The Huron Expositor, 1934-08-03, Page 2441.{.1T
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ii 1VICLean, Editor.
t Seaforth Ontario, ev-
y afternoon. by McLean'
se.ription rate, $1.50 a year in
ge; foreign $2.00 a year. Single
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SEAFORTH, Friday, August 3, 1934
War Clouds
Since the assassination of Chancel-
lor Dollfuss of Austria,.a week ago,
dark clouds have appeared in the al-
ready overcast sky of Europe.
A similar assassination in the same
. country just twenty years ago,
• brought on the Great War. Just
what the outcome of the recent 'one,
is, especially at this distance, impos-
• sible to say.
It is unthinkable, however, to be-
lieve that with the horrors Of the re-
cent world conflict still so vividly be-
• fore their eyes, that European na-
tions would willingly or -unwillingly,
on any pretext, allow themselves to
be drawn into A similar, or it might
be a worse experience.
•
What the Axe Has Done
• and Should Do
We are hearing a great deal these
days about the political' axe. What
it has done. What it is going to do.
Some of the ,comments are favor-
able to the Government which is
wielding the axe. Perhaps more of
them are not. •
In a statement made the other day,.
Hon. T. B. McQuesten said that
the axe had already saved the Prov-
ince $1,000,000 a year.
In- other words, unnecessary posi-
tions which the Government had
been maintaining And unnecessary
salaries which the Government had
been paying to the extent of $1,000,-
000 a year, had been abolished by the
new Government, and that much
money saved to the taxpayers.
•Of course the people of Ontario
have learned to talk about money so
glibly that a million dollars rolls off
the tongue as if it mounted to ten
cents.
But a million dollars of real money
is a million dollars anywhere in the
world, a n d Ontario's taxpayers
should not sneeze at it.
To be sure, it will fall far short of
•paying the provincial debt, but at the
same time a million dollars will go
a long way in meeting the interest
charges on that debt. And the inter-
est charges in themselves have be-
come a mill stone about the necks of
Ontario taxpayers.
That is what the political axe has
done to date and we are told it has
only commended to swing.
But if the political axe is to effect
real measures of economy, it should
be wielded on both sides of the fence.
A week ago Premier Hepburn
threw up his arms in disgust and ex-
\ claimedthat he was not running an
employment bureau.
That because of the horde of office
seekers for political positions, neither
.e-- he mor his ministers had been able to
• find the time necessary to give pro-
per attention to either the reorgan-
• ization or administration of their re-
- waive departments.
The axe should be swung there too
• —and swung hard.
Premier Hepburn's promise to re-
duce the cost of administering the
• business of Ontario by fifty per cent.
Ws one of the, things that put him
• in aka, r
flow v can he fulfill that promise if
onfp people expect him to make six
• ltigt, heelers bloom where only
letimed before.
thet Will, it be his duty to see
•ot1r one 'capable official is $3143,-.
Sik *ere
ap.
atoost �n1oi
V. 4W • ;era
ilmrt,i'i)(`A‘Arl(4,1).11L)rtlerrtt,
-
Ma' '
will the government of Ontario be
put an a busineSs basis.
We believe that Mr. Reptant un-
derstandthat thoroughly. ;What
his political followers should do is to
trY and understandif \too.' To •help
and encourage him in 'carrying out
his policy of economy, instead of put-
ting every obstacle possible in his
path.
Provincial Police as Game
Wardens
It is reported that the new Pro-
vincial Governm' ent of Ontario has
under consideration the advisability
of dispensing with thwervices of all
present Game Wardens and making ,
the Provincial Police responsible for
the enforcement of the game laws
throughout the Province.
In the northern districts of On-
tario, which - a r e internationally
known as a sportsman's paradise and
where the game laws have been en-
force& with a rigidity that has in- '
stilled a wholesome respect for law
on the part of residents and tourists
alike, that new arrangement might
work out quite satisfactorily.
• In those distriots the residential .
provincial police might have the time
to patrol forest and stream and look
after the work as it should be looked
after.
- In the older settled counties of On-
tario, however, the proposition is an
entirely different one. *
In these .older counties the place -
• for . the provincial police is on the
highways and not the by -ways. In
. fact, the patrol of the highways is
already too thinly spread out during
the summer season when traffic is at
the peak.
If the provincial police are to be
taken off the highways, or their pres-
ent duties added to °rill any way in-
terferred with, public safety is going
to be seriously endangered and at the
same time there will be no benefit
• derived from the standpoint 'of game
protection.
We understand that the mooted
change is to be made in the interests
of economy, and, as far as the older
• counties in Ontario are concerned, it
was high time that the spending of
very considerable ,sums of money in
the name of game 'protection was
stopped.
As a matter of fact, although we
have game wardens and deputy game
wardens and expensive salaries and
offices in connection with them, there
has never. been„ the slightest effort
on the part of these officials either to
patrol their territory or to enforce
the game laws.
• Thegreater part of the people in
these older counties are, apparently,
unaware of the fact that there are
such things as game laws in exist-
ence, -and 'too many of those who do
know, treat them with utter con-
tempt:
Firing the game wardens and
turning their duties over to the pro-
vincial police is not going to improve
matters either.
The provincial police already have
as much or more than they can at-
tend to now, without making them
game wardens. Besides their train-
ing does not fit them for any such of-
fice. It would be time and money
wasted.
What the Government should do
in our older counties is to either
abolish the game laws altogether and
the wardens with them, so as to put
the present law breakers and the
sportsmen who do obey the "'game
laws, on an equal footing, or to make
the office of game warden, something
more than just party patronage, and
appoint men fitted with training and
experience to carry out the work.
The -protection of game in old On-
tario has been too long neglected. •
gone
Interesting items picked born
Tha, Eneositor a fifty and
1mentY-11170 years ago.
From The Huron Expositor of
•• August 1, 1884. •
:Wihile Mr. James Netherby and
Mrs. -Wire; were driting Ointhe grav-
el road north of Blytb, the other day,
they met a troupe of performing
bears and their owners. The horse
became frightened at the bears and
ran sway, throwing both roccupants
of the rig out and both :were badly
injured. •
last ,. week Robert McAllister of
West Vaiwanosh sold to A. McGregor
of Lucknow a yoke of two-year-old
oxen for $100.
• Mr, William) Griffin hals left with
the Clinton New -Era a Bible printed
in the year 1639, nearly three hun-
dred years ago. It is lava good State
of preservation.
The Methodists of Varna , circut
have 'discontinued the use of the Old
Canada Methodist church- on the
iGotsbea:Like and intend holding ser-
vice' hereafter in the (building form-
erly occupied by the late Methodist
Episcopals. •
(Fall wheat was selling on the Sea -
forth market at $1.00 this week; oats
at 36e; butter, 12c; eggs, 15c; pork,
$7.00, and hay $6.00, per ton.
(The residents of lOardno's Block
and the townspeople' generally, got
pretty badly scared on Tuesday ev-
ening, when volumes of smoke were
seen issuing from the cellar of Messrs.
Laidlaw. & Fairley's central grocery.
Prompt action by the firemen, soon
had the fire under control. The fire
brigade were on the ground and
ready for work two minutes after the
alarm, was eounded.
'Mr. George A. Sills is offering
reward of $2.00 for a black and tan
terrier pup which answers to the
name of "Lula," lo'st, in Seaforth on
July 26th.
"Old Clear Grit,". the' famous stal-
lion owned by Mr. George Whitely of
this town, had to be destroyed on
Mo-nday in Toronto, owing to 'the ac-
cident which we noted last week. He
had served his country better prob-
ably than any horse that had gone
(before and his loss is a great one,
not only to • his owner, but to the
breeding interests of Canada.
Mr. William Broadfoot of Tucker -
smith delivered in town this week a
-three-year-old gelding which he had
sold to John Hicks of 1VIitchell for
$210. •
The matched race between John
Ward's "Mohawk Chief" and Mr. Rat-
• tenbury's "Royal Revenge"- will take
place on September 4th. -
The Egynondiville manse is now
nearly completed and is one of the
neatest residences in town.
Mr. VanEgmond's new woollen
factory is -new in operation, but there
is more machinery yet to be added.
•Mr. Edward .11/2CFaul has purchased
the 'handsome store on • Main Street
which he now occupies. for the' sum
of $3,250.
When retiring for the night one ev-
ening this week, one of the children
of Mr. Robert Boyce, 2nd concession
of Stanley, turned down the wick of
the lamp into the oil, causing the
lamp to explode. The room was en-
veloped in flames but. Mr: Boyce
,smethered the flames with buffalo
robes before any serious damage was
,done.
IThe corner stone of a fine two
storey brick residence of (Mr. ,W. A.
`Kaugh, hardware merchant of Hen -
sail was laid on Monday evening by
Mr. W. J. 'Ohapm,an of Wingham. A
large number of friends were present
to witness the ceremony.
Oere, Was no e
Ni449-40" ab01,4iTtli,e4#0uialhe
• stss
a
salvleatrg?' "I;(111:4'114.'0,14$1110**3r
recent issue of the Vlemseree ,Home
CoMpanions tells if Walt Dieney'S'
rise to fairne astride the inimitable
Mieskey, Disney's father .ineideenally,
was born in this 'distniet and his
-grandfather wag one of the early
settlersoinsthe ywhAl.'Nag)* anleMg.t4e
Douglas Fairbenks on his work great rnederns.
tour . endeared. himself to, „caortilisalsused on original drawingts` of him) on
and hoed bentera by showieg themthe walls of feshioliable galleries. In
tIViiokey 3ou inevies," begins air. short, 'Mickey is a Universal '''charac-
Johnsen. s"Tribes of .Kaffses in-.Selsth. ter.
Africa recentaydeellived to accept.any •His creatoinis Walt Deryssa small
cakes of soap whish did not bear the eager -faced dap fsg, a little be -
image of .aVliekey, -just, as fermerly.!wildered, but wholly unspoiled by his
they declined -coins. Which, did not sudden nhie tto fame.,!44114./,
bear the image of Queen Victoria. moved front a aVfissouri faiiroto Kat -
Mackey was recently" created a citizen !sas City when he, was eight years
of 'Francs at a carnival in Granville. old. From the age of 9. to -16 he de -
His 'fifth birthday, on September 25 livered newspapers, 'getting up every
last, occasioned column long. editorsninniing at 3.30, finishing about six
liars in English neirepa.pers. In Crer- and thee selling papers 'on a Corner.
many, Hitler has denotmeed young He repeated this routine after school
Nordics for 'Wearing Mickey Mouse in the afterneon. His earnings went
emblems- instead' of the swastika. into the family fends. At 1.5he got'
There (are theaters in Sweden and in a job as :peanut butcher on trains.
India- which run seven or eight . Responsibility and hard work sit_an
Mickey Mouse epics. one after the .early age gave him his drive •.and ie -
other as their Misfit program. The tdustry.
animated cartoon is the life of the Visney began to draw' .almost as
movie business in Japan where the. s.oson as, he 'began to walk. _He was.
feature picture' is often cut to piecesan old ' hand at craYons• before _he
because of .the Oriental -prejudice a- was of school age. In 1917, he A
gainst .seenes where lovers are shown tended high School for a year and
frying in the deep fat of passion. studied cartooning at .night. Then
P
The mumlbet a admissions to the-
(Centinued, on age 6)
)
,Mary, %easel
esIdeart Tl.nosevelt are anscrag hJLS
fins, gere than 600 martufaeture4•
articles ranging frroni doormats
Ito
jewels and watches bear his-pertraii.
TM-1*Wiia Atrt,r' declaried actort
Hushes director of the Art Institute
of Ohieago, in installing a perntan,
••
betniifellr:Jf1('ShadO.Ttleaftite.."
V.40, illkt**,401,!ftisWaine.SWeez afteetpg IG hie
likiss4i4: .„
During iheatertein(lieraturet
The yews oreCb404"1**eltrolif-A041-'-'
but there'sssiot
this morning; s -s. Winghanit.SAsinene04-
Times. s
Fish Spilled on .....
‘Flih were spilled all aver theshighs:
way -When Wesley. Thompson
Church 'fish' •peddler, driVing his vehicle
out of a farniSer's lane. nestr. Groderichs
ran it plumb into. the side of a pass-
ing truclo with disastrous reedits to
the fish wagon and its. ,00nteotn—s
Winghata Advance,Tintes,•
Big Specimen of Black Knot •
'That black knot isIsa very trouble.
;some disease on trees was proved be-
yond doubt by Joe Wilson, who for
two oe three years has been Cutting
black knOts -6ff his 'eherrY tree. .0a
ihlenday he decided to dig -the tree •
up and about 18 inches ibeloes the, 1.
ground, found a black knot growth/
on the root which Measnres 18%, in- • •
chez around and about 61/2 inche$
deep. It is now on display in our win-
dow.• It was brought to this office bar
T. Saint.-Wingham- Advance-Tit:mess;
On Trip to England
J. rellock, oWhiteeturch, LS.
leaving ''Thergies•-ofthiaweeli-to
his sister and other friends
England: While away he will take
trips to Wales, • Scotland and -Den-
mark:—Wingham Advance -Times.
• Hunkin Reunion •
The annual Hunkin reunion was
held at Grand. Bend on July 21st. The
.diy being ideal there was a record
attendance,' over 100 •persons sitting
down to supper. •One of the features
of the day was. a guessing contest
which was won by .MT.• Fred Hamlin,.
the pldest member of the reunion
Officers were appointed for 1936 and
the date of the next -picnic was set
for July 22, 1935, at Grand Bend
The'officers are:. President, William
Passmore; Secretary, Benson Tuckey„.
—Exeter Times -Advocate.
Grace Church Organ Ready Sept. lst
A meeting of the organ committee
of Grace Lutheran Church who are
making arrangements for. the pur-
chase of •i new organ, was held last
week. Word has been received frona
the Leye & Sons Organ 'Company of
Toronto from whichthe purchase is,
being made,, that thenew organ wia
be ready by.'Septerntber lst.—Mitchelt
Advocate.
Service Station to be Erected
Tearing down of iliarry .on the
Property of the late Robert Smitla
on the Main Street next to the Pres-
byterian% ce-metery at the east end of
the town, was .completed this week_
It is understood that the McColl -Fran -
tense Oil Co. intend to erect an up-
to-date service station on this pro
perty.--Mitchell Advocate.
Scholarship Winners
JUST A SMILE OR TWO
• "NoW, boys," said the teacher, "tell
me the signs of the zodiac. You first;
Thomas."
•"Taurus, the Bull."
"Right! Now you, Harold, an-
other one."
"Cancer, the Crab."
• "Right a,gairi. Anod now it's your
turn, Albert." - -
The boy looked puzzled, hesitated
monient, and then blurted out,
"Mickey, the Mouse."—Tdariime Mer-
chant, Halifax:
WHAT 0'111ER PAPERS SAY.
- Nice Boarders
(Toronto Daily Star)
A letter in Me Star to -day notes the presence
of nine skunks on a lawn in it. Toronto.suburb.
The little animals are pery fond of potato peel-
jngs and if Toronto folk care tis eneceseage them
they eatt, o VO by leaving these ahoet, The
story le told of ma -who retred' Iris, ounurnier
ottaglet4 a fe il3Yw1ho MI tirealcmiltS Oat
• 106.1111*14hboti riditr hour oath. eri)lenmg,
•itlid *hen the OWher tealizned POsitteireit lie WAS
.aif;eiiiSIieatoMai It'tfe5itt-66116--15-t 'theee Oreatureg
rlir a 0061114'
,
The teacher heard a chilkl crying;
and rushed out to the Playground to
find out the pause of the distu,rbance.
"What is the trouble?" she asked
little Jimmie, who stood calmly iby,
eating an orange.
"Billy took Fred's orange," explain-
ed Jimmie.
'Mid where- is the orange?" asked
the teaeher.
"Ohs Five got that," replied Jim
me, "You see, I am the lawyer."—
Chriatian Science Monitor.
SUNDAY AFTERNOON
•
• (By Isabel Hamilton, Goderich, Ont.)
But Thout bast needy brethren here,
Partakers of Thy grace,
Whose names, Thou wilt Thyself con-
fess
Before the Fether's face.,
And in their accents of distress
Thy pleading sioice is heard;
In them Thou mlayest be clothed and
fed
And visited and cheered.
Philip Doddridge.
• PRAYER
Grant, we 'beseech of Thee, that
we may pay good heed to Thy word
so that our lives may become copies
of Thine own. Amen.
S. S. LESSON FOR AUGUST 5th
•
From The Huron Expositor of
August 6, 1909
Mr. Charles Brone has a nice patch
of ripe tomaOns which for qtiality
and flavor cannot ibe excelled: Mr.
Brodie is a go )d gardener and takes
a speca1 Pride in haing everything
of the ,aest cmat",.
The first new wheat of the season
was brought to the ,Seaforth mills on
Tuesday list by Mr. Thomas grieve
of McKillop. It was a good sample.
Messrs. J. J. Cluff, W. Reid, J.
Cummings. and T. Johnson were in
Paris this week attending , the con-
vention of the Volunteer Firemen's
Asociatio-n.
Hensel' lawn bowlers intend mak-
ing a handsome green on the lot on
Main Street they recently purchased
from Mr. G. C. Petty.
Mr. R. D. Bell, Jr4, is erecting a
fine new brick residence on his farm
a mile and a quarter east of Henson.
•tKeake ,Bros.,, of, Wroxeter are in
Brussels this week manufacturing
apple barrels for -Messrs. Thornson &
Beaker to be used this coming fall.
Pressed brick arrived this week for
the Carnegie Library building at
Brussels and the work is being rap-
idly pushed ahead.
Fall )whet was $1.09 on the Sea -
forth ,markt .this week; oats, 53c;
butter,1.7c; eggs, 1Sc, and hay $6.00i
Mir. Allan Enke of Stanley has pur-
chased 480 acres of land in Alberta
-while his brother Dr'. J. Esler, has
acquired two Sections in the same
district. The properties ate located
about 60 miles froro a railroad at
present.
The 'county rate- payable by Exeter
this year is -1861.00.
The last of the IVICM-urchie 'bank
safe Which was blown up ever a year
ago, Was tiken eitt Of' ton -last week
to go into the scrap Pile
Mr: Jaines. Martin used 30 peunds
of tatine on -nine acres Of wheat. He
had an extra good crop this yeari
4)1
1..,41191.
44
end of histapaCity:
Another miracleis recorded in vers
es 42-44.
Good fortune now seems to have
befallen Elisha. Pious Israelites were
now transferring to the prophets
what had once been given to the
Levitical prests: hence they brought
to Elisha..lsread of the -first fruits
twenty laves of barley, and full ears
of corn in the husk thereof." Sure
ly this was a new thing to Eitsha
and a great change from the mode
f life which he had been la:terly
leading. Fe began life under very
co ini ortable cireumstances; probanly
being one of the richest melt who. up
to that time, had been called into the
set vice of the Isord. He had, how-
ever, had his tifne of trial and suf-
feSog, but now the sun seemed to
be shining :upon him, and plenty
seemed to, be at his disposal. What
did he do, with his good fortune? It
is re -markable that he did not selfish-
ly. appropriate. it, but at once said:
"Give unto the people, that they may
Son of God. Whatever he had he
held for the benefit of others. The
servantsaid, "What should I. set this
before a hundred men?" That is to
small it is for them; it is
more than enoughi for thee, but how
ger Of a hundred men? Elijah has
wrong in the sense that no one has been considered to be a type of John
jli7Sha Ihee,...been peen 0 dimmer
constantly going about in the cities
able for the domestic miracles which
other prophet resembled him of whom
(From The Peoples' Bble).
In the case represented by the 1
•
42-44.
Needy. •
of these relates to the. multiplication
containing what may (be termed eat." Here again is a foreshadow -
this :arch -ran is brought before us as
dow seems to base herappal. This
Ehsha's ii,rivrite -miracles. The first ine of the spirit and method of the
of the widow's oil. The husband of
A
of Jehovah:, and on that fact the wi-
, say, how
is • in some respects wrong, and in far would it go in satisfying the hun-
ger
who- was a faithful worshipper,
other respects not unnatural. It was
right to expeet to be regarded as the Baptist, and in many respects
woman inherited her husband's es-
traits....Air character not unworthy of
tate, bad as it was, (but she did not being regarded as typical of Jesus
inherit necessarily her -husband's good Christ; he was genial in life he was
pious on any hereditary aeon:mt. The
character. The fact however, that
eons, as he was by lawentitled to do.
she referred to his religious charac-
and villages; his career was remark -
to come( her way on that, amount. It be. worked; surely in all. these re-
appears that the law of debt was one spetts he reserribles More than any
ter, -sfhowed she eXpected some good
tohe
frleamwa,orkiembl,oesesse.verity, alike in the
Athenian and Roman law and also in Moses and the prophets did write!—
widows the creditor claims, now that
the father is dead, the services of the
For -
of Jesus -Christ. Elisha asked the eign Bible Society. Apart from them
women, "What shall I do for Thee?" the battle against ignorance and er-
Jesus often asked the same question ror could not be successfully waged,
ell, yet a geod purpose was to he the entireenterprise. But we need
gainettinin-g• her lostatester • far-- Prom the earliest days of
case in her own words. Elisha asked the Society the eolporteurs have .giv-
said: "Tell me, what host thou it the day are true to the great tradi-
the house?" Jesus Christ askedthe tionts of state past. At the present
of those who came to Him for heal- for it is they who push home the
ing or relief: "What with thou that victory. If the colporteuts failed in
disciples what bread they had before time they tire face to face with e
I shall do unto thee?" No doubt the devotion, courage and ,perseverance,
prophet knew what the widow want- a • shrewd blowbe struek at
' would . Te.inigs
andther queStion whieh Jesus. Christ en valiant service and those who are
also put ort sorrie oecasions. Elisha now bearing the burden and heat of
.
'This chapter has ben' described as
Lesson Topic — Elisha Helps the
Lesson Passage—II Kings 4:1-7,
Golden Text—Matthew 25:40.
The way in which Elisha addresses This is a soldiers' (battle, and the
himself to the circumstances of the soldiers are the 1,100 colporteurs in.
case is very significant -of the method the service of The Britisfh and For -
w°114 rfiakperaoynfril:in de.,,z..dEif.
the molt/hide. It is God's plan to and the general restlessness of the
he proceeded to eatialy the hunger of ermaus obstacles. Econonsie distress
work. Thus we become fello-work, to go on: bravely and hopefully. That
"Go, borrow tree- veSsele Oro..
start with what We hay. He will
hand, and then proceed to his own 4:.taireye ti‘drnoessowshijeenaki9t .misor• heartdivZry them
ers with God. .
first take elverything that is In our is never, easy, and doubtIess there
Now Elisha proceeds to his Work, --s anYA words eiffituhelyto?a., tIadts. kis tht;e:
ad
wih
tal: actidethyd,71,Bgh*barOws, obey:Oa feem::yfitiVeelf-':alpe teeorfe.:1the variaus. countie t� un_
sels." (But this was net all be said; Policy of he Society to engage rig-
orism azninstroction which comperes .'dertslie thin Work. ' Obeittafsisi ehse
strongly with what Sense 'Christ hi-• 'kneel their fellow-Couttrmeirt better
received a cheque from the Domn- mended to shut -door upon herself
The town treastirer of Mitchell has in prayer. Illse weimati was thin- and they bave no to:overt:eine the
self started with.segard to our tion than any foreigner ean Ittele thea,
ionttl •Si=ticlileglri:oll, atai:if: 6efcerbeli:
pay for thesite a the new .post of- into all the vestsel. . '
ion Govenernriesist fer $1,600 Which will and, upon her eilftS; -,andarboitpeouraine•
'611 er son, work to' tile, sensperrament and habits
- • . n
Meca
V:. n dpt their (methods of
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-14
'4
oi
WORLD MISSIONS
Who Are the Colporteurs?
We Jain with the many friends of
the pupils' who wrote on tjse Entrance
Examinations at this centreof whicla
a report was given in last weeles
pape. Zurich school again carts
through with flying colors as three
of the class captured the Wer
oriel Scholars -hips donated by the
Township of Hay. Mildred Haberer
-wins the first award of $27.60; Mar-
jorie Gellman, the second of $16.50,
and Gertrude Turkheim, the third, of
$11. 'Scholars from this school hate -
been successful in ,win:ning all three
scholarships for the past number of
years.—Zurich Herald.
Small Boy Struck
A near accident of an unusual na-
ture occurred on Tuesday, July 24thos,
When 'IVIis Naftei of Goderioh town-
ship, driving,
her car, struek the.
tricycle on which little Jimmiy Adams
in
was riding and turned /dover orz
the side of the road withot, appar-
ently,, injuring him in the least. Missi
Nafteil was proceeding' to a garage -
to have the lights on her car repair-
ed and did not see the youngster un-
til ,toe late. Fortunately no serious,hs
results are anticipated. — Goderic
Star. •
Mr. C. A. Robertson Ill
His innumerable friends will learrt
with regret that Mr. C. A. Robertson,.
recently elected member of the Leg-
isature for Huron -Bruce, was Sud-
denly talcen ill on Wednesday eVen-
ing, First reports were to the ef-
fect that his seizure was quite ser-
ious but his intimate friends state
that it is expected that he will some
be around again.—Goderich Star.
Hand Badly Burnea
Whileworkingin s
hilabOratory ore
Monday, Dr. A. W. IrWizi, detitist, had
his hand badly burned when an ex-
plsion occurred from oil Which he
was Using. The burn is of such a
nature that it has heen necessary to
have the entire band wrapped. Al-
though there was slight .danage ' to
the laboratory; he managed to get s.
the fire etinguished, (before there
was any seribus losS.—linton News -
Record: •
Dies in Tenth Year
The synipathy is extended to akir-
-and Mrs. 'Harry Ford and family of
Bill/Mlle in their sad ibereevement
in• the passing of their' youngest
dauhter, Edna. On Prkay she *as
removed to St. Joseph's Hospital at
London, Where she had been operat-
ed on for appendicitis fortteto two, •
days ef extreine suffering the bright
Iittle life passed away Sunday on
the dawn of hoe tenth birthdy. Edna
will be ,greatly; .ndssed by all her
sehool mates and Si/richly school
and as a member of the Mission Bend
a'S she alwayisstook part in all aotivi-'
ties as a faithfel and consistent
Mernber. She is saly' mourned b,"
her 'parenta, tvnObrothers and twot
siestas Laura, Snit, Clarence and Gor-
den, all at home. The fiiiteral
skatteabla 'Wih Intern/AM
igiteter eetiatert.Y.---gitebpf •
.AdOeittes: ' '