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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1962-05-09, Page 9
-a }Ai • • • • 4 a ii MAKE SURE YOU GET YOUR ATLAS' ALL-PURPOSE SAFETY LANTERN iT'S A LANTERN, spreading a bright light evenly over a large area. IT'S A SEARCHLIGHT with a powerful, tong range IT er- bium. IT'S A SAFETY BEACON with a red flashing light Fs for emergencies. �" Whether you're at home or in the field, on the road, on the trail or in a boat, you'll find the Atlas all-purpose safety lantern the handiest, most useful lantern you've ever seen. This offer is for a limited time only so make sure you get your Atlas all-purpose safety lantern soon t YOURS NOW FOR ONLY (ihcluding the Atlas Heavy Duty battery) MUCH BELOW ITS ACTUAL RETAIL VALUE (pias sales lax where applicable) 9 AVAILABLE ONLY FROM THE IMPERIAL ESSO AGENT WHOSE NAME APPEARS BELOW VSA Aa Tiffin, Wingham ALWAYS LOOK TO IMPERIAL. FOR THE BEST BIIIUIIIUIII■111111II111111•i11IE;IItikillillllall IIfII'llnlitil IIU'IINVIlliellt1IUIIIUIIIUII1111IUIII■IIIUIII■111■111■I1]UI1i■I11111111IIP1IIUIIIUII1� a ill OMC LAW TEST WEIGHT ,a s with amazing, ultra -light Magnalite housing EST SAFES MOWING y41 All models meet or exceed LAWN -BOY engine accepted safety standards with rugged, lightweight LAWN -BOY 19" Dual -Purpose Two ways to mow—discharge clippings onto lawn or into bag (with optional easy - attaching grass catcher assembly). New Magnalite housing makes it ultra -light, easier handling for anyone. ONLY $87.50 LAWN -BOY 19" Quietflite Sound conditioned for peaceful, whisper. quiet mowing at any time, Covered engine, rubber mountings, and big 90 cu. in. muffler smoother sound. Lightweight, easy to handle, vibration free. ONLY $99.50 R. LAWN.BOY 21" Grass Catcher Vacuum sweeps clippings and leaves into catcher bag . , . or discharges onto lawn as you wish, Lightweight Magnalite housing. Super -powered engine. ONLY $102,50 LAWN -BOY 21" Automower Self propelled. Roll -control handle gives instant, safe starting and stopping. Catches clippings or dis- charges onto lawn. Super -powered engine. ONLY $139.50 Get a'• LAWN -BOY Grass-. Catcher POWER MOWHt- ALI, MODELS' IN BEAUTIFUL GARDEN -FASHION COLORS SERVICE? — You Let! AN)) the !hitt- of expert service we offer is your guttrnistee of LASTING Sutisfaetiou, FURROW AND FALLOW OF MANY THINGS Jay Fairbairn Once again the farmer is being !Aruna(' for sanacthing that .he has no control over or if he isn't being blamed by everyone, at least he Is. the on • who • e • eventually. c will Sufi t c vc Gina Y We had the strontium 00 scare Ovid probably will have it again), the tainted meat uproar, the chol- esterol business (which is still not finalize(!) and now the poor egg producers are getting the salmon- ella finger pointed at Glum. Some nitwit even suggested producers should be forced to pasteurize eggs! Caul you imagine whipping pasteur- ized egg white or how would one go about frying a pasteurized egg: Anyway, why should shell eggs be lnisteurized even if It were feas- ible? Samonellsr Pullorum is one of the pullorums that we started to eradicate from flocks 40 years ago w.h•'n I was a boy on an Ontario farm. ' 13y diligent research, blood testing of breeding flocks, sanita- tion and proper feeding it has vir- tually been eliminated. When .a man like Dr, C, A. Morrell, head of the Food and Drug Directorate in Ottawa says: "Samonella almost never occurs in fresh eggs" you know that t'a he true, Dr. Morrell is a very cautious man ---•in his posi- tion he has to be --and he never, never makes a statement he cannot back up completely. Everybody in the industry is aware of the fact that chances of this salmonella that has been caus- ing the trouble coming from the fresh egg are very, very slight, but when somebody who should know better points toward the producer the latter generally ends up being the goat. Probably, this poor fel- low who suggested that producers should pasteurize eggs really meant that the processor who breaks .and powders or freezes eggs should be forced to pasteurize his product. This is exactly what the Food and Drug Directorate intends to do. Egg producers in Ontario whole- heartedly support this step accord- ing to Tom Robson, president of the OEPA. However, he does point out that any danger to consumers' through the use of fresh eggs is not only quite remote but almost non- existent. Anyway, baking or cook- ing would destroy all the bacteria. There is much more likelihood of salmonella being spread by person- al contact, the same as measles or I anything else, than there is through. using fresh eggs. It might be wise to avoid using products containing dried eggs until new regulations take effect, but it is hardly fair bo the egg producers if people stop using eggs because of this latest scare. They are having enough trouble By Ambrose Hills THE 1'OOILEJf COUNTRIES You hear a lot these days about the under -developed eowttries, and what should he done about them. Everybody has the answer for them. Hwy need prosperous Indus- tries, they need capital invested in !hent, they need to produce goods that will sell in world ,markets. Want to start a factory? You would be welcomed in many an under - developed country. They QUALITY NOW Now's the time to take a close look at your hay. "It's a good way to pick up last years mistakes," says Ontario Agricultural College's crops extension specialist, Stan Young, The reason for poor woody hay is that it was far too late when it was cut. Another common Loss of hay quality is leaf shatter. The biggest single reason for leaf breakage and loss is had timing of hay operations, or simply haling too dry, Seed on the grasses or legumes is another sign that the hay was cut too late. "The right time to cut hay is when the most feed value per acre is obtained," says Young. "And that is when the alfalfa or clover is just beginning to bloom." as it is without losing markets for no good reason. We hear that the breaking trade --- the people we've just been talking about --are bring- ing in 10,000 'cases of eggs from Poland. These will not be marketed as fresh eggs but will go into the production :of egg melange widely used in the baking trade and the very stuff that is being blamed for this salmonella infection. We won- der whether egg producers in Po- land have practically eliminated the salmonella pullorum +from their flocks as Ontario—and Canadian producers have? President Robson of the Ontario Egg Producers Association says the drastic reduction in the number of producers in Ontario and the regu- lar recurrence of such threats to the egg price structure as this im- portation from Poland underlines the necessity for organized action by Ontario producers. He means one marketing plan for eggs. "On- tario producers have a reputation for a high quality product," Mr. Robson maintains, "And we must press for action that will give con- sumers assuranc that they will re- ceive nothing but this high quality." Trachoma: rGreafesf Threat To Man's Sight 1 BEFORE It Can Be Cured k Trachoma is the greatest single threat to the world's good sight. An estimated 500 million people, one sixth the population of the earth, are afflicted with this serious eye disease. All of them suffer visual defects of one kind or another. To many trachoma brings progressive loss of sight. On some it inflicts total blindness. Yet if treated soon enough trachoma is a relatively easy blindness in the United States, disease to cure, as the pictures and 14 percent in England. In of the little Indian girl above England 13,000 people have lost show. On the left she appears their sight through glaucoma, while still suffering from tra- 30,000 in the United States. chonia -- eyes secreting and And so it goes around the squinted with pain, vision al- w o r Id. The human and eco - ready impaired. On the right nomic damage blindness and she appears after a few weeks partial blindness inflict on the treatment with antibiotic oint- world are beyond computation. anents -- pain gone, eyes and In the United States alone year - vision clear. _XII cost of welfare services and • This little girl's case might relief payments for the blind be taken as symbolic of the is estimated at $350 million. problem of blindness around the It was in recognition of the world. For not only trachoma urgent and global scope of the but the great majority of alt problem that the 109 Member infectious diseases of the eye States of the World Health Or - that cause complete or partial ganization selected "Preserve loss of sight can be cured if Sight—Prevent Blindness" as cauthe theme for the celebration rnostttcan t t belnpreve. �tedrbefore April 7 of "World Health Day", they even begin. h h e 14th anniversary of the United Nations specialized a - There are some 10 million gency's foundation in 1948. blind people in ethe world, a d tea p py A b o u t 650,000 of them are In his message for the an - children. Many researchers put niversaiy, WHO's Director Gen- eral Dr. M. G. Candau says: Gen - the figures even higher, at a"' "on this World Health Day I round 15 million and one mil- would urge governments, health agreeo respectively,fullytwo- sods oBf all administrations a n d p e o p 1 e two-thirds o£ have everywhere to review what is darkness need never have being done arid what could be occurred, done to prevent needless loss Trachoma, stnallpo:., onchoc- of sight. The knowledge is there erciasis, vitamin deficiency, cat- —it remains to apply it on a araC.t, glaucoma, and aecidents wide enough scale to protest are the great cause of most the sight of rnillionS Who, with - blindness. Glaucoma, is respon- out this help; are doomed to sable for 11,6 percent of all darkness." AFTE l; would give you attractive tax cone cessions. Your labor costs would be law, and labor legislation would protect you front unjustified strikes er -:rippling demands, In short, of- ficially and in every .other way the arms of the under -developed na- tions would he spread wide open to receive yotl. Why would they want you?. Not because they like the way your hair is parted, or the color of your eyes, They want you be- cause you would invest money, pro- duce goods that would sell, create jobs that would improve the living standards of the people. They want you so they'll have big plants, with parking lots full of the automobiles of the workers, and stores which cater to the workers with a steady pay cheque. Now think on these things, Then remember this Canada is, in many ways, an under -developed country, We just don't realize that it is. We are acting as if ours were a fully -matured economy, with plenty of people and a lig domestic mark- et, We are spending and acting as if we had it made, We no longer welcome industry with open arms -- htstear} we grasp at it with out- stretched arms, grabbing for tax money. Canadians face a rough climate, It is no easyland. One crop a year if you are lucky. The freezeup is severe. If you were considering a factory, all those things might scare you from Canada. Load on top of our natural handicaps a tax burden that is just about the high- est in the world, plus .r, philosophy of "soak the corporations," and you'll sec that this particular coun- try isn't doing much to encourage the industry it now has, let alone bring new industry here. Isn't it time we smartened up? TURNBERRY TWP. SCHOOL AREA BOARD MiLL RATE LOWERED The regular meeting of Turn - berry Township council was held in the community hall, Bluevale, on Saturday evening, May 5th at 8.30 p.m. with all members present and Reeve A. D. Smith presiding. The minutes of the last regular and special meetings were read and adopted on motion by William Dett- man and Edward Walker. Communications were received from the Department of Highways, Toronto, John G. Berry, County Clerk -Treasurer; Welfare Officers' Association and M. S. Hurst, fire marshall. Walker - Foxton— That the Mu- nicipal Corporation of the Town- ship of Turnberry approves the re- quest of the public school board of Howick Township School Area for the issue of debentures in the amount of $320,000 by the Corpoet- tion of the Township of Howick for the construction and equipping of a new public school. Mulvey - Dettman--- That William B. Cruikshank be appointed as building inspector for the Township of Turnberry. Foxton - Walker-- That By-laws No. 4, 4-62 be given a third reading and finally passed, signed by the reeve and clerk and the seal of the corporation attached thereto. By -Law No, 5-62 Tax rates for the Township of Turnberry shall be as follows: County, 13.7 mills; high school, 12 mills; hospitalization and com- pensation, 1.5 mills; reserve fund, 1 mill; residential and farm, 16 mills; commercial, 18.5 mills; com- mercial, 13 mills. Calross school area, residential and farm, 14 mills; commercial, 16 mills. Howick School Area, residential and farm, 11.7 mills; commercial, 13 mills. Federation of Agriculture, .4 mills. Bluevale street lights, 2.3 mills; Lower Wingham street lights, 2.8 mills, Wingham Separate School, residentlal and farm, 20.5 mills; commercial, 22.7 mills. Dog tax shall be the minimum rate as set by the dog tax act. Warble fly spraying, 11 cents per head if paid in cash; 13 cents per head if put on the roll; 10 cents per head for es,- Powder Powder and inspection; 8 cents per ■ head for inspection only. Accounts on the O'Malley, Frio- burgerand Black drains, if not collected before tax time, will be A includedin l above. 'A Total assessment for 1962 is $1,706.276.00. ( 5" Dettman-Mulvey • That the • general and road accounts be passed aad as pen Genndpe..rail Aeeorwseitsted, The Brookhaven Nursing Home, ! A $239.25; Callander Nursing Home,'1- $79.75; Meyers Meat Market, relief, 11_ $48.04; Wingham Advance -Times, IN 512.60; Lewis Flowers, wreath, 'Glen Wingham MTaneo-Thnes#, Wednesday, 19ia; 1903 il?aEe NttM $10,30; John V. Fischer, part saiary, $45.00; Welfare Administration, $3,40; Receiver -general, $12.48; J. J, Elliott, part salary, warble fly in- apeetor, $100.00. ray Bolt George Gallaway, 5214,38: Wil- liam Mundell, $166.67: Ted Hollo- way, 54,00; William. Reich, 54.00. Itotut Accounts State Farm Mutual, ins. on grad- er, $,,6.70; Sttte Farm Mutual, ins, on truck, 526.19; Andy's Garage, oil change on truck, 59.97; Wroxeter telephone calls, $21,95; Alexander's Hardware, hooks, links, $3.07; Ar. gosy Carriers Ltd., transport charg- es, 52.25; Listowel Transport, traps - port charges, 52.25; Canada Culvert Co„ culverts and signs, 5156.34; Su. pertest Petroleum Corp., oil, $3.3.31; J. D. Adams Co, Ltd., grader re- pairs, $148.92; Daily Commercial News, $10.80; Harry Mulvey, mile- age, $5.00; William Dettman, mile- age, $8.00. Paxton-MulveyThat we do now adjourn to meet on June 2nd at 1,30 p,m, A, D. Smith. Reeve J. V. Fischer, Clerk Golfer: If you laugh at nue again 1'11 knock your block off. Caddie: Haw, haw, you wouldn't even know what club to use. DEDICATE GIDEON BIBLES AS A CONTINUING MEMORIAL 'ALLY be tlorlated through your local funeral director •Gt , ,11. - HOSPITALS, PRISONS I WISH I COULD FEEL, AS SAFE ABOUT MY INVESTMENTS AS 1 DQ ABOUT MY PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED AT VANCE'S DRUGSTORE LOCAL TRADEMARKS, Ix. IN A SPIN OVER MONEY? Talk it over with a Niagara Loan Advisor. It's his job to help you! Niagara loans are made up to 22,500 — and are usually completed in less than a day. 'Remember, you will always be welcome at Niagara. NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Largest An -Canadian Consumer Loan Company • 307 10th Street HANOVEIR. Telephone 810 172 Ontario Street STRATFORD Telephone 271-9010 1IUltlPl IIUIIIUI IIUII IBI I IUI I IUI I IUI I IBI I IBI I IUiIIP1I IBI I IUB 1110! 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