HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1967-03-30, Page 3THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1967
ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS
qteadat Olideuel
Hensall Church
Marks Easter
The glorious Easter day cele-
brations were ushered in at
Hensall United Church with the
traditional sunrise service at
7 a.m., sponsored and conducted
by the Hi -C Fellowship, follow-
ed by breakfast for all in at-
tendance. The service was con-
ducted by Paul Drysdale, with
Joan Simmons taking t]ie scrip-
ture lessons and prayer. The
message was given by John
Goddard, president of the Hi -C,
on the theme, "Does Easter
matter in 1967". Miss Greta
Lama -Ale was at the organ ,and
accompanied Miss Joyce Flynn
and Miss Linda Mock in the
duet, "He Lives". Ushers for
the service were Gary Kyle and
Wayne Payne,
At the 11 o'clock Easter wor-
ship service conducted by the
minister, Rev. Harold F. Currie,
with Mrs. John Turkheim at the
organ, the congregation was
led in singing by the combined
voices of the senior and junior
.choirs, who sang together the
anthem, "He Lives Triumphant".
The junior choir, under the di-
rection of Mrs. Berne McKin-
ley, sang "Happy Easter Day".
The memorial lilies and spring
flowers in the sanctuary were
placed in loving memory of Mr.
.and Mrs. Victor Fee.
The church school sessions
met as usual except for the in-
termediates and senior depart-
ments who met jointly in a
.special "Easter service". Miss
Nancy Kyle conducted the de-
votional period and used a flan-
nelgraph toillustrate the Eas-
ter scripture lesson. Joyce
Flynn, accompanied on the
piano by Mrs. Berne McKinley,
sang "The Holy City". A film
showing the event surrounding
the Easter story was presented
by Mrs. Walter Spencer.
MRS. MAUDE REDDEN, Editor
Easter Sunday vvisitors with
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taylor and
Murray were Mrs. Harvey Turn-
er, Wilmer and Irene, Varna;
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Taylor,
Exeter; Mr. and Mrs. William
Butson and family, Staffa; Mr.
.and Mrs. Percy Wright and
family, -Cromarty, and Mr. and
Mrs. James Douglas, Palmerston.
Easter visitors with Rev. and
Mrs. H. F, Currie and family
were their son and his wife,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Currie, of
Hamilton, and Mrs. Currie's
mother, Mrs. W. T. Robison, of
St. Marys,
Obituary
WILLIAM RICHARD KINSMAN
William Richard Kinsman, of
Seaforth, passed away •at the
Blue Water Rest Home, Zurich,
on Sunday, March 26, in his
80th year. For a number of
years he farmed in Saskatche-
wan, returning east where he
farmed in Hibbert for 22 years,
taking up residence in Seaforth
in 1956.
He was a member of Chisel -
burst United Church, and a
member of AF & AM Bursay
Lodge in Saskatchewan.
Surviving are Ns wife, the
former Edna Brintnell; two
brothers, Earl, Cromarty, Dan,
1Vlacrorie, ,Sask.
Public funeral service, Large-
ly attended, was held from Bon-
thron funeral home Wernesday,
March 29, at 2 p.m., .00nduoted
by Rev. Harold F. Currie, who
paid fitting tribute to the life
of the deceased. Interment was
in Hensall Union Mausoleum,
burial later in McTaggart's
cemetery.
Pall bearers were Jack and
Robert Kinsman, Russell Ferg-
uson, Donald McLellan, Jack
Brintnell, Murray Brintnell;
flower bearers, Doug, Gerald
and Keith Brintnell, Bob Kins-
man.
HENSALL TEEN TOWN
DANCE
PRESENTS
'THE VOLCANOS'
Saturday, April I
8:30 to 11:30
HENSALL ARENA AUDITORIUM
No Slacks
Allowed!
Admission: $1.00
We Reserve the right to
refuse admission!
-stir: •w•;..
Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Hay and
Mr. and Mrs, Walter Spencer
have returned from their trip
to Florida and the Bahamas
Easter week -end guests with
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart McQueen
and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Snell
were Mr. and Mrs. Terry North
and Teresa, St. Thomas; Mr.
and Mrs. Don Rigby, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Knights, Stewart and
Jane, of Blenheim.
Easter service in St. Paul's
Anglican Church was held at
9:45 a.m. Sunday with celebra-
tion of Holy Communion by the
Ven. Archdeacon J. N. H. Mills,
of London. The choir sang an
anthem, "Easter Melody", under
direction of Mrs. Frank Forrest.
Easter lilies were in memory
of Mrs. T. J. Berry and the
Reynolds family.
Mrs. Leonard Noakes won the
Easter bunny at AI's Super -
Save, on Saturday. .
Miss Lois Simmons, student
nurse at Victoria Hospital, Lon-
don, !spent Easter week -end
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Simmons.
The following members of
Hensall Legion Ladies' Auxili-
ary attended a card party, the
guests of Exeter Legion Auxili-
ary, on' Wednesday: Mrs. Har-
old Campbell, Mrs. William
Smale, Mrs. Clarence Reid, Mrs.
Gordon Munn, Mrs. Mary Tay -
or, Mrs, Grant Bisback, Mrs.
Harry Horton, Mrs. R. Vanstone,
Mrs. Grant McClinohey. Mrs.
male was a prize winner.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Little and
heryl, accompanied by Mrs.
Marguerite Ulch, of Windsor,
nd Oswald Brown, QC, and
rs. Brown, of Detroit, spent
aster week -end in Toronto.
1
S
C
a
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E
Obituary
JOHN PEPPER
John Pepper, a highly es-
teemed resident of RR 2, Kip -
pen, passed away quietly Sat•
urday at the Blue Water Rest
Home, Zurich, where he was a
resident for six weeks. He was
in his 87th year.
Born in Hibbert Township,
he moved to Kippen when about
12 years of age, He hacl farmed
for the remainder of his life
until three years ago when he
had. a sale and has been in
failing health since.
Mr. Pepper was a member
of Hensall United Church, and
is predeceased by his first wife,
the former Florence Taylor,
who passed away in 1917, and
later he married the former
Elizabeth Fluker, who now re.
sides with one of his sons.
He is survivecl by his wife,
three sons and two daughters
by the first marriage: Russell,
of Stratford; Wesley, Niagara
Falls; Ritchie Blatchforcl, Lon-
don; Mrs. Harry (Rose) Walters,
RR 4, Goderich; Mrs. Gordon
(Ethel) Stewart, Goderich.
Second marriage, Roy, Exe-
ter; Bloss, Ailsa Craig; Cecil
Hensall; Mrs. Alex (Hannah)
Miller, Staffa; Mrs. Russell
(Marion) Hooey, Wallenstein; a
sister, Mrs, Frank Bean, Hen-
sall. There are also 27 grand-
children and eight great-grand-
children.
Rev. Harold Currie conducted
the service from B o n t h r on
funeral home, Hensall, at 2 p.m.
Tuesday. Burial was in Union
Cemetery, Hensall. Pall bear-
ers were Stanley Mitchell, Mur-
ray Traquair, Sandy Pepper,
John Pepper, Stanley Bean and
Tom Drover.
eveseeesseasseaseee
RAINY DAY GAMES
DEAR DORIS — Please save
my sanity by suggesting some
ways to keep my three school-
age little girls happy on a rainy
day during summer vacation.
Jittery
DEAR JITTERY — Here are
three:
(1) Assemble a pile of old
magazines. Provide round -ended
scissors. The game is to play
"house" by cutting out pictures
of rooms, furniture to put in
them, shapes of big and little
people to live in thein. Let im-
agination run free 'in shifting
family and furniture around.
(2) Provide color crayoni
and paper plates. The plates
are to decorated with flower or
animal designs anti then used
to receive luncheon sandwiches
(if little fingers haven't smudg-
ed them up too much!),
(3) Provide nuts and bolts
type cereal, macaroni elbows,
drinking straws, string. Then
have your little girls make
necklaces, bracelets, earrings to
adorn themselves for lunch.
Lots of giggles in this one.
DEAR DORIS — After my
daughter of 18 went steady with
a fine boy for six months, he
took a job out of town. She
wrote and told him her feelings
had changed. To me she said:
"Well, he has gone a thousand
miles away, and I intend to
have a good time!"
I feel she has treated him
heartlessly, as there was no
sign at parting that in a few
weeks she would only find
things to criticize in someone
she once thought ,almost per-
fect.
I love her dearly, but I feel
sorry for a lonesome boy who
so abruptly was dumped,
Sentimental
DEAR SENTIMENTAL—You'd
feel sorrier if your daughter
allowed herself to drift into
marriage with a boy she. only
half loved.
She acted like a healthy Ca-
nadian girl when she fell in
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love with the boy who was on
the spot. But it is also healthy
to fall out of love, at 18. Meet-
ing, mingling, getting around—
these are the ways our young
people learn about life, and
men; and get to the point where
they can make a right choice.
DEAR DORIS—My problem
is my voice. I have a low, rather
quiet voice, a monotone. How
can I make it sound a little
higher and more pleasant?
Dull Tones
DEAR TONES — A pleasant
voice is worth cultivating, Now
you've discovered a flaw in
yours, you can improve it.
But not by raising the pitch.
Some depth to a voice can be
beautiful; it's the monotone
that becomes boring. Learn to
put in some cadences which
give expression and color to
what you say.
Practise reading aloud, join a
dramatic group; listen to the
way they do it on TV. One or
all of these devices can help
you, Best of all would be a
series of lessons in speech.
*
Confidential to Disappointed
in Love — You seem to have
taken on a boarder rather than
a loving second husband. It was
a companion you needed, not an
additional drain on your fi-
nances. Better have a talk with
the lawyer who knows him and
his family, to get things straight-
ened out.
Take along your oldest daugh-
ter for moral support. When a
person's heart fails her, there's
no shame in taking along re-
inforcements.
* '
DEAR DORIS — What opin-
ion •do you have of a husband
and father who is a perfection-
ist? He never does anything
wrong, and knows everything.
He tells his wife she owns
nothing on the farm. Seems to
me he is lacking in something.
Beaten
DEAR BEATEN — Lacking
in something? Isn't that put-
ting it mildly?
A so-called perfectionist
makes a big thing of wanting
things just right, simply be-
cause he is not sure enough of
himself to live and let live.
He is wrong about his wife
owning nothing. She has a
share in his possessions and a
right to his support. On his
death she has dower rights.
PAGE THREE
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