HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1956-12-21, Page 11aq
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31
No Christmas would be com-
plete without an expression of
the warm feeling that we have
for our many loyal and appre-
ciative friends. A Merry
Christmas to all!
SILLS' HARDWARE
"Quality Goods With
Quality Service"
Phone 56•
Seaforth
To all our friends we wish all
the good things thatwthis glor-
ious time can bring: Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year!
BOYES'
FARM SUPPLY
Massey -Harris -Ferguson
SALES and SERVICE
Phone 110 Seaforth
May you find good cheer;
peace and happiness at Christ-
mastime! These are our sin-
cere wishes for all our friends
who have made this Christmas
such a wonderful one for us,
JOSEPH T. HUGILL
CONTRACTOR
Phone 388-J : Seaforth
CANADIAN TiI': E
CORP. ASSOCIATE
STORE
Phone 792 - Seaforth
t9
DALE PRODUCE
Main St. Seaforth
At this heartwarming season,
we extend to everyone our
wishes for a joyous and boun-
tiful Christmas and a Happy
and Prosperous New Year.
CLAIR HANEY
Groceries
EGMONDVILLE
Phone 72 •Seaforth
GILLESPIE
CLEANERS
Phone 196 : Seaforth
It's always a pleasure for us
to wish everyone of our friends
a Christmas and New Year
filled to overflowing with hap-
piness.
`SEASON'S GREETINGS !
J. A. WESTCOTT
JEWELLER
Phone 599-W Seaforth
BORDEN BROWN
GROCER — CONSTANCE
Phone 841 r 2 Seaforth
This greeting goes to all our
-friends with a special note of
cheer: "We wish you joy on
Christmas Day, and happiness
throughout the year"
ZILER and NOTT
Repair Shop
EgmontIvilie Ontario
A
MERRY CHRISTMAS
IS FORWARDED
TO THE CUSTOMERS
OF
SEAFORTO
Bright as the stars and sweet
as the sugar cane on your
Christmas Tree are our wish-
es for you this holiday sea-
son!
JOHN BLUE
JOHN DEERE FARM
EQUIPMENT
Phone 768 Seaforth
We extend our most heartfelt
wishes for a Merrier Christ-
mas. Here are wishes galore
for Health, Happiness and
Prosperity!
JACKSON HOMES
LIMITED
Seaforth, Ont.
BEST WISHES!
to one and :ill for a Christmas
and New Year . unpre-
cedented in joy and wish -ful-
filment!
SAVAUGE'S,
Jewellery • Gifts - Fine China
•
Phone 194 Seaforth
Now is the time for all good
holiday wishes - . May we
.,wish to all our friends the
best of health and joy for
Christmas.
SAM SHINEN
Dry Goods - Ready -to -Wear
Main St. •Seaforth
May this Christmas bring to
you in rich abundance all the
good things in life and may
they retrain. with you through-
out the New Year.
GORDON A. WRIGHT
WOOD PRODUCTS
Phone 342-W Seaforth
Compliments of
W. BEISEL
Stratford Music Centre
PIANO TUNER and REAIRS
Phone 4364 Stratford
Ontario
HILDEBRAND
PAINT & PAPER
Phone 67-M Seaforth
THE LAYMAN AND THE CRISIS
(Continued from Page 4)
three main fields where this vi-
sion of partnership must be sought
unless .we are to perish. For we
must apply the vision to the world
as we know it. These three are
industry, politics and international
relationships.
CAROL LYN SHOP
!Vlain St. Seaforth
EMMERSON DURST
Phone 648 r 11 : Seaforth
TERRY'S
RADIO REPAIR
Phone 347-R Seaforth
JOHN BACH
Phone 17 f Seaforth
ERIC H. MUNROE
INSURANCE
Phone 394 •Seaforth
fi
MRS. JIM ELLIOTT
Phone 249-W Seaforth
GORDON McGAVIN
WALTON
emi
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ReN
H. M. JACKSON
UIDES •:oar WOOL,
.E,gtnondyille Ont.
REV. J. H. JAMES
First, however, I must remind
you that in, any consideration of
man'ssocial life. the home re-
mains basic. The partnership of
man and wife, two people becom-
ing involved, accepting responsibil-
ity towards each other and liabil-
ity, a partnership enlarged with
the arrival of children; here we
have the nursery of partnership,
where all share.. suffer and sacri-
fice and find joy together. A home-
less society is doomed and the
broken homes in our world are
but a symptom of our world's sick-
ness. They. too. result from the
dominating power of the human
ego.
We in the West .are well on our
way into the industrial age. but to-
day all countries everywhere are
entering it. Even the most back-
ward areas of the world are be-
ginning to become industrialized.
Perhaps in this field, we of the
West may pioneer in partnership,
teaching others to avoid our mis-
takes.
Within industry we must learn
to see four partners: workers,
shareholders, community and con-
sumer. So far, the responsibility
of management has been largely
to shareholders. The rise of the
labor movement is basically the
protest of the silent partner, the
partner who has never been legal-
ly recognized. Higher wages have
not eliminated the tensions of in-
dustrial life, and we are beginning
to see that they will remain until
labor becomes a partner with
management, so that it can be
legally responsible to the com-
munity and the consumer as well
as to the shareholder. Within in-
dustry today, experiments in part-
nership are being attempted with
astonishing success and are per-
haps setting the pattern of part-
nership which will save our indus-
trial s'stem. Hete again we must
bear in mind that at the moment
industry. too; is functioning on the
basis of expediency as it caters to
world scarcity. This will not be
possible even 25 'years from now,
when India. China. Africa and oth-
er non -industrialized countries
have entered the race for markets.
Industry will have to become a
partnership where all the partners
involved become responsible, both
for the product and its distribu-
tion.
In the field of politics. the idea
of partnership will have to replace
the old animosities of partisanship,
if democracy is to survive. Gov-
ernment must become in reality a
function performed by consent. not
under the compulsion of power
groups collecting votes by propa-
ganda. What we see epitomized
in the Russian system is the ten-
dency within all forms of modern
government, the substitution of
power for consent.
To whatever party we may sub-
scribe, it is well for us to remem-
ber that in government, Her Marj-
esty's Opposition is more impor-
tant than Her Majesty's Govern-
ment, Irresponsibility is the in-
evitable consequence of unopposed
power. We must see the various
parties forming a democratic gov-
ernment as partners, not as en-
emies, no matter how violently
they. day r e e they
mutual responsibility, •
The field, however„ '
partnership ltaS' fiecome such '!.4.
glaring necessit t is the ;Field o1 in; .•
ternational relatOnsliips.,,
All ideas of ;nationT,: or ra'4•at
superiority are as dead • ie.
world as the dodo: bird .:;This pods
war flurry of nation;.a' isnn sounds a .
very dangerous death rattle. The
nations of our world must become
partners or perish..
This partnership, as a!gaitir,, we
have learned so recently, eivelves
colossal risks. Yet, as we come to.
see the alternative. in some form,.
of universal domination based on
naked physical power, we must be
prepared to take those risks.
Whatever we may think of _the
United Nations, it is the only hope
we have at the moment of cre-
ating a partnership of nations.
Again we must concede that to. •
day it too is forced to act out of
expediency. Before it can become
effective, a new code of Interna:
tional Law must be written which
will be accepted and adhered to
by all, and which will be enforced
by common consent. It must,
therefore, assume some form of re-
presentative world government, a
government largely judicial in na-
ture, but where will sit in equality
spokesmen on behalf of all the
nations. Such a world government, •
in our particular world. must be
backed up by an international sys-
tem .of trade and finance. where
the international dollar will gra-
dually assume universal value ;
where all nations will have equal-
ity of access to the raw materials
of the world and • their distribu-
tion.
I am convinced that the jealous-
ies and hatreds that have been
aroused in our world under the
aegsis . of the god of power, will
give way to nothing less than the
practical institution of this con-
cept of partnership. To. the disci-
ple of the Christian way, this 'is
the divine imperative. 'For God
was in Christ reconciling man in-
to partnership with Himself and
into partnership with his fellow-
men.'
The Queen Elizabeth Islands,• ly-
ing north of the great east -west
passage and belonging to Canada,
are the most northerly lands iia,
North America.
0
(i) mum Atteitib
ofr Attoppiim
tim+ ied
HE TURNS TO THE 13 OF �b1
If you, too, are a harried Santa Claus, caught in the
Christmas rush without enough time to shop for
all. your sifts . , . take a deep breath and relax.
Just follow Santa to the nearest branch of the 11 of IS
where you can solve your Christmas shopping
problerns v'. ith a few strokes of a pen.
There is a practical 13 of ht gift for everyone on }our
last-minute Christmas list ... for friends, aunts,
uhcles, cousins, nephews and nieces— or for your own
youngsters, or your grandchildren, as a special,
extra gift. So drop into your neighbourhood B of M
branch today. See if it doesn't restore that cheery
Christmas chuckle to your gift -giving.
BANK OF MONTREAL
This is one present that
has a wonderful future
for the small•frv,
because festive Christmas
passbook covers enclose
the gift of thrift that.
grows with the years , . -
B of M Savings Accounts
of their very own.
Gail decorated R of \t
Chris:nuti (i ,'7 ,c. arc
the ideal ah rt•ciit (0
shopping Tor the
..hard•tc,.liIva;e, I"
:ukit, yled 4:: err'. itrs
rendered. 'and to pin a
seaq,r,'nl Till in!u
the
'1,,tin ,tt•r,' sa,ings
account,.
l'eap't lil.r to rrceirr a
prnit13 of \t moue]
nrdrr in i1' cprrial I
colourful 1 hrisimas
eni elope be( ausr it
enable, th(•10 to ,clot
ex.0 1Iy ti hat they prefer.
inu nrrdlrss
guesswork and
clieihpoinunrnt. An
c•petialli prat' 'cal gift
fat ,eti nein(,, at home
and ,ihinad.
Note to Employer:
Brighten up your staff's
Christmas bonuses by
[[sing colmirful B of M
Christmas cheques.
\'ICY BAS.
WORKING WITH . CAI'4AblANS IN EVERY WALK "OP. LIPS SING' 181..