The Seaforth News, 1932-03-10, Page 7ITWiRIS$?AY, MAl
CH 10, '1932,,.
I
THE SEAF'ORTH NEWS:
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:141.31 it not serve you:'
i.. ieonths, 26 weeks, only $2.
to ,vd " 52 , 3:50
yai.. ,...i- n say address, in Canada, Nfld..
W. Indies, Great Britain' and Ireland.
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e .rn 1,, 01 S., 60 ods„ to other for -
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JOHN DOUGALL & SON
P..
O. BOX 3070, MONTREAL
Denthanen, ..... .......1931
Please send me WORLD WIDE for '
twelve months 23,50
atx months 2,00`. post paid
maim m
flumes '
alb or tem
FARM FOR SALE
Lot 11, Concession 4,' H.R.S , Tuck-
arsanith, containing 100 acres of choice
land, situated on county road,• 1r/q
miles' south of the prosperous Town
of Seaforth, on C.N.R.; convenient to
acliools, churches and markets. This
sarin is all underdrained, well fenced;
about 2 acres of choice fruit trees.
The soil is excellent and in a good
state of ctrrjivation and all suitable for
gbe growth of alfalfa, no waste land.
The farm is well watered with two
never failing wells, also. . a flowing,
spring in the farm yard; , about 40
acres plowed and reading for spring
seeding, also 12 acres of fall wheat;
remainder is seeded' with ,alfalfa. The
buildings are first class, in excellent
repair; the house is brick and is mo-
dern in every respect, heated with fitr-
mace, hard and soft water on tap, a
three-piecebathroom; rural telephone,
also rural mail. The outbuildings con-
sist of barn 50X80 feet with stone
stabling under; all floors in stable
cement; the stabling has water sys-
tem installed, A good frame driving
abed, 24x48 feet; a 2 -storey henhouse
16x36 feet. A brick pig pen with ce-
ment floors capable of housing about
411 pigs. The house, stables and barn
Have. hydro installed, Anyone, desir-
img a first class home and choice farm
should see this. One account of i11
health I will sell reasonable. Besides
elle above •I am offering lot 27, con-
cession 12,. Hibbert, consisting of 100
acres choice land, 65 acres well under-
drained; 10 acres maple bush, all seed-
ed to grass; no • waste land.' On the
premises are a good bank barn 48x56
feet and frame 'house, an excellent
well. The farm 'is situated about .5
miles ,from the prosperous village of.
Remelt on the C.N.R., one-quarter of
a mile from school and mile from
tharch. This farm has never been
cropped much and is in excellent
shape for cropping or pasture. I will
sail > these farms together or separate-
ly,to suit purchaser, For furtherpar-
ticulate apply to the proprietor, Sea -
forth, R.R. 4, or phone 21 on 1313,
Seaforth. THOS. G. SHELLING -
LAW, Proprietor.
A .
March ,13:
',Clod was in. Christ, ;re'concililjg the
'world unto himself;: not ifatputmg
their trespasses unto 'thein, far
he hath invade Him to be sin for
us, who lace' ,no, sin; that we
Might be' Made .the righteousness
of,'Go'd in hint 2 Cor., y 19, 31:
Itt highly'concertis: be'iieVers, wh'o
desire to keep a'constant' peace in
itheir'bos'onos, to be ever sensible of,
their spiritii'al poverty, and to feed
and rest '?holly on the allasuflficteuf
atonement acid righteousness of Jesus
•Oh•rise ' Disquiet df mind, and spirit-
ual
piritual'I slothifu1dess, often proceed' from
sc-lif-liigttlteoushess; and not looking
to Chris't foie everything; but trust-
ili'g secretly to someltliing• in olirseLbes,'
'Salvation, anal all the means
'of ob
taining it, are to be ''sought`; for in.
iChirist. To him 'therefore let' us
ap'p'ly, and in him let us confide: thus'
s'ha'll• we become spiritual and leapeYt
and thus will he receive from us the
tribute which he deserves from all
his church,
My Sav'iour's pierced side
Pour'd oat a double flood;
By Water''*e are pv'rify'd,
And pard'On'd by the blood.
Look tip, my soul, to him
Whose deeth•was thy desert,
And humbly view the living streams
'Flow from his breaking heart.
There, on .Elie cursed tree,
Iii dying pangs he lies,
Fulfills his Father's great decree,
'And all o'er wants supplies.'
Psalm-XVII—TIe Psalms.
15. As for ire, I will behold thy
face itt righ'teousnes's; I shall' be
stltiefied, when I " awake, with' • thy
likeness,
Instead of setting our affections
on things below, the prophet ,in-
structs us, after Itis example, to
place all our h'appines's in the vision
of God, and in . that righteousness
which leads to it; since .the h'onr is
coming, when we' shall awake and
arise, after -the 'divine similitude;
When we s'h'all be like God, for we
s'h'all see hien as he is, and by seeing
hint shall ibe changed into the saint
image; and then shall every desire be
satisfied with the fulness of joy, with
the exceeding abundance 'of utterable glory.
• "A'LFA'LFA BILL"
There leas been mach in the lime-
light in the past year Governor Wil-
liam Henry Murray, of Oklahoma,
who carries the p'i'cturesque nickname
of "Alfalfa Bill." When he first ran
as governor of Okla'homa, slightly,.
over a year ago, 'his nomination .was
taken as a joke., But Oklahom'a was
hard hit by the drought and the de-
OE H. McInnes
chiropractor
Of Wingham, will be at the
Commercial Hotel, Seaforth
Monday, Wednesday and
Friday Afternoons
l t+ceases of all kinds success-
tully treated.
Electricity 'used.
Douglas' Egyptian Liniment is es-
peciaily recommendedfor spider, or
infection of cow's teat. Invaluable also
in cases of spavins, curbs and sprints
and For Sale, Ads. 1 time 25c.
'Let 'us•have the games of your. visitors
NIOTICES TO CRE'D'ITORS.
In the estate of John Wesley ,Ber-
nie, of. the town of Listowel, deceased..
last day for presenting claims, March
Loth; to G. IL Shannon, solicitor for
the executors.
lIn the estate of Thomas Sloan, yeo-
man, deceased, late of the township of
Hallett, last .day to present claims,
March 12th, 1932,' to- George Sloan,
Administrator, Blyth.. •
I111 the estate of William Brock, late.
of the Township of Usborne, more
recently of the township of Biddulph,.
farmer, deceased, last: day to present
claims, March 14th, 1,932, to G'ladman
& Stanbury, Exeter .anld 'Jensen, Sol-
icitors for 'Executrix:
hn the estate of ,Eliza Forbes, late of
the 'town of iWi nghani, widow, deceas-
ed. last ',day, 'to present claims March
1'4tli, to J. H, Crawford, Administra-
tor, Wingham
In the estate of. Jacob Mc',Ccc, late
Of Goclerich, ,cleceased, last . day to
present cla.iins, March ,31st, to Loftus
El `Dlancey,'"Goderich, solicitors for
Executors, Reginald P. McGee and
George E'berhart.
1'n the estate of William Henry Car-
penter, late of the Township of Ash-
field, farnmer,,`deceased, last day to.
oresent claim's March 12th, 1932, to
hays and Hays, Solicitors, ;Goderich.
In the estate of )Iclissa Whitmore,
late of the township of Tuckersloifh,
'Window, last day to present claims
March 21st,_ to R. S. _Hays, Solicitor
for 'Administrator.
istrator.
In the estate of James Penn -mit
Gillespie, ham essulakar, 'Seaforth, de-
ceased 'last day to present ' claims
March 21st, to R. S. Hays, Solicitor
for Aduunistrator:
Poi' the estate of Joseph J. Staple-
ton, late of the township of Ribbert,
famer; last d'a'y to 'present claims,
ivlarcll 2,1st,;,to R:'. S. Hays, Solicitor
for, Executors."
apressian. - `fAffa'lifa Bill's" homely
talks and plain Ways appea'le'd to the
6aruvers o'f the sita'te and to the 'sur-
prise of ,e?veryor e, he was swept into
o'flfice by ' a huge: majority. Since
'thn lie has` been ,'very much'in' the
limeli'ght.' He has' beeolne" a national
figure and how he has his, hat in the
twig as .Democrattc candidate for�
Presidenit, - He wi'lll not likely win at
the Chicago comweiiition, but he Evill
a faction, to be reckoned , With, IIg
has the;old appeal, of the fnonitier. dams,
'when Hien lake. ;tTip'pecanoe' Hlarri'
s'on and, Andrew Jackson ,were sent
'Ito the White House, '
• ,The Oklahoma State Democrat
e'onvention was field recently and
2P. delegates selected idr the Chicago'
'convention were pledged. to sulppont
iitlhe governor, D'ecla'red : ,Governor
Murray at this gathering:
"I stnld in awe of the 'responsib t-
ily Of the presidency, but I will nit
deetake 'it; ,.. I min willing to shorten
;my life, .perhaps lose it, in an effort',
to stem the powers now crushing tore
tAmerican, people.''- . .'NO man is
'fit to be presi'dent who hasn't worked'
for $1 a day and lived on it.
11 don't get puffed up with praise, but
iE America is going' to be ;saved from
d'espolbisni� i't's gb'ing to take a -plat-
form
l'at-form that will mean something."
IGovernlor Murray was recently ad
dressing gatherings of fatmer's in 1,0 -
Vim, and he was hailed as a sort of
n'ationa'l .a'gricu'ltur'a'l' hero,,He ,.wais
)cheered to the rafters. That the senti-
ment was net .all noise was revealed
by a presi'deotiafl skate -wide poll con-
ducted by the De's Moines Register
and Tribune, , President Hoover got
14,798 ,out of 17,925 Republican straw
vote's.. Out df 38,17132 Democratic
'votes, Governor Murray led with 13,-
4217;; Governor Roosevelt followed.
with 13,051, and ex-tGovernor "Al,"
Smith came third with 4,727.
,Recently he led a motorcade hack
to the town Where he was born,. in
Texas, and all along the road he was
given a tremendous demonstration,
The goeiernor says he was "bora in
a cotton patch during a Navem'ber
snowstorm, rocked' in the cradle of
adversity, 'chastened' by hardship and
poverty. He ran away from home at
12 years of ,age, He picked cotton,
chopped wood, hired out as a farm
hand and 'led a peodiga1 outdoor life.
II3.e finally got an education, taught
school and studied law at night. He
became the tribal sttorney for the
]Chi'ckas'aws and married a girl half
white, half Indian. Her uncle was
the chief of the Chickasaws. His
marriage made hint a niem'ber cef the
tribe. Through his wife he came into
posse'ysion of 2,000 acres Of fertile
land, dropped law and started farm-
ing, He 'entered' polities and served
as 'Speaker of the first Legislature,
only, to be beaten for governor in .1910.
Elected to the House of Representa-
tives in 1912, he was 'beaten in 190106
because lie dared to predict that
President Wilson, instead of keeping
us out of the war, would put the Un-
ited States in. In 1918 he was beaten
for, gove'rnorslhip.
The pos'sibilitie's of large-scale farm-
ing outside the United States were
responsible for the biggest single fail-
ure in Governor Hurray's career. De-
feated in politics, he went exploring
through South America, where he
hit upon 'floe idea of establis'hin'g a
colony of United States husbaudnien
in Bolivia, From . that Government
he secured a concession of 75,000
acres' in E4 Ginn Chaco. Back in
Oklahoma he sold his Tishomingo
farm, paid his de'b'ts, ,mustered togeth-
er about 40 colonists, includ'ing his
own entire famil'y, and in 1924 led the
way to Bolivia. The land was poor,
the natives unfriendly, nostalgia
plagued all. Within a short time ev-
ery colon'i'se except Bill Murray and
his half Indian squaw had returned
despondently to the United State's.
They alone stuck . it, out for five
wretched years, fighting insect pests,
drought, shifty Bolivian officials: Fin-
ality, in 1'929 Bill :returned to the, Un-
ited States practi'cally penniless to
complete the most remarkable poli't-
ical career in O'klalitdma's history, He
s'tanted campaigning for governor
with $12 iii his pockets. Leaving
'Mrs...Murray $1 for emergencies, he
travelled' up and down 'Ok'l'ahoma,
haranguing the plain people to get
behind hien. He went up the creeks
and through the swamps. He hitch-
hiked from town to town. Crowds
'turned mit to hear lois Mastery of .a'b
use and invective: , He lived mostly
on cheese and crackers. He was rid-
iculed and scorned,but he beat a mil-
,•
lioivaire oil piaa in the Democratic
primary and wotithe election by, the
largest majority in Okiaboma. His
whole campaign roost .ltini less than
'i-lowever, "Alfalfa Bill" is far from
a c'lown. As a mutter 03 fact, he is, a.
bookish man,' According to the New
Yfnik magazine, Timehis library of
some 5,00D volumes is a precious
session and goes on to say: "H'is.
reace uig is deep,, wide, mostly classic -
a1: 'Many a visitor leaves' with a
sense of astonishment at his erudition,
ljit ability to quote and date and cite.
'Constitutional governmentishis spe-
cialty. The late great Champ Clark,
observing him in the House, called,
him one o'f the greatest :constitutional'
experts and p'arlienteniterians ever to
sit in Congress."
Registering Growers.
The • Growers': Markets Council ` at
the present time is asking all fruit
and rvegetable 'growers to register
their acreage uuder cultivation and
the aietoaut of each drop they produce.
Forms are being sent out as widely as
possible+and any grower who does n'ot
receive..a copy is asked to write in
to the cou'ncil for one. A concerted
effort is to be made to provide next,
year against 'any repetition OE the dis-
astrous marketing season experienc-
ed by growers last fall.
So far as fruits and vegetables are
concerned, dependable information
has been available .frown pi•+actically all
producing districts in Canada with
the exception .of Ontario. This has
resulted in Ontario production al-
ways being a most disturbing factor
on domestic and export Markets and
the net returtis to .the growers for
their production highly unsatisfactory.
With this information available for
Ontario, as provided for in the regis-
tration 'forms, an accurate estimate of
Ontario production can be made and
thuscloser working Ifacflities can be
arranged between all the fruit and
vegetable producing 'Provinces in or-
der that the greatest possible advan-
tage may be taken 0f all markets. Re-
gistration will serve many other pur-
noses such as pest and disease con-
trol, provide mailing lists for market=
nig and other information, yet its pri-
mary purpose is to enable the 'Coun-
cil to know who produces the vari-
ous varieties of 'fruits and keep grow-
ers informed of Opportunities to sell
at better prices. Blank forms can
be obtained from the Ontario Grow-
ers' 'Markets' Council for this pur-
pose,
CANADA AND THE
GOLD STANDARD
'(1Con'tinued from: Page 3)i,
The business of` banking is what?
It is. a simple thing: it is the .main-
tenance cif an equilibriumbetween
demand deposits and remand loans
hada between time, deposits and
time loans, so that you: or 2,
drawing a cheque against that bank,
may be certain that the bank will be
able to pay what we call cash for it,
nates, over 'the counter when the che-
que is presented. In other words if my
deposi't ,has been putt into a frozen cre-
lit that cannot be realized upon, the
'blank` is insolvent, and that was what
'happened in the United. States. That,
is the reason why this vast fund has
been created in that country at the
instance GE the president, for the pur-
pose of enabling that organization to
take up these securities. that were not
Otherwise salable at the moment.
When I say, sir, that the banking
system of this country has been the
sheet anchor of Canada 'in this period
of depression, I but state a common-
place. There is not one of us 'who,
however small or lenge may be . his
deposit in a bank, cannot with cer-
tainty draw his cheque 'upon that
fund to -day and know that it will: be
pa'id. The businesis of., the Depart-
ment of Finance has been to watch,
to scrutinize and to care for the :whole
financial structure so that there
should not at any one time be any
such loaning of demand deposits
upon time loans that when my cheque
was drawn it could not bep aid.
Now, sir, in the light of those
facts is there a single member of this
house who would say we should sub-
stitute, for a system that maintains a
coverage of nea'r'by 40 cents on the
dollar for all our legal tender out-
standing, a system under which there
is go coverage at all ? Where would
your credit be? I put it back to you,
ir: Where would your credit' be?"
'That is the history; of ,what bias
ranspired.
Rub it in for Lame Back, -A brisk
rubbing with Dr. 'Thomas' Eclectric
Oil will ,relieve lame back. The skin
will immediately absorb the. oil and
it will penetrate the tissues and bring
speedy relief, Try it .and be convinc-
ed, As the liniment 'sinks lit, 'the
pain comes out and there are ample`
groiuids for saying that it is an ex-
cellent article,
•
She (at the party): "What do you
think of our scheme: of ]Christmas de-
corations? Pt is holly overlaurel
leaves."
He: "Very good, of course, but why
not mistletoe over yew?" •
1 uiy,kaen 10 -year teased of
salmo.+. and trout fishing rivere,
lakes and streams in New Bruns-
wick will be put up to public
auction at the Parliament.Baildittg
Fredericton, April 7 next, at upset
prices ranging between, $25 per
annum and 812,000 per annum, is'
the announcement of Hon. L. P. D.
Tilley, provincial Minister of
Lands and Mines They represent
the pick of salmon fishing facilities
on this side of the American
continent.
At the close of a meeting of the
directors of the Canadian Pacific
held at Montreal, February 8,
President 111. W. Beatty announced
that in order to help western
farmers over the present period of
depression the Company has of-
fered to write-off interest on land
contracts for the year 1931. This
offer will be extended to the year
1932 on condition that the con-
tract holder pays his taxes and one
full installment on his contract
this year. Further encouragement
in the form of a bonus will be given
to those who make payments on
account of arrears of interest, the
bonus to be in proportion to pay-
ment made. This should be of
great assistance to contract holders
on the Company's lands who have
suffered through depressed marketa.
or crop failures. (824).
Jack Frost—King of Architects
Jack Frost, nature's greatest
architect, completed yet another
wonderful job, at Banff, on the main
line of the Canadian Pacific Rail-
way through the Rocky Mountains,
this winter, when he designed and
built the columns of the ice -castle of
the Carnival Queen. As is easily
seen by the picture, the two great
pillars are the outstanding features
of the palace. They were built by
putting into play, one month before
the opening of the great event, two
vertical streams of water. Then,
more men got busy and built the
connecting wall of gleaming trans-
parent ice -blocks, between the two
pillars, and set in front of it the
great throne of ice, from which the
ceremonies of the Carnival were
conducted, in the presence of thou-
sands of spectators from all parts of
Canada and the United States. Snow
and ice contests of all kinds, winter
sports in profusion, includingthe
Alberta Provincial Skating Cam-
pionships, went to make up the
programme, which terminated in
the election of Miss Margaret J.
Nicol, of Drumheller, Alta., well-
known as a tennis and hockey enthu-
siast, as Carnival Queen for 1933.
Her picture is shown inset.
Count
•
00
We Are Selling' Quality Bices
Books are .Well Made, Carlton is Clean and Cdpies Readily. All
styles, Carbon Leaf and Black Back. Prices as Low ds You Can Get
Anywhere: Get out Quotation ,an Your Nocf Oftlet:
Seaforth
News
SEATORTH, (ONTARIO.