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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-04-15, Page 15Dedicate organ at church service Besides confirming four youths into St. Mary's Anglican Church, Brinsley, the Right Rev. W. A. Townshend, D.D., Suffragan Bishop of Huron, dedicated the organ in the church in memory of the late Mrs. Gertrude Harris, organist at the church for some 25 years. She bequeathed the money for the organ. Mrs. Harvey Hodgins is shown playing the new instrument, while standing from the left are: Mrs. Emerson Woodburn, Greenway, a daughter of the donor; Rev. R. G. Jackson, minister of the church; Bishop Townshend. —T-A photo Plan special event at Bend UC sr f rif-1111"4- yri',11 t rl rl *girt •Irrx irs ri INAA WI. IIIx iAir :I Jr s All Four confirmed at Brinsley The Right Rev. W. A. Townshend, D.D., Suffragan Bishop of Huron, confirmed four youths at a Palm Sunday service in St. Mary's Anglican Church, Brinsley. The four are shown above being congratulated by the minister of the church, Rev. R. G. Jackson, right. The boys from the left are: Allan Wright, Arthur Mercer, Ron Scott and Bruce Biggs. —T-A photo A renowned farm editor reports on a new fertilizer, with a new twist—only one farmer in five can buy it! Read how these top growers are boosting profits by 25%. The big breakthrough in fertilizer BY JOHN STROHM WooL Realize the highest returns for your wool by patronizing your own Organization. SHIP COLLECT TO Our Registered Warehouse No. 1 Weston. Ontario. Obtain sacks and twine without charge from - Exeter District COOP $4,300 Exeter Farm Equipment 235-1380 Main Street North DICK JERMYN THE NEW 6,000 lbs. of VERSATILE POWER TRY AND MATCH IT AT NUFFIELD) 10/60 >PM.. .7. • , Using Na-Churs in the Row To Make His Crops Grow NEWSY TIRE I BATTE NEINBY Your GOODYEAR Farm Service Centre TIRE & BATTERY Centralia youngsters aid crippled children Mrs. Reid Brown and Roxanne of Lambeth were Sunday visi- tors with Mr. & Mrs. J. Thomp- son. Mrs. Wm. Elliott returned home from Victoria Hospital Saturday. Visiting with Mr. & Mrs. Murray Abbott was Sandra Ab- bott of Luca.n for the weekend. Her sister Janice is spending this week with her grandpar- ents. Sunday guests at the home of Mr. & Mrs. George Dunn were Mr. & Mrs. J. T. Paisley, Mr. & Mrs. Martin Herzog of Tor- onto, Mr. & Mrs. Chester Dunn, Miss Shirley Heywood of Exe- ter, Mr. & Mrs. Mervin Dunn of Hurondale, Mr. Ray Horne, Winchelsea, Mr. & Mrs. Ray Laramie, Robert and Jean. Mrs. Lorne Hicks visited with her sister, Miss Wilda Pollock in Kitchener over the weekend. Mr. & Mrs. Alan Johnson and boys of Fanshawe, Mrs. Ilene Johnson and Susan, Mrs. M. Hesselwood and Richard Shoe- bottom of London were Sunday visitors with Mr. & Mrs. Ray Shoebottom and faintly. Recent visitors with Mrs. Fred Harrison were Mrs. Jack Smith and Mrs. Mary Smith of Woodham, Mrs. Don Dixon and family of Hensall. Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Culbert of Niagara Falls were guests this week at the home of Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Huxtable. Mr. Robert Tripp was a re- cent weekend visitor with his parents before returning with his wife and family to Frobisher Bay. Mr. & Mrs. Roy Harrison and Debbie spent Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. James Stewart and family in London. Mr. & Mrs. Doug Wilson and family of Strathroy were Sunday visitors with Mrs. Elmer Wilson. Mrs. Norman Tripp and twin boys returned home from South Huron Hospital Tuesday. By MRS. FRED BOWDEN CENTRALIA Dennis Johnson of Saintsbury spent Saturday with his cousin Mary Shoebottom but the day wasn't all play. Dennis and Mary sold bags of homemade candy to help boost the Bunny Bundle. Their proceeds totalled $6.52, TO VISIT LONDON The Easter meeting of the Centralia CGIT was held April 8 in the basement of the church with an attendance of 10 mem- bers and two leaders. The open- ing exercises were followed by the business with M ar garet liaist in the chair. Plans were made for the visit to London April 22 and the moth- er and daughter banquet. The girls decided to give a donation to Bunny Bundle. The next meet- ing is to be held May 13. The worship service was tak- en by Marie Powe and Margaret Haist. The girls continued mak- ing drums. EASTER SERVICES Palm Sunday service was held in the United Church Sunday morning and in the evening a special service was held with an Easter film being shown, "The Miracle of Love". A num- ber was sung by the women's trio, Mrs. 0. Langford, Mrs. V. Drought and Mrs. R. Wilson and organ and piano duet played by Mrs. Ken Hodgins, organist and Marikay Hodgins. Easter service will be held next Sunday and April 25 the UCW anniversary will be held at 3 pm with the guest speaker being Rev. Harold Snell, Lon- don, a former minister at James Street church, Exeter. ENTERTAIN EUCHRE CLUB Mrs. H.J. MacNeil and Mrs. Gordon Zavitz were co-hos- tesses for the Strathroy ladies euchre club at the former's home Tuesday evening of last week. Ladies from the village who attended were Mrs. Harold Lightfoot, Mrs. Roy Harrison, Mrs. L. Hirtzel and Mrs. Mc- Leod. The latter was the prize winner. PERSONALS Mr. & Mrs. Don Heaman and family of London, Mr. & which is being considered as a centennial project. DISCUSS EASTER The Irwin unit of the Grand Bend UCW met Wednesday, April '7 at the church. Mrs. Susie Devine presided for opening worship. Mrs, Alex Hamilton conducted a B ibl e study on Easter taken from the book "A New Dawn in C anada". An interesting discussion fol- lowed. Mrs. Ed Gill presided for business. Lunch was served by Mrs. Devine. By MRS. WELLWOOD GILL GRAND BEND On Good Friday at 11 am a special worship service, The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be held at Grand Bend United Church with Grand Bend and Greenway churches taking part. Following this service the Second White Cross lunch- eon will be served. All members of congregation, summer residents and visitors will be welcome. spent the weekend at Ottawa with Mr. & Mrs. Barry Hamil- ton and Debbie. Mr. & Mrs. John Kowalchuk, Larry and Reed visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. R. Kowalchuk and family at London. Mrs. Roy Morenz and Mrs. W. Gill attended the spring WI board of directors meeting at Hensall last Tuesday. I'd like to tell you of the most exciting fertilizer idea I've run across in 30 years of farm reporting. It's an idea that's helping top farmers break through their personal yield barriers to such yields as 130-bushel corn . . . 5-ton hay ... 45-bushel soy- beans ... 3000-11i tobacco. The idea is Super Q®, a fertilizer so exclusive you can't even buy it . . . But I'm getting ahead of my story: Two years ago a select group of local manufac- turers were stung into 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 manufacturers pooled their strength in a giant cooperative effort. They called in the best scientific brains, and handed them this "impossible" assignment: 1. Develop the best fertilizer it is humanly possible to make. 2. Forget about price-per-ton. But be dead sure this fertilizer will return the farmer more net profit than any other product on the market. We want to guarantee it will, not just talk about it. 3. Formulate it for the top farmers in each com- munity. We'll refuse to sell it to anyone but the top! 4. Rifle it to fit a specific area . . yes, even a specific moisture level. 5. Make a different fertilizer for corn, for barley, tobacco, wheat, soybeans. 6. Use the best form of nutrients for the crop—not the cheapest or easiest for the manufacturer. Wow! Some of those who were called in declared: "You just can't get all those coons up one tree!" But other scientists rose to the challenge. They tested soil and moisture on top farms in each com- PERSONALS Mrs. Dave Jackson is a pa- tient in South Huron Hospital, Exeter. Mr. & Mrs. Alex Hamilton HISTORY AS PROJECT Mr. and Mrs. W. Gill attended the Lambton County Historical Society meeting Tuesday eve- ning. The main purpose was to discuss the proposed booklet of the history of Lambton County munity . . pored over the latest research . . an- alyzed new manufacturing techniques, new mate- rials, They picked the brains of ag college special- lists, interviewed top farmers on their personal goals. And then they created Super Q. The Super Q program is a national effort. It has all the efficiency and breadth of bigness , . but with the pinpoint local 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 outyielded the best commercial fertilizers by as much as 25%. Successful as they have been with Super Q, the scientists do not see their job as done. As Dr. Ray Starostka, chief formulator for Super Q, explained to me, "Don't memorize the numbers on a Super Q bag; they'll change the minute we get a new test or technique—or as local conditions demand." I certainly don't want to give the impression that Super Q is a cure-all. On the contrary, it will only be sold to top farmers—the top 20% in yields and management. They'll make Super Q pay off. I surveyed 900 farmers in ten areas, and it was really exciting to hear them talk of their goals. Quite a few told me they were shooting for 200- bushel corn . . . 7-ton hay . . 600-bushel potatoes . 60-bushel soybeans . 3500-1b. tobacco .. . 70- bushel wheat 100-bushel barley ... 25-ton sugar beets . .. 30-ton silage... 133-bushel oats. The Super Q Manufacturers are a select group, jealous of their reputation. Among other things, they must agree to disciplinary action should they fall below the rigid standards. They must pledge to provide soil and crop and management services that will help Super Qfarmers make more profit. Premier Holstein Breeder Grows Prize-Winning Crops Kippen lady has surgery By MRS. NORMAN LONG KIPPEN Mrs. Ted Robinson was ad- mitted Monday to Alexandra Marine & General Hospital, Goderich for surgery. Weekend visitors with Mr. & Mrs. N. Long were Mr. & Mrs. John Long of Owen Sound, and on Sunday Mrs. Marguerite Ulch, Windsor, and Mr. & Mrs. Oswald Brown of Detroit, Mich. Mr. & Mrs. Murray McBain of Watford visited recently with Mr. & Mrs. Ross McBeath. Mr. & Mrs. Ross Hutchison, Cathy and Karen and Mr. Wm. Chesney, all of St. Thomas, were Sunday visitors of Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Mellis. SUPER Q FERTILIZER MADE FOR THE ONE FARMER IN FIVE BY READ FERTILIZERS LIMITED ELMIRA and EXETER, ONTARIO or by writing to CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED 40 St. Clair Avenue East, Toronto 7, Ontario. N111111011111111111111111111111111111111111111111H11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111i11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111/111111111E" • T BACK ON YOUR LAND EARLIER 1 11 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 DUAL RIMS With Unverferth 2 MINUTES TO MOUNT 30 SECONDS TO DISMOUNT Can You Beat That? Mr. Farmer: prize for the best field of Oats. John Gillespie has been on the "Na-Churs,P program for 7 years. Says Mr. Gillespie: ',I like the 'Na-Churs' Program. It keeps my soil in top shape. I use ,Na-Churs, in the row at planting time. It gets my crop away, and keeps it growing. "I would highly recommend the ,Na-Churs' Program to any good farmer.', Do you know that Unverferth Dtial Rims will give you the following ad- vantages — • Gets you back on the land earlier • Mounted in 2 minutes with no jack • Dismounted in 30 seconds • Wheel settings may be changed without dismounting duals • Wheel weights may be installed while duals are mounted • Any used tire may be used for a dual • Improves Tractor performance • Increases Tractor power —reduces fuel • Reduces slippage • Increases draw-bar load as much as 50% on soft ground • May pull another piece of machinery on same gear • Cuts down impact breakage and repair bills. CONTACT US — We'll gladly give you the full story on Dual Tractor Rims. NA-CHURS Crop Service offers a complete soil testing service to its customers so that they don't have to guess what fertilizer analysis to use on their crops. For further information and custom planting and spraying, contact one of these men in your area: Jack Gaiser DASHWOOD Phone 80J New 4-Row Planter Regional Manager Newby offers: • complete farm service • warehouse stock • vulcanizing repair • farm discounts 242 Main North NA-CM/RS PLANT FOOD COMPANY Mark Whitney RR 2 CREDITON 234-6479 New 4-Row Planter Don Gaiser 313 Carling St. EXETER 235-1543 235.0330 I ., 1011111 III 11111111111 I l MOW 11 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 11 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 11 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 11 11 11 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 JOHN GILLESPIE, of R. R. 5, Galt, Ont., is well known throughout Canada and the United States, both as a pre- mier breeder of Holstein cows, and an exporter of pure- bred cattle, both to the United States and other countries of the world. In 1964 Mr. Gillespie entered the field competition in South Water loo County, and won First Prize for the best field of Corn. In addition to this, Mr. Gillespie also won first