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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1977-08-25, Page 21• GOD,ERICH-SIGNAL-STAR2 RS # A' ate SALE: toy five year old 11/ 48' eleven room house 012 pc. and 4 pc ,baths, tchen, .den, ---1111111: 26' 3 r g acager 2fi x 165' lot, selling o' quick sale. Will sell out 23' x 37' in -ground g $99,500. Phone 523 - 7. Real estate for sale THREE MONTH OLD, three bedroom, brown and l white 22 x 98 house In Huron Haven Village Carpe4t�• srgx dea aigig� ;:,s r a ,w. i"nclu, Ras` dining room and laundry room Set up on cement blocks -on nice lot. .Price $23,900.00. Phone 524.- 7458. -32,33,34 - EU THE UI 1. SAUN E on No. Ides, TION \CY for' 524. 4-461 ER INTEREST RATES ' NOW AVAILABLE ON st and 2nd Mortgages ANYWHERE IN ONTARIO ON RESIDENTIAL, COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL AND FARM PROPERTIES rim Financing- for New Construction and Land Development REPRESENTATIVES IN YOUR AREA PHONE FEWAY INVESTMENTS & ONSULTANTS LIMITED (519) 744-6535 NCH OFFICE: 705 GODERICH STREET, .PORT ELGIN, (519) 832-2044 FFICE: 56 WEBER STREET EAST, KITCHENER, VENINGS CALL MARY LOU VAN GERVEN 534-0576 NNOUNCEMENT uburn (Bob) W. Sforey 1 G. K. REALTY G. K. Realty Inc. is pleased to announce the appointment to our Clinton Sales staff of Bob Storey, of RR3. Bob is a recent graduate of Conestoga College;.,. Real " Estate Course and IS agerto ;F help you, whether buying or selling. For all your Real Estate needs, call Bob at 482- 7440 (home) or 482-9747 (of- fice). K ivn ice fast Gs e..Jt ne with tor hue tam Iqn at th, " lend .2 rly 111 INC. 14 ISAAC ST., CLINTON 482-9747 7. Real estate for sale WHEN NOZZLE IS NARROWED PRESSUR WILDS UP IN.HOSE AND PUMP MUST WORK HARDER GODERICH 3 bedroom split level brick and aluminum home on Eldon Ave. Family room -with fireplace. Private patio. Asking 565,000. 3 bedroom 11/2 storey unsul brick home on Victoria St. Double garage. Taxes 5172. Asking 532,000. OUT OF TOWN 5 bedroom stone house in Blyth on large 2 acre lot. 579,500. .4 bedroom frame home in Vanastra. Living room with brick fireplace. Excellent condition. Only 535,000. Blyth - 3 bedroom brick home on treed lot. Garage. Asking 529,000. Recently converted brick church, now has 3 bedrooms and room for more. ,All new furnace, wiring and plumbing. Large living room. Floorsare carpeted, cushion floor and pine. Room to run your business from your home. MOBILES, MENESET PARK 1975, 12 x 68 Bendix 3 bedroom 517,900. 1976, 12 'x 68 Bendix, only 6 months old. 3 bedrooms. 5 x 7 utility shed 516,500. RESTAURANT AND GAS STATION on Highway 8 in Goderich. Restaurant seats 36. Asking 590,000. COTTAGES 3 bedroom Viceroy cottage at Horizon View Estates. Some furniture included. 523,900. Two to choose from at. Shamrock Beach 3 bedroom open plan cottage. Built-in bar with stools. Cascade 40 hot water heater. Across the front sun -deck. Lot 72 x 114. 527,500. 2 bedroom 20 x 40 cottage with attached carport and sun -room. Tiled throughout. Taxes only 5145. Asking 519,500, Call today. . DON HOLST REAL ESTATE LTD. REALTO R 53 West Street 524-8951 Tom Tobey '529.7431 Anna Melski Enid Bell 524-2768 5 4- 191 MAURICE GARDINER REAL ESTATE LIMITED PROFESSIONAL COUNSELLING IN 'EAL ESTATE - MORTGAGES INVESTMENTS - APPRAISALS 38 ST. DAVID STREET, GODERICH 524-2966 STREET PLIITi bedroom m split E s fnam r ms, laundry room and „games Gas -hot water heating. Fireplace car attached garage on well land- Iot.. BE_SOLD: Inspect this quality 2 brick home with 4 good size s, formal dining area, luxurious room with fireplace and modern • By appointment only. Call 524 - ATE STREET: 11/2 storey insul ith full basement and double m, 4 bedrooms and porch. This home is priced to suit the modest so call for an early inspection. WAR STREET BUNGALOW: An Ve white brick home with full nt, 3 bedrooms and in new'eon- Rich carpeting throughout plus garage. Within easy walking of the square. - TREET BUNGALOW: This well brick bungalow is in immaculate n. 3 bedrooms, full basement, all schools and priced in the low Must be seen. Call today. HOT, WITH DETACHED nicely decorated. Fubedroom lt basemene is t hed rec room and bar. Included is rkshop and garage. A very good EXECUTIVE OFFICE. SPACE: to RENT 5offices, 2100 sq. feet. Kitchen facilities, 2 • washrooms. Heating, hydro and air conditioning all supplied. Stereo system in all offices. BUILDING LOTS IN GODERICH: Choose your site from a full selection of serviced Iotations. COUNTRY PROPERTY Country ESTATE - VARNA: 5 bedroom country home situated in very private park like setting. Well treed grounds. .31/ acres. 2 living rooms, 2 fireplaces, quality carpets and immediate possession. New oil furnace. Call 524-2966 to view. 4 MILES FROM GODERICH: on 2 full acres. Roomy 4 bedroom home has Targe kitchen and dining area, living room with natural fireplace, laundry room, 2 bathrooms and a Targe family room, all on a lot second to none. By appointment only. YEAR ROUND AT SUNSET BEACH: Inspect this new 3 level split in a private 3/4- acre well treed lot. Large master bedroom, quality carpets. 14 x 19 rec room complete with barn board panelling and fireplace. ATTENTION FARMERS: We have a good selection of farms. Inquire now. YOUR HEART IS A PUMP TOO WHEN BLOOD PRESSURE RISES YOUR HEART°. MUST WORK HARDER:. FOR MORE INFORMATION ABOUT HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE, ASK`YOOR HEART ASSOCIAT/ON -9, 7. APRIL 13-2 EEK T ADS WORK WON 7. Real estate for sale Real Estate Ltd. Clinton Phone: 482-9371 I floor brick home in Clinton, nearly new, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms, full basement, living room and dinette, allcarpeted, good large lot, 11/2 storey frame^ home at Vanastra, 5 rooms, ,3 bedrooms, full basement, nicely decorated, good lot. 2 storey brick home in Hensall, 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms, living room and TV room, 11/2 baths, sun room and utility room. Low down payment will purchase this centrally located duplex on quiet street in Clinton. Make an offer on this 1 floor home in Clinton 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, all carpeted, nicely decorated, electric heat. 20 acres in Stanley township. 16 acres in crop, backs on Ban- nockburn River. '5 acres near Loncjesboro, 2 storey brick home, 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms, new furnace, large L-shaped barn and shed. 3/4 acre with 11/2 storey aluminum -sided home in Egmondville, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, carpeted, full basement. 11/2 storey J.M. sided home in Clinton, 6 rooms, 3 bedrooms, all in excellent condition, lovely decor, new family room. Good lot well located. 4 acre hog operation near Blyth, completely equipped. Good 2 storey brick home, 9 rooms, 4 bedrooms, carpeted living and dining room. 51/2 acres at St. Augustine, 11/2 storey frame home, 7 rooms, 4 bedrooms, Priced right for sale. Fully equipped restaurant in Clinton, excellent location. FOOD FOR THOUGHT A man who makes a spectacle of himself is easy to see through. steal the Show at by Shelley McPhee "We're coming home to roost one byGeorgetown laughed a lot,'' notes Johns, As in anyother' profession, actors join g P ] one," John ekplains about himself anand :gthis prompted.-, the :compank to the theatre for a variety of reasons. f9, ._ 404.411 F%P ,, :�J�-�t�41°=tlz<v,�.lC:`��+5rtig,��?i�b�i'rbn to-2f$ry -. :lam $•°t'+}��1cvs'iRta�4E isasfc•�'LTy ". Barn; Paul Thompson, who is rural audience. go trip originally from Listowel. "Toronto cro • „ ,,,�,�,fjs,:tgally liked.it, but perform, for others it acts as an e and position of importance. Others enjoy ;he escape a far away plot and actors in the company character,, but for each performer, the_ have a wide variety of experience Main reason for joining the theatre has a ranging from television to other forms of personal and individual meaning. theatre, Johns says his scope isn't as Such is the case with Ted Johns, who broad. Before a life of acting, John has been working with Theatre Passe studied Honours English and History at Muraille for the last'four "years. He was, the University of Toronto and taught attracted to the theatre because of the' school from the Quebec -Labrador subject matter and the projects that the border 'to Brock University in St. group were involved with. Catharines. "It isn't the culmination 'of a grand "I think I'm getting better at it," says passion," explains Johns as he sits Johns in reference to his acting, "But it's amongst the props that will be used in an upsy and downsy thing to find a Passe Muraille's "He Won't Come In career in." From The Barn," playing at Blyth this "I have some familiarity with how it Week, goes," modestly claims Johns regarding Yet Johns, a seemingly soft spoken man, -has adapted well to the stage and will become the central. figure, Aylmer Clark, in "He Wont Come In From The Barn" which will be put on at the Blyth Memorial Hall for 10 showings from Thursday, August 25 to Friday, Sep- tember 2. Johns has been involved with several other Passe Muraille performances including, "Them Donnellys," "The Farm Show," "Hohn Hornby", "The West Show", and "The Horsburgh Scandal". He is also familiar with the Blyth stage as he put on a one man show, "Naked On The North Shore" in 1974. "This is my turf, my area, I do my best work here," claims 4ohns, "There's a real culture here and it's healthy." Johns is bound to feel comfortable in this area as Huron is his home county. His father, Edwin Johns of 35 Rat- tenbury St., Clinton, farmed at the Turner's Church area just sotithest of Clinton and also in the Mitchell area. ;johns was raised in Mitchell and at- tended thigh school there. While the Other carried on, as cows do," explains Johns some people took offense to how the cows theatre, "I get a great bang out of people, enjoying themselves." Enjoyment is what "From The Barn" is about. The low budget show tells the story of a farmer who decides to barricade himself in his barn to fight (or avoid) the forces around him. J,ohns admits that the plot is somewhat exaggerated, but by doing this, a variety of problems and people can be brought into the play to intensify the action, However, the action will not only be intensified by people but also by animals. Along with the cast made up of Clare Coulter, David Fox, Alan Bridle, Ken Parnell, anal Connie Kaldor two jersey cows, three pigs and a rooster will carry out roles in the performance, "In otherplays like "The Farm Show" the actors pretended to be the. animals," explains Johns but says. that actual animals give an aspect of realism. "From The Barn" was played to Toronto crowds . this spring and the reaction of the theatre -goers to this sort of realism was varied. "The farmers who came in from with a grin, "It smelled like manure, hay "Some people couldn't. believe it, they thought it was an attack on the audience but others wanted to milk the cows and get milk to take home,"'says Johns. On Tuesday, Passe Muraille's newest cow recruits came to the theatre where they will be spending the next 10 days on stage. The cows are on loan from the Brussels Livestock Yard and along with the rest of the barnyard crew, are bound to add interesting actions in the program . Amidst the grand and somewhat `'. sbubborn arrival and entrance of the animals, someone is practicing at a piano in the Hall's basement and another is off in a corner preparieng lines. The work is part of Passe Muraille's newest project, "Shakespeare For Fun And Profit." The 'play, which like the others is a group project, will tell the story of a group of townspeople who plan to per- form Shakespeare's Midsummer Night's Dream tor their Centennial. Meanwhile Ted Johns, dressed in his farm equipment hat, corduroy pants and rubber boots, along with the other ac- tors, are getting acquainted with their two brown -eyed animal friends who seem somewhat suspicious and hesitant about their new surroundings. Despite the fact that the stage has been equipped with beams, stalls and a gutter, the theatre lights seem somewhat deceiving and the sudden rash of human attention is slightly unfamiliar to them. But, the road to stardom must still be travelled, by beast and human, for whatever personal reason it may be. and animals. The life of a star is not always easy, so this jersey and Livestock Yard to star in Theatre Passe Muraille's "He George Pearson of Ethel found out. Pearson, leading the Won't Come In From The Barn," which Ls being performed cow, brought two jerseys on loan from the Brussels at the Blyth Memorial Hall. (News -Record photo) Flower show a success On Saturday, August 14 in the Green Thumbers Flower Show 27 young gardeners exhibited a total of 188 -en- tries, mostly specimen blooms from their own gardens. St. George's Parish Hall was alive with color and excited children whose zest for gardening and 'flower shows is gaining momentum each season. Convener Jenny Madden was delighted with the response as many children who regularly enter the show were on vacation. Members of the show's committee were Jean Culbert, Ruth Erb, Agnes Jansen, Pat Martin, Mary Walton (also able secretary -treasurer) and Jean Barnett. The highest number of points in the show was won by Kim Fangrad with a total of 22 points for which she received a bronze plaque, donated by Art's Land- scaping. Second highest points in the show was Darin Culbert with a total of 18 points, and third highest to Michael Madden with 13. Special awards went to Kim Phone 524-6384 don't pay any more, anymore! Looking for a place to call home? Look no further! We have mobile and double wide modular homes, built to quality standard, fully furnished and fully affordable. We will deliver to the lot of your choice, but remember, there's always lots of room at our place! You II also like our low down payment and easy terms. FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE REQUIREMENTS PLEASE CONTACT ANY OF THE FOLLOWING: STEVE GARDINER 524.9985 TRUCE RYAN 524-7762 ETE BETTGER 524-2865 AURICE GARDINER 524-ha31 JOHN SCHNEIKER 524-6055 SHERYt. WESTERHOUT 524.2961 PETER MacEWAN 524.9243 HURON HAVEN HOMES HURON HAVEN VILLAGE Box 128, Godeneh, Ontario N7A 3Y5 (Highway 21, North of Goderich) Phone (519) 524.6384 Fangrad who also had highest points in the horticulture section; Julie Ann Culbert and Raymond Bedard tied for highest number of points in the arrangement section for ages ten and under and Darin Culbert won highest number of points in the arrangement section for ten and over. The best arrangement in the show was won by Paula Feagan in the ten and under class, and Darin Culbert in the ten and over. Kim Fangrad won the best animal person, etc. a lady in full evening attire in the show. In the poster contest sec- tion, the first prize went to Elise Lindsay, second prize to Kim Fangrad and third to Michael Madden. Judges Edna Shaw and Sue Gower performed a fine job in judging the show•which posed no small challenge. Winner of the door prize, a Dutch shoe planter was Irene Clark. Winner of the junior door prize was won by Jenny Madden, donated by Jean Barnett. Fine arrangements and specimen blooms were also exhibited by Ann Allen, Jim Allen, Tina Bruiftsma, Jennifer Campbell; Dian Claus, Jennifer Dobie, John Dobie, Kim Jansen, Pam Jansen, John Kloss, Genny Madden, Patrick Madden, Christine Martin, Valerie Montgomery, Tim Reid, Shelley Wilson and George Zoethout. Children and parents deserve a great deal of credit for their accomplishments and excellent exhibits. Lynda Russel() was the only non- member Greenthumber who exhibited in two classes. Of the forty-three gardens planted, tended and main- tained by these juniors judged in the garden com- petition by senior • Garden ,.,, Club members Stella Crawford, Lois McGill and Mary Robinson, results (judged on a 100 point system) are as follows in order of merit: Kim Fangrad, Julie Anne Clubert, Genny Madden and Nick Trebish tied, Paula Feagan, Jim Allan, John Dobie, Tina Bruinsma, Ingrid Claud and Trevor Erb (tied), Jennifer Dobie and Brian Moulton in the ten years and under class. In the ten years and over class winners were as follows: Michael Madden and Pan Jansen tied, Anne Allan, Patrick Madden and Darin Culbert tied, Heather Turton and David Mahood tied, Dian Claus, Vickie Beattie, George Zoethout, Valerie Montgomery, Kim Jansen and Elise Lindsay. Each of these winners will receive a grandiflora rose bush in the fall for their et . forts. Keep up theegood work boys'andgirls