HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Advance-Times, 1980-04-16, Page 13an
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FOR BALL PARK 41.GHT$--Daly Metbeln� lc
dent of . the Viiinghaim Kinsmen, and Nick O'Dol,}
president of the Wingbanj 4lons, present cheques`to
nle Alexander, director of recreation, for balt park
for Rives; .dereceived sa -
;'the Lions, and an obviously.much •larger
from the local Kinsmen .club. Also In the
axton, manager of the Wingham PUC, who
e project by offering $12,000 worth of. free
II the lighting.
May bride
is honored
by friends
BELGRAVE—A tom
munity shower in honor of
Janice Coultes, bride -elect,
was attended by a large crowd
in the Women's Institute Hall,
Belgrave, on Thursday, April
10.
Corsages were pinned on the
bride, the bride's mother,
Mrs. William Coultes, and the
groom's mother, Mrs. David
Matheson, by Mrs. Glenn
Coultes. Guests signed a guest
book at the door presided over
by Miss Debbie Hopper.
Mrs.
John Anderson
welcomed the guests and
introduced the program
conducted by Mrs. Wayne
Hopper and Mrs. Ken Hopper.
Contests were enjoyed and
Donna and , Ruth Higgins.
favored
the ladies colas withP lana
selections. Mrs.. . Anderson
gave '• a reading; "Weddings
Are .1!'unny Things, Are/ft
They/i", -:.'followed by the
piesentatzon of the••gffts to the
bride by Carol and :Heather
Hopper. A. humorous bride's
book prepared by .Mrs: Ken
Hopper was also presented.
The bowswere arranged on an
apron -• by Mrs. Danny
McBurney, then given to the
bride to wear.
Janice graciously thanked
everyone for the gifts and
shower and invited them to a
trousseau tea at her home on
April 26 from 2-4 and 7-9 p,m.,
also to the Wedding reception
in Brussels, Morris and Grey
Community Centre on May 3.
A social time followed when
lunch was served by the Third
Line ladies.
ratifies
encs
GORRIE—Fire agreements
for 1980 with the Town of List-:
owel and the Village of Clif
ford were ratified at .Howick
Township council' Aprilses
sion.
In ratifying the Listowel
agreement, Howick will pay
. the township's proportion of
the total expenditure. of
$12,917.89: The , . township's
portion is $2,118.53.
The cost to the towiathip for
the Clifford fire agreeMe t
will be $5,009:0:
Cost to the township is based
on
coverage .
g area and
assessment. . .
ROAD ALLOWANCE
A road allowance near,
Lakele
t was officially closed
and sold to, Irvin Dickert who
has adjoining land.
The allowance is,loc � t o
Igtfi20, onc.r16 d lies. es o
the road .:allowance; ;that
existed on the lot line of hits 20
and 21, .. conc. 16 The road'
allowances were designated'
when improvements were
made to the concession, . but
because of the swamp -like
conditions in the area, land
further west was used for the
road.
The old original foot road
allowance is to be retained by
the Township of Howick.
Legal fees are to be borne by
Mr. Dickert. '
In a severance application
that was approvedby council,
C.oun. Stuart Douglas
refrained from discussion and
voting on"the matter.
Superior Mui er
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LARRY'S CYCLE WORLD
486 DDurhamStreet Walkerton, Ontario
1519). 881-0984
elsgverajtce dealt
' parceel t ionto, 264 by 264
with feeta
owned by Spun, Douglas in
LOW!)
eget Plans for the land are..
e owner of the
Irl'another land severance
Milleapipheatr n ^-from Ferdnand
R 1, ` Wroxeter
cti i" dvise the land
divisl' r. c ni'ittee it is op -
senting to the
• applliea iod til it is assured
thep seveereid nd will be used,
for agrl All purposes.
e Mr
ness it o council:
grant of $200 to
1 Board;
wilding permits
nded by the
t o...
etor, barn
a hog
ennett and Sons
1, Gerrie; a
for Steven
thi
•
as;
bill
for W�a
Faris'
inab
•
implement shed for Claude
Martin of RR 1, Fordwich; a
mobile home for Fred McCann.
of RR 1, Fordwich; a trailer
for Roger . Rowley of RR 1,
Fordwich;, and a house ad-
dition for George Weber of RR
5, Mildmay;
Authorized writing off $60.39
from the 1978 business . tax.
roll;
Accepted the gravel' tender
Of Joe Kerr Limited of
Wingham for 28,000 cubic,
yards of crushed gravel at.
$1.56 pet cubic C
yard
and 2,000
cubic yards at $1.56 for stock
pile. A total price of $46,800 for �i
the.gravel, subject to Ministry
of Transportation ort
atf
on andCom
-
municetions approval; .
Approved accounts totalling
$20,016. i1, including the road
acsguni f $14,713.45:
NEW ME BIER Lion -Bruce Churchman 15prese i
Lion President Nick O'Donohue Mr Churchman underwent"
cently for being the Wingham'club's newest member.'] leIrece
from Guelph. •- ,
MRS. LEWIS STONEHOU$E^.
Belgrave
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Hanna f rola 1
and Mrs. Wes Hanna of .Lista
1'
wel were Sunday visitors•with
Mr. and: Mrs. Clarence Hanna.
Mr. and Mrs: Wayne Nichol
and family , of BramptOi
visited on Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Edgar,Wightman.
Mr. and Mrs. John • Hayden
of Brampton .and'Gordon•Gray
.
of Kitchener were weekend
visitors. with Mr.: And: Mrs:
Leonard James.
Sunday • visitors with Mr.
and Mrs: Leonard were
her ' mother, Mrs. ' Wilfred.
Jenneton of Paisley • and herr.
sistei}, Mrs. •.Rella McTeer
Walkerton,
Mrs. Roger Pearson and
Danielle of Toronto arespend
ing, a week with Mr' and Mrs
The' Wingham:' °Lions mee
received a bit of 'a pep talk , riea1iz ng;,
ding their last tneet;ingfrom work c
guestspeaker Keith Rich- new' m
mond, zone cbaiinnan f iniiitsci signs._
Blyth. ` s
"Only• you .can strengthen He cloaca by stating,
your, club, which is part of the -,•a well run'cl }p cancontrrilut
largest service organization in to. a coinmunit rte"
the word
Ile Saf i
i , d, addit►g `Mr 1#ichiLtti�� �o eu
that as of lastNovember there dorsad Bruce array, ho is .
were 1,281,'960 Lions in 150 now campaigning for :in'
countries. tri .
term/tie/MT
w
t r
Lht<eC ops fir
Mr. Richmond stressed the that as manyLion � om
importance of commitment area .possible 's
stating that.a club should not Ottawas =: convennti'
only exist for
social'
uses.
y Pm'P summer to Vote-
but
otebut as an actual pledge to -Murray. Mr. Rich*
,work toward -•a community's arranging for. an airpl
progress..: trail sp .t ,some Li'
onard Jam'
•„ ,' •;- :f
as each meittlter fg ;OtEaywaoilthe `'ttclsio
BY MURRAY GAUNT, MPP (HURON -BRUCE)
Report fr�ro Lleten's Par
Environment Minister
. Harry Parrott will Announce
soon an Ontarice program to
combat acid rain, :including
measures affectingInco Ltd.
in Sudbury, the province's
major source of acidrain.
• Dr. Parrott would= not give
a.
in
ca•d -
In
e
e
ant,
S.
an
o
Y
n
n
d
ef-
n '
-
n'
steering committee wil
choose 10 to 15 designs fo
further rydevelopment. Then
some or all 'of these design
will be constructed, with
builders assuming' basic costs
nd the province paying.' the
dditional costs of passive
olar heating.
Wintario lottery money
otalling $13.,5 million }s
vailable for community pro-
ects this year. Reuben Baetz;
minister of culture and
ecreation. said ministry field
offices are accepting appli-
ationsfor projects' hearts,
ports, fitness, r retition,
ommunity information,
itizenship an heritage. The
rogram matches' dollar -for -
oiler money raised by non-
rofit groups. municipalities
d Indian hands. The new
rogram srresses; develop-
ent projects. such as one
ports category in which more
oney is available for
oaching than for equ pnjent,
r. Baetz said.
Treasurer F nk Miller Said
e will k into Ontario's
reem nt with the Ford
otor Company of i ablida
mited to determine Whether
details, but said Ontario h
decided to take 'a. lead.
combating acid rain, instea
waiting for U S ';action.
the .past • the Ontario- gowtri
ment position has been that w
can accomplish little in. th
absence of U.S. abatern
measures, because U.
smokestacks contribute
estimated 50 to.80.par cent
acid rain falling 'in; Canada.
The Ontario Energ
•
Ministry will spend $200,000 o
a province -wide coMpetitio
to encourage the design an
construction of• energy-
ficient housing withpassiv
solar heating. Passive sola
heating collects therma
energy thr'ough�windows with
out using fans, pumps or othe
mechanical collectio
devices. The minister wil
solicit design proposals from
registered builders • and
the company agreed to pre-
vent overall job loss before
receiving a federal and. pro-
viricial grant to build a new
plant. Mr. Miller said Ontario •
could hold back payments yet.
to be made of the $26.4 million
`provincial share if Ford had
'broken its contract. Eight
BY LORRAINE JOHN
ed this -pledge
cern p ge means . stated that a ices utay;also”
hundred and forty Ford
ernployees learned thisweek
that the castings plant where
they work is to be closed and
they will be: shifted to the new
plant. A total of 2,269 Ford
workers are already on in- ,
definite layoff•.
Whitechurch Personals
Last weekend a farewell
party was held for Kathy
Purdon at Blyth. Kathy has
recently moved to Stratford to
begin a new job. Kathy's
former co-workers took her
-out to dinner and gave her a
mohair ' throw for her
chesterfield.
A. birthday' party was held
for Mrs, Hazel Purdon's 83rd
birthday last weekend. Mrs.
Purdon was treated to dinner
at . the Vendome Hotel in
Teeswater.. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Bott of
Fergus, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Brown, Kathy and Jimmy of
Fergus, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Rintoul, Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd
✓ Moffat of Lucknow, Mr. and
.Mrs. Archie Purdon, Kendra
• and Lori Purdon and Kevin
Falconer.
Whitechurch friends are
pleased that Mrs. Orville
Tiffin returned 'home from
Wingham and District
Hospital on Wednesday.
Joe Tiffin attended the 58th
• annual meeting of the OntarioAmateur Softball Association
held in the Constellation Hotel,
Rexdale, on Saturday
Mri- Sadie Barber of St
Helens spent last weekend
with Mrs. Mary McC}ena-
ghan.
A birthday party was held
for Amy Falconer's third
birthday on the weekend.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Milligan, Mr. and'
Mrs. Angus Falconer, Mr. and
Mrs, Wes Tiffin. Mrs. Robert
Mowbray, Kevin Falconer and
Lori Purdon.
Mr. and Mrs Carl
McClenaghan visited Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Desroches on
the Weekend
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Currie and family
following the christening of
a
a
s
a
r
c
s
c
c
p
d
P
an
p
m
s
m
c
M
h
ag
M
Li
1
their granddaughter, Andrea
Helene, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Brian Courtis of Dor-
chester, were Mr. and Mrs.
Glen Courtis and Harry of
Wallaceburg, Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Ott and family of Lon-
don, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Peters
of Woodstock, Heather Currie'
and Mike Pitcher of Guelph
and the baby's great grand-
ma, Mrs. John Strong of
Gorrie.
The Tiffin families received
word early this week that Mrs.
Mae Maginty of Stratford
passed away on Sunday.
Miss Annie Laidlaw arrived
home last week from Wing -
ham and District Hospital.
Mrs. Arthur Burrows is as-
sisting her at home.
The closing progressive
euchre party was held in
Whitechurch Community
Memorial Hall on Monday
evening with six tables in
play, Prizes were awarded to:
high, George Grigg and Fred
Tiffin who played as a lady;
low, George Inglis and Mrs.
Ella Johnston; lucky draw,
Jack McIntyre; door prize,
George McBride.
Band looking
for alumni
The Durham Girls' Drum
and Bugle Corps plans to form
an alumni association and is
looking for farmer band
members.
Anyone who used to be with
the band and is interested in
becoming • part of the
association is invited to
contact one of the following
persons: Russ French, 369-
2389; Eileen Mighton, 369-2096,
of; Gayle Magwood, 369.3135.
Ittending all • regular available:
meetings, contributing to Mr. Murrhy i$' frail St
discussions and: ideas and Mary's and he:: `is running.
participating, in club against' a representative from
Montreal. •
In other business tile' local
Club blade a special do'nai on
to the Leader Dog Scltitl,.ol; in;
Wrochester., Michigan. 'he�
Wingham Lions make regulate
contributions to the school
which trains seeing -eye, dogs;•
for the blind
It was also reported that the
next Talent -Hunt will be held.
April 24 at the Town Hall, and..
a pew slate of officers will be
presented to the club during
its next general meetiti.
delegations.. .
"You only getout what you.
put in," he said 'before out-
lining six characteristics of an
outstanding club.: These in-
clude a major service activity .
that is important to the
community; sponsoring a
major fund-raising project
that is valuable;, having good
commiftiicationbetween
members and the community;
organized and enjoyable
.Surprise party..
held for couple
BLLTEVALE — Mr. and,
Mrs. Stanley Moffatt were
completely taken by surprise
on Saturday evening when 20
relatives -"from Brussels and
Bluevale gathered at their
home to celebrate with them
their 40th wedding an-
niversary.
The evening Was spent
playing cards and games after
which they were presented
with a lovely plaque com-
memorating the 40 years.
They also received a cake
plate, glass -covered bonbon
dish and "a three-storey an-
niversary cake decorated in
ruby, representing 40 years of
married life.
Mr. and Mrs. Moffatt were
married on April 13, 1940.
They have one son, Paul of RR
4, Wingham, and one grand-
son, Ryan.'
At the close of the evening a
dainty lunch was enjoyed by
everyone. "
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KINDERGARTEN
REGISTRATION
EAST WAWANOSH PUBLIC SCHOOL
Belgrave, Ontario
FRIDAY APRIL 25, 1980
1:00 P.M.
Children 5 years of age on or before
December 31, 1980 are eligible to register
for enrolment in .Si. op$GGilbei-. Child's birth
certificate is required at registration.
1
•