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Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), June 21, 1991, p. 12

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Page 12 THE WEEKEND OUTLOOK Friday June a 1M1 Community in Focus 60th anniversary Mr and Mrs CD Forsyth Catherine and Charlie a retired Executive Director celebrated their Wedding Anniversary June 15th at the Royal Ascot 26 Hall Road Georgetown There were guests who signed the guest book Their daughter Margaret and her husband Ron with their daughter Janice and sons Peter and Stephen were the very capable promoters of the recep tion The guests included Mr and Mrs Lawrence Johnston a nephew from Vancouver Mr and Mrs Pat Johnston a nephew from Edmonton Mrs Peggy Hardy Catherines sister from Edmonton Mr and Mrs Murray Johnston a nephew from Ottawa Mr and Mrs G Jones a grand from Ot tawa and her sister Janice and Mr Kent Tailing from Misstssauga Mr J J Forsyth another nephew from Waterloo Mrs J Boynton cousin from Oshawa Mrs E and her daughter Sara a from Toronto Kiwanis friends from Toronto Kitchener Aurora and Georgetown YMCA friends from Whitby Toronto and Queens ton and Church friends from United Church Marsville and United Churches Miller Mayor of Hills graciously presented gifts and a certificate from the Town and Garth Turner M P presented a beautiful photo of Queen Elizabeth on a greeting card The Seniors TV Production group of Georgetown and Acton took pictures for their TV pro gram which will be shown at a later date on Cable local After a wonderful afternoon 26 family members and a few friends enjoyed a dinner and took time to relax and visit with one another After years of marriage Charles Forsyth still wants his wife Catherine close by his side The two celebrated their anniversary with family and friends from as far away as Vancouver at the Royal Ascot Condominiums banquet hall Saturday Herald photo Flower show Sniffing the delicate scent of the red rose which won her a trophy for the best red rose is Marg West right Hundreds of fragrant blooms were on display In the basement of Knox Presbyterian Church in Georgetown and a lot of the flowers were grown by Linda Baynes left who won several firsts and earned the trophy for most points overall The flower show was put on by members of the Georgetown Horticultural Society Saturday as part of Pioneer Days In Georgetown Herald photo School orientation Grade public school students from Park Joseph Gibbons and Public Schools who will be entering Stewarttown Middle School this fall were given a school orientation Wednesday afternoon Pictured above Grade 8 Stewarttown student Joanne Meek far left and Lawrence Midwinter seated give a demonstration wk v- rrf what goes on in woodworking class to left to right Claire Gregg and Nicole Telller of Llmehouse P S and Esau and Carl Patten of Plneview S Middle School has a present stu dent population of 325 and It Is expected to rise to In September Herald photo by Lisa Boonstoppel Pot British visitor a travelling man By BEN The Herald Most would agree Sergeant Ma Hugh Colndge has chosen a rather unique way to spend his retirement The 65yearold retired British army parachute instructor pass ed through Georgetown Tuesday on a journey that has so far taken him through Australia New Zealand the Far East the Mid die East the United States and Western Canada A native of Cambridge England a place he describes as a little village of academic pretension Sgt Colrldge has been on the road for more than two years When I retired three years ago I decided rather than tend to the rose garden walk the dog and sit in the pub I put a pack on my back and wander the planet While in Georgetown the Sergeant Major spent a lot of time sitting under a big old Maple tree on Guelph Street enjoying a can of tuna fish his breakfast and just watching the people pass by As he does in every communi Sgt Maj Colrldge spent some time at the local Legion branches in both Georgetown and Acton swapping stones with Legion members He started the Canadian leg of his journey in the west and Iravclled eastward He recounts how travelling through the prairies was similar to driving through a loaf of bread the wheat fields were endless he said Vancouver is the Canadian city the Sgt Maj has enjoyed most It s a cosmopolitan sophisticated 20th Century city with snowcapped mountains The Sergeant Major relies on the train plane his feet but most of all his thumb to travel the world Hitch hiking is the best way to meet people he said For travelling companions he has a sleeping bag a tent a bottle of brandy and a sense of humor After zigzagging across the United States Sgt was glad to enter Canada I felt safer more comfortable he said He does have one complaint about Canada There is an absence of public washroom facilities In almost every part of the world there are public washrooms but in Canada you must enter a establish and buy something first From Georgetown the tramp as he calls himself is off to Quebec to check out what all the controversy is about To en sure he s not disappointed the Sergeant Major has a large Union Jack sewn to the front of his backpack That should stir things up Asked when he plans to return home the Sergeant Major couldn t say have no one in England to go home to Besides England is crowded there Is no space The empty tuna can marks the end of breakfast for Cambridge England native Sergeant Hugh Colrldge who passed through Georgetown Tuesday during his Journey around the planet Herald photo

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