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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1957-04-18, Page 8FUEL OIL 41.,) GASOLINE'S OIL, it;:it-4, LUBRICANTS 1950 PLYMOUTH CLUB SEDAN Radio. Real Sharp! $ 635 ONLY urp y Bros. Chrysler - .Plymouth - Fargo Sales and Service Huron St., Clinton Clover and Grasses W. G. THOMPSON • HENSALL and Sons Limited • Phone 32 it Pays to START Them Right Then RAISE Them Right The calf-starting plan outlined here really GROWS calves. It •HELPS SAVE calves, too. In the big Purina Re- search Farm herd every heifer calf dropped iu'ever two years has been successfully raised. Disinfecting calving stallS, disht- fecting the darn!s udder and flanks, disinfecting utensils, hold- ing ,down flies, all helped too. After a good start it pays to keep them coming! If you follow a feeding plan which grows them last yet keeps them clean-cut and Idairylike you can breed them earlier, get them producing earlier, and get more milk in their first Meta- tions. And It costs no more, for you save several months of unproductive feeding. In one years, recently, 14 grade ,Hol- stein heifers came Into production in the Purina herd." • They calved at an average of 24 months, but they were fully develop- ed and weighed an average of 1,244 lbs. So they gave around 3,000 lbs. of milk before most heifers have even. ,started, and in 19 months averaged 10,691 lbs. milk, 404.5 fat. Heifers like that are worth more, whether you keep or sell them. • Clinton Farm Supply and Machine Shop Charles Nelson - Jack Nediger NEW TRUCK? le.:1"e4the e • • • tkemaidz le, V BAK 41ill'elikoskeveietessaie• , • 10 d s a s a,-•nsita 11' A 41 S ,A "5 5 4 • io • $11•431, lb FIL - the fixer ... his full name, is farm Improve. ment Loan. Give him a chance to help fix up your farm . he's eco- nomical, conven- ient, versatile; He can do almost anything in mak. lug your farm better farm. BANK- OF 'MONTREAL eaffea,4 e/t4e Vek,i A necessity on almost any farm, a good sturdy truck saves you time, work ,and money in a hundred ways. If you're short of ready cash for such a profit-building purchase, FIL may be your ,answer. A B of ME Farm Improvement Loait Can put a new or used truck to work for you on your farm very quickly. Why not talk it over with the manager of your nearest B of M branch this week? If your proposition is sound, you 'can get a B of M Farm Improvement Loan :fee any type of equipment ly HAN Ho you need on your farm. 70? X!lIIOM MOM ,PAGE :MGM. .0.141TrO EWS-RECORP TX-MRSIM-Y) APT= 1:957 Myth Lopop Has - 100 Visitors To Open House • (BY:0er Windt%WAY) About 1.00 people atteaded open house at the Blyth Co-operative cheese and butter factory last. VednestleYt This co-operative has :250' members, which must view their enterprise with a good deal tof pride. After serious fire losses a few years ago, the factory has. Wit LIP again, and is making- cheese sold all over the continent,' It must have taken considerable effort to build this business' Op' to the place where they now mann- facture • up to 3,000 pnonde of cheeee a day. (The cheese they ser-• yea as a snack during "open house" was of excellent quality„ which is probably the key • to the success of the venture..) Along with the cheese they pro- duce a quantity of creamery but- ter. as well as whey butter which is a by-product of the cheese ine diestey. This fine example of Co-opera= 1194, given by the farmer members. is a lesson to the rest of us. Al t .Balton Tops. Henson Kin Of 4,14 Bean Club Art Bolton, Seaforth, assistant agricultural. representative' for HAM, Was. the Vest speaker at the dinner .zneeting of Hepeall Kinsmen. ,Club, held at The Kosy Korner restaurant, Thursday even,. ing. Mr. Holton presented infor- mative highlights dealing with the work of the 441 Bean Club, Lloyd Ford, president of Exeter Kinsmen Club; Les parker, who Is Theme the Deputy Governor for Zone E and several members of the dab were guests, L. Tibbrio, president of Hensall Kira Jack Drysdale, Conrad Me- Roberts, George, Sawyer, Harold Honthron and Harold Knight, 'at- tended the .Zone Conference held in Simcoe Sunday. Jack Fiddler, St. Marys,won. five pounds of cheese, as the door prize. In a contest to guess the number of pounds of milk deliver- ed to the factory from March 15 to March 31, of this year, was won by Mrs. David Anderson, Londes- bar° and Mervin Lobb, Clinton. A similar cream contest was won by Jack Fairservice, Blyth, Mrs., J. Gingrie ,h (By 04r-' Parfield correspondent) Following an illness of eight days, Mrs. Joseph Gingrich, passed away in Bad Axe General. Hospi- tal, Bad Axe, Mich., on Thursday eveningi April 4, 1957, in .her 70th year, The remains rested at the Mac- A,lpbne Funeral Home, Bad Axe, until the funeral service in the First Methodist Church at twp o'clock on Monday afternoop, The Reverend R. E. MacLean offielated and hur Bad lai took4,?e,laee in Colfax Cemetery, The deeeated woman, fcirmerly Editt 'Jean Cleave, was born at Drysdale, October 2, 1587, being the oily daughter of the late Mar- garet Logan and Samuel CleaVe. Later the family moved to the farm on the Blue Water High- way, Stanley Township, now own- ed by a nephew, James Cleave. Prior to her marriage she was a nurse, having graduated froth. Newberry Hespital. In a cere- mony perfoimed at Bayfield on December 25, 1914, by the Rev. C. Searle, she became the bride of Joseph Gingrich and 'went to make her home in Bad Axe, Mich, She was a member of the First Methodist Church, Bad Axe, and Past Noble Grand' of the Rebecca Lodge. She leaves to mourn her less, her husband and two sons, Cleave of East Lansing and Harvey, De- troit, also two grandchildren; surviving also are two brothers, Charles, Kaslo, B.C., and Paul Cleave, Bayfield. Mr, and Mrs. Paul Cleave, Mr. and Mrs. Logan Cleave and James Cleave attended funeral rites for Mrs. Joseph Gingrich in Bad Axe, Mich., on Monday. 0 F. of A. Directors April Meeting (By Carl Hemingway) Huron County Federation of Ag- riculture monthly directors meet- log last Thursday in Clinton, had a very good attendance from town- ship. and affiliated organizations. The secretary-fieldman reported on the annual metings of the Wheat and Poultry Producers organiza- tions held in Toronto, The meeting, instructed the sec- retary to extend an invitation to the Ontario Directoe of Field Ser- vices to attend County Director meetings. It was also decided .-to make the County Fieldinan avail- able to township meetings when- ever possible. ' After discussion it was agreed that the Federation hold a County field-day and picnic sometime in June, The executive was to decide place and date, also to obtain a suitable speaker. The secretary was also instruc- ted, in view of the serious losses being suffered by farmers in the Clinton and Chatham areas due to grain dealers going bankrupt, to draft a resolution, to be forwarded to the Ontario Federation, to the effect that grain dealer"s be requite ed to establish some sort of finan- cial responsibility for grain held by them for storage or for sale. Mrs. Gordon Greig, vice-chair- Man of Ontario Farm Forurn, re- ported" on the annual meeting in Toronto. In this she urged stron- ger support 'to the Farm Forum organization... She also advised farmers to visit the United Co-op- eratives new plant in Toronto. The directors would like to con- gratulate Mrs. Greig on being chosen as delegate to the Domin- ion Farm Forum meeting in the Maritimes. Swift's Mrs. Frank Gorrell *Ord was received bore recently of the deatl-Lof Mary Alma Jon- i.cin WidOW of the late Frank Gorrell, at .Oxbow, Manitoba. She was in her 96th year. The funer- al was from ' St, Paul's United Church, at Cdipw,, • Born at Hoirnesville in 1861., Mary Jenkins married Frank Gore roll, in Clinton, on March 14, 1854, and went to Manitoba', to live. Mr. and Mrs, Correll livecle at Ox- bow O'er since 1914,/' Mr. Gorrell died on. November 4, 1949, Surviving are two sons, 'Frank, at Prince George, RIC, and Will- iam, at Oxbow, Mrs. F. C. Gemeinhardt (By our Bayfield correspondent) The death occurred in North Western General Hospital, Toron- to, on Saturday morning, April 6, 1957, of a life-long resident, of Hayfield, in the person of Mrs. F. C. Gemeinhardt,. Born November 1, 1880, at "Woods Ville (the farm of Dr. Ninian Woods, the pioneer, ad)ac- ent to the village, new "Mars- vine") she was formerly Mary Frances Olivia Dupee, daughter of the late Annabelle Stalker and. Michael Dupee. She received her, education a t Bayfield Public School. 04 October 29, 1902, she was married to Frederick Christian Gemeinhardt and took up residen- ce in the house on Louisa Street which has been her borne ever since. Although her illness was pro- longed, "Mrs. Gemeinhardt was on- ly confined to hospital for , three weeks. After having been with her son Keith and family for sev- eral weeks, she went to Toronto to stay with her elder daughter, Mrs. Gilbert Knight, the end of October, The deceased woman was pos- sessed of a cheerful, happy dis- position, which she maintained despite some, years of ill-health. She was a member of Trinity (Anglicen) Church. Her husband predeceased' her in October 1937, a daughter, Doris, in August 1939, and a son Charles in November 1949, Surviving are three sons, Or- ville, Saginaw, Mich., Douglas and Keith, Hayfield, and two daugh- ters, Ethel (Mrs. Gilbert Knight) Toronto, and Evelyn (Mrs, J. Sturgeon, Jr,) Bayfield, 14 grand- children and four great grandchild- ren; also a brother and sister, Dan- iel Dupee, Paris, and Miss Eliza- beth Dupee, Toronto, The •funeral was held from Trin- ity Church, Bayfield, on Monday afternoon, April 8. The service, which was largely attended, was conducted by the Reverend C. S. Inder, St. Paul's Church, Clinton. Interment was in Bayfield Ceme: tery. Pallbearers were: H. Stinson, G. Little, J. Parker, W. Westlake, R. Larson and R. Blair. Flower bearers: R. Turner, A. Makin, S. Ervine, J. Lindsay, William Par- ker and G. Turner, Relatives from a distance who were present for the funeral in- cluded: Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Knight, Mr. and Mrs. Art Latimer; Ronald Knight, Toronto; Daniel Dupee, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Dup- ee, Paris; Mr. and Mrs. Orville Gemeinhardt, Carl and Lois, Mr. and Mrs, Harold Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Weihner, Saginaw, Mich, 0 Careless use of electricity causes more than 125 fires" a week in Can- ada eceorcling to official insurance figures. Annual cost of such fires is figured at $8,000,000, 11Q‘wnSbil). He was the son of the late William and Alice .Howson wbitley, and was ,born at Lontles-- survives, along with one brother, Percy, Toronto; three sisters, Mrs. Hope Chapel Cemetery, Hullett boro 79 years ago, lett, He had resided in Qorrie for ried 'Mildred Moss, Burlington, who 0, Riley, Toronto. Saturday for Er.. Leonard Whit- over. 54 years, In 1915 he mar- Robert Carter, Sask.; Mrs. Will 1014 Ferguson, Alberta, and Mrs. ley, Ciorrie, who was, buried in eral were Mr, and Mrs. Willows Dr, Whitley attended SS .8, Funeral service was' .herd on Among those attending the fun- Dr. L. 'Whitley - Mountain', Mr, and Mrs. Elgin Josling, Londesboro; Mr.. and Mrs, R. J, Phillips, Auburn; Mr. and Mrs. William Wells, Clinton, and Mrs, Robert Yungblut, 1-1ullett Township. • 0 • Rovers Meeting In Palmerston -.7-i • Invites Visitors The Palmerston Rover Crew will be hosts to the Rover Scouts and Rover Leaders in the Blue Water Region, on Sunday, April 21, 1957. Originally planned as a St. Geor- ge's day get4ogether, the meeting was deferred one week in view of Easter Sunday. A cordial invitation to attend is extended to anyone interested un the Rover program. Any who can- not make the 10 a.m. opening, can come to the Palmerston Scout Hall later in the day. The day's pro- gram will conclude with a Scout's Own service, at 3.00 p.m. The speaker will be Rev. L. Fowler, Harriston. Mr. Fowler is chair- man of the Maitland Scout Dis- trict. Those attending will be on their way home in time to attend their own church in the evening. Persons attending from the Clin- ton area are requested to contact Troop Leader Ron Magee of the 1st Clinton Troop, at HUnter 2- 9217 before April 20, to arrange for transportation and so the hosts will 'know how many to expect for luncheop. 0 LIVESTOCK MARKET REPORT' Hensel' Community Sale, April 11. Weanling 'pigs, $13 to $15.35; chunks, $19 to $22.75; feeders $24 to $28.10; sows', $68 to $91; Hol- stein cows, $140 to $165; Durham cows, $150 to $175; Holstein cal- ves $12 to $16.50; Durham calves, $13.50 to $28. 'Fat cows sold up to $13.80 a cwt. 300 pigs and 150 head of cat- tle and calves were sold, IIIINEMIEREMMEMEETIMEI 11111111 III 11 HARRY WILLIAMS' 9trizeWides-, WE. HOPE lit SUNNY, EASTER. DAY - BUT HAVE OUR OIL I ANYWAY/ aged 2559 ,o!r 5.7 percent above (114014 production in 1955 aver- Canada's composite. index of in,- Canadian Cancer. Society has ;Vent more than $5,500,000 on cancer Since its beginning $11, 19(35. the research. Be Prepared! A FEW SPECIALS: 1956 PLYMOUTH $2,295 1955 DODGE 1695 DiNiauxE SEDAN ...... • 9 SEED OATS and SEED BARLEY WE HAVE AMPLE STOCKS ON HAND FERTILIZER ALL ANALYSIS AVAILABLE CEMENT BAG OR TRUCKLOAD DISCOUNTS ON QUANTITY ORDERS We Are Still Contracting SEED OATS & MALTING BARLEY SEED SUPPLIED SEED CLEANING & TREATING SERVICE FEED OATS RECLEANED ONTARIO FEED OATS $45.00 Ton W. G. THOMPSON and Sons Limited PHONE 32 HENSALL For a better way to protect your estate Even an estate of modest size can be exposed to many hazards in the hands of an inexperienced person. At Sterling Trusts We have exper- ienced t state Officers who will advise and assist you in the safeguarding of your estate. Write for our free booklet "Blueprint For Your Family". 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