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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1984-07-25, Page 23FINAL,ROIINP-of !a 4tainerseriesofAiotocros.s at 8117 iGully',, S,un ,, oy, July 29 starting et l 30 cont ;Comte out and meet celebrities from 1 R,IF ratio In; Detroit : After the races party 'Met "Alliston Flytet". Far more information call H.uIfy Gully 262-33118.---30a r HURON CATTLEMEN'S BEEF BARBECUE and Dance, Wednesday, August 1. Barbecue 5:30. 8: dance 9 - 12:30 tut Lincoln Green. Tickets $.8 per person available from local directors. Phone 887- 6186 or OMAF office. -3o THE BAYFIELD Lions Club annual fish fry, Satur- day, August 4 from 4:30 - 7 p.m. at the Bayfield Arena. -30-31 ar "THE HURON COUNTY HEALTH Unit invites you to attend the Adult`Health Guidance Centre, held at the Health Unit office, Medical Building, Brussels on Wednesday. August 1. 1984 for 1. Health Surveillance. 2. Foot Care. 3. Anaemia Screen- ing. 4. Urine Testing. 5. Blood Pressure. --30 TOWNSHIP OF GODERICH History, Book, Residents and landowners -of Goderich Twp. may have their names included in the patrons list by ordering their book now - $20 per copy. Contact Mrs. Charles Orr, R.R. 2, Goderich. N7A 3X8 or 524-7032.--30 HURON COUNTRY PLAYHOUSE presents "Bedroom Force" July 17 • • July 28 and in PLAYHOUSE II "Billy Bishop Goes to War" July 25 - August 4, Phone 238.8451. - 30 HURON COUNTY FAMILY.Planning invites you to attend Family Planning Clinic every . Thursday from 6:30 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at Huron county Health Unit, Public Health Wing, Huronview, Clinton. Counselling and medical services pro- vided. Clinic dosed August' 7 to September 4.---30eow BLYTH FESTIVAL Garrison's Garage: July 27 (sold out); Blue City: July 28, 30, Aug. 2, 3: A Spider in the House: July 31; Cake -Wolk: Aug. 1, 2(Mat.)- 30ar A BENEFIT SOCIAL evening will be held July 27 at 8:30 p.m. in Auburn Hall for Mr, and Mrs. John Kruzanowski & Family who recently lost their home in a fire. Ladies please bring lunch. -29-30 (NITON LEGION BINGO held TberrtJgy even - Ings le canceled for the summer.-10.30ar , BINGO every i uesdoy evening ,at Vanastrtj Cen- tre, R;R. $, Clinton, 8 p.m. First regular cord $1 00 15regular $2„p.0o games, three share-the- wealtit, jetkpot 4200.00 must go! Admission is restricted to 1.6 years and over. -1 tfar MONSTER BINGO every Monday night, June 1) to Sept. 3 at Clinton Community Centre. Admission 16 yrs. and over. Cords 6 for $1., 25 cents each, fifteen regular games and three share -the - wealth, one $1000 game. Dears. open 6:30 p.m. Proceeds to community work.-24-35ar VISIT CANADA'S WONDERLAND with United Trails. Departs every Saturday thru Aug. 26. $29.00 includes transportation, admission and unlimited passport. To reserve a seat call 527- 1222.-29.34 SECOND PUBLIC MEETING to discuss the future of the Huron County Pioneer Museum will be held Wednesday, August 8th, 8 p.m. at the Goderich Township Hall in Holmesville.-29,30,31 COLTS CHICKEN BARBECUE: Saturday, July 28, Clinton Community Park, 5 - 7:00 p.m. $5.00 per ticket. Proceeds to Mirror Ball. Tickets available from Colt players and Fleming Feed Mill staff.-29,3Qar CLINTON'S CN SCHOOL Cor on Wheels 15089 needs your help to restore and maintain it. $5 membership privilege cards available at Bartliffs, Campbell's Men's Wear, Clinton Credit Union, Ball and Mutch Furniture. Donations over $10 income tax deductible. Life memberships $100."=29-31 ALL STARS TOURS: Bob Hope Spectacular, Cleveland, Ohio, Aug. 17- - 19 includes transportation, 2 nights accommodation, reserv- ed seat at Bob Hope Show, walking tour of Johnson Manor, show at Pacific Pearl, Lewis Research Centre, shopping, 2 breakfasts, 2 din- ners, pre -depart cancellation insurance and Blue Cross coverage each of two $249,00. All Star Tours 527-1222:-29.33 Clinton Monster Bingo results CLINTON - Jean Hildebrand and Hilda Austin both of Seaforth shared the $1,000 jackpot on July 23 at Clinton Monster Bingo. Shirley Pole of RR 1, Dashwood was a • share the wealth winner. She walked away with $141.25 in her pocket. A big early bird winner was Dave Jewitt of Lucknow: He won the early bird game with $113.50 for his efforts. Another early bird winner was Frances Ayotte of Dashwood who won. $97.50. The third share the wealth game was won by Irene Green of Goderich and Phyllis Lee ,of Clinton. The ladies shared $143.50. The first share the wealth game was worth $138.50. Helen Wallace of Londesboro and Chris Gerig of Goderich split, the winnings. In regular $50 game play, individual win- ners were Shirley Smith of Goderich, • Marilyn Morley of Goderich, Roseanne Overholt of Zurich and Nellie Kunder of Stratford. Other $50 game winnerswere Leah Breckenridge of Goderich, Marylou` Melick of Goderich, Gloria Alloway of Vallastra, Marlene Britton of Seaforth, Mildred Hartman of Goderich, Norma Caldwell of Dashwood and Ena .Shipp of Clinton. Elsie Hulley of Goderich and Debbie Stewart of Toronto split a game and won $25. each. The tenth game winners for a share in a $50 game were Lois Armstrong of Exeter, Rose Gass of Hensall, Nancy VandenHuvel of London, Kay Storzuk of Winghain, Lois Miriam of Goderich, Jeanne Parent of Exeter, Carol Finlayson of Exeter, Joyce Wallace of Seaforth, Helen Wallace of Londesboro, Lloyd Huffman of Bayfield, Susan Hiusser of Goderich, Nelie Gonie of „ ?tee 7ateet4 ,. INTRODUCING ORIFLAME High quality and economically priced European skin care and makeup products. Experienced in the European approach to glorify your skin naturally. For free facial - with no obligation, to buy - phone 482-7224 BUCK & DOE for Jamie Jutzi end Lynn HugIll FRIDAY JULY 27 \at the_ BRUSSELS -MORRIS -GREY TCENTRE Tickets 4.00 9 PM - 1 AM MUSIC AND LUNCH PROVIDED Happy Birthday Mom Love Dad. Laurie, Gayle. Randy and Staved Orillia, Helen Wallace of Londesboro, Verna Glazier of Clinton and Janine Couvillon of London. Barbara Moss of London and Linda Chambers of Goderich split winnings. Win- ners • in another.. round were Harold Johnstone of Goderich, Leone Gough of Grand Bend, Marjorie Meidinger of Zurich, Marg Percy of Clinton and Barb Van Damme of Clinton. Enjoy Our SUNDAY BRUNCH 11:30 am -3:30 pm 595- • SUNDAY BtlFFETes 5 pm -7:3305 m • - �$7 With all you can eat salad bar. Hot entree. dessert and rl(.11 coffee at the - WHITE r�t„1,�, CARNATIO.N 41) Holmesville- Weekday Lunches 11:30-3:30 Dinner reservations available 482-9228 After Hours - 524-4133 BUCK AND DOE for Jeff Gibbings and Sharon Thompson SATURDAY, AUGUST 4 For information call 482-3678 482-7419 OPEN RECEPTION following the marriage of Cathy Anderson Rickand SATURDAY JULY 28 STARTING AT 9 PM at the White Carnation - Holmesville Seaforth JUNIOR FARMERS DANCE SATURDAY. JULY 28th Seaforth Community Centre by "Professional Rock Sounds' '(DJ.) Dancing 9 p.m. - 1 a.m. Age of Majority or Junior Farmer card only By Janet Teach l Still in the spirit of natiopallain dance with Toronto's sesgitiee. ntenni l hers are the latest works of two'Canadian One, Bruce Cockburn, whose first Albion was released in 1970, and M Phos M (former- ly Martha and the Muffins) surprising- ly urprisingly didn't rate an item in Rolling Stone's Rock Encyclopedia. First is the one and only Bruce Cockburn, who has released his 14th album. If you want music to play while you converse about politics, the human condition, pr other equally heavy topics, this is it. Cockburn, in thepastthree years, has attained a full com- fortable sound that gets airplay on FM sta- tions (as well as AM). The album, Stealing Fire, deals with two ideas, Side One basically says, "Enjoy e". 0n the other hand, Side Two is a reac- :tion 'to woad violence. At one. point Cockbu rn cries, "If I had a rocket launcher some sour, would die." A major difference in the music as coin, pared to The Trouble With Normal (last LP) is the, absence of violinist Hugh Marsh. While the music remains superb, there is not the emotion Produced with the violin. In all, a must,fur Cockburn fans and a good introduction to Cockburn for new fans. Rating: 10. On the lighter side of rock, from the band that brought_Echo Beach to the. Great Lakes comes their. new album Mystery Walk. Here M plus M has mixed soul rhythms (Cooling the Medium) with the modernish funk dominating radio airplay. RCA, finally realizing the potential of M plus M has released arae r lxJlp ys ryFirst f ; these. a, �' rata for .Its 'reluc- tance to play, - b ck music, is Black Ste tions/Wbite tat..An, next ease Come Out and Dances. cam the idea that you can andthe third s away, e w gg. a dance all yai#r-1< oti..I , Y. single released is .Cooling the Medium (terry Me Down), often heard right now on the radio. Martha Johnston (one M) has. `rich substantial vocals that inix well with the abundant black sound created by Mark Gape (the other M). However, the in- strun)entation often lacks in variety, caus- ing the album to drag by the end of Side One. The only relief on Side Two is the sometimes poignant lyric such as this line found in Na- tion of Followers. "We believe ,in anything before we believe in ourselves". Isn't that Canada to a T? Rating: 7. Bigcitywornanhassn '7i town ® ® h • Colleen comes from a long line of artistic talent. Her sister Peggy and her father are both journalists. Her mother performed in various plays in high school. "She is a really good actress and I often wish she hadn't given it up," commented Colleen. "My uncle, who is also an actor, said he often wonders why my family are all involved in the arts," she said. "He said that maybe it's because we are Irish - we have that artistic bent." Today, as the playwright sits in the sun on a bench, she remembers her first day in the farming village. 13y Wendy Somerville BLYTH - How does a young woman from Montreal coxae up with a Class -A play about a competition in a small Ontario town? Colleen Curran, the playwright, . has managed to make Cake -Walk a pleasant reminder of community affairs to all small town locals. The idea sprouted from family visits to a cottage in Vermont. In a CBC -TV Journal interview, Colleen said she received her inspiration by watching and observing friends and strangers. "Someone would say something. and I would think,' Oh yah! I must remember that," she said. Last summer Colleen sat down to her typewriter and wrote Cake -Walk hoping Janet.Amo's, artistic director for the Blyth Festival, would accept it. In February her play was accepted and Colleen was on her way to being one of Blyth's summer playwrights. - Cake -Walk is Colleen's first Canadian Actor's Equity Association production. She has been writing plays since highschool and has acted in a number of Quebec Theatres. She graduated from both Loyola College and McGill University, • The 1Ilntreal native has sincewritten numerous one -act and full-length plays, winning awards at the Quebec Drama Festival and the Ottawa Little Theatre National Playwriting competition. In 1984, CBC -Radio produced Maisor.rict ve, her series about the Irish in east -end Montreal. Her other credits include directing, acting and teaching. STAO and DOE for Larry Fraser and Gail LaCroix on Friday, August 3, 1984 For further information call 482-7785 or 482-7220 BUCKandDOE for Dave Counter and Trudy Zegger Saturday, July y 28 Tickets *3.00 482-3617 YOUNG and OLD Join in the Bayfield Lions and Lioness "Shared Tradition Parade" SATURDAY, AUGUST 4th, '84 AT 12 NOON Dress in costume, decorate a bike, trike, or a float. *Log sawing contest *Arm wrestling contest *Mini Olympics *Fish Fry "When I first arrived I went searching for Katherine Kaszas (Cake -Walk's director). I was told I could find her in the Legion Hall at a penny sale," she recalls. "While I was there I thought I'd try my luck. I ended up putting tickets in for things I thought my mother, my sister and my father would like." Later, when she was sitting in the local tavern, affectionately known as The Rubber Boot, an actor informed her that she was now the proud owner of a tractor hat with the name of Blyth emblazoned . across its brim. "Nothing could have been more • appropriate," laughed Colleen. "It'll be great for my father." The Montrealer said that Blyth has a unique theatre, "Usually in a theatre environment, the actors are tense before a performance. Here the entire cast has got along beautifully." • She also mentioned the problems you can encounter with a sensitive director, "but this director is terrific!" She added that watching the play during production and rehearsal, "wasn't a painful situation at all." Cake -Walk premiered on July 17 and will run to August 18. Billy Bishop goes to war next at Playhouse II The great Canadian musical drama Billy Bishop Goes To War will be the second offer- ing of the Playhouse II Season at Huron Country Playhouse. Billy Bishop, the home town boy from Owen Sound, was a misfit cadet at Royal Military College, who, on the dawning of World War I, would have been expelled had not war started. Billy Bishop Goes To War is his story from his days as a cadet through his first encounters with trench warfare to his discovery of airplanes. Then his moments of glory came as he went on to become a top ace and international hero. But, the play is more than just a history class as it looks at the man as well as his deeds and presents us with a complex individual who sings and dances, exaggerates, fan- tasizes and finally copes with the truth about the war and his experiences in it. Billy Bishop Goes To War has everything needed to entertain - including a standout performance by Hank Stinson in his -title role. Billy Bishop Goes To War will be .in per- formance July 25 through August 4 in Playhouse II. All are invited: to attend Falls Reserve soil study Everyone is invited to the Falls Reserve Conservation Area for a down to earth weekend. If you like getting your hands dir- ty, a study of' area soils is a -good start. On Saturday morning at 10 a.m. come to the Activity Centre for the start of a one COLTS CHICKEN BARBECUE Saturday. July 28th Clinton Community Park 5:00 - 7:00 $5.00 a ticket Proceeds to Minor Ball Tickets available from Colt players and Fleming Feed Mill staff. BROWNIE'S DRIVE-IN THEATRE 169 Beech St.-CLINTON • • X OFFICE OPENS 1:30 PM FIRST SHOW AT DUSK NOW PLAYING 'TILL THURSDAY JULY 26 SYLVESTEn DOLLY STAL.2_.ONE PARTON _HINESTONE 1 he Knn,f,,nn heardSummer', of the . -„f•,� WARNING:'Coarse . ,• •... f Language - TBO NMI PLUS 2ND FEATURE NMI John Travolta - Olivia Newton John. "TWO OF A KIND. • STARTS FRIDAY JULY 27 • TO THURSDAY AUGUST 2 "The most imaginative movie since `E.T."" ( US MOtININ(. Nt wS ( Flti t v Pail 0„ GREMLINS WARNING: Frightening Scenes (TBO) When you're on a pain with live million dollars, nothing con throw you oil the track, Finders Keepers P„1 •t•t Qld T Country J Breakfast at the Londesboro Community Centre Sunday, July 29, 1984 9,a.m. - 1 p.m. Sausage, Bacon, Eggs, Homefries, Pancakes, Sponsored by Londesboro Lions Club Proceeds for Playground Equipment kilometre hike on which a closer look will be taken at the soils of the Falls area. Saturday .night at 8:45 p.m. come to the picnic shelter for an evening of very earthy films. Sunday morning at 11 a.m. the Activity Centre is open for an hour of investigation of the many creepy crawlers that live in soil. For further information, drop in at the Ac- tivity Centre or phone 524-6429, The Falls Reserve is .located five miles east of Goderich on Huron County Road 31. STEiNG DRIVE -1M GODERICH TILL THURSDAY, JULY 26TH • • •, • • • STARTS FRIDAY, JULY 2:7TH • • The insanity continues... • • • • • . • • • • •DESTWOWE fVault 4ICCONPANINENT 2ND FEATURE • • • • • • BOX OFFICE OPENS , • • FRI.-SAT. 8:00 SUN.-THURS. 8:30 • '2ND FEATURE • • • • The Hunter • from the Future• • • • • • • • • • • • FRIDAY • • SATURDAY • ONLY • TGUIDANC PARENTAEL• • • •••••••••••'• I ...c' . 9, • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.r•• ICOARSE LANGUAGE Theatres Branch Ont. PARENTAL GUIDANCE , ••••••••••i••••••••••••••• • TONIGHT TILL THURSDAY AT 8:00 P.M. • • • • STARTS FRIDAY, JULY 27m • ••�i,. • tl V • `� oaf . v �a�? • •-.te r -���, \ • O`Cvi ,., W, • • • • GODtRICH - 324-7811 • • • • MAW REP o TUESDAYS • •. FRI.-SAT. 7 ,& 9:10 i • SUN.-THURS. 8:00 P.M. • • • • • • • • • - • • • • • • •• Ill • • if adventure has a name, . • it must be Indiana Jones. • • jotinitoti • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • and the Taairis or woo PARENTAL GUIDANCE.11.11 • FRIGHTENING • SCEN T.D.b.ES • 4 PREMIER THEATRES vioseetootspoloseels••••••*ie••0e► 01000.••►®•®*i•et111lb•,D.