:â- â- *; ®hje /k0i)^rltftt %bmnu. \ UI.. 57; XO. 16 How South Grey • ' Voted Last Time •As F. R. Oliver and Dr. Brad. Jani- it'.son conduct their campaign in South i^iey lor the support of electors in the October b election, it is interesting to reva-w the figures in the last election in June. 1W4, when Mr. Oliver had a TJnT. "r ~''^^ °^"'- ^'- ^''"^'ow ft.n iidhan, Conservative. The otf icial fiKure.s for the 1^34 election WEDXESDAY. SEPTEMBER 22, 1937 W. H THURSTON & SON. Proprietort follows; are as A-* Kernahan Oliver Artemesia -j^i: „ _ nesia Bentinck ... Durham Egremont . fiuphra.sia . Markdale Neustadt . Dundalk Flesheiton Glenelg ^j Normanby Proton Osprey Holland :.:::" iJi Hanover Chatsworth 365 358 676 314 563 293 95 197 145 508 508 512 487 79 847 825 298 863 555 174 101 155 143 595 713 713 601 529 1035 106 Majority for 01 5612 8301 iver, 2,680. Poll -^«^MESIA Orange Valley . '^^'""''han Oliver Flesherton .... ^1 '"" Proton Station Z f Ceylon "^ Pricevilie ..I"!.!.I "" V'andeleur Eug-enia Portlaw .. The Vagabond Farmer Call For Clothing Need Is Great Voters' Lists Compiled Baptist Church News Totals Majorityâ€"Ol: .. 49 . 46 32 . 83 .. 28 365 iver 482. 106 81 58 120 180 87 142 73 847 Poll ^'ai-pham Hatherton Maxwell f«'versahm' OSPREV Kernahan Oliver 35 33 27 103 Smsrhampton ^1'^ Mclntyre ^^ Rob Roy 49 Badjero.s 29 48 Totals ... Poll EIPHRASI.A puncan ... Kernahan Oliver f^eathcote '. ^0 Pairniount ^9 'f'mberley 66 Rocklyn "9 S. S. "xVo 14 100 ^^^'â- ry Grove ^8 ('orifiij 59 L°' 6, Comg 127- 25 TotaLs Majorit^^^^^ 555 Po„ ''«'>Tf>V CodarviHt. .... kernahan Oliver Hopc'ville "^5 99 ^•ot 10, Con 'ie 'l^ 166 l-of •â- ?I. Con' 11 ^^ 164 [â- "t 23. Con. 3 27 94 Lot 20. Con. 3 ^'^ 45 Lot 38. Con .5 11 85 P'-oton Station':; li 57 3^ 51 50 117 150 36 61 69 85 601 41 77 24 104 58 52 TO 62 67 Majority-Oliver 449 S „ ,. «LE.\ELG •^- c>. Ao. () Con. 1. Lot 28 ot 19 ... 93 17 761 119 129 Con. lO, I f;"". :i LoT 19 : ^2 12.5 Township Hall , ^» '•* 124 Total., â€" â€"- Majority-oiiver-364 GAINSJN ONTARIO «t^;-/bviL.on;rn'--'"tiy <„. Hi^hwavs to ba '?'â- '" "^'"«'-^'"-nt .f the P-ovince, n/riv^b'"^'.'^"^ ^''<-' bfen asked to '• '^'^'^'""'^ P«'-tmenti„..tanee,o7rM"*''^^^- th'^ part of motori ts atlH:'.""^ °" " chiked rih" r^""'-' "'' '•--•^ vi.cisea D.\ the department If 1, "n'ruJhTh"' 'â- " -"-i'i^ : * * " 'houjrh they may not have hopn Z^j b'J; '""^ ^^ '^^ -"â- "'^' appear before department officials when his license may be sus, « „': he ^,s ordered to take a new driving While each case is dealt wth on its own merits, it was intimated that i"f a dnver has two or more acci.lents apinst hmi and the complaint of the citizens is substantiate.!, his license is usually suspended. In addition, sus. pensions ordered by th» courts must ;il.>o be obscri-ed and cannot run con- currently with-the one imposed bv the department. (By Alex. Sim> Chicago, 111., U.S.A. _ Lait week, you remember, I was writing on a boat hah" in and half out of Canada. Wo have driven almost without interrup- tion ever since. Once or twice we stopepd to sight-see; or to catch a wink of sleep. WV arrived in the Windy City last night; what did we do? Did We go to a show or night club? We went to bed and gut ten hours' sleep. EASTWARD GOING After eight or nine weeks westward travelling, after turning the watch ahead five times, it seemed strange to be going the other way; and rather nice; for it's homeward ho! as well as eastward ho. that wg shout as we drive. The trip took us from Vancouver Island to Seattle, Spokane, and Yel- low.stone Park. The .American moun- tains we saw are not as grand and massive as ours in Canada; but the roads are better. As a result few Canadian motorists see their own mountains. We have the materials and machinery, and the idle men, why | don't We build roads to meet the de- ' mand of the tourists to see Canada. \ Tourist trade is one of our greatest ! industries, but they must have roads, j .\t Yellowstone we saw the geysers, ' the hot mud, the Grand Canyon; most j interesting of all was Old Faithful, the j geyser that erupts -every sixty-three | minutes, throwing hundreds of gallons 1 of steam and water into a beautiful ( plumed column one hundred and fifty feet high. Every hour hundreds of people gather to see Old Faithful per- form. They come from all over the world, and it's worth it. If there was only one place in the ivorld where we could see the sun set. ! ar a rainbow, what an attraction it | would be? Yet these are to be seen in our own backyard. There is no charge; why miss it. brother? Yellowstone is one of the many Na- tional Parks in Canada and United States that are preserved by the gov- 1 .'i-nments for the enjoyment of the j people. The poorest man can ride ' the rails to see Banff or Cape Breton i or Yellowstone; it is his park; no one i can put up a fence and charge him a dollar to enjoy the beauty of the place. I This policy of setting up national • parks is one of the finest features of the continent. Wo have too few of them, as you know if you have tried to see some waterfall or valley with a barbed wire fence around it. or a sign at the gate "Admission 5o cents." There were so many bears in Yellow- stone around our tent that I slept on top of the car. Perhaps the risk was greater than the bears. Con.servation Says a Nation When mother says leave that piece of pie for supper, or when dad says w'e will summer fall the back fifty, they are saying "Conserve â€" Conserve." We have spent the natural resourc- es of this continent with wilful pro- digality. Timber, minerals, oil; all have been exploited, usually for pri- vate profit, without thought of replen- ishing the supply, or of generations to '•(Mne. Part of the Roosevelt New Deal was to initiate a nation-wide program of •onservation. Part of the wastage in the last decade has been in man- hood. Men thrown out of work with nothing to ilo. losing self respect, the desire or ability to work. The C.C.C. program was initiated to put unemployeii to work ; teach voung me4i trades, find thoni jobs: and to put them to the task of conserving the resources of the nation. W'a saw these lads, mostly from the city, bronzed and muscled, working on C.C.C. pro- jects. C. C C by the wav. menns Civilian Conservation Corps. Pbntinfj: trees, building dams, repairing roiids. are among the numberless useful 'â- '•- ''it arc undertaken. Said one observer: "Tliey are a lazy bu'ich of scamps." Remarked anoth"r: "It's the best thing Roosevelt did." Rain In the Dust Bo\% I "Wi' have frogs here seven years id that can't swim, and when this lain hit us, they had to wear life belts." a man on the street told us. '.\nd back from here a few miles I fouml a man in mud up to his chin. I threw him a rope, and he said, 'Pull hard, brother, for there's a mule under me'." i Floradora got in the mud which the I iiiitives call gumbo. Needless to say, I we camped right there. Next day the I sun shone, and the mud was gone. I The first rain we re^ceived going I west was in Saskatchewan, then proing i east our first was in the dust bowl of South Dakota. In Chicago we stalled Flora on the loop, the world's busiest thoroughfare. Was our face rod ? More of Chicago next week â€" and Ontario. Concluding Letter of Country Life From Coast to Coast. â€" Education by Travel.â€" The Trip From Chicago. â€" Farewell. (Special Dispatch from HoUtein, O'lt.l â€" Be it ever so humble the best place in Canada is home. There are wealthier plact^s. more scenic situa- tions, mor<> healthful locations, but this little corner of Canada has some- The Committee for Western Relief have sent out a call for clothing and vegetables again this year to aid those in the west who have been hit again with no crops. The need for cloth- ing is urgent and they are asking that we do not wait to send the clothing .vith the cars of vegetables, but send them out in bales. All who have used or new clothing to donate to this worthy cause are asked to leave it at either the Baptist parsonage or United Church parson- age before Wednesday, September 29. Wie bale will be packed on that day. thing that is lacking in every other place I visited. Here one is accepted without question for better or worse, in sickness or in health. Here there is nothing to hide or reveal, for my faults, and my few virtues are known to all. That is what home is to me. .md perhaps to you. You may not appreciate your home, or your home community. If not. try travelling â€" â- ou may be sick of home now, but you'll soon be home sick. "Well. I suppose you had a splendid trip," a friend says as he shakes my hand in welcome., "Yes, a splendid trip." I agree. And it is dropped there. I can't describe it and if I did he perhaps could not grasp it. You must .see it yourself: Mount Rundle, fhat towers over Banff; the sea that thunders in on Cape Breton; the Val- if-y of the .-Vnnapolis; the drought area of Saskatchewan; Vancouver Island. Who is there poet or dramatist enough â- o make landscape and living condi- tions live again by the mere use of words? Canada is so vast in extent and re- sources; so complex in people and oc- I'upation that one is overawed; any attempt at description must ultimate- ly fail. So it must pass. I visited practically all parts of Canada, travel- led fifteen thousand miles all told: ^alked with hundreds of people, in all ranks. But you. yourself, must see â- t. that is all I can say. Travel â€" \n Education It would be difficult to teach a boy to plough by correspondence â€" much easier to show him. So it is with travel. .A child may read about our history, he may study our geography, the economics of Canada or its sociol- ogy may be studied in University, but the study is academic and divorced from life if the processes of industry â- 'nd society are not observed first hand. For instance the operation of a combine, a nickle smelter, or a salmon •annery are just so many words if you cannot see the machinery running Then it makes one less narrow, and less certain that his own opinions are •ight if he meets people who disagree with him fundamentally. .\ business man in the Maritimes said: "We Bhie- nosers take things more easily than those in Ontario." .\ Vancouver ma'i when he 'vard I was from Ont.irio said: "Try to keep it quiet, it is a good place to bo away from.'' Great re- ligious ditfei'ences are everywhere in â- vidence; insipient political factions :ire gaining ground. It is good for wery young C:in;uH:in to become awRre of these differences before h:s own opii\ions become too settled, be- fore he begins active participation i" f-ivic life. That Canadian youth is facin<r its obliu:atinn« as citizens is '^bvious. I believe. This was mention- ed in the second letter describmir th.- '''anadinn Youth Congress, nn observa- tion confirmed by contacts thnnirrh- out the trio. , From ChicBKO to Ho.-stein At Chicaco we were fiv» hund-ed •riiles f>-n>ii home. We made it i" less than twenty-four hours. Driv- •ne fi'om Ilbnois. through a corner e*" Tnd'ana into Michisrii"- we nulled into a Michigan fi<d<l at midnight to throw •lown our sleeping b.igs for a brie*' •â- est. It 'vas brief, the reason, mos- luitoes. We drove on in our nainma<: imagine our constern'if-ion wh'n we bad to get out in •< bpsv hi-rbwav tf fix the trailer. .And the amazement of passing motonsts. The next fio'' was "on high ground; w" slent un*:i! sun rise, then broke camn to pound the trail again. This time on our Hst lap. We had breakfast and dinner combined at the home of Charlie's aunt in London, then struck home for sunner. .And Now It's Farewell I ittle remains now but to snv adieu before doini' so. I want t-o thank a'l those whose kindness and hosnitality made the road easier, and the inn>i>i»- 'ess tedious. .\ number of totters •^i^v" come in from readers. Th's â- â- •^hqt wore critical wer« annrecial"! •>nd win b-* diilv ac'<nrtwlpde'ed. Mv <,.v..nt"st rpp-ret is thnt the letters vp- •eived from Western Cj»i?nda invit'nT <\v caravan to visit them d'd not â- eich us until the trin was almost over. '•i'ir'illv. 1 wanf tr> *hnnk *h" e/litovs '••ho h.ive nermtHod mn the ns,^ of their col'imns. Bv*- fo'- fipir eonncr- "♦ioti and spiport the t'-ip would not havp been possibV .\nd to the reader. Farewell. Compilmg the list of votes in th'j County of Grey for the forthcoming provincial election on October 6 was completed on Friday and the lists uave been returned by the printers to â- J. F. P- Birnie, Clerk of the Peace, at Owen Sound for distribution to the various interests. The revision of the Osprey list was held on Friday last at | feversham when 61 names were ad- 1 (led to the list, making the available number of votes in the township for provincial purposes 1524. In pollings division 1 only one name was added; .N'o. 2 poll. 12; No. 3, 20; No. 4, lO; : No. 5, T; No. 6, 1; No. 7, 5; No. S. j I and No. i», one name. Artemesia | list comprises 1502 names and the | Village of Flesherton 335. Mr. Roy Liiiigford. the Singing Evangelist will have charge of the service in the Rock Mills Baptist Church next Sunday niifht at 7.;30. It is exi>ected that there will be a large congiegution to greet him. and a wel- come await.s everyone. Rev. Fred .Ashton, Pastor of the local Baptist Church has been invited to preach .Anniversary sermons at th»' Glenelg North Bapti.st Church next .Sunday afternoon and evening. He will occupy the pulpit here in the morning. Mr. Ashton was Pastor at Glenelg North 20 years ago. Rented Cairns Farm .Mr. Jos. McKee. who recently '"c- urned from the Swift Current district las rented the farm owned by Mr. 7. D. Cairns on t,he west backline. \Ir. Cairns is holding an extensive, luction sale on Tuesday of next week ollowing which Mr. McKee will move I vith his family to the property. \\ vish Mr. McKee more luck than he las experienced during the past few j ,'ears on his western holdings. j j Cbimney Fires j A serious chininev fire occurred on j Sunday no.^n at the residence of Mrs. | M Thistlethwaite. but wa.- extinguish- j ..d before anv damage was done. Th.' , oipes inside the house were red hot j vnd some of the wallpaper took fire j from the heat. With the high wind - prevailing at that time it was fortun- . •ite that the fire did not gam more headway. Two other chimney fin-] ,m Saturday in other village homes did: "Ot give much trouble in extinguish-) ing. ^ j No Paralysis in Townj Reports have been ^^""lated , throughout the district that Fleshe^o- is full of infantile paralysis. • 1 »>^ | ,.„mor is not correct as there I.S not, a case in towm at the present time, anrin ihe past there was on yo-j ..n.l that family came out of .,U'"-an tine on Sunday. ; Well Attended The 50th Annual meeting of The Owen Sound .A.ssociation of Baptist Churches is being held in the Paisley Baptist Church to<lay and tomorrow. This afternoon there will be a pas- tors' and Laymen's conference, at the same time in the church auditorium :he Women's Mission Societies will meet, also in the evening with Mrs. I Rev.) C. K. Dolby of Chesley pres- iding. Pastor and Mrs. .Ashtun are representing the local Baptist Church- <>s. There will be special speakers from Toronto at all sessions besides the general reports of the year's work Thursday there will be three general sessions with the Rev. R. G. Quiggan B. .A. of Owen Sound presiding. Three New Cases Iflfantiie Paralysis Iq Township llirei; new cases of infantile paral- lysis have appeared in .Artemesia town- i ship .luring the past few days, one at i Vandeieur. oiu- at Ceylon and the Dtiier un the east bac'Kline. In the ; Vandeleur case a four-year-old boy iiad the whooping cough and the par- iilys;s was not detected soon enough 10 sloi) the paralysing of the legs. ' This Wednesday morning the other two cases are of a mild nature. It I had been hoped that the .scourge had ! (ten briiught to a halt, as there ha<k I not been any new cases for two weeks. Fiesiierion schools were to have I )pened on Monday next, but alon^ ! .vith the Ceyion and Vandeleur schools â- will b».. closed indefinitely. HERBERT _ ( \RGOF On Saturday. Sfptember nth. i:>-'" at St. .John's .Anglican Church. N. 1- waj-, by Ri'V. Canon Bayiu's-Reed Loreen .May. <iauirhter o*" Mr--. M. Cargoe of Flesherton. to Harry K Herbert, son of Mr. and Mrs H. A Herbert of Toronto. Cars Collided [ Two cars were in a collision on the C-eylon hill Sunday evening, which re- sulted in both chariots being consider- ably damaged when their wheels be- came entangled. One of the cars was driven by Jim Noble of Markdale and the other by Robt. Farslow of the O. D. R. Cecil Dean of Holland Centre, passenger in Noble's car, had several teeth knocked out when his head came into contact with the windshield. Both ears will need new- left wheels and fenders. BORN TEETERâ€" I'LDLAR On September the eighth at two- thirty p.m., a 'luiet weddio.g was sol- emnized at the home «f the Rev. Mr Gordon of Dundalk. when Miss .Anmi Teeter of Ceylon became the bride e: Mr. James Pedlar of Rock Mills. The bride was becomingly attired in bag- dad blue triple crepe with whitp acces- sories. They were unatteni' d an'' left on their honeymoon for To onto. Woodbridge and others points. On their return a wedding dinner was .-er- ved to the immediate friend.- it t • home of the bride's mother. Jjs. >; Teeter of Ceylon. They will r-sid. on the groom's farm east of Fles;:er- ton. ' MacCANNELL â€" To Mr. and Mrs. I MacCannell, Proton, atid daughter. on Sunday. September 12th. ; H.ARDY â€" To Mr. and Mrs. James ; Hardy of Swinton Park, a son, (Still Bom) on Fridav. September :ird. HILL â€" To Mr. and Mrs. Ken Hill of Markdale. a daughter, on Sunday, j September 5th. in Mrs. N'uhn's nursing: Home Flesherton. â- WHITTAKER â€" To Mr. and Mrs. j I. B. Whittaker. a daughter, on Fri- I day, September iTth, in Mrs. Nuhn's Private Nursing Home. Flesherton. Card of Thanks Mrs. Thistlethwaite and Beatrice extend their gratitude to all who ran to their aid Sunday morning, with special thanks to Mr. Turney and .An- gus who so quickly put out what n.'^ht have been a serious fire. The local Conservative campaign in the forthcoming provincial election campaign in South Grey was opened! on Saturday evening when Major T. D, Bell gave a splendid addi'ess on the various topics under discussion. Dr. Biad. Jpmieson of Durham. Liberal- Conservative candidate addressed the I meeting, as also did Mr. Frank Irwin ; I and Mr. Rowe of Durham. While â- Jiere was not a large attendance at the meeting, due to the heavy rain falling, the party supporters wer^- very pleased with the number who â- \ttcnded to hear the excellent iid- firesses. i Mr. Stanley Gaudin of TJoionto is I visiting Mr. and .Mrs. W. H. Thurston j j anil other relatives in this distiict. I l:i throe weeks the results of the I Uition will be known. The l-told- ! •â- ou-so fellows will then come into i ;heir own. ! THK FINEK.U. CH.*PEL \ (Uamlied. ptrMiinl funer:il service. .Vvailable In all parts of Toronto .ind â- iuhurbs .it prices to snlt the Income of ever? family. JBatee S: i^labbocUs iBurial Co. FORMERLY B.M'ES BURI.-U. CO. Fred -Vladdocks Rictiard Maddocks. .Vigr. KI. 4344-34S6 124 AVENVb' K0\D ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF D.AVENPORT HOAD â- â- ^^ Pricevilie Store News Men's, Boys' Fall Clothing \\"c havf Iic't'ii recci\ in.ii:' I'ur Fall and Winter sucks oi Men's and Boys" Un- derwear. CNeralls and Trousers. Shoes anl Rubbers. The«;e were boug-ht prior to advanced prices and you will hnd our prices compare favorably with any. EATRA SPECIAL â€" CHINA WARE Just as a Special we are olTerint: a v^7-^piece set of open-st(.>ck Dinner Ware screen lined on cream for $2.95 White Cup.s and Saucers in first class quality at. per dozen 90c 2 T.ovelv Rowls for 25c Blankets, Yarns, Flannelette iUiy your woollen and flannelette blankets and flannelettes now. These will be higher when our present stack is L-xbauited. • „ , • j c We have a ffood gtock ot all kinds ot Knitting- Yarns, including: Monarch Dove. .Sweater Yarns and Sock and Sock and Mitt Yarns. GROCERIES. FLOUR & FEED We carrv the following stock of flour at all times. Furitv Flour, RobinTIood M'.ur, Cream of the West Flour. Buy- a Sac Floiu". and Cream of Roses. Clean, fesh stock of Groceries at the lowest prices possible. FRED G. KARSTEDT, Pricevilie