Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 7 Oct 1961, p. 26

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ONTARIO TODAY PAGE FOUR tHE AMAZING NEW CELLULOSE FILLER Mend those cracks! For cracks, holes, joins in ceilings and walls. No need to enlarge, cut back or wet the crack. Unique cellulose bond. Stays work- able for approximately an hour. Takes nails and screws. Before painting wet with a sponge tosizeit. Fill that woodwork Plug cutouts in doors etc. POLYFILLA will not shake loose, even on vibrat- ing surfaces. For that Gap behind the Sink Simply paint over the POLYFILLA when dry. ois Fix that window pane POLYFILIA makes an excel- lent Swedish putty for glazing in wood or metal frames. There is nothing as good as PoLvensa, Your first need in home decorating er A, Me... .. ih. oN LL LL Ll hh be Available from hardware, paint or building supply dealers Manufactured and distributed in Canada by NIAGARA BRAND CHEMICALS BURLINGTON ONTARIO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1961 Aftermath of a forest fire. EARS ago an old farmer with an unruly thatch of white hair and a face tautly lined used to go home every so often at unex- pected times of day to get his trusty shotgun. "The partridge is getting too thick down by the south pasture," he'd say. And it would be partridge for supper. If you'd spoken to him of con- servation he'd not have known what you meant. He'd never hegrd of the word. Yet he was a good conservationist. For, contrary to popular opinion, conservation, as it is applied to natural resources, isn't intended to prevent or slow down the use of resources. Perhaps the word "management" would be a better - one than conservation. In any case, conservation has become so firmly established that we're stuck with it. In October the federal govern- ment is calling the biggest con- ference ever held in Canada on conservation. To be convened in Montreal, it will bring together just about every government de- partment and industry with an in- terest in our natural resources. Do we need such a conference? In a colossal country like Canada isn't there enough of everything? Actually, a study of background in- formation for this conference sug- gests that there is--on the whole-- lots of everything at present, and probably there will be in the measurable future. Why then a full-blown conser- vation conference? The answer is that we could all enjoy this country more, make far more money and ensure wealth in the future for our youngsters if we practised management te of our resources right now. ET'S look at some facts . .. Take agriculture, for instance. Are we really short of agricultural land? The answer is: no. (There are some regional prob'ems, such as the Niagara=Peninsula which is being overrun by industry and the rich Fraser Valley which is being built upon). Even though we're not really short of agricultural land, we could make a lot more money by conservation. Soil studies could help a great deal. According to Professor N. R. Richards, of the Ontario Agricul- tural College, Guelph: "There is 'a marked lag between available technical information and its ap- plication to production programs. The lag appears to be due in part to a lack of incentive to reach higher levels of production from land resources." Only about one-third to one-half of the soil possibilities are being realized by farmers of Eastern Canada, he estimates. For instance, in New Brunswick, the home of

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