Loading...
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1928-03-15, Page 5• erimen with Incubators q114 „ rdodeies • irr 40ESN'T•PAY to experhnent; tid• V With incebatore and :by:eiders., An incubator that folio to hatch a let of hatchable egg, a brooder that lets Alen% chicks:die-el/eat fe • ee'Oensifee eereipment . at :Any.. You lose 'the.velue of t4o.,.. eggs .and sehicke.. You lose your proflit., . • . . . If Youomotto‘b.e certajn of i-ottitig-: time-testedenclreliahle, equipment -•-the beet buy on the market -7i -we invite You to visit-43yr store. We ' will tell you how Buckeye incubator* and brooders- have proved their', -S-Iirefiternaking•Ability :We within :you how they will. /Meg you Money-, and heti they Will make sininey,,x • for you. Don't buy poultry -raising,. equipment until you fee „what we have to offer. • ' 4maziny 10: 4011) Ir4,PriaTt, I ' • ••• - • .1Buckesecool-bonoot imago -0 Bidteseiite-Riaakeedn• Saves Money for a Milliken Users ...More than a million mereare .. 'leaking meneie with • Buckeye' pout- : try -raising equipment. It is making moneyfor many ' poultryeraisers right in this: vicinity. it will make < inoaay for 3kau. ^ 'Visit our store. See what Amazing' new Buckeye' equipment we have to " offer you. It Will pay ,you-eatid t Pay YOU big --to do thii;"' . RAE 81 PORTEOUS Lucknw, Ont. ,• Luck:now,.. Winghain Phone • pliene. 25* lioxiumel4a1 Work -LUCKNOW *Ind WINGHAM ' . , leila: t.h. largest and most complete sleek in ,,, the most' beautiful .designs, to,chooee from, in • , , ' ' ' ' , llfitirble; Scotch, • Swedish and Can- . adian Granites . We melte a specialty of Family bienuments And invite Jour .inspoction - ' Iriscriptiona Neatly Carefully ' an Promptly, Done. flee os .13efor. oraoine Your order. 9-Doug1as Brfns. - :R. A. SPottor I ' Lacknovve•tehit. BUSINESS , CONDITION' NOT , FLOURISHING IN t.s:A.' . • , The fellowing from • 1:1)6 Chicago ':'•Referee,•••..Tublished by Bert Collyer, contaiiig • it let of ,truth end. eserne- thing that should , have been told •lome The,Referee Says: • • . !!..13uSiness generally thijoiighout- the . "."IIaited States: has. slowed:down alarming extent but:newspapers and' Vendors, of adeertising keep. On insist-- ' ing, that everything ls fihe. Only a anlall part of,: the Public clseeiVed; by, such' niethods-and "those who are cleCeived. develop infeeior com- .Pies', honeying, that their Person.ql.lfl Ability .te,becoine Or stay prosperous , •• is due to deterioration of their, own ' business acUmen..\ Nothing is gained'. by this deception,' except to Woo haid earned dollars. from busineSe concerns , ".for 'advertising that,. teinporarily his no "pull". 'Why not .tthe treth ? !novo ' is nothing balicelly weong with .1)0Si- ness. We have had a,lieriod of 'over- production: Even this un "teid coMing country rimeti halt at such times artd wipe 'off' the. unavoidable, losses duo to auch overPrOdiletiort.- Bite- to , an undernourished butmesi that it is aming• along „fine", is • like telling a' -Starving man • that ••his viscera . is clogked'with .viands. He wnnifl ince. to believe it, but :he knows, bettee. Why not eonie our with the "epartIl- • • inseet truth -:-that business has been '"rotten", but hotind • al ,hopeful note ,forethe faure. es' The Teel feet is that th's'eantiltry foi. the last eighteen* meeths /Jai been .as. eleate.to_lpanleas ever be Possible Under the Fed:, eral Reseree ilanking Late. Ceiry are raining 20 per cent • South Chicago is mane. `,K) per cent 'of:normal. ITS:..wontlor beef- , nese is had in OVN,q,`,..kreilf. . .• • . .• i.....tentres. And despite • all` the beltrithlt- too at the eute, shows; there. are few -ears-at thei928 'vintage on ,the etreets. WhY try to hidc the poIliable, facts:1 Decatise ditisingeOuth 'sheen had is the bed reeton in the world 'why it should tome to life. Brit g.fproeperify Weill't WO ;relive et, Dtelinese deprekhleel IS Akin to inertilee-eor." the itch,' These. maladies ciire theniseWes. W. ,w0A4er ,that the awn:ides ,of tin- . Ode allay* tall • to . ideognite •the pf4thia • • ..x A LI CTION SALE OF VALUABLE • ' FARM LANDS, ' ..-Sitcu ate in "the Township' of ".'Ashfield in the County of Huron. . • Pursuant: to x the powers of sale con - tined , in . two- certain' Mortgages, .11rc1 will. be. Produced :at ;the':tline of ..falo, there will be offered for sale at -pubiic :auction by, John Purvis, Ain-, fiONebt, at the ••Cain House'in the on.-SatUrday, the 31St, day. Of March,: A.P. 1928,: at two ."J'clock in the afternoon;''thejollowing of labVitereeiYe • • 14' • ejteEti'NO.e,l.k,' The"' heath ;half.' half,:of:lot.ntinibert welve. t)10...LNelft1), coticession;--eastern di:. visibp; . of ,t,}1,1O township • of .Ashfield, • 'fifty acres of land More of ,HCiL N.O. 2..f. The ith half, • , the. out1i.hajf of lot number twelve h eencehsione-eagtern di - of the township of' Aslifield, fltaining fifty' acres: of land More or : les,. • T'so , parcels are situate..on a:good 7ravo1 road bout. three . froill 1.10 Villaexe .0,f Lucknow, two Miles f.,•0,7-) a gabber -end 'twq. miles front. a . 011. pareej .NO. iS situate. a frame, 24:• ft..by 36:ft. and A smell. eeeee: „stable; ft small orehard, and a - 'flee acres Pt' busli. timbered with hOeseb,,, renele and cedar. Tie: ;toil ;h• e eood loalt lands in h stite Of cultivation: Percel NO 2•14 all in glass and e..exellent •enstore freer: • • 're e"elS, SATI,171 The proueeties (.1ri)ed lent the mit up in eel).- - •/`'41'"'r'IS StIll,pet.46-a.'yoserv,e2bid. per (tree: 'of the ineeThase. ,one., ;fj) 1n• tl the. V.endors' soliciter ee. oper ex' • hale end the, baler,- thelafter. The , nerreirsor pessessiOnipline, f tor the (Tay of sale, • Fe:telex,. 1")el'ici'la!'S and ednditithr. of raL,, made. knoWn on the rise* ha 1 or -ma yebe-hnd anier-a P f•• qv, wordergigred.H. • •Pat,41, the ,spircntl, day. of. march. • • a vANsToigt-I,': .Win ehathe ()aerie:: 'Selicii-or for Venders. (j Jolt's SALE OF • • VA LUABLE PROPERTY le The Village Of Lucknow: 'ilea' undersigned eXectitor of :the. 'ate. (if Anna, M: Murray: deceased; will offer for sale• by Public auction ai Ithe Cale House in the 'Village of 1..ocRlietv in the, County of ,BrUce, by Auctioneer, ' Sattir- .111e. 3Ist, "(ley Of ,Marche A. D. at o'elock"in the aftetnoon • le, follewing valuable prOpetty, livc'iistdrlY'33'it. in width by the 'ell dupth Of lot 'nuMber '234, in the •illage•LuclOiew the County, of t'soce, • . leiie,ptenertis• situate a stone -1;eilig Le o '•steries high with bahe. went underneath, 33 ft. by 50, ff. 'The round "floor is occupied as a "'store. '1(1111,1 sechnd Poor is five-rooni 1 iline apartment 'with, hath "and'inodern conVeniene: sed the is heeted by , Thole,. is, also a:cement ad: 1,11 nt. the l'eS1'.:22 ft. by 33 ft. one 11 Id- bas'Oment. ' e let premises 'are alt in good re. - .11 e end. are 'sittiate's'iri a.: good hind. lan MY the main. street in Luckeniveaedx-offeee-An, 'ac lic'ilL'onpietennite for :hey -seek- ms.." pronto:1)1e' invest -110143, Thti prelierty:i8 being 8old for the P,Teigo ef winding 1he eltate of. , • • • `TY rs %OF' SALE: Ten, per parr itisp money _ri _ie., ay o_ 1 e '04 f'" nor,. Tha property sithlott; te,n; raserire bid., -Ttarikttlarn d ens •f- •VOIr \\`14'/"4)S made. known on the OrtrSJIc4•Or ro.ay be had On. tappii'• ri I 110 tl 11 rlersigned::•• •• fl pn..).-oia.4.201 day. Of ..1Viareh,. . I), 1028,, , • ' VAlISTONE; OntArie, • VentiOr'S AND 'GUARANTEE 011.1).A NIr. I .IMITED, Toronto, rio, Vendor, • ' • (20-3.0) ... • .,, to .; 1 0Avg ADDRESS )mciorrfey AT owEF $o4J4D, • • . AAICIENqf 8/4.1'.*E1, • • , 0,000 'FACTS ABOUT. CAN4D.4- Frei* 'krigb poeular eempilatient • r% Mr. R. D. Cameron, in the course "5,000• Facts Aboat, Cenediii"' fee of his travels about "Ontario in the 1928 is. out, having reached ients,: its im- ineres'ts Merchants' . of .the Retell Mhlin,tlieprovenincluding an illustrated: section end, twenty-fifth...yeare.... The:: • . . • . Aseoclatipn, 18 fregMentbr' called. UP"' editren is 'Marked by ManY • on to Address, ..orianisatioiiii such s ahowing, the ',Marked -Pftgeesh: Of t awns clubs.. or 3venien's societies 'in' Denelhion in a quarter ,ofa••centui the 'tfivt.rnis . he ‘Viiiite. Returning' frons'vhiIe the stirring story uf our n itinerr•in.Northein.4co . 01-• ' in a single year ario, he 'was in Oren' 'Ocrund.; ThaXan' strildOti'09-" 441'S series, ef eriS e• T4URDSAV:! MARCH 15th, 1328.4. .111101 '4.11:01)1AS. dEt.utr,wr. , . • Every parent should he Able to give aid to 'kiddies. This, of course- applies only to minor ininries.."'" in enee e.if major injuries inunediately srid for the doctor 'or4 don't ''attempt:Itit treat' injurkee' you he ,Icnow,.:nothkng about except to ,quieten - 7 ' and reeothO,`thelChild until the;. doctor _, :itrVi*es: • '•: • ' . The conniitinest of '•childre-ii's, aeof- • P' dents iSepeohafily burning. "If ;it . Merely, a Painfer setirch,',,a..,Piece, Of sdeP smeared over the 'Stirfece' of the. ' bern will , take out" ,the smart{ berne4t „ day of 'week: n-nd invited top 'dad- 'ai;aprha4g;eatPichas4kii.54 C.1:If7A.PgtItr131; itryarnentbg 11 no, diatoly. S Folio un 'a he- 13' -7 lress the Itiuvianis In?ltr4'rerstf:;,1. isio pub icatiOn- ing ; the. Innc,eon :and the Owen Sound 'S d • Self' Canada net:only. to adia Cawas the apeaker meron ' the Kiwanis Othnui,rinca.9tn'hIshiveet:aiblu°0:ild::11-6erinteay:€7C11-6-97-reclittita,.i:S Club '1uneheenon TlIjiradaY,;and de-, livered an eloquent :And.% appealing address on •the tinbject "Canada -Our Heritage." In his . preliminary re - Marks, after :being Antrecluced' by President J.'"'P: Leslie, the speaker. referred, to, the fact "that he At ; one time was a President at' Owen ,Sound and recalled aw.occas on sp years Ago when there Was no train eervice into. Owen. Sound for It:period Of 44 daYs, unpleasant 'experience in Buffalo te- it large' circulation. It, •maY be, the at, MeKizr08., Prim- hFelca.Qw from leading news ' dealers, or, b sending- 35c. to the ,Facts Yule; Co 533; liurOn St., .Toranto.: As, Tiftir DO IN BUFFALO Mr. ''"Joe" Beekberger fon of • Mr. and Mrs John Beckberger:.of kart; over, fermerly of Chepstow; had. an vvhich is the record for blockades, at least in this section of .the country.° • . In -dealing :with his subject, Mr. Cameron,' who is h fltient and forceful speaker, prediete&thet Canada would. yet become a. great and mighty „na- tion, and, he proceeded to deal ewith the wonderful Opportunities and ,.thq, great ,potentialities of. such a , vast'. country as Canada, and he vent into detail with regard to the Magnificent 'scenery, ' great natural resources, the: mines, the` forests, the Pariries, etc.. He declared that whirer'all of these things were: to be found in: Canada, after' the greatness 'of ,any country depends to a large extent on her peo- ple. He said pirobably no country, a - Side of possibly the e United , States had . such a dieersety of population. pointing Out that_theellible-i-erinted in this country alone:in 60 different lengueges.' It was 'gnat task .to 'educate these" people And to; assinii,- 'ate them' into Canadian 'citizetishlp one that must not be Overlooked, but gently. He has, been .working .in that 43rfor some time, and,..whilgtgoing down ati.adt one niglet last we4, he . ,..eyas' held up by. two -armed plugs. "Joe".did not inimediately respond to their, „dernand to, "come -across," with the 'result that he was kneelced down, find about • $10 was taken , iron,' his pocket: He was then ordered. to "beat' it."°While the afinir was. • re- potted le the pollee:along with a goOd 'description of the :robbers,. no arrests have yet been mdie." • flere aricl Tliere (26) ••4„ . • •• •;° .--,.FortiVive years • of faithful ger-. vice •to . the 'Canadian Pacific Rail - ay were honored recently ',when. George A. •Fowler,„ former lumberagent of . the company, was. pretient;.. ed by George Stephen' freight 1traf- ' fie. manager,. evith-a ' purse of contributed :by, Fowler's ' col- • leagues ' the railway'sfreight which :must; the faded. We must be , :traffic offices east of 'Chicago in eareful'in the, selection f the • the United State.s and, east of 'Fort 'ant in Canada. , •we bring into. the Country, and pref- erence should:he- given ----to -- British born, alibetighthere are Many other peoples in Europe wife 'make excell.- :eitt citizens. . The ereetionof good_ ,eitizen8hip Was easential, •and he .paid i high . tribute to., the preachers ,and the teacber5 of the country for the Work. they :are doing: along' this ling. ' At. the, conclusion of his remarks A eearti vote of thanks Was tendered ' Mr.:Campion for his 1l1tf'nrnatjngad. dregs biliest President C.:E. Brien. • .4IIFIELD UNITED em..101 NOTES 'Afee a long intereal, dee to • the mumps epidemic ana stormy tieno,. the .Haelteit 'League eterteda- rant on Thursday night' last,. with it eke attendance., Note was made of he continued sickness: of .the, Presie :fent,. Mig'S Tillie Sherwood, end' .a sympathetic , Message from the Lea- eie was sent .to her: • •• _Suitable -mention -Wes enadeateeach church service on Sunday by the pas- er .of the 10th birthday of our grand Ad nian Of the, United Church of Ianada, 1Ir Banal)* who is a mem- )e,- of the Zion Chnrch, and is.' still .learty and welL ,Prityeifel„conside cration was given o4 him as the con- gregation sang •"HoW, firm a founda- tion, ye saints of' die Lord" • „ The . pastor, e on, approaching ,the ;heine of Isaac Andre* on Sundey evening after the church 'serviecs of the 'day, overheard 'singing of gate a amber of voices with tunefulness and in theartYnnison, of the time- honored hymn, ."0 Godour help in ages past." On .being received in the house, he found seyeral ei .the Oen and quite a group of grandchil- dren gathered. round ,Mrs." Andersen, the old mother, who ; tyas receiving' leeogThtionof her ',88th littriday-; in this One becoming Mintier. The old, 'lady looked well and lupternety hap - 'naps are being :,made 'for another interesting debate on the, Circuit This 'is to take place af,:lla:ckett's Church on Wednesday evening next, ; under the auspices of he Leafeue. „ The sub; ject of the debate is: 1"Resolved that the stated policy •fted program of he 'United Chtirch-of-eanada-ittoonrn bitiOus for effeethte results and re- tention" of fundamental nnd central thingin 1ibir`Yeligibili-1ac.,rMrs - 9eo. Lane- and -kr. E.,O. Zinn areeto take the affirrnative. The pastor arid ,Andrew -expect / take. the negative. 'argtiment: Other fea- ture s will make tis meeting a very ,interesting one .Mr E: G. Zinii was appointed, eldei at the Hackett Church on the.firit ballot A the congregational Meeting' last Sunday, in place of Mr, Thomas Eerguson. .;••. Morning servieo, at Zion,, Sunday, Oi niedit.tiethosit tit. t e eearei,, 010 "tell Old 10 tits:quiat sash 1 Fergus. -A special' train • of 36' care left for Vancouver and points el! • route the other day with over 11,000 consignments of washing machines, and barn equipment This trainload, the • largest of its kind ever to originate in Canada, Irene ' * a Fergus firm and was handled by the Canadian .Pacific Railway as a special train, stopping at Fort Wil- liam, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Calgary, Edmonton and other centres. :Nearly 'all therconsignment*.were for rural. Communities. -• Immigrants are beginning'to..P9ur through the port' of Saint John and . Montreal' en route to Ontario and the West: With the arrival of Canadian- Pacific ;liners Montclare and Moanairn recently, in the neighborhood of 600- settlers of the best type have been distributed. Among these were British farm. laborers going to selected farms under the scheme of the Canada Colonization Association, and reanY, more will he coming in during the next fenv months., • Teronto:-In accordance with his -promise to Western Ontario - tobacco growers, •lHon. W. R. Motherwell has appointed,a commission to 'in- vestigate all phases of the tobacco - growing industry, for which two of ' the commissionefshave already been named. The probe will extend to I:every phase • of the industry, from. seeding to marketing, andorte of the most important features will be the effort to ascertain the best method' df operating a proposed co-operative 'marketing pool. • ' . Port Arthur. -Eventually Canada, will produce a 1,000,000,00,0 • bushel - crop of Wheat and will have no diffi- culty In finding 'a ,' market , for it. predicted Hon.,T. A. Crerar, Presj- dent :Ind Generali Manager of the United Grain Growers Limited, and formerly Minister of Agrieulture for the Dominion. Referring to the development of Western Canada, Mr. Crerar said there was no country in the worldwhere so great a' develop- ment had taken place in the Past few years and there was no country , haviiig such great possibilities. , In order to meet the increasing. ' popularity of the Canadian Rockies arnong tourists, and:Also to 'aid in developing trans -continental travel, ' the Canadian Pacific 'Railway .will run a quintette of trains across the • Dorminion from Montreal,Toronto and Chicago to the Rockies, Van- couver and 'Victoria ..,„tfils coming summer. These trains will be "The Trani -Canada Limited", "The Im- -perial'11-the-TorontozVancouyer---Ex., press, and: "The' Mountaineer" and "Soo -Pacific Express" from Chicago. The Trans -Canada andthe Monn- , ,taineer will be al-sfeephig-cat Vancouver.-"Maizie," the famous - 'White -Leghorn- hen- owned by the University of British ! Columbia Tann, officially known as Heil No. 6, :the worlds champion layer with 251 eggs .111.` a`. Year,:is, Proving A,:,sub- • stantial revenue producer for the University of British Columbia. „,..kast year -the sale of pedigreed peeltey Stock from Maizie returned to the University $2:225.• Two of her 'atielterel fetched $500 -each when sold to Ohio' poultry raisers, while another cockerel Sold in Ne* Jersey for $300. The University • receipts en sale of nStligreed, Briti8h Colum. Stook totalled 47;224, tor Ott 1,0314, ..114b1.6 $.> hOuld_ the. -be-deeper- and--bnen:;-i, look 'engrir,.evTaP it -:n asoft rag , Beaked in olive or other Oil:" On . no aecounti try te'remdere pieces Of burnt clothing froM'h, Wound, as this °should. only ,h,e. done` by or, under the direc- tion of • a :doctor.. : '; • Another 'Coitimon eceident, 'CinShed• fingers or hand through a banging 'door; or so forth. ;The best thing to. (ig in a ease:of:this kinil• is. tO improvise ,a splint by ;folding a - paper several times and ',bandaging' the hand with fingers extended to the paper, and the debtor •exainine One never.; knows wthee a `small bone may be fractured: • . , Sprains are also eery eornmon •and also • shead: be 'seen by -doctor.• Merely ,bandage the Sptained, ,part ,arriitY. • If if is. the. ankle 'don't waste tiine removing the shim handage eight 'over it. If the sprain isenet bad "Apply. :old 'water to prevent concus- sion and then bandage firrnlYi Then there are little troubles -Catised. over,excitenient :such as nose4ble•edinge. Po not step this toe inickly es it relieves tice overcharged eraine :Make the child He, down • and if the bleeding" doesn!t step after 10 nina,tes;,', make °•the patient', sit • up With head back and alerts , straight up. Apnly-d.celd objeet'tO the nape. if the neck and anotherto the br'd eT&-thenese. On no account lean 'oyez.. Anything with the head 'elovvn. sciipcq, REPORTS S.' NO. 4, Ashfield and • February; •-- F. Firdayson '.P FinlaySon Mckendrick. 51,!k; • K. Bass 47*;c'. MeDonald 20*7 • . IV: .ct116'hie McDonald 60. Sr. III: Ji; MacRae , 84 :L. MeDone -aid 787' L MeKendrfek 371.- ' . • Jr. /II: J. Finla sn82 11' xMcKen- zie 53; q. McKendrick ...II: S. ,Finlayson; F. -McDonald; D. MePon4id. D. McKendrick. ;., • , Mckeniie 29:; Ross A. Buric*olirgs; F. McKenzie 20. - Primer: K. :Finlayson 31; K. :Mc- •Kendriek 27; E. BarkWell 22;K. Rosa' The following were promoted to Jr 11 clase--.11f. MacKenzie, L Rciae; ,A. Bark*ell and F. McKeneie.' ' (*) Missed eXaMinittions.'"• : e • D. 'MacRae. . s No 3,' West Wa*iranask- Pupils .exainined ni Grant Arithe' ....itcrature, Composition. . - • . 'fetal 490, Hon. "300. Pass 240: Sr IV John Foran 334;• Cranston' 300; Donalda ,McDonald 240; MM. 'Purdon 72 (in grain,. only). ."J IV Cltlie.Durnin 101 (in 2 subjectS); Harold Pewter 40 (in , 1 subject). Jr; III: Jean Purden (absent from : ,St 11 Examined in .Liter..., Oeog., Corepositien: ..Totill" 300., Hon. 225: Pass 1$0,. Joe •Foran ..1.99:: Elwood Feeder (absent from . School); ' , • Ji 11 Bele •MeAlejOthr 222.e. .Ila Fowler: 155; . Ernest ..Durnire (absent from school). ' Primer: Helen 'POwleie: fait; Helen ,Difxhiti, absent) Noon roil 14.- AV. att., SS: " Archie T. MeKinnek. EFFECT ••. OF •'",PROBEIBITION. ON LABOR . , The United. Presbyterian of Pitts- burgh, gives a very telling exaMple If _the effect, Of drink in industrial . en- torprises' Which ,ertiploy ntiniliers of of workmen, and the change for the :better WM:oh prohibition hibtight a. Ma. It sayeethat "Hitchcock- and ..Tinkleie the men whobpilt.,the cele- brated 'ivi(if,rt Tunnei ,fltreugh., the tontinentaleDivide in • Color,edo, de - 'elate that the'Werk would have taken six Lo eigbt".inorithalonger. and.woUld,, have east at least half a million dol- larremere had it not been- for • the eighteenth anierelinent .161 the Consti- tution. eY"--draw a jirivid-Pietti re -or ,he difrerepee'betWken their great .1a-bor.-cables ...before arid since bitten. Before, it •cittneinto:emedtnitu of their Workmenbetanie drunk on • Saturday and remained se Several' days, and then 'Were unfitted Or work. TheY testify, •Ahat. camp conditions have absolutely- 'changed sincc. prohi- bition came; into and that. they •are-! now required ,to furnish 'better and cleaner Bunk houses and have better, sanitary facilitiesthan formerly." Th tha end it Will be the Sober 'nations, - who Will lead in 0,0 Taco' for Who- htsprImodys. , • ••••,• eer 444 r - • . . .... . ... . . ., • - .."----, • •efer • • ,-1".• ,...,....:IteoL. ...... ' J.:Ifs.' ,„ ..,......• '70 .,-ri r,...,•••••:::70... : • 4'. •••-.*:.• ‘-:....^ • a- -... ,,, . .. lialV :-*** 'et* 'e• ' .• -0,1! x4"•"..s.-e.. al 0.` ,....'‘ k • ' • . A ,,,A.,..., ',.•7•• .. .-, • .-7. di. • ' ' • :... •'•44% .. 47 ---'1” :' . :i.., s, 1 .11D ik I \ ' •' ' %. •Ift: . 4*-- .e.:•.` '-- eti, 1. I ,c,'',., - t•••.- ..k*,N.':. ',,'. 7 .• t ..•',.'',.s* ',-*,,-',`.•„...,,,, ., '111/.1- \ \\\,\. \V\\*' 47It •''',140‘..‘-1/4,__"ie --=,..‘",:;_-=•.i..z.s.,.-• \NC . ' 's.,\,2,1•::,,,t'5,.. -N.,. ,...*.',..-i,'" f'. 4%. , \ , . \ • 4.4 • , • . • . . • • , • 114, 1.11 \ `‘'\\ .• N ?./ '.\Nt ',2•••4..:t. •-••• \ ••••.. V;.-- \ • \\. 'I f .. .' \ , • \ ., \ ' HROUGI-IOUT Canada- t61 Ban: of Montreai is, daily ,oaning funds to re- sponsible f4rtners to assist them in their business, Bilik is at tittles- prepL to advance loans on terms consis- tent ,w,ith soUnd.banking. Established -1817, Assets` in otcess or s830,900.000 T. S. REID. Local Branch Manager.. • • .THE USES OF ,SAL;T, , Apart . from its flavoring prOper- salt can'he Used in many wayS, .Light colored cloth canbe cleaned very satisfactorily With dry salt. The .garment should be laid on " a table or. other haid-an- rfate-and salt -Scattered liberally over it It should be spread : eVenly over the stirfaCe .of the ...eieterial. A pad should then be made ef e piece of linen' foldee'sev- eral tithes,' and With this the salt shatild be rubbed "into the cloth be Inesins: of long sWeeps. Care must be taken net to rub 111 circles, es this Would be liable- te af- fect the surface of the 'cloth.: When the whole garment' has . been , treated the ;salt •should be brushed out and the 'garment, shaken: . 'Salt, too, ;has its use In laundry 7' work, as .a speonful placed in the tinsing 'water viI1 effectually' stop enY "running" o coloi• id., a fabrio, which is ont "itibfast"„ If a handful Of salt -has been added t.o the rinsing water, no difficulty, will , be .,eXPerienced in dryhtg. the clothes -)tit of 'doers in frosty weather, They:. will not freeze aiter. this treatment. For culinerY ,purpeses it has two opposite uses.. Placed in hot water it, speedi' up the boiling; whilst placed• in cold water it lowers he tempera: we'. This is the 'reason it IS used in onjunction with ice for freezfing pur- poses: •, • , 11,1' at egg oraeks during boiling, a. eaSpOonful Of salt ip the water will irevent the White front sPreading„, When removing stains it is always vise to use sirnple eincdis whei.;. ver rids sible. -Salt iS very Useful in hie respect: If a fresh fruit stain is revered inunediately with halt it iIl-gefibrMly.iiiigeth'airthiecoTOting- tatter and A rinse - Will complete the emoval of the stain. • Ink; too,"tunless it has 'titled, Wilt enerally „yield to salt ad lenon uice 'fotteeved by a soap and water One. tan „indeed discever ,a17. t;if.house t.!: nie:tht., atihlp hieltkor 'Salt rn il A burnt saucepan can be restored to whOlenets byflhling t with sett water axiletving it or twerity-fattr eurnt, the taste can .be removed by addieg a pinch of selt. . - When plates And dish4s have be- • •ome brown by being constantly put te het in a hot -oven, the stain can • be reineved by sprinkling,. on salt .and rubbing vigorously with a cork. By soakinge.breoms andi5ruJs in stropg salt Water . before using, . they will be found to last.'mfich longer, :than if not so treated. • New potatoes are -easier to scrape in saltedwater than in fresh. Barnhoo and wicker work .should. be rinsed In cold salted water after .vveshing to harden the surface.' e" ' .To elean a linen blind, -place the blind. on a 'table • and sprinkle with a , •mixtur.eof' salt and powd,ereii bath - brick vigorously, shake Well and rub with a Clean cloth. - 'Salt is indeed an all-round house- hold' thelP. ' • A SERMON, ON TOWN LOYALTY" 7 No citizen is so Peweefel, nond se humble,, but what, his town,is an aid to him.. in , some waY cie other. There is 'where' he, employes his :label* or his capital builds .his home, enjoys the society of his kind and, ip,short;-finds "everything that makes life warth the .• ,Fatlitig to find thesethings the usttelly: gees in search of them. elee- where.. :If. he remains it iS natural : to suppose:Ile has found thet, which he soitht. - • , Sinee, your toehi boosts you, why not do 48 well by it as it'does by you 7 To progress it needs the help * . , of eyery ditizeti, and eery citizenS benefits indiViduelly from eYety"cem- • nuteity,:imprbvementi Whether that impreyenient' take the..forni -of Public. ... w'OrkS, population 'gro.rth, increased . prosPeritY Or business det,elopment_&_.• -71Cro.iiiniunity is so miserable. and -unattraCtive. that it has itits ,hOost. .ers and none .so,perfect it has not its 'keockeri, but. that .city or tofivn Chieves mest f diVic betterment bas the Most boosters. • nowever one should .nof make the` inistaka of • Oonfining his:. boosting- to talking' about the virtues of hoinc town. Direct advertising pays, but the kind of boasting that paYs tha highest divid d aoher and pit- .; severing,. endeaeor of; ilia. knit that 11 ntllk ,hu bteonti• 'lost • biij1 n4 beautifl 'the colemtniity..