The Huron Expositor, 1964-04-09, Page 17y
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THE McdILLQP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE. COMPANY
Office -- Main Street
SEAFORTH
Insures:
• Town Dwellings
• An Classes of Farm Property
•rBummer Cottages
• Churches, Schools;' -Halls
Extended coverage (wind,
smoke, water damage, falling
objects, ete.) is also available.
AGENTS: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, ER 5, Sea -
forth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels;
Harold Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Baton,
Seaforth. .
. Have
applied for your
Social Insurance Number?
Your government is issuing Social Insurance Number
Cards in place of the unemployment insurance
numbers that most employed people have had until
now. The new numbers will help government to use
• modern office 'methods for greater efficiency in
handling unemployment insurance, and also other
social benefits such as proposed pension plans,.
For these reasons, you are invited to apply for a
Social Insurance Number, even if you are not a
confributor,to the unemployment insurance plan.
.'If you haven't yet applied, here's what you do..
IF YOU ARE AN 'EMPLOYEE your employer will give
you' an application form. Fill it out and return to your
employer promptly,
IF YOU ARE UNEMPLOYED and dravving benefit you
will complete an application form when you report
.to the Unemployment Insurance Commission in
person or by mail.
IF YOU ARE AN EMPLOYER registered with the
Commission, you will receive application forms auto-
matically. If NOT registered with the Commission,
please get in touch with your local U.I.C.. office and
application forms will be sent to you. Distribute
t application forms to your employees, have'them com-
pleted and return them together, not individually,
to the Commission.
0
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4
1
COMPLETE YOUR APPLICATION NOW
UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE COMMISSION
OTTAWA
UIC-2645
Exch�nge Trip Tbrills
Students .From Milwaukee
Stili chattering enthusiastic-
ally about their visit to a Cana -
school .a week `ago, a dozen
Nicolet high school students are
preparing to welcome an equal
number of Canadian students
Monday morning for a week
long look at Milwaukee.
The trip tp Central Huron
secondary school in Clinton,
Ont., about 120 miles northeast
of Det>:oit, marks the third time
in the last four years that Nice -
let have traded visits
With students at another high
school.. This is the first time
the exchange program took
them outside the United States.
They found, four representa-
tives of the group agreed, a
town filled with people waiting
to treat them like celebrities,
a more leisurely pace (even
-though their schedule reads like
a politician's the week before
election), a school with facili-
ties as modern as their own but
with a different academic em-
phasis, a greater, contrast be-
tween city and country life,
SEAFORTH
UPHOLSTERING,
`'.. Centre Street
Telephone ,446
FOR ALL KINDS OF
UPHOLSTERING
-- We Arrange Easy Terms
6�sss��ief(I,IJ�,�'s�sGJ
Trade-in your-
OLD SHAVER
and receive $6.00 on the
purchase of a
NEW SUNBEAM
CORDLESS SHAVER
Reg. $34.95
YOU
ONLYPAY $2S•ps
at
Anstett Jewellers
LTD.
Farmers' Contracts
MALTING BARLEY
We will have Betze& Seed, which has proven Afar
superior to Montcalm or Parkland.
SEED OAT CONTRACTS
Once again we • will have the three popular varieties:
Rodney, Gary and Russell Seed Oats. We can take
your crop from the combine' if you wish.
BEAN CONTRACTS
We will be contracting White Beans again this year.
We will have all varieties and they will be of the
highest quality.
We will supply seed and fertilizer for all these con-
tracts.
We will have a complete line of Clover Seed,
Timothy Seed and Grass Seed_ at _Very_
attractive prices.
Complete line Of CIL fertilizer
W. G. THOMPSON
& SONS Ltd.
PHONE 32 -- HENSALL
concern over whether the Unit-
ed States has ,any desire to an-
nex Canada, lack of understand-
ing about problems of integra-
tion (there were no Negro stu-
dents in Clinton), tastier food
in the school cafeteria, poorer
-quality among teen age folk
singers, a common bond in
Beatlemania.and realization that
borders don't make people dif-
ferent.-
"When they discovered Bob
Goisman knew Beetle mole
they knew we ,were normal•,'.'
said Penny Mayerson, 17, of
7515 N. Mohawk Ave., Fox
Point, a senior, member of the
student council at Nicolefrand
chairman of the exchange com-
mittee.
Bob, 16, of 7114 N. Crossway
St., Fox Point, a sophomore, was
called upon to play the piano
whenever thh opportunity arose.
"We visited the Shakespeare-
an festival theater at Stratford
on the way back, and they had
just finished making a small
harpsichord in the properties
department," related Debbie
Hill, 15, of 795 W. Monrovia
Ave., Glendale, a freshman.
"They asked us if anyone want-
ed. to try it, so Bob played 'All
My Loving,' the Beatles' song."
Schools • Different
But, in general, the week was
a serious lesson M similarities
and differences between two
countries. While. their student
hosts were basically the same as
students •at• home, their school
system wars different. This came
as a surprise, Penny said...
While ,Central Huron recon,
dary school is considered prim-
arily a commercial school, it of-
fers thr a distinct study pro-
grams, s e explained, Students
enroll ,in usiness and com-
merce, technical sciences . or
arts and sciences. Arts and sci-
ence students take a five-year
course, then go on to a three-
year college .program.
Change Schedule
"Their technical facilities are
tremendous," observed John
Goodman, 17, of 7667 N. Pheas-
ant Lane, River Hills, a ,junior
and vice-president of Nicolet's
student council. He was par-
ticularly in'lpressed with the
shops he toured. - .
On their return train trip,
the Nicolet students revised the
schedule.. they had planned for
the Canadians to include more
time for attending,^classes.
"When'.we discovered how
different the emphasis is at our
schools, we thought theywould
like to spend more time in
classes," Penny said.
Plans For Week
School consolidation m a y
bring about a revision in the
student parliament, she added.
Several.mentings–w4th--t-he Nico
let student and youth councils
have been scheduled this week
for the Canadian visitors so
they can see how government
operates in the States.
Bonnie . Homuth, 17, with
For- Complete
INSURANCE
on your
HOME, BUSINESS, FARM,
CAR, ACCIDENT, LIABILITY
OR LIFE '
• SEE *1
JOHN A.. CARDNO
Insurance Agency
Phone 214 Seaforth
Office Directly Opposite
Seaforth Motors
whom Penny - stayed, is presi-
dent
resident of Central Huron's student
parliament and is one of the
12 visitors scheduled to arrive
Monday. The Homuth family
Iived in a comfortable house ill
town (Bonnie's father is vice-
principal of the 'sehool), and
Penny found that the house-
hold was much like her own.
Such was not the case .for
Birthe • Carsten-Pedersen, 18, a,
senior. Birthe, an American
Field Service exchange student
from Denmark, and six of the
boys from Nicolet stayed with
seven large families whose chit-
dren commute by bus to the
consolidated school.
Birthe's host family had emi-
grated from the Netherlands 10
years ago. "I was most impress-
ed by their pioneering spirit,"
she observed, "their love for
the new country and the beauty
they found there."
There was reading from the
Bible rather than television at
night; it was cold "like a grave"
in her room when she awoke in
the morning; they- stili brought
water from a "pond," but for
this family, "in spite of all
troubles, this was home."
The boys who stayed on
farms . helped with the chores.
/Purpose of, the student ex-
change is to learn about the
geographic and economic,, fac-
tors of the area as well as to
visit school and families; so
several tours were arranged.
List Itinerary
Students visited a salt mine
and walked along "streets" 'of
Pure e salt 1,100 feet under the
bottom of Lake Huron. They
toured the Huron county mus-
eum in near -by Goderich, a port
which was once 'supposed to
rival 'Detroit,. they learned.
They visited the radio and
radar, the food services and the
instructional, techniques schools,
at the Royal Canadian Air .Force
Station at Clinton, ; The -station,
where the majority of . RCAF
men receive all or part of their
military training, is Clinton's
major employer. Its personnel
outnumbers the population of
Clinton which is 3,550, stllder is
were told.
They spent an afternoon at
the Douglas Point nuclear gen-
erating station, visiting areas
which will be restricted when
the station is completed next
year. And they spent a morn-
ing at two of Huron county's
modern farms.
The school board presented
each visitor with a newly mint-
ed silver dollar commemorating
the Charlottetown centennial.
At a school assembly the next
day, each received eight shiny
pennies "because the dollar is
worth only 92c in the States,"
they were told. .
' BRODHAGEN
(Intended for last week) -"
Mrs. Dalton Hinz attended
the funeral of Mr. Charles
Brickman at Seebach's Hill on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Young,
of -Stratford, with Messrs. Wil-
liam 'and. George •Diegel.
Mr. and Mrs. Carman Mogk,
Wendy, Teeeri and Randy, of St.
Thomas,* with Mr. and Mrs.
George Mogk and Mr. and -Mrs.
Harold Mog,k. Mrs. Ed. Brod-
hagen •and friend, of, Stratford,
and Mr, and Mrs. Mel Voll and.
Wanda, also of Kitchener,' visit
ed at the .same home recently.
Mr. and Mrs. George Sherrin,
of Toronto, with her sister,
Mrs. Robert French, and Mr.
French recently.
Mrs. Rosina Miller is confin-
ed to bed at the home of her
granddaughter, Mrs. Ed. Fisch-
er, and Mr. Fischer, Seaforth.
Miss Julie Jackson, of Strat-
ford, had been visiting with her
sister, Mrs. Charles Scherbarth,
and Mr. Scherbarth, a few days
last week.
Miss Gloria Muegge is taking
a hairdressing course in Kit-
chener.
or•ris a c
Mears Grant ..
For -Recreation--.
Morris Council met, Monday
with all members present, Mo-
tions adopted included:
Walter Shortreed, seconded
by Ross Smith,' that a charge
of 10 cents per head be charg-
ed- for spraying cattle under the
Warble Fly Control Act.
Smith and Shortreed: That
we renew municipal liability,
spray liability,non-owned auto
liability, and grader equipment
insurance with "Prank Cowan
Co.
James Mair and Smith: That
George Radford be given per-
mission to haul gravel from
Duncan's pit, beginning April
20, if he so desires during the
half load restriction period.
Mair .and Wm. Elston: That
we pay our membership to Hur-
on County Municipal Officers'
Association.
Shortreed and Smith: That
lames A. Howes be instructed
to stake and prepare necessary
plans for a drain in S1.. Lot 10,.
Con. 3.
Ellston and .. Mair: That we
give a grant of $500 to Brus-
seta, Morris & Grey Recreation-
al Association.
Shortreed and Mair:, That
road accounts as presented by
the road superintendent be
paid.
Smith and Elston: That the
general accounts as presented
be paid.
The meeting, adjourned on
motion of Mair and Shortreed,
to .met again May 4, at 1 p.m.,
or at the call of the reeve.
The following accounts were
paid: General Accounts — Ad-
vance -Times„ advertising, $6.31;
Bernard Hall, liability and spray
insurance, $385.63; Workmen's
Compensation Board, ' $1.50 ;
City of Brantford, $33.65; Muni-
cipal World, assessment roll,
$19.58;. Blyth Standard, envel-
opes, $10.82; Town of Seaforth;
high school debentures, $308.68;
Blyth Fire Area, fire call, $52;
Pinecrest Manor, $75.75; Doug-
las J. Callander, $75.75; S. H.
Blake, membership fee to Hur-
on County Municipal Officers'
Association, , $20; Ontario Hy-
dro, Blluevale street lights,
$14.25; Bluevale 'Milling Co.,
warbicide, $169.45; Red Front
Grocery, $77.74; George Mutter,
furnace oil, $28.12; S. B. El-
liott & Son, $59.92; Helen Mar-
tin, salary,. $100; Brussels, Mor-
ris & Grey Recreational Asso-
ciation, $500.00.
Road Accounts—Wm. McAr-
ter, mileage, bookkeeping, wag-
es, freight and license for truck,
$175.53; James Casemore, wag-
es, $305.00; Ross A. Jamieson,
loadings, and hauling gravel,
$26.25; Gordon Workman, ex-
tension cord, $5.60; Rosco Met-
al; reflectors, • $39.50; Wajax
Equipment, bearings, seals and
motor mounts, $139,16.; G.eorge.
Radford, angle iron, $6.25;
Thos. Garniss, welding, $30,04;
Dominion .Road Machinery,
clutch, $77.25; J. M.' McDonald,
•plywood, $42.59; Ideal Supply
Co., wrenches, $13.70; Brussels
Coal Yard, stove oil, $14.33;
Bluevale Milling Co., Zoo lbs:
salt on Bluevale 'Hill, $2.70; J.
C. McNeil; repairs to wipers and
drum of oil,. $65.87;' Wilmer
Glousher, snow plowing; $24.50.
The rural dentist treating an
elderly patient asked, "Could
you pay for a dental plate if I
found one °necessary?"
The shrewd old farmer hesi-
tated for a moment, then' re-
lied: "Would you find- one
necessary if .I couldn't pay for
it,"
'blue' coal'
Champion Stove and
FulLnace Oil
WILLIS DUNDAS
Phone 573 or 71 W
*WITH EXCLUSIVE
IN -TANK AGITATOR
P.T.O. OPERATED
•100 GALLON
BONDED TANK
Designed for the nett/
and future chemicals
that require constant
agitation.
Authorized
calm
Dealer
New Trailer Mounted
models with
100 or 200 imp. gal.
tanks
11,
See them now at
JOHN BEANE, Jr.
Brucefield -- Sales,- Service
Phone Collect,— 482-9250, Clinton
i
LET. I.'.
ARRANGE ' ` -74- -
YOU ..,:
MORTGAGE
For almost three-quarters' of a century we
have offered a friendly, personal service in
the first mortgage field. We can arrnge'a
first mortgage for you on your home, farm
or business property. .
All enquiries welcome.
¥STABUSIRE13 1889
THE INDUSTRIAL MORTGAGE &'TRUST COMPANY
Head Office: Sarnia •
Offices in Forest and Petro1ia
nlloa
W. E. Southgate—Phone 334, Seaforth
• WEDDING INVIT-AT1r(°H'S
Phone ,441 Seaforth
GROWING BEANS?
' . Contact ° *
E. L. MICKLE & SON ' LIMITED
for -
Quality Seed and Bean Contracts
Ontario Registered--
SANILAC ,
SEAWAY
SAGINAW
MICHELITE '62
Michigan. Certified --- SANILAC
All Seed Grown From Foundation Stock
BEAN CRONTRACTS:
Seed and Fertilizer Supplied
Crop Accepted at Harvest
Excellent Bean Demand Creates Good Prices
Malting Barley Contracts
Seed and Fertilizer Supplied
We offer the Popular 2 -rowed, high yielding,
excellent grading BETZE BARLEY
--We--c-ar-rySpring Grain. Seed
For Sale
E. L. MICKLE & SON
LIMITED
Phone -103 - Hensall
THE SEAFORTH PLANT
for
s
WILL REOPEN
� APRIL 15/64
••• •
Call` us for your
concrete requirements
SEAFORTH 868 W 2
GODERICH 524-7361
Hur�n
Concrete
wpply Ltd.
. ..re'