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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1953-11-27, Page 6�-ry7cF! ca Cheese ° Drop Told°. riot Milk. Producers IPA 1Bo31 .,R.R, 2, Walton.. •. teeny with trucking," he said. "It may be that in some oases the rates are too low and it may be that we have some truckers who were never cut out to be milk handlers." It can make spite a difference to the quality of the milk, he said, to w a 1eR :,p ,artiest• isf the Mit- oh$ri• Pietriet Milk Producers' As- seidation at the group'! annual meeting in Mitchell F41d.,a7 Isaac Bartle, Monkton, was elected vice - .president, and, Irvin Trowarbla, eaforth, was renamed secretary tttrasurer. have truckers who are regular on Addressing the gran, was"their routes, and provide proper t '33riggs, dairy ooananissioner for covering for their cargo of milk Oiatario, alto predicted thuk if tae cans, to reduce the effects of sum- aiadny milk. producers ewiteh during mer heat, dust, and winter wea- t to next year frons ceumg milk to ease gaG{gries and sell instead to Cher."The testing in this plant is be - concentrated milk plants, there Ing well done," said Mr. Webster, in comment on the milk, factory at Mitchell. "The equipment being used to haul milk to Mitchell is equal to the beat that is being used anywhere in Ontario." ay! not he enough cheese in Can - Ada to fill the domestic market. 'Commenting. oe the recent deal made by the Ontario Cheese Pro - deters' Association, to sell 10,000,- 000 Pounds of cheese to 'Great Britain, and assess every cheese producer two cents a pound to make up the deficit on the 16,000,- 000 -pound export deal, Mr. Briggs said it is his opinion that the cheese producers will gain in the outcome, because the export sale will tend to sustain the price for cheese sold in Canada. Increase In Milk Pointing out the interdependeuce of the several segments of the milk industry, Mr, Biggs said .'tat the producers. of milk for cheese, milk for butter, milk for fluid sales, and, milk for concentrated milk factories are all affected 'by any price situation in any of the four branches. "I suggest that from a long-term view," he said, "cheese is the pr& duct that we should export. There is a definite market in the United Kingdom for Ontario cheddar; I think cheese is the form in which our dairy surpluses should move out of this country." The livestock population figures in Canada now indicate, said the speaker, that there is going to be an increase in milk production in Canada in 1954, possibly of .about three per cent over the -953 pro- duction. In Ontario, he said, there are 8.4 per cent more dairy- cows now than there were in the autumn of 1952, and in Canada there are six per cent more dairy cows than there were a year ago. Report on Testing Dry weather this fall has led to more trouble than usual with dust problems in the transportation of milk, reported 'Herbert Webster, Woodstock, fieldman for the Con- centrated :Milk Producers' Associa- tion. Mr. Webster, as a check test- er for the farmers' organization, regularly visits factories and makes spot-checks and re -tests on the grading of farmers' milk by the factories. It has been noticeable this fall, he said, that there has been more than the usual trouble with milk found to be dirty on arrival at the factory, because of road dust on the milk cans. "Some places we have some dif- WINCHELSEA ION l and 114rs Biu Ducat and fance visited with M. and •Mrs Earl Barker Sunday, celebrating Terry and Jeckie's bit thday, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Park and family, and Mr. and• Mrs. George Ajrrene; and faintly visited. Sunday aROMSn with their parents, Mer, end M. Albert Roney and Mr, and Mrs, Chairles. Roney, lttlr, and Mgrs. Lawrence. Barker and family visited with Mr. and Mrs, Leans Moore 'Sunday. Children around Zion enjoyed skating 'Saturday ,afternoon in chell. Mr. and Mrs. George Pepper and M. Balfour and Dalton visited with M. and Mrs. Ross Pepper on Sunday. Did you know that since 1949 July has displaced June as the most popular month for marriages in Canada? CROSSROADS (By James Scott) NEW MAGIC When you pick up this paper I'll bet a dollar to a doughnut not a reader among you ever stops to think of the mechanical wonder which lies behind its production. The very word's you are reading now were set by a miraculous machine called the linotype. It looks like a sort of cross between a piano and an overgrown type- writer, As the operator sits there picking out the letters on his key- board, this wonderful machine ac- tually casts the type, spaces it out perfectly in the line• and in no time at all a page of print is set. This is a far cry to the old days when the type carne in little boxes and journeyman printers—and a colorful lot they were too—picked each letter out by hand and set it in the line. The type he used was made of metal from casts made by the great type designers of the ages. Even that was a far cry from the first primitive printing which used type carved from wood blocks. We have come a long way from Wil- liam Caxton and we're not at the end of the road, not by a long chalk. I have just seen a book which is printed without using any metal type—or wooden type for that mat- ter—at all. It is particularly in- teresting to us in these parts be- cause it is about the Festival our neighboring city of Stratford held so successfully this summer, and it is the first book ever to be printed in Canada using this new principle. The title. by the way, is "Renown at Stratford." There is only one machine in Canada which can do this kind of work which is a combination of typesetting and autmatic photogra- phy. It works something like this. The typesetter uses a keyboard some- thing like the one you find on a linotype, but instead of each letter being cast in metal it passes in front of the lens of a camera. The camera records each letter on film and the negative isused directly to make an etching from which a com- plete page is printed. There's no doubt about it, this new process, still in its infancy, is going to cause a minor revolution in printing before we're through. And that's not the end of it either. Mr. 'Harold Clarke and Mr. Ivan Brock were in Windsor Thursday. ' Mr. Newton Clarke, Mr. Harold Clarke, Mr. Bev. Morgan and Mr. Lorne Passmore spent Friday at the Royal Winter Fair. 'Mr. and Mrs. Cline Dobbs, Glen - cairn, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Brock. Mr. Jake Snider, :Kitchener, spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. R'ib. Batten. Miss Joy Whitlock, St. Thomas, visited over the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. F. V. Borne. Mr. and Mfrs. Lorne 'Shouldice, London, visited Sunday with Mr. find; Mrs. Newton Clarke. Mr. and Mrs. Cliff Moore and family, Exeter, visited Friday eve- ning with Mr. and Mrs. Wib, Bat- ten. Lawn Bowlers Picnic Once upon a our local Bowl- ing Club dee' ed o hold a picnic before the advent of winter. It was felt that, near a lovely lake, sur- rounded by dense WOODS, where children could romp up hill and down DALE, would afford general pleasure. On the . lake, members were EE to catch large TEALL ducks, 'such as are found in certan expan- sions of the St. LAWRENCE River. To this lake, on a certain occasion, one of the members, a newcomer, in the grey morning HAYS, once saw a noble HART come down to drink. At that moment, another man decided to PARIKE his auto near where a BALL game was in progress. Just then a "home" -strike drove the ball into the water where some ROWS were growing near the edge. For a moment the outfielder felt he was in a' BOX, but, throwing off his WESTCOTT, he did not de (MMUIR. He began to WADE into the water ,OLOSB to shore. Final- ly, with the aid of a LOINGISTAFF, in less than a Md'NNETT, he recor- -ered the BALL, ,but the extreme ef- fort he made to KLING to it gave ham an AD:ENNEAD. He soon re- vived, after eating several of CtHRIiSTIEE'S biscuits. We forgot to mention the "home" strike splintered the hickory bat. "Don't worry!" the captain exclaim- ed, "I'll fix it with slome 'good G'LEW, which a black -SMITH gave ',Me one day as I left the BARBER shop While there, L was told the r ertnan • 11A1SM once asked a IS'l11EV0IART of his household to .re- ur air the broken SilittS of his crab ee With b new ,sledge HAM - ER ;6: .'the'tlimate rtfirougbo1i't this . lake ai f5$ftin id. f4statet' `Oalittniotis, as it o f felt tis apse: f7ho 7teary Matitle„of WR -EY ? fine V' that. sitftUy°' nt Nsdafilties bio A:t ' ne Many researchers are already busy on various types of processes which will transmit the printed word through the air. Many details are to be worked out yet, but it is by no means beyond the realm of pos- sibility that popular books and your morning paper will come to you through a machine some day in the future. Doubtless the comic strips will be animated. All you will have to do is turn a button to get the editorial page, the women's section or the sports page, and there it will show on your machine until you're finished reading it, Then, with a twist of the knob you can move on to some- thing else. Well, it's a wonderful world we live in. The advantage of this kind of newspaper is that it can be kept up to date almost instantly. No need for extras, no delay while the copy is set in type, moulded and printed. In other words, you will have the news almost as soon as it happens, complete with pictures. That's all right, I guess, but to tell the truth the way the news is these• days full of scares, tragedies, broken homes, delinquent children, war -mongers and traitors, I'm not too keen to hear about it right away or ever if I can avoid it More and more the daily paper seems devoted to proving that the human race is a pretty cruel, de- generate, dishonest crew. I don't believe this, and even when we do slip I can wait a while to hear about it. Farm News of Huron ,Plowing is now completed. At the end of last week meat of the t1'eef cattle and young dairy cattle were;, still on pasture. This • fall has seen • the completion of an apove ayerage amount of drainage work. Fail wheat, old, meadows and new seednge are going into winter in excellent condition. • • • Feed Costs Curling a Forced Moult Keeping hens over the moult for a second year is something of a risk. A combination of conditions must be favorable if the Iiractice is to be worthwhile. The, value of hens as meat, the health and egg production history of the flock, and the egg market outlook are only a few conditions to be considered. In addition, of course, the cost of feed consumed during the between -sear son moult is important. Until a few years ago the natural moult was a lengthy process and one which seemed to entail consid- erahle costs in feed. Nowadays the practice of forced moulting allows greater control and 'provides for a more straight -forward accounting of costs. The cost of forced moulting was studied recently at the Harrow, Ont., Experimental Station, says poultryman W. F. Mountain. In September, 1952, about 350 Leg- horn hens were put out on good alfalfa pasture and supplied with ample drinking water. These had USBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE — EXETER, ONT. President, William A. Hamilton, Cromarty; Vice -President, Martin Feeney, R.R. 2, Dublin. DIRECTORS—Harry Coates, Cen- tralia; E. Clayton Colquhoun, R.R. 1, Science Hill; Milton McCurdy, R.R. 1, Kirkton; Alex J. Rohde, R.R. 8, Mitchell. AGENTS—Thos. G. Ballantyne, R.R. 1, Woodham; Alvin L. Harris, Mitchell; E. Ross Houghton, Crom- arty. rowarty soLICrroR—w. G. Cochrane, Exeter. SECIEETARYJFEEASITREat — Arthur Fraser, Exeter. HEAR DR. BOB COOK President of Youth For Christ International • Recently returned from Japan, where he headed • the World Congress, Be has travelled exten- sively and his story of the Far East will make a most extra -ordinary rally. FRIDAY Nov. 27th 8:00 p.m. in the New Legion Hall CLINTON been, falling sip' an, egg• production but at trip t sine," overs litTtut around 60 per cent. Feed w'an restructed to the alfalfa for the first five 'days;• then oats• were supplied at the rate of two ounces per bird daily: After• 23 days on the -IT -al diet they were allowed free, aodess• to separate hoppers of, iehipk starter;: whole wheat and oats. Two weeks later the hens, were returned to the key- ing houses and fed a hatching mash with • wheat, oats and barley making up the' grain 'part of the ration. During the first part of the moult- ing period the average intake for each bird was 'two ,pounds fourteen ounces of oats. During the next two weeks the average consumption vas 14 ounces of oats, 19 ounces of wheat and 22 ounces of starter. At present day prices the cost of feed during the six weeks the hens were on range amounted to about 24 cents per bird. Very few eggs are laid during this period. After housing the average feed consump- tion followed... a normal rate of about 4' y ounces dally. Egg pro- duction started, to climb, soon after the hens were returned to laying r eusrtora s' t q Pe7ua �, or leven" wwc k . W,e t d they f4cere I . CQ the, colony honaes, 1t° hOE reached the 75 per cent level, The nlei .F,ing VPOSIedurn 3a one which Is successiiulUE used at tlae Central Pialaerimlental F' n Ott Laws, The advantage. of fpraed moelting. prppe;Fly done„ net in air clUaring a geed supply of large ease, at a digh4tertkine. R?ouitry xeed- ere depe$ a great deal op, second egg production and; fiQeSibly 'other pou �trymen, on 0000n, *radRaid con. rolled moulting useful: Motorola TV at CROWN HARDWARE at CROWN HARDWARE Joseph Street Gospel Hall CLINTON Evangelist G. P. Taylor will continue, Lord will- ing, with special meetings every night at 8 o'clock (except Saturday) ; Lord's Day at 7 You are invited to come and bring your Bible and follow these Bible subjects every night. Questions, such as these will be answered: Are there few that be saved? 13:23: We must be saved; Acts 4:12. All of this is answered in Acts 16:31. y, Who is the judge? Jesus said: The word that I have spoken the same shall judge him in the last day, John 12:48. All Welcome. No Collections. NWIMNAVaiNaVANAWANAMNIX/INVINVONI vb. r//n/IrnI//arni////i/////k®a//s////iiv 1 .. g:1°Z 40 4% 141 1411 That's what our customers slot say about ••• r,��� r%z�s r/%og 0" omit 11m�4 i. 574 (1G000.;;NEAR "BEST 1NTER TIRE EVER" Suburbanite SNOW -ICE TIRES by GOOD EAR Superb traction thru' deep snow —on treacherous curves -up steep hills and driveways—;away from slippery curbs. It's leaps and bounds ahead of other winter tires... AND QUIET -RUNNING 7001 LOOK Pot THIS "WOI4ft•N" of OUAUTY SEAFORTH MOTORS PHONE: 141 CHEVROLET — OLDSMOBILE SALES & SERVICE GOOD'%E!-AR TIRES I�Ii 11i''ANI�II%14 $A4 1[nbur ante Agent: "Now, -sir, here% your policy premium only $6.00.0.4.7 6 800 a anon*on a straight It'fe. Insured (wistfully): "I guess. so, but I still would have liked to fool around a little on Saturday nights." The Sale will be held In••,O)intpn PaJr Gepunde, CLINTON, RNm. Tt7WS. D'm+Y ' L CtE B .,1,. • at 10911141. From the .Neeredited f%elyde of the' fallowing wolllhaiowit 0.1 41/.1* '00111.0/' Breeder; r. U.' • ROY 'REPPER 44, 80 t. ,$E4�Ft FA'i;M� 1;1, M. PECK 4t $Q.. } IpEEENIt� QI,IFFORO H. HE ,;A'SONSt VARNA MNtCKINLEY FARMS, Zll '1ICH' JOHN OSTROM, VARNA; • Auctioneer:, Jim 'McKinley, Morpeth; Ont. Ringmen: Lincoln. White, EdwardElllott and Algia Wetter For catalogues write: MoKINLEY FARMS, Zurich, Ont., or JOHN, OSTROM. Vflellas,9 , • SPEAK LOUDER THAN Words are hard put to tell the full story of Canadian achievement in 1953. During this past year, Canada took hew strides forward in almost every field of endeavor. These strides toward the future were made possible through an investmeit — by Canadians in all walks of life — of time, talent ... and money. How important a part your money played in Canada's progress in 1953 can be seen from the following highlights taken from the B of M's Annual Report for this year. Printed here, these figures — as they did all through 1953 — speak louder than words. •' • • • • • • • • • DEPOSITS: At the end of the Bank's year, October 31st, 1953, over two million Canadians had $2,226,960,333 in deposits with the B of M —money which has been kept hard at work with Canadian enterprise of every description and size. Although much of this money belongs to institu- tions and business firms, well over half of these deposits represent the savings of everyday Canadians — savings that, day by day, are working for you ... and for Canada. LOANS: Your bank is playing an important role in our expanding economy by means of loans to Canadians of every calling — farmers, miners, fishermen, oil men, lum- bermen, ranchers — to individual and business enterprises and to Provincial and Municipal Governments. As of October 31st, B of M loans totalled $857,762,561 — the highest figure in the history of the Bank. In a thousand ways, these dollars played their part -in maintaining full employment and in sustaining — or bettering —'our standard of living. INVESTMENTS: At the close of the yearehe B of M had $864,057,948 invested in high-grade government bonds ' and other public securities which have a ready market. This money is helping to finance government projects for the betterment of the country and the welfare of Canadians at large. Other securities field by the Bank —mainly short-term credits to industry' — bring total investments to $982,490,826. The message these figures express is a confi- dent and encouraging one. -Actually, it is your message...for it is made possible by your savings. • • • • • • • • • • • BANH' TO 2 Hill cutuvn BANK OF MONTREAL working with Canadians in every walk of life since 1817 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • �l The Moths By Roe Farms Servicer Dept. rLOOK AT THOSE PIGS,, DOC.THEY'RE SO WEAK AND SCRAWNY. THEY'LL NEVER MAKE PORK PROFITS. HERE'S SOMETHING YOU \-- SHOULD REMEMBER, BILL. STARVED HER! I GAVE A SOW,UNLIKE A DAIRY COW, HER PLENTY OF GRAIN DOES NOT DEPLETE NEROWN AND WATER AND BODY TO PROVIDE NUTRIENTS EXERCISE, TOO. FORTHEUNBORN--IT IS A DIRECT LOSS TO THE EMBRYO UNLESS PRDVIDED FOR MINE SOWS FEED.YOU P•'~. MUST HAVE STARVED THE SOW. YOU'RE ONLY CHEATING YOURSELF OF PROFITS, BILL YOU'VE GOT TO BUILD YOUR PIGS 'NINE SOW. I KNOW ONE FELLOW WHO FEEDS H15 SPRING PIG5 FOUR MONTHS BEFOR THEY'FARRRE 'LOOK, BILL. WITH A BRED 501+1 FED •, 014 GRAIN ALONE, IT WAS FOUND BUT WHY DOES THATTHE AVERAGE. BIRTH WEI6HTOF THESOW NEED, THE P16S FELLTO'`L85 LBS.AND5590 MOItETHAN GRAIN OF THE PIGS WERE BORN WEAK. ANDWATER,DOC? INHEtt tiSOW WAS FEDAGOODMASH THE BIRTHWEIGHTJUMPEDTO' 2.42. LBS, AID ONLY I5% OFTH1 PI65,, L. WERE WEAK. TH08E FIGURES ARE MIGHTY CONVINCIN6,DOC. STARVE THE SOVAND YOU ROB THE LITTER, BILL. JUST REMEMBERTHAT IT TAKES MORE THAN GRAIN AND WATER TO: 4 BUILD PIG5 WITHIN THE SOW. ®.PUT BODY_ WEIGHT ON SOW FOR A MILK RESERVE,. d IMPROVE QUANTITY AND QUALITY OF MILK AFTER SOW FARROWS. .41 41, zat'r`:`i;l1 Xi •r• ,..n cwy„r Ij FEED THE UNBORN PIGS RIGHT WITH ROl WONDERBROOD SOW MASH ars W. R. Kerslake, Seams Lorne Eiler, Bengal A. it MIugta>r°d, $rum J. 4,.044 er,rS '"" • R. Shoulclice, Brod1ha • • A •y