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The Clinton News Record, 1927-11-03, Page 7THE CLINTON NE;,;. itECORD GODERICII: The `.funeral of Mrs. . P. Tighe of Milwaukee tools place mm St. Peters church, God rich' on- hursday last. Mrs. Tighe had been n Goderioh with her mother-in-law aunt for some"little time, having C 11'remains - a contp�,z ed the 'remai s o£ hiss-; band, who' died September 29th, and she had just returned home aboet week when she was taken ill and died Brticefield very suddenly The remains'were Ladd beside those' of heat' husband. (Crowded out last week) The many friends of 1VIos Lyle e Hill will be glad to hear that she was able to return home last Saturday, af- ter undergoingan operation' for: a � p en dicitis in . eafo •thntfe 1 vial p cl the. 5 r t 1 tat hospital.' 3, ith Which 5, S. `Va`.Fisc .•ersm , . 'whze was closed for a week onaccount"•::of a couple of cases of scarlet' fever, was 'reoiiened`this week. We are glad to report that` the two patients are improving and on a fair way to i•e- GODERICH - Miss, Donaldson of the nursing stair of the Western Itos pital, Toronto, has been : appointed Superintend'ent.of'the Alexandra Gen- eral and Mar"ine Ilospital, taking over her new duties on Nov . 1st,;„ 'rznouncirig ^the opening of our new PLANTia/�,J V at 1 ®.•gra Lam,... •si 9ONTARIO.: _. -Tuesday, November 8th, 1927. On and after that date, we will be in ®the market. for,your CREAM POULTRY EGGS We pay= cash daily and return contain- ers daily. Cream prices good until. November 12. Special - - 42c ;No.1 - - 41c No. 2 - - - " 38c f.o.b. your station. We pay express charges.' Make your next shipment to SWIFT CANADIAN CO, Limited. STRATFORD - ONTARIO YOUR SUMMER COTTAGE ., :rl,f 1171V i I WrLUI,�IJI...,. !.,w Illlllllllf -is rat as Attractive Inside as Out ? MAKE your summer cottage comfortable and home -like with Gyproc Fireproof partitions and ceilings. At small cost the whole interior may be transformed into attractive, cosy rooms. Write for free booklet—"My Home." It willtell you how Gyproc Rocbdard Gypsum Insulating Sheathing and Instil= will reduce your fuel bill from 20. to 40%. " ' THE ONTARIO GYPSUM CO., LIMITED, `PARISH CANADA 162 l; Jrepasks�.,•allboard, For Sale By (m Thomas McKenzie Estate Clinton, Ont. Geo. T. Jenkins -• . Clinton, Ont. I The many friends of the Rev, W. A. Bremner. will regret to learn that he has been -confined to his bed during the past week. Mr Savauge of Sea forth conducted' service in the United` church on Sunday morning last and the Rev. Mr. Macdonald of Egnr:ond--' vtlle in the evening. Mrs. David Tough spent' the week- end with friends in Seaforth, Mrs. George Hill returned home this week after pe1 e• spending a in • fewweeks with her son and:family in Streitford. Mr. and Mrs. Carlisle of Hillsgreen were guests of Mr. and Mrs,. Douglas last week, The following -clipping ' is from 'a recent issue of. the Hartney (Man:) Star, and explains itself: "On 'Sept. 6, 1877, Edward Briggs add Ellen Robinson were married in ,,Seaforth, Ont., and on Sept.. 50927, they,: with their seven -children and wives and husbands, 29 grandchildren and one_great grandson, celebrated,. their golden wedding at home at Hartney. Upon this occasion the relatives , and..: old ' neighbors ' and friends from far and near gathered to congratulate, the still young and still happy couple, and wish 'them many more years of .wedded'happi� ness. Mr. and Mrs. Briggs made their first home in`-'Brucefield,, where Mr. Briggs was in the boot and shoe 'busi- ness. In 1882 Mr. Briggs came to Winnipeg where he' carried on the boot business for a year, then taking a homestead he built a shack two and a half miles `south of Hartney. In How to Reduce Varicose Veins Rub Gently and Upward Toward the Heart as Blood in Veins Flows That Way Marty people have become despond- ent because they have l?cen. led to be- lie}re that there is no remedy that help. reduce swollen veins and bunches. If you will get a two -ounce original bottle of NToone's Emerald Oilfull strength.) at' `any .: first class drug Briggs with an address and a read - store and apply it night and morning mg lamp. as directed you will quickly notice an improvement which' will aontin til the veins and hunches oxer to normal. ' Moone's Emerald Oil is Or harmless, yet most powerful germicide ando ounces last a very long time. Indeed, so powerful is Emerald Oil th chronic eases of Piles are oft tixely absorbed and anyone who is disappointed with its use can have their money refunded. All druggists sell lots of it. will` ' ue un - educed 'tjv at old en en - 'y. Better theManwith. His Eye tothe\Sky -thewith than.%lan HisEartotteG ound • ALL through its long successful history, General Motors of Canada has had its eye to the horizon . . . listening not for what lollowed, but looking always toward the thing ahead. And General Motors has seen many of its visioni Tt has seen a great industry grow up in 'Canada to supply the Canadian family with a nteans of trans- ' portation to meet its needs and resources, tO answer the desire for style, dependability, luxury. It has seen, in the canadian-Fisher'43ody plants, the+ perpetuadori of Canadian ideals of craftsmanship. It/has seen, in the \General lVfotors Research labor- atories, the development of countless advances and .refinements on Which much of modern motoring com- fort (depends. ' It has seen, on the General Motors Proving Grounds, the proof of principles which are .now accepted factors in automobile design and construction. • It has seen the triumph of co-operative purchasing and man,tzfacturing ,methods with their resultant, eConoinies to be shared' with the buyers of General Motors cars. And the eyes, of General Motors are stiTh to ,the horizon . . . still seeking new ways''' to improVe General IVIotors cars and to place th§ cais within reach of ever -widening circle's of Ganadian bu3ters. LA SALLE CAD I LLA C GENERAL MOTORS TRUCK GENERAL MOTORS SCANC',"'1'.A.1z,•mited Home Office and Factories . '\ Oshawa, Ontario the spring he returned east to bring his wife and child out to the prairies. There the young couple lived the life , of pioneers of the west, raising a large family and taking active inter- est in the community growing up around them, 112x. Briggs has held many, important ,provincial, well, as municipal positions. I-Ia .was 'the assessor . of, the first rural municipalities formed` in Mani- toba an 18854 and still - is . asses-' 'sox for Cameron, He served on the school board as trustee for many years. An -1902 he was elected to the municipalcouncil, i ewas the first president of the Farmers' Institute in this district and has always ,been actively interested in agricultural pursuits. Me. Briggs has, considerable ahihty has a platform speaker anhas assisted in every con- test of the Conservative party for many years. -In 1903 lie was ::their unanimous choice as—representative in the provincial legislature for Delor- nine. Opposing him were .Tudge Pat- erson and II. L. IVfontgomery, Mr, Briggs' was successful in attaining, the majority. 'Pour years later he was chosen again to contest the seat hut Iost to Dr. • Thornton..:;; In' 1907 Mr. and, Mrs, Bligge left, the farm to take up residence ,in Hartley. Mr. Briggs was an enthus- iastic cricket playerand just two :years ago played in a game in Elgin. His first cricket was played with the brucefield Cricket Club while he re- sided in Ontario. He has always been an .enthusiastic curler, belonging to the first Itartney rink and is still a member of the Hartney Club. On Monday afternoon fifty rela- tives . were assembled as guests at a. dinner. .A reception was held in the evening at their home, when many friends called ` to extend opngratula tions. The bride of fifty years was presented with; bouquets from the Union church and from many other friends, The 'family gave their -par- ents the complete installatiss?of elec- tric light appliances. The Old Tim- ers association"presented a purse with an address, Those of the family present at the celebration on Monday were: Mr. and Mrs. Wm- Briggs, of Winnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. rm. Blasi; of Cereal, Alta.; Mrs, Norman McRae, of Port- land, Ore.; Mr .and Mrs. Dell Scharf, of Hartney; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Briggs 'of Brandon. One daughter, Mrs. Hun- ter of Gull Lake, Sask., was absent. "Alfred Hayter„of Grafton, N.D. an uncle of Mr. Briggs,_ was also able to be preesnt, ` • The Old Timers of the district re- membered \the emembered\the golden wedding. of two of their most 'promin wheii they presented Mr. and Mrs. Ed. GODERICH:, A motion .presented to the council at its last meeting ta, change the 'election, date. yto Decem- ber 'was presented by Councillor Baileys according' to notice, and the vote on,i't resulted in a tie, the mayor voting nay. It was pointed out in. debate that many of the mariners -were still absent early' in December, also.that while a majority of the councillors might be defeated in De- cember they could still sit and con- trol the business of the couzlciI for a month. FOR' NINE YEARS RUINED 'HER SLEEP "I had stomach 'trouble 9 years, and gas made me restless and ner- vous. Adlerika helped 'so' I can eat and sleep good."—Mrs, E. Teach - stone. Just ONE spoonful Adlerika relieves gas and that bloated. feeling so that you can eat and sleep. well. Acts on BOTH upper and lower bowel- d removes old waste matter you never thought was there. No matter what you have tried for -your stomach and bowels, Adlerika will surprise you. W. S. R. Holmes, drug- gist. No More indigestion "After Mrs. Monette Took "Fruika-tines” • HuMiva(ious of ReVeka e� P d Especially 'Women Column,. r are 1 for 1— But Not Forbidden to Men When autumn leaves come falling down alien a city street They are trodden by the passing of a thousand, careless feet; The cleaners come to sweep them .up a dozen'; times a day. - And pack them into muddy piles to. t in Ives away; r of tl e se w Y, And no she stops to marvel at the gold and brown at all, 0, what a lot they miss in town when leaves begin to -)all! h. When autumm leaves come debiting down up5on a country way There's nothing half so beautiful, and nothing half so gay; A million merry rainbow -groups of maple, beech and oak, 'All madly dancing With the wind like littlefairy, folk; And then sonic golden- eventide, when "^ each of dancing fires, The country people pile thein up and light the autumn fires. And ohI the scent of burning leaves upon the frosty air— There's never a land in all the world holds incense half so rare, , The long blue drift of the darling smoke across the' sunset sky, And the cheerful -glow on .the faces near when the crimson flames leap high, They may have wealth and mansions great and all that heart desires, But what a lot they ;pales in town in missing autumn fires. —Molly Bevan. ' Just now, as one wends homeward in the autumn dusk, one is almost sure to smell the pungent odor of burning leaves and to see somewherb along the way someone busily "rak- ing' leaves onto a 'burning pile. No. matter where I shall :roan, should circumstances take me to the great Sahara, Ido not' -think I shall ever forget the smell of burning leaves in the autumn. People tell us we• should not burn up those leaves, that we should rake them into heaps : and allow then°f'to rot, and then spread them'upon,the garderr for fertilizer. Perhaps we should. It sounds thrifty' and prac- tical. But after all,, what could be more fitting for the leaves than burn- ing them, allowing the incense from them to lose itself in the crisp am? They have spent` their' day, -a„sweet, MRS. 0, 111ONETTIi "There's comfort forall' who suffer from indigestion in this grateful note written, .by :Mrs, .Omer .Monette, Montreal: 1/41' ' hardly dared take 'Fruit-a-tives',`foaring my dyspepsia wouldn't vanish;” : Mrs: Monette .frarihly confesses, "but finally took .two boxes,, Now I, eat well and recommend' 'Fruit-a-tives' to - all my friends as the: best remedy for dyspepsia.." Mrs. ,Monette expresses the sentiment of. thousands of people whose digestions came quickly back to normal under the healing influence of, "Fruit -a -tine§", This wonderful medicine is a combination of intensified fresh fruit juices and tonics. Indigestion 'and hiliousiiesd often are due merely Co lazy b6wels,'liver and kiddeyt; "Fruit-a-tives" overcomes these condi- tions gently and naturally. Get a bot from your druggist, Sic'or Soe,,'Relish your food again as Mrs. Monette does;' soft youth of delicate greeli, deeper ing intb full maturity, where they seemed for a time to rest at the very priiue. Then the short, swift, bril- liant decline, dying in a flaming beauty, which seems to defy death, to laugh at 'decay. What more fitting than that they 'should make for sun - mor it brilliant ofuneral pyre? Surely they, could they speak,.wouild give themselves gladly to such an end, Indeed, as one watches how they of- ten curl arid dance in the flames one feels that they do • understand and, do rejoice. in such a magnificent passing. Fertilizer,? Pooh, 'twould, be most unseemly! A little )rook, prepared especially for mothers and prospective mothers, was recently issued by° the Depart- ment of Health for the guidance of Canadians in the rearing of Canada's most precious and valuable asset,, Canadian babies. The book was written by Dr. Helen MaclVfurchy, Chief of the Division of Child Welfare. It was written as a Confederation Diamond...Jubilee edi- tion•but, owing to the number of pub- lication, being printed at the time, it could not' be issued for July first. It should prove_to'be a very val- uable book for a young 'mother, as it, tells her just what' to do for hgr`babe from the very hour of its birth; and, for herself also, both before and af- ter its birth. It is written in.,plain,. simple .language, .'which anyone can understand; and by one who not only knows what she is talking about but who realises the importance of the work of . the mother and the import-. ance,:not only to the mother but to the nation, of the child. A letter to the Henitjr: department, asking for No. 1, Mother's series. willbring this book to anyone desiring a copy. There is an saying "A 'penny Saved is. a nonnyold carnia "- I'm' not sure that that is an absolutely correct version of the proverb. as- they tell ns vie garble these old saying very hedly As a rule. But it is something like that- anyway. and it will serve I to illnstrnl•r what i, wish, to say. It o iwht fo hold good in more eases than that, of monov, actual nannies. Why shouldn't it hold wood in reirirrc to wealth of humanity? We in Canada are sn anxious for ponnlation that we have been admitting all sorts and con- ditinns of neonle and trying, with more or less success. to•mnke wood Canadians of them. But while doing this we have been losing numbers .of. real, 'young Canadians each year through infant mortality. The Government has awakened hut», rat r the past fewyears to the fact b that a 'baby' saved is a Canadianian gained, and efforts havebeen made .through the Child. Welfare Division of the ;health De artment to ste-' he'' p. n6 ,. Population drain `oh our ` o ulation throw h, this S p g most wasteful cause: 'Tie a wise move send 'it is' haying its effect; the Percentage" ofinfant mortality has been considerably lessened and as Intowle.edge, re •ardie ' -the rearingof � >_ children spreads especially among those, of other nationalities who have made Canada their ,home, the child- ren are given a better chance of growing up to be healthy young men and women, - RHEBEICAH Y®Ir � Telephone Patrol --a PERSONAL V.tA.fl.d Service e Your.. service depends on, more than just the way your own in- strument and line are working, - Any moment you may call for • connection with a telephone two, ten, a hundred or a thousand miles away. Your call may follow one of the great long distance highways, or • head off along some winding pole line into the next county. But; whichever it 'may be, your service is constantly patrolled, in trucks and cars and afoot, along' two million miles of wire in Onta- rio - and 'Quebec +-= to see that storm and sleet, wind and flood 'are out-manoeuvred—fo see that the track is quickly cleared for ?/ocer call -when the elements get the upper hand. These men are serving' you per- sonalorkly. t a job in Your interest. ' With them it's not just a day's w,- bu 581 I THE "WELCOME" SIGN /Nobody asked you, sir,". said the coy maiden. And in matters of buy- ing, es we)1 as in affairs of .the. ' heart, most people like to be "asked." Often, indeed, they insist on.a proper invitation. Iie is a wise nterehant.'who keeps the welcome sigh constantly before the community in the form of AD- VERTISEMENTS in the home paper. ?),icier everybody "sees it—for AD- V1f1liTISING is `,`the light; of directed attention." Speak up; 'Light up. hundreds of good customers are listening for your message and watching 'for Your wel- corne sign, in The Clint News s Roc "An :.Advertisement" is an Invitation" 'a 0