The Lucknow Sentinel, 1989-05-10, Page 15Open house held for bride-to-be
Mayme Wilkins held open house on
Saturday in honour of her daughter
Elizabeth.
On Saturday, May 6, Liz will become the
bride of David Dadson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
• Gordon Dadson of Amberley.
Quite a number of friends, neighbours
and relatives came to the house to see the
bride-to-be and all the lovely things Liz
had received at her many showers and
many of her, wedding presents.
Sarah Ritchie was the honoured lady
that poured the tea and coffee to the
guests. The special guests present were
David's great aunt and uncle, Jim and
Gladys Dadson of London, Liz's sister Bar-
bara Wilkins of Paris and Liz's grand-
mother Stella Irwin.
On Saturday evening Cecil and Jim
Webster of Waterloo and their mother Kae
OCHALSH
by Kae Webster
Webster visited in Goderich with their
aunt, Norma Young.
Visiting with Dorothy Finlayson on the
weekend were Carol Finlayson, her hus-
band John Balch and their two sons,
Nicholas and Alexander and Ken
Finlayson all of Toronto; Duncan
Finlayson and Laura Ens of Port Elgin
and Rod Finlayson of Sarnia. Rod was
home for a few days getting some land
ready for spring planting.
Margie (Finlay) MacDonald has return-
ed home after spending about two months
in Detroit, Michigan and area visiting her
sisters, other relatives and friends.
Huron County dairy princess
speaker at Dungannon
The May meeting of the Dungannon
Women's Institute was held in the Nile
United Church May 4. It was hosted by
---Ro erta-Lii skill -anal -Joan Dougherty— --
President Mary Robson welcomed
everyone and opened the meeting with 0
Canada, the Opening Ode and Mary
Stewart Collect.
There were 15 members present and five
guests. The roll call was answered by nam-
ing an old farm implement and a modern
one which replaces it. The exercise
brought back many memories for the
members.
The minutes of the April meeting were
read by Roberta Linskill and the
treasurer's report was given. . Cor-
respondence was read. Notes were read
from Mrs. Greta Stewart, the group's
oldest member, who will be 97 in June. A
note was also read from Mrs. Myrtle
Barker.
There is to be a quilt show at Goderich
Museiim between August 4 and September
5. Quilts to be shown must be taken to the
museum between July 10-17. `°
The Clinton OMAF office is offering a
course on Personalize your Home Land-
scape in Clinton on June 1.
iisINTEE
f. Cp. L 1 /..t , T r 6
REALTOR
25 ACRES mixed bush, 1st Conc., Huron
Township, Spring. $28,500. •
98 ACRES - Rolling pasture, 4 acres bush,
2 ponds, older bank barn. Asking $60,000.
201 ACRES - Finishing hog farm, 2 storey
red brick home, 750 hog capacity, sealed
silo, auto feeding, 140 acres naturally drain-
ed, near Teeswater.
306 ACRES - Approx. 150 acres drained
land, 140 acres bush & swamp. 3 bedroom
home, barn, pit silo. Kinloss Twp. Asking
$125,000.
5 BEDROOM HOME in excellent condition,
1 acre lot, close to Lucknow, large family
room, deck, well insulated.
4 BEDROOM SIDEPLIT -'/2 acre lot on edge
of Lucknow, finished basement, new win-
dows, woodstove & fireplace. Approx. 14
years old.
CULROSS - 196 acres, 115 workable, 50
acres hardwood, 30 acres softwood, 40' x 60'
barn, drilled well.
100 ACRE PASTURE FARM - Spring creek,
8 acres hardwood, 16 acres softwood, 10
acres 'wheat, balance pasture. Listed at
$48,000.
50 ACRE FARM with 4 bedroom brick home,
completely renovated, 32' x 64' shop, small
barn, 45 acres systematically tiled, small
creek, well landscaped with 2500 trees. 8
miles from Goderich.
ASHFIELD TOWNSHIP - 300 acre farm,
fieldstone home, 5 bedrooms, excellent con-
dition, 200 acres workable, barns set up for
farrow to finish, heated shop, approx. 80
acres bush.
2% ACRE PARCEL 1 mile from Lucknow, 30
x 30 shop, excellent building site.
LISTINGS WANTED
PAUL ZINN
ALVIN ROBB
WARREN TNN
528-2411
3954174
528-3710
Lueknow Sentinel, Wednesday, May 10, 1989—Page 15
Henry Clark, President of Branch 309 of the Royal Canadian Legion presented Dwayne
Harris, right, and Michael deBoer, left, with a $2100 cheque to be used towards expenses
incurred in sending 14 Lucknow Boy Scouts to the Canadian Jamboree '89 in Prince Ed-
ward Island this year. (Pat Livingston photo)
W./.
Four appointed to Huron Family
and Children's Services
Mary Robson, Jean Errington and
Elmira Finnigan are to be delegates to
District Annual WI meeting May 29 at
. Benmill r,
Essie Gibson and Jean Errington are
donating crafts for the craft table at the
District Annual meeting.
Willetta McWhinney will look after Pen-
nies for Friendship.
Illa Crozier, agriculture convener, in-
troduced guest speaker .Lisa Boonstoppel,
the Huron County Dairy Princess. She and
her parents live on a dairy farm at RR 1
Auburn where they have 120 jersey cows.
She spoke about her work as dairy
princess. She had an interesting quiz on
dairy products. The group sampled a Dilly.
vegetable dip she had made, one of several
available recipes using dairy products.
Also at the meeting was dairy coor-
dinator for Huron County BrendaBridges,
of Ripley.
Essie Gibson gave two readings "Life is
like a garden. What are you planting" and
"`Look to the Sun for Pardon". Members
gave one cent for each tooth, real of false,
,to Pennies for Friendship fund.
Lunch was served by Donna Young and
Willetta McWhinney.
The 1989 Annual Meeting of Family_.and
Children's Services of Huron County was
held on Wednesday, April 26 at the cor-
poration offices in Goderich. Family and
Children's Services is operated by the
Children's Aid Society and is responsible
for the protection of children under 16 who
live in Huron County.
The Board of Directors, elected annual-
ly, consists of 15 people. Four people are
appointed by the County of Huron, which
provides 20% of the funding of the $1.4
million budget. These appointees are
Warden David Johnston, W.L. Mickle,
Albert Wasson, and George Cantelon.
The following people were elected to.•the
Board:by the.membership:
Dorothy Coultes, Marian Doucette, Tom
Flynn, Murray Hord, Roberta Kloss, Mary
Moffatt, Michael Park, Suzy Symes, Dr.
Bruce Thomasson, Norm Tait, Paul
Zurbrigg.
Minutes of the last annual meeting were
approved. The financial report was
presented by auditor Eugene Bender.
Reports of the Executive Director and the
President were presented and are
available on request from the office at
524-7356 or 1-800-265-5198.
The Kids on the Block child abuse
prevention program was presented to
those in attendance. The program uses
puppet skits to teach elementary school
children about physical and sexual abuse.
It tells children how to protect themselves
when faced with an abusive situation.
ABOUL WITHOUT
—Gratitude is one without joy.
—Hope is one without life.
—Faith is one without an anchor.
—Charity is sure to find life brutal.
—Tolerance is apt to be very lonely.
—Patience spends much excess energy.
—A religion is one without courage.
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