The Exeter Advocate, 1923-9-27, Page 5ti
kedel
the
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the Pandora Record
The Pandora Range has been awarded the good will
of thousands of housewives because they know it is
dependable.
It is a reliable baker. The oven heats. quickly.
This is because it is built of Armco Iron with
nickeled surface, which radiates heat quickly. This
construction, which makes the Pandora oven so
economical of fuel and so easily cleaned, is exclu-
sively McClary's.
The beauty of the deeply -carved body of cast-iron is
enhanced by the durability which this lasting
material assures.
The Pandora possesses the latest MoClary's features,
Ask your dealer to demonstrate them.
�rar ' Lonontren
eal
r ^ V ancouv�e St. JohMn,
Calgary Saskatoon
Pand
191
Toronto
Winnipeg
Tian:ilton
Edmonton
AUCTION SALE
OF VALUABLE FARIM PROPERTY,
FARM CHATTELS AND HOUSE-
HOLD EFFECTS.—
In the matter of tine( Estate of David
Erie McKenzie, late of the Township
of Stephen, an the. County of Huron,
Farmer •deceased, and of The Devolu-
tion of Estates Act; Thera will be
offered for sale. by, Public Auction on
Lot 11, Con. 15, Tp. of Stephen
1 1-4 miles east of Shipka, and 5 .miles
west of Creditont, purl
THURSDAY, OCT: 4th, 1923,
At I o'clock sharp, the following :—
Real Estate—Lot 11 Con, 15, Town-
ship of Stephen; Coua-ty,,.oe Huron, 100
acres more or less. Upon thee( land are
erected a two storey brick h,ouse,hv-
bank barns, implement shed, good hen
-i` house, ppg pen, garage, never failing
rock well, orchard, well fenced( and tile
drained; 10 acres of god bush.
N half Lot 12,.Con, 15, rownhisp of
Stephen, 50 acres more or less; well
fenced and tile drained.
Live Stock—i gray Percheron, rising
4,. 1 aged work mare; inl foal, 1 driving
mare rising 8, 1 sucking colt; 2 cows
with calf at foot; 2 heiferst due in Oct.
1 he,i:fer due in November, 1 cow due
in Pec,; 4 cows due in March and Ap-
ril; 3 mile cows, 6 steers rieing 3; 1
heifer rising 3; 3 two-year old steers
4 yearlings, 9 spring, cows; 2 brood
sows; 8 turkeys, 12 ducks, 75 hens, 100
chickens
Implements, Etc.—Deering binder 7 -
ft, cut; Frost & Wood cultivator, M.H.
fertilizer drill, nearly new; steel rol-
ler new, Deering hay rake; harrows,
4 section; disk; 2 furrow plough, 2
walking plows, 2 •scufflers, bean scuf-
fier, tanning mill, power cutting box,
set sleighs., 2 wagons, top buggy, open
buggy, cutter, Ford Touring Car, in
good- cunning order, galvanized water
trough. International gasoline engine,
lei hip.; wheelbarrow, cream separator
new; set scales, hay fork, ropp and
slurps, root pulper, 2 sugar kettles,
grinstone; 2 sets double, harness; 1 jse
single harness, hay rack, pig, box,g rav-
el box, chicken coops, 8 cedar posts,
iron gate, lanes mower, 2 fence, stretch-
ers, quantity of lumber, wood boxes,
bagels, 20 ton of hay—clover and tim-
othy—.quantity of straw to be fed on
theplace, quantity of oats, 30 rows
of maungolds-40 rods long—,4 acre of
of corn in shock, quantity of buck-
wheat, 2 piers horse blankets, robes,
shooting traps, saddle, several pig
troughs.: ,
Household Effects -2 steel ranges, 01
stove— 3 burner—; dining room table,
chairs, kitchen table, butter bowl, ice
cream freezer, fire extinguisher, -1 bled -
Toone .seete, baby crib, washing ma-
chine,. sideboard, 2., separate beds
pantry; • sink, meat box, sealers, and
dashes, flat irons, feather tick, pawls
rocker, lamps, carpets, pawls, forks,
shovels, hoes, w-hiffletnees and other
articles too numerous to mention.
Teams of Sale—The land will be
s old subject toe. reserve Midi fixed by
the Official Guardian of enfants or the
Provence of Ontario, 10 per cent of.
purchpsre_ money 't o bet paid •ont day of
sale,. the .balance to be paid to the' Can,
ad.ian. Battik of, Corpine•ce to the joint
credit -or, the adminteetratrix :thcl the
Ofli eiel •Guardian wi,thlin: 30 days
thereabeeie In. all other respects the
terms wall bre the standing candlteea;5•
of the Supreme. Court . of Ontario,
Chattels -$10 end undies, cash: Over,
that amount 12- menthe,' credit will be
Alvan. on fuirnishiung approved joent
notes. per cent off for. cash.
This property must be sold :o wino
up the .estate: For• -further particttlars
apply to F. W. "Harcourt, K. C., Off-
icial Guardian, Toronto, H. E Eulber
and son Crediton, the Admin,lstra,taix
or .1, : R • Caring, Vendor -s Solicitor,
Exeter, Ont, •
Frank Taylor firs. Jessie. Mcl:enzn
-Au c*Dauer Administratr;\
R 11. 1,, CIedrftori, R, R. 2, Dashwootl
SEAFOR'TH-Earrly in the 'mornsng
of Sept. 19, a main, broke into the
home ,of Mfrs: Arlam I(1'.ne; a lady of
84 years, who was aroused. He at -
;tempted to choke her, but she called
far help andha fled, making- good bis
escape. '
AUCTION SALE
AUCTION SALE
FARM STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS
on Lot 14, Coat. 11, Usborne„ on.Fre-
clay, Oct, 12, 1923. Items next week,
Thos. Clarke, Prop.
AUCTION SALE
OF DAIRY COWS, STEERS AND
,HEIFa,RS.
At the Central Hotel, Exeter, on
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1923
At 1,30 o'clock, sharp, the following:
25 Head good Durham Cows -12 new
New milkers, 9 Springers, the bal-
ance coming in the early part of
spring.
11 Head 2 year-old steers and heifers,
This is a select lot of cows, 41 41
first-class condition.
Terms -8 months' credit on• ipprov-
, el joint notes.
Sccotty Easton, Gordon Campbell,
Auctioneer Proprietor.
AUCTION SALE
OF FARM
' FARlI STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS
HOUSEHOLD EFFhCTS, ETC.
`On Lot 22, S. B. Stephen, Half 'mile
East of Mount Carmel, on
MONDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1923.
At 1 o'clock, sharp, the following:—
Implements -M. H. binder, M.H. hay
loader, M.H. side -delivery rake, M.H.
dice harrow, McCormick mower, har-
row, spring tooth cultivator, buggy,
waggon, cutter, sleigh, No. 21 Fleury
plow, No. 13 Fleury, plow, 2 sets 1'eavy
harness, set light harness, set light'
double harness, buggy pole, grave; box
hay rack. stock rack, Olives corn, culti-
vator and bean harvester, root pulper,
hand cutting box, feed cooker, Buck-
eye chicken brooder, sugar kettle, No.
12 DeLaval cream separator, used one
year.
Ford Touring Car, 1918, new: top and
'm • good running order.
Horses -2 draft horses, general purpose
horse, driving mare in foal to Grattan;
Royal; Light colt,
Cattle -2 two-year-old and yearl-
ing cattle. These are a breedy bunch
of stockers. Cow due in Dec,, 4 cows
,clue in April, cow duel in, June, 5 calves;
P..rs—Save, 7 pigs 6 weeks. old, a
bunch of feeding hogs.
Poultry -75 hens, 40 pullets.
Feed .11.10 bus,• oats and -40Q bus, of
'5iriey ,and oats, .200 . bus,- barley; a
nio'my clover hay, bay stack and 20 loads
of clover chaif,
Household Effects Churn, washing
mach ne, 3 burner Perfection ,oil stove
cook stove and ,heater, walnut - s'de-
board, tables, chairs, Victrola and 40
records; other household effects,
Terms—$id and under cash ; over
that amount 12 months credit on fur-
o.shins approved joint notes. 6 per
ceait. discount -on cash for credit gums
I erms of dam made known on day
of sale, .
Frank Taylor, John Ryan,
Auctioneer Proprietor.
AUCTION SALE
70 HEAD OF CA'T`TLE 70.
Lot 24, conceseeoui 4, Usborn•ei
On Friday, Oct. 5
At 1 o'clock sharp, the following
Horses -1 percheron colt 3 years, old;
• 1 Porcher on, 'colt 2 yeaars( old, 1 Parch
erupt colt 1 year old.
Catele-1 Reg, Holstein cow due in
Oct; 1 wrleam cow due en Oct; 6
3 -year old ' ' steers, 20 2 -year old
steers, 20 2 -year old heifers; $ 2 -year
old Holstein heifers, 6 1 -year Old steers,
and '4 1 year old heifers:
t',gs-2 sows with litters at foot, 1
sow due the time of sale„ 7esows isa
Pig,
Bens 100 hens,
7 erns Six months,' credit ,.inn, ap-
proved Joint notes: or 6 per cent per
aranuna off 'for cash.
W. H, and Geo: Armstrong, Props.
Thomas Cameron ea down at the time will help you re-
Auctioneer I member the new parts you should
POINTS ABOUT PLOWS
the Development of This Basal
Agricultural Implement.
Began With Sharpened Pieces of
• Wood =Iron Plows Used by the
Romans Introduction of the
Subsoil Plow--Dr'itish and Amer-
can Plows the Climax in Develop.
rnent.
leon;ributed by Ontario Department of
Agriculture, Toronto.)
Sharpened stakes and crooked
limbs of trees were the earliest sub-
stitutes for the plow in historical
times, and their use has been com-
mon among the nations. The ancient
Egyptian plow was but a pointed
stick. The early Greeks used the
trunk of a small tree • with two
branches opposite, one forming the
share and the other the handle, while
the trunk formed the pole or beam.
The Iron Plow Used by Romans.
Iron plowshares' were used many
centuries before the Christian era by
the Romans, and the iron was used
for a double purpose—for plow-
points one year and for swords and
spears the next, as iron was scarce
in those days, The Roni'ans greatly
improved the plow by putting on a
wheel and also a coulter. Many races
of people showed a widespread hos-
tility to the use of iron in connection
with agriculture, believing that iron
poisoned the land.
Wooden. Plows Used in America 1.3x0
Years Ago.
The people of all countries went
through the early experience of find-
ing a ways and means of tilling the
soil, some slowly, some rapidly; and
,-.rriously enough the first plow of all
nations were much the same in spite
of the fact that some nations started
thirty or forty centuries ahead of
the others. The wooden plow isonly
a century and a half remote in Ameri-
can agriculture..
It r,- curious to trace the progress
of plowmaking in Britain, where
Caesar introduced the plow about
55 B.C. Those of the early cultiva-
tors were of necessity rude and Im-
perfect, for in those days the plow-
man was obliged by law to make a
plow before he was permitted to use
one. It is uncertain whether the
early British plow had wheels, but
some of those of the Saxons were
furnished with them. The Norman
Plow was furnished with wheels, and
it was usual for the plowman to carry
a hatchet to break the clods.
Introduction of the Subsoil Plow.
The first attempt at the construc-
tion of a subsoil plow was i..ede in
1677, It loosened the land up to a
depth of fourteen- inches. It Is not
necessary to do more than point to
the various and "numerous references
which are found in early history of
this valuable implement. For ages
the plow was little more than a
clumsy instrument, which served only
to tear up the surface of the land
sutlieiently deep for the seeds to be
buried. It was not brought to any-
thing like a perfect tillage tool until
the close of the seventeenth century.
The Dutch were amongst the first
who brought the plow more into
shape, and soon its best features were
copied and included in the Britisher's
idea of a plow.
The Rotherham plow was made by
J. FoiJambe at Rotherham, and a
,aatent was granted for it in 1730.
It wee than ;..ie most perfect in use,
and rs so,i ...•.t it ijwn after two cen-
t - .: , ,,, w was constructed
v.:. -.e draft iron share
..J ,he plating on the
s.rle being the only
.• .r1 With the de-
i . ..s iron industry, it
: aeon. time before plows
iron and steel were
binbe,no .ua.,z.
,ae-acs J.n dl, a Scotsman, was the
arm. i,a r m.,jr and manufacturer of
toe cos. iron mould board. At that
time (17 60) tea plow was generally
the joint manuraeture et the village
wheelwright and blacksmith. Plow-
shares had been made of wrought
iron until 1785, when a patent was
granted to Robert Ransome for the
making of cast-iron shares. The case
hardening process as applied to cast-
iron shares was the sabeect of a
patent granted in 1803,
British Plows the Climax in Develop-
ment.
The Rotherham plow, Small's
chain plow, and Small's Scotch plow
represented the climax in plow de-
velopment previous to 1800, and the
men whose ingenuity, spirit, and per •
serveranee brought about the devel-
opment in plow making were Fol -
jambe, Small, Wilkie, Finlayson and
Ransome. The work and develop-
ment of the plow during the past
125 years is too well known to all
to warrant its mention here.
The old plowmen simply scratched
the soil with their crude implements,
going over the field time ' and time
again, crossing and re -crossing until
they had worked, up a few inches into
a seed bed. The Roman farms. were
rarely over live acres in extent, and
when our forefathers in this country
used the old 'wooden plow, the clear-
ings among the stumps were small.
The two century gap between the old
rooter that scratched the soil surface
and the new 'multiple bottom tractor
plow of to -day is a long stretch for
the numerous plow milestones that
stand by the way to mark the pro-
gress of Agriculture, -L. Stevenson,
0. A. C., Guelph.
Fall plowing is best from the
standpoint of saving time, as it reaves
more time for spring work ' and us-
ually means earlier seeding. Spring
plowing is more effective in the con -
trot of
ontrolof weeds, as, being turned under
just before seeding, they have less
chance to crowd the grain.
The best time to inspect a machine
for Its "weak parts is when you are
putting it away for the season: .A
few notes in a memorandum i book set
Robert Kydd, Clerk, order next winter. '
Relief for Famine Sufferers
mpreaa of Russia at Vancouver Ioadingeippt,es tor the ea-rTbquaice *victim thousands of Japan
[��►ith everyavailable inch of her cargo space crammed with foodstuffs and a capacity stock of ships stores, sufficient
IFr to replenish the supplies of the Empress of Canada and the Empress of Australia, on relief duty off the Japanese
coast, the Canadian Pacific &S. Empress of Russia was the first relief ship to arrive. She carried consignments of flour,
canned milk and canned salmon amounting to 350 tons, from the Canadian government. The British Columbia branch of
the Canadian Red.Cross sent twenty tons of canned milk and fifty tops of other canned food -stuffs, while the Vancouver
Japanese Association contributed au initial shipment of fifty tons of flour for their famine stricken countrymen. More
than two hundred & twenty-five of the "Russia's" three thousand tons of cargo was of flour
AUCTION SALE
OF FARIvL
FARM STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS
HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS, ETC,
On Lot 27, Stephen, Tp., 11I miles
West of Dashviood, ozn
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1923
At 1 o'clock sharp, the following:—
Farm
ollowing:—Farm containing 75 acres, more or
less, bank barn, pig stable, driving shed
frame house; well fenced and well
drained, everlasting rock well with
first-class water, wind -mill; good
orchard, smoke house with cement
flour and wood shed.
Horses—Bay .mare 12 years old;
black mare rising 9 lyiears, old.
Cattle -2 'pinch cows, farrow cow,
heifer rising 2 years, yearling steer,
fall calf, 2 spring calves.
Hens -30 yearling hens.
Implements—Wagon with box, In-
ternational cultivator, new; Frost tend
Wood steel rake, MasseyHarris hoe
drill, hayrack, top buggy, 1200 lbs.
ec:ale, •fanningmill, cutting box, 20 ft.
extension ladder, big hay fork, sling •
ropes, root pulper, wheelbarrow, bar
ley forks, pitch forks, shovels, spades,,
bobsleighs, nearly new;gravel box, new
cutter, road cart, disc, 80 feet of L'
in. piping, -100 ft. 1;4 piping, neve; dia-
mond harrows, pig rack, Massey mower
gang plow, Fleury plow, hand scuffler,
2 sets heavy ' harness, 3 sets single
harness, 2 scythes, drain scoop, scoop
shovel, binder tongue, 2 dos, grain bags
neckyokes, wiffletrees, 2 logging chains
deo. cow .chains, wire stretcher, bells.
grindstone, 20 rods wire fence, 10(1
cedar posts, 7 tons, hay, half doz. rock
elm planks, quantity ship -lap siding
big chicken coop, cradle, 2 bunches
shingles „pruning shears, meat stand,
crowbar, cross -cut saw, 2 buck saws
mould, 2 axes.
Household Eftects-Cider mill, Dailey
'churn, washing machine, Pandora range
box stove, sewing machine, cupboard,
3 tables, small table, zinc, wash stand
doz, chairs, rocking chair, 3 bedsteads
coring, mattress, half doz. chairs, half
doe. screens, screen doors, plainers,'3
doz. sealers, half doz. windows, 2 do .
crocks, 50 gal. ceder barrel, 30 gal
cider barrel, 2 apple barrels, jug, but-
ter tub, mirror, 2 clocks, lamp, lanterns
2 iron, pots, frying pans, `tea kettles,
water pails, strainer dishes, wash boil-
er, pie plates, gal. coal oil, and a lot
dottier articles too numerous, -mem,-
to
' tion,
Terms—All sums of $10, and under
cash ; over that amount 12 months
credit on furnishing approved joint
notes. A discount of 4 per cent. off
for cash on credit amounts, Terme
of farm made kncov3in on day of sale
Arthur Weber, Chas. Willert,
Aucclone eer Proprietor
Geo. Edighoffer, CIerk.
FALL FAIR DATES.
Blyth . ,........ Sept. 27-28
Brussels Oct. 4-5
ederton .... ..... ... Sept. 28
hirkton Oct 2-3
Zurich
Sept. 27-28
FORD OWNERS
Make provision now
for a new car
The Weekly Purchase Plan
enables you to provide
against the depreciation
on your car—by means of
small weekly payments.
See us for particulars.
Milo Snell Cook Bros.
Exeter,, Ont. Hensall,. Ont.
dale. r
ed
FORD MOTOR COMPANY OF CANADA, LIMITED; .FORD r 0NTKai 0
a