The Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-06-14, Page 5.7
Itf tlY'tstair.-lu dlf4 X41
7,
MAFEKI!1G
Mmol,.Flora ra Andrew of l:•ondoit,,was
the
lIues t .o; her .cousin,, Miss Oliv.
4, dereon, over the week -end.
n
Mr BeacgmP.
S. for •'West
Huronvisited :No:.9'
,and •Crewe
ch
sools, Tuesday.•
, See advertisement In this, issue' re.
the Ashfield Garden Party.
Mr' Miltonrr
, Kilpatrick is' getting
.... g
,the barn he bought on the 12th .con.
Jeanie(' home' With the assistance of
,`hips :neighbors. • '
Our local team's; ea a
...... ms. h ve1a ,,
ed• ° oma goodgenies p •y
. �. ... with, this neigh-.
•,borilig. ;teams., $o. far the score has
not been in their favor,, but they. are
enjoying, the practice.
Mies A` '
'Oliven exson' is:
re-engaged
as teacher_ for .$::§. . No.
0, fofi the
eoiriin •year,:
I C
• . D S USS ESTABLISHING; . .
OF CONTINUATION SCHOOL
Ratepayers' of Dungannon schh qqol
• section
e ' Nit
weekto
mis
d c the
t
.__ e
advisability of establishing, a Grad
'C Continuation school,' •which woul
permit pupils taking their •middi
.school : work. Lower school: ' rk• a
pow • being , taught. at • Dungannon.
While many.favored: the move, o
• position, to the proposal was, .also .ex- .s
_pressed: Theerection or addition of
a new ;room,. to :thea school would be
a necessity if such a!jstepwere taken,
•,, but With increased ::rants . on' the
.building; theequipment and •teachers'•
: 'salaries,`„G. K. Mills, chief inspector t
•
MRS; JOHN R. SAVAGE
PIES „AT :.DT,INGANNON
Mrs.' John R. Savage, formerly
Mary Etta Sineltzer, ` daughter' of
Me late, Paul Smeltzer and-girths
Earls, passed away in ;Dungannon pn
Thursday ;in -her sixty-third ,year,
following an, illness,; of itbput five
months;,
Bort} in; Kinloss, as'' .a child' rs.
Savage, 'moved to Ashfield with her
parents, where she grey/ to Woman.
hood and thirty,-fvv ears ,a8°^ be=
eame,the,. bride of; +John'Savage•Fol
lowing their . marriage they;resided
for' a : tine; in 'Gre To'wnshi • but
later ,moved :to.' - concession seven,
'''Ashfield. For more. than twenty ears.,
they_ have 'resided in Dungannon.
The ,funeral service^•yeas held at
her' late. residence: 'on S• turda:
. con-
a . y,...
ducted'by, her ` _astor . Rev., D. „A.. c-”
P M.
Millan,, of .Dungannon United ehurclr'
e and was largely attended, 'by ;sorrow-.
d ing .frienda_of_•one:: who. -Was. esteemed
in her community.. Interment was in
s Greenhill cemetery. i
Besides' her sorrowing husban l,,
he is survived' by one ' idau ti,
ter'
Mrs., Leroi Stingel and two sons
Fred _of Washington, and",�rank:, of
Rid ewa .`wo. T
g Y sisters Mrs. Donald
D mold
McNevin, of.. Goderich; Mrs. C. Ras-
mussen pf Bloomfield, N. J. and
hree hrothers,' Joseph ...Smeltzerpof
moi
pointed out .that increased expense.
to .the :section would',be small. Pupils,
• from neighboring sections woull be
admitted to: the proposed school, at
no 'expense to' them, their tuition fees
• being paid•, by: the County. • .
WHITECHO1CH,,
w°
uit
e
Q n, nu
mbe r from St, -Helena
attended -.the, United church nn'v -
Bary ,last unda e a ^i er
►S, Y� 'w,h n veru •auGcess-,.
ful •services, Bunda,
were held and: :,
_ ,the: choir
rendered special music. •; •
: Don't lorget the 'Presbyterian,
niversary on 'Suny, *hen an
hen Revv.' Mr,
Melirtosh ,of London and formerly of
St. laelens, will pre •at
11, a.m. and7.30, pin.. .
,
Mr. ,and; Mrs Jack • Griiffinand eon
Larry of Detroit are visiting with
her :brothers Messrs:
. John and, Pat=
rick - Mc14Tillan. .
Mr., Robert ,
,L
ott of f
Br
British
a1-ui isvisa ing withdrsPare tsMr. arid ,Mrs.. WalterLott: ,
M .. and Mrs., J n
Craig r .. -
�' •Qand. fam .
ilily visited Ort Sunday with .relatives
at' Aubi7rn..
M m
ant"
of8''
r7 A .. russels ; whitewash.;
ed and: disinfected en
� , disinfected, ,Mr' George Kum-
ndy s: barn and yard last Wednesday
Mr.and Mrs...Wm.
Wm. Cranston $ o!.
St., Helens, spent Sunday with the
hatter's: parents, Mr. and Mrs. -John
Kennedy.
Mr
Sip., A. Emerson • spent a P Sunday
with Miss .,Ida McQuoid;
Mrs. Henry Patterson spent Sun-
day. with her .sister a •Mrs'. Bert Reid,
• Janes; My Scorch `uncle Gent
me
his -picture this morning;
Barry; How does he look?
• Jim
, , 1 . I 1
ADVOCATES OF BLUE
WATER ROUTE -TAIL. TO.
GET COUNCIL'S "S UPFORi
(Continued 'from Page 1)
erieh to Kincardine, passed :through•
a part of, the 'Country that would pe'
very- coiitly--.to • construct, c owing' to
sharp corners,; curves, . hills . and
bridges; -a stretch , of 15 or. ,16 miles
of• roadway on which little or 'rio'
work -•has :been,- done during: -recent,
Years'. He ' held; .that another route-
:.could• be selected, in this : part .o
Ontario • that would, reduce the cost
of construction: ', approximately one
We ;,who ':oppose '• the •proposed
routethat 'the' deputation •froni'
Kinca (which': they heard)-, are.
asking 'too much. .of . this ; County, ,'as
they are,served. it'present by No -.'9'•
ighway , he.. said. ;
;the _people of-.Lucknow,.-represent=;
ed--by-the-4ipeaker; .are interested. in•
that portion of :the highway, which
passes •through'.the Township of Ash-.
• field; 'Huron County, , and if the • pro;,,:
.posa,i,with respect to'th9.Blue.' Water..
:Highway materialized •the ''results.
w
:would- be serious JO '.the Village• of
a Luck ; in that it 'would divert • for
five months each year .•business that
rib tly` ;belonged .to Lucknow, ' stated
:Mr: -ii-amilton.:' Be' said ' 'he.:`didnot
Mink:.,the County' of ''Bruce,j•'would'
consent • to - the Government , taking
over the Blue'• Water ';route.;,. they
(.tie people oe-L now _ave ea
„ fairly in the ,past •with every other'
municipality :'and : will.. do se. ...i. • the w
future he 'added.'
,C;onciuding •his speech, .•Reeve ,
Hamilton, • one. ;of the ,new .members,
of 'the Council, said '
"Those municipatitiies`jrwho, sponsor
the ...Blue Water . route , have ' been
: paying; into this, organization, fol•. a
;'great number ,of. year.,. They coin
.'to this County Council under an ii,b,
Iigation ' to, support• • this.' Blue: Water
route from . Amberley, 'where -1t,-On.,
•-• ters "the' County of Bruce Kiri the
south; to • Tobermor in the north,"
.. , running .the a trethe' distance along'
`,haat is ••now called 'the ''lakeshore'
road. The distance ' of this 'route . is,
approximately 05 miles 'If, .this'
'wvork were undertaken it • would not
he a matter of thousands or hundred
of -thousands of, dollars, •but minions.
•by `the 'time it is: eventually `complet
ed. and paid for., In 'view • of :these
. 'facts I am inclined to believe and.
I am sure that you will agree with
me, that :'public: opinion is • not in
favor of. such, an, undertaking at the
present time..:I do feel that.some
time ,in. the future those” concerned
shduld meet at. a round .'table.' con-
ference and agree ori' an all popular
route from north to south and east
to ' W,eat, eorinecting . with Highway
No:, 9 in the centre • of . the • southern
hal . ' •• ..
f . of the county. �•; ,: ,
"I would' also,'!ike • to, point. .`out'.
that if' the proposed Bine 'Water
route: is ultimately » • . adopted it', will
, serve • the • ,permanent citizens a only;
en` one • aide, of the. County, and what
is required' is,, an all-purpose • route
to serve the ,.'greatest;: number, of
people.
We might aunt up by saying that
what 'we
,1bce must' eventually pY
'
•for, 'and owing to the'
stupendous
cost 1 believe this .,County 'should'
not undertake this work at the pre
''sent time. • But I 1wovld .like to say
that the repres'entativeS .from. , the
• niutiici paiities that are .not members
bf the ;BLue Water Highway Assoej:
=:.Ilk lotion are open minded and that
:deer • rs atilt oli'en fqr those that are to,
r •join With s ina I-po.. t
ti , ;adopting, an all-popu-
• lar' and •serviceable route for . this'
ay+"` •
highw
)▪ half .a. Mill Cut in' the, Count
Tau Levy ' .
safe a:„..et ,
again"
p.Y s df'.'`Bruce 'aril] benefit
again this year by a , reduction:. in ' the
County levy. On Tuesday afternoon
the' County. Couizcil struck a rate of
$i/a:: milli. This 'is half a mill rower
' than Me rate net last June, When the
' , levy. was 'redtteed ' by l said; pills.
This means 'that $14,0bp' fess will
N levied for, t
axes', in'.., Bruce' this
year, e= total amount to be raised
in'thiif ° County fol`• •all p� rposos in
• ,1934 is $236;272'.00. '
4t• (Continited :Nett Weelt)
a•
nd .Jack of'. Detroit, also,, survive.
it developed y t.
SUNDAY ACCIDENT
An accident which .fortunately.:did
not, end with serious results`, occurred.
onroad, . the Gravel, `]usjh.
t at ..the nor-
thern outskirts .:of the village, on
Sunday ' afternoon, ., A • car driven by
McNeevin of'.Goderich district
left the. roadway at this point . and
breaking through, a guard pest, went
into an ' eight -foot ditch, striking a
telephone 'pole : which prevented....the
car from. ,overturning.The pole was
snapped off in two places, leaving
about a nine -foot stick ..of: timber
lying on the .ground. The car came
to a stop a few feet • distance .again-
st a' fence, a-postin which was; :;,also
broken.. The passengers in, 'the,.car,
escaped,with ^ a shaking ? rupand:
Wad Bruises.; :One' of the• lade9 was cut
with broken. glass.,The''car Was able
to • proceed', rowits ?WTI, ,:ower « after
being; remoyed ' from the e'
r de p , ditch.
The <caris said to have been pro -r
ce top
4d' g" at:a� yet moderate' � ped.
and ' sotrie . mechanical .-defect; is•
thon•ght to have caused the mishap.
P
Sunry:er Dress '• .Goods•
`Now is' the time, to 'make cool
dresses .and,'Kin�
,• 's
� have �a big choice.
f n
sof' e materials—lovely Ray -Silks
at 25e, 39c, 59c; English' Voiles at
45c; ,Prin'ted. Piques at09 , Dress and
Suiting Linens,...; 45c 'and the ever coined b ' .Sid Smith : '
a Y
PARAMOUNT: PICNIC '
IS
All -Day .Ol gpgT•—Ea
°Yed
By ' Larger
rGAL,A EVENT
Attendance -,-Spots 1 eeuly Con-
tested,
Threatening. weather 'gave promise
of ,marring, the Paramount ,all -day
pienie; at 'l'out's ' Groife, Bruce Beach
ori Saturday, but: , the skies eleareo an entertaining program •ot
aorta. was rocee"de `.,
P d. with and •whgn
OEM one' dconeluded 150 or mote Who
'.were . in attendance, , acclaimed the
• outing a `delightful' one.
',feature evelic: of the ' sports
w'.as the free-forall . quarter -mile
race, with . enty entries,•. w' n.. by
.4,9b Rarkwell :. w,ho:,; was; .crowded
chsely, by •Norval Richards: n Iio '
,, ., a d b
fiarkness . „
Owing to the depression, our'iri--
f ormant declares, there uier.c on
tw;babies enteredthe•baby show,
o "` only
in
who were judged by 'such "experts"
as .Donald McLean and Jim Murray,
whn•aWarded first prize .to..Allan Mc-
Nam 'and second to Billy' Stanley.
:Carmen Hamilton's • softball team
squeezed .out a,,;12, to, '10 'victory from:
bill Kempton'., team and' Mrs. Fred
Crump'steam defeated Mrs. 'Robert
tiamiltons team.'' by a score of 25 to
19. In a football game,- Harold Stan
1ey's married men's team took a 2 to
0^•verdict. from the ,single men, cap
popular Organdy. Butterick. Patterns • The race , xesults, *ere:
• -• �"�`�uys—o"--ye4dr!;S=Horiale -Itami1 on .
KING BR.OS., Wingham ti Kenneth MaeLennan,Irwin. Doris• ' K 4 1
t Paisley Kincardine •• 4 0
L- • -. ^.
AIBoYs 8 • Years--•Rod;:...MacC_ ',les,
...lin Hamilton,,
. . Clump.
IreGrlsH,endeYresarrn-.-Margaret aM
K
Chair
e=les.• a
-Bos-
10 e
._._... Y —a$tetyart 'Jameson,
Jim. Hamilton. •
Boys 12 years-••Sandy.,,MacCherles,;
Bob.- cIntosh,
• Boys 16 yegrs—Allan;;s aeCharles'
Raymond le
Ch;
R}}chards - ;
Young Womena
-„•y .. MacDonald
Jessie MaCCharles,,• Annie' McDo ;
,. mold,•.
Young Men,
:100• yds.., NoryalRichaids, Bab Barkveh,
•Bob ,.Hiark.-. ,.
nese,
W m:.
Marriedo''
... ,,. en .. , Mzs $rlrold>
Stanley, Mrs.
Mel. .Irwin, Mrs.;Fied
Crump •
Mar ' ied
r Men= -Allan
MacCdnnelh' •
•Bill Stanley; Harold. Stanley...
ouple`Rac -_(Bob,,Backwelled
`
Mrs.Mel Irwin) Angus MacAuley`
and Ray MacDonald) (Goldie '.:M ar
t n' 'and' Annie �' �,s . n e 'MacDonald).
Women's Slipper. Pper. kicking. ---.Mia.
-Ke o
mpt n,i Mrs. ,Crump,, Mrs.;:Mac-
%,armada
BRTJCE 'LEAGUE; ST. N
.,A DING
ON TUESDAY, JUNE 12th,
Teams
: Pct:
Southam ton;, 3
Walkerton 5 • • 3 0 1'00
4 .1' .flOtt
Port Elgin
3'2 1 • .66T.''',
Chesley -..-........�... , ..3 2 , 1 X667
Lucknow '
'S 3. 2 .600` :
Millionaires .....-••.•-•.-.....•_3 .1 2 .333'..
:263
. ;000
{
t''1x
it
Oil HAVE READ OF R[JSSIA;1 , •
You know what' farming in the land of the Soviet
has .beconi'e • . ' ,.
State ' coflectiviza tii
on with industrialization. the
'supreme. goal, has made the farmer.httle better than the beasts
of the field, the hewer Of wood and the. drawer • of • water to.
the more favored classes; those to whom coniniunism looks
':, for the ultimate success of its, state industrialization 'experi-
rtient,
'FARMERS MUST' BE ; FREE
, i
Ontario walits ” ".: Ytsifarmers must be
no swing .00hs left
, left free, The men who; an 1932,, p educed $226,446,000 of
this province's Wealth, cannot be nia a the stepping stone for
, same' radical experiment in state industrialization.
Farmer though he is, Qtttario's Liberal :leader is prepared to •
sacrifrce'his own friends, to betray lits fellow workers in the
fields„in a frantic bid•for control of Ontario's vast 'natural
wealth.. '
By his bon eott/esrion he swings well to the left , towards
e'la
thnd lvhere the Communists, 'the sodfolists and the radicals
r ....
• HIS .OWN` WOR . S • .
Accept his OM words' to the eicctors of West York oar' Ma r
14,1932 :r •y ..
, "i swing, wed ter the %eft where some Grits do not tread,”
Or te'ke his speech to' SL.Thomas voters on' Febr[iary 11,
1933. Then the C.C.F:, ;its ideals not yet analyzed;' its
;impassible -to -be -achieved' dreams stilf Unexploded,' had seized
.briefly on a part of the public ►magmahort "Mi: Hepburn
saw in it another, opportunity fora bid-.for"powgr" at the •
expense of the solid, producing classes of, the province, So
-seizing his opportunity, reeking nothing 01•what such pro • ,
gramme., would 'Mean, ,he said, in ali"the entbusiastn of his
inexperieiite; a' "
"The C.C.V, is an example of this realignment: 'of
peliticat'thought. 1t is the„Jatest move in Radicalism.. 1 '
's mpathize+withthe people who' make up the ranks of the
• „ ,..t
. � F. They ar¢ ur at least ta,flri Way.out.
� �Y. .� fl'r r. d,.a.. t
MORTIFICATION But this is enlY'a small part of what the Qntano Mark
STAGNA ION AND MORTIF etu>�
Ontario s .Liberal leader would cut the cost of government: '
fifty per cent •
A tall,order, but quite possible if Mr. Hepburn and his
party are prepared to sacrifice progress and give the people of
Ontario stagnation and:inortification. •
. To cut his' expenditures• Ontario's Liberal leader, among
other econom es" woutd wsp,e :out the Ontario.Department'
of Agriculture ;
He has placed himself on record' to' effe .'this
The Toronto Globe,• -in -reporting- his -speech at ,a ,banquet
in Toronto on December ;15, 1932,' says:
"The ,departments of Game;and Fis, eries, 4.GRICIJL-`
TURF, •Lobour,'and Mines, the':Motion :Picture;' Bureau, .
Reseasch Work. and Colonization. were, 4, yew which •Mi, •
Hepburn cited as' fristances;where curtaiiment.or ABANDON'-
MENT of one service could be effected without • /tutting:
administration.'; , •
-WHAT OF THE. .FARMER?..
--Possibly-administ;atiori` wouldmot-'suffe -- ,
But what would happen to . the farmier? • ' : .
Where• would he be with his'overseas selling agent gone
merely to set up a record for low spending?,
'Would it be true economy,'to wide='out, at one: enthusiastic
'gesture,. the.agricultdral research which makes''avdilalile to'
;every farmer, �without,nioney ,and ,without .price, all, the •
resources of science, skill, knowledge and experience for the
enlarging of output.and, the im rovemen
P t of quality at leaver
, operating costs?' . ,
W.. 'THESE THESE HELP `, •
*ould it hel .e farm r , i _ '
pili er �� wipe •out the department which
:held, for farmers and faring women, in 1933, a total of,
coiirses,in a 'culture and hom '
Bri • e economics at as many centres
throughout the province? :a
Week' the mon'a
et r
Y saying justify g the elimination in every
county of the trained agricultural representative, the man to,
whom the farmers leek for advice in cases of plant or stock
disease?
Through abandonment
of the Ontario apartment
,1griculture, .Ontarios Liberal leader, Would abandon 'elk
Oatatio
'elkOaEado
.•
Marketing Board,
, ,Can the Ontario farmer afford to be without thisb
would its abandonmen ' ' '•
oar or
t be another of the: Costly .Lcnnomics ,
which Mr,, Hepburn proposes.
`The Ontario Marketing oard knew
Bthat fruitproduced in
Ontario 'Wei good"fruit but it knew also that it was not
reaching, outside markets in a way which made pofhntial •'
buyers aware of its goodness. ThroughCo-operation with
fruit growers,'cooling places and'a grading system Were estab
lashed. • • • •
In 1929:the ear this "`l as ' 'i ` ".+
Y Po cY�w dee dad. on,.yOntai'ao sold. •
65 carloads of apples' beyond its own • boundaries. . • •
In - 1933, after' •ten ...titling: iifaces ,.rad been eatabdshed, '
sales in Great,Britain' alone totalled 450,000 barrels„vat-
red at 51,080,000: •
Iti addition to this, there were correspondingly large sales ' ..
on t, r continent, f Europe! and in the' Canadian West,
•In t r. same Ave years:the e. pi5ft of pars and plums greiV
irna,, •pr{tctically nothing to. there' than 1 'b00 packages.
i .ns h one service rendered by the lien ,
r:,icli tOntario' , „ ry Governi9lent .
the tiberal.Farty would .wipe. out in its effort ' .,.,
os,rarlrt• good on; the. rash r'ecetioihy'' p1p`tuise of its ileader, •
Board; product o ,the progressive Conservative •admifihtrie
tign, hasdope,•fo the ,fariner
PRICES WENT SUP ` * •
'1n 493Z. it saw another .opportunity add this year. saw• .
Ontario .ewers who had abandoned 'Ontario.
' using 1,000;000 bushels of the Ontario pmduct at price ;,
$150,000: above the' current market `quotation.' • '
• The,board turned to, the'.; problems of the turnip grower:
Ad a result of its °first season's work the board, obtained oiie
• contract for 1932 for 40;000;bushels •and±,the price obtained
• now by the -farmers is between• 50 and 100 per cent better
than befora,the board, became interpsted•in the situation.
• Export' saki of cattle in ;.1933, for the whole of Canada.
totalled 50;3;1'7 head,' valued at $3,1'89,194. Aggressive sales
methods of the Ontario Marketing Board were responsible for
•TWO-THIRDS ' ,OF• THIS •' TOTAL. -31,783..'. HEAD! •
VALUED AT S1,'01-4,471=GOING FROM ONTARIO,'
What the Ontario Departmedt of ,Agriculture and its sub-
sidieryrthe Ontario Marketing Board- the Department which
.",-Liberal Leader Hepburn would wiPe out=has'done• for• the
bacon mdgstry needs no comment .•The. .
themselves. hBiiies sptialc�for
BACON SALES JUMPED
In 1932„:Ontario sold t art' • ? ` ` o •
y imlhon pounds, of, Bacon inane
.British
arks°
t I .,
. .,193'
3 �
tgra
has r
o
wn'to 4g;000Ob0
pounds. ANb THEFIRST. FIVE' 'MONTHS, OF 1934HAVE BROUGHT INCREASED BACON
RETURNS' OF'.
MORE; 'TITAN .$15,000,000 TO THE FARMERS'OF, •THIS
PROVINCE:
Export.o/ dressed poultry leas grown from a negligible
g figure ,.
to a to414.11 , •
To improve live stock herds of tee r ovine it
' Pro •s6recd. to :
pay twenty 'per, cent of the cost: of pine bred sires. In P 1932
.. alone there Were 430, applications and $3?,000'was paid. ,.In
the•five years, 442. approved herd Sireswere sent into Northern
Ontario, On these'the Ontario Government i
of this; cost; plus the freight;. . d 30 pct cent:'
Eff rcts'of h ...; . n. �t:._ ,
' t e department <.am'�l ep-operation of dairymen
have improved the quality of the 86,000,000=pound annual'•
production of'Cheddar cheese from •89 per cent. first' ualit'
in 1924 to 06 per cent: first,quality in 1 q”' ''q•
qq y 932 and Ontario
Cheddar Cheese nowbrings a' phemiuns o/ front two to.ehree
cents over cheese.froni other countries. y '
Ontario is the only province which loans mo to' -shine►*
on 11 'securit . d their 1>ry i..,. .
le . Y f..he r lands an¢ chattels, Iu.,i933 it Joined
in round figures, $6,700,000 to 3,41$ applicants,
PLEDGED TO ELIMINATION
This is the department which Mitchell'Ilepburrt,'leader
'of Ontario's • Liberal ,Palmy, has,pledged Irirnseli fo elm%
nate.
In, one fell swoop Ire would wipe. out a department
which has„done ',more than anything else in the Dominion
of Qui/Ida to see the farmers of tide PrOvince ti*ough the
periodi,of agricultural depression.
A•grOicuatalturlo re ,. ctannot afford. that •loss *tit btptitinieat til
Ontario 'mast have co. otri ctlon under erth
e': Progressive , -itruetion Wider LiberalOda Htpbutn:would
mean
Sr`gnod , r•L.•t'AL,,�Q• S TIV 4 °..00I.A 'IU'N N
•
, tp