HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1976-01-22, Page 18Page 18
Times-Advocate, January 22, 1976
AFTER ALL THE CONTROVERSY that surrounded the belfry in 1975, it lies dormant, gathering snow. Danny Hennessy peaks out from under
it as he returns home from Exeter Public School. photo by Youngs
manamsamormm sm.7.0,);„„,:,.r..„mt,,.,
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By MRS. HEBER DAVIS
Mr. & Mrs, Wayne Love and
Fayann, Varna, were Sunday
guests with Mr. & Mrs. Clarence
Davis.
Mr. & Mrs. Harry Carroll and
Mr. & Mrs, Heber Davis were
dinner guests with Mr. & Mrs.
Archie Sinclair Friday evening
and visited Mrs, Flossey Dickins
at the McCormick home,
Wednesday evening, the
Carrolls and Davis' were dinner
guests with Mr. & Mrs. Cliff
Abbott, Lucan.
Mr. & Mrs. Ford Dyer, Sarnia,
spent the weekend with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. &
Mrs. Wayne Carroll and Lisa.
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Davis en-
tertained the Lucan Ilderton Jets
hockey team and their wives to
dinner Sunday evening.
Patti Dobbs was a weekend
guest with her friend Ann
Klinger, Birr.
445 Main St. South, Exeter
235-1232
BUYING? SELLING?
.Take Advantage of Our Personal Service
CALL ANY OF US NAMED BELOW
BROKER: FRED EYRE Home 229-8936
SALES: DIRK COOLMAN (235-1950)
FRAN RITCHIE (235-0588)
NORM STANLAKE (235-0524)
Member of the Huron Real Estate Board
GERALD L. MERNER
Chartered Accountant
BUS: 20 Sanders E EXETER 235.0281
RES: 10 Green Acres - GRAND BEND -- 238-8070
liangitart, 'Kelly, 'Doig (Rd Co.
Chartered Accountants
268 Main St., Exeter
ARTHUR W, READ
Resident Partner
Bus. 235-0120, Res. 238.8075
FARM
SALES
Auctioneer
TOM SHOEBOTTOM
ILDERTON 666-0289
Free Appraisal
"Coll now for complete Auction Service"
HOUSEHOLD
SALES
WORK FOR YOU
PHONE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE 235-1331
Pad'a Parept9d
say, the final decision will rest
with the federal Anti-Inflation
Board, because the Government
of Ontario has, without
legislative approval, signed an
agreement which will have that
effect, which is in direct con-
travention of Sections 92 and 93 of
the British North America Act. "I
believe the agreement to be
illegal", said Mr. Bullbrook.
'"I'he best they can hope for is to
rely on the peace, order and good
government clause and a section
of the British North America Act
to legalize in the most peripheral
fashion the signing of this
agreement You can't delegate
your authority the Province of
Ontario cannot give their
authority to the federal govern-
ment „ . This happens to be a
parliamentary derriocracy and
we, as a legislature, are part of a
parliamentary system. You don't
go around surrendering basic
constitutional rights. You don't
go abdicating basic constitutional
responsibilities, legal or other-
wise .. We are a legislature, and
we demand our right to
legislate."
See you next week.
BY-LAW No. 22, 1975
A By-Law to regulate the use of land and the
character, location and use of buildings and
structures in the Town of Exeter.
NOTICE of application to the Ontario Municipal Board
by the Corporation of the Town of Exeter for the approval of
a By-law to regulate land use passed pursuant to Section 35
of the Planning Act.
TAKE NOTICE that the Council of the Town of Exeter in-
tends to apply to the Ontario Municipal Board pursuant to
the provisions of Section 35 of the Planning Act for approval
of By-law No. 22, 1975 passed on December 1, 1975. A copy
of the By-law No. 22, 1975 will be made available in the
Town Office for public inspection from the day this notice is•
printed until the.date of the Public meeting which will be held
on December 18th in the Town Office at 8:00 p.m.
The following is a summary and explanation of By-law
No. 22, 1975:
The By-law is comprised of p text setting out the
regulations pertaining to the various land use zones outlined
in the map attached to the By-law. The By-law requires cer-
tain minimum or maximum provisions, as the case may be, in
each zone such as lot area, lot coverage, front and rear yard
depths, sideyard widths, setback from roads, heights of
buildings, floor area, parking, landscaping and permitted
uses. These provisions apply to all lands within the Town of
Exeter and hereafter no land shall be used and no building or
structure erected, altered or used except in conformity with
the provisions of this By-law.
This By-law contains a provision that as a condition of
development or redevelopment of lands or buildings in the
Town of Exeter, the Council may impose such development
controls as are set out in Section 2 of the By-law.
• Every property owner is urged to examine the text and
map to determine the status of his property and to note how
he or she is affected by the By-law.
Any person interested may, within fourteen days after
the date of this notice, send by registered mail to Town of Ex-
eter, Municipal Office, 406 Main Street, Exeter, Ontario, or
deliver to the Clerk of the Town, notice of his or her objection
to approval of the said By-law together with a statement of
the grounds of such objection,
The Ontario Municipal Board may approve of the said
By-law, but before doing so, may appoint a time and place
when any objections to the By-law will be considered. Notice
of any hearing that may be held will boa given only to persons
who have filed an objection and who, have left with or
delivered to the Clerk, the address to which the notice of
hearing is to be sent.
The last date to file an objection is December 18, 1975.
DATED at the Town of Exeter Municipal Office, the 1st day of
December, 1975,
"E. H. Carscadden"
Clerk, Town of Exeter
Copies of By-law No. 24, 1975 "The Official Plan" will also
be available at the Clerk's Office forinspection,
vor
CORPORATION
OF THE
TOWN OF
EXETER
Winter works extended
The ARDA project to provide
winter employment for rural
Ontarians on forest stand im-
provement of Crown lands is to be
extended for the third con-
secutive year, according to a
recent announcement made
jointly by Ontario's Minister of
Agriculture and Food, the Hon.
William G. Newman, and
Canada's Minister of Regional
Economic Expansion, the Hon,
Marcel Lessard.
The purpose of the program is
to employ rural people in the
development of Crown lands for
forestry and wildlife purposes in
Southeaste'rn, Central and
Northern Ontario. During the last • . Agriculture and Food, is ex-
two winters the program • peeled to provide subsequent
providgd 5,Q90 Jobs for ,people_ „long-term ''.• eMploytheril op-
living in these areas who ., portunities through the general
would have ,been development of forestry areas
unemployed. This year. some and recreation facilities on these
2,000 people will be hired f or work l an ds.
REMEMBER THAT NUMBER. It could save you a lot of
money and time and help your hometown.
,,ne,,i•Nt^,
DID YOU EVER DRIVE 50 to 100 miles or more to take
advantage of a super-duper special? A local $50 item
50 miles away would have to sell for $34 in order for
you to break even.
THE AMERICAN AUTOMOBILE ASSOCIATION
certifies that 15.5 cents is what it costs to drive your car
one mile. So if you've driven 100 miles round trip to pick
up that special, you'll have to add $15 to that purchase.
That sweet buy can suddenly turn quite sour.
AND EACH 100 MILES takes from 6 to 10 gallons of
gasoline which the potential shortage of oil-derived fuels
would encourage us to save.
LOCAL MERCHANTS, whether they sell groceries,
clothing, drugs, furniture, hardware, appliances or
whatever, feature top line, nationally advertised
products at competitivie prices. These same 'merchants
support your school, churches and civic groups. They ,
help us all pay for the improvements that make this
community a better place to live.
SAVE YOURSELF SOME MONEY, help conserve
energy and support your town.
Presented as a public service by
`fie exeterZiineilAwocafe
otherwise
in tree planting and forest stand
improvements.
A $1,300,000 ARDA grant, to
be provided on a 50-50 cost-
sharing basis by both senior
governments under the terms of
the Federal-Provincial Rural
Development Agreement, will
cover the wages and travel ex-
penses of the workers, and on-
the-job maintenance and
supervision by field staff of the
Ontario Ministry of Natural
Resources.
The project, which was
strongly recommended by the
Ministry of Natural Resources
and the Rural Development
Branch of the Ministry of
Hugh Tom
FILSON and ROBSON
AUCTIONEERS
20 years' experience
of complete sale service
Provincially licensed.
Conduct sales of any kind,
any place.
We guarantee you more.
To insure success of your sale
or appraisal
Phone Collect
666-0833
666-1967
MT. CARMEL
INCOME TAX CENTRE
INCOME TAX—ACCOUNTING
for Farmers and Businessmen
MONTHLY BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
No Job Too Small
PHONE 237-3469
Vince Ryan B.A.
NORM WHITING
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
& APPRAISER
Prompt, Courteous, Efficient
ANY TYPE, ANY SIZE,
ANYWHERE
We give completc sale service.
PROFIT BY EXPERIENCE
Phone • Collect
235-1964 EXETER
C. HARRY RODER, D.C.
NORMAN L. RODER, D.C.
DOCTORS OF CHIROPRACTIC
84 Pannel Lane,
STRATHROY
Telephone 245-1272
By appointment please.
A NORRIS
497 MAIN STREET
EXETER, ONTARIO
NOM ISO
519 235.0 10 ,
ACTION CENTRE MART
— ANTIQUES —
Located on Highway No. 4
North of Exeter
PRIMITIVES - FURNITURE
COLLECTIBLES - NOSTALGIA
— BUY, SELL, TRADE —
*DO-IT-YOURSELF REFINISHING
CENTRE
Quality Wood Finishing Products
Prepared With You In Mind.
—Minwax - Deft - 18 Century -
P.V R.
—Accessories ( steelwool,
sandpaper, glue, etc.)
-AUCTIONS WITH ACTION
EXPERIENCE WITH SERVICE
Complete or Partial Estates in our
Auction Room or Your Premises
"You Name The Day —
We Make It Pay"
Drop in or Phone 672-3566
Bill and Lavarre Clark
Shop Open 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Fri. - Sat. - Sun.
We Work HARD For YOU
GEORGE EIZENGA LTD.
INCOME TAX - ACCOUNTING
for
FARM & BUSINESS
107 MAIN ST., LUCAN
Telephone 227-4851
PERCY WRIGHT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
Kippen, Ont.
Auction Sale Service that is
most efficient and courteous.
CALL
THE WRIGHT AUCTIONEER
Telephone Hensall (519)262-5515
GERALD'S DATSUN LTD.
SALES - SERVICE
LEASING
Open 8 a.m. -9p.m.
Phone 527-1010 SEAFORTH
Catch the Datsun Spirit
L. D. GEE
SUITE 208
190 WORTLEY ROAD
LONDON, ONTARIO
N6C 4Y7
519 673.1421
By JACK RIDDELL
MPP Huron-Middlesex
The Ontario Legislature has, of
course, been recalled to debate
emergency legislation to end the
strike of Metropolitan Toronto
Secondary School Teachers
which began on November
12th.Last week the teachers
voted to reject the latest offer of
the school boards which would
have raised minimum salaries
from $7,800 to $12,000 (53.8 per-
cent) and maximum salaries
from $18,400 to $24,100 or 30.9
percent.
The Government introduced
legislation which would force
teachers to return to work on
Monday, 19th January, or face
daily fines of up to $500 each.
Under the legislation, an ar-
bitrator is to be appointed who
Will 'set teachers' salaries until
June 1977, retroactive to last
September 1st. The arbitrator's
ruling will come by February
14th, and teachers are not to
receive any interim pay increase,
If teachers work to rule or refuse
extra-curricular duties when
they return to the classroom this
would also be interpreted as a
strike under the bargaining
legislation. Professional
development days, taken by
teachers in the last two weeks of
June to make exam papers and
evaluate students are to be
cancelled.
NDP Leader Stephen Lewis
proposed an amendment to the
legislation making the most
recent Metro Board wage offer of
an average 24.6 percent increase
the "floor" for compulsory ar-
bitration, and the influential
Ontario Teachers Federation
have urged all three parties to
establish such a floor to provide
for continued negotiations.
However, the Liberal Party did
not support this amendment
because there seemed little merit
in tying the arbitrator to a
predetermined base.
Bob Nixon, probably making
his last major speech in the
Legislature as the Leader of the
Liberal Party, said his party
would vote to get the schools
open, believing that compulsory
arbitration is the only way to
bring about a settlement.
However, he expressed his
reservations about the govern s
ment provision for a two-year
settlement, because this may not
he necessary if Ontario public
sector employees are to be under
the jurisdiction of the Anti-
Inflation Board.
He also criticized the Govern-
ment's attitude toward the
Ontario Education Relations
Commission, an agency created
last year when teachers were
given the legal right to strike.
The Commission was established
to supervise teacher collective
bargaining and advise Cabinet
when it believes continuation of a
strike jeopardizes completion of
courses, and it hasn't been taken
seriously by the Government in
Bob Nixon's opinion -- "it is not
having enough support from the
Government", He cited the
Government's failure to appoint
all five members Of the Com-
mission until after the Metro
strike began.
While the Liberal Party sup-
ported the back-to-work
legislation because of concern
about the affected students, they
were very critical of the
government's decision to sign a
federal-provincial agreement on
the anti-inflation programme
without bringing it before the
legislature prior to signature.
James Bullbrook, Liberal MPP
for Sarnia, pointed out that no
matter what the arbitrator may
RICHARD WELSH
Chartered Accountant
495 DUNDAS STREET LONDON N6B 1M4 CANADA
Office: 433.3803 Residence: Lucan 227-4823
G. RANDALL PAUL
Administrative Services
MAIN ST., LUCAN
Phone 227-4584
NORRIS & GEE
Chartered Accountants