HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1957-08-08, Page 114
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EXIETOR, -ONTARIO, AUGUST'S,
SEAFORTH GIRL. WINS. HURON TITLE — Betty Storey,
Seaforth, second from left, was named "Dairy
Princess" of Huron county when she topped a field of
five finalists in a milking competition at the Huron, County
Farm, near Cliiiton.. Marilyn 1VIershall, Kirkton, right, WAS
named, runner-up And alternate.' Other finalists were
Doreen Howatt, left, Belgrave; Pat Marshall, third from
left, Kirkton; Margaret McCann, fourth from left, Ford-
dency
e er tion
by CARL .HEMINGWAY
The Directors of the Canadian!
Federation of Agriculture held a
meeting in Ottawa and as a re-
sult far reaching reeommenda-
tions were made to tile Pritil'e
Minister.
One that I would like to dea
with il
s thm
e atter of price sup-
port. I am not an economist and
therefore cannot be considered
art authority .on the ,subject but
I would like to express some
°pilliw
ons. A little item In the Far-
mers' Advocatewarning far-
mers to "beware a parity
Prices" 'sonle constder-
deaerves
a, Ir 11111 iieisi S
of '900741. HURON svid /If ORM /1110.P4CVFX,„:„.
Huron County
anon. * By A.S. OOLTON
Denfield Girl
Crop Report
In 'United StateS, the govern- During the past week ok er
Seaforth Entrant VVins
ment set out to guarantee 90 to half of the wheat crop in the
$5% of paritSr Prices to the far- country was threshed or corn-
•
Trier and have ended up with a bitted and most fanners report
KirktonG.. Runner -Up To Queen
Betty, Storey, R.R. 2 Seaforth,
L s the 'Dairy Princess" of Hur-
on County, and willrepresent
Huron in•the Ontario Dairy Queen
competition at the Canadian Na-
tional Exbibition. She earned the
title Tuesday night, in a milking
coinpetition held_ at the Huron
County Farm, near Clinton. ,
Runner-up in the competition
who will be Miss Storey's alter -
.nate and understudy *Abe com-
petition was Marilyn Marshall,
Kirkton, for the provincial Milk-
maid ehampionship.
4-H Garden Clubs
Plan Zurich Day
South Huron 4-H Home Gar-
den Clubs will hold Achievement
Do at Zurich on Thursday, Au-
gust 29.
The program will be super- 1Weed Control
vised by D, H. Miles agricultural
Five competitors took part n
disrupt world markets. Certainly a very satisfactory yield ant
Mess of surpluses
•if Canada were to follow a nreeh some of the grain is a
k d warden of Huron the auditoritim•- at the Home, tar policy a bad situation would continued hot -‘venther
sjrni- rather small sample;
the county final, each milking a inaking the presentations, Elston' and the everting program was
cow in the registered Holstein Cardiff. Brussels, MP for Huron, moved outdoors. Bob Carbert,
M' Storey the redrecent trip to Venezuela, when
herd at the county farm, The Redo'. me ie, c
f L-
Wingham showed pictures a his
competition was carried out at t, rig
the regular evening milking 1 sash marking her, as the win -
time, with a. panel of four judges 'ner,
watching each girl while she Judges for the Huron competi-
went through the step-by-step tion were Mrs. Douglas Miles,
' -Clinton; Mrs. Harry Strang, Hen -
sail; A. T, Hare, London; 0, K.
Lochead, field man for the On-
tario Cream Producers Associa-
tion.
More than 1,000 people were
at the Huron County Home
Tuesday night, for the announce-
ment of the result of the county
routine of cleaning and gni], z-
ing the milking equipment. at-
taching the milking machine,
watching. while the cow was ma-
chine -milked, then -stripping the
cow„ and 'straining and cooling
the milk.
Other competitors were Dor-
een Rowan'. Belgrave; Margaret
McCann, Fordwich; Pat IVIar-
shall, Kirkton.
Cash prizes were presented -to
each of the contestants by Hur-
on dairy farmer organizations,
with Harry Gowdy, reeve of
sistant ag. representative, and u Topic
Miss Shirley Patterson. county Fourth meeting of the Exeter
home economist.
representative, A.. S. Bolton, "-'4 H CI b
411 Corn Club was. held in Sli-
hibits will be at 9 ann. The re- list 6.
Registration and placing of ex- on Tuesday evening, . Aug
mainder of the morning will be Club leader Ken Han, who
taken wth judging classes, each ' was in charge, of the meeting,
club member will judge two talked on weeds and their' con -
classes of vegetables and give trol, which was followed by a
oral reasons for her decision. questionnaire and discussion.
In . the afternoon each club ,Toni Treibner conducted the
will present an exhibit or a dent- opening of the meeting with 15
onstration with. comments on members repeating e 4-H
the same. Pledge.
0
(e) LOC.M. TRAP MARKS,
YOU CAKiTCL1N4 TWE
LADDETZ OF SUCCESS
COLD FE.E-r
Baling
Straw?
Try a Bale of
National
Baler Twine
ONLY
$6.25 bale
It's Good Twine
Belgium & Danish Twine
BALER $7,40
$8.75
Canadian Brantford •
BALER $8,00
BINDER $9.10
• We Are Buyers Of:
WHEAT, I3ARLEY, OATS, TIMOTHY SEED
Let us quote you prices.
Control Flies
WITH FLY BAIT, FLY POWDER, STOCK SPRAY,
BUILDING SPAY
Your choice of Several brands.
' t
eontest. The crowd overflowed
he took a shipload_ of registered
Canadian cattle to Venezuelan
buyers. '
The committee in charge of
arrangements for the Huron
contest included Simon Hallahan,
Blyth; Carl Hemingway, Clinton,
secretary of Huron Federation
of Agriculture; Ross Marshall,
Kirkton; Arthur Bolton, assist-
ant agricultural 'representative
for Huron. The arrangements for
the rnilking, competition Itself
were made by HarveY Johnston.
000110100 ttt 000000001 t ttt IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ttttt IIIIIII tttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt ttttttttttttt II ttt I ttt II
SPECIAL LOW COST
Sweetened Dairy Ration
$34.00 Ton
Keeps ,caws milking while pasture cis dry.
Try this ration.
Super Special Hog Feed
$52.00 TOil
All NO. feed gains sweetened with molasses and
• mixed with. our best hog concentrate.
Super Scooter
4" GRAIN AUGER
CoMplete with sheave, belf, motor 'mount, swivel
bracket, handle, tail ipiece.
5' Atd 10' extension available.
Down To
Earfh
By D. I. HOOPER
Think On This
101
d uch worse I t and barley crops have
On the other hand% we must ripened very quickly. All ex -
agree that farmers reed More cept a few fields of late variety!
Dairy Titlist
Miss Doreen Garrett of ILE. '2
Penfield, 17 -year-old daughter of
Mr. and Mrs, W. W. Garrett
and granddaughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Coleman of Lucan was
elmsen to represent Middlesex
county in the Dairy Queen com-
petition at the C.N.E.
equality of income if there is to oats have been cut and some of
be equality of living standards the early oats and barley have
for the different occupatiooal been threshed. 1
Aftermath on' fields of red
Prosperity is founded on pro- clover which were cut m June
d Won and trade but farmers 1have made very rapid growth
She won the county contes a
beth. There were five coetest-
ants.
Doreen. is an Edgewood Junior
Institute member and secretary
of the Middlesex Junior Farm -
Exchange Queens
For Bean Fetes
An exchange of queens will be
nnc of thefeatures of the Oa -
tarn) and Michigan bean feSti•
' vals on Labor Day this year.
Greta Pfaff, 17, of Exeter and
formerly of Cromarty1-
who wa$
chosen Ontario Bean Queen of
I1956 at liensall last year, Will
crown the Michigan beauty con-
test winner in Fairgrove on
t ' •
September 2.
the farm of James Murray, Lam -
Last year's Michigan quees
will be a guest of Hensel). Kips -
Olen at their provincial festival
the same day.
Hensel]. Kinsmen have increas-
ed their prizes for this year's
beauty contest. Jim Clark *
er Association. Her father is e
f the event .
W. Clark Ltd., Montreal, food
processors, are donating beans
with pork for the Hensel'. festi-
val. The traditional bean meal
will be better than ever, club ofa
ficials say because the beans
that they cannot • sell then. pro- blossom. 1 oration of AgricUltuTe.
president of the Mid esex
are faced with such high costs and at present show a. • eavy ,
duce at • world prices. Thus it is If a sufficient number of bees1 Doreen is. active in . sports,
necessary that our farm produc- are available to- pollinate the winning „,""ning second prize recently
tion be matched as closely to clover there should be a very i
t at the Junior Farmer Field Day
domestic consumption as nos- - good crop of clover particular-
sible. ly on the early fields.
With wages at present levels
the consumer can afford to pay „
the,farmer an equalizedJhn CSkinner
:. o
price for :
food. However if the consumer
can purchse imported farm pro -1
ducts from lowcost countries he' Veteran Airman
Every day in the last while, look for the answers. Help them k
looking through the daily papers, ; to understand: .
there is a ,dirth of wedding photo -1 "No couple should marry until
graphs to be seen and these re- they've thought the matter
very good article through maturely, learned much
Lread that should be of inter- about themselves and each ot
est to everyone who has reached IVIarriage isn't a pienie for
'a 'this emergency the Federation
,unreasonably low, To ova
and p,assed the marital
is just approaching it. Probably
all of us that are married .can.
not possibly remember the wed-
ding service as we heard it that
day, and maybe the one quoted
here might not be an exact chip-
Icate of the vows we took but
the essence is the same and be-
n- that I am'going to give two persons now to be 3oined.
trou the words of a country min -
at Medway Be 100 , •
Site is at present in her -second l will be factory cooked and. there
, year at London, Teachers' Col -1-411 be no danger of burning.
lege. During the summer she is The Montreal company is alsn --
-at Arn donating chili sauce for the meal
dren.
and toy bank favors for chil-
pglyaiyegrpoarunkds supervisor
Warden Fred Heaman, McGin
is certainly going to do it. Im- livray, presented her with t e
ports could be restricted by ta-1 John Clifford Skinner. 52, a Middlesex County sash following
riffs but that is a slow -prom. i resident of Crediton for the nest the judging at Lambeth last Try Surge for faster, safer
dure and • antagonizing. Since we years died in South Huron Hos- week. ,nunner-up was Marlene milking With increased' Produce
do require imports of a CaverhilI Ederten, (adv't)
great pital after a short illness. non.
He was formerly of Aylmer .4,,.., tttt tt t 41 t 11110111011110001100011000011i00 ttttt g ttttttttt tttttt 111111 tttttttttt 11 tttttt 1 tttt 0 tttt 01 t 1 tt 1 tttt
many products it is reasonable and had served with the RCAF
to control them by quotas rather for 16 years.
than tariffs, He is survived by his wife, the
In order to do this a .iiipport I
go. i former Ruth Baguley; two sons,
price must be set. Since the; Clare and Edward; one daugh-
vernment really doesn't want to ' ter. Betty, all at homg.
purchase farm produce this sup- I The- body is resting at the
port price must be set at a non- Dinney funeral home where the
incentive level. - By controlling ';
; funeral service twill be held on
the imports by quotasnthe mar- 1 Friday, August 9 at 1.30 p.m..
let can be held well above the Members of the RCAF Centralia
support price and in most cases will act as pall bearers and a reasonable fair return guardsmen and Padre IVIcLean
to the prodncer. will conduct the service
Hoerever there could be times
when the market price might be '
For many years the leading
metal recovered in Lite Yukon .
day—it's a pact so long . y
of Agriculture has rectuestedie was gold. But today it is ex -
both shall live,' Give yourselves
•goveroment to make provision seeded in value by silver and
a time of courtship—long enough
for deficiency payments. By this !base metals.
to make sure there are no basic, farriers would be pro- .
conflicts that could destroy your means
'marriage. Enough time and tested from serious losses in pe- the government could accept the
Federationof 'A
blind. of extremely lOw returns
c toon vainy e ra pwroi cueld h ing ho not
1 all farm products.
sal and apply a similar plan to
griculture prone -
thought' keeps love front being riods
"Into' this holy estate come bwehirlegq
it.11:ed
ister's interpretation of a beau, "Joined is a strong word. This
tiful service. pair shall be two no longer, but
"Dearly beloved, we are gath- one. They will see their oneness .
ered together 'here in the sight in the faces of their children;
of God and in the presence of they will hear someone say "She
these witnesses . . . - , • father's nose,"
has her mother's eyes and her
try preacher I have piloted many "But being one sometimes
"Sine I started out as a coun-
couples through the marriage turns into a struggle of indivi-
service: used in our Church. And duals to decide which one! It
soirietirnes I get a futile feeling in each;
should be Turnblending of the best
best talents, best
a
the
as I read the solemn lines —
as if I were standing up there
talking to myself!
"I observe that my two star
performers are in an impenet-
rable daze , . . 'I had stage
,fright so bad LAidril know what
was going on,' the girl may con-
fide later; and from the boy:
'All I could hear was my knees
knocking together.'
"If the couple has been to me
for sonie counselling, I probably
don't worry so much about them 1
as about the rest of the people 1
Rat the w.edding. Everyone gets
! so interested in the beauty of 1
1the bride, the nervousness of 1
; the groom or the cunning antics 1
1 Of the flower girl that -the deeper
meanings seem to roll off. And
that bothers mei
"For we all have a stake in
this. Marriage is not a private
affair, but a contract involving
at least four parties: a man, a
woman, God and the community.
All can rejoice- in the happy
Union of the two who are in
love; all will be hurt if the mar-
riage muddles along, Mires down
or breaks up.
"So it's to many petsple I'm
speaking — t h e, s e prospettive
partners, also brides and grooms
Iof the future, parents, end the
community at large'— as I read
the drvice, ... , .
' "To join tliis man. and this
.
woman in holy matrimony . . •
"I3ecause the familiar words
of the ritual tome easily to me,
I'm prone to send out seine
silent companion -thoughts. To this
girl its Whitt, and her matt: Do
you feel the solehmity—do you
realite, that here is sOrnething
that really is helY?
"Iltiheit you cast your lives to-
gether under this contratt, you
become particular instruments of
God's love, You may honorably
share with Him the mystery and
miracle Of drottiott. Your thin
(leen, born in Ills image. Win
work, play, love -Ana woship—
nkt yeti, according to your ex-
. ample. So your Marriage is sac.
td al a very special way.
"it is therefore not to be eti.
toted unadvisably . .. ,
"The couple befad me has
likely done some soul•searehthg,
perhaps under my guidante, arid
are off to a Proinisitig start, la
any case, the die is east for
them, barring a sudden. retreat
at the altar,
"tut these lints ere impor
tont to everyone hors --you par -
this, youth leders, U. you
grown.ups to 'whom Youngster's
—PleaseSupple
to
ntent
er than the supply warranted.
This may sound very compli-
cated hut I have referred to the
white bean marketing plan be-
fore and would do so again. They
have been successful in giving
a reasonably good established
price to the producer and have
been able to dispose of any sur-
pluses without too much cost to
the organization.
Since this group bas found it
practical to stabilize the home
market and make deficiency
payments on surpluses surely
• Mae arid more farmers are learning how our
quality feed and mashes add to their profits, We
have feed for every dernand--may we help you'?
GRAIN FEED -SEED
FN (natv“rs,4,-,.KtRicorsi
aterloo Cattle'
Breeding Associaffn
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED"
Mo Service
August 13 and 14
The National Association of Artificial Breeders,
an international organization, are coming to Toronto,
Ont., for their annual convention. So that our entire
staff can take advantage of this unusual opportunity
to attehd this meeting, we are closing down for two
days, We have not closed down for holidays for
several years and do not expect to do so this year.
P5n
An Example Of Out Holstein Bast
GLENAPTON BENEPACTOlki EX AND EXTRA
The only living Bx and t 'tire Itelstein btal.
•
for soviet or more Information on ell dairy
' and 'beef breede, cell tolled to:
4 CLINTON, HU 24441
notwoon 7130 and 036 AA.
Obtain The
•
Highest Prices 1
Sell To The
For Your Poultry!
Riverside Poultry
Company, Limited
LONDON
London 7-1230 Phone Collect Hensel! 680-r-2
"Dad, did you pick up my dress?"
That young voice hits Dad where it hurts.
He was so sure he'd remembered. every-
thing. And here it Amelia with A heavy
dele,, demanding het dress which he forgot
to pick up at the cleaners. Whyf grumbles
Dad, don't women do their OWit shopping?
The answer is that farm women usually
cto. lit fad, their shopping, in person. and
by mail, adds up in a lot of money. how
much? Well, last year, farna families put
about. 2,1,4billioiI dollars into eirdilation.
That's Over twice the amount spent for all
the new housing in CAnatia. About 1)000
million dollars wont for household require,
0000e001101100001011010101011001110110000000e1110111integetilleiefieglie01101101iligteleiieelr
fir
•
ments—the things you buy regularly, And
the teat if the money Wet spent for equi:
ment, wages, feed, seed, fertilisers—ever
thing that farmers need to produce to/
irt abundanee.
All this .farin spending or consult
goods and Servinen helps to keep a. gree
'many Cana' diens employed in a wide varlet
businoseg and is a`powerfal stirottlf
to progress and prosperity. This to it0
possible by good farm management,
oleut 1-.itaetiees which ittaude tho use
Modern firm mitchirtoty.
,•SSEYi-HILRRIZtERGUSON LIMITE1
toitogyek.. CAN ADA
•••••-. -