The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1930-01-23, Page 7A Real
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FOWEY,, DRUGGIST
Let’s have ■winter in the
*♦ *
winter-time and have
* * *V •
THE EXETER TIMES-ADVOCATE
it ‘over -\vitli.
Here and There
(456)
Running well ahead of schedule
steel work on the 21-story addition
to the Empire's largest hotel, the
Royal York, additional construction
is being rapidly pushed forward and
I; the sixth story is now completed,
«i^..All steel work is expected to b<
finished early in February anc
• everything will be completed bj
..June 1st, when there will be 2
total of 1,181 guest rooms at this
- palatial Toronto hostelry.
Hitting a 90-mile an hour clip, a
special Canadian Pacific train re-
> - cently carried (two-and-a-half-year-
, old Delphis Morin, who was though!
to be dying of intestinal influenza,
from- Sudbury to Toronto, for a
blood transfusion in the Toronto
Western Hospital. Leaving at 1,05
the train reached destination al
-6.35, al! traffic having been helc
■ aside for the special. At 8 the
•'■operation was performed and halt
;an hour later the boy was smiling
; sit his friends. He is now well op
his way tov recovery.
Fighting against Atlantic winter,
gales the cable ship John W. Mac-
kay has just successfully completed
-another epic of the seas in effecting
repairs to the high speed cable of
the Commercial Cable Company
-over which much of Canadian Paci
fic cable business is carried to
Europe. The cable was smashed in
the great 'quake of November 18,
the break being discovered withiD
•36 hours of the arrival of the ship
ton the scene, raising the cable
from a depth of 2^ miles and at-
.-a point 80 miles from the western
end of the break being part of the
.job to be done.
"Canary Korndyke Alcarta” a
fiv.e-year-old Holstein Friesian cow,
which a year claimed the
world’s championship as a butter-
Tat producer with 26,396 pounds of
milk containing 1,080 pounds of but
ter-fat in, 305 days, has beaten her
•■town record. Following her 1928
record this famous cow was the
guest of honour at, a banquet in
Moose Jaw. The latest record for
"Canary Korndyke Alcarta,” is 30,-
801 pounds of milk with 1,336.25
■pounds of butter-fat.® ---------
Honey to the amount of 55,181
.pounds wap, produced in Nova Sco-
iHl in 1928, according to official
figures, and the 1929 putput. will
likely be much larger as the sum
mer season of that year was much
more favorable, says Philip Bishop,
of Greenwich (Port William), the
largest bee-keeper in Nova Scotia. '
.-----------♦—
Within from four to five years
thousands of farmers throughout
the province of Saskatchewan will
have the benefit of all-weather
roads running in all directions. The
•provincial government plans to'
spend $5,600,000 annually during
the next few years ‘ on the con
struction of six main highways, all-
weather surfaced.
THURSDAY, JANUARY M
EESE5EE5H
1930, so far has given
people are not satisfied!
* *
us
*
all sorts oL’weather.And then some
* * **. *
The best stock1 for a farmer to invest in is the variety with a
&Bod ancestry and a good record and that goes on four feet.
County roads in this district have been neither fish, flesh nor
good red herring. Folk requiring to haul hogs or wood or coal have
found themselves severely handicapped.♦* . ■***•««**
’ A glance at the admirable gathering of young men and women
attending the Short Courses under the Agricultural representative
and his ‘efficient staff brings the assurance that the cream of Huron’s
agricultural life is not leaving the farm. These young people have ,
the physique and the intelligence and the interest in their work that
augur well for the future of this country.- Exeter is much the bet
ter of the presence iof these coming farmers and municipal leaders.
$ . •* * * * *- ■$ ♦ * »
r
________ f
Notwithstanding the growing
popularity of the motor car and
, motor power farm implements, the
horse is evidently not going into
the discard as rapidly as some peo-
, pie might be inclined to believe,
latest official estimate of number
■of farm horse's in Canada as-in
June, 1929, is placed at 3,376,487.
Jn 1919 the number was 3,667,369, a '
.difference of only 290,S82.
About, 50,000 tons of hay have re
cently been exported from Eastern
• Ontario and Quebec to buyers in
the British Isles. The 1929 ex
ports of hay from Canada ara
. greatly in excess of those of 1928.
The residence of Miss Belle Jack-
son in Egmondville, was completely
destroyed by fire recently. Some
of the effects were saved but most
of the furniture we burned. The
fire is supposed to. have originated
from a defective chimney.
i
A Severe Cold
Left Her With A
Tiresome Cough
Mrs. Chas. Eldershaw, Morrell, P.E.I,
writes:—‘'Some time ago I was seized
•with" a severe cold that left me with
■a bad,- tiresome cough. ...
“After trying different cough medi-
-cjxics, to no avail, my husband brought
teie homo a bottle of
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Plrte
Syrup
which I started to take at once, and
before I had, taken- several doe^s I
noticed a change, and. When I had
rinished tho bottle my cough was com
pletely gone. I cafiriot recommend Dr.
Wood’s N. I*. Syrup too highly.^
Price, 25 cents h bottle; large family
ftiZe 60 cents, at all druggists of dowers.
Put up only by The T.'Milburn Co,,
Ltd., Toronto, Ont.
V
j
What some big fellows are saying about the business outlook
for 1930: “We bid you hope.” “The year 1930 calls for an end of
joy-riding.” “A good year to those who work, who save, who' prac
tise thrift, who have faith and confidence that at bottom the coun
try is sound.” “Work, pot Wall Street, is the key of. success.”
“1930, a good /average year.” “There will be a revival of activities
in the spring.” “Employment will be maintained at a satisfactory
‘level in 1930.” “The returns to business enterprises will compare
favorably with those of the best past yars.” “Increased need of
aggressive planning.”
*** *****
Old Man Ontario is wakening up to the fact that the rabbit is
a genuine nuisance. The Jack variety, as soon a? the snow’disap-
pears plays hob with the fall wheat. The rascal is a close.nibbier,
thus destroying the wheat plant. Cotton tails girdle orchards and
garden shrubbery. Lately the pests have turned their attention to
the juicier young trees of the swamps and woods?.'• '
. It is high time that farmers were encouraged,'to destroy these
nuisances, by providing free ammunition for organized hunts or by
offering a paying bounty for every head brought in. *'
In treating the rabbit menace prevention is-better, than cure.
********
Some of the most heartbreaking reading of the last few weeks
is the account of persons of high, standing in the community who
have p'roven themselves scoundrels. ,
, Along with these stories is the between-the-lines Account 'of
men and -women who have failed to exercise the most elementary
precaution in the management of their funds. “The,good fellow"
in business may jbe the careless fellow whose easy-going methods
‘may involve;others in poverty and helplessness when want and weak
ness cannot be overcome. Folk .entrusted with other people’s funds’
should give frequent account of them doings and’that in minute
detail. ; ’ '
4.
ier, Wm, Becker, Michael Madden,
Otto Willort, Roy Ratz, Wesley Eng
land, John Houlahan, Rlacide Des-
jardine, Wesley Isaac, Augustus Lat
ta, Thos. Isaac, Adalbert Webb, W.
Baker, Roy jjodgins, Nelson Baker,,
Wm. Bowman, Earl Gaiser, Reter
Eisenbach, Frank Treibner.—Car,
Moved by Mr, E. GUI seconded by
Mr. H. Beaver: That By-law No. 431
prohibiting dogs from running at
large, having been read three times
be passed and sigped by the Reeve
and Clerk apd tlte Seal of the Cor
poration attached thereto. Carried.
Moved by Mr. W. Dearing, second
ed by ML W. Sweitzer;
That By-law No.. 4.30 to authorize
the Reeve and Treasurer to borrow
certain sums of money to meet eUr-i
rent expenditures- be passed. Carried
Moved by Mr, H. Beaver, seconded
by Mr. E. Gill:' That trie Petition
for drainage work filed by George
Link be accepted and that the Reeve
sign the same on behalf of this
Township. .Carried.
Moved by Mr. H. Beaver,/second
ed by Mr. W. Dearing: That Dr. S.
V. Railton. be .appointed Medical Of
ficer of Health. Carried.
Moved by Mr. E, Gill, seconded by
Mr. W. Dearing: That the following
Road. Foreman’s pay sheets be paid,
.viz,—
Peter Eisenbach, road 26, $3.00;
Wm. Becker, road 10, $2.00; Wes
ley .Isaqc, .road 17, $2.00; Joseph
Finkbeiner, road 8, $10.,40; Tljos.
Yearley, road 9, $14.40; Hy. Schenk
road 6, $11.20; Wm. Bowman, road
24, $108.75 ; Roy Ratz, road 13,
!$3.80; Nelson Baker, road 1, $3.00;
I Augustus Latta, road 18, $1.50; A.
Latta, road 18, $4.00;'total $164.
and the following orders: William
Coates, registering By-law $2.85;
Grand & Toy, Ltd., B.D. & M. lnnd-
Ier $7.50; Centralia Police Village
refund road account $65,83; Sun
dry persons, election expenses $147.-
08; The Steward of the Ontario Hos
pital, Woodstock re Alma Williams
$19.50; Wickwire Print Shop, print
ing $64,00; Municipal World, sup-
, plies $12.67; Canadian Bank of
Commerce, commission on cheques
$4.80; Township of Usborne, bal
ance due on E. B. $45.;38; Canadian
Bank of Commerce, collecting taxes
$107.82.
The council adjourned, to meet
- again in the Town Hall, on Monday,
February 3rd, 1930, at 1 o’clock p.
m.
/
d
School Attendance Officers, Eli
Lawson, Geo. Merrier ajid Wm. B.
Oliver.
■ '•-‘•Athletic Field Com.: Reuben
Goetz, Wm. Sweitzer; Thos. Treve-
thick, Fred Gaiser, J. W. Lawson,
Mrs. Herbert Young and Mrs. Daniel
Mclsaac.
Cow Tag Inspectors: Eli Lawson'1
and Placide Desj’ardine,
Fence Viewers: Henry Mills, John,
Morlock, Charles “Christie, Jacob
Ratz, Henry L. Kraft, Eli. King, W.
J. Brown, John Gill, Jas.: Hodgens.
Pound Keepers: B. ■ D. Cook, Hi
ram Sihapton, Royal Gaiser, Michael
Ryan, David Eaglesonj- George Wal-
John Graybeil and C. W per, Alvin Baker, Arthur. J. Airiy,
Christian Finkbeiner, Arthur Baker,
Solomon Pollock, Wilfred,! Desjar-
Goetz dine, Ged. Clarke, W^n. Stade, Gar-
‘ field Steeper, Harold'/Brophey. •
Dog Inspectors: David!,Eagleson,'
Nelson Schenk, John' T.'j«Hirtzei.~
Road Foreman: Nelson .Baker, W.’
Sanders, Lewis Davey, Geo. Hirtzel,
Alvin Baker, Henry Sclicnk, Robert
Gower, Wm. Schwartz, Albert Reg-
STEPHEN COUNCIL
The council of the Township of
Stephen convened at the Town l-Iall,
Crediton, on Monday, January 13th,
1930 at 11 o’clock a.m. All mem
bers were present and ’each sub
scribed to the declaration of office
and took his seat.
The minutes of the previous meet
ing were read and adopted.
Moved by Mr. II. Beaver, seconded
by Mr. E. Gill That a By-law be
passed appointing the following of
ficers and officials, viz:
Assessor, Truant Registrar and
Sheep valuator: Joseph Guinan.
Auditors,
Christie.
Caretaker: Ernest Guettlnger.
Board of Health: Reuben
and William Sweitzer.
Medical- Officer of Health: Dr.. S.
V.1 Railton.
Secretary of the Board of Health:
Henry .^Eilber.
Sanitary Inspectors, Eli Lawson,
Geo. Mcrner and >Vm. B. Oliver. 1
THE FRIEND OF LOVERS _•
' Foy^'p^opio have hoard of Mrts.-'
13. M <jrilmer>T>ut 3$ millions daily
read, the advice of Dorothy Dix,
Mrs« Gilmers. pen name, whose;
photograph, (Shown ’ above, * wos
takeft Toeehtly during Mr stay at
the Banff Springs Hotel. She wa«
on het way from New Orleans, Met
home, to Vandouvidr whence she
sailed for n trip to Alaska aboard
thd Canadian Pacific * cteamc-r
Charlotte.
Henry Eilber, Clerk
Hay Council
council of the Township of
I-Iay met in the Town Hall, Zurich,
on Monday, January 13th, 1930, ac
cording to the Municipal Act, when
tha -tollOwing,^subscribed,..- to-dhe^de-
claration of office: Reeve Louis I-I.
Rader; Councillors, W- R- Dougal,
David Ducharme, Alfred Melick and
Edmund J. Walper. The council
then became organized for the year
•1930. The rental charges for the
Town Hall were fixed as follwos:
'concerts, residents $5.00; non-resi-
residents $10.00; concert and dance
$12.00; dance $12.00 •
meetings $5.00; religious,
free; bazaars, etc.-, $5.00.
lowing -resolutions were
The
political
services,
The fol;
passed:
That the following be appointed of
ficials for the Township of Hay for
the year’1930: Clerk and Treasurer.
A. F. Hess; Assessor, W. H. Edig-
hoffer; '.Collector, R. Miller; Audi
tors, J. A. Smith and Ferdinand Ha
berer; caretaker of hall, J. Albrecht;
member "of Board of Health, C. O.
Schilbe; .Sanitary Inspectors, East
ern Division, B. C. Edwards; West
ern Division C. Eilber and that a
By-law be prepared confirming, ap
pointments. That the salaries to be
paid to the officials for the Town
ship of Hay for 1930 be fixed • as
follows: Clerk and Treasurer, for
township, $3 60.; township roads,
$20.1)0; telephone, $350.00; asses
sor, $120.; collector, $45.00; care
taker $50.00; auditors, $10 for Tp.
and' $2 for telephone, and that a
by-law be prepared confirming same.
That the Collector be authorized to
Continue the levy of all unpaid tax
es for 1929, and that the penalty
and costs of collection be added as
a debt duexthe township. That the
Clerk subscribe for nine copies of 1
the Municipal World, -one copy for
each of the following: Reeve, couii- ■
cilLors, clerk, assessor, collector and .
road, superintendant. That the an-'
liliai meeting of the subscribers of
the Hay Municipal Telephone Sys
tem be held on Saturday, February
1st, in the Town Hall, Zurich at 2
o'clock in the afternoon. That By
law No. l^lDSO, providing for loans
under the Tile Drainage Act, be read
three times and finally passod and
that a copy of tho by-law be
fished in the Zurich Herald for
ri’ttecessive weeks beginning
January ..15th, 1930, and that
ti.ee be appended relating to
to be taken to quash same in accord
ance with said Act.’ That tho Reeve
arid Clerk be authorized to sign and
submit to the Minister of Public
Fj.lghways, of Ontario, the petition
■of the. Township of Hay, showing
tii,at during the year 1929 there has
been expended upon the Township
vends the sum of $11,697.84 and up-
o'jv ihfe streets of.' tho police village
At Siitrivlf'tlie sum of $614‘,91. .and
tlte1 stetutory grant on
fthbse ainouft.ls acebrding to tho On
tario Highways 'Act and amendments
thereto. That the following be am
poiiitod pnundkoepors fop tho Town-
ship of Huy: A. Ingram, O. L. Potty.
<Iy. Walbe-r, S. Greb, W. J, John-
pub-
three
with
a. no
stops
710,000 more
Our increase in sales in 1929
over/,,1928 shows that
wer
and t
ar.
dredover seven hj
n thousand Iditional
ston, S,’ Hoffman, G. Becker, p.
Schwartzentruber.gH. Krueger, F.
Turnbull and 'L,’Nl’ Denomme; sheep
valuators, J.
F. Kading ■
Blackwell, J.
Eckstein and
a by-law be
said appointment's.
covering payments on township rds.
telephone and general accounts be
passed as follows:„ Township Roads, j _ .
T.
E.
,S.R. . _ ■_____,
W. J, Jarrott, pay list, road 14, $13.-
50. Telephone, Bell Telephone tolls
November ' 21st to December 20th,
$64.81; Canada Telephone & Sup
plies/ material $12.91; Northern
■. ..
Parke, Fred. Haberer,
fence viewers D. B.
Pfaff, H. Steinbach,' J;
A. Hendrick and that
prepared confirming
That accounts
Rennie, pay list, road 6, $1.80;
Ayotte, pay list, road 10, $6.60;
P. Daters, pay list, road 10, $6.60
Hoffman, pay list, road 8, $7.50;
Miller, pay list, road 9, $5.40;
Electric Co., $54-53; Stromberg-
Carlton Telephone Mfg, Co., mater- ,
ial $26.95; /Zurich Central switch
ing, six weeks, $96,00:- P. Mclsaac,
salary etc., $g7-5.30; H.’ G. Hess,/la
bor and material, $79.47. General
accounts—Nomination expenses $9;
Municipal World, supplies $12;77;
Township Clerk, registering Births,
Marriages and Deaths $23.00;, On
tario Hospital re C. Rupp, 3 months,
$39.; E., H. 'Weltin, account,
Masse Drain $1.50;?? A. Foster, bal
ance lock-ups $1944; IL Q. Hess,
repairs, to lights, town hall $5.20; A.
Meyers, error in dog tax, $2.00- S.
Children’s Hospital, grant $5’00,.
The council adjourned to meet again
on Saturday, February 1st, in the
Town. Hall, Zurich, at 9.30 o’clock,
in the forenoon.
A. F. Hess, Clerk
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