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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1975-09-18, Page 5announces plans
to guarantee your
home comfort.
•
Systematic Delivery
Control
We pre-determine your daily fuel
consumption so we're there when
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JO 24-hour Emergency
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Call us anytime. We'll keep your
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42 10-Month Budget Terms
Fase your fuel payments with
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4 Water Heater Rental
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IM Guaranteed Equipment
V Our complete line of depend
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6 Equipment Payment
Plan
Use our convenient payment plan
to buy a new furnace or any of
our home comfort equipment.
JAMES E. ROWE
EXETER 235-2840
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There are spaces for photographs and clippings
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Your Engagement Announced
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GETS MEDICAL CLEARANCE — At Monday's registration at Centralia College of Agricultural Technology,
Joan Grant of Hampton checks at the nurse's desk with Marg Clarke and Mary Fran Gaiser. T-A photo
YOu can expect
consistently good
perkwmance from this
vigorous, widely adaptable
hybrid. Responds well
to harrow rows, high
populations and high
fertility. Fast dry down,
high shellout. Excellent
grain quality.
Plant TXS85. A proved
consistent performer.
healers
EXETER PRODUCE
Exeter, Ontario
235-0141
LLOYD MATHERS
RR 2, Ailsa Craig
228-6210
PETER HENDRICK
RR 1, Dashwood
238-2611
•
Trojan Seed Company
To pick up garbage, but no plowing
Times-Advocate, September 18,1975 Patrol
Make no change in mobile park fee
JUNIOR PRACTICE — The Huron-Perth Conference schedule gets underway today, Thursday. Above
SHDHS junior Qach Doug Ellison, supervises a play from scrimmage. T-A photo
How are you going
to chase girls
if you're not
in shape?
PallTINVIT/0/7
Fitness. In yoir heart you know it's right.
Loose smut, a seed-destroying
grain disease, is on the increase
this year, and according to an
Ontario Agricultural College
researcher, it is posing a serious
threat to next year's winter
wheat crop.
"This year we have noticed a
high number of winter wheat
fields infected with the disease,"
says Professor L.V. Edgington,
Department of Environmental
Biology. "There seems to be a
higher incidence in the new
variety, Fredrick. This does not
mean that Fredrick is par-
"If the silo has just recently
been filled, don't go in alone.
Have a friend standing by in case
something goes wrong. The•
safest method is to go in with an
oxygen pack," Mr. Brubaker
says.
Exeter council decided this
week to stick with the licence fee
of $15 per month suggested for
each unit in Len Verit's mobile
home park,
Veri's lawyer, P, L. Raymond,
attended Monday's meeting and
noted that Veri felt that $15
monthly fee was too high and that
it would make the total monthly
rent he has to charge his tenants
too high,
"He suggests $12," Raymond
explained.
However, members of council
noted that the fee had to cover
fire, police, schools and county
costs and Mayor Shaw opined
that the $15 "doesn't go too far,"
Council had also been advised
that the $88 Veri considered to
charge as a monthly rental was
not excessive.
Deputy-Reeve Tom MacMillan
explained that council had
deliberated on the matter for
some time and when the $15 was
He emphasizes that just run-
ning the blower fan may do no
more than agitate the gases;
however, they can be eliminated
if the silo doors are removed and
the fan turned on for about half
an hour.
titularly susceptible; it's just
that the new variety hasn't been
treated sufficiently with the
correct fungicide."
To protect next year's crop,
Professor Edgington says, the
seeds must be treated with a
systemic fungicide. He points out
that a new formulation of the
fungicide, proven to be more
effective than previous mixtures,
has recently been approved for
use. The new systemic will likely
be slightly more expensive than
other types of fungicides, but
Progessor Edgington says it's
well worth the extra cents.
Loose smut is caused by a
fungus which enters the embryo
of the wheat seed at flowering
time in mid-June. After planting
in September or October, the
fungus begins to develop as the
plant matures. By the time the
wheat is ready for harvest the
next summer, the fungus will
have destroyed the seed.
"Dear Sir, I have two sub-
scriptions to your newspaper,"
reads a recent letter to the cir-
culation department of a large
city newspaper. "One paper is
placed under the doormat and the
other is tossed on the porch,
where it blows away. Please
cancel the subscription to the one
that blows away." uninannumninuninnuninimenimum
Repairs To
▪ All Makes
• • Lawn Mowers
• • Garden Tractors
• Chain Saws
F • Chain Saw Bars --.
and Chains
Authorized dealer for:
• Briggs & Stratton
• Homelite
• Tecumseh
• MTD Lawnflite Lawn
& Garden Equipment
Set, they felt it was fair and
reasonable,
"I still do,"he added.
A 'motion was then approved
that the fee be left at $15 and that
the mobile home park agreement
be signed with Veri,
Later in the meeting, council
approved a recommendation
presented by Garnet. Hicks of the
sanitation committee that Veri be
Trial is set
for Webster
September 24 was set as a trial
date in Exeter when charges of
kidnapping, possession of a
dangerous weapon and
threatening by telephone against
John Clark Webster, 29, of Exeter
will be heard.
Webster was charged following
an incident on August 14 when
police from Grand Bend,
Goderich and Exeter arrested
Webster after his mother,
Martha Webster of Zurich, was
kidnapped and held hostage at
knife point, She was later
released unharmed.
How some
predict
today's
election
Name PC LIB. NDP
Bob Heil 69 38 18
Tom Creech 50 55 20
Bruce Shapton 48 60 17
Bob Lammie 49 43 33
Ross Tuckey 44 75 6
Reg Beavers 60 25 40
Norm Floody 70 43 12
Tom Webster 49 51 25
Doug Parker 65 32 28
Rev. G. Anderson 80 22 23
Harold Gunn 54 45 26
Danny Laing 25 75 25
Howard Holtzmann 52 47 26
Bob Sharen 80 20 25
Brenda Mawson 60 40 25
Louise Clipperton 55 50 20
Heather Dougherty 41 65 19
Emil Hendrick 44 67 14
Ab Steeper 53 50 22
Joan Mantey 35 65 25
Debbie Case 30 70 25
Sharon Lynn 67 40 18
D. Jorigkind 57 45 23
Gord Kirk 60 40 28
Jim Carter 68 42 15
Pat Skinner 58 40 27
G. Beuttenmiller 60 50 15
Doug Riley 50 60 15
Arn Laithwaite 68 30 17
Dean McKnight 30 68 17
Joyce Sims 63 41 19
Three in area
receive 'golds'
Six gold awards have been
presented to Huron-Perth
youngsters as part of the Young
Olympians of Canada program
begun in May 1974. Only 27 of the
300,000 participants in the
program across Canada have
achieved the gold award.
Three of the gold awards were
won by students at St. Boniface
School in Zurich. They are
Brenda and Cathy Vanneste of
RR 2 Kippen and Linda
Denomme of RR 1 Zurich, The
other three winners in Huron-
Perth were from Stratford and
Goderich.
The program was instituted to
encourage young Canadians to
take part in healthy recreational
activities. Huron-Perth Young
Olympians director John
McCarroll said that the activities
include sports, crafts and other
hobbies such as drama,
photography or stamp collecting.
To feature film
with Kellerman
The next general meeting of the
South Huron and District
Association for the Mentally
Retarded will feature the
showing of the film "Walk Awhile
In My Shoes".
The meeting will be held at the
Dashwood ARC workshop
cafeteria on Wednesday, Sep-
tember 24 at 8 p.m. One of the
stars of the film is Dashwood
native son, John Kellerman.
John, now 31 years of age, the
son of Mrs. Mildred Kellerman
and the late Harold Kellerman
was born with Celebral Palsy.
He attended public school in
Dashwood and received his grade
13 at South Huron District High
School in Exeter. After a term at
Waterloo University he joined the
Company of Young Canadians for
two years.
Since that time John has
worked on and with many
government sponsored projects.
The film in which John stars with
two others was made possible by
the Transportation Development
Agency in Montreal,
charged .$3. per unit per month to
provide garbage pickup in the
mobile home park,'
council agreed with a
suggestion from Ted Wright of
the works committee that council
not approve Yeti's request to
have the town provide snow
removal in the development,
Wright said this recom-
mendation was for the present
only and hinted, that it may be
reviewed when the mobile home
park is further advanced,
He said that for this winter it
would be a problem because the
park was not completed and it
would be difficult to know what
areas had to be maintained for
traffic.
His committee suggested that
Veri make arrangements with a
private contractor for the snow
removal service,
In a discussion pertaining to
.Veri's 2440 regular subdivision
adjoining the mobile home park,
council agreed toleaveithe.matter
of choosing the five percent park
land donation up to RAP,
Veri reported at the last
meeting he anticipated council
taking money in lieu of the park.
land and therefore had made no
provision to leave park area in
his subdivision,
Mayor Bruce Shaw said he
sympathized with Veri in this
regard and suggested that the
land be deeded from other land
owned by Veri behind the curling
rink.
Raymond said this would be
possible and suggested that
council get a deed for the ap-
propriate amount from Yeti.
RAP chairman Jack Under-
wood indicated this would be
suitable with his group and it was
decided to leave the matter with
RAP and yell and to have a
surveyor determine the amount
of land that should be deeded.
While at the meeting, Raymond
explained that the Darling
subdivision agreement was now
ready to be signed by council and
a motion was approved that this
matter be left with the executive
committee.
Potentially lethal silo gases
could be a serious problem this
year, says J. E. Brubaker,
supervisor of agricultural
engineering, Ontario Ministry of
Agriculture and Food. He points
out that weather conditions this
summer in some parts of Ontario
— prolonged droughty periods
followed by heavy rains -- seem
to encourage the creation of these
gases.
Silo gases are produced in the
first five days after ensiling and
are a by-product of the fer-
mentation process. The culprits
— nitrous oxide and nitric oxide
— are colorless, odorless and
heavier than air, and therefore
tend to sink to the bottom of the
silo.
Mr. Brubaker says that if the
gases are inhaled, they will cause
respiratory difficulties,
coughing, sneezing, and then
paralysis, followed eventually by
death. He advises farmers to
consult a physician immediately
if they have come in contact with
the gas, even if there are no
apparent side effects.
BLOCKING EXERCISES — Members of the SHDHS senior Panthers football team went through a brisk
blocking session, Tuesday afternoon. T-A photo
Don't go in alone
Year's weather brings gas
Loose smut threat
to winter wheat crop
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JACKS SmallEngine Repair Service Ei
HENSALL 262.2103 E
07 Queen - One Block
North of Business Section
Hours 8 to 6
Fri. hiteS till 9