The Huron Expositor, 1964-04-23, Page 79
FRANK DUBOIS
Painting and Decorating
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone 271-9531
292 Queen St. - Stratford
DID YOU KNOW
that Sun Life of Canada is one
of the world's leading life insurance
companies, with 150 branch offices
throughout North America?
As the Sun Life represent..
ative in your community,
may I be of service P
JOHN J. WALSH
Phone 271-3000 — 48 Rebecca S1.., STRATFORD
Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada
. 1963 RAMBLER CLASSIC 660--4-Door
1962 FORD GALAXIE 2 -DOOR
inatie; Radio
--
1961 CHEV. BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder
1957 CHEV.-6 Cylinder
See the New 1964 Ramblers
MILLER MOTORS
PHONE 149 — SEAFORTH
t
wiNcti !,sie4-
'(1.,ntencied $'.o.r as wee). .
MI'S. PM :UM and 'SWAM,
of Memo Bead, visited Tues-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Newton
Clarke, •k. ,
.. .
Mrs. Harvey Smith and Pen-
ny Lynn, of Crediton, visited on
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Colin
Gallon and. family. '
Elimville. Institute ladies en
joyed a pot -luck supper at the
Township- Hall on Wednesday
evenmg. .
Mr. and Mrs, Bill Church, o
Winthrop, and Mr. and Mrs
Harvey Smith and Penny, o
Crediton, visited Sunday with
Mr, and Mrs. Colin Gilfillan and
Barbara.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Da,t,„
man and family, of Kippen
visited Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. William Walters and Dan
ny.
Mr. and. Mrs. Beverley Par
sons and family, of near Exe
ter, _ visited Sunday with Mr
and Mr% John Coward.
Mr. and Mrs. Wib Coward
and Susan, of London, visited
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John
Coward.
Mi.. and Mrs. Harry Sperling
and Miss Kay Horne, of Lon
dorrvisited on Sunday with Mr
and Mrs. Freeinan. Horne and
Raymond.
•
Mrs. William „ Watters and
Mrs. Colin Gilfillan visited Mrs
Nelson Clarke, who is a patient
in South. Huron Hospital at Ex
eter, on Thursday afternoon.
Mrs. Garnet Miners visited in
Exeter on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Eric Carscadenj Jim and
Marion.
Mr. and Mrs. Elson Lynn,
Joan and Jimmy, visited Sunday
with' Mr. -and 'Mrs.- Harvey -Skin-
ner at Sebringville,
Remember, it takes but
moment to place an Expositor -
Want Ad and be money in
pocket. To advertise, just Phone
Seaforth 141.
*. •
NE'W$ OF BROP OEN •
A group of businessmen dedi-
cated• to the propositien of .put-
ting Brodhagen on the map
have been successful. The Brod-
hagen Chamber of Commerce,
formed in 1957, will be honored
early in May by the Ontario
Chamber of Commerce with a
plaque for unique community
service. "We're really pleased
about this award," commented
Russell Sholdiee, one of the
trio .of representatives who will
go to Ottawa to receive the
Olaque.
Construction of a community
centre here in 1959-l0, with sev-
eral thousand hours of volun-
teer labor, slashed the estimat-
ed cost of the building in half.
The centre is now the focal
point of many community ac-
tivities. The mortgage on the
building was cleared last
autumn. An earlier project of
the Chamber was the levelling
and landscaping of the park on
which the hall stands.
' The Chamber draws member-
ship from both Logan Town-
ship, in Perth County, and Me-
Killop Township, in Huron
County. As well as Mr. Shol-
dice, William S. Riehl and Leon-
ard Rose plan to attend.
Last week the basement floor
of the community hall was
painted. Mr. Dalton Hinz has
been reappointed as caretaker
of the hall.
Members of the Married Cou-
ples of St. Peter's Church met
with Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
• Hoegy and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
•Fischer in charge of devotions
•nd lunch. Pastor Brill gave
th- topic, "The Jewish Reli-
gion)." ,After the business per-
iod, contests were conducted by
Mrs. Edgar Elligsen.
a
WOOL,
Jackson
Aluminum Ltd
SEAFORTH
is collecting wool for grading
and sale on the co-operative
plan. Shippers may obtain
sacks and twine free of charge
from the above or their
Licensed Operators
Realize the highest returns for
your wool by patronizing your
own Organization.
•
Canadian Co-operative
Wool Growers Limited
40 St. Clair Avenue E.,
Toronto 7, Ontario
1
1
Farrners! Contracts
MALTING BARLEY
We will have Betzes Seed, which hasproven far
superior to Montcalm or Parkland.
SEED OAT, CONTRACTS
• Once again we will ha:v.e 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.
.4440.....4490,944414116.1•4044.44.4=oraroMemor.4944044....40.4.4444.9.10ftee.er
Complete line of CIL. fertilizer
W. G. THOMF'SON
& SONS Ltd.
PHONE 32
HENSALL
Mr.' and Mrs. George Mueller
have -sold their farm to Mews.
Ralpand Allan Siemon.
Miss Joyce Rock has taken a
position in KMhener.
The student )teachers at Brod-
began school last week were
Miss- Donna Farrelly, of Alma,
and Miss Barbara 'Stinson, of
Chesley. They. stayed at the
home of Mr, and Mrs. Ed.
Scherbarth, Sr.
Mr. Herman Leonhardt has
been confined to Victoria Hos-
pital, London, •
Mr. Arthur Nichol is confin-
ed to Scott Memorial Hospital,
Seaforth.'
The sympathy of the com-
munity is extended to the rela-
tives of the late Mrs. William
(Rosina). Miller, whose funeral
was held at St. Peter's Luther-
an Church .on Saturday. Mrs.
Miller passed tiway at the home
of her grandddughter, Mrs. Ed.
Fischer, and Mr. Fischer, See-'
forth.
Sympathy is also extended to
the . family- of the late Mrs.
Louis G. (Elizabeth) Rock, whose
funeral was held 'here on Mon-
day. She passed away at Scott
Memorial Hospital on Saturday
after being confined there for a
week.
Mrs. Ed. Jarmuth has return-
ed home from spending the win-
ter with her daughter in Cali-
fornia.
Flowers were in the chancel
-of-St.-Peter's Lutheran Church
on Sunday from the funeral of
Mrs. William (Rosina) Miller
Brenda , Jean • An d er s o n,
daughter of '111r. and Mrs. Ross
Anderson, was baptized on Sun-
day during the service at $t.
Peter's Lutheran Churchby
Rev. H. Brill. The sponsors
THIS WEEK AND NEXT
Our Hungry World.
By RAY ARGYLE
The latest world population
forecast from the United Na-
tions is that the globe's popula-
tion will doube bythe year
2,000, reaching the Six billion,
dark.
Already, according to the re-
port, .500 million of the world's
people are suffering actual hun-
ger and another one billion suf
fer from mal-
nutrition.
•- How •c a n
Canada square
its conscience
with these ov-
erwhelming
contrasts be-
tween its
wealth and
other's pover-
t y, between
its under -pop -
Ray Argyle ulation a n d
• other' over-
population?
'The Answer Is That We Can't
In efforts made so far to
grapple with the problem of
starvation and over -population,
there is as yet no sign of a
break -through toward a final so-
lution.
• The Spectre of a world over-
run with hungry people, of one
vast city covering the entire
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IRVIN'S
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globe,' is already a familiar
nightmare.
The so-called population ex-
plosion is being held out by
many authorities as being a
greater threat •tb the future of
humanity than any ever posed
by nuclear bombs.
•But - humanitarian efforts to
supply foodstuffs to backard
nations often worsens the basic
problem • because of the tend
ency for population, to rise as
additional food supplies become
available.
And it is herthat the criti
cal juncture is reached in the
population puzzle. Just as birth
rates increase as food supplies
and industrial capacities grow
in backward countries, so is the
population level held down by
the available supply of food.
The determining factor in
such areas as Latin . America
and India therefore is food. For
this. reason, it may well be
physically impossible for the
population - explosion to ever
reach the blow-up point because
ponidation cannot exceed the
level at which hutnan beings
can subsist ,ori minimum diets.
This accounts for the endless
cycle which has been running
through such nations ever since
Western , industrial assistance -
and tood shipments were first
made available to them.
As health standards have im-
proved, the death rate .has de-
clined. As industrial capacity
has grown, families have multi-
-plied. As more food has been
shipped in, more children have
survived into adulthood, in turn
bringing more children into the
'world.
Food has always been the
controlling factor, either limit-
ing the population when it was
not available, or increasing it
when it was. available.
Recent demographic studies
now show conclusively that the
cycle will continue without sig-
nificant change unless the coun-
tries struggling with these
problems adopt aggressive poli-
cies of birth control.
This has been done in Japan,
and the result is the highest
standard of living in Asia.
The world will not explode
from over -population, but half
of the globe's humanity is for-
ever condemned to near-starva
tion until birth control becomes
the rule instead of the excep-
tion in the family of man.
For Complete
INSURANCE
on your
HOME, BUSINESS, FARM,
CAR, ACCIDENT, LIABILITY
OR LIFE '"
"SEE
JOHN A. CARDIO
, Insurance Agency
Phone 214 : . Seaforth
Office Directly OPposIte
Seaforth Motors.
4 ' • , VS,Ttr.".;li';'-'0.11"..,1,..fect..4,.0t.-... 'A*
g.7
,4r >•
•
were Ur. and lit's. Leonard:
Rose and Mr. and Mrs. Ralpb
Wietersen, along with the par-
ents.
Mr. and Mrs, Lavern Wolfe
with Mr. end Mrs. Martin Die -
gel, Stratford.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman ,Benne-
wies visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Messersthmidt, Sebring-
ville.
A reception for Mr, and Mrs.
Mike Maloney was held at the
community -hall on Saturday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Pfeifer
and • Karl with relatives in
Brussels on Sunday..
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Scher -
berth and family, of Detroit,
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Ed. Scherbarth, Sr.
Mrs. John Mueller, of Hamil-
ton, with her mother, Mrs. Aug.
Hillebrechta and attended the
funeral of her aunt, Mrs. Eliz-
abeth Rock.
Mrs. Edith Beuermati, of Sea -
forth, with her sister, Mrs.
Henry E. Diegel, and Mr. Die -
gel.
Morris F of A
Plans Aid For
TB Survey
The directors of the Morris
Township -F-ederation-...oLLAgrie
culture -met at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Black 'on Thurs-
day evening, with the president,
Ted Fear, in charge.
The Minutes and the treasur-
er t were read by secretary Mrs.
Ted Fear. A donation of $10
was voted to Blyth Fall Fair,
and $10 to Brussels Fall Fair.
George Watt, a representative
of Huron County TB Associa-
tion, was present and explain-
ed the mass TB survey, which
,the Federation , have agreed to
help with. Mr. and Mrs. Fear
were appointed delegates to
the B meeting in Clinton. Mel
It/lathers will be hairman for
the bus trip to Mienigan in May.
This trip will be open to any-
one in Morris Township.
Classified ads pay dividends.
WIND
• TORNADO • CYCLONE
Insurance •
R. F. McKERCHER
Phone 849 R 4 • Seaforth
Represehting the Western
Farmers' Weather insurance
Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont.
Seagram Appointment
friP"r•STINN
• •
JAMES P. 'GEORGAS
James P. Georgas whose appoint-
ment as Seagram sales represen-
tative in the Owen Sound area is
announced by .Emile Klisanich,"
Regional Manager for Joseph E.
Seagram & Sons, Ltd.
Formerly Manager of the Bay
Motor Hotel in Owen Sound and
a well-known skier, Mr. Georges
joined the Seagram organization
in 1963.
PlioNB 141
•,e,:e0e„,Li
• 0
...`
.; • ee,•„'
'9 •
•
9
:Ontario has all the bigness, all
the variety for one of the most
exciting vacations of your life.
Ontario covers 415,000
square miles, packedevith fas,-
cinating things to see. Like old
castles and cathedrals, art gal-
leries, and long sandy beaches,
red -coated Mounties and mag-
nificent wilderness, cannons
and charming side -walk cafes.
Your Ontario is a stirring,
exciting place. Take this sum,
mer to explore.
For more itiformation write
Ontario Department of
Travel,Room 270, Parliament
Bldgs., Toronto, Ontario
HONOURABLE JAMES AULD,
Minister
•
- NEED CASH
for
Farm Improvement
Home Improvement
A New Car
Any Worth -while
Purpose
If so, there are several good reasons
(easy, low-cost terms, for example) why
you should get the money you need from
"The Bank". •
Give your nearest Toronto-Doninion
Bank manager a call. Arrange to.drop in
and see him and chances are you can enjoy
the things you want tomorrow ... today
THE ,
*OA° NTO•DONIIIITION
Where people make the difference
'13110441K
S -2484A
W. D. STEPHENSON, Manager - Seaforth
4400•444.40•41•40090.94•140..90049`.90•09.9.94.084fti,
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Designed for the new
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Wafer
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tanks
See them now at
- JOHN BEANE, fr.
Brucefield Sales - Service
Phone Collect — 482-9250, Clinton
•
•
,h14 \IMO'