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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1957-10-18, Page 5;top • ''. :r. Mr§. 'L0004.Mnbtleaux.was Zurich z yv1W! M end Mrs. L1oy4 -Etue. • Mr. and Mrs, Jim EleW, 'Torun. 1NI11111111111M1,ii1111r1,111111111111111.11111111111 RECEPTION ;for Mr. and Mrs. Carl Richardson rr.. (nee>Karen Moodie). VARNA HALL Friday, Oct. 18th EVERYONE. WELCOME Ladies Please Bring Lunch !IIIjI1111I11111111111IIlllllllll1I111UfIlllll 01111111 111111011111111111 ,1111111111111111111 BAK E SALE. Saturday, Oct. 19 3:00 p.m, IN BOX'S STORE Under the auspices of BETHEL CHURCH W.A. 1111111111111111111111111111111M1111111111111: Something to sell? Something to buy? Phone 41•, Seaforth. to,'and Mrs ',ASA a Q'%ealto, ford, rutted 104,4, 0. Mr, and Michael Nagle. Mr. aild:Mrs. G. Mayin•an;, Pen broke, and Mr. and Mrs John Cleai;y, London visited with Mr, and Alm Frank Evans Mr. and Mrs. Tom Butters, Bet= ty Anne, Gordon?.and Billie spent. the weekend in Detroit. Mr. and Mrs Hugh Pugh and Glenn visited in Clairmount Mr. and :Mrs; George Coyne,. were in Brantford with Mr, and Mrs. James Atkinson. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Krauskopf, Bonnie and Bobbie, were in De- troit with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Krauskopf. M. and Mrs. Alfred MacDou- gall and children, of London, vis- ited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jor- dan. Mrs. Jim Newcombe and Jim- mie, Port Credit,Dr. Mrs. Frank and D Stapleton and children, Galt, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Stapleton. Mr. Pat McGrath, Rutter, vis- ited with Mrs. McGrath and chil- dren. Mr. Tommie O'Rourke, Dundas, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Looby, Mr. Dalton Burns, of Parry Sound, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Stewart, of Toronto, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Stewart. Mr. Jack Costello, of Niagara Falls; Mr. Gordon Costello, King- ston, and Mr. and Mrs. Peter RUMMAGE SALE under the auspice of the Women's Hospital Auxiliary at the LIBRARY Saturday, October 26th 2 p.m. Collections will be made FRIDAY AFTER NOON, OCTOBER 25 PHONE 484 or 27 LA-BATT'S CRYSTAL LAGER BREWERY LIMITED Space contributed in the service of this ' community .by John Labatt Limited CEQ S `iOURl W , Wori1 as 11894 oceisved by 'MrL. LeslieJaintes'• St, Sea, forth, io. ,the death atTafia of her father, C:eejl S.'1 arrow, 70, of EIderslie Township, w acb oceur- 'red October $, Besides h7,{3 . wife, the former Nclythe'Talnbling, of Toronto, and Urs.Fleming, he is- survived by three sons, Kenneth and Allen, Elderslie, and Beverly, Saskatch- ewan; three daughters, Dorothy, Galt; Marjorie, Toronto, and Mrs. Ross Doll, Bancroft; • MRS. MARSHALL STEWART Mrs. -Marshall Stewart, the for- mer Isabelle Neilans, died in Scott Memorial Hospital early Wednes- day morning. ' Although she., bad been in poor health for some years, her passing was quite sudden. Born in McKillop Township, .the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Alex Neilans, she attended school there. In March, 1908, she was married to Mr. Stewart, who sur- vives. She and her husband bad resided in Harpurhey for many years. A member of. First Presbyter- ian Church, funeral services will be conducted by her minister, Rev. D. Glenn Campbell, from the G. A. Whitney Funeral Home on Saturday', October 19, at 2 p.m., DST. Interment will follow in Maitlandbank cemetery. MRS. JOHN It ELGIE - The death occurred at her home, on Wednesday of Lena Eberhart, widow of the late John T. Elgie, following a lengthy illness. Born in Tuckersmith, the daugh- ter of the late Charles Eberhart I and Mary Ann Voile, she was in her 78th year. She was married in Hibbert Township, July 28, 1909, !her husband predeceasing her in '1952. Following a number of years farming in Hibbert, she and her husband retired to Seaforth in 1945. She is survived by two daugh- ters, Dorothy, Mrs. Glenn Slavin, and Miss Thelma Elgie, of Sea - forth, and by a sister, Mrs. Mar- garet Currie, Moose Jaw, Sask., and a brother, Dr. F. L. Eberhart, of Meaford. She was a member of Northside United Church, of the WMS and of the Women's Institute. Funeral services will take place from the Box Funeral Home Fri- day afternoon at 2:30, conducted by Rev. Bruce Hall. Interment will follow in Maitlandbank cemetery. SIDNEY A. DOLMAGE Sidney A. Dolmage died at the Thamer Nursing Home here on Monday, in his 65th year. He had been in failing health for two years. Mr. Dolmage was born in Mc-, Grosech and children, • London, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Dan Costello. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Feeney were in Detroit with Mr. and Mrs. Bader. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Fitzpat- rick, of Detroit, visited with friends. Complete With Deluxe Altoch-O-Matic Tools SMALL DEPOSIT DELIVERS BALANCE EASY PAYMENTS WORLD FAMOUS ! NAT IONALLY ADVERTISED NEW 1957 %4 EUREKA Acktifforemr NO DUST BAG TO EMPTYI Simply. zip' dips -to open top and remove sanitary - throwaway pslper dust bag. You our hands never touch zIP=cuP SWIVEL TOP Cleans all over from one position. Clean a whole room without moving the cleaner. Past, convenient —so much easier! At~ :Our Store 1TOW or - - - - PHONE See Live Defnstration (DUBLIN 7O) FOR 10 DA HOME TRIAL in ni; ectric (By CRAIG WILLIS) Once again -the "-`back-to-school" bell rings at 9; for some it rings, and rings, and rings! But it's soon apparent to those who care, that the over -eaters v s won't be there, Everyone seemed to' enjoy the Thanksgiving holiday and the ex- tra -day granted by the Queen, but most are glad to be back to school. $ $ Students' Counei Since a year book is being plan- ned, the duties of the Students' Council must expand. The increase in committees was discussed and new committees were appointed at a meeting on Friday. At this meeting before the nominations, the president pointed out that the nominees should be chosen for their ability in the job they are appointed to do. The Students' Council will be divided into two parts, a social section, looking after all social ac- tivities, and a commercial section, attending to all business affairs. There are still sub -committees and duty committees to be decid- ed upon at the next meeting. At the Friday meeting, sale of school sweaters was discussed and Linda Dobson put in charge of ad- vertising for the sale of last year's sweaters. A new • sweater was mentioned by Clen Kerr, and sev- eral suggestions for the color was heard, but nothing was decided„at the time. After the meeting of the Stu- dents' Council, a special meeting of the executive was held to fin- alize the ordering of Christmas cards. The choice from a previous meeting proved to be a dear one, as was pointed out by the sales- man, who said it was the most expensive card they had for sale. Since the cards were ordered in a large quantity, we were able to obtain them for $1.00 — 15c less than the original cost. It was al- so decided at this meeting the cards would be sold to the stu- dents at $1 per dozen. Sports The Golden Bears brought home another defeat late Thursday af- ternoon. They trooped out of the bus with none too high spirits, knowing themselves they had not played to the best of their abili- ties. The only advantage of the exhibition game in Mitchell is that the team is determined to win, Killop Township, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dolmage, and attended school in McKillop. In 1916 he married Flossie E. Lowrie, who died in 1955. He farm- ed in McKillop the early part of his life, and then was a trucker for 22 years, retiring about seven years ago. Surviving are five daughters: Mrs. Harold (Mary) Longman, of Auburn; Mrs. Ross (Viola) Mc- Nichols, of Kippen; Mrs. Mickey (Clara) Chabnik, Winnipeg; Mrs. Jack (Thelma) Burleigh, Seaforth; Mrs. Robert (Bernice) Norris, Staffa; three sons, Allan, Atwood; Reginald, London; Ronald, Sea - forth; three brothers, Joseph, Van- couver; Charles and Austin, Mc- Killop; two sisters, Mrs. Jennie Alexander, Seaforth; Mrs. George Fox, McKillop, and nine grand- children. Funeral service will be held Thursday at 2 p.m., DST, at the G. A. Whitney Funeral Home. Rev. D. Glenn Campbell, of First Presbyterian Church, will offici- ate. Burial will follow in Mait- landbank cemetery. MRS. L. VAN EGMOND The death occurred Wednesday night, October 9, of Mrs. Margar- et Elizabeth Van Egmond, 90, of 111 Huron St, Stratford, in the Stratford General Hospital. Mrs. Van Egmond was born in Stratford, a daughter of the late John and Mary Vanstone. She lived in Stratford until h e r marriage to Leopold Van Egmond in 1887 when she went to live in Egmondville. Her husband died about 30 years ago, and she re- turned to Stratford in 1947 and liy- ed with her sister, Miss Ruby Vanstone, at 111 Huron St. She was a member of St. Thomas' Anglican Church, Sea - forth, and was an active member of the Women's Auxiliary. She was a life member of the WMS and belonged to the Red Cross. She is survived by her sister and one niece, Mrs. Claude Trout, of Niagara Falls. The remains rested at the home of her sister until Friday at noon when they were `tinveyed to the G. A. Whitney Funeral Home, Seaforth, for funeral service on Saturday at 2 p.m. Rev. J. H. James, of Seaforth, officiated. Burial was in Egmondville ceme- tery. The pallbearers were Wm. Smith, John Earle, B. Roth, N. Floxby, E. C. Boswell and E. J. Oldfield. ALL KINDS of INSURANCE W. E. SOUTHGATE Phone 334 -.- Res, 540 MAIN ST SArORTli with more vigor and assurance than could be seen at anytime be- fore. In the first half it looked as if Seaforth was on the yield to keep warm. Their offensive play was almost nil, and their defensive play not much better. They aver- aged one out of every ten at- tempted tackles. The second' half showed some improvement on the part of the home team, but there was still much to be desired in offensive play. While Seaforth was in pos- session of the hall, little progress was made on the ground or in the air. Defensive •action remained the same, except that a few more half- hearted tackles were attempted. After the stiff practice on Fri- day (and everyone attending agreed it was the hardest work- out they had since playing rug- by), the game here against Wing - ham on Thursday should prove a far cry from the one at Mitchell. In the previous game they won by a singe T.D. The game here should be interesting. The loss, 27-2, could not be cred- ited to either the line or the back- field, as both literally fell apart. $ $ Question of the week: Barb, did you enjoy the drive-in Satur- day night? Do you always watch the show from the floor, Howard? EGMONDVILLE Mrs. Ross Alexander has return- ed to teaching at SS No. 8 after a serous illness. Miss Mary Stobie is visiting with friends in Detroit. Weekend visitors with Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Finnigan were: Mr. and Mrs. Earold Finnigan, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Finnigan, of Lon- don, and Miss Bee Finnigan, of Mitchell. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU1111111 WEDDINGS it a7 • aR4 Orsi f aviS'rlpamPA" ,were guests 4 Mr diad MTS.: 5 V' I awle..y, W ntbxq,P Rev B .'T ,RR tylia An** . en fan lyr of 'Turintto :PP 11 Thanksgiving with Mr and a.. Zack McSpadd®ai, Roxboro. bronze mums. The bridesmaids, miss Dorothy, Coal, Kirkland Lake, and Miss Mar- garet Bond, Louden, cousins of+ the bride, wore similar dresses of teal blue crystal charm, and car- ried bronze mum§. The best man was Fe W. R. , Pearson, RCAF, Lachine, Que., and ushers were Flt. -Lt. D. G. McGregor, RCAF, Lachine, and Flt. -Lt. P. A. H. ,King, RCAF, Cen- tralia. Mr, James A. Stewart was solo- ist and sang "The Voice That Breathed O'er Eden" and " "Be- cause." Be- c us . a e Mrs. James A. Stewart was organist. At a reception in the church hall the bride's mother received the guests in a dusty rose crepe dress with black accessories and a cor- sage of gardenias. The groom's mother wore a grey taffeta dress with dusty rose accessories and a corsage of pink roses. For a wedding trip to Eastern Canada, the bride chose a brown tweed suit with beige and brown accessories, brown muskrat jack- et and a corsage of bronze chrys- anthemums. The couple will re- side at 4040 Broadway Ave., Lachine. Guests attended from Saginaw, Mich., Fort Wayne, Ind-, Lachine, Que., Toronto, London, Kirkland - Lake, Sudbury, Huntsville, Gode- rich, Clinton and Brucefield- IIIII1111IIIIII111111I1111I111111111111111111111 SAUNDERS—GORDON St. Michael's All Angels Church, Toronto, was the scene of a pretty wedding on Saturday, when Miss Doreen L. Gordon, Toronto, be- came the bride of James E. Saun- ders, Toronto. Thebride is the daughter of Mrs. Arthur Johnston, Scarboro, and Mr. Stewart Gordon, Seaforth. The groom is the son of Mrs. Jas. Saunders, Toronto, and the late Mr. Saunders. Following a wedding trip to Montreal, the couple will reside in Toronto. Those who attended from Sea - forth were Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Gordon and Mrs. Jean Motton. ROSE—LILLICO Egmondville United Church was the setting for a pretty wedding on Saturday, when Marian Wil- liamina Lillico became the bride of James Glenford Rose. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Lillico and the late Alexander Charles Lillico, Seaforth, and the groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenford Frederick Rose, Byron, Ont. Rev. Dr. James Semple officiated. Given in marriage by her uncle, Mr. Thomas Mackie, of Embro, the bride looked charming in a white ballerina length gown of corded silk with bouffant skirt and lace bodice, with an overjacket of lace. Her fingertip veil was held by a seeded pearl headdress, and she carried red and white roses. Miss Christena Lillico, London, was her sister's only attendant, and wore a dress of powder blue chiffon over tulle with matching velvet bodice. She carried a bou- quet of white and yellow mums. Mr. Jack Chapman, of Byron, was groomsman, and Mr. Ernest McVittie, Blyth, was usherer. For a wedding trip to New York State, the bride donned a copper - tone Italian silk sheath dress with peplum jacket and matching tweed coat with brown accessories. Her hat was matching melusin profile with brown asprey trim, and she wore a corsage of bronze mums. On their return the couple will reside at RR 4, Seaforth. GOLDING—•MOFFAT Northside United Church, Sea - forth, was the setting at 12 o'clock noon, Saturday, for the wedding of Jeanette Bryden, daughter of Mrs. Peter B. Moffat, Seaforth, and the late Mr. Moffat, to FO Francis A. Golding, RCAF, Lachine, Quebec, On of Senator and Mrs. W. H. Golding, Seaforth. Rev, Bruce Rall, of Northside United Church, officiated. The bride, given in marriage by her uncle, Walter Moffat, wore a floor -length princess gown of mira mist taffeta. The bodice had a high empire waistline, portrait eckline studded with iridescent quins and rhinestones, and long y -point sleeves. The short chap - 1 train extended from a nest of back pleats. Her fingertip French illusion veil fell from a small crown of Guipire Lace and net, The bride's jewellery included a wrist Watch, gift of the bridegroom, and in heirloom brooch that had be- lenged to her great great-grand- thother, Jane Bryden. She carried a: cascade of yellow roses and 1"trench carnations. 'i`he ,matron of honor was Mrs. rs. P. Wilhee, Seaforth, sister Of 3400 0 =bride,. who wore a dress of cq ;rrystal charm, and earrie'd i BROWNIE'S DRIVE-IN CLINTON "FEATURING THE LARGEST WIDE SCREEN IN HURON CO" Weekend Shows Only DOUBLE FEATURE Friday and Saturday October 18 and 19 "THE DAY THE WORLD ENDED" and "PHANTOM FROM 10,000 LEAGUES" Kent Taylor and Kathy Downs (ONE CARTOON) Box Office open at 7:30 p.m. FIRST SHOW AT 8 P.M. STANDARD TIME ik wi! ii At Fall & Winter Weight UTILITY SHIRTS Sanforized doeskin utility shirts in new ivy stripes and gay plaids, in a variety you haven't seen the like of. Medium weights and heavy weights, many in "no -iron"• quality, are here for your choosing. SIZES: S, M, L, OS, to fit from 141/2 to 18 collar 2.95 to '$.95 Choosey a'a tons, wooly Parryliiore iso 1 , signs, . Noel lend and twill nylon, ii ular suburban p n e er coats ,.4q I.y5. A r; All are wariliy �itkl quilted Insulated wa rmth witbsut 1'!le�lot Popular shades inelude; light, • medium and ehareoat, greys, fawns and tweed plus the new ;popi tar red. Choose now from our ,big showing. a SIZES ,p4 TO 46 15.95 to 24.50' Stewart Bros. Ty TS TZ Ty TZ Ty Ty T1TyTyTs,TWTST�Td,ZTyTyTZTZTSTyTy Tr BIG $ $ $ $ $ SAVINGS Special TOPNOTCH Dairy Month October 10 to November 10 We are selling Dairy Feed just as fast as we can manufacture it, and at Rock Bottom Prices. Buy your requirements now and receive delivery any time before December 31, 1957. SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES NOW IN EFFECT Topnotch Steer Fattener 20% $3.65 per Cwt. Topnotch Steer Fattener 20% (with .0011% D.E.S.) $3.95 per Cwt. Topnotch Calf Starter 20% $4.70 per Cwt. Topnotch Calf Meal 22% $2.55 per 50 lbs. Topnotch Dry and Freshener 13% $3.35 per Cwt. Topnotch Standard Milk Ration 16% $3.45 per Cwt. Topnotch Special Milk Ration 16% 3.05 per Cwt. Topnotch Cow Concentrate 34% $3.90 per Cwt. Topnotch Cow Supplement 24% $3.40 per Cwt. Topnotch Cow Las 13% $1.75 per 50 lbs. Topnotch Bran -Mo -Las 12% $2.10 per 80 lbs. PLUS AN EXTRA SAVING OF— $1.00 Per Ton in Ton Lots, and $5.00 per Cwt., pick up at the Mill SPECIAL! Just new in this district — A Complete Milk Replacement — NURSE COW 20c of Nurse Cow will give a calf the required amount of milk for one day. A saving of approximately 20c per day to feed a calf on Nurse Cow, rather than milk. ASK FOR SPECIAL PRICES ON BRAN, SHORTS, OILCAKE, BEET PULP and MOLASSES $ $ $ $ $ $ $ We are Buyers of Timothy, Red Clover, Mixed Grain, Oats, Wheat, Buckwheat and Flax BUCKWHEAT — 95c per Bushel TOPNOTCH FEEDS LTD. Phone 775 • Seaforth, Ont. "The Most Value For the Farmer's Doilar" r p:i�Yt t TIT&T,t T1 1 .,i`.��.� Y,;