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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1932-09-02, Page 5•vistt +r : tr 80VMM 2, .932. Parliament : Will Meet .Soon .Continued from page )' Notching to hinder, and pllenty to en - se urage, Almemioaa 3ndtustr r to meett the news cand4i tions ib r locating here, Even the proposed restriction of 60 'per cent. "elmipiire teentemltr' of labor and material can be cornpiiled with. Ports Hope for Benefits. !Canadian sports allay benefit :mart the provision • that, to twaill. of the pireferences, exports Mush go through them. The advantage Nero', however, inlay be offset byeretaliatory reritri'c- lions on the ,outside. Canadian grain can be withheld.from' American ports -when the destination is Enngland, but, .mit the same• tiine, .merican' grain aaan be withheld from 'Canadi'an ports. 5o it is as broad as it is long. Parliament Act Soon. Parliament will be meeting this call to ratify the agreements and, then, de other things. It) is not dif- ficult to discover points of criticism. +On'e is that +Canada has tied itself up ito the United Kingdom and the other i. Dlamrnlo ns for a period of five years. '4t is a perfectly legitimate question xis to whether, by so dosing, sh.e is not "dashing" or imperiling her for- •eign export trade by ,inviting restric- tions equivalent to the prefer'ent'ial en'opo'sals. The prableeru is whether the. advantages secured really cern- epensate for the effects' which are po- tential on outside trade. Political Consequences? There is bho further question of political conse,quen'c'e, That Premier Bennett has increased his stature, *here cannot be much- question, even quarters. The .man on the street tho'u'gh.discontent is manifest in some tahinks it a 'pretty good bargain, con-- aeidering everytl'1}ng, and is disposed to give credit to the one who, pr•e- tsiding at the cai+t^feremce, is the logi- cal heir' to the hurrah, or to much of it. The enduring value of ;this fever, ,However, is open to debate. If'•pros- perity comes ,back, ail will be well. If it doesn't, in a re'ason'able time, the r'eacliion will be unfavorable ani neutralizing of the present raise. +FT:iblic ithemoriee are liable to be ephemeral. The a,greem:ents, In ore than any- thing else, are designed to help the ,primary producers. They are mainly in the W-ekt, where, the great volume of wheat -:Canada's greatest export t -is produced. iUiSwever, the western farmer cannot' be counted on. He ie n'iT'eady doubting -the value. of a -wheat 'preference anal saying it was not pressed Thr. Moreover, he is Ray- ing that his 'problem is not one of tariffs at all but of money. He wants monetary reform• -inflation of cur - fancy, inflation of prices, the scut- tling of the gold standard. The .ehances are against him getting anything of the kind. The confer- ence declined to consider •"fake" miesetar•y remedies. But opinion, de- rnanding .such r•eforn'i'a, however .xsue• tiona;ae e•conanlically• is very 'w'•olu.rvinous. if they don't get what .they want in this way, they may 'well he Inclined not to give any •cr dit for what after laborious' days ,zsnd nights, they have got other- , wise. WINTHROP TYi& IV. M. S. and Ladies' Aid of Cayan Church will meet at the home •tof Ml's, Calvin Millen on Tuesday, eeepternber 66th., Circle No. • 1 will +ave charge of the mee'ti'ng and ar- ran:gements will be. made for the Presbytery meeting.' 'Mr, Hiram 'Blanchard, of Shirgeon Falls, has been visiting with rela- tive:; in the village. IMr, and .Mrs. Andy Coutts and 'children., of 'Walton; spent Sunday with Mr. and 'Mrs'. Percy Little • School re -opened on T.hursclry. We -welcome our new teacher, an s$ 'Patrick. Mists `Irene Bolton is visiting with friends im Toronto. Bliss Minnie 'Wheatley spent a couple of days this week with hes ,~:ousin, Miss Blanche Wheatley, of 1iin+burn, Mies Ferne Wheatley has been en- • •aged to teach near Heas'all, Con- gratulations, Ferne. • • The Stupendous Wager Robert Ruggend'orf, the heaviest man in Germany, died recently at Ruisburge An enormous being, he weighed -181a stone and made a liv- ing by exhibiting his prodigious hulk. He could not travel by train except in a goods truck, so he toured in a motor lorry capable of carrying a mean-.m.ou•ntain•, whose flesh and fat approached a quarter of a ton. The front door of his house had to he twice as wide as that of his neigh- borre. Big as he was, Robert the Ger- man was almost a middle -weight compared with Edward Bright, an Englishman, who 'weighed 44 stone when he died.• He measured five feet .eix inchea round' the chest, six feet eleven inches round the abdomen, and two feet six inches round the middle ‘of his anm. He was never exhibited but went about his business as a grocer until increasing weight brought him to his deathbed. After Bright's death, a wager was laid that five men, each twenty-one years of age, could be buttoned in his • waistcea,t. The bet was decided at the Black Bull, Malden, and won with bwo men to spare, as semen normal amen were fastened in his waistcoat without straining a stitch. Bright left a wife and five children. His •dispositi'on was cheerful, his appetite not greater than that of many men, butt he drank a. galldn of ,beer a day for years before he died, when they had to cut through the wall and staircase of 'his house to get out his coffin. Daniel Lamlbert, the biggest man on• record, surpassed Bright 'to a far greeter extent than Bright ex- ceeded the German. A few days be- fore his death, Lambert weighed 52 atone 11 lb. This stupencjoun man measured nine feet four inches round the •body and thirty-seven inches round the leg. His tailor charged him twenty !pounds for a suit. Born at ,Leicester, Lambert was no. freak with only his size to cornmlend -him. He could carry five hudred- weight with ,'ease, a 4 +ether-, a per- forming bear was rea>u1-ing a dog in the street, Lambert beat the infuris aterl beast with his fiats until he let the grog go and -backed out fief the flight. Ass young man he was a wonderful swimmer, +hie mammoth bu& floating so high in the water that his (back made a raft on which two ordinary men found sup1 ort. !Lamlbert's father, a man of ordin- ary build, was keeper of Leicester prison. When he. retired, Lamlbert succeeded him, Quid from the way he treated the prisoners it is clear that he had a heart befitting his great body. • As a prison governor, he was undoubtedly far in advance of his, time. 'On retirement, he received a life pension. But he was driven into the show- man business because his enormous size made a show ef him wherever he went. He had to choose between shutting himself up, for life or going out into the world to make money. So he launched out •as showman in the grand manner, living in Picca- dilly, and staging 'himself before the most influential people. He was a great success as an exhibition and died in harness at Stamford, Lincoln- shire, where he gave a printer ordere for his slhow!bills overnight and was dead 'befo•re nine the next morning. Lambert was forty when he died, Bright died at thirty, and the Ger- man at forty-seven, proof that dis- ease was their fate from birth, and that a man fat enough to get money as a jiving show has no enviable lot, and''lias not much time in which to spend his earnings. "Get A Horse" Days It was in 1905 that this continent first began to take the aetumobile seriously. There were 50.0O cars in Canada and the United States as the year ?began, and •factory schedules were' set to add 35;000 more, . There was still a bit of jolting. "Didn't the boys lynch him?" asked a vaudeville comic that',wear. "No." answered the other. "lip one dared So near him. He was in an auto- micbile." The old cry "Get a horse" had:almost. grown hackneyed. Wen were 'beginning' to compare the horse with the •mairhine and fled the animal wanting. A two-seater run- about could be maintained for $350 a year. 'Maintenance of a horse cost around $500 a year. And then there, was the matter of speed. H. L. Bowden, in an eight - cylinder Mercedes, reached a world's record speed 'of '100 miles an hour in. February of that year-tvs ice the 'rate of the fastest racehorse alive., Men t c'Obed their eyes and began to see ell kin s of possibilities in the horse - less vehicle. C. N. \V'illlnres, author of the first automobile novel, "The Light - nit;; Conductor," became rhapsodic: "If every worried man, every over- worked men and every unhappy Mace co'.lid ,horrow. buy or steal a motor car, most of the insane asylums vec'nld in t•iree be shut up. No ,man `i!1 less a woman. can •be dull' and "Cr:;se`;e, a motor Cttl'. There was a feel in 1901 that thin new cure-all was to be an especial been to the upper strata of the social '1rrh i', The Automobile Club of Amer- icra numbered among •its several hun- dred members some of the richest r'ene .and when D. H. .Morris, presi- dent, laid down a historic set of t'rivet's rules he emphasized: "Don't fail to be a gentleman under any provocation." There was a great deal -of talk in those 'days of the gentleman driver find captions on new cars real alorg these lines: "New type of gentleman's toe rii g roadster." Wealthy owners of • automobiles saw in the growing movement `to tax and license their machines a• subtle clan.; dierrimin'atio'n. They hailed the on'n- ion ef Attorney -General Sturtevant of Wisconsin that all bill?gto license and number• a itoin"bile•s were uncors`i- tutional • Sturtevant reasoned- "It is Y.r,constitu•tional in that it,,,u'rjustly and arbitrarily' classifiers pers•one end. imposes, hindrances upon a portii•n of the same class not common to all." Newspapers and magazine:; were filled in 1905 with photographs of fit-,..eus millionaires in their new automotbiles. One memorable photo- graph shows Aurirew Carnegie sitting p: oudly in the font driving e•r'at of his new limousine. The u•^_aithy weren't sure just where a man night to sit in these new-fangled contrap- tions. In June, 1905; came an announce- ment, however, that forever destroy- ed the aristocratic flavor of motor- ing. For in June Henry Ford an- nounced he would !build a $400 run- about -10,000 of them in 1906. The aristocrats shivered slightly. Their day was over. There was never much talk after that of gentlemen an 1 automorbiles. -?InCwL>m`''4'i(ai• ';•%Sji fi. �tL FARM NOTES Careless Handling Causes Lower Prices. A retro'rt received .by the On- tario M,er'.eeti.n:g Board atet'es that, in an effort to inth2?e apple growers to preverat thee bruising of apples during harvesting and packing, R. S. Marsh of Illinois College of Algr'i- eulture, cites marketing s'tudie's which have revealed wide diffetrences in market prices as a result of nvefth- ods of .handling fruit in- orchard's. In one case, he said that there was a ,difference of 65 per cent. between prices received -for apples at th:r terminal market in ronseq•wence of the method of harvesting and grad- ing. liy that poolkahk. or, raw here 'bee welt suppllie,,d eitiT green feed and i sociis tap to*,puilleltie arewelt ' red Wolli,ngters me .azatle sat aWipaTent l-- erel} Ip Over tace0 *Air in 'cern borer fine e'stalriaai, 'i iel4i's toff14.14 eraged well• sever 8!0 bush e'ls, to The acre. Tomatoes and' corn made splens. said growth during the mouth 'a8 Aug - wt. Rush is prevalent in Leeds Coun- ty, particularly on late oats. Grass- hopper damage is reported in sone sections. Make the Meadows Pay. Ontario usually has about four and one-half million acres of hay caws eaoli year. gin passing 'across the province just 'before hrayin'g one can- not help feeding that many of ,these acres are not paying the taxes and the cost of handling' the crop., Statis- tical reports indicate an average yield of only one and pace -half tons to .the acre and this' can certainly be much imlproved upon. For the meadows, good drainage and :s'w'eet soil are very important. Roots of grassett, and clover's are slow to 'penetrate wet e „,errs, stud wherever there is a surplus of water on the soil, air is, shut out and hence the bacterial life is either weakened or killed. Another point in Meadow im.provemen't is the n•se of high quality seed. If poor seed is used the meadow starts out with a •handicap. Good drainage, good seed, and a liberal sutptpdy of suitable fert- ilizer make profitable meadows,. Alfalfa Ensilage. Full bloom appears to be the best time to cut alfalfa for ensilage. Wilting alfalfa for five hours int - peeves the quality of ensilage and is recommended for this crop. The ad- dition of 25 per cent, of timothy to alfalfa seems to improve' its quality as ensilage, while a mixture of corn and alfalfa produces an excellent en- silage. The ad'd'iction of molasses at the rate of .two. to four ,per cert. and crude sugar at the rate of one to twc pier cent. improves the quality of al- falfa ensilage. The addition of salt does not ap- pear to inl'prove the quality of' alfal- fa ensilage., whale, the addition of lime resulted in such a poor quality of ensilage that the corws did not eat it. Alfalfa eat in full bloom and plac- ed in the silo .w:'thout cutting pro- d'u'ces a rotted material which *is not fit for feed. Storing alfalfa in the silo for per- iods v'ary'ing from' three to nipe months a'ppear's to have no adverse effect on its feeding quality. Killing Couch Grass. Exposure of couch grass' roots to the sun for a few days in hot sum- mer is one of the 'n•osrt effectiee ways of ridding the soil of this past. Under fay orabie• weather eondi'tin'1s p035ible to kill conch • era", roots. completely by two or three days' ex- pesure, .but with the presorsa cf nic :et•r•e they will retain thee' vital- ity for some time, ,It is dif b uit to Sill couch grass roots under humid ee-neitions., and 'p!o•a'inlg wrier couch ors is of comparatively little use it destroying it, even when plowed as 'deep as 15 inches. • The spread of ,the,plant is through •the root.s'vstem and the only effective Way of e'Iinlin- atin;T it is • to work • the rhoes nn where the sun can get at there and •burn or dry the vitality out of therm. Weekly Crop Report. ileeerbt rains haws heir•cd the new seedings of clover, while pas- tures except in Eastern Ontario,. Erre excellent. Harvesting is about com- plete(' and threshing has' prn'gr eeeed ,favoralbly. Yields of wheat and l;ar- ley are average but oats are quit' light. A cons•idlerabite amount off ef- ter-harvest cultivation is being done in the tobacco districts of Sout'iern (intario. A large 'acreage 'of secmri •cutting of alfalfa wars handled in Hialdiniand. Red clover, fields are very prominent in. Larn!hton, A fav- orable season for grass has meant ilit,'f, lei e.s!ieesii `f r ° :1 4 rf 'l4 est e,%t5 celee Must Register Feeds. • • 'George H. 'Clark. Dominion Feed Commissioner, calls attention to the fact that under provisions of. the Feeding Stuffs' Act, all registration.; e*nir'e avtorratieelly on September ^Cli following the date of issue; also. that all •conertercial 'feeding stuffs must be registered, and that the fee for registration is $2 per brand. Feeds must be labelled exactly as registered and the guaranteed an- alysis, .s,tatemen't of ingredients and other information required for reg- istration must appear onis bats or tags attached to feed containers. Under the Feeniinga,Stuffs Act no change in the corrlposition of a reg- istered brand shall be made.' 'without reregistering it; Any *barge 1n the guaranteed analysis or ingredi- ents of a registered ibrand calls for the submission, of .a new application with the usual fee and sample, and the assignment of a new registration number. Removing Surplus Honey. The (best time to remove finished ,supers of com,ib ie in the early after- noon., when rths' bees are 'working well in the fields. It can easily be done by blowing smoke into the supers at the top to drive most of the bees d'o'ti'n. As the cover is lift- ed, the bees above the cover may be •brushed off with a lari;•e feather front a turkey's wing. After most of the he,es have been driven. down, the sup- er should be lifted at one end, and the bees on the bottom brushed off quickly befotre any can return. The super can then be "carried into a building and stood on end in front of a window so that the remaining bees will leave it and fly 'to the window, where they make their escape. Iroelle. In Se* r t $S03, , vie Augillit 2frtlt, lMr ,ij Mrs. w ii'lians J>seele. a data B,aloer. 'n Sc ibsAiWdl Sed fa t[li, on Aw&i#l't ' i lr• sed Mrs, epees Baketr, es este ,Doig. la aeott Mehneria1 ri ital, Seaforth, aa August lath, to Mat . and Mrs. Paul Dole, of Egmondvule, •m, 4011). Blake. -stn Colborne Townie, on August 22n4, to Mr. and MrriOrville R. Blake, (nee Iona W,atlabe), a ,daUgliter. flapper.---,Iix Winehsim Gsaezl31 HosPita5, on August 20th, to Mx, and Mta. Russell Abp - ver, a daughter-•M5argaa'et Voa7x, Mitcheili.-dn Usborne, on August 19th, to lylr, and Mae. Earl li tittehelL a daughter - Donna Marie. IMPORTANT NOTICES e- ASTURE FARM TO RENT IN TUCKER- smith, Lot 3, Comceaaton 6, ELMS., to rent for pasture for this (season, or cattle Pastured by the month. Good grass an,l water. Terra easy. JOHN SPROAT, Sea - forth. 3360-41 1- ABY CHICKS FOR 13 ALE. -S. C. W. Leg- horn and 0. A. C. Bred -to -lay Barred Reeks. Leghorn exceptiona14y heavy laying strain. Average daily production of 1,500 hens for the last three months was 1,021 eggs. Bred for health, vigor and high pro- duction. April prieea : Leghorn:), 11 cents; Barred Rocks, 12 cents. May prices, 1 cent less. No Rock eggs set after April 23rd un- less specially ordered. We have used pedi- greed cockerels for five years. W. HUME CLUTTON, R. R. 6, Goderich. Phone 1413, Carlow. 8357-tf MORTGAGE SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the Powev of Sala contained in a certain mortgage, which will be prrrduced at the time of sale, there will be„ offered for sale by GEORGE ELLIOTT, Auctioneer, at Public Auction on Mbn,lay, September 19th, 1932. at the houa' of two e•cl'oek, in the afternoon, at the farm of Peer A. O'Sullivan, R. R. Nu. 5, Sea - faith, Ontario, the following property, naane- ay ALL AND SINGULAR that certain parcel or tract of land and premises, situate, Lying ,and being in the Township of McKillop, in the County of Duron, and Province of On- tario, being; uumposed of Lot Number Four- teen and the West Haff of Lot Number Thir- teen; lath in the Third Concession of ,the said Town,hip of 'McKillop, and enntaining , to- g<,ther by ,adm'ieasureanent One Hundred and Fifty' Acres, be the same more or les. On •the said farm there is said to be erect- ed a dwelling house with suitable farm build- ings: •. '1'he lands will be sold subject to a re- serve bid. TERMS OF SALE. -Ten per cent, of the Purchase money dio be paid down at the time of salt and the. balance within thirty days. For further particutara and conditions of sale, apply to • Ontario Farm Organizations Show Large Annual Turnover. Figures reveal that during the peat year, 42 Ontario farmers' co-opera- tives embracing' 28,000 members did an average yearly ibu'sineas per mem- ber of 8587. This d'oe's not by any means. represent all of the co-ppera- tive effort in the province. It does tend to show, however, that farmers are u.nfiting -in their efforts to ,keep in business. The sixteen million and a half dollars Worth of business con - &feted by those included in the above figure represents sales of live stock. wool, dairy produlat,,s, ,poulitry pro- ducts, fruit and vegeltables, seed and grain and miscellaneous 'products, and the purchase for resale to mem- hers of such articles as machinery, feed, fertilizers, twine a n d many other. things. DEATHS Ratkenhniy, On Sunday, August 25th, at hi, late ran Write, lira cell est, Wjl'iam Hea-•v beloved husband of Charlotte Marks, in his h44h year. HARRY W. PAGE, East Block, Parliament Bldgs., • Toronto, Ontario; Solicitor to the Mortgagee. Dated at Toronto this Twenty -Ninth day of August, 1932. 3377-3 MORTGAGE SALE OF VILLAGE PROPERTY Under and by virtue of the powers con- tained in a certain mortgage' which will be produced at the sale, the undersigned have been instructed to sell by public auction n v the • prem•ises, .on • bokt„rIJRDAY, AUGUST 27th, 1032' at 11 a.m. the fallowing valuable property, namely: ALL AND'S'1NCULAR th $t certain parcel er tract of land anti premise -situate, lying and he - Ing in the Village of Exeter, hI •the County of Huron. and Province of Onrario, known Ind distinguished as Lot Number Forty-six 446) on . the North side of Vic:aria Street, west of William Street, containing by ad- measurement ate ofan re- be the measuremen one-quarter r r ah re- mare or less, on the map" Or plan of the subdivision of part of Lot Number Twenty-three :23) in .the First Concession of the Township et Stephen, prepared by N. Carew Boulton, Provincial Land Surveyor. dated 1876. and registered in the Registry Office of the County of Huron aforesaid aril known as Isucc Csrling's Survey. Together with the tights reserved in and subject to the charges contained in a certain deed dated the 12th of January A -D. 1923 from Victoria A. Hind, to one William Greenlee and regi,- tered in the Registry Office for the County of Huron in Book XIII for the Village of Exeter, on, the 6th day of N rch, A,D., 1923, as Number 5401. On the premises is a comfortable two storey residence built of cement •blocks and well finished inside. IL is located on one .R the best residential street: in Exeter, cen- trally located .for school and church. There is also °a commodious garage. TERMS OF SALE Ten per cent. of the. purchase money on the day of sale, and the balance within .30 days thereafter. .Subject t,, a reserved bid. Further terms and conditions will be made known on the .day of the' sale. 'GLADMAN & sTANBURY, Hensel] and Exeter. Solicitors for the Mortgagee. Frank Taylor, Auctioneer. • 3374-3 When you have a HORSE OR COW you want removed, 'phone promptly to William Stone Sons, Limited 'Phone 22 - ' Ingersoll 'Phone 215W - • Stratford FALL FAIR DATES Ailsa Craig Sept. 22. 23 Atwood Sept. 1(3, 1': Bayfield ,Sept, 28, 29 Blyth Sept. 30, Oct. 1 Bru'ssie'Is Sept. 29, 30 Drumultyo Sept. 27, 28 Dungannon October 12 E4mlbro October 6 Exeter Sept. 20, 2i Fordtwic'h Goderich Sept. 20, 21 Hanover Sept. 15, 1(3 H+arriaton „Sept. 29, 30 Kincardine Sept. 16, 16 Kirkton Oobobel 4, 5 Lion's fHleed October 5, 6 Listowel Sept. 21, 22 London (Western Fair/ ..Sept. 12-17 Lucknow Sept; 29, 30 Mildeney •Sept. 20, 21 Milverton Sept. 15, 16 'Mitchell Sept. 27, 28 Sept. 16, 17 Sept, 30, Oct. 1 New Hamburg . Ottawa, Central Canada, Aug. 22-27 Palmerston 'Sept, 23, 24 Fal+krhill October 4, 5 Ripley Sept. 27, 2R St. Marys October 7, 8 Seaforth Sept. 22. 23 Stratford Sept. 10-21 Tavistock Sept. 0, 10 Teilswater October 4, 5 Toronto (C.N.r.) Aug26 --+Sept. 10 Wellesley Sept. 11, 14 Wharton Sept. 15, 16 Win.gham October 7, 5 Internation4al plowing match, ' near Ottlta'wa October 11-14 Made To Your Measure New Fall Patterus New Autumn Shades New Correct Styles New Low Prices. TIP-TOP Suits are unquestionably the greatest clothing value in Canada. Every suit is made to your indi' victual ,measurements and we guarantee the fit. The linings and inside construction are perfect. All the New Fall Cloths are here to select fr.om Come in and let us show _•you what a beauti- ful suit you can get made to your individual measure for Only $22.50 STE;,:ART .ROS, SEAFORTH MORTGAGE SALE UNDER AND BY ViRTUE of the Powers a Sale cbntained in acertain mortgage,g e, which will be produced at the time of sale, there will be offered for sale bit GEORGE ELLIOTT, Auctioneer, at Public Audtion on Tuesday, the 20th day of September, 1932, at the tour of two o'clock in the afternoon, at the -farm of Joseph McFarlane, $, R. No. 1, Seaforth, Ontario, the following property, namely: ALL AND SINGULAR that certain Parcel or tract of band and prernises, situate, lying and, being in the Township of McKillop, in the County of Huron, and Province of On-' tario, being composed of Lot Number Twen- ty -Seven, in'the Fifth Concession, of the said Township •of McKillop, containing One Hun- dred Acres, more or less. On the said farm there is said to be erect- ed a dwelling house with suitable farm build- ings. The lands will be sold subject to a re- serve bid. TERMS OF SALE. -Ten per cent, of the purchase money to be paid down ati the time. of sale and the balance within thirsty days. l -'or further particulars and conditions ef sale, apply to HARRY ,W, PAGE. East Block. Parliament Bidgi., Toronto, Ontario, Solicitor for the Mortgagee. • Dated at Toronto this Twenty-seventh day of August, 1932. 3377-8 MORTGAGE SALE OF FARM PROPERTY i'nder and by virtue of the powers con- tained in a certain mortgage which will be produced at the sale. the undersigned' have been instructed ta.-"Sell by public/disetion at the DOMINION HOUSE, ZURICH, on SATURDAY. AUGUST 27th at 2 p.m. tie following valuable, farm pro ty. name- ly: AL1, AND SINGULAR t certain par- cel or tract of land and or i+ee situate, ly- ing and being in the Township of Stanley, in the County of Huron, and Province of Ontaret and being composed of the West half of Lot Number Six in the lligh"th Can- cr.... the said Township of Stanley,ins; fifty acres more or fess. and the so .h half of the west half ni Lot Number Seven, also in the eighth Concession of the said Township of Stanley, except a parcel in the form of a rectangle two rods square at the south -oast angle of the west half of said T,at conveyed by, the Canada Company to Robert Stephenson by Deed dated the ninth day of November, 1911. said part of Lot number Seven rtmtainintt' twenty-four acres and one hundred and fifty perches, more or leas, Thus is excellent pasture land and is cen- trally located in a splendid farming district, -TERMS OF SALE: Ten per rent. of the purchase money on the day of sale, and the balance within 30 days thereafter. Subject to a reserved hid. Further terms and conditions will be made known on the day of the sale, GLADMAN & STANBURY, Exeter and Hensoil, Solicitors' for Mortgagee. Osear Kinob, Auctioneer, 3374-3 PlumslPears • Coble and get your Plums and Pears. - Fine. Selection. -at- Huron Central Fruit Farm C.. HOARE - CLINTON OPIATIONS is In the grinding conflict of public, opinion the history of mankind has been written. Opinion has. loosed the, blotting war cloud, and dictated the .terms. of peace. The value of an opinion can only be finally' ap- praised by the accuracy, or otherwise, with which it parallels subsequent events. In the investment world, more than anywhere else, opinions that finally merit confidence are those which, in the light of ensuing events, conclusively . prove to have been based on facts thoroughly wider - stood, rather than vague theories misunderstood. E.A. Siegrist & Co. Ltd. Investment Bankers "Sound Investment Counsell" New Bank of Toronto Bldg., LONDON, ONTARIO. Telephone Metcalf 3370-1 ShiShinAn where Sample Package, p J Ten lbs. geed leaf tobacco, mild or strong, with free real Briar pipe, $2.50. Twenty lbs. for $3.00. 50 lbs. for $8.00. Quesnel, two lbs. for $2.00. Agents wanted. Ad- dress, G. Dubois, 1e Henderson, Ot- tawa, Ont. WE ARE PAYING 45cents s FOR NEW WHEAT Trucking arranged for and bags supplied. WOLVERTON Flour Mills Co., Ltd PHONE 51 : SEAFORTH FARMS FOR SALE FARM FOR SALE,-FOR-SA1tE PART LOT 2.4 and 2e. Concession 8, McKillop, con- taining 192 sierra end known as the T. E. Hays' farm. Must he sold to erase the estate. Tf not sold will be rented. For particulars apply to J. M. GOVENLOCK, Executor, Sea - forth. 835841 DRAIN TENDERS Tender will be received by the undersigned for the cleaning out of the Dolman* Drain. MiKillon, until Tuesday, September deb. Tenderswill he opened at 2 p.m. that day- Len'gth of drain, 9,100 feet; about 2,800 cubic yards. Ten per vent. of comtnact with tender. Lowest on any terrier alt necessaaily aeatemt- ed. Soreoifirations may be seen at this ofl]ce. I.et 37, C•onceveirm 3, McKillop. .TORN McNAY., Clerk. 3376-Z A BARGAIN • FOR SALE. -Five acres, one mile from Seaforth; modern house with furnace, bath and toilet; smatl barn; good orchard. 'Taxes, $16. Splendid chance to start chicken farm, bees, etc. Apply to R. S. HAYS, Seaforth, Ont. 2963-tt THE JOHN RANKIN AGENCY • Insurance of all kinds. Bonds, Real Estate Money to Loan SEAFORTH, ONTARIO Phone 91 is