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Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), September 28, 1932, p. 1

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s sixtysbrth year of publication the georgetown herald wednesday evening september 28th 1932 150 per annum in advance 200 to ujla- the georgetown herald jr m moore member caaadiaui weekly newspaper asaodstioq o cn-r- time ti standard time j fassenger and man iv 1020 ajn 2j3 pjn passover and mail 6j0 pjn passenger stops for passengers going east and toronto 966 pjn 8 going bast 956 pjn jassenpx- orange pekoe blend gaing wst fwaenger and mall passenger passenger and mall passenger sunday passenger siinaay 7j5 ajn b54 in 208 pm 8j5 pjn 8j0 a 1021 pm nartfc mall and passenger gmtmtf saeth mall and arrow incmsj seivke m- fi5 am 1055 un 1355 ul 355 pm 525 pjn as pjn 89l only 055 pxo dally except bat 1165 pm saturday only j6 ajn dally exoeqft son 50 ajn 115 pjn 400 pjn 6jr pjn stops only an nag signal 9j5 pjn sj5 un 9undys and bottdaja only reduced fare to ihjd of season ticket tkmmm and information at longs tnuhtnm the gardens this io0 food is 100 canadian two wety good wiwb wtjyyfai i enjoy it and it oasts coats a few fxpfs start today with two shredded wheat biscuits crisped in the oven and smothered in milk hot or com shtwmh wheat is io05 whole wheat lo0 canadian wheat 12 big biscuits ih every box directory uk roy dale georgetown ontario offices ora theatre bide arm bt- clarkncx h wicmun8 turwer beltnwas naaaiy pama oolcebokeffl block oemgetqaa 15 bramgton ontario q antad k b c h du t kenneth at lanodon money to loan ottawa main street booth shredded wheat made in canada by canadians of canadian wheat j have your eyes examined -by- l o t walker dojsc eyesight brampton who vrill be at watsons drug store georgetown the second wednesday of every month room wat8ar drug stoke for appointment p a watson marion office honre to 5 except r u in of orcein to pjn chiropractic nbttson th palmer oieamlii ib tear practice no medicine surgery oe xray service office ever dominion 8tox monday wednesday and fltiiiilajr a to 5 and ul to mo pjn other days and horns by aggwlntsicnt frank petch vg coatxkunokb do we get results a tamerta curat mice t most say that i am vtrr i with four work ta band- my ecasetlont i bad con sidered these boost liikwiwi kelly aiken otunoeviujt omvavho at ibm telepbone w talk we talk of depression and failure ajid mourn over times that are bad and seldoqa we say that a far tighter day 1 is coming to make the world glad but were used to toe changeable weather and though it is not always bright the very worst ollme turns to sun shine in time an darkness uailqulsmd by light we talk of the wars that are coming and make preparation for them and good news of love wtjich came from above we either neglect or condemn we think that the wisdom of states men may cure by and by every 111 but the wisdom of god is just given tlnod tu1 he sends in the terribly bull we talk of the peoples around us as if thgy were seeking our blood and mostly forget that weve never tried yet r f a plan which is peaceful and good a word coming doam through the ages a clear simple message divine to see in another a neighbor and brother and share with the world what is mine a b oooper ton a fellow engineer be could perform leate with bis famous 6j0 that no other engineer pquld equal with locomotives of the same class or even with the same engine firing for him was a backbreak ing ana hairraising job but his abl atio fireman sim webb was equal to every dun and and held casey in almost idolatrous regard follmring him from one run to another through hia entire career we had a number of fast men recalls a j patty thomas a coo pductor who often worked with the famous engineer and sinoe then i have had hundreds of good engineers pull me on different western roads bui i never met the equal of casey jones in rustling to get over the road the whisk moan in the sang is right casey could just about play a tune on the whistle he could make we cold chlus run up your back with it and grin all the time everybody along the line knesroasey jones whistle he bumped into the promised land hasrcfa a fbau tjavgaunl todt old twaflip off laultciu amy und worth ls0 on tn purchase of a new m jot a lmbmtil hgitt lor a paoay a night i twyy asooaen to tba iiaiailel tmaspkfaltnw4noaar and nw low prion ma it jiuaallil taryow aibma mgtt 1 laaop or laaaant at r aa rta an f3 see your local dealer off wrte ifs the coleman lamp and stove ccampany lfci onto a oktmo olfaaat monuments pollock a ingham as to oater a g o ikasafmot out wkktt to ctavanrwkmtt s m the new way to buy coal blue coal no extri delivery charges to noattai btjrwurttowif count wnuain stome acaooi par caaa net john mcdonald wood for sale choice maple hardwood and cedar rails at right prices orders left at a humes or at my home phone 55w promptly attended tol a uvingstone georgetown fall and winter millinery in all the leading shapes and colors at misses claridge herald block v- n a graphic story of the songfamed casey jones the southern engineer who rode to his death with one hand on the whistle cord and the other on he brake valve as told by r h ayr in canadian national railways laagasine for sept thbw 00 use being a hero un less they make a song about you and onoe you get into a ballad youre booked for immortality casey jones was the sect of n who was made for song casey janes went to glory in 1900 and he was no sooner dead than be was alive for ever a negro wiper who lowed htm was moved to express his feelings aa negroes an wont to do this is how spirituals grow a writer of popular songs was intrigued by the story and the little tune the name casey jones was irresistible tlallnjading had not qp to that time been popular ly cembrated in song tbe time wai ripe lor a jallroad ditty casey jones caught on it could be applied to any railroad casey worked for the illi nois central but that dvtot matter so long a she worked for a railroad all the public asked was that he be a debonair engineer who died with one hand on the brake valve and the other an the whistle cord he need pot even be a real person for a long time people were not sure that casey jones bad ever existed the na caesy jones was irr 1 real name was john luther janes but everyone knew bun- as casey be cause be canoe from a little place in kentucky which was pronounced that way although it was spelt cayce had his name been john tflggtnlyit- tom or even casey hlgkliilwctum be would never have got into a aong but every circumstance wot to ward his immortality be wimrw was irresistible be was debonair if you like be was one of the most popu lar boys who ever handled a throttle he was aogut bagger without ima gination tsolrvd and worked and died a plodder there was the es sential human lovableness aboat him the eaentlal romantic flair be may not have been a roisterer they say he never took a drink in his life hut he was debonair when he whittled over the crossings he whistled with an ah of his awn he played tunes on us whistle everyone knew caseys train the schoolboys ran down to the fence to answer his toot and held no grudge against him when he whistled the alarm that the acboolhouae was burn ing doam casey was bora an march 14th 1884 his father was a achooknaster at jordan kentucky and casey went ratkloadfaig because achookmbsten were no better paid in those days than they are today he hwaiae an apprentice operator in the local sta tion and soon learned to play the key with his own flourish but casey could never be satisfied sitting at a desk gtprhmg the trains go by there was a thrill in doing his little lot to see that the lines were celar for ttoe rush ing monsters a senee of rexaosmttity but artist casey wanted was to be fry- ing himself he dreamed of the day when he would sit peering out of the cat window with one of these glarlta whose heart was fire and in whose veins ran steam yielding dutifully to the touch of his fingers what a feeling of power be would have rein ing the mopatrr ip or forcing it to greater and greater effort 80 young casey dreamed and before long he had left the key and was out flagging it was as a flagman that be went to jackson tennesee six feet four and a half inches tall with dark hair and yes with a smiling mouth and a jaunty air he soon won the heart of janle brady whose oaotber kept the boarding house where he went to stay- janie won caseys heart too but fads now love did not turn ms thoughts from the old janle brady was just another good reason wh casey jones onjuot become an en gineer be pushed ahead and was made a fireman then casey and janle were mar ried two weeks after the wedding oasts mt the mobile a ohio and joined the illinois oentral as a ftreanan he took great pride in his engine and as ma jones afterwards recalled kept her bright and shin ing but that was only a ateo caaeya great day came in ism when he wa promoted to the other am of the cab there was an even greater day to that was when casey was given the oannantml but- between the day be tint took the throttle in his band and the day the camcufcel run was his lay neatly ten years of faithful service not only faithful but distinguished service ca janes service xd peoey s cxal who knew janet has written to the erie in the early days of rail roading there was a real glamour to the rails into this setting casey mglu of the caaaorrball xrfpnn fitted perfectly he was a giant and came of a great railroad family joan was famous for two things be was a teetotaller tn the days when ahstlnmne was rare srattie was the moat daring of an wajl in the days what a were slngiiy get her there and make the lane or ootne to the office and get your tune that casey jonm bad tadrvmuattty is borne out by eveiyane alio knew ban the rtgmtatton which c enjoyed was richly earned by nianer- 6qs mats of resonroe skill ana qatv s auttac- 4w- closed he always had a amlle or a broad grin the taster be could get his engine to roll the haiiptor be was he would lean out of the cab window to watch bis drivss apd when be got her going so fast that the side rods looked solid he would look at you and grin all over happy as a bay with his first pair o bed boots with all his fast running i never knew of him piling them up of any hue a few derailments and never a rearender he was either lucky or else his judg ment was as tiearly perfect as human judgment can be another old railroader who remem bers jonesis commander latcius c duma at the united states navy who once worked for the illinois oentral during my boyhood days be says in the old home town water valley miss our home was jast four doors away from the residence onraqpleq by casey jcneo bis wife dd two child ren at that time otsejt was a loco motive engineer employed by toe illinois central railroad running en gine no ss8 between water valley and jackson ttam i know both casey and his family very well and in my early teens i rode in the cab of na 638 with him several times when he would take his engine from tfe rowd house tracks to toe freight yard to couple up to the train before pulling out of the terminal on bis regular run i also retain vivid recollections of how we youngsters would instantly recognise casey janes whistle when blowing for old whistling board on the main line north of the town as he pulled in and out on his run there was no mistaking caseys whistle for he blew tones of bis own also how the negro bays driving muledrawn delivery wagons about the town vied with one another in imitating the famous engineers tootl to toooooopoot they lowed i dat casey josies man sbo pun a wicked whistle and we white juve niles thought sen too later on casey was transferred from water valley to mcmphto trrai where be ran in passenger s on the ntnols oentrsj between memphis and canton miss it was while pulp lng his train on this run that he met his death in a wreck near vaughn m1bs 32 years ago the cannonsiall etpiem wa the erackjrtsatn which ran between chi cago and new orleans and janes was the subject of must envy when at the age of w be was given r the great honor of taking it on the run between jackson and watter valley missis sippi according to an stride which appeared in the mobile register be was chosen because he was known to be a fearless boghead when the illinois central decided to run some really fast trains the story of bis last run has been told many times and with variations an article written by basel icanley tor the eagle magazine gives it in the fonn of an interview with the en gineers widow aa the camonball was going to ward new orelans a smonrt cannon ball was on the way to chicago fresh crews took over the trains at various points along the hue oaseyfe run was from jackson tbudl to water valley mte and up and down the line casey was known by bis wmp- poonwlu whistle it is said that no engineer has ever been able to imitate his method aa blowing a locomotive slnn the deep musical tooas vacat ed over the countryside as casey left jackson station on the day of hit death that whhmoorwttt call from the engine was casey last boodbye to bis wife casey pulled g old reno nul he tooted tor the aoa with an awful ahrlll the switchman knew by the whistles moans that the man at the throttle was casey jones on that last night mrs jones recalled it was april moo my husband pulled into the memphis station with the oamwnhall at about 10 oclock he looked over the engine with his fireman 8am webb and physically ethaiietart both men wont into the checking omea while they were there a report came that the engineer an the southbound cannon- had suddenly beco 111 and coyld not make the run tired though he was oaaey volunteered to double over the tracks he had 1ml webb spoke up at onoe and said that if oaaey was going back he tooi would go slnoe there was no other engineer qualified to guide the crack train casey waa told to take the run he requested the use oa his regular loco motive no ssa and at 11 oclock casey and ms fireman swung into the cab and were off the night waa foggy and the head light could pierce the gloom for only humkwd yank as the train roared on and casey bfcw ms whistle many wondered why he ws making the return trip that night the nrst fifty miles were uneventful except that at a small town a freight train with a broken axle held ug the can- ntmiiah for half an hour the acci dent blocked the main line when casey statred again he let out his engine to sixty miles an hour as sam weub piled coal into the greedy fire- box the details of the rest of that run were told to mrs janes by webb lbs train tore through the night at lengthwe reached the long grade that marked the town of vaughdn just below vaughn waa a sid ing entered at a sharp curwe casey approached bhto curve mating sixty in a fog we oouldnt see mare than three bmamdi feet ahead and notup- tn oaaey was about torn hundred feet tram the beginning the aade track did be see signal lights that meant a tram wis oh the aiding the freight though did not cany ritual lights to indicate that tere was anotner wain beyond ft an the fog made lb fcn- pnaimilu to see bat oaaey scarcely s apeed he knew the ski ing was a loos ens hid ham pased oanttpaad on pjb 4j 1 i king bennett by farmer delegate and it came to pass in the third year of the nifa of king bennett a i depression prevailed in the land and me people murmured one to another yok were not four meas ures of corn sold fan a shekel and the skin of a goal for ten farthings how- beil many that would labor with their hands hadno mqney to buy bread j and alter tnany day the people said among themselves let us go unto the king even unto king ben nett in the great city of ottawa femdvenluie be will spek words of peace and comfort that vrill be pleas ing in sour ears and when the multitude were come from the uuennost parts of the land aipl began to dnwnlgh unto the city the king said unto his armor- bearer whose naune was spotton and who leaned on his roar in the courts saw ball of folk dkop fkom the skv to be of the kings palace 1 pray thfee go soever swjum with x moutht sevs r require of me 80 he vent but tb sun was hot in the heavens and the man was great of stattue and when the people were came to tie gate of the city they sent mes sengers unto the king saying we pray thee ootne down unto us and let us reason together for the depression is great in the land and the people are soce pressed but the ring sat at meat with one rotheimere king of the east so the nr said unto the king per adventure may it please the king to send two of his irt1w to speak wltn the people but the kmg answered and said all the princes and captains ane this day offering sacrifice to the great god protection is the temple of high tariffs then said the messengers perad- venture if it be phasing unto the king the people will send a chosen few from among the multitude to con fer with the king or his catxaln in the kings pelatr but the king was wroth and anote upon the ground with a golfstick and arid as my soul uveth there shall none come into the king house to confer with the king or his capta that putteth not bis trust tn the great god protection that is in the temple of high tarffls and the high priests were outhrie wttr and man age the ttifkfjf ugcia rdbumed unto uae people apd made known the words of the king and there wan a young man arose in their midst and spoke unto the people saying l even l was a follower of the king and helped put him on the throne but we will tfa longer light for the king and there was a prophetess named agnes who prophesied saying the king will liv to regret bitterly his ac tion this day and it came to pass that the seer morrison who tn tunes past had giv en wise counsel unto the people ake words of cheer and hope and the people took counsel together hoar they might overthrow the great god pro tection that was in the temple of high tariffs and many were turned frees- the king thau day farmers sun to be awakened from her sleep by in orauge gow araicn iiilea the roam to hxsn to me winoaw aiarmed to ne further terrined by tne signs ai a ban 01 lire and a oealening m was a strange experience oi anes uaniord 23 wuo one morning reoenuy witness ed uiis staruing poenomena ou ine tana ol her lamer tnoanas sanford lour mues noiatt of cooksviue 1 was soared to deatn and thought at first hv had wjmetiimg to do wild theqciipse said miss uantoro vlvm- ly deectming her leellnes a queer orange ligut woke me up about a quarter to seven she re called u seemed to be posies and all tnrougnipy room jat tain was coming oown slowly fa jloelef a thick naae and theremtjjhuiwr and lightning 1 ran to the window ana saw thai the strange glow was caused oy the sun shining t tne mial turn rignt there in frontof my eyes and acnes the yard from the house was this strong rrttnrilijg light about the sue 01 a loothau as 1 pus up my hand to shield my eye it disappeared and at the same time came a terrific explosion- it seamed as if a ball of dynamic had buna about ten leet frompe ground were congratulating ourselves it didnx come near the house miss tdanford laughed i guess that would lve been just too bad diet you suiter much from the shock she was asked not for long she replied the family soon came running and as sooi as i reali sed that we were au still intact i felt all right but i must atfcnit that for a couple of minutes i was literally scared stiff these socalled fireballs it is understood are very rarely seen tbe erplonton appeared to do little dam theres never a rose theres never a rose in all the world but makes some green spray sweeter theres- never a wind in all the sky but makes some bird wing fleeter theres never a star but brings to beaven some sllyer radiance tender and never a rosy cloud but helps to crown the sunset splendor no robin but may thrill some heart ihls dawnlight gladness voicing cod give us- all sommnall sweet way to set the world reyttaxng anonymous the new pkjuod of man age but contented itself by breaking oil a tew branches from nearby trees and tearing up tufts of grass by the roots the ground underneath where the ball exploded looked as tf it had been slightly disturbed by a hoe the repot was beard by a hundred families within a radius of about ten miles of the oaufbid farm and alarm was general throughout the district until it was learned that no one had hurt other persons who bad been awak- mied by the bang said it sounded more like an explosion than a thun derclap neighbors at first feared that the 8anf0rd home had been struck by ll mr sanftord said be had searched the ground thoroughly in the region where the batl exploded but bad not seovered particles of any kind john patterson director of the to ronto meterologlcal bureau stated that very little is known regarding this phenomena very few fireballs have been sben and acvtitlflc know ledge concerning them is therefore scanty he explained they usdally occur during heavy storms are com posed only of gaases and unlike the meteorite leave no trace whatever the most wonderful of all modern propbedes is found lntennyson locksley hall for i dipt into the future far as human eyectiuldsee sw the vision of the world and au the wohder that would be saw the heavens fill with commerce argosies of llntesaus pilots of the purple twilight dropping down with costly bales heanfthe heavens fill with shouting and there rajned a ghastly dew from the nations airy navies grap pling in the central blue far along the worldwide whisper of the south wind rushing warm with standards of the peoples plung ing thro the thunderstorm till the war drum thrabbdno longer and the battle flags were furld in the parliament of man the fed eration of the world notes and comments parliament will aswvnhle on thursday oc 6th according to the official announcement made by prime minister bennett a rural school district that delay ed school reopening until itoesday september 6 win lose more than glm in d grants wbdue ail ur ban centre that tailed to open its school on setpember 1 will lose be tween 700 and 800 accenting to a r t from the deparonent the post ofdoe department is issu ing new postal note rtsmpri shortly- theoe stamps are issued solety tor the purpose of raising the value of postal notes lh order to makeup odd amounts up to nine cents they are not to be used for any other postal h whatever and must not be accepted in payment of postage revenue or excise some lessons taught by machrav affair the people of winnipeg may well be distressed by the sorry rewelations of the defalcations of john a macbray kc mr macbray was generally re garded as one of the most honest and trustworthy of the citys lawyers and church laymen and the lack of dose check upon his affairs by men who shared responsibility with htm in coeinectlbn with same of the trusts be handled was merely aa evidence of the general reeling that mr machray couldnt possibly do anything wrong but as is so often the case there was a confusion of the two ideas of hon esty and judgment and mr machrays associates find it no less eauy to share the odium of what may turn out to be honest ijt than they would to accept a portion of the blame for downright dishonesty it is not too early to point to a few of the lessons that this unfortunate affair imparts to those who are re- cegittve to them one of the first things made plain is that it is very very wrong to place trust funds tn the hands of a single individual or in a manner that has the same- effect the various educational and chiirch flinds under mr macbray should front the start have been in the capable imper sonal hands of trust companies who for moderate fees could have protect ed the trusts against the encroach ment of dishonesty or inept nfahage- nent what the machray case has demonstrated tn the case of public and quasipublic trust funds has on many previous anrpaions been demon strated in the case of perkhnges- taftes the trust company as trustee or executor provides a measure of safety and careful management that cannot be obtained with oomplete as surance from any single person the second lesson of the machray lse is that pension funds etc par ticularly when they deal with a large number of very snail panels can more effectively be handled by life insur ance ti through tnsuranoe and pension sr than by a oon- fnaad aet of accounts in the office of lawyer after due condolences have been nt to the many public bodies and private individuals who have suffered th the machray defalcations those who have contact with similar trust funds should sete the csxewe to survey their affairs and consider ways and means of insuring them against the depredation of bad judgment the financial post canadians wale more old as it is the adage its an iii wind that bloss nobody good seeam to hold true today because they are not riding people are walkky sua at seems to be helping tne boot and shoe industry according to an sease of 10 per cent in the out put of the leather footanmrilndibtry in canada for the first quarter of the current er as compared wkbi the c period of last year during the first quarter of this year 43m413 pain of boots and shoes were produced in canada as against sjwl- 810 pahs during the outi period of ism n canadas nnubbbed live stock m a report to the minister of agri culture a p macvarjael chief regi stration offloer stales that a total of 80100 oerttacstes for canadian pan- bred ltvestack were kwued during the osteal year ending march si 1931 time warn mads op as folic cattle mr 1t34 aneep 13x0 104a foam ns tks tm igtvtoa floats in historians discovery 80 much has been written the capture of quebec that it is ling to have the exploit put in a com pletely new light this is done at least for the great majority of those familiar with that stirring chapter in our history by an article that paul montgomery cuaiti unites to the cana dian magaatne he tells bow the way was prepared for wolfe by a member of the british intelligence service majarapatrkk mackeuar he was known in official communloaticns samply as itb intelligent oemtleman and the methods he employed bare been hitherto shrouded tn mmt but the log and book map that be prepared are now in the pcsbeadan of the archives at ottsda and are con sidered the greatest of canadian his torical treasurers they are the basis of mr montgomerys narrative we are tod bow pttt txmsolted mariffllar as to the pcwrfhuily of having an agent of the government get into quebec to secure information regarding the defences and return safely to england the reply was that this could be done in only one amy which mankeltar proceeded to explain he was accordingly commis sioned to undertake the task as planned be procee to the ohio country and then worked his way up to fort niagara here he told the french commander that ne was a french fur trader from loulsburg who had been captured by british troops but had managed to escape he had an i knowledge of kngmbh he said but it was sufficient to enable htm to follow talk which he heard while a prisoner about a new attack that was being i- the conanandrr immediately sent him an to quebec so that he could gtre his fofonaaaton to montcalm at the fortress msckwlar convin ced everyone that he was tellng the truth and was the guest of the gov ernor for some weeks after he bad accomplished his poipases he made his escape in a hay wagon reached london by way of boston and came back to canada with wolfe when the british commander fell on the plains of abraham he had mac- kellerb map in his hand and bad been able to make so thorough going a iiaajwh of his operations largely be cause of wtiat the intelligence offloer had learned about quebec during his stay there the fascination of the story can only be appreciated by reading it in detail it makes one anxious to go to ottawa and have a look at the mat erial which the archives department prises so highly mr montgomery al so tete of another document that may be seen in quebec it is the letter of tbanks which wolfe sent to the sietem ta one of the hospitals there who nursed some british soldiers in the preliminary skirmishes he promised that their buildingb would be immune from looting if his troops captured the city it was major mac keuar who standing tn the doorway of the hospital with cooked pistols made good that promise after wolfea death etbnonton journal cjtjl notkls have surplus toronto sept 3srd devite a de crease of nearly half a million in gross earnings on the canadian na tional hotels system over an eight month period this year the results show a substantial surplus mils year as against a deficit last year stated walter piatt montreal general man ager in charge of hotels dining and sleeping cars today put that fellow in one of the base- rooms remarked satan care lesbly a wbowl basement sputtered the now arrival t would have you to know air that i was a prominent citiaen to my late hone sir satan smiled that may ham been he said bat 7i want eat any tog tkttni owe the duties of an aiwtltnr carry wllti them a great responsibility jus tice w j donovan winnipeg has awarded datanges of 38000 againasa firm of accountants who audited the books of the international labcratles and failed to find or call the arms attention to defalcations to the above amount stolen by the manager at different ig the idea of weeding persistent id lers out of overcrowded seoonrtana schools in ontario is spreading rapid ly a special committee of hamilton trustees commended the action of principal gill of the wentworth tsch- nlchal school in refusing to allow time serving scholars to register a- galn it was decided to permit the scholars blacklisted by the principal to return on six weeks probation if they do not show signs of improve ment and willingness to submit to dis cipline they will be dismissed the committee also decided to i a policy of investigation and house- cleaning not only tn the technical but in all other schools operated fay the board it was pointed out that tf the pupils are not sufficiently interested to work and their parents to insist that they do work it is not only econ omically unsound tram the point of view of educational costs but also unfair to other pupils th the rlanrmi special low rates to hunters the teacher was giving a written examination tn european geptgraphy one question was l why does the run never aet en the british flag robetvilwate far the answer bebansa they take t tn at ium vli not in recent years has any one game calledon more followers in the smaller centres than pitching horse shoes in evey one of the smaller communities one finds the pitchers of horseshoes in action especially in the evening we do not know of a community around hens which has entirely escaped come to think of it it is a good game it must be fascin ating or else people around here would not keep playing it to be able to throw ringers and leaners requires practice and skill it is sit inexpen sive sport there is no unifgrm needed nor is it necessary to keep on buying equipment as far as we can learn the dues for the season are very small and in many cases there are no dues it is a game at which youth can play and which does not tax the strength of men well up in years the amount of action needed hi just about enough to keep his framework from getting squeaky and besides that be has a chance to enjoy the friendship of other men around the community while the game is on it la in all a very excellent game toronto sept 23rd ontario hun ters going notrb for their annual out ings at hunting clubs and camps are to have the advantage of special low rates over canadian railways it waa announced today c p rmdell chairman of the canadian passenger association from october 15th tn november 15th inclusive on presenta tion of current years hunting license parties of five or more hunters travel ling together may secure return tic kets st one and one quarter times the regular bretclass oneway fare these tickets will be good from sta tions west of kingston harrosnanlth and sharbot lake and south of parry sound and scotia junction to paints north of the two lastnamed st at lorn but- not west of heron bay imglae or naklna nor east of pembroke out or amos que and their limit will be 21 days but in no case later than de cember 1st arrangements have also been made by canadian railways handling this hunters trfflc far the provision of fecial baggage cam combination baggage and p care and colonist coaches with mini mum number of tickets required for such faculties and with the provision that hunters may carry dqgs which are permitted in ontario hunting and their other paraphernalia m audi cars without extra charge

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