12 ABBOTSFORD, SUMAS & MATSQUI NEWS October 23. 1948 WE S IX AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC WATER HEATERS 27 Years’ Leadership WESIX. the world’s first practical wutomatic electric water heater, is still oo BB in exchusive patented /<— pert economy, Today’ Lae wy are the finest ever built, =n quarter-century of experience. Fully SA Suaran Si. Accessibility. Removable front x panel makes adjustments » ser vicing easy, quick, ecencenical. Thermostat unit slides out withe draining tank. . Connections. Hot and old water pipe connections H in back of heater but to the plumber. Trap. Prevents hot water flowing through pipes until faucet is open—saves expense. Three and a Half Inches of Loose ed Fill Insulation. Prevents escape of . — into the room, insures econ- conce eas F . ra Double Strength Tank. 300 pound test, extra-heavy galvanized tank, made by one of the most reliable tank manufacturers in the country. A Heating Unit. Double- element models have a second unit and thermostat to give extra heat- in, . Doub Pole Thermostat. Discon- V nects both electric power wires in- stead of only one as in other yoad heaters. An exclusive WESIX ture that prevents over- beating and saves money and assures safety. 8. Repairable Unit. Precision-built to serve for years, yet easily repair- able should trouble ever develop. Exclusive with WESIX. Cold Water Diffuser. Gives better service by preventing incoming . water from cooling water already heated. . Styled for Today. Ebony black base. Lustrous white enamel shell. 15 Gallon Size, Suitable for Dairies, Garages, Etc. $92.50 ur Massey-Harris Agents — Murphy & Wakefield ESSENDENE AVE. & ABBOTSFORD, B.C. bad “ " irport yease of accidents which have not, as Municpal Ai 4 yet, marred the operation of the At Langley Catering landing field. To Visiting Clubs A local group has applied to the 4 ee is increasing at the Lang- |} Council body for permission to ope- Jey Airport, recently acquired by the | Tate and develop the airport, which municipal council, with two | Would include the erection of hang- fying clubs ‘operating £ from the strip.|@rs and other facilities. As yet the reports the has not made a decision eit be pte teas licensed by the coun- | ‘fl as laid down in the terms of Gollar-a-year lease agreement wi Meanwhile the Royal City Piying the federal government. In addition|Club and the Vancouver U-Fly are to this, full insurance ts carried in| operation their machines locally. THEY'RE MUNCHING HAY IN THE A TwelveRace Horses, Brood Mares Now — At Marvern Stock Farm | huge barns and the neatly fenced pastures of that estal |situated on the old Clayburn Road in Matsqui Municigaiiey, ae resting after a season of strenuous campaignin, blishment, built box stalls, it's light a: airy, runni water is available inside the barn el i The pasture has been divided jimto separate corrals and the | grass is in excellent condition. As a background, Sumas Mount- in completes a setting which decidedly unique. Star of the stable is the 11 | year-old Pass Forward. by By Pass II.—Mis Not, which won Fase in purses at Vancouver, kane, and other tracks during “fe past summer. This grand horse won four races, finished in ae se- cond spot six times and wi only “up the track” entire season. One of the best in the stri: is Count Allan, a three-year. which won Gung the past sum- mer at Hastings. He's by Count Arthur—Mary Helen, and they just don’t come with better breed- ing, as Count Arthur is by Reigh Count, a Kentucky nt winner. From Old Kentu Six-year-old Leslie c. by Gol- den Image—Tonga Girl, is from old Kentucky, suh. He won one race during the season and fi- nished second no less than six times. good twice during the Hi-Meadows beat fields on the way back to the judge's | Pagoda three times. She's a six year-old mare by Broad Mea- dows, a grand Maryland cam- paigner, out of High Token. One of the handiest mares in the stable is Inceptress, by the stake horse Tick On or Sierra Nevada, out of Hexie, a Chicle mare. Inceptress finished on the head end once, was nosed out of the big part of the purse in two \* | photo finishes and was third once. Bred In Alberta Prairie folk will have a_senti- mental interest in Rock Steady, by Stratford Rock—Fanny Fay. It was raised in Calgary and won at Hastings Park August 22, when it was owned by H. Hagan With Vie Bovine in the saddle, Rock Steady was taken back for three-eighths, dropped to the in- side when they entered the back stretch, took the lead at the three-quarter mark, had a three- length lead when they turned for home and won by four Ten Be, seventh horse in the stable, has never been to the is scheduled to maxe post and her debut next summer. It's by Gallator out of that grand old mare, Ada El Bee, once king pin on coast race tracks. Her racing days over, 15-year- old Just Mrs. is now the Mar- vern Stock Farm’s ace brood mare. She is always to be found hard by her colt, w the imported French t Band. In her day, Just Mrs. won a score of races, finishing in front on tracks in Winnipeg, Vancouver, and many other parts of the west. She i ally bred. her sire being Justi imported | from Badiend, which won the ci cidentally, | yearling jor. nd was re- garded by turf experts as one of the greatest bargains of his day Ti jarvern horses are a for- midable band and most of them can run in mud, dust or daisies. Pass Forward is still winning races at an age when most horses have long since thrown in the towel and in the stable are ai as reliable Well trained and well fed, they go to the post a mite sharper thi Uncle Newt's razor, and if they don’t finish down in fro: the race fans can ey have done their make it a horse level best to race. Has Ascot Maid Alf Teasdale, one of Vancou- ‘ er players in his veral ho’ as se the big barns. on Ascot Maid, an cig mare, to provide most and oats. The Maid have old, ae own brood mare, Acolin. and both are quartered at the be: il |1S BY FRENCH SIRE the over-crowded a | district s| re | LocaLy-ownen COLT C. Nordine, McCallum Road, Mai ‘i, has a colt which fi gures to hold his own on the coast race tracks next year. It is Band, by the French ae Jazz Band, out of Arabian ture at the ha | farm. She is by Nepperha: Love, and was once owned by K. M. Leach, Calgary theatre owner, E. H. Barton Back From N.Y., And Glad, Too Gilad to be back in a land where, among other things, cigars sell for 7% cents each is E. H. “Hal” Barton, Veteran former secretary-manager of the Chilliwack fair and well known in Praser Valley Board of | Trade circles, who returned inst | week for six months with his son Charles in Syracuse, New York. Por two weeks Syracuse had no | butter and one week it had no beef “They aren't rationed—you just can't get them. Unimpressed by New York agricul- ture was Mr. Barton. Land sells for @ little over $100 an acre; dairymen are getting $1 to $1.10 a pound but- Concen’ MILLING COMPANY LIMITED a AT YOUR DEALER 22,800 MILES OF POLES To serve the nation, the Peat — National ty ig! travel nadian National T: tain 22,800 miles of pole toe o and rately the distance. bet 173,000 miles of wire circuits, In 1943 locomotives of the Ca- ies, Rn opproxi- the rth and the si terfat on the stand. Parm labor is available at $1 an hour but hay spoiled in the fields this year because farmers had to wait for labor. Mr. Marton arrived home in time to attend a meeting of the board of governors, University of British Co- jumbia, on which he serves as the voice of agricultural interests in the province. POULTRY BREEDERS HOLD FIELD DAY AT CHILLIWACK R.O.P. poultry breeders held a field day and luncheon at Chil- liwack last Wednesday, when a Son, Harold Eversfield, SELL YOUR POULTRY to us, We pay live weight. The short haul avoids shrinkage. Phone 284 for pickup service for your poultry and eggs, ” —— SHIP TODAY WITH THE M-S-A—— + Ee} M-S~A Egg & Poultry Ltd. lew Siberia Poultry Farm and M. HL Ruttledge. Officials > attendance Longer ells, Department Agriculture, by Fs Mr. G. R Wilson, District Poultry Products Inspector, Dominion Fg vie of Agriculture and G. ndon, Poultry C: Commissioner “5 BC. MENNONITES OPEN TWO NEW SCHOOLS Redistribution of of ‘pupils attending rural elementary schools near Chilliwack city is being investigated by officials of school No. 33 following an an- AUCTION . SALE EVERY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON CUTLER’S BARN — MISSION Highest Prices for Calves and other Livestock ED JONES, Licensed Auctioneer nouncement that the junior-senior high school has lost 130 students to two Mennonite schools at Yarrow and Sumas. FOOD RULES Be sure you get all the food values your uires, ad- vises an authority on nutrition at headquarters in Ottawa of the Department of National Health and Welfare. “If you want to look, feel and do your best, be sure to get all the necessary food elements,” says the expert, who points out that Canada’s Food Rules, copies of which may be obtained, free, from the provinc- ial health department or from the federal health authority, indicate uch healthful foods as milk, it, vegetables, whole-grain ce- ls and meat or meat alterna- | tives. | | | Emil Gordon, 60, pion River businessman, d IS INCORRECT FEEDING KILLING YOUR DAIRY PROFITS? "fon ele” DAIRY FEED Feed your cows “MIRACLE” DAIRY FEEDS be- cause “Miracle” Dairy Feeds are scientifically Ps ed so that the cow gets the exact food value neces- sary to produce the most milk at the least feed cost. Sumas Co-op Association No. | — DELIVERY SERVICE — Abbotsford, Phone 158 ell ed cently following a heart attack. | practically untried, having started | only once during the past sum. | He was entered against e| keen horses and was not disgra ed in finishing out of the mone: Acolin is now in foal to known sire, Papworth, ‘arm. Get Tuned noted English horse Pepyrus. GCS! COLU (Located Morth of C | ABBOTSFORD, B.C. EGGS! us —E——_—— ; EGGMORE LAYING MASH | ; | } COLUMBIA GRAIN MILLING CO. EGGS! | MBIA ‘old Storage Lockers) Ht { “ ts PHONE 285 (| He POULTRYMEN! What is the most commes cause for your pullets te stop laying and ge into a tall | moult? We find where pullets consume large quantities of mash ond relatively small quantities of grain, production will go to a peak of 70% or 80% then drop. This drop i@ Production and fall moult is the result of the birds being out of condition. You should feed al! the grain your pullets will consume at night and one-third this quantity in the SERVING YOU IN YOUR DISTRICT* Brackman-Her ‘Milling Co. Lid. ABBOTSFORD PHONE by