HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1943-09-23, Page 7:NlyV'S
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MINIATURE JAP SUBMARINE ABANDONED ON KISKA.
This is a view of the Japanese submarine base on Kiska Island, taken by a Canadian army photographer after
Canadian and American units had reoccupied the island and discovered that Nippon's soldiers had d.e. The •under-
sea craft left in a damaged condition on runways and in the sheds are the two-man or three-man type which the
Jape first used in their attack on Pearl Harbor.They were damaged either by Allied bombing or shelling or by
enemy demolitions befoie he withdrew.
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NAME
POST OFFICE
STREET OR R.R. PROV.
To Pay Subsidies
to its breed type or the quality of
To Milk Producers its fleece. 'These buyers prefer, as
farmers do, to buy their rants by
Hon, James G. Gardiner, Minister grade,
of Agriculture, announced Septetn- ]tam grading is a policy of the
ber 1011 that the Government has Dominion Department of Agricult-
decided to revise the subsidies on ure. On application from purebred
dairy products because of increased breeders, experienced officers of the
costs brought about largely through department classify yearling and
the feed grain failures in whole milk lamb rants into four grades, These
and cheese producing areas.
Beginning October 1st, 1942, and
continuing until April 20th, 1944,
subsidies will be paid to dairy pro-
ducers as follows;;
1, Fifty-five cents per hundred
Pounds to producer -distributors of
fluid milk and of such milk bought by
distributors for fluid milk consump-
tion, as the Agricultural Food Board
may direct;
2. Thirty cents per hundred lbs.
of milk used. for concentration pur-
oses as the Agricultural Food Board
may direct,•' or by mail order, he knows exxactly
3. Thirty cents per hundred lbs, the quality of the ram he is adding
of milk used in the manufacture of to his flock.
cheddar cheese. Breeders with rams to grade or
4. Eight cents per pound of but- buyers welshing to acquire rams
ter fat until December 31, 1943 and should get in touch with their near -
10 cents a pound butter fat from est livestock officer.
January 1, 1944, to A,pril 30, 1944. For sheep feeding, good legume
It is expected that these subsidies, hay has no equal, say live -stock auth-
together with the prices at which orit[es. Leafy green clovers or alf-
milk sells, will make it passible for alfa hays are not only palatable but
farmers to produce sufficient milk to they furnish both protein and essen-
provide the fluid milk, canned milk, tial minerals. Sheep do not like any
cheese and butter necessary to feed of the coarse -stemmed mature grass
the civilian and armed population as hays. Ripe brome, crested wheat
well as supply ou rallies with cheese grass, or timothy hay are of little
and canned milk in considerable value to sheep. Cereal straws are
quantities. extremely poor feed. However, fine
It is thought that if western grain and leafy straw which contains
is moved east at present ceiling price quantities of clovers, gxasses, and
in sufficient quantities farmers in weeds may have considerable value.
whole milk and cheese producing ar- It may be used to supplement legume
eas with the assistance of subsidies hays. Coarse lowland hay has little
will be able to maintain production value as a sheep feed..If grass or
at a reasonable level. cereal hays are used, -they should
The Government is making a spa- have been harvested early and cured
cial effort to encourage the move- well
meat of every possible :bushel of Corn silage and roots, especially
feed grin from west to east with- turnips, are the most common sucou•
out increased price to the eastern lents fed to sheep. They add variety
farmer. It is expected that the On- to the ration and ten to keep the
tario and 4:1uebec farmers who have ewes in a thrifty condition. Three or
light crops will be supplied with four pounds a day are about the
sufficient grain at present costs to most that should be fed per cheep.
maintain their planned production Turnips, are especially valuab1 to
of meat and dairy products. It is the milking ewe. Corn silage should
hoped that the increased cost 01 pur- be sweet and free from mould. Sheep
chased feed for dairy production ov- require a supply of salt throughout
er home grown feed will he financed the year, preferably salt containing
by the subsidies provided. iodine. Sheep do not obtain enough
The Minister states that farmers salt when it is supplied in block form.
across Canada deserve credit for Sheep also like a considerable am •
-
meking as great a patriotic effort in Dunt of water, and in the winter
spite of labour and price difficulties time, the amount they may be able
as any part of the producing popula- to obtain from snow is not sufficient
Lion of Canada. . to keep them healthy. Further infor-
"There is no part of the .popula- motion will be found in the special
tion of Canada which has made war -time pamphlet No. 71 entitled
greater sacrifices and exercised less "Breeding, Feeding, and Housing of
Sheep," a copy of which may be ob-
tained by writing to Dominion De-
partment of Agriculture, Ottawa.
grades range from SXA rams of stud
ram calibre suitable for heading
flocks of choice, purebred ewes of
the sante breed down to Grade X
MITIS which are -not suitable for
breeding at all.
The ram grading policy benefits
the breeder with rams to sell by pro-
perly classifying. them. It benefits
buyers even more, enabling farmers
or farmers' organizations to buy
rams by grade. Whether a buyer
purchases a graded purebred ram at
the breeder's farm, in the sale ring,
pressure and I trust producers will
find it possible to keep up their pro-
duction with this assistance," said
Mr. Gardiner.
FARM NOTES
Farmers owning grade flocks of
sheep are advised by the Dominion
Department of Agriculture to use
purebred rams. A purebred ram im-
proves the flock with heavier and
finer fleeces.
'But not every farmer can identify
a good ram when he sees it. Even
ram buyers are not always accurate
in estimating a ram's conformation
The excessive rainfall during the
spring and early summer was ideal
for the growth and spread of peren-
nial sow thistle, says J. D. McLeod
of the Crops, Seeds and Weeds
Branch of the Ontario Department
of Agriculture. Perennial sow thistle
says Mr. McLeod, multiplies both by
means of seeds and roots and
spreads through the soil with re-
markable rapidity, to choke out the
growing crops.
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