HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-10-06, Page 4Vir'EREp
;OR FARMERS
CXei ing inn. Clinton, the
'Aye of the Huron ('aunty
it Fanners and Junior !esti-
. *k4e* 4deeklied to offer a trophy for
club -in the county which has
the best of a series of meetings in
(he coming season.
J.
judges_will atterud the meetings
of the various clubs, which will
• oat` be aware in advance of the
judges' presence.. Score cards will
be kept and judging will .include I at the Curling Arena each second
points such as the starting time
of ,meeting, the choice of 'topic, the
participation of members, • the per-
centage of members present, the
attention of members during the
meeting, the preparation of ° the
meeting, and the length of the
meet ing.
With Miss Lois Jones, president
of the county Junior Institute, pre-
siding, :the , executive agreed to
organize a Huron County Junior
Farmers- Curling Club. The pro-
posed club will meet in Seaforth
Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association
Where Better Bulls Are Used"
Here IS Proof That These
Brills Are Doing the Job
We have received from the Holstein -Friesian Association
of Canada, an up-to-date report of the milk and.fat production
as well as type grading of the daughters of our Holstein bulls.
These Production figures are a comparison with the Breed
Class Average which is ..100%. The records and grading are
on artificially sired daughters in many herds and under varying
conditions.
Type graded
BULLS %B.C.A. All daus. No. of daughters
No. of graded Breed average
record daus. Milk Fat daus. 47% G.P. or better
Elmcroft Monogram Duke V.G. Extra
205 110 111 288
Glenafton Milestone V.G.
163 114 120 302
Glenafton Trademark V.G.
48 111 116 109
Elmcroft Celebrity V.G.
47 105 105 89
Seiling Wing Double V.G.
28 106 119 86
Seiling Wing Pietje
2 88 86 11 36%
60%
41%
48%
40%
50%
All these sires together average
493 110 114
and fourth ilVionday of each month:
The deadline cibr joining was set
as October .17.
It was announced that the an-
nual provincial debating and pub-
lic speaking contest as well as the
music competition will be held
again.,
O 0•. o
A father, 'pushing a ,baby car-
riage down the sidewalk, was Lay-
ing vainly to •pacify his howling
two-year-old. "Don't get excited,
Andy. Now take it easy, Andy.
You must be calm, Andy."
A lady who happened to be pass-
ing by stopped and remarked, "It's
just wonderful the way you speak
to that child. It's :Jo rarely that
you see such gentle'°fa'thers. And
he's named Andy, the little darl-
ing."
"No madam," growled the fath-
er. "His name is Joseph. My
name's Andy."
Abitibi.
-Consddated Paper
Powell River
Price Bros.
885 49%
The following two bull were privately owned before being
purchased by the Unit in the summer of 1953 and their
artificially bred daughters are not yet in production.
Glenafton Benefactor Ex
31 • 111 123 43
Elmcroft Tradition V.G.
30 105 109 50 70%
PRODUCTION PAYS THE BILLS
WHY NOT USE these bulls who have PROVEN THEIR ABILITY
to sire daughters that are outstanding for milk production with
a high test, a better than average for type. The above bulls are
all alive and will probably begood for some time with the ex-.
ception of Elmcroft, Monogram Duke whose ability to produce
good semen is over and Seiling Wing Pietje who was recently
slaughtered. We have a supply of frozen' semen on hand from
Pietje.
If YOU WISH TO USE A DESIRABLY PROVEN BULL OR
A PROMISING YOUNG BULL,. WE HAVE THE •ANSWER
WITH THE BULLS IN THE UNIT.
For more information or service to these or any of our
bulls of ALL BREEDS, phone collect to CLINTON 515.
Between 7.30 and 10 a.m. obi week days.
7.30 and 9.30 a.m. on Sundays and holidays.,
Mysterious objects are zoom-
ing through the skies oyer
Coderie.h ago in.
It was ust about a year
ago that bright objects in the'
skv wore reported,
Last Saturday night, Gude-
rich Cab Driver Johnny Mc-
Graw and sone Unidentified
ppassengers were puzzled by a
bright light streaking over-
head. The object appeared to
drop into the lake,
'hero,, were no reports • of
any missing aircraft, so it's
likely that the mystery of the
bright object will remain um -
: l .
BRICK OR FRAME HOMES
MODERNIZING KITCHENS
AL.Sb DUPLEXING
ALTERATIONS -- TILE FLOORS
ALL •TYPES OF ROOFING
Reasonable Prices.
Skilled labor—free .estimates.
PIaAse phone or contact
Bruce E. Ryan
CONTRACTOR
175 BROCK ST. GODERICH
1•••••••••116 :8•o•••N0••
Each of -_these actively trad-
ed, listed, newsprint stocks
pays a good dividend, and
normally you are allowed to
deduct 20% of the dividend
from your "total" income
tax—an unique advantage.
Each of these stocks is
described a d analyzed in
the current Bongard Bulletin,
and a copy will be mailed to
you on request free and
without obligation, so that
you may study the facts in
your own time.
Please ask for "The News-
print situation."
Bongard & Oo-
STOCK BROKERS
...a sure way to save
Members
The Toronto Stock Exchange
Montreal Stock Exchange
Winnipeg Grain Exchange
Vancouver Stock Exchange
Canadian Stock Exchange
- Calgary Stock Exchange
London Office and` Boardroom
379 Richmond Street, with
Rear Entrance 7 Temple St.
Telephone LONDON 24301.
W. 11. Kippen, W. 'L. Bob
Smith, Morton J. Burns, Mat -
well J. McIntyre, Robert
Shaw -Wood.
38tf
1 a...,.
Step by step, the world's longest microwave radio relay system—being built jointly by members
of the Trans -Canada Telephone System—is taking shape. Designed to carry television programs and
telephone calls across the continent by 1958—the system—including spurs—will be 4,300 miles long, with
155 relay stations: It will link most major centres of Canada from Sydney, N.S., to Vancouver, B.0
Building this communications "skyway" is a vast project rgquiring many diverse skills. Peter Misnak-
oskang (upper left), a woodsman from Long Lac, is one of 35 Indians clearing sites in Northern Ontario.
Trees must be cut, rock blasted and roads built before a relay station can be established in this rugged
terrain, - Skilled engineers determine the -exact route- of- the `network- bymeans of slender tem
. ora p ry„ -
test towers, such as this one (lower left) thrusting 200 feet skyward' on a tentative site near Halifax. '
With the sites chosen, work begins on the permanent station. The towers at each location, ranging in
height to 350 feet, will be topped 'by huge antennae resembling a giant sugar -scoop ,(upper. right). The '
microwaves are amplified at each station and relayed by the antennae to the- next station in the system,.'
Even as the towers are being erected, technicians work inside the equipment buildings installing intri-
cate electronic apparatus (lower' right). .
Breakfast — A . Puffy Omelet
crowned with melted cheese.
Cheese makes sense on break-
fast menus. It's a nutritious
food that gets the family off to
an energetic start. .
•
Lunch — Chili Cheese Bake is a
recipe that will make you famous.
Dinner r- Frosted Cheese Pie
Wine -flavored process cheese
makes this the most unusual pie
you've ever tasted !
"4th meal" Snuck— Egg -in -the -hole
is quick and tasty any time. See
the glorious variety of Canadian
Cheese your grocer is featuring.
Write for the recipes.
Address Marie Fraser,
Dairy Food Service Bureau,
409 Huron Street, Toronto.
DAIRY FARMERS OF CANADA
Dairy Food% Servic♦ Bureau' ,1 ' 499 Huron Street, Toronto
— — mom min• —•— — m m min mow MIN OM mfr oil las um — — — — mg 1M NM a■t —
MNN •NN• •
.00TOBER CHEESE FESTIVAL
Ask for .. .
Eatmor Blyth Brand
EUndless Cheddar Cheese
SpecksBefore u r EyeCanadian publishool asked ahe superintendent a
, (K V. P: Philosopher)
If you read the "Voice of the'
People" ,Columns in the newspapers
or "Letters" in the magazines, you
are aware of the high proportion
that • is devoted to correcting mis-
takes, real or imagined, the reader
has found in the publication.
Ever=y editor worth his salt wel-
comes these. It proves that what
he publishes is being read. Some
of the criticisms do indeed set the.
record straight. And the most
violent and crack -pet outbursts
often provide entertainment for
editor and reader.
A great deal of the mail that
comes in to a movie studio or a
radio or TV station is of the same
kind. The writers point out that
the kind of clock shown in a pic-
ture could not possibly have exist-
ed sin the time the . scene took
place; that' a ship was called a
brigantine when it was really a
brig; that .,,Hannibal. was shown
with Indian elephants crossing the
Alps when by logic they Would
have to be African; that someone
called a deer's cranial adornment
horns when they are not horns,
but antlers.
As a matter of fact, a lot of us
derive a lot of satisfaction from
spotting such things, even if we
don't break into print or grab the
telephone.
We call it good fun. ilia the
psychologist calls it something
else. He says we do -it to feed our
ego : . . that we want to- . show
how smart we are, and by correl-
ation, how dumb the other fellow
is . . . and that some of us evert
take sadistic pleasure in showing
up the other fellow.
If,. this is true . . _ and . there
is considerable. evidence that it is
it is a trait not exactly calcu-
lated to make friends, but only to
influence people . . . by rubbing
them the wrong way.
' Some years ago we tried a little
experiment on about 20 folks in
LL our office. (And let us say right
I' now that if someone fiad tried it
on us, we would undoubtedly' have
reacted in exactly the same way.)
We took a sheet of white paper,
letterhead size, and near the mid-
dle put a small dot of ink, about
the size of a period.
"What deo you see?" we asked.
Everybody looked over the sheet
carefully, and without exception
came up with this answer. "I
see a black spot . . . look, right
there."
• Not a single person saw a beau-
tiful sheet of white paper whose
expanse was many times the size
of the small dot. Human nature.,is
like that. We look for the blem-
ishes . . . in the other fellow.
A great teacher once 'described
it as seeing the tiny splinter in
the other feirow's eye, but ignoring
the tree -sized beam in our own_
Most of us have not just one
black dot, but many, in our make-
up. What a wonderful thing it is
that there are some about us who,
while they see and know all about
the dots, prefer to see instead the
somewhat greater area of white
space, and love us for that, rather
than despise us for the dots. We
call those people our friends.
student to write a note . on the
mussical staff she had drawn on the
blackboard. ' She hesitated, then
•bravely began wilting between the
lines of the .staff:
Dear Friend: I hope lou are
well."
These bonds never drop in value.
They can be cashed for their full
face value, plus accrued interest, at
any time, at any bank. They bear
„, interest at the rate of 31/1%, a year.
, Order your bonds today at our nearest branch.
Just telephone, if you like.
To lumpy for comfortable seeping!
2
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• 4
BRUSSELS RACES WON
BY OODER1iJOH HOES'
Two Goderich entries copped top
honors do the harness races staged
last .:-Friday ...afternoon ._in connec-
tion with Brussels Fall Fair.
Bud Jerry's mare, bra Chips,
ron sped home frhead of the rest of
the entries in both heats •of the
free -for -an. Her times were
2.14 3/5 and 2.15.
Bili- t rditet's'. Vicki Oars was
the double hest Winner in the 2.24
elass. Times were 2.16 2/5 and
2.15
It wont biMre when you really need it!
r*i Savings Bonds
Now there you hove something,
whether you pay all cash or in
instalments l They're fireproof and
as
safe too—every bond is registered.
They're no good for papering walls
but can be used fo buy the whole
house. And what a comfortable feel.
ing to know you have the funds for
an emergency or opportunity. More
than a • million Canada Savings
Bond investors have that comfortable
feeling.
`# 10th iSeriesnterest pays �got'
n 3%% , 1
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