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Zurich Citizens News, 1968-10-24, Page 8PAGE EIGFIT ZURICH CITRONS NEWS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1968; ATTENTIVE AUDIENCE—When Hal Flaro, coach of the Zurich Dominions, wants to discuss certain details with candidates for his team, the boys are all ears and quite willing to listen, as this photo will certainly verify. This session took place prior to Monday night's practice at the Goderich Arena, when 31 prospeccts worked out. (Citizens News Photo) Amber Rebekahs Hold Installation Of New Officers District deputy president Mrs. Mary Lowe. of Brussels, and her installing staff installed the of- ficers of Amber Rebekah Lodge, Wednesday evening. . Past noble grand. Mrs. John Corbett; noble grand, Mrs. Earl Campbell; vice -grand, Mrs. Elgin Thompson; secretary, Mrs. Le- ona Parke; financial secretary, Mrs. Bertha MacGregor; treas- urer, Mrs. Ed Corbett; warden, Mrs. John Taylor; conductor, Mrs. Elizabeth Riley; chaplain, Mrs. E. Chipchase; musician, Mrs. William Fuss; color bear- er. Mrs. Howard Lemmon; RSNG, Mrs. Inez McEwen; LSNG, Mrs. Lindsay E y r e; RSVG, Mrs. George Clifton; LSVG, Mrs. Clarence Volland; IG, Mrs. William Kyle; OG, Mrs. Garfield Broderick. es of Dashwood District (ARS. E. H. RADER, Correspondent) United Church Women The United Church Women of Calvary United Church held their October meeting with the theme Thanksgiving. Mrs. Lloyd Eagleson was convenor and also read the chapter in the study book on Japan. Mrs. Stuart Wolfe gave a reading. Judy and Bonnie Mason sang a duet. Mrs. J. M. Tiernan was pianist. Mrs. Carl Oestreicher read a poem after which the members presented their thank -offering boxes. President Mrs. Eben Weigand presided f o r the business. Twenty-three members were present. Donations were made to Care„ the Biafra emergency fund, CNIB, Children's Aid, War Memorial Children's Hospital, and the Crippled Children's Hos- pital. The ladies agreed to have a booth representing the work for overseas relief at the Mis- sion Festival at Crediton. The nominating committee is Mrs. Ralph Weber, Mrs. Lloyd Guen- ther, Mrs. Gerald Mason and Rev. B. Guy. The sunshine committee is Mrs. Lloyd Guen- ther and Mrs. Ken McCrae. Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Tieman attended convocation at the Uni- versity of Windsor on Saturday, when their son-in-law, Bob Cor- nelious, received his BA degree. Mr. and Mrs. Ken McCrae were pleasantly surprised on the occasion of their 25th wed- ding anniversary, Sunday, Oc- tober 20, when members of their family presented them with •a seven -piece silver tea service, namely, their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ford, Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Tie - Past noble grand Mrs. Corbett was presented with her past grand jewel, and Mrs. Laura Williamson, Brussels, read the commission of the district deputy. District deputy presi- dent Mrs. Lowe spoke briefly and outlined her year's work and said they hoped to carry on with the United Nations project. Mrs. Sarah Stephenson, of Brussels, was soloist. A gift was presented to DDP Mrs. Lowe by PNG Mrs. Corbett on behalf of the Lodge. A social hour, contests and lunch was enjoyed. Members of the Lodge will appear on "Act Fast", CFPL-TV, London, early in November. man, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hoff- man, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Evans, of Richmond Hill, nieces and nephews. They also re- ceived gifts from friends and relatives. Miss Pearl Kraft is a patient in St. Joseph's Hospital, Lon- don. Mrs. Marie Restemayer, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Stade and Sherry visited with Edward Restemayer at the University of Guelph on Sunday. VILLAGE OF ZURICH Saturday, October 26, 1968, at 12:00 p,m. Standard Time will be in effect MRS. ELDA WAGNER, Clerk -Treasurer. i CURLING Any persons, men or women, who are interested in Curling at Zurich this coming season, should ccontact one of the following, as soon as possible: Vincent Doyle Ed Gascho Joe Hunt 236-4605 236-4012 236-4672 PUBLIC MEETING IN THE INTERESTS OF CURLING , will be held on MONDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 28 AT 8 P.M. IN THE ZURICH ARENA Controi of Rist Important to Prevent Damage (This message brought to you through the courtesy of Hensall District Co-operative) Are rats and mice eating you out of house and home? A single rat can eat, spoil or dam- age $20 to $25 worth of grain, or feed, every year. Rats carry and spread disease and para. sites of livestock in addition to the many human diseases they may carry. These rodents can multiply at a fantastic rate. The rat pro- duces six or seven litters a year with a dozen young per litter, Mice multiply at about the same rate but the litters are smaller, Rats can be controlled and eliminated, as the province of Alberta has proven. But it is the oily area in North America considered free of the pest. Control of rodents demands a four-part program, either on a single farm basis or over a wider area. Perhaps if enough people cleaned rats out of their own farms, efforts at wider con- trol might also be possible. The four steps are: • rodent -proofing of buildings; * eliminating nesting places and other hiding places; • removing food and water supply; • poisoning, trapping. Buildings can be made less hospitable to rats and mice by use of concrete doors and foot- ings, tight -fitting doors and windows, wire screens on win- dows, and metal kick -plates on the bottom of doors. The animals like to hide and nest in places that provide dark- ness and protection. Good housekeeping around the barn, cleaning up piles of old bags, broken lumber or old boxes will help. Removing all food is pretty difficult around poultry or live- stock barns, but cleaning up spilled feed, keeping feed in prised on Sunday on the occa- sion of their 25th wedding anni- versary when they found them- selves guests of honor at a re- ception at the Dashwood Com- munity Centre, Sunday, October 20. Some 75 guests were pres- ent from Kitchener, Waterloo, Elmira, Detroit and Dashwood. They were recipients of many lovely gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Burke and daughter, of Brampton, spent the week -end with Mr. Milt Haugh. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Keller, Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Willert, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Rader and Darlene were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Wei - berg and family. Recent visitors with Mr. and The members of Dashwood Women's Institute are remind- ed of the meeting October 29 with a bus trip to tour the Lake Huron water supply. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stumpf, of Kitchener, were pleasantly sur - fumigating and ZURICH BASEBALL CLUB BENEFIT DANCE For Injured Player's Fund FRIDAY NIGHT, OCTOBER 25 MUSIC BY Ken Mittelholtz and The Twylites TICKETS: 51.25 EACH Give the boys your support in this worthy cause Mrs Syd Baker were Mr. and covered boxes where possible Mrs. Jack Huffman, of Port Col-' and piling bagged feed up on blocks will help a good deal. Rats must have water, but mice seldom need it. Since most of the poisons or borne; Wendy and Michelle Webb, of Goderich, and Mrs. Melvin Guenther, of Gary, Ind. Zurich Dominions Lure 31 Prospects Out to Practice; Open November. 17 A total of 31 candidates were on hand Monday night for the third workout of the Zurich Do- minions, junior D hockey entry in the Ontario Hockey Associa- tion series. The practice was held in the Goderich Arena. Following the drop-off of a number of under -age players, coach Hal Flaro still has 23 prospects working out, and at least two more are expected for tonight's session at the Goderich Arena. Already signed up for the squad are Kirk Lyndon and Bill Taylor, both of Hensall; Leo Desjardine, of Grand Bend; Greg Jervis, Bill Sterling, Mel Hohner, all of Clinton•area; Stewart Mustard, of Brucefield; Harold Flaro, of Varna, and Doug Fleet, of the Bayfield area. A number of local play- ers, Rick Jeffrey, Brian Decker, Jim Hoffman, Kevin McKinnon, Paul Corriveau, Ron Corriveau, and Barry Clarke, of Grand Bend, are expected to sign their certificates tonight. Others who are working out with the team are Shane McKinnon, John Mc- Kinley, Aubrey Bedard, Paul Hesse, all of Zurich; Bob Moir and Gary Kyle, both of .HensalI, and Wes Chambers, ofClinton. Also being invited out for to- night's practice are Brian Mc - Ash and Glenn Hayter, both of Varna. Five teams have definitely entered the grouping in which Zurich will compete, and a schedule was drawn up last week in Mitchell. Most of the Zurich home games will be Reception and Dance FOR MR. and Mrs. BOB WILSON (nee Gail Robinson) ZURICH Community Centre Sat., October 26 played on Sunday afternoons during the regular schedule, with the starting time listed at 2 p.m. All other games will start at 8:30 p.m. Following the completion of the schedule the four top teams will enter a play-off series to pick a winner to go into OHA playdowns. A complete schedule will be published in the Citizens News next week. MEN'S BOWLING LEAGUE October 8 Rockets, J. Bedard ___ 592 3 8 Flyers, A. Gascho ____ 572 1 8 Lefto'ers, E. Desjardine 645 4 8 Dropouts, Ron D 630 2 9 Hippies, J. P. Rau 656 2 7 Gl'trotters, B. Lavery_ 610 3 4 B'herettes, C. Geiger590 0 3 Hustlers, N. Koehler579 1 1 H. single: Claire Geiger __ 344 H. triple. Claire Geiger 737 H. average: Claire Geiger_ 221 0 Week -end visitors with Chris Gascho and family were Mr. and James Gascho, Red Lake, On- tario; Mr. and Mrs. Simon Gascho, Imlay City, Michigan; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mullet and family, Montana; Mr. and Mrs. William Baechler, Pigeon, Mich- igan, and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Esch, Caseville, Michigan. Musk by the JIM SCOTT'S ORCHESTRA Everyone Lunch Welcome Provided rodenticides used for rodent control are also dangerous to humans, pets or livestick, keep them under lock and key. Bait stations should be put in a tun- nel, which can be as simple as a board leaned against the wall. A few drainage tile end to end also work fine. It is a good idea to put wholesome feed in the stations for the first few days. Rats are very cagey animals. The slow -acting, anti -coagu- lant materials have pretty well replaced the other poisons for rodent control. These drugs destroy the clotting ability of the blood, and the animal dies painlessly from loss of blood after eating treated feed for a period of three to ten days. Pival and Warfarin are effec- tive anti -coagulants for farm use. Others include fumarin, diphacinone and norbormide. Norbormide, a fairly new prod- uct on the market, is highly specific for rats. It is relatively safe where poultry, livestock and humans may accidentally come in contact with it. 0 SENIOR MIXED LEAGUE October 17 V'ieties, H. F'kbeiner 565 2 11 Ramblers, I. Frayne _ 591 5 10 S. Wines, D. 'Geiger _ 506 7 21 Wh'orwills, M. Rau __ 534 0 2 H. Hopes, L. Gascho_ 516 2 18 H'keyes, H. Geiger __ 549 5 22 H. single: Claire Geiger __ 265 H. triple: Delbert Geiger _ 628 MASQUERADE and COSTUME HALLOWE'EN DANCE In The Hensall Arena THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31 $50.00 IN PRIZES $3.00 Couple MUSIC BY DESARDINE ORCH. Dancing 'till 1:30 a.m. Sponsored by Hensall Kinsmen Club • FIGURE SKATING REGISTRATION AT THE ZURICH ARENA ON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 AT 10 A.M. $10.00 FEE for Children up to Grade 5 $12.00 FEE for over Grade 5 and Adults Any further inquiries, contact Mrs. Doug Armstrong, Secretary, Zurich Recreation Committee t Zurich Minor Athletic Association CHIP DRIVE FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25 DOOR-TO-DOOR CANVASS will be made m Zurich and Surrounding Area Proceeds to Sponsor Minor Hockey in Zurich NOTICE ST. JOHN AMBULANCE COURSE will begin on TUESDAY, OCTOBER 29 in the ZURICH COMMUNITY CENTRE Registration at '7:30 p.m. Classes from 8 - 10 p.m. Classes Will Be Held Every Tuesday Night at 8 p.m., for 8 Weeks Any persons or groups wishing to take this course should be in attendance for registration on Tuesday night. Sponsored By ZURICH and DISTRICT CHAMBER of COMMERCE