HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1965-10-21, Page 4i
PAGE FOUR ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS.
1,0.4111.11.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2L 1965
News of Dashwood
District
(MRS, E. H. R.ADER, Correspondent)
Personals
The Dashwood Boy Scouts
are very grateful to the people
of Dashwood for their splendid
response to apple day.
Mrs. Ervin Greb, of Preston,
and Mrs. Dorothy Anderson, of
Chilliwack, B.C., were holiday
visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Lorne
Becker,
Mr, and Mrs, Robert Annan
and family, of Pickering, were
recent visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Ferd Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Miller ac-
companied Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Bassow and Emma to London
last Wednesday where they at-
tended the funeral of the late
William McAdams.
Arthur Willert, Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin Walper, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Wurm spent a few days in
Ottawa with Mr. and Mrs. Stan
Slezak and family.
Mr. and. Mrs. Hugh Boyle and
family spent Sunday at Wyom-
ing with Mr. and Mrs. Sid Smith
and attended anniversary serv-
ices at the United Ch,urch.
Chuck Becker and Bob Hoff-
man will be the 4-H Beef Club
team representing Huron Coun-
ty at the Ontario 4-H interclub
competitions to be held at the
University of Guelph this Fri-
-day.
Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Rader and
family spent Sunday at Water-
loo with Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Tay-
lor and family.
Zurich Mennonite
JESUS CHRIST IS LORD
JESUS CHRIST EST SEIGNEUR
Pastor: Orval M. Jantai
SUNDAY,
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:00 a.m.—Worship Service.
YOU ARE WELCOME!
St. Peter's
Lutheran Church
Rev. A. C. Blackwell, B.A., B.D.
Pastor
Mrs. Audrey Haberer, Organist
SUNDAY,
10:00 a.m.—Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Worship Service
You Are Welcome
Recent visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Hoffman were Mr.
and Mrs. Don Sedy and Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Heppler, all of Wat-
erloo.
Dashwood EUB Church Youth
Fellowship recently enjoyed an
evening of crokinole with Cred-
iton EUB 'Youth as guests.
Michael Tieman and Beth Snell
held high scores. Lunch was
served by Mrs. Ross Guenther
and Mrs. Merrill James.
Diane Weber, Norma Wei-
gand and Eleanor Wolfe were
representatives of the Dash-
wood EUB Youth at Bridgeport
for the conference Youth Fel-
lowship convocation over the
week -end.
Rev, and Mrs, Merrill James
and family were guests at the
Rodney EUB Church Sunday;
where Rev. James was guest
speaker for their anniversary.
Sunday guests with Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Rader and Darlene
were Mr. and Mrs. Wendell
Gamble •and family, .of London,
and Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Rader
and family.
Mrs. Harold Brown, who at-
tended the funeral of her fa-
ther, Clarence Desjardine, and
spent some time here, has re-
turned to Granville, N.S. She
was accompanied by Mrs. Clar-
ence Desjardine, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilmer Desjardine and Mary
Anne, and Doug Weigand, who
spent a few days there.
The first meeting of the GNO
Club was held at the home of
Gloria Hayter with 13 present.
Newly elected officers are:
president, Alma Genttner; vice-
president, Frieda Hayter; sec-
retary -treasurer, Vesta Miller.
A gift for high score for the
year was awarded to Aldeen
Wolfe with Vera Guenther sec-
ond high.
Patricia Bender entertained a
number of her school mates on
the occasion of her tenth birth-
EMMANUEL EVANGELICAL
United Brethren
Church
ZURICH
Rev. M, Shatto, B,A., B.D.,
M 'mater
Mrs. Milton Oesch. Organist
SUNDAY,
10:00 a.m.—Worship Service.
11.00 a.m.—Church School.
You Are Welcome
SEP
JESUS CHRIST I5 LORD !
John 5:46 "Had ye believed Moses ye would have be-
lieved Me."
This Word of God from the Gospel according to John
equates our Lord's teaching on the reliability of Moes
Words.
We might well ask what were Moses' words. Some of
Moses' words are:
"Pharaoh's chariots and his host hath he cast into the sea;
and his chosen •captains in the Red Sea; the floods stood
upright as a heep; the deeps were congealed in the heart
of the sea; and the Lord brought back the waters of the
sea upon them; but the children of Israel walked on dry
land, in the midst of the sea."
The words of Jesus Christ stand on the authenticity of the
words of Moses. If ye wish to believe one you must believe
the other because the Word of God is one.
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Stade $1 Weido Hardware
"PLUMBING — HEATING -- TINSMIT. ELNG"
day. Following games a birth-
day lunch was served.
WSWS Meeting
The WSWS of the Evangelical
Church held its Thankoffering
meeting October 8, The spiri-
tual life committee with its
convenor, Mrs, Mervyn Tiernan,
as chairlady, presented the fol-
lowini program: a trio by Mrs.
Ken McCrae, Mrs, Ross Guen-
ther and Mrs, Jack Gaiser; a
Thanksgiving story by Mrs,
Hugh Boyle; a Thankoffering
service given by Mrs. Mervyn
Tiernan, Mrs. Charles Snell,
Mrs. Harold Kellerman, Mrs,
Letta Taylor, Mrs. Art Haugh,
Mrs. Carl Oestreicher, Mrs.
Lloyd Beaver, Mrs, Gordon
Bender and Mrs. George Link,
concluded with .the placing of
all Thankoffering boxes in
front of a table decorated in
keeping with the service.
Mrs. Carl Oestreicher, presi-
dent, presided for the business.
Reports from the various com-
mittees were given. It was de-
cided to accept two stockings
to be filled for Christmas from
the Ontario Hospital, Goderich,
Summer clothing to be packed
for the Mennonite Relief Cen-
tre is to be in by October 20.
An invitation to join with the
United Church Women at Grand
Bend for their Thanksgiving
meeting October 19 was accept-
ed. Mrs. Ralph Weber's group
and Mrs. Lloyd Eagleson's group
are to be in charge of the
"Share - a - Dish" congregational
supper October 25 at 6:30 p.m.
The nominating committee is
Mrs. Jack Geiser, Mrs. Hobbs
Taylor, and Mrs. Ken McCrae.
The sunshine •committee is Mrs.
Charles Snell and Mrs. Art
Haugh.
Ladies' Aid
The regular meeting of Zion
Lutheran Ladies' Aid was held
Wednesday, October 13, with
group 4 in charge of devotions
and lunch. The pastor, Rev.
William Getz, dealt with the
topic, "The call of the disciple".
This has been a continuous
topic and this was the first part
of the tird part.
Mrs. Leonard Schenk, presi-
dent, dealt with the business.
Reports were :heard from the
various secretaries. Group 1
and 2 will be in charge .of the
dinner for the Lutheran lay-
men's rally. The Lutheran
Women's Missionary League
rally will be at Tavistock Octo-
ber 25, when a film on the con-
vention in San Francisco will
be shown, The clothing drive
will continue through October.
4-H Meetings
Dashwood Sleeping Beauties,
club No. 1, held their fourth
meeting October 18 at the home
of Mrs. John Rader with. eight
"Whipper" Watson Suggests More
Walking as Better Health Formula
If the better health formula
of the 245-1b. wrestler, William
"Whipper" Watson, Progressive
party candidate for York East
riding (Toronto), is carried out
—more Canadians will be leav-
ing their automobiles in the
garage. In a recent statement
from his committee rooms, Mr.
Watson said that he would like
to see a recreational physical
fitness program backed by the
federal government.
This would mean that Cana-
dians would be doing more
walking, curling, bowling and
camping. Canadians, he said,
would feel better and the heal-
thy exercise would bring finan-
cial benefits with reduced
medical bills, and cut the time
lost annually to industry. Mr.
Watson said, "I would like
every kid in Canada to go to
summer camp," and then went
on to say, "I would also like
to see more employers open
their doors to handicapped
people."
"Whipper" Watson is a di-
rector of the Ontario Society
for Crippled Children, and has
made five trips across Canada
at his own expense on behalf
of the Easter Seals campaign
for crippled children.
This big man with a big heart
sees Canada not only as a coun-
try of tremendous opportunity
members and the leaders, Mrs.
Rader and Mrs. Rudolph Miller,
present. The girl finished
:narking their patterns and
started sewing. Emphasis was
placed on types of seams. The
next meeting will be at Mrs.
Paul Watson's, October 25.
Dashwood Merry Maids, club
No, 2, held their third meeting
at the home of Sheila Willert
with all members present and
the leaders, Mrs. Eben Weigand
and Norma. The meeting open-
ed with the 4-H pledge and re-
ports. Notes were given on
studying and altering the pat-
tern and preparing the mater-
ial. The girls made samples of
stay -stitching and French seams,
It was decided to hold the
next meeting at the home of
Eleanor Wolfe. The meeting
closed with "The Queen".
The fourth meeting was held
October 18 at Eleanor Wolfe's
with all members present. The
leaders gave notes on seams
and pressing. The girls made
samples of lap .seams. The
next meeting will be October
25 at the home of Diane Weber.
0
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VICTOR PYET1•L, Mgr.
RAYMOND McKINNON, Manager
—but with a healthier ,popula-
tion if his idea receives federal
government backing. A step in
the right direction, he said,
would be larger grants to so-
cieties and .agencies leading to
more facilities and better re-
habilitation centres. He also
suggests that young athletes
should also be encouraged by
being offered scholarships. This
would be one way, he said, of
ensuring that we do not lose
promising young people in the
athletic field to our U.S. neigh-
bour.
Mr. Watson also stated that
he intends to continue in his
work on behalf of handicapped
people regardless of the out-
come of the forthcoming
election.
0
Television Views
by William Whiting
NBC announced that fan mail
from foreign countries for the
program "Bonanza" has, for the
first time, increased beyond the
volume of mail from U.S. and
Canadian viewers. During a
two-month period fan mail was
received from 44 of the 59
countries where the full -hour
programme is seen. African
countries contributed the heav-
iest mail, followed by New
Zealand, Brazil, and Germany.
The program is dubbed into
Spanish, German, Japanese,
French, Portuguese and Italian.
It appears that "Perry Mason",
which runs opposite to `Bon-
anza", is stealing audience from
the show that has been number
one for so long.
This is the ninth season for
Raymond Burr and the pro-
ducer, Gail Patrick Jackson,
has instructed her viewers to
BOB'S
Barber Shop
MAIN STREET, ZURICH
"Professional Hair Caro"'
Agent for Dry Cleaning
give Mason a rough time in
their scripts in the coming
months.
Last season in the Mason role
Burr didn't have as smooth a
road as a constant winner usu-
ally has. Much of that stemmed
from an injury he sustain-
ed while visiting troops in Viet
Nam in late 1964. Tlie injury
and a subsequent corrective
operation, kept him somewhat
under wraps as an actor for
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Optical Service
Large Assortment of Modern
Frames
Broken Lenses Duplicated
Frames Repaired
Let us fit you with a comfort-
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Hearing Aid Batteries, all Sizes,
ALBERT HESS
Jeweller and Optician
emsemeeemareaumiummemies
raraNIII
much of the year.
Burr won't say whether
he'll lose a case this year, but
he does say "It isn't whether
you win or lose—it's how you
play the scene".
Last Sunday's show w a s
smooth and easy to follow and
Mason and cast played all the
scenes well indeed.
RECEPTION
AND DANCE
For
JOHN ERB and RUTH SMALE
(Bridal Couple)
in the
Zurich Arena
on
SAT., OCT. 23
Music by
Deslardine Orchestra
Lunch Provided
Everyone Welcome
PREPARE FOR WINTER NOW ! !
We would suggest you investigate your needs for
Fall and Winter Footwear
Now, Before the Rush, and Save Time
and Money!
BEGINNING OCTOBER 22
A Ladies' Train Case
will be offered in a Draw ending
October 30th
VALUE $11.50
WATCH FOR FURTHER DRAWS IN
NOVEMBER AND DECEMBER
Oesch Shoe Store
DIAL 236-4602 — ZURICH
MINEEMBONVINIIMMEN
Packages
QUALITY FOOD at LOWEST PRICES
Tang Orange _ _ _ 2/39c
Yuban — 5 -Oz. Jar
Instant Coffee _ _
New Honeycomb— 9.Oz. Pkg.
Post Cereal
Robin Hood --. 7 -Lb. Bag
All -Purpose Flour
Aylmer -10-0z. Tins
Vegetable Soup _ _
15 -Oz. Tins
Aylmer Peas _ _ _
Aylmer —15-0z. Tins
Diced Beats _ _ _
Maple Leaf — 3c Off Pkg.
Cheese Slices
Angelus—16.Oz. Bag
Marshmallows _ _ _ _ 33c
Tip Top Vacuum Packed—13-Oz. Tin
_ 97c Mixed Nuts 83c
35c Spaghetti 2/33c
Loaves
_ 67c Lewis Bread _ _ _ _ 2/39c
Clover Cream — 3 -Gal.
4/49c Ice Cream 79c
13 -Quart Bag
2/35c Newport Fluffs _ _ _ _ 73c
12 -Oz, Package
2/25c Shreddies 31c
Franco-American--15-Oz. Tins
12c Off Package
33c Kaduna Tea Bags _ _ 59c
FRUIT AND VEGETABLE SPECIALS
SUNKIST ORANGES, 113s DOZ. 69c
GRAPEFRUIT, FLORIDA, PINK _ _ _ _ 4 FOR 39c
McINTOSH APPLES 3 LBS. 29c
FRESH CARROTS 2 20-02. BAGS 19c
MEAT SPECIALS
SMOKED PICNIC HAMS LB. 49c
FRESH FRYING CHICKENS LB. 39c
FROZEN CHICKEN, LEGS or BREASTS _ LB. 49c
DOERR'S
DIAL 236.4354 -i. ZURICH