The Huron Expositor, 1963-11-28, Page 21•
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Arnold St nn ssen
Life Insurance is My Business
' Representing
Sun Life Assurance Company
of Canada
TELEPHONE 852 R 1.2
R.R. 5 - SEAFORTH
Read the Advertisements — It's a Profitable Pastime!
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WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS — Phone 141
DUB O
bliss Loretta Maloney, of
Louden, with her uncle, Mr. Ed-
die Krauskopf.
Mr- and Mrs. Edmund Tozer
and family, Davison, Michigan;
Mr. and Mrs., Tozer and daugh-
ter, East Detroit, Michigan, at-
tended the funeral of the late
Rev. Dr. Ffoulites; also Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Rowland, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Rowland, Oakville; Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Jordan, Toronto;
Mr. Ed Holland, Scarboro, also
many of the Sisters of the Ursu-
line Order, Chatham.
TOWNSHIP OF
HULLETT
We thank% the Ratepayers of Hullett
Township for an acclamation in our
respective offices for the year 1964.
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We also welcome the opportunity to
serve the best interests of the ratepay-
ers for the ensuing year, and take this
occasion of wishing all of you the Com-
pliments of the Season for 1964 !
Tom Leiper
Hugh Flynn
Jim McEwing
Clare Vincent
Don Buchanan
- Reeve
Councillor
▪ Councillor
- Councillor
▪ Councillor
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ST. COLUMBAN
Mrs. Catharine Feeney, Kit-
chener, with Mr. and Mrs. Theo
Melady.
Miss Nell Doyle, London, with
Ted Doyle.
Miss Marion McIver, Detroit,
with Mrs. William McIver.
Miss Joan Ryan, London, with
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ryan.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloney
are in Scott Memorial Hospital
following an accident in which
two cars were in collision.
Miss Luella Moylan, Kitchen-
er; Miss Anne Dalton, London;
Miss Helen Maloney, London,
and Joe Murphy, Orillia, spent
the weekend at .their homes.
Mrs. Jack McIver in Kitchen-
er with Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Purcell.
Miss Anne Morris has been
successful in her examinations
for registered• nurse. Anne is
the daughter of Mr. and• Mrs.
Thomas P. Morris, RR 1, Staffa.
She is on the staff of a hospital
in Windsor.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Teady
and family and Mrs. Anderson,
all of London, with Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph L. Ryan.
WHAT A SNOWSTORM DID
TO HORACE pREELEY
On New Year's Day 1853,
Horace Greeley, the famous
journalist, brought out New
York City's first penny news-
paper, The Morning Post. Un-
fortunately New Year's Day
brought a snowstorm. The Morn-
ing Post, launched on a shoe-
string, did not survive the day.
Every week more people dis-
cover what mighty jobs are
accomplished by low cost Ex-
positor Want Ads.'
A. i;2,1x.I';moi "1r, r41. w1rx i r iv iuvi
rse MithiWpstern
r Oppose it,pstern Tot
"We should either get into
Mid -Western wholeheartedly, if
it deserves support, or else ac-
tively oppose it," said zone
chairman Howard Aitken, Gode-
rieh, in presenting to county
council the program of Mid -
Western Development Associa-
tion. "Otherwise, those associ-
ated with it now are wasting
their time, and we do not like
that situation. We have defin-
• itely a problem here. The only
way to decide if Mid -Western
deserves your support is to look
at its program.
"One part of the associaton's
work in the past couple of years
has been an economic and feasi-
bility study of% the area, now
nearing completion, and sections
of it, we believe, are important
to this county,"
Elmer Goebel of Stratford,
general manager of Mid -West-
ern, directed attention of the
members to large woodlot and
soil maps.
"The association was set up
to do a particular job," he said,
"to promote the area for econ-
omic development of all kinds
—agriculture, industry, etc. We
have an inventory of the re-
sources of the four counties
(Huron, Perth, Waterloo, Wel-
lington). From analysis of this
information we will come up
with recommendations, possibly
to the local municipal level, but
mostly to county level or the
region as a whole. They still
will not be of too much value
unless we have the co-operation
of all communities within the
four counties. We • need the
ideas of men such as yourselves`
to carry out a decent program,
and this study will give us a
pretty sound basis to approach
groups with the information we
have gathered."
In reply to a question by the
warden as to the municipalities
participating, Mr. Goebel said
rn
Grand Bend, Seaforth, .G(clerioh
and Wingham.
J. Curtin, regional develop-
ment officer, provincial depart-
ment of economics and develop-
ment, said, 'We have been im
pressed by the work your asso-
ciation is doing, and doing it
very economically.' He was ask-
ed what advantages accrue to a
rural municipality joining. "In
the past two or three years,"
he said, "there has been estab-
lished at the federal level the
Agricultural Rehabilitation De-
velopment, which the province
has recognized and organized a
body to work with it. A vast
amount of money has been set
aside to deal with what is hap-
pening to agriculture generally,
in the nation and the province.
Some data has been produced
by Mid -Western. There is a net
loss in rural ,areas, people leav-
ing the land and moving into
urban centres.
"ARDA (Agricultural Rehab-
ilitation Development Associa-
tion) requires the direct partici-
Sell that unnecessary piece of
furniture through a Huron Ex.
positor Classified Ad. Phone 141
-- NOTICE --
For Co -Op Insurance
Call
W. ARTHUR WRIGHT
Phone 193 J — John St.
SEAFORTH '
Complete Coverages For:
• Auto and Truck
• Farm Liability
• Employer's Liability
• Accident and Sickness
• Fire, Residence, Contents
• Fire, Commercial
• Life Insurance & Savings
• Huron Co-op Medical
Services
• Wind Insurance
.6,)'lrf' ''
TRE.,AWIPI EVf?
pation of town: and rural peo,
ple. You have the nucleus of a
committee h Huron in your
segment of Mid -Western Devel-
opment Association.
"It won't do for civil serv-
ants to sit down and say 'this
is what people need'. There
must be ideas and motivation
coming from the people them-
selves—the grassroots—and this
is where the ARDA program
needs to be implemented, a pro-
gram broadly based."
so*, h sweet+ d; a
worth s a lay
L ves or$ Mutual Wary.
.i .111 v fir' s.t. o r s
Af CANAO:,,Ar k19.",!,?
W. G. CAMP$E
Box 659
Seaforth, Ont.
Phone 486
loctc
Do Your Christmas Shopping at
AMSING'S SPECIALTY SHOP
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FINE GIFTS IN CHINA, BRASS, SOUVENIRS
AND TAPESTRIES
CHOCOLATE INITIALS, 2 oz. 29c each
BOXES OF CHOCOLATES from 29c
COOKIES, packages, from 29c to 59c
DUTCH STYLE MEATS, in 1/, -lb, packages, each45c to 65c
— We Give Fast and Courteous Service —
WE INVITE YOU TO TAKE PART IN OUR
DRAW FOR A HANDSOME RUG
A Ticket for Every Dollar Purchase
Draw will take place Christmas Eve.
AMSING'S SPECIALTY
SHOP
Main Street Seaforth
;r,riIirf.£ r rir
yLL r w.
,vr£ r ;wrri; it'r1.rr 'iw, w.i)w1r g1i;'~1+?1. ;r�Li;r, I .r1+�:1�;r
K.. .. K. .. K, ...,.,, ,.,, .. ..,.,. • n.
e
FROM YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING CENTRE AT SEAFORTH
AND ZURICH
OUR STORES ARE "FULL TO THE DOORS" WITH EXCELLENT GIFT SUGGESTIONS—
But There's Still Roorn For Christmas Shopping!
This is Truly a
CHRISTMAS GIFT CENTRE!
C9
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A FAVORED
GIFT WITH
EVERYONE!
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Shop here for SLIPPERS
in every Style and Color
for every member of
the family. All at low, low
prices. Shop today!
FROM . .
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SLIPPERS from $1.98
MaDONALDSHOES
Factory ,,RONALD
Feet Save Shu -Money
Toys — Toys — Toys
Visit Our Toyland and
See Our Wide Variety of
Mechanical Toys - Dolls
Wagons - Tricycles
Check our prices!
FREE PANDA BEAR
With every purchase of $1.00 and over you will have the
opportunity to receive a Free Panda Bear.
Make It a "View -Full"
Christmas with
SPARTON TELEVISION
RADIOS
RADIOS
RADIOS
The perfect gift for anyone, especially
the teenagers!
WE ALSO HAVE
TRANSISTOR RADIOS
1
Visit One of Our Stores
GINGERICH
SALES & SERVICE LTD.
41 ••. i y1. 1 • 1 .4 ,.„,• 4 •.:1 ,� . ..
l
She'll clean her floors faster with
one of our Westinghouse or
General Electric
VACUUM CLEANERS
Polishing, too, is easier with a
GENERAL -ELECTRIC
FLOOR POLISHER
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Out -of -this -World Bargains in
Small Appliances
TOASTERS KETTLES
DEEP FRYERS G -E MIXETTES
SANDWICH TOASTERS
PERCOLATORS
RAZORS
G - E TOASTER -OVENS
Noma Christmas
DECORATIVE LIGHTS
See our display — We have Lights
for every pocketbook!
DECORATE NOW
SEAFORTH or ZURICH
Phone 585 — SEAFORTH Phone 34 -- ZURICH
-- YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING CENTRES --