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HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes Advocate, 1984-08-15, Page 2Pogo 2 Times-Advocute, August 15, 1984 Six girls in Junior Miss contest Crediton Summerfest activities get underway Friday night This year six entries were received in the Crediton Stun-- merfest 'S4Junior Miss con- test and a winner r will be nam- ed Friday night. Tracy Bullock is nine and a half years old. She attends Usborne School and is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Arbo. Tracy enjoys swimming and participates in karate. Arlene Cottel is the 11 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dave Cottel, Crediton. Arlene is a student at Stephen Cen- tral School and enjoys playing the organ and reading in her spare time. Gia King is also 11 years old. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne King. Gia at- tends Stephen Central School. She has spent her summer afternoons at the pool in Huron Park and also enjoys skating. JeanetteLeibold another 11 year old is a Free Press Car- rier for the Crediton area. Diane Leibold is her proud mother. She loves school. Christie Mosurinjohn is the 10 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Stewardson, Crediton. Christie attends Stephen Central School and enjoys swimming. Sherri Wells is the 9 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wells. Sherri attends McGillivray Central School. She plays piano and enjoys all sports. Other happenings on Fri- day night include the Talent Show held along with . the Junior Miss contest in the town hall. These events stkrt at 7:30. Bessie Bingo will be in progress at the park as will the Main Street Jug Band who start perforltning at 8 p.m. in the pavilion. The midway will begin opera- tion at 6 p.m. along with the refreshment stands. The Junior Farmers will be operating a food booth and a German cuisine booth will tempt your palate. Tickets and souvenirs will be on sale throughout the Summerfest. Draws will be made Sunday prior to the bay show. Some lucky peo- ple will be the owners of a Sunflower queen -sized quilt, a crib quilt and an afghan. Saturday gets underway with a pancake breakfast sponsored by the Crediton Firemans Association, follow- ed by a bake sale at 10 a.m. and the opening of the flea market. The horse show will again prove to very entertaining this year and will begin in the morning, break for the parade and then resume again in the afternoon. As well as events for horses, a special pony class will be add- ed this year. Adriaan Brand is the director of this event and is pleased with the number of entrants that will be competing in this event. The parade gets underway from the conservation area park at 12:30 and promises to be just as good as last year's event. A chain saw competition and Bessie Bingo will prove entertaining following the parade. • Regular bingo will be in operation, conducted by the Hall Board. The Crediton Parks Board will sponsor a beef barbecue and the Crediton and District Social Club will be looking after a dance. Beechwood will be providing the music. Sunday morning a church service will be conducted in the pavilion followed by more pancakes and sausage cooked up by the firemen and the Knights of Columbus. Regular and Bessie Bingo will operate during the after- noon as well as a baby show at 2 p.m. Baby show entrants are asked to pre -register in the Scout room starting at 1:30. The draws will be made for the quilts and afghan in the pavilion at 2 p.m. At 3 p.m. the Mercey Brothers will be entertaining the crowds. Bring your own lawn chairs and enjoy this wonderful entertaining group of country singers. The four part harmony of these men has been an inspiration to .dam TRACY BULLOCK many groups in the past and continues to do so in the future. A pork barbecue will close off the three day event. ARLENE COTTEL day event is a yellow button costing 91.00 in advance and 91.50 at the gate. This button lets you wander on the GIA KING in the Talent show and Junior Miss contest, The Main Street Jug Band, Saturday night dance, The Mercey Brothers on Sunday and other events. Advance buttons are avitilable in local stores as well as meal tickets for the Pork barbecue. See you there August 1T, 18 and 19 at the Crediton Sum- merfest '84 held 'in the Crediton Ball Park. Proceeds to community betterment. JEANETTE LEIBOLD SHERRI WELLS tHRISTIE MOSURINJOHN 4UEL VEP Easy To Install Beautiful Dashwood Sliding Patio Door A Canadian door designed for use in Canadian climates! So you get the insulation you need—plus the beautyof the great outdoors. Easy to install. A practical four seasons door =:. z made from wood for natural character and warmth. --- tl ,;•.+a Colours and styles as available from _ stock only PANCAKE MAKERS — Lee Hodgert, Caroline McClure and Brian Steele prepare the pancakes for Sunday's South Huron Junior Farmers breakfast at Thames Rood United Church. -A photo SH teacher is released on Toronto mischief chareg ping of an atomic bomb on Nagasaki. At Thursday's demonstra- tion, the protesters put tomb- stones and wreaths in front of the plant and sat at the front gate. Some of them wore cot- ton headbands with the Japanese character for peace. Group spokesman Andrew VanVelzen said another demonstration is planned around Remembrance Day on November 11. Young said she will likely attend the demonstration. Her activities - and subse- quent absences from her duties as a mathematics teacher at South Huron District High School - have landed her in hot water with the Huron County board of education. Using the alias of a slain African leader, suspended SHDHS math teacher Joanne Young was released Friday on her own recognizance when she appeared in provin- cial court in Toronto charged with mischief following a demonstration Thursday at the Litton Systems Canada plant. She is to reappear in court August 17 when a trial date will be set. When asked by the court for her name, Young said she was Patrice Lumumba, the first premier of the Belgian Congo - now Zaire - who was murdered in 1961. Young said she chose the name because of the link to uranium, a substance used in nuclear warheads. Young, who is opposed to nuclear warfare, said Lumumba is remembered for his resistance to selling uranium to American interests before his death in 1961. Although the judge was aware Young was giving a false name, "he accepted the name and released me," she said. Young was one of 13 pro- testers held overnight after they refused to sign a court order prohibiting them from entering or going near the Lit- ton plant which manufactures guidance systems for the cruise missile. Twenty-four protesters were arrested and charged with mischief follow- ing a brief blockade of the plant. All 13 were released after the condition was dropped, Young said. The only condi- tion of her bail is that she reside at her Zurich area farm. Those in custody had agreed to •'hail solidarity" so that no one would be released unless everyone received the same treatment, Young said. Some of the protesters were kept overnight at the Metropolitan Toronto West Detention Centre, a place that is becoming familiar to Young. She has been in the centre on a number of occasions when she refused to co- operate with authorities after her arrests following nuclear protests. The protest, organiz- ed by a group called the Cruise Missile Conversion Project, was staged on the 39th anniversary of the drop - The board applied July 9 for permission from the ministry of education to fire Young. A board official said Friday she had not had a reply from the ministry. The board took the action after Young was absent from classes November 18-30, 1983, and June 11-26 this year because she was in custody following protests. After the first absence, Young was suspended without pay for 22 days. The second led to the recommendation she be fired. Young, who had been in northern Saskatchewan near Wollaston Lake discussing issues with Indians on a reserve since mid-July before returning to Toronto for the protest, said she "hasn't got a clue" what she will be doing in September. Scottish visitor Continued from front page for her western trip at Ellison Travel. She also indicated pleasure at the fact her country doesn't suffer from having a mos- quito population. The Dobie family farm con- sists of 500 acres in County Fife on the east coast of Deer causes high damage Only three crashes were in- vestigated by the Exeter OPP this week, with the only vic- tim being a deer. The animal was in collision with a car driven by Sharon Fitzgerald, Hay, as the latter was driving along the Kirkton Road near concession 3-4 of Usborne around 11:40 p.m., Wednesday. After striking the deer, the vehicle careened into the ditch and sustained damage listed at $3,000. The driver suffered minor injuries in the incident. On Tuesday, a parked vehi- cle owned by Stephen Ranks, RR 3 Parkhill, was struck on Goshen St. in Zurich by an unknown vehicle. Damage was $300. The other crash occurred on King St. in Hensall on Fri- day, involving vehicles operated by Rose Dolan, Lon- don, and Tom Dickens, Hensall. Scotland north of Edinburgh. They have 120 dairy cattle and fatten about 75 beef cat- tle on the farm which pro- duces barley, canola, turnips and forage. The Scottish lass noted many differences in farming in Ontario, which she also found to be much flatter than her native country. She was impressed with the crop variety produced here, although found dairy farms to have smaller numbers of animals than in Scotland. In one area where there is a strong similarity is on the economic front. She said Scot- tish farmers have the same financial concerns as their counterparts in Ontario. During their stay in On- tario, the exchange youths have visited the Stratford Theatre, Niagara Falls, CN Tower, Fort Henry and even enjoyed water rafting near Ottawa. LAYOFF AT DIL Almost half of the 230 employees at Dashwood In- dustries have been hit by a layoff precipitated by a declining market for the firm's products due to the current economic co tions. President Mike Shurety has cited high interest rates, ris- ing mortgage rates and the falling dollar as factors in the market situation. 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