SL RAIA REEF RRL rd, HA 5 JA EE PA Nn REET eh ~ maa GE RE RACIST R et a RE pra ne © NT NET A = od SMA Con Hen 3 \ A RI en, a La SR RY 32 -- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wed., March 28, 1979 Ch ildren work best under pressure " SALE TIME: » automatic reset - ® ~ 7 SATURDAY, APRIL 7th 12 NOON SHARP STOCK REDUCTION SALE NEW & USED FARM IMPLEMENTS The property of W.J. LAMBERT & SONS LTD. (Massey Ferguson Dealer) on the Beaverton by- pass at Beaverton, 13 miles north of Sunderland or 23 miles south of Orillia. ' Tractors: M.F. 65diesel tractor wih Allied loader; 1978 M.F. 1085 diesel tractor demonstrator complete with cab - 8 speed; M.F. 1080 diesel tractor - multi- power - 385 hrs.; Ford 9N tractor (motor overhauled); M.F. 35 diesel tractor; M.F. 165 diesel tractor; Deutz 5006 tractor 1600 Hrs.; Ford 4000 diesel tractor 8 speed; Ferguson 2025 tractor. Industrial Tractors: M.F. 30 tractor & loader; Case 600 crawler - loader. Ploughs: John Deere 4 furrow 16' plough semi-mount; M.F. 72 3 furrow 12' plough; Norcan 4 furrow 14' trip beam plough; Dearborne 2 furrow 10" plough. .Discs: Kongskilde 612 disc 3 pt.; M.F. 25 8' disc 3 pt.; M.F. 39 10' Planters: M.F. 39 2 row corn planter 3 pt.; M.F. 41 4 row corn planter 3pt.; M.F. 468 4 row corn planter. Haying Equipment: M.F. 44 swather 12' with crimp' er; M.F. 317' power mower 3 pt.; Cockshutt 415 7 power mower; Ferguson 3 pt. rake; M.F. 29 3 pt. rake;=M.F. 10 baler; M.F.:.12 baler;walker - Stooker; Allied automatic stooker; John Deere rotary cutter; Cockshutt 129 hay binder 9 ft.; A.C. 904 hay binder 9 ft. _.Miscellaneous: 3 drum roller; chain harrows; 1970 Chev ries stake dump 'truck;} 20° attle feeder; Ford 610 harvester with 2 row corn head and pick up; Allied 6" auger with motor and transport 26'; J.D. 13' pull "type cultivator; John Deere 9' cultivator - 3 pt, lawn mower; MY mower, New spreader; Danuser 959 Dodge truck; st hole digger; M.H. ; Cockshutt 18 pull ine - PTO drive; M.F. re spreader; buzz saw; 600 gas combine, 15° grain head with automatic header control; White 4 row corn head. New Equipment: Vieon 3 pt. windrow-torner; M.F. 33 - 17 run grain, grass & fertilizer drill; Harris 7' 3 pt. blade, M.F. 256 tiller. Terms Cash or financing available prior to sale. 10% discount on all parts day of sale. Absolutely NO reserve! L available. Carl Hickson, Auctioneer, Reaboro, Ontario - 705-324-9959 Ad WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11- SALE TIME: 12 NOON 80 HOLSTEINS Quinte Quality Holstein sale to be held at the Quinte Exhibition Grounds, Sidney St., Belleville, ont.; including 30 milking fe- males, 40 bred heifers, 10 open heifers, 15 calves. Main sires represented are A Nelacres Johanna Senator, A Northcroft Admiral Citation, Romandale Count Crystan, Mooreville Rocket Kemp, Hayssen Instigator. Sale features include a pair of tall Senior Yearlings by Kemp - one with VG Dam, Ex 2nd Dame, 3rd Dam VG. Several big bred heifers with records on the dams over 200 BCA. A fancy Junior Yearling by Romandale Count Crystan with a VG Ned Dam. A fancy Senior Yearling by Ned from GP Dam: with 197-202 BCA, 2nd Dam VG with 184-198 BCA, 3rd Dam GP. with 147-201. A Ned bred heifer from a GP Telstar with 196-196. A fancy disc 3 pt.Corn AUCTION SALES red heifer by Bond Haven R A' Reward with high production 'dams. Several young cows due sale time including, a VG Emperor. 4-H calves include a pair of fancy. July calves by Senator and a deep pedigree calf by Man-O-War. Many cows and heifers due April and May. Several N.I.P. cows. Don't miss this) interesting sale. Lunch available. Catalogues on request. Salé managed and sold by Lloyd Wjlson Auctions, Uxbridge, Ont., 416-852-3524. : Ad SATURDAY, APRIL 14 SALE TIME: 12NOON FARM MACHINERY CATTLE achinery for JOHN : NAGHAN, 2 mile west o Blackstock on Church St. (first farm on south side). 15 head of cattle including 3 short horn cows, bred A | to Limousine, 3 yearling heifers, sired by 3% - §, Limousin Bull, all due summer '79, 5 steers, 3 heifers born summer '78, sired by % Limous- in Bull. 2 yearling steers. A.C. 185 diesel tractor with cab, tires, loaded, 1800 hours. A.C. D 12, tractor - gas; snap-coupler. A.C. 2 furrow 10' plow with snap-. row corn planter with snap- coupler. Numerous plates and adaptors for above tractor. A.C. 2 row corn scuffler with snap- coupler for above tractor, 2 sets tractor chains, A.C. 5 furrow, 14" trip beam plow, A.C. 12' double disc., A.C. 12' Vibra-shank culti- vator, G.W. snowblower, A.C. 780 . forage harvester with pick-up, 1 row corn head, A.C. forage blower with 40' pipes, hood and flexible elbows, 2 A.C. forage wagons with boxes - 3 beater. A.C. 904 haybine, A.C. 443 baler, A.C. 4 bar hay rake, P.T.O. bale stooker, A.C. wagon with 8' x 16' flat rack, A.C. 15 run grain and fertilizer - drill with .grass seed box and hydraulic lift. M.F. 300 Scour Klean combine - gas with 11' table, pick-up reel, 2 grain boxes on good gear, 4 section flexible harrows, 4 sect. diamond harro "A.C. 3 section spring tooth harrows, chain harrows, cyclone téeder (tractor mount) N.H. 331 manure spreader] (130 * bu.) 2 #6 Cockshutt spreaders, 8' land packer with Century box, 6' Mayrathe grain auge P.T.O. 34' 4" grainsauger - 12 grain aerator, Farm Hand mix mill, 2 single plows, double Moldboard plow, circular saw and frame, qt. farrowing crates, neck yokes, double trees, harness, set bench sleighs, wagon box 60-70 foot pedlar litter carrier track with hangers and switches, 1,000 bushels barley, 350 HN Leghorn hens. : Sale at 12 noon. Lunch available. Sale managed and sold by Lloyd . Wilson Auctions Ltd., Uxbridge 416-852-3524 All WEDNESDAY, APRIL 18 SALE TIME: 11 A.M. MACHINERY A HOLSTEINS 4 C lete auction for Mister Bee Farms, R.R. 3, Newmarket, lot 31, conc. 5, Whitchurch-Stouff- ville, 2¥2 miles east of Newmarket on York Road 31, then 1 mile south of con. 5 from hwy. 48, take York Road 31, 4 miles west then south on con. 5 to farm. 50 Holsteins, registered, classified, R.O.P. tested, free listed, 25 milking age female, including a VG Emperor due fo Ultimate at sale time. A nice group of bred heifers, open heifers and calves. Surge pipe- line milker with 4 units and number -75 pump. Milkkeeper, 500 gal, tank, 3 new meters, semel! tank and inventory includes vial "Citation R". 1974 V2 ton Chev truck (certified) 3 horses, 5 year old mare\ bred Arab good to ride. 2 year-old V2 Arab filley, gelding, good to ride. English saddle, western saddle, J.D. 2130 diesel tractor with roll bar and roof (good). J.D. 2120 tractor with loader (good). J.D. 40 furrow trip beam plow, A.C. 12' disc:., A.C. 210 manure spreader, J.D. 34 4-H harvester with-3 heads. : J.D. 485 haybine, N.H. 268. baler, 2 A.C. forage wagons, J.D. 10' cultivator on rubber. Mulkey elevator, N.H. "56 side rake, wagons, McCormich W-4 tractor, 5 section: harrows, Case &' blade 10' chain harrow, Int. 10' packer, 'Int. 56 blower and pipes, Letz grinder, Int. pull-type combine, feed rack, water troughs, feed carts, cattle oiler, qty. of baled hay, plus many moreSifems and farm equipment. Sale af 11.#m. Lunch available. Sale managed and sold by Lloyd Wilson Auctions Ltd., Uxbridge 416-852 3524 - adults... ction sale of- excellent fart, coupler for above tractor. A.C. 2" 3 rubber tired: All Discipline is not "Children are much like they work best under pressure. They respond to a challenge and produce much more when more is dem al' system in Canada is far too easy, We expect too little)of our child- ren, with the result that produce lazy students with lazy minds. There is a - serious decline in the liter- acy ii ® of our children today." 'SO says the Rev- erend Alastair Haig, Head- master of Grenville Chris- tian College in Brockville, Ontario. Grenville is a co-ed private school where 'discip- line' is not a dirty word, and where young minds are con- stantly being pushed foward their ability limit. "There is popular miscon- ception today in educational circles that discipline is bad, that it stifles creativity and hinders learning. This couldn't be further from the truth," says Haig. "We have found that young . people like to be challenged and stimulated, and they respect the teacher who is" firm and loving. They do much more work for him. A teacher makes a big mistake when he tries to be a pal with his' students. He must be a dependable authority figure in the classroom if he is to be effective. Discipline promotes creativity, it does not hinder it. "The best teacher is the gne who applies 'tough love" his students.....he loves em enough to press them. to their full potential. He will 'not accept second-rate work and he will definitely not pass .a student who has failed. : "Back in the 1930's, Dr. Spock and Dr. Blatz and others sold us a bill of goods. They said '"'let's liberalize the education of our child- ren. Let's get rid of the old methods which are out- moded, repressive -and restraining. , Let's liberate the child. Let him express himself, choose his own way ° and develop his individual . personhood." "That all sounds so good," says Haig, "but unfortunate-, ly doing one's own thing with' crayons, scissors, paper and .paste'has now replaced Save i é REL nded of them.-- CRENE Boned ' SAVE S-- Prices WHY PAY MORE FOR HEATING SAVE on PREMIUM QUALITY. FUEL i OIL 8 oR ALL YOUR FUEL OIL NEEDS. ~ 'I 1517 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY Telephone Today! Call Collect 668-3381 Prompt, Courteous Service ak § sound disciplined learning. Drill on the basics which provide the foundation for a solid education has gone out" the window. Daily repeated exercises are considered dull and old fashipned. - The result? Far )too many elementary stutiénts" never master their multiplication tables or the skill of reading or the rules of good gram- mar. Memory work which was a staple in the diet of an earlier generation has-been scrapped. Great poetry and prose is no longer comynitte to memory. Ge oyu and spelling bees are a thing of the past. To a great extent multiple choice exams have replaced the old written answer kind, and in some quarters examinations of any kind have been abandoned, © "Let's make learning fun' became the slogan of the modern approach to educa- tion, and so good hard work with its reward - the thrill of achievement - has been lost to our children, : "There is no shortcut to becoming well-edu¢ated" says Haig. 'It takes hard work and disciplined effort." Reverend Haig once 'cap- tained the University of Toronto 'Varsity Blues' foot- ball team, and as Headmas- - ter. of Grenville Christian College in Brockville he runs a 'tight ship'. There are no drugs anywhere, no one is allowed to smoke, boys' hair is 'neat and short, and the. girls' hair is out of their eyes. "The boys stand when a girl comes to the dinner. table, and one of the boys even holds her chair as she sits down. But for boys it is 'hands off' as far as the girls are concerned. There is no hugging, petting, hand-- holding, or 'going steady'. "The girls are the boys' friends, not their playthings says Haig. "Our entire staff of sixty is sold on the truth that 'discip- line with love' is.a formula that works in every genera- tion. It works at Grenville Christian College where we have the happiest, most productive teenagers anywhere." Speaking to the Rotarians recently, Haig said, "The idea that there must be "SAVE dembcracy in the classroom. has proven itself to be des- tructive. Let's bring back that dedicated school marm whom we feared, respected, and even loved gll at the same time. She wasn't out to . win a popularity contest. She kept our shoulder to the wheel and gave her life to seeing that we made the grade, It used to be that teachers saw their vocation as a high and dedicated 'calling'. Now teaching has become just a i word job,.and when the be]l rings at threg0'clock, the t suddenly disappears: ""Let's be fair to our child- ren," Haig insists "We owe them better guidance than they are getting. Let us once again pay the price. "And let us dare to discip- line. Our children will love us for it in the long run, and in the meantime, they will respect us and learn that old virtue, essential 'obedience'."' No Inquest gation. six months. deceased men shed no light Coroner Dr. Peter Noble of Oshawa said Friday that he will make no decision on an inquest into the deaths of two men in a plane crash near Blackstock. until federal aviation officials have completed their investi- And that investigation could take as long as five or David Ashleigh, 59, of Scarborough, and Patrick 'Klein, 19, of Oshawa, lost their lives when their single engine air craft crashed March 15 in a wooded area about a mile east of Blackstock. Dr. Noble said that a medical examination of the as to why the light craft with two experienced pilots aboard came down in clear weather on a routine aiming flight > out of the Oshawa L Alrpors. Date Set on a possible explanation NOW is the to consider FOR INF MEMBER OF O,F.D.A. o- Attention Farmers! TILE DRAINAGE needs. TION OR FREE ESTIMATE CALL: ~ Walker - Wright 10 YEARS EXPERIENCE time your ~ Drainage Roy (705) 324-9500 Lindsay Don (416) 986-5408 Nestleton -Shur-Gain Farmers will like new Shur-Gain Scour Treat because it is handy, economical and requires no needling. Indicated usage is for treatment of bacterial enteritis and pneumonia in pigs, calves, _ foals and dogs and cats. i; Shur-Gain Scour Treat (available -only from Shur-Gain) is very: effective it contains neomycin, two sulfas, plus . dlcrulytes in an absorbent, So base Nuit ooh res NeW easy to use scour treat. Shur.Gain--for the modern farmer tee WALLACE MARLOW CO. LTD, BLACKSTOCK - ONTARIO 986-4201 - chers