The Huron Expositor, 1962-11-01, Page 6IM9X1 'S,M.}.." QSITOR,
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119V k 1962;.
Lady BowIer Name
Mrs, Scott Habkirk
Mrs. Scott Habkirk was nam-
ed •president of the Seaforth
Ladies' Lawn Bowling Club at
the annual -meeting recently.
DANCING
BRODHAGEN
Community Centre
Friday, Nov. 2nd
Desjardine's Orchestra
ADMISSION 75 CENTS
RECEPTION
for Mr. and Mrs. Fred Malone
(nee Audrey Kemp)
Saturday, Nov. 3
BRODHAGEN
Community Hall
— Everyone Welcome —
MUSIC BY THE CLARETTES
LUNCH
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Turkey SUPPER
Duff's Church, Walton
Wed., Nov. 7th
Supper served 5:30 to 8 p.m.
Program To Follow
Adults 51.50 — Children 75c
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Held in the clubhouse, the
ladies concluded their summer
season with the annual meet
ing.
Other officers are: Past presi-
dent, Miss D. Parke; first vice,.
Mrs. H. Connell; second vice,
Mrs. E. Larone; secretary -treas-
urer, Mrs. L. F. Ford; tourna-
ment committee: Miss Alice
Reid, Mrs. E. H. Close, Mrs. H.
Connell, Mrs. T. Phillips, Mrs.
J. Muir, Mrs. R. Doig; conven-
er, Mrs. J. Muir; house com-
mittee, Mrs. N. Schneider, IV1iss
1'. Elgie, Mrs. A. Wright; social
committee. Mrs. T. Phillips,
Mrs. J. Muir, Mrs. E. Dinsmore;
prize and buy ing committee,
Mrs. H. Connell, Mrs. C. J. Wal-
den, Mrs. L. F. Ford; Provincial
Lawn Bowling Committee, Miss
Alice Reid, Miss D. Parke; audi-
tor, Miss Janet Cluff; bridge
conveners, Mrs. K. Etue, Miss
J. Cluff; euchre conveners, Mrs.
N. Schneider, Mrs. A. Wright;
lunch convener, Mrs. H. Whyte.
The fall and winter season of
bridge and euchre started with
a pot -luck supper and cards last
Thursday night at the home of
Miss D. Parke. The prize win-
ners were: bridge, Miss Janet
Cluff; euchre, Mrs. J. Muir.
Mrs, McDonald, Church St.,
offered her home for the No-
vember party. Mrs. S. Habkirk
thanked Miss Parke for .her
hospitality.
RECEPTION
.and DANCE
for Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Lovell, Kippen
(nee Myra Stokes)
Community Centre
ZURICH
Saturday, Nov. 3
Desjardine Orchestra
EVERYONE
WELCOME !.
INSTITUTE NOTES
The London Area convention
of Women's Institutes will be
held in Hotel London on Nov.
5 and 6. A full program is
planned, and Mrs. Lymburner,
prov.incial'president, is showing
pictures taken on her trip to
Australia following the ban-
quet Monday night. As many
Institute members as possible
are asked to attend,
FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
REV. DOUGLAS 0. FRY
Minister
Sunday, Nov. 5th
WORSHIP — 11:00 A.M.
9:45 a.m.—Minister's Class
10:00 ,a.m.—The Senior -Sunday
School
11:00 a.m,—The Junior Sunday
School
11:00 a.m.—The Nursery
Back to the
HURON ROOM
QUEEN'S HOTEL - SEAFORTH
The Fabulous Collegians -
With Their Soft Music
0 ❑
Clean., Comfortable Rooms
FOR RENT
By the Day, or Week
AT THE QUEEN'S
FIRST EXECUTIVE of the Huron Rabbit Breeders Association, which was organ-
ized in Clinton are shown, seated, left to right: Willis Van Egmond, RR 1, Clinton,
secretary -treasurer; Clara H. Magee, Clinton, president; Vincent Reles, Clinton, vice-
president. Standing: Directors Lorne Marshall, Kirkton; Herbert Hawkins, Brussels ;
Harold Taylor, Seaforth, and Gordon Cudmore, Clinton. (B-H photo).
DISTRICT FUNERALS
• J. W. T. DIXON
John William Turnbull Dixon,
of 750 Cook St., Victoria, B.C.,
died Sept. 15, in his 81st year.
Born at Gladswood Farm, near
Roxboro, one of a family of
nine, he was the son of the late
John Turnbull Dixon and Mary
Sloan Dixon.
He is survived by his wife,
Winnifred May., of Victoria, and
one daughter, Mrs. Butz, of
Okinawa; also one grandchild,
Mrs. Mary Jenner, of Colorado.
Funeral services were held
in McCall Bros' Floral Chapel
on Sept. 20, with Rev. H. I.
Higgins officiating, followed by
cremation.
JOHN R. WALKER
The sudden death occurred
in Hamilton Saturday evening
of John R. Walker, in his 57th
year. For many years a resi-
dent of Seaforth where he° was
educated, he was the youngest
son of the late Mr. and Mrs.
John Walker. A veteran of the
Second War, he had resided in
Hamilton since the war.
He is survived by his "wife
and four children. Also surv-
ing are two sisters, Mrs. Grace
Cameron, Toronto, and Miss
Mary Walker, Seaforth, and a
brother, Sam Walker, -of Tim-
mins. Interment took place in
Hamilton on Tuesday.
.MRS. MICHAEL McCAULEY
The Public is
-x:o invited to attend
HlU the Annual
Commencement.
'• of the ,
Seaforth District 'High ' School
in
SDHS AUDITORIUM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9th
at 8 o'clock
Ethel from Hamilton.
He is survived by his wife,
the former Dorothy Tirtcombe;
one son, David; two daughters,
Rosemary and Betty Lou, all at
home; mother, Mrs. Ada Brown
of Toronto; three brothers, 'Ed-
ward, of London; Reginald, of
Toronto; Harry, of Ottawa.
The body was at the D. A.
Rann funeral home,. Brussels,
until Wednesday, when remov-
al was made to Ethel United
Church for service at 2 p.m.
Rev. A. K. Griffiths, of Ethel
United Church, officiated. In-
terment was made in Mt. Pleas-
ant cemetery.
JOHN CAMERON ADAMS
John Cameron Adams, 63,
died at his home, Brussels, Sat-
urday night, following a lengthy
illness. He was born in Morris
Township, son of the late Wil-
liam Adams, and the former
Jean Doig.
He farmed for some years be-
fore moving to Brussels where
he operated a feed mill. Later,
he purchased a farm on con. 4,
in the township.
He is. survived by his wife,
the former Isabel Lowery; one
son, William, of Morris; three
brothers, Paul, of Grey Town-
ship; Russell, of Gorrie; Har-
vey, of Howick Township; one
sister, Mrs. Murray (Jean) Ed-
gar, of Howick.
The body rested at his late
residence until Tuesday at 2
p.m., when service was con-
ducted by Rev. W. J. Morrison,
of Melville Presbyterian
Church. Interment was in Brus-
sels cemetery.
The death occurred in Strat-
ford General Hospital on Mon-
day, October 22, of Mrs. Loret-
ta McCauley, wife of the late
Michael McCauley. Mrs. Mc-
Cauley was -the former Loretta
Purcell, youngest daughter of
the late Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Purcell, of Seaforth.
Mr. and Mrs. McCauley lived
in Stratford since their mar-
riage on July 4, 1911, in St.
James' Roman Catholic Church,
Seaforth.
Mrs. McCauley was buried
from the. Immaculate Concep-
tion Church, where Rev. H. J.
Curran, C,S.B., nephew of the
deceased, was celebrant.
Acting as pallbearers were
William Inkol and John Mur-
phy, of Stratford, and four
nephews: Thomas Flynn of Sea -
forth, Timothy Carbert of Kit-
chener, Robb Purcell and Jos-
eph and Michael McCauley of
Stratford.
DAVID WILLIAM BROWN '
David William Brown, 59, a
hardware -merchant .at Ethel,
died in Listowel Memorial Hos-
pital on Sunday following a
heart seizure. He was a native
of England, and moved to bank cemetery. •
Complete Work
At Elliott's
Elliott's Restaurant reopened
this week following completion
of a remodelling program that
began on Thanksgiving.
The interior has been com-
pletely rebuilt and new furnish-
ings and modern steel counters
and serving area installed. A
large window and new entrance
and front complete the•changes.
W. J. SLARK
William J. Slark passed away
suddenly at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter McClure, Mc-
Killop Township,. on Tuesday,
Oct. 30, in his 58th year. Born
and educated in Birltshire, Eng-
land, lke was a harnessmaker by
trade. A member of the Perth
Regiment, Stratford, during the
Second World War, in early life
he had been a member of the
Royal Army Service Corps.
During the past few years he
had been employed in the Sea-
forth area.
He is survived by two sisters,
Mrs. Edith Edwards, Appin,
Ont., and Mrs. Anne Phillips,
Toledo, Ohio, and one brother,
Aruth, of Atlanta, Georgia.
Three sisters an da brother also
survive in England.
Funeral services will be held
from the Box Funeral Home on
Thursday, at 2 p.m. Rev. 11.
Donaldson will officiate. In-
terment will be in' Maitland -
Court Hears
(Continued from Page 1)
burst property was deleted. The
scales were used infrequently.
Speaking for the firm, Mr. Ley -
burn asked that an agreement
covering purchase of property
at the sewer disposal plant be
carried out. He was advised to
write council, giving details.
The assessment on a barn
owned by Carl Dalton was re-
duced $300, when the assessor
suggested it should be treated
as a barn in a rural area and
greater obsolescence applied.
The court confirmed an as-
sesment of $2500 on the resi-
dence of Mrs. Selin Boshart,
The assessment, originally $2,-
350; had been increased last
year to $2650, and this year
reduced to $2500.
A building destroyed by fire
two years ago, and now owned
by R. S. Box, was deleted and
the assessment reduced $$50
with a comparable tax reduc-
tion of $57.46.
Councillor N. C. Cardno, a
member of the court, withdrew
while consideration was given
correcting an error in the as-
sessment on the Cardno Block.
The adjustment resulted in a
rebate of $8.30 in 1962 taxes.
The assessment of Mrs. Hel-
en Bolton was reduced $200 to
$1700, when the assessor said
the lot was overbuilt. It had
been $1500 previously.
Other appeals concerned
changes in designations and
were those of Orville Dale,
Robert J. Doig, W. J. Thomp-
son, Jack Huber, John Tre-
meer, Tony Phillips, G. Travag-
lione, Frank Morris and Arn-
erigo Travaglione.
HENSALL
The next Kinsmen meeting,
Nov. 8, will be a joint meeting
with the Exeter Kinsmen Club,
when the guest speaker will be
the National Representative of
World Council, Paul Mills, of
Hanover, who will speak on his
recent trip to the World Coun-
cil convention at Lausanne,
Switzerland.
Changes were approved by
the court arising `from changes
in the trailer by-law. These in-
cluded D. Hartwick, delete.
$1,000; A. Aubin, reduction.
$900; W. Baker, reduction $650;
J. Baker, .reduction $650; -C.
Williamson, reduction $725,
and P. Weimann, delete $850.
Members of the court were.
Mayor E. Daly, chairman, Reeve
W. N. Ball and Councillors
John Flannery, N. C. Cardno
and Neil Bell.
di The
Weeke
Brodhagen Community Centre
ANNUAL TURKEY DRAW
and CASH BINGO
Wed., Nov, 14, 8:30 p.m., sharp
• 15 REGULAR GAMES • 4 SPECIAL GAMES
Draw for 50 Giant Turkeys, followed by Dance
CLARETTE'S ORCHESTRA
ADMISSION: Bingo and Dance $1.00 — Dance only 50c
First Presbyterian Church
ANNUAL AZAAR
Saturday, November 3rd
3:00 p.m.
• HOMEMADE BAKING • PRODUCE
• APRONS • ETC.
AFTERNOON TEA
Guest Speaker:
DR. CHARLES STOGDILL
Director of Child Adjustment Services,
Metro Toronto, and a graduate of
Seaforth Collegiate Institute
— ADMISSION FREE —
Dance FoI1o\vhig Commencemeli►t
from 9:30 to 12:00
Robby Downs' Orchestra, London —° Admission SOc and 76c
r w
,
"'You don't like it—do you?"
CANNING CROPS INCREASE,
GROW' AND EXPORT MORE
There were 131,750 acres of
vegetable canning crops plant-
ed in Canada under contract to
the processing industry in 1961.
This was 5,000 more acres than
in the previous year, according
to the federal Fruit and Vege-
table Division.
Inspectors of "the Processed
Products Section reported
plants decreased in number
from 449 to 438 but increased
in size and production had ex-
panded. _ Some 5,000 export
certificates were issued, fewer
than in 1960, but the volume
of exports doubled,
Visits by inspectors to check
grades and packs numbered
20,000, a 50 per cent increase.
Domestic, import and export
samples graded by the section
totalled '73,000 in addition to
some 2,000 samples examined
at chemical and bacteriological
laboratories.
The chief products canned,
in order of quantity were: corn,
peas, tomato juice, around 200
million pounds each; tomatoes,
apple juice, peaches, beans,
pears, apples, apple sauce,
cherries, plums, (less than 100
million pounds each) and apri-
cots, strawberries arid raspber-
ries, less than 7 million pounds
each. Frozen products included
35.6 million pounds of peas and
a total of about 50 million
pounds of strawberries, corn,
beans, raspberries, apples and
peaches in that, order:
Eastern Canada contracted
for more peas and corn but
tomato acreage was 3,300 acres
less than in 1960. British Co-
lumbia reduced corn but in-
creased peas and bean plant-
ings. The reverse ,was trtle in
tlb'!A'n .fir.
LISTER SINCLAIR finds relaxation in games of chance,
but challenge in the mysteries of science, As host and edi-
tor of the Tuesday night program, Science Review on the
CBC radio network, ,he introduces world-famous scientists
in a series of talks a1l33out themselves and their experiments.
BAZAA.R and BINGO
Dublin Parish Hall
Thursday, November 8th
Bazaar at 3 p,m. Bingo at 9 p.m.
15 Games for $5.00
2 Specials 1'Share the Wealth
— 3 DOOR PRIZES —
Admission 75 Cents .
AUSPICES ALTAR SOCIETY
the prairies—more corn but
less peas and beans.
Some 300 of the canning in-
dustry plants were located in
Ontario and -Quebec but there
were 50 in the Maritimes, 60
in British Columbia, and' 28 in
the prairies.
The St. Columban CWL
are holding a
EUCHRE
and Social Evening
IN THE PARISH HALL
Thursday, Nov. 1
LUNCH P :OVIDED,-
The Week at
SEAFORTH ARENA
ATTENTION
LADIES! ..
SEAFORTH LADIES'
CURLING CLUB
would like you as a
member of their club.
• If you are interested in
curling, please contact Mrs.
Norman Scoins or any mem-
ber.
THE WEEK COMMENCING
NOVEMBER 18th is
"TRY -OUT" Week
SEE YOU AT THE
CURLING RINK !
and ,COMMUNITY CENTRE
FRIDAY,NOVEMBER 2nd—,
Skating — 8 to 10 p.m.
Arena opens at 7:45 p.m.
Admission — 35c and 25c
SATURDAY; NOVEMBER 3rd—
Skating — 2:00 to 3:30 p.m_
Arena opens at T:45-
Admission
:43Admission — 25c and 10c
. Skating — 8 to 10 p.m.
Admission — 35c and 25c,
TEEN TOWN`-- HALL
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 8th--
. Skating — 8 to 10 p.m.
Admission — 35c and 25c
This space contributed through the courtesy of
UNI0N (jAJCOMPANY
OF CANADA LIMITED
SEAFORTH -- ONTARIO
Remembrance Day
Seaforth Branch of the Royal Canadian Legion will
observe Remembrance Day with a Service at the
Cenotaph, Victoria Park, on
Sunday, Nov. 11, at 12:30 p.m.
The Legion erftends a cordial welcome to all School
Children, Boy Scouts, Girl Guides, Cubs, Councils of Sea -
forth, TuckerSmith and McKillop, all other crganizations,
and the general public, to join in the Service.
.Representatives of Organizations who are pre-
senting Wreaths are asked to be at the Legion
Hall immediately after church, in order to
pick up wreaths.
The parade will leave the Legion Hall at 12:15, headed
by the Seaforth District High School Girls' Trumpet Band,
arriving at' the Cenotaph at 12:30.
Order of Service At the Cenotaph
12:15—Parade leaves Legion Hall for Cenotaph, via George
and .Victoria Streets. •
12:30 -Selection SDHS Band
12:35—Hymn: "0 God, Our Help in Ages' Past"
12:40 -Last Post
Two Minutes' Silence
Reveille
Placing of Wreaths
"GOD SAVE THE QUEEN"
March Past
Following the Service, the' parade will proceed via
Victoria and Goderich'Streets to' Main Street and south
past the Post Office, where the salute will be taken by,
Major John D. Harvey.
SDHS Band
SEAFORTH BRANCH 156
ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION
ALLAN NICHOLSON
President
JACK HOLLAND
Parade Marshal
CHARLES WOOD
Special Events °
RAY J. BOUSSEY
Color Sergeant