Canada and other '
merribere of the British COW
monwealith, and the Crtissli,
" 'the speech, delivered by Mr.
St. Laurent, foliowed considers,
• Mon of an amendment to a bill
• establishing tha royal etyle and
Melo on proclamations.,
litr. St. Laurent: Mr, Chairman,
this is a bill that I consider to be
tot great importance and I think
that it should receive attentive and
KIDNEYACIDS
Noy parele newt seem to get sgood
akihrs rest. They ben and time -Mame it
n4& -.When it neredie their kidneys.
aria, kidneys filter potsoni and. exam
ode horn the Mood: If they fag and
aseranties, stay in the system—attired
not Ofin follows. If you don't rest roll
get and we Dodd's Kidney Pigs. 'Wore
gallp Ihe kidneys so that you• ean rest
Pet -and feel better. f 36
Dodcts Kidney Pills
M4'11011: .1MIS*1.T.W.,9,11. ATM helle
40.10# Clke
MIL P*.t.0,0nWO•Wat, '4," wry,*
thia,.,000.14Ont, 40: 0.4.1f.44e)
isfille'br H. sey'*if 0446
,
matt9,n etatontoruse' for'
Canada tee3aee and tite set
out: •
o
•
Elizabeth the Second by the
arace of God of the United. King*
dom, Canada and Her other Realms
and Territories Queen, Head of bite
Commonwealth, Defender of the
Faith. 8.
That is the text that was agreed
to at the prime ministers' confer-
ence held in London last Decem-
ber. There was a general desire to
• have the royal style and title ac-
cord with the constitutional posi-
tion of the various members of the
„ammonwealth and to have it, n so
far as might meet the conditions of
the various members of the com-
monwealth, as uniform as possible.
Recognize U:K.Sovereign
' With respect to some members
of the commonwealth there Was
some difflaulty:, For inettence, with
respect to Pakistan It *as found
that the form that would lee &Meat -
able to the pockets of the 'United
Kingdom would bel apt too et-edte
difficulties with the populatitin .of
Pakistan. It was also found that
such writhe case with-respectIo
the population of the MOP!. c't
Town of Seaforth
TAX PRE -PAYMENT RECEIPTS
FOR 1953
The Town of Seaforth will pay 4% per annum,
up to August 31, 1953, on'all Prepaid Taxes.
Certificates and full particulars may be obtained
at the Town Clerk's Office in the Town Hall.
D. EL WILSON,
•Treasurer
1
SEAFOATH MONUM,„pNT WORKS
OPEN DAILY — PHONE 3634
T. PRYDE & SON
ALL TYPES OF CEMETERY MEMORIALS
Enquiries are invited.
Exeter
Phone 41-J '
Clinton
Phone 103
Your Business Directory •
•
• LEGAL
A. W. SILLERY.
Barrister, Solkiter, Etc.
Phones: Office 173, Residence 781
• SEAFORTH : ONTARIO
McCONNELL & HAYS
Barristers, Solicitors, Etc.
PATRICK D. McCONNELL
• H. GLENN HAYS, Q.C.
t County Crown Attorney
SEAFORTIa ONT.
Telephone 174
ACCOUNTING
RONALD G. McCANN
Public Accountant
CLINTON : ONTARIO
Office: Phones:
litoyal Bank Office 561, Res. 455
A. M. HARPER
•Chartered Accountant
55 South St. Telephone
Gederich 343
Licensed Municipal Auditor.
OPTOMETRIST
JOHN E. 'LONGSTAFF
Optometrist
Eyes Examined. Glasses Fitted.
Phone 791
MAIN ST. : SEAFORTH
Office Hours: Week days, 9 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m.; Saturdays, 9 a.m. to
• p.m. Closed' Wednesday all day.
Thursiday evenings by appointment
Only.
AUCTIONEERS
• HAROLD JACKSON
Specialist in Farm and House-
hold Sales.
Licensed l Huron and Perth
Counties. Prides reasonable; satis-
faction guatanteed.
roe information,- etc., write or
Phone HAROIJ) JACKSON, 661 r
14, Seaforth; „Rat- 4, Seaforth.
JOSEPH L. RYAN
Specialist in farm stock and im-
pledeente and household efeects.
itatleaction guaranteed. •Licensed
In ifttromend Perth.Counties.
For partieulars and open dateS,
melte or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN,
It. •R. 1, Dublin. ,Phone 40 r 5,
10114filn.
EDWARD W. ELLIOTT
Lecebsed Auctioneer
COierespondeneeProcaPtly answer• -
ed. Immediate aWangements can
be Made for sale dates by phoning
4654 Mitten Charges moderate
iand,eatittattetion guara-7`131-, eid: •
MERCY*0. WRIGHT
Illeenited Auetlerieee Cromarty
LIVesteek and Perm Sale,
4celalty
.10etter auction itale, 664 the
wumwr, Atetletteer. Phone Mn -
MEDICAL
DR. M. W. STAPLETON
Physician and Surgeon
Phone 90 Seaforth
JOHN C. GODDARD, M.D.
Physician and Surgeon
Phone 110 Hensatl
JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A., le:D.
Physician and Surgeon
Phones: Office 5-W; Res. 5-3
Seaforth
• SEAFORTH CLINIC
E. A. McMASTER, B.A., M.D.
I nterni st
P. L BRADY, M.D.
Surgeon
Office Hours: 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.,
daily, except Wednesday and Sun-
day.
EIVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday only, 7-9 pen.
Appointments made in advance
are desirable.
CHIROPRACTIC
D. 11.•McINNES
Chiropractic - Foot Correction
,COMMERCIAL HOTEL
Monday, Thursday -'1 to 8 p.m.
VETERINARY
D. J. McKELVIE, D:V.M.
Veterinary Surgeon
HIENSALL, ONT, — PHONE 99
TURNBULL & BRYANS
Veterinary Clinic
J. 0. Turnbull, D.V.M.
W. R. Bryans, D.V.M.
Phone 105 Seaforth
THE McKILLOP
MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, Ont.
0101=110ERS;
-President - J. L. Malone, Seaforth
Vice -Pres. - J. H. McEwing, Blyth
Manager ,and Sec.-Treas. - M. A,
Reid) Seaforth.
DIRECTORS:
E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; J. L.
Malone, Seaforthe S.. H. Whit-
more, Seaforth; Chris. Leonhardt.
Bornholm; 'Robert Archibald, Sea -
forth; &that 11. MeErwing, Blyth;
ten;--Wire-Sa.Alexander, Wal-
ton; Harvey Fuller; Giederich, J. E.
Pepper, BrUcefield,
it r
\ AGENTS:
Letper, j, Lendesboro;
I T. Treater, Ittodhagett; Selwyn
taker, Brussels; Eric Munroe, Sea.
Imo•
tore.
690 a . • „ liedete
1
Prime Minister St. Laurent
South Africa. With respect to Atm-
tralia, New, Zealand and Canada an
effort was made to agree upon the
acceptance of a form that would be
erfiform—with the exception of the
use of the name of the country -e -in
each one. That was finally agreed
Upon and there was agreement -1
will not say at whose suggestion;
I think it was almost simultaneous-
ly suggested by the representatives
of the three countries, Canada, Aus-
tralia and New Zealand—that it
would be desirable to retain in the
style and title ks used in our coun-
tries something that would indicate
that it was the sovereign of the
United 'Kingdom who was recogniz-
ed as the sovereign of our coun-
tries, and that it would be prefer-
able to have that indication appear
in royal style and title rather to
have it _merely name .ehch one of
our respective countries and to
have all the rest of the common-
wealth. described as the Queen's
other realms and territories.
It seems to me that that is in
aocord with the historical develop-
ment of our constitutional rela-
tions. Her Majesty is now the
Queen of Canada but she is the
Queen of Canada because she is
the Queen of the United Kingdon
and because the people of Canada
ire hippy to recognize as their sov-
ereign the person who is the sov-
ereign of the United Kingdom. It
is not a separate office. It is the
recognition of the traditional de-
velopment of our institutions; that
our parliament is headed by the
sovereign; and that it is the .eov-
ereign who is recognized as the
sovereign and who is loyally and,
I may say, affectionately recognized
as the sovereign of our colintry. We
all felt that it was desirable to
have that recognition retained in
the title as a proclamation of the
historical, traditional link between
this country and the United King-
dom; and the same feelings were
entertained by the other two prime
ministers with respect to their
countries.
'By the Grace of God"
The question then arose whether
it would be proper to have in the
title we would use the traditional
words, "by the grace of God," sov-
ereign. We felt that our people did
recognize that the affairs of this
world were not determined exclu-
eively by the volition of men and
women; that they were detertained
by men and women as agents for a
supreme authority; and that it was
by the grace of that supreme auth-
ority that we -were privileged to
have such a person as our sover-
eign. Then perhaps the rather
more delicate question arose about
the retention of the words "defen-
der of the faith." In England there
is an established church. In our
countries there are no established
churches but in. our countries there
'are people who have faith in the
direction of human affairs by an
all -wise Providence; and we felt
that it was a good thing that the
civil authorities would proclaim
that their organization is such that
it is a defence of the continued be-
liefs in a supreme power that or-
ders the affairs, of mere men, and
that there could be no reasonable
objection from anyone who believ-
ed in the Supreme Being in having
the sovereign, the head of the civil
authority, described. ae a believer
in and a defender of the faith in a
supreme ruler.
I trust and hope that those views
which were shared in this confer-
ence will appear as reasonable
views to honorable members. 'The
procedure that was discussed was
that we would each of us asklour
parliaments to acquiesce in the is-
sue of proclamations her Her Maj-
esty herself. It is Her terajesty Who
Will determine, who will announce
by proclamation millet her royal
_style and title will be,for each one
of the several "realms of the corn-
monvvealth. It is hoped that these
proclamations may be issued simul-
taneousle in the various realms of
the commonwealth and in the other
,parts of the commonwealth that re-
cognize Her ,Majesty not as their
Queen but as the head of the com-
monwealth.
• The developments of modern
times have been that the sovereign
does not exercise the royal prerog-
ative that has come down through
the centuries without being sure of
the acquiescence of parliament.
And it is for the purpose of ex-
pressing in advance that our par-
liament will 'acquiesce in such a
proclamation that this bill. is now
before the house
Link of Common Ideals
In going .over the elements of
tlx royal stele and title. I made no
see.ciat referenCe to the -head' of
the it -hg
fortunate that In spite of local sit-
,uatione that appear to make it nec-
essary for the Most populous part
of the commonwealth no longer to
recognize the eereerelget of the Vett-
ed Kingdom as the sovereign of its
State4 but felt thaalt Wee iteettesary
7
'atto1...1ththe
)
erf the coinulee.V.F4
fr*eemtat04*00 „ ,
04* 01.94'*00,0:14..1**0
140. variel*
monweaU
0,14',903$9P11.411%.,,
their' mentortere „lot 4s00tPARP,,c,ff,'
the Pent, their, lethlitt4C.bee,,,,
itult that eargOe!etieSt,;1*,00.....10:hee;":
been for the benebto their. Act6pt.4,4,
and their dea1r to eeneerve that
association 4IX the future for the
benefit of their people. I de not
think that.we are hong presneepte-
outs or colieeited when Wei belt -ere,
and even whe'n we express the
be-
Ilef, that this coMmonweelth .group"
not only works ter the benefit' of
its own peoples but is an effective
instrument for the, good' of free
mankind throughmit the whole
world.
I know that my predecessor had
an influential -part i'x the decision
that was reached thet, in spite of
the fact that the' situation in India
required be constitution of a, ree
public for that great coantrY, India
would remain a part of the com-
monwealth. I fleet that the influ-
ence h exercised at that time was
in the right direction and that the
result was something ben.eficial to
us, beneficial to India and also ben-
eficial to free men throughout the• ,
world, and that the, conservation,
and development of that feeling of
common ideals, common purposes
between the great republic of India
and, the other members of the Bri-
tish commonwealth will continue to
be of service to free mankind. And
it is I think something for which
the realistic genius of the British
people has reason to be proud, that
it can accommodate itself to the
requirements of. new situations in
the lives of men and can conserve
the essentials without having to
conserve forms that to some ap-
1336
•
'00b,
Aftejis
‘,043r
'oit, He onvb#00%,
miloAttRriAlr
In.kLto th�flx
btivganttd40
Strengthened after
qf responsible acme.'
The Expositor will, reprint Mr!
Peartme'e speech in a settee.
quent iseue, •
•
pear to have become so outmoded
that they can no Lougee, be accept-
ed. I think it is a magniacent thing
'that' the peopleof India and the
peoples of the Occident can look
upon each other as human beings
equal in every respect; and I was
not going 'beyond what the fact re-
quires when I said in Ottawa to
Mr. Nehru that we hoped and trust-
edlthat in spite of the an More
centuries of their social experience
and civilization there would never
be any indication by their own -
people that they looked down upon
us as their inferiors, and that I
hoped and' trusted that in spite of
our rapid developinent of industrial
processes and industrial know -ho
there would never be any feeling
among the people of India that we
thought that because of that we
were human beings in any way
superior to the millions who inhab-
ited their country.
Rights As Canadians
We all know from our owe-Canee
dian experience that unity between
us, unity between all the elements
of our population, is and must be'
based upon that recognition, by us
all that we are all equal to each
other and that all have the same
rights to Canadian citizenship, and
that Canadian citizenship gives us
equality in every respect with all
oRr.
,Iti0f01‘,
r4
r$0,.tang; 1#ff
-900Pr',Ttat,Fwg)4 tp1.4109.0,, ,
400414:A0e. bel vg '44 Pgert by
44 of 66x.' fOil,c)W citizens- to Malte
Mt over into Any other kind of Cen-
&Wea time we batmen to: be be;,,
e,aase of our racial prigins add with
our ancestral traditions.
That is also something whice Is
now working out in this eceeMole
wealth of free peoples. 1 think it
is a solid foundation, upon whieh
there can develop and rest equal
pride of all of us in our allegiance
to a common sovereign. There are
those of us who recognize the sov-
ereign of the United Kingdom as
our own sovereign. There is .4
common loyalty between us and
the group of which that sovereign
is the head only as the head of
the common -wealth because In their
countries the situation that exists
does not make it convenient to
have, a monarchial form of consti-
tutional set-up. •
Seed Potatoes Go to Nine Countries
Substantial quantities of 'Cana-
dian certified seed potatoes have
5111711-1111
$wamps:visa
gr,
10,0;014,013
els
04,40hr A';;W
z604,14484-$4.4616, 0.4*
anCer ,4,9411to ti3g Pain *e
Rtagtc;Sout» 440.04, WSJwe-At '
4441.es and TIta-a494
Prince Edward bland eXPerieit,
the largest tiatel-1,294;741
Up to. December 31, compereth*itle,
699,118 bushels for the eaante
in" 1951. New Brunswick sipped
562,635 busbele compared with 441,,..";
034 in 1951. Alherta eeported 2,712
bushels to the United States and
note In 1951; Beitish Cele/able 46,-
011 ibushele in 1952 and only 5,300
in, 1951. Ontario and Manitoba,
Buchanan Cleaners
Mount Forest
Successors to TONE CLEANERS
We Picks Up and Deliver Monday
and Thursday
Phone 239 Seaforth
• ANDY ,CALDER
• "7' AGENT
Ladies' and Gents' 2 -piece Ignite,
Plain Dreeses, $1; Plain Skirts, 50e:
Gent's Trousers, 50c.
Quality Plus Service is Our Motto
S. BUCHANAN - Proprietor
•
48.18.T 74'aw
,
:0;i4Ok
t11411t".40: Mrij e
adgeetb treale
L -1•67. pet: 10,4
Atom. thta.6.5.0 p6r'6
64,
'belt
THE
9
0Ette;
So we have beiereda Tette*
Heron. Taat's not wIto,t,b
called by their 'patrosis,. hut that's
what they are 66,46d. 1* Utsftlezb6
Andthat's what thea.a.ete,m4.4iysik,
beverage rooms, evenethollihasthe6
People of HuroR baeleiteeedeeVetta
for -there.44 Lto
This is Jude another
the letter of the law' te1366Ing py•
ed and the sprit
trated. It is in the reddfd,, _ea
every one of theateiheVera0.1'9PW$
has had police action 1 limegft!tc;
against them. The lineation IS, Seta
long are men going to keep ou. pay
ing a third mora for their intoxi-
catlfig+ beyeragee?.- Illerackeir,
erage rooms deltreltatit'oneettf:
worst features of the, liquor traffide
nuisance. The people cit.s66431,10
not 'want beverage roonts.—(Adve)e..
•
54
iffc
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• •
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"4636' 36
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