The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-12-17, Page 9THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 17, 1953 Page ?
Brandram
Henderson
PAINTS
Arp Now Handled
In Exeter By
Fred Hatter
Full range of shades, including
Swing Satin, Popular prices, high
in quality.
• Painting and Carpentry Work
Solicited
PHONE 413-J EXETER
Report On
Crediton East
By SIRS. W. MOTZ
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Colling'*
wood and family, of Hamilton,
spent Sunday with their uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. William
Motz.
Mr. Harry Lewis has been con
fined Xo his home with lumbago.
Mr. Charles Anderson spent
last week in London with Mr and
Mrs, Jack Anderson and Linda.
Mrs. Bella Edwards has re
turned to Exeter after visiting
her sister, Mrs. H. Lewis, for a
few days.
Must Lower Farm Costs Of Production
In Face Of Prices Crop Ass n Speaker
MAKE THIS YOUR FROZEN FOOD CENTRE
I
Give
Shoes
and
Slippers
for
Christmas
’Pleasing
Gifts
Of
Real
Value
Ripon - Loafer Sox
For The Whole Family
GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE
Be Prepared For
The Holidays! I
Let us carefully Sanitone Dry Clean those formal
dresses and special Holiday Apjparel now and have them
finished with our exclusive Sta*Nu Process.
Special Attention Given to Sizing and Refinishing
Net and Nylon and Taffeta Evening Dresses
Brady Cleaners
PHONE 13S EXETER
“J have a lot more respect for
the simple fact of crop rotation
than I had when I went to col
lege,” said George Gear, Walker
ton, speaking at Londesboro on
Wednesday night to an audience
of 135 Huron county farmers.
Mr. Gear, agricultural representa
tive for Bruce county, was the
principal speaker at the second
annual banquet of the Huron
Crop and Soil Improvement As
sociation.
Mr. Gear, well-known through
Western Ontario as an expert on
the management of beef herds,
and on modern practice in the
management of pastures, spoke
on “The Philosophy of Farming.”
His ideas, he made it clear, were
his own and not necessarily the
policy of the Ontario Department
of Agriculture.
“I’m interested in all live
stock; I’m interested in growing
something to feed them; primar
ily, though, I’m interested in the
soil,” said Mr Gear. His own ex
perience,. he said, has led him to
be a little impatient with some
of the more extreme doctrines of
the conservationists. It is an ex
aggeration, said Mr. Gear, to ar
gue that the typical Ontario far
mer is mining his land, and it
is an absurdity to argue that any
considerable proportion of On
tario farm lands should be taken
out of cultivation and put back
to tree.
One of the ironies of farming,
Mr. Gear observed, is that the
good farmer is the one who hag
the problems. “The poor farmer
has no problems,—he’s happy.
Once he starts producing more,
then he starts to have problems.
The fellow who gets the big, lush
growth of hay early in the sea
son has to worry about how to
get that hay crop off a month
earlier than he’s used to, and
then he has to worry about keep
ing more livestock to eat the
hay, and more buildings to keep
the stock."
Mr. Gear was introduced by
Harold Baker, assistant agricul
tural representative for Huron.
Thanks for his address were ex
pressed by Richard Proctor, of
Morris township,vice-president of
the Huron Crop and Soil Im
provement Association.
Chairman for the gathering
was Russell Bolton, of McKillop
township.
M.P.P. Speaks
Thomas Pryde, Exeter, M.P.P.
for Huron, said he considered
the association one of the most
important organizations in the
country, and one that is concern
ed with the basic problems of
agriculture.
“I think everyone is aware,”
observed Mr. Pryde, “that the
honeymoon is over,—the days of
high prices and easy selling are
behind us for a while, There’s
going to be more of a seling job
for all of us to do, and I think
one thing is true,—that you can’t
go wrpng selling quality.”
Alvin Kerslake, Hensall, war
den of Huron, congratulated the
association on its work during
the year. Agriculture, he said, is
the key industry of Huron county.
“Folks like you make that in
dustry go.”
A welcome to Hullett township
was extended by Reeve William
Dale, recently re-elected for 1954.
Orville Taylor, of Belgrave, a
member of the County Council's
agriculture committee, said he
believes the grant given by the
county to the association is
money, well invested, and added
that the agriculture committee is
firm in "its support of the associa
tion.
Other speakers were Harry
Strang, Exeter, provincial direct
or of the Crop and Soil Improve
ment Association, representing
Huron, Perth and Bruce counties;
Russell Wagner, of Dobbinton,
president of the Bruce Crop and
Soil Improvement Association;
G. W. Montgomery, agriculaural
representative for Huron; Ken
neth Fallis, Toronto, of the crops,
•weeds and seeds branch of the
Ontario Department of Agricul
ture.
Cheques Presented
Cheques were presented by Mr.
Fallis to winners in the 1952-53
50-Bushel Winter Wheat Club
competition in Huron county. Top
score in the competition was
made by Hugh Berry, of Usborne
township, who had a yield of
57.9 bushels an acre; second
place was won by Allan Walper,
Parkhill, with 52.8 bushels an
acre.
The target for next year, in
the wheat club competition in
Huron will be 60 bushels an
acre, it was announced by G. W.
Montgomery. Eleven have al
ready entered, and additional
entries will be welcomed, he
said, from any who have at least
five acres seeded to registered
varieties.
Three 4-H clubs in Huran car
ried out projects that fit in with
the association’s work, it was re
ported by Harold Baker in a
brief review of his 1953 work.
Grain clubs, he said, were active
in McKillop township and in the
Exeter area; and a county forage
club was organized with H. L.
Sturdy and Wallace Bell as lead
ers. Total mebership in the three
clubs was 40; this proportion,
out of the 437 4-H Club members
in Huron this year, was not as
high, Mr. Baker suggested, as the
importance of crop projects
1 might warrant.
Good Things To Eat
For The Holiday Season
BIRDSEYE FROZEN FOODS
Strawberries — Peas — French Cut Beans — Lima Beans
— Mixed Vegetables — Brussels Sprouts — French Fried
Potatoes — Scallops'— South Coast Shrimp —• HO-Ma
Frozen Oysters (these are frozen in tins where they are
packed fresh) — Pickerel Fillets — Salmon Steaks •—
Halibut Steaks, etc., etc,
FOR A SMALL PARTY after the hockey game try
Frozen Chicken or Beef pies. Just heat them in your
oven—they are delicious.
WE WILL BE OPEN Wednesday, December 23, until 10
P.M. CLOSED THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 7 P.M.
We wish all our 700 locker holders and good friends
in this district a Merry Christmas! Good luck in 1954!
Exeter Frozen Foods
Phone 70 Main St.
Good Fanning Best Conservation
“A good farmer improves his
soil, and can make it two or
three times as good when he is
finished with it as it was when
he got it,” said Mr. Gear. “Good
farming is a better method of
conservation than any other we
have.”
"The lower level of prices is
here, and there’s no use arguing
about it,” said Mr. Gear. “The
thing now is to get lower costs
of production,”. Mr. Gear said he
would disagree vigorously with
those who criticize the farmer
for lack of efficiency.
“I think that as a rule the
farmer is more efficient than any
other branch that produces in
our society,'” he said.
The answer to the problem of
lower prices for farm produce
can not, in the long run, be
found in any policy of reducing
production, Mr. Gear asserted.
Obviously, he said, it would be
suicidal for farmers to deliberate
ly try to grow fewer bushels an
acre. “Farming isn’t of that na
ture,” he said^ “You can’t shut
the’ doors and stop production
for two or three weeks and then
start up again, the way you could
in some kinds of industry.”
While he would not agree with
those who argue that farm pro
duction should be limited, said
Mr. Gear, he also would not go
to the other extreme and agree
with the prediction that before
long farmers will not be able to
produce enough to feed this
country’s growing population.
Greater Production Goal
“I look for a great period of
prosperity,” he said, for those
who have their farms set up
right to pull through the next
few years of lowered prosperity.
The whole thing is tied up with
greater production, because great
er production is cheaper pro
duction.”
The time will probably come,
Mr. Gear remarked, when far
mers in his own county of Bruce
will turn to growing cash crops,
as farmers in south Huron have
already done. “We don’t grow
cash crops now in Bruce,” he
said, “because there is more
money in livestock. We can make
money on hogs even _ when the
price is fairly low. Up my way,
my guess is that the gqod farmer
is getting continually better. The
same can hardly be true of the
cash crop areas.”
The farmer who relies on cash
crops, and does not have a- really
well-planned system for getting
organic matter and fertilizer back
•into the soil, can not maintain
soil fertility, said Mr. Gear.
Fertilizer Alone Not Enough
“I’m a great believer in com
mercial fertilizer,” he continued,
“but I really think that commerc
ial fertilizer isn’t much good to
you unless you’re growing soil
building crops . . -. The fellows
who have been doing most things
right over a period of years are
the ones who can suddenly double
their production by the applica
tion of some fertilizer.”
Comparison plots in pastures,
to illustrate the effect of using
commercial fertilizer, do not al
ways Show conclusive results,
and one-year tests prove nothing
at all, said Mr. Gear. Hundreds
and thousands of soil tests In
Bruce county, he noted, have in
dicated a prevailing deficiency of
phosphorus in the soil, and yet
when phosphates are added, in
the form of commercial fertilizer,
they do not seem to have much
result in the succeeding crops,
unless the soil itself was in fairly
good condition before the fertili
zer was added.
Hoiv To Build Soils
“I think we can build soils
something like tills,—with a long
time to do it,” Mr. Gear contin
ued “The first thing we should
try to do is get along Witli the
soils the best way we can, We’ve
got to get a living out of these
soils while we are working them.
They tell its, and t believe it,
that where you take three tons
of hay off the tofi, there’s a toil
Of roots below. I sow fertilizer to
get a good crop of hay and grass
to make more of those roots to
build up the soil. What the com
mercial fertilizer is for is to
stimulate the growth of grass ■ and hay so the soli will build.”
The Be! Air 4-door sedan. With 13 models in 3 series,
Chevrolet offers the widest choice in the low-priced field.
i
ON DISPLAY
TOMORROW!
More things more people want, that’s why
most
the new car that combines great new performance
(m/
beautiful, most powerful ChevroletCome see the
ever built...
with money-saving gas mileage!
This is what you’re going to find when you
come in to check over this new ’54 Chevrolet:
In every way, Chevrolet now brings you even
more of the things you want.
More beauty with brilliant new styling
in Body by Fisher and bright new color
harmonies outside and inside the car.
More power and finer performance with
new high-compression engine power in all
models.
More comforts and conveniences, includ
ing the richest and most luxurious interiors
in Chevrolet history, and such new optional
features as automatic electric window and
seat controls.
And, thanks to advanced Chevrolet engi
neering, all this with new economy, too.
The fact is, you’ll find that no other car
offers so many things you want at such low
cost.
The colorful, new 1954 models are ready
for your inspection. Stop in and take a good
look at the best-looking Chevrolet you ever
saw . .. and your best buy for 1954!
Power brakes
New, wider choice of
Powerglide models
Now, Powerglide automatic
transmission is available on
all models. Powerglide nutdJ
made transmission gives icv
stant response and positive
acceleration. Teamed with
the "Blue-Plame 125” en
gine, it’s optional at extra
cost.
Thrifty new power in •
oil models
NowPowerglide models offer
the most powerful Chevrolet
engine ever — the "Blue-
Flame 125”.Gearshift models
have the advanced, more
powerful "Blue-Flame 115”
Both high-compression en- -------------- --------------------
gincs bring quieter, smooth- fortable position, Optional
er and finer performance on Bel Air and "Two-Ten”
with important gas Savings! models at extra cost.
for easier stops
Chevrolet in the low-priced
field brings you another
great advance in driving ease
— Power Brakes. Stopping is
almost unbelievably easy
and convenient—just a swing
of your foot from accelera
tor to brake pedal! Optional
New, automatic window
and seat controls
Now, at the touch of a button,
front windows are electrical
ly raised dr lowered. Touch
another conveniently placed
control to move the front
seat up and forward or down
and back into your most com-
POWERED FOR PERFORMANCE
ENGINEERED FOR ECONOMY!
New interior
richness
Here’s the kind of quality
you’d expect to find only in
high-priced cars. Fine new
upholstery fabrics with a
more liberal use of durable,
beautiful vinyl trim. New
color treatments in harmony
with the brilliant new ex
terior colors. Built-in arm
rests on all Bel Air models.
New styling that Will
stay new
There’s a new, lower, Smart
er look about this new 1954
Chevrolet.The new front-end
and rear-end designs are even
cleaner and more distinctive.
Massive new bumpers extend
even farther around the
fenders. All around the car,
new styling presents Fisher
Body at its beautiful best.
New, lower price on
Power Steering
Chevrolet Power Steering
substantially reduced in
price! That’s good news to
everyone. Chevrolet Power
Steering does 80% of the
work to give easy, sure con
trol. It’s optional on fell mo
dels at extra cost.
SYMBOL OF
SAVINGS Eevro'let^W
A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
C-7MA
Phone 1OO Snell Bros. Limited
CHEVROLET —• OLDSMOBILE — CHEV TRUCKS
Exeter