Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Citizens News, 1961-08-03, Page 7THURSDAY, AUGUST 3, 1961. ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS PAGE SEVEN New Ausable Conservation Officer Is Graduate of Ont. Agr. College John T. "Terry" McCauley, of Bowmanviule, a graduate of OAC, succeeds H. G. "Hal" Hooke as field officer of the Ausable River Conservation Au- thority, with his office in Exe- ter. The transfer becomes ef- fective August 1. Mr. McCauley has been field officer for three conservation authorities in the Peterborough _district since 1959, when he was appointed to permanent staff of the Dept. of Commerce and Developement. Mr. Hooke takes over as field officer for the three authorities which Mr. McCauley served — Central Lake Ontario, Ganar- aska and Otonabee Region — plus a new one just formed, the Crowe River. The transfer appears to cater to the interests of both officers. Mr. Hooke, a graduate in for- estry, will be in charge of the conseravtion program in the forest areas around Peterbor- ough. Mr. McCauley's OAC background, specializing in field crops, will assist him in pro- moting conservation farm prac- tices in the Ausable watershed. A native of Brantford, Mr. McCauley attended schools in Montreal and Toronto before entering OAC. He graduated with his BScA degree in '59. He worked with the Ausable au- thority during the summer of '59 and that fall spent several months with the Grand Valley authority in Guelph. His wife, Marilyn, a native of New Liskeard, is a graduate of Macdonald Hall, Guelph, and has accepted a home eco- nomics teaching position with Seaforth District High School for the coming year. The McCauleys have two children, Norman, 19 months, and Alisha, now 10 weeks old. HOLIDAY WEEKEND AHEAD ! ! BE PREPARED WITH PICNIC SUPPLIES HOT DOG and HAMBURG ROLLS PKG. OF 8 — 25c TASTY -NU BAKERY "HOME OF THE "TASTY -NU" BREAD" MORE FURNACE LOW BOY 011 and GAS FURNACES iorLESS MONEY ONLY 42 INCHES LOW—The I Coleman Low Boy Furnace can be installed in basements with m extreely low ceilings. UNIVERSAL—It delivers a new /' high in efficiency for any duct system. , Save on heat — have clean, healthful, filtered warmth all through your home. Low Boy has features of much more ex- pensive furnaces. Extra big heat exchanger, fully automatic controa, .filters and•:, blower. Prime Minister At Anniversary A crowd of 6,000 attended the 20th Anniversary Celebration of the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association on the evening of July 26, at the Unit headquar- ters. Earlier in the evening, over 3,000 people partook of the Beef Barbecue prepared by Master Chef, Tom Hays, and the serving was done by the Bloom- ingdale Women's Institute. A big attraction was the pre- sence of the Rt. Hon. John G. Diefenbaker, P.C., Prime Minis- ter of Canada, and Mrs. Dief- enbaker. They were accomp- anied by the Hon. J. Waldo Monteith, Minister of Health and Welfare and Mrs. Monteith; and Mr. 0. W. (Mike) Weichel, MP for Waterloo North and Mrs. Weichel. Other Federal and Provincial members pres- ent were Ontario Liberal Lead- er, John J. Wintermeyer, MPP for Waterloo North; Ray Meyer, MPP Waterloo South; The Hon. John Root, Minister - without Portfolio from Wellington Nor- th; Harry Worton, MPP, for Wellington South; Gordon In- nes, MPP from Oxford; Alf Hales, MP Guleph; Marv. Howe, MP, as well as the Hon W. A. Goodfellow, Minister of Agricul- ture of Ontario, who introduced the Prime Minister. Also present were top offic- ials of both Canada and Ontar- io Departments of Agriculture; the Breed Associations; OAC; OVC; Veterinary Director Gen- eral and other artificial breed- ing organiaztions in Ontario. BROWNIE'S Drive -In Theatre Ltd. CLINTON THURSDAY and FRIDAY August 3-4 "High Time" (Colour) (Scope) Bing Crosby "— Fabian Tuesday Weld (One Cartoon) SATURDAY ONLY — August 5 "Wild River" (Colour) (Scope) Montgomery Clift Lee Remick — Jo VanFleet (One Cartoon) • r tail. fo F EE oi tfoNSurv.ey of, your Horne SEE THE NEW COLEMAN SPACE HEATERS Idea for Cottage .. . ..Or Small Homes! GAS or 011 MODELS! Cingerich' �SakStSevice Sa.Limited ZURICH — • Si AFORTH SUNDAY MIDNITE ONLY August 6 (Double Feature) "T'he Attack of The Puppet People" John Agar — June Kenny "War Of The Colossal Beast" Sally Fraser — Roger Pace (One Cartoon) MON., TUES., WED. __ August 7.8-9 __ "PSYCHO" (Adult Entertainment) Anthony Perkins Vera Miles — Janet Leigh (One Cartoon) THURSDAY and FRIDAY August 10-11 'One Foot In Hell (Colour) (Scope) Alan Ladd — Dolores Michaels (One Cartoon) SATURDAY and MONDAY August 12-14 Federation of Agriculture Fieldman Discusses Increase In Grain Prices (By J. Carl Hemingway) Last week I reported the re- commendations given by "Agri- cultural experts" to OFA, which were to the effect that some- thing must be done to prevent a rise in the price of feed grains. - In the July 26, issue of the Winnipeg Free Press the meet- ing of the Farm Union also ex- pressed concern over the sud- den increase in feed grain pri- ces. The Prime Minister compli- mented the Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association on its achievements, spoke about ag- riculture in general and indica- ted that he had noticed the good crops in the area and com- pared this with the Canadian west where a severe drought is being experienced. Mr. Diefen- baker indicated that every ef- fort should be made to feed some of the hungry people of this world adequately, as this is also our best weapon against communism. I quote "Mr. Mel Tebbutt, OFU president, said the infla- ted price was making it impos- sible for Ontario feeders to feed western feed grains." I would ask the question "Who is being prevented from feeding this grain? Certainly a $10 increase per ton is not going to keep the "grass-roots" f a m i l y farmer from purchasing the odd ton of grain to tide him over until har- vest. From the most recent figures available from the Department of Agriculture, 78.7 percent of the grain fed in Ontario is grown in Ontario. When we realize that there are a good many extremely large egg pro- ducers with up to 110- 000 hens, that practically all the broilers and turkeys are fed on commercial feed, that there are also many extremely large hog and cattle feeders who purchase hundreds of tons of western WEEK END SPECIALS AYLMER 10 OZ. Tomato Soup 10 LB. BAG FINE Granulated Sugar Rose Margarine Bananas 3 tins 35c 85c 3 lbs. 79c 2 lbs. 33c LUCKY DOLLAR FOOD MARKET CLARENCE GASCHO — ZURICH 'Dog Of Flanders' (Colour) (Scope) David Ladd — Donald Crisp (One Cartoon) Free Pocorn Monday Night for the Children before 9:30 p.m. {TUES., WED., THURS., FRI. August 1516.17.18 Academy Award Winner 'Elmer Gantry' (Adult . Entertainment (Colour) Burt Lancaster Shirley Jones BETWEEN STARTER and LAYER THE BOSS KNOWS ITS PAYING TO FEED SHUR-GAIN CHICK STARTER Following the best possible start on Shur -Gain Chick Starter — keep your chicks maintaining that fast grow- ing pace with Shur -Gain Chick Grower. Shur -Gain Chick Grower is a scientifically formulated feed with high pro- tein value, extra vitamin fortification, high mineral con- tent and increased energy level, in fact the correct balance of nutrients for your chicks. GET SHUR-GAIN CHICK GROWER FOR YOUR FLOCK'S GROWING FEEDS NEEDS 10111111 1.10=1.111 M. G. DEITZ and SON Z (TRICE( Cedar Chests For Sale PRICED FROM $10.00 UP feed, we can only conclude the vast majority of farmers will not be affected by increased pri- ces of commercial feed. As feed prices rise it simply means that this "grass-roots' far- mer, that farm organizations are supposedly working for, will be in a much better competitive position in the production of food. Let us not complain about the high cost of feed grains lest we encourage the government to investigate the advisability of is- suing import permits for US feed grain which, according to the Ottawa report, they are pre- sently considering. Let us look at the relationship between grain prices and farm prosperity. Again according to the latest figures available from the Department of Agriculture for Ontario. The price of feed grain climbed steadily from 1942 until 1951 and then began a steady decline to 1959 with a very slight increase in 1960. In over 20 years of farming my most prosperous year, by far, was 1951 when the average price for oats was 91.,5 and bar- ley was 1.30.7. For many years I have be- come more and more firmly convinced that the prosperity of the real farmer is directly de-- pendant on the comparative val- ue, in our economy, of what his land produces. It is my earnest hope that our farm organizations will keep this in mind and act ac- cordingly. 0 Renew Your Subscription Now Replace power -robbing, noisy worn-out muffler — at Canadian Tire's DISCOUNT SAVINGS MOTO - MASTER Extra - Life MUFFLERS • LONG LIFE • SAVE GAS • QUIET Custom engineered for perfect "new -car" fit Free Exhaust Safety Check — Just Iron Clad Guarantee — drive to your Canadian Tire Store A new Muffler if it — no obligation, glad, to be of blows out. No time service. limit. 15 MINUTE INSTALLATION -- MUFFLER INSTALLED DISCOUNT PRICE MAKE AND YEAR (SINGLE EXHAUST PASS. CARS) "Do -It -Yourself" Muffler Discount Price CHEVROLET: 1949-53 (exc. conv.) 1954-58 (exc. cony.) 1959-60 PONTIAC: 1949-54, 6-cyl. 20-22 1955-60, 20, 22, 70 54.95 6.60 6.60 4.95 6.60 57.20 8.85 8.85 7.20 8.85 PLYMOUTH: 1949-53, 6-cyl. P17 to P23 7.65 9.90 (exc. conv.) 1954-59, 6-cyl. (exc. cony.) 7.65 9.90 DODGE: 1949-53, 6-cyl. D31 to D43 (exc. cony.) 7.65 9.90 1954-59, 6-cyl. (exc. cony.) FORD & METEOR Single Exh. 1949-54, 8-cyl. (exc. cony.) 1955-56, 8-cyl. 1957, 8-cyl. (exc. conv.) 1958-59, 8-cyl. (exc, cony.) VOLKSWAGEN: 1955-59, 4-cyl. 10.80 16.80 Similar savings on other passenger cars, including imports. Big discount on Moto -Master Exhaust Equipment for com! mercial vehicles. Brackets for tail -pipe installation (extra, where needed). Clamps, each 19 7.65 5.98 7.30 8.15 8.20 9.90 8.23 9.55 10.40 10.45 CA AD1RB, 'IRE ASSOCIATE STORE MILTON ROBBINS and SON 436 MAIN ST, EXETER