Zurich Citizens News, 1965-11-25, Page 7i
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1965
ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS
PAGE SEVEN
Huron Secondary Schools Face Expansion
Goderich—Every one of the
five secondary school boards
on which the county is repre-
sented has under way or is
Planning new construction at a
total cost of at least $5,000,000.
In at least three cases, expan-
sion of vocational training is
involved.
Goderich • District Collegiate
in a proposed 1967 addition is
"switching to a vocational pro-
gram." Cost, $1,027,546, with
debenture issuee of $400,000.
Exeter's vocational addition was
estimated last July to cost
$1,851,874, but Elmer D. Bell
told county council "it would
not be realistic to believe we
can build it for that today."
Clinton, which has 37 class-
rooms and eight shops •now, is
to have an addition costing
$467,120. Seaforth plans a 16 -
room school to replace one of
12 rooms. Wingham intends to
increase capacity from 970 to
1,310 students.
County appointees td these
boards reported at the Novem-
ber session under a new plan.
They brought completed ques-
tionnaires provided by the
county clerk, and every coun-
cillor had a copy. Thus was
achieved uniformity, an oppor-
tunity to make comparisons
and to ask intelligent questions.
Who thought it up was not di-
vulged, but it may have been
Warden Webb. It was so uni-
formly approved by the repre-
sentatives and so effective in
council that Reeve Duff Thomp-
son, of Clinton, proposed a sim-
ilar plan in connection with the
county's appointees on hospital
boards.
One question asked was re-
garding the spread in cost of
bus •transport per mile. It
ranged from 33 to 46 cents.
This led to an enquiry by Reeve
Wilmer Hardy, Colborne, as •to
whether any school boards own
and operate their own buses.
"Regardless of the eventual
comparative cost," said Elmer
Bell, "we are just not in posi-
tion to raise the capital in-
volved, and not likely to be, for
some time."
Reeve Robert Gibson, of How -
ick, reported that Palmerston
secondary school board owns
its buses, and thus controls the
TOWNSHIP OF HAY
CLERK'S NOTICE OF FIRST POSTING OF
v
TE
S' LIST
NOTICE is hereby given that 1 have complied with Sec-
tion 9 of the Voters' List Act and that I have posted up at
my office in the Village of Zurich on the 16th day of No-
vember, 1965, the list of persons entitled to vote in the said
Municipality at Municipal elections and that such list re-
mains there for inspection.
AND 1 hereby call upon all voters to take immediate
proceeding to have any errors or omissions corrected ac-
cording to law, the last day for appeal being the 30th day
of November; 1965.
DATED this 16th day of November, 1965.
H. W. BROKENSHIRE, Clerk,
Township of Hay
4 .1i an='hWY', raCllPb$ 4 4.31
MIEFISME4
drivers. One bus is turned in
annually. Howick rents from
the Palmerston board,
Clerk -treasurer John Berry
tossed in a mention of failure
in G -rade 13, and in the result-
ing free-for-all Wingham Dis-
trict High School received bou-
quets for a statement in John
Brewer's report: "84% of the
papers written by Grade 13 stu-
dents were above 90%. Our
students won one Ontario schol-
arship, .a University of Water-
loo entrance scholarships, two
Leonard Foundation scholar-
ships and one Huron W.I. schol-
arships."
Russel Kernighan, of the
Goderich board, said it was pos-
sible fora principal to "make
sure the worst pupils are gone
before graduation time,"
"We should be seeking the
the plant, the amount of chrome
excellent in results, rather than
or football grounds," said Reeve
WHO EATS THEM
The consumer research sur -
very, which is certainly the
largest of its kind ever con-
ducted in this province, is de-
signed to provide both produc-
ers and retailers with an up-to-
date picture of consumer atti-
tudes in regards to eggs. When
tabulation of this survey
is completed, it is hoped to be
able to show the consumption
of eggs by income groups, by
ethnic groups, and by geogra-
phical location.
The survey should show which
age group consumes the largest
number of eggs, the major meal
at which eggs are eaten, and
the preferred method of cook-
ing eggs, as well as giving an
indication of the amount of con-
sumer knowledge in relation to
eggs.
One of the most important
aspects of this survey will be to
determine the manner in which
the price of eggs affects con-
sumption.
4.1M .4for-Itltaza•
.1k444, .4f afItZ,
PRO
1965
SPEND $1.00
on
MERCHANDISE OR SERVICES
SIGN THE COUPON!
Each Week 1 $10 & 3-$5 draws
Grand Prize Friday, Dec. 24
Sponsored by
GRAND BEND AND AREA
CHAMBER
OF Commerce!
F. A. Clift, Bayfield. "You
should ask principals to indi-
cate in the report what he eon-
siders the improvement fea-
tures."
"Provisions should be made
for those who cannot keep up
the pace, to get their education
more slowly and possibly more
thoroughly," suggested Reeve
Clifford Dunbar.
"As long as they don't drop
out, they are at least earning,"
said Reeve E. Talbot, Stanley.
"One reason for dropout,"
pointed out Reeve Tom Leiper,
of Hullett, "is the requirement
for labor on the farm."
"I understand," said deputy
reeve Robert Squire, Goderich,
"that a majority of (Grade 13)
papers re -read received pass
marks."
" A lot below 50 had papers
re -read and got to," said Mr,
Berry, "but not enough for uni-
versity or too late, and some
students are back in Grade 13.
"Too many 'children have
automobiles and outside inter-
ests, and that is the fault of the Reeve Dunbar.
parents, " said Reeve C. E.
Boyle, Exeter,
Mill rates in these five sec-
ondary school areas were re-
ported as follows: Wingham, 12,
a reduction of 3.7 from last
year; Clinton, 16, a reduction
of two; Seaforth, 16.4; Goder-
ich 19; Exeter (South Huron) 13.
Russell Bolton, reporting for
Seaforth, listed scholarships
and bursaries from seven dif-
ferent sources, totalling some-
thing like $7,200.
John Brewer, of the Wing -
ham board, said: "Our building
committee was down to Toron-
to to see about our addition,
and they got approval for four
classrooms, o n e agricultural
science room, greenhouse, mar-
keting room, one sheet metal
and welding, one gymnasium,
cafeteria extension, enlarged
administration area and staff
rooms, library of 2,000 square
feet.
Ross Lovett reported for the
Clinton board, in the absence
of N. Counter. The report list-
ed present capital program as a
football field and track at ap-
proximately $15,000.
"I always played on a hun-
dred -dollar one," remarked
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 3rd
8:30 P.M.
LEGION HALL, SEAFORTH
TWO DOOR PRIZES
15 Games — 5 Share -the -Wealth
Admission: $LOO
EXTRA CARDS 25c, 3 FOR 50c, 7 FOR $1.00
0."0.44LAI::Gg.+ife.M..'. V. 11140. al*r...
: i i0Pio. ''-°rt:•=CO
Huron County
Crop Report
D. S. Pullen, Assistant Agricul-
tural Representative for Huron
County
Practically all livestock have
been housed in preparation for
the winter in Huron County.
Livestock feed supplies on the
farm are adequate. In fact,
some surplus hay has been pur-
chased locally by farmers in
Eastern •Ontario.
Farm water supplies are more
favourable this year.
Most of the corn crop is now
harvested. Cooler weather
would improve farm conditions.
Meanwhile grain driers are still
busy,
There is still some fall work
to be completed in Huron,
Nomination
PUBLIC NOTICE
Is hereby given in compli-
ance with By-law No. 58,
passed on October 27, 1965,
under authority of the Municipal Act, a Meeting of the
Electors of the Municipality of the Village of Zurich will
be held in the
Zurich Community Centre
IN THE
ILLAGE OF ZURICH
OW
FRIDAY, N V'EMBER 26, 1965
At the hour from seven to eight o'clock p.m., for the pur-
pose of nominating candidates for Reeve and four Coun-
cillors, for the Village of Zurich, for the year 1966.
When a proposed candidate is not present his nomi-
nation paper shall not be valid unless there is attached
thereto evidence in writing SIGNED by the proposed can-
didate satisfactory to the returning officers that he con-
sents to be so nominated.
IN CASE A POLL IS DEMANDED, POLLS WILL BE
OPENED ON
I r'^'tend Dece ..giber Aga 1965
(Said polis will be kept open from nine o'clock a.m. until
six o'clock p.m.)
IN THE TWO POLLING SUB -DIVISIONS OF THE VILLAGE
AS FOLLOWS:
Poll Polling
No. Place D.R.O. Poll Clerk
1—Community Centre Jack Turkheim Mrs. M. Hoffman
2—Community Centre Albert Hess Lorne Klopp
ELDA WAGNER,
Returning Officer
Dated at Zurich, Ontario, November 15, 1965.
aa�sra•�ow•,e,e,'
.fi:::"a..?`t:Kt<},: {.::...'t is:.•'•:•.:.:,�:ISIS:.;,:::.?.:::"�,4i.+c�..�+➢.`.'i'. • �}:.. ... 9'9.•:.
Chart shows the sales
trend to Viva from its
introduction in FEB.
1964 through OCT
1966 based on registra-
tion figures compiled by
the official independent
source. Projections in-
dicate a continuation of
this trend.
..t. ii" y'i5>'•
r <
t H
S gg ygg:•
1963 19 64 1965
:>:<>:<:. ... {?{+}:..;�. ::.�. : ::Y i '•:L• S%:':' +'•:N•}: 'W4: •;S "^"" {• \+: r .� +n}},„{• EF'X: "v ' F:\'.v rDe's
•:`�:?i::.:••:{yri:%RGA'+`�:k:•}}}•: n..:: .}?',? }•: ..\.. ..a\.: +:� y� +'�}'ia.,R'.d:':•{Qt[ j'�,�p(q�1. �. {J;}A,''\+� o:•: r.:,4+Kt'v p,.;c.,.:,¢�;^�(�.4 J� .�?'?•t•;'}a''` �• }�.: ,.\ •v
r`.4 v. •: $'n : .{ ..:�':: <l.:n\?:•S.{.; n{{l• :S<:{.,• •. .: J{? x•.iJ.{:ik{•f>1CTSi:L4v<iin�"i}.i: }:} n•f^G^:{v'9F'r�';hi”}4;'}Y.>.•`.14�Chx:\1i.•:.�.:::h.IP...\1{3•:C�:}\\•.l?v:'.v\'.�\'c:7•}:C•:5•:AKKJ�.. {.,.0}.{1 �:}+tl:*F't{v .�,. �•:�iX•.. }. i\\�.,.
GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
Viva Sedan
In just two short ye r tti. has rocketed
to outstanding sales s cress on the s eft i all car
best-eller list. Everthng t Viva ma
eve greater strides on the 1966
popularity graph. Here's why:
The Vauxhall Viva is built by General Motors to
give the small economy car buyer all the features
he's looking for, without compromise. Viva offers
snappy performance, a smooth ride, firm han-
dling, roominess, comfort, big trunk space and a
low buying price, all in a most attractive pack-
age. Hard to believe? Consider the facts, PEPPY
PERFORMANCE. Viva has a 50 horsepower en-
gine coupled to a fully -synchronized four -speed
transmission with a floor -mounted shift. OUT-
STANDING ECONOMY. Viva delivers up to 45
miles per gallon, SMOOTH RIDING, AGILE
HANDLING. With Roll Control suspension and
r
rack and pinion steering, Viva combines a smooth
ride with quick, agile handling. FOUR ADULT
ROOMINESS. Viva offers ample headroom,
elbowroom and legroom for four adults to ride in
comfort. RELAXING COMFORT. Bucket seats
offer exceptional driving comfort and firm sup-
port during cornering. When tilted forward to
provide access to the rear seats they stay tilted
... a most important convenience feature for the
family man. BIG TRUNK SPACE. Vive's trunk
holds 10.76 cubic feet of hard luggage with extra
room for rugs, parcels and other soft items of
luggage. LOW, LOW PRICE, Viva is easy for
g
anybody to own. Just take a look at the price.
Then go and visit your Vauxhall -Pontiac dealer.
Vauxhall Viva
$I,786
Suggested maximum retail price of a Viva Sedan with
heater and'defroster et
ZU RI tH
Price quoted Includes d&Mvery and handling charges,
Federal Sales and Excise Sixes, Provincial and focal taxes
and licence aro not Included,
ON DISPLAY NOW AT YOUR VAUXHALL.-PONTIAC DIALER'S
AUTHORIZED VAUXHALL - PONTIAC DEALER IN ZURICH:
YLOR MOTOS LIMITED
MAIN STREET -- ZURICH
Op sure to gone i s h'?Aleaoope "and "The Bogner now showing on tmlevhdon, Check focal llatings for time and channel. t 64.rai