Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1973-04-05, Page 12CHECKING A BEEF CARCASS - During the Open House at Centralia College of Agricultural Technology Wednesday and Thursday, students manned the various displays, Above, Aubrey Huntley of the senior business management class shows Wayne, Bevan and Janet Shapton of Stephen township the various cuts of meat on a beef carcass. T-A photo. Clandeboye residents confined to hospitals Mrs. A. Macintosh presided. Mrs. C. Coughlin was in charge of the devotions. Mrs. A. Simpson and Mrs. A. Thompson were co hostess. Regional rally will be held at Lieury United Church May 17. Mrs. Kilb new president of the regional will be speaker. 4 -H The fifth meeting of the Clandeboye No. 1 4-H homemaking club was at the leader's home. Mrs. Hardy demonstrated the correct ap- plication of lace on a hem. The girls made a sample for their record books. mithig Nr11111 APRIL 1973 WHAT IS TAX BITE FEVER? A very common ailment that almost every- body suffers from at this time of year is "TAX BITE FEVER". It starts annually somewhere around mid-March and seems to reach its peak in mid-to-late April. Then it gradually subsides. SOME PEOPLE AVOW IT The very acute symptoms of this chronic disease can be avoided by making estimated payments, taking out extra money from the weekly paychecks, budgeting carefully and by asking physicians for something to keep calm. THERE IS NO CURE At the present there is no cure for "TAX BITE FEVER" and none is foreseen coming about in the near future. Fortunately though, it is relatively short in duration and has no real lasting effect. THERE IS SOME HELP There are many everyday medicines that can help with relieving symptoms of "TAX BITE FEVER". We regularly stock a large selection of aspirin for headaches, antacids for upset stomachs and eye drops for redness and eye strain. KEEP YOUR SENSE OF HUMOR This message is brought to you by our pharmacy in the hopes that it will add just a touch of humor to the trials and tribula- tions of income tax time. Bob Middleton, PhmB Stan Horrell, PhmB IDDLETON Drugs -----1173 RHONE 235-1570 EXETER VIRSRVRnagRVROR R lk ly Buy Easter Seals Seniors play at Centralia By MRS. FR ED pp/mpg Prize winners at the euchre party in the community centre on Monday night were: ladies lone. hands, Mrs. Gordon Atkinson; ladies high score, Mrs. Lawrence. l-Iirtzel; ladies low score, Mrs.; Allen; men's lone hands Don' Allen; men's high score, Harry Carroll; men's low score, Ed Dundas. Mrs. Percy Noels was the winner of the lucky cup. Mr, & Mrs, Ralph Lightfoot and Mr, Mrs. Maurice MacDonald will be in charge of the next party. Persona Is Senior citizens met in the community centre on Monday for an afternoon of crokinole and cards. Mr. & Mrs. John Thompson returned home last week following a vacation with Mr. & Mrs. Don Heaman and family in Vancouver B,C. They made the trip by plane. Mr. & Mrs. Verne Johnson and family London were Saturday evening dinner guests with Mr. & Mrs, Ray Shoebottom and family. Mr, & Mrs. Russell Wilson and family visited Sunday with Mrs. Wilson's mother, Mrs. James Murray in Arkona and attended The Meryle Dolan Crusade. Mr. & Mrs. Russell Schroeder visited Sunday with their son and daughter-in-law Mr. & Mrs. Wm Schroeder at Dorchester. Mr. & Mrs. Fred Bowden at- tended a family dinner at the home of Mrs. Barry Reid in London on Sunday. It was a birth- day celebration for Mrs. Ray Paynter, David Paynter and Mrs, Ray Jaques. Mr. & Mrs. Russell Schroeder and Mr. & Mrs. Fred Bowden attended the funeral of the late Mrs. Terry Bowden in London on Monday. ljf„si% MEMORIALs 6 h 0 a iD-k, f t I T. PRYDE & SON LTD. Phone 235-0620 Main St., Exeter • MONUMENTS • MARKERS • INSCRIPTIONS Contact Jack Pryde: Office 235.0620 or Home 235.1384 Order Now For Delivery As Soon As Possible In The Spring DISPLAYS ALSO IN OODEMCH, CLINTON and SEAEORTH "OUR BUSINESS ESTABLISHED 1919" Page 17 Times-Advocate,, April 5, 1973 FROM QUEEN'S PARK By JACK RIDDELL, HURON MPP As a member of the Ontario Legislature, I firmly believe it is my responsibility to keep the constituents of the Huron Riding informed regarding activities at Queen's Park. It is,theref ore, my intention and with the consent and co-operation of the local newspaper personnel throughout the Riding, to submit a weekly report outlining the proceedings of the Legislative Assembly. The 3rd Session of the 29th Parliament was opened in it s traditional manner by Lieutenant Governor W. Ross MacDonald at which time he read the Speech from the Throne revealing the Government's plans for preserving the Province's land, environment and resources. The major emphasis seemed to be the Government's concern for the physical environment and the urgent need to control urban sprawl, protect the green space, and endeavour to improve the quality of life in general. A Niagara Escarpment Commission will be delegated the respon- sibility of protecting a million square miles of land stretching from Niagara-on-theLake to the end of Bruce Peninsula, Parkway belts around Metro Toronto and good agricultural land will be preserved as well. There will also be a Royal Commission enquiry into criminal ac- tivities in the construction industry which was formerly ear marked for the Toronto area but upon request of the Opposition will include all of Ontario. It very much appears that Ontario's electoral districts are to be changed but whether this will be done in time for the next provincial election remains to be seen, The throne speech included other matters such as regeneration of forest lands and preparation of idle lands for seeding and planting; stronger controls on the sale and use of pesticides; crackdown on traf- ficking of hard drugs; improved efficiency in the courts and elimina- tion of grand juries; increased payments to workers injured on the job under the Workmen's Compensation Act. Despite two by-election losses, Premier Davis intends to surge ahead with plans for regional government, east and west of Toronto, but he is meeting considerable opposition from members of the Liberal and New Democratic parties and I would hazard to guess that it will be a long time coming to Huron County. The Auditor's Report which has recently been released revealed a number of very interesting matters one of which was the decision on the part of civil servants who run the Ontario Health Insurance Program not to collect some premiums and to bill others improperly costing the Province about $55 million. There were 80 other major criticisms of provincial spending, one of which was use of Government aircraft by Cabinet Ministers, Senior Civil Servants and their families on non-business trips. Another was the $3,182 taxi bill from Thomas Symons when he was chairman of a Royal Commission on French language education. There was also a huge under-estimate of the $29 million cost of Ontario Place. This week both Robert Nixon, leader of the Opposition, for the Liberal Party and Stephen Lewis, leader of the Opposition for the NDP debated the Throne speech. Mr. Nixon criticized the Government's method of letting con- tracts for the construction of buildings designated for use by Govern- ment Services, To avoid the situation where some developers get ex- tremely rich at the expense of the Ontario taxpayer, Mr. Nixon strongly iterated that builder proposals should not take precedence over competitive bidding where the contract is let to the lowest bidder, everything else being equal. Mr. Nixon singled out G.W. Moog, President of Canada Square Corporation Ltd. as one developer known to be a close personal friend of the Premier who is profiting by this friendship. As an example, Mr. Nixon cited three cases of Companies headed by Mr. Moog working for the Government - 1) Canada Square, which is building a new $40 million office complex for Ontario Hydro 2) Swiss Granada Holdings which built facilities for the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education and 3) Transamerica Realty which built the Transamerica Building holding the Ontario Educational Com- munications Authority. Each of these contracts was obtained through the proposal method. In the case of the Hydro Office building which is under construc- tion, Mr. Nixon said that Ontario Hydro was leasing prime Toronto land valued at $7 million to Canada Square for 30 years at $1 per year. During the construction period of three years, Canada Square will invest by way of interest on construction loans a total of about $6 million. In return Canada Square is rewarded by a rental income of almost $6.1 million every year for 30 years. That is almost $183 million in total. Premier Davis took exception to Mr. Nixon's figures and claimed that Canada Square would make a net profit of approximate- ly $5 million out of the Hydro deal. However, Mr. Nixon issued a rebuttal claiming that many of the expenses of running the new building would be assumed by Ontario Hydro and not Canada Square is Mr. Davis had said. `The of the items leading to the large provincial deficit is that of ..viedicare. Mr. Nixon in his debate to the Throne Speech proposed some changes for Medicare stating that doctors should be allowed to .bill the Province on a fee-for-service basis but there would be a yearly limit to the amount the Province would spend. If the portion of the • health fund provided for physicians becomes depleted in the last quarter of the year, only a percentage of the bills would be paid in that quarter, Mr. Nixon said. He continued that instead of placing all doc- tors on salary, the fee-for-service principle of payment would be con- tinued but with constraints. Insurance For Complete Home, Farm, Commercial and Auto Coverage CONTACT Bev Morgan Insurance Agency Ltd. 238 Main St. Phone 235-2544 Exeter Across From Beaver Lumber K:'"ViNOM • s.s4110p2s- 0416. r• -• Neajpilst - st Present and Futur umnomn TIRE TORTURE-TESTED AT SPEEDS YOU'LL NEVER NEED! There are many seemingly magic tire cords and constructions around..You know them. Steel and Glass Belts, Steel and Fabric Radials, and hosts of others. Here today, perhaps gone tomorrow. But wherever lives ride on tires, one seems destined to stand the test of time-and go on and on. For race- track, tarmac, all the tough spots where others fail-NYLON remains to do the job. Since safety counts on the highway too, it could be why our 4-Ply Safety 99 Nylon, and our 4-Ply Long Cord/Low Angle Widetrack are still our Best-Sellers. We maintain they are the soundest values in North America! Groat Values in 2 Dependable 4-Ply Nylon Tires . BLACKWALL Super-Lastic 'SAFETY 99' (Whitewall $1.50 morel Whitewall Long-ord Low Abgle WIDETRACK Mill replace Belted Tires) 1 TIRE (and 2 TIRES I TIRE (and 2 TIRES Guarantee) or more Guarento.) or more PRICE EACH PRICE EACH SIZE Before Alter Before After cash discount cash discount discount for cash • discount for cash' •520/10t 10,98 9.48 - - •550/12t 11.39 9.87 - - .600/12 WhItewallt 13.60 11.97 - - •520/13 13.60 11.97 - - 600/13 14.48 12,33 - - 600/13 (575/13) 15.37 13.18 19.35 16.96 700/13 (C78/13) 15.95 13.73 20,55 17.62 645/14 (690/14) 15.48 13.28 - - 695/14 (593/14) 15,97 • 13.75 - - E78/14 (735/14) 16.66 14.40 21,25 18.29 F70/14 (775/19) 17.95 15.15 21.95 18.95 G78/14 (815/14) 19,30 16.43 23.30 20,23 H78/14 (855/14) 20.90 17.95 24.45 21.33 J76/14 (445/14) Whitewall 23.79 20.70 - - •5.5/15 Tube Type: 11.98 10.43 - - •560/15 14.98 12.81 18.30 15.96 C78/15 (689/15) 151.78 13.57 - - E78/15 (735/15) 16,99 14.71 - - F78/15 (775/15) 18.29 15.47 22.45 19.43 678/15 (825/18) 19.69 16.80 23,50 20.42 H76/15 (855/15) 21.35 18.38 24,95 21,80 J78/15 (885/15) Whitewall 23.95 20.85 26.50 23:27 L78/15 (915/15) - - 27,90 24,60 • Indicate, tread not shown 1 Doubla-ply (4-ply rat no) THE WHIPPET-TWIN-PLY DUPONT 66 NYLON TUBELESS BLACKWALL Whitewall $1.50 more SIZE 1 Tire (and Guarantee) Price After discount for cash' 600/12 Whitewall 14.36 13,64 600/13 11.48 10.91 678/13 (650/13) 12.98 12.33 C78/13 (7eo/la) 13.49 12,82 C78/14 (695/14) 13.36 12,71 E78/14 (735/14) 13.75 13.06 F78/14 (775/14) 14.25 13.54 678/141025/14) 14.95 14.20 H78/14 (ss5/14)Whitewsll 17.85 16,96 ,i, 560/15 13.20 12,54 . F78/15 (775/15) 14.25 . 13.54 G78/15 1525/1s) 14.95 14,20 H78/15 1855/15) Whitewell 17,85 16.96 THE WHIPPET Best suited for high-speed highways An all-muscle, cool-running, twin cross-ply Nylon-shaped like a European Radial. At double the price we couldn't make a better high-speed tire and still provide that soft cushion ride. Du Pont 66 Nylon for more strength, less overnight set, 54EAR ROAD•HAZARD INSURED: 20ifilth,20% Pro-rated Weer-Out Discount Allowance THE CONTENDER-4-PLY POLYESTER is still the world's safest tire cord iggensmise... Super-Lastic 4-Ply 'Safety 99' Other Assets • Priced right- no snore than you would pay for bar- gain tires elsewhere. This we know) Show us better value and we double the sav- ings difference. See Price Guarantee posted in all Canadian Tire Stores. • 5-Peer Road Hazard Insured: 20-Month, 20% Pro-rated Wear- Out Discount Allow- ance for 'Safety 99' . 32-Month, 32% Wear-Out Discount Allowance for 'Wide- track'. • No charge for tire in- stallation when you buy our Dill or Schrader Valve at our regular catalo- gue price of $1.00 (see below). Nylon DOUBLE-BELTED POLYFLEX 645/14 695/14 E78/14 (735/141 F78/14 (775/14) 678/14 (825/14) N78/14 (855/14) 600/15 L 14.98 16.29 17.75 THE CONTENDER boat with 4-Ply Polyester The tire cord used on all new-car bias-ply tires. Polyester is famous for its smooth ride, high stability and freedom from overnight set. And you can see for yourself-the prices are surprisingly low. Si•YEAD ROAD-HAZARD INSURED; 20-101th, 2044 PrO•ritid WeeriOut Diseount Atiewanta '"TORMNNEEMAWiiialiaigOMM:giMSEMP *5% Discount for Cash in lieu of Bonus Coupons. StatiosBalance, tire and wheel, $1,00. No charge for tire installation when you buy our Dill or Schrader Valve at our regular catalogue price of $1.00. And allow us to install both,"A tire isn't new unless the valve is MI" ILLUSTRATED 'SAFETY 99' TUBELESS BLACKWALL (Whitewall $1.50 more) SIZE 600/13 650/13 700/13 12.17 12,95 13.49 Alter discount for cash • 11.56 12.30 12.82 IF bigger mileage at low per rnilecost iS important to you, but you don't Want the harshness of Glass or Steel Belted tires, compare soft-riding Polyflex. We're sure you too, will agree leg one of the best belted-tire values anywhere. Remem- ber though that any belted tire is a hybrid. It's a remarkable performer under ideal conditions, but won't take abuse like the 4-ply Nylons. 5-YEAR ROAD-HAZARD INSURED 30-Moral), 30 66, Pro-rated Wear-Out Discount Allowance, TUBELESS 2+2 BLACKWALL Whitewall $1.50 more SIZE 1 Tire (A Guarantee) 2 Tires or Mare Price' Each Before After Before After cash discount cash discount discount for cash' discount far cash' MOORE SMALLEY LTD. 444 Main St. Exeter 235-0160 14.99 15.98 17.45 12.99 13,49 14.14 14,24 15.18 16.58 12,34 12.82 13,43 F78/15 (775 /16) G78/15 1526 /15) 1178/15 (885/15) 1423 15.48 16.86 * Two Technicians and 3 Service Bays For YOUR Convenience E71/14 (135/14) F78/14 (775/14) 678/14 (825114). H78/14 (855/14) F78/15 i75/151 078/15 025/15! H78/15 (855/15) MESCOMMA Use your handy CANADIAN TIRE CREDIT CARD 6,4 affentalengta 16,80 1/.75 18.47 19,80 15.18 WIG 17.55 11,11 19.96 20,90 21.98 18.30 19.75 20.47 21.80 17.38 18.76 19.45 2034 17.95 18,90 19.98 18.95 19.85 20.68 17.05 17,15 11.11 By MRS. D. KESTLE Mrs. Mervyn Carter has been a patient in Victoria Hospital and is remaining in London for daily treatment. Mrs. Barbara Carter who underwent surgery last Thursday is gaining strength daily. Gerald Millson has been ad- mitted to St. Joseph's Hospital where he is undergoing tests and treatment. Mr. Millson has been unable to return to his work since their car accident last June, Mrs. Alvin Cunningham has returned home after spending the winter months with her daughter. Mr. & Mrs. D. Kestle were entertained by their family to a Sunday smorgasbord at Coachlight Inn, Komoka. The occasion was their wedding anniversary. Correction: Mrs, Ray Hancock (Sheila Donaldson) did not un- dergo surgery. She was in hospital for treatment. (Sorry). Ann Westelaken entertained several girl friends to an evening movie and lunch on Saturday. Ann's birthday was the occasion. Lorne Derbyshire is under- going therapy in St. Marys Hospital and hopes soon to be back home. Kevin and Joanne Carter and Paul Simpson have sent $15 to Bunny Bundle for Crippled Children. They sold tickets for a large chocolate rabbit donated by Carters Store which was won by Ted Derer, Tillsonburg. They also sold cup cakes donated by Mrs. Ken Carter, Dr. Bruce Lowden returned home from Victoria B.C. Sunday after spending a week with Mrs. Lowden's parents. Mrs. Lowden and Scott will be home next weekend. Mr. & Mrs. Ron Atchison returned home from Florida after a ten-day holiday. Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Edginton and family visited with Mr. & Mrs. Max Bloye of Thorndale, Sunday. Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Perrian and family, Strathroy visited with Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Edginton on the weekend. Mr. & Mrs. William Lowden, Toronto are spending a few days with Dr. Bruce Lowden. 4-H The No. 2 4-H club of Clan- deboye held their meeting in the United Church basement where they had as their guest Bet- ty Convay, home economist. Discussion and demonstration was on trims, bindings and lace application. Garments were on display, UCW The UCW held their April meeting in the basement of the church on Tuesday afternoon. Nine ladies were present and The Centennial Committee are plan- ning a "museum" to contain historical and antique items per- taining to the heritage of Exeter to be dis- played in the Exeter Town Hall June 27 to July 7, Arrangements will be made for pick up and delivery, Anyone wishing to loan items for this dis- play please contact Norm Whiting at 235- 1964 or Louise Giffin 235-0164 as soon as Possible.