The Seaforth News, 1939-01-12, Page 7)THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1939
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
PAGE SEVEN
HURON NEWS
Mrs. L. Jacklin, Howie k Tp,—
Following a long illness, there
passed 'a'way at 'her home, concession
11, lot 115, Howi•e'k township, Christ-'
ena Wright, beloved wife of Lide
IJadklin, in her +7tllst year. The deceas-1
ed was born at Kingston, . Ontario,
and was united in .marriage .'forty-two
years ago, in 318916, to Lide Jiadkliti
The funeral services were helld Fri
day, Dec.. 310Th from ;her late resid-.
ence, being conducted by the Rev. A.
M. Grant of Wroxeter. Interment
took place in the •Wroxeter cemetery.'
Pal'l'bearers were Messrs. George Has
lop, Morley McMichael, Everett Me
Kercher, Norman Milligan, Alex Mc-
Cracken and Verne McDonald,
County To Revise
arried At 'Wingham—
Miss Doneida Henderson, daugh-
ter of Mr, ,and Mrs. R. Henderson,
Bl-uevrale road, was married to .Arohie
Holmes, 'of Brussels. Rev. E. O. Gal-
laher, of St. Paul's Church, Wing -
tam, performed the -ceremony at the
bri•de'.s 'hone. The •bride was gowned
in yellow taffeta and carried carna-
tions and American Beauty roses,
rhe attendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Janes Henderson, sister and brotlter-
in-law of the 'bride. A reception •fol-
1ow'ed the ceremony.
led In Michigan—
The death of Alexander Campbell
occurred suddenly when stricken with
a heart attack at the home of his son
William Campbell, Gaylord, :Mich.
'recently. Alexander Campbellin
. was i
this 7171th year being born 'on' North
half lot 1118, .con, 3', Morris Township,
and moved with his parents to iMichi-
ganin fall 118816. In Jsgtuary 118159 he
'married Miss .Ghristena Barr of
Morris Twp., who died eight years
ago. There are left to mourn their
foss ane son Will, Gaylord; Mrs.
jaw. Sibley, Rodgers City; Mrs. Kay
McGe'a+chey, Petoskey; Mrs, Wilford.
Duarte, Sheridan, Wyoming; Christ-
een, Pontiac; Grace and Ruth, at
home; also four brothers, Ernest,
Seaforth, Ont,; Mark, -B.C.; Holmes,
Cal.; Bob, Pontiac. Th -e ,funeral was
held .from Congregational Church,
'Gaylord. Interment was made in
Fairview Cemetery. Those who at-
tended from a distance; Mrs. Maude
Kirkliteger, Boyne City; 'Mr. Colin
Campbell, Detroit; Mr. Ernest Camp-
bell, Seaforth; 'Mr. and Mrs. R. J'o!-
ston, 'Listowel; Miss • Mary Lamont,
Brussels. Mr, Campbell will be re-
membered by 'his friends and ac-
quaintances in Morris and Grey
townships.—B,russe'ls Post, '
Business Transfer—
Mr. H. T. Rowe who for the past
24 years has been in 'business in Ex-
eter is retiring and has disposed of
his business to his son-in-law, . lir.
W. C. Allison.—Exeter TinesAdvo-
cate,
•
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We can save you money on Bill and
Oharge Forms, standard sizes to fit
Ledgers, white or colors.
It will pay you to see our samples.
Also best quality Metal Hinged Sec-
tional Post Binders and Index.
e Seaforthl News
Phone 84
HURON NEWS
Mrs. L. Jacklin, Howie k Tp,—
Following a long illness, there
passed 'a'way at 'her home, concession
11, lot 115, Howi•e'k township, Christ-'
ena Wright, beloved wife of Lide
IJadklin, in her +7tllst year. The deceas-1
ed was born at Kingston, . Ontario,
and was united in .marriage .'forty-two
years ago, in 318916, to Lide Jiadkliti
The funeral services were helld Fri
day, Dec.. 310Th from ;her late resid-.
ence, being conducted by the Rev. A.
M. Grant of Wroxeter. Interment
took place in the •Wroxeter cemetery.'
Pal'l'bearers were Messrs. George Has
lop, Morley McMichael, Everett Me
Kercher, Norman Milligan, Alex Mc-
Cracken and Verne McDonald,
County To Revise
arried At 'Wingham—
Miss Doneida Henderson, daugh-
ter of Mr, ,and Mrs. R. Henderson,
Bl-uevrale road, was married to .Arohie
Holmes, 'of Brussels. Rev. E. O. Gal-
laher, of St. Paul's Church, Wing -
tam, performed the -ceremony at the
bri•de'.s 'hone. The •bride was gowned
in yellow taffeta and carried carna-
tions and American Beauty roses,
rhe attendants were Mr. and Mrs.
Janes Henderson, sister and brotlter-
in-law of the 'bride. A reception •fol-
1ow'ed the ceremony.
led In Michigan—
The death of Alexander Campbell
occurred suddenly when stricken with
a heart attack at the home of his son
William Campbell, Gaylord, :Mich.
'recently. Alexander Campbellin
. was i
this 7171th year being born 'on' North
half lot 1118, .con, 3', Morris Township,
and moved with his parents to iMichi-
ganin fall 118816. In Jsgtuary 118159 he
'married Miss .Ghristena Barr of
Morris Twp., who died eight years
ago. There are left to mourn their
foss ane son Will, Gaylord; Mrs.
jaw. Sibley, Rodgers City; Mrs. Kay
McGe'a+chey, Petoskey; Mrs, Wilford.
Duarte, Sheridan, Wyoming; Christ-
een, Pontiac; Grace and Ruth, at
home; also four brothers, Ernest,
Seaforth, Ont,; Mark, -B.C.; Holmes,
Cal.; Bob, Pontiac. Th -e ,funeral was
held .from Congregational Church,
'Gaylord. Interment was made in
Fairview Cemetery. Those who at-
tended from a distance; Mrs. Maude
Kirkliteger, Boyne City; 'Mr. Colin
Campbell, Detroit; Mr. Ernest Camp-
bell, Seaforth; 'Mr. and Mrs. R. J'o!-
ston, 'Listowel; Miss • Mary Lamont,
Brussels. Mr, Campbell will be re-
membered by 'his friends and ac-
quaintances in Morris and Grey
townships.—B,russe'ls Post, '
Business Transfer—
Mr. H. T. Rowe who for the past
24 years has been in 'business in Ex-
eter is retiring and has disposed of
his business to his son-in-law, . lir.
W. C. Allison.—Exeter TinesAdvo-
cate,
•
faze JANUARY" ruse
1 2� 3e 4 6 ,71
8 9 to it 213 14
15 16 17 10 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 2t 28
293031,
taxa
2 "3
9
16 1
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alts .:�
.� t.
4
. 25
' •.wsa
'• aNit
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VISITED OTHER LANDS
While the visit of the King and
Queen to Canada next May will be
the first ever made to a self-govern-
ing British Dominion by a reigning
sovereign and hisconsort, it will by
no means be Their Majesties' first
Empire mission.
As the Duke and Duchess of York,
they made two important journeys to
faroff parts of the Empire. In ,1985,
they visited Kenya and {Uganda in
East' Africa, finishing up with a trip
down the Nile to Port Sudan on the
Mediterranean.
With this introduction to the art
of Empire touring, they were charged
two years later with the important
task of representing 'King George V
at the opening of the parliament
:buildings in Canberra, Australia's
nett --built federal capital.
The African affair was largely one
of intimate receptions Iby British of -
e
Irian
7
• Grandma always was a keen shopper and quick to "snap up" a bargain
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ALL FAMILY OFFER
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SEAFORT'H ONTARIO.
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
ficials and settlers with plenty of re-
creation n the ,form of big -game
hunting. But it was the six months
swing to Australia and New Zealand
that really proved the couple as Em-
pire envoys of the first rank.
The ,tour included' a cerentonial
voyage round the world in a battle-
ship, weeks of high-pressure receiv-
ing and reviewing in the_ heat of an
Australian fall and side trips to Em-
pire outposts such as Fiji and Maur-
itius. Incidentally, the Ship which the
Duke and Duchess made the botor was
the -battle cruiser Renown, a sister
ship of the Repulse which will 'bring
them across the Atlantic as King and
Queen next sprung.
Specially commissioned for the
voyage, the Renown sailed from
Southampton in January with their
Royal Highnesses and an imposing
staff aboard. The sailing marked a
sacrifice to duty for behind them the
young couple left their first-born
child, Princess Elizabeth, then only a
few months old.
For the Duke it was almost his
first trip in a +battleship since illness
forced hint to give up active service
in the navy during the Great War.
It was as a naval cadet, by the way,
that he first saw Canadatwhen the
training ship Cuuaberlandt brought
him, with other cadets, on a training.
cruise, to Halifax, Quebec and Mon-
treal. The Renown Went out by
Kingston, Jamaica, and the Panama
Canal to the lonely Marquesas Is-
lands in the South Pacific, thence to
Fiji where the Duke and Duchess re-
ceived the homage of straw -skirted
native chiefs, and finally to Auckland,
New Zealand.
'Men began the strenuous round.
Before many days, the Duchess was
a casualty with a sharp bout of ton -
She remained at Nelson. N2„
to recuperate while the Duke con-
tinued the tour to the South Island.
doing the honors for 'both.
The couple saw the famous hot
spring, at Rotorua and the magical
"Glowworm Cave" at Waitonto. Oth-
er experiences for the Duke were 'his
ceremonial election as a Maori chief-
tain and driving his own train
through the longest tunnel in the
British Empire on the way to Christ-
church. Rejoining. the Renown, the
Yorks crossed the Tasman Sea to
steam into beautiful Sydney harbor
to the drumming of saluting guns and
the clipping of ensigns. -Their duties
carried their up and down the coun-
try over the eccentric railways of
Australia, which vary in gauge with
almost every state all 1 necessitate
changes of train often at the dead of
nicht. They fulfilled engagements in
Queensland. New South Wales, Vic-
toria
utoria and South Australia, tout cross-
ed (lass Strait to salute 'Tasmania.
Throughout the tour tate Duke
nude it plain that he desired to
meet all classes and to be equally at
ee..sible to all political groups. He
met and matte .friends with a number
of labor leaders, uotunly J. T. Lang,
who afterwards became prince min-
ister '1 !New South Wales, and H. E.
Holland, New Zealand trade union
leader•.
In 11el'bourne On ":\nzac 11ay," the
couple watched a giant march -past of
2.511t1:) Australian "Diggers" (bud-
dies). lu Queensland they attended a
corrobboree — the, powwow of the
1u'traliau aboriginal, and paid a fly-
ing visit to the Lendigo Goldfields in
Victoria, In South Australia the Duke
tried his hand at the exclusively Aus-
tralian -part of kangaroo -hunting.
The Canberra ceremonies included
the unlocking the doors of the new
parliament house and unveiling a sta-
tue of George V in the entrance ]tall,
while Dante Nellie Melba, the great
Australian prima donna, sang "God
Save the King." With almost perfect
delivery, the Duke (now George VI)
in a brief speech toner] a glowing
message to Australians front hi.
father.
On the way to Fremantle, isolated
port of Western Australia, the couple
had a unique experience when the
Renown was caught in a violent hur-
ricane in the Australian Bight, fant-
ods for its storms.
.\ few days later, with nearest land
1,000 miles away across the Iridian
Ocean, the cruiser ran into a second
mishap when a fire ibroke out in the
engine -roost. The crew was finally
able to subdue the blaze.
On the way to Suez and hone, the
Renown made one more call at the
little sugar island of Mauritius, This
visit was the .cause of a classic mis-
print that appeared in a local news-
paper,
paper, The paper regretfully told its-
readers: "The colonial secretary an-
nounces that His Royal Highness
can stand only three days ip Maur-
itius," It meant "stay." Arriving at.
Plymouth the Duke expressed amaze-
ment at the demonstrations of affec-
tion and loyalty that had :greeted
them in every Empire centre. He de-
clared': '"Throughout the 'tour we
hare been conscious of one feeling
we were among our ownkith and
kin,"
D. H. McInnes
CHIROPRACTOR
Office - .Commercial Hotel
Electro :Therapist ,— Massage.
Hours—Mon. and Thurs, after-
noons anw 'by appointment
FOOT CORRECTION
by manipulation -Sun -ray treat-
• ment.
Phone 227.
MILITARY CANINE
A dispatch from 'Hambin, Manchu- 1
kuo, says: "Dogs had their day here,
when 1100) of them, trained ifor war,
were paraded through the city during.
defense demonstrations." Another
from Germany puts the number of
Pinsch'ers, Rottweilers and sitepherds
being made ready for war at 510,000.
A 'battalion of dogs is attached to
each German infantry regiment; it
takes part in parades, and is drilled
front a training manual as punctilious
as the manual of arms, In England,
Major Richardson's famous dog
school is an esta'blished center of
military training.
Dag-- have gone forth to battle
ever since man has hurled army
against army, 'Wall writings of 4000
B.C. show that the Egyptians used
sag -age dogsto repel invasion. Against
their foes, the Celts 'loosed fierce dogs
armed with sharp spiked collars. Eng-
land's Henry VIII sent Charles V of
Spain 400 English terriers, and "so
courageously- did they: fight that the
enemy. were thoroughly routed."
'Frederick the. Great, first to see their
value in modern warfare, used collies
as sentries, ambulance aides and mes-
sengers—functions that dogs per-
formed with distinction during the
World War.
Itt the trench fighting in France.
legions of dogs, 'both thorou'gltlbred
and mongrel, were with the Red
Cross and ambulance corps. Their
senses of smell and hearing—eight
times as acute as man's—enable theta
night or day to find the wounded who
had crawled into obscure shell holes.
The dogs were taught by practice
with dummies and live models to dis-
regard the dead, and not to bark
when they came upon the wounded.
'Equipped with first-aid kits, they
stood patiently by while the injured,
if able, helped themselves. Then.
tearing off a piece of uniform. they
dashed away to the kennel.: ani
re-
turned with stretcher bearer, S , .. .
,1•:144 saved hundreds .r
do; in the French army, after ;.
is .'aattle.notdoftiie men t.,
o t 1nlel in the first It,
well hidden that t.a man t.;
i,,ond :hent. A 11,..; .. ?.•.'
—'•i 1 a re,.—rd ofcee.. -
ut :es, than a year.
Tile Airedales t'1
irces excelled as scouts and sent .et.
Tinily Could detect 'Jr:: ..' I sound;
hall a :Wile away. They ',:t'i ...
tin.enttsit ')e:w'eett the
fr.c'tt11 and foe. and .o ke.•:t were_....
I1,tts
a:ies that .dile of '.17':1: '-
:14
:14 11' ely a- .:no t,,' 1.. t.e ve:•. ..
afe ti 1 :blur.': 4:'I7: :If .. _ ..
nd..anee. tlr"y tette-
the
este the ;,atrots 'tv low gro,o1
mut raiding' patsies 11,el ....
trench ., . err' .I;nt try
i t
7•11. .ark. They .rni.
n, ellen._. ..
nes.
1: n kr,. nr : i
t 1.1 er,l hug's t. .
guns. claiming they were it. tt
aettda'•lc than hors.`older .... •-
cause of their flair for eva,l'n
enemy and keeping. the gen,...-.
e:, T tare. In Russia, n ,rthern
equipped with gas masks. ;ars; :r;.
Ir.,ndred, of rounds ..f ani:nottit
tit." frontlitres, weaving ...e.e s;'
through a deluge of bul:et- ar:,1
In Italy, dogs toted sap•tlie-. ,.
in tine high mountain,., taking ..torr
cuts ftp passes too steepfor horse or
man to climb. Deus can carry ,-u-
munition up to 4 pounds: usia,A :r
simple attachment. they can la': a tel-
ephone wire.
Today canine legions are
drilled throughout Europe. Ir. Frank-
fort, at the largest dog school in the
world, it is reported that the clog -es
have a total attendance of 201) at a
thus. And at Jetta the government
ha: a hospital devoted exclusively ca
its army dogs, France, Italy, Belgiurt,
Holland and. Bulgaria alt have mili-
tary college; for dogs. The pupils are
taught to go out on reconnaissance;
to get through dangerous places with
ntessa,cs and supplies:: to transport
machine guns and ammunition over
difficult ,ground; to ovet•conte an
enemy by disarming him, tripping'
hint and Bolding hint at bay; and to
carry time explosives and gas bombs
into enemy lines.
1st Friend I(in debt)-; "Sorry, old
man. but I'm looking for a little fin-
ancial succor again." '
lid Frieod—"Y ou'Jl have to took
further this time. I'm not the financ-
ial sucker I used to 'be," -