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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1998-03-18, Page 66Page 10A — Farm Progress '98 A.& • Z•1•111/1WANIICBIWALE u. 0 fr w cc z 0 U a•Z• R R • # : •'N R • #: & e.o.M. MOTOR GR L. !pi - -1 _. . . N. r as, „ix - 1997 DODGE PICKUP Green, 23000 kms, 5 litre with air. AffA (Certitied)s1 9,900. 1995 LUMINA VAN LS 3800 motor, Pearl Waite. (Certified) '12,900. 1996 CHEV EXT. CAB Red, 55000 kms, air, cruise, til. (Certified) '18,900. 1994 GMC SL 68000 kms, 4x4, Blue. '12,900. 1991 DODGE 1 TON Dually Cummins diesel, 200000 kms. Loaded. (Certified)$1 4,995. 1994 CHEV SILVERADO EXT. CAB 350, Maroon, Grey. (Certified) '17,995. 1991 GMC 3500 1 TON VAN (certified) '6995. 1991 4 STAR LIVE- STOCK TRAILER 28' aluminum. (Certified) '9,500. 1991 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA Diesel. (Certified) 14,995. 1988 CHEV PICKUP 2500 Series with topper. (Certified) 55,995. 1992 CHEV CHEYENNE 4x4 With air. 122000 kms. Red. (Certified) '1 2,900. 1991 GMC SLE 3/4 ton longbox. 139000 kms. (Certitied)'12,900. 1991 FORD EXPLORER 4x4 Black XLT (Certified)$9,995. 1992 SAFARI All wheel drive. 108000 kms. Luxury louring. '10,900. All trades welcome. MOTOR CAR LTD. 198 Main Street, EXETER "Where Quality Cars & Trucks is our Motto” 235-3698 ZWIZIMIMIIPITME ZWINIEMNURIZIMEC . SFIL9SI:iQI IE PZ C'8 E•11 J J k • L•i=IePLI=C�i•Z • CORNER OF #83 & 4 • Clarke knows kids Farm Safety Association do learn the message marks 25 years of service • from page 9A day. The machine wouldn't work properly so I came back to the bamyard and I had turned the pto off, but in truth I had the tractor still running. I got the thing lifted up on the hydraulics and hadn't put blocks underneath it. " His daughter, who had gone through the Bruce County program, lectured him for not doing it the properly. "I was about to hit the roof, because I was cross and bad tempered cross and bad tempered because the thing wouldn't work. 1 realized she was right and that she had learned some very sound lessons at quite a young age," he says. "I think 1 realized that maybe you're wasting time talking to people like me because we know every- thing when you get to be my age," quips Clarke. "Those young people de learn these messages a it's a worthwhile projec keep hammering away at. DID YOU KNOW Farm tractors are asso- ciated with 47.5 % of farm -related fatalities. Tractor rollovers and runovers are the leading causes of •death. In most cases, there was no ROPS on the tractor. The farm operator is the person at greatest risk of being fatally injured. Source: Canadian Agricultural Injury Surveillance Program, October 1997 The Farm Safety Association will be celebrating its 25th anniversary in 1998. For the last 25 years the Association has been pro- moting safety to Ontario's agricultural community and has developed educa- tional programs used around the world. The 25th Annual .rence of the Farm „ty Association will be ,,.;id on March 23, at the Sheraton Fallsview Hotel and Conference Centre in Niagara Falls. This year's conference program has been devel- oped in co-operation and conjunction with the Ontario Agricultural Human Resource Committee. There will also be a greatly expanded display area featuring var- THIS Jnr GIlElIBON 11111 EIIIYfflhNC 101 01* Buy a new Born -Tough White 8010 or Field/Nester "r Sanas tractor by Mardi 31. 1988 and fak. 24 months of absolutely no -Interest financing. it's the kind of no-nonsense oiler you'd expect from a new generation that works hard to make thongs easy for you Choose from 8 all-new models—from 70-145 PTO hp --engineered from the ground up to deliver reliable performance aro more comfort than ever lesions. From their sleek, low profile styling to the clean -burning Cummins ins B -Serbs engines, they're reedy to prove what a new 8! Wuei ten take adwxpa at the wood introductory inenang rale. 9tA harry—IMS eller ands March 31.1115. '1WW. e b..... n3 a-... aft Wass Ma W M.all.. r wawa a.....WI . ee...n.n..aw aa... law wart a rale award I Wawa 37 MAW. taw.. Waite a I I% W awl* 11% 411 ..w/.. .10.1. M wiat 111% WOO wan. .ben aeon. nap wast awe 03 Wawa, WWW itpp,wM,•w./.•410. b' 0.11,0. 14 01Wr/r q,0 w/M10 00. Aub lamb],. ,901 ® reeeaelss WHITE ions safety companies and agricultural organizations. Special displays on the history of the farm safety movement in Ontario will also be highlighted. This year's program highlights a number of excellent speakers on vari- ous health and safety top- ics. The Conference's keynote speaker is Roy Bonisteel, of Trenton. Roy is an author and hosted -CBC Television's "Man Alive" program. Occupational Respiratory Disease in Agriculture will be the topic of Dr. David Muir, M.D., Professor, Department of Medicine, McMaster University Medical School, Hamilton, Ontario. Some of the other speakers include: Janis Seaman, Peel Board of Education, Mississauga, will introduce the new tractor safety computer module being developed for the Farm Safety Association. Glen Wright, chair, Workplace Safety and Insurance Board will address the delegates. Ted Mouradian and Humphry the Camel, of St.Catharines, will talk about why "Life's Too Short" and also provide a wrap-up for the Conference. Pipeline Safety on Farmland will be the sub- ject of a talk by Gary Robinson, manager of environmental health and safety, Trans -Northern Pipelines, Richmond Hill. HAUGHOLM BOOKS RR#1 Brucefield Ont. NOM 1J0 Classic 'flractor, Car, and Gas Books Decal Sets for older Tractors and Gas Engines PH. (519) 522-0248 FAX: (519) 522-0138 Weekdays 9 am -12 noon; 1 pm -5 pm Weekends by appointment or chance One mile East of Brucefield on Con. Rd. 3 Allan J Haugh Sales & Service of •Poulen Chainsaws •Weed Trimmers •Outboards •Generators •Lawn mowers RAY ULCH WELDING Dungannon 529-7647 C&M TRANSPORT 610 Inglis Street We Sell 1Zetitr,.r9, Ecce Sem-eel Lucknow 528-3535