HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1988-10-04, Page 14NOTICE
TOWNSHIPOF TURNBERRY FINAL TAX INSTALMENT DUE
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7th, 1988
Interest will be charged after due date at the rate of 1
I/4% per month or any part thereof.
Personswho have.. acquired properties and have not
received a tax bill should contact the Clerk. Failure to
receive a tax , bill does not relieve a taxpayer from re-
sponsibilities for payment of taxes nor from penalty for
late payment.
Any new buildings that have not been assessed as yet
this year, may still receive a tax bili before year end.
.To avoid the rush, you may makepaymentby cheque,
post dated for October 7th, 1988, by mail or in person.
Dorothy Kelly, AMCT •
.. ,... ,.,
Clerk "treasurer.
IF
Page 10A - The Winghergi AdwanesMiro
Family att
,;ft
W.
BELGRAVtr.. ., 'fpm
ridge, his daughter , Sheila and son
John of Manchester,' New 'lamp-
shire; Major Doug Lockridge of
Shilo, Manitobe; Mrs. Frances Mc-
Cammon and Miss Ruth Lockridge
of Islington and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Hewitt of St. Catharines attended
the Celebration ' ;: Awards present-
ation in the Wingham Armouries on
Sunday, Sept. 25.
Major Douglas Lockridge,
representing the family, was
presented with a plaque in memory
4,19
r n
_Or his °father', the tate Alfred
-
Lockridge.
Later, all gatheredat the home of
Mrs. Irlma Edgar, Wingham. Other
guests at the same home were Mrs.
Winnifred Johnston, Wingham; Mr.
and Mrs. Harvey Edgar, RR 4,
Wingham and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Stonehouse, Belgrave.
o -o -o
A gentleman may be driven mad
by love, but it should not make him
silly.
Duc De La Rochefoucauld
TOWNSHIP OF TURNBERRY
NOTICE TO MUNICIPAL ELECTORS
Please be advised that the last day for making
application to revise the preliminary °list of voters
has been determined' by the judicial system to be
Saturday, October 15th, ,1988, and not Monday,Oc-
,toper 17th, 1984 as previously indicated
Therefore, the Municipal- y
Office �3f �-the Township
- of .;Turnberry, Biuevafe, will be open on -October.
155th, 1988, during the hours ,of 901 A.1#AL:.:_to, 5:00
P.M. for the purpose of accepting;r °°
�evisiQns to . f
preliminary List of electors and,,,nominations for
office.
Dorothy Kelly,
Returning Officer.
NOMINATIONS,
Otice t0 Municipal Eles
TownshipcfTurnberry
TAKE NOTICE that persons may be nominated .a -Candi-
dates in an election between 9 o'clock in the forenoon and 5
o'clock in the afternoon of nomination day, Monday, October
17, :1988, but nothing in Section 35 of the Municipal Elections
Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 308 prevents a person filing a nomination
°
paper, with the. Clerk dudng_her, normal office .haurs :during the..
:four days immediately preceding nomination day.
OFFICES FOR WHICH PERSONS MAY BE NOMINATED
(1) REEVE
(1)DEPUTY REEVE
(3) COUNCILLORS
(1) TRUSTEE FOR HURON COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCA-
:!TION TO SERVE TURNBERRY AND MORRIS TQWNStHPS
4(1) TRUSTEE FOR HURON PERTH CATHOLIC
SEPARATE SCHOOL BOARD
;Nominees must be Separate School Su per tersiiinttr �„ E•� be
r,'�.+� f��vrtl�i�lttnrCijfr'g��i�' lit
.r � � ... ,- - i - -,.. . tet, M1 V� w �6.'.16t,:':
^of '`urnberry, ownship of V-)owic'k, Towrisfiip oft ast '�"
Wawanosh, Township of Morris, Township of. Grey, Village of
Blyth and Village of Brussels.
Nomination papers for Huron County Board of Education'
Trustee must be filed with the Clerk of Morris TOwnship.
Nomination papers for the Huron Perth Roman Catholic
Separate School Board Trustee must be filed with the Clerk of
Howick Township.
Electors are hereby required to take notice and govem
themselves accordingly, and further take notice that the
manner in which said nominations shall be filedis.set forth, in
Section 36 of the Municipal Elections Act. Nomination forms
and full particulars of procedures to be"followed,. may be ob-
tained from the undersigned.
If a greater number of candidates than required to fill the
said offices are nominated and make the required declarations,
notice of the time and place for the holding of the poll, inclu-
ding the advance polls and notice of the last day for making
applications for a certificate to vote by proxy will be given
forthwith.
AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that where the number of
candidates for an office who are nominated at the end of nomi-
nation day is not 'sufficient to fill the number of vacancies to
which the candidates may be elected, Subsection 1 of Section
40 respecting acclamation applies to those candidates and, on
the Wednesday following nomination day, October 19th,
`1988, the Clerk may, between the hours of 9 o'clock in the
forenoon and 5 o'clock in the afternoon, receive ° and certify
additional nominations for the remainingvacancies �n the office
in respect of which there was an nsufficient nurnber of
candidates.
SHOULD AN ELECTION RE REQUIRED, THE SAME WILL
BE HELD ON NOVEMBER 14, 1988, between the hours of
10.00.a°m° and 8:00 p.m.
ADVANCE POLLS WILL BE HELD ON -SATURDAY, NO-
VEMBER 5th, 19. , AND THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10th,
1-988 between the hours of 10:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. at the
BLUEVALE COMMUNITY HALL.
DEADLINE FOR OBTAINING CERTIFICATE TO VOTE BY
PROXY IS NOVEMBER 14TH, 1AT 5:00 P.M.
GIVEN UNDER MY HAND -THIS 4TH DAY O OCTOBER,
1988.
Dart b o , A
°turd hi,
o� edbyM ,
l en;a
out '�,eenl<, sy
mai trip' aero,
fidtana, `fs and Jowa
o nlh:* .akota where they irjistted
. he ti Palace . with. its unique
rLoar;eaitersd w. murals ,n; de
dag and naturalArasse4 at:
the Old West 11,14seuni at
amherlain and viewd the
Badlands and Petrified 04000 at
Kadaka. In the Bek MS National
Park of.Soutli•PakOtal they viSited
Bear CoUnirn.Arivirig f rough. a
Park., with the largest privately.owned collection of black hears and
Mount Rushrnore, with its.
nifieerit siountain carving of
,.�..OttiltMliresidentsto give up their
it Yellowstone.
Wyoming, 'due:`,.
',- serious forest fires there. At
ala,Wyonng, 237 miles east of
had to turn south
auttOitherstooke in the air. -
-.travelled .through ltah,
MVlormon Temple at Salt
'1val 'Crit, and .eitperienced . a brief
snow shower while there. They
visited Las Vegas, Nevada, the
Gad Canyon in Arizona and
continued their eastward journey
through New Mexico and Texas
where they escaped a . tornado at
Amarillo by a few hours, having
gone on to Alenreid to spend the
night. They drove through
Oklahoma, Arkansas and visited the
Grand' Ole Opry and Loretta Lynn's
retell at Nashville, Tennessee.
Their trip continued through the
Smoky Mountains into North
Carolina- and through Virginia;
travelling a short distance on the
Blue Ridge Parkway where fog
became too dense to continue.
They visited the Grand `Canyon of
Pennsylvania near Wellsboro aria'
Corning, New York, bef a crossing
f+o ha'' 1 ' NiSgara .l+'gl '
return home:
HELLC.11411 a , .ereaeartio., .:
right, has a. wva anima and -soon became-r;endevvit
the dachshund et Sundays Walk-a-dog-af-fion in Wingham .''Mytt1e
Ann Watson of Alp1ey is the little dog's oi?vner°
!um/
potkek don
l3LUEVALE — Thirty-six4 mem-
hers of the senior citizen group
enjoyed a potluck dinner in the
Bluevale hall last week to usher in
the fall season.
In the absence of President Ross
Turvey, the business was conducted
by the vice president, Gordon
iIundell. Vera.Moffatt was pianist
for the opening singing of "0
Canada" and the secretary,_Bob
Gillespie and Treasurer Mrs.
_.Moffatt, presented the r"reports.
Century 21
There's. more. to selling
a house than a sign on
the lawn and an ad in '
the newspaper
Deng the week of October
3rd to October `9t ,. CENTURY
11 offices across Canada will
lie hitting the campaign trail ex-
plaining to the public the 21
ways.,of :sei1ing a some_-- and,
there's. much more than putting
a sign on the lawn, an ad in the
newspaper, and waiting for the
phone to ring. CENTURY 21 is
an authority on the subject.
Recognized by the Canadian
and American public as the
largest real estate organization
in the world, the CENTURY 21
system handled over 2,000
transactions a day in 1987.
Over $40 million in quality
advertising is spent each year to
keep North Americans aware of
the CENTURY 21 name. Its
VIP Deferral System allows
over 7,000 CENTURY 21 of-
fices
f
fices and 110,000 salespeople
in North America, Japan, the
United Kingdom and Europe to
keep in touch with the moving
population. In Canada, the
CENTURY 21 organization has
425 offices with over 7,000
salespeople.
"There are many dimensions
to marketing .a home that don't
appear obvious to the average
vendor," says Paul Zurbrigg of
Century 21 All Points, "that can
only be created by a large orga-
nization. "We have many
proven marketing alternatives
and an Acta Warranty to back
up our services."
The CENTURY 21 system
includes 7,000 independently
owned and operated offices
throughout the United States,
Canada and Japan with recent
expansiirt, :to the Untted„Ki
dorm and Europe.` In Can
there are 425 CENTUR
sales offices with twit ',�m,
salespeople from coast to coast.
An "Alzheimer 4 Cafegi
workshop is to be held by; the`Hiiron
County Health Unitaon 11 v O at tie
Holmesville Hall., Volunteers also
have been requested for the Town
and Country Homemakers' new
Telephone Reassurance Program.
Margaret Mundell conducted a
"show and tell" surprise,_ displaying
the golden gifts presented to her and
Mr. Mundell by the Bluevale.Semiors
in horror, of their _. Ot_..:_w:eddin
annversaryin July.
A committee volunteered for the
October dance. The October regular
meeting has been mired forward to
the 24th to avoid Hallowe'en.
cp i
an -
Euchre a>lid " croilole *ere
enjoyed; The ladies' prizes were
awarded •to Mary Peacock,: Shirley
Skelton= . and' ' Laura Jenkins. Men's
winners were George Fischer, Alex
MacTavish and. Norman Skelton.
The group hopes to have more
members put to its Octobermeeting,
maybe even &few -goblins
0.v-°
Absurdity A ztatethen . or belief
manifestly inconsistent with one's
own opinion.
Ambrose Bierce
"The Devil's Dictionary"
'N OF V% INGHAM
AN
REM A ION D COMMUNITY
S �.�..� ..��� BOARD
The Town of Wingham is currently seeking interested "citi-
zens to sit as a member of the Municipal Recreation and
Community Centers Board. The Board provides advice to
Town Council on Recreation and Leisure Time Activities in
the community.
Interested people should submit their names to the Clerk's
Office during normal office hours.
J. I3yron Adams,
Clerk
M1