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The Huron Expositor, 1964-06-25, Page 9• • n • 1 A • • • 0 - • U' KNOW ...that Sun Life of Canada iq one of the world's leading life insuranoa companies, with 150 branch office• throughout North America? As the Sun Life represent- ative in your community may I be of service? JOHN J. WALSH Phone 271.3000 — 48 Rebecca St., STRATFORD Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada X COVET 1%ir 1962 FORD GALAXIE 2 -DOOR V-8—Auto- matic; Radio 1961 CHEV. BISCAYNE--6 Cylinder 1960 AUSTIN CAMIRJ.DGE 1959 CHEV. IMPALA 4 -DOOR HARDTOP -- at -- 'MILLER MOTORS PHONE 149 " — , SEAFORTH TRY SOME TODAY MAPLE LEAF DAIRY Phone 101 Seaforth 4 Sundays, Holidays, Everyday Maple Dairy Products are available at VANDERHOEK'S SUPERTEST Leaf DIXIELAND EXPONENT- Sounds of New Orleans and the Deep South are heard each Wednesday evening when Trump Davidson, a top exponent of Dixieland jazz, presents Dixieland Downbeat on CBC radio. DeIu�tions Now .� , r On Ori to r1 o Grovvn The Ontario ' WheatProduc- ers' Marketing Board has an- nounced that board deductions on all marketings of 1964 new crop" Ontario wheat will be six- teen (16) cents per bushel. • The new deduction rate is six (6) cents per bushel more than the rate of ten (10) cents, per bushel which has been in effect since establishment of the board In 1958. In announcing the new rate, Russell T. Bolton, RR 1, Sea - forth; chairman of the market- ing board, said that the 16 cent deduction will come into effect July 1st and continue through to the end of the marketing year June 30, 1965. Mr: Bolton explained that al- though there is an increase in the total amount deducted from the. sale of wheat the same system will apply as in the past regarding the use of the funds. One cent will be used to cover administration costs of operat- ing the board, and 15 cents will be used specifically for cover- ing the cost of purchasing, handling and exporting surplus wheat. In official terms, the total de- ductions of 16 cents per bushel THIS WEEK 'AND NEXT Poverty in Canada By RAY ARGYLE Canada has a _new organiza- tion this week, . dedicated to finding out` -how the average family in this country is get- ting along and where ' it is heading. The Vanier Instituteo •n the Family came into be- ing after ex- perts in many fields had sat ,down at Ot- tawa for a conference on the family called under the sponsorship of Governor- General and Mrs. George Van- ier. While the new group. will doubtless study many trends in family 'life -n Canada, much emphasis i be put on try- ing to d - solutions to the problems We already recognize exist. -- Ray Argyle One of the greatest of these is poverty, which must repre- sent the most serious threat to the stability of family. life in Canada today. BARN CLEANER SILO UNLQADER & BUNK -FEEDER YOU'LL GET BETTER PER- PORMANCE AND LONGER WEAR FROM ,A BADGER SAWS - S/RVIC1 • INSTALLATION JOHN BEANE, Jr. BRUCEFIELD SALES — SERVICE Phone Collect: 482-9250 - Clinton MILTON J. DIETZ offers 1 ON A NEWER, FASTER WAY TO KILL FLIES! The new and improved Purina Fly Checker is all new — it's made with two powerful fly killers and special attractants, a new fly -decoy that will help bring the flies buzzing in for one good, last feed! After that you just sweep the dead flies away! Last year we called the Purina Fly Checker the "Willingest, fly-killingest fly killer on the market". The new and improved fly checker is better still; easier to use — hang it, string it, set it, dunk it; it's designed to kill flies in bunches. You'll want to try the new Purina Fly Checker on your own farm. The new Purina Fly Checker is just one of the many Purina Health Aids we carry that can be a big aid in keeping your stock healthy and your profits high. For fast, efficient feed service call MILTON 'J. DIETZ PHONE 600 J 2 –* SEAFORTH, R.R. 3 Purina Chows — Sanitation Products Ventilation Equipment (Wholesale - Retail) Canadians who want healthier profits tomorrow use PURINAz HEALTH AIDS TODAY! Canada boasts of an affluent society. Indeed for many many fortunate' Canadians our socie- ty is a comfortable and• pros- perous one. •Families. whose' bread -win- ners hold well-paying5 of course have their problems,• work is nev- er marriage - er easy. Relationships between children ar parents and theire changing, and the current gen- eration of parents appears to change-ave be caught in ther from the era of the stern father to an era in which the family as a whole unit is the chief trademark of Canadian lifd'. But, is it really sensible for Canada to attempt to support an affluent society on an aver- age family •income of less than $5,000 per year? The 20 per, cent of Canadians who live on family incomes of less than $3,000 annually can't adequately clothe and house themselves, let alone share in the abundance which this coun- try is capable of offering. What appears to be happen ing in North America today h that 'the gap 'between the skill- ed and the unskilled, the afflu- ent and .the poor, is constantly widening. These • two great masses of society, in fact, are becoming strangers to each other. The poor are more and more shunted into run-down districts, their children confine ed to • poorly -equipped schools, the doors of the world of afflu- ence closed to them. • • What would eliminate pover- ty in Canada? The obvious an- swer is full employment at de- cent wages. This will not be achieved, un- til the great spajority of Can- ada's unemployed acquire .the skills and the training that in- dustry demands today. The simple fact is that this coun- ry has no use for poorly edu- cated, untrained men and wo- men. Social welfare assistance is eeded and should be provid- d,, but this will not solve any asic problem unless the chil- ren of today's poor can some - ow be kept in school and then rovided with whatever teehni- al or academic training each is apable of absorbing and us - ng. This is the only way. that he chain of poverty, extend - ng within individual families om generation to generation, an ever be broken. Along the road, it would help lower income families recog- ized they need good manage- ent of , their limited financial eans. They 'would find more warding and happier lives by voiding the purchase of flossy nsumer • goods which they on't need and can't afford, Finally, family planning is eded to ,reverse the trend w So common across Canada here it is the poorest families ho have the most °Children. t n e b d h p c c t fr c if n m m re a co d ne no w w FARMERS! , For all your haying requirements, see us ,for AKTIV MOWERS RAKES Reel or Wheel Types Hay Conditioners 4Vagons and Elevators Fox Forage Equipment HAUGH BROS. Farm Equipment One Mile East of Brucefield .+y represents a one cent licence fee and a-15 per cent stabiliza- tion fund levy. Any unused portion of the stabilization. fund will be refunded to producers as in the past. Mr. Bolton said the board's decision to increase the levy follows approval by producers through a vote conducted in March at county annual wheat meetings across the province and _ full authority by all gov- ernment departments concern- ed. The chairman said that as stipulated at the time of the vote:, the new deduction is bas- ed on 10 per cent of the nego- tiated minimum price of $1.65 per bushel which was set on May 28th, As in the past; the board will purchase surplus Wheat again this year, Mr. Bolton said, and nearly all of the necessary de- tail has been worked out in- cluding arrangements with the trade to buy and export all sur- plus 'wheat and provide flour mills with price adjustments to offset disadvantages in. export flour markets due to the board absorbing some of the export cost on wheat. Mr. Bolton also announced that the board has again ap- pointed United Co-operatives of Ontario as agent for the com- ing year. With the plans set for hand- ling the new crop and with an increase in funds which will provide the necessary collater- al for hank loans, Mr. Bolton said the board will be in a much better position financial- ly than was the case last year when heavy surplus purchases threatened the complete struc- ture of the stabilization pro- gram. He pointed out that the board has bought over 3,500,000 bush- els of last year's crop and that it has nearly all been sold for export. This represents a near record for the board- topped only in 1958 when a total , o • 3,592,000 bushels were hand, led by the board. A record volume •uf total wheat marketings has also been set with 11,800,000 bushels of last year's crop being marketed to date,. Total production last year is estimated at. about 18 million bushels,, Mr. Bolton said, and it is expected that this year's crop will exceed thht of last year, and the board is gearing its program in accord- ance with another heavy vol- ume year as indicated by all present conditions. The world is full of willing people; some willing to work, the rest willing to let them. trap ;1nsurea. O Town Dwellings ,. • AH Classes of F# r O TOOP .fy • Summer Cottaags • Churches, Schools, Halls, Extended coverage' (jK!ind, smoke, water dangage,iiiiig t .., ... Objects, etc.) is flso avail:ibTe; AGENTS: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, RR 5, Sea- forth; Wm. Leiper, Jr., Londeshoro;. Selwyn Baker, $russets; Harold Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin; Donald G. Eatotl, Seaforth. WANT ADS BRING QUICK" RESULTS •— Phone 141 FIRST MORTGAGES Farms -- Residential Commercial PROMPT, CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE The Industrial Mortgage & Trust Company ESTABLISHED 1889 r Coi.tact our Representative: W. E. SOUTHGATE J Phone 334 Seaforth a•: U L LHIG--A N ater Conditionin Proudly Announces the Official Opening of Their New Plant, 376 Byfield Rd., Goderich To Commemorate This Occasion and Our 10th. Year in Business • We Are Offering E` WITH YOUR ORDER FOR CULLIGAN SOFT WATER, A RAISED RELIEF WORLD GLOBES 17 INCHES HIGH OVERALL — A $15.00 VALUE Call today. For a limited time only, our neW Culligan customers will receive this wonderful Rand McNally Globe. It is in three dimension raised relief, in full color, complete with 28 page Globe Handbook. Let this timely gift introduce your family to the luxury and economy of pure filtered soft water. WE SELL AND RENT, (WITH, LEASE PURCHASE OPTION) FULL AUTOMATIC AND MANUAL WATER SOFT- ENERS or our portable exchange service is available at popular rates. Free water analysis and installation estimates. Problem water cleaned up, sulphur, iron, sedi- ment or bacteria. • GUARANTEED SERVICE AND SALT DELIVERY JUST CALL AND SAY . . . GODERICH 524-9571, COLLECT sSer . . . OR SEND COUPON 1 Culligan Water Conditioning 376 Bayfield Rd., Goderich .. Hey, Culligan Man! 1 would like to know more about soft water, and your free offer of a Rand McNally World I 1 Globe. NAME ...., STREET or R.R. NO. 1 TOWN.0 PHONE uYA1n41'�.'h++,. tiVYS �r'.°4�4,�{M1.....%•h6yd�m%Ft"u�. Ls' sl w„c;a