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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1934-06-14, Page 4fethtilk• ftlifl • "eeeeteieeteteeeereiette".....e.e..____ IbreeraulitagILIAleeraorriareemmere.reresr*Mr01. efireprot Brovinciat Election 31UNt 19th, 1.934 ELECT GEORGE IL 410 1 ( Warden of Huron C ou nty ) CONSERV.AT1VE randhiat, in II a eon Min n g A MAN with a clean record. 'bustinesel ability, ceperienced, practical and efficient. Fair play and a Aware deal for ell. LIDERAL-CONSERNATIVE ASS'N OF SOUTH HURON end raised here until her marriage after whith she *moved to MaginAew- awn up- efoltle then five yearic ago went to Tinto to live with her daughteit Vikere she passed away, BLAKE MI. Jim Johnsten speet 'an. wk e4 'with his sister, Mrs. Fred Turn- er eaf Godericb, Mies Gladys Douglas., R, N., and Miss Susie Oeich of Huron Springs, Hensall, spent an evening 'fast week under the parental rook. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Elpfer of the; Babylon Line were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gingerich, • Mrs. Leon Jeffrey,. jr., called one. Mrs. E. E. Clarke, :Saturday &en- ing Mr, and ItIrs. Amos Gingerichand little Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Oesch and family ,spent Sunday., With Mr, and 'Mrs, Sam -.11,0pp, near Hen - sell, Mr. Yule is spending te few days with friends in t'lli, 'Village. Mr. and Mrs.- Roy Gingerich and Miss Eva Bechtel: called on Mr. and INIrs. Ea. 00$6.1 .Saturdny evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Erb and family Mr. and Mrs. Allen Steel,: e. and lit- tle Peter, were week-ee41 vieitore with friends at Iiitchenei :old Baden Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Freckleton, of Luean called on Mrs. E. E. 'Clarke on. Monday ening. H1LLSGREEN (Intended for last week The young people are holding ret air arm ,ee.r in the eidlsgreen chureh on .June 10th in fee evening at 7.30 pen. - Rev. Mr. He of Bay -field will iii•t the guest epeaker- The choir at Kippen will le, in attendance with speeial music. The Ontario Brotherheed of Thr- ebermen are holding their annual eienic et Rondenu Park t'el dune 22. A number of the many friends 7eene this vicinity attend ,1 the fun - eta.' f the late() Mr. Henry Reichert ted in Zurich on Sunday. Mr. and M. Thos. Chuter of St - ford spent Sunday with the lat- eaT's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. • Rich- ealson. Parr Line. Miss Annie Jarrott returned to home after spending a couple of Teenths in the interest of her health ae. Dr. Moir's Hospital, Huron Spr- ings. !Miss Jessie Johnston of Clifford efeited friends in this vicinity during rhe week -end. Mr. and Mrs, D. B. Saunders, and ...inn Norman and Miss Alma Kelly of London. Mr. and Mrs. Gibson Brown ce Windsor. visited friends in this 'vicinity on Sunday. Miss Rcna St,!phenson sent short visit in Stratford A•t-ii friends Mr. Wm. Cochrone of Hinsdale, 'ILL, spent a short visit with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Cochrane and family. 'Mrs. John Cochrane spent a day in London recently. Mr. E. F. Chandler has several mum busy working on his summer :home near Goderich. DRYSDALE, (Intended for last week) Mr. .Jacob Dueharme of Detroit tspent the week -end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Ducharme. Rev. Father Marchand, accornpan- iied by Mr. Gerald Sreenan attend- ed the funeral of the late Archbishop McNeal at Toronto last week. The. Misses Leona and Monica Dewey, twin sisters, were week -end visitors at the home of the Misses Gelinas. Mr. and 'Mrs. John Donomme sp- ent a few days in Detroit last week. Mr. and Mrs. Theophile Ducharme of Detroit renewed acquaintances in the village last Saturday. Mrs. Delphine Ducharme of Wind- exer is a guest at her daughter's home Ms. E. J. Denomme. Mrs. Esther Charret, Miss B. Mous •sieau and Miss M. A. Ganes motor- ed to Toronto one day laet week,Miss 1Gelinas called on her cousins Mr. rand Mrs. Beecher Cryderman of that city. Miss Geraldine Laporte after 8P - tending a few weeks in Detroit retu- Tired home. Iffr. Dennis Charrett renewed accl- maintatices in our burg last Sunday A number of men who worked on the road have been laid off with a premise of a few more days work tater on. We are pleased to . hear that. Mr. Ed. Brisson is able to be around af- ter being ill so long. Miss Alice Bedard after spending the winter months in St, Claire,has returned home for the summer. Miss' Jennet Mero is spending her aeation with her aunt. Mrs. Joe 7-Metiard. Mr- and Mrs. Leo Denomme, of , Se`trolt, are spending a few holidays fat =the former's home, Mk. Philip Ilnenotritne. Dies at Toronto Mrs. Celina Kennedy, widow of Allan Kennedy died ..at the home r:1 r daughter, Mrs.. Cryder- Priiseourt, Toronto, after 'enrrthy iflness Li her Plst .yea• —mod- •- C- h - was ly..e.;1 4 and 141)S. Menno Mat4i and farrliI$ ;spent SO,day with ttir. and Mrs. 4alte SWaietzentruben (Intdiutod for last -week). Messrs. Clarkie and , ,Gratt TuniOr Goderich Spent the week- end with Mrs. E. Clarke, M.'Wad Mrs. John Diek of Orlllia called 'on friends in the village last week. Me. and Mr. Chris. Brermerman and family, Mr. and Mrs, Chris. Lic- ht), of Baden were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs.. Sol Bechler. Mr: and Mrs. Allen Steckleyand tittle Peter, were Sunday 'visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Amos Gingerich. Among 'those who attended the funeral of the late Miss Eleanor Lindenfield of London, was her, Hogarth says: Super -Size Chicks - Have the Vigor to •Make Good Rustlers Box grandfather, Mr. Thos. Johnston and her aunt Miss Mary Johnston, Marga,ret Douglas, Mr. Win. Finlay and son Harold. .Messrs Milton and John Johnston of Northern Ontario called on Mr. and Mrs* Thos. Johnston on theft way to the funeral at London. Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs: Jake Swartzentruber were: Mr. ad Mrs. Joe Lei, Mr. and Mrs. Ratty - Leis of Wellesley' Mr. and Mrs, Cilie Gesell°, Laura and'Clarence. * Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dechlev and family were Sunday visitors with and Mrs. Ed. Oesch. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Johnston and son Jim and Mrs. Edigholfer were annday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Weido of Zurich. vorreerrameaseeeler,e' BARGAINS !: BARGAINS! BARGAINS! Hogarth Super -Size chicks 'at very little more than the price of 'ordinary -size" chicks. They are away to a "head start", as soon as they are hatched, and have a reputation for being "big for their age" all through their lives. Just the chicks to stand a little hardship. SevEll. breeds. you want, if you are brooding theni)urliii: 2'make-shift" conditions. Plenty of vigor Fully Government Approved. filled promptly, Write or pbone, • Hogarth Baby Chick Hatchery 114 EXETER, ONT. Phone 184 1.11nrselay, lune 1404.-1934, hen is a M. ELECTOR, DECIDE At the Conservative Meetings irt Exeter and else- where throughout the Riding Mr. Geo. H. Elliott has claimed to be "the man who made the Motion in the County Council that the Treasurer's Books be investi- gated:." It is not true. The following is a certified copy n1F the motion: "Moved by Mr. McKibbon Seconded. by J. M. Eckert That we engage a chartered accountant to audit the books from. January1st, 1933 and install a proper system of book-keeping for this County the engagement and supervision of the said accountant or accounts to be in charge of the Warden's Committee. d." Motion Carrie The above is a copy of motion that was included in the minutes of June 9th, 1933. Signed, J. M. Roberts, County Clerk. VOTE FOR BAILLANTYNE---The Warden who forced the clean-up. V eeeieir „ • 41: eereerea. :•:04,0" eigeeke''' teitevet•tt.t.4. 4.4 .. • ••••••• you HAVE READ OF RUSSIA. ,know Whet farming in the land of the Soviet leas became, State collectivization with industrialization the supreme goal, bas made the farmer little better than the beasts of the field, the hewer of wood and the drawer of water to the more favored ,dlasse,s, those to whom communism looks for the ultimate success elf its state industrialization experi- ment. FARMERS MUST BE FREE Ontario wants no "swing, to the left". Its farmers must be left free. The men whe, tin 1932, produced $226,446,000 of this province's we.alth, cannot be made the stepping stone for some radical experiment in state industrialization. Farmer though he is, Outtaiio's Liberal leader is prepared to sacrifice his own Mends, to betraY' his fellow workers in the fields in a frantic bid for control uf Ontario's vast natural wealth. By Ms own confession he "r.aing,.., Well to the left", towards the land where the communists, kite socialists and the radicals dwell. HIS ;OWN WORDS • • Aieept his own words to the electors of West York on May 14, 1932. "1 swing well to the left where wine Grits do sot tread." Or take his speech to St. Thomas voters on February 11, 1933. 'Then the C.C.F„ its ideals not yet analyzed, its impossible -to -he -achieved dreams still unexploded, had seized briefly on a part of the public imagination, Mr. Hepburn saw in it another opportunity for a bid for power at the expense of the solid, producing classes of the province, So seizing his opportimity, reeking nothing of what such a pro- gramme would mean, he said, in all the enthusiasm of his inexperience: "The G.C.F. is an example of this traligriment of political thought. It is the latest move in Radicalism. 1 smoke:Hee with the people who make up the reeks of the C.C.F. They ac trying, at least, to find a way out." STAGNATION AND MORTIFICATION Ontario's Liberal leader would cut the cost of government fifty per cent. A tall order, but quite possible if Mr. Hepburn and his party are prepared to sacrifice progress and give the people of Ontario stagnation and mortification, To cut his expenditures Ontario'S Ltberal leader, among other "economies" would wipe out the Ontario Department of Agriculture, He has placed himself on record to effect this. The Toronto Globe, in reporting his speech at a banquet in Toronto on December 15, 193a, says: "The departments of Game and Fisheries, A G.R1COL- TURE, Labour, and Mines, the Motion Picture Bureau, Research 'Work and Colonization were a few which Mr. Hepburn cited as instances where curtailment or ABANDON- MENT of one service could be effected without hurting administration." WHAT OF THE FARMER? Possibly administration would not suffer. But what would happen to the farmer? Where would he be with his overseas selling agent gone merely to set up a record for low spending.?' Would it be true economy to wipe out, at one enthusiastic gesture, tbe agricultural research which makes available to every farther) without money and without price, all the resources of science; skill, .knowledge and experience. for the enlarging of output and the improvement of quality at lower operating costs? WOULD THESE HELP? Would it help the farmer to wipe out the department which held, for farmers and farm evothen, in 1933:„ a total of 93 courses in agriculture and home economics at as many centres throughout the province? Would the monetary saving justify the elixraination in every county of the trained agricultutal representative, the man to whem the farmers look for advice in cases of plant or stock disease? - Through abandonment of the Ontario Department of Agriculture, Ontario's Liberal leader would abandon the Ontario Marketing Board. Can the Ontario fanner afford to be without this board, or would its abandonment be another of the Costly Economies which Mr. Hepburn proposes. The Ontario Marketing Board knew that fruit produced in Ontario was good fruit, but it knew also that it was not reaching outside markets in a way which made potential buyers aware of its goodness. Through co-operation with fruit growers, cooling places and a grading system were estate- /' h t I, In 1929, the year this policy was decided on, %taxi& sold 65 carloads of apples beyond its own boundaries. In 1933, after ten cooling places had been established, sales in Great Britain alone totalled 450,000 barrefs, val- ued at $1,080,000. In addition to this, there were correspondingly large saes on the continent of Europe and in the Canadian West. In the same five.years the export of pears and plums grew from practically nothing to more than 100,000 packages. This is one service renderer] by the Henry Government which the Ontario Liberal Party would wipe out in its effort to make goad on the rash "economy" promise of its leerier. T . V A IT V r ASSOC tboettivtearteminttonettitiOntrAelarvelca.t.... But this is only a small' part of what the Ontario Marketing Board; product of the progressive C.onservative administra-. tion, has done foe the farmer. PRICES WENT UP ha. 1932 it saw another opportunity and this year saw Ontario Brewers who had abandoned Ontario barley using 1,000,000 bushels of the Ontario product at a price $150,000 above the current market quotation. The board turned to the problems of the turnip grower. As a result of its first season's work the hoard obtab.ell use • contract for 1932 for 40,000 bushels and the price obtained now by the farmers is between 50 and 100 per cent. better - than before the board became interested in the situation. Export sales of cattle in 1933 for the whole of Canada . totalled 5%317 head, valued at $3,189,194. Aggressive sales methods of the Ontario Marketing Board were responsible for • TWO-THIRDS ON' THIS TOTAL -31,783 HEAD, VALUED AT $2,014,471—GOING PRIMA ONTARIO. What the Ontario Department of Agriculture and its sub- sidiary, the Ontario Marketing Board—the Department which Liberal Leader Hepburn would wipe out—r" s done for the bacon industry needs no comment. 'The figures speak for themselves. BACON SALES JUMPED In 1032 Ontario:sold thirty million pounds of Bacon in the British Market. In 1933 the figure has grown to 40,000,000 pounds. AND THE FIRST FIVE MONTHS OF 1934 HAVE BROUGHT INCREASED BACON RETURNS OF MORE THAN 815,000.000 TO THE FARMERS OF THIS. PROVINCE Export of dressed poultry has grown from o negligible figure • to :61 total, in 1933, of S1,226,098. To improve live stock herds of the province it agreed to pay twenty per cent. of the cost of pure bred sires. In 1932 alone there were 430 applications and 837,000 was paid. In tbe Eve yeass 442 approved herd sires were sent into Northern Ontario. On these the Ontario Goverraneeit paid 30 per cent. of the cost, plus the freight. Efforts of the department and co-operation of dairymen have improved the quality of the 56,000,000 pound annual production of Cheddar cheese from 39 per cent first quality in 1924 to 96 per cent, first quality in 1932 and Ontario• Cheddar Cheese now brings a premiurn tol from two to three • , cents oder cheese from, other countries. Ontario is the only Province which loans money lo jartners on the security of their lands and chattels_ In 1933 it loaned " in round figures, $6,700,000 to 3,415 applicants. PLEDGED TO ELIMINATION This is the department which Mitchell Hepburn, leader' of Ontario's Liberal Party, has pledged himself to elimi- nat one fen swoop he would wipe out a department: which has done more than anything else in the Dominion or Canada to see the farmers of this Province through the period of agricultural depression. Ontario cannot afford the loss el Its, Department of - Agriculture. Ontario must have construction under the 'progressive Henry Administration: Destruction under Liberal leader Hepburn wouiti mean ruin. ATEON 0 F. er) TTAPT trAtenvOridnef040000400e101/0•4....1'0400.004.000.40•00cereere .0,010e. ert4err,l'Ira40.010,00007.0eVerpreerseeirkareerrerroore...ree."—e../I. „iikeese.41,,x.•