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Flesherton Advance, 12 Dec 1928, p. 2

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WEDNESDAY DEC. 12. '28 THE FLESHERTON ADVANCE W. J. Armstrong Is Treas. of Artemisia Dep. Returning Officers and Poll Clerks for Twp, Elections Council met at Fle^horlon on the Ist clay of December. There were present all numbers of the Council. Jtfinutcs were read and adopted. Communications, etc., presented as follows: Municipal World, Ontario Statutes; C. C. Middlebro, account $o; Treasurer of Csprey, re drain; .state- ment. Clerk of Peace, re jurors; The Advance, printing by-law. Claims for sheep kiiled â€" P. Sweeney, 1 killed and 1 injured $18; John McWhinney, 1 damajfcd $8; T. Hughes, 1 killed 3 injured $28; J. I. Graham, 1 kilicd $12; J(,s. Park, 1 killed, 1 injured $11.70. The above were all valued and payment ordered. Deputy-Returning Officers and Poll clerks were appointed: D.R.O., \V. G. Bowles, W. Harrison, M. Bannon, John Stewart, John Oliver, E. Warling, John Campbell, John iMcKee; Poll aerk.-!, W. J. Beatty, E. Wickens, C. E. Moore, F. J. CoUinson, John Dow, W. Ratcliffe, E. Linton C. Mcldrum. R. E. Gorlcy was appointed School Attendance Oflficcr and W. J. Arm- strong appointed Treasurer. Whittaker â€" Davis â€" That Mr. J. Kennedy be refunded $3.2G, he being assessed in error. â€" Carried. Corbett â€" Purvis â€" That J. Lock- hart be paid $1.35, beinpr half cost of damage to car on townline A.&P. â€" Whittaker â€" Corbett â€" That the account of Municipal World for Ont. Statutes, 1928, $2.16, be paid. â€" Car. Whittaker â€" Davis â€" That Report No. 9 of R»ad Supt., showing expend- ed on roads $329.37, and on bridges, $281.00, be received and the amounts be paid. â€" Carried. Purvis â€" Corbett â€" That the bal- ance of T. W. Findlay's account for the burial of the late R. Laughlin be paid, $30.00. â€" Carried. Purvis â€" Davis â€" That the follow- ini; be paid: Engineer Christie, fees re J. J. Little ditch, $265.00; C. C. Middlebro, preparing agreement, $5; The Advance, printing by-law $18.60. â€" Carried. Corbett â€" Davis â€" That claims for â- beep killed and injured by dogs, and valuers' fees be paid: Joe Park $11.- 70; J. I. Graham $12, Tom Hughes $28, P. Sweeney $18 John McWhin- ney $8; valuers, Joe Watson $11.25, Vr. Gibson $2, R. Piper $1.60, E. War- ling $1.25.â€" Carried. Purvis â€" Whittaker â€" That the Reeve and Clerk be a committee to prepare letters of condolence, to the Deputy-Reeve and friends on the death of his father, the late J. H. Corbett, and to Mr. W. J. Meads, a former Reeve of this Township, in the loss of his daughter, the late Mrs. W. A. Gibson. â€" Carried. The Council adjourned. Health Service • of the • CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOC. DOES YOUR CHILD SEE? One Horse Weeklies Selecting Dep.-Reeves When a child is blind in both eye-J, the condition is, of course, recognized. There r.ro many children who have defective sight, which fact is un- known to their parents. That this is CO, is evidenced every year by the number of children entering school who arc found by school physicians to have defective eyesight. The gord work of the school healtii services does not provide for the pre- school child, or for the child who attends a sch -ol where there is no school physicir.n or nurse. A child should be able ta recognize a picture or object one-half an inch square at twenty feet. Each eye It Has Come at Last From the Toronto Star. On the right of November 5, Jas. Carson, Sr., of Melancthon Town.shio was struck and killed by a raotor car on the provincial highway, and at the adjourned inquest, held at Shelbumc, the coroner's jury returned a verdict of unavoidable accid.-'nt, with this ri- der: "We recommend that pedestrians on the highway be compelled to carry I'ghts." So it has come at Ia.^t! A coroner'3 jury recommends it, and presently, no doubt, the law will compel it. When a man, woman or child poc? walking on the king's highway after dark in any 'I'lace not illuminated by street light, he. she or it will bo re- quired to go forth as an illuminated object, with lights fore and aft iik? n ship at sea. A man with a lan'ern will wend his inconspicuous way along old familiar rond.^, and if, in jumping across a puddle hi-, rc.ir light (ro?o out ho will be liable to a fine of (en dollars and costs. The rural youth with a dynamo in tho he '1 of ^-.s ^ot v.nd a festoon of 60-watt buUis around his shoulder will go fr.rt'i rad- iantly to his try.^t with a roijs'iv^ ^v » daughter, v.ho will meet him all ilc tip for the occasion. The rural .Toasin who by day. has been able to i '.entify those who passed along the road by tbclrhatsor the slumnof their shoul- ders, or the way they swing their arm, â- will soon be nW.f tp identify them t* right by their lights. There will be no more going and coming unseen and unnoted. Life ain't firoing to be what it once â- was. If a farmer can't cross the road without casrying a lantern, nor drive his cow along to his front gate with- out equipping her with a light, the occupation of farming is going to fall further into disfavor. The job of livino- is petting to be •^ery complicated. It mr.y br necessnry for pedestrians to cr.rrv lights. Hut they are going to hate it. Plans have been Dr<>i«r3d fcr a Ave â- torey hotel for Ori'.lla. 'One horse newspapers" is the An amendment to the Municipal manner in which, in a letter to the Act of Ontario suggeBts that the law Toronto Globe, Hon. Q. N. Gordon' relating to the admiasion of deputy refers , to the weekly newspapers^ reeves to the county councils has not that have been supporting the Globe . always been applied v â-  h sufficient in demanding justice for a returned ' care to determine whe or or not a and disabled soldier, who, for parly' municipality is entitled to be repre- reasons, w^s shamefully put out of 'seated by one or more deputy-reeves, the running for the position of post- In future, a clerk of a municipality master of Simcoc by the Postmaster- ' not separated from the county and General, although properly appro-,-- having less than one thousand elec- cd and appointed by the Civil Ser- tors, according to the last revised vice Commission. The Simcoe Re- voters' list, will be required to post I former, undoubtedly one of the best up in his office and send by registered weekly newspapers in Canada, and letter post to the clerk of the county more ably edited than many of the at least six days before the date of daily newspapers, is no doubt the nomination meeting, a certificate paper referred to by Hon. Mr. Gor- under his hand and seal of the cor- don. But Mr. Gordon might better poration, stating the total number of have kept quiet on the subject for it municipal electors according to the at once oxposod his narrow vision of last revised voters* list who are to be public opinion and his- littlenes.s ot counted to determine the number of soul. As old as history records | deptuy-reeves to be elected. In pre- may be two hundred doUtn. Thif will not make many changes in the county council representation and will satiafy all concerned that the law if being observed. A cow in Illinoia fought a train and knocked the fireman unconscious. It had better luck than a lot of autonuH biles. â€" Ktichener Record. is tested separately^ one eye being! covered with a card' during the test 'have we instances of otherwise able paring this certificate, care must be of the other. For near vision, aland capable men hampering their j taken to see that the name of any picture book may be used. If there I influence and untimely bringing a'o- j person is not counted more than once out their own downfall by just such 1 and that those who are electors by snobbery as that shown in his letter reason of being the wife or husband by Mr. Gordon. The weekly news- of a person rated for land as ownar papers of Ontario can well take care or tenant are not counted. The pen- of themselves, and whether in the es- alty for failing to send the certificate timation of Mr. Gordon they are one- 1 within th^ prescribed time is not to horse or only half a horse, they have exceed fifty dollars and for certify- not yet developed into braying donk- ing to a larger number of electors eys. I than should be counted the penalty IS any appreciable defec-t in either eye, for near or distant vision, the family physician should be consulted. Cross-eye is a condition which Is frequently neglected because of ig- norance as to its significance by par- ents. Children with this condition should he placed under medical care without delay. A cross-eyed child sees double. This causes confusion and so the mind trains itself to pay attention only to the image that comes to it through the straight eye. This results in one eye's being devel- oped through use and the others be- coming useless because it is not used. Unless the" condition is properly treated early, the child loses the use of one eye and is actually blind In that eye. If the child is treated between two and three years of age, the most, or all of hig vision can be saved; the longer treatment is delay- ed, the more vision is lost. Cross- eye is B condition that does not cor- rect itsef. Children do not grow out of it. If the child is nlaced sitting, facing the parent, an arm's length away, with one eye covered by the parent's hand, and is made to look at the parent's nose with the uncovered eye, the parent will find that, on uncover- ing the other eye,' it is either looking at the nose, which means that no cross-eye is present, or that it moved in or out, or remained crossed in or out, which is an evidence that cross- eye is present. Your children will appreciate, in later years^ your care of this special organ. A Simple Solution to your Christynas Gift Problems An initial deporit in a Bank of Toronto Savings Batik Book, presented in a finder, will ccmvey the Christmas spirit in a pieoonf and practical way. The Manager cl any branch of The Dsmk of Toronto will gladly lode after your requirements. BRANCHES: PEVERSHAM MARKDALE J. S. McMillan, Manager A. E. Hunt, Manager. Mr. John C. Ferguson of Mount Forest was instantly killed when a twenty foot stub, which he was cut- ting down, fell the virrong way and struck the victim, killing him in- stantcously. "B&N&IDRONTO Head Offict: TORONTO 840 Sh'h-hJ They Say Santa Uses An Automobile Nov/f Cio.s.si]) has it that Sana Clans now uses an automobile, the rein- deer havinj,'' proved too slow. He that as it v.uy, automobiles are used by nearly everyone else now why not let Santa drive one up to your home on Christmas Day? You don't have to be rich to buy one of our excellent new For<^ C/u"s. We have the best low priced car on the market and also one of the hif^hest quality. Since the new Ford has come on the market its success has been j^reater than anticipated â€" it gives superior ser- vice at all times, nn^ler all conditions. You'll make youi^ whole family happy by ordering one of our new Ford cars for Chrismas. He Down & Sons Ford Dealers -:- Flesherton BOB »6»6*aaa AAftA******<> « â-  « f f f f f^^^^^f f frtlTl t fl I) B fl D M I < # | a44. INVITATION! We cordially invite you to visit our store and liave a good look at our Xmas and winter stock. We have Xmas gifts suitable for each member of the famil}' and some exceptionally lovv prices. To induce you to come and see for yourself we shall, commencing Saturday, December 1.5th, serve tea and shortcake to all our customers every afternoon and evening until Chrismas Eve. You are invited to come and bring the familv. A. E. HAW CEYLON, Ont. Store open every evening until Christmas. MILLIONS THIS GENTLEMAN is busy "talking tele- phones to death"â€" which is merely a way of saying: that he is testing their transmission qualities. He is a worker in the telephone research laboratories. He has a rack o£ telephone trans- mitters and a phonograph. He "talks them to death" by means of the phonograph to see whether the transmitters give satisfactory results. There have been 95 different types of trans- mitters and 64 different receivers to obtain the instrument you are using today. And men are ct work now to find one still better. IN THE NEXT ROOM another man b using an apparatus which rubs a piece of telephone cord back and forth until it frays. He is sei^king a better cord. He is the man who found that the brown cord in your tele- phone today wears better than the green cord you used to have. You may not have noticed the change from green to brown but it has saved hundreds of thousands of dollars for telephone users. That is the business of these gentlemen â€" ^to make a better telephone and save money in doing it. THERE ARE NEARLY five thousand of them at wor'c in the Bell Telephone Laboratories â€" the largest telephone resarch laboratories in the world â€" and the Bell Tele- phone Company of Canada owns a contract giving access to all the work they do. That is why your telephone system now has the ingenious device known as the "loading coil" which transmits messages over wires fine as human hair. It used to be necessary to have heavy wires, increasing in size with distance. Tlie heavy wires were costly. The loading coil has saved millions in tck'phonc costs. The underground cables developed in recent years arc another of a score of similar benefits. They have wires to carry a vastly greater num- ber of messages than they used to, but they are so compact and so efficient that they can be pulled tlirough the original underground ducts. If cables and ducts had to be increased in size with the vast new traffic the costs of telephon- ing would climb sky-high. THE NEW CABLES, like the brown cord and the loading t;oil, mean millions of dollars saved. These dollars are dollars in your pocket. Your telephone is being connected with thousands of new telephones across the country every week yet this increased value does not cost you more because costs are sij?' ccssfully offset, by the economies which re- search accomplishes. ~ The gentleman testing the transmitter and the five thousand working in the laboratories with him are saving money for you eVery day and keeping the tele- phone adequate to serve the needs of Canadian progress. I>Ht«ik«ii by The BM Tctepkon* Compmy •/ Cmud* te M SM •0m«th<n0 aicvt M« ttUvkont btuiKCt* wul ift« f»»fU <• <t. ast

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