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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1926-05-06, Page 71 la A Policy onyour life will do much towards carrying out your intentions -whether you live or die.: Nothing can absolutely replace your life—but "a ` policy willin some measure offset the financial loss which will come to those who now `loon to you for support It may pay off the mortgage, supplyfood and cloth- ing for your family, keep,file-children at school, It may be all that is Left of your life work --to keep you in comfort in your old age. But—your Policy must be large enough. The Twenty.Payment Life policy is selected by many for the following reasons: Premiums cease in . twenty years --therefore your policy will be fully paid for before you reach later life —when your earning power will have declined. Cash values increase year by year, and after the third annual premium, the policy cannot lapse as long as- sufficient.. value exists. -Dividends are paid duririg'the twenty years and as long e't the policy remains in force thereafter. After two years the policy is indisputable, and you -may reside or travel in ahy part of;the-world, or engage in any occupation, (except aviation) without affecting your insurance: A twenty pay life policy will provide an amount in event of death equal to twenty or thirty" times the annual' premium, and produce an estate of $2,000, $5,000. • $10,000, or more as arranged. An .Easy These active progressive years of wife in 'which you are ea"}ning the most' money ate, the years in which premiums can be most easily met. Twenty years is a convenient period- and premiums spread over that length of time are moderate and easy to handle. If You Are 'Insurable --do not delay decision on this important matter—delays are dangerous. a Life , As.uranee COMpantg Geo. H. Elliott, District Representative Clinton, Ont. 4. ,pr „0.1 ' ae0 09• " OVK 6O O4 "A r a4 ° *FC *� • e xai► t or t9Qa9 FO'''as ;41,s,°`° ro Gi sot 4pet�o . q N'r' Pant a°t° 23 Every Week Last Year more sales were ibeii g ;made, stock turnovers speeded up and - profits creased by ADVERTISING. THIS YEAR every week .you let slip by without ADVERTISING gives your competi- tor a bigger opportunity. Start AD- VERTISING in The News -Record and follow the 'example of hundreds of suebessful business men by keep- ing your business. constantly ;:before your customers through :steady • ad- vertising. Advertisingis the most Efficient, .Economical Business -building Force at your command. Progressive Merchants Advertise Results of Spring Examinations in Clinton Public School. Hi ion Honours— S. Livermore, 86%, M. Plurnsteel, 8S, E_Hunt, 79 13. C,artwa^ight, 79 Pass T. Lovett, 7-4. B. Liverniose, 73 1f. Watkins, 73 V. Morrison, 73 C, Andrews, 73 R, Hale, 72 W. Jackson, 72 P. Hovey, 71 P. Collyer, 71 J. McTaggart, 71 I: Biggart, _J. Match, 69 W. Watkins, 69 B. Hellyar,.39 E; Rorke, 68 R. Carter, 67 G. Gibbings, 66 C. Levis, 65 J. Twyford, 65 M. 'Pickett, 64 D. Kennedy, 64 K. Pickett, 64 E. Rumball, 61 L Miller,, 60 Failed— '- G Holmes, ,59 F. Dempsey, 59 J. Elliott, "59 - .E.' Gibbings, 58 ' K. Nickel, 57 K.Streets ,'57 G. Rath, 56 W, Rozeil,:55 B. Cat' tw-right, 55 G. Cudmore, 55 E. Elliott, 54 F. McEwen, 50 D, Steop, 46. N. M. GEDDES, Teacher -.a Division 2 Honours= ah • Dorothy Watts, Mary Andrew Grace Fitzsimons Laurence Plumsteel Muriel Downs Madelon Glew Kathleen Cameron Pass— - Billy Draper Irene Swinbank Wilbur Cudmore Isabelle Lawson Jack Smith - Ellwood Campbell Pearl Crittenden Stewart Cook Norman Livermore Billy Murch Irene Layton Archie bale Pearl Churchill Norma. Streets ' Ernest Hovey Lloyd Rumball Harold Glazier Duncan Cartwright ' (Barrett -Taylor ,railed -- Elliott Bartliff `Donald. Levy 'Harry Plunrsteei Ruth Castle • Carl Furniss Robin Levis. M. ARMSTRONG, Teacher. Division 3 Honours-- Harriet 'Gaudier Jim Niekle' Owen. Combe Wilhelinine Trewartha I•Iarold Gibbs Mary Crooks Eddie Elliott Josephine Carter Pass— Kenneth Elliott Minlue ,Hudson Ernily'Scruton Reggie Gook Jim Doherty ,Stella Deeves Josephine Harris •- Lorne Brown Florence McCallum Marian Smith Beatrice MicClinchey' • Irene yenner and Clara Balla equal Robert Crawford -George Ruinball Isabel Cantelon - Fr!eda Miller w' ,Failed— Charlie Peckitt Josie ':Fitzsiinons Charlie Johnston Tom Twyford Harriet; Kennedy M. G..McMath, Teacher,•, Division 4 • honours— Marion Hudson Gene Andrews Pete Cantelon Tom Turner George Elliott M3tdred Fraser Dorothy -Cornish Pass Marion West Gordon Venner Jack Perdue ,George Cardwell Gladys Bezzo Sae Steep +Cecil Hohnee Orpha Perdue Frank heard Frank Becher Arthur Resell .Beatrice Brown George Twyford Margaret ,-Tasker Doris Crich Failed, Beecher Streets I-Ielen Ittnnball Ledith Steep Jack Murch Vera Jones Dorothy C ooh. ' • lv JohnCiiawfoid Cordon IJoy, Grace Levis Margaret Cartel• Ella Bluthner 3': M. 1 ARQUIIIAR, Teacher Division 4- Honours - Beatrice' Sharp Raymond Cantelon Lillian . M anning Ruth Collyer D•orothy_Corless Jessie 'Cameron Clayton -Dixon Joe Doherty Kenneth 'Taylor Passa - '-Harold Coates Whitney Carter Murray Cudmore Millie Cooper: Dorothy Glazier Bob Doherty, Ruth Pickett John McGill - Norine Finch Failed= - Isobel Holmes Frances ;Fitzsiuions Morris Link Marley Dale . Jacky Cree. Ross Fitzsimons. Geo. Laureson . "" Clifford. Kennedy • +'May Venner iBill Inkley Minnie Nash. • Mary Levis !1 George Gould ,, Norvel Furniss Alice Howard A. FARNHAM, Teacher. Division 6 Sennet Class Honours— Nora Fremlin -Jean Neilans II Elwin Neilans George Campbell 'Gertrude Reid _Fred It-ovey Murray Draper Mary Turner ;Sadie Elliott Rex Hovey Nora Livermore Alice Taylor Harold Johnston Rena Hovey Pass - Dors Johns` Vic Doherty Norman Fitzsimons George Levis • Jini Elliott' Clair Kennedy Junior Class honours— • Reggie Smith Virginia Hearts Bruce Bartliff 13 t Pass— Murray ass--Mu ray Hanley Dorothy Steep - Kenneth Jones Jack Nickel Mary Cooper Lucy Warren Bill Steep - Frances Carter Failed— ` i Grace Finch Glen Cartwright' BuddyH'arris .Lloyd Cook B. COURTICE, Teacher Division 7 Honours— Margaret iSchoelrhals Billie West , -• Norma Cook - Chester Neilans Agnes Doherty and Bob Biggart. equal IKehneth Reid and Evelyn Heard equal Agnes Cameron .Harold Seeley Donna Welsh' Pass— Violet Fremlin Rutin RozelI Willard Aiken Eva Ranrras. " Royce Fremlin Jack Mellveen : John Cuninghanie' _ Bab Gaudier Failed— Jim Crawford Verna Bozzo (missed an exam.) nSydnev Lawson Helen Lawson Charles, Match Louis Hoy M. WILTSEj Teacher. '-- Division 8 Honours Ellen Charlesworth Gordon Aitken • Ruth Andrews Agnes Agnew Gerdon; Hearn • Benson Sutter Ross Finch Madelon March George` Johns - • Ernest Mittell Edna Pickett Milton Downs Norris .Fit3simons Pass- Reggie Cudmore Maxwell Harness Ida Iioward Joe Steepe, Stanley Kennedy Percy Brown Cora' Streets Pahaa IlaiMi cg Isobel Cool.: Clarence ivc'ilar s • Aanie Cloward. Filch. Kremlin' Babble Draper 'Stewart-Sehoenlials' .Myrtle I3erzo ' Aeries Johnston Winnie Warren Nelson Lovett • Wesley Bezao - E. 1t. CARTER, Teacher HOG SHIPMENTS Report of hog shipments for week ending Apr 29,"1926: Clinton—Total hogs 67; select ba- con, 31; thick smooth, 30; heabies, 3; Londesboro—Total hogs, 119; -se- lect bacon, elect`bacon, 48; thick smooth; 38; heavies, 2. Huron County—Total hogs, :2,723; select bacon, 802. thick smooth, 1,594; , heavies,3164; extra heavies, 27; shop hog's, 84; lights and feeders,•18. 'SALT FOR FARM ANIMALS Experimental Farah Note Experience and science alike have shown that salt is essential to the good, health and'thrift of 'farm live -stools, Ifls not a food nor does 54 di ectlrin- crease the digestibility of food but it nevertheless 'plays' an important part in the work of nutrition.' Very briefly its chief functions in the animal econ- omy are: as an appetizer and a sub- stance which.make the feed more pal- atable; as a stimulant and tonic, when taken in small amounts; asn source of hydrochloric acid, a normal constituent :of the gestic juice. Its use therefore leads to a larger consumption of food, and, further, by stimulating digestion; permits the animal to make a larger and more profitable return in flesh or milk production. Of all farm animals, cows' in milk require the largest. mounts of salt. It may be given at regular intervals or mixed•with a meal at the rate of half - pound to 100 pounds of the concen- trates,"or the cows may be allowed' free access to it as rock or block salt in the manger. One ounce per head per day, if used as barrel salt, will meet the re- quirements of the animal satisfactor- ily. It is only when the supply is ir- regular that any fear need be enter- tainer) of the animal taking more salt than necessary -or` consuming too much" resulting in scouring. • Sheen require salt and there should be no neglect in supplyiirg it either by trough, barrel salt or by .rock salt. It Should' he available to therm at all times Horses thrive bes- whimregularly sapplied,_witli salt., :Say, about ane' ounce daily. 'When hard at work they require more than at r es L for the reason that silt .s excreted in iL11e perspiration. wigs andpoultry require less .salt tlta'n other' :i'arin animals taut it should .be 'supplied regularly•- Brood sows should not be without salt, whieh;anay be given is) box, Lz ough er self feeder., All stock Ted .liberally with rich nutricious feed exhibitas' craving for salt and this; should lie met if good health and thrift are to` be maintained —F. ,T. 'Shutt, Dominion. Chemist.' Sales --$1233 Cost ---$27.15 ,The difference between a successful year and an unsuccessful one is; only ,about; 15%. Think -how • easily you ca}i. "increase Your sales 5%, 10% or 15%- this year by plan- ning to go after business systematically, by Long Distance Every' day we receive ' new eyidence from mer- - ,chants in medium-sized towns, who have tried it Tor the 'first time and are surprised at their sac - cess. Here is arecent case:— "Number—of sales, 17; number who subsequent- ly bought, 27; total amount of sales, $1,233; total cost of 44 calls $27.15; percentage or selling cost, 2.2. Try Long Distance selling — and con- ,vinee yourself. i BuIuillaliaus o[ Heliekali A Column Prepared Especially for Women— Rut Not Forbidden to Men ' Who sweeps a room 057- in God's cause, • Makes thrtt, and the action fine." "A woman seldom takes up any re- form seriously", remarks the Petrone Advertiser, Until after men cease pay- ing attention to her." Well, she may have suspected that a lot of refotins were needed before, but then she becomes positive of it. Housecleaning time! What pic- tures are called up by that phrase. One sees hurrying women, with heads in a dust cap and huge aprons enveI- oping their figures, armed with dus- ter or mop, carpet sweeper or paint brush, as the case may 'be, turning out closets, brushing walls, cleaning pictures, etc. It is a time of hurry and stress and comparative discom- fort inthe home; a season men us- ually hate especially and few there be ;of the finale sex who can see any ,neeessity for this periodical upheaval. It is funny, -too, that glen usually think that woven really enjoy house. cleaning, +I have yet to gleet the woman who does. They usually dread it as an unpleasant but necessary part of household routine and, one which they would gladly escape if they could, They know, however, that thougtr unpleasant it is neces- sary to "go oreri" the house thor- oughly once or -twice a year,.,get into every corner and shake out and air bedding, clothing, etc., in order to get rid, of the accumulation 'of dust;,. which; no matter how., careful a housekeeper may be, will gather dur- ingthe rtpassing months, : Then a room may need papering or a floc,. may need repainting or polishing and something in the way of alteration pray be needed in the arrangement of furniture; curtains, rugs, etc,. Pro- belrly the reasonwhy Men conte -to believe that women like housecleaning is because they take the opportunity of the occasion: to make these alter- ations or to add a new rug or piece of furniture which perhaps they have been wanting .for Borne time, and also because,': after the. work is done and the house is clean from cellar; to attic, the --average woman takes a certain amount of satisfaction lout of it and showsa pardonable pride in the. ae- cortplishm crit. On the other hand, one can, if one uses a bit of imagination, readilyun- derstand wiry a man hates house- cleaning ,time with a bitter hatred, First of all a man does not under- stand as a woman does,' how could he, the necessity' for it. He goes to. his work some morning leaving'a fairly well -ordered 'home, nothing wrong with it as far al he can see, and when he returns carpets are torn up, curtains down, the•furniture piled on the verandah: and hisdinnex, what ever there is of diluter, is Ia!d on one end of the kitchen table, and he is en- joined to hurry -up and eat it se he will have time to beat the dining room rug and glew a loose leg on the parlor , table. If he is*good-natured he' does all the things he is asked to do, but usually he only does the ones he can- not get out of doing, and lie finds n great many things to occupy hien at the office or the barn, as the case may be, until the housecleaning• sea - sen is over: Housekeepers are agreed that per-. iodical housecleaning is necessary but the wise housekeeper knows that it should be done, .like dentistry, as pain- lessly as possible. The object of housecleaning is not that the house shall be ,clean, Mire object is to make the .house mere comfortable and healthful for the family who occupy it. The housekeeper' who makes the keeping of a clean house the end of her endeavors is not being true to herself; her -business is to make a home, all ,other considerations must be subordinate to that. Though a house be ' spotless to • the eye and fdrnished in the most approved style, if it is not home, in the true sense, of the word, to the family who occupy' • it, the woman who presides there has' failed in her job. 'While busy with the one"hundred and one things which. make up the sum of a housekeeper's work this might well be kept upper- most in the anind. I have often thought that it would he well if Wren and women could know more of the others' work; it would tend to more sympathy with an understanding of each other. If a man uhd'erstood mora, about what it means to keep a house in order, to plan and prepare nurishing and at- tractive 'meals, to look atter children ansa -attend tb their every need, they would have more respect for the ab- ility of -i the women who does this day after slay,'and keeps bright and at-` tractive 'herself while she's at it, and. if' a woman understood better what a strain it is upon the average rnan to keep up with his work; to compete with his fellow -business men; to be ready at all times to meet and grasp an .opportunity. 'to keep his business runirilig• smoothly and showing even a small margin of profit for the bene- fit of his wife' and family, that. wife would be ready to make his home a very haven ofrest and peace to- him. Farmers and their wives have more - opportunity of working together in •this respect than any other' class. The farmer and his. wife are really 'business' partners, because in so many cases the wife' also assists in the money making enterprises o1 the farm. And a farmer is so close at all times to his home that he, perhaps, mo}o than most men knows what a woman's Work means. REBEKA}L