The Goderich Signal-Star, 1971-11-25, Page 3hours in 1070. This means that
the consumer spent $7.70 more
per month than he did in 1960,
in order to save *2]0 in 1970!
Net loss is $5.60. But, let's not
be discouraged -Si-nee..we saved
u/n~"n7n^rr vmu61u/vurvxuo'
500KYVBwoconsumed! / .
b) that while the argument is
good.\n theory, it fails in the rea
world, since the' convenience
'devices BvdnoFromoteu'uctuuUy
increase the demand duringthe
current peak noriodu.
Surely it is ime then to break
this vicious,' ` Circle 'especially
when increases in power
production cause. corresponding
increases in dirty air, 'warmer
water, and. in the, very near
.""".=~"^"^"`""o"c",e wastes
mmget rid Of. ^ '
RECOMMENDATIONS
1. The y:O.N. strongly
recommends that Ontario Hydro
abandon its current. advertising
programme since it clearly
encourages an -'over -consumption
of electric -power.
'2. The F:O.N. also
recommends that Ontario Hydro
re -think the basic f its
advertising tiL
.k
h
been demonstrated such
'goals are inappropriate in -view
of,. Hydro:s contribution to the
deterioration in air quality in
�ebnvoAnamTo,outo.
3. The F.O.N. further
recommends that the new
primary goal of' Hydro's
advertising programme shouldbe
to find way§ of encouraging
people to use less power rather
province-wide.effort to achieve a
healehiet and' cleaner
environment for mmall. -
°�mn*wo u ww,m�o°r'w
fordairym�n
for
December
• .s
A two-day„ short Course for
dairy farmcrs will be held on
Debmnb*r8 and 9 at Centralia
College of Agricultural
Technology, Huron Park. The
purpose of the.courte is to help
farmers underthd and solve the
problems encountered ' 1n
managing the dairy herd. Three
topics Will be studied: mtud\ed: doiry
cattle nut,itiun and feeding;
herd fertility and reproductive
problems; producing high
. Instructors have been
obtained from Centralia College.
V.S.B. Hcu,on Park Diagnostic
Laboratory, ,Ontario Milk
Commission, Control
Program, United Breeders' Inc,
and private busines. Ample time
is scheduled for discussion and
exchange of information
between farmers and instructors.
2, Zuridh°, chairman of the
committee wbiich drew up the
plan, reported 13 tenders had
This plan piovides terni' life
insurance for the emplOyee in an
amount . equal to one time's
earningt plus aecidental death
and dismemberment benefits, as
well as $1,000 terp insurance on
the employee's spouse and $500
term insurance on each
dependent Child.
The board nted M
catodian at 8t. Anibrose
School, Stratford, effective Dee.
1. He replaced John Anderson
who resigned.
The tenders for snow renoval
as recommended by Trustee
John 'McCann, D. R. 3, Ailsa
Craig, chairman of building and
maintenance committee, were
accepted by the board uS
-follows: Joseph McCann and
Son, 8:ouCo,d, for the five
separate schools in Stratford, at
a rum* of $14 per hour or $7 p,er
half hour; Adrian and Son
8eoine, St. Marys, for Holy
Name School in St. Marys at a
rate of $12 per hour for heavy
equipment and $8 per hour for
light equipment;_,, a,nd. Tim
for St. • Patrick's Qohd&,
Kinkora, at a rate of $8 ,perhour.
•
The )September priciu*vt vas
discussed, with Jack
Business �Administruto,
answering ohum6eroCquestions
put by the trustees.
Crosswalks are to hie marked
on the road for the, pupils at St.
Patrick's School in Dublin.
John Vmt x, Superintendent
of Education and Jack Lane
reported on u`meeting at the
Regional' Office, Department of
EduCution. Kitchener,.|and
divulged ' certSin information
with " respect to .1972 grant
regulations. '
It was pointed out dhg the
ceilings are $585 for an
elementary school pupil and
$1,100 for a secondary nchoo'
pupiHncmmed from $545 and
$l�060. In addition two new
„Weighting factor are being
introduced. The first of these
factors is called the grant
weighting factor -which is #the
sum of the weighting factors for
special' education for
Therecompensatory edueation and
teacher was attending a meeting.
It was agreed that parents had
thlte6ption to Volunteer or not to
'will be only one
of tbe- board in
D ' � ,�
December 17.
a,
weighting . factor Is called the .
^^
'
expenditure. weighting Says
u�8' �� ����������� gallons' increased by the sum of the
weighting factors' for experience
~������' ��������D������� MuitIan�� River
and ' of teachers
and for density of population
within a given region.
Assistance for French
language instruction
been set out by th Department,
but
� it dn�wasfactor
will Oat, ~-
we
mnprobably
remain as that for 1971. - '
'The Department 'indicated
that the Province will pay
another one-third of the
udjusled deficits of former
_
.boards as at December,
that became a partof the county
separate school bumd.
In referring the ceiling for
subsidy purposes Mr. Lane
pointed out that the only
significant change is. in the
increase to $10 '.per QupU
elementary for unapproved net
transportation expenditere_ and
capital expenditure froM current
reventie. The amount recognized
in 1871 was limited to five
dollars per pupilelementary.
Lane smutxd"`
•Umt |u prrepamn8 budget
estimates for'1972 expenditures
the ,ou�' uy unenop}ny�oot
buSuxuuce. for teaching staff
which becomes efective January
l.^]872,will boufurther burden
on the uvui|ab|e funds to the
board. He reported that the
grants office of the Department
o�8ducutinn �ua' calculated the�
�
employer's share of Canada
Pension plan, cost and
�1
unemp)oymennuumnepcoutu,
be $5.51 per pupil.
Passed for payment was an
_account 'yu, $1.092' for
professional services for the year
1970and 1971. submitted by
Donrre|\y' and Moxphy,
Cudexich, solicitors for the'
board.
Trustee Joseph LuobY,
DwbUn, questioned about notes
being sent home with thosohoo
children to, the parents by the
schools requesting parents to act
as volunteer supervisors at the
schools utdifferent occasions,
such uuYn,yard duty or when a
Chairman of the Save the
Maitland Authority Jim Valarice
said on Tuesday in an interview
witly,the Signal -Star that run off--'
from the Lisu`�al -Lagoon has
begun again into the Maida.nu
`D|ver but the�hut qmditY of
was much i
"-At present," he notvu,^txv.
lagoon must be dumping close to
• 2,000,000 gallons of effluent per
day." The quality is much
improved, he went on to say,
and we really ' can't fault
Listowel for being any *ois,
that txe other tome lagoons
dumping material into the
Maitland. M/. Valance was
re[eyHn8lagoon sewage facilities
-at Milverton, Wingham and
8urrioton.
Mr. Valance explained -That
the effluent is cl an now with
to solve the whole problem. Mr.
Valance noted that the -solution
to the lagoon Jp,ublem was in
. °
New Clinton
plant names
its, �' ���� U� H��� �� � -
" " � ""�°°"""���= ~
Kx-Ce|}{) Corporation of
Canada Ltd., the
appOintment of Bruce Williscraft
as Plant Manager of the new-
' Wil-Dex facility in Clinton,
Ontario. . .
The Wil-Dex plant will
manufacture the Wil-Dek line of
cartridges and toolholde for
rertUi* which help algae to `market, and -in uddtiob,grow. "The , lagoon treatment' manufacture tungsten and
Stems 'can ,not remove this
cbiltent; of 'the efettent,", he
explained, "the only way known'
is through the spray System
operated , there during the
summer months." •
He d\d•oDe, hope of a more
complete. solution in the future
by 'pointing out that legislation
already -in force requires that no
phosphates be uuedun/wx�e in
detergent after zS71"This
'Inpune that ' the people of
communities along the river thid
at plants like Campbell Soup
not be able to use materialS for
cleaning that contain phosphates
and ,therefore nnnp*iobeQomg
into the 'lagoon in the first
plaov.'. ~
The Save' the Maitland
Authority president indicated
���
'that theorganization must
`n;un
turn \t# attention to other
centres along the riverwitn'
faulty septic tanks or feedlots.
running into the river and work,
titanium carbide" tbruw,aivap
~ifnb���r the ,CriittD*nnumket...~`~�
MrVYiU\acmft.„„cume to
Ex -Cell -0 in I960 as a special
machine designer or automated
lines. Prior to joining Ex'Cel/'O,
»r was a designer in the Tooling
and Pr0oduct DiVision of General
Motors of Canada.'
Williscraft went to Ex -Cell -O's
.Colonial Tooling aS.,Engineering
Product. Manager. He held
various management,
• leud,ing up to his 'most 'recent
p,omotioo. I ,
,. Mr. Williscraft mceived much
---lo•f4his education from Fan4iaw
Co| London, .Ontmrio,
where he specialized in •
Industrial M*nuQemeht and .
Administration and Production
and guuDtyCoqtnd,
He is ulso a member of the
Quuad\un branches of the,
_
Society of D4ubuCucterioQ
Engineers and the Society of
Carbide Engineers,
al
Motors
----
-
°
„,.
Dajry farmers living in the
" counties of Bruce, Huron, Perth,
Lambton, Middlesex Oxford and
El gin should file their
application with their
Agricultural, Aepronntat|vp hy
November 2GUx Others may,
contact Centralia College
(228-8601) directly. Enrolment
is Umikted to 50 pwnmnx-m~mr
firSt-tbine, first-served basis.
�^m
m
w
'-
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'
' .Dna. Sir. '
It it considered normal for a
dOg t9wag ltSlail; after
dog is the nuQ factor.
But, it is not-nprrnal foratailto
wag idog.
Emotions are very much like
a dog's rui\.'We` as responsible
beings, are in charge. We can
exercise -control over our
emotions. When our --emotions
take charge of as, an ubuounu|
situation exists. Such a situation
is.ropodly developing to loQu\&
* - ubv«tinn \cort ain
circumstances.- '
These certain circumstances
^to make aboftii legal wiU be if:
a) A continued pregancy
involves serious risk to the life,
injuryor grave ical or
b) There is a wuhwWmtiu| risk
that the child would be born
seriouslY - handicapped by
physical v, mental
',abnormalities;
c) A pregnant woman's
capacity' as a mother would be
ne,ouSlx overstrained by the
care of another chi1d;.,
d) A pregnant woman is
mentally defective or becomes
pregnant while under the age of
in
.`,
' - -'
,^'.x suggested that a decision
to terminate such__'pregnancies
could be made only by a
regixurndmediou| pruotiuone,in
consultation with a
psychiatrist.
|
m.
•
We must ask ourselvesnh,t
whether it would be a good
a
�^
all, thisis how
.
t
beN
Nazis zia
got rid of crintinals,cripples, the.
insane, Jews and Many other
_��-i, 1d-ud •"0.hris4wn
`
conununityl,,
Probably the ordinary
German in the early ^ 1930's,tuuuAut the same. He .was
proved disgracefully wrong- by'
subsequent events., "
Nomatter how worthy may
be the motives, u professingChristian 'muot continue to
regard foeticide as murder and n
cleat breach of. God's
Commxndihont:"Thou shalt not
Yours faithfully,
Catholic Women's
" League,
St: Augustine's-Ontario
Dear EditoFurther r:
my letter on the
reasons -COI hunting, may �,,thunk
everyone who huo
communicated with' me, both
verbally and in writing. l
particularly liked Mr. Stewart's\ot:o, of last week' in which he
'pretends to write in Tuxou, of
hunting whilst very cleverly, and
with commendable brevity,
assembling. all_ _those_ classical,.
.damuuetru:e the very
ter1xtic repeated in`his
- quotation. Lest his subtlety be
" lost on anyone, may {-emphasize
his points:Thus, if you are unable to
1. denounceitwith dramatic
words like "bunk" ,und"
thipf.1„.for mocietL„toconfer such "ridiculous': This, of course,
wide powers on the medical doemnt actually cop,nur
• profession_ „ . Are doctors, everyone so...
individually dr collectively, ac ^. '2. produce lists, of peon
exalted above the humap scene with status who -appear to,
that they have any. special support your views; ignore the..4
qualifications to make decisions fact that similar lists of people
which Christians must' �gord'»m,�can be .p,pduoed for the
beyum1�hei,00n`pvton'e. • Opposite ucgumeut, or indeed,
• �,,they ui
r/,uU`oodi[y,rent for most forms of human
from the rest u[the ,ommdn\ty behaviour.
or are they' not, for the most 3. pretend„. that Might is
part, ,very' much like, the rest of Right. After u|[ •the� must be
us; _ fallible, weak and 'not twenty-five million people in
particularly Virtuous? North America who Support
` We would, welldo to dropping napalm on Vietnamese
remember that many of the kids -.and thatmakes that
convicted�convicted Nazi war criminals �n8httoo, doesn't it?
were doctors wh4. usethe "smear technique".unowe, to what was in fact u-1[�-~unob� to impeach the
w moral question.•Th\o�noc to' be personal character of your
-Wondered at where the State sets . opponent, attack his profession•
^ i�n �op as God with ultimate (be a little bit more subtle
powe,or|i[eunddouth. though - the o6je��of-surgery�
' W�y�top at the destruction to relieve puin�-ouuoiuQ it is the
_of life the womb'? pco/oQut�aofth*bonxer).
• Th,' next and /uAicu| step 5, pretend not to understand^m^--, would be rvfdoo|omuube�ven ..the meaning of your opponents
powero(o de�,mipe whether an ' words, or misuse
individual once• born'()tight u».-Ue . argument (anything less
permitted to continue t� 'live.
/`.
e
•
4v,
Opini�nS,'
In order that Signal -Star
readers }night express their
opinions—On any topic of
public interest,. Letters to The
',Editor are always welcome
for publication.
But the writers of such
letters, as well as all readers,
are remincled . that the
opinions expressed .in letters
,,published are not necessarily
opinions held by The
al -Star. ' ^ `
~
°
phallic than a scalpel Would be
hard toOod|)
6.'ubovo all, and this is most
important; completely ignbre
the topic under diseussion,
which, in this case, is the real
reason for hunting.
Joking apart thuu8h. I have
no wish to attack hunters, only
to understand them. Will not
one of them produce some
serious arguments in support of
hunting, brut least say why they
go out kilting harmlessbirds and
animals.
In larger tennu, io'not the
story of the Creation
symbolically true? Surely we
.huve inherited 'u paradise of
living things on this planet, a
paradise from which'.we are
banishing ourselves by
•
. '
indiscriminate destruction, In
North' onespecies of.
animal has become extinct for
virtually every:, year of thiscentury4. and- most. of - the
'
endangered. This means a poorer
quality of life for ourselves and
for bur children it may mean
the end of all life in succeeding
For this behaviour, we have
no precedent and no right.Think about it.
Yours etc.,
Michael WattsMenesetung Park._
,
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•
'°
Affects 185 employees
"'"tit
'
41.+$$`^.
~� ` - '
_ In
.�—-'-`����
` '���
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/
GODERICB OHDRSDAY,NOVE8VIBM25, WI 3 "
~-
Life insuranc r separae school staff
BY WILMA OKE
The 'Sun Life Insurance of,
Canada Limited was appohmted
`�o��xndnbgrowJite '
full-time teaeherS, bus drivers
and custodians for the
Huron -Perth County Roman
' Cath;dic-8oparate School Board
when it met in regular session
&8unduy night in Seaforth.
This affects 185 employees
and the cost to the board will
amount to $11.80 per year per
employee for a three-year term
beginning January, 1972 --Trustee Ted GeoffkY, .R:°
N�turaIists
in
O
. -
' '°~
say OntarioHydro's , .
' - ' ` �
advertising �����0N��� ����� problem
The 'Fe�oraUun of Ontario
Naturalists presented its
submission to Task Force Hydro
today .concerning those factors should affect Ontario
Thy K.O.N.lbdeC^questkxned
Hydro;s contention that the
phenomenal growth rate in
power production represented a
mere rneeting of the demand for
basic ae,vicesc~andud"uncvo the
thesis that Ontario Hydro is
ursuing an advectiaing
noommmw^wnmnencourages on
indiscriminate and consumptive
use of power thereby provoking
-unnecessary :increases in power
productiori in Ontario.
A Survey of the broad .
spectrtimofBydouud4ewmled
that their'-SocCess depended on
being able tnpersuade tx��mdor
that heCbu|dn`t cuvewith a
' given aituation, unless he
resorted u`e�ctmu'�technology.
This was a ieved by
undermining the er's
udcconridence in being able to
cope and • then introducing
electrical _technoloKy as the
support he needed. ~� � ^
Clearly the intention ofsuch
a technique is to encourage
people to buy more ebotriCa\
hardware than, they really need.
At.a time. when .Lakeview and
Hearn Generating stations
jointly . account for76.78
percent of the sulphur dioxide in
Toronto's air, 27.7 percent of
the particulates ' and 53.21
percent of the oxides of
nitrogen, it 'seems most
inappropriate to be encouraging
people to use more rather than
less electricity.
Hydro's rationale (or its
advertising program is that the
more kilowatt hours that can be
supplied, the |owerthe unit cost, -since - the increased power
�
production - fill" in the valleys,
between Peaks or highs in^
8onovo,, this argument is
faulty for two reasons:
a) that while it is true' 'that '
the individual power consumer
paid 10(;.? less per kilowatt hour
in 1970 than he did in 1960, it
must be remembered that the
reason for this saving was that
power consumption in the home
rose from 500 Kilowatthours in
1960 to nearly 1000 kilowatt
AINSLIE'S
Home Dressed
Select Meat
IDEAL FOPI SANDWICHES '
.~~+
EIAMQLE��N����N����N��N��N�N���m��
SHOULDER OR BUTT
.PORK �8���K-�N��_������^��� i&~
BY THE PIECE'
BA
(SLICED 59c |b)
BONELESS - POT
.
ROASTBEEF
.
899'8~
49
1&~
�
�^�~�N���'�
1 ET US
'WITH OUR
VW/
FILL YOUR F
WHOLESALE
EEZE
•
PRICES
Buy Direct From The Producer S ive Tho Coot Of
he Middle M.m All Ow K4".`/ Is Gm/eminent Inspected
'
REMEMBER
HELP
YOUR RED
. CROSS
' You'll be fashionably warm
against the elements'in one
� mf our midi coats for dress up,
or one of otir ski jackets for the siopes -
^ ` d�just casual vv*ar.
Don't worry about the prices,
~' ooling
and Pr0oduct DiVision of GenerCome in and see our selection soon!
�°^
TO HELP
•
j
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=°°.�=~~~~._=~=�`~~-°~—~�--~�9µ,o,^=+~w���