The Huron Expositor, 1987-02-18, Page 13-H.ead-i ins
. (Continued from page A2),
hand and foot,' and then•slipsinto something
glamorous and strives to be entertaining.
This is not to, in most cases. When the
wives work, husband and wives share the
workload at home. Most men aren't asham- •
ed to help prepare a meal, run a vacuum or
help, out where . needed. They really ap-
preciate their Wives. working and show it.
''. We feel that the , problem began when
work habits were changed causing us to be
unable to face, each day without. tension and
• stress which results in much absenteeism..
Every employee, no mater how mental his
or her task, needs to feel appreciated, that
they belong and are part of Huronview:
a , a one ime, was e ee ing - no no
This is the view of most of. the employees
of Huronview who are really upset with the
articles in the Feliruary-11 papers, It makes.
the male employees appear, to do nothing
after work at Huronview,-but sit with their
feet up, healthy as they are, and the
husbands of the "worn out" female -
employees appear to be unfeeling, uncaring
wimps. .
We •hope that all thereaders of the
February 11 sensational articles on Huron-
View 'absenteeism read this letter.. If anyone
wishes to learn more about this absenteeism
problem, why not talk directly to the nurs-
. ing staff employees who work daily with the
residents of Huronview? They will be glad to,
answer any questions. •
Concerned Nursing Employees of
Huronview
THE, HURON EXPOSITOR FEBRUARY 18, 1987
RURAL WATER QUALITY
INFORMATION DAY
Fri. Feb.•20 10:00 - 4:00
South Huron Recreation Centre
Exeter, Victoria St. E.
FREE ADMISSION
9:30 Registration .'Coffee & Donuts
Lunch, Available
•
MAKES PRESENTATION Dave Murray, 'captain of last year's Centenaires, and Ron
Williamson of the Centenaires.executive, pose with. the team photos which will hang In the
Seaforth and District Community Centres. •• (Bedard •photo)
Crediton man president of Huron County' 4-H
Adriaan Brand, RR Credition. became Technology in,recognition of her leadership,
the 1987 president of the Huron Cetinty4-H Barry Cleave,. Varna was elected as. 1st
Club Leaders' Association- at the annual Vice -President; Ken Ramsey; ,RR 3, Blyth
meeting.'h eld February 2 in' Blyth. The 2nd Vice -President; 'and' Mary DeBoer,.
Association has a membership of .155 '_.Exeter, Secretary-l'reasurer of the Associa-
volunteer 4-H leaders • frorn all areas of the•, tion. Directprs. are Brian. McGavin; • RR 4,
County. .,.: • ' Walton; Ken Mewhinney, RR 1,Lucknow;
in his closing remarks, Mn: Brand Bonnie Johnston, ItR 2, Bluevale; Rose
challenged the Association to "involve more • Workman, Clinton: Lila Rintoul, RR 2,
non-farm young people in the -4-H program." Ludknow and Isabel ;Campbell,- RR 4,
Association.Past-President Dianne Oldfield, • Wingham:•
RR 4; Seafo"rth.was presented with.a pen:set The Association is celebrating its 35th
from. Centralia College of Agricultural • Anniversary in 1987.
Club Kinkora
(Continued from Page A10)
Tom Burke directed the first ball into the
net, on a hice pass from Larry Doimage, who
.41,1 moat of the trench work.
$ill Shortreed, himself having ' a dandy
:.•outing, replied on a long lame duck that
seemed to handcuff goalie Fortune. Short -
reed alsomade a terrific play on Brad
Finlayson when he managed to poke check
the fleet -footed Dumper and prevent, what
looked like, a sure breakaway.
Shortreed's score came when the crusty
carmudgeons Abbott Verberne was contem-.
plating his station in life in the penalty room.
• Gary Bennett scored the deciding goal
• 'when he calmly lifted the ball into the top
corner of the net. That opportunity came as
the result of a nifty pass from Dennis Murray.
•. Good stuff, I say.
CHISEUIURST4 JR. FARMERS 1 ` •
Not quite as good was ,Chiselhurst's 4 to
one whipping of the Junior Farmers. Strange
is the --only adjective to describe this
encounter.
Chiselhurst took to the frozen surface with
. only five runners but still managed to totally
dominate the Farmers. In fact, the Chiselers
had outran, outpassed and outshot their foes
to such a degree that it was 11 to zero in shots
at one point.
There with just 39 secondsleft to make the
first stanza history, Junior Farmer Paul
Hoggarth launched a crippled duck floater
that skittered into the Chiselhurst goal. It was
the -Juniors first shot on net. Yuk, yuk.
When the winners managed to fill their
bench with five extra bodies to. commence
play in the last period it was the Farmers turn
to play better. Now this is ice es-capades.
' Art Veenstra, Mark ltydn, L.es. Felconer
and Martin W ynja all combine 1 fo throttle the
Junior fellas.
Chiselhurst did outshoot the losers by a
, wide 18-5 margin.'
PARRLINE3 H.T. ROYALS 1
Parrline has created a monster. Roy Fisher
has patrolled the blueline for his organization
•
- mast of this' past tern(. but the hulking
defenceman has been shifted to offense for
• the past few matches and has responded by
pounding in some goals.
He notched a pair to lead his club to a•less
than easy3-1 conquest of the Royals in C play,
last week...__•
. His first tay at 1'4:30 of Me.final'period
• turned' out to be the. winner. Now, I don't
.expect the league's top gunners are going .to
be looking 'over their shoulders wondering
what possesses that leviathan shadow and is
making that eerie rumbling noise, but it's
nice to seethe big guy scoring goals.
Wayne Pollock had the other Panther
• marker, ' , •
The Royals were outshot by an 11 to 7 count
but executed much better than past show-
ings.
Jack•Van. Miltenburg had 'the lone H.T.
goal.
LADIES BROOMBALL
PARRLiNE 1 PERTH 0.
If Karen. Hamilton were a force'she would
.be gravity. Why gravity? Because she kept
the score down, that's why.
Her team lost • 1-0 to league champs
Parrline but her ambidexterous shinnanigans
in the Perth net kept the score on terra ferma.
Herstubbornballstopping, combined with
cold, slippery ice, that seemed to hinder
Parrline more than Perth, were enough to
give the. Perth ladies a than respectable
showing. . -
,The winners, it appears, approached this
tango with some indifference and it nearly
(Continued from Page All) .
stopped many point blank drives.
However he had trouble with the amazing-
ly, fast line of Jim Watson, Brian Dale and
Dave 13roome. They combined for nine goals
(only afterputting Dale on another line and
inserting Dave Longstaff to make them even
• faster)and generally were like cockroaches.in
the firemen's birthday cake.
hi fact, when asked for a replay on one, of
their beautiful goals, the camera -man apolo-•
gized and said he couldn't Show it because
the play happened too fast for the camera to
pick up.
Anyway the Sunday Mornings are ready
for next year - and so are the Firemen. But
can they stand another pressure packed
matchup? Can they handle the electric•pPace?
Would they, be able to keep calm with the
• lame nliis la'owd? Wild they stand another
Sunday of Watson jokes? These questions
and more will be answered next year, They
will if someonedogsn't ring in a fire alarm
during gable time, if you !mow what I mean.
SCOREBOARD
ST. .Amts BOWLING LEAGUE
Ladie'S high single,. Janice tv1'orris•• 240. Ladies high
rrlp16, Karen Hoegy 583.
Merr's Mori stadia. George Love 222, Men's high
triple, Murray Benn'ewles 807.
Standings: Devils 71, ibFhens 119, Angels 48, Satan 81.
Deriens 73, Hellions,71'.
EGMONDVILLE BOYI/LiNG LEAGUE
Ladies high single, Betty Johnston 215. To date: Carol
Kutrnich 304.
Ladies high Triple, Betty Johnston 578. yo date: Betty
Taylor 759. •
Ladies high average, Betty Johnston 190.
Men's high single, Ken Murray 318. To date: 1Niiite
Frarser 370.
Men's high triple, George Johnston 678. TO date:
Harry ben Haan 826.
high .average. Randy-.Grldzak212
' Star dings: Odd gaits 57, O 1r Gang 72, Boozes 74, Bad
' Ones 76. Raiders 76, Bustin' Loose 80.
inn,
THU1iSDAYNiG
Draw winner' - defer Kuz nith.ERs
Wbnten s high singre and triple, Pat Deighton 260,
616.
• (o'men's high average dbnnie Marion 196.
Wom9n's season's high single Carol Benttewtes 285.
Women't seato8's high tripte, 'Connie Marron 710.
Men's high single, Brian Barry 288 Men"s high triple,
Eric Matzeid 805. Men's high average, Nell Beuerman
• 252. Men's season'9 high Single and triple Murray
Behnewies 366,.011.
Standings C -Ps 83, Roosters 81, The Strays 69, The
Pears 63 B -Bops 59, Ailey Cats 59
COMMERCIALBOWLING
Ladles high single, Claudette- Elliot( 217. ladies high
tnpfe and average, Patti Fuhr 600 and 189
Men's'. high single 2nd triple; Harry OaLoyer 255 and
822 High average, Cor bo'rssseft 226
Standings: Asian 85, Petunia's 80, Tulips 73. OYohlds
72, Poppies 52, Ffosetiu'ds 46.
SENIORS BOW LING LEAGt1E
Thirty eight seniors bowled on Friday'.. •
Ladles high scores:Mary 1'fnfayson' 636, Beryl Reld
505 Men% ail James 468,
• high scores. AreFinI•ayso'n 725, Bill Harr1a853;
Wafted Reid 599,
Han total sdore was the FUr Traders with 2540.
8tahi7ings: Fur Trad
ers 28', Canadians 23, Explorers.
18i Eskimos 27, Arne1toans 19, Indians 11.
147614arne back to'Harvey bow after his stay in Stratford'
Reelithit Good tiowifng to an.
•
Sharon Whitfield pushed in the only goal
for her Parrline mates.
• SUEENS4 COMMERCIAL I
The Queens orch"th►rk first perio
sclfgoals
and coasted to a 4 to 1 success over the
Commercial. It was a dormant contest in
which the winners were Less than omnipre-
sent and the losers were much better than the
'final count might indicate.
Brenda Empey had two for the Queens to
McMaster Siemon
INSURANCE BROKERS INC!'
AUfO•BUSiNESS•FARM
CALL COLLECT
Bus.: 348-9150 or Res.: 345.2050
Cali us for a quote on farm insurance
No rebuilding clause on buildings in use.
68 Ontario Farad Mitchell
lead her bunch to the promised land of playoff
victories. • . .•
Teresa Finlayson and Pat Koehler chipped '
in the others..
Janice Cairns answered for the Commer
tial, a group. that missed some wonderful
chances this evening:
WINTHROP I JUNIOR FARMERS 0, •
You could call this the night of catalepsy.
That is suspension of sensation arid con-
sciousness 'accompanied by rigidity :of the
body.. We are tenting nap time here folks.
, Winthrop and Junior Farmers engagedin a :-
•
better expression of ladies broomball than.
the other two coma inducers but both teams
suffered through what was. to be 'a general
malaise this night. •
- The ladies- usually • provide plenty of
excitement hut the 'ice. conditions probably
contributed to irregular action.'
• Anyway, Deb Melady counted to give her
Winthrop•clan a tough victory over a Much
improved Junior Farmer team. • ' -
BROOMBITS: C.H', Express may not be
the quintessential broomball club• but 'they
are close. The champs looked very good last
week in bouncing Kinkora and that doesn't
bode well for the best of the 'usurpers. Last
week's action was slowed somewhat by a
horde of weird, bizarre penalty calls. Now
most df the lads deserved what they got for
their antics but some of the infractions called
were down right. inimical. Too bad to be
hilarious. The Junior Farmer girls team is the
most improved in the ladies group. They have
responded -remarkably to Dave Vanneste's
coaching. On the men's side Parrline has
moved up a couple of notches on the quality
scale.. This weeksuote comes from irre-
pressible.Wendell I1�elinet ..,OitIris w,lnning'•
goal against Winthrop; n A younger man
would have panicked.", The master 'of 'a
million one liners had another zinger that
aptly described the play of Brett Finlayson,
who had a less than astute genie against
Kinkora. "I didn't have a quote last week
because no one would talk to me." Hmmmm?
PHELAISPLAC
We haw added a now
TOLL FREE NUMBER! •
For qualified technicians
to service all your appliance
needs coltt
1-800.265-8589
or 303.610O
A13
T FOPICS:'
l: _ � `" •Mature Mangernent Livestock Health
,,-- t • .Well Water Concerns *Water Quality' Programa
r 'Ails , °`� • : sac es ra egy . , end -reticles
.
� " ,r Fishery Concerns '
Sponsors: Beyfield'C• onservation Authority; Ministry of the Environment',
& Ministry of Agriculture and Food
WE DELIVER
YOUR
ADVEIiflSIPG
MESSAGE
TO
SEAFORTH
AND
AREA
If you have
• something to sell,
something to ,tell,
don't keep it to •
yourself. Let your
• customers and
potential customers
, in on it! • Tell the readers
of The Expositor.
Advertise! •
ED BYRSKI
THE HURON' EXPOSITOR
527-0240
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Take The First Step Today
Sendforyour free ropy of
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FREE The Car Economy Book. + .
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