•T h e IF P • H alto n H ills, Thursday, D ecem ber 12, 2013 29 CHURCHES &TEMPLES GeorGetown Christian reformed ChurCh welcomes you! Interim Pastor: Tom VanMillegen sunday worship services: 10:00 am & 6:00 pm 11611 trafalgar road (north of Maple Avenue) 905-877-4322 www.gcrc.on.ca sundaY serViCes • Lord's Supper 10 A.M. • Ministry Meeting 11:00 A.M. • Fellowship Lunch 12:00 P.M. • Ministry Meeting 1:00 P.M. Meeting In: Georgetown Seniors Centre Address: 318 Guelph Street Phone: 905-873-1005 Website: www.haltonhillsbiblechapel.com www.knoxgeorgetown.ca Service Dial-in: 905-702-1629 God's Word for Today's World. SUNDAY WORSHIP SERVICES: 11:00 A.M. Rev. Steven Boose Chair-lift access available. 'Sunday's Cool' youth ministry program for ages 4 & up. 116 Main St. S., Georgetown, ON 905-877-7585 Services EVERY Sunday 16 Adamson Street, South Norval, Halton Hills familyhouseofworship@start.ca Services starting at 10 am By Cory Soal R.H.A.D. . . . Lend MeYour Ears We care about your hearing! Professional Arts Building 99 Sinclair Ave., Suite 210, Georgetown 905-873-6642 Serving the community of Halton Hills and surrounding areas since 1992 The Georgetown The actual cause or event or mechanism of Tinnitus is not known. We know it is real; it is a symptom that something is wrong in the auditory system, but we do not know what that something is. We do know that it is not the patients imagination; it is a physiological or neurological event. There is reason to be hopeful because current research using a Tinnitus model may provide the necessary information for identifying it's cause. IS IT ASSOCIATED WITH HEARING LOSS? In most cases, Tinnitus is associated with some hearing loss. For example, those who have been exposed to excessively loud sounds may have a hearing loss for the high pitched tones. Usually their Tinnitus will be located as a high pitched tone in the region of the hearing loss. In some cases Tinnitus is present where there is no hearing loss and for no discernable reason. For more information feel free to call... COMMON QUESTIONS ABOUT TINNITUS - PART 2 DO WE KNOW WHAT TINNITUS IS?? Happy 91st Birthday Mom! Madge Turner From your daughters, Jane, Hilary & Rita Visual Arts Centre 515 Main St. Glen Williams. Gallery open during December, Tuesday to Sunday, noon to 5pm. www.williamsmill.com Gifts that last. Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY DECEMBER 6 CORPORATE FLYER In the December 6 flyer, pages 2 and 3, the Nikon D3200 24.2 Megapixel DSLR Camera Bundle (Red) and the Sony DSCTX30L 18.2 Megapixel Digital Camera (Blue) (WebCode: 10173222 / 10244494) were incorrectly advertised.On page 2, the Nikon camera bundle in red is ONLY available online. On page 3, the Sony camera in blue is NOT available for purchase. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. Best Buy CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE BEST BUY DECEMBER 6 CORPORATE FLYER In the December 6 flyer, page 23, the Klipsch B10B 5.25" Bookshelf Speakers (WebCode: 10187137) were incorrectly advertised. Please be advised that the $149.99 advertised price is for ONE pair of speakers NOT TWO pairs, as previously advertised. We apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers.We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP DECEMBER 6 CORPORATE FLYER Please be advised that in the December 6 flyer, on page 19A, the Fitbit Force Wireless Activity And Sleep Wristband (Web Code: 10270645/44/47) is currently NOT available for purchase. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP DECEMBER 6 CORPORATE FLYER Please be advised that in the December 6 flyer, on page 26, the LG 4.6 Cu. Ft. Front Load Washer (WM3050CW) (WebCode: 10265902) was advertised with incorrect specs. Please be advised that the washer's CORRECT capacity is 4.6 cu. ft., NOT 4.0 cu. ft. and it does NOT have a steam function, as previously advertised. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience this may have caused our valued customers. FUTURE SHOP CORRECTION NOTICE NEWSPAPER RETRACTION FOR THE FUTURE SHOP DECEMBER 6 CORPORATE FLYER In the December 6 flyer, page 27, the "Buy Any 2 Save $200, Buy Any 3 Save $300 on Major Kitchen Appliances" Promotion was incorrectly advertised. Please be advised that this promotion is ONLY applicable on stainless steel major appliances. John Adams of the Georgetown Raiders deposits the winning shoot- out goal behind Burlington goaltender Jeremy Currie during their On- tario Junior Hockey League matchup Sunday afternoon at the Wave Twin Rinks. The Raiders outshot the hosts 50-36 and prevailed 3-2 after overtime solved nothing. Photo by Eamonn Maher Raiders rally twice but it's not enough Scott named Niagara's top male athlete for the week Jeff Scott of the unde- feated Niagara College men's volleyball program (9-0) has been selected as the school's male athlete of the week. The local native was a force for the Knights dur- ing a five-set victory over the FanshaweFalcons on Nov. 29, finishing the game with 21 points on 16 kills, three blocks and two aces. The six-foot-four GDHS graduate native was named OCAA Rookie of the Year and a second team OCAA All-Star in 2012-13, and this season has grown into a key leader- ship role with the team. The second-year Broad- casting, Radio, Television & Film student plays the outside hitter position and serves as the Knights' team captain. Scott serves as both a vo- cal, and on-court leader for a young Knights team, and is on-pace to better his scor- ing number from the 2012-13 season. He currently sits second on the team in virtually every statistical category including points (103), points-per-set (3.7), kills (79), kills-per-set (2.82), blocks (14), and digs (56). This marks the second time this season that Scott has earned Niagara College Athlete of the Week honours. Despite coming back on two occasions to tie the game, the Georgetown Raiders ended up on the short end of an 8-5 result Tuesday in Buffalo against the West Division-leading Jr. Sabres in an Ontario Junior Hockey League contest. The Raiders, who are trying to keep pace in the division with the Jr. Sabres and second-place Milton, rallied from 3-1 and 5-3 deficits Tuesday but the home side netted the winner with 3:39 remaining in the final frame to secure the victory. Steve Midensky, Steve Hladin, Ryan Smith, Liam Board and John Adams tallied for the Raid- ers, who were outshot 37-22. Georgetown also played host to the Aurora Tigers Wednesday evening. Check www.theifp.ca Thursay for a game report. Facing two of the league's weaker outfits over the weekend, the 16-12-2 Raiders managed to score four out of four points with a pair of one-goal wins. They edged past the visiting Lindsay Muskies 2-1 on Satur- day evening and then required a shootout to defeat the Cougars in Burlington Sunday afternoon. Hladin had both goals in Sat- urday's triumph over the OJHL North Division's last-place club from Lindsay and goalie Mi- chael McNiven made 24 saves for the win. On Sunday in Burlington, the Raiders led 2-0 five minutes into the contest on goals by Kyle Allan and Richard Court but couldn't build on that advantage and the 8-19-4 Cougars pushed the out- come into extra time. Shootout goals by Midensky and Adams clinched the win for Georgetown, bolstered by a 34- save effort by rookie Michael Singh. JEFF SCOTT