HARRISTON - Five-year-old Donald Nolson of Cecil his caif. Faiirtimne Hi'ghlights Dy Y2C'ur FiOPpFe eoter ANCASTER, ARTHUR, ROD- NE,!Y, BEAVERTON, HARRIS- TYON and SEAFORTH were ail visited by our Ful-O-Pep reporter this past e. Shown in the photo i s Mr. J. M. Govcnlock, president of the Fair at Seaforth. Mr.- Govenlock is the old- est fair presîdent in Western On- tlario, and is extremel 'y active in comknmunity1 affairs. He wasi a miem- lber of parliament froin 1919 to 1923 *rd is a past warden of Huron County. Britain's Long-Term Agricultural Policy The, net output of British agri- culiture increased by about 35 per cent during the war. Inten- sie mechanization made British agriculture aiiiong the mnost highly inedhanized ini the wvorld, with 190,000 tractors cornipared wIlle pre-w,&ar count of 60,000. Output per my.an-year rose by 10-1.5 per cent.ý The problein, now is to ad- just the industry to post-war nee-ds, wvhuIe retaining thewartirne gains ini effîicicy and deveIop- =il them tiýli further.- The Governîment's policy, both to save foreign exchange and for good farming, is to.* switch pro- duCion, as rapidfly as the cereals position permnits, froni the produc- tion of cro ps for direct human consumption to the production of live stock and live-stock products, especially pigs and poultry. The import of $1,000 worth of feed- ingstuffs will save nearly $2,000 worth of imports of livestock products. Though the world cereal short- age lias e"dti policy, it ti velains the' long-teni s6lutron, andj as additional feedinigstnffs become a'vailable, they wÏli be used to, increase pig and pouItry breeding stock. Sixteen-Cent Butter <Stratford, Fif ty Years, Ago) lu-,spite Of ram today, the mar- k&t was bu1sy.. Butter sold at 16-18 ctsa pond;c) eggs at 13 cents a dozen. iHoney was 10 cents a poundjc. Sprinig cicenis were 35 e.0 ýcents ;a pair. Tomatoes werc PriCed at 50 cenIts a2.bushel. HARRISTON Cntsnt the winn-ing team - HARRISTON MiTe jumpil, ARTHUR- The youngý their