HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1963-12-05, Page 61<
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C IRISTMAS
BAZAAR and TE
St. James' School Auditorium
Saturday, Dec. 7th -- 3 to 5 p.m.
• BIG PRIZE DRAW • CHRISTMAS CAKE DRAW
• Homemade Baking and Can -
SEWING • PENNY SALE • MYSTERY BOXES
Sponsored by C.W.L.
WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS — Phone 141
FISH & GAME CLUB MEETING
in Town Hall, Seaforth
THURSDAY, DEC. 12th
7:30 to 8:30° p.m.
This meeting is called in the interest of hunters and
fishermen to form a FISH & GAME Club in
SEAFORTH AND DISTRICT
j
CELEBRATE
New Year's Eve at Brodhagen
Community Hall
Licensed — Reservations in Advance Only
$5.00 PER COUPLE
FREE HATS AND NOISE -MAKERS
See ' WILBUR HOEGY, Brodhagen
For Your Your Entertainment
All This Week . . .
THE FABULOUS DYNAMICS
In the Huron Room
Queen's Hotel
Free Parking Behind Cities Service Station
WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS — Phone 141
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
Father Stephen Eckert Council No. 5289
TURKEY BINGO
Canadian Legion Hall, Seaforth
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5th
8:30 p.m.
15 Regular Games for Turkeys
4 Share -the -Wealth
2 Door Prizes
EVERYONE WELCOME !
Admission $1.00 — Extra Cards, 3 for 50c
Fill Council
(Continued from Page 1)
Tgwus1 ip. Councillors acclaim-
ed are Joseph Hoffman, Lloyd
Hendrick and John Tinney.
An election is necessary for
school trustees. Candidates are
Clifford Pepper, Raymond Fish-
er, Ross Turnbull and Ian Mc-
Allister.
Brussels
In Brussels, where J. C.
Krauter was returned as reeve
Friday, an election will not be
needed. Acclaimed as councillors
were William Stratychuk, Cecil
McFadden, Henk Ten Pas and
Laurie Cousins.
John Hanna was elected by
acclamation to fill the vacant
PUC seat. Elected by acclama-
tion as school trustees were Iv-',
an Campbell, Allan Nichol and
Louis Ebel.
Hibbert
The vote for council in Hib-
bert on Monday was as follows:
Ross McPhail 319, John Drake
244, Charles Roney 241, Auguste
Ducharme 221, Henry Harburn
188.
FUNERALS
REV. A. T. CARMICHAEL
Rev. T. Arnold Carmichael,
77, of Crofton Road, Toronto, a
retired minister of the United
Church of Canada, died Sunday
at Toronto General Hospital.
He was a former minister of
Northside United Church here.
Born near Quebec City, Mr.
Carmichael was educated at Al-
bert College, Belleville, and the
University of Toronto. He grad-
uated in theology from Victoria
College in 1916.
He had served churches in
Minden, Demorestville, Delta,
Alvinston and Seaforth. He was
in Sarnia for seven years and
at Balfour United Church in
Brantford for five years before
his pastorate at the United
Church in Port Dalhousie from
where he retired 10 years ago.
He was an active member of
the Masonic Order. His wife,
the former Winnifred Gwen
Strongman, died in 1961.
He leaves two sons, Captain
Howard A. and Neil Clifford
Carmichael; his daughters, Mrs.
J. F. Sweeny and Mrs. G. H.
Series; a sister, Margaret, all
of Toronto, and eight grand-
children.
Variety Concert
WALTON "
'COMMUNITY HALL
Friday, Dec. 6th
8:15 p.m.
Proceeds for New Chairs
ADMISSION:
Adults 50c — Children 25c
Ladies Please Bring Lunch
Set Dates For
Intermediate,
Bantam Hockey
Seaforth Intermediates 'con-
tinued a winning streak Tues-
day night when they defeated
Elmira here 4-2. The locals
have won three of the five
gashes played.
Next game is scheduled here
on Tuesday, when Exeter wily
be the opposition.
While all game dates have
not been decided, a schedule for
the nine -team group until the
end of December was issued
this week. Seaforth games are:
Dec. 10—Exeter at Seaforth
Dec. 13—Seaforth at Lucan
Dec. 17—St. Clements at Sea -
forth
Dec. 19—Seaforth at Centralia
Dec. 28—Seaforth at Elmira
Bantams Set Dates.
Bantam group winners must
be decided by February 10th,
group officials said as they is-
sued a schedule of Bantam
games:
Dec.:
7—Mitchell at Seaforth
14—Exeter at Seaforth
17—Seaforth at Clinton
20—Seaforth at RCAF
21—Hensall at Seaforth
28—Clinton at Seaforth
Jan.:
4—Zurich at Seaforth
11—Goderich at Seaforth
13—Seaforth at Mitchell
18—Seaforth at Exeter
25—Seaforth at Goderich
27—Seaforth at Zurich
DANCE
at the
BRODHAGEN
and District Community Hall
Friday, Dec. 6th
to the Music of
Stan Skipper's Orchestra
Tune in . .
THE
Pastor's Study,
on CFPL -TV
from Dec. 9th to 13th
at 9:55 a.m.
A SMILE OR TWO
CANADIAN SCENE
TO
ME IT -
-EP ITOMMES
URBAN
BLIGHT
After boasting of his prowess
as a marksman, the hunter took
aim on a lone duck overhead.
"Watch this," he told his com-
panions.
He fired, and the bird flew
on.
"My friends," he said with
awe, "you are now witnessing a
miracle. There flies a dead
duck!"
SCOTT MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Notice to Visitors
Because of overcrowding in the public areas of the Hospital, and
the fact it is necessary to accommodate a maximum number of
patients in the halls, it is necessary to restrict visiting privileges
until further notice.
1. Not more than one visitor can be permitted a patient
at one time. Visits are to be limited to not more than
one-half hour.
2. To reduce movement in the corridors as much as pos-
sible, it is urged that visits be limited to the mem-
bers of a patient's immediate family.
3. In the case of maternity patients, only the mother
and husband of the patient can be admitted.
4. Children under 15 years of age are not permitted in
rooms or wards, and parents are urged to refrain
from bringing children to the Hospital, except in
cases of necessity.
5. Visiting hours for private, semi -private and ward
patients are as follows:
2:30 p.m. to 3:30 p.m.
7:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Daily
It is regretted it is necessary to introduce these restrictions
in visiting privileges at this time. Patients and public alike will
realize, however, that in view of the crowded conditions that exist,
no alternative is available if the well-being of the patient is to be
pr'e'yed..
A minister from the country
went to the big city and, for the
first time in his life, stayed in
a large hotel.
The bellboy was very solici-
tous, carrying the bags for him,
pressing his suits and doing all
manner of errands to make his
visit easy and pleasant. The min-
ister, however, did not give him
a tip.
Finally, the bellboy explained:
"Reverened, in a hotel it is the
custom that when somebody
does something for you, you're
supposed to do something for
him in return."
The minister said, "Son, I'm
sorry but I didn't understand
that. So, tell me,. son, do you
drink?"
"You bet," replied the bell-
boy in eager anticipation.
"Then get down on your
knees, ready to pray, and I'll
give you the pledge," said the
minister.
RECEPTION
for Mr. and Mrs. Hardy Dillon
(nee Marjorie Campbell)
Legion Hall, Seaforth
Friday, Dec. 6th
NORRIS 'ORCHESTRA
Ladies Please Bring Lunch
Canadian social worker Doris Clark invites you to write
her about your problem. She answers letters of general
interest in this column but can't undertake personal replies.
DEAR DORIS—A friend of
mine has lost her only child,
a married daughter. There is
a little grandson left, but it
looks as though she will not
have much share in the boy's
life, as he is being brought up
by the young husband's mother.
They seem reluctant to let her
have the boy for even a short
period of time.
She is a person who has to
feel needed by someone, and
although her husband is living,
that doesn't seem to be the an-
swer for her. She has spoken
lately of adopting a child. It
would not, of course, be a baby,
but a child about 10. She is 45.
Is there a law about ages in
adopting an older child?
CONCERNED.
DEAR CONCERNED—Regula-
tions differ with provinces. Prob-
ably if she is 45 she could Abe
considered for adoption of a
child over five.
But she must not "live off"
such a child. If she feels des-
perate to be needed there is a
danger she would be over -lav-
ish, over -possessive, controlling
the child's every move.
The worker at your child
care agency would go into all
these things in considering such
a candidate for adoption.
FIRST
PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
REV. DOUGLAS. O. FRY
Minister
Sunday, Dec. 8th
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
0. E. S. EUCHRE
will be held in
I.O.O. F. HALL
Thursday Night
December 5th
at 8:30
PRIZES AND LUNCH
— Everyone Welcome —
DEAR DORIS — I have a
moustache! My mother says it's
only normal, for I have' an ex-
ceptionally thick head of hair.
Ever since grade eight I have
kept it bleached as much as pos-
sible, but it is still noticeable.
My friends at school say I
look funny with a moustache.
One boy even told me to go
home and shave.
People have told me never to
shave it off, but what am I to
do?
SHY GIRL
DEAR SHY—Everybody has
some down on their face. When
it's dark and thick, it should
be dealt with as part of a regu
lar beauty routine.
Take your pick: (1) Bleach it.
(In your case, I gather this is
not enough.) (2) Remove with
tweezers (if growth is light). (3)
Use a depilatory. (4) A wax
hair remover is helpful. It's
really a large-scale tweezing
and hurts a bit. (5) Shaving
(more often done than you
think.) (6) Electrolysis—in the
hands of an expert. (This is
permanent, but not 100 per
cent effective.)
DEAR DORIS—I am a girl 17
years old and am going with
this boy. He gave me his school
blazer to wear (worth about
$40) and we went to this dance.
We left the dance hall for a
while and when we came back
the blazer was gone.
We looked everywhere. I
told him I'd buy him a new
one, but he said no.
Now I was wondering if it
would be all right to buy him
one for his birthday which is
coming up?
WANTING TO FIX IT
DEAR WANTING—Not for
his birthday, because this might
start an expensive gift ex-
change. Yet you should re-
place the blazer if you can af-
ford to. Just buy one and have
it delivered to his home with a
note from you saying you know
how much he prized the other
one.
DEAR DORIS—I guess I'm
what you'd call gossip prone. It
started last .year when I was
accused of an accident which I
was not guilty of.
This summer a boy asked me
out who was seven years older
than me and I refused because
he was notorious for his morals.
Immediately another bout of gos-
sip about my moral standards
(very high) started up.
Later a fellow started phon-
ing me up asking for something
I would not give; and I finally,
literally, told him where to go.
Ever since, dirty remarks have
met me.
Doris, I feel awful about it
all. It's just this one group of
boys, but everyone believes
them. What can I do?
WORRIED SICK
O.H.A. Intermediate 11B"
HOCKEY
Tuesday, December Toth
EXETER
at
SEAFORTH
8:30 p.m.
ADMISSION .— .50c and 25c
WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS — Phone 141
Read the Advertisements — It's a Profitable Pastime!
DEAR WORRIED—For some
reason the boys resent you. Did
you high hat them, or act too,
too virtuous? Perhaps you've
talked about them and they've
heard about it.
If it's bad enough, a lawyer's
letter could warn them. But if
the whole thing is too juvenile
for this, what about heaping a
few coals of fire?
DOMINION
ROYAL
SNOW
TIRES
Each $14.95
VANDERHOEK'S
Supertest Station
Phone 225 : Seaforth
TURKEY BINGO
ST. COLUMBAN
Parish Hall
Thursday Evening, Dec. 12th
9:00 p.m. sharp
15 Games For Turkeys
3 Cash Specials
1 Share -the -Wealth
—THREE DOOR PRIZES—
ADMISSION $1.00 — EXTRA CARDS, 5 for $1.00
The Week at
SEAFORTH ARENA
and COMMUNITY CENTRE
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6th—
Skating — 8 to 10 p.m.
Admission — 35c and 25c
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 7th—
Skating — 2 to 3:30 p.m.
Arena opens at 1:45 p.m.
Bantam Hockey 7 p.m. — Mitchell vs. Seaforth
Skating 8 to 10 p.m.
Admission — 35e and 25c
-''TEEN TOWN — HALL — 9 - 11:45
MONDAY, DECEMBER 9th—
Figure Skating — 4 p:m.
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 10th—
INTERMEDIATE 'B' HOCKEY
Exeter vs. Seaforth
8:30 p.m.
Admission — 50c and 25c
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11th—
AFTERNOON SKATING—Pre-School, Beginners and Guardians
2 to 4 p.m.
This space contributed through the courtesy of
UNION COMPANY
OF CANADA LIMITED -
SEAFORTH --
ONTARIO
DEAR DORIS—I am 50. Used
to do , part time cleaning jobs
and baby sitting. Now I have a
bad back and wear a special
support. I get Government as-
sistance monthly.
However, I can sew and knit.
I tried selling a baby dress, bon-
net and bootie set in pink by
putting them in a store window
and they sat there all winter.
So 1 took them back.
I also thought of putting a
sign in my window, but was told
I would be charged with hav-
ing a business telephone. Any
suggestions.
WANTS TO EARN
DEAR WANTS—An ad in the
paper, a sign in your window,
a sample in a store display—
these are still good ways to get
started. How about a church
bazaar?
You won't be charged busi-
ness telephone rates unless your
telephone hums with orders.
Then it'll be worth it.
DEAR DORIS -- I went out
with a boy several times. Then
he went back to the city where
he worked. Before he left he
told me he loved me and asked
me to write to him.
My problem is I answered his
first and only letter and have
not heard from him since. It
is almost three weeks now. I
feel lost and lonesome without
him. I am 17 and he is 23.
Please help me decided what to
do.
IN LOVE
DEAR IN LOVE --It's a poor
sort of -love that Can't wield a
pen. Writing was his idea.
Don't waste another minute
on him. At 17 you shouldn't
be lost and lonesome long—un-
less you are high -batting those
nice boys your own age who'd
like your company!
Branch 156, Royal Canadian Legion
Annual
TURKEY
BINGO
Royal Canadian Legion Hall
SEAFORTH
SATURDAY
December 14
Play commences at 8:30 p.m. sharp
15 Luscious Christmas Turkeys
Ready for the Oven .
5 Share -the -Wealth
$50.00 DOOR PRIZE
II
Admission $1.00
Special and Extra,Cards — 25c Each
or 5 for $1.00
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