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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1963-08-15, Page 121 InTRON VRICSITOR, S. A O#k 114 0 AIX. 15, 96 LOCAL Mrs..4va WeStcott of Toron- Lfl hs §Pq 1di11$ a- holiday with Mrs. Geergetle Smith and is re- newing acquaintances in town. Mr W.illiain Stephenson, Co- coa Beach, Fla., is spending 119114ays with: his mother, Mrs. Leo Stephenson. Mr, atid Mrs. Malcolm Tim - Melia and daughters, Janie Sue 114 Cathy' Ann, of Toronto avant the : past week at the borne of Mrs, Alex Bethune. Mr. and Mrs. Roy. McGeoch are in Cochrane this week with her brother, Mr. William Taman and Mrs. Tasman. Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. John Kellar were her cous- ins. Mrs. R. C. Bonnett of Clarks- burg, West Virginia, and Mrs. Otis Whittaker and Gregory of Detroit. Mrs. Boulton of Birmingham, BUY EARLY! • Get Bargains! • Avoid Rush! Make LARONE'S your head- quarters 'for School Supplies. See the complete stock of New Text Books. Check the bargains! CLIP BOARD Here is a good buy! It regular- ly sells for $1.25. $1.00 .• FEATURE . REFILLS • One hundred Sheets of 20 -bond paper at this feature 490 price (reg. 59c) 200 Sheets, reg. 98c ._ 89c 250 Sheets, reg. 1.29 ....... $1.09 Carrying Cases Choose in leather and know it will last! Black, Brown, Green, Red. $4.98 to $7.98 NEW Ringless Binder This is excitingly practical. Ev- erything' you need •for classes goes with you in C this new.,binder ... �7 THREE -RING .98 NOTE BOOKS These hard -covered books stand abuse while protecting valuable notes. From 98c to 2.98 .• FREE •. Your name will be engrav- ed in rich gold lettering when you .,buy a leather binder at Larone's. Math Sets There is a good variety in these metal -case sets. Priced from 75c - $1.49 TEXT BOOKS For All Grades Check you text book needs from the 'official list in our complete school -supply cen- tre. Pens and Ink Feuntain Pens range from 98c to $1.50. In Ball Points it's 35c to $2.49: Ink by Shaeffer's, Waterman's and Scripto starts at 29c. Ink Cartridges are all in stock. SPECIAL! Book Filler 10 -Book Package 770 Narrow Ruled — Reg. 98c Larne's SEAPO'RTH 5c to $1.00 STORE Stationery - Gifts °E.VERYTHING FOR SOHOOL" BRIEFS Mich:, is the west of Miss Gladys Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hinds of New Liskeard and Mrs. Ray Ackroyd of North Bay were visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Clarke on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jackson spent the weekend at Barrow Bay. Dr. Friel Stewart of Windsor was here over the weekend at- tending the funeral of his sis- ter, Mrs. P. D.1MeConnell. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lauden- bach and family of Toronto are guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Laudenbach. Mr. Charles MacDonald of Windsor spent the. weekend in town. Sgt. -Major E. C. Parker and Mrs. Parker and daughters Gale and Catharine and son Tommy, from Picton Heights, visited last week with Mr. and Mrs. Joe White and Mrs. L. Healy. Mrs. Georgene Smith spent the holiday weekend at the Don Smith cottage at Bayfield with the family. Mrs. Ethel Stephenson, Mrs. Leo Stephenson and Mr. Wm. Stephenson visited in Ottawa with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Steph- enson. Mrs. Mary Hildebrand spent a week in Zurich and also at- tended the Thiel reunion, which was held there on Civic Holiday. Mr. and Mrs. George Ahrens of St: Petersburg, Fla., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Long- ford Rose in Tuckersmith. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Carpen- ter of Chatham attended the funeral of the late ,Mrs. P. D. McConnell on Monday. Miss Joan Smith, Sault Ste. Marie, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. C. E. Smith, Mrs. Mary Proctor of New Liskeard is spending this week with Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Clarke. Mrs. H. D. Winters and Dan- ny, who spent the past month with her sister, Mrs. John Kel- lar, and Mr. Kellar, have re- turned to their home in Par- kersburg, West Virginia. • Mr. and Mrs. C. Montgomery and Miss Beulah Woods attend- ed the Taylor -McGregor wed- ding Saturday in the Palm Room at the Sahara Motel, Sarnia. Miss Peggy Cornish has re- turned after spending holidays at Honey Harbor. Elizabeth Grant of Waterloo andar i M e McLean attend- ing are g YWCA Camp at Honey Har- bor on Georgian Bay. Rev. John and Mrs. Ross and son David of Foxwarren, Mani- toba, who have been touring the eastern provinces, visited his aunt, Mrs. Margaret Cuthill, George St., also the Dennis fam- ilies in McKillop, during the past week. Rev. and Mrs. Charles Fal- coner and son, Bobby, who are staying at their cottage at Port Franks, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hudson. Mrs. Harry Stewart is visiting her daughter, ,Mrs. Norman Mc- Intyre, and F• Mr. McIntyre in Owen Souna. David Britton, who has been attending the Ipperwash Cadet Camp, is presently a patient in Westminster Hospital, London, with bronchitis and pneumonia. It is expected that he• will be released in a few days. Recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mac McKellar were Mr. and Mrs. Orland John- ston of Clinton and Rev. and Mrs. Williams and Paul, Mt. Clemens, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Flynn spent the weekend in Toronto with Mrs. 0. H. Ferguson. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Hinds and Mrs. H. Proctor of New Liskeard and Mrs. Ray Ackroyd of North Bay called on Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Claitke, James St., on Monday. Mrs. Proctor is stay- ing for a week, while Mr. and Mrs. Hinds and Mrs. Ackroyd visit relatives and friends in Toronto and Niagara Falls. Mrs. Florence Mortin of Cap- erol and Mrs. Alex McLennan of Winnipeg are visiting, at the home of their brother, Mr. Wil- son Allan. Mrs. Allan Stone of Norwich is visiting her brother, Mr. Al- bert Hudson, and Mrs.. Hudson and family. Mr. Edward Pryce was in To- ronto on Monday visiting his sister, Miss Nellie Pryce, who is at present a patient in Toronto General Hospital, having un- dergone an operation there last week. WINTHROP Miss Edith Boyd, Kitchener, spent this past week with Miss Barbara Rowan of Guelph. Fol- lowing summer school they spent a weekend at Sauble Beach with friends. NORTHWEST TERRITORIES HAVE MOVED NORTH More, than one-third of Can- ada is located in the present- day Northwest Territories. How- ever, these Territories once in- cluded the Yukon, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. The three Prairie Provinces have al- so gained by expanding their boundaries northward into for- mer Territories country. How, ever, , the vast islands of the Arctic Archipelago were added to the Territotiei to which they still 'belong. The Territories co9er a ilailliorr arid a quarter S4tiare irrides; A 13 -WEEK National Film Board series, Canada at War, will be seen on the CBC -TV network on Saturdays during the summer months. The program, which revives a significant decade in Canada's history from 1936 to 1946, is a repeat of last year's series and portrays developments on the home front in addition to the role played by the armed forces in battle. Canada's distinguished record on the war fronts is recorded in films covering the Spitzbergen raid, Dieppe, Sicily, Italy, Normandy, Holland and Germany. DISTRICT JAMES B. LITTLE James B. Little, 72, of Lucan, died suddenly on Friday. He was the husband of the late Agnes Gray of Lucan, and is survived by daughters, Mrs. Robert (Janet) Gardiner, Lon- don, and Mrs. Basil (Isobel) Nagle, Lucan; and step -son, Wil- liam Brown, of Seaforth. The body was at the Murdy funeral home, Lucan, where a funeral service was held Mon- day. Burial was in St. James' cemetery, Clandeboye. MRS. P. D. McCONNELL Mrs. Patrick D. McConnell died suddenly at the McConnell summer cottage, north of Grand Bend, about six o'clock Satur- day morning, following a heart attack. While recently she had not been in the best of health,Mrs. . McConnell had been in town Thursdaymorning. Orn ng. The former Mary Jean Stew- art, she was the- only daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stewart, and was born in Sea - forth and attended school here. She is survived by her hus- band, to whom she was mar- ried in 1944, andTby two daugh- ters, Ann and Jane, and a son, John, all at home. She is also survived by two brothers, Dr. Friel Stewart, Windsor, and Donald L Stewart, Seaforth. She was a member of St. Jades' Roman Catholic Church. The body was removed from the G. A. Whitney funeral home Monday morning to St. James' Church, where Solemn Requiem High Mass was sung by Rev. John McConnell, a brother-in- law. Burial took place in St. James' cemetery,. Seaforth. Pall- bearers were David Stewart, James A. Stewart, Bert Doughty, Kenneth Etue, Joseph McCon- nell and Magistrate H. Glenn Hays. J. J.`MURRAY A Beverley Hills (Cal.) daily refers to the recent death of J. J. Murray, which occurred July 30, as follows: "Rosary will be recited this evening at 8 in the Church of the Good Shepherd for J. J. (Jack) Murray, 68, longtime Bev- erly Hills banker and a mem- ber of this city's first Civil .Serv- ice Commission, who died of a heart attack Tuesday evening. "Requiem Mass will be cele- brated Friday at 9 a.m. in the Beverly Hills church, with bur- ial following at Holy Cross cem- etery. "Born in Dublin, Canada, Mr. Murray came to Beverly Hills in the early 1920s and went to FUNERALS work for the Bank of America. In November of 1929 he joined the Beverly Hills office of the California Bank as a teller, ev- entually becoming an assistant vice-president before retiring in 1960. "He ,was associated then for two year with Perpetual Sav- ings & Loan in Beverly Hills, resigning in September of last year. The Murray home in Bev- erly Hills was on Spalding Dr. "Besides his duties on the Civil Service Commission, Mr. Murray was a director of the Beverly Hills Men's Club, treas- urer of the Beverly Hills Busi- ness and Professional Men's Club, a member of the Cham- ber of Commerce, the local Lions Club, the Knights of Col- umbus, and was a Canadian vet- eran of World War I. Lastun S day, his brother, Leo, and the latter's daughter, Ann, arrived from Canada for their first visit to the South- land. Mr. and Mrs. Murray were entertaining t h e i r relatives Tuesday when he suffered the fatal heart attack in a down- town shop on Olvera St. "Survivors include his widow, Edith, of 1345 S. Beverly Glen; four brothers, Leo, Michael, Mathew and Stephen; and three sisters, Mrs. Frank Evans, Mrs. Marie Melady and Mrs. Wilfred O'Rourke. "Funeral arrangements are under direction of Price•Daniel Mortuary. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the American Heart Fund." W. R. JEWITT Largely atte funeral ser- vices were held hursday after- noon when Rev. W. M. Carson of Londesboro, assisted by Rev. J. Cliff Britton, Seaforth, con- ducted a funeral service at the G. ' A. Whitney funeral home here for William R. Jewitt. Mr. Jewitt, who died sudden- ly at his home -Monday, was a former warden of Huron Coun- ty, and was president of the Huron County Children's Aid Society. Following the service, burial took place in Maitlandbank cem- etery, Seaforth. Active pallbear- ers were Ross MacGregor, Wil- liam Dale, George Hoggard, Frank Riley, Kenneth Preszca- tor and Fred Buchannan. Hon- orary pallbearers were former Huron wardens. Members of Huron County Council and county officials attended in a body, forming a guard of honor at the funeral home and ceme- tery. Flowerbearers were Ron- ald Gary, Beverley Jewitt and Howard Preszcator. 1938 WALLACE ROS 1963 APAIRIES AN Ni VI]1 $AIIY This is the 25th Anniversary of the establishment of our Apairy business on North Main Street in Seaforth, and to mark the occasion we are holding the line . - . There will be no advance in the price of honey this year. ORDER YOUR HONEY NOW 25¢ Ib. In Your Own Containers WALLACE ROSS APAIRIES North Main Street Seaforth' BRUCEFIELD Mrs. Thomas B, Baird and Mr. Funcan Aikenhead, Seaforth, spent last week in Toronto with their brother, Dr. Wm. Aiken - head, and Mrs. Aikenhead. Miss Paine Of London is vis- iting this week with her friend, Mrs. E. Forrest. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Squires and family are spending a few days with Mrs. Squires' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allan, Sr. Rev. and Mrs. Howard K. Plant are assisting at the Unit- ed Church camp at Goderich this week. Sunday morning service of Brucefield and Kippen United Churches will be held at Kip - pen at 11 a.m. Rev. E. Roulston of Exeter will have charge of the service. Explorers Hold Social Brucefield United Church Ex- plorers enjoyed a social eve- ning on Tuesday, Aug! 6. The girls enjoyed a swim at the lake, followed by a worship service on Mr. Stewart Broad - foot's lawn, conducted by Bren- da Ann Hargreaves a n d Betty Dalrymple. The girls and their visitors introduced themselves to the new minister and his wife, Rev. and Mrs. H. K. Plant. Hot-dogs and chocolate milk were enjoy- ed, Movies of the Explorers and counsellors and their homes were much enjoyed. WEDDINGS MAWSON—SAVAUGE Rev. Moorehouse of Parkhill United Church officiated at the marriage ceremony on June 7, of Lynda Jean Savauge, young- er daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Savauge, of Seaforth, to Douglas Murray Mawson, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Maw - son, of Parkhill. yoll. WASH DISHES.... OR BABIES... +,>f !:<s M ' J }ivr OR CLOTHS.-. OR DOGS... OR SMALL BOYS... then read about this new approved water heat appliance OR,A_11YTHIl'JG WITH A CASCADE 40 YOU NEED NEVER RUN OUT OF HOT WATER AGAIN It's electric. It's safe. It's dependable. It's low cost. As your needs increase, so does Cascade 40's output. It can produce hot water electrically SIX TIMES AS FAST AS NORMAL USE DEMANDS! And no matter how much hot water, you use, you save with Hydro's low rates. ti�,1 Cascade 40 is flameless, clean, silent, 1118 with a ten year guarantee on the tank. Have an approved Cascade 40 Electric Water Heating Appliance installed in your home. • Hi APPROVED The new Cascade 40 Water Heating Appliance is an APPROVED PRODUCT developed through the combined research and resources of Ontario Hydro and electrical manufacturers. La3Fe'SLe3ireTte3ra'S��i"n��� For details, call: SEAFORTH PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION Phone 472 Seaforth FRANK KLING LTD. Phone '19 SEAFORTH GINGERICH Sales & Service LTD. Phone 585 SEAFORTH r BOB DOIG• G. A. SILLS Phone 668 r 13 Phone 56 SEAFORTH SEAFORTH Wilkinson'sG1041 \ i SEAFORTH "WHERE FRESHNESS IS ALWAYS FEATURED" 4 I FRESH GRADE 'A' OVEN - READY CHICKENS 2 - 3 Ib. Average lb. 360 ONTARIO No. 1 -.TOMATOES 2Ibs'29 ° Y Hot Dog or Hamburg ROLLS w 4 / $1 ■00 . Burns' Skinless WIENERS 490 Daily Arrivals MATOES • TO•POTATOES • LETTUCE • CELERY • CABBAGE ALL AVAILABLE IMPORTED&NATIVE FRUITS and VEGETABLES Fresh Frozen OCEAN PERCH 2 lbs. 790 ONTARIO No 1 — Large CELERY STALKS 2 / 290 —IGA-- —IGA— PEAS or CORN 11 Coloured Choice Quality M A R G E R I N E 2 Tins15-oz29c 5 lbs. 99c MORE FOR .YOUR FOOD DOLLAR AT SEAFORTH IGA yoll. WASH DISHES.... OR BABIES... +,>f !:<s M ' J }ivr OR CLOTHS.-. OR DOGS... OR SMALL BOYS... then read about this new approved water heat appliance OR,A_11YTHIl'JG WITH A CASCADE 40 YOU NEED NEVER RUN OUT OF HOT WATER AGAIN It's electric. It's safe. It's dependable. It's low cost. As your needs increase, so does Cascade 40's output. It can produce hot water electrically SIX TIMES AS FAST AS NORMAL USE DEMANDS! And no matter how much hot water, you use, you save with Hydro's low rates. ti�,1 Cascade 40 is flameless, clean, silent, 1118 with a ten year guarantee on the tank. Have an approved Cascade 40 Electric Water Heating Appliance installed in your home. • Hi APPROVED The new Cascade 40 Water Heating Appliance is an APPROVED PRODUCT developed through the combined research and resources of Ontario Hydro and electrical manufacturers. La3Fe'SLe3ireTte3ra'S��i"n��� For details, call: SEAFORTH PUBLIC UTILITY COMMISSION Phone 472 Seaforth FRANK KLING LTD. Phone '19 SEAFORTH GINGERICH Sales & Service LTD. Phone 585 SEAFORTH r BOB DOIG• G. A. SILLS Phone 668 r 13 Phone 56 SEAFORTH SEAFORTH