The Seaforth News, 1960-02-18, Page 5THE SEAFORTH ORTB DEWS - Thursday, February 18, 1000
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Smith's Superior Food Market
FEB. 18-19-20
MONARCH FAMILY SIZE
CAKE MIKES :.,, 3 21 -oz pkgs 51 WOO
WHITE OR CHOCOLATE
SHIRRIFF'S NEW INSTANT .
MASHED POTATOES .,...:,, 27c
6 OZ PKG
MOTHER PARKERS ORANGE
PEKOE TEA BAGS
10c OFF PKG. 60 63C
NATURE'S BEST
TOMATO JUICE .... 48 oz tin 25c
KOUNTY KIST KERNEL
CORN , 3 14 -oz tins 39C
• CHASE & SANBORN
• COFFEE INSTANT .. 6 oz jar 99c
Smith's Superior Food Market
PHONE 12 WE DELIVER
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Northside United Ohara
Rev. J. Cliff Britton, B.A.,
Minister. -
Morning worship 11 a.m.
Jr. congregation and toddlers'
group. Parents bring your child-
ren to Church, they will be cared
for while you worship.
Evening Worship at 7 p.m.
'Church School at 10 a.m.
Youth Fellowship at 8.15 p.m,
Sunday evening.
First
Presbyterian Church
Rev. D. Leslie Elder
Minister
10 a.m, Church School and
Youth Fellowship Class
11 A.M. "THE PRICE OF
THE PERIL”
Senior Choir, anthem,
"Lord, T Believe"
4.30 P.M. VESPDR SERVICE
"Christ's •elft of Peace”
HAROLD TURNER TO RETIIOE
Harold S, Turner, collector of
customs' and excise taxes' at God-
ericb for the past 25 years, will
retire on Feb. 19, as he has reach-
ed the age limit set for civil ser-
vants.
Mr. Turner was born in Tuck-
ersinith township and served ov-
erseas in the First World War
'with the 10th Field company,
Canadian Engineers. He was cus-
toms *officer at !Clinton' for 10
•years before being transferred to
Goderieh. G. W. Robertson, of
Bracebridge succeeds him.
Egmondvtlle United Chatrolt'
Dr. 3. Semple, Minister. Lyle
Hammond, Organist -Choir Leader.
Morning Theme: "One Day with
Jesus 'Christ."
Evening 7.30. The Cathedrals
and Abbeys of Great Britain.
Dr. Don McKenzie, ,recently
bask from Edinburgh.
Church School and Minister's
Bible Class 10 a.m. '
See you in'Church Sunday
ll l l l l l l l l l l l ll ll n ll ll l ll ll u l u n a l n lull I u n n n m u 11 ll u WM/
3.
Properties For Sale
Large dwelling, James St., including extra lot. New oil fur-
nace. Modern kitchen and bath.A real buy for cash
One_& half storey brick dwelling in Dublin. Modern conveni-
ences. Three bedrooms. A real family home
OTHER SEAFORTH DWELLINGS LISTED
'We also have a number of good Huron County farms for sale.
FOR INFORMATION CONTACT
H.arold Jackson or• John A. Cardno
Phone 474
SEAFORTH
BROICRR
Insurance Office
PHONE 214
SEAFORTH
SALESMAN
TOWN TOPIUS
.bili. D. O. Cornish, of Niagara
halls, began his duties as credit
manager at Topnotch Feeds this
week. Mr. and' Mrs. Cornish. and,
two daughters, 8 and 10, are 000u-
pying the house of the late Mrs,
\Vlgg on Goderiell street West.
air. and Mrs, Eimer Laren and
Mr. and airs, Kari Dinsmore are
on a trip to Florida.
Attending the capping Cere-
mony at the nurses' residence in
Stratford on Friday were Mr, and
Mrs. Lorne Carter, of Seaforth,
Mr. and Mrs. John Sinclair, Kip -
pen, and airs, Fled Glanville, of
Walton, and Don [Hemingway.
Mrs. W. J. Faulkner and Patri-
cia of Galt spent the weekend
with Mies Lillian Faullmer,
Mr, and Mrs, Geo. Parke; Len-
clon, spent the weekend with the
fo1'mer's sister, Miss Dorothy
Parke,
and 'Mire, Tames Hogg re-
turned to their home in (lolling-
wood on Tuesday after spending
a week with Mr, and Mrs. Bed-.
fprd Dungey and familY,
ST. COLUIVIBAN
Those attending the 'Coyne -
Donavan wedding in Port Dover
on Saturday were Mr, and Mrs.
Michael Doyle, Mr: and Mrs. Wm.
MoMillan, IMM. and Mrs. Michael
Williams and daughter Joan; Mr.
and Mrs. Lew Coyne and family;
Mr, and 'Mrs. Thos, 'Morris, .Mr.
and Mrs..Michael Coyne; 1\11.Mr...
Mrs. Jos O'Reilly; Miss Alicia
Coyne, also MT. and Mrs. Cyril
Johnston of London; Mi, and Mrs.
loi
Steve Johnston of London; n•,
and Mrs, Russell Pringle; Mr, and
Mrs,,john Shea and Mr. F. Coyne.
HENSALL
11•Irs, Lloyd Iyloueaeau is a pa-
tient in Clinton Public Hospital
undergoing treatment.
L.A.C. :Robert Aundre, wire.
Aundrie and Carole left this week
to visit with the former's mother
Mrs. Jeanne Auncire in Washing-
ton.
The WMS and Arnold Circle
Evening Auxiliary members .of
Cannel Presbyterian and WIIII3S
members of the Hensall United
.Church were the guests of the
members of St, Peter's Lutheran
Church, Zurich on Monday even-
ing.
Mrs. Robinson H. Disk, 77, of
Hensall passed away Monday in
South Huron Hospital, Exeter.
She was the 'former Lucy Mohring
of Benmiller. !Predeceased by her
husband in December. Surviving
are two sons Earl of Ingersoll;
Stuart of 'Clinton. Two daughters,
Mrs. Gordon (Marie) Cudmore, of
Exeter, and Mrs. Ben (Edith)
Dawson, London. Funeral service
was held from the Bonthron fun-
eral home, Hensall at 2 p.m. Wed.
Burial in Exeter Cemetery.
EUCHRE
In IOOF Mall
MONDAY, FEB. 22
8.30 p.m. I,mich
Good Prizes
Sponsored by Ilaelleeiss
Iiebekinit Lodge
-TUCKERSMITH
James Jaeklin, Ohesley, a form-
er officer of the Ontario Federa-
tion of .Agriculture, was guest
speaker at the annual banquet
and meeting of the Tuckersmith.
F of A, held in Egmondville Unit-
ed Church last week.
Mr. Jaeklfn spelled out theac-
complishments of the Federation
on behalf of the farmer, and said
that 32 crops are being sold, with
18 marketing procedures. There
are 150 co-operatives owned by
farmers. He also pointed out that
the extent to which the Federa-
tion of Agriculture can do a pro-
per fob for its members depends
to a great extent on the attitude
and support of the members.
The banquet was attended by
1.24 persons. Greetings were ex-
tended by Reeve Ivan Forsyth,
EUCHRE
In Orange Hall
WED., FEB.. 24
Auspices of L. O. L. 790
Admission 40e
Lunch served
DANCING
Brodhagen. & District
Community Hall
FRIDAY, FEB. 19
Ken Wilbee's Orchestra
Admission 75'c
Anyone wearing leather jackets,
Slacks or jeans not admitted
Bingo - Dance Fri,,. Feb. 20
with Desjardine's Oreh.
BORN
Coleman — At Scott Memorial Eosin -
WI, on Feb, loth, io Mr. and Mrs.
Emerson Coleman, 11113 Seaforth, a son
Langille — At Scott Memorial Itosi )-
ta1 on Fob. 16th to Mr, and Mrs, Neal
n Langlllo .3 Regina Road, RCAF
Clinton, a daughter
Haltom — At Scott Memorial Hospital
on I'ob, lath to Mr., and A'Irs. Byrne)
broltom, Seaforth, a son
Reid — At Saga Memorial Hospital
on Feb.' 11th, to Mr, old Mrs, Robert
Reld, RR 4 Walton, a daughter
Rev. Dr, J. Semple of the host
'church and Reeve John Durnin,
warden of Huron.
William Rogerson was again
chosen president during the elec-
tion of officers conducted by D.
H. Miles, agr. rep.. for Huron,
Other officers are: past pres., A.
MoGregor; vice -Pres., Alex Chos-
ney; see.-treas., John Broadtoot.
School section directors are:
No. 1, Glen Bell; No. 2, _Joe Lost -
ell; .No. 3, Gordon Elliott; No. 4,
Ernie Cc1 • No, 5, Jack M Ka
y
,
No. 0 Geo Flewitt; No. 7, Alex
Chesney ; No. 8, -Alex 13oyes No,
9 Wilmer BroacIloot No: 10, Ro-
bert Kinsman The producer dir-
ectors are: cream, Gordon Rich-
ardson; beef, Robert !McGregor;
poultry, Andrew Moore; hog, Alex
•McGregor and Wilfred Coleman.
women's director is Mrs. Wm. Ro-
gerson.
At an 'executive meeting after-
wards, it was decided to continue
sponsorship of a corn club with
Bruce Coleman and Larry Wheat-
ley as leaders.
a0,ma
1PEDER9:TION NEWS
By J. C. Hemingway
When I was .a small boy we had
a dog. Our closest neighbour with
whom my father exchanged labor
also had a clog. The dogs went
back and forth whenever the farm
work required the combined ef-
forts of their masters. For the
most part these dogs got along
peaceably. On occasion they 'did
have differences of opinion and
did some snapping at each other,
but—just let a third dog appear
and his life was in danger. One
day they chased a dog into the
river, our dog went to one side
and our neighbor's to the other
and, had the men not been close
at hand the third poor critter
would have been drowned.
This should provoke the nasty
question, "were these .,:two dogs
smarter than farmers?"
Undoubtedly as ,farmers organ -
WE
WILL
SELL
CHEAP
TO
.SELL
HEAP
SPE:, IALS
9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
SKIRTS •
Taffeta, Tweed, Velvet, Gabardine, Plaid
SLACKS
Wool, Corduroy, Gabardine and lined Jeans
2A9
PULLOVERS - Wool, Orlon, Nylon
1.79
SPECIAL PRICES
RACK LARGE SIZE DRESSES
181/2 to 22% Summer & Winter Weight
SLIPS AND NIGHTGOWNS
Large and oversize
Carol_Lyn
be there will be differences of
opinion among the various groups
but surely these could be settled
with a minimum of snapping and
when an opposing force appears
all farmers could then be on the
one side of the battlefield. Let us
remember that we are farmers
first and members of the differ-
ent organizations second.
I have been a member of the
Fed. of Agri. for 20 years, a mem-
ber of a Co -Op, the Hog Produc-
ers, the Concentrated Milk Pro-
ducers, Cream (Producers, the
Poultry Producers tor several
years. Many times I have not
agreed with what they have done
or have not clone but I have never
felt that the way to improve the
situation was to join the enemy.
In the recent issue of the Fam-
ily Herald an account is given of
producer controlled marketing in
Denmark. These farmers were a
very independent lot and refused
to take part in marketing their
product until they were starved
into it.
Are we smart enough to learn
by their experience and take over
1 the marketing of our products be-
fore we face starvation or must
we travel this same rocky road
and acquire our own experience?
It has 'been stated that the rea-
son that the present day dollar
will do so little for us is because
the present generation is willing
to do so little for a dollar.
I hear complaints from time to
time that aur farm organizations
are doing nothing for the farmers
butalmost invariably these com-
plaints come from farmers who
have done nothing for their or-
ganization.
in closing I heard a good story
the other night. If you have evi-
dence to support it or dis-prove it
I would be glad to hear from you.
It seems that you can get 1 or 2c
more a dozen for your eggs at a
certain egg -grading station it you
purchase your feed from certain
feed mill.
MCKILLOP NATIVE
DIES IN KITCHENER
Mrs. Geo. Hillebrecht, Kitchen-
er, died Monday in the K -W Hos-
pital following a long illness. She
was 93. Mrs. Hillebrecht was the
former Louise E. Bennewies and
was born June 27, 1876, 'the daug-
hter of the late Mr. and Mrs. E.
Bennewies of MCKillap twp. She
was predeceased by her husband
in 1921. She was a member of St.
Matthew's Lutheran Church, Kit -
After thirty-one years in banking, Harry E. Crawford
still feels that service is everything! "Say what you
will, the big difference in banking is what goes on
across the counter... in what you can do for the
customer." Harry Crawford is Manager of the Main
& James Street Branch of 'The Bank' in Hamilton
Harry Crawford... he knows the difference !
... and when he is not busy with bank affairs he is an
ardent golfer and an enthusiastic member of the com-
munity. As the father of two children, a teen-age girl
and an eleven year old boy, he feels his experience at•
'The Bank' helps at home ... "You learn to listen, to
judge, to advise." Harry Crawford is typical of the
understanding, courteous, and efficient people you'll'
find at any branch of The Toronto -Dominion Bank.
Why not drop in and see why .. .
people make the difference at
TIORONTO-DOMINION
W. C. MOORE, Manager Seaforth Branch
SECOND
Public Speaking
Contest
WED., FEB..24
AT 8.90 P.M.
Basement of Winthrop
Church
Six more top speakers will be
• selected
Sponsored by McKillop Feder-
ation of Agriculture
Pres., K. Stewart
Sec., A. R. Dodds
WOAA Intermediate D
SEMI - FINALS
ATWOOD vs WINTHROP
WARRIORS
MONDAY NITE, FEB. 22
In Seaforth Arena
GAME TIME 8.30
SEMI aanstairaransommemare
oftener. Mrs. Hillebrecht is surviv-
ed by .a foster daughter, Mrs.
Maud Fisher, London; one broth -
or William of MoKillop twp. and
a sister, Mrs. Ed Prueter, Brod-
hagen. The funeral was held Wed-
nesday from St. Peter's Lutheran
Church conducted by Rev. F. W.
Zinkland and Rev. E. J. Fischer.
Burial was in St. Peter's Ceme-
tery, Brodhagen.
HENSALL
Mr. James Baynllam of Guelph
spent a few days last week visit-
ing with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
L. Baynham.
Mrs. Chas. ,Eckel is a ,patient in
South Huron Hospital, Exeter
where she is receiving treatment.
THE
WISE
MAN
knows that only life insur-
ance can provide him with
an immediate estate and
that the Sun Life of
Canada offers him the fin-
est in service and up-to-
date policy plans.
Arnold Sthlnissen
Phone 160R, Seaforth
X represent the Sun tile As-
surance Company of Canada,
Our modern plans can be
tailored to fit 7/001' own in-
dividual needs. May I dis-
cuss some of these Mans with
you? There is no obligation,
of oau90e,
SUN LIFE OF CANADA