HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1924-07-17, Page 4PAGE POUR.
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J. F. SNOWDON, Proprietor,
s�eomeee ease�nn.�.Na-aa-atit
Notice
to Subscribers l
I.The News is printed and
placed in Seaforth post office
every Wednesday evening in
time to reach town and rural
= Thursday.
.
readers
on Y
� route
Subscribers who fail to get, it
ref
avor-
that
daywill confer by
I
i
n notifying the publisherprompts
ly,
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itieneraIObsrYatiOflS 1
•
THE SEAFORTH NEW
1 it lung investigation might make ham. - She. was accompanied by her
s tong c
akeavery to
t t
compel n
et
n
1d co t
u•rfe
n pof
s Wra tock of C
deed to maintain itself. T knout men authorities aMr. Tiros. B dr
would
a superannuation Piot under which t scare teat randson, Master; James .R,
t ennui in- such a revelation to the ~ Canadian Macey g
who have gone on the retired h
who were just as "fit to work as 1
am, just 5.5 good as they ever were,
each who had only matured thew
err
experience; now they are, .waliting
the. streets of Ottawa or driving
automobiles at our expense, doing
nothing .for the rest of their lives.
Gladstone was prince minister of Eng-
land
g
land when well on the way to the
nineties. - I do not believe itt fixed
ages for retirement. I believe in
some system by which a man will
be kept in service and earning his
stoney until be cannot give service
any longer, and you cannot tell the
time at which the period of useful-
ness ends, except by examinatiot
the individual case. It is going to
load upon the backs of the taxpayers
of Canada a tremendous and in-
creasing burden as years go on, a
burden in very many instances en-
tailed in the support of people who
are thoroughly able to work for
their living."
The Old Town has received a good
first eget of paint on which the Old
Boys and Girls can put at red finish.
**
Too notch attention should not be
given the crop estimates handed out
At this season of the year. Efforts
are always made at this time of the
year to boost prices. As soon as the
new crop is on the market, the
propaganda will be directed iu the
opposite direction—to •hanmser down
values.
lodge .him fora stated period itt a
strong building with iron bars across
the windows, 'itt which he wottld be
shielded frons the scoreiring rays .,f
our` northern sun P
Tuesday was the 15th of July, St.
Swithin's day, and many people look
eagerly for it as a forecast. of the
hay weather they will have for the
HURON NEWS.
Exeter.
It is said that too many boys
around :Exeter go in swimming and
forget to put onabathing g
suit. They
Y
are likely to get badly sunburned.,
Wm. II. Resile died following an
operation in London hospital per-
forated two months agog He was
born in Clsborne 66 years•ago. His
widow survives. James and Thos,
Kestle, of Exeter, are brothers, and
ir.
' Winas
0
Mrs, E. . J
1.1r anti Mrsr) is
, ,s Btaeg's-haw cele-
brated their 60th wedding an-
niversary on July 7th,
Brussels.
shipped 6 fine 2 -year-old cattle for
Wm. Yeo; of Bluevale, which tipped
the scales at 1,325 pounds each, and
although there were over 4,400 head
t • market, that of da
f cattle on
tla M
0 3
again got the top price as he has.
done for several years, The six head
netted' $625.
E. L. Bloomfield, a former Wing -
ham boy, is one of the highest priced
and most accomplished whiskey de-
tectives tectives in Kansas. lie is optin g
x
''There is many a slip between the
jug and the lip." A little while ago,
the newspapers had it that the
American authorities were at once
going to hand Mr, Andrew Pepall
over to the Canadians, and we
thought the matter was settled; our
only anxiety Was as to how the
change of climate might affect Mr
Pepafl But there is a hitch. Mr.
repel! is not going to be forced
to leave his elegant home at 310
South Irving boulevard, Los Angeles,.
next forty days.Some other peop.e,1 if he can help it. He is going to
of tht• base sort, of course, smile fight the extradition proceedings to
at the idea. bet. whether you are the very utmost, Now. Mr, Pepall's
Marled to smite or too, you can do extreme reluctance to come back to
a .little iuvestigatlotl for 5 ourself thiel us rather strengthens our suspicion of
year and find out whether it: hi' guilt, A man against wham a
works or otherwise. Tuesday was charge of serious wrong -doing had
a nice mild dry day, and been falsely made would be only too
if the theory is correct, dry weather
shuttld prevail for the next six weeks,
including the Old Boys' Reunion: The
legend date's back to A.D. 800 and
has had people guessing ever,since-
**
gild to come back in order that tits
inost thorough and searching investi-
gation
nvese_
gation might clear his character—
might cause his righteousness to
shine forth as the light, and his
cc E noon-
the
brightness e,.
0
as g
innocence
David Ross. the grand old man of
Brussels, celebrated his 98th birthday
on July 6th,
Brussels Intermediate football team
have won their district.
Young jack Janilesoit had a close
call from drowning in the Maitland
ricer. He was playing with other
children on the hank and fell in, For-
tunately Ben, Whittard was within
easy reach and rescued the lad front
a watery grave, •
Mrs. Bishop Ward, a former resid-
ent of Brussels, diel at St. Thomas,
aged 84 years.
John McGregor • and John Martin,
of Timmins, northern Ontario, visit-
ed relatives. e.
Mr. and Mre. Wm, Emigh, who
have lived in - the West for 12 years,
were renewing acquaintances.
G. N. Edwards, principal of Ret
tory street school, London, O -
one, i6
visiting his parents.
Wingham,
Gordon, the 9 -year-old son of Mr.
and Mrs, George Kerr, of East.
\Vawanosh, was knocked down "nit
Saturday night by a ear belonging to
Jos, Chamney, driven by Cecil
Chamney. Gordon had hie band
shoved through the lens on one of
the lamps, and was severely cut and
bruised. The crowded condition of
the street was to blame kr the
accident.
1�
neck
tel of
Melford.
Mr.
ha.
<i acquaintances.
new n
yn re
tta s toy get the
Mrs, R James, who has spa
1I hart daughter, hasereturned to 'Wland, Ohio. ings
year in
tinder instructions from. the Ku Klu
Klan.
lnriugham Council has purchased
a ton of calcium chloride to put on
1, th dust,
• reefs
Mo 1. e
the st �
A new cement reservoir of the
sante capacity as the present reser-,
voir, 98,000 .gallows, is to be .built
by Robt. Vint for the Utilities
Commission.
'Mother Graves' Worst Extermina-
tor will drive worms from the system
without injury to the child, because
its action, while fully effective, is
mild,
lay,•
Kempsnfeldt Bay has added an -1 Ie it possible that Mr. Pepe!
hot
t I r - s the aforesaid thorough and
other to an already hog hs* o£ 1 ear
rots. The hay itself is a beautiful
stretch of water running inland from
Simcoe at the western side, with
Barrie at the end It is, however, l
very treacherouw, as strong gusts oil
wind arise suddenly and fraii
canoes are at their mercy. It was io t
this bay in the summer of 1884 flat
two young boys, one a son of titer
late Senator McInnis of Hamiltou,l
and the other his cousin, a son of
the late Senator Allan of Toronto,
aged about 16 years, went out ones'
day to cross to Barrie and nothing l
was ever again seen of either. In
the tragedy this week, the waters,
have returned one safely, an intrepid
young girl, and kept the two, strong
men.
LIFT CORNS `,'OR'
CALLUSES OFF
Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or
callus off with fingers
ISP
Don't suffer!4A tiiiy bottle of
1'reezono costs but a' few Dents at any
drug store. Apply a few drops on the
corns, calluses and hard skin" on bot-
tom oft, la
t m of feet,then lift o
o
When Freezons removes t orns from tk tf
feet
toss or calluses from the bo.tom. of ,
the skin beneath is left pink and healthy
Arai •never gore; tender of irritated,
1 GENERAL OBSERVATIONS. 1k
By W. H. T. $1
3$ Is a man old at 70 7 It dependsi
nn the man. At this age. one mast
will be slow, feeble, pottering and
inefficient in his movements, HIS
physical forst will be hent, mentally,
he will not be receptive of new
ideas, he will he set in his ways, r.
auci not able to conform to altered
conditions, while another man will be;
the egnal or evert the superior. of
many in their so-called "prime,'
Anil hence it is that a hard and
fast rude in this matter cannot 'se'
laid down.
Chore are some important po"i-I
tions in the world for which young;
men are not considered eligible. fill,
the Raman Catholic church. a man'si
cannot reach the papal chair until
he is old. In many case' Dir
judges are not. elevated to their truth I
place before they have entered on
the declining years of life.. Heads
of great corporations are often men
c over 70, who manage their vast coa-
ti cerns with conspicuous ability.
The other evening, our wise men.
cols _ at Ottawa entered on a discussion of
e,tcl Tt the question: "When is a man old ?"
"Che debate arose on a superannuation
bill for civil servants. The act
originally proposed to retire all
civil servants at 65, but the Gov-
ernment, on reflection, decided to
raise the age limit to 70: Malty
members protested, some against the
principle of paying any civil serv-
ants a retiring allowance when the
ordinary man must provide for ,his
old age out of his wage or salary,
and some against considering that all
men have reached their :limit of use-
fulness at 70,
Rt, Hon. Arthur Meighen led in the
protest against the age limit, and
objected to the habit at the present
time of considering every man's
usefulness cion at the age of 70, He
said, "T. think it is not only nonsense'
but it is loadingon the country
Yif�y, �y:�,',`�'.. .f�l,".L. i'•+1:� r Kix' � A':t%.''�..'
aMimarlaid
Now Ready
"The Dunlop Trail
Summer Resorts of Ontario in
a Nutshell for the Motorist.
"The Dunlop Trail" is the "new -idea" touring book, which rep-
resents the first attempt to lay Ontario before the holiday -seeker
in such a way that he can motor over the Province systematically.
The whole story of Ontario is told -in sequence—Ontario from
Winnipeg to Cochrane, to Windsor, to Montreal—yet the book
only comprises forty pages, and is pocket size.
Not a reference page from cover to cover—in other words, you
get the whole story of a district when you are at the two pages
gel
covering that particular district. No advertising'
of any kind in
"The Dunlop Trail."
All maps and illustrations specially drawn ; all material specially
compiled. Think of this feature: All your mileage figured oat for
you over the entire Province—the first time this has been at-
tempted in the history of motoring.
In "The Dunlop Trail" you find every River and Lake trip in
Ontario that hasa schedule; also special Train trips; combination
Auto, Boat and Train trips; the first complete list ever published
of places in Ontario where Summer Hotels are located; every
Golf Club and Camp Site in the Province, and real information,
where you want it, about steamer and ferry services for taking
autos aboard.
In order to keep .the circulation of ' "The Dunlop Trail" in the
proper channel a nominal price of fifty cents has beets put on it,
Any Garage or Tire Dealer in Ontario will take your order for
"The Dunlop Trail" or you can procure it direct from this Com-
pany at any of the Ontario Offices mentioned below.
DUNLOP TIRE & RUBBER GODS CO , LIMITED
HEAD OFFICE«ANND FACTORIES: 870 Queen St, East, TORONTO.
HAMILTON BRANCH: 18-24 Park Street South.
LONDON BRANCH: 571 Richmond Street.
OTTAWA BRANCH: Dunlop Building, 306-312 Sparks St.
Dunlop—Tire Makers to Canada for Thirty Years.
DUNLOP A i N TIRES
Less Air, More Comfort
Stone -Built Clothes
TAILORED TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL MEASURE.
PROM NOW ON,
All 'Woollens used in the manufacture of "STONE -BUILT
CLOTHES" are treated with the famous Larvex Moth -Proofing
Process, and guaranteed immune from the ravages of Moths under a
$850,000 Globe Indemnity Bond.
A BOND WITH EACH SUIT And EVERY SUIT GUARANTEED
Demand This Bond, It is Your Protection,
WHY DO WE GO TO THIS EXPENSE ?
BECAUSE Moths are the greatest factor in the destruction of
Olathing that are laid away for even a short period.
BECAiUSE This new scientific discovery—The Larvex Process—
entirely eliminates any danger to your clothes from
ravages of Moths and their Larvae,
BECAUSE STONE -BUILT CLOTHES with the added attrac-
tion of the Larvex Moth Proofing Process, is a com-
bination that defies all competition—that cannot be
beaten. They are built to your individual require-
ments,There is no extra charge to you.
Stone'Bui1I lathes
SOLD EXCLUSIVELY BY
MIT W
THURSDAY, JULY VI, 1924.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
DR. H, HUGH ROSS, Physician
and Surgeon. Late of London H
os-
pita1, Londoe, England, Special
of the 'e. a
attention to diseasese y , ear,
nose and throat. Office and resid-
ence behind Dominion Bank, Office
Phone No. 5; Residence 'Phone 106',
DR, F. 3. BURROWS, Seaforth,
Office and 'residence, Goderich street,
east of the Methodist church. Cor-
oner for the County of Huron. Tele-
phone No. 40. •
DR. C. MACKAY,—C. Mackay,
honor gradvade of Trinity Univers-
ity and gold medallist of Trinity
MedicalCollege; member of the Col-
leged Surgeons
an S of
Physicians
of g
Ontario. -
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER: Eye, Ear,
Nose and Throat. Graduate in Medi-
cine University of Toronto, 1$97.
Late Assistant New York Ophthal-
mic and Aural Institute, :Moorefieid'a
and Golden S u
are Throat Hos-
pitals, London, England. At
Commercial Hotel, Seaf o r t h .
third Monday in each month,
from 11 a.m, to 3 p.m. 53 Waterloo
street south, Stratford. Phone 267,
Stratford,
SEPAFORTH
mamm mai
ewoOsneemNolalmommonelme
1
s....s'` kh Gr7filj.
jj..-„.,?r EE
es
Classic of California in the brave, wild fifties
"Salo y Jane”
WITH
J14,0QUELlN1E' LOGAN
GEORGE F11WeETT
MAURICE FLYNN
Actually filmed iii its original setting—among the great
Redwoods of the Santa Cruz mountains,
The rugged town of Red Dog, the quaint Harte characters,
the sweeping action, the typical Harte humanness, All have been
transferred to the screen with absolute fidelity.
Showing Thurs., Fri. and Sat.
Next MON: TUES., WED., be sure to see
Edwin'Carew's
- "MIGHTY LAK' A ROSE."
RINCI3S S
General Fire, Life,
Accident & Autom,obilg
INSURANCE_ AGENT
and Dealer in Singer Sewing Machine!'
James Watson
North Main St, SEAFORTH, ONT,
THE McKILLOP
Mutual Fire Insurance Coo
FARM AND ISOLATED TOWN
PROPERTY ONLY, INSURED
Officers
James Connolly, Goderich; Alex.
lathes Evans, Beechwood, Vice Pres -
dent: 1). F. McGregor, Seaforth,
Sri. -Treasurer.
Directors.
1\in, Rant, No. 2, Seaforth; John
lllenneweis, Brodhagen; Janes Evans,
laeechwooci; M. McEwen, Clinton;
James Cottony, Goderich ; ;Alex.
ifroadfoot, No. 3, Seaforth; J, G.
Grieve, No, 4, Walton; Robert Ferris,
Hardock; George McCartney, No. 3,
Seaforth; MurrayGibson, Brucefietd
Agents.
Alex. Leitch, 1, Clinton, E.
Htnchley, Seaforth; J. A. Murray, R.
R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. V. Yeo,
Holntesville; R. G. Jarmouth, Born-
holm. James Kerr and John Goven-
tock, Seaforth, auditors.
Parties desirous to effect insurance
or tranaest other business will be
promptly attended to by application
to any of the above officers addressed
to their respective postoffices.
Brides
Always look on a piano as a real, lasting gift.
Something that will out -last almost' any other gift and also
stakes their house into a home.
I am prepared to meet your wants' and can guarantee to sell'
you at the closest prices as my. selling costs are smaller. than the
city store, aid you simply save this, •
I have in stock, two new pianos; 1 Bell and 1 Dominion. See
these before you buy. It .nay mean big money to you.
Jonathan Ea ilugill
Phone 13-616.3 miles West of Seaforth
I also rent Pianos for Garden Parties. I make delivery by truck
anywhere.
Don't Throw
r.n; ysrrti3 Your Old
Carpets Away
They make new raver
sable"Velvetex" Rugs.
Send for Vete tax Folder 2
CANADA RUG COMPANY
LONDON. ONT.
Desirable House
FOR SALE
.To the person seeking a comfort-
able home close to stores, churches,
and schools, and still be in the
country, this re'side'nce is splendidly
located, being less than a mile from
Seaforth postoffice. The property
consists of eight acres of land, a good
frame house with seven rooms and
woodshed, hard and soft water; good
stable with gement flooring; fine or-
chard. Possession can be given im-
mediately. Further information may,
be obtained at THE NEWS OFFICE.
FEATHERS WANTED
Highest prices paid. Max Wolsh
phone 178, Seaforth.
LEMONS WHITEN AND
-BEAUTIFY THE SKIN
Make thls beauty loth cheapf or
your face, neck, arms aiande.
At the cost of a email jar of ordinary.
cold creamone can prepare a full quar-
ter
uayter pint of the meet wonderful lemon
skin softener and complexion beautifier,
by equeeping the juice of two fresh lem-
ons into a bottle containing three ouncea.
of orchard white, Care should be taken
to strain the juice through a fine cloth
so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo-
tion will keep fresh for months Every
woman knows that lemon juice is used
to, bleach and remove such blemishes tS
freckles, sallowness and tan and is
the ideal skin softener, whitener and
beautifier.
Just try it! Get three ounces of
orchard white at any drug store ,and
two lemons from the grocer and make up
a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant
lemon lotion and massage it daily into
the face,nook, arms' and Lands. ' It 1s
marvelous to smoothen rough, red kande.,