The Huron Expositor, 1962-10-18, Page 13•
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WIN'D
• TORNADO a CYCLONE
Insurance
R. F• McKERCHER'
Phone 849 R 4 - Seeforth
Representing the Western Fara
ers' Weather Insurance Mutual
Co., Woodstock, Ont.
Be Warmly Contented With
Texaco Stove Oil
ox TEXACO
FURNACE FUEL OIL
Call Us Today 1
WALDEN &
BROADFOOT
Phone 686 W Seaforth
HURON FEDERATION •NEWS
$y Mrs. J. W. (Florence) lrlllott,
Secretary
The annual meeting' of the On-
tario Cream Producers will be
held on Tuesday, Oct. 23, in
the council Chambers of the
Clinton Town Hall, Clinton, at
8:30 p.m. The guest speaker
will be William D. Hotsom. 4t
good attendance is hoped for.
Roy Coulter, Campbellville,
chairman of the Ontario Wheat
Producers Marketing Board,
says that Ontario wheat -produc-
ers have been informed that
they will receive a rebate from
the monies deducted from their
1961 crop returns for stabiliza-
tion purposes. Of the 9 cents,
per bushel deducted in the 1961
crop year, only 1.7c was requir-
ed to cover the Board's costs
in purchasing, handling and ex-
porting some 1,600,000 bushels
of wheat. The remaining 7.3c
SILO UNLOADERS
Bunk Feeders and Stable Cleaners
must be installed as soon as possible as
cold weather delays the work and costs
money.
GET IN TOUCH WITH US AT ONCE ON
OUR FACTORY SPECIAL
Good only till October 21st
JONATHAN HUGILL & SONS
Phone HU 2-9822 — CLINTON
or 667 W 1 — SEAFORTH
• 45. % Nitrogen Ideal for
Preplant or Plowdown
Aero Urea is the most concentrated dry nitro-
gen you can buy! It is long lasting, resists
leaching and easily applied.
Plowdown
Broadcast and plow under 2-3 bags of double -
duty AERO UREA to rot stalks and supply
nitrogen for top corn yields.
• Preplant
Work in Aero Urea before planting to save
sidedressing. Put nitrogen in the root zone
where;. it stays until the plants ne&d it. If you
have a lot of stalks to plow down and are
growing corn—use Aero Urea.
389.62
C FA.ATA.2IZ ZD
h'. M. REQ•O.
TOPNOTCH FEEDS LTD.
Phone 775 Seaforth
5437
amounting to a total of aboit•
$857,107, will now be rebated
to the more than 28,000 Ontario
wheat producers whet partici
pate in the marketing program.
Approximately 11,740,000 bush.
els were marketd in 1861. In-
dividual cheques will he mailed
later this fall. Meanwhile the -
Board is engaged in marketing
the 1962 crop of Ontario winter
wheat.
How important is Ontario ag-
riculture to the economy of
rural Canada? Most economists
and politicians seem to have un.
derseored the importance of the
Ontario farmer in the national
economy. We hear a lot about
the indatstrial wealth of the
"Golden Horseshoe", the role
of the business communities in
Toronto, Montreal, \Hamilton
and Windsor. We are constant-
ly reminded of the value of
western wheat in the export
market, of the , wealth in our
forests and our mines. And all
the while there is to be found
around our very feet the bus-
iest, most progressive and vers-
atile agricultural machine to be
found in the nation. How im-
portant is Ontario agriculture?
According to the Dominion
Bureau of Statistics, the Ontario
farmer in 1961 played a real
important role. The farm cash
income from the sale of farm
products in Ontario amounted
to $900 million in 1961, and this
is by far the greatest provin-
cial production,' accounting for
some 31 per cent of the total
Canadian cash sale of $2,058.5
million.
The Federation of Huron
County held their monthly
meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 9. The
Ontario Federation of Agricul-
tural annual meeting on Nov.
12-14, being held in the Royal
York Hotel, Toronto, was dis-
cussed and delegates picked to
attend this meeting. Watch this
column for date -of Huron Coun-
ty annual banquet.
Girl, looking at engagement
ring, to fiance: "I didn't say
the stone was small. I -just said
not all my friends have 20/20
vision."
Arnold STINNISSEN
Sun Life Assurance
Company of Canada
Telephone: 852 R 12
R.R. 5 - SEAFORTH
YaocanFgo
A[L»OOTI.
IF you Feel
.s
These days most people work under
pressure, worry more, sleep less. This
strain on body and brain makes physical
f,tness'easier to lose—harder to regain,
. Today's tense living, overwork, worry-
-any of these may affect normal kidney
action. When kidneys get out of order,
excess acids and wastes remain in the
system. Then backache, disturbed rest,
"tired -out" feeling often follow. That's
the time to -take Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Dodd's stimulate the kidneys to normal
action. Then you feel better—sleep
better—work better. Ask for Dodd's
Kidney Pills at any drug counter, 84
2
BIG- BONUS BUYS
IN
«jr�LNEALTH TERRq�MYtj,�,
The following 2 big bonus buys are available at Animal Health Departments
of Drug Stores and at Feed Dealers. Also ask for Terramycin Animal Formula.
and Terramycin Poultry Formula with AG -77.
1. FREE BALLING GUN
Buy the NEW 24 Tablet
Economy Pack of Potent
Terramycin A&D Scours
Tablets and get a FREE
balling gun—$1.98 value.
STOP SCOURS IN HOURS! Potent Terramycin A&D
Scours Tablets provide the fastest, most effective
treatment of scours for farm animals. Be prepared!
Get this safe, convenient and economical treat-
ment today.
TERRAMYCIN PRODUCTS
Available from
FEEDS LTD.
OPNOTCH
Phone 775
•
Seaforth
2.12 FOR THE PRICE OF 11
Get. the Special Bonus
Pack of Potent Terramycin
Liquid Formula for Mastitis
-G.et 12 TUBES FOR THE
PRICE OF 11!
FIGHT MASTITIS BEST! Potent Terramycin Liquid
Formula torr Mastitis gets you back to Milking for.
Profit — Faster! Here's the convenient, econom-
ical treatment that pays for itself by getting in-
fected animals back in production — Faster!
PFIZER CANADA Agricullural Division
See .
SEAFORTH
FARMERS
PHONE 9 SEAFORTH
for your
TERRAMYCIN PRODUCTS
PERT AND TUNEFUL—
Peggy Neville is the blonde
singer seen eaoh Saturday
night on CBC -TV's Red River
Jamboree—the western music
program produced in CBC's
Winnipeg studios,
U!STRI. T WEDDING
SELI. r HEYWOOD
Carmel Presbyterian Church,
#iensall, was the eating for a
lovely autumn wedding Satur,-
day,- Oct, 0, at 2 p.ru,. when
Danna Darlene Heywood and
Murray Neil Bell oxehangecl
marriage vows beforethe Rev.
ROSS MacDonald in a 4ouble-
ring ceremony aurid a floral ar-
rangement
rrangement of baskets of white
gladipli, interspersed with fern,
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Heywood,
Exeter, and the groom is. the
son of Mrs. Roy Bell and the
late Mr. Bell, Hensall,-
The bride given in marriage
by her father, was lovely in an
original floor -length gown of
white Chantilly lace over slip-
per satin, trimmed with white
chiffon rosettes. The fitted
bodice, trimmed with seed
pearls anti- iridescent sequins,
featured a portrait neckline and
lilypoint sleeves. A crown of
seed pearls and iridescent se-
quins held her finger-tip veil of
French illusion, bordered with
Chantilly lace. A strand of
pearls with matching earrings,
gift of thegroom. completed
her ensemble, and she carried
a bridal bouquet of red roses
with Stephanotis and ivy.
'Matron of honor, Mrs. Jerry
Reid, Hensall, and bridesmaids,
Miss Barbara Clausius, of Zur-
Furrow and Fallow
By FAIRBAIRN
Exports of Canadian flue -cur-
ed tobacco have increased by 30
per cent the past three years.
In the year ending July, 1962,
exports to all countrieswere
about 11 million pounds higher
than in the year ending July,
1960, totalling about 41 million.
The Ontario Flue -Cured Tobac-
co Growers Marketing Board
which has been conducting its
own campaign to increase sales,
cites four major factors'respon-
sible for expanding export mar-
kets:
1. Devaluation, of the Cana-
dian dollar.
2. Availability of tobacco leaf.
NOT treated with MH - 30
(maleic hydrazide, sucker
control chemical).
3. Availability' of tobacco
• grown from tested 'seed of
Government- approved var-
ieties.
4. Progressive sales efforts by
the Canadian tobacco trade.
Producers themselves take
credit for maintaining a contin-
uity of supply by growing more
tobacco than the domestic mar-
ket could absorb. Ontario grow-
ers have risked having unsold
tobacco on their hands and it
has paid off since only about
5 million pounds of the 1961
crop remains unsold as they
prepare this year's crop for
market. Auctions are expect-
ed to open about Nov. 1.
Nineteen sixty-two production
of flue -cured tobacco in Ontario
will be lower than, last year be-
cause acreage was reduced by
nearly 6,000 acres (approximate-
ly 5%). • However, yields have
been good despite earlier loss-
es from bad weather conditions
and there will again be suffici-
ent tobacco to maintain and ev-
en enlarge the export markets.
Maintenance of this continuity
of supply is stressed as a major
factor in the retention of export
interest by the four -man' group
from the marketing board who
recently returned from a trip to
the United 'Kingdom and six
European countries. These are
countries•where the demand and
price of tobacco for cigarettes
provides a potential market for
Ontario leaf. Significantly, West
Germany, which imports the
most tobacco of these countries
except the. U.K., and where cig-
arettes sell at 65c for 20, sharp-
ly increased purchases of Cana-
dian flue -cured tobacco last year.
While the touring growers
made every effort to ascertain
the possible effects of Britain's
proposed entry in the Common
Market on Canada's tobacco ex-
ports, nothing definite can be
forecast at this time. Current
negotiations in Brussels should
make the possible effects known
before too long, but it seems
highly unlikely that develop-
ments there will affect the sale
of this year's crop. As to the
future, there is the likelihood
that preferential tariff rates
will disappear. Canadian to-
bacco now enjoys an advantage
of 20 to 23 cents a pound over
non - Commonwealth countries
such as the United States. How-
ever, that advantage is- not as
great as it appears at first
glance because the duty on all
tobacco going into the U.K. is:
$10 per pound. British buyers
can buy really top grade Cana-
dian tobalrco at 60 to 65 cents
a pound on the exchanges,
transport it to the U.K., pay
the $10 per pound duty and still
beat the U.S. price which is
just under $10.90. But a few
cents on an item costing almost
$11 is not as appealing as• that
20 cent advantage on an 80 cent
item would make it appear.
Incidentally, the British will
probably continue to buy top
grades since they, seem most in-
terested in a ripe, full-bodied
leaf of good flavor, while many
European manufacturers evi-
denced more interest in the
lower half of the plant—where
there is less nicotine. There
might be an increased demand
abroad for lower grades of to-
bacco, • particularly if smokers
switch to filter- tips or if -addi-
tives are permitted as they are
in the United States, There is
some possibility that the addi-
tion of flavorings and soups . to
cigarettes in the U.K. might be
allowed if Britain enters the
Common Market.
The Ontario growers also
scouted the possibility of an
increased demand overseas for
blended cigarettes which could
reduce consumption of flue -cur-
ed tobacco. While this hight
happen, they do ,not feel it is a
serious threat at present.
The children were in the
midst of a free-for-all when
father unexpectedly entered the
room:
"Tommy, who started this?"
he asked.
"Well," replied Tommy, "it
all started when Albert hit me
back."
CO-OP INSURANCE
• Auto And Truck
• Farm Liability
• Accident and Sickness
• Fire; Residence & Contents
• Fire, Commercial -
• Life Insurance
• Retirement Income
All Lines of Insurance Written
W. ARTHUR WRIGHT
Phone 193-J '— 'John St.
SEAFORTH
alroureigginaueasumannouggoonosemp
ODORLESS
CLEAN BURNING
FURNACE OIL
STOVE OIL
D. BrightraO
FINA SERVICE
PHONE 354
USBORNE AND
HIBBERT
MUTUAL FIRE
INSURANCE CO.
HEAD OFFICE - EXETER, Ont.
Directors:
Milton McCurdy - RR 1, T<irkton
President
Timothy B. Toohey :-RR 3, Lucan
Vice -President
Wm. H. Chaffe - RR 4, Mitchell
E. Clayton Colquhoun - RR 1
Science Hill
Martin Feeney - RR 2, Dublin
Robert G. Gardiner - RR 1
Cromarty
Agents:
Hugh Benninger - Dublin
Harry Coates - RR 1, Centralia
Clayton Harris - Mitchell
Solicitors:
Mackenzie & Raymond • Exeter
Secretary -Treasurer:
Arthur Fraser - - Exeter
SEAFORTH MONUMENT WORKS
OPEN DAILY
T. Pryde & Son
ALL TYPES OF
CEMETERY MEMORIALS
Inquiries are Invited.
Telephone Numbers:
EXETER 41 CLINTON: HU 2-9421
SEAPORTHt tantact Willis Dundas
On, ',!'T..,..f.M,is �13'
ich, -.and Miss Shirley., Hwo
eyod,.;
Pester', sister of the 'bride, were
.gowned alike in qua street -
length peau:desowith head-,
dresses of white net,le,. with white
marabou tri and matching ac
cessories They carried baby
white carnations..
1! lower girt,. Judy Heywood,
sister of the bride, was froeked
in white nylon chiffon over taf-
feta with snatching headdress
and carried a basket of aqua
carnations. Bobby $eywood,
brother of the • bride, was ring -
bearer.
James Bell, Exeter, attended
his brother as groomsman, and
Robert Clark, Hensall, and Ron-
.ald .Heywood, Exeter, brother
of the bride,• ushered guests.
Mrs. Malcolm Dougall provid-
imusic,
and accompanietraitionalWd edthe soloist,
Robert Laramie, of Centralia.
For receiving at the wedding
reception for 37 guests at the
New Commercial Hotel, Hensel',
the bride's mother wore . a
sheath of white and blue flow-
ered satin with accessories in
black, and corsage of "coral
mums. The groom's mother, who
assisted, chose a flowered sheath
of nylon chiffon .over taffeta
with gold accessories, and a
corsage of golden bronze mums.
For travelling, the bride wore
a grey 'double knit suit with
red and white accessories, with
which she wore a corsage of
red roses. The young couple•
will reside at Glenview, Apt. 12,
852 Trafalgar Street, London.
Every week more people dis-
cover what mighty jobs are ac-
complished by low cost Exposi-
tor Want Ads.
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We write all lines of
N
L
Ma
oh
1 SURANCE
Fir
e - Auto - Wind
lability and Life
Manufacturers Life
Insurance
J n ' A. Cardno
Successor to
WATSON & REID
Phone 214 : Seaforth
i111111i1111IIIIIII1111111111111111111l1l111
cRILLOP MUTUAL.
FIRE .'JNSU ;
Mita
tsi#,teskr. -
* Town Dweliinps .
Al! 4105505 of NOP PropOr`1y
Summer Cottages -
R Churches, ,Schoofsr i o11s
Extended eoveragte (wind;
smoke, water. damage* falling
objects, etc) is else: ,irtvaileble.
AGENTS: James Keys, RR 1, Seaforthr V. J. Dane, 11,4.,5o Sea -
forth; Wm. -Leiper, Jr., Londesboro; Selwyn ,Baiter, $rtissels; Haar -
old Squires, Clinton; George Coyne, Dublin;, Donald G. Eaton,
Seaforth. .
WANT ADS BRING QUICK RESUI,-TS -- Phone 141
Read the Advertisements — It's a Profitable Pastime
Remindere about your
ONTARIO HOSPITAL INSURANCE
aP'
Always keep your
Hospital Insurance
Certificate handy.'
KEEP INSURED/
Separate premiums are required for
your insurance from now on. Obtain
application form at a bank, a hos-
pital or the Commission.
KEEP INSUREDI
The.Family premium must be paid to
cover husband and wife. Tell your
group OR, if you pay your premiums
direct, nptify the Commission.
KEEP INSUREDI
Follow carefully the instructions on the
back of the Certificate of Payment
Form 104, which_ your employer is
required to give you.
ONTARIO HOSPITAL SERVICES COMMISSION
2195 YONQE STREET, TORONTO 7, ONTARIO
s
anada
avings
onds
easy to buy
simple to -cash
good to keep
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—an average interest to matu-
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year. In dollars and cents every
$100.00 you invest will grow with
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at maturity.
You can buy a $100.00 bond
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the convenient Payroll Savings
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They are available in amounts
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resident—adult or child—up to
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Estates, too, may buy. Interest
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You can cash your Canada
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Buy new Canada Savings
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CANADA
SAVINGS
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