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The Huron Expositor, 1964-04-09, Page 15q Your neighbours profit from using • ATRAZINE* Shouldn't You • • • 4 • • • a • • • • M "We now harvest more corn 'with less time in the fields!" says Elmer McFaul, Townllne Farms, Hillier, Ontario "Spraying with Atrazine is a regular part of our corn manage • - ment, ' Mr. McFaul says. "This year we sprayed over 200 acres, Since using Atrazine we have harvested bigger crops with less labour." Atrazine treatment Is normal routine with successful corn growers. Your neighbours, who have used Atrazine, will tell you they wouldn't grow corn without it. One application of Atrazine controls weeds all season long Including those In the rows which can't be reached by cultiva- tion. Start using Atrazine this year . , . discover howprofitable corn production can be. Ask your farm supply dealer for an instructional leaflet on the new, more concentrated formula, Atrazine 65W. Place your. order now and get your sprayer readyon e. for good farming *trade mark registered in Canada for use by Fisons (Canada) Limited Al 13 2 1018111116811111118111111918118, 41111111=101111111 OFFICE SUPPLIES THE HURON EXPOSITOR Phone 141 : Seaforth MALTING BARLEY CONTRACTS Parkland Seed Supplied This variety out -yielded Betz and Mont - calm in Huron Countyas tested by the Ontario Agriculture College . and pub- lished in their "1963 The Progress Re- port." • White Bean Contracts One of the Areas Better Cash Crops Fertilizer and Seed supplied on all contracts. • - FERTILIZER A complete stock carried at competitive prices. ❑ o For Sale y-• Feed Barley 49.50 per ton O 0 K D. CORN $53.00. PER TON O 0 Cook Bros. Milling Co. Ltd. Hensall Phone 24 or 249 - Ly Ont. Lloyd .Mold's : Is New Assessor - For Bayfield Stanley Township Council, meeting at Varna Monday night, appointed Lloyd Makins, Bay- field, ayfield, as that police village's as- sessor at a salary of $250 a year. Mr. Makins succeeds Jack Stewart, who resigned after two years' service owing to ill health. Council accepted the tender off. the Sandy Construction Co., Goderich, for crushing and hauling 14,000 cubic yards of gravel to be delivered on the roads at 66c a yard, and for 2,000 cubic yards to be stock- piled in the pit at 50 cents a yard. The tender of Reeves Con- struction Co., Mount Forest, for , the construction of a 50 - foot bridge oyer the Little Bay- field River, 'was accepted, at $18,446.50. Council accepted the tender of Lee Jennison, Grand Bend, for supplying and apply- ing 100 tons of calcium chlor- ide. Church Groups NORTHSIDE 'UNIT FIVE The fourth meeting of Unit Five of Northside UCW was held at the home of Mrs. Doug Whyte; This ineeting was in the form of an auction, with a good variety of articles. Jean Whyte welcomed the guests and introduced the auctioneer, Merle Hoover who was assisted by Carol Baker. - ST. THOMAS' W.A. The thankoffering of St. Thomas' WA was.held at the home of Mrs. Bruce McLean with 11 members present. Vice- president Mrs. Cleave Coombs presided and opened ,the meet- ing by reading Psalm 113 and St. Luke, chapter 24. Prayers were offered for mis- sionary societies --and -prayer partners. Lord's Prayer and member's prayer were repeat- ed in unison. Miss D. Parke, treasurer, reported $70.00 was realized from the bakeless bake sale. The annual spring meeting will be held April 28 and 29 at St. Paul's Cathedral, London, -;.DISTRICT 'FU/NERAt$ -JOHN cora Requiem High,Mass was celer brated- on Wednesday morning. for John Coyne, ,:who died on Sunday morning.. Rev. L, J. Coughlin officiated. Present in the Sanctuary were Rev:- R. Durand, Dublin; Rev. Thomas McQuaid, S.F.M., St. Marys, and Rev. 41wyu Morris, Lon- don. The pallbearers were Mich- ael Doyle William McMillan, Peter Jordan, Joseph Hastings, Louis Morris and Michael' Coyne. 'Burial was made in St. Columban cemetery. JOHN O'HARA John O'Hara, 86, of St. Col- umban, died Friday at Huron - view, Clinton, where he had - lived for the past two years. Mr. O'Hara was a son of the late Thomas and Barbara (Arn- old) O'Hara, and had farmed in McKillop Township for many years. He retired to St. Colum - ban, He was never married. His only survivor is one sis- ter, Sister M. Editha, Sister of St. Joseph, Almonte, Ont. ,Pray- ers were said Sunday evening at the Beattie funeral home, Clinton. Requiem High Mass was sung at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Clinton, at 10 a.m. Mon- day, with Rev. S. E. McGuire officiating. Burial followed in Clinton cemetery. ARS. ELIZABETH ROCK Mrs. Elizabeth L, Rock, 81, of Brodhagen, died in Scott. Mem- orial Hospital, Seaforth, on Sat- urday, after a short illness? She was the former Elizabeth Louise Ritz, born in Logan Township on April 30, 1883, a daughter of the late Mr. and Mr"s. John (Katharine Veitor) Ritz. On April 8, 1902, she " was married to. Louis (� Rock and they farmed in Logan Town- ship until 1914 when they mov- ed to Brodhagen. Her husband predeceased her by 10 years. She was a member of St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Brodhagen, an active member of the Luth- eran Church Women, and a teacher in the Sunday School for many years. • She is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Harold (Violet) Grove, Detroit; Mrs.. George (Lavina) Wheatley, Seaforth; Mrs. Ray (Laurene) Hart, Lon- don; one brother, Jack Ritz, Mit- chell; one sister, Mrs. Hope Mina) Pauli, Detroit, Michl, Where o We Stand in CancerBattle? April, "as it has been for many years past, is campaign month for the Canadian Cancer Society. Where do we stand today in our battle against cancer? In the past few years, Can- ada has marched into the big leagues of .cancer research— and this year .the Canadian pub- lic is being asked to contribute $3,9F4,000,for public education, welfare and -.research funds to keep that march moving for- ward. Cancer research is a giant jigsaw puzzle in which thou- sands of pieces of knowledge of hundreds of different fields ENTIRELY UN -ITALIAN • In 1912, a tenor made his operatic debut in Padua, Italy. He was listed on the program as Eduardo di Giovanni. After singing in Milan, Chicago and New York, this man became general director of the Metro- politan Opera Association in New York and later, chairman of the board of directors of the,F oyal•Conservatory of Mus- ic in, Toronto. Who was he? Edward Johnson, famous Cana- dian singer. He changed his name for his opera debut in order to appeal to Italian audi- ences. WIND • TORNADO • CYCLONE insurance R. F. McKERCHER Phone 849 R 4 - Seaforth Representing the Western Farmers' Weather Insurance Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont. Testing Can't Make a Bull Any Better ... . . . But It CAN Tell You "How Good He Is Reliable sire information is a tradition with Ontario's breeding co- operatives. All of the available information on each buil is obtained and published so that the breedercan safely base the future of his herd on the bull of his choice. - WtC.B.A. DAIRY BULLS are daughter proven in hundreds of Ontario herds under all types of feeding and man- agement conditions. W.C.B.A. BEEF BULLS many of which are performance tested, are being progeny tested under the Ontario Quality Meat Sire program. Sires with genetic superiority proven by up to 100, 500, even 1000 offspr,ng are available at low cost through the service's of WATERLOO CATTLE BREEDING ASSOCIATION Branch Offices Throughout Western Ontario --- listed in your Local Telephone Directory. of study must be fitted togeth- er. And, slowly, painstakingly, those pieces are fitting togeth- er. The great volume of re- search being done is, bit by bit, yielding us answers. While the cancer death rate keeps slowly rising in Canada— it's now this nation's No. 2 lefller-$e number of people saved f the disease, each year is rising too. The key to the cancer riddle lies" in research, and last ',year more than 200 Canadian scien- tists and technicians were "at work in a score of Tabora res of 117 different project —117 new and different pieces of that jigsaw puzzle. - , The miracle of cell division, cell differentiation and replace-. ment; the mystery of the sub- stances that make up the nuclei of cells; the effects of certain cancer-causing substances, and the therapeutic value of cer- tain cancer -inhibiting chemicaI's are all being checked and cross- checked. Canadian scientists are seek- ing clues to this life -and -death problem by probing the struc- ture of viruses and even, oddly enough, by probing the fighting urges of mice. Cancer is such a complicated disease, it takes so many forms and attacks in so many ways that this multiple approach is a necessity. In this kind of research lies our only hope for a final an- swer to the- scourge of cancer, which this year will take the lives of some 25,000 Canadians. The Canadian Cancer Society is putting its tremendous ener- gies, its organization, and its funds into supporting every worthwhile cancer research pro- ject that might possibly bring the answer closer. Cancer.,,researchers across the country rely upon the Canadian Cancer Society for a great deal of their financial support. To continue to make this support possible, the Canadian Cancer Society is now relying on us. USBORNE AND IIIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - EXETER, Ont. Directors: Timothy B. Toohey - RR 3, Lucan President ' . Robert G. Gardiner - RR 1, Vice -President Cromarty Wm. H. Chaffe - RR 4, Mitchell E. Clayton Colquhoun RR 1, Science Hill Martin Feeney • RR 2, Dublin Milton McCurdy - RR 1, Kirkton Agents: Hugh Benninger - Dublin Hairy Coates - RR 1, Centralia Clayton Barris - Mitchell Solicitors: Mackenzie & Raymond - Exeter Sec refa ry1`reasu rer: Arthur •,r'4ser t A• gxeter four, grandehildren, and lour reat•grandehildren. • The bodyrrested at the L9C1t hart funeral home, Mitchell, until noon • Monday, when re- moval was made to St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Brodhagen, where a funeral service was held at 2:00 p.m. Rev. Harold Brill officiated, and burial- was in the adjoining cemetery. ' JOHN TAYLOR John A. Taylor, 73, a retired Morris Township farmer, died suddenly at his home here ori Thursday. He was born in Morris Township, a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Tay- lor, and farmed there until re- tiring here in 1960. Surviving 'are his wife, the former Ettie Margaret Dale; and two sisters, Mrs. Ralph Garden, Mrs. John R. Garden, both of Woolsley, Sask. The funeral was held Monday from the G. A. Whitney funeral home, with Rev. J. C. Britton, of Northside United Church of- ficiating. Interment was made in Maitlandbank cemetery. The pallbearers were Allan Searle, Walter Shortreed, Allan Mc- Call, Bill Sholdice, James Jam- ieson and Wilfred Shortreed. MRS. WILLIAM MUELLER Mrs. William Mueller, 92, who had - farmed for many years with her husband, first in the Bornholm area and later near Brodhagen, died Thursday at the home of her granddaugh- ter, ,yrs gdward (Velma•) F s4 er,,x ,Se�fAlth• , lire torxue; ^Jame lfo11a4,. she .was a -member of St. Peter's Lutheran. Church,. $rodhagen,. .Predeceased' by her husband and_,only daughter, she is sn vived' by one granddaughter, - three great-grandchildren and one great -great-grandchild. The body rested at. the G. A. Whitney funeral ' home, Sea - forth, until Saturday at 11 .a.m., when removal was made to St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Bred- hagen, for services at 2 pan, The Rev. Harold Brill oMciat- 'ed. Interment was in the ad- joining cemetery. , Pallbearers were Fred Kist ner, Edwin Rock, Norman Rock, Wilfred Ahrens, Russell Shol- dice and Emanuel Beuerman. ONE OF THE LARGEST The • Bibliotheqtte Nationale (National Library) in Paris is the oldest of all European na- tional libraries, having been established about 1480 by Louis XI. It is also now one of the largest libraries in the world, having more than six million volumes. The walking fern (Camptos- orus rhizophyllus) a c t u a 11 y moves across the floor of the woods by putting out roots at the tip of eaeh frond and af- terward letting go at the base. augO The smart way to save and travel ! Extra coach car conveniences to make your trip more comfortable. For other economy Rei \A.thite & Blue Fares call ... Your Local CN Agent CANADIAN NATIONAL 17.64 WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESUL4TS •-- Phone 141 • 'RITE ROSE ERVICE STATtO• (Corner Goderikh and Coleman Streets) OPENING SPECIAL With every Oil Change during Opening Days THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY April 16, 17 and '18, you will receive FREE LUBRICATION Harvey Kennedy, who will operate t he Seaforth Whit4 Rose Station is welt known throughout the district. He is thor- oughly experienced in station operation, and you can be assured of the best in service! HARVEY KENNEDY WHITE ROSE SERVICE WHITE -ROSE GASOLINE WITH TCP