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The Rural Voice, 1993-04, Page 56TIRE EON - Odds And Ends - Cash and Carry - Price Quote Per Tire 4-REMINGTON 2-ELECTRA P275R60-15 White Letter 5100. P15580R-13 $40. 2 -TURBO 2-B.F. GOODRICH P245R60-15 White Letter $75. P16580R-13 12-UNIROYAL P235R75-15 Black Wall $40. 1-B. F. GOODRICH $82. P17580R-13 4-BRIDGESTONE O P235R70-15 $80. 6 -GOODYEAR VECTOR P225R75-15 $75. 4 -FIRESTONE P225R70-15 White Wall $79. 2 -MACH 70 $45. 4-B. F. GOODRICH P185R70-13 $65. 1 0-PERELLI P185R80-13 $50. 2 -MICHELIN P185R65-365 $100. 2 -GOODYEAR GR70-15 White Wall $65. P20560.13 4-REMINGTON P215R65-15 White Wall $80. 4-REMINGTON P205R70-15 White Wall $75. $55. 1 -GOODYEAR DR70-14 $45. 4 -MICHELIN P1856DR-14 $80. 10-sx7000 1 -MACH 70 P24560R-15 White Letter $80. ER70.14 1 -GOODYEAR 155SR-13 $50. 4 -MDG $355, P205R75-14 $55. WILLITS TIRE LUCKNOW "ON THE FARM TIRE SERVICE" 528-2103 52 THE RURAL VOICE different seats. In 1981, the Cast Iron Seat Society of Great Britain was formed. Many collectors got started because of other collections or interests. George Kuhl did not set out to collect cast iron seats specifically. "Twenty years ago, you could buy a whole implement like an old binder for a couple of dollars, seat and all," he states. "I had several implements with the seats, and that's how I started. I didn't intend to collect just seats back then." There are over 2000 recorded designs of seats and hundreds of different manufacturers. "Every small town and village had its own foundry," states Stewart Weaver. "Many foundries put out plain seats with no name to tell where the seats were made. There were many, many seats manufactured in Grey and Bruce counties before the turn of the century." George Kuhl continues: "The Magill Company operated in Chatsworth and they made walking There are over 2000 recorded designs for seats and hundreds of different manufacturers plows, corn cutters, root pulpers, land rollers, and threshing machines. No one has located any seat from the Magill Company as yet." Cost- cutting measures eventually forced companies to begin using cheaper steel seats in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Every year the Seat Meet features a particular seat. This year it is the V. Wahns Seat, made in Grey County in the village of Neustadt between 1860 and 1870. It is an American Harvester seat from a reaper. This seat has a rating of 10 1/2 on the scale used by the CISCA to rate the availability of seats. A 10 1/2 rating means that the seat is extremely rare. The scale is as follows: 10 1/2 = only one seat known to exist 10 = 5 or Less known