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The Huron Expositor, 1974-11-21, Page 2... ....... ,. ..1jlll _ x: , r . Tom, .:--r f:.:. ; :..A ,,•.,, r` Trn --, , v �A�� , ` ,: _ , , I%? 0. i ; I f ' ti ; IF ./P vin ,. 1 ' F - V Fr r i a '`u Y')lr w r Y } I• � " �' f u is ! r ," 5F }v j-: y :. r , t `, ,fir r; ,s hT r 4 , , f I w. a t, s r �. n + i w M. tit t v 1 !, f' ..�- Y, f • v '� d >�l le �,6 '- R`- ?. s. �, F r y " - ,f .r , k { y . ,. ., - ,. , sd a� r s <.' C J� �, .I. •rr!� ,s s -- ��: i `Y� !"�^ s /�," 4 A b . I. „ qq c w i.. A.. n'4 N. e• L .:.k,: el i!,A. va:. 7 •°,., °4'. '• fY... M - "<'( 9 Y.. ., ., .. �' iSe'fortha�.�r_ ,x„. �.:i.- z.:�k�,pe'.:., ,P� ;.r+x .3u a, c s �' , 1 ,.. tra -, f:; % t. ei ,. y�” ,a t<,.,.. Irl- ,•n„•4 s F: r 'h-A�Fsw `�Y ..,. r r« o I sao c ,,ft t CU �' I'll� (F#fA h ,-r kt ✓'alar' .; .. ' �ar`r` rYesis xi, g(' iY. YS:. .', �!r . j:. �' `ue 'i. Ja "r'� ^,rl ,. .. ,:,. /��� w`< ,, ,. '., )E ;✓ai 4 ?t�•`.< ty�„T;e>�p ., xn,., .. •'t'h .t. t_,, t,, . ',✓` ,Ra ,., :t' « - �d"'; 's r', i 'J, y`ifi� ',J'r�,�: ” "� x .,u ' , rt"'f. ° .�i I,.a•.� r Con. inued from an any special i erest a11,q., a i''CY .S"J '„ �:.,`!�1+ Mfr�x IK+�'•rF , , a, rt f ,�. y �'.q; #��.'�, _ ✓,�` a '(Continued nt I... ,, . p� D F w that e?t erj nc counts. 1 +ti , r ) c tial N'M, k e r r cc ,, : ,Yat x f�� :� ���,,sy., 1 ,�, bean chairlman P e.. e. S#nee 1860. Servm the sr ,,� ,, . ;s ,, 1, r , comtnitteq he 1 g Community First .,_ !.: i r.r.. tl ` a , ` u Y i e t 4 � , tqa «� s-, Mr, Hildebra d "ultra to sop Jr' Y1 �Y'�'YA'' st a •tv.:;'. ' 1J,¢w it�x 8s °'fir; ...,.t•. rr ��ik „�,'."k �,f .a5! a�' {eg.rl S fs,�a}'YW.b Yi , t �' %r .a year�and says ate wp}tld like rt,.. i' d Jr s 3 e_ S: t ep'• �, , x , « P :, :; ;�... < ,, , industry Attrac,te tQ i?u. list . every : ,r s ti;: a ra , , .Alit, :§ i , o there , J,,' b ,,. c at :S,EAEORTH, ONTARIO. a ry Thursday mornin b McLEAN BRAS., Publishers Ltd, . ... : ,,, «.� . r, ' »A ,: b., �r:w 4 ; h toy to See thins the ugh ,:111i g Y � � ` '�I r,, .: �� , ."�� + ,�;,. g industrl'al ark altd says ftp v!cilt • Ck : a« e n o d a s p¢d a ;k a t "T " !° 4 : i : , ' " „e¢ especially with the Sttrd on Y �+ �Gr '� 1v ° , M r t a �y, * �+', � r p Y .Y FESS to have town Wide, sewers ^ ? ANDREW Y. McLEAN, Editor � : N 11­�' �, ' n k county policing corning up P . i:: ' a " 9 � ..; , p MN, `>a2t ti � y�yh � U ir;u I al completed next year. � Mc, Member Canadi n Commuriit News a er Association ,,. 9 Even though P r1 y .1. ..,, a Y P p '.:�•''A yz Y, .gi'??, f -.•qa k 4••" i`+� F 44 .:�� ca Hildebrand, who is 49, IS married "1,'7'&",7".,�L�.i• > ,-.6A'A , . ,.,. t "", �, ty governments are to a lar ge Ontario Weekly Newspaper Association �x ' '1. � with three children and is a life q extent controlled by the other two !on Seaforth resident. and -Audit Bureau of Circulation ,,I levels of government "I'd still john Sinnamon, 38, Is •running k �t. , hate to see no local involvement for a second term on council Subscri tion Rates:NA ;. i in munici al government", he f Canada (in advance) $I .00 a Year t said P g -because he wants to see the c P ``" r1 *`° t ' He'd be lad to see serious projects" 'ch the itrrent council ht c co n 11 has started, completed. He has Outside Canada (in advance) $12.00a Yeal i s a « ' , minded young people on council, been chairman of .the - ubi[ti - f 11.' t� J tr h Mr.Ellis said, "as long as tf)ey works committee for the past ear- . SINGLE COPIES — 25 CENTS EACH ,.' 11 l ,s � � , realize the responsibility."P y l l and would like to see a sidewalk 4.r a Mr. -Ellis, a native of Seaforth, and street improvement program Second Class Mail Registration Number 0696 t , 'F ,. � .. , � �, . has been• back in town for four - �"' � -started and new drains and a tree Telephone 527-0240 t• r < , �t " , a �� r ,� ears and lives.with/his wife and $ r t f Y clean up completed. The public t•' t ' four children on John St. works program should bebrought • SEAFORTH ONTARIO THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21 1874',,,' t t�*�y �° ` , , �00 ,,; 4, r � � ,, .,. " , ,Ma , r „ Lon time councillor- George up to average, Mr Sinnamon said. . , �� t" �, - fi # , t 4, 1� a Hildebrand. also raised the He noted that our taxes are just as t , rz , Q„ 4W,. r R :, t �, �,, �-'� + - ,.,=� .. ;m• • w..,.1: problem of local ggvernments high as other area towns but v ��, , „.r:«I'{ ' , 4.., w bean controlled b other levels. suggested that public works . . An ewer enc "Y� ° t .. We've been trying to get this haven't perhaps gat their attire^of e < -fir '.�" ,x,,&-, . , _ incine�tor going for three or four tax -money. ' 18 61 "b u i I d i n at B e ee h w o o d yearst', he said. and the' province Mr. Sinnamon, a butcher at toe + , ..• It's not every week that a Seaforth it is a waste of money t0 spend a cent keeps changing its regulations. IGA is married, with toter organization calls an Emergency on restoring an old house, even an old keeps Hildebrand says he will try to children atad lives on Goderich f Meeting' • and we should take it house that belonged to the represent everyone. rather than Street. ' seriously when one is called. The Van descendants of one of ahe most Sugar and Spice .1. Egmond Foundation is calling such a important settlerFs in the' Huron Tract.. . , - • meeting for this Sunday afternoon. Perhaps they don't care about their reconsider I . B of E g - y maybe they prefer the new ' By 8111 Smiley The Van Egmond Foundation is history,. ' declaring an 'emergency' because over the old 'or just think that the \ (Continued'frorti Page 1) although Ontario Provincial Mr, Hill said the board will Police has made a written state-. they need some help from the public. money could be better spent on be more definitive on ent they feel it is safe. The hard working members on the " T's'see. Where am I'? I' obscene, like,•"You have institutes, like the Bell, I .have o e m t g something else.specialleave when contract talks The board will leave it to Mr. • know- I� was going to rucks in your head." But its started him ul'1' with the present executive have faced a lot of Now there is not much we can do to g g are next discussed. . Cunningham -to present the new make a pointed, telling not. They're falling out, (Or inane coloured .,rrtic�m of criticis lately. Admittedly they have convince those people that the • Consider Field Trips board proposal to Mr. & Mrs. attack this week on one of being knocked out by the the Saturday ittrl,ern•. Ile The Board adopted the:•'ad hoc Berry that the Separate School n of held much success in getting the Van Egmond House is important - P Y P 9 P the great evils of our clumsy roofers and painters. seemed to thrive un it, Field Trip committee report as Bus driver (who does not con- , building even close to a point where it except maybe to ask what kind of a , society, But I can't remem-- Sh-h-h-h.) • • ripping them apart w illi presented at the October meeting sider it unsafe to stop at the Berry # can be opened to the public. They future -can we hoe for if we don't her what it was. Arid"riiy'fillings-are,falling g'bsr1�;"'•''relish. and any v P Maybe that's because I out as fast as I can, or my ketchup that happened to be with i minor changes in the gate) to pick up the younger e , have had trouble raising money appreciate, understated and learn Y recommendations added by the children. who attend the Kings- , have three exams to set, dentist can, put them around. needed to restore the house to from our past? Education Committee who were ge Separate School, and the eleventy-four essays to in. He's a nice guy, and the I thought it wise to move somethinglike its original for given the report for further two older sons, who, attend 9 glory. But those who d0 think the mark, my bricks are falling most painless dentist I have him up to telephone books, g P But the important thing, is that the ever had, for which I will=s police reports, politicians Consideration. Goderich ffthetate. This driver p 9 preservation of the Van Egmond .out, along with my fillings, p p p house is in public hands. It • hasn't house is important, those who would and my wife, Who has just cling to him until teeth do us speeches, beer labels and Requests for three field trips will drop off the two older boys at depart, but you can't build such examples of Canadian were approved: 100 Grade 10 the intersection at the top of the been cut u into a artmcnts torn given me a thrilling account P Y p P P like to see its grounds and its rooms students from South Huron hill where they will have a wait of down for a hi hwa widening or of how she couldn't get the pine trees out of stumps. culture. Turns out he's a 9 Y 9 not a stuffy museum but Open t0 the District High School to Ottawa ten minutes for the secondary suffered the indignities that man of car started, is going to , And then there's m,y boy after my own heart. 9 Y public for meetings,, plays, concerts, the hospital tomorrow. grandbabby. You'd think I Go to it, Pokey. .His real from November 21 toe at -no cost students' bus (which will not n m our beautiful old buildings have. It is picnics and weddings should try to Ah, well, c'est la vie, as • would not worry about him . name is Nicov Chen, but I 10 the board; 66 Grade 9 students pass the Berry farm) to take them still available and well taken care of from Huron Centennial School to to Goderich. In the afternoon the ' w attend this emergency meeting' and the Chinese say. You can't when he's a hundred miles tacked Pokey on him, -and it Ottawa from May 6 to 8'at a cost proposal calls for the separate read for renovation when the 'funds have everything running away. But I do. has stuck. He pokes into Y speak up. P to the board of approximately school bus to meet the secondary - dike clockwork in a world in How do I know .those everything that is moving, become a at - The old executive is going. New which the most sensible youngsillies in the da .care $200; 42 students from Goderich bus where the two older sons will Y or still. If it's moving, he District Collegiate institute be transferred to the separate Only handf of people cared people, 'who are interested and creatures seem to be cock- centre are teaching him the stops it; if it's still, he makes g studying French to go. to Quebec ` school bus and be dropped of at enough about -the n Egmond House enthusiastic about the . house are , roaches, ..right things, Do they know it move, -grinning fiendishly City from February 11 to 15 at no their laneway. • t0 attend the' Foundation's annual needed to start a fund raising I .also have forty-four how to ride him on a jigging all the time. cost to the board other than 'the Another busing problem was meeting last week. ' At that meeting program, hopefully administer the letters to answer, six vital ' foot to the tune of, "Did You I tell you, it's a gay, mad g :. P Y telephone calls to make, Ever Go Into An Irish- whirl around here. Just cost of two supply teachers; but more easily resolved .for the • the chairman, James Doig and winter works grant and to get the ` the request was denied to permit children of Mr, & Mrs. H. Baker y, 9 - building to the oint.where it can be a speech to write, and a man's Shanty, Where Money now I was interrupted by . 15 grade 8 students from Robert- at R.R.4, Clinton, who had secretary, Tillie Butler resigned. g p •randbahb to bring u Is Scarce and WhiskeyIs two pretty girls at the front � Treasurer Edith Baker has resigned 6 Y g p' P Y g son Memorial Public School in previously been asked to go from 9 opened for Seaforth's Centennial next Then there are about Plenty'?"'? door, rakes in hand. I'd ,Goderich to accompany the their home on an incline on No. 4 . 10 previously but.has agreed to act until summer. They could also assure the . seven thousand pounds of Do they know how to let forgotten about t��eQ7: collegiate students. to Quebec Highway to an intersection at the a replacement could be found. Their ' retiring executive that their hard work oak leaves to rake and. bag. I him chew their thumb while They'd. come to rake my • because with 15 students and the top of the hilt -to wait for the bus to efforts on behalf arf-4,the Foundation was not for. nath'ingl: F'-9' r c 7 i?,h4nk I"Il send item to it.; at the same time whistling in,,- ie�ves. For money, of 1.1 French'. teacher -on-, the• trip the Huron CentenniaN, 'School at "' Bangla-De'sh. Surdly some his belly and'dvawing hls"bhre ?'• rse. Couldn't get any ° `remainin students would be Brucefield. This bus had:ten turn �. and their 'entdu�'iAm. ffav"e "6666•- ... High-school kids all over town are g a:. body_ ,,lf`nowsa how to M foatj ih'ftle`Wr"tb'thV'fdne of,", 1� , l �s, without French i*rgrrvcttmr,-atso#•around at the highway ' inter- t~ommendAe. All are understand- collectively raising thousands of make oak leaf and acorn "K'nees U Mother Brown"? - • P• was felt there was too wide a section. Also involved was an ably discouraged but are stepping dollars to send themselves on trips to , soup. Don't think I'm being Well, maybe the youngIn the past week I have variance in ages - 13 years old to unidentified kindergarten pupil down to give others a chance to et Euro e: The enthusiasticall SOId . hard and cynical. There's a sillies aren't doing too badly, also dealt with sixteen. 9 9 p Y Y Y. 19 years old. ' Sent back to on a concession in Tuckersmith as ion as there are'three of students who are obvious the renovation program underway. subscriptions this fall and donated lot of protein in those g Administration .to endeavour to who. was the first on the school them to one of him. At least flunkies, one irate parent, . A start has already been 'made. acorns. And I have"'.28 equalize cost was the proposed bus in the morning and the last, - Y some of the money they raised then to several disgruntled teach - squirrels, not,counting chit- they're not trying to unteach trip of 30 students, members of off in the afternoon. Mr. Foundation members have an ' � the Foundation. ers, and one invitation to dren, in my attic to prove it. him the good things he's the French Club, at F.E. Madill Cunningham illustrated on a map C lication in for a federal Winter Certain) - the Van Egmond learned from his ram s. judge a beauty contest., • PP Y g Maybe you think this is g, P Secondary School at Wingham to that by re-routing one of the Works grant which they hope, when -Foundation could benefit from having just the whining of a Had a call from his mother combjnedwith volunteer labour WIII g To top it off, in today's Quebec City ata cost to the buses the tarn on the highway some enthusiastic young people, middlea ed man,.who can't last Sunday. She made it of about $500. '' was eliminated and the long ride . ' Y 9 P P g mail came an electron flyer, g get the first floor of the old building in active . in planning. cope with life. Well, you're - from a phone booth, y as from Ray Argyle, who' A lengthy discussion resulted .for. • the kindergarten child nett good shape. The torch so to speak, is being right. , Mother Bell has not'smiled from the requests for th.e cost) shortened. On a motion from pretty g p P g - sv'ndicates .this column, an 9 Y • g M bricks are failing out. on them yet. Asked her trips with only a few students in John Henderson of Seaforth who There are, we're sure, man people Y g nouncing his run for school P Y Y P P passed. It's up to all of us Who Care Or the are being sucked where the baby was. She the school participating. Mr. Hill said, "I -feel 'so sort for the Y g trustee. He .must he out of P P g• Y in Seaforth and area.as_.weltas former about the house and seeing it restored out, b the gentle vines of responded coolly that he was questioned whether there would parents of the kindergarten child ` Y g his nut. q P _ g area residents .who believe that the t0 attend the `emir enC meetln this old Georgian house, on her knee, tearing pages I be money left for the large group as this' fia eieil fist in . 9 Y' g, g Y g g P PP year' preservation of our heritage, and our . pick it up and keep the Van Egmond which are.about as gentle as out of the ,telephone direc• Everybody seems to be of students in the school for McKillop to one of our students good , old buildings is important. ' house project going. See you there at a giant squid. The roofer , tory• going a bit mad these days, external activities when- a small and a change was refused; !'ll I. said, "Geez, Bill, your bricks Iie loves tearing up books, but I'll lay odds that I get group of the students, such as, the move they re-route this bust" There are many others .lmaxd .ink that the Town Hall at 2 on Sunday. are loose." It sounds sort of especially 'those• bl' ,sacred there before the rest of you: French class, would be getting a No action was taken on alleged 1 _ . fairly big percentage of the, over -crowding on a 72 -passenger 4 �° subsidy allotted to the school. bus from Goderich north to Port It was questioned whether the ' Albert area. Alternative . first club to the principal with a ' suggestions offered were not request for a trip received the considered to be solving the most. Trustee J.P. Alexander of situation where some times 69 NUMBER 17th, 1899 The new Methodist Church at Kippen, • was opened on Sunday when Rev. J. Edge of London officiated. Win. Bailey of Bayfield arrived home from a three month's trip• to Dakota. James Sproat of Egmondville has returned from a business trip to Burlt's Falls. Samuel Hunter of Usborne says he has to work harder now than he used to when he lived in theAgobd, old Grit Township of Tuckersmith. T.A.Russell of the Thames Road has %von the Ramsay scholarship at Toronto To the Editor In the Years Ago . Wingham asked if the principal of students ride on. the bus. Mr. the school was the only one to Cunningham stated that provin- decide who went where and was cial regulations consider 69 pupils University. ' Messrs. D.D.Wilson & Co. showed us a monster in the egg line. it was laid by an ordinary goose and weighed 3 4 of a pound. .Robert Bell of the Seaforth Foundry has ' --r- leased W.M.Grav's house at the head of John Street. Miss Kirk of Londesboro has again secured the position of teacher in S.S.No.1 for the coming year. Thos. McAsh of Varna was helping at the raising of the Presbyterian sheds and as he went under the prop. the roof fell a 2 Political anguish Sir: Is Max Saltsman, • (NDP, Waterloo - Cambridge) serious about amending the Criminal Code "to make it an indictable 1. offence for anyone to destroy useable food as a form of protest?" I have a hard time believing that he is. Where was he when Montreal firemen went on strike and let building after buiiding burn as a form of protest? Where was he when western grain handlets' refused to load ship after ship with grain as a form. of.-protestY Some of those ships were scheduled to go to places like Btangladesh about whose starving rntssionslM.P.Saltsman is concerned. . 'VilJliere' revue he When ......I need not go illi with free dist.. tfMr.Saltshian , is serious, 1, tot one, woul l be prepitred.46 support his private tnemb'ei''s bill. But to be serious he must also be consistent. is he prepared to seek an amendment to the Crimina i Code "to make it an indictable offense for anyone to destroy any usable good as a form of protest?" Does Mr. Saltsman feel the sante otoral anguish when strike after strike leaves food to rot in fields, robs children of a good education, cripples part of our economy. stops production of essential commodities. allows people to be left h omeless by uncontrolled fire, stops essential services, or just holds a part of society up for ransom? i dol ' Is Mr. Saltsman's anguish real or is it just political? Elbert van Donkersgoed, Secretary -Manager, Christian Farmers Federation of Ontario . Drayton, Ontario. 'i . u`?.; ;r ,. '•;+ i ,rc. , 9 ", , • . . k . ° v „ ' o , .,:1`r . ,. ice. i 11 i.,n,� • ,. I . told by J.W. Coulter, superrn- on a 72 passenger bus legal. • I tendent, that at Wingham he Superintendent J. W. Coulter .,, •— o knew the principal and heads off informed the, board that arrange- •. I `"•• •.•-•••-- strikin him on the head. g John Grainger of Brucefield has staff met to decide field trips. A request for nomination to ments, had been made with the Ontario Arts Council to have The Mammoth block,'at St. Joseph is now purchased the house and lot formerly Department, of National Defence Rebecca Burke, a professional Illf up two stories. St. Joseph is now lighted by owned by Mrs. Douglas. He intends to was granted to Miss .Marilyn ' artist from London,- instruct, electric light. make extensive repairs and ,plterations. Clark of Victoria Public School at classes in J.A.D. McCurdy Public . NOVEMBER 21, 1924 f The large concrete bridge at Zurich which has been St. • Goderich; but was denied at this . School Tuesdays and Thursdays - The blizzard on Sunday took many by under erection at time to Mrs. Eila Smith, who and Seaforth Public School surprise in McKillop co as it did P P g Joseph on the Lake Road was opened for teaches at J. A. McCurdy and Mondays and Wednesdays' for without any warning. J, Thornton and Ed, Re ele of McKillo g P public traffic. P During the past week James McGregor Usborne Central Public Schools is three weeks in November. are now engaged in constructing a drain in g of Kippen was seriously hurt by a bull. He where she presently on a Probationary contract. Eight -five per cent of her salary is . being paid by the Arts Council. Usborne l sborne having completed the drain at was in the act of feeding the animal when it g Invite New Trustees' Mr. Coulter reported guide-- Dublin. became enraged and turned on him. The Huron County Board of lines for metricasuringg, Lorne Hulley, McKillop. happened with NOVEMBER 18, 1949 Education will invite newly grades 7 and 8 histo grade an accident when the auto in which he was Less than two years after his mother was t elected ' tr`ustees to attend the geography and physical education riding turned turtle and he was badly hurt. killed and father crippled a traffic - Pp in December 16 meeting of the (kindergarten to grade 8( have Win, Tr,ewart'ha,' McKillop, lost a accident, Leonard Donnelly, Dublin, was Board as observers, the in camera been distgributed to the schools valuable horse and hasurchased one from P instantly killed at a Kitchener intersection session at 1:00 p.m. as well as the this fall. Committees are now Zack McSpadden to take its lace. P� when his car was crushed by a Toronto open meeting gthet ontheo eartpreparation g A number of the Winthrop young men bound C.N.R. train. m 00ing at 4:30 i` )guide) nes (K-8), geof have joined the Seaforth Kittband. 1p.m. A grant of $1500 was given to the Hay an organizational meeting graphy grade 8 and home ' Joe Sills left for Pittsburg "'here he will Township Community Centre by xhe will be held by the trustees for economics for the intermediate spend the winter. council of .Hay at its regular meeting. 1975. Judge Francis G. Carter of grades. John F. McMann. has rented his farm. The badminton -season looks very Goderich will be invited to swear ' Superintendent W. D. Kenivell east of Seaforth to bale Nixon. promising this year, over twenty players t in the newly elected trustees, the reported that enrolment in the Messrs. Joe Eckart, Michael urned out for the weekly round robin. chairman • and the vice-chairman three schools for the trainable McLaughlin` and Mike Murray, Manley, Mixed doubles were played all evening will be elected and appointment retarded, Wingham, Goderich left for Northern Ontario to spend the with R.S.Box in charge of.the gatne!�, made of the auditor, solicitor, and Huron Park has grown ftom 40 winter in the mining district. About 850 people sat down to well -laden consulting architect and a 38 in September of 1969 to 66 as Several cardloads of his old friends and tables at First Presbyterian Church when steering committee c onsisting of' of November 13, 1974, an neighbours drove to the home of Edward the ladies served a turkey dinner. During chairman and three•members of increase of almost 74 per cent. Ferguson in McKillop. where he and his the period while others were waiting, Rev. the board, R.B. Dunlop, Business . bride had just arrived after theirgiarriage. D. Glenn Campbell showed colored moving An appeal by Mr. & Mrs. Administrator; reported the At a well attended re -organ ization• pictures and the following sang solos: Miss William Berry of R.R. 3 Goderich, Board Budget Committee met on meeting of the Seaforth Hockey Club the Marian Mason, Mrs. Frank Kling, Jas. T. • against a previous board decision November 7 to define the general following officers were elected: Pr es. R. N. Scott and Fred E. Willis. Bruce Jamieson , on bus pick-up of their children, guidelines to be followd and an Bissonnette; Sec.Treas. •O. Dick; contributed several organ solos. re -opened the subject for discus- Administration budget meeting Executive Com. W.J.Duncan, DaltonReid, Miss Agnes.66venlock passed away in sion again by board members. was held on November 12 to H. Johnson; trainer - W. Hort, Coach, Dot Scott Memorial Ho3pital. She was born on it was ruled again by R. L. review the guidelines and Reid. the Govenlock homestead on the -north road Cunningham, transportation establish a timetable for feview of It The Thanksgiving dance sponsored by and was in her 81st year. She was in the manager, that it was unsafe for a .budget requests. A formalized 'the G,W.V.A. was an unqualified success - civil service at Ottawta for 2S years and bus to stop at the lanewav to the ' budget manual Is to be prepared in every way, The luncheon was served by prior to that was a milliner in Edward Berry home which is located in a , for those involved in the budget the Ladies Auxiliary. McFaul's store in Seaforth. hollow between two hills, process. w M . - .