The Goderich Signal-Star, 1975-06-12, Page 19PAGE 6A—GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1975
cz, New legislation helps
CHURCHPICNIC
Dungannon Nile Pastoral
charge held a special worship
service and picnic at
Menesetung Ci'mp to recognize
50 years of church union. The
hymns and sermon folloWed the
theme, "That All May be One".
Music was provided by
Donna Sue. Errington and Jan
Caesar who sang with Donna
Sue playing her -guitar and by
Frances and Irene Logtenberg
who sang and accompanied
themselves with their guitars.
After the service a bounteous
lunch was enjoyed by all. Mr.
Cliff McNeil, clerk of session,
made the presentation of an
envelope of money to Rev. and
Mrs. McClenaghan on behalf of
Nile congregation.
Rev. McClenaghan made a
fitting reply and thankedthe
gathering for their co-operation
during his six years as
'minister.
The results of the races were
as follows:
Four years and under - Jeff.
McMichael, Arletta Glenn,
Scott McMichael,
Six years and under - Kenny
Logtenberg, Sheri Smyth,
Craig McNeil.
Eight years and •under -
Kenny Logtenberg, Iinda
Hart; Rhonda McMichael and
Cathy Snyder (tied),
Ten years and under - Janice
Pollock, Colin Snyder, Carol
Ann Smyth.
TwelVe years and": under -
Glenda Park, Janice Pollock,
Simon Logtenberg.
Three-legged race (eight
years and under) - 1st Janice
Pollock and Carol Ann Smyth -
2nd Jodie Kerr and Linda Hart.
Rhonda McMichael and Cathy -
Snyder (tied)
Twelve years and under - 1st
Debbie Kerr and Cheryl Hart -
2nd Simon Logtenberg and
BaP'ry Smyth.
Sack Race - (eight years and
under), Linda Hart, Jodie -Kerr,
Cathy Snyder; (10 years and
under) Linda ,Hart, Janice
Pollock, Larry Henry and Carol
Ann,Smyth (tied) ; (12 yrs. and
under) Cheryl Hart, Glenda
Park and Barry Smyth.
Wheelbarrow races (eight
years and under) Sheri Smyth
and Jim Wright, Rhonda
McMichael and Cathy Snyder; S
Marsha Boak and Jodie Kerr.
(12 yrs. and under) Barry e
Smyth and Simon Logtenberg;
Cheryl, Hart and Debbie Kerr;.
Janice Pollock and Linda Hart.
Kick the Slipper - (9 yrs. and
under) Larry Henry, Cathy
Snyder; (12 yrs. and under) d
Col in Snyder, Debbie Kerr.
A friendly ball game was
enjoyed by a mixed group -to
complete an enjoyable af-
ternoon's programme.
SOCIAL NOTES •
Mr. and Mrs. B.F. Comfort of P
St. Catharines are spending a b
few days with Mrs. Cecil Blake,
Barbara Blake is home from H
Toronto for a few days.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Wilbur t
and Mrs. D.S. Fines of Toronto c
carnet° their summer home for
the weekend., Mrs. Fines is p
remaining for a visit with her s
sister-in-law, Mrs. Cecil Blake.
Visitors on Thursday with
Mrs. Lil McDonald and Mr.
Frank Moulton were Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Stautenburg of
Kitchener and Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. Padget and Mrs; Isabel
Percival olCambridge.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Eedy of
Strathroy spent the weekend
Eedy,wit
hhis mother, Mrs. Heber
" Johnny, Greg and Larissa
Aldham spent the weekend with
Mrs. Mary Bere and family.
Field Day for five area
schools was held at Brookside
on Wednesday. Mrs. Wilson and
her Grade One class, ac-
companied by several parents,
took a bus' trip to African Safari
at Rockton on Friday.
Brookside school pupils,
teachers and some .parents
enjoyed a band concert on
Friday when 'Miss Mary
Andrew and her students, from
Woodland Heights Setior
Public School, London per-
formed a variety of numbers
including those by the per-
cussion ensemble and the stage
band group.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fowler
spent part of the weekend at
Parkhill with Mr. and Mrs.
Thos. Fowler and family.
Visitors on Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Fowler were Mr. John
Fowler 'of Grand Bend, Mr.
Gordon Ball of Morden, Man.
and Mrs. Fern MacDonald of
Rexdale. •
Mrs. Donald Stroh and two
boys of Pembroke sent a few
days with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Andrew
WI
t
The Dungannon Branch of
Women's Institute met at the
home of Mrs. Wilbur Brown in
Lacknow on Wednesday
evening, June 4.
President Mrs. Graham
McNee extended a welcome to
all, who had come through the
June rain. Roll call, "Name a
Province of Canada and give its
flower emblem," was-- an-
swered by 18 members and two
visitors.
Mrs. Robt. Irvin then com-
mented on each floral
llustration in the church
calendar. As convener of
Agriculture she also gave a
plendid motto on "It is not
what we have, but how we
njoy what we have that makes
s happy."
The guest speaker, Mrs.
Frances (Alton) Elphick, in-
troduced by Mrs. Cecil Blake,
ave the topic on Flower
rrangement which were
eveloped adeptly for several
ifferent occasions. Flowers
rom her own garden; fresh and
dried, were used in interesting
manner., Mrs. Clarence
cClenaghan expressed ap-
rediation to Mrs. Elphick.
A flower contest was enjoyed
y all. •
In the business period, Mrs.
arry Girvin, secretary-
easurer, read the minutes,
reasurer's report and
orrespondence.
Items of business were:
lates with the W.I. crest were •
old. Mrs. Warren Zinn was
thanked for having prepared
the program booklets; Home
baking had been donated and
take?' ,.to Huronview tea and
bazaar. A- canvass is to be
conducted for Canadian
Arthritis, later.
Fofty cents per, mernber is to
be given to support a foster
child which is a District
project. Children's Aid 'Society
is also to be supported and a ,
craft gift is to be sent to area
convention.
• A soldtitlid impromptu report
of the District Annual, held at
Blyth on Monday, May 26th,
was given by Mrs. Elmer Black
stressing the theme, "Equality,
Development and Peace:" * * * *
Mrs. Black read a short *
address of appreciation to Mrs.
C. McClenaghan, a valued *
member; who will be moving in *
July to Paisley, and presented *
her with a cup and saiicer- • *
(trillium design). P Mrs. 4_
McClenaghan replied, ex- "r
Instant
Friendship
The warm greeting of
your Welcome Wagon
hogreSs with "The Most
Famous gasket in the
World" will introduce,
you to our community
and start you on the
way tbward new an&
lasting friends,hips. -
If you are new in town,
call
.4rainl.(e/147#0C
LTD
ph:rne 524-6675
•
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• - 41,4,- •
.1
*
Establish credit for young farmers
The Government of Ontario,
through the Hon. ,William A.
Stewart, Minister of
Agriculture and Food; an-
nounced a Guaranteed Credit
Program fdr Young Farmers in
the Legislature on Thursday,
May 1, 1975. ,Under the new
program, .young farmers or
potential farmers between the
ages 0( 18 and'35 will 'be able to
obtain provincial guaranteed
intermediate-term loans for
farm development' purposes.
The program will apply to
young farmers entering far-
ming for the first time; for
farmers wanting to rent land or
Young people.....
(continued from page 3M
when a person is fairly realistic progress is that they should end
about himself. Only by' their formal schooling with the
knowing yourself - your conviction that with con -
potential and the strength of structive original thought they
your will to develop it - can you can build on that foundation
do all that you are capable of some contribution to the
doing. „; progress of their profession,
Be prepared to cope with business or trade. Employers
change and the problems it everywhere are looking for,
brings. , A person's such Yk;)ung :people, with'
physiological, psychological education, intelligence, and'
and health characteristics are drive enough to take up some of
different at every age. This the burdens.
change is part of the normal
process of development, Some
great musicians, says critics,
were guilty of working up to
colossal climaxes early in a
composition and then blasting
away at -the same chord over
and over again, ruining the
moment by being reluctant to
leave it.
Having problems does not
mean allowing oneself to be
flattened out by . them. The
shadow cast by a problem may
be transparent or only a.
passing shade. What a healthy -
minded person seeks is not to
be relieved of responsibility for
conducting his - life, but
toughness and determination to
live successfully under
pressure.
At no stage in your career is
it wise to trust to luck. A -good
mood in which to tackle life is to
believe that luck will never
desert you when 'you are
prepared to do without it.
At the relief of Dunkirk a
motor torpedo- boat snarled
away from England to pick up "stand, a sturdy fulcrum, and
its quota of beleaguered British • the lever of your particular
and Franch soldiers. The qualities will move any ob-
signalman on. shore flashed to stacle.
it: "Good luck." The captain Much of the misery of life is
replied: "Thanks. Actually we caused by efforts to control the
rely on skill." Uncontrollable. The•message of
Whatever part you choose'to Epictetus, a stoic _philosopher
play on the world stage, keep in of the first century A.D., may
mind that life is like a candid be paraphrased in this way: a
camera: it does not wait for you pers'on's environment contains
to pose. You cannot adopt two'sets of factors, those. which
safely the Bohemian belief that are controllable by him and
washing the dishes should be those- which are beyond -his
left until they are needed. control. The wise and happy
person is he who applies
Vital to high achievement is
the capacity for directed and
sustained energy expression.
Ambition is not merely holding
outhyour hand to receive: it is
positive, purposeful, energetic,
creative and self-assertive.
When a noted artist was
asked how to attain perfection
of drawing combined with
resplendence of. colour, he
replied: "Know what you have
to do and do it.'
Your future is not a novel that
you can leave on a shelf to read
later. It requires a resolute
facing of the world as it is now
and as it is becoming. We shall
se some things looming in that
future about which we can do
nothing. But in most affairs
what we do f,oday may have a
most significant influence in
helping us to share in, the
human enterprise..
Search for. a vacuum and
expand into it. Seek a place
where your special qualities
can be used to the greatest
advantage. Find a firm place to
DO YOUR BEST
Some people's lives are
pressed down and running over
with earned honours: ' others
are empty with an emptiness
that will never be filled because
they will not try. There may be
a certain placidity, but there is
little 'that is interesti.ng, in the
life of, a person whose main
object is to avoid thought, work
and effoi-t.
This year's graduates are
about to try their wings,
-hitherto used only in theoretical
flight, against the bracing air of
reality. They need a proper
foundation of knowledge and
ability and a fair share of in-
telligence.'
More important for their
himself to controlling the
controllable items and refuses
to worry about the others.
That you .cannot yet com-
prehend fully the universe in
which you run your .race is no
More surprising than that
.Roger Bannister broke the
four -minute mile only after
eight years continuous
training.
Myrtle Cook, theToronto girl
who won the 10'0 -yard gold
medal at the Olympics in 1928,
was asked by Laurier Lapierre
on television in January: "What
do you think about when you
are 'poised at the starting line
waiting for. the signal?" She
replied:"You just think: 'run
•as fast as you can',:'
DELICIOUS'
Meals or Saadi.
NOW FULLY
..;LICENSED
GODERICH RESTAURANT
STEAKHOUSE & TAVERN Ltd.
LICENSED UNDER THE LIQUOR LICENSE ACT .
• WEST STREET
pressing her deep feelings.
Following collection and *
courtesies the hostesses, Mrs.
)4"
Chester Finnigan, Mrs. Gordon *
Finnigan and Mrs. Russell 4_
Alton served a delicious lunch •"r" *
and conversation continued to * *
Saturday June 14th
****** ********** * Isr*
BICYCLE
SAFETY )*:
centre around - floral *
arrangements.
SALTFORD VALLEY
HALL
\ FOR RENT
Phon Ed Van den Broeck
524-99 4 or 524:.9366
...•,..)ky 7i.. 41
los •
*
9 a.m.
GODERICH MEMORIAl. ARENA f*
Sponsored by
'60DERICH KINSMEN CLUB
GODERICH POLICE DEPARTMENT
'and
Bring Own Bicycle
*°19°
PRIZES IN, EACH CATEGORY
6
for farn)ers owrling land and
of mayinterest, require only t
upper limit, The first t‘p\a•oyym%nr,st
acres.
wishing to rent additional
Each loan will be for a period
of up to ten years, without an
dependingheon
conaitions and circumstances,
with the remaining eight years
requiring principal plus in-
terest payments. The rate of
interest will be prime plus one
percent. ,
The new intermediate term
credit program will tie into the
government's program of
maintaining govc•rnment -
owned land in agricultural
production -in situations such as
the North Pickering and
Townsend projects. By
providing the „opportunity to
rent . agricultural land, the
credit package should generate
sufficient cash flow over a
period 'of years to assist a
young farmer in the eventual
puTIchcaaSne of fe he swohwernefarmoremand
more young men would be
encouraged 'to lease private
lands held by developers and
private owners around 'urban
center's," said Mr, -Stewart.
"This rented band means ,a
young person. can launch his
farming career or indeed ex-
pand an existing faren
operation while .avoiding the
Pttle
(4J11fl
BAYFIELD
is open
MONDAY TO SATURDAY
Lunch 12:30 to 1:30
Afternoon Tea 2 to 5
. Dinner 6 to 7
SUNDAY
Brunch 10:30 to 1
Afternoon Tea 2 to 5
Dinner 5:30 to 7
For Reservations Call
565—i 61 1 '
•
WELCOME
SERVICE
would like to call you With
"housewarming gifts" and in-
formation about your new
location. The Hostess will be
glad to arrange your svbscrip-
tion to the Signal -Star
Call her at 524-7854 •
obstacle of land- cOstli. until a
repayment Capacityis.
generated."
Loan applications will be
made through the local
agricultural representative's
office in each county, and. will
b1' processed through an
Ontario Ministry of Agriculture
and Food Committee.
Applicants will work out with
Ministry staff the amount,
terms and repayment
schedules, based on the
borrower's repaymentt
capacity. 3'
Included in the consultation
process is the requirement.for a
satisfactory production plan for
the farm, All inquiries should ,
be directed W. the local county
office of the Ontario Ministry of
Agriculture and Food where
application forms should be
available within the next three
weeks,
CAR
WASH
Would you like your car
cleaned inside.and out so that -
it again shines? The Clinton
Junior Farmers will do it for
you., Bring it to SEERS
GARAGE in Auburn or
GRIFFITHS GARAGE. in
Blyth between 1 and 4 p.m: on
SATURDAY, JUNE 14th.
Weiltclean your car in and out.
ifor 52. See you Saturday.
The Bovarta• n Tavern
HIGHWAY21, BAYFIELD
• DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS
• QUIET DINING IN •
A COZY ATMOSPHERE.
WEEKEND SPECIAL
Pork & Veal Cutlet -•
Esterhazy with Dumplings 15.50
OPEN 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. 7 DAYS A WEEK
-.-FULLY LICENSED —
-T;
•
Frank & Gus Carry -Out
PIZZA
ALSQ
SPAGHETTI -LASAGNA -RAVIOLI
50 WEST STREET, GODERICH
(Near The Laundroinat) •
524-7662
OPEN
Monday to Thursday 4-2
Friday and.Saturday 4-3:30 •
Sunday 4-12 except Holidays
WE DELIVER — 50c
We now have: 18" PARTY SIZE Pith
SUTTON PARK INN -
Hwy. 21 North ,
- Kincardine
IN THE STORNOWAY LOUNGE
THISWEEK
The popular Irish group who have entertained you in two
previous engagements at the inn
NEXT WEEK
By special arrangement the man with the golden voice. This
great act plays the best clubs in the province.
PAR 3"
"RAY
HUTCHINSON
and
GRAND PARADE"
•4,7
IN THE WILLIAMSBURG DINING ROOM
This Saturday & Sunday
"FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL"
10 ozoT. Bone Steak Dinner •
Intluding 'a trip to our famous Salad Bar, Dessert of fresh'
strawberries with ice cream.
$5.95
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Now:..AccOpti00.:1tioltirigi for
"The
Downstairs
Rowe
+ Air Conditioned !'
+. Completely Private
-I- Seating for
up to 86
+ Bar facilities available
+ Fully Licensed
IDEAL:FOR
*WEDDING RECEPTIONS
*BANQUETS
.*PRIVATE PARTIES
*MEETINGS
*PRIVATE DINNERS •
AND IT'S NOT TOO EARLY TO
BOOK YOUR
CHRISTMAS PARTY
PHONE GUS AT 524-7711
FOR MORE INFORMATION
OR COME IN AND INSPECT 4.
THIS ROOM YOURSELF
„ .
i) •
RESTAURANT & TAVERN
Hwy, 21, Goderlch
5244711
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•
•
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