The Huron Expositor, 1972-08-31, Page 14OPNOTCH
TOPNOTCH FEEDS LIMITED
AT THE
REQUEST
OF OUR
CUSTOMERS
We are re-opening our GRINDING and
and MIXING FACILITIES
SATURDAY MORNING
EFFECTIVE
Saturday,
Septembr 9, 1912
For the Month of
SEPTEMBER
• We are offering
FREE
GRINDING and MIXING Each ,
t SATURDAY MORNING
Phone 527-1910 Seaforth
0
J•
Ontario is now putting together
the biggest municipal enumeration
in its history.
Without you it won't be right.
'I his is tin election year
for municipal councils. school
hoards and other local bodies
in most or Onldrio. An carl
step in these elections is the
docunlent.ngid wet... lists.
o assemble triers' lists N e
need to make,an enumeration.
his is done by the Pro \ ince
foreachmimicipd0.
Hut our Municipal enu-
meration insols es more than
_lust voters' lists. It helps determine the di\ ision of
education property hives how een the public and
separate sellout stems. 11 lets the Pros mee mote
fairly distribute grunts ter locul gw.ernments to
help reduce mimicipal tax bilk. And it also helps
provide us with an a:curate population count.
Collecting nearly 8 million names and ad-
dresses, as you can- imagine, Is a big job. 'I he
Province is employ ing 8.000
people to visit every residence
in, Ontario. When the govern-
ment representative knocks
on your door. the procedure
is simple, The enumeration,
notice is pre-printed by com-
puter w ich the names of e,very-
one currently on record in
your. .household. It on agree
that the information is correct
and complete, you simply sign
the notice. If !here/are changes:such as an addition
to the family. corrections are made on the spot,
verified and signed by yon or any other adult in
your household. If you are not home the notice is
left. together with Simple instructions. You mail
it. postage free. only inhere are changes.
You will he counted sometime between
September 5th and lath.
The Municipal Enumerition: September 5-18.
Without you it won't be right
I*, (government of Ontario
Ministry Ret cmue
Hon. Allan (irossnran. 1)otmld'A. t•oshie, 1)cputy Nlinister.
PRICED TO GO!
1 - Impala Custom, 2-door, HT., V8
.2 - Bisciyne Sedan, V8
1 - Belaire- Sedan, V8
2 - aievelle Malibu, 2-door, HT., V8
.1 -1/2 Ton Chevrolet Truck ,
1 - Monte Carlo, 2-cloor, HT., Demo.
4
1 - Vega "GT" Coupe, Demo.'
13[1]Gth CAic
SAL es,"09we., sERvice
MI
527-1750 • SEAFORTH
14-4110 ?HURON EXPOSITOR' SEAFORTH, ONT AUG. 31, 1972
Air p011ution is damaging
people, plants, animals. 'And art
treasures, even those inside
museums.
"The contaminated at-
mospheres over modern indus-
trial centers are ,shorteniag the
life snan of many forms of art,"
Air pollution
damages art
The annual plowing match of the Huron Plowmen's Association provided an opportunity for
friends from across the country to gather and talk about topics of the day. With an election
around the corner, politics were not forgotten and here Charlie Thomas, Huron Liberal candidate
(5th from the left) answers a query. (Staff Photo)
Canada's exports to countries
other than those in North America
have more than tripled in thepast
five years, Cy Cline 'told a
meeting in H ibbert Township Hall
Wednesday evening:
• Mr. Cline, the Liberal candi-
date in Perth Wilmot riding said
non North American exports now
stand at 5 1/2 billion dollars re-
sulting benefits to every Canadian
regardless- of whether he was a
farmer, merchant or worker.
.Introduced., by fpriner Hibbert
Reeve Earl Dick, Mr. Cline told
the meeting of advances being
made in the organization of he
riding in preparation for the
forthcoming election. He dis-
cussed in detail action taken by
the Trudeau government to ad-
vance the- standard of the
,Canadian people including im-
provements 'in the provisions for
Senior Citizens and the battle
against inflation.
Reeve Ross. McPhail of
.Hibbert .extended greetings to the
gathering on behalf. of the town-
ship. 'Robert Hamilton, chair-
man of the Hibbert Liberal
Association, was chairman for.
the meeting.
Eugene Whalen MP for Essex
and a former parliamentary
secretary told the meeting that
the average Canadian enjoys a
Mrs. Frank _Erwin of Putnam.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Ramsey
and Tracey of Kitchener. visited
on Sunday With his parents Mr.
and' Mrs. Alex Ramsey.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Read-
head of Kitchener and Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Filsinger of Strat-
ford visited Mr. and Mrs.Alex
Gardiner on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Jefferson
and family of Sault Ste. Marie
spent last week visiting his mo-
ther Mrs.- J. R. Jefferson and
Cline addresses
Hibbert meeting
friends mark
standard of living second to none,
While prices were high in some
areas, the fact remained that
Canadians paid less for essen-
tials. As an example he said
Canadians paid 20% of their
income for food while Russians
had to pay 60% of all they earned
in order to feed themselves. He
Was.introduced by A. Y. McLean
Of Seaforth, Vice President of
the Liberal Party in Ontario.
birthday
other relatives in this commun-
ity.
Miss Helen Reibling of Min-
verton, Mrs. Wilmot Graul of
Brunner, Mrs. Jack Golightly
,of Windsor, Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Eggert of Rostock were recent
visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Gardiner.
Monday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. K. McKellar were Mrs,
Charles Holland of Charlottetowh
P.E.I„ Mrs: W. N., Binning and
Jane of Mitchell.
"1 know-how you feel about
house calls, Henry. hut I've
had this nagging headache
for hours,'".
tiNiVERSt7),
POt401414A
---- MD V
IV= •
•
even.-piece
CHROME
family size
,KITCHEN SET
Excellent condition
345-2103
says Dr. A, J. Haagen-Smits
a biochemist at the California
Institute of ' Technology.
"Frescoes, stonework, tapes-
tries, paintings, have all been
subject to some kind of chemical
attack."
Auto emissions and industrial
pollutants are the chief culprits.
At Boston's Museum of Fine Arts,
fumes from a nearby garbage
disposal plant have., been pin-
pointed as the source of a tough
black substance that has en-
crusted 'hundreds of ancient
bronzes. The Museum of Modern
Art in New York -- whose outdoor
metal-sculptures are coated with
many layers of a heavy wax tO
protect them from pollution --
inspects its indoor galleries
every day for the effects of
gases and soot that are sucked in
through air ductS and corrode the
paintings.
Today museum people regard
air-filtering systems as the best
method of coping with air pollut-
ion. The most successful both
filter and "wash" the incoming
air, removing from 85 to 95 per-
Cent of atmospheric impurities.
But pollutants from auto exhaust
still creep through the filter
systems. The best systems, says
Dr. Haagen-Smit, have elaborate
charcoal absOrption.filters corn-
-billed with' washing devices.
,These systems, however, are
so expensive that most museums
cannot afford them.
Air pollution's damage to the
art of all ages can be seen by the
naked eye, Its effect on human
lungs is reflected in the rising
rate of respiratory disease.Find
out how you can combat air pol-
lution., Contact your local tuber-
culosis and respiratory disease
association. 'It's a matter of
life and breath.
E0mondville
Corresqondent
Mrs. Chas. Geddes
Visitors with Mr. and, Mrs.
Leo Teatero on the weekend were
Mr. -and Mrs. George Tovell
and family of West Hill,
•-Visitors with .Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Geddes were Mr. and
Mrs. James Cameron of Sar-
nia, they are also visiting with
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Cameron
in Brussels.
Visitors with Mr. and "Mrs.
Elmer Stephenson on the week-
end were Mr. and Mrs. Orval
Stephenson of Marlett Mich., Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin North of Midland
Mich.
Howard Henry
Soli and Crops Branch
Ontario Department of
Agriculture and Food
Guelph, Ontario
If ,you consider fertilizer and
investment, and weed control an
expense, think again! If you fert-
ilize by guess rather than by
soil test, or fertilize over the
soil test, and then apply less
herbicide than recommended,
think again!
' In tests conducted in 1971
by the Soil and Crop Improve-
ment Associations in the Niagara
Peninsula, 6-36-6 fertilizer was
drilled with barley at 175 pounds
per acre in a field where soil
tests indicated no fertilizer was
required. The result' was a loss
of $7.92. per acre because there
was• no increase in yield.
In other tests, fertilizer
banded with corn where soil tests
indicated no fertilizer, or only
side-dressed nitrogen was re-
quired, resulted in an average
loss of $5 per acre.
In further trials, corn plots
were fertilized with commercial
fertilizer according to soil tests
while other Plots were fertilized
with manure plus a reduced rate
of fertilizer. In the^ manured
plots, the rate of fertilizer was
reduced, based on the estimated
fertility value of the manure.
applied. In theory, both plots
received the same total plant
food as recommended by soil
test,' whether from manure
and/or fertilizer.
In this trial, yields were the
same, on the average, and the
cost of commercial. fertilizer
was reduced by $9.51 per acre
in the manured plots. This $9.51
can be considered a saving in
Brodhagen
Correspondent
Mrs; Ken Eiligsen
The annual Decoration Ser-
vice was held at St. Peter's Luth-
eran Church on Sunday and was
well attended. The Rev, A. Horst
preached the sermon.
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Vander-
-Inuelen and James who haVe re-
cently returned to Canada from
New Orleans, U.S.A. and are
now residing in London visited
with Mr. and Mrs., Ken Ellig-
sen and boys on Sunday. They
were former residents at the
Wm. S. Riehl apartment.
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Wolfe
and Mrs. Dick Watson and girls
were dinner guests of Mr. 'and
Mrs. Michael Connelly,' watburg
on Sunday. 'The attended the
decoration service at Seebach'S
Hill Lutheran Church and later
visited Mr. and Mrs. 'Ezra Hinz
at Stratford. Warrant Officer
Watson and sons visited Monday
with, Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe and his
family, who later returned to
their home in St. Thomas.
Michelle and Randy Beuer-
man, Goderich spent their hol-
idays last week with their grand-
parents Mr. and Mrs. Manuel
Beuerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Hoegy
and family have moved into their
home here, formerly the Henry
E. Diegel house.
Miss Donna Leonhardt,Lon-
don spent the weekend with her
parents Mr. and Mrs. Irvin L eon-
hardt.
Visitors with Mrs. Caroline
Elligsen on Sunday werelir. and
Mrs. Steve Stojkovic, Windsor
and Mr. and Mrs.GeorgeWesen-
berg and Mrs.F.Smith Brussels.
r
out-of-pocket expenses which can
partly cover the fixect cost of
spreading manure. WI Perhaps money saved on fert-
ilizer when soil tests are used
should be invested in more ef-
fective chemical weed control
programs, such as the new herb-
icide mixtures recommended for
improved annual grass control in
corn and soybeans.
R. H. Brown, Ridgetown Col-
lege of Agricultural Technology,
claims that approximately one
third of all crop losses are
caused by weed competition. Rec-
ent tests at the college show that
lamb's quarters and ragweed use
850 pounds of water to produce
one pound of dry matter, whereas
corn can produce almost two
pounds of. dry matter with the
same amount of water.
Weeds are also wasteful of
fertility. It takes twice as much
nitrogen to produce the same
amount of lamb's-quarteis, rag- 3"
weed, pigweed And crabgrass as
corn. Five-year tests at Ridge-
town showed poor crabgrass con-
trol reduced corn yields 8 per
cent in a year of adequate rain-
fall and 29 per cent In a droughty
year. According to Mr. Brown,
intensified weed control is of
prime importance, perhaps far
more important than many
farmers realize.
" A standard herbicide treat-
ment used in corn is oil-atrazine
with a materials cost of about
$6 per acre: This sometimes
misses crabgrass. and. foxtail.
If these weeds build up, espec-
ially in fields which have been
in continuous corn, consider
using one of the recommended
herbicide mixtures, designed to
improve annual grass control.
One of the most effective is I Sutan plus a' reduced rate of
Atrazine, applied and disked in
before planting. Others include'
Lasso or Bladex plus- atrazine,
applied after planting, before the
corn or weeds emerge. -
Chemical cost per acre for
overall application of these mix-'
tures is approximately $8.40 for
Sutan-atrazine, $11 for Lasso-
atrazine and $10 for Bladex-
atrazine..The mixtures average
about $10 per acre for chemical
corapared to $6 for oil-atrazine.
Therefore, improved annual
grass control will cbst approx-
imately $4 more per acre. If we
assume corn yield will increase
20 -per .gent with better annual
grass control, a crop' with a 90-
bushel yield potential will have an
increase of 18 bushels per acre.
If corn is selling for $1 per
bushel, we now have an
$18 increase in return per acre. 4
If we subtract the extra $4 we
paid for the herbicide mixture,
we Wave a' net' 'ittriurn"cif $14
from an investment of $4 per
acre.
A
LOCAL
BRIEFS
MrS. J. Elwood Harts of 4
Phoenix , Arizona, is holidaying
at the home of her father, Mr.
T. Heal and sister Mrs. • W.
McPhail. Over- the •week end
their brother, 14i. Tom Heal
cousin, Miss Susan Blane of to
and his wife and a -visiting
Plymouth, Devon, England,
motored from Toronto for a
family reunion.
Mx. David Coote has re-
turned to Burlington after spend-
ing a week at the McLeod farm
in Tuckersmith.
di Mr. and Mrs. warner,Toiedo,
Ohiospent time and Florida
sunday withh Mr. ants"..
and Mr..ancd,"
Mrs. John Hoelscher, Seaforth,
Mrs. Geo. Addison and also call-
-ed on Miss' Cora Barrows.
' Mr.' and Mrs. Geo. Addison
spent several days recently at
the home of their daughter 'and
family' in Londsboro also last
week with them camping on the
Maitland River-in Goderich.
•
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in a
GUARANTEED
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4 and 5 'Years
Contact:
John A. Curdho
Insurance Agency
S EA FORTH
Representing:
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Guaranty Trusts
Royal Trust
• ••••••••••••!•••••••
News of Cromarty
Family and
Correspondent
Mrs. Ken McKellar
ck! ,
A gathering of the faintly and
other close relatives of Mrs.
Grace. Scott met at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Russell
on Sunday to honor Mrs. Scott
on here eightieth birthday.
An afternoon of social chat
was enjoyed and a smorgasbord
supper was served, including a
beautiful birthday cake, Mrs.
Scott was presented with a T37.
set from her family with her son
Donald' Scott of Seaforth making
the presentation.
Guests were ' present from
Seaforth, Chatham, Essex,Var-
na, Russeldale, Staffa and Cram-
arty.
A large °- crowd attended the
Memorial Decoration Service at
Staffa on Sunday which was held
in the church due to the unplea-
sent weather.
Rev. W. E. Aldworth, a for-
mer minister at Staffa was the
special speaker. Music was pro-
vided by the male quartette.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Walker
visited on Tuesday with Mr. and
deed; control
make money in .pocket.