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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1919-05-08, Page 5fr 0 a. Congratulations, My .Daughter, You Are Looking Fine! t. why shouldn't= I look well after using Dr. Chase's Nerve Food?" "Is that what has made such a change in your appearance? You were so ..;pale and thin, I was rather anxious about your health." "Why, I- have gained fifteen pounds, and I feel so well, too." - "And you have such a good, healthy color.- Your blood. must -be rich and red." "I knew you were suspicious of anything that our 'doctor did not pre scribe, so I said nothings about it to you.„' • "Well, I will not have any doubts about ' Dr. Chase's 'Nerve Food in the future after what a healthy looking girl it has- made - of -you." • - rte.. relit - - "Yes, and I feel so differently, too. I was so nervous and irritable that I was .:.. very y easily annoyed - arra upset. Then' I. would have those fearful nervous head- aches. I3vt, thank goodness, . that is all over, and I know what to give credit to for the change." "I am very glad you are so well again and think I)r. Chase's Nerve Food a very valuable medicine, *since it' has done you so much good." Miss "Gertrude M. Burrell, Clementsport, N.S., writes: • "I Iiave used Dr. Chase's Nerve Food with splendid results. For a number of years I u iv.?'Kli,-f,•A wJth. ase.rr�gf••rnnr..: y . _a �f., a;;o had a complete, break¢ewn. I had no control of my nerves and had terrible hysteri" cal- _,spells. I could not sleep, had ' night . . sweats, awful dreams and nightmare. My physician gave me medicine to put me to "..sleep every" night, and another kind to taker every two hours during the day, butit did not seen to do me any good- only while I wax taking it, I -never, really expected to -get well. Reading about Dr. Chase's Nerve Food one day, I gave it a trial, and the results from the first 'box .encouraged me, so I continued its .Use,. and found my nerves getting steady and stronger. My appetite improved and I gained in strength. • ambition-. and flesh. Now I am able to do considerable work. and can highly recommend Dr. Chase's Nerve Food as a good tonic for the whole system." • • (Alonzo W. Daniels; J.P., says: "It gives me great satisfaction to vouch for the testi- mony s hi. Y ,:.... Young, lady and the benefit she I,as received from your wonderful discovery.") Dr. Chase's Nerve Food; 50 cents a box, 6 •for $2.7.5, all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Ltd., Toronto. ,On every box of the genuine you will find the-portrait.and sig- nature of A. W. Chase, M.D., the famous Receipt Book author. FAKE OR*IN VARIETIES (Experimental Farm Notes) Each year many farmers are the vic- tine►l of plausible agents who are selling ao called- new varieties ' Making ex travagant claims they -charge o corrt's ponding price and only too often • the farmer who naturally desires more peo• duet.ive varieties if obtainable, pays an ext rlatant price tor A stlppreledly new and prolific Rort, which is either an old variety cantoutleeed• with a new name or else a selection whose qualities are entirely -unknown. Being divisible into clumps, these -agents and their claims can bet grouped conveniently as follows: Firs, those who take a high yielding. prolific variety such as Banner or 0 A.C, No. 72 oats, give it another name and introduce it as a new variety. Second, those who are selling a var- iety that has been multiplied from a peculiar`eplaut or from extraordinary heads found in the general crop. 'I''he producer thinking it a valuable variety, offers it for sale before -its qualities' are known. - Third, these woo are offering for sale to " a few - l}I ited --, eu#onters only, - a- wonderful variety that was produced by a secret process of selection or else bas been grown from a few seeds found in tt e tonihs of the ancient l'haraohi'. A fourth clays might be made of those ho sell a variety for whet it is, but r ake extravagant clainra.for its yieldin 1 ility. This is well illustrated by the • tib OPPORTUNITY for Retail Merchants HE next few years will 1 mark a tremendous chane' in the busing of i' tailing. • , Motor Transportation,, now reduced to a low-cost basis, gives retailers a great opportunityfor busi- ness growth because it widens their trading area. The Ford One -Ton Truck makes available this opportunity. It is Motor Asch typic hate ,tfio f'nct :•, A, Cab Transportation at low cost witnt,Itwo-e�sy wirsdshiPldwhichyi" lost..«,ft rot rot t, f icer meaiei se te'rurnee cost, lou) operat- See thesi eompkt;ttrucks. Seise the ing cost. opportunity to enlarge your field of busi nese. Let es *ohs your- deli very A small outlay will motorize problem, Priem (Chassis sole) t Staedard Ford Bodice �r *tetra. Got oar sties your deliveries and open to you the opportunity, .for" business expansion. Complete Trucks —Two Standard Bodies Ordinary hauling and delivery work can be best adapted to two standard types—the Strike Body arni the .Express Body. These two body types are kept in stock ready for immedi- ttie delivery. They insure the maximurl efficiency from the Ford Truck. $7E0 f.o.b.' I-ord. ';'nt. E. A. Renwick Dealer Lucknow . The " ()Merle!' Malt Co. have sunk another well and are enlarging and improving their p!aeit. (commencing May 7Lh, Sea.forth merchunte will claw. their stores at 12.30 o'clock aurin; May, June, July and August. J. J. Merner, on, has s -,Id- his ley Tp., John fifty acres and other: • Mr. D. C.. Rose,, of Br ussels, r•ee e►,t1v received 21 rose, hushes sett from Ireland. by hie son ` Dr 1., "` Bose, who is servicer with tette ar there. • W. II. Fraser, M.P.P. for North Huron,. is baek on his fern) after at- tending his first se•ssiio,r of the Pr (i&- Legislature. Ile says he had a busy and interesting tine, kin the Private Bilis Cnn,nittee, Railw and Standing urge, s 51.P.• for South Hur- 100 stere farm in Stan- Turn,er bought eine (hear- Koehler the W. A. (sewer, ::,wh a ut'1 tu: sed fmirr California to ,.-tosu business in-BruyseiK, received avoid ~1 week that his wife who remained the south had undergone an oilerat and, had passed away All way, .01141 Mr. tereeta/`' *etc, -his family California. Y. hest week there arrived in Brussels a packaeee.of letters and a- Christmas parcel • vehiehh had been addressed to Sergi. Jack lithantyee, France. Tire. pateol h:-tdl been sent•out by the ladies of .Brussels, and failing to reach the oldier, was returned to,tliwm. Ttie sweetmeats were still ia goo,' condi tion. TIE EXPLANATION Nature placed the growth -pro- moting `vitamins" in the oil of the cod-fish—this explains why Scoti'sm S1 is so definite in its help to a child of any age. Latter-day science reveals that the "vitamins" are needful for normal growth. Soett's Emulsion will help any oa/ld grow, Scott & Iiowue, Toronto, Ont. 19-2 THE GIPSY TRIBE The. busy Hardware }Iotise Phone Sixty -Six for Prompt Delivery. e"r► a The nomads of the countryside :have !its taken to the great out -of -lows agsi c, end wan%leriug gipsy caravans are,scat nth tiered here and there along the si'deroads by the . tri veiled highwae s, a positive sign of spring. -• "` " The lure of the lend h u s►:irred their ;; on b'ood with the coiningof spring and they scour the c-suntryside. 'Their ays tiny tents, their covered w•tgons, and their poorly -covered horses are familiar,. if ,not-"alsveys welcoined. .eleotteeeieuseeet re the pea' tree 'rural' !lactic:Ape where the. roe' est' i"n. ion e - Well with their piet;�srt;t�, chaisttg, iau F1`c u , in at the constraints and restraints of highly civilized life. And all through -the winter the precious thoughts of the great out-ot-doors •were with them as a beacon light to steer` by. Then, preparations all completed, they bundle all their earthly possessions. into the wagons, . Ind men, women and numberless children take to the road *gain to live on their wits—or anything else available. And the rounds of horse= trading, bickering anti .dickering, for- tune-telling, and what not, commences—to carry. them thro►teh the invite/ summer months without, sowing or reap- ing—and, above all things, with a min- imum of labor. Their picturesque .encampthents by .the wayside are entrancing to the passer- by who secs the ready adaptability .of the nomads to the peculiar life they lead, and ' %etches the tousled kids as they -play about the wagons,. or wander oft into the sh tae of the wakening for- est, or even 'risk (?) their lives amongthe knobby, crippled underpinning of, the horses with which'their elders com- mence the season. - On a bright, mild day the free, ,un- trammelled lite cif the gipsy is a charm- ing thing' to contemplate. But on a closer ac piaintance; such as the farm house atiords, the glamor frequently dies, and while hen houses' may , not al: ways be locked on their approach, at any rate a feeling of relief is felt when their caravan rattles its nomadic way' over the crest., of the hill, and newer pastures are naught. The village of Blyth•has undertaken the tret:tion of ;: f'nisii , Hail as a' memorial for the fallen soldiers. A _subscription campaign is under way, and is making 'good progress - A list of subscriptions published, last week'. amounted to $4150..00 There was ono knbscription of $150; six of '$100, one $75 and-fifty.twwo of $50. The first lake freighter to arrive at Goderi le from this upper- lakes was the steamer Sarnia, Ca pt. Pyette. Being first ship- master to bring his bloat into the harbor, Capt. Pyette was tho recipient of a hat from the town, this presentation being a Custom of long standing. TheSarni t brought a cargo of wheat fro;n the elt Wilton, at Fort Williatn. On May let the Goderich butchers resumed the delivery of meat . to their, eustorners, thereby- repro% ing a griev ance of which the housekeepers have been couiplaiuiug. Tate butchery cleitned that it wes inipoisible for them to secure a jTer•son to do the de tivering. It is said th'tt realty people / laska or seven -headed wheat. d .The agent in the first case is a finan- tl cia l shark who is of taining money by F false pretences ' He perhaps does the le ist harm qf any beyond,_,the confusion o created in the nomenclature of varieties fe and the money which he takes fmm the M farmer.. 1 kr Ire the -second ease she agent air be W iscontinued the use of meat rather ian be at thetrouble of going after it. Charged with. bigamy, Ernest W. itt was arrested recently at Toronto. t is alleged that Fitt, under the alias f Ernest W. Burton, went thrrntgh a rm of marriage with Miss Jessica cLeod in a Toronto church while towing that lie had a wife living at it�y taneeeontee Ile -was- mat Teti in Norwich, England, in 1904. Fitt is wanted in Wingham for wife deser- tion. • Rev. Father W. G. Good row, who recently returned from overseas, where he ser-ved as a Boman Catholic chap lain, has been appointed to succeed the late Rev. Father Ctimtnings, .of Walkerton, who was killed in a Rail way accident hear Galt last January. The appointment, it is said, inay .be - only temporarily, -but it is generally conceded that he 'will be given a r- rn nent appointment later. acting in the best of faith and with the conviction that his claims will be justi- fied by the resulting crop. Perhaps they will be, but the varieties are legion that have been introduced in this way and have been found worthless io comparat- ive tests with standard varieties. The third agent, though, is the real • out and out grain fakir and should be liable to prosecution. The farmer who is deceived by his pretences almost de- serves to pay the price of hip credulity. It is the righeof any person who.has multiplied out a selection of grain to sell it for -what It is and charge soy price `16 he sees fit. Agaloet these well-inten- tioned, legitimate• transactions we have noteing to say beyond warning the farmer that at beat he is likely only buying an old variety and that exceed- ingly few of these amateur selections are ever of value. What is advisable is that in every rase before buying a variety that he in- tends to grow as s general crop, the farmershe‘ild consult the'reports of his nearest Experimental Station. T h e remedy 'for the actual frauds that are pereetrated is in his own hands. As long as he will buy the agents will sell, and the effcr'ts put forth by the cereal - stations of Canada for the improvement of eropi will continue to be partially frnstrated, A SIUNNIN0 DEMAND t From The New York Tines) Ficin a suburban town where the domestic problem seemingly threatens soon to • become. insoluble comes a tale that deserves thnughtlul altter,tion. As told -it. reveals a colored maid, opt long acquired •or particularly .etticient,. but highly pai& and even - mere highly valued becatise 80 hard to replace, say- ing to her'mistreat' the dreadfully fam- iliar words, 'Fin,going to leave.' im• passioned demands for explanation of this cruel purpose at last elicited the reply, 'Because you have hurt my feel ingeee -And thew,- *T 4rrrthrr Dub- lin, mane's grievance' was brought to light: "When your son came' home from the war last night you didn't in- troduee me to him. Ile has been' fight- ing for me just as much as for you, and 1- wanted to taut to him." To -the theueleful this is much more than an amusing story -and the wise will not -de- cide " too hastily that the maid'] griev-, %ace was out a real one or that her ex- pectation' were presumptuous, PJBL1FF—D1MI ,T.—A happy event took place in-Bluevale on _Wednesday, April 16, when Miss Mary Agnes 1)i ment, eldest dau•ehter of -Mr:and Mrs. Harry Dimetit, became the bride of Mr. Alfred L...Poereiff, of Wingharn. The ceremoney seas perfottmed by Rev. Crawford Tate. Mr. Possliff will take his position as Principal of the Wing - ham Putilic School after the mid- surnmer holiday and Mr. and Mrt. Posliff will reside in Winghatn. Rev. Capt S. E. Mcliegriey, 11't C., lately returned from overseas,, was ie. ducted into. the charge of St. Paul's parish, Clinton, Thursday evening of last week, at seven o'clock. Areh- 'rieacon Richardson ' and Rev Canon Dunne hail charge of the induction service's • Capt McKegney was bx,l!ii in $t. Paul, Minn., of Irish Parentage. and returned to the north of Irelandrtimer when a child and receive l itis e(lucatien there. lie was trained as a :atelier in the Marl- borough Stre'e't Training C'►Ile!gt',, ub- lin, and. afterwards taught for some years. .Before coring to Canada he was for three years Assistant secretary of then Church, of Ireland Young•Men's Society. ;Capt Mchcgney's thesolog- ie•al. training was received in Huron College, ',intim!, and his first' charge TeTsttrTrt> was tTitt of incuinl►ent of `.+t. Dever, C' rch, London. Liter he was ap- Psi ted curate of St Mark's Church, Parkds'e, ainik still later re'etor of Trinity Church, Iirantfoi(1, t. Abram 11.►wrttltl, of Brant Township, •d.l•ivered a 11s►lste'iu hull on the 'Walk- erton cattle nor ket last week which weighe.i e310 ibis. getlel for beef, he got over #250,00 for the animal. to%elle p iledi s;ncit .bar. thaw' Tout. ' All t'hiou#h the winter thee nc,uia,ls •had seclu fed thetuselves in the cit -y. and enriched the life of .the -congested centres The next -to -nature life of the gipsy in the summer months is a natural one, but it is existence- without productive labor, and therefore is freedom at the expense of (or the labor of) others, of which nature furnishes many examples in the animal and vegetable kingdom. CHURCHES ADVERTISING' Wonderful changes have came e,rer. the church with respect to advertising. Oce of the ablest magazine writers hae been_ Making -A-eaovass of -the growing importance of advertising,. and he as- certains that &-ernrrlmretively recent convert to advertising is the church. The Messiah Lutbera-n Church of Phil adelphta is given as an ex,imple. From its conservative stage it branched out and used newspaper spice. window cards, ' nd bill -posting. When the ad- vertising began the membership was 215, but rose to (i06. The Sunday. had only 175, but grew 510 At Cedar Rtplds, Ia., the First Christian Church doubled its Sunday School attendance in two years, The Warren Memorial Presbyterian Church of Louisville, in s f four weeks' 'Qewspeper campaign, in- creased its Sunday night, attendance from 1,00 tct b00. It.is estimated that there are 50,000,000 People in Canada and -the United States-- without church' affiliation, so the possibilities of -ana1y tical chnrrh adveitiming are4arge. Newspaper advertising is declared to have been the chief factor in raising 840,O00.00o for the Presbyterian Clutch in the United ,States. --Winnipeg .Tri- bune. Kintail- Following is a report 'of the Kintail Women's Institute for the year ending May 1, i ent Ile *stew —t;lance on band includ- ing intert•at, $1'i 77: from Ashfield-C'oiitt- cll, 8400 00 --- 0 17:xrr:Nn►Trt:L -_t)r' 1i'd tos,e work, 41:►-'►1;-,1►,►n,ctinn to Canadian Red - 'r►ss, $100.00; Balance nn hand, 02.'45. The '2 'l5 - The following is the velrtatinn by the Ned Cross Society in God'erich upon ¢*axis received from tee % onier,'s Instit- ute, Kintail. 178 }►airs socks, $ee ,0o►; 17 `l•;rench Attirts ' aQ 15; . l.}�' .. , i _s-__. - `;, ; •parrs .(K'IiCR, t!, ut); 51 field shirts, 153 00;' 4s Billow slilrg, 24.00; 7 la lies' shirts; 17.00; donation to Canadian -Red .Cross, 100.00. Total gy:►; ; : Fifty►• tiro Bair sf seeks - were sent overseas in parcels to the bays - Met,. iLtit:$r' 1►11Cttit. l'rve Ii , ~t'c'T-'Frear. FOR PROTECTION AND -ECONOMY ARRY out the economy idea In the paint you select --do bot uN "wasteful" paint. choose one that lied civeringcapadty-aaa eztretne durability. We have the right paint to use for economy --your boli** painted with it this Fall, will stay bright, looking fresh and resisting theattack of weather. Use our paint and you will avoid re; ire and save money.' and Mops These every -day • household needs, are especially necessary to properly complete the Fall house-cleaning. O -Cedar Polish - - 25c. to $3.00 size* O -Cedar Polish Mops, two style. - - each 12_i9 e ha>n�dle Lithe, Prepared PJ aster Cerinent ' 1 Cleve a:nd Coil -Spring: -Wire, Woven .Fence, .and Barb Wire. A Full Line of Builders' Supplies 11 NIcLEOD & JOYNT � The Store Where Your Money Goes Farthest 11 Specia ' e napes the difference � Trarii n g between, the low -paid worker and the high -salaried e P g expert. _ �'��e c�►n smooth out the road for you, froin the. one class to the other. Students.adtnitted any tithe. Sehd, for free catalogue. i (..---`-" ifjor WJNGI4AM, ONT. #// The school that places its graduates in good positions. D. A. McLachlin, Pres. Phone 166 , Murray McLeish. Principal. WINGIIIIM, rinci a:- Cream .Separators Just a few left at the _old prices. --Buy-be, fore they•are all�sold• ,New Williams Sewing Machines will do aII kinds of sewing. They run fight ; are very dtirable. Gourlay-Winter-Leeming Piano's, will give youiiatis- faction. We believe we can, save you sone money on a piano deal. W. G. ANDREW, - LUCKNOW. J Garnet Aratstrong, Druggist. What Will You Do with the Interest? When you cash -in those Victory Bond coupons on May lst exchange -them for their par value in War Savings Stamps. Your Country needs this money in these days of readjustment and recon- struction. The purchase sof War Say- , inks Stamps is an easy 'way for you to save, as , well as a patriotic duty. War Savings Stamps can be bought wher- ever this sign is D displayed. War Savings Stamps The Easiest Method of Saving 1• „., -� [•'”. rb. ,�u•. r .n.At„ '_per •/� �_.x" .Rr 4 46a1110.:'16.� - - - t 4 4