HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1967-02-16, Page 7w'
ALL 'TYPES
INSUEPT
Donald 6:.;' Eaton
Offico in Masonic Block
Main $trent
Phone 527*1410,: S•aferth.
•
ARROW
ALL CANADIAN
Petroleums Limited
j,
Dae
e _
Diesel
s
Gs .orin
HE4 TING OILS
Valvoline Oil and Greases
"Go
r
Aro.
With
AGENT:,
DON N COLEMA
DIAL 527.0646 — SE'A ORT
,r.
w
•
"0
DevelOPMent:'.of the 229*acre
Valls Reserve ona"eryatiort
Area, "tea Ben'1VMi ler,, 94 odte
lined 'Thursday in,,.a master der.,
elopnient plan,, cord cost VA-
MP-
Q°
'JamesIno of`C
Hum; Mit-
clic)) Associates Ltd. of Preen,.
lea,. outlined to the annual,
meeting of the Maitland Valley
Conservation Authority held -et
13russels, they costs and poten-
tials of the area acquired by
1
in 083.,
r
iZY
autho
he
t
a-
The conservation areas d
v
96
4
in1
efa'
d
" board .iso
0
ided
ry
a Pr°fes. sK
ona
l design_ i
n_ te
would be invited.;`to Plan the.
area and design proposals.
Mr. Ilnox said the project
could be developed' into an out-
standing area. He told members
n'ot to be "frightened by these
14
preiif'iinary estimates:
id the . i rst phase of,,
theTe:. said : cost ,. 4,*
. pi'p3ri WOO- � 20„
000 and would include roads,'
administration. building ,and
early development.
Tl}e over>all plat} calla for
tent and trailer areas,, conse'rva,
tion areas, con>ervation d?s'
plays, barbecues, picnic she-
teas,, picnic: tables, comfort sta-
tions,
tations, adidintstration building,
stable andparking facilities,
-He said this would' also in-
Waste,
diva
and e hydro, water
chid y ,clro
disposal facilities: Winter activ-
ities,
ities, he noted, could include
skiing and tobogg
an
ing
fon
e.
ginners and intermediates, but
-not on an advanced scale.
Plans call for preserving old.
Indian habitations in the area.
He said the plan could be fi-
nanced over a 20 -year period.
Alvin Smith of Bluevals
chairman ;of the. authority, said
in his. inaugural - address the
area's development rate depen-
ded on the authority's finances.
Clifford Dunbar, chairman ef.
the flood control board, said
the authority is in the process
of acquiring a dam and pond at
Bluevale.
eaforth Monumeflt orks
'OPEN DAILY
All Types.. of
Cemetery
Memorials
T. PRYD'E & SON
Inquiries are- invited.—_Telephone Numr62=9421,
EXETER 2:.35-0620
"SEAFORTH: Contact Willis Dundas
p.
HAROLD ELLIOTT
TV Towers, Antennas
(Regular alid,Colour)
Repairs, Ornamental Railings
Phone 262-5372
0111011 „
authority yesterday' re*
:eleeted,MT. Smith for hiss 'sec -
odd' term as c iairmaf fi G, < f
•Kelterborn - of Milverton, wig
named vice-chairman and
Banf oro- of Listowel, ,beeretal7
.: --
as
ire urer
::',Advisory board Chairmen;
conservation areas, Jack Brown,
Ellice .- Township, ;public rola-
I.tions, ' Giiilliam_'.'Miiter, •Clinton;
land,..use and:.. Wildlife; Harry
Oakes,.RB. 2, Clinton;. flood col -
trol,, Clifford Dunbar; reforesta:
,
tion,. °East -Opp
enhas u ,er. RR 3
, ,
M rikt
e><r
4
The treasurer said.. the 1967
n
ci
u
i
levy on the 29 -member m .
e
palties ;wall., .he :$2,4>950, ;m
pared to $26,262 ,Mast year.
The general administration
budget- is , $21,450; conservation
areas. $2,000; '.information •and
education $1,300; conservation
service $4,650;, capital develop-
ment $23,800. Total budget 'ial
$49,900, "compared to $81,397
last year.,
Earmarked for capital ' devel-
opment' are Wroketer .Conserva-
tion Area --=$3,000; Falls Re-
serve $13,000; reforestation $5,-
000; other conservation areas
$2,800.
Erl• eatzeld f:aiitttred' ibeI
Marathon 'R4i'ling'l.T0urnalfl,ent
chamtiionship at
,CFA Clinton,
Hensall
l ° Ii 1 i
1 l
A Mix,kl__., :t ARs!-:..,,,,,:_iir,.......,4
EfE
GOOD SERVICE, AT LOW, LOW COST
1965 CHEV. BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder
1965 CLASSIC SEDAN
1064 MORRIS OXFORD
1963 CLASSIC SEDAN
1962. FORD WAGON -
1962 AMBASSADOR
1961. RAMVIBLER
•
Crime and See the
NEW 1967 MODELS
MILLER MOTORS
Phone 527-1410 Seaforth
American Motors Dealer
•
on '.,indaY;, • heading a field of
gg eotnpctitors
gion
Q
inner
.He edged out Ch
Alm Of Goderichin the. final;
ganles, to finishfirst. William
led,the way with, 1,290,. atter
five. games.. The winner over•
vette a slow start ;and • rolled
1,255" in the last 'half' .to give,
him a 2,4311. total for ten games,
His scores were: 183,170, 298,
279, 255,-1,165; 291, 221, 291,
201, 201--,--1285.
He won a,transister radio for
the high ten, a watch for hav-
ing the high ',five in the second
half and, he also picked up a
high single prizes.
Art Finlayson, ' Mel Merriam,
other
Jim Scott. were the Ot
Seaforth bowlers entered in the
an
amt. ..,
to
tiara
Art third
finished
behind Eric Matzold and Chas.
Williams, with a 2,299. total.
He picked up a travelling• bag
for finishing runner-up in the
first five. He rolled. 1,208. -
Following are the winners of.
genies at the Legion sponsored
bingo held ld
at
the Legion
Hall, p'riday evening• - ..
Stigma
aa pones; 'Mrs. •DtcKer-
cher, Ja>Enestewn; Carl Druber,
Mitchell; Mrs. Steep, Brucefield;
Mrs: McLean, Goderich.
poor prizes: Sadie Campbell,
Mitchell;. Hilda Austin, Seaforth.
Regular games: Mrs. Pert
Boyce,Clinton; Mrs. • Barney
Hildebrand, Seaforth; Mrs. Reid,
Hensall; Jean Sanger, Mitchell;
Mrs., Jim )3arry, Egmondville;
Bill Apstin, Seaforth; Mrs. Ron
Dale,, Seaforth; Mrs. McRerch-
er, Jamestown,. and Mrs. W.
Vanderburgh, Clinton; Mrs. G.
Turney, Clinton; Mrs. Steep,•
Brucefield; Beverley Lee; Clin-
ton,.. Mrs W. Vanderburgh, of
Clinton; /Mrs. J. Watson, Sea=
,forth; Jean Sanger, Mitchell.
PERIL IN SPACE
It may now " be safely sur-
mised the United States — bar-
ring an outright Russian abdi-
cation
bdication of the space race — has
lost its bid to be first with a
man on the moon in thisdec-
ade.
A brdwrlT egg layer that
can put. you in the black:..
Shaver StarcroSs 555; -,
This rapidly maturing brown
egg laytar Isis prolific producer
of large and' extra large eggs -
Its reduced body weight, im-
proved `feed conversion, and
outstand.Ingrecord of livability
. insure excellent profits. The'
Starcross 555 is ideal tor market
brown egg
Hare'swbatyoutan expect . •
t2-niontheggpr'iducti res ...
parcenta" IF" t i rgeand �ixtr 'ti
large * 4:.�:,..k
Lbs. of F I )- iii . ''-•
mss a
CQN14
SWFT HNICHgt110 �:
liorP }RI
America's three-man Apollo
spacecraft was to have . flown,
for the first time next Tuesday.
And, although the ` United
States would have been 28
months behind . the , Soviets " in
orbiting a three-man space ve-
hicle, (Russia's.' •yeskhod I
achieved this in -October, 1964)
America seemed to be catching
up. .
The U.S. •Gemini flights had
been spectacularly" successful.
Docking and rendezvous had
been accomplished , smoothly.
One crew had . set a space en-
durance record ot_ 330 hours
and two others had pulled off
space walks which out -per-
formed earlier Russian man-
oeuvres.
But there will of course be'
-no__high_ drama at-. Cape . Benne_
dy• next Tuesday, because the
three men who were to have
ridden Appollo I into orbit died
heroes' deaths during a routine
ground test Jan. 27.
The full impact of the deaths
of space veterans .Virgil Gris-
som, Ed White and rookie Rog=
er Chaffee have yet to be felt.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration has post-
poned indefinitely the three
• manned flights scheduled for
this , year, although unmanned
launchings will continue.
The investigation of the trag-
edy will take several weeks, but
the report from the inquiry is
sure to insist changes be made
in the space program to make
it impossible for •such- an acci-
dent to occur again.
It is highly unlikely either
scientists or the Congress will
be able to Justify going ahead
with the $40 billion space pro-
gram without radical changes.
The first change will .have to
be made"in the atmospheric en-
vironment of the Apollo space
capsule. It was because the
Americans chose the easy way
out. — all -oxygen space cab-
in --- that Apollo I became a
fiery death trap --
The; spark of yet-unkown or-
igin which leapt into the space
cabin as thee, three Astronauts
lay strapped, on • their couches,
immediately' consumed the cab-
in'soxyi cri' and ignited every
burnable. 'thing'' in the ' space
°r
they all curg
atmosphere
Se .
was'chosen' Wad* a weight and
space', ;Tlr alt rbhtive was a
ttv gas: system sif as oxygen
andf fnitrogen'fr ;t,wlif oh the Rus•
sians • U.Se i.ift .,th spacecraft.
Btitxthla.t next weight —at
vital . f� w American
'rgeketsi:werkless powerful than
Ruasia''s bddsf ate' aa-- and re-
quiresmore, complex egtiip-
Ment:
In •.a two -gas environment,
the spark which consumed life
in Apollo I would have flick-
ered
lickered out harmlessly. Its origin
would have been pinpointed
and corrected.
Such an environment also re-
quires a double cabin for space
walks — one wherein the ostro-
Maut.can close a trap doer be-
hind him to free his system of
nitrogen before venturing into
- . open space. Otherwise, he could
become subject to the "bends"
which sometimes afflicts under-
water divers. ,
• In, retrospect, it is evident
that while ,American scientists
knew what they were doing,
they took a calculated risk —
and last.
It can now be expected U.S.
Scientific and ►ttblie opinion
w be' brought to bear to en•
MO such 'mistakes' On not re- ,
'Pato'', Vida deans the growth .
of American space capacity will
be retarded, because important
ade in
craft design without slhange's cannot be ow ng up
the whole program.
The Soviets, meanwhile, are
moving ahead slowly, apparent-
ly
pparently avoiding every possible gam-
ble which could result in disas-
ter: And while it is possible the
Russians may also have • lost
men in their space program, it'
seems to have- none . of ,the
"crash" atmosphere of the
American . effort. -
Astronauts Grissom, White
and Chaffee were brave men
who -will -go down -in history= -be-.
cause their deaths. were the
first of the Space Age.
The goal set by -President
'Kenney' of putting a man on
the moon in this decade thus
claimed its first victims six
years later. With the American
space program virtually at a
standstill, Russia continues to
hold a clear three-year lead —
at a time when there are only
three years left in the decade
of the 1960s.
McCLU'.
2# SEAFORTO mow: 82
E.
-0476
-- NOTICE --
For Co-op Insurance
Call
W., ARTHUR WRIGHT
Phone 527.1464 — John St.
• SEAFORTH
Complete Coverage For:
• uto and Truck
• ,Farm Liability
• • Employer's Liability
▪ Accident and Sickness
• Fire, Residence, Contents
• Fire, Commercial
• Life Insurance ds Savings
• Huron Co -Op Medical
Services
• Wind Insurance
•
'blue coal'
Champion Stove and
Furnace Oil
v w�►
i'Com any:of C1 , 4
Sun Life A�sura�+� �, , .
Phone 271-$400; �.. 4$ $ :Rebefcii $tr• RA'F ORD
WANT ADS BRING :QUICK ,.
WILLIS DUNDAS
Office 527-0150 - Res. 527-1053
MUTUAL..
'O
M I� _
THE
_
PA
OM,
-
A.
FIRE
Offk. - mora *so
3EAFOR'
t
Town . merlin:: Q, ,
AIX Clafsea of f;*r!i.'Prop
• Summer frottages -
• Chur4he$s Schools, 'chills
Extended coverage i , .
smoke, water damage, fa
objects, etc.) Is_ siso availab
11eyb,
RR 1, Seaforth; V. J. Lane, BR \l.r L'1'`1S ~.f ajllCS
Seaforth; Wm.. Leiper, Jr., I ondesboro; Selwyn Baker, Brussels;
Harold Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin, Donald G, Eaton*
Seafori .
.8-
r•
Askusfor' ..
puaearched dairypr0
that can help increase your
annual profit by: as much as 20%
Let us help you achieve:
1 Up to 2,000 extra lbs. milk per cow/lactation,
• 2 Improved herd condition.
3 An average 2 extra yea
per cow.
4 A 12 -month freshening schedule.
5- A- reduction--af -as much as 20%' in the herd
replacements you raise to. maintain present pro-.
duction....
years,of heavy production
- • See us or call us now for complete information.
MILTON J. DIETZ
Purina Chows — Sanitation Products
Phone 527-0608 SEAFORTH, R.R. 3
■■ ■ ■ ■ 1 1 • m U, m •ana
■ ■
E ■ ■ ■ r ■ ■ • ■ ■ m m ■t �■
11111111111111111•11111111
■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ • 111111111111•111111111 ■ •
Go ahead) Choose a savings goal
at Toronto -Dominion. We'll match it
with Life Insurance!
Picknyourself a five year savings goal. It could
be as little 3s $600, or os much as $5,000,
(Your convenient monthly deposit can range from
$.10 to $83.33.) Whatever savings goal you set for
yourself, that's the amount of life Insurance
protection you have, for five years, from the
minute you make the; first deposit in your
Toronto -Dominion Assured Savings Plan. This is in
Great (e M1Aad idea from
addition to all deposits made, plus the bonus your
savings have earned. Whether you're saving o t
for
your children's educatioi`i, for the down payment
on a new home, for b retirement nest. egg ...
or even if you don't have a special objective
in mind, ask your Toronto -Dominion Manager
about the Go -Ahead way of saving ... the
Assured Savings Plan. •
TORONTO -DOMINION
The Bank where people make the difference.
Dom. STEPHENSON0 IVIanager • Seaforth
•
•