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The Blyth Standard, 1930-03-20, Page 5PAGE 5—THE BLYTH STANDARD --March 20, 1930 H. A. MciNTYRE, L. D. S„ D. D, 5 D1ONTIST Office hours -9 to 12 1 to 6 BLYTH—Tuesdays and Wednesdays Evenings by appointment. 'Phone 130. Dr. W. Jas. Milne, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. CORONER COUNTY OF HURON. Office—Queen Street Residence—Dinsley Street. BLYTH, ONTARIO J. H. R. ELLIOTT, NOTARY PUBLIC & CONVEYANCER Fire, Accident, Sickness, Employer's Liability, Plate Glass, Automo• bile and Live Stock Insurance. BLYTH, (Phone 104) ONTARIO, LOFTTUS E. DANCE,Y. BARRISTER, SOLI OITOR,NOT A1tY Pf1BLTC, CONVEYANCER, MONEY 'fo.rOAN. Office— Queen Street BLYTH, ONT SON LIFE ASSUIIANCE CO, OF WAN, PROSPER OIIS & rR.oOITRSSIVF It leads the Geld furor Canadian Companies. H. 11, l ONO, District Manager, Ooderidin THOl1NS GUNI)RY, AUCTIONEER, CODERICN, - ONTARIO Leann Stock;Salee a epeelalty. Order loft et the Blyth Standard ORlce will be promptly attended to. Telephone me isles at my expense. Dr. J. C. Ross, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON Office hours -10.30 to 12 2 to 4 7 to 8.30 Except Wednesday evening. Phone No.—Office 51; Residence 69 BLYTH, ONTARIO. MY OPTICIAN WfltteCHHU Drug Store DR. W. J. MILNE, Fine Spectacle Ware and Accurate Lens Work a Specialty. QUEEN ST., BLYTH TRE WINGRAM MONVMEISSAL WORKS has the largest and most complete stock, the most beautiful designs to choose from in MARBLE, SCOTCH AND CANAD. IAN GRANITES. We make a specialty of Family Mon- uments and invite your inspection. Inscriptions neatly, carefully and promptly cone, Electric tonts for carving and letter Ing Call and see us before placing your order, ROM. A. Spottoti. 11INGHAM. • - ONTO'' no Industrial Mortoags and Savings Cot SARNiA ONTARIO Money advanced on first mortgages on lands, Partes desiring money on fern - mortgages will please apply to the under- signed. J. H. R. ELLIOTT, Agent, BLYTH, - ONTARIO. C. E. TOLL, L.D.S. D.D.S DENTIST Hours 830-12 1,30-6 Wednesdays at Monkton. ',hones 124,4212 James Taylor License A tioneer for the County of Huron. s attended to in all parts of the co Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay ders left et The Standard promptly attended to• Belgrave Post Office, PHONES: Brussels, 15-13. North Huron, 15.623 The Standard Club bing List: Standard and Daily Globe $6.75 Standard and Mail and Empire,,, 6.75 Standard and London Advertiser 0.75 Standard and Free Pree 6,75 Standard and Toronto Daily Star 6.75 Standard and Family Herald 3.00 tandard and Farmer's Sun 3.50 Standard and Can. Countryman 3.40 Standard and Farmer's Advocate 3.00 Standard and Weekly Witness 3.85 Standard and World Wide 3.90 Standard and Presbyterian 4,50 Standard and Poultry Journal 2.90 Standard and Youth's Companion 4.50 Standard and Northern Messenger 2,55 Standard and Can. Pictoral..,,,,.., , 195 Standard and Rural Canada 2,70 Standard and Farm & Dairy 3.00 Standard and Saturday Night 5.50 Standard and McLean's Magazine 4,75 Tho 131gth. Standard, SCHOOL SUPPLIES We have now in stock a complete line of Public and, High School supplies: Text Books, Scribblers, Drawing Books, Loose Leaf Books, Exam. Pads, Rulers, Inks, Rubbers, Paints, Water Colors, Compasses, Slates, Pencils, &c The Standard Book and Stationery Store ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +44++++++++++'++++++++++++ It Costs No More To Fireproof Your Building WHEN you build a new house "or repair an old one be sure to use Gyproc. Gyproc also gives quick construction; insulation against cold and heat—and fuel economy. Write for free book, "Walls That Reflect Good Judgment," containing interesting infor- mation on home planning with Gyproc, Roc - board and Insulex. CANADA GYPSUM AND Ai.ABA8TlNE, LIMITED -Fireproof, Wal _ board For Sale By nix= Blyth Planing Mill - - - - Blyth, Ont. SEE OUR FINE LINE OF GOODS FOR olYday Ci!6s CONSISTING OF UP-TO-DATE Footwear, Men's Fuvnishings, Garters, Arm Bands, Ties, Scarfs, Caps, . Braces, A FINE DISPLAY OF Towels, Handkerchiefs Ladies' Scarfs. G. A. MACHAN, Phone 88 BLYTH, ONT. I3 Pk Et IL. C "SIS I C - HATCHING EGGS FOR SALE FROM CONTEST WINNERS Our en won first rize for the largest number of t oints, also for the highest hen at the Nova Scotia Egg Lying Contest. Our pens are mated to male bi'.ds from registered hens. It does not cost any more to feed a good ullet than a oor one. It only takes one extra egg next fall to makethe difference in cost; rice. Barred Rock Chicks per 100 $18 White Leghorn " tt " $16 JOHN FAIRSERVICE Blyth, Ring 153, Box 13 The Standard Real Estate Agency The following very desirable properties have been listed with us at very low pric- es. We also have a number of farms and village lots which we are offering for sale Get in touch with us when you are in the market to buy either village or farm pro- perty:- 144 storey brick dwelling on the corner of Icing and Wilson Streets. Three - eights of an acre of land. This property is in excellent state of repair and can be purchased at a very reasonable figure. 1J storey frame dwelling an Morris St, Three-fifths of an acre of land. This is a desirable property for anyone requiring a 'comfortable home at small price. 14 storey frame dwelling on Dinsley St. In good state of repair and most de- sirably located. This property can be purchased on excellent terms, 14 storey frame on Dinsley St. (known as the Graham property). Thin can be purchased at a very low price to close up the estate, lr storey brick, modern equipped dwel- ling on Dinsley Street. Desirably situat- ed and can be purchased atlittle more than halt the present coat of construction A real snap for anyone desiring an up-to- date home, 1� storey frame dwelling on Morris St. Half acre of land with small stable. This property can be purchased with only a small payment down, 2 storey brick dwelting on Dinsley St. Modern in every particular, quarter of an acre of ground on which there is a good stable and garage, 1 storey frame dwelling on Queen St. North. Quarter acre of land with stable. Get our price on this property. 1 storey frame, ashpalt clad dwelling on Morris St. In splendid repair. A good buy for small money. 1F, storey brick dwelling on Morris St. In splen lid repair. Three -eights on an acre of land on which is situate a good stable and garage. 2 storey brick dwelling on Queen St. Ten acres of land. Goal brick stable. A most desirable property foe anyone desir- ing a small acreage of land. A very desirable 2 storey brick dwelling on Queen'S6 One quarter acre of land. Property in excellent condition. Most desirable location. This property can be purchased for little more than half the et r ,r„ r,.ncti,:r. r(day. t� dorso fr,,,ae wish cenu,111 kitchen, stable on premises, 1, acres of land, A good buy. 10 acres of land on which is situate a good cotnforialae frame cottage, barn. driving shed and the land in a fit St- state of cultivation. The prJpetty known an the old lire hall mt rhe east side of Queen Street, '('his bei:ing ie auto used as a garage, It can be purchased at 0 very reasonable figure. Frame cottage on Mill Street, } acre 01 land. A very desirable and comfortable place for persons requiring on a small home, 11 storey frame dwelling on Drum- mond Street. Stable on the premises. Can be purchased at a very reasonable figure. The Standard Real Estate Ager cy I3LYTIJ, ONTARIO DOUGLAS D. MAJOR, L. V. C. M. Organist, Choirmaster Knox Church,-Goderich Supervisor Music Public Schools. (Certified.) Teacher of Piano, Voice, Organ and Theory, A few vacancies for pupils Apply HTun(0, Mrs Peplestone, Phone 80, Dinsley St., Blyth Chickens is Chickens A citizen in an Ohio town was bothered by his neighbor's chickens. Catching ane he attached this card, which the hen proudly wore home to her mistress: Oh, Mts. McGulty if you knew how it shocks Nice chickens like us to be pelted with rocks, To be shoved away by strangers and loaded with reproaches For scratching up gardens and messing up porches; If you knew how we suffer when to the neighbors we roam, You surely would pity us and Beep us at home. EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN AND FARM CATALOGUE TO INTENDING PURCHASMS W".' REiVNIE C9 Immo TORONTO ALSO AT MONTREAL VANCOUVER AUCTION SALE OF FARM -STOCK AND IMPLEMENTS An Auction Sale of Farm- Stock & Im- plements will take place at lot 28, con S. Mullett, 2 miles souttewe_t of Lomdesbero on 'Thursday, March 205h. at 1 o'clock sharp. consisting of the following;— HORSES—bay mare 8 years old; black mare 10 years old, black mare, driving mare, CATTLE -Durham cow, 5 years old milking thoroughbred Herford cow, 7 year's old, due in May, Het ford cow 9 Years old due March 10th, black cow 'J years old, roan cow 0 years freshened 0 weeks, aged cow milking, black cow 1 years old, milking, Hereford steer 2 years old; Hereford heifer 2 yearn old, 2 heifers rising 2 years; yearling steer; 2 spring calves, 3 fall calves, 1 calf 0 weeks old, thorobred Hereford bull, 10 months old, PIGS -9 pigs 0 weeks old. br,,od sow, 7, rock pullets. IMPLE SIoN IS Mass, Harris hinder, 7 ft cut, Massey-Harili mower 6 ft cut, 10 ft steel hay sake, Mao Bey -Harris 13 tooth cultivator, Massey- sey-Harris 15 hoe drill, chum wood 1011e0. set 5 section harrows. Flinty 3alkutg plow, No. 22; Massey -Harris 12 disc. she gle row turnip Sower, wagon, gravel box. set bench sleighs 11 ft :Lock race, hay rack 15 ft. wood rack pair bolsters, aA:- Taggart tanning mill, art scales 1200 lbs, root outlier, steel lire baggy. Portland cutter, Eaton cream 00(103 0(15 050 11) cap: chop box, oat box tool 1),x. flay iLrt;, rope and car, slings and pu lays. gnnd- slone, power emery grinder and stand. b h. p gasoline engine, wheel barrow, 50 0 inch pipe, pump jack line shall and belts sugar kettle, 5 gallon gasoline can, bag - holder bag truck, doz grain bags, 3 doz fertilizer Barks, pair horse blani,ets. mot- or rug, set team harness, set plat harness 2 sets single harness mail box, watt , trough. 8 woad gates 14 feet, 2 wood gat• es 13 feet, 2 inch elm planks. inch elm him her, 2 basswood sills. basswood lumber, 4 white ash tongues, 9 cords cedar cut HOUSEHOLD EFFECTS 5 piece part. r suite odic dish.(-ro rn Bulb berht., u M.1)11 pa;btr label, kmchen c.b'net, sir board: ot.•sser, ;eon bed, ;1 11,'t eel. 2 ries lug chairs, Japanese mating rug 2x3 fold ing baby carriage 2 hanging lamps Cole- man lamp, 3 coal oil lamps, 3 burner coal oil stove with oven,tirst class mndr1 Aran.' range for coal 00 zooid, tea 11(101 treats, oh ineg, epi and d.:z rrc ro > pu 0-t net, lug m-chnrc. Daisy churn, 2 tables 8 kitchen chairs, batter bowl ladle and prit,t set quilting Names and clamps, set scales 240 lbs, sausage machine, .5 gal vinegar jug 5 gal keg, 5 gal demijohn, shovels, 1 forks chains whillletrees, neckynkes and numerous other areicles. All will he sold without reserve as proprietor is giving up farming. TERMS—Ail sums of 810 and'1 under cash, over that amount 12 mom 11 f credit will be given on furnishing approv- ed joint bankable papers or a disc runt of 4 per cent straight allowed f tr cash on credit amounts Hoes cash.' G. 1(1 ELLIOTT, BERT N01'T, Auctioneer, Proprietor. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE TO CLOSE ESTATE 11E ESTATE OF .1.1311ES )5071U111151550 The undersigned Administrator offers for sale the following assets: Parcel No. 1. --being part of lot 61 on East side of Queen Street in McDon- ald's Survey of the Village of Blyth on which there is said to be erected =, two-storey brick building 30x60 feet This property is well located in the 1)n iness section of the Village. Parcel No 2—South half of lot number 4, con. 7, Township of Morris. This farm containing approximately 100 acres is situate about 4 miles from the Village of Blyth. Further particulars may be obtained from The Trusts and Guarant'e Com- pany, Limited, 302 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario. or its solicitor, R, Vanstone, C, Winghatn, Ontario. FARM FOR SALE Ch ce 51) acre farm for sale—west 3 int 27, on. 12, Mullett one and one half mi6 es from Londesbot0, one j mile from schoo good 8 room house, barn hen hoose and garage. Geo 11. ;;are, 12. R. 1, Auburn Phone 20-7 illy(0. FOR SERVICE Registered Yorkshire boar. also a nun. bar of sucking pigs, Apply Alf. Haggitt, lot 13 con. 9, Morns. 0 a'dll' AlAKINC CIGARhffhti Machine (tolohee t Orth One Condit. - nous bitrmsm—(:rent ('etre Is 'Tatum, T suppose every cigarette-4;111okm- has at one time or other been. humil • lated, and by somewhat similar moans, In the goodness of his heart he has offered c, cigarette to the su- perior person who smckes a pipe, and the superior person has said: 'tlo, thank you, i r;nly smoke to - The worst of it was there 5e041ed no answer to the superior person. You could not prove that your ciga- rettes were "all tobacco," But there is an answer, and 1 found It by going over a factory at Nottingham, Engiand, where ciga- rette -making recently celebrated its hundredth birthday, writes a Tit -Bits man. I saw the tobacco eater the factnry In its raw leaf state, and I watched Its every process until It was reeny to come out again as a cigarette with the familiar label on the outside of the box and the familiar cigarette card inslde. And the answer to the superior person is: How, with 5,0e0 workmen to see all that takes place, would any reputable firm dare to mix anything with the pure tobacco? in the factory, the first things Lo I be seen are the brown bales of leaf tobacco, and atter that the one great impression is of the vast quantity of Intricate and delicate machinery. The first process is the moistening of the leaf by machinery to make It pilablo and workable. The moistened leaves are passed' on to benches ,where groups of girls grab them and glvo one savage tear. This grabbing and tearing process is accomplished by hand, and is done for the purpose of removing the hard stalk in the centre of the leaf, The next stag is the blending. The blenders' job is a highly-apeclallzed one; they must have a keen eyesiglit and a keen sense of emelt, and, above ail, they musi bo good, sound judges of what ennstitu.es a good tobacco for either pipe or cigarette, Where a mixture Is being made, the light and dark tobaccos are mixed 1n a ma- chine which ensures the exact pro- portion. After this it passes to a condition - ng room where It Is brought to ma- turity. Previous to reaching the fac- tory It has lain for from three to nye years maturing in bonded stores, 1t1101' at Liverpool, Manchester, or London, but It receives its anal touch in the conditioning room of Uta factory, All of it has now been blended and graded, and that portion which is to tie sold to the pipe -smoker goon ,to its own room, where it fin packed and labelled by machinery and finished .or sale, The tobacco for cigarettes ;nes to another machine, where it 1s rolled and wrapped in paper by machinery. I watched the paper fed to the ma- chine, saw the tobacco being put oa to a miniature conveyer, and then, at the other end, saw what seemed like a little ;et 001011ing forth Ono continuous cigarette, This jet never stopped, and it was all dime so quick- ly that you could not see the little knife come clown through the couttri- uoua roll when a cigarette length heti emerged from the mouth of the jet. There was a new dov(ce which weighs the tobacco in each cigarette and records to the hundredth part of an ounce any variation in the weight of tobacco. Outside the factory it was good to find that the firm has adopted mod- ern welfare methods. The firm has provided twenty acres of sports grounds, where football, hockey, cricket, tennis, and bowls are played. Another testimony to the firm length of service of some of t11 i employes, Uniformity of Railways. Britain's four big railway groups are discussing a plan to stalldardiae the entire railroad Bieck of the coun- try. The cmupantes realize 11110 1100 dreds of thousands of pounds of run- ning conts may be saved by thii action. An official of the L.N.E.tt. Bald to a reporter; "Conferences are being held by ot- fcials of the companies to agree up- on standard equipment of'every kind that is practical, Tickets are to he of uniform color fey lines—first class tickets white, third elms green and workmen's buff color, "Before the four big groups cauda luta being there were 120 railway- , ailway, companies in England, each with Its ()Wa type of stock, tickete and em - pinyon' uniforms, Now the compan- ies are concentrating ou standardiz- ing everything they tree." Lord Ilyron's Home. Historic old Newstead Abbey, fam- ous as the ancestral home of Lord. Byron, has been purchased by Sir Ju- lien Cahn for presentation lo the na- tion uncoil dilaonally, Newstead is older even than the Byron fancily, The abbey, which will be, srrured for the British people for all time by Sir Jullen'e benefaction, was a prio'y- when the founder of the line, Sit' John Byron, entered into pr.i:e; ton in 1540. The great poet was not born there, but was taken to Newstead by his uui4Ier at the age of ten years. "it was a 111(11)1(;0 front a shabby Scottish fiat to a palace," Lord Myron wrote. 1{indness Rewarded. Ills Iclnrlly 11((11tion to an need 570ntitn customer, who never even lc:ea- :its name, has brought reward 1 C. Alartin, a grocer's mauagtsr a hove, England. Iu her will rh•, weemn bequeathed to hitt as .i ;ht•te our house, the rrul. from nee:ri,ds a en,n)(r(altl,' t 'Marl in, wbr 1 o '. his Id,. uci r; the grey aa,,,. eelit trst. College, 470 r1ilef.: At ill^ R03-11 air, • a9.. a;,t;hu:.�1 - - anal t0 look Luer tirtmil