Grimsby Independent, 11 Aug 1949, p. 2

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Fruit need not be told in print Mtflmmdmfilhhfig on the wpresent crop, or what the effect be on trees trying to survive on a minimum of moisture. The real damage may not be Currently, however, growers are more many thousands of old trees as well as young nursery stock will not survive the winter. crop. This is actually far from the truth. All one has to do to realize just how bad the situation has become is to visit any of the mmmummm quantities of fruit being shipped is of below This represents a loss to the growâ€" c.andnhoa-dlllnmnvut. Take the harvesting of plums, such as the Shiro and Burbank variety. Seldom do growers mum&ahmmyfi:'uy year, there were perhaps tbeoddmvhomtmh to be in a position to irrigate found free of the task of grading plums. . & been proclaimed far and wide as a bumper No. 1 quality. mm.dmlvflfil”m‘“- which are far below the usual jous mouthful that Niagara peaches are noted for. A shadow of their former selves, vast quanâ€" tities of second and third grade peaches are replacing the No. 1 pack. _ A weekly bulletin issued by A. W. Fickâ€" msier & Son seems to hit the nail on the meier & Son seems to hit th head, and is printed verbatim: 'Vlltllvvâ€".;lâ€"â€""l"-â€"" n'l" rl m;}&tp‘nfinw'flm”h COLLEGE BY TELEVISION mmjmmamw lege and the Broadcasting System hdfu@ueobz!mbyWh- inwshundvdublene.We-nlllm to such programs with delighted relief from the usual wrestling matches and variety -HB.AWMWM“ wyfihu.nd"b-“uothh- w|mmh"ullle-hflyhllfi°- _ But we can‘t slong with the asâ€" -qflneth.m-.Wm LETTERS TO THE EDITOR â€" far as THE SMALL TOWN (By George Matthew Acsm®}) Iuhluv'nntohfl‘“"" the fact that 1 was both born, and lived the ain-fl“""“",,_‘_"m- Te wmqm- m mat~ aeeT the drugrist, the harness maker, o the 3 IMdfl"W’"“’ men. spread Mmaffi““"' all over the fown. There was community interest. Wdawd #md‘mlfi"- ""‘m"'w'-' _ambd"m‘u-u ‘_.l-dhd â€"*fl;&l'm 'ym'-uâ€"'.i on of a country‘ mesn and Eookiy portion o 3 oi y s M hn Mont "ooe from humoble origin. _ And 1 haye Nok A_A-â€"-Cw'hw‘mw &"'m ehurene eager to Fan 97 tak* aedie pgpen :‘:."'Efifl"m and from “‘w.".M:‘L‘ met a man Of in the fact. The projonged drought is having a very _ The projonged drought in the Niagara On the other hand, we can‘t help remem acts * And + Sancies True independence is nmever afraid of appearing dependent, and true dependence leads always to the most perfect independence. take time to t B cmag PP GPPG / as well as those who have FR.ANK FAIRBORN, JR. . hnX ts weekly ne#y in c P 46 t c ccmaclth s ysnt wa Ye e 57â€" P average summer, talk to a few of the old timers in the district, many of whom have informed us that this is the worst they can ever recall. There have been long droughts intbepst.htmennaluodthk duration. * Scientifically the experts consider not onlythehekdrdlmthllfi"r"‘ months, but also the lack of moisture in the subsoil due to a mild winter and an exceedâ€" ingly dry spring. The situation is as grave as the fruit uwvfih-.gxo."x d::.nl‘l:zdl‘o.t size. This pears plums. mm.rhnnihmudrr“ ndu-‘nditbnb'thdz“-flyw soils and irrigated orchards are proâ€" U%:hobltunhltnlh. following fruits will be harvested this greek and next. Peachesâ€"Red Haven, Golden Jubilee, Fisher, and all choice freeâ€" The fruit crop will be_ much lighter than estimated a few weeks ago and probably will finish three weeks earlier than 1948 and 1947. Peaches, plums and pears will all be harvested by September 15th. ' Drought Worst Ever If you think this drought is about an duce even a No. 2 size peach. Our estimate n LR LFE RISK probably 25% of the marketable peach ACCEPTED FOR LIFE INSURANCE xtflb&dfi*‘m“nfi".‘ No. 2 ”mw."A ~5 000 ___ SIA ameliannte hnllolnnthtm CeaaCEWMEy eRmn nR CCC BmR E. i> mmmmmmw could cover 20,000 or 20,000,0007"*___° _ _â€"__ College is : , even if it‘ds something less than "dramatizaâ€" tions." Highly educational as the mass media Mfly-flmb..tha'hsfllndfarth concentrated analysis and original thinking which cannot umd through mass meansâ€"not even exclusive reliance on the lecture system in colleges. A fully educated man is not a passive mmnmmmvw be sharpened on the grindstone. Watching oflâ€"'pqitn-fln-â€"fl.m'lthfl-l _“umnh.olmw â€"From The Christian Science Monitor. with due regard to law and decency. contributed to the life of the nation and to A friend of mine asked me to go with the world. mumuufi«xa-:mâ€" Our great educational institutions are which happened to be that day. It was filled with students who have corse from the quite interesting, but Lord what muddles war «mail townsâ€"and if you have listened to the makes of human progress. Norands sells its bromdcasters of baseball you have goid to the Government and gets puid in Canâ€" wu.ufl arfla&nmmnnflbtuvdhh come from 1 mmm.wmmu %mflh--mflnâ€"mm sells us this Amerâ€" through many & m.dmflhwunm&u;w.&n learn from each. They are , useful levy a on American goods to keey them mmumw;-mnbmmummmmm and lived in these amaill towns, CAMT" who earn it and use it to bonus imports. It‘s mmm-i&-dmfl&mwhmmmmnw Kife, and these memories grow richer with thetad age, when men not yet old, can count yeurs. The church, the school and the libâ€"malf a dozen wars fooght mostly to end war rary are outstanding institutions in the amall _and the end is not yet! town. They are its intellectual and spiritual 1 wore sarty to the station that evening yuardians. No one who has ever lived in . amail town can forget its endless benefts â€" when he asks: "Why have a college Amm?q:l-.fl. mugfl-.u.m.‘w- Distrust and caution are the parents and a few T HE GRIMSBY INDEPENDEN T NEW PRODUCT IS CANADIAN ACHIEVEMENT Men whose job is fuller ubliZ20U" â€"" Canada‘s forest resources are eontinually coming up with new wood products to fit the modern age. Latest result of their chemical uflmfilhnmm mmm.mdu"fi building materials. mmmbamm ment. Wbysn-fldtbcm ite Company Ltd.,. an International Plyâ€" -uaw.munmw"”'“:{ made in the company‘s mills here, and is r_.iymdfluthemwuflfl' All but five out of every 100 applicants for life insurance were accepted in 1947, the Institute of Life Insurance reports. mdlm-muflfl" that 95 per. cent of all applicants were issued gent were ,oxd..'grmwalh-d.’onuflm standard rate policies and 10 per cent extra rate policies. Chief cause for the 5 per cent not qualâ€" ifyiularddnrmndlfllotexmr‘h pclidumtbehudmdw of the heart, arteries and kidneys. Nearly KS + ““W‘Wfir‘ WwiIh R * "lctiec of Presdwood, the surface characteristics SO THIS IS TORONTO (hl..l.l).-“) Soth'ui.‘rmm:ndnbew:'fl are. Perhaps I should call you & n iD mhhmmwmh m’ Mm‘mvbhmm in Huron, my old county, went to Toronts Wuwmhlmmm about it for the remainder of their days. When I first went to Toronto you could get 3 pood breakfast for 12%4¢ on Yonge St. douthehlfenteonein?\'o-plfll@“" ter for your breakfast and got back a chit goodform‘n"’shukhlt-'l'ryw"“ E2 C cowrsnt tell me the answer yOu get. attend 1 saw Toronto again when I was o img the Ontario Agricultural College. Prizes were offered for student judging that year. 7 won $16. I picked up $20, on the same basis, in Winnipeg. lwuuhiflyr“m“ beef cattle in those days. Now 1 know a good piece of steak when I get it. I got more mammmfl-mmwyl ever earned. A little goes a long way when a man is working his passage. lu-mmulmfi“' d,,‘-hunputfi!m the muxmmmwu night but I knew, of course, that the phoenix mmm.&--flwmm u.mryouuflmuummflh it why couldn‘t Toronto* with Onâ€" tario behind it, could do almost anythingâ€" even some things which, to others, seem very reached Toronto but why worry yeqnils PPRAAA NN CCC 0OA ce d troubles, it reminded me of old times. ‘The usual thing hapened. A man came along who lb:o:!”“ nllhhd e >\ me & room wmmhum:“\-* wd&nflhmmwb low lsy the railway tracks, the shore ndadnllhfl- Toronto keeps pushing the further out into the lake but that‘s uthiung'.llflnvwflhddun.htlt times, the waves come backâ€"for revenge u lztvo that day. 1 went out to see a man who a Power Magazine for farmers. He told me, and he‘s the averâ€" age man has no ides what is to happen to agriculture in the future. By new methods, new implements, progress along chemical and biological lines, the whole face of agriculâ€" ture will be changedâ€"should I say "lifted". These things, of course, will come from the #mmmmmyam todo'ififih::hkhhdpthhr- er. Human progress not come fromiso Istion. It was industry which, in the last century, lifted much of the burden from the hback of the farmers, there is still more to be â€"there is nothing mote interesting than humanity on the move. There was one chayp in early middle Hife, who had taken just a fii&gwmguhmmb“‘n&_ walked diagomally, Hf you e se en inrie rlnbchu:‘fiodfin.umu or awallowing canary. He walked down the ramp from the ticket office to the thace room in the inn when I utilization engineers developed methods of core thasts of Masonite to each side of 9 he plywood. Mwemfi."‘fh "knowâ€"how" of making permanent, ruifillthondshnww in plyâ€" â€" The new fills o) of «202 berlding materiais for a beard Tith Preater strength and rigidity thA7, PMOPFL 024 -uapuk-boawfl;“'" which are smooth, hard grain Muboudnz!-mm‘n: support when used mm‘:; niture, cupboards, doors, CMDA® . ; ; and in other home . o * mmbppant are being made at i *%â€"inch and uwnd:mmvwdw""d half of all the impairments preventing issuâ€" md"’“"""““.?,mo. M D Ce e s 9 i lt ao s t of t & mhnmlmlg‘pgmll‘ 21204R ce anscmeelit ainerde deraciens ~p C ut o w C Physical reasons combined accounted for m&mlmfildthu‘wbg“fl*-"‘ ;;;-;tmdul wg.s' o monl Leks w or cent. Te manl nank were for S coupational hazâ€" than 5 per cent were for OCCUpatiOnAl JIME~ udsudthehhmv&fcroficud«- writing reasons, including application for too much insurance in relation to finances, locaâ€" where the public waits for the outâ€"going tion of residence, or habits regarded as harmâ€" Then he knew. there was nflfl missing. He felt in all his pockets. He off his hat and felt along the inner face of the band. He looked at the hat in order to mmnmmm‘l:ohdw pockets again. came to him. He seemed for a moment to sober up. He moved quickly, went back to the waiting room and came back with a coat over his arm and believe it or not the tickets were in and smiled. He was happy again. He felt the coat. He took them out looked at them both smart and satisfied. ‘ hufimmnmuflydn-! ed.'nhnflakdfla’_m‘nehfli'lhm‘ about four feet long. greeted his wife thcnfiehduphhllfihgm-dghcu his-houldchtlluhn&:b broom. Life, for little girls like must be much the same in all the civilized countries of the Letters to the Editor l--lm-nk.tlwâ€".“‘ of insects at the American Museum of Natural Histâ€" q.auu.nrnm-nwr-m carciessly might prove to ‘be more devastating to man‘s economy than the atomic bomb. This applies to the carciess use of insecticides on a large scale but does not refer to a faurmer spraying his felds with DDT, but the mass ucrial use which has been throughout the district. ,'oâ€"._-lt“ut.mm bians, mammais and insects are essential to our surâ€" vival. Let us in a minute review s few facts about abundant birds such as robin, redâ€"winged blackbird. cardinal, goldfinch, yellow warbler and song sparâ€" row, but do they realize that over two hundred and fifty other species of birds migrats through by the erecmies and by man, would speedily put an end to | a crop of pitatuen, for can ytatn trog in a angin seasom is capaile of producing «xty million bungry dencentaritna. Brame yazt Yoe do wou Tuttrt, in males of the species product about fifty young at a time and there may be us many as thirtsen generâ€" ations of plant Nee in a season. TUnder ideal condiâ€" tioms there would be something like tem sextillion lice in the thirteenth generation. Most tirds, amyihiâ€" bizns, reptiles live on insects. This Weeps the balance of Mauture. All birds ford their young on insects -w“m A Sicker whome crop has I.lb“nhluhpg an.‘.fl“nfl..-'.h h:-b-lfi,â€".’..iflh:\t-:.‘- snd dusk Many birds oat their weight in insects n caum % Most peorhe wl remeciiber that there many i-m-m-..h-mm.;-fl hhju-dc:‘m-lm llbd_.l vloamn a copy of a recert News mflafi:h im "‘:""!- I hope use in your Newspaper Tours truly, * .Mo.lm WOTARIES " durth wthe néuking mered OA Ahhe e is ow uo w uen minting period. A ficker whome crop magy P708e in h&b“-â€"luhp.: .?.,'__,” .h.‘tw-“.-r. &1 Bt. Paul ut PHONE 2.reme hundr=d mosquitoes for ons menl. A wron has heen ST. CaThaARin h-ul-uu;-.mu-uâ€"-un 4+ and dusk. h&-d“*hâ€"a.h + e omm ame Aus "Linegin C e n lt Established 18875 c auieg every Inursday from office of publiâ€" UVIMA-“...Q.&&GM' b’ Nights, Sundays, Holidays, 589 PT Fear -"F.:,"'&c-suu 4 J.Ml.mm.w. * Q-:::-.“"""!- THE GRIMSEY NOeradet LIVINGSTON and LAWBON, Publishe. 240 Chariton Ave. We, PVE """~ s eul cvTon and ByjLOER oo hys Seam Belt" Exterl®" *"" _ noofé ..,..,..w""'-‘ _ £â€"A. BUCKENHAM _ ACCOUNXTANTS BEAMSVILLE _ PHONE 197â€"R 29 Oak St. 1. B. McCAUSLAND Alterations Expertly Done BARRISTER, BULOVA, ELGIN, ELCO RELIABLE MONUMENT Emt ® _ Sn Exterior and Interiof Watch Clock And SUN LIFE OF CANADA Dr. D. R. COPELAND, HAROLD B. MATCHETT B aell 6 l 54 Robinson St. 8 M....“L MM'. Appol . w 0 m 1. a wain st."C $ Kingeway KNG & KNG BARRISTERS, souicrrors, GEORGE 1. GEDDES 74 Main Streat yy l > l 25 Main Strect, West GRIMSBYy "“-"Mnt-u 12 Main St. West, l'-h.T‘“ h INBURANCE E. J. GORDon D. D. . broupinhss..li 11 .lan.hg‘.. 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