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Clinton News-Record, 1984-01-11, Page 2ARY Amajor .� ev $&2' OA* r tom O it . n . o : A i�l�yr r�.te�l! '�i� .: 1 �#1" • ,fah � � b M,'� y nounced recently by.ricu1,t`t and Food Minister Ltettid� T11. The five-year program,includes a' new beef and sleep marls. ting;:system and eight initiative.S to; make t ie.industry more effi cleat and roductive. r' - Tialnbr4ll. said,. a three-man commission wili� plan tlbe establishment of a beef marketing, agency" ,responsible for establishing, a clearing 'house marketing system for slaughter.cattle :, Members of the three -man --beef marketing: agency commission will be: Ralph Barrie, a beef fanner and president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture; Henry Davis, vice-chairman of the Ontario Farm Products Appeal Tribunal; and Mur- ray Gaunt, a TV commentator, for Huron County who has a farming background and is a former Liberal member of the Ontario Legislature. Mr. Davis will be chairman and Mr. Gaunt's.service is dependent upon a --satisfactory-ai°rarigenient ei:ng--made-:,pith his employer. The appointment of three sheep commis - signers will be made shortly. Timbrell said he expected the commis- sioners to report to him within three to six months with a business- plan -to establish a heef marketing agency. • Further support to thie re meat` industry will come, he said, in the form of a series of grants and incentives to improve beef pro-- duction. ro- duction. About $62 million will be available over a five-year period to increase the pro- vince's calf production, improve production efficiency, expand feeding programs, im-• .prove fencing and provide technical assistance and support to producers. Timbrell said recent ministry studies of Ontario's red meat industry showed that a major cause of problems in the beef in- dustry is the 20 per cent per capita decline in consumption over the past six years. "The current beef cattle and sheep marketing system is full of inefficiency - too many middlemen between the producer and the packer, profiting at the expense of both;" he said. The industry "can no longier afford the luxury of the present marketing system." • • The' goveTruneni-lids-therefore iiisctied to establish producer marketing agencies for both beef cattle .and sheep. These agen- cies will operate'clearing house systems for all slaughter cattle and sheep marketed in Ontario," Timbrell said. • He pointed out that supply management °. s►. i�t�i�r�a�al°tO€t �g ./, T !e gover ant �,, tppo iT>rt r itiat"ives: - :To increase: the number of calves roduc- ed in.Ontalfio by, increasing the cow' one-third Over current Ietrels• Ontario presently draws 50 per cent of its calf ,sup, plies from Western • To help establish ag ;cultural oppprttnli&- ty centres to provide..technical assistance and explore other opporttiriities in areas where beef producers are suffering con- siderable difficulties, - To develop initiatives to assist in cattle feeding. - To help develop a northern development program. - To assist in building more fencing as cow herds and sheep flocks are expanded. - To create a beef cattle improvement pro- gram designed to increase production effi- ciency by 10 per cent. improve business management sup- - 'lo _ - To prepare a program to improve pro- ductivity in the meat processing industry. Timbrell said he believes it is the govern- ment's duty to provide leadership to this im- portant industry in trouble. - Ontario's red meat industry needs .to. be St. Joseph's Separate School in Clinton has recently received a new principal from Strat- ford. Mr. Ed Cappelli is from St. Michael's School and has been acting as full time prin- cipal at St. Joseph's since school began on Monday. The degreeholderis married with three children and hopes to move to Clinton as soon as possible. "The students and staff are terrific," he said. "I'm looking forward to working with them." d Wendy Somerville photo) :.Sno__w collapses baric roof SEAFORTH - The excessive snowfall of the Christmas weekend storm -caused ,a 40 by 60 foot section of .barn roof on the farm of Bill VanNes of Ethel, to collapse: The roof trapped about half of the 90 head of dairy cattle in the Barn. The collapse wasn't discovered until the family started morning chores. ``Most of the -cows were. trapped in their stalls," said Margaret VanNes. "One was hurt and still can't Stand." Following the discovery, the VanNes' issued a plea on the local radio station for assistance in freeing the trapped animals W and temporarily 'rebuilding the -barn. --Ap- -- proximately 50 neighbors spent most of the day cutting ,up the roof with chain saws and closing in two open ends of the 12 -year-old barn. Two construction crews organized the workers. Kayley Mills Clinton Charlene Townsend R.R.4 Seaforth Scott McClinchey canton Amber McDougall Londesboro Sandra Lobb R.R. 2 Clinton Duane Siertsema Bayfiold Ryan Hoy Goderich Paul Chambers cllnton ChristopherDixoncanton Darryl De Ruyter Clinton Tammy Walsh Clinton Cathy Bircham Clinton Terry Madsen R.R. 3 Bayfield ,Janes Ad0111_Cowansvif le,. Quebec Jan. 11 Jan. 11 Jan. 12 Jana 12 Jan. 14 Jan. 15 Jan. 15 Jan. 15 Jan. 16 Jan. 16 Jan. 16 Jan. 17 Jan. 17 Jan. 17 Snowy Riddles 1. Why was the sky weeping? It was crying out loud. 2. Why was the sidewalk undressed? 11 was slippery. 3. Why did the kid put his money in the snow drift? He'd heard it was a bank. 4. Why did the snowman have a suitcase? ft was. made of packing snow. 5.. Why did the woman put snow on her face? She'd heard it was powder. 6. Why did the kid run -outside --with her -cereal bowl? There were good flakes out there. • 7. Why did the kid with a heater rub his eyes? He thaw the thnow. 8. What did the kid say when she saw another kid build a snow fort with paste? "Me gloo. "• Distributed by Canada Wide Feature Service 'cited c 1083 Mackay Prothero Weather JANUARY 3 4 5 6 7 9 INA •1983 -2 -5 -2 -6 1 - 4 1 -10' 1-3 1 -3 -6 -21 3 -2 '3 -19 0 -4 7 --14 1 -5 Snow 26 cm Rain 15 mm, INSULATION Beat the high cost of heating this winter: Call LES TURNER for Free Estimates on *POLYURETHANE FOAM • BLOWN CELLULOSE • BLOWN FIBREGLASS •FIBREGLASS BATTS- ROCKWOOL •CMAC APPROVED , GOVERNMENT GRANTS yAva IaKlo rriiomos"lit�fiii#"Iliiif7irti"'' 1971 UP TO `SOO. Call now for a '. free estimate. Also available for foam insulation fire resistant ' coatings. 1 P.O. BOX 1067-CLINTON 482-3563 Licensed -Bonded -Insured NEED TO KNOW SOMETHING ABOUT YOUR NEW COMMUNITY? dome, qon!.!. LTPhon.,524-2544 Our hostess will bring gifts and greetings along with helpful•community information. competitive 0.1 the Nora, rleal moot, he ssaki, ,since Ontario Livestock place are basically determined in the Vatted States. The now program is based on findings in a series of eight 'studies the ministry con- ducted onducted during the past year of the pro- vince's red meat industry. In addition, the ministry consulted 'extensively with the in- dustry, holding eight meetings across the province as well as a series of private con- sultations with individuals and groups. In making the announcement, Timbrell roducers referred to the proposed tripartite national %bilization program,,, expressing his severe ppointment at the lack of pro - gross made recently, in stabilization negotia- tions. "However,". he added, "I am continuing to negotiate with the Other provinces and the federal{'government" on_a stabilization pian that would provide producers with some protection against fluctuations in market prices that characterize the agricultural sector. Hill revises historie book Historic Streetscapes of Huron County is a revised book about the various streetscapes of towns, villages and hamlets in Huron County: ' The author, Nicholas Hill, is a partner in the architectural and planning firm of Hill and Borgal which is located in Goderich. Both partners practise mainly in the rural count es of"Iiuroai, Si"iiceandPertlT andn the cities of London and Stratford. Nicholas Hill is a member of the Royal Ar- chitectural Institute of Canada and the Canadian Institute of Planners and has a _ Master of Architecture odegree. from _ the. 1 PECK APPLIANCES "IN THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN VARNA" •FILTER QUEEN SALES & SERVICE • VACUUM CLEANERS - Gales It Service to Most Makes) • FM COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS (For Farm N Susineul • WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES •WOODS FREEZERS •CENTRAL VACUUM SYSTEMS •INSECT & FLY KILLINQ UNITS (Far Indoor & Optdoor Use) •GIFTS & MANY MORE ITEMS VARNA, ONT. 482-7103 University of Toronto. He has written a number of, books on the subject of historic building preservation and has lectured widely on the same subject throughout the province. In 1979 a previous book, under the same name, was published minus the town of Ex- eter. xeter. In the more recent publication the ---town-has : been included A-_ The first section tells of the history of the Huron County settlement. This includes a history of how the Canada Company was formed to finance the venture of purchasing T.um to page 3 =\1 uAIEK TR/C/AN'S^ys .4T ELECTR/CAL WORK WERE SENIOR MEN, `%T5 OUR PERMANENT JOB -NOT JUST NOW 4 THEN" HAVE MAP' E" I ADEQUATE POLO WIRING rry'lliichanian 3-PNASEE[ECTR/C CLINTON 482-7374 BUSINESS AND PSROPESSJ`' Y!MAIL DIREC' +C (to West Wawanosh Mutual Insurance toIn anY Dungannon, Ont. NOM1R0 529-7961 RESIDENTIAL AUTO FARM AGENTS: rrank Foran Donald MacKay Donald R. Simpson Mason Robinson Delniar Sproul Lyons and Mulhe-n R.R. 2 Luchnow R.R. 3 Ripley R.R. 3 Ooderich 341 Catherine St. Winohem RJR. 3 Auburn 46 West St. OodeAdh 323-3324 3,3-33'2 52147567 357-2473 524-7373 524-73711 FOR A QUOTATION ON YOUR FARM, HOME, COTTAGE OR AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CONTACT THE AGENT IN YOUR AREA DIRECTORS: Sidon Bradley Lud now Oenld Kerr P.O. Bon 62 Blyth Austin Martin P.O. sou 344 Luti,now Kenneth B. Madsen R.R. 2 Paisley Donald McKenzie 103IIBIn Ave., West Ooderlch John Nixon R.!. 3 Prussak CLAIMS SHOULD SE REPORTED PROMPTLY TO THE DIRECTOR IN YOUR AREA 523.2214 523.4273 521-3661 341.7337 324-7642 117.0427 OPTOMETRY REPAIR R.W. BELL OPTOMETRIST The Square, GODERICH 524-7661 JOHN LONGSSTAfF OPTOMETRIST Seeforth S27-1200 Monday, Tuesday, Thursday. Friday 1:00-$:30 Saturday - 9:00-12:00 noon Closed Wednesdays BY APPOINTMENT Fie parking on premises Clinton Electric © White -Westinghouse 4--I-hrtpUri rtt Appliances Sales and Service APPLIANCE REPAIRS ELECTRICAL MAINTENANCE VI ALBERT ST. 482-3646 APPLIANCE and REFRIGERATION REPAIR-SERViCE- Jim Broadfoot 482-7032 ELECTRIC INSURANCE riummie ues 9",lac tvict E11��0 eve •ECONOMY •OUA.LITY ®SERVICE "Big lobs or small, we guarantee 8Z 73741�� CLINTON OR CALL 1-81/0.265-1215 ASK FOR PAGER_. NO. i GAISER-KNEALE INSURANCE BROKERS INC. Insurance -Real Estate Investments Isaac St., Clinton Phone Office 482-9747 Len Theedom 482-7994 Hal Hartley 482-3613 B ob Thomas 4E2-3096 B ill Counter 4E2 -36E7 JOHN WISE INSURANCE BROKERS LTD. General Insurance Guaranteed Investments Clinton Office: 4112-11644 Res.: 4E2-7265 ABATTOIR SERVICE F8ENDER'S ABATTOIR Home Grown Beef and Pork MITI Street, Henson 262-3136.. Who esale, Retail and Custom Slaughtering. Kip day Tuesday. Call for further information: . Ilionior Mansger Dale Erb 262-5628 236-7733 Olfr Mints is "The GOld a Mt" GLASS/ALUMINUM See us for your building projects *Glass and mirror *Energy-efficient replacement windows !Window & screen repair •Plexiglass •Door service and repairs *Complete range of aluminum siding and building products cllnton 51 mirror and aluminum products 24 Princess St. West, CLINTON 482-3322 PHOTOGRAPHY Fitzgerald Studios photograph‘ and cti+1om iramin'g 400 lame. Street Clinton 482-3890 MECHANICAL GBAILEYs LENNOX AND DUAL-AIRE FURNACES Y SHEET METAL WORK SPECIALISTS IN ENGINEERED HEATING SYSTEMS PHONE: 262-2020 HENSALL, ONT. TRAVEL BUSES AVAILABLE FOR CHARTER Deluxe Highway Coaches Activity Buses Custom Hans Phone Called .Gederich 524-7622