HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1989-06-28, Page 2222A — THE -HURON EXPOSITOR, JUNE 28. 1989
LYiiESir.ERiv
(4)SITAARID
ROCK
Newspaper editor addresses meeting of Staffs WI
ERYIRES
527-4560
American Top 40 Music for^Butk-& Does,
Dances and otherSpecial Occasions
aevens
DISC JOCKEY SERVICE
You are invited to
Join the Kale Family
In celebrating the
44th Wedding Anniversary
Of their Parents
Tom and Bea
Sat., July 1st Open Reception
At 9:00 p.m, at the
Seaforth & District Comm. Centres
Music By "Solid Ivory"
Best Wishes Only
Country Gold
RockenIRoll
DISCO POLKAS. WALTZES. NEW LASER DISC MUSIC, GOOD RECORDED
MUSIC FOR WEDDINGS, OANCES. ANNIVERSARIES. PARTIES, ETC
15 yrs. eapeeenee *No Wimp charge
BRUSSELS - 887-6159 DAYTIME or EVENINGS
'HAPPY 30th .BIRTHDAY
DAD
John Wilson
50th
Wedding Anniversary
OPEN
HOUSE
Happy 25th Wedding
Anniversary
PETER & BEVERLY VANDERVLYET
Married June 27, 1964
Staffa Correspondent
MRS. JOHN TEMIPLEMAN
345-2346
Kay Smale and Joyce Miller hosted the
Canadian Industries meeting of the Staffa
Women's Institute at the township hall on
Wednesday evening. Guest speaker was the
Editor of the Mitchell Advocate, Andy
Bader, who gave everyone present a good
understanding of what was involved in the
publication of a weekly newspaper.
Fourteen members answered the roll call
by telling Andy what they would like to see
different in their local paper and a question
and answer period followed. Andy was in-
troduced by Kay Smale and thanked by
Joyce Miller.
Joyce opened the meeting with a poem
"In This World” followed by the Institute
Ode and Mary Stewart Collect. Kay Smale
gave a reading "No Excuse Sunday" and
Doris Miller gave several jokes.
Roberta Templeman presided for the
business following secretary, Lillian
Douglas reading the previous minutes and
the correspondence. Kay Smale gave the
treasurers report. Roberta thanked all who
had helped at the District Annual and thank-
ed the Program Co-ordinator for the prin-
ting and distributing of the programs for
1989-90 prior to the meeting.
Members were reminded that June is
Na fear
Women's Institute Month and everyone was
asked to contribute suggestions for pro-
moting Women's Institute and also ideas for
a tour or bus trip.
Tweedsmuir Curator, Esther Smale has
had 25 copies made of the update on Belle
Campbell's book on Hibbert Township.
These copies cover the period from 1952 to
the late 1970s. Anyone interested maY pur-
chase a copy for $5 each. Kay Smale gave an
interesting
eresting report of the District Annual.
gave courtesy remarks and the
meeting was closed with 0 Canada.
PEOPLE WE KNOW
Many from the Staffa area were guests at
the Bonikowsky-Templeman, wedding at
Templehaven Farms on Saturday evening,
and later at the reception at the community
centre in Mitchell.
Robert and Pamela Swan, Scotland,
Christopher Swan, Graham, Lynn and
Kaylelgh Abbott England, Jim and Eileen
Greer, Ormstown Quebec, all arrived for
the Bonikowsky-Templeman wedding and
are now visiting with relatives.
Friday evening dinner guests with John,
Roberta and Richard Templeman were
Robert, Pamela and Christopher Swan,
Graham Lynn and Rayleigh Abbott, Wilfrid
and Isabelle Ands and Margaret Cole.
A large crowd attended the retirement
party for Robert Sadler on Saturday even-
ing at the Crystal Palace, Mitchell.
Doris Miller visited on Sunday with Jean
and Bob Mauer, Exeter.
Rob, Bev, Carrah, Cain and Cohen
Templeman visited on Sunday with Chuck
and Dorothy Ebel, Goderich.
Robert and Pamela Swan, Aaron,
Scotland left from British Columbia on
Saturday where they will visit with relatives
prior to returning home the end of June.
John and Roberta Templeman attended
the baptism of "Meaghan Darlene Amelia
Ellison" on Sunday morning in Knox
Presbyterian Church, Goderich with Rev.
D.R. Nicholson, officiating. They were later
guests of Don, Darlene, Sean and Meaghan
Ellison for lunch.
Steve and Terry Waikom entertained
about 50 relatives and friends at their home
on Sunday. The occasion was the 25th wed-
ding anniversary of Terry's parents, Andy
and Barb McLean.
Graham, Lynn and Kayleigh Abbott, Sur-
rey, and Christopher Swan, Essex, England,
returned home on Friday following a two
week visit with John and Roberta
Templeman and family.
Don and Isabel Coburn, Mouth of
Keswick, New Brunswick visited Sunday
with the Templemans.
Cromarty Church folk will be joining with
Staffa Church folk for the month of July
beginning July 9 in Hibbert United Church
at 11 a.m.
• from page 2A
was a young boy learning to play the
clarinet, there were days when he practised
as many as.eight hours. Eight hours! And in
one of the obituaries of Benny Goodman,
who died at 77 in 1986, I read something that
truly astonished me. Even up to the last
year of his life, Benny Goodman would
begin his daily practising with a few
minutes from his first book of elementary
clarinet exercises that he started with when
he was a boy nine years of age!
Learning to speak a language is a motor
skill which actually requires very little in-
telligence, but a great amount or repititious
practice, very much like learning to play a
musical instrument, Proof of this is the fact
that virtually every person in the world, ex-
cept idiots (persons having a mental age of
two or less And requiring constant care)
ACROPOL
RESTAURANT & STEAKHOUSE
Johnnie & Winuie Glanville
(nee McCallum)
Johnnie and Winnie Glanville, ofR.R.4
.Walton, were ,rnarried August a3$4th,
1939. To celebrate this special occa-
sion, ,family. friends cind neighbours are `
invited to _join in an Open House on July
7, 2-4 p.m. at the Kinburn Hall. Best
wishes only please.
Congratulations Mom ,and Dad,
on your Silver Anniversary. With
love from your children,
Marianne, Lisa, Michele and
Ryan.
OPEN
CANADA DAY
SATURDAY, JULY 1
-527-1254- �. 'lf 'x"22 54 -....
Licenced .Under .LLBO
5 Main St., Seaforth
learns to speak at least one language. From
the day a child is born it hears its mother
speaking. After listening for weeks and
months, the child speaks a word, and then
another, and another, and another. Of all the
species of the animal kingdom, only human
beings communicate in such an advanced
and sophisticated manner, by expressing
simple and complex thoughts with
thousands of words instead of the rudimen-
tary noises of birds and animals. We tend to
take the fact that people speak for granted,
yet it is by far the greatest intellectual
achievement almost all people will ever ac-
complish. This extraordinary ability, uni-
que in human beings among the entire
animal kingdom, enables children all over
the world to speak their parents' language
fluently, sometimes with a vocabulary of
more than 1,000 words, before the age of
five, without knowing how to read or write
or having spent one minute studying gram-
mar! What an adult needs to learn a
language, is to become a child again. Hear
and repeat, hear and repeat. Patience,
determination and practice, practice, prac-
tice. Nothing less will do. The study of gram-
mar can be interesting, but it is not
necessary because to speak correctly a
child or adult need merely hear and copy
correctly spoken speech.
J.V. Andrew, the author of "Enough"
writes that the new Official Languages Act
BUCK & DOE
.Debbie 'Henderson
and
Doug Steinman
SATURDAY, JULY 8
Age of Majority Required
For more info cal 527-2352 or 522-0351
has been designed to bring about the "Fren-
chification" (a word not in any of my dic-
tionaries) of ALL business, industry,
unions, the courts, and EVERY enterprise,
private or otherwise serving the Canadian
public, and the "Frenchifieation" of ALL
schools and EVERY workplace in Canada
with the intention of making Canada an EN-
TIRELY FRENCH NATION.
If the government of Canada really had
some marvellous, easy, magical way of tur-
ning all Canadians into fluent speakers of
English and French, Canada and the Cana-
dian people would be theenvy of hundreds of
millions of people around the world, and I
would be an enthusiastic supporter of such a
program. Foolish people, who are more to
be pitied than ridiculed for the simpletons
that they are, don't know what they're talk-
ing about when they complain about
"French being shoved down our throats".
To that I say, "If only it were that easy. If
only one could learn a language (or any
other skill by having it shoved down one's
throat like a pill,"
Only a person not playing with a full deck,
and who really ought to be an inmate of The
Provincial Hospital for the Bewildered,
could believe that the federal government of
Canada will somehow "Frenchify" Canada
so that ALL commercial enterprises in
Canada will have to conduct business only in
French or even 50-50 English and French.
Only a person who is'mean-spirited, small-
minded, paranoid, bigoted, hateful, envious,
malicious, out of touch with reality, dream-
ing out loud in every color of the rainbow,
and/or just plain stupid, could utter and
believe such .ridiculous and„ pygippstes
nonsense. By comparison, anyone toda
who believes in the tooth fairy, that the
earth is flat, and that the moon is made of
green cheese, is one of the great thinkers of
the 20th century.
Yous Truly,
Paul Copeland
CAA DA J]A'
CELEBitV1'ft)NN
I,\' SEAfl)WfB
Saturday, July 1
7:00 A.M. TO — Firemen's Pancake Breakfast At
11:00 A.M. The Firehall
12 NOON — Leisure Walk Poker Rally. Starting
from Victoria Park. Prizes to be
Awarded.
2:00 P.M. — Legion Drumhead Service at Victoria
Park
— Concert in the Park after the Drumhead
Service. Come seethe New Renovations
in Victoria Park.
— Open House at The Legion MI Afternoon
9:30 (DARK) — Giant Fireworks Display at the
High School. Food Booth will be
Available.
Admission to the Park 45.00 per car
QUEEN'S
SEAFORTH
LICENSED UNDER LLBO
NOW Dine In Cool
AIR CONDITIONED
COMFORT
ENJOY THE QUEEN'S CAFE FAMOUS
O PE'P1
w' NOON TILL 1:00 A.M.
SATURDAY, .JULY lst
GIVE YOURSELF A HOLIDAY...ORDER A
PIZZA FOR .LUNCH OR 'SUPPER
SUN., MON. 11:00.11:00 TUES., WED., THURS. 11:00=MId. FRI., SAT. 11:00-1:00 A:M.
SALAD BAR
0116.
THURS. - FRI. - SAT.
PATIO NOW OPEN
COMR'IERCIAL HO
Our Dining Room
PUB GRUB MENU AVAILABLE
AFTER THE GAME - TILL 11 P.M.
FOREST CITY YOUTH SOCCER
NEXT WEEK
WED., JULY 5
,,� }'
r 1
N
Pi s
THE GODERICH & DISTRICT.OPTIMIST CLUB
gy TH�� ANNUAL
7:00 St. Columban Soccer Field
ST. COUJMBAN
LONDON `P;UN.S;
This ,ad epongorvd-by
TONY 'ARTS 527-0,79*
INC
WITH J TTHU MDAX..,AUNE,29189 J
Gary Edwards Dale Burt
Myrna Lorrie Marie Bottrell
Carmen Westphal Terry Sumsion
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JUNE 29, 30, JULY 1
MON. to FRI. 12:00-1:30 p.m. -FRI.;,& SAT. 5:00-p.m.,8:00;p,m.
Main St. Seaforth 52749980
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THE
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Rev. Ken and The
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PUBLIC MEEItNN
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"TUESDAY, 41441,14,01, 1989
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