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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1934-10-18, Page 3T'HURS:DAY, -OCTOBER 18, 1934
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
PAGE THREE
HURON NEWS
Mrs. Wm. Leppington, Clinton-
While visiting her daughter in
!Sarnia, Mrs, William Leppington of
(Clinton, died ''S'aturday morning of
iheart failure in 'her 711"st year, 'De -
'ceased was in app'aren'tly good health
a week previous -when She went to
spend a few weeks with her daughter.
103'orn, in IGoderich township in what
is known as the Tipperary settlement,
she was Susan Carter, dttught'er of
,the late Tihomnas Carter. In early wo-
manhood she married. 'William Lep-
pington. who predeceased hereby eigh-
teen years, lih-ey farmed for some
years in God'erich township ,then
took up residence in 'Clinton, Her
fancily consisted of one daughter,
Mrs. F. W. 'Lawrence of :Sarnia, and
two sons, Wilbert, Who: met a viol-
ent death, in 1902 by being caught in
she machinery at the 'flax mill then in
operation in 'Clinton, and "Piths, H.,
of Clinton. Two brothers ' and two
sisters also survive, !James Carter,
Clinton; John Carter, London; Mrs,
Garry Cooper and Mrs, S'',, Cooper,
near Seaforth. Nine gramd'children
alos survive. The remains were.
brought to Clinton for interment, bur-
ial taking place on. Monday.
Died in Mitchell—
'Following an intens of only a few
weeks' duration Mary 'Aiun Ferris,
widow of !Isaac 'Ilbrd passed away
on Sunday at 1l.itcihell, in her eights: -
eighth year. She was born in Lon-
don, Ontario, daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs, Charles Terris. Sixty-
seven years ago she married Isaac
Hord. Her husband pr'edeceaeed her
17 months. After their arrival in
Mitchell the late. Mr. (-Lord opened a
dry goods business, which he operat-
ed for $U years, She leaves to mourn
their loss, four sons, Walter, Toron-
to; Fred C., Mitchell; rllired, Wolse-
ley, 'Sask„ and 'William, 'Edmonton,
Alta; also two daughters, Mrs. '(Dr.)
_}.
J. 11.1 Nanghton of (Penn Van, N.
Y., and Sirs. Geo. McLean, Mitchell.'
Elected President—
At the regular meeting, of tltclOns
tario Secoudary School Teachers'
Federation, District No. 4, held in
Stratford on Saturday, G. A, Ballan-
tyne o'f Seaforth was elected presid-
ent for :he coming year, succeeding
S. W. Hann of Kitchener. Afes-s B. H.
lLirritt of Mitchell was elected vice-
president, A. Williams of Forest, sec-
retery-trek urer; M, F. .11icL•son of
Kitchener. c niitlor; 1'. Farr of Mil-
verton. n. - C,- tiiilt:itio S :1,,,,' r •tore-
.. t .tive; ler. Evan: of St. Mary-.
inilrlic t} er-nether, and J. P. 1lo n:
Gotle:'ieh, and Miss Muriel Stuart
5irat:ord, reart'.entt,tives,
t ersian Balm pr lit nes
charm -and bcaiity. It is unrivalled
in its magical effect on the skin,
Swiftly ttbsorbed etc- the. tissues. it
leaves -,eve' vestige of stickiness.
'Delightfully co:,: to she skin, Stinnt-
lt.ting and invigorating.. :Softens am1
makes the itis !lawlessly white.
Subtly fragrant. Imparts youth an1
loviine.- te, the c.i i1!i eiei-. F rcian
Balm is t:tc ini',itab:e choice of the
woman who cares,
Send es. the names of your visitor;.
KENTUCKY KIDN'AP'PING
Hop for the safety of Mrs.
Berry V. (Stall, young s'ociety woman
who was lkid'napped from her home
at Louisville, Kentucky, dwindled
over the 'Week -end as ,police and
friends ibegam a minute search of
nearby hill land and:marshes, Many
(hours after a man entered the Stoll
home and kidnapped the pretty, 26 -
year -old woman, no trace had been
found of !her 'or her abductor. Her
husband, an Officer of the Stolt 'Oil
'Refinery Company, -was-near a nerv-
ous collapse, Within 24 hours after
his wife was kidnapped he announc-
ed that all demand's of a, ransom note
asking $50,000 had been met, The
money, it was (believed, had been
placed in a'spot designated hi' the
.note, but had not been claimed. 'Po-
lice instructed hundreds of .posse -
men who spread aver the countryside,
to watch for freshly mounded; earth,
possibly covering the grave of the
kidnapped woman.
KING ALEXANDER KILLED.
Submerging its former political
feelings against ;the co'tmtry's king,
!Zagreb, jugoslavia , the hotbed- of
+Crotia's independence, 'bowed its
dread and gave- itself up to prayer as
the body of tie slain Alexander ar-
rived from !,Fiance on its return to
native soil.
ding Alexander 1I of Jugoslavia and
'Louis .Barthou, foreign minister of
'France, were slain on 'Sept. 9th by
a political assassin at Marseilles,
!France, as they drove through a
crowd, and a 'Crotian exile poured
a volley of shots into the royal car.
The assassin was cut down with a
sabre by one of the guards,
'l'.he dead -king's ho.neeoming had a
peculiarly siguificaut meaning at Za-
greb, because it was there that three
Croats, in December, 15133, attempt-
ed to assassinate :Alexander during. a
visit which lie intended In be a Christ-
mas gift to the Croat people.
!111 the way from the coat, through
the ;,,,,,r vil'ages of Dalmatia, on to
'ogre,!, unending, ]be+ of peasants
and '1noun taineer, knelt in prayer a:
the royal train mate its sorrowful
way, From Zagreb the bn4y wa-
taken to Belgrade, there to await the
IC:n;_'s widow. Queen Marie of Jug.
a.t.d the h It l ins, Peter II.
eta' telt., his lather's penin' on the
throne with the 11 ista:: ec of a rc.:-
t'itiy ci's'm it tanto he 'ween a4<.
The oo isSt :igen: ose Jf t le.
we -tern roads receive,; a shipment
cal 'alich 'aa, a donkey, described on
the freisht 'till as sue burro,"
.liter checking itis goods carefully,
the assn of made his report:
one bureau; dyer, 'nt jack --s."
Small Girl it even -v -s l h,,}1
(l:t, I t.,.v., }este lots better to...
1g than }ear daddy"
silos; utrue child of the motor cr')
"Well, I as.hut he --I'm a :;.tis
In'_ del.
t:hosic," said• the teacher, r.' -
"y a ntis;pelled most of
thea, :' 1- at your composition."
"t'es't!;." e 4sddtined Johtluie;' 'I'm
to be .. diene,.. -writer."
BA'i7DITo ROB ST. CLEME'NT'S
BANK OF $2,000
:Kitchener, Oct. 113,—Two bandits
who held up Ed -ward !Jordan, manag-
er of the St. Cements branch of the
Canadian Bank of Cammere'e yester-
day and escaped with X2,000 iia cash
are still at • large today, Every prov-
incial policeman in the district had
'been warned to be on the lookout for
the light model sedan bearing nuinben
C'.P4482, For nearly an hour yes -ter-
-day the bandits were only a few
jumps ahead of W. C. Reuber and
'Glenn SsIclVeigh, two dLinwciod Wren,
who gave chase in 'Reu'ber's ]9129,,mo-
<el automobile, A shooting affray in
which 14-c'Veigih, a teller for the
Banks of Nova IScatia, fired two shots
and Reu'ber, a Linwood' hardware
merchant, discharged a shotgun,
speeded the bandit car to such an ex-
tent that Reuher could not catch up.
!Neither M'oVeigh nor IReuber will
.swear that their fire was returned -
'One mans alighted front. the bandit
car as it ground to a stop 250 feet
ahead. and raised 'his arm as if to
shoot,. The noise of the Motors tirade
it impossible to hear a report, hew -
ever, and the distance was too gr -eat
to see a revolver in the bandit's 'hand:
'He lost little time in scrambling back
into the mac'hin•e, however, when the
pursuers opened fire,
At no time durinng the phase• did
they see two ,men in the car ahead,
'Renber and McVeigh said. The chase
was 'finally given up near. the village
of Yatton as the bandit's pace left the
pursuers far behind: \Vhen last seen
their car was proceeding in the direc-
tioni of Alma, in Wellington county,
!Bound with wire and smothered in
the folds of his own coat, Manager
Edward L. Jordan lay an the floor of
the bank while the -til-assorted pair of
bandits escaped with $2,000 fn cur-
rency,
II)raggings himself tit the front win-
dow of the bark after loosening the
Cutting shackles. abort his 1110ils, Jor-
dan groped; for his gun, hoping to
take a mot shot at the escaping, car,
only to find that the hanlit visitor-
h,al.talec:s the Weapon and all :he atu-
nMlnili'ln es well a. 8:1 -the ;paper mo-
sey the little branch boasted.
1 t w t a carefully pia-rncd job lute
certain ,eatnres of it smacked of the
amateur, There was ntstitinr of the
„nnii.01„ ,e re1,s1 the elder of the
t:v,, raiders. said she manager. He•
was a tall, rather ']istin-ni.hc,1 look-
ing :mot of about well tire: -ed in
a blue suit with a topcoat carried me:-
e!.!;only over his aril, Ntsoon-or
companion was in lids cirly twenties.
ilc was. jauntily attire.1 1.1 ''own sift
and won: a 1i: tt grey has 1 -lis Stne.,
seas dirk told his ' ,nep!esin
Police were soon on this trail of the
bandits, for Matthew. Schuanver, tt1,
.,crates a ::cel era] store near the
:,11k, :hell t, ! 1 by ;Ionian of the r,'t-
':very, phoned his brother Frank aim
omit] is a geneC t store ;t Ltnw,iari
10 !)e' 011 'ltt• lookout ir,r she car.
Shorty dttes•s .rd the word t tar
that !te ear had 1 ,hnmgl
1.1';wo i a,.,! that \Cotter henber an t
Etl.:ar -Wilber had seen ci;-•e,
•
On,s o' the co.rnmooess complaliats
.. .voritis, mid the m,, -t c' grove .r•t-
1'1ir'tttn :,.r them is Ili -tiler Graves'
.A—.rat-Exterminator.
ACCDDEENITAI OR, PLANNED ?
'\Vas ,the death of the infant son of
Charles A. Lindihergh an accident or
cold, premeditated murder!?
That is one of the -many questions
that officials have striven to answer.
There was a !belief on the part of
some oflfic:ials that no' arrangements
were 'made for the care of the Lind-
bergh child following the dramatic
kidnapping of March 11, 119132 •
In all oither kidnappings, either of
infants or adults, the abductors had
made elaborate preparations to main-
tain their captives.
'Orme theory advanced was that the
kidnappers thought they cou'dd just
as easily collect the ransom money
with the child out of the way. Some
high officials lean to that theory.
Others thought that the death pos-
sibly was accidental following -the
kidnapping. -
Much study 'has been given -by
both state and federal authorities to
the cold, emotionless Bruno !Richard
IHauptmann, said to be a great 'war
veteran, Evidence has !been 'obtained
that certain of the Lindbergh ran-
som bills appeared in Europe some
time after "Dr. 'ja'isie" -Condon paid
over the ransom. 'A'bou't $115,000 was
recovered while $5,000 passed through
banks, out of a total of '$501;000' paid,
The difference has not. been ac-
counted for.
AN INTERNATIONAL APPEAL
!Only an. aroused Public. opinion
-,practically world-wide can -make ef-
fective the international action neces-
sary to put an end to a practice that
is destroying annually • millions of
•wilt] fowl, It is she pollution of the
coastal waters of the - maritime na-
tions of the world. The rapidly in-
creasing siumber of vessels using oil
for 'u'•1 has in recent years greatly
alarmed those who •'hate become
familiar ;vitt the facts, In 19'14- vessel;
.,sing.'for 1r,�ptilsion were only a
tenth d.ahe number using it in 11)65
and -dace that date has steadily in-
creased. .ls the life of this oil etas
been l>a:•.;e 1 oat the nil read -se,
heavy, ticket, these ships have dump-
ed into the sta, senvral!y co near
hand ' i r. the ,ata' -tuft, .gilt by
wind and lite toward the coos , h:ts
b i 'u:e : the waters in which mil-
lions of. Ai)] 'tire;-, geese, flicks an:1
rrd- have alighted that it
Sas f.ons ] to• . pi,h:n' fate. This i'i. s}1 pit .h Jobe be under-
stood. I s-
indersto , s 11Isink. Ittn always re-
mains n '•1 t ;au I'Ostre 1t t
.err, ...,_ ,tui' iu ;he -,tato*.
1'lx these •ilirds heroine
sC, samme wit!: ::1'• ; is tha' they al•'
u Italie to take :dish; a -Olin, The line
;tom, ars ,.,1, 'hat insa:a.te• their
told zn.i ,cater be
me, r .1l,,1 and 11vater--,:akc 1, the
kin is tsoosed ,o the c:cancnand
the 'bind, from ,; t1 and banger
Or ] e +. from dr, wn:!1_',
Mr. Ifre nods!: t'. Lincoln, a einem
of ;Cie. 1'. it. 1 States lntcr'lepart.
;nem; t.',s1., ;:tel• .li (lis l,ollnti,-,n,
. a' e. en ',ine year, ass the
SM.3 ;tuts.' •.l aha' oasis
•m ,'+t ,,.- ,,:.t vl the tons , .
,v. .,''i,taros 1 into. ...,•1-
terr t , . , sear: Nes- York
Isms-,' , ....t. . .vases alone.. tt 5,
Sol tons. til ., tt,"1'1: :t-e:ta
k 4t94.1.11,
rw11`�.e'xtHtiitv`bM2, et:
heck
•
We Fire Selling Quality Books
Books are Well Made, Carbon is Clean and Copies Readily. All
styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low as You Can Get
Anywhere. Get our Quotation on Your Next Order.
The Seaforth News
SEAFORTH, ONTARIO,
1•ieved''117 per cent (was carried asthor
Now thunk of the following:.6 re
port 'from Massachusetts is well cal
ed tragic. It says: "The number o
poor birds we 'found down there colo
e. FALL PLANTING OF
PERENNIALS:
1-
f I Numerous gardening opera'tion•s
which are o'fteii taut off until spring
1
may ,be done in fall with every hope
-of success.
No sweeping statement can be•
made about 'gardening in a country
with such a chivorsifi-ed climate as
ours; but its Southwestern 'Ontario
where we usually ahve a long mild.
fall, perennials of many varieties can
he planted at .this time very satisfac-
torily. 'rhe soil is usually in excellent
working conditionin autumn--sa con-
dition which is often absent in spring
—and if planting is done in early fall
enough warmth will have been retain-
ed in the soil to encourage root
growth, thus allowing the plants to
became thor'ough'ly re-esta'blished
'before 'freezing weather sets in. An
established. ,plant 'is !better able to-
withstand summer drought than one
newly planted; this is another point'
in 'favor of fall planting,
1Late-flowering and tender varieties -
of perennials should- be planted' ' in
early spring, but the early=flowering,
sorts give better result's if planted in'
fall. The accepted time for planting
iris seers to be ,July and ;August, al-
though excellent results have been
obtained .by planting in October.
This is not recommended as a gen
eral practice.
Iff the soil is at all dry at planting
time, a thorough watering is advis-
able; although this is not a'ften neces-
sary, as in a normal fall there is a.
fair supply of moisture.
an the case of deciduous trees and:
shrubs it would be advisable to wait -
until the plants are dormant before
transplanting, which will entail the •
loss of a certain amount 'of vitality
Two very good reasons for planting
trees and shrub, in the fall are that
there is less danger of nurseries being
sold out of the ntarcrial required, and
time is les hilly occupied than its.
Springg. Evergreens may be success-
fully transplanted daring September,
hut no later males. the location in
exceptional'v .favorahie.
1'lte l)ontini,,tt l:vp'erinteutal
„ ,.1 1 -ha „a, Outztri:,, will. be
to 3sntnit tof pea: t, lsit1:. may
he trans:dant< 1 in fall and als., pian -
Ing it:streeth 5ls ',,r .l'u'st plants.
eyed with oil is perfectly awful; coot,
brant, ol-ciseivaws, everything. The
amount of oil varied fram a little en
the breast to so snitch they could net
illy but could only paddle about un-
til they starved, Several had plucked
the-mselves almost clean (bare) trying
to get rid of the stuff."
1Lt 119119 an oil tanker unto'adieg at
East 'Providence, 'Rlhlod-e !Island, broke
the .hose but con•tinu:ed 'pu'mping oil
for some time 'before the ;break was
discovered. The oil covered the upper
bay and as a result State officers .ga-
thered' up and ,buried 404 'bltrelbills
that had floated ashore.
On January ,10, 719130, the steamer
Edward I.arc'keltlback was wrecked on
Block Island, and the oil released
killed literally thousands of birds
from this island and' the adjacent
shores of 'Long ,Island. Seventeen
species were listed as killed, the re-
sult of this catatrop'he,
I'] the above report 'front a very
small section of New England's coast
line tells such a story, what must be
the record for all. the 'coastal waters
of the 'M'aritime 'Nations,
'What ,has 'been done up to the pre-
sent to putt a stop to this sad story
of destruction of b -'rd life? Much of
which the ,vast 'majority of bird lav-
ers :know ,nothing. The !United States
has an act snaking it unlawful for
any ,person to discharge ail. ,by any
means whatsoever .into or upon the
coastal or navigable waters of that
country. This law has been most dif-
ficult of enforcement and has accom-
nli.:.herl but little. The guilty ship is
far away by the time the deed is
done and so evidence is almost im-
possible to obtain.
!But much more has been undertak-
en though little has come of it up to
the ,present. As far hack as '.Tunis. 19216,
5 conference 051 i.11 pollution of nar-
igible waters was held at which
twelve foreign powers :were repres-
ented, .At that time tin' draft of a
convention was adopted to -prohibit
the discharge of nil or oih• mixtures
in c, astal waters, This `5'nven•tfon
was tentatively agreed to by nine of
the power represented, the three di, -
senting powers being japan, Italy and
5k'rmany. Acrorrlingly, the report:
says, the hoped for multiple treaty
failed. Suet then! there have 1)51,11
conaer.ati,,ns hes en the t'nitedi
States ait'l Great lir! i.]l.
'What has "tech done in iin5' n l
oversolne this direful evil ? In 1931
Sir Coo: e R.twurl, \t.1'.. 1 itr.:dn--
ed a Pill ict„ the British Partialness
to :mike t ii )11 . rs the 11,5 iil
horning ships of nl tiitit]es for sell -
Tire: .61 from other ss :hat
11 liquid discharge -1 into, 015 sea
-h,ildl-1 r,aitain n.,rt than one ply-;'
.i c dl 1Oii,il;bi 1 is ttnn] 'i,
tiro n;,'1 tSis Ttl11 a't t u r rl 1110]-
01 a ly t'ri a 'n it= itr- u .0]'1 u.on 1
reading. it ditsl •a 1liitnl l -testi: owing
'•' the end of tile 1.7-1 5nterninent.
Mach was 'lone, however. in the a;;•;
of a stud; mach init a septrat ;rs.
and roves! . tions were .rade, par-
ticularly along the c,u 1, 1<.a•-'
t'.u• effect- t:r:- , i1, no; .only ; t]
1,inis and :i.'t, 1''t ass , ,a: tile
!link ami si-11 live.
The!0lt 5] .] an et•natlont la -:;fah;
a'l•iressed sommications to tics g,
ernntents of all the principal mar' -
time powers, informing. them of their
intention to raise the question of -Oi',
Poanti'n :It the League of Nation,
with the least passible delay,
This is the situation. The problem
is an international one. The assertion
from 1l1'a.'hington, and from :England
as well, is without question correct,
:hat only an aroused and vigorous
public opinion, widespread among
lovers of wild fowl in each of the
countries of the great Maritime 'Pow-
ers, will bring about definite action
to stop this cruelly destructive twee.
!Apparently the remedy will be
found by compelling these ships to
use such separators as will accomp-
lish the end sought.. No law merely
fonbiclding the discharge of oil into
the sea can be enforced. But an inter-
national agreement whereby the oil
burning ships of each of the Powers
must provide themselves with an
effeffetive separator .could be en-
fore,ed,
The :Last ,Asuhmta •Attach:, may re-
ally he the last one if ,promptmeas-
ures are taken. Dr. J. D. Kellogg's
!Asthma Remedy will safeguard' yon,
at will penetrate to the smallest brktn-
chial passage and bring about a :heal-
thy condition, 7t always relieves and
its continued use often has a :perm-
anent effect. Why not get this long -
famous remedy 'tosclay and. commence
its use? 'Inhaled as snscilee or vapor
if is equally effective.
"`-19o'tlle'r, -isn't your hair perma
nen•tly waved?"
Wh3*
do you .ask that, child ?"
"I've been thinking, another, Why
can I leave my neck permanently
washed."
I3EARTBURN
'In hearthttr', a horning sensation
est tau 1115 re n t to .alar
plexus. This 1, ace.k onpatlivt! 1:5'
regi gi:rti 1' 1551'. thy nt, t '1 ,
nlaii q l .,tt t)_ _a ling tint,;
The h u learn nesill- tws or tarts
Immo- after tit. taking o, a Weai aric;
related by eating, drinking. !,t u'''
taken., an alkali such to baking ss''la.
In the absence of gastris: nlvt'r air.
tt.t,l-e1153 singlet :ma i11--
dt,hied.
Ven- little bread sinff is aliowes
.ince this. stinmistes the gastri,
juicer, with t ennui'!.* t1. acid.
The most valuable a]tr,'.,. ,.f Chet ar,.
10111, create. hatty tt:•1. c!'i;k-
elt and fender oft' e`
The frl itsg ,1,111 ,1 be arnitic'1,
saw' vegeta Mess s'isb fruit,
bread, :.le' it,•1 :11'! ctTerv, .tins
drink..
A. 't symtptconvie treatment 1115.
Lieutsit. na ta1.e st tett. ti -s,. .,.
'icli•it of ti-isei..mfort ;t l.o s:ler
;airing equal rams nt.'i's'le.illnt, e:,:-
eittnl bicarbonate an,l bismuth axy-
earl: not:.
'Banana Bran Not 'Tread --
1-4 cup shortenings, ', cusp sugar, '1
egg (well beaten) 1 crap bran, 1f'.;
cups flour, tsps. 'baking' powder,
tsp. salt, 1.J tsp. soda, I cop chopped
nut meats, 15,-, cups mashed bananas:
2thsps• water. i1 tsps vanilla extract.
Cream shortening and sugar weld..
Add egg and bran. .Sift flour with
baking powder, salt, and -sada. Mix
nuts with flour and add alternately
with stashed' bananas to wihich the.
water ,has -been added, Stir in vanilla.
'Pour into greased loaf tin, Let stand
30 minutes and bake in a moderate
oven (;31315 deg, F.) one hour. Let cool
before nutting.
Yield: 1 'loaf '('ti; x 4?G inches).
Simple sandwiches are always wel-
come, 'Cream butter with h'oney and
spread thin slices of white bread. A .
delicate tiling is -made by creaming
butter with anchovy paste, nlulstard.
hoeserad.ish; .or chopped parsley.
Sone other savo-ry fillings are chop--
ped
hop-tcd celery moistened with maybe- •
noise; creamed butter, mint leaves
and chopped pimiento; chopped pick-
les or olives with mayonnaise; ground
cheese and <lriecl beef moistened with
tomato puree.
Stranger: "I want to +buy a
faun
Real Estate Broker "You've come
to the right place, sir. What's your
business?
;Stranger: "I'm a fa.r,m'er,"
lBro'ker: ''Ott, we have Why good'
farms f'or farmers! I , thought- you -
we're 5 city chap."
.good