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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1975-03-26, Page 15TWO gay Liquid. Manure Systems: Honey 'Wagon! Slurry" Surrey] Either of these Clay Liquid Manure Handling Systems can ' move a month's manure in a single day. Either inject manure ',into fields or spread in controlled 25 to 35 foot swathes. Honey Wagon •has inside the tank, liquid cooled vacuum pump. Slurry Surrey is impeller type System. Available i n 800, 1500 & 2250 gal- lon sizes; with many options. Write for mote information. . R.R. 1 KINCARDINE. PHONE 395.5286 I MINI in am ow um Ili NE MIN MN IN II If you get the feeli good things are happen Ontario wait Ill you see what the new lottery does for us. It's like a kind of awaken- ing. More and more of us are getting into things: Kids' baseball tourna- ments. The Hamilton Philharmonic. Jogging clubs, folk dancing, art classes, Bon- spiels. It's happening all Over the Province and it's only the beginning. Now, we've got a new "Ministry" to help. The Minis- try of Culture and Recreation. .Its job is simply to help each of us get more out of life. At first it will co-ordinate things already under way. Like the Ontario Summer Games, the Science Centre, the Ontario Heritage Foundation. But then it will start help- ing new programs. And there are literally hundreds of oppor- tunities. Travelling theatre groups. New hockey rinks. Support for women in the arts. New libraries, in places where they don't-even exist. Because part of the idea is to give all of us an equal chance to participate, wherever we live. How can we do it all? Well, there's the funds from the new Ontario Lottery, stari. -ing just a few weeks from now. • The Lottery is expected to provide many millidns of dol- lars...And every dollar we then put into the various programs will be for just one reason. To help each of us get more out of 01. life. So this is going-to he one lottery where all of us win. ONTARIO .,LOTTERY CORPORATION. MINISTRY OF CULTURE AND RECREATION. Ontario Harvey McCulloch, Chairman Bobaelch, Ministee 'Marshall Pollock Managing Director Mal6olm Rowan, Deputy MiniSter . WHITECHURCH ,Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Rintoul of Tottenham came on Monday to take Carol, Kimberley and Debbie borne. The girls had been holidaying at their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Black of Belgrave az__i_e-. and Mrs. Gordon parents Mr. and Mrs.:— Wallace Sunday. Conn. HAD 92nd BIRTHDAY Sunday afternoon visitors with This community extends best Mrs. Earl Caslick were Mr, and wishes to Mrs. Mary Chapman Sr. Mrs. CarMan Haines of Wingham at Brookhaven Nursing Home on and in the evening visitors were the occasion of her 92nd birthday Mr. and Mrs. Bill Caslick of on Saturday; March 22. Culross and Mr. and Mrs. Wilfoid Lloyd and Janet' Sleightholm Caslick", Wingham. arrived home last Tuesday after When this community awoke spending some months in Australia Monday morning they found the and New Zealand. They report it most beautiful scenery of every,: was a most interesting, educational, thing coated with ice, which trip with everyone being so resembled fairyland. Highway 86 friendly. • presented no diffieulty for traffic Mr. Bev. Kay accompanied , Mr. but the back roads were treacher- Wayne Baswick to Knox College, ous and our public school pupils Toronto, on Sunday evening, had a holiday. The bus to the high Tom Inglis enjoyed a Beef school went through. Improvement bus' tour last Week to On' Wednesday evening Mr. and Michigan and Ohio, where they Mrs. Joe Guest and 'Mr. and Mrs. toured, Michigan University; 'Seed Jim Struthers of Teeswater visited and Fertilizer plants at: Maumee; with Mr. and Mrs. Don Caesar and Ohio and also visited farms.family- Stephen Inglis of Lucan, son -of Miss Wanda Ireland of Tees- Mr. and Mrs. Jack highs, spent the water spent holidays with her friend' Vickie Scott. Inglis. . ' • This community extends their Mr. and Mrs. Eric Evang of Hyde sympathy to Mrs. Peter de Boer Park were Sunday visitors with his and family in the loss of a dear parents Mr. and. Mrs. Bill Evans. husband and father, and also to Trevor Hunter of London is other relatives: The funeral was spending holidays with his • grand- had from Langside church on Rintoul. ' Mr. and Mrs. Machan and Ross of ', Kitchener spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Fisher holidays with his grandmother, Mrs. Tom Inglis, •Toin and Betty. His sister Miss Bonnie Inglis of Toronto also' spent the week end with them and with her uncle Alex t4, Agricu itural Tidbits With Adrian Vps ' Minister Otto Lang' of the Canadian Wheat Board has been ' urging the Western farmer to grow more wheat. His American count- erpart has been doing the same -thing. Some farmers haven't forgotten lessons from the past, when over-production caused pric- es to slump to such an extent that the farmer was stuck with a loss for every bushel he grew. This resulted in cheap food for the Canadian consumer and for the consumer in the buying countries, while the countries that needed the food still went hungry because they couldn't even pay for the transpor- tation of the grain, 'let alone 'the grain itself. Nothing has changed., Food aid is given in dollars, noein bushels, so with inflation the poor get less. One bumper crop in North America and we will have trouble storing the wheat while the Indians and Rangladeshians still starve. . Everyone agrees that a buffer of grain should be created, but nobody is willing to pay for it. As a result the North' American farmer will.have to pay for the storage and at the' same time his storage will be used against him to depress his price. And if there is a market, the docks will be idle for two months every year because of strikes, not to mention slow work actions in between. The western longshore- men want an increase in annual wages from $17,200 to $22,000 by the end of 1976, and this for mainly unskilled labourer work.' How "long are we going to stand for this? Because it is in my view an essential industry to feed the world, strikes should be banned and any unlawful strike prosecuted with the army moving in when necessary to keep the •grain moving. No skills needed except for maintenance. Most sit on their backside watching the augers and suction-hoses anyway. PAGE FIFTEEN THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO WEDNESDAY MARCH U, 9