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The Seaforth News, 1931-07-23, Page 8PAGE EIGHT THE SEAFORTH NEWS. THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1931, .'HENSALL. Moss Mavis Spencer spent a few days visiting friends in Toronto, Miss Mary, McMordie Of London visited .for a few days with friend's. Miss Mae .l'1dNlaughtton is visiting at the 'home of,/ her parenits, Mr. and Mrs: Dan McNaughton: 'On \Frilday of this .week Mrs. Marg- are't lAgur,-Hensall's oldest citiden, will celebrate her 100th birthday. Mrs. Agur was Ifornierly Miss Margaret Ballard' aitd was born in Prince Ed- ward lcountlty. She dived there four some time after her marriage and lat- er was a resident of London. Her husband d,ield there and she .came with her daughter,- Miss Mary Agur, to make her ho'ane with her son-in-law, and daughter, Rev. Dr, and Mrs. Flet- cher, near Exeter, where Mr. ,Fletcher was minister for : over tarty years. After his resignation he moved to Heusla'll, where Mrs. Agur and her daughter kept house for him until his dealth, Mrs, Agur continued to live here and until this hast year she has been in goold health.. Her mind and memory is still ;goad and she enljoys meeting and chatting with her many friends. Dr. R, P. I. Dougall of Petrolia spent the week -end visiting his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Wan, Dougal. IDr. Russell MdKay and bride of H'agersvi'1Ie, who are on their honey- moon `trip, spent a few- days last week visiting Hensall friends. Constables Wha'tesides and Grundy of Goderfch and Hudson of Hensalll made a raid on Saturday night on a farmhouse two miles out of Hensall,. which is occupied by two Belgians who recently 'moved there from. Cen- tralia. We understand quite a lot of liquor was founld and the names taken of same 'fourteen men and women who were found there, all of whom will be brought to trial. The two Belgians were taken to Goderich on Saturday night, The Hensel district is getting !somewhat notorious for drinking dives and we hope this wild'be the start of a general cleanup. Miss Amelia McKay of Toronto visited with Miss Greta Laramie :for a couple of weeks. IMr. and Mrs. A. Foster and family spent Sunday int Kitchener. (Misses M. and E. Johnston have re- turned from a delightful motor trip with friends to the northern peninsula Mao visiting friends at Pike Bay; Lions Head and Tobermory, return- ing by Owen Sound, Harrison Park and Eugenia Falls. Mrs. Jane E. Short, accompanied by her daughter, Mrs. Forrester, 'both of Windsor, are visitors with the Misses M. and E. 'Johnston, Mrs, E. Rennie spent a few day's last week .with her 'sister, Mrs. Cante- lon'and Mr. Cantellon at their cottage so beautifully situated at Pike 'Bay. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sweitzer and children of Detroit are visiting at the him e of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hig- gins, 4v1'iss E. Murdock had a pleasant motor trip to the northern peninsula last week, Dr, and Mrs. A. C. Campbell and family of Toronto spent the week end in town, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Murdock. 'Misses Jean and Dorothy Campbell and brother Keith, of Toronto, are spending part of their vacation with their relatives in town. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. IBonthron and Mrs. L. Simpson spent Saturday in Kitchener. IA great deal of hay remains to' be harvested in this district and owing to the very wet weather sante of it is in bald condition, Mr, Wm. Pepper cut a 'field of wheat on ]Saturday last and the wheat. harvest will be in full swing this week. :Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Butt of Toron- to are visiting for a few day's this week with Mfrs. John Murdock. The death occurred at his hone on South Richmond Street early Sunday morning of Robert 'Lamont, aged 72 years. He 'lived alone in the house .re- cently occupied by Lawrence Heffer- nan, having moved here from the farm olf Robert Cameron where he had been employed for about a year. I -Ie was visited by several friends on Saturday when he was last seen alive, Mr. A, Foster, who lives across the street from him, not having noticed him arounkl on . Sunday or Monday 'went. over and found him lying in his bed dead, in a badly decomposed condi- tion. Dr. Collyer was immediately no- tified and after making an examina- tion he called Dr. O'Dwyer, coroner, at Zurich. The coroner got in touch with the authorities at IGoderi'oh who ordered an inquest. The post mortem was performed by Dr. Collyer on, Tuesday morning. 'The remains were then turned over to W. H. Hoffman & Sons, undertakers of Zurich,_ and buried in. the Blaylfielld cemetery 'Tues- day afternoon. Mr. Lamont was born in Stanley township, a rnem'ber of the weB known Lamont family of Zurich, and, also a brother of the late Peter Ilambnit, who was fot a' nulmlber of years reeve of Hay t,olw•ntshlp and a Warden of Huron county, iHe 'had had. several children living in the. West and the United States. Dr. Geo, Blatchford of Detroit vi's- itekl at the home of 'Mr. and 'Mrs. Ri- eihlard 13lrtditford. Miss Edna Butt of Toronto is visit- ing this week with friends in town. A quiet wedding was solemnized at the United .Church Manse at high noon on ./Wednesday whe-av _ Rossie Etherington ,Broadfoot, eldest daugh- ter of Mrs, Jas. lBr'oad•foo't ,and the late Jus. Broadfoot was united in :marriage to _lir. James Anderson Mc Allister of the Parr Line, The 'Rev, Arthinr• 'Sinclair officiated, The !brides- maid was Miss Cllaris Connor of Windsor fond the groomsman Mr, Jas, IBroad'foo't, b'ro'ther of the bride. They will 'ma'ke liens' home on the bridegroom's farm on the Parr 'Line. Before her marriage, 'the 'bride' was teacher in S!S. No, 1, Tu•ekersmith, 'Mr. and M'ds,. Laird IMickle, 'Misses Florence Welsh and Nellie Boyle are spending two weeks camping at Mr, and Mrs. G. T. Mickles 'c'obtage at Rbdrdeau Park: \'lrs, Peter Fisher. and daughter, Mis's Eleanor Fisher, are Visiting at the home of the former's son. at Gray- enhulrst. A quiet wedding was solemnized Wednesday w�lnen Isabella Jean Rus- sell, youngest daughter of 'Mrs. A. Hodgert, of Hensel, was united in marriage to John Giibsoa. Madge. only son of lir, and Mrs. Walter Madge of 'Tuckersmith, the Rev. Arthur Sin- clair officiating. She was attended by her sister. Miss Verna 'Russell. 'The groomsman was Mr. Clayton Col- quhoun. They will . reside on the groom's farm in Usbo,rne.. The 'choir of the Carmel Presbyter- ian Church assistedin the new Bres- byterian 'Ch'urch at Baylfieid on Sun- day evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. !Harding and son William of London spent' Sun- day with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cor- bett. Miss Hazel Morena cif Dashwood visited friend around :Hensel' on Sun day. ID:r. and Mrs. Murray Fisher of Graven•hurst spent a felts^ days with the former's mother here, Mrs. Jas. Bonthson assisted in the choir of the Presb'y'terian Church at Bay'fiel'd on"Sund'ay. Mr, Robert Mayers of Vancouver spent' the week -end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Passmore. Mrs. Sam Stacey and -son. Jack cf Detroit are visitinlg with friends in town. BRUSSELS Little Miss Mary Davidson had her tonsils removed by Dr. F. J. R. For- ster at Sea'forth. At the jitney on the bowl'in'g green -Monday night, Walter Kerr won 1st, W. Willis 2nd, and: ,D. C. Ross 3rd. Much sympathy is being extended to Mrs. (.Dr.) McKelvey, Sr., of Tor- onto, by her many 'Brussels friends. for 'being so unfortunate as to break her hip. A few years ago Mrs. Mc- Kelvey fell and broke her .hip but was able to go around with crutches.. \'1r. Leslie Lowery of Toronto is visiting his parents, 3fr. and Mrs. C. Ldwery, Mrs. ,Richard Miller and daughter anal Mrs, Miller's brother, Mr. Thos. Smith, of Detroit, are visiting 'frien'ds in Brussels -this week. Miss Norma 'Speiran, of Cran- brook, is holidaying with Miss Ma- deline Speiran. Mr. end Mrs. Earl Cunningham and son and daughter, and 'Mrs. Cun- ningham's sister, Miss Annie iHutch- inson, who has spent the last few weeks there, left on a. motor trip to Havelock to visit Mrs.-Cunningham's mother. Mrs. Wm. :Clouse is visiting her sister, lfiss Seats, in Teeswater. Miss Helen ,Baeker, h'as gone to Burford, where she will visit her cousin, Miss Doris 1fdAnter, who has been visiting her here. Miss Elva Oliver, 'RM., has return- ed to Toronto. Miss Bernice McKinnon, daughter of Mr. John ;McKinnon, of Fort William, and grandl aughlter of Mrs. John McKinnon, of the 9th con- cession. of Grey, h'as 'been made might superintendent of Listowel hospital. Lindsay Bain, 14 year old son of Mr. ,and Mrs. Andrew Bain of conces- sion 2, Grey To5v.n•1hi,p, .was drowned at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon in a branch of the Maitland River, which runs through his parents' ;farm. The' lad, who was unabie to swim, is 'said to have been Caught in ,the heavy ceased .by the recent -rain. The boy was bathing in the river in company with his younger brother. Douglas,' and the 'hired man, when he is thought to have 'stepped: to beyo•nel his depth. Although unable to: swim, the man made desperate efforts to save the drowning youth, a'lmos't los- ing his own 0ife in the attempt. The body was recovered. ;hall an hour later in five feet of water, The Bain farm is located four miles :'east of James- town village. The boy's parents were on a visit to Paisley at the time,, of the tragedy, and returned two 'hours hater. Lindsay is survived by six. bothers and sisters. TOWN TOPICS TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO July, 1905. St. Joseph in 1905. A despatch from Buffalo gives the following interesting account of ''St. J'o'seph wird particulars regarding a new industry to be, 'started there "One of the largest and most sub- stantial of 'Canada brick. terra-cotta and tile planitis have been bought by B'uffa'lo investors. Oliver H. Cabana jr., the :well known business man, and Thos. Lannert', one of Buffalo's best known contractors, have secured ex- tensive interests in St. Joseph, a thriving little Canadian town. After the recent big fire that ',snvepit Toronto the scarcity of ,brie•ks trade building a difficult matter. As a consequence bricks were imported from the Unit- ed 'S'tates, a heavy 'duty paid on them, and prices jumped from $7 and $3 a thousand to $14, While .bricks were scarce in Toronito, Mr„ ,Cabana and Mr. Lannert took a trip to St. J:ose'plh and there bought ,up what is consid- ered one of the ;finest day deposits in that country. An extensive plant lies been installed for the manufacture of bricks .and drain tile, and it- is pro -- posed 'to manufacture terra cotta in the near future. Slt. Joseph is situated on Lake Huron just north of 'Sernia. Extensive deposits of aluminum have. been found in the clay there, and the little town is rapidly growing. The investment, of foreign capital has giv- en great impetus to, the place, and it now boasts the fact that it has the only factory in Canada that manufac- tures pipes used in some of the finest pipe organs on the continent. 'An hotel has been built at a cost of $150,- 000, 150,000, and will be:apened as a summer resort. Although ten miles from the railroad, an 'electric 'bus carries Pas- sengers to St. Joseph through the finest ,garden country in Canada. Former Residents. Last week we were favored by a call from 'Messrs. Ben Williams, John Sayers of •Stratford; John Sayers, of Chicago and his son, John. Mr. Wil- liams resided in Seaforth some years ago, but is now the pro'prietor of a knitting factory in Stratford. Mr. Sayers resided in ISeaforth many years ago. being employed as agent for the old' Dominion Telegraph Co. He is now a broker in Chicago whence he 'removed from Seaforth, Mr. John Sayers, sr., was a fanner near Stratford in 'the pioneer days. While here they were the guests of Mrs. Samuel IBoy:d, Champions of Ontario. At Berlin on Friday evening last, the Hurons out the last crimp in the aspirations of the Toronto Albions for championship honors, and by a scare of 4'to 2 added the coveted hon- or of "Champions of Ontario" to their other numerous football troph- ies. The' game was an easy one for the locals, and never at any ,dine was the result in doubt, or were they Forced 'to extend themselves. The Al - bions are a fine, gentlemanly 1st of players, but sadly lacking in the vim and system that wine championships. The local players were : Goal, G. Graves; backs. F. Sills, W. McLean; halt backs. C. Sills, C. 'MclKenzie, C. Stewart; left wing, E. Murray, E. Bryans; centre, H. Chettle; right wing, G. McDonald, D, MclLeod, Re- feree, H. W. 'Brown, Berlin; time- keeper, Walter Baker. Many Changes at Hensel!. There have been many changes in the-flourislhing little town of Hensall within the past ten years. Nearly 275 off our old pioneers have been laid in the dust, and their combined ages, would total about 22,000 years. The personeli of aur business men has changed greatly during the past de- cade. Of 'those who kept general store at the Commencement of that period, E, Ronnie is the only one still in business. The MciD:oned•1 and Mc- Arthur hardwares and W. IC. Davis,. grocer, sresti•1'l in business, as is J. C. Stoneman and A. McPlte'rson . T'h•e place has improved greatly in appear- ance. Over eeven:ty,five fine resie ences and six good business blocks have been erected. The population has increased b'y a couple of hundred and an air of genera' contentment is observable. The churches have shared in the general progress and are num- erically stronger than they were ten years ago, though the personell of the congregations have greatly Changed. The Weather. 'For some days past electric storms and heavy rainfalls have been. of fre- quent occurrence in (Seaforth and vic- inity, and the climax came 'oft Wed- nesday evening -in the worst storm of the season. For fully two hours, the rain came down, in "torrents amid ,el- ectric flashes and violent thunder. The large barn of Mr. 'John VIdEwan about a' mile ,and a h'alf west of Brucefiel'd,, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground, 13y ,the as- siJtatice of neighbors all the farming. implements and stock were removed. Fashion Note. It is announced that women's cos- tumes this fall are to be 'heavi'l'y trim- to pay for then,., IA large number of young people enjoyed an impromptu• dance at the old Coleman, residence on G'o'deri'ch street east on Wedne'sday evening. DiIS•CARDED COSTUMES PLEASE 'SOUTH SEA 7ISIJA'N'DERS Not for (many moons 'have Come- dian prairie [Indians ,conte down garb- ed in. top 'Bats and blankets to gaze at the transcontinental.' railway trains.. Today they ride, :i'ns'tead of a cayuse, an automobile, and array themselves in conventional "store clothds," But seemingly the less ,sophisticated abor- igines Of ifar eastern lands are addict - cd to freak fashions in apparel 'and ac- cording to 'Hayden (Church in ,the New York Times, one of the Most un- usual industries :of 'England, wiped out temporarily by the war, is going full (blast again. :This industry, we are told, is (that wherein discarded fancy Costumes 'of ;theatrical compan- ies are sold to savages. ITravehers in the South ;Seas, says. he, need not be surprised at seeing quaky islanders wearing cast-off cos- tumes from the chorus of ".Hit the Deck," or village 'damsels disporting themselves in raiment 'which once graced actors is "Rose Marie" or "Show 'Boat" They may even glimpse some 'swarthy monarch ' clothed in glittering garments that last saw the footlights :of the !Folies ,Bergeres, or some sable majesty 'wearing the royal robes of Macbeth or 'the regalia from "Chu 'Chin 'Chat-." For when stage costumes grow :obsolete in London they can,.be disposed of to coal -black ladies of :the Cameroon:, or the gay "bucks" of !Basutoland. dn•deed, a big consignment of 'cast-off theatri- cal finery is now being prepared in London for shipment to South Afri- ca. The champion 'pusher" of one London firm tin this business l'a'tely left Marseilles with a mass of foot- light finery from "Follow Through." which, it is hoped, will appeal of the sartorial aspirations of the subjects of the subjects of .the .Gaekwar of Bar- oda or the myrmidons of the Ma- harajah of 1Ka'purth•alia. The man .who 'founded, but who has since abandoned, this strange in- dustry for other things is Joint 'Hy- man, of Leicester Square, London, in the heart of fheatreland He is to- day one of the 'hest known theatrical costumiers, and 'tells an amusing story of !how he started his former role of supplying obsolete stage raiment to the simple folk of the jungle and the desert. A friend, says he, a very swell dresser, was wrecked off the coast of Africa and managed to swim to an island. But alas it was a can- nibal island and the refugee found himself in grave danger of the pot. It was only 'when he promised his Bond Street suit of tweeds, his vest and his $10 pink silk underwear to the cannibal chief that he was saved from the casserole. :Finally the ap- peased chief sent him away on a catamaran to a neighboring isl'an'd, where White' folks lived by whose aid he got back to civilization with his idea of a market for stage raiment among the native's. So goes the tale. John Hyman took up the idea at once and up till 'the time he dis- posed of the business two years ago was selling his 'gaudy wares in many parts of Africa, in 'Siam, the islands off the Malay 'Peninsula, and in the Australian "hush." Of his odd trades Hyman has some 'strange 'tales to tell almost as strange as that of the gentleman who escaped the pot by reason of his tact and his snappy garments. The scene of one incident was a district in the Ca'ncicage region — Portuguese territory — 'which was ruled by a chieftian who used to be one of Hyman's best customers. This dusky ruler's extensive wardrobe in- cluded at last accounts one com- piete First Lord of the Admiralty's costume as worst by Sir Joseph 'Por- ter, ICC.IB., in "Pinafooe"; the cos- tume of a S'panis'h 'toreador that had formerly figured in "Carmen," and the complete livery of a flunkey in a Drury 'Lane "society" melodrama, 'be- sides other ornate get-ups which roust have looked weird against a background of mad huts. This old chief, 'tis said, ruled in peace until an ambitious nephew tried to oust him from the throne. Fortunately the chief had in his kit an old "Hamlet" costume complete with gold chain and iponiaril, and with this he was able to moll'i'fy the nephew. who, on its presentation, agreed to stop his plotting. Few of the native (purchasers of such finery have real. Money to give in return. They mostly pay in "kind," with rubber, and palm olive in Africa, and ivory in Siam.. Savages' the world over, asserts Mr, Hyman, dis- like covering t'he'ir legs. 5o the spectacle is often presented on the Gold 'Coast and ,elsewhere of an ebony enema TWINE GOLD MEDAL and GILT EDGE 650 feet to a pound 1214c 600 feet to a pound , .11 Vec One Three Burner OIL STOVE, new $10.00 GALVANIZED PAILS each , 25c No. 57 'EMERY S'TOINE'S 85c PARIS GREEN per pound 35c 16 in. LAWNMOWERS $7.99 DAIRY BUTTER, per pound 14c ME'N'IS WEARING SHOTES per pair $2,69 --:'Cash ('rices Only :— IT WILL PAY YOU TO BUY I;N EGMONDVILLE IATJ. , I �I J Nl AN chieftain strtvtting'dressed-as a noble in some 'Shakespearean play or as the Mikado his bare black legs quite spoiling the effect 01 the gay plumage. According to .Hyman the denizens of Northern Zululand de- light in stage armor and wear it on. the hottest days. At one village in Dahomey. a traveller for the firm be- held.a local beauty wearing a "'Merry Widow" hat, asash of faded pink rib- bon and little else. The gaudy handouts that are thus unloaded on primitive peoples do not always consist of stage costumes, ,it seems. Pretty nearly every kind of showy apparel "goes" with native tribes, and the stock -in -trade of a Logsdon syndicate includes many things. In the consignments one will see uniforms that • were worn in the British army before khaki came into general service and no end of smart liveries that once . adorned the pow- dered footmen of Mayfair and Bel- gravia. Every year the magnificent dark blue and gold -laced liveries of London's lord mayors' servants are renewed and the old ones sold, many of them no doubt eventually glad- dening the hearts of dwellers in wild tropic lands. A DORSET GIANT. Did you ever hear of the Giant of Cerne Abbas ? He is cut on the side of a hill in Darsetshire, England, and, says the London Times, he is the veritable giant of all fairy tales. A full one hundred and eighty feet high he measures in his bare feet; he is gross-linsbed and foolish -faced, as alt giants notoriously are, and carries a club, terribly knubbly and 'forty yards long, brandished over his shoul- der. And what if he' has a left hand at the end .of his right arm so that he grasps the dub with his knuckles forward! His thumb is at the tap. No hisltorian may have mentioned that peculiarity of giants, but it is just the clumsy kind of way they would be trade. And the people who drew the giant of Cerne Abbas had. plenty of opportunity to observe and copy him accurately; for the story still lives how he was killed, and then, as he lay, his' outline was sketched upon the hillside, just as you draw your Tend' round a big trout on a sheet of paper. Who were they who did it? Some. learned people argue that they were the Phoenicians, who used to come trading to this southwest coast for tin. 'Whoever made the giant, they did it very, very long ago. The Ro- mans undoubtedly found him there, and it has been suggested that he is in fact that war god to whom—so Caesar tells us—the ancient Britons used to sacrifice their prisoners. There is no knowing ,what savage orgies. that peaceful corner of the val- ley of the Cerne may not have wit- nessed. Perhaps it was its evil repu- tation that brought St. Augustine there to preach (the St. Austin's Well in the churchyard of aCerne, Abbas perpetuates his name). He found the people not unworthy of their bad reputation; for they tied cows' tails to the, robes of the saint and his 'follo'wers and herded them out of the village like cattle. The giant is not, so to speak, painted in flat color; he is sketched only in outline by a single trench that makes a flowing foot -wide rib- bon of line. against the green of the hillside. His monstrous ribs, his nose and mouth, his foolish high eyebrows, and no•und, staring eyes, with other detail's, are all there in relief. The night is his season. All' day he lies stretched upon his back, staring across the valley past the village with its high church tower and the ruins of the abbey that in his middle age he watched building SO laboriously a thousand years ago. So still he lies that flacks of rooks and sea gulls wander over hint and prod into his ribs and cheeks for worms; and though they must tickle dread- fully, he never moves. But at night— so the legend runts'—when none can see whether he is in his place or not he rouses ansi conies down silently to drink at the streams below. In the. hot summer of 1921 he had so, great a thirst — and no wonder, lying on the parched 'slope all dayl—that•'half the :brooks and ponds and wells of Wessex went .drys FOR SALE Sully moderns home, on 'Centre St,. . newly decorated; three-piece bath;. three -wire service; large lot, two -ear garage, small fruit, close to school, and'churches. Apply on premises. E. R. 'CRAWFORRD. 30, H'OUSE FOR SALE Nine -roomed house, washroom and. pantry. Hard and soft wrater, good cellar, electric lights, reasonable terms, can bee arranged. Garden planted with, potatoes. Garage. Phone 307, Sea-, forth. 30. WANTED A limited number .of cattle for pasture, water and grass .guaranteed. Phone 133 r 21, 'Seaforth. T. G. SHI L LI NIGLAW, APARTMENTS: TO RENT. At once, over Thos. Dickson's, Seed and Feed Store. Apply to E. L. BOX. FOR SALE. *Having given up the .McCormick - Deering Agency, have several good used Cream Separators for sale at a right price. Also a lot of good used repairs for nearly all makes of farnv implements. W. C. GO'V'E!NJLO!OK, Phone 146 r 5, Seaforth. BINDER FOR SALE Or exchange. Up-to-date Deering, 7 ft. cut; used only seven seasons - Also one 6 -ft cut Deering. Bath in good shape. Will sell either, or would consider some good dairy cows or heifers in exchange. Apply to J. E. H'UiGIIUL, on Highway 3 utiles west of Seaforth. Also have one almost new Renfrew cream separator. fully guaranteed. 30 FOR SALE. Walnut teed and dresser, walnut gate-legged table and four chairs, Windsor style, Spanish walnut china cabinet; daybed, white enameled kit- chen table; above are all practically new. Also a Gerard•.Heintztnan piano. MRS. ROIBIT. ARICHIIB'A'LD, James St., phone 29•SJ. NOTICE The Ladies of St. Thomas' Chunc'h intend holding a Lawn Tea and 'Home Cooking Sale at Mrs. Charles Holmes, Helllside, on Friday, July 24th. Also euchre at 8 o'clock. 'Tea 25 cents, euchre 25c. FOR SALE. Electric floor lamp and Hoover el- ectric floor sweeper. Also an electric washing machine, Apply to MRS. AT,KIINISIOIN, Opposite high- school. 32. HAY FOR SALE. 'On hot 3, .can. 5, Tucker•smith, 20 acres of standing hay, in field, timo- thy and alaike 'c'lover, offered cheap. JN'O. &PROIAr', Seaforth. 30 LOST A rhinestone bracelet, on Sunday evening, July 126, on. John street, Main street or at Victoria (Park, Val- ued as a gift. tppply to Phone 164, Seaforth. 30 BARGAIN PRICES ON TOM BARRON LARGE ENGLDSIH WHITE ,LEGH+ORNS And 0.A.C. Barred Rock pullets, 4 weeks old. 30 cents; six weeks old 40c; eight weeks old, 60c. Prices for older pullets and selected yearlings on re- quest. We guarantee safe delivery.. Order now. Later prices will be high- er, KINGSWAY HATCHERY Petersburg, Ont. IN MEMORIAM. KKIIS'TINIER. — •Tit loving memory. of our dear mother, w'ho passed away nine years ago toed/ay, July 1dth, 1922, Nine '•lonslly years have passed, Dear Mather, Since angels came for you;; Yet through the mist of '(these long years Your .face comes smiliit'g through, Each lonely hour that we Have spent Is woven through and through. With gold threads of memories Dear 17dther; 'just for you, SEAFORTH MARKETS. Butter, per Ib lee Eggs, per dozen . . , ...10c-,l12c,1'4c Potatoes, new . ...:1$1,50' Hogs, per r owl $8,25-$S25