The Goderich Signal-Star, 1974-07-04, Page 18pA
P _ a
PAOH 4�A.-GODE` ( i SIONA1 STAR,,%TIIURSHAY, •JULY 4, 1971,,
armors
bid to,re-route
power Iines
ose bn bottle for
f� 1otsI
lilt'' 11 1 1: 0Y*
The Goderich ;tions Club and the two.young Y,L_ion r presentatives• from Texas .exchangedbgifts
u enirs�`at �th-e MaitJar-rd--CAiintr.. Club last` Th 'rsda . DustyHubbard left' from• ldalo
and so v � . Y x � Y ,, 4
Texas, presented the LionsMpreiden't, Bill Alcock centre, with two pennants from 'Texas and. a
iron •from her home town news . a er the,Lubbock Avalanche -Journal. The brandin
traridngP P � •g
`iron s mbol stands for--'Lubbock-�Leacls the Way'. Robert Ca11►�n:tight, from Rotan, Texas, is
holding the Goderich banner that .is ' to -tie taken -back to Texas, (staff -photo)" -
Farmers in Huron and Bruce
Counti'ess who have 'been
fighting the proposed power
corridor between Bradley J'unc,
tion and Seefortll°'in favoyr, of a
route that would travel
through lower class, ,farmland
• saw .their• ycause d,ealt,a death
blow ;by Environment1 minister
-William Newman -last week.
Mr. Newman, has ordered :ex-
propriatior of the lands On-
tario Hydro wants for its route.
To back' up his decision the
mini"s""ter said ,that if farmers •
and Hydro have not 'come up
with settlements within 80 days
the.,: Ontario. Land ,Comper-
sdtion •Board will be called
upon, to, arbitrate the a matter.
The Drily bright point of the
decis'i'on ik that the widt,h^of the.
right-of-way will ' be reduced,
i.nitiallyl at least, from 9,00 feet
to 500 feet on the firsf'l "'' fthe
• route and 'from 540- feet a 490
feet` on the second leg o the
• corridor: When• the land
needed for a proppaed e�tpan-
siotrthose, rights of way will be
increased" to their • original -
figures, but until that ,time the
,;extra la.r d „,will remain under
the control of the respective
farmers. as
The 'envirbrirnent minister
discounted the fanners'
- proposed, routestcfor a number
of reasons. Firstly, he, said the,
alternate.. route would ' cost
about,.$5 million mare than the'
Hyuro rcjute and it would riot
save.saye.afr appreciable amount of
arab.ie_la.nd, . In 'fact, Mr.
-- lewman ,felt that the alternatie
route wo.i+d probably create
'.,tother problems.;, ± eeondl'y 'tlae•N
inister,expl' ned that the far-
., m rs' _prop '-d ,route did ,not
don't ider :the amount of prime
agricultural land that would be
affected in the souiherly„endY
'the t hsrinission fine around
WiiI''ghain' , and a proposed
Wingham," transfer `station. At
this point along the'alternate
'transmission route, as much or.
_: more.. prime ,Arid„.. nd would be
disrupted: +
',Erivironmment • Minister
Newman J based his .ex-
propriation order on a report]
from - Mac' Craig, an Owe
Sound lawyer, ,who headed 'an
r
April ftCoo rding -to
Newrnan, Mr. Craig's report
• states -that -4n choosing. a route
Hydro took more land use fac-
tors into `account than' just the
disruption ofagricultural land:
He cited such 'examples as the
number of river..crossings, nurn
1 ber oLw,roperties.affected and,
the number of diagonal land.
reverences involved.' -
Ucensod ,undiI L.C.S.trR,.
BAYFIELD,,, R D., GODERICH
.5244711
SUNDAYS
---
'DINE BY
CANDLELIGHT
Our ,fust beef
is' a delight
FAMOUS, EXCITING,,, ENTERTAINING
Charlie E .stein
.ANN- H18 •BAND
for your listening and dancing pleasure
,4
Yanwnr.r..r....
FIRE AND
ALL OTHER LINES
HURON ROAD ,
GOD.ERI,CH. 524- /411 '
Occasionally, son'tething in into 'the., arage. In `the Zvvinter•, nickel." I. insisted 1 would pay
t.eresting.or unusual ,comes snow blew in. Neither bothered -the go ng ra e..1 e re se .
along -74o brighten the daily me, bit you'kn t`what vo, Men.:• ,hey .tv re . doing F it, for
routine, just., when: it seems to are.iiiCe. - ' Canadian literature. Jamie
•be%;gettto•g:-dreany u.ple..,,mi' ,•,,,,,,Well o y the, night in said they.w.ere pretty busy, 'and
these happened to me recently: quest ifin, the two ladies asked when 'Wanted it done. I
First, the good ,Satnaritans., decided' to close the garage said whenever they,could get at
The story really .;.began,, one door, because the snow was •- it. I thought he meant . in a
night last Winter.- ' blowing in. They, gave a great couple or"•,three 'weeks-,
I have an ancient . and heave, the wire came off the ,I went in-tb.•dinner,,deligh:ted.,
venerable wooden garage, pulleys, and the door came off - at .this display of gratitu-de or
whieh 'bears on bath sides of the" rails. - • whatever. After .dinner., .I heard
the entrance � the honorable Fortunately, the car,was' hot a bit of ,a din out.back,'and they
'scars : left' ..by my wife and in the garage, or I'd have .been ,were, four young men,, getting
'daughter as theytried at looking rot a new caro The:door that ridiculous door ,. back on
g v
various times to get the car into weighs 'about six hundred -the tracks.
the garage or out of it. pounds. 4 I-was-alrnost,overcome with
My wife is the only person of It did - not come crashing something or 'other. Ail four
my acquaintance who. can try to + right down, but hung,, suspen- were former' students of mine:
.,04,4„,a-car_out of a garage and ,d'ed by'the wire, at a .forty-five Mike Laurin, Mike Dragoman,
get it wedged -k•itty-corner degree.,angle in,the garage. You 'John Sachs and Jamie Hunter.
across the. building. On several couldn't have driven a kiddy At least -two of them_ had been
occasions d have almost had to car in them working•since eight o'clock that
have the 'garage demolished to >= I was /g'oing to Organize a ` morning, and here they were 2
getthe Carout.- -., . . ..work pa.;ty and get it back. on twelve hours later', slugging
night last. the rail', it was storm and awayata '.brutal awkward. job '
• Anyway, on this ig h Y,
winter,'` wife -and .a fiend then•"I -got .the `flu ---and time for their�`old English teacher. I
'were,�trying to close the garage went n, and things�cr_ =piled _up; was touched. They.-„absolutel .'
' refused any payment..
e ' -A/couple of -times,” r went out • I- was just as astonished as
o garage, which ;will probably'• '.a. d_ looked at the stupid. thing, was :moved. .Here were four.
ever see forty_again. The door did once tried CO get ft,back on young guys who, ' instead of
is ' not eiractly. electronically • he rails, which' almost gave me' moaningparourtd. Omit, no'em-
controlled. a double hernia. ` . • . J-ployment, or' living- on -welfare,
° it is a massive tiring, abolrt Well, time went on;•and my had formed a loose partnership,
six inches thick, of hardwood: wife nattered away about get and were doing construction
It would cost about a thousand . ting that door, fixed and the'._._ painting, anything . they could.
.dhllars..--ta bu.i1d. tod.a�.-The '.�:neighbou�rs dropped a few-l�,in-ta„y.,,.get%.:,-.,:�,,,,,,,,.tlx,,�.,.,rro.,,,,,,,
chap -who- installed -it was quit but I --became sort of fond of They were immediately of -
ingenious, that crazy thing hanging°there, fered• the job `'of taking off -my,
"• He installed a couple bf rai as one might g•et • fond" of, a storm windows and painting
some pulleys, . and two "hyge . cross-eyed, cat. - my house, And that':e 'haw you ,
weights at'the end• of solrne One fine'evening recently, •f get ahead in the, world, which
hea-vy;-- ire. While the door was'Sitting:in'•the'back•yard, en- �rdoes NOT owe you a' living
could not be rai"sed and slid • .joying my preprandial a eritif,` ,young' man
back With ancouple of fingers, when ' an old, truck pulled up In addition to this lucky
like those in a modern garage, '•a'nd •a 'sweaty, dirty young mail,° .strike, I have Dan. St: "Amand,
a strong man, with a good • came' through the gate. ,, another studeritf and' thee best
heave, could get it ' up ands ' Under; tide. grime I: iflevltified ' cornet player in the wholelarea,
sliding• back along the rails. '`,iamie Hunter, whom I' taught cutting my lawn, so' all in all,.. it
' ' I• ,• atn' not- a particularly last year" .Grinning, •he announ- looks like a good summer.. --
,
• •
strong • roan. In .:fact, ' I. am a ted, "Mr.r'Smiley, I'm going to
tweak• one, in' more ways than do something for Canadian.
cine as, ,r,y wife could tell' you•. literature°•'' L wars baffled. " He
r1nn . _ ,_—as,.t._.Y seem tO.
/Fhis door is as old as th
•"` Mr. Newman recognized the
objections lodged by area far.:
mers but 7has•decided to go',
ahead. anyway.
'1"-'1" P'! lY+d'trrray;G��u-rrt,wI-.
_who.. campaigned,. against the•.
route, could only comment t'lat
the reduction ' of • c2trridor wid-
ths, 'was --'a helpful oncession,;
beat .the ideal Solution would°
have been, ,a re-routing, of. the.
::.power 'lines, -r
� ,{ Wr w,,.ywlw! M'rwlw/wlwlr•lwhvlw)w/ Iwlw)wr.••tiwlwM•N•IwrwH•tM'I•.7wlw/w/w/v wlv+I�+lfy�'IA•IPMv.I�•fwl:•• M•Ir".I.^'�Ywfw/w
. sa result, f usually°�left the went on, "V�1hen are you going
garage d.00r;� open. I' reoi ldn't to get your•garage door fixed?"
see• the point in'all that heaving "Oh, that: Any day rtdw
and. hauling. This ancioyedmy Jamie; as soon as I.. can find
wife::- In• the fall, leaves blew someone to do it. Why?
"Well, every. time Mike and I
drive ,by. and see that. door, it
,bothers us, •We're going Co 'fix •it
for you'.".
rest!'.',. enahusasticall
."L ow much cant -14S :
"It's not going to cost you -,a -
I�.:rlw
,.Iwrw/WII
:Iwr , aye. .,w w,,�
r
Ywlu1.,,,n,
WED.,‘ THUJRSF, FRI.� sAT., JULY}10,11,12,13•
BER
fi WELCOME,. '
SERV.ICEI
would .Ike ,to Call - you 'with
"hbusewarming_gifts" and in-
"' formation about your new
'location. The Hbstes'a will ba
glad to, arrange your •subscrip-
tion -to. the Signal -Star
Call eat 524-7854
R•
-eriJ
c carman photograp
524-7924 p S'S 0 — RTS 95 Toronto:, St:
large—WEDDINGS... ,small
children •
family
aerial ,
colour
olt
R TRA1
�MII�EIt�A��:^ Indusw'ialn�
STCA_R— brochures
F R A M I N G= needlework
PHOTODRAWING ENLARGEMENTS
y «Y
DRIVE-IN • GODERICH
HWY. 8 AT CONCESSION RD. 4 e PHONE 524.9981
All • fishermen should know
' how to swan, know first:a
and carry a first aid kit with
them on fishing ,trips. 'Wear• a
personal flotation•..4evice which .
• will support you in yourgfishing
clothes. Keep. ;in the .swim with,,
'Red Cross Water, Safety.-
`' •
�\ �`14'�v' l ♦ ti{:x.•{y.}}'r • 14•{ q'•\•} \} " i'M•{'1k'v.'k?}'{ +, -plc.:y{;
:.{'?:;.{' •:{•x:^4:1 '+ ; y \4 \ a �: {: \{Y4C•+: }�O?'h {.. •.:..{;'•,�1,��'�ti
/he Forun`n makes suii)rnerccm'e alive witb.tf=i'e'best
in live entertainment. A celebration of"wbrm summer,
oftetnoaris • and 'evenings, and later,, the mellow
weekends of autumn,,Rock.i,Jazz, Folk. Symphony.
:Ballet. -Opera. Ali in a ,beautiful outdoor amphi,
theatre by,, he•water. There's roorn for 8,000 people
to enjoy_ it all, a
Cinesphere arches its glii'ter ng sphere .around the
wortds,most erdvanced'fdm theatre. With towering.
new l«AJC films ...six,:;storeys high,' ,With
with
16-f"racic stereophonic sound' This year, hang onto
Your seat for a world premiere: •tlae'breath-stopping .:
hi -junks of ' Snow •Job . (ts.a lqugh•fillod ride_in a .
:pione,,..on .0 bus.. i n the,..a.iir..dnd through the '
snow. And returning this,a, corner is the • widely:'
acclaimed film Volcano..., the brilliant drama of an
Icelandic volcano eruption.
Children's Villa' is the wo° itis -most exciting
playground. Over 30 space-age ways for :
kids toh'ave jrx, -in"a happy place
dreamed up just for-thernr.
On,.a M6.pn_W.a1K. An Earth
( -, _ Box Crawl. Cuing bliss-
.. fully drenched in the,N• . '
• oew�,Woter Play Area.
Sitdoting Water Cannons.
(Aftbrovatds, they pop
• Ainto t bird•shoped Kid
Dryer to get dried off.) .
`this year We've added..
omething,f 0 gr !M up
a rtew Mrni-Gattrisur"se '
Eighteen hples in -.N . • ...
-stbrylcrndr tting:
-Putt•puttl
Experiential Theatres in -steel pads'high :above. the,, water,
surround you. with sound„..colour, imrlge . It:s_a whale new
multi -media theatre e.x'pe.rience using firm slides, lights, •,music.
This year there s a startling view' of Canada's capital in "Ot
taws More Than aCity and the swirl of dancing colours
and patterns known as 'Kaleidoscope'
0.
Plus: °Marching bands, clowns, ,talking • animals' ail over
the park. A tra��elling Showboat to fill the canals -with' the
'sound of music.' The FMCS Hada. Youthcraft •Ontano, a
new' artisan`showplac,e+•:The Marina with its unique sec roll
promenade..
/ylore' than 2b' eating 'rind drinkl'ng.:plcioes in all, for -every'
palate -and pocketbook; ,
Pedal.- Boats. •. Weekend .hel:icopt'er rides. Par'k-
land, Picnic spots; -And watch for many mare-
. new things:to enjoy, all season long• ��
Hours: Surnmer, .Progrcirnme:- May 18 -Labour •
Day, Park open 10 00 a,m. J:00 a,m, Attractions '
open to 10:00 p.m.Autumn Programme: Sepl.'
tember 7 through Thanksgiving. Park and At-
tractions open weekends and "`holidays only,,
time; Os above. Winter Programme: Sunday,
-fa `February 28 •
ADMISSION; (Includes all attractions above,
r xcept. pedal howls, • helicopter. rides,..Mi.rti,Golf
and tours of HMCS Honda: Adults (18 and ov,er):
$1.50 each (after 91:00 p.m., $1.00).• Juniors°r
(.I3-17°): '$1.00 each. Children with parent .or,
:guardian: .free (up to 4 children); Ch•rltlren (12.
and under, unaccompanied): 754 each.`ntario
resident senior citizens: frees •
Parking: on site $1.00. (Except during CNE
p riod.) During CNE admission •
' paces will be the same ds those
chor ed by the Exhibition.
Tickef will permitentry to
.c
bath Onfariq Plage
.and CNE,
Spacial Rotes: O,t:oup
ti :discount civd�lable`n, .�
f11►' pre-arrdnged tours.
'Pht5ne (4.A) 965.7064
f .% informatio'n.
tiliNESE
52A-2242
• Try our Delicious
Prepared Meals
• We have excellent Dining
Facilities
• We can also prepare
Your meals for convenient
Take-out
•n., T,.huir. 1 O' to 1 a
Fri=u=Sat. 16 to 1
Sunday 1 1..to 10
Treat
Yourself
to dinner
,
out at •
• wiY, l'° 1 y1'rr'rrvr ,.IIs rrarrwr,.vn.