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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1990-01-17, Page 6SA aa7— THE HURf;1N..: EXPOSITOR, JAr4vs RY 17 1,990 , UP TO OFF ALL IN -STOCK FABRICS Broadcloth Reg. 3.39 60" Reg. 7.98 299 Polyester Lining Poly Cotton Interlock 60'' Reg. To 8.99 60" Reg. 21.50 Jogging 5 9 8 Polar Fleece ■ m Fleece 1999 10 BIG DAYS ® JANUARY 17 TO JANUARY 27 9 MAIN ST. 527-1900 Mon. - Thurs. 9 - 6 Fridays 9 - 9 Saturday 9 - 5 'RIANG LE DISCOUNT.. J `�HarvieHil en frdogsided'`Satr day, December 30,.1909a He was'73. A graduate of the University of Western Oi►tario, where he attained bis Bachelor ,mss Degree, Mr. Hiller taught for a time it an elernentary >seinool `, near Exeter, before moving on ,39 Ottawa witelm'e he taught Mr Force students. He taught. in Kingston area high schhools until, his retire - amid' in•1977, Mae }Maple survived by his wife, the former Helen McLaren; a son, Dr. James• Millen of Hamilton; and a .daughter, Jane and sou -in-law Will Ger'is of Kingston. luso surviving are: a sister, Edith Dunlop of Seaforth; a brother, Stanley Millen and his wife Jessie, also of Seaforth; a brother-in-law Ken Cowan of Midliantd; a sister-in-law Doris and her hus- band Norman Lane of Hamilton; and several nieces and nephews. Mr. Mien was predeceased by his parents, Cavin and Maggie Hillen of McKillop. Township, .and a. sister, Bessie Cowan of Midland. Funeral services were held on January 3, 1990 at St. Margaret's United Church, Kingston, with interment at Cataraqui Cemetery in Kingston. Pallbearers were four former teaching colleagues, and two nephews, Bruce Whit- more and Douglas Lane. DR. R. GORDON HAZLEWOOD Dr. R. Gordon Hazelwood of Hamilton, and formerly of Walton, died Sunday, December 31, 1989. He was 78. A retired minister of Blinkley United Church, Dr. Hazelwood was a Past Presi- dent of the Hamilton Conference of the United Church of Canada, Past Grand Chaplain of the Grand Lodge of Ontario, AF and AM, a member of the Meridan • Lodge and a mer:' of -the Seo$tlsh Hite, 32nd Degree, " 'r He was well iniown In the Walton conn- munity and was ,rininister to Walton: and Mbncxief:,for 4.411)&1)4 of years. He laid metirgd in Brussels for .son}etimne, and did some Supp -ministry in the area. Be la elnreived by hls wife Helen; a son Lane and Ids wife:Mary Ann.,of Hamilton; and a daughter Lynda and her husband Thomas Harrower of Burlington. Also surviving are grandchildren, Anne, Bryan, Paul, Pamela and Deborah. Friends were received a the Swackhamer and Hilts -Blackford and Wray Funeral Home, and a funeral service was held in Blinkley United Church. WILMA RICHMOND Wilma Richmond of -Parry Sound died Sunday, January 7, 1990 at the Parry Sound District Hospital. She was 83. She is survived by a son Bill and his wife Betty of Parry Sound; six grand- daughters; and 13'great grandchildren. Also surviving are, two sisters, Rosa Schouten of Sudbury and Amelda Reynolds of Seaforth; and one brother, Fred Watts of Toronto. Mrs. Richmond was predeceased by her husband Argyle Richmond in 1980; one brother Stan Watts; and two sisters, Sister Mary Blanche (Arletta) and Lyolla Guerin. Friends were received at the Logan Funeral Home in Parry Sound. Parish prayers were said January 9. Mass of Resurrection was celebrated at St. Peter's Church on Wednesday, January 10, 1990. Temporary entombment Hillcrest Mausoleum Acres, Anna tMar erste WW d T o r erlY Seaforth, die xJaan at the Clinton 'tblic ttala f� ` 1 porn at Auburn, shi'wus t r : foothfrn►e ArelatreAnGUrWgnaetspe'r,SYoenwyabluatatanemd btire Mrs. Walden isu v fa noVactr MaandrjhisrewfFreaJnofoGGod onigh,o°gruhaedr- children, Cameron and-thL9ty'Vt'aser;a sister Lila (Mrs. Mel Webster of Clinton; and a brother Arthur.; Youmtgblut .of Goderich. She was predeceased by her husband Clarence J. Walden, and two brothers. Friends 'were received at the Whitney- Ribey Funeral Home in Seaforth and ,:-a funeral service was held there on Tuesday Spring burial will be in Maitlandbank Cemetery. As expressions of sympathy donations may be made to the charity of one's choice. EDNA WRIGHT Edna May Wright of Peterborough, died Friday, January 12, 1990. Born at Goderich on Mary 17, 1915, she was a daughter of the late Frederick Cook and the former Robena Bell. She is survived by a son Raymond of Caesars; a daughter Mona (Mrs. William Louth) of Peterborough; 10 grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren. Mrs. Wright was predeceased by her husband Fergus Wright. Friends were received at the Whitney- Ribey Funeral Home and a funeral service was held there on Monday. Spring burial will be in Maitlandbank Cemetery. SPECIAL EFFECTIVE JANUARY 15 TO JANUARY 28, 1990 100's ASPIRIN TABLETS NABOB 300 G. THE COFFEE WITH THE BEST BEAN TASTE COFFEE LOW CALORIE SWEETENER 100 PACKETS 80 G. SUGAR TNI GLADE POTPOURRI 170 G. AEROSOL At Pig- ESHE '!ER HALSA 450 ML. SAMPOO OR COI EDGE 200 ML. AEROSOL SGnAVI G GEL ITIONE FAVOR LEMON SCENTED 350 G. SPRAY FUR ! ITU! ,E POLISI "TOILET DUCK" 500 ML. TOILET BOWL CLEANER � I $359 $29 $169 $119 $269 $219 $219 $159 IMPROVED FACILITIES - Swimmers take advantage of the im- provements made to the pool at the Vanastra Recreation Cen- tre during the noon -hour adult swim. The pool was officially reopened on Monday afternoon after eight weeks of renova- tions. Elliott photo. S owmoh6le 'bridge referred A request from an area snowmobile club, for permission to build a bridge on town property and over Silver Creek, has been referred to the town's Finance and General Government committee for fur- ther discussion. "The town's biggest concern is liabili- ty," commented Town Administrator Jim Crocker at last week's council meeting. "If something happens we don't want to be seen as a partner. Certainly there'd have to be idemnification forms signed, and the bridge would have to come down in the summer...I think we should check into the legalities of it." Council in general agreed with Mr. to committee Crocker's points. They also raised the question about how property owners ad- jacent to the proposed bridge might react, since the bridge would certainly bring increased snowmobile traffic to the area. What will the neighbors say?" asked Councillor Bill Teall. "I think we should check the amount of traffic that can be expected." Council decided the matter had to be looked into further before a responsible decision could be made. "I don't think we should hurry and jump into it," added Mr. Crocker. "This is almost the same issue as skateboar- ding." TRO UCINC trAel-deWrder-/ze,141... COMMU ITY EETI GS: Right in your town! LOOK! IT;S THE NEW FASTS FLEXIBLE PROGRAM! CAIRNS-FINLAYSON Janice Ann Cairns and Brett Allan Finlayson were married Saturday, November 4, 1989 at Egmondville United Church by the Reverend Cheryl -Ann Stadelbauer-Sampa. The bride is the daughter of John and Jean Cairns of Egmondville and the groom is the son of Arthur and Mary Finlayson of Seaforth. Maid of honor was Chris Cairns, sister of the bride, and bridesmaids were Barb Flanagan, friend of the bride, Brenda Em- py, sister of the groom, Calana McClure, friend of the bride and Cheryl Campbell, friend of the bride. Best man was Mike Flanagan, friend of the groom, and guests were ushered by Denis Medd, friend of the groom, Dan McClure, friend of the groom, Gary Bennett, friend of the groom, and John Cairns, brother of the bride. The cou- ple honeymooned in the Dominican Republic and now reside in Seaforth. Thursday, Jan. 18 6:45 pm EGMONDVILLE UNITED CHURCH We're finally here! Now Weight Watchers brings its New Fast & Flexible Program closer to you, through a more convenient way to lose weight: Community Meetings. With our new 1990 program you'll lose weight fast, while living your normal, everyday life—it's easy! And talk about value: pre -paying for a series of meetings saves you money. JOIN WEIGHT WATCHERS TODAY! NEW FAST& FLEXIBLE PROGRAM weight Watchers is the registered trademark of WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL, INC. 01990 WEIGHT WATCHERS INTERNATIONAL. INC. All Hghta ro,efwed. BIRTHS O'NEILL - Elizabeth and Shawn are pleased to an- nounce the arrival of Jordan Daniel, born at St. Joseph's Hospital m London, on Thursday, January 11, 1990, and weighing 7 lbs., 3ozs. Proud grandparents are Burke and Maureen O'Neill of Toronto, and Irwin and Doreen Johnston of Seaforth, RING - Born to David and Heather on December 28, 1989, another beautiful girl, Morgan Elizabeth, weight 9 lbs., 4 ozs., at Mt. Sinai Hospital, Toronto. A sister for Rachel, and second granddaughter for George and Shirley Ring of Seaforth and Mrs. L.S. Gent Clarkson. HAPPY BIRTHDAY Happy birthday to Paul Cronin, six - years -old on January 18. Happy birthday to Matthew McGrath, four -years -old on January 17. Local Jr. Farmers' join forces The Junior Farmers' organizations in Clinton and the Exeter area. Seaforth, Clinton and South Huron have "We're trying to be one club, but main - merged to form one large club. Declining tain our ties with our home communities," enrolment in the three separate clubs Rob Honking stresses. brought about the amalgamation, and there The Junior Farmers meet on the second are currently about 44 members in the new Tuesday of each month, with the next organization.% meeting taking place at Exeter High "Membership was spread too thin bet- School on February 13th. A County ween the three, and the same people were meeting will be held tonight at 7 p.m. at holding the executive positions," reports the OMAF offices in Clinton. Membership Rob Hunking of Auburn, president of the month is set for March, but a fee schedule newly -formed group. He adds that the Jr. for the new dub hasn't been established as Farmers organizations have joined yet. Traditionally, the Provincial fee is $13 together for practical reasons, but that and the County fee is $2, with the in - they won't try to re-establish themselves at dividual clubs charging for membership. one "home base". The meetings for the Generally, cost of membership works out new club will be rotated among Seaforth, to about $20. March of Dimes into campaign The 1990 March of Dimes Winter Fun- draising Campaign is in full march. In the community of Seaforth, volunteers are beginning a community direct mail cam- paign which will run until February 15, to raise .their goal of $3,000 in support of disabled adults in Ontario. Last year the Seaforth area collected approximately $2,500. Since 1951 the Ontario March of Dimes has been working on behalf of physically disabled adults all across the province. Each year it focuses 90 per cent of its budget on three main services which in- clude; independent living assistance; assistive devices; and employment ser - "Innovative from page 3A roughly $20,000 - will be absorbed by the county, but the equipment won't be in the school until next January if the program is a go. Not only will the high school students be making use of the keyboards once they make it to Seaforth, but a program is be- ing considered whereby the elementary school students in the upper grades would come and take keyboarding lessons. Schools from as far as Brucefield have ex- presses an interest, Mr. Parr remarks. "If we've got $20,000 worth of equipment here, what's the use of having it sit idle?" The keyboarding class will be the only one in Southwestern Ontario between here and Essex County. None are offered in London, and three are on the go in vices. Remaining funds are directed towards programs ranging from a post polio network to advocacy and research. In 1951 when the Ontario March of Dimes was founded to battle the polio epidemic, the Marching Mothers raised $14,000 in their campaign. Today, the 1990 Fundraising Campaign, which provides support to all disabled adults in Ontario, has set the highest goal of the campaign to date. With the assistance of dedicated volunteers across Ontario, they will work towards a provincial goal of $547,000. Please give as generously as you are able. Help the March of Dimes to provide independence for disabled adults. approach" Kitchener. SDHS is making a concentrated effort to attract the Grade 8 students to the school and get them excited about their upcoming high school careers. In the past couple of weeks, representatives have been cir- culating to the elementary schools to go over course selection with the students, and a Grade 8 day is planned for January 24th at SDHs. Mr. Parr hopes that a demonstrator will be there throughout the day to give visitors a hands-on introduction to the keyboards, and adds that parents will be able to meet with the principal and guidance staff later that evening. I think that it's important for the parents and the community to know that we're doing the best for the kids."