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Page .8 Times-Advocate, March 27, 1975 40$401,i
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Up school board spending
This week in the Legislature,
the Minister of Education an-
nounced that the Government
will raise ceilings on school board
spending by $50.00 for each
elementary and secondary school
pupil "because of continued
inflation."
Boards will now be permitted
to spend $926.00 for each
elementary school pupil and
$1,441 for each high school
student. This increase will add
some $20 million to the province's
share of education spending,
which is about 60 percent of the
total.
Government grants to hoards
By MRS. ROBERT LAING
CROMARTY
Mrs. John Miller opened the
March meeting of the Marian
Ritchie Evening Auxiliary with
an Easter poem, "The Crown of
the Morning." "When I Survey
the Wondrous Cross" was sung
followed by the scripture, read by
Mrs, Lloyd Miller.
The roll call was answered by a
verse on hope, A letter was read
from Ruby Rook of the Luampa
Mission Leprosy Settlement in
Zambia, to whom each member
had donated a new pillow case
last year. She told of treating a
witch doctor their hospital and
of preparing a Braille code for a
blind leprosy -patient. Bandages
are still the greatest need in the
hospital.
Mrs. Lorne,'Elliott gave the
i-lbpe," showing
the 'hope' tbat pqmes from the
resurrection. The- Study Book on
'City Living, prepared by Mrs.
Larry Gardiner, was given by
Mrs. F. Hamilton, Mrs: J. Carey,
and Mrs. J. Templerrian. It dealt
with the problems that have to be
overcome in Tyndale House,
Montreal; The Korean 'Christian
Centre in Osaka, Japan; Port
Harcourt, Nigeria; Taiwan; and
a north Toronto suburb where an
inter-denominational church is
being planned,
of education will rise this year to
nearly $1.5 billion from $1,33
billion last year.
On the subject of teacher
salaries, the Minister said "their
salaries should reflect increases
in inflation, together with other
economic trends in. the com-
munity . . but to withdraw
services to support demands that
are by any standard, exorbitant
and unreasonable, is grossly
unfair to students."
The Minister of Colleges and
Universities announced a new
student loan program and the
creation of a $500,000 special
bursary fund to assist im-
poverished part-time students.
Maximum living alowances
under the existing Ontario
Student Assistance Program will
increase next fall from $48,50 to
$57.50 a week.
The new Ontario Student Loans
plan will enable a student to
borrow at low interest up to $1,400
each academic year to a
maximum of $4,000, and Ministry
officials estimate that up to 3,000
students may benefit from the
plan. Applicants must be on
welfare, unemployed or have a
low family income.
The extra three hundred copies
of the centennial cookbook which
has proved so popular, were
distributed to the members to
sell.
A touch of war
Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm Lamond
returned Thursday after a three-
week trip to the Holy Land. They
reported that it was a beautiful
country, but they were disap-
pointed to see that most of the
sacred places had been so
commercialized. They also ex-
perienced a touch of war, their
hotel being only a couple of
blocks from where Israeli-
Egyptian fighting erupted'shortly
after their arrival.
Buildings sold
An auction sale of the booth and
the steel storage shed was held at
the Cromarty Ball Park on
Saturday morning,
Men bowlers second
Cromarty men's bowling team,
consisting of Harvey Dow, Don
Johns, Eldon Allen, Bob Laing,
Yoste Drost, Elmer Dow and
Norm Wilding, captured second
place in their Monday night
bowling league in Mitchell. The
playoffs are now in progress.
The final night of skating was
held in Hensall arena Saturday
night.
Personals
Debbie Hulley of Winthrop
spent a few days with her aunt
and uncle, Mr, & Mrs. Larry
Gardiner.
Mrs. Otto Walker has arrived
home after spending several days
in South Huron Hospital, Exeter.
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Currie,
Dorchester, visited Sunday with
her parents, Mr. & Mrs. Otto
Walker.
A spokesman for the Ontario
Federation of Students has
described the OSAP increases as
inadequate to cover inflation, but
welcomed the special bursary
fund as a "step in the right
direction" in student assistance,
Liberal Leader Robert Nixon
continued his reply to the Speech
from the Throne this week,
strongly criticizing the Govern-
ment because in Ontario we are
not "pulling our weight: in the
economy, in food production, in
house-building, in education, not
even in urban transit. Despite our
tremendous natural advantages,
despite our rich resources of
people, of land and of mineral
wealth, the Davis Government
has been unable to maintain
Ontario's hard-earned position of
strength and leadership."
Mr. Nixon pointed out that
Ontario's unemployment rate is
going up almost two-thirds faster
than the national rate. Also the
value of Canadian exports in-
creased 58.6 percent between 1972
and 1974, but Ontario's exports
went up by only 34.1 percent only
three-fifths of the national rate.
Consumer prices are rising
faster in Ontario than the
national average: in Toronto, for
example, house prices have been
rising 18 percent faster than
elsewhere. Meanwhile between
1972 and 1974 Canadian average
wage rates have increased faster
than in Ontario.
Also, across Canada the pupil-
teacher ratio in schools has been
improving, but in Ontario class
size has grown larger.
Our argiculture industry is
experiencing serious difficulties,
and there were 127,000 fewer
Ontario farms in operation in 1971
than a decade earlier. This
decline is continuing, and our
arable land is fast disappearing.
There has been a fall in
acreage for feed grains, tobacco,
fruit and vegetables. The number
of dairy cattle in Ontario has
dropped steadily since 1956, from
more than a million head to
755,000 in 1971.
For the past two fiscal years
this province has actually un-
derspent its housing budget, In
1973 and 1974, the government
underspent by a total of $103
trillion $103 million which
should have been spent on
housing and was not. This past
fiscal year, the rental housing
budget was underspent by $20
million.
The Government has in-
troduced legislation to increase
the number of Ontario Ridings to
125 from 117, as recommended by
the Report of the Independent
Ontario Electoral Boundaries
Commission. The change will be
in effect for the next provincial
election, according to the
Premier.
There have been minor
changes made to the Huron
Riding since I last reported to you
on the interim reports of the
Commission.
The Riding will now be known
as the Huron-Middlesex Elec-
toral District and it will consist of
the townships of Adelaide,
Biddulph, East Williams,
Goderich, Hay, McGillivray,
Stanley, Stephen, Tuckersmith,
Usborne and West Williams, the
towns of Clinton, Exeter,
Goderich, Parkhill and Seaforth,
and the villages of Ailsa Craig,
Bayfield, Hensall Lucan and
Zurich.
Lobo township and the town of
Strathroy were re-aligned with
the Middlesex Riding whereas
Tuckersmith township and the
town of Seaforth remain in the
Huron-Middlesex Riding. The
interim report removed
Tuckersmith township and the
town of Seaforth from Huron and
included them with the Huron-
Bruce Riding.
Hullett and McKillop toNftships
now form a part of the Huron-
Bruce Riding, otherwise the
Huron portion of the new Riding
remains as it was formerly.
Ontario wants
you to g_et
your fair share
of $375 million
Tax Credits.
Thousands of Ontario residents will share in this year's
Tax Credits. Make sure you get your fair share.
To apply, you must file both a Federal Income Tax form
(even if you don't pay income tax) and the Ontario T x
Credit form which comes with it.
Any questions?. You may, free of charge, dial "0" a )d
ask the operator for Zenith 8-2000. Residents within ti e
Metro Toronto local calling area should dial 965-8470
William Davis, Premier
Arthur Meen, Minister of Re
TAX CREDIT SYSTEM
FHH751B
as Aesso e., • ASis e
wait 'fil you see what
the new lottery
does for us.
Couple return from
trip to Holy Land
If you get the feeling
good things
are happening in
Ontario
It's like a kind of
awakening. More and more
of us are getting into things.
Kids' baseball tourna-
ments. The Hamilton
Philharmonic. Jogging
clubs, folk dancing, art clas-
ses, Bonspiels. It's happen-
ing all over the Province and
it's only the beginning.
Now, we've got a new
"Ministry" to help. The
Ministry of Culture and
Recreation.
Its job is simply to help
each of us get more out of
life.
At first it will co-
ordinate things already
under way. Like the Ontario
Summer Games, the Science
Centre, the Ontario Her-
itage Foundation.
But then it will start
helping new progiams. And
there are literally hundreds
of opportunities.
Travelling theat
groups. New hockey r ks.
Support for women in t e
arts. New libraries, in p es
where they don't even
Because part of the idea
give all of us an equal ch ce
to participate, wherever
live.
How can we do it all?
Well, there's the funds from
the new Ontario Lottery,
starting just a few weeks
from now.
The Lottery is expected
to provide many millions of
dollars. And every dollar we
then put into the various
programs will be for just one
reason. To help each of us
get more out of life.
So this is going to be
one lottery where all of us win.
4))
VG
IICTO M and GREY
TRUST CO PANY SINCE 1889
Kurt owman, Manager
Main St., Exeter 235-0530'
Harvey McCulloch, Chairman
Marshall Pollock, Managing Director
ONTARIO
LOTTERY
CORPORATION.
MINISTRY OF
CULTURE AND
RECREATION.
Ontario
Bob Welch, Minister
Malcolm Rowan, Deputy Minister