The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1955-05-26, Page 5A
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Garages
Sunday and
Evening Service
Open Ulla Sundays Wetines-
day afternoon, and "during
the eVeningathrOUghent the
week:
Snell Bros. Ltd.
GARAGE
THE TIMESADVOCATi, EXETER,, ONTARIO THURSDAY MORNING, MAY 26, 190
di
ra ng Fou.nder
oper, Dies.
Charles r, Hooper, founder of, a dollar a dozen or eggs, sent -
the present egg -grading sYstena„: thing unheard of in this district.
died Monday in Stretford 'Gene- A Colorful figure, Mr. Hooper
11/0 e/auty„,,seventh served as a member of the, coun-
cil for several years and it was
:4131.°14rtel g'sau:gligal-usts1473:131/Pn' .the 'present. organ was installed
through Mr llooper's eorts that
ff
1-11Keter more tban, 40 years ago in James St, United Ohltrch.
and It grew Into a large enter. After selling Ws business here,
prise before he sold: out, Ur, and Mrs. Hooper moved to
Ile began by gathering eggs in Louden. They 'returned to Exeter
a basket and selling them As minall$3p.olViwnr0; trecniteOrtneer,r
"New -1414 Eggs", a motto which
became widely known. During the 1154, s
MIA world war, Ur. Booper paid Mr. Hooper was a Patient at
Isistaisto %%%%% s ll sISI lll !ssis asstmossolossmnsttslismossasammus
• 68 DESOTO SEDAN, radio,, all the comforts of home
'5D DODGE SEDAN, fully quip -pod
*61 PLyNOTYTH SEDAN,' priced zight, $1,005
'49 DODGE SEDAN, dependable transportation
U •
'49 and '60 FORD—one a coach, one a sedan
s3 • '48 DODGE REGENT SEDANS (2) ,
'54 DODGE 1 -TON Express, 20,000 miles, A-1 condition
Seven '37 To. '42 Cars
Your Choice Under $60 Each.
Exeter Motor. Sales •
Your Dodge - Desoto Maki
Phone 200 Fred Dobbs, Prop.
• Open For Your Convenience Until 10 p.m.
Evening
Each
, the Rushton Nursing Borne, Mit,
,cheli, for the past year, Follow,.
ing a 'fracture in his hip, ie was
removed to hospital in Stretford
a month ago. ills only survivors
are nieces and nephews,
The bOdy rested at the 11opper-,
3 Hockey Funeral 'Rome where'
Rev. L 3. Snell ,conducted the
service on WediVesday afternoon.
Interment was in EXeter Ceme-
tery.
Report From
•
Baseline
By MRS. ARTHun /WYMAN
Mrs, Margaret Hawkins, Len -
don, is visiting this week with
her cousin, Mrs. Arthur Rundle
and Arthur, •
Sunday visitors for the twenty-
fourth were Miss Ethel Wilson,
of St. "Marys with Item brother,
Mr, Wilfred Wilson; Mr. and Mrs,
Will Scott, of Kirltton, with her
sister, Mrs. T. Doupe, and Ras -
Sell; Mr. and Mrs. George Squire,•
of Whalen, with their son, Mr,
Harry Squire, •and Mrs. Squire
with Mr. and Mrs. pred Doupe;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rogers and
Shirley, of Kirkton, MIS and Mrs.
Wesley Spearin, o Zion, Mr. and
Mrs. Newton Clarke, Winchelsea,
With. Mr. and Wm. Arthur Run-
dle; Mts. Annie flodgins, Mr.
John Wilson, •of St. Marys, with
Mrs. Ben Wilson; Mr, and Mrs.
Raymond Switzer and Judy And
Dennis and •Mr. and Mrs. W, L.
Switzer Mr. and 1Vas. C. Wigood
and family and Miss Lois Me -
Lean, of Campbellville, and Mr.
and 1VIrs.. Carol Mills and Gwen,
of Auburn, with Mr. and. Mrs.
George Wilson.
Mrs. Albert Hermandez „ and
Patricia and Richard, of Essex,
visited her mother, Mrs. Reward
Switzer, the past week.
Mr. •and Mrs. Leslie Zinn, of
Sudbury, are visiting the latter's
parents, Mr. and WS. W.,0L,
Switzer this week.
- seamos
suismosammor
• ,Se. -04..; White
•
Seed
• Baler Twine 9, Binderlwinp
" • flayb. Wire. And Fence
.E) CLL. Fertilizr
Funk's and Pfister Sed Corn.
Phone 32'
W. G. Thompson
& Sons Ltd.
HENSALL ' Evenings 72
Second Um in
Bidduiph
By MES, H. or4solsT
Mr. and Mrs, Cecil Skinner
of hhgeter 'were guests of their
daughter 1VIr. and Mrs. John
Mc-
AWstsr and attended anniversary
Services at Veutralla United
Church.
Mrs. Gordon McAlpine and boys
of Parkhill spent Monday with
her sister Niro. Charles Atitineom
ney.. A. A. Neild of4Ailsa. Craig
was a dinner .guest on Sunday
of M, 1-1, and lira. Olston.
1Virs, 011ie Bodgins of 11nter
and grandson Brian Of ucan
visited on Sunday with M. and
Mrs. Clarence -Smith,
Mrand yrs. Dean -Gibson
spent the weekend at •Stoke's
Bay.
Or, and Mrs, Allan Elston and
family spent Sunday with yr,
and Mrs, Antes Barker,, Lucan„
Mr. and Mrs. Clark Fisher or
Exeter spent Sunday with 'Mr,
and Mrs, Bob Blair,
Miss Barbara, Lewis of London
visited Sunday with her *nether
Mrs. Jessie Lewis.,
Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs, Chris Fischer were Miss
Dorothy Fischer, Mr, lora sMor-
dush, Mr. Bill Fisoher, Miss Lor-
raine Black and Mr, and Mrs.
L. 'ItlierenSen, all of London,
Miss Ina Chappel of Kirkton
spent the weekend. with Miss.
Joyce irsisoher.
saVIr. and Mrs, Wm. Woodall
and daughters Indy Dianne and
Monica Lynn of Windsor spent
the holiday with Mr. and Mrs,
john Spacek.
Mr, and mrs1 Nelson Squire
of Farquhar spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs, Geo, MeFalls and
attended Centralia United Church
anniversary.
Mr, and Mrs. Orville Langford
and John spent Sunday with. Mr.
and Mrs, Fred Pattiaon, Woods
ham.
Mr, and Mrs. Reis McFalls vis-
ited, Monday with Mr. and Mrs.
Chas, Tindall, and family and at-
tended the races at DelaVaTe.
•
Huron County
Crop Report
By G. W. -MONTGOMERY'
All classes of livestock are nOw
out to pasture.
Growth a ha' and pasture
fields and spring grains has
been retarded somewhat by the
cool dry weather. Rain is very
badly needed all over'the county,
Due to lack of moisture, cern,
sugar beet, soybean and white
bean land is working up very
lumpy. Seeding Of eorn became
general in the county this ,past
week
E1grieultuval Events
IPerth-Huron Breeders York-
shire Sale, Fair Grounds, Strat-
ford, May 26, 1.30 p,m.
Hensel' Spring Stock Show,
Bengal, May 27. Show and sale
of 100 Hereford Steer Calves by
members of the Walsall Boys and
Girls Feeder Calf Club.
Huron County Holstein Breed-
ers Bus Tour to O.A.C. to Hol -
Stein Field Day, Friday, nine B.
Data-
Eliniville
By MES. ROSS swim
Mrs. Gilbert Johns and Grace,
Miss Mary Skinner spent the
weekend with ,Mr. and Mr. Gar-
net Johns, of Sarnia.
Mr. and Mrs, Hubert Hunter
spent the weekendwithMr. and
Mrs. EarlHunter, of near Barrie.
Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs, Charles Stephen were -Mr.
and Mrs. Milan Nash and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Bell and Noel,
of Toronto; Mr, Sam Miller, MrS.
Schenk and family, of Dashwood,
and Mr. yand Mrs. Jack.ltobinson
and faMily, of Kirkton.
Mr. Bill Wilson, of London,
spent the.weekend With his mo-
ther, Mrs. TO5
Mr. and Mrs. Laurie Stephen
and Jerry, of London, visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, Austin
Mrs, Franklin Skinner attend-
ed the graduationof her nephew,
Hugh Rundle, from Ridgetown
Agricultural School, on Friday,
Mrs, Maynard Margison and
family, of London; .and Mrs. Ed
Johns, of Exeter, visited Monday
With Mr. and Mr"Delmer Skin-
ner.
Elimville Y.P.U. enjoyed a
Weiner roast at the Kenworth
Lodge o)x Monday evening
WS. Thomas Bell returned
home Mi Sunday froni Toronto
and is visiting g few days with
Mr. and Mrs, CharleS Stephen,
see your Ceolitlig- Bait" dearer!
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liORPROPOSil4
Down
to
Earth
Sr la, 1, HOOFE$
It's A Dog's Lite
"Sport never did such a 01:15,"
expostulated Farmer Brown.
"Why he was lying- on the porch
When I name out Ulla Morning."
Yes, Sport was lying on the
porch when Farmer Brown got
up., But where was he all night?
All day, he hnd romped with the
children on the lawn. (Ie .had
scared the H----. gut of that sales.
man at 3 o'clock). He got the
cows up front tho' pasture at 5
p.m., but what did he do all
night?
Sport was not what he seemed
to be. He was literally two clogs,
Respectable all day but the coms
pany he kept at night was very
disreputable. What a gang! Boy
did they get around. They had
all the livestock within miles
afraid of them,
While this is Just a theoreti-
cal case in some instances we
are sorry to say it Is true, Many
respectable doge are rogues at
night. There have been very ser -
ions cases in Usborne Township
this past week. One case was a
sheep -killer land the other was
a large number of cattle run and
Worried until the ,cowa had torn
teats from. being driven through
fences and the •grass cattle had
raore than 100 pounds of flesh
run off them.
We have a livestock proteotion
act and while we have not it at
hand, a few ideas that some
people have about •the act pre-
testing the dog, valuable or not,
are just so much hog -wash.
a
To begin with e dog is a stray
(24 itoUrs a day) if. it Is not
under proper control. In short he
Mnst be accompanied by some-
one. He Must not. stray On land
'Where livestock is habitually
kept and if the dog is found wor-
rying, injuring livestock or poul-
try he May be destroyed. If the
21 107 s wt 040 ok tbe per-
oowwnnser‘thr d°oWg°,
owner must destroy the dog with-
in 48 hours and ir he refuses
may be ordered to do so by a
magistrate.
Any township whieh is under
the Livestock -Protection Ad shall
pay the authorized claim of the
livestock owner but it is entitled
to collect this amount from the
owner: of the dog or doge upon
proper identification of owner-
ship.
This column .strongly suggests
that everyone know where their
dog spelidS his time. If you don't
know for certain where he is at
night, tie him with a chain- and
strong tight collat.. Nobody wants
to shoot your dog but then who
likes to see wanton damage done?
trstially a friendly warning is
enough but this writer is one
who, like many other livestock
owners, is going to shoot first
and ask questions later.
DID YOU KNOW?
Mastitis is not contagious. It
does not jump automatioally from
one cav to the rest of the herd.
—Please turn to Page 10
H. .1 cQRNISH .& CO*
-CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
11 Conaisla, L, F. Cornifak D, Mitchell
294 DUNDAS SL ONDON„ ONT,
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Waterloo,. Cattle
Breeding Association
"Where Better Bull! Are (hear
AhrsikT6.)*
---- • s -s
Horne of the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association 10-
cated just north. and east of Waterloo, ,one-half mile elf high-
way No. 85 on the old Airport Road.
This is the place that co-operative artificia1 breeding
has built and it Is composed of an office, board room, labor*.
tory,. and 00 box stalls in the barn which house as good a
group of -hulls as can be found under any roof.
Visit the headquarters some time.
Besidearthe headquarters, we maintain branch offices nt:
Guelph, 4 lEramosa Road, Phone 207
Arthur, Ontario Phone 115
Palmerston Onistrio, Phone 00
Clinton, Ontario, Phone 242
Kincardine, Ontario,Phone 400
Formosa (two muners), Phone Walkerton 887W2
and Mildmay easonot
Tara, Ontario, Phone 13$B2
For Artificial Breeding Soryice or more information,
call the office nearest you between 7:30 and 10:00 A.11f. on
week days and '7:30 and 9:80 A.M. on Sundays and holidays,
Cows noticed in heat later than this should be inseminated
the next clay.
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t,
ONTARIO'S
eirgSHARE A
BILLION DOLLAR BUSINESS
AIDED BY "GOOD .GOVERNMENT
More than a billion dollars worth of farm
products have been sold by Ontario farmers in
each or tholast three years—nearly double the
output of ten years ago. •
Development of new•crop varieties and thorough
extension work under the present administration
has expanded cash crop acreage in Ontario by -
more than 400 per cent.
Departmental herd improvement policies have
maintained livestock output at 70 per cent of
Ontario farni income.
The Frost administration has introduced the
most advanced marketing legislation of any
Canadian province.
Community living in rural areas ,has been
bettered throughy'rost government grants. Last
year these ,amounted to a quarter of a million
dollars for 108 community centres.
UNDER THE FROST ADMINISTRATION
SOUND. LEGISLATION HAS BROUGHT BENEFITS
TO ALL ONTARIO FARMERS:
• HERD IMPROVEMENT has been encouraged through the Frost - Government
program whichpays farmers one third the purchase price of all thorough-
bred sites. Giants to date amount to $56,006.
• LIVESTOCK LOSSES ARE REDUCED by provincial goverment provision for
Warble Fly and vaccination against Brucellosis.
• CHEAPER FEED for livestock is demonstrated through five pasture improvement
stations established under the present Government.
• ENDLESS SEARCH for better crop varieties at Ontario Agricultural College
and Western Ontario Agricultural School is made po'ssible by the
Department of Agriculture.
• FUTURE,FARMERS already have received a million and a quarter dbllars in
cash loans *On the provincial government under the Ontario 3unior
Farmer Establishment Loan Corporation,
roateudONTARIO
414