Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1958-04-23, Page 104"TritT,,,TZ: err tt iv as, BEFORE IT STARTS Now you can control,-AND STOPS , internal worm damage in your hogs, That's right — continuous medication of your bogs is now possible with the new SHUR-GAIN Medicated HOG FEEDS for SHUR-GAIN 18% PIG BOOSTER-STARTER MEDICATED and SHUR-GAIN 16% 110G GROWER MEDICATED now contain a sensational new antibiotic called HYGROMYCIN B So what does this mean to you? -- just this: SHUR=GAIN, Medicated HOG FEEDS (1) Controls worm damage before it starts. • (2) Kills worms before they mature, so halting re-infection. (3) -Protects against follow-up infection in worm,darnaged tissue. (4) Does not throw pigs "off fe,ed". (5) Continuous protection frorn.more kinds of worms. (6) Makes possible more efficient feed utilization. (7) Requires no change in feeding methods. (8) Does not affect the taste or smell of feed. SWITCH TO SHUR-GAIN 14 OG' FEEDS (MEDICATED) and SWING MORE PI?OPITS YOUR WAY Farmers' 17nlonVield Successful Concert (Intended for lest week) • AUBTITRN----The Huron Celinte' Fariners' Union held a successful concert and • dance In the Legion Hale Clinton, last 'e'ritlety evening, with a huge attendance, The concert was a decided sUce.e$s and was talent from each local inthir.• on County, Dancing was .enjoyeel to Collin orchestra., Holders of the lucky tickets ill the draw were: The Whirlpool dryere, Ray Hanna, Auburn; . the Landrace Hog, (donated by Jack Wilson of Auleurn),. S. 'Rutledge, of Brussels; electric kettle, R, Hen- derson, Seeforth. The directors are very grateful to evereene who worked so laird to make this event so successful. MANN FARMERS PUN TORONTO TRIP ACTIVITE Bluevale Belles Study Snitaticm By Going Forward with . the IWaterloo Cattle Breeding • Association 1 e I-1 i -II1 The IteStlitS Nvill be,' .., i BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING a iii =.- for artificial heeeding sea-ice to the following btoods:— Milstein, J'er'sey, 'Ayrshire, Guernseyi i I Hereford'tpolka and 'horned), Beef Shorthorn (polled and horned), OHO Purpose 8horthorri, i i Ali gns, Charelaise Bed Poll and soon Drown Swint w-• for mote inforination, Orme milled to . - . . Clinton HU2,3441 or Mildmay 130r12 1 • 7 • ' w~arr 40,4!}. 04- *VS *V4M %/ft BLIJEVALE—The fourth meet. Grounds, London, ,Tune 1$, 10 and ing of the Bluevale Belles 4-H Club 20, Professor Orr is well qualified was held in the .sehooltito present the material on this S.S. No. 10, Morris, on Apriltfsee oetef, subject and the information to be The vice-president, Shirley. John. gained from this And the many stun presided. , other •outstanding features of this i Followng the reading r 4 • 0 . the p'arneers' Poultry. Show will will help minutes and roll ball, Miss Patter- I Put money in your Pocke son's letter was read, which stated she would .be present at the April unthriftinees. 22nd meeting, „. ' ; •,, .• ' . I ' There t is ' little , , that can -be • U U U U U U U U U U U • U Gordon Scott Is - 4=H Club President -, The first meeting of the Howick , 4-H Grain Club was held at the el home of Ron McMichael on Friday, April 11th. The 16 members in at- tendance held an election of offi- cera with the following results: President, , Gordon Scott; vice- ei president, Bob Strong; secretary- - II treasurer, Keith 'Wbods; press .= reporter, Ian Mundell • • The- members were given lestru- etion by 'club leaders Ron Mc:- Michael. and Jim Renwick and by Art Bolton, assistant agricultural • representative for Halton County.. El The meeting dosed with the ser- ving of a delicious lunch by Mrs. - ir McMichael. Topic of 4=11 Club 1 ri The Blyth Lions Dairy Calf Club a met in the Belgrave community el board room on: Friday, April 11, E One, of the leaders, Maurice Halla. hare was present. A film was shown on- care- and • management of dairy calves, A representative of the U.C.O. feed division spoke on feeding and management. Mr, Miles, . agricultural repre- sentative of Huron County, gave e few remarks. The club leaders treated the girls and " boys with doughnuts and soft drinks. "X into Win AdVaelee-Proles, We SCOT1 .FARMS COMPLETE DISPERA1,4 SALE OF Dual. Purpose. Shorthorn Cattle 2 Herd Sires 1e Deal Calves (; Females to he held MAY 14th, 1958, at the farm at 1. pen, faietered Itt the sale will be the get of such ontstanditig eiree Teinpiereegh Royal. King (Imp.); Sanford leall'esnaideal Millheot Holler game; Culkeeran Gay .13oy The herd with estriblished in 1081. The fen-odes have all been wee on the terror :and. from outstanding imported double dairy bulls, Herd :fatly aceretlited, Femeles vaeeitiatee. KO,P. Tested For catalogues write; James M, Sena, Scott Poultry Jeanne KR, 20 Seaforth, Onterio FOR MORE CORN per acre PLANT , WARWICK HYBRID SEED A Canadian grown corn especially developed for Canadian climatic conditions. See Your Local Dealer For the Right Variety For YOur Farm Dealers: Jas. R. Coultes, R.R. 5, Wingham Bluevale Milling Co., Bluevale Mac Newton, Wroxeter Warwick Seed Company Blenheim, Kent County, Ontario The. Oldest Seed Corn Company iu Canada. STOP IT! .1%; SOYBEAN YIELDS Sinee soybeans compete very poorly with weeds, it is •advisable to plant in rowe wide enough Apart to allow cultivation •and to use enough. seed to give a final stand of two to three inches between plants, De x,. S, Donovan of the Central Experimental Farm In -Ot- tawa, says the amount of seed re- quired, of course,'will vary with the characteristic seed size of the variety and the percentage germi- nation, A four-year'study of soybean row and plant spacings at the Central Experimental Farm, indicates that wider the most :favourable cendi- thins (that is a chiefly weed-free land ), 'beet yields would likely be obtained from seven-inch, rows and about three-inch spacings between plants withirr the rows. As the use of herbicides becomes more widespread the trend in soy- )wan phtnting will likely be toward solid drilled stands. WOO The. Government Deficiency Pay- ment applies only on properly graded wools.. The directors of East VVawanosh Federation of Agriculture /nee- last Thursday evening in U,S,S, No, 3 East Wawarlosh. William •'-Cow called till meeting to order and also gave a. report on the County Federation meetings. The minutes of the last.-directors' Meeting ware° read by the secre- tary and adopted on motion of Ire-. land and Caldwell. Elmer Ireland spoke briefly on farm marketing and suggested that- a bus be secur- ed for the farmers of the township and. their wives,' to visit the Hog Marketing office in Toronto, and the new U.C.O.- office and • ware- house at Weston, The trip has been tentatively set for about Jun.e 10, Carl Hemingway, Hume County Federation fieldman was present and Went over the subscription list for the ilural -Co-Opertitor. Earl Caldwell mentioned some herds of cattle on the township showed a large number of warbles, A motion' to give a grant 'of $25.00 to help greet a calf stied to the Belgrave School Fair, 'additional of $15,00 each to the Belgrave School Fair Board and the Blyth Agricultural Society was approevd. Federation News By J. Carl Hemingway Ontario Poultry Producers held their annual meeting -in Toronto on April lertheTom Robson was re- elected president; Mrs. Evelyn Mc- Cartney, let-vice, and Albert-Pond, end-vice, The new promotional plan was accepted unanimously, This plan comes under Section 9. of the Farm Products Marketing Act .and auth- orizes the organization to levy a fed for educational purposes and for the advertising and promotion of the product; To make .this plan effective the minister of- agricul- ture must be assured that at least '60% of the •producers approve the plan. The Farm Products Market. ing Board will decide whether pub- eivirereetiee,thigs or petitions will be re- rl If the producers approve the plan a maximum of 2c a bird on poultry and ee on each' 30 dozen crate of eggs or portion thereof will be .dedueted.'at point of sale and will be remitted to the organi- zation e A percentage of this Will he returned to the counties and the rest will be used to finance the Ontario organization and to pro- motei eggs. te better handling, sale e In Ontario we Mute compete with western- producers and this can most easily be done by pro- ducing' only high quality eggs and by taking the necessary steps to be sure that -they reach the consumer In the same good- condition, 4 very large percentage of our, eggs are 'still produced by flocks of 100 to 400 birds and too many of these producers fail to 'gather eggs often enough and fail to cool them quickly, A few -dealers fail to provide protection while masking pick-ups in the hot weather. Few retail out- lets provide refrigerated counters but those who do, have increased their sake greatly, In one store window is Toronto three large baskets of eggs. were on display last Sunday afternoon, Theme eggs must have been. sitting in the sun part of e Satenelay, all clay Sunday: and I'm 8t1.1;b< ':the pUrchaser on Monday wonidnet -be pleased With the quality of the eggs. •••• • ftfuustfilittn tfoltertifN • rusPertmt, with Seleeted Additions Selling -MONDAY, APRIL 28th At 7.00 p.m. (Twilight Sale) 06 _HEAD hi the ;500elt Salty Mae- aged by Plays Petals tainted. • Selling at the Meer Sales Arena, Oakville, Ontario, • The GRANVIIE DISPERSAL ntr l'eee a earriplet,e bed hie Peel County and Gletiattint biereda big, all hierehee edeVell to Central tentriele Unit isieetl. These are big cattle with ION Of •deVelOpernait. Selected eittelee 'are, part inanely outstanding teeth the ;nettle of Mer,e, Ribbon Ihrelt e 400040 Renee -and Rilebient Farms among titheree. the kind Ilene* friettidein the'Ner Donal' or Alleteleadhiet Solna, All Pliny AeeetrilitH, Itiletrilleeted envie Officially Vete:Meted.- HAYS FARMS' LIMITED iitlo Melliagetre • , • thief 410 Oeltellie• thititele yyrFj- -girls were also asked to pasteurize milk in two ways. The meeting edjouened after queries were answered, Management Is 4-H StudieS Health, Good Citizenship The fourth meetipg of the "Ad- vice Seekers" was held at S.S. No. 9, April 16, with 12 members pre- sent. The president, Rosalind Los der, presided, with Mary Taylor as pianist. The meeting opened by singing "0 Canada" followed by the 4-H Pledge and motto. The minutes were read by Ruth Tay- lor and following a ahort businees discussion the meeting was turn= ed over to Mrs. Lapp, - The objective for' this Meeting was "to help make girls aware of the connection between good health and good citizenship", They dis- cussed Sanitation, which included micro-organisms, water supply, safe milk, sewage dispcisal, the house- fly and precaution in case, Of in. feetioris. All *enjoyed a ,slot on posture, put on by Ruth Taylor,' Mary Lou Moffat and :13etty Zinn. The home assignment was to make 'a list of people who have made an* outstanding contribution to health; write a story de One of these In the 'record book; keep re. cord hook up to date. The meeting closed by shiging "The More WO Get Together", The members are looking forwatd to a visit from, Miss Shirley Patter- son, the •home economist, at the beet meeting On April e8r Sniffling Pigs May' Be Diseased Sneezing and sniffling in pigs may be eelatively harmless, but ail too often the Oanadian Veteri- nary IVfedieril Aesotiatiert watts, they May be the early signs of the diSetiste atrophic thinitle. it is a condition which causes a wasting away of the bones in the nose, The stricken anbiattle she* a leethler dished iii -or tWiate ed face and' often are very suseep. tibia to respiratory diseases, Row- eyst The greatest 161401 comes frpni. pot* Utilitetkeit Snit ifelletst :fleyveva,. a farmer may' StiVet valuable -blond lines if he -will iso- late at 'leeene the healthy- pigs he wishes le keep as, founda. titan stock. A viitei.oerian he- consulted to supervise -the proa groan to prevent reitreakm, The new Brussels Livestock Sales Barn will open for its first weekly livestock sale, FRIDAY, MAY 2nd 1/4 mile east of Brussels on the county road THE SALES WILL COMMENCE EVERY FRIDAY AT 1 P.M, . Rate — All Cattle, $2.00 per head - Calves and' Hogs 3% up to $500,00 • 2% over that amount A new set.of Fairbanks-Morse scales with etameed ticket's will be installed and government inspected by the opening day, FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT Sale Managers — Hugh 'Pearson, Brussels Phone. 60x Jack Bryans, Brussels Phone 18J4 Auctioneer — Harold Jackson 1(1,23 U r Cleaning'Eggs —A Chore? 'Much haw been said in recent years fee and against the various inethede of cleaning eggs for mar.. ket or for hatching purposes, There have been arguments stating that the cleaning of eggs under some conditions lowers their quality, while others will state that all eggs 011001 be cleaned to guaran- tee e uniform high .grade for either commercial or hatching eggs, Do you know the facts and prse cedures on the cleanine rof eggs? Are you aware of the lest equip- ment available to make your egg cleaning chores almost a pleasure? a'This Business of Cleaning Eggs" will he the -topic Af a talk to be given by Professor H, L. Ore. Poultry Department, 0.A.C., Guelph, at, the Poultry Iridustry Conference and Exhibition being staged at the Western Fair WINGHAM Way, April 23, 1958 ROI " w SPACINOS ANO Secure the utmost; by patronizing your 'own organization. SHIP COLLECT TO out leegietered Wevelionse No, I. Weston, Ontario Obtain sacks and twine without charge from GEORGE IIALDENBY Holyrood :3101eTelaY eleMICHAEL , KR. No. 2, Wroxeter NORMAN alcDOWELL, ' Ilelereve . • a or by writing to CANADIAN CO-OPE'RATIVE - WOOL GROWERS LIMPLED 217'llay Street, Toronto, Canada ' 11111111111.1M11101.1111,11111L ONTARIO herd, Then the hog house and equipment must be completely .cleaned and disinfected before more hogs are. purchased, Breeding stock should be purchased from a herd known to pe free of the ease, T , Go Forward With the AaMOM OSSEW = ' Angus Bulls Added • . • _ . . ji aleinloehian 2330th, — born September 2nd„ 1965, 1955„weight over 1600 lbs., brother to the famous 09th. 'in the Sehenk herd — anti Eileenmere of Dandy Lawn — bred by 'George 'Ti. Storey of Guelph — make up the Angus bull battery. They are( tops for Angus (pettily and come from tee , - • , ancestry with good size... ' . . = 11 ' .ANOTHER, CHAROLAISE HAS ALSO BEEN ,ADDED beeause.of polluter" clemand fair this: NEW ; . ' RIMED. rel.-, i:lr t r - • * GRAND RANG EXCEL is from a top V.O. darn with ,a 2X tecord'a"24,010 milk - 1,1109 fat - 4.2%and ti 9 laetati ons of 1.65328 016 fat - 3.76 test: She is also the dam of Franco, a highly proven bull in the Oxford Unit. Exee I's second dam is classified Excellent with 20982 / mills - 808 fat - AL CLIFF MASTAIAX There are seven Excellent mid 6 Y.G. animals iii this pedigree, His seven nearest dani average 900 lbs. fat-from 21000 lbs. of milk. He carries strong Mount Victoria breeding-. the pedigreee 'of these two new hulls „Appear in the 'current Ihetter Bovine Bulletin. tine:ma-rotors employed at, the different offices are as follows:.- 7 at Waterloo,,, e at Gait:lob, 8 at Arthur, 4 at Polnierston; 4 at Formosa, 2 at Ta ra, 3 at Ithicaediee, 4 at Clinton, 2 full time Veterinarians, 1. Lab technician, 3 office secretaries, a manager and an tweet-alit manager. It is interesting to rote that artificial breeding ia Ontario has increased to the point Wh011'e we over 200 people are fully Mimed in this industry pine all the members of the belied of itheellas that have Mit intieli 'time' and thought into its development, Two Holsteins Recently Added- Staff Increased to 37 Full Time EMPLOYEES • U a U U U n U iii U. it i U ' Life Menalierillip only $5.00 ,..: , $5.00 per cow` for rnenalmrs ' i , ,,„.,, $6.00 per cow fornownrcembera , i tioniiiiiicliiiiMilifilithitilifilittlifiliiiitrililiftliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiitiiiiitmiltitivilliciiiniiimiliiiiimilif 1-1 Please note that our summer calling hours, effective May let., I 1.30 to 9.30 a.m. I Between: 7.30 and 10 a.itn; on week days -s 7.30 and 9.30 a.m. on Sundaysand holidays i It .4 are from a F... recommended in the way of treat- micro-organiSins, house flies' and scientists have Peacock and notes were given on: Sanitation wahealiecussed by litre. Mont that offers any great deal of hope. However, veterinary medical developed their control, prevention of spread- a pro- gram which will prevent and elitei- ing infection and other topics, nate the disease from most herds, The dali motto and, creed were I This program cane for drastic given to- the-members 'and re, First' action: The farmer must be willing Aid quiz was answered, I to either destroy,or.isolate the af- For the next meeting the mem- ,eeotee pigs then market the entire bers are to make a list of people ' ,. , . who have made an 'outstanding ' • ' • - - 11 1! contribution to health and to write 11 111114111111111111111111111111141111111110111111111111111111111111M111111111111111111111111101111111111111111111111111111111111119111111111111111M11111101115I11111111111111111 a story about one of these. 'The i 1 , . . ,. aterloo Cattle Breeding Association 1, , 1111 t.* "WHEREBETTER BULLS ARE USED" , N1 . - ' 1111 . . . ee re•re From Deceit-ribber 1/57 to Alarela 31/58, eve have II ea eme ' inseminated 18,.134 first service cows for an inereese •i! over the same period , of- lase year of 2,00e rows or [TO 17.2%. Should this increase be meintained for the 1:1i: re. balance of this fiscal year, it would mean an iurease 110. , of 10,032 cows or a. GREATER TOTAL INCREASE 1 ' -- THAN HAS EVER, BEEN EXPERXENCED IN OUR ee , ENTIRE HISTORY except in 1952 when the territory I Wes expanded and the seevice extended to include all i ti! the breves. OUR GOAL FOR THIS YEAR IS 'I ,,, 68,000 COWS. --ea- Hereford Bulls Added • 111, . l "El . . , -z-• With emphasis era PERFORMANCE TESTING, and freedom from the dwarf Meter as well as -MI MGR QUALITY, six Hereford bulls hay e been added In the Weterloo bull stud. rii At the. Ooterio Bull sale, the top horned. bull, who was the fastest; gaining bull ever to go through' to the government feeding station at Guelph; and the top polled Hereford bull, 'were, purchased, I At the Panteeli farMs testing station ,al Panhandle, Textile the TOP HORNED and TOP POLLED Fli: . bills • were pilrelleasete The top two bulls at the Dixon Springs Experiment Station in Illinois 1 were purchased. Performance testing has been carried on for ten years at the Dixon Springs Idx- II peeiment Station.. ' .-- - • ' ' ill We believe that the performance, tests of our new Hereford hull battery cannot be duplicated in a ,.„ a , any Unit. e. 64,4lito,44,`Z• • glebe, erepereve ' C.4