HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1961-09-28, Page 5IIID SEAfi'ORTH NEWS—Thursday, September : 28, 1..961
SMITH'S SUPERIOR it
On coo
Challenger Red Sockeye Salmon 2-734 oz tins $1.00
Green Giant Corn Niblets ,.. , . 6---.14 oz. tins $1;00
Van Camp's Beans with pork . , 7-15 oz :tins $1.00
Carnation Milk .. , .. , , , , 7 —Large tins $1.00
White Cross Toilet Tissue ... .. 9 Large rolls $1.00
Aylmer Fruit Cocktail ..... , . , 4-15 oz. tins $1.00
Cigarettes All popular brands 20s , , 3 for $1.00
Golden Dew Margarine 4 lb pkgs $1.00
Silver Ribbon Choice Green Beans 6-20 oz tins $1
Aylmer Soup, tomato or vegetable 8-10 oz tins $1
Aylmer Catsup 5— 11 oz bottles $1.00
Ellmar Peanut Butter 3—.16 oz Jars .$1.00
Weston's Saltine Crackers ... 3-1 lb boxes $1.00
Weston's Chocolate Mallow Cookies, 4 cello bags $1,
Pillsbury Cake Mixes (Banana Nut -
Chocolate Nut or Date Nut) 3 pkgs. $1.00
St. Williams Assorted Jamas , , 5-9 oz Jars $1.00
Clark's Tomato Juice 8-20 oz. tins $1.00
Kleenex Regular or chubby 6 pkgs. $1,00
Westinghouse light bulbs, 24, 40 or 60 watt, 5 for 1.00
St. Williams Pie Ready (Cherry, Apple or
Blueberry) 3-20 oz tins $1.00
Aylmer Choice Peach Halves ... , 5-15 oz tins $1.00
PHONE 12 We deliver
KIPPEN
Rally Day service at United
Church, Kippen was well attend-
ed and was conducted by Rev.
E. New of Monkton. Rev. H.
Johnston conducted anniversary
services at Bethesda, a Monkton
charge. The Junior Choir sang "1
shall see the King some day".
The story was given by Sharon
McBride. The leaflets were given
out at the door by Margie Elgie
and Susie Mae Lostell.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hutchi-
son of St. Thomas were weekend
visitors of the latter's brother
and sister-in-law; Mr. and Mrs.
W. L. Mellis.
.ru�tbr co.,. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Wahl of List -
owe? were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Dickert.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Riley,
Marlene and Eleanor returned
Friday from Melford, Indiana,
-where they attended the funeral
of Mrs. Riley's cousin.
Mr. John Doig of Grand Rap-
ids, Mich., visited during the
weekend with his mother, Mrs.
Lydia Doig, who is ill in Victoria
Hospital, London.
Mr. and Mrs. Eldin Kerr, Win-
throp were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Elston Dowson.
Kinsman: Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Kinsman are happy to announce
the birth of a son (Lyle Gordon)
on Monday, Sept. 25th at Scott
Memorial Hospital, Seaforth.
DANCING!
Brodhagen Corn. Centre
FRIDAY, SEPT. 29
Desiardine Orchestra
Admission 75c
EUCHRE
In Orange Hall
FRIDAY, SEPT. 29th
Draw on $50.00
Lunch served. Admission 40c
Reception
For Mr. and Mrs. Ross Milison
(Muriel Shobbrook)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6
Londesboro Hall
Norris Orchestra
CROMARTY
Mrs. Sarah Agnes Payne of
Moosejaw, Sask., died on Wed-
nesday at the home of her sister
Mise Margaret Miller, Lot 10,
Con. 9, Hibbert twp. at the age
of 80 years, She was the former
Sarah Agnes Miller and moved
to Moosejaw in 1914. Her hus-
band the late Eustace Payne died
two years ago. Mrs. Payne was
a member of Trinity United
Church, Moosejaw, and of its
WMS and WA. and a member of
the Pythian Sisters. She was a
former member of Cromarty
Presbyterian Church. Surviving
are two brothers, James Miller of
Hibbert, and George Miller, Lon-
don; two .sisters, Mrs. Ernest
Templeman and Miss Margaret
Miller, Hibbert twp. The funeral
was held at the Heath -Leslie fun-
eral home, Mitchell, on Saturday,
conducted by Rev. A. H. Daynard
of Staffa United Church. The
pallbearers were John Temple-
man, Alvin Cole, Bert Mahaffy,
Leslie Miller, Samuel Norris and
Wilfred Annis. Burial was in
Knox Presbyterian cemetery, at
Mitchell. Friends and relatives
from London, Thorndale, Exeter,
Science Hill, Staffa, Cromarty,
Seafor'th', and Mitchell were in
attendance. •
ARTS AND :GRAFTS
Displays, on or water colors, (Goder-
ioh Art Group, Mrs. Alex Smith, God-
erich ; (Seaforth Group) Mr. E. Boswell.
Seaforth ; (Mrs. Thomas' Group) Mrs.
Alex Boyes, Seaforth.
Crafts, aluminum tray, Mrs. Wm.
Hodgert, Mrs. J. Grummett, Mrs. Mervin
Nott. Copper article, James Watson,
Mrs. Wes. Heimpel, Mrs. Wm. Hodgert.
Copper enamelling, James Watson, Mrs.
R. Dalrymple, Hand -made leather arti-
cle, Mrs. O. R. Friend, Robert Reid, Mrs.
3. Grummett. Costume Jewellery, Robert
Reid, Harry McLeod, Mrs. Wes Heim -
Pei. Corsages, Mrs. J. Grummett, Mrs.
Wes Heimpel, Mrs. Wm, Dolmage. Ta-
ble centre, Mrs. H. McLeod, Mrs. Wm.
Dolmage. Place card for hallowe'en
Mrs. Wm. Dolmage, Mrs. H. McLeod.
Paint by number, Mrs. H. McLeod, Mrs.
B. Verbakel, Mrs. J. Wallace, Drift-
wood arrangement, Mrs. R. Dalrymple.
Harry McLeod. Hand puppet, Mrs. H.
McLeod, Mrs. Wm. Dolmage. Hand-
made hats, Mrs. O. R. Friend, Mrs. Wes
Heimpel. Hat, knitted or crocheted, Mrs.
Wm. Dolmage, Mrs. Wes Heimpel. Stuf-
fed toy, Mrs. N. C. Cardno, Mrs. M.
Steffen, Mrs. H. McLeod. Gift -wrapped
parcel, Mrs. H. McLeod, Mrs. Wes
Heimpel Dance Poster, Mrs. H. Mc-
Leod,
o-Leod, Mrs. Wes Heimpel, Mrs. Wm.
Dolmage. Collection of photos, Mrs. Ii.
McLeod. Lawn ornament, Bill Verbakel.
House slippers, Mrs. Wes Heimpel, Mrs.
N. Cardno. Ceramic tile article. Robert
Reid. A.O.0., Harry McLeod, Mm. J.
A. McGregor, Bill Verbakel.
Most points—Mrs. H. McLeod, Mrs.
J. Scott.
DAIRY RRODUGTS
Butter, 6 lbs, Mrs. Jae. Carter. 3
lbs. Mrs. Jas. Carter. 1 doz. servings,
Mrs. Jas. Carter.
Maple Syrup, Rita Orr, Mrs. Col-
clough. Fred McClymont.
Homemade soap, Mrs. Wee Heimpel,.
Mrs. W. Coleman, Mrs. Jas. Carter.
Seseierse
NEW 1961 CHEV. BELAIRE SEDAN, a.t.&r.
1960 ENVOY SEDAN
1957 FORD COACH, A.T.
1955 CHEVROLET SEDAN
, 1955 CHEV. CONVERTIBLE
1955 CONSUL SEDAN
1953 FORD SEDAN
1952' ))+"ORD CONATERiIIBLE
1952 CHEVROLET 1 TON, PICKUP
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED
Seaforth Motors
Chevrolet - Oldsmobile Sales As. Service
MITCHELL
Phone G. Fawm 186 Phone 541
-811I NORTH
TOWN TOPIC$
Mr, and Ml's, .Tack Sproat, of
North Iia Were weekend
of Mr, and MusaR. Ii Spr at,
Mrs. Fred Tisseman, London,
was a recent guest of Mr. and
Mrs. R. H. Sproat,
The Dundee family held a get-
together at the home of Mr, and
Mrs, Willis Dundas, Seaforth,
when four brothers and one sis-
ter met on Sunday for a social
afternoon and smorgasi)ord Iun-
oheon, Those present were Miss
Tillie Dundas, New York City;
Mr. and Mrs, Armour Dundas, of
Lucan; Mr. and Mrs. Willis Dun-
das of Seaforth; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Dandas, Toronto, and
Mr. and Mrs. Torrance. Dundas,
Walton,
BORN
Taman — Jim and Diane Tam.
titan announce the birth of their
daughter, Dawn Louise, in the
Bellefontaine, Ohio, Hospital, on
Sept. 23rd
Reid — At Scott Memorial
Hospital, on Sept. 27th, to Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid, RR 4 Walton, a
son
Mem — At Scott Memorial
Hospital, Seaforth, on Sept. 22,
to Mr. and Mrs. Joseph : Mero,
Seaforth, 'a daughter
Kinsman — At Scott Memorial
Hospital, on Sept. 25, to Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Kinsman, Kippen, a
son
Bolger — At Scott Memorial
Hospital, on Sept. 25, to Mr. and
Mrs. James Bolger, R R 3 Walton,
a daughter
Lubbers — At Scott Memorial
Hospital, on Sept. 26, to Mr. and
Mrs. Lambert Lubbers, R R 2 Sea -
forth, a son
WALTON.
The MoKi)lop Group held their
September meeting in the Church
Wednesday evening Sept. 20 with
it members present, Mrs. Xae*
Bosnian presided and opened the
meeting with hymn 679. Mrs. T.
McCreath led in prayer, Mrs.
Campbell Wey read the scripture
front Matt. 13: 1-24, The topic
was given by Mrs. G. Love. In It
she told of the fascinating career
in the frontier of medical mitis,
slonary Dr. Margaret Strang 5a-
vauge, a native of Exeter, After
the report, Mrs. Gordon McGavin
gave a report of the provisional
committee.
There will be a meeting for
all the members in the church on
Oct. 4 When Rev. Higginbotham
will explain the new Organiza-
tion of the United Church Wo-
men. Plans were made for a so.
cial to be held in the church on
Friday evening, Oct. 20 when
Dr, B. A. McMaster will show
pictures taken on his trip to the
Holy Land. The meeting was
closed with hymn 502 and pray
er. A delicious lunch was served
by Mrs. N. Schade, Mrs. S. Mc-
Call, Mrs. D. Thomas and Mrs.
R. Barrows,
Mr. Hugh Campbell is at pres-
ent visiting his daughter, Mrs.
Geo. Carter -and Mr. Carter, Lon-
desboro.
Mr, and Mrs. James Keyes, of
McKillop, visited Sunday with
their son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Mac Sholdice,
Miss Betty Hoegy of Listowel
spent the week end with her pat-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Hoe -
8y.
Mr. Wayne McMichael of Galt
spent the week end with his par -
cats, Mr, and Mrs. R. Mcldiehael,
Mrs. Chas. McGavin has re•
turned home after being confined
to the K -W hospital, Kitchener
for five weeks.
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Anderson of
Stratford were Sunday visitors
at the borne. of Mr. and Mrs, Alf-
red Anderson,
First
Presbyterian Church
REV. D, LESLIE ELDER
Minister
10 am, Church School and
Youth Fellowship Class
U A:M, -
WORLD COMMUNION SUNDAY
The minister will conduct the
service and administer the Sac-
rament,
Thursday, Sept. 28th. Preparatory
Service, 8 p.m. Guest Preacher,
Rev, D. Ross MacDonald, BA,
ANNIVERSARY SERVICES
CHISELHURST
United Church
Sunday, October 1
2.30 AND 7.30 P.M.
(GUEST SPEAKER
Rev. Wilbur J. Rogers
of Erindale
Afternoon Service
SPECIAL MUSIC
EVENING — HURON JR.
FARMERS QUARTETTE
Northside United Church
Worship 11,, 0414,
We observe w ll World Corn
i
mullion et this service,
Church School 10 a,m,
Junior School during worship
period.
Organist, Mrs.J A.Stewart:
Choirmaster, Mr. 3, A. Stewart;
Minister, Rev. J. C. Britton, B,A,
Embossed maps bring the World to the Fingertips
of the Blind. This equipment and special training
are made 'possible by your donation to the
TRI -COUNTY CAMPAIGN FOR THE BLIND-
HURON
LINDHURON COUNTY OBJECTIVE $6000.00
Send your donation today to:
Mr. E. C. Boswell, Seaforth, Ont.
COMING AAwUbrijoThfrf/thomC'hmroIet1
SMBER 29th1
You'd expect Chevrolet to do .it — and it has ! Traditionally
Chevrolet has been the leader who so deftly pinpointed the needs
of Canadian motorists—and then so aptly developed the right cars
to fill those needs! Now Chevrolet has done it again! From its his-
tory of achievement in engineering perfection, mechanical durabi
lity and luxurious comfort, Chevrolet takes another significant step
into the future. And now in 1962, Chevrolet
invites you to enter a new World of Worth. _
A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
CHEVROLET
62 Chevrolet Rich new styling with Jet -smooth
Chevrolet Impala Convertible
CHEVY EE - A TOTALLY
NEW LTE OF CARS
Chevrolet Bel Air Sport Coupe
Here's all the car anybody could want. Fresh -minted style that comes to a clean -sculptured
climax in the new Impala Convertible. A road -gentling Jet -smooth ride. A new choice of V-8
skedaddle. New Body by Fisher interiors that give wide berth to feet, hats and elbows.
Beauty that's built to stay beautiful — right down to new front fender under -skirts for extra
rust resistance. And here's more than ever to please you from the make that pleases the
most people. Impalas — that take the high price out of feeling luxurious; Bel Airs — that
ride as smooth as they look; Biscaynes — that sacrifice not one iota of comfort as they go
their thrifty way. See your Chevrolet dealer and talk over this newest version of Canada's
traditional leader !
It's the car just about everybody's been trying to build. But
it remained for Chevrolet to come through with its Here are
all the time -tested virtues you expect from Chevrolet plus
surprises you've never seen. A full line of saucy new -size
models built a new way for easier service and maintenance.
Thrifty ? Only four cylinders to feed, or six if you like extra
scamper. Roomy? Sedans seat six solid citizens. Price? A
most pleasant surprise (with the heater -defroster at no extra.
cost!).
Chevy II doesn't stint on anything — except gasoline ! Its
power plants both have hydraulic valve lifters and an 8.5 to
1 compression ratio. There's Chevrolet's famous Powerglide
automatic transmission available. And there's a suspension
system that includes Mono -Plate Rear Springs — part of an advanced, road smoothing suspension. But high
on Chevy II's list of virtues is thecomfort and style that until now has been known only in cars costing
much, much more !
And it's yours to enjoy in all three series of Chevy 3I — in all nine models. There's the. Chevy II 100 series
— beauty built for every budget. The Chevy II 300,— function with a flair in a family car. And the Chevy
IT Nova 400 series — sensibility -at its Sunday -best. Choose one — and you get everything you want in a
cat - including the dollars -lower price tag! •
Milli
.. _ -zap-.�•
ALL„THIS IS YOURS IN A CHEVY II
• Body by:. Fisher — solid strength and lasting value
• Choice of 2 PowerPlants—a frugal four or almost -as -thrifty six
• Choice of 2 Transmissions — 3 -speed Synchro-Mesh or
Powerglide • Unique Unitized Construction — two box -like sections for
, • Industry -new Suspension System— Mono -Plate Rear Springs extra strength
never require lubrication • Exclusive Interiors — Handsome upholstery in a choice of
• Power Features — Steering and brakes optional on all models colour combinations
Chevy A Nova 400 Convertible
Chevy II 300 4 -Door Sedan
Chevy 11 100 4 -Door Station Wagon
Whitewall tires & wheel discs optional at extra cost
Corvair-sports car spirit
family car function
Corvair Monza Club CoUpe
You'll Dever find joyful excitement wrapped ',up so ce;etttlih- will,
economy, elegance and sports car dash it's it is with Corvair fc:r'62.1 here's
the stire.footed agility that stems from Corvair's lean,en;tiue and weight
distribution—Comltplete with its gas -saving ways. There's Elie pori: appeal
*Standard an //Is Monza Club Coupe, Optional at exh'a cost on the Alonzo 1 -Door Sedan and
Corvair Monza Station Wagon
of bucket seats* — and there's the kiddies' romping rooms that comes
when the rear sent is folded down". Certainly, the nine models of
Corvair for '62, including the new Monza Station Wagon, combine the
host of fancily comfort with a sports car flair - and an eye on economy!
the Moazd Station Wagon.**Optional on 500 and 700 series toupee and sedans,
._.. _. ' C-1621-1
SEAFORTH MOTORS - Phone 541
J