HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1982-04-07, Page 17news
,acknow Sentinel, Wednesday, incl 7, 192 --Pane 14
Present rebuttals...
ahem page 4
the Milton to Middleport arras.
Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food
deputy minister, said he personally prefers.
M3, while the Ontario Institute of Pedology,.
commissioned by OMAF recommends M3
orML.
Ontario Hyrdro recommends Mi, .and hi
rebuttal lawyer Bruce Campbell said.
• evidence prompted at the hearings has
given hydro no reason to change its recom-
mendation. Reviewing the three routes Mi,
M3 and M5, Mr. Campbell said M3 "is the
worst 'overall from a technical
perspective." Ile acknowledged it had the
least impact on agricultural lands. In line
length he said, it is the second worst of the
proposed six, and in the number Of towers,.
second worse to M5, which has a 500kV
single circuit line from Bruce to Esse and
two 500kV single circuit lines. from BNPD to
the London area.
° In regards to the foodland-hydro commit-
tee's recommendation, Mr. Campbell said,
"Modification doesn't make it any more
attractive than it presently is."
Comparing Mi and. M5, hydro's lawyer
said. Ml's line length is significantly less
than M5's, and Mi has 1,V1 towers, while
M5 calls for 2,072 towers.
• Mr. Campbell referred to evidencegiven
earlier in the week by Huron County Plan-
ner Gary Davidson, in which the County of
r Huron in two separate motions supports MI
and opposes M5. He added that Mr. David-
son said the county does not object to plan
M3. Mr. Campbell said the county's position
should be given "great weight" because it is
willing to accept a line running full-length
through the county. He added the county's,
opposition to M5 should be respected.
"All information considered, taken in.
:balance, leads me to submit plan. Mi is
preferable," said Mr. Campbell.
• Hesaid the null alternative or the do
nothing approach doesn't meet the purpose
of the alternative interpretation..',allowed.
In Mr. Davldaon's submission he said the
county dismissed last fall such -matters as
agricultural land use protection; costs of the
. various routes and the general need for elec-
tricity in the province.
"After that discussion they took.the posi-
tion that they would support the Mi line, not
strictly on one ground such as agricultural
land use planning or agricultural land use
protection, because they agreed with Hydro
Davi it met
numerous criteria," said Mr.
•
He said the county discussed the matter
at its session on March 25, and re -
its support of MI and indicated it is
opposed'to M5.
summarising the opposition to M5, the
'county planner said in choosing a line to ac-
complish the least effect on agriculture, M3
would do that. He said agriculture is one
consideration and Ontario Hydro and the
county have looked at all aspects. The main
reasons the county is opposed to M5, is the
increased number of towers over M1 and the
double impact of two lines at two different
In Mr. McQuail's rebuttal for the
foodland hydro committee, he said in its
analysis, the committee's proposal is the
best alternative.
Mr. McQuail said the committee is not
giving a technical suggestion, but he noted
in Ontario Hydro's reply evidence there
wasn't much opposition to the proposal and
to the committee it is an acceptable under-
taking to be considered.
He suggested the delay to study the com-
mittee's proposal would only be as long as
the delay there was in releasing Ontario
Hydro's six proposals while awaiting- the
government's decision.
The foodland-hydro committee chairman
expressed confidence in its proposal and
said he hoped the Consolidated Hearings
Board' will recommend it in its final deci-
sion. •
Mr. McQuail submitted costs to the board
and noted the committee has spent 1,100
hours attending the hearings and meetings,
not including the working group meetings,
to present a unified position from the
agricultural groups.
In his attempt to get the Committee's costs
awarded : to Ontario Hydro, Mr. McQuaid
said . parts of the farming sector think in-
volvement in the hearing process would not
change . any :'decision. But Mr. McQuail
didn't look at it in that way. He did suggest
when the board announces its decision, it be
made in Stratford, so more confidence could
be takenin the board's decision because
of its openness and not tucked away in
Toronto.
Down at the bowling lanes
Town and Country • Team. standings: Violets
16, Blues 11, Yellows„ 11,
Ladies high single, Ann Oranges, 8, Greens 7; Reds 7.
Dexter with 207. Agnes Far-
rier and Tena Gardner were Ladies 6:30
tied for high double with 319.
Art Burrows bowled high betty Stanley bowled the
for the men with single of 239 high single with a 311 and
and double of 426. also the high triple with a
Games over 200: Art Bur- 693.
rows 239, Ann Dexter 207, Games 200 ant' over: Betty
Wes Young 202.. Stanley 311, 206, 'Kay Craw-
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PUBLI
C NOtICE
PJ
TO AREA PATIENTS
Beca:ase the Government of Ontario, through OHIP,
refuses to pay fair fees for your medical services, your
doctors have been forced Into the position of not
provlding certain services for "free" u the have
traditionally done.
These servkes include:
' medkai advice by telep
*renewal of;p'rercrlptions bb phone,
* resifts of laboratory .tests by phone,
stilling out certain forma at the request of patients.
Until Government r ecognlzes the justice of the •
physklans's position, these services will not be
)provided for "free": Patients requhringthese services
will be slaked to make an • appointment to see their
doctor person:db.. Naturally,. the elderly, handICapped
and those who need true emergency advice. by'
,telephone will be looked steer in the ,nornWmanner..
The doctors In your ilea fully realize that this protest
:.wild Inconvenkmce numerous patlente. However, your
doctors are determined that OHIP should pay fair fees
for medical. services.
As patients and taxpayers we hope you support your
doctors.
HURON COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY.
ford 223, 211, Barb Ross 227,
205, Judy Hunter 225,. Grace
Elliott 221, Marion MacKin-
non 220, • Dorothy Hamilton'
208, Nancy Parrish 204.
Team points and. stand-
ings: Pumpkins 13, 38; Car-
rots 11, 43 t4; Beans 11,
481/2; Beets 14, 55; Tomatoes
4, 35; Peppers 10, 31.
Correction
Last week's Jamboree '83
picture of the Mayfair Rest-
aurant was submitted by
Pharis Mothers of Lucknow
not. Alvin Hamilton as incli-
cated in the Sentinel. 'We
apologize for this error
MAINTENANCE
AS$ISTT
Written application - state
tag education., overtones
w►IU be received by the
understaaledfor the above
position until April • 16,
1982.
Send application to:
THE ADMINISTRATOR
BRVCEI.EA HAVEN
Box 1600
WALKERTON, ONT.
• NOG 2V0 •
--14ar •
4060 tractors plus
200 pieces of
machinery
CLEARING
AUCTION SALE
Van Eyl Farm Supply,
Clifford
and
Dave Holiday Ltd.,
Nit. Forest
April 10, 10 a.mr.
Hwy. 9,'A mile west of
Clifford
38 tractoirs,18 disc, 2 side
d%llvery rakes, 4 owata-
en, 6 combine., 10 plows,
31 cnitivators, 7 balers,. 7
harvest and hay equip-
ment,, 3 haybines, 5 for-
age boxes, 4 manure
spreaders, .trailers, stack-
er, own new equipment,
6 lawnmowers, misceilan•
eons.
AUCTIONEER
GORDON BRINDLEY
=--14
WINGNAM SALES ARENA
The Winghain Sales. Arena
An interesting place to shop
Everything under one roof
NEW AND 'USED FURNITURE, ANTIQUES, USED
APPLIANCES. Item of Interest,very old antique pump
organ, •made 'in Clinton, very ornate walnut cabinet,
priced reasonable. ' • .
NEW AND USED GUNS AND AMMUNITION.
EXcelient prices on new 22, 222, 243, 22.50 Calibre rifles
by Win, Rem, Regan., Savage. Example: Roger 10/22,
Ihit `price $189.00, our prke $149.00.
CLOTHING • work pints, work shirts, coverall', work
shoes, adults $25.00; children $12.50
BLUE JEANS for men, ladles and children.
TOOLS • vises, grinders, drill presses, cut off sews.
BVLK GOODS - an assortment of cookies, bulk baking
goods • raisins, dates, etc. Bulk peanut butter and jam,
bulk candy . smartles, tubes, humbugs, mints..
POTATOES (Field rim) -'$5.49 per 75 Ib. or 2 bags for
$10.00. •
NOTE We pay top prices for goodused furniture aid
appliances and antiques.
CALL THE WINGHAIHI SALES ARENA 3574730
WINGGAM SALES ARENA
• AUCTION SALE ,
Of Llvestsck and Msnbinery will be 1eld, for
RICK JONES
West half of 14 23, conc. 8, Klnle.. Township,
3.mles east of Holyrood or 7 miles west of Teeswater
SATURDAY, APRIL 10, at 12:30. P.M.
LIVESTOCK _
Registered 4 yr, old Hereford bull; registered 11/2 yr.
old south ,Devon bull; 9 rsglstered Hereford cors; 15
grade Hereford and semi Angus cows; s first calf
heifers; 28 stockers, 750.000 lbs.; a herd of big cows
.and heifers that will have calf at foot or due by sale
than. Hord has been Brucellosis tilted for last 2 years.
MACHINERY
John Assn 2140 tractor with 2800 hours; Massey
Harris 343 gas tractor; Massey 34 swather with 12 ft.
reel; New Holland 357 mixmlll; International 610 seed
drill, 16 run with grass. seeder; New .Holland 469
haybine has 0 It. cut; New Holland 256 Rolaber rake;
New Holland 610 manure spreader, 216 tau. with upper
boater; Schultz 106 bu. manure spreader; Schafer 400
offset 6 ft. disc; John Deere 40 plate wheeldisc;
kongskllde 11 ft. cultivator; John Deere 3 furrow 3 pt. H
j • plow; Cockshutt 620 baler; George White 36 ft. elevator
t on wheels with motor; 24 ft bale elevator with motor;
Cockshutt 416 mower, 7 1t; hay conditioner; 3 wagons
with .2 having 16 ft. racks and 1 -• 18ft rack; 6 section
diamond harrows with bar; 10' 4" grain auger with
i motor; 11' 4" grain auger with motor; scraper 0 tt.
blade; 20 ft. feed rack on wagon; Onan 15 kw. generator
on traitor; George White 7 it. snow blower; Doli grain
t moisture tester; • fertilizer spreader; troller frame;
Unicorn log splitter; Champion oat roller; cap for 1 ton
I truck; snow fence; 2 mineral boxes; 2 cattle oilers; 2
I creep feeders; number of farm gates; cattle chute with.
self closing head gate; 2 hydrauliccylinders with .► oses;
1 baler twine; few small Items; 1072 Choy. C60 truck with
1 17 ft. cattle rack, will sell as Is.
This Is wan kept, almost new machinery and livestock
In excellent condition.
Owner moving to Northern Ontario
FOR INFORMATION PHONE 3924149 •�
TERMS' CASH - LUNCH BOOTH
Owner or auctioneer not responsible for accidents ,
GL -ark -3
E OORGE POWELL• or losses BRIAN RINTOUL
Auctioneer
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1t
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MCLIONAGH
FLEA[
T.'. L k, I",,1•R LT[)
528-2031 ` Lucknow
KINLOSS TOWNSHIP
175 acres,farrow to finish, good buildings.
100 acres, loose housing bairn with trenchsilo, priced to.
sell.
100 acres, 2 bedroom bungalow, 'vendor will hold
mortgage.
50 acres, 4 year old, .3 bedroom home, gravel loam,
good buildings.
100 acres, horse farm, '/: mile ,track, 60 workable.
150.300 acres, dairy farm available with cows and
quota, financing available at good rate.
200 acre dairy farm available with cows and quota,
financing available at good Interest rate. '
ASHFIELD TOWNSHIP
659 acres, level, one set of good buildings, cash crop.
100 acres, cash crop, good set of buildings.
100 acres, level, highway location.
100 acreii, level, : cath . crop farm; requires drainage.
HURON TOWNSHIP
150 acres, level, systematically drained.
150 acres, level, well drained, good buildings.
HOMES
Lucknow = 1'/a storey, 3 bedroom home, attached
garage, completely remodelled.
K.intoss • 4 bedroom home on 7 acre lot, completely
Insulated, financing avallable.
Ashfield - 4 bedroom home on 4 acre lot, good
workshop.
Point Clark Area
3 bedroom home on ,' acre well treed lot, double
gage. •
3 bedroom home on large lot with garage, 1 block from
beach.
2 bedroom home, 11% % mortgage, 0220 per month.
FRASER MatcKINNON ROBT. CAMPBELL
Res. 3954880 529.7417
HARRY MCDONAGH
528.3821
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