Clinton News-Record, 1972-03-02, Page 14ae• .0" or. re' ." ee, .1 a' 1' ,.,aastealtea.~KeP"a4aek4ralnat~i~x~4491,-e"-~"evat47'
United Church court opposes Sunday funerals CHURCH
SERVICES
ONTARIO STREET UNITED CHURCH
"THE Fekr-NOLV CHUACH"
REV. LAWRENCE S. LEWIS, Minister
Mrs, Doris McKinley, Organist and
Choir Director
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972 -,
9;45 PM, Sunday School, "
' 11.09 a.m. - Morning Worship,
LENTEN SERIES
Theme: "The Choice of the Disciples"
A WARM WELCOME TO
Wesley-Willi; uniud Churches
REV. A. 4. MOWATT, 11.0„ Minlatall
MR. LORNE DOTTERER, Organist and Choir Director
WESLEY-WILLIS
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
10:45 a.m. - Hymn Sing.
11:00 a.m.-Worship Service and Sunday School
LENTEN SERIES 3
"THE YOUNG CARPENTER"
Wednesday, March 8, 8:00 p.m. Lenten Candlelight Service of
Meditation. A warm invitation is extended to all ladies of the
area and their friends.
HOLMESVILLE
1:00 p.m.-Worship Service and Sunday School.
All iVilcOrne
CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH, Clinton
263 Princess Avenue
Pastor: Alvin Beukema, B.A., S.D.
Services: 10:00 a.m., and 3:00 p.m.
(On 3rd Sunday, 9:30 a.m.
Dutch Service at 11:00 a.m.I
The Church of the Back to God Hour
every Sunday 4:30 p.m., CHLO
- 'Everyone Welcome -
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
REV. T. C. MULHOLLAND , Minister
9:30 a.m. - Sunday School and Morning Worship.
Wednesday, March 8, Madeleine Lane Auxiliary meets at
Church, 8:15 p.m.
BAYFIELD BAPTIST CHURCH
Pastor: REV. L. V. BIGELOW
. SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
Sunday School: 10:00, a.m.
Morning Worship: 11:00 a.m.
Evening Gospel Service - 7:30 p.m.
ST. PAUL'S ANGLICAN CHURCH
Clinton
SUNDAY, MARCH 5, 1972
THIRD SUNDAY IN LENT
10:00 a.m.-Matins
10:00 a.m. WED.-Early Communion
Tuesday, March 7, 2:45 p.m. Ladies Guild at Rectory.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Huron Street, Clinton
SUNDAY, MARCH .5, '1972
Morning Worship: 10 a.m.
11:00 a.m. Sunday School.
Pastor: Rev. W. H. McWhinnie
ALL WELCOME
CALVARY PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
6 VICTORIA STREET
Pastor: REV. LESLIE HOY
9:45 a.m. - Sunday School.
11:00 a.m. - Morning Worship.
7:00 p.m. - Evening Worship.
Beginning a three-month study of
Book of Revelations.
Friday Evenings: 7:00 p.m, - Prayer and Bible Study.
•
• • N .*, • •• •• •• •••• • • • • • • • s, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , •
Business and Professional
Directory
TODAY'S CHILD
BY HELEN ALLEN
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The TORONTO Vag SYNDICATE
VW.
HURON MEN'S
CHAPEL AUBURN
HEAR
WAYNE McLEAN
Toronto Radio Broadcaster
First Baptist Church, Clinton, 10 a.m.
First Baptist Church, Goderich, 11:15 a.m.
• Huron Men's Chapel, Auburn, 8 p,m,
PLUS
SINGING
DE.VERAUX SISTERS
From Fort Erie
Westfield Fellowship Now, 2 p.m.
wt Heron Men. Mon's Chapel, 8 p.m.
"Evil Prevails When Good Men Do Nothing"
TED HOLMES
145 beer Park
Circle, London
471-6.005
Are you taking full advantage of
the tax savings that are available
through • Registered Savings
Plans? If not ask us.
SUN LIFE
a
progressive
company
in a
progressive
industry
SYNDICATE LIMITED
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GORDON T. WESTLAKE
Phone 565-5333 Bay-field
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA
Op tit tolls
In order that
News-Record readers might
express their opinions on any
topic of public interest,
Letters To The Editor are
always welcome for
publication.
But the writers of such
letters, as well as all readers,
are reminded that the
opinions expressed in letters
published are not necessarily
the opinions held by The
News-Record.
Home, Parkhill, with Rev. H.F.J.
Moorhouse officiating. Interment
followed in Grand Bend Cemetery
where her remains were bourne
to rest by Harold Thompson,
Walter Meadows, Barrie
Armstrong, Ross Keith and
Murray Miller.
1 expect to attend the Workshop on Wednesday, April 12,
Na me,. wwwwww .......... ....... .... t••.1.1•
Address
Employed in Hospital?
Employed in
Allergies. In .... ... Now many?
Number of Group attending,...
Number for Leneh
Note; There is no registration fee, Luncheon fee will
not (Motel $2.50.-
••41,1,11,11Y tie
Children's Respiratory Disease
Workshop
Central United Church ,•• Stratford
Wednesday, April 12, 1972
Hon. Dr, C, Collins Williams,. Director of Allergy
Sick Children's Hospital, Toronto
* *
Please complete the registration form below and return
to Huron Perth '1\13. and R 4 D. Association, 121 Wellington
Street, Stratford.
Areas of co-operative
planning,- where such
Operation is feasible". Such co-
operative work would affect
churches in the north western
part of Huron County.
The now Division of Mission in
Canada, had a very lengthy report
with a number of vital issues that
created considerable excitment
at times. Although there were
some negative votes, a motion
was passed to petition the New
Hymn Book Committee to publish
a words-only edition of the new
Hymn Hook,
The Division also reported that
at a Conference held at Five Oaks
on "The Church in Rural
Society", there was considerable
talk of Tent-Making Ministries,
This refers to a situation were a
Minister may work part of full
time in soma secelar occupation,
and also be minister of a Church
at a reduced salary. Were it is
workable, it is a happy
compromise to prevent a smaller
charge from having to close down
Churches.
The Division of Professional
Personnel reported that a call to
the Rev. B.J. Robinson has been
issued by the Thames Road
Pastoral Charge. Rev. Robinson
is presently serving in
Newfoundland and if .he accepts
the call will replace Rev, Stewart
Miner who will be leaving Thames
Road at the end of June.
The Members also welcomed
Rev. Murray Aspden, of the
Milverton Charge who was
ordained in Burlington on Jan. 15.
An important item on the agenda •
in the afternoon was a study of the
present call system, The methods
by which Churches hire ministers
and ministers seek
congregations, have not changed
very much since Union in 1925.
The delegates broke up into
groups and each made
recommendations on four
problem areas relating to this
subject. These suggestions will
be summarized and sent to a
central committee that will be
considering similar
recommendations from all
Presbyteries across. Canada.
About the only negative item on
the agenda was the report from
the Stewardship Motivator that
the total Mission and Service
contributions of Churches in the
Presbytery were down this year
$2000, He urged all members to
do what they could at home to
encourage congregations to
increase their givings this year.
TWO ARCTIC TALES
Frahz (Russell stars as Charles Francis Hall an American Explorer,
in CBC-TV's 90 minute drama documentary Two Arctic Tales to
be seen Wednesday, March 29 at 9;30 p m, Narrated by the
distinguished Canadian born actor Raymond Massey, this
fascinating program chronicles the careers of Sir John Franklin
and Charles Francis Half, two 19th Century Arctic Explorers.
••••••••••• ••••• \SS% • \ •NN\ \
OPTOMETRY
J. E. LONGSTAFF
OPTOMETRIST
By Appointment Only
Clinton-201 Isaac St.
482-7010
Monday Only, 9.5:30
Seaforth 527- 1240
Wed., Thurs., Fri.
and Thurs. Evening
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INSURANCE a
K. W. coLQUHOUN
INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE
Phones: Office 482-0747
Res. 482-71104
HAL HARTLEY
Phone 424693
LAWSON AND WISE
INSURANCE — REAL ESTATE
INVESTMENTS
Clinton
Office: 41124144
J. T.- Wine, Roo 4112-7206
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JERVIS SALES
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4A-,Clinton News-Record, Thursday, March 2, 1972
Obituary
NEEDS A HOME SOON
Here is Tony, an appealing five-year-old of English and Italian
descent. Tony is a slight, solidly built boy with lovely dark blue eyes,
brown hair and fair skin. He is healthy and active, loves rough and
tumble play and is a good traveller,
There is some urgency about finding adopting parents for Tony
very soon, A change in his foster family is making it necessary for
Tony to leave that home within a few weeks and the Children's Aid
Society hopes he will have only one move - to a permanent home
with a mother and father of his own.
Tony is a lovable youngster with a delightful personality, He is shy
at first, but soon makes friends and is very affectionate. He enjoys
music and likes to beat time with a drum or tambourine, He is fond
of books and television, especially Sesame Street and Galloping
Gourmet. He likes playing outdoors - loves the water and plays
happily with his tricycle or scooter.
This lad is not expected to be academically minded and he has
been slow in speech, However, he is progressing with speech
therapy, which will likely be needed for another year.
Tony needs an affectionate, active family who will want to help
him with his speech difficulties. Is there a family with those
qualities necding a dear little son? To inquire about adopting Tony,
please write soon to Today's Child, Box 888, Station K, Toronto. F or
gener al adoption information ask your Children's Aid Society.
Huron-Perth Presbytery of the
United Church of Canada at its
meeting on Feb...•20 unanimously
passed a resulution that it "go on
record as opposed to the conduct
of any Funerals an Sundays."
Some of the reasons for this
resolution were that Sunday
Funerals force Funeral Director
to work on the Sabbath, create a.
lot of extra work for clergy who
are already very busy on Sunday
leaving no time for, family life,
and make it necessary for UCW e s
to prepare refreshments if a
reception is held. Also, cited was
the fact that in many other areas a
decline of Sunday Funerals is the
trend.
At the same meeting the
members heard an invitation
from the Bruce-Maitland
Presbytery of the Presbyterian
Church, "to examine, possible
and note-making is the only way to make sure
that you have the information readily at hand.
Much that is useful is to be found in books,
and the mark of a true student is note-making.
Make a note of anything you come upin in a
book or other publication that might be useful
in some future situation. One may keep notes
because he is planning to write a novel, or an
autobiography, or a family history, or the
story of a corporation, or a play or a poem.
When Anatole France-called the greatest
master of prose in his generation-came to
write his Life of Joan of Arc, his secretary
says that France opened a clothes press and
dragged out a mattress cover stuffed to
bulging and fastened with safety pins. As he
loosened the pins, a deluge of paper scraps
spilled over the floor. There were thousands
of notes scrawled on backs of envelopes, pages
torn from notebooks and theatre programmes.
and clippings from newspapers and
magazines. He captured ideas while out
walking in the Bois de Boulogne, sitting in the
theatre or a railway train, or when he woke in
the night.
Keeping notes of interesting things heard
and read may lead to publication of an
anthology. C. F. Kleinknecht of Washington set
himself to bring together a storehouse of
"Gems of Thought", and he published volume
28 in 19'70.
Leonard E. Read, President of the
Foundation for Economic Education Inc.,
author of several books, wrote to the Monthly
Letter: "I made a resolution to keep a daily
journal into which I would write any good ideas
given me by others or any that I might come
upon by myself. It will be 18 years next month,
and I haven't missed a day. At first this was
extremely difficult, but within a year or two it
became a joy.-
Michel Montaigne. born in 1533, was a man
of insatiable intellectual curiosity. In 1580 he
published a book of essays-the first essays
ever written-and it is still being reprinted.
The point relevant to this Letter is: Montaigne
quoted copiously, therefore he must have
noted assiduously, He wrote: "Anyone who
would like to know the sources of the verses
MRS, WINNIERED POLLOCK
Mrs. Winnifred Ethel (Miller)
Pollock passed away in St.
Joseph's Hospital, London, on
Feb. 7, 1972, in her 88th year.
She was born in Goderich
Township, daughter of the late
George and Emily (Steepe)
Miller. In 1922 she married David
Pollock and moved to Centre
Road, Parkhill, where they
farmed until her husband's death,
in 1950 she moved to Catherine
Street, Parkhill. There she lived
•n active life with church and
social affairs until January 7,
1972 when the dreaded cancer
revealed its work.
She leaves to mourn her loss
her daughter (Olga) Mrs. Roy
Thompson, three grandchildren,
Harold, Gary and Debbie-Lynn; a
sister (Edna) Mrs. Will Dohie,
two brothers, Bert of Kitchener'
and Arnold, Goderich. She was
predeceased by two sisters and
six brothers, one her twin,
Funeral services were held
from the M. Box and Son Funeral
and examples I have piled up here would put me
to great trouble to tell him _I gather the
flowers by the wayside, by the brooks and in
the meadows, and only the string with which I
bind theth together is my own."
MAKING AND
FINDING NOTES
A calendar pad on which you write things to
be done and promises to be kept is next in
importance to your clock in organizing
efficient use of your time. Some people find a
wall calendar handy if it has space for writing
beside every date.
Some items of business and personal
finance come up at regular intervals:
annually, quarterly, monthly. A perpetual
diary is handy for keeping track of them. This
diary has the months and dates printed, but not
the years or days of the week. You enter items
to be attended to on certain dates: pay
insurance premiums, give a birthday present
or send an anniversary card; review staff
salaries: order winter fuel, and a hundred
other recurring items.
Everything written should be dated. There
is nothing more irritating than a missing date,
whether it be absent from a memo or the back
of a photograph.
It is a good habit to have paper or cards
always handy on which to write a note about
something that turns up in your mind or
something you see. Hunches come in all sizes
and at all hours of the day and night.
Many people-and not only poets-sleep
with a pad of paper and a pencil on their
bedside tables. The man who thought up the
idea of making landing mats which could be
used to construct airfields overnight said to
Alex Osborn (who teliS the story in The Gold
Mine Between Your Ears): -The bed, the
bedside pad and pencil, are great aids to
thinking up ideas. Only last night I scrawled
over four sheets of paper in the pitch dark-
notes that could be solutions to a current
problem."
File cards are the handiest tools of the note-
maker, They can be carried in jacket pocket or
purse. They can be arranged alphabetically or
by subject and kept in any container from a
shoe box to a mahogany desk tray,
Orderliness is a big help toward finding
references. Instead of keeping notes and
memos in a mattress cover as Anatole France
did, or having them jumbled in a drawer,
assign a place where you can keep them in
easily accessible form.
Some people prefer scrap-hooks in which
notes about related topics are written or
pasted in sections separated by division
sheets with projecting index tabs. A doctor had
a library in which most of the books were
straining in their bindings, He did not file
articles torn from professional magazines,
but folded them and inserted them in the
textbooks dealing with the same subjects, He
adopted this method, he .said, because it
provided him in one cover with the basic
principles and the latest developments in
treatment of disease.
SELF-IMPROVEMENT
One of the greatest benefits of note-making
is the stimulation it gives toward self-
improvement.
Did you ever think of the time wasted while
waiting-waiting fora bus or a train, waiting
for someone who is late in keeping an
appointment, waiting for dinner, waiting for a
television programme, waiting for your
partner to get ready for an evening out? Every
such period is an opport6nity to think and to
record your thoughts on those pocket cards
you carry.
The notes may be about "tricks of the
trade", or items you saw in the newspaper
about developments in your line of business,
or the name of a book you heard mentioned, or
an ,idea for self-improvement arising from
your observation of someone, or a note may
put on record one of those fleeting
inspirational ideas that defeat your memory
when you try to recall it,
Everyone can benefit by becoming an ardent
observer of what is going on around him and
then making notes. This keeps him in touch,
with life, It is a way to make sure of being up to
date. It gives him a young, alive, feeling.
Put it in writing
Continued from Page 1
7,,~40')<-:%'-a~;Le2.a~a~a.e71••.42-a-~-it.ont-,
R. W. BELL •
OPTOMETRIST
The Square, GODER ICH
524-7661
Clinton Memorial Shop
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