Clinton News-Record, 1956-02-23, Page 8HARRY -WILLIAMS'
C-9141-€ %kVA—.
OUR 0$1.10 SUVA"
A 1.110040STAT;
A COZY HOME,
NOLO& crITING PAT
HARRY WILLIAMS
SHOW and SALE of
2831 BEEF BULLS I283I
under the auspices of
THE ONTARIO BEEF CATTLE IMPROVEMENT
ASSOCIATION
in
The Sheep and Swine Arena
ROYAL WINTER FAIR BUILDING TORONTO
MARCH 7th and 8th, 1956
Herefords and Aberdeen Angus will be sold on March 7.
Shorthorns will be sold on March 8.
Sales commence at 10.00 a.m. on both days.
Only officially approved bulls Will be offered
in these auctions.
Every Ontario farmer who buys a bull in this auction will be
eligible for .a grant of 25 per cent of the purchase price,
but not exceeding $150, in accordance with the terms of the
Bull Premium Policy.
For catalogues apply to:
W. L. HAM, President, W. P. WATSON, Secretary,
GUELPH Parliament Buildings, Toronto
Ontario Beef Cattle Improvement Association
411.0mawmorms
TENDERS FOR THE REMOVAL
OF KITCHEN BY-PRODUCTS
TENDERS are now being invited for the purchase
of Swill and Kitchen By-Products from the RCAF Sta-
tion at Clinton, Ontario.
All By-Products will be sold by weight. Swill must
be picked up daily by the purchaser and Bones, Rough
Fat, Suet and Grease twice weekly.
Tenders are to be submitted prior to 29 February
1956 to:
Commanding Officer,
RCAF STATION CLINTON,
Clinton, Ontario.
Contract Barley
Taking contracts for barley again this year.
Taking orders for Clovers and Grass Seeds for
Spring. Prices very reasonable. Permanent
Pasture Mixtures will cost from $6.50 to $8.00 per
acre. It will pay to order early.
Fred 0. Ford
GRAIN and SEED
PHONE 123W CLINTON
as near as your telephone
A COMPLETE
TRUST SERVICE
IN WESTERN ONTARIO •
Cali
RAYE B. PATERSON, bust Officer
Henson, Ontario, Phone 51
For
• Estate Planning and Wilt
• Real Estate Services
• Investment Management and .Advisory Service
• 34,4 % Guaranteed Investments
• 2Y2% on savings—deposits May be mailed
Or Contact Any Office Of
GUARANTY TRUST
COMPANY OS CANADA
Toronto • Montreal • Ottawa • Windsor Magill* Falb • Sadintry • Sault Ste. Miirle Calgarjr •• Vancouver 143.‘b
01 11
Attention, Farmers!
NOW is the time to place your order for
a silo, to avoid the shortage of cement and steel.
Contact me at once for full information.
ELMER HUGILL
SILO BUILDER
Phone 545W — CLINTON — P.O. Box 40, Isaac St.
6-7-8-p
FARMERS
We are shipping cattle every Saturday for United
Co-operative of Ontario and solicit your patronage. We will
pick them up at your farm.
Please PRONE COLLECT not later than Friday nights.
Seaforth Farmers Co-operative
H. S. Hunt, Manager
Phone--Day 9, Evenings 481w
39-tfb
Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association
The calves you get are efficient ~converters of
feed into beef or milk.
The quality of the calves is better than average.
BETTER CATTLE FOR BETTER LIVING.
For service or more information phone collect to:
CLINTON 515
Between: 7.30 and 10 a.m. week days
7.30 and 9.30 a.m. Sundays & holidays.
Cows noticed in heat later in the day should be
bred the following day.
Or send coupon to the above office.
Please 'call at my farm to give further information
on your Artificial Insemination service.
NAME
Address
Location' of Farm:
Concession
Lot No.
"WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED"
The less money you have to spare the more im-
portant it becomes to use our services.
The cash outlay is low.
TOWNSHIP OF GODERICH
APPLICATIONS
for
Warble Fly
Inspector
Applications are hereby called
for the position of Warble Fly In-
spector for the Township of God-,
erich for 1956.
All applicants to state hourly
wage expected, and also the expec-
ted rate per mile for travelling
expenses.
All applications to be in the
clerk's hands by March 1st.
R. E. Thompson, Clerk,
R.R. 2, Clinton
7-8-b
TOWNSHIP OF
TUCKERSMITH
Warble Fly Spray-
ing Tender
TENDERS are invited by the
undersigned for
Spraying Cottle for Warble
Fly Control in 1956,
subject to the Warble Fly Control
Act and Amendments,
Township will supply warbicide
required and contractor must fur-
nish all other requirements.
Tender to state a flat rate per
'head per spray and done to the
satisfaction of the Inspector ap-
pointed by the township. Work to
be commenced April 2, 1956.
Tender to be accompanied by
'insurance policy or certified proof
of same stating coverage and to
be in the clerk's hands by 2 p.m.,
March 6, 1956.
Lowest or any tender not neces-
sarily accepted.
E. P. CHESNEY, Clerk,
Township of Tuckersmith,
R.R. 4, Seaforth, Ont.
7-8-b
NOTICE
To CUCUMBER GROWERS
A vote on a petition received from the Ontario Vegetable Growers'
Marketing Board that cucumbers for processing be designated a regulated
crop under the provisions of the Ontario Vegetable Growers' Marketing-for-
Processing Scheme will be held on Tuesday, February 28th, and Friday,
March 2nd, 1956. Polling Booths will open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on
each day at the following places throughout the following Counties:
COUNTY LOCATION Address
PERTH Stratford Ontario Department of Agriculture
Dublin Holland Insurance Agency, P,O. Bldg.
HURON Clinton Ontario Department of Agriculture
BRUCE Teeswater Township Hall
Lucknow Council Chambers
WELLINGTON Arthur Ontario Department of Agriculture
Trussler's Garage
District Co-operative Store,
25 Speedvale Ave.
Ontario Department of Agriculture
Ontario Department of Agriculture
Every grower who contracted for the sale of cucumbers for pro-
cessing in 1955 or has arranged for the sale of cucumbers for processing
its 1956 is entitled to vote:
Growers must vote at the polling booth closest to their place of
residence.
VOTE AS YOU LIKE, BUT' VOTE,
so that as wide an expression of opinion as possible will be
registered oil this matter.
ONTARIO FARM PRODUCTS MARKETING BOARD
G. F. PEBZIN, Chairman F. It B. STEWAM, Secretary
..a
Drayton
Guelph
HALTON Milton
DUFFERIN Orangeville
rikOX VXORT
C.414NWL4 NO", 11.1WASPAY, rf:15%1144Y P.146 rikOX VXORT C.414NWL4 NO", 11.1WASPAY, rf:15%1144Y P.146
"Soil, Self and Soul" Basis For
Farmers' Outlook Into Future
'.."4""."..".444 Experts Say' declining tax rev- Seaforth's Betty
Is High :Scorer
Betty Storey, Seaforth, was the
highest scoring" contestant from
Hunan County who took part in
tome annuat Junior JUdgine Con,
Vet held in connection with the
election of All-canadien Helstein
cattle. She scored 132 points out
of 4 peeeible 140, among the 453
4-H hoye and girl,* fawn all parts
of Canada who took PaPt.
The winners (OW tied for first
place) all had Scores of 130 points,
Prizes were provided by the Nat-
tonal Holeteleerriesian Aesoelatioe
of Canada.
111101EM111111111NOWN
A bright future for agrieultere
in this county was .predicted by Q.
W. Montgomery, agricultural ree
presentative for Huron., In his ad'
dress to the annual meeting of
Federation of Agricult-
ure, (The following are excerpts
from an account of the Meeting
reported in the Seaforth News).
Ile tweet his address on the
topic, "The Fiternet Triangle," the
three points of the triangle being,
Soil, Self and Soul.
Soil, he said, is basic to all we
do and everybody Alive should
realize that soil is the basis' of
all life. We can no longer ex-
ploit land and there is no new
land to discover. There is land
in Northern Ontario that would
be better left in bush than cleared
because the climate is not right
for crops.
Barn Meeting At
Saltford To-day
Gordon F. Bell, newly-appoin-
ted Holstein fieldman, will pres-
ent a type demonstration in cat-
tle and Holstein judging classes
this afternoon, beginning at 1.30
o'clock. The occasion will be a
barn meeting at the Biesett Bras.
Farm, Saltford, just north of God-
ericle being held by the Huron
County Holstein Club.
H. E. Bellman, agricultural en-
gineering fieldman for the county
will discuss latest dairy cattle
housing and the use and care of
mechanical equipment, and Donald
Corman, of the United Farmers'
Co-operative will speak an econ-
omical feeding.
beheg made by ProsPeetive pur-
chasers of farm lands of the soil
maps at the agricultural office.
farm sold the previous day at
Seaforth had been studied by half
a dozen different interested peop-
le who came to see the sail map
of that farm.
Farm land values have doubled
since the fall of 1951, and this
week a farmer' from the south
Part of the county had come to
consult him about accepting an of-
fer of over $40,000 for his 300 acre
farm.
Dr. H. L. Patterson, director
of the Farm Economics Branch,
recently stated that he can see
no reason why farm land in this
part of the country should not
be worth $200 an acre before too
long, with the industrial expans-
ion now taking up land near the
cities and in the Niagara Peninsu-
la,
Anyone who can afford to buy
land should do so, Mr. Montgom-
ery said.
"I suggest you don't put It off
till to-morrow" the speaker said.
Dr. Patterson, one of the top
economists in the country, pre-
dicts an upswing in four to five
years with the tremendous poPu-
laden increase. He foresees a
population of 25,000,000 in Canada
by 1975. Farm people will have
things much better, but they will
be those who are able to weather
low prices and remain on the farm.
So soil is basic and must be
tested, proper rotation of crops,
and good farming practices stud-
ied and adopted. If production
costs are lowered then low prices
are not so serious.
"One-fifth of the world's pop-
ulation is starving," said Me.
Montgomery. How lucky we are
here! New Canadians from Eur-
ope tell us you cannot purchase
farms there, because land is so
valuable it is' handed down from
generation to generation."
The second point is Self, We
have a heritage of freedom in a
democratic country. You are a
farmer by choice, no one keeps
you from being a farmer. It be-
speaks us to do the best job we
can.
"There is a wonderful oppor-
tunity to absorb information, but
are farmers availing themselves
of all the agricultural services?
A decline in farm prices greatly
increases the work of our staff,"
APPLICATIONS
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
The Council of the Township of
Hullett will receive
Applications for a Warble-
Fly Inspector.
The Inspector to comply with
the Warble-Fly Control Act. Wag-
es to be .85c per hour with ,05c
per mile mileage while on• town-
ship work.
Applications to be in the hands
of the Clerk on or before February
23, 1956.
Geo. W. Cowan, Clerk,
Londesboro
7-8-b
TENDERS
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
The Council of the Township of
Mullett will receive tenders for the
Supplying of 700 lbs. of
Warbicide Powder for
Warble-Fly Spraying.
100 lbs. in 1 lb. bags and 600
lbs. in 15 lb. bags. All tenders to
be in the hands of the Clerk on
or before February 23, 1956. Low-
est or any tender not necessarily
accepted.
Geo. W. Cowan, Clerk,
Londesboro
7-8-b
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111E
TOWNSHIP OF
TUCKERSMITH
TENDERS FOR
BRIDGE
SEALED TENDERS, addressed
to the Township Clerk, Mr. E. P.
Chesney, Mt 4, Seaforth, Ontario,
will be received until 12.00 noon,
Tuesday, Match 6, 1956,
for the removal of the existing
structure and the construction
of a 100-foot twin-span rein-
forced concrete bridge at Lot
35-36* Concession 1, H.R.S.
Cement and reinforcing steel to be
supplied by the Township.
Plant and specifications May be
seen at the Clerk's' office and at
the office of the undersigned,
A certified cheque for 10% of
the contract bid must accollapany
each tender,
Lowest or any tender not 'hetes.
scarily accepted,
B. M. ROSS, P. Eng.
Consulting iEhgineer,
Box 705,
Goderich, Ontario.
Seed Fair Soon
In Middlesex;
Four Day Event
The 18th annual Middlesex Seed
Fair, including classes for 11 Wes-
tern Ontario Counties is being held
at the Western Fair Grounds, Lon-
don, on February 28, 29, March 1,
and 2. Last year entries exceed-
ed 1,004) and wide-spread interest
is being noted for this year's show.
The Fair is being • opened by
Professor J. A. Porter, • Michigan
State University, who will also
discuss soils and crops. Other
well-known speakers, including J.
M. Appleton, Dr. D. N. Huntley,
T. H. Lane, Thomas Green, E. M.
Nethercott, I. B. Whale, Charles
MacNaughton, Bruce lVfehlenback-
er, and Dr. H. L. Patterson, appear
on the afternoon programs or in
panel discussions.
Evening entertainment p r o••
grams feature the adult Square
Dance and Step Dance Contests on
Tuesday night, a fine Variety
Show on Wednesday night by Med-
way High School, Middlesex Jun-
ior Farmers, and the YMCA, along
with a European Travel Talk by
R. G. Bennett, Ontario Depart-
ment of Agriculture, Toronto;
while on Thursday night public
school groups are staging a chor-
al and Variety program along with
the public school Square Dance
Contests.
The extensive educational and
commercial displays will show the
latest things for far: folk. The
Fair will conclude with the auction
sale of grain on Friday afternoon.
TENDERS
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
The Council of the Township of
Hullett will receive tenders for the
Spraying of Cattle in the
Township of Hullett for
Warble-Fly, in 1956.
All spraying to be done in ac-
cordance with the Warble-Fly
Control Act and to the satisfaction
of the Inspector. Tenders to be
so much per head per spray. All
tenders to be in the hands. of the
Clerk on or before February 23,
1956. Lowest or any tender not
necessarily accepted.
Geo. W. Cowan, Clerk,
Londesboro
7-8-b
GRAVEL TENDER
TOWNSHIP OF
TUCKERSMITH
TENDERS are invited by the
Township of Tuckersmith for
CRUSHING and HAULING
approximately 7,500 cu. yds
of gravel to township roads
in the summer of 1956.
% inch round' screen to be used
and work to be completed by July
1, 1956. Contractor to supply all
requirements except gravel which
will be supplied by the township
at three locations.
Tenders to state a flat rate per
cubic yard delivered on roads at
the direction of the Road Super-
intendent.
Tenders to be sealed, marked
"Gravel Tender" and mailed or de-
livered to reach the Clerk by 3
p.m., March 6, 1956.
Lowest or any tender not neces-
sarily accepted.
E. P. CHESNEY, Clerk,
Township of Tuckersmith,
R,R. 4, Seaforth, Ont.
7-8-b
1110111111, ,, ll;
9;4004411101 11001 III 1111
FUELOIL al GASOLINE
MOTOROIL. LUBRKANTS
o.
A.R.?, (LINTON • Oyu 526J
IREINISIIIIIIIII11111111111111111111111011111111111111
The quality of the soil is be- Mr, Montgomery said. "Bach. year
in studied more closely than. saw an increase in the eitioilher of
ever before, Mr... MOnt4oniery Visitors to the agricultural office,
said, and told of the great use and this year we handed .out more
farm account books .than in the
four previous years. Two farm
management associations have
been organized and 51. men are
enrolled at the night school course
In farm management, For those
who have been lceoPahg fairly
curate farm records we can assess
their farm methods and properly
advise them"
"the lot point of the triangle
is Soul. You believe in what you
are doing, you believe in your-
self, your community and your
country, We are a Christian dem,
ocratie country and it is our spirit-
ual belief. which makes it all worth
while," concluded the speaker,
Notice
Township Ot
Tuckersmith
To facilitate snow reraor-
al Operations, the public is
requested not to park ears
or vehicles on roadsides
during the winter month&
And nOtiee Is hereby xis.
en that the Township Will
not be responsible for SO
damages caused to such
vehicles as a result of snow.
plowing operations.
L P. CHESNEY,
Township of Tuckersmith
51'-tfb
Goderich Township
gel'S 41144PP14,tiPP to Mary and her eaaoptanoo of the incarnation are
the most. momentous words in history. Thus we Ong the num.* ficat and "Hall Mary," with ven-
eration, may God make us model
our lives to be pattenlect from the example of the. Holy family,"
mrs, Bert Rowden, vice-presid-ent of the Women's Auxiliary thanked Aev. outerhridge for his
fine talk.
Mrs. John Middleton was in
charge of the music for this sere
vice and Mrs. Donald Middleton
sang a. beautiful solo "Along."
Others taking part inclireled, Mrs.
MiltOn Steepe, Mrs, Gordon Rath-well, Mrs. Peeves, Mrs. Cooper,
Mrs. liudie, Mrs. Russel Anderson
and Mrs. Stuart Middleton.. Mrs.
Bert Bowden was the leader in
charge of the service.
canes in Canada in recent mouths
indicate present high taxation lev-
el has reached the point of din-
fishing returns.
1OWNS$lp OF GODERICH
TENDERS.
for
Warble Fly Powder
Tenders are hereby called for the supplying of warble Fly POW, der for the ToWnehip og Coderich for the year 1956. 605 .pounds to be suoolied.--340 lbs. to be in 11 lb.
ceetone, and 405 lbs to he in IS lb. bags,
This powd to delivered to
giriten, or to
er be
the Warble Fly Die spector by March 20th.
AR tenders to be in the ciariel
banda by March 1st. Lowest or any tender not necessarily steep-
R. E, Thompson, Clerk,
R.R. 2, Clinton
Mrs, II-1.1W1 Anderson, Holland
Landing, visited last week with
Mrs. Tohn Middleton and relatives
in the district.
Mrs. Fred Middleton has been
visiting in Toronto with her
daughter Mrs. Edward 14411ens, for the last two weeks,
World's Day Of Power
The Women's World Day • of
Prayer service was observed in 5t,
James' Church, Middleton, with 1.1.
persons present.
Rev. Warren OuterbrIdge, T34.,
was the speaker and delivered a
most inspiring message.
"We welcome this special ser,
vice, which brings us to the chur-
ch of God during the week. The
proceeds from the Day of Prayer
service help many worthy causes,
including the Bible Society and
medical missions in India end
braille for the blind. , The social
gospel is most important, the gos-
pel of practical help."
"To grow in Grace we must all
worship God, each in his own
church, thus over the years we'll
grow in love and devotion to our
Lord. Mr. Outrebridge stressed
the origin of Jesus as found in the
Gospel of Luke.
"By being born into a human
family He gives his sanctification
'to human life. He alone can bring
God to us and us to God as the
mediator. Through .him woman-
hood and family life are forever
sanctified."
He stressed this point, "The an-