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The Huron Expositor, 1953-03-20, Page 51 P , ; • s `Wree al'l ebb are the Natllter mama, rnalttng a ..Graaf); 'ea;trafle°, °fiYrarednee• The. cheerful, littlo, tori - ..!oeo wig ,dominate o11. oat**aroi id the aghool until„ neat Wed- „ •.tbq@tesdaty, When again the student y •will be set free. .Within ught walla of work and headiaches; there is one cheerful mote sounded: Ii a little work hes been shown theough the term, acct you have • worked't►p to 70' per cent, in both ' Christmas tests and Eaeter exams; 'you won't be required'•to write the final set in June„ This one bright .note usually arouses some effort ••out of. all. • The midnight oil ,that has been -u-usedurp during the last few weeks will likely 'burn brighter than, ever aforth 1,4EONE next W edneec$;ap nighti atm $00 tired eaplle are •&et;'. free' atub soak the kelt, advan 4ge f4at AI'ui^dei}r#ee night: So, If there are some care-, free attitudes m sewandering' around you Will know why. aF of A&- Question of the week: What fine young man has twbb fair maids, one in First Forel and the .other in, Third, sparking off real fireworks this week? SPORT SHORTS (By K. Laron) Seaforth hockey fans saw one of the best hockey games played In the Seaforth arena last Monday HERE'S A SPRING, SUGGESTION! Drop in To -day to See our Wide Assortment of SPRINGS AND +MATTRESSES You'll be amazed at the value and economy com- bination we have to offer in this season's showing of Spring and Mattress sets. Comein early and take advantage of a wider selection! Box Furniture Store FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 43 Res. 595-W FARMERS let HURON FARM FEEDS LTD. EGMONDVILLE (1) CLEAN' YOUR SEED NOW! We will pick up, clean and deli er it back to you promptly. .. Phone 664' r 33. (2) MARKET YOUR EGGS and POULTRY We have an excellent market outlet. Take advantage of it; it will pay you dividends to -day! Phone 664 r 33. (3 GRIND and MIX' YOUR GRAINS WITH PURINA PREMIXES. Phone 664 r:33.(4) EXPLAIN TO YOU HOW PURINA'S COM- , PLETE LIVESTOCK and POULTRY FEEDS CAN MAKE MORE MONEY FOR YOU FASTER! PHONE 664 r"'33 — SEAFORTH — - Used Cars for Sale 1-1951 PONTIAC COACH 1-1951 DODGE—Four-Door; Radio 1-1951 PLYMOUTH—Four-Door 1-1950 CHEV: SEDAN—Radio 1-1949 DODGE -Four -Door 1-1946 CHEV.—Four-Door 1-1950 PLYMOUTH SEDAN and Radio 1-1937 DODGE SEDAN—Four-Door , TRUCKS 1-1948 DODGE 3 -TON SPECIAL with Platform) and Racks 1-1946 DODGE Y2 -TON 1-1942 FARGO 1-TON—Platform 1-1941 FORD 1 -TON STAKE These Cars and Trucks in Excellent Condition MACHINERY 1—"D" CASE TRACTOR 1.—LL CASE TRACTOR 1-70 COCKSHUTT0 TRAMOR 1 --VA' CASE TRACTOR 1—USED 13 -TOOTH CULTIVATOR 1 -WAGON (Steel Wheel) 1 USED GRAIN DRILL :with Fertilizer attachment 1-1951 VAC TRACTOR (New) at reduced price - A, few 9' and 10° Packers Available 2 SETS USED SPRING TOOTH HARROWS Rowciiffe Motors Phone 267 Seaforth .49:40040 eke 14std9: 0c4 Qf e'it 1),:1;00,041P,:414='. catq Thief t40000MOd' Font o'f the Shia net Oke f]l,al. 8tauza: men tl►eft t�lat>d, 1 W& r iior Sailors didn't ave alio ai4 kept ghtiat ua}tfl. fie lBna1 Whistle. • 4t hae. certainly been, shown hi thio .series with Sarnia; that 'thee Sailors axe top conteendere.. They. carry the 'word 'Sport' to its hie* est, Claud' 'H is 'haft net only taught his team , ow to play. hoc, key,but how tela play' 'p y i sports', neanahip. 0.r: r Provide 101)0 Pkete, id. xpu 4g t4,.e 11,19 lT'out Kor•:.ea li ettl , ', cs!piesc co! it s(rvipg 1 Sus of weeltly or.fia}t► Y` t Although local fame who attend ed Wednesday night's game in Sar - Ida might not feel the same way about the Sailors, I think the blame for disagreeable action can blamedblamedon the officiating.- After seeing the U.S. version of hockey refereeing in the 'Oil City; it its possible that our good neighbors would make a better impression on Canadian fans by ,sticking to base- ball, After Wednesday's game, Sarnia' hockey officials commented on the loyal support the Seaforthites• gave their team. Along with the large number of fans from the home town, they were impressed with the attendance of Stan Smith and his Seaforth Highlanders, who went ail out to encourage a Seaforth vic- tory. If Sarnia thinks that wee spirit, let's show them what Sea - forth can really do Saturday night when the rubber will be broken on home ice and the league champs will .be declared. In the Industrial Hockey League playoffs, the 'Merchants made a comeback last week to take Wed. nesday;Light's game from Egmond- ville, 5-3. This win for the Mer- chants tied the series with one game each,` Thursday (tonight) both teams will he out to break the deadlock .and take the lead, in the beet -of -five series. LEGION HOCKEY Games Played Saturday, March. 14 Black Hawks 5, Bruins 0. Goals for Black Hawks scored •by: Mc- Nichol 1, B. Flannigan 2, C. Kerr 1, J. -Strong 1. .. . Rovers 1, Red Wings 1. Goals, for Rovers: T. Broome 1; for Red Wings, Dupee 1. Maroons, 8, Can'adiens 5. Pee Wee—Maple Leafs 2, Rang- ers angers 2. For Maple Leafs: B. Reith , W. Teall; for Rangers, M. Mc- Fadden, Wright. Games Saturday, March 21. 9 ane—Rovers and Black Hawks 10 a.m.—Red Wings and Maroons 11 a.m.---Canadians and Bruins 12 noon—Pee Wee. Seed Company Starts Operations At Hensall SteelBriggs Seed Co.; Hensall, commenced • operations ' recently with about 15 employees. Art Kil- ner, company representative from Toronto, said Tuesday that small shipments are going out by rail this week to Southern Ontario. Next week shipments will„be made by rail to Quebec, the Maritimes and distant points, he said. WINCHELSEA ▪ M• r. Newton Clarke is the owner of 'a new Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Johns. Sar- nia, attended the funeral of the late John Johns Thursday.. Mr. and Mrs. Austin Dining, of Elimville, Mr. and Mrs. Wib Bat ten and Mr. Af Brook spent Mon- day evening with•Mr. EZra Willard, Mount Pleasant.• • Mrs. Newton •Clarke spent a few days 'With her daughter, Mrs. Bev. Morgan, Thames Road. Mr. and Mrs. John Batten spent Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Don •Penhale, Exeter.' Mrs, Colin Gilfillan visited Satur- day with herr father, Mr. John Mc- Donald, Staffa, who is confined to his bed. • Mr. Elwyn Kerslake visited Sun- day undray with his mother, Mrs. Arthur Kerslake, who is a patient in Vic- toria Hospital, London. Mr. and Mrs. William Walters and Mr. and Mrs. Wib Glanville, Staffa, spent Monday in Toronto. 1, ,.. t. a•aVita�:ii �..h.m�¢,.a.'4. �n,,..r4,t�.�.e.�''+�+rbl�•�� Canada has 25,300 Mormons. reryone haleb bfipahi tho ,Alred Fare will remember, the long periede of waiting and the hours qff duty whop there was nrgt a 'great deal .'tel, eeeupy _,one's Thoughts. Perhaps this le onereason wily, many servicemen becople.• tt'tich heavy smnokers, The • cigarette r'be- comes a `chain of action$ • vizi* keep the hands and the nate oc- cupied. The mpnotony of the line- up for mese, •pay, medicalinspect tions, d'ocumentotion, is ,`broken by the movements that a company cigarette from the time. it is taken fromthe pocket, until it is ground out under the foot. - Surrounded -With Mud I remember quite d etinctly the heaviness of spare time and even, monthly passes. during a 20 -Month stay oaf a station in Northern Que- b . I was among the, first men diafted to the station. It was not completed and - was surrounded with interminable stretches of mud. There were only 50 of us for a few weeks, then "'the num' hers increased to 1500. That first winter seemed as though it would never end. The natives, told us there wade. fall of 17 feet of snow. I did not doubt it, as we were snow in a great deal of the time. In late March I was detailed to go to a crash. We went in a 'snowmobile, across fields and ditches plugged with snow. In one tiny French-Canadian hamlet I looked down on the veranda roofs as the snowmobile climbed over the packed) drifts on the village street. The fronts of many houses were completely covered with snow. Wolves and Snow Towards the middle of May my chum and I decided to follow a rough road into a bush at tiie far side of the Camp. We were stop- ped by a gentleman frantically wav- ing his •arms and shouting, "Non! Non! Les Lutes! Les Lutes et la neige'." He was telling us there was too much snow and too many wolves for a comfortable walk. The first attempt in the way . of entertainment on the camp was a variety show sponS'ored' by Life- buoy soap. Maybe they .thought we needed their product, but the show certainly did' not boost its sales. Since there was not a lib- rary •or a reading lounge of any kind on the camp, many of us join- ed book clubs. We found' that a bogk helped us pass time ie a pro- fitable and enjoyable way. If we found difficulty in amusing ourselves in an out-of-the-way place eimedieesedoeseemedeimemalmenmelliel AMERICA'S FAMOUS RELIGIOUS DRAMA "The Pilgrimage' Play" Filmed in Natural Color Sponsored by Northside WA FRIDAY, MARCH 27 Northside United Church Adults, 50 Cents Students and Children, 25 Cents • First Show, 4 p.m.; First Show in Evening at 7 p.m.; second to follow. —PLAY— "LOOK OUT, LIZZIE" Three -Act Comedy by Wood- ham L.O.B.A., in EGMONDVILLE ' - • United Church n TUESDAY, MARCH 24 8:30 p.m. Sponsored, IsY• Egmondville Yoang People's Society ADULTS 50c CHILDREN 25c WhyteisButcheopr Sh MAIN STREET Week -End Specials (1) Stokely's Fancy Quality CREAM STYLE CORN -20 -oz. Tin - 19c (2) SMOKED PICNIC'S - - - 43C lb. (3) BOLOGNA - 29c lb. s SLICED - 31c lb. (4) Fresh Cup Up CHICKEN Eviscerated Broilers and Fowl available Thurs- day, Friday and Saturday of Each Week YTE'�S BUTCHER w I� Phone 96 WE DELIVER Every Day to ala? Readers' Digest, coronet 'Time will be elseciati" suit,, rite, Also. W yoi4 )cava at* poe4- ' 6014e editions of novels (0141.00 *eluded), travelogues, or eieleketide, works, don't destroy . them, They cad} provide a great deal of;=piear Ore for a lonely soldier; sailor, or airman. These books and periodicals may. be` left at either Sills' "Hardware or at' Box Furniture Store. If you ean- not deliver them to these places yourself, phone Sills' Hardware and the Legion will collect them at :your home. You need your servicemen! They need your used books 'and maga- zines! Will you assist us in keep- ing them -happy? Last year 97 per cent of all Red Cross work was donee by volunteers' who donated their services entire- iy`9vithout pay: They need YOUR help to carry on this important work. Synthetic Dairy (Continued from Page 4) and are pot subject to outside com- petition. Wages and profits are protected in the fullest sense. Aa the representatives of a very extensive dairying community, .I' support the claim of the dairy farmers for a ban on the manu- facture and sale of synthetic dairy products, insofar es it is within the Jurisdiction of the Government of this Province. Personally, if I want a drink of milk, I want it to come from the cow, not from a cocoanut. In conclusion, I believe we are living in the greatest era in the history of this Province. It pres- ents us with a great challenge. I believe this goyernment is facing its duties and trying •to meet the proiblems with which we are faced, and I am happy to be privileged to share in thisgreat task. Cemeteries , The Hon. Member for Parkdale brought to the attention of the House a few days ago a situation which calls for corrective action immediately. I refer to the growth of cemeteries operated for profit. The public usually think of ceme- teries as last resting places for their dead, and associate their ownership with a church or the municipality. But a -new plan has crept into being. It is this: Promoters move in; .a •plot of land is secured outside the city and a corps of salesmen proceed to sell graves on a pre -need plan. You pay so much down, the balance in regular monthly instalments. This ie' being done on a big scale. You buy.,. few square feet of land, and pay almost the price of a building lot for: it. You are told the farm Will be nicely landscaped, etc., and that perpetual care of your. plot is assured. It will be a memorial park, and beautiful photographs are presented to sell the idea. The Cemeteries. Act calls for 15 per cent of the purchase price be- ing placed in a trust fund' to care for the lot in perpetuity. Anyone who has any knowledge of the cost of operating a Cemetery knows it costs more than that to adequate- ly keep the grounds in proper or- der. Provide For Enforcement For instance. the Toronto Gen- eral Burial Trust places 50 per cent of the purchase price in a perpetual care fund. The cemetery in my own home town places a similar amount in a trust fund, but even the -,interest on that amount gives tbem nothing to spare. I will not bother you with figures, but those of you who are mathe- matically inclined, can figure out the potential profits when 100 acres of farm land are converted into Cemetery lots at possibly $4.00 per square foot, after making due al- lowance for roadways, shrubbery, etc. ,The potential . profit on 100 acres is over $7,000,000. In addition, hundreds of young people particu- larly will not complete their pay- ments and will thus lose all they have paid. I suggest that the Cemeteries Act must have more adequate pro- vision made for enforcement; that a larger percentage of the purchase price of a lot be placed 'in a per- petual care fund; that annual fin- ancial returns must be made to the Department, and penalties provid- ed for failure to de so. Greater safeguards must surround the use of trust funds'. „- The Assessment Act should be amended to permit the assessment of these properties, and also provi- sion made for imposing a business If something is not done immedi- dtely, we will have more abandon- ed cemeteries, poseibiy in the. path of an expanding community and, in addition' to being an eyesore, they will impose further liabilities on the shoulders of the municipalities. District Obituaries LATE IVAN WELSH l`T1ENSALL.—Word ns, received in Hensall of the death of Ivan wleish, Toronto, who died of a heart eondition. Owner of a plan- ing' mull in Toronto,. Mr. Welsh was born in Hensall, son of the late ler ..and(.Mrsr...Willaa.m- Wcalslh Vie wife predeceased him some years ago. Surviving are one son, three bro- &Sete Reit, Clifford and Florin, and tW itv'bi rt'era, Leila and Vera, all df t1`eeeetto... Funeral service was held irk 'ri gnto '.DtarcI 18, 7,, ase, es i4._:;' Sir Swlslf'''tatf144Kaldr njlic�adsrtJ(►tr many!► .#li�lny n(pk 4e440'•iCottQt��a� 1 only- fotindf at r' th►1.. Sete�ry now from Ole • pRlur►rnl i.iar `ehoyri�' Featured' at `1 }a9!5', 0,1 EASTER • f IILLINERY l Featuring . the neve t straws. In ' clever tonic s Mauve, Pink, Grey, Navy, Red and Btacfi. Styled to complement you and your new ,Baiter en. SPRING COATS At 4.95 to 9095 Whether youprefer shortie'styles or full-length coats, your best choice is at BTEWART BROS. This Spring range features the new soft textured Saxony all -wool coatings in plain shades or checks. We've combed the markets for the best styling and beat values in the trade. They're all assembled here in the widest choice we've 'shown in years, and at thrifty prices you'll appreciate. Our feature ranges run from 29.50 to 42.50 NEW EASTER NECKWEAR See the new narrow look in men's Reek - wear, featuring pleats, knits, woven corona- tion patterns , neat stripe• effects and oth- er novelties. Smart neckwear f o r smart dressers at 1.50 & 2.00 "rr The new Spring ready-to-wear Suits, Sport Jackets, Topcoats and Blazers are here, The Suits feature two trousers from $42.50 to $65.00, lin clever, hairline weaves and small checks. w Topcoats also include many new checks, as well as popular gabardines from $23.50 to $45.00. If you prefer Sport Coat and pant ensemble, you'll yet the best choice here at lowest prices. ewart Bros. LATE, CHARLES SWITZER KIPPEN.--Funeral services for Charles ,Switzer, RR. 3, Kippen, who died in his 62nd year Tuesday at the Clinton Public Hospital af- ter an illness of six months, will be held at the Ball and clutch Fun- eral Home, Clinton, Friday at 2 palm- Rev. E. McLeod, of the Kip - pen :United Church, of which Mr. Switzer was a member, will offici- ate. Interment will be in, Clinton cemetery. Born in Bayfield, he farmed in the Kippen district for the past 28 years. Surviving beside his widow, the former Ruby Currie, are two sons, Eric and Donald, both of Clinton; two daughters, Miss Betty Switzer, McKenzie Island. and Miss Berva, at home; two brothers, Earl, Bay- deld, and Morris, Vancouver, and one sister, Mrs. George Lindsay, Bayfield. LATE MRS. E. SALTER EXETER.—Mrs. Emily A. Salter, 78, who died at her home in Exe- ter Tuesday. bad spent most of her life in Exeter. For three years she resided in London, Where her hus- band, Martin F. • Salter, died 3S years ago. She was the former Emily A. • Gould. She was one of the oldest mem- bers of James St. United Church. Surviving are one son. Charles, Wingham; two daughters.. Mita, at home; Mrs. Charles Reeves. Sea. forth; one brother, Harry Gould, Windsor; and two sisters. Mrst Walter Cutbush and Mrs. James' Shapton. -Exeter. After resting at the Dinn.ey Fun- eral Home, Exeter, private service es were conducted Thursday at f p.m., by the Rev. H. J. Smell: anti . interment made in Exeter ceme. tery. • DELUXE ALL METAL -glume VENETIAN BLINDS i' Sizes 18 x 64 3.98 27-36x64 4.98 Lengths of 72 inches are available COLORS—Ivory or White BOX FURNITURE STORE PHONE 48 RES. 595.W 4r 1952 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN — Hydramatic drive and radio 1952 CHEV. COACH 1951 FORD CUSTOM COACH 1950 CHEV. SPECIAL SEDAN 1949 METEOR COACH—Custom built radio - and Sun Visor 1948 CHEV. COACH 1947 CHEV. SEDAN 1947 CHEV. COACH 1946 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN—Custom basin -in Radio 1946 FORD COACH 1941 PLYMOUTH COACH Seaforth i4�t�rls Phone 141 4i