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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-06-26, Page 15• • • gi 10' 46' • telcharri.Pontitte Buick Limited Main St., 190 AIIII1114)OCONVIIIMISII power Stow new black top, two snow tires Mount Forest 3234111 and brakes, V4 engine, automatic transmission, On rims, Finished in Ori9ht Red with black vinyl Interior. Safety checked„ ready tb go, " MIcE0S11115.00 • 1 • 1972 ,,,foRD• .0.04•4004, 500 ,,,.4.door ,14,400, .;power steering and brakes 351 two barrel engin., 33,500 milei.,,finiSluid KM.* friAostalliciirown with 'bele. vinyl trim, A pool cloon'outomo-: • I ' . ritio.ss„mmo, ' 974 « PONTIAC ;MAIO STATION. WAGON. equipped -with 400 Z -barrel• -engine,. automatic • transmission, .power steering and .brarksii, four -season air conditioning, ,whito Walls. and • . 'wheel disciFinished intimefire Green with Saddle Vinyl interior...LW MOUS. Retallpricor0 SS, #04-410 ' . . 'SALO !*ICEtoli:MAO . 1,970 i,'popoo MONACO SOO • four door hardtop equipped with power Steering, and ,brakesi. at-091710ft transmission, radio, White wall* artd•whowel covers; FinirShed,:10-•Medium• ;Green , • ,: , . Metallicwith !lack Vinyl notch back seat*. . '.. • .; * - • f • • - •PIKE 0 $14,9#000 1971 %PINTO '-• automatictransmission, 200 c.c. engine. Refinishedinf5hOMiock Orgion with : PlatkinteriOr, 55,00(torigInal MileSii Economy sized and economy Oced-qt only $1445,00 . . , .1 *' MAKE US AN OFFER 1972 CHEV 34 TON -TRUCK - 350 Vi,0 engine, power steering, standard transmission, 11" OwlDly tiros, stepside box. In *0.Ni...condition serviced. at this garage since new. • RELIABLE TRANSPORTATION 1967.,A0BAssApo*.4ciogar sedan. This unithas a new engine block, 4 new tires, new battery, overhauled' automatic transrnission and steering assembly, and a gas -saving O.:cylinder engine, 064 good buy at * PRICE $695,00 DEMONSTRATORS AT 110 -SAVINGS 1974 PONTIAC GRAND VILLE CONVERTIBLE* equipped with 455 engine, automatic transmission power door locks and windows, six way power seat, custom radio, rear seat speaker. Burgundypotchbotk seats in soft vinyl. Honduras Maroon exterior with matching top, List Price - $6,417.95 . DENICi 5/411 PRICE $5,695.00 1974 BUICK CENTURY - 2 -door Colonnade Coupe. Finished in Silver Cloud with notchback Bur- gundy vinyl seats, 3$01/43 engine, power steering and brakes, radio, white walla anacus; tom wheel, discs, vinyl roof and remote control mirror. List Price 54,809.05. • DEMO SALE PRICE $4,369.00 • \ • COOL OFF IN THIS HOT WEATHER SPECIAL • 1974 - BUICK LESABRE LUXUS 2 -door hardtop. Finished in Nugget Gold with a Tan vinyl top. Equipped with tinted glass, custom air conditioning, remote mirror,, 455 2 -barrel V-8 en- gine, radio and radial tires. List Price. $6,800.00 DEMOSALE PRICE $5,900.00 The ,Town Lot with The City Stock 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 11 1 ri.„,1141' AMU Ves ?arm and Country *wee some istosestiog about The the Food have been for a Ions time, they restrict figures however are different. When the Lobito board began operations in sales wore 17$ million 'TidsYear's crop is expected AO million pounds. That's woo- triction? .„ Then the bean board. When they started, production was llite000 hundred pound bags. Now it is 1,043,297 hundred' pound bor. Restrictions? The Chicken producers. halm been attacked repeatedly for the quota system, but when they began operations in 190 the pro- duction was VS' fltiiiiou pound* while last year it was up to 275 million pounds. One can readily see that. orderly marketing pro- duces more, nOt le1, • 0 0 0.' After the famous heart trans - 'plant, surgeon, Dr, . Michael deBakey from the USA debunked the,theory that fat eauses heart failure, comes the news, es related in the new Maclean's , magazine that two Canadian heart specialists, Dr. Meyer Friedman and Roy H. Rosenman, have come to the same conclu- siert. • " "Coronary heart disease ,01°;• -most never occurs before the age of 70, regardless of the fatty foods eaten. etc." Theyclaim it is the, type of person who . is insecure etc. I hope. by gosh. that our MIX's will read this book. . • ' . 0 ,(1) 0 • " "As Christians we must have -.0 concern for the right to use all our - resources even if it means vocaz. lizing Our displeasure to the point •, of a showdown with governments' who seem to show an arrogance for the rights, wishes and con- cerns of the Canadian people," says Huron's Anglican. Bishop David Ragg. The bishop spoke these words in connection with, the disappearance of farm land for "highways, sprawling subdi- • Tidbits; Viblon$ Or Oarritioti kor -hydro power lines. "The land that God Save 00 for safe -keeping, the land that He gave us *0 that we may feed His world j tretatod as a sow* commodity, The poem lands are left because they are more diffi- cult to handle." New canoe mite • map for Algooquin The latest edition, 0 "Alva - quin Provincial Park CAW Routes", a Inap-brOChtl,re., incor- porates significant improve- ments. Not Only are many more- in- terior canoe routes shown but for the first time locations of camp- sites are indicated on the over 1,o0o-mile network, With the rapid growth and Popularity of canoeing in Algol). quin (use has doubled in the last. four years), the jdea of indicating campsites is to encourage distri- bution of canoe -camping over a wider area, thus . helping to reduce crowding. Other improvements include. Enlargement of map Scale from 3 to 2 nines to the inch to – show greater detail. Indications of all park peri- meter access points and descrip- tions of motor routes from major highways Surrounding thepark. Re -structuring of canoe routes. by segments to increase the number of route combinations. Written segment descriptions on the .reverse side of the map have been carefully positioned so that when the map is folded the description is near the appropri- ate map segment. Expanded information on how to plan and carryout a canoe trip for maximurn enjoyment. Priced $1 (Canadian), the map -brochure is available from the Ontario Government Book- store, 880- Bay St., Toronto; the Map Office, Ministry of Natural Resources, Whitney Block, Queen's Park,. Toronto; Or Algonquin Provincial Park, Whit- ney, Ont., KAI 2M0. "DEALER DON' *ON THE SPOT • TODAY! FINANCING Drive a little • farther and DAN'S MODERN APPLIANCES LTD. Sales ' HANOVER PLAZA "YOUR SATISFACTION IS OUR MAIN CONCERN" Tves.-Sat, 9:00 a.m.. 6:00 rn. .36461011 •,Once,upon a time, in the daYs when a poor 'boy c'ould, still hope to be President, a poor, boy named Henry Ford decided that he would do sometlun7 even greater than 0 become Presi- dent. Hedecided that he would make it possible for every man in America ,to have his own private homeless chariot. And in spite of the fact that there was no re- search fotmdation or giant corpo- ration to take him under its:wing and nurse the wikl dream in him, Henry Ford managed very Well. His Tin Lizzie not only found 15 million owners but it ushered in the Assembly Line and the twentieth century industrial re, volution. • • AU of which was rather embar- rassing to many of the great people of his time, because Henry Ford was, to them at least, a bit of a queer. Be believed, for in- stance, that the only colour proper fora motor car was black. He ,believed too in . paying. his workers45.00 -a day, even though the going wage for the time Was less than half that. And he bad this curious bug about' the magi- cal properties of the soybean. ' And when he persisted in planting huge acreages of the bean in southern Michigan long after he had become the nation's number one industrialist, mime of the men . in his top Office used to apologize for him. "Well, he's still , country boy at heart,". they would say. • But • Henry Ford's , Chemists agreed with him that the soybean did have magic locked up in it, and before the'Model Tgave way to more sophisticated descen- dents, they managed to make up- holstery and steering wheels from soybean. If you have a hob- bist friend who treasures a Model T, have a look at its steering wheel next time .you visit him. You'll see that it isn't made of • wood, 'or metal. And plastic wasn't even a word in the diction- ary then. Henry:Said that his new steering wheel ,was of coinposi- tion, but it was really soybean „ composition. And long after Henry had with- drawn from the America he had so profoundly,. 'changed,' one of the ellenlistAmvifio.)04 shard his enthusiasin for the potential of the humble soybean continued to experiment with it. That man's flan*. was Boyer, and in 1954 he discovered a way to make a plasticized.mass of soybean meal and then to spin it into resilient threads of edible protein. Not only that but he discovered a way to weave those fibres into almost any texture or thickness. In other words, .he had discovered a way to make an edible product which had all the protein of meat, which would have the texture of meat, any kind of meat, and which needed only the addition of the right flavour to make it taste like meat. Well, last year, the first of these new soybean meats hit the market. The food companies will. be some time yet before they can offer you a soybean steak that looks and tastes like steak, but they do so well with such things as meat loaf, baloney and sau- sages that you can't really tell the difference. And it seems only a matter of another five years be- fore there will be acceptable sub- stitutes for almost any kind of meat you fancy. How cheap will they be? Well that depends a great deal on how much profit the food corporations see fit to exact from. us, but this( new hamburger extender - which isn't really one of the new substi- tutes, mind you, but merely a protein additive - can be made for around 13 cents a pound, To get another idea of the effi- ciency of the protein potential of the soybean as compared to that of. real meat, scientists point out that an acre of soybean in this part of the world could be ex- pected to produce about three- quarters of a ton of the bean. Feed that three-quarter ton to a steer in the feedlot and •he will turn it into something like 56 pounds of protein in steak and hamburger. Give it to the chemist and let him transform it into one of the new meat substi- tutes and he will turn out 500 pounds of something that looks like meat, tastes like meat, has the same nutritive value as meat, has no cholesterol in it and should only cost a fraction as much. Looks to me like the beginning of the end for animal husbandry as an essential industry, and though I have been a livestock man all my life I can't say that I regret this. There was a time, of course, when I thought the rais- ing of animals for meat as the most justifiable occupations a man could choose. It used to be one of the most gentle and natural of all the things a man could elect to do in this world. You took pride in your animals, knew them as fellow crea yY073 worfrivia evoohelertheirge comfort, hungry yourself than have them lumm. And when Came the inevitable day they went off down the rood to the butcher, you could SW to yourself, "Well, they bad a short but a happy' life." And you knew that end that Fate had instore for m was likely to be an ea going out than what Fate d One day exact from you. But now calves and pigs and steers are no longer creatures. They are little more than living machines. Valves are no longer allowed to romp in the sun. The Modern method is to tie, them up in stalls so small they will never be able to take a full step as long as they live. If you want to be' more modern still, keep them in the dark and the combination of no exercise, no light and feed with the right kind of hormones it will - turn • out the flabby, anaemic veal that *brings top prices today. Same with pigs, which are often jammed so. tight- ly in their quarters now thatthere isn't room for all of them to lie down at the same time. Andlhe beef that used to come ,fronl the cattle on God's , thousand hills now waddles out of the feed lot, and even God doesn't know what sort of chemical. 'guck,may 'have been pumped into it before it goes to the block. • So P11 have few revetslor the passing of animal husbandry, for the coming of bigtime Astrining and modern efficiency have not only destroyed all its poetry, but its kindness as well. Spirit Lifter for the week' By RUTH STAFFORD PEALE . Every day give thanks,flns will activate the flow of good into your life. Negativism de pletes; ,thanksgiving creates. "0 give thanks . unto the Lord; ,for he, la gbodi for his mercy endureth for 'evettalt"' Pail& 1071 • hY ato* horns"to go into ef. feet on all new wtticles sold in the city in 1$74 sad thereafter. The regulatign. Would re, qtlire instailotien of city,coun, try hors*, wide*, used b E* rope, enok * lower sound when the oar is trowel, ing at street speeds than when it ia moving at highway sPeechl. ' ALG: TIIE Plywood boxes mixture of , shells have been used to ren* force levees along the Atiaats, sippi River during flood . emergencies. ``‘ 4 • Sili,40iIiIolibiES': . .. , ..,;2a-m:ci McCormick tilt- 403' • • , • .Case amscCe 410 .cOern.,,ick j011,10$,` .01S0960 .COse800 . . . . • . -• 660 • .Johri 6 ?fp 0 I ..' 1/011Int.F. ..IDSol'Po' It192: ' .Art.F,.,35 .Alli't ChallootiA: ;:". - ,',,-.••• , f.,2E8°ED.Wagons1 SiA n t O'P , it lEk biRAlieCS‘''''' • ',..,4 ,. 1 ,*..-, • L. il!?. WATER WELL DRILLING BY DAVIDSON 10' WE HAVE JUST PURCHASED API ADDITIONAL . HIGH-PRESSURE ROTARY DRILL, TO PROVIDE EVEN FASTER 'SERVICE' FOR OUR CUSTOMERS! Free Estimates Anywhere in Ontario. Fast Service. Our Wells Exceed Provincial Government Standards.. ModernRotary and Percutiion Drilling. Strict Adherence to Environmental Regtilations. DAVIDSON WELL WINGHAM 357-1960, • DRILLING LTD. BOX 486 SATISFIED CUSTOMERS SINCE 1900 THROUGH FOUR GENERATIONS .11111•111111111111•11111111111=111r How to saw down a tree with your lawn mower. Electric Tractors A husky .plug-in electric chain saw is only one of more than 35 accessories and attacpments that work withlhe New Idea Electric Tractor. There's also a snow blade, a snow thrower, dump cart, sweeper, and edger-trimmer—just to name a few of the ones that help make short work of Fall and Winter yard jobs. Stop in and ct3eck our pries on the New Idea Electric Tractor—and 'Rs full line-up of work savers. The electric tractor backed by dependable NEW IDEA DEALER SERVICE 0 ttery power is better HARVEY KROTZ LIMITED TRACTOR &, IMPLEMENT DIVISION Listow•I 291..3300