HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1969-05-22, Page 3He said in the past
municipalities have fought to
build up their assessments and
have allowed unplanned growth,
but he suggested that regional
government would eliminate this
fight,
Nicklom added that
provincial assessment would
reduce the necessity for
municipalities to attempt to
build up their own assessment.
Reeve Derry Boyle pointed
out that county council is
dominated by rural
municipalities and pointed out
that the fact they had approved
undertaking such a plan
indicated their willingness to
co-operate in it.
"It was a large step forward,"
he said, "especially for the rural
areas,"
He predicted township
councils would pass the
necessary zoning bylaws and
other legislation to make the
plan effective.
Times*Advocate, May A 1969 Page 3
100'h Anniversary
o CREDITON .he UNITED CHURCH
(Services to Be Held in Zion United Church)
Sunday, May 25
Morning Worship
11:00 a.m,
Sermon 5y the
Rev. Alex Rapson
Sault Ste. Marie
r• • —
A TWIN REGISTRATION—Tuesday afternoon at JAD McCurdy school at Huron Park children were
registered for this fall's kindergarten classes. In the above picture, public health nurse Mrs. June Martene
is getting information on twin girls Lori Anne and Lynn Marie from their mother Mrs. Larry Cronin of
Centralia. T-A photo,
A Centennial History of the Crediton United Church (Story
and pictures of Shipka Church is included) has been written,
price $2.00. Any one wishing a copy, please notify Mrs. Ed.
Lamport, RR 2 Centralia. Telephone 228-6215.
•
•
Members. of Exeter council
and the local planning board
received an insight into the
objectives of county planning,
Tuesday, and were advised it will
take from 15 to 16 months to
get an official plan prepared.
They were also told that local
ratepayers will probably enjoy a
reduced levy towards the cost of
preparing the plan because
xeter already has an official
plan and zoning bylaws.
Any reduction extended
would be based on the value of
the local plan in the total scope
of Huron's plan.
Speaker at the meeting was J.
A. Nicklom, regional manager
for Kleinfeldt & Associates, who
have been hired by county
council to prepare a plan. It will
be the first plan for a county in
Ontario.
Nicklom is presently visiting
'TiJ lief tirches
in the area
Invite you to join them for
Worship, Fellowship and
Services
Over entire area
School rates up eight mills
BUSY SIGNING AUTOGRAPHS—Signing autographs was the order of the day for Paul Henderson of
the Leafs at Friday's EMHA annual banquet. Above, Paul Shapton, Jim Webb, Matthew Muller, Steven
Skinner and David Bogart are getting Henderson's signature. T-A photo
Jame street Ziniteb eburcb
EXETER, ONTARIO
Minister — Rev. S. E. Lewis M.A., B.D.
Organist and Choirmaster — Mr. Robert Cameron
SUNDAY, MAY 25
10 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL, ALL DEPARTMENTS.
11 A.M. MORNING SERVICE
United Church Women Anniversary
Guest Speaker
Rev. Finlay G. Stewart, D.D.
Rev. Stewart, minister of Can-
ada's largest Presbyterian church in
Kitchener, has served on all the
major boards of the church and in
1956 was Moderator of the Presby-
terian Church in Canada.
His weekly service from St.
Andrews is telecast on TV-13 and is
the only regular telecast service in
Canada. He has served 16 years on
the Kitchener Board of Education
and is active in a vast number of
community services.
He is in constant demand as a
speaker and has made several prior
visits to this area.
SPECIAL MUSIC BY THE CHOIR
WELCOME
CAVEN PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
Main at Hill St., Exeter
Interim Moderator:
Rev. R. M. Bisset, Avonton
Organist: Mrs. Murray Keys
Sunday, May 25
SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 a.m.
CHURCH SERVICE 11:15 a.m.
Nursery available for pre-
school children.
BETHEL
REFORMED CHURCH
Huron Street East
Rev. Harmen Heeg, Minister
Sunday, May 25
10.00 a.m.—Morning Worship
English
2:00 p.m.—Afternoon Worship
English
3:00 p.m.—Sunday School
`Come and Worship'
EMMANUEL
BAPTIST CHURCH
Huron Street West
Rev. Ivor Bodenham
Bible School for all ages
at 9:45 a.m.
11:00 a.m.— Morning Service
"Is There Not A Cause"
7:30 p.m.—Evening Service
"Who So Ever Will May Come"
Wed. 8 p.m.—Prayer Service
We welcome you to
worship with us.
CENTRALIA
FAITH TABERNACLE
Undenominational
Rev. David Ellyatt
Sunday School 10:00 a.m.
Morning Service 11:15 a.m.
Sunday 8 p.m. Evangelistic
Wed. 8:00 p.m. Prayer and
Bible Study
Fri., 7:30 p.m. Young People's
Ball Game and Barbecue at
Huron Park.
A hearty welcome awaits you.
PEACE
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Andrew and George Streets
Pastor: Rev. Earl Steinman
9:15 a.m.—Divine Service
10:30 a.m.—Sunday School
ZION
LUTHERAN CHURCH
DASHWOOD
Pastor: Rev. Earl Steinman
9:45 El,n1.Sunday School
11:00 a.m.—Divine Service
Churches of the Lutheran Hour
ZION UNITED CHURCH
CREDITON
Minister:
Rev. H, G. Zurbrigg, B.D.
Sunday, May 25
Service of Worship and Sunday
School withdrawn in favor of
the Crediton U. C. 100th Anni-
versary Services.
• Exeter will receive credit
for work on official plan
Similar to Exeter, district
municipalities face an increase of
between seven and eight mills on
their 1969 taxes for school
purposes.
Estimates released Wednesday
by the director of education for
Huron County, John D.
Cochrane show a sharp increase
in the amounts to be raised for
education throughout this area
this year.
It should be noted, however,
that costs would be considerably
higher had the provincial
government not passed •
LIONS CLEARING PARK AREA—Members of the Exeter Lions club have started a clean-up program
On the north-east corner of Riverview Park. Last Wednesday a half dozen Lions appeared on the scene
with rakes and saws to get the operation going, Above, Gerry Webb is doing some tree trimming with
Mel Gaiser and daughter Kelly helping in the brush carrying department. T.A. photo.
ASSISTANT RESOURCES
MANAGER — Bryan Howard,
BA, a graduate of the University
of Western Ontario and
presently studying for his
Masters Degree at Waterloo
University has been named
Assistant Resources Manager for
the Ausable River Conservation
Authority. This is the fifth
summer for Bryan with the
Conservation Authorities
• Branch.
Large crowds
at Pinery park
• Despite the inclement
weather provided for the first
holiday weekend of the year, the
number of visitors to Pinery
Provincial Park was higher than a
year ago when better prevailed.
The office of Park
Superintendent Mel Jackson told
• the T-A Tuesday morning that
16,880 visitors had entered the
park during the three-day
weekend.
A total of 710 tent and
camping units were in service in
the Dunes area. The Riverside
section will open the first week
of July making 1,175 units
available to the camping public.
GB council
— Continued from Front Page
also instructed to make the
necessary repair to the municipal
• boating docks after last year's
dock master Alex Leatherland
told council considerable repair
was necessary.
An amendment was made to
the supplementary road
expenditure bylaw for 1969
after receiving recommendations
from the Department of
Highways engineer.
The village will be asking
DHO to approve the request for
$22,000 on roads, $27,500 for
bridges and $3,000 to cover
engineering expenses.
•
•
•
each municipality in Huron to
advise local officials how the
project will be undertaken, how
they will be asked to contribute,
and to determine from them any
local problems that should be
considered in drafting the plan.
The question of Exeter
having to pay towards such a
plan, when in fact the
municipality has its own plan,
was raised by R. E, Pooley,
chairman of the planning board.
"Why should we have to pay
to come into such a plan?" he
asked.
Deputy-Reeve Mery
Cudmore, chairman of the
county planning board,
explained that Exeter would
receive full credit for having a
plan, with that credit being
based on the value the local plan
will be to the county.
Joe Wooden, secretary of the
planning board, questioned if,
the county could enforce the
plan in a municipality which did
not agree to pass the necessary
bylaws to put the plan into
effect.
He further questioned if a
municipality could in fact pass
bylaws contrary to the plan.
Nicklom replied that in
theory a municipality could live
outside the plan, but added that
the county could in turn oppose
bylaws passed by a municipality
that would be contrary to the
plan and the county would
probably receive support from
the Ontario Municipal Board.
Wooden said he feared that
townships which are completely
rural may find the plan an
uninteresting document and not
approve it.
However, Nicklom replied
that he has found rural
municipalities quite interested in
his visits to them and said he
hoped that with the proper
explanation and education they
would approve such a plan.
Cudmore interjected that he
was hoping there would be no
differential between
communities due to the fact
problems between each type —
rural and urban — were directly
related.
"Such problems as pollution
affect each equally," he said.
Wooden then suggested that
unless the plan limits urban
development to existing urban
areas, the plan won't be as good
as it should be.
"There should be
recommendations along these
lines," Nicklom replied.
Huron Warden Jim Hayter
was also in attendance and
expressed the opinion that
townships were feeling the
problem of growth and the
demands for services which
accompanied residential areas
spreading into rural areas.
ODC manager
to speak here
The annual meeting of the
Exeter Industrial Development
Corporation will be held at the
Legion Hall, Wednesday.
Guest speaker for the event
will be Al Etchen, general
manager of the Ontario
Development Corporation, the
group which administers
Centralia Industrial Park.
The shareholders of Exeter
Industrial Developments Limited
will meet to elect directors,
appoint auditors and transact
any further business.
Anyone is invited to attend
the dinner meeting, including
wives.
Tickets may be secured from
any of the directors: Larry
Snider, Dick Jermyn, Eldrid
Simmons, Glenn Fisher, Fred
Darling, Bill Smith or Peter
Raymond.
legislation to insure that school
taxes would not represent an
increase of more than two
equalized mills.
In Exeter, the estimated
subsidy amounts to $27,865 for
elementary schools and $1,505
for secondary schools. Residents
will raise $63,948 for
elementary schools and $94,454
for secondary schools.
In Hensall the provincial
government will pay an
estimated subsidy of $8,423.
Village residents will be
expected to raise $21,199 for
elementary schools and $25,506
for secondary schools.
Stephen residents will pay
out $72,366 for elementary
school education and $94,454
for secondary school education.
Estimated provincial government
subsidy in Stephen is $25,336
for elementary schools and
$1,954 for secondary schools.
In Usborne, taxpayers there
will raise $46,784 for
elementary school purposes after
an estimated grant of $25,879
from the provincial government,
and $64,070 for secondary
schools.
It is estimated Hay Township
will get the largest provincial
subsidies in this part of Huron
County. Figures show that
subsidies could be $35,375 for
elementary school education
with the residents raising
$50,708 and $11,344 for
secondary school education with
the municipality paying
$79,302.
At a Tuesday evening
meeting, Huron County board of
education hired B. C. Straughan,
Goderich, as chief accountant
and office manager at a salary of
$12,000; L. R. Maloney,
Bayfield, manager of purchasing
and services; and R. McVean,
Bayfield, plant superintendent,
Because of the excessive
estimated cost of alterations at
CHSS, the board has reached a
decision to rent office space at
the nurses' residence at Clinton
Public Hospital for two years.
Mr. Cochrane explained that
alteration costs at CHSS were
still too high after the contractor
had made some cuts.
Rent at the residence will be
This Weekend
DINE WELL
at
The Little inn
BAYFIELD
For Reservations 565.2611
Receptions - Banquets - Catering
Local delegates
at Kin convention
A large delegation from the
Exeter Kinsmen club attended
the Annual convention of
District One of the Kinsmen
clubs of Ontario held at Sarnia
over the weekend.
President Dave Cross and Mrs.
Cross, president-elect Walter
Peitsch and Mrs. Peitsch, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Coleman and Clifford
Quance attended the entire
convention proceedings while
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Dowson and
Mr. and Mrs. Gib Dow were in
attendance for part of the event.
President Dave Cross of the
local club reported it was the
largest district convention he
had ever attended with more
than 1,200 Kin and Kinette
members registered.
The Drawbridge Inn at Sarnia
was headquarters for the
convention with some of the
events being held at the Point
Edward arena and some
delegates were forced to seek
accommodation across the
border in Port Huron.
George Irving of Galt was
elected governor for the coming
year and next year's convention
will be held in Buffalo with the
Fort Erie Kinsmen club as host.
In competition for the best
Kin club of the year, the Hensall
club with president Wayne Reid
in charge placed third. The
Clinton club was second in the
same competition to the top
club from Caledonia.
The Exeter club placed fifth
in the Junior Bulletin Award
contest. Gernot Dauber is
bulletin editor of the local Kin
group. There are 74 clubs in
District One that stretches from
Windsor to Hamilton and
Kincardine to Sarnia.
At the Sarnia convention, a
resolution was passed asking
recognition of the Saturday
closest to June 6 as National
Flag Day. This resolution will be
forwarded to the National
convention in Toronto in August
and then to the Federal
government.
Not to attend
Hibbert fires
Hibbert council advised
Exeter this week that in future
the local fire brigade should not
attend fires in that township
unless requested to do so by the
brigades at Mitchell or Seaforth.
However, enclosed with the
letter was a cheque for $190, the
cost incurred when the local
brigade answered a call to a farm
on Highway 83 in the township
earlier this year.
Council decided to write
Hibbert and thank them for the
cheque and to include a note
that they should advise their
ratepayers which brigade to call.
In the fire in question, the
local brigade had been called and
the caller didn't know the exact
location of the farm.
3:15 - 4:30 P.M. FELLOWSHIP HOUR
Evening Service
7:30 p.m.
Sermon By the
Rev. Robert Hiltz
Sturgeon Falls
ee Sze 7Ueecoote
PARISH OF
EXETER and HENSALL
Anglican Church of Canada
Rector:
Rev. G. A. Anderson,
D.F.C., Dip. Th.
Whitsunday,
May 25
Trivitt Memorial Church:
8:00 a.m.—Holy Communion
11:00 a.m.—Morning Prayer
and Sermon
Infants cared for in Nursery.
11:00 a.m.—Sunday School
Organist: David Elston
St. Paul's Church:
9:45 a.m.—Morning Prayer
and Sermon
Organist: Mrs. Frank Forrest
MAIN STREET
and CREDITON
United Church of Canada
Minister:
Rev. Douglas Warren, BA, BD.
MAIN STREET
Organist:
Mrs. Frank Wildfong, ALCM
Services and Sunday School
withdrawn for Crediton United
Church 100th Anniversary. Serv-
ices in Zion Church, Crediton.
CREDITON
100th ANNIVERSARY SERVICE
11:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
Rev. Alex Rapson
7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship
Rev. Robt. Hiltz
All are welcome
CHRISTIAN
REFORMED CHURCH
Rev. D. .1. Scholten, B.A.,B.D.
10:00 a.m.—Worship Service
(English)
2:15 p.m.—Worship Service
(Dutch)
12:30 p.m.—Back to God Hour
CHLO (680 Kc)
CALVARY
United Church of Canada
DASH WOOD
Minister:
Rev. Bruce Guy, B.A.
Organist: Mrs. K. McCrae
Sunday, May 25
10:00 a.m.—Morning Worship
11:00 a.m.—Sunday School
EXETER PENTECOSTAL
TABERNACLE
53 Main St. Ph. 235-0944
Pastor: Rev. F. E. Rhuda
9:45 a.m.—Sunday School for
the Whole Family
11:00 min.—Morning Worship
7:30 p.m.—Evangelistic Service
Watch These
TELEVISION PROGRAMS
on Channel 8
Sat., 6 p.m.—"Springs of Liv-
ing Water"
Sun, 12:15 p.m.—",:,'ressreads"
Attend Church on Sunday
Okay July
celebration
Exeter council Tuesday night
approved sponsoring the annual
July 1 celebration at Riverview
Park, and will again be calling on
local service groups to assist in
the program.
The event will also include a
fireworks display in the evening
at the community park.
George Vriese will be
chairman of the event.
It was indicated the local
curling club may hold a
barbecue in conjunction with
the celebration.
$2,500 per year. The board will
occupy the remainder of the
first floor 'and ten offices
upstairs. Meetings will be held in
the board room at CHSS.
Exeter churches
— Continued from Front Page
convener of the elders.
— that the session act in the
capacity as music committee.
— that the Rev. Glen Wright
be the minister of the new
congregation on the same terms
as those made by the James St.
official board.
— that the new congregation
meet in the present James St.
church.
— that the trustees assess the
two manses as well as any other
alternatives.
— that the men form one
AOTS Men's Club.
— that the minister's holidays
be in July.
— that an invitation be
extended to the Rev. George
Goth to participate in a special
service on August 10. Dr. Goth
has suggested the subject: "The
Church, Dead or Alive'.'
— that the session deal with
the matter of summer supply
and the stewards act on the
matter of caretakers.
— that Rev. Daynard and/or
other members of the
consolidation committee
conduct the congregational
meeting.
— that the new church be
known as Exeter United Church.
Jir kre A
,