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The Huron Expositor, 1963-12-12, Page 14
w .44THE HURON KX,POSITOK SEAFORTH, ONT.: DEC. 12, 1003 1 Gfo$S1rQR8 do A , $y 4. C. Gordon L MIR ill ill■ s all II I. MI 14 ill t$ ■ t4 MI .1M- 4 144 28 It z: as I2.4 742. 111 30 ts ■ �.�33 . . •i■ 3S 36 No 31 38 . 44 3q til u■44 44 S. ■• i 146 143 ■■ ... Vi .. Ma q9 A CP: OSS 1 - Scottish see 4 -fit 7 - cirri name 8 -Poem Ip - vexation 12- Commercial anization - Pronowi T;,sr - Optic rote 16 -Sun god 38 - Thin& la 1w 19 - Pronoun 20 - Mouths ss - Stupor 26 - dmerlcan hem- mate Cab.) t7 - Tantalum 28 - Felonies 81 - To dismay 84 - Not at QUI 85 - To draw ciel. as a 11414 86 - Preposition 57 - Border 69-.Tavom 41 - Biases •20* a- n1,p TI 15 - Terminus 46 - Before 47 - Unit 48 - Onetime Russian ruler 49 - Errs . DOWN -Diversion 2 - Girl's name $ - Distributers d - Oppose 5 - Goal 6 - Introductions E©®® HUME, ©HO OHM MMM UMHHHEMEHOOMM MEM H 0 MOM U HO MOH OM 0 MILMEHO mermen 0© RI O • Ii2g2 h3pH©©gJ 11117117M133 0 ©Ii ©1IEJ L9111 112 SO JEMUIBU©©B®®13 ®ORI 12100 I►II W1 E►Til3O . DIE©!1. ,rn5-r E N 4, 7 - Kind of wood 9 - Roman 501 11 - The entrants to 'entrance! 12 - Jacob's Biblical brother 13 - Distinct e stamp 17 - ..gears S•s 19 - Parent 21 - Sailor 22 - Fish egg8 24 -Knock 25 - Male nickname 28 - Fish 29 - U. S. state (abbe 30 - More wartime 31 - Summits 32 - Parent 33 - Photographic device 38 - Anger 40 - Compass direction 42 - Dental degree 43 - Noun suffix of agency 44 - Electrified atom W TO ORDER Magazine Gift Subscriptions FOR CHRI$TNlAS ! No Shopping — No Wrapping No Mailing — No Bother An Attractive Card Announces Your Gift ! Just ask us to send ANY Magazine— Saturday Evening Post, Life, Maclean's, Popular Mechanics, or any Canadian, American or British Magazine. THE HURON EXPOSITOR Phone 141 'y .. ••.. M+ . y0.. y.. y v,. •y... +d .. .. y... y... ... .0 ..y, . - . - y. °t h, .Ft�+,x F „ri rt.Si di..rii.r k .s ,rit,41 Morris Agrees To Establishment Of Panning Area Morris Township Council met December 13 with all members present. Motions adopted in- cluded: That the necessary applica- tion be made and procedures taken to constitute the Wing - ham and District Planning Area and the establishment of the necessary board; That road accounts be paid as presented by the road super- intendent; That Lloyd Warwick be main- tenance man for street lights in that part of Bluevale in Morris Township; That general accounts be paid as presented; That the meeting adjourn to meet again December 16, at 11 a,m. The following accounts were paid: General—Advance=Times, advertising, $4.05; Village of Brussels, firemen, storage of tank, $411.50; City of Brantford, $33.65; Town of Clinton, bal- ance of debentures for 1963, $60.91; Department of Health, insulin, $4.10; Municipal World, supplies, $1.98; Township of East Wawanosh, Arbuckle Dr., $1,086.63; Helen Martin, hydro for hall, $6.0'7; Helen Martin, 'revising voters' lists, $30.20; John Brewer, revision of voters' lists, $6.80; HEPC, installing Bluevale lights, $326.66; relief, $95.68; Callander Nursing Home, $71.25; David Hastings, wreath, $14.10; George Pollard, level- ling Grasby Drain, $16.50; Mor- ris Township, tile, Peacock Dr., $1.40; James Mair, commission- er, Grasby Drain, $8.00; Treas- ury Department, tile drain loan, $197.01; Helen Martin, bylaws and fees, Higgins Drain, $100; Herman Nethery, severance, etc. Higgins Drain, $140; Morris Township, pipe, Higgins Drain, $114; Helen Martin, part salary, $65.00; George Radford, return of certified cheque, $200.00; Bluevale Recreational Associa- tion, grant, $100.00. Road Accounts—William Mc- Affel-, mileage, bookkeeping, wages, $162.06; James Casemore, wages, $240.00; Canada Culvert Co., grader blades, $45.79; 'Mel- vin Carnochan, digging culverts, $26.25; Dominion Road Machin- ery, repairs, $36.91; Ideal Sup- ply Co., oil filters and steel lines, $9.53; Sam Sweeney, bull- dozing Campbell bridge, $2,- 424.00; Mel Jermyn, hauling pit run gravel' and dozing, $2,876; Alex Inkley, fuel oil and tax, $355.50 ; Wingham Advance - Times, advertising, $2.43; Brus- sels, Morris & Grey Telephone, tolls, $7.00. Sell that unnecessary piece of furniture through a Huron Ex- positor Classified Ad. Phone 141. GET A BARN CLEANER SILO UNLOADER & BUNK FEEDER YOU'LL GET BETTER PER- FORMANCE AND LONGER WEAR FROM A BADGER SALES • SERVICE - INSTALLATION JOHN BEANE, Jr. BRUCEFIELD SALES — SERVICE Phone Collect: HU 2-9250, Clinton SCOTT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Notice to Visitors Because of overcrowding in the public areas of the Hospital, and the fact it is necessary to accommodate a maximum number of patients in the halls, it is necessary to restrict visiting privileges until further notice.. 1. Not more than one visitor can be permitted a patient at one time. Visits are to be limited to not more than one-half hour. 2. To reduce movement in the corridors as much as pos- sible, it is urged that visits be limited to the mem- bers of a patient's immediate family. 3. In the case of maternity patients, only the mother and husband of the patient can be admitted. 4. Children under 15 years of age are not permitted in rooms or wards, and parents are urged to refrain from bringing children to the Hospital, except in cases of necessity. 5. Visiting hours for private, semi -private and ward patients are as follows: 2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. 7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Daily it is regretted it is necessary to introduce these restrictions in visiting privileges at this time. Patients and public alike will realize, however, that in view of the crowded conditions that exist, no alternative Is available if the well-being of the patient is to be reserved . is.,..rcav wiresri^. TIM WEEK AND NEXT THE OSWALD MYSTERY. By RAY ARGYLE The mystery of Lee Harvey may long echo down the can- yons of history. Because of in- credible police stupidity—and the fact of his murder cam be termed noth- ing less—what began as one man's shame h a s become the shame of an entire na- tion. The strange Ray Argyle story of Lee Oswald, t h e demented, twisted assassin in whose fevered mind burned a hideous desire for revenge and infamy, this week seems destin- ed to remain forever an enigma. Lee Oswald died as he had lived—defiant, hateful, without apparent remorse for the awful crime with which he stood charged. The bullet that tore at Os- wald's vitals before the eyes of millions of television viewers the Sunday before last in Dal- las served no one. but Oswald himself. Deserving as he might have been of this ignoble fate, his death at the hands of Jack Ruby accomplished no end oth- er than to deprive the world of its only chance of finding the real cause of John F. Kennedy's assassination. Lee Oswald fits perfectly—al- most too perfectly, it might be said—the classic pattern of the assassin. Born 24 years ago of a wi- dowed mother in New Orleans, Oswald grew up in a lonely world of his own making. He devoured Marxist litera- ture even as a boy but was, ac- cording to his teachers, a poor student. Childhood acquaintanc- es recalled that he kept to him- self. On a high school question- naire, he left blank a line which asked the names of close friends. Oswald in 1956. joined the U. S. Marines, where he learned how to handle a rifle. He be- came something of a marksman, but "his sergeant remembered that Oswald had been a "hot head" who would flare up at the slightest incident. In 1959, Oswald made his way to the Soviet Union, there to re- main three years. He at first re- nounced his U.S. citizenship, but after nsarrying a Russian girl, appealed for permission to re- turn to America. The U.S. Em- bassy in Moscow loaned him $425 and a year ago, Oswald came back to the U.S., bringing with him his wife and child. He repaid the loan, lived for a time in New Orleans where he was arrested in connection with a disturbance arising from his handing out pro -Castro leaf- lets, and seemed to travel back and forth from New Orleans to Dallas. Oswald had drawn his final unemployment insurance cheque the day he landed a job at the, Texas School Book Depository. He moved his family in with a suburban` Dallas family, rented a small room in the city, and commuted at week ends. Oswald made a mysterious trip to Mexico 'City at the end of September, travelling with two women and a man in a car. There, he visited the Cuban and Russian consulates, seeking an entry visa for the Soviet Un- ion. Told that it would take time to process his application, he stomped out of both offices in a huff. Meanwhile, Oswald h a d bought a mail-order rifle for $12.75. He broke his usual com- muting schedule on the day be- fore the assassination, spending Thursday night with his family. The next day, he went to work at the building overlooking the route of the president's parade, carrying a long package under his arm. Challenged by a po- liceman, he said it contained window blinds. The rest is history—although it has not been satisfactorily ex- plained what caused a detective to challenge him in the street near his rooming house after the president's shooting. There is as yet no evidence to link Oswald either with Ruby or with anyone else. From what has been learned of Oswald's life, he emerges as a whining malcontent, a loner. But when did Oswald—if the police are right, as it would seem they are in naming him as the Presi- dents killer—first hatch his scheme of assassination? Oswald had been honorably discharged from the Marine Corps in 1959 but that dis- charge was revoked after his trip to Moscow, and replaced with a dishonorable discharge. In January, 1961, Oswald wrote from Moscow to U.S. Navy secretary John Connally in Washington. Connally, later to become Texas governor, rode with President Kennedy in the fateful Dallas parade and was himself wounded by the assas- sin. Oswald's 1959 letter, unearth- ed after the President's death, warned that he would "employ all means" to right the injus- tice done him. This may be the most vital clue in the strange story of Lee Oswald. HOW MARMALADE TREES GOT THEIR ODD NAME The marmalade tree is a mem- ber of the star -apple family. It produces a large egg-shaped drupe tasting like marmalade. Marmalade itself comes in many forms, being made with oranges, quindes, lemons, limes, peaches or apricots, along with parts of rind and a mixture of sugar and spices. FREE SERVICE TEXACO FUEL CHIEF Now round-the-clock free service to Texaco custom- ers! Plus an annual clean- ing and adjusting of your home oil heating equipment —also completely free. You pay only for defective parts. Call us today for Texaco Fuel Chief—the economi- cal, cleaner -burning heat- ing oil. Walden Broadfoot. yotlo+rs,. 686.W .Seaforth Christmas TREES Nicely Trimmed Pine Trees 4 to 10 Feet — We Deliver Gordon Noble PHONE 71-W — SEAFORTH WIND • TORNADO • CYCLONE Insurance R. F. McKERCHER Phone 849 R. 4 - Seaforth Representing the Western Farmers'. Weather' Insurance Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont. EARLY INDUSTRIAL SECRET For seven centuries, the Chin- ese succeeded in keeping the secret of making porcelain, first popularized in Europe by Marco Polo. At last, early in the 17th century the Japanese captured a potter in one of their Korean wars. He taught porcelain mak- }ng, using kaolin discovered anew in Japanese territory. True porcelain was first produc- ed about 900 A.D. and was be- ing manufactured on a com- mercial scale during the Sung Dynasty of China, between 960 and 1279 A.D. Shortly after this period, enamelled porcelain was initiated, with all its variety and beauty. Sell that unnecessary piece of furniture through a Huron Ex- positor Classified Ad. Phone 141. 4 DID 'TOO KNOW Phone • . • 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/ be of service P JOHN J. WALSH 271-3000 — 48 Rebecca St., STRATFORD Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada WEDDING INVITATIONS Phone 141 — Seaforth , i ).. f ..l�5-1 r ;t- i y+.fr x' i ;., I w• i 5- 5-' r' � u� 1,[+' i b:4, r� .. n, ,.,....,, ..r, .' G,. '.ti, ,5. .�.. .. ...s, • . Buy yourself A CHRISTMAS PRESENT! H & N 'Nickchicks' Save ! ! $3.00 per 100 Order your Day -Old 'Nickchicks' Before December 21st and, Save $3.00 per 100 Birds Take Delivery Any Time Next Spring Write or Phone: HENDERSON TARTED CHIC'KS SEAFORTH Phone 588 ONTARIO 1 5- 1 yr r 15- 1,w' t i .vr r. Y„•.ri". �•'.e....� 1, r,w wrw le)prele) rtwr r ..,ti,.•,�. .. ,•. .. p..,.,, .. ,S, ..',". .. .. .. i w i) 5- 5,=" � �� i ue1 u- r 1 � 5-' r .w 5 r 1)10115- 1i ,101 5- r yr r e- i ,w- ) P 5 r ,S... ,•....�. • ,4 .. ...�. • i . ;k .. r„ ".4. ,s, .�. • +•« .4. • .•.... ,F, .. ,•....',i. ,5, . '„ •• ,.,, ..t, .. d.. ,k .. ,s...'.k „ K,. :k .',.,.. r„ �... ,.,, .. ,•,, .. ..'R, •. ,5, .. LOOK NO FURTHER ! See the Grand Display of Gilt Suggestions In the Store and Windows of your Christmas Store For Every Member of the Family, at g', FOR THE , PHOTOGRAPHY ENTHUSIASTS! • KODAK CAMERAS • MOVIE CAMERAS • MOVIE AND SLIDE PROJECTORS • FILMS and SUPPLIES CHRISTMAS CARDS • • A COLORFUL SELECTION Available in Boxes or Single GIFT Wrapping Paper Seals and Tags of Every Kind for Attractive Presents. Pipes, Tobacco Pouches, Cigarette Rollers, Shaving Sets, Electric Razors, Shaving Brushes and Bowls, Kodaks, Leather Wallets, Travelling Kits and Lighters. TOILET GOODS A few of the well-nown brands of toilet goods avail- able at our store: Yardley, ' Faberge', Evening in Paris, Max Factor, old Spice, Friendship Garden, Desert Flower and many others— Cosmetic Sets, Quality Soaps, Bath Salts, Colognes, Dust- ing Powders, Comb, Brush and Mirror Sets, Gift Sta- tionery. ALL MAKES OF Electric Shavers At SPECIAL. PRICES For Christmas Gifting ! Give an Electric Shaver—the every -day -in -the -year Gift! We stock Smiles 'n Chuckles Neilson's and Rowntree - Chocolates IN. CHRISTMAS WRAPPED BOXES Would you like a F -R -E -E CHRISTMAS PRESENT? Lovely "Regal" Walking Doll or "Eldon" Electric Road Racing Set Come in and fill out an entry blank. Nothing to buy! You need not be present to win. ■ "The Rexall Keatungs arena Drug Store" NI. B. Hoover., Phm.B, Seaforth Phone 2S B,. Xeating,,,Phim,B. • • • • • s a • • f. e r