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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-05-23, Page 2l a Page The W ngham AdvanceTimek Thin y, y 2, 1974 Lakelet News Items Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Snell, daughter Myrtle and grand- daughter Kathie, and Mrs. Myrtle Wilderman of London, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Denis and family and Mrs.! Holzchuh of Stouffville visited a few days last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Harper. Mr. and Mrs. Del Hickling, Sandra and Debbie spent the weekend at the same home. Mr. and Mrs. John Inglis of To- ronto and Mr. and Mrs. Jim - Inglis Jr. of Milton spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Jim Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bridge and family of Brussels, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Pellett and Robert of Wroxeter and Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Metzger of Gorrie visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Metzger and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Paynter of Kitchener were weekend visitors with Mrs. Gordon Wright. Weekend callers with Mr. and Mrs. Ken Dettman were Mrs. Herb Miller and Kevin of Water- loo and Mrs. Marlyn Stafford and family of Bloomingdale. Scott Edwards of London spent the weekend at the same home. Mrs. Cliff Hallman broke her wrist in a mishap on the weekend. Residents present petition to council Mrs. Dorothy McKenzie ap- peared before members of the West , Wawanosh Township Council when they met in the hall for their May session. Mrs. Mc- Kenzie presented a petition sign- ed by the majority of• the resi- dents in the St. Helens area, re- garding dust control on Conces- sion 10-11. On. motion of Council- lors Rutherford and Foran, the petition was tabled for the pres- ent time. Council members passed a by- law, prohibiting the running -at - large of animals other than dogs. This by ,law is enforceable by the local detachment of the Ontario Provincial Police. Grant Chisholm spoke briefly to Council concerning his wish to purchase a piece of land from the township. Two applications for CLAY - Silo Unl'oaders - Feeders. - Cleaners • Stabling - Leg Elevators - Liquid Manure Equipment - Hog Equipment FARMATIC - -. Mills - Augers, etc. ACORN . -- - Cleaners - Heated Waterers ZERO — 1l. - Bulk Tanks ,,, - Pipeline & Parlour Equipmenr WESTEEL-ROSCO-Granaries °a a L Hag Panelling Bulk Tank &Pipeline cleaning Detergents,, Tacit Dip, etc. Bovadine Dyne losan ddrsdn Foamcheck Klseneaisy • LOWRY FARM SYSTEMS R.R. 1, Kincardine, Ontario Phone 395-52$5 tile drainage loans were present- ed and accepted, those concern- ing the south half of Lot 22 and the west half of ,Lot 23, concession 5; and Lot 22, concession 4. The 1973 audit of township ac- counts was discussed, after Mr. Harper's letter was read wherein he, inferred he would not reduce the amount he originally quoted for the audit. A motion by Councillors Foran and Durnin directed the clerk to write Mr. Harper to the effect that his resignation would be accepted and upon its receipt to contact Monteith and Monteith of Strat- ford to proceed with the 1973 audit. General accounts of $663.74 and road accounts of $6709.88 were ordered paid on motion of Councillors Foran and Hickey. 1 TRE u opt .z4. o. P. P. 'TRAFFIC BUf. umemplanammoun 'DEAD $,`C Removal Service We are now paying up to $20.00 for dead or disabled cows. $2,5.00 for dead or disabled Horses Smaller animals from 500-1b. to 1,000-1b. — $1.00 per cwt. CASH ON THE SPOT As a •service to you we pick up pigs and calves Free. 24 -Hour Service Power Equipped Trucks CALL COLLECT 887-9334 Brussels Pet Food Supplies Lic. 399-C-73 tf -SEE YOUR CO-OP FIRST! We have in stock acomplete line of chemicals, seed, and fertilizer • at COMPETITIVE PRICES. If you have to change your cropping plans due to the late season, we have in stock limited quantities of : Early Varieties of Seed, Corn, Barley, Mixed Grain, and Small Seeds. YOUR CO-OP CAN HELP YOU WITH ALL YOUR FARM SUPPLIES. UiIt.d Ce -operatives of Outa,i, BELGRAVE BRANCH 357-2711 887-6453 FIRST HALF WINNING TEAM—Trophies were presented to this team of the Fordwich Bowling League for scoring highest during the first half of the season. The team was made up by (back row, left to right) Doug Brown, Alex Reid and Gord Matheson; -.(front row) Mary Johnson, Leone Foerter, Margaret Johnson and Marguerite Bridge. (Staff Photo) INDIVIDUAL WI NNERS—Indivicktal trophies were giverf to (from left to right) Andrea Eskitt,- ladies' high single, bowler; Bonnie Wilson, ladies, high average, Gord Mathe- Pete Eskritt, men's high average, qe tiec mbkin, ladietnl „,.,3 so94 Wnerr of the,4 Molesworth :�L,a�es most improved:bowier, AlgA :Reid, nnen' .most improved^F� a ,.lads ' ; � t; Nellie Allan, �.. w�:�•. p � -..._ . _ ��hig11 smgte.. � . (Staff Photo) . By Murray Gaunt, MPP Huron -Bruce Report from Queen's Park Ontario Hydro is to be allowed to expropriate certain lands re- quired for relocation of a CP rail line to, make. way for the contro- versial dam near Arnprior. How- ever, it has been refused the go- ahead it sought to acquire other land it needed to use only during the dam construction and for a transmission line" for which Hydro had no firm, plans. , Hydro may reapply for expro- priation of further land when it can more precisely state how much land it needs and where the transmission line will be built. Otherwise, the way, is cleared for the $50 million dam. Environment Minister William Newman confirmed the Inquiry Officer's finding that Hydro's evidence about how much land it needed and for what purposes was "vague and unconvincing". Ontario Housing Minister Sid- ney Handieman said this week that house prices are on the way down and will bring savings that will reach buyers on lower in- comes. He attributed this to the province's new Land Speculation Tax. However, the- Opposition pointed out that the facts do not seem to bear this out as housing costs rose six per cent within the area covered by the Toronto Real EstAte Board in the month of April. Premier William Davis said there are nd plans to review or stall the increase in gasoline 4' prices "at the moment", but he could not see any reason for prices going up as much as they will in the next few days, more than 9 cents a 'gallon for at least three brands. • It was estimated that the stock 'of oil and oil products produced at .the old price would last until mid- May. Mr. Davis told the Legislature he found it hard to understand an increase beyond the rough seven cents that was agreed to at the Ottawa conference 'six weeks ago. Ontario residents pay a total of $44 million for each ode cent in- crease in the price of a gallon of gasoline and fuel. The provincial tax on gasoline is 19 cents a gal- lon. The Ontario Government has changed its mind for the second time and decided denturists should be allowed to. Work inde- pendent of supervision by den- tists if they pass qualifying ex- aminations. Health Minister Frank Miller said that the denturists who wrote the examination to qualify to work under dentists now will be able to work independently. However, they will have to pass upgrading examinations when they are set. Denture therapists willnot be allowed to make partial entures xcept, under dentists' super- vision. They will be restricted to Whitechurch News Home for the holiday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dan Tiffin, were Barry of Kitchener and Joyce of Toronto. Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ben McClenaghan and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mc- Clenaghan were Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Culbert and Wendy of Georgetown, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Ross of London, a former resi- dent on the Mirehouse farm, and Mr. and Mrs. Angus MacDonald of St. Helens and on Monday Mr, and Mrs. Harry Moss. On Wednesday last Mrs. R. Des Roches and Bobby, Mrs. Carl McClenaghan and Mrs. Bill Gib- son were in London. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Walken and Kimberley of Listowel were holi- day visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Earl Walken and family. This community was sorry to learn on Monday that on Sunday Mrs. Hazel Purdon fell at the apartment and after X-ray was taken at Wingham hospital. She was taken to University Hospital, London with a broken hip. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Rintoul, Carol, Kimberley and Debbie of King spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rintoul and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Black. During 1972 some 3,300 miles of rivers were studied by 20 uni- versity students in the Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Quebec, Newfd'undland and Labrador. main in the upper or lower jaw, or both. Making a partial denture is a much more complicated pro- cedure than making a full plate according to Mr. Miller because of possible problems with adjac- ' full upper and lower plates for fit- ent teeth and so this work should ting in a 'mouth Wrhere no teeth re- be supervised by a dentist. r r■I� rrB rle rrr �i �B 11111 to 004110 tam. This ws away any per. If it tlossit't cwt your doh, sr. t ;bruiwt or Nod apply Iodsral e Yoe S�fhr4� aw Aft.rf 1. Ireakihwn? Then come to us ! We have what if takes to "'spruce" ' you u►, again. And what bett.r tiRn@ to 'get started on SUPER PLENAMINS.' Start now with a special in#ro- ductoryoffer. SUPER PLENAMINS 36 Tablets For Only Lee Vance Ltd. WINGHAM YOUR WINGHAM PHARMACIST ONTARIO WESTEEL - ROSCO GRAIN BINS Seven sizes in..stock Over twenty sizes available Cash -Discounts For, Payment on Delivery ORPENOL From gam - E RNWE'I N EDIATELY TEL Y h X81` ' Asa`n3 i�ir rice increose June 15 CALL COLLECT * WALKERTON 8814187 Dealer inquiries Invited 1 Add an outdoor living room this year 111 � BUILDALL WOOD PATIO DECK � �� all „oma. or al 1 1 i See us f I your OUTDOOR LIVING NEEDS' . PATIO STONES 1 . SIDEWALK SLABS . BuiIdalI Wood Stain; . WROUGHT IRON I, RAILING 1 . SAKRETE CEMENT 1 MIX 1 . DRIVEWAY SEALER . LAWN CHAIRS I . PICNIC TABLES 1 LD i i SPECIAL 1FIBERGLASS 1 SHEETS i aFT._ x5.95 10 Fr s7.50 � HODGINS-McDONA I Wingharn 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 600Shi„ ILDALL ASSOCIATE STORE .. 0