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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1974-10-03, Page 174 SER INTEREST RAlfl !a\ Now AvailableOil ST. AND 2ND MORTGAGES AnYwboritireOtitfrio Ort RESiDENTIAlit commeRCIAL,INDUSTRIAL and FARM PR.OPERTIES Interim Flaming For New Construction& Lsnd Development For Representative* to Your Area. 91 , Phone SAFEWAY INV. ESTM. % S. AND CONSULTANTS LIM' ED (519).744.6535"+) oilect Head Office .56 Weber St, E., Kitchener, Ont. -We Buy Existing MortgagesSfor instant Cash - tau Ey! "res. PLOD 14" an4 16" 1.6 furrow semi I.H.C. 4.5 furrow menti plows 5*4 furrow 3 p#.. hk 2.3 furrow 3 pt, h. 4.4 furrav trail plows 2 Gehl 309, 2 heoci harvesters' 1 John. 'Geese Sit 2 -head her- . vaster 1 4 -row and 33, 2 -row corn Stalk choppers 51 -row corn pickers B ' CLIFFORD 327.8045 Reap the Savings Now! Chock Thee Crop Of Big Sues In Every TSC Department...All Specially -Pried. To Make k Your Dollar Go Farther! Visit our store and pick up your free sale catalogue full of bargains.. a TSC Stores LISTOWEL • S>A ri . .N 41.4..4. I�Tln'FJrflll Of. rr 190 Mitchell Rd Phone19V-1882 • 3 Mon.-Thurs., 8:30-5:30; Fri. to 9.p.m.; Sat. to 5 p.m. i COMPLAINTS -After the eggs are packed and shipped to the grading station, complaints arise. One operator of a grading Station said he is getting only'one cent more than h was getting in 1950 for grading one dozen eggs. Agricuitural Tidbits With Adrian Vos Canada's egg producers had their hens lay five billion eggs per year:Because this was more than could , be sold, an estimated' 28 million eggs will be spoiled by the, end of the year. This, of course, a -crying shame W1 y de'n't iti !'' society, led by our governments, buy these eggs and send "them to What You Need What You Get "YOU NEED THE MOST FOR YOUR USED CAR" JACKSON MOTORS LISTOWEL LTD, Respectfully Needs Your Good Used Car TRADE WITH US TODAY people who are in dire need of protein. As far as the Egg Agency - is concerned, it means a very slight 'over -production for Cana- dian needs. In fact about two dozen .eggs too many for every 5,000 eggs produced. I feel kind ~ Of so j ofo r MrS Plumptre that she has.been takeny in by her staff. It should be re • - membered that her staff is headed by a Professor Forbes of Vancouver who said when he commenced his duties, and before he had done any research, that he was very much opposed to marketing boards. It appears from here that there is as much, or more, mismanagement in the Food Prices Review Board as there is in the Egg Agency. How much does this Plumptre board contribute to our taxes and hence to inflation? 0-0-0 How part-time farmers and non -farmers in rural areas can be living side by side and create problems for the bona fide farm- ers is demonstrated in East Wawanosh Township in Huron County. This county is the first Ontario county to have an official plan. I'm all for it, but it is far from ideal. One 'would think that in an area that is zoned agricul- tural there wouldn't be restric- tions to agricultural expansion. However here we have a case where a farmer wants to expand. He applies for a permit to build a pollution -limiting liquid manure -tank. "No," says the planning board. Somewhat bewildered he asks why not. Well, within the required distance is a house trailer set up on concrete blocks that doesn't require a building pertnit. Because of the distance to this dwelling the farmer is re- fused a building permit for his tank. This seems to me a great in- justice to all farmers. His other neighbor doesn't care too much, for this is a part-time farmer. Is it any wonder that farmers resent the settling of urbanites in rural areas? was dated September IS, 1074, and fisted prices for. Gram A eggs, one filo. ,Grade fir. eggs and, two f* Grade C eggs, which*twits the =eked Wil. In roti to prices, Mr. ROW note4 that it is difficult for a ?- ducer to mit from the good prices. , be Mid, ale the same amt of food .anL need tui same amount ot labor regardless of their age. This meaini. that when the hens are yob, they lay Small eggs and notes many aos they doll tww. reach their peak and eventually level off. As Mr. Nicholson said talking to producers4nd graders results in different opinions and sugges- tions as to whet 'should " be done. But one thing is clear; producers don't believe they are to blame fpr the price of eggs sold to the consumers and neither ,do they believe the board and CEMA are. ' That's what makes Mrs. Plumptre unpopular. They point to the cost of pro- duction, about 60 cents a_ dozen, and remind one that all they are doing is paying their bilis, not making any money. Meanwhile the board tries to bring the situation under control.. One producer, on a quota, said that . the control should be imposed on everyone producing eggs. In the end, the old question of what comes first, the chicken or the egg, is being asked. But whichever way it's answered, the• producers will novo need a permit to buy pullets (young ;Mens)., As Mr: Ross said, once they have these chicks batched they should ekpect them to lay eggs somewhere. "They just can't kill them." And without many hens, there shouldn't bean, excess of eggs. It should•be noted, though,that the. Agriculture . Ministry has said that egg consumption in Canada has been dropping in the last two years. In any case, no one is talking about a consumers' ` quota yet. mionomminimmimS OSS 1-.Ancteent mutiry - greaten - oforru its ry9'.- Pe n poe 53 leer ialto 11 - A itseure 12 - Poker primo 14 • Extend over 16 - Anger 17 - ContInooiva.;cavae 19 - Mineral! sprig 20 - Preppaition 21 - Bkmtoh 2Z - Britg legal ,. actionagatart 24. -_ Musical note 26 - Force; PosVet 26- - Withered • 28 - DestilnY' • 29 -HIV 31 - Golfing devices 34 Morally 1°W 37 -OpposedCO.in, a ePortiI g wi►y 39 - Collegiate Cheer 4a' -`ire 41 Creek ,letter 42-...11a1* 44 - Flx firmly 46 - Thing, in laFw. 47 -Nostril 49 - Timm 50=T..���dy�� t 54 + Flows Prima •omporor o,): Jp0Wl 1-o+ 1'a no 2 - ikr cad #hare 3 - Water'auidt Mice 5 - Hoerner - Prls o r's Unitic - Utters sho rpty mcgmmintra u" io u fit U E ►f i t:: I3al l/ `►+l LAWN W L 6`i L. MAL L!' WW*J1J WWW :► ir7ti D: ®Cidp1 PM KICOU VOWP 51 HAW fll � s i3l �': t30 Ea Let "til ltl'wl W WE _llLL LI1ALe NU [ INl ` R%JI l~1EU5J fitLfEL E',I7 J L E?!►� !a W L J iki lac:WM12I J A X/+ poopirf osgroomed: X1 dc -y 113 • ay y: • - * 1$ - F alig 17 0 To comoort 400k 'father . Regret 21 '4,1001)0W 27 0The day *irk: $0-000400 ttsi s .Aum 33 - To embark 44 „- ,rlcatt N. R 3si + #nsaot 36 Fiat k*fti . actresss 3TJlck e 41 - : Uliawat•y . nott Asiatic retina 4s-To:eaat 46- De a • 44''Ttr''� so .'44171.4,11:), six - SProvo '- ! A,cs YOU CAN Fix -IT By Gene Fon Bent Board One effective method of straight- ening out a bent board is first to wet it thoroughly, then rest its ends on bricks and place a heavy weight on its center. After a few days under this pressure, the board will usually flatten out. By D. C. Williams .- 1. • WORDS OFTEN MISUSED Use "LIKELY" when referring to a contingent event regarded as probable; as, "It is LIKELY, to rain tonight." Use "LIABLE" when' referring to a possible event re- garded as disastrous or unpleasant; as, "You are LIABLE to fall if you are not careful." Avoid the expression, "i am partial to cake." Say, "I am FOND of cake." Do not write, "This is our's." No apostrophe is required in writ- ing the possessive pronouns, OURS, YOURS, THEIRS, ITS, and HERS. Do not say, "Being as you are already here, shall we proceed with our discussion?" Say, "SINCE (or . INASMUCH AS) you are al -- ready here." OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED inchoate (rudimentary ). Pro- nounce in-koe-it, accent on second syllable. Zealous. Rhyme with "jeal- ous." Porcine (resembling swine). Pro- nounce par -sine, accent first syl- lable. y1-lablc. Anathema (a curse). Pronounce a-nath-a-ma, .i. -cnt second syllable. Ephemera! t'hortdived). Pro- nounce e;;-fen,-er-al, accent second syllable. I)otisrrr. P►u:.o'in., d.'..tic- ai. ac- cot rust syllabic. Lasa fns 4 Vahan pasta .. Pro - r, .once la aahn- a, acccht Arc•rnd syllable. ArchirIaro. Pronounce second syllable as "kr " not as "chce." tl Ypurgatc. accent first syllable, preferred. Pu!ssance (power. might. or force). Pronounce pyoo-i-sans, ac- cent first syllable. OFTEN MISSPELLED Abbreviate; two "b's." Abro- gate; only one "b." Cooperate and coordinate; now correctly written without the hyphen between the two "b's." Urban (of a city). Urbane (courteous; suave). Porten- tous (ominous); "tous." Preten- tious; "ious." Desecrate (to pro- fane). Dessicate (to drf+ up). Pul- motor; only one t'1." WORD STUDY "Ilse a word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vo- cabulary by mastering one word each day. Wolds for this lesson PRECURSORY: preliminary: in- troductory. "His precursory re- marks hinted at the real nature of his speech." INSULAR; illiberal; narrow minded. "He has an insular at• titude toward all new ideas." ERUDITION: knowledge ac- quired by study. research. etc.. scholarship. "He is a man of great erudition." MI Ri-TRICiOUS; flashy, at- tractive, or impressive, but worth- less of phony. (Pronounce r'nair-a- trish-us, accept third syllable). "The kindliness this politician exhibits to the public is meretricious." CHESS- • TIME Can chess flatten-. b.�xing? By JOSEPH MIL BROWN After George Foreman `and Muhammed Ali walkoff with half of Zaire's 'treesury as a reward for boring people to death (the winner no doubt to be matched with Floyd. Pat- terson), the Third World -may get to realize that brute strength is all washed up,'and that future history belongs to the chesspiayers of the world. This was the message of the regent • Olympiad, at Nice, even though the Russians set a record with their eleventh straight victory. Nothing re- vealed it better than two sig- nificant ignificant events. One was the placement in the Group A final' - along with theSoviet Uniofl, Yugo- slavia and the U.S.A. - of a team from the rto 1 Philippines. But even 'so was the bestowal of a grand- master title upon the brow of that country's handsome 22- year-old star, Eugene , Torre - the first in Asia. When Newsweek's Barry Riddell returned from Manila, he carried a package of ideas which countries like Zaire could well pay attention to. "Developing countries in Asia need a game like chess," Minister of Education Juan Manuel told him. "Our young people require the Mental self-discipline it brings, and it is a breathtakingly inexpen- sive way to encourage people to use their minds." An aide to President Ferdi- nand E. Marcos added pointedly; "This is a game where physical size doesn't count, so we are on equal terms with those robust Rus- sians." What the Philippines are proving is that chess can be the salvation of the battened and the beaten. It's a message even for developing societies; every one of them contains the most demeaned group of all: the female sex. My own opinion for the lack of top-notch women players is that the game is replete with sexism, and still awash in 19th Century prejudices. A match for the "women's champion- ship" between the wives of masters Jackson Showalter and Lewis Worrell was once relegated from the chess clubs to the obscurity of their homes in New York and Brooklyn undoubtedly based on the prevailing preju- dice that no spectacle was more disgusting than two women playing chess. Women in chess have al- ways been made to appear lovable. (Morons and idiots, perhaps, but lovable.) Wil- helm Steinitz loved to tell about "the most independent "moved h paw two whenever she was in the for It. II had to be right, hem* her m''- ,. Russia's gririndagrt Ni .yy s has been i tb en's c n'1�� dozen years. But the complint considered. , have gone tier,way wattd a tOli rnament in Ya. when a .1104 decided wasn't a ' man in + ` could beat her at.... 4 . +Oddly enough, may,,, that reputed arch -sexist, Bobby Fischer, who has the secret truth of it all: When, duringhis reign as men's;' champion, Mikhail Tal was asked the reason for Fischer's ''i chess combat, he pointed to Bobbys profound knowledge of chessliterature. "Fischer," lamented 'Tel, "even studies games by wom- en players." • 1972 OLYMPIAD Skopje, Yugoslavia • Eugene Torre (Philippines) \ . Florin Gheorghiu (Rumania) SICILIAN DEFENSE. 1. P -K4 P -Q84 2. N-KB3 N.QB3 3. B -N5 PKN3 4.0.0 B -N2 5. P -B3 N -B3 6.R -K1 0.0 7. P -Q4 , PzP 8. PxP P -Q4 9. P -K5 N -K5 10. N -B3 NzN 11. PxN Q -R4 12. P-QR4 B -N5 13. R -K3 KR B1 14. P -R3 BzN 15. RxB P-QR3 16. B -B1 P -K3 17. B-KN5 Q -B2 18. P-KR4 P -R3 19. B -B6 N4C2 20. P-KR5 ' P-KN4 21. B -Q3 N-84 22.R -N1 BzB 23. PxB N -R5 24. R -K3 Q -Q1 25. P -N3' N -B4 26. BzN PxB 27. R -K7 R.B3 2$. QRxP RxP 29. Q -K2 Q.QB1 30. QR -Q7 Q -B3 31. R -B7 443 32. R-Kdch RxR 33. QxRch Q -B1 34. Q -Q7 K -N2 35. R -B8 R -Q3 36. Q -B7 Resigns SOLVE A CRIME SOLUTION Caruthers killed Edwards. Donnelly can't be the killer, because he played two sets of tennis this morning, and the killer was operated on ten days ago. Albertson is not the killer, but the killer's cousin. Benson is not the killer, for he met Albertson for the first time three weeks ago. This leaves 'Caruthers and Edwards. Since Caruthers is obviously alive (he is a fine tennis player), he must have killed Edwards, the only other name mentioned.