Input-.851“. Clinton, Stratrord and Dundas. Lunch was served by the ladies and a large crowd of spectators witnessed the games.â€"Listowel Banner, (30!! Tournament at We] Ninety-six conipetitors took part in the golf tournament held here yester- day afternoon by the Listowel Golf and Country Club. Visiting players were Quite a large number of men gath- ered at the McCauley pond on Thurs- day aiternoon last and with hammer and saw soon erected two fine large bath houses for the use of swimmers at that pleasure resort. Mr. Ted Poole, the swimming instructor engaged for the summer, was here on Saturday and will return in about a week to take up his work of supervising the bathing.â€" Plesherton Advance. Have Ended Bath Home: In the presence of a congregation that filled the Presbyterian church on Tuesday evening, Miss Bessie Margar- et MacMurchy, R.N., eldest daughter oi our townspeOple, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. MacMurchy. was designated as a nurse evangelist missionary to the 81111 field, Jobat, India. of the Presbyterian church.â€"Collingwood Bulletin. Designated as Missionary Toronto Man Audited After more than one hour’s delibera- tion, a jury at the General Sessions 01 the Peace in Stratford last Friday at- ternoon found Samuel Steinburg of Toronto not guilty of the charge of having had in his possession goods bearing a counterieit of the seal of the Liquor Control Board of Ontario.â€" Listowel Banner. Herald. was held on Monday last in Knox Pree- byterlan Church, Ventry. The attend- ance was larger than usual at both the alternoon and evening sessions, and in attendance and with others who at- tended the service packed the sacred ediï¬ce to capacity.â€"Uatowel Standard. Held Suds: School Convention The annual convention of Proton Attend Chuck Service The annual church service 0! I... 0.1.. No. 370, Listowel, was held in Knox Presbyterian church on Sundcy morn- ing last in which the unlisted orders A cow belonging to Mr. Alex. Herd, this side of Allan Park, was so badly injured when struck by a mead truck driven by an Ayton nun that it had to be destroyed. mule Officer Hood, 0! Durham, has investmted the noct- A traffic light system similar to that now operated in Toronto, will ‘be in- troduced into owns this summer un- der plans that are now under consider- ationâ€"011111: News-Letter 1'11“!!wa To Have PAGE 2 In OtherComities Idaho-WM Mount Forest. McFADDEN’S’DRUG STORE schoolhouse. The driver of the other car, Richard Lucas, of Markdale, es- caped without as much as a scratch.â€" Lucknow Sentinel. Hold Annual Meeting Declaring that governments had lnjured in Accident Mr. George Brooks, Kinloss township, lies in Goderich hospital in a critical condition, suffering from a fractured skull, several fractured ribs, a lung in- jury, bruises and lacerations as a re- sult of a. motor accident which occur- red on Monday afternoon, one and a quarter miles north of the village of Lucknow at the intersections on the Gravel road at the 2nd concession After an illness following an opera- tion, Joseph J. Cave, editor of the Bea- verton Express, ever since its inception in 1879, brother of the editor of this paper, passed away peacefully at his home “The Elms†Beaverton, on Sun- day, June 19th, in his 76th year. The funeral took place to the Stone church cemetery on Tuesday, under the aus- pices of Beaverton Lodge No. 249, 1.0. 01"., services being conducted by Rev. Mr. Howard in St. Paul’s Anglican church or which deceased was a life long member.â€"Midland Argus. The girls, who continue to bear their sufferings courageously, were brought to the hospital nearly two weeks ago by Dr. Bell of Lions Head and placed in the care of Dr. J. '1‘. H. Robinson and the hospital staff.â€"Walkerton Telescope. Editor Passes Fire Victims Recovering Skin grafts on Wilda and May Belle West, nine and three years of age, re- spectively. two or the victims of a fire in their parents’ home near Lions Head some weeks ago, have been started in the County of Bruce General Hospital. Home Destroyed by Fire Fire totally destroyed the home of Mr. Harry Patton, former road Super- intendent, on the 4th line, Artemesla, on Monday afternoon, that resulted in the loss of practically the entire con- tents ot the house. Insurance of $300 was carried on the house and shed, but there was none on the contents. The cause 01 the tire is attributed to a spark from the chimney alighting on the roof, and with the dry shingles and high wind the house was soon ablaze.â€"‘ Flesherton Advance. {his appointment from the Civil Ber- vice Commission at Ottawa. He ' will 'enter upon his new duties as soon as Inspector Arthur, arrives to make the transfer which will possibly be in a few days. He succeeds Thomas Foley who resigned some months agoâ€"Col- lincwood Bulletin. mum-e Keeper Anointed Of the thirty-two applications filed for the vacant position of lighthouse keeper at Nottawasaga Island, Mr. Samuel Hillen has received notice of lstreet, said she was going to the river for a swim, but disappeared complete- ly, and until‘present writing had not been heard from, though diligent search had been made. The affair is quite mysterious, and, though the girl may be in quite safe and comfortable quar- ters, there is reason to fear that some mishap may have beianen hen-Mount Forest Confederate. who ICharged with Altering License Plate i Provincial Officer J. NJPage the first fof the week picked up a couple of 'young men whose arrest he hopes will Iclear up a score or more petty thefts .of car tools, tires and almost anything :moveable on an automobile. Fred Wray {and Kenneth Wray are the pair. They jgave their place of residence as Tot- itenham and last week the former was let go on suspended sentence from one :of the Toronto police courts. With this Epair the provincial officer also picked up Mike Simis. The most serious of- fence with which any of these men will be charged is that or converting a 1931 motor license plate into a 1932 one. It was cleverly done and a close examination was required to detect the iwork.â€"Alliston Herald. Killed in Accident Ambrose Terrence Donnelly, a young man on whom his widowed mother de- pended greatly, came to a tragic end Monday when he was terribly mangled {by getting under a mowing machine to which a team of horses was attach- ed. Just how the accident happened *will never be known. The young man late in the morning took the mower to the west side of the farm intending to cut the hay in a field there. Just about noon Dan Lynch, a neighbor on ithe next farm, noticing the horses ap- .parently uncontrolled, went over to see ' what the cause was and found Ambrose Donnelly badly cut and mangled and [and very weak as a result of his in- ,juries.â€"Alliston Herald. Mr. H. C. Barnett has received ad- vice from the Post Office Department that he has been appointed to succeed his father, the late W. R. Barnett, as postmaster. The new appointee has been on the post office staff for about ten years, and practically in charge for five years, and during that time has capably and efficiently performed the duties. No doubt this is the reason his application has found preferment over the others received when the position? was thrown open a few months ago.- Paisley Advocate. Appointed Postmaster Deanery Bowling Club Organized . The Anglican Deanery Bowling As- sociation held its first meeting for the season of 1932 in Arthur. The _follow- ing members were elected: Hon. Pres., Rev. Scudamore, Mount Forest; Pres., H. P. May, Palmerston; secretary-treas- urer, W. S. Buschlen, Arthur. Games committee, Harold Arthurs, Elora, S. P. Elliott, Arthur, Charles Moore, Guelph, Mr. Honeford, Palmerston. Games will be played on the second and fourth Tuesday of each month. The first tournament will be in Ar- thur on Tuesday, June 28, at 7 pm.â€" Arthur Enterprise-News. lprobably never before been called upon to shoulder such responsibilities as have present-day governments, Hon. Dr. J. D. Monteith, minister of public works ,and labor in Ontario, speaking before the annual meeting of the North Perth Conservative Association at Milverton on Wednesday, vigorously defended the policies of the provincial legislature, and declared that to the best of its ability, it would continue to carry on economically and efficiently in the best interests of the peOple.â€"Listowel Ban- v‘ wâ€" -' '_V 'v "C. acid test when he scores up in the Hotel Lafayette Stake on July 23 at the Buffalo Grand Circuit meeting, for he will be forced to go up against such other celebrities as Zombro Hanover 2 :03, winner of twelve races in fourteen starts in 1931; Braden Heir 159%, Hollyway 2:01%, Guy the Tramp 204%, the Canadian crack that won eleven races last year; Myrtle McKlyo 2:00'A and others of class. This race should be one of the best of the 1932 seaon. Everything in Medicine for. THE DURHAM CHRONICLE Life suspension was imposed on Jock- ey W. Brown at a special meeting of the Western Canada Thoroughbred Racing Association in Winnipeg on Monday. The sentence was handed down for foul riding, it being charged that Brown used a battery on his mount in the fourth race Saturday at Polo Park. TheGovemmentandthex-oyutam- flyotshmmemthehmdsotm- ohm Baturdny damn: upm- meledbyumytnqnavyomceu. Ontario’s Government, or the On- tario Hydro-Electric system, is to take over, on equitable terms yet to be ne- gotiated, the Abitibi Canyon power deâ€" velopment project, as a result of the financial difficulties of the Ontario Power Service Corporation, which finds it impossble to secure some $5,000,000 necessary to complete the develomnent. appearancev since leaving its nutive land in Kresge’s King street east store, Hamiltcm, last Friday. Hidden in a bunch of hummus and surviving a frigid ride in a refrigerator car, a tarantula made its first public A school teacher and a 12-year-old boy were drowned in a flood following a six-inch rain in Southwest Missouri Monday night. Apparently believing that wild tur- nip or Jack-in-the-Pulpit was good for eating, Cyril Marvin, young son of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Marvin of Burt’s, near Belleville, is seriously ill at his home as a result of having eaten several. A committee of technical experts was formed on Monday to push construc- tion of the projected tunnel under the Strait of Gibraltar. Lifesavers late Monday night recov- ered the body of Stanley J. MoCaffery, 35, of Toronto, from the lake at the foot of Lee avenue in that city, and were dragging for another unidentified man, and possibly a woman, all believed to have been drowned from a canoe. The Southern Pacific Railroad in Mexico was completely tied up Monday afternoon when 3,500 employees went on strike after negotiations for a set- tlement had failed. cities. A sudden intensiï¬cation of political activity on the part of German mon- archists and renewed Fascist demands for peremptory suppression of the Communist party further complicated internal troubles on Monday after a week-end of sporadic violence in many The body of George Elmitt, 24, was brought to North Bay on Sunday from Kirkland Lake after being recovered from the bottom of a 30-foot dump into which the young man had fallen. A hundred reducing tablets taken in three weeks, to cut his weight for a mystery non-stOp flight to England, wrecked the life of Wilbert Clayton Hyatt, youthful mechanical wizard, whose body was taken from Windsor to his home in London. Ontario provincial police on Sunday were holding the body of Frank G. Hamilton, 47, Fort Wayne, Ind., pub- lisher, who, they said, committed sui- icde yesterday at his summer cottage on Lake Pinage near Espanoia, Ont. The body was found in the cottage by the caretaker. A bullet hole extended from the mouth to the back of the head. News in Brief call off his forces seeking to abrocate the two-thirds nomination rule; these were the features of the Democratic National Convention getting under way in Chicago on Monday all smiles and determination to defeat President Her- bert Hoover. A demonstration against prohibition involving a. fist fight and the upsetting of some lady delegates, the announce- ment by Governor Franklin D. Roose- velt, candidate for the United States presidential nomination that he would heard more about the dis-struts con- dition of affairs throughout the world in my two weeks back in Canada than I heard in my entire stay in England, France and Italy. And it is Europe that has cause to be depressed.†world conditions it would haw}: been accomplished in 1929.†she said. “I htve ularly are much higher Only $5.75 and $8.95. be sold at a sacriï¬ce price. All reg- E. E. Mformrmyorotmtch. char, his wife, mam-5.01:qu Bee-e. were injured on Hominy when the car dflwnbyur. Mahddedwasflp- Defy pavement three miles from Ferns and turned over .11: the ditch. Every day we have a few coats less; but we still need room for our would settle m debts, revive Amer; to“ foreign trade and how the re- covery of world commerce. COATS $5.75 and $8 95 use of the debates to the Imperial Conference has aroused Ottawa taxi drivers to netted protest. nouncement of levine’s ladies’ Wear Specials! whichheclumed Read The Classiï¬ed Ads. on Page 7. Flesherton, on may. July 1. All young ladies fifteen yeu's of we tad over can enter the listsâ€"the time is 3 p.m.â€"the prizes 6. ‘3 and $2. Come on. girls, let. us see you. 6232c. Marguerite Nutml, noted singer of Toronto and well known by radio fans. will be the judge for the Beauty Con- test at the big picnic in Lever's Grove. 'with one child. and who had walked here from Montreal. kept house for a farmer out Pike Lake way, but caused so much trouble that she was brought to town. Chief Flynn was put on her track Saturday night. When he accosted her she collapsed, and the Chief car- ried her to a doctor's, who, in turn. put her in care of the hospital. where she remained unconscious for some hours. On Sunday she improved, and on Monday the Provincial Police were notified at Palmerston. He came over and, assisted by Chief Flynn. took her to Guelph where she was to remain in custody for inquiry and observation. â€"Mount Forest Confederate. tnl aberration gave our police force and others some trouble for a few days the past week. A woman who, accord- mahbyenduissadnssthome. Heis olsosurvivedbysixhrothersendsem sisters. The tuners! took piece on Wed- nesdey afternoon to the Luthersn cem- etery on the 10th concession of Garrick. â€"Mildmsy Gsutte. Taken to Guelph {or Observation A case of what uppears to be men- with his deep concern as to his ability to .1111!†his finances for this period of depression. preyed upon his meat-.1- ity. On Hominy morning he went out for the cows. utter which he went into CW. for the put 31 yem. mmmtywutounded oullmdnybyflwmwsthfllnwu- 111m B. Rchkopt, a mpected tamer of the 12th concedonotcuflck. m ended his life by hanging. Mr. Rehkopt hadnotbeenmcoodheuthforsome the «thatwbereusbmume mm- m. â€â€œ9 W MM amended from mlppkW.’I‘hemmcnued, mmww‘mlmutmnotneou- my “I Rehkoptwumhmmm W“ I motthelltcur..ndun Hem-y Rehkopt of Normmby, mu m warms-awe very honorable in all his buslneas .3- “in. He was in fnlrly comfortable ctr- °m°°5o m4 enjoyed the fullest conï¬dence of ell who knew mm m. I‘ll-nay, June I. 1032 BEAUTY CONTEST wuasudblowtohu