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Zurich Citizens News, 1959-03-18, Page 7WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1959 GI 5 • ZURICH Citizens NEWS 4r> FIND IT IN TEE WANTADS!" uN sERv ca La MEN r teLASSIFXED RATES: 25 words or less, 50e the first week, 35c for repeat advertisements. Lar- ger advs.: 2c a word the first week, then 11/2c for repeats. Cards of Thanks, In Memor- ,' Engagements, same as above Births, Marriages and Deaths, No charge. FOR SALE ROTARY HOG FEEDERS and Letz feed grinders, Apply to Amos Gingerich, Blake, phone Zurich 79r12. 46-tfb FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR in real good condition. Good size frozen food compartment across the top. Apply to Henry Rau, phone 59r16, Bayfield. 11p BEES—about 40 colonies of bees, in standard 10 frame hives, with two supers to each hive. Apply to • Ed. Haberer, phone 174J, Zurich. 10-11-p SEBAGO POTATOES—No. 1 On- tario variety, guaranteed. Free de- livery in Zurich. Apply to Fred Regier, phone Zurich 121. 9 to 12p WHITE DROP LEAF TABLE, or would trade for three kitchen chairs. Apply to Sydney Ramer, phone 90r4, Zurich. SEE YOUR authorized dealer for Viking electric separators and re- pairs. Basil O'Rourke, Blacksmith and Welding Shop, Brucefield. 5-7-9-10-11-12-p RUBBER STAMPS. The Citizens News can fill any of your needs in rubber stamps, stamp pads, etc,, phone 133 Zurich, or drop into aur office. .. 12ttb. SEED — MONTCALM BARLEY, cleaned, grown from registered seed, also some Red Clover. 20 bags table potatoes. Apply to Rus- sel Oesch, phone 687r23, Hensall. 11-12-p PRINTED COUNTER CHECK BOOKS and CONTINUOUS FORMS ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS 33-tfb TYPEWRITERS and ADDING MACHINES - Everything for the office ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS 33-ttb LIVESTOCK FOR SALE HOLSTEIN HEIFERS, springing, priced reasonable. Apply to Gord- on Coleman, phone 99r20, Zurich. 7-x LIVESTOCK WANTED OLD HORSES WANTED -AT 31/2c lib., and dead cattleat value. If dead, phone at once. GILBERT BROS. MINK RANCH, phone col- lect, Goderich, 148334 or 148331 MISCELLANEOUS PAGE SEVEN FARMERS wishing to have their cattle sprayed for lice, phone Bill Watson, Dashwood 37r19. 49-tfb FILTER QUEEN SALES AND service. Repairs to all makes of vacuum cleaners. Reconditioned cleaners for sale. Bab Peck, RR 1, Zurich, Phone Hensall 696r2. 18-20-22-24tfb FLOOR SANDING, PROMPT and efficient service; or rent our sanders and do it yourself. This is the time of year to have your floors refinished. Charles H. Thiel, phone 140, Zurich. 14-tfb DRY CLEANING and LAUNDRY Service. Cali Earl Oesoh's Barber Shop. Pick-up and delivery every Monday and Thursday. Brady Cleaners and Laundetenia Ltd., Exeter. 22-tfb WATERLOO CATTLE BREED- ING ASSOCIATION "Where Bet- ter Bulls Are Used". Supply arti- ficial breeding service for all breeds of cattle. If phoning long distance, simply ask for Clinton Zenith 9-5650 If it is a local call, use our reg- ular number— Clinton HU 2-3441 For service or more informa- tion, call between: 7.30 and 10.00 a.m. week days, 6.00 and 8.00 p.m. Saturday evenings For cows noticed in heat on Sunday morning, do not call until Monday morning. The quality is high and the cost low. PROPERTY FOR SALE 25 ACRES CHOICE LAND, on Highway No. 84, about three miles west of Zurich, Lot 21, Con. 15, Hay Township. 50 percent of land planted in Christmas trees. Apply to Neil Walker, Zurich. lltfb LYRIC THEATRE EXETER NOW PLAYING: Thursday, Friday & Saturday MARCH 19, 20, 21 "Quantez" Fred MacMurray, Dorothy Malone Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday MARCH 23,3 24, 25 "Kathy" Dan Duryea, Patty McCormick Coming: "HOUSEBOAT" Cary Grant, Sophia Loren Matinee: Saturdays 2 p.m. .111101000111111 CARDS OF ,THANKS I would like to express my sin- cere thanks to all my friends and relatives for all the cards, flowers, treats and visits while a patient at St. Joseph's Hospital, London, and since returning home.—RUTH WEIDO, 11p Mrs. Sam Rohner and family wish to express their sincere thanks and appreciation to rela- tives and friends for the many acts of kindness, expressions of sympathy and beautiful floral tributes received during our recent bereavement. Special thanks to Rev. C. E. Peacock, Mrs. Don Kingsbury, the pallbearers, West- lake funeral home, and all who helped in any way. 11b The family of the late Alan George Lockie wish to express their sincere thanks and apprecia- tion for all the acts of kindness, messages of sympathy and beauti- ful floral tributes received during their recent sad bereavement in the loss of a dear husband and father. Special thanks to Padre T. F. McKay, Fa, K. Carpenter, and all those who took part in the service or helped in any way. — MRS. ALICE M. LOCKIE and FAMILY. 11-b Acre Strawberries Costs $785 For Year's Production Strawberry production is an in- tensive enterprise. A three-year study completed by the Farm Economics and Statis- tics Branch of the Ontario De- partment of Agriculture reveals that the average total cost of pro- ducing strawberries was $785 per harvested acre, 61 percent of which was for labour. It is cal- culated that the average costs for 1958 would be $856 per acre pick- ed. A total of 4,000 acres in On- tario (nearly one third of it in Norfolk County) in some years produces a crop worth two million dollars. Some 49 percent of the total average costs were for harvesting and marketing—mostly labour and containers; for the fresh fruit trade this percentage was even higher. The labour requirements of 759 hours per acre (80 man work un- its) are three times as great as for peaches, and almost 100 times that for field crops like spring grain and hay. More than half of the labour time is used in picking. A summary of strawberry pro- duction costs is contained in On- tario Department of Agriculture Circular 342, obtainable at the of- fice of the county agricultural re- presentative. CASH YOU NEED, 'TIS PLAIN TO SEE ...,50 OFF YOU GO TO T.C.C. A MOMENT'S ALL THE TIME IT TOOK, AND LIFE TAKES ON A BRAND-NEW LOOK_ THE MORAL'S PLAIN FOR ALLTO SEE ,.,WHEN YOU NEED CASH SEE T.C.C. IS CANADA CREDIT RATION LI M ITED SQUARE, PHONE 797 ODERIC 1 ONT. Why put up with money problems? The solution to those worrisome bills is as easy as this: call Trans Canada Credit! Loans from $150. to $2,500., or even more, can be arranged for up to 20, or 30 months. So why not solve your money problem? Call us today! Cultivate Your Curiosity, Urges Safety League Prying curiosity into the affairs of neighbours is bad manners. Yet it is strongly recommended by the Ontario Safety League , .. to driv- ers. Be downright inquisitive in traffic, asks the League. Cultivate a curiosity about ev- everything that's going on. Every- thing that's going on, or stopping Especially stopping. Try to find out if, when why and where other drivers are going to stop. Ask yourself why the man in the passing lane is slowing down; is he turning left or is he waiting for an unseen pedestrian? Specu- late about the ball that bounces into the roadway—is there a re- triever right behind, either the two or four -legged type? Check on the car parked at the curb with the engine running—is the driver keeping warm, or is he about to move off? Give a thought to the tires of the car you are following at 60 m.p.h.—what happens to you if one of them blows out? Weigh the possibility that the Highways De- partment put down those double white lines ahead because the curve is dangerous—and not just because they like to use up paint. Use imagination and patience—not the gas pedal—to find out why the driver ahead is braking sharp- ly when the road is apparently clear. Curiosity may have killed the cat, but it has saved a lot of driv- ers, Make everybody's business your business, when the business is moving in traffic. A healthy curiosity on the road sometimes avoids a very unhealthy crash. Hensall Kinettes Plan. Inter -Club (By our Hensall Correspondent) Mrs. William Mickle was hostess at her home on Tuesday evening for the ni' etiig of the Hensall Kin- ettes, with president Mrs. Jack Drysdale presiding.. Discussion centred around plans and arrangements for the coming inter -club meeting which is being held at the local arena on May 1. This Sunday, March 21, members of the club will visit some 30 to 35 shut-ins in homes, hospitals, and nursing homes. Mrs. Jim Clark won the mystery prize. The Citizens News Sells Counter Check Books Hensall Kin Give $25 to Listowel. Disaster Fund (By our Hensall Correspondent) "Advertising Night" was obser- ved at the dinner meeting of the Kinsmen Club held last night. Vice- presidents John Heal and Ross Jinks chaired the meeting. Guests were present from Delhi, including Wilf Wittet, nominee for Deputy Governor for Zone D, who gave a campaign speech. Cpl. Les Dupont, RCAF Station Clin- ton, who resides in Hensall, was also a guest. A cash donation of $25 was vot- ed to the Listowel Disaster Fund. Discussion centered around the Zone D Conference to be held in Hensall at the .Arena on Sunday, April 5, from 9 a.m. on. 150 mem- bers from 12 clubs are expected to attend. 0 Canadian Urged To Eat More Apples To Relieve Surplus As cold storages bulge with the remains of 1958's bumper harvest, Canadians are being urged to eat more apples. At February 1, there were 4,340, 000 bushels of apples in cold stor» age and another 276,000 in com- mon storage. This was roughly 25 percent of last year's 16,685,000 - bushel crop, Canada Department of Agricul- ture and the Canadian Horticult- ural Council have joined forces on a $25,000 promotional program to increase home consumption. The campaign will run to mid-April. Holdings Highest Holdings at the first of the month were the highest in five years, At February 1 last year, there were 3,126,000 bushels in cold storage. Coupled with the big 1958 crop, five percent higher than the pre- vious year and the third largest in the past decade, exports have been smaller to date due to the loss of an outlet' in Continental Europe. To February 1, exports to the United Kingdom totalled about 849,000 bushels compared with 667,000 bushels at the same time last year. About 800,000 bushels had been exported to the United States—roughly the same as in, 1958. ' To stimulate consumption of ap- ples and thereby reduce the cold storage holdings, Canadians in the next month or so will be encour- aged, to give them a prominent place in the 'daily menu. LO. (.1)ST Depend on us for every printing need from a letterhead to a complex adver- tising piece. Esti- mates gi es°- requesc, FINE MINTING CAL` ZURICH CITIZENS NEWS CALL ZURICH 133