HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1977-12-29, Page 18'AGE 4A-r-GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29,4977
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TV Channel 5 - Saginaw Schedule for December 22 to December 28
•
(Exclusive to Signal -Star Publishing)
MORNINGS MONDAY TO FRIDAY
7:00 TODAY SHOW
7:30 TODAY SHOW
9:00 MARCUS WELBY M.D.
10:00 SANFORD AND SON
10:30 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
11:00 WHEEL OF FORTUNE
14:30 KNOCKOUT
00
12: NEWS
f�
AFTERNOONS 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
• MONDAY THROUGH. FRIDAY
DAY
12:30 CHICO AND THE MAN
111 1:00 THE GONG SHOW
1:30 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
2:30 THE DOCTORS
3:00 ANOTHER WORLD
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29
I AFTERNOON
I•I
CS
I
}
I
,l
BRODIE" Maggie Smith, Robert Stephens '69
▪ Remarkable character study of an eccentric
schoolteacher in an Edinburgh girls' school:
4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "THE THREE WORLDS OF
GULLIVER" Kerwin Mathers, Jo Morrow -- Based
on Jonathan Swift's classic. '60
, EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6'.30 N.B.C. NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED
7:30 MICHIGAME
8:00 C,H.I.P.S.
9:00 JAMES AT 15
10:00 WHAT REALLY HAPPENED TO THE CLASS
OF '65
11:00 NEWS
11:30 TONIGHT SHOW
1:00 TOMORROW
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30
AFTERNOON
4'00 STUDIO FiVE: THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN
l? EVENING
6:00 NEWS
▪ 6 30 N.B.C. NEWS
7:00 WILD KINGDOM
7:30 MUPPETS
8:00 C.P.O. SHARKEY
8.30 CHICO AND THE MAN
3 9:00 ROCKFORD FILES
10:00 QUINCY
j 11:00 NEWS
11.30 TONIGHT SHOW
;j SATURDAY, DECEMBER -31
MORNING
7 7:00 SEARCH AND RESCUE
t 8:00 C.B. BEARS
i 9.00 THE YOUNG SENTINELS
9:30 SUPERSWITCH
• 10:30 I AM THE GREATEST: THE ADVENTURES
OF MUHAMMAD ALI
- 11:00 THUNDER
11:30 SOUL TRAIN
it AFTERNOON
;°
1230 SCIENCE FICTION THEATRE: "THE
GOR°GAN" Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee --
Horror tale of a monster called The Gorgan, who
t turns his victims to stone, '65
00 TV5 MOVIE: 1'WILD IN THE STREETS"
Shelley Winters, Hal Holbrook - The youth culture
takes over the country, with anyone over 35 forced
to enter a retirement camp. '68
4:00 MARTY ROBBIN'S "SPOTLIGHT
4:30 CANDID CAMERA
5:00 WOLFMAN JACK
5:30 SHA -NA -NA
I•
EVENING
tl
6:00 NEWS
6:30 HEE HAW
7;30 GONG SHOW
8:00 4TH KING ORANGE BOWL PARADE
9:00 MOVIE: "COME BACK LITTLE SHEBA"
Laurence Olivier, Joanne Woodward
11:30 NEW YEAR'S EVE BABYSITTERS' SPECIAL -
TRIPLE FEATURE: 'iMR, & MRS. BOJO
JONES" Desi Arnaz Jr., Christopher Norris - A
high school romance ends in marriage, with dif-
fiCuLties
fromm parental pressures.
'71
1:00 'IF TOMORROW COMES" Patty Duke, James
Whitmore '71 • Story of a secret wartime marriage
between a young girl and a Japanese -American
boy.
2 30 "THE HAPPY TIME" Ctiarles Boyer, Louis
Jourdan B&W '52 - Based on Rodgers and Ham-
merstein Broadway hit about events in the life of a
1 20s.
family in the 9
French-Canadian a 11
Y
00 FIVE STAR THEATER: "THE DiON
BROTHERS" Stacy Keach, Frederic Forrest '74 •
Two West Virginia coal mining brothers seekk
.greener pastures in the city, and careen through a
short. violent. sometimes furipiareer as armored
car robbers.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 1
t7 MORNING
6:45 DAVEY AND GOLIATH
7:00 - OPEN CAMERA
7:30 CARTOON CARNIVAL
8:00 - REX Ht3MBARD
9:00 - ORAL ROBERTS
4
j 10.00 ABBOTT '& COSTELLO THEATRE: "HERE
t COME THE COEDS" Abbott, Costello, Peggy Ryan
'45 ` B&W • Confusion reigns at a girls college when
Abbott & Costello attempt to pay off the mortgage.
i, AFTERNOON
C12:30 A.F.C. CHAMPIONSHIP PRE-PROGRAM
` 1:00 A.F.C. CHAMPIONSHIP GAME
' 4:00 TV 5 MOVIE: "UP PERISCOPE" James Gar-
ner, Edmond O'Brien '59 NBC - Navy'lieutenant,
during World War II, is ordered aboard submarine
to get special photographs on Japanese -controlled
t island.
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
ti 6:30 WiLD, WILD WORLD O_ F ANIMALS
7:00 DISNEY
9:00 BELL SYSTEM PRESENTATION: "THE
FOUR FEATHERS"
' 11:30 CINEMA FIVE: "I LOVE MY WIFE" Elliot
t Gould, Brenda Vaccaro- Young surgeon becomes
bored with his wife and family and his life becomes
a series of brief and meaningless relationships with
attractive women.
MONDAY, JANUARY 2
MORNING
9:00 MARCUS WELBY M.D.
10:00 N.B.C. STAR SALUTE TO 1978
11:30 99TH ANNUAL PASADENA TOURNAMENT OF
ROSES PARADE
s
AFTERNOON
2:00 TV5 MOVIE "THOSE DARING YOUNG MEN
'IN THEIR JAUNTY JALOPIES" Tony Curtis,
- Drivers of cars'from all over the
h
Jas
;Terry Toa
�Te y
world converge on Monte Carlo and try to sabotage
each other. '69
4:00 TV5 SPORTS SPECIAL: "THE PATH TO
PASADENA" News 5 special on Michigan's
preparation for the Rose Bowl Game.
4:30 ROSE BOWL PRE -GAME PROGRAM N,B.C.
4:45 ROSE BOWL GAME - Live from Pasadena,
Calif. NBC
EVENING
6:00 NEWS
6:30 NBC NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED
7:30 ADAM - 12
8:00 ORANGE BOWL GAME Live from Miami, Fla.
NBC
11:00 ELEVEN O'CLOCK NEWS
11'10 THE TONIGHT SHOW ' NBC
1:00 TOMORROW • NBC
•
TUESDAY, JANUARY 3
AFTERNOON
4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "QB VII" Ben Gazzara, Anthony
Hopkins '74 - Pant I of the drama based on Leon
Uris' best-selling novel about an American author
who accuses a Polish -born Jewish doctor of-Vc"ar
crimes in his book.
EVENING
6:00 SIX O'CLOCK NEWS - NBC
6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED No. 145
7:30 ADAM • 12 No. 30307 "Log no. 43"
8:00 MEDICINE rN AMERICA: LIFE, DEATH AND
DOLLARS - NBC - An NBC News Special. Tom
Synder is the principal on -camera reporter for this
in-depth examination of medical care in America
today.
11:00 ELEVEN O'CLOCK NEWS -NBC
11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW - NBC
1:00 TOMORROW
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4
1
AFTERNOON
4:00 STUDIO FIVE: "QB Vii" - Part I1 Ben Gazzara,
Anthony Hopkins- Continuation of the drama for
televisionbased on Uris' novel.
EVENING
6:00 SIX O'CLOCK NEWS - NBC
6:30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS
7:00 BEWITCHED No, 146
7730 ADAM -12 No, 30317 -Log No. 34"
8:00 LIFE & TIMES OF GRIZZLY ADAMS - NBC
9:00 BLACK SHEEP SQUADRON - NBC
10:00 POLICE WOMAN - NaBC
11:00 ELEVEN O'CLOCK NEWS
11:30 THE TONIGHT SHOW - NBC
1:00 TOMORROW
2
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1
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1
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*
• CABLE 12 LISTINGS
* Thursday Beginning At 7 p.m.
"Foxy's Friends"
*
*
with Ronnie Varga
*
*
* Wednesday 7 p.m.... "1'11 Be Seeing You" *
* with Stan Profit *
* Featuring people 'n places of interest
* • *
* • y Mondayjy7:30 p..m1.1_ye y, Lions1yTV1Biingo1 11 *
*
* if lft * 7f 7[ *lk 7[ 70 7t 7t 7[ 7� 7f * 7g 7f 7{ * 7t 7t 1� *
SWEET MEMORIES AND AU REVOIR
'-•i'ia
Sea els hears commissioners' side
by...'delegatiCel.:"tteldthaim°Ityor•
n
Customers benefit
l
The Godmlch Public O,0.T Coda i*) ht cont'*. and hodhe neat weak glhefl .r* I.r+ 411, 000. Infurnallwl aAa lA1,0* otl,ey40Q*4$tladonen de0 offeiDDatW. ter watb'asupp Yla loWn Yid Dad9gD(pund outrbwtlOy ammlwlpa y(
"id th1
n tusad w make r Ilan d 4*0*0 tet c Y a ••1 think thue'a mason for that and next week
received to Blow them w mak dsian+ on w reJutt (Ire h000 4. e4sated by a bey w11t. "Ad tlrri wsan'l a word aboutm
* commul**0t0 l a lm 5. rt C ., rn.d, n 4111 probably De 113,000." said the 00470* ,rand pipe.. c0nnact0g seater malar, auwmadr rl6001 01* A 1Mt le q1R
"w taM
her compWnte hum Jim Searle were made V< what ..
about wholesale attendance at.... water worksconv
to •that ethlarIt is unnecoaaa1100or 0 to send that o,o,bei"W r d'otherrPUCOrelated .ob1 cu that `01 44004 "know beanada/' arboul rho aublact�nventlon ha (ytVES FAI31 E
entloo W Anaheim, California.XpEN3k
Sardis he
the commlaoa circulate
with r pel4dI want convTh first
Snarl. . der 11'rnih inNw be u war as s commisslo0er 1 better of any Unvetm4n 00il sant th. Steop4. who mPcI, tel<i(C°d`4 tlw Pracucr vl tp,
yq y g , vtsm me c,0,rn mej
petition he said ba was planning to circulate if
Editor's Nut* The Inst w 4µk the awry ra m prlvlle`e
the cumm4siu0 couldn't more to three used in the Siynal�Ster the H used were oat le 'ra thh IWunnatwn or be Orr cly`t In mY wuu;d benefit mast Irom infprmatloa gathered. that the P sY a lio.°rf.la�
recommendations about cugv Millen U4,l attendance SI,000 per 0150 U 11 M,CMnlann'TDa Io1Wwn g dlaayrne alW waintalAeu maneY beck tDrY t'4^ .04 Vuaa blyf.4) Lonvle rote lDe commiglo lilt Dr a(elt'.r. tl 60. UC ^grad^tel to D Y lkyk4.
Iib^
7 1a0t of
rem 11101 b.Cmuse commlaslun member <ammiwiun<
w r
Ipur n W dl
ated by PUVC
Ware n Yoe
manager In r tD,sll
The suggestions n co were that outside
PUC delegate w hurt Ion the venue estimated coal. rt h+vn rt " D+^P ,t Cons W loom d
'ed mwtlun the cum' wlrrady w e kquwledgtlblr tlbuut water and *hila e
ouulde Ontario, that
week an The Snarls ugue4 met*:
the intoe he end +oma otber c �
be sem w any con h r own coup cum � rte s see sand cru ld benefll the low ummu
the number of delegates bo considerably H.tgO eahead
rather
any commissioners w -linen received Irom att<nding the nl •ct Y m n by bleawd whh aq •Dove .van M a
reduced and that um of the delegates be either
newspaper apologiwreses letlrning more. wish a small Income shuuW income Ur y4'
Evert M1ddel, the hydro foreman, ter Ernie
wives that were eriuctsed as r mutt of the error
expense 11 the uamlmirrWn endured meet I° n01 be dr
Porter, the water toreros^, whose actual work l"sUformla M4Yor $hew(rll suggratrde thtli Hr saW the tom mnswn's decision w send DrlviI,g. wleke lin rvi4' 0*10 nvenuun"� 4
SHEAR5041 THANKY w i the Wlice mrnag<r MacMillan wul a waam of monaY he couldn't 4flord n pelma ar141Dari w
q liticruonr enable them to p veto en. on SEAR LS Searle was wrong on that drlm, s ng 0ince Aa coulJ ha vis gone to Turonw w letlrn to ter pDen d me co t rIo frJsd to satmq'
technical levels ire well as report Dark on their commission was gulag to review an engineer's
run salve,.
an office
k *D1m,
Mdings" l'uinmsaionrr l.ronarJ Shcrrduw^ two- report that eight on the Goderich water eyetem '•You'd (eel llka the fifth wheel o
Searle told the commis..^ he felt n "wee rely ended Saari* for c coming lurnotd sod tusm [Aar root thousand. of 4ol4ra. W RD Inlsrmatlon In trying w point nut Ne value of eonventiuos, convention' s
fair to see if me commission wanted to go along- i o se a public Is.tlrned at the convention the commis.ion would Mac Nlllan said ha attended one In T^runty Searle '�1� h4pWned, -hewed..: ter tet
su g ted that the
the a •1.3, rat 31 6
la ns Doul to les he new regulations on W
VVa rid err' e
P R a uta year. eagv g m..., Yw
Noma nr
J lh Y ec v
k din re tan.
H
Ir nor e g < Ji, u,ll
l t temp Ycwl4
added that Y rex lawn w e ed. H h<
fund, .ant n nin IM solea tea when the rr than r
for
B o th w
i nwaa rxa mi g e it tom
m^a un m�au eel n
let the cum oro to
to r fd mar the
that A wonted 1 tel u let "R Dr
1110^ I govern- F peau
3 et lust to kr t Inf rmatl nefit of
know whet 1 the taxpayers Yers m that kind tel d.. ern e rt wim the Intention tel m mpIl a de *0.1 un 1wld he.4,44 the new p onto Ne tet ••Thal a for lime wen site
h th one
mem in ten. Ile and i 1 that kind tel action r po
w marded to eon.• utero nl3uvrrnment anewwater,torayetenktucump'Imenl the tank the luwr�hy savtoµ about f25,0001n wee, that 8iv< hr commiuq
Shuards,w, I use to srY that. he wouldn't ""' •Isn11
d,sagruv w1thw Searle on the expense tel the
Mal
frll mal the nY.
hen :ie,
ant an
e elle,
ndally should breduced d possibly _- -w Ind
He said h Id t g lug with theu$a st
that no Goderich delegate be allowed 1_ attend
en roti outside theprovince
(otnm-in ChairmanH. y Wll said the
, i ission had been ding people to Con
commission
entiona for 20 years and thing 0 vier Said
H asked Sr 1 f he wouldn't rather take his
wife he h g. u 4 consent,. Wore. added
that thetaxpayers hould be taking SI look
tet 41000 1 00 utov 0t the c Y l I •
rlalrmngtd -ut l5000ere an,
W^µ
'1 don't doubt that there un 1 lel I %V ant
like this at other levels of government mal
should be stopped, agreed Snarls •UY es.
are toe high now tx
a Commissioner Jim Peter, said his attitude
was that there were 1,300 cusw men for the PUC
,with the petition before me public reacts. to t
n 99 per rent 0
Goderich felt about conventions such as e
in California'
The petition is the result of effor is by Snarls to
have to commiss[on attendance at a convention
00 California 'unified. He was angered by the
fort that the PUC held the bill fur four um
mluluners, the mays, and the officemanager
m tel .r their wattend theAmerican
Water Works convention in Anaheim Caitlin nos
recently
Searle contended that Ole practice of payout
fur wasthe the t-3 1 -tiny es.
and that t
not try for hie felts the legates
atfortend f Goderich H d
as
.naib.t gleaned ( 'request
convention
ovaltel was nunecessary4 10 n1 f y
wasn't t . 1 t d many
• ple lu get 11
Mayor Deb Shrwfelt said huh d some doubts
s to the accuracy of the figures used in
newspaper story In the Signal•5wr and
suggested that the figures were way out of line
He said the first week the story was that...
Listen to those pealing bells,
As the sound wafts over the Harbour and Saltford hills,
In Courthouse Park can be heard
The Mayor reading a proclamation word by word.
He is inviting all the citizens and their friends,
To celebrate with him as the Old Year ends,
Then in the distance can be heard the boom of a gun,
For it is New Year's Eve, Goderich Sesquicentennial has
begun.
There were levees and meetings and sports galore,
And as the year progressed there were many more,
Many citizens joined Bay City in their St. Patrick's Day
Parade,
Where mannew frin sand acquaintances aces
were
made.
1
The Air Show was a wonderful display,
Then carne the anxious and long awaited day,
That started Goderich Old Home Days to a big success,
With the Treble Singers, steam train, firework0, parade and
all the rest.
Liberals increase
Liberal incumbent Jack. Riddell coasted to
victory in the Riding of Hueon•Middlesex
defeating his nearest opponent Conservative
candidate Anson McKinley by almost 4A00wotes.
Riddell handily won the riding with a total of
12,749 votes while McKinley pickedup 8.178 and
NDP candidate Shirley Weary SsilS a distant
third with only 1.405. In 4975 Riddell defeated PC
hopeful Jim Hayter of GodertCh by a similar
margin. 3779 while NOP candidate Paul Carroll
picked up 2.008 votes.
Riddell.. 45. a Dashwood area farmer. led in
most of the polls by a comfortable margin from
the start and was declared elected early in the
evening. The Victory was made somewhat more
enjoyable for Riddell after the Liberals gained
official opposition party statue- in Ontario. a
position they relinquished to the NDP party In
the 1975 election
From campaign headquarters In Exeter
Riddell said that Huron.Middl era and Ontn,o
voters made n clear how they felt about the
`oderich--�
SIGNAL -STAR
Ila v EAR --21
THURSDAY, JUNE le, 1177
• .
SINtiLE COPytk
y're robbing the dead
ova the
They say its easy to steal Irom the blind but
Sum .one in the Goderich area has found that It is
easier cult lu steal from the dead Maitland
Cemetery Sexton Elgin Chambers revealed
Tuesday that wlne0ne. probably from the
God 'h area hre been using the Maitland
Cemetery ase source of -geraniums and shrubs
for a g0r4rn Chambers said about kis plias of
geraniums and shrubs have been lifted irons , he
eraves rn the cemetery and rw0 shrubs polled
frilm their spot
Chambers said the thiel or thieves have not
just gIna d stolen the geraniums 'they bvsy
hopped forth m He said some of the plants are
more mature and larger than Others and the
culprit has taken nothing but the ft st available
"Its nut kids." son Chambers "What the
hell do they want with ge iums1 I 0on11 think
its vandalism because lib only the better
flowers taken I lust think It's someone who i9 toe
cheap to go buy flowers himself" _
Chamber- knows must of the tenants of the
cemetery and where they are and says 00 can
take anyone t0 at least half a dosen spots where
flowers have been uprooted and stolen He said
une.grave had two shrubs stolen which amounts
W about 338 investment for the family
Gera nwms. went for about 31 35 apiece this year.
according to Chambers. who claims itis not only
,00o'b to the lkeepy replacing
huveg the flowers
but it is a. nor ony ar the ceme,hry empbyn, wRe.
'1 aiway+ felt it 041 pretty serious when . ^.^1^000 mat they ars alw.lr
people ,tart sealing from me dead,' ever.reallhen amrenne: n iiiitithgb.:: r.,
Y V ., any attendYhn
Chllambe,d lhc•. remeler has Iwo a been the '11.40 adds lhri he began p ,m,
y s *Ant w p the I e- d-
vcu tlthl , I to r as bad 4s this car N x,d .t
Y the rn there n ale
Her II J e f ly ry st that was s ben on
the lap% Id .,s. ahe
four corners by large a e which'lowers wen
Zhu
Pups
lamed s' i; y um • turned the urn (4o h tlyt'c uw o, ' v»e
up d n is ti; get in dirt t and then made off el, n r d hey
h Ih nam i F 4117 60 nee ewpp,J -
1 (M ism I 1 t
p% be reR I 0::::::::::::::,:7,
t la of h b'Dnm
tee pl Beth t gg p I.:. hfeitm,
sig thr f W
property h 1p*1 lly r f t 1. , .end ngr.,,t,,,,,,,:.
D 0
h ha -complained 4004*, n*o,the parry p,
Thr I n N
points W g . else h Nett.
W th <k
m e d I I. D rhe tw
( Y
r Its t th I r • n gh. h ld •y,
snook] th y ; Ih f d t
(ha 00 , d • I ff t pnblmy
gate which would k most all the owners ha,, 1111he m 1.1;,“„'.,:n.""..14'74-0.4 .,,
rather httaul probably dun t r I,
Chambers said the stealing Mould or done m awfully 100.111 f ,, ,ei,.•r I s.ea..mea
the -middle of the day and neither he nor his wire 11.[ 01 a remelerc
V 41 '
The cemetery D and rant responsible to
policeto place 4 h a day:. id the sexton
"Oncethe people buy theplot its their
H den e victims tom t him with
plaints ting to know what ca be done corn
t that the cemetery Is open from sunrise
t 0 d wn and during those hours many people
come d go. lie d he .anted to put a gate up
w keep people out fthours but the cemetery
board outdo tag t it He said the only thing
he run suggest u mandatory car check at the
Town behind Colborne
Councillor John Doherty asked Monday Township in this mailer -Only Cnonculor Hayden
evening at the regular council meeting to be and Deputy mese h dere Palmer voted against
excused front votig on the reeominendation of it
the airport committee top y the rest of legal The girls stick together - '.quipped the mayor
fees to Colborne Township In any action resuittrig Mau ing the rote 1t s boys ^gainst the girls At
from Colts < decision to resc.nd two building .least that , the tune of the paper
permits issued for properly In the vicinity of Sky
Harbor Airport RECOMMENDATION EXPLAINED
But after a brief discussion Doherty was
advised by Mayor Deb Shewlelt thatit would be The recommendation 18 pay the legal fres for
necessary for h -m to vole on the question - Colborne- Township billow, d the township s
unless, of course, he left the room decision to rescind building permits which had
"Then I may have to leave the room," said been issued W Rennie Armstrong for Lot Plan
Councillor Doherty who claimed he did not have 12 m Colborne Township and Joseph Driver .for
enough background knowledge of the airport file tat 7 Plan 2. also.In Colborne Township
tomake a dee talon at Monday's meeting The airport c,
lmmnitmeeting in special
However, when the mayor celled for a session May 2%agreed these two lots are in
recorded vote as requested by Councillor 0150 immediate urea of the proposed 000 runway
Heydon, Doherty voted in favour of the motion to extension at Sky Harbor Airport and d hornet
pay any legal fees incurred by Colborne were built on them, they would be in direct
issues and the leadership offered by PC leader
Welham Davis Riddell sad that area voters had
umber of concerns. namely the chasing of the-
Goderich Psychiatric Hospital and the at•
tempted closing of the Clinton Public Hospital by
the PC government
McKinley, 5t a Zurich arra farmer made'
some early gams ,n his first attempt at a proven
MI seat but rapidly lost that support as the bulk
of the pulls reported Weary, a 42 year old high
school teacher received littlesupport in anypoll.
The ConservatIves were resting their hopes on
the. McK coley name In the rldinR us: Anson's
brother Bob McKinley 10 the federal Com
s rvat MP fur the riding McKinley has
always been active -n Intel politics serving 15
years on municipal rounods, and fn 1975 was
elected warden of Huron roisnly
Riddell stole the Huron Middlesex seat from
the Conservative, in a by election in 1973 The
seal was. left payee ndl,,olnu the retirement of
PUC pinpoint
water tower
The Goderlch Public Utilities Commission
hag authorized town engineer Burne -Ross to
pinpoint the exact location of a new elevated
water storage tank
The request was made after the cosemisedon
reviewed a 36 page report on the town's water
ryslem and the needed additions to serVIce a
projected population of 41.275 in 1997
The new.tank is hoped to reduce a potential fire
hazard n Goderich during peasummer
hors
he the t 6ecapacity .
water is ata minimum CombinedN the
lark
o storage the pumping required
he
present tank on Albert Street during the peak
water use period cannot cope with water flow
end fire needs and reduces the water pressure In
norm areas of town to almost nil of certain times
• of the day.
The engineer's report divides the work
necessary W alleviate the problem (ata three
areae: constructionof a stew standpipe, con-
.000144on of watermains to tie the new standpipe
Into the system and addition of perms at the
pumping station to meet current and future
demands
The 10101 project is anesumated 1937,965 worth
of work. The new Morse' facility will cost
9483,000 while the watermalne will coat 6217.250
and
21 3 0and the replacement of the hlghlift pumps will
Cost 440,900. Tacked on to those costs are con
struttion rose engineering
fee., property
and
financing that boosted the totalMann cost. and 8
to nearly a million.
The PUC looked at the added water storage
need, along with the poosible- takeover of the
pumping station now serving the town The
pumping station is legally owned by the province
but the town pays all costa for equipment and
operation of the plant. The town Is considering
taking over the site and automating n and
Mayor Deb 5hewlell asked Ross if the. Iwo
project. shouldn't be "meshed together"
Ross said the two projects could beco^sidered
simultaneously if the town preferred it mat way.
but added that one could be done with the M.
tendon of tying the other Into it ata later date
He raid the town could go ahead with the nese
water tower sped simply tie It Into the automatic
system If 11 chose to renovate the pumping
etatlon.
Ile wont 0000 IOY 00,4.07 any new pumps Ptat,
I r automated now or Iter
s0 te
the station could a
Shewlelt quickly calculated money the tom
mission Could make' ne of if It declded to
ahead with the project and figured that th
(Insncing was - In sight'
The mayor said that the commission has abnu
The Sky Divers were a wonderful lot,
They could dive and land on almost any spot,
And tumble and fall out of the sky,
Just like young hawks learning to fly.
We were honoured by the Lieutenant Governor, Pauline
McGibbon,
Who unveiled a plaque and cut a ribbon,
So to all who took part with hard work and toil,
Thanks to all and to your Spiritual CSmforter Rev, Royal.
But soon those bells will ring again,
And this Sesquicentennial Year will go down memory's lane,
So sweet memories and au revoir what more can I say,
For I may never pass again this way.
wit
Percy Barker
Alexandra Marine &
General Hospital
December 1977
89,000 in a water tower reserve fund. has about
190,000 In Investments, hes $20,000 In ministry
money earmarked 'for expansion of the water
plant, could raise about 538,000 in a year by
raising the water rates one dollar and could be
saving S28.000 ahnually by not replacing retired
employees at the water treatment plant.
Rose suggested that if the town wanted to
provide a base from which 4 *tart Imine ng the
project It could 00(10 water rotes Immediately
and,tack on *0010 0,00'9 00*110Whep the project is,
finished. He sold other towhee rtrjanalpp,,eltoller•
installations did similar things to raise funds and
avoid expensive loans. He added that start to'
finish- may be Iwo. or three years from now if
verything went according to plan.
e Shew felt said that the township properties that
may be dev'elbped in the next few year should
Alen De rnnsldered when the PUC look, at the
water lower He said township land, n naw.
zoned for resldrnttal development and will be
needing services from the town when they'*►
developed
Mayne Shewlelt said the town and township
should sit down and come up with some plan to
either hese the township help pay onnstruction
onto nar be prepared to pay a little .440 fur
*hast. r.- later
Th r p ex $ug70 l 1401 the new wale, tower
be installed near the Canadian National Railway
i nth
d. fY}tderich u
st south of
track the o
I
ase
cues
The-rr
Use Mal Rad intersectiony P
sn ideal e i of land 1000 Ire* by 500 fret that
would snake Meal ,f elevation00 keep costa
down and effrl n y40.50, maximum The tnwerl.
to h j f under fret high and will hold
1.461500 Rnllnnl
A non err pump or (Ire pump may be included
and -111 pump 4,200 gallons per t0ft,when
activated and will work 0umm04, Ily hafsed on
an electronic control In the watertank The tank
will be rnunied. le 7,300 feet of 14 inch -wafer main
through the Industrial Park to lluckins Street
.and 3,930 feet of eight inch pipe Hain Huron Road
'I0 Regent Steeet on Cambridge. Maple and
.Regent StreetsbR
th areas betterwater
• RR
pros T h Rhl f1 pumps I the treatment
plant Ill b rpt i 1 Rin a ting 01217
million gallons p day perpump s Dp ed to
the eat ^ting 011 5 millionR 1lma per day
t per pump being replaced
Thprop alt d R -d to provide adequate
iter storage f a 20.y r period for design
Ro population 11,7,5 bused on an assumed con
s t n t o of the existing two percent growth rate
The system Is al. hosed ed 0 current use
t average of 150 gallons per capita per day
Riding majority
long standing Conservative member and cabinet votes He was defeated_ In Lucnn m 1975 by 10
minister Charles MC Naughton votes
Riddell survived the first test and later won a The total Voter turnout In the riding was 23,116.
decisive majority in the election of 197S defeating upover 1.000 from 1915
PC candidate Jim Hayley by 3779 votes Paul
Carroll of the NDP polled 2,008 votes In thlr
election Riddell increased that majority slightly
fora clear personal mandate in the riding.
The town of Goderich has always been one of
the keys to the riding and Riddell waa.able to
increase his majority there over 1975, In
Goderich Riddell polled 1861 votes compared to
1461 for McKinley and 283 for Weary. The dll-
ference was 400 votes while In 1975 Riddell
managed just a 100 vote maJority over Hayter,
Riddell lost just two polls out of 23 in Goderich
The results in Goderich Township were close to
1975. as Riddell won every poll Inc 600 votes and a
209 vote majority.. He also won by four votef in
Bayfield while Hayter had won a majority. In the
village m 1975, Luton continue. to be: • trouble
spot for R Iddell as he lost at the polls there by 29
Jack Riddell, MPP
.nflic t with any future expansion 4 u
rename,
Riiroan Dµua- f n. (,ai . Bann
Departmentfrosviit at DAM > 'rte
and thlest h t I'
wh h hied I 11,0, 0
tr I un
!emit), IIIsh
I hen on Juni 1 ihe airpoia«h
another t - t4F reetterandd
De l0 mitt,
ndf nhe awe pdt n fth.mtet
departmenl of 1 l 7 setbacks Ie m
nI'd fu r e desem w
grunt, . n o�• nr.,, I'd hm-}hr dry«uym nt
(Aralrp, rt
Alaii in the wh„e the now
heard-counts0,01',1•r ti'1r, Des Idella explain
land fathe
10i5, soh,
hot h ndid t affect y nglel
d IIµ-. f[ ,.'.t!ke Mt, IA q to art
seasonal - t I but under the to
1 R std ince As, control isplaced otaccusancy.
In
11,1',110•0`"•11,14 Elmer Squires Awl
Art
'orb AA, pointed nut b the Wmm6tee
irnpiirianrs of the. eepanded Iar,4410, et
airport l m g ID tel Ildnintion P
Mischir,ery t id
The town 1 toin Murphy eat
present al th-simeeting and a ted
explain - Die . I li the m lllee
a h thecommittee s ed.open tit
the someone,: ,greed to recommend to
01.M., 111 14, the ,aro* segs! fees *hid!
1 um to p•••
Index
DEI
AN
BINGI
venin
Centre
First
ifteer
three
01
dmis
ixteer
LINT
every
first
restric
Fifteer
115.00,
any 1
00.0C
eek.-
5/
A It.
can see
still en,
A gc
leaves
preach
A go
learnir
bit of yl
Hors
rse
toms
fur
Is
g�of
y
hyin
Con(
es
Ag0ni
osi
Le.
District News, . P13 to
Classified' .... , . P19 to
Jubilee Events
Editorial .... , , , , P4 &
INSURANCE
George Turton
LIFE, AUTO,
FiRE AND
ALL OTHER LINES
GODERICH S24=74111
S'rg9A'
, t ,1
3,r
•k
., Y. k"•,*:a J i '1:'. ' 'd;. � . h a sled
vinime centre Ort
The Welcome ill be Inac Gods.ng In
• ton and attending
Mead them ItownOes o InGoderich
Iner Jubilee en-nperstion with the tiruihw sateen Omer
tourist who will counsellor.. at the nonR In town end tre ar . J te• ) es. OT A 0 pre, i ie,, train 9
tourist,JudyLr the Information centre are. Debbi Association h familiarisation roan for lou Hslc°unseilers Die photos
Stewart, Judy Langr1dge, Bandy Nalel (supervHor),000 t eM IIC
Kim Brady. Judy will be workloa In the Log Cabin on the *WIWI R/help
Roderic
SIGNAL -STA
110 VI AR -75
THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1977
440414 COP
earls stillquestioflillaS,t
i ei lied Murd 'amn
ue iang lie
(0Jim hoc, Searles,
C.odeGoderlPcu loo Uthtle (1000 Drohlems rethrr hans can rthr vague general cnmund more am• other j•I C ervPIII1I `hr hv00 0ll
ane into ^' it I Ina0' 0''^rrn+
WW,l,, forgo Ira nun' vs. k: ion convention
then In the menu at the (1140 Pale C id have
the ` ,
United States. said Works nTueteday he had been) led to see ction rrmaventiont� F.rnlie Porter the mown water man.rper d 1 h Ion li lip pakten*
believe the PUC had an option W offending an foreman, spent from June 5 to June 9 In Landon Calera s`99Wl
AWWA Sealer, convention In London In June whlrh according to Searles was a "damn Rood
Searle.�pld he.'hod been talking with the
Steelier city engineer and discovered that that
city doesn't send a delegation to the AWWA
convention but attends the Ontario section
'convention lnread
Searles said the section conventions ere held in
Met about every geographical erre of Canada
and the :United States and are designed to drew
municipalities with the -same types nf',ystems
and problems together to one meeting He said
there are four Canadian section., Atlantic
Canada, Quebec, Ontario and Western Canticle
and over 30 American sections
According to Sre ries' understanding the
sections are designed to allow representatives
from 01,1C. 10 the section to meet with their
counterpane and dismiss problems and
situations common to both He geld by limiting
the number of PUC, at the convention the
Let's go
RN Ven der Ends. and Jim Wilkie have been
bury Ibis week applying r fresh teat of palm to
M.
'fierier
h Herbst. In es. R ellen ler
6eMt4t P P•r the Jubilee
1 relebratlosr, The tire, slang with Jacques
Rlehmrd end Chris BlstKhave votuetteend their
time for the project, (It tiff phete)
Index
SchoolIf's Eft
P2, 3, 24
Canada Cord rcremon
Y P24
Blyth Theatre PIA
Pioneer parade P7
Blnewater Open }loupe 1,21
;Foy
Res
Day
�91
XIi
s'f
Phil
Opt
The Goderich Jubilee 3 Committee is 44,011ring
plans Inc the giant Sesquicentennial celehretlene
to begin next Wednesday morning.
A wreath laying ceremony at the tomb of Tiger
Dunlop on Highway 21 will officially open the 12
days nl celebration* The event wl(Ltake place at
915em
Goderich mayor D J Shewlelt will mark the
opening of Come Home Day* later In the mor"
nine with a ceremony in front of the Court House
in Court Roush, Perk at 10.30 a m. The ceremony
will be followerfhy a plaque dedication to John A.
Sully hod Ontario Premier Wllllam Davi. has
been Invited to unveil the medal plaque The
Premier will elm be a guest et a 17mcheon In his
honour
At 2 p a *hurl pageant et Light Haulm Park
1l1 Include the reae00rtmenl of the founding of
Goderlch.. The first of the daily Happy
Fellowship Hm,rs w111 get underway at Court
House Parket 3 p.m and provides visitors with.
ehance to relax and visit with old friend*
The Bret evening of the celebrations w111
feature 0011 el entertainment a old faehlimed
.quare 4.nefhg. Al 7 p m the Teen Tones will
provide a musical Interlude In Court Hnu.e Park
end their performance will be followed by
relent contest In Court House Park At 0 p.m
everyone le Invited to portlelpale in a Square
Dane, en the Square
The first day of the celebration., Founders
Dry offers time lively entertainment end should
f•be en interesting beglOnt0g td the se.quleen•
hamlet.
ether rote wee one of the merry
Wlah IIyo lisle flying !n the hetet* Heprimary geode stud.
hhope, hrof ough0l a 'first leg of the ei roseec The rld,y,(hlal pheeil