The Huron Expositor, 1962-10-11, Page 5•
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WED/DINGS
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MR. AND MRS. LAkRY A. DALE are shown following
their recent marriage at the home of the bride's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Britton, RR 2, Dublin. The bride is the
former Margaret O. Britton, and the groom is the son of
Mrs. Alvin Dale and the late Mr, Dale, . Seaforth. (Photo
by Phillips).
MR. AND MRS. F. F. KELLY were married at • St.
tolumban's Roman Catholic Church. The bride is the for-
mer Margaret Ann Maloney, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank'Maloney, RR 5, Seaforth, and her husband is a son .
of Mr. and Mrs. Fergus Kelly, RR 2, Dublin. (Photo by
Fowler).
JOYCE' ALMA WILSON, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. -
Harold Wilson, RR 3, Seaforth, and Bruno Braecker, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John Braecker, ItR 2, Walton, were tnarried
recently at Egmondville United Church, Egmondville.
They will reside at RR 2, Walton. (Photo by Jack Doerr).
il+.'.' MON mogra4,. SWQRrift:
RONALD MORGAN JOHNSTON and Hilde Franzika
Scheimann were united in marriage in Vancouver recently.
The groom is the younger son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Orland
Johnston, Clinton, and formerly of Seaforth, and the bride
is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Scheimann, Dussel-
forf, Germany. The couple are residing in Vancouver, B.C.
dorf, Germany. The couple are residing in Vancouver, B.C.
WEDDINGS
JERMYN—MURRAY
On Thanksgiving Day, Oct, 8,
at 10 o'clock, Brussels Anglican
Church was the salting for a
ceremony of interest, when
Donna Alice Murray became the
bride of John Roy Jermyn. Rev.
H. L. Jennings officiated.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Don Murray, of Toronto,
and the late Mr. Murray, and,
the groom is ,the only son of
Mrs. Laura Jermyn, of Brussels,
and the late Thomas Jermyn.
After the ceremony, the
groom's sister, Mrs. Alma Pink-
ney, of Seaforth, served a de-
licious Thanksgiving wedding
dinner, held at the home of Mr.
Amos W. Corby, of Luisa St.,
Seaforth.
Guests were present from
Goderich, Brussels, Seaforth
and Toronto. The couple will
reside in Toronto.
MALON E—IC.EMP
White gladioli and red zinnias
decorated the altar. of St. Col-
umban's Roman Catholic
Church on Saturday, Sept. 22,
for the marriage of Miss Aud-
rey Joyce Kemp, daughter of
Mr, and Mrs. John Kemp, Mit-
chell, and Alfred Joseph Ma-
lone, only son of Mr. and Mrs.
Emmett Malone, RR 2, Dublin.
Rev. L. J. Coughlin performed
the ceremony and sang the
Nuptial Mass. The organist was
Mrs. V. J. Lane. •
The bride, given in marriage,
by her father, wore a floor.
length gownr,.of Kau de faille,
with bodice fashid of French
lace with a sabrina neckline,
with long, lilypoint sleeves. The
pleated midriff had two small
bows at the back. The full, scis-
sor pleated skirt had a panel of
French lace at the front and ex-
tended to a chapel train at the
clack. A crown of crystals held
her tiered scalloped satin veil
of silk illusion. She carried red
roses with ivy and streamers.
Mrs. Robert Uniac, Mitchell,
sister of the bride, was matron
of honor, wearing a street -
length dress of red peau de soie
and matching Shoes. The bodice
had a sabrina neckline and short
cap sleeves, The scissor -pleated
skirt had a large bow at the
back. Her headdress was of
white neau de soie petals with
a short veil.
The bridesmaids were Miss
Joan Gethke, London, and Miss
Mary Lou Siegner, London.
They wore dresses similar to
that of the maid of honor. The
attendants each carried gar-
denias with streamers and ivy.
Pamela Uniac, Mitchell, niece
of the bride, was flower girl,
dressed in a .red peau de soie
with round neckline, short..cap
sleeves, a scissors -pleated skirt,
and a pleated cummerbund with
two small bows at the back. She
carried a basket of white baby
chrysanthemums.
The best man was Robert
Uniac, Mitchell, and the ushers
were William Murphy, RR 4,
Seaforth, 'and Ray Kemp, Lon-
don, brother of the bride.
A wedding dinner and recep-
tion were held at the Brodha-g--
en Community Hall. The bride's
mother received the guests
wearing a sheath dress of beige
crepe with matching jacket,
trimmed with, lace, brown ac-
cessories and a corsage of Talis-
man roses. She was assisted by
the bridegroom's mother, vtfho
wore ,a blue figured jersey dress
with black accessories and a
corsage of red roses.
For ` travelling the bride
changed to a three-piece brown
knit suit with brown and white
accessories and a corsage of
white baby chrysanthemums.
After ,a honeymoon spent in
Northern Ontario, the young
couple will live at RR 2, Dub-
lin. o
. Guests at the wedding were
from Stratford, London, Detroit,
Teeswater, Mitchell, Seaforth
and St. Columban.
NORTHSIDE UNITED CHURCH
Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Junior
Church School during worship;
Senior Church School, 10 a.m.
—Minister, Rev. J. Cliff Brit-
ton, B.A.
CAVAN UNITED CHURCH
Worship, 9:30 a.m.; Church
School, 10:45 a.m. Anniversary
service will be held on Oct, 21
at 11 a.m., with Rev.. Arthur
Higginbotham, Walton United
Church,'as guest minister.—Min-
ister, Rev. J. Cliff Britton, B.A.
This Wtek At the Starorth Di+ttrrct High SOW
The Students' Council has
contributed $50 to Dr. Graham's
Homes. This institution, also
called "The Children's City of
the Himalayas," was founded in
1900 in Kalimpong, West Ben-
gal, India, by a Scottish mis-
sionary, Rev. J. A. Graham. It
is an inter -denominational m'is-
siona'ry cause, providing good,
clothing, education and spiri-
tual training for over 550 un-
der-priviliged Anglo-Indian chil-
dren. A number, of Canadians
have taken a vital interest in
these children for many years.
Our Students' Council began to
support this organization last
year with a .contribution of $50.
* * *
Our rugby team went away
Choir Organzes,
Name Officers At
First ,Church
Mrs. W. A. Wright was nam-
ed president of the choir at
First Presbyterian Church at a
reorganization meeting Thurs-
day night following choir prac-
tice.
Miss Carol Brown is the or-
ganist, and Mrs. William Brown
is choir director.
Rev. Douglas ,p. Fry,churcl)
minister, presided at the meet-
ing, which elected the follow-
ing officers: President, Mrs.
Wright; vice-president, John A.
Cardno; secretary, Mrs. R. K.
McFarlane; treasurer, J. Ken-
neth Willis; librarians, Joan.
Coleman and Darlene ' Sills;
gown committee, Mrs. Margaret'
Cuming and David R. Stewart;
membership committee conven-
er, Mrs. F. Kling; social, flower
and gift, Mrs. John A. ' ardno
and Mrs. Kling.
The membership committee
have been requested to prepare
a list of choir members and that
this list be printed ,occasionally
in the church calendar. Lunch
was served by Mrs. Kling, Mrs.
Wright, Rev. Fry, F. E. Willis
and John Cardno.
A SMILE OR TWO
A local small fry had been
vaccinated and after the opera-
tion the doctor prepared to
bandage the sore arm.
"Put it on the other arm, doc-
tor."
"Why, ,no," said the physi-
cian, "I want to put the band-
age on your sore arm so the
boys at school won't hit it."
"Put it on the other arm,
Doc," repeated the boy. "You
don't know the fellows at our
school."
ALL KINDS
of
INSURANCE
W. E.
SOUTHGATE
MAIN ST. - SEAFORTH
Phone 334 Res. 540
• that vital link 'n each
of your Friendships
Choose from the BI66EST most
BEAUTIFUL and VARIED display of
Christmas Cards we have
shown in many a year.
Feaur.d
IN THE
NATIONAL LINE
last Wednesday to challenge the
Wingham team, and found- it in
as good a shape as ever. Our
boys • came up with the short
end of a 20-0 score. It's quite a
comedown, but the last game
isn't here yet. Better luck next
time!
* * *
Another sport has reared its
head, in the form of a junior
boys' (16 and under) soccer
team. In case anybody is won-
dering, soccer is football played
with the feet, as opposed to
rugby, in which the players use
anything which -comes in handy.
You, can see Jim Melady and
his squad out every noon -hour
practising. Apparently, they
could use some more men, so
if anybody feels that he'd like
to play soccer, here's a good
chance. There are three teams
in the newly -formed league—
Wingham, Goderich and Sea -
forth. Seaforth's first game,
with Goderich, ended in a 6-6
tie. Give these boys a good
hand, everybody!
* *
In case you have been won-
de>;ing about the doughnuts
that have been sold in the cafe-
teria, they will be a regular
feature from now on. Look for
them on Tuesdays and Fridays.
' * * *
•
Magazine Campaign Time is
just around the corner—you'd
better get your customers lined
up! Remember that any special
offers for reduced subscriptions
rfiade by the magazines we are
selling, may also be, billed
through the school.
* * a:
That seems to wrap up
things for this week. I might
mention the annoying little
switch last week: Monday, Tues-
day, Thursday, Wednesday, Fri-
day, not to say anything about
this week; where Tuesday is
Wednesday, and Wednesday is
Tuesday, and there's- no Mon-
day at all!! It's rather odd to
start right in at Wednesday.
But it's all for a good cause—
it gives the Grade 11 students a
chance to *write their tests in
the Wednesday test periods. I'm
sure that they are very grate-
ful!
With the new Brownline 11" x 81/2" Square
Ring Binder, sheets always lie flat for easy
writing and reference. Takes up to 300 sheets,
plus index, in less space.
./1
Cover has strop, backbone and folds conk,
pletely under toform conVenlentspppprt.for
taking notes or v rlt'iila while standing op or
sitting down away from desk.
There is fess tension on sheets, especially
when book is full. Reinforcement of sheets
is virtually eliminated—and less tension
means rings won't pop open.
openingandclosing Is simplicity itself. No"' '
complicated mechanism to get out of order.
Covers are tough, long -wearing Tronicsealin•
black, blue, tan, green, red.
At last! A three-ring binder with
the capacity and. convenience
you've always wanted
The NEW... BROWN LINE
SGUAR E
INGER
If you've been looking for a3 -ring binder that has a big -volume
capacity without being bulky and inconvenient to handle—
see the new Brownline Square Ringer at your stationers. It
has all the features you want yet is so simple in design and
trouble-free you'll wonder why someone hasn't thought of
it before! -
PHONE 141
•
' SEXFORTI1
ROEHLER and.
X Furniture
Invite You to their •
•
•
FESTIVAL
of
Values
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Then on top of that, we ere slashing our markup to where it will just barely cover
overhead cost to give you these prices. We're determined to make this a record break-
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In addition to these extremely low prices we pledge to maintain the same high quality,
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in the past.
Kroehler Bedroom Suites
Kroehler Sofas
,Kroehler Lounge Chairs
Kroehler Matching Chairs
Kroehler Chesterfield Suites
Kroehler Platform Rockers
Special For Our Fall Festival of Values:
ELECTRIC CAN OPENER for only •
when you purchase Kroehler Furniture over $99.00
99c
BOX FURNITURE.