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The Huron Expositor, 1962-05-31, Page 5• • • • • • • • • • • • • • WINCHELSEA NEWS OF TN Miss WendY Q11111411, of t$43 - ter, spent Monday and Tuesday with her grandparents, Mr. ,and Mrs. Coljn ilfi lan. 'The Messengers of Thames Road United Church entertain- ed their mothers and .grand- mothers and Elimville Messen- gers and their mothers were guests on Sattlrflay afternoon. Mrs. Wilson gave a very inter- esting talk on her trip to visit her son who is living in Yellow- knife. Mrs. Edwin Miller also, showed slides of EEskimodchil dren. The children served lunch at the close or the meet- ing. Mrs. Beverley Morgan and children, of Thames Road, vis- ited on Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Newton Clarke. Mrs. Freeman Horne, Mrs. Harold Clarke and Mrs. Newtor. Clarke attended the trousseau for Miss Helen Frayne on Sat- urday evening at- the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Frayne, of Sunshine Line. Mr. and Mrs. Newton Clarke visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Doupe, of Woodham. Mrs. Harry Ford visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Free- man Horne and family. Mr. and Mrs. 'Tom Campbell attended the funeral on Friday of Mrs. Campbell's aunt, Mrs. WEEK John f•%rdi an, ll 1 xeter. Mr, and ¥rs. Els ' n I.yrnxi and family spam Synd y with Mr. and Mrs, Tom .$kroner and fam- ily at St. Pauls. Mr. and Mrs. Beverley Par- sons and family, of near Exe- ter, visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Coward. • Mr. and I4rs. Colin Gilfillan, Grant and Barbara visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Har- vey Smith at Crediton. Elimville UCW Meet Phe Elimville United Church Women met on Wednesday eve- ning at the church with twenty- five ladies present. Mrs. John Batten and Mrs. Howard Johns had charge of the worship part of the' meeting; Mrs. Jackson Woods gave the Bible study; Mrs. Charles Stephens read the Scripture, and Mrs, Bev. Wilson gave a very interesting talk on her trip to Yellowknife. Mrs. Allen Johns read a chapter from the study book. Mrs. Hor- ace Delbridge, the president, took over for • the business part of the meeting. Lunch was served at the close. RED CROSS TO MEET The Red Cross Society will meet in Carnegie Library. at 3 p.m. on Friday. SPECIALS FOR Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Chase & Sanborn COFFEE... 1 -Ib. Bag 65¢ KOTEX—Regular package, 12's . • . • 39¢ MIRACLE WHIP SALAD - DRESSING HEINZ KETCHUP CLARK'S TOMATO JUICE KAM ... 32 -oz. Jar 590 11 -oz. Bottle 21 0 . 2 48 -oz. Tins 530 Tin 450 130 Locally Grown RADISHES 2 Bunches California — Large Size 113's ORANGES...... ... , .... Dozen 55t SEE LONDON FREE PRESS THURSDAY FOR ADDITIONAL SPECIALS Smith's Phone 12 FREE DELIVERY WANT ADS BRING QUICK RES` JLTS — Phone 141 Read the Advertisements .- it's a Profitable Pastime ! MOTORISTS IN THE KNOW JUDE OAT imagine 2 DOMINION ROYAL TIRES.RONLY FO 525.00 750x 14 First Line $22 oo • Take -off Casing at... ff.. �ll Reg. priced at $30.00, with trade PAY! AS USUAODATHE BEST D ALS AT Seaforth Motors CHEVROLET AND OLDSMOEILE Phone 541 -- Seaforth 't ERNIE FISHER, .the Liberal candidate for Hnrn uron, is shown ,welcoming the Hon. Paul Martin, former Minister of National Health and Welfare, as he arrived at Goderich airport Friday evening. Mr. Martin later spoke at a Liberal rally of close to 400 persons and charged that the Progressive Conservatives had not been faithful to promises made to the Ontario farmers, and pointed out that the devaluation of the, dollar would increase the price of farm machinery by at least nine per cent. Ch�llengePM on Debt As Huron Liberals Rally Prime Minister Diefenbaker's explanation of the national debt increase is "not in accordance with the facts,'" Hon. Paul Mar- tin charged at a rally in Gode- rich Friday evening on behalf of .Mayor E. C. Fisher, Liberal candidate in Huron, Earlier in the evening, Mr, Martin had listened to the Prime Minister on television say the position was due to' the government paying money to the provinces to enable them to discharge their responsibilities. "I challenge his statement," Mr. Martin told an audience of over 300 in the public school auditorium. "This government did not pay a cent to any prov- ince until the fall of 1958, and within 11 months of taking of- fice in 195'7 it had a deficit of $1,250,000,000. This government has brought in six budgets, and in every one a deficit, totalling three billion dollars." The former health minister had left Port Arthur the same morning, spending some time in his home constituency )"ring- ing doorbells," flew from Wind- sor to Goderich for an '8:30 meeting and left at 10 to board his plane at Sky Harbor ' in time for a telecast in Windsor. "I have been in seven prov- inces this campaign," Mr. Mar- tin said, "and the spirit of change 'is reflected in large audiences attending Liberal meetings. The time has come for change in Canada and in this riding of Huron." Chairman of the meeting was Andrew Y. McLean, of Seaforth, president of Huron Liberal_ As- sociation and former M.P. for Huron -Perth. "Mr. Martin„' he told the meeting, "has made a great contribution to Canada. The fact that he is with us indi- cates the extent to which he is willing to co-operate. He is on a heavy schedule, but has managed to fit this trip in. His visit will be a major factor in the victory which is in the air for Ernie Fisher." At the start of the, •meeting, a dozen young people carrying "Vote for Fisher" banners, NOII,THSIDE UNITED CHURCH Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Junior Church. School during worship; Senior Church School, 10:00 a.m. District 5 O.E.S. Chapter will hold 'a church parade on Sunday evening at 7:30 p.m.— Minister, Rev. J. Cliff Britton, B.A. marched down the hall and lined up ,at the front. With the chairman, guest speaker and Mayor Fisher on the platform were Hugh Hawk- ins, of Clinton, president of the Western Ontario North Liberal Association; J. K. Hunter, chairman of the town Liberal organization;'' Mrs. Clayton Ed- ward, vice-chairman; Mrs. Dan Murphy, president of the,Wo- men's Liberal AssociationAn- drew Lang, president of the Young Liberals, and Hugh Hill, Goderich, who thanked Mr. Martin at the conclusion of his speech for "a fair and reason-, able approach" to national problems. He expressed •hope that Mr. Martin's absence was not endangering him in his own riding. "I am going to win it, don't worry," interpected the East Essex representative. (He had 1,623 plurality in 1958.) The chairman announced that provincial leader J. J. Winter- meyer, will speak at a rally in Seaforth, June 5, and that Hon. Lester Pearson 'will be in the riding for a few hours on the 6th. Robert Nixon, who won a recent by-election in Brant; is scheduled to speak in Zurich on June 14. Mr. Hunter, in introducing Mr. Fisher, said: '"Some things, his principal opponent is tak- ing credit for, Ernie had Hauch more to do with." The candi- date elaborated on this point. would have announced the de- valuation in an election cam- paign if he had not been put in a very difficult position? When the last government was in power the Canadian dollar stood at $1.06, and we were re-. spected because of the stability o£ our financial policy," "The next prime minister, Mr. Pearson, is a man worthy, of the confidence of this coun- try," Mr. Martin said. "He is the most outstanding statesman this country has produced. He would have. been general sec- retary of the United Nations but .for the veto of the Soviet Union. The Communists did not want Pearson. the Canadian I believe people do." FREEZE YOU SAVE WHEN YOU BUY IT s Now you "can own a freezer with Revco superior design' and performance, for the lowest cost per cubic. foot .i A,Custom Freezer Chest for Every Need Home Economists recommend from 3 to 6 cubic feet of frozen storage .per person (the larger the family the less needed per person). - There is a Custom Revco Chest just right for any family. Capac- ties range from 13 cu. ft. for a family of two or three, to a giant capacity 26 -foot to store all the needs for the largest families. There is no drying blast of air to dehydrate your food—a11 refrig- erated walls provide the fastest freezing and safest storage to maintain the freshness, flavor and nutritive value of all your ' frozen food. - See the 17 -ft. and 22 -ft. Models in Stock Revo Has What You Want in a • New Freezer! BOX FURNITURE Phone 43 -- Seaforth "We thank our member," Mr. Fisher said, "for the decision to have thb island in the har-' ,bor removed, but many trips were made to Ottawa. I head- ed delegations many times. God- erich harbor is vital to the economy of town and county, and that is the reason I went to Ottawa, not for any politi- cal expediency." In his speech, Mr.' Martin reviewed campaign issues. Dis- cussing unemployment, he said: "The last five years have been among the most wasted in our history. We have lost 15 bil- lion dollars in production, five billion in the last year alone. We have more unemployment than at any time since the dark 30's, when we had a Conserva- tive government. This govern- ment has not addressed itself to the outstanding problem, namely, that almost a half -mil- lion Canadians are out of work. This has been a period of mis- management." Of the devalued dollar, the ex -minister asked: "Da you sup- pose the minister of finance EVE MAR STORES SEAFORTH, ONT. "WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUY Ladies' and Girls' DRESS COATS . and CAR COATS 10' 0 Off Regular Prices PHONE 405 S. THE MOST" Men's and Boys' COATS, CAR COATS, WINDBREAKERS 10% Off Regular Prices LARGE 'SELECTION LADIES' DRESSES Dan River, Arnell, Etc. Priced from $3.98 to $1.95 • Large selection of LADIES' and GIRLS' SUMMER SLACKS, CLAM DIGGERS, SHORTS, POP -TOPS, BLOUSES, ETC. — At Reasonable Prices Boys' SPORT SHIRTS Long and short sleeves. SIZES 3 TO 18 Priced 85c 'to $1.98 Men's SPORT SHIRTS Long and short sleeves COTTON and TERYLENE Priced $1.45 to $3.95 AGENTS for W. R. JOHNSTON READY-MADE SUITS and MADE -TO -MEASURE SUITS COME IN AND CHECK QUALITY AND PRICES FEEL FREE TO B1lOUS ; AROUND — NO OBLIGATIONS VOTE ERNIE FISHER FOR DUNG EGRESSIVE REPRESENTATION IN OTTAWA What the riding of Huron needs is young .aggressive representa- tion, and this is exactly what you will get by voting and electing Ernie Fisher, your Liberal Candidate. During the five years that Ernie has been Mayor of Goderich he has worked to the limit of time and endurance to further the progress of that town. This is precisely what he will do if elected in this riding of Huron. SOME EXAMPLES OF HIS AGGRESSIVENESS: • In the time that Ernie has headed up the Goderich Municipal Government he has made several trips to Ottawa and set up many inter -departmental meetings in Goderich with government offi- cials. This work wasall relative to the removal of Ship Island, which is now underway. In his representations, Ernie Fisher constantly pointed out that the removal of this shipping hazard was vital' to the continued prosperity of both Goderich and Huron County. , With the island removed, Ernie saw -possibilities to facilitate the storage of much more grain at the Harbour. This in turn would mean that trucking could be used more broadly with a re- sultant savings of at least 2c per bushel to Huron County farmers. Without being your Federal representative, Ernie has- already clone much on behalf of the riding of Huron. • During. the past year, Ernie attended close to 300 meetings, each of which constituted a speaking engagement. • He also made many trips on matters that required -the atten- tion of either the Provincial Government or the Federal Govern- ment. Keeping things constantly in front of right people is the way that things have been attained for Goderich, and this is the way Ernie intends to represent you, the people of Huron. • Vote for young aggressive representation on June 18. Vote for Ernie Fisher. FISHER, ERNIE SEE — HEAR ERNIE FISHER - CFPL - TV CHANNEL 10 6:15, JUNE 5 CKNX - TV CHANNEL 8 -- 6:10, "JUNE 8