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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1966-01-27, Page 16Some of the representatives from the sixteen rinks of the Police Bonspiel held at RCAF Station Cen- tralia on Friday, January 21, are shown examining the "proden Memorial Trophy". Front row, left to right John Wright, OPP Exeter; Laurie Parkin, OPP London; Jack Smith, RCMP London; back row, left to right, Bert Whitlock, SID Centralia; Bill Anglin, OPP Lucan; Art Jeffers, OPP Guelph; Russ Harding, RCMP Sarnia. Police bonspiel skips By MRS. ROSS SKINNER The Elimville WI held a euchre party at the hall Monday evening, Jan. 17. There were eight tables playing. Winners were: ladies high, Mrs. Ross Skinner; gents high, Mr. Floyd Cooper; low, Mr. Rus- sell Morley; lone hands, Mrs. Harold Bell; lucky chair, Mrs. Alvin Fulton. Winner of box of groceries was Mr. Floyd Cooper. The next euchre will be held Monday evening, Jan. 31 at 8:30 pm, PERSONALS The Usborne Central School Choir will be singing at the Elimville Church Sunday evening, Jan. 30, at the CGIT service. Mr. Malcolm Hiltz will be the speaker. Mr. & Mrs. Harry Murch of Petawawa are visiting this week with Mr. & Mrs. Alvin Cooper. Mr. & Mrs. Harold Bell visited with Mrs. Thos Bell at Huron- view, Clinton Sunday. Do you know . that Investors Syndicate has been in business for over 60 years? 0/--guiedioN SYNDICATE LIMITED TED HOLMES 145 Deer Park Circle, London 471.6005 or Enquire at The Times• Advocate • this Sunday, Wednesday afternoon and during the evening throughout the week, MAPLE LEAF MEATS QUALITY YOU CAN TRUST 1, 890 Maple Leaf Boned & Rolled FRESH PORK LOINS Devon — Rindless SWEET SMOKED BACON' 85 ° Maple f WIE NERS 2 — 1 lb Vac Packed pkges 98 0 Fresh Ground 2 HAMBURG Vegetable or Tomato CLARK'S SOUP JAVEX 111U OFF 10 oz tins 4/450 Gallons 9futyea 9ood Highliner, 24-oz. FISH and CHIPS (Haddock) 5 42 390 790 3/$1.00 Old South, Fancy 12 oz. tins ORANGE JUICE Clover Cream ICE CREAM 1/2 Gal Farm House CREAM PIES Chocolate or Coconut Big 9" Pie with Graham Wafer Crust King Size, 32 oz. 100 off IVORY LIQUID White Swan, White or Colored TISSUE 2 Rolls Hostess TEA BAGS Pkg. of 100 Plus 284 coupon 9/U 69 0 190 29 0 210 White, 96's FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT 10 for 690 Aliens Fancy Large Size 113s SUNKIST ORANGES Do.,,59q APPLE SAUCE 20 oz, tin Hanki-Pak KLEENEX A H 3 for Duncan Hines CAKE 830 Superior Hamburg or BUNS Hot Dog Pkg. 10-Lb. Mesh Bag COOKING ONIONS FANCY MAC APPLES 3 ibsliiq Superior White or Whole BREAD Wheat FOR 1 HEAP BIG SAVINGS FROM C.P. MIXES 2 large Pkgs. Pineapple, white, devils food, deep chocolate, fudge marble. Sweet Pickled - Cryovac 2%2 to 3 lbs. lb 69° COTTAGE ROLLS Tulip 3 — 1 lb Prints FAMILY PACK MARGARINE iu 179 Maple Leaf W2 lb tins CANNED HAMS . CH E DDAR 59 0 Maple L af 64 off 16 oz jar CHEESE SPREAD CHEESE SLICES 29 ° Maple Leaf 8 per pkg Maple Leaf 2 lb box (ProcessCHEESE Chedd ar Govt. Inspected Meat 15 oz ) 99 0 CHUM DOG tins 9for 12 oz. tins s1.00 KAM LUNCHEON MEAT 2 for $ 1 0 0 Maple Leaf PURE LARD 2 for 49 0 Snowflake keRTENING VA lb. plastic 8 9 1-lb Pkg. vik kk 7,C Heinz 11 oz. bottles TOMATO KETCHUP 210 Nescafe 14¢ off INSTANT COFFEE 6 oz jar 9 90 TANG 42 ° ORANGE 2 Pkgs. SUPERIOR *FOOD MARKET* We are open Fridays Ti 9:00 p.m. For your shopping convenience. • .— . • AT THE HIG H Sq.1001,, By Ann Creech Page. 16 Times-Advocate, January 27, 1966 A fter exams 11111111111111111011111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111811IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1111111111111111111IIIIIIII!!!!!!! will be a post-exam recovery dance and I'm sure all of us are looking forward to this! The festivities will start at 8:00, with a basketball game betweenSHDHS male graduates and the male teachers. Following this is an- other basketball game between the alumnae girls and our senior girls. These should provide a lot of fun and thrills! After the games there will be a talent show, with musically- gifted students displaying their talents and a grand prize will be awarded to the winner. Fol- lowing the talent show a dance will be held, for all. The admis- sion fee for this fun-filled eve- ning is only $.50, so let's have everyone out! Jan. 29, the 12F and 10B class- es, who were the top classes in the magazine campaign, will at- tend a show in London, and then go out for a bite to eat. This is their reward for being so ener- getic and ambitious, That's all for now, see you next week. Since all of us at SHDHS are busy writing exams this week there are no major functions operating. There are however, a couple of important and inter- esting events going on imme- diately after the termination of exams. Friday. Jan. 28 atSHDHS there PERSONALS Mr, & Mrs. Wilbert McNeight celebrated their fourth wedding anniversary with a turkey supper Saturday evening and had as their guests Mrs. Annie Youngson, Mr. & Mrs. Ernie Simms of St. Marys, Gifts were received. Mr. & Mrs. Stewart Marriott, Ron and Maryanne were Sunday guests with Mr. & Mrs. Archie Dewar. Mrs. Cocciotti of Capreol is spending some time at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fred Park- inson, Fred and family while Mr. & Mrs. Fred Parkinson, Mr. & Mrs. Ken Hill of Lambeth are enjoying a holiday in Florida. Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Spence and family were Sunday evening guests with Mr. & Mrs. Norman Brock and Bill of Zion West. Mrs. Vernon Trott and Betty of Toronto were Saturday guests with Mr. & Mrs. Archie Dewar. Mrs. Oliver Baker, Mrs. Nel- son Baker, Mrs. Ellis Strahan, Mrs. Bob Elston, Miss Kate Jameson and Mrs. Duncan Mc- Naughton attended the fourth an- nual Perth Presbyterial held in Mitchell United Church Monday. Mrs. George Wilson is a pa- tient in Victoria Hospital, Lon- don. The last end It took an extra end to break the tie but skip Harvey Pollen and his teammates won the second draw in the annual O'Keefe curling bonspiel Saturday evening at the Exeter Curling Club, Bob Jeffery is shown at left while the female members of the team include Marg Murley and Dolores Shapton. At extreme right is Jim Lyttle, O'Keefe representative who later handed out the prizes. (T-A photo) Ill Health? Visitors to Biddulph area County council decides against Bayfield request ald Carroll, Mrs. Borden Smyth and Mrs. M. Elston attended one at Mrs. Tom Kooy's, Ailsa Craig. See your doctor first. Bring your prescription to MIDDLETON'S DRUGS By MRS. M. H. ELSTON BIDDULPII Visitors during the weekend with Mr. & Mrs. John McAllist- er were Mr. & Mrs. Harold Skin- ner, Mr. Cecil Skinner and Mr. & Mrs. Don Hooper, all of Exeter, Mr, & Mrs. Ralph Lightfoot, Centralia, also Mrs. Edna Lang- ford and Mr. Orville Langford. Mr. & Mrs. Allan Elston and family were guests of Mr. & Mrs. Murray Neil, Exeter, Sunday evening. Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Gardiner, Exeter, visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Mervin Elston. Bradley and Jimmy Gregus of Exeter spent the weekend with their aunt and uncle, Mr. & Mrs. John Spacek. Mr. & Mrs. M. H. Elston ac- companied by their uncle, Mr. Clarence Fletcher, Woodham, were guests Saturday with Mr. & Mrs. Ross Cook and Paul of Kirkton and the latter's mother, Mrs. Elva Godbolt. Mrs. Charles Atkinson, Mrs. Lorne Weiberg, Mrs. Mervin El- ston and Mrs. James Barker at- tended a hobo tea at the home of Mrs. Clarence Davis F rid ay afternoon and Monday afternoon Mrs. Harry Carroll, Mrs. Ron- "It appears," the committee added, "that there is no provi- sion by which a township may have two school boards for ele- mentary school purposes. Since every urban centre with population of less than 1,000 must be joined to the adjoining township, there is no provision for establishing a school author- ity of the Village of Bayfield." take to co-operate with Tucker- smith. The matter arises from a proposal of Huron County School Area No. 1 to build a central school between Brucefield and Kippen in Stanley.) The consultative committee's report was read by Inspector James Kinkead and signed by Reeve Carl Dalton, Seaforth, as chairman. At the latter's sug- gestion, council went into com- mittee and excluded the press for purposes of discussion. Upon e nquiry later of the clerk- treasurer, this reporter was told the report had been adopted with- out amendment, but that there would be something further com- ing up. There wasn't, at the Jan- uary session. The report dealt also with East and West Wawanosh school boundaries, suggesting that the boards meet and recommend re- vision as desired. Accordingly, the committee "awaits a pro- posal." Parts of the Public Schools Act cited in support of its Sea- The public school consultative committee of Huron county coun- cil has decided against Hayfield in its effort to have parts of Stanley attached, with the rate- payers' approval to the village for school purposes. "According to Section 40(5) of the Public Schools Act," the re- port states, "Bayfield must be a part of the adjoining township, Stanley, for school purposes." Also referred to the committee was a proposal to add parts of Tuckersmith to the town of Sea- forth for school purposes. The recommendation is "f urther study" and no action, "since it seems inadvisable to recommend the inclusion of these properties in Seaforth without a complete study of the effect on the costs to these properties or the costs to the ratepayers of Seaforth of the suggested plan." (Seaforth Mayor Flannery, after a meeting of school trustees with town council about three weeks ago, said council would support any actiouSeaforthboard forth and Bayfield decisions were Section 40 (9) and (5), as follows: "Every urban municipality that had a population of under 1,000 according to the municipal cen- sus for 1963 and every urban municipality that had an average daily attendance in the public schools in the municipality of under 100 resident pupils in 1963 shall, on and after the 1st day of January, 1965, form part of the township school area that surrounds it or with which it has the greatest length of com- mon boundary." "Where the average daily at- tendance of pupils of the public schools under the jurisdiction of a board is fewer than 100 in any year, the inspector shall notify the clerk of the county and the secretary of the board af- fected, and the council of the county shall, by bylaw passed before the 1st day of July follow- ing notice from the inspector, attach the school section in which the board has jurisdiction to an adjoining school section.