HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Advance-Times, 1981-02-11, Page 7taini*
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• 1090/ Milligan WW1*
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Mr. andMrs Bill Rinteel
were Wilda* ArrolitOis With
Mr; and Mrs. Leonard
Robinson, Mark adTracy
• Belgrave. .
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Falconer of Blyth were
Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Angus Faltotter. ,
M. and Mrs. Bradley
Speiran of Brussela visited
Sunday with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rin -
tout.
Visitors' on the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs.: Elroy
Laidlaw were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Vannus, London, and
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ducharme,
Goderich. -
Mr. and Mrs. • 'Irwin
McClenaghan of St. Thomas
visited Tuesday with Mr. and
Mrs. Carl McClenaghan and
Mrs. Mary McClenaghan.
On Wednesday, Michael
• McClenaghan, accompanied
by Greg Sutton .of Stoney
Creek, was in the vicinity.
Mr. McClenaghan Will be
visiting the towns in this
region in connectionawith his
job and Mr. Sutton was
accompanying him on his
initial route. While in this
area, they called on
Michael's uncle and aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl
McClenaghan, and his
grandmother, Mrs. Mary
McClenaghan.
This community is sorry
that Jack Boyle is a patient
in Wingham and District
Hospital and wishes him a
speedy recovery.
Mr. and' Mrs. a Walter
Elliott and Karen and Mrs.
Elliott of Wingham were at
London on Sunday to visit
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Laidlaw, Michelle and
Jason. Mr. and Mrs. Don
Campbell of London were
also visiting at the same
p-eghome.
'a. The 4 -II meeting - was
Postponed f rot") last'
Saturday until thisSaturday,'
'February 14: •
The United • Church
• congregation held its annual
meeting on Sunday. af-
ternoon.
"
N4,414r,
goo
PAT
ack Ryan• Or
*Walt.
r, an Mis. Ryan and
family llved .Inthe idilage
1' here for a minsnurnber 01 Oars `
when Jack operated the feed
residediwpart of
the homel now ,OWnetl:by
George 144004,i., OW.
-1 community Ptteitds:sym-
patIorio Mr. Ryan and 4008,
Br_ucet *maid andLereY.
Mrs,. 'Ruth James. of
• Brantford. visited Friday
4 with, My,- and _IVIrtk, Victor
Emerson. — _
Word .was received last
• week from Miss Linda Moore
at Kitimat that she has
obtained employment and is
with her friend, Wendy Kay,
;1`.• .and her. parents, .Rev. gid
Mrs. Bev Kay„
Russel Proctor of Livonia,
r Michigan, attended the
funeral of Tone Morrison on
! Friday and is spending a few
days with Mr. and Mrs. Fred
▪ Tiffin, Mrs. Gertrude Tiffin
of Wingham and Mr. and
Mrs. V. Emerson.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tiffin
and Russel Proctor of
Livonia, Michigan, were
• ,Sunday visitors with Mrs.
4*
dd
t%.,atAsilT[i4:4
r
in
Or
Os -11dr and
lorry cresol) ' of
Windsor . and 'Mrs: Edna
CaSgmere,, Brantford,
*OW Friday at the same,
*Me. '
loast week Mrs. - Eva
catnercal,, the former Eva
MOrrison of Brantford,
passed awar.,..: Monday;
February 2, in the afternoon
• and her brother, -Tom
Morrison of Little Current,
passed away in the evening
of the same day. Tom and his
wife and- family • resided for
many years in Whitechurch
where he operated the
garage and his wife Connie
operated the booth. Their
anddrea,, Marilyn, Jim and
Kenneth received their
• education at 'SS No. 10. All
attended the Presbyterian
Church where Tom was an
active member. The com-
munity extends sympathy to
the sorrowing relatives and
friends. Flowers were placed
in the church on Sunday in
memory of Tom.
Mr. and Mrs, Fraser
McKinnon of Lucknow
• vicinity were Sunday visitors
THISWEEK'S
SPECIA
100 mi.
Colgate
Toothpaste •
24's Listerine
Throat
Lozenges. •
I .1
200 ml. Ultra Ban
SPEW
Mebdoralit
•
75ml. Ultra Ban
Roll -On
Deodorant
450 nrd. Clairol
,Condition Shampoo or 4 • 9
Conditioner
AH Shades
Loving Care
Hair Colour
55 gr.
Penaten
Cream
2.2
See our large selection
of Valentine Cards
and Candies
T F4 'ANGLE
DISC 0 NT
PAT,WWDAWS.COS*Iftrf,(00ACCO5
Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Weekdays Sundays Noon to Six
ACW meets at
Procter home
BELGRAVE — The Feb- ,
ruary meeting of the Bel -
grave Anglican Church
Women was heldat the home
' of Mrs. Beth Procter. The
president', Mrs: Procter, led
(' in prayer and the Lordts
prayer was said in unison.
The Bible reading was given
by Mrs. Clare Van Camp.
The roil call was answered
by seven members and the
collection taken. The min
utes of the last meeting were.
read by, the secretary, Mrs.
Clare Van Camp, and "Mrs.
Alex Nethery gave the treas-
urer's report. The members
were reminded of the World
Day of. Prayer to be held in
the Presbyterian Church en
March 6 at 2 o'clock.
Mrs. Harold Jardin read
information about the
NqAle's boycott..Mrs. Proc-
ter ead "my "lever Again
List" and "Catalogue
Shopping". Mrs. Robert Hig-
ginsread "Where there is
rove", .
„
Variety Show
The Wingham Lions Club is produc-
ing a Variety Show with numbers from
the local organizations in town. The
crowning of Miss Frostyfest Princess
will take place at this event.
Thursday, February 19
8 p.m. Wingham Town Hall
Adults $2.00
Children 12 and Under $1.00
M C. Bill Thompson
Come out and see all the local talent!
Another Frostytest Weekend Event.
'Scheel program"
seCe1.7004-41:14,. Huron r°11081447 J*3"tioll
pwfifilerr,univitt credit a cud_ secretary.
• credit courses.
•
The suinmer1 se,
I19
Fregritet' was lttitlatad'ir
1979 and offered non-credit
courses in remedial English;
remedial Mathematics and
driver education. In 1980 the
aonfredit program was
e4iatiged to inehVe.EngriSh
assfsecond language, Credit
• courses in he.th,rears.
limited to English and
mathematics.
This year the board has.
recommended • that a
• minimum =ailment of five
•-doti
Seaor
• revenuiwat .
19A0 expenditur
$13;742 and.,reVe,
4;11,10:fhistapts',..• schec
was .• 'set k5..4,0.1t7c,
pupils•
for seetindaeyefi
Driver,`::*1)fdatt
will
„pay$85.
,
• .
''”; •
IN 'TIL SPR I lookSa.
tip truck won't be going anywhere until the spring thaw as Old Man
covered it In a cozy blanket of snow.
. •
9.5 per cent saki* Increase
•
Teachers • rcrry new contract
Secondary school teachers
in Huron County have
ratified a new, one-year
contract with' the county
board of education giving
them a 9.5 per cent salary
increase.
A ratification vote on the
proposed contract was held
Monday, with 72.9 per cent of
the teachers voting in favor.
The board bad piffled the
contract at an earlier
meeting. •
The salary section of the
new contract prnvidesdar a
9.5 per cent pay 'raise,
averaged over the year, to be
paid ona split grid giving the
teachers a raise of 637 per
cent reteoactive to Sep-
tember and a further raise
Feb. 1.
The raise is in line with a
fact finder's report released
earlier, which said Huron
County secondary school
teachers deserved a- raise
which would move them oUt
of the • position of being
lowest paid in the prevince,
Knox church
holds annual
BELGRAVE --- Knox
Presbyterian congregation
held its, annual meeting in
the- church On February 3
with a good attendance. Rev.
Kenneth Innes 'opened the
meeting with scripture and
prayer. Douglas Bruce was
eppointesisecretary.
, Plans were made for a
Centennial Service in con-
nection with the Morris Cen-
tennial August 2 and for the
anniversary in September.
• Mrs. Dalryniple was ap-
pointed organist and Doug-
las Bruce, secretary -treas-
urer.
The record will be sent to
every home.
' Garner Nicholson moved a
vote of thanks, to Rev, Ken-
neth and Mrs. Innes for their
spiritual guidance through-
out last year, to Mrs. Wil-
liam Dalrymple for all her
help with the music and to
Douglas Bruce for acting as
secretary -treasurer.
Rev. Innes closed the
meeting with prayer.
• teanher, representative
• 41iirlet *ea* reported. She
said this raise moves them
out- -01: the bottom position,
butstilt '..leaVes them con-,
siderably • .„,,,befow the
' provinciataverage.
Under \the .riew contract the
%vetage•leacher salary will
$200. The maximum
a.-4.0acher With 10
jearts exPerieuce „rises to
, $30xiikifret0‘,$3•1,043, while.
••. the. starting salary for a
:eachete.the lowest
...-,,Fakary•**1114-4se to $14,760
• troth $13,872.
, The raise also applies to
, princiPids . and yice pririe
• cipalF in the county system,
• bringing „their salaries- to
$4,040 and $39,840 respec-
hvely.
Lakelet gioup
plans to visit
nursing home
,LAKELE4' DUe' to poor
. weather conditions and
Illness, .attendance at the
February meeting of Lakelet
Women's Institute was pont*:
Mrs. Harry Judge chaired
the meeting,. held at the
home .of Mrs. H, Wallace.
The roll call and topic were
held over until the ,next
meeting.
A visit to the Fordwich
Village Nursing Home will
take place late in March. An
invitation was. read from
Belmore Institute for this
week.
A letter was read from the
FWIO president, reminding
the members that the branch
fee is raised to three dollars.
All branches across Canada
are asked to contribute one
. dollar per' member to
establish a foundation fund
for the Adelaide •Hoodless
Homestead, mesteaddelegate from Lakelet
will attend the officers'
conference in May. Mem-
bers also agreed to donate
$25 to the Scott family of
Belgrave, recent .,fire vic-
tims
The Maech meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs.
Jake Versteeg.
WMS meditation
on Dr. Schweitzer
BELGRAVE — The
Women's Missionary Society
met at the Presbyterian
Church last Monday, Feb. 2,
with Mrs. Jack McBurney
presiding. She opened the
meeting with the call to wor-
ship, Mrs. Mac Scott read
the Escripture, followed by
Mrs. Joe Dunbar and Mrs.
Garner Nicholson who gave
the meditation based on the
life of Dr. Albert Schweitzer.
Mrs. Elizabeth Fear led in
prayer. The roll call was
answered with a verse on
"Love".
Mrs. Ivy Cloakey took the
topic on the church among
the Bhil.
The secretary's report was
given by Mrs. McBurney and
19 visits to sick and shut-ins
were recorded,
Mrs. Dunbar and Mrs.
Nicholson gave a report on
the annual meeting they at-
tended at Seaforth. Plans
were made for the World
Day of Prayer, which will be
held March 6 in Knox Pres-
byterian Church, tielgraes.
Mi -s. McBurney closed the
meeting With prayer.
Mrs. Weary added that the
establishment of several
teacher -trustee committees
to work on resolving dif-
ficulties • and long-term
planning is- an important
step. "It is \ the hope of both
parties that hese com-
mittees will be ble to work
amicably to iron out any
areas of phtential conflict
before they reach the formal
bargaining process for next
year's contract."
• The new tonttaet covers
the current school year,
Sept. 1980 to Aug. 1981; the
teachers had been without a
contract since September.
Shower is held
for bride -elect
A • miscellaeeous eeigh-
borhood shower was held at
the home of Mrs. Michael
Willie, Wingham, on Monday
'for , bride -elect Jill Hayden
whose forthcoming
'marriage to Kenneth Marks,
Belgrave, will take place in
March. Hostesses were Josie
Anger, Joy Thompson,
' Bonnie Hamilton and Wanda
Stapleton.
Fun and garnet were
enjoyed and conducted by
Sharon Rowe and Marion
Hatt of -*Walkerton. Bonnie
Douglas of Kincardine kept a
humorous memo of the
evening's proceedings. .
Jill expressed her' ap-
preciation to the 32 ladies
present for the many lovely
gifts she received at the
surprise shower. Lunch was
served by the hostesses. An
autographed book was
presented to the bride -elect
by her Pleasant Valley
neighbors and friends.
YPSenjoys
toboggan party
•
,Whitechurch —7 On Satur-
day the Young People's
Society held a rally and were
joined by somefrom
Bluevale to enjoy a toboggan
party on the hills of Kinloss.
They , returned to
Whitechurch Community
Memorial Hall for supper
where about 25 gathered -
Then they went to Lucknow
Public School where games
were enjoyed. They returned
later to Whitechurch hall
where a discussion on the
words in popular songs was
led by Rev, Terrance Trites
of Bluevale. This discussion
proved very interesting.
The rally was concluded
by attending church at
Chalmers Presbyterian
Church on Sunday. After the
service a pot luck lunch was
held with a good crowd in
attendance.•
In Canada, more work
days are lost every year be-
cause of arthritis than
through strikes, says The
Arthritis Society\ Arthritis
affects all of us.
St. Andrew's
WMS meets
in church.
Mrs. T. Currie gave a
verse on Christian.fellowship
as the call to worship when
the Women's Missionary So-
ciety of St. Andrew's Pres-
byterian Church met in the
upper room, Mrs. 3. Conn,
read . scripture. from "the
Gospels of Matthew and
Ltikeand gave a meditation
based on the passages. Mrs.
H. Aitchison ' led in prayer
and Mrs., A. Gaunt sang a
solOi. • 'After', accompanied
by Mrs..1: Conn piano.
. Mrs. • Clare* -lea_ the
Mission study on India which
was 'explained more fully
with the. use. of a tape
recording.
.President Mrs. G. Wall
conducted the business. The
minutes were read by
Secretary Mrs. Roy McKay
and the • offering was
received by. Mrs. Roy
Hastings and Mrs. F: Lewis,
with Mrs. J. Burchill giving
the dedicatory prayer:
The meeting closed with
prayer by Mrs., J.- McKague
and a social hour followed.
Curries will
lead three Ms
Mr. , and Mrs.' John A.
Currie are "the presidents
chosen by the Three Ms of St.
Andrew's Presbyterian
Church to lead them through
the ensuing year.
Other officers are: 'first
vice presidents, Mi'. and
Mrs. Raymond Neill; second
vice presidents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Donaldson,;
secretaries and press
reporters, Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon Wall; treasurers,
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Phillips; pianist, Mrs.
Wallace Richardson;
telephone committee, Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Beard, Mr. and
Mrs. Clare Niergarth.
The group met in the upper
room of the church with a
good ' attendance. The
meeting opened with a poem
by Mrs. Jack Currie,
followed by a hymnsing. The
scripture from the first
chapter of James was read
by Mr. Currie who also read
an article by Paul B. Smith
of The People's Church,
Torontb, on the present
school system. Mr. Currie
also led .in the offertory
prayer.
Teeswater
Agri -Lotto
The Teeswater Agri -Lotto
draw was held Feb. 3.
The $300 -prize was won. by
John Green, Wingham, and
the $200 -prize was won by
Doug and Larry Donaldson
of Teeswater.
The five $10 -prize winners
were: Jim Snyder,
Wingham ; Waldon Moffat,
Teeswater; Louisa Brill,
Teeswater; Art. McKague,
Teeswater, and Doug and
Brenda Reinhardt,
Teeswater.
Just about every uniform
• visible within hospital hall-
ways has been worn by
Marty Cretier a one time or
another. He has . been an
orderly, an ambulance at-
tendant, a 'floor nurse, aq,
emergency 'nurse and an
operating room technician.
• Right now, his working time
is divided evenly between
the latter two, so his face
might well be the last one
you see belpre drifting off
into nothingness induced by
anesthetic, or the first you
see if you run into the' hos-
pital with the end of your
finger dangling! -
Wingham is al world away
from war-torn Arnhem,
Holland, where Marty was
born. He remembers his
parents telling him of a rapid
evacuation from their home
when he was a baby, shots
piercing the air and \hitting
the carriage where he and
much of the Cretier's
worldly goods were bundled.
Four years after the war
ended, in 1949, Marty was in
Canada.
A graduate of Wingham's
Registered Nursing Assist-
ant's School in 1973, Marty
has also taken the am-
bulance attendants'. course
in casualty care at CFD
Borden; a course in respira-
tory technology and emer-
gency ventilation at Fan-
shawe; operating room tech-
nician's course at Wingham
and a course in CPR (cardi-
opulmonary resuscitation),
which he later taught for
Conestoga College.
This year, he returned to
Victoria Hospital, London,
for an update in respiratory
technham ant..
Irtr;liejt:Hos:inaPin 74%11;le:"
presently
is helping to set 4
in charge of Tera for ,
suction, oxygen andt '
tion machines and te*ra-
tors in the hospital: At one
tithe, he assisted ?,,OStlibirt;,
gags in autopsies Pah:ailed ,
at the local hospital; meat
are now done in largeriaxi..
pitals.
• Although Marty finds all.
aspects of nursing ."very •
satisfying", he would like to
work primarily with
anesthetic and inhalation •
therapy. Hetnisses the close
• personal relationship that
often 'develops between
patient and nurse in bedside
nursing, but finds ()iterating-
' room nursing very educa-
tional, with no two cases
alike. Often, too, the OR
nurses can play a vital role',
in alleviating a great -deal of
-
'thii-uloikot*-041
surgery. Must rewarding
allis seeing a patient who
has suffered ' for years,
"Walking away from surge*
well".
Away from the hospital
hallways, Marty is active in
youth organizations. He is
Troop Scouter with the
Wingham Boy Scouts, one ,
who helped form the Scout
Musketeers Gun Club, and
president of the Wingham
and District Association of
, Big Brothers. He also works
as a part-time constable in
Wingham and helps with
farm work on his father's
farneitear Bluevale. •
, Married in. 1970 to the
former Joanne Elliott of
Bluevale, Marty is the proud
father of two 'daughters,
Amy -Jo and Janell.
FORDWICH 1 CLUB
The first meeting of the
new • project, 'Get
Ready Get Set... Sew', was
held at- the home of the
leader, Mrs. Ruth Harding.
Donna Harding was named
president and Janice Ruttan
vice president. Secretary is
Eleanor Gibson and press
reporter is Coral Lockie.
Each girl will be required
to sew either a skirt or vest.
The leader conducted a
metric quiz and demon-
strated how to take
measurements. • The girls
then measured each other
and decided their own
pattern size.
A sewing box, pattern,
material and notions are to
be brought to the next
meeting.
Mrs. R. Chapman
hosts UCW meeting
Whitechurch—The United
Church Women held their
February meeting on
February 4 at the home of
Mrs. Russell Chapman.
Mrs. Wilda Laidlaw
opened the meeting with a
meditation on the Apostle
Paul in prison. Mrs.
Sleightholm read a poem,
'Plant the Word and Jesus
will do the rest'. She also
read scripture from Paul's
letter to the Philippians and
followed with prayer.
Mrs. Laidlaw , gave an
account of a storm in the Fiji
Islands which killed 14
people and left ..2,500
homeless. She also read a
poem, 'Thank You, God, for
Everything'.
There were eight present
to answer the roll call,
'Something you learned
about Japan in your study of
1980'. The minutes were
read, fees paid, offering and
Least Coin received.
President Mrs. Farrier
elosed' the meeting with
prayer.