EL a 4 30 -- PORT PERRY STAR -- Wednesday, Mar. 30, 1977 Auction Sales WEDNESDAY, APRIL § SALE TIME: 11:30 AM. FARMS SOLD MACHINERY Auction sale for DOUGLAS & WM. MOORE, R.R.4, Cobourg, on Hwy. 2, V2 way between Port Hope & Cobourg, (opposite Gulf Service Station). Including: John Deere 4000 Tractor (93 h.p.), 2100 hrs; J.D. 430 Tractor (35 h.p.); J.D. 1120 tractor with cab (2100 hrs);1.H.C. w-6 trac. tor; J.D. 4-furrow 16 plow, semi-mounted; J.D. 3-furrow 14" plow - 3 pt. hitch; J.D. 4-furrow 12" plow - 3 pt. hitch; J.D. #40 S.P. Combine 10'; Trip- le K 14' cultivator; Dunham. Lehr tandem disc, 1V/; Int. 8' cultivator on rubber; Int. 9 cultivator on steel; Int. 10 16. run grain and fertilizer drill on rubber; J.D. 4-row #1240 plate. less corn planter; J.D. #24T baler with bale thrower; 2 bale thrower wagons 14' & 14'; N.H. #469 Haybine 9'; J.D. #9 mower, 3 pt. hitch; J.D. #896 rake; Hay elevator 30'; Calsa weed spray- er, 3 pt. hitch; J.D. #34 ).row corn harvester; 2 Dion self- unloading forage boxes, 3 beater - 14" on 8 ton wagons; N.H. self-unloading 3 beater 16' for- age wagon on 8 ton wagons; Dion forage blower with 60' of pipes; 2 gravity grain boxes with wagons; 2 grain augers; Brady corn stalk shredder; Bad- ger silage distributor; Danuser post-hole auger; Brady grader blade; chain harrows; 3 sets harrows; cement mixer; Pion- eer chain saw; bale stooker; Woods eat roller; steel 3 drum roller; hydraulic cylinders; 32 extension ladder; cattle oilers; Agr Jackall jacks; load of small items. Note: The farms are sold and this is a closing out sale of top quality machinery, stored inside and in excellent order. Sale at 11:30 a.m. Lunch avail- able. Sale managed & sold by Lloyd Wilson Auctions Ltd., Ux- bridge, 416-852-3524. M30 TUESDAY, APRIL 12 sare vime: 12 NOON HOLSTEINS Complete GANARASKA HOLSTEIN Dispersal, owned by Donald Budd, R. R. 1, Port Hope, selling at the farm on Hwy. 106, 1 mile north of 401 between exits 80 & 81. 80 Head - 1 Excellent, 3 Very Good, 16 Good Plus, and 1 Good. One of the top herds selling this year. Features include Ganaraska Lorna Very Good, her dam and grandam both Excellent. An outstanding family. Ganaraska Marie, Very Good, another Very Good 2 yr. old milking up to 70 Ib. of 4% milk, a real show heifer. Fury Storm (Excellent) due in September to Northcroft Admiral Citation (Extra). Fury Virtue, a show type senior year- ling by "Fury" with 5 gener- ations over 20,000 Ib., 4 of them "Very -Good".- Whether you are looking for a show animal, a top pedigree, a foundation female, or a 4-H calf, you can get all that at the Ganaraska Dispersal at 12 noon, April 12. Lunch available. Sale Managed & Sold by Lloyd Wilson Auctions Ltd., Uxbridge, THURSDAY, APRIL 4 SALE TIME 7:30 P.M. HOLSTEINS Complete BAR-M. HOLSTEIN Dispersal owned by J. A. Mc- Comb, Castleton, Ont, selling at MALMONT SALES ARENA, Blackstock, Ont,, Neil Malcolm, Prop. 40 Head - Classified, R.O.P. tested. This is a fine herd of cows and heifers - an old established herd. everything _homebred. Sale features include Bar-M Maple Rockman (Very Good), 4 yr., 365 20468M. 770f. 3.8% (158-163). A ton cow by Rockman due in July to Perseus Leader (V.G. - ST). Also Bar-M Rock Girl (Very Good), another Rockman with over 16000 Ib. due before sale to Admiral Citation (Extra). A fine 2 yr. old selling is Bar-M April (G.P.) by Man.O- War and due in August. Also included in this sale are a group of fresh and close cows including a "Very Good '* Agro Acres Supreme Lad daughter from a Very Good' dam due at sale time. Also a 4-H opportunity, 20 4-H Senior and Junior calves selected for 4-H work, so bring your girl or boy. Lunch avail. able. Sale at 7:30 p.m. Sale Managed & Sold by Lloyd Wilson Auctions Ltd., Uxbridge, 416. 852-3524. As SATURDAY, APRIL 16 SALE TIME: 10:00 A.M. REAL ESTATE & FURNITURE Auction sale for W. A. HICK- LING, 127 Main St. S. in Ux- bridge, including 2-storey home in top location on beautiful lot, (61x 200) in town overlooking pond. This home features: newly papered throughout, trim painted last summer, aluminum storms, oil furnace, low taxes, lovely lot. painted last summer, aluminum storms, oil furnace, low taxes, lovely lot. Home will be open for inspection on Sat. April 2 at 10- until noon, and Sat. Ap'il 9, 10-12 o'clock. Terms: $4 00. down day of sale, balance i; 45 days. Sale subject to a owners. Contents Include: Wes. tinghouse frost-free 2.door re. frigerator; RCA 30" electric stove; matching twin beds, box springs and mattresses; single bed, double bed; chairs; nest of tables; kitchen utensils; dishes; » wash stand; garden tools; tools; many, many other items. Sale! at 10 a.m. Property at 11:30 a.m. Sale Managed & Sold by Lloyd Wilson Auctions Ltd., Ux. bridge, 416-852-3524. AV THURSDAY, APRIL 21 CONSIGNMENT FARM MACHINERY & FARM SUPPLY At the LIPTAY AUCTION CENTRE. An open sale for trac- tors, balers, mowers, plows, cultivators, manure spreaders, combines and all farm machin. ery. (Alsosmall tools). Consign now so that we may advertise your machinery. Phone Steve Liptay, Peterborough, 745.0260, or Bowmanville 263-2117. Ab 416-852-3524. Ab - { Raliroadhouse Lond Motor Motel tw NN TE m-- ® 21 Luxurious Rooms @® El Heated - Air Conditioned - Cable T.V. ©® Breakfast Lounge [Guests Only] ® Facility for Seminars - PORT PERRY, ONTARIO Telephone: (416) 985-8131 Paul - Asta Larsen Meetings, etc. PETER BARKER Denture Therapist 111 Dundas Street West WHITBY - 668-1464 4 Send dak of ice on lakes The Ministry. of Natural = Resources warns that the - recent mild weather has caused rapid decay of ice. "Regardless of appearance, we strongly recommend that you do not travel on any ice surface," states the Lindsay office warning. Each year the Ministry receives complaints con- cerning water problems, usually flooding or erosion, which could have been pre- vented by better site design or subdivision layout. Sur- prisingly, people seem to overlook the simple fact that water runs downhill, with the unhappy result that flooded basements, damage - to property, expensive renovations, and even haz- A oid . cP OA LI at tS FINS -- LYST HFAVEAS HEA HS LLI NNT SRK Lo ards to life occur, One local problem invol- ved houses built into a hill- side in such a way that drainage down the slope was directed into the lower level two car garage, and then into the basement of the house. This could have been prevented by a house and lot design more in keeping with the natural slope of the land. Another common problem is caused by filling-in low- lying areas. For example, many people seem to think that a wide channel with only a trickle of a stream is wasted land that can be re-claimed by placing of fill. This is sometimes illegal and often ignores the natural conditions that cre- poroval of HOLSTEIN BUS TRIP . Thursday, March 24th, is the date for the annual Ontario County Holstein Club bus trip. The trip this year will include a visit to the farm of Mr. R. F. Brown, R.R. 2, Paris, in the morning, followed by a visit to the Head Office of the Holstein Friesian Association of Canada, in Brantford, during the afternoon. This should be a very informative day for everyone interested in the Holstein business. Anyone wishing to attend, is advised to contact the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Office, in Uxbridge. © PORK PRODUCERS' BUS TOUR # rangements for a bus trip to the Toronto area on ¢ Wednesday, March 30th, Emphasis will be on mar- i keting, with a visit to the Ontario Pork Producers' % Marketing Board Offices, Dundas Street West, Toron- " to, in the morning, followed by a tour of the Canada Packers Plant in the afternoon. ~The "cost of the trip will be $6.00 per person, : including lunch. i the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Office, in Uxbridge, for details and bus reservations. CROP INSURANCE Now that farmers are planning their 'spring pro- i gram, it is time to think about crop insurance again. 2 Whether you are just beginning to farm, or have been established for a number of years, you may wish to consider insuring your crops. : A new addition to the crop insurance program for this year is drought insurance for hay and pasture. All too often drought in some part of the Province causes severe hardships to livestock producers, who have to pay high prices for feed. This insurance plan provides a way for the livestock producers to protect themselves against the high cost of buying livestock feed in a drought year. Other crops covered under the crop insurance program are corn, spring grains, white and coloured beans, flax, and new forage seeding, There is a reseeding benefit in the event that it is necessary to reseed three or more acres of insured crop, and there is also a preplant indemnity to cover preplant input costs, if weather prevents you from planting or seeding. Crop insurance premiums have been kept as low as possible as a result of Federal and Provincial Government subsidies. The Federal Government pays 50 percent of the premium and the Provincial Government pays all of the administration costs. As a result, the actual cost to the farmer is considerably less than half of what the program would cost without subsidy. The price options and premium rates per acre are as follows - a RA SESE SH $3.25 per acre. P.O. $2.30 per bus., F.P. $4.00 per acre. SPRING GRAIN - P.0. $.02 per Ib., F.P. $1.50 per acre. P.O. $.03 per 1b., F.P. $2.25 per acre. P.O. $04 per 1b.; $3.00 per acre. SOYBEANS - P.O. $3.50 per bus., acre. P.O. $4.00 per bus, F.P. $2.60 per acre. P.O. $4.50 per bus., F.P. $2.95 per acre, Zz NEW FORAGE SEEDING - P.O. $20.00 per acre, # F.P. $1.00 per acre. tyn McKnight, R.R.2, Uxbridge, and Archie McMil- lan, R.R.2, Beaverton. ? area, or at the Ministry of Agriculture and Food 7 Office, in Uxbridge. CORN - Price Option, $1.50 per bus. Farmer Premium $2.50 per acre. P.O, $1.90 per bus., F.P. : F.P. $2.25 per Applications for crop insurance should be received 3 by our Crop Insurance Agent by May 1st. The Crop Insurance Agents in Ontario County area are Maus- © Information on the crop insurance program is ; ' 2: available from the Crop Insurance Agents in your Ontario County Pork Producers have made ar- & RN ER & Z ps : bd 2 2 ated the valley in the first place. The "trickle' usually increases dramatically dur- ing the spring thaw, which should alert the prospective builder to a potential prob- lem. However, even the spring high water level is not necessarily the maxi- mum limit of flooding over say, a fifty year period; and this level should be deter- mined by an engineer before considering any develop- ment in a stream valley. The safest, and most pleas- ant community design is to leave stream valleys and their associated slopes as open space areas - for parks, golf courses; agriculture, and similar uses which do not require buildings. Today the most serious floodlands, have been identi- fied in hazardland mapping into incorporated municipal official plans and and zoning bylaws, In some areas Conservation Author- ities have undertaken more detailed floodline mapping and the levels of the lakes on the Trent Canal are .regul- ated for navigation pur- poses, by the Federal Government. These factors are considered by the Minis- try of Housing in the course of approving major develop- ments such as subdivisions, However, many potential problems remain which can only be uncovered by the discretion of the builder, and good judgement of the buyer. This is especially true of small private devel- opments which tend to avoid technical planning to reduce costs. Ice cream wagon 0'kd If you've a couple of youngsters around. -the house with-money burning a hole in their pockets, fear . not. Help is on the way. Jingle-jangle. The Ice Cream Man Cometh. The company will prob- ably employ. three or four - local young people to oper- ate the cycle. Youngsters can make up to $200, a week selling ice cream products, said Stephen Smit of the company. Chances are, the ring. of ....... the bell -and the hoot of eager youngsters will be a familiar sound on Port Perry streets this summer when the Dickey Dee Com- pany ice cream cycle starts making its rounds. Council Monday night gave its approval for the company to operate in Port Anyone interested in going, is advised to contact ©: Wedding Invitations available at the Port Perry Star 985.7383 A Basement Floors Garage Floors ) Patios - Sidewalks J] Concrete Steps J DON'S CUSTOM | CONCRETE FINISHING Quality Workmanship tg PHONE SEE A PICTURE YOU LIKE IN THE PORT PERRY STAR? ORDER YOUR RE-PRINTS on