HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1963-09-05, Page 3THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1963
ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS
PAGE, THREE
News of HENSALL District
Dr, W. R. Sproat, of Wind.
soh, Janet, Jim, Dru, and Beth
Anne visited his mother, Mrs,
E. Sproat, the past week, also
his cousin, Mrs. Harry Buechler
and family at Kingsmere.
Sgt. Ross Kennedy, of Up-
lands Air Base, Ottawa, accom-
panied by his son Ronald, and
daughter Dianne, have returned
home after vacationing for a
week with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Eric Kennedy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hall, of
Minitonas, Man., have returned
home after a holiday spent with
Mr. and Mrs. John Henderson
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Mattson
and sons have taken up resi-
dence in the Passmore home on
Richmond Street South, which
they recently purchased from
Mr. Passmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn McKen-
zie have sold their property on
Brock Street to Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Turvey, who get posses-
sion September 21. Mr. and
Mrs. McKenzie and family are
taking up residence on Rich-
mond Street North.
Union services concluded Sun-
day last. This coming Sunday,
September 8, Rev. Ross Mac-
Donald will occupy his own
pulpit in Carmel Presbyterian
Church, and Rev. Harold Currie
in Hensall United Church. At
the concluding union service in
Hensall United Church Sunday
morning, Rev. Currie delivered
an inspiring message. Mrs.
Pearl Passmore and Miss Mary
Goodwin sang two vocal duetts,
and. Mrs. Robert Pryde accom-
panied at the organ.
Mr. Vernon Hedden, Mr. Rus-
sell Hedden, Earl Hedden and
Leslie Raine, of St. Catharines,
spent the holiday week end with
Mr. Herb Hedden.
Hensall Women's Institute
meetings will resume Wednes-
day, September 11, in the Le-
gion Hall, with a pot luck sup-
per served at 7 p.m. sharp.
Roll tall, "An Exchange of Re-
cipes". Program convenors,
Mrs. B. Koehler, Mrs. H. Hor-
ton; hostesses, Mrs. R. M. Peck,
Mrs. J. Bengough, Mrs. A.
Noakes, Mrs, W. Dilling.
Mrs, C. Richardson, Mrs. N.
E. Cook, Mrs. Walter Spencer,
Mrs. James McAllister and Mrs.
Earle T. Rowe attended a tea
at Westminster College, London,
sponsored by the United Church
Women Furnishing Fund of the
College on Thursday afternoon
last.
Mr. David Shirray, who has
been a patient in South Huron
Hospital, Exeter, for the .past
three years, has been moved to
Huronview, He was visited by
his niece, Mrs. William MacRae,
and her son from Ottawa. They
were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Shirray.
Mrs. Minnie Sangster was
visited recently by members of
here family from Forest, Lon-
don and Lucan,
The Misses Shirley Johnston
and Marjorie Turner visited
their grandmother, Mrs. Robert
McAllister, last week.
Sunday, September 8, Rev. K.
N. Hick, of Ailsa Craig, will be
guest minister at Hensall United
Church in the morning. Rev.
Harold. Currie will be guest
preacher at Brinsley United
Church Anniversary.
Unit 4 of the U.C.W. will re-
sume meetings this Thursday,
September 5, starting at 6:15
with a pot luck supper, Mrs.
James McAllister is Unit Lead-
er. A new season of activity
begins for the United Church
women.
The general meeting of the
United Church Women will
meet Monday evening, Septem-
ber 9, at 8:30 p.m., for all Units.
Mrs. Hilton Laing and Danny,
Mrs. Jean Manson, Mr. and
of Exeter; Mr. and Mrs. Stewart
McQueen and Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Snell were in Blenheim
for the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Don Rigby, and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Knights and family.
They attended the christening
of Jane Elizabeth Knights at
Ridge United Church on Sun-
day. Mr. and Mrs. McQueen
remained for this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Parke,
of the Goshen Line north of
We have available wheat seed contracts. Seed and
fertilizer supplied until corp is delivered.
20c PREMIUM WILL BE PAID ON WHEAT!
4
W. G. THOMPSON HLNSAI.L
and Sons Limited Phone 32
•
4.4.4440,
VILLAGE OF HENSALL
Notice of Street Closing
NOTICE is hereby given that pursuant to the Muni-
cipal Act and other powers thereunto enabling/ The
Council of the Corporation of the Village of Hensall
proposes to pass •a by-law to stop up and close a portion
of Wellington Street which said portion may be more
particularly described as follows:
That portion of land contained within and commenc-
ing at a point 25 feet south of the south westerly corner
of the intersection of Mill and Wellington Streets thence
easterly 11 feet thence southerly 55 feet thence westerly
11 feet to the boundary line of lot 42 Wilson's Survey.
then northerly 55 feet along the westerly boundary of
Wellington Street to point of commencement.
And further take Notice that the Council of the said
Corporation will •hear in person, or by Counsel, Solicitor
or Agent, any person who claims that his land will be
prejudicially affected by the said by-law and who ap-
plies to be heard at a meeting to be held in the Council
Chambers at the Town Hall, on Tuesday, October 8, 1963,
at the hour of 8 o'clock P.M.
Dated at Hensall this 4th day of September, 1963.
EARL CAMPBELL,
Clerk
Zurich, have taken up residence
on Queen Street.
Mr, Charles Mickle left Mon-
day for Hamilton where he will
resume his position as high
school teacher at the Westdale
Secondary School.
Kippen Gun Club
Leon Hartman, of Kitchener,
won the Kippen Gun Club Tro-
phy at Kippen Gun Club's an-
nual Labor Day Shoot held at
Kippen Sunday afternoon, with
a score of 49 out of 50. John
Barker, of London, and H.
Crawford, Kitchener, scored 48
out of a possible 50. John
Anderson, Hensall, scored 47
out of 50, Lloyd Moore, Inger-
soll, and Shelden Weinstein,
Brucefield Women
Enjoy Bus Tour
Mrs. Mary Haugh and daugh-
ter Suane, of Brucefield, have
returned from a two -months
tour of Canada and the United
States, leaving the first of July
and returning August 24. They
covered 10,000 miles by bus,
with three bus loads of 110
people, mostly teachers, from
Canada and other countries of
the world, taking the trip with
sleeping accommodation and
meals served on the busses.
Mrs. Haugh stated that it
was a wonderful tour with mag-
nificent scenery and certainly
one realized the vastness in
resources of North America.
They travelled through five
Provinces, 15 States, three Ca-
nadian National Parks, and five
American Parks.
During their itinerary they
vi-ited Winnipeg, Regina, Cal-
gary, Edmonton, Jasper Na-
tional Park, Columbia Ice
Fields, Lake Louise, Banff, Van-
couver, Victoria, Crater Lake
National Park, Prairie Creek
Redwood Park, San Francisco,
Santa Monica, Disneyland, Mex-
ico, Hollywood, Zion National
Park, Grand Canyon, Bryce
Canyon, Salt Lake City, Yel-
lowstone National Park, Chi-
cago.
London, 46-50. Goderich won
the five -man trophy for 16 yards
with a score of 117 of a possible
125 birds. Members'of the team
were Bill Stewart, John Gilbert,
E. Horton and Itedley Prouse,
all of Goderich, and J. Wigle,
London. Kitchener team was
runner-up with 116 'out of 125.
Mrs. 5. N. Whittaker
Mrs. Nettie Whittaker, of
Hensall, passed away suddenly
at Grace Hospital, Windsor, on
Sunday, September 1. Born in
Westminster Township she was
in her 72nd year, Se was the
widow of Cecil Walker and
Henry Whittaker. Surviving
are four sons, Hubert and Iiow-
ard Walker, London, Carl 'Walk-
er, Windsor, Clarence Walker,
St. Thomas; two sister and three
brothers. Funeral service was
held Wednesday from the Need-
ham Memorial Chapel, with
burial in Pond Mills Cemetery.
Mr. Jim. Robinson, Ph.D., of
Miami, and Mr. Ronald Sproat,
I3.A., M.A., B.F.A., of New York
City, were recent guests of Mrs.
Earle Sproat.
Miss Joy Tamblyn, of Ade-
laide, Australia, who is on a
tour of several countries, is a
house guest this week with Mr.
and Mrs. John Henderson and
family.
Mrs. Cecil Kaiser, of Picker-
ing Beach and Daytona Beach,
Fla., spent a week holidaying
with Mrs. Earle Sproat who ac-
companied her home for a short
visit,
Mr, and Mrs. Eric Kennedy
have returned from a 10 -day
vacation spent at Kiwartha
Lakes, Fenelon Falls, with Mrs.
Kennedy's sister-in-law, Mrs.
Oliver Geiger, and Hamilton.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lindsay,
Pamela and Sheila, London,
were weekend holiday visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. John Hender-
son and family.
Mounties Musical Ride Will Be One
Of Main Attractons at Western Fair
Western Fair opens this Fri-
day at London's Queens Park
for eight wonderful days of
sheer pleasure.
There is so much to see at
Western Fair for every member
of the family from Educational
Exhibits to Conklins huge mid-
way and glittering Horse Show
in the Ontario Arena.
Two full hours of solid and
nerve -tingling grandstand en-
tertainment will be headed by
the greatest single attraction in
Canada, the R.C.M.P. Musical
ride. This you must see. It's the
thrill of a lifetime.
Reserved seats
Write Western Fair for re-
served seat tickets, $2.00 and
$1.50.
Western Fair has everything
— huge livestock show, farm
machinery, flower show,
women's work, 4-11 Club con-
tests, poultry show, art, photo.
graphy, government displays,
fruit and vegetables.
New Building
A big feature this year is the
new building replacing the fire -
razed Manufacturers Building.
Built in record time, it has
64,000 square feet of floor
space. It will be full of interest-
ing and varied commercial ex-
hibits.
And don't forget eveyone has
a chance to win a $1.000 atten-
dance prize each night of the
Fair, September 6 to 14.
WIN $1,000 A DAY ATTENDANCE PRIZE
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the GRANDSTANf; ;•
Plus THE CHORDETTES and
SPECTACLE '63
d star studded stage extravaganza
Sept. 6-12
SEE the spectacle that never grows old—the Fair
that gives you all the fun, excitement and thrills
your heart desires.
NAME THE BUILDING
Win a $2,500 Nutria Stole
Plus a Trip for 2 to the
New York World's Fair
RCJVLPPVILlSICAI.a RIDE
SPECTACLE '63
Sept. 6 to 12
3 RING CI CUS
Plus R.C.M.P. Musical Ride
Sept. 13 & 14 Only
ar,
GPEND IISS
sarmus
WESTON'S
Apple Pies
38c each
Compare at 37c — 100 Foot Rolls
Handi-Wrap
29c
Compare at 2 for 29c
Kraft Dinners
1 tic each
ept° 6 to 14
LONDON, ONTARIO
=MU ,m.®I e1BN1al. masa Imam mom- =Mos Mem.. W.= MHO =Ie.r+qr"
ORDER YOUR GRANDSTAND SEATS BY MAIKI p
Please send me Y tickets to the evening
grandstand performance on Sept
Enclosed is
Evening Reserved Seats $2.00 or $1.50.
Name
1
m
Address
Please Enclose A Stamped Self -Addressed Envelope
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'kit BETTER!
Ontario No. 1
POTATOES
25 -fib. Bag
9c
'�`li:�sc"::yes 1,K :,,.... ;.,r.�;..,zr..< 111
dos.',�ac ai �tw ?��ro�2YGNa:2a%:lrc
FROZEN FOODS
SUPREME BRAND — 2 LB. POLY BAG
French Fries 49c
SUPREME BRAND — 2 LB. POLY BAG
Mixed Vegetables _ _ _ _ 45c
Fresh Pork Shoulders Iia 35c
Cubed Stewing Beef m 1b. 59c
Pork or Beef Liver - lb. 29c
Wieners Bolt gna
2 In 79c 29c LB.
Compare at 89c — Giant Size Package
Giant Surf
Compare at 25c Lb. — Parchment Wrap
59c
Rose Margarine _ 2 lbs. 43c
Compare at 79c — 3 Lb. Pkg. Carnation Instant
Milk Powder 67c
Compare at 35c — 4 Roll Pack Cottage Brand
Toilet Tissues 29c
Compare at 69c — Johnson's 1 Lb. TGn
Paste Wax 57c
Compare of $1 — 6 oz. Jar Instant' Coffee
Nescafe 84c
Compare at 31c — Clark's 48 oz. Tins
Tomato Juice 3/85c
16 oz.
Compare at 37c Jar — Super Save,
Peanut Butter
Compare at 2 for 39c
Chili Beans
Clark's
29c
15 oz. Tins
699c