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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-03-23, Page 5. !'T' ' OW > l lr . TS ITR-SDAYn MARCH '23r l,,, ./9f't. c:." 1 0116l111**r: J;ORDYVE: ;Tha Martin, Bros, are busy cutting Wood in thisoeslity►, • mu Vetere, Champion tsnent the• week -end• under the Parental roof. Mr. Themail MeGuffin, of Listowel . tatted friends *beat Fordyce recent- • l7 Chester and Elliott Taylor have ' •been, huffy hauling • Tressed hay to Whitechurch, , The . Stork.. •called at Bert. Thoma-. son 'a, ratulations, ibaby �boye,. s. recently and left a ' A number from here attendedthe recent concert at Whitechdirch and report a very enjoyable evening, , Mr.and' Mrs. rs W.• M .. m ' ha r C b n e • visited one day lasweek at .Wm. Nikon's, Mr, Nixon has not been • keening well of F.iate. Mr. and Mrs: „Chester 'Taylor mo- tored to Auburnn recently- a'nd report the road in very good condition. That was before the little snow flurry. p`AST; , Tuesday; Mar,21. We .welcome Mr, and .Mrs. McInnes to our community,,. • Miss Lilly Alton, of -Lucknow, is visiting at Elmer Alton's. .'Mrs, Thomas Agar of Brampton, itisited at Robt. Henry's on Saturday. We extend our heartiest congrat- ulatona.•to ' Mr. sell, Mrs. ' Wilfred • Drennan. We extend our heartfelt sympathy -to Mrs; 'Gordon Irwin in this her hour of sad bereavement, • - • Mrs; Herb Stothers and daunhtr Lenore visited with her 'parents here a few days .of last week. , Mr, and Mrs. Jack Emmerson ' .of Kinloss visited with the latter's; .par-. eats here .Thursday of last week. Mr and Mrs. Samuel Sherwood .re -- .,delved' the sad news on Monday of the death of diem-. s`on. •Ernes' •Ernest with his wife and .family. returned to ;their home in the West about a week ago. Our deepest sympathy goes. out. to to Mr,..and 'Mrs, Srwood' and family also :to the widow and little 'sons ,and ` daughters. ZION • Tuesday. Mar'21st:= Syrup making is the work engaged • in :by all . the • farmers at • present. What's' the matter that thefirst boil- ing Of syrup, won't keep? . , . . Wo»d, bees are all the go at Zion at present. You 'should see the' Ritchie Bros; cutting'twood with there • Big • steam outfit cutting from 8 to 10• cord' Mr..hour.. • Thos, ••Cook• spent Sunday. last. with Lucknow friends, ' Mr. Dave Andrew of Clinton gave a moving Picture show and an instruc- tive lecture. in the raising of , cattle •and pigs to make the most profit, The lecture was given in the :interests of .the ;'Zion 11. F. 6.' and "was enjoyed very much by'all :present s-'- We a11 -.'extend sympathy to Mr, and Mrs. Richard Gardner in the death of her father Mr. John Barclay, of Dun- gannon., i Do you .think its right for' a young man to drive over the •top of 'a man's wire' gate and smash it all up on a' Sunday evening:? ;Cr shoulii:.he be cused seeing it was Sunday evening? Miss Blanche and Mr. Harvey- Web- ster. of : Dungannon spent ' Saturday . last with -:and- Mrs; Pette Con Watch for the date of the 'Greates. Play•. ever written. Fun -and Harmony . —all the way.' Something : doing every- - minute.. in "His Awful Dad." By the • Zion Dramatic Entertainers, e'.. • • GULROSS _ CEI TIRE 1Vlonday; 11Inr; 20t1i. Born—On. Monday,Marr 13, To Mr. and Mrs.' Wm. Simpson, 'a• son. Mr, and'Mrs. J•.Erb of Salem, spent -4-`Suziday'*at•the'liome of their daughte Mrs.Walter '`Rose : ; • Mrs. Relit. : McCullough , returned' borne after 'spending a couple of weeks with relations at Brussels, Mr.-W t g -Wal'er-Ferkuson-of-n 5th Co- has>,been sick =for' -+a--couple' of weeks. We hope' to' see him about 'soon.... Mr..Chas Ste •_retunedto _-the West after s pending the' winter at the° home -Of his -parents here. Mrs. A. McKague spent a few days last week . with friends in Teeswater; ' .Mr. and Mrs, Archie ' Patterson of Whitechurch :visited at the .home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ross last week We are sorry to report' the• serious �. illness of Mr. 'John-- -McKenzie,, of Brantford: His .many friends here. wish to, hear of a.speedy recovery.. e . ._.Mr. •.Wilfred-McKague:has�r en.eria'. gaged to work for Mr. Thos. Moffatt NEWSI?"APB> 'PAI S °(Sarnia Canadian -Observer) ` The 'anounceme:at that the Detroit News has abandoned 'the !horning eld in that city is somewhat surpris- ii nforination Coualed with the fie- elaration of a few days ago that the new paper in Port Huron had • gone -into the hands of a receiver, the unci - dent, suggests .that the process '.of .imitation. of superfluous'' newspapers is continuing and. that •it Willcontin- ue. , • The facts seem. 'to- ,be that there have (been too many newspapers, The stress . 4f hard-headed : buainese has compelled the unwarranted ones to Some years age. 'many yr ages,. sub mar.: 'll 1 to t was andsmall; cities ,had at ieas�t s • ie two newspapers: Most of us can recall what ill -supported, miserable affairs the m'ajorityn of them were, neither ,a credit •to . those who . were . •struggling to keep then in being; nor to the., communities they, represented., When. the war came on, the pressure of fin- ancial conditions drove the weak pap- ers•to'the wall or into amalgamation; _which gave one •panslr -of some Stand- ing where two or three 'had existed in an uncertain fashion before. The result wasthat the surviving papers were able to maintain 'a decent stand- -Mg and serve their patrons better and at less • cost than had been the •case where the. commui{ity had to support two or more. The outeome has been that the whole tendency in Places, under 50,000 population: is 'to- ward one -.paper. Thepeople under such conditions are convinced.. that one paper is all they. esin 'afford to• support, and they have demonstrated on . numerous occasions, where there. have been at emnts to inaugurate the • second newspaper' that thq advertis- ers who pay the shot are not favor- able to newspaper duplication in a field:•• that-- does not-vvarrant_such. A few years ago, .there appeared to exist among some of the public an impression that there •was no risk concerned • about an investment' in a newspaper. So "many of ahem have discovered to. their . ,sorrew that no commercial enterprise' can lose. mon ey faster than a badly -manage news- paper, that •there is no ,;longer the craze for the kind of ,glokY that was supposed . to accompany :journalistic ownership, May men In- Canada have lost immense sums of •money in. modest newspaper " ventures, They were usually . outsiders who,-: before .the incident that -gave thein'•the • happy experience, saw only the glani Tor. of the'game''and the suecesful ex: ter or. appearances at the newspaper;. They :had ho conception as • to the magnitude of":the.wage.•hills, the ex-• cessive cost of. machinery!, white pap-. 'el- and news services, the strain and worrying of the training staffs to perform 'the intricacies 'of the task which any newspaper•must accomp- lish if it' hopes to.rise above the stat- us . of a journalistic mediocrity: How- ever., testing ' time through • which newspapersare passing has ;succeed- ed.-ip-educating-the -public- to the re-: cognition that the newspaper: game is not onefor anieteurs, that pears of training often fail to produces success- • ful executives , and that 'the_ business can readily prove a sink ' hole for 'large amounts of money without get- ting 'the et-tiing'the investor` far on the road :to success . The newspaper 'business _ is today a highly specialized calling: it which the -examoles-of-genuine, suc- cess are so few ,compared 'with .the list of.failutes-'that' no man .except_a' gambler • of trite :most foolhardy: type of, money in it. Successful. predation of a newspaper means un. ceasing toil, watchfulness and anxiety• on the part of those directly concern- �d::I•t-- imposes-=responsibilitiesthat the average man accustomed only to commercial lines is not w711ling"" to --un- dergo 'beeauseiie • must •conclude •that other lines of -+b'usiness `offer greater' rewards at less sacrifice. ered . ' thousands of - . Russia's' best • people lir cold 'blood' on the slightest pretence. has also ibeen_,:, distanded Made up as it was of members; of :the old Czarist secret •police,- ex-convlc't.S , and other: criminals. the' Cheka wa. o niterua t mw.- Btt'-'organzafion; s• s1 �s n .ro erful :that for a `tune it .was 'alma r• `tis .tIl override the 'wishes of, the'i;o% menta ' C -1; 'Mackie's tale of.the 'horroreof` • i - , cto-being-short o f pp set Russia in re food• and other necessities of life is such 'as .to defy description: Re state. that no matter what .. is done: ; ten millions, of peonle; in the Volga dis trict •are doomed,. while an additional twenty-three,' millions are de"e'id 1' for their existence r"on. outside help, In' a strip of country, one:: thousand ' miles long and between three' .arid i o .'- four:•'hundred •miles, w �i_ ,. as�estofthe Ural- m•ountains no •.rash fell until August 20th •of last year. The only thing that was saved was. the potato for the summer, gu • Mr and Mrs.Geo, Waegland and. =•�-family-:moved from here -last Friday'. _crop, nttd..that ,was taken from..the • evenin Their departure was . some• ground. while the plants were s ill in _.. __ . _ and: their at sadden opeople-hereflower; I.et°tire'-wori'd-l�ive;to-:the full �h dt new " home is ' et"unknown to their, of its resources. andstill there will be friends of this vicinity, • ten millions, of peo"le in that and A number -from' hereattended the.other districts who will die.Ptric , Lack of 8t. Patrick . social in Knox - Church, transportation is' one of the causs. Teeswater_last_..Eriday..:evening_ All : for this•, calamity. Much of the back report a splendid time country west of the Ural: mountains: --o=o-o--+ has: been Cut off absolutely from the outsideworld., and to quote Col. CONDITIONS IN• RUSSIA .• -, Mackie: "When the roads are omenet up and we go: into. some• villages o ]��-m �o-"aron�"Saturday_ Night`�— •1�'-fi€tsen=hundred—�ieop e� ro - A m oat interesting, authentic and , tht will not be found line •hiring up,to-date analysis of the tl••not oven a cat or mouse," • Russian -:situation--was-- g°rven-d seemly. by.Cal.� II; ; 11/1aelaier-who-has aunt•-ra from '• that country. having completed a tour f' investigation pertaining to trad0onditions on behalf -of the ('ani adian';Goyernnent, According to_ Col. Mackie communism has not or �,r: , ken down latterly, but has beer, :. Nowadays if you tell a.' girl that ally discarded., In a•wordthr • int V she. isn't beautiful he can produce is coining back to capitalisin as fast the bills to prose' It t isablet -There- arc crow h ''it fearful price to. pay for lib'; e,rtc.'and-the pity i3 tliciie who pay bad nr,-1, nfo ol " sh es"' in Moscow tragrad set, u. as 1 or e _ ..a .ti _.. _ ..... tate` more communists in New York City than would be found in all Russia. The Russian leaders now real. — . 'iae•the folly 'of a :0..sieni which has well nigh ruined then. Bankrupt, • with illusions shattered. disabled front every point of• vie.N. Russia„is bn her knees, and la ,part.. 7 to make peace with !the world, ' ' The Cheke. the body which was res. ��ppqur l�! t00>th+t > d't9,rrax, e►»d mord. !ekw. 4 no not slitter another day with Itoh,IPY`Sl ed ing, oi' Prottrud• ns Pilo*. N,t ourgleal bpdn ation required,' OCCbaieOinotentwlirevre yott o nc ed :mordtstbenb t, coo, 88x A Tf' 'k° naiad PW$ lr IAt ispfAyproaI 441440. • 0 ;x.x v vti • People who attended 'Ri1ois Dollar lar.l ast year will l re em,b r the 's splendid Bargainsa1ns theY' got. This year w. are going one better. Be here earl andoften. ' Capture the .Mysterious Ttss Ripley in..our otoreard receive a Silk Dress 'FREE.; OfiLLAR for :ANY 'OHE of the Following' Items 6 Yards 30 -inch Light Print 4 Yards 42 inch Dark Print , 3 Yards' 36 -inch Stripe Cambric Shirting • 4%. Yards 36 -inch White Flannelette 5. Yards 28-i4ch White Flannelette • 5. Yards 24-inct'S'eotch Check Gingham 5 Yards 27 -inch Blue and Pink Chambray .4 Yards 184nch Pure Linen Hand Toweling • . 2 Yards 40 or 42 ifieh Heavy Circular Pillow Clifton. 2Y4, Yards'' 45 -inch Colored Table Oilcloth ' 5 Yards 36 -inch Factory Cotton ' 5 Yards 36•dnch Bleached Cotton (heavy) • • -• ' 15 Spools,. 200 yards, Black` or *late. Cotton Thread 2 Pair -Large urkikh Tows 5: Ladies' Summer- Vests- ,4 ests,4 Pair Boys' •heavy ribbed Cotton Hose 2 Pair Girls' Silk Lisle Hose, black 4 Pair Men's Lisle Colored. Sox.. 1 Pair $1.50..Silk,Hose, any shade . • 4 -Pair Men's Heavy. Wool Sox; • . Men's Overcoats, $1.00 each Men's" Raincoats, $1.00 each Ladies' Raincoats, $1.00• -each - Weider •Coats; $1:00 :each -"-' f'oys' Pullovers, 2 for $1,00 Boys' Suits. odd sizes, $1.00 each piece.' Men's Dress' Shirts, 14 is 17, $1.00 each; DAMASK• ; TABLING Fill. Up Your Drawers' .. • :'11000 Yards Tabling,mlieautlful patterns, 58 to, 64 in. Wide. going at .$1.00.: • Also see our specials in Cloths. 54x54, 54x63, and larges sizes, ;from $1.00 up. You buy them at Half Price; Napkin Specials, in half-dozen lots, gond large sizes at, ,, . . ,. , .. ... , . . . • ..... . $2•50 $2.50. $3,00, and $3.50 per half-dozen -. • ,• . 1000 Yards of Pure Linen Toweling ,at 4 yards for ,,c -,,, .•..$1,00 5 ,Large' Comforters; at $2;50 each 50 • Girls' .Sweaters, Pullovers. also :some 'buttoned coats,, Your Choice" at Si" ; GROCERIES,. 2 Cans each C., orn Peas Tomatoes and. 3 cans Park and _Beans, all for ' ... .. .. . , ...... , . .. $1.00 ., ,., .... .,. .. • Seeded or Seedless. Raisins, largq packages. 5 for• $1.00 3 Pk -'Rinso-3 cakesPatit 011ai-„ a pkgs.: and 3 pkgs._ Drudge Cleanser, all' for .. $1.00 8 Pkgs.. 'Jelly. Powders, any flavor, for - ... . ,X1,00 ' 12 Bars Surprise, Ggld;'Sunlight 'or P. $z'G. Naptha, and ;3•pkgs. £mmonia- for . , ..:., ..'....... , .:.. .... .:......_. _ .$1_00 3' 1 -Lb, Cans best Red, Salmon for • .. 4'Bottles Jam or Marmalade$1.`00_ 1 L'b..-'best Tea, and 1 lb choice Coffee for Matches, '4, boxes for .. • " 30c. 2 -=',3 -:Bottles Extract • ..(.assorted), 1tin Daking.:• owder•--,3-- packages . Starch..2• tins ' Prepared Coffee for • $1.00 7-Cans-Soup;Bintz, etc, ;:. ;$1,00' HOUSE DRESSES ' • , Every. Dress cut. in Price. $2.0rDresses for $ .00, and., luicher priced at the same reductions, MEN'S AND BOYS' SUITS 20 -..Per -.Cent Discount air. any Sidt .in the Store. Extra .Values in Felt• Hats. Caps, Suspenders,. Underwear, Sweater,. Coats. All reduced for the day at prices you can't resist. , BIBLESS OVERALLS Blue with'. white stripe or all black, any size; Today Only , :$1.25 a Bair • -SILKS 'A. C• ollection of Silks, including. all •the popular' shades, 'of Taffeta, i, lauchesse and Marlette• worth tip .to' $s,OU a yard. On "Joliet „Day-‘•, ..Only We Otter 4 'Yards for -: , :.. .. , •,.....:. •*'6;00 DRESS GOODS .We" will .offer- a varied assortment 'of , Serges, 'Poplins, . Cashfneres,, • rialdsand other makes of L- ress• '1"Toods; 38 to 54 inches wide, and worth up' to $6.00 a • yard,• Un Lo}jar 'Day Only.at ...4 1,60 a yard' ... We have many' other targains which we cannot mention here;• owing..' to space, but'it' will be your gain to: come here on Dollar l . „„:. -' ,et Real Bargains. : • APT_ MISS RIPLEY in this Store and get a Silk Ores FREE. .She will be :out 'from :2 to 5 . .o'clock. Salute her ,. correctly by saying, ."Are You .the Mysterious Miss ss Ripley of Ripley's Greater Dollar Day", and also 'get the $5,00 prize offer. ed ;by the. Progressive Association. NOEXCH', .NGE REFUNDS_ F.U.�DS►_ zTh _Store' With Tlie Stock • • LABOR ORGANIZERS ' •'` _ , ALKERTON- l ork• Little rc•aclt CrazyDoctrine of L �V and._ Big P$Y r...... (From The Herald and Times) . Three, Labor- magnates in the per! sons. of Pat. Green of Ottalwa. :Pro- vinciat Labor Organizer, Arthur Martel -:of Montreal, lit 'Vice Presi-; dent of -the Canadian • Trades and' Labor Congress; and Fred. Molina*• of Toronto, General . Organizer . of the Brotherhood of Painters. and: Decora- tors for Canada. delivered stiri ing' 'addressesto the gathering of•Labor men who assemlbled'at the Town Hall -here On -Saturday.' night:'~Mr' "Green; • the :first :speaker, said he had spoken froni this •hall less than ' a year ago Tihere had f eta e' s ,just before the a -closed down for -tale or•three-:months.. He•ha predicted such: a move 'at .the d_ time and declared that the bossesbiad dome. ' this to compel .'a shortage of their goods and so that their hands after walking the streets for a time would be glad to take a decrease in .-wages.- This most startlirg state_- of affairscould no doubt have been pre- vented had Mr. Green • just in i of inud the bosses where they. could have got orders for their goods, and thus kept their staffs intact but hie failure,.to -pass• tlut-'the iecessary nformation- • brought about the close -down: As factories all over the .continent • were closing down about the ne _time -the_ : a c+atattrophe Avasn't:; eculiar towWalk- erton. and so -must ave been a -"coin= certcd action all round; Instead of the markets of the world, Mr. Green Wined it on the crafty designs. of the bosses, Had Mr. .Green however. but dropped into Walkerton during the slump and showed the employers where to get ordersthere is no limit to -the - salary -ha-could=have-drawn and the good he could have done, His, panacea for the ' •present unentpk,y- ment tris' ' to bring about' a slier er .work and thus spAad out ti work more by •enforcing urn 8-h ur instead of a 10 -hour day: If a Ilan is working for an industry that industry and the country owe titin a living, and we are trying to get the Old Age Pensions Ant . Pititlad to ..nforeo thiiu, Aix, Q'. a ishan *Owl 11).0 .14 Labor:, Movement was trying to get. an Unemployment Insurance . Act put through, .Thennployers would have to, payfor it at run their factories in a way:that there wouldn't be ally un - :em ym to -_.end-:_......... ;_ P Mr. Fred: Molinau, the next speak- er, deplored` the 'fact that the Weal' -Finishers'--Union- -her-e-hadn't---been. heat am. but he hoped it would . be again.re-organized. He, claimed -Labor; Unions could prevent .unemployment :by "stopping some .men from working 12 to .15 hours, while others • Mere. walking, around . out, of : work. Mr. Arthur. Martel, who has just returned.. from the International Lab - 'or Congress. at Gen'oea. Switzerland, where he was Canadian delegate, is something of humorist, and said. he. - had .come, to, the conclusion..by,„the smallattendance, that the - working conditions in Walkerton were good, otherwise More would • have been pre- sent. •Theathering looked like' a con- spiracyag'ai`nsem.` liie ir ' g•Sas most of '-taled .. , .. • the audience iwere hearths d8'oi=:�llad itbeen' a burlesque .all mould _like. to: b q . see; all Canadians `have families like they have in Quebec, 1010 20 children and • not • like the typical : American family, father, • mother and poodle flog; Small -wages were sinal!- families. and this was.. anational dis- aster. Your employer,. he said, ,is placing you on :the market lilce an emu turkey gobbler, if there are More of -you,.you -dare: _worthless;`_if•therc'. ate_ fewer of :you, you are, ' worth. entire; it was tithe he clamped, this snaking a commodity of man was stopped, He stated -that the laborers -IV Canadn' •were••-starv'ing., because •theyx•- had•l.no•. work. while in •Germany workmen• were starving because .they have a job, In Germany men work all day for the price of a. pound of butter • and all week for the prim of 'a pair of shoes. He claimed a workday should be 8 hours in Canna as there' isn't en- ough work to,keep all going at 9 hrs. As a result of the meeting ;a Finish- ers' Union. will be organized in Walk- erton this Friday. A woniatli,s ago only matters when she has 'been" that me some time. Another difference between hog and pork is that pork never grabs the end 1104 ...� ._.., . ERTHIN( C S C. P. R. Tickets ossard Corsets FARM'VALUES Not only do CANADIAN y o ..the average values. for all descriptions of farm live stack The average value; of the occupied show. an extraordinary. decrease as compared al - farm lands of Canad'a._which_included 'p red with lues' but they are ai , , so below, the values- which :were, rug-' both-,im r..eyed .a d:-.0 .nail.: r..oved ..!and ,_..:,._ P.._.:..�_ n__-. �.._.�_.._...��.._:___I71n;..17Efti]'P,the.wRr.: Fox..harses_-.the_ -together with dwelling houses, barns, -a%ues are •the lowest` on recoil since stabres- and other .fa;m -buildings is:' thes"e.. annual returais were begun %n `returned ,to the: bureau of' -statistics' 1909; -For Canada as a whoie;;horses nt ed with �d8 .=under one year of age average $88,' as $60 per.' acre as co par 4 ►1 1920, 46 in• 1919''$41 in 1918,38 .as against" $49° in 1920; horses_o. ne in 1017, $36 in 1916, and $35 in 1915, •By provinces • the value ,far • 1921 -is "hihest in British Colarnbia, vi,,:$122.. in other' rovincess the average value p r, of farm lands per acre reported, as follow�st,-Ontario $35; Quebee... $59;.. Prince. Edward $35; Nova Scotia grid Manitoba $35; Saskatchewan', $29 • New 'Brunswick and Alberta ' $28. 'year to 'under three years . old and:, aver,.. $123;_as against ..$151, ; Cattle under one year 'are $12 as •against $20; cattle one to threers: $26 against $67. For all,•descriptiont the Vaverage value per head. for Can- ada i;forhorses $83 as against $106'' in 1920; for mulch cows $51 as again- st $80; for other cattle $37 as again- _ ; 5, . For the:year : 1920;- the -average • $t $ �� #or sheep -$6 as agarnst�$10 1 highest and for swine $14 • as against.- $23. Wages' of farm h e, p were the on' record. For 1921 the returns show For swine per 1001b, live weight the. the average a• very Substantial reduction, For. the average is $10•as against $15 m 3920, •whole_of' Canada. _ wages The per capital values are the low helpersof:_farm ...durin the summer. es of any during the last seven years' g season of 1921 -were for men $07 .an. 1015 to 1921, eaEceptthat for awns,. 2 i the value in 1915 was $14 as in 1921. for- women $42, includ ng• .,board; .ail average value of Ivehich was. $22 pet' ; . • ' Month for men and $18 for women In ' .. -, $ , A tactful diplomat is a. Man who 1920 the corresponding, overages were . can, remember a ; lvomail s birthday $8¢ for men-,, ineludrn,m. s_board•value . $20: and -forget her •age--- . KINLOUGH• We are all, very sorry. to -'port' the illness, of Mr. •Jas. -•Purdy. - Mr. Thomas _Percy is nota s-well.a , iris spa friends'.w wirl .ill. _ „ _ . ny` o -e to' see Miss Ti1lieflo . _. .- _._ ._.. �tskx?is.Q.arii.af_.Kincar.;.___ dine spent the .week -end at at her home M1 •am l -Mrs, ( i'; Rhine of Kin- garf spent a day last week •with'Kin- h 'fru loug - - -.. friends. g en Mrs, •F. Hodgkinson spent allow day'sof last Week, with Mr; and Mrs; Richard White,: ' Mrs. R, F >Hod ' i � kn. n g o ,.; ,s spending a fewdas with friends at'.Wing ham and Whitechurch. Mr John. McFar1ene has. ken _�- ..... . . .... :...:-...._..... , ._.ate.. _. , ,..,•s�.., possession of ` the store and farm which he purchased from , Mr, R. A. Richards, and Mr. .and .'Mrs, Richards have moved to their farm or; die - twel •fth,concession, .The Entertan in'tent in- the Town ship •Hall, Holyropd, was: 'a huge suc- cess. There nvas -a-a•ogd:-erow.d-and •--: after the program lunch Was served by the. Wonteri'5 Institute to all'who were present and afterwards a. couple of _hours,: was _.Sp-Qat o _ :. .'r _ �...d€incing-azrd_... _.__„_< card playing. 10 fo*, 5for 33 • 't