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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1982-10-20, Page 28PAGE 6A —GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1982 Couple residing in King City following wedding at Baptist Church First Baptist Church m Goderich was decorated with wicker baskets of white daisies, yellow roses, baby's breath and trailing ivy on September 11 at 4:30 p.m. for the 'wedding ceremony of Kenneth Dale Shelton and Catherine Janice Anderson, both of Goderich. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Edward Anderson of Goderich and the late Reverend Edward Anderson and the groom is the son of Charles Shelton of Goderich and the late Jean Shelton. The Reverend John Wood officiated at the double -ring ceremony. Mrs. Warr provided organ music and the bride's sister sang Evergreen before the ceremony and a song she wrote herself, entitled Journey of Love, during the signing of the register. The bride was given in marriage by her mother. She wore a floor -length white dress featuring long sleeves with lace cuffs, high lace collar and pleated , four foot train extending from just below the shoulders. The dress was complemented by a matching lace hat with lace veil. Mid of honor was Jane Neve of Sudbury, friend of Red Cross BLOOD DONOR CLINIC G.D.C.I. AUDITORIUM +TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26 FROM 2 P.M. TILL 5 P.M. 6:30 P.M. TILL 8:30 P.M. This Public Minded Message Published by.., SIFTO SALT EVAPORATOR PLANT the bride. She wore a light beige skirt and blouse. The long skirt featured a dark brown ribbon band midway down. The long sleeved blouse buttoned down the front and featured a high lace collar and lace cuffs. The blouse tied over the skirt at the waist with a matching belt. The top of the blouse was accented with a little brown bow. The maid of honor carried a wicker basket of white daisies, yellow roses, baby's breath and trailing ivy. Bridesmaids were Marianne Anderson of •Goderich, sister of the bride, Debbie flunking of Blyth, friend of the bride and Barb Hamilton of Goderich, sister of the groom. They were gowned the same as the maid of honor and carried the same flowers. Flower girl was Stephanie Borre of London. She wore a light beige dress with dark brown pinafore with beige knee socks and brown shoes. Groomsman was Bob Pollock of Goderich, friend • of the groom. Guests were ushered into the church by -Alan and Grant Shelton of Goderich, brothers of the groom and Scott Little of Goderich, friend of the groom. Ringbearer was Ryan Shelton of Goderich, nephew of the groom. Following the wedding ceremony, a dinner was held at the White Carnation in Holmesville followed by a reception at the Goderich Legion. The bride's mother greeted guests wearing a rose colored floor length dress with matching cor- sage. For a wedding trip to Muskoka Islands, the bride changed to a brown two- piece suit with soft yellow blouse and yellow rose corsage and the groom changed to a three-piece corduroy suit with yellow rose boutonniere. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Dale Shelton are residing at R. R. 1 King City, Ontario. Prior to her wedding, the bride was feted at a shower given by Marianne Ander- son, Debbie Hunking and Vickie Powell in Saltford; at Mr. and Mrs. K. D. Shelton a shower given by Jody Brissette and the mother of the bride at the First Baptist Church; at a shower held by the aunts of the groom in Clinton; and at a shower held by friends from work in Toronto. Watch this paper for a change in wedding policy CASHWAY OCT. SALE NDS SAT SAVE NOW ON FIRST QUALITY •CARPETS In Chestnut Brown, Wood Rust, Camel And Heavenly Blue ... ' COUNTRY LANE 100%, Polypropylene Level Lobo.' Foam rubber backing. For high traffic areas. Our keg. 6.75 (Not all stores carry all colors).. Or Choose Our Bright And Lively SPACECRAFT 1000/0 Space Dyed Nylon Level Loop by Ozite. Dense foam rubber backing. In Beige and/or Chestnut. Our Reg. 7.89 KILN DRIED WORK BENCH 6' SPRUCE' PRE-CUT FOR EASY ASSEMBLY Neils & . Instructions • are included • PER SQ. METRE DEPT. 306, • SQ. METRE IN Pr No 11 DEPT 048 Save Now At Cashway On .-12"x12" WHITE. J CEILING TILES CCHVV, • DEPT • 172 1/2" plain white, tongue and grooveceiling tiles. IN HANDY 32 -TILE CARTONS SAVE 235.25 T0390.07 ON A 10 FOOT • SECTION ... Save Even - •-- Larger Kitchen -Kitchen. Cabinets CrownCraft is a "Moilylar Unit" system of cabinets that -allows you to pick and choose the number and type of cabinets you want, the optional extras you want and, most importantly, the STYLE you want! CrownCraft by Raywal: an industry leader for 9 r a quarter century! 5 Style Groups! • ESTATE including Country Oak (as shown) as well as Vanguard, Chateau, Squire and Concord designs. In Oak, Birch and Pecan woodgrains. • ESTATE II today's European Look expressed in functional designs & decorator color schemes with oak trim. • VILLA• . stylings that include Alpine, Coronet, Patina and Camel, .in genuine Birch and Pecan woodgrains. STARLINE in a choice of Heritage, Windsor Oak and designs .., in Pine and Birch woodgrains. • Example: BUY A 10' SECTION OP OUR CATHEDRAL MODEL AND Save 390.07 . Our Reg, price for the upper & base cabinets including cou'nter top is 1,560.26, but you pay only .1,170.19 ' ON THE VILLA MODEL Save .235.25 Our Reg. price for,a 10' section is 941.00, but you pay only 705.75. Please allow 4-5 weeks for delivery. CATHEDRAL Our newest design! The'ulto- mate in solid Oak, raised • " panels with distinctive hard- • ware, --SAVE 6000 STANLEY Automatic GARAGE DOOR OPENER Standard model, , for most doors up to 18'x7 120SAVE s ON ALL 1N -STOCK 995 OUR REG. 249.95 DOOR OPENER - Take your choice, of any garage door in stoc and save 150/0 off our' regular price! ,000--16. GRADE 'A" Save 1400 , Reverse trap, regular tank model in white - vitreous china Our Reg. 69.98 I I WHILE STOCKS LAST! • CEDAR LUMBER • PRESSURE TREATED LUMBER • 48x13 CHAIN LINK -FENCE - • FIBERGLASS PANELS • CHAMPLAIN SIDING • OZITE TURF & ARTIFICIAL GRASS OUTDOOR CARPETS GODERICH 155 ANGLESEA ST. PHONE 524-8382/8383 OR. MAIN ST., ATWOOD PHONE 356.2214 VISA 98 STRAPPING .1x243' 39C SPRUCE 1x3-8' SPRUCE 'I' 2x2-8' -SPRUCE -790_ Quality setund torrone- in the industry' FRAMING 2x4-8 ECOHOMYOR 2)(3 STUD GRADE 9,7' EA. ASHWAY 8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. SATURDAYS 8:30.5:00 FRIDAYS till 9:00 P.M. II ' , FREE Life style kill BY ARTHUR HOPPE On the morning of his 42nd birthday, Grabwell Grommet awoke to a peal of particularly ominous thunder. Glancing out the window with bleary eyes, he saw writte,: in fiery letters across the sky: "Someone is trying to kill you, Grabwell Grommet!" With shaking hands, Grommet lit his first cigarette of the day. He didn't question the message. You don't question messages like that. His only question was, "Who?" Grommet slowly stirred the cream and sugar into his coffee and shook his head. "I don't know," he said. Convinced though he was, Grommet couldn't go to the police with such a story. He decided his only course was to go about his daily routine and hope somehow to outwit his would-be murderer. He tried to think on the drive to the office. But the frustrations of making time by beating lights and swit- ching lanes occupied him wholly. Nor, once behind his desk, would he find a moment, what with jangling phones, urgent memos and the problems and decisions piling up as they did each day. It wasn't until his second martini at lunch that the full terror of his position struck him. It was all he could do to finish his Lasagna -Milanese. "I can't panic," he said to rs Are you like Grabwell Grommett? Are your life -stile habits slowly killing you? , Why not get involved hi a program that 'could change your health life-style?! Beginning Monday, November 1, in- dividual and group counselling sessions will be offered free by the Huron County Health Unit in weight control and proper nutrition; stress reduction; physical fit- ness and exercise; and smoking cessation. Register today by contacting the Health Unit at 524-8301 (Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. until noon or 1:15 p.m. until 4:30 p.m.) Why not get involved?! Just for the health of it! himself, lighting his cigar, "I must simply live my life as usual." So he worked until seven as usual. Drove home fast as usual. Ate a hearty dinner as usual. Had his two cocktails as usual. Studied business reports as usual. And took his usual two Seconal cap- sules in order to get his usual six hours of sleep. As the days passed, he manfully stuck to his routine. And as the months went by, he began to take a perverse pleasure in his ability to survive. "Whoever's trying to get me," he'd proudly say to his wife, "hasn't got me yet. I'm too smart for him." "Oh please be careful," she'd reply, ladling him a second helping of beef stroganoff. The pride grew as he managed to go on living for. years. But, as it must to all men, death came at last to Grabwell Gronunet. It came at his desk on a particularly busy day. He was 53. His grief-stricken widow demanded a full autopsy. But it showed only em- physema, arteriosclerosis, duodenal ulcers, cirrhosis of the liver, cardiac necrosis, a cerbrovascular aneurism, pulmonary edema, obesity, circulatory insufficiency and a touch of lung cancer. "How glad Grabwell would have been to know," said the widow smiling proudly through her tears, "that he died of natural causes." -From the San Francisco Chronicle. Sent by Dr. Jerry Wyness, San Francisco State University, through Health Educational Services, health Unit, Court House, Goderich. Program at Vanastra will help back pain sufferers • BY BARBARA . ALKEMADE Lower back 'pain. Oneof the- conunon ailments- or symptoms of our times. Most of us suffer from it at one stage or another in our lives. It may just be a nagging discomfort that goes on and on, or the scarey, Mind- • numbing spasm that literally leaves us bedridden. A new pilot program for low -back -pain sufferers is being offered at the Vanastra Recreation Centre •this fall. Called Active Care of Back Pain, the program has been researched and compiled by Doug Lafreniere, BPE, MSc., fitness co-ordinator for the Lake Huron Zone Recreation Association. Mr., Lafreniere, previous to the program's 'inception, encouraged comments and suggestions from local medical 'prac- titioners and chiropractors hy showing them the program in full. At present, Vanastra fitness instructors are • im- plementing the program on Friday mornings. Each session aims to help people. whose back pain is of a mechanical nature and who. are allowed by their doctors to exercise. The program emphasizes relaxation and stretching and improving the flexibility of the muscles of the lower back, while strengthening the abdominal muscles. Relaxation exercises are used at the beginning and at the end of each exercise session for three reasons. First, they are used to relax muscle tension, frequently the cause of low 'back and neck discomfort. Second, relaxation exercises are important to use prior to stretching or flexibility exercises because a relaxed muscle will naturally stretch more easily and lengthen more fully than a tense muscle. Third, relaxation exercises teach , people to become aware of muscle tension and relax it before spasm and pain occur. Flexibility exercises are used to lengthen hamstring .and calf muscles to reduce stiffness and rigidity of the. trunk. These exercises are sequentially designed to progress from mild muscle stretching to more strenuous types. Low back discomfort is often identified with weakness of key postural muscles. Like flexibility •exercises, muscle strengthening exercises progress from mild to inore strenuous types. Next to good posture and a willingness to help your back, the greatest support you can given your back is building strong and flexible , supporting muscles through a good exercise program. See you at Vanastra! For further information, call 482-3544. Wilkins four sons home for holiday LOCHALSH NEWS Ks. Webster, 395-5257 On Thanksgiving Sunday, Charles and Mayme Wilkens had their four sons, Bill, Larry, Jack, Kenny and their families, daughter Elizabeth and Laura and Mabel Campbell of Toronto with thein for dinner. Florence MacLennan \of Kincardine, daughter of • Mrs. Rhetta MacLennan started to work on Monday, October 18. at Freeport Hospital in Cambridge. Prior to leaving the hospital in Kincardine, the. staff there • showered Florence with a lovely going away party. Congratulations to Ewen. and Marg MacLean on the occasion of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Jim Webster of Waterloo, was home on the weekend with his parents, Wellington and Kae Webster and all visited with Viola Farquhar in the Goderich hospital. They also visited with Jack and Marion Smith in Dungannon. Charles, Mayme, Elizabeth and Kenny Wilkens, had their Thanksgiving- on. Monday at aulte4 vac( to- debt Pt' dt Fall Fashion Show Wed,,' Oct. 20th 739 P.M. In Exeter Mall Bring a friend Door Prizes Coffee & Cookies Jaqueline's Specialty Fashions • 1362 Lembton Mall Rd. Sarnia. Ontario 542-2873 420 Main St., S. Centre Mall Exeter, Ontario 235-1412 the home of their son, Bill and his family. Allen Park of Wallaceburg visited one day last ,week with Janet Wilkens for awhile. Ross and Jean MacKenzie had two of their sons, Bob and Kevin ' MacKenzie of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barrett, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zechner and Lind Barrett of Toronto with them on Thanksgiving.. Visiting on Thanksgiving with Mrs. Dorothy Finlayson were Mr. and Mrs. _ Bill Rodgerson and .their two sons, Andrew and Charles of Toronto, Paul and Jane Emberlin of Torontb, Mr. , and Mrs. Bill Finlayson and their two children, -John and Jennine of Sarnia. Mr. and Mrs.. Jim MacKenzie and family Mary 'Ellen, Gregory and Keith had their Thanksgiving' din- ner with Ruth's grand- mother, Mrs.. Arthur Rock of Seaforth. The ladies of the Pine River U.C.W. were very hap- py with their Kountry Kit- chen bazaar which was held at the Pine River Church and Reid's Corner Hall. Dr. and Mrs. Russell Mon- crief had Mr.. and Mrs. Jack Clift and Lesley's brother, Steven and his girl friend of Mississauga help them celebrate Thanksgiving._George and Betty Mon- crief had their daughter, son-in-law and family, George, Jane, Jennifer, Laura and Rebecca Ullrich of London with them on Thanksgiving. • Janet Wilkens, daughter of Charles and Mayme Wilkens, of Paris, Ontario, spent a couple of days last week at the home of her parents. Janet graduated reeently from Lairibton Col- lege in Sarnia where she had been a student for the last two years in the Early Childhood Education course. Visiting on Thanksgiving • weekend with Finlay and Margie MacDonald was Margie's sister, Mrs. Donald. McKinnon and a girl friend of Paris, Ontario. . _ . 4 1, .);,:so,. ..,. - . -^I A ha • SONOFLEX 2'x4' INSULATED CEILING PANELS ' Washable. Sound 'absorbent, toO! 5 -yr. no -warp guarantee. DEPT 172 88 PEBBLED OR ETCHED DESIGN EACH PORT -AL Replacement WINDOWS ON SALE Complete Details at Cashway • Example: BUY A 10' SECTION OP OUR CATHEDRAL MODEL AND Save 390.07 . Our Reg, price for the upper & base cabinets including cou'nter top is 1,560.26, but you pay only .1,170.19 ' ON THE VILLA MODEL Save .235.25 Our Reg. price for,a 10' section is 941.00, but you pay only 705.75. Please allow 4-5 weeks for delivery. CATHEDRAL Our newest design! The'ulto- mate in solid Oak, raised • " panels with distinctive hard- • ware, --SAVE 6000 STANLEY Automatic GARAGE DOOR OPENER Standard model, , for most doors up to 18'x7 120SAVE s ON ALL 1N -STOCK 995 OUR REG. 249.95 DOOR OPENER - Take your choice, of any garage door in stoc and save 150/0 off our' regular price! ,000--16. GRADE 'A" Save 1400 , Reverse trap, regular tank model in white - vitreous china Our Reg. 69.98 I I WHILE STOCKS LAST! • CEDAR LUMBER • PRESSURE TREATED LUMBER • 48x13 CHAIN LINK -FENCE - • FIBERGLASS PANELS • CHAMPLAIN SIDING • OZITE TURF & ARTIFICIAL GRASS OUTDOOR CARPETS GODERICH 155 ANGLESEA ST. PHONE 524-8382/8383 OR. MAIN ST., ATWOOD PHONE 356.2214 VISA 98 STRAPPING .1x243' 39C SPRUCE 1x3-8' SPRUCE 'I' 2x2-8' -SPRUCE -790_ Quality setund torrone- in the industry' FRAMING 2x4-8 ECOHOMYOR 2)(3 STUD GRADE 9,7' EA. ASHWAY 8:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. SATURDAYS 8:30.5:00 FRIDAYS till 9:00 P.M. II ' , FREE Life style kill BY ARTHUR HOPPE On the morning of his 42nd birthday, Grabwell Grommet awoke to a peal of particularly ominous thunder. Glancing out the window with bleary eyes, he saw writte,: in fiery letters across the sky: "Someone is trying to kill you, Grabwell Grommet!" With shaking hands, Grommet lit his first cigarette of the day. He didn't question the message. You don't question messages like that. His only question was, "Who?" Grommet slowly stirred the cream and sugar into his coffee and shook his head. "I don't know," he said. Convinced though he was, Grommet couldn't go to the police with such a story. He decided his only course was to go about his daily routine and hope somehow to outwit his would-be murderer. He tried to think on the drive to the office. But the frustrations of making time by beating lights and swit- ching lanes occupied him wholly. Nor, once behind his desk, would he find a moment, what with jangling phones, urgent memos and the problems and decisions piling up as they did each day. It wasn't until his second martini at lunch that the full terror of his position struck him. It was all he could do to finish his Lasagna -Milanese. "I can't panic," he said to rs Are you like Grabwell Grommett? Are your life -stile habits slowly killing you? , Why not get involved hi a program that 'could change your health life-style?! Beginning Monday, November 1, in- dividual and group counselling sessions will be offered free by the Huron County Health Unit in weight control and proper nutrition; stress reduction; physical fit- ness and exercise; and smoking cessation. Register today by contacting the Health Unit at 524-8301 (Monday to Friday, 8:30 a.m. until noon or 1:15 p.m. until 4:30 p.m.) Why not get involved?! Just for the health of it! himself, lighting his cigar, "I must simply live my life as usual." So he worked until seven as usual. Drove home fast as usual. Ate a hearty dinner as usual. Had his two cocktails as usual. Studied business reports as usual. And took his usual two Seconal cap- sules in order to get his usual six hours of sleep. As the days passed, he manfully stuck to his routine. And as the months went by, he began to take a perverse pleasure in his ability to survive. "Whoever's trying to get me," he'd proudly say to his wife, "hasn't got me yet. I'm too smart for him." "Oh please be careful," she'd reply, ladling him a second helping of beef stroganoff. The pride grew as he managed to go on living for. years. But, as it must to all men, death came at last to Grabwell Gronunet. It came at his desk on a particularly busy day. He was 53. His grief-stricken widow demanded a full autopsy. But it showed only em- physema, arteriosclerosis, duodenal ulcers, cirrhosis of the liver, cardiac necrosis, a cerbrovascular aneurism, pulmonary edema, obesity, circulatory insufficiency and a touch of lung cancer. "How glad Grabwell would have been to know," said the widow smiling proudly through her tears, "that he died of natural causes." -From the San Francisco Chronicle. Sent by Dr. Jerry Wyness, San Francisco State University, through Health Educational Services, health Unit, Court House, Goderich. Program at Vanastra will help back pain sufferers • BY BARBARA . ALKEMADE Lower back 'pain. Oneof the- conunon ailments- or symptoms of our times. Most of us suffer from it at one stage or another in our lives. It may just be a nagging discomfort that goes on and on, or the scarey, Mind- • numbing spasm that literally leaves us bedridden. A new pilot program for low -back -pain sufferers is being offered at the Vanastra Recreation Centre •this fall. Called Active Care of Back Pain, the program has been researched and compiled by Doug Lafreniere, BPE, MSc., fitness co-ordinator for the Lake Huron Zone Recreation Association. Mr., Lafreniere, previous to the program's 'inception, encouraged comments and suggestions from local medical 'prac- titioners and chiropractors hy showing them the program in full. At present, Vanastra fitness instructors are • im- plementing the program on Friday mornings. Each session aims to help people. whose back pain is of a mechanical nature and who. are allowed by their doctors to exercise. The program emphasizes relaxation and stretching and improving the flexibility of the muscles of the lower back, while strengthening the abdominal muscles. Relaxation exercises are used at the beginning and at the end of each exercise session for three reasons. First, they are used to relax muscle tension, frequently the cause of low 'back and neck discomfort. Second, relaxation exercises are important to use prior to stretching or flexibility exercises because a relaxed muscle will naturally stretch more easily and lengthen more fully than a tense muscle. Third, relaxation exercises teach , people to become aware of muscle tension and relax it before spasm and pain occur. Flexibility exercises are used to lengthen hamstring .and calf muscles to reduce stiffness and rigidity of the. trunk. These exercises are sequentially designed to progress from mild muscle stretching to more strenuous types. Low back discomfort is often identified with weakness of key postural muscles. Like flexibility •exercises, muscle strengthening exercises progress from mild to inore strenuous types. Next to good posture and a willingness to help your back, the greatest support you can given your back is building strong and flexible , supporting muscles through a good exercise program. See you at Vanastra! For further information, call 482-3544. Wilkins four sons home for holiday LOCHALSH NEWS Ks. Webster, 395-5257 On Thanksgiving Sunday, Charles and Mayme Wilkens had their four sons, Bill, Larry, Jack, Kenny and their families, daughter Elizabeth and Laura and Mabel Campbell of Toronto with thein for dinner. Florence MacLennan \of Kincardine, daughter of • Mrs. Rhetta MacLennan started to work on Monday, October 18. at Freeport Hospital in Cambridge. Prior to leaving the hospital in Kincardine, the. staff there • showered Florence with a lovely going away party. Congratulations to Ewen. and Marg MacLean on the occasion of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Jim Webster of Waterloo, was home on the weekend with his parents, Wellington and Kae Webster and all visited with Viola Farquhar in the Goderich hospital. They also visited with Jack and Marion Smith in Dungannon. Charles, Mayme, Elizabeth and Kenny Wilkens, had their Thanksgiving- on. Monday at aulte4 vac( to- debt Pt' dt Fall Fashion Show Wed,,' Oct. 20th 739 P.M. In Exeter Mall Bring a friend Door Prizes Coffee & Cookies Jaqueline's Specialty Fashions • 1362 Lembton Mall Rd. Sarnia. Ontario 542-2873 420 Main St., S. Centre Mall Exeter, Ontario 235-1412 the home of their son, Bill and his family. Allen Park of Wallaceburg visited one day last ,week with Janet Wilkens for awhile. Ross and Jean MacKenzie had two of their sons, Bob and Kevin ' MacKenzie of Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barrett, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Zechner and Lind Barrett of Toronto with them on Thanksgiving.. Visiting on Thanksgiving with Mrs. Dorothy Finlayson were Mr. and Mrs. _ Bill Rodgerson and .their two sons, Andrew and Charles of Toronto, Paul and Jane Emberlin of Torontb, Mr. , and Mrs. Bill Finlayson and their two children, -John and Jennine of Sarnia. Mr. and Mrs.. Jim MacKenzie and family Mary 'Ellen, Gregory and Keith had their Thanksgiving' din- ner with Ruth's grand- mother, Mrs.. Arthur Rock of Seaforth. The ladies of the Pine River U.C.W. were very hap- py with their Kountry Kit- chen bazaar which was held at the Pine River Church and Reid's Corner Hall. Dr. and Mrs. Russell Mon- crief had Mr.. and Mrs. Jack Clift and Lesley's brother, Steven and his girl friend of Mississauga help them celebrate Thanksgiving._George and Betty Mon- crief had their daughter, son-in-law and family, George, Jane, Jennifer, Laura and Rebecca Ullrich of London with them on Thanksgiving. • Janet Wilkens, daughter of Charles and Mayme Wilkens, of Paris, Ontario, spent a couple of days last week at the home of her parents. Janet graduated reeently from Lairibton Col- lege in Sarnia where she had been a student for the last two years in the Early Childhood Education course. Visiting on Thanksgiving • weekend with Finlay and Margie MacDonald was Margie's sister, Mrs. Donald. McKinnon and a girl friend of Paris, Ontario. . _ .