HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-04-23, Page 5"10., �n � l��� �'.:: ��i°�"3 wE ��+
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]i'AftWIE CO-OPERATIVE STORE
TIIE TOWN. lyIERCHANTS-
THE CHAIN STORES
•
(Hanover I?ost)
They are- talking of ,starting . a
• farmer's ce-operative tstore in Dur-
. • ham. We understand the, decision 'to
go ahead with the store will depend
• on the resylt Of the canvass now. be-
• ing made-azYlon.g 'thevfarriters • for
the seggrmg of their signatl,res tut
w demal}d notes, on tl►e strel��th •ruf,
t� t 1 Kant
'r{ hdme maktn�' of l< v
• , . ,days.
to the ba k,
$200
That is
-
d >< their stores on up -to -;date
_LL kick. in
• _ th' t as good They d
• • • 1ih chain Stores, wi
hep
which the directors will borrow mon-,
ey' from the' banks to finance • the
business, • • ' '
• There were three' speakers present,
Miss "11iaePhail, M'•P„ Mr•,' Spoffard,
manager of..the store at `Flesherton,
and a `representative from the en-
operative company, at:Toronto... In
address }Ifiss. MacPhail',,a'sserted
the day ofre ai 'niere
over Ile had outlived hie'. 41'aY
of usefulness, Tbe,*reteil majreh'atgt-•
bid had' hisxday estthe saiiie es the
sou s ani, mitts
"Vwitlr=1'he of-her-things-of-�'=-1i,YP�4
•
Miss.. MacPhail'' admitted that the
egg 'grading .station there had 'pat
over' $1,000 and, the hope: of saviiin
the farmers.. Who .had'•. gone securite
for this money lies in the possibtit,
Of •` •i a profit out .ef•a general
tail Ste e. The only way 'in'•which
the •farmers' could .go' into the ,,retail
business would ' be for some one to
curit• for the.capital' iequir•ed
n and in this manner,rraist:
` the. neeettary.'capital,• •This, 'she'
sug-
gested;. could be done by .canvassing
.the country: round about, ;and. asking
the farmers'.to sign"demand? notes,.'
Width they would be obliged :to pay,
if the store - proved 'profitable She`
,:herself, she' said, 'had signed; notes
for . . .
Miss 'MacPhail's re;;
We ,question
Mark that the day of the, small town,
merchant. is'' numbered.. •Prollably in'
some towns ' that will 'be the case.
the case right now witil sonde
' in some small, . towns. . Thcy.
., stores utethods�'The-fid" 'not put .enough
L iJ c is x 0.•
OL Il, & NEW , `1 :A) 'wax B,EFiS j
In years ' goae I y the boel eerer'
•u .e stn ed • his Seccess� by the �muiii ae'r
of swarms '.given off . by his apiary,
and it w:es :these ssyarnts that' were
depended ;upon 'to' yield the ° sdrplus
honey: Before the. ,advent •o{; the'.hoz -
ey extractor the heaviest• oi:" tha
swarms were Carefully selected, in'the
;11 • of _the .yeaxz. the bees were then
killed by•sulphur fumes 'and. the hon-
ey extraOakt1i,4,117the combs bis .fir&}:
crushing .them and then' straining.
It .would appear that this; practice
ga rise.to the old doggerel
"A waren a$ •bees• in :May. Is'.worth
• a load • of hay;
° a dswarrxi. of bees in 'gnaw .% worth a
silver spoon, •,
A swarni' ofi bees, in July is' not worth
The:.early "swarms'•' Vvere" the best
for'they would ,give more Honey and
possibly' 'other swarms: ;. Swai'iliing'
usually .oecurs;.just before o> n'during
.a heavy honey' flow and the„.,swarm` •
Mostly 'made Up': f the fiel�.d�`, bees:'
of • the colony.: A certain amount,,• d-
time' is wasted by the bees' in snaking.
the -necessary •preparation -for •.swarir -
• ing and there', is' .almost an .entire.
cessation of Honey.: gathering; . front'
the '•tune the' , swarm issues until
again `Housed, in a 'new borne, 'there-
fore, if the s:warm�issues .when; there`
is a honey flow el eight to ten pounds •
.,per . day the total, crop of the colony
will
be greatly, reduced' because of..
S E 01'124 / L THL1,ItS;UAY,. APRIL .' 3rd, 'f 9,3t.
tit
.E 1Y
t THEY. DON'T SPEED"
IN .Hd OVEI.t
{ (From the Durham Ghrontcle)
'Keep your eye on the speedometer' •
i$ a good, slogan' `to remember ,when.
passing through Hanover''these 'days,
according to. information wiiieh cornea,
tie this Toff ee j on't • let •your car by
.,any _..chance trav�eL#as :t ei_ the
regulation 20 miles an hour .along the
streets' of this •particular town, and-
.net,
nd
do :rpt, lin any' instance, if you .' .Iue
your, dollars, let it acceierat . even
slightly, over the. ten mile limit when .
going past•:the , itersectione.'If .you'.do,
you,'aria liable :to a summons, :and 'the t
town is perfectly, within its. rights,.. c
for `is • riot :this . the law? It ; will do
you : no 'good to' :defend your..eaee be=
tweet wintersect'ions if; you can ,swear
yo r car ,'is. doing t*enty-two miles 7
an, hoair, .�the.1_aW_ 'says 20 Tiiee intig,
.istrate •has'nQ others option, tl{ian
.,fine you, If ' your . speedoineter', regist-
ers
egist
ers; 11, miles an hour ,at an intersec-
=titan and. y*u;.. an only swear•to that
'7
•
•
•« i "• to 'their business. They do
i t 'carry' an attractive stock. Many J
"of . them do not 'adve tise at• all --.and
even if ;they do they do d not " put
••enough title..-. or thought into their
copy. . Weekly. papers are received
at this office that •fairly, ' teens with
bright,'well 1vritten copy: They •come•
from wide-awake° towns where .the
nierchants are hustlers'. :Other papers
ale received' . which' carry very, little
home -town: advertising. The. public
nowadays are 'not willing to accept
e-:
"'something jus • ,
• 'th
wand service. e .
swarming:_:_, Ferthern Qre, , swarms
sometimes have the habit of abscond
for parts unknown end. when. this
oceurs both bee .;
Swarm control is, practiced because
at if the bees: MANY GIRLS MARRV'• uND
it has. been pro�ven:_th e
ill
s and crop ;are lost.
Bfoie they stepped ashore from the:Canadian Pacific
e ey i?
liner Duchess of' Bedford at Halifax on, Saturday.
April 4th, ;Their Excellencies and their children posed
'for their •first- Canadian -photograph.. `
. e'as •the ''waited inMthe "Writing Room''
-. ; .Showa :abav . . .Y .,:.. _• ... • sinister to
of. the: Duchees of Bedford for the •Prime ; M
set thein, ;the ,party from left to right is: Lady
oyra Pontionb'y, The Earl' . of,.•Bessborougb,' the
•,%
Countess .of`.Bessborough and Viscount Duneannpri.`
Fellow .passengers' on'.the'hner said the •Vice -regal
party"took • part very democratically it' the ordinary
shipboard�.life, His E cceilency•presiding at the•conceon',
in, aid. of. Seamen's Charities .and..Visceunt;,Duncann
sister . Lady. Moyra;, taking . their.."
and`his •'13• year:• old __ ,,. .
parts • on the. programme ,as •elocutionist and pian]e�t,•'
respectively.' ••
GOAT) MANNERS, LUBRICATING OIL OF • THE
can be kept' contentedly gathering •
nectar, ;arid not wasting time ••.in
SOCIAL ORDER
_lar g e pure s of honey will
that if .14: ;slow: raising' the legal :mare
_s-wari}iirig, . g. r.,. p , Condensed -.From the Del'ineatorz ,•suiieiior rice; we know toddy
f' the �
' be obtained:' The Bee.Division ,o ,February' 31st �-b 'William Lyons the Knights of the Round Table Were. ridge , age in' the U:S is • Suggested
t- ,rPie nary , , 3' ,•1' vel 'one of them;'by Miss Grace Abbott, ,.of -the .Fed
Central.. EzperiinentalFarm. at: O Phelps, 'professor_ of English Lit- fun_cttbning, neat y„e y
methods where- p "
taws have • devised,YaleUnidersity. would be. in` faiL L?iid`eaneaili that Tetal Qhilden's Bareau -Miss A, : att:
erature at.
ra swarming ,can,he prevent- _ . studied devotion,, thee was, little re quoting ,experts,:notes the 1920':cen-
by'natu 1 g..
the same time' al: - : o es 'eeially' ' s 'ect: fo .. women ., nut: little reasdn sus showed 1(3,388' married girls• in
ed' • and : which • apt •Many • ' people• t day, .• p p r ', v ho '::were' fifteen
lows . for controlled ` increase In the: those of the older generation, obser ” for it: The uniqueness' of Galahad the. United'` States . s
or But= ,ring.everywhere the lack of '!urinal , d un- cons 7icuous; hot in .any, or :under et the time-ef ,their- mark..:
number of colenieg,. •'Writes fma e h 1
Letin o._ . .°N..ew Se '
i in dress • social relations, an , . t The, census also • showed . 825.•
d to—herr elders rude who neuea.,, me=n 1'ar, lYire` ries? e.
15' YEARS ''OF AGE
`amount, you ar`e• .in'Yiuteli again tor' T-
the law -says' 10 miles:
' ' For. the past. couple of years' Han-
over has - had • rather a bad ' .name'
,amongst motor drivers, 'and•. D.urbam
drivers have not.escaped the 'dragnet,
:-On, one, occasion, a local 'merchant re-,
ceived a. "slammons for; driving'. across,
neater rate than
anterseetipn.-at a g
10. ,�,','ites an -hour. 'He paid the fine
rather thaw 'defend 'the Charge:" He
could not 'de this . sugcesfulli. Speak-. •
ing to :the Chronicle he said •' bis car
was ,doing ' over the law limit, 'lint: the
speedometer `.did loot -register the 15
miles an ,hour.: ' He would. audge.•it
would -be ' soitiewlhehe between -12 and'
13',miles an: •hour::`This alone :would
t _ " ` and he wouldn't lie nor -
convict him, a
t k'.e 'the time to. defend' the charge
or the .sake of th,e fine. As a, result • '
he watches:• the speed when driving,
t rough the awn; but•-does•-iwt motor ..
that yak unless compelled. .
This' ". "ear'. the town has `Started
y ...
ER
out a ddubt, are Mil -sing' the gomng^
hard fora the little fellows. The town -
of Barrie, for instance, has --five- chain
groceries.. The small town merchant
in our'opinion,, Willsurvive ifputs
brains •and push) into ,his'- business:,
•
ries, ifyou are Y lar e : p of, ounce Ameucans o- •ria e
speech, believe that ,:good_ ; manners_ . g 'roue ." Y i g
, . p glen e areplenty of Galah td's i- t fifteenLvidowed"or-divorced...
• d' rh m,��-.-� �....-- •.. , _ ...__ : _ ' d •'daY . g els .
interestedr-C•_ B rGoo e a , shave vanished that young -men -ah
-ih .-.•
women} area rude ' ciit for it nor are they: aceoided, any.
LLING .COUCH -GRASS.. ' • to, thosein authority, arid: rude •'• to
Kf
each other.•
gor late fall tillage We must: be careful. not to. confuse
Spring tillage the absence of elabbr%te formalities
is not 'a satisfactory . means of: de.:
with bed manners.'; In coniparing' our
stroying quack or• `couch grass, ac age. .with that -of 50 years ago, the
- most' apparent social •ni,an vP 7R1��'�tllE
:cOrding to one in authority who' giyen three years'.'ebsetvetionto the
wprk and ...who. declares' thignelifidely
dependable, ...seaseri: Air', destroying
quack: greas...by tillage. The .degree
•
•
Replaced . by Comradeship ,,.,
'The formal courtesy of man to;
.woman has been replaced 'in the.20th
.century by. ccinradeship. . " •
• The' surest sign of intimacy is the
absence :of •fornlali'ty. if a .inion is.
walld-rig on the street 'overtakes a:.
' Oil' Mire-ca4nre:-'basis.: it `was ::estimated •
again One of our citizens received
wore whiskers, silk bats, And er, it almest certain triat they
frOck coats; yet they 'were all yourig, have met hefote, • Intimate. friends
and probAbly more generally 'given.. never . have le make conversation
to dissipation than .college graduate unleSs they; :feel like it, ,Tenhyson
ep are now, though that is something end Carlyle sat together one eveeing,
that uannot' be accurately determined and never opened 'their months ex -
College ' professOrs , in , thoie ,.days cept.to eXpel clouds of .tobacco striae'.
agieed7that it was- the pleasantest:
William- Dean . raft-it-tin.te-
Cord that . on 'one occasion he and
Mark' TWain travelled .sitle side,
in ,the -train frcen Hartford . to _Nal:v
'York three. hours,' that neither of'
them read anything and. neither .said
• There• are: Ow '660, old• age' pension-
ers in the , County of Huron, it. was
revealed at a meeting' of the cOunty
'Since the- 'ACV came.into erce
• have been' 733 applicatiens,1 of which
number, 649 have .. been favorably.
, passed Upon. In this time there have
been 89 deaths.
. At this i,veek's .meeting ;there were,
23, new; applicatioes, .and ,there ,Yvere
.12 granted full, pension end six part.
penaiqn. }be were laid over •for fur-
ther Consideration. ()fie peasien haS
Veteran 'whb eatne under the new. see-.
tion reducing the 'age for War Vet-.•
The 'monthly bill of. the board. was.
411,422.91.1 of which the cotitty.con-
-tributed $2,288.58.
•
cultivation ..is _not „effective_in control ilurtThosow-But-a-large tiroportion_
-of- their _time was given neither to
teaching nor to research in se
ship, ,bat te the enforcement of dis-
Today; in many' college enclosures
the studepta are by no means form -
11 -arrayed arid it is not an unus-
eccasional.and half-hearted stir-
ring of the soil stimulatei the Weed's
growth. The one-way disk Plow has
been' found very effective in • quack
grass elimination and his a law op-
erating cost.
NOTICE TO CREDITORS 7
nal Sight. to see a ptofessor in goi
4 jacket and knickers. But the rela-
tions between students and rnemberP,
of the faculty op, yery often en the,
basis of intimate friendship. The ab-
sence of fotinality on the surface is
accompanied with real respect on
both sides and With sincere affection.
ThiP is certainly an •improvemeht.
Lack, of Formality , ,
dollars in the bank draWing $20 a leges td a large extent runs -parallel
to that .of the world outside; and 1
month eomewhere oh his' rounde. believe thet what is true of acAdemic
'This 'Wag the most 'oUtstanding tevi- , manners is largely true of city and
dence of greed. How could an honl, village life in genera The lack of
orable 'Man eign the declaration at- forreelity is balanced by an increase
(teched Jo hia aPPlication while eon-. y be that the decrease in for -
does not live in Port Rowan. Provi- sing "preciousness of time. In the
•• The Port -Rowan News says: An.
iespeetor of old age 'pension depot-.
deute wae here last feeel1 He found
one . mate who' had Seven thousand
'sion for:inspection: was Made in the 18th•.century, before: they had ahy
tiniesaving devices, everybody' ap-
pension law when it was passed by parently had leisure -leisure to. write
the Ontario. legislature. Without, in- letters leisure for conversation, lei-
speetion, frauds would Multlply. ,Old sure for sprolonged Politeness. Now'
• • everybedy who. amounts to' anything
age peesions heve come at e time
is busy. We are impatient 4vith sup -
of depitession, When they Are More erfluotis ,preliniiiiaries and" embroid-
needed Om ever before. There are eries and wish, fis, the sayieg .is, to
a score of old ' people in the coin- get d'own to brass tacks...
. In. the Matter of the .5state 'of
William Irwin, late itf the TownshiTt
`of Ashfield in the County of Huron,
• Farmer? deceased.,
Notice is hereby giVen that all
persons haring any claims or' de-,
• mends ,agaitst the late-, 'William
h , who died on or about ' the
1939, at the Township •of Aslitield in
the,-Cdunty df Heron, are' required
. to send, by. pcist prepaid"or to deliver
to the' nndersigned, Administrator of
the, estate and effects of the .
William Irwin, their elutes and ad-
dresses end full" paiticulars in writ -
jag oft their dahlia 'and statements
et their accounts and the nature Of
the aecuritie% if any, held by thorn,
'dub' Verified by affidavit. .
Aed teke notice that after the
said Acintinistrator will 'Proceed tit
thet'eto, having regard only to• the
" claims of Which he shall then have
had initice„...and that the said Admit-
....,goistrator will not be liable for the
- laid_itesets or any pelt thereof to
anv „person of Whose elaihi Shall.
This notice is given Pursuant-te-
the statute iri*fhaf behalf:
Dated at LtieltruitV, Ontario, ' this
1931,
enmity who Would have had..e. hard " • u ort the proposition thet
stroggle if the .pension hadn't come._
-FORIVIOSA FIRM ASSIGNS
•
merchants -of Formosa, have -made an
autherised assignthent for the benefit
.of their creditors. -A meeting • of the
efeditors 'will be held at Owen Soiled
en Friday, . when a permanent as-
signee veilt-h appointed. This firm
has done: ah extenCive business at
Fornmeti for. some_ yeara, hut it is.
said that the tXtenSion of Coo much
credit bas involved theriOn financial
difficulties. Mr. 'A. E. Wegerert, att-
irig,as reeeiver tor the , creditors", is
e;"11,,iyi'fig on the busitess in the mean-.
tiVe.-1Viildmay Gazette.
• The -..principle ,of :real- courtesy: as
distingeished from • the enamel. • of
increashig good nature and tolerance
of:. crowds -with tWo notable. ex:Cep-.
tiene; an infuriated :mob, which Os..
less intelligent. and more:cruel: thhn
any';colleetisin of wild beasts; mid'
. But in •general, 'the .ctowdi 'en their
listening in the night .to electiori
that there ere are: living .in the' United
States today :343,000 women • and
giGrls who 'were„ ander' fifteen , when
married. The; mariageable age .var-
ves,:
in different states!. 'In' twelve
states •girls ..may marry at , twelve
and,'. boys at 'fourteen; in ' sixteen
states boys,• ,must 'be eighteen and
girls sixteen; the other states have
variations, of these ages. Marriage
under the :age of . majority is illegal he was stopped .by, khe'Hanover con-
.in' most states yviiihout; the consent ' '
of . parents or ' guardians.: 'Miss ,Ab- stable and told he was doing 40. H'e .
-admits he might 'have_ been •at 'the.
Nott, listing arguments:. .sealer but denies. any'such speed as
early: marriages, says full.bodily time; .
moi, chalked up- against him . on, the
maturity is' net •reach¢d for' many.as\
su_ morons. •
well .
gii`ls until eighteetr and t�qr boys -lin ,One of our citizens has verj''•
i t twenty._ A very young girl who citizens
he said that if
.marries a man much older than her- put it, though araunf
self. passes under tutelage of her 'local citizens want. to hang
'husband and frequently never ac • .'Hanover, knowing 'these; things,` let'
quires 'ark, independent outlook 'and them . take it. It; is a long'"time since
resourceifulness. A ,ehildlish cnnother the 'authorities of 'that town cow-•
or.,a childish wife may be appealing rnenced,splitting. hairs over rates of
she says, to the incurably romantic , speed, and the best way to keep out
individual, but she ;is %unequdl to the. of trouble asbte ' vo d that
f rued 'as
burdens and responsibilities that : she much asp babo when car waso
go through it,
should carry: � `'\ __,i,,.. the steed limit prescribed
PROPeiSAL.TO'TAX CAT
thormighfares, seems. to me on the
whole to be good-hurnored, tolerant
and .enen kind.
summons'. the other day for . doing 44
miles an hour inside'' the .corporation
n to ;Durham. Ile'
when driving tlii?ough
declares. he ;might have' been 'doing'
. -but .rather - :than take ,the time,
25, u
sent the cheque, fQr $8. to' cover .the:
assessment. He is just one. more who;.
will ,gi' e'the town -a wide 'go by .un-
.less he cannot get • out of it. When
.e couple• --of. miles this side of town::
well
by lavv. If the tWo cases which we
----- ' ' haVe quoted, and which are: the eic.r
'Miss Edith L.*Igarsh, of Clarks- periences •ef reputable Durham eitie .
burg, advocates a tax on :cats as. a sells, are correct, we do.nat doubt -
means or reducing •the number Of that thiso-titizen is right;
stray felines. She would go further There is the other, side of the queer; ' '
Growth of Courtesy and have. intinicfPal regulationt that
and, good .manners characteristic'
this ' present •time-fer at - ought now eats shut uti at • night. From any' ec-
to be, apparerit that I -believe thiS t:o .onomic'point of vieVe that any. source
be. a: fatt-is born net . only' Of in- . for ' taxes ...is. acteptable;:th,e idea' tr,ay
ereased - consideration', tor others but
mars ef teddy and 'those, of ,50.. years tin. ;in any case is woald possibly'
ago is that, then age arid' authority ievelve the municipal.. authorities in'
course. a /certain lip .Service wilich
has .nothing to de with thaindividual:' a cat catcher,. and thete, are ',some
th e is an intreasing • ,im- who Say there are tee many now,"
er than the reverse, several. things wet. wheri the. individual. by, his own.
' Iderl ties- mind et eharacter • deserves It; and
h h does ' deserve it, he receives
it 'hi lh,e'roost gratifying form.
'But perhaps the „most striking, and
ers shown by this generation ih corn=
parison with foryner times : is con,
selling aed' everYthing pertaining to.
coranierciar life. ' Surely there has'
never been any, period.. in history
.where courtesy was so univereally
regarded -as an Asset as it istoday.
You s.might• raise the objection that
this form of roertesy lie' •more
sincere than th.e traditional palate
eese of chivalry.' Ent if, in every,
df suceesstil, man, that cerigililly
iS An 'unmistakable . tribute to, its
Altlieugh true courtesy • springs!
from within, and is, often shown by
poor people.. in the Ye;
of ilf0, it really can be cultivated. It.
has' its. origie in sincere ,consideraticin
not only for the -right's but.,f or the
happineas, of others; but even those
whe feel this only •slightly yin 'feel
mole when' they ,see hew grateful
strangers are 'ler IitTre-
'faeling•it mare th'ey Will prac-
tise it entil if becomes -a Wait.- -
• Oon:a' Manners are lubricating..
oil of the social 'order; they. niake
the • daily raund run with:less We.
can be said. I ear
simist, shaking his silver head sadly
make the following contribution to
',triode= thotight:
"The goring- people -Of thday l3aVe
no manners at all: if this goes 66 -
we shall relaese,'into barbarism.
A Comparison,
' tut was not elaborate and formel
isties...ef barbarism? When the -In-
ditto Savages .rof North, Areerica dis-
missed anything,‘ they had infinite
time. They sat in solemn „;donelave
passed the mediative pipe slowly a -
Wend, and when one spfrke, no one
in the cempany any More thought
of- interrupting than we'„think le;
terrupting the preacher in church.
Compare a modern meeting of bank
directors With. tornmittee of Iedian
'Periling from savages to so-crilled
tesy of the lige 'Of chivalry was orily
a thin veneer, barely . 'concealing a
cotitempt.. We khow the rules
tbat_gaine...The knight must pro-
ieatly at any moment to risk big life
for a danger ifrdiztress. Rey slight -
/1h day of Apr est whim is Ins law. But although
.Adlnilliatret4 With Abe rifest profound formal re,
• The difference between a Amger end
Th.e Old 'fashioned red Woolen lin-
derskirt,is no more. An eXcharige ex.;
plains Its pas s teht-
-rect-dyt. to, ?poke lip-
itiek and color the gasoline•redr-
•
What about the rats and micel 'If
the numbers of cats •it legsene:i as
would likely follow, impoting a tax
Ot'l.;,4ein, .t•ould not the number ;of
rep:Letts •fitcreaie? Then, besides .an
official cat catcher, there would be
an official rat and mOute catcher ap-
pointed ,by by-law,for 'every municip-
ality for. thes.e are the days when
offices are ;being multiplied so rapidly
one'. tan hardly - keep track of them.
as inspectorship% and; taxing eats
inspectorg all throUgli the province
and, probably,"mOuse'"and rat • inspec-
tors too. The Enterprise is oppobed
to the taxaticm "of /elites. We are
afraid Ave",army, of officials wonld•be
increased in. consequence. There ire
so reany inspectors who coinc. around
nowsticlang their noses into peoples'
private affairs that we. will el:•dtire
-the cater:we ls of the fouicats on the
fence .and t, e tib -pats on the roofs
ratha, than -e "Mit Miss Ilarth!s,_
-tion to be considered as well. No me,- •
torist hat any 'right to go through
Hanover or any. other town af an ex-
cessive 'rate of speed. If he doesAhe.
should be Punished. Reckless driving
cannot be condoned. There is. a vast
difference, however,. -is stepping oft
those who flagrantly 'break the law,
driving a mile or ,two over:the -IiMit.
SPEED CAUSED
The coroners jury whieh, enqUired
into the circurnitantes shr.roundirig
,the death ef lames Irwin Patterson,
of 'riVerton, who died in the Goderieli
.followinert-eir accident en
the Elnewater Highway, said the ac:, •
cident was due to °excessive speed."
Patterson and his assistant on the
road eaid.„.that when he mine ,aleng
Patterson, was'on 'his fee, and made'
the remark: "Too much !speed, 4. I •
guess." Siriclair 'who was with P., -.4t';•
terser: in the colite at the tiine of
the wreek, Said that he knew' nothing
abont the aceident. Ile waS asleep at
the time, in fact, did not remember
of anythinefrom the time they left
Eitteardine until he regained con,-
sciousness in the Goderieh.
lie said that he considered Patterson
careful drivel%
Dr., W.- Martin* Who had examined'
PattersOn'A.,body„._:_ttid ,Oiftt 'he had
deubtetty lie bad died et 404 ss the
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