HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1971-10-21, Page 102A Clinton News-Record, Thursday, October 21, 1971
BURUMA — DUPEE
At a dinner held last evening in the Ontario Street United Church facilities at Clinton Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Blanchard of RR 4, Walton, were presented with a citation naming them the Foster
Parents of the Year for Huron County. Making the presentation on behalf of the Huron County
Children's Aid Society is C.A.S. director locally Bruce Heath of Goderich. — Staff photo
p.m.
BAYFIELD BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor: REV. L. V. BIGELOW
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
Sunday School: 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship: 11:00 a.m.
Evening Gospel Service — 7:30
ST. PAUL'S ANGLICAN CHURCH
Clinton
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
TRINITY 20
10:00 a.m. — Parish Communion.
CALVARY PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
166 Victoria Street
Pastor: Donald Forrest
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
Sunday School: 9:45 a.m.
Morning Worship: 11:00 a.m.
Evangelistic Service: 7:00 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Huron Street, Clinton
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
Morning Worship: 10 a.m.
11:00 a.m. — Sunday School.
Pastor: Rev, W. H. McWhinnie
ALL WELCOME
\ ,•• • • \ •
Business and Professional
Directory
•\ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \
OPTOMETRY
J. E. LONGSTAFF
OPTOMETRIST
Mondays and Wednesdays
20 ISAAC STREET
For Appointment Phone
482-7010 *
SEAFORTH OFFICE 527-1240
Thursday Evenings
by appointment
R. W. BELL
OPTOMETRIST
The Square, GODER ICH
524-7661
INSURANCE
K. W. COLOyHOUN
INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE
Phones: Office 482.9747
Ras. 482-7804
HAL HARTLEY
Phone 482.6693
LAWSON AND WISE
INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENTS
Clinton
Office: 4824644
J. T. Moe, Res.: 482-7286
'ALUMINUM PRODUCTS
For Air-Mater Aluminum
Doors and Windom
and
AWNINGS and •RAILINGS
JERVIS SALES
R. L. Jervis Ile Albert Sti.
Clinton — 462-6300
DIESEL
'Pumps and Injectors Repaired
Filr All Popular Makes
Huron Fuel Injection
Equipment
fiayfield Rd., Clinton-482-7971
CHURCH
SERVICES
SERVICES ON DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
9:45 a.m. — Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship.
REV. J. C. BRITTON
ONTARIO STREET UNITED CHURCH
FRIENDLY CHURCH"
Wesley-Willis -- Holmesville United Churches
REV. A. J. MOWATT, C.D., B.A., B.D., 0.0., Minister
MR. LORNE DOTTERER, Organist and Choir Director
WESLEY-WILLIS
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
10:45 a.m. — Hymn Sing.
11:00 a.m. — Morning Worship and Sunday School.
Sermon Topic: "THE CHURCH BUILT ON A ROCK"
7:30 p.m. — Joint Thankoffering Service. Illustrated
talk on Nicaragua and Costa Rica by Miss Lucille
Bond. HOLMESVILLE
9:45 a.m. — Morning Worship and Sunday School.
CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH, Clinton
263 Princess Avenue
Pastor: Alvin Beukema, B.A., S.D.
Services: 11:00 a.m., and 3:00 p.m.
(On 2nd and 4th Sunday, 9:30 a.m.
Dutch Service at 11:00 a.m.)
The Church of the Back to God Hour
every Sunday 4:30 p.m., CHLO
— Everyone Welcome —
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
Mr. Charles Merrill, Organist
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24th
REV. T. C. MULHOLLAND, Minister
9:30 a.m. — Morning Worship and Sunday School.
The United Church Women
of North Street United Church,
Goderich, entertained the
residents of the nursing homes
and shut-ins of Goderich, as well
as the members of their church
who are residents of Huronview
on Wednesday afternoon.
The group of about 100
people were taken for a drive
through the country to view the
Autumn scenery, then returned
to the church for supper. The
program included musical
numbers by the McMillan
family, a sing song, and slide
pictures. The outing was greatly
appreciated by the residents and
the United Church women of
North Street are to be highly
commended for the project,
A communion service was
held in the chapel on Thursday
morning. Mrs. Campbell soloist,
Mrs. Brown organist and Mr.
Campbell assisted Reverend
Wittick of Myth United Church.
Mrs. Hopper of London
arranged the program for
Thursday Family Night.
Eighteen young people, who are
students of Mrs. Hoppers, aged 6
to 14, thrilled the residents with
several types of dancing. There
New extension
course offers
preventive
medicine
A new home-study course in
dairy animal health is now
available from the University of
Guelph, It is designed
specifically for dairy farmers,
A.I. technicians, or others
employed in allied industries.
Three veterinarians from the
Ontario Veterinary College have
developed a course that allows
the farmer to practice a better
preventive medicine program for
his herd, in co-operation with his
veterinarian. The symptoms and
causes of diseases affecting dairy
animals from birth to death are
outlined in detail. Management
and medicinal correctional
procedures are included, but the
emphasis is placed on practicing
preventive medicine.
The 'course will include eight
assignments, which will be
corrected and returned with
comments to the students. It
costs $3C, including texts. For
further information 'contact:
Office of Continuing Education,
University of Guelph, Guelph.
modernism is condemned by no
less a person than the
vice-president of the land of
Enotsevarg.
They have found that, besides
bringing in modernistic ideas to
the healing arts, such attendance
at professional schools lowers
one's confidence. Those who
have not wasted time in school
are able to promise cures for
every kind of ailment from
general disruption to specific
inabilities.
Voluntary participation in
weekly classes, held on the first
day of the week and called
"Monday School Classes", is
sometimes helpful if no new
thinking is provoked. It is not
important that the subject
matter deal with healing or
professional standards for
doctors. It just makes the people
think that the doctor is seriously
studying his art.
Attendance at lectures on the
healing profession is also a way
to make people think the
physician is serious, but if
physicians do not like what the
lecturer says, they are
considered wise to leave and go
to a lecturer who says what they
want to hear. However, since
most Enotsevarg professionals
are found golfing, fishing,
sleeping or reading the funnies,
attendance at lectures is not
required for full professional
standing.
Therapy varies from kicking
sick people out of hospitals to
declaring illness illegal.
Enotsevarg spelled backwards
is c-h-u-r-c-h.
book and take a vow that you
believe what's in it — whether
you ever read it or not. One
highly recommended procedure
is to read it every night before
you go to bed, and to take
sentences out of it and carry
them around to quote from time
to time.
Attendance at formal
academic institutions is
discouraged by the very patients
who are to be treated by the
doctors. They believe that the
modern medicine is really a
work of subversion. Such
hat's new at HuTonview?
WINNEMOSERECOREMNA
was Highland Reels by Jill
Hanna, Jessie Nicol and Judy
Thompson; square dances by
John Thomson, Kim Mustard,
Ron Bilyea, Cathy Macfic, Allan
McConnell, Barbara Bilyea, Joe
McKinnon and Jackie St. Marie;
step dancing by Shelley Hopper,
Mich aele Robinson, Terrie,
Linda and Lisa Morrison, Susan
Spence, Kelly St. Marie and Teri
Smale.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry St. Marie
accompanied the dancers and
also played several numbers on
violin and piano. There were also
vocal solos by Mary Powell. The
Family Night program will be
held on Monday, Oct. 25 next
week instead of Thursday
evening when the residents are
looking forward to a program by
the Huronia Male Chorus.
Clinton Memorial Shop
T. PRYDE and SON
CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH
LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE
CLARENCE DENOMME
DAYS NIGHTS
482-9505 482-9004
HURON
MEN'S
CHAPEL
Auburn
HEAR
JOE KYLE
TELL HIS AMAZING STORY
FROM CRIME TO CHRIST
AND THE KYLE FAMILY
SING
Sunday, October 24
AT
WESLEY MEMORIAL CHURCH
GODERICH — 11 A.M,
HURON MEN'S CHAPEL
AUBURN — 8 P.M.
ALL WELCOME
Evil Prevails When Good Men 'Do Nothing
Witegrort
Our current serious shortage
of doctors may be solved by the
land of Enotsevarg.
Every civilized and
developing nation on earth
declare that the number of
physicians and surgeons is
inadequate. However, there is
real hope in the solution which
was developed by Enotsevarg's
governing powers.
The citizens of Enotsevarg
simply have made it easier to be
a doctor. They have more than
enough. All you have to do to be
a doctor, surgeon, or physician
in that land is to buy a medical
$15,"r7rim"' 11-
labriditglOo
4:g0iFIN
If you're looking beyond today,
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bonds, They're the go-ahead way
to save for the future — without
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where you work, bank or invest;
on instalments through the
Payroll Savings Plan where you
work; or on instalments through
the Monthly Savings Plan where
you bank or invest.
Simple to Cash: Canada Savings
Bonds are cold, hard cash —
instantly. They can be redeemed
any time at their full face value
plus earned interest.
Good to Keep: Canada Savings
Bonds are Safe. They're backed
by all the resources of
Canada and they pay .1
GO AH •
BUY CANADA
SAVING'S BONDS
Clinton Christian Reformed
Church was decorated with deep
pink asters on Sept. 11 when
pastor Alvin Beukema united in
marriage Shirley Joyce Dupee,•
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Dupee, Clinton to John Buruma,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius
Buruma, RR 2 Clinton.
Jacob Roorda played the
wedding music.
The bride was escorted down
the aisle and given in marriage
by her father. She wore a
floor-length, white polyester
gown trimmed with white lace
with a floor-length train. In her
hair she wore a pearl crown with
veil. She wore a wedding band of
her great grandmother, Mrs.
Emily Pickett, which was 91
years old. She carried yellow and
white shasta mums centred with
an orchid.
Maid of honour, Miss Greta
Burns, Clinton, wore a dress of
yellow peau de sole over. satin.
In her hair were yellow bows.
She carried yellow and white
shasta mums.
The bridesmaid, Miss Frances
Buruma, sister of the groom,
wore a lilac peau de sole over
satin, floorlength gown and
carried a bouquet of white and
yellow shasta mums and lilac
bows in her hair.
Junior bridesmaid was Sharon
Dupee, sister of the bride, who
wore a yellow, polyster,
floor-length gown trimmed with
lace and carried yellow and
white shasta mums. She wore
yellow bows in her hair.
Flower-girl was Miss Barbara
Dupee, niece of the bride. She
wore a lilac, polyester,
floor-length gown with white
lace and carried a basket of
white and yellow shasta daisies
with lilac bows in her hair.
Ring bearer was Jeffery
Dupee, brother of the bride.
Frank Buruma was his brother's
best man. Larry Dupee,
Seaforth, Wayne Dupee, Clinton
and Jerry Buruma, London were
ushers.
Mrs. Dupee chose a
street-length dress of moss-green
crimplene for her daughter's
wedding with a corsage of white
and yellow shasta mums and
accessories of white.
Mrs. Buruma wore a purple,
crepe, street-length dress with
white accessories and a corsage
of yellow and white shasta
mums. The wedding supper was
held at the Hotel Clinton.
The bride and groom
honeymooned in Niagara Falls.
For the trip the bride chose a
brown and cream street-length
dress and a corsage of pink and
yellow carnations.
good interest year after year.
New Canada Savings Bondsyield
an average of 719% a year when
held to maturity. They're available
in amounts from $50 up to a limit
of $50,000.
Each $100 Bond begins with
$5.75 interest for the first year,
pays $6.75 interest for the second
year, pays $7.50 interest for each
of the next five years, and then
pays $7,75 interest for each of
the last two years.
On top of this you can earn
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make each $100.00 grow to
$187.00 in just 9 years.
Canada Savings Bonds are good
today, better tomorrow. They're
Canada's most popular personal
investment. Look ahead!
Go ahead! Buy Canada
Savings Bonds.
"THE BIBLE
TODAY"
A significant change in the
age of customers visiting the
sales counter at the American
Bible Society in Los Angeles
is reported by the staff •there
— and the same observation
would hold true for the Can-
adian Bible Society, especially
in Vancouver where a youth
corner has been set up in the
Society's Book Store, They are
now getting a heavy influx of
young people in the 18 to 25
year-old bracket, They are typ-
ical of their generation, andl
many are dressed. in hippie
fashion, but the significant
thing is that they are buying
Scriptures not only for their
own personal use but to give
to other young people. Many
of them show evidence of
knowing the Scriptures, part-
icularly the New Testament,
quite well. They show some-
thing of a sense of desperation
in that they have not been
able to find answers to quest-
ions in some of the move-
ments in which they have
been involved and some of the
philosophies which have at-
tracted them. They appear to
be turning to the ,Scriptures
with a desperate hope and
some real expectation that
here they will find answers to
their problems and to the pro-
blems of Society.
* * *
During the past 35,000 Jew-
ish Bibles (Old and New Test-,
aments) were printed in Jer-
usalem and are now being
bound. This is the third edit-
ion of the Hebrew Bible which
has appeared in the land of
the Bible. The first was in
1959, and the sec.md in 1962.
All in all some 81,000 Hebrew
Bibles have been printed. In
addition there have been tens
of thousands of New Testa-
ments and Portions of Script-
ures. In the twenty years
since the work of the Bible
Society was reorganized in
Israel, the circulation of
Bibles and Scriptures there,
in over eighty different lang-
uages, has reached a total of
about 596,000.
* * *
For the second year in a
row Greek school children are
using New Testaments pro-
vided by the Bible Society in
Greece as a religious educat-
ion textbook.
average annual interest to maturity
GET MORE GOING FORYOU I