The Huron Expositor, 1966-02-17, Page 9Heard, $100.
Road Accounts --Wm. McAr,
ter, .wages, mileage add Wok -
keeping, $190.90; James Case-
more, wages, $376.50; John
Smith, wages, $285; George NC -
call, wages, $6; Glenn Snell,
snowplowing, $810; Geo, Rad-
ford, snowplowing, $633.25 ;
Glen VanCanip, hauling gravel,
$5; Valley BIades Ltd., grader
blades and lanterns, $77.25 ;
Tom Garniss, chain oil and files,
$28.96; J. M. McDonald, lumber,
$18.99; Brussels, Telephone Co.,
'rent and' tolls, $2521f Ideal,
Supply Co:, cable ends and
wrenches, $20.45; Mel Jermyn,
snowplowing. and backhoe work,
$1,011.50; Alex Inkley, fuel oil
and tax, $196.35; Brussels Coal
Yard, coal and stove oil, $66;
Oldfield Hardware, paint, $7.11;
Harry Christie, wire brush and
drills, $17,77; Punkin Motors,
oil filters and glass, $18.63.
GREY TOWNSHIP COUNc IL
Motions adopted by Grey
Township Council at the Febru-
ary meeting included:
lay Kenneth Bray and Law-
son Ward: That the engineer's
report of the Rowland Drain
be. .adopted and court of revi-
sion be held March 7th, at 2
711
.HURON EXPOSITORR SEAFORTH
Py, .Bray and ,Ward: That the
Reeve and Treasurer, be Guth-
ortze4 to make application to
the Minister of Municipal At,
,fair's for the provincial grant
under the Drainage Act for the
Rowland Municipal Drain.
, Melville, Lamont a n d
Charles Thomas:, That Engin-
eer James A. Howes be *in-
structed to examine and report
on the open portion of the
Sixth Concession Drain, to clear
all ,lands from lot 16 to lot 25,
con, 11,
By Bray and Ward: That we
accept the request of William
Baillie and others to repair 'and
extend the Bantle Municipal
Drain to clear S% lot 34, can.
13, and other lands, and that
we instruct Engineer, Jas. A.
Howes to examine and report
on same.
By Bray and Ward: That we
instruct the Clerll4 to advertise
for crushing and hauling ap-
proximately 20,000 cubic yards
of gravel, %-inch screen to be
used.
By Ward and Lamont: That
we instruct 'the Clerk to adver-
tise. for tenders for warble fly
spraying.
By Bray and Lamont: That
THIS WEEK
AND NEXT.
tiY RoY Ar9Yle..',: �..
•
•
J6
COAL -FUEL -OI
WILLIAM M. HART -
Plhone 527-0870 Seafoi'th
lir COW'
196,4 CLASSIC AUTOMATIC
1964 '660' CLASSIC AUTOMATIC
1962 RAMBLER 2 -DOOR •
1961 CHEV. BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder
1961 AUSTIN•
•
See the New 1966 Models
Now on Display
MILLER MOTORS
Phone 527-1410`
Seaforth
We Are in the Market For
SEED OATS
•Gary
Rodney
• Russell
Registered, Certified or
Canada No. 1
HIGHEST PRICES PAID
We are now taking Corn.
Shelled or on the Cob
W. G. Thompson
Sons ltd.
Hensall,. : Phone 262-2527
Area Cou.iicifs. HOW laus
M,ORILIS COUNCIL
Morris Township council met
with all members present. MO-
tins
ations approved included:
By Ross Smith *and James
Mair: That membership to
Mayors' and Reeves' Association
be paid.
By James Mair„and William
Elston:' That $25 be given to
Huron County Soils .and Cro
Improvement A,ssoeiation.
By Elston and Smith: That
Bluevalle Hall Board be given
$100.
By Smith and Mair: That W'm.
Elston be . council's representa-
tive • on the Wingha and Dis-
trict planning o: d.
By Shortree and 'Elston:
That we advertise for warble
fly inspector and fez' warble fly
spraying.
By Mair and Smith: That we
advertise for supplying, crush-
ing and delivering approximate-
ly 20,000 cubic yards of gravel.
Ey Elston and Bhortreed:
That Stewart Procter be wel-
fare administrator for town-
ship.
General accounts paid in-
cluded: Wellington Marks, re-
bate on taxes, $89.59; Ontario
Hydro, Bluevale lights 14.25,
Walton lights $101,52, Belgrave
lights $104.52; The Carswell
Co,, municipal councillors' hand-
book, $4.75; Office of Queen's
Printer, Assessment Act, 41.00;
Membership' to Mayors' and
Reeves' Association, $10; Town
of Exeter, charge back 'accts.,
$50.55; Ross Anderson, street
light replacements, $27.90; Mun-
icipal World, assessment and
tax rolls $3429, supplies, $2.95;
Huron County Soil and Crop
Improvement Association,. $25;
Kilbarchin Nursing H o m e,
$122,25; Post Publishing House,
advertising, $2; welfare, $45,30;
Callander Nursing Home,
$244,50; Wm. Peacock, Morris
share of dump, $50; Helen Mar-
tin, salary, $119; Bluevale Hall
INSURANCE
WIND
TORNADO CY_ CLQNE
JAMES F. KEYS
Phone 527-0467 Seaforth
Representing the "Wesfern
Farmer's Weather Infurance
Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont.
Farmers!
Increase Your
MILK
PRODUCTION
Build a. Concrete
Silo, height to suit
your needs.
Upright Concrete Silos
14 feet up to 55 feet
ARNOLD HUGILL
92 Cambria Rd. North
GODERICH — '524-9437 Collect
May we suggest -a.
Save -for -the -Little -Things -
you -might -otherwise -never -buy Account?
•
////{A N,% I A r IMPERIAL SANK OF COMMERCE
ri
The New Morality
Conventional standards of
morality are under almost con-
tinuous attack. But it seemed,
for a few days last week, as
if the winds of change had sud-
denly taken on gale -force
strength.
While fashion designers un-
veiled a '"nude look" for wo-
men's clothes - complete with
cut-outs, bare midrifts and ever -
shorter skirts—there were oth-
er more significant but less no-•
ticed breaks in accepted moral
standards.
In Canada, a church maga-
zine declared that unmarried
'mothers may soon be keeping
their babies. -A teen-age girl
told a national TV audience,
"You make your ..own rules" in
sexual behavior. Actors in TQ-
ronto put on a play about homo-
sexuality. And churchmen talk-
ed openly about ' something
c a 1..1 e d, "Christian atheism"
while proponents of the "God
is dead" school of religion
stirred'a storm in pulpits across
the Land. ".
To many, the increasing per-
missiveness in personal -beha-
vior and the' mounting question-
ing of Christian dogma are
signs of erosion and decay that
will bring the Western world
to an appalling level of decad-
ence.
In • every . field—books, mov-
ies, television and advertising --
a flood of sexuality seemed to
bear society's stamp of.approv,
al for a new age, of morality.
The pregnant bride was out-
numbering the virgin bride, ac-
cording to some church minis-
ters.
The apparent universal pre-
occupation 'with sex: could 'be
seen in such instances as the
recent Move by a group -of Uni
i,ersity of Toronto students to
dispense birth control informa-
tion on the campus.
"Canada has absolutely the
Mott hyprocritical attitude th
birth control in the ':w.orld," a
spokesman said. Dissemination
of birth control information and -
contraceptives is outlawed by
the. Criminal Code of Canada.
The •revolt against such ob-
vious hyprocrisy may, according
to some sociologists, be actual-
ly a sign of a new and more
honest morality. There is much
evidence that personal sexual
behavior actually has not chang-
ed greatly in North America irl
the past 30 years. The differ-
ence is that most people today
frankly accept certain patterns
of behavior which a generation
ago' were hushed up—but none-
theless prevalent, -_ - _ _ ... _. _
If this be the, case, a strong
argument can be made for the
New Morality as far preferable
to the guilt -ridden, complex -in-
ducing twisted standards of the
recent Victorian. age..
The New Morality, According
to this interpretation, does not
really basically change society's
reliance on the family and on
marital fidelity as the founda-
tion of Western civilization.
It may, however, bring a, new
objectivity and anew personal
freedom, leaving '-citizens free
to work out their own behavior
patterns, while still restricting
practices recognized as detri-
mental to society as •a whole.
This would explain t h e
mounting public demand for
more .liberal divorce and abor-
tion laws. Advocates of change
-in these fieldsargue that. to .lock
people into hopelessly tragic
marriages, or to force a rape
victim to bear the child of her
assailant, are in themselves acts
of extreme immorality.
*Whatever moral standards a
society adopts are usually in-
fluenced by its science and
technology. Primitive tribes per-
mit polygamy because their so-
ciety has no . place fol• excess
females. People in over -popu-
lated lands produce large fam-
ilies ' because they look on
their children's 'labor as 'essen-
tial to their security.
Thus in our society, the birth
control pill has already wrought
a change at least in public at-
titude toward sex, if not in
actual practice. And 'we have
a• mixed-up generation, trying
to find new standards, unsure of
what will, : finally prevail.
Ironically, .during the past 10
years the number of illegitiin
ate births have jumped 50 per
cent in Canada—at a time when
birth control measures were
more readily available ,than ev-
er before. And according. to a
new survey by the United and
Anglican churches, the major-
ity of unmarried ,mothers were
"•nice girls" who just didn't
know anything about birth con-
trol.
The essence of the New Mor-
ality Would seem to be that an
honest approach to sex—backed
up by factual knowledge—offers
hopes of a higher morality than
the old istandards which often
brought tragic .consequences as
a result.
•
NOTIC.E! -
Township of Tuckersmith
Ratepayers and inhabitants of the Town-
ship- of Tuckersmith are requested by the
Council
TO NOT PARK CARS
on Township Roads and Streets
during the winter months
in order 'to facilitate snowplowing
operations.
Council will not be responsible for ddm-
ages totally vehicles parked on roads or
streets.
JAMES I. McINTOSH
Clerk -Treasurer
Tuckersmith
the Clerk” be ,instrneted •to ad
vextlse /Or tenders for warble
Ay powder. ;
m
By Thoas and Lamont: That
couft of revision wi the assess-
ment roll be reopened and Lots
11 and 12, Con. 7, Ethel, owned
by James Cardiff, be assessed
for; land $100, buildings $1,500;
this assessment to be added to
the roll for 1966 taxes. The
Walton Anglican .Church pro;
perty assessment of $400 be
changed to exempt assessment;
the 1965 dog tax of $2;00 be
refunded to Elwood McTaggart
and Fred $malldon.
• By Bray -and Ward: That we
give the Huron County Soil
and Crop Improvement Asso-
ela'tion a grant of $25.00.°
By Lamont and Ward: That
we purchase an auxiliary pump
for the fire department for the
sum of $380.00, with trade-in
of old pump after satisfactory
demonstration from C. Hickey
& Sens Ltd.
Accounts approved included:
James A. Howes, survey, report,
etc,, Rowland Drain, $250.00;
Huron County Soil and Crop
Improvement, grant, $25,00;
The Municipal World, supplies,
$22,03; B., 1V]. & G. Telephone
System, rental and tolls, $21.36;
Howard Bernard, furnace mo-
tor, $16.00; Association of As-
sessing Officers, membership
fee, $10; George Wesenburg,
assessment analysis and tax ar-
rears notices, $62,46; EIwood
McTaggart, rebate dog tax, $2;.
Fred Smalldon, rebate dog tax,
$2; Hiemstra Nursing Home,
January acct., $122.25; Queens-
way Nursing Home, January
acct., $122.25; Humphries & Co.,
January relief acct., $173.04;
Supertest 0iI Co., fuel oil, re-
lief, $31.05; Shelter for relief,
$20.00; drainage debentures,
$274,45; Irvin Schade, fox boun-
ty, $4•:00; ,Wayne , Hood, fox
bounty, $56.00; C. M. Steven-
son, fox bounty, $4,00; Wm.
Baillie, fox bounty, $12; Jimmy
Dobson, garbage, Ethel Village,
$14.00; J. C. Conley; bulbs,
Ethel Village, $2,68; Robert
Cunningham, oil, fire dept.,
57c; George Rowland, gas, fire
dept., $L33; Elwood McTag-
gart, maintenance fire dept.,
$8.00; roads and bridges, $2,-
442.58. Total, $3,699.05.
-- NOTICE --
For Co -Op Insurance
CaII
.W. ARTHUR WRIGH
Phone 527-1464 — John St..._
SEAFORTH
Complete Coverage For:
• Auto and Truck ,
• Farm Liability
' • Employer's Liability
• Accident and Sickness
• Fire, Residence, Contents
• Fire, Commercial
• Life Insurance & Savings
• Huron Co-op Medical
Services
• Wind Insurance
p,, dit Die of .ra"ipta4.+ SAI I.
,of the o4d's 1ea4iu l*
coroftleo, 14414 150 iminch, Apo
- .
QughoutlkkohAmorictt
As tlwt .Stan i if `t' r In:110N1• ,
slue in pops corn,
map l be of 4 ,6,
.. JOHN J, 1 4 LSH
Phone 271-3000 , —,. 48 Rebecea St.. STRATFORD - -
Sun 'Wel Assurance Company. of Canada
OFF10E U:PPLI
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
Phone 527-0240 ____ - Seaford'
PICK UP YOUR,t,
;
DOLLARS
RIGHT
NOW!..:f
1
T.
BARN CLEANER
,SILO UNLOADER
• & BUNK FEEDER
YOU'LL GET BETTER PER•
WEARA FROAND BADGER
SALES'- SERVICE • INSTALLATION
JOHN BEANE, Jr.
BRUCEFIELD
SALES — SERVICE
Phone..Collect:
482-9250 - Clinton
7.71
3
GET STARCROSS 288 CHICKS FROM
SWIFT-- PROVED SUPERIOR—AS A
TOP PROFIT PRODUCER!
There's a prosperous future in your hands when you, pick
up Starcross 288 chicks today, Next fall and winter • your'
egg income —your egg profit - - will be the highest pos-
sible. Test after test in the United States proves that
Starcross 288 has consistently excelled in across-the-board
comparisons. Just look at this recent Random 7 Sample
Test in New York.
Eggs Per % Eggs
Net Pullet Large•and
Income Housed Extra Large
Shaver Starcross 288. • $ 3.55 ' 253.7 77.8
---.Test Average- 2.74 222.9 75.7,
+30.8 +2.1,, --
--Shaver Advantage $+.81
SWIFT'S
HATCHERY
WALTER
McCLURE
R.R. 2, Seaforth
Phone 527-0476
Get Starcross 288 chicks
—the proved money -pro-
ducer from your Swift
Hatchery or your near-
est Swift Hatchery deal-
er. er. Ask him to show you
all the facts — it's the
surest investment infor-
mation anyone can have.
AI
M
r.
r.
r.
i=
476
1
_.-.
•
Jnr.*n*immmmnmmmmntinfintainnm•msmntnnnuaonpwr..rsw.
1964 PONTIAC, AT.—A62141
1964 CHEV. BEL AIR "8", A.T. and R.—A61L12
1963 CHEVY II SEDAN—Ai i 6
1963 CHEV. BISCAYNE SEDAN—A49948
1963'.DODGE "8" SEDAN—A59102
1963 CHEV: BEL AIR SEDA,i; A.T.—A60777
1963 FORD ".8" COACH—A60999 •
1962 ENVOY --A6181:1
1962 CHEV. SEDAN-L."A61474
1962 MERCURY -METEOR "8", AT.—A62141_..
1961 CHEV. PICKUP—C75701
1961 CHEV. "8", AT.,HARDTOP—A62285
1961 PONTIAC SEDAN, A.T.—A62053
1961 METEOR SEDAN -A61511
1961 DODGE SEDAN—A73765
. Name Your O-wn Deal -- We Must Lower Inventory
eafort
Phone 527-1750-1' --Seaforth
Open Evenings No reasonable Ofter Refused