HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1981-03-26, Page 19S.T.
Gary Bannon
R.R. 1, Seaforth
5274582
for
Dry wall taping,
papering,
painting
FREE ESTIMATES
'No
r . THE HURON EXPOSITOR, MARCH. 26,
ww
PEN-STREP (100 ml)
LINGOMV-INJECTIBLE
(50- ml)
SHELL HORSE WORMER
• 5
(19.5 g) •
$2.70.
OPINIOTCH
''Seaforth
TOPNOTCH FEEDS LIMITED
527-1910
Oitt4r0 MY144q of A)1011' out• 0910 , lure' and , Fe6d office FOr thOse -1# coil with ' a.
. 1.,'. • . , • ' callers from any, long tbs.-. "
tance ,exehange in . Huron
- county can phone our office
using Zenith 7-3040. Our
local number is still 482-3428
This decision was, eceess-
ary because„ of problems
encountered with several
phone numbers for our office
", Please make this change in
the blue pages of your book.
We sincerely regret the
confusion and inconvenience
new ghetto, tturubors 'for the ttiis will rte the last 4change Ali
We have just beOti 119lIflea. untidier liSfed ft* the atinett
of an important change. Wildlife Management Area
USE
EXPOSITOR
WANT-ADS
Phone 527-0240
ChotOn., ' Lottdoti difiglorY, 'the Phollo'
tast C ' g MX 9 n P this may cause. Hopefully,
efftctive .
Seminar will talk farm insulation
Peaveys and pikepoles were well-known words on the
lips of the-early arrivals to this country and March was the
time of year when lumberjacks.used those took,.
Farmers used to be loggers too
•
under the 0000 ,MiniStry
Natural Resources 1$ the°
' Clinton '05kgrioatnrat Office
number- Thoor,rel't ntlinbet
is 4N.ION We weal& apPre
elate it if you, w9144:1 change
'that as
and haw is insulation Inept; how insulation mail...dills. 14%1%0mo cost is Sit) per
fal!IsOd Canada plan ...should be' ap.e,tied_for...ra,4........1.9-smo itteluding-timele
• SerYree'h14110i-gs, ' mum effealieness2One ses-
Professor Ross irWin, pro-
gram ca-ordinator.
The morning sessions will
examine the purpose- of
insulating farm buildings.
which products are the safest
and most effective for agri-
cultural purposes,"
The afternoon session is
directed toward insulation'
Speakers will address ques- contractors. Speakers. rep-
;-----reserningibe--fai 1,,
what are the best -Materials doo industry. wilt expiate
• •Oneof the highlight sion,iS devOted uO the nartie-
speakets tlie War 4104.lenis br t
osrapils, Cliff $1rirtuffe of concrete, flOOrS•and
t114'14a*Tak'ffeAgatCh."ntitt- • spe4aWed s.. actin
ed."- Said Professor trwip, about fruit and"
11 fovaluate the Vege1010 st.OrakOs will
non materials materials currently pl;e4ented';PY Keith Clarke.
oaobie,. and recommend Ontario Ministrt::
ee 0
cure and Food agricultural
engineer. to end the program
Eseryone is welcome to
attend the seminar at the
Royal Canadian Legion. Col-
onel John.. Met rae Branch.
York Read Guelph.
-SIX> a.m. _moil 4 p.m.
, .
,*.1.1:t fupt gpx:i.o.904,..0, 6p1pot; 0,m4,0 vroo.*
(0,00P): wilt presonter the
lindingsof the seceed phase
or• their s;iudy On Absentee
Land thAnersbip to the
Huron, County 1:•:&det,ation of
Agriculture`.; (hit:FA)
monthly meeting .-April 2. at
.8:30 Ethel Central
School in Grey TOV, 110111p.
This three phase stud) »as
initimed at the request of the
HCFA because of the con-
cern of its 'inenibers* about
the increasing fOreign land
holdings in the co airy.
Ton) Fuller. Director of
the IWOP'. Joints Maage, U.
•
will. present the' results and.
their conclusions of. the Use •
and itthinagement PhaSe con7
ducted last Augtist., to 11114. •
. Shelly - Paulocik and Ted
Gruska interviewed the rent•
ers of absentee .owned land
and their neighbours to
4eterniine how the land was
being managed. The farmers
were also given ample oppor-
tunity to voice their o.pmions
and solutions about the issue.
The third phase of the
study. on .social and tico-
homic impacts of absentee
$4.00 SHELLATGARD (Swine wormer)
(150 g) • $9.85
$4.50 N,E0MIX PAMINE (Scour Bolus)
(25/R4,) 4.55
BANMINTH 11 (Swine wormer),
(20% Prem.ix) (62.5 g . ) $4.15 NFZ , SOLUBLE (454 g) 2.25- -4
• Lofts's-are apaosassea by bob flab's imatitRa Clews Om 14▪ 38 2C1
-
4.
o' it now:
erestopping the
leakwith the
Report on
•
This program stops abuse.
Not everyone who continues to receive
unemployment insurance after,starting a
:new job is cheating. They may Still be enti-
tled tosome benefits. Or sometimes they've
made an honest mistake: Unfortunately, a
great deal of money has been wrongly paid
out in the past to people who don't report
a new job.Now our Report on Hirings
program is putting an effective halt to this,
_thanks-to:employers who particApate-Soon,
people getting UI will know they must tell
us that they've found work and report all
their earnings.
Big- aid-small companies -are
helping us succeed.
Together, the Canada Employment and
Immigration Commission and employers
are detecting potential overpayments. With
' Report on Hirings, employers give 'us the
starting date and Social Insurance Number
for each new employee or send extracts from
computer payroll tapes. We cross-check this
inforrhatiOit with the Social Insurance
Numbers of people getting UI. When the
system detects people-wrongly collecting
...;benefimairtinY0144cal.lcLanalt°r -----
prosecution may follow:13 ut our is
to penalize or prosecute the people. It's to
pay benefits to people who should get
them-no more and no less.
I
. lEnrinZatIonni°iilindsida tigglignitc*an Canada
• Lloyd#Kworthy, Lloyd Amworthy,
Mintstor hiltnIstte
on
It's simply successful.
,'tome owners aren't the
only group of people who are
saving "energy ' costs with
instil tan. Many Ontario
fartneare insulating live-
snack barns, educe
bills.
To present the most up-to-
date information about the
insulation of farm buildings.
the ,University Guelph and
the Ontario Ministry of Agri-
iailture and Food, are spon-
soring a one-• sernin• r •
April 2.
"The seminar is aimed at
contractors and suppliers in-
terested in insulation. and
particularly at hog. poithat),
and dairy producers who
heat livestock tms' "
Back in the days 'when big timberiwas being cut. the
river crews had to wait for the lake ice to clear before the
spring log drive could begin.
My Irish grandfather and his older sons eery rivermen.
They spent the winters in the (rigging camps. A
reconstructed camp in Algonquin Park can only leave a
visitor, shaking his head and 'wondering how a couple of
dozen men could live. and .,work in such dreadful
surroundings for many weeks at a time.
• I'm too young to remember the big logging drives but I
recall , listening to Grampa talk about ii. The drives
usually Owe in ,April or May and* power developed to
'that date could stop those w lid, trips dote n the rivers.
across the lakes. over the falls and through the gorges to
the sawmills.
Not Much of that type of logging is done these .days.
Most of what is harvested goes-for, pulp 'mills and those
little logs wouldn't keep a turtle afloat.
In those days, many. farmer's spent the winters ,in the
logging camps and the rest of the year trying to cultivate
the land. Many would have gone broke as farMerS if they
were not able to go logging in the, winter.
The river crews were kings. during the drives. In the
besh during the winter. the.fellers were the important men
but when.the drive began. 'the river crew took over. They
rode the logs as though they were born on them.
They had the responsibility oflteeping the logs moving.
When those logs jammed. it was' dangerous work. When
the key' log was, found and the jam was loosened, those
huge logs would lY like match sticks. The river crew had to
run for it when the jambrote. They were sure-footed as
mountain goats and had to leap from log to log• until the
jam settleaV
Some died doing the job. If the peaveys and 'and
pikepoles didn't Work. they would use dynamite.
• Gramps talked• about many men standing in freezing
water for hours almost up to their waists yet few 'tif,
ever got a cold. If they did, they Wouldn't admit it anyway.
he said.
He remembered working in a camp' in northern
Haliburton county one year when the foreman pulled a box
from under Grampa's bunk. In it, was the spring supply of
dynamite. •
'• "And I was heavy pipe smoker," he said. "That box of
dynainite was under my bunk all winter!"
The most important man in the camp during the winter
monthS, said Gramps, was the cook. Men were fed tour
times a day and the food had to be good or they simply left
camp. Any lumber baron who stinted on food could nor
muster a crew the .following. winter-. . .
Grampa Lytle was not an articulate man but he must
have had the soul of a poet-. I remember him talking about
the evenings in May when the logs were held by huge
sag-booms in the quiet lake waters. When the breeze"
dropped just at sunset. he said. "You could smell the
sweet stink of scar-red pine and Spruce that came strong
across the water."
That was back in the days before chain saws, too, and a
man with an axe who could use that tool properly was'
valuable in the camps, 1 don't remember my granddad
when he could handle an axe that well but my father told
me he could fella tree within inches of where it was meant
to fall. He used to keevhis axes. in a_ special_place and
nehodY else could use them. •
I guess they were-forgotten when he died. My father
prowled: the oW homestead up near Buckhorn and found
them stashed-high up in the rafters of the woodshed behind
the hoc e. By. that time,' they had rusted badly but my
father kept them for years.
I wonder where they are today? And how many people
would know how to use them if they were found?
Sheep ritembers wantid
Boys. and girls to be
enthUsiastic members of the
Huron County 4-H Sheep.
Club. Applicants must be
fun-loving and eageeto learn.
Good opportunities for ad-
vancement and no exper-
71ga
national Meeting •Ol" ,,the
WHOA County
(.l41,-Vit Me bold on • rdaii•°
April 4th, 198l, 10:00 a.m.
in the Beard Room of the
Agricultural Office in Clinton
This club is open to boys and
girls between the ages of 11
and 19 years as of January•
1st. 1981 As a project. the club
titember wilt— be ke ping
remrds two to Bic OM*
and thef,r4a .r
swi4ko$ iiieckgtipo and
management practices relat-
ed to the sheep indnsirY,
If yen are interested in
joining this club, please plan
to attend, the meeting. Fur-
ther details on the club may
be obtainedly contacting the
u Oral Cclititon-
I •
A" A • A
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•
e Ft of • • " e- • "A • •
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of 'OnelPh, Joint" 'F#z• owlicd.land'hy.OPrint 44ta.,444i.*4 • Ini-I•rggA0 • • ;-.--
u4sni:18:61.11M,'W144; p.tthu,t4iii":cotloP4o... 411PIF'PtiAtgft9tt;ilte.i'det4h"1:coltn'attgI.', •
It's a fact. The best way to
consistently 'control corn root-
worms is to alternate carbamate
and organoPhOsphate iris ecticides
each year. And FURADAN in-
secticide from Chemagro is the
carbamate to switch to.
The outstanding contact activity
of FURADAN stops early root-
worms cold, before they can
damage delicate feeder roots. And,
FURADAN protects brace roots
from later rootworm attack , Helps
stalks remain upright for easier
harvesting and better yields. ,
Apply FURADAN as you plant. $'
Hard, purple granules won't bridge
or clog applicator boxes.
This year, don't take chances
'With your corn yields, switch to
FUllADAN is a leg TM of FM0 Corp .1 •
FURADAN. Your best defense
• against corn rootworrns.
"Order FURADAN now from:
Ontario Bean Grower* -6).0,
R.R. #4, Seaforth 81302CA-48