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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1986-01-22, Page 4Page 4-- Lucknow Sentinel,Wednesday,.Januaiy 22, 1986 4 EXCELLENT building lots, 72 z 157 ft., Napier Street, Lucknow. LUCKNOW, 3 bedroom, with added "annoy room, on and electric neat, well insulated, hill lot. Priced to sell. LUCKNOW, brick 3 bedroom home, 2 extra lots, well,loeated, modern oil and wood furnace, paved drive and deck. KINLOUGH, 3 bedroom home with new addition, combination wood and electric furn- ace, ideal family or retirement home, priced to sell. LUCKNOW, 4 bedroom home, well maintained, one bedroom down. Priced right, immediate possession. LUCKNOW, desirable building lot, owner has reduced asking price, prkne -Iocatlon. DUNGANNON, nice 2 bedroom mobile, asking $13,500, including stove, fridge, 40 ft. T.V. tower. KINLOSS TWP., 65 acres, 38 workable,, balance hardwood cedar bush. KINLOSS, 100 acres, 50 workable, -balance rolling ideal recreation property, reduced to S34,900. ° KINLOSS TWP., 50 acres, fieldstone home, .cattle barn, implement shed, retirement or hobby acreage. LUCKNOW SALES BARN, financial statement available. ASHFIELD, 200 acres, . approximately _170 workable,well tiled, balance hardwood, cedar bush. 100 ACRES, St. Helens area, .4 bedroom home, barn 40 x 110 ft., 80 workable, hardwood bush. Reduced, inquire. 150 ACRES, Kinloss, dairyset up for 70 cows, pipeline, attractive home. 100 ACRES, West Wawanosh, cash crop. 89.5 ACRES, Ashfield, 'buildings; good, systematic tile, beef .feedlot. 179 ACRES, West Wawanosh, improved dwelling, beef pasture land. 50 ACRES, Ashfield, good . buildings, all: workable; highway location. Inquire. WARREN ZINN, 528-3710 ALVIT ROBB, 395-3174 e When you -are out waikhg your field -learn what to. look for find -hal i,to iaok .for. problems In your crops. Seminar speaker- from University. of .Guelph, , OMAF, Centralia, and industry. Six weeks There twain! some- spaceavailable. Held at W. G. Thompson, Port Albert. SEMINAR OUTUNES February 03 -Introduction 2:00 - -Course Objectives 4:00 p.m. -Scouting procedure, soil sampling, mapper =Normal phnVdeveiopteentt .Corn, says, cereals February 11 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. February 19 2:00 . 4:00 p.m. February 26 2:00 4100 p.m. 'Dlagnoeing: soil problems, compaction,, erosion -Sok Tests, tissue test,, as a dhgnostic tool Chernierd residue. tests -Nutrient defclencer -Weed ,.Ident(Bea tion -Maiming problem areas' -Economical trettmeut ,levels -Faits years gianiitog -Seed produced by . plants -HerrbkWa action and luj•ury Teed►: 'How lo wont "fide insects ••.�� .Bnsest Idendcation =Damage symptoms, economic treatment thresholds :.%sect cycleowfime of infestation* Ai* heat' to fie. °: `." -Prevention • • March 5 2:00 - 4100 p.m. Diseases. 4Theotry :of Arai infection -Moaln- of infection . =Insect Borne, Soil Borne, Seed .Borne, Mr Berne -Disease Idrentilcada e March 12 2:00 - 4:00 p.m. •Whorl -tip Me ig., -Tie .in Specific Topics .requested For more tnfe rel t .ci d r Street lights discussed West Wawanosh Township Council met for the regular January session on the morning of Tuesday, Jan. 7, 1986 at the office in the municipal building. Reeve Aitchison was absent due to illness. All other members were in attendance. A motion by councillors Brindley and Hamilton -Seeger, That West Wawanosh Township Council hereby appoints Deputy - Reeve Raynard to act as, Head -of -Council for this meeting in the absence of Reeve Aitchison, was carried. No one declared a disclosure of interest at this time. The minutes of the December session were adopted as printed on;motion of councillors Hamilton -Seeger and Cranston, with a provision in the motion adopting,,,,, that the Reeve's: submission for telephone toll charges for 1985 be itemized. The building : inspector presented three applications for building- permits. Council- lors Cranston and Brindley moved, That the building inspector is hereby authorized to issue building permits to 1) J. Stutzman (2 - sugar shed and storage shed) and 2) County of Huron (storage shed). In correspondence dealt with the ques- tion of the street lights in Dungannon, which, according to Ontario Hydro, are becoming obsolete and replacement parts increasingly difficult to obtain. After con- siderable discussion the Clerk was directed to contact Bill Dodds of the Clinton area office to arrange a meeting with the councils of the Townships of Ashfield and West Wawanosh and Ontario Hydro. Council concurred with the resolution of the Township of London to petition the Ontario government to implement legisla- tion whereby volunteer_ firemen are protected by Workers' Compensation, as are full-time firefighters, in the event of heart problems associated with stress generated by fire calls and fire responses. Planner .Cynthia -.Fisher of the Huron= County Department of Plannngand Devei= opment :attended the ;meeting to plan• the next steps in the preparation of a Sec- onarday. plan for. West Wawanosh.. Miss Fisher reviewed .the entire list ,• of steps involved in :the development of a secondary plan for the sake of new .councillors. The next step in . West Wawanosh's develop - mentis line meetings to be hosted by each council member during the last ftvo weeks of February. These meetings are to provide an informal atmosphere for small groups of ratepayers to obtain information and to provide input into the Plan. Notices will be mailed to township residents informing them of the dates and locations of the various line meetings. _. Discussion regarding snowplowing, hir- ing of extra help and rate of pay therefore, condition of equipment of equipment, took a major part of the afternoon. The point was raised that, next year, advertising for applications for extra winter part-time help would' be done early in the Fall. The road superintendent reported that Colborne road superintendent Durnin was request- ing approval from Council to reconstruct another portion of the Boundary road in 1986. The road superintendent was direct- ed to. inform Colborne that West Wawan- osh has no money to be expended for such a project in 1986. A motion by councillors Hamilton -Seeg- er and Brindley, That the Reeve and Clerk are hereby authorized to apply for the annual subsidy on road expenditures in 1985 was passed. Road accounts in " the amount of $15,432.06 were authorized for payment on motion of councillors Brindley and Ham- ilton -Seeger. A motion by councillors Hamilton -Seeg- er and Cranston, That West Wawanosh Township Council hereby gives "first, second and third reading to by-law #2-86 was carried. This by-law (in the amount of $300;000.00) is the annual borrowing by-law to authorize the borrowing of sufficient funds to cover municipal expen- ditures necessary until taxes are collected. A. letter from the trustees of Auburn asked about a .parking by-law for the villages and the , possibility of having some streets black -topped ?hen the county is doing county road 22 -out of Auburn. Council :was -not prepared to anwet either fay query at this time.:. General accounts : in the, 'anionnt of $15,652.66 were authorized for payment. Councillor Brindley ° adjourned to Friday, Jan. 10 for the purpose of dealing with by-law '# 1-86, the by-law to set remuner- ation for. township elected and appointed off cials .and other employees. !Tecond fj]2 to bc- sshown The second film in:the free film series of new releases from the National. Film Board of Canada will be shown at the Lucknow Library Jan. 23 at 7:30 p.m. It is The Masculine Mystique., a 90 minute color film just available., In the-Mascul Mystique, thestories of four men and their relationships with women' "are interwoven to produce this unusual -and intriguing feature-length dramatization. Blue, in his mid -thirties, has spenthis adultyears searching for the right woman without any hick -Hes baffled by women's liberation - what do they want? Alex, the same age as Blue, married with two snail: children, says heneeds his freedom - hers 'having an affair. Mart and Ashley are both, intheir forties, divorced : with children. Mort has found AT THE a ins'ton"jai, Just after midnight on Aug. 3, 1985 Provincial Constable Donald Craig :Camp- bell of Kincardine. OPP. Detachment was kilted, on duty, when ,the .:cruiser in which he Was a passenger was, in collision with a speeding car. Although Craighad only been, on the Force for fourteen months, hehad earned the ?respect .of: all who *knew ° him. He is Sadly .missed and fondly: remembered by hisco-workers at Kincardine OPP Detach: mens. In Craig's memory, Number 6 Branch, ' Ontario Provincial Police Association pres- ented a donation of $2,500 to the Kincaur-°' someone new but she balks at a permanent relationship Ashley, devastated by his divorce, is unwilling to risk a new commit= ment._ Their four stories, sometimes poignant, often very funny, are' shown in dramatic sequences interspersed with scenes of confrontation. Amongst themselves the men probe why they act as • they do. They attack and defend, and perhaps even learn a little about themselves and the changing role of men in.. today'ssociety. dine and. District General Hospital. The money ,was used . to purchase a portable suction :machine: To commemorate this donation, the members of .Kincardine De- ..:taichnient have purchased a suitably en- graved OPP . plaque for display in the hospital- lobby. . N EiflJdi8Whdd The eighth draw of the f ,ucknow and District Sports Complex. Lottery was hed with the4following picking up prices $ Jack ' Treleaven, .1 uckiuow, 5300 - Lloyd ; Hall,' tuckn swy 5100 -, Wayne. Atkinson,. , Lucknow, and, Phil McCann, R TLItektMw. • _ _