Terrace Bay Public Library Digital Collections

Terrace Bay News, 20 Aug 1964, p. 10

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NOTICE RE NEW BY-LAWS Residents of Schreiber are hereby notified that BY=- LAW No.445, whichp»rohibits the throwing, placing or depositing of Dirt, Filth, Glass, Hand-= Bills, Paper or other Rubbish or Refuse, etc., on any High- i way, Street, Lane or Bridge within the Township AND By-Law No.446 which prescribes the times during which Fire may be set in the open air and the precautions to be observed by persons setting out Fire in the Municipality, have been passed Aug- ust 12th., 1964 and are now in FORCE. The above By-Laws may be seen during office hours in ithe Municipal Office. R. C..Skinner, Clerk-Treasurer . TOWNSHIP NAME ATTRACTS INTEREST Interest. engendered by bearing the same name as our town has attracted several strangers into exploring the origin of 'our' Schreiber. Gilbert Schreiber of Wisconsin has been here and Mrs. Samuel Hublau and her son Daniel of Toronto. Mrs. Hublau is the former Georgette Schreiber of Nancy, France and she was interested in discovering if any relationship existed between her and Sir Collingwood Schreiber, for whom we are named. It would seem that Mrs. Hublau and Sir Collingwood may have had grandfathers who were one of nine bro- thers living in Leipsieg, Germany who left home to Eseek their fortunes in other countries. It is known that one went to France, one to England and another to South America but the rest have not been traced. Mrs. Hublau's father was Chasles Emile Schreiber . A local stamp collector, Mrs. Ernest Willoughby, for years carried on a curious exchange with Charles Schreiber of Willoughby, Ohio--the postmarks adding much to the curio value. Mrs. Lester McCuaig corresponds with a Heinz Schreiber of Hamburg, Germany, the letters starting when Mr. Schreiber found his name used for our town while studying a map of Canada. | RAPID EXPANSION AT LAKEHEAD COLLEGE The 1964-65 yniversity-year will be one of expan- sion at Lakehead College. Enrolment is expected to increase by 40 to 50 percent over 1963-64, to a total of 400 to 450 students. Full-time faculty will | increase from 22 to 30, (Continued page 8) GAME BIRD SEASONS ANNOUNCED The open season for game birds throughout Ontario was recently announced by the Minister of Lands and Forests. The following seasons and limits are appli- cable to the Geraldton District for 1964. Ruffed and Spruce Grouse September 15th to December 15th, both dates inclu- sive. Limits:- Five (5) birds per day in the aggregate Fifteen (15) in the aggregate in possession at any one time. _ Sharp-tailed Grouse September 15th, 1964, to March 31st, 1965, in that part of the District within the Territorial Dis- trict of Cochrane and that part of the Territorial District of Kenora lying north of the 11th baseline. Sharp-tailed grouse may be hunted in the remainder of the District from September 15 th to December I5. Limit:- Five (5) per day. Fifteen (15) in possession at any one time. A PLACE FOR THINKING SMALL > Tue NationaL CENTENNIAL Commission has a sales- man on the road these days, selling the idea of centennial celebrations to Canadian communities. His name is John Fisher and his title is Commissioner. He told an audience the other day that he hoped cen- tennial committees in that district would think big and that the celebrations would be big and colorful. Mr. Fisher was speaking in the centre of a thickly-populated area. Presumably he would change his sales talk for a small community. It would be recalled by those who followed in the press the cross-country progress of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939 that some of the most heart-warming and memorable pictures were those taken at the wayside stops, not on the steps of city halls. And some of the most memorable centennial celebra- tions. may very well' be those in Canada's towns and villages. Most memorable, at least, to those who participate. There's a place for thinking small. LOCAL STUDENTS PASS GRADE XIII SUBJECTS The following subjects have been successfully writ- 'ten by Grade XIII students :- Cheryl Everitt, Diane Petersen and William Scott - ALL subjects. Brian Birch - English Comp; Peter Christie - English Comp., Algebra, Geometry and | Trig; Bruce Costall - Algebra, Geometry, Trigono- metry, Physics and Chemistry; Leonard Godin - Eng. Composition, Algebra, Geometry and Trig; Marlene Jarva - Algebra; Shawn Kirkpatrick - Geometry; Lawrence Lalonde - Algebra, Geometry, Trig; and James LeSauvage - French Authors, French Comp; Louise McGooey = English Comp; English Lit., Alg., Geometry & Trig; Chemistry, Latin Authors and Latin Comp. (Continued Page 2)

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