The Huron Expositor, 1969-04-24, Page 4•••;,1•t•-.771••••Nt-Ft:•.. tr..
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
Er SATURDAY
•
DON'T • .MISS
BILL YOUNG
and the
WESTERNERS
Matinee Saturday Afternoon
3:30 to 5:30
•
Beverage Room Snacks -
PIGTAILS & SAUERKRAUT
AT THE
UEEN'S HOTEL
SEAFORTH
47- All.W:14910IWEVO5IIVit4,;g krOPilrtfo'A IT.t 44?, I
BRUCEFIELI) ,
Is Now Open For Business
Vic and Olga Whittingbam
Welcome All Old and New Customers
MAIN ST. NORTH SEAFORTH
Rqv. D. L. Patterson, B.th., Pastor
Sunday, April 27th
10:00 a.m. — . Family Bible School
11:00 am. — Family Worship Hour
"THE OBEDIENCE OF FAITH"
7:30 pm:— Senior Citizens' Night
F.
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BROWNIE'S
DRIVE-IN THEATRE
CLINTON
Box Offize Opens at 8.00 p.m.
FIRST SHOW at 8.30 P.M.
FRI. -- SAT. -- SUN.
April 25-26-27
— DOUBLE FEATURE —
"DARK OF THE,
SUN"
(Adult Entertainment)
Showing at 10.15 p.m.
Rod Taylor, Yvette Mimieux and
Jim Brown — In Color
— PLUS —
"MRS. BROWN,
YOU'VE GOT
A LOVELY
DAUGHTER"
Showing at 8.30 p.m.
Starring
Herman's HerMits
And Stanley Holloway - In color
Coming Next Weekend
'WILD IN THE STREETS'
(Adult Eenirtatement)
- AND — 'NOOSE OF A
1,000, DOLLS'
Earoiftmene
CROMARTY
Mrs. Charles Douglas 'is a pat-
ient in, Stratford General Hos-
pital.
Mr, Harry Statham of Park
Hill and *. Alvin Cornish of
Exeter visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Otto Walker.
Sunday guests with Mrs. J.
R. Jefferson were Mrs. Roy
Reed. Mrs. Ernest Waddell, mss,
Cliff Kemp all of Fullarton.
Mr. and Mrs. Calder McKaig
visited' Mr. Ernest Luxton who
is a patient in, South Huron Hos-
pital. Exeter.
'Mr. and Mrs. John Wallace'
and Debbie attended' morning
• service in Knox Church, Mitch-
• ell on Sunday, when their grand-
daughter, Julia Ann Parkinson
was baptized and also visited
Mr, and Mrs. Parkinson.
Mr. and' Jdrs. Tom Gillespie,
London were 'Sunday visitors
With Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Scott.
Mr. and Mug. Alex Gardiner
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Gardiner spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Ed K.nedhtel,
Rostock and Mond* with Dr.
and Mrs, A. N. Atkinson and
Mr. and 'Mrs. Richard
Wingharn on Monday.
Mrs. .Wilmer Howatt, Landes-
bar° visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Gardiner.
FRED &. ETTA BUCHANAN, ProprietOrs
Phone 482-9880
Saturday Night
The Harb
Beverage Room Snac
Southern Fried Chicken
BRODHAGEN
-Mr. and Mrs. Carl 1VIakel, BR 2,
Mitchell, Were guests of 'Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Benneweis recent-
ly.
Mrs. Micky alfeCloy .and Mk.
and Mrs. Alf Ruston, Stratford
visited, with Mr. and Mrs, Lav-
erne Wolfe on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kettleweli,
Strathrok and aVar. arid' Mrs. Jlies
of Lambeth. were guests of Mr.
arid Mrs. William Brown. on
Sunday:
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrealte Miss-
erschavidt of Detroit visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bens
newels early last week' and at-
ended the. lunier.al of the late
Norman Knechtel in Stratford
on Monday.
Mir. Williamr Mel.* visited
with his daughter and 'family.
Mr. and Mrs. Don McLaughlin '
in Stratford en Saturday.'
Mrs. Rachael Ahrens accomp-
anied Mr. and Mrs, John Clark
and family arid Mrs. Barbara
McLeod of Mitchel to visit '.1fr
and Mr,. Geo. We5esherg Brim
eels on Sunday
Mrs, John E Sierrion called
rail Mrs. Aliguq Ird,lchrecht on
Sunday.
• Gsiettq' of Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
man Bennewies on Sunday were
Mr, and Mrs George Eickmeyei'
of Mitchell.
BENEFIT
DANCE
For Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ryan
on
Wed., April 30th
at
Brodhagen Community
Centre
Music by Ian Willies's Orchestra
Ladies' Please Bring Lunch
HURON HOTEL
Dublin
SEAFORTH TERN TWENTY
presents
THE MAJORITY
SATURDAY, APRIL 26
9:00 — 12:00
SEAFORTH ARENA
- DRESS — C/rUAL
ADMISSION $1.00
a
tdo
ENTERTAimmEmr
FRIDAY — Mel Kitchen- Trio
SATURDAY — "Elgin Fisher"
In the Ladies' and Escorts' Room Enloy a Sing-A.LbAg with
PEARL at the Hammond Organ
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
COLORED TV
TASTY 'BEVERAGE ROOM SNACKS
COMMERCIAL HOTEL, Seaforth
FORIVIAIL''DANcE
to the
Music of
"The
COPPERTONES"
Seafoith District High School
FRIDAY, APRIL.' 25th
9:30 to 1:00 a.ni...
Crowning of "Formal Queen"
Tickets available from Students or at the
Expositor Office.
---•Irammtrroo•nemiv•IV!eiooien•ara•e
MEETING NOTICE
Annual 'Meeting of the
HURON (PROV.) LIBERAL ASSOCIATION
will be held at
HOTEL CLINTON
Thursday, April 24
at 8:30 p.m.
J. H. AITKEN, Secretary
PLAN INCREASE
A
4Ceetieued from milt
tragoWttiqijiltattse the7ilrtissels---
kindergarten is used, enlY hat
a day now and because there-is
room at Walton for a kindergar-
ten class it would alsd be pos-
sible to use existing buildings
and split the group.
Although there are .only 32-
35 children eligible for. kinder-
garten in Colborne, Mr. Coulter
said the number is too large for
one class and again there are
two ways to house two classes.
A portable classroom would
provide the needed space, or
the central school's present stu-
dent body might be squeezed to-
gether to free a room for the
kindergarten. The latter option
would mean having four double-
grade rooms in the school —
something one board member
predicted would be criticized by
parents who feel the central
schools were 'built to provide
rooms for each grade.
In Ashfield-West Wawanosh,
the 56 kindergarten-age children
call for three classes, Mr. Coul-
ter said,. and the best way to
provide space appears to be
establishing a kindergarten in
an available room at the North
Ashfield School and placing a
portable for two classes' at
Brookside,
Goderich Township's 26 kin-
dergarteners could be placed in
a class at Holmetville where a
room is free or could be divid-
ed — with half going to Clin-
ton and half to Goderich where
space also exists, Mr. Coulter
concluded.
Goderich trustee Dan Murphy
suggested that students just
outside the town on the east
should not have to go to Holmes-
ville, board vice-chairman Rob-
ert Elliott of Goderich Town-
ship said the same arguement
exists for all towns. "What do
you do with the central schools,"
he asked, "close them all?"
Another 'of Mr. Elliott's ques-
tions implied that kindergarten
classes might, be little more
than day-care or babysitting
centres, but that opinion was
countered by Mr. Coulter and
by board members who said
the classes do have educational
value.
John Cochrane, director of
education, said he -believes the
board must "accept as,,. an , es-
tablished condition tat we
have kindergarten in Huron
County with the 'exception of
four areas" and that kindergar-
ten must 'be available• every-
where or nowhere. Mr. Elliott
agreed and added that since
everyone in the county will
share the costs, the whole coun-
1
•
th
ti
0
•
I'
LoRPME01/11111ATRE
GODERICH, AT CONCESSION RD. 4 ► PHONE 524.9901
WOMEN'S HOSPITAL AUXILIARY
PENNY
SALE
BOX'S NORTH STORE
NOW UNDERWAY
--- SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE —
DRAW WILL BE MADE 9:00 P.M.
'MAY, 2nd
Tickets at the Sales Store or from any
Auxiliary member
"MUSTANG" THEATRE
LARGEST SCREEN IN HURON COUNTY — ALWAYS A DOUBLE BILL
Children Under 12 In Cars Free
Sox Off i,.P.Opil? 7.30 paP. — Show Time,8,00 p.m.
Fill„ SAT:, SUN. — April 25.26.27
They're young...they% In love
...and they kill people.
401t
lIDITINVILlieV
FCIHILLICIB
URCIMIM 11/
TECHNICOLOR*
Corning NeXt Weekend—Mary '213-4 •
"G0101, Guitar" and "Pink -Jungle" ,
Ftt tIne“,
titki-O t
ty 14, eetitio We Picler
tense
Mr. Coulter said that tg-oetr.
kindergarten tochers.ore tct,be
hired, he must know by Ma y g to seek graduates of the tea' chers' colleges in London and
Stratford.
Since the board already has
a budget committee meeting
slated for next Thursday night,
Mr. Coulter was asked to re-
turn then with the data needed
for a decision.
The closest Mr. Coulter could
come Monday to giving cost es-
timates was to tell the board it
Nywoold have little left from
$15,000 if it hired one teacher
and bought and equipped one
portable classroom.
He said a portable unit used
last year in Hulled Township
cost $8,370 and required $620
in furniture. The same unit lists
this year for $300 more, he said.
Purchase of used portables from
other school systems, or rental
of new ones are alternatives the
board said it will investigate,
Require. Teachers
(Continued from Page• 1)
the board -members. This school
is presently a two-room school
for sixty-eight Pupils. Next year
it is expected there will be
seventy-two students. The pos-
sibility of buying a portable
classroom to temporarily fill
the need at the school in Sept-
ember was considered. A report
on the suggestion to be brought
in by the Building Committee at
the regular meeting next Mon-
day night.
The board cleared a Perth-
County Health Unit request ,to
show films to students and par-
ents on growth and develop-
ment of the child to the SI-
ford schools which have not '1-
ready had them.
John Vintar, Superintendent
of Education will meet with
all separate school principals
from Huron and Perth on Thurs-
day afternoon at St. James
School, Seaforth.
News of
DUBLIN
St. Mary's Anglican Guild
met at the 'biome, of Mrs. Roy
Bum:hill, with Mrs, Wm.. Smith
the president in charge.
The meeting-. was opened with
a poem entitled ",Spring's Ar-
rival" read , by Mrs. Fred Gull-
foyle
Mrs, Herbert Brown read the
scripture lesson, and meditations
front the study book: "The Upper
Room".
The minutes andthe.finanloial
report Were given- 'by Mrs. Roy
Mrs. Charles 'Friend read an
article from the Canadian
Ohurehmant entitled "ThiS Job
is Too Tough For Men," This is
work dame by „Ohurch lay women
on Indian Reserves and in out-
lying districts 'in Manitoba. The
work consists' of helping the
women in their homes with
their problems, conducting ser-
vices in their churches where
they ...do not have a minister
preparing children for confirm-
ation and sometimes having to
officiate at burials, These women/
are knpwri_as "the Bishops Mes-
serigisrs.,.
MrS, Smith closed the meeting
with prayer. •
ates
Problems
Raw sewage is coining to the
surface of a playground at. the
Blyth Public School and a mem-
ber -of the `board of education
demanded Monday that im-
mediate steps be taken to cor-
rect:the school's -septic system.
Garnet Hicks of RR 3, Exet-
er, said he visited the school
on a budget committee tour and
saw that "sewage practically
runs on the ground by a ball
diamond" on the school's lower
playground. ,'•
• Urging that - the condition be
remedied "in two days," Mr.
Hicks said that the board chair-
man, John Lavis of Clinton and
John Henderson of RR 5, Sea-
forth, representatives of the area'
which includes Blyth, should
meet immediately- with someone
from the Huron County Health
Unit. . .
Mr. Hicks said the problem
stems from a "blunder" made
by the health unit and it is up
to the health agency to find the
solution.
"This is terrible in my books,
just terrible," said Mr. Hicks.
The board directed that Mr.
Lavis and, Mr. Henderson check
the,. situation and authorized
them to have the septic system
corrected.
Mrs. R. K, McFarlane is spends
inky, a week or two; with her eon-
Sin, Mrs. W. A. Canilpibela,
Mi. Allan Johns of Vancouver
attended the funeral of
Mrs. Edwin Johins Mitchell., and
visited Mr. and Mrs. Lorne
Lawson,. joins Street.
The Seaforth Branch of the
Canadian Red Cross, Society was
represented at the annual meet-
-ing in. Sarnia on April 17-18, by
past president Mrs. W, E. Butt,
president, Mrs. A. Y.. McLean,
secretary Mrs. Lorne Dale and
treasurer Mrs. Norman Scoins.
An Expositor Classified,
pay you dividends. Have you
tried one? Dial 527-0240.
anaw-princing% were neined
TOT the J. A. D. McCurdy Pub, lie School at Centralia and the
Colborne Central School when
the Karon County Board of Edu-
cation met here Monday eve-
ning.
Slated for the Mcitairdy
School .post is W. J. Linfleid, a
native of Goderich, now teachr
ing near Barrie, Ont. The 'Col-
., borne job will be filled by W.
H. slack who is cutrently sup-
ervising principal " for public
schools in Belgrave, Brussels
and Blyth.
FUNERAL
MRS. EDWIN •JOHNS
Mrs. Edwin Johns, St, Andrew
St., Mitchell, passed away sud-
denly at her residence on Mon-
day evening, April -14.
The former Gertrude Webs-
ter, she was born at Lucknow,
August 18, 1906,' a daughter •of
the late Thomas Webster and
the former Maude Dempsey. On
August 23; 1935, she married
Edwin Johns and they farmed
in Tuckersmith and • Fullerton
Townships, moving to Mitchell
in 1959.
She was a member of Main
St. United Church and the UCW.
Surviving besides her 'hus-
band, 'are one son, Robert E.
(Ted) of Toronto.
'
one daughter,
Beth, Mrs, John Rose, Mitchell;
one grandson, Paul Rose; two
brothers, Earl, Oshawa and
Keith of Blyth, and one sister,
Jean, Mrs. Melvin Lobb of Clin-
ton.
The late Mrs. Johns rested at
the Lockhart funeral home, Mit-
chell, where Rev. D. Sloan con-
ducted a funeral service Thurs-
day afternoon at 'two o'clock.
Burial was in Clinton ceme-
tery.
Remember! It takes but a
moment to 'place an Expositor
Want Ad 'and be money in
pocket. To advertise, just Dial
Seaforth 527-0240.
•.•••••••••••••••••••1;•••.•••••••.••••••mov••••••••••.........t.
CASH BINGO
Legion Hall, Seaforth
8:15 p.m.
Friday, April 25th
-APRIL BONUS
$100 Jackpot To Go
Three $25.00 Games
15 Regular Games for $10.00
Two Door Prizes
(Children under 16 not)
permitted)
ADMISSION $1.00
Extra Cards 25c or 7 for $1.00
Auspices Seaforth Branch 156
Royal Canadian. Legion
Proceeds for Welfare Work
the appeintMente Were con-
toiled in motions reported out
of a closed April 14 committee
of the whole meeting. Salaries
were not announced and no fur-
ther background information on
the two men was immediately
available. ,
The board also accepted the
resignation 'qf R. E. Crawford,
principal of Victor Lauriston
School in goderich and W. D.
Burton, business administrator
of South Huron District High
School in Exeter. Mr. Craw-
ford's resignation is effective at
the'end of the school year. Mr.
Burton's.takes effect at the end
of this- month, but the board
agreed to' retain him for the
next two months at $40 per
month.
Also accepted by the board
were the resignations of three
teachers: Mrs. Isabel Wheeler,
Wingham. Public School; Mrs.
Jean Koetsier, Hullett Central
School; and Mrs. Margaret Turn-
bull, Exeter Public School. All
take effect at the close of the
school year.
Fr. iday, Apr. 25th
Admission $3.00 per couple
Admission restricted to those
over 21 years.,
Deslardino's Orchestra I.
11010.11114111MIWIIIMIWIIMIllteellineWe ie
RUMMAGE
SALE
will be held in •
St. ThoMas' Church
Parish Hall
Sat., April 26th
at 2 o'clock
."c
Named Zone
(Continued from Page 1)
Clinton 3, Seaforth 3; Zone 3
North — Blyth, 21 members;
„Brussels 11, Goderich 9, Howick
9, Wingham 4, Teeswater 4 and
Lucknow 4.
Winners of drair prizes,.con-
ducted by Zurich Lions, were:
Irvine Trewartha, Seaforth; Don
C. Colquhoun, Clinton; Earl
Youngblut, Zurich, and. Ivan
--Youngblut, Zurich.
Attending from Seaforth Lions
Club were Pr•esident Irvin Tre-
wartha; first vice-president Gord
Beutenmiller a n d secretary-
* treasurer, Orville G. Oke and
Ed Taylor.
LOCAL BRIEFS
KINBURN. GENERAL •STORE
WILL BE OPEN FOR BUSINESS
MONDAY, APR1I:18th.
•
•
DINING & DANCING
FRIDAY, APRIL 25
"The Cousin's Four"
SATURDAY, APRIL 26 '
"Les Jolly & His
Orchestra".
"Back by Popular Demand"
.Come Out And' Enjoy Yourself
PIZZA PATIO
Restaurant and Tavern
350 Bayfield Road
Goderich
Plus Serond Feature
Pala NEVIINAM1111 as COOL HMO
-UWE
ecimicot.brelammISION? •
(Adult Entertailinent)
IT
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