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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1933-07-06, Page 3THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1933.
THE SEAFORTH NEWS.
Services We Can ,'Render
In the time of need P+ROTECTION
is your :best !friend,
Life Insurance
-To protect your LOVED ONES
Auto Insuranlce-
To protect you against LIABILITY
to PUBLIC and their PROPERTY
Fire Insurance-
To protect your HOME and its
CONTENTS.
S'i'ckness and Accident
• Insurance-
• To protect your INCOME
Any of the above lines 'w,e 'can •,•give
you in strong and reliable companies,
14 interested, call or write,
E. C. CHAI'1'BERLAIN
INSURANCE AGENCY
Phone 334 Seaforth, Ont
An 011 for All Men. -The sailor
the soldier, the fielherran, the 'lumiber-
:man, the oust -door laborer and all who
are •exposed to injury and the ele-
ments will 'find . in Dr. Thomas' ;Ec-
leotric 0i1 a true and faithful friend,
To ease pain, eefi'eve colas, dress
Wounds, sulbdue luenlbag e and o.ver-
ccme rheumatism, it is excellent.
Wherefore; it should .have a. place in
tall 'h'ome medicines' and be amongst
those taken an a journey.
Popular -Stall' nOS
SEASON- OF 1933
The Handsome 'Choicely Bred,
Clydesdale Stallion.
"FLASH -101N"
No. (05022) (20576) Imported
Approved Form I''Enrolment No. 2096
Monday noon will leave his own
- stable lot 23, con. 5, Logan, ,.and pro-
'teed to .Peter Hignell's, lot 14, con.
S,
McKillop, ' for night. Tuesday
To Jos. Flannigan's, lot 6, con. 7,
:MIc1Kiltop, for' noon, 'thence to Rock
Bros.,.,
Brodhagen, for night. Wed-
nesday -To Thos. Bolton's, lot 19,
con. 10, 'Mcl1 illop, for noon, then to
Geo. 'Bennewies, lot 8, con, i1'2, Mc-
Killap, for night. Thursday=Ta:
,tomos Wicke's, lot 29, 'con: 114, Lo-
gan, for noon,[ thence to George
:Siemon's, lot 24, ,con, 1'1, Logan, "far
nigtht. Friday -To his own stable
Tor noon, where he will remain until
the 'following Monday . noon. This.
route will be continued throughout
the season, health and weather . per
mitting.
Terms -112 to insure, due Feb,• ils't,
1934.
JAIOO'B HLGNELL,
Proprietor and Manager.
iClydesdale Scallion
IHIAIIIG'
(21'863)
Enrolment No. 41116 ,Approved. Form 1
Monday leaves his: own stable, lot
22, cop. 1'3, Hibbert, goes north '1'%
miles" and west to - Ed. MdKay',s for
noon. Thence 'west and south 'by
-..way of 'White school, to Walter
'Madge's for night. Tuesday -West to
the 2nd corucession of Hay, then
south to Earl 'Campbell's for noon,
then south to Leo Johns for night.
Wednesday -,East to Larry Taylor's
for noon, then •east and north to
Jack Simpson's for night. Thursday
• -North by way Of the boundary to
this own stabile where he will •remain
until 'Saturday !horning, Saturday -
:Norbh and east to Donalld McKini'-
eon's for noon, then south to the
12th concession and west to his awn
stable where he will remain until the
following Monday morning. This
route will he continued for the sea-
son, health and weather permitting.
Terms -$10 :to insure.
WM. 'COLE
prop,
Enrolment No, 26114. Passed. Form 1
STAIR LIGHT
113226
This- handsome choicely bred 'Per-
cheron Stallion will travel the follow-
ing route during the season of 1933:
(Monday'will leave his' own stable at
'Munro and will go to Ed Rose's, 5
miles ,horth of Dublin for night.
• Tuesdlay will go to John L. Malone's,
one mite west of Beechwood, Wed-
nesday : returns to his own stable.
Thu'rsd'ay goes south to Bruce Coop-
er's 005 mile south of Elinrville for
night; Friday to Orville Roger's i1%
m'ilos _no>nbh of K'irkton for noon,'
Then home for night. Saturday goes
to Carlingford and Monne by ;way of
IFu3larton This horse `is drawn on
trailer and will respond to caal .off
route. r
'Terms to insure $,112•y two ,mares
,from ' the sante owner, e1110,' Parties
losing colts' will have free service the
fallowing yelar.
NORMAN'PARS'OINIS/Munro
Proprietor and Manager. 'Phone • 00n5,
Duib'lin. '
* * * * * * * * *
•' NEWS AND INFORMATION :*
0 FOR THE BUSY FARMER *
1' (Furnished by Ontario Depart- *
•" .ment of Agric,ulture,) *'
x * *! * * * '* * * * *
Branded Beef Increases
!Breaded beef sold in all Canada .dur-
ing the, mond; of April tdta'iled ,over
two ,million pounds, an 'increase of
aplproximlately 32,1000 .pounds a week
as ;conslpaned with Meech; and an in-
crease of 50 percent as compared
with Alpril, '11932,
Wide Cost' Range' Shown
In Cheese Manufacture
'IAccordding, to Dr. J. F. Booth of
'O'ttawa, the oast oe making cheese in
;11115 Ontario facto'nies ranges. from
$1,85 per hundred pounds where the
an:eduction am'oun'ts to .3913,000 pounds,,
to as high as 03!211 per leendred
pounds wehre' only 47,1000 pounds are,
,puaduced,
'Cull Dairy Cows in Denmark
Go to Happy Hunting Ground
The sllau:ghter'ing and bu'rnin'g of
cull &airy cows is proceeding rapidly
in Denmark, Tihlis has been cited as
one pnsctical method of •,ed'u'cing over
peodu'c'tion and, lowering produ,cti'on
costs of. milk. Also, it has been indic-
ated, far too many Canadian dairy
cows have outlived' their'ruil+k-produc-
ing usefulness, are shipped to market,
instead of being consigned to the soil
from whence. they came.
Half of Canada's Berry'Crop
Is Supplied by This.Province
'Canada's:+
c'
ommenci:al production of
steawlberries for 119312 amounted to ap-
proximlaltely 20;600,000 quarts.- Ontar-
io's contribution to this total was es-
timated at 10,1614,000' quarts, or close
to fifty per cent.
The commercial production of ras'p-
berries, for the same year, was estab-
lislhed at 7,00150,0110 quarts. Ontari'o
again supplying about 'half this total,
or aplproximlately 341117,000.
Weekly Crop Report
IAgri'cul'tdnal representatives 'report
that rain is badly needed in most sec-
tions of the province. 'Meadows and
spring crops which lo'olced very prom-
ising on June 1st are not coming up
to expe'c'tations due to the extremely
hot weather in early June which was
followed in, some Sections by very
cool temperature and frost in some
areas. Alfalfa is an exception and re-
ports indicate a satisfactory tonnage
from this crop will be secured. Ease -
ern On'tari'o has reported pastures
drying up and ,milk' production falling.
(haying operations have been general
in all pants of the p:rov+in'ee during the
past week. Flrolm Southern Ontario
come :reports thlrut the drought serious-
ly hurt of the strawberry crops. Es-
sex for instance, declares that its• crop
will not average 30% of "normal years.
Many fields of tobacco in Norfolk
have had to be sot over again owing
to the combined damage of -wind,
frost and sun.
Canadian Bacon Export
During ,first quarter of 1933 bacon
importations into Great Britain were
down some . twenty per cent. occord-
inig to the Statistic's Bran'c'h. Canada
and the Netherlands were the only
countries to increase :their conitryiibu
tions to the bacon supplies.
Ontario Onion Pool
Alt a meeting in Chatham, it ' was
decidedto continue the operations of
the Ontario Onion Pool. Directors
co'mmenced a,campaign with the ob-
ject of securing members to sign up.
on the basis of a one-year contract.
Alt the recent annual meeting itwas
decided to cancel the existing five-
year contracts,
Care Will Save Money
Farmers sustain enormous losses
each year through carele's's methods of
shipping livestock by train and truck.
Ex'p'erienced shippers recolmimen'd bhat
all cattie be dehorned, that each class
of stock be separated by pa ti•tions,.
t'h'at loading chutes be used and that
all sp'i'kes), slivers, etc., be removed'
from cars and trucks.
Wider Market Probable
,
Increased oppo'ntun'i.ties for Canad-
ian cattle breeders to sell to the
t market are believed to exist
through tle'tar•iff differences: between
that country and Ireland. Alt one time
'the Freie :Striate shipped abou't 800,000
head per year and` -have extorted as
much as h,000,000 head in peak seas -
.The ` full
eas-.The`full effect of the new heavy
En'glis'h duties against the Irish, Free
Slate will :prrolbiably not be Sett by Can-
ada immediately but a gradual redulc-
tion ,in Irish cattle breeding is amtici:p
ahecI, Providing Canadian producers
assure a continuity ,of supply an excel-
lent opportunity exists for increasing
cattle export.
Commercial Representatives
(The 'Dleparlt',menit; has announced
thee assieltannlce is being given to .the
O'nbario Grower's Markets Council to
continue 'their Co'mmne.rcial Represen
na'ti've work. F'r'uit and Vege'tahle
Growers' Representatives will be es-
talbllish'ed ori :the prin'cip'al :Canadian
markets 10 assist growers and shi'pp-lwas secured tor the family, t0 live in
ers in etap'enlding outlets for their and they remained in it for one. year,
'crops to the Iarges+t extent possible,
C, W, 'Bauer,, Secretary of• the
iGinowers' 'Council, will 'have his head-
:quarters established In Toronto this
year and in addition to being present
on the Toronto market will also sup-
ervise the activities of the •Repres'en-
tatives in other parts of the Domin-
ion.
III. E. Tans, Fruitland, is appointed
Western Canada Representative with
headlqueeters in Win i g.. A. H. Dix -
"on, Hamilton, will be ;established on
.the Montreal m'arke't and will also
supervise O'ttaw'a and Quebec City
shipments.
.IC. IT..51. Baillie, , Beatnsvilile, will
be this •Grouters' Representative in the
Maritime Provinces, with headgear-,
tens at either Sit, John or Halifax,
IT'he ;Reprelsenitaltives are maintained
only awing the fruit anld vegetable
marketing season, In the past two
years their services- have been .ex-
tremely valuable and the demand for
'Ontario fettles and vegetables' has
been very widely extended as a result
of their wolik. Since they began :oiler-
atiions Ontario fruits have qu'adrup'led
in volume do the West, •trebled to the
Maritimes and • do'ubled• to Montreal
and district. In. Western Canada par-
ticularly, Ontario is regaining its share
of the consumer deinand and is very
'largely reiplalcin'g inniported p'rodu'ce,
rather than interfering ' in any wa'y,
with British Columbia 'growers,
ONE HUNDIRED YEARS I'N
GODIERIICH 'TO'WNS'HIP living thirty-one grandchildren, fiity-
two great
grandchildren and twin
t
-
oThe following, fs •a brief history of two great great, grandchildren.
Noe !Wallis +family, as: related by Mise
Mackenzie, a granddaughter Of 'James
Wallis at the family gathering last
week.
The early 'home of the Wallis fam-
ily was a fame near Tithby in Not-
tinghamshire, England, near to 'the
beautiful 'homeeee Lord Byron, 'H:ere
oil 'Soptemlber 19th, 11705, James 'Wallis
was born, the only 'Child of Edward
Wallis. This fares was sold in Mlarch,
1118017, and (the family •moved to' 'Lin-
'oln'shire and 'bo'ught a farm one Haile
from Tattershall, an the River With-
am in that portion .of Lincollns'h'i.re
known as 'Walcot Stales.
,James Wallis Married Mies Jane
1S'unipter in Billinghay church on Oc-
tober ,113, 11819. 'Four daughters and a
son were born in this home, the eldest
daughter dying in infancy. The wish
to come to :Canada had been 'form'ing
u the ,mincl ,of 'Jamies IWial'lis and in
1118312 the farm was rented and arrange-
ments were made to' sail for Canada,
but sickness in the ,family :hindered the
carryieg •out ' of the plan. In the spring
of, 11933 another start was made and
carried' out, and the .family consisting
of nine persons sailed from Hell, (The
trip was made in eight weeks and
three days. When but a few days out
at seasmallpox broke out in the ves-
sel. Tem person's were buried at. sea,
and the 'Wallis 'baby,, .ane year olid,
caught the disease but recovered.
Then :a 'terri'ble stone overtook them
and for 'three days they were nailed
clown below deck, but at .last they
landed in safety at Kastle Garden,
New York. They went to Albany and
took the canal (boat drawn 'by horses
and in this way went the whole length
while lames Wallis came on to Can-
ada. Es looked through the land on
iLake'On:tario but Carne on to the Hu-
ron tract, tnf which he had read .articles
by Dr. ''Dunlop. lie ;finally chose the
lo•t on which ''his grandson, 'Walter
Wallis, •still resides. 'The aged 'rand -
mother, Mrs. 'Sumpter, died in 1534,
six weeks after the family had reach-
ed the home in the forest. Edward
'Wallis, the grandfather, had returned
to :England before the .family canoe on
to Canada; he had intended to come
out again, but :died in England in
1836. Another son and daughter' were
born to the family in Canada,
The only mode of travel at that
time was by the lake. The Goderich
road was blazed in '1i036, .'hint Was not:
passable for some time after that.
Ja•ines'Wallis deed in the fall Id 11440;
his wife survived, him ;fifty-four years,
dying iii '115:91'1. Both are buried in the
'1ldaitland \cemetery, 'Oaderich,:0'1 their
fancily of six children node are living
now, !bit the widow of the youngest
son, James E. wig*, still 'lives at the
home oif bee son, Charles J. Wallis,
at Clinton. •
The (family of. ;James Waiblis had
much, to do with the development of
1Goderie'li township land_ are remem-
bered still by many of the older resi-
dents of the district. They were John
and 'Jiatnes, .both of Gaderich town-
ship; Mrs. Donald Fraser, firs. D.
;Mackenzie, Mrs. ((Rev.) C. Jones and
Mrs. ;Pas: !Burk. Of the descendants oif
James, Wallis the pioneer, there are
PAGE THREE
WHAT, IS MONEY?
What is money ?
Much ingenuity has been •spent
upon attempts to define the :terse
money, IA'll such attempts at defini-
tion 'seem to me to involve ;the logi-
cal blunder of supposing that we
may, by settling the ,meaning of a
single word, .avoid all the complex
differences and various conditions of
many things, each requiring its own
definition. iBull'ion, standard coin,
notes, legal •tenders and not legal ten-
der,cheques; mercantile bills; ,etc„
are all things capable of being re-
ceived in [payment 'of a debt, if the
de'b'tor is willing to pay :and the cred-
itor'toreceive them,
Money, however, first ,came into
use on a broad scale in the ]City
Sitat•es of ancient [Greece. Coinage
Was used Your centuries before the
Christian era. It is of ititerest bo note
,thlat the ,early (Greeks exercised :bet-
ter judgment 'than most of the ;suc-
ceeding civilizations; Throughout
the greater period of their career the
Greek States escaped 'the :consequ-
ences of coin debasement and infla-
tion, 'which 'play su'c'h a prominent
pant in sulbsequen a 'history.
2n the record's of !Imperial ]Rome,.
particularly in ,the 'first centuries • of,
the Christian •ere, we 'find the 'next
nsajor ,develolpbnenit in the history of
money. AAocard'ing to M.T. H. G.
Wells: "One Main respect in wlifich
the :Raman system Tins an anticipa-
tion of our awn, and different Tram
any :preceding political. system, was
that it Was a cash and credit -using
g
system. !Money had 'been in :the
world as yet for only a few cen-
OARNERA, ITALIAN GIANT•turies. But its use had been .gro'wing;
•'NEW HEAVYWEIGHT C'H'AMP •it was providing a fluid medium far
trade and enterprise, and changing
;Primo 'Carrera, the Station giant, econlomic conditions profoundly."
in consideration of space we pass
once regarded ,as merely a grotesque over the lengthy interval lbetween`!the
Pugilistic freak, is the new heavy-
,weight
eavy Roman experiment and the next great
•weight championutJak of the world. He monetary .stage, the establishment on
dcnocked out Jack ;Sharkey of Boston
last 'Thursday night in 2 minutes 07 a permanent basis of paper money,
second of the sixth round, with an in :the eighteenth century. Who was
actonndfng, lifting, deadening right resp'onsi'ble for the introduction of
hand uppercut. 'It was an utterly hair- 'this need not detain us ;for .long. 'Ov
raising ending 'to the battle. It was erlooking tGoe'the's remark that this
so sudden, .11 scarcely seemed true. money was the 'creation of the Devil,
ISharkey was against the ropes at the we are again .thrown back into the
time, dizzy from a thunderous pun- mists of the early ages. The .Greek
meting from the huge fists. The up- States and'Rome each had ,a :form of
percut was short, but with the weight dep'os'it system 'by which drafts were
of FIGO Pounds beh'ind an arm as thisk 'honou'red agains't sums deposited.
as the mast of a yacht, Down wentl'Nero issued plated coin. The Venet-
iSharkey, falling forward on• his, face,' ians,
who are credited with origfn'at
and as he stretched there on the can -,mg banking, dealt in bilis of :ex -
When You Have.A„
HORSE or COW
YOU WANT REMOVED,
Phone promptly to
WILLIALLMMSTONEITED. SONS,
Phone 22 - Ingersoll
Phone 215 W Stratford
amseramsamaravanom
opnsent, there are three'outstanding
features, namely, frequent 'abuses Of
the system, the concentration of note
issuing powers in 'the hands of tlse
banks over' the greater part of the
world and 'the. shifting froma purely
money economy to a credit economy:
'The paper money system may
have Shorn governments ,of most of
their 'powers Of coin. ;debasement,
but it provided 'thein with an even
[anger 'field for :money 'manipulation,.
Yet, with all the, lessor's ° that his-
tory should have taught and notwith-
standing all the :s'afegu'ards against
abuse, :monetary laws -have been dott-
ed 'from time 'and many ii'berties tak-
en with this system.
THE FIVE MI'SISING SNAKE'S
:Prof. Louis' Agessiz's passion for
collecting specimens for study or for
the museum often caused him to make
unusual uses of Isis .own dwelling. As
was conslmon in his day there was on-
ly one bathtub in the ,house, and 11
was net in'frequently occupied iy
turtles and .other animal's, aquatic or
amt
P hib•ous.
One morning Mrs. Agassiz was just
finishing dressing and was putting on
one of her boots whenshe became
aware that .there was something
wriggling inside it. She called to her
husband, who was still asleep in the -
adjoining room, "0 Agassiz1 Come
here; there's a snake` in my boot!"'
"'My dear," the professor replied
sleepily, "where .can the other five
be?"
[Teacher (to class): "What is an
octopus?"
(Small Boy (who had just corn
menced to take Latin): 'Please, sir,
I know, sir; it's an eight -sided, cat,"
Mrs, Bridemore: "Clarice has a
new riding horse Ile -,fest tall."
Mr. Bridensoret 'i'slands, not feet."
Mrs, B•ridemore: '''That's what she
said; but, of course, it was a mistai e
because :horses don't have 'hands."
vas ender the glaring lights, the change. lDuring the regime of an
muscles in this white 'torso quivered `•Eastern emperor a century beforeIA flea and fly in a flue
nervously. Thirty -'five thousand men the Ohnist an era strips 'oif deerskin Were discovered. Now, what did
and women set startled', in .11adisott s-to'mtna'Idy representing certain, sums they do?
Square G'arden's Long Island bowl,'were used. Marco"Polo found that Let us fly!" said flue. Rea.
S'harkey, echoic 201 ,pounds, spread paper money was in use in 'tlhe East "'Le't us fleet" said the fly.
over a mere 6 feet of height, made early to the ninth century. !So they flew through a'flaw in the
nine appear a mere midget along -.Tie 'European use of ,paper ,money flue.
side, the Gargantuan from Italy, had seems to have been derived from the
apparently been winning -with . ease. .practice of the IB'ank of Amsterdaun
Some of his wild .flings connected and of the London •gald'smi.bh in. issu-
with Camera's head,' and the crowding receipts against coin deposited
was cheering for the champion, when'Umadually it dawned upon the latter
hi sattack died away and her fell'that as the possibility of simultan-
against the ropes as if for a breather) eons demand for :the encashment of
Carrera was right oe. top of hint, and all outstanding' receipts• was remote Many mothers have reason to bless
then• -,boom[ :the [finish, It was a and therefore that full metal'li'c cover Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator,
startling thing. was unnecesslary, a fair reserve might because It has relieved the Tittle ones
iCarnera got only '10'per cent of the of suffering and ,made .them healthy.
'Let's swim the sea of life together'
Your chartins I can't resist.
She coyly -dropped her eyes and.
murmured,
"You're on my wading list."
he maintained 'against immediate
gate receipts to Sharlcey's 40% per 'withdrawal and the balance lent at
of the Erie 'Canal, 364 miles. A hone cent. 1 intereet. In 'the processof this devel- Want and For Sale Adis. .1 time, 25e,.
e
•
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The Seafsrth News
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,