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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1967-11-02, Page 7"THAT BLUE PLOW" with Reversible Plow Points from J.F. FARM MACHINERY LIMITED is really plowing Ontario. So many farmers in the area already have a J.F. Overum Plow, why don't you drop in and see us, we have 5 and 6 furrowed Semi-Mounted plows with automatic trip beam on display. We will be happy to arrange for demonstrations through our dealers. FARM MACHINERY LIMITED THAMES ROAD EAST, EXETER, 235.1021 Open 8 am — 11 pm SUPERVISED Daily 9 — 5 Except Sunday Mon, and Fri. Evenings 7 — 9 STURDEVANTS Coin-Op PIONEER 14-20/14-50 the chain saws built for professionals and others who think professional! PIONEER Ck CHAIN SAWS the big difference is total engineering ! "SEE YOUR NEAREST PIONEER DEALER" "Exeter Farm Equipment" model 14-20 with Injectaire model 14-50 automatic oiling .k• • INSTALLED ONLY GOODAEAR Safety Spikes pse 0 • Tw.Ce the tranon on glare .5e • Mak,Murn control for curves and hull • Fns an Goodyear Suborban.te tires—new and retread. Panthers win Page 7 Times-Advocate, November 2, 1967 zone fora six pointer and Jim Hayter booted the extra point. In the third period, Ha.yter plunged over the Stratford goal- line from three yards out to up the South Huron margin to 13-0. Bud Desjardine took over in the final 15 minutes of play and scor- ed a pair of touchdowns on short yardage tries, Hayter added the convert on the first TD and the score was up to 26-0, Bowling 0 17 2 32 5 36 — Continued from page 6 TA (T, Arthur 584) PP (J. Bell 685) GU (B. Sanders 769) CC H8 RR HA WI HS 7 37 0 27 7 20 0 25 4 21 BA AC HE YS TH 3 22 5 28 2 15 5 15 2 28 7 30 0 26 Register for figure skating Monday afternoon was sign-up time for Exeter and district youngsters that will be taking part in the winter long activities of the Exeter Figure Skating club. Above, Mrs. Don McIver hands over the necessary money to club president Mrs. Mary Boltzmann while daughter Lisa receives the receipt. — T-A photo Gilfillan 598) Baynham 539) Wilson 629) Holtzmann 709) McDonald 585) Campbell Campbell 540) Lewis 737) Adkins 530) Hodgins 654) Glover 652) Johnson 665) Glanville 593) (G. (E. (G. (H, (D. (G. I. (D. (W. (L. (J, (B. U&D(W, RO CO ME T1 SD WC —Continued from page 6 back Andy Pirie was thrown for losses on six different occasions. The Continual rush on the lake- port signal caller was led by Uilke Nagel, Danny Shoebottom, John Pryde, Mike Hoy, Gord Greenwood, Brad Hamilton and Peter Kok. Pirie completed four of eleven passes attempted but gained only a total of 60 yards due mainly to the Panther pass coverage provided by Len Rimmer, Ron Durand and Chuck Snider. Goderich managed to gain only 18 yards on the ground and were being stopped on wide around plays by the fine tackling of Bud Desjardine, Jim Hayter and Greenwood. All the scoring was confined to the fourth quarter as a member of the Goderich backfield recov- ered a South Huron fumble in his own end zone and was downed before he could get out to put the Panthers in front 1-0. Midway through the final period, Scott Burton hit Bill Far- quhar on a 45-yard pass and run play to ring up another sixpoints and complete the scoring for the afternoon. Jim Hayter accounted for most of the Panther ground gaining as he picked up 5'7 of the 80 yards in 17 tries at the Goderich line. Bill Bourne was the most consistent pass catcher hauling in four tosses from Burton good for 43 yards. In the 26-0 win in Stratford, Thursday, the Panthers back- fielders received sharp blocking from Kevin McKinnon, Ross Huff, Brian Huxtable, Martin Manley and Len Hume enabling them to score four touchdowns. The Panthers hit the score sheet for the first time late in the second quarter when middle guard DannyShoebottom recover- ed a Stratford fumble in the end BANTAM BOYS (J. Gould 233) 5 5 (J. Darling 214) 0 0 (M, Lysack 196) 3 8 (H. Jones 205) 2 2 (S. Thompson 268) 5 10 (B. Wilson 263) 0 5 Farmers said 'goats' of subsidy criticism 609 487 382 PEE WEES Cockwell 100) Desjardine 84) \Teri 76) ZE (J. LI (D. BE (J. BANTAM GIRLS CA (H. Mathers 268) RO (T. Litt 228) OW (W. Gilfillin 219) 1337 993 935 Douglas Fraser, RR 2, Blyth; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. Faye Fear, RR 5, Brussels. Named voting delegates to the forthcoming zone and provincial meetings were: Robert Johns, Woodham; William Leeming, Walton; James Williamson, RR 2, Walton; Lloyd Stewart, RR 2, Clinton, and Mervyn Smith, RR 1, Walton. There is hardly an industry in Canada that is not subsi- dized, Huron County cream pro- ducers were told during their annual meeting in Clinton last week. "There are many products that could be imported cheaper than they are produced in Canada," Gerald Carey, Zone 6 director of the Ontario Cream Producers' Marketing Board, said in his report, He said Canadian textile firms, for example, are subsidized by government so they can com- pete with firms in Hong Kong and other countries mass- We've got them! The snow tire that's all bite and no bark. The new Goodyear Bean growers receive rebate Ontario white bean growers will receive a rebate of 66 cents per hundred pounds from the Ontario Bean Producers' Mar- keting Board stabilization fund, based on the 1966 crop. The boar d said a total of $879,907 will be mailed to about 3,500 growers Nov. 1, Each year, the board deducts 77 cents a hundred pounds from all beans marketed by growers. The money goes into a stabiliz- ation fund, used by the board to subsidize the surplus bean export. The amount left over after the crop is marketed is rebated to growers. The board exported a record 462,328 bags from the 1966 crop, worth about $4,000,000. Last year's total crop of 1,396,000 bags was a record for Ontario growers. producing for the Canadian mar- ket. Canadian farmers are unfairly criticized, he declared particul- arly by urban residents. "We are the goats," he said, "because we receive cash subsidies. But every other industry is sub- sidized, too, in one way or an- other." W. G. Urquhart of Stratford, general manager of the Mid- Western Ontario Regional De- velopment Council, said "unless planning in one municipality is carefully integrated with the pro- grams of others, confusion is bound to result —to the detri- ment of all municipalities in- volved. "In a basically rural region such as Huron County," he said, "it is vital to protect and pre- serve the land which is inher- ently capable of continuing to produce good agricultural re- turns." Mr. Urquhart said the Ontario department of economics and de- velopment has projected figures indicating Huron's population would increase to about 61,000 by 1985. "Population pressure in South- ern Ontario and in the north- eastern portions of the United States is creating unprecedent- ed demands for recreational fa- cilities of all kinds. "Huron County is in an unique position to provide and develop facilities of this kind as a major industry," he said. Roy Williamson of RR 2, Wal- ton, was elected chairman of the association, succeding Ray Hous- ton of RR 2, Brussels. Other officers: vice-chairman, pit at the same time, in the same place Sugar and Spice With Westinghouse Coin-Operated Drycleaning Machines, we're able to offer you a complete, one-stop service, Now you can take care of your laundry and drycleaning at one time, at any time of the day and at substantial savings, The dry cleaning cycle for a load is only 45 minutes, an ideal way to houseclean slipcovers, winter garments and drapes (they can be rehung the same day). Meanwhile you can be washing shag rugs, blankets and bedspreads in our big triple load washers or normal laundry in Westinghouse or Maytag machines. We wash electric blankets too! - ask the attendant, with Vytacord. 95 each Tubeless Blackwall 775/14 (with your old tire) Laundromat and Drycleaning Center Canada's newest and most advanced winter tire! Phone 238.2056 St. 57 Ontario Grand Bend probably got off with a warning. And everybody was happy. Now it's open and blatant bat- tle. It's vicious and ugly. It is fanned by newsmen and tele- vision. They always seem to be there when the cops are man- handling some screaming punk, but are never present when some constable is being kicked into jelly. I've met a lot of cops in my day, some in the line of my duty, and, I hasten to add, some in the line of theirs. A few of them were real hoods, but the vast majority were decent, or- dinary chaps who would go out of their way to be helpful, It's a rotten job, but remem- ber, men, somebody loves you. Vytacord Suburbanites are specially designed for safety spikes... Now from Goodyear comes a new kind of snow tire. It's all bite and no bark! The bite comes from a revolutionary S-Chain tread design that grabs hold in mud and snow to get you going and keep you going. And new Suburbanites are quiet! No morning "thump" when you drive away. They're built with Vytacord, Goodyear's polyester tire cord that won't flat spot, no matter how cold it gets, You can look forward to extra mileage too from longer wearing Tufsyn tread compound, GOODYEAR'S FAMOUS NO-LIMIT GUARANTEE NEWBY — Continued from page 4 is the hours: working holidays; special details; calls in the mid- dle of the night. And, of course, there's the job itself. Much of it is routine, even boring. Everything in trip- licate. But a Saturday night can be a nightmare. How would you like to cope with a drunken fight at a dance? Or a stolen car, driven by a kid at 100 miles an hour? Or a couple of plastered prostitutes belting you about the head and ears with their hand- bags, cheered on by the mob? Or a call from delighted neigh- bors, at 2 a.m,, telling you that Joe Scheiss is beating the brains out of his wife? And that's on top of the ordin- ary stuff: petty thefts; gang rumbles; car crashes; street beatings; jeering hoodlums. But I think all these things are secondary. There's some thing else that has turned the placid policeman of even 20 years ago into a mean cop. And that's the attitude of the people. It's fairly new and very nasty. I notice it, with dismay, among teen-agers. Even the decent ones sneer at "The Fuzz", as they term our stalwart guardians of the law. I don't know where they got it—perhaps from movies and television—but they seem to think the policeman is some sort of brutalized Gestapo type looking for trouble. A few policemen, of course, foster this attitude. There are always a few bullies in uniform who release their own psycho- logical perversions. But they are a tiny minority, usually curbed by their peers, Even more disturbing, perhaps, is the number of adults who will stand around and watch a policeman being beaten up and enjoy it. There's always, of course, been war between the police and the populace. But It used to be a good-natured, fun-war. You tried to circumvent the law, whether it was swiping apples or beating the speed limit, If you were caught, you grumbled a hit, lied like a trooper, and TIRE & BATTERY 242 Main North Exeter 235.0330