The Huron Expositor, 1981-10-14, Page 1.122nd Year
Whole Number 5827
$17 a year In advance,
A single copy 50 cents SEAFORTH, ONTARIO, wEDNEBOAy, OCTOBER 14, issi 20 PAGES
e this wee 111 i
Veteran volunteers
A couple of Seaforth people
were honouredfor years and
years of volunteer service by
the Huron County division of
the Canadian Cancer Society
at Holmesville last week. See
pg. 3,
New councils
Two area schools have just
elected new student coun-
cils. See them on pg. 15.
No UNICEF
The Huron-Perth County
Roman Catholic Separate
School Board has decided nit
to have its schools support
the annual United Nations
International Childrens'
Emergency Fund drive this
fall. Story on pg. S
OFA meets
Former Ontario Federation
of Agriculture president
Peter Hanna= spoke at the
Huron F. of A annual meeting
at Hensall last Wednesday.
The story's on pg. 12.
the Canadian Cancer Society r ' Dr. Ragula said a survival
Tuesday evening; October 6. • rate of five' years fOr all kinds
of cancer of the colon and
The Russian-born Dr. Rag- rectum is about:40 per cent
ula. received his medical and it does not improve in
tratnitigifiBeigiiifti. Vaduat: 2 'Spite of extensive 'and mod-
ing in 1951, He tame to
Canada in 1954 and now
practises,family medicine in
London. He is medical advis-
or to the Canadian Cancer "It appears that the only
Society, London Branch and way to fight cancer at the
assistant clinical ,professor present time is, early detect-
with the Department of Earn- ion of this disease," he
ily Practice at the University reported.
of Western Ontario.
Dr. Rairila said that the
Through his , speech, Dr. occurrence of bowel cancer is
Ragula familiarized the aud- frequent enough to justify
ience with his experience in routine screening for early
the early detection of bowel diagnosis. If the doctor does;
cancer by use of a simple test not offer such screening, the
ern treatment including sur-
gery, radiotherapy, and chef
motherapy.
lR
NEW LEADER — Bill Campbell will be at the helm of the Seaforth
Optimists for the next year, after being inducted into the job Thursday by
Lieutenant-Governor of Zone 10, Bill McGrath.
(Photo. by Ellis)
B. GREGOR CAMPBELL
A spokestnart4 for the Ontario Provincial
Police at Godertch says everything has gone
smoothly, andtherehave been no problems,
since the detachment took over where the
one-man Seaforth detachment left off Oct. 1.
The local detachment was phased out and
shut down. OPP headquarters at 'Toronto
says economics was the reason.
Cpl. Leeking of Goderich OPP says, as of
the first of this, month, that detachment has
been patrolling three zones instead of two.
The new zone is Seaforth and area. Each
mne is regitlarly covered by one officer per
shift, meaning the Seaforth zone has at least,
one officer patrolling it 24 hours per day,
Constable JifrilkiiiKebel was the Seaforth
detachment before Oct. 1, though Goderich
backed him up and helped patrol this area,
but not on a zone basis.
BY GREGOR CAMPBELL
If you take traffic laws lightly you're
playing with your. life. Lose it and you- won't
get it back.
We can educate the public but "can only
hope that it sinks in," says Sgt. Jim van der
Voort, the • commander of the Sebringville
detachment of the Ontario Provincial Mice.-
"We can't have a policethart in every car out
there."
Despite tougher enforcement of traffic
laws the number of fatalities in the area'
patrolled by the detachment is alarming.
So far this year 14 people have'been killed
in eight accidents in Sebringville OPP's area
Which extends __to St. Columban -east -of
Seaforth. This figure is.the second highest for
any detachment' in the proiincial force's
District 6. The District includes some large
der Vooit.
But the 'Sebringville detachment has been
cracking down on drinking drivers and people
who don't wear seatbeltsfqr sometime now.
And the number of fatalities isn't any, less
alarming.
Five people died in the area patrolled by
"1 think the Seaforth area now get
better coverage in terms of nianhours," says.
Cpl. Leeking. He adds administrative
duplication was cut down by the changeover.
Should a citizen wish to reachGoderich
OPP in Seaforth and surrounding area (ie.
Walton, Blyth, Londesborough, Dublin) now
he or she can phone 524-8314 or Zenith
50,000.
Forget Constable MacLeod's old number.
He has been transferred to the OPP's 13
member detachment at Chapleau, about 160
kilometers northeast of Sault Ste. Marie. He
had served Seaforth the past seven yars, and
before that he was with Goderich OPP.
The closure of Seaforth's one-man de-
tachment leaves only two such detachments
in the province, at Nestor Falls and
Dubreuiville.
the,-Sebringville detachment in 197$. Since
then the figures have not been so relatively
rosy. Seventeen people were killed in traffic
accidents in Sebringville's area in •1979. 16
people in 1980, and 14 so far this year with a
good two months to go.
There were 420 liquor seizures from motor
vehicles by 'Sebringville OPP in. 1979, 720
such seizures last year and there have been
745 so far this year. Impeded driving charges
laid by the detachment this year (150) are
more than_double the number for the same
time-peiodip 1979 (66). Seatbelt charges laid
'show the same trend; 196 laid by the
detachment hi 1979. 269 in. 1980 and 252 so
far this year.
Sebringville's commander Says contrary to
the popular stereotype no police officer
becoineatobardened a fatality doesn't effect
him or her. Sometimes the job can be
frustrating. •
Sgt. van" der Voort used cigarettes and
Sgt. van der Voort says he wonder as a
citizen where this type of logic leads. He
also wonders about the rights of the innocent
victims in all this, and the rights of taxpayers
who end up paying for other people's right to
kill themselvec
The detachment commander says 10 of the
14 fatalities so far this year in the
SebritigVille detachment's area happened in
Jane, July and. August. He• says nice weather
in these; months undaubtably_has something
to do •with more drinking and driving, and
hence more fatalities. But he isn't an expert
Believe it or not. Christmas is only 11
weeks away. And that Means the time is fast
approahing for the Brussels Post. Blyth
-Standard and Huron Expositor's annual
Christmas Cookbook. '
Thanks to the contri-
butions of recipes from the many fine cooks
among our readership, the cookbook has
Dr. Boris Ragula,
spoke on early
detection of cancer of the
bowel at the annual meeting
of the Huron County Unit of
BY GREGOR CAMPBELL
Seaforth firefighters responded • to an
alarm from Kilbarchan Nursing Home at 46
Church' St. shortly before 10 o'clock this
morning (Wednesday). They returned to the
station quickly. Though Fire Chief Harry Hak
become a popular item Marva homes.
A total of $40 in prize money will be
awarded to those who submit recipes. See the
ad elsewhere in this issue for details, and
categories of recipes. ,
Mail or bring in your recipes to the Post,
the Standard or the Expositor by Friday. Oct
23.
patient should a.slrfor It, he
said.
The screening used by Dr.
Ragula, known as hemoccylt,
blood testing, takes only' .a. Ji
few minutes and is simple
and inexpensive for the
early diagnosis of cancer of
the gastrointestinal tract.
"Most of my patients
diagnosed with this system
were asymptomatic and a
maliganancy wouldn't have
been detected for another
year or two without the
hemocCult test." he explain-
ed.
Also, because of his simple
screening method, many pat-
ients are spared other painful
tests. Only those showing
certain signs from the first
screening are subjected to
further tests, he explained.
was unavailable for comment at press time, it
appears the false alarm may have been
triggered by an accidental break in the ;,
circuit.
More than 1000
protest letters
presented
HENSALL=A presentation of 1.03- letters
stating the feelings on the economy of the
Huron County -people was presented to MP
Murray Cardiff (PC-Huron• Bruce) at the
Huron County Federation of Agriculture's
annual meeting here Oct. 8.
Gerry Fortune. president of the Huron
County federation made the presentation to
Mr. Cardiff. Prior to the presentation. Mrs.
Fortune said she had read the letters as they
came in said the fetters made her feel "sad.
frustrated, desperate, and angry". These
feelings were vented, not at the letter writers,
but at the situation the economy is in.
She said in one of the letters, a person who
had been farming for 25 years didn't know
what they were going to do. because next
year they would have no equitity left.
Mr. Cardiff said "agriculture has been
given another blow", with the announcement
that day that Farm Credit Corporation loans
to farmers increased to 16.1'5 per cent from 14
per cent.
Russell Bolton of McKillop Township was
presented with the Huron County Award for
hiS invoIment with fig,..:,, ...)rman
Alexander made the presentation and read
out a long list of Mr. Bolton's accolenplish-
It was the sixth year for the award.
FOR SERVICE TO AGRICULTURE -- Russell Bolton of McKillop, right,
Was this year's recipient of the Huron County award, from the Huron
Federation of Agriculture,' at the group's annual meeting in Hensel,
Thursday. Mr. Bolton, World haychamplurrannuallysince1972, has been- -
McKillop and Huron F•of A president, longtime secretary of the 'Huron
Plowmen's Association, a registered seed grower and- active n local
school boards and the. Agricultural Society. His wife. Edna is at left arid_
centre is last-yew-1s winner Norm_ an Alexander of' Londesbciro 'who Made
the presentation. (Photo by .White)
my : five ...attend
hall.
every business inside Seaforth's Business ,
five people attended the Meeting to get the
BIA organized last Wednesday at the town
IMprovement Area (BIA) boundaries, only
Despite the fact that !emit went out to
Oct. 20 in the town hall at 7:30...
arranged another meeting for Tuesday-night,
meeting' is trying -one' more tithe an d has
to the editor for more details.)
Jerry Hetherington who organized the
(See his letter,
LOTS OF LETTERS — Huron F of A president GerryFOrttine'gave
Huron-Bruce MP Murray Cardiff more than 1000 letters from Huron
farmers at the F of A annual' meeting.' The letters, protesting' high
interest rates Arid the government's lack of attention 'to eton0Mic
problems, will be delivered by the MP to Prime Minister Trudeau.
(Phpto by White)
in statistics. can kill you, seatbelts save, lives, and police
He says therea , are three facts the public officers, can do very little to save lives without
shouldn't forget though alcohol and driving co-operation from the public.
Bowel cancer -con be
etectd.speoker
tells .Huron .'group
Band to sell Expositor
This fall the annual SDHS Huron Expositor
subscription campaign is being carried out by
members of the SDHS Girls Trumpet Band.
rand members will use their revenue from
selling new and renewal subscriptions to help
- meetlhe costs of their trip to next year's
Calgary Stampede.
Look for a band member to be calling on
you soon:-
• Despite tougher enforcement
cancer as an analogy. FigUres show cigarette
smoking and cancer are closely linked yet
many members of the public argue they have
a tight to smoke ifIliek want to, in other
words they defend their right to kill
themselves. The same logic applies to the use
of seatbelts for some people. The Command-
ing sergeant says this puts police officers in
the position of haviog- to protect people
against themselves.
----Motoreyele helmet regulations, which have
,shown they save- lives, have recently been
thrown out in court in British Columbia and
. the United States because judges ruled the
regulations infringed on an individual's civil Centres of population with heavy traffic flow rights. including the. counties • of Huron, - Perth,
Grey, Bruce, Wellington and highways in the "
Waterloo region.
"Alcohol was the contributing factor in
the majority of our fatalities," says Sgt. van
It's cookbook time again
Drivers paying with lives
of scieening qt
the time of Yearly or general
examinations ()wall patients--
40 years of age and over.
Firemen called to. Kilbarchan
BY GREGOR CAMPBELL
High interest rates apparently haven't
hurt construction in Tuckersmith Township
as much as might by expected.
The number and value of building permits
issued by the township to' date this year
exceeds 1980 figures for the entire year.
There _have been 69 building permits
issued in Tuckersmith this year, with a value
of $933';550. Last year 63 permits were issued
with a value of $1,112;600 a figure that is'
distorted because it includes one Huron
County permit with a, value of $312,800.
Tuckersmith's situation is exactly the_
reverse of Seaforth's, where the number
and value of building permits issued are
down in comparison to last
year's figures.
meqting. A
41 Ax 134.,....4...16.410,44,,41,.,Aii.. ,. , 1 _44 '' ' _ ,.in., 111:4,6A.AM...a............,