Clinton News-Record, 1984-08-22, Page 14t
Chapman -Knight
John Brian Chapman of Bayfield and Karle
Lyn Knight of Brampton were married in
Meaford United Church on July 7. Rev.
Doug Aikman officiated. The groom is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. J.R. Chapman of
London and the bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. H.W. Carleton Knight of Meaford.
Maid of honor was a friend of the bride,
Nancy Davison of Snelgrove. Bridesmaids
were a sister of the bride, Tally Alinas of
Meaford; a sister of the groom, Linda
Talbot of Bayfield and a niece of the bride,
Teresa McVittle of Owen Sound. A friend of
the bride and groom, Shane McChesney of
Brampton was the flowergirl. The groom's
brother, Eric Chapman of London was the
best man. Another brother, David Chapman
of London was an usher, along with friends
Gary Darnbrough of Bayfield and Kip
Cantrick of Birmingham, Michigan. A
reception was held at the Meaford and St.
Vincent Community Centre. The newlyweds
honeymooned in Bermuda and northern '
Ontario. They will live at Ann Street,
Bayfield. ( John Prettie photo)
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OPEN: • 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Fri. till 6:00.'
Closed Wednesdays and Sundays.
Kaptein-Dykstra
Rick Kaptein, son of Mr, and Mrs. Dick
Kaptein of Bayfield and Angela Dykstm
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kees Dykstra of
Clinton, were married on August 17 in the
Clinton Christian Reformed Church. Rev. V.
DeJonge of Exeter officiated at the double
ring ceremony. The maid of honor was
Sylvia Veenstra of RR 4 Clinton.
Bridesmaids were Sylvia Haverkamp of RR
1 Brucefield and Le Tran of RR 1 Clinton.
Brian Johnston of Bayfield was the best man
and ushers were Alfred Dykstra of Clinton
and Conrad Kaptein of Bayfield. The
wedding reception was held at the Goderich
Township Community Centre, Holmesville.
The newlyweds will be living at 118 Gordon
St., Clinton. (Frank Phillips photo)
HURONVIEW Au t I'24
:croftsday, and w e the
residents, played carts, the others b i,
themselves with knitting .00 veno
paatbnes•
Anglican communion was, to have been
field on August 14 and iii the absence of Rev
Simmons,, Frank Bissett played selections
on the chapel organ for the pleasure: of the
residents.
On August 15, the auditorium was the set-
ting
etting for the August birthday party. The pro-
gram was provided by Gordon Harrison,
Tony Hyde, Lorraine Madge and Francis
Schram. Gordon and Francis accompanies
gam!
O.. Lorrai
'with their dtrn r ,bSi
ew. In splendid voice,,
sa„ 6
"rlaacie lira played sone: snappy
,selectionsoaf tine vjol l rl nyiew ap•
i:,, lire otos these.: talented pile f om.
rich, fold p> a ►ting i s pros ram• Also
thanks to the ladies from Album' omd Blyth,
for- pproviding the cupcakes.
Thursday afternoolli residents were" in,
vited to a mock Weddiing, whichwas taking.
place at the Day Centre. This was the day
for the marriage of none other.;. but Miss
Scrubb, and was the fashionable event of the
rnl�
lderich waa„f ortunate ming d ie f the
, to which four of the TallShip8 rode
eres .dentswentteseeth . '
week Bib!reel
e Study was tot In the
c ape , under the leadership of• , o
es e. h.
sing w
�►ho led ;thi e
• .ed in i�g
Olive McMillen ead a ptM lesson.
Wed ., Bible
Fr .. r time and r a x
a e ae.at w
quid eidJesus-. y i
Friday was a busyganging trips
for as many residents asposs le, to see the
ships anchored in Goder. ch. harbour. The
sight was an inllpresaive onq. No doubt it
was u greater' for
a m full rno
unday Ino g. !01
ev. kick coitductin
wMa+ ueens sung . byA+vasElsieoe Nffendlerf
'1
atl
the front of the auditedum by' Vow
Mogan.
Ruronview extends a ^whit welcome -to
Helen Cornish of Clinton, wbdy has domCtot
reside at Huronv ew-
To the families of the late Mrs. Delia Nix
on,. and Mrs, Jane Waghorn, sincere sym-
pathy is expressed.
Pope's visit will be assiste.dvolunteers
If you're one of the hundreds of thousands
of people who are going to see Pope John
Paul H, be sure you make your plans with a
thought for comfort and safety.
Tony Jenkinson of Toronto, a volunteer
with the St. John Ambulance Brigade, says
that for many people, it won't be an outing of
just two or three hours. It could be 10 or 12 or
'18, and you should go prepared.
St. John Ambulance Brigade volunteers
will be among the thousands of volunteers
on hand wherever the Pope goes, to help
look after the throngs who want to see him.
In Ontario there will be about 500 Brigade
members involved in Toronto, Ottawa and
Midland.
They will be working under the direction
of professional ambulance services, ready
to provide first aid if you need it.
They're part of complex medical
Remove wooden buttons before washing
Remove wooden buttons from a garment
before washing to prevent the buttons from
swelling and cracking, says Margaret
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Loewen, clothing and textiles specialist with
the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and
Food's rural organizations and services
branch.
MRS.eGAYNELL COX of Clinton died on •
Thursday, August 16, 1984. The funeral
service was held on Sunday, August 19,
1984.
tall & !Iatwnu
FUNERAL HOME LTD.
153 HIGH STREET, CLINTON
482-9441
Church Services
Fellowship Bible Chapel
Clinton
162 Maple Street
Sunday, August 26
9:45 Worship & Remembrance
11 a.m. Sunday School and Family Bible Hour
7 p.m. Evening Service
SPEAKER: Miller Thompson, London
8 p.m. Tues. - Prayer & Devotion
Christian Reformed
Christian Reformed Church
243 Princess St.'E., Clinton,,
SUNDAY, AUGUST 26
Summer Pastor . Dick Wynia
10 a.m. Worship Service
7:30 p.m. Worship Service
• All Visitors Welcome
Watch "Faith 20" at 9:30 a.m. on Global T.V.
Anglican
St. Paul's Anglican Church
. . Rev. Gordon Simmons, B,A,, M, Div_
11;30 a.m. - 1ST 6 3R0 SUNDAYS- HOLY COMMUNION
11:30 o.m. - 2N0 8 4TH SUNDAYS - MORNING PRAYER
Everyone Welcome
Pentecostal
Calvary Pentecostal Church
166 Victoria St. Clinton
Pastor Joel HeimbeQlier
9:45 A.M. Sundcti' chool
10:45 A.M. Morning Worship
ALL WELCOME
Ba
tist
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
85 Huron St. Clinton
SUNDAY. AUGUST 26
REV. GILBERT KIDD
10 a.m. Sunday School
11:15 a.m. Morning Worship
Everyone Welcome
United
Wesley -Willis United Church
MINISTER - REV. JAMES BECHTEL B.A.. B.D.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 26
11 a.m. - Holmesville & Wesley -Willis worship in
Ontario Street Church for the month of August.
Ontario Street United Church
MINISTER,pR6ANIS
Rev. R. Norman PicLouise McGregor
11 a.m. • Public Worship welcoming
Wesley -Willis & Holmesville congregations
coverage that will include medical spotters
perched above the crowd. There Will be field''
hospitals and amublances on the outskirts,
and golf carts equipped with stretchers for
use in the crowd. The Mass sites are divided
into big squares that the organizers refer to
as corrals. Brigade members will work in
teams with the ambulance personnel in each
corral, and will be along parade and travel
routes in each area.
The Brigade has been given lists of the
kinds of first aid problems that cropped up
during the Pope's visit to Ireland and the
United States. Jenkinson says most of them
were minor, and most happened as people
were leaving the sites.
"They were heat related, from sunburn to
heat prostration. There were insect bites,
blisters and foot injuries, some of them
because of the uneven ground. I'd estimate
that there were about 1,200 to 1,500 cases to
be treated at each site, and only one or two
broken arms or legs and one death from a
heart attack".
He reminds you that no matter where you
go, you'll have some walking to do, and a lot
of eta: ;ng. Normal trafffc'Nt.:' be stopped
•
at pe _ eters around each area, and inside
those; Fie eters it will be feet only:, There
willbe',, ome buses available, shuttling to
and frotri. Mass sites, but there will still -be
walking to do at the site.
"Get a good night's sleep the night
before," Jenkinson suggests, "If you're an
older person, you might want to take a nap
before you go."
"Have, la well balanced meal in the
morning. There will be food concessions, but
you may want to take a snack or a lunch
with you"
"Wear good walking shoes and take `a
change of socks. Dress suitably for the
weather. Wear a hat if it's a bright sunny
day, there will bevery little shelter at the
Mass sites".
"If you're on medication, take enough
with you, and don't . skip it. That goes for
medication for allergies to grass or
insects". ,
"Once you're there, make sure you know
where the washrooms are, and don't wait
until the last minute to use them".
"We're also recommending to our
members that they wear cheap watches,
leave their wallets and valuables at home,
and take only a little money". .
"It's really a matter of common sense. Go
with a realistic idea of what you're going to
be doing".
!Orly of the Brigade members will be on
•dutfor a couple of days. For instance, they
have to be in Midland before 6:00 on
September 14, because the perimeters close
then. They're being billeted there in tents on
farm fields that belong to a relative of a
Brigade volunteer. Brigade will be coming
not only from Toronto, Ottawa and Midland,
but, from other communities including
Simcoe, Barrie, Oshawa, Peterborough,
Migsissauga, Cornwall, Hawkesbury,
Brockville, Pembroke and Perth.
In each situation, the volunteers will stay
on duty until all the people have left, and it's
expected that it will take hours to clear the
majgr sites. If you're planning to be there,
you should also be prepared to be patient.
Clinton and area obituaries
Gordon Lawson
Gordon Lawson of Clinton died on August
8 at the age of 80. He died at the Clinton.
Public Hospital following a lengthy illness.
Mr. ,Lawson was born in Hullett Township
on July 8, 1904 to Luke and Rita Lawson and
lived. in Clinton since birth. He married in
1924 and is survived byhis wife Grace L.
(Stong) and son Frank and was predeceased
by his brother Harold Lawson.
Mr. Lawson was a painter and later
operated a billiard parlor. He retired 11
years ago. The former Ontario Street United
Church member also belonged to the fire
brigade and both town and county councils.
,Atfuneral was held on August 10 at the
Beattie 1411110ml Home in Clinton. Rev. R.N.
Pick of the Ontario. Street United Church
presided. Mr. Lawson was buried in the
Clinton Cemsterv.
Gaynell Cox
A Goderich Township native and Clinton
resident, Gagnell Marguerite Cox died in
Clinton Publit Hospital, on August 16. She
was 70 years old.
Mrs. Cox was born on November 15, 1913
to Franklin John Whitmore and the former
Isabelle JaneReid.
On• June 17,1939 she married Carl Cox in
Holmesville. The couple lived in Clinton
where Mrs... Cox was a member of the
a
Ontario Street United Church.
Along with her husband, Mrs. Cox is
survived by two sons and daughter -in-laws,
Jerry and his wife Elaine and Craig and his
wife Ann, all of Clinton. Also surviving are
four grandchildren.
Mrs. Cox was predeceased by three
brothers; Flank and Harold Hamilton and
Ken yet of, and two sisters, Rose Young of
Toronto n Flossie Welsh of Clinton.
Funeral services were held at the Ball and
Falconer. Funeral ''Horne in Clinton on
August 19. Rev. Norman Pick of the Ontario
Street United Church officiated. Funeral
and committal services were held at the
funeral home and interment followed at the
Clintbhc 1eter3'� ," ,,_,, !...
Canadian Kin electnew president
Tom. Breneman of Brandon, Manitoba,
was recently elected the 65th president of
the Association of Kinsmen Clubs at the
organization's annual eonvention in Vic-
toria, B.C., where it was announced that
during the past year Kinsmen and Kinette
clubs across Canada donated $22,577,598 in
service funds to their communities. ,
This year the Association was again the
largest single contributor to the Canadian
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation. Kinsmen and
Kinettes donated $857,905to help find a con-
trol or cure for cystic fibrosis (CF), which is
second only to cancer •in claiming the lives
of young Canadians. In addition, ' the
Association's members supported . many
other organizations, including the Canadian
QUOTE
OF THE
WEEK
"Strive that your
actions day by day
may be beautiful
prayers.
From the Writings
of the Baha'i Faith
66 99
Baha'i Faith
For more Information
Contact Box 1230
Clinton
Clinton Area
MICHAEL FALCONER
153 HIGH STREET, CLINTON
462-9441
Goderich Area
ROBERT McCALLUM
11 CAMSRIA ROAD, GODERICH
524-7345
ti
Diabetes Association; the Multiple Sclerosis
Society of Canada, the Unitarian Service
Committee of Canada. and the March of
Dimes. Kinsmen also operate the Kinsmen
Foundation of Saskatchewan and the
Kinsmen Rehabilitation Foundation of B.C.,
both of which setae the needs of the disabled
in those province's, This year the Kinsmen
and Kinettes of Saskatchewan raised $1.9.
million during a20 -hour telethon to support
the work of theiii'oundation.. •
In addition to providing support for
numerous community projects , across
Canada, ranging from constructing swimm-
ing pools and arenas to purchasing equip-
ment for hospitals anal schools, Kinsmen
and Kinette clubs . tifis year donated over
$50,000 to complete construction of a school
for the physically' • disabled in Mombasa,
Kenya. This was a two-year international
relations project arid in total the Association
contributed $300,000, half of which
represents matching funds from the Cana-
dian International Development Agency
(CIDA).
Breneman, 37 who is a member of the
Kinsmen Club of Brandon, practises den-
tistry in Brandon and is a founding partner
of the WestMan Dental Group. He joined the
Association in 1972 as a member of the Bran-
don club.
In addition to serving as secretary, vice-
president, president and past president at
the club level, Breneman has held the posi-
tions of vice -governor, governor and past
governor for District 2, which comprises
Manitoba and part of northern Ontario. He.
was made a life member of the Association
of Kinsmen Clubs last year while serving as
the Association's national vice-president.
Breneman, who was born in Hamilton,
Ontario, served as assistant vice-president
(public relations) for the 1979 Canada
Canada
Winter Games in Brandon, an event sup,
ported by a $200,000 donation from the Bran-
don Kinsmen which was announced during
his year as club president. He is also a direc-
torof the Manitoba Heart Foundation and is
a past president of the Western Manitoba
Dental Society.
Breneman and his wife, Janie, who is ser-
virig , this year as national Kinette co-
ordinator, have three children: Chris, 13,
Jodie, 11, and Kara, six.
' The Association of Kinsmen Clubs is an
,all -Canadian organization founded in 1920 in
Hamilton, Ontario. Its national head-
quarters is located in Cambridge, Ontario,
adjacent to Highway 40L. The, Association
has a total membership of over 20,000 men
and women between the ages of 21 and 40 in
more than 1,100 clubs. Kinsmen provides its
members with a wide variety of social ac-
tivities as well as an opportunity for self -
development by serving their communities
through fund-raising and service projects.
Rev. Brown leads Bible School
By Isabel Scott
BRUCEFIELD - Vacation Bible School
was held at the United Church hall last week
with Rev. Wilena Broom as leader and Mrs.
Barbara Cooper in charge of the music.
Pupils and teachers were present from
Varna, Goshen, Brucefield altd the Kippen .
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congregations.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson McCartney,
Georgine and Robert attended the
Armstrong -Nethercott wedding at St. Marys
on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. - Douglas McBeath of
Windsor visited with his mother, Pearl
McBeath on the weekend.
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