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The Citizen, 1992-01-08, Page 22PAGE 22. THE CITIZEN. WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 8.1992. Former Blyth couple wed in Clinton, lives in Kitchener Photo by Gary Walden VANDERHEYDEN-WALDEN Father Ray Renaud officiated at the wedding ceremony of Jason VanderHeyden and Christa Walden at St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Clinton on Nov. 16, 1991. Jason, of Kitchener, is the son of Gerald and Anna VanderHeyden of Blyth and Penny Waddell of Lon­ don. Christa, also of Kitchener, is the daughter of Garth and Dianne Walden, Blyth. Maid of honour was Maria Ver­ burg, of Blyth and bridesmaids were Angela Nethery, Blyth; Sheila VanderHeyden, Lucan and Jill Walden, Blyth. Bill Gulutzen, Blyth was the groomsman while Paul Hallahan, Tim Walden and Wesley Wilson, all of Blyth were ushers. Following the wedding a recep­ tion was held at the Blyth and Dis- are residing in Kitchener. Jason and Christa Vander Heyden Blyth Christmas visitors with Lome and Evelyn Popp a week before Christmas were Doug and Kim Popp and Bradley of RR 2, Moore­ field; Dianne Popp, London; Robert, Janet and Robert John Popp, Blyth; Paul and Betty Popp, Londesboro; Debbie and Steve Roy, Greg, Kristopher, Jason and Michelle of Exeter; Betty and Brian Holme and Nicole of London; David and Karen Popp of Clinton and Kathy Popp of London. Lome ano Evelyn Popp, Brian and Betty Holme and Nicole and Paul and Betty Popp drove to Flori­ da on Dec. 20. Going through Georgia and Florida, traffic was bumper to bumper all the way. Everyone was going to Florida, it seemed for Christmas. They spent two enjoyable weeks in Florida going to Disneyworld, Epcot Cen­ tre, MGM and Universal Studios, Cape Kennedy, air show, dog show, etc. Lome and Evelyn spent a few enjoyable days at Nashville on their way home attending a tap­ ing of Nashville Now and Grand Ole Opry. Russell Nesbitt, 24 year old son of Carl and Lena Nesbitt, was seized suddenly on Jan. 2 with excruciating pain in his right side. Determined not to disturb his par­ ents, who had retired early because his mother had to leave around 12 for night duty at Huronview, and still clinging to the hope the pain might somehow vanish, Russell took the truck and off he went to Emergency in Clinton Hospital. The verdict was acute appendicitis. At 2 a.m. the staff had located a Seaforth surgeon who was free at that time on that morning to oper­ ate. His mother arriving home around 7:30 a.m. found the truck missing. It was there when she had left for work. In a few minutes she received the call that her son was entering surgery in a few minutes. One might ask, Did he drive fast to the hospital? The answer was “No, not too fast”. Although time was of the utmost importance to his recov­ ery, he might have been pulled over, questioned, checked, tested, etc. which all takes time. His deci­ sion proved correct, for his surgery was free of complications. He arrived home last Monday at noon with the highest praise for his sur­ geon and doctor and staff. Murray and Cindy Craig, Melanie and Melissa of Port Syd­ ney; Mary Craig, North Bay; and Nancy Craig, Etobicoke, visited from Dec. 22 to 27 with Bill and Isabelle Craig. All enjoyed Christ­ mas together and visiting Christ­ mas Day with Donald, R.R.2, Brussels. Bankers Continued from page 16 tions from a purely logical point of view. Banks are not in business to make emotional decisions. Bank managers lose their jobs or face certain transfers if it appears that their on-the-job impartiality has been marred by emotional judge­ ment calls. Appealing to a banker's emotions, just won't work, Ms. McGlinchey said. She suggested that small busi­ nesses can be best prepared to meet their banker with ample documenta­ tion, thorough financial statements, management, marketing and inven­ tory statistics. When banks look at loan applica­ tions they will consider the general market outlook, social trends, inter­ est rates and competition. They will closely scrutinize the business oper­ ation to assess its inventory values, equipment, staff, other funding, and its position relative to other types of similar businesses. “There's always risk perceived by the banker. You need to give them security,” she noted. Banks and businesses can, and do, carry out healthy and reasonable negotiations. Ms. McGlinchey stressed, however, the face of bank­ ing has changed in the 1990s. Recession has tightened the money lenders' belts, and record high bankruptcies have led banks to assess each loan application with a certain amount of skepticism. Gone are the old days when a client could drop by for ehat with his bank manager, Ms. McGlinchey noted. trict Community Centre. After the wedding trip to the Dominican Republic, the couple Drink and drive and you’ll get a lot of support. 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