APRIL 16, 1970 TERRACE BAY NEWS PAGE 15 EEE EE ERENT ARTS AND CRAFTS EXHIBIT IN SCHREIBER Schreiber Parks and Recreation Committee are sponsoring an Arts and Crafts Exhibit in the High School Auditorium on Sunday, April 19th from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. Exhibits and demonstrations from the Thunder Bay Craft Guild will be a feature, also displays of local talent. There is no admission charge. Regional Government - cont'd from page 14..... The transfer of 80% of education, health and welfare costs to the provincial treasury. The establishment of a Municipal Foundation Plan to replace the provincial grant structure and to pro-. vide a uniform standard and costs of municipal services across the province. Limited access by regional governments to the federal-provincial income tax. Active support, including financial assistance, to sponsor community action and political involve- ment in the processes of local government. Experiments in ways of making government at all levels contact with the people served. NOTICE OF MEETING The Annual Meeting of the Terrace Bay Ladies' Curling Club will be held in the Club Lounge on April 28th. at 8:00 P.M. Refreshments will be served. HONOUR ROLL Congratulations are extended to the following students for their excel- lent efforts in obtaining an average of 75% or better in their third term:¢- Ist row, - Mary Coste, Beth Ross, Maria Veneziano, Debby Gemmel, Victor Dukes, Allan Turner. . 2nd row - Ted Ross, Clover Dukes, Doris Lehto, Sharon Scott, Kathleen Guina, Karen Guina, Rosemary Spesiale, Michael Spadoni, Linda Fontaine. 3rd row - Marylyn Cook, Nancie Spillane Mary Speziale, Linda Nesbitt, Norme Walker, Cathy Bailey, Susan Greham, Estelle Chicoine, Dale Sisson and Sharon Smith. ; Missing from photo ~ Larry Power. CANDLE LIGHT TEA The Catholic Girls! Club will hold their Candle Light Tea - Sunday, April 19th from 7:45 to 10 p.m. in the Parish Centre, Schreiber. There will be live entertainment with admission being 50¢. A door prize will also be featured. TT Lands and Forests Bulletin - cont'd from page | ... | like to see the deer eat. | like to see the birds fly over our head. | would like to go swimming in Limestone Lake." A DIVIDED HOUSE THE KEY TO COMFORT Controlling the temperature of your entire house with only one thermostat is like using a cabin cruiser to cross a pond. You'll get there, but at an exceed-- ingly high price. It isn't necessary to keep all the rooms in the house at the same temperature all day long. Accord- ing to the Canadian Hydronics Council, each area of the house has its own needs and should be treated separately. The bedrooms, for example, don't require as much heat as the living area during the day. Having only one thermostat to control the heat is wasteful, says the Council, and uncomfortable. One way to solve the problem is to divide the home into separate heating "zones" and have each zone controlled by its own thermostat. ee LEE