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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1968-06-13, Page 10AO Piptop Npws-4P0Prci, ThuretlaY,iruae 13 POO \\*...\\•••\‘‘ IS THE'll TO ADD SIL gXZENSIONS ,SILO ROOFS call or Write NeW, s. GfORGE WRAIITH Box 95 GODERICH P1IPNE 44011 tf N.,...‘,..\\•••••"%s"\\\N"NN••‘,..\\N From 0 ur rly File Ea .410 AO.: lYfiSg.;-Plgabeth ,PAirdner Vho has been on the 04 of Vogue .Magazine .Now 'Yoric for. Ps* seven months, is spending • elmt. vacation ,At :her limo in DAYfieltlf. JoAnne and ..Kenny with their parents, Mr, and Mrs, TOM :Arltell And uncle • Nen 4ricel4 Bay City, . Mich. gan,.-Were at their faintly Snip in xiayneld over the Metnerial Day holidays,. CT1 N EDGA "Common sense legislation foi Huron" — /One. Canada — No Special Provincial Status — A "Just" Society — Equal Rights . For All — Farm Income Maintainad In Bad Years — A Consumer Code For Your Protection — Training and Retraining Programs Jobs for All — ,National Marketing of Farm Products — Fair Drug, Piices — Housing at Reasonable Cost - Government Economy More Efficient Public Service Vote Where the Action Is — For a Trudeau Liberal Government E D G A R Vote EDGAR Vote TRUDEAU Vote LIBERAL Vote CANADA (Published by the Huron Liberal Association). aossemeeneuemensommoommosomooser MEET. JOE GREENE Canada's Minister of Agriculture Goderich, Saturda June 15th Parade to Court House Park from Hamilton Street, headed by the Goderich Town Hand will begin at 3:15 p.m. Program at park at 3:30 p.m. — Refreshments — Ice Cream — Pop NIMNIMPIMb. SEE MAIT EDGAR ON TV CFPL TV, donday, June 17, 7 to 7:30 p.m. CKNX- TV, Friday, June 14, at 11:30 p.m. ',Conestoga fomesi .fo (contirlee4 from pagg '1) an audience of about 130 People Was told at Winton Legion Halt. Jest Wednesday evening at a ,Cennestoga Oollege forum, RePreSPAtatiVeS Of each major department in the PPI- lege spoke to the audience, ac- tinainting the Pe0Ple with, the objectives PO desired results Of the courses, At Present,Cenestoge Col- lege, located near the village of Doon, on highway 401, has an enrolment of 196. Ten yeare ,from poW total enrolment will be abOut 19,900, college officials say, The, college, one of 19 colleges of applied arts and technology in Ontario, has been in operation since January, 1908. Year one end August 9, Classes are PreeePtlY being taught in 20 portable class* rooms and a, large semi-pep, patient building. Permanent buildings for the L44-sera nampus Are Voider construction for next SOP, tetnbert The hew bniicling0 have a total floor-space Of 40,000 square feet.. The faculty at the VOW has. grow)) from '20 Original members to 60. any teachers have been drawn -42141 the areas of btlaineeS and industry, some of them teaching pv0111141. Among thePP are David Russel, of the TV Prograilly "This Tiour Has Seven Days"., and "Ward .Cornell, radio and television announcer. Educational advisory em- ma-tees Provide a liaison be- tween the college and the geographical and vocational areas it serves. Purpose of the advisory committees is to as,' sure that the education pre- graills at the college are con- sistent with the current and future needs of the communities it serves. Among the 28 members of the committees are Rev. G.G. Russell, ca.d,rAch, on the APPItO arts J. PfmingtOtlir 'Pc4eriqh, on the business, committee, and cayle4r '1/9a4 Machinery COMPetWo Ooderieh! on the lildiletrY committee.. Herbert Such, reeve of Gocl-! erleh, is vice.-,chairman of the gonest440, P94ege, board of governors. Chairman of the forum, Dean Schneider, said the college is '1!lanAing to make a study in depth of the educational needs of thO PeoPle litiTou County. At Preeeetk the college has few students from Huron County heeaue of the fact that gem- meting to the college Would mean a drtlie about 60 milee each way every dky$5 One person in the audience Suggested during the question, bag Period that a satellite cam- pus for the goliege, if set up in Huron County, plight attract neW.businesses and industries to the area. At present, many Huron County students are taking ex- tension courses from the col- iege. Canadian industry has ten engineers to one technician or technologist, the audience was told. According to college in- dustry department officials, the ratio should be exactly the op- posite. The college currently offers three year programs in air and water resources, civil, elec- tronic, electrical, and mech- anical technology, and two year drafting, electronic, electrical, and wood products technician courses. The technology courses are designed to Produce graduates Prices to• be paid to Ontario wheat producers for 1968 crop wheat were re-established at the same level as last year, the Ontario Wheat Producers' Marketing Board announced June 5. Mr. K. A, Standing, secre- tary-manager of the board, said in announcing reauits of negoti- ations held in Toronto on June 4 between the marketing board and trade representatives, there will be ne change in the 1968 negotiated Ontario wheat marketing agreement for the 1968 cropyear which begins July first. Although the board owns con- siderable stocks of wheat atthe present time, board negotiators pressed for continuation of last year's price schedule which 'sets' the, minimunr at $1.80 per bushel for grades No. 1 and No.. 2 wheat, less board deductions. Large volumes of over- production in all major wheat producing countries are weigh- ing heavily on the world ex- port market. Along with this, disposition of the new inter- national grains agreement cur- rently being fought in the sub- committee of the U.S. govern- ment is causing great concern. The U.S. has until June 17 to ratify the agreement. Canada has already ratified, but future prices here as well as in all wheat markets of the world depend on U.S. ratification and many other countires involved which apparently are holding off pending U.S. decisions. It is the feeling of marketing board directors that producers will have to adopt a different marketing system for 1969 if present conditions continue. They suggest the possibility of total pooling or marketing quotas and suggest also pro- ducers should consider all as- pects of the market prior to seeding this fall. The negotiated agreement provides an escalated price schedule for an increase of 10 cents per hushel. The price rises two cents per bushel per month through October, No- vember, December, January, who are capable of thoory to the solving of en gingering problems. Tech ,nologists .usually work as a ooginonring:440,Stsnt,. Teetraicim, are usually yin Yell/0 in the, .installation operation,, and. PlallItenance ccomP/OX equipment. Courses in the creative art .division Include graphic .an commercial art, •design, ad vertisiog and public :relations ,jeoroalisro, radio and telelli eion, film, recording, tbeatr. and audio visual ,aids tq edg. cation. Applied arts _courses .a Available in earlychildh education, .recreation, SOO services assistant, and .co sumer and family studies, Two and three-year busbies • courses are offered in the area, of 'business adininietrationt ac counting, comppter program rearicetingo insurance retailing, and general, Legal and medical secretarial. - New courses offered for 196 include theetre arts, genera arts, library technician, lopa government, a g r ic nit ra drainage technologist, '4)01 a die design technician, rura parish develeinnent worker pediatric aid, - survey tech nician, hospitality management administration assistant mechanical lab technician, in dustrial technologist, and legs 'clerk. The colleges of applied art 'and technology in Ontario, ofte referred to as ((community col leges", do not all offer the sam courses. Some programs at th schools have been initiated a designed specifically for th needs of the surrounding corn Amities. and February, when it remai at $1.90 until the end of Apri In May, it decreases five cen per bushel and again in Jun returning to the $1.80 deve Mr. Standing said moistu discounts, also part of t negotiated agreement, rema the same at two and a ha cents per bushel for every on half per cent of moisture b tween 14 and 15 per cent. T discount is two cents per bush for every one-half per ce moisture above 15 per cen Obituary EMMA CRUIKSHANK' Emma Jemima Cruiksh Of R. R, 2 Clinton died of ea cer , in-Victoria Hospitali= don; Monday May 27, -at age of 52. The daughter of Willie Sturgeon and the former Jessi Beatrice Wallis, she was bo in Hayfield. She married Jame's Willie Cruikshank in 1945. She lived at R.R. 2 Clinto five days prior to her deat and in Clinton the six previou years. She was a member of th Hayfield Trinity Anglica Church, Surviving are husband James father, William Sturgeon. R,R Clinton, daughter, n7 Robert (Berthena Margare McCool, brothers, James Brucefield, and Newton, Po Dover, sisters, Mrs. E. (Audrey) Florion, Clinton, an Mrs. J. (Berthena) Hammon Hayfield. She was predecease by a brother, George, of Britis Columbia. Funeral services were hel from Ball and Mutch Funer, Home with Rev. E.J.B. Hang son of Hayfield presiding. Inter went was inBayfield Cemete Pallbearers were Ed Floria Jack Hammond, Carson Snow don, John Denomme, Paul Mc Cool, Robert McCool. Persons attended the servic from Hamilton, Port Dove Wingham, Toronto, Kitchene Mitchell, Walkerton, Bayfiel Brussels, and Goderich. 25. YE TIE CL.T.NTPIINgV,AggOl3P, Th16047:? :May A 193. Missteattie PloMaa, TetUreed. Tuesday - lieSp..PW after ,spencting the Weekend with and Mrs, -JoeephSileeek. Miss Mildred. *AN el)ent the w4eireacl in Pecteriehat the henleof her .eieter Mr,anci. Mrs. Fred Sandy, Miss F, Jamieson of Londesr boro is visiting in Toronto this, week, 482.9414 TREAT YOURSELF T A tio-F O Rosr REFRIGERATOR -FREEZER HOW -.00100111P • before you become upset over another messy defrosting job, or tackle another sticking -ice tray, or pry apart packs of iced-up frozen food, or become frustrated over the lack of storage space and endless trips to the store, see the new "NO-FROST" refrigerator-freezers now on display at yOur local appliance dealers. They're bigger, better, never frost-up and never require defrosting . . . ever H ! CLINTON PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION *4** k************k* GINGERICHS GROVES & SON "WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL" CLINTON, ONTARIO Res.; 482.9746 Wheat' prices announced MALT EDGAR REMINDS YOU Advance Poll Are open Sat., June 15 and Mon. June 17, from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. and are located IN EXETER TOWN HALL IN SEAFORTH BOY SCOUT HALL IN CLINTON TOWN HALL WINGHAM TOWN HALL IN OFFICE OF H. SHORE, GODERICH This information courtesy of MAlT EDGAR LIBERAL TRUDEAU HURON whe suggests you Contact your nearest Edgar.Trudeau Committee Room SEAFORTH — PHONE 5274611 CLINTON — PHONE 482-7729 GODERICH — PHONE 524-6191 WINGHAM PHONE 357.1412 EXETER PHONE 235.1302 (Published by Huron Liberal ASSOciatiOn) a