HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-03-02, Page 54.9! •rsr.•
TEE ' LUC' CNOW SENTINEL, / `1UIttDA1*, MARCH i!.,,
Here's..htei x ••*•-r
Longer Wear --Better Value
Wearing rubbers all day is tiresome, but since rubbers are necessary,
• why not wear Ames Holden Rubber Footwear?' Each pair combines
the least weight with the longest possible wear. '
• This longer life }s built into; each pair with . The .tar wi}o designand make:these ahoea •
pure drubber., pressure curedi and extra have been working out your footwear problems
strength 'where the wear .comes. See the for years. Their knowledge -of materials and -
heavy'ribbing under the laced. This is only rubbershoemaking makes ,Ames « Holden
one of the many special .features that iiiake it Rubber Footwear the ,greatest value you cars
possible for us to back up• the sweeping buy. .:• Let us fit you with
guarantee on every pair, .,VI
I3OLDE
VBBEROT
•
Look for the Ante. Holden
snerk on every pair
For Sale By
F. b. MacLENNAN
::Lochalsh, Cont.
•
• SAVING TIIE> PENNIES •
(Walt Mason) :.
It as wise to save the pennies when
• the pennies come•your way, for you -
re more apt .to need them when ar-
A <,, rives a rainy day; and when Famine
comes a -whooping with the cross-
bones ` on her vest, then the fellow
` * . with the bundle has the edge on all
' the rest. I admire the .man who's
saving, 4'f he doesn't save toe, hard
if . 'he doesn't 'think' a dollar bigger
than the courthouse yard; and I like
to :see him salting down the riches
that hes struck, if ::he: always has a '
quarter for the guy' that's eat ' of
luck:Viten ` the . winter cornea upon
us,,,yelling like baseball fan, then it's
`ice to have. some boodle in an ld .t�i-
n 4
mato h
can•, when' there's sickness in
�
the wigwam, and we have to call the
dot •then it's nice to have a • package
- hidden 'in _ the eight-day clock. when
g' Y ►
Old•Ag e, the hoa' • .rascal, comes •a-
butting in at last, then it's' nice' to
-'have-•:-some-rin'bles' that you -cornered-
in the past; and the man who saves
' ' a dandy- and a. duck --
sanies 1s d d
theP y
if ' he always ,has .a quarter for the
r . u. that's out of luck
e • O Q.e_ :
As soon as some girls give up dolls
- the ..::sett-theirjninds"-on-dblla-rs.--•- -.
r
WISHI•NG
•
Do you wish' the world were better?
Let me tilt' you what to do;
Set a watch upon your actions,
-
Keep them always straight,and true
Rid your mind of selfish motives,.l
Let your thoughts be clean and high
you'' can -make a little Eden.
Of the s here yon occupy.
Do
Do.' you wish the world were wiser?
Well; suppose you make a 'start
By accumulating 'wisdom -
In the scrapbook ,of your •heart;'
Do -not_ waste one page on frilly;
_
• Live to learn and learn to live
If you want to give me knowledge;
You must get it, ere you give. -
Do you wish the world' were happy?
Then remember day by -lay r ---
Just to scatter seeds of kindness -'
As ou: asses Sion the •
way;..
Y,
For the pleasure 'of the many
May` be offinimes 'traced to one, -
:As the.band that plants anttor
1--
Shelters •armies from'' the sun_
-Ella.. Wheeler Wilcox
•--•-0 0 0— ,
- -.The .The-F-ortElginTime'_:zePorts good._
d. -
herring fishing . through the ice . at-
-thanlake- port....' .._
• Q
This is the SPACE
That carried the AD
•That gained
the "REP"
•
That made the SALES :,
. .
That yielded the PROFITS
That built the BUSINESS _
That "Jack built.
•
ASIIFIELD COUTNCIL-.
Council' met on February 6th. A11
mem'bers•.present, Minutes of January
meeting read and approved.
Motion by Jamieson and Sullivan:
That `.clads for damages • to car of , M,
Durnin be left' over until March meet-
ing and he be notified to attend,
Reeve reported letting the printing
to the Star Printing Co,
By -Law No. 3, appointing the fol. -
lowing
ol-lowing' officers wasduly passedi- • .
Clerk; .'Chas. E. 1}icDonagh; Collect-
or; G. C. Treleaven; Treasurer, W. P.
Reed; Assessor Jos. .B:' O'Loughlin.
•Sheep Valuators=David M. John-,
sbon, Richard Johnston,: Rol t; J, Web-
ster,. Robt. Drennan, 'Thos Garvey,
sr,, and Archie Johnston,
Poundkeepers-John Savage, John.
Green, N•; G. McKenzie, Frank Scott,
Thos.: Irwin and._P,atrick MQrun.�
Fence Viewers -K. "_ J. McKenzie,
atm; .-J; Tack,- Eolrt; Davidson- 4as
Lane, Thos. Dickson, Robt; Fitzger.
aid; Jot •n _
Finlay's'on; w•m;�Crawford;�.
John McLeod, Jas. Keane.
•School Attendance OfiiceRi
t= i
chard
Johnston, , • • • . '
The ,Auditor's report wasdulyp
re-
ceived'on motion of JafTiieson and
Sullivan_
The foliewing amanita were order-
paid
rder ..
ed paid on. motion . of Jamieson and
S- uiilvan:
F2tVi! MIEN
A. Good Supply of Soft Water a
' Household, Boone
The farmer's rife and . Daughter
1Vill hpprectate It -Location of
the Cistern - Advice Given for
Local• Jnslaliment.
•.(Contributed by OritaArie Department of
• Agriculture. Toronv,.) . •
Lucky indeed is the farmer who
can boastof a never -falling supply of
Pure and fresh water from well or
spring on his premises. Its value.
cannot be reckoned up in dollars
find cents: Another .source,of water
Supply on the farm AS the. rani, water
caugi)t on the roefo of the, buildings
and stored 1n •'large ' piiderground
tanks,,' called cisterns, It i$ coma
Family •called soft water in contrast
to the head water of . welis and
�sl?rings. .. ':
A Supply'..of Soft Waler •a Boon.
. Every housewife who is. fortunate
enough • to have a plentiful supply of
soft water for •washieg .dishes,.
clothes. and • woodwork, ;stood for use
in the bath, knows well tu$w touch.
superior it' Is to, hard water. It
saves a lot of soap, andthe" oper-
ations are More easily carried . out
and the results more' satisfactory.
This valuable supply of water comet
down from the clouds -in fairly• cop:
nous amounts month by, tnontn, ano
• costsuothing except a eimalt outlay,
Probably' 41.50, onei . ru a. i..dtltue
for eave-troughing' and a s,i,rag*
•
tank or cistern.
Over Qutario the average rainfall ,
from April to. December. Is about 2%
inches_ per month, 'and it all the
buildings of an. average=sized farm •
were provided with .eava-trougiiing
no less than 'four -barrels of water
per° day on the average over; tit}'
whole ,year would be' cullec.ed. • The
quantity of water will serve efficient-
ly a Cannily of six - living in a boaa.
equipped with modern. plulnbing 'ilx•
tures. -The only draw'en the well, of
hard °water, supply 'would •.be th•
amount required •for ,drinkinga ani
cooking purposes:. .
•
•
•
ingnarrrs
t Munn's
,
GREATEST VARIETY of Check. and
Stripe Eiinghams shown in years...
Prices are love, qualityonly.the best,
and in any shade- you want. You
cal give us :Cast'. for any size Check 1.L"
3'
you want to buy, -but: Fashion• says
the smaller checks are IT
Samples cheerfully submitted
V >
you THINK.: -.9F •
GINGHAMS THINK 0F. •
•
•A Good .Cisterna Necessity.
To .safeguard against a•- shortage. .
if soft. water •in:,tinnes'of 1lroug.i.
and during, the winter..stasou whet•.
rains are • tc.�irce. the; cistern
ens..oulo
tie large ough' to held a .Wo 01
'three months' supply: . This would
require :a• storage tank at the very
least 10, feet square and, t U f.e.
deep, or its equivalent in different df
, • metier mensionsor two tanks hay-
ing together this capad?ty. it is well
to •remember that •the tans built le -
the cubical form . say 10x10»1.0,,. is
more, economical than- one. of the
same .sine' but •.. oblong • it, . feria
(6,'2-3x15x10) • for ,example. Tht
cylinder forst takes even less' ria
•teria! than the cubical bn. it sea,
,
be a little •slower and, herder to '
build. Sometimes the . battle form
is constructed. '•Either (lee ' cyl Melia .
cal or bottle type isi.
. usually 'bail.. .'
brick laid in a``mitts concrete mortar:
and finally well' coated ort; the ins'i44.
with, a, rich •mixture of cerneut, wet: -
erably super cement, :had -tints sand
:Tile: 1ORlOx10 s ze: wi i lio7f e:2n(
.imperial gallons, orapproxi.a.itelj
-20:0-barrelsa-liraL' b tluils the
capacity would be 1-5 shore, or 7,500
gal Irene - To�btiitii ``tilt cube-a:f lata `_
cistern (1Ox10x1.0) it weulr;',require
'L2 cur -_yds, of concr_e e, .the. walla.
bottom and top being six .•ittches
thick'. ' Using a .1.6 -mixture ,it would
Lake a prexiinate la 18 bart'ele of ce
asst and115 loads of g navel.: For
the .;cylindrical' shape itwould take
-about-ll�:, cu:.'yds.' of material, and-
for•the oblongashape (6 2 3x7 -5x10); •
about 13 cu. yds With a knowledge,
eef F local --prices- of =inweetai.- •and
R. Twamley, gravel, $13.40. Jas.
Lane .gravel, $5401. Thos.._Richard_.
-son; spikes, $2.50, Board of health,
'expenses, $i2,505,. -Municipal; Vorl'd,
supplies, $15.70, ; A. .E. Johnston,
plank, $1&OE 9?, Goderich Star, -print-
ing,` $107.25. D. MCLean,''salary 'as'
Auditor_„ and supplies, $14.80;. Wm.
McCarthy, ` salary as Auditor, $14.00,
Will:. P. Reed, ba'larree-�"-sarlary-and
postage; $31 28 C. E. McDonagh, ex-
penses re . Flynn road, . $8.50. , Total •
75 75
Council adjourned to meet • March.
13th., at i pain., on motion of Jamie-
son and Parrish,
Chas. • E. McDonagh, Clerk.
• Aruna azine-writer:�sa -we:a 1,°h
g Sts i ave'.
our great moments of indecision. Us
usally they come 'between the time of
waking and getting up;
r
Advertisement
\ia
Addressed tithe wife with md, distrait •
Its news dispels her troubled state,:
shows the : rices that she' can pay
It.P,
...:. pin -da;
And where to-�+o-on--shoPP g y
So now, of course, she'll patronize
Those firms whd wl�i _
•
�'nvite to
'Shop �'here'You A>�o � ., Shop
Weekly oil
9ol;ldtl I
. a era•As
Issued by Canadian N eagle �ewap p
r Toronto,o Canada,
Head �O�ce,
POOr01,01044Fire",414/41P4rIeffle4W440411110041.111.41
BEAUTY OP THE SKIN.:
Is the natural desire of'every woman;
and is obtainable by the use of Dr,'
-Chaeo'eOintment. Pimple* blackheads,
roughness and redness • of tbo skin
irritation and ecretnu disappear, and.
the akin is left soft, smooth and velvety.
All dealers or lldmanson, Bates & Co.,
Limited, Toronto, tiamplti free it you
mention this paper.
Dr.Chase's
Ointment r,
labor, it would be an easy :matter to
estirnate the cost of a 6,0e0 to 7;000.
oailou caster n....,. . _.....
rhe Locat ion 'of. the" Cistern:
• The :house cistern may--be''located
tri the cellar, or outside underground,
according ,o-coti.dtttous. •if--the--cel -
ler .be large—and provided with good •
drainage• for the overfiow of the: cis-
--tern, there can •be' noTer"i'ous objet-'
tion to having the cis.terrl•in the.eele
Far. If the' row` of •the house is not
targe enough to egileet sufficient rain.:
water for the water service of the
home, Abe roofs of barns and other
b� ildtngs May be connected up to an -
otter cistern at these buildings and
the two cisterns connected for joint
service if 'necessary, In:this case
probably the beat arrangeminnt would
be to •b,ulld one 'very large under-.
greiti,nd tank, 12 or 1:5 feet 'square
.atad�_10•-feet ._deep, at..a... teint.,.where:.
-'rain' water.., from_ both': house and
barns would gravitate and collect.
Between the barns. and this cistern-_
it would.. be advisable to :build .a
settling basin to intercept dirt. from -
roofs. The water syateni would be
connected to .this_ large :cistern to
supply the house or barn all reatiired.'
✓ he same Water•sy:s-ear could be used
to supply the house or barn with the
water frown -the •well.. or . other sd uede-
used . for drinking,, ar.d cod'ki
purposes. �, '
In• building a cistern do net snake
the,serious mistake'of making, it too
nuall. 'then 'Install some .aril ei
Nater system. •in order• _tab have,_the.
%eft water bath lint and cold,. on_ta.p•
.hrougno•ut the 'house. In subse-
lueet, articles ',,will dt•:tc t. It: various
ygi''g of'wtttr s}s.i.n "1' tf,ir itPnl
route.
The Departmen:,' . Physics..
',).A.C., Guelph, Ont.,. is prt'pai•ed to.
advise you without charge 'rt•,;arding
installation of water' s, steals.:plumb-
ing, sewage disposal, etc: --k. It.
ulraharn, U. A. College, Guelph.
"FOS "b;
t.
CATTLE `BECAME VicIous -
•
• Eley Coit 01.der .int .r ft ;lii a•:'
• • $18,00;00/ 'n L:a Y,
lacy Are Ro,ivevrs 01 , i..•'tli
Minnie t'rrnp s"ierth -h3rtl r i 1{.
Nttr i twt rttl.t�e: f • a,;•Melt-••;
Irandelion ` 1 iruirni it h;;
$5,O01.1 run 11 as. Sall lit !$,it). ,
r(',iolrthi. , i nv 4rf•.tnrtr,, t ri•+,.rarrr,•n] r
:Aprlr•� Ili ie..' Iuia1'ri4i't.
- A •sttherheial sur'•.v of Se.uiher
t)
n,ttt•^,itr shows, vary • cl'Fxny t:i:,S
lysed perms 'aavt• g:3ineu ;fill' lama
neadway on._vt•rj' litany titans' as tc
-have hi+stone-tar '1 rgkst•l,rtrlit,l•utt'
;bing factor. rhiatleai, r•ai_.vft•cil,'rens
tard; etc...;.- are: crowdi°ng nit. flu
Useful fund :plants, rednt•ing ,.yield&
'a ,. •
tied Making niurt .dtthcult: •
Too_.taitfeaa etit-ilei i, anti, 1'-nu_ik1an .
Dogs. •
Tlie' ofd .:mss when leper ,was
more ale:al ti! ,,.and gang-pitielis for
after harvest ttltage.. were found -in -
:tee:on everyfa'rtit, clean, wed fret:
ieltls Were te be Seen -oix.ev,t.
v hand-.-
•
itarms that were of clean1
i-
_ess
and the pride _cif their •owners
• re no longer eta 1 ii++ rasa_ t •iti:e
%Id " school and :•'the condition of
(Mildmay Gazette)
George Fische; of the 10th cones-
, sign of Carrick furnished a. •few of his
neighbors, with • a thrilling and dang-
erous adventure last Saturday when
he attempted to drive his fat cattle to •
market at. Neustadt, The 'cattle re-
sented the •attempt to drive them, off
the premises, and began to exhibit
unfriendly, tendencies. One animal, a
big three year old steer, became part-
icularly. vicious. 'It took up its stand
beside `a fence, in a• neighbor's' field,
and ' elierged. at every :person who
approached. An !idea of its,temper
may be . gained from ,the fact -that in
one of its mad attacks its horn gene
Crated• I% inches: iiito a cedar tree on
the roadside, Fences were torn and
_h_rekenby_. the_infutiatel. snimal;_and
Mr.: Fischer :and his neighbors . had-'
.some_ -very nairavQ.;.escapes, ....The' an-.
inial was finally' overcome through
exhatistii , and ht was •*tied ':tip" aiid'
thrown on a stoneboat, and :hauled
its to its -Swan stall. --Mr: Fischer
says it will have to, be -slaughtered.
on . the . farina as it ,would.''be. idle to
attempt to ti -rive it to market
'DETERMINED' TO.SUCCEED
abu:ndant;•_wil•litse• tiel"-o�n--.the-far-nus-----.The•fo(lowi'n cis: oneao ra
g f-t`lre-••t dt=-
has gone. ` The presence of cornpeting :tions of a manufacturing firm• in Gla -
w_ els does not •worry the present day
Gla-
sgow, Scotland. Thirty years ago• a
- barefooted, -ragged `urchin' presented':'
far mer to a point (if action. Shortage. himself- before the, desk of the princi-
of help, apathy tin '114 -°part of land• 1 pal partner: and"askced for-avb k 'S an'
owners, neglect to , make noxious errand boy. •
weed bylaws ,operati.e, and the "'There's' a deal o'running, to be
sheep-liiTliii-g--doggy tlave-heen` 111e itief ...done;":.sail 7BIZink, j gly:7-a.
oontributing factors favoring the fecting ,a broad Scotch:accent. "You
• w:holenale weed- development that; is• ;qualifications'd be a' pair- q'•shoon "
uqw experienced by this• province.. I The boy with a grave nod .disap-_
,Annral. Losses Ron to Millions tar Peared tie -lived by -doing odd mobs
in the market an slept under one of.
i
Uoltars. R the 'stalls. 'Two months passed before
The average loss : per acre. on •cut- ; he had ..saved enough money to buy
tivated and gr.azing'land8 is ditlicuit- the shoes:,. Then he.presented htlast:,€-
to determine. Ou the well kept farms ; before • Mr, • Blank one morning and
the annual 'loss caused by _late • p.res- held out' a package. "I have the shoos
duce of 'weeds is .not .leas . than two sir," he said quietly. •
dollars per acre. On tite,_fa. nns_that - "O!" .Mr.. Blank..w.ith__difficulty -re
have been poorly managed.. for • a called the circumstances. "You want
number of 'years . the annual, loss • a.•place? Not in those rags, my lad•
from weeds may be aa high as ten You would disgrace this house,.
iiblla"rs iter "acre:" creMuth-el-ower ,'•'•.The'bay "hesitated"`a' lit6fiiehrlffer
figure •of• two dollars .per acre as, the then' went out withotnt- a word. Six
uiinimuni loss, ;on the Southern On- months passed before he -returned, de
-tarso -farms-tlta:t have an- 'aggregate ;-cently. _clothed_ 111 course but -new-gar.
area: oaf 14,000,000 cleared acres we �•ments•, Mr; Blank!s,inteiest was aron-
have a loss of $28,000,000 per year.
`The weed Increase which has:been so
t a�tid durinig 'the past ten 'years :will,
if not checked, cause a• direct 'loss
to the •Ontario farmers of $1,00,000,-
000, peer annum.
n •' Let the Keogh •dna-fli•e- Tarro "B0
b
.
'Let.
(]cling: ti -�' _ �. .
If the noxious weed r•Ihbe-y. that
Is being perpetrated on the Ontario
farmer from April to October encu
-}ear'-just-because-he-te_willing to -be
robbed- Were -trtopped. .money -for
household comforts, taxes, etc.,
Would- be .more.:plentif u.1.F Af tqt liar',.
vest ;tillage, autulnu ploughing- and
the cleaning' up of the fence rows
and roadsides in good 'time will help
check. the advance of weeds. The
agriculture of no' province: is so rich
that it -tan -afford: to tolerate a weed-
Every farm and country home
should feed itself, and to do this it
for each f' ani
necessaryI t
isa r
Y grow
w
g
vegetables and ,sma
garden g ll .,alta.
All corn cribs and grain bind
should be carefully inspected to Ileo
that they are rat and mouse proof.
A concrete laudation. for lite '.' t♦
auiilli 1 ► �!MiS sra►! ±M►�Ett. M.
sed For the first time ne Looked at
the boy attentively'. His thin tbloodless
face• showed'that he had stinted him --
self of 'food for months in order'to
•buy those clothes. The manufacturer
now questioned the boy carefully and
found_ -to his ire, that- he_ could
neither 'read nor write
�. "It is necessary that 'ion should do
both before we 'condi employ you in
carrying home packages." he ,,said
"We have no. place for you,",
The lad's face.,grew_ paler; but with;
out a word,•of complaint he disa.ppear�•
ed, Ile now went fifteen miles into
the country and found work in stables,
near toa' night school..At the end of°
tke year•. he again presented' himself
before Mr. Blank.
"I can read and write," he said
briefly, ,�
L,.gaVe iiiln.:.the _place. the_.ern-,
nuisance that is costing many' mil- plover said years afterwards, "with
lions each year, -L. Stevenson, Sec- the convlotlon that m process of liars
rotary. Dept, of Agriculture, Toronto.he would take mine if he made up his
mind to do it. Men rise slowly in
Scotch business houses, but lie.is+now
0 0 0--- chief foreman:"
Arabs
knewthose •�.-
W e never why--.o•—o.—
fold their tents and silently stoal ''An expert says every .'car owner
away until we . saw pictures of the should learn. how each part of his car
ladies there, functions. He should at least learn
.. haw the steeli*g' wheel function,
•
Broncliitis Sentenc to:
Death byBuckle !�M
Amazing Free Trial. Offer
"- Spells Disaster: to Colds.
Proof! •Clear convincing reofi. without
riskinga single le cent of.your money,
that eckley has : the afest 'an',
surest vr: y of totally' destroying -
every trace of that terrible' cough or
cold! Just'iinaginei A.bottleofBuckley's
Bronchitis . Mixture FREE. 'Simply
take• -the coupon bel'ow'to any . drug • •
store and the b_ettle'is yours!' Try it ..
__ d-. - l . immediately . _
..on., our.col _ _It w11 ._. mel
convinceyou that the -regular she a
•'is allyou require to smash the and
give you a s y relief.. It's the chance•
f a ife _time; but byall . means act
quickly.' Right..now, -fill in .the coupon
and exchange it at any of the drugstores'
listed below; •
•
-
1N:'1-.-BUCKI.ay;41mlted;Msnutscturiq puts as
` 142 Mstsil.Street, — Tomato • •
OUPON
•
• ee trial Buckl_ey elf onehitis listure.
This coupon will not he accepted 1f
• presented by a child.
Name ...... ,... .... ,..... ....:..-.. ...,..
•
Address
Dniggist's ` •
Name . }`.. . . •, .
Sold'in ]iucknow by A,` E. •McKIM,
or by mail from Us on 'receipt of 10c.
...:YOUR .NEIGHBOR .... .;.::.
-Nei hborl'•
g inessis. .a - world -need
�-to-�
day. We would be better off as fami-
lies. immunities and nations- if we
--enecuraged -the 'get-together "sAirit
The evil eye is largely responsible for
the mischief that separates people
and ---breeds -strife: Get-tlie--ideahat—
your neighbor is as good as yourself
and the social, business and suirital
,problems of the'world will be'more.
thens half solved. "Devise -not evil
against thy neighbor, seeing he dwell-
eth securely by thee," Instead' of ..put
ting up, six-foot fences, .keep -off -the
:grass.mnotices .and passing _him •by..- ..
with your nose in the air., try what a
genial good morning over the fence
will pre!) lice or cleaning a foot or two
• of" bis-`s1'tow; -hinted ' iif` ilraroviiiar a _
straight .edge between your proper-
ties with your shovel. Trouble usually ---
begins_ with _some little . meanness:, tor_
a neighbor that stirs up the goat that
slumbers' in all of us. It is only a
small hart of -our mental equipment;
• but it• can do rt tremendous amount
+of bone -headed damage when •it rises
on tts.._bind legs. A. good neighbor
mak be a' great blessing. At any rate
the man who sets about_making en-
;ejnies of those about him, whether at '
home. in -.business or anywhere else.,
is kicking out the underpinning of his
own foundations. "Devise not evil ag
ainst thy neighbor." The fellow who
takes Swan advanta a
__ _mean ---,ge:,af. tllo.e..._,�ho .:_.�_. ...
have to live with -him or near }Sim {s- --
a mortal cut-throat.
-Shoe, and Leather b111 n>l:
SUN STARTS,A FIRE
The.:s...I. •_
unlight passing through a
reading glass on the counter of. J,' G.
Hibbert's tailor shop nearly caused a :
fire on• Friday, says the Walkerton
Telescope. The . sun's rays were focus-
ed
bit
on. a bit of 'woollen Cloth by the ,
glass and bad started it burning
wheu'Mr. Iiibtiert'a attention was at.
traded by the situate, .
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