The Huron Expositor, 1975-08-14, Page 3McKILLOP MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE COMPANY %e
Established 1876 •
'1 ' HEAD OFFICE: Seaforth, Ontario
Mrs. Margaret Sharp, Sec.-Treas.,Phone 527-0400
It Only
Costs A
Little To
Be Safe
Fire, Extended Coverage, Windstorm, Theft
Property Damage, Liability, Etc.
Directors and Adjusters
Robt.Archibald.R.R.4, Seaforth
Ken Carnochan, R.144, Seaforth
Lai ern Godldn, R.R.#1,Walton
Ross Leonhardt, R.R.1, Bornholm
John McEwing, R.R.1, Blyth
Stanley Mcllwaln,R.R.2, Goderich
Donald McKercher, R.R.1, Dublin
Wm. Pepper, Brucefield
&N.Trewartha,Box 661, Clinton
Agents:
James Keys, R.R.1, Seaforth, Wm. Leiper, Londesboro
Steve J. Murray,R.R .5, Seaforth, K.J.Etue, Seaforth
527-1817
527-1545
527.1877
345-2234
523-9390
524-7051
527-1837
482-7534
• 482.7593
We Are Your
SchOol 'Supply
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Just Arrived
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...THE.Hunw EXI ,41179.101j01)ST...i4
RESIDENTIAL :COMMERCIAL
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* FLOOR CLEANING, . 9 FLOOR TILING
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LOOKING AT THE FLEA MARKET — Mrs. Jim Kelly admires some of the craft
articles that Mrs. Harold Taylor, left, had for sale in- her booth at the flea market at
the Van Egmond house Saturday. About 200 people wandered through the outdoor
antique, craft and white elephant displays on th 'e sunny lawn of the house,
McKillop
Recent visitors with Mrs.
J oseph Thornton ' were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Kistner of
Kitchener, Mr John Kistner and
Mrs. Betty Schaefer of Waterloo,
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Howe of
Cromarty and Mrs. Rose
Campbell of Walton.
Mr. and Mrs.Ed. Regele spent
' Wednesday afternoon with Mr.
and Mrs. Reg. Schultz, of #3,
Blyth.
Mr. and mrs. Stan Preszcator
and Barbara Glanville of Crediton
spent a few days last week with
Mr. and. Mrs. Harold McCallum.
The many friends of Mrs. Ethel
Leeming are sorry to learn she is
a patient in Seaforth Community
Hospital.
Miss Donna Reynolds of
Seaforth visited Wednesday
evening with Miss' Joy Hey.
Recent visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Regele were Mrs.
Adeline Bennewies of Brodhagen
and Mr.and Mrs. Clarence Dennis
of Moncrief,
Miss Betty Beuermann is
spending this week in Stra tford
with Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Musselman.
Mr. and Mrs.Harold McCallum
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
E. Regele of Princeton on
Saturday.
.
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Corriing.u0
1
Twenty years from now, crops
growing on recycled garbage will be
an everyday sight.
That's pretty hard to imagine
right now because mosfof us think of
' ,garbageas just that--garbage. But
in fact, it's a potential resource.
And the Ontario Ministry of
the Environment is harnessing it.
, How does it happen?
By recycling. Garbage will be
tctken to recycling centres where it
will be shredded, separated, and
some of it, turned into fertile soil to re-
vitalize barren areas of the province.
The same basic shredding and
separating process will also produce
fuel, paper, cardboard, metals.
And we've just.begun to explore
the possible end uses of garbage
The system: step by step.
A centre for advanced research will
come up with many more.
Where is it happening?
Our Ministry has
already inaugurated
Ontario's first recycling
centre in North York.
In the next two years,
similar centres will be
built to serve London,
Sudbury, Peel, Halton,
Metro Toronto and
south eastern Ontario. . •
In 15 years there vane'
recycling centres all across the
province to handle 90 per cent of
Ontario's garbage-everything,from
abandoned cars to organic waste.
Why recycle?
Because the people, of Ontario
-all,of us-pileVp garbage at three
times the rate that the population
increases.
The Ministry is working on
wayS to reduce that amount, but we'll
always have garbage. And we're,
having trouble finding places to put
it and the landfill to cover it,
Once garbage is being
recycled, those problems will be over
But more important than the dumping
problems, we're literally throwirig
away valuable resources-with every
ton of garbage we discard.
In a community of 100,000,
/ garbage recycling will conserve
r the equivalent of up to 3,500,000
/-1 'gallons of fuel oil a year, 3,600 tons of ▪ reclaimed steel, 4,500 tons of glass.
Ministry
of the
Environment
• Ontario
Hon. William Newman, Minister
Everett Biggs, Deputy Mtriister
Our recycling program is
considered one of the most
advanced in the world. It's a
p* commitment to a
different way of living.
And ,the whole
world will be watching
4, Ontario's garbage come
up roses.
4.
SOkitlthing
...
t O43/4
by Susan White
Canada's. rtotth,.
you need the mail
0'
Here's a 'little something to
make all our readers who receive
their Expositors ka few days or a
week late in the hail, feel better,
or at least feel it• could be worn.
We had a letter recently from
friend and Expositor subscriber
Anne Melady who is nursing fOr
the summer in Baffin Island,
NWT. The day Anne wrote, July
16; she had just received, in one
mail, her May 29, June 12, 19 and
26 Expositors! She says her
village, .Pangmrtung, gets mail
once a week or sometimes twice
"if there aren't too many passen-
gers to come in" by air. •
"The first news to hit town
here when the plane arrives is
how many bags of mail are on it.
Since we have no radio or TAP.
and a daily paper arrives any
where from two weeks,to a month
late, all correspondence is enjoy-
ed."
Anne continues "However,
there are many other things here
that make up for slow delivery
and getting mail is like Christmas
once a week."
It's kind of nice to see how mail
delivery pijIls us together in this
huge country of ours. As much as
we complain about the mail being
late, none of us could get along
without it. Maybe it takes a stay
in an isolated place with out any
other means of communications
to realize how precious the mail
is. 4! Anne Melady, an R.N. who will
Newfamilies
We would like to welcome two
new families to the community.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Dyke, who
moved earlier this summer from
Kitchener to the former Jim. Th
ompson house and to Mr. and
Mrs. Oliver Crawford, their two
sons, Oliver anG of Staffa
who are moving now into' the
former Walter Scott house.
Mr. and Mrs. George Murray
of . salt-Cambridge spent the
weekend at their summer 'home
across from John Th ompsons.
John Lawson spent .a few days
the past week holidaying with his
ce cousin Barry Turrker, of
Tuckersrpith: • •
Bonnie Turner tiiCkeiriiith'
spent a day with Elizabeth
Lawson.
Mr. andrS. Marrii Bos spent a
few days the past week holidaying
at' the Upper. Canada Village and
area.
Miss Julie Ann Merner spent a
few days visiting with her
grandmother, Mrs George
Mellwain.
- Miss Rose Carvanollo of
Mississauga spent the weekend
visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Stevenson, David, Darren and
tuinne.
Miss Marie Harvey of Don
Mills visited on Friday with Mr..
and Mrs. Reg. Lawson, John and
Elizabeth.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Storey of
Clinton visited on Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Storey.
A number of people from the
community attended the
reception held on Saturday
eveninga, t the Saltford Hall for
Mr. and Mrs.' Harvey Dale. ,;
Mr.Carl Merner visited on
Sunday in Zurich with his
grandmother, Mrs. J.W.Merner
and aunt Mrs. Catherine Burn of
finish her bachelo'r's degree in
Nursing at UWO next year, is a
daughter of Mr., and Mrs. Ted
Melady of St.. Columban.
And Expositor news must have
some staying power. She says "I
greatly enjoy news, even if it's six
weeks old." Thanks for writing,
Anne.
It's been a really exciting
week around here. First of all we
hear that the Royal Ontario
Museum'dig on-the site of the old
Huron Pottery 'in Egmondville is
finding some pretty important
things.
Among them are potter's tools
that will for maybe first time let
us see how early pottery shops
operated. And then there are
really lovely molds and interest,-
ing coloured and shaped pot• lids
that prove that the Egmondville
pottery' made a lot more than
yellow glazed flower 'pots.
The dig for this year ends this
week, but the things that have
been found will be studied and
may be very important for
understanding a part of our ocial
history._
Word kept filtering into our
office from cultural reporter (that
is what it says on her T shirt)
Nancy Andrews and from other
usually reliable sources that great
finds Were being made at the
Egmondville site. That made us
feel pretty cheerful because it
gives the Seaforth area one more
valuable historic site and another
inConstance
Mr. and Mrs. Sam McClure,
Shirley ,Doris and Doug returned
home on Thursday evening from
their holidays. They spent the
past three weeks visiting with.
Sam's relations in Pilot Mound
and Crystal City, Manitoba and
with Mary's brothers and sisters
in Wawota, Sask. They also
attended a family reunion 'on
Aug. 3rd when Mary's eight
brothers ' and sisters were in
attendance. Sam also visited
with cousins Don and Stanley
McClure in Unity, Sask. and
Mary, Shirley, Doris and Doug
visited a sister, Margaret
Guillanne of Marquise, .Sask.
' 'by 'way of the
northern states nd returned
home through Can da.
Mr. and rs. George
McIlwain, Lynn and Steven
visited on Monday with Mrs.
George Mcllwain enroute homelo
Stratford from their holidays'
spent at Sauble Beach.
Mr. and`Mrs. Jim Preszcator,
Bill, Debbie and Michael
attended a reunion held on /
Sunday at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry England and girls of
R.R., Stratford
link with our past.
The other good" news came
Monday morning when James
Murphy of the Huron Country
Playhouse in Grand Bend called
to say that his company is going
to bring their production of Hello
Polly here on Tuesday night.
We've been hollering long and
hard about the need for someiive
theatre in Seaforth and Tuesday
night's our big chance.
Our only regret is that the
perforinance won't he in Cardno's
Hall. Maybe, someday, it'll .be
usable again hut for this time tie
Playhouse actors will use the
SDHS auditorium. The .one and
Only show will be at 8:30 Tuesday
night, August 19, with tickets.
priced at $3.00 each.
Apparently incoming SDHS
principal Bruce Shaw suggested
to Mr. Murphy that they bring
Hello Dolly here when he heard
they had one night free on their
schedule. It will be the regular
full Dolly production that played
this week at the new Playhouse
barn theatre outside Grand Bend.
Seaforth will even get a break
on the ticket prices. Friday and
Saturday nights it would have
cost you $4.50 to see the same
musical at the Grand Bend
theatre.
Huron Country Playhouse act-
ors already play in many southern
Ontario towns on ,a ^touring
schedule. They hope to expand
this next year and are performing
here next' week partly to see if
there is enough interest in town to
make Seaforth a regular stop next
summer.
So, if you like light funny
theatre and would like to, see a
return to the days of touring
performers packing them in in
Seaforth, come to see Hello Dolly
at SDHS, Tuesday night.
Tickets are available in town
at the. Expositor office, the
Toronto Dominion and Commerce
banks, and at the door on
Tuesday.'
You're
Invited
Tea will be served beginning at
2;30 p.m.• at the Horticultural
Flower Show at Seaforth District
High School Saturday August 16.
*****
Members of the Horticultural
Society are invited to attend a Tea
in the Blyth Memorial Hall on
Thursday August .28th, 2:30-5:00
p.m. Sponsored by the Blyth
Horticultural Society.
* 24 HOUR TOWING *
CARL'S AUTO BODY
BRUSSELS
Complete Collision and Frame
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.l Day
Nite
887-9269
887.9231
Streetsville.
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2 Qt. Carton
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Offer good, until) Wed., August 20
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