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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1969-04-24, Page 12OOyDE.RICH SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, APRIL 240969 4 ADVERTISING IN THE SIGNAL -STAR is an INVESTMENT NOT AN EXPENSE Announ`cernertt ket W. J. Mills, president of W. J. Mills Motor Sales Ltd., is pleased to, announce the 'appointment of Koert Stryker to his * competent sales staff. Koert brings with him a good deal of experience and understanding of your$ automative needs and invites everyone to drop in and say "H.ello." Whether you're interested in a new or used car, Koert will be -pleased to -assist you. - REMEMBER! A MILLS DEAL IS A GOOD DEAL. W.J. MILLS MOTOR SALES LTD. Kingston St. 524-7314 ipv r Auburn and District 45TH ANNIVERSARY Mr. and ,Mrs. Orville Free were guests of honor at the home of their .daughter,' Mrs. Lawrence Plaetzer, and Mr. Plaetzer ,when they received relatives and' friends on ' the occasion of their 45th. wedding anniversary. The guests were •welcomed by Mr. and Mrs. Plaetzert- and during the afternoon more than 70 persons signed the guest'book. Tea was poured by, Mrs. Neil • MacDonald of Teeswater, sister of Mr. Free's, assisted by Mrs. Grace Greer of Lucknow. Also • 'present was Mr. and Mrs. -Harvey SiltiVof Blyth, Mrs. Free's brother and sister-in-law. Other close relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Huston of Kincardine, were • also present for ' the afternoon. The guests were served by Misses Sherry and Wanda Plaetzer, Larry Plaetzer, Mrs. Jack Alton and Miss Yvonne Bean. Gifts and cards and flowers were on display and a'beautiful -floral arrangement adorned the dining room. Guests were present from Luckhow, Dungannon, Port Albert, Goderich, Blyth, '' Clinton, Seaforth and Kincardine. MARRIED RECENTLY .. • Mr. and Mrs. Clifton MacDonald of Goderich were Nests of honor earlier this NO! No! NOT THERE! NO? Save where your'vfellow credit union members save and receive the added security of LIFE SAVINGS INSURANCE Goderich Community Credit Union 324-7931 39- STo DAVID STo month 4 the home of Mr, and MTs. Jack Weirwhen friends and neighbours gathered 4,,,, to congratulate them , on their recent marriage. 'An address of congratulations was read by Mrs. William Moss,and gifts of lamps and magazine rack were presented by Jack Weir and M,lrs. W.' Bradr pck. Both Mr. and Mrs. ° MacDonald thanked everyone for their gifts. C.G.I.T. repares program The Auburn C.G.I.T. group met in the Sunday sch9Ql room of Knox,nited Church with the. president, Marie Plunkett in charge. The meeting was opened by all repeating the Purpose and the roll call was answered by naming what. you were taking to the bake sale. Marie -read the - scripture lesson, Psalm 1 and Jed in prayer. A Bible quiz followed. The offering was received and dedicated and Sherry Plaetzer gave the financial statement. The remainder of the meeting was taken in preparing the _ program for the -next L.C.W. meeting. The meeting was closed by singing Taps. Horticui#ural Society meeting May Stlr May 5 is the date set for the first spring meeting of tthe Auburn Horticultural Society in the Auburn Community Memorial Hall. The decision was made at the executive meeting held last week, at the home of the president, Mrs. Gordon. Taylor. ' Plansare to have a travelogue and a demonstration and the program will, be in charge of Mrs. Bert Craig and Mrs. W. Bradnock. In charge of the pot-ltick lunch will be Mrs. Frank Raithby and Mrs. William Straughan. Mrs. Taylor presided for the executive meeting and the mintPtes were lapproved as read by Mrs. Bert Craig. The financial statement was prepared by the treasurer, Mrs. W. Bradnock, and accepted. The correspondence was read and other business was transacted. It is •. planned to have a membership- drive to assist with the work and plants for the village flowerbeds. The president announced that IIrs. William Klie, the director for District Eight will be guest speaker at the June 2 meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davies "returned home on Sunday evening after spending several months in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jackson and family of Mitchell spent the weekend with her parents„Mr. and Mrs. John Daer. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Noble, of Kitchener, spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs: George Schneider. Many from here attended the funeral of •a`, former Auburn resident, Mrs. Wellington Good, last Thursday in Blyth. St. Mark's Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hamilton attended the auction sale held by Mrs, Macallison at Alsia Craig last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. James Aitcheson of Seaforth visited last Wednesday with their daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Scott and Mr. Scott and family. Miss .Laura Wagner df Syracuse, N.Y. is' visiting with her sisters the Misses Ella and Minnie Wagner and other. membersof her family. A Miss Nancy Anderson of Stratford Teachers' College spent the weekend in 'Toronto. ACW April .meeting The Anglican Church Women of St.' Mark's Church met. for their April meeting at the home of the president, Mrs. Thomas Haggitt. The meeting was opened by singing the hymn, The Church in the Wildwood. The pianists during' the meeting were Mrs. Gordon Taylor and Mrs. Robert J. Phillips. Mrs. Haggitt took as her scripture lesson St./John . 10th chapter followed by prayer. , The missionary. topic was the Easter message written by Rev. George Locke of Fort George and Paint Hills telling about the Church's work in the north at this season of the year. After singing the hymn, "0 God our help in ages past” Mrs. George Schneider 'gave the topic of the afternoon an article, "Northland" written by Bob Hastings, a teacher at : Fort George. It was an interesting account of his teachings` of the. Indians and of his experiences. This .part of. the meeting was child: Safety Week -Canada's high and rising level of accidental ehild fatalities and injuries is a black mark on the country's record., the Canada Safety Council says. The Council's national Child Safety Week campaign running from May 4-10 is aimed at parents who -can prevent a majority of these by proper supervision and child safety education. World Health Organization statistics show that Canada's rate of accidents suffered by children -under the age _of one year and between the ages of five and nine is the highest of all developed countries. Only Japan has a higher accident rate tor. children between the ages of one and four. - The latest Canadian statistics show that 2,108 children under the age of • 15 died from accidents in 1967: Canadian health authorities estimate that 500,000 Canadian .children suffer accidents of all kinds every .year.. - Accidents kill or eriliple, more children than • all diseases combined. The leading killers are traffic accidents, suffocation, drownings, and explosions and fires, in that order.° Census figures show children under the age of 15 mal- up 33 percent of the population. Yet more .than 40 percent of pedestrians killed in traffic accidents are children. Next to traffic, the home claims •the most fatalities and even more injuries, These comparisons arid statistics illustrate, the scope of the problem. The Canada Safety Council says recognition that this "loss of Canada's most closed by singing. What a Friend we have in Jesus. •The president thanked all who had assisted her and the business was conducted. The minutes of the previous ' meeting were accepted as read by the secretary, Airs. John Daer. The financial statement was given by,. the treasurer, Mrs. Andrew Kirkconnell. The travelling apron received a penny for each letter in the Parable of the two sons. The roll call was answered by quoting a Bible verse with Vision in it. Plans were made for ladies to visit Huronview and .make _visits also to some who have few visitors. Mrs. Haggitt presented a wedding gift to Mrs. Steve Noble from the church and Mrs George Schneider accepted the gift 'on behalf of her daughter. After an auction the benediction lunch was served by Mrs. Haggitt • assisted by Mrs. George Schneider. wiTH- C-R-OvvN--DaAanoa-v WITH CROWN DIAMOND INTERIOR PAINT BARG AENS f („nii /,✓ri, -tikr* ry 1„„ I ,,/ir/ SpA. . REG. NOW$ 55 X14.55 GAS..* CROWN SATIN 1 -COAT LATEX GLAMOROUS SATIN PLASTIC FINISH • COVERS IN ONE GOAT • DRIES ODORLESS IN 3Q MINUTES _.. LE'AN..UY-WmT WATER:— REG. NOW $5/$2" $11.40 GAL* GAL* QT.* NEW CROWN VELVET 1•COAT 1O -LUSTER ENAMEL SUBTILE EGGSHELL FINISH • WASHES AND WEARS LIKE ENAMEL •. COVERS MOST -COLORS IN ONE COAT • PRACTICAL ELEGANCE FOR' YOUR HOME. 45 QT. *MAY BE TINTED AT SLIGHT EXTRA COST --,-CONTAINER UNDERFILLED TO ACCEPT COLORANT 33 PRIZES precious assets was largely ['revert-0.We is needed to bring home the fullR gravity of the child accident situation. The extent of parent responsibility for a great number of these accidents is confirmed by statistics showing the most dangerous ages for child accidents are -at two ana .free and the worst times qt day are in the late afternoon and evening. •a - "9h, it couldn't happen to my child." is the all -too -common • reaction of parents to reports of ,accidental child fatalities and injuries, the Canada Safety Council says. Vigilance by parents must be unceasing to prevent tots from being struck by cars while playing and traffic ,safety education must b,e taught early and often. everyb dy's outboard ? llhIlIll1I1�11tmfhlu„..... 111 I�I�IIIIIl1111111111U�1ilI�.�l., : 111111 .I 1111111 Iltl Ih'ultll•'�11 I I � 1 IIIIIIIIIi!Iil1, !IIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIU111111i,;.. .IIIIIIII�IIIfht .tl. .►unll,UIIldb FLOWERS! VEGETABLES! Apply 3 lbs. per 100 square feet... work into the soil before seeding or transplanting. Then watch your garden grow...beautifully. SHUR-GAIN : NUTRITE Garden Special 4-12-8 is available in 50 Ib. and 25 lb. bags, and 41/2 Ib. boxes, from fine lawn and garden supply dealers everywhere. ve Gower INDUSTRIAL AND GARDEN CENTRE 75 Hamilton St., Goderich 524-8761 NRUDE. LARK — This 40 hp engine is the happy medium for many boats between the big power erk gines and the smaller fishuig outboards. It's powerful enough for family skiing or cruising, yet economical and smooth enough for trolling. To top the cake -- it's a luxury motor with pushbutton electric shifting, automatic choke, thermostat tempera- ture control, fully regulated generator, and much more. See the Lark 40 soon. SERVICE ELECTRIC (Goderich) Ltd. Eifel 52445s1 EVINRUDE SALES & SERVICE CUTT'S RED & WHITE F�c' m:cSte1 BONELESS FULL CUT D Open Ni.tely ` Until„ 10 p.m. v91 VICTORIA ST. - - rrr)Nr M1t NI M1IIrI M1r Nlp TE RUMP ROAST TENDER " BLADE STEAD GE BOLOGNA f lot .. le. 994 SIRLOIN SUPREME STEAK ie. 99' VACUUM PACK l6. 79' K -P WIENERS 2--.994 �e: 39° CHICKENLEGSorBREASTSpb99' n CANADA UTILITY GRADE, T 1b. LIBBY — 14 Oz. FANCY FRUIT COCKTAIL CINDY — 33 Oz LIQUID DETERGENT HEINZ CATSUP KLEAR LIQUID — 27 Oz FLOOR WAX $1.°° APPLE JUICE 2e39° AJAX -2 DETERGENT $1: ' 294 ' SWIFT'S ROYAL DANE 12 Oz. LUNCHEONMEAT 494 ROBIN HOOD FLAKY —.21 Oz. PIE CRUST MIX 3i696 PANTRY SHELF — 48 Oz. 3's1 • 279a "us.' R .0o GENERAL ELECTRIC — 40-60-100 W LIGHT BULBS SMART'S —. 28 oz. 'NO PURCHASE NECESSARY'- SAUERKRAUT-__. 1 tat PRIZE - 1969 SAI RLAN EN 00 INERTS ROOF 8 AUTOMAT CYLINDER CTRANSMLSSION .2nd'PRIZE - 16" G.E. PORTABLE COLOR T.V. 3rd PRIZE • AUTOMATIC G.E. PORTABLE STEREO 5. 4th PRIZES SLEEP GUARD G.E. ELEC- TRIC BLANKETS 10.51h PRIZES ELECTRIC G.E. CARVING KNIVES 15 - eh. PRIZES PORTABLE G.E. HAIR DRYERS BUDGET SPECIAL NOW 3 GALS. FOR CROWN DIAMOND $5(), INTERIOR 9 5 SEMI -GLOSS WHITE GAL. 4. 20 • ith PRIZES PORTABLE 'G E FOOD MIXERS 30.8th PRIZES AUTOMATIC G.E. CAN OPENERS 50 -'Ith PRIZES MINIATURE G.E. SNOOZE ALARMS . 300.10th PRIZES ONE GALLON OF CROWN . DIAMOND PAINT IN THE FINISH AND ,. COLOR OF iytOUR CHOICE•. JOHN JEFFEaY &SON ELGIN AVENUE EAST 524-8171 ECONOMY SIZE SPICand SPAN 14 OZ BOUNTY PUDDINGS `iOSEDALE — 48 ,Oz. INA U.S. NO. 1 RED & WHITE 60's 2459° TEA BAGS 594 DUCAN HINES 14 Oz. --$1 .4° CAKE MIXES 4e89' TOILET TISSUE FANCY„ — 14 0 JU10E 4ri • STOKLEY PEA a 2x894 A 51 OQ Rolls • CORN LETTUCE � wew 4 -CARROTS ONTARIO _N.O. 1 Doz. 794,FROZEN PEAS 2449' ORANGES 26. 49' ROSE BUSHES � OQ ZFR 1. Doz. 69 99' 4