HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1972-07-06, Page 10HIM GARNER
A frequent contributor to both CBC TV and radio Hugh Garner
(above) is considered to be a master at .writing about the
common people. Currently CBC radio's Anthology heard Satur-
days at 10:03 p.m., EDT, is presenting a Garner short story
each week read by actor Murray Westgate.
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IIIIINOMMEMISMIW,MIENE
BY SHIRLEY J, KELLER
• • •
•
Business and Professional
Directory
• • • • \ • • • • • • • • s • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
CHURCH
SERVICES
ALL SERVICES ON QAYLIGHT SAVING TIME
. et ONTARIO STREET UNITED (BUM
4- "THE FRIENDLY CHURCH" r
* Rev, LAWRENCE S, LEWIS, Minister
Mrs. Doris McKinley, Organist and '' 42
• * Choir Director
0.4 SUNDAY, JULY 9
°44
,
. s
11:00 a.m.—Worship Service and Nursery „
11:30 a.m.—Junior Congregation
THEME: "THE GREAT INVITATION”
7:30 to 8:00p.m., Thursday evening, July 6,Service in.Chapel.
EVERYONE WELCOME
Wesley-Willis—Holmesvitie United Churches
REV. A. J, MOWATT, C.D., E,A,, p.D., DD., Minister
MR, LORNE DOTTERER, Organist and Choir Oirecter
WESLEY-WILLIS UNITED CHURCH
"THE CHURCH THAT CARES"
Services at Ontario Street Church
during the month of July
•
CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH, Clinton
263 Princess Street
Pastor: Alvin Beukerne, B.A., B.O.
Services: 10:00 a,m„ and 3:00 p.m,
(On 3rd Sunday, 9;30 a.m.
The Church
Dutch Service at 11:00 a.m.)
of the "Back to God" Hour every Sunday 4:30 p.m. CHLO.
EVERYONE WELCOME
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
REV. T, C. MULHOLLAND , Minister
9:30 a.m.—Sunday School and Morning Worship
Everyone Welcome
BAYFIELD BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor: REV. L.. V. BIGELOW
SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
Sunday School: 10:00 a.m.
Morning Worship: 11:00 a.m.
Open Air Service: 7:30 p.m. Paul Bunyan Trailer Camp
Prayer Meeting, Wednesday at 8:00 p.m.
ST. PAUL'S ANGLICAN CHURCH
Clinton
SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
'-- TRINITY 6
11:30 a.m.—P'AkiSH COMMUNION
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, JULY 9, 1972
Pastor: REV. W. H. McWHINNIE
10:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
11:00 a.m.—Sunday School
Clinton Memorial Shop
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BY MARY McILWAIN
A community shower was held.
on Tuesday evening, June 20th at
the home of Mrs. Ella Jewitt for
Diode Preszcator prior to her
marriage on June 30 to Larry
Dillon.
Linda, her mother, Mrs, Ken
Preszcator and grandmother.
Mrs. Lawrence Hill of Crediton
were presented with corsages.
Mrs. Ella Jewitt and Mrs.
William Dale conducted several
contests with a reading "Deacon
Brown's Courtship" by Mrs.
Irene Grimoldby,
Mrs. Reg Lawson read a nice
address to Linda.
Linda thanked everyone very
fittingly and lunch was served.
xxx
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crozier.
Brian, Paul, Kevin and Lori of
Huron Ridge, Kincardine were
Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs.
George Meitwain and family.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wammes
returned home on Saturday from
their trip to Nova Scotia.
Mr, and Mrs. John Thompson.
Betty,Sharon and Bob spent the
weekend with the Robert Reynolds
family of Southfield. Michigan.
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson and Betty
attending the wedding and
reception on Saturday of Linda
McMichael and John Collins in
Senile. Betty was maid of honour
for the bride.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thompson
and Rick visited on Friday
evening with Mr, and Mrs. Jerry
Armstrong and Tanya of St.
Marys,
Mr. Sid Laws was home for ten
days with his wife and family and
spent considerable time with his
mother in Huronview and has now
gone back to his ship which is on
its way to Spain.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Bannon and
Melanie of Stratford were Sunday
visitors with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben _Riley and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Ken .Preszcator,
Dianne and Nancy visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Jim
-.Preszcator, Billy and Debbie.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson McClure
and Bryan, Mr. Austin Dexter of
McKillap Mr. and Mrs. William
Dowson, Brenda, Bonnie and John
of Varna were Sunday visitors
with Mrs. Ella Jewitt and boys.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thompson
and Rick visited on Sunday with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carter
Kerslake and Craig of .Staffa.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Betties,
Pam and Michael of Seeforth were
Sunday visitors with Mrs, Irene
Grimoldby.
Weekend visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Sid Laws and family were
Mrs. Ruby Barber cook on the
S.S.Bruce Angus, sister of Mr.
Laws and Mr. Bill Laws of the
S.S.Gordon C. Leitch
accompanied by his wife and
family of Owen Sound, and also
visited with their mother of
ffuronview, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Riley and Dawn of Londesboro,
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thoma.s and
Mr. Carl Laws of Goderich, Mr.
Grant Laws of Sarnia.
Jim Thompson spent Sunday
with his grandparents, Mr, and
Mrs, Terrence Hunter of
Colborne Township.
Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. John Wammes, John and
Mary were Mr, and Mrs. Ed
Wammes and Ronny of Clinton,
Mr. and Mrs, Leo Sanders,
Jennifer and Jeffery of Brussels,
Mr. and Mr's. Marris Bos, Steven
and Sharon.
. Joan Thompson, - Patsy
Anderson and Doris Dolmage
were, among a number in the
confirmation class who joined the
Winthrop United Church on
Sunday,
Don Jewitt and Jim Medd left
Thursday night for a trip out to the
western provinces,
Just last week, we saw our only
daughter graduate from
elementary school, It was a big
day for hen...first time for a
grownup, beauty shop hairdo:
first time for a long dress, and,
most of all, first time for saying
"goodbye" to a closed chapter of
her life.
I can honestly tell you she went
into that graduation hall with
mixed emotions....as did most of
the graduates I'll wager. One part
of her wanted to be happy because
she was entering a new, exciting
adventure at secondary school:
another' part of her wanted to cry
because she was leaving old
friends, dependable companions,
trusted teachers.
Those emotions showed on her
face, too. As her mother, I could
read the signs of joy and sadness.
I' understood,
That didn't stop our daughter
from behaving absolutely normal.
She was in her usual
tizzy.... sullen with adults,
effervescent with friends: late by
youthful standards and early by
parent guides for the beginning of
the evening with the exact
opposite true following the
ceremonies.
By the time I got to the
graduation hall, I was a nervous
wreck. Where have 1 tailed as a
mother, I wondered, as I saw her
charging down the street with her
friends—fresh hairdo blowing at
will, long dress flipping at her
ankles? For this one evening. I
wondered, couldn't she be just a
little more sedate and proper?
I guess that's why I appreciated
the comments of her' school
principal that evening. And that's
why I want to share them with you,
for I'm certain some of you must
have sons and daughters who are
adolescents. They are probably
driving you to distraction, too.
Well, here's what an educator
has to say about that.
"Frankly I don't know any
answer to adolescence. About the
only thing to do is try to hang on to
your sanity and pray. While you
are hanging on to your sanity and
praying, I will reach down into the
black pit of my experience with
kids like these, and give you a few
things to think about.
"Adolescents do not hate their
parents, They merely feel
contempt, occasionally coated
with condescending pity for them,
They all refer to their father as
"oh him" and their mothers as
"sire". "She won't let me go,
naturally" and "Who was that on
the phone? Oh him."
"All adolescents begin to "go
steady" —daughters with boys
who appear weak-chinned and
untrustworthy; sons with girls
who appear hard and brazen. No
parent gets anywhere combating
these romances. How can anyone
as stupid as "oh him" or "she"
evaluate a big wheel like Ricky,
who, it "just so happens is on the
football team and president of
Squee Gees!"
-All adolescents telephone.
This is part of the cohesive
quality that makes them all eat in
the same restaurant. walk in
bunches, keepen-constant touch..
You will not solve anything by
having two telephones. "Wow, two
phones," Connie and Wendie's
friends would say, and would keep
them both busy.
"As adolescents get older, they
intend to have the family car all of
the time. To accomplish this, they
resort to the gentle nag, or water-
dripping-on-stone method, the
"everybody else can" or the cold,
tearful silence.
"Adolescents are not careful of
their own possessions, but are
absolutely reckless with anything
belonging to their parents.
"All adolescent boys would
prefer to live in a car,
"All adolescent girls would
prefer to live in the bathroom.
• 'Seriously, parents—these
graduates are really a great
group, They will need your' help,
support and understanding more
in the next few years than any of us
realize. They need your advice.
They need your patience. They
need a home. They need to know
and be told their limits. Only you
can provide all of this for them."
I don't know whether anyone
else but me appreciated that
message. It really doesn't
matter. As far as I'm concerned,
it was the most cheering message
of hope I've heard in a long, long
time.
The advice is good. I'll try a
little longer to hold onto my sanity
and a little harder to pray more, I
hope you will do the same.
The Women's Institute ,net on
June 22nd in the Agriculture
Board Rooms. Mrs. Popp
conducted the opening exercises,
Mrs. Frank Cummings gave the
report on the District Annual held
in the Anglican Church in
wingharn on May 31st.
Mrs. C. Holland past president,
was presented with a gift for her
two years' service as president.
It was decided to hold the annual
picnic on the 27th of July in the
Clinton Park and have as guests,
grandmothers who don't belong to
the Institute, Roll call for this
meeting is "bring your baby
picture".
Members are asked to
remember an article for the
penny sale at this meeting.
June 22nd being Canada Day for
the Institute, the roll call was
answered with "What can be done
to make good citizens of today's
youth?"
St. John Ambulance is a non-
pro f it , public service
organization operating
throughout Canada. All of its
members, except for a small
administrative staff, are unpaid
volunteers.
St. John Ambulance in Canada
is part of the international Order
of St. John which is active
throughout the Commonwealth,
and traces its origin back to the
Crusades.
Queen Elizabeth is the
sovereign head of the Order of St.
John (St. John Ambulance) and the
Governor General is the head of
the Priority in Canada which is
responsible for the work of St,
John in Canada.
First Aid classes under the
auspices of St. John Ambulance
have been given in Canada since
1883, The first branch was
formed in Montreal in 1884. The
first unit of the St. John
Ambulance Brigade was formed
in London, Ontario in 1909.
St. John Ambulance is both a
service organization and. a
teaching body. It has three
foundations: The Brigade, the
Association and the Ophthalmic
Hospital in Jerusalem.
St, John Ambulance Brigade is
a body of volunteers — men,
4women and teenagers, — trained
in first aid and home nursing who
devotee large part of their spare
time to public service.
The St. John Ambulance
Brigade wear the familiar St.
John uniform when on public duty
and provide First Aid coverage at
a variety of public events —
parades, football games, fairs,
etc. They also help in hospitals,
clinics, homes for the aged and
other places where knowledge of
First Aid and Home Nursing is
valuable.
Classes in First Aid and Home
Nursing are taught by members of
St. John Ambulance year round in
towns and cities across Canada. A
small fee is charged to cover the
cost of the textbook and material
used in the classes (bandages,
etc.)
St. John Ambulance is the
recognized authority on First Aid
teaching in Canada and provides
instruction on this subject to the
public, the Canadian Forces, the
Mre.RueselColciough gave an
interesting .paper on the
"Voyageurs", a group of young
Canadians. She told of instances
regard to their visits in Quebec
and other countries,
How these visits leave a spirit
Of brotherhood between Canadian
young people and those visited and
helps to bring about a better
understanding of Canadians.
Also, better relationship between
French-speaking and English-
speaking Canadians,
Sharon Colclouge sang two
solos with guitar accompaniment,
"Red River Valley and Running
Bear" which was much enjoyed.
August is holiday month and a
bus trip is planned. A committee
was appointed to decide on place,
time and details.
Two new members joined the
Institute at this meeting.
RCMP, Civil Defence workers
and municipal police and fire
departments.
An annual St. John Ambulance
project is the Save A Life
programme in which St. John
instructors give free two-hour
classes in artificial respiration
to the public. This programme
begins on a nation-wide basis in
May the first holiday month of
the summer, when drownings
begin to mount. More than one
million Canadians have taken this
training since the programme
began in 1954,
St. John Ambulance supports
the Ophthalmic 'Hospital in
Jerusalem, the city where the
Order of St. John started. The
hospital is one of the centres of a
worldwide battle being waged
against the dreaded eye disease of
the Middle East — trachoma.
There are more than 300 million
sufferers from this disease in the
Middle East and parts of Africa
and Asia.
The annual budget of St. John
Ambulance in Canada is now more
than one million dollars. This is
spent on equipment for the 11,500
Brigade members, mobile First
Aid units, stretchers, first aid
supplies, textbooks, manikins for
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
demonstrations, as well as a
small paid staff at National and
Provincial Headquarters.
'Phone the News-Record at
482-3443 or the Signal-Star at
524.8331 to place your want ad:
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2A—Clintdn News,,Record, Thursday, July 6, 1972
Constance
Shower held
plans bus trip
Cancer can
be beaten.
For further information,
contact your local Cancer Unit.
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