The Lucknow Sentinel, 1975-07-30, Page 12Separatfo'h Reryclahle
of metals materials
Fuel
' ..j.
separation\
of lieht
and heavy
material
SENTINEL,OW LUCKNOW, ONTARIO
WEDNESDAY, JULY
K°410.41.****4044,.....•••••••••••••••‘.************Iih
. .
eclipse of the sun on July 9th. The
eclipse in this district was: only
about 70 percent of totality,
reaching the peak of obscurity
about 8 a.m. The partial blackout
of the sun covered a period of
approximately two hours from start
to finish. ,
Charlie Anderson, Zion, bagged
a turkey buzzard that had a wing
spread of six feet. A pair of them spread
lit on a fence on the Anderson
farm.
Hector MacKay -of
h-
his on Jul y
Whitechute
99th birthday observed Ruth
29th. ,
50 YEARS AGO _
JULY 1925.
Entrance exaMinatiOn results at
Lucknow centre, which included
Lucknow. school and surrounding
ow-country schools, named the follow-
successfu l Ong students, M al colm
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Whit,,
an occasional glimpse of the partial Commerce.
Mr. and Mrs.
and Trevor vi Sited
Mr. and Mrs.
OLIVET
Peter
on Sunday
Ken Rutherford
-
Van Sickle
with
of
,
Arthur.
family of Birr were Sunday--1
of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Whi
Mrs. Robert Engel, Marill
Robbie of Dublin visited
Wednesday with Mr. and
Walter Black and family an
and Mrs., Jack McGuiri
family.
and Mrs. Ted Whit
family recently sold their fi
Oeds Geertsma and have ma
THROUGH
WITH
LOOKING
,
THE
MARGARET
BACKWARDS
SENTINEL
THOMPSON
FILES
Watson, Katherine MacKenzie,
Myrtle Bruce, Clifford Webster,
Duncan McKinnon, Rae Watson,
Sadie Jewitt, Catherine McKinnon,
Enola Buswell, Helen Swan, Alex-
— w-, ander Andre -Willielniitie Agar,
Bondurant, James Cassidy,
Annie Colwell, Jack Fletcher,
Myrle Gamble, Lynn Geddes,
Ernie Hanna, Beatrice McQuillin,
Ruth McKinnon, Jean MacKenzie,
Frank McNall, Mary Maclntyre,
Dorothy Reed, Lyla Richardson,
Winnifred Webster, Agnes Wilson,
Margaret MeQuillin.
W. W. Hill bought the store
building in the Murray ' Block
recently vacated by the Bank of
.
10
0••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••4
YEARS AGO
JULY 1965 .
,
-George Lucas of
purchased the garage,
and house located at
from Ed Speilmaker of
Mr. and Mrs. Lucas
to operate a body and,
shop
house on the farm of Dick
on the Lochalsh-Kintail
in Ashfield Township, was
Mr..and/Mrs.
John Hindmarsh of the M
Goderich District. It was dismantl- Goderich
log by log and was re-erected by
Mr. Hindmarsh as a cottage. The ,
log house was believed to be over
100 years old and built by a family
named Welsh . .
Tenders were being called for
the construction of a new four-room . Roman Catholic Separate School at
Kin sbride. . gg
30 YEARS AGO
JULY 1945
An overcast sky permitted only
Wingham
equipment
Belfast
Kinloss.
planned
fender
A log
West
sideroad
sold' to
Durham. Oeds and his p
plan to move to their new • lc
shortly.
There was a flourish of a
last Saturday evening ii
vicinity of the Ripley District
as . many people gathered
hdereldsstrheishesaartsuarldoafytheevpenaginega n,
the Ripley reunion. Als(
evening a receptionwas held
school for Mr. and Mrs. I
Pollard, newlyweds.
A.
arba
ccomin
Twenty years from, now, crops
growing on recycled garbage will be ,
. an everyday sight.
That's pretty hard to imagine
right now because most of us think of
garbage as Just that-garbage. But
in fact, ifs a potential resource.
•And the Ontario Ministry of
the Environment is harnessing it.
How does it happen?
By recycling. Garbage will be
taken to recycling centres where it
will be shredded, separated, and
some of it, turned into fertile soil to re- •
vitalize barren areas of the province.
The same basic shredding and
separating process will also produce
fuel, paper, cardboard, metals.
And we've just begun 'to e?iplore
the possible end uses of garbage.
The system: step by step.
A centre for advanced research will
come up with many more.
Where is it happening?
Our Ministry has
already inaugurated
Ontario's first recycling
centre in 'North York.
In the next two years,
similar centres will be
built to serve London,
Sudbury, Peet Halton,
Metro Toronto and
South eastern Qntario.
In 15 years there will be
recycling centres all across the
province to handle 90 per cent of
Ontario's garbage -:everything from
abandoned cars to organic waste.
Why recycle?
Because the people of Ontario
-all of us-pileup garbage at three
times the-rate that the population
increases.
The Ministry is working on
ways to reduce that amount, but we'll
alNArays have garbage. And we're
having trouble finding places to put
it and the landfill to cover it.
Once garbage.is being
recycled, those problems will be over.
But more important than the dumping
problems, we're literally throwing
away valuable resource's with every
ton of garbage we discard.
In a community of 100,000,
garbage recycling will conserve
the equivalent of up to 3,500,000
gallons of fuel,oil a year, 3,600 tons of
- reclaimed steel, 4,500 tons of glass. No.
00-
up roses.
Ministry
of the
Environment
Ontario
Hon. William Newnan, MiniMer
• Everett Biggs, Deputy Minister
Our recycling program is
considered one of the most
advanced in the world. It's a
• t , commitment to a
different way of living.
And the whole
world will be watching
Ontario's garbage come