The Huron Expositor, 1966-02-10, Page 7SEAFORTH -N .UI Ix:. RKS
OPEN. DAU,Y
T. Pryde 84 -Son
ALL TYPES 'OF
CEMETERY MEMORIALS
Inquiries are invited.
Telephone Numbers:
EXETER 235-0620 CLINTON 4$2-9421
SEAFORTH: Contact Willis Dundas
WANT ADS BRING QUICK RES.ULTS: Dial 527-0240
Read the Advertisements -- It's a Profitable Pcestime!
1964 CLASSIC AUTOMATIC
1964 '660' CLASSIC AUTOMATIC
1962 RAMBLER 2 -DOOR
1961 C> IEV. ' BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder
1961 AUSTIN '
See .the New 1966 Models
Now on Display
MILI.ER MOTORS
..Phone 527--1410 Seaforth
We Are in the Market For
SEED SATS
_Gary
Rodney
Russell
Registered, Certified or'
Canad`a=' No. 1
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
We are now taking Corm
Shelled or on the Cob
W. G. Thompson
&-Sons Ltd.
Hensall : • Phone 262-2527
Pettit Whei.t. Producers
Name Officials apt
The annual Meeting of Perth
Wheat Producers was held in
the Town -Half, Mitchell, Wed-
nesday, and was in charge of
Mac Spence-, Ric 6, St. Marys,
who is county chairman• of the
Committee. -
Afilm, under the direction'
of Cliff Allen,-Fuliatton, was
shown during the early -stages
of the meeting.
The guest speaker for the oc-
asion was M.. R. McDougall, of
Blenheim, a member of the On-
tario Wheat Producers' Market-
ing 'Board executive and chair:
man of the 'Board's Advisory
Committer, responsible for price
negot' . ons. The Board had
obliged to buy slightly
more than one-quarter of a
million • bushels of the 1965
.crop, said Mr. McDqugall. This
is a drastic change from the
position the Board experienced
in 1964 when heavy purchases
depleted their stabilization
fund.
Mr. McDougall assured grow-
ers that most of the 1965 stab-
ilization levy of 15 cents, per
bushel would be returned to
producers who marketed their
1965 crop. There is a ' strong'
possibility that a regular mar-
ket for Ontario winter wheat
can be developed in the United
Kingdom at a favorable price,
he said. A recent' announce-
ment of a small sale of 17,500
hushels to this market strength-
ened this theory.
The Board, said Mr. McDOu-
gall, hasfollowed a policy of
subsidizing millers of Ontario-
wheat
ntariowheat being manufactured into
The men in the locker room
stared in amazement at' the
club's newest member who had
just put. on two pairs of golf-
ing pants. Finally he noticed
the stares and explained: "When
I golf I always wear two pairs
of pants just in case I get a
hole in one."' '
USBORNE' AND
' HIBBERT
MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE CO.
-HEAD..OEFICE ° _EXETER Ont.
Directors:
Robert G. Gardiner R.R. 1,
President .Cromarty
Martin. Feeney - R.R. 2, Dublin
Vice -President •
Wm. H. Chaffe - RR. 4, Mitchell
E. Clayton. Colquhoun R.R. 1,
Science Hill
Raymond McCurdy R.R. 1,
Kirkton
Tim Toohey - R.R. 3, Lucan
Agents:
HuXh Benninger - • Dublin
Harry Coates - - Exeter
Clayton Harris. Mitchell
Secretary -Treasurer:
Arthur Fraser. , - - Exeter
'BARN CLEANER
SILO UNLOADER'
& BUNK' FEEDER
YOU'LL GET BETTER PER-
FORMANCE AND. LONGER
WEAR PROM A BADGER
SALES • SERVI'CE'- INSTALLATION
JOHN,BEAN,E, Jr.
BRUCEFIELD
SALES — SERVICE
Phone Collect:
482-9250 - Clinton
1964 PON 'IAC, AT. ---A62141.
1964' CHEV. BEL AIR "8", A.T. 'and R.—A61212
1963 CHEV. BEL AIR SEDAN, AN:=A60777
1903 CHEV` 1'I DAN—A61763
1963 CHEV. BISCAYNE SEDAN—A49948
1963 DODGE' "8" SEDAN—A59.102
1963 FORD "8" COACH --A60999
•1962 ENVOY—A61811
1962 CHEV. SEDAN—A61474
1962 MERCURY -METEOR "8", AT. --A62141
1961 CHEV. PICKUP --C75701
1561 CHEV. "8 AT., HARDTOP—A62285
1961,PONTIAC SEDAN, A.T.--A62058
1961 METEOR SE+DAN--A61511
1961.DODGE SEDAN—A73765
-Name Your, Own Deal . -- We Must Lower Inventory
eaforth Motor
Phone .527.1750
Open Eveithigs
Seaforth
• l'o Rea'onable Offer Itefus
flour for .the export market.
At a request from millers this
Subsidy has been increased to
bring it .in line with the cost
to the Board of exporting whole
wheat. Exports of flour are
equivalent to 20 thousand bush-
els of wheat. •
A request from seed wheat
growers to , be exempted from
the stabilization levy was not
granted by the Board. Since
seed wheat must be marketed
in early fall, the function of
the board in stabiling price, at
this stage of heavy marketings,
was a justifiable argument for
the refusal of this request, said
Mr. McDougall:
Plant breeders, growers, mil-
lers, chemists and cerealists are
continuing their efforts to de-
velop a hybrid -wheat with :the
desirable qualities of a stand -
tip wheat with high yield poten-
tial and . disease resistance. In
the meantime, Talbot and Gen;
esee continue to be the most
popular- varieties, with millers
ee in
indicating a preference for the
milling qualities of Gepesee.
Mr, McDougall was introduc-
ed by Russell Bolton, Seaforth,
chairman of the Ontario Wheat
Producers' Marketing. Board,
and thanked by Mr. Spene.
The eJJ,,tion of officers was
conducted by C. E. Dearing,
secretary of Perth Federation
of Agriculture, and resulted in
Mr. Spence- being returned to
office for a second term, Har-
old Patterson, of Fullerton, was
elected vice- president, a n d
Bryce Skinner, RR 1, Mitchell,
was returned as secretary -treat
urer. Those elected as commit-
teern n were: Jules DeBralien
dere, RR 6, St. Marys; Robert
Hamilton, Cromarty; Jim Mil-
ler, Milverton, and Earl Boville,
RR 5, Stratford.
Door prizes of pastry, flour
were won by: 25 pounds, Jules
DeBrabendere; 10 pounds each
by Arnold Roney, RR 3, Mit-
chell; Jim Miller and Robert
Spence. ,
THIS WEEK
AND NEXT
by Ray Argyle
In The Provinces Scotia over a proposed Halifax
hotel room tax. New Brun -
In every provincial capital- swick's lawmakers,- .meanwhile,
across the land this week; the have ,been at work since before
politicians were trying to Christmafs on Premier Rob -
stretch tax dollars to match the ichaud's plan to take over most
new demands of education and municipal responsibilities.
medicare. It was the legislative i' Taxes are also worrying Pre-
season in Canada, and from mier Shaw of Pilnce Edward
Victoria to St. John's, as well Island; who--f-aees -the prospect
as Ottawa, the lawmakers fan- of boosting the island's sales
ed the same old problems --too tax to. six per cent and would
many needs, not enough money. like to win another election
In the provincial legislatures, first. Ontario also has heard
the issues and problems run the rumbles of ,an increase in its
gamut from bridges and roads three per cent ,sales tax.
to law enforcement, fluoridation Quebec's legislative __seas.
and Sunday sports, opened without any, central'
But topping all the- issues in piece of keystone legislation but
the emphasis was on the prov-
the current sessions of the 10
legislatures 'are education and ince, s own war on poverty, with
.medicare._ On;, -..the first—educa-
tion—there. is geneiallagtee=
ment that budgets will have to
rise for at least die next 10
years, until the current drop in
the .birth rate begins to be felt
a decade hence.
On medicare, despite the urg-
ings of the federal government,
it was beginning 'to look as if
as many different schemes as
there are provinces will be
hammered into shape before
the country begins to assemble
a national, universal health care
program.
The Ontario legislature was
only a few days old when Pre-
mier Roberts, after rejecting
Ottawa's share -the -cost • offer ,on
the grounds that the province
would be left holding the fin-
ancial bag, unveiled his -own
medicare program. It will be
a _government -run plan inde-
.pendent of insurance compan-
ies and will cost ,$65 million a
year, in subsidies to low income
residents.
Because the scheme is not
compulsory, it does not meet
federal government ' require-
nients. Nor do the B.C..and Al-
bera programs. Of the three,
Alberta's is the most limited in
that it merely provides subsi-
dies for low income persons who
want to join a privately oper-
ated insurance program. And
relatively few Albertans. — in-
cluding those who most need
help—have bothered to join,
The only medicare plan meet-
ing federal standards • is that
running in Saskatchewan. The
scheme, set up by the CCF, has
been maintained by the Liberal
government and costs have be-
gun to drop after the first year
of operations.
Alberta remains the only offi-
cial. hold-out against medicare
in principle, but observers be-
Iieve Premier Manning' will
bow to the inevitable, just as,he
has bowed on other issues he'
once _ staunchly fought. These
include cocktail bars, fluorida-
tion and Sunday sports. Alber-
ta has had cocktail bars for sev-
eral years now and in prepara-
tion .for the current provincial
legislative session, the premier
said he would permit fluorida-
tion and Sunday sports in any
community voting for them b'
a simple majority.
In B.C., as well as in Quebec
and Prince. Edward Island,
there's talk of a provincial elec-
tion this year. Premier Bennett
has clung Co power by knocking
the props from under the NDP
by adopting their programs—
such as socializing the B.C.
Electric -- whenever it looked
as if, his
government was in
danger. Around the handsome
B.C. legislative buildings this'
year, there's talk that Mr. Ben-
nett will upgrade medicare
while leaving automobile insur-
rance--another pet NDP issue
—to a newly -appointed royal
commission.
The Saskatchewan, Alberta
and Nova Scotia legislatures
open" next week, and in Regina'
Premier Thatcher faces the
prospect of his three -seat ma-
jority being further cut in a
crucial by-election. The 'Nova
Scotia and Alberta governments
face no such dander, but there's
mounting controversy in Nova
the usual stress, ,on defending
E engi _ culture. Only in New-
foundrarid, where -"Premier -Joey
Smallwood has already publicly
picked his successor, can the
current legislative session be
expected to run a 'predictable
course. z ..............
Sponsors .
Dance
Huron County Farmers' Unian
held a successful dance at the
Auburn Community Centre on
Friday, when the CXNX Ranch
Boys played and over 250 at-
tended. The dance committee,
Carl Govier, chairman, Mrs:
Thomas Govenlock, Mike Pen•
nick and E. Rathwell gave the
following Bance prizes that
were donated:
First: two boxes of chocolates
donated by Hohnesville, to Miss
Donna Marsh and Arthur Hall-
am, Auburn; 2nd, prize ter cou-
ple married on Feb. 4th in at-
tendance went to Mr. and Mrs.
McNee, Dungannon, donated by
Wilkinson's • IGA, Seaforth, was
a hath; 3rd: Two -pound box of
chocolates, donated by Top:,
notch Feeds Ltd., Seaforth, to
Mrs. Ross Daer, Auburn, spot
dance; 4th: Two -pound box of
chocolates, donated by Topnotch
Feeds Ltd., Seaforth, to Bili
Hayden, RR 1, Port Albert; 5th:
Foam rubber tractor seat cush-
ion, donated by. McGavin Farm
Supply, Walton, to farmer and
his wife coining the longest dis-
tance, awarded to Mr. and Mrs.
Lorne McDonald, Amberley,
Ont.
Husband: "Will you please
hurry. We'll be late for the
party.
Wife: "Please stop nagging!
I told you an hour ago I'd be
ready in a few minutes."
Classified ads pay dividends.
RUNS
IEANElI
NO SMOKE, NO ODOUR
HEATING OIL
Walden & Broadfoot
,Phone 527-1,224 -- Seaforth
THE.HU ON 6CF!OSITOR, 5EAF,OaTH, ONr., :Fllr14 ', a .,4
Arnold, Stinnissen
GROUP r-:':41FE ACCIDENT .nrwd
,SICKNESS . MOR MEDICAL
' PENSIONS. ANNUITIES
Representin!
Sun Life. Asswanee Company
Goderich St, Haft. Seaforth
• of Canada
TELEPHONE 5274410, "
S U NWO RTHY
WALLPAPER
"SPRING -TONES"
.Ready - Pasted, Washable, Embossed
WALLPAPERS -
SUITABLE FOR ANY ROOM IN THE HOUSE
A Distinctive Group of NEW Textures
Here's
Real
SPECIAL!
Regular Value
Value! $L15
Per Single Roll
L
GRAVES'
WALLPAPER & PAINT
"Friendly Service & Derating Advice"
DIAL 527-05x0 -- SEAFORTH
¶Thc one beer so pod its made
Canada famous for beer
throughout the. world!
In Ireland and over 60 other countries, you can
enjoy a world of flavour in the balanced beer.
( • Trish folk singers At D4blifes popular Abbey'' TGiith
The CARLING:'`� BREWERIE Limited
•
$LN+r+4