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The Huron Expositor, 1964-03-26, Page 911111111111111 un Iuuifmin IIIIIIt�• tl Save Money • On -Your Se€d Have you -ever compared' the ► cost of buyingtreed froth your local dealer and from a door- to•door salesman? You'll be surprised how much you can save by buying locally. In addition, you can always 'be assured of prompt service and satisfaction. tr Jones, MacNaughton Seeds have been specializing IN farm seeds in this area for many years. They know your needs and they provide qual- ity seeds to meet those needs. For service . . . satisfac- tion . . . savings . . . It's • Jones, MacNaughton seeds. From y'cur local dealer or Jones, • MacNaughton Seeds EXTER Phone 235-0363• CREDITON Plho7e 234.6363 .LONDON Phone 432-2258 IIIIIIiUlttutt,���a,u.f„n�'t��i�t�i,ttn� Classified ads pay • dividends. Wheat Prc.ducers End ors Increased License, Levy Th re esults of a recent vote by Ontario wheat producers on a proposed licence fee and levy increase found a clear majority of ballots in favor of the new proposal. Roy Coulter, chairman of the Ontario Wheat Producers' Mar- keting Board, said that the bal- lots processed by the Farm Pro- ducts Marketing Board show 69.59% of the total votes cast WIND • '•2NADO • CYCLONE Insurance F McKERCHER Ph' 'e 849 R 4 - Seaforth Representing the Western Farmers' Weather Insurance Mutual Co., Woodstock, Ont. BARN CLEANER 5110 UNLOADER & BUNK FEEDER YOU'LL GET BETTER PER- FORMANCE AND LONGER WEAR FROM A BADGER SALES - SERVICE - INSTALLATION JOHN BEANE, Jr. RRUCEFIELD SALES SERVICE Phone Collect: 482-9250 Clinton TOP PRICE FOR YOUR CAR! 1963 i;,_iMBLER CLASSIC 660=4 -Door f 196). CL EV. BISCAYNE-6 Cylinder 1960 RAMBLER CLASSIC -4 -Door 1959 •(.1-IEV. BEL AIR -6 Cyl., Automatic 1959 RAMBLER CLASSIC -6 Cylinder 1959 RENAULT DALPI-IINE-4 Cylinder • 4 Miller Motors are new equipped to do FRONT END ALIGNMENT and WHEEL -BALANCING SPECIAL THIS . MONTH -- Free Alignment Check Parts. and -Labor Extra °See the New 1964 Ramblers -- at . MILLER MOTORS PHONE 149 — SEAFORTH are in favor of the levy in crease. Russell T. Bolton, Sea forth, is district director o the board. Mr. Coulter stated that th Ontario Wheat Producers' M keting Board is convinced be yond doubt that the vote con ducted at county annual whea nieetings across the proVinc in February obtained tha nee essary voice of opinion by pro ducers which would enabl their board to implement more sound financial system. He also pointed out that . as result of the Wheat Boatd' credit crisis last fall, a greats operating capital is imperativ to the continued success of th wheat producers' organization. Mr. ( oulter said that al wheat producers in the Prov ince were kept well informs of he credit crisis situation of the various proposals stu- died by the Ontario Wheat Pro- ducers' Marketing, Board, and finally of the vote itself. This w a s accomplished through direct newsletters to all producers from the market- ing board's office and through widespread news media cover- age. All producers received no- tice of their respective annual meeting which outlined the is- sue to be voted upon at their meeting and of ,the voting pro- cedure. , • The procedure of casting bal- lots at county meetings, Mr. Coulter said, was favored in order that producers be afford- ed the opportunity to openly discuss the issue in each county prior to voting for or. against. Mr. Coulter explained that while it could not be expected that all 26,000 wheat producers of Ontario would attend meet- ings, an unusually high number ,did turn out to the 31 meetings held. Results of the vote were as follows: Total ballots • cast : 1,161; $08 voted in favor and 353 voted against the proposal. The proposal presented was as, follows: "That the. Ontario Wheat Producers' Marketing Board deductions for licence fees and levy be increased from .the .present 10c per bush - n e ar t e e a a s r e e 1 a WANE LIVE FOWL Picked up at the ,faun, Top Prices — Locker Service Available — Phone 751•J 12 — Seaforth or 393 J • 15 — Brussels Ronald Bennett WALTON -- NOTICE -- For Co -Op Insurance Call W. ARTHUR WRIGHT Phone 193 J — John Sic SEAFORTH • Complete Coverages' For: • Auto and Truck . •....Farm Liability . • E'mployer's Liability • Accident and Sickness • • Fire, Residence, Contents • Fire, Commercial • Life Insurance & Savings • Huron Co-op Medical ' Services • Wind Insurance MILTON J. DIETZ TIPS ON SAVING FEED AND GETTING MORE AND LARGER EGGS On light, leghorn-type pullets you can save up to 4 pounds of feed per bird during the' growing period by using Purina's Controlled Feeding Program which provides exact nutritional re-• w quirements for each stage of . growth: First 10 weeks; full feed a top quality feed. Purina Startena, and Growena are especially designed to give your birds vigorous growth and sound development—the -solid foundation they'll need for sustained production. 10 to 14 weeks; 14 pounds of Purina Pullet Developer per day per 100 birds. 14 to 22 weeks; 15 pounds of 'Purina Pullet Developer per day per 100 birds. After 22 weeks; Put them on a Purina Laying Ration, free choice. On Purina's Controlled Feeding Pro- gram you will have lean, "hard” birds that develop slowly .. • begin to lay up to 2 weeks later, but, they'll start - laying large eggs and they'll produce more eggs over the laying cycle. Why not call me, or drop in at my Stbre with the Checkerlpoard Sign. I'd like . to tell you more about Purina's'Con- trolled feeding Program. If you have your own grain I'd like to tell you about a controlled feeding plan that uses Purina Growing'•thow and your.own grains. for fast, efficient feed service call MILTON J. DIETZ PHONE 600 J 2, SEAFORTH, R.R. 3 Purina Chows — Sanitation Products Ventilation Equipment (Wholesale, Retail) Canadians who want bigger profits tomorrow feed PURINA CHOWS today! inlrlll . Testi l siV r a 4 el (lc licence fee and 9c levy) to an amount not to exceed 10 per cent of the negotiated minimum price." (At the present floor price of $1,65, a total deduction of 161 cents per bushel would be pos- sible.) Mr. Coulter said that as a result of the favorable vote, it is presumed that the Ontario Wheat Producers' Marketing Board would i mplement the new deduction system at the beginning of the new crop year, July 1, 1964. However, he said, this is a decision to be made by the Ontario jl1heat Producers' Mar- keting Board following proper approval by government under the Federal Agricultural Pro- ducts Marketing Act. UFO Meets The March meeting of Local 284 of the Ontario Farmers' Union was held in the Town Hall. A request for support from the Seaforth Agricultural Society was tabled, and Carl Dalton was appointed to in vestigate on behalf of the Un- ion. Delegates to the two-day Seminar at Guelph gave reports on the topics, "Farm Organiza- tion," by Professor James Mc - Carrie, research and organiza- tional director of the Saskatche- wan Farmers' Union, and by Prof. Dent, of the Ontario Ag- ricultural College, • who -spoke on "Communications." The Huron District Farmers' Union presented to the Farm Products' Marketing Board was.. read and discussed, concerning an "egg marketing plan". 4 yi AU.BU.RN-. CQ:ULLEBRA` GOLDEN WEDD„�NG ANNIVERSARY 1Vlr,.:and Mrs. John IdouStQn observed their 50th wedding anniversary on Friday by re- ceiving friends and holding op - n -house during the afternoon and evening. They have resid- ed in the Auburn district sintee their marriage. They were married at the home of the late Mrs. James Clark on concession 8, Colborne Township, by the late Rev. Andrew Laing. Mr. Houston was born in Dumfriesshire, Scot- land, a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Houston. He came to Canada in 1904. Mrs. Hous- ton is the former Mary BaenaYoung, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Young, and was born in Auburn. Following their marriage they took up residence on the bride- groom's farm, concession 2, West Wawanosh, where they re- sided until they retired and moved into their, new home on Sept: 1, 1960. Mrs. Houston was organist and choir: leader in Knox Presbyterian -Church for many- years, and was a music teacher before her marriage. Both Mr. and Mrs. Huston have been very active in Knox Church. He was ordained an elder in 1927 and has been ,a member of the session ever since and also Sunday school superintendent for a number of years. Mrs. Houston isa life member of the WMS and is at • present the auxiliary's pianist. Mr. Houston is a past master of the . Morningstar Lodge at Carlow, and Mrs. Houston is a member of the Auburn Horticultural Society. Mr. and Mrs. Houston have three daughters, who joined them in celebrating this mem- orable event: Miss' Frances E. THIS WEEK AND, NEXT A New Dominion ' by RAY ARGYLE The Dominion -Provincial cal conference.in Quebec Ci next week marks a new rou in the stiffening struggle b tween Ottawa and the pro inces foi :-supremacy in 'the c lection and spending of t throughout Canada. As such, the conference w touch on . the most sensiti nerve -end the e. n t i Canadian, Co federation more sensiti even than su emotion -char ed issues Quebec cepa atism and S. control Canadian i dustry..-...• Ray Argyle The reas for this is th while all these issues are bou up. together in the general que don, of Canada's future as a n tion, none is more fundament than control of government re enues, The Confederation that w know today is not the Confe eration as laid down in th British North America Act 1867. And it is efforts by ce tain provinces to• get back t the ' original intent of that a which has caused many of th current stresses between 0 tawa and the provinces. Under the strains of war an the growth of government sery ices • •undreamed of a centur ago, the original spirit of Con ederation has been reshape until today provincial authorit has been eroded almost to th vanishing point. Now, at a time when a min rity government in Ottaw must deal with unusually wel ntrenched provincial admini trations, complicated by re newed French - Canadian de mands for autonomy, the coup ry is finally recognizing tha he BNA Act is no longer orkable constitution. The Act has foundered o wo main obstacles. First, it re erved rights to the provinces hich the provinces are today ncapable of financing. • Education, highways and wel- are, which a °century ago were ems of minor concern or cost, emain provincihl responsibili- es. The cost of these services today staggering, and will row as the country grows. his is why the wealthier pro- inces, and not just Quebec lone, are demanding a return fis- ty nd e- v- ol- axes ill ve of re n- ve ch g- as r - U. of n- on at nd s- a - al v- d - e of r - o• ct e t- d y c y e a 1 t a n f 0 e s t t s w f it r ti is g T v a USBORNE AND HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. HEAD OFFICE - EXETER, Ont. -Directors: Timothy B. Toohey - RR 3, Lucan President Robert G. Gardiner - RR 1, Vice -President Cromarty Wm. H. Chaffe - RR 4, Mitchell E. Clayton Colquhoun RR 1, Science Hill ,Martin Feeney - RR 2, Dublin Milton McCurdy • RR 1, Kirkton Agents: ` Hugh Benninger - Dublin Harry Coates - RR 1, Centralia Clayton Harris - Mitchell Solicitors: Mackenzie di Raymond • Exeter tecretery4reasurer:." Arthur ,Fraser Exeter of traditional tax fields to the provinces. The second rock on which the BNA Act has foundered is that it remains an act of a British parliament, over which Canada has no vested control. Until it is replaced by a con- stitution of purely Canadian or- igin, it will be more divisive than unifying as a foundation for the Canadian nation. Is the solution, then, .merely to rewrite the BNA Act with a Canadian constitution and re- store to the- provinces such or- iginal rights as the raising of most taxes? Unfortunately, no, because it is only Ottawa's intervention in the tax field which has held Canada together. The principle of provincial taxation is incon- sistent with federalism, and will remain so despite such theories as "co-operative feder- alism',., -now being advanced by the Pearson goverpment. Canada needs more than a new constitution—it needs a New Dominion which would somehow grant to the provinces a deg're'e of independence with- out balkanizing the country to the point of destroying the na- tionhood we are now struggling to preserve. lue coal' Champion Stove and Furnace Oil WILLIS DUNDAS Phone 573 or 71•W SEAFORTH=- - UPHOLSTERING Centre Street Telephone 446 FOR ALL KINDS OF UPHOLSTERING — We Arrange Easy Terms -- FARMERS! For Alt Your Spring Machinery Requirements See the ALL NEW Renault Tractors Trail Cultivators Discs of All Types Ontario Seed Drills HAUGH BROS. FARM EQUIPMENT One Mile East . of BRUCEFIELD Houston, a member of the fac- ulty of nursing at Victoria Hos- pital, London; Miss Mary 1. 'Houston, home economics teach- er- at Hillcrest School, Hamil- ton, and Miss M. Jean Houston, B.A., of the University of To- ronto Press. Their only son, Flt. -Sgt. James Young Houston, OW, was lost in flight in May, 1943, and was buried in Ger- many. Mrs. Houston has one sister, Miss Olive Young, who has re- sided with them all her life. Mr. Houston has two sisters liv- ing out of. a family of 12: Mrs. Mary. McCubbin, Dumfriesshire, and Mrs. John (Isabelle) Mur- ray, also of Scotland. BACKACHE? ..not me! For relief from backache or that tired -out feeling I depend on— at pf ll 1No;ld,'s�iea3} igy Itfe ijll• 0mapar,►lesr Wl i }1 0' ►ranelr�io througboat 'Nd th america? As the Sun Mfr. re a Prg•ent- �- , • Niue in gout nortmtnunity, -�. may/ be of service JORN J: WALSH Phone 271.3000 -- 48 Rebecca St., STRATFORD, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada NOW , . Give Those Fall Crops a Boost USE. AERO PRILLS Broadcast Spreader Supplied Harriston Fertilizer at Attractive Prices CONTACT E. L. MICKLE & SON LIMITED HENSALL — Phone 103 afC.^a 04 k"' • WITH EXCLUSIVE IN -TANK AGITATOR • PtT.O. OPERATED X100 GALLON BONDED TANK Designed for the new and future chemicals that •require constant agitation. Authorized Calsa bealer New Trailer Mounted models with 100 or 200 imp. gal. tanks See them now at JOHN. BEANE, Jr. Brucefield — Sales - Service Phone Collect'— 482-9250, Clinton miners' t��,,�: `,pan racts MALTING BARLEY We will have Eetzes Seed, whish has proven far, superior to` Montcalm or Parkland. SEED OAT CONTRACTS Once again we will have the three popular varieties: Rodney,;: Gary and Russell Seed Oats. We can take your crop from the combine if you wish. BEAN CONTRACTS We will be contracting White Beaks, again this year. We will have all varieties and they will be of the highest quality. We will supply seed and fertilizer for all these con- tracts. We will have a complete line of Clover Seed, Timothy Seed and Grass Seed at very attractive prices. Complete line of CIL fertilizer W. G. THbMPSIN, ONS Lt PHONE 32 -- HENSALL