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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1972-11-02, Page 22• A OD IU SKCNA1 STAR:;'HURSDAY. NOVEMHl R 2, 1912 anter can �e beaten. T. PRYDE & SON _ LINTON--*EXETER--SEAFORTH--*GODERICH ti Memorials Markers and. Cemeiery Lettering Frank Mcll�wain 524-9465 200 Gibbons St, WANTED In Colborne Township Pr�pert' suitable for a waste disposal land fill site. Interested parties, please contact Reeve Douglas McNeil, Goderich, R.R.6, or Clerk Wilmer Hardy, R.R.5, Goderich. NOTICE To The Municipal Electors Of. Colborne township The 1972 Colborne Township Municipal Electors Voters', List is now posted in Colborne Township Municipal Office at R.R.5, doderich and the polling divisions. The last day of application for entry, correction or deletion is November 10, 1972. It is the ratepayer's duty to see that their name -ia on the above voter's list. WILMER HARDY Clerk, Colborne Township NOMINATION For the municipal offices of Reeve, Deputy -Reeve, and 3 Councillors, public and separate school representatives, will be received at the Clerk's office, Goderich, R.R. 5, commencing November 9, 1972 and closing at 5 p.m., November 13th, 1972. - Nomination forms are available from the clerk. WILMER HARDY Clerk. CAN IDB SERVE YOU? Monday, November 6, 197 2 one of our representatives Mr,. J. D. Brinklow will be at The Bedford Hotel Goderich 9:00 a.m. to 12 noon In this district and throughout Canada many persons and firms in practically all types of N businesses anC u_ g Agriculture • Tourist and Recreational Businesses • Construction • Professional Services • Transportation • Wholesale,and. Retail Trades, as well as Manufacturing have obtained loans from the IDB to acquire land, buildings, and machinery, to increase working capital, to start a new business, and for other purposes. If you consider that IDB can be of service, you are invited to arrange an appointment with the IDB representative by telephoning. Telephone: 524-7337 or in advance by writing to INDUSTRIAL D, V 'LOPMENT . BANK . 197 Yin Shrift, Prondoni.Ontario NSA 1 82 The Goderich Volunteer Fire Department was called out last Sunday evening toa fire just east of Carlow. Firemen entered the abandoned, smoke filled house, and extinguished a blaze which caused little damage. Control family size says UC cleric �* The UN -sponsored meeting on ecology at Stockholm last .Tune "tip -toed right around the single most dangerous threat to the human environment - the rapidly' increasing numbers of ftumans, writes Rev. Howard M. Mills, minister of St. James Bond United Church here, in the current United 'Church Obser- ver. Dr. Mills, the father of three, recommends that the church begin urging all young couples to have two children. or fewer. He doubts that the major con- ference on Population planned by the UN for 1974 offers much hope. "We have all -known about the population explosion for at Tiger. Dunlop BY MARTHA ROBERTSON least 20 years without significant action resulting," he . claims, 'and part of the problem is we Christians: in our an- cestral subconscious dwells that ancient Hebrew conviction about God's original directions to man --Be fruitful and multiply and fill the earth." "Today, growth is the watch- word in everything from GNP to the number of gold medals we covet," maintains the writer. "Now we find, to bend a phrase. that 'the wages of growth is death'!„' He argues thea mankind must become - just as clever at achieving . Zero -Population - Growth as it has been in multiplying and filling the earth. "This is where we Canadians can and must start," . he says in The Observer article, "By achieving" a zero population growth rate we will also be working on the problem of growth generally: all five areas of the life support system (ex- ploitation of resources; pollution; expansion of in- dustrial processes; food produc- tion; and population) directly influence each other. Equally important, only as we North Americans succeed in stabilizing our own population will our urging of effective population control on other and less developed nations become credible. Dr. Mills recommends that the church•begin by urging all young couples to have two children or fewer. "That's especially hard to do if you yourself have, or had, three or four or six or more; it's also tough if you're a pastor whose church has traditionally frowned on those with childless intentions." The seventh meeting of the Tiger Dunlop Dinnerbelles, was held at Carlow Hall on Monday October 30 at 7 p.m, Laurie Dustow read the minutes of the last meeting, and Gail McMichael read. the Treasurer's Report. ;They then had a short discussion on our Party for the Eighth meeting and another discussion for Achievement Day. People were picked to make a table setting for the Day and also a skit was planned. To get right down to business we then started into our evening's .class of making chocolate chip cookies and chocolate sauce and eating them with ice cream and ginger snaps that Mrs. Kaitting had made. The ingredients of the chocolate chip cookies were: 1/2 c. shortening, 1/2 c. white sugar, 1/4 c. lightly packed brown sugar, 1 tsp. vanilla, 1 egg, 1-1l4 c pastry' flour, 1/1 tsp.' baking soda,, 1/2 tsp. salt, 1 pkg. (6 oz.; choc. chips, 1/2 c. chopped walnuts. 1. Cream together the shor- tening, sugars and vanilla. 2. Add egg and beat until light and fluffy. 3. Sift together the flour, soda and salt. Stir into creamed mixture. 4. Fold in chocolate chips and walnuts. 5. Drop batter from a teaspoon about 2" apart on ' greased baking sheet. 6. Bake moderately hot oven, 350° for 8 minutes or' until light golden brown. Makes about 4 dozen. . After eating these goodies homework pamphlets were han- ded out and homework assigned. The neat meeting is to be Monday November 6 at 7 p.m. at the Carlbw Hall. This meeting is just a time to talk about Achievement Day and the Party. The meeting closed' with the Creed by Karen Mcphee. r You Are. Invited. SUNDAYS 9:30 Morning Prayer 9:45 Family Bible School 11:00 Morning Gospel Hour 6:30 Evening Prayer 7:00 Evangelistic Rally WED. 8: Home League (Women's Group) THURS. 7:30 Bible Study 7X4/1/4 etivom, 18 Waterloo St. S., Goderich AgrA.NOw- 41114, "Wo preach +hrlst, cruclfied, rlsrn and coming agisln" GIVE ... so more will live HEART FUND WILLIAMS CEMETERY MEMORIALS " And Inscriptions Stratford -- Ontario Bob McCallum Representative 65 Montreal St., Goderich Phone 524-7345• many Can books for -children . Young Canada Book Week is November 15 to 22, but try to find a Canadian 'children's book, writes author Jean MacKenzie in the current United Church OBSERVER.. Most of the books for Young Canada Book "`'Week written and published in the United States, she'says. "This is a war for the minds of our children, and we're losing. Thoughtful Canadians should take a good look at the attitudes our youngsters are absorbing" "If there .are things Canadian, worth preserving -=our history, our triumphs, our, attitude to living, then as parents we had better pay attention. Americana is creeping over our way of life like a. fungus," she maintains. • our cot'fee cups. We agreed that it was, indeed, a terrible thing. Yet when wit went out to buy a gift book for our Johnny, an in- credibly high percentage of us bought an. American or British book." Mrs. MacKenzie recognizes that economic forces are weeding- out:: -:Canadian writers- -as well as publishers and artists. "Few Canadiaia writers can live on the proceeds of their books alone," she says. "They must work at an outside job or supplement their income by writing articles, public relsi'tions' pieces, business or technical commissions." For her own part she confesses: "much.as I'd like to, I don't know that I can af- ford to write for your children." ,Parents have the respan , However, she. sees some hope sibility to see that their children if Canadians will support their hear and read about the things writers, artists, publishers and that make Canada unique1,pays ,� printers. "One of the great dif- this mother and author of two ferences between uu is That children's books,. 'River of Stars' and 'Laura Secord, Legend and Lady'. "It is,up to us individually whether the next generations will be Canadians, or merely little Americans ' in long underwear," she says. Americans make more noise about their accomplishments. Maybe we should do more about blowing our own horn. But then—that's not the Canadian way, is it' she asks. Mrs. MacKenzie warns that The fault is not with "if we persist in buying , Canadian publishers or authors, everything our next door neigh - Mrs. MacKenzie maintains, but bour presses on us, we shall do with the book -buying public. nothing but buy ourselves "You and I were upset," she oblivion.". recalls, "when the failing Ryer- son Press was sold to an American firm. We wrote letters to editors. We tut -tutted 'over RED .CROSS IS ALWAYS THERE WITH YOUR HELP obituaries LAWRENCE C. SN' DER Lawrence C. Snyder of Colborne Township died in Vic- . toria • Hospita.,l, London, . following a two-week illness. He was 66. The son of Levi and Emma (Blake)' Snyder, he was born August 25, 1906 in Colborne Township' where he resided all his JiffLiiiik until X956 and had been a Colborne Town- . ship mailman since 1958. • He was married November 23, 1029 in Colborne Township ,to Margaret Allin who survives. Also surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Ray (Jeanne) " Johnston, , Sarnia; two grandchildren;. one sister, Mrs. Brian (Leola) Ames, Atwood; and three brothers, Emerie, Moose Jaw, Saskat- chewan, and William and Stanley, both. of Goderich. He was a member of Victoria Street United Church. Funeral service was conduc- ted -Monday, October 30 ate Rt es• 7un:eral Home... with..,Bev........ Leonard Warr in charge. Inter- ment was in Colborne Cemetery. Pallbearers were Harry Westlake, Toynbee Lamb, Clare McCue, Gordon Fowler, Jiry Reed and Herman Schoemaker. Flowerbearers were Raymond Allin, Don Sowerby, Giant Fisher, Robert Clark, Wayne Snyder and Ted Roston SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5 WAYNE CLEAN ,,1,‘.D.!SVFRKOUNCER The Holden Family will sing at WESTFIELD FELLOWSHIP HOUR - 2 P.M. HURON MEN'S CHAPEL, AUBURN - 8 P.M. U.R. WELCOME — GET YOUR TICKETS FOR CHRISTMAS BANQUET DEC. 1 "Evil Prevails When Good Men Do Nothing" SUNDA Y SERVICES FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH (Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec) MONTREAL STREET near The Square REV. W. H. McWHINNIE F.R.G.S. Organist: Mr. Frank Bissett 10:00 a.m.—Sunday School 11:15 a.m.—Morning Worship Tuesday, 6:30 p.m.—Baptist Youth Crusaders This Church has an Evangelistic and Missionary Vision. COME AND WORSHIP WITH US WESLEY MEMORIAL CHURCH THE FREE METHODIST CHURCH Park St. at Victoria H. ROSS NICHOLLS, Pastor 10 a.m.—Sunday School 11:00 a.m.—Worship 7:00 p.m. ---Evening Service WELCOME " CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH BAYFIELD ROAD AT BLAKE STREET EVANGELISTIC — FUNDAMENTAL REV. R. BRUBACHER, Pastor Church 524-6445 Residence 524-9497 10:00 a.m.—Bible School for alt ages 11:00 a.m.—Sermon ",BEHOLD THE LAMB OF GOD" Corflmbnion Service 6:30 p.m.—Y.P.—"Word of Life Club" 7:30 p.m.—"God's Want List" Wed., 8 p.m.—Prayer Meeting and Bible Study WELCOME TO THE FRIENDLY CHURCH Knox Presbyterian Church THE REV. G. LOCKHAfT ROYAL, B.A., Minister THE REV. RONALD C. McCALLUM, Assistant WILLIAM M. CAMERON, Director of Praise SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1972. 10:00 a.M.—Sunday School 11:00.a.m.-y-Divine Worship Sermon: "THE CONTEMPORARY CHRIST" iNursery and Junior' Congregation) .--- Mr. McCailurn will preach --- 7:00 p.m.—No - .Miter to Worship Depart to Serve COME TO A GROWING SUNDAY SCHOOL. IF YOU NEED A RIDE; WE HAVE A BUS. Bethel PentecostalJabernacle Affiliated with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada. CORNER OF ELGIN AND WATERLOO STS. REV:PETER G. ST. DON, Pastor SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1972 10:00 a.m.—SUNDAY SCHOOL • 11:00 a.m.—WORSHIP SERVICE 7:00 p.m.—EVENING SERVICE Tuesday, 8:00 p.m.—Bible Study and Prayer Friday 8:00 p.m. Youth Night For further information about church services call 524-8506. Keep your words soft and sweet, You may have to eat them. T. GEORGE'S CHURCH November 5, 1972 - Remembrance Sunday Holy Communion at 8:30 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon at 11 a.m. Canadian Legion Members in Attendance Sunday School and Nursery at 11 a.m. Music concert by the "Albanaire&' at 3 p.m. Wed. Nov. 1 - Holy Communion (chapel) at 7 p.m. Organist-Cholrmaster: Mr. Paul C. Baker F.R.C.O., L.R.A.M., A.R.C.M. Rector: The Rev. G.G. Russell, B.A:, B.D. Victoria Street United Church HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP REV. LEONARD WARR 10:00 a.m.—Bible School For All Grades r : 116.m , ----Worship -Service _ Sermon: "GOD'S GIFT OF-VIORY" . - BENMILLER . UNIT,D CHURCH • 1:30 a.m.—Worship Service& BBible School ATTEND THE CHURCH -WEEK "ALIVE & WELL" MEETING IN THE DUNGANNON CHURCH THIS '-`4 COMING SUNDAY AT 8 P.M. "North Street . United . Church ti REV. ROBERT L. RAYMONT SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 19/2 9:45 a.m.-10 year-olds and over 11:00 a.m.—Babies to 9 year olds 11:00 a.m.—Mornlng Worship Sermon: "SOMEBODY IS DOING SOMETHING" X g W.E•L-0-04A-E' . Lorne H, Dotterer • Director of Music Miss Clare McGowan-•-Assistent Visitor 4 $ 4 .s r 0