Clinton News-Record, 1984-02-15, Page 18FLOWER
AND
LANDSCAPE
SHOW
TORONTO -
SUNDAY, FEB. 26
FOR MORE •
INFORMATION 1•,I
OR RESERVATIONS
�►-,�.-
CONTACT'
1f%•
GODERICH `
524-4540 or 524-7622
PAGE1&•—CLINTQN NEWS -RECORD, WPDNE„SDAY, FEBRUARY 15,1984
Entert
Community calendar
NOON LUNCHEON on Thursday, March 22nd, .at
Wesley -Willis United Church. Adults $4.00.
Children $2.0O. -7x
FESTIVAL SINGLES DANCE, Saturday, February
18, Stratford Fair Ground Annex. Dancing 9 - 1.
Live band and lunch. 7
HAWAIIAN DANCE, February 25. Music by "Free
Spirit", Clinton Legion, $16 per couple. Contact
any Kinette member or call 482-3818 for
tickets. —4,5,7
EUCHRE PARTY at Varna Township Hall on Fri•
day; February 17 at 8:30 p.m. Sponsored by Var-
na L.O.L. 1035. Ladies please bring
sandwiches.- 7
CARD PARTY: Wednesday, February 22 at 8 p:m.
in St. Joseph's Parish Hall. Prizes andlunch. Ad•
mission 32. Sponsored by Knights of
Columbus'. 7,8,10,12
"THE. HURON -COUNTY Health Unit- invites-youurto
attend the Child Health Clinic, held at the Heafth
Unit office. Huronview, Clinton on Friday,
February 17, 1984 from 9:30 • 11:30 a.m. for: 1.
Health Syrveillance; 2. Anaemia Screening: 3.
Immunization; 4. Hearing Screening; 5. Vision
Screening; 6 Fluoride brushing for ages 3 to 5
years. Adult Immunization will also be offered at
this Clinic-. 7
Keep Us In Mind
For March....
DINNER /DANCE - Saturday
March 1.7, 1984
FEATURING - "Expressions"
DINNER THEATRE and DANCE
Saturday, March 31, 1984
FEATURING "Paul Bros.°
and Shirley"
. WHITE
CARNATION
Holmesvllle
After Hours -
524-4133
HAPPY 16tH
PRETZEL!
-from the gang
EUCHRE PARTY at 1.O.O.F. and Rebekah Hall,
Princess St., Clinton, on Feb. 16 at 8 p.rn. Ladies
please bring lunch. Everyone welcome. -7
CLINTON LEGION BINGO every Thursday, 8 p m.
First regular card $1.00. Six cards for $1.00. Fif-
teen regular games, three share -the -wealth.
Early bird game 7:45 p.rn. Jackpot $200.00 must
go eoch week.-9tfor
CLINTON Horticultural Society meeting Wednes-
day, February 22. 8 p.m. at Presbyterian Sunday
School room. Growing begonias by Margaret
Anderson. --7
DESSERT EUCHRE Moi 2 at Rebekah Lodge,
Princgss St., Clinton.- 7
SINGLE'S DANCES every Friday night of Twin
Gables Tavern, 130 Argyle St., Listowel. 9 • 1
a.m. No jeans. Featuring Mike Kraft and The
Country Chorm. Snacks and refreshments.-7tf
PAi�1CA1' E BREAKFAST, Saintli* Fi36'iudr.}i.-"M
Clinton Legion 9 a.m. • 2 p.m. Sponsored by the
Clinton Scouting Movement: - 7ar
CLINTON MINOR HOCKEY Dance, Saturday, April
14, Goderich Township Hall. Music by. the "Ex-
pressions" (formerly the Shannons). Dancing 9 - 1
a.rn. Lunch provided, Tickets $5.00 each. Spon-
sored by Clinton Minor Hockey.— 6,7ar
Back in Bayfield for
the Winter...
Good Food, Great Price...
VILLAGER'S
SPECIALS
at The Little Inn.
MONDAY:
Beef Bourgignoh
creme caramel
TU ESDAY:
Curried Lamb,
Fruit Mousse
WEDNESDAY:
Baked Fresh Lake Huron Whitefish
with home made chips
Cherry Cobbler -
THURSDAY:
Roast Pork
Rice Pudding and cream
A complete home cooked .
meal from our famous
kitchen, including soup or
salad all for...
$650
111
ant
BINGO. every 1 uesday evening at Vonastra Cen-
tre, R.R. 5, Clinton, 8 p.m, First regular card
$1.00. 15 regular $20.00 games, three share -the -
wealth jackpot $200.00 must go! Admission is
restricted to 16 years and over.—1 tfar
SKATE-A•THON February 18 from 1 • 4 p.m. at
Bayfield Arena. Pledge sheets available at Nip N
Tuck. Sponsored by Bayfield Rec. Committee.
Proceeds to winter skating program. --6,7
THE LITTLE INN of BAYFIELD
565-2611
Main Street - Bayfield
MITCHELL KINSMEN Poker Rally, Sunday,
February 19th. Registration 11 a.m. at the Crystal
Palace. 6.7
RECEP'flON
for
Eric and Kathy.
McNee (Husking)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18
IN BLYTH
aPPY-2-7tIFS rlhdoy
"PAUL"
(I guess you're getting older)
Austin Roorda and Marcel Laporte gave it their all in a tug of war match
Monday. Male and female students were matched against each other in the
began winter carnival week. (Shelley McPhee photo)
Successful tour completed.
Last summer's highly successful Huron -
Country Playhouse production of Ernest
Thompson's ON GOLDEN POND has just
completed a two-week tour of nine centres in
Ontario. •
Starting in Bancroft on January 10, the
cast of Larry Aubrey, Ben Carlson, Les
Carlson, Alison MacLeod, Aileen Taylor -
Smith and Sandy Webster also travelled to
Deep River, Elliott Lake, Espanola, Tim-
mins, Campbellford, Waterloo, Drayton and
Petrolia. In each location; the production
was enthusiastically received and the
at CHSS on
contest that
superb cast left each audience craving more
entertainment HCP style.
ON GOLDEN POND was the first produc-
tion of the HCP 1983 season. The touring pro-
duction differed from the original produc-
tion in that Sandy Webster and Alison
MacLeod were playing the roles of Norman
Thayer and his daughter Chelsea. This was
the first play to be toured by Huron Country
Playhouse since the mid -seventies when
shows such -as Hello, •Dolly visited various
towns in Bruce and Grey Counties.
.....1•f.1.1.O11.. 11...111. ......1,...11 .11/11.191.11..8119.11810618111111.1.1110.11 OOOOO
CrODERICH
524-7811
• WED.-THURS.
• AT 8:00 P.M.
• ONLY
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RESTRICTED •
DRUGS •
BRUTAL •
VIOLENCE •
STARTS FRIDAY, FEB. 17 FRI.-SAT. 7 & 9 SUN.-THURS. 8:00
"The feel -good movie of 1983."
Richard Corliss. TIME MAGAZINE
How -c uch.dove, sex, fun and
friendship can a person take?
BIG CHILL
In a cold world you need your friends
to keep you warm.
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to nso.s
I1 r1...S 01 ♦G1 0. Ovn
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Roulston starts theatre company
BLYTH - Two plays, a riotous comedy and
a nostalgic musical comedy will highlight
the first season of The Theatre Circle when
the new professional theatre company opens
on March 15 at Blyth Memorial Hall.
The Shortest Distance Between Two
Points will be the opening presentation of
the new company. The fast -paced comedy
deals with the complications. when a govern-
ment decides to build a new superhighway
to serve a new recreation development but
doesn't notice a little village is directly in
the route. The villagers fight back forming
their own independent republic and the
laughs build from there to a bang-up ending.
When the play by Keith Roulston was first
presented at the Blyth Summer Festival in
1977, Doug Bale of the London Free Press
reported: "The audience was ready to die
laughing by the end of the first act." The
show runs March 15,16 and 17.
The songs and d comedy routines of
vaudeville will be recalled when The'
—Vaudevillians
21. Three old-time vaudevillians
reminisce about the old days and long for
their return so they can pick up their
careers again in this funny, sometimes sad,
musical evening. Peter Colley, author of the
international hit I'll Be Back Before Mid-
. night-- anct 'Heinar Pillar; -former- - artistic -
director at Theatre London collaborated on
the script with David Warwick, one of
Toronto's top theatre composers, arranging
the 'old tunes and providing additional
music. The show played for eight months in
Toroiito as well as at such theatres as the
Muskoka Summer Festival.
Tickets for the plays are $7.50 each but a
subscription for both plays is only $12.
The Theatre Circle is a new company set
up specifically to bring theatre to smaller
cities in southern Ontario. The company this
season will visit Chatham, the Sarnia-
Petrolia area and Owen Sound a well as
presenting performances at its home base in
Blyth.
The company is headed by Keith
Roulston, former general manager and one
of the founders of the Blyth Summer
.Festival and Ilwe. Meyer -.,_who is production
manager at the Blyth Summer Festival If
this season is successful, five plays -will be
toured next year, each spending a week in
each city. •
The company is made up of professional
actors, directors, designers and crew
members drawn from the talent poo?across
Canada. '
. It is supported in each of the communities
by a local committee which will assist 'in
selling subscription tickets, distributing
Slips -and falls •
Slips and falls account for nearly 25 per
cent of all farm injuries. In the autumn and•
winter months, mud, snow and ice 'increase
the danger of falls. Many areas on the farrh
that were relatively safe at other times of
the year become more dangerous in the fall
and winter months. You can prevent most
falls by not hurrying and making sure of
your footing: "DO IT OUR WAY -IT WON'T
HURT". This has beena message from the
Farm Safety Association. ' '
G ODERICH
LITTLE
THEATRE
PRESENTS
"BORN YESTERDAY"
by
GARSON KANIN
Directed - JUNE HILL
Production Dates: February 22, 23, 24 & 25
r
Dates:
Times:
BOX OFFICE
February 16, 17, 18, 20, 21, 22, 23, & 24
Weekdays 10:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
• 1:00 p.m. - x:30 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
Location: The Livery (South Street, Goderich)
REMEMBER TO BRING YOUR TICKET STUB TO RESERVE
YOUR SEAT - NO PHONE RESERVATIONS PLEASE
publicity and doing what fundraising is
necessary to meet the costs of the produc-
tions. During the week the theatre spends in
each community it will be available to work
with local amateur theatre groups, speak to
students in schools or t-cb'i about theatre to
local service club luncheons, etc. The object
is to come as close as possible to providing a
, full-time resident theatre for each of the
communities while spreading the burden of
supporting the theatre among 'different
communities, thus providing professional
theatre to as many people as possible at as
inexpensive a cost as possible. The Theatre
Circle is a non-profit company with a board
of directors drawn from the communities
represented.
Happy 35th
ANNIVERSARY
Fu -and-Mtnii®-Sch'ooraha_s
Love and best wishes from
Bruce, Sandy, Peggy and Doug
and grandchildren.
Come and say hello at the
reception at the Legion on
February 18, 9 pm -1 am. Best
Wishes only.
Happy Birthday
IV"
•
THE WORLD'S •
GREAT VACATION RESORTS
HAVE ONE THING
IN COMMON:
THEIR GUESTS
KEEP COMING BACK.
AA
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service and facilities, has over the years made their ,
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of the finest tennis facilities in Florida with eleven liar -Tru
courts kept in tournament condition. A magnificent executive
golf course where nothing is spared to maintain its
immaculate appearance. Our oceanfront location offers
luxurious accommodations in hotel apartments with fully -
equipped kitchens, and private access to our white sand
beaches. The kids have everything.from golf and tennis
clinics to a video; game room. The evening brings entertain-
ment and gourmet cuisine in our resort's two fine restaurants.
And then there's us, -providing personal attention and
service to assure you'll want to come back again and again.
INDIAN RIVER
PLANTATION
RESORT
385 N.E. Plantation Road
Hutchinson Island; Stuart, Florida 33494
Toll-free (800) 327-4873.
In Florida collect (305) 225-3700
Or call your Travel Agent.