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The Citizen, 1985-11-13, Page 20The Original SQUEE ZO' STRAINER • Make apple sauce, tomato sauce, jams, soups and piefilling without peeling or coring a•single vegetable or fruit. • Make seedless jams strain- ed pumpkin, creamed vegetable soups and much more... just as fast as you can turn the handle. • Free 23 page booklet in- cluded with over 60 recipes, tips and guidelines on how you can use your Squeezo Strainer throughout all seasons of the year. • Another fine product from Troy-Bilt.... the makers of tools for easier gardening. October Special $7900 plus free "Joy of Gardening" cookbook $17.95 value. HURON TRACTOR EXETER 235-1115 BLYTH 523-4244 Mon.-Sat. 8-6p.m. Closed 12 - 1 Wed. & Sat. Closeat 5p.m. *Sportswear •Trophies •T-Shirts *Crests *Caps •Banners GORDON KASTER WROXETER, ONTARIO NOG 2X0 335-3136 or 335-3671 [res.] Our Company, a Mutual Insurance Company, is M ore what than you see Comprehensive Farm and Residential Insurance at competitive prices Howick Mutual Insurance Company Wroxeter, Ontario NOG 2X0 Telephone: [519] 335-3561 CHAMBERS DOMINION HARDWARE WROXETER Electrical and Mechanical work for farm or residential Service and Installationsat reasonable rates IN BUSINESSSINCE 1955 Circle Square Shopette convenience store BOTH STORES UNDER ONE ROOF 335-3265 any G. O. K. ENTERPRISES CUSTOM SILK SCREENING & CRESTING OUT OF GAS ON AN EVENING OR WEEKEND? GOTOTHE WROXETER SERVICE CENTRE IN DOWNTOWN WROXETER OPEN MONDAY - FRIDAY8-12,1-6,7-9 SATURDAY 8-12,1-6 SUNDAY 1-6 Grease jobs and oil changes $5.00 plus oil and filter PROPRIETORS: HUGH AND GEORGINA JARVIS PAGE 20. THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1985. Blyth, Hullett buy land to expand waste site Continued from Pg. 1 (up from $10) with the charge increasing from $15 to $16 for each additional female. (Clerk Larry Walsh said he sometimes felt sorry for the male dog population because from the number of people who admitted having female dogs and bought licences, the males must get awfully lonely.) The fine for having a dog run loose will be $25 per offence. A pound fee of $5 per day will also be charged. Mr. Mahon will be paid $50 per month salary plus $25 for each dog captured. DRAIN PROBLEMS A complaint had been received at the ratepayers meeting in October about water being drained from the rear of the Blyth Inn Hotel onto the alleyway and Peter Irwin from the hotel was at the meeting to discuss the problem. He explained that the water ,. concerned was all clean water from three sources: roof drains; a large water-cooled air conditioner and an ice making machine. All three drain into a cistern in the basement of the building that must be pumped out periodically. Mr. Irwin said he didn't feel this was, particularly a problem in the summer months when there was more water to be pumped because he was pumping the water onto his own property. Reeve Tom. Cronin said the complaint had mentioned that the water was going onto a public street. Council suggested that if a drain from the hotel was fixed it would solve the problem to everyone's satisfaction. Mr. Irwin said he did not want to spend much money fixing the drain. Councillor Wm. Manning sug- gested that the village should assist in an investigation into getting the drain open because it's a situation that might become antagonistic between the hotel and its neighbours. Council moved to have town foreman Merv. Ritchie dig explor- atory holes along the drain and use a snake to see if the old drain could be reactivated. LANDFILL SITE An agreement has been reached between Blyth and Hullett councils Former area resident dies in Brampton WAYNEELWOOD NICOL Wayne Elwood Nichol of 10 Welbeck Drive, Brampton died suddenly Nov. 1, 1985 at South Peel Memorial Hospital, in his 44th year. A life-long employee of Cana- dian National, he was born in Newmarket but attended school in Wingham. He war married to the former Shirley Moore at Wingham United Church in 1962. His wife and four children survive him: James, Susan, John and Andrew, all at home. A brother, Allen, of New Brunswick and a sister Noreen (Mrs. Lynn Finnigan) of Pickering also survive. He was active in the Brampton minor hockey program and in lacrosse and was a member of the Kiwanis club, and St. Paul's United Church. and Lorne Popp to purchase his 34 acre property east of the Blyth- Hullett Waste Disposal Site for a price of $40,000. The deal will close January 15, 1986. Reeve Cronin reported some displeasure from Reeve Tom Cunningham of Hullett township over a report in The Citizen from the Blyth ratepayers meeting in which it was reported that the municipalities had been renting surplus land from an earlier purchase and would rent this land too. Reeve Cunningham felt his township was not being consulted properly. Councillor Albert Was- son said that the whole purchase had developed faster than had been expected and so the two municipalities had not had much time to talk about details of future use. The new land will be used as a buffer area around the waste- disposal site. BEQUEST TO CEMETERY Council has received word that the late Harold Longman of Londesborough has left a bequest of $500 to the Blyth' Union Cemetery. Earlier the cemetery had been left $5000 from the estate of Bernard Craig. Council endorsed unanimously a resolution from the town of Durham calling for the govern- ment to outlaw strikes and lockouts in education and impose binding arbitration in labour disputes between teachers and school boards. Councillor Wasson wondered at the binding arbitra- tion issue saying that arbitration is not always best. "There's no sense jumping out of the frying pan and into the fire," he said. Councillor Manning pointed out that the disputes nearly always ended qp in binding arbitration now anyways if they went to strike. Councillor William Howson said that most of the time his reaction to these resolutions circulated by other municipalities was to file them but this was one he was in agreement with. Filing was exactly the action a resolution from the Township of Puslinch got. The resolution called for a levy of four cents on every ton of gravel taken from all pits and quarries. Council didn't agree. BRUSSELS TRANSPORT LTD. 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