The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-10-25, Page 4,
fAelt TOW
. 711It LUCOTQW sirsrminn 4nuRsbAy, OCTOBER 25th, 190 •
DKr° Water stem
caPadties are greats,-
. -Prim are
Durogives you mare
Mater at a lomsrprice.
Lotog4ife, care -fru
service guarasteed.
'
onie.
kitchen sink with running Water
under stronrpiessure-a mud- '
ern bathroom -an up-to7dat,e laun-
dry -plenty of faucets in convenient
places --.2111 aVailable with a Duro,
Water System. Think what this
•means in comfort and convenience
in your suburban orfarm home.
Duro Systems can be used with
deep wells, shallow *ells cisterns or
springs- •They may be driven from
' 14111i:1e current, fann light plant br
gasoline engine: .4stallation quick
• OA easy.
, Duro-ize your country home. Let
•us recommend the right Water sys.7
tem Of the proper. Capacity or your
Xequitemeals.! No obligation! "
•
The Empire Brass Manufactaring Co.
London Torianto Winnipeg Vancouver ••
For Sale Ey Wm. MURDIE & SON
1.017011CITOW SEIisTEX.-
Published every. Thin -setae,. Morning
at Lucknow. Ontario.
A. D. MacKenzieProPrietor
and Editor.
OCI'OBER 25eli, 1928
• -.
,IS IT
VIO1FrIhIO 'POBLIO '
OWNERSHIP,
It is sustietted. in •*sOine ituarters
thes4 atehee:,,P, elredehg 'olifg.litthiena7ptleariitat-
Walkereon and -Wiartore, by .a hig
United States concern e is' part of e,
•scheme t� discredit • and heat out the
Ontarlo. Hydro Electric System. ,
Water powers- scrlocated that they
•eau &teemed for the: development a
electric ' energie certainly' present a
greet besiness opportunity-ethae is
sehea theavater ,Pewer can be,obtatnecl
,at reasonable cost and eoverinrients
' not impose •too great restrictions as!
to peohts. Private companies, usually
ere'Velling to take chances on that, as
egoverunentageherally canebeef`gotten
at" one way or another, •
The Ontario Hydro-Eleetric system
represents about the Most efficient
and ,successfullarge-scale public own -
'ship entei-Prise so far undettaken, end
therefore the greatest enenaie to pri-
vate ownership of peddle. utilities. For
this reason those who have' secured
water power privileges, or Who see
odd, business opportunitiesinacquire
ing Such; naturally wish • to see' the
:Ontario 'enterprise discredited.'
; Public ownership has its weaknes-
ses. There is danger that the man,
lagenient, freed from eompetitieff and
1,' hiving no, direct eersmail..interestat
stake, will .litek eneerpries: or beeome
those whoin-lt. serves.,,Theire is dan-
ger tee of the' grist of operating be-
comme too high. Publicly owned MAL
serPriseS never are;: as economically
inanagedeaseare eprivateehusinesses. •
On the other' hand a privately own -
Ad puhlie Utility is, Sere te' become • a
source ofc government' corruption, and
as such:service is likely to be of the
nature ;of. '-ce monopoly -and -the price
,is 'likely ,to be "all. the, traffie will
hare." •
As between ,the evils which beset
•nrblic ownership and the'evil i Which
attend 'private ceeneiship of public
setelitiee-'wee-luiveno-hesitation-in
•ehoosing the former there being great-
er liklihoOd of reform. •
, •
WaterSystem
•
•-ltINILOSS- COUNCIL'
• Kinloss Council met on Oct 8the
• All 'members present The minutes of
last meeting were read -and on motion
• 'were adopted and signed as correct,
The Eng -Meer presented ' his report
on the -Starling ciil-erla triveredeby Ross
and McIntosh that the Report of Mie
- C. A. Jeines on the.Stirling :Drain be
previsionaily 1 adopted and that the
• Clerk be -instructed to prepare a .BY
, Law and ferward a copy to ell part-
ies interested in the Township'of
_
loss -- Carried ,,,
A Petition for the improvement of
'the Kinloss and Kincardine drain was
presented by J. G. Huston and others.
Motion of Ross and McIntosh that
• the Petition of J.. G. Huston and oth-
ers,' be accepted and that ' the Clerk
be instructed to forward the Petition
to Fred A. Edgar Engineer with in-,
struction to investigate and report on
' same -- Carried. -
• Rosa and McQueen: That the cone-
,• snunication from D. Forrester in re-
gard to Board bill for Small Pox
'patient to ,be referred back to Board
'ofIlealth - -Carried.
• Motion of Carruthers and McQueen
that the Township of Kinloss donate
• $15.00 to the South Bruce Ploughing
0.• .
t.seems
Fathers and mother's used to°.
.look forward be-avely,'but not,
always happily, • to the time'.
when the boys and 'girls'
'esaitild go :away to seheol iri
, a dietine city.' 11 `So often
• meant a .break in the habits'
of home life -ea. sore tz-iaL '
; Thanks 'to I,ong toistari
• the boys and girlsat school
or college can 'still be' kept
:within the family,
Brit'don't expethent to pay
for Long Distance calls :Oat
. .
of their elender allowapces.,-
• That eeerne hardly, fair: The
deniand.s upon their none too e
fat Purses are too frequent
•, • and too intietent.
• Fix a; clay" and hone. **lien ,
• you will call them, and You'll• ' ;
rind them eager t� talk. with,
• that Can hest cheer there on
snatch Carried,
Ross and MclntOah-that•
Leod be paid the balance of contract
$253.00, C. A. :Jones, Engineer, hays
ing certified that the, work: has been,
completed - Carried. •
Ross and McIntosh:, That the claims
Lor damagesfor sheep killed by dogs
efer.....$1,Leache1or oneeslieepe.be-paid
to' Wm. Stauffer and has. Bonnett.
Accounts paid. Were as follows:
Isaac 'Plaine% (Pay List 103) $17,75;
• fohn•-Keenede (Pay List 104) $5.00;
J. B. Hodgkinson (Pay List '105) '$2. -
',leo. Scott (Pay List':106e$5.90; L P.
Weiler (Pay 'List 107) $70.00; 'J. J,,
Henderson. (Pay„ List 108) .$123.30;
• J. A. McKinnon '(Pay List 109) $96..;
J. A. MeKinnon. salary $2850; Orville
Tiffin (Pay List 111) $5.15; Dan Cas-
sidy (Pay List '112) $15.O0.'
Ceuncier':adjourned until • Monday
Oct 29th at the usual place and dine
when a coart, of revision on the Stir -
'Inge Drain' will be held, at two 'O'clock
Gee, G. Moffat -Clerk:
WHEN WORK WAS _WORK
• EDISON'S FIRST PHONOGRAPH
oe; •
Thomas A. E. Edison, famous in-
. ,
ventor, is an old man now arid as to
ais owndoings naturally looks ,backs
vard rather than fOrward. He was
she Principal in an enjoyable little in-
eident the other day, when he had
•eicasion to • recall the making of the,
first phonograph, and the, day when
lie Made the' first record by "reciting
• into his machine the, words' "Mary
eed 'a little iamb." .
• (New York Tribune)
, If the Several . hundred Englishmen
who came to! Canada -recently 'to help
garner a: record wheat scrim in 'the
arestern provieces, :andineieted upon
being sent because they. found'
the Work* toO :strenuous. ceuldehaye,
lived in the Dominion lsefere the ad-.
verit era the self -bender and other lab-
or saving devices they, might have
good reasons for comeleint,
In the ptoneer days ,wheat, eats and
barley were cut by hand with. a cradle
which was much' like a ' scythe, but.
-had' a light frame of 'Wood to keep
the 'steiks in Place •while they were
leid in reeks. The regularity of
these • rows marked the cecellenee of
..the cradler, who was considered ar
exp&t when he could reap all that a:
Man Could bind into sheaves in the
•,,ceeireecessfse. dees„Which begalleatAaSse
light and ended at dark:: • • -
If there was enoonlieht during' a
criticalperiod of. the harvest and the
' grain was" in shock it was ,cOnsidered
• treason to nnirniur if the farmer eug...,
gested that his , Men devote e few
•hotis ef the night to the 'task of
"draWine.in." which meant the: trans-
fer from ' the field 'to, the capacious
mows whist) Were 'the 'feature ,of ev-
ery' properly built barn.
That old story about the city man
who yearned to' surprise the farmer
with whom he heeengaged to work'
throesh a harvest might be applied:
• with force tie those pioneer edays mn
Canaea, when. a good 'farmhand was
Indeed by the amount of sweet lie
oull shed •fot-•$1.50 a dee. This city
(hen set hie alarrn elock foe e and
salliee forth shottiy after thet hour
in black' darkness', eanguiee that he
-you& delielet•emoloyer. On turn-.
Ilee corner of the barn he met the
'flirt -le veto feel e brirernine nail (if
;*, eiteer hand and held the bail
'01.ra lqntert,' in is teeth: Placing the
nejle tirott.the irteund 'mid removing
eteseelsenterese.theeferiner-svitetea-veither-
, :Manse ieiverked. • "W.here, have
:omhi, th' hell ,iltiv?" • •
R",4 hefere the eiahthour,
dsy. ee%aiete general, and grime farmers
•were eetieeee with their ht. While
Pot a. fte.v, beeteise of its indenend-
ince declared farming the ideal oc-
t:upation for the man were loved Nat.
ere in all her aspects.
v
-------0-o-o
, .
, Ti. ancient people who abitied
'Eiliery 'Bell l'elelihotte is a
Loll ,Diatance station... , , Pere before the Incas, used corti as,
Ol
' Cs .shown by their use of corii as a
NIIMN4IMPPIMIIIIIIIINIIN1141 i.., . ,
- - " • ". '' drr0r4tivii IIStar4 411 burl* 44100* '
The inectune it ; appears was 'Made,
•*min a drawing -by Edisoneby a skills
ed wcirkintin :by the name of John
-Kruesi. The emachine being .completed
elr. Edison spoke intei it and had the
ereat satisfaction of hearing the mat
• reproduce the sounds fetely well
Years of improving followed,' but for
e. long thee the Edison phenOgraphs,
: •
-eproduced freni a resolving cylinder
ineteadof the disc; so , commen tee
, Mr.:. Edisdn has alWays been very
'rieridlys to' Britain and to liritistror-
• -anizatiens, and institutions, and • 45
-oar's ago he loaned ;his first .1ittle
nhonogreizh to the 'British patent of-
fice _museum, et South Kensington and
.it wee- the, returneof :the machines to
Mr. ,Edison. whieh eccaeidited .his little
•ealk recalling the day that he first
"ward it reproduce the Swords "Mary
ead a little lamb;"; the 'first words'
.ver eeprodueed that way. •, -
It appears that Mr.' Edison • pre-
entech also his first electrie lenip to
ehe musehin at South Kensington, but
eay s it will remain Aber° as it was
A" present from him:.
_
•WHERE WOMAN'.S INFLUENCE
COUNTS
v
' (From Toronto Saturday Night)
• The residents of Toronto were deep-
ly touchee on e recent afternoon by
the spectadle of every policeman who
could be spared from duty. fellowing
the hearse Which bore the remains �f
Miss, Ariiia- Katherine oode- theft
s t jeep iney,,,Uatil',,,,herssedeetles„. end
incest impressive obsequies, eompar-
atively; few Toront.onianS Syeee ,awore,
of the ',work that, Miss Woods had
ne'ried en for a quarter of a century
nt lionorar.y. Secretary of the Christ-
ian Peliee Aesohiation, hot, to evety
elffieet in, unieorm,sfroire the highest,
to the loWest in.. rank, he notent and
heneficeht influetice were well lcriowny
ded, trithsterided that:�f any nmni.
cipal politiciae that hes teen known
in the hlitory a the cit. the kind
41,,Christisaity..ahe-opracticed?*441Um
itedby,no, narrowness of creed or out;
look, and she was 'One to whom any,
policeman in 'trouble confided his diffi-
culties ,with assurance of e ,sympa-
thetic •hearing, The policeman on the
atwith a sick wife cir ehild at home
eras ;consoled, with the kneWiedge that
his caree were bfar as •possible being
Shared, and alleviated through the
ititidly offices ot Miss Weed% She Per-
haps hpew' more, than , eityeine, else of
:the persenneheof' the force,' arid the
Board of .Pelice Cernmissioners Were
always glad te avail themselve's of her
eoUnSet. Though her ,illieess.'hed been
at several -meths duration' the: neiv.
Chief ' Of Police den.„- Draper had
emend her the best advisers ireadjuet-
ing himself to his new reepcipsihilitiee.
•• Miss. Weeds' .positicin in the' chile
'Polity of Toronto ;was aliscilutelY
ique and eihnot perhaps,' be paralleled
ip any cit pri thi continent.. .Her.
fironense private infliienee wee Per-
haps increased' by the fact that she
„
always :shunned' pehlicity, and never
far as one 'tcnows went to the
riewleraihers about anything. She was
never heard of in the coteries that
demand a more powerfnl voice for
aeeimenenhli-e-eiffairee She Wasepro-
ebably aware of the fact that in her
.own euiet way she wielded e gr-ater:
'influence than the average man, She
. was t,ndeed the embodiment of prac-
tical ,Christianity and the latent ,pow-
er d enlightened womanhood: •e
• OUR LOSSES BY PRE
. •
,(Frona • The Farmers' Advocate) •,t
The fire losi for •the eiglie- months
sf 1928 was over a million dollars
PRAM' FARMER -IN: JAIL
ON L. C A. CHARGE
- -Walkerton Herald -Thiel s)
. Jim . Rogere, whose home 'On the
Walkerton -Hanover Road .is common,
4, referred to • as • "The Half Way
House," had. his premises visited by
Provineial Officers Nelson and Mc-
Clevis about 10 oeclock•Tuesday night
• and -as a ilepult of the, wet goods they
diacovered , and 'eartein imforitiation
they had reeeivedeJim Ives pieced ...un-
der arrest and 'brought to' the Wallis
•erton jell, where he has Leen remans
ded ,on the charge of selling liquor to
, ,
!minor's,
Rogers. 'Wipe is 'a bachelor ermer,
living hi a srealteshatik 'hell -way be-
tween.. Walkerton and Haeover, has
had his place Searched, 'it is said
on verities OceasiOns„ the „ past
without the authorities gettipg, any-
thing on him. For the past two
'teouths' Officers' Nelson and'hIcClevie
heve had the place ,under observation
and'.when, under cover of the dark-
ness 'hisesday pighe •they stepped
,out Of their • car„ the anelible,JaMes
met 'them with a lanteen near 'the
eate and apPerently thinking they
were customers said in his friendliest
• topes, -"Boys just step inside."
• He seemed rather startled; when
the pair advised hire they were pot-
i:oreen and had a warrant, for the
search of. his elaCe, Regaining his
compesure he pepared them for the
sight of a lot of empty betties, piled
in the house, and 'which he complain-
ed lind ben fired out of eats by people
passing his home, This was a feature
of Ferguson's. • Liquor Control •.A.Ct
neeording to the officerg that Jim said
he 'didn't like. He also told them that
there was a drunken. Men • upstairs.'
whom he wished they wisuld remove,
nnd",Who ;seemed ready for a scrap
when Constable McClevis approached
-greater-thae-forethe sane peried, in ' ' f '
•
they came upon 3 10 -gal. barrels of
In their search 'about, the •premises
eider and a 15 -gal barrel o elder -
1927., It ' is 'a tremendous losseto inch-. berry wine. The polite, took samples
iduala •and to 'the' 'nation to, have a ,of' it and it le said. had a ham time
fi• erreovilonact of
Ohneatarrlyio$iiII2t,Oh0e6s,04000rt•inspatleme
' •• the wine after it had been placed in
'keeping the cOrkseie , the bottles of
te
of twelve months. Nearly $10,000,000 I:iingpooliiiiceoffiatscheoihterehe
interval
coarnkp
ds poupt.;
of , this loss was in' dwellings, stores, ting quite a :problem up to the offi-
_years-there. wereell_b_hertes. burned ns_ - • ' d h t '
•ferneatiOn that Rogers. had been set--
eerse--A-s-the-police claim -to -have in
i
farm buildings. and factorie-s-:Last
'the Province, with.a loss of $1,893,47--8 ling etcreand Lae some of the
, The, waste 'occasioned' by uncontrol-
led fires represented in terms of Int
man life; labor, time are natural
sources, cannot cannot be recreated, but is a day neat at •2 p.m.. when he comes. up
etuff; had made ehem. drunk abou
.'„firrteetiminutes. they Pieced. James
under arrest and piloted tem to Walk-
erton, where Magistrate Waeker re-
manded' hint to the cells until Tues -
hiss' which places a tax upon eindust-
ry :and thrift and adds to the cost of
living. •
. In a single hour the borne or the
barn with the season's .crop rney,
• laid weeteeliy;the-clemon_fire-Mit
• cif this loss is preventable if due pre-
• caution is taken in the storing of the
crops, in ' the handling of ' combusti-
ble material. SpOntnecus cOmbusticin
takes place in hay 'and :5t1' which
has not • been properly cured.,before
being stored, but it may also, take
place in the ,pile of dirty or greasy
rags -or ruhleisli which has been alloWe
.ed to ,a4c4mu1ete. Careful inspection
'should be made, of all buildings' .and
mirroupdiegla to remove any accumu-
lation of waste' material which might
• increase :fire hazards.
.It is always,arisk to , store, the
automobile, tractor or gasoline en-
gine in the 'barn where there is hay
ana straw.' One -*tee not know when
the engine' Will backfire and 'sparks
:stare ra blaze.' At this season the lant-
ern will he used in doing the Morning
and •evening chores. If it is kept clean
and always hunaein a safe Piece there
• is comparatively little - danger, but
when the. tubes beeeine clogged an
explOsion is possibleetnder no con-
sideration should the lantern he set
on the barn or stable floor
• _Where electricity is used a careful
inspection of • the wiring should be
made it least once, 'a year. Lightning
sets fire to a few barns, but where tbe
:buildings are :properly wired 'the lege
from this sOurce is negligible,: The
• spark 'from the chimney, .the cigarette
snecigais stuhumoiilderingetnegiaeS or-
westesmaterial, near the buildings, or
careless use of the lantern or matches
are sources Of' much less.
' In/the dwelline house every precaut-
ion should' he taken for there ,the dan-
ger' to- life is etill. more r.rOtiounced:
The aecurpulation, of ;rubbish around
the furnace,' the setting of. the atove
andpipe e tooclose to 'a wooden par-
tition, defeetiye or dirty- chimneys.
the use 4f. eoal oil or gasolne in start-
ing fires, and ,the, use, Of gasoline fcir
cleaning, all increasethe fire hazard.
,Asfew hours' time making a general
inspection and clean-up may prevent
e. conflegretion that. would destroy
property and ,endager life. All doing
their bit in ehe way of reireiving fire
hazards will greatly decrease ,the fire
loss for this, coming year., and save
many a' heartache. Peeeention Should
be watehteerife Make weekly clean-
,
:attiestbeeepolicseapch iesorte•tn. ,otesztal,
vitiInnee,effort the to make Pire
Prevention .a verSerial' matter of, first
magnitude
Babe Rtith.announces he's for Goys
ether Smith, Which probably ail
swing more, votes that a learned:
treatiee offering e a wbrkeble remedy
for the great probleuis confronting
the Unit,M; '8tat•s.-1.4ad9a rree
on a selling charge: .
Samples of the stuff coerailed, on
the .premises were taken to Toronto
this' Thursday. , bse Ofheer lelcCievis
•*er analysis,' so that the 'coert
know ,the exact amount of. kick in
tlie- 'moisture.
• gCKiLES$,. AITTCOST, FINED. •
• AND mcgNsE- 'CANCELLED
Harry Henderson,:son of Thos.
Henderson, whe keeps ti store at Elm-
wood, was last week fined $20.00 and
ecOsts .9f .$8.00, and -had his drivers
lieense• cancelled, in court at Walker-
ton. ,
•
• The • youth, it Seeins, was, doing a
sort of jitney .business :taking high
school students from the Vicinity of
lmwood to the-Wilkerten schoolelle
was of the kind that "passes every-
thing on the road," not always ey-
ing ,great regard .for those ,whoirehe
passeed. ••
Cese_ day, .in. his ,haste. he passed a
Wyllis-Knight car on the road, and
in the aat found his ford almost up
agairiSt an Essex occupied by the re-
presentativeseof taw and 'ceder Con-
stables Nelson and Meclevis, apct the
Bev, •Mr. Perdue of the chitclren's
Shelter. Mr. 'Perdue who Was, driving
had tes, take the .d,itele to • overide, a
head-on collision, ahd et -that the
Ford' lost a huli-cap in hitting the
:Willys-Knight. Little thinirs ,like that
hewever, didn't bother the reckless
.youth who was in a hurry so he:sped
en his way. Getting out o* the ditch
the Esse x ,was turned in pursuit of
the flyipg. ford, but althoegh it te-
eistered close on 56 inileS"' per lenir
it failed to overtake the jitney ,until
jit, milled in town. The police car then
'nulled ,aloneside and Henderson, ap-
parently inreaised evite*told that he
was underj. arrest. He sees' charged
with reckless driving' 'which he denied.
• In eourt Magistrate Walker believ-
ed the police as against the youth
-eith the result as stated above.
co o 0—
GOT' 00 DAYS FOR , FIGHTING ,
• 'Pence Magistrate Walker • is pen-
alizing; in no. iineertain feshion, per -
tons convicted • of . rowdYism. Frank
,of Huron Township realez.
es ',this for he is in the Comity jail
here. Frank ,struek Wililam Robert-'
eon, in the late. et, doctor's serviees
evere-required, for noeewes, brides
ehe sA,..P.Aliesee.e9utteseese,:thliowi,d,
At Kincardine. Tuesday afternoon ,
the story Was told. The ecea- occurred
et al: theeihine en---(ett. iith the
farm of Niitchelhe 'father-in-law." the
'elagietrate considered the charge of
isSault,40ccaeioning bodily harni was
sebetantiated, and he • a"ieigriech the
erring:' °tie to 'Governor ityndmansa
bastile for 00 day's:
Some time ago the tame Magis-
trate handed out 30laiet to a man,
iron the same diStrict was con.
it4c40, Illihtiax,
•••••••?•^......r. -:-....----- -„,-.
- _.
,--
b
,
.• .-7......,";,..
/l .. ,•.- -
,-, .,
"t-,- ,)! ,•••*, re_eseee„,..res--- .
. •
; Modern farming, means tractor • farming With 11 McCOR
,
NLICK-DEERING TRACT° a OUTFIT, besaving tune aad mon-
,
, ey. They are built to lad and aescheid -boy ,cen, operate them: :
No working parts eepesed to grit or sand. there. are no, trouble,
makine SProcicets or chains,. all worlin Parts enclosedHair'
dreds of, up -to date farmers in, Onterio 'are keeping their !joys •
, at home and their 'wark up to echo '.ule ivith the McCerinick-Deer-
ing Tractors. Phaws, .and other' nuiviiines0f, the same •Make. ' •
•• The NEW McCORMICK-DElERING GRAIN'BINEER coin-
binea-the best inechanical features of the old McCormick and '
• Deering harvesters, light in draft and convenient t� oPerete. It
is availab'e with either the McCortniek or Deer:ne Knotters. •
Twenty t eo iniprovements built into the Ileipilton-made Binder
Blake it more desirable than former models. •
. FOR PARTICULARS CALL AND SEE
U. ANDREW
&GENT . LUCKNOW
HAPPINESS MUST BE' :A
• It was Sterne Who wrote: "There
-isenossuch-thing-aserealehappineSsein,
:life." 'Sterne believed that '"e tran-
quil acquiescence Under an 'agreeable
dhealloupeiinseens'es..is the defieition of real
NVhat an illusion!
- Slinse Said :,:"The netireet we can
come, to, perfect happiness is to cheat
ourselves with the belief that we have
got it." •
What a delusion!
Solon' wrote: elio One earl be said, to
e trappireuerti heets-dead."
What a snerei;
• Departing ,from the •spiritualside
of this subject. "true happiness," we
Must come to this conclusion: The
most beautiful period in life: is .that
else
eehwhen nwe have medeesornebsidy
It is by sowing hanpiness' that we
• reap'the right reward. ,
There are ether haunts • of happe,
pess, and they are so: varied and un-
• accountable that I shall not take the
time to index them. but yoe may put
this down as the irrevocable truth:
True haeniness , must be shared.
A gracious or generous deed done
nives greatelinemipess, ani iteia_ from
eueli an unselfish act that ewe receive
the reaction, tailed true happiness.
• Can von conceive of a. men or wo-
Man heine. truly -1Monse-e4l-alenc? W-e-
niay find:pleesure all alone. bat eer-
some, pleasere is nothing. but _grati-
eeation 'it is not that ineeleing, mot-
• or 'that calm • satisfeetiep, • that
ehrills.. We must make others ham
before we can he truly balmy our -
:selves. , • • " , •
• Try startine out eeekine happinese
nen sortie •fieh Pion rand yoewffl
wind up with the Stenies, the Shaws.
the Solops-writers who are seldern,
1.
mioted save to Show the weakness Of :
their theonte. ,
- The insist: interesting, and inspiring
_hoer mn the lieere'e existence iSesehen
we have made' others tralyihappy.-
The Silent Partner.
0-eee
FLOWERDALE
Friends Of .Mrs. ,jolio McMureliere,
are pleased to know e that she ,,retinn-S,
ed'froni4einsion Hoepitel•to her ,home
in 'Flowerdele last Thursitey • Shje'was
accompanied hy her daughter eMrs.
Alex' Cameron Of Detrea, who will
pOnti a' short time with her.
;Chas. .Smith bade a very large and
successful sale last Thursaay.
'Ms...Houston, of Kineireineeepent,.
a cooPle Of des4 hrst week at the
hone of her cousin Mr. IL ,Martin.
Mrs. George Murrayel.-Ring at .
. ,
the, eme of her Miele ,Atex WanisleY. •
Mrs: Angus: Greham &emit a 'temple •
, of. days last, week' 'With., Flowerdale
irieeds.
• Mr.. R. 'Watson and, Mr. •Aethie
Camermetertainly .had :trYing. time
filling _their. silos 'last Week in the
• A -repi•epeptative of • the 0: A. 0.- •
, ,
was in Flewerdele. last week selling
some of.Alleir tested good seeds.. • ,
. Misses Sarah and Elizabeth McIver
•spent Sunday at their home here
• ,
• ;•-urn •
Few big jobs are held hy men who
were taueht heirs to fear the opin-
ions of the neighbor. •
•
!Phone No. 10 is 'at Your Service
Ws Sell for Cash -We Sell Cheaper Than The Credit Store
•Roofing Material
• Many people to -day are at a loss totmake a decieion' as to what .
r they will use to roof with. We, would be 'glad „to 'have you call to
• look at samples Of Brantford, Roofing and we will explain -and sue:.
,gest, what you -should lime.' Below• ' we Ad before you two'. classes
•
of
Ashphalt ,ShingleS., •
'
,
They are securely locked, make a nice appearance, they are tire proof
•
• ARROWLOCit-efoe Baras; Garages, or any . out building-.
and reasonable in price.
• .
•
The Colors -Red, Green and Blue Black are facipieee,' thus add-
ing beauty to the building.,
, •
. SUPERTILFe-For Hints e -A Locked. •„Shingle. •with Penna.
nence, Beauty, Strength, Fite ReSistance-s-You get all these in Braid -
ford Supertile Slates, besides deub:e thickness all,over your roof and
triple thickness er 48 Per. cent of,' the roof. , Weight 210 lbs. pee
Squire, , Color -.Red; Green and Blue Meek. ,
• ASPHALT SIDING--Fourin one -Laid 21,.i i'111,:to the -weather
and 8 in. long. -Tile Red in col Jr "givi9g the appearance ot red brick.
This is the niaterial„for' fearile, !muses -It ntakee,1 bern war*,
improves the appearance and youget away troni piI.tmnt :weight
200 -lbs: Per -Square.' - • '
'ROLL, ROOFING -,light,. _Medium yrosiehewille
•,
Lime Plaster Cement
Sash Primed and Glazed
Wm. 1Viiirdiel/ Son
Heating, Electric,Wiring
, .