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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1929-07-04, Page 6Ca llbt9raZ ° '®w Siisaet Miss Alma Reid of S. S. 110 1 and Miss Mabel Wood of U. 9:'9. No. 1 'have resigned their schools: Mist Reid ligar taken a school near '' London, There are just two teachers;in Col- 1 e 'bo` e',who have not resigned, Miss' Alma FfCl) on did . , i' No, 9 and Mr. 4. a . Wood of. Saltford: Miss -Winnie Hanish spent Sunday with Miss 'I'Iax•y, Addison at-Londes- boro. Mr. Allan Watson is remodelling 'his barn this 'summer Mrs. John Treble is vi.-,iziez with her daughter, Mee. Will Clayton of • Putnam. Miss 'Sylvia Seguss is home Trona 'London. -. IVIx. Alex. Youngis out a„aln with the aid of :his 'cane, On Thursday evening twenty-two 'bead of cattle, that had g•sithered, be- neath a lltt'le basswood tree when an -•electric storm ,arose were killed on Mr. Gerdon Young's 'farm,, The cat- tle were pasturing,; there tor; the'sea -son and were owned by 117,', : Lochart and Mr..Medd.•' The loss 'is' pertly -covered b 'insurance.Three other nim the bolt and, escaped. missed Miss Julia Young, came horn'° for the first: S Jule 29th, Bl th,l On Saturday, , ui Y. Tr.M ;Liles .A Annie ,polies daughter, c . z , s n , .. i Jones and':the late Mrs. Jones; eddie • i aerie e to' Mr, James sbsas united in n S a of -Flint, Michigan. The' T"olem n very quiet and the' .cerenzony was S • oun *.. eeple will reside in Flint. We y f, P heartily wish . them, happiness their wedded life._ Leebuen, 'Nile olid Port Albert Sun - ay school;, held their picnic. at the latter 'place on Saturday, All report a good time. , Mir. Charles Vaicoe was home ev- er the week -end. Mr. • Robert Bean is now veneering • M his residence with, red bride_ This will masse a' fine improvement: - Mr. R. its'. Youngs residence , ;is close to completion. ' ' • Several small rains were very wel- come in this locality lately. 'Already Sound and color have: been 'added', to -the .movies, and smell is y said to'be next.,, How about a little ;beasts which were also in: the field. more' taste?—Exchange, Qualifications for Old Age Pensions m:Ontario are Announced TORONTO, June 25.—Qualifica- 'tions for -pensions° under the 'Ontario 'Old Age Pensions ;.Aets,are defit(ed to .day by order -in -council in the Ontar- io Gazette as approved by the Ontar- bo Cabinet. �4 person must be. a British sub- ject, or, being a widow, who ' is net xi Bs•itish subject was .such before her marriage, has attained 75 years, resi- dent. of Canada for.20 years, and re- -sided in the province :or. Bye :years, They must native an Indian as de- fined by the Indian Act, not in' re- ceipt of -'n income of as nhltch as '$365 a year and has not made any voluntary assigumept or transfer, of property for the 'purpose of.. qualify 5ng for a pension. • Udder the act, 'a sen dr . daughter 'laving sufficient means is bound' to provide for maintenance of a depen- dent parent, the act. ,not relieving then from such obligation; Local ponsiou boards •are Appointed for each county, united counties, city, separated town and provisional judi- cial district, including the :County of Baliburton, Applications made on or before July 1, 1930, must be made 'to the local pensions board of the county or district in 'which the ap- plicant resides nn July; 1, 1929. Af- ter July 1, 1930, applications must be made 'where they the reside. Applications are made on prescrib<' W.!i {i ne cit �� _ ., he sz Mrs. Iirbbolzi making t Y a, Ti[E CLINTON NEWS-ItECO1.Li TIIUR DA"Y, ;111 KILv table, Miss Ada Stackhouse leading t 'ss' zl-es tie and D the addrnsv': ,and Mi U , Oen. Last .Sunday Rev. Dr. Barnby Iy i•Fxlt"J17tTi7 i'()xt ;'cllx9 l? ` this week they have moved to Vanden , tivhere.t e tier cin ws assi an a ixst vis tl -axx d nxa 1 r x 1 �onhi4toi 9a r • . Teo [�� l 13 t Y`u Askin Stz°eet T<nxt'eii. Clxurch: While C rh 91 PCl )P.i' 011 ^ :liothld Gnd j tla ! friends tics only in his own congrega-' flops --•-How Chemicals ,tet, • . ' .tion but with the public generally. ContrU'otel Gp Ontsrlo Diasartinent of , t .... A„rlcu.ture, 'I'ortintoJ Olds lilC4LS Neese le preached' his ,fareiyell'sermon and 1041A' rG xzx' h t will beassistant t• . (Should ls. Yeas' sou zt resident here( they have made malty dx, Condi- ed :forms, accompanied by a declara- tion by an`'acquaintanae' as to resi- dence of applicant. For determining' age, regard may be made to birth certificate, baptism certificate, church record, marriage certificate, family Bible or other proof satisfactory to the local' board, S„ Naturalizationpaper must bellied - with the application, Maximum pension of $240 a year is to be reduced when the'pensioner has an income in excess to $125 a year so that the Pensioner's income and the amount, of pension together will not exceed :$ 365: a year. For ex -- ample if the pensioner" has an in= come' of 1200 a year, the pension will be $165.a year. Where an applicant has not resided in Ontario during the whole of the. past 20 years, but has resided in a 'province . he will be entitled to re- ceivo the pension providing that pro- vince in which he has resided is un- der the Dominion Act: These pro - vines are Alberta, British Columbia, ll4anitoba.:Saslcafehewan and the Yu- kon Territory. Pensions will be payable monthly by check and recovery can be made for nondisclosure of faets, innocent or false 'representations or any -other rause. Pensinus are susnended dur- ing the lawful imprisonment of the Pensioner for any offense. `During, the °eai•.y summer frequent reque'sts reach- this, Dille° asking ter ways and":means of killing °Win:k'iou§ plants without apptyiug the general methods`of soli tillage: Poisoning, poison oak,,Iioison suii1uc, and polfsoti hemlock -are the most frequently men tioned plants. The usefulness Of chemicals as weed' killers is limited to the follow= Ing 'Cases: --- 1. When the obnoxious' wend oc- curs in limited areas and is to be destroyed regardless of the effects of the chemical' on the' soil or nearby. plants. .2. When it is desired to render the soil steirile, as on tennis Courts, paths, roadways or gutters. 3. ,When the 'Plant that' it; is de- sired to -ki1>, is more sensitive .to chemicals than the other plans 0e-, cti•pying .the same ground, as iii,, the case, os mustard in. oats, or. orange hawk weed in grass. Brow' Clheniiuels' Aot. , Some`pireparations, as arsenic „and mit let tires s oil win / oh d a HEN you plan thattrip, be sure to plan your tires. 1� You can't• enjoy yourself if you're worrying abour blowouts all the time. Drive around here and let us equip your car with Do- minion Royal Cords or Royal Masters. • They are a sound foundation for carefree..holiday. We have absolute confidence in these Dominion Tires. We have watched' there in service and we' know... they will deliver the mileage, Dominion Royal Cords are the standard by which tires are judged -- Royal Masters are In a class by themselves. We have Dothinion •Tires for every cdr at popular prices. DOMINIOWTIRE DEPOT CLINTON L M. Elliott LONfESBORO Leslie Ball carbolic acid, uved in Weed killing act directly ,and quickly -was plant`paisone, other Bitch ae common salt; may:. draw `the water trim the tender green growth, or by bolding the soil;inois- tune' so that it cannot, be Ailed by the plant roots: Young an$'tender plants in active growth succumb to the plant poison much More readily than do the older plants. Chemicals Used. - Oonlmoil Salt.—It applied in ,quasi-. City in dry hot weather, in very strong solution or dry le effective and not expensive: Most Molted against road Canada Leads By. Freak Yeigli In wheatexports, ports. In railway mileage per capita. In world newsprint production. Inlife insurance' per capita in the Empire. ' In hydro, power developed per ea - pita. In opening of new countryby air- plane. In the world's largest pulpwood re - souces. In the world's largest inland port of 11/fontreal, Sn the largest grain mills in the British °Empire, In"the world's richest nickel and asbestos mines. Iji the largest forest resources in the Empire, • Irl the most extensive sea fisheries in the . world. • 'In Quebec bridge span, the long- . est of its type. In the largest buffalo and elk herds in the world. , In one of the highest tides in the World --.,59% feet, Bay of Fundy. In the largest farmers' co-opera- tive society in the world—the West- ern Wheat Pool. In two of the largest drydocks ors the continent --at Esgniinalt and St. John. / In the longest publicly -owned rail- way system in the world—the Cana- dian National, of 22,000 miles. In the largest agricultural• imple- ment industry in the British Empire -the Massey- Barris, Toronto. In the largest railway yards sin the world operated by one concern---C.P. R. at Winnipeg, (258 miles of track.) In Ontario's Bydro-Eleetric trans nhisison lines as one of the largest public .ownership schemes in the world. In the Canadian National Exhibi- tion as the largest in the -world, based. on annual attendance of over two million, In the biggest dam in the world, the Gouin, at the head of St. Maur- ice River, double the capacity of As- souan dam, In the Chippctwa-Queenston Power Canal as the world's largest engin- eering wort since the Panama Canal, R 2Ell LADY VICTIM OF MOTOR 'ACCIDENT Mrs. W. v1eFa,ls, Exeter, was a 1- uost instantly killed and two other passengers' received serious injuries i they were 'rid- wlaen theiiutoinDb le h y Ing in, owned and driven •by Ga ret Flynn, Exeter, was overturned on the Y , detour of No. 4 highway, a"short Bl dis- tance . north of 'ticofi Monday morning at 1 o'clock following a coilison with another car, The injured include: Mrs, Frank Taylor, Exeter,' internal injuries, a fractured knee and shock; Frank Taylor, her husband, internal injuries and shock; Garnet Flynn, driver, and Mrs. Flynn, bruises, cuts, and shock All were taken to Exeter and given medical attention by Dr. Dunlop, 'way or path weeds: Copper Sulphate.—Used in solu- tions from '2 ,to 10 per cent. it Is effective against rough leaf' plants as the mustards. More power4ul in its action than salt, it Is expensive. A 3 Per cent. solution is used against mustard in graip. ' Such a solution can be made by dissolving 10 pounds of copper sulphate in 40 talions or water, and 40 to 50 gallons of this spray are required for each acre treated. Sulphuric Act&: This weed killer is rather dangerous to handle. It -destructive to all vegetation to which, it may be applied. It' must be hap died In glass as It destroys metals. Owing to ricks In handling, 'It, is not generally reconVmended. Caustic Soda,—A strong solution of caustic soda while rendering the soil sterile, is very effective as a weed killer and is used with .success against poison ivy and other nerdy deep-rooted plants, For best, effect It Is applied during hot dry weather. Carbolic Acid.—Crude carbolic acid diluted with 15 to 20 parts of• water makos .a cheap and effective weed killer. It can be handled with satetY and will not injure the spray pump, sIt is best applied by spraying on the Plants, or saturating the surface soil. A;rseilate of Soda.—Arsenate of. soda, used at the tato of 1 pound to 3 to 6 Aliens of water, is .very effec- tive as a killer of obnoxious plants. It may be applied es a spray to tith plaits or soil, It is very durable, in that it is not readily washed from the soil,. Most useful on roads and paths. W>,iite A,rseitiq and Washing Soda. --Theee two substances mixed in the following proportions, white arsenic 1 pound and washing soda 2 pounds, with 5 or 6 gallons of water, males a very effective herbicide. Lawn weeds such ds elttckweed or orauge hawk weed or other juicy leaved weeds can best be combatted by heavy applieatiens of salt. Such should be epplied'on a hot bright day in July, broadcasting at the rate of two or even four quarts of tine salt per square rod, (Try it out on a square yard first to find out what your soil and grass will stand). Rake out the dead weeds, sprinkle on some more grass geed and water well. -- cloudy weather. •Arm ��•i C4l x J'� SSS t i1. est, ' moi' 4. =,4 r7 (IInIIIIUWII1,n tong lililli)gii2 I4iIllllIIlli9hihiii➢Iglllli \• O ,GALVANIZED SIDING for Outside Walls ..Attractive to look at. Inexpensive. Easy to put on over old, walls. With building ppaper, warm; dry, windproof. Choice of Brick, Rock - and Clapboard pattern " add the touch` of pros- pperity to stores; give aetterlight. Ferman- ent also for schools, • halls, Stitchene and batbroorns.'Edey /J toppetttilioverold x, plastsr.No dust :orlitter. Eae Rock -face 'Clean and paint: Can- nat craclt < or fall t GALVANIZED SHINGLES End the fire hazard. Put on over old roofs. - Easy to lay. Good lboking, permanent, inexpensive. Use NO Other. ° The Permanent fireproof roof i63 Beet n3,eet . ET PRICES FROM TINSMITH OR CA R P1TI .'. iloopormsaimaroefaimiosuommEsionsmom moo Summer Pruning, Watering and Fertilizers for Hence. Sunnier pruning of roses 15 essen- tial for beat results, says Prof. A. U. Tomlinson, of the Ontario Agricul- tural Gollego,, Old'fiowers should be cut away, and dead growth or weak shoots should be treated likewise, Old flowering shoots, immediately after the bowers have done should be out back, especially early in the season to a strong prominent bud, With Teas and possibly Hybrid perpetuate new flowering wood will develop vers. quickly, When pruning 'is 'done a _Oleic acting fertilizer should be dis- tributed over the surface,—nitrate of soda, acid phosphate or blood meal. After fertilizing,, should tide season' be dry water the plants well. Early morning or early -afternoon are the best periods for the watering of roses, never water late at bight except ,in very hot weatlier..,Mildew and fun - gee diseases spread rapidly under cold, moist conditions, so do not cre- ate such by watering' during cool, cloudy weather. -'-Dept. of Extension, O. A. College. Don't Americanize Canada In the eagerness to attract tourists and their trade there is a tendency to convert out main highways into long drayhn out bazaars. The United States flag as flown almost as fre- quently and almost as high as the Limon Jack, and with names and manners we are recreating in this land of the Maple Leaf the very at- mosphere and conditions that our neighbors to the South try to get- away from for a time in order to en- joy the quaint and different customs of their Canadian cousins. It is poor business! i Canada has a wonderful asset in. the names brought from England and Scotlland; names that suggest glens and lochs and clans; names that,pie- ture in one's mind the beauty of the English countryside. And then there are those Indian names that one must learn to pronounce. In no post office or• traveller's guide can be found so many Haines, soft, musical and so full of meaning, as the Indian names that mark towns, hamlets, riv- ers and plains ire Canada, The Province of Quebec possesses rimy unique and , varied natural beauties; but its historic and quaint French,charaeter is the magnet that draws the foreign visitor. This is forgotten in the zeal to attract tour- ists anal' an American nomenclature is invoked for the purpose of adver- tising hotels, restaurants and gar- ages. The Roads Department of the. Quebec Government isaware of the mistake and has sent out an appeal to all citizens, 'merchants, hotel keepers and advertisers along the highways to "give proof of tr'ue.busipess sense in endeavoring at mil times and on ill occasions to preserve to the Pro- vince of Quebec its exclusive char- acteristics.” What is true of Quebec is true of Canada alt a whole, This Dominion might well be made the great sum- mer playground of the continent; and with that in mind we should preserve the names, natural beauties and clstomsthat are distinctly -Canadian: --The Farmer's Advocate. All Male 0alc'ee Do Not Make Good Bulls. No Weeder should expect every calf- dropped. to develop into an ani'- mai suitable for the • breeding herd, but too many insist on selling every male calf for a bull. The breeder who will ultimately produce the best oattie, command the highest prices, and satiety customers will keep only, high-grade bulls. Cultivating not only kills the weeds but it improves the physical condition61the soil. BLYTII: The Sunday School of Queen Street United Church made a presentation of an address and purse of money to Rev. Dr. Barnby, who preached his farewell sermon last Sunday. The address Was laid Eby Mrs. Wm, Jackson and the presen- tation was made by Mrs. Pelts. The W. M. S, also met and MTs. Colclo igh read `an address to Mrs. Barnby and Mrs. A. B. Carr made a presentation of a purse of gold. The Amity Zible, class met at the home of Miss Gidley and presented Mrs. Barn- by with an address and a chesterfield Fs•atilc Taylor, brought til in as un- dit on recover'n r San- colxscious con , a 6 scienstleea in lite office - Aceoxdhi tot + ^sitz,^,n laid,hw g. H.T.O. Whitos d9s Goderich,, whoithsS, r investigating the accident, a west- bound automobile, owned and driven o An crEck, $ebring„' in' Y crossing thewe detour 'atthvillee 'county line, struck the car broadside, Flynn overturning it into -the ditch. lll'cFaIls was pinned underneath'. the wreckage of ,the northbound car, and died a few minutes after being re- leased YULY ROD AND GUN In Iine with the season of the year, -the' July issue of Rod and Gun and Canadian Silver Fox News, Canada's 192;;. seesseessissesesesseeesi isrgely to the fishing and tenpin iht pests outdoor' life., � of • to ruar g;' NotesIntaddition departmentthe capablyegl'eondFishinucted' byG. I'.• Sladen a couple of:s le di p p n d, yarns by N. Milton 'Browne and Reno de la Buere appear in this is;, sue. The contents include many excellent ,stories and featuree by Pd - ward •Orinerod, Bonnycastle Dale, C. S. "Landis, 3. Vit. Winson and W. 0, 11Totley, providing a wealth of enter- tainment and information for the reader. Fox ranchers will find vii)=-' cable information in the articles of the Canadian Silver Fax News sec- anon. Rod and Gun and 'Canadian Silver Fox. News -is published monthly,by W. J. Taylor, Limited, Woodstock, national outdoor magazine; is devoted Ont. n 1879 - and To -Day! When the Marquis of Lorne and Princess Louise were guests at the old Queen's in Toronto, the telephone was in its infancy. To -day there are more telephones in the RoyalYork which occupies the old Queen's site, than there were then in all Canada. From his room in the mammoth hostelry to -day the Royal' York guest may call anyone of the 1,300 telephones in the hotel, or any telephone in Canada, United States Cuba, Mexico, Great Britain and almost any country hi Europe. The facilities for quick and convenient communication are the last word in efficiency. They are the nerves of this great establish- ment. BOW TO REDUCE VARICOSE VEINS Rub Gently and Upward Toward: the Heart as Blood in Veins Flows That Way Many people -have become 'despon dent because they have been led to believe ,that: there is no remedy that wilLseduee swollen, veins and, bunches. If you will get a two -ounce' orig-, Taal bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil (full strength) at any first-class drug store and apply -it night and morning as directed you will quickly notice an improvement which will continue until the veins and bunches are reduced to normal. Moon's Emerald Oil is a harm- less, yet most powerful germicide and two ounces ' last a very ..long timer Indeed, ,so powerful is Eater- aid 011 that old chronic sores and ulcers are often entirely healed and anyone who is disappointed with its use can have their money' refunded. All druggists sell lots of it, Advertisements Are Store %Vind-ows • . PLOIIIIERS Remelber when the unbeaten Hare raced the Tortoise --and being . so far ahead, how the Hare showed'his contempt by lying down for a Snooze, awakening in time to discover the Steady Plodding Tortoise was too near the Winning Post to be overtake m' Just so You , ag Wi' ,; bj Ste , dg Adventist ° g with I , s f r a Definite to Purp.se. "An Advertisement •'is an Invitation" The Clinto News R ecoid