HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1925-03-19, Page 4Ist..flete
;ad Harr*Ws foe Sp"; esp. The pnceica!,theso a;.
are lowet Wi/W.' 'Ca what toed rake we
glee yew on tlIegeomedeemir a ithl
ciyykodiheliT o.thy.
•esneuPsYthe Girferwisit *ambit• No, 1 Grad*
bk. Sweet, Mammoth, Mance, Grimm% and Oaterlo Variegated
Alfalfa On Seed. •
N UC
Lmthmw Wingial*
7
'000 Pi
OflumeiflaI wor.
FOW 0-4,wiLiGgpi
**eat; and Moat `coaiide14--.
•,th,c)larst.,heautliel dodge/
. from, In
Scotch. Swedish aur Cast-
, adian Gr,anitea
•
make, a specialty a Fand1.#-
Ileavatta and invite yonr
ipt.Neatly, lCarefellY sad
Prouiptb, Done:.
ealbefore placing your order.
•
RA.Spottcs
clmowi-Ont.
ow LLO. No. 42.8„ 'meta
lodge room,.every second Tut
s-
• slaY of th-"e month at 8.• o'clock p.m.
W.M., l!ff. Parker: F.ec. Seer.. Wm.
•
Back to the Starting, Point
,
:(tiil3r Otar)
-inany.''Perte rign1 Russia,.
POPulatlen..0t. iteesia is very.
I -
argelY, ',revohition'..' broke
()Own
Some .iraen., of 00aeat.!en., and jitioityi*
aava4, 041711:v0 by dreSsing, as 0,4*
5:41t4c, by liteing;henceforth'peaSants
like 'their. ,neighbors. :They,. their
Wives and children relinquished
•every 'pretension and the' cOmmunity,.
Pleased' and gratified, took them in
and vouched for them 'when the Red
officiala passed through.
They,are.there, Roy/ever,' seattered.
ihreogbont rural Ruasia, undistin7
guishable. from. •the,:regular run: of
;the liegLiOtiz, but7:..educated,' nbiler-
menti'thinkingr-rdt recover
When. they can their lost Status,. but
accepting the situation as it While
they..must.
the , o unins - Pratrda,••• the
'offlciat &ilia the 'communists. in
recentlit;'apPeared .n•general
•article Which' •,Shotvi that, journal to
be perplexed by conditions in. rural
„eoormanitioi•-oat ,Of a .'•populatioii of
ten .thOUsand only twelve .persons
, May ;lie: cOniminiiSts and but ,fonr:af
'therie local en. It earn:that. frani
semewlie ,th olerds" haVe re ..rned
-:--educated men .teaclieis
,wr!tere,, priests; land surVerors, civii
engineers. They are „Peasants PoW--•
-
they. wear cOarse bOOti4 woollen:shirts
and tionsere, emoke: 'cheap tobacco
• and drink cheap liqp0r. They. are
rough Peasarita. like the rest; but
thei?,,,' influence directs - the "' whole
colintryside:' '"I knew,P' saY,S the
Writer -in Pravda; 4;cone. former priest'
'who long. ago. eillliled.!hishair-.014.
Settleddown as a, peasant He hves
'Village :fof sothefour thousand
peopl.e-AVhere the0 ire only tw,o:cOm
'muniats, bcith of them Officiala.."; The
.peliaant52tro5t ,the .fo.rnier .7to
such. an extent that if he speaks at
.a village Meeting .for or . against
'sometax or some • innovation,' hi%
opinion 18 unanimously ' hacked." „.•
'Anether,influeriee is, at work An
agent Of the gOverthent arrives in a
. rural, eentinunity „ , end he mast' „te
- , .
:housed while there,- so, naturallY • Ite
find's:shelter With, One of the richest
peasants for the'-poOrer ones have no
acceptable acCOnuneditioii to
• ,.
and, he gets, With his meals; ..:•.,the
-local: impressions'of his 1 proriperens
host, and is guided by thein, •
It would seem, . • therefore, that 'in
Russia 'the. Inevitable is happening.
The- With- edutatiairluid
•kpoidedgi )iis, advantage Over ". the
• Oliterate. The. Man who,has sonie
mean* has an advantage over Adigh-
•bors who have none. In Oe country:
.of the hiirid the.orie-eyed man is king
Reduce pecipletoconirnon level., and
• at cage a figure emerges, • pushes up
by its own viger or is thrust Up •to's;
general consent to be leader .• in. the
,lightIng,'spokesman . the argu-
ment,' or in',;!de.:•the`iliiiikirig,.. Mere
and there 'a hut better roofed
• sgamst the ram than others,.is
cleaner and Otter kept, .fised., isvith
,superior comforta, and tbe occupants.
acquire an inflnence and frord aernali
materialadvantage derive • greater
ones. It has doubtless been so in all
cetintrieff-ni all ages. •:"
•
NO1111.1eujum.
, •
-1120111114, .11,011139471411011711004
•THE •
cr •SVAT/T41.1A
Publishid, avow dim 149
' 414441W. CtntariO.
A. P. MacHenxie, Proprietor
and rditUr, •
t.
,
top-notch sales-
man at office -boy
wages!,
This salesman; who
reaches the ear of the -
public,. quickest, and
adds the largest num-
ler of new bus*.ess
prospects—cost'. You
much-- les,sf thant-the
cheapest office -boy.
Add him to your dal
-force! • •
As an investment that
can bring large return's,
e.ncourage , your best -
.13alesmen to use. Long
Diitance freely. • Each
year rnore than 50,000 •
new telephones are
added in. Ontario and
• Quebec to the list of
• those they can do
• ness with.
Costa a famay Acta 2% op'
• otinel/ ouaay. •
iLOWERRALE •
Mrs, 'John It. McDonald , .two
children; . spent , a Ifeyv ‘days ; last
Week with ICincordine frienda. •
. . •
.ThOmpson Brothers are busy 'cut-
ting Wood with their new •sawing
• outfit;"
Den; •Thompson • and Mrs.
Strathdee S`p,Ont Thuradak,
tertioea with 'ars; W:
Jack :Carter and ,wife
day at the Hedgkirlion: '
THURSDAY, •MMCH 19th, U25.
EQUALIZIN,O THE ASSESSMENT
- The Village, Councd'. has made a
good move in appointing valuators,
• to equalize, the yaiues of property
for purposes of assessment.
The assessor of elle year, ugually
'follows pretty ,closely the comae '0,f,
•4e/144..0014 0,130144-4,* lriattat
there WOuld be, no profit left,
• It has genie about that 'fann help
wants, the abort, 44ed hours of the
,raeorir: and big pa ---less work and
more roonei, is. the war the targe
operator above. -referred. to put it.
The farmer -can't have fixed boon as
he must meha ;,w11110 thesun-
shines," ., •
No 40nb4 mea'.ea2ald be indueed to
work the eCeaSienal fleceasary. long, •
.
hours, but under, wasitng ceeditions
40 fanner 'can ,affokd the .iuce-
Tent.; so he does the neit best.
lus predecessor, ' "vei4ifrinff "'V OP• thing: he Pits. the fqin 'ander grass,
such °tom #4., iniPtgYenients *ay and so the great counties of Huron
Wafran:t. But • PtePertg values ehinge. and Bruce are slowly; being convent -
0r' reasons, and in the coutai
Y.eari a no deal of ininstice in
thaiway of -...asSessment is liound to
de,velePe• ,'
The ...men 'engaged for the re:;val,,
;jatti, h
i°4r'Fteht0aikood .: as d"' c'Sk'oL:14"esPowi'sibe--
Jig the :worlc.as any. 'iriallahle trio.
that eaaid be ;selected, • and their
wOrk should •be fairly. satiSfactorr, •
THt. UPS AND, DOWNS,
OF WHEAT :
The priee of wheat 'which -nzdy
few ago was going IT by
leaps ' ..hoeincia.„....00ate-has.-been• -
geing dovin. . an even more rapid
rate; .
•:With the decline. as ' with the rise'
Ahere-46-en:Saying"-4--Where-the end
will le 'these rapid .rup4and-down
movements give SpecUiators' . their
opportunity,. and no .d'oubt; a number.
• 'of the, big fellOws and a few. Of.,the
Smaller, ones ,made fortunes - dnring.
• the , rise ,and again •the fall.
.1lilany more 'who staled. With , the ,
-game a"littie t� long made and loet.
Alga „ fanners who " had a'
"..'ew-hundied-hushelaLot,Wheat
bin,,and who ...tor One :reason or ,an•;,
other "' did not get it oat when the
Price Wee feel that theY.,< liaVe
been bird hit.,
The, upward rush started: With\te
i
LOVE TO THINKOF ,
• SUMMER TIME
big ..bnying of ' 'wheat -nand flour n
this continent by tha.:.liaVetnmelit
Russia; This, ereated. the belief' tliat
there' Was a .world-scrireit Wheat
and. rye: Tho price -went up to -day,
anci,.it Would .to te-Merre74
Tba Market wins. filled With buyers
while those ,:who hakgrain felt like
bolding ,it for the. li.etT'e; 'price which:
was. sore to prevail. to-mor.row ' or
n elet, Week,' When the decline set • in .
there 'Vats a fish tO :sell. Thai .bad
the effect of sending the Price down
'and down, non holders-betime
gusted " and 'began. to !wait' to .see if
there 'would be , anOther; 0., It has.
alt.reaulted in sort of mad
. • • ;•
-
There is .a-„tendeney blaine, the
,gamblers •in grain •prieas. for these
_boOinenrid breaks; .the ginnblers
haven't. it; all .their own way. Doubt-
less they. are ready „ to take ativerit.!
age of any favorable' circumstance,
and by their efforts greatly aggra-
vate theunhealthy. ;condition, ,.but
.;c4nept_ ' stari a really brat dais .
lioemi , It took' tile real demand.• for
• flOur in Russia 'start the recent
boom. The decline, set 4n.- when :felir
could believe that prices
higher, •, ";. '
In ' 'Ones When the grain,
: . •
market marked by a more or less_ re-
gular 'series oftupi and downs, it. is
.said that the .big ap,edulators' \are
1)1.04 regular winners, end .the apec-.
,tilators With .0niall •ineina as regular,
loaserk: At Soo times: those Who
gamble on a large scale can cOntrol
the. Market :Within lizniia and, atsuch
times , the ulaMbs''',. are regularly
ea into grating Janda. '
•
fln; he Liatening"i'oet", '
in the Februaly number of The
Listening Post, the Editor , was kind
enough to publish an 'article of mine
on political thinking. I haye pOnder-
ed Whether It would be good taste on
my Part to fasten -on an article in
the sanie1 'Umber as an example of
-failure wthirikTsrit lierinisaible -kir-
one contributor to pOunee upon an-.
• other and say': "This Will never_do-_-...., ..
-airl-Aavesho-wn m my •contribu-
bon?" Is :this not a • little like play-
ing on Oe side and getting, a, referee
at thesame ti e? nt,2-1-ent-,-teirrpted-
tO risk .eyen. Such odinuS •ilnieltranes
as this -so serions'ant',1'in maIntain
ing ,that straightforward 'thinking ..ii
a ,dire neceSsity ' with vs, just now
And I :hope that Mr. Stewart i or
anyone eke, will retort. to me if I
em guilty of flawin argument .• •• • •
.' I, am . not going, to go into 'the Tar•
it vs.' Free , Trade 'debate ,ge4erally;
I have already 'dealt • with, ,some of
(Lthel4hielfol, • ' • e -L --n' inber '
The, Listening Post .1. merely wish to,
sholiv the 'looseness of thought 'izi lir.
Stewart's. defence .of the Tariff. ' He
is obviously unacquainted with econ-
omies and the principles ,I of 'trade
generallytc or he, 'could never have
written his sentences about triide.be-
ts een: faraners and mannfaituxeFa;
onsequently, I think he is to be ab-
s yed from -wilfulness .of misitate‘..
me t 'when he says ..that raising a
'tari on an article does .not increase
the price of\ that artiele to the :con-,
pri\
• ..
sumer. ,ii fact, he is very frank in
411.•••
and n� tlefenep 0:40 „tatitt (except
fr?!.a ie .419.iotZ tttlattit 404)k.io• dant'
- ii\ade:te-'iriiieliii giv00,:a-Aie.;
dal, advantage) bas yet' besi, Written ,
9** will: atAnd 1°004 494-lialS,.. -
• But iti is not often that I have seen.
anything co incredibly naif as. Mr.
Stewart's ; goloparison of • Canadian
and American' Pricei• to prove that
Tariffs' do not. Increase prices, ,
in the. first -place the comparison
should not have been niade 'between
A3,To tariff -ridden Cp4ntries,but le.
tween av high -tariff .COnotri such as
Canada and a free tiiiiie, Or very loW:.•
I
tarifr country such. as Mell'ul ' or
Denmark orGreat. Rritain. . •
, In the second place.; assuming that ".
'Mr. Stewart's : price. eoMparieonsare
correct, ...his:ctotal of •prices for, Can,
ada, 7)1161411as a high - or!if; is less
than hi, total . Or prices for •the. Unit-
ed States which has ,a still higher
Tariff. ; • Canada -$97.35. . says • -,M,"r.
Stewart, ',:t' .Unifed 'States -,-- 312:4,,0$.
WhFl., EleAherec, Mr.. StoWart `Saya.
:that :larger production „means lower
Aigri ouii:-.Fiw:Init of.4het eleven ':i'.-
'ticles cited' are Cotton • goods -here
again the Americans have the -adi.
vantage,. .Is there any „ explanation,
other than the 'Pe.rduey • Tariff, high-
er than the Canadian . Tariff to ex-
plain the discrepancy? - . • :- .- ;
' In the third place, let us look More
:aosely-at•-the. artieles,, *r. Stewart
'names.... There are three • articles' in
his..iist-viiiicli-,aceount4or-th,-e-7,4.Tref-.7
lean Tariff. .en French 'arid ..BrItiah
woOlen gods is higher than .: the•
Canadian. HoW can he prove that the
hirilre17-"'Tari as -not resulted _ir
higher prices to the consumer in this.,
instance?
• Finally there ii, one mistake, sure-
ly, in Mr; Stewart's list. Itis just;as
well known that shoes are eheaper%pi
the United' States than in.:Canado, as
it ' is known woollens are . ' cheaper,
here than4here. liti: Stewart puts
Shoes' at the same price,. But in s.:hoes
the • United States is a . free; :trade
•
,
I loire to think of summer time .
When hirdlings take the wing,
tie pid old .,klithesonie sunimer
• thne,
'That follews after spring,
Perhaps my rhyme is premature,' •
• BeCause 1 ought to it/low- • •'
The winter day, still' holds the Sway?
The fields -ire white 'With snow."
- • •
I4Ove to think.of summer time,
• When skies -are azure bine,
When sweethearts' tell their tiles Of
love, • .
And hearth are beating true,• •
rils then that life is One sweet song,.
• • "That Song 111 sing to yOu,"'
when You and It together .hie;
•To...rtver.7..an4, canoe-.
..,and„...tait, „visited, ;I' love ' tO ;think Of simmer time,
ber, daughter Irks: W.- Pi -McDonald oVirben4fiticitite su4;
• the.week. '•.Yeri• enot•einniner•:tirne the best,
day With lier AV,4 likto the...sPAngtinae'is, earlY°
, , Tien all* said and done; :
rand Mrs, W. Greenwood. and
•
.•the P.• ThoreaaY:
Mrt. MeConneirlift • 1..iiitTireelt
'0 *it sistere 0140,
'
The antuinii's itisset 'brown,
'VS 'very nice to,e10t6 "P,I.1
But ,. ouinmer i3,bfld$ (tow4,.
• •;• IAMEtt U • MOPClitEt4g•,',
'01 DOkt"lit,S,
It Is • .difficult. to see how sucit an
unfortunate and ruinbus 'condition
ean be overome. Co:operative mar-
keting and grain pools if .greatly ae-
veloped woulcrno doubt tend towards
steadier,markets. • •
• '
ndt coun ing himself 'among the "ex-
,
perts". to '. honl .entrust tariff . mat-
ters: 'But expert willsave. Mr..°
Stewart the looseness of think;
• •
•
mg betrayed
(I take them ,
section • of his aril,
. 'only .a quarter Of n
; (1) "The raising
collars, Old shirts wen'
the following sen,
•
order from •
one
e Which.,eccqpies.
age.T
the duty' on
net increase
'the price .of,, these artiee, The' Tar-
iff Could be : raised 1or
100%, kut the price would reinain
the Same; for the reason fated,
that prices are based on eetua tost.
of. production.". ' - •
(2)--„AThe-tariff_innne__ f_the m
sohrees Of re4enue -to the Country."
• (3) "The Tariff protect s- the .wage
• earner to even a greater, extent. than
The manufacturer. If 'goods: made in
Countries ,where ;low .wegli and low
-standards • of living prevail are. hp-
portetions : f ro m those. ;:countries
'w.herelow „Wages are pai .' .. • •
' NO. 1,:. of -•',.cOlirae, begs the , whole
q,..festion; .., .there Is: no attempt.; to
rireite it, ''' .oillyi,tife.-. statelnent that
there are 'very few manufacturers of
&oilers • arid \shirte ' in Canada) that
coMpetition•ketiareee the Caiiedian:
,manufaeturers. \',,ic e e p s, ' the prices.
doWn, It :is. economically and- histor.
ically uniOund, but, let' that Pass.,
'
Keep it in Mind ' for what . it is
',•ivorth. and then pass on to.,(2), and
(3). ,
NO., 2, shows that the "Tariff, high..
as 'it: is . in banacia, ,does not: protect,'
!n. the sense that; it does not , keep
.DEP-OPI.11;ATIOIst GOES 014.'g°,3,0604d: dlorrie01;iteein, igrit'o*I?CoaredButnaija.,\,n'ok.
' With the , coming, of spring' We • °IanY: of them' d° under it'Tai4fr of
1 .
•
•
hear of. still,. a few - More Huron 3474.ti' Ine" that 7Jiat 'Mi.' *67
eCtieus.70tynef,atvrinhoerLsg:obi4ingil Ocluiterefatitutaionn- • `0°14,acrt.tioeilioll,i3isti'"actualv:rartificPsiaciitbIt
:rca. Da'
a escaie. **cod to nate in, .the county Ie. else it ', contradicts , 1‘.1o. r *alto -
is. going ,to ort -dolor., -arain_grriviing 'gather. And whielgver • horn of the
,piiratiaas to a trillitintum,, /le will 'dilemma' kr:, §tewart, .e116°se's will
opasturehay and
ba!ifid Ifaetod..4 ,.ctrttre.,7.gtredri 3 deal cOntradict his mein thesis , that the
where they hope to 'pick up a living
stock .. and‘ htiolo., Tariffe beneftcial • to the consumer
.tects:' the wage ' earner -who, as Mr,
•
`Caine 'fo, NO. 3.k., Par. if the Tariif . pro -
Mentz, letting the farin . , , at -large. „. ' .
goto grass • .
1 . when
selling, ',of their
while
they , moveto , town „or, •City• . ‘Contradietiens. multi') y ., we
%
soretiesahamon;': ,,t'il'et.t . are
.soec.ial ,.., cow, !ftZtaili:rti nsgtisYcsOstgs4sThia5t a 't.4hen
• t o t'sii.yl, ttin
llet
&gene: which; makes,. this, ',coorrie ! ne- , :r•adft; ' in 'M'''' 'tvjart.'s rid"' now . , ,. , . . • • . . .
iiiiiii,,,.-6.at..-a-abailyi saima prepared does--inerease-t.tne.-..- marnitalaturntg.
-
cultivate: ' • : . :
,... , , • .•,. •,... 113,6•1-. '.,,datritils4u' me66i.lits•-.-AlI'eti -iti •O'fttehrnedirirctise.e• •Nt6o;.-:.
..t.0 take , Pm. ilelf. --..ebend4ned- 4 rFee .t.f
' xAt the ,,batIC of dt:',all in ;the .1iirin.: 4." But the see°114 'Part of No. 3 6on-
. ,
heiii, orohfoth „ f ,. who, tradiets 'Veth.'lle, ,1 at,i'd No 2,
, . , The.,armer, ow-
„tt .t.:150,.ilaoiniigneter,.hoatioi4,, 4, iittn.,t1daarst,otert Jit these ,ContradietOM: S.atelnents
Mr. 'Stewart is not More confuted
tl,lan any other od,-ocate of the
7;:e 4it, tiiiii'” ,061.,16.741aliti*- .-volry-
clear 4,. atirmITt get i''''il ' twohlo,
000nor
sr ;ate?' Le..0;41.4 C•itieat .'' It!Y
' •010 Otit0Meit thItt t1,101014 J1 „,Aviii4i'
14.1111141Cdar.
coincidence?
, .
,
''•*114.011AM
FRONT.
SPECIAL:SALE of ALUMINILI
.-ThOl's44y,..,:f)71.04:Y'..04.Satgrd07
,
c0Thnial:
3 -Qt Water Pitche-easY pouring hp
• .
2 -Qt, CO1,9nial Teil.Ppt; Iiielded spout
12 -Inc . Seadiless 'Roaster- .
3Piece arid 3-
S -t. Lipped Preserving '<age
11.
• 2-9t. Colonial Percolator,
• 5 -Qt. colonial Tea Kettle, Vveldeci spout
6 -Qt: Potatd•Poi, lock lid
,
•••
•
C-O-Orhandle
Gur--Win-d-01( r.
Also we carrry the Famous"Budceye"
Incubators and:Brood'ers.
one fi
•ai-dware Coal'
11 Cli,n
,
..Pitn-ibin • Ti.riStithirg•
, 0
• r, , and Mr. WM. G. gray wewe
in' ,Peterbeto on :Friday, :attending'
the funeral of their brother -in law,
the . late ..W. • Howard. . Weram, , who
'died' very suddenly on Tuesday., at
his, home in Toronte;.',..Deeeased was
trekied to Jessie Gray, daughter
Mr. and MrS. • John Grey of Wing-.
ham. 'He. was With the , McLean Pub7
Co„. and had been in I.istoWel
on 'biisiness for his 'firth. I. week pre-
vious, to his.. death. Many Viringlierh '
friends extend sympathy to the be-
reaved faintly., ,
says that to operate With
hire4 help is :Out of tltO qtteetipn,
If tilt .b001' +isn't" IOC the ,=intao tor 0;
00 1r01 0.10040
• .
• It :ms with. regret that Wingliam,
people will learn that :the B,ell Tele,
phone Co:, hal ,decided to discontin,
he the, business end ‘.•of their: business
.WinAiam and OWing to the fact
:that all clerical work will be handled
from: , their. Stratford _Office, • Miss
Maud Flenty bas severed her connee-
with the Bell for:the time being.
We :understand, a sirniliar ;situation
awaits her in Stratford, should she.„
care._t�goo • that place. • xt
Winham alOne, • but aiso, LstoweI
Goderich and. St. Mary's • ,Mlices of
e tell have been :closed . • so far as
cal- work is -;concerned.
. " .
AND , GUN 'FOR .APRIL
Facts a fiction for the -. sports-
mteres mg an of '1, wicdc var-
iety,. ars_ offered iil* the .Apti1 issild of
Rod andG'un 1 CalindaT7The iiiitial-
• stOry, The Silent - Up ' By the 'Gera:-
de-TerrerhY Aide Griffin 'Mer dith,
is a tale Of silver , iosPee;tin'fg, war-
ranted .,to. - \holdthefa 1-ention• . f all 4,,
,
who. read it, In '1,,l'he ': i otoring •Le.,
gions 'Are Cowing.; " Wm. ,O..,• . rwin
heralde„ the influx. of sum\to rists
• into Canada.. 13ohnraSt1e 1a: • and
J. W. Winson again 'clieNirse•\ nter-
eatingly on .Wild bird: li ..'e 'and
Willinms and Mit tin Htinter add,
,
their quota of goOd! reading.
MAI',1` FELL le• P-13-iT
• Fred .,Plaeter, a lumber -I -nen, had.
a narrOw 1 escape from death ' when
W fell from a ' tree a distance f 70
fedi, While- .adjusting. a cable , : t'. his
sawmill, six miles west of• ,Cargill
on .Mer, 'llth. Dr. 1.1, C.
-of Cargill, , who was, Called t the
sPealite
e'hf°W11:17inbgadltyhebru. aisecedidInntc1 ;f1.°151i4r1rd
4i ...'
ed, aboutt-the-body.1?4. ho 'benci were
broieri. Mt. Plaetzer, WbO is -al -.alai:::
ried Ivan,abbit i. 65 Years of L age,
eame,.- here from .---• Auburn, Huron
.2ni.C°4ritlitYes-,, a :gilo.e,a.. ar n dG..•°14ne" t.ni g.tah_r't .11-,e.4,rbh°„?.nt.. W •si t.i 1.3"...
:Edward Dam, of.. Waterlool:has
heoperating4 limber .c.amp?about.
slit miles -west ut 'Cargill; •.- .
--..,.......1.-44)-o—
• .
"One geed .79.1 to stu.d.4.10e eXPres•.
siert tit a ..'-tvontaii's 6,-..eS`'. is. fe. epilf
ItAtchup oh her tnlito elOth.•
'Whatin' the 4, '.
BULL. SAW fith
tittle Ruth Myles" • ..of Rarristofir
had 'a narrow espape ,from enrag-
ed hull, Saturday, ,which Was; being
led to the market by ti 1,4
little girl who wore a red tarn was
walking atteet; when.
the'btill„ 'sfghtedthe'.'4.iblem of • (I ail-.
ger, arid. eliagecl at tl-e 1ikL M9n,
the-Eitto(A Tailed to ho to y4n,
in-
to- a. stor •whieti 'did She wasn't
a loo.meii.t too •soon,for the aniinal.
raced right ..up• to the :store &pr. • ..
".""4111,11.(•
,
• .
' edie.." • c... - .•5' -r• ' -r )-• A. -r • •••,' . ,..4 ...... 1:7 . ri
, .. •• .. • . ' ".-?`.•''''s ' -.-,.."....•
• .a<0.,:',„...7.,...',7;;:1, l• l'Or,/W,ie /
r,',;/,/•/'';,;e/';>' . ....\'N>Ni
' r ''''''. 7'..."...i".4'... ' p ../ v.,0 /07, •
.,. -44'41
Z..-,
• •
t y be,
on't jam Lot
r.
•
1
zicura
Cling makes
easy layiincr---°
.XCELLENCE viobd; that 1.1b.,§ beco. care,:
,fully :: kiln dried .by ski11d'';s7orktnen. of ,lopg ex=
erience, ptornoe5easy laying aiid *ensures a floor Of
beauty. When you .1dy239airian Kept FI..ard,
wood Flooririg,you are sure 413,t, e\iery strip Ins,.been
carefully ' iripected to staid tlae tes,:t of a 4,fetittie- fOr .
durability, e,conorn'y.afia beuty nist upon Seaman'
Kent Hardwood, floorin.. We can supply yu in any-
gra e ,desired.
,Yptt,:ton
Ypivrseif
14,1.--1.„..1
ste..04141.61 010
,.Ch00:41P Than CArpots.,..;
4•04i9ot.,-.1)•-tt1vni4.1.i. • ,
No. 1 Qu a r'ei- Ctc,f 'Ma ire -Pak
3;, oak $aiq
.
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UtkilOW
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