April 2014 - Anglican Diocese of Fredericton

Transcription

April 2014 - Anglican Diocese of Fredericton
Diocesan Anglican Church Women
Diocese of Fredericton
Volume 3, Issue 4 ~ April 2014
Posted on the Diocese of Fredericton web site (anglican.nb.ca.)
Members, please post or circulate this newsletter in your ACW Branch.
Diocesan ACW Annual Meeting
May 6 & 7, 2014
St. Luke's Anglican Church
OUR PURPOSE
* To unite women
in a fellowship
of worship,
study, and
offering which
will deepen and
strengthen
their own
spiritual lives,
and lead them
into Christian
service in
parish,
community,
diocese, nation,
and world.
* To work for
and sustain an
informed
interest in the
mission of the
Church.

104 Church Street, Woodstock, NB
Registration ($ 5) begins at 9:30 a.m.
Banquet ticket is $ 15.00
Please see pages 11-13 for a pre-registration
form, maps, accommodations, etc.
To reduce line-ups, please pre-register by April 23
OUR ACW IS GETTING SMALLER—WHAT SHOULD WE DO?
Is your group diminishing in numbers? Having trouble with
offices that cannot be filled? Read the news from Christ Church
Cathedral on page 5 for an idea for an alternative structure.
The next Diocesan ACW Executive Meeting
Wednesday, June 16
9:30 am, coffee/tea, muffins
10 am, Meeting begins
e for
Deadlin
sue next is
17
August
St. Mary’s (York) Church
770 McEvoy Street
Fredericton North
page 2
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
Greetings from your President. . .
I just get one report done, and it is time to do another. Three weeks ago, I did a
report for our Diocesan Meeting. Last week, I did a report for the Annual Report
Book, and tonight, I will write up a message for Launching Out.
We had an excellent turnout for our March meeting and drew up a proposed
budget for 2014. With less income, we had to make some cutbacks.
I sure have a great Executive. They work very hard getting information to the
Branches and assisting them whenever required. We heard reports from each of the
Deaneries and compiled a list of Deanery meetings with dates which will be included
in the Annual Report book.
I plan to attend the Mothers' Union Rally on April 26, and on May 6 and 7, Woodstock Deanery
will be hosting our Annual Diocesan Conference. Plans are well underway, and the ladies in
Woodstock Deanery are working very hard to see that everything goes off well. There will be Holy
Eucharist Services each morning and on Tuesday at 1:00 pm, the guest speaker is Rev’d Kent
Greer. So get your registration and banquet ticket orders in, and I will see you there.
Farraline Place needs a new roof. Please keep them in your prayers as well as our Prayer
Partners in Saskatchewan.
A reminder to send deceased member names to Inez Estabrooks, and if you wish to honour a
member for outstanding service, check with Inez, she will give you the details.
Olive Trevors has lovely Certificates of Appreciation for presentation to members for their ACW
work.
We are now in the Season of Lent, and many will be attending special Lenten Services.
May this Easter Season bring you fulfilment of desires and God's richest blessings.
MIRACLES OF EASTER
The sleeping earth awakens. The robins start to sing,
The flowers open wide their eyes, to tell us it is spring,
The bleakness of the winter, is melted by the sun,
The tree that looked so stark and dead becomes a living one…
These MIRACLES of EASTER, wrought with divine perfection,
Are the blessed reassurance of our Saviour's Resurrection.
~~~Helen Steiner Rice
Easter Blessings,
Glenna Geer, Diocesan President
ACW Launching Out
First published, September 2011
E-Newsletter of the Anglican Church Women
Diocese of Fredericton
President:
Glenna Geer
neon2000 at nb.sympatico.ca
Published September, November, February, April
Send articles up to approx. 600 words to:
Patti Hoyt, E-mail: patti23 at nbnet.nb.ca
Fax: 506 832-5860
576 Route 121, Bloomfield, NB E5N 4V1
Book of Remembrance
and Roll of Honour
Please notify Inez Estabrooks and your
Deanery representative (or President) with
names of those who should be entered into
the Book of Remembrance OR for a
certificate for the Roll of Honour.
Inez Estabrooks
E-mail: inezw at nb.sympatico.ca
64 Fairfield Road, Sackville, NB E4L 2X8
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
page 3
Kingston-Kennebecasis Deanery
Together, We Are Awesome!
The members of St. Luke's ACW, Gondola Point, were very
excited to invite the ACW members from St Paul's, Rothesay, St.
Augustine's, Quispamsis, and Holy Trinity, Hammond River to join
us for lunch on Monday, February 10 th. The hall was decorated in a Valentine theme, thanks to Alice
Parlee who always does a wonderful job. The Diocesan President Glenna Geer and Deanery
President Margaret Petrie, as well as Alyssa Hayter, Youth co-ordinator for all four Parishes, also
joined us. It was a great time for old friends to socialize, meet new people, and promote the efforts
of the ACW Branches in our area.
Following lunch, our President Rosemarie Kingston introduced the guest speaker, Laun Marie
who coordinates Kennebecasis Valley Outreach.....a local organization that deals with family
violence. Rosemarie, in her introduction, reminded the ladies that abuse has no social barriers.
Abuse can take place in the poorest and wealthiest of homes. Laun Marie informed us that one in
four people, both men and women, are abused in their lifetime. Abuse takes many forms; spousal,
elder, financial, verbal, mental, and spiritual abuse. Laun Marie also focused on teen violence,
February being Teen Violence Month.
Following the PowerPoint presentation, a free-will offering was collected and, along with money
that our Branch had already set aside, we forwarded $528.20 to KV Outreach. Thank-you, ladies, for
your support of KV Outreach.
We would encourage all ACWs to invite other branches, especially those struggling with low
attendance or aging membership, to come to any special gatherings you may be planning. Together,
and with the grace of God, we can be an awesome force!
Some of the ladies attending were asked to model T-shirts that had been created by victims of
abuse.
L-R: Margaret Petrie, Sally Frits, Barbara McDermott, Rosemarie Kingston, Cleo Cyr, Alyssa Hayter,
Karen Patterson, Tara Hasany, Glenna Geer.
Submitted by Joyce McElman
page 4
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
Kingston-Kennebecasis Deanery continued . . .
Trinity Church, Sussex have two wonderful experiences to share. In
February, we enjoyed singing with the residents of the Kiwanis Nursing
Home. It is always fun for everyone to sing along with the old tunes. We
ended our singsong with a "seniors" version of Jesus Loves Me. I hope
this makes you curious! Two of our members made valentines and delivered them to the people
there. We helped distribute the shortbread cookies, donated by our ACW group, and the ice cream,
provided by one of our members. We thank her for her generosity and her tribute to her deceased
mother-in-law, who started the ice cream tradition many years ago.
The second occasion was hosting the World Day of Prayer for our area. Having Egypt as the
theme gave us an added opportunity to learn about the country first hand from a parishioner of
Egyptian heritage. We shared their music, art, and knowledge with all and say Thank You to Gamil
Khalil and his wife Dorothie for their help and memories. They gave our speaker Georgie Keith so
much more than was required for us to see, "The Stream in the Desert in Egypt." We had a great
turnout from several churches in Sussex (who were the participants), as well as people from
Pearsonville to Apohaqui and Penobsquis. We were also fortunate to have two gentlemen in our
congregation! We were all invited to taste bashousa - an Egyptian food. Many thought it tasted like
coconut! Everyone enjoyed the experience and fellowship.
Both experiences help to keep us together with the rest of our community.
Submitted by Eleanor Ellis
Lancaster Deanery . . . from their Annual Meeting
Guest speaker Vivian Carson, Dominican
Medical Missionary, and Claire Mawhinney,
Maces Bay ACW President
Deanery President Donna Middleton
and Secretary-Treasurer Joan Bursey
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
page 5
Fredericton-York Deanery
On Sunday, November 24th, St. Peter's, Fredericton, had their 175 th
Anniversary of continuous worship services. Archbishop Miller gave the sermon.
Prizes for bingo and Christmas cards were given to Farraline Place by various ACWs.
Several ACWs had successful bazaars and/or luncheons.
Several Branches participated in World Day of Prayer services, March 7 th. Several
representatives of these churches have been to the planning meeting and the Bible study on
women of Egypt and have shown the prepared video to their ACW groups.
St. Mary’s and St. Peter's are sister churches, and St. Peter's was invited to join St. Mary's for
an evensong this winter followed by an invitation to join the two choirs in an evensong of special
singing in February at St. Mary's. Several of the choir ladies are ladies of the respective ACWs.
The Cathedral ACW invited me to their Annual ACW meeting in February. We also heard a
special talk on C. S. Lewis by a young university student.
The Fredericton-York Deanery is sad to lose a favourite minister's wife, Helen Smith, wife of
the retired Canon Tom Smith. He was the priest at St. Mary's Church and then at St. Peter's
Church for several years before retirement. He has also lent a helping hand at both Christ Church
Parish Church and the Cathedral in recent years.
The ACW members of St. Mary's acted on a motion by a member to start a campaign to
collect pennies from ACW members and the congregation at large: the money collected to be used
for the Council of the North. Pennies were collected in November and December, and members
and friends gathered in January to roll and count them. This was a social event, and the final total
was $167. Some good friends made up the total to $200. The treasurer and her daughter took the
heavy load to the bank and held up proceedings there for some time as it all had to be counted.
We hope to make an annual event of this, possibly collecting nickels and dimes in the Fall.
St. Mary's York Parish Church ACW and some members of the choir had a successful
Luncheon Bridge Party on March 20th, despite the terrible weather and some entries cancelling.
The funds from this endeavour will go toward commitments of the ACW and choir.
St. Augustine, Parish of Canning and Chipman, are having a . . .
Spring Tea, Friday, April 25
11 am -1 pm at S. Augustine’s Church
Cost: $8; Menu: Chicken-a -la-King, sweets, tea, and coffee.
Submitted by Betty Adams
Did you know . . .
* Nearly 1,000 Anglican and Lutheran young people participate in the Canadian LutheranAnglican Youth (CLAY) gathering every two years? This gathering is especially important
for youth from small communities, where perhaps only one or two young people are serious
about living out their faith.
page 6
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
Fredericton-York Deanery
News from the Anglican Church Women, Christ Church Cathedral
At the Annual Meeting of our ACW in 2012, in lieu of a
structured executive, (i.e. president, first vice, etc. for whom there were no
contenders), the gathering approved the formation of an Executive Committee to
manage the commitments of the ACW. As a result, dedicated ladies meet on an “as
need” basis when the majority of the 7 members can gather. The secretary and
treasurer are firm positions, but the chair rotates among the 7 committee members.
These meetings may be 60-90 minutes long. At this time, the most responsibility
rests with the secretary as she is alert to issues that require action and arranges the
meetings. In 2013, we had 5 Executive Committee meetings plus the Annual Meeting and an
afternoon Christmas gathering. When there is a good reason, such as Christmas or an engaging
program, 20-30 will attend. If these qualifiers are not in place, attendance is 6.
To-date, this is working very well. Each committee member has a definite role to play missions abroad, missions at home, receptions, communication, programs. In the
Fall of 2012, the ACW passed the historical management of the kitchen to a
Kitchen Committee, independent of the ACW. In recent years, the kitchen has
become a very busy facility with several groups using it. But ACW was expected to
finance, maintain health standards, etc. so it was necessary to relinquish this role.
Having divested ourselves of this 'Martha' aspect of our service to our Christian community, we
studied the Purpose of the ACW as outlined in our Constitution and By-Laws: To unite women in
fellowship of worship, study, and offering which will deepen and strengthen their own spiritual lives
and lead them into Christian service in parish, community, diocese, nation, and world.
We had the service/mission to community, etc. aspect well covered. The fellowship of worship
and study has been neglected. To counter this, ACW General Meetings with four winter programs
have been planned for the second Wednesday in the month in the afternoon. Each
member of the committee is responsible for one program. We have a short business
meeting, bringing the gathering up-to-date with minutes from Executive Committee
meetings, followed by the guest speaker, closing with simple refreshments. The January
speaker was the Right Revered Bill Hockin on the topic 'Resilience' -- strong evidence
that a strong faith and a church community are key to effective resilience. There were 24 in
attendance. The February 12 speaker will be Lionel Hayter, a student of C. S. Lewis. C.S. Lewis
shares, in his classical writings, the strength and courage derived from his Christian faith. The
March 12 and April 08 speakers will present on topics relating to Lent. If you are in this area on
these dates, please join us.
This Committee structure is working now for our ACW. Is this structure an
alternative as your group looks at diminishing numbers and offices that cannot
be filled? There are reasons to go this route: a historical role in the church and Diocesan affairs;
the need for an ACW umbrella to be in place to respond to specific needs; financial resources to
manage; and we have ACW ingrained in our personal church culture. For lack of a President, a first
Vice-President, etc., it is not fair to close out the Anglican Church Women, if an alternative structure
can be supported.
Submitted by Kaye Small
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
page 7
Dear Friends,
On behalf of those who live and work in the Council of the North, I want to thank you for the
ongoing and generous support we receive from you.
The Council of the North faces unique challenges: vast distances, isolation, the continuing
effects of poverty, and the legacy of the residential school system. All of these contribute to an
increased level of pastoral needs. However, the Council is responding to these challenges with faith,
innovation, and heroically sacrificial ministry.



The Council of the North were encouraging parishes to host a Council of the North Sunday during the
Lenten season in 2014. This special Sunday would be an opportunity for congregations to come together
in awareness, fellowship, and prayer for this important ministry in our church. Below is a resource for the
5th Sunday of Lent. (Resources can be found at http://www.anglican.ca/cn/)
From all of us who live, work, and worship in Anglican churches in the North, thank you for partnering
with us as we move from a mission shaped by structure to a structure that is shaped by mission.
Bishop Mark MacDonald, National
Indigenous Bishop, has said, “Suicide has
become one of the great spiritual battles of our
time.” As many Canadians know, suicide rates in
indigenous communities are from 5 to 11 times
higher than in the majority population. What
we also need to know is that, through the
Council of the North, Anglicans are providing
frontline pastoral and sacramental ministry to
those suffering from depression, alienation and
suicidal thoughts as well as to the
families who have been affected by this
tragic choice.
To support those providing this
crucial ministry, partnerships are being
forged between Council of the North
dioceses and the Suicide Prevention
Project, which is coordinated for
Indigenous Ministries by the Reverends
Nancy Bruyere and Cynthia Patterson.
Patterson, who calls the Project’s
creation “a beautiful story for a tragic
subject,” speaks about several underlying
causes of suicide, including inter-generational
trauma resulting from residential schools, and
the extremely compressed cultural transition
of the last 50 years. In the midst of this,
Council of the North clergy and parishes are a
vital and caring presence, offering prayer and a
community of hope and healing.
page 8
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
This Mother's Day - Help Change a Life
The Mothers' Union is a Christian mission society that seeks to support families
worldwide with the unified aim of everyone belonging in a world where God's love is shown through
loving, respectful, and flourishing relationships.
To carry out this aim, Mothers' Union members follow five objectives:
1. To uphold Christ's teaching on the nature of marriage and promote its wider understanding.
2. To encourage parents to bring up their children in the faith and life of the Church.
3. To maintain a worldwide fellowship of Christians united in prayer, worship, and service.
4. To promote conditions in society favourable to stable family life and the protection of children.
5. To help those whose family life has met with adversity
With over 4 million members worldwide, Mothers' Union reaches out to communities through
various initiatives - locally, nationally, and internationally, and continuously seek ways to engage
their church and community to support family life.
Mothering Sunday is a key date in the church calendar that remembers mothers. It is
recognized on the fourth Sunday in Lent and honours Mary Sumner who began the Mothers' Union
in England in 1876. As a clergy wife, she recognized the need for mothers to support one another in
raising their children for God.
One of the ways that Mothers' Union works to support families and communities is through the
Make a Mother's Day Campaign (MAMD). The MAMD campaign focuses on supporting mothers all
over the world, and it has helped to change their lives. The Make a Mother's Day gift will aim to
inspire disadvantaged mothers by giving them the skills and confidence they need to achieve longterm sustainable change and assist their communities to create a better life for themselves and their
families.
Gifts - their description and cost can be found on the Mothers' Union website at http://
www.makeamothersday.org/choose-a-gift. Or contact Ethel Nelson, email:
[email protected] or Dawn Skene, email [email protected].
Mothers' Union Canada has also recognized the need to support the women in Canada's North
and the challenges northern communities sometimes encounter. A Christmas "Joy" gift has been
established which provides the supplies needed for a woman to join a parenting course and improve
her parenting skills, which strengthens the community.
Mothers' Union Canada has embraced the Make a Mother's Day Campaign, to not only
promote the initiative on Mothering Sunday, but also on the secular Mother's Day celebrated the
second Sunday each May.
The Mothers' Union Prayer …
Loving Lord, we thank you for your love so freely given to us all.
We pray for families around the world. Bless the work of the Mothers'
Union as we seek to share your love through the encouragement,
strengthening and support of marriage and family life. Empowered
by your Spirit, may we be united in prayer and worship, and in love
and service reach out as your hands across the world. In Jesus'
name. Amen.
Lilian Ketch
Diocesan Mothers’ Union President
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
Food for thought . . .
"I the Lord do not change . . . return to me,
and I will return to you," says the Lord Almighty.
~ MALACHI 3:6-7.
Tithing has been on my mind for some time,
and I find it does not appear in the New
Testament. However, we are taught to give
systematically, liberally, cheerfully, and as the
Lord has prospered us, proportionately.
I know there are those who do tithe
faithfully, and they find they are richly blessed
(one tenth from the top). The Old Testament
believers were required to bring one tenth of the
best of all what they had - produce and
livestock - to the Lord. The tithes were in
addition to the numerous offerings and were
acknowledgment that every thing belongs to
God, and He was the giver of all possessions . .
page 9
(This is not easy for us to accept – I worked
hard for my money, we might say, forgetting
who made this possible).
The world would certainly be a different
place if we all shared willing and lovingly, no
more wars, famines, etc. However, we are
human beings and what we are, this will never
happen as long as there is evil in the world.
I often wonder what the Churches' financial
situations would be like if we all tithed. Malachi
3:10 says "Bring the whole tithe into the
storehouse that there may be food in my house.
Test me in this," says the Lord Almighty, "and
see if I will not throw open the flood gates of
heaven and pour out so much blessing that you
will not have room for it. I will prevent pests
from devouring your crops, and the vines in
your fields will not cast their fruits, before it is
ripe."
This is not just our money that we should
share, but all gifts of the Spirit as we have been
given. Don't keep them under a bushel.
REMEMBER MALACHI 3:6 –
“I THE LORD DO NOT CHANGE''
Until next time, God Bless
Kay Kilpatrick.
New Chapel at Bishop McAllister College, Uganda
Canon Jeffries posted
pictures of the new chapel,
a work of love in progress.
The walls are erected, the
beautiful stained glass
windows have been
installed, the steps built,
and now construction has
begun on the steeple.
ACW Prayer from the ACW in Nova Scotia:
Almighty God, we give thanks to you for having sent Your blessed Son to become the Saviour
of the world; grant to us a deep sense of gratitude for Your grace and mercy towards us. Enable us
by Your Spirit to reveal Your love in all our actions so that Your salvation may become known to all
peoples and Your name glorified throughout all the earth; through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
page 10
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
Executive ~ 2013-2014
Chaplain ........................................ Capt. Rose Steeves ....... rose.steeves at gmail.com
Past President ............................ Florence Joy Clement ......... 454-8173
President ..................................... Glenna Geer .................... neon2000 at nb.sympatico.ca
1st Vice-President ..................... Rosemarie Kingston ....... hayesr at nb.sympatico.ca
2nd Vice-President .................... Linda Lebans ................... lclebans at gmail.com
Secretary .................................... Diane Todd ...................... chuckdianetodd at gmail.com
Treasurer .................................... Karen Patterson ............. pattersoned at hotmail.com
Deanery Presidents:
Fredericton-York ..................... Betty Adams ................... adams2 at nbnet.nb.ca
Kingston-Kennebecasis ............ Marg Petrie ..................... margaret.petrie at bellaliant.net
Lancaster.................................... Donna Middleton ............ ddmiddle at gmail.com
Miramichi-Chaleur .................... Sybil L. Hills.................... slhills1959 at hotmail.com
Saint John.................................. Pauline Long .................... nannie at rogers.com
Shediac ....................................... Linda Fury ....................... lafury at eastlink.ca
St. Andrews ............................... Merwyn Berry .................charlottegowan at rogers.com
(leave message for Merwyn)
Woodstock ................................. Clara Pirie .......................co.pirie at gmail.com
C HAPLAIN ’ S C ORNER ...
I had the pleasure once again to visit Mizak, Haiti, in January with 14 other
men and women from the Miramichi area. We spent the last two years fund-raising
and were able to raise $20,000 to help the people in Mizak. The first time we went,
we built a home for a needy family, this time we focussed more on the community.
Our funds helped build a much-needed medical clinic, a water cistern, place solar
panels on roof for electricity, and supply water filters for individual homes.
The highlight of my visit was meeting our child that our Parish ACW sponsors to
attend school. Her name is Vanessa Joseph, and she is 14 years old, and she has
two sisters and 3 brothers, her mom and her grandfather, all living in the same
house. She is the second youngest in the family. Her little brother is 9 years old,
and he is being sponsored as well. Her oldest brother is an artist; he paints
beautiful pictures. The family lives not too far from where we stayed in Mizak . I
was able to bring her some gifts and some for the family as well. Their home was neat and tidy, and
they seemed very happy.
Our ACW sends $150 a year and that pays for her uniform, books, and school fees. The family was
very happy to see me and thanked me and our ACW for sponsoring Vanessa.
One evening, as our team were sitting outside before the lights went out, Vanessa came over and
presented me with a gift for our ACW. It was a painting that her brother had made. I was very moved
by that because I know that they don't have very much material possessions. It meant a lot to me. I
have been blessed in many ways during my two-week stay in Haiti, and thank God for our safe return
home.
Blessings,
Rev’d Canon Rose Steeves
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
page 11
TD Bank
Woodstock, NB
~ Thanks to Google Maps
St. Luke’s
Church
X
~ ACW P INS ~
Have you got the new ACW pin yet? Give $4 for each pin to your Deanery
President and ask her to pick up one for you at the next Executive Meeting. . . .
or contact Glenna Geer — neon2000 at nb.sympatico.ca
page 12
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
April 2014
Diocesan ACW Annual Meeting
May 6 & 7, 2014
St. Luke's Anglican Church, Woodstock, NB
Registration begins 9:30 a.m.
The meeting registration fee is $ 5. Banquet ticket is $15.
So if you plan to attend the meeting and the banquet, please, prepare a cheque for $20 per
person, payable to St. Luke's ACW by April 23. (Pre-registration form on the next page.)
Please mail it to:
Jean Collicott, 11 4 Victoria Street, Woodstock, E7M 3A5
"Let your light so shine before others, that they may see your good works,
and glorify your Father in heaven."
MATTHEW 5:16
Wondering about parking?
The parking lot at the Baptist Church is probably the best place.
The street behind the church hall is also open for parking and
actually leads to a parking lot.
ACCOMMODATIONS
Motels:
IN THE
WOODSTOCK AREA
Bed and Breakfast:
Best W estern
123 Gallop Ct., Exit 185
Prism B & B
114 Victoria Street
Call toll free 1 888-580-1188 or call 1-506-328-2378
Call 1-506-328-8981
Price: $105 plus tax
Price: $80.00 tax and breakfast included
Includes a hot breakfast.
Howard Johnson's Take TCH exit 188
Call 1-506-328-3315
Price: 80 plus tax
Includes a continental breakfast
Brigette's B & B
10 Braun Street, Grafton
Call 1-506-325-2298
Price: $64.00
Canada Best Value Inn Take TCH exit 188
Call 1-506-328-8876
Price: $80 plus tax
Includes a continental breakfast.
Riverside B & B
Call 1-506-328-3094
Closed for winter so price not available
Knight's Inn 276 Lockard Mill Rd, Jacksonville
Call 1-506- 328-6688
Price: $79 plus tax
Breakfast is extra.
John Gyles Motel
Take exit 200
Call 1-506-328-6632
April 2014
Diocese of Fredericton ACW E-Newsletter—”Launching Out”
page 13
PRE-REGISTRATION FORM –
DIOCESAN ACW ANNUAL MEETING
St. Luke's Anglican Church, 104 Church Street, Woodstock, NB
May 6 & 7, 2014
NAME: _________________________________________
ADDRESS: __________________________________________
__________________________________________________
PHONE NUMBER: __________________
E-Mail: ___________________________________
CHURCH/LOCATION: _____________________________________
Please check the appropriate boxes and enclose a cheque for the total amount made out to:
St. Luke's ACW.
 Registration fee $ 5.00
 Banquet ticket $ 15.00
Please check the following box if you plan to stay for the second day. This will help us in
planning coffee break and lunch arrangements on that day.
 I plan to stay the second day
Registration Kits, including your banquet tickets, are to be picked up between 9:30 &10:30 am
on May 6 at the Church Hall (attached to church). There you can sign the registration book and have
coffee/tea and a muffin before the Church service.
Looking forward to seeing you in May.
Please return this form with your cheque made out to: St. Luke’s ACW by April 23, 2014.
Send to Jean Collicott, 114 Victoria Street, Woodstock, NB E7M 3A5