HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-07-08, Page 2Canadian National Exhibition Band Contest
Closes July 25th
'ALL entries must be mailed not later than July 25th:
Cl After that date, it will be impossible to enter your
band in the Toronto Exhibition Band Contest,
Now, right now, you make it a point to see that your town
band competes in one of the classes,
$3150 in Cash Prizes
Special Award Shield. Individual tokens. Every band
classed with others of same size. Every band has an equal
chance. Contest is held on Music Day, Thursday, Septem-
ber 1st, and all competing bandsmen will be admitted to
Exhibition free on this day.
Civic officials of every town, see that your particular town
is represented. Bandmasters and players, interest yourselves
in this exceptional opportunity to bring glory to your own
home town.
The first thing -right now -get the particulars. Find out
all about the test, pieces, the Adjudicators, the list of cash
prizes and the rules. Drop a line at once for this informa-
tion and for entry forms to
The Secretary
Exhibition Band Contest Committee
145 Yonge Street - Toronto, Ont.
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IIBRANCHES
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INCORPORATED 1856
Capital and Reserve $9.0004990 yili
Over 130 Broaches
The Molsons Bank.
There is no safer or surer way of safeguarding
yoursurplus money than placing it in a savings
account with The Molsous Banks.
Why net begin to-dsy? • _ •
IN THIS DISTRICT:
Brucefleld, St. Marys, Kirkton
Exeter, Clinton, Hensel], Zurich.
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W.BAT IS A FARM WIFE WORTH?
(Continued from page a)
TWINE
(ILT EDGE TWINE is long fibre pure Manilla
s•650 feet to the pound, is Government inspected
d guaranteed to work perfectly
22 cents per.pound, cash.
Hay fork .pulleys, 6 inch wheel, each $1.00
Corborundum section files, each $1.00
Long fibre pure Manilla rope, tarred hap loader rope
on hand at rock bottom prices,
Pitch Forks with selected handles, each
Wooden hay rakes, each
Floor hooks, each
Pure English Paris Green, per pound
$1.65
". 50
.20
60
Preserving Season
finds us able to Quote a considerable reduction in
Blue and White Graniteware.
Preserving kettles from $1.00 to $3.25.
Cherrie Stoners, each $1.00
Wire Canning Racks, each $1.00
Wire Strainers, Mixing Spoons,etc.lat reduced prices
Special Sale of Lacqueret Varnish Stain
Pints, while it lasts, 50c; 1/, pints, 25c; 1/4 pints, 15c.
A REAL BARGAIN IN GOOD GOODS.
G. A. Sills &.Sons
"To -night
sure
—on the 4.40!"
For the Quick Service
-- that brings repeat orders
ss
LT me get him . on Long Distance, and I'll soon settle
this" -say's the shrewd business man, as an emergency
g Y
arises. His personality, with the persuasive tones that
helped him build up his business in the old days, is still the
greatest force at his command, and it never fails to bring
the needed results.
Lone Distance pcmtits him to retain that personal contact and influence
with men in distant places, on which his success was built. "If one of
oar travellers fails to secure an important order, he gets me on Long
Distance before the interview is over, and I nearly always land it."
The homer of Long Distance as a business -getter is only beginning
to be appreciated, "Use the 'Bell' to Sell",
and see how economically it produces results.
Many of your Long Distance calls can take
advantage of the Station -to -Station rate. Ask
our Local Manager to explain how, or ask for
our Booklet, "A Few Ways to Speed Up
Business."
Every Bet)
Telephone
is a Long
Distance
Station
Pain is an Indication
of interference with the normal functions of the body. it
is a sign of trouble, and if allowed to continue, causes itself
still further disorders.
Common
Sense and
humanity agree
.that relief from
pain should be
the first step in
the treatment
of any disease which is present. Headache, Neuralgia,
'Rheumatic, Backache, Sciatic and Ovarian Pains, ONE
or TWO
GI DR. %i.'S'
,ANT�
Pain Pills.
HEADACHES AND RNDElfilT/C
Dr. Miles' Anti -Pain Pills
mad the pain is gone. Guaranteed Safe and Sure. Price 30c.
old in Seaforth by
E. UMBAC$ Pbm., B.
'an abuse of flesh and blood to excee
that ameetet of labor.
Then follow this! In reply to
questionnaire sent onte to farm wimp
en throughbut the) country there wet
9000 responses, "These 9,000 volae
stowed that they worked, the yea
'round, winter and summer, 11.8 hours
day, in the Eastern States, in sum
mer, the returns showed that th
average woman worked thirtee
hours, and the average for the whol
country, in summer, was even slight
ly more. Eighty-seven per cent. o
these women reported that they ha
absolutely no vacation ' during th
year. Of the 13 per cent, who re
ported that they were so fortunate.a
to get a vacation, the length of tha
vacation averaged less than twelv
days. The total amount of rest, i
summer, averaged by 8360 women o
the farm proved to be just about on
and a half hours a day.
Linked up with concrete facts lik
these the word "tired" takes on
Itretty definite meaning; and one be
gins to see why it -is that, in spit
of all the clarion calls "back to th
land," Alice and Joan and Baud, wh
quit the farm for the factory a fe
years ago, shake their heads an
turf. wearily back to their automatic
machine tasks. In spite of the grind
ing nature of their work, at least
they are free at the end of the eight-
hour day. At letast they get a vaca-
tion of a fortnight a year --or, if they
don't have it given them, they can
take it. At least they average more
than an hour and a half of rest a
fray in summer. In some industries,
indeed, it has been found good busi
mess to give a rest period during th
hours of work, at the company's ex
pc use.
Of course there is another side to
this. Even with her long day and
the multifarious duties that fall to
her lot, the farm wife does not nec-
essarily envy the woman who sits at
'r. machine for eight hours, with an
environment that is not always agree
able, in a factory which at worst is
vile, and at best is -a factory. She
knows that she is building the future;
that she is in contact with growing,
eital things; that it is home where
.he works; and, above all, that the
subtle influence of love has the power
of ennobling and glorifying even the
hardest work and longest hours. But
this is altogether another thing. It
is not a question of whether the farm
woman is -in revolt against her lot.
II is a question of whether her lot
should be lightened, and if so, how?
And this, I suppose, -is the end of all
the valuable research in farm -home
eronomirs, like that issued by the
States Relations Service of the Fed-
cr•eel Department of Agriculture, from
whi,-h I am taking these facts. The
0.001an of "nu occupation," who has
hitherto known only her own condi•
tion or that of her neighbors, will
now be in a position to view herself
as an ecanimic class.
We find, for instance, in analyzing
the returns from this comprehensive
zu rvey of farm -home conditions, that
til per cent, of the women ---of those,
that, who replied to the questionnaire
-were carrying water for household
Seo an average distance of thirty-
nine feet.
It is almost an axiom among farm.
.•rs that the ane big asset to look
for in baying or selling a farm is a
ciepeeslable supply of running water
at the house and barn. What it
means not to 'cusses= this seemingly
haste cnili'l'vi,'lee 14only to he known
by those who have had a spring go
dry- in midsummer and have to bring
water from a near -by spring in bar-
rels -or by those who have spent
the best part of their Iives and,the
best mosaic's of their back grab inp;
water from a well.
It is not pleasant to learn that "85
per cent. of the homes have water
in the kitchen only, this meaning a
pump or possibly a rubber hose at-
tached to a barrel located inside or
outside the kitchen.
"In 61 per rent. of the homes into
which water must be carried this
work is done by women.
"In 9000 of the seven -roam farm-
houses -this being the average, size
-there are from one to two staves,
not counting the kitchen range. These
acid to the daily work of 54 per cent.
of. the rural women who, when heat
is needed not only carry into the
house the fuel to feed these stoves,
but kindle the fires in the morning
and keen stoking during the day.
"The Eastern section of the coun-
try reports that while 50 per cent. of
the farms have power machinery,
only 12 per cent. have this power ma-
chinery doing any work for the farm
d
a
e•
n
a
e
n
e
f
d
s
n
e
a
t'
w
d -
But "Fil$t4-byes" Brought
Hea$thind Strength -
29 Sr. Itcas Sr., MONTREAL,
"I am writing you to tell you that
I owe my It a ld " ;Flruit-a-Lives". This
medicine relieved me when I had
given up hope of ever being well.
I was a terrible sufferer from
Dys? a -'had suffered for years;
and nothing I took did me any good.
I read about "Fruit -a -lives" and
tried them. After.taking a few boxes,
of this womierftslgmedit•ine made from
fruit juices, I eon ow entirely well"
Madame ROSINA FOISIZ,
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 250.
At all dealers or scud postpaid by
Fruit -as -tires Limited, Ottawa.
e
v. -a man.
"The studies of the poultry special-
ists indicafi,-that 81 per cent. of all
poultry flocks in the country are
cared for by women. In the '.Vticldle
West the pereentage is even higher -
80 per cent."
These are only a few of the ilium-
inating gleanings from the inquiry.
But when yon consider that the hired
girl has practically gone out of ex-
istence, that the laundry work is
mainly done in the farm home by the
farm wife. sod that in addition she
is helping with the dairy, with out-
door field work, with the kitchen gar-
den, with nceoeinting, with the barn
livestock --yon begin to see what that
'C'olor'ado farmer was driving at when
he wrote to his senator not long ago
insisting that farmers should be per-
mitted legally to have at least two
Wives.
This letter of the Colorado farmer
was adjudged to have been written
in all seriousness, i don't know. It
may have been written by some wag-
gish farmer who wanted, with this
direct attack on the conventional
morals, to throw into relief the heavy
burden the farm wife is bearing. But
I do know that the city newspapers ,
fed upon the letter with great gusto I
and made it the basis for the most
comic dissertations in their best col-
lege undergraduate veins. Not one
of them saw the real lesson between !
the iines of the Colorado farmers' '
letter, 'which was that, moral issues
aside, and figuring merely on the I
basis of a farm wife's labor, -the
work now being done by the average
woman on the farm is quite enough
for, twb' women.
I hope the farm wives won't be et.
fended if I pose another question, as
brutal and immoral -,though, of
course I don't mean it to be taken
literally -as the suggestion of the
Colorado farmer- This is the ques-
tion:
"Does it pay to repair a farm wo-
man when she has broken down?"
The experience in the world of ma-
chinery is that, after a certain point
of wear in a machine has been passed,
the owner is money in pocket by
scrapping the machine and buying a
new one. and money out of pocket if
he spends further stoney on repairs.
A cheap automobile is a good case in
illustration. The average farm thy-
vet- is driven hard, often over bad
roads, often overloaded, often neglect-
ed, not treated as all machinery
should be treated -arid all because the
original investment was not large.
There is a tendency to reduce the up-
keep charges to tht• minimum -to
make the flivver go as long as it will
go and then get a m -w one. Obvious-
ly, when the upholstery is leaking
horsehair, and the bearings are worn
Ain, and the cylinders are cracked,
and the whole chassis has the wales
it isn't going to be a good investment
to have the flivver put into a garage
and rebuilt. It costs too much in
proportion to the cocl of a new car.
However, sentin -nt aside. and
viewed merely as an o:•ononlie pro-
position, the farm wife is in about
the same position a' the flivver, isn't
she? She is driven hard, over the
bumpiest kind of domestic roads, re-
gularly overloaded and often neglect-
ed. I don't mean sic,- is neglected by
her huslland. He is in the same boat
with her. They are berth equally the
victims of a vicious economic scheme
by which the res• of the world
wants to ride to !usury on their
backs -and to a great extent has
succeeded in doing i'. Never in your
life did you ever meet a labor agi-
tator, one who had brains enough to
understand conditions as they really
are, who wanted to see farmers have
an eight-hour day or farm wives pro-
tected by the same labor laws with
which factory workers are surround-
ed. It is all too obvious that there
wouldn't be food enough to go round,
and that joy -riding by the non -farm -
log population would come to such a
quick stop that the brakes would
shriek.
Looking back over the lives of
farmers in this country, as those lives
can be read on the tombstones of
cemeteries in rural places, you may
see that this scrapping of worn-out
farm women is cxaetly,what has tak-
en place. In the early farming days
in the Eastern United States it was
infinitely worse than it is to -day. Gcc
into the cemetery in a New England
village and see the three stones that
mark the graves of the three succes-
sive wives of some farmer. Notice
the dates of their births and deaths.
They didn't last many years, as a
rule. Mchitabel lived to be twenty-
nine. Rachel was thirty, perhaps,
when she gave up washing the milk
pans. Alice lived to be twenty-four.
Why did they quit so early? Were
they sickly young women in those
PAINS SO BAD
STAYED iN DED
Young Mrs. Beecroft Had
Miserable Time Until She
Took Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Cmc.—"I have rulTere,l for
the ;: n from a female trouble i
;i.e.,/ u ;... pain mid
;art) le -.pt me in Led tom. er ,
,i,: ,,. eacii :roc:;.h. I nearly went
, and Por actio', a
is 4h' I veil] not do rlv wk.
I saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg':t:,:da
f'oinpnnnd r:dter;:iscd in the Hamilton
Spectator and I took it. Now I have no
pain and am qui ,.'regular unless I over-
work or stay tin my feet from early
morning until late at flight. I keep
house and do all my own work without
any trouble. I have recommended the
Compound to several friend,." -Mrs.
EMILY BEECROFT, 269 Victoria Ave. N.,
Hamilton, Ontario.
For forty years women have been
telling how Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound has restored their
health when suffering with female ills.
This accounts for the enormous demand
for it from coast to coast. If you are
troubled with an ailment peculiar to
women why don t you Ary Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? It is
made from native roots and herbs and
contains no narcotics or barmful drugs.
For especial advice wq sen are asked -to
write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine
Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of forty
years experience is atyotlr-service,
y+e? Tot sb all,; • ttit g were; robeet
-eu11Q We,Osett, courageous' atld . oak
carted. "But Heals 04:bleed couldn't
stand it, ' •
Of souse they- were worked to
death, avid eve*ody now knows it;
very likely many people suspected it
.then but considered it the natural
span of life for a farm woman, and
a glorious end.
I realize that the'farmer husbands
of that older generation have been
described as slave drivers and brutes,
who willingly saw their wives work
themselves to death and cheerfully
went out and picked a new one from
the- large and comely available sur-
plus, It may have been so with so -me.
There have always been brutes and
always will be, perhaps. But you
can find more excuse fpr those old-
time farmers when you read, in this
government' survey of present-day
farm•homes, facts like the following'
Thirty-six per cent. of the women
reporting, besides their other duties,
help to milk the family herd, Fifty-
six•mer cent, take most of the care of
the kitchen garden. Eighty-one per
cent. care for the poetry: Twenty-
five per cent, help with the livestock.
Twenty-four per cent„ help in the
field's an average of 6.7 weeks in the
year.
Mind you,'these present-day farm
women are for -the most part bearing
and raising children. Theyare not
"sending out" the laundry. They
have no hired girls. They are carry-
ing water into. the house an average
distance of 39 feet. They are feeding
the stoves in the winter. Nearly 80
per cent, of them are filling and
trimming kerosene lamps. ' Ninety-
four per cent, are doing their own
baking. Ninety-two. per cent, have
to do their own mending and presum-
ably make their children's clothes,
for the most part.
Of the farm women who reported
on the subject, 35 per cent, were
making butter to sell. Nearly 90 per
cent. were washing the milk utensils.
But when it came to the money accru-
ing from the sale of -the butter, only
11 per cent. reported that they had
the butter money for themselves.
Twenty-two per cent, of ,the women
who cared for the poultry said that
they had that part of the income for
their own. Sixteen per cent. said
they had the egg money. The aver-
age poultry flock was ninety fowls,
Now, nobody would want to make
the rash charge that the modern
farm woman is suffering from bru-
tality or neglect or meanness on the
part of her husband or father. So,
in the face of these records, .it be-
hooves us' to go slow before charging
the former generation of farm hus-
bands with those same qualities. The
answer is to be found, it seems, in
that strange inability of the farmer
to insist that his business be regard-
ed, among other business, as one in
which the laborer must be paid a fair
wage for his work. It is obvious
that, viewed from any economic angle
you please, there are millions of hu-
man beings in this country -mean-
ing the farm women -working with-
out any remuneration whatever, -to
say nothing of what is called "a liv-
ing wage." -
Some mighty interesting figures
came out of the survey concerning
the compensations that come to the
rural woman.
These compensations, we will say,
are schools, church, neighbors, medi-
cal and hospital service, the automo-
bile and the telephone. The five out-
standing problems, according to the
survey compiled by Miss Florence E.
Ward, of the Department of Agri-
culture, are: To shorten the working
clay of the average farm woman; to
lessen the amount of heavy manual
labor she now performs; to bring
about higher --standards of comfort
beauty for the farm home; to safe-
guard the health of the farm family,
and especially ,the health of the mo-
ther and growing child; to develop
and introduce money -yielding home
industries where necessary in order
to make needed home improvements.
To effect these changes, the survey
goes on to suggest the introduction
of improved home equiphlent, princi-
pally running water and power ma-
chinery, and more efficient methods
of household management, including
the rearrangement of the inconvenient
kitchen and the installation of mod-
ern heating systems. Also, by .help-
ing farm people fo understand the
laws of nutrition and hygiene, and
On on. Finally, by cultivating the
idea "that in -vestment in the comfort,
beauty, health and efficiency of the
farm home and community is a wise
and legitimate expenditure."
But one point I.do not find touch-
er] on in the survey: The prices of
farm products- arc too low in com-
parison with the cost of their produc-
tion. The consequent wage of the
farmer and his wife is trio low in
Popular Stallions
LORD MANSFIELD
Imp. 1218671 (16303)
Vol. 29, B. C., S. B.
Passed Enrolment No. 1734 Ferns 1
Will stand for the improvement of stock this
season, as follows:
Monday. -Will leave his own stab'.,' Beech-
wood, and go to John Murray's, dcKillop,
for noon : thence to Allen Rose'. 10th Con-
fusion, for one hour; then to his own stable
for night 'fuevday. To Peter Lindsay a,
Mullett, for noon; thence to Owen Flynn',,
for night. Welneeday--To Wm. Anderson's,
McKillop. for noon; then to his own stable
fur night. 'rhur,decy.• To Dominion Hotel,
Dublin, for noon: then to Joseph Atkinson',,
Hibbert, for night. Friday -To Martin Cur.
tin's, 1% miles cast of Seaforth, fornoon:
then to his own stable for night. Saturday -
To James Flannigan's, Logan, for noon; then
to his own stable, where he will remain until
the following Monday morning.
Terme.-To insure a foal, 813,
James Evans, Proprietor and Manager,
Beechwood, Ont
COL. GRAHAM
(12103)
Approved Enrolment No. 1370 Form Al
Will stand for the improvement of stock
this season, as follows: •
Monday, May 0th. -At noon will leave his
own stable in Egmundville and go north
long the gravel road to Grieves' bridge,
then west to Joseph McFarlane's, for night.
luosday. -Will go west 3% miles to the
Kiuburn Road; then north to Bert Steven -
son's for noon ; then west 3% miles and
south 11 to Andrew Flynn's, for night.
Wednesday. -Will proceed 1e.!, miles south
and east 3+y miles to Malcolm Montgomery's
for noon: then east to his own stable for
night. Thursday. -South 2%h mile ; then east
two miles And one-half to Peter Meteor's,
for noon: then 'north five miles to John
Lane's, for night. Friday. West to the
North Gravel Road end south to hie own
stable, where he will remain until Monday
noon.
Terms to insure a foal -$15,
Dominick Reynolds, Proprietor and Manage
The Premium Clydesdale Stallion
BLACON'S SON
(20869)
Approved Enrolment No. 5272 Form A
'terms to insure --$15.
blsnelay. Will /rave his own stable. Brut
field. and go west 'to the second conceaeio
of Stanley, then north to John Butcherd'e
comparison with the wages aid for Jr'foe ani r; nignht north and west to Ed. Glenn
equivalent physical effort, not to r a ata theay TeB way ieoBan
for
noon to Varna a the the eyn le Roo
speak of mental equipment, for noon; than by way f the Bayfield Roo
to the Gwhen Lino to Arthur Mc mom's ,y's
How much is a fas'm wife worth? tar night, wednenday.-sv McClvmont'e td
The figures indicate that, in the sum road to the Parr Line, then south to win
total of human welfare, she is worth I Fontein, tar non,; then to wullafo M
her weight in platinum or diamonds; I -To of StLi epi he
g y: south
the TownLinn, the
but in so far•as she has made every- i r� K1DDPn pad Hoath to George Glenn's. fo
day 'businesss•see it, in so far as she vn; then by war vf.the London Road k
-has been able to draw down any -- own 'bible. ar ne's.rl, ll Road,
f Frion
'than t George McCs side r Mita Road, fax noon
salary to prove it, she is only,worth than to McAdam's stile road, and north to the
her food and lodging.Ind ctic James
H. It. S., Tuckernmith, then
But the horizon of the farm wife I trait to James Carnochen's, for night. Snt-
nrear.-Wert by ri adfnot'a bridge, then
is not so black to her as it might be 'meth to the Mill Road, to his own stable
to' an investigator. There is a joy in MandayhmorII remain until the following
home slaking that even drudgery can-
not tarnish; there is a satisfaction I R. D. Murdock, Proprietor and Manager,
in doing one's job and doing it well, I The Deeeidc Premium Horse
and not quitting or sniveling; and 1 MAKWIRA (Imp.)
such satisfaction most farm women Na. 15279
•
have. _ Prosed Enrolment No. 3267 Form 1
But they ought to get more than Will stand for the improvement of stock
that. this season as follows:
Monday. -Will leave his own stable. Staffs,
and go west to Riehord Setlery's, for noon ;
• south to the .Cromarty Line then east to hie
Iceland is planning to combine salt awn stable for night, Tuesday. Win leave
production with, contemplated electric James Bollontyne's, Uahorned h vena ry h for
power stations and with mining and night Wednesday. -south to the Thames'
smelting iron. Road and meat to the mb,,,,Elimville Line and
south to Elimville to Joshua Johns', for
noon; then south and east to William
Broek'e for night. Thursday. --South to the
10th conceneien and east three miles and
north to William Thompson, Jr.',, Lot 6,
�.r�r p Concession 9, for noon; then north to the
URINE+ Ou Cannoteny RJtkton Line end west to Taglur'e Aotef,
w Vies
Rirkton, for night Friday, -North to Mount
�New+v es I Pleasant at Jasper Prldham'e, for noon; then
�i/ _. Qint ys o Can roasts O -west and.north to John Hamilton's, for
•��'aF J� ;41;fitlyien"imio9 night Saturday. -North to the 7th ceases-
U��•d.�(se atop alfa west to the Oentre Road and south
L` Eye Remedy' to his own atelia, where he will remain
and Humins." - _ untB the following- Monday morning.
Hee) rem'i beattTlean.t Clear and Webby. Tprma to lnsnro--416,
Write iertefeo•L!yecaie£OOk, . John Livngstono, Proprietor and Manager.
NodeCybBemedree„9Ce610ltieStrasheetca s
INVOLUCRE
121451 (82966)
Passed Enrolment No. 854 Form 1•
Will travel the following route this seasons
Monday. --Will leave his own stable, Brum-
field, and Severed west to Varna at Sher-
lock Keys'. (Sr noon ; then north into Gode-
rich Township to the Rayfield concession and
wet to A. A. Welsh's, for night. Tuesday. -
North by way of 6th concession to Porter's
Hill at George Vanderburg's, for noon: then
north to Jame McMillans. 6th concession,
Coderich Township, for night. Wedneday.-
lie way of Jewel's Corners and Benmiller to
W. ifill's, for noon: then by way of Maitland
oneoysion to Holmesville at Harry Sweet's.
for night. Thursday. -By any of 16th con-
cession to A. 'I'ownsend's. for noon; then by
way of Huron Road to Berry & Cameron's
Carriage Shop, Clinton, for night. Friday. -
South by way of the London Road to his
,wn stable, nrucefleld, for noon; then west
P', miles and onuth 1,4 miles to John
Murdock', for one hour; then to his own.
stably for night. Saturday. -South 2% miles,
and east 1,4 miles to Robert Elgies, for noon;
thin by way of the Mill Road to his own
stable fog night.
The above route will lie continued through-
nnt the season, health and weather per-
mitting.
Terms. -To insure. $16.66.
William Perry, Proprietor,
Passed Enrolment No. 5464 Form ii
Pure Bred Percheron Stallion
MARSHALL GUEDO
8091
Will stand for the improvement of stock
this swoon a follows:
Monday -Will leave his own stable, I:ot
25, Conemsion 7. McKillop, and proceed to-
Seaforth at the Royal hotel. for noon; them
south to John McElroy's, Tuckersmith, for
night Tuesday. --East to Joseph Nagle'e,
for mon I then to Dublin at the Dominion
Hotel for night Wednesday. -To Joseph
McQuaid's, for noon; then to W. Flanni-
gan a. Lot 2. Concession 6, McKillop, for
r. night Thursday. --To Peter Bicknell's, for
noon; then to his own stable for night.
Friday. -To Henry Buerman s, Logan, for
noon: then to S. Ellison's, Lot 5, Concession
12, Logan. for night. Saturday -To AndrewPetric'
I wherek'hefor will remain emainnre unt l his the followible
ng
Monday morning.
e' Terms. -$14 to insure, payable January 1,
n Io22. All accidents to mares at risk or
• mvnors.
•J. Murray, Man.; Jos, Brewster. Prop --
I
EMPEROR McKINNEY
i
e i
[1653]
• I Approved Enrolment No. 4075 Form At
- The Standard Bred Trotting Stallion will
n stand fpr the improvement of tock this
r ,canon foot' his own stable. hot 9, Concession •
4, Tucker,mith. Mares from a distance will
y- be met port ot- the way.
Terms. -To insure. $15.00.
Charles Riley, Proprietor,
S,
The Pure Brod Clydesdale Stallion
GOLDEN GUINEA
• (2073a)
Enrolment No, 1275 Approved Form r
Will stand for the improvement of . steak thin
season, no follows:
I Tuesday. -Wilt leave his own stable, Huron
I Road, three miles wet of Seaforth, and go.
t Commereia7 lintel, Clinton, for 'noon;
thou by way of IJuron Dend and Holmesvilfe
lin, Osenr Tebvtt'e, 4or night, Wednesday,—
way of Maitland Coto Ben fo -John
Durst',, for noon; then to Benmiller and
Heron Road to Wilmot Beadles-', for night-
'rheradey. To the '7th concession, Gbderich
Township to Fred Pickard's, for noon'; then -
to William Vodden's, Telephone Road, for
night. Friday. -Dy way of Telephone Road'
to Fred Pepper'e, for noon; then to hin
own stable, Huron Road, for night, where
he will remain until the following Tuesdes
morning,
C. W. Nott, Proprietor, - -
The Pure Bred Clydesdale Stallion-
RANTIN ROBIN
No. 21685
Prosed Enrolment No. 6697 Form le
Will stand for the improvement of stock,
this semen at hie own stable, Lot 24, Con-
cession 4, Meliillop, except Saturday After-
noon from one to six o'clock, when he oral,
be at the Royal Hotel Stables, Seaford,.
Percy Smith. ns nan
Proprietor l and Maae[er: