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Flesherton Advance, 15 Dec 1926, p. 4

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MMMMMMMMkai UPEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1926 THE FLESHERTON ADVANCB DeForest-Crosley RADIO 1 kK^^ua A real Xmas Gift the whole family will enjoy and gives the results that people are looking for to-day PRICES WITHIN REACH OF EVERYONE. m-AR the' new AMPIJPHONIC PHON'OGRAPH and APEX ]^E^^' PROCESS RECORDS. Sherlock-Manning and Mendelssohn Pianos. We also have in stock DeLaval Creanv Separators. Singer Sewing Machines, including the new electric machine. • We will be pleased to demonstrate to you. Have vour Picture I'raniing- clone before the rush. ARTEMESIA COUNCIL W. A. HAWKEN Photo Artist and Music Dealer. THE FLESHERTON ADVANCE Published on ColiingTvood street, Flesherton, Wednesday of each ' veek. Circulation over 1100, I "Price in Canada, f2.O0 per year, ' when paid in advance $1.50. In ; JJ.S.A. $2.50 per year, when paid in advance f 2.00. ^r. H. T'TUuSTON. - Editor case the road wag quite wide and there was any amoutn of room for a car to pass on the right side. EDITORIAL NOTES A FORTUNE FOR A PROLIFIC MOTHER. Where is the weather prophet who told us that over-abundance of rain last summer meant a mild winter and light snowfall? â-  • • These are the days ^jjiBn one may pet sennons, opera, bad news, and the business of or.;- neighbors over the telephone, but people are thankful that so far bills have to be sent through the postoffice. Since the early days of the Province bt Ontario, when the will of the ec centric Dr. Dunlop, the first M.P. for] « • • Ctennty of Huron, was probated, noj ^lon. Artliur Meighen, late Conser- aevise of property has given rise to\.j^jjyg jeader, ia,moving from Ottawa more talk than the testament of ^^ T«,n»,tn He finds the atmosphere to Toronto. at the national capital far too cold Charles Miller, late barrister of To- ronto/ Mr. Miller has left a will deal-| f^^. hi^^ ^j^.^ ^j^^^^; fng with property variously estimated: as of from three hundred thousand | dollars to a cool million. He has be- In the excitement occasioned by qneathed to preachers of Toronto and the Provincial elections we fear rau- to Mr. Raney, the temperance leader, nicipal affairs are being overlooked. sluires in breweries and racing park.s â€" these generally of small value. It is hardly possible that the bene- ficiaries named will accept these leg- acies. If, however, they do not, the legacies will be added to the main be- quest, which is unique in its provis- ions, and colculatcd to create wide- spread interest. The bulk of the es- tate, amounting to hundreds of thou- sands of dollars, Mr. Miller directs Let there be full attendance at the annual meetings and careful ^crutiny of the reports presented by the au- thorities. China is still in great turmoil with three or four big armies struggling for the mastery, and friends of Can* adian missionaries continue apprehen- sive for (.he future. Perhaps the an- cient nation would improve its con Council met on Dec. 4, the members all present, the Reeve in the chair. The minutes of former meeting were read. Correspondence was read as follows: Engineer McKnight, final report on the Boyne bridge, 4th lino, order for payment of contract, $280; iIi.;K James, claim for sheep; Levi, Belts, claim for sheep; F. R. Boland, claim for sheep; J. T. Best, bonus for wire I'ence, S19; R. Allen, bonus for wire fence, $25; Roy Freeman and oth'.':-.i, asking for bonus for wire fence lot 101, 3 N. E.; Dr. Turnbull, M.O.H., repci-t for 1826; MiiUUebro & Burns acct. preparing Proton Station drain bylaw and correspondence, $25; R.C. McKnight, balance re Boyce bridge, S17.55. By-law 9, appointing D.R.O's and Poll Clerks, was nassed, viz., D.R.O. W. G. Bowles, R. Chard, C. E. Moore, Geo. Banks, John Oliver, E. Warling, \ John Parsons, Wes. Plr.ntt. Poll Clerksâ€" J. Ilutton, E. Wickens, M. Bannon, John Stewart, John Dow, W. Radcliffe, Tom Fenwick, Harry Fisher, By-law 10, appointing H. D. Mc- Loughrey School Attendance Officer. O'ders were passed for the payment of the following: F. Boland, sheep injured, $8; J. T. Best, bonus for fence, $19; R. Allen, bonus for fence, S25; Archie Stewart, bonus for fence, $U>; E. Loucks, gravel, $7; J. Mc- Donald, gravel, S9.75;Mrs. Atkinson, gravel, $10.30; lighting hall, $9.93; Levi Belts, sheep killed, $30; Miss James, sheep injured, $7; D. Muir, valuing sheep, $7.50; Engineer Mc- Knight, re Boyce bridge, $17.55; J. J. Boyce, balance on bridge contract, $157.40; Middlebro & Burn.-,, legal services, $25; A. Stew'fcrt, refund, $2; T. Mercer on GilHs' bridge, $4. Davisâ€" -Carruthersâ€" That T. Elliott be granted bonus of 25c per rod for wire fence at lot 10, 3 N. E., 77 rods as asked for by R. Freeman et al â€" Carried. Carruthers â€" Corbett â€" That the re- port of Dr. Turnbull, M.O.H., for 1926, be received, and he be paid his sal- ary, $50 â€" Carried. Davis â€" Carruthers â€" That Geo. I. Graham be refunded $22.58 of his taxes of 1924, he having been assessed twice for the same property in that year â€" (Carried. Carruthers â€" Davis â€" That the Treasurer accept from H. Corbett $7.50, being Melancthon's share of work done on townline â€" Carried. Corbett â€" Davisâ€" That the 'follow- ing question be submitted to the electors at the first municipal elec- tion: "Are you in favor of abolish- ing statute labor in this township?"â€" Carried. Council abjourned. Good Gifts for Santa Claus Articles Suitable for Every Member of the Family All Lines ot Furniture A FEW SPECIAL LINES -. â€" : W ORK BOX or BEDROOM BOX JARDINIP.RE STANDS, various sizes CROKINOLE BOARDS Conibirution Crokinole and card table, a !;tal idea. All kin Is of SLEIQHS and WAGONS CHILDliEN'S WHEELBARROWS D01j;,S CABS and CRADLES ROCK I NO HORSES P>JBL!:S and HYiMN BOOKS SANJAVICH TRAYS KIDDY KARS DOLE'S HIGH CHAIRS Children's ROCKERS and CHAIRS CHli,D'S PUSH SLEI,GHS PICTURES of all kinds suitable for any room in the house. KITCHEN CABINET DINING ROOM SUITES CHESTERFIELD SUITE LIBRARY TABLE AND CHAIRS " SLIDING COUCH SINGLE BEDSTEAD or Bed Outfits DRESSER AND STAND Easy Chairs in Leather or upholstered MATTRESS such as "MARSHALL" ODD CHINA CABINET CEDAR CHEST \ANITY DRESSER Tables â€" Kitchen, Dininof Room, Parlor Leather and Upholstered COUCHES ELECTRIC fcAMPS VACUUM SWEEPERS SMOKERS' STANDS ' We desire at this season of the year to voice our goodwill and fellowship by wishing one and all a Very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year in 1927. THOS. W. FINDLAY, Flesherton FURNITURE DEALER & FUNERAL DIRECTOR L Phone in both- House and Store. OUR MOTTO fS "SERVICE. Editor Flesherton Advance: .explain, however, anyway I expect Dear Sir,- -1 sec by the label on my you know more about it than I. How- pai)er that I avi in arrears, and J"-=up- ever, we are well satisfied with the pose you huvo several like me, so a wheat Pool. Of the other pools I am woodshed, the door of which wag open. The story goes on to say that Mr. Clarke captured the deer right there and then by embracing it couple of d >il.ii-5 from about one hun- not so sure. I am ^fraid they are I around the neck and saved his dog to be compounded and awarded to the Kj^j^^ j^ j^ j.„„,j ^^^^ ^,3,^ ^ jozen mother giving birth to the largest Lmbitious generals for a Mussolini number of children in the ten years next ensuing^to the testator's death. lAJready, therefore, the competition The eiitaph of many men comes set on foot by this eccentric lawyer, ai„ng too i^te to live up to it. But may be said to have begun, for we human sympathy for an afflicted as learn that since Mr. Miller died, a few -ociate was never bettor exemplified weeks since, the population of the than it was in the late municipal elcc- Province has been augmented by the j tion in Ottawa, where three of the arrival of several hundred babies, and | Controllers, finding an associate con- one little Toronto woman has entered fi„ej j^ hospital, and unable to speak the lists with tv.in«. She, enterpris- j for himself, eloquently pleaded for ing one, had no hesitation in express-! his election, claiming for him aij ex- ing her convicticn that Mr. Miller jceptionally good record, must have been a very benevolent ig^ntleman indeed. Setting out with this advantage, this mother in Israel LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A WORD FOR JUSTICE. dred of us would help to fill your coal ?oing to pool and pool bin, for if lie winter there is any- drown themselves, but of course thing like it is here you certainly time will tell. will need it. W"iiter set in in enrn-| I was pleased to see a few letters 38t and it hag snowed nearly every in The Advance, but not enough. I day since, and vfHs cold as well. | was pleased to see Jimmy Russel's In my last letter we were in a sad, letter. I think people would enjoy plight with crops all burned up for your paper more if there were more hundreds of miles around, but in lii25 letters and not so much home or we had good crops, and having the neighbor visiting. Every person has wheat pool we receive.l Sl.11 per his own view, of course, but I do not bushel for No. 2 tough; in 1923 we. think you encourage letter writing got only 69 cents for No. 1 NcA-thern. enough. The pool is a grand success. We get Well, here's for a merry Christmas 69M!C for first payment this year and « happy New Year, for No. 2 tough, another payment in ' â€" E. D. LeGARD. March, another in July. Crops this Glenside, Sask., Dec. 2, 1926. year varied a lot. Some had good I ^ yields, while others had poor yields. Deer are getting so plentiful until they; from injury. â€" Dundalk Herald. ELWOOD BOWLES W.M. OF L.O.L. 599, ORANGE VALLEY W.M. â€" Elwood Bowles. I.P.M.â€" Harold Lever. D.M.â€" J. E. McKee. Chaplain â€" Harold Richardson. Rec.-Sec. â€" Clarence Alcox. ' Fin.-Sec.â€" ^W. G. Bowles. Treas.â€" W. J. Beatty. Marshall â€" G. B. Littlejohns. Lecturers â€" G. W. Littlejohns and W. G. Cockburn. Tyler â€" Ed. Beirnes. Com. â€" W. Alcox.'W. J. McFadden, C. Irwin, W. G. Cockburn and N. Stoddart. A movement is 00 foot to give a says she believes she ought to have \ bannuet to His Honor, Harry Cock- a chance to gain the big prize, though 1 .=hutt, the retiring Lieut.-Governoi', ten years is a long time in which to land at the same time a popular sub- wait. Then there must be ethers, and ,scription is asked for from the people •who knows but some good lady will [of the whole Province to purchase come along with triplets! Then the a suitable gift to be presented at count â€" who is to keep it? |the banquet. Of course, as it is a We fear this eccentric old bachelor I "Popu'w" subscription, only those In devising his estate did not stop to . need give who feel §p inclined. There reflect what a kettle of fish he was is no compulsion about it, which ac- stirring up. counts for its "popularity." A STRANGE DECISION An Aberdeen, Scotland, judge, has recently been called on to decide At Division Court on Friday last whether ev not whist is a gambler's Jnd«e Sutherland gave a decision on ^^me, and he ha 1 been so puzzled by a case that has not been received by | the arguments brought forward that the farmers and others in this dis- ^e has postponed judgment till he trict with very good grace. The ^ i^oks more fully into the pastime. We plaintiff wag leading a pig along the should think that with the reputed vosd at night when the car came caution of the Aberdonian the Sheriff from behind and struck ,"t. The would decide that whist was both a plaintiff claimed that it wna within j^ame of chance and of skill, but three feet of the side of the road at harmless to all these who play it the time it was hit, but the defend- for pleasure and not for financial «nt said that it must have been on profit. further as he was travelling on the j * • • crown of the road and the pig was on Some of the defeated candidates in â- ma angle facing the centre of the the recent election are not to be left xoadway. The plaintiff was in his (ong in mourning. W. R. McKeown rifhta in travelling along the high- of Dafferin hai sc^iured a remunera- way at night, but the judsrmcnt was tive government iob which necessi- trhren against him as he didn't have tates his removal from Orangeville 'lifhta to show that he v.as travelling the first of the coming year. It is tm »he highway. The ji.Jge seemed -iigo rumored that Di. Jamieson is fo think that t was a good oportun- to secure a Toronto seat, the mem- ity to show that the car, in the eat>m- ber elect having aho received a gov- ation of many in Ontario, had • he :rnment job. We hope that the latter Tight of way at nirht over all classei is,porrect. The good doctor deserves j property nor life would be safe there «f traffic and that if anything or on<i;thing in that way if ever a man on *nybody wore injured thereby it was ijd. It appears that a recent law «ot the fault of the car. The farmer make.s it possible to exchange seats kaa rights on the highway with his in this manner without calling an «toek when leading them and ia this olection. I Dear Editor â€" I was rather sur- prised at the decision given by the indge in court here recently, in the case where a pig was killed by an automobile. The judge^hy hi.i verdict implied Lhat the highway is not to be used it night by anyone but the- motorist, the pig and that the party leading the pig was negligent in using the high- way at night, and by not giving any oignal to the motorist. I believe the ruling all over the civilized world is that the party over- taking ii the one responsible for giv- ing any signal, not the one overtaken. I have driven a car for a good many years, and if my lights are good en- ough for me to see 100 yards ahead I cna travel with safety at 40 miles an hour, but if I can only see ten yards ahead of me, ten milei an hour is excessive and dangerous, and one should not drive at any speed at which he could not ston easily within the range of visibility of his lightj. The judge also intimated that the party leading the pig should carry a light â€" I suppose a tail light on the pig! â€" but thte is no law in this mu- nicipality (there should be) making it compulsory for other than motor driven Vehicles to do .10. It seems to me that the^udge was biased in favor of the motorist. I am one, but I believe that any one per- son has no mor0 right to travel the f^ highway than another, so long as he is within the law compelling either pe- destrians or horse-drawn vehicle to carry lights, why should it be neces- sary for a farmer leading his stock to do so? Or why should he be pro- hibitei-from using the highway at any time of the day or night he may wish to do so? I am writing thia because I have heard nothing but adverse criticism from every person who attended this hearing, with whom I have spokea regarding the case, and in every case the opinion held is that the verdict was very unfair. If verdicts auch as this become common the king's high- way would soon become the property of the reckless driver, for neither so plentiiul a- \Ve got 25 bushels per acre off forty { round here that it is nothing out pf K'res, and 30 bushels off another , the usual for rabbit hunters to run Stepping backwards into a pan of forty acres, and 12 bv-,hels off 80 ' across them in ones, twos and even 1 .scalding jelly which her mother was acre.s, while off another seventy acres threes. We heard of one coming making, Reta Pallin, a two-year-old ,ve got 17 bushels per acre, while j^to town the other day and crossing little girl, was fatally burned at her some got as low as 10 bushels. All Main St. West. A story comes from ', home at Mono Mills, dying about thorough -summerfallows, as a rule, i Ventry district to the effect that a twelve hours after the accident. -ire dependable, except in a year like young deer chased Arden Clarke's ' 1924. We had a hard time to get ; farm dog home and right into the Read The Advance "Small Advts." threshed this year, as it rained so j . . often, but we got all cleaned up at last. Some did not get threshed. One man sixteen miles from l-^re has 200 .acres of wheat out yet, but mostly ill otheri got threshed. Every person is anxiou.i for the new sign up for the pool. It looks as though it would near ; reach the 100 per cent. It appea-s that there ire about 450 seats in f'.e Grain Ex- change. Each, holder of a seat has four employees $2000 fir ef.ch, five| men $10,000 for each aer\ which jostsi about double as much li handle 34,-] 000,000 bushels as it osts the pool 1 to handle the other 66,000,000 bushels. The Grain Exchange i? trying to kill the Pool by saying the' they paid a higher price than the Pool, but they cannot nut that over the farmers any more. They have exaggerated things to suit themselves, and have not given 1 correct statement, taking it by the year. It would take a long time to FOWL WANTED I HAVE OPENED UP A MAR- KET FOR ALL KINDS OF DRESSED FOWL. MUST BE WELL DRESSED. DRY PICKED AND BLED. FOR WHICH I WILL PAY HIGHEST PRICE IN CASH. IT PAYS TO CRATE YOUR FOWL FOR 1 DAYS OR TWO WEEKS. J. RUNSTADLER Flesherton Thanking you, Mr. Editor, space in your valued paper, I yours for â€"PAIR PLAY for am Useful Gifts for Xmas Aluminum Teapots, Perculators, Kettles, Enamel Roasters, Potato Ppts, Cereal Cookers. Mitts, Gloves, Tools, Cutlery, Etc. China, Berry Sets, Cups and Saucers, Cake Plates, Salad Bowls, Vases, and many other articles that make suitable gifts for this season. m FRANK W. DUNCAN GENERAL HARDWAR.E Phones: 54wMid54j aasll

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