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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Star, 1935-09-19, Page 2, lee ale0 •••••• 1%. • 0.4;*411.4 #4414,0r, . •••A AO. • .••••••••• • • "•'• ,••• - WA • .4116 " oerv" TER COMICH STAR Argultswor, 'PODE. (Estatooed 100) indepen444 newspiper, oolubea ThUrsday at The Star' Office, tlederiets. Sulteer4Alon V4:0---040204. and ,Oekeet 'Brieeirt 101,50 r.eyear edvalage an arreara 4200), ; United Matte. 42,09 per Tear leeadvanee. Both 'Ad and Pow ,eddettsees should be elven when ehange of address is re, queseed. 's s . • OAROBIZATIONS—We And sthisi Inset ofour subscribers Prefer net tO heve their sebseriptione interrupted in ease they te remit before exeiration. 'tiniest) we aresnetifled, "cancel, we wunie the subscriber wishes the eervice (Outlasted end will ,eenet the paper for a limited time ' ItleelMieNCES eiteuld be Made by registeredletter, money ordersor cheque payable at par In Ooderich, • • The 1501erieh Star aecepts advertising in its columns on the smders anding that it wil Mot be liable for any error in aiiyadvertiting published hereunder unless a proof of such advertisements b requirediin writing by the advertiser and reterned to !me Star' business office duly signed by adver- tise*, and, with such emirs or corrections plainly noted In writing thereon and in that case. if Any error is not corrected by Ile Star, ehall not Weed such esproportion oX tho entire ;tett of /bleb advertisement as the spat* opens pied bythe noted error beers to the whole space weepiest by such advertisement. Advertising rates on application. ALERED WILKES, C. Klatlt, STEWART, Editor. Manager. Phones: Day 71; Night 84 and 331. Post °Mee Drawer 6'11. WO, ,441.?.• THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19th, 1935 ONTARIO HYDRO RTES The electric bine sent out Iast week *were no d‘iiibt made up on the same'basis as all other hydro bills have been for years, and as one citizen remarked to The Star, "we don't know anything different". To new comers they Were, to say the least, amazing. . -That_the local hydro officials are in no -manner re- sponsible for the rates, is known to everybody, as- the ratesare set bi the head office in Toronto. It is also e-qually- well known -that geoferaphically, Goderich is a long way from Niagara, the source of power, but when cd, which is altogether likely to be the vase regarding the kcal plant or branch, the maintenance charges surely do not warrant the present rates. Two weeks ago Kincardine got a reductionof $4. per !mese 'sewer,- but on enquiring The Star was informed, the reduced rate is no,:?Nv what is being charged in 'Gado - rich. The. Review -Reporter of Kincardine said last week "Kincardine's minimum monthly bill was reduced from $1.39 to $1.11 two years ago, and the ' local commission -Fopei to -geturenthe---appioval of the Ontario Commission for a further reduction in the -near future".: , In 1934 the average domestic monthly bills were: -Kincardine, $1.95; Wingham, $2.12; Hanever, $2.22; and Walkerton, ;2.29. Commercial bills for the aame year were, per month, on the average: Kincardine, $4.91; *Hanover, $4.'78; and Walkerton, $5.41". We are not prepared to say how those rates compare --With those „charged in Goderich, bat we do know there is a bill right here for a house for the first half of August, amounting to $3.10, and that does not include the charge of11.04 for.a water heater. Na person can reaaonably object to paying $2.08 per month for a Water heater; it is a hundred per cent. investment, as suppliei the, bath and kitchen With hot- water at all hours for $25, year. It's the other charges that make consumers wander. sOme-seetions-of "Otitario,_numhera of -towns and municipalities have organized to pretest to the Ontario Electric rower Commission against the rates established by that body. The fight has often, been long and vigor- ous, but a mutually satisfaetory arrangement has usual- ly been made 'whereby the municipalities got bettor tes. GAM that procedure not be adopted to advantage for Goderichand it's citizens? The following municipalities on the Georgian, Bay system have just received:the -following rebates: Alliston $87,50, -Beaverton $257,_ Becton 012, Brad- Tatt-16701rechin $91, Chatsworth $954, Chesley $1,226, Coldwater $497, Cookstown $245, Ci eemore $560, Dun- dalk $153.2b, Flesherton $225, Grand Valley $372, Gra- venhurst $90, Hanover $2,776, Holstein $255, Huntsville 049, Kinc*rdine $7.20, 1,IcTier, in Freeman. Township $370, Markdale ;430, Mettford $2,095, Midland $85, Mild- may- $495. Neastadt $435, Orangeville $2,256, Owen Sound $9,890, ,Paisley ;632.68, Penetang $3$, Port Elgin $1,310, Port Perry $255, Friceyille $160, Ripley $650, Shelburne.$6, Stayner ;4.20, Sunderland $19; Teeswater -448- ,1 -7 ---Thornton' $440, Tottenham $480, Walkerton $2,- 1714 Wavilmushene $85, Wingham $3,046, Woodville $45, total $83,540,78.* l'iltiiiderpalitiea in which a refund to consumers will be made, refund based upon a percentage of the 1934 re- hesley $2,145, 'Hanover $4,470, Huntsville $1.978, Meaford $2,814, Mildmay WM, Owen Sound ;14400, 'Port Elgin $1,494). Walkerton 1,764, WINAhnin $2,911.- 87.Total 0$884L8i. The rebates do not *Mount to A great,deal 'Thr some of the municipalities, while others Ore refunded sub- stantial iariounts, Owen .Sound for' Insfatiee getting a credit of $9,3,90; and Winghini $3,046. Of Course there ,ni always the possibilitYlif a debit bill coming tho year after' a credit has been received, thus keeping consumers, in a state of uncertainity. But the *portant featitie 48-tqliget-the-rittes--teduAttif titia-TOtialtir-lidtrittr Already penalized in many directions, but if light and power charges can be made' easier, it will be •,some en. couragement for people who can to place their money *here it will furnish employment and help conditions generally. PEAR,' NOT A .REMEDY VOA motives do not always produce right methods. The authorities of A county on Long Island have a plan 'oral Oitrt mutinous Ot kolooroPtu censure for minor traffic viola- tions, county police are instructed, tohand offenders a special card. On one aide is a courteous warning, but on the other iSide *re 'gruesome photographic reproduc- tions of two fatal motor Mishaps. , it is always considered a hopeful sign if citizens offer The latter rniet\lio4 is open to question, ' Itesortinkt, to run for municipal Offices. Assuming that. is true, -feart4J startle' motoriatiinto obe4lengcto,..its,tigh*, ay .Canada 'Musthe in a glorlousty healthy state,- as 644 are laws is an ad scheme applied to another problem,/ Zrhe tteethe t45 seats in the Rouse of Ootentelate, Atki the, method isn't so different, from that of displaying •oat, end is not yet. • films in the belief that scenes of Munan destruction *ill *rouse humulity, sufficiently to put tho likelihood Italy's Attack on Ethiopia ;was postponed from Sep. of war beyond the P*I0 ef actuality, Vat likewise i tember 4th until' October 16th. Why not call it off° by itrtipiqtd teaotrie cOttiont in titaitrra *Owl** to ton* oust vonsent? - the rale of sootallad curatives for human ailments. Fear isn't * piterantattier, itis *troublemaker. There Is polutodIrtptoof for tit& phaSt o ttodeta postlitilo #10ctrelli Mt, *MA 1 greatly „ "11:fror tevott t, cm** *poi ine". ,, • Tra'Oney to - Mt* 111141* At ' are 'aggravated by it. Fear la not a reinedY. It is a mental. Malady; Intelligent..reaSoning, iS the, antidote. In the ea -0,p Of the, Arneriea* COontylS Safety ac,heme, it is not the motive but the Inethod•which 0"y:e1es misgiv- ings. The kividly Intention a atithorities tet etipplent ilS111:41er 'Methods with their well.mcanhig "courtesy Card' is like- iy to, InOte a more lasting and irsefial effeet, upon' the average intelligence than the -shodkinerneditiin they eni- pioy to emphasize their objective. - What an upside desen condition affairs are in, not,only throughout the world, and politically in the Dominion, but in our own small sphere. Two months ago, the citi- zns of Goderich were more or less disturbed about the, alleged shortage in the, former Tax -Collector's. depart- ment. Then a motoring party had things tangled up for a few weeks to be finally settled by at least two of them feeling the depressing effects of law enforcement. Last week another regrettable incident occurred and another well-known citizerj. is surrounded by -diffienities and ' troubles. His prominence and his activities, combined with his genial good -nature and unbounded ,generosity earned, and justly, for him an enviable, position in the community. It is perhaps 'the two latter qualities that are chargeable for his present predicament Whatever it was, there will be a good deal of difficulty in convinc- ing his hosts of friends that he did, what he is charged with doing, with any. criminal or improper intent, but that it was rather the result of some sudden mental collapse. In the story in this issue about the buying and -selling of cars 25 years ago, farmers at that time were urged to buy pars to add to the contentment of their wives and keep the boys on the farms. The possegion of a car, didn't InVe that'effect dt leaSt-So far is the 'boys were concerned, and though telephones, radios, electric lights and power, with high class Modern maehinery have been - added to many farms, the bright lights continue to lure --younr-Teople-tar-the-towns-and-iities-.---Tcr-w-city--bred- man, the country has a fascination that he cannot shake off. and as he anticipates the day when he can no longer carry on his business in the town or city, his thoughts involuntary turn to the country as a haven of rest. Pos- sibly its a peculiarity of human nature • to want some- thing we haven't got, but if a man today has a fairly decent farm that is, paid for, he is one of the luckiest of mortals. When Florida was swept by a hurricane and 506 people lost their lives. and thousands were rendered homeless, money„ food. clothing, -medical assistance, furniture and everything ta relieve the sufferers was poured into the stricken area. What a different scene was, and iS being enacted in Africa, where Italy is using all the scientific knowledge and intelligence she posses- ses to destroy lives and property. Courage, loyalty, generosity -and energy are appeiiled to in both cases, and no human' effort is being spared, but there is a lamen- table difference in the two objectives. Huey Long, Louisianna's murdered political leader and 11. S. Senator, was spectacular even unto' death. His casket is said to have cost $5,000, the flowers were estimated to cost another $25,000. Southerners are tra- ditionally warm-hearted, hut could Huey Long, with all _his love of splendour, haVe-been consulted, he _would likely have preferred the above outlays ..to have -been madevto help the people in his state' and elsewhere, who are sorely in need of help. From some of the correspondenee received last week those who sent it in must have had a higher conception of our abilities to decipher writing than we have our- selves. Really we are not mind-readers and mistakes are hound to be made, particularly in names, if they are not written plainly. Will correspondents please bear this.in mind when preparing their copy. Dissatisfaction has been expressed. in L'Ondon, over the number of failures in the middle and upper school departmental examinations, special exception being taken to the French and Latin papers. A refeyente to the Goderich results does mit disclose any unusual fail- ures, but the reverse. Moral -let the students come to Goderich. A press d.espatth from St. Catharines says the Dionne quintuplets were as far back as 1902, outnumbered by two when a AleXican wonihn gave birth to sweets! ehil- dren. But who wants seven? Flie, is .,just four too many;with wheat,?otatoes, flour and bacon at present , _ •prices. An exchange offers this advice, "Vote for country- -not party sound'advice alright, but ittseeeesitalitee will depend 'largely upon who you are, what you are, .and What you hope to get out of any new order that may be established.---itce-a selfish -veal; at electiorrtim s. Womga DIRDIAS Pa 1400 -of Of, WORK pi:2009m1n,P4 vousp 4E FMftL tztotolli ,MAKE O Preit OW' • s4ORE.110PA st,(K15, !Ng's, 1,1t014.114E SARI, f00131t445 '4;AS POO- ,ertuk. Y SOLVED TRE PROBLEM OF USTI 40. 15 NO 4044 0044 A4 ALurAINUM V It4 14fterting. me re exisers m A HYDRA*. oP-eAthtlit ARP IS . A VARY OoMt.40t4 . altArareoo iite„ suktrAcg, Po4pEweJupea, Mut* Calit$ *.P Rawl , imgma,,,my ON. Ac4.u5E.D c (Ana, NAS seset,. PROVIDED tlE 4esr ollinRE,BAR:42, 4114., OPPION•RS -frin LAW, I Owe's100. IS* embirtirso aro*** calij MONG THE POLITICIANS Two women were last week eleeted to make your own. Of course the auth- _prides swill have something to say about it, but Orillia's rnayor seems There are 82 Federal seats in On- to be overlooking that detail. itajo_for which 269 candidates are offering themselves: -A-Rutronstruction-ocidtdirre--wil oppose Hon. W. L. MacKenzie -King at Prince Albert. - the Senate In Poland.' . 11, Hon. R, B. Behnett is billed to ad- dress a Meeting in Kincardine on Octo-:. •ber 8th. " - , - A Galt United church clergyman has expressed the opinion that the C. C. F. is the most Christian party in tile pres- ent camgpaign. There is a possibility of a seventh candidate entering the Essex 'East contest. The last entrant will be a Socialist. \ H. J. Crawford, warden of Simeoe Count, will contest North Simeoe as a Recoristructienist. That riding has been represented by a Conservative for .many years. Premier Bennetts Wording of.. the re, port about retiring workers of 60 or over, includes all workers, not only employees •of the Government as some people con- tended. The report reads "statutory re- tirement from the labor market of those workers who have restehed the age of 60 years." Mr. Prank Donnelly is freely mention- ed as the Conservative -candidate for the Huron -Perth riding. The convention is billed' for tomorrow. If all the people that Mr. Donnelly has successfully pil- oted through their troubles in the Police ;Court, show their gratitude by support- ing him at tho Dolls, he will have a tre- mendous start over anybody that may epter the contest. According to Mayor J. B. John- ston, Orillia, the machinery is all ready to begin as soon as the council says the word for the establishment there of -a. municipally owned bank". That's the system, if the banks won't lend good money, start a bank and Miss Agnes Macphail, ,Canada's only woman member of Parliament has,- with -consent-cal-her -,ezecutive-fri Grey -Brace riding, endorsed the Stevens policy in 'its .entirety. She will run on that ticket, instead of the U. P. OE— Labor. • Up to .Monday there were 645 candi- dates after the 245 seats in the House of Corrunons. Liberals had. 218, Conser- vatives 181, C.C.P. 118, the Reconstrue, tioniste 98. Several women are in the field and also a number of clerygmeri. Of the latter one is a Liberal, the others being enlisted under a C. C. F. and the Stevens banners. • Where five candidates are seeking the same seat, the one getting 21 per cent of the votes cast can win, if the other votes are equally distributed. .There are several ridings Where five are running, and others are liable to appear. Up to the present there are eight parties, Con- servative, Liberal, C.C.P., Reconstruction, National Government, Uy.0.-Labor, Communists and Social Credit. Political Courtesy Favours to political opponents in the thick of an election campaign are few and far between. Through the co-operation of the Conservative Dominion Organization here and the Conservative provincial organization in -the province of Nova Scotia, a half hour previously -reserv- ed by the Conservative party in that province was made available to com- plete a Canadien Radio Broadcasting' Commission coast-to-coast- hook-up for Right Hon. Mackenzie King, Lib- 'eral leader, for last Tuesday evening. . The broadcast for Mr. King had been arranged through all provinces except..Nova Seotia for 9.09 to 9.30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. The Conservative party agreed to accept the half hour following, from 9.30 to 10.00- o'clock to accomodate the Lib- eral chief. • ----CANADIAMBON QUOTATIONS furnished by JENNINGS, PETRIE & CO. LIMITED, Bond Dealers,- 516 Huron & Erie Building, London, Ont. _ 3. B. Hughes, Local Repreeehtative Approximate quotations Sept. 16th 1935. • - DOMINION OF CANADA 5% Nov. 15, 1936 e .$103/50 $103.50 5% Mar. 1, 1937 105.00 100.00 5%% Dec. 1, 1937 , 1007.00 108.00 IX% Sept.. 1, 1940 104.54 _106.00 5% Nov. 16, 190 105,50 107.00 5% Oct. 16, 1943 106.00 108.00 "41% Oct. 15, 1943-45 102.60 104.00 3-1.1r% Oct. 15, 1944-49.. 100.50 401.60 470 '00t. 15, I647;52. 102,50 1' 02.50 426% Nov. 1, 1948-58 - 104.25 105.25 4%Vs Nev. 1, 1949-59 104.50 105.50 DOMINION GUARANTEED C. N. 1.9 .111 416% Segt. . 106.00 107.50 To, avoid' appearing in the newspapers as "An acei- C. N. Rs 5% Feb. 1,1954 406.50 109.00 dent", drive' sensibly, keep your „eyes on the road; re. 0, ki• Iti 5% Sui,V 1, 1069 10840 10950 triember you are driving13 tars—, your own, the other C. N. R., 6% Ott 1, 1969 4.09.50 111.00 ,,mx,e,,that,you.see,,andiaLtilirdrarountLthe4fornet-.that.yo rigovntcw, GOVERNMENT bey- on. the fares- sue& tatikeslefesnorg, kgrati**-495,::5-*?? - ' - liivribUliYillii iiffe:Antoznobile men- ' do not 'see. , _ British ColuMbite 5-Ve. are constantly being astonished at sept: 1, 1953 ' •,.. 970-00 10.00 the price farmers are willing to pay Brifith Columbia, 5% % for the hest cars, and the way they Feb• i' 1°45 "'PM 1°'115 are Oaying ia in cash, with as little manitoba, 416 5, . Dec Ls, p6s 00.15" 102.25 fuss as if they were buying a new . horse Manitoba, 51,6% Oct. .., draft* * i' l, 1, 1055 ..... ... .. ... ., lesas. 106.25 N ew Jan Tht public has gone motor crazy, Iiirunswick, 5% 15Se,otia41 1000 , 104.00 109.00 at least that is the deduction that Nov cat be made 'from statisties recent - 15, 1961 ..... .... :-..: .. . .. - 105.75 104.25 luly gathered u atigirieettlfettna:ebendinitLmv:wnerythofotrt ado4.,_ 444.0.,ta-,Prit-,As-r-*--- .------* do '1050 103 '15 .144.125 a large part of the public has an al. Ontario, 517,0 July 1, • aiming ease of parescs. Reports 046 .,....•.....Z....A•V•4....6....A.A•A'S ,110.26 111.16 show that during the present year it Optirie Ifydro Is the *Ira of Ameriean automobile Comm. , 4, 55 Oet1, makers to ..build not less than one 99,00 10140 hundred_ and sixtyl thousand cars. tt.5. Quebec. 4% *iii. 1$, 1962 0275 105.25 'This !limber at an average of two Sa*itelvawan, Ott. 44.'70 , thousand dollars means an outlay Olt. ,11 1951.-- , -9336.,, 96.25 of three hundred and twenty million itOl18rsrerle-14-ore exact; the *Antes, worm ilowders Orval tail: spending ot etiti million dollars daily TheY Itainedia,K, attack the Worms sPe for the tnirehiise of automobile's by expel Them °mei this esStem. 111010* . - . . votounmpletlette wIrevin, ill,,Mtbuttl,vatel.ansristotolt4beasneot medicine for children. collecting -Aivotiolt and, reetatalt,-the debin4 'OStern tet, „healthfulness, without the setreith‘of the thild I bere- 4 and its tonstitutioor * _HEEP HELP GOLFERS ON WESTERN PROVINCE, I TOP Marquis wheat at LEFT, 'With a rust: resistant hybrid developed from • I Marquis at RIGHT, at the Winnipeg experimental firm. BELOW, different A' herd of 2000 sheep are being 1 stages in the development of a rust resistant wheat from Marquis wheat, with used to keep the grass on the Regina j the last two leaves being of the resistant variety. • - HY.JAMES, MONTAGNES- Eit night to 'itiCt"tise wheat in maturing ' 'Peatral Press Canadian vvriter snore quielcIY. • . • Ottawa, Sept. -14.--The eetdemic ef wheat stem rust which made it 11 s .appear - mice'. PM thiS euramer ins Western Canada, Will probably he the lest to bother farniers. 'Wheat which can re. sit the atas ef stein rust, le about ready for distribution to farmers. 4v - cording to Dr, lie H, Newman, dominion cerealiet, is reasonable to expect that ,by the spring of 1034 there will be avails able etiougla seed to distribute two to. Astir Isushels to each Canadian wheat growing fart:net. Several varieties ,. of rust resistant wheat are being tested in different points of Western Canada. Of _the total num- ber of wheat species two or three have been found to give excellent. results when attacked by the stein rust, and these varieties are being raised in in- creasing quantities so that several thou- sand bushels will be available for the 1937 planting. Research work has been -carried on situ* 1916 to develop a wheat which *ill be both rust resisting and have the qua- lities which have Made Canadian wheat so hardy and early maturing. Work was first started at the cleminilon experi- mental farms at Brandon, Manitoba, and Indian Head, Saskatchewan. Later the dominion inst research' • laboratory was started at Winnipeg to deal entirely with this problem which ruined entire crops-- in certain settions of the weSt. Throughout the west planting of ntimer- ens variette-1. wa.4 year, while at the main laboratories at Winnipeg and Ottawa, wheat was grown -in hot houses the`year round; with elec- tric light furnishing artificial sun power EXPECT ENOUGH • SEED AVAILABLE BY. 1937 •• 20 Years of IteSearch • soon as , ea911 new '-varieey had matured, the few bushels of wheat were Milled and giveNa.414g 'ttest4 In the 'bake ovens where bread Svae ma(ie from. each variety. Records were kept and tnere were always more yarieties grow - mg. As fast as one hybrid wheat ehow- ed signs ef belzig rus* reSistant it WS. bred With biller varieties, %fah the search; Pr the best varieties ever -going on. Now after nearly 20 years of tests by ndividual farmers, .government expert - mental farms, university and agricultur* al school laboratories; wheat varietree whieh will resist any attacks of the qtersi rust dieeaSe are being'grown m inoeas- ing quantities for &-strioation to farmers and soon wheat stem rust win be a thing of tthe past on the Canadian Prairges.e10----+ and other countries' where wheat is grown under similar condition:, as in the United States and 'Russia. ,Before rust resistant wheat varieties were developed, numerous other means of counteracting the diseatowere taken, the first having been the complete era- dication from Western Canada of the barberry, which was considered at first the main cause of the -disease. When this failed to stop stem rust aerial tests with sulphur dusting ..were made. 'Tharr''-'41 aeroplanes wereused to find out -Where the rust came from, and it was. found that rust disease spores were carried high in the air coming north from, the. southern United States. Lastly it was decidedto sievelop wheat -varieties which. could- withstand the attacks from the disease since there was no way. of keep- ing the rust away. Canada's -most fam- ous wheat, Marquis, was the heaviest ufferer of the disease, and most of the experiments in cro-sr,biiTang Egir have been with Marquis to find a hybrid of this wheat which- would withstand rust disease. 0 • • .4r n't.• T • 0. 0 0 0 0 0 • 0 00..0 Golf eourse trimmed. The links are divided into two fairways. While the. sheep clear off one, the golfers use the other. HOW IS THIS FOR SPEED (Ptern an Exe.harige of July, 1910) C. T. Smith, of Carnduff, Sask., drove his new car home, leaving the seity-ort Saturday tem -lung at 10.45 and reaching home Sunday, staying overnight at Brandon. His total time for the trip was 15 hours, distance -277- miles. - That was about 18 miles an hour. A 1935 goin at that rate would think he was r going backwards4omeat has started an investigation of its -or--was-at-I-stantling:stilL wn-,---rt -win try to- -find out Ifthe • Sixteen automobile mtikers are ad- Spencers paid full income tax. vertiaing 'automobiles to the farmer The Spencer succession duty probe in the 450 farm papers othe United was the first in a series of investigations f 'States, and most of them are argu- planned by the Provincial Government. ing There are about 245 more estates to be that the automobile will keep the investigtoed, aceording to reports from rontor —es -else The succession duty investigatien here was into Seven estates left by members of the Spenter fannly, who held huge blocks of Iniperial Oil stock. At first the probe was to have been only intothe estates left by Charles Norman Spencer and William Melville Spencer. How- eVer, other estates became Inv-olved, so the good of the seoutiels.sion vea.e widen- ed to inve,s'tigate the Ifortunes hill b seven members of the fatally'. the American public. Sunday has ISTERN BUT SACRED DUTY WAR MAY BECOME LEAlVfINGTON', Sept: 16.-A strict at- titude of pacifism does not interpret the mind of Jesus Christ and in some cases resort to war Is a stern sacred duty, de- clared Rev. J. L. W. Diretean, pastor of the Knox Presbyterian Church„, in a ser- mbn Mr. McLean said he agreed Modern' preaching of pacifism "is nothing but philosophical nonsense." Ile pointed to the erusades as -proof war --could be earr.- ried on under the sanction of the church, The evils of .peace may be worse than the -devastations -of- war in certain cir- cumstances, he diclared. , , /f it's news' you will always read it in The Goderith Star, Huron County's most interesting weekly newspaper. been excluded and with this the num-. be of clas is br u ht d t o g own o three hundred and twehty. Imagine spend- ing' one minter dollars daily for it luxury like an automobile. SEARCH' CONTINUES - FOR1NCOME TAXES - has closed the seven 1.,....7Erobviniato Now that t 1 Government Spencer estates and -received a -succes- sion duty settlement rtimored to be $650,000, the federal income tax -depart - 'Or killed and three wounded was the casualty list, after a debate in a Mexican Legislature; then Huey Long, the Louisianan p�liticai boss Was shot to death in the Assembly Hall of that state. They take their poll, tics more seriously in the south than we do hi the cooler climes of the north. Traveling at 300 miles an hour, as attained by Sir tlitt Mk computed it would take him nine and a quarter million years to teach the nearest star; That is too mueh of a joy ride te be undertaken without ix little preparation. OTHER PAPERS' 'OPINIONS Standard), It takes,* lot and alter tbey lAduiteiti husberuL- - henbis • CRAiGi wow Rol Nate posumos, Flovnion A INAICIPA 110NOS Phone 4 ••••••••••••.1101.0•Irommwene...111.1.1.4 ointac hes ACHING MUSCLES AND JOINTS are quickly relieved by using 'RUBLiCAPS. J. A. CAMPW4 Drafted. RUPAACAPS beatamnsammertamma Have You Put in Your Winter Supply, of Coal? If not, We, with to remind you tiukt wa carry * full line of different fuels. We wish, to parti. ---adarly---draw-your attention to DISCO, "dick - it a form of coke with the, gases left in. Try And test it out for yourself. NOW is the time to have your heating system overhaul- ed* Phone in your order and it will be given prompt attention. !shone Stet* 22 Kom112 CHAS ••• Aor