The Huron Expositor, 1963-06-13, Page 46
" ^ 1#;''1[7UON EXPOSITOR, SEAFORTH, ONT.,
13, 1963
HURON FEDERATION NEWS
.BY. MRS, JOHN W. ELLIOTT
Secretary
• June is Dairy Month and an
appropriate time to review the
Procedure that a tank truck
operator should take on each
pickup of milk from a produc-
er's bulk tank. Set Dot by the
. field supervisor's office, the pro-
cedure follows:
1. Examine the tank of milk
to see that it is of acceptable
quality.
2. Determine weight of milk
in tank 'from the dip stick read-
o ing and chart. (Dip stick should
be removed, wiped dry, then in-
serted back into the milk be-
fore a reading is made). Re-
cord weight, temperature of
milk, date, reading of gauge
rod and leave copy with the
producer.
3. Start agitator and operate
for at least five minutes, or as
much longer as necessary to
'blue coal'
Champion Stove and
Furnace Oil
WILLIS DUNDAS
Phone 573 or 71 W
properly mix all milk in the
rank.
4. After the milk has been
thoroughly mixed, take a one -
ounce sample for butterfat test-
ing and put it into a bottle
clearly marked with the name
or number of the producer.
5. Rinse the farm bulk tank
with cold or lukewarm water
after the tank has been emptied.
Note: In ;the interest of each
producer that the procedure be
followed, should the operator
not be doing se, discuss the
matter with him. Failing any
improvement of procedure af-
ter such discussion, please con-
tact the Executive of your lo-
cal Producers' Association,
Chicken Situation and Outlook
During the first 20 weeks of
1963, 110 million pounds of
chicken were > rocessed in
registered poultry processing
plants. This represents an in-
crease of 12,5 per cent over the
97.5 million pounds produced
during the same period of 1962.
Marketings have been above
the corresponding week of 1962
in each week of 1963, with in-
creases registered in all prov-
inces. Saskatchewan has the
greatest relative increase, 56.5
per cent, and Quebec the great-
est numerical increase, 7.5 mil-
lion pounds. To date in 1963,
Quebec plants have processed
2.4 million pounds more than
Ontario processors.
Arnold Stinnissen
Life Insurance is My Business
Representing
Sun Life Assurance Company
of Canada
TELEPHONE 852 R 12
R.R. 5 - SEAFOR
SPECIALS FOR
P
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Bick's
SWEET RELISHES 4 for $1.00
12 -oz. Jars — 4 Varieties
Kellogg's
RICE KRISPIES • . 3 91/2 -oz. Pkgs. 85
Red Rose
TEA BAGS -60's
NESTLE'S QUICK 16 -oz.. Tin. 55¢
75¢
Liquid
JAVEX 64 -oz. plastic jug 430
Clark's
TOMATO JUICE
48 -oz. Tin 27
450
89¢
Fortuna
Crushed PINEAPPLE 2 20 -oz. tins
WATERMELONS each
Sunkist
ORANGES—Size 138 Dozen
New Crop Local
RADISHES 2 Bunches
550
13
SEE LONDON FREE PRESS THURSDAY
FOR ADDITIONAL SPECIALS
Open 'til 10 p.m. Friday — 6 pin. Saturday
Smith's
Phone 12
FREE DELIVERY
Friends Honor
Couple Moving
To Seaforth
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Oliver
were honored at a social eve-
ning held in Walton Commun-
ity Hall, when frietids and
neighbors gathered.
After a program. with W. J.
Turnbull as chairman, Rae
Houston read the following ad-
dress and gifts were presented
by Wilbur Turnbull and James
Smith:
Dear Vera and Leslie:. At
this time of year, graduations
are the order of the day. Gradu-
ations have figured prominent-
ly in your lives, as one by one
you watched your family reach
this milestone. Now we meet to-
gether to celebrate your own
graduation.
"We do not have letters or
scholarships or awards of any
kind to grant, but we do offer
you a citation which goes like
this: The world grdws better
year by year, because some
homemaker in her sphere. puts
on her apron and grins and
sings, and keeps' on doing the
same old things. The world is
steadier day by day, because
some neighbor across the way,
when the going is tougher than
you have planned, can be count-
ed on for a helping hand.
"Now that you feel you must
make your home in another
community, we wish to show
our appreciation of the help
you have given in so many ways
by asking you to accept these
gifts. May they be constant re-
minders of your friends and
neighbors."
After thanks for their kind-
ness, all joined in singing "For
They, Me Jolly Good Fellows,"
and lunch was served,
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver have sold
their farm to Lloyd Mitchel, of
Kerwood, and intend to make
their home in Seaforth.
Exeter Names
New ,Reeve
Councillor Ralph Bailey has
been appointed Exeter deputy
reeve.
Mr. Bailey replaces William
Musser, who has resigned the
post to accept an appointment
as clerk of the court in Exeter.
Council will interview two de-
feated candidates from the last
municipal election to find a re-
placement for Mr. Bailey.
Sell that unnecessary piece of
furniture through a Huron Ex-
positor Classified Ad. Phone 141.
WIND
• TORNADO •CYCLONE
Insurance
R. F. McKERCHER
Phone 849 R 4 - Seaforth
Representing the Western Farm-
ers' Weather Insurance Mutual
Co., Woodstock, Ont.
Be Warmly Contented With .
Texaco Stove 011
or., TEXACO
FURNACE FUEL OIL
Call Us To -day 1
WALDEN &
BROADFOOT
Phone 686 W Seaforth
CORSETTiER
Bras, Girdles, Corsets
and Support.,Garments
TO FIT ALL FIGURES
At Reasonable Prices
Mrs. J. Hoelscher
SEAFORTH
George St. — One Block East
of Library
1
�a`!S
(en
0"4•+
\
77.7-77
Hurondale W.I•
Adopts Child
From Kore a
STEP RIGHT UP! Comedy from the subtle to the bizarre
is featured on the CBC radio network program, Here Comes
the Clowns, heard throughout the summer on Saturday eve-
nings. Host Ben Lennick invites listeners to join him in
laughter as he brings out recordings of the world's most
popular comedians.
MR. AND MRS. MILTON WILTSE
MARK GOLDEN WEDDING EVENT
Highly esteemed residents of
Clinton, Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Wiltse, Victoria St., observed
their golden wedding at their
home in Clinton on Wednesday.
They were married at The home
of the bride's parents, the late
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McMich-
ael, Hullett Township, by the
late'Rev. A. W. Barker, of Sea -
forth.
Following their marriage they
farmed a 100 -acre farm on
Highway 4, two miles south of
Clinton. The farm had been
earlier operated by the ..bride-
groom's parents, the late Mr.
and Mrs. Levi Wiltse, and the
property now constitutes a por-
tion of the Clinton RCAF Sta-
tion. The couple retired to
Clinton in 1944. They are ac-
tive members of Ontario Street
United Church. Mr, Wiltse has
served as an elder; Mrs. Wiltse
is active with the United
Church Women, and is associat-
ed with the Clinton Women's
Institute.
The Wiltses have two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Cecil (Lois) Elliott,
and Mrs. Ross, (Mildred) Mer-
rill. and five grandchildren, all.
of Clinton.
At a reception held at the
family home, guests were re-
ceived by both daughters. Pre-
siding at the tea -table, which
KIPPEN
was covered with a linen cloth
and centred with a three -tiered
wedding cake, flanked by gold
candles, were Mrs. T. J. Mc-
Michael; Mrs. Garfield Mc-
Michael, Sarnia; Mrs. H. G.
Hartford, Lambeth, who is Mrs.
Wiltse's sister, Mrs. H. C. El-
der, Tillson'burg, who was or-
ganist at the wedding 50 years
ago; Mrs. Etta Eyre, Sarnia,
who was flower -girl; Miss Elva
Wiltse, Clinton.
Serving in the tea-room were
Mrs. W. J. Dale and Miss Wil-
ma Dale, both of Seaforth; Mrs.
Robert McMichael ' and Miss
Audrey McMichael, both of
Walton; Miss Evelyn McMich-
ael, Goderich; Mrs. Mona Cram-
er, London.
Assisting were Mrs. Ephraim
Clark, Miss Jean Scott, Sea -
forth; Mrs. Myrtle Tyndall,
Mrs. Charles Eyre, and Mrs.
Lorne Lawson, all of Clinton.
Assisting in the living room
were Mrs. Pearl' Gallagher,
Goderich, and Mrs. Lloyd Bat -
kin, Clinton.
Mrs. Bessie Howe, of Wood-
stock, is spending a few weeks
with her sister Margaret and
brother Oliver MacKay.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Priestap of near Mitchell visit--
ed
isit`ed Saturday evening with the
latter's father, Mr. Robert
Thomson.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Salldon,
Walton, and Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
ert Getty of Moose Jaw. Sask.,
visited during last week with
their cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert McLean.
Mrs. Dowson is at present
residing with her daughter, Mrs.
Eldin Kerr, of Winthrop.
Mr. Nelson Hood is reported
as being in fair condition in
Victoria Hospital, London.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Van Wier -
ren and family visited friends
in Auburn on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John C. Doig,
accompanied by Mr. -and Mrs.
C. Comb of Grand Rapids,
Mich., visited during the week-
end with Miss Janet Doig of
Clinton and Mr. and Mrs. N.
Long, Kippen.
If you buy a beef carcass to
package for the freezer, Home
Economists say that you can
figure one-quarter of the car-
cass will yield steaks, one-quar-
ter roasts, and one-quarter
ground beef and stewing meat.
The final quarter is waste, bones
and fat.
AT HURON COUNTY'S FINEST USED CAR MARKET
'1963 Pontiac Laurentian Sedan, new—A.T.
1963 Pontiac Laurentian
1963 Chevrolet Biscayne—Fully equipped
1962 Ford Gallaxy Sedan
1962 Pontiac Laurentian Two -Door Hard-
top—Automatic
1961 Pontiac Parisienne 4 -Door — Fully
equipped
1961 Pontiac Laurentian—A.T.
1961 Chev, Four -Door Station Wagon—A.T.
1959 Chevrolet Impala Four -Door Hard-
top—V-8 motor, automatic
1959 Pontiac V-8—Automatic
1959 Volkswagen
1958 Chevrolet Biscayne Sedan—A.'1.
1957 Pontiac Sedan—Standard
1957 Pontiac—A.T.
MAN'/ OLDER MODELS
USED TRUCKS
1960 Chevrolet 1 -Ton Pickup
1960 Chevrolet %-Ton Pickup
A Written Guarantee for 60 Days on all Late Model Cars—Many other Models to choose from
BRUSSELS MOTORS
" BRUSSELS — ONTARIO
Pa�iON 113 -"Th. Horns of Bothe Used Otte OPEN EVERY EVENING
For Complete
Members of Hurondale WI, at
their meeting Wednesday eve-
ning in Thames Road United
Church, voted to adopt their
child in Korea for another year.
Mrs. William Dougall read a
letter from her. Twenty-five
dollars was voted to the FWIO
International Scholarship Fund
by which a girl is brought to
Ontario and given a course in
home economics. She returns
to her own country to teach her
people.
The Historical Research and
Current Events committee ar-
ranged the program in which
Mrs. Glen Stewart gave a paper
on "The United Nations," and
Mrs. William Dougall one on
the International Peace Gardens
on the boundary between Can-
ada and the United States in
Manitoba. Mrs. Ed. Sillery dis-
cussed current events.
Miss Marlene Webber spoke
on "The Conquest of Outer
Space," with which she won
third place at a public speak-
ing contest, sponsored by On-
tario Hydro. The motto, "Stu-
dy the past, work in the present,
plan for the future, was dis-
cussed by Mrs. Edwin Miller.
Members displayed their hob-
bies or handiwork, including
knitting, sewing, scrapbooks and
quilt tops.
President Mrs. Gerald. Mc -
Falls conducted the business,
when announcement was made
for attendance at Guelph, June
20 to hear the ACWW Presi-
dent, Mrs. F. J. VanBeekhoff,
of the Netherlands. Mrs. Har-
ry Dougall reported fol' the dis-
trict annual held at Seaforth,
at which 17 members from this
branch attended.
Mrs. R. E. Pooley reported on
the Canadian Association of
Consumers and it was voted to
subscribe to the new magazine,
"Canadian Consumer," publish-
ed by the- CAC.
STRAWBERRIES FOR SALE
4
Order your Strawberries now and be assured of nice fresh
berries for your deep freezer and for preserving.
Although frost has shortened our erop, our prices will not
be above those of last year.
Phone HU 2-3462 ,
F. W. ANDREWS - Clinton, Ont.
BACKACHE
When kidneys fail to remove
excess acids and wastes,
backache—tired feeling=
disturbed rest often may
tallow. Dodd's Kidney Pills
stimulate kidneys to normal
duty. You feel better, sleep
better, work better. 80
WASHED
SAND and STONE
All kinds of
GRAVEL - FILL - CRUSHED STONE
'for every requirement.
FRANK KLING LTD.
Phone 19 — Seaforth
•
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Office -- Main Street
SEAFORTH
•
Insures:
• Town Dwellings
• All Classes of Farm Property
• Summer Cottages
• Churches, Schools, Halls
Extended et'o v e r a g e (wind,
smoke, water damage, failing
objects, etc.) is also available.
AGENTS: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5, Sea -
forth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels;
Harold Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eaton,
Seaforth.
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ti,:><si::i3a:y:>.:iS:::;:::::::i%::i-#'ai: ��°' � trig"•r''i2?'i>�'S=?''?'S'?i.
FUEL-SAOR FILL CAP
checks excessive
evaporation ir, storage
Another proven co -OP rT1 oney-saver ... the
"FUEL -SAVER FILL .CAP" This special cap,
. cuts fuel Josses and ch ks fuel deteriora-
tion by reducing evap. ation.
*Actual tests show tha fanner annually
using 1,200 gallons ., gasoline loses 67
gallons each year . e to evaporation.
When using a "FUEL. AVER FILL CAP" the
loss is reduced to 17:allons ... a saving
of approximately $1 65
Help keep your co: s down
with the CO-OP "F L -SAVER
FILL CAP", regular priced
at only $2.50
Guaranteed
INVESTMENT
CERTIFICATES
5 -Year Term
W. E. Southgate
Seaforth
Representing:
British Mortgage & Trust Co.
Guaranty Trust Company
Sterling Trusts Corporation
Huron & Erie Mortgage Corp.
Crown Trust Company
USBORNE . A N D
HIBBERT
MUTUAL° FIRE
INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - EXETER, Ont.
Directors:
Timothy B. Toohey - RR 3, Lucan
President
Robert G. Gardiner - RR 1,
Vice -President Cromarty
Wm. H. Chaffe - RE 4, Mitchell
E. Clayton Colquhoun - RR 1
Science Hill
Martin Feeney - RR 2, Dublin
Milton McCurdy - RR 1, Kirkton
Agents:
Hugh Benninger - Dublin
Harry Coates - RR 1, Centralia
Clayton Harris • - Mitchell
Solicitors:
Mackenzie & Raymond - Exeter
Secretary -Treasurer:
Arthur Fraser - - Exeter
0
•
NEW CO-OP
prevents fuel
CK BOX
ilfering
SNAPS -ON...
LOCKS T'GHT
SEAF
ock up your
asoline with the
asy-to•inftall
0 -OP Lock Box.
oastructedfrom
elded heavy-
guage steel and
painted for all-
weather protec-
tion, the Fuel
Cap Lock Box is
priced at only
$2.00.
CO-OP . ° the Gasoline
with the "PLUS FACTOR"
Enjoy the year'round reliability
of CO.OP gasoline and the com-
plete line of CO.OP petroleum
products. °
When you buy Co-operatively
there's also a big PLUS FACTOR
. the all Important Ownership
and Control of the business. You
also Share in any savings made
from its operation.
•
•
RTH FARMERS CO-OP
PHONE
SEAFORTH
PETROLEUM, PRODUCTS
•
INSURANCE
on your
HOME, BUSINESS, FARM,
CAR, ACCIDENT, LIABILITY
OR LIFE
SEE
DOMINION ROYAL TIRES
SAVE- YOU
MONEY
JOHN. A. CARDNO
Insurance Agency
Phone 214 Seaforth
Office Directly Oppositte.
Ge tforthMotors
DOMINION
ROYAL GRAND
Reg. 19.95
Now Only
SEAFORTH MOTOR
forth
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Phone 541
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