HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1964-11-05, Page 10rA►
10 -,the Ooderieh Signal -Star, Thursday, November 5th, 1964
A ' k e
its.
. .AUBURN NtiA.
' Ur URN; Mr, .and Mrs W'al- was won by Mrs. Joe Hunking I the sovereignty of God.- Mrs.
li m Sitraugh"alk spent a few days i,tt had been donated by Mrs. IErnest Durnin thanked Mrs.
i last' week in Wingham visiting. James McDougall. 'Che mem-Hiltz. Lunch was served.
as Jardin, Mr. Jardin and fam-
with their daughter, Mrs. Thom- hers voted to sponsor an auc- Thanks for the invitation were
expressed essed by: Mrs. William
fly. tion sale of home-made baking p � .
;.n November. Plans were made Hardy, Donnybrook; Mrs. Chia. -
relatives
George Hamilton visited les Smith,Westfield• Mrs. Geo -
forth
in Bruceifield and. Sea- c'o hold the next meeting at the es Schneider, St. Mark's eonorne of Mr:'. Lloyd McClinchey .'
Earth for a few days' week. lican' Church; Mrs. Wilfred
with Mrs. Joe Verw•ey and Mrs.
An -
Mr. and Mrs. George Haggitt, Elliott' Lapp in charge of the Sanderson, Knox Presbyterian,
Jt>•hniiy, Paul a"hd Michael mav- and Robert J. Au-
whereed to Zurich on the weekend program. The lunch commit- and
Mrs. Robert
rt J. Phillips, The pre-
gradertee will be Mrs. Donald Sprung,
operator.Mr. Haggitt wit e a Mrs. John , Snyders, Mrs. Harold side.nt, Mrs. Bert Craig, spoke a
• Sprung and Mrs. 1Vorthy Young• few words and thanked Mrs.
Hatkowe'en Party The roll call is to be answered Hiltz for her message.
The first meeting of the Au- by naming a necessary article
burn school, U.SS. No. 5, Hul- in the sick room. Contests of
lett, Red Cross Society was held imitating animals, quotations
with the president, Jennifer and songs were in charge of
Grange; in charge. It took- the Mrs. Donald Sprung and Mrs.
form of a Hallowe'en party. Walter Cunningham. Lunch
The roll call was answered, by .was served by Mrs. George
36 pupils telling their favorite Schneider, Mrs. Jamas Jackson,
song. A Hallowe'en song was Mrs. Ariel Dui'zer and Mrs.
sung by Junior pupils, Lynn Lloyd McClinchey,
Turner, Michael Marion, Trudy . Thankoffering Meet
l Iachan arid Wanda Plaetzer. A
guessing ,,dame was in ,charge
of Brian 'Craig. -Riddles were
" I a .» est —.
gritnd march took place with
the judging of costumes. First
prize for best -dressed went to
r-- -Gail Seers- r-hp.-clres&ed-as-Gran--
riy_:oAt.. ha ave-" y-4Iitlbillies:'
- The coanic prize was awarded I sister by Mrs. Kenneth McDou-
BowlingRolls
Into High Gear
October's 'end saw bowling
.rolls into high gear on the lanes
of Little Bowl at Goderich. Ter
date, "Tick" Mero topped „the
singles by rolling a 405. He
The Autumn thankoffering of tarted- with a spare, • then a
the United Church Women of strike, another spare, followed
Knox United Church was held by nine strikes for his near
Donnybrook, Knox Presbyterian,
St. Ma"rk's Anglican, and the
Baptist Church being (*resent.
Gl gists- r_e- a telcomed•--by-- $re
pies=!dent, Mrs: Berf Craig, as-
to Paul Marion and George Col- gall., The 'ushers were Mrs.
liver Anderson and Mrs. Guy
unninghatn. Mrs. Norman Mc-
Clinchey.led the meeting and
the service of song ,was led by
lins as man and wife. A candy
hunt was held for the junior.
-pupils. Words' from Hallowe'en
were read by Mark Arthur. A
guessing song contest was con- ! the church organist, Mrs. Nor-
man McClinchey. Miss Elma
Mutch read the Scripture. She
ve an ins . iring Thanks
:ducted by Jennifer Grange and
Bob Marion was the winner.
'Congratulations • to L y n n i message on these •passages
Youngblut of Toronto who last I which was followed by prayer
week graduated from the' Is..Iduet by Mrs. sung bynMisses ell. A
stitute of Chartered Account-
ants of Ontario. His mother,
Mrs. Major Youngblut, attended
the. ceremony held in the On-
tario room of the Royal York
Hotel, Toronto. Lynn was one
of the 820 graduates who also
included; four girls. Lynn is
employed with the Wilson-Eddis
and Associates of. Toronto, the
firm which she has .been. with
for the past five years, two years
at Orillia and the last three
year in Toronto. fi
Testing Water
. The—fourtir meetnw af- the
- - Auburn Aides -was held; at the
• horns `o.£ Patsy and Linda Reed
7( t000sy9A3LMS19P ssa,*. y `4b n �+ en �7c� in
�tAl �1�� illl•,li���J1�C11 4,
presiding. The minutes were
read by Lynda Andrews. Plans
were made to hold the next
meeting at the home of the as-
sistant leader, Mrs.. Frank
Raithby. The leader, Mrs. Keith
Machan, led in the discussion
on 'sanItation and germ control,
contail'i'ination of water and the
pasteurization of milk. Mrs.
Raithby told about houseflies
and spo'k•e of their control She
-laoi two sea ' "ism
take in the case of. infections.
Marian and Connie Hickey -and
Lynda Andrews demonstrated
the proper posture when sitting
or standing. Each member is
• - to take a sample of her `drink -
ng water supply and send it
away at the next meeting for
tests. ` Lunch was served by
Patsy and Linda Reed.
Hallowe'en Parties
Hallowe'en parties were en-
joyed by, several groups in the
community and ' one of these
was held by the Auburn Ex-
.plorer. girls 1 iii Knox United
Church. A' ghost game was led
by Mrs. Donald Young and then
the grand march was held with
all the members parading in
costumes. Fancy dress prizes
were won by Gail Seers, Shelley
Grange and Sherry Plaetzer.
Comic dress prizes Were award,
ed to Marie Plunkett, Doreen
McClinchey and Susan Thomp-
son. Doreen McClinchey and
Sherry Plaetzer conducted a
game called Black . Magic and
the hunt for hats and pumpkins
was -won Jay Shelley Grange.
Doreen McOlinchey won the
prize for guessing the correct
number of jelly beans in the
jar. Mrs. Arthur Grange told 2
ghost story and after fortune
telling, a lunch was served by
the leaders.
The Auburn `*C.G,I.T. mem
bers held their party with 1F.
girls taking part. The grand
march was held .with the judge.
being :VIPs. Ed. Davies, Mrs
Thomas Haggitt and Miss Laura
Phillip's, First prize was award
cd to Jane Doran, second to
Sharon Collins and third to
Diane Kirkconnell.' The comic
dress prize was awarded to Mar-
ian Youngblut, second to Joyce
Leatherland and the third to
Margaret and Mary Sanderson
and Betty Moss. The special
prize went to Judy Arthur and
Gail Miller. Games and con-
tests were enjoyed and Iunch
was served by the leader, Mrs,
Wes Bradnock, assisted by Miss
Margaret R. Jackson.' •
Walkerburn Club
The Walkerburn Club met at
the home of Mrs. Leonard Arch-
ambault with 16 members pre-
sent. Mrs. Joe Hunking was
in charge of the program in the
absence of the president, Mrs.
Lorne. Hunking, The roll call -
was answered by each member
telling a riddle. The minutes
were read by Mrs. Henry Hunk-
Mg. A thank -you• note'was read
.-from Mrs. Lloyd Penfound and
baby daughter. The- grits gift
and Klaske Koopmans. Mrs.
Harold Webster read a poem.
Mrs. Elliott Lapp introduced the
guest speaker, Mrs. Robert S.
Hiltz of Exeter. Mrs. Hiltzis the
wife of a former minister on the
Auburn charge six years ago.
She stressed to, above all, seek
suGA
AND SPICE
by Bill Smiley
SHE'S EVERYTHING BUT
PATIENT
I get "•'few fan letters. About
half of them are from dear,
sweet, intelligent people who
tell me they read the column
faithfully, and like it.
'k
Ab5lut a quarter of them are
from mutton -headed, wrong -
minded, opinionated people who
read the column faithfully and
,disagree with my politics, lan-
guage and philosophy. The other
quarter is made up of frantic
chairmen of the program corn-
mittees for various service
clubs, wanting to know . if I'll
speak to their group- on July
14th.
ing for the Tigers in the Men's
Town League at the time. His
three game total was 843.
Mari'ly-h- Banrtrssterr ook-r
honors among the ladies with
a 356 single and a 780 triple.
This .score was rolled- in the
Wednesday mixed league. Mar-
ilyn has won the high single,
triple and average forkltehouse
several times.
Interested in seeing Junior
bowling? Drop out to Little
Bowl any Saturday morning be-
tween 10 and 12 o'clock and
see aririti id it a' llirf
to spill those maples. a The
youngsters -range in age from
six to 16.
In the 12 and under class
Jane Dean holds high single, a
152, and for the boys it's Mike
MacCuspey with 157. In the
over 12 class, Nancy Green-
wood is high with• a 258 single
while Paul Johnston holds a
242.
GODERICH , ONT.
Dan,ei'ng;_fo the Young Crowdvery atiiday N_i- t
THIS MEEK,' SATURDAY;''NOVEMBER 7th
emsz:rmu ,avhrawozminolorn;apoittretirrAtirrittrytymiummormmr...4,
No Slacks or Blue Jeans — DancittFig 7' to 12
,ADMISSION 75c OR PERSON,
Catering to Weddings, Luncheons, Banquets, etc:
For rental information or reservations
'DIAL 524-9371 or 524-9264
* • :k
The answer to the last one is
always no. I spoke to a service
club once, and swore I'd never
dm ft 'gai. r •••-avave- uever has_
such- an- ignorant --audience----
* *•
After spending a week pre-
paring a speech, and driving
fifty 'miles on a winter night,
a h►rd. dayRs,�wox.J�l.==vase
asanxiously by 'the,resi-
delit`1f 1 could "keep it down to
ten minutes or so."
•
About ., half the members
ore.half.oile4Laalstsato.ors.th
went to sleep while I was being
introduced. This is about stand-
ard. The president and secre-
tary kept looking at their
watches. Before the ritual
"thank you" eight or ten mem-
bers had slunk out. The presi-
dent apologized, "they hafta go
curling."
The minute the vote of thanks
(in which the mover called me
Mr. Wiley, the famous colunfh-
ist) ended, the club came to
life with tigerish intensity, and
sat there listening for three-
quarters of an hour to them
quibbling about whether they
:shouldspend -fifty- husks—an- a•
-donation-fa-boys', hockey, 'Which.
woutd get them -a-picture--and
t:i..,. .. n.
paper, or twenty-five bucks on
a donation to a scholarship fund,
which would, get them a para-
graph. Guess which won.
I started out to say was that
we had a switch this week.
My- wife got a fan letter.
At: " * :k
•
It was a lovely letter --warm
kind, friendly, intelligent, and
utterly mistaken. '
;l: :r• :k •
In part, it reads, "I'm sure
you ,must be ,a very patient,.
woman and a very' •happy one,
as I think I can tell from your
husband's column he is a happy
and contented man, and this
is mainly all a wife needs to
be happy herself. Perhaps?"
k ;k :k •
Bless youg dear lady, for that
"perhaps." There's still hope
for the reacting public.
My wife is about as patient
as Henry the Eighth, about as
y:
She's 'a good icid, basically,
but it'.s_.heen_a...long _time -since
�'ie.'waa-;o�.b�"�irr even Tcnew
What innings it was.
:r
At least once a week, she's
so depressed 'she says, "I just
feel like jumping off the dock."
rep y, -"So 'wiio-T stopping
you?" She, old. -Patience, bel-
lows, '"Yqu'd just lova that,
wouldn't you? You'd go right
tint and get . married to some
`young fliAbberti -ibbet who could-
eep you in line. And so
on.
* *
However, as you have long
since guessed” this ,experience
has nothing to' do with what
I'm going to talk about. What
sts
BILL KIRKEY TOP KINSMAN -
Five member, of the Kinsmen Bill Kirkey, Jack Cummings,
13111 Haply and' Ken McGee.
All olub presidents of the dis-
trict, together with the district
executive headed by Governor
MaitalFdgar of Clinton, attended.
Jim Brown of British Colum-
bia, World Council Chairman,
stated an estimated one and a -
half million dollars is raised
by Kinsmen each year for• 1pcal
Welfare projects -.across Canada.
Bill Kirkey of the Kinsmen
Club of Goderich was named
"Kinsmen of the year" for Dis-
trict 1 of the • Kinsmen Clubs.
This was in recognition of his
outstanding devoted service to
the work of the Kinsmen Club
of Goderich.
Club of Goderich attended Dis-
trict 1 A all Council meeting at
Niagara kF'alis on Saturday.
They were: Maurice Gardiner,
piano with the proper finger
movements. Next week she'll
he bawling hell out of me be-
cause 1 haven't been bawling
hell out of the kids about some-
thing- or .other.
• * Ak *
Happy? No. Pat;nt? It is
to laugh. Interesting? Si. -At-
tractive? Si. Nutty? Naturally.
And perhaps that, dear lady
fail, is why her husband is, as
you put it, "a happy and con-
tented man..' Oy!
r
Wingharn emoria s
Quality — Service — Croemetery Lettering
PHONE WINGHAM 357-1910 or .WRITE BOX 15$
JOHN MALICK — WINGHAM
*
She thinks she's smarter, fin-
ancially, than the president of
the Bank of Cahada. But she
never has any change for the
milk bottles.
She claims she's sq, neurotic
she can't sleep a wink, ever. I
take her to a movie, she. falls
asleep in eight minutes, and it
takersthe comlbined efforts of
'me, the ticket taker,- ' and the
manager, to get her out of the
theatre when it closes.
:3: ;k a:
Last week she" wanted, to go ,
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Experienced Drivers
TELEPHONE
524-7401
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OPTOMETRIST
F. T. ARMSTRONG
Consulting°Optometrists
The Square 524-7661
REFRIGERATION
and -
APPLIANCE SERVICE
All makes — All types
GERRY'S APPLIANCES
The Sauare
Phone SA -8434
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Real Estate Agent
RUTH VAN DER MEER
DIAL 524-7875, Goderich
Agent For
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118 St. David Street
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-Roy N. Bentley
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4 Britannia Road, East
, Dial 524-9521
GODERICH — ONTARIO
Butler, Dooley,
Clarke &' Starke
Chartered Accountants
Trustee in Bankruptcy
Licensed Municipal Auditor
39 St. David St, 524-8253
GODERICH, ONTARIO
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GODERICH, ONTARIO
•
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Dead Animal
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Phone HU 2-7269, Clinton
Dead animal licence number
262-C-63
49tf
ROYAL CANADIAN- LEGION BRANCH 109
Invites You To Join Them
IN THE
Remembrance Day Ceremony
at the Cenotaph, Wednesday, November 11
All Legion Members and Veterans will form up at. the
Legion Hall at 10:30 A.M. V- Dress, Beret and Medals.
ATTEND THE LEIGION (HUTCH PARADE
North St. United Church Sunday, November 8, at 11 a.m,
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GODERICH
524-7146
43-44