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Clinton News-Record, 1983-09-21, Page 15
On Sept. 20 Septa 23 Septa 23 Sept. 24 Sept® 24 Sept® 24 Sept® 25 Sept® 25 Sept. 25 Septa 26 Sept® 27 1 PAGE 14-CLINTON NEWS -RECORD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21,1983 ree. Vii. ;.. s Seniors to f lob. ut <mn pot luck su per By Bertha MacGregor HENSALL - The Three Links Senior Citizen club commenced their fall meetings with a pot luck sup- per on Sept. 13. A short business meeting followed the supper and Mrs. Aldeen Volland, first vice president chaired the meeting. Mrs. Irene Davis gave a detailed report of the 25th annual convention at Wind- sor. It was announced the Fall Rally will be held at Seaforth Arena on Oct. 5 at 1:30 p.m. with registration at 1 p.m. Numerous bus trips were discussed with little in- terest shown. Mrs. Rosa Harris installed the officers for the ensuing term. Mrs. Evelyn Flynn and Mrs. Edith Bell con- ducted euchre. Winners were: men's high, Clarence Volland; low, Vera Lem- uion; lone hands, Irene Blackwell; ladies' high, Mrs. Gertie Moir; ladies' low, Pearl Taylor; Lucky cup, Vera Lemmon. South Huron Youth for Christ After a successful year, the board members and their wives enjoyed a hot turkey dinner at Bob Heywood's Restaurant on Sept. 15. The first Fall Rally will be held in the Brucefield school on Oct. 1 at 8 p.m. A film will be shown entitled "High Point". Quizzing will begin at the November rally. There will be interesting pro- grams for the coming rallies, plan to attend and br- ing all the family. Centennial Committee Back to Work The Centennial CoFrunitee is back to work after taking a break for the month of August. While there was no regular meeting in August committee members were still working on various pro- jects. The Centennial plates have arrived and tickets for the gold draw, are available at several outlets and from committee members. Get yours while supplies last. Meetings resume this month so be sure to keep Sept. 27 open. If you are not on a committee and would like to help come to Hensall United Church next Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. We need your support in planning a party the whole Community can enjoy. Ladies Meet Winnie Skea presided over the devotional of the WMS of Carmel Presbyterian church on Monday evening. Mrs. Eleanor Thompson was ecretary. Dorothy Taylor gave the study on Pacific Islands "Nuclear Power". Mrs. Cathy Bell gave the treasurer's report. The United Church Ladies of Zurich invited the ladies to be their guests on Oct. 6 at 8 p.m. Huron Presbyterial will be held at Belgrave on bet. 12 at 1:30 p.m. The next meeting will be held Oct. 3 at 8 p.m. Mrs. Tayor presided for the Ladies' Aid meeting with Mrs. Hoggarth as secretary. The annual bazaar will be held Nov. 5 at 2 p.m. Mrs. Gloria Mousseau and Mrs. Florence Hyde will serve tea at the October meeting. It was decided to ask the Ar- nold Circle to decorate for Thanksgiving. Queensway Visits Western Fair A number of Queensway residents enjoyed a van trip by Ellison's Travelways to Western Fair where they viewed exhibits and saw the grandstand performance. Rev. Forsythe in company with Peter Snell conducted worship service on Tuesday. A silent movie on Thursday evening with lots of laughs was much enjoyed by residents. Bowling at the Zurich bowling lanes on Friday resulted with Neil Regan high scorer -148. Birthday Greetings to Jack Lowe and Levine Fink- beiner who had September bihtdays. United News Ventures In Mission, a pro- ject of the United Church of Canada was the theme of the service at the United Church on Sunday morning as Rev. Stan McDonald spoke on Stewardship. A mixed quartette con- sisting of Rita Scholl, Belva Fuss, Bill and Tom Bailey sang. The ushers for the ser- vice were Rod and Randy Parker, Tim Rawcliffe, and Steven Gerstenkorn. Paul Alexander greeted the con- gregation. The flowers at the front of the church were placed in honor of the mar- riage of Lori Flynn to Rolf Zwikirsch which took place in the church on Saturday. New members for both Junior and Senior Choir were encouraged as they begin their fall season. Hensall 4-H Club Sept. 13 Hensall 4-H girls started their first meeting by doing exercises. The group read new 4-H hooks and also discussed subjects for the following meetings. The election was held and officers are: president, Liz Sangster; vice-president, Mary Ducharme; treasurer, Janet Mowat; secretary, Christine Rose. Trying to select a name for the club was very difficult and no name was chosen at this meeting. Leaders of 4-H girls are Janet Sangster, Nancy Parker and Gail Sangster. by Christine Rose. Funding cuts possible for. centres Daycare workers from Wingham and Tuckersmith Daycare Centres fear for the future of their centres if pro- posed funding cuts go through. Jane Lane, supervisor at the Wingham Daycare Cen- tre, explained, "Parents will ae asked to pay in the range of $20 per day which is the actual per diem rate." The future of daycare and day nurseries was the topic of conversation at the September meeting of the Huron County Community Services Council. Valerie Bolton, chair- woman of the council, ex- plained, "Daycare is funded by three levels of govern- ment, federal, provincial and municipal, so the whole issue is very complex. But essentially what it comes down to is'that the provincial government is phasing out its support to daycare and parents will be forced to pay the full cost for their children unless they qualify for social assistance." Getting social assistance will require having an inter- view with a social worker from Huron County social services and the family in- come has to be quite low to qualify. "It will close our centre," said Karen McEwing, a supervisor -of Tuckersmith Day Care Centre. "We. have some children who are sub- sidized by Huron County social services but there will not be enough of them to keep the centre full." Most council members agreed that it is a humiliating experience for people to have to apply for assistance and give an ac- count of their family finances. Pat Bailey, Deputy Reeve of Wingham and member of the Wingham Day Care Cen- tre board of directors, is angry about the proposed cuts. "Only a few years ago the government built this beautiful centre and funded it 100 percent. Now they are simply willing to turn their backs on it and let it close down." She encouraged council members to individually write Frank Drea and Bill Davis to protest the cuts in funding. Council members sup- ported the daycare workers by passing a motion to write aiTetter of *WA and=t dud copies to their MP and MPPs. In other council business, it was decided to hold another information day in November which will be open to the public. The infor- mation day will include workshops, films and displays from the various county agencies. Smile White collar worker - someone who carries his lunch in a briefcase instead of a lunchbox. A true diplomat is always ready to lay down your life for his country. Mr. and Mrs. Brian Nell McGregor .. Wesley WillisUnited Church hi Clinton was the setting of the Sept. 16 wedding of Brian Neil McGregor of Brucefield and Terri Ann Murney of Clinton. Rev. James Bechtel officated at the service. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Don McGregor of RR 1 Brucefield and the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Murney of 169 Maple St., Clinton. Barb Young of 131 Isaac St., Clinton was the maid of honor and bridal attendants were Sandra McGregor of London, Kathy Bylsma of Clinton and Luann Taylor of London. The flowergirl was Katie McGregor of Londesboro and Jeff McGregor of RR 5 Clinton was the ringbearer. Rick Forbes of RR 2 Clinton was the best man and ushers were Ken Hesselwood of Blyth, John Wood of London and Randy McGregor of RR 1 Brucefield. Following a reception at the Goderich Township Com- munity Centre, the newlyweds honeymooned in the United States. The couple are making their home at 160 Queen St., Clinton. ( Frank Philips photo) ,� IT'S WORTH= 00 «s or 1 lr ',.'-• maisomammilk ¥ 345-2250 THE. DRIVE! Main St., Dublin OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 9 P.M. Closed Mondays GoK1s�.-0F A PAX eF P.SSOCs pxRN 00010 . GPos aUdt EO C�SARpG G 011.0 g S GH OS' 00 THE BOARD AND BATTEN GIFTS AND HANDICRAFTS 9 Rattenbury Street hast. Clinton 182-37211 01'1:,ti: 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.. Fri. till 6:1111 CIoaed Wednesdays and Sundays ,rate sch of enrollment u By Stephanie Levesque Kindergarten teachers may be' hired to compensate for the overall enrolment in- crease in some Huron -Perth separate schools. First day enrolment statistics presented at the Huron -Perth Separate School Board's September 12 meeting show an overall enrolment upswing of 53 students. This is the first in- crease experienced by this board in 10 years. The increase is all in Perth County which has 66 more students enrolled this year than expected. Actual enrol- ment in the county increased by 35 students, from 1,354 in 1982 to 1,389 students this year. In Huron, separate schools report 13 fewer students than projected. The actual enrol- ment figures show a decline of 23 students from 1,220 last year to 1,197 students this year. Superintendent of educa- tion, John McCauley said some classes had over 35 students in them on opening day. Rearrangements since then have)eft no classes with more than 35 students. The superintendent added that kindergarten classes are being closely monitored to determine where addi- tional teachers may be add- ed. Pleased by the increase, Stratford trustee Ron Marcy asked how many more students are enrolled than accounted for in the board's budget. Superintendent of business and finance, Jack Lane, answered 53 students at pre- sent, but said the Ministry of Education takes September 30 enrolment figures for grant purposes. Per pupil grants to the school board are based on the September 30 enrolment. IT'S TIME TO TALK BUSINESS! Visit us in CLINTON Every Monday Representative: BOB McCLINCHEY ere the Federal Business Develop- /' ment Bank, and we can be one of your most important resource centres. We can lend you money, or provide loan guarantees and finance an increase in your business equity. And more! We offer a brain bank of experienced people, too. Come talk business with us, about financing, counselling, management training and government assistance programs. One phone call can bring it all to you. For an advance appointment call: or write: 271-5650 (collect) 1036 Ontario Street Stratford. Ontario Federal Business Banque federale Development Bank de developpement Your future is our guarantee. Canada To Stephen Icing moon Kristen Crawford Rod. It Clanton Kari -Lynn Taylor Hens! Paula MacDonald Cllntors Elisabeth Ball Clinton Ruth Ann White clinton Robbie Marriage Clinton Rose -Marie Young Auburn Chad Slotegraaf Clinton Steven Rody v.v. s Clinton Scott Brown Clinton A Bird Clues Across 1. What this puzzle is about 3. Their tails spread like tans 6. Opposite of down 8. How birds hear 9.Abald -- 10. They quack 12. A sunflower -- 14. Birds use bits of this for nest building 16. Sounds like sew 21. Small branches 22. Opposite of before 23. A robin will eat this 27. A budgie is kept in one 29. A thumping bird 31. Opposite of far 33. Same as bill 34. The end of a bird 35. Put one in your cap 36. Maple and birch are Puzzle Down 1. A ---- jay 2. Opposite of wake 3. Talking birds 4. This bird is bright red 5. A. bird --- with eyes 7. A paste made from liver 11. A -- fisher' 12. Common city birds 13. Birds lay them 15. It crows at dawn 17. Over and over ---- 18. What birds see with 20. --gulls 24. Some birds --- south 25. Wood ---- 26. Where birds some- times eat 30. It hoots 31. A bird's home base . 32. Rhymes with bat 33. Birds splash in a bird --- Distributed by Canada Wide Feature Service © 1983 MacKay Fairfield Limited �■.■Z ■.II ■5 ■ 6 3 . , 9 ■■. ■I■ ■ u ■ ■ ■ ■ ■OPIPIlkall e9 ii I o MP 0,0 ■,`' ■ 5 a. . - 0°'11 /Fit •a 110 9,4twU •ilk' Lk UIUU %ig,_ZI.2i 1• ipp�� ci 20p z5 L3iii ■■■ •■ i3 S■ �■ >1 .7L ■�iANI■f• kg ■ ' ■..1 ■ 1 li ■ 011 ET ET ti ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET •ET: ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET T ,Ei ET ET ET ET 'ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET lel' ET ET ET Et ET Et Et Et Et ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET• ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET' ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET ET let Ellison Travel help make your vacation one to remember Caminc,17- Caribbean& Mexican Riviera Cruisin andk 9 PRICES IN CANADIAN DOLLARS The Affordable, All inclusive Holiday at Sea Mardi Gras • Carnivale • Festivale • Tropicale 1!UA 1) ICPA A 471) mum 1 c roues EY Et Et ET' Et Et A special cruise for singles under 35 Charisma Book our Jan. 29 group departure and you could win your cruise free Special price 5959 pp Air Cruise and all meals Carousel Carousel's 100 page full colour brochure featuring 31 destinations at unbeatable prices is now available! 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