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Clinton News Record, 1945-10-25, Page 7OCTOBER 25, 1945 CLINTON NEWS-RECORD --�-�'-- PAGE SEVEN Tuckersiuith te Is Expected r RAI'S e o CHAIRMAN =- E. P. Cliesney; :,.:Gashrate for NEWS -RECORD 7+ *diets good only until 9 p.m. Sat- Hag'"Marketing Scheme aerdays. There will notbe another Loan for '12 ,months. .Last time, Victory Honda were parches - able ortweekly payments spread ever'6 months. This time, buy twice as many spread over 12. months. Doubieyour purchases "--same weekly payments. So 'aaayl. So thrifty! Soaignt SIGN YOUR NAME TO VICTORY' 'VICTORY BONDS Elie t Cafe SALESMEN .r m.n. am Southgafe, A Nicholson, E. P. .y Is Outlined In Detail The scheme, • proposed by the On- tario' Hog Producers Association for the marketing of hogs produced in Ontario„ on"which the hog producers of the Province will vote during the period •between November . 12 and" December 8, if adopted, will give the hog, producers a broad measure of control over the `marketing of their product. The scheme, as it is being presented for the vote, provides not only for the .organization of the hog'produeing industry, but .for the Licensing of all hog buyers and processors, for regula- tions as to the marketing of hogs throughout the whole Provina or .any part of it which may be ,designated; and for settings up a negotiating com- mittee to deal with problems between producers and processors. The first section of the scheme deals with the organization of the hog producers. It provides for the creation of a local board of seven members, to ibe known -as the Hog Producers Marketing Board, The Ontario Hog Producers Association have suggested the first members of the Board, who shall hold office until March 31, 1946, Will be as follows: District 1, Alvin ,Rintoul, Carleton Place; District 2, W. E. Tummon,. Foxboro; District 3, George Wilkin- son, Alliston; District 4, Wilfred Bishop,' Norwich; District 5, Norman McLeod, Galt; District 6, George Johnston, Owen Sound; District 7,. Thomas Robson, Denfield. Seven Districts The producers of hogs shall be divided into seven districts, as fol. lows: District 1. Glengarry, Stormont, Dundas, Mussell, Prescott, Carleton, Lanark, Renfrew, Leeds and Gren- ville Counties; District 2. Frontenae, Lennox and. Addington, Hastings, Prince Edward, Northumberland, Durham, Victoria and Peterborough Counties; District, 3, York, Ontario, District 4, Axford, Norfolk, Brant, Wentworth, Haldimand, Lincoln and Welland Counties, District' 5, Perth, Waterloo, 'Wellington andDu f ' Counties. Distric, uron; Bruce and Grey Counties. District 7, Essex, Kent, Lambton, Middlesex and Elgin Counties. In the plan of organization, the producers of hogs .in each county named' will forma county group. For each district, there w411 be a district Hog Producers Committee, to which each county .group will appoint` a representative or :representatives an- nually, on or before March 15. Each District, `Committee will appoint a member annually ,to the ' Hog Pro- ducers Marketing Board, prior to March 31. Powers and Duties The powers and duties of the Hog Producers Marketing Board are a part of the scheme. This Board is to be given power to control all marketing of hogs produced in On,• tario and to regulate their Sale in accordance with the provisions of the Farm Products Control, Act and regulations made under that Act; In addition, this Board has- authority to take such action .as it deems advisable to stimulate, increase and improve the. marketing of hogs in Ontario, and to appoint such persons as are deemed necessary for this purpose, with the Pro vi o that allexpenses incurred for these activities shall be paid out of the money raised . by the License THE future of Canada is bright. Now that ' Victory is ours and„peace has returned to the world, all of us have a definite obligation to our service men and women. The best 'medical care and treatment must 'be given the maimed and the wounded. Thou - 'sands of others to be clothed and fed and paid while they learn new peace -time trades and pro- 'fessions. Pensions to be paid the next-of-kin of 'those who made the supreme sacrifice, These . and other rehabilitation outlays involve hundreds .of millions of dollars. Our Allies in liberated 'countries need food, '. Thereate4 ways you ;I. For Cash, 2. By regular monthly payments aver a period of 12 months out of your pay envelope, clothing and other supplies to relieve suffering and distress, and they look fo the United Nations, including Canada, to help them. The money for all these things must be raised through the sale of Victory Bonds. You are again asked to buy Victory Bonds.' Victory Bonds, backed by all the wealth of our great Dominion and its people. Remember, Canada will repay you for every dollar youinvest in Victory Bonds. The same rate of savings as . in previous Victory Loans will pay for twice as many bonds over the 12 month period. can buy Victory Bonds; 3. By deferred payment plan. ii' is "a way you can buy . more Victory, Bonds with money as you get it. 4. By personal, arrangement with your, banlc, trust or loan company. NADA PACKERS LTD. Clinton Ontario SIGN YOUJI NAIVIE' FOR VICTORY TUCKERSMITH CHAIRMAN pointment of a ' Negotiating Coni- POTATO CROP DOWN mittee of six persons three appoint- E P. GHESNEY SEA'FORTIP ed by the Hog Producers Marketing OVER 30 PER CENT Board and three appointed from aineng themselves by the licensed ONTARIO THIS TEAR e a e- s is d y sh Y, e s' nt r f of s fees which are provided u p ded for in the regulations ns under the scheme. The second' section of the scheme consists of the regulations to be made by theOntario OntarFarm Products Con- trol Board for _ the marketing of hogs in Ontario. These regulations provide that all processors and buyers of hogs' must be licensed by the Farm Rroducts Control Board, and only persons hav- ing these licenses can, carry on busi- ness as hog processors or buyers. The licenses will be annual, extending from .April 1 to March 31 the fol- lowing year, and the fee is fixed at $1. Fee—Two Cents Per Hog For the purpose of defraying the expenses of the Hog Producers Mar- keting Board for its services rendered in the marketing of Ontario hogs, and carrying out its other duties, every producer and buyer is required to pay annually to the local Board for each hog delivered to a processor and pro- cessed by him Iicense fees at the rate of two cents -per hog. These Iicense fees shall be deducted by, the pro- cessor from the sum of money owing by him to the producer or buyer, and shall be forwarded to the local board at the end of each three month period. The regulations call for the ap processors. The powers given to. th Negotiating Committee are.. listed i the'' scheme as follows: (a) To negotiate: sand fix' eve rents respecting minimum price differentials, premiums and discoun that shall he paid for the grades an weights of live or dressed hogs b processors and other persons; (b) To enquire into and establi the best means of preventing injur to' and bruising of hogs between th time they leave the producers' prem ises until they reach the processor killing floors and to fix responsibiit for all bruising; uirinto (c) To enquire q t the prese deductions for condemnation. insu ance and to negotiate such 'adjust ments as may be deemed expedient (d) To negotiate such other mat ters respecting the •marketing o hogs as the Farm Products Conti Board may determine. (e) To make such recommendation to that Board as may be deemed ad visable. In the event that the Negotiating Committee is unable to arrive at an agreement on any matter, provision is made for a Board of Arbitration, to which the producers and the pro- cessors each name one member and these two will name the third. In case of failureto agree on a third member, the Farm Products Control Board is given authority to name him. Any agreements which are approve& by either the Negotiating Committee or the Board of Arbitrationhave to be submitted to the Farm Pro:huts Control Board for approval before coming into force. Name Marketing Agency The final provision -of the proposed regulations give the Hog Producers' Marketing Board power to appoint this 1 nla'rkjsting - agency or agencies through which the hogs produced in Ontario, or in any part of the Province designated, shall be marketed, 'When that is done, then the &regulation, re- quires that every hog marketed with- in Ontario, or any part of Ontario covered by the appointment of the marketing agency or ,agencies must be soldthrough the medium of or at the direction of the agency or agencies. The above, in summarized form, f Aa anticipated by Huron pCounty potato growers," Canada's 1945 potato crop, is down nearly 30 per cent: and Ontario's lower by over 30 per cent from the 1944 prop. Estimate ; announced by.Dominion Bureau ' of Statistics is 35,184,000 hundredweight from 507,600 acres, ,compared' with 49,409,000 hundred- weight ,frpm 534,900 •acres in 1944 In its first estimate of " production of root ;and other late 'crops, the bureau placed the potato yield at 69. hundredweight per acre this year against 92 hundredweight per acre a year ago. The decrease was attribute& to "substantial" reductions in yields in all provinces and especially in Que. bee, where total production will be about 5,000,000 hundredweight less than the crop of 1944. By provinces the production in hundredweight is iht �' g esti mated'fol- lows, s a. . with 1944 figures in brackets: Prince Edward Island, 3,956,000 (4,719,000); Nova•Scotia, 2,083,000. (3,075,000); New Brunswick, 7,017,- 000 (10,370,000); Quebec, 9,672,000 (15,032,000); 20,000) OManiitoba, 1,250,000�(1,300 90,- 00); Saskatchewan, 2,086,000 (2,246,- 000); Alberta, 1,554,000 (2,153,000); British Columbia, 1,650,000 (1,904,- 000. gives a digest of the contents of the marketing scheme on which the hog producers are to vote. Meetings are being called in every county of On- tario, to be held during the week of November 12, for the purpose of having a thorough discussion of the proposed scheme before voting. De- tails of the procedure of voting are being announced in •a series of adver- tisements being published over the signature of the Chairman of the Farm Products Control Board. RETURN FROM OVERSEAS GODERICII — Among Goderich men who have returned recently from overseas are Survey Sgt. E. F. (Ned) Sale, L.Bdr. It. J. Culp, 'Major Colin Hunter, and L. Cpl. Neil Thompson, M.. Ne went away a boy.. Necaneho,neaMan He has seen things:.... done things ... ...suffered .things ... ; that he won't talk much about. But he is doing a lot of thinking. He is thinking of comrades who will not return and of others who have yet to spend months in hospital. He: is thinking about dependents of those who died. And he is thinkkag of his own future and what it holds for him. Jr -le realizes that he has a handicap of years to overcome to catch up with those who held civil jobs while he was away fighting. When he was in the service, be too bought Victory Bonds, because he realized what the aftermath of war would mean to him and count. less thousands of his comrades. Glennie's Restaurant Get Ready to Buy More Victory Bonds 1