Zurich Citizens News, 1968-10-03, Page 4PAGE FOUR
Zurich Couple Married 50 Years Ago
Mr. and Mrs. Milne Rader,
Zurich, celebrated their '50th
wedding anniversary on Wed-
nesday, September 25, with a
family dinner at the Dominion
Hotel, attended by about 25 rel-
atives and friends. Following
the dinner the group went to
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Victor
Dinnin and enjoyed an evening
of singing, slides and conver-
sation.
Relatives and friends attend-
ed from Toronto, Kitchener,
Woodstock, Crediton, Dashwood
and Zurich.
Mr. and Mrs, Rader were mar -
Zurich Mennonite
Ephriam Gingerich, Pastor
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 —
9:45 a.m.-1Norshp Service.
10:45 a.m.—Sunday School.
Guest Speaker: Rev. Cyril
Gingerich.
Blessed are they that hear the
word of God and keep it.
Luke 11:28.
You Are Welcome
St. Peter's
Lutheran Church
Rev. A. C. Blackwell; B.A., B.D
Pastor
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 —
10 a.m.—Worship Service
11 a.m.—Church School
You Are 'W elcome
LAKEVIEW CONSERVATIVE
Mennonite Church
Formerly
SS 4, EAST STANLEY
Minister — Alvin Baker
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 —
10 a.m.—Sunday School.
11 a.m.—Worship Service.
8:00 p.m.—Evening Service
Friday Evenings —
8 p.m.—Bible Study and
Prayer Meeting
We invite you to worship
with us.
EMMANUEL
UNITED CIIURCI[
ZURICH
Rev. John Huether, B.A., B.D.,
Minister
Mrs. Milton Oesch, Organist
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 —
10:00 a.m.-World Communion
Sunday Service. Commun-
ion and Reception of mem-
bers.
11:10 a.m.—Sunday Church
School
.8:00 p.m.—UCW Thank -offer-
ing Service. Speaker. Rev.
Bruce Guy, Dashwood.
Thursday, October 3 —
UCW invitation meeting at
Bayfield. Cars leave church
at 7:15 p.m.
Thursday, October 10 --
8 p.m.—Official board meets
PORTABLE
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Citizens News
Phone 236-4672
ried in St. Peter's Lutheran par-
sonage on September 25, 1918,
by Rev. H. Rembe. Mrs. Rader
is the former Alberta Truemner,
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Truemner, while Mr.
Rader is a son of the late Mr.
and Mrs. William Rader.
Following their marriage 50
years ago, the couple farmed on
the 14th concession, Hay Town-
ship, for 23 years. On October
22, 1941, they moved to Zurich
where they have resided since.
The couple were recipients of
many lovely gifts, flowers and
cards on the occasion.
1
ZURICH CITIZONS NEWS
ST. JOSEPH and DRYSDALE
Alfred Ducharme, Correspondent
Visitors at the home of Mr.
and Mrs, Fred .Ducharme were
from Windsor, Cyrile Ducharme
and son Denis, also Paul Masse;
and from Stoney Point, Sister
Rosalie Ducharme; from Brus-
ells, Urban Ducharme and son
Leslie and his wife.
Mr, and Mrs. Vincent Jeffrey,
of Detroit, spent a few days in
St. Joseph and the surrounding.
While here they attended to
Mrs. Emily Meidinger's funeral
mass after which Mrs, Meiding-
er's remains were taken to
Windsor and laid to rest beside
her late husband who passed
away two years ago.
Lovely October
We are now entering the
beautiful month of October. It
is also the month •of the early
fall, the passing of a summer,
the • storing away of crops for
those who cultivate the land
and finally their reward for
their labor during the past year.
After the passing of a fruitful
summer with the growth of all
that was planted, 'with the wild
flowers along the way which
during the summer were bloom-
ing, and with the trees and
shrubs with their full vigor, all
of that are beginning to •disap-
pear with the corning and pass-
ing of the month of October.
The green leaves on trees which
marked the period of prosperity
are now falling and leaving the
trees bare with only drying
limbs to indicate their passing
for this present year. So the
time passes on, for many it is
the loss that they will witness
the coming and passing of an-
other October.
•(Continued from last week)
You remember in one of my
articles when my buddy and I
reached a flag station — the
border line between upper Mich-
igan and Wisconsin — we had
made preparations to board a
flyer train so that we would
land In Marquette, a distance
of 72 miles. Well, luck was not
meant for that midnight or
should I say New Year's morn-
ing. I made the crash but my
buddy missed his hold.
It took less than a hour to
reach Marquette. I then walked
around the train so far as the
rear end but he was not there.
I was ill at ease. I did not know
if he had been down under the
train and, of course, that would
have meant the last of him, for
many ,hobos and knock -abouts
in the world have lost their life
there, their remains perhaps
dumped some place out of the
world and that would always
remain a secret to humanity.
Indeed I was worried about
him but I had to put myself
together for when leading that
life you are always exposing to
danger which you can't avoid,
I kept on going after I had
a rest at the Green Block hotel
for a few days then off again
I finally landed in Indian River,
where I worked for Wilbur.
Through corresponding home he
was told of my being in Indian
River. When least expecting
my buddy, he popped in at the.
evening and you can imagine
the joy of both of us. He agreed
to work for Wilbur for six dol-
lars a month.
You remember me telling you
that I had given Wilbur my
notice for I had other plans in
mind which I wanted to do but
after my buddy had arrived I
then thought it would be al-
right working together as we
had for some years passed.
After my buddy had been
laying in his bunk for .a while
he heard a noise so he asked
me if I heard it. I said yes.
He then told me to light the
little lamp at the head of my
bunk and. again asked me if I
heard and knew what it was.
He, too, had been on the road
RESPIRATORY
DISEASE
Half of Britain's doctors do not smoke cigarettes.
Their quitting rate is, Dr. B. H. Bass believes, the high-
est of any group of males in the world. British doctors
are also, he said, the only group which has managed to
cut down on the rate of deaths from lung cancer.
The history of the British doctors was one of the
few encouraging facts related at a plenary session of the
Canadian Tuberculosis Association during its annual meet-
ing in Vancouver, by Dr. Bass, chief physician of the
Good Hope Hospital, Birmingham, England, as he urged
all those interested in reducing chest disease to work
harder at persuading patients to give up cigarette smok-
ing.
It was conspicuous, said Dr. Bass, that the patients
of doctors who have given up smoking seem to have less
trouble in stopping than those whose doctors still smoke.
Illustrating his lecture with slides, the Birmingham phys-
ician showed pictures of patients suffering from a var-
iety of conditions promoted by cigarette smoking gan-
grene, gastric ulceration, "tobacco angina", coronary art-
ery disease, coronary thrombosis and emphysema and, of
course, lung cancer.
His last slide was of a jet airliner.
"If I were wealthy," he said, "I might invite you
to come with me on such a plane to some resort. ,.Suppose
that as we were going up to the embarkation gate it is
announced that one in eight of these planes crashes and
that there are no survivors! Would you fly? Yet the
statistics show that for those smoking 20 cigarettes a day
for 20 years, one in eight dies of lung cancer."
CHRISTMAS SEALS FIGHT TB AND
OTHER RESPIRATORY DISEASES
This Advertisement is Published by The Neuron
County Tuberculosis Association
Cotton Clowns
Work on Protect
(By Elizabeth Vermont)
Our fourth meeting took place
at 7 p.m. on September 25, at
the home of Mrs. Morris Webb.
We opened with the pledge.
Liz read the minutes which were
seconded by Barb. Diane gave
the treasurer's report. Our
next meeting will be on Wed-
nesday, October 2, at Mrs.
Webb's.
Our achievement day will
take place at Clinton on Novem-
ber 23. Our books and dresses
must be completed and handed
in on Monday, November 11,
For our roll call we had to
answer the following questions:
"How I had to adjust my pat-
tern?" and "What kind of line
suits me?".
We discussed good posture
and how it affected our health.
Mrs. Webb demonstrated stay -
stitching, darts, gathers, joining
seams and how to use tracing
paper.
for some years—he had heard
about haunted houses and
haunted buildings. He then
asked me if the shanty was a
haunted one. There was noth-
ing else for me to tell him but
the truth but I also told him
that nothing had hurt me so
far.
(To be continued)
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1968
Obituary
MRS. EDWARD MEIDINGER
The former Emily Masse, Mrs.
Edward Meidinger passed away
on Thursday,September 26, in
her 85 year. She was a resi-
dent of the Blue Water Rest
home.
Surviving are one daughter,
Mrs, Napoleon (Joan) Bedard,
Zurich; four brothers, Philip,
Zurich; Edward, Jerome and
Napoleon, all of Windsor; and
one sister, Mrs. Leah Bertrand,
Hawks, Michigan. Her husband
pre -deceased her.
The body rested at the West-
lake funeral home, Zurich, un-
til Monday morning, September
30, when mass took place at St.
Boniface Roman Ca t h o l i e
Church, Zurich, with Father A.
Durand officiating. Burial was
in St. Alphonsus Cemetery,
Windsor,
A nnou nceinent
MISS ANN RYAN
will join our staff at Hi -Fashion Beauty Salon.
A former operator in Stratford for the past year,
she is well qualified in all types of Hair Styling.
With the additional staff we hope to be able to
provide better service to our clienlile, especially
on Fridays and Saturdays.
HI - FASHION BEAUTY SALON
Dial 236-4982 — Zurich
instant -6-0z. Jars
Nabob Coffee _ _ 2/$1.59
Mother Parker -100s
Hostess Tea Bags _ _ 63c
Beef or Irish -24 -Oz. Tin
Puritan Stews _ _ _ _ 49c
All Colors -2 -Roll Pack
Delsey Toilet Tissue
Honey Comb, 12 Oz.; Alphabits,
Sugar Crisp, 13 Oz.
Post's Cereals
Regular Grind -1 -Lb. Bag
_ 29c
15 Oz.;
_ 47c
75c
Nabob Coffee
Allen's -48 -Oz. Tins
Apple Juice _ _ _ _ 2/69c
Salted, Plain or Saltines -1 -Lb. Box
McCormick's Sodas _ 39c
Maple Leaf Liquid -3 Sizes
Detergents 77c, 61 c, 33c
Whistle -50 -Oz. Bottle
Spray Cleaner Refill _ 99c
Minnette's-19-Oz, Tins
Saico-7 Oz.
Soled White Tuna _ _ 47c
Maple Leaf -11 Lbs.
Picnic Shoulders _ _ $1049
Tempt -15 Oz.
Dog Food 4/45c
Club House -2 -Lb. Jar
Peanut Butter _ _ _ _ 79c
Monarch -7 Pounds
Pastry Flour 79c
1 -Lb. Prints
Ellmarr Margarine _ _ 29c
11 Ounces
Aylmer Catsup _ 2/45c
loos
Bayer Aspirins _ _ _ _ 69c
Economy Size
Vick's Vapo Rub _ _ _ 99c
Hotdog or Hamburg -8s
Superior Rolls _ _ _ 2/45c
Schneider's-28.Oz. Tins
Best Tomatoes _ _. _ 5/$1 Sauerkraut _ _ _ _ 2/59c
Hyatt's-14 Oz. Aylmer -19-0z. Tin
Choice Peas _ _ _ _ 2/39c Cherry Pie Fill _ _ _ ._ 53c
FRUIT and VEGETABLES
SNOW WHITE — JUMBO SIZE
ONTARIO CAULIFLOWER Head 25c
CALIFORNIA TOKAY GRAPES _ - _ 2 LBS. 39c
FANCY
NlcINTOSH APPLES _ 3 lbs. 35c or Bus. $3.75
CALIFORNIA ORANGES, 113s _ _ _ _ DOZ. 79c
MEAT SPECIALS
COUNTRY STYLE PURE PORK. SAUSAGE _ LB. 59c
COLEMAN'S WIENERS LB. 49c
POLISH SAUSAGE LB. 59c
DOERR'S
DIAL 236-4354 ZURICH