The Lucknow Sentinel, 1917-07-19, Page 4• we'
*mimeo outing
*eau*
_.„,,„it,„..0.. immess
atkopeosa Ornamaa
A. Pio Move
oM *Mem
•
••
4.
Noialtikat=
�Tm.
, Rose.
Dental
Q. POWL.Ipo.J. D. S., Othos up
tolea.2Aek r"swathii. sr,g
vwc.ittitht=1.1 zed ara.
at each Gerrie aloir„
G. flurk NEWTON 1). 1). Nat.*. °Mee
eit-frnM
strid &itld3Pworit. Paint** traot-
vr, Omanteitemaii modern
by the ass or the *.t.eirepiftat, and
saasedy, $30.1iriut Newest
la tooth. AinnAtaa platted
Fall Tenn from Sept 4
CENTRAL
j //
STRATFORD. Oal
Coonsaarela.1, Shorthand and
Telegraphy Departments
We halve thorough courses, exper-
ienced instructors and we place grad
-
meat in poeitions. Denumd upon us
for.trained help is many times the
number graduating. Get our free
catalogue.
D. A. MeLACHLAII. PrIncIttal.
Lucknow Fruit & Produce
constsemy.
• WANT CREAK
We test each can and pay .for
it as received. Got a can and
start now when price is hiih.
Highest Cash Prices
Paid. for Eggs.
Call fa tout sea us when
fit town
LuchnoWf4rui0i.Prodice.
C
-,4toyakt Maack ,(11.;$1.1, G.101illan! Mgr.
FR.'I3k()
Studio, Lucknow.
Open Monday, Tuesday and
Vednesilay.
Mk" is the time to have
that 1a.m0F Group taken
while they are all at home.
GRAND TRUNK RAILWAY
SYSTEM
ATTRACTIVE TRIPS
.0 MARTIN, Agent, Lueknew.
Iihnne 2
TO:
MUSKOKA LAItSS
ALGONQUIN PARK ,
JKAGAISETAW^H RIVER
LAKE OF BAYS •
KAWARTHA LAKES
.GEODGIAN BAY •
Kounditip tourist tielrete: now On 'sale
from. etations in Ontarioat areie low •
tee-,:etfteAtle..11;yLe'skaiemeri..7.--=2.1e
rnttt
*g.rt4 Ir APV-edie0
'Berth relervatien‘ and full. Information
at all Grand- Jerre*, Ticket Offices, or
'Write CB 1ORNINGJ Pisttict Passen.,
ger Agent ky. System, ,Toronto,,
Restraint
My heart was Alled-with Billingsgate,
And on my fiery tongue
A scorching flame of hatted e •
And of fierce invective hung.
• X longed to tell the country.
Of ,ray party's wrongs and woes,
And to crush beneath a load of scorn •
My party's hated foes.
But I heard a try that, stayed ma
A try from the shore* of grant*, '
Where Grit and Tory aide by side
Have stemmed the foe's advance.
.rwas the try,from the"stout battalions
The sweat in the thick of the fight;
A. cry for support for the firing line
That conquered ini petty epite. -
And I swore by the land that bore me
That no bitter word of mine
Should. delay the help that is called for
By the boys in the firing
That with charity to all nay race
And bitternesa to Whit,
stAnd behind the gallant men!
Who stand bebind t/Ita gun.
1
*amay iturasotturreost.-T• 1661~
ar mast arttala. a•• year $1.1%, six
ho .roweeikaartVioria. Tear
wyVenPO4ts
vows mesa. paid ia arrow irate
* ala pia taw Motor.
immtheantresi W160 Wit° metre Tits bleatinel
lif masa will eenter a favor by au -
=lurk. ia at the aset at as early et dam. se
Wham aliases of toddrage IA &wired, both old
mei th• mew &adroit "bona b. shrub.
Adreetteing Bases.
DOPLAY itavitiavatoon Itarets-.41.ade known
•
Omar Alowarh-One insertion 30c; three
eartioce 81.00.
Farm or Real ',katfor wale 50e each loser.
gon;Miecellaneoei ArtIcleit For .klela To Itent•
wanted l.00t, rowed, eta., eack insertion Mo.
Local Readers,. Notiowe, ete.aeo per line par in-,
torsion, so each aubeenusbt insertion; epeobil
rate of Se to regular display advertisers. Card
ot maraud ofetuoininot xvoutki 80 and 80, Per
line. no notiee tete Weals°. Lava advertnung
10c and 50 per line. Auction skim. brier notice
raw^each aubeequent insertion. filack.fe.00d
longer natio. 10o per line for Met insertion
1114 wont 3 naps for 1.
AsYsiwial the Oka al wide Ise*
PeatalarY Weald elegy lesivideid s Wiwi& „
dos, t• be cessidered u advertisteatet and
charted accerdirgly.
nuaineee Verde of six lipor and under $6.00
Per. iear.
-
THURSDAY, JULY 19th, 1917
THE SOLDIERS' PENSIONS
The petitions which the Canadian
Pension Board is allowing to privates
disabled in ilie war is likely. to create a
good deal of diseatisfaction.
Take the came of Pte. Dai McDonald,
who had the. elbow of his right • arm
ahattered, rendering the arm almost
useleea, Ue ie allowed a pension of
eight dollen. per Month fora year, when
he is to,preserithiniself.for re-examina-
tion. hollowingthie exaMinatien,' "it
may be (supposed that the pensioe may
be increased,or decreased : The chance
.an increase, however, is not very
bright, AS thearm is not likely to become
lese useful than it is iiow:
How the Deardeame to the conclusion'
that eightdollers per menth is a fair
pension to 14 Mall With a: disabled right
artn it is difficult to say, but to most
people it looks More like an blankthan
a reward. With tha, coat of living as it
is, eight_cioliars. per month will. leave, .41.
Man deperldellt upon his' friends or on
public charity unlese, he is able to
plement it avith'it fair amount of earn-
ings. 01 course, a betii with a good
left arm can earn something; -especially
if he hari a buithesatrainirigekit he has
capital With•Which to start -a- businese
that he can Manage; but many of the
boys Wile enhated during thee.first year
of the war have neither business exper-
ience nor capit,al. They wee just be-
AdeeintIife The 0841k4:that.y4th-an
arm.o ieleggoviti or the muscle's Of the
back destroyed ahd weakened, they find
theraserves in a difficult position'. • With
a pension of only eight dollars per.month
these men Meat gc selling shoelaces and
leadpeticils of beg in a more straightfor-
ward war.
•
Itteeme to us the aim of the PensiOns
Board ought to be to ate that the :vim
who fought in the war are not put at a
Permanent disadvantage by the wounds
they received-thatis, 80 far as repara-
tion can be made. There are cases such
as the leas of sight Or of two limbs, or
paralysis and many othercasetifor which
anything the nation can do wifl. be but
poor compensation. These sufferers are,
in 4 measure, like dead who have given
their lives for the Country. 3
As there is a° limit to the earning
power of the nation, there is a limit to
what can be done, for the disabled _sol-
diers, but when One sem millions thrown-.
away on such an insaneentermisO as
CapBorzJiam??,,f•e'S-„,
o vityoiiiveinfthoinand unfit nien
1
•
lili 1.JUS,NOW 31114 1 INEL
ot the war, imy be Neighed by a ilee
of not more then tea thoumaid dollars
or imprimisent of sot more then three
park tot both.
ileum Ooldn$aa, the well known max -
&tilt agitator mad netrieey welter, was
the first to incur the penalty. The
judge who dealt with her ease showed
no leuiency, but imposed the maximum
punishment -a fine of ten thousand
duller* s.nd three ye ere in prima. Miss
Goldniae ham for many years been a
dieturber of the peece in. the United
States, oppmed, apparently, to every-
thing as it ie. She knew the law aud
deliberately challenged it, advising her
audieuces to resist the Military Service
,Lew. Being in outstanding character,
the udge 'evidently thought it m well to
make an example of her and titi show
her kind that there is to be no nonsense
in the enforcement of the ]awe
We have ne &area Goldman Can-
ada, but we hall be surprieed if a numa
ber of those fiery gentlemen in Quebec
do not get into trouble.
FURLOUGHS ran HEROES
An efforb is being !Dade to induce the,
Militia Department to grant a furlough
to the Canadian soldiere who went to
Europe with the Brat and second con-
tingent% These Men heve had' long
and eeeere service,: and it -Would be
eery Aka thing indeed if they could be
greeted a Vacation mid a chance to -some.
home for a time. •" •
Such a prospeok'however, can hardly
be looked for. War knows little lihnian-
ity in its treatment of men. .Everything
that Can be done to win must be done,
and the veterans of the first and sezond
contingents are now Valuable • men at
their:UAL:40-rd" twe or three Who 'are
new on the job, Beskies, ,there is the
prciblem of .transportation. ,With the
submarine warfare ab the height of it'e
destructive power Andeliipping facilitles
taxed to their 'utmost,we fear the prole
peet of giving the veterans a holiday
and a trip home are not bright. . - •
THE CflISISIrjGEy '
There has been much said within the
past week about trouble irisioe.g the
governors of Oeiniany.- There has been
treeble'-all right, for three of the leading
men have resigned -the Chancellor, :Who
, ia.next in,power-to the kitieer; the, Min--
iater'•ef Pereign 'Affairs -and the Miniettn-
Of War: It Was in earthri- u.ake`all right
Which shriekthesatflitials out, of . their,
piece's.; 'but whether 7thilt change ie for
good or bad there is ni5 baying. •
We think it .unfortunate .iliat 'there.
-should 'be -Strife intong-thrheada
departments in Britain, France,- Rusem
and our own country' while the success-
ful prosection of the war demattds'
unionand harmony; but the strife .in
the couecils of the Allies have been he
worse' than the strife it Berlin -perhaps
not as great Carl 'Ackerman, who had
excellent opportunities to know, tens es
that right from. the 'beginning of the war
Hollweg, the chancellor, was at logger-
heads with the army and navy chi*.
The ruthless methods of the army: end
navy got the Foreign Office inte all sorts
of trouble, while thechiefs-were 'rawer
• done coming the Foreign Office eir its
delays and ite premises of good conduct.
Brutes quarrel among themselves as well
as With their neighbors. ;
. The resignation of the three ministers
is Che outcome of 'a three -years' euarriff; -
TO the Allieii it is a good sign, it
things were going atAll well in Germany:
-the*Ieliders would not be fighting among
themselves. •
uest to keep the
Unitcd.8tatkieetiatheltttOettir.s,41---,1:.
undParmythiehrinsistedupoti*k policy
which brought in the new enemy. The
fighting chiefs started the War with th
idea..that they'cinild "fick ‘,theworld
PntAiA44.41.1-±11_ 54, f Them.
after -they have post the country 'several
housand,dollars each, one cannot kit
Milk that the economy Which stints the
disabled itoldiera is misplaced,
It ie likely that after the wttr the their insaility.
matter of adjusting the soldiers' pensions
Will be up at almost every session of ' SAVING FOOD . . ----
parliatitent. -It is hard 16 -belie f° that
the country will stand for a scale of The city newspapers have been more
pensions that -will not keep the disabled or leas plainly hinting that Food. ()on
men out of the poorhousei. troller Henna is going to arrange one
ENFORCING Ali/ table bill of fare for us -tell usowhat to
'TAR,/ EERviCE,, eat, what it. ot to' eat and 'how much.
0
and they are not yet altogether enied
• One of the cuts, tor extOnfilei is to be le
ptovides ifevere penalties for
. thcge enly one meal Per • dale -end we are
Aol bIt it' Cenedien C°1'ecriPtien meat We are to be asked to eat meat
who seek te evade tue law, or *he by'
•
expected to scale down our eating all
spokewor written word may incite others round.
te. dieebq .ebureel 18 4 very This doesn't look well to folk all their
necessary feature'of any military irrvice lives accustomed to the exereise of their
bill, as there Always is in every coutitry own sweet 'wills; but after all 'there is
an element who will object to Military no privation nor hardship be the re-
serViee and who will object to almost. strainte proposed, Ihetuits; basing their
any measure which the government will• statements upon experiment and Hun4
take. ongli inforniation, say that we all eat
The 'United 'States military seri;ice about one-third too much, and that 'most
bill provides that parties seeking to bring peopfe eat too much'. meat. Both here
about the defeat of the aims of the 'bill and in the United States grestnikihmis
Pr any Way obstruct the protoutlow–teput-opow-the
• . 1Ni%
HOMEISEEKERS'
EXOLIRSIONS
41;*
*; 14‘• t41..
eklfgrvig °
4r,a 1,41
.APOlkht.
MAY Sth TO OCTOSIR Seth
Every
TU ES D.AY
'Al. RAIL" - jso by "
THURSDAY'S STEAMER
"Great Lake* Routes"
Memos NavisailatO
Your Future ishi the West
• Th8 fertile prairies have pot Wast•ii
Canada ()kale map. There Ars still.
tbousatuts or *ma waiting for the awn
who wante'a hen* and 0(0.0srity„ Toe
. winstsue nom and trawled*
Canadian Pa�lfic
W. B. HOWARD
xisterigFis.71Pm,
PROFITS
east of 1..ivins Comailssion,r Submits
Report on losscon
11••••••••••••
Startliag revelations of the money
made by packing concerus in CAUSOI
luring tits past couPlsuf Years, won
hiriginst•i;lotautboreporby
ur
rtpree.eW.
F. o.c
totoh:., ,
nor, Cost of Living Commisaioner. A
"nutria*" of sores live niuilion dollars
last year on haven alone is declared
to be the share of one company. An.
3ther big company which shares for
the most part the bacon monopoly of
"cued*, is reported to have cleaned up
• *bout a million and a half.
Mr. O'Connor nye: "The basis or
•a monopoly in this emeraodity exieted
before the war. In 1914 the two
companies exported more than half
the total bacon exported by Canada,
Their control of the bacon situation
has been much strengthened since.
iu ion the , two companion together
SOld a -hundred and forty minion
pounds out ,of a hundred and fifty -01W'
million pomade gold by all the ewe.
storage companies in Cauada,
tilbly no more istrikieg ,example of a
monopoly of any one commodity can
be cited from the records or any coun-
try supplying the allies with feed.'
Mr. O'Connor', report deals geom...
District Passenger Agent, Toronto. ally with all commodities handled by
cold -storage •companles, but he pays
Particular attention in his deductions
to the aperatione of the two biggest ,
eompanies,
• In lele, the year when bacon prices -
soared :itatnit, the first company ex-
ported 95,00,000 pounds of bacon, out
of a total Canadian export of 160,000,-
000. The "margin.," according to Me.
Mr. O'Connor, in his report, *Ms _
the term "margin"' throughout, and
'does not specifically designate this. as
ruT:c:Lenig:tri:nrgovifia6t48.,8568°,500,c04ealt*- Per Weed.'
1.4
The total bacon business handled
.by the company last year is -estimat. •
ed at a hundred million pounds, at an
average margin ot 5.05 cents per
pound. In 1916 the company exported
57.000,000 pounds, at an average mar-
gin et. 8,67 canto per pound, , the total
business of the company aggregating
some 41(4' An,illion -pounds, In -1014
the company did •a fourteen -million-,
pound business, with prelits averaging
6.06 ,cents per pound.
• Commenting on the increased sell-
ing prlce. agd, margin of profit last
year As compared with 1914 and 1910.
Mr, O'Connor says: "There is no 03Vi
deuce of correspondingly increased
storage Or other„ costs. The margin'
of 8.67 cents was suffcientlr satisfac,
itnorynain6dr profitable. hie' in. 1915. Why'aoL
• "Margln” Is the. _difference between",
tiro cost of food laid down in a ware -
house of a company and .the 'selling
Price. It is obvious that a number of
charges have,. , to bededucted from
"margin" before "profits" will be ar-
rived at. •
NEAR RIOT AT MONTREAL t
and efficiency expertS are -pointing out
numberless ways in:which thingi--food
stuffsincluded-are wasted by our free:
and,eaey methods of living.
So all that is proposed at present ift ta`,
bring us up, -or down, to fir commoneiense
way` of living-. • 'Mimed of Ifiriug to eat,
-
We shall be Wight to eat to live-4hat
le, to eat suchthinge said such quantity
as wzfl maintain us at the highest degree
of effieiency, instead of eating to gratify
taste and appetite ,
For more than a Year the Germans -4
especially the poor in 0erMarer-have2
been held down to pretty slim scale Of
vying. Hundreds of thousands have.
:!aeell atAcnip,kitelieuE,
g -t Maly a rather poor stew forlea cents.
At first the farmers claimed the right to
kill and consiune..their own hogs and
cattle, but by and by the food controllers
put a stop-to'thie.- 4 18 said thee the
rich, knowing what Was emniree• early
had away large stocks' of staple foods'
, •
and are living Well..
. There, of course,,will be plenty of food
in Canada for the. Canadians; and Much
t0 spare, and the same is true Of the
United §tates; bet almost unimaginable
quantities are recieiretl to feed the Alhed
armies in France. That is „tbe point
thatjs empire:de:id ahd the reason for
the'emeomizing., '
On alesubject of economy ' "Ceneer-
.vetion!' for ;JAY, has the tolloWing;
"Canadians' sliould no 'Consider . that
' 1917 will be the only Year that rigid
economieS must be practiOdP There is ,
glinovring at this date when the war
will end, and even after it has ended
there will be urgent need for 'Canada's
surpluenflood-for many AnOith's wliilW
4tirepe is being regenerated!'
C ULPOSS COW -CI L
• , :Teeswater, 3:14
Council met to day Following" are
the minutes: • *
Arrastrong--MePlierson-That we ap-
point Jas. Thompson to let the contract
of graveling the 20th, sidercaul, con: i 2, .,:the escortor tbe Pelice °dicers end of
,
Mayor's Anti -Conscription MeetingProvided•491triet. EXcltement.
Mayor Martin's denionetration on
Fletcher's Fields Montreal, on Sunday;
drew a big crowd, anxt was almost rd
bponsibin for -rioting. Pining the
course ot the meeting an -incident oc-
curred that, but, for the interventic1n
Of pollee officers, might. have ended,
-in---serlous-injurrier-Liblit:Col7"1:715.7
Rexford, -who was in civilian clothes,
and a, soldier of a leighiand•-teinforce,
iment eompany.-, As It was, both were
htistled by the crowd; and When they
had been placed on a street car stoned
were thrown at the car, breaking. the
Windows. A crowd of about 5,000 peo-
ple broke away frothe main body,
and the harangue .of Alphonse Ver.'
ville, 51:.,„ to chase after Col. Rexford
and the soldier. Neither made any "
attempt to run from the mcib, leaving
• only :under police Orders, and under
Mayor Martin. •• • •
-• .A remark made by. cot Rexford'
during; the tour,* of Mr. • VerVillell-
speed,' precipitatedithnLtrouble: The
latter had _.temarked that ..tnern_were
-nianY
the amount granted last year, 850:00.
parried. „, •- -
McPberse.'n-,,Arnistrong-Ihat .)amse
Thompson -be appointed -to - investigate Canadian soldiers In England
and have the roadrepaired at lots 28 'who were kept there so that their •
and 29, eon. 12 and 19, as complaint
has been made that it is net safe for
public travel, 'Carried.
Thompson -McPherson -That the Pet-
ition -of Thos. 'Brown and -Win; Ruth
and others for the construction .of a
. drain tobe4aownast Ithelkown - and,
Ruth drain, be received and that the
Feeineat be notified to ...make an .
inutintr__-zeth-ertirerio7fie-araiid:,- an
..'tspothere.0-1^0-nr‘ril'auith---14
provisions -of- the Municipal Drainage
Ad.- Carried. • • :
'Thempson-Arinetrong-4That as the
Reeve of Greenock has ordered a culvert
on ,the boundary between Ciiltose..ana
Greenock to Ise filled up, and, as Mr.
Wall, a Chilies ratepayer, has objected
tohavnigat done, -that the Reette bor:
respopd.with the Reeve of Greenock; to
have the,sinie repaired. Carried.
„ Manerson-Keffer-Thet the Reeve
ancL,Tims. McPherson, having examined
diteh and culvert at Iota 17, con. 8 and
0; would recommtiud that, the creek, be
cleaned out and a new 'cement culvert
built as seen as possible. Carried. .
McPherson-:- Armstrong- That the
Reeve and Philip Keifer to exanibie the
road at lot 33,• min. 4 and 5, as there has
been complaint, made that the water
overflows and cawing damage, they to
have the same repaired. Carried. '
Thompson -MePat imie4That we ap-
point the Reeve to have the knish cut
On the 1011i, sideroad,-cen. cern-
plaint has been Made, Ca raeil.'
Reffer-MePherseti-4That 1 12 finance
report as jut read 1 e adopted, and
orders heated on the T exeurer for pay-
ment of the account!, and that we now
adjourn to meet again on Monday, ,Aug,
Oth., or at the call ,of the IteeVe. Oar.
tied, . • °
• .
-vgAt Stitto*/ CIerk,
•
pilysIcal condition - would not be
known in Caritida. •
"It • is not so," came the ri4Plk bi
in3niediately the.,excite.
merit grew. tense.
BATTLESHIP_BLEW ‘IIP
Probably Soo, Lives -Lost ivith H.M.S. ,mrs... Mary .4infileyi.„0-. winihami
Vanguard : - , .... - - .
H.M.S. Vanguard, Catetain....14eLt,,,. ,_.,.vdied at .the ,thiwompenof jray_Ther brother -in law,
ic ,iefirwertreedillirariaiielitiroat the - - -- tit,. in her
•itiglit'ot-7.Tinr: 9' AS thErfe8,0,"..Or.a11.11%,;44,11ryvitT. 4'''.—
le:iTilhaareiehrp46rf:nk immediately' and __TB GooriBeeeilrrEC-Lk.got E. N.
*eh' were only three survivors ,
men. The offiCer has since died. an
oaftrinthneg thoseaboardtiohmipeeart and
time . Letdviabwits bdeen lie town the past week
on e nest ay afternoon wen up
r;
Th..tsda
*
le IOU
tif MOLSONS. BANK
CAPITAL AND RESERVIi 48,800,oao
. SS branches In Canada
-,A Oeaeral Banking easiness Triiisacted-
Circular Letters of Credit
Bank Honey Orders
SAVINGS.BANK DEPARTMENT
Intermit allowed at hitillteet current rats• .,1
T. S.:REID, Manager.
Natiogal*SOrict-
.Positions are Plentiful. There is work and
good pay for EVERY ONE WHO
. .•
This school is prepared to train you to get and hom
a good position..
Would you not like to take the plice in the business
world that one of the boys left vacant, when' he -
went to fight for you, and earn for yourself a
good income at the same time.
We have trained others who are doing this—let us
. train you.
SCHOOL. --:OF COM
Phone 208 .
_
. Clinton, Ont.
B. F. WARD, 11 A, M. Acets" Principal.
.Sclsool Opens Tues., Septcniber 4th 1917i
temeseeememee.
,
A Special in Ladies' Silk Waists
with fancy collar and cuffs at $5.00
White Lawn and Voile Waists, odd lines ,to
clear at Big Reductions
Special quality in Middies at 1.00 and $1.25
Ladies Silk Gloves, short, at 75c and $1.00
Nowis-the Stiff Clotliis Made
to order as Tweeds and Worsteds will
be much higher ht pike.
BUY LINOLEUMS NOW.. Prices are. low
- to what they will be for next season. '
A few Trimmed Oats in the Millintil7
Department at Big Reductions to Clear
..CONNEL
• '
1
HURON Ljny4pr NEws-
There were, however, 24 OiliCeril and. to Walkerton in connection with seine
71 ,men not on hoard at the time, thus
bringing the total number of 81.11TiV01% new work in recruiting, haying been
td 92.* A loll inquiry has been or A • •
tiered. . • . ' -• • .commessiened to secure -recruits for the
19,250 battleship -Van uard di . . e .
tons and her complement be-.,
forestry.divisions which. are needed, by
fore the War was 870 men$1te be the British ;Clovernicient; Canada hate
longed to the St Vincent-, class of .
dreadnoughts and was launched in ing been asked to tarnish additional
1144.1th' 190,9! ' ' '' foresters, Cot. te.wis has been very
• elk BRIEF" OAR STRIKE successful in recruiting for ,artillery
returned to work, e ting eh in. .D.4ew Era tells the following: A few
crease of:six Cents0 all round. days ago while working in the debit)
ie0-4-in,altdl t. okeHrni trei ceckadthelefou r
Toionto 'Piot, for Two Days Men and his new appointment is based
• .
•
6 . i on his good work in that respect: --
.
Afteraheing tor tWO' all GI° eith Star. :
d e •
it half days theors and Motor- -
ATTAC1KED ille' tor.ra,---The • Clinton
Men of thet T Street Railway ...... -
They had &Mended an Increase of 10 . 4.
cents per 0.pferzhotui 30ovteetrtsyhatiectrzedvi ft/ nog
length of eervice, A Board Of Con. .
lifivreslivianohGn. Rttaannssffoorrdd,, son
ao eafttMaeirc.edanbyd
ciliation, is to try to affect d final set- his Jersey bull, tind had a very narrow
tlement There was an entire abSence efiCaP.(1 from keitg.killed by the enrag.
of ViOlente - dttring the strike, as the
company .did not attempt to run ears, ect animal. He 'entered a narrow
.,
'passage way where the animal
A coalition recruiting cOmmittee
has been organized In Australia, tied, and the animal broke loose and
'I'lle tiew Wool clip Of Australia has attacked bins. ' Mr,.. Ransford hung
been rola to. the British Government, onto ono -of its horns and', was.•.tossed-
Tertillulanetinisler"44tar.4041441111°114.40 IS
be-rigli0=-4114 the 0411 until be was flung into
AmeliCiki y r-"40. ....el. - . - - ,,
J
a_ miingor and ,pulled • himself out of • ...
harm's Way. Ile.enftet4 grbittI.Y:,fro!n. •
Shock and bruises and the benes in ilia
left sliouidae are'. broker. For
Teas frac-7
Dien .argti1'thee°
died' at the borne of her nephew,
Goshen tine, $tariley TOwnahi/S,. Mrs.
Jane Wilscn, at the greet age of 101
.years. , Mrs. Wilson was born' in
Ireland, but einigrated...to-this..councerwhile ,-------Lt--
still comparatively youvg and
so lies spent tihnostele.,:ber:`,Iong 10(11
on the same farm on' the Goshen Lino.
Since the death of her husband she
his lived- with her nephew, -William
Poliock, the 'present owner of the term,
airs. Wilson has always enjoyed the
hest of health, being Mile to go about
and Wait on hereelf until some . three
or fOur weldor ago, when she it lase
- had to take to her bed, saffering Item
•
no special ailment, but just a gradual
breaking tip•of the system end weak.
O nese. She posed enietly away at a
o'clock,Stuiday„inorning and the fun -
oral WAS held the follow.(ng afternoon,
being toriducted by Uv A Alcrarlaties
.
A VALUABLB CROP
The Catadian wool elip is eritimated e •
at I 2,o0o,spplpuhda,ofAvool-titis---yeari---
-vvtfielOralling at an average of 45 eenlff
Uleane an interne 0161400,00k
'tar
tit
'