HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1962-04-26, Page 9Thurs,, April ;0, 1902,,Ciinion NewE-Record-4090 9
HARRY WILLIAMS
11112-6633 RN CLINTON
EATING OILS-'GASOLINE
GREMES-MOTOR:0101-,
WHITE ROSE
In • 'the first inforrnatien • let-
ter from, Carbert, the new
information. officer for the
OFA we are -told that the fed-
eral 'government 'h'as author*,
- ed a temporary subsidy of $5
per ton freight 'assistartee ship-
ped to the .Atlantic proVinces
by rail or boat,
This-, is something that On-
tario corn grew' have want-
ed tor long time. American
corn, due to certain subsidies
paid to American farmers and
due to very .favourable shipping
rates, can be delivered in King.
Stun or points east cheaper
than corn from south western
Ontario. . .
This left two choices' •tq gov-
ernment: Eithei they 'could
give freight.- assistance to On,
tario groweri or they could
have placed an import quOta
fee . on the U.S. corn to the
equivalent of the American
subisidy to the farmer.
,This, then, • bebomes a clues-
ti.on of whether, • the powers
that be think it advisable to
keep the price of corn low to
the buyer or to let it find a
'true market level. By intro-
ducing th-e freight .assistance
it is apparently in the eyes of
gOvereiment • expedient to keep
the sale price as low as pos-
sible.
In the same letter' we are
told that due to, an urgent re-
quest from fluid milk producers
the government will. pay the
12 cent subsidy on birtter 'man-
ufactured from surplus fluid
milk for the next year. This
is to give producers and pro-
ceSsces time to readjust their
production and quotas' to a
more realistic level.
I have-also received copy
of a few sections relating to
the Game and Fisheries Act
that are of interest to farmers,
"Lend May be acquired ureliee
the '1:tublic Werke:. Act' for pur-
pose of management, perpetua-
tion and rehabilitation of Wild-
life Resources in Ontario." In
other words farm land can be
expropriated for the above
PtialPoba',
"No person shall; without
atithority, post.. 'No Trespass-
ing' signsrelating to ihileiting
miewmassavemosasiesversoiserm
W/SE
MKS
SURE
NOW
Tel MeE
Xot TOGO:
At Tool PM ruaz EetheAt &wee
tiltn\\11
,V,yeaR, forkload: EzEarRie*
1111.2-3807
TOM DARLING
AR, • I TO
ELECTRICA R CTING
EAST ST. CLINTON
•
tie
Oland Authority Urged- To Work
eriously .for Conservation •
Wedding Vows Exchanged
Miss Sandra Gladys Doig and Albert Alexander
Pepper were married April 7 in Winthrop United
Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert J. Doig, RR `1, Dublin, and the groom's par-
ents are Mr, and Mrs, William R. Pepper, RR 3,
Seaforth. Rev. J, C. Britton officiated at the cere-
mony. Following a wedding trip to Ottawa and the
United States, Mr. and Mrs. Pepper are living at
RR 3, Seaforth. (Photo by Frank
or fishing.""
This is' interpreted to mean,
that the farmer must first ob-
tain: permission from the
itster :or his officials before he,
Shall '',.undertake to post his.
land. •
It would seem that the
clause is giving 'a great deal
of freedom -to htmterS and fish-
ermen.
While I have had little dif-
ficulty in this matter . there
have been -cases. quoted at
OFA - meetings where farmers
have suffered definite serious
leases dile to irrespensible bun-
tees and 'the changes in the
act seem to be to the disaclivare-
tage of the land owner.
With the. announcement of
the vote on the milk marketing
plan on May' 31 this office is
endeavouring to .obtain' a copy
of the plan and we will endeav-
our to' give you all: information
as quickly as possible.
•
Classified Ads
Bring Quid(
Results
"If you Are net ele'dipaled fo
conServatien And nealige It$
11PO4," said Andrew Dixon
W4igh4rn on April 12, -4 you.
would be better to resign and
go. home. Otherwise you .are
.only headache the ,414h-
o4ty and .a, detriment 'to your
compitudtee".
Mr, Dixon -(who is .a retired
high. .sphool 'teacher Ana .for,
liver leader in the Aneable.,
er Authority? wa's speaking to
representatkves. of the Mainland.
Valley Conservation Authority,
Clinton, and the Townships
it TWft(tt Land Goderich. were
made members of the Maitland
Authority :early this year,
Mr, Dixon 'said' that .conscr.,
\ration one. of the most im-
portant programe facing Can,
atlas' "Every little job you do
in 'conservation work," ha told
his audience, "stands as
monument to the fact that you
have lived," ,
Mr. Dixon said the short
Water stienly faced by maw
municipalities is a witnees to
the need 'foe conservation meals-
tree.. Despite 250 fresh water
lakes in Ontario, he said, there
is an .obvious shortage of wat.
er, He .attributed th.e
'lug supply to the ever-increas-
ing. surface drainage. system and
a Steady growth population.
The 'speaker said farm pond~
are a great help in providing a
source of water in rural areas,
and advocated damming 'streams
to oreai€e reservoirs; He said
such reservoirs offer a Vpe of
flood control and the water elso
can he used 'to flush etreame
during dry summer months.
IVtr, Dixon urged' the author-
ity to 'acquire swampy land in
an effort to offset the run-off
caused by extensive drainage
Canada's foreign aid program
in the coming fiscal year will
cost $64,246,100.
WOOL
JACKSON
ALUMINUM LTD.
SEAFORTH
is.collecting wool for grading
and sale on the co-operative
plan. Shippers m a y obtain
sacks and twine free of charge
from the above or their
Licensed Operators
Any Government Deficiency
Payment will apply only on
Properly Graded Wools
Secure the Utmost by Patron-
izing The Organization that
made this possible
Canadian Co-operative
Wool Growers Limited
40 St. Clair Avenue E.,
Toronto 7, Ontario
16-7b
in 44.PMe. areas, He glso said n
PlIOPP01., ehenild: be launched to'
eckleate .farMere. ,t;rom clearing
off woodlands, vA lnAh. ehglll34
be harvested like any eithair'
crop. Rough t*.e4 he
moved .1.4/t„ alegardlies .of wheat
it ea are out, they ..t4o1.314:
vosPlAced"
434;70p4 Open .Pitphes
According to him, authorities
shoglid oppose openditche's
P-44sa 'they carry away top, soil .
and, ultimately Kove a hill of
expense through the necessity
of .dleaning.' HO said ditches
should be tiled,
Mr; Dixon was uncertain bow
tar art aQt110,11.W .$1101,114 go With.
parks and recreation programs,
"I am not sure of the, benefit
they bring in coriservarto.ont,
Snell projects should be left to
parks boards and not entered.
Into by conservation .autheri.
ties."
He also said there is reason
to question wildlife preeerva-
ton as 'authority sch'eneee, He
said wildlife can cause as much
damage to crops as the benefits'
it brings to areas, "An animal
that is -one man's friend. 'can`-
be wither intaril.S enemy,"
Explaining, he said foxes
could be a benefit to the orcb-
'mid farmer because they reduce
rodent population, Conversely,
they are the enemy of poultry
farmers. •
0 . •
In tbd, coming fiscal year
Ottawa's share of the cost of
the federal-provincial hospital
insurance program will inerease
by $55 million to a total of
$325 million:
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BY YC:pURS TRULY
NOP 41/1YelArd
AND FIS COULD SEE AT A
GLANCE THAT WE WERE EXPERTS AT
SATISFYING cusromerie.
FARMERS
We are shipping cattle every Monday for United
Co-operative of Ontario and solicit your patronage. We
will pick them up at your farm.
Please PHONE COLLECT not later that Saturday
nights.
SeafOrth Farthers Co-operative
H. S. Hunt, Shipper
Phone 669 W 1
By DE:134W?
Son, Bruce:Field
24211.
ee, `...X.,..1:ss>.:6?;,:a:N$:•»ix,,,,,,••• • •- •
hit
TIt
Car Rally
You'll save both time and money when yott buy fertilizer
in polythene bags. }ere's why:
Polythene bags are waterproof—you can truck fertilizer in
any weather without tarpaulins. You tan store fertilizer outdoorsi in fields where yott'll use it.
Polythene bags are tough—they don't absorb Moisture and
*oaken. They are easy to handle and stack:
Polythene hags are closed with a heat-seal—there's no lint
bt• atririg to plug your drill,
Polythene bags are tranSparent—you tan at* the fertilizer you are buying without opening the hag.
Save
Bu
tale .,,Save money
your feetill* in- :Polythene as fra s'
store it ..outside I tiles where you'll ere it-
biviSito4
tAgAniAit WOO
FILehd! 44.14 IT
IVIASTEX
A Studebaker Lark driven
by, John Jones and LOU
, Lalonde, of Toronto came
FIRST over all cars in• the
gruelling 4,126 mile Shell
Car Rally. Only LARK has
Won this vicious test of
endurance two years in a
Competing, against ears
representing every major'
manufacturer in the world,
the,handsome Lark once
, again. proved its reliability.
Other cars faltered and
broke up en rough, rutted
If Too fragile suspen-
MOn systems gave tiptOO
little road clearance created
havoc; too tiny engines
balked and died. The '62
Lark Carried on, eagerly
grappling with actverse road
conditions and terrible
weather. The Lark swept
across the prairies, soared
over mountain ranged,
mastered speed trials with
ease and matched the
driver's cominandS with
race car handling. For• the
second year ii1 a,row the '62
Lark has won, beating all
comers in 'the world's
longest, most gruelling
rally.
JOHNNY JONES LOU LALONDE
Nevtgettir briver
Confident and
comfortable all
the way
"The Lark really handles," says
Lou Lalonde, winning' driver. "I
have never been on wereereada—
o thee cars were bogged 'right
down to , their doeta, in Mild yet
the Lark, with its fantastic
manoeuvrability, powered
through the muck and around the
Stalled data like a broken-field
runner with the goal in sight.".
JOhlinY Itines, the Man with the
snaps and .eoinputete Said, "The
Lark' is really a comfortable par'.".
"Other navigators belted like
Mexican Attaining Beans on
those rough roads-didn't
bothet MO at eV "Thie coinfOtt
fatter means a hot when you're in
a cat for as long as 18 hours
helped us stay fresh and atOt,"
What LARK'S
Victory Means
to YOU
It means you can be, sure, the
Lark is everything it is claimed
to be . . fast, dependable, eco-
nomical, comfortable, sure.
footed. Other manufacturers
make these claims. Lark proves
them!
The features that have proVed
Lark the unbeatable, long dis-
tance Rally champion are the
very features you want in your
personal ear. A rugged, powerful
engine, superb handling, sensible
road clearance, positive braking,
amazing eConorny and more late.
riot room and comfort than any
other domestic, family car.
Go to your Studebaker beater
IOW, Drive the cat that hoop
decisively beaten ell other makes
and models. Buy a Lark and be
assured your car will be the same
as the one that won the Folly
won the "Car of the Year"
Award, and is winning thont4andi
of hew e friends and admirers
across Canada.
'Why not test drive, the '62
Lark and form your own opinion?
Tonight!
(subieetteoinde1C000rmatiou)
an
STUDEBAKER'OP CANADA, HAMILTON, ONT.
• Test drive the Lark at this dependable Studebaker dealer:
WI H. 'DALRYMPLE Sc SON -Brucefieldo Ontario