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The Huron Expositor, 1988-10-12, Page 1818A — THE HURON EXPOSITOR, OCTOBER 12, 1988 OBITUARIES ROY ALLEN Roy D. Allen of Seaforth, died Wednesday, October 5, 1988 at University Hospital in London. He was 70. Mr. Allen is survived by his wife Christine; three sons, Dr. John Allen of Peterborough, and Don and Tom Allen, both of Toronto; two stepsons, Jerome and wife ' Anne Marie Herlehy and Patrick Herlehy; two stepdaughters, Marilyn and husband Jim Myers and Charlene Herlehy, all of Kitchener. Also surviving are one sister, Mrs. Uriah (Audrey) Walters of Sarnia and four grandchildren. Friends were received at the Whitney- Ribey funeral home in Seaforth and a funeral service was held Friday with the Reverend William M. Barber officiating. Burial was in Maitlandbank Cemetery. Pallbearers were George Case, Allan Nicholson, Frank Golding, Gord DeJong, Everett Felker and Henry Ziler. The Royal Canadian Legion Branch 156 held a service Thursday at the funeral home. JEAN M. DILL Jean M. Dill of Mitchell, and formerly of Dublin and Seaforth, died Thursday, Oc- tober 6, 1988 at the Seaforth Community Hospital. She was 75. Born in Seaforth on February 13, 1913, she was a daughter of the late Reuben Frost and the former Lottie Bristow. On April 14, 1941 she married Joseph G. Dill. She was a former member of Northside United Church, Seaforth. Mrs. Dill is survived by one daughter, Karen Warren of Stratford and one son John William Dill off Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Also surviving are; one sister; Beatrice Burgess of Flint, Michigan; one brother, John L. Frost of St. Thomas; and five grand- children, Jill and Mark Warren and Chantelle, Danielle and Michele Dill. Mrs. Dill was predeceased by her husband Joseph on October 15, 1963; one sister Dorothy Hayne (1987) and one brother, Harold Robert Frost (1935). A funeral service was held at Northside United Church, Seaforth on Tuesday, Oc- tober 11, with the Reverend Donald Jones of- ficiating. Cremation with interment at St. James Roman Catholic Cemetery, Seaforth. The Lockhart Funeral Home in Mitchell assisted with funeral arrangements. ELI 0. DENYS Eli 0. Denys of RR 3 Kippen, died Tues- day, October 4, 1988 at St. Joseph's Hospital in London. He was 60. He is survived by his wife, the former Rachel Stallaert; sons,, Walter and wife Nancy of RR 3 Kippen, Ron and wife Debbie of RR 1 Brucefield, Brian of Sarnia and Rick at home; and daughters, Dianne and hus- band Dave Youmans of London, and Darlene at home. Also surviving are nine grandchildren; Mr. Denys' mother, Mrs. Adronie Raes of Chatham; stepbrother Dan' Raes of Chatham; and sisters, Germaine (Mrs. Martin Schaap) of Chatham and Ramona (Mrs. Ray Reid) of Belmont. Mr. Denys was predeceased by his father Edmond Denys and stepfather Leon Raes. Friends were received at the Whitney- Ribey Funeral Homes in Seaforth and a Funeral Mass was held Thursday at St. James Roman Catholic Church with Father C.G. Caruana celebrant. Interment St. James Roman Catholic Cemetery. Prayers were said- Wednesday night at the furferal home. DOROTHY MURRAY Dorothy Marie Murray of RR 5 Seaforth, died Thursday, October 6, 1988 at the Strat- ford General Hospital. She was 69. Mrs. Murray is survived by her husband Vincent John Murray; two daughters, Rosemary and her husband Dennis Belfour of RR 5 Seaforth and Loretta and her hus- band Gordon Butters of North Delta, British Columbia; and two sons, Steve and his wife Anne of St. Columban and Jim and his wife Janneke of RR 5 Seaforth. Also surviving are 11 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren; four sisters, Mary of Edmonton and Anne, Helen and Patricia, all of Kitchener; and five brothers, Louis of 'Seaforth, Joe of St. Columban, James of St. Thomas, Frank of Dublin and Vincent of Kitchener. Mrs. Murray was predeceased by three brothers, Dennis, Paul and Fergus. The '- family received friends at the Whitney-Ribey Funeral Home in Seaforth and Mass of the Christian Burial was held at St. Columban Roman Catholic Church on Monday. Interment in St. Columban. Parish prayers, were held at the funeral home on Sunday evening. Pallbearers were Rob Tetu, Charlie Downey, Don Kelly, Alan Murray, Jim Maloney and Ray Maloney. Honorary pallbearers were Iden Ryan, Bill Feeney, Leon Maloney, Herman Klaver, Larry Flanagan and Paul Murray. The six grand- children were flowerbearers. Coaching • from page 14 lumps, or here and there. Recognition is a day-to-day concern for all organizations. Recognition is not so much something you can do as it is something you are. Volunteer recognition is a sensitivity to others as per- sons, not a strategy for discharging obliga- tions. Let's recognize our Volunteers today. Without Volunteers Seaforth would not have so many successful organizations. O.M.H.A.-N.C.C.P. COACHES CER- TIFICATION CLINIC, Level - Intermediate (formally, Level 3) will be held on November 11, 12 and 13th, 1988 at the Clif- HCBE lord Arena. Times are as follows: Friday from 6 to 11:15 p.m., Saturday from 8:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. with one hour ice time and Sunday, 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. with 2 hours of ice time. To register contact the Rec Office at 527-0882 or call Vaughan Braby, P.O. Box 128, Clifford, Ont. NOG 1MO, 327-8717. Are you INTERESTED IN TEACHING with the Seaforth Recreation Department? Have a good idea for a new program that would be of interest to the citizens of Seaforth? If so, please send the program outline and your resume to: Marty Bedard, Seaforth Recreation Dept., P.O. Box 885. Seaforth, Ont. NOK 1WO, 527-0882. WEDDINGS FALL SPECIALS In effect Thursday, Friday, Saturday - While Supplies Last 8 INCH Tasty -Nu Store CHERRY � -67))Only PIE ° A Wide Variety of . e Canadian & Imported CHEESES WHITE OR WHOLE WHEAT 4.- ° • ^ Fresh Off The Block (� COUNTRY e�J PLUMROSE BUNS DOZ. o CREAMY HAVARTI BEUERMANN-MCCAMBRIDGE Janice Beuermann and Joe McCambridge were married Saturday, September 17, 1988 at St. Peter's Church in Brodhagen by the Reverend Horst. The bride is the daughter of Donald and Pauline Beuermann of RR 1 Dublin and the groom is the son of Bernard and Betty McCambridge of Chalk River. Maid of honor, was Beverly Beuermann of Guelph and bridesmaids were Nancy Mc - Cambridge of Toronto, Sharon Wilson of Seaforth and Mary Jo McCambridge of Chalk River. Flower girls were Amy and Laura Buckley of Belleville, :cousins of the groom. Best man was Darryl McCambridge of Chalk River and guests were ushered by Jeff Beuermann of Dublin, Jack Lamirande of Ottawa and Yvon Deschamps of Ex- panola. Junior ushers were Jason Beuer- mann and Jeremy Beuermann of Dublin. Out of town guests attended the wedding from New York State, Quebec, Kapuskas- ing, Sudbury, Chalk River, Belleville, Toronto and Sault Ste. Marie. Following a reception at the Mitchell Community Centre the couple cottaged in Parry Sound. They now reside at 126 Pomeroy Street. in Tweed. Marcon Studio photograph. NUTRITIOUS BRAN MUFFINS 6 FOR o DELUXE CHOCOLATE BREAD a e BROWNIES 6 FOR I] 0 g PEOPLE Mrs. Norma Steele had as visitors, Linda Leeming and Harry Daum of Stratford, also, Shirley and Stanley Preszcator of Crediton and Anne Clark of Walton. GINETTES RESTAURANT SEAFORTH'S FAMILY RESTAURANT! Roast Beef Dinner 5 includes coffee or tea and dessert SUNDAY, OCT. 16 5:00-7:00 .25 'Daily Luncheon Specials •Licenced Under LLBO 'Seniors 15% off MON.-SAT, 6:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M. SUN. 7:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M. 90 MAIN $iaAFOR H 5074964 • from page 1 should have a prayer, not necessarily the Lord's prayer, which they understand and that students from all religious backgrounds can benefit from. "From, my point of view if a child of six doesn't know a basic prayer and its fun- damentals he can't make a prayer of his own," she explains. HCBE board chairman John Jewitt ad- mitted the board has not yet sent any direc- tion on this issue to schools, and is waiting for guidance from the Ministry of Education as to what type of opening religious expres- sion should be in place. "It's not a board decision," said Mr. Jewitt "sometimes these laws s -e passed and there's nothing we can do abs ut it." Trustee Tony McQuail noted the t the cur- rent opening exercises appear to be general- ly well accepted by the community. WOW The Work Orientation Workshop (WOW), a first time project in Huron County, was reviewed for the board and termed a success. The progra vas operated from South Huron District , iigh School in Exeter. 10 in- dividuals between 16 and 18 years of age were selected for the program who were Junior Farmers progressing in academics but didn't have academic goals. The idea of the workshop was to assist teens to begin planning for their futures without severely interrupting their present activities. During the summer work program the students took the first two weeks to go on a wide variety of field trips to local small businesses and large industries, hold seminars and hear guest speakers, and have group discussions about career planning. A WOW manual was developed on how to find a job, hold a job, and lose a job. Then for the next seven weeks the students got actual job experience, and met periodically to discuss their experiences with their peers and in- stuctors on the program. The program gave high school students a chance to explore high job opportunities in a supervised manner. Both the students and the organizers gave the program a positive evaluation and recommend its expansion. The 10 students who completed the program are said to be more aware of the oppor- tunities they have, and changes have been noticed in their attitudes, their grades, and the types of courses they take. Unlike initiatives which help to re-educate students after they have dropped out of school, WOW helps prevents students from dropping out in the first place. MARKET YOUR CORN & SOYBEANS THROUGH US • from page 1 spoke on the perception of rural life and agriculture. He noted until the urban and rural populations realize the true business of agriculture, many of its problems will re- main unsolved. The highlight of the evening, of course, was the presentation of the Rural Leader- ship Awards. The recipients of these awards were all deemed to have showed outstan- ding leadership and contributions to the rural community and agriculture in Huron County. Among the award recipients were five from the Seaforth area. ROBERT BROADFOOT of RR 1 Brucefield has been involved with the Seaforth Agricultural Society and the Huron Soil and Crop Improvement Association, and has been president of both organiza- tions. He is also a past 4-H leader and member of the Ontario Egg Producers' Marketing Board. Along with his involve- ment in these organizations, Mr. Broadfoot is presently deputy reeve of Tuckersmith Township, and is an active member of the Brucefield United Church. ALLAN CARTER, of RR4 Clinton, has also exhibited strong leadership in the com- munity. He has been a 4-H leader for three years, director of the Huron Holstein Club for seven years and president for one, and is also organizer and leader 'of the Junior Calf Club. Mr. Carter is involved as a coach and instructor in hockey, and as an assistant coach in baseball. He is an active member of the Northside United Church, Seaforth, and a representative on the Seaforth and District Community Centre Board. DONALD DODDS, of RR 1 Seaforth, has a long involvement with rural organizations as well. He has been a leader of the 4-H Swine Club for 29 years, and is a member of the Seaforth Fair Board and the Seaforth Co-op, where he holds the positions of presi- dent and secretary. Mr. Dodds' agricultural involvement also includes the Ontario Federation of Agriculture and the Farm Debt Review Board. Mr. Dodds serves as Clerk of Session of the Winthrop United Church. NEIL DOLMAGE, of RR 4 Walton, has been a help to many organizations and their members. He was the first chairman of the Huron County Beef Improvement Associa- tion, and was very successful in getting that organization off the ground. He is presently its secretary -treasurer. Mr. Dolmage has also been a zone director and secretary - treasurer of the Ontario Charolais Associa- tion. As a director and presently president of the Seaforth Agricultural Society, Mr. Dolmage was instrumental in organizing the Stan Jackson Hereford Show. In non- farm -related activities, Mr. Dolmage is past president of the Seaforth Curling Club and is a promoter of youth curling. He is also a member of the Kinburn Forresters. BRENDA MCINTOSH, of RR 4 Seaforth, is another who has been very active agriculturally in Huron County. She ;las held executive positions on the Huron Coun- ty Federation of Agriculture and is current- ly its 2nd Vice President. She has also been very active for many years in the Ontario Federation off Agriculture. Mrs. McIntosh is a board member and panel chairperson on the Farm Debt Review Board. • Up to the minute prices • Fast, efficient and friendly service • Extended hours to receive your grain • Accurate weights and grades • Cheques issued at local branch • Competitive prices Also Augusta, Houser, Harus, Fredrick Seed Wheat ORDER NOW! ERNS.,..._.-.. .._�.. efrefq ...- ..,..SRebs .. Seaforth 345-2545 Pt. Albert 529-7135 ..:01)1145.71 -At Hensel) 262-2527 Ailsa Craig 293-3223 Mitchell 346-8433 Granton 225-2360