Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1919-01-16, Page 8The Best Wins 11 CORRESPONDENCE 1.�jLm,or,A/a PFII�IIIP���p'amM4o+•,••18 7i,ot is who this is the most popular barber Shop in town, .Eery th?rip is sanitarro and owl can enjoy a hair cuthere, Commercial .Barber Shop,C4th W. ROBINSON Prop MUSICAL Mies Annie G, Govenlock, Graduate Teacher's Course'Qodowaky Methotle, anedian Academy of Mueio Toronto reeopen her dame in piano, Organ d Theory on September 3rd. Peelle will be prepared for Canadian ndemy and Toronto Conservatory enunatione Studio North Main St. Phone 103 MUSIC Mrs, O'Connell has re -opened classes in Piano and Singing Pupils prepared for the London Con- eert'atory. MRS. O'CONNELL, John Street, Nomination Kippen .Mie, A. Noakes is nearly well again we are glad to report, Mrs, J, Waxman is home again from a trip to Flint, Mich. Mr, and Mrs, Humphrey Day an of Hamilton and Mr, and Mrs, Phos Doymon of Seek, are visiting relatives here. Mr. Wadley Frenob has gone to Pert Elgin to attend the funeral of hie sis- ter, Seirs, Upehall, Mies Mabel Whiteman of Toronto visited her parents.. Rev, Wm, Martin of London took the services in St. Andrews last Sunday Mrs, John Patterson has returned to her home in Toronto after a pleas- antvisit with friends. The Reading Circle met at 'Isaac Jarrots on Friday evening, .A. large number were present and found it not only entertaining out p ofitable, Londesboro John Bridgiu has returned from a visit to Detroit. ' A meeting fornominating a Correct! -1 lor for tilling a vacancy' in the Mc- Killop Council for i914, will be at Calder's Hall Winthrop on Monday the! 20th day of Janiiarr 109 at 1 o'clock p, m, and in the event of i•, nleotioni required the vote will he t t,t ,tt the!; usual i,oliine pewee - on Jowl try 6th \ 39111 By r)r.let the i`.,unei Mies Olive Brigham has gone back to her school at Highgate, The Womeu'e Institute are preparing for a social in February. The proceeds will be used to erect a monument to the toilet] heroes of the war. I, ML'RDIE, Clerk. Hensall Mr. Arntatroi g who bought the '"�"". lntosh farm hos moved to a house s•ti Albert P. Chert now oarriee the tuail j tato Lomion Rood, on No ' Route, There is a partial ban on again tu'i - Dulbiilil pravant the spread of the epidemic. i BrucefieId Clotting for the Belgians were ship- ped from here last week. The school has again been closed by the Hai, Mies Elliott of London will take charge when it opens again. Mies Margaret Ross has retuurned to the Toronto University. Truck Licenses slava Been Raised !Sam. Russ of the London Road is ill with pneumonic, Lint Wen. McQueen, eon of James McQnaen was recently married to Miaa Baldwin of Iowa and will live in Tor- onto. Mt in a e farm to air Itoweill'.. who now has a line hag farm, A very pretty i,eeld:ug %me that of Miss Laura Boatriee Doling ai:d E. Elmore s.Junnre at tha home of Mr, kiamuel Lilting. A iarge runnier of handsome presents testified to the high esteem of the bride.. The bride will be greatly missed fn Hensel!, both at Lome and Church. Mad wiabes for the future go with the young ample to. their new home in Exeter. The S. S. entertainment was very suceeesful in the Methodiet Church, The proceeds being $50, eromatry The epedemie still takes its tell of valuable Iivea. Lost Monday Eliza 3I Gertrude Dow passed away, aged 31 years, after four days illness, A large ! circle of friends and and relatives aro' left to mourn, The funeral tours plots I Manley the next day, 1'.e. Patrick Plctirath and his ut,,r- sons bride arrived Lome fast week and were wiatnl'.y welcomed by his t . ,,. frier„u' He ass thr.estgh all the s irr. est iDal:Cug, His Mother 1i -train -it a year ape 151 1 .04,4E,, AP Still in EIg- tame. James Maluvey tett to 51,&110,1- ids studies in NA inntpeg last week, )utas, Hannah BruxHr ie Itotne Otto a trip to London. The epftfea is is still quite-preyalertt in ANNUAL FEES ARE INCREASED UPON GRADUATED SCALE Motor trick owners are closely effect ed by one or two notable ehaugee in the collection of revenues throngh the meter trattic Act which will go into of feat et the beginning of the new year The annual fops for motor trucks have beauinereasotl upon a •graduated soale which reoognizee the •weight of the cargo AN well as the weight of the truok itself 'Micro will be taken into don. sideration as the Moak of assessment the combined weight of the trunk and its maximum load capacity, In future, trucks of,from two to eight torts will pay five dollars per ton, or frsotion thereof, Trucks upward of eight tons and not more than ten tons, will pay $7 50 per ton, and trunks exceeding ton tons will pay $io per ton, or frau. tin thereof' This oshednlo resembles that in use in New York State. Another change in motor registration affects the dealers' rnarkete. Formerly dealers' in motor vehicles have paid a fee of $Ll for initial registration, and a first set of markers, In future the gov- ornment will charge the dealers $20 per set for markers, .Minters say how ever, permit ants of markers issued to them to De nsod on any car they tuay choose, so long as such ears are in pri. rate use Approximately ' 110,000 power ve- hicles are registered now on the pro- vincial register, no fewer Hen 1.02,000 of these being passenger -cars, and 7400 motor trucks, giving an average of one motor oar to every e3 of pep,l- hition of the province of Ontario. The entire revenue received by the government from motor reltiole, liees,ees le estimated at $1,2'el,000, and it is expected that the a:lalitional than will he raised as 0 result of the in- rre-ae in the motor truck charges, speaking of the new notes, W. 'A. McLean, deputy min io it „f tn;hways; tated that it was hoped that +shy the higher notes levied un the hrav'ter cars their ,ts« in this province world be ilia- : see .sg,eti. Stich oars, be pointed out greatly increased the eclat of road countenance, while lighter cars would ,le 0r,e wont as wail. ler Preodegast of Chicago is vieititig• his sistur Mrs James Shea. Mr John McDade teff for Kitohenern A branch of the Holt Name Soulety was organized by Far Barry of Louden. It pledgee its members to refrain from using profane ur impure langn•tee. John Reyes of Stratford virsited his snot Mrs J Nagle Ho was four yeata at the front. Some of the schools are still closed Mts. Tufford is ill at present. Mr, Herman Speore of Stratford was home Fier the hulitiayee Mise Esther .Moore is home again from the west, Miss Mae Hoggarth of London has returned after a visit here, Sta'ffa plibbert was elected by acclamation A A Coiquhoun is reeve; end I Morris, T Mahaffy- W Feeney and W Dalyruple eonnoillors, Mr, James Harburn who for six years carriedthe mail on the route has been forced to resign owing to ill health. He wee presented with oats and a purse by the patrons, to the val- ue of over $100 as a token of their good will. Mrs, E. D oke of Seaforth is taking care of her daughter Mss J McDonald whe has been'Very-i'll, eleemra Thos. McKay and Joe Joho- aten made a busiuese trip to Lundell last weep Some of the rate payers of Dui. 'school have been contemplating as to the building of a new It, 13, si, 0, 'rho Board appointed to look after their in. termitearc•, Martin Purnell, Thos. Mc- Kay, Wm: bfanley and the site is to be on the premises of Frank Welsh Lot 11 Oois r0 VloKillop, Mrs. P, McLaughlin vlsiteel friends in Seaforth on Sunday. Miss Monica .Eckart has returned to her hone near Seaforth, A Pill That is Prized.—There have been many pills put upon the market and pressed upon public attention, but none have endured so long or met with so muob favor as Parmelee'e Vegetable Pills, Widespread use of them has attested their great value, and they need uo further advertisement than this.- Baring firmly established there selves in public esteem, they now rank without a peer in the list of standard vegetable preparations, ee WHE:il PRUNING TREES Always tore a pole saw and pole cheat's on ,'t= tips of long branches, pad use tt, pole hook in removing dead breeel r. of the ailanthus and Other britt'+' trees where it would be too dang'' ns to reach them other- e/hie. Do notaeeeed back" or out off the top of a t1 except Where the tree Al old and eating, and then under Special ire .oetions. Be as ,_ ,' c and as Judicious In germing e,• 0 -Bible, and do not raise the branch. - ..o high as to make the tree Pool. :ii:,- a telegraph pole. Comment :• pruning the tree from the top and finish at the bottom. Make every cut as close and paral- lel to the :murk as possible. To make the cut perfectly smooth the saw sieret be well set and sharp. Leave nu stubs, dead and dying wood, or fungus -covered branches be. kind you. Do not fail to cover every wound with coal tar, not allowing it need- lessly to run down the trunk. Do not remove several large bran- ches on one tree at a time. They must be removed gradually, the work extending over several seasons. LIME FOR ORCHARDS Forming Expert Says it Will Start a Clover Crop Prof. W. S. Blair of Bentville, N.B., writes: I am often asked if I would advise lime for an orchard. My reply le, yes! for the purpose of starting A clover cover crop, if for nothing else, It is doubtful of what value lime le to Increase our apple crops,. but certainly many orchards will not produce clover without lime. The ganntity per acre required will vary somewhat, and in many eases all the lime requirements may be made tip by a Judicious use of slag. I am cone winced, by our experiments at Kent - that lime in some form is risen• Hal in order to get a growth of clover en many of our soils. The reason iihy vetch has given better results than clover 10 that vetch will thrive Pte soils which are quite acid, al- though liming is usually helpful to it. it has, therefore, a far wider range. of adaptability than clover, which tends to disappear altogether when Mils become exceedingly acid. Lime, of itself, will not always give in- creased crops. On poor soils there is not the gain one might expect, for: time will not furnish the necessary nitrogen, potash: and,$hosphoric acid. It is entirely unneccessary for you to leave your work or lose valuable time to make_ a trip to the bank. Bank with us by mail !. Send your deposits in by money order or registered post and the amounts will' be acknowledged and placed to your credit upon receipt. THE ANK DOMINI SEAFORTH BRANCH: R. M. JONES, JWanagaat 522 titlgRtfiennue istmenu ranee tutaineueAgatarneenaneil4R rnweer6AAser. Europe Wants Meal i Canada now has the opportunity to. make her export position penman- ent The war stimulated 'tho export trade. in Canadian liv{t stook products to a degree deemed well nigh impossible five years ago, Exporte of beef in- creased 6795 per cent, of bacon and pork products 671 per cent, Total ex- ports of live etoolr pro.aiots in the fiscal year ending M'aroh ;tat, 1918, were valued at $172, 734, 081 as compared to $58,449,119 in t914, Canada has the opportunity of hold- ing this trade and increasing it, for one meat products won a splendid re- putation in Europe during the war, and Canada is in a position of the fav- ored nation, The price of feed has been high, and the cost of producing live stock - hap been oorreepondwgly high B,ut the market price of finished animals has been high. The price may decline gradually, but the price of feed will de= cline alio, end the percentage of prat to the farmer should thus remain about the same: Indeed if the cost of feed declines first, the profit to the fanner will be inereaaed, .1. 15, Brethour of Burford, Out., who won the first prize - for export bacon hogs at the Winter Fair at Guelph Nara that with relative prices of feed and bacon thou pertaining there was a good profit. With atandarc feed at $57 a to and' bogs at $tti live weight, 1 make a pro- fit of over 20 per tient, said Mr. Breth. our, It ie the profit that oounte_ not the gelling price; and profit depends upon the relation of the price of feed to the market price of the finished anima!, Mr. Herbert Hoover, Chief of the United States Food Administration, who is at present in Europe hives tigat ing conditions et Gust hand cables as follows: Every pound of pork products we mon export before next July Europe will steed, stud es 305)0 as the initial chaos ttf tbe 3nddc'ti economic change from wet to arttlietlae can be overcome there will he over -demands. Authorities any that this demand in the ease of beef, ()Yell mole than that of pork. will be abnormal for many years owing to the fact that Europe is estimated bob° abort of over 115,000;000 head of tike stook, of which 28,000,000 represent cattle irreplaceable in less than five years, Thrift Is Patriotic Common Sense Says Hon. T. W. McCarry Prosperity should not be permitted to hide need of saving Hon. T, W. MoCarry., Provincial Treeenrer for the province of Ontario, is a frac believer in the gospel of thrift and a strong supporter of the War Savings Stamp Campaign, In a recent atatemet,t he aays,— "Years of progress and prosperity have tended -quite naturally—to make Canadian forgetful of the fine, homely virtue of Thrift which was so admirable a trait in the character ofourOanadian pioneers. As a people we do not know what Thrift means, as it is understood in Great Britian and Europe; the small daily personal economies which enable semen not only to ,live within his income, whatever it may be but to save something every year, and which' in the aggregate makes a nation rich, France (prior to the war) is a striktng example of 'a nation made rich by in- dividual thrift. To -day Canada is facing a big war debt incurred in defending our country Standard Feeds Are endorsed by the Organ ization of Resourses Com. - mitten of Ontario and are fpr sale by the following firms- The Cambell Flour 1VIills Co. Ltd, West Toronto. The Cambell Flour Milts Co Ltd. Peterboro. Howson & Howson, Wing - ham. D. C. Thomson,' Orillia, A A. McFall, Bolton, Write for prices and pur- chase direct from the above manufacturers. Scott's For Wrrn F otwear s s sear "The Home Phone 51 of Good Shoes" Seaforth See "STANDARD" on the tags. Offering for Sale, OIL CAKE MEAL COTTON SEED MEAL for imnsediatesale in car- load lots. To be sold dir- ectly to Farmers, Farmers Local Organizations and loc- al dealers selling directly to feeders of live stock. This offer is open only to Dec. 31st. when other disposition will be made of stocks remain ing. Prices on application. Till Dec, 3 est. they will be approximately $63. to $64. per ton f. o. b. Hamilton, depending on carryi11 ee charges at the time purch-s.' Sold on the basis of mark- ed weights as they arrive:. Purchase directly frons JAS;. RICHARDSON & SONS, Ltd. Royal Bank, Building, Toronto, In charge for the Organization of Resources. Committee, Parliament Build ings, Toronto. Noma ruthless foe, We have got to foot the bill in ono way or another. and what easier or more profitable way than ,by saving our money and lending it at good interest to the governnteet in the form of War Saving Stamps? Thrift is patriotic common -seise, Small investments fu Government s,, - entities have the foaudation of many a fortune, and the War davittge Stamps system ought to garner an enormone harvest of small change from Canadians old and young, rich and pour alike," Annual Meeting The Anneal Meeting of the McKillop Mutual Fire Ineuranoe Company will be held in the Town Hall, Seaforth, on Friday Feb, 7th, 1919 at two P. M. The business of the meeting will be to receive the Annual Statement and Auditors' report. The electing of three directors and two auditors and other business which might be ocnsidered of benefit for the Company. The retiring' directors aro John G, Grieve, James Evans and John Bennewies who are ligable for election, JAS. CONNOLLY, THOS, E. HAY Pres. Seo. PRINTING Counter Check Books I.etter Heads . Posters Envelopes Menu Cards Loose Leaf Ledger di orms etc. Statemeuto i'rogramtnee Dodgers Calling Cards efetnorial Cards Hill Heath; Wedding Card:+ Note 'reads Neat ip and pramptlp done SEAF The .biggest Men in the country havre,fotlnd that the easiest way to spell success is to ADVERTISE. Sup• pose the newspaper did not p; ablish the News. how would the people. know what is happening ? If you don't publi h your :More News how will the people know about your goods? You can never sell the g,. oda people do !lot know you have. Advertising is telling about your stock. The farm that advertises gets ahead, every time, oY the firm that does not advertise. Shop. worn and out=of-date stock is the penalty merchants pay for not advertising. R3:;; NEWS e ereenelesseanwareseausweisserseersee NOTICE The Anne of meeting of the members of the Seaforth Agricultural "inolety will be hold -00 Friday January 1711) 191.0 at otto o'clock ie ilia Librisry bnilfling, D. FOTHh;IiINGHAM, Pro, M, BItODER lilli, Secy, END -STOMACH TROUBLE, GASES OR DYSPEPSIA "Pape's Diapepsin" makes sick, sour, gassy stomachs surely feel fine in five minutes. If what you just ate is souring on your stomach or lies like a ltmlp of lead, or you belch gas and eructate sour,, imdigeeted 209a, or have a feeling of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad taste in mouth and stomach.head. ache, you can get relief in five minutes by neutralizing acidity. Put an end to finch stomach diatreso now by getting a large fifty -cent case of Pape's Diapepsln from any drug _store, You realize in five minutes how needlese.it ie to suffer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any stom- ach disorder caused by food fermentation dile to exsepsive said in Itemeek. &FF MAIL CONTRACT SEALED TENDERS, addreseed to the Postmaster General, will be receive ed at Ottawa until noon, on Friday, the 7th day of February, 19x9, for the oon- veyaltee of Els Majesty's Mails, on a proposed Coutraot for four years, six times per week over Seaforth No. 4 Rural Route, from rite Postmaster General's Pleasure, Printed -notioes containing farther information as to conditions of propos- ed Oentract may be seen and blank forms of Teude'may be oh.teined at the Post Offices of Seaforth, Egmond- ville, St_ Columban and Bruoefieid and at the office of the Poet Office Inspec- tor London. PONT OFFICE 1ESPECTOR'S OFFICE, London, 27th Deo., r9I8. Chas. E, H. Fisher, Post ease Ioepeeter t., a