Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star (1907-), 14 Jun 1934, p. 5

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& N HT aady ) \ "SRA gl 3 Sa i x i or 5 < ARTA -- Gr AN Wp me SE EA Dr hh Sey - « ----------. * Sri - wir < uy i 6 Rabid hey $1) - = --_-- F {pa ind ig A e KS offer 'you one of the a oy iad Tana rices BRAY CHIC aur reduced Nee +) x _of the season. "Exactly the same high Es ity as the BRAY s that won more than half the prize money : au iblic chick-rearing contest last year, against chicks from forty- : foun ther cheries. Prices very little, if any, higher than you will ~~ have Sy 'pay, anywhers, LR faa ps a "Take ge of this obport nity to fill your laying house with * vigorous," Winter-la stock. Our breeding flocks kept our in- = cubators ning steadily through the coldest weeks of last winter. - Phone your nearest Bray Hatchery for to-day's prices, : BRAY CHICK HATCHERY, 79 Clayburn Ave. St. Catharines, Ont. Bray Hatchery at Lindsay, corner Lindsay and Kent Streets. Eight breede--Eighth Year Blood-Testing--Sizth Year Government Approval : x "ie "THE CHOICE OF GOOD MEATS IS EASY IF YOU BUY = FROM -- i! BERT MacGREGOR ZION (MARIPOSA) £5 (Poa Inte topes week) 1 Church services were withdrawn on Sunday on. account of our pastor at- |'tending the conference at Brockville. The Sunday School was well attended. A good 'crowd attendéd the ball gale at Zion on Saturday evening to witness the game between Wick and Zion, the score being 9-4 for Zion. Congratulations are extended to Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Kitson, on the ar- rival of a baby girl. Mr. and Mrs. C. McQuade enter- tained the young people of this com- munity with a dance on Friday even- ing. AL Mr. Joe Short spent a day in To- ronto last week, Mrs. Maxwell and Gordon attended the funeral of Mr, and Mrs, Russell Forman's little five months old child at Kirkfield.on Friday, June 1st. - MARSH HILL Mr, and Mrs. Charlie Ball and fam- ily of Toronto, spent Sunday- at Mr, Sam Hood's. ? . Mr; and Mrs. Elwood Miller and childrén of Sunderland spent Sunday at John Kay's, p ou TR 03 Pag | Gh Gr Mr, and Mrs, Reaford Miller, of To- roptoisspent Syidday at Mr. Wilntor Cregeen Rp : re Hi 2 *; Mr, and Mrs, Robt. Swanick spent Sunday evening at John Kay's. Mr, and Mrs. Kelly, Toronto, spent 'the week end at. Colin Larimer's, There was qbjte-a good turn out at lodge pn Wednesday evening of last week. ©. 7 L303 . "Mr, Robt. Brown and Stanley Me- Leod made official calls around here last week, Ti 'Mrs. (Dr.) Rawlinson, of, Montreal, who has been visiting her aynt Mrs. 'Rodd, left on Saturday to visit her father and mother in Edmongon.« Mrs. Geo, Howsam, of Port Perry, visited with Mr. and Mrs, John How- sam, a few days last week, Mrs. Laing and daughter, Baloboro, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Jos. Stone. ¥ Severa] from here attended the ser- vices of the B. M. B. C. in Uxbridge recently. ; : Mr. and Mrs, Geo. Michigyof Sask., are visiting relatives and friends here. Mr. Arthur Lee and family, of To- ronto, at his brother's, Mr, J. A, Lee, og- Sunday. he © Miia Mrs. C. Blait; of Ottawa, with. 3 id Mrs, Blair, the first of 'the ¥ : Mrs, © path, Mrs. Hollinger, and Miss Jesh Whitter, of Toronto, were visiting" Mas. C. Whitter, on Sunday, Seyeral "from here attended the Golden Wedding of Mr, and Mrs, P, Luke, at Epsom, on Monday. We are glad to see Mrs, J. A. Leask in her home again, after spending the winter in Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes, of Toronto, Misses Olive and Dorothy Real, visited with Mr, and Mrs. R. Real, on Sun- day. i) . I a NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Estate of John Watson, "deceased. All persons having claims against the Estate of John Watson, of the Township of Reach, deceased, who died on the 8th day of February, 1934, are hereby notified to send in to the undersignéd solicitors on or before the 30th day: of June, 1934, full particulars of their claims. \ EP 3 5 "1: Ng 770U HAVE READ OF RUSSIA; + i You know what farming in the land of the Soviet . has become, Fn ... State collectivization with -industrialization the supreme goal, has made the farmer little better than the beasts of the field, the bewer of wood and the drawer of water to the more' favored classes, those to whomt communism looks for the ultimate success of its state industrialization experi- FARMERS MUST BE FREE . Ontario wants no "swing to the left". Its farmers must be left free. The men who, in 1932, produced $226,446,000 of this province's wealth, cannot be made the stepping stone for some radical experiment in state industrialization. 35 Farmer though he is, Ontario's Liberal leader is prepared to sacrifice his own friends, to betray his fellow workers in the ° .fields in a frantic bid for control of Ontario's vast natural wealth, * ; Lovin SE By his own confession he 'swings well to the left", towards the ond where the communists, sogialists and the radicals wel. : BE) > di > - HIS OWN WORDS Pcs "Accept his own words to thé electors of West York on May 14, 1932, 50 TS ott Ae 4 | well to the left where some Grits do not tread." Or. his speech to St, Thomas voters on Febryary. 11, 1933. Then the C.CF., its ideals not yet analyzed, its impossible-to-be-achieved dréams still unexploded, had seized. briefly on a of the public imagination. Mr. Hepburn saw 1 it IL opportunity for a bid for power at the of the solid, classes of the province. So his opportunity, nothing of what such a pro- ie WO mean, he said, in all the enthusiasm of his CCP. is on of this 1 : : i in sample * aympathize the people who make up the ranks of thé A They axe tying, at easy 0 Rad a way out" L t of I 4 t 3 'STAGNATION AND MORTIFICATION ~~ Ontario's Liberal leader would cut the cost of government . fifty per cent. : A tall order, but quite possible if Mr. Hepburn and his Ontario stagnation and mortification. To cut his expenditures Ontario's Liberal leader, among 'other "economies" would wi of Agriculture. . He has placed himself on record to effect this. The Toronto Globe, in reporting his speech' at a banquet -in Toronto. on December 15, 1932, says: "oo ! "The departments,_of.. Game and Fisheles, AGRICUL- TURE, Labour, and Mines, the Motion Picture Bureau, Research Work and Colonization were a few which Mr Hepburn cited as instances where curtailment or ABANDON- 3 ON b party are prepared to sacrifice progress and give the people of pe out the Ontario Department MENT of one service could be effected without hurting administration" - i WHAT OF THE FARMER? .- Possibly administration would not suffer. But what would happen to thé farmer? "Where would: he be with his' overseas selling agent gone merely to set up a record for low spending? . -Would it be true economy to wipe out, at one enthusiastic gesture, the agricultural research which makes available to every farmer, without money and without price, all the resources of science, skill, knowledge and experience for the enlarging of output and the improvement of quality at lowe: operating costs? WOULD THESE HELP? "Would it help the farmer to wipe out the department which held, for farmers and farih women, in 1933, a total.of 93. courses in agriculture and home economics at as many centres 'throughout the province? : ) Would the monetary saving justify the elimination in every county of the trained agricultural representative, the man to whom the farmers look for advice in cases of plant or stock disease? SM Through abandonment of the Ontario. Department of Agriculture, Ontario's Liberal Ontario Marketing Board. ~ Can the Ontario farmer afford to be without this board, or would its abandonment he another of the Costly Economies which Mr. Hepburn proposes. The Ontario Marketing Board knew that fruit produced in Ontario was good fruit, but it. knew also that it was not reaching outside markets in'a way which made potential buyers aware of its goodness. Through co-operation with + fruit growers, cooling places and a grading system were estab- 3 lished. In 1929, the year this policy was decided on, Ontario sold 65 carloads of apples beyond its own boundaries, , In 1933, after ten cooling places had been established, sales in' Great Britain alone totalled 450,000 barrels, val- ued at $1,080,000. . : y In addition to this, there were correspondingly large sales on the continent of Europe and in-the Canadian West. In the same five years the export of pears and plums grew from practically nothing to more than 100,000 packages. ' This 's one service rendered by the Henry Government which the Ontario Liberal Patty would wipe out in its effort to make 'good on the rash "economy" promise of its leader "now by the fares is between 50 and 100 per.cent. better BACON SALES JUMPED leader would, abandon the . "cents over cheese from other countries, + Agriculture. But this is only a small part of what the Ontario Marketing: Board, product of the progressive Conservative administra tion, has done for the farmer. ---- Solicitors for John Watson, Estate. tributed among the parties' entitled and Stool *(Doniinion), Table, Barrel thereto, Kavihg regard only to claims of which the solicitors shall then have notice. Dated May 25th, 1934. . HARRIS, HARRIS & WALLACE, Ghurn, Dash' Churn, Kitched Cabinet, (mouse proof), Writing Desk and Bookcase, combined, pair Stgp Lad- ders, Wheelbarow, Cow Chain 30 feet long, Couch, Set Single Driving Har- ness; Lawn Mower, 13 chairs. Any Port Perry, Ontario, reasonable offer accetped. By Mr. C. J. Howard, Osler Farm, Cartwright, (old Hooper Farm.) Dresser, 2 Bedsteads and Springs, Chest of Drawers, Quebec Heater, Cook Stove (Old Homestead), Organ oC. SOS SN OS CONE | F. W. BROCK & SON | The Creamery IS PAYING 22¢. 2le. and 19¢. FOR BUTTER FAT. You can save labor and make more money by sending your cream to PORT PERRY CREAMERY A. GOODE & SON, Proprietors FOR SALE The RED & WHITE Store 11th Anniversary Sale Chocolate Ruffles Biscuits, 2 Ibs. 25¢. RED & WHITE COFFEE, V, Ib tin ................ 20c. RED & WHITE TEA, ": tb pkg. ........... TR 28c. KOLONA COFFEE, 1 Ib bag ............00ovuuun... 29. HELMET CORNED BEEF, I's ............... 2 for 25¢ Gold Medal STRAWBERRY JAM, 40 oz. jar ........ ..356¢. MAZOLA OIL, 1 Ib. tin ...................... NIN, +. SPICES, (Glass Shaker) ..................... 2 for 19c. Raspberry Jam, 32 oz. jar 27c. QUAKER PUFFED RICE .................... 2 for 27c. LADY GODIVA TOILET SOAP ............... 4 for 19c. GOLDEN SPRAY 'CHEESE, (plain or pimento) ..2 for 25c. TUNA FISH WHITE MEAT ................... tin 19c. PINK SALMON. tall tin .................. Sunnis ..10c. RED & WHITE FLOUR, ........ 24's 69¢...,......78 27c. BULK COCOA ................... ceveel 2 Ibs. for 21c. i P 23c. BROCK'S BIRD SEED' os FALCON SWEET MIXED PICKLES, bottle . WESTON'S SODAS, 1 Ib bags ...............:2 for 23c. TIGER SALMON, I's ............. SETI LIE JL tin 23c. Australian SULTANA. RAISINS. ......... ..2 Ibs for 25c. Crosse & Blackwell MARMALADE, 32 oz. jar ........32c. JEWEL SHORTENING ..........0 ...... L..2 Ibs. 19c. P, & Gu SOAD v5 cei fn ys wenn wa asd 5. bars for 17c. JUICY ORANGES, Special ........ ee dozen 34c. CREAM CUSTARD 'BISCUITS, per Ib ..............15¢c- CHOICE TOMATOES, large tin ..... FP + oan» 100, AYLMER PEACHES, choice ............ SPICE tin '18c. eanut Butter, York Jar, x DC IC BETS ' ve per pkg. 19c. vie sete ov 280, Baking Powder and Extract Deal 1--16 oz. tin BAKING POWDER and EXTRACT, both for .... 1--2 oz. bottle of ceeaeaea a 29c, DE I "ee Phone 43, Port Perry PRICES WENT UP "In 1932°it saw, another opportunity and this year saw Ontario Brewers who had abandoned Ontario barley using 1,000,000 bushels of the Ontario product at a price $150,000 ahove the current market quotation. ~The hoard turned to the problems: of the turnip grower As a result of. its first season's work the board obtained one contract for 1932 for 40,000 bushels and the. price. obtained - than. before the board became interested in the situation. Export sales of cattle in 1933 for the whole of Canada totalled 50,317 head, valued at $3,180,104, Aggressive sales methods of the Ontario Marketing Board ivere responsible for TWO-THIRDS OF THIS TOTAL--31,783 HEAD , VALUED AT $2,014,371--GOING FROM ONTARIO. ' What the Ontario' Department of Agriculture and its sub- sidiary, the Ontario Marketing Board--the Department which Liberal Leader Hepburn would wipe out--has done for the bacon industry needs no comment. The figures speak fo: themselves. : vo ) In 1032 Ontgrio sold thirty million pounds of Bacon in the British Market. In 1933 the figure has grown-{o' 10,000,000 ' pounds. AND THE FIRST FIVE. MONTHS OF 1934 HAVE, BROUGHT INCREASED BACON RIETURNS OF MORE THAN $15,000,000 TO THIS FARMERS OF THIS PROVINCE. 3 ? Export of dressed poultry has growmw from a negligible figure to.a total, in 1933, of $1,226,008. | te {7 won To improve live stock herds of the province it agreed to pay twenty per cent. of the cost of pure bred sires. In 1932 alone there were 430 applications and $37,000 was paid. In the five years 442 approved herd sires were sent into Northern, Ontario. On these the Ontario Government paid 30 per cent of the cost, plus the freight. ~ Efforts of the department and co-operation of dairymen have improved the quality of the 86,000,000 pound annua) production of Cheddar cheese from 89 per cent. first quality in 1024 to 96 per cent. first quality in 1032 and Ontaric Cheddar Cheese now brings a premium of from tivo to three Ontario is the only province which loans money to farmers on the security of their lands and chattels. In 1933 it loaned in round figures, $6,700,000 to 3,415 applicants, PLEDGED TO ELIMINATION 'This is the department which Mitchell Hepburn, leader of Ontario's Liberal Party, has pledged himseli jo c¢Lmi nate, ; "In one fell swoop he would wipe out a dépatiment which has done more than anything else in the Dinilnion of Canada fo see the farmers of this Province through the period of agricultural depression. ; Ontario cannot afford the loss of its Department of Ontario must have construction under the progressive Henry Administration, k Destruction tinder Liberal leader Hepburn would mean . iy COAL! WOOD! LUMBER! RD) (7 AANY F740) | ~& N Na SUMMER PRICES NOW IN EFFECT"FOR COAL. A car load of BRITISH COLUMBIA SHINGLES has arrived at our yard and we would be pleased to quote you on your shingle and lumber requirements We also handle ASPHALT ROOFING ""MARMILL CHICK STARTER Again the Marmill Chick Starter is scoring a wonderful success among poultry raisers. We carry a line of Marmill Feeds. FRED E. REESOR : Phones: Office 73 w; Res. 73 j BUY NOW Made-to-Measure SUITS and OVERCOATS at Low Prices. We are offering good values--60 different designs in Tweeds, Fancy Worsteds, Grey and Blue Serges. Pressing and Dry Cleaning Done ° ° (0) man Over the Telephone Office, Port Perry Tr = DON'T WORRY ABOUT FIRE! Have your property properly insured at once . HAROLD W. EMMERSON Signed: THE LIBERAL-CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION OF ONTARIO & mre -- a rp --p-------------- by] s opr asp: Shp sh Ew BN or torre mone ram a vé hon Pod its - ~ TNR. X 7 ' ne -- oo ES Case 3 EY . . na INT PAT" gah on es ae pha ¥e $38 r et aN ~ - " ACA a -- a. Ra - > ra Fo pe Ti Bg a J-- v ee LF fl 24, 4

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