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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1925-10-22, Page 8,F1'ENS.t tiL. The � •1 1 c. h�rki�es�;of the:.Unnted e nt t h are haying' a fowl 'sypper Tuesday, Nov, 3rd, 'Supper served; from 5:30to ,.8, t I� $ after which ' oo i p ro ramnie will � g F be given atptlttz ;citttiroh. Board rneetinl of The first offcial`13oa g the United. church was held on Tuesday evening. Mr, John 'Stacey is busy painting and decorating the Chiselhur'st church. Services will be held in the basement of the Chiselhurst next Sunday. M Mr, John Steacy: held an auction sale of household effects on Wednes- day a•fternopn, Mr. Geo, Elliott be- ing auctioneer. Mr. 'Harry Howard of Dashwo'od will move into Mr. Steacy's house as soon as it is vacated Arrangement's are !being made to get the returns Election Night at the town hall. Everybody is invited to 'come. Mrs. Beverly Beaton (nee Miss Dorothy Green) of 'Detroit, who camp over last week to visit her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Jonah 'Greets, was taken to London hospital on Sunday for treatment, as she has been in 'poor ,health for some time, Next Monday evening a 'Ha71gw- e'en social will be hard in the young people's league of the"l United church, AUCTION SALE C)f 'H',itse and 'Lot in the Town of. 4., Seaforth.''' ; 1h 'k,xecutor of.'Yhe :csLL-i tate -oh the late-Aiarg liet?Keeler,will' .offer 'for 'irate by public auction, on Saturday, the 3 -1st day of October, 1925,'at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon, oit the premises, the following property; Lot number $ixty-nine (69) on the west side. of Centre "street, in. Beattie's Surveyof part of the Town, of" the Seaforth. On lot is a one and one-half 'storey brick veneered house with cellar, furnace, electric light, hard and soft water; ads° a frame stable or garage and henhouse, The property is well lo- cated in a good residential part of Seaforth. Terms—Ten per cent. of the purchase money to be paid in cash on the date of sale, and the balance within 30 days thereafter. For further particulars and conditions of sale apply to JOHN J. •HUGGA'RD, Seaforth, Ontario. Solicitor for the Executors. Thomas (Brown, Auctioneer, Dated October 15. 1925. BAYFIELD. Mr. and Mrs, C;. H. Copeland, of Sprucedale, spent several days last week, having come for the Copeland - Pollock wedding 00 \\rednescfay. While here they were guests with Mrs. William Stirling. hfr. Frank Erwin,'who spent sev- eral days last week on a hunting ex- pedition, was the'guest of his aunt, Mrs.F A. Edwads. He returned to Kitchener on Saturday. Miss Anna Elliott, Toronto, spent the week -ems with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. J. Fraser, her uncle being quite ill, Mr. Robert Penhale left on Mon- day for Saskatchewan with a carload of apples. Mr. and Mrs. Winslow, of Mon- treal, were guests last week at the Ritz. Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Sturgeon and family moved to Grand Bend on Monday. Mr. Sturgeon is engaged in fishing there. Mr. and 'Mrs. Ernest Callow, of Bcarnsville, were week -end guests With Mr. W. 3, Elliott, of Goderich township. A social evening was spent at the Rectory Wednesday of last week, during which a men's club was form- ed of the three parishes. The fol- lowing officers were appointed: Hon. President, Rev. F. H. Paull, Bayfield; President, Morton Elliott, Bayfield; vice-president, Charles Middleton, Middleton' appointment; sec, -treas- urer, Leslie Elliott, Bayfield. The rest of the evening was spent in games and music, after which Mrs. Paull served a dainty lunch, assisted by Miss 'Ploy Edwards. The next meeting is to be held in Varna on November 19th. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Scotchmer, of Kitchener, spent the week -end with the former's sister, Mrs. Wm, Heard, having come to attend the funeral of his sister, Mrs. A. Townshend. Mrs, Thos. Brandon returned to her home on Monday alter visiting relatives in hh'ingham, cash. Six months' credit on hay, Johu Alexander, proprietor; Frank 1ayt,q;; 2uctioneer, CLEARING AUCTION SALE. Of Farms, Farm Sockand Imple- ments, Household .Furniture. Thomas Brown, auctioneer, has received in- structions from the executors of the late Thos. 'Flanagan estate, to sell by,. public auction on lot 6, con. 3, h,r.s,, Tuckersntith, on Tuesday, Nov, 3rd, at 1 o'clock sharp, the following: "Farms=100acres composed• of lot 6, 'con. 3, h.r.s, Tuckersmith; a splen- did farm, clean, well drained and fenced; 2 good spring wells; a bank barn 44x80, with stone foundation, cement floor, water inside; hog pen hen house and drive shed; good l/ storey frame dwelling house. 100 acres of choice grass land, well wat- ered, being lot 8, con. 3, h.r,s„ Tuck- ersmith. These 'farms are within 2 utiles of Seaforth. Farms will be sold subject to a reserved bid, Horses -1 draught mare 5 years old; 1 draught gelding 5 yrs. old; 1 good driving horse; 1 'Perch'eron gel- ding, 4 yrs. old; 1 draught filly•rising 3 yrs, old. Cattle -6 choice cows supposed to be in calf; 1 farrow cow, 4 feeding steers, 2 stock steers, 2 heifers, 2 yrs, CLEARING AUCTION SALE old; 4 yearling steers, 4 spring calves, of Farm Stock and Implements at 1 thoroughbred Durham 'hull, rising Lot 11, Con. 3, Stanley township, 21.4 2 11 miles south of 'Brucefield on Friday, AUCTION SALE Of Farm Stock and Implements. George Elliott has been instructed to sell by public auction on Lot 13, Concession 8, McKillop, on Tuesday, Oct, 27th at 1 p.m. sharp, the fol- lowing: Horses- TIeavy draft marc in foal to Lord Mansfield, heavy horse 7 years old, heavy draft mare coating 2 years old, driving marc 9 years old in foal to Lord Mansfield, 1 driving mare 6 years old, track marc Elsie Dickson with foal by her side, sired by Uraton Royal; 3 -year- old gelding sired by Elmer Dickson; 2 -year-old filly sired by Govenlock's horse; heavy draft horse 9 years old. Cattle -4 -year-old cow due Nov. 24, 1 cots 4 years old due Nov. 27th, 1 cow 4 years old due Dec. 1st, 1 cote 4 years old due Jan, lst; 1 cow 5 years old due Jan. 4th, 1 cow 4 years old clue Dee, 4th; 1 cow 4 years old due June 27th; 4 spring calves. Implements — Bain wagon nearly new, rubber tired buggy, Can- ada Carriage Co, stake, steel tire buggy nearly new, 2 walking plows, 2 sets double harness, set single harness nearly new, several horse collars, 7 tons timothy hay, Clinton fanning mill, grindstone. oak barrel, ladder, set& whiffletrees nearly new, neckyiike nearly new, Buffalo robe, forks. hoes, chains, shovels and other articles too numerous to men- tion. Terms --All sums of $10 and uuder, cash; over that amount 12 months' credit will be given on fur- nishing approved joint notes, or a discount of 6 p.c. allowed off for` cash on credit amounts. Philip En- right, proprietor; George Elliott, auctioneer. 14.1E SHAPOHTH NEWS THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22; 1925, Fowl --40 Rock pullers, 75 young{ filly rising 3 yrs. old; general purpose' rope, wheel barrow, top buggy, hens, 17 geese, 6 turkeys, horse 6 yrs. old; driver, quiet and re- democrat; set of team harness, set of double driving harness, forge, anvil, drag 2 full sets of taps' .' and dies, g v"withnew frame gasoline e post hole.auger, s Leel and 'bearinks; pg , water tank, Prairie State brooder, amounts. Everything to be soldj, as Wisconsin ncubator` (140 eggs cap- proprietor has rented his 'farm.. acity),whiffletrees, neekyokes, forks, Laurence :Forrest, proprietor;, Geo. shovels,: chains and'several ' other H. Elliott, auctioneer.. Implements-.1 10 h;p. gasoline. en- gine, a ull •line• of good tarn] hiiple- n • r 'tltm oed- t n 1 "ed o the � stet s �o os f t, 11 g ed on a farm; 1 good set of double harness, heavy harness, 1 set of plow e , 1 set of single harness, collars, bridles neckyokes, whippletrees, and a lot of other articles generally found on the farm. About 40 cords of 14 -inch dry hard -Wood, about an acre of roots in the field, 12 bags of potatoes, 1 good DeLaval cream separator, ,'also a quantity of household furniture, 1 Ford ear, 1918 model. ' Grain -About 100 'bushels of peas fit for. seed, 250 bushels of mixed -grain, 300 bushels of oats, 10 tons of choice tirnothy hay,.1 Collie dog. Terms—On real estate, made known on clay of sale, or on premises, or to the executors or R. S. Hays, solici- tor for executors. On stock and im- plements, all sums of $10.00 and under, cash; over that amount, 12 months' credit will given on fur- nishing approved joint notes or a discount of 5 per cent. off -for cash. Hay, grain and fowl, cash. Executors, Peter 'Sullivan, Joseph Flanagan, 1'. 'Brown, auctioneer, liable 7 years old; ,general purpose mare, Cattle—Cow 6 yrs. old due to tresheni•�l' ov,'1st; cow. S yrs, .ol4 due; to freshen Nov. 4th; cow 4 yrs.o'ld' 4 yrs. due to freshen Nov, 6th; cow, due' to; freshen Nov. 1st; cow 3 yrs. old due to freshen in December; 2 cows 3 yrs, old due to freshen Jan. 15th; cow 5 yrs. old due to freshen in December; 3 cows 7 yrs. old sup- posed to be in calf; 3 cows 4 yrs. old calf at foot; 1 cow 6 yrs. old, not in calf; 1 cow 6 years old, calf at foot; cow 4 years old clue in Feb.; fresh cow; 2 young calves, 6 spring calves, 2 yearlings, 4 steers rising 2 yrs., 1 Durham 'boll (registered). Sow due to farrow Nov. 24th; 2 pigs -125 lbs. each, 2 chunks, pure 'bred Tamworth boar (registered), 8 young pigs, 13 young breeding ewes; 60 barred rock hens, 60 pullets hatched in April. Quantity of turnips and corn in field. Innplements — MoCormiak binder, Deering mower 6 ft, cut; McCormick hay rake; Massey -Harris hay loner new; T-udhope Anderson single riding plough, new; Cockshutt walking plough, No, 21; Cockshutt plough, 2 - furrow; Bain sleigh, Adam's wagon, scuffler, drilling plough, Massey - Harris 10 -hoe drill; Noxon 12 -hoe drill, disc harrow; diamond harrow, 4 sections; diamond harrows, 3 sec- tion; Fleury crusher, good as new, sat 1 gine Irjc hoisepa ver; steel' ;s'hlfltn articles tqo numerous to mention., "terms—Roots, corn!,' 'hens, young' pigs and all sunt§ of $10 and under'', cash; over that aiuognt, 12' t1tontha cr din• will be given on . ttrujshing' ap-: e . �i'roved joint notes, ora discount of '` slowed for cash on. credit 5 Fier ceut,a yrs. o c. Hogs—I sow, clue to litter in Dec. • Oct. 30th. at 12:30 o'clock sharp; the 110 -inch grinder, Maxwellcutting box 3 young sows not bred, 16 chunks. following: Horses—Grey Percheron with carriers, pulper, 160 ft. hay fork DO YOU SELL AUTOMOBILES ? Even when the sale seems lost Lo Dis- tance may save it! c°•• " e '„"Don't wait," says Henry Ford, "use the telephone!" CAR OF SALT. We are going to unload a car of cattle and dairy salt on Oct. 29th. Special prices off the car. MAR- SHALL STEW.A'RT, phone 77. TILE F""R SALE Sizes -4 -inch, 6 -inch, 12 -inch. Good supply cement tile, well seasoned. Cement troughs for sale. Apply to R. FROST, Seaforth. 44 TWO COWS FOR SALE. Two good cows, supposed to be with calf. Both milking. Apply to the premises of BYRON McGILL, Harpurhey. - PORTLAND CEMENT. Just arrived, a carload of Canada Portland Cerement, Get your supply at once as this may be the last car for this season GEO. A. SILLS & SONS, 43 Hardware Mchts., Seaforth. AGENT WANTED. Agent, part or full time, for Life Insurance Company. Good contract. Apply News Office. tf HOUSE FOR SALE. On the corner of Louisa and Mar- ket streets, a comfortable six -roomed house with good back kitchen and garden. Light and v,ater in the house. Will be sold cheap. Apply to MRS. FORTUNE, Seaforth, phone 161-J, or The News Office. ROOMS TO LET. Two apartments, four rooms each. Central, comfortable; electric light, water. Immediate possession. A. D. SUTHERLAND, Phone 152 AUCTION SALE Of Farnt, Farm Stock, Implements and Household Effects. Mr, Frank Taylor has been instructed to sell by public auction on Lot 12, Con, 8, H.R.S.. Tuckersntith, on Tuesday, Oct. 27th, at 1 p.nl. sharp, the fol- lowing: Horses—Driving marc 12 years old, good third horse; filly 2 years old, filly 1 year old, gelding 4 years old, gelding 1 year old, Cattle —Durham cow due in December, Durham cow due in December, Dur- ham cow due end of December, Durham cow bred June 27th, Dur - haw cow bred Aug. 3rd, Durham cow bred Aug. 12th, Durham cow bred Aug. 23rd, Durham cow ,bred Aug. 31st, Durham cow bred Sept. 40th, farrow cow, cow milking, 6 Aberdeen Angus steers 2 years old, 2 Short- horn steers 2 years old, 7 Aberdeen Angus heifers 2 years old, 5 yearling Aberdeen Angus steers, yearling Ab- erdeen Angus heifer, 10 Aberdeen Angus calves. Hogs -3 Yorkshire sows not bred, 21 York pigs three months old, 12 York pigs 6 weeks old. Implements. — Deering binder 6 -ft. cut, Dane hay loader nearly new, :Massey -Harris side rake and tedder, Massey -Harris No. 5 2 -row corn and bean cultivator, Oliver bean puller, new; Massey -Harris disc har- row, Cockshutt 2 -furrow riding plow; 2 -furrow Imperial gang plow, walking plow, pea harvester, Litchfield man- ure spreader, 80 bushels capacity; McCormick 16 -disc grain drill, 15 - tooth cultivator, 12 -foot dump rake, land roller, turnip sower, 2 scufflers, set scales 2,000 db., large wire stretch- er, top buggy, cutter, set bobsleighs, Bain wagon, 16 -ft, fiat rack with roller carriage, new; light wagon with pole and shafts, 'Chatham fan- ning mill with bagger, wheelbarow, 30 anchor cedar posts, 4 -section har- rows, 2 root pulpers, quantity of plank and lumber, quantity of mixed grain and early oats suitable for seed, "about 25 tons of choice mixed hay, partly alfalfa; quantity of ntangolds and turnips in the field. Household Effects.—(Dresser with mirror, 2 bedsteads, 2 sets bed springs, child's white enamel crib, writing desk, hall stand with mirror, pedestal, eight-day kitchen clock, kitchen cupboard with glass doors, Pandora cook stove, washing mach- ine, clothes wringer, Daisy churn, kitchen mirror, quantity of fruit sealers. At same time and place the. farm consisting of 100 acres more or less, will be offered for sale sub- ject to a reserve bid if not previously sold. On the premises is a good 1/ storey frame house with furnace and water in house; bank barn, 50x86 ft. concrete stabling, litter carrier and water in the barn; hog pen, 24x40 ft., concrete floor; abundant supply of good water, There are about 9 acres of good bush, This is an ex- ceptionally good wheat and bean farm, being well drained and in a high state of fertility. Terris on 'farm —10 p.c. of purchase money to be paid on day of sale; balance due on the 10th day of December. Terms on .Chattels—All sums of $10.00 and under, cash; over that amount -112 months' credit will be given on furnishing approved joint notes, or a discount of 5 p.c. per annutri' will be allowed off for cash ort credit amounts. Grain and roo'ts, ORGAN FOR SALE. A six -octave piano case organ as good as new; sideboard; white iron bed, with springs; brass parlor lamp (coal oil); also a base burner stove with oven. Apply at the News Office. 43 HEIFER LOST. Strayed from dot 17, con. 8, Mc- Killop, within past two months, a year-old heifer, red, with a..gouple of white spots; and with horns. CHAS. LITTLE, Dublin P.O., or call 2401-24 Seaforth, in the evening. AUCTION SALE Of Farm Stock and Implements at lot 13, concession '1, one-half mile south of Brucefield, on Tuesday, Nov'. 3rd, at 12:30. o'clock. Draught team; also driving mare and reliable driver. Four cows, numberof heifers, steers ,and calves. All the farm implements, James Berry, proprietor; Geo. H. Elliott,' acct, MAKING OUR • AILWAYS PAY The sure , way—the only way—that our perplexing railway problem- can ever be solved. Temporarily our Canadian . National Railway system is in a hole.. To deny the fact would be rank untruthfulness, to belittle its importance would be sheer folly. But this huge public ownership enterprise CAN and MUST be pulled out of the hole, and it's up to the men and women voters of Canada to do it ! A Loaf Big Enough for Two If our foresight had been as good as ou? hindsight, we would never have built the excessive railway plant we have today. But what is done cannot be undone. There is no use crying over spilt milk. The problem novv is to chart for ourselves the course that will most quickly and most surely place the Canadian National Rail- ways on a paying basis. Thus far the main effort of its manage- ment has been to get more business— freight and passenger—for the C.N.R. by taking it away from the C.P.R. By that method, the cost of securing business is greatly increased for both systems, with no real advantage to either. They are merely fighting over the division of a loaf, which isn't large enough to provide sus- tenance for both. The only way our railway problem will ever be solved is for the voters of Canada to see to it that our railways are given a • bigger loaf to divide—a loaf of freight and passenger traffic that will be large enough for both systems to thrive on. We Have the Acorn, We Must Grow the Oak How to increase freight traffic—that is the kernel of our problem! The average Canadian freight train earns $5.00 per mile travelled; the average passenger train earns only $2.00. So it's upon the freight end of the busigkgss that we must concentrate. Of course, some kinds of freight are more profitable than others. There is very little margin of profit in carrying grain, first because the rates applicable to it are lower c per ton per mile than the rates on any other commodity, and second because the grain movement is a peakload- traffic, calling for an enormous investment in cars that are idle the greater part of the year. But there is a substantial margin of profit in hauling general merchandise. What can we do to ensure our railways getting more of it? Higher Tariff the Cure Increase our population—start a big immigration movement—and the rest will follow as a matter of course! Easier said than done? Not at all! All we have to do to start the tide of immigration flowing through our ports is to hold out to the prospective immigrant• the assurance of a steady job at good wages, or the chance to engage profitably in farming or some other form of production or service. A higher tariff, that will be a real Pro- tective Tariff, will give him a guarantee covering every point. And nothing else under Providence will! A Lower Tariff is Poison A Tariff policy that allows the Canadian market to be supplied more and more by outside workers, automatically operates to 'educe the freight traffic available for our railways. When for instance, due to insufficient tariff protection, the Libbey- Owens glass factory in Hamilton was forced to surrender the Canadian field to its sister plant in Belgium, Canadian railways lost the hauling of 2,000 carloads of raw material per year! If Canadian cotton and woollen mills only had the making of the textiles that we import every year, our railways would have, the hauling of another 50,000 carloads per year of raw material freight. Picture to yourself the scores of other things that under a low tariff policy we import, when under a higher tariff policy we would be making them in our own workshops, and you can hardly fail to realize that the sane—the sure- -solution of our railway problem is all ready-made for us, and awaits only our order via the. polls to put it, into operation. The neces- sary traffic is there. All we have to do is reach out and get it! Increasing Imports Mean Bigger Railway Deficits Every. time that low duties take away a portion of the domestic market from a Canadian industry and give it to a foreign industry, our railways suffer in four ways. 1. They lose the hauling of the raw material that such industry would have used. 2. On the finished product, instead of the full local rate, they get only their proportion of the through import rate—a much lower net. 3. When it results in the Western Cana- dian market being supplied from a U.S. factory, they lose the long East and West haul, and get only the short haul from the international. boundary. 4. They lose the hauling of all the mer- chandise that would have been con- sumed by the workers who, due to the resultant unemployment, emigrate to - the United States. Lower duties throw people out of work. They just as surely throw railways out of work. We can never save our railways by giving them less work. We must use our brains and our courage to secure them more work—better paid work! Higher tariffs will do it. TE VA HIGHER TARIFF AND FOR . LOWER ;TAXATION FORcon.a.•Nv.vieee7ConmItaeeraao,fsr't .,irwaieaA