Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1970-04-16, Page 8:THE HURON EXPOSITOR, SEAFORTWONT., APRIL 16, 1970 1410*5 of Walton Euchre Attracts 16 Tables Don Hunt ENAMEL SALE 14.nja i M,. e CC' Grey Twp. Approves dr, $150 Grant 1.k. Look out for those Dodgers Correspondent MRS. ALLAN McCALL A well-attended euchre party was held Friday evening in the Walton Community Hall, when 16 tables were in play. Prizes won included: High Lady, Mrs. Nelson Reid; Low, Mrs. Harold Bolger; Novelty, Mrs. Pete Mc- Donald; High man, Keith Clare; Low, Ed Godkin; Novelty, Ricky Sholdice. Lunch was served by the com- mittee, Mrs. Doug Ennis, Mrs. Roy Williamson, Mrs. Harvey Craig, Mrs. Harold Bolger and Mrs. Ernie Stevens. Mrs. Douglas Lawless and Dianne ,and Mrs. Ron Uhler and Jeff of Burlington, spent a day this past week with theirparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Turnbull. Mr. and Mrs. John Currie, Cheryl and Rhonda of Brampton visited Sunday at the home of ' Mr. and Mrs. Allan McCall. Miss Corrie ,De Ruyter of Stratford, spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. Jan Van Vliet, Sr. Mrs. Roy Williamson was a patient in the Seaforth Commu- nity Hospital for a couple of days the first of the. week. Mr. and Mrs. ,Nelson Reid, Mrs. W. C. Hackwell, Mrs. Ethel 'HackWell and Mrs. Jean Miller were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs:. Reid Hatetwell, Exeter. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Finlayson and family, Kippen called at the home Of Mr. and Mrs. Mac Shol- dice on Sunday. Misses HelenSearle and Mary Bewley of St. Joseph's Hospital, London, spent the weekend with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Baan attended the eraduates' service, on April 5, where their son at- • tends the Ridgetown Agricul- tural College. Mr. and Mrs. Ranton Mitchell and Mrs. William .Simpson . of Mitchell, visited Mrs. Leonard Leeming last Thursday. Mrs. Simpson remained for a few days' with her sister. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Steele, Seaforth, and Miss Dorothy Sho- brook, London, spent Saturday at the home of Mrs. Leonard Leeming. Correspondent Mrs. Ken Elligsen ' The Brodhagen 4-H Club held their sixth meeting at the home of Sherry and Sandra Kappes. During the discussion the girls learned ways vegetables can be used as garnishes, relishes and centre pieces. •A dentre piece consisting of a cauliflower, sliced carrots and pickles was as- sembled at the meeting and the girls helped .to prepare •a vege-e table platter,by cutting radishes, celery and carrots into attractive • shapes. A dip was made by Sharon Smith and went over well with the vegetables and potato chips. Hot chocolate was served by the hos- tesses. Sharon Smith then thanked Mrs. Kappes for the use of her home. The seventh meeting of the prodhagen 4-H club was held at the home of our assistaht leader Mrs. Ken Smith, The girls were given a small quiz on the identi- CHURCH UNIT MEETINGS The 8th and 16th Unit of Duff's United Church,Walton, met at the home of Mrs. Wilbur Turnbull, Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Alvin McDonald opened the meeting with the "Call to Worship". Hymn 15, "For the Beauty of the Earth" was sung with Mrs. Jim Fritz as pianist. Mrs. Alves McDonald read the scripture from Ephesians 1: 1-4. The topic, "What's with a family", was taken by Mrs. Jim Fritz and included a discussion. Mrs. Doug Fraser was in charge of business. Minutes were read by the" secretary, Mrs. George McCall. The roll call was answered by 13 members fication of thirty vegetables_ Thetopic of the al eeerng was unusual vegetables. The girls prepared and baked stuffed pep- pers and cooked and mashed yams, The Brussels sprouts were boiled and served with a butter sauce. The escarole was' made into a salad and the celeriac was boiled. , For lunch the girls sampled the vegetables they had prepared and. experienced many new fla- vors. The Achievement Day is May 2 in Mitchell when the de monstra- .tion ePotatoes. Every Day" will be given by Heather Pegg and. Janet Scherbarth. Mr. and Mrs. Lavern. Wolfe accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Mar- tin Diegel to Toronto last weekend to see the Home and Garden Show. While there, they visited Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Haupt and Mr, and Mrs. jack Sumerville and fa- mily. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ahrens, and 1 visitor was present. Lunch was served by Mrs. Don McDonald, Mrs. Doug Fra- ser and the hostess. 4-11 MEETINGS The seventh and eighth mee- tings were combined and, held at the home of Kim Humphries. The notes and questions were given by the leaders for both meetings. Each member brought fruit bread that was to be made for the home assignment and Grape sparke was made at this mee- ting. The Walton II e Fruit Loops" held their seventh meeting at Mrs. D. McDonald's home. Ten girls answered the roll call. Mrs. McDonald gave notes and discus- sion followed on Fruit Table ar- rangements, hoW it should be displayed in the Record Books. A cheese tray was made up by Linda Johnston and Beverley Mc- Call. The eighth meeting followed the same evening for weice each girl had brought different fruit bread as their home assignment. This was displayed on a cheese tray. Demonstration' was a fruit drink, Grape Sparkle; which was started by Mrs. McDonald and finished by Heather. Record Books were checked and work was done en the skit for Achievement Day, which is to be held on Saturday. April 18. at 'the Seaforth District High School. Each girl who took the project will exhibit her Record Book, Recipe File and an in- dividual serving of a prepared fruit dessert with the recipe. MISSION BAND The Mission Band. met in the church basement Sunday morning with' 37 members present. After the Call to Worship, the secre- tary's report was given by Mary • Searle. Stephen Dennis gave the, treasurer's report, followed by the collection. Peggy Dennis will play the hymns for the May mee- ting. A song was sung with •Mrs. Merton eiackwell at the piano. Teachers were Mrs. Ross Bennett. Mrs. 'Merton Hackwell, Mrs. William Roe and Mrs. Mac Sholdice, assisted by Debbie Wey, Burlington, visited' with his parents„ Me. and Mrs. Wilfred Ahrens this weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Don Seymour and family moved to Huron Park last weekend arid Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gilbert have moved from the Riehl apartment to the Sey- mour home which was formerly the home of William Diegel. Mrs. Michael Connelly, Wat- burg, Mrs. irk Hearold and Steven, Sebringville, visited re- cently with Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Wolfe. Mr. and Mrs.. Ken Elligsen and boys were guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Richard' Leonhardt at' Strathroy. .Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Wolfe attended the Wolfe-Henderson wedding on Saturday at the Knox Presbyterian,Church at Listowel and the dinner and reception at the Brodhagen Community Hall.' Mr. Rudolf Franeck and Ro- bert, Toronto, visited Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Wolfe and other old acquaintances. Grey Township Council met in the Township Hall at Ethel for the April meeting when Resolu- tions passed included: That the Clerk-Treasurer be authorized to request permission from the Department of Munici- pal Affairs to transfer the ac- cumulated surplus of $31,847 to a reserve fund; - That the report of Engineer H. H. Todgham of the Beauchamp Creek Drain, dated January 28th, 1970, be provisionally adopted and By-law No. 11 of 1970 be given first and second reading; That the Brussels Medical- Dental Building be given a grant in the amount of $150.00; That the Regional Assessment Commissioner be requested to initiate in his census programme the counting of dogs harboured upon the premises assessed; That Grey Township Council endorses the resolution from the 1 Town of Goderich to petition the Provincial Government to imme- diately consider the feasibility of providing adequate four-lane linkage from these Western re- gions to the MacDonald-Cartier Freeway; That membership fees in the amount of $20.00 be paid to Huron County Municipal Officers' As- sociation. Approved accounts paid in- cluded: General - $5,387,66 and Roads & Bridges - $7,320.40. UCW Has Meeting Unit #3 of Northside United Church Women met at the home 'of Mrs. Albert Baker, Tuesday, with an attendance of 12. Worship included a scripture reading from the New English Bible about the trial of Jesus, an' Easter poem and a reading "A Co-operative Garden" by Miss Ethel Dennis. A chapter "Pilate's Wife" from the book "Famous Women of the Bible" ; was read by Mrs. Baker. An "April" poem_ and a prayer, was, offered, by Mrs. E. Heist. The roll call was answered by naming your favourite spring flo-t wer, followed by an exchange of Hewer slips.. After co/electing the business Mrs. Harry Brown spoke on the "Indian Problem". aided by a recording of an interview between Pierre Berton and an Indian Af- fairs official on the same topic. Refreshments were, Served be Mrs. Leslie Oliver, Mrs. Peteie Dunlop and the hostess. Mrs. W. J. Putman iteanke.d Mrs. Baker for offering, her home and those who took Hart in the meeting. OBITUARY CHARLES A, McLEAN Charles 4. McLean of Go- .de-rich, passed away on March 31st. He had been fornierly em- ployed by Robert W. Campbell : of. McKillop for a number of years. Mr. McLean is 'survived by his wife, the former Marjorie Leemby and two daughters. Mrs. Paul Dirksen of Winnipeg, Man., and Mrs. John D. Universal Of St. Catherines. • Funeral services were held - on Friday, April 3rd, 'with in- terment in Maitland Cemetery, Goderich: Ten years ago, the word around the baseball beat' was that likable Walt Alston was about to be chopped by the Dod- gers. As the 1970 season got un- derway, there was Walt Alston, still as likable as ever, stand- ing calmly at one end of the Dodger dugout listening to the same experts tell him this could be the year for his Los Angeles team to win it all. Fog 17 years, Alston has defied the critics and managed a baseball team his way. Mpst of the - time, it hae worked', aided, of courses, by the million- dollar arms of Don Drysdale and Sandy Koufax. Both are now gone from the scene, but some strong new throwers are front. and centre, teady and able to give Alston the same one-two punch. The two. are Bill Singer, a brilliant 20-game winner' last year with a fine 2.34 earned run average. He's another Drysdale and like Don, thrives on hard work. Laet year,, he pitched 315 innings for the Dodgers, the equivalent of 35 complete games. The Koufax of• the new Dodgers is Claude' Osteen, another 20- game winner last year with a 2.66 ERA. The Dodgers 'have a third young pitcher, Don Sutton, who won .17 games last year, and if he finds his control he should easily win 20 this time. And pitching-isn't the. Dodg- er's only long suit. The Wield is set with West Parker at first, National' League rookie of the year) Ted Sizemore at second, Maury Wills at 'short and Bill Sudakis or rookie Bill 'Buckner at third. The outfield features one of the best hitters in baseball, when the mood suits him. Willie Davis has been tabbed as the player to make the fans forget Willie Mays for 10 years. Mays is still around, and Willie' Davis was almost fclrgotten last year. Veirlfie Last two mthnths of the season. Davis belted the ball at a .350 clip and claims' he will hit .400 this year. He has the ability, but,in ,the past he has been prone o change his batting style as, often as he changenils sweatshirt. The main threat to the Dodg- ers in the National. League(West) should come from last year's. champs, the Atlanta Braves. It's true that Hank Adtbe'rs at year older, but Gordie Howe showed us all that elle really does begin ar40. And Aaron is only 36. so a repeat of his .300 season with 44 homers isn't out of the question'. The complete collapse of the Braves at the hands 'of the Mets, May have destroyed the con- fidence of some of the younger players. But Orlando Cepeda is a much better hitter than he' showed last year (.257, 22 homers) and Rico Carty is a true all-star (.342 after a bout with tuberculosis) so Atlanta should be tough. With Aaron in right, Carty in left and Tony Gonzales (.294) in centre, the,Bravee have the best hitting outfield in base- ball. :Only Torn Seaver won more games than keuckler Phil Nierko (23-12), 'end' despite the Mets, Ron Reed won. 18. The other teams iii the, West shouldn't challenge the Dodgers or Braves. The best of the rest should be Cincinnati, but the Redlegs seldom produce when it counts. Sparky Anderson, who played some great second base for Toronto Maple Leafs in the International League, is the new manager . But the Reds have the same strength as last year - and the same weakness. The hitting is first-rate, the pitching third-rate. And you doh't win pennants without a solid staff. National League batting champ Pete Rose (.348), and Bobby Tolan (.305) are back in the outfield. And Johnny Bench, gives the Reds the best catch- ing in basebalLe The Giants have no new blood to help Mays, Juan Marichal, and Willie McCovery, and San Diego appears a cinch for last. The sixth team in the west, Houston, could be the dark horse. They won 10 out of 12 from the Mets last year, so anything is possible. PREDICTION: I-Los Angeles, 2-Atlanta, 3-Houston, 4-Cincin- nati„ 5-San Francisco, 6-San Diego. In conclusion, this means the Dodgers and Mets will meet for the NL title with •the Dodgers winning it. Baltimore and Min- nesota will repeat -their 1969 final with the same results. An Expositor Classified will pay you dividends. Have you tried ow? Dial 527-0240. erwtmomm.fissowimassmumnir, For Your SPRING GRASS SEED Requirements We will have avaIlable a full line -of grass seeds. We are over stocked on RED' CLOVIR, 4 Ix This is your opportunity to use Red CloVer for soil building purposes. We will have avail- able by seeding time plow-down mixtures, priced to sell. I R. N. ALEXANDER Londesboro 482-7475 ' or 523-4399 News of, Brodhagen Busy Schedule for 4-H Clubs Datsun1600 has everything you need to get ahead 4 LATEX FLAT 5.95 GALLON 1.99 QUART WALLPAPER & PAINT DIAL 527-0550 SEAFORTH "The best friend iatir home,ever had: 14, McKILLOP UNIT The McKillop Unit of the U.C.W. met at the church, Wed- nesday evening with 16 ladies present. Mrs. John-Ettrech presided for the devotions and opened the meeting with a reading on Ste- wardship, "What shall I give?" Mrs. Campbell Wey was pianist. Mrs. Murray Dennis read the scripture from Exodus 4: 1-17. Mrs. Burch' gave the meditation. A skit, "The Truth of the Matter is", was given by Mrs. Burch, Mrs. William Roe, Mrs. Murray Dennis and Mrs. Don Dennis. This was folloWed by a discussion on "We have to think of what we have, what we are, and what we can become," The topic on "Stewardship" was given by Mrs. Dave Watson, followed by • a poem, "Try to spread a little happiness". ewers. Burch closed with prayer. Mrs. Campbell Wey was in charge of business, Mrs. Norman Scliade received the offering which was dedicated by Mrs. Wey. Plans were made for the May meeting which will be held at the home of Misses Ethel and Teenie Dennis in Seaforth, which will feature a sale of plants, baking and sewing. The general. U.C.W. meeting will be held in C the church May 6. Mrs. Wey closed the meeting with prayer. Lunch was served by Mrs. Dave Watson, Mrs. Keith Rock and Mrs. Glen McNichol. 411jannin Moore GALLON • 2025 QUART Benjamin Moore Paints THIS CLASSIFIED D Got Fast Results! . eeeee .eseeeis....e.eireefe LARGE 'baby crib, color, blondo innenspring mattress. collent condition, 527-0292. 11-254 Datsun 1600 is designed to get you wher you're going as quitkly, comfortably and economically as possible'. There's a powerful 96 h.p. overhead Cam erIgIne under the hood. It's a rally-winner. Freeway eater. You get all the acceleration you need for • passing, all the handling ability you need for parking, and more gas mileage than yo'u ever 'thought possible. And that's not all. The Datstfrt1.600 is big where It eating, The there's a Datsun ror you: 1000 2-Door and 4-Door Deluxe Sedans. 1600 2-Door and 4-Door Deluxe Sedans and Wagon. 2404 Sports, 1600 and 2000 Spools. 1600 Pickup. Over 80d' Datsun dealers In Neeth America. Nissan Automobile 0e, (Canada) Ltd, factory lone offices arum:farts depots et: Vatid-OuVer, Toronto, Montreal, Halifax. There Eire over 230 Datsun dealers coast-to.coast. Test drive your Datsun at: ERALD'S SUPERTEST 249, Conte ‘. kieteti and. 8', Seaforth, Ontario -Itelenb.one 527400 the more-for-your-money ca, SuGCESTED RETAIL PRICE, PORT OF ENTRY, TORONTO a puig TAX,LICENCE, LOCAL FRE;CHT, IF ANY inches are on the inside, not on the-outside. It comes loaded with extras that others call options. And it costs around half what you can pay for a big car. Which is the whole point, If you're looking for a car that gives you a little luxury, a lot of performance and a great deal of economy, buy a Datsun 1600 get ahead, Of the game. FRO you save, It will help you to • mi5 and invest all the money The.Seaforth housewife who rolaced this ad, sold the baby crib by 9 a.m. Thursday morning and then received Four more calls befOre nonri. That's the kind of response you can expect from an ACTION AD in The Huron Expositor Phonp 527-0240