HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1943-10-13, Page 4"Here's the New, E $y
eaWWifu1 Family Meals"
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WALTON
A meeting of the U.F,W.O, will be
held at the home of Airs. George
Dundes on Wednesday, October 20th,
Due Dates For
Basion Coupons
Retiu'l coupons now valid include:
Sugar coupons, numbers one to 16.
.111 canning sugar coupons.
Tea -coffee coupons, numbers one
r•t 17.
"reserve coupons Dl, D2, and D3..
'•"Itter coupons 26 to 31,
4t ean2011e, 17 t0 19.
1
.1.2.9811=a11:13... A:G.11141V...=4SVPMCICOMISOTOIE10.1.0
BUSINESS CA :DS
WH..U.AM ,PENCE
Estate Agent • Conveyancer
and Commissioner
GENERAL INSURANCE OFFICE
MAIN STREET, — — ET)HIEL, ONT.
Dennis Duquette - Lince1 web. Auctioneer
(FOR HURON COUNTY)
For Engagements Phone 31 "The Brussels Post" and they will be
looked after immediately.
For information, etc., write or phone either 51.0,18 OR
41X at Brussels, Ont.
ALL SALES CONOUC; ED IN A SATISFACTORY MANNER.
MODERATELY PRICED.
Allan A. Lamont
Agent for—Fire, Windstorm, and Automobile insurance
Get particulars of our Special Automobile Policy for farmers.
Queen St. Brussels 'Phone 657
W. S. Donaldson -,.. Licensed Auctioneer
Phone 36.r-13 — Atwood, Ont•
for the Counties of Huron and Perth
ALL SALES PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO
--CHARGES MODERATE—
For En _ ernents pbone 31 'The Brussels Post' and they
will be looked after immediately.
W. D, S. Jamieson, M.D., C.M., L.M,C,C,
Physician and Surgeon
Capone -
Office Flours -1 . 4 and 7 - 8 p.rn.
Also 11 - 12 a.m. when possible.
Saturday evenings until 10 p.m.
Sundays—Emergencies and by appointment only.
Home calls in forenoons and 4 - 6 p.m.
Chas. T. Davidson
insurance Agent For
ALL KINDS OF
Automobile and Fire Insurance
Accident and Sickness
Anent for Great West Life Insurance Co,
'PHONE OFFICE 92X BRUSSELS, ONT. RESIDENCE
Harald Jackson
SPECIALIST IN FARM AND HOUSEHOLD SALES
(Licensed in Herun and Perth Counties)
PRICES REASONABLE, SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
For Information, etc., write or phone Harold Jaeksoh.
Phone 12 on 658 S1alorth R,R. 1, Bruc lfeld
Make areangse ents at The Brussels Post or
Elmer D. Bell, Barrister Office, Brussels.
D..1'. RANN Furniture
FUNERAL JoYuiThili i746i~ SERV1& E.
Licensed Fence al Director and Embalmer
,o..,,,�..,,�a.,..,,,K.a.,-rim,.,,.
PHONE 36 or 85 -- -- BRUSa5EL"5, ONT.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Howick iVlutual Fire Insurance
—also --
Word Windstorm Tornado Insurance
Auturreebile Inslaranee
PHONE 42 P.O. BOX 1
TURNBERI2Y ST. -. -. x..— BRUSSEiLS, ONT.
Lewis Rowland.
(Licenecd For Huron County)
SATISFACTION GUASANTEED — PRICEs REASONARLE
Tor Engagements Phone SI "The Brussela Poet" and they wits
be looked after immedaltety
For information, etc., 0K' ;fie er phone Lew. Rowland 880 0.24 at
Seaforth; cr write RJl 2, 'Walton,
51
Aalcticn Sale
Farm Stook and implements
North IA Lot 29, Con. 10, Grey Twp,
WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 20th
at 1 P.M.
Mrs. Frank Hackwell, Proprietress
Wm, Scott, Auctioneer
CLEARING AUCTION SALE
Farm Stock, Implements and
Household Steads
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1945
Commencing at 1 . P.M.
at Lot 4, Concession 7, Grey Twp.
1!;1. miles north and 1 mile
east of Brussels,
f .
HORSES -
1 Clyde Team, 12 years old
1 Ciy11e Gelding, 7 yens old
1 C4+4..c Mare, 8 years old
1 i 'ivi ; Mare 7 years old
CATTLE—
(All Durham Cattle)
1 Roan Cow due May 15
1 Red Cow due May 13
1 Red Cow due January 10
I -,Farrow Cow
7 T.ietters nistug 2 years old
6 Steers rising 2 years old
5 Spring Calves
PIGS -
10 Pigs, 140 lbs.
6 Pigs, 125 lbs,
•
7 Pigs. 9 week sold
POULTRY -
55 .Sussex Hens, 1 year old
IMPLEMENTS -
1 Deering Binder, 7 -foot cut
1 Massey -Harris Fertilizer Drill
1 14 -plate 'Bissell" Disk
1 Deering stiff -tooth cultivator, 8 -ft
1 Riding Plow
1 Walking Plow
1 Gang Plow
1 Snuffler
1 Steel Land Roller
1 5 -section harrows
1 Deering Mower, 6 -foot
1 Deering Hay Loader (new)
1 Deering Side Rake (ne-w)
1 Sulky Rake
1 Doer it g Manure Spreader (new)
1 Farm Truck Wagon (new)
Tiny Rack 16 -foot, Roller Rack
1 Set of Sleighs (new) and rack
1 Rubber Tired Buggy (like new)
1 Steel Tired Buggy
2 Portland Cutters
i Stone Boat
1 Fleury Grain Crustier
1 set of ,Scales, 2000 lbs, capacity
2r5 grain Sags
DeLa.val Cream Separator, power
drive -34 H.P. Motor
Wheel Barrow
Quantity of Lumber
Forks. Shovels, Whiffletrees,
100-11 Extension Cord
Nechyokes abd Other Artieles
HAY AND, GRAIN—
35 tons of mixed Hay ,„
200 bushels Mixed Grain (1942)
1000 bushels Mixed Grain (1443)
Quantity of ]Wangles & Potatoes
2 Set of Back -band Harness
1 Set of Single Harness
Several Horse Collars
1 set of Stewart, elleotric Horse -
Clippers
1 Set of Hanel Clippers
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS -
1 MeCiary Range
2 Extension Tables
6 Dining -room Chairs,
Side Board
1 Arm Chair
2 Dressers and other bedroom fut'nl-
Lure
TERMS—CASH
No Reserve as Farm Has Been Sold,
Harold Jackson, Seaforth
Auctioneer
Mrs, Alex. I. Armstrong,
.Proprietress
Rol,t. Patrick, Clerk.
Buy Wat' Saving Stamps
TIS BRUSSELS C'OS`T
AIttction Sale
Farm Stock and Implements
Sit of Lots 64 & 56, Concession
1, Morris, Township
About 1 ml -le West of Jamestown
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19th,
Sale starts at 1 p.m. Sharp
HORSES„ -
1 Clyde Gelding, 9 years old
1 Bieck Perehoran Gelding, 7 yrs. old
1 General Purpose Gelding, 3 yre.
old broke single or double
I 1 Belgian Golding 1 year old
1 Pereheron Gelding, 8 years old
CATTLE -
1 Durham Cow. 9 yeare old fresh,
,. rebrod „ „ ,
1 Dtli'11a13 Cow, 8 years old bred
Aug, 20th
1 Durham Hereford Cow, 6 years
old fresh
1 Durham Cow, 5 years old bred
Aug. 10th
1 Holstein Cow, 5 years old bred
Aug. 7th
1 holstein -Durham Cow, 6 years
old bred August 4th
1 Holstein -Hereford Cow 4 years
old fresh and rebred.
1 Hereford Cow, 8 years old, fresh
rebred
1 Ayrshire Cow 9 years old fresh,
rebred
1 I-Iolsteiu Caw, 6 years old, fresh.
rebred
1 Gurnsey Cow aged, fresh
1 Holstein Heifer, 2 years old,
bred Aug. 1st
1 Brindle Heifer 19 months old,
bred Aug. 28th
9 Durham Yearlings
1 Ayrshire Heifer, 1 year old
7 Spring Calves
6 Fall Calves
These are a choice lot of
Young Cattle.
PIGS -
1 Yorkshire Hog, W elwaod Breeding
1 York Sowarryirg second lihter,
due to farrow Nov, 20th
2 York Sows carrying second litter
clue to farrow Dag, 22
5 York Sows, pigs just weaned,, all
rebred
1 York Sow, with 9 pigs a weeks'' old
14Pig e 9 weeks old
6 Chunks about 100 lbs.
13 Pigs averaging 165 lbs.
If/ Pigs averaging 180 lbs.
94 Pigs all around 7 weeks old
IMPLEMENTS—
1940 Ford Ferguson '.tractor on
rubber with Ferguson plow, in
A-1 shape
Pulley for Ford Ferguson Tractor
Bissell double disc in -throw and out -
throw, 14 -plate
Spring -tooth Harrow, 3 -section
1 International 'Spring•'tooth Culti-
vaier
1 Massey -Harris 13 -disc
Drill
2 Crown Gang Plow
1'Walking Plow nearly new
1 Deering Spreader
1 set Harrows 16 -foot
1 Massey -Harris Mower 6 -foot cut
1 Massey -Harris Hay Loader nearly
new
1 Massey -Harris Side Rake new this
year
1 International Dump Rake
1 Oeekshutt trt1ok Wagon, nearly
"ew
1 Deering 13111401' 7 -foot out
1 Blizzard Cutting Box, 12 -inch.
mouthpiece with pipes
1 Vessott 10 -inch Grinder
1 Belt 26 -feet long 8 -inches wide, 6
ply,
now
1 set Bench Sleighs with Rack
I steel -tired (Buggy
1 Trailer with stock racks suitable
for use with hector, equipped
with 32x6 tires
1 set Double Harness
1 Car '34 V-8 DeLuxe Sedan
HAY—
about 25 tons o2 Mixed IIay
TERMS—CASH
Arthur Ruttan, Proprietor
Thos. Miller, Clerk
Harold Jackson, Auctioneer
Did You Ever Wonder?
HOW TONS OF VALUABLE MET.
ALS CAN BE RECOVERED
FROM FACTORY SMOKE?
The expression "gone up in smoke"
long Isis beets applied to things be-
lieved irretrievably lost, And for
many years tons Of valuable metals
have quite literally "gone up In
smoke" in connection with the ore
smelting and refining processes.
Other tone of ohemicals have like-
wise escaped through meter chim-
neys as, for example, the bismuth
end cadmium wasted in this manner
by lead end, zinc plants,,
Today, however, mechanical cy-
clonic coliaotors and electric pre.
cLpitators axe making it possible to
recover literal fortunes from factory
smoke.
There an'e several walye of trapping
valuable substances' that otherwise
would go up in sande and be lost, •
One method makes use of a lnlnia-
urn cyclone and the principle of the
centrifuge or mare 'separator,
The amore or fiunes• are blown in-
n n cone'sltane1 tube having curved
stationary blrides which impart 4
whlrlleg 1ltatia11 to the gases, The
partiales of duet 40(1 6116pended mat.
fertilizer
1
4
50550u;sn:
Wwitteeday, Oetabet• lath, 1043
An Important Message to
TZS of OATS lad BA LEY
Which Demands Your Immediate Attentions
it'Iore food than ever before in our history is needed for our armed forces, our allies and
those et home.
Therefore, due to partial crop f...7i111re this year, it is imperative that Ontario Farmers
plan NOW for their 1944 SEED REQUIREMENTS.
The Ontario Department of Agriculture requests your immediate co-operation and offers
the following suggestions.
.. smelly wherever possible good seed of suitable varieties for
your 1944 requirements.
2. Any grain ---oats or brrley - either of the 1947 or 1943 crops
ennoble for seed over and abuvc your 0.:f, rout:irenlonts
should in the National interests be cleaned and offered for
sale as seed.
3. If you have surplus seed, give your neighbors the first chance.
If not sold by November 15tH, advise your Agricultural
Representative. Do not feed grain of seed quality. If
necessary, replace it will Wustern Peed Groin.
4. The Directors and members of County Crop Improvement
Associations are urged to become actively interested inthe
movement and supply of seed grain.
5. If you are unable to obtain suitable seed ---advise your
Agricultural Representative of your seed requirements NOT
LATER THAN NOVEMBER 15th.
Your Agricultural Representative for Huron
J. C. SHEARER — — CLINTON
ONTARIO DEPARTMENT of AGRICULTURE
HON. THOMAS L. KENNEDY, Minister
W. R. REEK, Deputy Minister
'ml T".-P-NENN cv+ :uft¢'MFre:bl tom' .'AM,,..04,b,W,r4.z altlt2i4yPW_+7` _
ter in, the smoke are fle agaiut the
wall of the tube by centrifugal force,
and thence crop to collecting bins
below. ,Suc1t cyclonic eolletors will
recover particles les so small that theye
Y
' would pass steadily through a 400.
mesh ween—a screen so flne that it
will hold water.
To capture even small particles,
the Cottrell precipitator (named for
the University of California profes-
sor who developed the method) may
be used. The factory smoke is blown
into a preoipitation tete in, which a
discharge eleotrocle connected to 0110
side of high voltage rectifier is me -
gentled. The wall of the tube is
grounded and when the current is
turned an the airborne particles in-
side the tube become itemized and
are prei'elpitated against the sides of
the tube, from which they can be
jarred loose periodically to fall into
a hopper below.
I Poisonous arsenic is removed from
gold refinery smoke by 000ling the
fumes until the arsenic condenses to
tiny particles' which are then re-
moved by a Cottrell precipitator.
Farmer Co-operation Requested
Regarding Seed Grain for 1944
Due to the partial failure of 1943
oats amts barley crops in the Prov-
ince,
rovince, the Ontario Department of
amaa4 ,n,anb-d,-; 7;1' „.a,w.—�•-..,•-�
Agriculture this weeb is taking
steps 1.11 an effort to assure an ade-
..iaatte seed supply for .I.944. The
Department is requesting the co-
operation erati
on of growers i n
1 t n planning
g 1 g
now tar their 1944 seed needs and
reporting individual requirements to
county agricultural representatives
by November 15th.
Hor. Thomas 1. Kennedy, Minister
of Agriculture, in commenting an
this measure states: "What the
Dpartnent of Agriculture would
like farmers• to do is secure wher-
ever possible good seed of suitable
varieties for their 1944 sowing
needs. All oats and barley suitable
for seed t'rom the 1943 crop and any
held over from 194.2 sbould be
cleaned and offered for sale as seed.
Farmers should offer :their surplus
seed first to neighbours and advise.
their Agricultural Representatives.
of any not sold by November 1511.
Do not feed grain of seed. quality
If necessary, replace it with Westere
feed grate. Farmers are advised to
buy seed grains early and if unable
to obtain suitable seed, advise their
Agrtcultunal Representative not
later than November 15th. This will
enable us to estimate the . require-
ments for each district so that
there well be ample seed grain for
everyone."
1t is farther suggested that Direc-
tors and Members of County Crop
Improvement Assooiations can be-
come witively interested la the
movement
and1 supply of
1 n seed creta
therebya n.
o ttibuting valuable xs-
s'stance in a situation which de-
mands serious and immediate action
an the part of farmers all over the
Province.
I CLERK'S NOTICE OF FIRST
POSTING OF VOTERS,Ll'ST
I
Voters' Lists, 1943, Village of
Brussels, County of Huron
NOTICE is hereby given that I
have complied with Section 20 of the
Voters' List, Act and that I have post-
ed
osted up at my melee, Brasseis on the -
13th clay of October, 1043, the list
of a}1 persons entitled to vote in the
mundcipalilty at Municipal (Elections
and Elections to the Legilative
Assembly and that •Such list remains
there for inspection,,
And I hereby call upon all voters
to take immediate proceedings to
have ell errors or omissions oar-
rented
orrented according to law, the last
day of appeal being the let day of
November. 1943.
Dated at Brussels, this 13tk day
of October, 1943,
R.
S. WARWICK, .Clerk.
211112
taahMTItliaDi AVIEZ
of Canada keep abreast of the
Dominion's expanding needs.
•
Six times since ��18 70 the Bank Act under
which the Chat eyed Banks operate has been
revised by parliament—six times in that period
the activities of the banks have been carefully
scrutinized by the people's representatives.
Every ten years the Bank Act
has been thus revised. Each one
of the six decennial revisions
has contributed much to the
evolution of the banking system
to meet the expanding needs of
a developing Dominion.
In 1934 the sixth revision of the
Bank Act was made. Fifty merni
bets of the House of Commons.
made up the committee, which
examined witnesses—among
them batik officers, government
officials and reformers— and
studied exhibits filed by various:
individuals and organizations:
Findings were submitted to the
House, and later that year the,
Bank Act was revised in many
important particulars.
Through democratic enquiry and decision,. the Canadian Nanking System has
gown and been adjusted to meet the needs of the people, providing a deposi-
tory for.savings and a sound basis for Canada's free economic development