The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1972-06-01, Page 16HEARING TESTS
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MIDDLETON'S DRUGS, EXETER
Thurs., June 1 7 1 to 3 p.m.
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PART OF A SCHOOL TRIP — A group of grade nine students from South Huron District High school
visited an oil well in the Greenway area Friday as part of a tour of the area. Above, farm owner Cecil
Smithers explains some of the oil drilling operation. At the extreme right is SHDHS teacher Jim
Marshall. T-A photo
The Huron County 4-H livestock
and field crop judging com-
petitions were held Saturday at
the Seaforth fairgrounds with 138
young men and women par-
ticipating.
The Blatchford Feeds trophy
for the highest score in the entire
competition was won by Brian
Miller, RR 3 Exeter, with a score
Of 716. The runner-up was Bob
McNeil,' RR 6 Goderich.
Miller also won the senior
competition open to all young
men and women 18 to 30 years of
age and also to all those who have
represented the County on Royal
teams and graduates of a two-
year diploma course in
agriculture. He scored 716 of a
possible total of 775 points.
McNeil was again the runner-up.
Compile directory
A directory of all public service
organizations in Huron county
hag been compiled by the Huron
County Social Services Com-
mittee.
The committee, financed under
the Local Initiatives Program,
completed the directory and
began distributing it last week.
Copies will go to libraries,
newspapers, ministers, doctors
and others involved in helping the
public.
The directory gives these
people the names and numbers of
social agencies, health services,
recreational services,
educational institutions and
service industries such as
newspapers.
Other winners were;
Intermediate — 41 competitors
— open to all young men and
women 15-17 years of age who
have not represented the County
on a Royal Winter Fair Judging
Team. Barry Gordon, RR 1
Seaforth, score 695, possible 775;
Beth Passmore, RR 3 Exeter,
score 695, possible 775.
Junior — 32 competitors —
open to all men and women 12-14
years of age including previous
participants in 4-H Inter-Club in
Guelph. Brian Lobb, RR 2
Clinton, score 689, possible 775;
Margaret Franken, RR 2 Auburn,
score 688, possible 775.
Novice — 45 competitors —
open to all men and women 12-17
years of age entering Judging
Competition for the first time, no
previous 4-H Club experience.
Karen Tyndall, RR 4 Clinton,
score 686, possible 775; Susan
Tyndall, RR 4 Clinton, score 678,
possible 775.
Pre 4-H — 14 competitors —
open to all young men and women
11 years of age, Scot Lougheed,
Belgrave, score 660, possible 775;
Ruth Alton, RR 2 Lucknow, score
648, possible 775.
Canadian National Exhibition
Shield — high Novice Judge —
won by Karen Tyndall, RR 4
Clinton; Runner-Up, Susan
Tyndall, RR 4 Clinton.
C.I.L, trophy — highest score in
swine. Won by Joe Phelan, RR 2,
Blyth, score 146, possible 150;
Runners-Up, Fred Meier, RR 4
Brussels, score 145, possible 150;
Judy Cook, RR 1 Belgrave, score
145, possible 150.
Huron milk committee award
— highest score in Dairy Section.
Won by Bob McNeil, RR 6
Goderich,score 98, possible 100;
Runner-Up, Jim Fairies, RR 1
Gorrie, score 98, possible 100.
Cyanamid of Canada award —
highest score in Sheep Section.
Won by Dave Baan, RR 3 Walton,
score 95, possible 100. (Brian
Miller had a score of 96 but other
major award winners are in-
eligible).
Huron County Beef Producers
Association award — highest
score in Beef Section. Won by Ben
Van Miltenburg, RR 4 Seaforth,
score 133, possible 150; Runner-
Up, Mark Wynja, RR 4, Seaforth,
score 132, possible 150.
Over half the producers who
supply milk to Ontario's in-
dustrial plants receive at least 20
cents per hundredweight less for
their products than many of their
neighbours, This is because they
continue to use milk cans for
cooling and shipping, says 0. R.
Irvine, Dairy Division, Kempt-
ville, College of Agricultural
Technology.
The actual difference is more
than this because, losses due to
sticking, spillage and low grade
or rejected milk, are greater
where milk is handled in cans
rather than in a bulk cooler.
Truckers picking up milk in cans
are travelling farther to pick up
their loads, Consequently, their
rates are increasing.
Grants are available to
producers to assist them in
making the change from milk
cans to bulk tanks. Farmers who
make the change should derive
satisfaction from handling milk
through an easily-cleaned bulk
tank, says Mr. Irvine.
Installation of bulk tank cooling
facilities is the first step toward
entry into a higher priced
market.
1
Gordon Hill, president of
Ontario Federation of
Agriculture, addressed a group of
Huron County corn producers at
Brucefield Public School
Thursday.
Mr. Hill stated, "We need an
orderly flow to market twelve
months of the year, we have to
recognize there is a market
requirement all year round and
we have to supply it or else an
alternative source will be found
and that will probably be the
American corn or Western
barley. Other complications are
the farm to farm sales. I suggest
we make no attempt to interfere
with this program. The OFA is
supporting the principal of an
orderly marketing plan for corn
and I suspect that we have been
influenced by other marketing
plans such as the bean board and
the wheat board even though
there is always room for im-
provement, it has certainly
improved the income of grain
production considerably,
Two delegates, John Oke, RR 3,
Exeter and Bob Allan, RR 1,
Brucefield, were appointed at
this meeting to represent Huron
County corn producers at an OFA
meeting to be held June 19 at
Duncan Hall in Toronto.
It has been suggested that a
commission of seventeen
members be set up to market
Ontario corn. The commission
would consist of eight com-
mercial representatives and nine
corn producers; one member
from Cereal Manufacturers, one
member from Starch
Manufacturers, one member
from Distilling and Brewing
Industries, two members from
Feed Manufacturers, one
member from Feed Dealers and
Elevators Association, one
member from Ontario Livestock
Feeding Industries, and also nine
corn producers.
The alternative to this
marketing program would be a
producer board consisting of corn
producers with no commercial
representation. Chairman Mason
Bailey, president of Huron
County Federation of
Agriculture, asked for a show of
hands of which type of corn
marketing board would be
preferable. It was unanimous
that the marketing board would
be preferable. It was unanimous
that the group present preferred
a producers board to market
their corn.
The corn producers requested
their two delegates to inform the
Toronto meeting of their
preference for a producers board
rather than a corn commission.
Pays 16
riresAcivocato, .4une. 1„ 197.2
Brion Miller is top winner
in Huron 4 judging class
OFA president speaks
Need orderly market flow
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UNTIL MAY MAY 1, 1973
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ANOTHER BIG ONE — A Victoria Day holiday weekend fishing
trip was successful for Tom Elliott of town. Tom is shown above
with a 12 pound northern pike caught in the Bruce Peninsula.
T-A photo
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