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The Huron Expositor, 1953-12-04, Page 13, EC Ezeitenienti• 1;Tow'. Oeutd there Ibe any excitement at •a time hike blue? AAI this wee and- piyrt of -Cite neat,. thus .. ueation,al institution Awe 3t0 "4:41, -eco , a 'steady diet of CAXletiele-9 a 4lee. Trouble comaes. last and furious as these "brain:- MA-Sera brain-t+ers male their first appearance -•of the tome.), For moat, they seem- ed; to 'pop Tun from' nowhere, but• when TO take another look,..the TURKEYS Choice, "Fresh Killed, Oven Dressed Turkeys for Christmas or New Year's. - Delivered - BERT SPENCE Phone 190-M - Mitchell r • cit ieafoi day obOAddmeni: Caao be n'echedu - ed for over a month. Just what .the outcome will be is not. ex11e0ted to be known for: a couple of. weeks, *irking pap- ers takes time, so you'+I1 just have to wait, mother! Now, to get away from that de- plorable subject. Rave you had. a chance to see the extra curricular activity list posted fast , week? There area large • variety of sub, jeots to choose from from, which should be able to liven up the' tenth periods considerably, Back in the ancient days, about four, years ago, there was a class in home economics for the boys. For the ,boys, at the time, it was -the favorite tenth period of the week. Whether 'the feed bill went up too much or notthat year is not known, but if it was to start again it should attract much interest. Girls, you should have tasted those cookies and tarts! The day we made the pancakes . . . you nev- - Continuing - SALE! TEN % OFF ALL Surplus Stock See Us For A Complete Line of All Building Materials Seaforth Lumber Ltd. Phone 47 Seaforth The Perfect Combination for BEST POSSIBLE Dry Cleaning Sanitone Cleaning Plus STA -NU • Sanitone Gets Out ALL the Dirt • Sta*Nu Restores Finish Beautifully This drycleaning miracle now available to YOU at no extra cost! r erclonetedeforograyb FINISHING PROCESS used and recommended for years by leading clothing manufacturers 'Makes clothes look and feel new again! Sta*Nu restores original textile oils lost through wear and drycleaning. Fabrics feel lively, eoft, cashmere -smooth. Colors look brighter. Clothes drape properly, re• mist creases and dirt. Wrinkles hang right mut-even after crumpling or packing! Available only at drycleoners dhplaying this emblem... StaNu • ...FINI5NINa PROCESS ,Said afoutsteat toddy Cost No More Than Ordinary Cleaning Exclusive At Brady Cleaners - SEAFORTH AGENT - Eric Milner Flowers • of r „OR. VIM Put +f (Wren' n0004 Mg stbad average. for em'i'r iii . 1.19e10y'I s0heil''u1o..Ma week the ioeafe tIi Baldwins extended . thefts leap e leadership, as they took two easy wins -at the expense of the Wig, ham. Town Hailers. Saturday night the locals cart the new • Wingh4m 'club for thedrat time the The result was' quite obvious in the first period Notching; MO quick $pais in the first 20 1!ninutee, the' team ,coasted to a 7-1 victory., In Wingham Mon days night it ..was a repeat of Sat- urday 'night, asSeaforth came oat on tap holding the 9-4 decision, The only change was that 'Moose' Smith, who was seen in action here 'Saturday, has been sent back, to the north. In his place is Tommy Wilson, Tx -(London Lou Bailer. The addition of Wilson should give some greatly needed strength, to the (basement dwellers. Saturday night the Chatham Sherman Admirals move into the Seaforth camp. ,.For the past few weeks the ;Chatham kids have had' some poor luck with their goalies. Morley ,McMaster 'hopes he can solve this problem by the ,lime he steps onto the ice Saturday. Last year McMaster found some fault in the Seaforth rink. Providing the chip has been dropped since, hock- ey fans should see a good match when the Admirals make their first appearance here Saturday. er tasted anything like them, thank goodness! Attention . . . 'the Captain is looking for a crew. It appears as if there is going to be conserip- tion within the ,next week for the H.,M.S. Pinafore. The crew is not big •enough to meet the require- ments and this means some canar- ies are going to get the thumb shortly. There's a lot of fun ahead for somebody. - There hasn't been any word of a Christmas dance or afternoon ooncert. If there's little prepara- tion made, there could be lots, of fun -also a half holiday. You can see news has come to a standstill this week, so between now and' next Friday I'll see if I can find 'something shattering. Paper is 'Canada's largest export. Photofilm is made from wood pulj REEVE WILLIAM MORRITT• Acclaim Councils In Huron Centres The following are results of elec- tions leo-tions by acclamation in four more Huron County centres: Grey-ToOvn- ship, Blyth, Wingham and Grand Bend. More nomination and elec- tion by acclamation information is found on Page 4 of this issue of The Expositor. GREY: Reeve -Clifford Roland (accl.). Council -William Bishop, Clifford Dunbar, Howard McNaught, Hugh Smith (accls.). BLYTH: Reeve -William Mor- ritt (accl.). -Council-George Radford, Louis Whitfield, Fred Howson, Cecil Wheeler (accls.). School Board (four to be elect- ed) -,Mrs. Lorne Scrimgoeur, Car- men . Hodgins, William Empey, Frank Tyreman, Walter Butel, Geo. Bailey. WTNGHAM•: Mayor - DeWitt Miller (arch). Reeve -R. E. McKinney (acct.). Deputy Reeve --Jos. 'Kerr (accl.). Council -W. F. Burgman, Elmer Wilkinson, Athol 'Purdon, Earl Hamilton', Norman Keating, How- ard Machan (accls.). P,U.C.-R. H. 'Lloyd (acct.). GRAND BEND: Council -John Manore, Campbell Chapman, John Hood, Clarence Green '(sects.). School Board -Kenneth Young, W. F. B. McLaren, Lawrence Mas- on (accls.). CROSSROADS (By James Scott) -BE WARNED NOW On January 25 a terrible thing is going to happen and in ease you haven't heard about it, now is as good.a time as any to get prepar- ed. I am not talking about the birth- day of Robert Burns which also falls on that date, although I have known the odd one who had to get prepared for that festive night too. No, it's not Burns' birthday that's in question, but it is directly con- TO on TO THE ELECTORS OF SEAFORTH: Vote for the candidate of your choice, but by all means VOTE! NELSON C. CARDNO A Candidate for P.U.C. For transportation: . Phone 82 This Week AT THE Community Centre FRIDAY, DEC. 4th 8 - 10, p.m. SKATING SATURDAY, DEC. 5th SKATING in the Afternoon IMISGRMIIIIIMIRMIIMGamosnogamamt This is what SALE .means!' Everything is on sale but we're outdoing everybody with our special bargain prices -sloshed un- believably low -on Old Company's Lehigh Premium Hard Coal! NOW is the time -the best time - to fill your bin. Take advantage of our ridiculously low prices for this top quality hard cooll CAI( TODAYI Yov°II like Oar sp•elal eredII ptansI Seaforth Lumber Ltd. Phone 47-Elieforth, Ont. osummomoseggopmergagigermaggoorgil SC nected to Auld Scotia's favorite bardie. You know what a bardie is? Of course you do, and I haven't met a Scot yet who couldn't tell a poet when he saw it in print. But there is a chap -Englishman by the way -who maintains that these days hardly anybody knows the braid Scots and in order to make things easier he proposes to "translate" the poetry of Rabbie Burns. He's going to rewrite the main poems and put them into "good English!" They are to be published 'January 25. There are at least three good reasons why such a terrible thing •should never be done. • In the first place, it isn't neceF- sary and if there is one rsce in the world who hates the superfluous it is the Scots. True enough some of us may have a little trouble re- membering exactly what "thairm" or "pint -stoup" or "rutty sark" mean, but usually we can guess from the rest of the poem. Be- sides, there are hundreds and hun- dreds of lines where you won't find a single word which would stop you. As far as knowing the pre- cise meaning of every word goes, there are not so many of us who have such a large vocabulary of ordinary English words that we don't constantly come upon some which we have to look up in the dictionary. The second reason is that Rob- bie Burns was using the language which was part of his everyday life and he was writing poems about that same everyday life. Deliber- ately he chose to write in the vernacular of his time because he thought it best expressed the true flav_or of what he was trying to say. That he was right needs no proof. He -is today, and has.been for well over a century, the •poet of the people. If he needed trans- lation this could never have hap- pened. And the third reason is one which affects every aspect of our living today. The real reason this English fellow thinks be .should translate Burns is not because be thinks be can make the poems bet- ter, but because he thinks he can make them easier. We live in a time when the easier a thing Is made fol us, the better we like it. 1 have just finished, reading Ma- jor Strickland's wonderful account of pioneer days celled "Twenty - Seven Years in Canada West." This is one of the best and most de- tailed stories of early settlement ever written about this country. The one thing which emerges above all else is how rewarding the life in those days was in spite of the truly amazing hardships which every settler -no matter who he was or whether he had much or little money -hid to ex- perience, Long hard hours, peril to 11fe nd 1imib, loss of loved ones, threat disaster never far away -all th e and, yet, Major Strick- land had ti,s, . „his life, reap- ed the rich rewards` I f hhde Oath hard labor and felt t , < e had Med shore fully than if he had F�• R ;ALL THE FAMILY . CHOOSE FROM THE GREATEST ARRAY OF .SMART USEFUL GIFTS WE'VE ASSEMBLED IN OUR OVER 50 YEARS OF BUSINESS . , AND REMEMBER! EVERY •PURCHASE I8 GIFT • BOXED FREE 1 ' V GIFTS FOR HER: SLIPS 2,95 to 7.95 a PANTIES - .59 to 2.50 NIGHTIES 2,95 to 10.95 NYLON HOSE 1.25 to 1.95 HtANDKERCHIEPA .10 to 1.50 TOWELS and TOWEL SETS .89 to 7.95 LUNCH and TABLE BETS 1.95to1295 BEDSPREADS ` 7.95 to 18.50 GLOVES 1.00 to 3.95 BLOUSES 2.98 to 9.95 SWEATERS 4.50 to 9.95 HOUSE COATS 4.95 to 18.50 SKIRTS 4,95 to 11.95 DRESSES 9.95 to 29.50 FINE LANGMUIR LUGGAGE 10.95 to 29.50 A. GIFTS FOR "SIS": SWEATERS DOLLS and TOYS SKIRTS BLOUSES SNOW SUITS PURSES DRESSES 4� 1.95 to 4.95 1.00 to 5.95 1.95 to 3.95 1.95 to 2.95 10,95 to 18.95 1.95 to 2.95 2.95 to 9.95 GIFTS FOR HIM: FINE SHIRTS 2.88to11.05 SPORT SH I RTS 4.95 to 11.95 PYJAMAS 3.95 to 7.95 NECKWEAR 1.00 to 2.00 FINE SOX .79 to 1.95 HANDKERCHIEFS .25 to .75 GLOVES 2.95 to 4.95 WOOL GLOVES 1.95 to 3.50 MUFFLERS 1.95 to 4.50 BELTS 1.50 to 3.00 CUFF LINKS and SETS 1.00 to 4.50 WINDBREAKERS 11.95 to 15.95 STATION COATS 13.95 to 29.50 BATH ROBES 7.95 to 16.95 SWEATERS 4.95to10.50 LUGGAGE 3.95 to 35.00 TIE RACKS 1.95 HAT GIFT CERTIFICATES 4.95 to 10.50 GIFTS FOR "SONNY" SHIRTS 1.95 to 2.95 PLAID SHIRTS 2.49 SOX .79 to 1.39 SWEATERS 2.95 to 5.95 PYJAMAS 1.95 to 3.95 HOCKEY SWEATERS 3.50 BOYS' TIES .50 to 1.00 BOYS' STATION COATS 13.95 to 15.95 BOYS' SKI CAP$ 1.59 to 3.25 CHECK THESE HANDY GIFT SUGGESTION LISTS - THEN CHRISTMAS SHOP AT STEWART BROS. ri, 1i !1 1i . r•,j,.*.K:1'.-.1. �l,1'ry1!t1.l• I y..t .Keil,.1; .1 ,1..:.l ,::ii : 41., 'r 4' ,.�ti� ,l.4 "_1 yr4' ,r-1:.�4' ;1, ',h: Hensall United Church Choir to Present a Christmas Cantata The choir, under the direction of Mr. Ronnie and Miss Lammie, is practising a Christmas cantata, to be presented in the United Church Sunday evening, December 20. stayed on the family estate over home. No one is wise to go out looking for trouble and difficulty, but to meet the challenge of his own pro- fession and situation surely gives him more satisfaction than to fall back on today's formula which is simply, "let George do it." Now comes along a "George" who would take all the life and all the work of appreciation away from the greatest singer of song and story Scotland has ever known. I, for one, don't thank him for it, and I warn all fellow admirers of Robert Burris to be on guard against this threat to The Immor- tal Memory. Too Late To Classify rt OR SALE -d1 PIGS SEVEN WEEKS old; 1 calf, two weeks old; 1 steer, between 400 and 500 pounds. LORNE WILSON. Phone 658 r 2L 4488-1 1 O•R SALE -4 TONE UNDER -DASH auto radio, like . new; 530. KEN MOORE. Phone 647 r 81, Seaforth. 4488-1 Euchre & Dance Sponsored by L.O.B.A. SEAFORTH COMMUNITY CENTRE FRIDAY, DEC. 4th Games at 8:30 p.m. Music by Collins' Orchestra Admission 50 Cents Ladies Please 'Bring Sandwiches LUCKY LUNCH PRIZE Sat. Morning Hockey All Boys wishing to Play Hockey, Be at the Community Centre SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5th at 9 a.m. Age Limit - 15 Years Before December 1 MEMBERS OF MIDGET TEAM NOT ALLOWED TO PLAY 51118118, -llsr ' Expositor Want Ads Bring Results - Phone 41i SPECIALS ELLMAR PURE PEANUT BUTTER c 16 -Ounce Jar 32 3L ROBIN HOOD OATS FOR HUT BREAKFAST 17c 36 -Ounce Bag CLARK'S PORK & BEANS l 1 c 20 -Ounce Tins 2 FOR 33o WETHEY'S TOMATO JUICE -Fancy Quality 11c 20 -Ounce Tin 10 TINS FOR $1,00 AUSTRALIAN RAISINS 2 Pounds ° 37c WESTON'S CHOCOLATE DROP CANDIES 39c 1 Pound OLD LONDON TOWN MINCEMEAT 33c Two -Pie Size -Tin OGILVIES, AYLMER, WAGSTAFFS FRUIT CAKE MIX C9c Makes a 2 -Pound Cake D SNIDER'S CRISPY FLAKE SHORTENING 27c 1 Pound Bake with Margarine and give your baking a delicious flavor ROSE BRAND -3 Pounds 9 95c WRIGHT'S Superior Food Market Free Delivery - Self -Serve - tow Prices PHONE 17