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The Huron Expositor, 1976-05-27, Page 5S A 31 WEN S anymore. werehere. QE • C.I.A.G. INSURANCE the CO-OPERATORS are moving their Huron County Claims and Service •Office in Goderich to': 31 WEST STREET P.O. BOX 234 GODERICH t 524-2138 Your Huron County Agents ore: ROSS FRANCIS BEAT KLOPP Kirkten 229-6294 Zurich 236-4988 LLOYD MONTGOMERY PETER ROY Wingham 357-3739 Clinton 482.9357 GEORGE TURTON • Gdderich 524.7411 we'renotthere Pure Perk Sausage Sliced macaroni & cheese Loaf 9Vb Football Hams Maple Leaf Whole, half Quarter 1.39! •THE.111.14Ro)(129g1TQR! ,for. 2i7, 9 .get the Miley from us! VG WCTORM and GREY TRUST COMPANY SINCE 1889 Robert arid Allastaire Wilson all of Fergus and Wayne Wilson and Marianne Erin, Milton. Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. George Pethick and Sheron were Mr,'and Mrs. John Pethick and Mrs. Ruth Pepper and Murray. Mr. and Mrs.. Jim Scarrow, I3obbi-Ann and David -spent Sun- day at Lion's Head. Smoked 'ipnics 9/Vb Sliced baby Beef Liver 4 9C Beef Blade Steaks 89!' Fresh Ground Chuck 89 ---FREEZER SPECIALS--- Front Quarter of Beef 'Fully Processed 75 LQ. Side of Beef Fully Processed • 9Vb 4 Turkey Wings 10 lb. box 3.90 10 lb.,Bag of peef Patties, 1.90 4 lb. Bag of Beef Patties 891 Store 262-2017 AL 'S MARKET HENSALL — ONTARIO A bbatoir 262-204)- 1111111111111111-ripv,":1;.1:Jailir:1111 THE SEPARATE SHOPPE MAIN CORNER, CLINTON PHONE 482 7778 (NEXT TO CAMPBELL'S MEN'S WEAR) PANTSUITS and BLOUSES , SKIRTS — PANTS —, SHORTS — SUNTOPS OPEN 1-6 OPEN 1-6 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ‘,/ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • .• • • • • • • • e • e • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • , • 6 6 • • ▪ . • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••00414•••••••••46 •***111 • • • • • • • a ' • • • • • • • • • • • • BILL MCLAUGHLIN! MOTORS LTD • We Bring It All Together SERVICE SAVINGS SELECTION SATISFACTION * •••*•••• ******* ••••e• ************* 0000 e 0000 Finished in Polar White with dark blue cobra stripe package, and , equipped with a 302 V8, automatic, front' and rear Functional Spoilers, racing mirrors, styled .steel wheels, rear quarter window louvers. FORD PUTS EXCITMEMENT BACK INTO DRIVING See Ken at . . . • . CANADA'S ULTIMATE SPORTS SEDAN • • • • • • • • tr. • • • • • e • • 5, S . • • • • • • • • • • 0 • • • • • U. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4 • • e • • • • • • Go Hand in and - - - - GRANADA GHIA ONE OETHE BEST HANDLING CARS ON THE ROAD TODAY! This Ghia 4 door sedan is loaded with features including 302 V8, Automatic, Double Power, Reclining individual • Bucket Seats rear Defogger, Lacey :403ke aluminum Wheels, Beautifully finished in tan - metallic with a matching tan vinyl roof. GOLD SPECIAL Featuring black finish including blackout Chrome with gold highlight stripes and wheels. Black and tan velour inter(or, 2.8,1itre V6 engine, 4 speed transmission, Power Disc,brakes. 185 x 13 radial THE SEXY CAR WITH EUROPEAN STYLE! • • • • • .9 • • • • . • • • • • • • • o • r PANCAKES COMING UP — Ed. Taylor, centre, supervises as members o the rewly formed Leo Club make and serve pancakes outside Roth's Garden Centre on Main Street. All the money that the Leo Club raised was donated to the arena fund, accordihg to the terms of a challenge to the club by Ken Roth. (Staff Photo) Winthrop girl visits Brazil Correspondent Mrs. Robert Hulley Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harris accompanied- by, Mr. and Mrs, Steve Argyle 'of Bayfield visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Tony Wolfcamp and Marsha. Mars,ba: returned home with her grand- parents for the holiday. Doris visited with Mr. 'Harvey i Mr, and Mrs. Roy Dolmage and R eme _ n, b_ e r old r nk Rev. Horst is very faithful in coming to speak to us. I haven't heard of any picnics planned for May 24th a traditional picnic day, weather permitting. This year Victoria Day will be celebrated on the "try date. • Pupils,. at school will hay no need of saying May 24th is the Queen's Birthday. If you don't give us a holiday we'll, all run away." However, many of them will be helping to plant the potatoes and other VeWables in tbefamily garden. 5 How did Victoria Day originate? It is a long time since I haye heard this discussed but in my memory it is this. When Edward VII came to the throne he asked that' Queen Victoria's birthday be Celebrated instead of his own.Thus Victoria Day May 24. Until recently it has always been celebrated as a holiday on the exact date. Now it is usually' celebrated on a Monday near May 24th to make a long weekend. This year it happened to fall on a Monday which is the holiday. Ladies from the W.L. visited the home, Sunday. Mrs.' James Kelly and Mrs.. Henry SWarz. Birthday greetings to Wm. Elligsen who celebrated his birthday May 23'. He was 72. Holiday Visitors: With Miss Turnbull, Misses Bess and Peg Grieve, Egmondville,. Miss Marilyn Hillis, Tillsonburg, Miss Jennifer Hillis,. Ingersoll. He's: a:Segfprth.notive Policeman .S (Bditor's.Not 1 MoOlath,. , Ask Const. McGrath what' ate featured in •this story in the would do if he had three wishes Georgetown Herald, is a WO of Michael and Ina geQrat on Seafoith,'While his. wife is -tlIP he laughs. '''One millMcGrath, R.R,4„,.. and former Mary Ann Kunz: daUghtek of Mrs. Mary Kunz of Seaforth)' The day aftec. he turned 21,, Bill McGrath joined the Ontario Provincial Police. It wasn't that he had n othing to do or was tralped in a dull factory job but rather that it seemed to offer a balance to his other interest, surveying. - He had completed a year of studying surveying at Fanshaw Collego in London before he joined the OPP he says. Out the OPP decided to send him to Northern Ontario.The list of small northern communities like Cochrane, Hearst and Long Lac ...goes, on for quite "I was stuck in Northern Ontario," Const. McGrath says while hi's hands toy with,not one new pipe but two. 'EachOars identical td the ordinary but to Const. McGrath the differences in the two pipes may be measured in the hundreds. Const. M cGrath has recently returned from a 11-week course in identification procedures at the Ontario Police College in'AyliTizr7--- On the Halton Regional Police Force in Georgetown, which he joined five years ago this month, the Course has meant "a change of duties," he says. ' Instead of general patrol, the first class constable now is more responsible at the scene of a crime for the care and handling of evidence, fingerprinting, philto- graphing and, of course, drawing and surveying. It is the kind of work -requiring concentrated observation of tiny details which all should come together to exhibit a coherent story of image to a judge and jurjii. It niay even be like putting together a puzzle -which has passed through a paper shredder. As far as having, been in .personal danger, like most other policemen, Const, McGrath shrugs .it off as not: worthy of mention, 'although, he says: "1' ve been really lucky. I've never encountered any difficulties.' That- inelqdes a three-month period with the 99th 'Battery of the 21st Field REA. (M; Artillery' in NATO 'exercises in Get ally in 1969, Const. M cGrath'sa)is. "It.was when the Soviet Union. walked into..czechoslavakia,". says. "I thought I might end up staying there but there wasn't too much tension." Const. McGrath, who was born and raised in Seaforth, Ontario, is .married with one child and lives in Acton. When he gets time off, "I tinker around in the basement." he says. "I've made a couple of sticks of furniture," he says, adMitting wood-working as a hobby. "I was just attracted to wood work." By now his fingers have thoroughly explored the surfaces of the hair of pipes, casually impressing. on • his memory each shape and texture. Dolmage, a patient in Strafford General Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Bill. Hulley, Bill and Kathy, Cromarty visited with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hulley and family, Sunday. Visiting with their parents over• the weekend were:. • Doris Dolmage who graduated with her N.A. from Wingham Hospital, Friday; Earl Dolmage, Chatham and Don Dolmage, who is going to school fot 'his apprenticeship in carpentery in ,Burlington. Mr. .and Mrs. Jack McGhee, Jacky, Judy and Roy of London and Sylvia, an exchange 'student from Quebec who is staying' with the McGhees for three weeks, visited Friday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hulley and family. ▪ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dolmage attended graduation exercises for their daughter Doris Friday at • Wingham Hospital. A number of school friends of Sandra Finney had a surprise party for her Friday evening prior to her departure- to brazil Satur- day. Sandra will be arriving in Brazil Sunday and will be spend- ing the 'summer months with her Brazilian sister Bete Maia who spent the -winter months with the Hulley family. Miss Linda Currie , and. Rim Dorchester spent the weekend with Bob and Marg Hulley and family and also visited with Mr.' and Mrs. Bill-Hodge and Brenda. • Visitors over the Victoria Day weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wilson were Mr. and Mrs. Carman Wilson, Rhonda Lee, (By Mabel Turnbull) Several residents enjoyed the Stanley Cup hockey series. It was a good series with plenty of excitement. 'It reminded 'me of hockey in Seaforth some years ago when such n amen' as Dick, H Hays, Reid, Sills were popular with the Seaforth fans. In the old rink Alice McConnell and .I had season's tickets and attended all the games. The local team us0 to play ' in Stratford near the end of the season when no ice was, available, here. We would' follow the team there to cheer them on. Those were the days to remember. Devotionals were taken this week by Rev. A. A. Horst, St. Peter's 4 Lutheran Church, Brodhagen. I was sorry to have missed his message. When we were alerted that it was church day I was deep in 'Slumberland' catching-44)-0n a much needed sleep after 'a brief trip to the hospital in the morning to conclude work which had be en done on my foot previously. Thus I failed to get notes on Rev. Horst's message. . • He very thoughtfully came in to chat and gave me a short run-down on his topic. He spoke on the passage from the Bible where Jesus said "I am the Vine. Ye are the branches" and the speaker explained whets' setbacks and troubles came to us thcrewas the pruning process. We all know when a plant is pruned fresh growth begins as a result so, with us,, it gives us a chance to think and start afresh, Cavan UCW talks family . history - . The regular' meeting of Cavan U.C.W. was held on Tuesday, Mary 18. Mrs. Jane Case opened the meeting with a short reading. Hymn #1 "The Church's One Foundation" was sung. Mrs.• Mary Church read the scripture lesson frbm Psalm 1 and the meditation on "The View Point of Life," Mrs. Case then led in prayer. Roll call was answered by fifteen members giving their mother's given and maiden names. f• The minutes of the last meeting were read and approved. The correspondence was also read, The • U.C.W. discuped setting some goals for the year. Mrs. Maja Dodds read the financial report and the offering ..was received and dedicated. Hymn 125, Saviour Like a Shepherd Lead Us" was sung. Mrs. Jane Case then discussed the History of Families in this area. Each member brought an heirloom which were looked at and discussed. Lunch was,served by Unit 4. Next U.C.W. meeting is June 15 at 8:00 p.m. • dollprs," he Sa.Y.A4119140 )119.00Y • SP that no, anc . bis family ,eptdd' "lead a .very quiet, Onobt-rneWe CONST. BILL McGRATH