HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1965-05-20, Page 16#(wPasr?rOR, 's OTH, o :, AfAx a 4965
ArnoldStinnissen
GROUP - LIFE ACCIDENT and,
SICKNESS - MAJOR MEDICAL.
PENSIONS • ANNUITIES -
Representing
Sun Life Assurance Company
of Canada
TELEPHONE 527.0410
Goderich St. East., Seaforth
-,'WANT.ADS BRING QUICK RE,ULTS: Dial 527-0240
Read the Advertisements --. It's a PrQfiitable Pastime!
Top$ 'At
take '
At the Legion zone
tournament, herd in G
on Saturday, the team
Seaforth'Legion Branch
were runners -ug, and w
participate in the district
Ys being staged at
Saturday, June 5th
The team from Seaford).
Alex Muir, Art Nicholson,
McLean and Wilson
Allan.GoderichGalton
First Friend (in front of psy-
chiatrist's office): Hello! Are
you coming or going?" •
Second Friend: "If I knew,
I wouldn't be here."
WILKINSON'S (11) for Meat Values
•
TURKEYSc ROASTING ,�;
�•,. CHICKENS Ib Areroga Ib.
lb.
b 590 HULEG DRUMSTICKS Ib. 65R
TURKEY THIGHS `& BREAST Ib. '690
Ib, 370
CHICKEN LEGS & BREASTS
BEST OF FRYERS
DOUBLE BREASTED CHICKEN .... 16: 350
CANADA CHOICE MILK FED
LEG, OF VEAL lb,79c
OFF YOUNG CANADIAN PORKERS FLESH
PORK BUTT ROAST Ib.49`
SWIFTS PREMIUM
CANNED HAMS ;AN 3.59
RED BRAND RIB
STEAKS
WHYT'ES READY -TO -EAT, EASY TO CARVE
HA
SMOKED
BONELESS
PORTION
75;x.
lb. 69
BONELESS. ROUND STEAK lb,
Sirloin, & Porterhouse Steaks
BEEF or VEAL STEAKTTES .... lb.
Ib.
PRIME RIB
ROASTS
"King of
All Roasts"
ib. -..
VARIETY OF CHOPS
Centre Cut
Pork Chops Ib.65c
Butt Chops ib. 59c
Veal Loin Chops Ib. 89c
Veal Shoulder Chops, Ib. 79c
Lamb Loin Chops Ib. 59c
Lamb Shoulder Chops, Ib. 49c
Lamb in the Basket ..,lb: 29c
Country Style
Spare Ribs Ib. 59c
79°
85°
55¢
WING STEAKS OR ROASTS 794
• BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS Ib. '094
CHUCK .STEAKS ICUT THICK) ,b 594
DELMONICA STEAKS
(No TALI ,b. 991
CUBE STEAKS • 994
SANDWICH STEAKS L (BROWN
,b, 99*
'WELL TRIM{,IED FOR BAR -B1
BRAISING. RIB I. 394
GROUND FRESH HOURLY
LEAN n
GROUND BEEF 2 !h. 89`
TABLE RITE TRIMMED RED BRANO.
ROUND .•�''
STEAK ROAST lb, 79
CHUCK ROAST -' 16,5:5'
SAUSAGES & WIENERS
Fearman's Wieners, Ib. 49c
Lucas Wieners 2lbs. 79c
Country Sausages
6 -Pound Box 2.19
Coleman's
Precooked Sausages ib. 69c
Copaco Sausage Links, Ib. 59c
Bacon -Liver Sausage, Ib. 59c
Summer •Sausage
Chubs lb. 79c
Table Rite — 6 -oz. Pkgs.
Cooked Meat 4 for 1.00
BONELESS
IMPERIAL ROAST
lb. 69ft
CANADIAN
POT ROAST Ib. 59¢
BONELESS
WINDSOR 'ROAST Ib. 690
SAVOY
ROAST or STEAKS. Ib. 75*;
CALIFORNIA
POT ROAST .... Ib: 65¢
SERVING OF BACON
(Sugar Cured) •
Fearman's Devern
Side Bacon Ib. 69c
By _the Piece
Smoked Side Bacon lb. 55c
Bacon -Squares Ib. -29c
Back Bacon, 6 -oz. Pkg, 53c
Ham Steaks - Pkg. 67c
Sweet Pickled
Cottage "Rolls Ib. 59c
Smoked Picnics Ib. 43c
TOP VALU TOP VALU INSTANT
• T o C
Canned . Drinks lOoz. ....0e..Coffee soz. jar 69
CLUBHOUSE, — SAVE 124
PEANUT BUTTER
GIANT SIZE
SURF .DETERGENT
FACELLE ROYALE ASST'D COLORS
BATHROOM TISSUE
MCLAREN'S — SAVE 15c — ASST'D
RELISHES 12OZP! AR
VAN CAMP
BEANS TOMATO SAUCE
HEREFORD
CORNED BEEF
16 -OZ,
JAR
20c OFF
39C
13c
TWIN c
87
PACKS'
•
4 '25 -OZ.
.- TINS
12,42. TIN
43°
11°
49'
FACELLE
TOWELS COLORS 2
FACELLE WHITE
SERVIETTES' -
ROSE SWEET MIXED
PICKLES
CAPTAIN CRUNCH
CEREAL
LIBBY FANCY
d
2
TWIN
PACKS
48 PER
PKG,
16-0Z.
JARS
8-0Z. PKG
81`
65c.
35°
TOMATO1UBCE,3 49.0Z 9
TINS q,
MODESS `+ �;
Sanitary N4
apkins 2 OFG12 rj
MOOESS
SANITARY NAPKINS24 PER89'
OARE'S
BISCUITS
COOKIENJAR"
FREE SNACK TRAY WITH KRUN•CHEf
83'
POTATO CHIPS TWIN PACK fig`
— BAKERY FEATURES —
S,IIIRLEY GAY APPLE PIE
, 24-PI.`.39• `
WESTON ANGEL FOOD SHIRLEY GAY •
CAKE F;` 41' Bran Muffins 354
'smut," GAY , WESTON
DONUTS 74:: ' 33c Chelsea Buns 'PR: 498
WEStON.
- FROZEN FOOD AND DAIRY FEATURES —
SUNNY WHITE LEMONADE , 3 "T;` 69c
SUNNY FRASERVALE COO
LIMEADE- 2 6`";,-.7.29' FISH & CHIPS IPE,.. 57E
STOKELY'S FARM HOUSE
Kernel Corn 2'''b' 89` LEMON PIE ta-•:• Jr
Pkpr. CRFAM VSB• X17
CHERRY HILL HONEY BUTTER CINNA ON 2 Cln. 59`
PEANUT MALLOWS :P=Q '¢ BUTICR FIRST :'AbE 57' ' Shortening 27..b 69B
,
Tamatoes.�' for IQE
ti4, •, ,, i 14.02. TUBES
Marge M2uifh ttering, Red Cutters
F 42 .,,:,Oreinli^,CaIifblria
4"r# itiOL lgt fESw14 ��. H e 1wlol 'Qu$r�t 494
WATERMELP . 89c
No. 1 Quality Pascala --w Size.,30's
Celery Stalks 23
"Garden Fresh" Rosebud Red
RADISHES 3 PkOs. of Sixe.30s 29c
Mild Flavor "Fresh" Green'
ONIONS{-S1ze 48`s,..,.........,., Bu, hes 29c
12
R.!oI�
In Iran 'Mine Deriv�l�pnient
A well-known Seaforth natlye
is taking- a prominent part An
the development of a new ikon
ore deposit in Saskatchewan
John F. Daly is president' of
Choiceland Iron Mines Ltd. The
development is located 50 miles
east . of Prince Albert, He is, a
son of the late Mr. an4.'M,r's.
John F. Daly, of Seaforth. ,
The discovery of the ore
body by. prospector 'Milt "1120 -
Dougall is deseribed by' writer
Jim Bastable' in, a recent issue
of the London Free Press:
"Many prospectors beat the
bush all their lives and pick up
little more than a good suntan
or a cold. Milt McDougall took
a whirl at it fresh out of a
two-week prospecting course
and found at least 150,000,000
tons of iron ore.
The find ' was made on a
cold winter day 10 years ago.
McDougall - swung his , bush
plane over the snow-covered
Saskatchewan countryside and
was startled when the airicraft's
compass went haywire.
A wildly gyrating compass
had meant only trouble to hunt-
ers and student RCAF pilots for
years. But it had a different
meaning to McDougall, now 50
years old. -
"The lessons I learned during
my, prospecting course con-
vinced me that I was flying ov-
er something more than just
wasteland," he said in an in-
terview.
"I had heard stories from
local"people about elk hunters
getting lost in that area be -
Win Legion
Bingo . Prizes
Following are the winners of.
bingo held at the Seaforth Le-
gion on Friday evening:
First game, Wes Vanderburg;
Clinton; 2nd, Mrs. Stan Wat-
son, Mitchell; 3rd, Ilene Plant,
Seaforth,, 4th, split three" ways;
special, Muriel Hudson, = Sea-
forth; 5th, split three ways;
6th, Mrs. W. Carpenter, Dub-
lin; 7th, Mrs. Les Habkirk, Sea -
forth; 8th, Mrs. Pauline Ken-
nedy, ' Seaforth; special, Mr. •
Osier, Mitchell 9th, F: Slavin,
Clinton, and ldrs. CIara SWan,
Seaforth; 10th, F. 'Slavin, Clin-
ton; llth, Mrs. F. Slavin, Clin-
ton; 12th, :Mrs. W. Carpenter,
Dublin'; \special, W. Carpenter,
Dublin; 13th, Mrs. Pauline Ken-
nedy, Seaforth; 14th, Pearl
Tideswell, Clinton; $35110.. spe-,
cial, Walter' Carpenter; Dublin.
• Door prizes were won by
Betty Pennington -and Mrs. • C.
Ashton, Clinton.
TRACTOR CLUB ELECTS ,
The • regular meeting of the
Brussels -Exeter 4-H Tractor
Club was held in the Clinton
Agriculture Board rooms. Of-
ficers elected are: President,
Graeme Craig; vice-president,
Ken Oke; secretary;treasurer,
Keith Strang; press reporter,
Don Storey.
After the officers 'were, elect-
ed; the manuals were handed
out'.
DUBLIN
•
Mr. and --Mrs. A. McDougall
and family, .London, and Mr,,
and Mrs. S. Eckert, Timmins,
visited with Mr. and Mrs, Jo-
seph Jordan.
• Two rather dense landlub-
bers, at sea for the first time,
were looking out over the
mighty ocean. Said one, "That's
the most' water I ever say."
The other .replied: "Yeah,
and that's just the top of it!"
cause their cempassos WQul41't
work properly. And then .dur-
ing the Second World War
young pilots had trouble when
their eompasses . acted up. Their
experiences were blamed on
poor knowledge of navigation."
McDougall played his - hunch.
He staked 40 claims and gave
birth to a major iron -ore de-
posit in Westerh Canada.
Upwards of 150,000,000 tons
of ore averaging about 30 per
cent iron have •been, outlined in
preliminary drilling. and the
ore -body has not been delimit-
ed in any direction.
Saskatchewan government of-
ficials term the discovery, near
the village of, Choiceland, .50
miles east of Prince Albert, the
"most significant of the prov-
ince's metallic minerals - in
terms of its potential impact on
development, of manufactul'ing
industries."
Plans are under way to bring
the property into " production
and tap the rapidly 'expanding
steel market in Western Can-
ada and overseas. Choiceland
Iron Mines Ltd., which now
owns the 4,000,acre property;-
will
roperty;will drill a pilot hole this sum-
mer, then -.sink a 2,600 -foot
shaft.
McDougall, a wiry six-footer,
lad had been working as a bush
pilot when he got the prospect-
ing bug in 1955. ' "I took a
short government - sponsored
course, figuring I might learn
something. A few weeks later
I•happened to fly over Choice -
land."
It was the, first and, so far,
last discovery for -McDougall.
He operates Contact Airways, a
charter air service, out of Fort
McMurray, Alta., but retains an
interest' in the iron -ore project.
And he still dabbles 'in pros-
pecting.
The government, anxious to
get the project rolling, is ready
to, provide Choiceland with up
to $5,009,000, likely by way of
a grant, to sink a shaft.
While • development of the
ore -body is in its early' stages,
there is little doubt.,,„the mine
will play a key role in Sas-
katchewan's mar6h from a ba-
sically agricultural to an -hi-
dustrialized province.
Industry ` Minister '' Gordon
Grant; asked, in an interview
how the discovery will fit' in
with the 'impact of Saskatche-.
wan's.potash development, said:
"It will provide the Prairies
with a source of iron ore and
assure Interprovincial Steel and
Pike Corporation Ltd., an al-
ready established steel pro-
ducer, of a continuing source of.
new iron. Quite likely addition-
al steel products will be pro-
duced for the growing potash
industry." '
Potash, used as fertilizer,
is fast developing into. a 'big
money-rnaker for the province.
A bright future also seems as-
sured for iron ore, in the West.
Mr. Grant said, "There is a
substantial market for furnace
feed on the Prairies. Scrap
prices and supply are far from
reliable. An integrated steel in-
dustry will never be built on
the •Prairies relying solely on -
scrap." ' •
Western steel 'producers have
used.scrap iron. for years de-
spite storage problems and im-
purities that must . be elimin-
ated. Electric furnacess.are not
geared to handle the normal
blast -furnace feed, which 'aver-
ages 50 to 65 per 'cent .iron.
Choiceland plans to produce
what is known as sponge iron,
a reduced product containing 95.
per .cent iron. This is made to
order for the Western Canada
furnaces. In addition, Japanese
and European steel. - makers
have . shown interest in the de-
velopment.
.Why has it taken' 10 years -to
get moving an the project?
•
"resources are seldom[' devel-
oped unless an economical mar-
-
ket exists.. for the proposed out-
put," Mr. Grant said. "When
the Choiceland development was
first proven up; the Prairie
mmarket for new iron was Ha-
lted since scrap was available
to meet electric -furnace de -
ands.
. In recent years, consumption
• of steel on the Prairies •Lias been
rising rapidly and new furnace
capacity has been installed .or
is planned;"
John F. Daly, president of
Choiceland, which has its ,head
office in Toronto, 'also puts it
down to the fact that 'until a
few years ago many mining
men turned up their noses at
an iron -ore deposit, that had to
bemined from underground
compared with an open -pit op-
eration. •
"But - exciting technological
advances have changed that,"
he said. "Look at the big Pea
Ridge development of Meran-iec
Mining Company in Missomi
and Bethlehem' Steel's Grace
Mine in Pennsylvania. They -
opened new horizons for un-
derground mining of iron ore
on an economical basis.
•T h e Choiceland orebody,
Which government officials have
described as being "singularly
free of troublesome impurities,"
is in a settled area near high-
way ••transportation and the
CPR, which serves the village
of Choiceland.
There will be no headaches
over fuel or power supply.
Dirt-cheap lignite coal, natural
gas and hydro are available for
use in the reduction •process.
Use of lignite would be a boost
for the- province's coal indus-
try.
The company' plans initial
production of about 250,000
tons a year, which would re-
'quire . a mill costing about' $16,-'
000,000. '
Canada exports more -than 85
per • cent o'of its 38,000,000 -tons -
a -year production, of iron ore.
Authorities forecast annual pro-
duction of about 50,000,000 tons
by 1970. Saskatchewan hopes
to get a handsome piece of that
market."
OPEN DAILY
T. Pryde'on
ALL TYPES OR,
CEMETERY MEMORIALS
Inquiries are invited.
Telephone Numbers:
EXETER 235-0620 CLINTON 482-9421
SEAFORTH: Contact Willis Dundas. •
We offer the following:
All Varieties Available with
High. Germination
CONTRACTS—
Seed and- Fertilizer supplied
CUSTOM TREATING—
'° For Wireworm Control -
EPTAM--
Effective Spray for Weed -Control
THIMET-- .
For Bean Beetle Control
(by order only)
COOK BROS.
MILLING CO.
LIMITED
Phone 262-2605 = HENSALL.
•
"Our Office now located across the
Street from the Elevator"
•
REPLACE THAT
NOISY MUFFLER
NOW FOR JUST.
Chev. and
Pontiac
Most Models
•
C
1�2 ton Chev. and
CMC trucks
Most Models
7.50:
s6
S0
• 'LOC.KSEAMED END HEADS -GI -VE POSITIVE SEAL
• SIX RUGGED BAFFLES
• HEAVY- ZINC -PLATED SHELL
to GAS-TIGHT' SEALING`
GENERAL MOTORS DESIGNED, BUILT- and BACKED
Ph
r
Seaforth
Motors
ne 527-1750
Seaforth
The Seaforth Pudic Utility
Commission has lowered
the rental on a Cascade -40
water heater to only
1.50 per olonth
The Cascade 40 electric water he .ter can
supply all tlte' .ot„, r ,ter pull ever need,
I
• Two elements produce -Lot water fast • - Large tank keeps
40 gallons of hot, water co tap • Needs. no flue—can be in -
at ywhete r,%me1s--Iso sate and clean • Por moue
• info $Mon
ic
10,
•