HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1971-11-25, Page 18Queens' Hotel
SEAFORTH
THURSDAY — WHITE. ASH
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ...
"The One-Eyed Jack"
— Also Saturday Matinee 3-5 p.m. —
•
(lIazd and Alvin : Thanks for stopping by)
NEXT WEEK :— " KATY and
In the Huron Lounge
0,Tfic HURON EXPOSITOR.. SRAPORTH, ONT. NOV. 25, 1971
II BINGO
Logion Hall, Seaforth
FRIDAY, NOV. 26
8:15 p.m.
15 Regular Games for $10
THREE $25 GAMES
$75:00 Jackpot To Go
TWO DOOR PRIZES
ADMISSION $1.00
Extra Cards 25c or 7 for $1.00 '
(CHILDREN UNDER 16 NOT
PERMITTED)
—Proceeds for Welfare Work—
Royal Canadian Legion
Auspices Seaforth Branch 156
SOCIAL
DANCE
Music by
TONY NOTHER
At Seaforth Arena
FRI., NOV., 26th
9,12 — 1 25 per person
Refreshments
Euchre
Winners
Winners at a recent Happy
Citizens Euchre were: Ladies'
high, Mrs. Elizabeth Storey; lad-
les' lone, Mrs. Belle Moore;
ladies' low, Mrs. Liz Brown;
Men's high, Secorsi McBrien;
Men's lone, John Tremeer; Men's
low, Lorne Dennis.
RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Horton
(nee Jean Turner)
SATURDAY, DEC. 4th
Zurich Community
Centre
MUSIC BY
BLUEWATER
PLAYBOYS
Lunch Provided
Everyone Welcome
111WP"WilIWP'01111111.".1111118111."‘11111110.
RECEPTION
for
Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Nolan
(nee Mary Ellen Coulter)
FRI., NOV. 26th
Brodhagen Community
Centre
MUSIC BY
COUNTRY CAVALIERS
Ladles please bring lunch
' Everyone Welcome
CA NDELITE
/ RESTAURANT and TAVERN
Friday and Saturday
"THE JUGGERNAUT"
CANDELITE
PHONE 524-7711
RESTAURANT and TAVERN •
BAYFIELD ROAD 1N GODERICH
-•••••••- W
•••••••••••••••••••4,1114
WELCOME JO
THE HURON HOTEL.
Dublin, Ontario
For an evening of dining pleasure and
/relaxation.
ENTERTAINMENT EVERY SAT. NIGHT
NOV. 27 — Nelson Howe & Teresa Feeney
DEC. 4 Reids and The Rythm Boys
Lunch ,Served
RESERVATIONS FOR BANQUETS'
THE SEAFORTH
SNOW1VIOBILING CLUB
PRESENTS
SAFETY MEETING *1
with the OPP. Safety Specialist showing slides •
and discussing snowmobiling' problems..
Chief Gordon }Miley. and a delegate. from Ontario Fed-
eration of Snowmobile Clubs will be present to assist
in the program. •
Wednesday, December ist 1971
at 8:00 p.m.
Seaforth Community Centre
Open to everyone interested in snbwmobiling
FREE ADMISSION
-.441ilam.._ IOW
Construction of a sewer lagoon to provide sewage disposal capacity for Seaforth began
last week. Already large• earth movers have moved hundreds of yards of earth as a pre-
liminary to creating the lagoons in Tuckersmith, west of Seaforth. C. A. McDowell Ltd.,
Centralia, are general contractors for the project which involves construction of,the lagoon
and pumping station as well as a force main leading from the pumping station in Seaforth to
the lagoon. Ontario Water Resources Commission, is responsible for the construction and ,
operation of the project which has been in the planning stage for more than six years.
(Staff photo)
CELEBRATING THE BIRTH OF CHRIST IN SONG is a centuries-old tradition, as shown
in the Christmas hymn above. The Latin hymn appears on a leaf from an illuminated
Antiphonary of 15th-century Italy, now in the Library of The Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York City (Gift of Louis L. Lorillard, 1896). More familiar today is'"Joy to the
World," above right, by the English hymnist Isaac Watts, set to music by, Handel. Song
sheet 'by. Hallmark.
'
Songs of Se ason Carrying
ormers Are
rone To
Deafness
Abend 55 representatives
from eight counties which com-
prise Zone 5 of the Farm Safety
Council of Ontario learned
Wednesday at the annual meeting
of the Huron Federation of Agri-
culture that -farmers suffer a
greater degree of deafness than
workers in any other industry.
'A 'film' on sound shown by
Hal Wright of Guelph, secretary-
mknager of the council,,revealed
the effects of machinery noise
on the ear and' of how manufac-
turers, in an attdmpttoeleminate
the noise, are installing sound-
proof cabs on machinery.
"In the meantime," explained
'Mr. Wright', A earmuffs are the
answer." '
'In' the all-day session , Mrs.
Gladys Helin .of Timmins, chair-
man of the provincial council,
'exchanged ideas on • the causes
of accidents and how they can
be prevented.
laze
Threatens
wouris.ww414•44444,44.44.044.4
Variety Concert
Sponsored by the building fund
of
BRUCEFIELD
TNITED CHURCH
at .
Huron Centennial
School-
FRIDAY NOV* - 26
TURKEY
BINGO
Seaforth Legion Hall
FIFTEEN GAMES
December 7th
8:30 pm.-
' Sponsored by the Seaforth
Legion Ladies' Auxiliary
THIS WEEK
AT THE
ROYAL HOTEL
MITCHELL
•
TRURSDAY
Lou and Pearl
Friday and Saturday
The
•
Hunimingbirds
In the Crown Room
Dining room open on Sundays •
from 12 noon - 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.
to 8 p.m. in the evening.'
1111111111111111111111110111111111
S SIMS
= • (Country RaMblers)
$3.00 per couple
Tickets 'Available from Members ,
SEAFORTH OPTIMIST
FALL ROUND-UP DANCE
(Seaforth Legion Hall S
*I-
SATURDAY, Nov. 27t1f 1971 S
S
S
S
S
DANCING 9-?
4,
•
fP*.Wk\Aia-Ai'\VP42A®Aiicw\uAv/itoab--
ST. JAMES' CWL
CHRISTMAS BAZAAR and TEA,'
ST. JAMES' SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27th
2 to 4 p.m.
-- DRAW for CASH PRIZES --
.Christmas Cake Draw; Home baking and
candy, penny *sale, mystery prize sewing
and gift
-
boutique.
MIA.A4/
Auspices of Dublin' PTA
TURKEY BINGO
12 Games for Turkeys •
3 Specials '
114
4
SEAFORTH TEEN TWENTY
PRESENTS.
"Mornington Drive"
SATURDAY, NOV. 27th
Teen Twenty Christmas Banquet Tickets
December 18, available at door this week.
COUPLE — $5.00 SINGLE — $2.50
rt..25 rd. 26 so. 27
Song Ol Norway
so, 28 m..29 n..20
11(411t
REYNOLDS
WINIIRS
"WHAT'S THE
ouigaz
DOG I
wit
W. C. WILDS 1111
My Little
Chickadee
it
Seaforth Community Centre
Admission: $1.50 per person
Message
CorresPeindent
Mrs. flugh• Berry
Brucefield firemen were
called to a fire at the home 'of
Mr. Geo Clifton. Fortunately
little dainage resul)jecrwhen
fire was.. quickly extinguished in
a shed.
Mrs.. 'J. W. McBeatli visited
with her son and family at %Ind-
sOr over the, week end.
The nominating committee of
Brucefield U.C.W. met at the
home of Mrs, Lorne Wilson on
Monday.
Mr. Jas. Broadfoot visited
over the week end with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Broad-
foot. . . .
Mrs. H. Berry visited over
the week end with Mr. and Mrs.
DeWayne Elliott, Windsor.
Tuckersmith U.C.W. Unit 1
will hold their annual pot luck
supper at the home of Mrs.Jno..
Broadfoot on Dec. 3rd.
As families and•friends
gather to sing carols, as car-
olers roam from home to
home, as happy notes ring
out in church services and
other gatherings, the familiar
and favorite, songs of the sea-
son celebrate the pure joy of
Christmas.
Busy about hiS holiday
tasks, one, singer alone might
—carol joyfully," just for the
gladness of it. The Christmas
treasures of heart and spirit
are his in fullest measure,
for carols belong to people
everywhere, and most espe-
cially to every individual.
Carols are simple and sin-
cere, merry- and joyful, us-
ually religious and sometimes
secular. Some carols are .an-
cient indeed and some are of
today. But whatever a carol's
age or origin, one thing is
always true.
All carols are modern.
Their spirit is that of the
first of all Christmas songs,
"Glory to God in the highest,
and on earth peace, good will
toward men," sung by an
angelic chorus.
Their message, like the age-
old 'Christmas story, is as
fresh and new as tomorrow,
' Hymns Were Latin
By its very character, a
carol brings "Glad tidings of
great joy' or, to put it more
simply, "Good news. The
French carols known as "No-
els" express this with the
use of the word "Noel" or
'"Nowell' as a refrain—
and "Nowell" means "news."
Scholar's Latin was thelan-
guage of the (list Christmas
hymns, the forerunners .df
, present-day carolS.
Typical of those ancient
hymns is a leaf from an il-
luminated manuscript, now
in the Library of The Metro-
politan Museum of Art, New
York Cit'.
: The leaf features a dramat-
ic initialietter, illustrating the
Nativity scene and "illumi-
nated" by touches of gold.
It's the work of an unknown
15th-century Italian artist.
The hymn celebrates the
birth of Christ. Son of God
and Saviour of Man. Its source
is an Antiphonary, or collec-
tion of antiphons — songs to
be sung in response or in
alternate parts.
Though the Latin words
may took complicated to an
nonscholarly eye, the music
is simplicity itself—notes for
a,basic melody.
Simple as it is, this 'hymn
comes from an era which saw
the beginning of ;realer com-
plexity in music. Toward the
end of the 15th century,
church music became not on-
ly a' religious inspiration buf
a moving- force in musical
development.
Rhythms became more
complex, and counterpoint
began to evolve.
Changes Look place in the.
language of Christmas song,
tbo, for Latin was tie longer
a language understood by all.
The solutioh? "Macaronic"
carols, which may suggest -
something to eat —but "mac-
aroni" adds a "c". to be-
come "macaronic" and gain
a new meaning — "in two
languages."
Macaronic carols combined
Latin with a language that the
catntrion people understood.
Dancing with Joy
A Christmas carol might
'also be a Christmas dance.
Origin of the word "carol"
Dublin Parish Hall
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3rd
act 8:30 p.m..
Admission $1.00 .
\1-2120M
itself seems to trace back to
the French word, "caroler"
meaning to dance, and carols
of yesteryear may have been •
sung by carolers dancing in
a circle.
Full of rejoicing, the carols
we sing today literally dance
with holiday merriment,
Christians,
Celebrate
For For those who celebrate
Christmas as a holy day, the•
holiday is greeted with re-
joicing, with prayer and
thanksgiving, in church knd
private devotions.
The 'word "greeting" has
a special significance here,
for herald angels singing to
shepherds in the fields and
a star shining in the heavens
truly brought greetings—ac-
cording to the Revised Stan-
dard Version of the Bible,
"good news of great joy
which will come to all
people."
•
to
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