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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1965-04-14, Page 8p7t PAGE EIGHT THE LUCKNOW SEN.TINEL,. LUCKNOW, ONTARIO WEDNESDAY, APRIL 14th,' 196S N....♦♦ N♦♦N....N�♦♦! ♦♦ ....♦.♦ ♦♦ ,,. A. N ,' farmers 71* I,ockniwc Ares; • GET YOUR SUPPLY •OF PURINA . CtIQWS AND SANITATION PRODUCTS FROM: Gordon. i•. Johns• -- •tone• IN LUCKNOW • ♦, AT THE JOHNSTONE .SEED. CLEANING. .PLANT ' •' • O PHONE .528.3714 • •♦•s•♦♦♦•♦••it•♦•••••••o••o••••••o♦•••••♦ i ••o••.. :. i • • WHITEC,HURCH (Intended For Last Week) Mr. and Mrs.„ Scotty Ross of Wingharn . visited. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs: Keith Collyer .and. fam- ly. Mrs Angus MacDonald, Mrs. 'H. D. MacDonald and. Mrs. D. Mac- Donald spent Monday m Y.ondon,' Mr. • and Mrs. Allan Coffin and Kirk of Kitchener, accompanied by Richard ' : Coffin ` of. Verdun,; .Que- bec, • visited • Sunday . - with their mother Mrst :Emma • Coffin - and John. Mrs. and Mrs: Tom McInnes of ,.Gerrie "were”. recent visitors with Mr. and :Mrs.' LOrville Tiffin. • Mr. and Mrs: Stewart Smith of Kitchener spent the 'week-endwith' her „ parents Mr. and Mrs., Ger-' slain Johnston : and'..Jack John- ston of London visited . there on Saturday: • Mr. and Mrs. Jack Morrison' M ,.n Donald, Joyce, Arnoldrnold and. Doug- las were Sunday visitors with her parents ' Mr. and Mrs. Roy Huff- man., Mr:: and Mrs. Bill Neable. and Howard`- were Sunday visitors with Mr: arid Mrs. ;,Julius Fischer and family of Palmerston. ,Kenneth Neable . spent the week: end with ; his grandmother : Mrs: Matilda Graham of Teeswater. Mr: .' and Mrs • Carl :Weber, :!Anne; Marlene, .and Clair ,visited: on Saturday with Mr and Mrs: George Weber of Kitchener ' and on Sunday with . Mr. and Mrs. ' Robert Chambers of Harriston: Jim Ross of Wallaceburg'spent ;. 'the week=+end with his folks Mr. and.' Mrs.' Russel Ross. Mr: and; ; Mrs. Harry Swan and family completed their moving to Bervie last week Mr. and Mrs., Wilbert Proctor" of Morris: Township visited l : Sun- day :with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jam- +: ieson:: Mr, and Mrs.' Llqyd . Whytock, Juni,: Janet,; .Nancy ✓•and Darlene, East Wawanosh, visited Sunday. with Mr. and Mrs. Carman Why- tock. Charlie 'Falconer,. Mary a n d John visited on Sunday with Miss- es ,Annie and . Mary Laidlaw.' Mr. and Mrs. • Roy' `Irwin. visited on Sunday ' : with `.Mr. :and • Mrs° Bert and 'fami y of Morris .town-. ship. Edna . Wall and 'Sandra Fisher, Gary Chapman And Elgin.': Sleight- holm,, from 'the Y.P.S., attended the Y.P.S. meeting held in Tees water 'Presbyterian Church Sun- day . evening, where Captain Fer- ris of '; Wingham• Salvation Army was. guest • speaker: . Mr. • and Mrs. Jim Currie ' :and. Donna Leader visited. Saturday everting. with ; Mr.: and :Mrs Rus- sel • Gaunt. us-:selGaunt.. . Visitors on Saturday with,. Mr. and: Mrs.' Albert' Linnets were her brother-in-law Henry 'Gurges. of • Malton and his parents ; ,Mr. and' Mrs.. Henry Linnets .of; Guelph. Visitors on Saturday evening with Mr. and , Mrs. Albert Coul- tes`were Mr; and Mrs. -Lawson Majury •'of Paisley, .and Mr. .and Mrs. N•elson Kerry of Eden Grove. Mrs: Jack Coultes, ' Debbie : and Kevin . of :` Dresden' spent ' few `dayslast, week ' with her : parents Mr. and Mrs:. Mervyn Pipe, Bras-,. sets; • and on . Saturday • Mr. Coul ter . . joined; them. and.,all visited . With Mr; ` and' Mrs. Albert et:mites `on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert; Schwichtenberg,: ' Lori- Jane ' and Kerry visited at the : same home.' Mrs. Tom O'Malley has return ed to Sarnia and ". Mr. O'Malley is oylespending. . , a ;few days; with Jack B : Mr. and Mrs; Peter Chandler and.. family of St. Marys area moved last, week to : the. Tom Malley. farm:: Mr.. and Mrs Donald. -DOW vis ited on . Sundaywith'., her :' parents. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Stobo of Cul ross Township. • TEED ERTI FI CATES • issued in amounts from $100 -upward:: for 8; 4, or 5 • years.. °. i earn the above indicated` interest, payable half -yearly by.cheque. • authorized investment for all Canadian Insurance Companies ,and trust funds. ' 4- B,Y MURRAY `GA014.T ... M.PP, HURON,BRUCE. The report :of the speefal eo n - mission on redistribution of elec- toral districts in Ontario was sent to the Legislature's Standing. Committee • on Privileges ' a n d Elections. Premier. Robarts 'ask- ed ".the House, to take this'. action on:. the plan. to •.increase the : num ber of House seats from 108 to 117 over Opposition protests, that it . would put redistribu- tion back in the field of politics; Premier Robarts contends the Standing Committee . will just make proposals before resubmit- ting the plan to the original •com- mission. The .. revised . ' plan ' will. then come before theLegislature for final. approval: . The Legislature, in session since January ' 20 *heads. ,for, a 10 day . Easter recess Thursday with a .' heavy work load still .'• ahead when it ;.resumes. ;April 27th. Still to ' be discussed are estimates . of many. major 'departments and im- portant. legislation ` proposed by the Government. The preliminary report` of. the Legislature''s, Select Committee, on youth, ' of which I am 'a ;member; was .tabled in the . Legislautre ; on Friday . of last: week. The. Committee's work will not, in all likelihood be ` cofnpleted be- fore. 1966. - The ' Committee favours, com- munity collegesthat would allow VH iTECHUR-..H Mrs. . Robert. Ross returned from Wngham and District', Hospital ow Monday to the hom e of her son Don. Ross and Mrs.. Ross.: Mrs..John De Boer was admit- ted to . Wir:-;ham 'and District Hos- pital on Thursday. The commun- ity . wishes her a speedy recov- ery• Mrs.: ' Musgrove. • returned: • : on. Wednesday. from..,__Wngham _':and District Hospital to ' the home of her daughter Mrs. Doris • Willis. Charles ' Tiffin . and Mr. ` and Mrs. Fred Tiffin were in London on Friday where Fred • learned from the :" specialist that his eye had much improved and would not require " further, , treatment.. Joe Tiffin, Mrs. Orville. Tiffin sand Mrs. Tian Tiffin were in .Lon- don :on Tueesday. Mr: and Mrs. George- Currie spent the weekend in .London with Mr.. and Mrs. ' Frank. McConnell,' Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth 'Winegar - den, Mr. .and • Mrs. Jerry St. Marie. ' iversities. ; This would be helpful. and ' would fill' an obvious need. There are too few of our students advancing to higher education levels as compared with what is Believed to be their - individual potential. • There would appear to be a need for :the co-ordinating of trades 'courses, technological train- ing and' opportunitiesfor degree courses with the status andunder the;, .authority; of .community. 'col-- leges' and or universities , for a greater. number ,of .:high ' school students than • are presently be- ing given ' •theirpost secondary 'graduates to go ; onto Ontario Un-. school 'training. Mr, •win,, . ,Arbuckle: who lives wth his 'daughter Mrs. Rutherford: IieavieT-•of W�rghtamr-•and�a-�for� mer resident of { the area .° suffered; . a stroke last week and is a :pat- . Hosfentpitainl,Wingham „and ' District. . ' M. and Mrs. Eldon; Emerson and' Lila • Emerson were Sunday visitors: with Mr. and Mrs.. El- wood • Barbour and - Mr and Mrs.. Allan .Barbour. •. Bill O;'Brian of Whalen's Corners visited, .on Thursday_ with:. Mr.. -and; • Mrs George 'Currie " ' ;Curries 'School pupils and teach- , Garniss are ,sponsoring• a card party, iii • the school this Fri - to evening; at 8:30. Prizes. will be awarded. • (Intended For Last Week) Miss' Ruth. Taylor of Toronto spent the weekend at' hen home here ' Mi. :an.d Mrs. Art. Hagerman of Beeton_ spent the weekend with Mr.- arid Mrs. Lawrence ' Taylor.. Little 'Joyce Taylor .'is under the • Doctor's care . with bronchitis at her home. We . wish her . a speedy recovery • '• Calvin -Brick U:CW :'are ..busy preparing. for a bake sale to be' held• in the Oddfellows. rooms. this Saturday. Ruth, Grant and.. Jim, • Cortes visited on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth,. Coultes of 'Willow - dale. ' Mr.. and.. Mrs. , Carl McClenag- han spentthe weekend.' with :Mr. . pe . , . , and Mrs. Bob: Aitcheson;and fam- ily of Ilderton . • • More' than :1,500 fires needless- ly damage ..Ontario. forests each year, most of . them ` during :.the fire- . season,; from. April to Octob- er. • A. renownedfarm editor reports on a new fertilizer, with.:: . a new twsI-only onefarmer inivecan buy:t! Read how these Sopgrowers,are boost:reg profits by 25%. rea t rou BY JOHN STROHM I'd like to tell you of the most exciting fertilizer idea I've run across in 30 years of farm reporting. • It's' an idea that's helping top farmers break. through their personal,' yield barriers to such yields as 130=bushel corn , , : 5 -ton hay .. 45 -bushel soy- beans ..'.• 3000,7lb. tobacco The idea is Super Q®, a fertilizer so exclusive you can'teven buy it . • But I'm getting ahead of my story: y Two years ago a select group of local•nianufac-.. turers were stunginto-action by a disturbing truth. The top farmers, were moving faster than their • advisers .. . demanding that fertilizer companies: improve their scattergun approach to fertility'prob- prob- lems. • ' So, these hometown manufacturers pooled their strength in a giant cooperative effort: They called in the best scientific brains,: and handed them this "impossible" assignment • 1. Develop the best fertilizer itis humanly possible to make..' ', 2. Forget about price-per-toh. But be dead sure this fertilizer,will return the farmer more net profit than' any other product on the market. We want to guarantee it will, not just talk about it. 3. Formulateit for the top farmers in each coin- munity. We'll refuse to sell it to anyone but the top! 4. Rifle it to fit a specific area , .. yes, even a specific moisture level. 5. Make a different fertilizer for corn, for barley, tobacco, wheat, soybeans. 6. Use the. best form of nutrients for the crop -not the cheapest or easiest for the manufacturer. Wow'! Sone ofthose'who were Called in declared: "You just. can't get all;those coons up' one tree!". But other scientists rose to the challenge. They • tested soil and moisture on top, farms in each'com , . 372 Day St, 35'D0n1op Ste, 73 MI:sls:ago .IL, Toronto 16arrir Ortllia in fertiliz munity . pored over the latest. research , an- alyzed new manufacturing techniques, new mate-'` rials. They picked the . brains of ag college special lists, interviewed top farmers on their personal. goals. And then they created Super Q. The Super Q program is a national effort It has all the efficiency and breadth of bigness but with the pinpoint local' accuracy to give the individ- ual grower higher ' yields and . profits. In Aide -by - side tests on hundreds of farms with six• different crops,_ Super Qi 'outyielded' the lest. commercial, fertilizers byas much as 25%: Successful as they have been with Super Q, the scientists do not see their job as dome. As Dr. Ray Starostka, chief"formulator for Super Q, explained tO me, "Don't memorize the numbers on a Super Q bag;: they'll change, the minute. re get a new test or technique—or as local conditions demand I certainly don't want to give the :impression that Super Q is a/cure all. Ori the contrary, it will'. only be sold to top farmers -the top 20% in yields and management. They'll make Super Qpay off. surveyed 900 farmers in ten` areas; and it was really exciting to hear them . talk of their goals. Quite a few told me.they were shooting:for '200 bushel: corn . 7 -ton hay ... 600 -bushel potatoes ::. 60=bushel soybeans ... 3500-1b. tobacco .. 70- bushel wheat ...100 -bushel barley . 25. -ton sugar beets ... 30 ton silage ... 135 -bushel oats. • The Super Q Manufacturers are •a select group, jealous of their reputation. Among other things, they must agree to disciplinary action should S u P E R they, fall' below the rigid standards. . They must pledge to provide soil and(Q._ crop and managementserviceti that will help Super Qfarmers make More profit •:SUER Q. FERTILIZER TOO ONE F/IRMEq, FIYI, BY: FERTILIZERS LIMITED Ri.MINA ani EXL�TER.ONipR.lO: •