HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes-Advocate, 1978-01-19, Page 22Page 22 Times-Advocate, January 19, 1978
21 For Rent 26 Legal Notices
AVAILABLE March 1st fur
nished. and heated bachelor
apartment. Laundry facilities
above Canadian Tire Store.
Phone 235-1497 or 0451. 3t
HEATED one bedroom apart
ment ground level, laundry
facilities. Whilton Apt. Contact
d. Parker 235-1497 or 0451. 3f
EXTRA SPECIAL
$32,400.00
Impressive lMs storey double
brick home, featuring 3
bedrooms, living room, dining
room, study, goodsized kitchen,
3 piece bath. Situated on a lot 50’
by 165’ with a fenced in play area
for children. Private paved drive.
Must be seen.
CALL BILL McPHEE
1-673-6390
or
1-455-3659
CANADA TRUST
REALTOR
3:4c
THREE bedroom newly
renovated modern home, wall to
wall carpet. 1 '-4 mile off of paved
road, no pets. 262-5768. 3:4c
THREE bedroom home on pav
ed road, no pets. Phone 262-
5768.____________________3:4c
ONE modern 5 bedroom farm
home, broadloom, 1 mile off of
Hwy, 4, No pets. 262-5768. 3:4c
ONE bedroom apartment,
heated, 398 William Street, Ex
eter. Phone Norm Walper, 235-
1684._____________________3t
COUNTRY living 3 bedroom
mobile home, full basement, on
highway. Call 237-3274. 3c
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Estate of
ETHEL JANE
BALFOUR
Deceased
All persons having claims
against the estate of Ethel Jane
Balfour late of the Township of
Tuckersmith, in the County of
Huron, Widow who died on or
about the 17th day of November,
1977 are required to file par
ticulars of same with Bell &
Laughton, Solicitors of Exeter,
Ontario, by the 21st day of
January, 1978 after which date
the estate will be distributed hav
ing regard only to those claims of
which notice has I *:en received.
BELL & LAUGHTON
Solicitors for the Executors
Exeter, Ontario.
1:2:3c
26 Legal Notices
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
in the Estate of
LAURA CATHERINE
McCANN
Deceased
All persons having claims
against the estate of Laura
Catherine McCann late of the
township of McGillivray, in the
County of Middlesex, Housewife
who died on or about the 1st day
of August, 1977 are required to
file particulars of same with Bell
& Laughton, Solicitors of Ex
eter, Ontario, by the 21st day of
January, 1978 after which date
the estate will be distributed hav
ing regard only to those claims of
which notice has been received.
BELL & LAUGHTON
Solicitors for the Executors
Exeter, Ontario.
1:2:3c
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Estate of
He Hen Murray Grieve
Thompson'
Deceased
All creditors and others hav
ing claims against the Estate of
Hellen Murray Grieve Thomp
son, late of the Township of
McGillivray in the County of
Middlesex, Widow, deceased,
who died at the City of London
in the said County of Middlesex
on or about the 25th day of Oc
tober, 1977, are hereby notified
to send full particulars of their
claims and their addresses to the
under-signed Solicitors for the
Executrices on or before the 20th
day of February, 1978, after
which last mentioned date the
assets of the said Estate will be
distributed having regard only to
claims which have then been
received. Dated at St. Marys,
Ontario, this 9th day of January,
1978.
Waghorn, Stephens &
De Young
Box 610,
St. Marys, Ontario,
Solicitors for the Executrices
3:4:5c
A HOMEMAKER GRADUATE — A dozen ladies from Huron
County graduated recently from a Homemakers course
offered at the Vanastra Campus of Conestoga College.
Above, instructress Leslie Cole presents a "letter of recogni
tion to Dianne Moody, Exeter. Photo by Elaine Townshend
Ask policy to better
personnel relations
Possible duplication
Huron board debates membership
The Huron County Board
of Education members
didn’t know Wednesday
whether a $4,433 mem
bership in the Ontario
School Trustee’s Council
would be a duplication of a
$3,521.30 membership they
approved for the Ontario
Public School Trustee’s
Association,
decided to
Cochrane,
education,
Turkheim, Huron’s member
in-
of
the
The board
have John
director of
and Herb
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Estate of
WELLINGTON BRUCE
BAKER
Deceased
All persons having claims
against the estate of Wellington
Bruce Baker, late of the Village
of Grand Bend, in the County of
Lambton, Retired Engineer, who
died on or about the 1st day of
November, 1977 are required to
file particulars of same with Beil
& Laughton, Solicitors of Ex
eter, Ontario, by the 21st day of
January 1978 after which date
the estate will be distributed hav
ing regard only to those claims of
which notice has been received.
BELL & LAUGHTON
Solicitors for the Executrix
Exeeter, Ontario
1:2:3c
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Estate of
Milford Cicero
Merner
Deceased
All persons having claims
against the estate of Milford
Cicero Merner, late of the village
of Dashwood, County of Huron,
Retired Merchant who died on
or about the 22nd day of July,
1977 are required to file par
ticulars of same with Deane &
Laughton, Solicitor of Exeter,
Ontario, by the 4th day of
February, 1978 after which date
the estate will be distributed hav
ing regard only to those claims of
which notice has been received.
Deane & Laughton
Solicitors for the Executors
Exeter, Ontario
3:4:5c
The education committee
of the Huron County Board of
Education was asked by the
board Wednesday to in
vestigate the possibility of
developing policy aimed ata
better working relationship
between the board and its
school personnel. The move
was made after the board
received a letter from the
elementary school prin
cipals’ association for the
county asking that the board
consider developing a better
working relationship.
The association told the
board in the letter that it was
concerned that school
personnel have often ex
pressed a lack of opportunity
for input into the develop
ment of board policy. It
added that there was little
personnel input into the
decision making process
which affects programs and
the operation of the schools.
The principals suggested
that now was the best time to
institute the heW policy since
the board had recently
realigned its committee
structure and seemed to be
attempting to encourage
more input from staff and
trustees. That plus
recommendations from the
recent school evaluation
done in the southern end of
the county which suggested
that efforts be made to get
more input into education
policy from staff and
community organizations
prompted the association to
request the change.
The association pointed
out that there can be “little
doubt” that both the board
and the school staff share the
same major objective of
providing the best possible
system of education within
the boundaries of human
limitations and human
restraints. It added that a
“high degree of co-operative
endeavor can contribute
toward obtaining the goal”.
The principals said that
fewer misunderstandings,
better concepts of purposes,
greater acceptance of
priorities, greater ap
preciation of limitations and
procedural frameworks and
better interpretations of
community needs and values
could result from a closer
working relationship.
The letter1 added that there
was no intent by the prin
cipals to interfere with the
rights, powers and duties of
the board but only the desire
to have the opportunity to
work co-operatively toward
the best possible planning
and consideration which is
necessary in the exercising
of those powers and duties.
on the association
vestigate the worth
Huron’s membership in
council.
The council, according to
Cochrane,
avenue to
education
organized
board’s in the province that
the board recognizes. Huron
has been a member of the
council
years.
“The
trustee _
the ministry and is the
umbrella the ministry uses
to receive requests,
resolutions and ideas from
boards,” said Cochrane.
Goderich trustee Cayley
Hill raised the question of
need for the Huron board to
belong to both the council
and the association. He said
he did not mean to be critical
of the organization but
merely wanted to know if the
board was duplicating
services by belonging to both
groups. He added that in this
time of restraint the board
is the board’s
the ministry of
and is the only
L»ody of school
for the past five
council is the only
group recognized by
may be able to save $4,000 by
joining just one group.
“That will buy alot of
typewriters,” he pointed out.
Jack Alexander,
Wingham’s trustee, asked if
anyone on the board new if
the Huron board got
anything from the council
worth the $4,433.
Board chairman John
Elliott said he had been to a
convention sponsored by the
council and said that it was
worthwhile going to the
affairs to hear speakers of
the calibre usually at the
convention but he added that
he didn’t know if it was worth
$4,000.
Clinton trustee Dorothy
Williams said she attended a
convention designed to
educate newly elected
trustees in education ad
ministration. She said she
found the convention very
worth while but didn’t think
she got enough information
to merit a $4,000 expense.
Turkheim told the board
that he had been a director
on the association for a year
and explained that he new
nothing of the procedure of
the organization when he
began attending meetings.
He said the association
provides statistics for boards
to use for salary negotiations
and sponsors conventions
designed to educate board
trustees. He added that he
was just beginning to un
derstand association func
tions and that it took a year
for him to get his feet wet.”
“Over the past five years
this board has paid $20,000
membership fees for the
council,” said Hill. “Have
we had that much worth of
service?
Hill told the board that he
had been to two or three
programs sponsored by the
council and that he was very
unimpressed with them and
felt they were virtually
valueless, he said he hoped
the board members weren’t
merely postponing the
inevitable by not taking a
firm stand on the matter and
suggested that the board
give full consideration to
value for the expense before
paying it.
Elliott suggested that the
board table the matter until
it can be ascertained what
benefits the board derives
from membership in the
council. He added that the
trustees should be give' a
clear picture of the pros and
cons before making a
decision.
“If we don’t know now
we’re not going to find out in
30 days,’’ claimed Hill.
“Some members of the
board have been sitting at-
this table for a number of
years. I’m not opposed to
tabling the matter but I
would like to point out that
the board should know now
what the worth of the
membership is.”
Cochrane explained to the
board it was quite possible
membership in the two
councils duplicated services.
He said the Ontario Public-
School Trustee Association
was composed of public
school boards and was a
member of the Ontario
School Trustees’ Council. He
added that the council was
composed of all school
systems, public, French and
Catholic, not just public
systems.
“I can’t say whether this
board gets benefits from the
expense,” said Cochrane.
“The council is an avenue to
the ministry and the question
Bowling
Make committee changes
Several changes were
made in Exeter council’s
standing committees for the
coming year and two citizens
were dropped from the list of
appointments after it was
noted that they had not been
attending regular sessions or
showing proper interest in
the groups to which they had
been named.
Councillor Ted Wright was
named chairman of council’s
public works committee,
normally one of the heaviest
workloads. He succeeds
R.eeve Si Simmons in that
position. The latter remains
on the committee with
I)qp u ty.-Re e,y e_, D on
MacGregor’^ahd Councilor
Lossy Fuller.
Th$ other major com
mittee — protection to
persons and property — will
remain under the chair
manship of Councillor Ken
Ottewell. Other members
are Councillors Steve Pfaff,
Harold Patterson and Mayor
Bruce Shaw.
RECEIVER SALE
Roll Mills * Sand Mills •
Mixers • Inks • Raw
Materials • Laboratory &
Office Equipment
We have been instructed by Deloitte Haskins & Sells
Ltd., Receiver-Manager, to liquidate the assets of...
MANTON INKS LTD.
In Detailed Lots By
AUCTION
on Thurs. Jan. 19, at 10:30 A.M. at 1557
Sedlescomb Dr., Mississauga
(1 block E. of Dixie Rd., N. off Dundas)
SAND MILLS * ROLL MILLS * MIXERS * SCALES *
ETC: 2 Moore house Cowles 7-15 Flexo Sand Mills
* 3 Greey 895-17 Three Roll Mills * Vicker-
Armstrong Two Roll Mill Mercury Three Roll Mill 2 3
H.P. Flexo Ball Mills Bowers 10MMA 15 H.P. Mixer
Lightnin CEX 5 H.P. Mixer * 3 250 lb., 150 lb. & 50
lb. cap. Pony Mixers * Holman Hydrovane 5 H.P.
Comp. * 24 350 lb. to 50 lb. Mixing Tubs * 2 Toledo
800 lb. & 400 lb. Platform Scales * 6 Toledo 30 lb.
to 100 lb. Scales * Lynx 3,000 lb. Pallet Truck *
Loadstar 14> ton elec. Hoist * 2 Barrel Lift Trucks *
Potdevin Sealer *
FINISHED INKS * RAW MATERIAL: Approx. 8,-
000 lb. of corrugated Oil Flexo & Glyco Inks in asst.
Colours, etc. * $35,000 of asst. Raw Material in
Solvents, Alcohols, Pigments, Oils, Varnishes, Resins,
Cans Wax, etc.
LABORATORY & OFFICE EQUIP.: Three Roll Lab
Mill * Vandercook Proving Press * Thwig-Albert C-
46 Inkometer * Ovens * Scales * Gestetner 160
Duplicator * 4 IBM & Olympia elec. Typewriters *
Record-O-Fone Telephone Valet * 5 Munro & Olivet
ti elec. Calculators * Remington 6 dr. F.P. Card File
Cabinet * 3'X5' Steel Safe * 5 asst. Card File
Cabinet * 14 2 dr. * 5 dr. Legal & Letter File
Cabinets * 7 D.P. & L-shape Desks * 6 Exec. & Steno
Chairs * etc.
INFORMATION: Phone, write or Telex (065-24563)
The Auctioneers.
INSPECTION: Wed. Jan. 18, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. &
morning of sale.
TERMS: Cash or certified cheque & as per posted
conditions.
Anniversary
celebrated
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence
Volland were honoured on
the occasion of their 45th
wedding anniversary when
their family and grand
children entertained them to
dinner at the Burkley
Restaurant, Exeter on
Sunday evening.
Town hall
$3
A Ministry
of
Housing
Ontario
Housing Corporation
NOTICE RE
TENDER CLOSING
Ontario Housing Corpora
tion hereby gives notice
that due to the severe
weather conditions and
other uncertainties, the
following tenders were un
able to be opened on
January 11, 1978. The
closing date for these
tenders has therefore been
extended as follows:
SFT 78-1 General
Maintenance
Repair Work at
Various Projects
in Huron County.
78-2 General
Maintenance
Repair Work at
Various Projects
in Bruce County.
78-3 General
Maintenance
Repair Work at
Various Projects
in Perth County.
Tenders will be received for
the above until 11:00 a.m.
(local time), Wednesday,
January 25, 1978 by On
tario Housing Corporation,
c/o Courthouse & Registry
Building, 80 Dundas St.,
P.O. Box 5600, Station
"A”, London, Ontario,
N6A 2P3, attention Branch
Manager (519) 679-7110.
Tenders which have been
already submitted need
not be re-submitted.
THE LOWEST OR ANY
TENDER NOT
NECESSARILY ACCEPTED.
SFT
SFT
G & G Discount..............................
Debbie Etheringtdn.......................
Bruce, Fran, David & Bruce Shaw
Campbell's Jewellers....................
Laidlaw Transport..........................
In memory of Joyce Monteith......
Gerry & Sandra Vanderworp......
Tom & Judy Ellerington................
Mr. & Mrs. Ross Tuckey................
Ella M. Jory.....................................
Frank & Louise Giffin....................
Elimville W.l....................................
Bev Morgan Ins...............................
Mr. & Mrs. R.A. Orr.......................
Mr. & Mrs. Ray Frayne.................
Mrs. Ida Dinney..............................
Eleanor Scott..................................
B.P. of Canada................................
David Dittmer.................................
Smyth Shoes..................................
Annonymous..................................
donations
$10
10
100
65
150
20
50
25
50
25
100
25
50
10
50
25
50
200
10
25
510
Patterson takes over as
chairman of the sanitation
committee, being joined by
Simmons and Ottewell.
Lossy Fuller will continue
as chairman of the social
services committee and
Steve Pfaff will remain as
chairman of the property
committee, a task he
inherited when Councillor
Barb Bell retired.
Joining Mrs. Fuller on
social services is Derry
Boyle, while MacGregor and
Boyle are the other members
of the property committee.
Shaw, Simmons and
MacGregor will represent
Exqtqr on the area fire hoard
and Shaw and Ottewell will
remain as council’s
representatives on the
planning board.
Patterson will continue as
the liaison with the building
inspector, while Simmons
and MacGregor will be the
members of the municipal
liaison committee.
Replacing "Simmons on the
board of management of the
Downtown Business
Improvement Association is
Pfaff, while Simmons and
Wright were named to the
cemetery board.
Retiring clerk Eric Car-
scadden was appointed to the
cemetery hoard as a new . after a news item appeared
member, while Norm
Stanlake was also appointed.
Bob Russell and Bill
Batten had their ap
pointments extended to the
committee of adjustment
and parking authority,
respectively, as did Harvey
Pfaff, a member of the
planning board.
Reeve Si Simmons will be
council’s representative on
the Ausable-Bayfield Con
servation Authority, while
the four members of the
South Huron rec centre
board of management were
all re-appointed. They in
clude Mayor Shaw, Jerry
MacLean, Kim McLean and
John Burke.
During a discussion of the
latter, Ottewell suggested it
would be nice to have the
chairmanship of the rec
centre board passed among
the three contributing
municipalities “so each feels
a little more that they’re
part of it”.
Boyle also questioned
Mayor Shaw about some of
the appointments in view of
the fact the board appeared
to have trouble raising a
quorum for some of- its
meetings.
Shaw Said that generally
the attendance of the
members was good at most
of the 40 meetings they held
last year and the only
problems (due to sickness
and weather) occurred when
the press was invited at the
tail-end of the year.
Boyle also questioned if
one of the appointments
should be filled by a person
who had more interest in the
major facility (the rink) at
the new rec centre.
While no change was
made, Boyle said future
councils would have to
consider appointing at least
one person who did have a
considerable interest in that
portion of the facility.
At the end of
deliberations over
pointments, Shaw said
four people had volunteered
Ladies Tuesday
S. McNair 511
C. Hockey 585
L. Dietrich 497
E. Skinner 638
M. Goodwen 578
£ Flynn.613
R. Eveland 503
J. Penninga 568
MM L. Pencombe 821
M. Bridges 689
Y. Jacques 532
M. Holtzmann 596
Men's Monday
S. McNair 693
B. Schade 667
H.Holtzman 582
S. Bird 520
R. Devil 520
J. Bell 585 .
D. Brintnell 642
G. Black 683
C. McDonald 633
R. Smith 672
B. Farquhar 790
Men's Wednesday
V. Smith 675
P. Lavier 633
J. McNair,708
D. Gifford 688
J. Vautour 713
B. Coleman 697
B. Hogg 726
D. Brintnell 703
Minor Bowling
M. Mathers 181
S. Skinner 209
J. McFalls 180
Juniors
M. Mol 261
G. Peitsch 244
A. Pearce 200
Seniors
L. Warwick 320
S. Skinner 394 ]
J. Mol 380
M. Brunzlow 291
B, Anderson 354
J. Pfaff 365
Mens Monday
Sportsman 674
B. Baynham 727 ,
M. Looby 678
C. Murray 631
A. Farquhar 617
B. Hogg 711
M. Brintnell 620 i
P. Durand 711 I
E. Matzold676 I
Friday Mixed League
R. Cockwell 640
J. Snell 648
G. Campbell 556
C. Murray 834
R. Gridzak 566
D. Plumb 573
D. Sweitzer 557
GR
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Mens Wednesday
R. Lacourse 634
D. Murray 591
R. Dickey 788
B. Hogg 654
C. Wurm 728
D. Gifford 725
L. Stire 708
D. Brintnell 707
in this newspaper inviting
them to do so.
“It’s nice to have people
interested in their com
munity,” the Mayor noted,
adding that some of those
0
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is- can a board be an island
and stand by itself.”
He pointed out that the
Huron Board can be a
member of the association
and not the council but that
to be a member of
council it had to join
association.
Under the association
Huron board obtained
services of a personnel
relations co-ordinator and
have a two year pact with
Fred Reeve who was hired to
handle that job. Reeve
handled negotiations bet
ween the board and the
teachers this year and has
one year remaining on his
contract. Reeve is also
handling negotiations with
our Dufferin and Grey
counties and the three
boards are each paying one
third of his salary on top of
their membership fee for the
association.
the
the
the
the
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53
LARRY
SNIDER
Spark
thumb:
Steer
This
Way
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volunteers may be asked to
fill the vacancies which have
arisen on the recreation
committee. That group was
not named this week.
I
plug rule of
the longer the in
sulator, the hotter the
plug. If it's too hot for
your engine, the in
sulator nose will look
white instead of grey or
tan.
* * *
Rough idle and stalling
problems are often
caused by air leaks.
Check the gaskets at
carburetor and intake
manifold, and the hoses
or tubing that feed
vacuum-operated units
in the car. If no leaks are
found, you may have a
cracked manifold.
* * *
New extra-powerful
battery may make a
viable, competitive elec
tric car possible. The
battery would use a
"refill" power source in
stead of recharging.
U.S. Government is
sponsoring the study.
•¥■ ¥ ¥
EVERYONE in the car
should be wearing seat
belts. If '
passen gers
ing belts,
passenger
increased by 50 percent.
* ★ *
A butterfly valve is the
pivoting metal plate
that controls the flow of
air into the carburetor.
You can guess what it
looks like.
back seat
aren't wear
front seat
injuries are
Larry Snider
MOTORS LIMITED
EXETER 235-1640
LONDON 227-4191
Huron County's Largest
Ford- Dealer
Total to date $20,068.90
/
Ur AND OVER — One of the surprises for the Exeter atoms on their recenttripto Exeter, N,H.
was the fact the players' bench had no doors. The boys had to climb over the boards, not an
easy trick for a little guy weighted down with hockey equipment. Scott Bogart is shown here
attempting to make his entry, while Manager Shirley Pratt lends assistance further down the
line. Staff photo
A ■ - ■ - ’ '■reYytjMMMI** k jfcfe 1'1
’jra
TASTE THAT'S
OUT OF THIS WORLD
A special selection of spices from around the world ac
cent our seafood and chicken. Yet, we're as close as a
phone call away.
Dixie Ice FRIED
CHICKEN
235-2665