HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1931-06-11, Page 5THURSDAY; JUNE 11th, 1031
7 ,
fi
THE L'UC1f NOW BBNTIN'Et PAGE.
It's time to IteiEROOfammal
He --Pill show you roofing
treatments of impressive beauty. •
'$ H'e. will tell you that Brantford
• Roofs are fire-resistant; that.
• th t less to buy, less to lay.
.an nothing for repairs.
Hewill advise you in: tiie:se1ec:
tion 'of: the Brantford design
most suitable to your type of.
home and its surroundings.
He -will glad* .give 'a . FR,E'
estunate of` how little ;it costs
to have a Brantfordd Hoof • laid •
'.directly^: over. your old;• wood'
shingles, to 'eliminate muss, to`''
save : time and 'Money:,
•
e -y war
Brantford -Eoo6'ng-Company; L-united—Uead-Ofice;anii-Factory:'-Brantford; -Ont.
•. -Branch Offices and Warehouses
Toronto, Winnipeg, • Montreal, 'Halifax, Saint John, N.B., and St -John's, . Mid.
For 'SiiJe By WM MURDIE°:& SON
• WORLD TELEPHONE'
DEVEL'OPMLNT
c:.. '
•
World'. progress in 'commui.ication
=the .development of those 1'..teilities
which bring the human races. into
closer and closer contact-is''of uni-
versal rnter,t Necessarily the pro= Jr. III -Etta Swan. 413: Ronald only; ` but perhaps .the enumerator,
ject,of,collecting, and_asseinbfing the Cranston'. 385: Allan ;Miller. 316*."after being -well schooled ';in -advance.
Satz is-frayphi--with ljtlrcultie§-acre"' d fh d T Lundy..;; b 11=Grace Weal-herhead'-590: Perry can 'het -1'5-3M far t r -in the.' gentl,
D' Of W.Okertonb_..
Youth Iue
To S ee�iin
•
That the' motor ear accident on
'the •County Highway. about 2 miles
west of Walkerton at 5.3.0' o'clock ons
the• .mormng:•':of ' Friday,. •May 15t1i,
when a . Ford roadster w s ditched
,when
a river om un y;'„ ro e
his back; froin e ie :int e
:Bruce County hospital about 6 •o'clock
:RUR 4L`.SCHOOL, REPORT
S S.. O. 4; West WaWanosh
• (Junior: Recall) ..' •
Daily Marks
Sr.. III—Jean 'Forster. 39't Frank
McQuillin 271*:.. Norman '.McDonald
220. .•
QUESTIONING , THE FARMERS finite tons.
It is well that the census ,comes
in, between seeding. and harvesting;
how_crops will not'' be calling for much,
attention around the first • of June,
and during the summer months it
may be impossible• for- all ° these•.
questier:s . te...b tt r selxv oa£ ,n'!
swe>, ed` ii " •`wa lea ler rico ria
august body know as the Bureauof
Statistics. , MARBLE, SCOTCH, . SWEDISH
AND -CANADIAN GRANITES
•
(Stratford • Beacon -Herald)
.We have before us a copy of the
questions which are to be asked
farmers, in- the- tsidng-of-the 19311
e:aats. T e Eset4e.' f -other eaav-.
ous 'size, •and l'tsdit 1f1= fill 234
questions. °'" ,
There is a note on the bottom .say
ing that all the questions, must be
answered That makes .one wonder
if it would not be better for the en
umerator to• •carry his grip along and
,spend a couple of days at.each'farni'
' It might. be, if a start was made
right after the morning milking, that
half the •questions. could be answered.
beforo it was time. to 'do the milking
in the 'evening, • "
If the, farmer intends • to get ;any
work done on the days, the enumer •
ator'is spending on .his farm.it might
be advisable -.der the census' mail; to,
folliiw:the owner of the place around
as. he went through his daily occu
If farmers can • answer, all the
questions oil that list they are smart
indeed. In fact we would be inclined
to regard a . perfect score ° `as one 'sof
the ;outstanding accomplishments of
the: year ,.. . .
.How' many: farmers, know exactly
how many` quarts of strawberries or
currants they picked -during 19301'
Does _a fattier, Measure into cords the
amount of'wood he mita .in':a year, or
does he bring in as. much ;as he thinks
he will need? O!r , could it be 'told
definitely how many eggs; ':were pro
diced on the'. farm, during' 1930?' It'
may be that in . this 'advanced age
all such records are carefully 'kept,,
and a great advancehas. been -record-
ed
ed since the. tithe` 'when ..•eggs..; Were
gathered from the side df the straw-
stack'in; the hired . man's, hat.
Perhaps 'farmers,;know' how many buttons aren)t always sewed on. And
;tons of hay' and alfalfa they produce it'includes the „western western precept:
during a ' sea "on, .but : again' we doubt . "Never lie• to your wife.
s'were eche. Japanese are probably ;the
it. -As we recall, it, such things , in -adapting
generally recorded in terra of` loads keenest'of the Orientalsp J;
western. ideas t'o:"their •own uses. Per-
haps this set of rules for the.ideal.
Japanese-hu�sband4aa-heen-deliber�aincl fani;ily_ppent_,S,unday .eyenhig at
LUCKNOW and WINGHAM
Monumental ' Works
• Lueknow, Ont.
Has4he •lar -gest- mer$.most-- cotapleta•-• •
. t v.- ,>R.'P•�ff Fat a •t *++an ula�deni s
elle-01e- fet ; ln--
•
JAPANESE :HUS ANDS •
GET S .ND ADVICE,
vellin to
An ;America - a g the
Orient on a Japanese :steamer, found
it strange, that the- captain should be.
dressed' in kimona instead of a "blue
piniform' in
gold.braid• and • , but-
`oe s. 'Yet the ship was as ably eom
nanded� as an. American or English
osgat. Though Japanese ceremonies
ind social customs are very different
froth` ours apparently', marriage at
well as a ship is managed by peopli'
rn.=kimonas•.very
.westerners.; ..
Tn F a list of ;rules for husbandly
conduct,; :drakwtt• up by Japan�ese-wo-•
•nen, tli,e surprising feature `i's•that
.here is nothing new to'Americans.-;,-
nothing that -smacks off the- exotic
or of cherry ,blossoms' of holy:•Fuji-
•aatria . It 'might have' ,been. compiled
by--a-New-Rochelle-,New-club. Yet
it , was actually put. together' by.the
women oli' the staff of the"Fujokai,
or 'Woman's. World., '
• It . advises a husband to be cheer,
ful at home, indulging in jokes•. now'.
and then.; to -go shopping with :his'
wife once, in awhile, ,and to stop on
the way home for a•, bite; if his wife
happens to; look pretty., tell.. her so.
ft • even• urges- that '• her . birthday..
;should not be forgottten, and that
there should be ;.no scolding. even' if
must always: fall short• of .being of f 'm which h ci' d h Diirnin"'558:. Hugh D. McDonald. 467 task. of transferring 'loads into de-
. the character of last minute•infoima- Gordon McDonald' 461*: • Harold
tion `In a recently, published, supe= the seine 'day:, 'yeas `apparently. due to Woods '272*. ""��
mart', made from official data by excessive speed; was, in substance the • Si I -Johnny, Pritchard • 624: Jim-
BellSystem 'statistician'g,' world tele- finding; of the Coroner's .fury at the. °mie• Aitchison 622: Aligns McDonald
phone • figures are now • available u.p nquest, in the County Council chan3b 36'f Russell Webb 565... • '
to the date of January. 1, 19u0, er, oi�,,,rrid4v... evening ,last. 'w1u h Jr I—Doris -Wilkinson '408,
: Nerth`Anieirica has 21,69 ,3 r:G txel Dr. H. (x. Joyce, Coroner;, presided, TPrihier=Ai•r"angel• alphabetically
ephones, or 63.64% of the world .to'- , i.d 'Crown Attorney Preeborn'•:_ea . ' Margaret Aitchison; •Rass Gammie.....
tal,' a number that is .almost ° twice• aliilrified the, witnesses .under oath:.'len NlcDreeard; 1V1ae,-.1Nre ronald
i s , r --•Begg (�e*a60,K i-° _ 4bns:P m, r:ked.,_t*).►isspd :.one
oda=with- �Q Z�telepltones for cac'h The, first: witness, Andrew ",Waech- More •days.
'100 population comes second ..in 'tele- •
, phone .deve;lupment • to ;the :United •
States which • leads the world' with,
• 16:4. telephones.. per. 190' of its inhab-
itants. New.Zeal'and comes third .with
10.3', ,ifollow'ed by Denmark to ith 9.6,
. ''Sweden, with 8.3 ,and Australia,wiLh
7.9 .telephones per 1'00 inhabitants. • •
' Can,a'da, with 1,399,93( ranks. ledge the •Lundy car was, travelling
.fourth .in• absolute number ..of tele at ,double the speed he was going:
phones being • led only by United; `After the car, passed him. it • went
States, • Germany and Great. •Britain.'• down' the centre of the road aa. -con
But in Gem any" and Great Britain, ,iderabple- distance, and; front what he
the nurriler. •of . telephones pet,• 100 could ilsee •the-• boys'. lost, control and.
.population is only. 5.0 and 4.1 respec- it took td the' ditc:la almost'kap.posite
• tively. 'It is interesting':; to note that. J.• L::Zettler's • gate. He was able • to
In Canada 82 per cent and in United. stop his car in front :of the accident,
States 100 • per cent of the 'telephones, and getting out went over to ,where
are under •private ownership and op- ,:loin. lawn ly . had been hurled', out• of
eration,' while in Gefmany and, Great his car onto the road; following' the
Britain.. all : telepho'nes are o.pei sited ditching o'f, their° machine. He realized
by the • government. Argentina leads that, Lundy was terribly hurt,. and.
South..America-in.._.telephone., developp-...vhs...-so'--overcome • at the --sight °that
anent. with 2.5 "pet. ' 100 inhabitants, he•almost fainted and had to go baste.
a densitl: - exactly equal' -to that ' of. to his car. '
• France. Japan easily, leads the Asia- His two sons, Harty and Arthur
• tic countries, .but has only 1.4.'tele-
phones per 100 'people.
ter, 'testified that he was . coining ,to, • Test Marks .
5,30 •o'clock Mas at the Sacred• Heart . • . Sr, IIIA Jean . Forster . 452:• .,Frank'
Church, Walkerton, with his two sons. McQuillan 265*: Norman McDonald
[tarry .and Arthur, in a Buick sedan 154. ' `
w'liich', was doing between 30 and. 3b Jr,a J,I,L..;Etta Swan' 446:.. Ronald
miles an hour..The' two Lundy boys, Cranston 2$9: Allan Miller. 264.
Joni and Hari-y,evertook and passed 1l—Grace Weatherhead 445: Perry
him, and to ,the best Of his know- Durnin 867: Hugh D. 'McDonald 350:
Harold • Woods 184*: Gordon- Mc-
Donald 136*
Sr., I—Johnny Pritchard 458:. Rus-
sell Webb 427: ' Jimmie Aitchison,
421: Angus McDonald '.377
Those marked '•(e`) missed one ..or
more tests.
No. ' on roll ' 20. ' Ave. Att 19.5.
• . Beatrice McQuillin..
•
In • the- provision .of telephone fac-
- Miles -for, cities of 50;000' people :and-
,, over, :Canada leads the. world. • .With
• - -23.3 telephones per- 100 • inhabitants
• in these comunit'ies its closest rival
is the United States ;with. 23.9.• In
the smaller towns .arid villages Can.;
ad'a ranks second; with 10J tele=
phones per 100 people,' being led only
by the United States, with 13.1 tele-
. phones per 100 people.- Thus the in-
habitants ,of Canadian cities and
towns of !under • 50;000' inhabitants.
are better provided with telephones
than most of the 'larger Europ'eati;
cit"es.•
In Canada the telephone is used
_to a greater extent than in any crib,
er country. During 1929 Canadian'i.
made 257.7 telephone conversations
per Capita, while, ' the United States.
and New . Zealand With 231.0 and
212.0 were the only other countries
‘with over 200. telephone •converse•-
' ' tions : per person. lenmark With
148.6 was the leader of the European
countries' its, conversations per cap-
. ata. Canadians make 8 -t:inies more
use of their .telephotaes than the Bri-
i;ish who reported. 32.1 conversations
'Per capita and over • •13 times mote
than the French. who make 10.1 calls
per capita. .
Notice To Creditors,
In the Matter of . the Estate d
ALEXANDER WALKER late of the
Township of Kinloss in the County
. Bruce+ Fanner. deceased;
Notice is hereby given that• all
persons having any claims or de-
mands against the late Alexander
Walker. Who died on or about 'the
sixth day of April; A.D. 1931, at the
Township of Kinloss in the Cgianty
of • Bruce,' bre required tq send post
prepaid, Or 'to deliver to the tinder-
signed, executors under the Will• of
the said Alexander Walker, their
names •,and addresses and full par-
ticulars, hi writing iof their claims
and •statements of their accounts and
the nature - of the 'security, if any,
held by then, duly verified by affid-
avit.
And take notice thatafter the 27th
day of Jtine A.D., 1931, the said ex-
ecutors ivill proceed to distribute the
assets of the said deceased among
person's entitled thereto,, having
regard only : to the claims of which
,,a ..they .shall Hienleave, lied notice and
that -the said executers Will -not -b'
liable for the said assets or.anv part
'thereof to any persein of whose clailai
they shall net then • have received
notice.
This notice is given pursuant to� the'
statute .iii that ' behalf. ,
Dated at Lucknow; Ontario, this" 2nd
day' of June,. A.D. 1941.
John H. Ross; R. 1, J olyrood,• Ont,
Eldon Eckenswiher H 1 11,,lyteua (i•.t
• S. .5., No. 5; Kinloas
Sr IV Final: Tests.
Part I,—Agric., Hyg. :and ,,Art,
Total 300. Pass' 180: ' Honours 225.
Pass—Mary White 2241 Johnston
MacLeod and Elliott Carruthers 220,
(ties), . . .
Part 11 -Total 750. Hon. 563:'. Pass
Waechter, corroborated their father. 450.
. _ ,. _ - _.-,_, _ . L . ,lion: -Many -White -638: Johnston- -
speed the Waechters were travelling,
and that as they gave the plenty .ol
•
road they had no occasion to run out
onto -the grass. ' • . . '
A Broken Back.
Dr. Robinson _ . of..._W_.alkerton, _ who
was .hastily -summoned by phone
Went nut and found Tont" Lundy lying
on the road. He. was able to nvxke a
diagnosis right, there of •a broken
oack, as the •boy "teas pares/led- •from
nis shoulders down. Dr. Robinson had:
nim removed to the kiospit.•f l and im-
mediately got in tonch by phone With
a -specialist in •,Totonto, who • gave'
to understand that nothing coal,.
ae done as the injury was •aliuost in-
variably fatal. Ile had .an a -ray
Laken' at the' Hospital to confirm his
liitgnosis.•
Dr. Malcolm ;Stalker' and Dr. H. H.
3inelafr, . who made a postmortem
e)ami•u ition-, the same night, reporter
in substance that they found the
ooy's back broken at the fifth -cer-
vical vertebrae, which is almost be-
tween the shoulders and that • tlto
spine was separated at this • point
about an inch. •
e Ante-Mortelri Statement
Crown Attorney Freeborn and
Prov. Officer MeLevis producced tit tle.,
,nquest a• sty"urn, statement made by
Thomas•, Lundy, after he had been,
told by Dr. Robinson that he was
dying and' in that Lundy admitted
that he. didnot have a permit to
drive ani hate- andthat he was driy
ing the car when the .accident'
carted, and not his brother, Barry:
• Exonerates Brother ,
The Crowii Attorney explained
that• this •sworn statement could be
Laken as evidence in a, cou'it of- law
ind that it showed conclusively that
his .brother} --darty, was not .driving
the car, altho Harry 'had informed
the police., en the morning 'of the ;ic-.
cident that was driving the mach-
ine : '
• Mt.- f'r'eeborn said that this •iia-.
quest was largely to exoneriite dairy
as .the latter, who had a driver's per-"
mit, made the„ sta.ternent himself that
he had driven the ,ray in order to take
the blame from •the brolher who did
not have ti permit.
Lty, so doing; • it seems, }tarry was
nnaking himself liable • to a man-
slaughter enlarge; but the suuscquent.
e:dntradiction 'and ,the ante-mortem
statement of his brother, together
with the finding of-the.,J.ury,...cam
'letel•y e;:onerates him in the -matter:
4dittors, .
MacLeod 626. Pass—Elliott Carruth-.
ars. , 523. ,. '
Jr. IV—Tested Hyg., Gram., Lit.,
and Geog.
Pass—Leonard .MacLeod 72%: Ir-
vin 'Carruthers 65: Absent—Wilfred
White.. - •
-.fr. III—Tested in Arith.•; . Geog.,
2omp., and Spell.
Hon.—Grace Remolds 75: •Pass—
Cohn Parkes 60:. ' •
Sr.' 1I--Hon.—Kathleen Carruthers
Mary Reynolds,. 79, (ties)::' Pass—
,;eorge Robinson. 65.
•
Jr. • II—Good•-=Robert Parkes, La-
egne White.
•J r. • 'Pr.—Good---Arthur Wheeler.
No. on Roll .16. Ave. Asti 14.5.
M J. MacDonald.
MOTHERS' ALLOWANCES
• 1N HURON COUNTY
The Average monthly' payment un-
d er the Mothers' 'Allowances Act'in
dolman told'the county council in the.
course of hie report on •mothers' al-
lowances in Huron. County. The suin
of $1,750 had been, paid, ou't in May,
of -which the county paid half. There
were at present fifty-five .mothers on
t he roll.. One ot. these received$15: a
month, four $20, ten $25, nineteen
$30, ten •$35, seven' $40, ohe $45, one
oiie 50, and:two $55 a month.
The total number of women ° re-
ceiving aid since the Act ,went 'into
force seven Yeats ago was 145. On
the ' first thirty-threeapplications
favorably passed.,,only 'o,ne remained.
fbirty-two " had been• removed from
the list. The causes were death, • re-' :
*inoval' from the county, remarrying
and the coming of age (sixteen) of.
children. The last 'cause accounted
by far for the, most., removals, he
said. " -
Discussing the agitation to give
aid to .mothers ' with one child', Mr.
Holman said it was 'felt that if as-
•sistaitnce were given CO mothers with
one child it would prove more of a
nandicap'than a help.' A young we-
Man with one child, in good health,
spurred to greater effort§ 'by -her,
position, unfortunate ,;though it yeas,
could accompli`sli mueh more than
anything the Act woifld provide for
her, as mothers receiving assistange
under the Act are not allowed to en:
gage in remunerative employment:
4. A Spoiled Reputation
Soca it Visitor:' Of course,'"closing
the, saloons , has raised your hus-
8anc1's standing in ,the community. "
iVtrs. Dooley: Ser•'e, an it's the ,other •
way Muni. In the old days Mike was
pointed' out by everyone gas the vil-
lage drunk,' bub now `you'd think he'
WAS just nobody. • '
•
W L' make a. Specialty of
Family monuments and invite"
your Inspection.
-- Inscriptions. Neatly, Carefully and
Promptly Done.:'•
See us before placing your Orden.
..Douglas Bros.
Phone 74
Luckno*
•
apotton
Phone 25.6
Winghani
IUNLO;UG1.1
Mr: -and 14lrs.i:Beit_ Mel eutJ ; anti
+Vlis E..vel •n. ' Me•Le>ln, spent a: ` few
3a s -',with" friends'in 'Detroit'
Y
:'-11Ir: J Adair o#' Kitchener' •and - - ••
A.iss' Beth 'Hodgkinson• Df'•;London.
Vere{ • Sunday. visitors at Mr., J. B.•
iledgkinson's: •
1V1r....and 'Mrh.. 'H..A. Graham -and
:{•athl en',returned home after spend-',
ng,. a week with"'''Mr. • •and' Mrs. Jack
Graham, A7m�Arbour;''Michi an. • " ' ..
Mr. ,and Mrs. Heb• ,Tweedie • were '
recent. visitors ,."with the former's .
mother . here. . •
Mrs. ,Harry Bell' is visiting ; her''
1 tihter 'gra, H. c uire. •
.a8'_. M... ZG1.G ,
Mr.,,and Mrs. S. Parry and fainily
of, Detroit,. ,visited last •'week with •
:Mr ;and Mrs. Jno.. Hodgins. • •
. .The --:Sr. W.A., '',meeting . was held
on Tuesday, afternoon. ' •
Mr. • Jos.' Armstrong of • 'Niagara, .
spent a few days • with his daughter,•
Mrs., Jas. Hodgins. •
Mr. and• • Mrs. • • George-Haldenby
.ately medelled'on the American plan. Mr. Howard McGuire's
1
.1
P die earliest Kelvinators: which ''
went to -work fol -heir owners'
seventeen years ago, not one has
ant. Dorn. out. Kelvinator' .was .first in
• , the electric refrigeration ' field,' and
Kelvinatorstill leads' --in mechanical.
simplicity, in freezing speed and in
Modern refinements. •
And here is the proof. 'i* need only.
check over the following Kelvinator '
features, one by one, to be ,convinced .
tliat Kelvinator is the outstanding elec-.
•' ' i ric refrigerator on the market.
LOW
FIRST PAYMENT
CONVENIENT
MONTHLY TERMS
Your nearestkeivinator
.Nato rubber ice trays for quids and easy •
'-.removal of ice cubes.
Kelvinator'rpatented bo-Tbermie Tubes give
wbrld's,,fastest freeezing, of ,ice cubes and
. desserts: ' .
. —The Kelvin Crisper keeps lettuce,' celery and
vegetables fresh and crisp for days, and even `
restorex`thern when wilted. .
- roe Prost C.bert keeps meat and fide at below-
freezing tetperatures..
4 -way cold, atttomarlotlly controlled, is an
exclusive Kelvinator. feature,
•=----One piece, round -cornered porcelain food' -
coriipattukr.nts. - - . •
— Triple -coated porcelai n exterior with French
Gray trim •
':Qtptdruple' clirbinium plated *hardware.
Monel and chromium iCe-tray fronts.
E- lectrically lighted interiors. Balanced
doors. 'No stooping. ,
Ask your Kelvinator dealer to show you tbi'many
Kelvinator flattop.. Kelvanatars are made in
Canada by, Keleinator of Canada .Limited,
London,' Ontorii, and are plced from $215 up,
f o.b factory, •London.
dealer e►11i gladly 'demonstrate the New .Models.
Win. Murdie '& Son
pHofte10
LucKNOW'
E L E C i R 1 C•
SHOP ;AT l OOP STORES...
DISPLAYING THIS E M9 tit L E M
R 1' C E
R
RELVINAT®R.. PROs E.,CTS TK IR
PERISHABLE MERCHANDISE,
X
•
a