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The Rural Voice, 1988-09, Page 20/111111R' 1 a • PREMIUM QUALITY FORAGE FROM LOW QUALITY DRY HAY The Injector Wrap process will increase the protein content and nutritional value of low quality hay and straw, increasing PALATABILITY, DIGESTIBILITY and T.D.N. values. Reducing the losses caused by weather can result in up to 30% increase in the volume of useable hay per acre. Turn your existing dry hay or straw into a top producing forage by contacting your authorized INJECTOR WRAP Dealer/Operator. AGRICO CANADA LTD Brucefield itrAgriC0 519-233-3948 ONTARIO MINISTRY OF ACV%ICVLTURE ANO F000 CENTRALIA COLLEGE — a part of the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture & Food Centralia College proudly proclaims over two decades of graduates in careers throughout the agriculture and food system. ®Obtain specialized training leading to exciting employment in management, business and technology. Centralia College offers two year diploma programs in: Agricultural Business Management Animal Health Technology Food Service Management Visit our display in the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food exhibit at the I.P.M. at Stratford. Acincature aro Food ONTARIO Jack Riddell Minister CENTRALIA COLLEGE Huron Park, Ontario NOM 1YO (519) 228-6691 18 PERTH COUNTY SPECIAL EDITION ity on pioneer farms rose dramatically! Those early innovations from John Deere were portents of monumental significance. By 1857, Deere was turning out better than 13,000 plows a year. Today, the corporation that bears his name is the largest farm - equipment manufacturer on the globe. But enterprising Ontario develop- ments also gave the early sod -busters a helping hand. With plowing mat- ches being popular provincial events as early as 1824, rapid changes in the design of moldboards, shares, coulters, handles (stilts), and plow beams produced an amazing variety of plows according to location and soil types. By 1854, Ontario counties and township societies were holding more than 30 annual plowing matches. And from Confederation in 1867 onward, "large and substantial grants were given for plowing matches by both the Federal and Ontario goverments" (Agricultural Gazette, 1915). There was great prejudice against cast-iron plows — some even affirming that cast-iron poisoned the ground .. . Eight years after Canada's first birthday, blacksmith Thomas Yeandle put the bustling town of Stratford on the map with his outstanding Beaver Plow. Taking first prize at the Ottawa Provincial Exposition in the follow- ing year, Yeandle's plow design won acclaim for both the man and his hometown. But from 1885 to 1910, plowing matches began to dwindle in the province. Having generally been held in conjunction with a county fair or agricultural exhibition, the availability of suitable land close to a municipal fairground became a problem. It soon became apparent that plowing skills were diminishing among farmers. It was not until 1911 that a group of farmers concerned with good tillage and soil husbandry met with officials of the new Extension Service of the Department of Agriculture to form the Ontario Plowmen's Association. Breaking Ground: The Story of The Ontario Plowmen's Association, by Amber Underwood, states: "For its first 40 years the OPA concentrated on