Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes-Advocate, 1985-01-30, Page 19Page 18 January 30, 1985 21 For Rent 101- "01 t) !OWN HALL " auditorium 101 rentals including wedding,, meetings, banquet [00111, IC'etlll CS, txhibni01), 111nls, etc. Kitchen facilites asailable. Contact I:Ihum Drawl, 235-2000. 101n S1ORA(.E SPACE asailablc tot )our snossnrobile, hike, barbecue, etc. Rented space a%ailable by square loos. Call Brian 235-0956 between 6 and 8 p.m. Pick UJ) - deli et sersice. 49t1n ('ONIMI:RCIAI. SPACE. for lease in Ex- eter from 10(1(1-5(XX) square feet. Good location, lots til parking. Appy in wrung 10 Box I3P, Exeter Dimes Ads ()cute. Lx- eter, NOM ISO. 5:6c 23 Wanted To Rent THRLI. BEDROOM FARM HOUSL, barn and file to 10 fenced acres in Lxeter area. Must Case ample water for small livestock operation. 1\s0 -year leat ur longer preferred. Apply stating location, rental and length of terra asaitablc to 'lox BAN, the Exeter -1 mfrs-Adsocate, Lxeter. 450 CASH CROP LAND for 1985. Contact Barry Willer( 236-7741. - Iran LAND for 1985 crop. Phone 234-6456.4-7c 28 Auction Sales ONTARIO'S Largest 1 -arm Machinery Consignment Sale, Norwich, Ontario. Fri- day, February 8, 1985. 10 a.m. (Sales con- ducted second Friday each month.) Ap- proximately 150-175 tractors plus all types of farm equipment. Consignments welcome. For more information call (519) 424-9998 or (519) 424-9093. Proprietors K.S. Hamulccki & Sons. 5x Budget Rent A Car Low daily and weekly rates Special weekend rate Fri- day 6 pm.. to Monday 10 a.m. $59.95 including 200 free km's. Mensal! Motors Ltd. 262-3331 Kerosene Kerosene Kerosene Bulk at Centralia Farmers -av 228-6638 Township of Hibbert Change of Meeting Date The February meeting date of the Council of the Township of Hibbert has been changed from February 4th 1985 at 1 p.m. to: Thursday, January 31; 1985 1 p.m. Township Hall Staffa Charles Friend AMCT. Clerk, Township•of Hibbert TENDER FOR THE SUPPLY OF A 1985 1/2 TON PICK-UP TRUCK TRADE-IN: 1981 1/7 ton Dodge Pick-up, Model D-150 Tenders to be in the hands of the clerk -treasurer by 1200 Noon, Monday, February 18, 1985. M.T.C. tender revised forms available from the Road Super- intendent Joan M. Duchar'me Ross Fisher Clerk -Treasurer Road Sup't. STANDING FUELWOOD FOR SALE To improve growing conditions for valuable trees the Ministry of Naturol Resources is thinning a woodlot in Stanley Township and is assisting the woodlot owner in selling morked, stonding trees to o reputable fuelwood controctor. Fuelwood Volume approximately 59 standard cords (one standard cord 128 cubic feet) Location Bayfield area This fuelwood area will be sold as one lump sum to one contractor no partial sales For further details contact Harry Wilson, Ministry of Noturol Resources, RR 5. Winghom, On tario NOG 2W0 Telephone 519-357-3131 or toll free 1-800-765-3003 Onfer,o AArnstry of w ,• <- Nafi r al x,11,. n 5,,,.,. Resource% fw.n v...•.. GIVING ASSISTANCE - Student teacher Cynthia Walkom helps Kathy Gage to her skiing feet at J.A.U. McCurdy School Friday atter- noon. In the background is Mark Mason. T -A photo Zurich Cougar column Room 3 - Grade 2 and 3 The grade 2-3 class of Room 3 are doing a fine job at keeping their room clean, with some help from their teacher Mr. Revington. I think they appreciate Mr. Revington's help keeping the room colourful, this makes us happy. Now we have a nice red and white Canadian flag on our classroom wall, it also is very colourful, The grade 2's enjoy reading about on the farm. The grade 3's enjoy lear- ning about fantasy land. The class is bringing books on what they're studying. By the sounds of things school is go- ing very well for us. Joel Siebert Room 7 - Grade 6 and 7 The grade 6 class of Mr. Weido has been writing many varied types of creative writing in prepearation for the Winter Snow Ecology Week, January 28 to February 1. Students have been using snowshoes to travel into the nearby woods to study various ecological adaptations of animals. With the large amounts of snowfall that we Zurich bowling Monday Ladies League S 1'. Miller 685 011 C. McCarthy 574 !1G S. Stade 566 PP J. Fisher 630 UD 1. Hartman 599 RD S. Rickert 727 AO S. Doxtator 683 G11 B. Bierling 628 PH S. Hay 51:3 Nut IBM Jim 541 HL F. Lavinsky 430 Tuesday Mens League 011 L. Hoffman 598 TT L. Bedard 603 B R. Bierling 686 1' G. !fusion N C. Wurm It J. Bedard GF' K. Jeffrey Wednesday Exeter Ladies It. Berends M. Brintnell 11. Coates t.. Seigner IIS Berends IIS at. Brintnell 6(15 704 587 686 503 427 487 432 203 169 Thursday (;rand ('ove Estates 11 Marshall 11 Broad .1 \'Vhtlstnith S. Trowbridge (' F'lesvellvn 11 Thomson Thursday Golden 490 449 587 532 451 5:37 Age Seniors 1. O'Rourke 258 I, Dandier 244 1 Neeb 283 F'. Moore 276 115 F' Moore 167 'Thursday Night Mixed League (:T 1) Smith 647 1 I. Melodic 456 Al' F Palen 667 GG M McDonald 558 TI1 I. ,lacohe 55? It .1 Jacobs 475 Saturday Interim%n Iloa lnmr vs "Zurich Zurich I. Dale 12611 IIS I. Dale 205 Ito%(more .1 Marshall 1168 IIS Dwayne S .3:30 Exeter sc dikes \o. 1 Mikes \o. I Rost mars 7110 Exeter 11 liierhnl 616 Zurich ss dikes 11 Zurich 1 bred \likes 11 I) Pahnly 1000th lin%link SF' .1 Crown :340 11 .1 l'aers :146 AT V Brokenshire 232 13) (' Overholt 266 1)11 I) Rader 311 Sr. Girls IIA M ('tiers 111) N1 ('aers 115 M ('aerx Sr. Boys n,\ 111) 115 IIA III) IIS 111 111) Its 11.\ III) 14' N1 hall M !tall .1 ("aers 61-, 681 18 'l 27 28 :111 1:,0 401 217 154 37.3 210 .1t, (:iris Dicker( 1.12 Dicker! 1.16 1)ir kerl 18') .Ir. limas 1) Overholt 1:,0 T 1 anshergen .186 1 lanshergen 217 Raffia in (.irl% .1 Clarke 114 .1 ('rows )8.' .1 1'rmwn nanlant (toys 11\ It 11:1f1 _ 111) 1) 4(ader 115 1) Itad'r have had, snowshoes are the only form of footwear plausible. The students are eagerly awaiting all of the special workshops (both in- side and outside) that will be taking place during Ecology Week. We all hope the weather co-operates. Room 8 - Grade 7 and 8 We would like to welcome the students of Zurich Public School back from their most enjoyable Christmas holidays. During the holidays our grade 2 and 3 teacher Mrs. Eagleson had a baby on January 2. We would also like to we come Mr. Revington who is taking her place until the beginning of April. Ms. Querengueser, who recently returned from a six-month stay in Australia, is with us again. She enter- tained some of the students by show- ing some fascinating slides. Another new face we'll see around the school for the next 2 weeks is Jen- nifer MacKnight, from Barrie, On- tario. Jennifer is taking part in the Katimavik Program which is nine months long and ends on March 20 for her. She has travelled to three dif- ferent provinces (Quebec, Ontario and Alberta ) and has met many new people. January 29 - February 1 is Ecology Week at our school. The topic this year is "snow" (and we surely have enough of that). Everybody will be out and about. The grade 6, 7 and 8 students will be doing some cross country skiing and igloo building. Open letter to Ag Minister Dear Dennis: In our meetings around the pro- vince with county and district Ontario Cattlemen's Association members, we have: discovered uniform feelings of great frustration on the part of the Cattlemen. These feelings are the result of the inability of the executive members to discuss openly and fair- ly with their membership your recently released report of the Beef Marketing Agency Commission. Your ultimatum to the Ontario Cat- tlemen's Association Executive that they not take a public position on the report nor publicly comment on it under threat of having the proposed changes unilaterally imposed is reprehensible. Firstly and foremost we in the On- tario Liberal Party believe that in- dividual producers have a right to hear not only from those promoting the recommended changes but also from those holding divergent views. We in the Ontario Liberal Party de- mand that the executive of the On- tario Cattlemen's Association be allowed fully to participate in the discussion process. Surely if the changes as proposed in the report are for the good of the beef industry, the report should be able to stand on its own merit without your action to muz- zle comment on it. We fail to understand how your ac- Tuckersmith session During local government week Tuckersmith Township Council con- ducted a brief council session in the auditorium at Huron Centennial School at Brucefield for the senior students to learn about municipal affairs. After watching the council members in action the students ask- ed questions, and one that a young fellow asked was what could be done to stop a neighbour's cattle from trespassing. A discussion was held and Reeve Robert Bell spoke of the importance of keeping line fences mended and -the role of fence viewers which council appoints each year, and about having stray cattle impounded and what a pound was. Huron county warden Paul Steckle, the reeve of Stanle townshi e s t r ke to the students on Huron County coun- cil. Mr. Steckle placed several ques- tions to the students, to which they will write their answers later: "What do you think should be done with the Huron County Museum?" He spoke of the costly renovations needed for the building. The warden asked: "What would you do with a group of employees who are making demands for increases in salary in excess of the guidelines set down by the provincial government?" In a special session with students from Stanley, warden Steckle had them respond to and write down the names of their reeve, their members of council, road superintendent, clerk, assistant clerk, fence viewers and all the other people who make up the total local : overnment team. GOVERNMENT EDUCATION CLASS - Janet Coleman, a stu • ent at Huron Centennial School, handed a brief to Warden Paul Steckle at the special local government education class held January 15. (Wilma Oke photo) tions to silence duly elected members by a majority of producers can possibly be justified in a democratic system. Furthermore, it is our position that the question to be placed on the ballot be made public now, so discussions held will be relevant to the question to be decided. Once again, we believe that inform- ed discussion will provide the in- dividual member with the best background upon which to base his or her decision. As it is now, many producers are reaching into the dark in a vain effort to examine the question which ap- pears to be illusive. How are pro- ducers to make informed decisions on a program which could redefine the whole beef industry without open and full discussion? At this stage, we further urge your assurance that sufficient polling sta- tions will be provided for producers in which to cast their ballot. The practice of providing one poll- ing place per county as was the case the last time a plebescite was held among producers was not sufficient to ensure a good turnout and will not be sufficient at this time. Therefore, we look to you to provide easy access for balloting purposes. At a time when the beef industry stands at a critical stage in its development, you as the Minister should be encouraging full and open debate on all options available. The beef producers of Ontario deserve nothing less than complete honesty. Murray Elston, M.P.P. Huron -Bruce RRSP 1 03/4 1 year RRSP 1 1/2 S years v; � 3 For Preferred Sole Dotes Confirm Your Auction NOW CONTACT BRUCE RATHWELL - MANAGER DICK ROBINSON - WENDT KLOSS RATHWELL & ASSOCIATES INC. Hwy. 414, Brucefield, Ont. 482.7181 Ma -Specials Decorator 12"x 12" Ceiling Tiles Tiles are tongue and groove for easy instal- lation and feature a professional supercoat white finish. Sold in cartons of 32. Gypsum Drywall An economical wall panel ideal for building or im- proving walls or ceilings. 3/8" 4 x. 8 Stylish Panelling An inexpensive way to add the "Look" of real wood at afractionof the cost. Adds warmth and beauty to any room. from sht. Ridgid Foam Insulation The practical, economical insulating choice. Saves energy and keeps your home more comfortable, in winter and summer. Lightweight and easy to install panels won't sag or shrink, cuts with utility knife or ordinary hand tools. 4 x 8 sht. 1 '/2" styrocoat Polyethylene Vapour Barrier Available in a variety of thicknesses and roll sizes. 00 4 mill roll 100" x 180" Prehung Door Prehung DI doors available in many sizes and price ranges t�11 Fe ;I I Iin e�� a' P `tees Insulation in Friction Fit costs you money be held in Energy toss Designed to be . Un wasted tweenframing ote bee place t allow choice ,nsulating Ideal for walls or re pour faced to a insulation barriers. Update your today Centralia Phone 228-6638 Open Mon. - Fri. 8 - 6 Sat. 8 - Noon