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The Huron Expositor, 1965-05-06, Page 34‘. 4. kr• 4 • • 4 • • • ,• Arnold Sfinnissen GROUP - LIFE •- ACCIDF.NT, and SICKNESS - MAJOR MEDICAL. PENSIONS - ANNUITIES ° Representing Sun Life Assurance Company • of Canada TELEPHONE 527-0410 Goderich St. East - Seaforth To T 01110irlot WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS: Dial 527-0240 CONTRACT, BARLEY • - PARKLAND BARLEY The most dependable variety to grow ! —Proven from Past Performance! —SEED- and, FERTILIZER Supplied FERTILIZER Complete Stock Carried Contact us for to -day's prices. SEED GRAIN Order early while supplies are, good. SEED BEANS Good supplies on hand. • CONTRACTS AVAILABLE' Printed literature on growing' beans available at our office • COOK BV. 0S-•-•• MILLING CO. LIMITED Phone 262-2605 HENSALL • • A complete - Warehouse Service ...now within a few miles. of your farm. Products • SUPER FLOW Ferdlizersin bulk °rpm!. • C -I -L Anhydrous Ammonia in 2 -ton nurse tanks (applicators available) •• 'Special Turf and Garden Fertilizers (GOLFGREEN and EVERGREEN) Services Save time and moneywith the C -I -L Bulk Spreading Service. A fast, efficient method of top -dressing and broadcasting. • Truck bulk spreaders • 800 pound "Lely" spreaders • 4 -ton pull -type spreader's • Soil Testing Laboratories • Farm Advisory Service FERTILIZER Topnotch Feeds Limited SEAFORTH — Phone 527.1911 Topnotch Feeds Limited BRUSSELS — Phone 199 W. C. Hoegy BRODHAGEN — Phone Monkton 347-2378 W. G. Thompson & Sons HENSALL — Phone 262-2527 Centralia Farm Supply CENTBALTA —Phone 228.6638 ALLAN PATTERSON A university honors course •in either mathematics or eel- ence is the immediate goal of G." Allah Patterson, who was selected as ..Seaforth District High School's nominee to the Student Leaders' Club by his fellow students. Allan, 18, son of . Mr. and Mrs. John E. Patterson, is a grade 13 honors student with a wide- range of interests, He is president of the boys' ath- lete society; a yearbook staf- fer, and a member of senior math club. Last year he was vice-president of the Seaforth Teen -Twenty elub, and was a member of the students' coun- cil. He is active in sports, being 'Captain of this year's football team arid participated on school basketball and gymnastic teams. He has also played in the town's hockey leagues for sev- eral years and has attended the Ontario Athletic Leadership Camp at Lake Couchiching, There is no doubt in Ajlan's mind at to the value and need for an university education, the topic he selected for, his essay. "Today many people still re- main ignorant of the impor- tance of an education, especial- Insurance • WIND. TORNADO CYCLONE JAMES F. KEYS, Phone 527.0467 Seaforth Representing the Western Farmer's Weather. Insurance Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont. 4.44.44.444flurf4.4.44.4.ms44.4..44.44ftwal4441. lY the. kW contributed by "..a university. Such people to be awakened to the increg7 lug- role of the.: university,„ ‘`A •University is an instittp, tion ' organized for teaching' and study in the higher realms of learning. To many people the word 'education' simPly means the memorization. •of facts 'which have no praetical value; . however, this is not true at university level. "Aided- by highly -specialized. instructors, the student trains himself to develop his mind. 'This is real education! As. one educates himself, he discovers how little he actually does know, and his curiosity turns about him. In this way, the college graduate has before himself a broader picture of life. - "A university education pre- pares a youth for his entrance into the challenging world of today. By working on his oivn, he gains a sense of responsi- bility in managing his own af- fairs. University life presents a sharp contrast with the pro- tective nature of the second- ary shoot. "By participating in some of the countless organizations and by Jiving in residence, a student becoi accustomed to • association With others. This quality allows a gradu- ate to contributeimmensely to his community and perhaps to his nation. • "Presently, with the increas- ing demand or ,> skill arid knowledge, a graduate has lit- tle difficulty in finding top salary positions. He is an asset to his company because he has already proved his de- sire to excel. "In conclusion — perhaps the most valuable result of all education is the ability to make yourself do the thing you have to do, when it ought to be done, whether you like it or not." "My wife and I have been happily married for twelve years," ,said a man to his friend. "We go out twice a week and have steak, imported ine, soft music and candle- light." "Gee," said his friend admir- ingly, "that's wonderful." sure is," answered the married man. "She goes out on Tuesdays and' I go out on Fridays." Every week more people dii= cover what mighty jobs are accomplished by low cost Ex- positor Want Ads. Dial 527-0240. .4.41444.4.4•4444m4.4fur FOR YOUR BEST BUY ON A iatiLgirearf Seaforth • Motors '64 CHEV. BISCAYNE SEDANA.T. "'64 ,CHEV. BEL AIR SEDAN—A.T., Radio '63 CORVAIR SEDAN—A.T. '63 OLDS SEDAN—A.T. and Radio '63 CHEV. BEL AIR SEDAN '63 DODGE COACH—A.T. '63 CHEV. BISCAYNE SEDAN '61 CHEV. SEDAN—A.T. "60 CHEV. SEDAN '60 FORD "8" STATION WAGON—A.T. and Radio '60 PONTIAC COACH '59 LARK SEDAN '59 CHEV. SEDAN—A.T. '59 PONTIAC- SEDAN '58 FORD SEDAN "8"—A.TI '58 P9NTIAC SEDAN , '56 CHEV. "8" SEDAN MECHANICS' SPECIALS Stock No. 491-1959 516-1957 477-1959 462-1955' 429-7-1956 511-1953 CHEV. SEDAN PONTIAC SEDAN ....: 475.00135.00 VAUX SEDAN 325.00 FORD '8' A.T. SEDAN. -150.00 FORD '8' SEDAN VAUX SEDAN 27755..0000 ABOVE SOLD AS TRADED — NO WARRANTY NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED! Seaforth Motors D• ial , 527175O Seaforth 'Used Lot Open Wettings — Phone 27.0450 4 _ WILMA JACKSON Seaforth District High School's representative in the School Queen's Club was Wilma Jack- son, a Grade 13 student. Eigh- teen -year-old Wilma is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stan- ley Jackson, RR 2, Kippen. A first-class honor sttident, .• she has received academic school lett ers andalso the certificate of scholarship for four years. She is a member of the school trumpet band and is on 'the yearbook staff. Her ambition is to be a clini- cal instructor in a school of nursing. In her essay, Wilma writes about our national' flag., "February 15, at 12:45 p.m. I witnessed history in the mak.- ing. Some classmates and I watched ,Canada's new flag rais- ed, her emblem to be forever a symbol of Canada. As we look back into Can- ada's past we see that her first flag was the Cross of St. George. This flag was embedded in her soil by John Cabot in 1497. The -blue and. gold. •Flor-de-Lis established the small and re- stricted French colony. How- ever, aftr the defeat of the French in 1763, the Union Jack replaced the Fleur -de -Lis. Canada as a British colony, tolerant of both • race and re- ligion, grew. Each of the new immigrants, although he re- ntained loyal to his •homeland, gradually developed a pride and nationalism for Canada. Con- federation in 1867 only served to increase the nationalism and produce -a demand for a Cana- dian flag.The replacement ' of the Red Ensign by the Maple 'Leaf is not a withdrawal of loyalty , from the Common- wealth. It - is in fact, a step- ping stone for ---the establish- ment of a more united Canada. The Maple Leaf nav symbolizes to Canada and the rest of the world that we are a distinct nation with a distinct charac- ter. " ' Accordingto an encyclop;e: dia a flag has definite require- ments. "A flag is usually ob- lorrg and attached by one edge to a staff or halyard. It can be viewed fromeither side. As its usefulness for purposes of identification must depend on its blowing out freely in the wind, the material should be light, It is' thus- advantageous. to choose a device or pattern which will be the same on both sides of the flag. This consid- eration tends • to exclude any wording and 'lc onsideratidn of visibility • tend' to favor the simpler patterns." If the quo- tation is broken down into each of its requirements and applied to our flag, you will see - that it meets the necessities for a distinctive emblem. My conclusion is best ex- pressed •by Charles Sumner: "There is the National flag: He must be 'cold,' indeed, who can look upon its folds: rippling in the breeze without pride -of country: If in a foreign land, the flag is companionship, and country- itself, with, all its en- dearments," The was proud, as she could be of her first meal. It started with a doughy mess about two feet long. Hubby gulped and asked, "What's that?" "A pie; darling," she answer- ed: "A bit long, isn't it?" "Long? Of coursei? it's long, dearest. It's rhubar ." Classified ads pay dividends. WOOL Jackson Aluminum Ltd. Seaforth is collecting wool for grading and \sale on the so -operative plan. Shippers may obtain sacks and twine free 6f charge from the, above or their Lic- ensed Operators. Realize the highest returns fti' your wool, by patronizing your own Organization. Canadian Co -Operative Wool Growers Limited .,40`.st. choir Avenue B., Ontario tidien ( Sittferth Links were IWO?: ented at the semi-annual <M- OW meeting of --the '-OntarioSciciety for Crippled Children and its af6liatod service clul)s in the counties of Huron and Perth; 'held in Clinton on Thursday. Attending from Sea - forth were Rev. Harry Donald- son, C. A: Barber and W. -D. Stephenson. At the meeting, representa- tives from the Easter Seal. ser- vice clubs met with nurses and officials of .the society to dis- cuss the program of activities being carried on for the bene- fit of. crippled Children. A spe- cial feature of the meeting was ademonstration by the society nurse on the •function of a Mistogen Tent which is part of the equipment used in the treatment of children who have cystic fibrosis. The services of the Ontarito- Society for Crip- ple Children include a field nursihg program; camping; pro- vision of equipment; assistance to treatment centres; research —all made possible through the funds raised by the Service Club's. annual Easter Seal cam- paign. Chairman of the district meeting was W. W. Haysom, of the Lions Club of Goderich and the service. clubs represented were Bayfield Lions, Blyth Lions, Brussels Lions, Clinton Lions, Exeter Lions, Goderich Lions, Grand Bend Lions, Lis- towel Rotary, Lucknow and Dis- trict Lions, Sedforth Lions, St. Marys Rotary, Stratford Rotary, Wingham Lions, and Zurich Lions: In response' to shouts and ranting coming from .the bath- room where- her husband was shaving, -the young wife hur- rieA to the door and asked what , was, the matter.. "1\ly razor," he said: "It just won't cut." , "Don't be silly," the young innocent said,"Do you mean to tell me your beard is tough- er than, linoleum?" . SHOES and REPAIRING . at Jack Thompson's Footwear Service MAIN ST. •••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••.......m................ SEAFORTH UPHOLSTER/NG Centre Street Tel. 527,0190 FOR ALL. KINDS OF UPHOLSTIRING. ' — We Arrange, Easy Terms — CORSETUER 'Bra, Girdles, C'orFot.- and Support Garment TO FIT ALL FIGURES At Reasonable Prices Mrs. J. Hoelscher SEAFORTH George St. -One Block East of Library • MOORE'S RIPLES Ik()UllE Easy-to-Dse Interior Latex Flat • For walls and ceilings NOne coot covers • odes In as hour • Apply witis.brush or rolls 3a CC 74 Benjamin Moore paints GAL • GRAVES' WALLPAPER --& PAINT "Friendly Service & Decorating Advice". DIAL 527-0550 — SEAFORTH WEDDING INVITATIONS Phone 527-0240 lemsmorso --""^" KIIMERGARTEN REGISTRATION Wirt.dd parents of children to • be'g'm Kindergarten in Sea - forth Public School in Septem- ber, please register them with the Principal cis soon as con- venient. 'We expect to have two classes next ye.)r, so it be possible to -admit • children whose parents are not rate-. the Public School., J. W. TALBOT Principal REPLACE THAT • NOISY MUFFLER NOW FOR JUST Chev. and Pontiac Most Models 1/2 ton Chev. and GMC trucks f Most Models • $7.50 50 "RI t • • LOCKSEAMED END HEADS GIVE POSITIVE §EAL • SIX RUGGED BAFFLES • HEAVY ZINC-PLATED'SHELL , • GAS-TIGHT SEALING • GENERAL MOTORS DESIGNED, BUILT and BACKED Seaforth Motors •Pitone sg7.17so.„ A e