The Huron Expositor, 1979-01-18, Page 18'
1. .
-Troyer's bpokshelf
18 THE HURON EXPOSITOR JANUARY 18 i•979
,.1
25 InMeinoram 27 Births
striving for gr. t tead09-by,"
ASSN:laden i$ only jOst,
To describe KarSh as a
naive name dropper.
tail strap hapger. A Seeker
•after reflected glory is 0111)710
state the, obvious. None of
that, though. can deny his
uniqoe raft tart wOulti be too:
strong a word for so highly
stylized A Career) and the
intriguing glitupse he gives
US of his SklbjeCtS. Because,
like all seekers of ap-
probation. Karsh has spent a:
life. time learning to photo-
graph his subjects as they . • • .
would like to be,. And, in the • • 0 . • • •
US M
FRAISER: In memory of
Judy, Fraiser wbo passed
• Away January 18. 1972.
',God knew that she was
suffering •
That the hula Were hard to
clinth,
•80 He ClOSed be weary
eyelids
And whiSpered. ", ace by
thine."
•
Away ip the beautiftll OBS
of God,
By the valley of re% sO fair
Seine day, WO, know not
when,
We will meet Our loved one
thero.
—Always remembered and
sadly missed by Mother.
perry, Wayne, Jun and
Colleen. 25414x1
RYAN: In loving =Mary of a
dear son Gordon Lewis, who
• passed away Jaii, 1'. 190.
. Years go by. but iemories
stay
As near and dear as
yesterday.
.t's not the words • they are
but few, .
• , It's the loving memories
•we •keep of you• .
—Sadly rnissed by Mom &
Daci, sister and brothers and
sisters-in-law. 25-84-1
DRISCOLL: In loving
'• memory of a dear son 'arid
brother, Wayne, who passed
away one year ag0 on
January 15th, 1978,
' Never more than a thought
• away,
Quietly rernentbered every
•' No need for words except
• to say, •
• Still loved. still Missed in
• every :way. ": .• •
—Lovingly remembered and,
-sadly iniSsed by: Father.
• .Mother and.brothey Eric.
26 Personal
Mr, and Mrs, Nick Blom of
Kippen are pleased to an-
.
nounee the engagement on
:• • • • Christmas Day 1978., of their
• .
„•-• daegfiferitita Ahn to Alan
• • Savauge, son of Mrs. Loretta
,
• Savauge- of Seaforth. •..•
• • ,
•
• • - :.; • '• •
onstcirice
• Correspondent
• M.
MARY MERNER '
' Mr, and Mrs, Jim
Preszeator Bill, Debbie, and
Michael, visited on Saturday
evening with Mr.: arid Mrs.
Gary, Preszcator, Steven,
Shannon and Sherri of R,11.3,
Clinton, •
' Mr, and,' Mrs: Ed:. Sparks
and family of R. R. I,
Londesbore were Sunday
supper guests wit k Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Stevenson,DaVid.
Darren and Luanne.
John Scott- returned to
Guelph University on Friday
from the Christmas holidays.
• Mr, and Mrs. Jim Thorny)."
son and Lisa visited on
• Sunday with his grand-
parents Mr. and Mrs.
• Terence Hunter of Colborne.
• Township.
Mr. • and Mrs. Joh• n
Thompson and Bob and Mr.
and Mr's. Jim ThotripsOn' and
-Leisa visited on Thursday.
evening, Dec. 28th with 11,1iss
• Grace Hunter of Goderich. '
• • Mr. and Mrs. John Jewitt
and family entertained the
Jewitt family at their home
on New Years Day.
Mr, and Mrs. Tom Me -r -tie -i -
Jason and Jeffrey of London
Were New Years Day visitors •
• with Mr! and Mrs. Carl
Merner, Sandy, Julie.
• Michael and Shelley.
New Years Day .visitors
• with Mr. and Mrs. John
•"Thompson, Sharon and Bob
were Mr. and Mrs. Terence
Hunter of Colborne Town-
•• ship. Mr. Clarence Bennett
of Goderich, Mr. and Mrs.
• Andy Thonipsoti of Oakville.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thompson
•'and Leisa and 'Sue Keeriley.
• side and' Dave Lawton of
Etobicoke,
. Mr. and Mrs. Prank
EllwoOd of Montreal visited
• on friday; Dec; 29th with
Mr. and MrS. P•rank
ChristMas Day visitors
with -Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Dolmage were tteir family
Mr. and . Neil bolmago
Leanne, III and Steven,
• Mr. and Mrs, Larry Blake
Nellie and Xathy both of
Walton, Mr. and Mrs, 'Ed.
Saldivar, •Jim. David and
Jeanne, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Oliver, Jerry, ^Danny and
Kevin of Setifortb, Mr and
• Mrs, Brian Anderson Chris
and tine Of St, Mtitys,
SUBJECTt TO ,3101.,and Pat,
• ,3S BoSworth Cre$Pelat.
• Kitchener. .0,• son, Ryan,
James, on January' 10 in St.
Mary's Hospital. Grand.
parents are Clarence and
Cecilia KYan. Dublin and Mr.
• and. MIMI' James. Subjeet.
,Port Elgin. 27-84-1
ORPINgf{t Barr): and Pat
aro ;happy to announce the
aftjval .of their son Ryan
Gerald. 7 lb., 9 oz., on
December 24 at St, Joseph's
Hospital in Lon:don. Proud
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs.. Don McDonald and Mr.
and Mrs. &Bremner."S
GLANyILLEi To Mr: and
Mrs. Larry Glanville on
January 15th Seaforth
Community Hospital, a
daughter. 27,434x1
•
28 Deatits
HRA: Evelyn (Way). Shera
er sled away at Seaforth
Community Hospital, Friday
January 12, 1979 in her 69th
year. Beloved wife of the late
Harold Shera, dear mother of
Warren Shera, Seaforth.
Dear sister of Mrs. Russell
(Helen) Dallas of Brucefield,
•Mrs. George (Ida) Jackson of
Brucefield and Mrs. RObe'rt
(Gladys) Cross of London.
Also survived by three
grandchildren. .Predeceased
by daughter Marilyn and two .•
• BY WARNER TROYER
More. Ibis week, on coffee
table and- gift books offered.,
this •SeaSon. by Canadian'
poblishers:
LOST TORONTO
- by William Deady:
Publishedi by Oxford
University Press. $1,9.SQ.
It's generally believed by
CBC prOducers, magazine
editors and book ottblishers
in Canada that everyone
living mere than about 177
miles from Toronto's' City
Hall, hates and abominates
everything concerning the
fondly know n as
Hogtown. It that includes
tivo don't read this book;
unless, that is, you do care
for your own community.
• Because what \Villiarn
Dendy (a product • of
Edmotiten, by the way,) has
done is to document the
de f '
extraordinary and
fascinating buildings in
Toronto, And with Toronto,
aspwith all of Canada, our
heritage and history are
desperately b'
often. rendered. threadbare
by the developers and park-
ade princes. By showing us.
in this look back at what's
gone," what we' Ve lost.
Dondy reminds us all how
hard we ought to strive to
keep what's • left of our
history, There is here, too,
some damned • intersting
sociaL'ootitical history.
brothers Casey and 'Clare
Way. Funeral service was
held 'at Whitney-Ribey
• Funeral Horne. 87 Goderich
St. West. Seaforth. on'
Monday with Rev.: Roberts`
• a J •
officiating. Temporary
entamh-ment in Pioneer
Memorial Mausoleum. Inter-
ment to follow Maitlandbank
C'emetery. 28-844..
Council names
committees
• searorth Council made ap-
pointments to town commit-
tees Monday • night, most
of them repeats.
Nev members include
Gary Smith., who s.vill • fill
Larry Dillores term on the
'planning board, (Mr, Dillon
has „resigned) and will also
serve on the committee of
adjustment. He joins Gord
Rimmer, • Charlie Campbell
and councillors Mero and
Johnston •on the planning
'board. •
• Jim Cunningham was
• named to the development
committee where he joins
Lloyd Eisler and Ron
MacDonald; Ernie Williams
has jotired„ and Lloyd Rowat
will be asked to join the
committee.
Former mayor Betty
Cardno was named to the
Local Architectural Con-
servation Advisory Commit-
tee, along with present mem-
bers Winn McLean, Fred
Cosford, • Grace Cornish,
Vivienne Newnham, and
Walter Armes •
Ex. Councillor and arena
committee head Bill Bennett
will be a new . recreation
committee member, along
with Jean Hildebrand, Peg
Campbell. Gary Montgomery
and Larry PItonstee1.
•
• -KASH CANADIANS
by Yousuf • Karshi-
Published by the University
of Toronto Press. 524.95,
•. Staffers at Life Magazine
had a saying, through the
orttes and Ftftiesk • If it
wasn't in Life this week, it
didn't happen.". So with
Yousuf Karsh's pilgrimage
among • the powerful, the
famous, the notorious; if, in
the 'past four decades they
weren't engraved on film by- •
Karsh, they just weren't all
that important.
• Karsh, at 70, is nothing -if
not ingenuous. He notes of
his 'first important as-.
signment, that he obtained it
by asking the son of the then
Governor General, in the
mid -Thirties, to arrange a
session With his prestigious
parents. By 1941 Karsh had
persuaded ,Mackenzie Kini
to help him meet and photo
• Roosevelt and Churchill, and
his career was made. He...vvas
the photo-pprtrait artist of
The Great. That King, him-
self one of Canda's most:
• celebrated svncophants,
should have launched the
career of yet another man
Example, from a letter writ-
ten by MacDonald on a ;rain
1930;
'The whole world ha$
been prairie. . .we got line
breaks of sunshine with the
Manitoba maples all drip-
ping with rain and that
weather moving, off t the
north where it lay along the
horizon like a great ,greY
•blanket thrown pff the bed,'"
An apt description of some of
his own paintings,.
• A shy man, •MaeOonald
bad great humour as well as
a great artistic gift. The
•eZterpt$ from his letter's are a
charming., in this volume, as
are the pictures moving. This
is a coffee table bet* yeu'll
return to often* it's for
• browsing not just -for dis.4
play. Make a gift of it, if you
wish; but get one for YOUrself
if you" can,
LANDMARKS OP
• CANADIAN ART
• by Peter Mellen; Published
by Mecielland and Stewart.
4501.
Very glossy; very ex -
Pensive: .excellentt re-
prodUctiens. The b0915: is a
survey of Canadian art sinceISO° AD, with an opening
Section 'on native art going
back On estimated three
thousand years. Compiled by
"a- select board of dis-
tinguished experts," are, in
the introductory words of
•
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • t • * ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••
74.
aft
0
Jean Sutherland Boggs,
"'One hundred and sixteen
world that are landmarks in
the development of art in
Canada."'
Jean-Paul Riopelle„ in,thls;
Olympiad, merits a one-page
illbstration, as do William
Ronald and Harold Town.'
Conspicuous in their absense
are Ken Danby, Sam
Elorenstein (of whom more,
later) and A.J. Casson, the
only surviving member of the
Group of Seven. But then,
Only room for 116 works.
Nothing here, either, by
Robert Newton Hurley, otaY-
be the only Canadian artist
(besides MacDonald?) who
noticed that prairie lands-
• capes are comp,sed mostly of
sky. -
But the *tures are
beautiful, Mostly.. And that
's what art books are for..
Very decorative, Nice black -
dust jacket, Title in gold'
•• * • ••• • • • • • • • • • W., • • • • • ** • • • • • • oo • .•
• ID • . 4.
oI"sT
— . _ .. : 1-- APPLIANCES --Th
Da win .. •••....,.....•...,,••••,••••••••••••••••'•••••••••• 000.0, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••• ** • 41::::::::::: • 76:
F •
re'Vea. tOd M re than, he knew. :-.\• • :,,*
pursuit of that geol.% he has . , I: • . : . .
. . . . , .
.• 1110
. ••• . J.: i . i '•:
•
.. • • . • •
••
. • '• FUNERAL HOME ---\ ...
• AUTO '
•••••
DARWIN'S FORGOTTEN
Appliance A.
. introduced by Roger : ReflOgeratiOn
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Service .
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• i , Service and repairs to
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APPLIANCES
Service and repairs to all '
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Don Horne
Maintenance
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\527-0636
Lewin: - photography by
Sally' Arnie Thompson; Dis-
tributed by Oxford Univer-
sity Press. 523,95,
, The Galapagos are hardly,
anymore, forgotten. But the
islands' in that Archipelago
are, in this book, seen
through fresh . eyes. Ms.
• Thompson's photos are
•everything one could ask;
• beautifully• composed,
magnificently reproduced,
• funny; touching, reeking of
life and humour. Here, with
• some of the text of Darwin's
own diary from ,the 1831
voyage of.the Beagle', are the
• creatures which later stirred
Karsh , in himothe.thepries which led
to' rigian of Species. The
• BRUXER
•
•
•
`el
•
•
•
•
•
•
• \
it •
,—CARCARE
blue -footed booby, the pen-
• sive sea lions and cynical,
ancient sea turtles are in- ''`""
finitely interesting. Unlik•e
•the human subjects frozen in
monachrome by. Karsh's
lens, these artless matures •
reward every return to their ••
portraits with renewed de- *
light and natural pleasure.
•
• . ••
Art
: Repair Service
TUNE UPS
rirnA Inc
THE TANGLED GARDEN
by Paul Duval; Published
13543"2.5C0erebrus/Prentice-Hall.
41+ DIJBLIN, ONT.
. . •
to all mattes of cars
• andlight trucks °
Will pick up and
deliver
Bus. 345-2891
i 345-2114
• : Home.
- : Frank and Maureen
L• •,, Bruxer
Canadian painter J.E.H : ••
MacDonald has, long de- • CAR CARE ,N
• served his own book and •
place; Mr. Duval has given it
• to him. A prime founder of -•
the Group of • Seven, •
MacDonald's power as a •
• landscape artist is well re-
presented in this large an •
dopulent volume, His brief. •
• sixty years of life nonetheless
,gave MacDonald • time • to •
paint Canadian vistas from
one coast to the other and •
inspired, too, some ex- •
traordinary prose to which
Mr. Duval had access in his
search of family • papers.
•
ARNOLD J. STINNiSSEN
Fyrng-r., LI -FE — and Mortgage Insurance Plans
Income Tax Deetietable Registered
Retirement SavingsPlans and Annuities.
Income Averaging Annuities •
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Electrical
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HOME. FABM 8i."
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Phone Auburn 526-7505
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Please watch the date on your
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RESTAURANT -N
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Whitney -Ribey
Funeral Home
ROS$ VV. RI 1;3 EYI
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87 Goderich St., Seaforth
• PI-IONE, 527-1390
CEMETERY
MONUMENTS
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OPTICIAN
David
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Ltd.
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87 Main Si., Sotith,
• Seaforth
OPTOMETRISTS AND ,
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or after el: phew
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. • • • • 44 • Jr•• 0'0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • el* • • • • 44 • • • • • • to • er • • • • • •• • 4i'• • • • • tit ea • a • • • • • • • • tit
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