The Wingham Advance-Times, 1973-03-22, Page 19ca
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$y M. N. Tesler
We are coming tip tothe p of
ate.
and
witched
to be tuts'is a
cusp carefully. if
you were < born in the -period.
betweenhetweenNarch le and 24 then the
chaff are dy ., can . fool
Your4lud they had better nAnPeouple ote ►..
�chave.
c�% k>I�iw
are up to. The
as. 'is thatthe very cry psychic
Piseean is workin cahoots
with the wild intuition of des.
While both Pim and Aries, en-
joy sOstood, we. are goingto move
to another area today with what 1
call Heavenly Hamburger.
Jew this recipe you A will need
kik one pound, or more depending on
how many people you intend to
feed, of the best beef you can
afford and want to allow y. ourr self
to eat in ground -up fashion, Get
your butcher to put it through the
-grinder' twice—this is very Im-
portant. s -
Heavenly Hamburger
1 pound ground beef
salt to taste
black pepper, to taste
r • (freshly ground)
'A cup melted butter
1 cup lemon. juice
> cap liquid mustard
sherry or wine to make mustard
The above ingredients, as you
can see have been adapted to, one
pound of meat. You have to adjust
• everything proportionately if you
�► use more than one pound.
1. Make your meat into a -flat loaf
in a baking pan. •
2. Cover the top with salt and
black pepper; then broil fiercely
for 10 minutes until , it is crusty
brown on the outside and tender
pink on the inside.
3. Then pour the melted butter,
lemon juice and liquid mustard
over the meat.
This is an absolutely delicious
hamburger loaf and makes a
main dish even for special com-
pany.
' A reader writes: Mrs. S. K.
from Viscount, Sask., gets' a free
copy of my best-selling book "It's
Fun to Fondue" for the following
question;
"I enjoy cooking but I always
find that working around the kit-
chen gives me a backache. I was
boon September 30. Would this be
significant?" '
IMPLEMENT SHEDS
Milking Parlors, Barns
CUSTOM
FARM BUILDINGS
Palmerston a 291-2914
Your birthdate makes you 4
Libra and .the syrntoms you
describe and the reasfor
them certainly do make sense.
Your sign gove3i the kidneys
and the lumbar vertebrae' and
these are your weal sem. .
Perhaps you are standing
.:badly. Few people realize that.
how. you stand while you're doh
your kitchen work is half the
battle, Don't .slump and crouch
over that dessert that has to be so
carefully pre .pared. Work at :a
proper level ---and get some
rhythm into your movements,
like a dancer.
Make sure that everything you
need for cooking is in its proper=
place so that you only have to
reach for it. Use one movement
instead of six and you'll soon find F
out that the Mechanics of cooking
are not only fun to work out, but
will also prevent that backache.
Next "week we get into Aries
and `1. have some refrigerator
rolls for you that I'm sure you'll
enjoy,
Newcasile
disease is
contained
Last summer the almost for-
gotten plague of the poultryman,
Newcastle Disease,struck from
the blue sky and set the whole
poultry industry wedge,
Flocks were condemned, quar-
antine regulations were enforced
in, .certain affected areas and
great cofusion reigned for a
number of weeks. Vaccination
programs were immediately in-
stituted and the threat of spread-
ing the disease was thus reduced.
Today we know that imported
budgies and other • fancy birds
were the likely source of the
initial infection. However,
migratory birds, chicks and
poults imported from areas of the
-U.S. can also be carriers.
.Turkeys do not as a Tule react ,
as violently to the disease as do
chickens. They can therefore be
carriers and a continuous threat
if they, are ` not properly vac-
cinated..
little alae help of the pharniia-
ceutical industry, government di-
rectives and the faithful ad-
herence of poultry owners to
proper vaccination programs, it
appears that Newcastle disease
is no longer the acute threat
which it was 10 month s\ ago.
McGAVIN'S
FARM EQUIPMENT
Sales &Service-Walfon, Ont.
Seaforth 527-0245 -
Used Tractors
—1060 NUFFIELD
—165 MASSEY WITH LOADER
—414 INTERNATIONAL WITH LOADER
—B250 INTERNATIONAL WITH LOADER
—B275 INTERNATIONAL WITH LOADER
—460 NUFFIELD
—465 NUFFIELD
See Us For:
—USED ALLIED MIXMILL
—USED NEW HOLLAND MIXMILL
—206 NEW IDEA SPREADER
Brussels 887-6365
INTERNATIONAL:
710 SEMI -MOUNTED PLOWS
GIVE VINCENT'S A CALL
FOR USED
TRACTORS & EQUIPMENT
INCENT
M;NHi.
liriNcE.FARM EQUIPMENT op.
Oar Motto!. .'Arfltit WE. SELL WE $E1!'VICE"
RIVER'S FURY—in some spots icejams: have caused, More than a few problems. -This
spot on
the
Saugeen shOws how destructive ice.. Can .: � ;w en thrown
• b onto the banks.;
NO PROBL
authorities.
EM—This stretch of the Saugeen is presenting no problems for flood control
In fact -it is nice to see the river flowing and fresh (Staff Photo),
Switchboard
milking seen
for dairymen
Seventy-five milk producers
from Bruce County, attending a
meeting at Formosa, were told
that a switchboardwill play a big
part in milking for future dairy-
men. Technology has already
perfected everything involved
except an effective way of putting
. on the teat cups.
More thorough milking means
higher butterfat tests as the last
milk from the cow has the higher
fat. content, George Jackson of
Toronto told the meeting.
Results from a mastitis screen-
ing test, completed last year in
the Mount Forest area, showed 18
per cent of the cows tested had
two and three gel counts. In herds
with higher gel counts, infection
ran as high as 40 per cent. The gel
index measures the numbers of
white blood cells in milk.
Province sets
zoning plans
TORONTO (TIPS) — In recent
weeks the Ontario government
has issued zoning orders covering
six southern Ontario townships.
The orders form part of a gov-
ernment plan to halt unregulated
urban sprawl around smaller
cities, such as Chatham and Bar-
rie. Local councils are totally by-
passed by these orders, and con-
trol of land uses is in the hands of
Municipal Affairs Minister John
White.
A spokesman for the Depart-
ment of Treasury, Economics
and Inter -government Affairs,
which covers municipal affairs,
said that plans for use of the zon-
ing orders in other areas in the
future remain confidential.
ONTARIO FARM
INCOME HIGHEST
TORONTO (TIPS) Ontario
farmers received the highest per-
centage of cash farm receipts,In
Canada during the first 11 months
of 1972. Receiving 28.9 per cent of
all cash receipts for farms, On-
tario easily outdistanced second
place Saskatchewan which drew
only 22.8 per cent.
Maitland, Saugeen levels
are down from last year
Although residents owning
lake -front property alopg the
Great Lake shoreline are. con-
cerned over rising waters and
damage to their property, the in-
land dwellers have little cause for
alarm.
Reports from both Maitland
Valley and Saugeen Valley Con-
servation Authorities have shown
the water levels are down from
last year.
In both cases, the below normal
snow and ice accumulation this
winter are given as the reason for
the safe run-off levels. •
Superintendent Bob Wight of
the Saugeen Valley Conservation
Authority office in Hanover said
the Saugeen River had recently
reached its peak for the year. at
six feet, six inches above the
river's normal depth near Walk-
erton.
This increase was about four
feet lower than the depth reached
last April.
The water level was dropping,
he said, but with the rain "of last
..week the rivers and streams will
likely stay at peak for about a
week.
A spokesman for the Maitland
Valley Conservation Authority
said that unless the area is hit
with "a real deluge" property
owners have little to worry about
as far as the Maitland is con-
cerned.
Supt. Wight estimated, as the
in 4ield flooding this year was
below normal, that farmers could
be on their land in about a week
or two, in this area, if the sun
comes out strong for that time.
T`4ra Globe *4 MO
Welfare or nO ',fare,: ' '
tiloym . r an ' no art-
enrploymernt insurance, farm
laboring, delay as a. harvest
hand, 1 a dying occupation.
Ontario fernier* have watched
thetrend for years. Privately,.
they adMit it 1 inevitable ,but
thatto not stop them from pub-
licly'. ,grumbling . `bitterly. about
bow welfare and unemployment
b�en�ebenefitsare
�� /turning ' Caanad .
into a •nation of slackers.
Rural Canada's anger at the
Liberal Government programs
offering alternatives to- low -paid
farm work sbewed up Clearly<i r
fast November's, election results.
cult
Buty oat
clfinosedirng hookfarm. at theworkers; dffit-
goes beyond superficial claims
that people would rather draw
welfare than pick tobacco,.
When ,yon tails; to ro
how. lard it is to find falabor,mers anger
usually surfaces before reason.
One tour of rural Ontario
enough to convince the outside
observer that farmers believe the
Government's -whole welfare -un
- employment program is a vicious
co nspiracyonally,of. towordekerspriv. e them, per
s,
Straightforward View
Some take the straightforward
view that if you abolished welfare
payments except in , cases,, of
"rear hardship and made unem-
ployment benefits ,contingent on
not refusing any job, however
menial, that would solve the farm
labor problem.
Others, like Samuel Bonham,
an active 77 year-old who still
personally manages 50 acres . of
fruit and vegetables in Grimsby,
see that it is not that simple.
Mr. Bonham doesn't blame
welfare or, the Government, he
blames the Canadian educational
system.
'"They "say :people no longer
want '•to do menial work... well
it's not true, they no longer want
to do any work at all," he said.
"Canadians are oriented by
their education to the idea that
once they've got their education,
they'll get $10,000 a year without
working. '
"Education teaches them that
you don't need to work with your
hands. We've got to get right.
away from the situation where a
man can say!' don't like the: 'b''
•A Y.
3a 1
so I wont work .yv;
Across the province there are
hundreds of Sammy Bonhams—
maybe thousands who believe it
is criminal to allow anyone to
draw government benefits where
there are harvest or other farm
jobs available.
But when their anti -welfare
anger subsides, many admit that
the drift away from the land is
not peculiar' to Ontario and will
not' be stemmed by tightening
welfare programs. •
In fact, no country or region
has stemmed the drift toward
urban centres, except in margi-
nal or short-term ways.
In Ontario, the drift is definite
and, apparently, irreversible and
farmers have trouble in finding
both skilled permanent workers
as well as temporary harvest
hands.
2 Solutions for Harvesting
For harvesting they are finding
two solutions: the long-term one
of mechanization and the short-
term one of the Caribbean
Workers Program which brought
1,500 workers from Jamaica,
Barbados and Trinidad this year
and will bring more next.
The Caribbean program is an
employers' dream, providing at
relatively low . cost, a stable,
industrious and captive work
1111 pox .11,011t 00011 10
.a..
DANGEROUS SPOT ---Evert though the Saugeen has not given a great deal of trouble
during the high water seasOf it still presents a danger to children. Be sure to keep them
away from the river until thewater goes down. (Staff Photo)
guarantees . six
weeks' work, though moat
workers stay m Via.
tiepay* rates equivalent to the
lidnimumw of $1.65 -an-
hour but pay is evened out, over,
work weeks so that if ram,; �-
rupts r . the Cad
v*lcer Al laid off a not paid, .
but . given the opportunity on.
good days to work extra -hours at
basic rates•to makeup the milli-
, mum
arum,-,mum.he has, beenguaranteed.
Each year' when arm' a`les
ciatio as.• apply to the .f r _ra 1.
government to renew the .pro-
grain, there is gully: sono.
kind .otoutc ',.agatnst:the id �Tof
"'taking away from AVM -
dials in times of high unemploy-
ment." ►plloy-ment.f°
ri
its : ghte i..ndigaationis,
the experts all agree, completely
unjustified :shethere is no ;eyi-
dence whatever that • Canadian
workers want the ifs a iib-
bean workers are taking or would
do them if*the Caribbeans did not
come. ,
:Nor. is there . any evidence, to
,suggest that cutting unemploy-
ment benefita'Would force people
back to the land as laborers,,
Acro, Ontario .about, 60,000
workers are. involved in some.
kind of farm work at the peak of
the' harvest ;season.
#r but initialTiItant
makes it available.early to 'the
larj� og\e-fie farmer, .jt ua
co opr `
A mocha**
which replaces about 50
coots about lave , tun total
earer $45,040e
one ManPower coon -
senor. said ',there is no
away from the basic
farm work. It is hard
long hours and the lay
andthere is nom.
students don'twantilit,11they cu -
find any alternative at all.11016.
ton restructure farm financing
completely. to pay better wags
andgive .better net, .*
won't find 'u t'kers.: hanginit
employment benefits really has
very little to do with ; the problem
in theTlong ,te,.""
In. '.Ontario, many ',different ,:wronghy varii
varieties of cern are recommend, ; farmer- mucl ancon;
ed for use, ranging from the late- than h inctiaL save
maturitytypes own in ` '.tire y
southwest to the ly ' on they comm si>ded:.
varletces re�nrrrended
grown in the central eastern removed":`because
parts of the province, Witheiri
w :�� seed failed to kilo
in - shorter supply than normal . ne '
'br<"r4ds.
this year, some farriers are erg should
buying hybrid seed' that is not on commend °-
the recommended list. The seed Comma
may seem cheaper now, but the 1973Reporrt
farmers should neda thit
f'QrxhaicTri, e.
might cost thembe mwaroney t herat able
Corn aterfsed dealersoe and count� avy
vest time, says R. B. ; Hunter, agricultural offices. ,nonan
crop scientist at the University of mended varieties Musf meet
Guelph. miniutunf standards.`'hes+e c 4
Some farmers are ',Rehash*. hybrclshave been► teed f
coir seed' requirements directiy,..'performance .ix& ielc.,
fr, m the United States. A number' strength; and adaptabilityailaiitability,.°
of these hybrids have been tested, It takes at least two years; of
but have not been added to the re- tensive testing .before new vatic. -
commended list because they fail ties are considered for ,the rel,
to meet Ontario standards. A commended list. The 'minimum:
farmer "gambles with these corn standards keep rising
as . new
varieties;. he might get a hybrid improved corn hybrids become
that is' inferior in yield, or stalk available.
quality, or is too.late for his farm. By using recommended
Some of the seed purchased in ties, corn producers can be more
the U.S. may -seem to be a bar -1 certain that their crops will yl
el
gain by saving„the farmer $1 to $2 and'' stand" well under Ontario,
per acre. However, planting 'the conditions.. `
We are privileged to be direct agents lit this area -for
the prestlgeOus
annuls J' I, acro frratbry
CROYDON, ENGLAND
Establish a link with the past through your surname
England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, Continental
European Origin .
•
(gnat -Of -Arms fur Display
If your surname is -in their comprehensive library of Arms
--and the chancesare that it is—Awe are able to supply that
Coat of Ante as an ornamental wall -shield for your how
office or club. Makes an ideal present
Further information and illustrated colour brochure • .
available on request from
)' I'
TRE.
WAXWORKS
".7
181E Josephine St. WINGHAM, ONT.
357-1781;
WATER WELL DRILLING
BY DAVIDSON
FOR 73 YEARS, GUARANTEED
WELLS AT THE LOWEST COST.
Free Estimates Anywhere in On-
tario. Fast Service.
Our Wells Exceed Provincial
Government Standards.
Modern Rotary and Percussion
Drilling.
Strict Adherence to Environmental
Regulations.
DAVIDSON WELL
DRILLING LTD.
Wingham
357-1960
Box 486.
Satisfied Customers Since 1900 Through
Four Generations
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