The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1964-10-29, Page 14Juniors hold
The licTon County ,J.teiier-
Fertnere. will.geleb.rate the Mk
Anni versary of Jupior Fanners
in .petaree 4t a banquet and dance
to be. held in the LoOpn 1141
at Seefeortle on Friday, P1P-Yetile
per 6th, This ,..gso mark
the 17.th AneiVereeee. the.
Huron county Junior Farmer-
Aasoplatton,
pennetto Assistant pee
pety Minister of Ageictieture
TED HOLMES
145 Deer Par); Circle, London 471.6005 or Enquire at The Times- Advocate
LOOKING FOR A
GOOD INVESTMENT?
INVESTORS MUTUAL or
INVESTORS GROWTH FUND
COULD 13E YOUR ANSWER
Investors
Of cAti...!tA, t!totto
Page 14 ',rimes-AdVocate, October 29, 1964
Discuss water problems of area
Several area municipalities were represented when the Ontario Water Resources Commission
outlined proeedures for hooking onto its Lake Huron pipeline to London at a meeting in Parkhill,
Friday, From the left are: Exeter PUC manager, Hugh Davis; Dr, J. A. Vance, OWRC chairman;
Lorne Kleinstiver, Dashwood; Mayor Eldrid Simmons, Exeter; Reeve Glenn Webb, Stephen
Township. --OWRC photo
Urged to form groups
for pipeline water study
Makes visit
District Governor Pete Bis-
sonnette made his official visit
to Exeter Lions at their meet-
ing Thursday. He gave a talk
entitled "My Trees", referring
to the 46 clubs in his district
as trees. He said some were
well-rooted, some were fast-
growing, some had many
branches and were doing well,
and of one that needed trim-
ming. He was introduced by
International Councillor A. J.
Sweitzer and thanked' by zone
chairman, Tom MacMillan.
President Harry Strang chair-
ed the meeting.
Save
Soon
Interest on your BRITISH MORTGAGE Savings
Account is computed twice each year,
October 31st and April 30th. This r m eans
that money in your account by October 81st
will earn 4%.
You'll be Wise td make your deposit soon,
or transfer to open a new BRITISH MORTAGAGE
Account. Your money earns 4% interest.
Come to the office r 'write us, or phone.
BRITISH
MORTGAGE
& TRUST Telephone 235-0530,
C.V. Barrett, manager,
Exeter.
TO BENEFIT FROM THE NEXT INTEREST
OCTOBER
True. Wed. Thur. Fri. Sat.
PERIOD
5
12
13
20
27
19
2 3 4
10 11
17 18
24 25 26
28 0.1141 it orm
N..
Ott 1.1.,11ent.
nor1.0.x.
21
Closed All Day Saturdays
PHONE 235.0233
BELL & LAUGHTON
BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS
a NOTARIES PUBLIC
ELMER D. BELL, Q.C., B.A.
C. V, LAUGIITON, Q.C., LLB.
Zurich Office Tuesday
Afternoons
brand Bend Saturday
Mornings
by Appointment
PHONE 519.235-0440 EXETER
O. H. RODER, O.C.
DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
Strathroy, Ontario
OPPICt 1101IRS
Mon., 'net., Thurs., Fri.
9 .12, 2.5
TireS„ and Fri, Evening,, - 9
By Appointment Please
Office Phone 84 Home 1499
Teachers need spark
to .curtail dropout loss.
anniversary
for Ontario, and formerly age
eleulterei rePrOseetatiye f or
Hui on C panty, will be the Pest
speaker .at 00 banquet.
A ppecial invitation is, ex
tended to all by the, Huron
Junior to. attend this important
event. A lheited supply of tic)cT,
ets May be purchased for the
banquet and dance from any
Huron county Junior Farmer
member.
$tatf members from
INPre In attendance.
"The four-year program in
secondary schools IP the anti-
biotic of our disease," said
William T, McHugh, reastrar
Of the Ontario VoCational Cen-
tre, London, and a member of
the panel dispuOsing the dropout
problem.
He blamed secondary school
teachers, elementary teachere
end pare* for "pushing" chil-
dren into the five-year instead
of the four-year course.
"Far too many of us are
setting ourselves up as experts,
trying to tell our children what
school and what course they
should follow."
Mr. McHugh said he felt the
Fatalities
receetinued from front page
In, the month,p other fatality,
which occurred on Friday$Q094
her P, Ken Broom, , Xen has 1)@94 charged with to
Yield the ri&ht,Pf,way
He was the driver of a loaded
&revel truck which ran into
car driven, by Herman Brander,
18, #iR g Mitchell, at an inter..
section in leeeprne Township. A
passenger in the Brander Oar;
Greet Gilfillan, 18, Winceelsea,
was kilied in the crash.
Broom had been, prpceedine
south on concession road and
Brander was travelling east on
another concession road.
After the collision, the truck
landed on top of the car in the
south-east corner of the inter-
section about three miles north-
east of Exeter.
OPP Constable John Wright
was the inveetigating officer and
was assisted by ow) Cpl. C. J,
Mitchell.
More chances to
win by starting
Christmas
Shopping
- NOW!
boy that drops out .of the five-.
Year prpgrern has pp idea what
tradep are open to etre and he
consequently' becomes alePther
frustrated peepon working ere
the wrong lOh.
Another member pf the panel,
Melton. C. K e e in, a astriet
cleveleinnelet Pfficer with the
depertmeet of Indian affaire,
said most dropouts he has seen
in his work are not unintelligent
eereens.
Expressing his concern over
the occupational courses, Mr.
Keam said: "We have put a
further hurdle in the path of
a person who needs help. Em-
ployers look upon these grad-
uates as students who cannot
learn. Are we letting this two-
year prpgram develop its own
stigma again as it did when it A good temper must be kept
was called the terminal cool to retain its sweetness.
Course?" T. C. Haliburton
Mrs. Wilma Harcourt of Lon-
eon, placement supervisor for
the Bell Telephone Company of
Canada, said unergraduates are
in "mid-air, they don't know
where they are going, and we
find ourselves acting in a guid-
ance capacity. Application
forms filled in by students would
amaze you. We are interested
in how they conduct and express
themselves and many applicants
do not seem to be aware of
what we are looking for." '''''eeereeeee,fee
He Also warped municipali-
ties against being too cautious
in estimating future needs,
pointing out it would be dif-
ficult to serve additional areas
once original design and con-
struction has been undertaken.
Dr. Vance suggested com-
munities should attempt to pro-
ject their needs some 20 years
into the future.
Teachers eannelOpeer afford
M lgeore the droppet pepbletn in
secondary eehools, peyerel
speakers concluded in a we'
,discussion in Clinton, Wednes-
clay.
The panel opened the annual
,profesSional development con-
ference of District 10 ,of the
'Ontario SeePeciary echopl
Teachers' Feeereteere ite etee-
Ject was "The Other 90 per
Cent".
Panel moderator Mess Phy1-
11p Monkrea.ri of Toronto, first
Yieeeeeesieent of the OWTF,
said, "The dropout problem
is net simply a matter of at-
tendance. Vocational wings,
special vocational echpols, oc-
cupational courses and special
high school programe are for
the integration of the non-aca-
demic student in his petisface
tory and useful place in society.
"These schemes are worthy;
they are needed, but they are
not enough," Miss Moneelan,
said.
"The drop out desperately
needs the teacher who can ignite
some spark of interest that
might give new direction to his
life. He needs the teacher who
can suggest motivations where
none are readily apparent, the
teacher who can identify values
worthy of his effort.
"This means a deeply per-
sonal relationship between the
student and the teacher," she
said. "It means a highly indi-
vidualized approach to learning,
one that is obviously demanding
of teacher and time and atten-
tion. Such a situation seems
very close to our fundamental
faith and reason for being in
public education."
D. J. Cochrane, principal of
the Central Huron Secondary
School, welcomed the more than
500 teachers who registered
from 20 schools in the district.
Zurich church
90 years old
Bishop Emeritus George Ed-
ward Epp, Riverside,Ill., spoke
Sunday at the morning and even-
ing services held to mark the
90th birthday of Zurich's Em-
manuel Evangelical United 13re-
thern Church.
Bishop Epp was presiding
bishop in Ontario and the Cen-
tral U.S. for 16 years before
his recent retirement.
Pastor Manno Shatto officiat-
ed at the services, assisted by
Rev. A. M. Amacher, who was
pastor of the Zurich church for
eight years.
Starting
Monday
SHARE
CHRISTMAS
$500
PRIZES
TOWN TOPIC
Mr. & Mrs. R. E. Pooley
returned home Tuesday even-
ing following a trip to the wes-
tern provinces visiting at Re-
gina, Winnipeg and Kenora.
officials, but of course failed
to receive any answers as to the
cost involved for the municipal-
ity.
Another interested party at
the meeting was Lorne Klein-
stiver, Dashwood, who present-
ly supplies about 100 cottagers
along Lake Huron in Hay Town-
ship from his private late sys-
tem.
He also indicated another 150
cottagers may be interested in
a supply of water.
Stephen Reeve Glenn Webb in»
dicated there may be a possi-
bility that Da.shwood would be
interested in water, although
noted they had found it too costly
to proceed with plans for a well
system some time ago.
It was then suggested that
Exeter, Hay Township, Dash-
wood and other sections of Ste-
phen Township which may be in-
terested in water from the pipe-
line get together and form a
water area to see if a pre-
liminary investigation should be
carried out.
Reeve Webb was asked to act
as organizer of such a meeting.
Dr. Vance pointed out that
the OWRC would have to have
formal requests from any muni-
cipality wishing water supply,
and added that this should be
done within one month so the
pipeline could be designed with
this in mind.
-e.ee;eee.ee4elee eeeeo,,,--......,eeeeeeeeeeNeeeleeee
The Ontario Water Resources
Commission has a commodity
to sell, but it's going to be up
to the customers to determine
now much they're going to have
to pay for the commodity.
That in essence is what se-
veral area municipalities
learned when they met with
OWRC officials in Parkhill,
Thursday, to discuss the pos-
sibility of taking water from
the Lake Huron pipeline to Lon-
don.
And to find out the cost of
water, municipalities will have
to combine into "water areas"
to define the needs of particular
sections that could be fed from
the same auxiliary line from
various reservoirs along the
32-mile pipeline.
Dr. J. A. Vance, OWRC chair-
man, explained that the cost
of the preliminary engineering
studies to determine need,
feasibility and cost for the var-
ious water areas will be charged
against the municipalities in-
volved, either as a single charge
if nothing comes of the plan,
or as part of the capital cost
of a project if one should be
instituted.
The Town of Exeter was re-
presented at the meeting by
Mayor Simmons and PUC man-
ager Hugh Davis,
"We're very much interest-
ed," Simmons told the OWRC
( Merchandise
Certificates ) Look your best
with a HAIRCUT from Just for shopping in
EXETER Wayne I
O'Rourke I
and
Gerry
Pick Up Your Coupons
at Exeter Stores
One coupon for each purchase 25¢ to $5.00.
One coupon for each additional $5.00
purchase or portion.
First Draw Nov. 7
Two draws for $25 certificates. All coupons stay in the drum until Dec. 12.
Early Christmas shopping gives you the best chances to win.
tormansamaimmanirmummitms,
Business Director
BIG QUESTION
One of the major questions
asked at the meeting in regard
to Exeter's needs was raised
by Davis, who noted the added
supply was needed only in the
summer months to fill the needs
of Canadian Canners Ltd.
Davis said the town could
possibly use another 1,500,000
gallons in the summer, but said
no more would be needed in
the winter and spring months.,
In fact, he reported that even
at . present two of the wells
supplying Exeter are not used
in the winter months.
He also explained this would
be about the same position as
which Grand Bend would find it-
self, due to their increased de-
mands in the summer months.
The local PUC manager said
that it would possibly hinge one.
suitable arrangement as to the
minimum and maximum
amounts of water that could be
taken and on what basis the cost
of water would be established.
W. D. Conklin, a member of
the OWRC, suggested Exeter
could consider drawing their
main supply from the pipeline
and using the wells as a sup-
plementary system in the sum-
mer.
"We're ready anytime," was
the statement made by Grand
Bend Reeve Stewart Webb when
asked if the resort wished water
from the pipeline.
After the meeting, officials
from that community met with
the OWRC to discuss plans for a
line from the treatment plant at
Port Blake.
It was estimated that another
150 or more summer cottages
between the intake and Grand
Bend may be interested and
Oakwood residents were repre-
sented by Bill Moore.
Grand Bend at present has
an engineer drawing up plans
for its distribution system.
Other communities which in-
dicated a desire to study the
idea of connecting to the pipe-
line were: Ildertone Biddulph
Township, Parkhill, McGilli-
vray Township, Ailsa Craig.
These communities too were
broken into "water areas" to
discuss their needs further.
Smith
BARBERS
346 Main South EXETER
ALVIN WALPER
PROVINCIAL
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
For your sale, large or small,
courteous and efficient service
at all times.
"Service That Satisfies"
DASHWOOD EXETER
Phone 119 Phone 235-0991
DR. J, W. CORBETT
L.D.S., D.D.S.
DENTAL SURGEON
Devon Building
Phone 235-1083 Exeter
Closed Wednesday Afternoons
GERRY SMITH wishes to announce
the appointment of WAYNE O'ROURKE
as second barber for his shop
SPECIALIZING IN: Brush Cuts, Square Backs,
Princeton, Perry Como, Flat Top, etc.
MACKENZIE &
RAYMOND
BARRISTERS & SOLICITORS
CHARLES L. MACKENZIE
PETER L. RAYMOND
Hensel! Office in the Town
Hall open Wednesday 2 to 5
p.m.
PHONE 235.2234 EXETER
N. L. MARTIN
OPTOMETRIST
Main Street, Exeter
Open Every Weekday
Except Wednesday
For Appointment Ph 235-2433
G. A. WEBB, D.C.
DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC
CLOSED WEDNESDAY
For Appointment Ph 235.1680
JACK HEYWOOD
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
All types of sales
"For Top Prices"
EXETER LONDON
Phone 235-0720 451-8630
A Most Appreciated
Gift
JOHN WARD, D.C.
CHIROPRACTOR AND
DRUGLESS THERAPIST
15 Wellington St., across
from PUC
ST. MARYS PHONE 284.1501
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/War, Prager Exeter