The Clinton News Record, 1928-03-15, Page 7r __— `._ —
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Manitoba
Wheatfirlds
F-iROUGHC3'UT Canada the Batik
of Montreal isdaily loaning funds to re-
sponsible farmersto assist thein in their
business.
This Bank is at all tines prepared
to advance . loans on• terms consis-
tent with sound banking.
TRE
JEssTablished Ti8i7
Total Assetsin excess*83o
Clinton Branch: H. R. SHARP., Manager
Another Firm''.
but of Business
Just one of the news items which
are appearing inpapors,quite too of-
ten these days throughout the Dom-
inion. And what is the•reason, There
is only one; and that is lack of loy-
alty to home institutions and the lure
of the flashing publicity of the large
city establlihments, Many citizens,
while earning their wagesland salar-
ies in one niece, nevertheless send a
large proportion of this looney out
of the community for questionable{,
bargains, thus depriving such com-
munity of that much necessary work-
ing capital.
usinesss Men
Do the. Same
They have local firms who are able
and ready to supply them with all
their requirements, yet for the most.
trivial reason or excuse they will,eon
sent to extend this patronage -toout-
sidefirms, this helping to build up'
distant citiesat the expense of their
hometown. They seen to forget that.
this money se sent out 'might .other I LL
wise have, been 'largely, returned 'to'
them by those with whom they should
have left this business. Therefore,
when in need of printed matter or,
any kind, whether farmer, business
Irian or professional roan, always- ex-
tend first consideration to
TheClinton limo ews- Record
1
T3IL CI,INTON NEWS -RECORD
HAtlp(iiings
i111.1140 ,t{o>tro>rit artirl ,',`
'•�' S 9G
BUTE' Olin to ill -health " 11I isp
� g
-Patience 5Cott',,;.assrstant; teacher,',. )
131vth 'Cont enation 'Soh"ool has .leave
of
absence for a couple of ,months
and will visit.relati es in the South-'
in -States, Miss .IVI,cMithaet ;of
Wi oxeter is takcing Miss". Scott's �woik
daring her absence.
BRUSSELS:, William "Rands, life-
long \resident of this locality, died
euddenly Sunday rnorning at his
Uoane inGrey Township:, 4r,Eands
had'his overcoat en pieptiratory to
leaving for ,church when ,he became
suddenly illi dying' half- an: hour• later,
'He was '72 years of ,age, a member' of
the :United eelinfehe and Proreinent,
Orangeman, He is survived by his
widows one son -and four •daughters.,
GODERICII: The attendance at
'Flour has in -
the Childress'- Story
creased to such' an extent that more
loom is- necessary • attt the e M I
'lp o
Leaf 'chapter Dagghters • of ' the
Empire offered to furnish .a vomit in
the basement - of the Public Lib-
rary for this purpose, The
board has accepted the offer.
course in
O TH: A short co e
SERI' R s
Farmisin .conducted
Mechanics being
r
week
'u-tehall,Seaforth this s
h town
and theaus ices of theDe artment
et x
pp
of Agriculture.
WINGHAIIi; There died', at her
home on Patrick street on Friday
afternoon Mrs. David Sommers, who
before her marriage was Effie Jane
Gidley. She was born in Blyth, De-
cember 29,. 1884. She had been, in
poor health for past two years, but
had been able to, get around, until a
few months ago. Besides her hus-
band, one son, Kenneth, at home, two
brothers and ,three sisters survive(
Russell, London;' Harvey, and Pearl,
BIyth; Edith, Toronto; Ittrs. A. Me-
Vittie, Uespeler, Funeral services
were conducted at her late residence
on Monday afternoon by Rev. Dr,
Perrie. The remains were taken
to Blyth for interment in Union Cem-
etery.
SEAFORTH: A pretty wedding
was solenmized in St. Thomas'
church,: Seaforth, on Wednesday
morning of last week, when Elener
Emily, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Gruremett, of Harpurhey,was
united in marriage to William Henry
Palin, the ceremony being performed
by the rector, Rev. T. H. Brown. Afs
ter the ceremony a wedding dinner
was served at the house of the bride's
parents, the immediate relatives and
friends being present. Mr. and Mrs.
Palin .will reside' on the groom's
farm on the fourth concession of Mc-
Killop, where the best wishes of many
friends will follow thein.
EXETER: A.;,,,,quiet but pretty
wedding took place' at tete James St,
United parsonage on Wednesday of
last week at two o'clock when Miss
Jennie Aileen Passmore, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Passmore, was uni-
ted in marriage to Mr. Lloyd Para
sons, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Parsons. The ceremony' was- per
formed by Rev. D. McTeerish. The
bride was attractively attired in a
dress of blue georgette. The witnes-.
ses were IVd,iss Lily May Snell end Mr.
Alvin Passmore. " Following the wede
ding, the bridal party repaired to the
home of the bride's parents where a
dainty buffet luncheon was served,
The bride donned a gown of navy
crepe, with coat, hat, shoes and stock-
ings to match and the happy young
couple left ori a wedding trip to Lon-
don.
SEAFORTli: The following are
thenames of the pupils in the public
school taking the highest standing in
connection with, the religious instruc-
tion course who wereawarded hand-
some gold-filled pencils presented by
Rein. T. H. Brown, rector of St. Thom-
as' church: Principal E. R. Craw -
ford's room -Elsie Drover and Mary
Reid;' Miss• cKay's room—Winnifred
Savauge,' Lulu Hart. {''
GODERICH; The death oseurred
on Friday afternoon of Mrs. D. Con-
knell at, the home of her soh, Chris,
Sanderson, with whom shit made her
home. Mrs. Cannell had been in pont
health for over a year and was con-
fined to her bed for the past five
months. • She was the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. L. Manning and was
born in Colborne township in 1853.
She resided all her life in this vicin-
ity. She married George 'Sanderson
and after his death later married the
late Daniel Connell. She was, a faith-
ful member of: the Victoria three tj
'Un-
ited church.' She was ,of a loving
disposition and all who came in con-
tact with her loved her. She is sur-
vived by three 'sons, Chris. Sander,
Bitter. IfemAeS
"Fruit•a-tires" the Foe of
Constipation
Iseertw MILLS, N. B. -"I esti
1 1I honestly say 'Fruit -a -lives'
are the hest internal regulator 1
have ever used. Other remedies,
and 1 have tried many, cause
pairs and griping, but `Frult-e-
tives' always act easily and effec-
tively. I most sincerely 'recom-
tnend theta.",
Mr. S. MacNair.
Iviade from the intensified
juices of ft sh fruits combined
with tonics, `l ruit a -Lives" is a
natural medicine. It'stren gthens
the system to act naturally
without 1 h continuous use of
is natives -25c, and 50c a box.
lioderitS Jct eillvq'uette;
rice George ' of MOOSc':"Jaw,
bthei,, Jin Manlri rg olj
IC.� iPtl Our sisters, 'Mrs;
as , 0 ,
Fi 1¢r df 1 ea nxngten;' Ms.,Beacom
Chnbo)r, Mrs Robert Bogie of
Sheppardton and Mrs Bezeau o'f;
I{itehencr, iter, 14i.' C. 'Parr, ' of „the
Victoria •Street 1diritecl church con -
,ducted the.' funeral, services at the
home of her ,son., Chris Sanderson,.
Newgate street on' Mohday afternoon:.
Interment was made in the Colborne
cemetery,
Sl 41'ORTH: William ""Laidlaw
-Ballantyne the oldest litaeori in the
district, died zit his borne here :Theirs-
daynight atter a short illness;ju his
89th 'year. He was'boi•n in Hawiclt,
.Rokboroshire, Scotland, and came to
Canada when 14 years of age, learn-
ing the trade of shtieinakor in Galt,
He was married ie 1859 to Agues
Mackay of Galt, and in 1851'moved
te` Harpurhey; comningte• Seaforth a
few years later and residing here
Hewas.staunch t res-
ever since. a
e
e a member of the
b terian and was, Y
.session for over 40, years. Mr. Bal-
lantyne was license-;inspeetor for 28
years,, a member .o
i'b i e f the P.uhlic school
board` for 22 years and had served as
assessor for a number of years. He
Was a charter meinber. of Britannia
Lodge,
N0id A.M,had
. 170,A.F. ar
received the old rnembers' medal
from
and in June,
Grand Lodge, ' G
gold
was, ' presented with a g ld
headed cane bythe officers
and'
Members
of Britannia Ledge
on the
occasion of his Goth anniversary as
a member of ''the craft. He was al-
so a .past chief and chaplain of the
local camp of the Sons of Scotland,
His wife 'predeceased him in 1915.
He leaves two daughters, Jennie, in
London,, and Isabel, at 'home, and one
son, Jon M. Ballantyne, of St,
Thomas, The . funeral was held . tin-
der the auspices of Britannia Lodge
from -the First- Presbyterian Church
on Sunday afternoon at 2 .o'clock.
GODERICH; A third Literary
program was held . 'in the 'asembiy
hall of the G. C. I, Friday . night.
James Sutherland, as second vise -
president, had charge of the program
which proyed to be one of the finest
held. He made a brief and fitting
ehairman's address, and then M9iss
Alma Howell played a pleasing in.
strumental solo. The debate was an
interesting one, the subject of it be-
ing. "Resolved that the freedom ala
lowed the young people of today is
beneficial." The affirmative was up-
held by Forni 3B, the speakers be-
ing' Ned Sale and Miss Margaret
Groves. The 'negative side was up.
held by form 3A, the speakers being
Frank Savage and David Wenger.
The .speakers presented their argu.
ments'welt and all spoke very distinc-
tly. Dr. Messina gave the judges' de-
cision in favor of the negative. Miss
Dorothy Holmes favored the audience
with a vocal solo. The "Journal"was
comical and' many original things
told the editor. Miss Elsie Win-
ter. The society pianist, Howard
Young, played a pleasant instrumen-
tal number.
FOR TIIE PROTECTION OF
FARMERS
A letter from the Department of
Agriculture regarding alfalfa seed
contains a warning which it would'
be well for farmers to heed. In part
it reads as follows: "For protec-
tion of farmers, the Dominion Gov-
ernment has passed a special reguia-
tion making it compulsory that all
alfalfa, seed brought into Canada
from the United States this season
must have ten per cent, of the seed
stained red—excepting such, seed as
is imported in sacks sealed by state
officials and under a guarantee not
only that it was grown in certain.
specified states but also that it be of
the Grimm, Baltic or similar- hardy
variegated strain
"Every farmer should, therefore,
take advantage of the, protection oft
fered and refrain from buying any
seed carrying the red stain since
such seed is: very. likely to be ,of
varieties or strains .not suitable to
Ontario conditions:
"If red stained seed is offered at
a lov;i price a farmer might save
something at seeding time by buying
and sowing' such seed but he woiiid
do so at .grave risk' of serious loss
by ,wifiter' killing later on."
GETTING h KICK
by Walt Mason)
To get a kick appears to be the aim
of most of those I see. . Without a
kick life is too slow, the people mut-
ter as they go. Oh, some excitement
must be found, :if we would see life's
;wheels ge, round. And so men sip the
poisoned gin' to get • the kick con-
cealed therein; they get the kick,
without ce doubt, ante burn their in
side plumbing out, and -sometimes to
the morgue' they slide, is moral lesson
to provide,, 'To get a kick young
people try some dope unholy, on the,
sly; they want to knoo5' just how it
seems to entertain the hophead
dreams; there is no danger; 'they are
sure,, that they'll be addicts, beyond
cure; but some bleak day' the truth: is
known—they' cannot la the dope
alone,. To get a kiek the man who
drives his auto, with bis aunts anri
wives, steps onthe gas, that he tea i
know how fast the blamed old bus
^an go: The road is long end :'flat
and straight, and ha hits up a giddy
gait; but from arlintersection now.
there comes a sway -backed brindled
cow, and they collide, the cow and
car; a rencling(sntaslt, and there you
rel , The grave mortician comes:
and sees the victims plastered on the
trees. T� get a kick the daring' guy
who never has ,learned how to fly,
climbs in a plane some happy day
and tries to bit the Millty Way, And
when he lands it's upsitle clown; we
bear his fragments off to town and
Rope hie death was not so quick as to
deprive him of a Icicle.
Ilia
A Column Prepare
Especial y for Women --
But Not Forbidden to Men
13e selfish, withyour worries;
"Be generous with. your fun,
But never"lend a worry out
To "anyone:
We all have worries:but some way,
Y:
The ones who hoard' them ,greedily,
Are better liked in life than they
Who out of enerosit
� generosity, Y,
'Give them to friends; who, if 'twee
known,
Area " to have tome ofh �'
t t c.tr. own.
P
I was struck with a bright little
saying met in my reading the other
day. It wasn't from a great writer
at all, it was just a newspaper "fil-
ler," but so common have great
thoughts and• wise ` sayings become
that we- often pees them by without
a thought. This was, to the effect
that many people are happy p p w it ut
ho
sa ing much about it,
but fewpeo-
ple can be miserable that way. „Did
you ever read anything truer than
that? Somehow, when we are happy
we appreciate it, but there is always
something
more we should like, some-
thingthing
which would make our cup of
happiness overflow, and because it is
lacking we feel aggrieved and as if
what' we already possess is not so
much worth shouting over. The fact
of the matter is that deep down in our
hearts most of us feel that there is
nothing too good for us; that no
matter what good Dame ' Fortune
drops into our lap it is no more
than our due and when the tricky
dame sends us something in theway
of bad fortune we are apt ,to hang
our harps upon the willows and re-
fuse -to lift our voices in the littlest
kind of ti song for the many blessings
we have had heaped upon us.
But did you ever meet anythiag
Recently Dame Ellen Terry, the
great English actress, passed her
eightieth birthday, - an event which
was celebrated almost 'as'a national -
event.'
ationalevent,'- In a message to the Daily
Express Dame Ellen is quoted -es say-
ing "A Kerry heart goes all the way"
and proceeds: -"Perhaps that is why
It have managed to jog on for eighty
years. I ern a. little tired now, but
not too tired to smile at kind friends
who have forgotten not for t
g en me."
To be able to Bile and take up.
one's work and go on, even though
circa to e
m nes ere e not always aw s
a to our.
y
likan
t d it ma b ho
e our ix
Y o
of
s
happiness is completelyletel
Ydemolished,
a
is a fine achievement. In fact, men
have been canonized for lees.
Miss Charlotte Whitton, Canada's
representative
on the Child Welfare
Council of the e League of Nations,
a Canadian woman who has been do-
ing -some fine work during the past
year or two, sails for Halifax on
March
1.9 for Geneva where she will
attend the sessions of, the Child
Wel
-
fare Committee of the Leagueof Na,
tions. Following
the sestions
trWhitton will visit Hungary, Austria,
Germany and Belguim to study web -
fare work. The war created unusual
problemd in some of these European
countries, and in Hungary, with the
assistance a the Hungarian assessor
of the League of Nations, she will
study conditions amongst the large
number of refugee children. In Aus-
tria she will study the work being
done amongst malnourished children,
and in Germany will investigate in-
teresting work that is being done 1
along the lines of child psychology.
REBEIIAH.
more cheering and, stimulating than
the other sort of person, the person
who refuses to weep, no matter what
sort of a backbend slap fortune deals
him? I have one such in my mind
now. One whom I term "The Gal-
lant Spirit" He has had an ordinary
sort of life, a life full of strenuous
work, with which he has managed
to mix a lot of fine, unselfish living,
and just as he was looking forward
to some years of rest after histoil,
something happened which' shattered
almost completely that picture of
restfulness and bade' which was al-
most within his grasp. But he refused
to complain, rather went to work to
extract from his misfortune whatev-
er of blessing he could and went
about carrying comfort to i!'thers who
seemed to be less, blessed than hes
His courage and the gallant way in
which he met his disappointment Evas.
an inspiration to many and a dew/1-
right rebuke to those given to water-
ing their own pillows and filling the
atmosphere ine which they Moved
with gloom over minor difficulties
and troubles. It was a positive mor-
al tonic to talk With hint.
THURSDAY, MARCH '15, 1525.
WINO,ilvt,: 11ev. Charles
Cragg; of the Devine St,eet "`Uaitt
.ehuren, S unit, formerly pastor!
the Me,hod st'chmeh, ,Winghaiu,.'h
been appointed: pastor of the Hi
Street United chcuch, Oshawa. Tit
Present, -Restore ltey-G, -W -peMin.
wliolias been in Oshawa, for the pas
four years, and who is also Presided
of the Bay of Quinte Ccinferense, ha
accepted a call to Stratford. . Mp
Deli/Elle leaves on June 30, and' 3VIi•
Cragg will take over his new-chargi
en duly ist,
SEAFORTH: Word has been re-
ceived by Mr. and,l'ylrs. J. 3.estcott
from WP
Windsor that Captain and Mrs.
Bowers w s of the Salvation Army, who
were: formerly stationed in Seaforth
some five years ago where they were
held in very high esteem, have been
appointed to take charge of a boys`
school 0o at the Gold C0 Ast West Af '-
ea. A farewell meeting was held re-
cently in Windsor to bid them God
speed.
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UO1Sada SIN.
azotroranrasostacaaszum
The best oats and the best china
Every package marked "Chinaware"
contains a piece -of china as good and
as pretty as you would buy.
155
SENSATION
AT THE
INC
eee }'I R•ESBNTING.. completely new ..
-•-- j • styling.. andengineering., pro-
nouttcetteby automotive criticss to
be two years ahead, the new Okjs-.
mobile was the sensation—of—this'
spring's Motor Shows.
Engineers, manufacturers, body -
makers, salesmen' and the public,
in one breath hailed this new
Oldsmobile as the outstanding
achievement in all the great ex-
hibitions of motor cars.
And now all Canada is agog with
the news. of `its brilltantperf2rnt-
ante, All inotordom .is , ringing
with wholehearted prsise;, •-•
At'the Special Spring Salonthis
week, the public has enthusiastic
ally taken up -the -chorus.
Just as it stood' but at the Motor
Shows .. . just as its fine car
qualities at low price are destined ,
to dominate automobile shows
everywhere the New Olds-
mobile has become the talk of the
See the Fine Car of Low Price 1
Let us arrange a personal demon- O
tratton for yowl B1
tto pa rli^is'lI,, YrA°rfl�t�2t.°
//
0142II5 ((�..
. fi talon'
G;
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;',1;-;;;;;;g:i
t I i,, y
OBIL
r'.
THE FINE CAR OF LOW'PR10E
.11e B. Lavis,
PRODUCT OF GENERAL
MOTORSm 0
Clinton
is
CANADA, LIMITEDere