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Wingham Advance-Times, 1980-09-10, Page 11
�,.. , ,:.. ......, ., .. i. •!!l 4 .Fh.-T +�... ..1'n':,. . . Y,t. yy -?A^ C !r . � ... . ^...:....: .. :.. . n�...... ... G... „ ..: �a.:; -: ' +� ll . � I :: ..o .r a ,..- ,... d. .:. f-` 1 w' , h .The Win 4dv' mess, with ;:;acting as cation was the Angli- on Sep - pm. Mrs. be guest fall rally elgrave in WET WORK—Billy Gaunt was rinsing the car, but managed to get some of the water onpPam Passmore too, during the Junior Citizens' car wash last Saturday. Business and Professional. Directory Karl C. Lentz Chartered Accountant Box 305 ' Blyth, Ontario NOM 1H0 . w Tela 523.9589 , - WINGHAM MEMORIALS Guaranteed Granites Cemetery Lettering- Reasonable etteringReasonable Prices Buy Direct end Save Bus. Ph. 357-1910 Res. Ph. 357-1015 Frederick F. Homuth Phm.B., R.O. Carol E. Homuth, O.O. Mrs. H. Viola Homuth, O.D. Optometrists Harriston, Ontario 338-2712. 'opl tm ,ps, co,ua their theme, 'There Is W9: T ,BCOone' The Service wed with the.:h a ,'Work, -.for the Night Is o ing'.. , Topham read Sear'iptu re from Mark's Gospel, chapter tenni and they used as their. Meditation a dialogue, compng Christ's work on earth to that of . today's Christians. "tie .left °us to , carry on Ms no matter what our, station in lite," the speakers.' said.: Mrs. Reid read two poems andcleaned,' the worship service with prayer. Rev President Mrs. S. Clarkson -Male Mrs. G Go Blu+vole W BLUEV LE —Aim Glen_ Godley opened the Sep- tember peeling of the. Women'sNVlissionary Society of Knox Presbyterian Church with a poem, 'Debt', followed by the hymn, 'This Is Our Father's World'. Devotions were conducted by Mrs. Ross Mann and Mrs. Harry Elliott, giving .'A ._ Traveller's Guide to Fordwich seniors begin fall season FORDWICH — The senior citizens held their first. meeting of the fall season on September 3 at 8 pm in the community hall. President Roy Kennedy opened the meeting and welcomed everyone. '0 Canada' was sung with Miss M. McElwain at the piano. 'Happy Birth- day' was then sung to those with'September birthdays. • Mrs. Helen Nickel, secretary, read the minutes and treasurer Lorne Kelley gave the financial rePortt. Bus trips were discussed, th- ough rip decision was reached: - «s, Tlie''dtrni000Is are to'irave' a display at the Howick Fair, with the theme, 'Do You Remember When?'. Corn- mittee in charge will be Mrs. Lila Shoemaker, Mrs. Marion Kennedy and Mrs. Helen Nickel. A game af- ternoon was planned with prizes offered for shuf- fleboard for men and women. Mrs. Edwin Dietz and her group were in charge of the program which included a humorous reading, `Greatest Breakthrough in the 80s', by George Badman. Following the program, euchre was enjoyed. Lunch Wes, in, Chat* .0101: blitz and her group. ervic�. Direct� PRINTING WINGHAM PRINTING SERVICE • PRINTING • PHOTO COPIES • REGISTER FORMS • RUBBER STAMPS • WEDDING STATIONERY 314 JOSEPHINE STREET WINGHAM 357-3800 FLOWERS The Flower Nook •flowers for all occasions • potted plants • weddings are a specialty PROMPT DELIVERY SERVICE CaII or drop in and see us at 218 Josephine St., Wingham PHONE 357-3333 BACKHOE Backh©e Work Hugh McBurney WINGHAM 357-3819 SALES AND SERVICE Lynn Hoy Enterprises Ltd. Honda and Skidoo Sales & Service wy. 86 east of Wingham Phone 519-357-3435 PLUMBING PLUMBING INSTALLATIONS Repairs, Renovations New Installations, call Terry Deyell at 357-2808 or 357-1229 PLUMBING HEATING Leroy Jackson —Plumbing —Heating —Tinsmithing 191 Josephine St. Wingham 357-2904 ELECTRICIL PLETCH ELECTRIC LTD. Electrical Contractor Motor Rewinding and Complete Motor Soles WINGHAM 357®1583 T-SHIRT PRINTING Our T -Shirt. Are 'TOPS' IA Great Walking Advertisement) G.D.K. Enterprises Wroxeter, Ontario CUSTOM SILK SCREEN PRINTING OF T-SPi!RTS Gordon Motor, Box 62, Wroxst.r Bus. 335-3134 14... 395-3411 INSURANCE 'fel/ All Types of Insurance 335-3525 357-2636 GORRIE WINGHAM CONSTRUCTION BERT 357-3053 and DICK 528-2726 ASKES BROS. CONSTRUCTION General Building and Renovations Concrete Forming WE SELL Hunt & Pella Windows Kaiser Aluminum Products Andex Barn Products FREE ESTIMATES FUELS, BILL TIFFIN Imperial Esso Agent' For all your Home and Farm Fuel and Lubricating Needs 357.1032 SALES Forever Yours Stationery • Invitations • Thank you notes • Napkins. matches • Social announcements Th. Wingham Advance - Times Office WELDING Portable Welding Will do custom port- able welding and in - shop repair work. •Ornamental railings •Free estimates Phone Spike Bakker RR6 Lucknow 528-2026 THE ADVANCE -TIMES 1,14 357-2320 de for the be held or the fall tober 5 at 8 eed to give tin to the etion Com- ard Vacation ;Vipenes. It fed that the 'tooth at the ,I a 'A Baby's ti closed the hymn and am pro - diction. ens 'ting Elliott read a •poem*Ail d .`Mothers', followed"by a!er. Fifteen �;meinrers and one visitor answerlr. rd the roll call with a Bitble - erse containing the word -`rvest'. Mrs. thanked everyone for acards „ visits. A dis- cussion followed about the 1 ;1 study::,40ook and the group's Toffering ser- vice :then the,rLS will invite Belmore Presbyterian and Blueeale fl'ni d Churches to hear guest` -.:speaker Terry Trites3 The .treasurer's re- portwas given.bbbbby Mrs. Ross Gray asci Mrs. Colley catedtil,'oftfering. Mra GolIey was in charge of the tapi e, 'Economic Rights from =the Caribbean', Their denioc_racy is five minutes in�a polling booth every five; years. Their crucial , • problems are unemployment and educa- tion. ' Eighty per cent of the population' does not have the. power to matte changes. The poor people.have nothing with very lie chance of any chan Mrs. alley impressed upon the•members the ' im- portance of freedom of ;speech. "It is•the will of Godo. to be free,s's t Cflor/ Donald J4acPo aid, for Y rit South and agric vie critic for the New emeratie Party nt Queen's Park; IS accusing layge dairies an,d super markets of. "gouging' consumers with unjustified ' increases in the •price of milk, and he is demanding that the goverment put a stop to the practice. In an open letter to Agriculture Minister Lorne Henderson, Mr. MacDonald protests that while price increases to the farmer are strictly controlled, there are no controls on the Mid- dlemen. "Milk marketing -has, become a jungle in which naked economic power, increasingly Concentrated in the dairies and super- markets, is gouging the public to the detriment of both the -farmer and the 0 Dept increase to to.2 cents r < half of thetS ts the milk board cel .. •they were enitttl use. of a concern over the linpact to the industry SP* whole, , some des- and super markets are passing more than double that nesse to the consumer, no singles- out Donla nds • Dairy, whichhas jl p l e increase to five cents in it$ sales to Loblaws, a ; sister corporation „in the Weston empire. Lpoblaws,he notes, has added nother twocents, turning : ,£ : ,cents which the f, e' received into a seven cent increase to the. consumer. He points out that at the, tunin e of the last price in- crease to farmers Work of Brussels native profiled in study of Japan BRUSSELS '— Mrs. Vernon Hupfer continued the mission study of Japan when the members of the af- ternoon unit of the United Church Womeu met in the church parlor. Mrs. Hupfer informed the members that the area of 3,000 islands is just one-half the acreage of Manitoba, yet it has a very dense population of almost 115 million: The literacy rate is 100 per cent and with 60 million radios and more than 26 million television sets'; Japanese people are con- sidered very progressive by the world's standards. Japan's aspiration is to become the top economic power by the year 2000. There are almost 2,000 Protestant , missionaries in Japan, among them John and LaureLElliott who are now studying the ,language and serving in Japan: John was born in Myers' Clinic in Brussels and grew up on a USC Sets $4 miUnion as�iristmas target, OTTAWA ,<Dr. tta more just �.o a new and Hitschmanova, ' executive distribution of resources director of the Unitarian . would bring about a better Service ,Committee, recently 'tomorrow. "This is not a utopia,” she said. "It is a necessity and time is running out." The USC works in Bang- ladesh, Nepal and Indonesia as well as Lesotho, Botswana and Swaziland in southern Africa. The total number of gprojects has grown from 83 challenging days ahead. USC ' in 1979 to over 150 this year: funds are channeled into self-help projects; for men' "The USC always looks and especially women in forward to the day it can some of the poorest coun- ' work itself out of a job, Dr. Hitschmanova said, "and this year it will be phasing out from Hong Kong and Cyprus, where USC projects will continue with local and government funding." Founded in 1945, the USC is an all -Canadian overseas relief and development agency with no formal church affiliation. Overhead is a low 11 per cent of total Launched the 36th annual appeal with the largest -ever Christmas Daytarget of ,$4 million. ',Speaking in Montreal Dr. Hitschmanova said; "An suchas.the USC has' urine the an importantr le to play and tries. "Ours relief programs assist the most vulnerable, those who cannot help them- selves, hungry, homeless children, the handicapped and the elderly who never expected thatold age could be so frightening and un- just." She said Canadians should help their children under- stand that hunger, prejudice ---income. Its headquarters are and war must be eradicated located at 56 Sparks Street, from the earth and that only Ottawa, K1P 5B1. USC HELPS THEM—In Lesotho, southern Africa, education requires hard work and self denial. There are too few schools; classrooms are overcrowded; ed- ucation, books and uniforms all must be paid for and 40 per cent of the children cannot afford to go to school at all. The unitarian Service Committee helps to build and equip schools and provides high school scholar- $hip$ships. rti-,^''!g, t•!'gket ahic year is . SC 's �rn,annaaa �.�..op...�.. . �_. Sd million in cash and gifts -In-kind. farm near -Molesworth. He attended the Presbyterian Church there. He enrolled at Briercrest Bible Institate, in Caronport, Saskatchewan, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Religious Education degree. He and his wife ' and two children went to Japan early in 1979. Fourteen ladies responded to the roll call and 47 visitations were recorded. Mrs. Cudmore opened the devotions by reading a poem, 'Help Me Serve'- A11 joined in singing a hymn and. scripture, Psalm 62, was read in unison. Mrs. Cud - more led a study of the psalm, stressing the fact that the source of all strength is in God, not in riches or power. "These are as vanity in His sight," she said. "He only is my rock and my salvation." Mrs. Cudmore announced a craft sale at the =nursing home early in October. Donations:. of .knitted •land crocheted articles would be much appreciated. The meeting closed with a hymn, followed by prayer. 1a Pat e,, 1 "That°l'thi, assks, -`what . itiaila there for the dei1r111 supermarkets anotherCut noel?" Mr. 'n,,S•o„T x^^^nr*s the " us e out! Pd;„Iilt,att't will have it-, ct a ..e,.:...�� ..�.,. potentially disastrous efflas! on milk sale '`.and Bags for the nti ester to take action tu:- protect the latereols' of the >tnllk indostry. , MoP•+ payable ,Grind 1 4:1 1 , tt,t 'CCfiti,W Day 'entre i.Wf e� Last week"e Advance- Times featured pictures a�snd a brief write-up of the fare- ` well parts held for Janet Bishop, past enordinater-ofndifaitdl5' the Wingliam and Area Day , Centre for the As many .of our seniorsd as ., possible came to the centre Tl to wish Janet success in the mother, future, and thanks for the Tiffia. past. All the seniors cooper- t. ated on a group gift and pre- sented Janet with a very; r of+Kitchen'; unique quilt, which was w.ltb-Mr. ai handmade by Anne Conn, N and .Joey and Janet's position- has beed WELCOMES YO U! 1 Get away from, it all 'for a change I`solate,y people in our reser complex.' Cgmprehensive meeting facilities fig groups of up ,to 30.inctaduig . T. meals, refreshments, recreational facilities„Ad overnight accommodations, if =required: A very productive atmospherefor:your gatheripg. ••.}t. TAKE IT FILM THE 'TQP, Reef feriae, The� Ribera tall «houl the Ilew LA'E differeacer Theo Gysbers and his four sons are partners in a 1600 acre combined poultry and beef operation in Ilderton, Ontario. Each year they crop corn and alfalfa and buy in 1950 head of Western cattle" and 640 head of short keep finishing cattle. For the last 18 months those animals have been on New Life Golden Blend. Explains Theo: "We ran a test with Golden Blend, and got a consistent four pounds gain per head per day — that's why we're staying with it!" New Life service? "Excellent," says Theo. "I'm very happy with it — it can't be beat!" New Life Feeds: they mean incomparable service and a complete range of high quality, high performance feed products and programs for the successful beef farmer. They've both been proven for years 'b`y'°°customers like Theo Gysbers. Thanks, Theo! new -life St 010 tr11 on... is vasing, 1s limited Head Office: P.O. Box 219 Hanover, Ontario N4N 3C5 Hanover 1-800-265-5510 (toll free) Tnnerkin 1-ann-2a5_ )279 (t, -ll fiels) South Mountain 1-613-989-2003 , Zj�