HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1919-06-19, Page 44
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THE MOLSIONS BAN
CAPITAL .AND. RESERVE::.._ $8 800,000
Over 100 Branches in Canada
A General Banking Business Transacted
Circular: Letters of Credit•
Bank "Morley ':'Orders
SAVINGS. BANK DEPARTMENT
Interest allowed at highest current rate
T. S. REI D, Manager.;,,
,
Cream Separators
Just a few left at the
old prices. Buy be-
fore they are allisold.
New Williams Sewing Machines will do all
kinds of sewing. They run4light ; are very durable.
'`n • '� •' w"�ieii ' as�
Gotrrlay-Winter-Leeming;Pianos will give you satis-
faction. We believe we'can save you some money ,
on a. piano deal.
W. G. ANDREW,
LI�CKNOV�✓.4
,�1te 0PpICE
• HAMILTON
d
H E . special Government
campaign for the develop -
menu of agriculture 'through-
out Canada will result in a
vastly increased number cf
business transactions. Y o u
will find the. Bank of Haiiiil-
ton ready to give .you the best
possible service in'taking care
of 7lir n%ds-. Communicate
with -our nearest branch office.
K QF HAMILTON
LUCltNOW BRANCH --J. A. Glenne, Manager.
iCilitkiWUI
* ttflutt
Published every 'i'httreLi" tt ruff le •
at Luukttow, Ontario,
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.i
_ and Editor. ..Y,.r-' •.may
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•
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pet year. -
muttons $1.00.
THURSDAY, J UNE 19th, 1919.
SYMPATHY, FOR.-PZlM:i1�ALS
`' -'throughout the night before 'McCul-
lough, the Toronto murderer; was hanged
a large crow l of more or lees excited
l . the vielnity ofethe
people gathered i n ,.. ,
jail, no that the police ba i to be on
guard heat ten attempt should be' wide
to ..take the condemned man from the.
death cell and set him at liberty.
The crowd, of course, was not made
up of the sensible people of Toronto►,
but of that element of the population
which is swayed, now:' this way, and
now that,.by p:lesio tis arising out of the
immediate circumstances.
•
A number 'of the Toronto daily papers
had been writing. up -the McCullough
case in a good deal - of detail,- and the
untiinktng hid n ade .of him a hers
and of the girl, `'era, (who certainly is
not ae wise' girl, and 'not- likely a
very good girl) a heroine. And these
admiring sympathisers,,were not con-
tinedi entirely to the city crowd
Throughout the town's and villages
where the story was read there wa 3 to
be found a considerable number wh
thought, sotuehdw, that McCullough
ought to be spared; and " they: hoped
that st metheng would turn up that be
Would again escape, or that the crowd
0
would free him berora those entrusted
with the carrying out of •the laver {whom
some would about as lief, see hanged)
about(' perform their unpleasant duty
Ttsis "sytujiithetic;" pi.sstou-Swayed
crowd cannot act with deliberat ►n.
they crave satisfaction, not justice; and"
their. beliefs' and judgments are based
' upon ituwediute fueling and not upon
feet nor evidence: eller different cif-
-etivatanees,-�tlie ert+atd which, teirruund
ed t!le Toronto j ml,, and fife rrA.k nd�
' roughee-r:he'cvisntry, vetiuld ' 'constit
-ute a lynching mob. All would depend
upon hew the case' would hatipan to -be
presented to -them. If- the t'hurderer's
victini. chanced to• be a- child, a woman
or some popular it'll of the hour, they
would hang, or burn nurse' suspected
person without trial. •
There is a god deal -in an editorial
tiote which appeared in the Glebe. It
sat i, " T he. »mash which collected around
the Toronto Jail _Thursday night should
have saved. its cheers for real heroes
There art plenty 'of them.-
The
heta "
The plain truth about ,McCullough is
et he was a aorthless au.l dangerous
llow•. Conttderarion should be bad
r the men whom he killed, and for
hem-ieees.woul• not be. safe- if
eroee" such -a9 icl ulleeigh were psi'
:tte,i to go at large.
McKIM'S DIRECTORY
Shows Cbssgeii in the Publishing Fiel
1'tie ta►ni►dian . Xewspee er Directory
.for ,1919, jest ilsued by the publishers
A. Mckim, Limited, Advertising Ag
es*' of Montreal, T, iron to.
aod"_London, }.&inland, indicates great
activity ire_ the publishing field during
the met year.
'
While t ,,number, of daily- papers
published in t91 i diminisbe : from 135
to 1 6, due msiele to :he effect -of the
hiQa cost .onewsprint.- the total butn-
ber of. Canaiien publications increased
fries 1.4411 to 1.e.e'. Fifty•fiee .new
weeklies have arisen..during: the. Mast
SCHOOL REPORTS
d f 8. S. No. 5, kl N r.co s
Sr. IV. - Charlie \I orrieou, Isabel
Chesnut.
-*ether, the eittiatioe *eremite ..p2
cif tile Domion.
McKim Directory witli the eiere thee
deserve CAtitlo: fed to be impreseed erith
A, eeepiete gazetteer of reety teem
and city- In Canada and Neuf sundlaed
1
" MacKinnon, L Are
!Smith, Peter Mortis,. Lola MacGillivray.
Jr IL -Ruth MacKinnen.
1. -Stuart SfecGillivrey.
Jtoleeelleien Swan, Katherine Mac-
.,N,Tma Carruthers.
.Se•Primer-LTed *Murray. Jins Mae-
.Gillieray, Alex Smith. .
Jr. Pruner -Elizabeth Rati139)11.
Ietende.: for lest w4;ek
iog_her VACALloa at her hetes here ,
th
fe
fo
THE GOVERNsiENT
reeentalf-hed a' chance to learn with
whet centemptuous indifferetire he is
interesto Are conipetetion 'rite nose
.. According to a wri:er in The Ceicaip-)
.canned foods -vegetables and • niets3,-
when war operations suddenly ended.
oee weuld think that in world
whsre there is ,ee..th h veer the
*noes bete week high c-ist. -eepecielly she e,. -yet
spendine a few' days with frietids in
•
gepresetlei as being "in a• ,egindary as
te• whether or pot the. supplies abotild
he dumped on the mearket at the risk of
demeralis,ne business
os every efts ce deek and in , every bosh
.1111111 library.
•
4
Of .0. erehsouud, sleet Satanisy at Silver
troable in gettine rid of this excessive,
supply of feehd. this to tie "ceilectiee
witese
TWO *tar Melt' fifty: ,jfli miffing this
Oi!
11111118111d Meth rind these along *lth
uitllione of cans of vegetables were sure
to deteriotratb, it was ifrotidseti ter offer
some of the stuff for sale, but "the
*fatil . Misfit'' of the
United States siecceeded is having the
Wieling* withdrawn by the te i•erter-
maater General t►f the army." The agile
of this large quantity of foot' would
have lowered prices, and the Cauuers
Association didn't went that done
That "the people" iu whose interests
the government is supposed to be car-
ded on wanted cheap food • .wade --tee:
difference. The "Canners had their way.
The canoed food was not only kept
orf the market, but worse was' done.
With the cessation of war operations
and the coming of spring the _soldiers
were being given (reil vegetable*, And.
we niay Suppose,fresh, meat seal fish:
Now- here). was the War Department
with endruious quantities ''of canned
goods which it could not use and dared
not sell. It anted not look well to
milli the food Tutu the sea, au the fresh
vegetabtee- were cut off -Trow - the - army
ation and the men who had fought for
he honor of the country and the safety
o . tlia• world, were given the canned
es+-because: 'th, Canuers'-Assaciat u
id tn.; �s amt theertr .anted goods' 'sold
the public. The people might starve
and the soldiers be badly *fed, but the
recious privilege of the causing comp-
nieS._ to:. charge hie prices and wake
moue- millions of dollars must "nd't be many ".matters : they disagree, and to
support a tariff of which they do not
d
r
tf
to
a
tI1M� , llhd Vit, f'�mar thi.y Nt;Tr1 -tr : i i�ttll ti !n lot 'l:t4tylt fiv 11' 11 ali!1
tildes, blit dislike hint, they have de- WO *18 fgebntly remedied tL?&$ I k
cided tp support Mr. White in gettin
the Budget through parliament, thout
it is not s free trade budget. As al
three men are equal in abilitya nd sin
cerity to any which we have in parlia
g little incident arising ()tit of tie, itftete
h the war trade with Roucuania..
11'. d feature of the Clloadien. protective
- tariff system is that when a manufac-
turer of cloth, for example, imports his
went, as all are Liberal Unionists, an
all free' traders, it is interesting t
observe the reasons which actuate
them in their preeent stand.
It is said (and it is likely true) tha
some time ago Mr. Crerar proposed;t ha
there should be no reviaiuu of the tariff
up or down at the present seeeiou of
parliament; and it is understood tha
hes was prepared to remain in the tiabi
net should it decide tc proceed in that
way. His view was that as the present
government "had been formed to carry
oU aver work, it should confine itself to
that d•aty leaving such a coutroversal
matter as tariff revision until detnobil-
izetion was completed.
Such revision of the tariff as has been
inadc 11 a been downward, ttelStr err.rar
-would want it -"be, but the revision is
not nearly so sweeping as he would like.
Evidently he wanted a whole loaf or no
bread. Should all who believe as he
c . 'rggf►rdhng,-trade matter, tarThat
st-and,: the.government would be defeat-
ed, and an election would be necessary.
Evidently Messrs. Rowell and Calder
are more compromising and are prepared
to co-operate with .nteo with whom on
d
raw '
u material -='his yarn --on which there'
d is an import tariff of 25%, he. will, if he
can show that he sold. the cloth made
t from such yarn outside of Canada, he
t allowed a rebate tut the import tax
ttf which amounts to practically the eh( le
t thing. Get the idea:' When a menu-
- ' facturer sells his goods outside of Ceu-
ada !ie will get back :row our govern-
ment the money he paid for importing
,the- raw e i ' uded an rikekin bis
goods. that enables him to sell his
goods cheaper to the foreiguer than .to
the wan at home: C►
The Cacadian w,e,putacturers of cot-
ton and linen clothes receive- bigo_
-front euuianj if they bought their
raw Material -their yaru-1n the Vatted
,States they w,ould have their tariff
taxes returned on proving that they had
seat the el w,Rouieaia. They . had.
been working: for .;the home trade and
getting their yarn froth --the 'Dominion
Textile Co.-aconcern with headquart-
ers at Montreal. There was no duty to
pay on. yarn bou,tht from the Dominion
Textile Co., but the price charged,b_y
that company was as high as the price
of yarn bought in the United States
plus the duty. Rut the duty on U. 5
yarn going info the cloth for .f► .►imania
would be returned; so the cloth manu-
facturers decided to buy in the. United
States. _
But the Da ftinion Textile Co. wanted
to supply the yarn for this big Rouman-
ian trade'. It could dams only by cut-
ting its price. And it aide some cut.
It had been charging. 71 cents per.
pound for, yarn, anti in order toehold
the trade it cut the price to 54 cents per
pound. It is safe to assume that it is
still making money at that price; but it
is snaking something like one million
&flaw a year less out of the people of
Canada than it was ivaking before.
The case goes `to •show utost clearly
that the Doti'tinion Textile Co. and
other concerns dealing in yarn did not
eeeerthe protective tariff at all in order
to get along reasonably well. It needed
the protective tariff merely to enable it
o Nue, ze extra millions outoof _ the
Cacadfan R.earera of cotton. goods. The'
,
interfered with'
POLITICIANS DISAGREE
Three of our parliamentary heavy
weights had en interesting tilt in the
House of • l ontnions last weak: It
developed in the course of the debate
•
on the'lludget. ,
It will be remembered that Mr. T. ' A.
Crerar. who represents a Saskatchewan
constituency, resigned from the cabinet
because he did not approve of the
Finance Minister's revision of the tariff
Not only did he resign, but he spoke
strongly against the -Budget as Mr.
White presented it. IIs spoke for the
grain growers of the West and wain
tained that there shoiild be a much
more ample scaling down of taxes an
its. rte, es cull
po pe y upon farm machinery
and food stuffs. Hie is said to hive
made • a str
en$ debatng speech. and
One of.tie a..:.- -- of .,__--_ -- ., �.
entirely approve, rather than break up
the union of the parties while the
couutry is still_iowinally• ac "war and
.
the army not yet demobilized. -
Mr. Rowell's criticise' of the stand
taken by Mr. Crerar was rather severe
cowing from a friend and .►dmirer;, and
Mr. Calder intiwated that Mr. Crerar
had endeavored to make a, hero of him
'self by giving up once for a principle.
But Mr Crerar could not very well
ha+e done otherwise. He, will stand'
higher in public estimate for taking the
stand that he did, while there is little
doubt but that Mr. Calder would have
better served his own interests by re-
fraining from harsh criticism -of,/ his
°western colleague. A convection of
Grain Growers at Moose Jaw has... sinct
unanimously passed a resolution com-
mending Crerar and condemning the
action of the more politic Calder.
BEAUTIES --OFA Mawr,.C TION
made the position of the Gaverneient
from which he had joist withdrawn seem
rather unreasonable. ,
Mr. Crerar was f?llowed,ley Hon J.
A. Calder, an able and astute represent-
ative also from Saskatchewan, and a
member of the cabiuet; and by Win. N.
W. -Roaell, president of the Couucil,
whose ability as a debater is- well
tne Uniou Government to see the war
ou May Be
Skeptical
.0 so -DISTRICT JOTTINGS .0 S
. The home of Mrs. Itabelle Gurdon, and James Armatrong, eon (if Mr
'fee/4liter, was the. scene f q iiet and %Ire John h'. Aemstrong, Were
wedding on June when her thug') married at the home of. the bride's
• ter,' Margaret Josaie, Wit.1 III trri .1 to parents on June 4th, Rev,- .W. A.
Ur. John' F. McGee, of E _‘‘," .0/an Bradley, of Teesweter, officiating,
ding march. - Cu'rose.
els -Grerdou the !,••re I- oil the groan's ell OW 501 et)I1,
Mc. Wm. Clare, owner of othe 11.. thgL a. recent aftereoon 4.U-theses/in,
eswater flour :was put to OD delyerine laundry at the home of
bursting of the flume leading from the that une rooni was filled with smoke
datn:T.to the mill. The rush of water and on •investigatien be found tho
which• followed the- hreak threetened hydro Iron was burning into -the wood
at one time undermine, the funnda on which it was resting. Nnt knovr
tion -of elie-etnill The water. had to. ing the comliinatioi1 he -called in a
neighber end the power was soon
turned :off, and the bosed taken ont,
Aide.- A -few minutes metre,- InitiVe We' ,
and the teeult, might. kiVe 'been clifftr,
the iron and heine .c.11ed'awny foe a
About What Dr. Chase's Nerve
Food Will Do for You, But
Here is the Evidence.
When the blpod gets thin and
-.watery, when the 'nerves become
weak and exhausted, when , your
vitality is run down. and you reel
weak and tired -it__46—__because
nourishment is lackint.
You may be elating as usual but
your digestive ',Potent fails 4o ob-
tain front the foOd you 'eat the ele-
ments from which new blood and
nerve foroe is created. •
Beeause Dr. -dbases Nerve Food
sup.plies this element to the. blood
-dUld nerves it is the moat stiecossful
of restoratives..
While personal experience with ak
medital treatment is the only ab-
solute proof that ft will benefit
you stiii. we are all similarly con-
d4stittiounteLd an: what will help one will
help another under similar Pon -
This is 'Why it is so interesting .to
read the experience of other people.
and many will find in this letter
their own conditions destribed..-
., Mrs. Thomas Williamson. 'Pleton.'
. Ont.. writes: -For the last twenty
years I have had trouble with sty
nerves. I euffered from sleepless-
. nese. and, of course, my System was
often' in ar•-Turr-down condition from
nervousness. At differept times
when I would hire severe attacks
was under -the doetoi'sr care. but
this only gare me temporary relief.
Twice WWI to a eknitariurn 16 To-
Tonlo. where I secured same relief
at the erne. This past surnmer I
suffered ftom another nervous
breakdown. and it was then that I
commenced', using Dr. Chase's Nekve
rrredJcine and czn new gef up in
the morning and AO (work. which
lir a somethieg "Could 'not do pre-
. Decals:Se I tasked to get.
strange?y confused. Ify appetite is
rood. knit I tan sleep well. too .
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, t cebto
a box. a full treatment of bouts
for j2 13. at 'ell them or' lidnies.
ass. Bates & Co, Limited. l'ersatia
•
flume built. .
declined sinoe 1869, 2eeell or 343 per
42 per cent; Huron since 18;9; 19 271
';',Qr .'33770 oP:r_a9cepnet_r;_ 4; e;c.neia;.f.01,....Ata. eriejote.gc;01:67ti;
sicie 1672, 11,925 or .3.; per.Cent; 1 Tnere is fetich lam ntatfon in the
'Durham since. 1671, 9 e20 or 40 r I villaire of Peisley this‘ see er oecir the
cent and Nortbumb-r'and since 1871 idnesth!retteptlia,-.,en-of ,t,hh: ifiralenAtnabutiil,duinog,. leTei:k4
?1,46456 or 34 per cent.
iraErx. egeinstitv..erirumparfwove_&Qheefiet:,,31aitret, ti,‘.18,!aeli
'metered beiiiiTilided on cars arid
7 building is heiug torn down and the
:Ile Hstini 11 iase, Paisley, .was the
tesrinie, awe! the ,eld hulk head the _
ine4t hotel in western Oetario out
first -of .1ast week and a new _bulk
side hf the cities. . ft was built, in
wirbiali7ela:rits.h7lilei:vaenalrre'Pe-it:;engd2ii:;:ujltrh:.1136:it-i'61.51.7.:'F:i; .1'44.15'br)P:dii71;,citlerir'iw,rn°ghtt:eien late bevid il inlIA,
aiwslae: raiingdiii;exIpteeettiot,ti‘Untit:ef
';'''''')'>-) aill *i 1 tak a rn in.rtiet.,tt4 :e."1:1,;* 14;4;00), but it did net proven paying
tied the folleowing: About -a hircdre-tilicti?(Hlice,iien.,w' ii.t.:12,:ietil::telYeaar-8.511dr.teir.,--44-i00,141.74::.
Brute fermiers will leeve *eilkerton
its,(boo. t: Food it evidently prove,1
a ottiwth.fAtiiiiity strft;:vive\ICA' t rut; p.ti tri:itri:u(s:t.or,leo.' ,ii. 441 Ifit.Ild :ati. :14*`;:_.1f"aiti, la afnu; wheeil tC1 :tit it i tatil,4:1
he ties ri,Ae s',Id it for screp for about ,
es's' Club and all tit: preleilient 4}Sire
born heeesiers in the Ceenty will te e 8 t,•=00. When its destrazei m Wa>1 I
4ild. preerve it. The wrecking
Burengton aril ether pent., reLere
,firm wanted Se,204) but th.svndicate
iDgmt,i1:0iWa.s:licarervv.,n 7.Tbia:srplipt,r):Ligl.t.:
James Th:nipeoz, 13th C re, Cu'rees to Pleas.' w‘Jr.}1 to P111 ihe alleutnild
>; t la 17, i'i'(lt5 !!t'1' I1,:+1lati !; Iii,t,11 � _�
tail"` rhttbltd lit Ttitt! et/filial-1 liany Id .
.t:litttt t ft►r yaht eleiletel to part wily- ' '
the workiugtnan'u- aver cost s0 iuw h
tains now than they did'before the war.
And the same remark applies to all
kinds of cotton and line» clothes.
And it explains too how fluwe men
are millionaires and 'athei•- men have a ''" ---
hard
�—
hard time to keep food and clothing in
the ouse. & -
""intra-, ,-++�►
•
Newfouedland to Ireland by. acieoplatee
in an unbrokeueffight proved succeseful.
W. Brown alighted in Ireland on Sun-
day morning after a 11.'ght of 1G hour*
:gild 12 Minutes from 8l. J6ho:
World wooden; coMe quickly tbose
day" - In its way -tbere .is nothing in,
men. To Britiehere there is a .degrce
satisfaction, not to say pride, in the
fact that the firat trans -atlantic flight
had the distinction, thtough the Wright
Bros. of producing the first succeshful
heaviet-thau-lair Hying machine met
France had the honor of piodueing the
man and-:machtne to fir3t fly across the
Eaglish Chant:it-A. The teat of Alcock
and BrOwn is not likely to be sunpasieu
for some tittle; but the accompliehniente
of science and invention have been such
in the past few years, -that one hesita•tes
to suggest a limit to:what may be done
in the way of flying within the next
decade.
The experiences of Alcock and Brown
In crossing the Atlantie was. not alto-
gether pleaeant, and their escape frool
The fate which overtook Hawker ited
Grieve was not by a very wide margin.
Fog and storm are prevailing conditions
over the North Atlantic, and though
the airmen waited lorig fer fair weathsr,
they encounteredlit good deal of both.
The distance from Newfoundland to
behind is 1,9(10 mike The mathine
started _with 81'0 -gallons of gasoline mitt
50 gallons of. lubricatiug oil. Only
&bout two-thirds of the fuel Supply was
used,*so that a much' longer flight mieht
have been made. It is not unlikely that
distance is greater, -weather cenditirms
are better.
B USINESS AND SOCIETY CARDS
out.. insurance. Vire and Marine.
1. U. O. F. Lueknow Lodge meets every Friths)*
evening at 8 0' 'lock in their Hall, Camp-
bell street. All brethren cordially invited.
Officers :- Noble Grand, W. Macketszic;
Boyd; Fin. secy., in. Paterson; Treasurer,
e Thur.day night on or before the full
thoore, in the Masonic Halt. Havelock street
-J. NV., Jas. Boyle; Seely., W.'
NYAL
stairs in Hutton Hoek. Toeswater. Speo
ial attention w.f.:old plates, crowning and
bridgework. .% kits Wroxeter let. and 3rd.
Wodnetainy of 01101 month; ltorrie Thur.
Lucknow. Ont. All . modern
Crown and Bridge work. ['Medea* exi met-
bi the use of he late.it, .silnplemt and
safest remedy, SOMNOFORM. Newest
thing in *Official teeth. Alutaluma platsed
nen breakable
TinsTnithing
Eavetroughirig
Furnaces Installed.
All kinds of Tinware
promptly repaired.
G. Drinkwalter
•
•
WANTED
iie. will give
opt ensile test 1'1'141111 autl
cash „
fair trial., Wo *slur.
11i tke attr. nit lake Oar
non givE you ell-
•
The Seaforth
Creamery Co.
Sealorth, Ont.
•
mge
-46
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