SELL RENT SWAR + HIRE * -- Thursday, Sept. 4th, 1969 10 - PORT PERRY STAR Auction Sales Auction Sales THURS., SEPT. 4th--The Regular twilight Auction sale at 7.30 p.m. of Dairy type springing & fresh cows and heifers, open heifers, and bulls, both Grade and Pure Bred, being from Unit Sires. A good selection is expected this month as the pasture season draws to a close, with demand being good on all classes. If you have cattle to consign to this sale that will insure buyer satisfaction and that you wish to turn to cash immediately please con- tact the sale managers. Your articipation is appreciated in these monthly sales and inquiry is no obligation. Sale at 7.30 p.m. Frank Bennett 887-5570, Norm Faulkner 640-3813, Sales Mgrs. _2--Spt4 & Auctioneers | 3--Spt.4 i AUCTION SALE of Farm Stock & Implements, Hay, Grain and Furniture. The property of CARL Mac- INNES, Lot 16, Con. 6, Eldon Twp., 3 miles east, 2 miles north, % mile east of Argyle on Palestine Quarter Line. WED., SEPTEMBER 10th at 1:30 p.m." No Reserve. Farm Sold. Terms Cash. Ray Bur- ton, Neil MacEachern, Clerks. NORM MacINTYRE & SONS, Alictioneers THURS., SEPT. 11th--Aue- tion Sale of Livestock and Implements and Household Furniture, 70 Head of Hol stein Cattle, 1965 M.F., 165 Diesel Tractor, 1964 M.F. 35 Diesel Tractor, 1967 M.F. Trip-beam Plough, New Hol land PTO, Manure Spreader, SAT., SEPT. 6th--Complete dispersal at CEDAR LAWN FARM of 50 Registered Jer- seys, including Fresh Cows, springers, bred and open heifers (all from Al breed- ing since 1946). Tested for regnancy, also Bulk Cooler, urge milker units, Electric Hot Water Tank, also "MILK QUOTA", for Pool #1, effec- tive Oct. 1, 1969. The pro- poly of ERNEST HOOVER arm located (3 miles N.E. of Markham) or (3 miles S.W. ~ of Stouffville). NOTE this is a good production herd with a dairy test 5.39 to 5.6 %. Lack of help makes this sale a must at this time. Pe- digree folders available. Pedi- gree man Arthur McKewen, Clerk A. M. Wood. No Re- serve. Terms Cash. Sale 1 pm. ATKINSON and WILSON. Sales Mgrs. & Auctioneers 2--Sept.4 MAMMOTH 2 DAY AUCTION SALE BRADLEY BROS. 1st farm north of Whitby on Highway 12. Including Ma- chinery, livestock, hay, grain, furniture ,ete. 1st Day THURS, SEPT. 11 Full line of Farm Equipment. 3 tractors etc., 5000 bales of - hay, 3000 bu. mixed grain. Sale starts at 12 noon sharp. -- 2nd Day FRI, SEPT. 12 Milk Quota(534 1bs.). 97 High Grade Holstein Cattle, includ. Bulk tank; ing 44 Cows. stable cleaner, milking ma- chine, dairy equipment. Sale at 1 o'clock sharp. At approx. 5 p.m. content" of this home will be sold See bills for complete list. Terms Cash, . TED JACKSON, TED SPENCELEY, 2--Sept.4 Auctioneers 1967 New Holland Powel Mower, Fowl, Hay, Grain, Straw, the property of ROY McMULLEN, North half Lot 10, Con. 7, Brock Twp. 1 mile west of Junction of 7 & 12 Hwys. on 8th Con. or 2 miles North & 1 mile West of Sunderland. Terms Cash. No Reserve. Farm Sold. Fur- niture Sale 12 noon; Machine Sale 1:30 p.m. Cattle Sale at 3:00 p.m. Murray Walden & Ed Allen, Clerks. CARL HICKSON, Auctioneer Reaboro, Ont. Phone Lindsay 324-9959 - BUY SELL: RENT MONDAY, SEPT. 8th, 1969 AUCTION SALE of Garage Equipment, Tractor and ete. the Estate of the late A. H. JUDD, Lot 14, Con. 12 Brock Twp, 6 miles N. of Sunder- land on Hwy. 12, 1% mile east. Massey Ferguson #50 Diesel Tractor with Robin Loader, nearly new, only 146 hrs.. Triple K Cultivator, Massey Ferguson Plough, Buggy, 2 wagons, Boat and Trailer. Drill Press, Band Saw, Valve Refacer, Bumper Jack, Air Grease Gun. Quantity of Tools, impact wrench. Arc Welder, Paint Sprayer, Elec- tric Drill, Tire Machine, Bat- tery Chargers. Adjuster stands, Cabinet. Many other useful articles. Sale called to settle estate. Terms Cash. Sale at 1 p.m. Clerk, Gerald Graham. : REG JOHNSON & SON, ~~ Auctioneers. Ph, Sunderland 357-3270 THURS., SEPT. 11th AUCTION SALE of House- hold Furniture, Car, Anti- ques, Tools, etc., the property of BERT LOACH & OTHERS, will be held in the Town of Cannington at the Brock Creamery on Shedden St. Including a 1962 Volkswagen Deluxe Car with sun roof, Kelvinator Clothes Dryer, SAT., SEPT. 13--Complete dispersal at HI.VIEW FARMS of 100 Holsteins, including 65 milk cows (40 backward springers for late Nov. or early Dec.), 35 bred heifers, DeLaval 90 can bulk cooler (2 yr. old), Milk Quota 1577 1b. Pool #1, effective Oct. 1, 1969. Surge 4 unit pipe line milker with electro brain washer and electric pulsators, SP. 22 Surge vacuum pump, International #55, 2 row Forage Harvester (new, only cut 40 acres), 2 Forage wag- "ons, 2 yrs. old, Inter. #40 Universal Forage Blower, cpt. Inter. #105 Grinder - Mixer (like new), Silo unloader, etc. The property of L. SYTSMA and SONS Farm located 8 miles N.W. of Stouffville) or (10 miles S.E, of Newmarket) or (12 miles north of Hwy. #401 on Don Mills Rd. turn east 1% miles to farm) NOTE --These implements are like new and the cattle are big, strong dairy cows and heif- ers. Farm Sold - Sale 12:30 sharp (Implements). ATKINSON and WILSON, Sale Mgr. & Auctioneers Round Dining Room Table, Knick-Knack Cupboard, Pine Cupboards & Washstand, Iron beds, chrome suite, Ice cream table & 2 chairs, love seat, hall stand (antique), brass bed, plaques, large brass tiffany light fixture, school clock, arrowback chairs, moustache milk glass oil lamps, qu. of other lamps & dishes, 1880 school maps in wooden case, wooden telephone, 7 h.p. wheelhorse tractor (all at- tachments), propane floor furnace(1 yr. old), John Wood heater (nearly new), qu. of shutters, qu. of tools, 2 sets skiis, children's toys, etc. Terms Cash. Sale at 1.30 p.m. Gerald Graham, Clerk. REG JOHNSON & SON, ' Auctioneers. . Ph. Sunderland 357-3270 cup & saucer, carnival glass, |} glars-lined propane hot water |}, L "REAL ISTATE TD REALTOR 985-7373 CAP, ~ Senior Citizens " Soon the Club will be start- ing the usual twice monthly meetings (second & fourth Wednesday's of each month). First meeting after holidays will be Wed., Sept. 10th at 2:00 p.m. Sorry there was an error in last week's write up. Euchres are always held on Saturday evenings at 8.30 p.m. twice a month. Hope it put no one to any inconveni- ence. (should have read Sat., August 30th). These euchres are held all year round. Considering the. warm wea- ther and being a holiday week-end 12 tables were set up for the euchre held Sat., Aug. 30th, Things will soon be back to normal again after summer holidays & activities, We older folk don't welcome the winter but seasons come and go and their is not much we can do about it. Next meeting at Hall (be- hind P.O. in Port Perry) will be held on Wed., Sept. 10th at 2 p.m. Several of our members are still on the sick list, speedy recovery to all. Win- ners at Euchre on Aug. 30th as follows: Ladies High, Mrs: S. A. Wallace; Second, Mrs. M. Goodman, Oshawa; Low Mrs. G. Johns. Gent's High Mr. Holdershaw; Second Mr. E. Healy; Low (as man) Mrs.' A. Holland (12 tables). It was reported Hall was quite comfortable electric fans & air conditioner helped a lot. Plenty of seating capacity for a larger attendance. SAV N=RN ST = = = 0a =] = WEN = = NR = Ae La a LL = COO CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS la La = 1 =] Ny = 2 a = {= = Wh ON = RENT « SWAP + HIRE = + SELL: RENT Tough Eines For Speeding A sliding scale of fines for speeding convictions, with the penalty rising sharply in relation to the speed, went into effect in Ontario on Sept- ember 1, 1969. ' Under the new sliding scale, the fine will rise with the speed: $2 for each mile per hour over the speed limit up to 9 m.p.h.; $3 per mile between 10 and 19 m.p.h. over the limit; $4 pet mile between 20 and 29 m.p.h. over the limit; and $5 per mile for 30 m.p.h. over the limit. For an offence that occurs after September 1, a driver will be fined $10 for driving 35 m.p.h.in a 30 m.p.h. zone. But that fine will rise to $30 if he is convicted of driving 40 m.p.h. in the same zone and to $150 if he is driving 60 m.p.h. A new sliding scale of fines has also been set for convict- ions resulting from the over- loading of commercial veh- icles. - Changes in fines make up the bulk of more than 60 amendments ito the Ontario Highway' Traffic Aé¢t which became effective September 1. "We have overhauled the entire system of deterrents by discarding the principle of varying fines for first, second and third or subsequent offen- ces," Hon. Irwin Haskett, Ont- ario's Minister of Transport said. "New minimum and max- imum fines. have i;.been established for each traffic offence. "The changes are aimed at irresponsible drivers who invite collisions by their shock- ing disrespect-for the traffic laws." : L Asan example of the stiffer fines, Mr. Haskett mentioned the new minimum fine for a careless driving conviction. For an offence occurring previous to September 1, the minimum was $10. For an offence occur- ring after September 1, the minimum is $100. The max- imum fine of $500 remains. Janitors Continued said the 320 school custod- ians would demonstrate to back up their contract demands. However, , Mr. Harper warned that if nothing comes out of the Sept. 17 conciliat- ions session the union can legally strike. The union is allowed to strike seven days after the conciliation officer hands down his decision. "Up to now we have been waiting - for them to come to us to start negotiating," said Mr. Harper. "If we don't: finish up Sept. 17 then we'll never finish, we'll have to strike." Ross Backus, school board administrator, said today the | union seems to have recon- sidered. its position regarding a walkout as there has been no meeting between the board and the union. : Mr. Backus had no com- ment on the union's change of heart. : The union is demanding an hourly pay hike of about $1 to about $3.50 an hour. The union is also asking for continuation of overtime rates for Saturday and Sunday Friends Honour Epsom Couple On - 40th Anniversary On Sunday, . August 10, Mr. and Mrs, Al Christie of Epsom were honoured at a celebration of their 40th Wedding Anniversary. It came .as a complete surprise as their actual wedding date is 'Aug- ust 7. - . . \ In the afternoon the family guests arrived and were served a buffet dinner. Shortly after, the guests of honour were presented with a colour TV, a ruley dish, glasses, candles,. compote, a coffee-mug set, a steak set and a bed-spread. At 7:30 six members of the Uxbridge Canadian Legion Pipe Band paraded on the lawn and serenaded the bride and grq#m, guests and neigh- bours with several Scottish tunes. : ro During the evening the neighbours dropped in to offer their congratulations. Guests were present from Guelph, Brampton, Toronto, Bowmanville, Kincardine, Col- umbus, and Victoria Corners. Is your child afraid of the water? Let him borrow I Learn to Swim, a picture book from the Children's Department of Port Perry Public Library. The book will amuse him and may overcome his fear of the water and teach him the fundamentals of swimming. in work at-all schools and that the board rid- itself of its professional negotiator for contract talks. : - S x . eR eel Welwe Sng a PapgP Ney, 85S STAPLERS | gS paren ey "CLIP PAPER SHARNCIL PUNCH "Rpg ERs Bias i'l ST ig n I L227) 3 OH n oy ~ om y Bad] VE w__ tT Laie oe "PORT PERRY STAR OF OFFICE SUPPLIES TO MEET ALL YOUR NEEDS 8 PRIN Whatever you need in printing, our Bali 0 |e NVELOPES i - PHONE WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE modern equipment and long experi- ence assure you of a quality job, at a price you'll like. PORT PERRY ONT. Printing Services TING &, [AY A, RAW TICKETS POSTERS | 985-7383