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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1968-06-06, Page 61 • r.„" „„ 130.11,01$ ExposnoR.,, SEAPORT'', ONT., JUNE 6, 190 ntertainment In the Red Knight Room Friday Night—Clarence Petrie Saturday Night Gord Ross & the Lamplighters In th• Ladies' and EscortsRoom Enloy a Sing -A -Long with PEARL at the Hammond Organ FRIDAY AND SATURDAY COLORED TV BEVERAGE ROOM SNACKS Tasty Chicken Wings COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Seaforth THURS., FRI., SAT. June 6-7-8 `PrIgalli DILLER.' Did you hear the one aboutlihe Traveling„palesiady7 EA A UNIVERSAL PICTURE • TECHN,COLORS Plus . . . WOOLNER BROS Presents itILLIIMYS IN A HAUNTED ;MUSE Cb92R "BEST FILM OF 1966I" Notionol Society of Film Critics A Coro Ponti Produttion Antonioni's BLOW-UP COLOR A Prorniv Productions Co, Inc. ItelnoR ADMITTANCe RESTRICTED to Ms°. N CO .41 Olt OM - MON., TUES., WED. June 10-11-12 ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" N.Y. Pose may _d a TBERMAN- 'BMW: HE PANDRO S. GUY GREEN joir PRODUCTION BILme IN j'AtWil SION* (Adult Entertainment) Coming Next: "LANA, QUEEN OF THE AMAZONS", Plus: "SAVAGE GIRLS" (Bath Adult Entertainment) WEDDING INVITATIONS THE HURON EXPOSITOR Phone 527-0240 , Presented With Painting Miss Valeria Drope who retired last February after serving 19 years as administrator of Scott Memorial Hospital and Seaforth Community Hospital was honored Thursday when the board presented her with a painting of the new hospital which was completed recently by a Seaforth artist, Mrs. Ross Sauvage. At a subsequent meeting of the board Donald I. Stewart was named president; succeeding A. Y: McLean, who retired after ten years in the office. Vice-chairman is John Longstaff, while committee chairmen are W. D. Stephenson, J. M. Scott and Mrs. J. McConnell. Shown here are (left) Mr. Stewart, Miss Drope, Mrs. Joe McConnell, who made the presentation and Mr. McLean. (Expositor photo by Phillips). Former Area Dumps (Continued from rage 1) Ontario Hydro, is a fruit jar collector chiefly. He got start- ed when he was hit by the "bug" after an auction sale and he hasn't stopped collecting. He ad- ded he does a lot of research Chicken Barbeque Thurs., June 13th AT CONSTANCE Sponsored by C.O.F. Served from 5:30 •to 8 p.m. Adults, $1.50 Children, 6 to 12, 75c Under Six Free Take Out Orders SHOWER for Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Miller (Karen Schumm) BRODHAGEN Community Hall Friday, June 7th Christie:I' Orchestra! Everyone Welcome Ladies please bring lunch DO YOU KNOW THE -4 POINTS BEHIND, EVERY AD? When You See An Ad in THE HURON EXPOSITOR - THIS *IS WHAT IT MEANS . . 1. A REPUTABLE STORE . a store that lives up to its advertising bar- gains, has a reputation to uphold. 2. DEPENDABLE QUALITY in the merchandise it sells — Merchandise that is exactly as represented. 3. HONESTY in advertising messages and in dealings with the public. No attempt to falsify or deceive. • 4. ,VALUES • . •. Every Huron Expositor advertiser has an important message for you. It pays to read them all I MAKE YOUR PURCHASES THE SAFE WAY CoNSULT THE ADS EVERY WEEK IN 4 "Sirice 1860, Serving the Community First" Phone 527-0240 Seaforth from the public archives. . Dave Parker, a Bell Telephone employee, began collecting old telephone pole insulators which upon, being replaced would nor- mally have been thrown away. He has one which dates back to 1865 made by the old Hamilton Glass Insulator Co. It is now enshrined in the Hamilton Mu- seum. Mr. MacKenzie, a scientific historical cataloguer, at the Na- tional Museum, has done some archeology but concentrates on bottles collecting as a hobby. Since '1955, he claims he has over 10,000 bottles, one of which dates back to the first to third century A.D. and , is made of Roman glass. He ob- tained it in a trade for a tele- scope.' Another bottle has the label, Wm. Pipe, Kingston, CW". CW standing for Canada West which was before confederation. Mr. MacKenzie doesn't stop at just bottles. He collects books, other relics, deeds, etc., which he uses as barter with other collectors. He plans, on estab- lishing .a glass museum some- time in the near future. For collectors such as Mr. MacKenzie, they are liable, to go ariyvvhere in their search for relics. They travel back roads, especially winding roads made long ago, in -hopes of finding , a cache left by some farmer. "Usually when I see an old house or a dump I ask the farm- er for permission to scroimge around the place," he said. "They look at me, scratch their, heds and think Pm nuts." He never takes the same roads back to Ottawa, he says. When he finds a likely pros- pect (his experience enables him to judge .She age within moments) he creans and packs them carefully and takes them home. "The real fun is when you get home," he smiled. A half the fun is cleaning them up and trading them again for 'others. • "This is part of the thrill of digging a dump. You never know what you're going to come across," he added in saying you could dig for hours and almost gn the verge of frustration come across a cache. When digging a dump, he digs right down to the virgin soil, establishes a wall and works from the wall being care- ful not to- work too fast or too hard. He doesn't limit' himself to dumps. He finds that old houses are valuable sources and says 'that anyone ciit have something extraordinary without knowing it. He is interested in anyone of this nature and will talk for hours with the person in hopes of mustering up a trade. He's a family man, as are the others so theymust stay home quite a bit. Don. claimed he can tire of digging and get carried away in his world of bottles but will often knock ,off and relax with a book or go for a drive with his wife Alice and sons Colin ‘(4) and. David (2). - His world is in the empty bottle only!!! Rectory Tea and BAKE, SALE Wed., June 12th 3 to 5 p.m. St. James' Rectory Sponsored by the CWL wisso..smoWnsarosore. ro.rees. semi Londosnoacndc EDRistrict LEAGUE Marconi Italia Vs. St. Coltunban at St, Columban Field Sat., June 8th 4:00 p.m. Conservative Committee Room 'South Main and John Streets For information CALL 527-1150 Or Come In CASH - BINGO Plans -Meelling sea/ort4W,1, win MO Tues. ° day 4une 11 at 8:30 p.in, at the home! of Mrs. G. PaPPle-, oU calt will be "The most popular dairy product us&din my home." There will be a debate by mein. hers, "'Butter vs. Margarine," lunch committee will be Mrs. Ken Campbell, Mrs. I Hudson, Mrs. E. Papple, and Mrs. A. Campbell. An Expositor Classified will pay you dividends. Have you tried one? Dial 527-0240. Legion Hall, Seaforth Friday, June 7th r 0:15 p.m. IS Regular Gomes for ' $10.00 Three $25.00 Games $75.00 Jackpot to go Also: Door prizes, $10.00, $5.00, and $3.00 (Children under 16 not permitted) ADMISSION $1.00 Extra Cards 25e or 7 for $1.00 Auspices Seaforth Brands 156 Royal Canadian Legion Proceeds' for Welfare Work `. swerielinsermissinerocenusesmoroselesseeisserkinemske "1 BROWNIE'S DRIVE-IN CLINTON THURSDAY — FRIDAY - June 6-7 — D0UBLE FEATURE — 'DEADLIER THAN THE MALE' Richard Johnson — Eike' Sommer ShOWilig at 9.15 p.m. In Color — PLUS "The Reluctant Astronaut Showing at 11.00 p.m. Don Knotts —Joan Freeman' and Arthur O'Connell Color Cartoon SAT. -- MON. — TUES. June 8-10-11 "THE DIRTY DOZEN' (Adult Entertainment) . 'Showing at 9.15 and 1--110 p.m. LEE 1VIARVIN — ROBERT RYAN Jim Brown and John Cassavetes Color Cartoon WED. -- THURS. -- FRI. June 12-13-14 — DOUBLE FEATURE — "CLAM BAKE" Showing at 9.15 p.m. ELVIS PRESLEY — Shelley Fabares In Color — AND Hour of the Gun' Showing at 11.00 p.m. James Gamer — Jason Roberts and Robert Ryan Color Cartoon Meet the `Travellers" Cindy and Bruce Starting Monday — The Ken Rose Trio UEEN'S HOTEL si.....olekeesrorirmisoriSinealftenssroftsec Friday Night Mac MacDonald Saturday Night Norval Reid Trio BEVERAGEROOM SNACKS Hot Turkey Sandwiches HURON HOTEL Dublin • RoYal Canadian Legion, Clinton Branch 140 DRIVE1N BINGO Brownie's ,Drive -In Theatre, Clinton .IVIONDAY, JUNE 17, 1968 Double Feature "Tobruk" and "Gunpoint" BINGO: Eight games for $10 ,— 3 share -the - wealth.: Extra bingo cards and extra share - wealth cards 25c each or 5 for $1 Gates open 7:00 p.m. Bingo at 7:30 p.m. Movie at dusk Advance Tickets $1 Tickets at gate, $1.25 each All proceeds for sports In the community Tjekets available from Legion members or 011ie Legion Hall. Seaforth Lions Park PAVILION Saturday Night, JUNE Sth with music by "The Mystic Power" from Brantford REN1111111111T HENSALL TWILIGHT STOCK SHOW HEAVY HORSES — LIGHT' HORSES PONIES — IMPLEMENT 'SHOW Tuesday, June 18, 1968 5 o'clock p.m. Featuring ... Prize Hereford Feeding Calves To be Judged,and Auctioned BABY SHOW (no entry fee) Prizes for All Contestants " Bands in Attendance MONSTER MIDWAY KIDDIE RIDES AND OTHER ATTRACTIONS TORY GREGG, Master of Ceremonies PARADE COMMENCES AT 6 p.m. Refreshment Booth — CKNX Mobile Unit Auction Sale of Calves 9:30 p.m. ADMISSION 75c - Students 50c - Cars 25c - Children FREE DO YOU SING? DANCE? Play An Instrument? This is your once in a lifetime opportunity to turn your talent into dollars. 41 more than $200 in prizes acii Amateur Talent Contest SEAFORTH LIONS ANNUAL CARNIVAL June 26, 27 and 28 Preliminary Contests: Wednesday evening, June 26th and Thursday evening, June 27th. Fjnals: Friday evening, June 28th. Prizes: Preliminary Contests: $15.00, $10.00, $5.00, Wednesday $15.00, $10.00, $5.00, Thursday Final Contest: $75.00, $50.00, $25.00, Friday Final contest winners will also be invited to appear on CKNX Television during the new Fall schedule of programs. To Enter: Fill pi this application form and return today fo: Rev. DoUglas 0. Fry, .Program Chairman, Lions Carni- val, Seaforth, Ontario. - Full Name - (If Group, list on separate sheet) Address • i Age (if under 16) Type of Talent, vocal, instrumental, dance, etc. Name of selection to be performed It musical Candidate's preference: Wednesday ,Thursday Deadline for contestant,applications, Monday, June 24th, 1968. The time available on contest nights may be limited, and it tpay be necessary to limitentrie§; so get your applidation in early. All applications will be acknowledged,