HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes-Advocate, 1981-09-10, Page 8i
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Page 8
Times -Advocate, September 10, 1981
Rebekah fall season
starts with supper
The tall season of the
Pride of Huron Rebekah
Lodge commenced with a
pot luck supper Wednesday
evening Following supper
NG Marjorie Arthur
welcomed 43 members and
presided for the business
assisted by VG Cheryl
Edwards. who also gave the
sick and shut-in report.
Manu members had been
remembered during the
summer
Treasurer Mavis Atthill
gave the financial report. A
bus trip will be arranged by
PN Lois McFalls and Sis
Marion Skinner. Plans were
finalized to serve the Fair
Board directors on Fair Day
and vouchers will be given to
Braemor residents. The
Rebekahs and Oddfellows
will have a booth at the Fair.
PNG Audrey MacGregor
gave the report of the in-
augural meeting held in
Goderich in June and stated
that the installation in Ex-
eter will be October 21.
JPNG Margaret Cook
gave a veryinteresting and
FANSHAWE COU.EGE
GRAD - Brenda Hocgert,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Reg Hodgert of Thames
Road, graduated recently
from the Legal Office Ad-
ministration course at
Fanshawe College. Brenda
has accepted a position in
the office of Browne,
Burgard, Robinson, Venutti,
Barristers in London.
r
informative report of the
sessions at the Rebekah
Assembly in Toronto. PNG
Shirley Cooper and Sis. Nor-
ma Meikle reported a very
enjoyable time at the Lodge
campout in August at Fami-
ly Paradise.
The meeting closed with
two very appropriate poems
given by NG Marjorie
Arthur.
Indiana visitors
in Saintsbury area
By MRS. HEBER DAVIS
SAINTSBURY
Mrs. Anah Stelzer and her
son Jim of Marion, Indiana
and Mrs. Alexia Atkinson,
Lucan were weekend guests
with Mrs. Mary Davis.
Sunday evening the
"Stelzers" entertained a
number of relatives to dinner
at the Garage restaurant,
London. Those attending
were, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jim
Barker, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Homemakers
enjoy cuisine
The Board of Directors of
Town and Country
Homemakers held their
regular monthly meeting.at
the home of Gwyn Whilsmith
where members enjoyed a
lovely lunch on the shores of
St. Joseph.
Tickets were distributed
to each member for
"Japanese Cuisine" to be
held in September. It was
reported that the spring
bulbs should be available for
sale at this event.
The committee from the
north end of the county
reported that plans are un-
derway for a variety concert
featuring good local enter-
tainment to be held in Oc-
tober at the F.E. Madill
Secondary School in
Wingham.
Hopefully this "may be an
annual fund-raising event
with everything from mosic
to comdev'.' says Bev
Brown. chairman of the
board.
Executive Director. Jean
Young informed the board
that to date. $16002.has been
raised for the building fund,
for the office on Victoria
Street in Wingham.
In an effort to hold its
meeting on a rotation basis
throughout the county. the
next regular hoard meeting
is tentatively planned for
September 23. in Exeter.
•
Maguire. Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Greenlee and Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Tindall, as well as the
"Stelzers".
Mrs., Atkinson and Mrs.
Davis all enjoyed a chat at
the home of "Mrs. Davis,
later, they were joined by
Jeff Young, Lucan. Saturday
evening Miss Marjorie
Isaac, London and Mr. Gote
Wennerstrom, Lucan called.
Miss Marylou Tindall was
enrolled at Western
University on September 7.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Greenlee, Mr. Harvey Latta
and friend spent several
days on the Bruce Penin-
sula recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Carroll attended the funeral
of their aunt Mrs. Elizabeth
Hans, 98 of Petrolia. She was
the daughter of James and
Mary Carroll.
Mr. and Mrs: Hugh Davis
entertained the Biddulph
township road Department
employees and their wives
Sunday, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Simpson Nancy and
Darlene, London and Mr.
and Mrs. Davis were guests,
Monday.
Church Service was
cancelled at St. Patricks
Church, Sunday due to the
decoration Service at St.
James cemetery, Clan-
deboye. •
Miss 'Marjorie Isaac,
London and Mr. Gote
Wennerstrom, Lucan were
Monday guests with Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Davis.
Coming soon...
Watch T -A For Details
VIAL OF LIFE
•
e
DAIRY PRINCESS - Middlesex Milk Committee chairman Bev Shipley talks to the four contestants prior to Saturday's
Middlesex Dairy Princess competition in Ilderton. From the left are Patti Galbraith, Janet O'Neill, Patricia Mair and
Marianne Dortmans: The winner was Janet O'Neill. Staff photo
Takes first at Pembroke
Shipka fiddler wins again
By MRS. HUGH MORENZ
SHIPKA
Willis Desjardine won
another first on the weekend
at the Pembroke Old Time
Fiddlers contest. in the in-
termediate class, and he
won a trophy awarded by
Len Hopkins, Liberal M.P.
Personals
1'isitors during the
weekend with Willis and
Ella Desjardine have been
Bonnie. Janet and Lonnie
Dugas, of Huron Park, Alvin
and Clara Statton, Grand
Bend. Sonny Weston, of
Sylvan.
Ferman and Leota Snyder
were the attendants, last
Wednesday at the wedding of
Dorothy MacGregor and Art
Thompson, at Church of
God.
Jodi Russell of Windsor
holidayed last week with
Doug and Ann Russell and
family.
Karen Guenther will be
attending Western Universi-
ty in London this year.
Cliff and Velma Russell,
Doug and Ann Russell,
Donald and Ann Russell,
Tom and Rosanne Russell,
all attended the wedding,
Saturday. of 'their nephew
and cousin, Roger Baldwin
son of M(. and Mrs. Winston
Baldwin.,-. to Linda
Verschueren.-daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George
Verschueren, all of Exeter.
Local Jeweller practices
what he sells
Exeter jeweller Mike Anstett will not be available
Saturday afternoon to advise you on which wed-
ding ring you should select because he has bought
a ring himself. Mike is getting married to Beverly
Jane Slade at St. Paul's Anglican Church in Clinton.
Both Mike and Beverly wish to thank all their friends
for wishing them well. Anstett's in Exeter will open
ccs usual on Monday but they'll have to do without
Mike for a few more days.
Our Exeter Store will be
closed at noon Saturday
September 12th
ANSTETT
.JFWf L1 E1re,
4. Maio St 1 rete,
1
The wedding was at the
Holy Name of Jesus church,
with reception held at the
Rose Gardens in Kingsville.
Joyce and Howard Adkins
visited Monday evening at
their daughter's, Gloria,
Harvey, Kevin and Dwight
Beierling.
Ric and Esther Storey, of
London, Suzanne and Otto
Plein. Christopher and
Melissa, of Elmira. visited
on the weekend with the
girls' parents, Ferman and
Leota Snyder.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde.
Nicholson, of Courtright,
visited Sunday, with Mr.
Herbert Harlton. Dorothy
and Lorne Fenner, Mabel
and Karen Geunther.
Larry and Joy Uniac, of
Toronto spent the weekend
here with John, Linda and
Rebecca Wuerth.
Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Dell,
Tonya and Cynthia, of
Belleville were weekend
guests with Hugh and Annie
Morenz. The Dell's brought
Blyth singers
to continue
The Blyth Festival Singers
will resume their weekly
rehearsal schedule on Mon-
day. September 14 in Blyth
Memorial Hall.
Now starting its second
season. this mixed choir of
80 voices enjoyed sell-out
houses at its three concerts
last year and is looking
forward to another
successful year in 1981-82.
The choir. whose members
come from a forty -mile
radius of Bluth, is under the
professional direction of Mr.
Lawrie Rowbotham of
Listowel.
Plans for this season in-
clude a benefit'performance
on October 24 in support of
the Bluth Memorial Hall
Building Fund. a special per-
formance of Christmas
music on December 6, and
concers in March and June.
Those„+'ill all take place in
Blyth 'Memorial Hall.
The idea for this com-
munity choir grew out of the
need for a good choral
"outlet' in the area, and the
response to it has been
tremendous. The Blyth
Festival Singers are part of
the parent organization, the
Blyth Centre for the Arts,
which also sponsors the
Summer Festival, Winter
theatre. music and
children's series, the Art
Gallery. and various
children's art and drama
workshops
New members who love to
sing in a well -disciplined at-
mosphere are welcome to
join the choir. A special in-
vitation is extended to all
tenors and basses in the
area
J 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
ADAMS
Heating & Cooling
• Heating Systems
of All Types
'NV Aut', MODERNIZED
„• ,! r AINTAINED
• General Sheet
Metal Work
• Air Conditioning
• Humidifiers
• Ventilation
235-2187
133 Huron St . East, Exeter
1111111111111111111 nllllllllllllllllllllllllll.
their son Clinton, to London,
where he will be attending
University
tario.
Ailsa Craig area
Institute to meet
By Alice Dickens
Visiting with Mc. and Mrs.
Ralph Turner were their
son. Carl and wife Bev of
London on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Daigle and Allison,
Amhertsburg visited during
the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Rosser.
Riverview Women's
Institute met Monday even-
ing when Ralph Robinson
showed . pictures of Egypt
where he has been recently
on business for the G.M. of
London.
Rev. Kenneth Hayes,
pastor of the Ailsa Craig and
• Denfield Baptist churches,
has accepted a call to be
Pastor of the Baptist church
in Neustadt. Ontario which
is a community of about 500
population with twc
Lutheran. one Roman
Catholic and one Baptist
church.
Mr.- and Mrs. Guthrie
Stokes received word of the
birth of Tyler William
Yates. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Yates, (Eleanor Stokes)
of Sarnia. Mr.' and Mrs.
Stokes visited the family on
Sunday.
Friends. neighbours and
relatives extended "birth -
of Western On- day greetings to Mrs. (Fred)
Ida Bice, Strathmere Lodge
(formerly of the village) on
her 90th birthday celebrated
in the Sunday school room of
the Ailsa Craig United
Church on August
30.
By MISS JEAN COPELAND
Mr. and Mrs. George
Wheeler have returned home
from visiting relatives in
Brownsburg and Knowlton,
Quebec.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Copeland visited Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Bev Westman, Granton.
Mrs. John Rodd, Mrs.
Fred Parkinson and Miss
Jean Copeland enjoyed .the
bus trip arranged by Mrs.
Raymond Paynter to
Caledonia Tuesday' and the
boat cruise on the Grand
River and the program
which followed.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Watson,
Grand Bend, Miss Lana
Marshall of Kirkton were
supper guests with Mr. and
Mrs. Reg McCurdy, Jason
and Jeffrey and helped
Jason celebrate his tenth
birthday.
Mrs. Audrey Cornish of
Battle Creek, Michigan
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. George Wheeler.
South Huron District High School, Exeter
EVENING CLASSES
CREDIT COURSES Fall Term 1981
Credit courses will begin during the week of September 21 and end during the week of
December 14. These classes will meet two evenings each week, thus'enablinq pupils to com-
plete the course by Christmas. Pupils in day school must see Mr. Wooden if they wish to
enrol in a credit evening Class. Credit courses may be taken for non-credit cis well. The fee
for credit courses is $30.00 except for welding which is $75.00. Day school pupils ore not
required to pay the fee if they are Huron County school pupils. Fees are paycthle on the
first night of the course. Interested persons should register in advance by calling the school
at 235-0880.
Course
English 551 (Gr. 13)
Mathematics 552
(Gr. 13 Calculus)
English 440
(Gr. 12 general)
English 340
(Gr. 11 general)
law 400 (Gr. 12)
Beginning Shorthand
(300)
Intermediate Shorthand
(400)
Introductory Accounting
(300)
Introductory Welding
(300)
Interrnediate Welding
(400)
English 240 (Gr. 10
general)
Mathematics 240
(Gr. 10 general)
Beginning Typing
(Gr. 9)
Computer Science 400
History 240
(Gr. 10 general)
Geography 240
(Gr. 10 general)
Consumer Education
(Gr. 11 & 12 general)
Intro. to Computer
Programming
Nights • Time No. of Sessions
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m. 25
Room
Lihrnry
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m. 25 114
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Tues. 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Thursday 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7-10 p.m.
Tues. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Thurs. 7-10 p.m.
Mon. & Wed. 7.10 p.m.
25 120
25
25
122
202
25 209
25 209
25 701
25 95
25 95
25
25
25
25
220
112
204
703
25 212
25 103
25 707
25 703
NON CREDIT COURSES
Non -Credit Courses will begin the week of October 5. Interested persons should register in
advance by calling the school (235-0880). Fees are payable on the first night of the course.
Course
Adult Fitness
Stained Gloss Art
Weaving without a
Loom
Pottery
Cameo Tube Painting
Flower Arranging &
Christmas Crafts
First Aid (St. Johns)
C.P.R. (Basic Cardiac
life Support)
Photography
Pilots' Ground School
Badminton (S.H. students
only)
Patchwork & Quilting
Social Dancing (fox
trot, waltz, polka, etc.)
Doncercise (dancing for
exercise, style, rythm)
Needlepoint &
Bargello
Gourmet Cooking
(Sons Argent)
Survival Skills
for Women
Introduction to
holistic health
How Gov't works emphasis
on Municipal level
How to Invest in
Canadian Securities
Crocheting
I.F.R. Ground School
(for D.O.T. Exam)
Basic Electricity
Night
Monday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Tuesday
Monday
Monday
Thursday
Monday
Thursday
Thursday
Wednesday
Thursday
Monday
Tuesday
(Oct. 20)
Wednesday
Monday
Monday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Time
7:30-9:30
7:00-10:00
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:00-10:00
7:30-10:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-10:30
7:00-10:00
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-9:30
7:30-10:00
7:00-10:00
Sessions
10
7
10
10
20
Room
Iq num
99
724
714
117
10 109
10 116
4
10
14
25
8
10
10
718
177
Cnf
I n nvm
274,
Sml rlvm
Public
Schnnl
10 774
10 774
10 lib
10 89
5
10
5
706
708
170
10 105
14 97
Fee
S15.
435
S1 5.
S15.
S7 5.
S15.
S15.
513.
515.
S25.
TBA
510.
515.
S15.
515.
580.
S15.
S15.
510.
S15. I
510..
515.
$25.
Sewing Program
(o) Courses 8, 9, 10 are designed and taught to give basics necessary for professional looking
courses also give the techniques needed for the return of woven fabric.
(b) Interested persons should register for the courses in which they are interested by telephnnintt the school
(235.0880). Once the degree of interest in each course is determined the day and time of the course will
be set and those who have registered will be advised.
(c) Courses 1 to 7 will be offered consecutively, consequently it will be possible to take several. Fee 1 to 5
6. Women's Tailored Jackets - 10 weeks
7. Men's Tailored Jacket • 10 weeks
8. Beginners Sewing for Children age 10-14 - 10 weeks
9. Beginners Sewing for Adults • 10 weeks
10. Intermediate level Sew - 10 wenks
11. Advanced Sewing for Childrtrf • 10 weeks
results: the
S10. Others S15.
1. Men's Pants - 5 weeks
2. Advanced T -Shirt • 4 weeks
3. T -Shirts & Velours - 5 weeks
4. Women's Pants that fit - 5 weeks
5, Pattern Know-how (Basic Pattern
I 41110+
Drafting) •
5 weeks
5