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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1969-01-02, Page 9clintPri Nevv09PCdrd, Thprsclpy, January 2, 1969 9 Lord Simcoe Hotel University & King' St. (at the subway)- Tel: 362-1848 • new, Thanks for your Here's hoping the New Year will bring a wealth of good fortune to friends old and many kindnesses. A wish for a very Happy Year NOWELL WELDING AND STAFF 51":;•. ,4 enjoy Toronto more . . „ stay at the Lord Simdoe Hotel where the service Is warm and friendly where the prices are sensible .• . • where you're close to everything downtown ... where you• can relax in modern refurbished rooms . • • where you can enjoy fine foods and intimate lounges. Singles start at ,$9.00 and end at $13.50 Doubles start at $14.00 and end at $18.50 LuxurySuites Available Clinton Memorial Shop T, ;wag and: som -CLINTON EXETER, $.1001r1.1 Phone .482421 f 4weromemeereameme oeeeleoweeemeo - Open Every Afternoon Wool Roproossontotive A. W. STEEP 482-6642 May this New Year witness the fulfill- ment of peace among all men of all nations. Thank you for ydur valued patronage. CLINTON UPHOLSTERY KEITH BRAUTIGAM 1 $68 Ford Lit) four-door hardtop, full power equipment Out stereo tape. A tine Owner low mileage car at only $3 196/ Volkswagen 1600 t ationwagon iii imMacelate conditicin for oniy 1966 Pairlane XL two-doer hardtop bucket seats and tensole in truly beautiful condition only $2117 1965 Fair'larte four-door Sedan, 8 cylinder, only 1450 1966 Ford Custom 500 four-door, 6 ciyinder automatic. A one owner car in immatulate coriditibn "41 1795 1066 Pontiac Laurentian 6 cylieder automatic-. One owner in beautiful condition 1695 shin :54m:trail( r '69 is ..early ports fishermen throughout province were pleased to n recently that the 1969 grin Summary of angling lations was released _Several tha in advance of the normal he early release of the ,mars will emiVe of benefit to eat anglers in planning their ter, spring and stammer ing vacations and will also ve of special interest to rise out fitters. Additions and changes in the 69 summary resulted from lers' questions during the `and include more o r atien on licences, ensive public fishing areas, 'Wogs, maps, fish huts, ering, marked fish, seasons on n-sports fishes and other ans of fishing. Season changes 'eh have been recommended the federal department of heries as ammendments to the 069 Ontario fishery gulations, other than those itornatically changed by irreet regulations, include: Federal Health and Welfare mister John Munro recently resented the Commons Health o`mmittee with his )partment's suggestions for gislation dealing with the ialth hazard of cigarette coking. The time has come, he said, augment and strengthen the lucational programme in aeration for the last five years. x private members bills on the me subject have also been ferred to the committee for tamination. Among the proposals put :rward by the department for )tential legislative action were: A ban on all cigarette lvertising and promotion, and o on the promotion of arette smoking in the vertising of other products. The elimination of all coupon ifed tiAtfiftifiv-§divenveefunti' &iiiraging cigarette Sinoltirig.' A statement on all cigarette ekages and cartons which uld warn potential and rrent smokers of the dangers This Business of Farming, o special hour-long ro.grammes produced ecifically for the benefit of ers by CBC-TV's farm and heries department and the nt ario department of gril culture and food, will be 4ecast on CBC-TV Tuesday and Tednesday, January 7 and 8, at 0:30 a.m. In` addition, on Thursday, inuary 9, in the same time not, there will be another ne-hour special report on the ndings of a year-long survey Ito the agricultural industry of lntario by a farm income ammittee. . All three specials will be ilecast on CBC-TV's Ontario ad Quebec network. Regular rogramming The Friendly 4ant, Chez Helene and ETVO rill be pre-empted on this etwork for the three occasions. From Field to Feed, part one I the series This Business of arming, looks at the harvest, wage and use of feed grains. It istusses the alternatives faced y the livestock producer in roviding feed for his cattle - rowing and processing on the ome farm, buying from a nail! r another farmer and processing n the farm, and buying repared feed. The programme eXamines the crease in core production in Intario for use as a feed grain, ad illustrates different systems rriployed in moving corn from le field, through storage and reparation as feed for cattle, Nine and poultry. Appearing on lie programme is Jim lacDehald of Centralia College, ad farmers from rottlittenberland and Elgin counties, SecOnd programme in the No-part series IS Money Matters. dealt with Many aspeets of lahaging money ors today's dirt •"-- keeping records, proper ed improper use Of credit,- how a figure the far' butinee% taXeS nd estate planning, Narrater' is on McArthur', lecturer in Utile-Se diariagetnent et entralia With hunker Hill, a Maker to kitiers in Ontario for 38 years,. ,(1101*,tvry credit; us, in xtension Of the season for rainbow trout in area 20 where the season this year ended on September 15 instead of December 31, - Restriction of pike fishing in OnthrioQuebee boundary waters between April 1 and May 9- - No closed season in 1969 for walleye angling ill Georgian Bay as part of a 10-year programme of investigation. A one week earlier bass season in Ontario-Quebee interprovincial waters. - An earlier brook trout winter opening date in area 16 and a later opening in area 17 (Georgian Bay) to have that water conform with the seasons established in Bruce, Grey and Simcoe counties, The new Ontario Summary of angling regulations, in • its 42-panel format, represents a further step by the Department of Lands and Forests in providing a concise and easy-to-read picture of Ontario's sport fishery. of smoking and indicate less hazardous ways to use the product. A maximum level of tar and nicotine content to be set for cigarettes, this to reduce the hazard to continuing smokers. The requirement that all cigarette sales outlets adequately display the listing of the tar-nicotine content of the cigarettes on sale. In addition to his speech, Mr. Munro tabled a report prepared by his department for study by the committee. Examining the health problem and reviewing the research and educational action already taken, it elaborates on the rationale behind the conviction that regulatory measures have become a necessity .in the increasingly serious health problem. "GetaleS''of thefreport'*ill be- available from the Department of National Health and Welfare to health organizations, tobacco companies and other groups involved in the question. farm business is changing. Jim Sutherland, director of agencies for a Canadian life insurance firm, talks about insurance as it relates to the farmer, his family and his business. Don Graham, an agricultural representative from Brant County conducts a loan counselling session with a prospective borrower about a junior farmer loan. The programme concludes with a case history of how proper management of money helped one Ontario farm family in attempting to develop a successful farm operation. Farm Income Report, the special on January 9, is the first release of the findings of the Ontario Farm Income Committee, Its report is based on a year-long survey of the agricultural industry in Ontario, which covers all aspects of agricultural and rural living and makes recommendations, for future policy. Taking part in this special will be Everett Biggs, deputy minister of agriculture and food, members of the farm income committee and specialists of the research organization which eonducted the investigation. Bell builds Bell Canada spends about a Million dollars a day for equipment and facilities to extend its system in order to meet public needs fee communications services. In 1968 the company will have spent about $337,000,000 to expand and modernize its network, The company eXpetts.r these expenses will continue to increaSe. Illustrative of the Cornpany's construction program to have its facilities ready to meet customer needs is the fact that in the last 10 years (Si/lee Bell's last general rate increase) the company has- invested about $2,500,000,000 in facilities and equiptnent more that the emribined costs of Xitirriat, Manic Vr Churchill Palik and the 'Canadian part o the St, Lavetenee SeaWay, The Right Honourable Vineen 'Massey; P: C., a c., H., Canada's first native-born governor general, will be commemorated on a six-cent stamp to be released by the Canada Post Office on February 20. Twenty-four and one-half million of the new issue, designed by Prof. Imre von Mosdossy of Agincourt, Ontario, will be printed by the Canadian Bank Note Company Ltd., Ottawa, using a combination of the steel engraving and lithographic processes. An engraved portrait of the late Governor General, printed in dark brown, occupies the upper half of the vertical stamp; wording in a lower area, printed by lithography with dark brown lettering on the olive green background, has "Vincent Massey" and the years of his birth and death "1887-1967" arranged on two lines. Immediately thereunder is "Governor General" placed on two lines to the left and "Gouverneur General" similarly arranged to the right; immediately below are the years "1952-1959" indicating Governor General Massey's prolonged term of office. A dark brown denominative "6" to the upper right of the portrait and "Canada", in white on a dark brown• box at the 4base, completes the design. Customary First Day Cover service will be provided by the Postmaster, Ottawa 2. Born in Toronto. Ontario. on 20th February 1887, Mt. Massey assumed his duties as personal representative of the Queen on 28th Februray 1952; the distinction with which he acquitted himself resulted in an extension of the customary five year term to just over seven years, the longest of any person in such a capacity. His precedent shattering selection as first Canadian-born Governor General had been preceded in 1926 by his appointment as the first Canadian Ambassador to the United States of America. Mr. Massey lived to enjoy all but a few hours of his nation's historic Centennial year; his death occurred on 30th December 1967. At one time the President of an industrial enterprise' bearing his name, Mr. Massey was active in divergent fields. During a 'tenure as teacher of modern Aistory at the University of Toronto, an institution he was later to serve as Chancellor, he supervised the building of Hart peaking to the annual meeting of the Oxford and Districit Cattle Breeding ' Asseilciation, cattle nutrition expert, Professor J. B. Stone of \the yniversity of Guelph, stated that ,at the .present time the top lirnitl for production for a Holstein cow would be apps Dximately 40,000 pounds (16, OG, quarts) in 305 days on twic ea-day milking. I his is assuming that the cow has ,the genetic ability, the right body conformation and is fed and \teenaged under the best poesiVile conditions. PrOlfessor Stone warned that fewco!ies have the genetic ability . for ,stih production and that feed: wuld 'have to be of top quality At all times to achieve such 'a levCL He stated that it was economical under present conditions tot feed for high production ,kared felt that there House, a gift from his family to the rapidly expanding seat of higher learning.e In the 1914-1918 war he served as a staff officer in Military District 2 and later as Associate Secretary of the War Committee of the Cabinet; in the second World War he was contributing his diplomatic skill and knoWledge as Canadian High Commissioner in London, He also served as a member of delegations to the League of Nations and to the United Nations Assembly. Mr. Massey chaired the Royal Commission on the National Development of the Arts, Letters and Sciences which resulted in the widely read Massey Commission Report of 1951. He had the distinction of being the Criss' GtianYnOYGeneral to fly over the North Pole and, some six weeks before the end of a 'life laden with well:deserved honours, he was among the first Canadians to be invested as Companion of the new Order of Canada. was a tremendous potential for increased . production in the dairy industry , if up-to-date feeding and management practices were followed. Professor Stone noted that the greatly increased use of corn silage in recent years had resulted in a significant improvement in production and recommended this feeding approach to dairymen. He warned, however, that additional research was needed to determine what suppletnentary feeding was required to maintain a high yielding herd in top condition on a corn silage programme. -It was his feeling that in future we will see a decrease in the use of hay, an increase in the use of corn silage and the growing of higher yielding grain crops to supplement the corn feeding programme in our dairy herds. Former time Minister John Diefenhalter appeared on "Under Attack" ,at Carleton University, Tile old (MO handled blinself very well; with • the students making 'a poor showing, which is not unusual at any of the universities.. When asked how he felt about Dalton Camp because he had ousted him as Conservative leader, Mr. Deifenbaker said: "As tar as 'Dalton Camp is concerned, the Canadian people took care of him on June 25." 4: Three specials appeared in the top 10 Survey released by the national Nielsen ratings, Number one was the Heidi special, followed by Rowan and Martin, with The Tennessee Ernie Ford special in third spot, Tied for 4th Coiner Pyle and My Three Sons. Mayberry R.F.1). was 6th, with Julia 7th and the Jack Benny special 8th. Family Affair was 9th, while Gunsmoke and Red Skelton were tied for 10th. * * * At the age of 18, Debbie Lori Kaye is the youngest performer ever to have her own television special, She may also be the tiniest - but it's her talent that makes her loom large in. Canadian entertainment. Hey, Little One, the 60-minute colour special, is scheduled for telecast on CBC-TV Monday, December 30th, at 8 p.m.. :14 One of the latest Rowan and Martin jokes: "My uncle's funeral cost $5,000 so far," "So far?", someone asked. "Yes, we buried him in a rented tuxedo." * A perfect Christmas would be to keep Bob Hope in Hollywood and let the troops visit him. Elvis Presley made it. In the latest national Nielsen ratings, the Elvis special was number one, with Rowan and Martin in second position. The runners-up were as follows: 3. Charlie Brown's Christmas, 4. Ann Margaret Special, 5. Family Affair and Fantasy Hour, 7. Mayberry R.F.D.,..8. National. Geographic special P1:43,a a Bonanza4 „LO: IMissx. Teenage• America tspecial, 11. Gomer Pyle, 12. Julia, 13. Dean Martin, 14; Bob Hope special, 15. Frank Sinatra special; 16. Mission Impossible, 17. Gunsmoke, 18. The F.B.I., 19. NBC Tuesday Night Movies, 20. Here's Lucy and My Three Sons, 22, Ed Sullivan, 23. NCAA Football game. The ratings for men 18 years and older went like this: 1. NCAA Football game, 2. Ann Margaret special, 3. Rowan and Martin, 4. NFL Football, 5. National Geographic special, 6. Mission Impossible, 7. Charlie Brown's Christmas, 8. Bob Hope special and Bonanza, 10. The Elvis Special. For women 18 years and older: 1. Elvis Special, 2. Ann Margaret special, 3, Rowan and Martin, 4. Dean Martin, 5. Family Affair, 6. Bob Hope Special, 7. Miss Teenage America special, 8. Mayberry R.F.D., 9. NBC Tuesday Night Movies, 10. Bonanza and National Geographic special. :I; :1: A recent letter to TV Guide went like this: ."About these complaints of too many commercials - what kind of mind is incapable of picking up the continuity of a movie after an interruption for a commercial? And hew much would it cost nie for an evening of television if there were no commercial sponsors?" Very well said. HOW IS YOUR CAR HOLDING UP In this cold winter weather NOW WHILE PRICES ARE AT THEIR LOWEST THOROUGHLY RECONDITIONED NEWER CAR IS THE TIME TO TRADE FOR A Cottle' in and see our large selection of really good 1964, , 1060, 1062 models priced from $495 _ 2, 'o Motors ord. Ltdo (F ' ) -derich M South Street, ............siaam.s.m.........mmtttv.zzzzog., . North on Highway 4 Issue Stamp To Honour Massey Munro seeks action m smoking hazards late three farm specials CRC television next week Prof says cows can produce 46000 lbs. of milk yearly Keith's Fa ily Clothing CLEARA CE SALE WILL coNtIN05_ Till IF brucory list COME AND JOIN T E MANY THAT ARE TAKING ADVANtA OF THIS SAVING Our Store W I Be Closed Monday is Ali Day tarting an. 6th UNTIL PURI-14VA • NO US "COME TO STORt Y 111 IMO BOYS .MORE" i".' ....J....," I" "I " • I I