Ontario Community Newspapers

Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), December 26 1928, p. 1

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the georgetown herald sixtythird year of publication georgetown wednesday evening december 26th 1928 1 50 per annum in advance 200 to usa the georgetown herald 1 m moohe ruuiuhr ana irrolwmm akmlauort uaadlu nallwal bedrle lallway itmli hakurban hallway kabtbounu wefltuound dally itotly mo a tio urn no i 7jiom 4 oil j bjs b4m i1m ii 3 lun 8 1a7 pm 1 13s pm 10317 phi 0 335 pm 54 4i7 pill ii 631 pm 13- 6j17 pin 13 tjs pn 14 767 p m l o as p411 lo u 17 u in 171 oa am is ilia pm nob 1 a 3 will run dally except blin dly vmm time tame hkl cut passenger patteager passenger lull passenger passenger passenger sunday culbj wmt hell passenger passenger nwoxh mali nwhccr passenger passenger sunday oelag nwtli uu usu alaf seat 1j3 in 033 am 1018 ra 1300 pra 4 00 pjn 033 pm 83ft pjn 731 pjn 740 era 883 am ioa8 ul 313 pjn 40 pjn 003 pju 708 pjn 1024 am bjjs im c5 pjq 112j jn 710 pjn directory ib boy due barrister anal salieliar oeorgetown ontario offices king bldg u1u st clabencb a wldoins banrbter beueuer nu117 pauie hours 0 am to 5 pjn open wednesday and saturday evenings mettgaga imuumxi heaey to lean teumlone 1u georgetown elevator flour bran shorts rolled oats oilcake poultry foods 1 hay straw and salt at lowed price all kind of grain bought at beat market prices alex l noble agents for grain pool jj phone 145 georgetown g isib forsters grocery full line of fresh groceries al ways in slock bananas and oranges al the right prices leecream in balk cones or bricks foreters term cash georgetown phone 29 3 zj an db b t mot payaklaa aas sargeeat medical oncer of ilealth in 1if g township ofllee boura 3 to 4 and 7 to 8 pja tiisne sj office and residence main street south opposite presbyterian church db c v williams physician and surteon medical officer of ilealth georgetown ottee and residence queen st south mioae tat office hours 13 and 68 pjn also by appointment p b watson ddb udh oeertet otaee bianii to s eieeat thanlay afternoons p l heath las dds office in lane block one door north of oneills carriage pactory hours 0 am to 8 pjn db b leabmontu velerlnery burgeon phone 340 main st n oeaffeiesm omaopbaotio -ne1lben- the cmreareeler palasar graaute is years ptaetlee ne m bargeey ostesaalhy or eleetrieuy xray service office over pameua store office taurswedneday a fjaturdsy 3 to 6 and 7 to 0 pm other days and hours by appointment paeae ulw i11m1111 u at bflhssi tasne til tuesday and friday a to s pjn db p b bbnnbtto bye bar nose and throat specialist a the removal of his office to all haol stbsbt bast hamilton ontabio bye aliases fitted consultation by appointment phone outlaid 788 convenient parking for automobiles j sanford stowturttown plumbing tinsmithing tmsbbtjet usecrially uvea phone 84 r 12 georfetown rr no 2 44444 w h willson t ubdsriakar and ileaud smbalmei- auttunobil or htvburawnhtimi i ptuina night or tly 54 w or m gaibgfir a debtob a stnoobeb kelly aiken oollbotob penlataat aaassafal omeea orangevilla owen bound and quelph established 1u90 imni tviii i trrrmrk 1 tth iiihiii ii ii sell your cream at home mflkkymcuccsthc highest grade and the best price opt every sjlbraay wfu georgetown creamery co m saxe manager ageals far melette cream beparaters cno aaa see tbew i l l nil 11 itlrtrrrn 1 1 i i i 1 1 i i l i i ii i fi i mi in i i i i l l xmemmmmtgmmi w b browne co agents for wheat pool bring your wheat oats barley here take feed back we wiu truck if preferred norval mills ksjvt for pastry kings choice canadian wonder for bread cash prices shorts middlings bran chopped wheat barley chicken feed at mill look for prize in our flour w b browne co norval ontario j1glitslc51 i homemade baking all made in our own home maekeys bread fresh every dsy delivered to your door groceries quality fint thtn pricm ke lee maoonooiues ulied out peel i lb 8unmah puffed and nectar raisins 3 packages panoy smyrna pios 1 lb for grown com syrup 3 lbs ue crown corn syrup 8 lbs for ue ammonia 3 packages its soap special old home rug 54 s 27 wi h lo bars of comfort soap all for q12s less than the value of the rug alone mark clark phone 229w georgetown ttmew hydroeleetrie system orders taken for ranges and appliances of all kinds 44v office town hall wraggettes drug store tllhh 339ittiins tbe tititnti of 9eorgetoton anb commuiiitp 13 verp appp anb proflipcrousi wraggehes drug store lihwettt itiiislreei tttantm im choicest flour and all kinds ol feed at reasonable prices try us with your next order georgetown flour feed mills vy c bessev georgetown lwkcffimontreal iutallkilkd out assets and liabiuties 31tt october 1928 assets cult oa hind 0j0s70651i on other banks 67346083 depotie in the central gold reserves 1500000000 call and short loans on boods deben tures and stocks 17b1n19900 dominion and ivovindal government securities 70704r08710 cuudian municipal securities and british fareien end colonial public securities other than canadian 1605480191 raitwav tnd other bonds debenture and stocks 360301406 quick aset 1389828256 loans and discounts and other assets 3751500144 barik premises 1190000000 ljibflitiesofcmtoinenundlsntersof credit u per contra 311511661 toulatmts 87378252361 liabilitibs to the public notes in circulation 4606757400 deposits 7il4s01709i letters of credit outstanding 1313911663 other liabilities 17144s6bfl33 total liihoetiea to public 81073666888 bstoam of amafai over lublut ue to public 6305585474 tllobk otrbst days ive just beh to h bsubw shop of whiu tmaiilalled wurtm of shlntntf starlllsers und bltf soft hydrmullo clusln whlt6oitd the ttitmuianu work in flowersmhud alt it tauixlii it utlnk of other day wlun palhw cut our hair the bis farm kltclum was our sltop whim kuihmht all was uuroueh utul slvsartxl a row of tttven tietuls for we were seven too aiul oh i the tortunt we enduivdl we learned to erln and bear when we sat on that old high stool and pather cut our lialrl when aatherd don his steelrlmmed specs and wlvet the aclilors up why motherd fly the premlseal and jmuterd kick tlve pup and vow by nil tarnation uuu wed better have a rare or someoned set his jacket warmed t when father cut our hair- the shears were dull and bits of hair et down ttulde our shirts they itched and pricked us half to death and pulling boys hair hurts sometime a boy would peep aloud and sometimes pauierd swear but bauits would do no less than that had they to cut boys hair then when the job was finished and the wreckage cleared away hed take the littlest on his lap and coll us round and say hes sorry hed displeased us then hed soberly declare that life held far worse hurts than thatl when father cut our hair and wed hang round and listen to the wonder tales hed tell bottvetlnies we laughed and sometimes cried for rather told them well and when he kissed us all ooodnleht and sent us toward the stair we loved him sot why any time wed let him cut our hair i how fathers gone the kitchen too the days are grown to years i and sometimes when im all alone my eyes grow thick with tears ah oodl could we turn back again i rd love to hear him swear to sit in that old kitchen and let rather cut my hair i edward ormerod halton rifles the volunteers op lttft continued front last week it u fitting that the first chapter of this book of chronicles should be dedicated to the four independent companies of red coats that formed the basis of the organisation of the halton regiment in 188 colonel noble and llajor grant have provided me with records as to the dates and organisation of these com panies as well as the personel of the original regiment and from these re cords i am drawing the material for this chapter on the 18th of december 1m1 the ookvllle company was authorised with george k ohuholm in command and with john barclay and wm b chls- holm the subaltern officers on the oth of january 183 the stewarttown company was gaaetted with john murray in command and john johtt- ston and oeorge w black the subal tern officers it is an interesting commentary that tuewarttown in these days was capable of supporting a company of forty five all ranks but that was before the economic and industrial changes hod depopulated the rural districts and concentrated the population about the cities and larger centers the georgetown company was gts- etted on january 30th lies and its officers were captain james young with wm w roe and john r bar ber his subordinates in the nerval company gaaetted peb ttth lies the officers were joseph kyle in command and oervsjsep power the ensign as second lieuten ants were called in those yatmysv the acton company wis organised in lsas and william allan was in command and james bymon and alex brown were the lieutenants with the organisation of this company be gan the service of major grant sendee that covered nearly forty years the greater part of it as quar ter master but more of this honorable service later according to these records com panies were established in milton nelson and nassagaweya in ism and the regiment was authorised on a seven company basis though they did not get together till 1s6s when the companies assembled at oakvule and a decision was reached to make it a rifle corps clothed in rifle green port of which was paid for out of the mens pay the original regiment was officered as follows 188- 1871 cot geo k- ohuholm major john murray adj john rait ing surgeon dr ogden paymaster h m bwltter qr master r a ap- pelbe bergtmajor walter mckay no l coy oakvule capt w b chuholm u r b albertaon ensign j shane no 3 bteworttown capt j johns ton lt r campbell ensign geo black no s coy aorgetown capt jos young lt j it barber ensign r d mcmaster no 4 ocy nerval capt r kyle lt jos currle ensign root ourrle no 5 ooy burlington capt mc coy lt wm kerns ensign cooper no 0 coy artotvcept wm allan lt jss bymon ensign a brown no t coy milton capt bastsdo lt ensign no goy nassagaweya or camp- bellvuie capt j lyons lt j hutcheon ensign list in 1877 ltcol john murray major wm allan paymaster h m swifter adjutant john kitting bur geon dr ogden asst burgeon dr jas appelbe qr master r 8 ap- pelbe sergmojor walter mckay no 1 co oakvule capt it b albertaon no a co bteworttown capt w p appelbe no s co georgetown capt j r barber no 4 oa nerval capt jas currle no 5 co burilngtoncapt wm kerns no 9 co acton capt john shaw no 7 oa muloo- capt wm pan- ton no s co compbellvule capt j lyons it would seem that the four original companies were oakvule georgetown nerval and bteworttown and many of these men were in the companies that volunteered for service during the trouble of 18w when canada with a poorly organised multla force was sud denly called to defend her frontier against an invasion that must have looked foraldswe in those days when the defences were so inadequate in 1000 the british government is sued a medal for oeneral service in canada in un and itto end the presentation of these directed the attention of the service of these stalwart men who had volun teered without lirotuurc and offered their servlcm at a time when the sit uation looked very serious and who after tluit service had been rendered tifld fitted back into uve economic sit uation laying aside the rifles and knousacks and addressing llvemselves to uve aria of peace it is doubtful if any group of men were more active in tit industrial and economic life of die county uton uiee veterans of ibm their history is the hutory of the development of the county during tlvose decades before tlve close of the century many of them went into business some of them went to their trades but most of them like cinclnnatus went back to their farms it was my privilege to see a parade of utoee veterans in 1001 just after they had been decorated and though samewliat declined into uie vale ot years they were a noble looking body or men a worthy basis of organisation for uie halton regiment captain johnston was in command and every inch o captain he was too and like bear with that something in his face that men would fain call matter au thority they added much color to the life or the country with the scarlet and white ribands that bore testimony of a voluntary service to the empire and tlvey gave a living promise utat should the empire again need men the county would be ready with a full measure of service and in uie years to come that promise was fully deemed it is a long way bock to 1880 and these veterans are for the most part a memory a state into which all things pass even wars but they formed tht background of the hal ton regiment it was their hands and hearts that buut the foundations on which the present institution rests the work was well done continued next week notes and comments a man wul go out and buy half n dosen cigars at ten cents each lose one of them and break two in hla pocket and laugh it off but let his taxes bo increased by 00 cent and he loses nine hours sleep and does enough grousing to postpone a war taxes ure regarded as lifes worst calamity pensions roe everybody quite a lot of discussion has been caused in england over the applica tion 0 the earl of birkenhead for a pension of five thousand pounds 1 year which be is entitled to as an ex- lord chancellor lord birkenhead has forsaken politics and gone into dutlnes where he appears to be al ready on the high road to earning on enormous income the prevailing view of the noble lords conduct in demanding his rightful pension while till able to earn a tnsgnuieent income is that he is playing the game some what low down and taking advantage of a position in which he is technically right but socially wrong apart altogether from lord birken heads attitude to pensions it is well to consider the question of pensions from the standpoint of all of us when all is sold that might be sold in favor of pensioning public servants lt all holds true about everybody else by what straining of right is the usually well paid dvu servant more deserving of a pension at say sixty than the ordinary worklngman or worklngwom- an the clerk the bookkeeper the sten ographer the coouieavcr the miner every one of these and all the other workers not mentioned is a public ser vant most of them have been engaged in the productive occupations or it may be reproductive ones by their labor and the fruits of their toll they have been helping to maintain the army of public tervsnts tram prime ministers down or up as the case may be at a fairly high level of com fort and ease having maintained these various dvu and civic employ ee while working in the public ser vice the general body of workers must also continue to maintain them or most of them after their retire ments but nobody thinks of pen sioning those who hove paid the pen sions of the other people i the ctvu service at ottawa the servants of our several provincial governments the employes of our various municipal authorities our judges and policemen oil these and many others directly or indirectly receive pensions even the senate is composed of a number of noutlclons who have been pensioned by the county for their services to a party let the pensions go all round i all cltisens reaching the age of let us say sixtyfive should receive a pension from the country provided they are engaged in no occupation that keeps another person out of employment the cost of it in comparison with the benefits securing would be slight a trifling readjustment of the incidence of taxation would finance pensions for everybody while the saving in the up keep of institutions for the aged and decrepit the lessening of calls upon private charity and the financial re lief brought to the relatives of those unable to work would far outweigh the burden of expense of pensions to the country incidentally this would do more to solve the problem of se curing population for canada from the british isles than anything else we could do people wul not leave the old country for canada if it involves forfeiture of shelter and sustenance in the rainy day of old age stewarttown school report names arranged in order of merit 8r rv robert harris gerald gra ham jr iv eddie lunan mary stand- lih dorothy maclean betty smeth- urst edward hlcken jr in charles maclean walter hodge prancls jenklnion lillian maclean jr ii harold lunan dorothy wil son jack jenklnsan david hodge br i lillian thompson jr i ilorold wilson jack mac- lean may hlcken sr pr douglas lawson jean ten nant jr pr muriel maclean roy smith eleanor oraham clifford wilson jessie m mckay umehovhe school report sr iv wulle newton s3 lorene mltcheu 83 jr iv olive tyres 70 ellse davis 78 doris gowdy go lurold johnson sr in edith tyres 76 dermis hu1 78 robert lane 78 john packer 03 uoyd given 00 sr iiuly torawel 170 eva tyres 78 harry bmethurst 78 earl scott 00 jr tv margaret brown s3 marg ery johnson si myrtle parnell 70 horry devereaux 77 dorothy cleaves 73 wilfred joluuan 57 pr dorothy johnson billy mullere jean parnell pr 1 peggy bmethurst george tsrswell helen devereaux n le beelleur teacher are you thlnltlng about buuding let the family herald and weekly star montreal lialp you write to the perm buildings depart men t iv you want to succeed in the world you must make your own op- liortunltles as you go on the man wlio waits for some seventh wave to out him on dry land will find tllst uie seventh wave is a long time acomlng you can commit no great er folly uian to sit on the roadside until someone tomes along and in vites you to ride with him to wealth nntl influence john b oough some people are just naturally late home ore kept late occasionally through no fault of their own while others plan to be late this applies to people who attend public gatherings of all sorts of the utree classes of latccomers uie latter class is uie most annoying noutlng seems to please them more than to have seats in uie centre of a row so uiat after proceed ings hove begun they may be able to disturb the whole assembly by push ing their way into their places ueeently a great orchestra leader in philadelphia stopped his orchestra in the midst of a classical number and ave the late comers a brelf lecture incidentally rebuking those who rustle their programs and indulge in chatter during the playing of a selection this little episode may help uie situation in philadelphia but uie annoyance caused through those who come late and also through those who delight in rushing out a few minutes before an entertainment is finished seems bound to conunue to laugh and to jeer at uie small town and at main street is consid ered smart in literary circles main street may have its faults a narrow vision and backbiting but after all main street is a grand old place what do the youths who grow up in chicago or new york know of the glories of life experienced in a small town the great city in addition makes for supreme seulsnness a man lives to himself and for him self he does not know nor does he want to know his apartment neighbor he may be able to go to the theatre and hear great lectures but after am he lives in a narrow round where main street exists one rejoices in the happiness and the good luck of his neighbors and sympa thises with them in their sorrows and their misfortunes main street frelndshlps are worth more than all the acquaintances of broadway or state street after all there is no thing so worth while in life as friend ships the kind of friendships which can be developed only in the intim acies of main street now that thrills ore in style with uie younger generation why not make them popular among those of us who boast or apollglse of thirty forty fifty or even sixty birthdays many an eye will sparkle and many a heart wul throb with delight if a gift of candy from hubby be found on the breakfast or dinner table or slipped lovelshly beneath the pillow it will bring back old times and prove to be more valuable than many a gift ten times as expen sive it may be a box of candy a bag of candy a jar of candy or a collec tion of bars each woman has her favorite and each man knows what this favorite is even though time has allowed him to forget the thrill such gifts brought during sweeuieart days there lsnt even the excuse of its not good for you that was formerly given in all sincerity for we have learned that pure candy is a good food and that something else is re sponsible for the sins once laid upon its tasty shoulders so give the good wife a thrill this week by presenting her with a gift that you have almost forgotten how to present you will be amply repaid when you see the smile that is always given to a loved one who does not forget to remem ber balunafap the young people of the local united church held a meeting on wednesday evening when an orator ical contest was the main feature of the program mr earl smith ninth- line erin was taken to orangevllle hospital on friday evening where he underwent on operation for appendicitis at test report he is doing as well as can be ex pected mlis maud young of toronto la spending a few days with lier mother and sister here lloyd mclean son of mr and mrs donald mclean jr of the sixthline underwent an operation in a guelph hospital for appendicitis last week we are pleased to report that he is convalescing friends and neighbors assembled at the home of mr earl smith on saturday afternoon when they cut a nice pile of wood mr smith and family are grateful for this kind neighborly spirit in a time when he is physically disabled advocate glen williams public school christmas report names appear in order of merit br iv tom norton hon jean mc donald alan appleyord wulle emer son ronald chamberlain barry clarke jr iv william hancock hon madeline graham hon marlon schenk norman marchment marjorte haines agnes macdonald harvey hewhurst ray bell robert mcmaa ter graver norton sr in mildred norton hon ida eoson hon richard beaumont mar garet monally clara hill bessie nor ton joe norton bulle davidson jen nie mcnaily oene klrby roy gar vin cyril clarke william preston jr m bertha schenk freda ap pleyord mildred norton donald wil son hilda lorrlman ruth march ment richard everson myrtle allen nora barlow morris miller jack preiswood edna nell prlnclpal jonlr wsbat ii class hon mary wagstaffe ene garvin pass alva ms isles una hill alice addy oordon graham mervyn klrby bertha allen beverly moody jlmmle buck gordon allen albert iiu1 emmie ledwldge sr i hon joyce appleyord roy preston eileen fry maud thornton and catherine macdonald equal gwenle iladley pass ruth fnaton elsie dewhurst tommy hill patsy davidson ralph bludd and lome oarwln equa beatrice 1 uncock bulle schenk edna preston eve clarke primer class harvey cooke bareta bllck oalrence beaumont dorie haggle ella hill george eason ir vine hui myrtle warern bulla nor ton a i mclaughlin teacher

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