The Huron Expositor, 1965-02-25, Page 10Penny for penny, .
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MAPLE LEAF
DAIRY
Phone 527-0810 : Seaforth
•
•
Sundays, Holidays, Everyday — Maple Leaf
Dairy Products are available at
Vanderhoek's Supertest
OFFICE SUPPLIES
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
Dial 527-0240 -- Seaforth
CONTRACTS
MALTING 'BARLEY
Seed and Fertilizer Supplied
WHITE BEANS
Seed and Fertilizer SPplied
WE HAVE ALL POPULAR VARIETIES
Sanilac -Seaway - Michelite and
Saginaw
Seed Oat and Barley Contracts
• RUssell
Herta
Garry and Rodney Oats
Brant and York Barley
• ,40
• We.have a quantity of Feed Beans
at $35.00- per ton while they last
• •
We are in the market for good Herta Barley
suitable for seed
Also in the Market for Feed Barley
W. G. Thompson
and Son Ltd.
, Phone- 262-2527 HENSALL
.4 -,''77W<Tr,:nr0M.,r 0014 • 1"
piltio4t §.030 fqr PPIPPNI
R1140111, Mitelle4: was held
IlkesclaY aftertleon. of last week
at the Lockhart funeral home,
, ,
Mitchell. Rev. Douglas Sloan,
of Main Street United Church,
officiated.
The pallbearers were Carl
SChellenberger, Jehn Ronnen-
berg, Mitchell; Frank Ellison
and Thomas March, Stratford;
Robert Patrick and Allan Nich-
olson, Seafortb.
Tempdrary entombment was
in Woodland Mausoleum with
burial later in the Woodland
cemetery, . Mitchell.
MRS. R. H. MIDDLETON
Largely attended funeral ser-
vices for the late Mrs. R. H.
Middleton were held from St.
Paul's Anglican Church, Hen-
sall, Thursday. Rev. J. P. Can -
don, rector of the church, con-
ducted the service and paid
high tribute to the life of the
deceased,
Interment was in Bayfield
cemetery, Pallbearers were
Walter Spencer, W. 0. Goodwin,
Laird Mickle, Bob Middleton,
Dick Middleton and Harry Lawr-
ence. Flowerbearers were Ew-
ing Buchan,. Trevor Wilson and
Stan Harrell.
MRS. WILLIAM SCOTT
Funeral services for the late
Mrs. William Scott, 42, of RR 1,
Ayr, was held from Trinity
Anglican Church, Galt, on Tues-
day, Mrs. Scott, the former
Doreen, Caldwell, of London,
passed away at South Waterloo
Memorial Hospital, Galt.
Survivors are her husband;
three sons, Peter, Michael and
Derek, all at home; her parents,
r. and Mrs. Wesley Caldwell,
London, , formerly of Hensall,
and one brother, Ross, of Chat-
ham.
Mrs. Scott Was a niece of
Mrs. Alice Joynt and T. J. Sher-
ritt, also of Hensall.
MARIANNE VANDERVLIET'
Pupils and fellow teachers
from .Stanley Park public school,
Kitchener, and members of the
NOTICE -:
For 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
• At 5 weeks use
°PIG STARTE
OR
CO-OP-,*
;pp STARTER'GROWER
when required
•
ff; RIG
STARTER
(Medicated)
PIG STARTER
GROWER
5.50
per
100
4.35
per
100
Available from
Seaforth
Farmers Co-op
Phone 527-0770
CO-OP Feed now better than evert
CEA
SAFETY -TESTED
AT HURON COUNTY'S FINEST USED CAR MARKET
'64 Dodge Sedan' Four-Door—A.T.
3—'64, Pontiac Laurentions A.T., fully
equipped; 2 6 -cylinders, 1 8 -cylinder
'64 Chev. Bel Air.L-Fully equipped
'64 Meteor Custom Sedan
3—'63 Pontiac Laurentian Sedans
'63 Chev. Impala 4 -Door Hardtop V-8—Fully
equipped
2—'63 Chev. Bel Air Sedans
'63 Chev. 11
'62 Pontiac Parisienne 4 -Door HardtoP V-8
'62 Pontiac Laurentian 4 -Door Hardtop V-8,.
'62 Laurentian Sedan—Frilly equipped
A Written 'Guarantee for 60 Days on all Late
•
1314188g
s moToRs
ONTARIO
PHONE 00 -.-"the HoMe,04effer Ltsed Cars" OPEN EVERY -'EVENING
'62 Rambler Seden—Standard
2—'61 Pontiac ,Parisienne 4 -Door Hardtops
'61 Pontiac Laurentian Sedan V-8
'59 Pontiac Two -Door Hardtop
'58 Chev. Sedan
'58 Pontiac Sedan
STATION WAGONS
'63 Ford Fairlane Station Wagon ,
'63 Chev. Biscayne 4 -Door Station Wagon
'61 Falcon 4-Dd9r Standard
'58 Pontiac Station Wagon
USED TRUCKS
2—'62 GMC 1/2 -Ton Pickups
'61' Chev. Heavy Duty 1/2 -Ton
'60 Chev. 1/2 -Ton Pickup
Model Cars—Many other Models to choose from
•
•
Wed-
nesday afternoon in N,liteltell. at
the ttirietal of MissMarjannc
Vandendief,
The .21 -year-old Miss Vander;
vliet was shot to, death St414110Y
in the. farm home of her 'par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Foort Van-
dervliet, RR 2, Dublin.
Over 200 persons filled the
Heath -Leslie funeral_ borne for
the funeral service, condUcted
by Rev. Douglas 0. Fry, of First
Presbyterian: Church, 'Seaforth,
assisted by Rev' A. H. Daynard,
of Staffa United Church.
Miss .Vanderliet'S; favorite. re-
cording, Mantovani Strings play-
ing the Theme 'from Exodus,
was played immediatelypreced-
ing the service.
"We come to • share the grief
of the family and to be of
strength to them," said Mr. Fry,
"There is too much tragedy for
them to bear. I can't giVe you
an answer as to why this should
be," he said. "I searched my
heart . . . but what I really
needed was to lay my. hand on
the Word of God."
Faith, he said, can be -of help
to- those .who have great tribu-
lations, in life.
•
Following the ,service, the
coffin was carried through the
guard of honor that formed out•
side the funeral home by pall-
bearers Larry Stacey, Mitchell;
Gordon Pethick, Toronto; Terry
Daynard, Guelph; Dan Kemp,
Guelph; Ron O'Connor, Dublin;
Harry Tromp, Logan Township.
Six Kitchener school teachers
were among the honorary pall-
bearers, Donald Leathern, Camp-
bell Krueger, Wilfred French,
Betty Lou Cull, Joan Kuehl and
June Dukes.
Temporary entombment was
made in Woodland Mausoleum,
Mitchell. Burial will be made
later in . Woodland cemetery.
AY ARplam
Those'Canadians who, fear the
country is breaking up 4904
look south to another British
federation -.7, the islands of the
West Indies. There's a lesson
there for Canada.
I have just returned from a
swing through some of the is-
lands of what was the West In-
dies Federation. They have .tra-
ditionally had close ties with
Canada and there have been.
frequent suggestiOns that they
could one day become a Cana-
dian province,
By Air Canada jet it's only
five or six hours to Most Of
these places and every winter
many thousands of Canadians
holiday there in the sun.
In Trinidad, where I. spent
most of my time, Canadians are
activein the oil business, news-
paper publishing, banking and
hotelkeeping.
This , is an island of some
850,000 people, mostly of either
Negro or East Indian descent.
It is by no means an undevel-
oped country. It has the, fourth
highest living standard in the
western hemisphere,health and
educational levels are compare:
tively high, and wages for na-
tive workers are good.
But Trinidad h'as .a crushing
unemployment rate of better
than 14 per cent. One-third of
the jobless are teen-agers and
unless Hrinidadians learn to
control the sizes of their fam-
ilies the unemployment rate
can go nowhere but up as more
young people go into the labor
market..
Trinidad's basic problem—
and this is repeated throughout
all these islands of the sun—is
that secondary manufacturing is
almost non-existent: A govern-
ment - sponsored industrial de -
Have a problem? Write to Canadian social worker
• Doris Clark in care of this newspaper. •
'HELP HIM BE A MAN .Puppy love don't hurt, but th
DEAR DORIS My son 17
does.
played softball and football but
Broken Up
now I have news from the doc- •
tor that' he has early symptoms
of rheumatoid arthritis. He was
told to be Careful of his hands.
Saturday nights he goes with
his pals to a roadside restaur-
ant. Well, a- ,week ago the old
fellow who runs it had had a
few drinks and started in on
my boy about how his brother
(who is an assessor) had raised
his taxes and how the whole
family was bad. My boy- *as,
mad and wanted to fight him
But didn't because of his hands.
Now I fear he has lost face
with the other boys. My hus-
band's motto is peace at any
price. I think that "he who
fights and runs 'away. will have
to fight another day." I would
appreciate your point of view.
Mabs
DEAN MABS — Wouldn't he
lower himself to the level of
the drinker if he fought with
him? Your boy's own estimate
of himself is what his friends
will go by. And it is more civ-
ilized to avoid this kind of trou-
ble than to establish superiority
by force.
You hold it in your own two
hands to help your -boy to man -
hoed, in spite of - threatened
health. Don't baby him. Ask
him to' carry his share of the
,household load and have him
kiri‘on the discussion when mat-
ters of importance come up.
* * *
DEAR DORIS — I'm 14. I
went with a boy 18 until re
wrote me a letter saying he
loved me and I got scared, I
wrote and said I don't loveyhim.
Then I cried .nights when I
heard be got a girl. Also I
can't go out with another boy
because of him. When I get to
thinking about him I drive my-
self nuts.
' Don't say it's puppy love,
'blue coal'
Champion Stove and'
Furance Oil
WILLIS DUNDAS
Office 527-0150 -- Res. 527-1053
DEAR BR
right ta be
off. And wrq
love not hurtin
terribly, and it
got.
Next time •stay in your own
league and have the carefree
good times that are coming to
you. Your dates shouldn't' be
a day over 16.
* * *
DEAR., DORIS—Is it proper
to make an amendment to a
motion which has been in the
book for six months? Or should
the motion be nullified and a
new motion made?
The borrowing of money is
involved. The bank will not
accept the motion because the
word "we" was used instead of
the named organization.
Secretary
DEAR SECRETARY — 'Quite
proper. The chief requirement
o'f stich' an amendment is relev-
ancy, and this one sounds very
much so.
TO TIRED -EYES — The use
of some common sense rules
when viewing television can
save strain. Write in through
this newspaper for the little
leaflet, "Enjoy TV—But. Save
Your Eyes!", enelbSilig a stamp-
ed,. self-addressed envelope.
- * *
DEAR DORIS — I allowed a
commercial batten to store his
dismantled oven in my garage
for "a while," then • saw how
huge the pieces'were. A' year
later I wrote twice that I want-
ed the meSs removed. Never a
reply.
Am I legally permitted to sell.
that staff as scrap and keep the
proceeds as' a kind .of rent?
Harassed
DEAR HARASSED — Regis-
ter your next letter, giving him
30 days. Failing a reply, go
ahead and sell. If he should
ever •turn up to demand the
proceeds you would have evi-
dence that he was contacted
first. You did not, require rent
at the time, but to get the
money he'd have to sue. Prob-
ably not worth it, considering
he might lose his case anyway.
is
You were
and call it
about puppy
It does hurt;
what you've
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY,
Office ." Main Street
• SEAFORTH
Insures:'
• Town Dvirellinds,
• Ali Classes of Farm Property
• Shmmer Collages
• Churches, Schools, Halls
Extended coverage, (wind,
smoke, water darnage, falling
objects, etc.) is , also available.
AGENTS: James Keys; RR 1, Seriforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5, Sea -
forth; Wm. Leiper, Sr., Londesboro; Selwyn 13aker, BrUatielal
lIarOld Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin;. Donald G. Eaton.
Seaforth. _ . k
rituftt 3" "s
WirriyouRIEDI
fh'hIad
velqprneut corporation, work-
ing hard to promote local indus-
tries but so fer there is neither
the skilled management or
trained werking, force that is
needed.
Despite its rick still and lush
climate; the island cannot feed
itself and food imports run to
$50' million a year.
To a Canadian, it's a fascin-
ating and colorful place. The
capital, Port of Spain, lacks
none of the modern amenities
for visitors, goad hotels, inter-
esting shops, intriguing night
clubs and of course those ever-
present symbols of Trinidad—
calypso singing and steel bands.
Trinidad, now an independent
nation- of the British Common-
wealth following the break-up
of the West Indies Federation,
is governed by a Negro party,
Dr. Eric Williams' People's Na-
tional Movement. It's' a semi -
socialist, mildly anti-American,
and has the firm support of
the country's influential labor
unions.
The opposition party is sup-
ported mainly by East Indian's.
ere there is thus some of the
Same racial, tension which has
recently gripped neighboring
British Guiana, although the
situation in Trinidad is not
nearly so serious.
What's the lesson in all. this
for Canada?
I asked everyone I talked to
whether the Federtition—it in-
cluded Jamaica, Bakbados, An-
tique, Trinidad and other is-
lands—would ever come back?
It was universally agreed that
it should and would — but not
under the present generatiori of
political leaders. They sacri-
ficed the Federation for short-
terrn local self interest, 'and
with it went the chance of an
economic and political unit
large enough to be meaningful
in today's big, power world.
Seven of the smaller islands
are now talking of a local con-
federation, and there's hope
that a common market might
emerge among all the Carib-
bean states except Cuba.
But be it an island or a pro-
vince, we now know that the
road alone is hard, and that it
will get harder as big technolo-
gy and big markets become
more and more the key ,to eco-
-nomic well-being.
Classified ads pay_ dividends.
.
A 0 •
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PROMPT
WATCH
REPAIR
SERVICE
at
SAVAUGE
JEWELLERS
Certified Watchmakers
OPPOSITE POST 'OFFICE
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YOU'LL GET BETTER PER-
FORMANCE AND LONGER
WEAR FROM A BADGER
SALES - SERVICE - INSTALLATION
JOHN BEANE, Jr.
BRUCEFIELD
SALES — SERVICE
Phone Collect:
482-9250 - Clinton
thai• On- Li fl Pedalled ,
of the world's loading lift" insurance;
companies,. with 150, branch offlece
throughout North America?
As the Sun, Lite r•preseni•
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may I be of service P
By
JOHN J. 'WALSH
Phone 271-3000 — 48 Rebecca 1St., STRATFORD
Sun Life, Assurance Company of Canada
A Special Quantity Purchase Makes Possible This
Decorating Special
-•
Washable - Ready Pasted Wallpapers
Single Roll
•WALL FASHIONS BY
SUNVVORTHY
HILDEBRAND
PAINT and PAPER
INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR DECORATORS
Phone 5274880 : Seaforth
Custom Tinting Free of Charge To Our Customers
Seaforth Motors
'63 OLDS SEDAN—A.T. and Radio
',63 DODGE COACH
'58 FORD SEDAN "8"—A.T.
'59 CHEV. "8" SEDAN—A.T.
'61 RAMBLER SEDAN—A.T, -
'62 RAMBLER SEDAN
'58 CHEV. STATION WAGON
'62 FALCON .COACH
'61 RENAULT SEDAN
'61 "CHEV. SEDAN—A.T.•
'58 PONTIAC SEDAN
'56 CHEV. "8" SEDAN
'59 PONTIAC SEDAN
.'58 PONTIAC 'SEDAN
'58 CHEV. 1/2 -TON PICKUP
No Reasonable Offer Refused!
. •
Seaforth Motors
Dial' 527-1750 Seaforth.
OPEN EVENINGS
Convenient. RAIL:LINER service
to STRATFORD
'LEAVERRivE 7siTARFAOTRF HR D1 21:5:5, pp.m
.m:
LEAVE STRATFORD 1:55 P.M.
ARRIVE TORONTO 3:55 P.M.
. .
Convenient connections to Montreal, Atlantic.Provinces
and Western Canada.
Low Rail Fares.
Red Fare one-wav to WINNIPEG $21.50;
to HALIFAX $24.10
For information phone the local CN Sales Office.
-r-s?
!KJ.%
70
Rep)
•
see&W1jf0
440,
to a, wAr
rth .ue $4.
• ,• ro.
•0/to
•CANAtilAhl NAtIONAL'
,7,.. , •.•
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g
41,
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•
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