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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1926-08-27, Page 6AM J, 0"At id � &.= . 8 90ut16 LEGAL JOHN L NVOGARD Da * ter rm I Solicitor, Notary Public, Etc. We Block Seafortk On R. S. RATS Barrister, Solicitor, CAMI god Notary Public. Solicitor for tt Vominion Bank. Office in mar of th 'boininion Bank, Seaforth. Money loan. BEST & BEST Phurlsters, Solicitors, Conveys *I and Notaries Public, Etc. OM in the Edge Building. opposite Th Expositor Office. VETFAUNARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin asy College, and honorary member o the Medical Association of the Ontarii Veterinary College. Treats diseases o: all domestic animals by the most mod arn principles. Dentistry and Mill Fever a specialty, Office opposib Dick'a Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth All orders left at the hotel will re ceive prompt attention. Night calli received at the office. a"�l "A.I�Vxa, '. Q. Honor graduate of Ontario Vete;rin- asy College. All diseases of domestic ardim Is treated. Calls promptly at - landed to and charges moderate. Vet- exinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich Street, one door east of Dr. Mackay's Office, Sea - forth. A. k CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, University of Toronto. All diseases of domestic animals treated by the most modern princil?lea. Charges reasonable. Day or night calls promptly attended to. Office on Main Street, Hensall, opposite Town RaIL Phone 116. MEDICAL DR. R. P. L DOUGALL Honour graduate of Faculty of Medicine and Master of Science, Uni- r 'ty of Western Ontario, London- erm Member of College of Physicians and Swgeons of Ontario. Office, 2 doors east of post office. Phone 56, Hensall Ontario. 3004-tf DR. J. A. MUNN Successor to Dr. R_ R. Ross Graduate of Northwestern Univers- Ity, Chicago, 111. Licentiate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Torout. Office over Sills' Hardware, Main SL, Reaforth- Phone 161. DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY Bayfleld. Graduate Dublin University, Ire- LLud. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda Hospital for Women and Children, Dublin- Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs, Parsow. Hours, 9 to 10 a -m., 6 to 7 pm.; Sun"Ya, 1 to 2 P.m. ?866-29 DR, F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, 11ast of the Methodist church, Seaforth- Phone 46. Coroner for the County of DR. C. MACKAY C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin- Ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur� keons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Ool- [*go of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office—Back of Do- sitnion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5. Night calls answered from residence, Victoria Street, Seaforth. AUCTIONEERS F. W. ANRENS IAcensed Auctioneer for Perth and Huron Counties. Sales solicited, Real Estate, Farm Stock, Etc, Terms on application. F. W. Ahrens, phone 34 r 6, R. R, No. 4, Mitchell, Ont. OSCAR W. REED Licensed auctioneer for the Coun- Use of Perth and Huron- Graduate of Jones' School of Auctioneering. Chicago. Charges moderate, and sat- Isfaction guaranteed. Write or wire Oscar W. Reed, Staffa, Ont. Phone ?96,5x52 THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates can be itnado by calling up phone 212, Sea - forth, or The Expositor Office. Charg- es moderate, and satisfaction guar- anteedL OSCAR KLOPP Honor Graduate Carey Jones' Na- tional Schoot of Auctioneering, Chl- enco. Special course taken In Pure Bred Live Stock, Real &tate, Mer- dititndise and Farm Sales. Rates in keeping with prevaillp _r mairket. Sat- Infae"on assured. *ilte or win, Oscar Klopp, Zurfeb, Ont Phom 2968-52 R. T. LURER lAcensed anetioneer for the County AlVotl. `Sales attended to to &II, of the county. Seven y0srs, ex - et, in IMAnItAa and Samkatehe� WAIL Terms wihsopalble. none No, 1"s r 11, Exe%r, at "Itridis P. 0, R. I t at T_& Iturlon ptamptly W1. W . . . . . . . . . . 'xiV ?,k 10 3. I'00 and graded with a fan, "4fws, �;,vlhe seed AoUld be oown oc, e -quarter 49, plot of about one W, 44 -4%06� on clean land to increase U the. SUOO ; It has beendemoustrat- The.; 04ger reolog or;,. TIAV` o?d mqny"-)fimes that seed produced by W0.7 eager wq=-11,30, Z, 4 with careful and efficient Of use A'.q,00d fanning mill, may pay N on the hatbo*A0 for -the qr*Uble many times over. busly he v mu14 re 4qR&t%A4T.16 it aloft, and thon, d LADY, ASTOR'S TRICK HAT -BOX would -be sudden dispin, M.. It. IT.P.01 A rit A Lady 9 ney Astor is back In Vir- ment and reproachful. , gl v, bori aUces 16 t4he If no I ginia for a holiday in the home of h two Jadlei Who . . . . . . . . girlhood, 4 similar to the visit of 1922 when 4o included Toronto in her travels. if redb.aps have good memories they recall a certain habit of Lady Astor four years agu which will cause them to regard -her luggage with a suzpic- ions eye, especially her hat -boxes. Lady Astor, of course, has a spriglitly sense of humor that has been well kno%vn from the mischiev- ous pranks of chilhood to her irre- Pre-8sibility in the Brit4sh House of Common$. hi 1922 she had as private secre:ary II Ruth Pennybacker, whos disposition matched Lady As - torts, and bel%vt-en them they perpet- rated a co�tijival hoax on redcaps. Miss Penn.vbacker disdained port - Best of all Fly Killers -10c and 25c per packet at all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores. able typewriters. The machine she used Was a full-grown, adult affair with all the accessories and it made a good solid 'chunk of thirty-five I pounds or more. It was a fine ma. chine, but the difficulty was how to carry it because there was ho case. Lady Astor had a nice strong lea- ther batbox built to withstand the tortures of Atlantic travel. She of- fered it as a solution of her secre- W Pressing their 919010% It 'Was the Same at h0tel& Many a dignified Porter's mapAcent snav- HY was shattered when, Us essayed to lift that leather hatbox lightly from taxi to pavement. Redcaps and porters began to be- lieve that Lady Astor must wear a fine assortment of steel helmets. -1 IS LOVER OF HORSES The Scottish -Canadian millionaire, John McEntee Bowman of New York, is one of the few "hundred per cent" business men who believe that the horse will not be driven out by the motor car. Recently he made a trip to England tb 49'. International bo=1 931— Air. Bowman, who started bis g"4ijoser- Az a clerk, now owas 'a a -- of palatial hotes in'th'e largest Ameri- can cities. Not much more than twenty years ago he was nearly starving in seareh of a Job in New York, when he called on a hotel, Proprietor named Baumann. The similarity in their names aroused the proprietor's interest, and sooTt young Bowman -had his foot on the ladder which he has climbed so high. tin e The constitutional issue i's pure Political buncombe, desi',,,,-- d to divert attention from the King Government's administration of the Customs Depairtment, upon which issue it was ignominiously defeated in the House of Commons, Here are the vi*tal stubborn facts: I In September, 1925, Mr. King was granted dissolution by His Excellency Lord Byng, on the representation that he must be given a chance to secure a clear working majority. He stated at Richmond Hill that if such a majority was not forthcoming, he would not attempt to carry on. 2 In the old Parliament thus dissolved there had been 234 members, of whom 117 were Liberals, 66 were Progressives or Independents and 51 were Con- servatives. 3 In the new Parliament, elected in October, 1925, Mr. Meighen had by far the largest group --almost half the total membership of the House. Out of 245 seats the Conservatives had X16, the Liberals 101, the Progressives 24, Labour 2, and Independents 2. 4 Instead of immediately resigning, as he should have done in view of the ground upon which he had been granted dissolution, Mr. King asked for and was granted leave to carry on, on the assurance that he would leave the fate of his administration to Parliament itself. 5 On Friday, June 25th, three separate motions by so- called independents, in suPPort of which Mr. King's Government marshalled its last ounce of strength, were decisively defeated and the original motion of censure, to which the foregoing had been moved in amendment, was still awaiting decision in Parliament when Mr. King asked His Excellency for dissolution on Monday, June 28th. 6To have granted Mr. King a dissolution under such circumstances would have been a di;ect denial of the right of Parliament to pass upon the vote of censure then pending. 7 Following Mr. King's resignation, Parliament by a majority of 10 did actually adopt a direct vote of censure on the King Govern. ment, and declared it unworthy of confidence or office. 8 It was Mr. King's refusal to follow British precedent in co-operating with the incoming administration to pass supplies and complete the sessional programme that left Mr. Meighen no alternative but to ask for dissolution. 9 Mr. Meighen followed the same course as that adopted by Sir Wilfrid Laurier in 1911, when he saw that it was impossible to carry on and abruptly dissolved Parliament 10 If His Excellency had recalled Mr. King to office, he would have done so in the very face of Parliament's vote of censure. 11 Under Mr. King's interpretation of the constitution a Premier need never resign, but could demand dis- solution after dissolution, despite the v 'rdict of e Parliament or the electorate, and the Governor General must Perforce accept his advice. This is the story. It calls for no cornment—it speaks for itself [ The Conservative Party stands solid as a rock for sound 1135ritish constitutional practice, the maintenance of the British connecuion, and the right of Canada to enjoy the blessings of -stable' Government. INV, A00%kl 9 1 FO.R ANDR W H1. C S I A aV 1LJ. -11 'n U And ad6id another. Ele WA nqe� t 44W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ", I �' ioliI , UP or= ed SO 04t7y"Q44 nocessAr— , Iry "T"G" L k. I ily luo�.Iu des a cholce of vVlety As WOU as the 'selection of seed Of aot Tito Tonilo and TU!sty- Every, farmer should Ask himself thee � two questions: Am I Vegetable Laxative. Kro-1119 we vest variety? Am I us, SWe Relief for ing the best possible seed of that variety? Some varieties are more suitable Constipation for certain districts than others; will retv=,greater Yields; Will produce a 25 and 50 Cents quality of crop which will demand a better market; or will be more suit -1 At Druggists able for feeding requirements. it pays to solicit the advice of the near- est experimental station, agricultural college or agricultural agent regard- ing the varieties which are likely to give best results and then to test out s(,urce available. Registered seed at few of these beside the old sort, should be secured if at all' possible Once a really desirable variety has as this is the highest grade of seed been located the next important ques- recognized commercially. If it is de - tion to settle is how to obtain and sired to improve a variety, a simple maintain a supply of good seed of method is to go through the field at that variety. It is safe to use only harvest time and select a large num- pure seed of high vitality, plump and ber of heads from plants which are uniform in quality, free from disease strong, vigorous, free from diseazoe and well matured. and uniform in type. It is very im� I When a change of seed is necessary portant that the selection of identical it should be obtained from the best heads be observed or the resulting crop may not be uniform. These 'xiV ?,k 10 3. I'00 and graded with a fan, "4fws, �;,vlhe seed AoUld be oown oc, e -quarter 49, plot of about one W, 44 -4%06� on clean land to increase U the. SUOO ; It has beendemoustrat- The.; 04ger reolog or;,. TIAV` o?d mqny"-)fimes that seed produced by W0.7 eager wq=-11,30, Z, 4 with careful and efficient Of use A'.q,00d fanning mill, may pay N on the hatbo*A0 for -the qr*Uble many times over. busly he v mu14 re 4qR&t%A4T.16 it aloft, and thon, d LADY, ASTOR'S TRICK HAT -BOX would -be sudden dispin, M.. It. IT.P.01 A rit A Lady 9 ney Astor is back In Vir- ment and reproachful. , gl v, bori aUces 16 t4he If no I ginia for a holiday in the home of h two Jadlei Who . . . . . . . . girlhood, 4 similar to the visit of 1922 when 4o included Toronto in her travels. if redb.aps have good memories they recall a certain habit of Lady Astor four years agu which will cause them to regard -her luggage with a suzpic- ions eye, especially her hat -boxes. Lady Astor, of course, has a spriglitly sense of humor that has been well kno%vn from the mischiev- ous pranks of chilhood to her irre- Pre-8sibility in the Brit4sh House of Common$. hi 1922 she had as private secre:ary II Ruth Pennybacker, whos disposition matched Lady As - torts, and bel%vt-en them they perpet- rated a co�tijival hoax on redcaps. Miss Penn.vbacker disdained port - Best of all Fly Killers -10c and 25c per packet at all Druggists, Grocers and General Stores. able typewriters. The machine she used Was a full-grown, adult affair with all the accessories and it made a good solid 'chunk of thirty-five I pounds or more. It was a fine ma. chine, but the difficulty was how to carry it because there was ho case. Lady Astor had a nice strong lea- ther batbox built to withstand the tortures of Atlantic travel. She of- fered it as a solution of her secre- W Pressing their 919010% It 'Was the Same at h0tel& Many a dignified Porter's mapAcent snav- HY was shattered when, Us essayed to lift that leather hatbox lightly from taxi to pavement. Redcaps and porters began to be- lieve that Lady Astor must wear a fine assortment of steel helmets. -1 IS LOVER OF HORSES The Scottish -Canadian millionaire, John McEntee Bowman of New York, is one of the few "hundred per cent" business men who believe that the horse will not be driven out by the motor car. Recently he made a trip to England tb 49'. International bo=1 931— Air. Bowman, who started bis g"4ijoser- Az a clerk, now owas 'a a -- of palatial hotes in'th'e largest Ameri- can cities. Not much more than twenty years ago he was nearly starving in seareh of a Job in New York, when he called on a hotel, Proprietor named Baumann. The similarity in their names aroused the proprietor's interest, and sooTt young Bowman -had his foot on the ladder which he has climbed so high. tin e The constitutional issue i's pure Political buncombe, desi',,,,-- d to divert attention from the King Government's administration of the Customs Depairtment, upon which issue it was ignominiously defeated in the House of Commons, Here are the vi*tal stubborn facts: I In September, 1925, Mr. King was granted dissolution by His Excellency Lord Byng, on the representation that he must be given a chance to secure a clear working majority. He stated at Richmond Hill that if such a majority was not forthcoming, he would not attempt to carry on. 2 In the old Parliament thus dissolved there had been 234 members, of whom 117 were Liberals, 66 were Progressives or Independents and 51 were Con- servatives. 3 In the new Parliament, elected in October, 1925, Mr. Meighen had by far the largest group --almost half the total membership of the House. Out of 245 seats the Conservatives had X16, the Liberals 101, the Progressives 24, Labour 2, and Independents 2. 4 Instead of immediately resigning, as he should have done in view of the ground upon which he had been granted dissolution, Mr. King asked for and was granted leave to carry on, on the assurance that he would leave the fate of his administration to Parliament itself. 5 On Friday, June 25th, three separate motions by so- called independents, in suPPort of which Mr. King's Government marshalled its last ounce of strength, were decisively defeated and the original motion of censure, to which the foregoing had been moved in amendment, was still awaiting decision in Parliament when Mr. King asked His Excellency for dissolution on Monday, June 28th. 6To have granted Mr. King a dissolution under such circumstances would have been a di;ect denial of the right of Parliament to pass upon the vote of censure then pending. 7 Following Mr. King's resignation, Parliament by a majority of 10 did actually adopt a direct vote of censure on the King Govern. ment, and declared it unworthy of confidence or office. 8 It was Mr. King's refusal to follow British precedent in co-operating with the incoming administration to pass supplies and complete the sessional programme that left Mr. Meighen no alternative but to ask for dissolution. 9 Mr. Meighen followed the same course as that adopted by Sir Wilfrid Laurier in 1911, when he saw that it was impossible to carry on and abruptly dissolved Parliament 10 If His Excellency had recalled Mr. King to office, he would have done so in the very face of Parliament's vote of censure. 11 Under Mr. King's interpretation of the constitution a Premier need never resign, but could demand dis- solution after dissolution, despite the v 'rdict of e Parliament or the electorate, and the Governor General must Perforce accept his advice. This is the story. It calls for no cornment—it speaks for itself [ The Conservative Party stands solid as a rock for sound 1135ritish constitutional practice, the maintenance of the British connecuion, and the right of Canada to enjoy the blessings of -stable' Government. INV, A00%kl 9 1 FO.R ANDR W H1. C S I A aV 1LJ. -11 'n U And ad6id another. Ele WA nqe� t 44W . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ", I �'