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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1961-06-01, Page 64•-*`tT,, HURON EXPOSITOR, SEAFORTH, ONT., JUSTE 11 1961 NEWS OF BRODHAGEN MARIED SIXTY YEARS AGO, -.MR.-, MRS. HENRY ROCK CELEBRATE Mr. and Mrs.- Henry Rock cele- brated their 60th wedding anni- versary on Tuesday with a dinner for the immediate family, in the basement of St. Peter's Lutheran Church, and a reception was held in the Community Hall in the eve- ning. Mrs. Rock is 82 and Mr. Rock 87, Their daughter and son- in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ah- rens (Frieda), RR 4, Mitchell, cele- brated their 25th anniversary on the same day. They have a family of two sons and three daughters: Fred, of Kitchener; Martin, RR 1, Bornholm; Mrs. Dan Fischer (Em- ma), and Mrs. William Siemon (Hilda), RR 1, Bornholm, and Mrs. Edward Ahrens (Frieda), RR 4, Mitchell. One daughter (Martha), Mrs. Henry Hinz, predeceased them. There are 11 grandchil- dren and a number of great grand- children. Master Richard Leonhardt won first prize in the soap box derby (rural) in Mitchell on the Victoria Day holiday. The Dublin Bowling Club held a banquet and social evening at the Community Hall here Satur- day evening. Mrs. Eli Rapien is confined to Stratford Hospital, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Simmons, of Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. S. Riehl. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Scherbarth, of Detroit, with her mother, Mrs. J. L. Bennewies. Mr. and Mrs. 'Russell Sholdice accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Jermyn, of Mitchell, and Mr. and Mrs. Alf Francis, of Monkton, to News of Dublin Children Receive First Communion At St. Patrick's At the 8:30 Mass on Sunday morning at St. Patrick's Church, Rev. R. Durand officiating, 19 chil- dren made their First Holy Com- munion. The children were: Pat Flanagan, Pat Delaney, Casey Van Bakel, Donald Looby, Tommy Goet- tler, Henry Fleuks, Larry Feeney, Fred Nyland, Delaine O'Rourke, Mary Kelly, Catherine Kramers, Jane Looby, Donna McLaughlin, Mary Ann Ducharme, Maureen Ry- an, Astrid Segeren, Lou Ann Row- land, Rose Marie Eckert, Cheryl McGrath. Women's Institute Meets The Women's Institute of Dub- lin held their monthly meeting at the home of . Mrs. • Dale Anddrson on Tuesday evening. Eighteen members and two guests were pre- sent. The roll call was answered by "Tips on storing clothing." There is to, be a Film. Day held at the Huron College, Western Uni- versity, London,. to which the members are invited. It was de- cided to take the courses of "Con- sumer Workshop" and "What is New in Home Furnishings," It was alst) decided that the ex- ecutive act as a resolution com- mittee. Mrs.,Thomas Butters gave an interesting report of the South Perth District convention at St. Pauls, Ont. Mrs. Harold Pethick, the president, reported in detail the officers' conference held at the O.A. College, Guelph. Household hints were given by Mrs. Dale An- derson and the motto, "Do not work all your life making a liv- ing, but work to live all your life," was taken by Mrs. John Bur- chill. Mrs. Herb Britton read an interesting article about famous women. Arrangements were then made for the next meeting, to be held in Dublin parish hall on June 27. The ladies of the Seaforth WI and the Glen Gowrie WI have consent- ed to be present at the coming meeting. Mr. Fred Peel, of Sea - forth, will attend and give a talk and show slides of his trip to Rus- sia. • After the meeting an auction sale of plants, bulbs and mystety boxes took place. The proceeds amounted to $8.70. Lunch was served by the committee in charge. Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Cronin and children, Stratford, with Mrs. Elizabeth Cronin and relatives. Mr. and Mrs. John Robinson and Mr. Tom O'Rourke, Dundas, with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Looby. Miss Kathleen Byrne, Reg.N., of Montreal, and Miss Monica Byrne with Mrs. Peter Dill, Rochester, • • Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Dillon and family, St. Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly and family, Sea - forth, with Mrs. Louis Dillon and Dorothy Dillon. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kelly and Mr. and Mrs. Keith Kelly and Nancy Kelly, Kitchener, with Mr. and Mrs. Fergus Kelly. Mr. Joe O'Connell, Davenport, Iowa, with Miss Mary O'Connell. Shower, Honors Bride -Elect About 50 friends and neighbors gathered to hold a showed for Miss Audrey Godkin, bride -elect of Friday, June 2, at the home of Nits. Stanley Hillen. The, evening program consisted of contests con - chided by Mrs. Gilbert Smith and Mrs. Stanley Hillen. Others tak- ing part were: Reading, Marjorie Boyd; accordian Selection, Gerald- ine Nennis; vocal duet, Margaret Hillen and Eileen Smith; piano duet, • Margaret and .!Jean Hillen, and a reading by Eileen Smith. Jean Patrick and June Hillen brought in the gifts, which were presented after an address was read, by Jean Hillen. Margaret Boydand Eileen Smith assisted the bride-foxbe in opening•the gifts. 4.4 a Lions convention at Kingston. Mrs, Norman Rode, of Detroit visited with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Prueter. Mrs, Lydia Querengesser, Mrs. Frank Swigger and Mrs. Freeman Spencer, of Detroit, with Mrs. W. L. Querengesser esser and other rela- tives, Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Messer- schmidt, Arlen Ruth Mary Bone, De- troit, with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bennewies and other relatives. Mrs. Lavern Wolfe spent several days with her mother, Mrs. John Hinz, Sr., Sebringville. Flowers adorned the altar of St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Brod- hagen, on Sunday, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rock's diamond wedding anniversary this week. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Grove, of Detroit, with Mrs. Elizabeth Rock for the weekend. ST. COLUMBAN Mr. and Mrs. Auguste Ducharme, Angus Kennedy and Miss Rita Kennedy in Windsor attending the nurses' graduation at Hotel Dieu. Miss • Catharine Murray, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murray, Detroit, was one of the graduating class., Mrs. W. J. Lane in Kitchener. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Morris, Lon- don, with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Mor- ris. Miss Anne Nolan and Vincent Nolan, Kitchener, with Mrs. Eliza- beth Nolan and Frank. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Murray in Windsor. Jack Malone, Guelph, with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Malone. Miss Anne Maloney and Miss Helen Maloney, London, with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maloney. Miss Nell Doyle, London, with Ted Doyle. Gordon Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Angus Kennedy, receivetl his Bachelor of Arts degree on Wed- nesday at convocation of Univers- ity of Toronto. Mrs. Angus Kennedy is in To- ronto. McKillop Dancers Enter Competition For the fourth annual square and step dancing competition at Dundalk on June. 1, 2 and 3, the McKillop Squarettes have been en- tered by Mrs. 0. Storey. Entries have come from an area extending from Powassan on the north "to Port Robinson in the Niagara Pen- insula. Square dancing each night: Thursday, 15 elementary schools; Friday, 10 senior groups; Satur- day, professional groups; step dancing each night, finals on Sat- urday. Vince Mountford, of Bramptbn, will act as emcee each night, and Earl Heywood, of Wingham, will give the compulsory calls. RUSSIANS FIRST IN N. PACIFIC Although Eastern Canada was discovered discovered soon after Columbus reached America in, 1492, more than 250 years passed before the first European ship was sighted off the coast of British Columbia. First to sail near the rocky headlands were Russian explorers searching for the sea otter. It was not long, however, before Spain, Britain and France were attempting to carve themselves empires in the Pacific. Rivalry between Britain and Spain was fierce for a few years. LAWN ,CHAIRS Unpainted $7.95 e Rent TOOLS School Action Begins (Stratford Beacon -Herald) When Judge Frank Fingland, shortly before 5:00 o'clock adjourn- ed Friday's hearing in the Dublin Separate School election case, at Goderich, 47 objections had been taken to names ,on the list of 254 who voted last March 15. Two were on behalf of those upholding the election, the remaining 45 were filed by E. D. Bell, Ka, Exe- ter, counsel for Joseph L. Ryan, of McKillop,complainant. ant. His honor adjourned the hearing until Tues- day at 10 a.m. Should he then up- hold any considerable number of the objections, there will likely be a new election—the fourth for the selection of five trustees for Sep- arate School Union Sections 2, 3 and 4, Hibbert, and No. 1, McKil- lop, Some ratepayers in Logan al- so support the union school. New Vote Possible Ten persons sat about the long table normally used by counsel, as Judge Fingland vacated the bench and sat with Mr. Bell, three town- ship clerks, three spokesmen for these upholding the election; Zach Ryan, for the complainant, and Miss E. A. Cooper, court reporter. Voting on March 15 by married women not assessed as joint own- ers accounted for many of the ob- jections, and some farmers' sons, who can vote in municipal elec- tions but not in separate school elections were found to have vot- ed in this one. A few who voted are aliens, but they are qualified for separate school purposes. Should his honor void the elec- tion ,and appeal is not taken, there will have to be another meeting of the ratepayers of the union school, and the minister of educa- tion will set the date for the next polling. Clerks J. M. Eckert, Roy Burchill and Kenneth Reany, of McKillop, Hibbert and Logan, left their as- sessment rolls as court exhibits in this case, which it was later point- ed out will delay completion of this year's unless the books are released on Tuesday. "I am hopeful we will finish on Tuesday," Judge Fingland said at adjournment. "I may reserve my decision, or I may give it when we get through with this story. Then there is always the right of appeal." Mr. Bell thanked the clerks for the efficient way in which they gave their evidence. There were 34 persons who on March 15 voted, though not on the lists, after taking an oatth in the form required by the Separate Schools Act: "I am an assessed householder or freeholder in School Section I am of the full age of 21; I am a supporter of Roman Catholic School Section ; as such supporter I have the right to vote at this meeting." Statute Studied At the opening, Mr. Bell drew upon a pile of law books and re- ports in citing relevent statutory provisions and also three cases: Moffat vs. City of,Hatl►ilton, Mc- Leod vs. City of Toronto; and Bidal vs. Michaud, a 1952 case. "The basis on which this en- quiry is sought," he said, "is that certain persons voted who had no right to vote, and for that reason the election is invalid, in that cer- tain persons were elected or de- feated who otherwise might not have been. The matter may turn upon who is entitled to vote in an election of this kind, and in this connection the statute is not en- tirely clear. I refer to Section 26 of the Separate Schools Act. It in- dicates that every householder and freeholder, 21, who is a supporter of a rural separate school, is en- titled to vote, and for our purpose this is a rural separate school." "Who are supporters?" asked his honor. Those living in the area?" "I don't think it is necessary to our procedure that we know that," replied Mr. Bell. "A supporter is a ratepayer, as it has been inter- preted in a case I will quote." Mr. Bell pointed out that Judge Thompson in the Hamilton case cited had defined fi householder ehol der 9 and freeholder as equivalent to owner or tenant. "I think I should be bound by it," said his honor. "Then we have a procedure rea- sonably simple," said Mr. Bell. "If we find opposite the name of a party the symbol for owner or ten- ant, and also supporter, that gives the right to vote; and if that con- flicts with the pollbook we can determine quickly, I think, the names which appear to be objec- tionable under this rule." Duties Recounted Rev. Leo E. Reed -Lewis, parish priest at Clinton, who was chair- man for the March 15 election, with Rev. Remi Durand and Rev. John McCowell as secretaries, test- ified in the forenoon. "Up until Thursday, February 9," he said, "any information I had on the separate school situation I received'yfrom the newspapers. On that night, at the invitation of the people concerned and at the in- stance of the vicar -general of the diocese, I' was to chair a meeting on February 10 in the new school in Dublin, with the idea of getting the. ratepayers to agree on the date for their annual election of five trustees. We had the meeting; it was an orderly meeting. March 15 was set and unanimously agreed upon. The ratepayers had also un- animously agreed ,I should . be chairman of the election meeting. "I want it clearly understood I chaired the first meeting and elec- tion on the instance of my ecclesi- astical superior. During the Feb. 10 meeting questions were submit- ted by the ratepayers to the secre- taries, to be forwarded to Mr. Rob - arts (Minister of Education) for his interpretation as to who would have the right to vote. I have a copy today of the letter sent by him to the joint secretaries with his private opinion. The meeting of March 15 began at 10 a.m. The recommendations of Mr. Robarts were outlined, and 1 instructed the people present that We were to use the 1960 assessment roll, subject to the recommenda- tions of Mr. Robarts in determin- ing who was to vote. I made it very clear to all present that my- self as chairman, and the secre- taries would make no decisions specifically on who had a right to vote. If anyone questioned the right of any person to vote, they took an oath on the Bible that they felt they had a right to vote. Thir- ty-four people took this oath with me. Not only did I clearly outline the seriousness of taking this path, but each one of the 34 I went over with them very carefully their du- ties and the matter of taking this oath. Some few decided they would not vote, becauske they were not sure in their own minds as to their right to vote. During the course of the day, until 4 o'clock, 254 all told came -in and voted. At the conclusion of the voting, the joint secretaries and myself counted the vote. I removed the votes from the ballot box, called out the names and they were re- corded on the blackboard of the school. The results, I presume, are known to your honor.". Later the results were recorded as follows: Shea, 146; Bruxer, 141; Ducharme, 135; Feeney, 128; Vog- els, 119 (these five elected); not elected: Kale, 118; Murray, 110; Nolan, 107; Williams, 99; Cronin, 97. IOOF, Rebekahs Hold Service The IOOF and Rebekahs attend- ed divine worship on Sunday morn- ing at Northside United Church. Members were present also from neighboring lodges. The members were accompanied from the lodge rooms to the church by the SDHS Girls' Trumpet Band. The Senior choir sang two num- bers for the occasion, an anthem, "Fairest Lord Jesus," (by James R. Gillette), and a ladies' chorus sang "How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings" (by Liddle). Rev. J. C. Britton spoke appropriately on the subject, "Brotherhood," taking his text from 1 Samuel 20:23. Explorers Group Meet At Bethel The Explorer Group of Bethel Church had their affiliation serv- ice in the church Sunday evening. The Chief Explorer is Mrs. William Roe, assisted by Miss Ethel Den- nis, The keeper of the treasury, Joan Dennis, presented a gift of money to Mrs. Charles Boyd, treas- urer of the WMS. Devotional exercises were con- ducted and the study book sum- marized by each girl telling the highlights of one chapter. A solo, "I•m Only a Little ,Christian," was sung by Betty Roe, and a duet, "The Bible Tells Me So," was sung by Joyce McNichol and Frances Beuei'man. Members of the Ex- plorers are Jean and Betty Roe, Joyce McNichol, Frances Beuer- man, Marianne Wildfong, Starr Fischer, Leona Glanville and Joan Dennis. What Are Grebes? Grebes are related to loons. The name is applied to any member of the diving -bird family Colymbidae. Like loons, grebes are excellent swimmers and divers, but because the legs are attached so far back on the body they are awkward on land. Grebes are -smaller than loons, have the toes bordered by lobes of skin instead of full webs, have rudimentary tails, and in breeding -plumage the head is us- ually adorned with crests, which loons lack. Five species of grebs are found in Canada. * * * What Are .the Five Largest Lakes On the Continent? North - America's five largest lakes' include three of the Great Lakes. The five, in order of size, are Superior, Huron, Michigan, Great Bear and Great Slave. Lake Michigan lies entirely in the Unit- ed States. Lakes Superior and Huron are divided between Can- ada and the States, while Great Bear Lake and Great SlaveLake are situated in Canada's Northwest Territories and are both part of the Mackenzie River system, The area of each lake is as follows: Superior, "31,820 square miles" (11,- 200 square- miles in Canada); Hur- on„ 23,010 (13,675 in Canada); Michigan, 22,400; Great Bear, 12,- 000; Great Slave, 11,170. 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We invite you to enjoy a meal in Our Modem DINING ROOM BREAKFAST: from 7 to 9 a.m. LUNCH: from 12 to 1:30 DINNER:. from 5 to 7 Sandwiches and Light Lunches (A La Carte) Available at other hours from 12 Noon We invite you to use our Din ing Room for Dinner Parties with up to 60 guests COMMERCIAL HOTEL FULLY LICENSED PHONE. 227 SEAFORTH DISTRICT FUNERALS MRS. `CHARLES POLLARD BRUSSELS—There passed away in the Brussels Nursing Home on Wednesday, May 24, in her 85th year, a highly respected person, Mary Emily Bolger, youngest daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James 13olger. She had been an invalid for the past six years. The deceased was born in • Mc- Killop, near Seaforth, on May 20, 1877, and moved to Morris Town- ship as a young girl. On June 20, 1903, she married ed the late Charles les Pollard, youngest son of the late Mr. and Mrs. George Pollard. She is survived by two daugh- ters and one son: (Mary) Mrs. Ed- gar Hollinger, of Fruitland; (Mil- dred) Mrs. W. J. Perrie, of Grey Township, and George, on the home farm, and nine grandchil- dren. The funeral was held from the D. A. Rann funeral home, Brus- sels, on Friday, May 26, with the Rev. H. L. Jenning,s, rector of St. John's Church officiating, assisted by Rev. W. J. Morrison, of Mel- ville Presbyterian Church. Dur- ing the service Mr. Donald Mc- Donald sang "Beyond the Sunset," accompanied by Mrs. Edwin Mar- tin, The pallbearers were four grandsons; Charles Hollinger, Ken- neth Pollard, Donald Perrie and James Perrie, BA., and t w d nephews, Harold Bolger and Nor- ville. Pollard. Burial was made in Brussels cemetery. 1 ZION Mr. and Mrs. Jack Malcolm visit- ed his mother, Mrs. Alexia Mal- colm, in Avon Crest Hospital, Stratford, on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Aikens in Stratford on Thursday. Y Mr. and Mrs. Sterling Graham, of Roys, and Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Burchill with Mr. and Mrs. Her- bert Britton Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hannon and Mr. and Mrs. Elmore Klein- feldt were in London on Sunday and celebrated with Mr. William Cook his 95th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. George Pepper, Mitchell, and Mr. Dalton Balfour with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Pepper on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hannon were in Stratford on Friday and visited Mrs. Alexia Malcolm at Av on Crest Hospital. Misses Joan and Margaret Brit- ton were home for the weekend. The surest place to find a help- ing hand is at the end of your own arm. ' blue coal' Champion Stove and Furnace OS WILLIS DUNDAS DUNDAS and LONEY Phone 573 or 13.8 ALL KINDS as ,a of INSURANCE W. E. SOUTHGATE MAIN ST. : SEAFORTH Phone 334 — Res. 540 and FUEL OIL Win. M. Hart Phone 784 : Seaforth It) Huron County's Finest Used Car Market 1961 Pontiac Strato-Chief ..... 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