HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Advance-Times, 1978-11-08, Page 10vAts
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328 >ahirhati t
alydtte• ,paeaed away
v 2#.. at Owen
Marble Roe -
Ott in 1 54tt► raw.
The.. former•. Ma .i
Newell, Ws, Tia bo
+ase olt April .9, 1925, a daughter
Of the lite Horace leve U d
Eli: beth Windowbank, She
alien. • No 11, Turnberry
To t t p -
She married _Mr. Mason on
September 6, 1944, in St. Paul's
Anglican Church, Winghant. He
Survives, with one son, Keith
Mason, Toronto, and one daugh-
ter, Joanne Mason, Kincardine.
Also surviving are four sisters,
Mrs. Stanley (Nora) Vanstone
and Mrs. Sperling (Gladys) Yeo,
both of Wingham, Mrs. Wilfred
(Agnes) Seddon, Stratford, and
Mrs. Elgin .(Iris) Boyce, God-
erich; and two brothers, Harry
Newell, of Cambridge (Preston)
and James, Wingham.
Mrs. Mason was a member of
the Anglican Church and the
Ladies' Auxiliary to the MacDon-
ald Branch No. 183, Kincardine.
Members of the auxiliary con-
ducted a memorial service at the
funeral home on Friday evening.
The funeral service was con-
ducted at the R. A. Currie and
Son Funeral Home, Wingham, on
Saturday at two. o'clock by Rev.
S. R. Lupton. Interment followed
in Wingham Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Don Picot,
4
N �Pr�. a �m,,,
,�"w.
1 1�r 7 .'tl. a? nit w ... 10,r M r.!. ,
,.-µ• 'A.�F. i:atrZ.. i A. rt*41r. - it' 'i :: .74;
.r :w :r .i:'rG 1',w.:•sp«._, �y ::a Yt ::.1Wa r °:is f' '�Sak'R'i
G urge Web n
, Janes Wad-
harn., Jack MacPherson, Harry
Porbea it Ken Rowe. Ladies of
the on Atlxiiliary of which she
was a member, served as flower
bearers. 'D. A. MacLennan off
Lochalsh and Mac Webster of
rn`-.Iiitcardine piped The Lament
during the committal service at
tlia ccuaeiery.
Memorial donations to the
charity of one's choice are being
acknowledged by the family as
expressions of sympathy.
Mrs. P. Henlfs
dies suddenly
at Wroxeter
The sudden death occUrred•at
her home in Wrofeter on Satur-
day, November 4, of Mrs. Percy
Henley. She was in her 63rd year.
Mrs. Henleywas born in
Guelph and was the former Reta
Mu. Brohman, daughter°of the late
Mr. and Mrs. George Brohman.
She and her husband operated
the Edgewater Restaurant in,
:Wroxeter and more recently,
have operated a grocery store in
the village.
Surviving, , besides her
husband, are two daughters,
Mrs. Daniel (Shirley) O'Beirn,
Scarborough, and Mrs. 'Ian
,(Doretta) Ly'ndd, Lindsay;
grandehildreii,'' also nieces and
nephews.
The late Mrs. Henley rested at
the Davidson Funeral Home,
Gorrie, where service was con-
ducted at two o'clock Monday by
Rev. Thomas Fleetham of Ford-
wich United Church. Her final
resting place will be Elmwood
Cemetery,,
Markham,.
Honorary pallbearers were
Terrance and Richard O'Beirn,
Geoffrey Woollen, Ken Edgar,
Oliver Riley and Ken Lynde.
John E. McCallum
lifelong resident
of East Wawanosh
A lifelong resident of East
Wawanosh Township, John E.
McCallum. of Belgrave died in
Huronview, Clinton, on Friday,
October 27,- in his 97th year.
Mr. McCallum was born in
East Wawanosh on September 28,
.1 : ,2. His parents were the late
John McCallum and Mary Mc-
Gregor. He attended SS No. 8,
East Wawanosh and farmed all
his life on the family homestead
on the ninth concession of the
township. He was a member of
the Belgrave United Church, a
life member of the Canadian
Order of Forresters and a mem-
ber of the Belgrave Loyal Orange
Lodge No. 462.
Mr. McCallum's wife, the
former Edith Bruce, pre-
deceased him in 1962. He is sur-
vived by one daughter, Mrs.
George (Eileen) Jones, London;
two granddaughters, Mrs. Susan
Pratt, London, and Mrs. Jack
(Irene) Carmichael, Toronto;
and two great-grandsons,
Murray and Rodney Pratt of
London. He was predeceased by
sisters, Susan, Flora, Mary,
Annie and Maggie;. and a
brother, Duncan.
The late Mr. McCallum rested
at the R. A. Currie and Son
Funeral Home, Wingham, until
Monday, October 30, when
funeral service was conducted at
two o'clock by Rev. John Roberts
of Belgrave United Church.
Interment followed in Brandon
Cemetery, Belgrave.
Pallbearers were James Mc-
Callum, Arnold Bruce, Gordon
Nethery, "Murray Pratt, Stanley
Vincent of Springfield and Elmer
Bruce. Floral tributes were
carried by Rodney Pratt and
William Nethery.
As expressions of sympathy,
memorial donations may be
Made to the Belgrave United
Church or the charity.of one's
choice.
Private service
October 29 for
Mrs. F. C. McCool
A private funeral service was
held Sunday, October 29, at 2:30
at the Beattie Funeral Home,
Clinton, for Mrs. Dorothy Amelia
McCool of Clinton. Interment fol-
lowed in Clinton Cemetery.
Pallbearers were John Burrs,
Carl Longman, Ed Layton,
Wayne Layton, Doug Layton and
Harry Cochrane.
Mrs. McCool passed away at
Clinton Public Hospital on Thurs-
day, October 26, in her 77th year.
Born in Cornwall, England, on
July 6, 1902, to the late Mr. and
Mrs. William Jago, she moved to
Canada in 1914 at the 'age of 12
and with her family, resided in
Mitchell. She attended public
schools in Mitchell and Clinton
and following graduation, she
trained and received her Regis-
tered Nurse's degree at the Clin-
ton Public Hospital on November
17, 1924.
She married Frederick C. Mc-
Cool in Clinton on June 3, 1926,
and they farmed in Hullett Town-
ship before moving to Clinton in
1968.
She is survived by two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Roy (Doris) Green,
Toronto, and Mrs. Orval (Jane)
Wolfe, Cambridge; two sons,
Paul of RR 5, Wingham and
Robert, RR 1, Londesboro; and
'seven grandchildren. She was
predeceased by her husband and
one sister, Edith.
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GORRIE 4-H EXHIBIT—Among the excellent exhibits on display at the Gorrie area
Achievement Day on Saturday at Howick Central Public School was this one by the Gorrie
3, 4-H Homemaking Club. Commentators for the exhibit were Elizabeth McCaughan (left)
and Susan Mann.
Brussels council hears of
transportation problems
In its last meeting before the
Nov. 13 municipal elections
Brussels village council heard of
some of the transportation pro-
blems senior citizens have in the
north end of Huron County.
Rural Development Outreach
Project. Field Co-ordinator
Louise Marritt told council 37 per
cent of the seniors in the northern
part of the county either never or
seldom have use of a vehicle.
She saidithe problems en-
countered by these people are
more important in small rural
communities because senior citi-
zens must travel greater dis-
tances to get the services they
need.
While large communities are
expecting senior citizens to be-
come a large segment , of the
population, in north Huron the
seniors already make up almost
20 per cent of the populace.
"We have some of the pro-
blems that other people are
OIITUARY
T>ItA LL—Passel yaway at Sba l tip
Waterloo Memorial HospitF.
Cambridge, on Friday, Novem-
ber 3, Mrs. Catharine P. Trail,
in her 93rd year. She was the
'beloved wife of the late J. J.
Traill; dear mother of Mrs.
Alton B. {Mary) Adams of Lon-
don and W. Allan Traill of Tor-
onto. Also surviving are eight
grandchildren and four great-
grandchildren. She was prede-
ceased by one daughter, Mrs.
John P. (Doris) McKibbon, in
1972. A private funeral service
was conducted on Monday with
interment in the Toronto
Necropolis.
WILLIS—Florence Elaine Willis,
39, youngest daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lorne Sanderson of
Wingham, Passed away at
Brantford General Hospital on
Wednesday, October 25. She
was the beloved wife of Thomas
W. Willis, formerly of Brus-
sels; dear mother of Mrs. Ray
(Debbie) Dahl, Christopher,
Wilfred and Yvonne, all of
Brantford; sister of Mrs. Joyce
Steuernol, London, Mrs. Bill
(Dorothy) Taylor, Stayner,
Elmo of Wingham, Bill,. List-
owel, and Raymond, London.
She is also survived by two
grandchildren, nieces and
nephews. Visitation took place
at he McCleister Funeral
Howe where funeral service
was held in the chapel at 1:30
on Friday, October 27. Inter-
ment followed in Mount Hope
Cemetery . Rev. L. H. Gibbons
of Evangel .1 entecostal Church
officiated. L ations to the
Canadian Can,,dr Society, were
gratefully accepted by the
family.
WRAITH—Passed away sudden-
ly in Kinloss Township on Wed-
nesday, November 1, John Rod -
well Wraith t Lucknow in his
70th year. Ile was the beloved
husband of the former Fanny
Wall; dear father of Rod of
cWingham and Eldon, Sarnia.
Also surviving are six grand-
children; three sisters, Mrs.
Dorothy Stein, Cambridge,
Mrs. George (Leola) Gibbons,
Wingham, and Mrs. Henry
(Mary) Albrecht, Walker-
ton; and one brother, George of
Goderich. The late Mr. Wraith
rested at the MacKenzie and
McCreath Memorial Chapel,
Lucknow, where funeral serv-
ice was held Sunday at two
o'clock. Interment followed in
Tiffin's Cemetery. As expres-
sions of sympathy, donations
would be appreciated to the
Arthritis Society.
anticipating," Mrs. Marritt told
council.
The RDOP survey, which also
got support from the Day Centre
for the Homebound in Clinton and
from Transport Canada, also
found that 64 per cent of the sen-
iors without the use of a vehicle
live alone.
The survey was to identify
transportation problems of sen-
ior citizens in the area, not to find
solutions to the problems.
Council was told by Clerk
William King that a $35,637.94
Wintario cheque had been re-
ceived by the Brussels, Morris
and Grey building fund commit-
tee.
Reeve Cal Kreuter told council
the cheque takes care of the
money the village had guaran-
teed, so everything the village
had backed had been paid off.
The Belgrave sewage works
are in the final design stage,a
letter from the ministry of the.
environment told council.
Engineering for the project will'
probably be completed. next
spring, though provincial funds
haven't yet been allocated for the
project.
Council learned in a letter from
the ministry of transportation
and communications 2 that,, i
didn't need provincial appraval.
to open James Street as a pbblie
thoroughfare. The ministry also
notified council that the street -
met MTC standards.'
Coun. Malcolm Jacobs said
there was no misunderstanding
at the Oct. 2 council meeting in
which council received a letter
from John Schenk of Goodall and
Campbell solicitors. A . second
letter from the law firm on behalf
of Douglas Trollope told council
Mr. Trollope's building was being
damaged by water coming from
the adjacent Olympia Restaurant
on Turnberry Street.
Council had treated the com-
plaint as a neighbors' squabble
instead of a problem to be solved
by the village building inspector.
The second letter from Mr.
Schenk noted that the Ontario
Building Code covers water dam -
r MRS. ALLAN GRIFFITH
Wroxeter
The Wroxeter Senior Citizens
held their delicious smorgasbord
supper in the Community Hall
basement on Wed. evening, Nov.
1, when 50 persons participated.
Following dinner a few games of
euchre were played.
TEA PARTY—This group of Silver Circle and Golden Circle school students had a tea
party In costume as part of the celebration of Hallowe'en last week. From left to right are
Alan Perrie, Billy Zimmerman, Kenny Purdon, Tracey Purdon, Karen McInnes, Jackie
Kieffer and Mary Jane Edisbury.
age, so the building inspector
would have some power to solve
the dispute.
Village Clerk William King
said he checked with the head
building inspector's office in
Toronto and was told it appeared
to be a private dispute and coun-
cil should stay out of it.
In other business council upped
its grant to the Belgrave,
Brussels and Blyth school fair.
The grant this year amounted to
$35 and in years past was $25.
Council turned down a donation
request by the Christian Record
Braille Foundation of Willow -
dale, as councillors felt it was
better to contribute to a local
fund drive by a group like the
CNIB.
Council passed a motion asking
people to comply with a Brussels
Business Association request
that businesses close Nov, 11
from 10 a.m. to noon in honor of
those who gave their lives in the
two world wars.
The business association also
got thanks from council for its
street sign project in which street
signs along the main street were
replaced with new signs.
'In closing the meeting, earl �
council member described the
term of council as productive, a
good learning experience and
fun:
ok+ a�r{wttrlgn+tN,n
A
Carp lilfrokti
spring program
is WI topic
LAKEC,ET- Education was the
theme, of the (regular meeting of
Lakelet WI held in Fordwich
Community Rall on November 2.
Special guests at this meeting
were members of the Howick
Junior Institute.
Featured were slides shown by
Robert Keip of the Maitland
Valley Conservation Authority.
Along with excellent commen-
tary he portrayed the educational
program held in conjunction with
the Huron County Board of Ed-
ucation the past two springs at
Camp Wyoka, on the north shore
of Lakelet Lake. He was intro-
duced by Mrs. Henry Hohnstein
and thanked by Mrs. Harry
Judge.
Mrs. Harold Wallace, presi-
dent, conducted the meeting,
opening in the usual manner. The
roll call was answered by thir-
teen members and eight guests
telling the school they attended,
and what it is used for today.
Members were reminded of the
annual Christmas dinner and gift
exchange to be held at the home
of Mrs. Wallace on December 7.
Also there was an urgent remind-
er that 4-H club leaders will be
needed for the next club if the 4-H
movement is to continue in this
area.
Motto for the evening, "He who
never changes his mind never
corrects his mistakes",, was
given by Mrs. Percy Huth.
A delicious lunch of pie and ice
cream was enjoyed by everyone.
R. W. BELL
OPTOMETRIST
GODERICH
The Square 524-7661
Great rabbit movies
you have known and loved.
STARTS SUNDAY
NOVEMBER 12th
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r4.rti9,w;�;
EIect�r
It has been a privilege to salve'`
,
Reeve, and as your representative ort..County
Council. If re-elected 1 will continue to bp of
help with our Township .and County matters.
ask for your support at the Polis,on>I,.0 44
vember 13. ••
Re -Elect
BILL ELSTON
For Reeve
s0
Elect
Lloyd Gilroy
Deputy Reeve
* 10 year resident of Wingham-.
* 30 years retail Management experience.
* Member of Wingham United Church, Whig-.
ham, Masonic Lodge AF & AM 286, Scottish
Rite Masonry, Canadian Legion, Mocha Tem-
ple.
I NEED YOUR VOTE ON NOVEMBER 13th
IN ORDER TO SERVE YOU
and your interests on local council
and Huron County Council.
Transportation available to and from the Town Hall
on November 13th from 11 a.m. to p.m. Call -
357-1017
Service Directo
ELECTRICAL
Burke -McLeod
Electrical
Contractors Ltd
Electrical" Contracting
Motor Sales, Repairs
and Rewind
Wingham 519-357.2450,
BURKE ELECTRIC LTD.
Appliance Sales and Service
Maytag Moffat
kitchen Aid
Inglis Hoover
Wingham 357-2450
Quality and Personal
Service Guaranteed
PLETCH
ELECTRIC
Wingharn
Industrial, Commercial,
Farming, Domestic
PHONE '
357-1583
FLOWERS
• Wedding
Arrangements
• Cut flowers
• Plants
• Flowers by
Wire Service
LEWIS
FLOWERS
135 Frances
Phone
357-3880
SALES AND SERVICE
Lynn Hoy
Enterprises
Honda and Skidoo
Sales & Service
Hwy. 86 east of Wingham
Phone 519-357-3435
INSURANCE
/Coil
INSURANCE
All Types of
Insurance
335-3525 357-2636
GORRIE WINGHAM
TOP SOIL & GRAVEL
TOP SOIL AND
GRAVEL
Crushed Gravel
Cement Gravel
Fill Gravel
Top Soil • 3/4 Stone
Sand
John Cox 357.1297
WINGHAM
—ANTENNAS AND
SMOKE DETECTORS
MC. AND MACS
TOWERS
Antennas and
Smoke Detectors
For Home or Business Cali:
335-6321
or
357-2644
FUELS
• BILL TIFFIN
Imperial Esso Agent
For all your Home and
Farm Fuel and
Lubricating Needs
357-1032
PRINTING
WINGHAM
PRINTING
SERVICE
• PRINTING
• PHOTO COPIES
• REGISTER FORMS
• RUBBER STAMPS
• WEDDING
STATIONERY
314 JOSEPHINE STREET
WINGHAM
357-3800
SIGNS
SIGNWRITING
"Dunn By Tom"
Thomas E • Dunn
RR 1 Bluovalo
335-6395
PLUMBING HEATING
Leroy Jackson
—Plumbing
—Heating
—Tinsmithing
191 Josephine St.
Wingham 357-2904
PLUMBING
PLUMBING REPAIRS
RENOVATIONS
New Installations, call
Terry Deyell at
357-2808 or 357.1229
CONSTRUCTION
T. M. & T.
CONSTRUCTION
General Contractors
All types of concrete work
Pit Silos
Home and farm byilding
CAL1, BOB THOINP';§`bN
BI,UEVALE, Or4A:l 111
357-3493
r
If Your
Business Is Service
0
THE
ADVANCE -TIMES It 3572320
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