Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1954-05-21, Page 74?i SA t4 sviw.+ta�a Huron -Maitland- Presbytery Met in Teeswater Tuesday The Presbytery of Th ron-Mait- dand of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, meeting in Knox Church, Teeswater, on Tuesday, May 1'1, stud well attended by representa- tives from Seaforth,Brussels, Teeswater, Wingham, Mo.asworth, 'Gerrie, Bluevale, Belmore, Luck - now, South Kinloss and Kinlough, Goderich, Heiman and Clinton, Lakeview Casino GRAND BEND OPENING DANCES Saturday, May 22nd — and — Midnight, May 23rd Neil McKay's All-Star Orchestra Be among the first to Dance on our Beautiful New Dance Fioori bade farewell to Rev. W. R' T. Ful- ton, whose resignation front [e1- v911e ,Church, Brussels, sad Knox Church, Belgrave, was accepted. Mr. Fuiton1has been chosen by the Board of Missions to take charge of the church's estaibdishment and work in Kitimat, B.C., the home of the giant aluminum industry of that province. Rev. A. J. Simpson, of Teeawa ter, presided as moderator of the court. Permission was given the Bel- -grave congregation to dispose of USBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE — EXETER, ONT. SECRETARY - TREASURER — Arthur President, William A. Hamilton, Cromarty; Vice -President, Martin Feeney, R.R. 2, Dublin. DIREOTORS--Harry Coates, Cen- tralia; E. Clayton Oolquhoun, R.R. 1, Science Rill; Milton McCurdy, R.R. 1, Mitchell; Alex J. Rhode, R.R. 2, Mitchell AGENTS—Thee. G. Ballantyne, R.R. 1, Woodham; Clayton Harris, R.R. 1, Mitchell; E. Ross Hough- ton, Cromarty. SOLICITOR—W. G. Cochrane. teeter. Fraser, Exeter. 3rd VKTORY LOAN BONDS have been CALLED FOR PAYMENT JUNE 1st IF YOU HOLD Third Victory Loan 3% Bonds (issued November, 1942 to mature November, 1956) they should be presented for payment; on or after June let through any branch bank in Canada. AFTER THIS DATE NO PURTHER INTEREST WILL BE PAID. The interest coupon dated November lst, 1954 and all coupons dated later than this must be attached to tlhe bonds when they are presented for payment. Payment will be $101.26 1te a $100 bond (and for other denominations accordingly). This payment includes a $1 premium as required by the terms of the bond—plus 26¢ which $s Interest at 3% from May 1st to June lst—the period since the last coupon became payable/ Government of Canada By: BANK OF CANADA; Fiscal Agent VBJ-14 their large unused shed, Rev. R. J. Boggs was: appointed to convey Presbyter's. greetinge to the Women's Presbyterial when it meets at Ethel on May 31. Applications from men desiring to enter the ministry of the Church in Canada, came for sanc- tion or otherwise before the Pres- bytery, and their names and form er scenes of labor are as follows: Rev. George R. Paterson, D.Th., of England and Wales; Mr. Charles Jackson, B.A.; .Rev. Hares W. Zeg erina of the Evangelical Church of the Netherlands; Rev. John 'Mc- Bride, of Scotland; Rev. J. Nelson Hall, of Edinburgh; Wen. Ross Rob- son, California; Rev. James W. Ranes, B.Sc., Schenectady, N.Y.; Mr. Cecil 'Christian, 'B.A., Th.M., U.S.A. Rev. D. Glenn .Campbell, Sea - forth, was appointed' interim -mod- erator of the vacancy at Brussels caused by the removal of Mr. Ful- ton. A board of examiners, appointed by the Moderator, to examine the records of Kirk Sessions, was com- pleted ompleted and attested. !Rev. R. G. MacMillan, Goderich, became a commissioner to General Assembly meeting in Toronto on June 2, in place of Rev. W. H. Fulton (resigned). Rev. D. Glenn Campbell inform- ed Presbytery that the 26 delegates from the Presbytery to the Dom- inion -wide congress to be held in conjunction with the Assembly, was completely made up. Progress reports were submitted by convener of the Christian Edu- cation Committee and the conven- er of Stewardship and Budget com- mittee. The interim moderator of the Sunny men, women gain 5,10,15Ibs. Get New Pep, Too. Be Thrilled With Results - or Pay Nothing What a thrill! Bony arms, legs fill out; ugly hollows fill up; nock no longer scrbwny; body loses half-starved, sickly look. Thousands, who never could gain before, are now proud of shapely, healthy -looking bodies. They thank the special vigor -building and flesh -building tonic„ Ostrex. Its tonics, stimulants, invigora- tors, ton, vitamin B,, calcium, enrich blood, improve appetite and digestion so food gives you more strength and nourishment;, put flesh on bare bones. Mrs. L. Savard, Mattagami Heights, Ont., writes, "I gained 10 lbs. Tired feeling, nervousness gone, too." Another user, Mrs, Marc Gagnon, Cap Chat, P.Q„ writes, 1 gained 13 lbs. Health fine. My rundown husband gained 15 lbs. New pep." Don't fear getting really fat. Stop when you've gained the 5, 10, 15 or 20 lbs. you wish. Money back if you're not delighted. Costs little. New "get -acquainted" size only 600. Refuse substitutes. Ostrex has given re- sults when other tonics failed. Try famous Ostrex Tonic Tablets for new vigor and added hounds, this very day. At all druggists. ONLYAV8 IS UP TO DATE... TRY DRIVE—and find out why Ford is worth more. Take it out on the road and you'll be convinced that Ford out -performs all other cars in its field. DRIVE—and discover Ford's V-8 smoothness. Let the responsive performance of Ford's great V-8 engine—product of the experience gained in building more V4 engines than all other manufacturers com- bined—prove to you that only a V-8 is up to date. DRIVE—and feel Ford's soft, steady ride. Enjoy the road -hugging "big -car" feel of Ford, relax in the comfort of Ford's firmly sprung foam -rubber seats, experience the completely effortless ease of driving that's yours when you drive Ford. DRIVE—we think you'll like it. If you buy a car with an eye to lasting value, then you'll be Wise to go Ford—because Ford is worth more when you buy it, worth more when you sell it. WORTHA4ORETODAY WORTH MORE TOMORROW A 1561 YOU CU...CHM AMUS MAT IS SAFETY MONNI CINSTORMIE FORDO, SEDAN fossa uefdimhObae►sm hd••eurte•rular10eser•1°•a.•esOMA+,"Wood •twog out.•••••J :mon'arcu YOUR FORD DEALER INVITES YOU TOPiOM,FORD OHT/FROAD Daly. Motors, Phone 102, Seaforth s•) r ttsU,i LOOK FOR, THE SIGN 0f VALUE WHEN YOU BUY A USED CAR—SEE YOUR FORD DEALER "Keeper of the Trees" (By MRS. (Continued from last week) But if hope springs eternal in the human breast, only death can extinguish it in the breasts of the eternal gamblers in mining stock, So Tim went on working hard, spending little, and sinking all his Surplus in holes in the ground scat- tered throughout New Ontario. Gerald's second sonetwas a differ- ent kettle of fish entirely. Art Fox did not buy mining stocks — he sold them. Consequently, he lived well, dressed nicely, drove a prac- tically new Doodge convertible, and took as his slogan, "People are divided into two classes: the suck- ers and the guys who take them. And I'm no sucker!" Janet considered Gerald the salt' of the earth; she thought -Harry likeable but worthless, (was he or was he not making eyes at Karen?) and for their sakes had so far re- trained from hopelessly offending Isabel. It was Janet's opinion that if all diplomates had to serve an apprenticeship in the general store of a small village, wars would auto- matically cease. IV On the long winter nights Kel- son's store was the hub of the whole community. Sigmund often sold more after six o'clock in the winter time than he did all day. It was a great convenience for everybody that Kelson's store stay- ed tayed open in the evenings; for the man who was out of tobacco; for the housekeeper who needed some yeast; for the lover who wanted a stamp to send a letter on its way. But it's most valued contribution to the life of the village was in act- ing as a safety valve for all kinds of opinions. Sigmund was the neat boss of the assembly; not only in experience, but in character. He gave his lit- tle parliament plenty of leeway, but he also know how and when to call a halt. Henry Parr, if given a free rein, was a trouble -maker. As a war vet- eran the villagers felt that Henry was penhaps entitled to a little more say than the average man. But Henry had a hate fixation. He hated Jews, Frenchies, capitalists. He thought that fellow Hitler was to be commended for the way he was handling the Jewish situation. Np use being soft-hearted 'with trash like that. If you were, you'd soon find that they had lifted the gold fillings from your back teeth. four t barges, without settled mini- sters at the present time, all made progress reports and hope to re- port settlement of new ministers,. according to the choice of the con- gregations after hearing candi- dates. An invitation from St. Andrew's Church, Molesworth, to hold the meeting on June 22 in that church was received and accepted. At that meeting full reports from the Com- missioners of Presbytery to Gen- eral Assembly will be heard. Dumb passenger: "Do all ships have rudders?" Captain: "Yes. It's a stern ne- cessity." Mother (to little boy, returning from party): "Did you refuse the second piece of cake s I told you?" Junior: "Sure Ma, just like Dad does. I said, 'Take the damn stuff out of my sight!'" • M.C.DOIG) As for Quebec, especially on their churches. Let them know they were living in tb,e twentieth cen- tury and not back in the days of Frontenac and Champlain. "Hold your tongue, !henry,"" eolm- ma.nded 0 Sigmund, shortly. "You make me tired.. The French 22nd Regiment did more to w.in the war than your whole Siberian Contin- gent.' ! Henry's Predilection for trouble- making was, due to his tendency to revert to personalities if the argu- ment showed signs of going against Mm." When mild -spoken: Fred Stern suggested that Perhaps Quebec was not run entirely by the priests of the Roman Catholic Church and the Pope of Rome, Henry asked un- pleasantly what would happen to Fred if he didn't do his three 'miles to Tanner every Sunday morning for early Mass. He'd be excommunicated, that's what! "How the hell do 'you know, Henry?" Sigmund. demanded. "Shut up!" And Henry would shut up. He knew that Sigmund not only had the strength of character, but a)so the strength of arm to shut him up. Then there was Gerald Fox and Jack Freelong. Sigmund stood just so much from them around•election time. And then he would take them firmly by the collar and the seat of the pants and propel them out- side. One notable day he put them both out at once. • They never bore a grudge for longer than twenty-four hours. For twenty-three they would vnow and declare that they were doing their shopping in Tanner from now on. Not another nickle of their money would that big Swede get. But around about seven o'clock of the following evening they could no more have kept out. of the stot'e than they could have stopped smok- ing. Sigmund would look up at the rattle of the door latch. A face would be peering through the glass and then the door would open and either a battered felt hat or a strip- ed work cap would come sailing across the counter. "Come in, you fool!" Sigmund would shout, -What are you hang- ing around out there for?" 'And it would all start over again. Mr. Travis, 'of the bad throat, seemed to get as much fun out of the store meetings as anyone. His eles would sparkle at a good thrust from either side, and his silent laughter could spur the village raconteurs to new efforts more than Harry Parr's loud 'guffaws. v The Parrs were thorns in the flesh of every storekeeper for miles around. It was said that there wasn't a grocery or a clothing or a hardware store anywhere in Tan- ner, Silcox or Beaver Meadows where a Parr could, make a fifty - cent purchase, lay down a five dol- lar bill, and get any change back. They would go around with their pockets full of money and never think of paying a bill until some- one put the screws on. They had an old hay pressing outfit, held to- gether, Sigmund was wont to de- clahe, entirely by binder twine and baling wire, and they went through the country buying hay from farm- ers and pressing it. Woe betide the unsuspecting farmer who Iet them off his place without receiv- ing cash in hand. - (Continued Next Week) LUNDELL Combination Hay Chopper & Harvester FOR EASIER, MODERN FARMING !,, • • SAVE TIME, WORK, MONEY with the NEW COMBINATION UNIT for HAY CHOPPING, SHREDDING and BEDDING • • • Chop Straw for Bedding • Chop Stalks for Bedding • Chop Vines for Bedding • Chop Hay—Either Green or Dry Starting June 1, and daily thereafter, LAKEVIEW HATCHERY will be cut- ting grass with a LUNDELL HARVES- TER for beef cattle in feed lots. 8 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. — • — "Before you Buy, Drop in and See Sheldon" SHELDON D. WEIN Phone 7 or 365 (Nights) : EXETER, ONT. 919 fC� Fa1a, individuals, .aatii Onus not just in the ds/ but all across Canada, 1: record for convenient, 404100, and friendly banking service, ;W . can help you with your f nancial problems. Won't you come in and discuss them with us? J. R. M. Spittal Branch Manager r�E )MINICj BAN K • 82 YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE CANADIAN PEOPLE 5a-12 We are Contracting for Malting Barley For The Canada Malting Company The barley grown from this seed will be delivered to the Seaforth Plant, where NEW and MODERN UNLOADING FACILITIES are being installed. Topnotch Feeds Phone 15 or 376 Limited Seaforth -SEAFORTH MONUMENT WORKS OPEN DAILY — PHONE 368,E T. PRYDE & SON ALL TYPES OF CEMETERY MEMORIALS Enquiries are invited. Exeter Phone 41-J Clinton Phone 1011 Your Business Directory LEGAL A. W. SILLERY Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. Phones: Office 173, Residence 781 SEAFORTH ONTARIO McCONNELL & HAYS Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. PATRICK D. McCONNELL H. GLENN HAYS, Q.C. County Crown Attorney SEAFORTH, ONT. Telephone 174 CHIROPRACTIC D. H. McINNES Chiropractic - Foot Correction COMMERCIAL HOTEL Monday, Thursday — 1 to 8 p.m. • OPTOMETRIST JOHN E. LONGSTAFF Optometrist Eyes Examined. • Glasses Fitted. Phone 791 MAIN ST. SEAFORTH Office Hours: Daily, except Mon- day, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. OLINTON—Monday, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (McLaren's Studio). INSURANCE FOR ACCIDENT and SICKNESS INSURANCE LOW COST PROTECTION LIFE INSURANCE and RETIREMENT PLANS Phone, Write or Wire E. C. (Ned) BOSWELL JOHN ST. - SEAFORTH, ONT. Special Representative: The Occidental Life Insurance Co. of California. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y. HEAD OFFICE—SEAFORTH, Ont OFF'IOERS : 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, Seaforth; S. H. Whit- more, Seaforth; Chris. Leonhardt, Bornholm; Robert Archibald, Sea - forth; John H. McEwing, Blyth; William 8. Alexander, Walton; Har- vey arvey Fuller, Goderich; J. E. Pepper, BruceAeld. AGENTS: �/1lteml Leiper, Jr., Lonsesbere; J. F. Fruiter, -Erodbagen; Selwyn Baker, ltrassaels; Brio Monroe, Seta forth. MEDICAL DR. M. W. STAPLETON • Physician and Surgeon Phone 90 • : Seaforth -JOHN C. GObDARD,M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phone 110 Hensali JOHN A. GORWILL, B.A., M.D. Physician and Surgeon Phones; Office 5-W; Res. 6-3 ` Seaforth SEAFORTH CLINIC Telephone 26 E. A. McMASTER, B.A., M.D. Internest Telephone 27 P. L BRADY, M.D. Surgeon Telephone 55 C. ELLIOTT, M.D. Telephone 26 EVENINGS: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday only, 7-9 p.m. Appointments may be made. VETERINARY • D. J. McKELVIE, D.V.M. Veterinary Surgeon HENSALL, ON'1'. - PHONE 99 TURNBULL & BRYANS VETERINARY CLINIC J. 0. Turnbull, D.V.M. W. R. Bryans, D.V.M. Phone 105 •Seaforth ACCOUNTING RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant OLINTON f ONTARIO Office: Phones: Royal Bank Office 561, Res. 465 A. M. HARPER Chartered Accountant 55 South St. Telephone Goderich 343 Licensed Municipal Auditor. AUCTIONEERS JOSEPH L. RYAN Specialist in farm stock and lm- plements and household effects. Satisfaction guaranteed. Licensed in Heron and Perth Counties. For particulars and open dated write or phone JOSEPH L. RYAN,.. R. R. 1, 'Dublin. Phone 40 r 5, Dublin. EDWARD W. ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer Correspondence promptly answer. est Immediate arrangements can be made for sale dates by phonln8 4554, Clinton. Charges moderate Ind satisfaction guaranteed. PERCY C. WRIGHT Licensed Auctioneer - Cromarty Livestock and Farm Sttiee a 8peoletty Per a better auction 8816, all the WRIGHT Aatetioneer. Phoma lH'st sat!,. ,a 0 t lift.