HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1971-08-26, Page 9MR. AND MRS. KENNETH OKE
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Couples take vows at Ottawa,
Mount Carmel and Denfield
Times Advocate, August 26, 1971 P000. 9
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The marriage of Darlene Janet
Carson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
W. Cecil Carson, to Paul Edwin
Passrnore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lorne Passmore, Exeter, took
place August 14, 1971 in Parkdale
United Church, Ottawa, the Rev.
James Lawson officiated.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a long
white carved crimplene gown
with a short train. Her hood fell
softly about her face and she
carried a cascade bouquet of
white daisies and yellow roses.
Lorraine Hansen, maid of
honour, and bridesmaids Sharon
and Beth Passmore and Mrs.
Wendy Carson wore identical
gowns of flowered polyester
organza in shades of green,
yellow, mauve and blue. They
carried cascade bouquets of
white and yellow carnations.,
Jack Hodgert was best man
and the ushers were Wayne
Rodd, David Passmore and
David Carson.
Following the reception at the
Skyline Hotel the couple left on a
honeymoon in Europe. On their
return they will reside at RR 3
Exeter.
04e - edevriectit
July 24, 1971, at Vanneck
United Church, marriage vows
were exchanged by Susan
Elizabeth Charlton and Kenneth
Oke in a setting of pink and white
flowers and pink candelabra.
Reverend W, Jarvis of Exeter
officiated at the double ring
ceremony.
Wedding music was provided
by Mrs. William Thirwall and
accompanied the soloist, Mrs.
Ross Watson.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Charlton,
Denfield, and the groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Oke, of
Exeter.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride chose a gown of
white satin organza, Her Juliet
sleeves were sprayed with
chantilly lace, and the cuffs were
trimmed with this same lace, The
bodice, which was waisted in the
Empire line, was enhanced with
Chantilly lace, and the same lace
flattered each side of the A-line
skirt. To complete her ensemble,
a Cathedral length veil, trimmed
with Chantilly lace, flowed
gracefully from her satin
organza bow-shaped headpiece.
She carried a cascade bouquet of
red sweetheart roses and baby's
breath.
Sharon Mitchell, Strathroy,
was maid of honour and
bridesmaids were Catherine
Charlton and Laurie Charlton,
sisters of the bride, and DianLe
Oke, sister of the groom.
Flowergirl was Kimberly
Whitfield, cousin of the bride.
They wore identical gowns of
frosted blue organza with Empire
waists and long puffy sleeves.
They wore miniature pink car-
nations in their hair and carried
bouquets of rosy-pink carnations,
shasta daisies, blue cornflowers
and baby's breath.
Ronald Oke, brother of the
groom, was best man and ushers
were Larry Purdy, Strathroy,
Robert Heckman, Lucan, cousin
of the groom, and David
Charlton, Milton, cousin of the
bride.
Following the reception and
wedding dance at the Ilderton
Community Hall, the bride
changed into a white and navy
hotpant outfit with white ac-
cessories for a wedding trip to the
Eastern States.
Prior to the wedding, the bride
was honored at several showers
hosted by Mrs. Bruce Warner and
daughters; Vanneck United
Church; Mrs. Robert Rodgers
and daughters Miss Sharon
Mitchell; Mrs. Les Gibson and
daughter; and London Life
employees. The bride was also
honoured at a trousseau tea given
by her mother.
The employees of the County of
Middlesex held a presentation in
honour of the groom.
9eawree.4- Diet rid
Are you great as a mate — or a
"louse as a spouse?" Test
yourself for the answers.
Though sometimes your best
friends won't tell you, these 20
questions should help you to
arrive at the answer — how do
you rate as a mate?
1. Do you sometimes give-in to
avoid an argument, even if you
know that your one and only is
dead wrong? (Unless, of course,
it's a matter of principle.)
No statistician has ever
calculated the number of
To teach French
in Kenora school
Kathy Cann received her
certificate for teaching French to
English speaking children.
She will be flying to Kenora,
August 30, to teach school there.
The Pentecostal congregation
gave her a farewell party
Saturday and presented her with
a beautiful gold watch. She also
received a gold necklace.
as
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Dietrich and the late Pius
Dietrich of RR 3 Dashwood, while
the groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs, Earl Fenwick, Byron,
Miss Helen Nadiger of Dash-
wood, supplied the wedding
music and accompanied the
soloist, Mrs. Linda O'Rourke, RR
3 Dashwood.
The bride's brother, Pius
Dietrich Jr., gave her in
marriage. She was gowned in a
A-line dress of lagoda. The
bodice, the sleeves and
detachable train were
highlighted by Swiss guipure
lace. Her headpiece was of white
roses and seed pearls and held a
four-tier scalloped veil. She
carried a bouquet of red roses,
pink carnations, baby's breath
and stephanotis with trailing pink
lace ribbon.
Matron of honor was the bride's
sister, Mrs. Janet Block,
Goderich who wore an empire
styled gown of hot pink polyester
satin.
Mrs. Teri-Anne Sutherland,
London, sister of the groom, Mrs.
Evelyn Wood, London, and Mrs.
Louise Merner, RR 3 Zurich,
sister of the bride, were
bridesmaids. They wore mauve
dresses styled the same as the
matron of honor's. All carried
nosegays of daisies and pink and
mauve carnations.
William Fenwick was his
brother's best man and Cliff
Willis, Len Wood and Barry
Bloch ushered.
After the reception at the Dash-
wood Community Centre the
happy couple left for a honemoon
to Northern Ontario and United
States, the bride wearing a long
sleeved jumpsuit of pale pink
swiss dot with matching midi-
vest.
Mr. and Mrs. Fenwick are now
residing at 232 Oakland Avenue,
London.
Prior to the wedding, showers
were hosted by Mrs. Teri-Anne
Sutherland and Mrs. Joan
McCann, Mount Carmel. The
groom's parents entertained the
bridal party after rehearsal.
marriages that have cracked on
the rock of unwillingness to give
in on unimportant questions, but
the number must be large. You
won't deepen your spouse's
stubborn streak just by con-
ceding a point, quite the opposite.
People are at their most con-
ciliatory after winning a round.
2. Do you show loyalty by
building him or her up in public
and keep your spouse's secrets?
Fidelity is more than a matter
of staying monogamous. You're
being disloyal every time you
recite "cute" anecdotes that
make your better half look small,
or publicly correct his (her)
grammar, or tell your friends
and relatives things they have no
right to know.
3. Do you maintain friendly
relations with your in-laws?
It's one of the soundest
married life insurance policies,
experts say. By showing your
mate that you like his or her
family, you're showing approval
of a very important part of
himself or herself.
4. Do you try persistently to
change him (her)?
Hard on the vocal chords and
the marriage ties, and futile
besides. The only person who can
change your mate is friend
spouse himself. You married for
what he or she is — or did you?
5. Do you attempt to correct
your own flaws if they distress
your mate?
All right, so your mate
shouldn't try to change you. But
maybe that one cherished
weakness isn't worth the con-
tention it causes, and correcting
the habit might make your
spouse vow to be more punctual,
less over-weight, or whatever
you've been striving to make
him.
6. Do you watch your ap-
pearance as carefully now as you
did before?
You should but if you do,
you're rather uncommon, Sur-
veys among people generally
show that a surprising per-
centage of the wives and
husbands polled, thought their
mates were not as particular
about grooming as before
marriage.
7. Do you try the same flattery
you used in courtship days?
Even if you didn't specialize in
blarney, you undoubtedly showed
a flattering interest in everything
your prospective partner said or
did, Try it again, One good home
remedy for domestic headaches
and other complications: really .
listen when your mate speaks,
8. Do you have a hobby or other
strong interest which is not
shared by your mate?
According to many'
psychologists, you should! Too
much togetherness can be stifling
and ultimately become stale, A
Separate interest gives you
breadth as well as a breather.
GUENTHER REUNION
August 15, the Charles Guen-
ther family held their annual
reunion at the Dashwood Com-
munity Centre. Fifty-three
members and guests attended
from many areas, such as
Toronto, Port Elgin, Gary,
Indiana, Simcoe, Port Rowan and
Windsor. After a pot luck lunch,
the children engaged in games
and races.
A short business session was
held and the following officers
were elected for the coming
year: president, Mrs. Sydney
Baker; vice-president, Mrs.
Milton Webb; secretary, Mrs.
Stanley Green; games com-
mittee, Mrs. Thomas Munn and
Mrs. Edward Johns.
WEBER REUNION
The annual reunion of the
Daniel Weber family was held at
Riverview Park, August 15.
Picnic lunch was served at
noon. In the absence of the
president Rev. and Mrs. C. B.
Carr, Thelma Weber took charge.
A short devotion was held with
Keith Weber reading a paper
written by the late Daniel Weber.
Officers for the next year are:
presidents, Rev, and Mrs. C. B.
Carr; secretary treasurer,
Thelma Weber; sports com-
mittee, Ronnie and Lynda Weber,
Thomas and Brenda Carr,
A reading of the 'Snoopy
Reporters'was read by Diane
Eagleson, and a card sent by
Rev. and Mrs. C. B. Carr was also
read.
The sports committee, Diane
and Eric Eagleson, Mona and
Erie Hamilton, were in charge of
games which everyone enojoyed.
Family meet for
father's birthday
Sunday afternoon about eighty
relatives of Samuel Jory, of town,
gathered at Riverview Park to
celebrate his 89th birthday with
him.
Mr. and Mrs. Jory have ninety-
seven members in their im-
mediate family, many of whom
were present, as well as nieces
and nephews from various
places, including London, Oak-
ville, Burford and Florida.
SAVE on
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Introductory Fall Season
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Short sleeve sport shirts Reg. to $3.95
Koratroil jeans and dress pants sizes 8 to 18
Denim flares in stripes and plain shades
Windbreakers $7,98 — 2 pc. pant suits
EXETER "Ch8rgex"
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MR. AND MRS. PAUL PASSMORE Before a setting of baskets of
blue cornflowers, snapdragons
and baby's breath at Our Lady of
Mount Carmel Church, Marilyn
Faye Dietrich and Kenneth Earl
Fenwick were recently married
in a ceremony performed by the
Rev. J. Mooney.
Exciting Fashions
We have just returned from the Fashion Market
and invite you to see our New Fall collection
of blouses, pant tops, hot pants, dresses in the new length,
suits, coats and jackets, sweaters, purses, etc.
JUST ARRIVED . . .
New Fall and Winter
DRESS MATERIALS
I
Boys' Back-to-School Specials
Knit short sleeve T shirts Reg. to $4.98 Sale 2"
Sale $195
1 /2 price
$598
$16"
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Of Made-to-Measure
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Back-To-School
TROUSER SALE
Select group of flares and straights,
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Special at
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Limited quantity of tapered dress
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$4 95