AVEDNESDAY. JANUARY 26. 1933 THE FLESIIERTON ADVANCE Flesherton High School FORM Z LATIN â€" HON. â€" Mcrie Allan i»2, Belly Murray 88, SukIo MacKinnon 85, Marie Chard 82, James McCormack 80, Catherine Stewart 81, Lea. Seelej 77, Everett Talbot 77. PASS â€" Mervyn MtFatlden 73 Cecil Chard 67. Milford PiiK-r 51», Lil- lian MaKee 5(), (Jeorjje Boyd 50, Am- Kus Tumey 50. FAIL â€" Velma Fisher 4t). AriO'lt Martin 42, Georjcc Akitt 38, Hugn Bibby 25, Bob DarKavel 24, Delbcrt Smith 23. Local and Personal Euchre and dance in Flesherton on February 2nd. Mi.ss Glady-J Pindcr of Toronto vi.s- ilcd last week with her parents here. The Flesherton Dramatic Ci'ub pre- sented their play at Markdale and Kimberley last week. Owing to mild weather last week the carnival in Flesherton rink was postponed. MIDDLE .«;CHOOL CANADIA.N HISTORY â€" HON. - Christena MacKinnon 76, Mary Wil- son 75. PASS â€" Anna McLean 71, Rena Clark 67, Bob Bellamy 06, Evelyn Brown 66, Hazel McKiilop 65, Bill Parker 03, Lavcrnc Piper 62, Donald Aldcorn 60, Elsie Graham 59, Donald Reiley 59, Wallace MacDermid 57, John McVicar 57, Catherine McVicar 56, Stanley Hunt 51, Delia Vause 51, Dorothy Jamicson 50. FAIL â€" Jean ,Wolstencroft 44, Verdun McMaster 43, Wilfred F.ook 42, Opal Weber 42, Frances Collinson 38, Martha Ostrander 38, Bob Phillips 37, Dick Stewart 36, Mervyn Johnson 35, Gordon Patterson 32, Macil Snell 32. Bessie Cairns 18. Mr. and Mrs. Robt. McEachnie and -Miss Mai'ie McEachnie of Toronto Priceville Presbyterian Church Activities Arc To Inslal Memorial Win- dow To So'.clivrs 111 Their New Church week ended with Mr McEachnie. and Mrs. Alex. !*;>: V , iC FORM 5 TRIGONOMETRY â€" HON. â€" Earl Johnson 87, Jackson Stewart 79. PASS â€" Eleanor Mather 54, Marion Shaw 53. FAIL â€" Ellen Parker 44, Ross Smith 40, Murray Stewart 35, Jean Hincks 35, Almeda Hincks 33, Graham Beard 32, Mervyn Little 30, Kathleen Morrison 24, Josie Falconer 19, Daisy McFadden 17. GOOD DAIRY COW RATION A ration for a cow in milk that supplies about fifteen pounds of pea and oat hay per day and crushed oats and barley, one pound to each three pounds of miilc, is about a balanced ration if roots are fed in addition. It no roots are available, bran should be added at the rate of one pound to three of the mixed pfrain. If the available supply of hay is limited to mixed hay or timothy, it would be necessary to add a protein supplement to the grain ration. This may be oil-cake meal, cottonseed meal, gluten feed or fish meal, 50 to 100 pounds for each 300 pounds of crushed grain depending upon the protein analysi:- of the supplement available. Messrs. C. N. Richardsin, secretary of the Flesherton Hydro Commission, and W. F>. Turney are in Toronto at- tending a Hydro meeting. The W. I. will meet at the home of Mrs. W. J. W. Armstrong, .Wed- nesday, Feb. 1st, at 3 p.m. All wel- come. Mr. Wm. Miller has rented the reb- idencc in town owned by Mr. Frank Cairns Sr. and is moving hi-s family from Meaford. '.Ve welcome Mr. and Mrs. Miller and' Marion to town again- Rev. and Mrs. Goff of Clarksburg and Messrs. Don Sinclair and Jack Armstrong of Toronto were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. W. Hick- ling. Messrs. C. N. Richardson, secretary Tavish and F. J. Thurston attended the Motor Show at Toronto on AVcd- nesday last. They were also the ttuests of General Motors at a banquet in the Royal York hotel. Recently youngsters have been in- sorting snow in the outside letter box at the post office and a number of letters were neariy destroyed. Par- ents are requested to warn the child- ren against -such practice. Quite a number of "knights of the 1 oad" have taken advantage of the free parking and eating facilities pro- vided by the village (luring the past week. Chief Jos. Field has had c many as five at one time in the apart- ment -â- •l the park. A euchre and dance will be heid in Fraternity Hall, Flesherton, on Thrus- day, February 2nd, in aid of the hock- ey club. Euchre at 8:15 sharp, danc- ing at 10 p.m. Music by Dorothy Foster and orchestra. Admission 25 cents. The ,W.M.S. was held on Tuesday afternoon with a good attendance The meeting opened with hymn 697 fol.owed by Scripture reading from Isaiah, 40th Chap. Mrs. Dan Camp- l)cll gave a reading, "God has nc hand but our hand-.<." The minutes were read and considerable business was transacted. Mrs. Sutherland ga\ e a splendid paper on Foreign Missions; Mrs. Campbell has the topic for next month, the roll call to be answered with verse Scripture on word aervi-je. Mrs. Boyce closed with prayer. Mrs. Wilfred Watson pre- sided over the Willing Hc/pers and opened with hymn 745, followed by prayei' by Mrs. Mclvor. The creed was repeated in unison. Arrange- ments were made for the parlor soc- ial to be held at the home of Mr and Mrs. Dan Campbell on Thursday. Feb. 2nd, when everybody is cord- ially invited to attend. The Presbyterian congregation ol Priceville are installing a Memorial window in the new church in memory of the soldiers. Anyone wishing to contribute a donation for same please leave with the committee: convenors Mrs. Dave McDonald, Miss Ma> Stewart and Rev, Dr. Mclvor. The annual meeting of the eon gregation was held last week, wher. a full house was present. Rev. Dr. Mclvor presided over the meeting. Mr. Allie McLean was re-elected a sec. trea.s., after several years of good .'ervice. Mr. John McDougall an daughter. Miss Alice, motored from Toronto to bo present at the meeting. The manager.; are as follows: Wm. McMillan, Allie McLean, Archie Mc- Cuaig, Hector McEachern, David Hincks, Ben .McKenzie, A. Hincks, Dan L. McArthur, Wm. Aldcorn, iWm McBride. Thank You, Donald The editor of the .Wiarlon Echo get.- off his human nature homily in a late i;33ue. It reads just as if it had occurred in Flesherton only the price it higher! "I am very temperanien tai. AlK)ut a month ago Donald Ciimeron came in and stopped hif Echo. He said, 'You know, Duncan, I am dropping the Echo for 1933 bc- cau.te we simply can't afford the $2.00 and at that I like the paper and will miss it.' I was very disappointed, but I hadn't an argument in the world to offer him for I fully realize just how little money the farmers are handling these days. I can get along without Donald's $2.00 but Donald's .stopping it made me just wonder where this thing it going to end and I could envision our list of farmers being entirely decimated. And it made me feel darn blue and pessi- mistic. As a newspaper man I fully realize that weekly newspapers are being pretty hard hit in this depres- •iion. Foreign advertising is about gone and I felt that if our farm sub- scribers began to drop off where will a lot of us small •â- papers get off at and how soon. Today the phone rang. I answered it. 'Donald Cam- eron, R.R. No. 5, speaking!' 'Yes Don- ald!' 'Soy Duncon, put my name back CMARLEJ JENNINGS ANNOUNCING A friend, who has the paint all worn off his dial-button, names these seven programs as among his favor- ites: Sherlock Holmes, Cantor and Riibinoff, the Neilson Hour, Edwin Hill the News Commentator, Ruth Etting, the Coo Coo Noodle Club, and the Trioiettes. Ho didn't know it, but he picked one for every night f the week â€" Try it yourself. Write down from memory seven programs that please you, and see if every night's a big night on the air. known Canadians to listen in on Cali- fornia rugby in January. on your list and I'll drop in the first time I'm in town and give you the $2.00. We certainly miss the Echo. And to show how small the margin between a fellow feeling blue and fine is, that little incident is the size of it very often. Yes, it has put my outlook on the future back to normal. Thank you, Donald!" Demand For Approved Chicks Slaves of the lamp â€" or the ti^be, if you like â€" that's what some of us are becoming as the result of the "con- tinued story" type of my-scery pro- gram. Listen to one episode and you're doomed to tune in "next Tues- day at the same hour." If you don't you'll never know how the hero es- caped the peril that threatened him. Not all programs depend on episodes to carry the suspense from week tt week. The voices of -oome of the stars have enough character interest to draw us back again and again, even if there is no "story" at all. In this connection, we think of Mrs. Pennyfeather and her "dear people everywhere, just everywhere." Some day we will have more Can- :ida wide broadcasts than at pre-ent We have it on the word of the chair- man of the radio commission â€" not to be too critical, but somebody over- looked a good bet in Canada's part of the world broadcast on New Year's. Some countries boasted of the tem- perate weather, but when it came Toronto's turn at the microphone, the talk was about electric stove-s and hydro power â€" with the thermometer at 60 on our back porch â€" and all those listeners in Australia and elsewhere thinking, no doubt, of "Our Lady oi the Snows!" Books For Attendance One of the most significant om- pliments federal poultry poiicie; have received in recent years was givsn at a meeting of hatcherymen in Hamil- ton the other day, when it was as- serted in -support of the federal Pol- icy of Hatchery Approval that the outstanding reason why hatcherymen should be identified w:t'n th.' policy was "the public are deiiiandin^ ap proved chicks." Hatchery Approval i-s now entering its four:h year o operation and is doing s lit toward the building up of quality and value in poultry flocks on Can.ia''ii farnis. PIGS NEED FIBRE At the morning service at St John's United church prizes were giv- en to six members of the Sunday school who had attended 75 per cent or more of the services. Misses Winter fed market pigs and breed Betty Murray and Gcorgina McDonald ing stock relish a little fibrous matter Douglas, Donald and Munro Scott to chew, and they need it rejrularly. Well, Canada's national game has at last become a national radio fea- ture â€" pardon U3 if we mean hockey. From CJOR Vancouver to CHNS Halifax and a dozen stations in be- tween, the Voice of Foster Hewitt will now be heard each Saturday evening describing the world's fastest puck- chasers cavorting in a National League game. This progi'ession ol the General Motors Hockey Broad- cast from one station to a coast-to- coaat chain is one clear case of a pro- gram growing in s^ope because thorc was an audience waiting â€" People likt- GOOD sport broadcasts. We havt There are some programs hard to classifyâ€" is the March of Time . a newscast or drama ? Certainly more the latter, and g'ood stuff, too â€" Likelj to hear King George or Clarence Dar- row speaking almost any time â€" theii "ghosts", of coui-se. Speaking of ghosts nearly all the comedians em- ploy ghost writers and gagmen to supply the ammunition â€" not so sure about the Marx brothers. All we know about them is that they "make vip" for the microphone â€" Groucho wears his frock coat, eye glasses, thick eyebrows and moustache. He would feel naked otherwise. An orphanage â€" one of the young- sters steals to the attic, finds a g:reat pile of brass musical instruments- blows into the biggest â€" ^Boooooom â€" boo â€" boo â€" A quiet voice: "Do you like it?," and the boy looks up to see a hooded monk, one of the or- phanage staffâ€" "Sure I I'ike it!" "Then: I shall teach you to play â€" and that's how Jesse Crawford, talented vir- tuoso of the organ, began his music. Now â€" well, you have heard and ad- mired. Flesherton 5 Markdale 2 and Fred Gibson were the recipients. One girl, who was absent from church will receive her book later. I niB 8TORB â- BBTICB F. T. HILL&CO.,Ltd. CHAIN STORES Markdale, Ontario OUB BUTIMG PC WEB SATES TOU A LOT OF HONBT Announcing Three Big Days Of Grocery Specials 33 I5.\KS l'l"..\KI, S().\P $1.00 3 CAN'S CllOlCl'. CORN 2Sc 3 TINS CLARKE'S TOMATOE SOUP 23c - MAPLE LEAK RAKING P0\VDE:R 16c Tin 10 LHS. COOKING BE-\NS 25c 4 LBS. CHOICE DATES 29c 2, 5 lb. PAILS CLOVER HONEY 65c KEYNOTE FLOUR, Jule Bags $L79 cwt These Prices good only Friday Jan. 27, Sat. Jan. 28, and Monday, Jan. 29 They will eat straw if nothing bottei is available. It is easy, however, to give them something better, such as second cut clover or alfalfa and other well-cyred grass or cereal crops that have been cut green. The feeding of a few mangels from day to day, as is well known, has very desirable effects The important thing is to see that ai) pigs, except the very young, get some form of vegetable matter re;v ularly. The results obtained from this practice will amply repay the cost involved in the small quantity of fib- rous feeds used. Won A Car, Took Cash Mr. Leonard Hishon, accountant in the Dundalk branch of the Bank ol Commerce, was the lucky winner of a car in a lottery contest sponsored to raise funds for the skating rink at Monkton, The draw was held at Mitchell. "Hish" was given the choict of a car (which had gone over 18,00(j miles) or $500 in cash. He chose the latter option. There have been dozens- of tickets sold locally in automobile lotteries the past year or two, but thi.s is the first car or its equivalent ill cash won by any local resident 'Hish" is in a mighty convenient spot to store his money, too. â€" Dundalk Her- n)(l. Last night was a night of impor- tance in the hockey circle of this district when the Flesherton will- bees knocked out the Markdale would- bee3 to a 5-2 count on the locals ice. The play was fast and clean with no penalties being handed out by referee '"Tuck" Berry. Both teams were in excellent shape and travelled at top speed. Bob Dar- gave. was Flesherton's outstanding back-checker, and Mervyn Johnson's shot would knock a horse down, while King showed up red for Markdale. Murray Stuart was the scoring "ace" of the night, scoring two goals, whih Dargavel Smith and Piper bulged the twine for the other three. King and Teeter was Markdale's scoring "aces." The spectators all noticed that Eddie Ferris wore a large iron horseshoe around his neck, supposedly to keep him from catching cold, but we think otherwise. Earl Johnson was a real cave man sending many of the rival's 'Jown for the count of ten. Flesherton â€" Goal, E. Ferris; de- fence, E. Johnson, G. Akitt; centre -M. Johnson; wings, J. McFadden, B Dargavel; substitutes, E. Fisher, D. Smith, L. Piper, F. Patton, M. Stuart. Markdale â€" Goal, Dundas, sub.-goal M. Burnside; defence, Thibaudeau, Teeter; centre. King; wings, Macaulay and White; sub., H. Burnside. D. McDonald Warden D. McDonald, Reeve of Bentinck, WES chosen Warden of Grey County by acclamation at the first session ol tho County Council' Tuesday evening'. It is very rare that a iWarden is sel- ected in such a manner. Four othei men were nominated for the offite, but quietly withdi'ew in faVor of Mr. McDonald, whose election as Warden had been conceded last week. Those nominated were W. L. Taylor m Osprey, Thos. Doherty of Glenelg. Louis Himmler of Neustadt, and' W. I. Field of Colldng^vood Township. The selection of committees wili take place this Wednesday morning. A recent competition asked for three topical similes. Here i-3 the winning entry: As rare as a golden wedding in Hollywood. As idle as a trouser-press in a nud- ist colony. As out-of-place as a gangster at a Disarmament Conference. INDIAN POPULATION Canada, with an Indian population onc-thiixl larger than that of the United States, spends $.3,000,000 pel year as against $27,000,000 expended in one year by the United States. In Canada the Indian has full freedom of hi-3 person, can choose his own mode of life, and is secure in his pro- perty rights. In his health, in his material affairs and in ali other ways, he is much more advanced than is the Indian in the United States. In the United States there are 36,- 000 Indian children without school facilities, and out of the total 1931 appropriation of $27,000,000 the sum of $11,500,000 is for the education of only 31,000 Indian children, nearly one-half of whom are chiefly confined in costly, inefficient and segregated Indian boarding schools. Ninety-seven Brampton families are rc.-civing relief. f Small Advts. ^ a , BOAR FOR SERVICE For Sale DRY ,WOOD FOR SALE â€" Maple, beach, birch and elm. Phone 32 r 13 Flesherton, R. J. Vause. Yorkshire Boar for service. Terint $1.00. â€" John Oliver, O.D.R., Art* mesia. FOR SALE â€" Quantity of gooo hay, all varieties. â€" T. J. Stinson phone 41 r 11. FOR SALE â€" Sound driving* mare or will exchange for heavy colt. â€" Wm. Fadden, Feversham, Ont. Two boys, while out hunting one day recently between Hanover and Neustadt, came across the dead bodies of two bucks with their horns so in tertwincd -in each other that they -ould not be separated after the'heads were chopped off. FOR SALE â€" 1982 Electric Philco Radio, 7 tubes, used only 8 months. Real bargain. â€" George Johnson, phone 75rll. FOR SALE â€" Well bred driving mare, good free driver, guaranteed worker, make excellent brood mare 7 years. Apply any forenoon. â€" Archie McKechnie, Priceville. BOAR FOR SERVICE Registered Yorkshirt Boar for ler* vice by Flesherton Bacon Hog Clut^ tbe property of the Ontario Depart* ment of AgrieuHore. â€" C. STEWART, Caretaker. ' FOR SALE â€" Your choice of two Jersey cows, pne juat freshened, the other due Jai^. 27. both 7 years old. Would consider exchange for young catt.o.â€" Reg. Boyd, Flesherton. BUSINESS CARDS 4 GEO. E. DUNCAN lil DUNDALK "^"^ LICENSED AUCTIONEER "" For the County of Grey. Temji 1 per cent. Satisfaction guaranteed Dates made at the Advance office. Prince Arthur Lodge. 383, A. F. A A. M. meets in the masonic Hall over Kennedy's store, Flesherton every Fri- day on or before the full moon. W. M.. Geo. Long, Sr.; Secretary, H. A. McCauley. ;-.j..«<^,v;.:A«»t^'iJ