The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-03-21, Page 3FORMER RESIDENT DIES
Mrs. Edith Stevenson, 76,
Lethbridge, died in a Letb,.
bridge hospital Wednesday,
MarCh 6 after a short illness,
Born in Halifax, England,
Mrs. Stevenson came to Ter-
onto in 1911„ moving to Credi,
ton in 1947 and to Lethbridge
in 1958.
While in Creditor! both. Mr.
and Mrs, Stevenson attended the
United Church and Were faith-
ful workers in the choir where
Mrs. Stevenson acted as or-
ganist for some time.
She is survived by her hus-
band, George H. Stevenson; one
son, George Allen, Lethbridge;
one daughter, Mrs. S. T. (Irene)
Jones, Edmonton; one brother,
John B. Hyde, England, two
grandchildren.
The funeral service was held
Saturday, March 9 with Rev. A.
T. King officiating, Interment
Was in Mountain View Ceme-
tery.
STUDY HAIR STYLING
The seventh meeting of the
Crediton Classy Cut-Outs was
held March 16 with an attend-
ance of 22.
Doreen Kenney gave a talk
on the hair. Discussion was on
the long, heart-shaped, square
and round face and the types
of hair styles suitable for these.
The rules on care of hair were
discussed.
The next meeting will be held
on March 23 at the hall.
MINISTER TAKES STUDY
At the UCW meeting on
Thursday afternoon March 14
in the Sunday School rooms
Rev. R. S. Hiltz presented the
study from the book "The Word
and the Way."
Mrs. R. Reid was in charge
of the worship period assisted
by Mrs. C. Kenney who read
the scripture.
Arrangements for the bake
sale on April 6 were completed.
President Mrs. G. Zwicker
was in charge of the afternoon
business. Hostesses were Mrs.
M. King and Mrs. Wm. Hodge.
PE RSONALS
The Crediton United Church
Young People met on March 18
in the church school rooms,
with Charlie Browning taking
the worship.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wolfe of
REVEALS SALES INCREASES
.. Hon. C. S. MacNaughton
By GORDON MORLEY
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hamilton,
Mr. Elmer and Miss Verna
Greenlee spent Tuesday even-
ing with Mrs. Gordon Allison.
Mrs. Allison spent Tuesday with
Mrs. Walter Morley, Kathleen
and Gordon.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Schenk
and Mrs. Gordon Allison spent
Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Don Pettigrew.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed, Gackstetter.
spent Sunday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Schenk.
Mr. Douglas Lewis is under
the doctor's care.
Mrs. Evangeline Adams and
family visited Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Wither-
spoon.
Miss Ida Hardy is a patient
in the Strathmere Lodge nursing
home at Strathroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Trevi-
thick visited on Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Watson.
ALL AT REDUCED PRICES
SOLAR HEAT
Titna,-Achfccgte March '.21, 1963 On . food .market development Pay changes
Crediton
.„..... ..„
on the old share!,
parable basis, the newt.
policy for 1963 woultj.
etwlvalent of $15 on
shares. By MRS. L. PRESZCATOR
gents
in,dividends t:hrlor§'4.1 basis,yaara wi4001411.1119d16d:ilhottli ePrr
than those p4icilittemer years,.
In 2.9,58.14 per share was paid acNaughton rebuttal.
causes lively exchange
A. change in method Of divl,
payinente from irregular
dates to quarterly dividends is
announced by British Mortgage
4
Trust Company, At the same
time, a dividend of 15 cents
per share will be pa.41.on April
1 to .shareholders of record at
the close of business businesson Friday,
mnych15, 1903,
This change is in line with a
policy indicated by the prest,
dent, Mr. W.H. Gregory, at
the company's annual meeting
held last December,
Wilfrid P. Gregory, q.c.,
executive vice-president and
managing director, stated that
the company anticipates that
future quarterly dividends of
15 cents per new share will be
paid on July lot and October
1st which would equal a total
dividend disbnrseinent of 75
NOW Spring Foohy.
Arriving 0
Detroit visited over the week-
end with Mr. and Mrs, Lloyd
paiser.
Mrs. Garfield Hill is spend-
ing a few days this week with
her family in London.
Teen Town will be held Sat-
urday, March 23 at the com-
munity Hall.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hendrick
of Guelph spent the weekend
with Mr, and Mrs. Ed Hen-
drick,
Mrs, Robert Pfaff is a pa-
tient in Smith, litiren Hospital.
Mrs. Rita Schenk, Miss Dor-
een Kenney and Miss Ruth Roe-
szler attended the hairdress-
er's convention in Toronto,
The group committee meet-
ing for the first Crediton Cub.
Pack met at the home of Mrs.
Lorne Hodge Monday evening
when it was decided to hold a
bottle and basket drive on Fri-
day, April 18.
Men's end Boys Blackand.prowti.' •
O x F ()RAS
AT 'ROCK BOTTOM PRICES
All sizes in stock
• MEN'S. AND BOYS' WORK SHOES
MEN'S, BOYS', YOUTHS' & LADIES' RUBBER EGOTS. .
Men's as low as $3.49 & $4.49 Insoles Included
4
bushels in 1961; the first 11
months of the 1962 comparable
period, 400,000 bushels.
Now just let Me make this
observation, if you will. I
was privileged in 1960, and I
was prigileged again in August
and September of last year to
represent the hon. Minister of
Agriculture in the United King-
dom and abroad.
MR. R. C. EDWARDS: What,
again?
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Yes, privileged. But I simply
want to say to you people over
there who do not like to hear
information like this that it
really does not matter very
much, does it, whether the hon.
Minister of Economics and Dev-
elopment, the hon. Minister of
Agriculture, or any other ag-
ency supporting the government
of this province, accomplishes
these things. Does it really
matter who does it? Does it
really? This gets back to the
point of the hon. member for
Oxford.
MR. CHAPPLE: That is old
stuff, is it not?
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
No, this is very new stuff.
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
You had better start to recog-
nize what we are doing. I
simply say this to you, Mr.
Chairman, and through you to
these hon. members over there,
that even this remarkable per-
formance, in the short space of
less than 12 months, is still a
drop in the bucket. I am pre-
pared to say that when this hon.
Minister of Agriculture and this
hon. Minister of Economics and
Development, or whoever is
associated with him 12 months
hence, present these figures to
the House, they will be even
more imposing than they are
tonight. Because you see the
thing that you people over there
forget is this! This is a govern-
ment that works together. The
hon. Minister of Economics and
Development, the hon. Minister
of Agriculture -
The first football games in
the U.S. took place in 1820,
Two years later football was
banned at Yale because of the
injuries: Anyone caught playing WUERTH'S SHOES Phone the game was to be fined half
a dollar. 235-0611
LADIES' & MISSES' CANVAS AND CORDED SHOES
All colors -- See our bright collection
SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY !
Huron MPP c.s,lyInOnnOton
employed export sales fignree
to effectively Tien oppoSition
criticism of .the Ontario govern-
menPs trade crusade in the
legislature recently.
Speaking in snpport of Agric-
ulture Minister Stewart during
the debate on estimates of his
department, the highways min-
ister revealed some of the
results of the market develop-
ment drive undertaken in the
U.K, and elsewhere. Mr. Mac,-
N au g h ton twice accompanied
provincial trade delegations to
the British Food Fair in search
of new sales opportnnities.
Hansard reports on the de-
bate, which produced so m e
lively exchanges, follow:
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
I think it might be interesting
for the benefit of the hon. mem-
ber to put some facts and figures
on the record at this time. Over
the course of the last fewyears,
since the marketing develop-
ment branch has become inter-
ested and has operated rather
intensively in this field, there
have been some very inter-
esting figures developed. I am
going to place them on the
record for the information of
the hon. member who has just
spoken, and as a matter of fact
for all hon. members in this
House. I am going to put some
comparative figures on the re-
cord here and now.
I am first looking at the first
11 months of 1961; the first
item here is canned pears; the
poundage shipped for the first 11
months in 1961, 1.49 million;
the first 11 months of 1962 - a
comparative period - 4,197,000,
almost four times as much. In
terms of canned apples, the first
11 months of 1961 just under
three million lbs.; and for the
first 11 months of the year
just completed, just over 9 mil-
lion lbs. again - over three
times as much.
For the first 11 months of
1961 we come to the item of
canned peaches, the quantity in
the year first mentioned there,
251,572 lbs., and the first 11
months again of 1962, 1,689,000
lbs.
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
No, this is Ontario. Pretty
impressive figures , aren't
they? The first 11 months of
1961, canned fruits other than
the ones I have mentioned,
1,103,995 lbs., one year hence
the same period in 1962,
5,938,000 lbs. In terms of
canned corn, a very important
product of southwestern Ontario
particularly - 1961 again, the
first 11 months - this is a record
today that is available-
3,304,982 lbs.; the first 11 mon-
ths of 1962, 8,1000,000.
AN HON. MEMBER: Put that
in your pipe and smoke it.
Interjections by ho n. mem-
bers.
AN HON. MEMBER: He has
not answered the question yet.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Well, we will answer some of
the questions.I am sure the hon.
Minister will also answer ques-
tions satisfactorily before we
are too much older. Now, let
us go on with this because it
should be on the record.
BIGGEST EVER
MR. MAC DONALD: The hon.
Minister means unlike Diefen-
baker's government you work
together?
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Well now, that is rather un-
worthy. This is a team effort,
you know; working together in
this fashion great things are ac-
complished. So any attempts by
the hon. member for Oxford to
try divide one Ministry from
another, or break down this
government in its total intensive
effort to accomplish the sort
of thing I have related to you
tonight, will fail.
AN. HON. MEMBER: What
about cheese?
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Well, I regret very much, Mr.
Chairman, that the hon. mem-
ber for Stormont is not in his
seat tonight because we had a
fair-sized dissertation on che-
ese a year ago and I would
rather not get into that. We
have corrected the situation
that he complained about.
Gentlemen, I think this is a
reasonably sound presentation
of a pretty good accomplishment
on the part of teamwork, on the
part of a very good government.
You can make whatever com-
ments you like from there on.
in Hopper-Hockey's
Chesterfield Suite Sale! .111,11•11M111•1111:11•13:1113109*11111
Bill Health?
See your doctor first.
Bring your prescription to
MIDDLETON'S DRUGS
Middleton & Genttner
AN HON. MEMBER: Yes, put
it on.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
1961 again. In the first 11
months the recorded figures-
tomato juice, a very important
agricultural commodity,
9,220,000 lbs.; the comparable
period in 1962, 10,7'77,000.
HON. MR. GROSSMAN: Any
questions?
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Vegetables and vegetable juices
other than tomato juice, a very
interesting figure, here, 1961 -
3 million lbs.; and in the 1962
comparable period - 10,849,000
lbs.
MR. MAC DONALD: You look
like the cat that ate the canary.
AN HON. MEMBER: Carry
on there, a lot of good material.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Here are some more processed
agricultural commodities - pic-
kles and relishes, if you like,
quite important to a lot of
people: 1961, 11-month period,
1,471,085 lbs.; the comparable
period in 1962, 4,285,000 lbs.
Listen to these figures now.
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Aren't you interested in the
agricultural industry?
AN HON. MEMBER: They do
not like this kind of information.
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
MR. CHAIRMAN: Order!
Order!
HON. MR. MACAULAY: This
was at the start of the year I
was talking; that is what this
man did and look at the result.
HON. MR. MACNAUGHTON:
But you see, Mr. Chairman,
these people have not really
heard anything yet.
110N. MR. MACAULAY: We
started a crusade and we really
made it into something.
AN HON. MEMBER: Hear,
hear!
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
In 1961, and it was regarded
as a fairly favourable picture-
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
MR. OLIVER: Make him keep
quiet.
MR. CHAIRMAN: You set the
example, please.
An hon. member; The ex-
ample comes from the govern-
ment.
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
Mr. Chairman, just let me give
him these figures. They are
fascinating; they are fabulous,
really. In the first 11 months
of 1961 - onions, 120,000 50-1b.
bags. Now listen to this: in
1962, the first 11 months -
1 million 50-lb bags.
Interjections by hon. mem-
bers.
MR. CHAIRMAN: Order!
HON. MR. MAC NAUGHTON:
But listen to this one. This
is the last comparative figure
I am going to give but we will
have a few other observations
to make, so don't applaud too
soon.
In 1961 there were 2,000
bushels of carrots exported to
the United Kingdom and else-
where. In 1962 - and a great
deal of this developed subse-
quent to the food fair which
took place in Olympia last Sept-
ember - now listen; 2,000
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