HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1926-01-28, Page 5Thursday, ,,Tarattary 28th, 1920,
$U$Iti1ESS CARDS
""'"""-^.
lIDL1 YE,1 OLIVE
*tweeter, Solicitor, Notary Public
Wttl,, Office ort Hamilton. Street,
t off the ;square, Croderich, Priv
lalbn funds to loan at lowest rates.
ate. :;: oboes will be in Hensall en
Friday of each week.
*Milroy F, Hess, Township Clerk
Mew or marriage licenses, Notary
Sys Hyy, Commissioner, Fire and Ant.'
' gi,Iteli le Insurance, Renrepenting
`' and Erie Mortgage Corpora•
rte, The Canada Trust Co. Zurich,
'f3i►n�la, �
R. Knapp, D. D. S., L. D. S»
DENTAL SURGEON i
OFFICE
HENSALL
SAM OFFICE
><1RICiIRA44D
PU'f `YOUR
Wants Ft,r "-Sale, Lost,
Found, Noxice, Etc. Ads
IN THIS COLUMN
FOR SALE -
Flax seed for feeding your lstock
at $2.50 per bushel.
Fred. 0, Kalbfleisch, Zurich 30-5
OSCAR SLOW'
Iliraduate Carey Id. Jones Nat -
* nal School of Auctioneering. Try
lime for Registered Live Stock
Terms in keeping
113• prevailing
Will 43reeclerices. Choice
111310r� for sale. pWill sell anything,
Vtiejswhsske+ 93 or write, Zurich.'.
Bone 18
Licensed Auctioneer
Licensed Auctioneer for County
ail Huron. In a position to con -
*net any auction sale, regardless
Ifis to s1ze or articles to Bell' I-
soliciit Your business, and it not
satisfied will make no charges for
services' _Dashwood.
Arthur 'Weber,
ellose 13-57
116.
Zurich Meat
M A R K fT
_,___r__...am
Fresh and Salt Meats
Sausages, etc
$tplog sra
Highest Cash Price for H DES
ool
CASH FOR SitINS
De1Chor
;ZURICH LIVERY
)E em in a position to accomo-
Mate all requirements •iu. the Livery
have Auto for hire. Any-
issB' done in the teaming line.
GEORGE J. THIEL
Zurich
• G. S. ATNZNSON
- L. D. S., D. D. S.
DENTIST
iIIZETBR, ONT. Phone 34
`.It BAYFIELD Every Wedneaday
OVENINGS IN EXETER BY AP-
POINTMENT
1,1VE
POU LT R
WANTED:;
`ken every day till 3 Ocloek p.m.
Db. not teed four% garde morning
*SSW bhought in.
Highest Cash Prices
--C•LSH FOR ---
Cream and ,Eggs
W. O'Brien
Bid,
Zurich .
Trans-
• • • AtIanhic
at famous five tube Set
Eelerbrity, clear tone, '.. "distance.
`W'li l sttrpasa anything in Radio
that costs up to $184).0O.
Ktylhing but the beat in Batteries
and equipment goes with nay
T eis •bot Olg Ti IE AIR every de-
-
nail complete for $130.00. and
guaranteed for one rear, If its
*alio I have ve it , Pod the safes
ars right. 111. `
S. WEIN; - Prop.
EMABWOOlis MOTOR SERVICE
NOTICE
My accounts aro new ready'and
any person indebted' to me, kin-
dly call at onee and .settle lsamrae
Fred Thiel, Zurich.
i
STRAYED
Unto my premises on Dec. 31st,
1425, Lot 13th, conn. S.B,, Stanley
Township, a two-year-old heifer,
Owner can have same by proving
property and paying expenses.
Emanuel Reichert, R.It.1.
FOR -SALE
A good dark bay driving horse
5 years old. Apply to Asericki
Meson, St. Joseph.
FOR SALE
10 -inch grain grinder in
condition, L. Prang..
good
FOR SALE
A goad pair of Ladies ;skates
annd shoos, size 6. Apply at
Central Telephone Office.
i
FARM FOR SALE
Consisting of 9% acres being Lot
7, con. 10, Hay Township. Soil
is of a good rich clay loam, well
drained and fenced and in high
state of cultivation. There is on
the premises a fine hardwood bush.
of eight acres, good frame house,
bank barn and other outbuildeings
For further particulars apply Jon
premises.—Daniel Truetnner, R.R. 3,
Zurich, Ont.
FOUND
A Buffalo Robe on Town Line,
Hay and Stanley. Owner can have
same by proving property and
paying for this adv. from Chas. S.
Bedard, R.R.,2 Zurich. '
Dr. H. H. COWEN
L. D. So D. D. S.
DENTAL SURGEON; 7
At .DEITZ BLOCK, ZURICH ev-
ery Thursday, Friday and Satur-
day.
Main Office
BARTLEIB'S BLOCK, DASHWOOD
COAL
POCAHANTAS
COKE
Miller Crack
Soft Coal
GOOD SUPPLY ON RAND
Case & Son
PHONE 35 HENSALL -1T
. ESM MEETS
Mr. Raymond Fisher of s leitch-.
quer is visiting at- hiss hone,
Mr. John, Geiger of Pigeon,Mieli
is 'visiting with,.his daughter, Mrs,
John Gascho and other relatives
and friends.
Reeve B. F. Klopp is , attending
the January meeting of the Huron
County council at Godornilif, '
Mr, Milne Rader, 14th con. has
treated himself attd family to a
new Stronvberg-,Carlson Radio
Set. Punccased from W. G. Hees
& Sons, authorized dealers.
The auctions sale of household
effects held by Mr. A„ Melick on
Wednesday afternoon, brought out
a large crowd of people who soulni
bought up the • ariicles offered for
sale.
•
Mr. Thomas McMillan, M;. P. for
South Huron delivered a very
elequent and noteworthy address
in the House of Commons, Ottawa
last Thursday. And South Huron
is being well repre4sented bylthis
stalwart Liberal.
We have now on the way a car
of genuine Consolidated Pocah,on
tis Lump and car genuine •Con-
solid'ated Miller Creek Lump, al-.
so expect soon a car Furnace Egg
Coke. Place your orders early for
these shipments. D. A. Cantelon
Phone 10, Hensall.
During the year 1925 more life
insurance was written in Canada
than ever before. People are be-
ginning to .realize more and more
the 4lue and perrnancy of tilife,
insurance. There is no surer way
of provi_ling for comfort in later
years and that of your dependents
if you do not survive. Beforein-
suring get rate, plans, eteefrom
A. F. Hens, Zurich, local agent.
LATE HOLLAND LITTLE{.
There passed ,sway at hia-,horn?.
at Hensall on Tuesday Jan 19th,
Holland Little, a highly respected
resident of that village and afor-
mer resident of Zurich, '"Holly"
as he was known by his Zurich.
friends, came to this part over
twenty years ago from the State
of Pennsylvania, where he .stillhas
relatives. .When he first caniehere
he practised horse dentistry, af-
ter disposing of this business he
took up painting, paper - hanging
and decorating which he continued
as long as he could work. He
was a -.member of the Hensall hand,
and one of the. original members
of the Zurich Jubilee Band, was
a Presbyterian and in polities a
Conservative. Zia was a good has
band and parent and leaves to
mourn his death hiF widow, a
young son and two" daughters, •h•^
had been in poor health for some
time and had underwent several
operations which did not improve
him any. The bereft: family have
the. sympathy of their many Zur-
ich friends.
FEB. ROD AND GUN
Still further ini.iprov.ements in
the appearance and contents of
the miagasine Rod and Gun is
shown, in the February number,
which has just been ,issued. There
is a g ood line-up..o2 Isporti )g re-
ading material in- this! issue and
good illus'tratin'g 'in also a feature
of the number, •The series of de-
scriptive arcticles, A. Bryan Wil-
liams' Breezes frci'm the West and
Raymond Thompson's In the Big
Woods of Canada, continue with.
interesting insitalments, while com-
plete stories, fictitious, true • and in
structive, are of outstanding merit
A short sketch of. Outdoor Lit
from the pen -of F. B. Duod, en-
titled October Days, in a gem of
its kind. A poem of great merit,
Nocturne of the Prairies, by David
Howarth is also noe of the feet -
urea of the issue,. James Frise's
cartoon. in this' issue is anothee
masterpiece of huruororts art, with
it flavor of the otztdoorsj. • •Rcid•
and Gun is publiished monthly by
W. .T. Taylor, Ltd. Woodstock,:
Ontario. :.
S. HURON AGRIC. SOCIETY
Carl McClinchey, Edgar and Wal'
ter McBride were to Hensall on
Friday night. • -, •
The regular meeting of the
Mission Bandwill be held in the
church on Saturday afternoon, Jan
fiOth,a good attendance is re-
quested.
W. M. S.—The Wontesr,'s Mission-
ary Society niet at the home of
Mrs. Robert McBride on Wednes-
day, January 20th at 2.39 p. nu.
The President ,Mrs. Finlay in the
chair. The meeting opened with
siiiging hymn 388 after which Miss
Mary Johnston led in, prayer. The
Wide responsive reading was„ ta-
ken front Matt. 6, 1:13. the minutes
of the December meeting weret
read and adopted. I. Theire were
nineteen members present at this
Meeting and each answered • the
roll call vi'thi a `verse er t3eripture
Then sang hymn 798, Mika Mary
Johnston then gaire a• reading out
of the jubilee book. ' and sang.
hymn 556 and closed the meeting
by repealing the Lard's prayer in
In spite of rain and bad road
there was a good attendance at
the annual m +eting • of the Sheath
Huron Agricultural Society, held
in the Ccaa_n_rn_ercial Hotel at Ilen-
sa11 on Monday last. The Treas-
urer's statement showed a subst-
antial balance at the end of the
year, and the Directors decided at
this meeting to largely increase the
prize money offered at the annual
Seed Show, to be held in the Town
Hall, Hensall, on Friday, February
26th. Tho date of the annual Sp-
ring Show was set for Tuesday,.
April 6th; and the premium list
for this will also lie increased.The.
following officers were elected;.-
President, Wm, C'onsitt, Hensall; 1st
Vire, W. D. Sanders, Exeter; 2nd
Vieem Dr, Campbell, Hensall; Sec;
Tress„ Keith McLean, S>afoOrth
,
Auditors, f1. Arnold, A. McDonell;
Directors,, Robc. McLaren, H. 0,
Soldam, W. W. C'h'apnean, C, Canip-
bell, John Manson, Oscar Klopp,
OWen Geiger, W. R. Dougall, Mat
Clark, T. Sherritt, Bert Deck, Rt
D. Bell, J .A. Fleming, Harry Neab
Wilt.. Pepper.
RK TRIG LIVESTOCK
HOW CONDITIONS HAVE .CHANG-
ED TN HALF it CENTURY,
Local Butchers vs, Abattoirs—Spread
of Present System --- Other Live
Stock Agencies—The Butcher and
Partner Still Operating.
(Contributed by Ontario Department of
Agrico•ture Toronto.)
The marketing machinery that has
been set up to.l'iandle and dispose of
the Ontario farmers' largest cash
revenue product—live stock—is the
result of three comparatively recent
economic developments: (a) the
growth of relatively large urban cell-
tres whose meat supply can no•longer
be wholly , supplied from local
sources; (b) the rapid strides made
during recent years in improving the
year round distribution of fresh and
cured meats, and (c) the economies
effected by large scale operation of
the business of meat killing, curing
and storing.
How Conditions have Changed.
Previous to ,fifty years ago the
population of the province was large-
ly rural. The meat supply of those
actually on farms was automatically
found, while that of the urban dwell-
ers in the villages grid small towns of
that day was provided by direct con-
tact between the producer and con-
sumer. In the few larger towns or
cities, where there was sufficient de-
mand, the meat supply in addition to
the above method,, was supplemented
by the local butcher, who performed
two general functions, (a) providing
fresh meat at retail in all seasons;
(b) acting as middleman betweey
producer and consumer when `the
population of the centre became large
for the immediate locally produced
supply, or for proper contact for pest
service between producer and con-
sumer. These local butchers became,
so to speak, butchers and drovers.
The centres to which they consigned
this surplus stock were naturally the
larger ones, growing and destined to
continue to grow because of natural
advantages as distributive centres.
Consumption of meat was large.
Local, direct producer -to -consumer
supply in the carcass was limited,
therefore the abattoirs and slaughter
houses were relatively large.
Abattoirs vs. Local Butchers.
These large abattoirs had four im-
portant operating advantages over
the local butcher businesses in the
smaller centres: (a) larger volume of
business meaning smaller unit oper-
ating costs; (b) a more varied con-
sumer demand for all parts of the
animal; (c) a better opportunity to
develop ,uses and markets for mors
edible by-products; (d) volume suffi-
cient to find and develop distant and
foreign markets.
Spread of the Present System.
These advantages gradually' creat-
ed a new direction to the flow of live
stock from farm to consumer. Briefly,,
the readjustments were as follows:
Tho larger abattoirs and packing
plants began to supply meat products
to other cities and towns previously
supplied by local butchers because
their lower operating costs and abil-
ity to supply the exact products re-
quired for consumption in these
places overcame the advantage of the
local butchers' nearness to supply of
raw materials. These larger abat-
toirs could also handle most efficient-
ly all stages of slaughtering, process-
ing and disposal of by-products, there-
fore, the increasing surplus animals
began to flow to these larger centres
on hoof rather than as dressed car-
casses. This also necessitated the
establishment of central live stock
markets where producers and sellers
of live stock could assemble and
grade their offerings and meet the
buyers on common competing ground.
Other Live Stock Agencies.
Thus we find the origin of such
live stock agencies as the railway, the
market, the live stock commission
man and the packer buyer all ren-
dering essential service in disposing
of the farmers' live stock. Since
many of the above agencies act an
behalf of a large number of small,
isolated and distant producers, in-
dividually lacking influence and
acquaintance with this complex mar-
ket mechanism, much distrust and
suspicion, largely unwarranted, has
arisen snaking it necessary for the
Government to step 1n as an addi-
tional marketing agency, on the one
hand to enforce such regulations on
the other agencies as are deemed
necessary to create public assurance
of honest buYiness practices, and on
the other hand to act as an educe-
,.tive medium, through its Supply,
grading, and price service, to assist
producer to more accurately and
rapidly interpret that consumer de-
mand, on a knowledge ,of which de-
;;iends ultimate success in 'Prielaction.
The local butcher in city, towin•gpd
village,obeying and killing hia own
animals, has not been entirely dis-
placed by 'the meat retailers buying
from Central packing houses. The
farm still automatically supplies the
most of the meat consumed by farm
families. also a percent
/tap_
of the de-
mand in steelier centres—Wile the win-
ter months. It is not a matter of
wonder, t ierefere, with no large
rural 'and small town population of
Ontario 'that to -day somewhat less
than one-half the anneals raised for
meat find their way to market
through the large markets and pack-
ing Lietch, Dept, Farm
oirostllcs, QA.C,., Guelph,
Spray Muptard.
Iron sulphate can bo euccessfylly,
uled to destroy
mustard in standingg
'grain without injury to the atop. Use
20 .per cent. solution, dissolving 80
pounds of iron sulphate in 40 gallons
of water, or 10 pounds copper sul-
phate to 40 gallons of water. Strain
into the spray tank and apply on a
calm day, just as soon as the first few
fates in the field show (lowers.
eee .....r ,_N
Paco IT
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rImpiements.
Pumps,Pi pin and Fittirigs
Also install our Pumps
Storage Batteries, Hot Shots
y
and Telephone Batteries
Telephone
Tires, ,Tubes, Greases and Oils
L. A. Prang, Prop.
ott •
•
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•
• Garage! Garage!
•
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•
We are in a position to Eepair
•
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• any make of Car.
0
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i Also do Battery charging and
•
• Repairing. Store your battery
:with us for the winter0.
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P. EROIF, Mechanic
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0essa 9tiessee cess•11Hs434'1osC4ssawe-"vai
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eStil giPsadirJ3 a45:2.a;n1+14®O►
PROTECTIO
Get one of Our Auto Tops
They will protect you from t h e
cold winds and will make Winter
mot(nng a pleasure
IF YOU WANT SERVICE, WE HAVE 'IT
WE RERUBIIIin YOUR BUGGY WHEELS.
HESS - ZURICH
+++++++++++++++++++++++++F
GYPROCK
THE FIREPROOF WALL BOARD. Is wail plaster cast its
+ sections, flexible, light and easy to handle. It can be nailed
and sawn like lumber, and. comes all ready in sheets for use,
The carpenter simply nails It to the joist or studding or over
the old plaster and the wall is finished, no dirt to clean up;
no time lost for drying, ready at once for Alabastine Paint;.
Paper or Panels.
,Can be used with splendid results for partitions, for ceil-
ings, for the attic or repairing old plaster. Let as furnish the
building material for your repair work now while it is Black.
Good supply of Roofings, Sidings, Shingles and slumber in
stock at reasonable prices.
SAW LOGS WANTED AT ALL TIMES.
•+a+++++++++++++++ Set
e
C. KALBYLEISCTI
NO ra
ZURICH
e+e++++++•+.-a+++++,r++++t++++++ a+++++++++++++++++++++++
i•--F—F—+—t+—+—f—+—+—+-=+-- +--+—+—+—+—+—+—+—+—+-
;Dollar for Dollar
VALTJES ON SUITS, ETC,
1Yes, even more than'
iyou expect for your
t Clothing Dollars
STYLES
WHATEVER YOU DESIRE
WOOLLENS
FROM THJ3 FINEST LOOMS.
+ TAILORING
iI`he Custom Tailoring Variety,
PRICES
Second to None.
W. HOFFMAN
r•
i
t
Iv1ERCIiANT TAILOR. W. E.
HOFFMAN & SON UNDERTAKE
AND,FUNItRAL DIRECTORS. Day and Night Phone No. 86.
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