The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1966-09-29, Page 2APPLICATION FOR REGISTRATION
TO: MR. R. J. HOMUTH,
CENTRAL HURON SECONDARY SCHOOL
CLINTON, ONTARIO.
From Courses Listed Above I Wish To Register In:
1st. CHOICE
2nd. CHOICE
NAME:
ADDRESS:
TELEPHONE NO:
Registration fee will be payable on opening night. Names will
be listed for other suggestions as suggesteti here by you,
Don't cry, well soon fly
The kittens have lost their mittens and let's go in our flying machine are the themes of these two entries
in the Exeter fair parade. At the top, a car entered by Greene's Variety depicts the old nursery rhyme.
Below, Don Bell with sons, Danny and David are engaged in trying to propel a craft from Sexsmith
airstrip. T-A photos
Area pupils
camping out
The Clinton District Collegiate Institute Board
REQUIRES INSTRUCTORS
FOR NIGHT CLASSES
To Be Held At
Central Huron Secondary School, Clinton
As Advertised In This Issue
APPLICATIONS TO BE FORWARDED TO THE UNDERSIGNED
NOT LATER THAN 30 SEPTEMBER 1966.
MR. R. J. HOMUTH, B.A.,
Principal,
Central Huron Secondary School,
Clinton, Ontario.
Ink -minemeng
More than 80 grAde eight SW ,
dents from Usborne Central and
Exeter public schools are this
week participating in a conser-
vation school camp at CaMP Syl-
van in the Parkhill area.
In the outing arranged by the
Ausable River Conservation Au-,
thority the young boys and girls
are studying all aspects of con-
servation with Terry McCauley
and Dave Wood of the Authority
in charge.
The Usborne students, 32 in
all, travelled by bus to the camp
Monday morning and returned to
the s c h o 01 early Wednesday
afternoon.
The 49-student Exeter contin-
gent headed by teachers Bruce
Delbridge and Mrs. Wm. Ramme,
loo left Exeter Wednesday morn-
ing and will return Friday after-
noon.
Principal Allan Taylor, head-
ing the Usborne students, reports
that although the weather was cool
in the evenings, everyone ap-
peared to have enough blankets
and coats to sleep comfortably.
The boys slept in the barn
and the girls in the "Conestogo"
wagons one night of their stay and
then reversed their sleeping
quarters the next.
Most of Monday was spent ex-
ploring the Rock Glen Conser-
vation area and going on a five
mile hike. In the evening a noisy
hootenanny, Weiner roast and a
mystery tour held the interest of
everyone.
Included on the agenda was a
tour of the old Sylvan village, a
visit to several .area farms, and
an orienteering hike of the 240
acres of rolling and forested ter-
rain of the camp, following maps
and markers. Other ventures
that kept the students busy were
a soil profile study, measuring
stream velocity and timber
cruising, which entails estimat-
ing the size and age of a tree
and the number of logs contained
therein.
The Usborne kids left Camp
Sylvan Wednesday norning after
cleaning up the site and stopped
at the Pinery Park before heading
home, while the Exeter group
used a reverse schedule, stop-
ping at the Pinery at the begin-
ning of their two and a half day
trip.
Drinking minors
— Continued from front page
drove at a high rate of speed
and squealed his tires.
Both drivers pleaded guilty to
the charges.
The Clinton District Collegiate Institute Board
and its
Development roads picked Advisory Vocational Committee
offers adult
in lieu of work on county roads
reverted to the following town-
ships:
Ashfield, $1,051; Colborne,
$1,125; Hay, $2,000; Stephen, $6,-
410; West Wawanosh, $450.
CARELESS DRIVER
Arthur A. Stuck, Centralia,
pleaded guilty to a charge of
careless driving, the charge hav-
ing been laid after he was in-
volved in an accident on Algon-
quin Drive at CFB Centralia.
Stuck ran into a parked car.
Evidence revealed Stuck had
been drinking and he was fined
$30 and costs on the driving
charge.
William H. Haugh, Dashwood,
paid a fine of $15 for makii,g an
improper turn off Highway 83 on
August 15.
He turned in front of another
car and damage in the crash
was listed at $800.
Floyd Wein, Dashwood, also
paid a fine of $15 for failing to
yield the right of way.
He pulled out of a service
station on Highway 21 on Aug-
ust 27 and was involved in a
crash with a car on the high-
way.
Bruce Nairn, Cromarty, plead-
ed guilty to careless driving
after he was involved in an ac-
cident on Highway 4 on July 14.
Evidence revealed he pulled
out of a service station at a high
rate of speed and went across
the road and hit a hydro pole.
He was fined $50 and costs of
$7.50. Nairn admitted he was in
a hurry but said the car got out
of control on loose gravel.
Dirk Mark Coolman, Stephen
Township, was fined $10 and
costs for failing to stop at a stop
sign.
Constable John Wright report-
ed he saw the Coolman vehicle
coming rapidly from a sideroad
and that it crossed Highway 4
without stopping. Night Classes
Each Monday commencing 8:00 P.M., 17 October in the following subjects
providing sufficient enrolment is received in each course and instructors
are available.
REGISTRATION will be by coupon below and fees collected at 8:00 P.M.
Monday 17 October.
FEES shall be $5.00 for business and recreational courses; $15.00 for
technical courses and $10.00 for each academic course and farm manage-
ment. Material will be provided for business and technical subjects. An
additional $1.00 will be charged each person for insurance coverage while
on board premises in accordance with Board Policy.
Business Courses And Recreational Courses
BOOKKEEPING SEWING — ADVANCED
TYPEWRITING — BASIC
OIL PAINTING
MILLINERY
Technical Courses
AUTO SERVICING WELDING DRAFTING — BASIC
GENERAL CARPENTRY — ADVANCED
Academic Courses
GRADE 13 — ALGEBRA
— GEOMETRY
— ENGLISH
Department Of Agriculture
FARM MANAGEMENT FOR PROFIT, DECISIONS AND RECORDS.
First class will be held October 24
In order that the Board may have an indication of interest in the subjects
being offered, please register now using the coupon
CLIP NOW AND MAIL
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ce occultice
By R. S. ATKEY
Three roads in the County of
Huron have been designated by
the Ontario Minister of Highways
as development roads for pre-
engineering, the County Road
Committee reported to the County
Council at its September session.
They are: road number 3, Var-
na to Brucefield, 4.3 miles, esti-
mated cost, $220,000; road num-
ber 12, Road 3 to Highway 8,
1.3 miles at Egmondville-Sea-
forth, $150,000; road number 8,
Summerhill to Auburn, 6.4 miles,
$340,000.
Although the total cost as esti-
mated back in 1964 was $710,000,
County Engineer J. W, Britnell
informed County Council that the
actual cost, when built, could ap-
proach $1,000,000, with costs
having gone up so much since
that time.
"Now that they are designated
as development roads with the
Ontario Department of Highways
bearing 100 percent of all costs,
with the exception of property,
we will be able to accelerate
our entire long range program.
In this way, the whole of the
county benefits from the develop-
ment road work and not just those
municipalities in and around the
designated development roads.
Hon. C. S. MacNaughton stated
in his letter that he was able to
make these designations only be-
cause the County of Huron quali-
fied for this type of direct aid
as per the findings of the road
needs study and because of the
County's willingness to raise its
share of its needs by increasing
the mill rate for roads.
"The committee realizes that
the findings of the needs study
and the subsequent .55-mill in-
crease in road levy were not
pleasant to many members, but
we feel these recent designations
(with more to come in the future)
make our actions worthwhile.
You will recall that we stated
for an investment of $35,000
(.55 mills on the county assess-
ment) we would qualify for di-
rect aid amounting to approxi-
mately $250,000 per year."
Work on development road
759-2 on the Crediton Road was
reported ahead of schedule.
Grading is nearing completion
and paving is underway. The pro-
ject will be completed well a-
head of the November 30 com-
pletion date.
At the suggestion of the road
committee, as a result of a
decision of the Municipal Roads
Branch of the Department of
Highways, County Council pass-
ed a bylaw under section 468
of The Municipal Act in order
to make the following payments
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Be sure to watch televised Canadian Football League Games. See local listings for time and channel.
A past president of the Mid-
Western Ontario Development
Association; ROSS Savauge, died
at his Seaforth home Sanday
morning.
Mr. SaVauge was a jeweller
and was 63 years old.
I
Pig* 2 Times-Advocate, September 29, 1964
.40 y
TAKE GOOD LOOK AT INDOOR EXHIBITS AT EXETER FAIR
MacNaughton makes announcement
Beaumont Custom Sport Coupe
(with Sports option)