Huronia Museum – Looking Back 60 Years Ago in North Simcoe – January 1st to 8th 1958

Click on photos to enlarge

 

This tiny fellow won a host of prizes for Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Day, 146 Eighth Street, Midland, by being the first baby born at St. Andrew’s Hospital in 1958. Weighing in at 7 lbs 3 ozs., he is a brother for Lloyd, 16, Larry, 12 and Linda 6.

 

This little girl, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Harold Bumstead, Wyevale, will have no problem remembering her birthday. She arrived on the scene in St. Andrew’s Hospital, Midland, Christmas Day. Christine is the third daughter of the Bumsteads, who so far have no sons. ( one more daughter and two sons followed)

 

Mr. & Mrs. John Houden of Elmvale study an old scrapbook kept by their daughter Mrs. Howard Grier of Wyevale (standing) that tells of the day 50 years ago when the couple boarded the train in Elmvale to travel to Barrie to be wed. It was January 1st, 1908 and just past Colwell on the line to Barrie the train derailed and the coach rolled down a forty foot embankment. No one was seriously injured, even though the coach caught fire and was completely destroyed. The Houdens went on to Barrie and were married. 

 

 There is a wonderful story of determination, hard work, local support and family behind this event. 

This monster moose was shot by C. F. Townes of Wyebridge who works as an electrician at a mine at Spanish Ont. The animal had a 57-inch antler spread and weighed about 1,600 pounds. Mr. Townes son Jim is at the right.

 

St. Andrew’s Hospital caretaker Oscar Jean…(paper ripped, the last name missing) can be seen with the lawnmower out Friday morning on the hospital lawn. (Just before Christmas) 

 

Near collision with the tree at right failed to dampen these two Midland lads’ enthusiasm for tobogganing. Paul Tremblay left, and Ken Cleary were only two of the many children that “rediscovered” Little Lake Park as a winter playground during the last few days of the Christmas holidays. 

It was a case of “look out below” when these four enthusiastic but “green” skiers tried out the long boards in Little Lake Park recently. It was a belated chance to try out Christmas skis and toboggans after weeks of bare ground. Skiers are Keith Cleary, Bob Gray, Tom Davis and John Adamson. 

 

 

 

  • The Free Press Herald headline of January 1st, 1958; Midland Teacher Shot in Rabbit Hunt Mishap.  A Christmas week rabbit hunt north of Honey Harbour had serious consequences for Guy Johnstone son of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Johnstone, Midland. A teacher at Sacred Heart Separate School, Midland, the young man suffered serious injuries to his back when a shot-gun carried by his brother, George, 16, accidentally discharged Friday afternoon. Rushed as speedily as possible some 40 miles to St. Andrew’s Hospital, Midland, Mr. Johnstone was attended by Dr. E. A. Grise and Dr. Peter Brasher. Blood transfusions were given and a lengthy operation carried out to save the young man’s life. Dr. Grise, said Tuesday that, while still critically ill, Guy has been “improving a bit each day”.
  • The County Herald headline of January 3rd, 1958; Small Tractor Explodes Driver Escapes Unhurt.  Ovila Cascagnette, the Penetang town foreman, considers himself lucky to have escaped with his life this week when a tractor he was attempting to start in the town shed, exploded and set the building ablaze. Considerable damage was caused to the roof trusses of the building as well as the underside of the roof sheathing when the gasoline-fed flames leaped into the air. The tractor, which caused the fire, was badly damaged by the explosion and subsequent blaze.
  • The Free Press Herald headline of January 8th, 1958; Say Policies Under Fire, Hospital Board Resigns.  Elected members and two appointed members of St. Andrew’s Hospital Board served notice Friday night that they were resigning, effective Jan. 20. The resignation followed a discussion of existing conditions at the hospital after the resignation of board chairman R. J. Pinchin had been tabled at the meeting attended by representatives of the Lions Club, the Y’s Men’s Club, the Junior Chamber of Commerce, the Business and Professional Women’s Club, the lODE and the Nurses Alumnae. A public meeting is to be held in the auditorium of Midland’s new municipal building Monday, January 20, to elect a new board. Chamber of Commerce officials and service clubs were requested to urge their members and the public to attend.
  • Apparently, Floridians are not the only ones who can boast of balmy Christmases. Mrs. Robert Carson of 365 Hugel Ave. W., Midland, picked a large bowlful of beautiful pansies and white alyssum in her garden Christmas Day.
  • New Brewer’s Retail store to open January 9th at the corner of Bay St. and Midland Ave.
  • It begins to look more and more certain that Midland’s famed ski jump will sit idle, for this year at least. Earlier, Ross Irwin, an official of Midland Resorts. Ltd., and prominent in various ski activities here for several years, had hoped to have a meet Jan. 10, 11 and 12. Mr. Irwin said yesterday there will be no action on the Jump till the weekend. “Things look pretty grim,” Ross Irwin admitted. “However there is another date open in March and if things take a turn for the better we may still have a meet this winter.” Numerous obstacles, mostly financial, have blocked operation of both the ski jump and the regular ski hill this season.
  • Midland police had a busy day Friday, with four accidents on the books, one of which involved injuries to an 8-year-old boy hit by a car while playing hockey on Manley Street. The latter accident occurred shortly after 4 p.m., when David Anderson, 8, slipped and fell into a car driven by Dr. T. J. Johnston. Son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Anderson, David was one of a group of several lads engaged in a game of street “shinny” at that point.
  • Ten Years Ago This Week – 1948 – Fire damage, estimated at nearly $50,000, was caused to a three-roomed brick school at Perkinsfield. The fire broke out shortly after midnight. * * * Flos Township celebrated a century of municipal government. The first council meeting was held in 1847 at the old Hamilton Inn at Orr Lake. * * * Car license plates for 1948 were blue and white. Midland marker numbers began at 610-N-l, and Penetang 666-N-l. Motorists were again being provided with front and rear plates. During World War II and for two years afterward only rear markers were supplied. * * * Public works employees in Penetang were given a two and one-half cents per hour wage increase at the inaugural meeting of Penetang council. The council also decided to install its own gasoline pumps.  * * * A group of Simcoe County citizens, which included Dr. J. Small, Midland, and Rev. R. L. MacLaren, Penetang, planned to ask county council to establish a juvenile and family court for the county. * * * Indians at Christian Island were to have a registered nurse stationed on the reserve. * * * J. R. Parrott was elected chairman of the newly-formed Midland District High School Board. Vice Chairman was C. M. Vent, mayor of Midland in 1947. Other members of the board were J. Wells Hartman, T. M. McCullough, Rev. L. E. Gosselin, John Skelton, John C. Rumble, Dr. E. A. Grise and James Poppleton.

Huronia Museum – Looking Back 60 Years Ago in North Simcoe – December 16th to 31st, 1957

Click on Photos to EnlargeHundreds of toys are made shiny and new again in Lions Club member Gordon Boyd’s basement workshop. Mr. Boyd has been doing this in his basement for five years with the help of other club members. Cecil Launder, left, is chairman of the Lion’s Health and Welfare Committee which is in charge of this project. 

A few minutes work by Lions Ed Walker and Hugh Blair and this discarded wheelbarrow had a new handle, the wheel straightened and a new paint job. It and hundreds of others will be distributed to the needy at Christmas by the Midland Lions Club. Any leftover will go to the Salvation Army. 

The result of a collision at the corner of Dominion Ave. and Queen Street Monday morning. Sgt. George Wainman who was driving the police cruiser escaped injury, the other vehicle was a local taxi. [I believe this is the lane behind Mr. Grocer looking south, the large building on the right is the Georgian Hotel and the glass house in the upper left is Mac Perrin’s greenhouse?]

White gift Sunday has been an annual event for more than a decade at St. Paul’s United Church, Midland. Money received is to help young students from the church prepare for ministry. Holding the boxes are Bruce Gazely and Kenneth Walker. Placing a gift envelope on the crib is Sonja Beatty. 

There was plenty of work for mail carriers in Midland last week as witnessed by this carriers “case”, laden with Christmas cards and other mail for delivery in Midland. Sorting the mail into the proper routes is Rex Downer. 

This is the biggest week of the year for both the regular and extra staff at Midland’s post office. Post-Master W. F. Bourrie, right, and Jim Wallace get parcels ready for distribution by mail carriers to hundreds of Midland homes. 

Post-Master W. F. Bourrie considered this line up a lull in the crowds that have been jamming the wickets at Midland’s post office all week. 

On the table in front of Don Toole are some of the 21,000 pieces of mail, mostly Christmas cards, that have been coming into the Midland Post Office daily since last Friday. 

Gathered together in the Georgian Hotel Tuesday night were fifteen men who had served as presidents of the Midland Lions Club since its inception 20 years ago this month. Front row, W. A. McArthur, Don Swinson, Edwin Walker, Dr. Art H. Pinchin, Gilmour Nesbitt, John Hodges, W. S. Struthers; back row, Bill Jeffery, Gordon Boyd, Jack Doughty, Alex MacIntosh, Hugh Blair, Lorne Watson, Bill Orr and Walter Woods. 

Charter members of the Midland Lions Club who were there twenty years ago when the club received its charter. Front, Gilmour Nesbitt and Dr. Art Pinchin who was the club’s first president. Back row, Don Swinson, Lloyd Letherby, MPP for Simcoe East now living in Coldwater; Bill A. McArthur and John Hodges. The picture was taken at a get together in the Georgian Hotel Tuesday night. 

Keeping an eye on the reindeer while Santa was off distributing candy elsewhere, “Rusty” was a big hit at the Coldwater Santa Claus parade December 21st. On less important days Rusty can be found not far from his master, Charles Eplett. 

Despite the gloomy weather the Santa Claus parade staged by the Lions Club and merchants in Coldwater Saturday afternoon drew the usual large crowds. Santa is seen distributing candy to the children. 

Coldwater Santa Claus Parade, the Candy Cane Princess is Sally Galbraith, her court is Sandy Galbraith and Beverly Langman. 

Santa had some dandy gifts for the huge “family” of the Shoe Corporation of Canada at Midland’s Roxy Theatre Saturday morning. Employees and their families from Midland Footwear, Midland Industries Ltd. and Fern Shoes, Penetang, completely filled the theatre for the event. Officials of the firm are seen in the background directing traffic for Santa. 

The Chatham Maroons of the Canadian Legion’s senior boy’s league sport brand new uniforms. Sponsored by the Midland Police, money came out of funds collected for sport and safety council work. Chief Robert Cameron, Const. Ross Willett secretary-treasurer of the league, Constable Tom Currie vice president, Sgt. Ernest Bates coach; Middle row, Jim Wright, D. Squires, George Hilliard, Bill Claus, Bob Logan, Dave Stainton; Back row, G. Rourke, Bob Irwin, Bill Atkinson, John Hawke, Doug Dwinnell, Wayne Marchand captain. 

Mrs. John Maxwell and her mother in law Mrs. M. Maxwell discovered this old lodge certificate while cleaning out the attic of the home they had sold on First Ave. Port McNicoll. The certificate had been used for backing in a picture and was dated 1808. The ladies presumed it had been brought from England as the lodge was the “Grand Surrey Lodge, Mother Lodge of the World”. The organization was the Royal Antediluvian Buffaloes. [A later edition of the paper stated that theatre manager Al Perkins had been a member at one time and that a chapter still existed in Niagara Falls.]

 

  • Free Press Herald headline December 18, 1957: Fifteen Freighters to Winter at Bay Ports.  A survey of bay ports yesterday disclosed that a total of 19 ships will winter in Midland and Port McNicoll this year, three more than last season. Included in the list are 15 bulk carriers, with some 5,800,000 bushels of grain in their holds for winter storage. Three CSL ships are at the C S L winter berth, three at Tiffin elevator, Midland, and three at the C P R elevator, Port McNicoll. At the winter berth, the Gleneagles, Prescott and Westmount have about one million bushels for later delivery at the nearby C S L elevator. At Tiffin elevator, the Sir James Dunn, Lemoyne and Hochelaga have 1,600,000 bushels in their holds. At Port McNicoll, the McLagan, Thunder Bay and Coverdale have even more, 1,700,000. Another million bushels lies in the holds of the Barge Portadoc and the bulk carriers Quedoc. Senator of Canada and the Paterson at Midland Simcoe elevator. All are of the Paterson Steamship Line. Two smaller ships, the Algocen and the Algoway have around half-million bushels for the Aberdeen elevator, Midland. Completing the list of ships in bay ports for the winter are the Canadian Pacific vessels Keewatin and Assinaboia at Port McNicoll, and two Canadian government lightships, St. Heliers and C. P. Edwards, in Midland. The C S L tug Bayport is again available for icebreaking duties in the two ports.
  • County Herald headline December 20, 1957: Trio Seeks Ottawa Aid for Harbour Development. A three-man delegation left Midland early Thursday morning for Ottawa where its members will interview Transport Minister George Hees. The delegation, comprised of Midland Mayor Charles Parker, Mayor A. B. Thompson of Penetang, and Percy Crawford, president of Midland Ratepayers Association, will present a brief to the federal cabinet minister. The brief outlines the advantages of Midland harbour as a deepwater port for ocean-going ships, once the seaway is opened, and sets out the facilities available here for building new ships.
  • The Free Press Herald headline December 23, 1957; Merry Christmas from the Management and Staff of Midland Printers Ltd.   Photo of Staff             From Left to Right — 1st Row: Bob Chittick, Charlotte McGrattan; 2nd Row: Wils Harrison, Jim Lennox; 3rd Row: Ab Cripps, Florence Ladouceur, George Garraway, Bill Murray; 4th Row: Charles Goodfellow, Ken Somers; 5th Row: Vern Farrow, Marilyn Rumney, Charles Scott, Stan Brooks, Bill Murphy, Frank VanStone; 6th Row: Clare Holden, Finlay Macnab, Lillian Rutherford, John Silvey, Vivian Cadieux, Barry Conn Hughes; 7th Row: Bill Sharper, Alma Woods, Charles Palmer, Viola Leroux, Kees Hordyk, Florence Morrison, Harry Brown; 8th Row: Serge Jeannotte, Marie Leclair, Phil Adamson, Frances Leclair, Lawrence Todd, Lorne Letherby, Dorothy Evans.

  • As Christmas Day falls on the publication day of the Free Press Herald, publication schedule for the paper has been advanced to Monday, Dec. 23. Only one paper will be published Christmas week, the Friday, Dec. 27 issue of the County Herald having been cancelled.
  • J. M. Castex Monday night admitted that, for once, Huronia Council Knights of Columbus had been able to carry through a project entirely without his knowledge. The occasion was the presentation of a full-colour portrait of the venerable priest, which will be hung in the K of C Hall in Penetang. Practically every member of the group was present when Rev. A. J. Desaulniers and Grand – Knight Lloyd  LaPlume, made the presentation.
  • 25 Years Ago This Week – Twenty-five freighters, tugs, barges, cruise ships and a government light tender were wintering in Midland harbour. Sixteen of the ships were grain freighters and barges. * * * Bush Street residents in Coldwater awoke to find their homes flooded by water from the swollen Coldwater River. The floods were caused when stop-logs in a dam were not removed after several days of heavy rain. *  * * A health report showed that death rate from typhoid fever in 1931 was 90 percent below the death rate for the disease in 1911. Scarlet fever, whooping cough, measles and diphtheria death rates had declined to a point 80 percent below 1911 figures.  * * * Full breasted, milk-fed chickens were being offered in district meat stores at 15 cents per pound, up to five pounds in weight.  * * * Midland council approved a 21-year lease for the Arena Gardens with Arena Gardens Limited. The lease was subject to the approval of the Ontario Railway and Municipal Board. (A 1914 Act replaced by the OMB, which was also replaced this year by the “Building Better Communities and Conserving Watersheds Act, 2017 “) Under its terms, children under 15 years of age were to be admitted to the rink free one afternoon per week.  * *  * For the first time in the season, snow plows had been used to clear the streets of a heavy fall of snow. Following the snowstorm, the temperature dropped to 15 degrees below zero. * * * The government light tender S.S. St. Heliers was assisted into Midland harbour by the tug Strathbogie. The ice in the harbour was so thick the St. Heliers was unable to plow her way through it.
  • Some indication perhaps of the inroads lamprey eels are making on the game and commercial fish populations in Georgian Bay can be gained from an Ontario Department of Lands and Forests survey this year on commercial fish landings. The report for the first nine months of this year showed lake trout landings were down sixty-one percent, to 15,000 pounds, whitefish down sixty-seven percent, to 136,000 pounds, and yellow pickerel down a third to 30,000 pounds. Even more disturbing was the fact that coarse fish such as bullheads, carp, catfish, chub, sunfish, suckers, rock bass and others were on the increase.
  • At their December meeting, Orillia council passed a motion to designate the old post office building on Peter Street, now being renovated for a municipal building, as the “Sir Sam Steele Building.” Sir Sam born at Fair Valley, was one of the founders of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and carved out a notable career in military service for Canada.
  • No gadabouts are Mr. and Mrs. Treffle Coté, who marked their 60th wedding anniversary in Victoria Harbour Dec. 6. Mrs. Coté has lived all her 78 years in Victoria Harbour. Her husband has lived all but two of his 82 years in the same village. And the last 52 years of their married life have been spent in the same home, just across the CNR overhead bridge at the north end of the village. Life has never been too easy for the Cotés. Yet neither had any complaints when a representative visited them last Wednesday. Both expressed a willingness to do it all over again, if such a thing were possible. ” I’d still choose her if I had the chance again” said Mr. Coté, nodding in the direction of his spouse. Treffle Coté was born at Port Severn in 1875, the youngest in a family of four boys and three girls born to the late Mr. and Mrs. Louis (Louis de Gonzagoue) Coté. Treffle is the last surviving member of the family. A lumberjack in his younger days, Coté Sr., moved his family to Victoria Harbour when Treffle was only two years old. There he went to work in the old Powers’ lumber mill and later transferred to the Waldie Company, a name almost synonymous with Victoria Harbour in the first quarter of the century. Treffle went to work for the Waldies after a brief schooling that ended when he was 13 years old. He received 50 cents per day, working in the yard. The “day” started at 6.30 a.m. and wasn’t over until 6 p.m. This went on six days a week. Treffle stayed with the  Waldies until the firm closed its doors for good. Then he took what jobs he could get, from day to day and week to week until he eventually found steady employment at the CPR elevator in Port McNicoll. This too came to an end with the return of younger men following World War 2. By that time Treffle was 69 and entitled to take things a bit easier. Victoria Harbour in the old days was a pretty busy village, “and a good place to live and work,” Mr. Coté  Mrs. Coté was the former Marie Louise Labatt and like her husband, she is the only surviving member of the family. Her only sister died many years ago. Her father, Albert Labatt, also earned his bread and butter in the lumber Mills of Victoria Harbour.  Although they never went to school together, Louise and Treffle were always together as youngsters around the Harbour. They were married by Father Barcello in the Roman Catholic Church there Dec. 6, 1897. Two-sons and six daughters were born to the Cotés, all of them still living. All six of the girls, now married, live in Toronto. The sons are William of Hamilton, and Wilfred, who still resides in the Harbour. Six daughters are Mary (Mrs. Albert Fortier), Celina ( Mrs. Harold Norrise), Maude (Mrs. Otto. Eddy), Florence, (Mrs. Alvin O’Sullivan), Christie (Mrs. Fred Cripps), and Ida (Mrs. Warren Chapman). In addition to their eight children, the Cotés also have 22 grandchildren and five great grandchildren.
  • Midland council has approved applications from Marshall Dorion and Jack M. Holden for taxicab owners’ licences, as recommended by Police Chief Robert Cameron. It was reported that Mr. Dorion would be associated with Martin’s Taxi and Mr. Holden with Hebner’s.
  • With the arrival of the Sir James Dunn and the Thunder Bay this week, the Midland Marine Radio Station will close down for the season. The government ship St. Heliers brought in Hope Island lighthouse keeper Alex Herron this week. The ‘Wireless’ is to reopen April 1. It was supposed to have been moved to Wiarton, according to some reports, but construction there has not yet started.
  • Two young children late Saturday night lost their lives in a fire which seriously gutted the two-storey brick home of their grandparents, located on Fox Street, Penetang. The two, Jeanette, 7, and William, 5, were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Perrault of Penetang. So fierce was the blaze that firemen were unable to enter the building for more than an hour, and then only behind a fog nozzle spray. They found the two bodies huddled in an upstairs bedroom.
  • V. B. Strickland Real Estate and Insurance opened its new office on Midland’s main street over the weekend. The spanking new office is situated in the Ingram Block on the southwest corner of King and Dominion. The block has been undergoing a face lifting since the town office staff moved into the new municipal building last month. First a livery and then a harness shop, the Ingram Block has long been a fixture on Midland’s King Street. It was the location of two banks and a number of offices before the town occupied it many years ago and survived a fire in 1914.
  • Ten Years Ago This Week – Three Midland High School students commenced their training in lens polishing and grinding techniques, in a temporary plant set up by Bausch and Lomb Optical Co. in the basement of Midland YMCA. The firm’s new plant was to be built at Elizabeth and Lindsay Streets. * * * It had been announced by postal authorities that letter carrier mail delivery would be inaugurated in Midland not later than July 1948. Seven men were to be added to the existing post office staff. * * * A North Simcoe district man was fined $10 and costs for operating a vehicle when in an intoxicated condition. The vehicle in the incident was a team of horses and a sleigh. The case was heard in Penetang court.  * * * Tiny and Tay  Agricultural Society in its annual report showed a net profit of $42 on the year’s operations. Total revenue for the year was $4,654.38, and total expenditures $4,612.04. * * * Penetang council was proposing to ask the Ontario Municipal Board for permission to raise $75,000 to be used in the construction of a memorial wing at Penetang General Hospital. The request was to be made early in the new year.  * * * Honey Harbour residents were preparing for their tenth annual dog derby and winter carnival. The events were to be held Feb. 1. * * * Seventy-two persons were killed in highway traffic accidents during November 1947. The number was six fewer than that for the same period in 1946. * * * St. Paul’s United Church, Midland, was filled to capacity for the fifteenth annual presentation of its Christmas pageant.

With this local winter scene, the staff and volunteers of the Huronia Museum’s collections department wish you  a safe and happy holiday and all the best in 2018!

 

Huronia Museum – Looking Back 60 Years Ago in North Simcoe – December 7th to 15th, 1957

Click on Photos to EnlargeOld’ King Cole was the theme of this float, somewhat laboriously assembled by the “dads” on the Free Press Herald staff. The fiddlers at left are Mary Murphy, Cathy Harrison and Valerie Somers. At right Elizabeth Ann Holden, as Old’ King Cole, and her brother Wayne Holden, the court jester. 

Saturday was hardly a fit day for beauty of any kind to be out of doors aboard a slow-moving float. These children braved the elements to be in the Santa Claus parade aboard the Simcoe Elevator’s “Sleeping Beauty Float”. Joan MacDonald was Sleeping Beauty with Billy Snider as Prince Charming. In the fairy group are Anita MacDonald, Barbara English, Bobbi Joy Carson and Brenda MacDonald. 

Children aboard the Midland Planing Mills Queen of Hearts float got some protection from the wet snow that blanketed the parade this year when the sponsor erected a plastic covered roof. Queen Bonnie Bray with Ronnie Henderson on the left as the Knave and Paul Henderson the King. 

“Carollers from all nations” was the theme of this float entered in the Santa Claus Parade last Saturday by the Stanway School of Dancing. All members of the school, the dancers wore symbolic costumes representing ten different countries. 

Despite the driving wet snow hundreds of Midland children lined up to greet Santa Claus in front of the new municipal building following Saturday’s big parade. Morie Witcher and Haig Abbott are seen helping Santa distribute candy canes. 

This photo is not related to the parade pictures above but they do answer a question we have had about this 1955 photo. The names of the three watching through the fence are unknown as the photo was never used in the newspaper but the location was also a mystery. Knowing that this was the fence around the cenotaph and that they were standing on the outside, by the angle of the fence posts, there is no current background that could identify where they were standing. The mystery was solved when we saw the parade photos. The same fencing extended in front of the curling rink as well and that is where they are standing. Note the beautiful trees in front of the curling rink in the photos above. 

Perkins Trophy for the best play in the inter-house drama festival at MPDHS Friday went to House Theta Kappa for “The Monkeys Paw”. Mr. & Mrs. Al Perkins present their trophy to director Chris Thomson, the first recipient. 

Best actress in the inter-house drama festival at MPDHS last Friday was Barbara Johnstone, receiving her trophy from the donor, Mrs. Eileen Peters. Miss Johnstone starred in House Theta Kappa’s presentation of “The Monkey’s Paw”. 

Tie for best actor was the decision of the adjudicator J. C. Peters of Orillia, at the MPDHS drama festival last Friday. Winners were Tom Marr, of Sigma Chi and John Pritchard of Theta Kappa. Miss H. Moderwell presents her trophy. 

 

Work has already begun on the million dollar addition to the Pillsbury Canada Ltd. plant on Midland’s waterfront. The tall piece of machinery is driving piles for the new building. The company’s flour mill can be seen to the right rear. 

New IOOF, Odd Fellows Hall on Dominion Ave., next door to Jefferys’ Hardware,  has progressed to the steel stage. Along with the new Pillsbury plant, the addition to the Ontario Hospital in Penetang and a number of new homes being built in the Ingram Subdivision, the new hall will provide many jobs for construction workers. [The IOOF hall has recently been sold and the Midland chapter closed.]

 

Four girls and one boy were presented with scholarships by Russell Coughlin, president, on behalf of the Port McNicoll Legion, in a ceremony at Port’s municipal office last Friday. Nancy Bell, Sharon Armstrong, Helen Rudy, Mr. Coughlin, Molly Malone and Kirk Mitchell. 

 Last Friday night saw a number of Port McNicoll students presented with scholarships by both the village school board and by the Port McNicoll branch of the Legion. President of the School Board, R. B. Duncan made the presentation to the four girls pictured. Molly Malone, Helen Rudy, Helen Kovalak and Mary Loney. 

 

Toppled transport load of bagged plastic pellets at the corner of Fifth and Vinden Monday afternoon. The 30-foot trailer owned by Haslam Transport went into a skid when the brakes locked. The driver, George Golden of Hamilton was uninjured. No charges have been laid. 

  • The headline from the Midland Free Press December 11, 1957; Vets Study Mystery Bug Infecting Herds in Simcoe County P. A. Scott, health unit director, told this newspaper yesterday many milk producers’ herds were harbouring an infection which caused lower grades on laboratory examination, but in most cases was not visible on a physical examination of either the milk or the cows. The condition in the herds did not seem to affect the pasteurized milk, which in recent inspections was “very good”, the director said. The infection has not yet been definitely identified but appears to be a form of mastitis, an infection of the cow’s udder. Describing it as expensive and difficult to treat, Dr. Scott said: “it is a continuing economic problem for the farmer”. Providing the milk is pasteurized, there is little danger, he intimated and labelled as “farfetched” the possibility of human contagion.
  • The headline from the County Herald December 13, 1957; Makes Meet Application- Ski Jump May Operate in 58  Steps were taken in Midland yesterday to put a $20,000 “white elephant” back on its feet—the white elephant being the now idle ski jump and assets at Midland Ski Resorts Ltd. Ross Irwin of Midland, closely associated with the jump and for years an active member of Midland Ski Club, told this newspaper today he had made an application to hold an invitation ski jumping meet on the property on the weekend of January 11 and 12.
  • Two Midland girls, Judith Rankin of 372 Johnston Street, and Sharon Benson were among the more than 200 carriers of a Toronto evening newspaper who won an all-expense trip to Chicago over the weekend. The party left Toronto Friday night and arrived home Monday. The girls arrived in Midland Monday afternoon.
  • New lights and electric outlets were installed on the Knox Presbyterian Church auditorium’s newly constructed stage in time for the Christmas program of the kindergarten and nursery classes. The tiny tots were the first to perform on the rebuilt stage. The kindergarten group has 37 children registered who are under the guidance of Mrs. Charles McElroy and Mrs. William Cameron. For the concert, Miss Margaret Marks was the piano accompanist. Nursery children are under Mrs. Herb Carpenter, assisted by Miss Judy McIntyre. In the first group of songs, the children sang included ‘Tick-tock’ and ‘Very Softly I Will Walk’. Three little girls, Mary Jane Walton, Betty Hacker and Susan Rodgers sang a trio and Anne Cleaver’s solo was about ‘My Pony’. Representing the boys, Peter Donaldson and Ian Sheriff, gave recitations, and David Cooney sang ‘Deep and Wide’. Sharon Biggar and Donna Gallivan sang a duet, and Barbara Hudson a solo.
  • Ontario Department of Lands and Forests has revealed that, of an estimated herd of 870, 100 deer were “harvested” during the four-day open deer season in Orillia Township and Crown lands in Matchedash Township.
  • If remarks made at the annual nomination meeting Wednesday, Dec. 4, are any criterion, Port McNicoll residents so far are well satisfied with the scrapping of the former continuation school in favour of sending the pupils to Midland-Penetang District High School. Almost every member of the council and of the school board said they were pleased with the results, as did one member of the small audience. Not one complaint was voiced.
  • Ten Years Ago This Week –  Candidates seeking public office in Midland went on record as favouring the establishment of a town planning commission, and a local bus system. Voters were being asked to accept or reject a ten-year franchise with Penetang-Midland Coach Lines. * * * Small boat builders in the North Simcoe district welcomed a federal government announcement that a 25 percent excise tax would apply only to motors for small watercraft. * * * Midland Public Utilities Commission was seeking council’s approval to enter into an agreement with Tay Township to supply water to the veterans’ housing development on Yonge Street, W. * * * Attorney General Leslie Blackwell had approved the establishment of a magistrate’s court at Coldwater.” It was expected the court would not be instituted until early in the new year. * * *  Area doctors reported that a measles epidemic, which had reached fairly high proportions in North Simcoe district, was on the wane. About 30 children in Port McNicoll and vicinity were still suffering from the disease. * * * A proposal to establish a small library at Victoria Harbour under the county library scheme was discussed with Victoria Harbour council. Under the plan, about 330 books yearly were to be provided to the village.  * * * Waubaushene Chamber of Commerce was making plans to build a fire hall on Pine Street in the village. A building owned by C. H. Sheppard had been dismantled and removed to build the hall.
  • To help meet the heavy demands placed upon it at this season of the year, Midland’s Salvation Army Corps will conduct a house-to-house canvass to boost its Christmas cheer fund. Envoy J. Thompson said this week. Envoy Thompson said that this year Midland Citizens’ Band will accompany the canvassers and will play carols. The band will be under the direction of bandmaster Al Hume.
  • ELMVALE — On Wednesday at noon, a general store of long standing was closed. Mrs. Lawson Robinson, who carried on the business since the death of her husband, found the store too much of a responsibility, she said. However, she is remaining as a citizen of the village at her residence on Peter Street. —-  At midnight or somewhat later the citizens who live near and around Lawson Avenue were awakened by shots and by merrymakers who gathered to charivari Mr. and Mrs. Webster, newlyweds, who invited their friends in for lunch and a social hour.
  • For the first time in some years, Penetang has two vacant stores in its business section. One-half of the store formerly occupied by Economy Stores still remain vacant following removal of that concern to Midland. The grocery store operated by J. D. McNamara for many years on Robert St. has been vacant for the past couple of months, with no sign of a new tenant.
  •  Dear Editor: The propeller-driven wooden passenger steamer “John Lee Senior,” official No. 100,122, was built at Wallaceburg in 1893 for Mr. John Lee Sr. The length was 86 feet, breadth 21 feet, depth 7.2 feet and weight 88 gross tons. For a number of years, she was operated between Penetang and Parry Sound under the command of Capt. “Punch” Dube, father of the late Salem Dube of Penetang. She was totally destroyed by fire on August 8, 1913, at Victoria Harbour. —W.R. WILLIAMS