Clinton News-Record, 1965-02-25, Page 81090 .News-Record,Thurs„, rgb.•25, 190$
$
Major,
sere training came .t ceinp ergeant -
tie*Rank
• For Ontario Police
Ontario
a#Srentg,q4 tg‘Y 00140P' Pr.M.1
vige,ier :Pei* Maier*
• Algclidliatect fp*. 'the Provost
&s4.0hool at Canip PordeP
Faicial,..klehrgarY
One $ergeent Maier, Wiil te
eaelgited to eachVW 17 Dis.-
lwict
Tielatitluar.teris 'b....14'0110PM
the Prole*Ptee and Will he resPen-
fOL' fliecliPlOW4114fOree
op-
iations thretigheut their res-
isective diStricts tinder the corn -
of the distriet"s superie,
. lekteleM,
tvvo weeks inten,
Perfiehl the $ePgeant MajOrs.
IVOivfx3, instrue*M grekTTI both
POP, Vin441 P0409 44E1 CLaxPos iristrgetet1
ie. soch ,sebjeets.,es drill, crPwd
omtroli sl4Pleets
istraltion, inetheds of lestruc,,
tION tear ges eq:4p411elAt, wea
•PPM and SUpeeMtell teellniclue.
The Sergeant Mapers W.
Wear WM' t.y1: insiia, on
P1194'404: toreklIo• A neW un-
�iin bee also heen „mede for
the new rank of pOlicemen.
„ .
Ne4r.); '104 housewives
business Women in 23 oommon,
131es across Canada voluntarily
give ahent 87,000 teems of 'their
lento anouelly by serVieg. M the
Canadian Red Cross ,cOrp.s.
Clinton Meraona Shop
T. PRYDE ancl SON
_
. CLINTON — EXETER --- SEAFORTIf
Open Every Afternoon
PHONE HU -,2-7712
• ,At other tinsels contact .
Localfi Representative—A. Steep -482-6042
NOTICE OF
r11110 I Meetl.rigr
NOTICE is hereby given that the 90th
Annual Meeting of the.
HAY 'TOWNSHIP FARMERS
MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE
"COMPANY,.
Will be held in the Community Centre
"'ZURICH, ;ONTARIO '
-, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 26th, 1965-:
at. 2:00 o'clock p.iri.
• To reCeive-the .annual report, to elect ;three directors,
• tO 'transact• all. business as may be done at a 'general
• meeting of the policy holders. • •
• The retiring directors are: Jack Scotcluner, 13ayfield;
Harvey Taylor, Varna, and Otto Willert, Daahwood, all
of whom are eligible for re-election.
•I
'HAY TOWNSHIP FARMERS MUTUAL
• FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY
• EDMOND 1-CENI3R1 CK, residet
• JOHN. R. CONSITT, Secretary -Treasurer
7-8b
. •,
• , .
EastWi Makes,DOnations
Hers Taik On Pubhc Relations
The replar meetlogt fig the
KipPen at WI' Wit0e1d at the
home of MrS.2.3.-41Pea
Qfl 1171.419444Yr FebrPari '47
With Mys. Nen Melta,y '4&,' PP-
hPete4a,'
'rtifi'Preside4t. MrVern
eice haired the .meelibig. Thc
opeOihig Ode .$*
.weot CPIleeteR*ed: tkite.-;
P@Milg• eNereis.ea.LjJ,*II lele4s
answered by 0.Xeer914, PPM. the
'11.411.4 boo, The Seeretew,
W1111* XO'le read ,t,he miktotes,
Mot104 .to ,opotriiPate to tjhP"
Ilureo County BurserY,t� eel*
p.
delegate. to Officera Con, _few,
ence, 444 to give a 4414** to
the liM.4a11 Legion for t..e'NI",
theratite of their wore were.
0,
SaKIPS'ed,
Reperts Were. given' Vie'
tVe4SUrer,Vs Robert et1. 4114
hv the .8..wrshhle o0hveheri Mes.
SeWing for the Stelt
.Q1..),114.reh's
1P tai 'was.
Mrs, Harri. P4lichvelt P1411*
reAtions offiPer, lotropK the
Weal ,a1)Pelf.P •Pn „POW, Rteletr.
Hereici Currie of
This difflogit sl,t14eclt
ef ITtay feeete 41)1y
this egoelteOt.SPealCer,
NillOs Mettle 1341,5 of..1-tenSoill
eonoehted on thpIto,
xuotttut s. like a ship, everyOne
shotild take turn, at the,
Wheel". Afias Pais' 40preach
rb1,1 mow wo..q 4eW, .ver.
,ouight-Oovoldlig.
Inquest Into Triple Clinton Fatality
Advises Stiffer Drinking Penalties
GODERICH—Three •Clhiton
Yopng nien met death January
10 -de a:pprexintately one second,
a Coroner's jury learned in en•-•
qinring lett') a crash en High -
Way 8i three Miles east of God -
rich. The inquest, befere cor-
oner N. C. Jackson, in Goderich
last week, . waswe', eificallY into
the death of Thomas Alvin
811"P, .21/ a lbaker at Bartliffs
Bakery–Limited, Clinton, who
was •found •dead behind: the
wheel of his car about 1:45 a.m.
killed also were James MurraY
Rymer.% 23, and Rebert Richard
Thompson, ' 20,
The jury, headed by Clayton
Laithwaite, 'Goderich Township,
brought in the following yerdiet:
"We say that Thomas Alvin
Sharp came to his death at 1:45
in the forenoon of January ten-
th, three miles east of Goderich
&AirNo. 8 Highway; and the de-
• ceased's death was caused by
multiple injimies, inclading aev-
Vance of the •esophagus and
carotid artery, caused.
by impact of the car with a
tree,: due ,te ov,ei-fireclne,ss and
frotnakoholic impairment.
"We reopmmend that the pen
afties for impaired and drunken
driving be Increased." •
•-,Evidence brought out by
Crown Attorney W. G. coob-
rane in examination of six .wit-
riesses vise to the effect that
the road at the accident scene
as straight and dry, traffic
light and there is no steep ditch.
. Provincial• Ccestable
of the car probably was not ex-
eeeseve; that it veered 'from the
pavement at an angle of 30 to
40 degrees, and that tire maths
showed no attempt to apply
brakes or change course. The
carr "just left the highway and
went straight into a tree, 90
feet from edge of the road."
The 'constable found in •tbe
car four bear bottles that had.
been opened and eight emaehed.
but with taps on. At Goderich
hospital, where Thompson and
Hyiners were pronounced dead
on arrival, a Whiskey bottle
Was found in 'Ilhomixsonts coat,
vvilth about an inch and a half
of liquor left in it.
Witnesses other than the con -
Stable were Gordon' Bannister,
Goderich,' garagernan; Mrs. pby-
Ms Lee, RR 2 Clinton, mother-.
in -1W of Sharp, and three
menibers 'of •a highway patrol
Who came upon the crashed. car;
Miner McClinchey, RR 2 Clin-
ton; Gerald Brown, 145 Victoria
Street, 'Clinton, and Fred And-
erson, RR 5 Clinton.
Mr. 1VIcClinchey said that he
had turned a flashlight on the
interior of tbi car anethOught
Thompson, Sitting on the floor
in the ba.ok, had a "coke" lxit-
tle in his hand, Which' dropped
into his lari. Dr. Jackson com-
mented that all three had re-
ceived injuries which must have
ad iy
beenviimmediately fatal; the bot-
• tie hPeobabfallen from
ea"Sharp," the coroner said,
"had a fracture dislocation of
the neck, with complete sever-
ance of the kiwer part of his
brain. He had severe lacerat-
ions of the neck, and the esoph-
a:gus was cut • across; he died
before he could bleed to death.
There were 'multiple fractures of
•the elarvicle, right ribs and left
ryshyn testified that the speed forearm. He died almost instant-
„ • A renoratiedfarm editor reports on a newiertiliger, with
anew twist—onYane farmer infive can big
• Read how these top growers are boosting profit 6y25% ,
• /
•
'”" is7golgeeAt. ,
The big \breakthrough in fertilizer
• BY !JOHN STROHM
•
I'd like to tell you of the most exciting fertilizer idea
• I've run stress in 30 years of farm repprting.
•6It's a.tt idea that's helping top farmers break_
\ through 'their personal yield barriers to, such yield
• as 130 -bushel corn ... 5 -ton hay . 45 -bushel soy-
• beans .. . 3000 -lb. tobacco.
• The idea is Super Q®, a fertilizer so exclusive
you can't even buy it . . . •
But I'm getting ahead of my stoke • ,
, Two years ago a select group of local manufac-
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-
lems •
So, these hometown nianuTacturers pooled their
strength in &giant CooperatiVe effort. They called
• id the best scientific brains, and handed, them this
"impossible" assignment!'"
1. Develop the best fertilizer it iehttniarily possible
to make.
• 2. Forget about price -per -ton. But be deadsure this
fertilizer will return the farmer mere net profit than
any 'paler product on the market. We want to
guarantee it will, not just talk about it.
3. Formulate it for the top farmers in each cow-
•raunityAre'll refuse to sell it to anyone but the' top !
4. Rifle it to fit a specific area yele even a specific
Moisture level. ••
S. Make a different fertilizer for corn, for barley,
tobaaee,,wheat, soybeans.
•6. Use the best forni of nutriehtsfor the er�—not
the cheapest or easiest for the Mantifacturer. ,
• Wow! Some of these who Were culled in declared:
"You jest can't get all these teens up one tree!"
But other scientists rose to the thallenge. They
tested soil and moisture on top farms in each com-
munity. . . pored over the latest research ... an,
alyzed new manufacturing 'techniques, new. mate-
rials. They picked the brains pf ag college special-
lists, interviewed top farmers on their personal goals.
And then they created Super Q.
The Super Qprogram is a national effort. It has
all the efficiency and breadth of bigness . . . but
with the pinpoint ideal' accuracy to give the individ-
ual grower higher yields and profits, In ,side-by-
side tests on hundreds of farms with six different
crops, Super Q outyieldecl the best commercial
fertilizers by as much as 25%.
,Succetsful as they have been with Super Q, the
scientists do not see their job as done: As Dr. Ray
Starcetka, chief formulator for Super Q, explained
to me, "Don't memorize the numbers on a Super Q.
bag; change the minute we get a new test or
technique—eras local conditions demand."
certainly don't want to give the impressiOn that
Super Q s a cure-all. On the dontrary, it will of:0
be sold to top farmers—the top 20% in yields and
management. They'll make Super Qpay off.
I surveyed 900 farmers in ten areas, and it was
really exciting:to hear them talk of their goals.
quite a few told ine they were shooting for 200 -
bushel corn . . 7 -ton hay .. 600 -bushel potatoes
.60 -bushel soybeans , 3500 -lb. tobacco . 70 -
bushel 'Wheat 100 -bushel barley . 25 -ton sugar
beets ... 30 -ton silage... 135 -bushel bats.
The Super Q Manufacturers are a select group,
jealOus °Melt. reputation. Among other things, they
must agree to dittiptinareaction should
they fall below the rigid standards.
They must pledge t� provide soil'and
crop and inanagementservices thatwill
help Super Warmertimake'rnote profit.
•,. • •
SUPER ilatIlLIZERAVIADIE FOR "THE ONE FARMER ItIVRIVE. BY
READ 'FERTILIZERS LIMITED
MAMA eniC.EXEttk 'ONTARIO
- . .
The coroner said an autopsy
had ,shOwn 1.9 parts of alcohol
Sharp's blood, whereas 1.5 is
considered to constitute intox-
ication.
"Some people with over two
Might be found quite capable,"
Dr. Jackson said, "but a. limit
has to be set somewhere. I im-
agine if Sharp had been driving
locally and stopped by police
before the accident he might
have been charged with irrtpaired
driving; be would .probably have
been able to convince police he
was not drunk. This man work-
ed in a bakery, Worked. hard
Friday night until noon Satur-
day, 1 presume. I don't know
how much rest he got in the
afternoon but going home at
1:45 am. he was probably quite
tired, he had had quite a fere
drinks and there is a chance he
was asleep. There is no sign the
car Was out of control. He had
not put his brakes on or chang-
ed direction of the oar.
The jury, which was out from
12 noon to 12:40, comprised, in
addition 'to the foreman, John
Hindrnarsh, Glen Prke,- Elliot
Rivett and Harr, y Williams, all
of Goderich Township. Mr. Coch-
rane explained that there were
no witnesses to the accident,
and all persons had been sum-
moned whose testimony might
be of assistance.
1Vtrs. Lee told of a call bY
Sharp and ,Thompson around
1:00 -or 1:15a.m. on the morn -
ng of the 10th. They had noth-
ing to drink at the Lee place.
1Vlr: Anderton recalled seeing
only one other car ahead while
driving east from Goderich
lim-
its: it turned around and came
back to the crash scent, but
Was uot ,identified. To the fore-
man he said there might have
been 'Westbound cars,. Nilo
Brown believed all three men
were dead when, found; none
made asound.
Constable'Petrysiwn said the
OPP was alerted by a call from
the :higliWays department at
Stratford and he reached the
etene. at 2:15. He estimated the
distance front Lee' t to the Scene,
via Goderich, at 11 Miles: No-
rnerotts photos taken at the
jerash scene were shciwn co.rorier
and jury. ThereWas to little
slope front the pavement ilia
a car. could readiLP be driven on
it witness said,
"On en 'aster-pt,On of, 80
Miles per htyttr, ater travelling
90 feet WoUld do so, in one See.'
"Yes," the officer agreed.
1Vir, 13artnist& said the Steer-,
big Mechanism WM' still intact
and operative, though badly
bent. .Th:ere was ntr indication
that tire went • flat On the
highW4, (The left front tire
had been cut and flattened by
the bteriPer �h intpact With the
tree.) WititesS Said the dar WAS
lit geed condition 'for its. age, a
195/ reedel.
THE DUKE
• The great jazz pianist-camposer_Duke Elling-
tell is Ieatur0 in a CBC -TV Festival,progr am, The
• Duke, ;to be telecast on Wednesday, March S., Pic-.
turect,4ere nolltineting Ns band from the piq.no, he
tallss.#120out his iv and his earTY daYs in jazz and
perforrns a progiatii consisting of Sqine' Of ills most
• recent CornpOSitiAir/S- Appearing With him and his
• jazz men are singer Joya Sherrill and. dancer
'134nPY Briggs. ,
Kate Reed And
Douglas. Rains.
Again At Festival
Douglas Rain, the only actor
Who has appeared every year at
the Stratford Festival since its
beginning in 1953, is keeping
his record unbroken by signing
for the • Festival's 13th season
which opens on June 14 , and
continues until October 2.
Mr. Rain will play Prince Hal
in both "Henry IV" and in "Fal-
staff" two of •the four plays
Which will be presented this
simmer.
; •
After an absence of a year,
Hate Reid returns to the Strat-
ford Festival this summer to
appciar in two of the. 13th sea-
son's four plays. '
The volatile, red:haired Tor-
onto actress will play Portia,
Brultus' "true and honourable
wife,'' in Douglas Campbell's
production of "julius Caesar."
(CBC Photo)
WARBLE FLY CONTROL
Township of Stanley
1,..APPWCATIONS be received ,by the Town-
$hiP. of SfanleY for the Position of WARBLE FLY
INSPECTOR for the yeqr dn.sppctor must
be familiar with he WPrOle Fly Act and must
keep 9CCUe at e recPrd Cpttle sprayed. Salary
will be $1.15 per hour and. eight cents per mil'"?
• for mileage. Applications to be clearly marked
as such -ond to be in the .hondS of the clerk
by February 27, 1965.
2. Tp\pgRs, will bp received by the Township of
Stanlq, for SPRAYING' CATTLE for Warble Fly
for 1965, The Township will supply the pOWcief.
Tericlert to state prke per head per sprw.All
wnoyt,
rkActoconform with the terms of the Worlale
3, TENDERS Will be received for SUPPLYING AP-
• PROXIMATELY 1,000 POUNDS OF WARBLE
FLY pOWDER. Tender to state price per 15-
\ pound bags and one -pound bags, delivered to the
•Township shed in Varna.
SEALED TENDERS. for each of the above, 'clearly
marked as tocontents,. Will be received, IDy the
• undersigned until February 27, )965.. Lowest or
any tender hot necessarily accepted.
McI Grciham, Clerk,
,
Township of Staalley,
BRUCEFIELD, Ontario.'
, 7-8b
!*
".1
COvenitiit.1,11111L-LINERstritice
to .:STRATFORD
LEAVE CLINTON 12:40 P.M.
ARRIVE STRATFORD 1:35 P.M.
LEAVE STRAT.FORD 1:55 P.M.
ARRIVE TORONTO 3:55
Convenient connections to Montreal, Atlantic
Provinces and Western' Canada.
Low Rail Fares. •
Red Fare one-way to WINNIPEG $21.50
to HALIFAX $24.35.
For information phone the local CN Sales Office
WITH FAST CONNECTING
SERVICE TO TORONTO
$2°.9.15
Red Fare
One Way
White 0165 Blue
Clir?ton to TOronto
oftion7mummiumimmummai
CAI
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5