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HomeMy WebLinkAboutWingham Advance-Times, 1980-10-01, Page 14'Wingham Advance -Times, 0 ober 1, 1980 elpino to develop, rural energy at rum The Ontario Energy C.or- P3tion (OEC) 1 proceqd- : ',' 108 vSittuthe further develop - t 'Mitt of therthal energy uses from the Bruce Nuclear Power Development, Mal- colm Rowan; president of the energy corporation an- / notmced recently. Commenting on a presen- tation being made by the • OEC to the Great Lakes Sea- way task force, Mr. Rowan . stated that sufficient interest has now been expressed to Proceed on an urgent basis with industrial development at Bruce, using uclear-gen- erated thermal/energy. The presentation outlined the results 0 an industrial survey commissioned last February by tie Bruce County conomic Develop- ment ommittee into the ind rial uses of this energy as complement to the agri- c al uses already wider vestigation at the Bruce Agri Park. "If Ontario is to reap max- imum benefit from this in- digenous and proven re - Knox United holds' anniversary service BELGRAVE . Arrange- ments of multi-colpred auhimn flowers in the vesti- bule and sanctuary of 'Stift United Church made an attractive setting for the anniversary service last Sunday morning. Members from Calvin - Brick United Church joined with the Belgrave congre- gation to help celebrate the Occasion. Mrs. George Procter, organist and Mrs. Howard 4 Morton, pianist, supplied lovely prelude numbers as well accompaniment for the h 'e. Rev. John G. Roberts ex- tended a warm welcome to visiting church members and to the guest speaker, Rev. Fred Lloyd and his wife, Barbara. Rev. Lloyd is the minister at Emmanuel United Church, Sault Ste. Marie. Rev. Lloyd chose scripture readings from Genesis 26: 6- ., 22; Acts 2: 43-47, whiCir relate to Abraham's Wells and the result of.Peteet Ser- • men, as the bails By his elo- • ' went message. Citu,rches are like wells, he said. Some resemble cistern Wells, Which store water and preserve it; but often leak •.and the inflow of water or the message is lost..., Shallow wells dry up, be- • come'. parched, •and so with • rMRs. DERRILL HALL11111, —Th Lakelet Mr. and Mrs. Peterltams .• of Toronto visited Sunday • 'With Mr. and Mrs. Henry - 'Hohnstein. , • Anson Wolfe bf Melbourne • Called_ on ,,old friends , in Lakelet over the weekend. • • Mrs. Roy - Burchill and . Mrs: Esther Dennis of •Goderich visited' last week • with. 'friends and former neighbors in Lakelet. Mr. and . Mrs. Stuart Deuglas returned on the • weekend from a two-week : vat P) thq*04P0481 churches. The pastoral --charges dry up. Deep wells are hard to ob- tain and maintain. It is dill- ., cult for God's work to move in this type of area; but an s,artesian well, like an . out- frowing church, is always gaing service. We must be outflowing. Abraham returned to his homeland to prove his wells. • We need wells in the life of our church. There are three types of church wells, he said: faith, sacrifice and- vision, which must spring up. A church Must have a sense of direc- tion, if it is to become an out - flowing well of life. • Each should be honest to his forefathers who drank of the well Of sacrifice and loyalty. Be conscious of the heavenlY being surrounding him; not a robot. All mist have wells of vision. To be great; is to have a vision of the 'New Jerusalem' have oply one impulse — Sing to God; give glory and thanks. The large choir of mixed voices sang 'Everywhere I Go' accompanied by Mrs. George Procter. Following the sermon Mr: George Cuil contributed, The Holy City' in a very pleasing manner, with Nra. Howard Morton • piano accompanist. • The large congregation of members and visitors showed appreciation of this happy anniversary cele- bration. Risesd— dori4,44—° •:-0001!"•"'IssmannowssTTnsii • Mr. and Mrs. Don Rae, • Jamie and Ian of ,Guelph, spent the weekend' with her. parents, Mr. and Mr. James Coultes. • Dr. and Mrs. William Lit- tle and Bettsie of St. Cath- • arines spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Petrie • Holmes. Rev. H. L. Nugent, Interim Moderator of St. Andrew's • Presbyterian Church• , conducted the Sunday CLASSIFIED 357-2320 morning worship service. His •sermon title was 'Symbols off Hope' and it was an appropriate prelude to the 'service of Holy Communion which was observed as part of the service. Rev. K. Barry Passmore, at the morning service in the United :Church, welcomed Mr. and Mrs. Gary Chapman into the fellowship of the churth. They have tran- sferred their membership from Whitechurch. Com- munion was also observed in that church with Mr. • Passmore delivering the communion meditation. WARD St UPTIGROVE Listowel (519) 291-3040 ' CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS HEARING TESTS Vance's brug Store, Wingham on Friday. Oct. 17 1 3 p.m. This will be Invalid of usual Oct 10 visit. NO OBLIGATION Bottorles,Accilssorles, repairs to all makes, J. D. Fair 143 Ontario St. Stratford, Ont., 273-2113 HEARING AIDS source by the development of an industrial capability at the Bruce, then a deep water port to be located within several miles of the site mist be seriously considered. "The Great Lakes Seaway task force has been re- quested to consider and recommend ways in which water transportation, in- cluding a deen„rater harbor, could faciliffte industrial development associated with the Bruce Nuclear Power Development," Mr. Rowan stated. Response by industry has clearly indicated that a lack of docking facilities in the immediate vicinity. of the Bruce site and access to the Great Lakes is considered essential by most industries which have expressed a real desire to participate. The Bruce industrial sur- vey was conducted for the Bruce County Economic Development Committee by Dr. W. A. Seddon of Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, with the financial support of the - OEC and thefull cooperation of Ontario Hydro, the Ontario Ministry of Industry and Tourism and the Bruce AgriPark Joint Venture. Over 100 energy -intensive industries were surveyed over a six-month period. Ontario Hydro would sup- ply energy in the form of steam and -or hot water from its nuclear genera ting stations for industrial and other • uses and has designated the OEC to be its FOOD FOR FRIENDS The second meeting of the Belgrave II 4-11 club, Food for Friends, was held on Monday, Sept. 22, in the Bel - grave WI Hall. Donna Higgins, the presi- dent, opened with the 4-H pledge and the roll call was •taken, with each Member telling her experience with the recipe she had tried at home. Work sheets were com- pleted in the 4-11 books and all members took their part in the kitchen to make tacos and tortillas. These were en- joyed as a snack-by--eVery- one.. ,The meeting closed with the.4-Hinotto. SNEAKY SNACKERS The second Meeting:of the Sneaky ,Snackers was held on Wednesday, Sept. 24, at Mrs. • Chambers' home. When members first • arrived they worked in their books. • • Everyone then took to the kitchen and each member helped prepare Chinese-style pork and tams. • With the pork there was rice and with the tacos, beef and chicken fillings, with lettuce and cheese. Everyone thoroughly en- joyed both of these tasty dishes. Not only did members have these two epiotic dishes, but to make it even more cultural, they ate the rice and pork with chopsticks — or at least they tried. Everyone left well fed with - their chopsticks in their hands.- Beimore Mr. and •-Mrs. Peter Mulvey and family spent a few days travelling through Northern Ontario. On Sunday at McIntosh United Church, Jeremy Fieeh, Son of Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Fitch, was baptized. Mrs. Clark Renwick has returned home from hospital and is staying with Mr. and Mrs. Ken Dettman. The library will be closed on Saturday, October 4. Congratulations to Miss Mary Dickson on being ,cho- sen Belmore's represent- ative in the Howick Fall Fair Qum contest. The Bantam Girls took on their mothers in a game. The 'girls won by only one run. Following the game the team members and their families were entertained at the home of ,their coaches, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Douglas. Mac MacLeod has returned to Winnipeg after staying with Mrs. Clark Renwick for awhile. exclusive agent for the sale of , this thermal energy to the envisaged development. The Bruce Thermal Utility has been formed by the members of the Bruce. AgriPark to undertake the transportation of thermal energy from the Bruce Nuclear Power Development and t,o support the develop- ment of an industrial load. The Bruce Nuclear Power Development has the capa- city to .supply about 10 mil- lion pounds of steam per hour to industry. Put into perspective, this corres- ponds to about one-third of Ontario's daily industrial steam requirements and the energy equivalent of 50,000 barrels of oil per day. Ontario's most energy in- tensive industries currently use non-renewable fossil fu- els such as coal, oil and na- tural gas as feedstocks for steam generation. The steam handling apacity of nuclear generating stations offers a unique opportunity •to reduce Ontario's depend- ence on heat generated by fossil fuels as well as serve large industrial steam de- mands. Estimated total energy costs will he dependent on overall demand and load factor for steam. ,However, based on Ontario Hydro's own experience, the costs of nuclear generated steam are significantly less than those obtainable with fossil fuels. Earlier, in 1979, a group of private investors and the OEC initiated the AgriPark concept to use lower temper- ature heat from the Bruce reactors for greenhousesand fish farms. A one -acre ex- perimental greenhouse is • now in production and eventual plans call for 150 acres of greenhouses to be sustained year round by low grade heat.. The OEC is the primary energy investment vehicle for the Province of Ontario. The role of the corporation is to encourage private sector investment in energy-related' • projects in support of the • provincial energy policy. Workshop on stress October 18 The Bruce County chapter of the Association for.„Child- ren with Learning Disabili- ties will present a workshop on stress at the Huron Heights Public School, Kin- cardine, Oct. 18. In the morning four speakers will discuss stress with. reference to the student,the parent, the teacher and the school. Discussion groups of smaller numbers will allow personal • interaction with all speakers in the afternoon. The fee for the workshop will include lunch and a coffee break. Preregis- tration is due Oct. 1. For more information contact the Bruce County ACLD,Box 989, Kincardine, NOG 2G0, or phone 396-4178 or 396-3872. THESE APPLE TREES were broken off at ground level last Thursday evening when a tornado touched down on several farms along Con. 4 of Culross Township. The trees, belonging to Ken Aitken, where only a small portion of damage caused by the tornado as a large section of his bairn roof was torn from the barn and tossed down on a tin shed. MRS. LEWIS STONEHOUSE Belgrave Personal Notes 1. A family gathering was 'held at the borne of Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Crawford, Goderich, on Wednesday, September 24, 'to celebrate Mrs. Etta Cook's 91st birth- day. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walker, Mrs. Grace Cook of Goderich, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Robinson, Auburn, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cook, Mr. and Mrs. Garner Nicholson, Mrs, •Telford Cook, Mrs. George Cdok and Miss Annie Cook, all of Belgrave..Mrs. Cook enjoyed her lovely ,cards reeeived. • from relatives ode triepde, She is Ostitaftiff Aleiefid•fti' • Marine aith General Hospi- tal, Goderich.:(' Mrs. Telford CoOk and her brother, Frank Cooper-, • attended the wedding of their great niece, Rose Marie White of Panbrtm, -Saskat-' chewan, and John Olsen of Manitoba on Saturday at the Wingham Bible, Chapel. Mrs. Harry:Cook attended the wedding Of her grand- daughter, Rose :Marie White of Panbrun, Sask:`, 'to John Olsen of -Manitoba on Satur- day, September 27, at the Wingham Bible Chapel: Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hanna visited on the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Brian StOrer and Mr. and Mrs. WaynechenMinickerand family of Kit Mrs. ll'eliniaEnsOrn of Sar, nia spent the weekend, with her mother, Mrs. Robert Procter. They were over- night guests of Mr. anclArs. Howard Zettler of Chepstow on Saturday. evening.' On Sunday they motored,. through the northern counties to Owen SOund and eMoearfs.ord to view the autumn Colors, Danny TbbmpSon of Goderich spenklie weekend • with his grandPerents; Mr. • and Mrs. Bert Johnston, re- turning home with Miss Ber- nice Thompson', • Mrs. Marilyn Thompson and Chester MacDonald, all of Goderich, who were dinner guests at the same home on Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Russel Philips of Pickering at- tended the the wedding of Mary Ellen Havens and Douglas MacLean at the Lucknow • Upited Church on Saturday, September Xi,. while their ehlldreni,Megan and Ryan, — r1ed-MBONt#eir aunt and 66;21V0 . and" Mi,."Jack • Taylor. All were overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tay- • Miss Lisa Campbell Of London spent the weekend • With her grandmother, Mrs. ()live Campbell. Mr, and Mrs. Brice Hedden of Rensellaer, New York, visited with her aunt, Mrs. Ethel Wheeler, this past weekend, Mr. and Mrs. Sent Pletch, • Mr.` end Mrs. Keith Pletch attended the wedding of Jane • : Gall and Sam Mondano at NewtontirOOk United Church, Willowdale, �n Saturday. They also visited with Mr. and Mrs. Nornian " Hill. of Willowdale on Sun- day. • Several Belgrave resi- dents toured Parry Sound re- cently and enjoyed a three- hour cruise among the.30,000 islands of Georgian Bay. The <, peace and, tranquility of nature; especially when wrapped in'tbe glow of an en - 'Chanting fall day; left the ;spellbound. • • .,1Et_ Nfron ' and iteremY, Wlin,reside on the 4th concession of Morris TOwnship, • were dinner guests Of his. grandmother,' Mrs. Leiliebolt, on Sunday. • Mrs. George Michie at- tended the Grand Chapter session, Order of the Eastern Star, which was held last week in 'the, Royal York Hotel, TOronto. Misses Joanne Edgar and Dianne Scott have returned to Centralia College for their second year in food service Management . oupie honored on 40th anniversary Whitechurch — The family congratulations and best of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rintoul wishes to his parents. Both held a 40th anaireesary . BILI and .Narrna replied, • party fen their parent e in the thanking their family for Whitechurch Community planning the . pleasant evening, everyone for at- tending and for best wishes, cards, flowers and gifts. Mrs., Rintoul was the former Norma 'Caldwell of • Blyth. They were married at the home of the bride's parents, the late Mr. and Mrs. George Caldwell, by Rev. A. M. Boyle on Sep- tember 28, 1940. Their. at- tendants were her sister, , Thelina, Mrs. Mack Cardiff of Brussels, and Peter McDonald, the groom's cousin, of • Lucknow. Both were present on Saturday evening. The flower girl, Nancy tee of Toronto, now Mrs. Noel Wittich, a niece of the groom, was unable to be present. Their family consists of one son and four daughters, Neil of RR 2, Lucknow, Anne (Mit. Dave Oberholtzer) of Waterloo, Donna (Mrs. Harry Gutoskie) and Sharon (Mrs. Gordon Campbell), both of Kitchener and Doris (Mrs. Leonard Robinson) of Belgrave. There are, ten grandchildren On Sunday at noon the family enjoyed a smorgas- bord at Turnberry Tavern Wingham. Memorial Hall on Saturday evening. Open House was followed by dancing to the music of Tiffin's Orchestra. A large number of relatives and friends gathered to help celebrate the happy event. A smorgasbord was served at 11:30 pm. Neil Rintoul, on behalf of those . present; offered • MIKE ZIMMERMAN and John Jouwinia frOtY1 the Jack Reavle Opportunity Workshop are hard at work hammering ss typear hinges +/nether. Connie Jamieson, work - hop manager, explained that thi*Lk* done In the workshop's new porteble, which was Installed this weak, 2^, Bluevale Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Henning attended the 40th wedding anniversary party held for Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rintoul on Friday night et Whitechurch. On Sunday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Henning ideited with Mr. and Mrs. ,Marty Cretier, Amy -Jo ' and Ja nen. tarestqrOn for torty.01.4.7.,, #iiriiirtherinformotiop WingnaThom Belgraveil • Telephone 3672 ilieeesereteueutae._ • CNIB Canvass The Wingham LionsClub will ba conductingtheir annual "IIQUSe to house" cativass_for: the Bijnd 'on Tuesday evening, Odtober 14th, 19.80h arinoess :through Injoy or, ditoiese cart hagi., pen to anyone faintly is Immune The dian National -institute ter, tha, Blind 'offers • habilitation and support ..3010/1do3 Which help visually impaired people qv° fulL broductivellyea. • 'As a charitable organization;CNIB ranee • public donations to continue its impaitant ser- vices. BY givinggenerously when the canvasser ;Palle you ensuraihatiVe CNIB it there t0,101P, •should;Vou .or someone close to...you need its..., seri/Ices. ntuotwamm. . 1-0 G'rdciter.•;-*Jtitier.of , 3:00)4fottb-(of.groCedeOlt • JORN'..CU14. • showing -‘• • Other winners are: • Dwight Leslie . Mrs.1111. Brewster • ' Sam Bondi • Paid Greenwood Judi De Boer rtINESTnciA COLLEAt OF APPLIED ARTS , ANti TECHNOiOGY it..ONTINUING EDUCATION requires • PARTTIME NURSING TEACHERS These evening teaching positions are open to both men and women. We require part-time nursing teachers with specialized knowledge to teach in the following courses: -Theoretical Concepts of intravenous Therapy -Theoretical'Concep of Renal Nursing -Theore,tical Concepts of Respiratory Nursing -Introduction to Psychiatric Nursing for Registereed Nurses -Topics in Geriatrics for Registered Nurses -Introduction to Coronary Care Nursing -Patient Care Planning These courses are offered • at a variety of locations throughout Waterloo, Wellington, Per- th and Huron Counties. The applicant must have; 1. A current College of Nurses of Ontario Cer- lificate of Competency as o Registered Nurse. 2. Current Theoretical and Clinical expertise in the subject area. 3. Good communications skills. 4. Ability to relate to the adult learner. 5. Teaching experience is an asset. Employment and benefits Officer 299 boon Valley Drive Kitchener, Ontario N2G 4M4 Competition No. 80.110 • Al •