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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1970-02-12, Page 8PAGE EIGHT ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS
found a way to educate their
children in the passing decades.
They were honest and they very
much helped one another in
time of need. They left in their
pathway, we believe, twelve
priests, two lawyers, two doc-
tors, one religious brother and
ST. JOSEPH and DRYSDALE
(ALFRED DI.ICHARME, Correspondent)
Another birthday has passed
by to Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Ducharme of this parish, which
means another year added to
their life. We believe them as
being the oldest couple in this
parish, and perhaps among the
longest in married life, as afore
said, sixty-six years. They are
also the parents of the fifth
generation, that too is a rarity.
On Sunday last was Mr. Duch-
arme's ninety-second full year
of trodding this earth and he
received many good wishes and
gifts from his children, and who
knows it may help to stretch the
time.. Mother Ducharme also
had a birthday on January 28.
She too had many good wishes
from children and friends who
called to offer good wishes. For
all of that we are grateful and
we thank our children, relatives,
and friends and above all we
thank God for having chosen us
among the few, for a long life.
Thanks!
The last six decades of those
early pioneers has passed on and
not any of them left to tell the
tale and what the following
generations know is only tradit-
ion of those early settlers left
behind six generations ago. The
last is the present one. By what
they heard in their homes in
child hood by their parents they
learned much of their life when
they were squatted in the wilder-
ness of this community. Their
many incidents which took place
during the process of clearing
their land and as well the many
From the wilderness they est-
ablished a young and prosperous
generation of today leaving them
in a good state to carry on as
farmers. They made many
changes as they years passed on
and most of them wrecked the
little log house and in its place
built a new one or in place
remodelled them to the latest
style so that they too would
carry on in comfort. This little
St. Peter's
Lutheran Church
Rev. A. C. Blackwell, B.A., B.D.
Pastor
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 —
10:00 a.m.—Worship Service
10:45 a.m.—Sunday Church
School
Everyone Welcome
Zurich Mennonite
Ephraim Gingerich, Pastor
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 —
10:00 a.m.—Worship Service
10:45 a.m.—Sunday School
"Boast not thyself of tomorrow;
for the knowest not what a day
may bring forth."—Prov. 27:1.
Emmanuel
United Church
ZURICH
Rev. John Huether, B.A., B.D.,
- Minister
Mrs. Milton Oesch, Organist
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 —
10:00a.m.—Morning Worship
Admission of Elders
Boys' and Girls' Fellowship
11:10 a.m. Sunday Church School
Wednesday, February 18 —
8:30 p.m.—Official Board
Sunday, February 22 —
8:00 p.m.—Film: These Four
Cosy Walls
LAKEVIEW CONSERVATIVE
Mennonite Church
Formerly
SS 4, EAST STANLEY
Minister: Alvin Baker
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 15 —
10:00 a.m.--Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Worship Service
8:00 p.m.—Evening Service
Every Wednesday Evening —
8:00 p.m.—Bible Study and
Prayer Meeting
We invite you .to worship with us
French parish is isolated from
many others in the province,
being known today as St. Joseph
parish on the Blue Water High-
way on the borders of Lake Hur-
on, and to its advantage it has
many laneways leading to the
lake where many bought lots
from the farmers and built them-
selves and family a beautiful
cottage. The highway is a well
kept one with beautiful sceneries
on both sides and especially in
the spring time when nature
provides all of its beauty. Also
in the autumn season when the
trees that in the summer were
covered with vigorous green
leaves had turned to a golden
colour covering the ground many
inches thick. AU of that is at-
tractive to the site -seeing mot-
orist.
Those early pioneers of twelve
decades ago are the real found-
ers of this parish and it is to their.
the credit goes for the property
prosperity of this parish. Even
though they were poor they
Lutheran Church
Hears Reports At
Annual Meeting
At the St. Peter's Lutheran
service on Sunday, the 1970
church council was installed.
Members of the council are
Glen Thiel, Vice-president,
Douglas Armstrong, secretary;
Harvey Clausius, Earl Deichert,
Harvey Hohner, Ivan Kalbfleisch,
and Albert Schilhe. J.M. Turk-
heim was installed as treasurer.
Ivan Kalbfleisch, the one new
member of the council, also
reported at the annual meeting
on January 28 as representative
on the board -of the Blue Water
Rest Horne. At the same meet-
ing reports were given by sec-
retary, Mrs. Harold Thiel, and
superintendent, Charles Kalb-
fleisch, of the Sunday Church
School.
Mr. Kalbfleisch was asked to
undertake the organizing of a
young persons' choir.
Mrs. Gordon Hess as treasurer,
and Mrs,. Leonard Prang as pres-
ident, reported for the Lutheran
Church Women, telling of the
program of visits to the sick and
shut-ins, offerings for the Cystic
Fibrosis fund and -the London
Rescue Mission, quilts made for
Waterloo Lutheran University,
quilts and layettes and clothing
packed for world relief and other
projects.
Bert Klopp reported that the
perpetual -care fund of the Cem-
etery Board was almost sufficient
to warrant employing a regular
grounds- keeper.
A balance of $1655 was report-
ed in the local treasury by Jack
Turkheim, with liabilities of
the building fund reduced to
$2027 as at December 31,1969.
The services continue to be held
at 10 a.m. each Sunday with
Sunday Church School at 10.45.
GUARANTEED
CERTIFICATES
and
DEBENTURES
834%
1 to 4 Years
5 Years
CONTACT
John R. Consitt
2364332 — Zurich
twenty nuns of different orders.
They also left several school
teachers and many who took
part in public affairs. All of
those mentioned are according
to memory and perhaps there
were more. Therefore the gen-
erations of today may well be
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1970
proud to be direct descendants,
We boast to say thatthis one
among the many parishes in
this part of our land to be
beautiful and we say with cert-
ainty its citizens living a broth-
er life. This concludes our write-
up!
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SHORT RIB OR BLADE
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