HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1974-11-14, Page 19NOTICE
To The Electors of The
Village of Lucan
REGULAR POLLING DAY
Monday, December 2, 1974
All Polls Open From 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
ADVANCE POLL
Saturday, November 23, 1974
Poll Open In The
Lucan Municipal Office From
11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
CERTIFICATES FOR PROXY VOTES
MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE
CLERK UP AND UNTIL NOV. 26, 1974
Mrs. I. H. Gibson
Clerk
NOTICE
To The Electors of The
Town of Exeter
REGULAR POLLING DAY
Monday, December 2, 1974
All Polls Open From 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
ADVANCE POLL
Saturday, November 23, 1974
Poll Open In The Town Hall From
11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
CERTIFICATES FOR PROXY VOTES
MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE
CLERK UP AND UNTIL NOV. 26, 1974
E. Carscadden
Clerk
McKnights
invite you to
SHOP
EARLY
For Christmas
Shop Now
While Our
Selections Are
At Their Best
Our New Showroom Is FULL of . .
GET OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU BUY
• * Chesterfield Suites - 15 to Choose From. Variety of
styles, fabrics and colors.
* Chrome and Bronze Kitchen Suites
* Stacking Chairs, Dining Room Chairs, Side Chairs,
and Occasional Chairs.
* Space Savers * Roll-Top Desks * Lamps
* Bow-front China Cabinets * Picture Frames
* Coffee Tables * End Tables * Mirrors * Bars
* Mattresses * Bedroom Suites
WHITING'S
ANTIQUES, NEW AND USED FURNITURE
Main St. 235-1964 Exeter
NEW
FURNITURE
Come In And
Browse ... /
Away For Christmas
Times-Advocate, Novo r 14,1974 Nogg 19 Zee44
Church
News.
which they had made, 'MY 00
doubt went home reeling much
happier than bacIthey gone .1)Pt on
the streets. to play Weir or treat.
seOnaip ir tl lonewneaeg% night a$ g. er
tt
oef
residents of McCormick Home
and presented each person with a
card. And .a Halloween poster
'PASTRY BAKERS — Students at Mt. Carmel separate school of Mrs. Marjorie Glendenning's class en-
joyed a baking lesson recently. Shown buttering buns are Alice Dietrich, Teresa Reed and Virginia
Duchorme with the help of mothers Antionette Vandenberk, Louise Vondenberk and Leona Morrissey.
photo
Crediton church ladies elect;
couple home from lengthy trip
NOTICE'
To The Eleciors'of The
Township of Hay
REGULAR POLLING DAY
Monday, December 2, 1974
All Polk Open From 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m,
ADVANCE POLL
Saturday, November 23, 1974
Poll Open In The Township Office Fl-om
11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
CERTIFICATES FOR PROXY VOTES
MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE
CLERK UP AND UNTIL NOV. 26, 1974
Wayne Horner
Clerk
Pentecostal
Singing at the Pentecostal
Holiness church on Sunday
morning was led by Rick Thorn-
ton and Rev. Ray Brewster,
speaking from Luke 22: 14-20 said
that Communion is the symbol
of our close fellowship with our
Heavenly Father through Jesus
Christ.
At the evening service Mr.
Brewster led the singing and
preaching from Isaiah 42:1.10 he
told his congregation that
Christians need to learn to "sing
a new song to the Lord," letting
God take over and bless them in
their lives through His Holy
Spirit,
The Boys' Brigade is meeting
regularly each Friday evening
and the two girls groups held a
combined Halloween party
recently, at the church. Members
appeared in costume for games
and refreshments provided by
the older girls, -
United
At the United Church a film
"The Gift", prepared by the
Canadian Legion, was shown
during the morning service. It
was a very touching film of
Dieppe, Normandy, Alamein and
"D" Day, etc., also showing
many memorials, and
cemeteries. The film ended with
a Remembrance Day service at
one of the memorials in France.
Mrs, Fred Revington acted as
projectionist.
Potted mums were placed in
the Sanctuary in memory of Mr.
& Mrs. George Dickson, by their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. Sr
Mrs. George Carpenter.
Boys and girls from Grades 3 to
8 who like to sing are invited to
the first. Fall practice tonight,
Thursday, at 7 sharp. United
Church members and friends are
invited to a Festal Evensong,
Sunday, November 24, at 7:30, at
Holy Trinity Anglican Church,
Anglican
The service of Morning Prayer
at Holy Trinity Anglican church
was attended by members of
Branch 540 of the Royal Canadian
Legion and cadets from the
Middlesex-Huron Cadet Corps.
Rev. John Hofland selected
"Rest eternal grant unto them, 0
Lord, and let light perpetual
shine upon them" from the burial
of the dead, as his sermon theme.
He spoke of the many sacrifices
of those who gave their lives in
the great wars.
Special prayers for the United
Nations and relief of famine were
offered-by Mr. John Bright:
Percy Vahey, Branch 540, read
the lesson from Corinthians 15.
The choir sang "0 Valiant
Hearts", accompanied by the
organist, Mr. John Allen.
Following the church service
the Legion members and Cadets
paraded to the Cenotaph service.
Mr. Hofland will be showing
slides of his work during the five
years he spent in the Diocese of
the Arctic at a Festal Evensong,
Sunday, November 24, at 7:30,
Everyone is invited to this in-
teresting evening.
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Henry Pfaff discharged from
hospital is at the home of Mr. &
Mrs. Fred Bowers.
Steve Dundas, after a period of
convalescence at the home of Mr.
& Mrs. Don Dundas has returned
to his home on Main St. East.
Kevin Pfaff has pUrchased the
home of Mrs. Isaac Gower.
Mrs. Etta Mae Young has been
discharged from South Huron
Hospital and is a resident at the
Bluewater Home, Zurich.
Rev. James Miller of Grand-
bay, New Brunswick, was guest
speaker at Zion United Church
Sunday morning.
Sunday evening Rev. Armin
Schlenker conducted the service
at the Bluewater Home. Mr. &
Mrs, Carmin Schlenker sang,
accompanied by Mrs. Ed Fink-
beiner,
Mary Ellen Schlenker spent the
weekend in Toronto with Lynne
Aikens, a friend she met at the
Beach Mission.
Harold Glanville bagged a
moose on an expedition in the
Huntsville area.
Mr. & Mrs. Wallace Nixon of
Fordwich visited Sunday with
Mr. & Mrs. Sam King. Mr. Nixon
was once stationed at RCAF
Centralia,
Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Lamport
attended the Reid-Williams
wedding in Port Huron Saturday.
Stuart Kuhn of Baden, for-
merly of 'Crediton, was buried
itsthe Crediton Cemetery Mon-
day.
Seniors plan
baking sale
A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL
HOLD ANY ITEM .UNTIL
CHRISTMAS
If in doubt about sizings . . .
May we suggest a
GIFT CERTIFICATE
Thanks For Shopping at McKnights
Len McKnight &Sons
master charge MEN'S WEAR
o 235-2320
111111111111
( II \ RCIA
By MISS ELLA MORLOCK
.CREDITON
Mr, & Mrs. William Schwartz
have returned from a three-week
bus trip to California.
Through the states of Indiana
and Illinois they saw fields of
corn and soya beans. In Wyoming
on irrigated land, there was
sorghum, which would be shipped
to Ontario and Japan. Large feed
lots held many cattle and there
was much planting of winter
wheat. Along the highway were
permanent snow fences, built of
wood and decorated.
Utah offered sagebush,oil
wells, a copper mine, a visit to
the Mormon Tabernacle, and the
examination of a piece of salt the
tour guide chopped from Salt
Lake.
Crossing the Oakland Bridge,
the world's largest, into San
Francisco was exciting, as was
the view of the Golden Gate
Bridge, the world's highest. The
party rode a cable car to
Fisherman's Wharf.
Mountain roads to Los Angeles
were dizzying, especially when
there were 38 sharp turns within
a two-mile stretch, with often a
sheer dropping away beyond the
guard rail, Occasionally they saw
oil wells in the Pacifc Ocean.
Mr. & Mrs. Schwartz toured
Disneyland and Hollywood in Los
Angeles, and the Queen Mary,
with Mr. & Mrs. Richard Vaughn,
at Long Beach,
Watching the neon lights of Las
Vegas' Main Street gave one a
feeling of movement. In Colorado
they viewed the Hoover Dam and
slept within a stone's throw of the
Grand Canyon.
It was in New Mexico, site of
the Painted Desert and the
Petrified Forest, that they ex-
perienced a heavy snowfall.
In Oklahoma there were large
bales of hay left in the fields until
wanted for feeding. -Silos ap-
peared on farm landscapes.
In St. Louis, on the banks of the
Mississippi, Mr. Schwartz took
the elevator to the top of the
stainless steel arch, the world's
highest monument, for a view of
the countryside.
The entire tour covered 6,150
miles. At one point the altitude
was 8,640 feet. Temperatures
ranged from 12 degrees to
seventy-nine,
Zion UCW
The UCW of Zion United
Church held their November
meeting Thursday evening. The
program theme "Prayer" was
developed by readings, songs and
a dialogue on the Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Claire Schwartz, Mrs.
Howard Lightfoot and Ella
Morlock were in charge of the
program. Mrs. Gordon Fink-
beiner accompanied the hymn
singing.
During the business session
presided over by Mrs.Cliff
Russell, plans were finalized for
the bazaar of November 16. The
clothing bale will be packed the
following week. A sum of money
was donated to Five Oaks. Mrs.
Ray Morlock read the report of
the nominating committee.
The following are the officers
for 1975: president, Mrs. Cliff
Russell; vice-president, Ella
Morlock; recording secretary,
Mrs. Ross Pickering; assistant,
Mrs. Nelson Lamport;
corresponding and press
secretary, Mrs. Gordon Ratz;
treasurer, Mrs, Ross Krueger;
pianist, Mrs. Gordon Finkbeiner;
assistant, Mrs. Lorne Presz-
cator ; greeting cards, Mrs. Hugo
Schenk; nominating committee,
Mrs. Allan Finkbeiner and
Mrs.Doug Gill; auditors, Mrs.
Howard Lightfoot and Mrs. Ervin
Ratz; benevolent fund,' Mrs. Ed
Finkbeiner and Mrs.Walter
Fydenchuk; literature, Ella
Morlock; good cheer, Mrs.
Marguerite Finkbeiner; com-
munity friendship & visiting,
Mrs. Ray Morlock; social func-
tions, Mrs.Cliff Kenney. Con-
veners of committees are:
Manse, Mrs. Preszcator;'
membership, Mrs. Lloyd
Lamport; stewardship &
recruiting, Mrs. Armin
Schlenker; supply, Mrs. Ed
Hendrick; missionary
education, Mrs. Jim Finkbeiner;
finance, Mrs. Krueger; kitchen,
Mrs. Earl Neil.
Foster parents
Mr. & Mrs. Ross Krueger at-
tended the Foster Parents'
banquet at Brussells. The
speaker H. H. Dymond,
Executive Director of Ontario's
Children's Aid Societies urged
that siblings be kept together in
foster homes, and that people
realize that foster parents are an
effective deterrent to juvenile
delinquency. "A foster home is of
infinitely more value than a
correctional institute," he
declared.
The early sh oPPer catches...
BEST joys
The Lucan Senior Citizens'
Club "Bake Sale" on Saturday
Nov. 16th, will provide everyone
with an opportunity to buy, in-
stead of make, something for the
weekend. It will be held in the
Masonic Hall, behind the Library
commencing at 1 p.m.
37 members were present, 30 in
the Sunshine group and 7 in the
craft group. Euchre was enjoyed
and played for lone hands with
Mrs. Earl Atkinson winning the
ladies and Mrs.Rose Atkinson,
playing a man's hand, winning
the man's prize, which, luckily,
was something anyone could use.
Twenty members bought their
tickets for the Christmas dinner
on December 17th and tickets for
the draw for the $30,00 basket of
groceries were distributed to
those present.
Lunch was provided by Mrs. G.
Miller, Mrs. C. Armitage and Mr.
Fred Mcllhargey.
Elizabeth Arden
Blue Grass and Memoire Cheri
Hand Shell $401
Fragrance Basket $45° and $475
Assortment of
Gift Baskets
* Love
$450 To $20
Eau de Love and L'ove's Lemon
PURSE SIZE SPRAY COLOGNE
PURSE SIZE SOLID COLOGNE
Brush Sets Peg. $1 1 .00 Value
Viewmaster Viewer
Viewmaster 3-Reel Pack
Philishave Double-Head Razor
Philishave Triple-Head
Deluxe Razor
$2 5°
$2 25
$599
$2 89
$1 89
$190'
$3417
Just Arrived . . .
NeW Complete Display of
MEDICO PIPES
Exeter Pharmacy Ltd.
235,1570 PHONE 235-1070
NOTICE
To The Electors of The
Village of Hensall
REGULAR POLLING DAY
Monday, December 2, 1974
All Polls Open From 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
ADVANCE POLL
Saturday, November 23, 1974
Poll Open In The Village Hall Prom
1 1:00 oat. to 8:00 p.m.
CERTIFICATES FOR PROXY VOTES
MAY BE OBTAINEb FROM THE
CLERK 'UP AND UNTIL NOV, 26, 1974
Earle Shapfer
Clerk
4