HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1975-08-20, Page 18,hon
,.}
EIGHTEEN THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW,'ONTARIO. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20,
--Brazil is plough—in-wits-way-out of
900,000 tons of excess fertilizer.
Singapore yards are bulging with
piles of it. The Philippines has a
nine month supply right now -
triple its normal inventory. and
India has enough fertilizer in
stockpile to last it throughout the
1975-76 crop season.
The sudden glut/ of fertilizer in
world markets is a startling turn of
events from laSt year's shortages
which led to a tremendous runup in
'DOPEY Gimoir DANci
FRI:, SEPT S
LUCKNOW ARENA
Sponsored by LUCkflOW Lions
N.F.U. NEWS
By Mrs. G. Austin
Lucknow Phone, 528-2011
LORNE REID - SHOE REPAIR
LES.PETTER SHOES
Entered in the Hully Gully Moto
Cross, series on August 3rd in the
-250 c.c. Junior class was Van-
Sickle of this area, who placed
eighth in the first moto and third in
the finals and which had a class of
twenty. entries. Rick Irwin, Brian
Van Sickle and Mrs. Peter Van
Sickle attended. The next race is.
August 31st.
Congratulations are extended to.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron McGuire (nee
Julie Reeves) who were married
last Saturday in the Anglican
Church, Ripley.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bennett and
'OLIVET
n At
Dili School
It was back to school for the
former Pine River Girls' re-union,
whiCh was held at the summer
home ..of Marjorie (Welsh) Wild-.
fong at. Lurgan.
VVhen Hilda (Reid) Ackert rang
the big school bell, everyone sat
down -to a Opical
Garden Party meal. Books were
forgotten and no one even counted
calories. There were twenty
present, among them Dorothy
(Gomm) Turner, with her pictures
of many happy times spent around
Reid's Corners. Mary (Steele)
Brown and Jean McDonald had
interesting contests, and everyone
enjoyed a good visit under the big
maple tree. Fern (Fraser) Pollock,
Allene (Brown) Bradley and Agnes
- (Henry) Lyons will be in charge of
the 1977 re-union.
the price of fertilizer and to a
dramatic boom in the U.S. fertilizer
exports. Now, both deniand and
prices of fertilizer are plummeting.
ombination Of high fertiliz,
es prices and big increases in the
price of oil were simply too much
for many countries to -"absorb
simultaneously and price resist-
ance in international markets was
inevitable.
Longer range, a few fertilizer
people, wonder how 'long interna-
tional markets will sit still for this
kind of violent supply and price
swing forced on them by the
producing nations in 1974-75.
ummer Shoe
SALE
Nov On
family of Burlington are holiday
°for two •weeks at their sump
home here.
Bill and David Black of Lonc
spent the week end wall th
parents;, LL Mtc--and Mrs. Wa
Black, and family and attended
McGuire-Reeves wedding ' on
urday.
Dawn and Brad Fludder, ch
ren ,of Mr. and Mrs. John Flud
of Ripley, are spending ten d
with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hamil
and family, while their parents
on holidays..
Mr. and Mrs. David King
Pam of Goderich visited on Sun
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack McG
and family.
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-garbcrge. But:
in fact, it's a pbtential 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-
vitali7e 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 explore'
the possible end uses of garbage.
Landfill
Ror
Furl
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, Peel, Halton,
Metro Toronto and
south eastern Ontario.
'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
of us-pile up garbage at three
times the rate that the population
increases.
The Ministry is working on .
ways to reduce that amount, but we'll
always 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 resources 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
reclairried steel, 4,500 tons of glass.
Our recycling program is . •
47.100 considered one of the most
advanced in the world. It's a
commitment to a
• different wary of living.
And. the whole
world will be watching
Ontario's garbage come
up roses.
Ministry
of the
Environment
Ontario Gary Durbin
Hon, William Newman, Minister
Everett Biggs. Deputy. Minister