Clinton News-Record, 1980-10-23, Page 10'TQ I� " ORD, THUR$$DAYp
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TABER 231,19
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by Helen Owen and Bud Sturgeon
John Garrett of Bayfield, struggles under all the
prizes he won at the Bayfield Lions Fishing Derby
on the weekend. (Bud Sturgeon phlito) ,
Baptist Church news
The services at the Bayfield Baptist Church were
well attended on Sunday when Rev. Les Shiel used the
theme Salvation`then service.
He stressed that in God's Word, the Bible, we are
taught° we, must first accept Jesus Christ as our per-
sonal Saviour, then. serve Him in our daily life. We are
to flee .from all that's evil; follow the Lord, daily,
through Prayer and service; and fight for His
righteousness, until He Gomes again to earth as He
promised.
We are to serve through prayehurch attendance,
teaching, leading and Igtaiessing, remembering -
always to do all things unto the Lord. How much time
do I have? How Much time do you have, before He
comes?.
Rev. Bennett
baptizes grandson
On Sunday, October 19
the Rector christened his
grandson, Zachary Neil
Donovan. at Trinity
Anglican Church.
Zachary is the son of
• Mr. and Mrs. Neil Ben-
nett of London and
brother of Gareth and
Mairon. After • the
christening, family and
close friends from
London and Brantford
were entertained at the
Rectory.
Thebeautiful flowers in .
the sanctuary on Sunday
were provided by Mrs. •
Myrtle Robinson.
At the morning service
Euchre
The Bayfield Euchre
Club met on Wednesday
evening, and nine, tables
were in action.
Winners were as
follows; ladies high,
Marg, Dowson; ladies'
low, Grace Duggan;
men's high• George
ljl heard; men's, low, Lloyd
Makins: lone hands,
Clare Merner.
During the meeting, a
moment of silent prayer
was observed for the late
• Fred Telford, who l'ad
passed away recently.
VILLAGE OF
BAYFIELD
Application for position
of
ROAD
' SUPERINTENDENT
for the
VILLAGE OF BAYFIELD
will bo received by the
undo signed until
November 1, 1980. Must
have knowledge of
grader operation and
other . municipal
twaihitiory.
Salary is negotiable
G.G. GRAHAM
CLERK -TREASURER
VILLAGE OF RAYFIELb
the Rector appealled on
behalf of SI:" Monica
Huuse, Waterton. This
establishment has been.
supported by Trinity
Church since 1967. Its
program. -which ranges
from the care.ofepregnant
girls, assistance in
stressful family cir-
cumstances, counselling
and opportunities to help
in the development of
independence and self -
reliability, fulfills a very
necessary role "
pound trout worth $400
When- all the weigh -ins me: "You should have by John Garrett of
werecompleted on seen Milligan landing the Bayfield. •
Sunday at, noon, Ron fish a little while ago with The youngest fisher;
Rawson . of. London a tiny reel and 4 Ib. test". man to catch a fish, Toby
claimedthe top prize in . When. it •was all over, it Zolnai of Kitchener, was
the 2nd Annual Bayfield was none other than Bob awarded a ceramic plate
Lions Trout Derby by Milligan of London, who for his 1 ib• 6 oz. effort. •
catching a rainbow trout claimed the $100 in cash Various other prizes
that tipped the -official for third place. His „were also given to anyone
scales at 8 lbs. 51/2 ozs. , winner weighed 5 lbs. 51/2 that caught a fish and had
The contest, which • ozs. He was accompanied it wei homed-atn duringthe
stai'ttedat aienibn Fr , derby. As well, Norm
and continued throughout who "only caught cold", Fields . of Wallaceburg
the weekend, saw an
increase of 75 percent in
entries, with over 70
participants this year.
Last year's contest was
plagued by poor weather
and not a single rainbow
was caught. However, the
latest version was
equipped with real
fishermen's type
weather. A little sun, a
Iittle cloud, sometimes
windy, sometimes not,
with a ripple on the water
and the wind in the west
(primarily), it all added
a good weekend for
sportsmen entered.
hteen units took
advantage of the
weekend's free camping
at Rainbow Valley.
Taking first prize inthe
derby wads Ron Rawson,
who caught his rainbow
on Saturday afternoon.
His wife. Colleen,
claimed that he spent 13
hours_ fishing on Satur-
day, but at any rate, the
couple madethe drive
from London every day
during the contest.
Along with the $400 in
cash, Ron also receives a
• 'take home' cup from
Molson's Breweries,
which local sales
representative, Brent
Scrimshaw was on hand
to present. His name will
also be engraved on the
large Lions Trophy which
stays on display in the
village, and local
taxidermist Bill.. McNutt
of Dashwood will mount
the prize fish for him,
courtesy of Ausable
Taxidermy. The total
prize package was valued
at more than $600.
When asked what his
winning secret was, Ron,
who had Ianded six
rainbows during the three
days replied, "inflated
worms". -
The second place prize
money of $200 in cash was
awarded to Preston Todd
of Goderich for his catch
weighing 5 lb. 151/2 ozs.
which was landed on
Sunday morning.
Early Sunday morning
one of the anglers sdid to
up t
the
Eig
and Jeff, who landed a
Coho and a Chinook along
the way. The junior
Milligans claimed to be
using the dreaded - '377
Spoon' for their catches.
For those that don't
know, it is a reversed
`alligator' type lure.
The BBQ -Smoker,
donated by Brandon's
Pro.....�Hardware, for the
`heaviest non -rainbow'
was won by Gordon Dill
of Varna, who did battle
with a 19 lb. salmon.
Gordon said he, "used an
id Indian secret", to
atch his prize winner.
Second prize in this Bayfield.
category was a filleting When the cider -pot, got
knife valued at $40, low and the'talk ran high,
donated by McLeod's we heard the real tales of
Fishery in Bayfield, and the weekend, the
went to John Garrett of 'unknown' entrant that
Bayfield, who caught a 15 caught a huge rainbow,
lb. salmon. who rather than take it to
Third prize, an `Old the weigh-in • im-
Pal' tackle box, donated mediately, left it on his
by the Bayfield Building ' stringer where .it
Centre, was won by Andy departed from -some two
'Stickman' Sturgeon, a or three hours later. Then
pre -season favorite that there was the `Stickman'
faded in the early going. • who when queried about
His catch tipped the the 'frozen fish' he was
scales at 13 lbs. After carting along the river
catching a 31 pounder a .bank exclaimed, "I
week ago, when asked caught this one up near
what happened - during Varna and it was so cold
the contest he replied, "I up there, when I put it in
lost some big ones...." the water for a minute it
The Pocket Fisherman," froze. I had to chop it out
donated by the Bayfield of the ice!" The„fisher-
man who as a4quickly
left heading towards
Varna.
All in all it was a superb
won the 'from farthest
away' prize and Ev Earl
of Bayfield ,won the
`second oldest fisherman'
prize. (Nobody present
would admit to being the
eldest).
As the highly suc-
cessful event wound -to a
close at Randy's Cabin in
Rainbow Valley, " the.
crowd gathered around
the old wood stove for a
taste of Old Joes 'hot
apple cider plus' and a
sample of some A-1
smoked Sturgeon and
Whitefish courtesy of
McLeod's Fishery in
Lioness, for the guy or gal
under . 16_ years of age
cat6hirig the biggest fish
(any species),
l
was won
Anstett J
LIMITED .
11 ALBERT Si., CLINTON. 482-391 f
WE'RE AT YOUR SERVICE...
• On -staff goldsmith for repairs to fine jewellery
• In-store watch repairs, including battery installations %
• Fast in-store engraving
• In-store ring sizing
• Appraisals by our on -staff Certified G-emologist %
(AGS).
%
HOURS: Monday through Saturday, 9
a.m. - 6 p.m.; Friday nights till 9 p.m.
contest and the Lions
Club are pleased with the
turnout. Nobody , was a
loser.
The draw for the
fishing rod and reel was
'won by Bud Robinson of
Bayfield, and the
ceramic fisherman was
won by Ory ' Zorin of
Marlette,. Michigan.
As I walked away from
the tiny cabin on the river
flats, Eric, Joe, George,
Randy and Paul were still
bailing cider, and
glancing back I thought,
"Geez, I shoulda entered
this year
Coun
id finishes term
Bayfield 'Village
Council met : on October
20, imrpediately4ollo.wing
a meeting of the
Ratepayers Association
when nominated can-
didates for the new
council • gave an account.
of themsglves •
The retiring Reeve,
Frank McFadden,
presented :a report of
village affairs to date and
-Jack Willock expressed
the thanks and ap'
preciation of the
residents for all thework
that had been carried out
by, Reeve McFadden
during his terms of office.
George Fellows, the
incoming Reeve, en-
dorsed these remarks,
congr. -Mr.
McFadden on doing an
excellent job, sometimes
under difficult and
diverse circumstances.
Speaking for himself Mr.
Fellows expressed
willingness to serve
KENNY ROGERS
his
a
village such as Bayfield.
He hoped, he said, that::
`during his two years of
office he would be able, to
serve the various in-
terests
n-
ter. es,.ts involved and
pledged himself to do his,
best for the benefit of all
concerned,
Council then proceeded
to its regular' business.
After the reading of the
minutes of ' the last
arraeeting and the
correspondence received,;
a large part 4f the time
was concentrated on
clearing up outstanding
matters as far as
possible.
It was agreed that no.
more gravel .would be
,cemovecth xillage
gravel pit. The report of
the Bayfield building
inspector was submitted
to the council updating
them on activities on
their behalf.
The complaint
regarding drainage
across Angus Street
where it joined Cameron
had been investigated
and steps to remedy the
Tan to page
11
•
VILLAGE OF
BAYFIELD
Application for position •
of
CLERK TREASURER,
TAX.COLUCTOR
for the
VILLAGE OF BAYFIELD
Must have knowledge of
accounting and collet-
flons, and knowledge of
municipal procedure or
willingness tra enrol in a
AMTC course would. be
an asset.
Applications accom-
-pan iedu-by°-resu im e_of--
qualifications and .ex-
perience will be
received by the under-
signed until November
'1, 1980. 6.G. GRAHAM
• CLERK -TREASURER
VILLAGE OF
BAYFIELD
KENNY ROGERS
"Greatest Hits"
�
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
"The River" .
NANA MOUSKOURI
"Nana Come With Me"
IS OVER
BUT for This Week Only we have
Special Prices on Odds and Ends
Stock must be cleared to make room for the i 98-1.nodels arriving daily.
BOB SEGER
"Against The Wind"
• McClary Fridges
• Hot I3oint,Microwave Ovens
• General Electric Washers
M my other Specials, on our sales floor - Over 300 Major Appliances on di plc,v
e -
We do our Own Service - Not Factory Service
DRYSDALE MAJOR APPLIANCE CENTRE LTD. HENSALL
e Plac
e To Buy Appliances Any ()Fon FritMy ht hit ri , rvs 262-2725
A