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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1977-01-27, Page 5-QEVo 7ii/E 0. P e - • 1-K i li FF/Ci 13116 1 5AyS: • • ,-- Flurry,:before your, new car is-a month old. Come and see uS,Pand hear -all about the VVVriii's Xtend Guarantee .trea_trrient.: We'll tell you how you can protect -your new engine, .• cooling and transmission and e'x'tend the guarantee on these components . that. "parts. and labot)r covered ; up to a filakirriurri of/$2,000! • ,Wynn's Xtend is a series, df remarkable -treatments which: actually condition the metals inside your car, helping to.improveltthrication, cutting down-corrosion ,and maintaining peak performance. We'll-do it all for'you, if you'llke, adding the treatments to your car. at the,regULar_ser.vice intervals. For 'you, there's perfect peace of mind. You can drive - on, confident that you're covered.•. Wynn's Xtend is doing its job inside the most 'expensive working parts 0 your car .. . and there's the cast iron, guarantee, just, in case, .TAcSO:AVAII;ABLE FOR USED CARS'' FOR'IMOKITHS,.OR 12,-(0,0 .MILES.;; Gettiklit _Paton Ltd. , ,g4arrOi_Hntee. *it .,yriti* Xtend Maple' Leaf No. 1 Breakfast Tasty BEE PATTIES • • :A pp. Sugar and Spice Bill Smiley Charting your life B, SMYTH Tuckersmith and Seaford), A former - operatpr of the Harald Sthyth, Brodhagen, A private service was hPld at Winthrop Mill Ephriam E. Haase. fonnerly of Teeswater, passed' the Ingiam Funeral Home (Beach -13.--,R4,-Seaforthrtlied-irt Stratford away at the. Seafotilt Community, thifelY7OTt-likdifeS-414;--Jaatiaiii - Hospital; on Tuesday He was 79. While not in the best Of health for several years he had' been in hospital for three weeks: Born in Howick, he was the son of the late Henry Haase and Mary Ann rabic. Mr, Haase early learnelsl the milling- business in the Listowel area and 35 years ago perchased the Winthrop which 'he continued to operate until 1957 whenhe rented,the mill and commenced fanning north of Winthrop, In 1967 he sold the farm antktetired -to the village, He was predeceased by his first thet0 former Emma Fleihrn flier and in 1949 .1-ie married the former Mrs. Margaret Hodge Horne- 'who survivet-thether with a son Glen Haase, Sault Ste. Marie and a' step SOn.i. Donald lierne,Seaforth. He also is survived- by- 7 grandchildren and .8 great grandchildren and by • sisters, Mrs. James (Vera) 'Englis of Acton and Mrs'. Albert (Ida) Gallangher • of listovvel and a brotber ' David Haase 'of Wyoming U.S.A. • The remains are resting at the Box Funeral' Home- Seaforth. Musicians Union, and a former Dec Sills. Flower beaters,. by wher Rey. . e service n be conducted So n empluyof the ee of M late .0scar arathon Realty Ltd. . Howa"rd Allen, Tony DeJong. Presbyterian Church on, Thursday and the' former Ella Dettner, heis at 2,p.m. Temporary entombment !survived by hiS' Wife, the former will be in Pioneer Mausoleum Edith • Krauskoff; _ene son, with burial later in Maitlandbank Eugene, both of Kitchener; five Cemetery. ' daughters, Donna (Mrs. Bruce St. . JOhn) of ,Kitchenar. Vicki (Mrs. DOUGLAS ENNIS _Frank Kucy) of Baden, Alma The funeral of the late Douglas (Mrs. John Falsetto) of Ennis was held Thursday Cambridge. Linda (Mrs. Ecin January 20th .from the Whitney- Johnson) of Mississauga, and Ribey Funeral Home. Bonnie of Vancouver, B.C.; two The service was conducted by . sisters, Irene (Mrs. Kati Miller): Rev. Merqn E. Reuber of and Marjorie (Mrs.,, Leo Northside United , Church, Kraemer),-both of Kitchener, also ,Seaforth, assisted by~ Rev. survived by 'seven grandchildren, Edward Baker of Dufl,s--„United:.....,, Predeceased . by two brothers. • Willard and ' • ' The ' remains were at the Schreiter-San4oek . Funeral Home 51 Bentnn St., Kitchener. Prayers . were offered at the ,funeral_Lhome on Wednesday, January 19. at 9:30 a.m. followed- by 'funeral mass at Sacred Heart ChUrch. at 10 a.m. Interment folloWed in Kitchener. Mount Hope cemetery. • • DANIEL MATTHEWS 'Daniel ,Matthews, 89; died at Seaforth Community Hospital ,on Monday. A former residept of St.. Columban, he had been at Queensway Nursing Home, 13Orn in Hibbert, he is survived 'by 'a brother Timothy of 'Seattle, Washington and several, nieces • and nephews., lien-tains rested at the Box Funeral Home until Wednesday morning when a funeral service was conducted' by Rev. P.A. O OostVeen at 5i.'Columban Rornan Catholic . Church.' Temporary interment followed in Pioneer Mausoleum. pallbearers were: •. Louis McIver, Joseph MclVer, Thomas F41{RIAlvi EARL HAASE Hospital on Thursday, January 20, 1977 in his '85th year, • He is survived by his wife Pearl Huffman, of Brodhagen, formerly of Teeswater; .two daughters (Lorna). Mrs. Ford Dicldson of Brodhagen, (Twyla) Mrs. Robert Gibb of Glencoe and three granddaughters. Also surviving, is one brother John of Teeswater, He was predeceased by on brother Everett. The 'funeral service' and commital, conducted the the Rev. -Michael Boulger of the Monkton and Willow Grove United Church, was,held Saturday, January 22'at 2 ple. at the Heath,-Leslie Funeral Home,, Mitchell.- Inter- ment followed in Woodland Cemetery. Mitchell, HAROLD EUGENg LAUBER' • tlarold Eugene Lauber died Sunday, January 16, 1977.as the result of a heatt attack. Aged 70 years., he resided at 134 'Louisa Kitchener. . • He Was a member of, Sacred Heart RC Church; the Canadian Legion, Branch 50. the Kitchener Musical Society Band; and.. 19, 1977 at 1 p.m. 'Bite-intent was in Pine ' Hills ,-Cemetery,, Scarborough. . JAMES`Ma SOUTEB James M. Sourer 'died at .Seaforth Community Hospital Thursday, January 20, 1977 in his , 75th year, He was born in McKillop Township, the son of • the late Alex Souter and Janet Ramsay. He is survived ,by his wife the former Christena' ' (McDougall) Brown and step children (Jean) Mrs. Glenn Bridge, Brussels, (Ruth) Mrs.. Carlyle -Carter, . London and • Angus BrOwn, R.R.#4, Seaforth. He is' also • survived by two sisters (Isabella) • Mri. Alex' York of Morrisburg (Florence) Mrs. Orrin Dowsoti of Clinton. - • ,-, • • - , -- Rev. 'M. E. Reuber concluded • the funeral service at the R.S.Box• Funeral , Home. Temperary, entombment .followed in Pioneer Memorial Mausoleum , with interment' to follow at Maitland- bank Cemetery, Seaforth. Pallbearers were Joe Maellan, 'Elmer Dennis, Andy .McNichol, John Davidson, Gordon Elliott THEW HURON EXPOSITOR, JANUARY 27 '1977:'—$ Had the 'flu this week:and took a couple of days off wok. That made 10 days in the last 15 years on the job. And I rediscovered the reason I .will, time and again, totter off to work when' I'm practically on my hands and knees with some ailment. • It's because I nearly go out of my skull' with boredom when I'm home sick. I'm not saying my wife isn't a delightful conversa tioaalist or a charming companion. She is. But when you have the 'flu you want nei their delight nor charm. You just want to be left alone like an old dog, to live or die as the Lord decides. She won't leave me alone. She brings me a big breakfast fp bed.when all I really want' 'is a sharp harikari knife. After, once sPendinga year in bed, in a sanatorium, I - hate eatieg bed.-Trying tohalance a tray on the knees. Spilling coffee, on the sheets, with, the,'-'"inevitable blast .‘ from the laundress. Dripping gooey egg down the front of your pyjamas.: Then by lunch-time, I'm so bored-with °bed that I stagger '' arid diesS, dying or ebt. And she starts again. I should have some lunch to. keep my strength Up. Have you taken your antio-biotic pills, dear? Maybe You sholdd,watch,TVJot.. a while to keep , yout..-spirits. up. Would 'you like another cup of tea? I don't Want another cup of tea. I'm .drowning .in it already: I don't want any sardines on toast,- or cheese bits in the ' oven, or nice tasy soup-.-Paifypills make me diziy. TV makes me want to -throw upi. This has got to be the swine flu.'Am I really /dying or will I just. be paralyzed for life. Does God really, e xist? If He does, why is He dumping thiq _onme? • Well, all that is bad enough. But during this session,- the worst happened.. I ran out of reading material. By the end of Day Two I had whipped through three library books, two • 'daily papers twice .a day, and half-a-dozen weeklies, a Couple sof news magazines, and the directions on the cereal box, in English-and French. The inevitable occerred I was fcitced to read one of those ,women's. magazines that my wife buys occasionally' at • the supertnarket when she Sees an interesting - recipe. It plunged me into an even deeper, . almost suicidal, depression.— • ---- • One of the feature articles told me,l,mnst lOve myself firsts if I weregeieg to amount to anything. I plowed thiough it with growing disgust, considering that, at the moment I degpised myself, modern, nie_dicirie-My_Wife,-and almost-anything, else I could .think of. When I got to a list of things I-must stop • doing if I were to love Myself, and'. read, "Not havinglOrgasnis,i' I threw up all o*er - the' livingroom rug: After settling my stomach 'with a hot faddy, and finding nothing-else around that. 'I "hadn't--read twice,_ I picked up the e '114111, db, a 0111,C magazine again, in sheer desperation. The of er feature -article pIntrged me once 4 in into abysmal gloom: It was called, "Chart'YoUr Way to Success,' When! read about the author that she is a ' professor of educatiOnal„psychology, I should have stopped right th0e.-4.:know how much those.birds know about real life,: They live in a 'dream worlit,of stuff like "positive reinforcement" and "negative. .feedback." • But I pressed on. ,After wading through , three saccharine endorsements fieni "people whose whole life she had chanced; I' went on to-this: "You too can follow in the footsteps of Lee, Mark and Doris. You can define and attain your 'Own success." It seems that all you,have to do is make a chart, 'divided into three periods, each representing a third of your life, beginning at the age of five. Then you list three successes - for each, period and opposite each, list why it, 'was a .auccess for you. Out of sheer ennui, I, started a chart. In • the first period, 'from five to 15, I could think of only one success. I won one fight with. a belligerent' urchin named George Cornell, with whom I tangled, frequently. It was a success for me because it was the ,. only one. 1-ever did' win. . „ In the second period, from 15 to 30 again I could think of only one success: I learned to fly an airplane. But this wasn't such a great success'since, because of it, 1, spent a Streteli in a German prison camp. In the third period, from 30 on, I couldnt• think of a single' success. A . became a newspaper editor through' sheer accident. All that got Me was 10 years laboring as a galley slave to pay off the mortgage on the paper..,, Then A became a teacher, which any damfool could become in those days. They were pulling bodies- in off the streets because of the baby boom hitting the 'high schools. 1 became head of the English Department purely because nobody else. was qualified, not on merit, experience or dedication. I became a syndicated columnist by '. 'chance. All that gets me is a deadline hanging about my neck like a big old .albatross. _ • By, the time I'd finished making outhe chart. I realized:not for the first time, that I was an utter failure, and, that it was going. to take a lot mere than a chart to change things. It was then that I made my one and only -resolution-for 1977. And all subseqUent years. 1 will never again,' should I. be forced to eruse nothing more, exeiting than the Sall print .on toothpaste tubes. read another woman's magazine from a Supermarket. • Immediately I made this resolve, 1 felt a lot better, and next morning was back, at' work-. L wer Interest Rotes NOW AVAILABLE ON a stAand.2rid Mortgages ttnyWhere In Qn,tar19 on RESIDENTIAL --INDUSTRIAL COMMERCIAL and FARM PROPERTIES Interim financing, on new construction ' REP4ESEorNiTanAliF,d1HYe0EveNSI:IIPNfilYeOrat YOUR AREA SAFEWAY „INVESTMENTS & CON S ULTANTS LTD. Head Office: 56 Weber Street;, Kitchener; I519.1' 744-6535 Branch Office; 564 Tenth Street; Hanover [5141 364.3121 WE •BUY EXISTING MORTGAGES FOR INSTANT CASH ( :/(411./7- 1//7-41 eAeF./)) 1 /4 AUTO BODY REPAIRING *Complete Collision Servike ' " '''''`. *C11'06111 Painting. *Frame repair *Side •,moulditigs *Door mouldings fiWindshield,service IP YOU GET' A GING - , GIVE US -A RING . . Seaforth . Centre Rea* of Esso ShilltO/ft 0588 4M,•••,1 •• Town of SeafOrth Chureh., Walton. The pallbearers were Torrance Dundas, William Coutts, Harold Bolger. NelsOn. Marks. Douglas Kirkby and Neil MeGavin-.. all of Walton. , Temporary entO-nibinetit. was made in the Pioneer Mausoleu,M, Seaforth with' burial to-follow Brussels Cemetery. Friends, and relativesatiending the funeral,, from a distance , inchided - Mr.; EdwinC. Alberta: - Dr.• --and Mrs. John Davies., Whitby"; Mr/ . and Mrs._ A. H. Loveridge, Scarborough; Mr. ,Gerald Dressel, Etobieoke;•Mr. and Mrs. Al Kelly, Nobleton; Mr. Richard Cunningham, Brantford; Mr. and Mrs, Wm. C. Ennis. London.; Mr.: "anti" Mrs. Ronald Ennis and family, Whitby.. Hall was a self-employed brick layer and had contracts outstand- ' ing. Judge Hays granted the. request. Mr. Hall is to serve his sentence in the Stratford jail. Also heard WedoesdaywaS the case of RafteWarnes, age 54, of 182 Main St. South, Seaforth. Mr. Warnes Pleaded guilty, to charge df common assault against George Shanks, 17. of Kippen. • Judge, flaYS• found Mr. Marries.- guilty, but granted ,,arr absolute discharge in 'the case: • Kenneth F. Bruxer of Ontario St., Dublin Was found., guilty in absentia to_a charge of possession of alChOliof u'hderage. He was fined $53. • JIM Crocker • . .0161'k-treasurer, h . McIver; James Y McQuaid, Theo Van Bakal' and Joseph Nolan.' OLLA RAE HENDERSON Otla Rae Henderson died; peacefully at. Riverdale; H'o'spital; Toronto on Monday, January 174. 1977. . - She was the former 011a Rae Modeland of Tuckersmith and Seaforth, daughter of the late Richard Harmon .and Susan Modeland.: She leaves a daughter, Irene of Toronto and son RoSs, daughter- in-law Betty and grandsons, Ross, Gary, Larry and Glen, all of Scarborough and brother, john W. Modeland of Seaforth. the was predeceaSed-in 196 by her husband Robert Currie Henderson, also formerly of • Turn White . EleOgnts into, CASH with a Clatsified Phone. 27-0240 Fresh Medty Pork SPARE RIBS Fresh Frying or Roasting CHICKENS MEAT MARK ET 3-4 lb. it, 99 69 lb. • 17;,•:-•"•"•-• :•••• At.,Seaforth. coact ; man Pleads guilty riving arge When • . Provincial Court convened in Seaforth on Wednes- day, January 14,-'`with • Judge Glenn Hays presiding, James H. Hall, age 40., of Rostock, pleaded guilty:td a charge of impaired driving, An earliei plea of not guilty was withdrawn. Mr. Hall received the minimum tvict week sentence for this , his second offence, had his driver's license suspended •for six months, In his remarks, Judge Hays.stressed that the penalty for such an offence could be as much as one year, .in p-riSon. Ken Devereaux, lawyer for Mr. Hall, •requested that his client be allowed- to serve his sentence on weekends, explaining that Mr. 0-04 1-1110onii.ig*Attorg .Under By-Law NO. 682 for the Town of Seaforth, it Is an offence for • • ,. Any,person to own or harbour any dog within the Town''-of Seaforth,,„ without tbe said dog being Tegistered arid.wearing a proper, dog-tag i and any persOil who owns or harbours, a clog within the Town of Seaforth to allow the said dog to, run at large.- .?' t• • . 4. Any dog found running at large May be seized and Impounded, and after a specified tittle may be ,sold or destroyed: , - - Any person convicted' of.a breAah of By-1&w No. 682 is liable to 'a penalty _ .. Of up to $66,00 for, each-offence. '