Loading...
The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1973-06-14, Page 20FROM QUEEN'S PARK Les Pines Hotel Motel North of the Bridge EXETER Phone 235-0151 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT • ,.l This Thurs. Fri. & Sat. M E M N T A Where Old & New Friends Meet DINING & DANCING NIGHTLY — NO COVER CHARGE COMING SOON The Real Thing They're Terrific Don't Miss It 'Ti- Come Join the Fun Amateur Night EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT 10:00 to 10:30 and 11:00 to 11:30 MUSICIANS and SINGERS ONLY * Prizes for best in both categories and for runners-up * The best in each category will compete for Albatross trophy on August 30 Attend the Opening of Our Newly Decorated Dining Lounge FATHER'S DAY — JUNE 17 4;00 to 8:00 p.m, By Reservation Only Opening Specials New York Sirloin Steak . . .$6.50 Turkey Dinner $3.75 Roast Beef Dinner $4.00 Cordon Bleu $3.50 Assorted Salads and Desserts Child Portions Available Entertainment . . . Thursday, Friday and Saturday Volume III Club Albatross Huron Industrial Park Phone 228-6733 HEATED POOL Open Daily BREAKFAST & LUNCH 8 a.m. to 1:00 p.m, DINNERS 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Sat. - 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Sun. - 5.30 to 8:30 p.m. YOU Are Always Welcome! Dining Room Licensed Under L LBO Saturday, June 16 Mozart and The Melody Maker Green Forest Motor Hotel YOUR HOSTS: "PETE" and "CAROLE DEITZ HIGHWAY 21 GRAND BEND FRIDAY, JUNE 15 SATURDAY, JUNE 16 PLAYDOWNS 7 P.M. DANCING -- 10 P.M. 1 THE 'NIGHT-HAWKS" wdh Clarence Petrte ADMISSION —ADULTS 2 00 CHILDREN 50 ELIMINATIONS — 7 P.M. ADMISSION ADULTS 1.50 CHIL OREN 50 M.C. Johnny Brent • . • club attending the district con- ventions, so that the spirit of Lionism could rub off to give other delegates new ideas and a refresher in Lionism, Another highlight was meeting with the international president elect, Tris Coffin. He is presently first vice-president and will become the president of Lions International at the 56th in- ternational convention to be held in Miami June 27 to 30. He is a Canadian and a Lion all Canadians can be proud of, Lions is the largest service organization in the world today, There are well over one million members in 26,222 clubs in 148 countries and geographical areas in the world, Lions stands for "Liberty, cake with 26 candles which were lit by the past noble grands. Special guests, past noble grands, were Mrs. Gladys Chambers from Shilo, Manitoba and Mrs. Alice Bowen, Guelph. During the evening nine members were presented with their 20-year jewels. Monday about 30 members enjoyed a picnic supper and evening of sports at the home of Mrs. Mildred Fulton. Sports were enjoyed and winners were: soap in a dish relay. Vi Coates' side;grapefruit relay, Vi Coates' side; guessing jelly beans in jar, Mavis Atthill; guessing articles in an egg, Helen Bell; kicking slipper Liz Lam- port, Gladys V. Skinner; un- scrambling word, Helen Bell; clothes pins in jar, Helen Bell's side; distance walk, Ruth Skinner, result of an LIP Grant, will be in limited use this season. New expanded art exhibit facilities will feature the works of local artists, Huron Country Playhouse was founded in 1972 and offered a six- week season which attracted over 5,000 visitors. HENSALL HOTEL DINING ROOM OPEN 12:00 Noon - 2:00 p.m. 5:00 - 8:00 p.m. 12:00 Noon to 1:30 a.m. From 9:00 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. B.C;tt,A1'* 4 0I We Cater to Banquets Weddings, Etc. is Come and Dine With Us Too! DAILY NOON HOUR SPECIAL In the•Beverage Room $1.00 SELECTED MENU SPECIAL FRI. & SAT. NIGHT In the Beverage Room $1.50 Take Some Home TODAY KENTUCKY \ STYLE Chicken 411..1.11.411 llllllllllllllllllllll 11111 lllllll 1111111111111...1111.1111111 lllll flfului111111111111111111111111111111111 Snack Pack 2 Pieces with Wedge Fries 90¢ Dinner Box 3 Pieces with Wedge Fries and Cole Slaw $1.50 lllllll llllll 1 lll 111111.111 lllllllllllll 1111111M 111111 111171111111111111111) lllllllllllll II llllll 111111111111111111111.111 9 Pieces Regular Barn 9 Pieces $2.70 15 Pieces $4.45 esiossmstimmintimt llllllllllll lismil 1 u l u u lllllll lllll 11111111.1 lllll 1 lllllllll 1.110.1111111.11111.11 lllllll lo Giant Barn 21 Pieces $5.95 WEDGE FRIES A New Taste Treat 1....111111111111111111111111111111 llllll lllllll lllll 111111.111.11.1111111111111111111 n11111 1111111111111111111u111,10111 HENSALL HOTEL Phone 262-2012 FOR TAKE-OUT ORDERS Page 20 Times-Advocate, June 14, 1973 HENSALL COMMUNITY CENTRE JUNE 15 - 16, 1973 See and hear bdcil.ng chomptons from C000do and the U.S.A. compete for the "Ward Allen Memorial Trophy" $1,430 Cash Prizes Camping Sites for Tents and Trailers Available Hensoll Community Park- AdjotnIng Hensoll Commundy Centre R 0 W N I 9 5 _ Et,,,,A ROD .. A *0‘9.1t i. A FISTBIL Wednesday, Thursday, Friday June 13 - 14 - 15 STEIGER AND JAMES COBURN WILL BLOW You APART Of DYNIMITL' I DUCK, YOU ILICKL/V 1 ... -‘t' 14 • • C.:. • - ... : tit, ir t• fl AIM • , L , ' II - lo-iisii, i 7,---- lb:. • i , Ng.- 7 ;, ANS is X/111 Unded alpha's BURT REYNOLDS Adult Ent•rtalnmon iiiitiVE•041 THEATRE /1 CLINTON ONTARIO eli HERE COME THE Sat-Sun•Mon-Tues. Juno 16-17-18.19 Detective . .. - Harry Callahan. it . _.,,.• He doesn't break .. ip...04 •--- murder cases. He smashes them. Clint Eastwood ) 1, ' • I % -di Dirty Harry STARRING itti SIG ag PRODUCIION V ...Ylk 1 •, ''''cZa• .$ , 10. RON O'NE AL . 'i . 4 1 ... 4 ‘" „ ,,. „.„ V ., from Warner Bras a Warcpr Cenr,• 1.at a s ‘,„mpany Coming next Wect-Thuri-Frl. . , THE NASHVILLE SOUND 38 of the COuntry'a top musical pertoOmerti CARRY ON UP THE JUNGLE Malt Entertainment By JACK RIDDELL, HURON MPP The Ontario Government is determined there will be planning in the province and introduced legislation this week to give itself the power to force municipalities to follow its lead. The proposed act to provide for planning and development in On- tario would give the province strong leverage to deal with municipalities slow to act on their planning problems; but it counter- balances this with the requirement that all stages of the planning process be acted out in public with the full involvement of the municipalities. Under the terms of this bill, the Government would be able to designate any part of the province "a planned development area" and directly decide how the land was to be developed. Premier Davis made it plain in a statement to the Members of the House that the days when someone could do whatever he liked with his lands have passed. They have passed because of the threat of ur- ban sprawl and the Government introduced three bills in the Legislature this week designed in different ways and in different areas to check indiscriminate development. The legislation introduced would allow the Province to force municipalities to produce land-use plans, set up a Commission to produce a master plan for the Niagara Escarpment, and establish a series of parks - and parks associated with utility corridors - to separate towns north and west of Toronto. The Commission will buy the most important areas of the Niagara Escarpment, and it will introduce strict land-planning con- trols over the rest of the escarpment. In a long-term plan for a Parkway Belt which would include highways, hydro lines and green space, the Ontario Government has frozen the zoning of 55,000 acres of land around Toronto. Expense accounts which pay Ontario Cabinet Ministers up to $3600 a year with no questions asked came under fire in the Legislature this week. Vernon Singer, liberal member for Downsview, said the payments of $300 a month were unauthorized and represented something approaching fraud against the taxpayers. Liberal and NDP members on the Legislatures Public Accounts Com- mittee claimed the allowance had been a secret until they discovered it while reviewing the Gaiernment's expenditures last year. Investigations in the new Ontario Hydro headquarters project continued this week. Barry Brooks, former superintendant of Internal Services for O.I.S.E. (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education), told the Legislature's Select Committee, that he once received a telephone call from an Ontario Hydro official asking whether he was aware of a friend between Premier Davis and developer Gerhard Moog. Mr. Moog's firm, Canada Square Corporation, is building the Hydro headquarters under a lease-purchase arrangement with the Hydro Commission. It is the same firm which erected the OISE building. Ontario Hydro chairman, George Gathercole, conceded un- der heavy questioning by committee counsel, Richard Shibley, that Canada Square Corporation Limited, got more exposure within Hydro than three competing developers before it won the contract to build the Hydro Commissions new office headquarters. Mr, Sissons, Hydro's assistant general,manager for services, was questioned at length about the apparent lack of enthusiasm shown in Hydro memoranda, including those written by him for developers other than Canada Square, There was both exitement and the making of history in the Legislature this week. Paul Yakabuski, a Convervative member from Renfrew South, was expelled from the Legislature as he attempted to explain a remark lie had made about French education in Cornwall. No one at Queen's Park can remember a Government Party member being expelled from the House. The Speaker, Allan Reuter, ordered the Sargeant at Arms to escort Mr. Yakabuski from the Chamber after the member refused to sit down. The events leading up to the expulsion began on Tuesday during the question period when Albert Roy, Liberal from Ottawa East, ask- ed Education Minister, Thomas Wells, whether he was looking into the situation of the two teachers fired by the Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry Board of Education. Before Mr, Wells could reply, Mr. Yakabuski interjected the teachers should have been jailed. Mr. Yakabuski. in an attempt to explain his remarks, proceeded to condemn the Opposition for using the explosive situation in Cornwall' for Political gain, and it was at this point that,-Mrc:Reuter.,ruledithat Mr. Yakabuski was no longer in order and told him to sit down. The Conservative member attempted to carry on with his statement and after being told twice to sit down, the Sargeant at Arms, was told to escort him from the House. Towards the end of the week Premier William Davis gave a rather lengthy statement on energy plans that he is proposing for On- tario. These plans include a $3.8 billion expansion of power generating facilities, including two nuclear plants, and the establishment of a ministry of energy to deal with all matters pertaining to energy. Mr. Davis did not name the man who will assume the energy port- folio, but the likeliest candidate is Darcy McKeough, the Premier's Parliamentary Assistant, with responsibility for energy matters. One of the new Minister's first jobs will probably be to take the Province of Alberta to court over its attempts to increase the price Ontario must pay for Alberta natural gas. Premier Davis also introduced legislation to turn Ontario Hydro into a Crown Corporation and to provide a review process, including public participation, for price increases on Hydro's electricity. At the same time that the energy plans were revealed to the members of the Legislature, Leo Bernier, Minister of Natural Resources, indicated that the expansion of the Bruce nuclear complex will mean the loss of Inverhuron Park on Lake Huron between Port Elgin and Kincardine. Active Lions club member attends annual convention Lion A.J. (Jake) and Mrs. Sweitzer attended the 53rd an- nual. Lions district A convention at Cornwall recently. One of the highlights of the convention was a parade with 239 entries lasting over four hours, The opening ceremonies were graced by the presence of His Excellency, the Governor General of Canada, Roland Michener and Mrs, Michener, The business sessions were well attended and the highlight at Monday's meeting was the public speaking contest, The boy and girl winners in both English and French languages delivered their speeches. The chairman of the Tuesday morning meeting reported that 2,375 Lions registered for the convention, Mr. Sweitzer, who is a Past District Governor and Inter- national Councillor of District A-1 and life member of the Exeter Lions Club has been attending district conventions since 1949, He missed only two until the time of his illness in 1967 but has at- tended the last three. He also attended seven international conventions in his years of Lionism. The new Governor of District A-9 is Lion James M, Pemberton of Cambridge (formerly Galt). Mr. Sweitzer would like to see a full quota of delegates from every Large birthday cake features lodge event Mrs. Vi Coates presided and Mrs. Mildred Thomson assisted at the Pride of Huron Rebekah Lodge birthday party. The lodge was instituted 26 years ago. Plans were made to go to London. There was a large birthday List plays The Huron Country Playhouse will open its "Festival of summer Stock" July ii. James Murphy, Artistic Director, has announced the season of plays which will in- clude: Lawrence Roman's "Under The Yum-Yum Tree"; William Inge's "Bus Stop"; George Kelly's "The Show-Off"' and "The Fantasticks"; Eric Nichol's "Like Father, "Like Fun"; "The Reluctant _Debutante" by William Douglas Home; Roland Petree's "Pink String and Sealing Wax"; and "The Hand That Cradles The Rock" by Warren Graves. The 1973 season will be staged again in a 400 seat tent on the company's farmyard site just two miles from the village of Grand Bend. The company's partially renovated barn, the Centralia Farmers Supply Ltd. Groin • Feed • Cement Building Supplies Coal 228-6638 Intelligence, Our Nation's Safety" and the motto is "We serve", Following the convention Mr. and Mrs. Sweitzer spent a week camping in the Peterborough district before returning home. DASHWOOD HOTEL Entertainment in the Picture Lounge * Friday and Saturday, June 15, 16 The Comets * Wednesday, June 20 Al Harvey and The Blueboys Tiffany Dining Lounge Hours Monday through Saturday 12 to 2 and 5 to 8 Sundays 4 to 8 For reservations call 237-3671 Don't be disappointed . . . make your Father's Day reservations early