HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1962-11-29, Page 19••
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Name Winner
In Essay Contest
Elaine Townshend, a pupil at
SS 5, Goderich Township, has
been declared the winner in
District 8 (Huron -Perth) in an
essay competition. She stood
first at the Bayfield fair ip Sep-
tember.
Subject of the competition
was, "'I'he School Program At
Our Fair."
Gwen Finkbeiner, a grade 6
pupil at the Exeter public
school, placed second, and third
prize was awarded to Sally Mow-
at of Seaforth public school.
Altogether there were nine
essays at the district level, each
having topped the competitions
• • at nine district fairs.
Elaine's essay will now be
entered in the provincial com-
petition, with the results being
made known in mid-February.
Judges were the English de-
partment teachers at the Sea -
forth and District High School,
assisted by F. R. Cosford.
In charge of the district com-
petition was Mrs. Joseph Grum-
mett, district representative.
•
Return Council
(Continued from Page 13)
be wise to consider additional
calcium chloride on roads. Cost
was about $100 a mile, but in
view of the serious dust situa-
tion this could be money well
spent.
• Councillor Alex McGregor
said how helpful he had found
Reeve Thompson. He found as
he became more familiar with
municipal work that there was
a requirement to. gain approval
for almost every move council
made. He wondered if 4his was
necessary, since • farmers gen-
" erally have proved they can
run their own affairs and do a
good job. He referred to the
action taken to adjust council
salaries and said there had been
no objection.
Cost bf education was caus-
ing concern and some change
should be made whereby the
landno longer carries the cost
of municipal taxes. Paying tri-
bute to the work being done
by assessor Ivan Forsyth, he
said he doubted the assessor's
guides provided as yardsticks,
reflected conditions today.
• Councillor Irvin Sillery, who
was completing 'his first year,
said he had found it a wonder-
ful experience.
"High school demands are in-
creasing, but the costs must be
met if we agree our children
are entitled to an education,"
he said. He would like to see
road widening carried out at
Forrest's bridge.
(The balance of the report of
the Tuckersmith ratepayers'
meeting will appear in next
week's issue.)
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CONSTANCE -
Mrs. A. W. Bromley, of Kit-
chener, visited with her father,
Mr. James Dale, over the week-
end.
•
ST. COLUMBAN
Mr. and Mrs. Louise Masse,
Grand Bend, with Mr. and. Mrs.
Joseph L. Ryan. •
,, ,
Christmas
Special
PERMS
Reg. $15.00 - $12
Reg. $10.00 - $7
Reg. $7.50. - $5
BETTY SCOTT
BEAUTY SALON
Phone 80
OPEN EVENINGS .
PI
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.1"lig IWRQI!1' E C 0sriQ13, sgOolilw,. ,Q:v ", iQV Pi
r1!
SANTA NEEDS
SNOW -FORiiiS-
gEIGH
SO YOU CAN BET ..
WE'LL SOON Grill'
And when• we -do, YOU -will need WARM
and DRY WINTER FOOTWEAR. Thl4.
is the place 'to get it if you' want to
save money 1
Women's Black
Suede or Nylon
Overthe-Sock
Cocktail Boots
with Cuban or
Illusion • $10.95
heels
Teens Black or Brown Over -the -Sock
<-. SNO '
BOOTS
in nylon, leather
or rubber.
5.95
to .
8.95
THE SEAFORTH PIXIES make their debut at the Santa
Claus parade on Saturday. Organized by Mrs. Jean Hilde-
brand and Mrs. Marlon MacLean, and instructed by. Ken
Bassett, the five and six -year-olds include, from the left
(front Tow): Heather Kruse, Robbie Hiusser, Beth Broome,
Brian Dale, Susan Hildebrand, Lee Bell; (second row): Wendy
1962 SANTA CLAUS PARADE
The following is the order in which bands and
floats will appear in the Saturday parade :
1. Stratford Perth Regiment Pipe Band.
2. Officials.
3. Eight costumed marching girls: Barbara Long-
. staff, Elaine Ross, Mary Eckert, Grace Riley, Lois
McLaughlin, Theresa Ryan, Elizabeth Carter.
4. Old Woman in the Shoe: Highland Shoes.
5. Seaforth Pixie Band.
6. Cinderella and Her Pumpkin
Auto Wrecking,
7. Clinton Community Band.
8. Hansel and Gretel: I.O.O.F. and Edelweiss -Re-
bekah Lodges.
9. Lions Club Float.
10. Pinnochio: Canadian Tire Associate Store.
11.. Clown and Pig : Topnotch Feeds Limited.
12. Little Red. Hen : - Henderson Started Chicks Ltd.
13. Thirty Majorettes: Pearce Studio, London.
14. R.C.A.F. Station Clinton Bugle Band.
15. Snow . Queen: Miss Lois Tyndall.
16. Queen's Attendants: Miss Mary Scott and Miss
Faye Little.
17. Snowflakes: Patricia Bowering, Seaforth Public
School; Margaret Eckert, St: James' Separate
School.
18. Snow White and Seven
Town.
19. Bal. Ba! Black Sheep: Seaforth Legion.
20. Clinton Pipe Band.
21. Elephant and Pluto: Topnotch Feeds Limited,
22.. Puss -in -the -Well: Willis' Shoes,
Whitney Furniture:
23, Rock -a -Bye Baby : Box Furniture.
24. Little Red Riding Hood: Seaforth Women's
stitute.
25. I.G.A. Float: !
26. Hospital Auxiliary Float.
27. -Clinton, District High School Trumpet Band.
28. Choo-Ghoo Train : Sills' Hardware, Smyth's Shoe
Store, Keating's Pharmacy, Bill Smith's Grocery,
Stewart Bros., Elmer Larone, Harold Jackson.
29. Miss Dorothy and Mr. Don : CFPL-TV, London.
30. Seaforth Juvenile Western Ontario Baseball
Champs: Regier Transport.
31. Seaforth Fire 'Truck.
32. Forest Brass Band.
33. Three Billy Goats Gruff: Harold Maloney, Street
Foreman ; Bob Doig, Plumbing and Heating.
34. Yogi Bear and Quick Draw McGraw : Cleave
'Coombs, Sunoco Service Station.
35. Polly, Put the Kettle On : Scott Habkirk, Buses.
36. Peter, Peter, Pumpkin. Eater : Crown Hardware.
37. The Good Ship Lollipop: Maple Leaf_Pai,ry,
Irvin's Hardware, Johnnie Blue,
38. Seaforth District High School Girls Trumpet Band
39. Santa Claus.
Coach':' Cudmore's
Dwarfs: Seaforth Teen
Crich's Bakery,
In -
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WATCH
ECIALS
MEN'S - 25 JEWEL
AUTOMATIC
SHOCKPROOF
WATERPROOF
SWISS MADE
MI MI
ONLY $ 2 9.95
Anstett Jewellers
Phone 77 : Seaforth
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... w �. . .
McConney, Mary Lou De Groot, Barbara Brady, Peter Har-
vey, Jan Muir, Cherie Lynn Wallace, Linda Willis; (back
row): Jo -Ann De Groot, Debbie McPherson, Susan Byerman,
Kathy. McGonigle, Mary Noble, Dinny McConney; (rear):
Melissa MacLean, Cathy Somers, Bandmaster Ken Bassett.
(Expositor photo by Phillips).
OVERSHOES
For .everybody! At prices you can't
beat!
CHILDS' SIZES 6-12 •
at • 3.49 and 3.98
CHILDS' WHITE, SIZES 5-10
at
This Week At the Seaforth District nigh School
(By' GISELA DORRANCE)
Last Friday„ an assembly was
held to distribute the prizes to.
the winners of the magazine
campaign. The total sales were
'very good this year, and . fell
less than $200 short of the ob-
jective of $2,000. The daily- high
salesmen, who received a foot-
ball mascot or $2.00, were as
follows:
Monday, Oct. 15: Jim Sills;
16, Heather McLeod; 17, Ruth
Gorwill; 18, Myra ,McNair; 19,
Joan Hoover.
Monday, Oct, 22: Robert Mac-
Donald (11-C); 23, Linda Bry-
ans; 24, Anne Blake; 25, Graeme
Craig; 26, Michael lewnham.
Monday, Oct. 29: Suane
Haugh; 30, Diane Finlayson; 31,
Brian Habkirk; Nov. 1, Gerald
Rapien; 2, Geraldine McTag-
gart.
The draw, which included all
those who had sold at least $10
worth' of subscriptions, for a
transistor tape recorder, , was
won by Bruce Elliott. The $30
salesmen draw for a Marconi
transistor radio was won by
Diane Finlayson. Linda Bryans
accepted the purple elephant
on behalf of 10-C, which had
the highest average sales in the
school. (Yes, a purple elephant
-and a very nice purple ele-
phant at that!) The Huron Ex.
positor awards, three transistor
radios, went to Joan Ryan (who
also won a transistor last year,
because of her good salesman-
ship), Audrey McMichael and
Karen Dolmage. All these sales-
men and saleswomen, and ev-
eryone else who supported the
campaign by selling subscrip-
tions, are to be congratulated.
In Hullett
(Continued from Page 13)
If possible, this bridge will be
replaced by 'the road superin-
tendent with local labor. Also
mentioned was the benefit of
the various membership organ-
izations joinedby the munici-
pality, such as Good Roads, On-
tario Rural Municipalities, Hur-
on County Municipal Officers.
Robert Thompson, the town-
ship represcintative for Clinton
High School, was unable lb at-
tend the meeting due to ill-
ness, but Councillor Jim Mc -
Ewing obtained the financial
report from Mr. Thompson and
read it and explained the var-
ious items on it. •
Oliver Anderson gave a fi-
nancial report for the Seaforth
High School, and Walter Scott,
representative on Scott Mem-
orial Hospital, gave a compre-
hensive report on the finances
of the Seaforth hospital and the
relationship that Ontario Hos-
pital Services have in the fi-
nances of the hospital. The
hospital operates. only on the
difference in the• rate between
the rate charged by the hospi-
tal and the basic Ontario hos-
pitalization rate. This amount
is the only money that the. •hos-
pital retains for its own use, he
said.
* * *
The Students' Council is now
selling Christmas cards at $1.00
per dozen. or 10' each, at 'the
booth. Better get yours while.
they last. I don't know -how
many students like to identify
themselves with the school
when they send their Christmas
greetipgs, but I, rather like the
idea. `
* *
The Chatterbox staff is try-
ing to scrounge up contribu-
tions for the yearbook. If you
have any short stories, essays,
jokes, original cartoons, photo-
graphs, etc. (I had better use
et cetera, to cover anything I
may have missed -such as poe-
try), that you would care to
contribute, please help out by
giving them to Joyce Brown or
some other member of the year-
book staff. The more contribu-
tions we receive, the more we
will have to choose from, and
Fireside Farm
Forum Meets
3.98
MISSES' SIZES, 13-3
at
3.98 and 4.50
BOYS' SIZES, 1-5
at
MEN'S SIZES, 6-12
at
4.98 and 5.95
5.50 and 6.95
GROWING GIRL -5, SIZES 4-10 5.49
at
SLIPPERS are always a welcome gift at Christmas and we've got
loads of 'em that'll cut your Christmas spending in half.
Women's and Children's Cosy Comfortable
SLIPPERS -Many styles and many
colors, from - 1.29 to 4.98
the better our yearbook will
be.
* * *
Here are a few boners from
exam papers (not Seaforth's, of
course, but no doubt we could
do just as well) which I found
in an hilarious book (that's a
boner too -a misrelated' adjec-
tive clause!!)
"Aesophagus was the author
of Aesop's Fables." ' '
"Buddha lived a normal life
-with a wife and family, and
when he was thirty he left home
in search of happiness."
"Robinson Caruso was a great
singer who lived on an island."
"Nero was a cruel tyrant who
would torture his poor subjects
by playing the fiddle to them."
"Michael Angelo was the
leader of the Angelo Saxons."
"Ptomely was a Greek scien-
tist who discovered the cause
of ptomaine poisoning."
Fireside Farm Forum met
Monday evening at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. James Howatt,
with 12 members present. Dis-
cussion was "Dairy Policy." As
Huron .County is predominate-
ly a beef producing area, the
dairymen in the county should
be willing to support the ex-
panded "set-aside" program of
dairy farmer of Canada.
Winners at euchre were:
high, Harvey Taylor; lone
hands, Paul Buchanan; consola-
tion, Mrs. George Carter. Mrs.
Gordon McGregor Invited the
forum for next week.
WINTHROP
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Innes,
of Deloraine, Man., were visi-
tors with Mr. and Mrs. John
Boyd on Tuesday.
FOR EVERYONE!
Men's and Boys'
SLIPPERS
2.98 to 4.98
Our . BAUER SKATES Make Terrific Gifts!
If you're not sure of the size or style wanted, purchase one of our convenient Gift
Certificates.
• % UU%S
SHOES FOR THE FAMILY
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Now Open to Serve the
St.'CoIurnban District
The Bright Interior of the New Ryan's Groceteria at St. Columban
RYAN'S GROCETERIA is now open to
.,4§etve you. You will find our new, larger
And completely modern store bright and
attractive. Shelves are laden with an en-
tirely new stock of Groceries, Meats, Fruits
and Vegetables, arranged for your shopping
convenience. Everything in the store is
new.
As life-long residents of the area we ,look
forward to serving our many friends
throughout the district., We hope 'that all
in the community will feel free to take
advantage of our services.
For the convenience of the public, our store
will be open each week day from 8 o'clock
,in the morning until 10 o'clock in the eve-
ning. We invite you to come in and see us.
RYAN'S GROCETERIA
ST. COLUMBAN Phone 84 R 3, Dubin
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