The Lucknow Sentinel, 1922-04-06, Page 4.GRAtill
autticRAILW
•
OW $214e004 Tilutpit
Vittlinnio
ftlatoithertP, Qatikrio.
1101gra4Milk Pittatitter
- „alai 'PAW, -
THURSDAY, APRIL Oki-, lea o'
plat!E Abil) ORIKINAIO
vt St AM vehO used to.
104 Anter MO *Pare Money
ter it friend to keOP tOr hi* beeamer
he Ueda isett Xagat,
do the Irk*, died, oat'. hiss chances
af' ;getting bin limey back, 'Ttatialtell.,
'Your' asetringiss he* Pines.benk in the
ef ,llamiltosi fa pasr laregifard.
BRING aud IlicCORMICK
FARM.*ACHINES a.nd REPAIRS
Tractors! ofid' 11041404*
Wh *,,Sers Threel411g knekhOnli, •
145“..4, *Tit' rater Ca, niers* Eitolls, Menelaus and
'Witter • ;
Froat's.celled Vire arel Woven Fence; •
Connerls Ferretti* Electric Washer; "
Gentlet; , Winter And bee,ining Pianos,"
• SLE BY:
• .-7-111i-e more sensible -view Was point-
ed out '1Orig ago bat the prInlitive
and_ savage idea 'of • punishing the
i.criminal-*-"taking it Mit' of his bide,"
so to ay -for the -Satisfaction of the
winged rather than for the mire' of
the criminal, has been slaw to *giva,
•
way. •
..' A report receetly,,isaued by the
reformatories of New York State
:SaYS `that, of the' criminals Committed
ta their care, 40 per. gout., because of
their mental:State, are unfit to be at
-large, at the time Of their committal;
and ten per cent. Are ultimately
found unfit tube at large at all.
FOR A
,Slowly, but steadily, the Idea is
making headway among thos_e who
deal with eriminali that the husineee
of the pace and the orineinal courte
is to protect dociety rather than to,
punish., the wrongdoer Wording to
his works,
"Let the puniehlentit fit the CrI"
said the old-faehioned eeiminalogist;.
"This person:1s a menace to society,
• •
and not At to be at lage," ' says the
That is tlie• point to get at -"not
• . tit to- le at large." -c -net, it to ,enieY
the libertr. accorded ordinary sensible:
. " • ; ,
itthis view, were generally held We
Would 'have :much better enforcerrient
of 'the laws than we have.. There
would be less of the "poor felleve'
•stuffMbieh se often brings the law
to nothing, and., turns the crinunal
loose to -pursue -bis- course, and iesa
•"give *te the seeinulrel, 4o punisli
tient is ton -math, for ' .which
sernetimee finds expression ht. hang-
ng
an Offender to the, rieafesttree,
or bunting hint at the.stiike;-:- •
If the .wrongdoer Were shnidy re
gardecl:aa *At to be 'af' large (and'
hia,Oriine taken ae Proof of this) in-
stead of ' inflicting needless pain and
Misery Upon hint, he would be so far
deprived of his liberty as. to melte
sure, that society would be -safe_ from
his, depredations, :And ' under this
necessary ,restraint he should • be
'Made- tri earn his living- so‘as- mot -to
liera-burden-uport -•
When ' insanity is elearly.apparenti
..this is the View' Which everybody
takes. It is generally recognized that
there is no use in hanging an insane.
inarderer. Edo justelml'away where
he can da nri'more harni.-Witi not
'treat all crirninalS. in that - *ay? If
that were done there would be less
Islitinfing-frOnfienfercement-of-
the.mw There would be: lees ground
for kir-shah sympathy -in fa,vorr„Of the
Criminal, and more tonsideration for
'those whe' lose their property. or their
lives by his ,rietiOns... , • • -
WIRELESS TELEPHONY •
THE LATEST WONDER
:Wonderful, inventions have been
crowding iupon the World' hi such
numbers duringAhe-hist half century,
that We nceept many Of • them as a
matter of eouve. •
Wirelesstelegraphi-mem
a_onderful.
. .
enough, and when we heard of 'wire -
_lea; _.telepliony__ft few years ago. we
thoaglit it never _ ceulcL develop he
yond being- an interesting feat nt
seience:But already .it Wet become a
Very prattle* affair, and In recent
'months has hecarne.tbe:sthigtagh-rien.-
Mc lad. And strangely ,enough it is
not very, eapensive-,,s.rece.iving
se -
vice at any rate- not being beyond
the reach of the average faintly. '
As a Yilearis. of .advertising -them-
selves a number of newspapers have
installed priWerful transmitting mach -
The te„, hear there • musical concertsl,
ineic-find give out.tp rill who may care
vee
ly• payrol1. has never •been is than .
$17,000. In addition to this there
have been Other expensesof .a-Tninor.
nature, This 'mikes the strike the
Most e-apensiVe in yieltiatory Of- the
Canadian trade e -union movement.
Corrimenting -upon the vaSt sum of
money spent by the Interriational
rirniatta-aszitt..-LocaL,21-,-President-
Andrevir Gerrard said ;the- :strike
fUnds were corning -largely from
-Prifiterit--lit-Work'iii- the- United-
Sthtes. - showed "•,the
:weakness of ''''•tM • argtiments of
unionism. "Th -ere are 6000 • union
arintera in . Canada," .said Mr,
Gerrard, It extremely doubtful
they. viopld have been able to rrovide
the firiarices for a, :striko of , ti
..nature.-This..is_the_entiver_ to _ those
-
who are advocating egsith from
the international trades ut.ion move-
ment in Canada." By the end of the
month the strike 411 hive cost the
International Union a anin of Money
ereeeding $700,000. There appeatts
to he no settlement_ of the strike in
eti the empletMent prititeis
ars oettlag en Alt fight •witheut the
ROO 01004
LUCKNOW.
isos' • •
Capital pod up $4,00.00
Reserve te,tind!' $5,006,90
Ooler 1120 Brol.1001. -.'"
Why Keep Surplus Money tlte• House?
It is dangerona Better to tithe this money to the nearest
Branch Of The Molsone-yiank and deposit it in" a savings!
account where Will be absolutely alfe. .(MoneY may be
deposited or withdraWn. by =sit)
REID, 'MANAGER, IiiiCKNOW BRANCH.
women...
• DURHAM GIRL WITNESSED Lucknoti LO -14; No. 4,gs, Meet in
PRINCESS MARY'S WEDDING their lodge room, every second Tues-
day of the month-itt 8 cOalock Pan
n: letter- tri, her "home folks/'
dated at London. England on the .4th &tea one • -
• of March, 'Miss Edith Edge of Due,. '
• barn Bruce Co giyes an interesting
. account' ;of her sight of the. royal
-bridal party' TiVeriteriatter • Ablrey.
on_the. ticeaAer_i of the marria,gs of
Princess Mary. and Lett:Leacelles:
Miss Edge -saw in Part:
- "But, I wrist. tell yOn- about • the
Wedding. We took UP • our pastions
' the „sidewalk euteidethe ;gates a-
bout We had a splendid • view
,
of everything, as, there was no
ihNsfront of us._ The policemen lined
the route istim the palace to the. Ab-
bey, and, the Life Guards. with their'
seirrlet4.coats and black .busbies in-
side the police cordon. At ten to el-
even the Rothe, Guards rade': tre
• escort, the partiest to the . Abbey. At
-,11- theliQueeir:arid.-her_±_tbeee__eme_.
appeared maid roar of cheers frok
; the .thousands - Of spectatori:" /Clew
Minetea Utter came another band of
Guards. this time with the Princess
• and her father. She looked Charm-
• ing in her wedding 'awry and nodd-
ed graciously to the admiring crowds.
"After a wait of an hour or so the
sthe return of the royal party. The
. chimes rang out from Westinineta,
and 110.**.tt- `th
o er
bells •,a o er the 6.0.. Kifik;
Queen, and familsr, 'CAMS Au the. first
carriage, Queen Alexandra in the
neXt, and then followed cars Witr,
r. the distinguished guests. The Prin-
eesz had -i-Cdif:-
ferent route and did not return for
• sttleaet ten minutes after the others
The great Waste Of cheering Mum
nearer and nearer and culminate6
in the ajArearance Of the bride an,-
,groont,. nodding. and smiling; ; Ther.'
they drove under the arch and we
thought' we had seen the last. But
rumor Said the Royal Parte were to
appear on the beleOpy. Ticket -holder
- were allowed inside the gates, and in
Appeared and were joined in a ehoet
. erne- .the King and the two
:.4x.eouts„, „Loud_ rheas._ waving land7_
. kerchiefs and flags. weted •their
appearance. Princess Weis, eatnt'
out on the balcony farther to Wt.
' right, After a few rninntes they: dis,
entreated inside the palace and the
erdWda- dispersed.
fotgOt to tell you in last week'k
. lett* •of il being shown through th:,
Parliante .t Buildings by Big -('-
Page Croft, M; [le was e,.treeel.
• nice and saw-nrote-than---the-timis
we Were. down euriselvee.
are eleven 'hundred remns in all ane.
over two miles corridors; In the
&yet was a little chattel where
M. P.'s might be married or their
children , baptized. Lady 'Scott' wat
Matried there the other darn A
the foot of the stairCloadinct. to the
crypt Was the nlo.....%Ht• r -here Guy
VaWkei Wee Caught we *Mt out on
tIi terra.* overleOiting T104411.
rfOrs 014 X.00r4
LO.0„P. Lucknow-, Lodge 'meets every
Friday Oening at-8•reelock in their
Halt 'Campbell StreddrAll brethren
cordially invited. •Officers:. Noble
Grlid, Arch...Bathe:Or; Vice Grand,
' MacLeen Sehnstone ; See.,
Aitchlion; Pin. -Sec.,' Dr. Petersen;
Treasurer, -Alex.' Ross.
Inture, and it le u1t thatthe serViee'
good, th,a sid.ultde being aa distinet-
*. heard:f the' hearer were in the
roma where, Ithe3r ace',.given out.
4.kl4 the woriditilikfeature is that
Many tranaiiiitting Machina:1;4"1e'
at Mork at* the sSearze time anti the
• liatener Tarty, WAUSAU'. bis instert-
Inent, e1 tite•somale 'centring trent
the erre he i1easeife4Yati may ba Set: ,
ening te whet the:Toronte Daily Star-
girdt4' out and tbenb, wishing to
hear frera Detroit, you 100 . -tern a
key to thisright point and;the Ster's
Service is .cut off- arid yeti begin JO
bear front "The Detroit News."- The
air, or •ether,.marbe tilled *ith :sound
w,e,ves and you seleet just these you-
Wenclerfull And yet it is not tee,
much to say that in -the near fature
there will.be one oilnaere ef these re.
Aelving Initrinnents in. evert' Village 1
in °uteri°, and in many hortieS,
•
,U,1041140rIENZ 11,1SMAliag -
Professor McIver, of 'the ,depart-•,
Ment PolitiCar. EceimaY; iTniveiSi--
ty of TOrtinto,.. ia_credited With the
statement that, •In his opinion, unem-
ployment insurance should not :be
confined te.,ceitain specified employ-
ments, but should be broad enough
to takin all workers Who are Out of
. • ,
• If we should have anenaployment
insurance at all, 'Professor McIver is
right . Woriers in at 4rearches.
industry : ought tp 'be treated alike..
Zhe idle clerk,•stenographer, Or lab-
Orer have jy$ as good a right to pay
when they areidle as'haye the brick-
layer,. the carpenter or the factory.
hand, and if 'we. ever have a goyern;•••
ment- erazyt, enough, or 'sufficiently
dominated by What is called "labour",
-te• estahlish-iinemployment-insurancei
• it 21firelY will ,apply all around. Ariy
other arrangeritentwould be tee ridi-
eulous; •
It will bp a -great arrangement, and
Nines". :will'niviiiys be 46 -ed• when
workers; 'good bad..n4 indiffere*
effiCient and inefficient, all alike, •get
paidwhether • at work . Or idie;find
•this from a fend supplied by 'the em-•.
ployers of labor. .
That is the logical outcome of un-
employment insurance.' if one union
orclass of :, wage-earners s entitled
to pay whether at work Or Idle,
Classes are so entitled, and itwill not
be Poildible to make/any' distinction'
between stheefficient and the . ineffi-
cient, the lazy and the active, And
why should there:be 'anY-cdistinetion
,inade? If men,are to be paid whether
idle rt workyliy not_pay a nian
the same whether he does a
a avitole days' Work?
• Under the proposed conditions we
'ierireely caniiiingine-wage-earriers
being very active in looking for -jobs.
Perhaps 'there will be established a
.special peed to 'decide as to whether
the•applicant for .inaurance has or has
not made reasonable effort to secure "
-employme2it. '
•131.it... we are _•of opinion :that the4
labor unioria which proposethiiUn-
employhient insurance have an easy
,way out of this .difficulty. They would
gay: "Let the. einployers look up the
idle men andkeep them t Work* if .
they don't want- to: Pay :idle men 'let -
them -provide work for them." There
......... •
•
MR„..RERRY'S MISTAKE _
• Once there, was . a grpcer nained
Berry. He sent a hill before it was .
Ana. and '.the.- nerson-:who--,reedived it
*rate in ,reply :' "You have sent in
your 'Bill Berry before it was. fine
Berry: Your father; the TElder-Peri,77-•
-would not --have- been -such --a Goo re-
Berry,•but you need nit look so Bine
Berry for.I .don't care 'a Straw Berry
about your:Bill Berry. and if •Yoti
write..again before June -Berry I'll
maul you until von are like a Black
Berry and feel as soft as: a
PPM and they a!ez.biNte-'.. zo.7etuhtis3r-oius:
in the G Now.
a Kit Berry; fat. I* ant 7eur.
tickle .B. erry. "
• • •
A COSTLY -STRIKE
,So Titea .
'Fatigue is the result of pOiSens
in the blood: So when the • kid.-
neys 'fait to purify the blood' one
of the 'first indications is unusual
panadinsoitrstishteenbta4tiro.d: .,feelings. and.
Neglected kidney nonbles lead
to years orauffering. from rheuma-
tism or develop into - such -fatal
. ailments as Bright's disease. • •
The. kidney „action is promptly
corrected by -use of Dr. Chase's
Kidney -Liver Pills -- -the best
known regulator of -kidneyel liver
and b.owejs.
Mrs. John Ireland. .
2. King, Ont.,' writes:
wits a greet sufferer from severe
headaches and bilious spells. tried a'
number of remedies without ,obtaining
any benefit until I was. advised to use
Dr.' chi..., Kidner -Liver Pills. These
completely relieved me and made me
feel like a •new person. ' ant very.
•grateful to, Dr. Chase's medicines' for
what they have done for me, and you
may use my letter •for the brnefit of
others."
'Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver .
'Fills one pill" a dose, 25c a box,
all dealers or Fairnanson, Bates &
Co.,• Ltd., Toronto.
•
•
CLEAN UP and 1.PAINT IT
,With Martin-Senour 100
Per Cent, Pure Paint
Save the S'urfate and You: Save All"
• A coat of Martin-Senour Paint will add considerable
vajile to your prop'erty. It is tile highest grade of
paint , for interior anct`e?derior. use,. . Gals. .$5.00,
1-2 Gals. $2.65, Qts ;$1,40, Pts. 75p., 1-2 Pts. 40C.
' Martin-Senour Schoolhouse Red Paint for painting
barns, gatTges and all 'out -buildings. Gals. $3.15,
1-2 Gals. $1.75, Qts. 90a:
Woodlac. Stain and Varnish •for beautifying' floors
and furniture. Qti. Pts. 75e., 1-2 Pts. He.
Marbelite Floor Varnish, best varnish for floors.
Qts. $1,75, Pints 95c., 1-2 Pints 50c• .. 14
Muresco and Alabastine for wall and ceiling decor-
ation, 5 lb. Package for 75c. „
Coil Spring Woven Fence and Barb Wire at the
Right Price. •
A.car-loarof St. Marys Cement expected by Aptil 7.
Extra Prices • on
Auto Tires
2 -Tread Tire, :guaran-
,teed 5000 Mile
$13.00:
SPECIAL
• on•
Z -tread Cord Tire
guaranteed 7000 miles
• ' $17.00
of a controYeray over wages and
'working conditions.. The. mine ovvnera
and Operators maintain' that they
must reduce wages from the high
level .established during the . war, in'
•order to meet the competition of the
non-union: Mines in which 'a !lower
• scale. of wages preVaill and 'where
the men do more work in ,a day. !ril
miners demand more pay than they
were getting, on the.ground that they
were not getting . :"Iiving wage,"
whatever,that may mean. The miners
want also,yt reduce the,*orking days
Per.weekAo
five days,pay to remain
the same as. for six days. They say
• this is necessarir in order that -there
may lieNork enough to go • around
As it is, they say, there ere about
two 'hundred thousand. miners in the
..countryfor whom-there-was:no work
So they Planned -filet eaCh.nriur should
do leis. in Order "that all mightlave
em. aynuat Sbouleariother Intridred
urand miners ceirie into the dem
-
or .quit the .farms and go -mining,
• We may. assume that the :Onion lead-
ers would propose cutting. =ether
day -off-the week, that these also
should have work and good pay:
71t wiui be remenibered that -about-
-a Tear -ago oa-slmilar.-strike of coal
*miners was inaugurated in Britain
and thatfor _several months- al) the
mines in. the country were idle. There
Ole inines 3Veme allowed to' become
flooded. with".4.atery_the. pump_ opera-
tors;dnd .othey's who kept the mines
in condition having .quit. work- along
With--.-the-miners. It mas--thought4hat.
thiSprocedure would bring' the oper-
.Yeu .are• The Prahlenl, isuhredi
It • strange that thiStriffeinikrit
Merit' •InsUrariee 'should get:- perious-
-eonilderation 7-bY 'reSpensible•--inen•Lnt,
-ell; Why • Should: this inatirante be
confined to wage-earnera
pay the laWYer„ytte• beause,
miClierits?the doctors Who
idle .becauie, be has no patients? the
.dentist who could attend to double
"the .business he ie. getting? And why'
not insure the matrufacturer ,against
_duAtieree When' his ,machines are Jae,
and the •store -keeper "Wh-c•-•ietki Only.
half the business he could do? These
,
men ard al times aStruly out of work,
as are ;the earpenters and -bricklayers
who are- Walking the..streets.L._
•
. The_ printers1---strike-in-Taronto •
speeches; sermons, • the news of t e
-day; market -rePorts, etc. "The -De-.
troit News" .was first. to install such
a service in this part; arid last "week
-the - Torento---Dally-Star installed_
machine,. and . la _daily "broadcasting"
all kinds of news and entertainment,
• To take' advantage of these services
•arie has only to install a eomparative-
- ly small rederYing -Outfit;IYiliter'may
• bebought complete or anywhere
from 426, trp.-to,-$50..Roughly sneak:
,ing a. race.iving.'m.achinewill.give sat-
isfactory results at the rate of a mile
for every dollar it costs -a:
machine being good over a radius of
26 milea Mid a 50 -dear 'machine be-
ing good for ' 50 miles. However, a
• 25() -dollar . machine is good for dis-
t&neS ..m..Uch_ over_g04.1.1(111efinerhans.
a thousand or more. Conversations
are daily being carrigd on 'with pail-
sertgers on ships far out on the °dein,
and words hatte been heard .distinctly
clear across the Atlantic, •
• But the installation of machines in
the homes is the thing about radio
• telephony Whith most interests the.
• average tali, it.10010 40 thidth
tliesq w.c,010 bqaointon lii tilt 1140r
• THE COAL MINERS; 'STRIKE
• e
• All fforts-to.' avert- a Strike of en ---
lee !coal Ininers on this continent fail-
ed, and the Men.quit work on the firit
day. ,of Apyil, All Union mines in the
United, Stater and Western Canada
"-ziffietid;-ithe -fir-ova scas-i-c
are the mines mines - o preVent their ruin by Hw he cihs have making sittihs faade tfoartyal pii:03*,urletss:
_toward recoveg,_but the. a^cident_
and a few mines in the iiniteil:States
,voiking„tindere_uniom„. inue$Atre abccunr.4.1auy_tioutt!f_waete.r;,,r_
open -because the miners' -contracts" Is • P"SP rule buat: 't11 t aYIlis pr0bo5c:s Wl1 not add Much to the
yet spread to the railways an. tlie
general beauty of his countenance.
• THE RED. FRONT HARDWARE
RAE ..ei-PowriEouS
Phone 60. - . Lucknovy.
Highest Cash Price Paid
for Cream and Eggs
Any Day
Test Guaranteed
PALM -0 S GROCERY
Where Fresh Groceries Can_Be
Had at the Lowest Price
POnee,'S`Customer,'Alwaye a
OratoMet
_ Give_Us A Trial
•
PHONE 75. ,
SPRING TERM FROM APRIL ,31d.
CENTRAL BIJSINESVCOLLEGE
Wingham; Ont.
• l3o.ok-keepiirg, • Pitman's, :Short -
hind, actual office work. Person-
al Instructions: • a specialty, rea-
sonable tuition, graduates assist-
ed to positions, .Affiliated • with ,
Central Business College, Strat-
ford. Our graduates_are in 'de-
• mand. Students may ettroll at anytime No ;
..4a_Ogr vacatii-
TRAIN SERVICE
-.• between •
• LUCKNOW AND TORONTO '
, • ' • 'Daily e-ccept•Sunday
Lve, Lucknow 6.09 a.m.; 2.35 -0.1N-7 •
Arr Toronto_ 11,10
Lve.. Toronto 6.59 -am 5.02 P.m..
Arr.' lanikriair:-12,49 -p.m., p.os -Fon.
Agents. ••
v: 'Agent, Lucknow.
Catalegue Free. . Phone 166.-
ators ib an agreement, but_ m.--tir:s • ., , ,
Presiderrt. - • Princit.,
the' miners ,kere ,m-J.s.taert-i
-re• °per
.etcre refused to acceed to the
demands of . the tinkers, and the
strike was defeated, after causing in-
calculable loss to the country .as 0.
whole: and to the -.miners and mine-
• operators.in partieular:.0 •. •
• In the United States as in Britain,
the mine owners and operators have
,eorneta the conclusionthat,theY,,inust
• fight the unions to a finish. For years
, theY have Made concessions and now
, it has become evident that there is7
7to be no `end to the demands* of the
Miners.. The ruirito their business -by
eloefrig :deem can be ,:no. twprie" their
the ruin which yielding to the. di:\
mantis of the- miners would- bring.
The Republican.ov
gernment_ is_sym-
• athetic with the business men ef the
country, and the mine operator§ ;
evi-
dently have toncludelsthat the time
was opportune for a fight to the fin -
D. A. McLachlan.- T-R_Fo.sterk
AXE HITS MAN IN PACE -•
' .. HAS 'VERY .CLOSE CALL'
:
John H:erman: son of kr. and Mrs.
Jos.. Herman,- was the victim of a
very painful- and dietreasinz acci-
dent last Thursday, says The
• may Gazette, He and. his brother
Joseph mere in the bush cutting
o�didakstheeThrtlie° Thai Of
a neighboring tree were in their
, First-class coaches-
parlpr-Library Buffet §er*e, from •.
Pahnerston-• to -Toronto '-- en morning
train, and Toronto to Palmersfon on.
•
." For full particulars as to tickets,
etc; 'apply to 'Grand Trunk Ticket
„
Thos --Who Stay in
the Valley,WiltNeve.r-
Get Over the Hill
Iiring us. your '
Cream, Eggs.and Poultry,,
vandte-owthe-hilkep •
"
We Pay You CASH.- "
-limiest Weights, Accuratelr-ests and- a
•' quare peal to All
•
• SI LVERW 00 DS,_
For Service
tray, the latter made a slash at them
the-nre.--The-axe handle WAS We
and Joe had it pair t4 woollen' mitts
en, he lost -his -hold on .the weapon
.which Was carried with considerable
foree and sliced in 'Saari direetiim.
the blade of axe hit John square• -
ly on the bridge • of the :nose, inflic-
ting- a terrible gasheeuttirar• the.bone
to the depth. of nearly an hie)). He
Was hurried to.the doctor's officeAed
sever -stitches Mere required to close
the wound. The injured man had a
narrew". escape, as the age barely
With the operators have not expired.
There are also a few large mines in
•theU,nited. States and on Vancouver
Island, which are netnnieeized,
and consequently are still, operating,
These operating mines, howev'er, can
supplY .orily.a„Sreall-fraction-ef ,the,
coal required by the industries of the
continent, 60 that should the , strike
• be tont contieued, many large factor -
104 and the steam railways will be
seriously. affeCted, if not PUt out 'of
business, In any. event the strike, Id -
volving s it, does a half milliOn
era, cannot fail to greatly !tenpin
the provalling %mitten fhprvioont
1:411 .00140 tit 000./ti 11 tile molt
aqk workers flt the sea ports. These
may refuse to handle oral. imported
Item • overseas or, , from rion-union
mines.
•
• Afteri-mr--important -feeling.ttaffic.
cop bawls You out you know 11,
Salaam felt when rebuked; by an ass,
Do not buttes
Another day wins
ite a i na, Meta
Ing,or Frotnat .
ing lidiep.,, Ne
saver eat opt
a tto it rdeutrea
.014Pnent fa retteveyoaat once
Iii 004110. eh 4 011 4
a pat s *Co,, lea .
411 you numt on 4
Per POOP,
Smaililfaur
Give it a hnOolcont43low with a few
doses of
Buckley's Bronchitis Mixture
Tried and proved by over 200,000
people, Positively Guaranteed to give
rsliet: 40 name tor 75 •
told by ill chiaraloa
Or by mall horn •
VI, R. loolliv, 14g Mallet 16 Torisio.
Mill hi 14004* by At°E.11101014i
PRONE`47,..
-olo-Light Ledge •
meets every Thursday night on.or
before the full moon, in theldas-
Havelock St., Lucknow. ,
N. G. Mackenzie; T.,
• Si, Reid; J.W. J. ,McQuaig• Sec • .
W. A: Wilson* ,
'JOHN SUTHERLAND, & SONS, Ltd.
-Guelph.-Ont.vin-Sitionce, Fire and
• Marina
•
• U -Need a Monument
n.:
Marble and Gran •
-
lot to" W°Srktosck:11-"the Irnilogset 44bneda:t7fintri.
designe to choose from in Mar -
wand Canadian Gran'
• • WikTwitl eheoese,n. uniSicatteek eett •
and invite -year -3:k
Specialty of Family
spection., •
Inicriptions neatly and prompt.'
ly-done.
Call ,and see AUS before placing
Your order.
• ' ROBTL, ut,knfipt4
PivOlToTnONroi
04)1 WO Airli Perh141101*uttM,
IN WA !Ti P94011