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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1966-07-14, Page 7• • • • • • • • • R r • • • • • • • • ,Arnold Stinnissen GROUP • LIFE: • ACCIDENT and, SICKNESS + MAJOR MEDICAL. PENSIONS - • ANNUITIES Representing Sun Life Assurance. CQmpanY Goderich St. East Seaforth of Canada TELEPHONE 527-0410 Bid trouble goodbye, t- , 'When you, buy a Berg barn cleaner, You Op forget replace- gnentl Ten -year-old installations are still going among. Built with fewer, more/rigged parte, there's leea to ,go wrong even ` after years of hard servico e. Ho -And -.ore gutter -chs n links eliminate hundreds of parts. Berg - u acomplete line of atalle, water bowls—everything for your See us for FREE plan help. Exclusive copper bearing steel. Special nickel alloy forged steel links. Write ` Farm Automation Box 519, Seaforth, Ont. Dial 595-4578 FS THE HURON EXPOSITOR, Phone 527-024Q • Seaforth Coui.. cil USBORNE CoUNcl TJsborne council instructed at Tuesday. night's xneeting that enquiries be ;made of tii,e Depart- ment of Lands and Forests re• garding the requirements to make• the township an area re- quiting a license for non-resi- dents to hunt. Other motions .passed at the three and a half hour meeting included: —that the tiles drainage inspec- tor's report on Loan No. 46 be, approved and a loan of $1,000 be made; —that the petition of Harold Carroll, Ross Cooke and others for a municipai drain in the upper portion of the Washburn drainage area be accepted as a proper petition and that J. A. Howes, O.L.S., Listgwel be ap- pointed as Engineer; .—that the Van Steeg Drain re- port be provionally adopted and the court of revision if neces- sary be" held at the August meeting —that the road accounts' pre- sented by the Road Supt. amounting to a total voucher of .$16,553.53 be paid; —that a supplemental by-law appropriating $4,000 to provide for the application of calcium chloride to the roads be passed subject to the approval of the Department of Highways; —that the current accounts • Rep amounting to. a total voucher of $9;470 be paid as presented; —that the County rate for '.1966 be 17.0 mills, the 'HO School be, 14,50_ mills: the township rate- be 12,50 mills, making. a general rate of 44.0 mins,. and the public school rate be 15.0 mills, and a formal budget bas- ed on the foregoing rates be .prepared for adoption at the August meeting. MORRIS COUNCIL Morris council set the town- ship mill- rate at 14 mills for farm and residential property and 15.5 mills for business and commercial property at their meeting, July 4th. Other motions passed with all members present included: that tender of Harry Temple- man, Gorrie, to paint outside, trim on hall and shed for $270. be accepted; —that applications for drain loans be approved; —that a grant of $150 be given to Brussels Fair Board; Blyth Fair Board; and $35 to Belgrave School Fair for 1966; —that a grant of $100 be given Belgrave 'Arena Board and $125 to Brussels Recreational Assoc- iation; —that Bylaw No. 9, 1966, auth- orizing the addition or two per cent penalty to all unpaid 1966 HELP WANTED A well established Real Estate Company has an opening for a man to sell real estate in the Seaforth and Mitchell district. An ex- perienced salesman would be- 'preferred, however training will be given. All inquires will be ,confidential and inquiries should be sent to: - WILFRED McINTEE & CO. LTD. Realtor, Walkerton, Ont. ' 'qty 1965 CLASSIC SEDAN 1961 'CHEV. BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder 1959 FORD 1960 CLASSIC See these - New 1966 Models Now on Display 1966 AMBASSADOR 1966 CLASSIC 770 1966 AMERICAN 224 MILLER MOTORS Phone 527-1410 Seaforth tax after Dec, 15th and Ye of one per ceiit interest beginning ,January 1, 1967, until paid be passed. tile General Accounts Ralph Logan, foa bounty, $4; Art.. Edgar, fox bounty, $4; Wil- fred Warwick, fox bounty, $4; Wm, J. Elston, fox bounty, $4; Stanley Hopper, fox bounty, $4; ToWtlship of Hullett, Court of Revision, Clerk's fees and by- laws re: McArthur Drain, $130; Belgrave Co -Op, warble fly powder, $233.10; Huron Exposi- tory ads, re: McArthur Drain; $7,0; Town of Clinton, deben- ture principal and interest fie: Collegiate, $298.19; Peter Dorsch fox bounty, $4; Bernard Hall Insurance Agency, premium in. Canipensation policy, $2$2.94; Kilharchan Nursing Home, $116.25; Blyth District Fire Area, fire call, $96; Callander Nursing Home, $269.50; B. H. Moffatt, $82.83; Bluevale Mil- ling Co., carbola, $2.15; Helen Martin, $119; Belgrave Arena Board, grant $100; Brussels Re- creational Association, grant, $125. THIS WEEK AND 'NEXT by Ray Argyle THE, 'MEDDLING' CANADIAN "That man in Ottawa!" The British and French were saying this of Lester B. Pearson 10 years ago when as External FamIiv ReL.. flIO The Dolmage reunion attralc- ted 72 to the Seaforth Lions Park, June 19th. The -officers are: px'S'sident, Jerry Dolnaage; .secretary -trea- surer, Mrs. Bernice Norris; lunch, Mrs. Jean Dolmage, Mrs. Helen Agar; sports, Richard Boice, Russell Turner. The results of the races and other events on the program were as .follows: Foot races, pre-school, Rox- anne Boice, Carolyn Lesson; six, seven, eight, Patty Dolmage, Garry Dolmage; .nine, ten, ele- yen, Michael Turner, Richard Dolrnage, Patti Norris; 13 to 16, Ean Dolmage, Sarol Dolmage; girls, 16 and over, Mrs. Barb Turner, Joyce Dolmage; boys, horse race, Bill Merriam, Patti Norris; crab race, Richard Dol - mage; longest sipper, Mrs. Jean Dill; kick the slipper, preschool, Beverly Dodds, 6,7,8, Michael Turner; birthdays, ladies, Mrs. Madeline Lesson; men,. Bruce Turner; anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Dolmage; longest mar- ried couple, •Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dodds. Road Accounts Sam Sweeney, bulldozing, 426; Ken Sholdice, hauling tile and culverts, 9; Melvin Carno- chan, backhoe work, 18; Mc- Gavin's Farm Equipment, mow- er parts, 35; Ideal Supply Co., Wrench and resurface controls, 38.33;. Ontario Culvert and Met- al Products, culverts, 407.75• Alex Inkley, gas, fuel oil •an. tax, 205.27; Wingham Tire Ser- vice, -new tires, 231; Howard Smith, sprayer tips, 34; E. E. Cathers, supply and haul gra- vel, 2,303.34; G. A. Somers, re- pairs to tractor, 145.26; N. S. Bauman, clay tile, 33.21; Bel - grave Co -Op., brushspray, 149; Wm. McArter, mileage, wages and bookkeeping, 196.50; James Casemore, wages, 3/1; John Smith wages, 94.50. icans when he addressed the U.S. Society of Newspaper Edi- tors in Montreal this spring. He ignored Vietnam and dealt mostly with economic matters. I thought his talk was reasoned and fair, but Americans in the audience reacted .sharply. They generally regarded his com- ments as an unfair attack on U.S. economic interests. Canada next split with Wash- ington over the future of NATO; when the Canadian dele- gation to Brussels, led by Paul Martin, defied U.S. determina- tion to launch counter-measures against France which is taking its troops out of the Atlantic al- liance. Dut to Canadian insis- tence, the U.S. failed to win its way fora joint 14 -nation ap- proach gainst the French, and the door was left open for fu- ture French participation, most probably on France's terms. Mr. Pearson followed up this diplomatic coup with a hard-hit- ting speech at Springfield, Ellie nois. He was outspokenly criti- cal of U.S. attempts to dominate NATO and equated the Ameri- can domination of the Atlantic allaince with the Soviet domina- tion of Eastern Europe's •mili- tary apparatus. The significance of this posi- tion is that Moscow is having as much trouble keeping its War- saw Pact countries in line as the U.S. is having with. Canada and France. Again, Mr. Pearson took on Washington over U.S. bombing of Hanoi. He publicly said only that he "regretted" the attack, but it was well known in Ottawa that the PM regarded the latest American} escalation as sense- less. According to one Washington observer, Secretary of . State . Dean Rusk has been feeding President'Johnson a wildly inac- curate assessment of why Cana- da has been behaving in such an unusually independent manner of late. ' It is ,said that Mr. Rusk be- lieves Canadian foriegn policy is aimed at winning more Liberal party . support in Quebec, and that this is why Canada took a pro -French attitude at the NATO foreign ministers' con- ference. Some Canadians have been heard to express the same opin- ion. The major international prob- lem remains Vietnam, despite the NATO side-show in Europe., Increased bombings have so far brought no significant re- duction in North Vietnamese support of the Viet Cong in the south. Each degree of escalation appears to have hardened Ha- noi's determination to carry on the fight. And so the American dilemma grows — a nation pos- sessed of the ability"to win a crushing military victory, but unable to end a 'confliet which daily becomes more immoral and barbarous. USBORNE AND HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE 'INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - 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: n HDublin Hugh Benninger • - Exeter Harry Coates - Clayton Barris - Mitchell Seer taryTreasurer•Exeter Arthur 'Fraser -- Affairs Minister. he led the United Nations in censuring the Anglo-French invasion of Suez. Today, the Americans, notably the short-tempered Lyndon B. Johnson, are similarly exasper- ated 'at Mr. Pearson's "med- dling" in Vietnam and his point- ed criticisms of U.S. policies on matters ranging from NATO to economic guidlines. While U.S.-Canadian relations are a long way from the hys- terical tenor of the last days of the Diefenbaker administration, events of recent •weeks damp- ened the usual ardor between Ottawa and Washington. The current impasse really goes back to last December whets Mr. Pearson, in a Phila- delphia speech, called on the U.S. to suspend bombing . of North Vietnam, When word of the PM's remarks reached the White House, the American president hit the ceiling, taking the Pearson comment as further evidence of Canadian unreliabil- ity. The fact that the U.S. did in- deed later temporarily suspend its bombing attacks Gannet be credited to the Pearson speech, but the Canadian position, add- ed to appeals from other West- ern nations, helped nudge Washington toward the move. The Canadian PM next spoke to an influential group of Amer - Classified ads pay dividends. NOTICE -- Por Co -Op Insurance Call W. ARTHUR WRIGHT 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 ' rou cap'f argue with WEEDS KILL THEM WITH .. PROVEN INSURANCE WIND TORNADO CYCLONE JAMES F. KEYS Phone 527-0467 : Seaforth Representing the Western Farmer's Weather Insurance Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont. High H�atLOW Appetite MAINTAIN STEADY EGG PRODUCTION DUR- ING SUMMER MONTHS WITH SHUR - GAIN SPECIAL HOT WEATHER LAYING FEEDS. HENS on LITTER - Shur Gain 17% All - Mash Layer • HENS in CAGES - Shur Gain 18% All Mash Cage Layer HATCHING FLOCKS - Shur - Gain 17% All - Mash Hatcher Each of these special hot weather rations are formulated with increased levels of protein, minerals and vitamins to compensate for reduced feed intake by poultry during periods of high tem- peratures. Keep your egg production up to profitable levels with a SHUR - GAIN hot weather laying feed program. Custom ping' . - Cement For Sale All kinds of Grain Bought and Sold SHUR'GMN WM. STAPLETON - .&. SON COAL MERCHANT Floor, Feed and Seeds, Oil Orders promptly 'attended to •poultry. feeds . Phone 31 Dublin, Ontario -Seaforth Monument Works OPEN DAILY AH Types of Cemetery Memorials T. PRYDE &- SON Inquiries are invited — Telephone Numbers:482-9421 EXETER 235-0620 SEAFORTH: Contact Willis Dundas CHIPM,A'N pE �- SPRAY There is Still Lots of Tune When Applied . with ATRAOIL The proven weedkiller for use on edrti. Kills annual grasses as well 'as broadleafed weeds. It is also possible to kill quack grass without damaging corn. Kill the Weeds be- fore they kill your profits! Contact us for more details and litera- ture or, better still, see 50 acres on my farm sprayed for quack grass last year. CUSTOM SPRAYING Custom Spraying using the most modern - equipment, particularly designed to handle Atrazine, thus ensuring the most effective results. MILTON J. DIETZ Purina Chows — Sanitation Products Phone 527-0608. : SEAFORTH, R.R. 3 CHIPMAN CHEMICALS LIMITED Montreal " Hamilton - Winnipeg • Saskatoon - Edmonton t I WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS: Dial 527-0240' Revd the Advertisements — It'sa Profitable Pastime,! 4r Y 5 OFF THE AFTERNOON ON THE WINDSOR ERRY, 1908. CARLING CINCI WAS 26 YEARS OLD. cit 44101