The Goderich Star, 1936-02-27, Page 2PAGE TWO•
•
torn Y weeks Evn that 'w*s better th -Spending the
sin en '000 and freeling to desttli, '
Xidnappittg I rn eXpensiVe littsinesa, the Labatt as
coStiiig the Provinee of 'Ontario, oyer $200,000- In $401.'
° tion to the ,menetary outlak, --1,t sent three men to the
penitentiary forlifteen $eare each, thne by the own
considered acts, vireeking, their own lives;
(Esiahlishe4145)
Art intlePendent .newalainer° PUblIebeti Myr 'fliur*da.V At
nve giter "Onloai Gaderith. i',30bteliPtlen Me ---00104$ Ond
ire* Britain. 81.50 per; year in adv*Ite0 (in erre*rs 42,00) ;
ite4 Ailaterx• $4.96 per year in 1)tdVittite. Ugh c4 »4 new
ifte'sw•ebe414 bo Oven 'When 0400 Of stedrese ires
Inasted. _
CeSINTOELIsernONSs-vfre find' that Mar or our subscribers
Meter net to have their subscriptiOas hitorrtind In WS they
Salil to ream beton exuiratt,mtaws we are 'notified to
'c a.stutne Via subscriber wishea the derviee continued
snd *ill sena-the PaPOr for $ Ideated tl.nte
itsatrITAISICISS should be made be registered letter, money
*der or Cheque payabls at par in Goderich.
The Cioderich Star aeeepts advertising in its columna on
.he understanding that it wfl Itiot be liable ffn any error in
my advertng pUblished hcretinder Unless a proo Q saeh
Aalvertisernent4 is required in waits; by, the advertiser and
*ettun,ed to The Star's busineSs office dely signed by adyerm,
timer and with'such errors or corrections plainly noted in
vtiting thereon and in that case. if any error is not correeted
• iy The Star, its liability' shall net exceed sUch a proportion
the entire test of such advertiseinent as the space occu-
pied by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by
sat advertisement. Advc:rtising rotes on application.
A1130114CD wiurEs, C. KERR STEWART,
Editor. Manager. ,
Phones: Dar 71; Night 84 and 331,
Post -Office r ...ver 071.
THURSDAY, MBRUARY 27, 1936
ALL IN OPERATION
A letter was received by The Star last Saturday, ask-
ing for the .names of the different industrialsplants now
operating in Goderich. As similar requests may have
been -reeeived by other citizens, we decided we would
answer the letter sent to ourselves, by giving the de.
sired information through The Star.
Here is the list:-
Goderich Salt Co.
- Western Canada Plour Mills.
•-Goderich Elevator and Transit Co..
•-Deminion-Iteads-Mac'hinery Co. - -
Ideal Salt Co.
Goderich Organ Co. (Wood -Workers).
Goderich Manufdeturing Co.
Goderieh Planing Mill.
Everyone of the above concerns is operating, and all
of them are looking forward with 'confidence to a busy
Pring and summer, There_ are also several smaller
plants.
In olio of the plants there are IR men on the payroll,.
and its wages average $4,000 every two weeks. • In: an-
other the average number of employees is 85.
• Those are the two major ind9stries. In some of the
others, from 5 to 20 are employed all the year round.
It is a list of which any town should be proud.
Then •the harbor can accommodate any fresh -water -
ship afloat, and still leave docking space for a good sized
fleet of freighters.
As Goderichqs the county town, a number of officials
reside here, and their incomes all contribute to swell
.the ;buying power -of the community.
There tare four hotels in town, three of which are
open the year round, and a fourth in the summer sea -
eons ---The Sunset -built on .the banks of Lake Huron,
'and femous for the freshness and daintiness of its table,
Aervice. --Its_-derivessits- -name- from the--gor-geousneas
of the sunsets which cart be seen from its spacious rooms
and verindahs.
. A river, with high banks en 'both sides, forms, part of
the town's boundaries, and it is said to -g� on the ram-
page every spring, With millions of tons of .snow be-
tween its high banks, we are anticipating the break-uss
with pleatureable interest, our only regret is, we can-
not annouice either the inonth, week, day or hour,' so
this public could see and hear the winter's accumulation
Of snow, ice and water on its way to the lake.
:The Main street of the town is in the form of a circle,
which strangely enough i called "the square." It is the
elitieet place in Canada in whieh to get lost, but there
are always people quite -willing to help strangers tb find
their way about, in fact Goderich is famous for its tour-
tesy and its salt
• SIGNIFICANT FIGURES
Deenite radiosancing, cards, .sports and movies, the
Old-fashioned habit- of reading still persists., If the
--,----7-'-fftxPer1nee of the Goderioh Public Library IS typical,
' and-itsissa fair Criterion, the public still turns to book
Last Year 1419 more books were issued from the loeal
library than in 1934, or rotighly, every maze woman
and thild in Goderich took out an average of 7% books
in 193.6. •
Thee are significant • figures. Pen le's actions are
u n uesiee, their tl-TTghts, and thoughts. to a
extent are molded'hy book te It is SUrpriSing, as
well as encouraging, to note; from the annual report of
the Isibrary, that nearly half Of the books taken ant
butt year, Were not little; but of, travel., Art), literature,
1IstozifOfa bIrapby fietiOn_ is,. of tourie„the„,most
Poptilar, and 'that is tailly understeod. There is no
objeCtion to *ago liettcinS Said- the World would be a
etratnge. place without it Sortie of the most gifted
'writers hesie published boOkS that mono under the fies
tionheltdirigs but they °Should really be placed with till
duties.' —
APPROVE OF WCAL MAN
.The February Sth edition ut The Canada -Gazette, is
. Said' to oa rmt1uappointnient �t* nun'tber ef Federal
Iteturning-otricers, as pormartent occupants et those
, positions. It tuch is the e*se 3t sileallid represent`
eonsideridge sowing in both time And money during
lkiterokielfttiOa8. If the Men who looted in that eipseity
*Vito last eleetion are neiv'the permanent appointee,
it would meat) that several hundred 0,,eriserirliktives bive
been given lobs by a "Liberal administration. Fhls is a
Inuig, unlikely situation, hat -as these men 'have had ex.
Pettettet, and teuld do the wOrk with less .ettort, they
would be logical appointments.
1,4,,Nortit Huron, many members of beds Parties
*Mild like to see ktr„ W E Blackstone appointed. Atom
the experience gained last he bes_an intimate knew.
Wire of Ow tiding, and could be dept*ided upon to ills.
rge the4*ties attithed to the offiee,whieb tire 14* nO
lkght.
.k
month of Folmar
told, to ent'Ice„.„et or it t
dals. ',Like 0417* ovali a
ej Is flot wealtit" an decler6i1
itnisl tite deep.t,. *trite, but
pored tO *tee ste
Two women have. luet been appointed ae pound -
keepers for a cit l in the .United ..States. Their duties
are to round up "stray rattle, lioraes, goals, mulee,
sheep and swine." Thus once more has inan'p prestige
fallen before the onward niloch, ot women,
Sea Or t:IVEI councillors have given a practical kemon.
stration of their sincerity about ceonoznY, by rescinding
the by mw to pay themseires so ninth per years It Was
contentious question iit Seaforth, as it Is in other
conumthities, Goderich hes no trouble of that natttee,
• the council members. giving their servicea ter the bene-
,
fit of their community. •
.1••••taamwm.....awal•••,.
Two snore members arb required onsthe- Public School
'Board, one of the heavieet, if not the heaviest spending
body in towp. Here is an opportunity for at leasst two
reliable residents to serve their fellow citizens:, If they
possess some knowledge of public affairs, SQ milelt the
better, but they should at least have a sympathetic and
-understanding interest in both teachers and pupils.
•
A. E. Cal min, publisher of The Picton Gazette, and
whom de only knew by exchanging correspondence
on different occasions, on problems lit whieh we were
both interested, has placed the prophetic "801' to his
last copy. He died some days ago at his home in Picton,
the town for which he gave freely of his best. He
occupied many positions of truit in his community, and
his death is a loss to his district, and also to journalism.
Jockeying or Ti,arty-advantage seems to he engag-
ing the attention of the members of the House of Com-
mons to the exclusion of moie- important matters.
Both parties seem to be equally anxious to unearth
ancient history rather than proteed witls the country's
business. • With the Government of the day backed by
such a large majority, and an election four or five
years away, it seems more than passing strange that
precious time should- be wasted talking about all sorts
of frivolous matters.
White frost on trees, houses, stores and stables, and
everything else out -doors on Saturday morning was tak-
en as an inditation that a thaw was on the way. On that
particular morning, the temperature was 12 below at the
harbor, but there was no wind and consequently it was
hard to realize it was as cold as the instruments regis-
tered. Railway whistles also sounded differently while
some kind of birds -were calling from tree tops. All of duction, lessen net or real wages, add
whieh adds' hope to the hope that the back of Canada's • to the unemployed.
P.s spoke after Mr.
.- '.
worstwinter is at laet broken, and spring is in the offing. Severalle1
Of:nr4)
an, s *isms /1/45
ateelak
eSe. eso sieeeNeet
euite.,FENES,
ge.gaigAIV
$04.10 OAP.
CA'r4f40 4ttatetiote
tole Wee. eett $1i4iK ,
ffilat.4 Qs -fitofoic uttnt. I
tJ4,Y1 Est ilism
Aesrg OHO WI E.R$
NERKE$ ostoksikroky
Isass. VIKCIP-4514* Otilt.t4 WPRK, IN *OM ci:osite ookfctms
uaHoolon Dome. 'Iota -or,. L1ND8RG.l. HI PLAnt
4i4Or alt40%. 41)3t51. nirtrirrs1.0" V.125.ZPAG 'AND4.41$41‘1'
. • ' '
411104/4. IIMPV4 roltaktte0.4.1,0111" j
Maiden Siwech Less
- Than Five Minutes
oalailleamansa.•
The Penality
North Huron's Member Sets Ex- Of Eijia• asamnamommo
ample- for. Brevity The lines of suffering on almost
every human countenance have been
• FEW GOOD DEBATERS deepened, if not traced there, by un-
faithfulness to conscience, by de -
The Ottawa Journal makes the
fallowing-commedts
• Deachmairs first speech in the House
of Commons: •
• Brevity isn't always sthe soul of
wit Nevertheless, we hail with sat-
isfaction a speech Made in 'Parlia-
ment this week by Mr. R. J. Desch-
• man. It *as Mr. Deachnaari's maiden
Wert, and although he was dealing
with somewhat ;difficult matter -
whether the State -should paY retir-
ing 'allowances to all citizens over
sixty -he spoke less.than five .min,uts
es. His speech took Iess than a
column el Hansard, about 500 words.
In those five minutes, Mr. Deach-
man was able to show that he pro-
posed lass could not reduce unem
ploymeni, nor inerease wages and
purohasing power, but that, op the
eontrary, by adding $120,000,000 to
the State's annual bill; demanding
higher taxes, it would decrease pro -
Deachman. But though they spoke
much longer than he spoke, using
Claiming to have 60 years successful experience as a hundreds and thousands of more
weather prophet, based upon the habits of Bluepoint
oysters, a writer in an American exchange last Friday
asserted, this continent was in for another cold dip. He
Sthtted that the oysters W-eri fat and still bidding deep.
which hesconsidered a Sure sign -of continued - severe
weather. He didn't explain how oysters, usually consi-
dered as dumb came to be endowed with special informa-
tion on, the weather. Perhaps an oyster can guess about
as near right as any person, or thing, when it comes to
weather.
February is ordinarily about as faded or colorless a
month as any in the year. This year will go down in
history as one of the storThiest and coldest ever exper-
ienced. When the sun did shine, which was very rare -
1, its rays were not powerful enough_ to improve the
temperature, or induce the storm kilns to relax for an
hour or two. March 'winds 'are usually to be avoided,
but they tire accompanied by the assurance that the
sap is on its way up sfrom the tree roots, and that
April showers to be followed by Hey flowere, are on
the way.
,•.••••••••••••
couneil has voted $.60.0_ to, assist, in the ex-
termination of mosquitos. in_that town. That is an
expenditure rGoderich has to. occasion to duplicate,
there being no low lying swamps or 'breeding spots in
this district, and the breetes from Lake Huron dis-
courage many venturesome nieMbers et that venomous
tribe that might feel disposed to summer in this locals
--few----years-itge-Orillia was- notods-for its -fro--
gressiveness, it being one of the first to adopt days
light saving; and its mosquito grants also attracted
attention, but latterly it is noted. for the rough -house
tactics .of Its Councils. It is a Change for the worse.
By publishing- the Aiditore report ot the township
of Colborne, in the two local papers, -instead of in book
form, that touneil hes adopted a plan that will, appeal to
a great teeny residents of that township. While the tax.
• payers are direetly toueerned in the disposition of their
own money, there are Comparatively few who go to the
Clerit'a oilite' to ask for tOpies of the financial states
merit As nearly everybody takes a local paper, the ins
formetion this year will likely be more thoroughly con-
sidered-thait-it-ever was before.- The. dtta.lis'are not
given as fully -as they would be in book term, but they
ekiplain the Township's financialposition in a manner.
any person cau understand. By this year's plan, the
Reeve and .Councillors are advertising the fact they
have nothing to eonceal„ and their aetion wifl belp to
restore' tonfidence in their owri.public officials, and pos.
sibly of those of other municipalities.
•-a-,•••
OTHER PAPERS' OPINtOM:
afety First, (The Perth 'pourier).--- The popular
ramie .of liviag thlavtvinter Ias been from hand to ears.
Still itsetut (Pettal Coqier),4-4b0 tall5Wer to thb
onotion$ whit is * rumble seat good for,
Way have been
found by the hTerth, tialtOta vsural carrier Who ear -
res *11010 ih his *tuck to pull it i;ut °flow drifts.
Fords of the The,..isak, (The Finerielei Post.) Aorta
the gums, Nor *in be mocibir its maiden voyage
ere's* the *ow. The largest *14 afloat, it willlinark
new p4Wt'in site, apeedi levity and km:tett
Yet it may that the Queen Mary will be Ott hitt et
e *re*t toil& itsinthtuns. Other **tient with rotritimt
mbitions, pottlettlerly /*pia and the rafted Statek swer
tent to leo* the the 'Oben tet. al* find toted In the
Otitis)* shilWristra iota to ,4.-oosottito on
4.1_! ffilt.*
!1igbt-welght aUoy steel and stn
444 tuber shipt 0444
skeational tressisin skipping at*
Used.°
11/111r.SDAY, 'Mi. 27th 1$0
Ywh
oluelltii:ditetiaZse
Hundreds of Different METAL CAP hermetically
is,: seals treetrengthe
. Ways of 1101Mentss .
s' 'Prevents, Wilts
Inas Yetis c040fir
Ruhitafinardfiv
freely to relieve
1141.1Y• ,Innsgular•
pains,: or stiff.
ne% 00r0 fee
r kelt mat i
aettes, etc.,
PROTECTION TO ROADS
=
The 'salt industry is one of the
greatest in history. It hasn't attained
title distieetion beemise of its size
but because, directly or Indirectly, in
fourteen hundred ways, it has enter-
ed intall the spheres of human life,
industrial, agricultural and domestic,
o
and has come to affect great things
and small in some way or another.
One •great industry, and perhaps
the most romantic, which it affects,
is transportation. Fasr years salt has
been ased on the dnits ef transporta-
• tiu iIt is to be found everywhere;
from the 'crystal containers gracing
the whitestables of diners and salons,
to- the brine that flows through the
,
refrigeration system afloat ,and
wheel
Recently it has. eome closer than
ever to transportation through its
latest development. It is now. being
Used in the construction of highways
to make firm, dustless, all-weather
roads, .that will brave the fiercest*
el 'ents of wind, rain, snow and
f ost, and are capable of carrying
ousa,nds of speeding cars and heav-
ily loaded trucks. Surfaces have been
produced which ean scarcely be dent-
ed with a hammer when dry and
which offer a firm and tractive
wheelcourse when wet.
By topping roads with this new
and permanent type of pavement, de-
partures from duty. Todo wrong.is_,Infoe_th_the_zonstmetimtg
finite and substantial savings can be
-the ,surest -_Way bring-sufferingT. •
• ways -of the highest type, for the
materials used, -gravel or crushed
stone, sand and clay, - are to be
found in practically all localities.
sufferin, and in- Properly blended and compounded
relish fer innocent pleasure
crease our sensibility to g. with salt, thoraughly mixed, spread ,
on the roadway, dampened and rolled
They spoil us of the armeor of a
conscience and of trust in God, with -
pixel used succesSfully to meet the need
out which for low cost, all-weather roads. Only
into place, these materials are being
of foes,
changes of
to handle this construction. necessary
CINV:ifveulrerkaebaleaulbyklalhlQisthe8 the •ordinary type of- road 'building
is to inflict the sorest injury on our
.life: Thus,. toequipment, which almost every high-
. do . wrong way organization owns, is
no wrong deed ever failed to bring it.
Those sins which are followed by no
palpable pain are yet terribly aveng-
ed, even in this life. They btidge our
capacity of happiness, impair our
own peace. No enemy can ,do us
selves svhenever or however we viol -
Xi Ontario, the first sections were
equal harm with what we -do our-
laid on the Department of Highways
ate anx_moral or religious obligation. system, in the Toronto residency, and
' e shortly after; the Department of
Northern Dsvelopment built several
• RE-ELECTED DIRECTORS sections were laid in various counties
including Huron, through the pro-
vince and test sections were Construe-
' .,- ted by the Quebec Department of
The annual niesang or the MCKillopi Highways. .
• McKILLOP MUTUAL miles in the Muskoka area. Seeeral
-Mutual FI:rP Insurance cmPanY was These salt treated roads are known
ten Friday afternoon in the Town as "Salt Stabilized Roads,"-"stabis RUST -RESISTANT WHEAT
lized" because they are firm under
all conditions. The action of the salt
is on the clay portion of the com-
pound. The c am acts as a binder for
the coarse aggregate, whilst the salt
controls the usual action of clay
over cycles of wetting and drying.
Water is added durieg construction
to make the -clay plastic, to ensure
compaction, and to provide, in part
assmeisture bond which adds to the
cemehting powers of the clay. It has
to be properly proportioned and man-
ipulated, but' when this is done the
materials wiillet up in a firm dense
mass, -.-a mass that will turn water
without rutting, and be solid and
dustless when dried out.
• Other applications of salt to the
transportation industry and its pro-
blems are now under development,
and as the days go by more links will
be added t� the chain binding these
two great industries more and more
closely together.
TRAFFIC' LIGHTS
DANGEROUS INTERSECTIONS
Sates Ames;
Harald. F, Ritchie.
•
flees Loti
Toeeeo
to -
Toronto Member
Scores Farmers
Claims They Are Not Thinking
For Themselves—Statement
Denied
ITEMS PASSED
OTTAWA; Feb. 21 (0P') .-A protest
against--inkireased- a,gricititurat-estimittee-
over the yearA was made -in the -House -of -- ---
Commons on Friday by David Spence,
Conservative member for Toronto -Park -
dale. He sa2d farmers had been spoon-
fed, so long they expected some one else
to do all their thinking. '
He was promptly told if any class In
Canada had been spoon-fed, it was
manufacturers, not farmers.
Economy was necessary today,.the Tor-
onto member -declared, and it -should -be
tmiforra in ail departments. The Agri-
culture Department was rprinting tons of
literature, and farmers, Instead of learn-
ing to thaik for themselves, were told to
write in for directions on building a
chicken -coop. }Te was not opposed to
farmers, "but I think we are doing atore
than we are asked to do. I believe they
should do more thinking for themselves.
They are not so stupid as 'we think they
are, rhope," he !concluded.
• The whole discussion arose on an -item
of $2,016,900 for experimental farms,
which then passed;
-Following the minutes of the hitt an-
nual meeting the secretary's report was
words, not any of them apposing the given by Mr. Reid, in which he analyzed
resolution said anything not said by the
and: outlIned the fi-es•ncial
Mr. Deachman, or presented the progresd
of the Company during the past
points he presenteitste lucidly. or .as year andasspeciany stertaining to the rate
wellreduction on new and renewal aPPIka-
tionS. The question a rates on seoond
and third tastallments was explained in
detail and especially that the Insurance
Act under subsection 3 of Section 106,
would/ 210!. perzrdt any recta:mon on
..seeena and third Instalments, so that
the D2reotorershadsabsoartely no option
In regard to rates. , The report stated
that there were 2,645 policies in force as
of December st 1935, an increase over
the previous year of 91.
• The ..retiring diteeterS, Matsrs. A.
Eroacitoot, John. E. Pepper and W. R.
Axchlbald, were all re-elected. Messrs..
John L. Malone and Edwin P. Chesney
were appointed auditors. -
A complete list of the newly elected
officers,can be seen in the advertisement
of the McKillop ,MutUal Fire Insurance
Co. on peg! 7.
Brevity, when it becomes a fetish;
is a nuisance: A man may utter a
stupid thing in ten words as readily
as a brilliant thing. The great thing
in Mr. Detichman's fever was that in-
stea i of making a set speech, a
sfieech prepared and written out
without regard for preceding diseus-
sion, he was really debating things
said by speakers who had just taken
their seat,. -
That is what *debate-lIctuse of
Commons debete-should be. The
curse -of most Howie of Commons
speeches is that they aren't debate
at stills they are just set speeches. As
a consouence the House losses ,that
"tut -and thrust" which Mr. Speaker
Fitzroy oftthe British House spoke
about this year; is cohdezened to a
precession of interminable ,speeches
aa dtill as they -are sometimes irrele-
vant.
Actually, the number of men in
Parliament who may be classed as
goed debaters is sraprieingly small.
There are any. number of men who
can present a given
ably or who can make, a good speech.
Etlucational System
' case clearly and
There are perhaps less than a -dozen
who mai thine quickly on theis feet,
oscatesfollewsits_areeed•ingespeake
merit • s* tluickly auS effectively. This is Education Week. throughou
and analyse ant
d .lisseet, Lis argu-
mrs Ontario. and is :sponsored by the Came.
Bin Teachers' Federatton. Among its
Bennett can do it, partiCularly in the
field of finanee4. and; atr. Dunning. features are radio addiesses by Lady
* etirwisaseedssermutror estweldss,11°1- 1'1611nm Regers
But,taken as a whole, and including '
eveu the front benches, the talent is
0 9 in:vihiehonr.._ 4.se_ot..cpmin0434.rictiTtralo-QtArr.thIcihrsjeeecots-naciraery-tb-zose-eholle-tersitetti,;:r
doesn't shine. .
adaptett o present-day needs, of
Indivi-
* *
Our past Parliament, we think, had saysnatejracaolflaltdmasisies! -antdratairt atenilidgfit Innea-deefil
more of this talent. A budget speeth When. it Is realized .that Ontario haa
by Sir George Foster would bring about 6,000 adzninistrative unite, „Tante
Radi� ddiesses
••••••••••••••.....;
• Edueatioin Week
doration is being given the estab-
lishment of traffic lights at dangerou
intersections of highways in tit. opens
cotintiy, ft was announced on Friday by
W. J. Fulton, CbSirnball of the commit -
fee on Engineering, Roads' and Pave-
ments, at the convention at the Associas
tion ot Ontario Land Surveys in Toronto.
While Aittle actual construction work
ad_beens castled,. oizt bys-_the-Dspattinent-
ca Trghways in. 1935, Mr. Fulton said,
many surveys had been taken for esti-
mating the dOSt or straightening and
"widening:, . pavement whir.th had been
found 10 be Inadequate.
Reforms Must Be Introduced in
ELIMINATE FRILLS
an immediate reply from Sir Richincd 'England and 'Wales with a PoPalvtlioh "
Cartwright, just as a budget speech twelve times as great as that, of Ontatin,
by Fielding brought an ientediate have only 311 school. boards and Soots
and brilliant analysis from Fast '0'4 land, hat only 38, 'the necossliar for 'wine
TetlaY a budget speech sees a week- drastic clung° In (tttalle's methods is
end adjournment so that the Opposi- vet," evident.
004-'4 financial -critic may - --counlisetion-At-isalaries' 4-1" 11)1r4gr4etut
a, laborious reply. •
sThere is the habit, too, the.birth of 141111°11131Y-"bects tmta
dit'eumeaJ'"citbelintin' clitrinlat462111m°It "°r't
'whielt Wit in well, .of reading 8"ndatr'aelleels bee°rne° more urgent
speeches. Lest than twenty years every dal" siert belb* glten atter:"
ow., It has grown into a pernicious thin during the present *telt'
hingerobbing Parliament of its
live-
hness and interest, if not of much of
its efficiency, and waking it more and
more of a sounding board for all
sorts ?f' propaganda.. 'Speeches de-
velop Into briefs for this cause or
that.
* * *„
Prepakation for a Speech, whether
in 'Parliament or outside Of it, is a
necessary. thing. But it should be
preparation of the mind, an organl.
maims and marshalling of arguments
within the mind, not .dePentiehts
upon exorcises On paper, on whet Is
tat voile, dependence Upon some.
body ale:ea exercises on paper.
sort of thing, the degra$314 of Par-
napient
to sort of reading circle,
.should be diteedireged sternly'S
CESSION DU11ES TOTAL.
OVER
'
BEATTY 114
READY NEXT YEAR
Ottawa. -Three rust -resistant wheat
I strains developed on Federal experimen-
tal farms vvIll be available for distribu-
, tion i11the °Attu= of 1931. Agricuittcre
1 minister Qardiner told the -House of
1 COMM= today. He said the three
strains would be distributed to fanners
I in 1937, who would sell the resulting
crops of the next year to their neighbors.
•
It Testifies .for Itself. -Dr. Thomas'
-,Eolectric ,011 -needs -no- testimonial of its_
powers other .than itself. Whoever tries
: it for ixvughs or colds, for cuts ort oorttu,
idons, for spra2n6 Or burns, for pains' in
the -limbs -or bixty„ well know •that ,the
medioine proves itself and needs no
.r.gUarantee. Thiss_showst why this Oil is
i in.general use.
am.........................................,...••••••••,,,.......... .
.11111•1111111111111.41•111011.1miuMMIONNY
EYE TROVELE ?
Have your eyes- examined by
R. A. ESD, ter 17 years Strat-
ford's leading optometrist. Ex-,
• pert work only at most moderate'
.prices.
Eyes Exatninstl- Glasses ittei-
Consult him at
Robertson's Jewelry Store.
J. W. CRAIGIE
Insurance and Real,Estate
DOMINION, PROVINUAL
•MUNifelPAANI! BONDS
Phone24
:oal Bnsiiiess as Usual
•, CHESTNUT AND STOVE ANTHRACITE,
POCAHONTAS a nd DOMESTIC 4, LUMP
COAL, ALBERTA LUMP COAL from the
Foothills of Alberta. •
ISCO
tbis wonderful coke with .the gasses left in it.
` a
. All orders given prompt attention and all the coal
is weighed on the Town's scales (your scales).
Phonet-Othee 22
Hou*e 112
CHAS C LEE
Coal Ystra and (Ate at the thaw.
ma.sea•astaaawa.a.......taama•koa.,....aomaatotamaa.aia........:.•a.aamaaaalaiimamommaatfapjlamaiiLwaaaiwasralroaIsvaisamaiacimiaintia4ame•aiami.......amaarfo•
Do Tit Paidol Boils
Cause !hi intiM Mittry?
Anyone who has, or' is, suiteriag
frohens Itadira heir .44 aaiL
*livable they *eke you teelj. Salt'
the *out p041, that ss soft *0
seeni to get rist„of one
te.14 itte plletes 'east*
MILLION
'e tontatio revenue ronetteeelsSats
atttles is **eh* sUs* hieh fhb atm..
Ittett witeetetott *Mee ,atte the Wet
Which' the