The Huron Expositor, 1970-09-17, Page 10SEAFORTH ELECTRONICS
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0""41:10 HURON EX 0 ITOR, SEAFORTH, ONT., SEPT. 117, 1970
Read the Advertisements — It's a Profitable Pastime!
Scanning the Weeklies
By Lee Hee
a
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4
myth Horticultural Society held their
first Flower Show on Saturday and It was
a huge success. Mrs. Archie Montgomery
won the Eaton Trophy as top winner. The
Simpson-Sear's award went to the runner-
up, Mrs. Edgar Howatt and MrS. Jack Mc-
Nichol won the door prize which was a
five dollar certificate for bulbs.'Police
Chief Jim Warwick warns the villagers
that the do by-law Is still in effect. He
points out that there are many dogs run-
ning at large during the night hours.
Such violations are liable for a $10.00
fine or the destruction of the dog. The
Standard also relates that the farm of Joe
Ryan, McKillop will be the scene of the
49rd Huron County Plowing Match and
Farm Machinery demonstration on Oc-
tober 10th.
The W11103.'11 Advance-Times reports
that there is little change in enrollment
figures for local high and public schools. '
We note that a story appears in the
Advance-Times which indicates 'that the
first Fall Fair of the Ontario Hospital
School, was held on September
12th and 13th. Fred Tilley- and Eric
Matzold of Seaforth won three games
with a plus of 45 and overplus of six
to take first prize in the men's doubles
tournament for the Hanna Trophy, at
the Wingham Lawn Bowling Club.
The St. Marys Journal-Argus tells
us that a Cardinal in the hedge of the
John Tyler's residence left it late in
the season to hatch its young. The
Tylers have watched the small family
hatch nerve the end of August and the
young -Cardinal just found Its wings on
September 3rd. Enrollment at the St.
Marys Schools remains about the same
as in 1969, a total of 1717 pupils.
Life-tong residents, of the Atwood
area, Mr., and Mrs. Stanley "Struthers,
marked their Golden Wedding Anniver-
sary with an open house in the Elma
Memorial Community Centre Hall, Sate
urday evening, according to the Mil-
verton Sun. The Milverton ,Winstonetts
won the Ontario Provincial Women's soft-
ball Union Intermediate 'A' Charnaion-
ship in Ottawa recently defeating Ottawa
Bell's Corners 6 - 5. Wilfred Smith,
Monkton,' a member and Past Master of
Elma,.Lodge #456 A.F. and A.M., Monk-
ton, was presented with a 50-year pin
jewel at the Thursday night meeting.
The Mitchell Advocate reports that
..the post office has decided to discon-
tinue the street letter boxes as of
October 1st. Miss Hilda Kennedy, sister
of Angus Kennedy, R.R. #4, Seaforth and
of Mrs. Auguste Ducharme of St.
Columban, hosted a number of friends
In London for a surprise 40th anniver-
sary party for Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Murray, Detroit. The bride of 40 years
was the former Emily Kennedy and
the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.
Rowland Kennedy of Tuckersmith.
According to the Clinton News-Record
winter must be getting closer. A meet-
ing was held at the Clinton Community
Centre to determine interest- in forming
a junior hockey club. Joint installation
for Kinsmen and Kinettes from GOder-
ich, Clinton, Exeter and Hensel' 'will
take place at the Legion Hall on Satur-
day evening,. September 12. This is a
good indication fall is just around the
corner as service clubs and lodges start
their activities following the summer
holidays. Brucefield Fire Department
were called to the farm of Keith Layton
early Sunday morning. Mr. Layton Vent
to the barn about 7:45 in the morning
and discoyered the fire. The barn was
saved, but seven loads of grain had to
be dried as a result of water damage.
The Exeter Times-Advocate reports
that Judge GlemHays stated that Tues-
day Court was the largest he had ever
conducted. There were 113 cases, and
before the session was adjourned at 7:45
p.m,, a total of $3,548.00 had been levied
as fines. Practise will start in the
last week of September for Junior and
Midget hockey players according to the
Lucan Executive. All indications are
that the "Irish" will be icing a stronger
team this year than last year.
The Goderich Signal-Star reports that
the school enrollment is down. The
Youth Centre at the corner of East Street
and Cambria Road will be open Saturday
evenings from 8 p.m. until 12 a.m.,
starting last weekend.
The Zurich Citizens News reports
that the council have instructed the clerk
to write Huron County Pony Association
to find out some of-the details of their
plans to operate pony harness races
at the old fair grounds. Races have been
held recently on a fairly regular basis
at this site,
In the Grand Bend Times We note
that there is a new postmaster at Grand
Bend. Mr. Garfield Johnston, formerly
of Exeter post office, where he had
worked- .for the past eleven years. Mr.
Johnston replaced Mrs. Lennea Statton
who retired a week ago.
Donald Johnstone, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. C. Johnstone, of Lucknow
'
'com-
mences work at the Luc know Post Office
on October 1st, according to the Sentinel.
He was the successful applicant of 10
who recently applied for the position.
For the past three years he was em-
ployed at the Sentinel.
4
' Broke on $12,000 salary
Make our Booth your headquarters' when you visit the
Annual
SEAFORTH FALL FAIR
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
SEPTEMBER 17th and 18th
SEE THESE SUGGESTIONS
and modern materials on display at our booth 1-
Drop in and discuss your remodelling and imprOveinent ideas,with
US.
Ball Macaulay Ltd.
Lumber - Builders' Supplies
Phone x527-0910, SEAFORTH Phone CtINTON 482-0514
CARS:
3-1970 Obey. Impalas, 2 and 4-dr. H1"s.
$-1970 Pontiac Parisiennes, 2-dr. and 4-dr.
HT's.
6-1970 Ford Galaxie 500's; 2-dr., HT's.
2-1970 Mustangs.
1-1969 Camero.
1-1969 Ford, 9passenger Station Wagon
1-1969 Chev. Belair Station Wagon.
1-1969 Chev. Belair Sedan-
3,-1969 Chev. Impalas, 2 and.4-dr. HT's.
1-1969 Pontias Laurentian 2-dr. HT.
1-1969 Ford Sedan
2-1968 Obey. Impalas, 4-dr. HT's.
2-1968 Pontias Parisiennes, 2-dr. Hrs.
1-1968 Pontiac Laurentian Sedan
1-1967 Pontiac Grand Parisienne
Z--,-1967 Obey. Belair Sedans
TRUCKS:.
1-1969 Ford 1-ton, 11-ft. stake body,
duals, V8.
1-1968 ,Ford 3/4 -ton pick-up
1-1967 'Chev. 1-Ton stake, duals
1-1967 Ford F-500, 14-ft, stake
1-1966 Chev. Tilt Cabs 14-ft. stake.
Number of Chev. and Econoline Vani
1964 -1967
ALL LISTED CARS ARE V-8 AUTOMATICS WITH POWER STEERING, MOST HAVE
POWER BRAKES.
A large number of 1964 - '1967 Chevs., Fords
and Pontiac sedans, Hardtops, Convertibles.
BRUSSELS MOTORS
BRUSSELS - .ONTARIO
PHONE 8876173—"The Home of Better Used Cars" OPEN EVERY EVENING
t
MR.
MERCHANT
Here are TEN solid facts
you should consider in planning
your ADVERTISING
THE McKILLOP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
Office — Main Street
SEAFCiftTH
Margaret Sharp, SeceTreas.
Insures:
* Town Dwellings
• All Classes of Farm Property
* Summer Cottages
" Churches, Schools, Halls
Extended coverage (wind,
smoke, water damage, falling
:objects, etc.) is also available.
AGENTS: James Keys, BR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5,
Seaforth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brus-
sels; Harold Squires, Clinton; George- Coyne, Dublin; Donald
G. Eaton, Seaforth. •
F
FIB of E Sets Policy on
School Driver Training
Enrollment figures presented
last Tuesday evening to the Huron
County Board of Education show
that fewer students are enrolled
in schools throughout the county
this year than last year.
Enrollment In elementary
schools under the board's juris-
diction has dropped by 21 students
while there are 15 fewer students
registered this year for classes
at the county's five secondary
schools than last year.
Director of education, John
Cochrane, did point qut to the
board that enrollment in the te-
condary schools could rise in
the month of September and
possibly even October as senior
students, for instanc,e, return
from summer employment.
Enrollment is up from 40 to
1 This new paper is an, advertising medium that is WANT-
ED it is sought after and paid for, and advertising in
it is not an intruder in the home.
This newspaper's circulation is CONCENTRATED in
this trading area.
3 The newspaper provides PENETRATION in the prim-
ary market by reaching virtually every family or cus-
tomer in that market.
4 People read newspaper ads when they are ready to make
a decision and to act - WHEN THEY'RE •READY TO
BUY.
5 The newspaper is convenient; it may be consulted at a
time most CONVENIENT to every member of the fam-
ily.
• 6 People LIKE TO READ NEWSPAPER ADVERTISE-
MENTS - surveys show 85 per cent' of - the people want
their newspaper to contain advertising.
7 Every issue of every newspaper contains IN.FORMA-'
TION AND PICTURES of interest to every member of
the family.
8 Newspaper reading is a habit and a part of people's
routine.
9 The printed word is MORE RELIABLE THAN the
spoken word and it cannot be refuted because it is easily
available for re-checking. More accurate information is
obtained by reading, than by listening.
10 The newspaper is ideal for comparison - items in a news-
paper may be easily compared with items in other news-
paper ads.
THE MOST EFFECTIVE AND MOST ECONOMICAL WAY
TO PROMOTE BUSINESS IS THROUGH NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
urn µ>xposibr•
Since 1880, Serving the Community Firat
Phone 527-0240,
42 in the county's three schools'
for the retarded.
A final tally presented at
the meeting showed that enrols
lment in all of Huron's schools
is down by 34 students.
"For all intents and pur-
poses," observed Mr. Cochran;
"we are about the same this
year as last year in Huron."
"It is interesting to note,"
interjected the board's vice-
chairman Robert Elliott, Goder-
ich Township, "that although we
will have more board members,
we have less children to adminis-
ter."
Elliott was referring to notifi-
cation from Huron County Council
that two additional school board
members. will be elected in the
county at fall elections.
In other business, the board
hired Mrs. Jane Silcock of Lon-
don for Usborne Central ps and
engaged Mrs. Joan Talbot as a
part-time female custodian at
South Huron District High School.
Policy regarding driver educ-
ation in Huron County secondary
schools was agreed upon last
Tuesday evening at the Board
of Education meeting in Clinton.
The folio win g recommendat-
If a blight disease is present
o n your corn this year, there
is a good chance that it is south-
ern leaf blight. According to Dr.
J. C. Sutton, Department of Crop
Science, and Dr.' Elwood Hatley,
Department of Crop Science,both
With the University of Guelph,
southern leaf blight is especially
common in the Counties of Mid-
dlesex, Oxford, Waterloo, and
Wellington as well as the areas
farther south.
Corn grown for grain should,'
be harvested early if sit has
been infected by southern leaf
blight. Also, use drying facili-
ties if available, or store as high
moisture corn.
Early harvesting and careful.
drying will minimize the amount
ro
Smiles . . .
The real measure of a man's
wealth is how much he would
be worth if he had no money.
ions were oaoptFd bx the board:
a. That the rate charged to
students be set at $15; b. That
instructional time be standard at
a minimum of 25 hours class-
room instruction, eight hours in .
car instrdctlon and 18 hours ob-
servation in vehicle; C. That the
rates paid for classrobm in-
struction remain as they are at
present with Milton and Sea-
forth $6 per hour and Exeter,
Goderich and Wingham at $7
per hour; d. that the rates paid
for "in car" instruction be set
at a standard $5 per hour.
Board members learned the
variance in the cost of class-
room instruction stems from"the
fact that different systems are
employed at the schools for
driver education. In Clinton
and Seaforth, a professional
driver education instructor han-
dles the entire program; in the
remaining schools, the in car .
Instruction and the classroom
instruction is given by different
people.
As well, classes in Clinton
and Seaforth for driver educat-
ion are much larger than in any
of the other centres.,
of mold damage on the kernels.
The southern leaf blight fungus
develops on kernels as a blackish
mold which may continue to grow
on corn dried to as lOw as 20
to 25% moisture.
Southern leaf blight also in-
creases stalk breakage. With
early harvesting, there will be
less stalk breakage.
Early harvesting is recom-
mended only where southern leaf
blight is present. If. corn is
attacked by other leaf blights
such as 'yellow- leaf blight, or
northern leaf blight, or if there
is drought injury to the crop,
early harvesting le, not recom-
Mended. '
If you are in doubt about
whether or not the blight on
your corn is southern leaf blight,
or if you wish further information
about this disease, contact' the
Soils and Crops Specialist at the
nearest -county or district office
of the Ontario Department of
Agriculture and Food.
..:DEAR DORIS
My husband earns $12,000 a
year, •yet. we're always broke
and behind in our bills. ,We
don't have a lot of clothes or
beautiful expensive . furniture,•
don't go on many trips. I do
my own jam and pickles, buy day-
old bread.
At income tax time we al-
ways feel blue. Where did our
money go? We never have enough
to pay our house taxes. Last
year we pawned our tape
recorder. It makes me sick. I
need someone to tell me per-
sonally what we should spend on
clothing, food, etc. What do we
do wrong?
-POOR MANAGEMENT
DEAR POOR - You aren't alone
in this. Budgeting is a more
personal, individual matter than
you might think. What you find
necessary will be quite differ:-
ent from The lady next door. You
eat different foods, your rou-
tines of work, travel end re-
,'creation are not even a rea-
sonable facsimile •of anybody
else's.
So th e thing to do is keep
track of every cent for a while;
then look the bad news over
with your husband to find the
places where you -can cut down.
A budget book from your own
bank will help 'yon get started. a
DE AR DORIS
I am diabetic. My son went to get veal chops, he, got two
slices. I don't know how to count
this for calories. Lardb chops
are all Tat; not much lean.
How can I count calor'les? I
am allergic to fat and the doctor
says I am to make sebstitutions.
It is hard to catch on by myself
when deaf. •
SIXTY AND SUFFERING
DEAR SIXTY - A diabetic needs
as much nourishment as anybody
else, but has trouble with star-
ches and sugars.
If one slice of bread is al-
lowed, the Food Exchange lists
allow a substitution of one of:
half a cup of cooked cereal, half
a cup of macaroni or rice, half
a cup . of lima beans or split
peas, half an ear of -corn, or a
small baked potato. "0 •
Under certain conditions, a
little ice cream is allowed; many
vegetables are on the list. Same
with meat and .fat exchanges.
Priceless help about these
things is offered by the Canadian
Diabetic AsSociation, which puts
out a book called "Exchange •
Lists for Meal Planning for Dia-
betics in Canada." Write for•
it' to their headquarters at 1491'
Yonge Street, Toronto'7,Canada.
DEAR PORTS
I toil interested in receiving
your book list on the fart- ,e
life. We. have three tee;12{,, •
and I have' tried to answer
questions in a straight
manner, but somewher. .10iie
the line we got off on the wrong'
foot. They are not coming to
me with their questions any more.
They don't even seem to want -
to talk about it when I bring the
subject up in private.
-PERPLEXED PARENT
DEAR PERPLEXED - 'Twas ever
thus.' But be handy for that
first emergency. The 'day, will
come when your friendliness and
unshockableness will pay off.
Right now your teenagers are
trying what they can figure out
on their own.
DEAR DORIS
I see that the World Health
Organization supports the 'U.S.
findings that there Is a connec-
tion between the number of cig-
arettes smoked and lung. cancer
rates.
If this is so, why don't-people
just quit? Would you take poison
if there was a chance it would
kill you?'
-QUERY
DEAR QUERY - That's too open
and shut. Of course not.
But smoking 'and other long-
Corm habits don't respond so
easily to sudden resolutions.
They meet. "an emotional need'!'
So the secret, is to fill the spot
With routines just as satisfying
and better for you. Not easy,
but its being done all over the
place. '
Every week more and more
people discover what mighty jobs
are accomplished by low cost
Expositor Want Ads. Dial 527-
0240.
immisonimmamowom
SEED WHEAT
Certified and Commercial
TALBOT, YORKSTAR and
GENESEE
'At the Seed Plant,'Londesboro
R. N. ALEXANDER
Londesboro
Clinton, 4182.7475
111111111111111111111111111111111118111111N111
SEAFORTII
Warn Growers of
Leaf Blight Threat
4
4
0
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
ALUMINUM SIDING
WINDOWS — AWNINGS — RAILINGS
DOORS — UNIT STEPS
HOLMES & NiacLEAN
527-0032 or 527-0421