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The Huron Expositor, 1939-02-10, Page 2i ;�� , . ,y ,� I'll„ . ' 1 r 4r,��i�lli;`„ 1 ,,� '`; s ablash�d 1860 l01 r�''`�Ilq;`x�!�h lVloPkiail McLean Editor. ” t tl�fr;{ ,. .h at Seaforih, enteric, ev- lyf,� ' r °Thursday afternoon by McLean 11� qI µ W! ,. y ,1111 "I 'M ' , subscription rates, $1.50 a year in I i vazace; foreign, X2.00 a year. Single ,1 �� . ��� w copies, 4 cents each. + 1,' 6 Y � ,. 11%z� . S� FORTH, Friday, February 10 - 9 _' . 1 `. ` - ` To Honor Mr.. Lapointe h: ,. `: Signal honor is to be paid Hon. ;,1-��1'" Ernest Lapointe on Faebruary 18th, Y i`1 , -:. , men he will complete, his thirty- �;, kith year as a member of the Do- minion Parliament. � 1" . On that date, which is also the '. Dirty --fifth 'anniversary of Mr, and . +`;: Xr& La inite's wedding day, Mr. . � ,pointe will be guest of honor at a pe Liberal banquet in his home city of 1Quebec. E..,, The banquet will be attended by a: ',1, premier King and his entire Cabinet 1"s : �d also in attendance will be over ene1hundred members of Ptarliaanent, r'epresen'tative of every Province in 1 the Dominion,. • ,1111 Thiriy4ive years ago when Mr. .. r,l .. �� . ]Lapointe entered Parliament, he was - s- a young .French lawyer, unknown ?;:,.. and without influence. To -day he is nht only Minister of Justice, but, per- daps, the most able' and outstanding - 'Ina'n, that has ever occupied that 3 position since Confederation. But that is not al..-. .. Thirty-five ° Vicars ago when Mr. Lapointte came yto Ottawa he could not speak a word tHGi. f bi•�, of the English language. Today '` mere is no more fluent or eloquent 1. ,- speaker, in that language, in the a' House of Commons. �r_ In fact, Mr. Lapointe has no peers ^r and very few equals, as. a speaker in , . either the French or English lan- '� .1 ,gauge in Canada. While as a Par- liamentarian and statesman he is outstanding in this country, -and in- � . 11, �1. ' ternationally known as one of Can - i#'� ada's most able men. ,N '. ,I Thirty-five years is a long time to ,11 be.a Member of Parliament, but Mr. '_ Lapointe has not only been in the it lHouse that long, but will continue to ' > I' be a member as long as he cares to be one. He has (seen many changes 1 . in Parliament; many changes in the `� fortunes of his political party, but . there 'h'as been no change in the loy- :1 a' alty of his, constituents, nor is there •L ,.:. `"�! likely to be. ;5.: Ability and political preferment =do ry e' - lot always command either popular- '�� ity or respect, but with Mr. Lapointe I'll they do, and both political friend and ". i� , political foe are alike in their recog- 1, a nitiori. �). • ,r. `N, Still Object To Pasteurization lxlrc> !4 ;. -11 11 The new pasteurization law put in- , .�� to force a few months ago is not a r�„ ... ;: bit more popular in the country dis- Yit. ". tricts to -day than it was the day it _: Gwent into fore's. As a matter of fact, opposition to F'n: _4 the new Act seems to be steadily Vii,+ %, . I �;rowi'hg in the townships through- :,,,, � out the Province, because it does '`',` work an actual hardship on the peo- I;1, I ple in small centres, who have milk 9, t!0 to sell as well as on those who have `_ r:;: %rmerly purchad their milk raw r*. "; t from the surrounding farmers or i 1; � ; . -from the small dairy, . r, IThe general opinion in the coun- bl, ,., "` r 'try, , districts seems to be that the °i1r compulsory tuberculosis testing of -: ;h .cattle, and not pasteurization of u lcl�ilk, is the answer to check the ,14 m . spread of the disease. That many advantages to health follow in the wake of pasteurization there can be , ,', I no denying,'but these advantages are I.— very much mor4 apparen�x,in large "l.ll, centres, where milk is apt to be massy '� , ;' Fours old and to change hands sev- ;' eral times 'before it reaches the con- �; . z niers. 4'; Tin the country districts and in viI- ,, Iages filhe situation is different. There r,; , d'iylivory is made at"first hand, and it, `I. is there ''that a miore or less, serious ' '{,t, �tuation has arisen because the neer ' • �`� lair has c�xt c�fl" .;ire livelihoods of ,' r,§ ` many small dairies and milk produc- l! ;tit eft. " n�+ `fi(here +are m�uy queer th>rngs in `'ya a►d t�h >rer1nriatY�in law 3,, ,, z ki is not ' an cepl;� ►rr the general , e Where ale_. s e veyrYy.. (luelr z ". , f ,"., 1 1i i � til ► W�s L' l� lig . ",�}q uay,',rrrr 11 - 1.- _ ., . u''.11 tily5 �'�"{� G>�('1,,.;,,., t/n R'. to,.rS,r.nI i�{rM , f ., bt ` r.. rr. k It. i : , l 1 t. e .'R ml,. J. M Z I 1 ! i +J M . N�. ,'y 4 1, Z L a 4 k't , J $ l „A. la , n ,� G r^" aw, �Y .l . � . .G, .,;�-,ria... .. �rc�',*,,.,, >•„ xi. :.,.:.7 .r<... .t.:. x... �1 .d.ue... , stance it( is shill ermissible by lawn Ir 1 1 ' I— i+, IrF I, i�h A Y 1 i� 4 {i 9n j"IT a R 1 :N,9 t, " t 'i < .t h d.a,"IY AY p0 6?,fit lrt -bt,ply 7,1=1 ,t,�l , �4��n lil�rin� ( �,tfr�,',','ralt,,�'�1'till.i ts�5 ; Nlek� l , 1„ 1 r' I". j . l :f c ', " �k, dt' , 11 Vr'c tl . f�. I 1, 'pp.j���' AA��'� 'I/� Q Q. « - F9BRX �.1T, lit? • '939 to sell dairy butler made' from raw but the lave says it is not Ycallrls.! �► rabbit would' make a d4•rsih across the — — —� � �"hi� o�fer Q� �.�y,1V��sadows � , x S'��� �� the milk, same fields in front of us, and the dogs i big r at tate postioffice' is � From The Huron paper, .� permissible to sell the buttermilk. k'Y°o311. that one might lx�fer that interesting It pinna Picked From 'and i!0! N!rry J. Ilioyl.) i Ce�`tyPapers the dasher in the farmer's churn, col- -. Tule Huron Expositor of Fifty and who has be -n living there for ' ; which is, capable of stamping m1orO Y lected all the disease germs and de- Twenty-five Years Aga don't think they ever really tried to "WINTER VISITING" I The occasional cottoittrail or . jack- ' posited, them in the buttermilk, so as to leave the dairy butter free from all disease. It is not that way, of course, but that is the way the law, puts it. 4 Another' feature of the pasteuriza- ' tion law than is objected to in the • -country districts, is the increased cost to :the consumer, without adding t to the profits of the producer. It I costs money to pasteurize milk, the average cost running from two to three cents. And it is pretty hard to convince the county consumer, who has been 'brought up on raw, milk, as was his father and mother before him, that he' is. getting any- tbing, whatever, from this tax of two or three cents. We are not against pasteurization or anything else whereby the health of -the general public can be safe- guarded, or increased, but living in the ,country it is not .at all hard to see" why the pasteurization law was unpopular to start with, and why it seems to be becoming more unpopu- . Ilar everyday. . • The East Simcoe bye -Election When Colonel George Drew was chosen leader of the Provincial Con- servative party, Premier Hepburn announced that the new leader would -not, be opposed by the Liberal party in any constituency in which he might choose to run. That was followed by the resigna- tion of Hon. Mr. I Finlayson as mem- ber of the riding of East Simcoe, and the offer of that constituency to Colonel Drew. As the riding of East Simcoe is strongly Conservative, these two things were generally looked upon as all that was necessary to place 11 olonel Drew in the Legislature, a place, all were agreed, he should, as leader of the Opposition party, be be- fore the commencement of the next Legislature. But, apparently, things are not quite as, simple as that. In fact, the auesti•on has not been settled at all. Instead of Col. Drew securing an ac- clamation, he is going to have opposi- tion, and what is still more astonish- ing, opposition from a member of his own party. He is to be opposed in the forth- coming bye -election, by Captain Dempster, a returned man, and a Conservative resident of the City of Toronto. The reason Capt. Demp- ster gives for his opposing Col. Drew is that "not so long ago he at- tempted to -destroy one of the bul- waxks of democracy, the two ,party system." This, of course, is in reference to Col. Drew's reported willingness at the last provincial election in 1937 to join Premier Hepburn in the forma- tion of a coalition government, a move which is said to have been blocked by Hon. Earl Rowe, the then leader of the Provincial Conservative art p H w much truth or otherwise, there is in these things, we have no means of knowing, but the fact re- mains that Col. Drew did leave his own party. in the 1937 election, and opposed his party leader as well. The Conservative convention in Decem- ber last was supposed to have healed the Rowe -Drew breach and again ., • united the party, but, apparently, that hope or expectation has not been fully realized. Col.. Drew is finding out that while he was the choice of the Conserva- tive convention, that does not mean that he was the un'azimous choice of all the Provincial 'Conservatives, As a matter of fact,. it is well known that there was, • and still is, strong Opposition to him, as leader of the party, among the old line Conserva- tives. And Conservative opposition, whether in or out of the party, is a real force that has to be reckoned _- with. However, as vie say, East Simcoe is a strong Conservative constitu- ency, and 'as Colonel Drew is ' the choice of the official Conservative or- ganization in that riding, there is lit- tle doubt thai he will be elected, who- ever ho 11 ever his opppnent or opponents may l be. �{ i' f`. I�. 1 .t Ir,!+ YI i � I. 1 `% f, �C. r is°�f t , I k� ! r r f 1 1 7 ,:,, a,{ «;:r PI , lY :r$' r 'I �a �.;,�R �t 111,y ,�,! .' .„�r ,} .I- ,. al improvements to God�n) dh harbor. a lead to sit dowand wait for us. when he wrote to mel . A serious accident, took place on A real old-time blizzard visited Turesdhy at thhe Foundry dom,pamty''s., Western Ontario Pon Monday, Traffic . VNmt in Wnngham. Mr. J. Cook, one was tied, up all through the disrtrict,. of the employees, whole trying ad- ® JUST A SMILE OR TWO • but only for a short time. The high- ' 'uwt a belt on once of the m,achintes• k d 'b ' , • was caught by the heli and whirled ® 1 rabbit would' make a d4•rsih across the New Stamping Machine "� Expositor Sdmehow or other a copy of this Hawaii, fields in front of us, and the dogs i big r at tate postioffice' is � From The Huron paper, reached, awayown in 'd would put on, an exbMbition for our A ,time,wrm 'and g'o't in the hands of a cousin of benefit. But somehow, even the dogs a rseedbly,installled stamping machine' , , February 18, 1914 . imine who has be -n living there for .sensed the spirit of the occasion and which is, capable of stamping m1orO Y well The meeting of the officers well on to ten years. I3'e'sI attached don't think they ever really tried to than 800 letters Per minu'Ge. The maa- " anarrell the 33rd' Re�girmewt was held in qo fibs tourist bugin�sss there it seems, catch fibs rabbits, Naw and again, chine isl a cotmpaet affair, elecbricaldyl ,f 51dneMm: onTlryr+sxi+a+y of last ;seek. and 'he's been reading t�rese Uttle an enquiring drag would come lasering rums, and it cancels stamper, and affixes w `they dieradled ha train in August. The weekdty letbers of mine, here's' part out for a bout with ou¢s. Mother the dia'Ge a:Lmpstt si'multanesously BY " or were Idteut. Cbl_ Wil'- u what she says: "When I get writ- would, always screa¢� and. tell Paw to the olid, method o,C stsal>ping .by hand rffic+ettrs.:pmes'e.Dtb Majora ComaibeI tug all about the glories of Hawaii, make those dogs quit fighting, ands he Ione Letter per secai*1 was, a fair speed I Isom, who prreskDedr ianoe, and McTaggart, of C1in- 'and of what a paraddse it is for visli- would make, a 'half-hearted, attempt to but the machine doe's, approximately' '' .Sahaw- Catph dnss Damiap• and MloPlbmal',• tars, i begin wondering about ;that call thnem� . but dawn in.' his heart ,thirteens lebters per oeicond�.--Gode'r•ich, on; Nxi& ich; H+eam an, of Exeter- Nasftel it's like back on ,our Coneessdoo at he was just the samie as we children- Signal-Stra'r. this Ind Buries', Goderich; Sinclair and your Leuts. Town, time of year. When I read in column, about ,gnaw and all that He wanted Sand and, To to lick y tine tar out of all the dogs the Young Hoakeyjst Injured Vareoe, Oolburne, and g Cmnhon4 Swan; of Blyth, and Hod- • • • well it gave me a lonesome &on road,. ., FoLLowdmg in his, bnatheas" foot'stteps �nls and S'banbnn-y of Exetea. feeling." .. let's quite a (long tunic ago since, I" There was a long stretch on, the. Murray, sideroad just t before you resulted in a p,admtfusl injury for ten- , Mrs, Hem w Peck of the BaTfreld) saw a nock of hens, numberingthe Jahn. We were boys ,bh+en, and turned) onto the Twelfth Concession, y� M' Jack Stoddart on Thursday last. The 'lad was defence in i2'heal {his, i2 Baur-red Rocks, and during the family lived' over on. the Twelfth I with cedar trees' growing up aloeng inulin a 'hiockey game, emulating his oro- , month of January she gasthered, " 94 Concession of the next Ibow'usirdp.. At ,the sidle of the road. They were gen. Cheus Bob at Chatham and Harvey in 1993. ..- Frequent intervals during tine Winter, erally covered with- :snow, a'nd A was GoderdcJh, when lie wasstruck in, the , Mr. J. P. Ran,. of the commnercial our and family and his would visit ,back forth. Generally we would leave like driving through two walls of � � white The horses would' always slow mouth by the .puck. Several stitches Hotels zur•ick leas puachaseldl the fine one of the older boys to do t1he ,down there, and even, us chiLdtren were required' l- ,close the woundr. , 150-acu'a noith of that town. from Mr. chores, and hitch up on Saturday af- would' stop talking'. There wasift a Gorlerich S',ignal-Star. William Fes- ternoon Mr. w. J. walker, who ,iris Don- and land over there for a sound. in there and the weigh ,bells New Metropolitan Agent late ducted buadtntesr> Mere in the furmliture pp I always, enjoyed' these trips, There petaled slow and, deliberate Pike .• . and to my mind it was the grandhgt Mm.' Eb, Ross4 son of Police Serge - �� for tho spot � Ye&M may, tak James Mc- was a feeling of expeotancy that part of the trip. ant A. 0. Rose, and Mrs. Ross, has k en bxto partr�;;r,ghdp Mr. seemed' ,to hover ims&le you, as tJhe I beefs named Me"politan Life Inssur- Kay, of EgmnomdlvilLle. horses jing-jong'ed along, and the But then as we 'turned' on to the .ante agents, Here owing to the illness The new creamery is mow .PaSCIT to sleigh took funny little dips and ,di'vesI Twelfth, Paw would, look up at .the of Mr. Harry Bla,4* who has reprl s- 11raced" all the cream that is: offered. O'Sullivan from over rough spots in the road', We dart, that seemed to 'be rolling in on 'the enbetl the company for 'many years. Mrt Fetter stripped used to have the wagon box on the us, and give ,horses -a, little slap Mr. Ross is being introduced' on his Steaforth oft- Saturday 26 steers which ;sleigh, with planks stretched across with the, end of the lines. We wererounds, by Mr. Frank Yates, of S'tirat- the had .Purchased from Ms. Thomas ,fin, They averaged seats and our feet buried, down in nearly there . and that was, the irord, assistant manager with the firms McMba,Laa, of Hullestt. the hay in ,thee box, wrapped up in time when, we would start to think ,there. Mr, Black, who has been Ht 1300 pounds each, and in price $120 sacks at our feet were +heat bricks that ,about eating. The more a ',person for some time, 'has improved consider- , each, It 2) degrees below on Wed- somehaw seemed to ,hold their ,heat thought about that table, the hungier ably; and is able to be out agatm, was until we arrived at Uccle Timothy's. he. would, get. Sometimes they would: G•adtericU Sdgnal•Strar. nesdw, morning. When it,, was extra cold, we used have just butchered and, there would ,dominating type of school, and par- In the N'o¢thterfl . League hockey to burrow down in the hay and cov- be a big roast sham and, spare ribs--- Injured During Hockey Match m tc(h betweenSeaforth and Clmfton' in the Palpate Rink on Tuesday even,- ered ourselves over with; the robes or maybe Aunt Nellie„'had just killed Ross Duncan, suffered a compound ing last, the Clinton boys were victor- and blankets, while Paw sat up in a couple of big plump roosters , of ankle Playing 'ions by a score of 4-3, ,front and drove. It was'always, great and the thought of it made a Ipersours g.while, hockur'e: rid :hockey on Friday evening. The, Brus- Mrs. John Clark, of F, mrondvia'le', fun to see low long you could keep mroubh water. gels Juveniles were playing the Luck- ' trraad fire mftsfiortumle to stip on tans' ice your eyes closed and when look up over i he edge of the box .to see how Lights would be twinkling in the houses lalong the way and Un- now team when the accident occur• on Wedlnasid,ay .morning euid falling mucor farther along the.road. we were, .. . . cle Timothy would meet -us, with a hos -. red' Rost,. t then e was the was set and broke her right atm. Mr. J. 112. pove:ugock,' Reeve of Mc- Toby and Sandy, the two Collies, lantern , , , and while the men put 'plc ;hese ankle 'placed in a cast where it will have to Kiillop, hag gone to Ottawa. this week. used to romp along beside the team making frequent sniffing excur- the horses away we would walk into th;� open doorway that was filled Ln remain, for some weeks,. We- Grope He represents, the county council, on &ion.li along the tracks. in the snow, lamplight into the warmth and the recovery wont . be too painful, Ross.—Brussels Post' a deputatitolB to 4m.terview the Domdn and then dash madly ahead' of the the smell of food, and I think that's taxpayers' incomle, very little scr•iti- ion Government in respect to adcIdtCi�on- team., until they had gained enough of I what may cousin was thinking about . Old -Time Blizzard al improvements to God�n) dh harbor. a lead to sit dowand wait for us. when he wrote to mel . A serious accident, took place on A real old-time blizzard visited Turesdhy at thhe Foundry dom,pamty''s., Western Ontario Pon Monday, Traffic . VNmt in Wnngham. Mr. J. Cook, one was tied, up all through the disrtrict,. of the employees, whole trying ad- ® JUST A SMILE OR TWO • but only for a short time. The high- ' 'uwt a belt on once of the m,achintes• k d 'b ' , • was caught by the heli and whirled ® 1 way was bloc e a out a in e and a (half south of town and ears could . up to the ceiling„ tearing nearly ev-not get ',harorngh in the evening. The ..711 ery stitch of clothing from Me body. A motorist had been baled into Dickie's father was shock to see 1 snowplows opened.' the highway early The Collegiate Institate Board at fit; and when his name was called (his son making things uncomfortable Tuesday morning and motor traffic , Clinton organized for .the new year by charges the judge asked, what the chs for his little playmate. was resumed4 Exeter's main street is 1 rlacang D. A- Forrester as chairman were Against the prisoner. "Wiry did' you do that to Tommie?” 'piked high with snow, but workmen and Prine teal Treleaven, as secretary. "Sustpicdolus actions, your Ih,onoa," he asked severely. ,are .now engaged; in carting it, away. ,me phrbliv school appointed T. Cot- answered the policeman who made the "I am tired• playing w%Ith him. I The highway running ears,' and west a tie, chragman; J. Cu,nnInigham, secr'e- ar're'st. want him to go ,home," was Dieluie's has been, kept open and, t',,e Dashwood tarty•, and, R. E. Manning, treasurer. "Suspici-ous actions?" queried the az,sswer, bus Inas made its regular runs. The I+ The big hole in, Turnberry, neer judge. "What, was he doing that "Then why didn't you ask ham to Crediton sideroad has, been closed to Wingtam, continues' to grow larger seemed suspicious?" go home?" motor traffic owing to the driftsL— ° and swallows• Up everything. "Weal," replied the offices, "he was "Oih"—it w -•as Dickie's turn to be Exeter Times Advocate. • running wibadn the speed' limit, sound- 6hoekedl—"w'hy, Daddy, that wouldn't Ribs Fractured From The Huron Expositor ing his horn properly, keeping on, the be polite'" February 15, 1889 right side of the street, and not try. • "That At tine hockey match in Goderic,h ing to beat any of the stop lights— soda jerker mixes a nice so- Friday afternoon last between' the Ex - The work of preparing the stone for so, naturally, I arrested him." da. I wonder how he ,learned?" eters atld 'Godlerich higjh school teams, the new Government building at Gode- • I "Oir, maybe he went to Sundae Austin Fahrner, of Crediton, 'had, a ' rich •its pvog:resesing and a large quan school." couple of ribs broken -hen he was tity is almecudiy on the ground'. Caller: And wIliat is dear little " • badyahec'ked. against the boards by At a recent examinutdon at the To- Henry going to be when he grows A little boy went into a shop and one of the Godleridh play, rs--Exeter roar,to Business, College, Mr. Robert'l'im'es-Advocate, Up?" asked for a pound of ochre. ' McQuarrie, of 13131th; took 363 marks Mobher: 'Tin not s'ol'e, but from "Do you mean red, ochre?" asked out of a possdbbe 400, standing third the look's of the wail -paper and every- the shopkeeper. Buys Brucefield Transport ' in a large class.. blAng else he touche,s I think he'll be- "No," replied the little boy, "tappy Mlesisrs Benm,eCt and Lilvirug- Comte a fingerprint expert." ochre." The Tucks Tra p Y nspont has ur- .John stonte intend sbaiWng'a brick yard, on chased the Forrest Transport of • Mr. Be'nntett's faumr, Westfield, in the Brucefield and Tuckery's: will extend spring. The ieba.y is said to be of the best, r}nad'itty. ® B Educational Costs their service to cover Hensall; Kip- ' Pen,, Br•ucefiel'd, Clinton and. Seaforth- 'I'im,es-Advocate. • —Exeter On Satnrrday, January 26th, Mr. George Wade, resaddmg m,ear Wingliam, I Lost Three Fingers ` tapped some six or seven maple trees • and on Monday aynv-erted the run in- Possibly at no time in our history Than boys and girls would apparent- Mr, Norman Lediet was taken to to dleli'do'us maple syrup- Miss Alice Hewitt, of Walton, 'has' has our provincial educational sys. term particularly in the secondary ly all ,have, jobs and be enabled' to lead happy and contented lives. I V.dngsharn General Hospital Monday I morning having suffare7d the loss of just comrplerted a patchwork quilt cou- field, been subject to such a barrage It is'true that there has been a very three fingers of his right hand while , talimmnrg' 5,625 pieces. of criticism as at the present time. marked increase in Secondary school working at Brownes factory.—Wing- ro, ;duo has car- ,Mr. Jahn Richa,r�nt The content of the Curricula, the pre- enrolment in recent yearn—i.n fact, ,ham m•e Advance -Tis- • ri,ed on t1he blracksanifrhlug business in ,dominating type of school, and par- from 44,477 in 1919-1920 to 112,781 in C- mua.rty for some, timie, has removed tieWarly the soost of these schools, 1936, an increase of 68,3x4, or approx- Appointed organist and Choir Leader txr Wfinchelem .rn the Towmehip of Us- are ad,i the sdbjeots of much adverse im'ately 150%r. It appears that the Mr. ,Toho L. -Nichol, of S'outhamp- borne, critmt iciohi the press and on thte,plat- Adolescent Attend.vnce Act is .not en ,tern, was ,test week ahoseu, as organ- orga'- At the residence of &rrm, chiefly by the representatives tirely to blame for this increatae, Ance ist tat and chows leader for St. A tm,e biidWs, father, on the 20th ulld_, by and some wauld-be representatives of there were, in May, 1935, 22,684 pupils Presbyterian 0hurch. ' Mr. Nichol is Rev. Mr. Bridgman, Mr. 'John Midler big. business. I over 16 years of age in our Collegiate well known thraughaut Onrtrari'o for to Miss Elizabeth Wordn, both of A few yvans ago when our s,e,con- Institutes and High' Schools; 4,315 ov. his musical ability, For 18 years.h" ' Hibbeet. On Tuesday evening; the carnival of diary schools., theoretically available to alb adolescents, fumotioned on be- er 15 years of age in our Continua- tion Sbhools,, and 11,907 over 16 years was, an' organist and choir leader in stile season was Meld on -the S'eaforth badlf ,of to compauiative few, and Dense,- of age in the day classes of the Voca- Galt, but resigned dere to ill' health. skating rink, when the33'nd Battalion quentl•y made small inroads' on the tional Schools—a total of 38,906 young For t'he (past nriue months he has been . hs n roueSoum famished gk)cd musfic. Tihte prize. wie- taxpayers' incomle, very little scr•iti- people Who aro past the ages -of oom- Stationed at not .. It is e neTs were: Ladfiesr conic, Miss J. ci,stm was heand. Now bhtat large num- pulsory abbendance, approx-itmately petted tthat 'he will assume his duties; assume ,here DaleA- Miss C. Kidd; gentlemen, con- 'bers, of young people of al'1 classes one-third of the total enrolment, May very shilll A,clr ac, W. Jackson,, K Watson; ladriles' are attending secondary schools, and it not seasonably be assumed that, vance-Times,. • dbameter 'cos•tunm, Miss Ida Ddek,son, the resulstintg cost is rising, we find rightly or wrongly, more Ontario rift- Lucknow Store Had Bad Fire 11 ' Was N. McKay. The judges, of the many mien in public and slemd-public zeros are demanding a secondary laddie costumes were Mr -4. (Dr.) 'positions dtenoumcing the system when School education for their children. to- Fire at bile Lloyd Turvey Variety - Smdt,h and Mrs, J. C. Laidlaw, and, of ever they are given an, opportunIty of day than demanded it- fru the goldien Store, Lucknow, destToyed, practical - the gentlemen's costumes, Messrs. doing so. Their shock line of amgu- tax age of 1917. Since much of the ly all the stock. The conftagrati'ora ' Chi ttenden and T. V. Coben=m,, ment is !that under tllip impetus of our criticism ,o,f secondary education to- took place Friday night and the On Friday morning of last week the Adolescent School Attendance Act, day is levelled at Mie Academnc ,Lucknow fine brigade battled the. . brick school house asdtuatbed about ly, xequirin,g country boys and girls to Schools in particular, it may be well flames for two hours, 9.30 to 11.30.. miles, from Hensall, was destroyed by remain at school until fifiteed years• of to point out that there is a prepon- 'before they got the 'blaze under con - fire. age, and city boys and girls ' until the derance of ,a.cadternic schools in our troll. An avenheated• stove ise report- I 'Mr. Jobra Reinke, of Tuckerstmi•t'h, is age of sixteeir, taxes brave increased provi.n,oe because they are, the cheap- ed to have caused the fire, The loss busy getting bomte material for the ,enormously. Some of these gentle- 'est type of'Secondary School to oper- is heavy as no insurance was- carried r erection of a new 'brick residence. men contend, {shat nearly all our fin- ate. by Mr. Turvey. The apartment above' Mr. James Sproat, councillor, in- ancial ills can be traced' to thee- ris- 'Certainly if we, are to make any the store, where Mr. and, Mrs, Tur- 4 'bende building a Large barm next sum- ing cost of edu'cati,ont Most of the very' drastic saAngg le ednrca:tional Vey lived, w,as not damaged by fire, MERL mortgage foreclosures on homes and costs, w'e shall have to close the but smoke and water treated; quite a ' Tho singing class, which been Harms, they claim, have beets caused doors of our Seconldary Schools to all loss. Mr. Turvey was in Lastbowel at tso ably conducted, by Mr. Jas. Didk-, by these increased costs. One well- but ,those who can afford to pay for a, hockey game w'he'n, the fire broke ' son,, BSA., of McKillop, iau conmecUm known speaker contends th4t but for ,such education. Is that wheit our out and his wife was absen(t also vis - with 0arvan, Clhurek ,gave thteir teach; these costs, certain, 'cities would have ,critics really, want, but dsre not adv,o- iting friends, — Wlntshwm Advance.. ` eer a v,ery agreeable surprise on Fri- been saved, from'bankruptey; that the 'eatie publicly? To say that marry Times. • they ev'enimg when they asvemlbled at depression Itself, and; the present re- pupil's attiemddng Academic Schack ' t1he home of We ,fathm•, Mr. Charles oesadda in 'busintess, is cau". by the cannot Pftfit by the education, recety- Lions Whip London Juveniles Dickson, and presented him 'with sin hexes that/bnssimtess generally' is call- ed there, and therefore shouldi Blot be a ' address rand' a Itandstome wrttdm,g desk. ed upon to bear; and of cdurse the required to attend, does, not touch On Saturday afternoon, the Lions On Monday afternbon: Mr. Arthur me tax that its singled out for 'criti- the problem. Any -type of Vocational JuveRi•les journeyed to 11derbon for Forbes, 'of Seeafor'tth, with. a along cisme Is that levied. for esducahion, Scbool would be still more, costly, so a`n' exhibition game wItlh, a picked 'sle4gth and. ,two slphn of his, best hors- while the ohne item) in: those costs that that the only m,e us, of saving money 'team from London'. At 'the, end' of ,as, conveyed twsenityt-five Sasivaitiondeta dma'ws the 'sp'eci'al ire of critics isIthat would he to refuse, as we have said, the final ,period, the Cadu'bon, boys bacQ to C'ldntlom, where,all atitendiead' a grand df teac'h,erW onlemiesl all secondary, education, to large num- piled up a scone of 9-1 and fairly ngwett and jubilee .meeting. Now, what are the remedies pro- bers of our young peolp}e, s"varmled over (their oppooitiont ttimre At thee, s!katttn(g ri'n'k. on, Tuesday ev- posed by these critics? In substance, Before we, accept .t,hat stolution, we after time with ,Choir. Superior co$r- •enfimg Mra Wi11ma` t Pickard .fe'l'l on, the t;hes,e Vatt'Mots propose that we pro- might ask ourgebves just what our binat'ion plays. The goal -getters, for Ice and broke aver arms at the wrist. vide fewer of oup boys amd, girls; with 'purpose In educating our youth featly C14nton were Monteith. 2, McEwen, 2.. The reUrm mab& bedwee3b the see mtdary school tedueatii+on at public is. lf-,we are educating your youth Powell 1, S'parlang 2, Haddae 1, and B�rucefielldl amid' 0rawt'on Checker Chubs oasib--that ,education, beyond, the pub- to become cogs in an, industrial mar- `�uh'oun L Only three penalties was: played on, 'ilhursdlaty eiv'endnrg of lie odbootle level,le really unnecessary chd:ne that will produce fortunes, for Were handed out In the game, two last week in this Oddtfelowis, Ball In foe' success Ill life, sdmce maamy unedu- ,bb'e few and ,poverty for the mean 'C0' Cl4nton, amyl outs to Londiomtr—Clin- B,rucefielsd,. it Wwd; a, close .iwn,d ,caber, men have accumulated fortunj; thein ,of coumge we should, keep our ton Newe,Recordt very Inttere'sting mlartch and the rtelsult that if larger numbers, of oulr boys boys -arndi girls out of Secondary+ was a vAn of foW gaWes for tbte 'lmbmn'e •and girls were taken but of school be- Schools. (Arty, edmc,artion, beyond the Young Son Passes .club. 'Ylm $rucetl4lxi! ltaayew sw'em* Y. ,tore they' reach the age or 15 and 16, Public School level, might 'well macer- Mr. and Mrs. J. 'R. Q Moffatt MWd"b, W. O'NbYi, J.'Mcrimugau, J. rtaxea wbuldl be mucor lower, buednesKs `iboyis fere with, such an, ,idleal) lf, on the and, family will hays tlbo 'of 9§tielasilii, ll''.- Fhsineti; J. XoDel�,dy A- WlMid boorcm, ambit ,amid girls could other hand, we are edti'catiai,g our sympathy of y mnany friends Thomlpsbm� I bb n: rbtt C6md to e�toP inti Badtory+. t �- (Continued, on Page 6) tact' tete desfilr of I (Contl'aued on Page 3) ;n. , .p d H { 1 I ," 1 f .�1 1 1 I r r f c t,: <, s a P P rt 1 1 1 'M. i •!• Y I. J T 1 �iig i �t � 1 :{ t �, Y , ,.r i dr u , - ,I ,l.n .f:a �•� u ll , A Ir f l «! , .. .w. .� k ,.0 .. r, � ( iFi i I 11 ,. I 1 ;N i! a e � ,r V a. , M1 u it ..«l, ;�..v_,I. .,,. ... .t ., , .. i '.t. f, iv ..:...... .. . ._... '1: �,. .... . s1