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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-10-12, Page 15STARTS SUNDAY -10 o.m.- s o.m. Closed Alexanian Carpet 7 DAYS ONLY If, In ( 1(,hrr 22. i'rrllrr .In(L n1 I.1 livalll) (Ir1rl'I ! ',i inrr• �( I•I I put i n(u.l I,,.( 11 •\RI 1) \" 1 ( )\\ \ti PRICE or less 11 I Urr,rni.rn rrrrr(lar wit r (,r \l ,tni,(n ( nnrl,,tr.(I)lr honk I)n( t MUST BE CLEARED! 0 Receives G Tom and Rita Tobey are justly proud of their son-in-law, Christopher Moore of I2 urlington, and rightly so. Christopher received the Governer Gener- als Literary award for 1982 for his book, "Louisburg Portraits", a non fiction by an English speaking author. Tom and Rita spent three days in Quebec City recently by invitation of the Canada Council. They attended the official reception held at the Citadel in Quebec City as guests of Governor General Ed Schreyer. This is the official residence of the Governor General while in Quebec. Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Glen Verheye (nee Irene Hasty) who were married at Dungannon United Church on Saturday. The reception followed at Saltford Valley Hall. Sharon Baltzer is a patient in London's Victoria Hospital, following surgery on Thursday of last week. Congratulations to Al and Cora Sherwood vernor merres Literary award DUNGANNON DOINGS Mari® Park, 529-77118 who were married 38 years on October 11. Al also celebrated a birthday the same day. LiI MacDonald enjoyed the Thanksgiving weekend when she had a visit from her brother, Ray Errington and his wife, Miriam of Picton. They were accompanied by their daughter, Faye and husband, Charles Ireland, also of Picton. On Sunday afternoon Cora and Bill Caesar of Goderich enjoyed lunch at Lil's before the foursome headed home. Members of Dungannon Sunday School enjoyed a 10 k.m. bikeathon on Thanksgiv- ing Monday to raise money to help with supply costs. Some teachers and parents accompanied the children. Cookies and freshie were served at the church following the ride. The children raised approximately 5200.00 for the Sunday School. Mrs. Mary Bere and Mrs. Bertha Aldham of Goderich visited Marybelle and Dwight Aidham and family of Inglewood on the weekend. They were accompanied by Alice Scott, who spent the weekend, with her brother, Finlay Shackleton at Rainbow Valley Ranch near Caledon. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stirling, Darlene and Harold of Thamesville spent the weekend with Elsie Irvin. Dungannon Kinetics The September general meeting of the Dungannon Dinettes started with a tour of the Ontario Provincial Police station south of Goderich. Tom Jansen gave a very interest- ing and informative talk which generated a lively discussion time. The business part of the meeting was held at the hone of Kinette Sharon Baltzer. Four more infant car seats have been purchased and will be rented out to new parents by the Alexandra Marine and General Hospital. A fifth car seat was donated to the Goderich Ambulance for their exclusive use. Jim Hayter Chev-Olds in Goderich provided the car seats at cost price so that the Kinettes could help the Hospital to continue this very popular program. Also during September, the Kinettes celebrated the second anniversary of their formation. The evening began with a fun car rally through parts of Ashfield and Colborne townships and ended with supper and a special "Anniversary" cake. Kinette Sharon Baltaer is in Victori Hospital in London following an operation, She is wished a safe and speedy recovery by all her Kin family members. Seminars aimed at improving profit picture Farmers interested in improving their profit picture should plan to attend one of the "Management For Profit" seminars planned for eight locations across Ontario. Local fanners may attend the seminar of their choice at one of the following loca- tions: Mildmay on November 21; Kitchener on December 1; London on December 2; and Ridgetown on December 3. Dr. Hiram Drache, farmer and farm management specialist from North Dakota, is the feature speaker. A local top farmer, Richard Hiscocks, and Ministry of Agriculture and Food specialists will pre- sent management ideas for the '80s. Registration forms are available at local O.M.A.F. offices. Fees for the day and lunch are $20 per farmer and $10 for additional members of the same farming operation. Survey questionnaires will be mailed by mid-October to custom operators in Ontario. The annual survey provides information on rates for various custom operations to farmers and custom operators. Custom operators are encouraged to com- plete and return the questionnaire to G.A. Fisher, O.M-A.F., Box 726, Chatham, N7M 5L1. New custom operators can obtain a copy of the questionnaire from Mr. Fisher. Sumary results of the survey will be available in February from O.M.A-F., Box 159, Clinton, NOM ILO. The Open Junior Farmer Livestock Evaluation Competition will take place at the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair on Fri- day, November 11 at 9:00 a.m. Eight exer- cises Dairy Cow Selection, Dairy Cow Evaluation and Sire Sel ction, Dairy Heifer Selection, Beef Cow Selection, Carcass Evaluation, Boar Selection, will have to be completed and reasons ( written and/or oral) given on several classes. If you are interested, please contact your provincial director or the Agricultural Of- fice, Clinton, before October 27. If you are interested in judging horses and are planning to attend the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair in Toronto, you should consider entering the Robert Graham Memorial Judging Competition. This competition is open to any resident of Canada who has not reached his/her 26th birthday on November 1, 1983. Contestants are required to judge two classes of heavy draught and two classes of light horses. Competition will commence at 9:00 a.m. on Thursday, November 10 m the Horse Exer- cise Ring (registration at 8:30 a.m. that day). For more information, please contact John Bancroft at 482-3428 by October 24, 1983. Goderich WI hosts Auburn at meeting The regular monthly meeting of the Goderich Women's Institute was held at McKay Centre on October6. The Institute Ode and repetition of the Mary Stewart collect opened the meeting. The secretary's report was given and adopted as read. The group welcomed members of the Auburn Institute as guests for this meeting. The area convention will be held at St. Mary's on October 27 and 28 for this district and Jean Schram first vice-president will be our delegate. An invitation from Goderich Township Institute was received by the secretary to attend a meeting on November 14 at 8 p.m. in the Community Hall. A special speaker will be present. Literature regarding the Bicentennial of Ontario in 1984 was read and discussed as to what would be a suitable way to help celebrate. Also a rug -braiding course is being held in West Huron for interested members. Celia Taylor gave a report on the historical meeting held at Hensall Sep- tember 28. Some fine selections of music composed by Celia Taylor were well received by the members present. They contained memories of her school days and her past, in the village of Auburn. Three interestmg readings were presented by Eleanor Haggett of Auburn and were en- joyed by those present. A contest was held on finding three and four letters words found in the word "Halloween". The winner Eleanor Haggett found thirty-two words and was presented with a gift. A lovely Angel Cake, made by Lois Wilson, was also won by Eleanor Haggett. Birthday greetings were sung to Eleanor Bradnock of Auburn. Some special prizes were also won by lucky members. The roll call for this meeting was answered by each member, naming an article used in pioneer kitchens. The meeting was closed with>the Singing 0 Canada and the Institute Grace. Jean Schram and her helpers served refreshments. The next regular meeting will be held November 3 at 2 p.m. The new Institute Hand Books were distributed to the members of Goderich Institute. Watch for buses and red signals The Canada Safety Council reminds all drivers to keep alert for school buses and their flashing red stop signals: Provincial law requires all approaching, as well as following, drivers to stop their vehicles when a school bus is loading or unloading passengers and the overhead lights are on. Children may be . unpredictable, but your responsibilities as a driver are clear. ApplipppnoRimmoptii A LADY'S SHIRT SHOUL o BE AS WELL -MADE AS A MAN'S. AT DAVID WHITE'S THEY ARE, IN ALL THE CLASSIC STYLES. A traditional oxford from Cline in a 60% cotton, 40% polyester blend that offers a woman comfort without the laundry care. And the man -tailored features assure any woman generous fit along with nice appearance. From there we offer you the experience of a Countess Mara blouse... exquisitely tailored... natural fabrics... a wide spectrum of styles in a rainbow of colours. Sizes 6 to 16. Blouses that are waiting to, be seen and worn by you. Only the beautiful beginning of.... David E,White Clothier forJV[en &Women 36ShoppersLquare. 9oderich 524-4312 ti•: . • .ti1� • •:� ••� tip: :�:': a� GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, 'i'OBER 12,1903—PAGE 15 Chiidren readftmdsto raise OSoc for Multiple Seloros s oc , Starting October llth, ten schools from the Public and Separate School Boards in Huron County will be reading to raise fund for the Multiple Sclerosis Society. The READ-a-thon program in Huron Coudaty will involve 1264 students who hope to raise $3,600. The 1982 program involved five of these ten schools. These schools registered 227 students who read a total of 1388 books raising $1,102.25. Mary Vezeau, regional READ-a-thon coordinator said, "If everyone in the Huron area sponsored •"One child in their • neighbourhood they would be helping to motivate that Child to read while raising funds for the crippling disease of young adults." Multiple Sclerosis is a disease of the cen- tral nervous system which may be characterized by disturbances of vision, muscle control, balance and speech. MS usually affects young adults between the ages of 20 to 40. As yet, there is no known cause or cure. All funds raised will be used for research. Magician entertains students By Bonnie Henderson and Brenda Gibson On Monday, October 3, Mr. Bill McClory from Teeswater, who is a magician, entertained the student body in the gym. This was much enjoyed by all. On Wednesday, October 5, room 4 with Mrs. Worsell went to the Clinton Conver- vation area for a hike and brought back leaves, seeds, cones, etc. On Thursday they used the leaves to make leaf prints, rubbings, waxed leaves, and leaves covered with mactac. On Wednesday, Mrs. Graham's grade 4 class. and Mrs. Tebbutt's grade 3 - 4 class went to Bell's Apple Orchard for a field trip. Each student received a glass of cider and could pick up a few apples to take home. Mrs. Graham's class made apple sauce on Thursday. Mrs. Allen's grade 1, Mrs. Carroll's class and Mrs. Young's grade 1 went to Bell's Apple Orchard on Friday. Mrs. Louise Wilson was in the school on Thursday. She gave a demonstration lesson on journal writing in each of the grade 1 classes. Brookside soccer teams participated in the soccer tournament at Robertson School on Friday. The senior girls won three games and tied one to become champions. The senior boys finished in second place as finalists and won a pennant. The junior boys and junior girls each won two games and lost two games. CALLUS TODAY FOR ANY OF THESE SERVICES "Liquid" WE WILL APPLY ATRAZINE THIS FALL "Air Flow" WE CAN APPLY DRY FERTILIZER THIS FALL "Spreader Truck" "Do It Yourself" 5 TON WILLMAR & TOTE SPREADERS "Serving the man whose business is agriculture" CYANAM!D \EFFARM SUPPLY CENTRE R.R. NO. 4-CLINTON 482-3423 Alexanian I carpet Ko11. And rnll. 111 hr(r.r(1loom •uui hunrirt ci. of n Horan/.. 'IMO) .vr rug. and han(1-«ns.('n. nrirnial. Indian and ( hlnr.r rug. i(r.md nano' arlrrl II•\KI)I\(,, HI KI Itir.11)'. ( ( )K( )\i 1. 141 RI (SS, I\11 11. R\RK)\10Ri MR )R RI ` 1 `'l 1 1 ( 111).• .ti1111' 1 \KI't And print. along '.'Ur room n)rn.urrm(•nt• .11 /hest• Irn( t. Iht'r•II t;o SALE ENE)S OCTOBER 22 685 Adelaide North „1Dearness DriveLO N D O N 663 Victoria N. Kitchener, Guelph Hwy. K Mart Plaza Hwy. 8 Kitchener NOBODY DOES IT BETTER FOR VALUF,,.SINCE 1975 Cash, Budget or. aa► aaa(r a 'moo