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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1969-01-09, Page 7HENIAU. BY •MRS, MAUIhF HEpDEN rprise par.tY on anniversary A surprise dinner was held at Dominion Hotel, Zurich h 37 relatives of Mr. and Mrs.. rvey Hayter of Varna joining h them to celebrate their h wedding anniversary, (owed by a social evening in rna Hall when friends and ghbours gathered for a gressive euchre. Whiners were Gordon Johnston, Miss Louise Lovett, Alex McBeath and Alvin. Keys, The celebrants were the recipients of many lovely gifts and money. Presentations were made by Orval Weber and Ebner Hayter. The evening was climaxed by a delicious smorgasbord lunch which included an anniversary cake. indow broken by snowmobile A snowmobile crashed into a ge plate glass window seven t four inches high, and five t three inches wide at 'nthron Furniture and Funeral me on Main Street, Hensall, !ring the early hours Saturday smashing a two•foot hole in the window. Jack Drysdale,'' on his way to open up his store which adjoins the furniture store, gave the alarm. O.P.P. Exeter detachment said charges are pending. OBITUARIES LINDSAY EYRE Lindsay Eyre, Brucefield, ed suddenly in Clinton Public ospital last Saturday January 6 heart ailment. He was imitted to the hospital the day died. He was in his 67th year. e was a member of the O.O.F. Lodge, Brucefield of tuber Rebekah Lodge, Hensall, rd of Brucefield United hurch. Surviving are his wife, the ormer Anna Pearl Douglas; two aughters, Mrs. Arnold (Nora) ;eys, RR 1 Varna and Mrs. avid (Verna) Reid, Clinton; a rather, Campbell Eyre, eaforth; a sister, Mrs. Annie ole, Hensall and eight randchildren. Funeral services were held 'uesday from Bonthron Funeral tome, Hensall, conducted by ,everend E. D. Stuart. Burial ras in Bayfield Cemetery. THOMAS SHERRITT, Thomas John Sherritt of [ensall died in Westminster [ospital, London, December 29. [e was a patient there for. zveral years. A veteran of World lar I, he was a member'of the lensed Branch of the Canadian egion, a member of Loyal range Lodge 24, and a member f Black Knights, No. 1035, ayfield.; irewas associated -with 1e, choir = of •Herisali: United.' hurch for some years and was a iember of the church. Surviving are his wife, the wrier Myrtle Ryckman; a son Nomas H., Fort Lauderdale, lorida; three sisters, Mrs. ouise Spalding, Anna Marie, lorida, Mrs. D. H. (Dora) urley, Almont, Michigan, Mrs. 7. S. Caldwell, London and one randchild. Funeral services were held •om Bonthron Funeral Home n January 1 with the Reverend arold F. Currie in charge of the ervice. Interment was in Bayfield Cemettery. Pallbearers were Erwin yckman, Lynn Ryckman, errry Ryckman, Ross Caldwell, ,on Case, Grant Case, nephews f the deceased. WILLIAM COLE William Cole of Hensall assed away at Huronview on onday December 30, He was 5 years old. He is survived by his wife, the ormer Annie Eyre; a son, Alvin, tR 1 Cromarty, and two randchildren. Funeral services were held rom Bonthron Funeral Horne in January 1, conducted by the reverend Harold F. Currie. Iurial was in McTaggart's 7emetery. Pallbearers were Eric Vlansfield, Lloyd Venner, Jack 3rintnell, Ross Riley, Arnold {eys, Mervyn Eyre. PEARL. ANDERSON Miss Pearl Agnes Anderson of Varna, . passed away at Huronview on December 29, in her 70thyear. Surviving are a sister, Mrs. Elmer (Helen) Turner of RR 1, Varna and a, brother, George of Seaforth. Funeral services were held from Bonthron Funeral Home on December 31 conducted by the Reverend Murdoch Morrison of Varna. Burial was in Baird's Cemetery. ROY DOWSON Roy S. Dawson of Hamilton, formerly of Stanley Township, died suddenly in Hamilton on December 27. Survivors include his .wife, the former Allegra Sutton, two sons, William H., Palo Alto, California and Robert of British Columbia and a brother, Orrin of Varna. Funeral services were held in Hamilton on December 31 at 11 a.m., at 3 p.m. from Ball Funeral Home, Clinton, with burial in Bayfield Cemetery. PERSONALS Major and Mrs. R. J. Graham, David and Kathryn, spent the Christmas and New Year holidays with Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Love, before leaving for New Brunswick, where Major Graham resumed his duties on ..1VIMonday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baker and family of Lambeth and Aldan Johnston and family of London, spent the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Asa Deeves. Miss Joanne Hayter of Dashwood, was a weekend guest with Miss Beth Troyer. Mrs. R. S. Hopkins of Greencastle, Indiana, U.S.A. has returned after spending the holidays with her sister Mrs. Hugh McMurtrie. Gail and Billy. Jinks, London, have returned home after spending the holidays with Mrs. M. Jinks, Susan and Mrs. Bertha Jinks. Raye McKenzie, Toronto, spent the weekend in Hensall. Holiday visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Harry Snell were Mr, and Mrs. Don Rigby, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Knights, Stewart and Jane, of Blenheim, Mrs. Jean Manson, Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Laing and Danny, Exeter, Mr. Stewart McQueen, Hensall. Miss Margaret Mousseau and her brother Wilfred spent the holidays with relatives in Detroit, Michigan. Mrs. C. Christie and Catharine have returned after spending the holidays with relatives in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Moffatt and family of Kippen have been vacationing in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lindsay and family were Sunday visitors With Mrs. John Henderson and family. FARMERS!! SAVE DOLLARS -- BUY DIRECT DURING OUR CARLOAD SALE Any day now carloads of new tractors;• combines, swathers, drills, planters and tillage equipment will begin arriving and you can TAKE ADVANTAGE 4I± THESE SAVINGS $Y PURCHASING DIRECTLY 0F1 'PDR CAR. NiNCENT ' }zonwAty ,Qohn Rar{t AYRGALT-SEAF0RTH Phoma 527-0120 FARM EQUIPMENT INItlNNiN11111iN11111001111N11111111111NIN1illiINlilu„IIIMIlill1111101111111111111(1111111104111NN11101N 11111$,11111iI111NiI111111111p111111111N1111111111111111Ng 3. Auburn o MRS. VMS '” )RADNQCK--Gorresporiilent- hilorre 526-7 59 gIuemNnllimmoNInniuulmlminllninmminmiimoliilg111nn1111uuunllooT 1 omumoomi moollomminnuoiti 1yn101 limo ovp Mr. and Mrs, Albert McFarlane, were London visitors. on Monday. Miss Barbara Stra$ser has returned to her home in Ontario, California after visiting relatives at Stratford, Clinton, Lucan, Goderich, Toronto and Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Raithby have returned from a two -weeks bus tour in Florida. John Raithby, with Mr, .and Mrs. Grant Raithby, Collingwood. Mr. and Mrs. Maitland Allin visited last week with their nephew and niece, Mr, and Mrs. R. K. Allin of Goderich. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Heynen of Hamilton and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leander Peters of Lethbridge, Alberta, visited last KIPPEN NEWS BY MRS. NORMAN LONG PERSONALS Guests Sunday, December 29 at the McGregor family home included: Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Riley and Diann of Goderich; Mrs. John McGregor, Mrs. Edgar Butt, Miss Seire McCloy, Mrs. James Edwards all of Seaforth; Mr. and Mrs. Eric Judge, London; Mr. and Mrs. John McGregor Jr. and family; Mr. and Mrs. Doug McGregor and family. A Christmas party, Saturday, December 28 was arranged by the Cooper family with 35 attending at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Doug Cooper, Hensell. Brenda and Gregory Campbell of Hensall spent some of the holidays with their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hood returned home after spending Christmas and New Year's days with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Carter and family of Harrow. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. F. Bell accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Eyre, Seaforth are having a vacation in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bell and family spent New Year's day with Mrs. Frida Wettlauser and celebrated both Mrs. Bell's and Mrs. Wettlauser's birthdays. Mr. and Mrs. Beverley ` . Henderson of Hamilton, Wilma and Lois Jackson enjoyed`sonie of the holidays at their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Jackson's home. Edgar McBride. accompanied his daughter Sharon to Sault Ste. Marie on Sunday where she will commence her duties teaching. Mrs. N. Long visited Friday with Reverend D. A. and Mrs. MacMillan of London. week with Mr. and Mrs. Robert J, Phillips.. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Craig visited for a few days last week with her sister, Miss Jean Hamilton, in Oshawa, Mrs, James Craig, Mr, and Mrs, Arnold Craig, Mr. and Mrs.. William L. Craig, Allan of Guelph. and Brian spent Christmas Day with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Craig and family at Bluevale. Mr. and Mrs, Ron Livermore of Gorrie visited last week with her parents Mr. and Mrs, Donald Haines. Mr, and Mrs. Karl Teichert, of Goderich with Laura Phillips. Mrs. Gordon R. Taylor has returned to her home from Brantford, she was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Rathwell, Janice and Michael Rathwell. Mr, and Mrs. Keith Robinson, of Toronto, with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Robinson. Charles Beadle, has returned to London after two weeks at his home here, Mrs. S. H. Daer, suffered a heart attack and was taken by ambulance to Clinton Hospital on Saturday. Her many friends wish her a speedy recovery. Miss Nancy Anderson, returned to Stratford where she is attending teachers college. Mr, and Mrs. W. J. Craig, with Mr, and Mrs. Robert Craig, Lucan. Brands tell if you are from East or West There's no such thing as a national taste for food in Canada, according to a recent poll. "Canada is a whole lot of smaller markets," the report states, "each one with its own pecularities in different food product categories. The report ' lists these differences in • taste from region to region in Canada: In B.C. and the West, one brand of coffee (Nabob) has always dominated; everywhere else across the country, its another well-known brand (Maxwell House). Neither brand has been able to make inroads into the other's territory despite expensive attempts on both' sides. Easterners consume far more instant coffee than Westerners, and when they drink ground coffee they prefer a milder brew., Westerners are more like Americans — they go mostly for ground coffee, good and strong. Quebeckers consume about 80 times as much molasses as the rest of the country. They also constitute the largest per -capita soft drink market in the world, including spruce beer, a popular Summer thirst -quencher. Mariti�mers like more carbonation than other Canadians in their soft drinks; though it's said to kill the fruit flavour. It seems one regional bottler dominated the Atlantic market for so long that his high -fizz product became the criterion on the east coast. Though coffee's strong in B.C., the tea connoisseurs are in the Maritimes, where tea sales are not only proportionately far greater than in the rest of the country, but they tend to be concentrated among the better -quality brands. Ontarians like thick pectin added jam; Quebeckers like theirs runny. Quebeckers buy two olives to Ontarians one, and they must be unpitted, not stuffed. On the other hand, English-speaking Canadian buy four times as many pickles as their French-speaking cousins. Yarnci BY FRED McCLYMONT The United Church annual congregational meeting will be held on Wednesday evening January 15. The flowers in the United Church fast Sunday were placed there by the family of the late Miss Pearl Anderson, A very interesting book on. the history of Varna has been compiled by Floyd McAsh and is now available. Brucefield personals Holiday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hawgood were their daughters, Marlene from Dalhousie University, Halifax, Gloria from Radford College, Virginia, and Mr, Hawgood's brother, Det. Leslie Hawgood and family from Toronto. Adustrul Park news PERSONALS Mr, and Mrs. B. Burnett of Haney, B.C. recently spent the holidays with their son-in-law and daughter, Sgt. and Mrs. R. Cournoyer. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Brown and children from Calgary, Alberta and Mrs. P. E. Sawyer of London, Ontario spent the Christmas holiday with Sgt. and Mrs. 0. Sinker. Mrs, R. Fong -jean is a patient in Clinton Public Hospital. Roll up your sleeve to save a life.. Beauty• Brawn • Style. Stamina Scorpion '69 is above all in features you want for family fun, comfort, trouble-free snomobiling. Before you buy, test drive '69 Scorpion. Compare and you'll go Scorpion. PO ZoogyllouillOcg Electric Start Available The proven snomobile that never lets you downs Rent A Snowmobile For Use On Our Farm Range - $5 Per Hour SALES -SERVICE & RENTAL DEALER H.R. NO. 3, CLINTON — 482-9997 Scorpion It C to N a s• w Record, Thursday, Jani�ery �, 196;3 7 \‘‘‘N.N.»1‘.•1•N"�...♦ \\\\\\•.. / / / / / / / / / / / / NOW IS THE TIME TQ ADD SILO ExTENSIQNs • SILO ROOF$ Call or Vlfritt IOW GEORGE WRAITH BQX 95 PHONE 524.6511 GO. DERICH tf / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / / enjoy Toronto more... stay at the Lord Simcoe Hotel where the service is warm and friendly ... where the prices are sensible , . where you're close to everything downtown . , , where you can relax in modern refurbished -rooms ... where you can enjoy fine foods and intimate lounges, Singles start at 59.00 and end at 513.50 Doubles start at $14.00 and end at 518.50 Luxury Suites Available Lord Simcoe Hotel University & King St, (at the subway)— Tel: 362-1848 ANNOUNCING... THE OPENING OF ELMER FREY'S ARROW SERVICE STATION (FORMERLY OPERATED BY J. S. CUMMINGS) We wish to thank all our former customers at our old location on Highway 4. We hope you will continue to call at our new location. OPEN 8 A.M. TO 10 P.M. 7 DAYS - A - WEEK NO. 8 HWY. EAST . TERMS CASH ON SALE MERCHANDISE . ALTERATIONS AT COST ALL SALES FINAL NUARY H ERMAN'S MEN'S WEAR REGULARS - TAUS Sale Priced vies 50 TOY• TO $iairet 50 Ar Reg. '69.s° to $100.°° HOBBERLII4 Tailored -To -Measure Suits Reduced 20% for This sale SALE 300 MEN'S SUITS - TOPCOATS SPORT COATS WINTER JACKETS loop UP TO 50% OFF The Complete Balance Of Our Fall & Winter Stock Now On Sale! PHONE 482 93511 HERMAN'S M WEARcuNToN