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The Huron Expositor, 1962-04-26, Page 5• • r • • OBUTUA NES. Tom Dorr YOU'RE LATE COMING HOME FROM SCHOOL, DEAR. LOCAL (Continued from Page 1) children, London; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jordan, Detroit; Miss Mary Jordan and Mr. James • Jordan, Toronto; Mrs, J. Jor- dan and Mrs. Harold Meagher, Dublin, and Mrs. L. Fortune, Seaforth. Mr. and Mrs. R. R, McKind- sey have returned from a holi- day in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Dwyer • and family, of Windsor, visited with Mr. and Mrs. Leo Hagan during the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. William Lanni- gan and Leasa and Kelly, of Toronto, are guests of Rev. and Mrs. Kendrick and . Mr. and Mrs. James Flannigan. Mr. and Mrs. G. McKindsey :and family, of Niagara Falls, and Mr. Don McKindsey, of Fort Erie, are visiting at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. McKindsey. T/Sgt. and Mrs. James G. Taman and family, of Bellefon- • taine, •Ohio, spent Easter with Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Close. Miss Donelda Adams, teach- er on the 'staff of the D. A. McCurdy SehooI,"• RCAF Cen- tralia, is spending the Easter holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Adams. • Cpl. K. T. Adams, of Steven- son Field, RCAF Station Win- nipeg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Adams, is at present a patient in Deer Lodge Hospital, Winnipeg. His many friends in this district wish him a speedy recovery. • Mrs. Lillian Wright and Ar- thur attended the funeral of Mr. William Kent in Toronto on Monday. Mrs. Harry Weiland, of To- ronto, and Mrs. W. J, Ross, of Clinton, were here on Mon- day attending the funeral of the late George A. Love. s Mr. and Mrs. Les Naftel and Logan, of Walkerton,, visited with Mrs. Leo Stephenson on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. Overholt, of Goderich, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Simp- son. Mr. and Mrs. William Burns spent the weekend in Sudbury. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Stewart, Toronto, were Easter visitors with his mother, Mrs. H. Stew- art. Mr. Douglas Stewart, of Ot- tawa, spent the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Stewart. Mr. and Mrs. F. Kling spent the weekend in Lindsay. Mr. Thomas R. Cluff, Mont- real, spent Easter with his father, Mr. A, F. Cluff. Miss H. M. McKercher is in Edmonton this week attending • a meeting of the Canadian Ex- tension Education Council. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hofroid and family, of Preston, spent the Easter holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hudson. Mr. Peter Rowat and Mr. Tom Dick are in Owen Sound • attending a Red Cross Swim- ming School. Mr. William R. Stephenson, of Cocoa Beach, F,lgrida, spent Easter with his mother, Mrs. Leo Stephenson. Easter guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Torii Flynn in- .• eluded: Mrs. D. Duncan, Mrs. L. Rowland and Mrs. Ann Thompson and friend, of Tor- onto; also Father' Hugh. Curran, Mr. Flynn's nephew, Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Williams and sons, 'Of Mount Clemens, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. M. McKellar. Miss Mary Lou Sills, London; Mr. George Sills, Toronto; Miss Ruth Sills and Mr. Joseph Ken- nedy, Kitchener, were Easter guests at the home of Mrs. C. P. Sills. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Eckert and • children, of Niagara Falls, vis- ited last weekend with Mr. and Mrs. 1:' M. Eckert. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Taylor and Mrs. Fthel Stephenson were in London on Wednesday and call- ed to see Mrs. Walter Broad - foot, who is a patient in St. Joseph's Hospital. Miss Barbara Plumsteel, daughter •of Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Plumsteel, has accepted a position on the teaching •staff of the Scarboro Board of Edu- cation. She will take a summer • BRIEFS course at OCE in physical edu- cation, prior to assuming. her new duties in September. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Lemon, Jack and Janet, of Bracebridge, are spending their Easter vaca- tion with Mr. and Mrs. Dave Lemon and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chesney. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Geddes,_ John and Robert, of London, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Geddes over the --weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stewart, Mrs. Arnold Scott, Mrs. George Tunney and Mrs. Ron McAllis- ter were in London Saturday attending the funeral of the late Mrs. James Stewart. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Leon- hardt and family spent the Eas- ter holidays in Petawawa. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Hart, of town, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Butters, of Dublin, are holiday- ing in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carter and family, of Richmond Hill, spent Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Downey and Miss Anne Downey. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Grant and children, of Waterloo, were Easter 'visitors with Mt. and Mrs. A. Y. McLean. Mr. and Mrs., .Wm. Scott, of Ottawa, spent the holiday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Scott. Mr. Scott returned to Ot- tawa with 'them, where he spent a few days. Lions Learn • (Continued from Page 1) tion survival measures, since 1954 with the advent of nuclear weapons, have . undergone change. Today, responsibility is laid down as between em- ergency measures organizations, and the militia. The present program was compared to . in- surance. In the event of an attack, it would result in the saving of a maximum number of lives. The meeting was in charge of Irvin Trewartha- and Dr, John Turnbull, and the latter introduced Major Harvey. • The club's annual theatre night will be held in Septem- ber this year, rather than in June as formerly. During the evening members of the John Henderson family contributed. entertainment. Today's youngsters don't leave footprints on the sands of time -just tire tracks. A donation to the Canadian Cancer Society is an investment in health and happiness. GEORGE A. LOVE ' George A. Love, 69, of Gode- rich, died Friday at Alexandra Marine • and General Hospital, Goderich. He had been in poor health for a number of years. Born „in Toronto, son of the late Alexander Love and Har- riet Soole, he was a printer and learned his trade in The Huron Expositor plant. He was employ- ed mployed until his retirement a num- ber of years ago with several well-known ''Toronto plants, Re- turning to Huron County, he operated, a stpre at Shipka, and in 1953 retired to Goderich, where he was a member of St. George's Anglican Church. He is survived by his wife, the former Jessie R. Scott. Sea - forth. The body was at the Box Funeral Home, Seaforth, where service was held Monday at 2 p.m., with Rev, H. Donaldson, of St. Thomas' Anglican Church officiating. Burial was in Malt - landbank cemetery. Pallbearers .were Jack Ratz, Matthew Sweit- zer, Samuel Scott, A. Y. Mc- Lean, Jud Walker and Soole Walker. Flowerbearers were T. R. , Thompson and Lewis Tay- lor. MRS. L. HOEGY The death occurred suddenly on Monday in Scott Memorial Hospital of Mrs. Louis Hoegy, in her... 80th year.. The former Ida Walther, of .Ltigan Town- ship, she married- Louis Hoegy and resided in McKillop Town- ship before coming to Seaforth in 1920. Her husband predeceased her in 1950. She is survived by two sons, Wilfred, South Bend, In- diana, and Walter, Livonea, Michigan; four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. A sister Clara, Mrs. Burt Kline, Mitchell, and four brothers, William and Emanuel, of Mit- chell; Dick, St. Thomas, and Gustiva, Vancouver, also sur- vive. She was a member of North- side United Church and Edel- weiss Rebekah Lodge. ' The body is resting at the G. A. Whitney Funeral Home, where funeral service will be held, Thursday at 2 p.m., with Rev. J. C. Britton officiating. Ln- terment will be made in Malt - landbank cemetery. - WILLIAM FORD AITCHESON The death occurred in Rose - town Hospital; Mnday, April 16, of William Ford ArEclveson, 79 - year -old resident of Rosetown, Saskatchewan. Mr. Aiteheson was born Dec. 12, 1.883, in McKillop township, the sone of Mr. and Mrs. John Brown Aiteheson. He •spent the early years of his life there, -and in 1905 he went west to Saskat- chewan, living at Milestone for three months. He returned to Ontario, but in 1906, deciding to make Saskatchewan his home, he went to Saskatoon. He home- steaded east of RosetoW in the spring of 1907, and resided on the farm until 'he retired two years ago to live with his daugh- ter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. K. Ito. He was married on June 19, 1923, to Katherine Elizabeth Squires, who passed away on November 13, 1954. In addition. to Mrs. Ito, Joyce; a daughter Freda, Mrs. David Freisen, re- sides in Saiskatoon; and a son, Alban is at Moose Jaw. There are five grandchildren. A sis- ter, Mrs. Alice Calder is ii Hud- son Bay, and a brother, James, resides in Seaforth. A son, Wm. Ford, passed away in 1931. Funeral service was held in t h e Rosetown Presbyterian ian Church on Thursday, April 19, with Rev..J. ,H. Young officiat- ing. Mrs. R. Maiming was at the console of the organ, and ,accompanied the congregation as they sang the hymns, "Abide With Me" and, "Safe In the Arms of Jesus." Miss 'Gay Bar- rie sang the solo, "What A Friend We Have in Jesus." Mr. R. Beaton was the usher in the church. Interment followed in the fain - illy plot in Rosetown cemetery, with the following ,acting as honorary pallbearers: Jim Burt, ! NHSS1ON RY 40D .E$SES NQRTHSIDE OCIN• THANKOFFERING. Northside United cru . W Men held their Tb $' meeting Tuesday eve?g visitors train ch tat Eg- mondviille, -..Constance, - Bruee* field and Winthrop. P'earldent, Mrs. Neil C. Bell ceded a warm welcome ito a and gave a. brief° summary of the work so far this year, which proved very emeounaging, Mrs. Nor- man Knight lied in,prayer. Scripture was takes from St. Matthew, read by Mrs: -Tom Wil - bee. The ladies' choir rendered an anthem, ''Christ the Lord Is Risen To -day," followed by a duet by Margaret Hiller and Eileen Smith. Rev. J. C. Britton introduced the guest speaker, Dr. Walter Clean Living Is (Continued from Page 1) good as Watford, but that the "puck just did not bounce right for them." -Mr. Gregg thanked Mr. Dungey for the inviter +fin to attend and address the group. The program was brought to a close with the, showing of a film, "The Fastest Sport in the World," which included high- lights of last year's Stanley Cup finals and many of the NUL past starts in action. • It also showed many scoring plays in slow motion. Mr.. Patterson, secretary - treasurer of the minor group, released the following financial statement this week: Receipts Public donations $ 219.35 Donation, Teen Twenty 226.00 Gate receipts 190.97 Deposits: %O gate to WOAA.., 17.80 '% gate to OMHA ... 82.91 Total receipts $ 737.03 Expenditures 2 entry fees WOAA $ 18.00 Insurance, 2 teams 30.00 Telephone, postage, etc28.27 Hockey sticks, supplies 351.94 15 sweaters and socks 124.37 Advertising 17.14 Gate % to WOAA 17.80 Gate % to OMHA 82.91 Bank balance 66.60 $ 737.03 An estimated $32.72 has yet to be paid, Mr. Pattersen said. The seventh meeting of the Slik Chix was held Sat. at the home of Mrs. Keith MacLean. The real call "Something T have learned about making a gar- ment" was answered by 13 members. Lynn Nixon read .the minutes of the last meeting. The book covers and the fash km show were discussed `as'the buSiness. The girls were asked to complete their record books and garments and to harve them handed into the leaders by next Thursday, April 26. The Fashion_Show A fashion show consisting of het Willing Workers, under the leadership of Mrs. H. McLeod and MrS. J. McIntosh, Jr., and the Silk Chix, wider the leader- ship Of Mrs. M. McGrath and Mrs. ICeith MacLean was held in the Sunday School room of Egmondville United -Church on Saturday. At that time the girls' mothers and friends were pre- sent.. Each girl modelled her garments and Mrs. M.. Mc- Grath commented on) each one as they appeared. Some of the ladies present acted as judges on a few of the girls' choices of color combina- tions and their suitability to the occa,sion. Lunch was served by the girls and the leaders. Hector Button, Al Hutcheon, F. Kidd and Bill King. Pallbearers were Bob Adnam, Walter Ad - nam, Stew Adnam, Austin Coul- ter, Dave Aitken, Charlie An- derson„ Keith Adie and Lloyd Clark. TEENS! A Tremendous Selection of CORDS and CANVAS OXFORDS Buy these exciting colors in Washable Cordu-roy - Black, White, Black Wat Grey, Green, some Red, some Gold Try these very fashionable colors in Blabk, White, Olive, Check and Multi -Stripe. CANVAS OXFORDS $2.98 Irnported Black, Gold or CORDS Look over the Terrific White MEN! Bargains in' Bone and FLATS or PUMPS Broken lines - assorted sizes. Priced Below Cost Green BOYS! See the many Foam Soled SUMMER CASUALS in Suede or Leather, on SALE AT COST! "°%.' S SHOES FOR THE FAMILY Illodieal. Missionary in 4494. .speaker based KS tak on "Pore • Your Neighbor. - Yourself", and spoke Of being' 41040 through elturat, schaa and hospital and' 0:W. toleco place since 1928 Mien be went to Africa.. He teld of the number of students eccapleting. the. needs' of their own Peolike- The hospital at Chissambra, where Dr. Strangway works, hag - been enlarged and through Pe- lle health programs,. drugs, etc., TB aul leprosy is beiog control - Dr. Strangway for his enlighten- ing address and al who took part in the meeting. Benedie- tion was pronounced by Rev. jOyed with lunch served by the social committee. COOK WANTED or Married Couple To be responsible Mr kitchen and do cooking. Apply: QUEEN'S HOTEL SEAFORTH For THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY Only (OPEN FRIDAY MGM 'TIL 10) BOYS' SPORT' COATS Novelty tweed and check pat- tern, boys' sport coats, broken 7.95 sizes from Easter selling. Reg. to 14.95 SHIRTS and BRIEFS Double seat briefs and sleeve- 770 less topS in Lennard's $1.00 quality. Sizes S, M, L only Men's Reg. 2.95 - 3.50 Half Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS Broken size range of men's half sleeve sport shirts, great- ly reduced for three days 1.95 SINE 10% ON MEN'S ORING SUITS Nothing reserved, just JO% sliammt new Spring suit,s for 3 today at SPORT ,SHIRTS Boys' long sleeve summer weight sport shirts, greatly reduced to clear. Sizes 8 to 14 only SAVE ON MEN'S ALL-WEATHER TOPCOATS .00 Men's Grey or Green Only Matching SHIRT and PANT SETS Famous make, matching shirt and pant work sets, in green or grey shade only. All siies. ' A bargain at SET 95 Save 20% on EASTER MILLINERY Balaece of our after - Easter stock of this sea- son's hats; 3 days only 20% off Clearance BRASSIERES 26 only men's reversible all-weather coats. Reg. 21.95 to 27.50 CLEAR , .... 0%off A real buy at TO MEN'S SANUFORIZED BROADCLOTH Boxer Underwear Shorts Assorted good pattern boxer underwear shorts; sanforized; bal- loon seat cut. Sizes S, 97; ea. SPRING COATS Reduced 20%, For Three Days All this season's best ni I! clear colors and styles to .. 20700TT Reg. 25c to 29c Heavy Weight Terry FACE CLOTHS BROKEN LINES OF,HIGH- PRICED BRASSIERES •-• 97 Big assortment. of good color. VERY SPECIAL 15° ea. 72x84 Satin Bound Viscose and Nylon BLANKETS ALL COLORS Individually boxed. SPECIAL 495 Sale - Wabasso PILLOW SLIPS Durable quality faraous Wabasso make. 42 -inch size • The chances of someone keep- ing your secret are about 46 to 1 against you. There is no secret about our circulation audience. ABC "tell-allh reports give factual answers Tor your advertising questions. , Ask to see our ABC report. THE HURON EXPOSITOR 36" Wide - Kitchen Pattern DRAPERY FABRICS Assorted New Patterns. REg. $1.00 QUALITY 79° Yd. .25 pr. FLANNELETTES Mill -ends of 69c quality, assorted ; good .pat- 5 50 yd. patterns STEWART BROS. THIS STORE FOR BEST BUYS THE YEAR AROUND Read' the Advertisements - It's a Profitable Pastime ! WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS - Phone 141 KELVI ATOR cet VISIT OUR HOME SHOW All Next Week tSee ad. elgewhere in this issue) See all our entertainment -a wide variety. MONDAY TO FRIDAY ONAN SPRING TRADE - IN SALE - ELECTRIC RANGE Automatic Oven Timer, Minute Minder, Rotary 7 -Heat Surface Element Switches, Surface Elements, Signal Lights, Surface Light and Switch, Appliance Outlet, Oven Window, Oven Light and Switch, Full -Width Storage Drawer, plus the 16 additional features yon will find on every Kelvinator Electric Range. YOURS FOR ONLY $7 95.00 See our wide variety of KELVINATOR Automatic Washers and Dryers • TWO -DOOR Refrigerator FREEZER Automatic defrosting Refrig- erator with 'occlusive Hum- idiplate. Twin porcelain Crispers, plus many other ONLY $ 2 9 5 With Trade-in (With Trade-in) GENERATOR SETS - Have standby power • - Works off power take -off on your tractor. See the .display at our Show ! WATER SYSTEMS FURNACES - APPLIANCES - ETC. We are featuring $2,000 worth of used parts for Refrig- erators, Ranges, Washers, Etc. - All Makes and Models. ALL USED PARTS WILL BE SOLD FOR ONE-QUARTER OF THE NEW PRICE Now is the time to repair your Range, Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators, Etc., while our stock of Used Parts last, You Always Save When YOU BO At GINGERICH'S SALES & SERVICE LTD. Phone 34, Zurich Phone 585, Seaforth 171e• 1117107.0:171. was GENERATOR SETS - Have standby power • - Works off power take -off on your tractor. See the .display at our Show ! WATER SYSTEMS FURNACES - APPLIANCES - ETC. We are featuring $2,000 worth of used parts for Refrig- erators, Ranges, Washers, Etc. - All Makes and Models. ALL USED PARTS WILL BE SOLD FOR ONE-QUARTER OF THE NEW PRICE Now is the time to repair your Range, Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators, Etc., while our stock of Used Parts last, You Always Save When YOU BO At GINGERICH'S SALES & SERVICE LTD. Phone 34, Zurich Phone 585, Seaforth 171e• 1117107.0:171.