HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-08-29, Page 17YOUR H,aNDWran.
TELLS
nu;
tar,
which, you t
swain
you on edgex You take life aa.
riot, ow in your
ha '
�,'yai'
feelings i ,
Y
Your "builtmin" reserve,
seen in your vertical writing,
keePe you from .
your fealtngs op 1y,. end the
loop on he right side of 4
cuts off your talk line.
Beal �, some the
is very sneed; Be -
*alone, elite time► centers ,
your thinking on yourself, used
iclueerca the loveliness out Of
life.
You have to learn that 1R
certain amount' of strain is a
part of productive • livin6.
obligation,and , respell.
sibility make tension.... and
anadety a valid part of elft.
Just remember that "mai-
lowed" happiness is only a
capsule of synthetic bliss. -
with au aftertaste. Pure h
pins a sweetness whiff
s-butithas to be earned.
It
doesn't come in pills.
D.J.
Per PARM, TOWN and, COUNUIY HOME OWNERS.
Can You Use $1,600. to $20.001.?
It you van afford monthly paymelits of
521,$6 you may borrow
640011w may borrow
$67.67 you relay borrow
$94.73 you may borrovti
`etl..
$1,600
$3,000
$S,00Q
$7,000
The above Loans based on 16 per centper•annur
5 Yr. Term --20 Yr. Atnorttzation
Borrow for any worthwhile purpose: To consolidate your debts,
fix the car, buy, cattle, ora cottage! ,
Fast. -Courteous Service -.Please Call PALMERSTON 3434432
GeraldFLWolfe
Representing
Arnold Highman Realty Ltd.
Kitchener, 1-519-7444251
Member of Ontario Mortfage Broker's Association
i
1*
MOBILE HOMES
DOUBLE -WIDE HOMES. •
.Glendale .Pyramid .Marlette .Bendix
. "large selection of double -wide and single -wide models on
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*fast, efficient delivery and set up by professional servicemen.
*low prices assured by our volume buying and easy purchase
plans.
MOB1LiFE CENTRE
4166 KING ST. E. R.R. 3, KITCHENER
No. 8 Hwy.°t► twee i Hwy, 19J 6535788
ATTENTION:
FARMERS .
SAVE $ $ $ on your
Feed Costs
Get the facts on the new
"MODERN MILL"
way of building your own feed rations right on
the farm.
Improved "computer" blends and mixes ingredi-
ents smoothly and accurately. Contact us now and
take advantage Of our booked shipment, and save;
you will buy direct from ,Ontario distributor.
MODERN FEED SYSTEMS
Newton, Ontario
Ca11 (Collecto) : 595.8182
4
Derealyt,
22 :and have 'mY own
apartment now.When 1 lived
at home, t was
*WOO With with too:
ily and too Many
in tom. I .
the tim.e sind
would be able to 'get along
without "thein when I was on
my ova. !like to be alone and
awaY froM Pie, but I still
have my sundeties and I still '
take the pills. What am .l run=
ring sway from?
r.J.
Dear L.J.: ' ,
You're ,ruining away frau •
.normalcy.
You're running away from
the everyday anxieties which
will still be there tomorrow,
as you roach for another. pile.
:Family' tensions are as
common as families, ,and
there'll always be differences
of opinions -- we hgpe.
Your whole pattern of living
is one of order, seen through •
kitia
Lack of 'i' dots a
weighty problem.
Dear Dorothy:
My biggest problem, and I
do mean big, is myself. I am
about 120 pounds overweight.
I have put this weight on over
the years And I have tried
'ever: Yes, I 'akn, also;
under a doctor's care and
have been a member of
Weight Watchers and other
organizations. I'll struggle
like the dickens and lose 20
pounds, then put on -30. Tell
me something I don't know
about myself.
B.C.
Dear B.C.:
"Pound-a-math-ically," . ad-
dition" is easier than subtrac-
tion,
ubtracttion. You've been picking up
excess pounds for. a long time
now: It's impractical, then, to
expect them to melt away in a
hurry.
Your problem lies in your
lack of direction, seen in the
weak t crossings. You have
been jumping from one plan
• to another, not giving any one
of them a chance to help you.
Your carry -through is ade-
quate, seen in the long down -
strokes, if you could get on the
right track.
You don't like to admit de-
feat, seen in strokes not re-
produced. This is good, but
FALL WHEAT
There are many reasons why fall wheat should be in your
cropping program:
*World demand for Ontario soft wheat
*Wheat is seeded and harvested at slack times of the year
*Excellent cash crop prices
*Federal Government Subsidy for encouragement of in-
creased production
*Fall Wheat of late has a big jump on spring grains
*E>atellent reports are coming in on our new Fredrick Wheat
Yields
*Ask your local dealer for our varieties available
The rood house whore "Germination, Purity & Quality" ars important
E. C. BRAMHILL & SON LTD., PALMERSTON
you keep trying different organizations and different
methods, hoping that each onemight have the magicmiracle. Y �. tli teatoiletail, n� Titilio isk' of.,i,dots, that such "Musts"as
weighing your food, and obeying; weight loss requirements
is your undoing.Besides that,
you don't like to be told what
to do, seen in your letter k.
Especially would you dislike
the dictates of diet demands.
So, first, if you want to lose
weight, your aproach must
be guided. Possibly, Weight
Watchers, who will direct
your weight loss plan d help
your set your' goals Then,
you ll have to make up your
mind to accept what you are
told, and comply with a sys-
tein, whetheryou want to or
not.
Make it exciting for your-
self. Ask to chairman a
Weight W`atcher's luncheon,
or just treat' the group to a
Weight Watcher's pie. Lastly,
your whole being is badly in
need of physical activity, seen
in the exploding p hoop.. Lack
of this need keeps you on
edge, and such edginess can
suck you right into the "food'
fan." So, set up an exercise
plan, too.
The rewards are great, if
you set a goal and follow a
plan. Others can help you, but
only you can lose the weight.
D.J.
cARDS
TH115 SOLITARY CARD suer
GAME REQUIRES TO
OF SIXTEEN CAWS.
(FOUR CARPS gAc'H
SUIT.) ONE CARD OF SAC
SUIT 14AS ALREADY BEEN
POSITIONED
ON THE GAME
BOARD* IWE
REINONING
CARDS MUST
BE PLACED ON
THE BOARD
AfiCORD1)+,1Cr.
TO 11 -IE . EIGHT PROMS I$
LISTED EE Dw.
1PLACE 7r BETWEEN aolp
N. PLACE * BETWEEN S d► H
3. PLACE I. BETWEEN * 4
PLACE I1 BETWEEN ,a1
5. P+1UAC.E It BETWEEN a •
O. PLACE lip BETWEEN 3 6
7. PLA4E 9 ♦ BETIA EEN a M
S. PLACE V* . BETWEEN SIP
(SOLUTION MAY BEfOUND ON PAGE 6)
Cattle feed from nituri
While natural gas now is used
to fuel industrial furnaces
produce plastics, artificia
rubber and petrochemicals, hea
oubuildings andcook our food, a
chemical en ineer at the
University of Toronto is using it
to make feed •components for
cows and sheep, ,.As another raw
material for protein production
he uses previously useless wastes
from the pulp and paper industry.
Prof. Morris Wayman, who has
already made major con
tributions to the wood pulp in-
dustry, is producing a nitrogen -
rich, white powder from natural
gas called urea formaldehyde,
which he says could have' an
impact on agri�Culture similar to
the invention of artificialfer-
tilizer 60 years ago. Nitrogen is
°'needed by .animals for the
production of proiin and amino
acids, . necessary for life sand
growth.Cows andsheep get their
nitrogen mostly from grains.
The notion of a • factory
providing cattle' with feed
components might seem strange,
but then the manufacture of
artificial fertilizer 60 years ago
was considered foolhardy and
unnecessary by many.
The idea of using urea
derivations as synthetic source of
urban development.
But diminishing 'fall'>pn land is
ot the only concern.
t "Our aun is to' find cheaper and
more readily available feed
components notdependent on`the
whims of nature," expla1nProf.
Wayman. "Modified. urea I$
made`in a factory and is unaffected by bad climate, un-
favourable Weather conditions
nitrogen is nt new, but making.itprpitiedseentists_�. rillarge doseof to ,,.meat are dngerous because
uea breaks down quickly in the
digestvesystem and enters :the
blood' stream as toxic ammonia.
However, with funds provided
by Canada Packers, Prof.
Wayman has modified urea to
prolong this breakdown from
about 30 minutes to about six
hours. By doing this he says he
hopes to increase the amount of
modified urea in ruminant feed to
completely replace protein
nitrogen, which would be nearly
four times the amount now
possible. So far everything is in the test
stage but small amounts have
been fed to somesheep atthe
Canada Packers Research and
Development Laboratories in
Toronto and they are fat and
healthy looking. After this initial
safety screening is completed,
the new compound will be fed to
cows.
But why go to all the trouble of
making animal feed components
from natural gas? The major
reason is the world's tremendous
loss of agricultural land every
year. In this area of the province,
for example, the Ontario
Federation of Agricultureestimates 26 acres of good farm
land are taken out of production
every hour, a good part ofit by
Agricultural Tidbits
with Adrian Vos
Last year the number of people
in the world increased by 76
million. This means, of course,
that the world's farmers have to
produce food for these additional
ppeeoople. This year the increase
vill be greater and every year
after that, until the world is
saturated with people. Even now,
one disastrous crop in any of 'the
five major grain producing
countries�ill mean widespread
hunger throughout the poorerworld and skyrocketing prices for
the rest.
One cynic told me recently that
we can't be expected to fed the
world if the population keeps on
growing. He stated that it will be
as it always has been and people
will die by the millions, until a
balance between food production
and people has been reached°. It's
ghastly to contemplate but as
long as better birth control is not
used it appears that my cynic will
be right. By the way, he himself
has five children.
As long as we continue to cover
our agricultural land with cities
and highways and shopping
plazas, we hasten the time this
will come to pass, by
slaughtering the gtose that lays
the golden eggs.
400
Hailed as a great step forward
for the farmer is the inclusion of
Ontario corn on the Canadian
futures market. I sincerely hope
that the optimists are right. The
futures market has been a very
useful marketing toolThe experiences of the Chicago
futures market in the last two
years leaves me with some
doubts of its continuous
usefulness. Speculators left Wall
Street in large numbers and
bought paper soybeans. In the
selling and reselling of these
commodities the price kept going
up. Fortunes were made without
a single bushel of product
changing hands. The soybean
producer made no money and the
soybean user had to pay exor-
bitant prices.
Will the samething happen
with corn? Today's prices seem
to indicate a trend in that
direction, Let's hope that the
futures market doesn't become a
tool for a permanent ripoff on
firmer and consumer.
Competition
for Princess
Septem er 23
The 1974 Huron County Dairy
Princess Competition will once
again be held at the Zurich. Fair
on September 23.
The main objective of the Dairy
Princess programme is .to im-prove communications between
the ranilk producer and consumer.
A Dairy Princess is a goodwill
ambassador who represents the
Huron County dairymen of her
area at various social and
educational functions. Girls who
are interested in the competition
must be a resident ofCanada,
single and between theages of17
the dairy industryui'i ; thepat
hive ,ears a a i1 or:�iiird�ucershallbe deemed eligible to compete.
as a producer's employee, shallbe deemed eligible to compete.
Contestants will be required to
deliver a short prepared speech
on a subjct related to the dairy
industry. They will also have
individual interviews from a
panelof judges and participate in
the- climax of the event - the
milking competition. Contestants
will be involved in coaching
sessions before the competitions
sothattheycanbefilledinonall
aspects of the competition.
All 'girls participating 'in the
Dairy Princess Competition will
receive prizes, with the • 1V74
Huron County Dairy . Pricess
receiving a luggage set.
Girls interested in par-
ticipating should contact Len
MacGregor at the Agricultural
Office in Clinton for further
details.
I. What nation is second to Ru-
ssia in size among- European na-
tions?
2. What creatures have the best
eyesight of all living things?
3. Who was the French sculptor
who designed the Statue of Liberty?
4. What ancient mythological
character's name is applied today to
the quality of self-love or ego-
centrism?
5. What is a "polemic"?
6. What is the source of the
much -quoted expression, "The proof
of the pudding is in the eating"?
7. What is the projection of one's
thyroid cartilage popularly called?
8. What famous Polish astrono-
mer promulgated the theory that the
earth and the other planets move
around the sun?
9. What is albumen?
10. How much time does the aver-
age newspaper reader spend in por-
ing over his daily paper?
II. What is the crime of
"embracery''
ANSWERS
I. France. 2. Birds. 3 Frederic
Bartholdi (1834-1904). 4. Narcissus.
5.°A controversial argument.
6. From "Don Quixote," by Ce-
rvantes. 7. dam's apple.
8. Nicolaus t opernicus (1473-1343).
9. The white of an egg. 10. About
thirty-seven mutes. 1 I. An attempt
to influence a judge or jury by cor-
rupt means, as by bribery, threats,
or promises.
iigas
and other infestations that plague
'traditional sources of livestock.
feed- corn, hay and oats - and
ruin many other crops every
According to prof. Wayr an,
the food shortage rblem IS only
too real, maybe no in, Canada,
but in other partsof the world.
"The United Notions' food and
agricultural organizations have
made 4 map showing global belts
of starvation, The scope ana
continuity is much .more
widespread than believed "-tens
of millions, will probably die in
Africa within the next decade."
The tithe will; come when land
alone will not be able .to supply au
the world's food requiareinents.
For this reason Prof. Wayman is
`encouraging Canada to develop
factories that will grow protein
rich . microorganisms from, in-
dustrial, urban and agricultural
wastes. His bioengineering,
laboratory, one of the few in
Canada, has grown such single
cell protein from pulp and -paper
liquid wastes and from sawdust.
No industrial plants in this
country currently produce this
type of protein. The Soviet Union,
by contrast, has an ; annual
production of over 150,000 tons
single cell protein mostly grown
V atiFphti r arid°' bitpe
Tal,.'.r '�S, -
protein can be used• as feed ad=
ditives or extracted and used for
food and pharmaceutical pur-
poses-
Single cell protein can also be
grown from oil, and from gases
like butane. Such ,protein
production might seem strange
and exotic, but the projected"
doubling of the human population
by the year 2000 could result in a
situation where we will have to
reserve oil products for food
production.
Dist#t ti bctw +► I -
PLICATE awl f AVB. To fay
ea a � b IMPLICATED * a
0 s to t Ono lack INVOLVEI) *4011i0114
+ems I es C'
Ar ibs way4404 ist ba�b e er
olcY#e ,* 14106hurt ad* SAY,.'' elks AS Ip latWIRE �Y"Toaotsay,"the Jsid .desk silt �> k," S.ay;" Irak
LAY co k as :'to ,'1t :looks Iikc itrain arty. 'minute,"" y,''"It
books AS Ip it t ALMS,y OFP1O OViv�► v�e� Iby �tronl of ��Pronounce vie -vel +'oe-sec: nlioa fiest �syllabl a of boih �,
Cat�zo. ` Proa kat-e=accent an fiir s ►I �Ague. Pronounce ai-gyou,on iliirst slrllsble.
Ctw#ilea Pronoun ck'naccent Brat syllable.•f rbi r. Pronorlcehar-bin cr,
accent firs syllable,
IN .P�EQ
Knickknack; observe titc fotir
�•1C"s."' ,Either " `4aligrsmcnty�' +or`
"alinensent' is +c srect
though tits ft+ t
for:,is r
Sorg c ci', th , ur to..•r
4 t P. 1 S 8c .t� � and
fall. Strai lttened ttrait, r strn%t),
straitened (.rests cted;. conroOk. as
'in straitened circumstances'";) , Op-
ulence; one t'p." Opportune; twtr
a
-a,
own
"Use a word three times -104i; is
h p yours." Let 'ni increase our vocab-
ulary by mastering one wordeachs
day. Words for thio limon; •
INCITATION; that which inein
to action; incentive. (Accent;z.l<hird
syllable). 'These itcitations spitted
him on to his goal." ,
SYNTHESIS;:,combinatiion or
unification of parts. into a ,whole.
(Accent first•syllabk). ""Our pilin
synthesis 5 f many-
RY; white or giy .with age,'
venerable;yancient. "That: ts' miry
joke,", r •aza a{.'k„
' ts`4`g Tai'
Vas Eye Irsx:
S.P. CoMp1NES
.1 McCormick Int. 403
.2 McCormick Int. 303 •
.Case 960 ,
° .Case 800
.Case 660` °
.John Deere 45
.Allis Chalmers A
.M.F. Super 92
CLIFFORD
327-8045
I"
Mr. Farmer
* Silo Tops
cuateRs
tilaSt1CS
We repair or
replace silo tops
- of all diameters.
Our product is
everlasting,
durable,
fiberglos
made right here
on the premises
To talk about
your needs
Ph. 822-0000
LTD. Hwy. #6, 4 miles N. of Guelph
SENATOR EMERSON
FOUNDATION
SACRED MUSIC
with
NIVEN MILLER
SCOTTISH BARITONE
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 6TH
AT8:15P.M.
IN THE
North Mornington Presbyterian Church
LOCATED 6 MILES NORTH OF MILVERTON, ONE ROAD WEST
ADULTS $2.00, CHILDREN $1.00.
FOR TICKETS PHONE 595-4752 OR 595-4606