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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-08-07, Page 4• .7,40,1M.:*. • ,• 'Sowers! Hay Rakes, Hay Tedders, Gain OP4 Corn BlioleM " • ;11,f/ILKINSON •". . • on Plows, Scufflers:,unit Berrow!!!,,, " SSTEL••4s ;WIRE C70.,.1' • , • V91144- Oate0:".444: Woven fge.ne0''4400. .004Pleetall PaivOidsed. •'PIANOS-*. • • 'A, • • Se our Lgiade btiylug , • ...Fer.-Sale..A4:' .• ANDREW'S, 1-..'ciPCKNOWe • ,Incorporntek 1855_ • C4PITA.14 • • $4,000,qoo RESERVE sp_igo moo': OYER- BRANCHES , ,cANADA - MOLSON Money shou d not be left lying around the house, eVen, locke d • hp or 'hidden away• Deposited in . vings Account with The • Molsons Bank it is safe, :earns interest • and' is readily available. . S, • Rip!), MANAGER, 1.14KNOW • BRAls,ICH. ' • • • Seaforth Creamery 'CREAM BiTYING STATION Hightest cash •prices .paid for • Crean!' and Eggs. We guarantee ' Fiervice and satisfaction to ali•our •patrons. Give !la a trial and let us prove to you that we are a worth while • market. • Cecil -Mullin, . LncknOwlBranch Phone Lucknow Phone 74 N'finghatin Plitine•256 Monumental Works • . LI:10010W and WING11.4/11 • Has the largest and most complete stock in the most beautiful _designs to chootte from, in • MSrlde, Scotch, Swedish anr Can- . adieu Granites We make AL specialty of Family Monuments and invite your inspec- tion• . Inscriptions Neatly, Carefulb and Promptly -Done. See us before placing your .order., Douglas Bros. • B. A, Spott'on • Luc.know, Ont. Lucknow L. 0. L. No. 428, meets in their ledge room every second 'rues-. day of the month at 8 o'clock ti.m. MCQUillin. • ` WHITECHURCH, The Mission Band Rally held here- on July 2nd : was well attended and • most .instractive The afternoon •• Meeting -lipened . with, the Mission -Asit-n-a-}ifiiiii---790, (With -MrS,' Gollan, ,• •superintendant Of the ,Mission Bands -'----ed•-therltliasi-ein7Bandliraierfia-..- collan 'read the ' SeriptUire lesion .•• ,frorn Acts 10, it was read 'Indialogu•e • lating- ta, the,. Scripture"; lesson: ,The 'roll *as the •called with each band • answering by repeating • the class text, (John 1646), ,The meow. from each. band ..Was . as .follo3vsz Artnow Kincardine 0; • Ripley 25,1 Pine 'River,O, *South, Kinloss 14, Ash! • Lucknow 14, • St Helens' 13 'Port Albert 0,, Dungannon6, White- • church 18, Langside. basn't a Mission • Band but an invitation -had been sent , -them' and there ,were 11 present. • ,,,,There were 35 other visitors present • making total of 140 at the after-• noon session. The Whitechurch Band favoured us with a Chants. One.frem • e,aeh bina gavo a repott of the years , •• ;kirk, Ogee repot e gave ethers new •1 - ported in mhaTtiaillepTi.65siacllieirySi: ands sd ntalihtIen; ideas. to. carry On -their Wei*: Mrs. Gollan tlien gave. her report.- She re- • • trbeing new ones this year.' Mrs..Gal- . Ian gave. us •some ideas. of' the'. work We might lie,"taking a 'greater"! pa'rt in. She ,stressed that 'there might ,be more Junior, 'Members.. TIM 'members , of St. Helens. .Mission ' Band then favhured. us ,with a, :'ehorus. An 'in- spiring duet Was given' by two little, girls ' froni: 'Ripley • There was a motto in it for everyone. Mrs Gollan read a letter from Mrs. J. S. Mc-. Kay, India, thanking, na for •the lit- erature' that we .sent .to her and gISTI ng -u§ .sonie,idea ,of her work there. ,A. showing et hahds, 'do this'.. year; send. literature .to, ' Mrs.. 'McKay -or help" .one of , kiss. Campbell's girls. The niajoritr Were in favour` 'of the latter; . Everyone now kilned. in, Li •Prayer circle.. One•meinlier.troin each band giving a prayer. Miss,:. Jennie MacDonald:of South ICinhiss told, in a very interesting_ manner the _story of "Mary Louise and Dick', on. a trip ,to the foreign Mission fields.. This Story aPPOied..-ve . mhili.- to the' little 'folks. ' One Of the boys ';'frorn, . , , Dungannon • .,recitecl: a . Missionary piece: Mrs. Harkness read i a. p.#3zer on "Ways, Of Teaching Missions to Boys" and Girls." -Ilia', paper :wits 'a' very ' helpful one to the leaders of• the • different bands. 'It", gave .eah., leader a better idea of how to get the ,boys . and • girls 'interested in tii.e. • work' ..of. the 'Mission . Bands., , Miss 'tended the , Summer :Scheel at •.,St,' Caroline Webb' of, St. Helens' who at. Monies gave us a,,paPer, on a days. •programme there After listening- to this Very interesting paper each One was -left -With., a feeling "Why wasn't I there.'" The afternoon 'seiiioi. Was closed ,by singing three Verses 'Of 115'2 inn 763. Lunch was then served on i.the church. lawn: ' . ' The, Evening Meeting. -::,:.7 . .....„..Mrs.-Harkness-Opened--the-eVening *meeting with hymn 794: The* Scrip - tare lesson was .then read, from Luke Chapter .9: followed -by a reading, by One of the Armpw girls: , We were then favoured •. with a pageant • the VOicesr of the VVorneh by sisc little .girls from Lneknow, .which was yerY much enjoyed„:,4 , all...ptesentt-J Mi''''. .Bruee'Gkey :Of: plin'ginnon 'then gave; his address illustrated with lanteir Slides ore, ork..in -West" -Whieli Was very . interesting and appreciated by all Hymn . 590. was then sung after Which Mr Grey .announced the 'benedictian: _ . ,, , , -___0„..-.0_,..,.-- • WESTERN' -FAIR ADVANCING The announcement of the Western air brings-fd-tli:e nilnd of , everyone the value tb ,Western/•, Ontario of . this, g're4 Agricultural and Industrial the; "INVIardi*.:'.F.IVIT.thas, been an outstand- ing factor, in promoting. and encoor-, aging the 'development of Agricul- ture and.,•InduStry generally through:. Qtlt Ontario,.....The.:records of the l'paSt' and the growth of 'the Exhibition in- dicate thatit has ,,accOrripliShecl•it purpose to a • very marked degree: The Zetnpletien of, a new. Mnufao- tuters' Bending last year has' 'pr.ovid, abcomnforlation'which \Vis great- ly. needed for the „display of pro- duced by danadian ma.nufaettikers. This new building will be filled to Capacity at the BXhibition in Sept- ember wth a great variety of exhib, iti' featuring . Canada'S itiduStrial aehleyenients, ,.micKNOtPiktEk TOODO AtOtst 7th,, 19,4. T.13T 4/14 vat.11.14 t'1'.4t)r. .4,4Y0 •.orty-Ope, "mirsterions..-: barn fires: with , reeolog -loss of -4120,069, had beeri. reported.. t'o•o0e,e'u. Indication of the pessibilitieS of bustiPri provided in. the •eurrent sPli" -SMI is not entirely lacking however On1y. two days. ago, Mr. Heaton re- ceived a report of a Pre that occur. red on June 5th and led to a request Lor itiveStigatien by hs ,clePartinollt, ce lire- 'originated, »wwQf earn.,Whiell,;hgar.40454,fo 40,irmonthsen7--'-*vOif'''''ttilie of before' taking' • fire, This, according Mr. Heaton...implicates the posthty - of reviVing the, (:),tiditions' favorable to spontaneous combustion„ under increasing temperature of.'.the. outside air. . According to the • 'Fire.' Marshal's 1,002 barn fires, itiyelving loas, rot'. report, .we" had irk. .0nterio, last year $2,599,812, to.wardiwhich,' the in, suranee CoMpanieS (stock and nui- t nal) contributed.... $.1,693,923ir'arid-':oor -farmers .SufWed f • .person al • loss of $905,899. Of .the total :' el 1;960 bah:: fires eccurrizi,*,last year, 711 entailed loss of' ,over $2.00 each, investigation by the. department • Shows. Siren- • tendons ,combustion was ;".resporieible for' 64 .of these barn fiies, with•'re- aulti.ng loss of $318,757: : Study, cif a °Sunni -airy.' of. 'causes .of barn .firef- in 1923 Shows that Spentandoim bustlon V,T4s, responsible for, the greatest money loss of. any single cause of fireassigned., though' light. ning:.• on unrodned barns.' ,.was the cause Of . the greatest number of barn' Pilliaarrisitn%gthei 91': . nipertane.e. of spontaneous cembustion,. as .a cause Of bard. fires, the Fire .Mershars. re • Port ' for 1023 .".points out that "lr, view Of :the .fact .that for several years past' we .have been challenged -particularly officers'„of, 'mutual inSuran?..e 'companies, as to our the ory thatia • large percentage of the' fires- have occurred frail, ..spontaneus -combustion.' of the ,crop • we nave:this' year .. been particularly '..cereful, not to. .asSign • "spontaneous, conibustion!": as A', cause 'Unless .the .evidence was.. elear,, dedisive and • complete, :and ',that ,.haS ,beoir possible where the fires have been • in .daylight, .and *here eye -witnesses have been . able.' to. clearly. reeite the location- and 'appearance, .of the fire When 'it,..Wasjirst " The Province : of • Ontario, through • the' Fire , Marslial?s.....departnient, . has :beenand is .the pioneerin inveSti- gatiOn of the . ,eaeses 'of ...barn fires and in ,....proVing. , the spontaneoin... •ternbustioh....theety; -Methodsorigin.. ate& here- have 'been.„.adonted. by fire ,tharshals.;innther.parts- of..the COunC. • try and of the 'United :'StateS.,'Farni: era employed jn',harvestingof. the hay. crop.. as most are at. present Cannot,' therefore; 'fail to be ested in the :suggestions' for haying ainr4ecottLe.e0 .ect(iimiclibitiastteicio.n, opfett6en. irt,. gpstporirt Voaiii6;ihne crops as SeCferth b Mr..''C„`H, "COW: 'an, ',4n , inspector- Of' . the Fire Mar department, as; follows. .; .Cowan • "For. the .past five years at. least,' f .have.; as .i result_of_investigating. more t,Irait' three hundred barn fires' „been ' strongly.- urging. thediscontinu- ance of .the use Ofthe side delivery rake and the hair 'loader -because it, 'has' become quite' obvious to me, .as a result of these; inire.stigations; that . theSe. i ppletnents,•, -thernselveS most Va ualile. and - necessary,'. have been And , are :-being. generaiV un- .,ivis,ely. • iisopL . • •) ... • 7. .' "The..COMMUSiOns I, }ave necessarily , . reached are:'. •„.' . • ' "(1). That • spontaneous. cornbus- tion, or., Self-ignititin, in hey mows; alwaysealised by- inefficient Ctiting or damp .hay; • . • ..'"•(2),.. Thathay continues' to :breath or sweat ,for. tad days 'after, cutting . . . .•.and that if '•'. it is earlier • disturbed or Mowed . into'. 'mow, ..6r stack,' the 'process Ok sweating, still goes en.•: •"3) Phat efte.r.' len days. in tile' field in. Cock',it 'Will not again .Sweat, neat, . MOW bairn; 'Or . .viired .by:rain from: leaky roofs or fropi.,:” moisture „ "being . introduced from other, .caus.e.s.-.- , "(4) That :the only s,afe..place, fo.r tthc'prpeeSs'of-SWeatiti-k---7-irin-tire-: coek ia the •field'. 'Not, in, one.. Single• 'instance that has came' Under ni .experience where fire has resulted from spontaneous combustion has it been found. that the hay had been sufficiently long . in the 'field properly • :Mature. .orily'' a 'few' cases .h4d the hay. been tevelled-ine.the.„riaawo,anekirtnone;••Sa flirasi recall; had. -it"' "been salted. . ."The ' lack of labor and the rites, 'hiS 'machine 'Was Wrecked,. and fog l'enee ,of the ,side delivery %rake - .and also forced the...America.n... own • . ,1 the bay-lioader have.,been ,contributL 'rMadLren -left !".'‘Englarid 1 on•,'Matelr,`,- ink -factors 'to:tn.dueltattelri•Plitting and thei'UnitedStas ,flyers Set t .e crop;' and so long as these im- out about' the. seine time frOm .the te, • • • p emen s are used and the hay drawn bef�r• 0, pr p maturitlong Avi'ti•il'itY. of New York, • They, • have1, shall !continue t� have an exces- . .n. about fo alf months sive and altogether unnecessary, fire on the:weir, se that even. if two • of 1:.wgite in 'our fatniets'. barns.- • '764 • • • y will, the .aceoffiplisninent• attiltit `, like Ihairleader' are of course here to 7t -The deliVery.".:..rake • and the the-. Ainetipans, get ..borneiis''they, be regarded .4s great suedess, to the given th,ebut. warning 'should be farmers to. s,ee that they are everif,,tbeAt-4,enci'esivor---wi.11-testrlin---tH-troperly-lused7iristead:Tz.off."beinrir.,ab inuch usefnl:' informatien as to the used,and ' in . . — no caSe 'Shoulci the hag, • .' he., drawn, in untili. it hes reinained requireinents forlorik flights. 1, • . • •lo , ng enough in the field to be, pro,, , perly cured. If fOr'•any reason it is 4Xaw-11-1--Hear.4er,''Et1144P,at we eon- • iiL-114W-0- , condition 1i,(arid.1 know wil SPONTANEOtS COMBUST! 4(1er. Unsafe .fartners :.coesider safe) • GIVEN AS CHIEF CAUSE:. • then. 'by ,41 means let the fartner.eee ' ° 4.thit ..it.,..481„...;,,ProperrY,..' 'levelled tthr. ' - top*. .44d .,salte0. . the extentof sev ake'haste s owly, .in haymaking. en, or eight °quarts to a load. . is in effect the advice, offered r. by •"cdt - the f,atreer afford under Ontario Fite ,Marshall Ei P. Heaton, ;Ole oressfire of. a heavy crop.- catchy, who. calls attention •to the fire ".inen- ' weather and scarcity of labor; to .ace existing hay that ',resort' to ,•the -uSe of :Machinery :and -'been SuffipientlY*, .tured before being a hasty' '-inethrid •of ,curin -and. tar stared. Tire fact. that ' the season la I. the risk .6f losing his crop, his .barn late ...and'Aliat .1�t much hay Kat d'POssibly his live :stock ? • This been stored to, _date ,credited . Mr.: Heaton for •the lack so far of , nHota;6fft14sdlitlitna tunroerlte -iinhavtietivh°Of ''thlies- reportS .rif barn fires .chie ...fo Sport- .',..-e.eord SlOwn by our .tenetts or taneOus combustion of Pay thiR thit, Dotietliar elass of ;risk." "yeaes et6p, Last year, with the bay- • ,• .sillealttartti‘nyg°, ThettifTireset.werekplr' tdaetibIS'lea.rnWhiQawants' svirri barn 'due to' Spentaneotia. coin. UStioe was', reCeiVed On -JO? 220th, ta teach ,s,%?m••, , „ men LI,TartNOW SENTINT-i • TIIIJRSDAY Al./GUST 7th, 1924. MURPERERS -'0OMPARATIVVLY •. SAFE • • • The 'daily newspapers are doing :their. heat to. keep pp interest .iti the. _ itiide. Ch Wa,4 • The• Chance ,of `these •confessed murderers being hanged :is •suggest- ed. by th.e fact that, lest year (1923) there were ! 270 murders in Cook County,. Illinethe, pra.tically Means' Chicago, as ‘that city ., has spread. almost over the county, and there was just one. execution.: • Nine, were sentenced by the eourts ta .h4ng, but , for one reason' and anoth- en/eight Were allawed (6.• eseape the • gallows. • . " 'The present year bids fair to eut- strip 1923 in ,the'nuniber Of Murders. • In' the ' first; six months there • were 11,5,killings, "being:at the rate of 359 fat theyear; So far there,. has not • been an execution, and we are not: sure' that there has been •a Convic- • tion. The .courts scareily eould get around to a conviction' in six months One, can hardly believe that mat- ters will go on.as they wer.e after the present vase ' Leopold and Leob , is disposed., of. The murder was so 'brutal' and cold blooded, and there not , a shadow ,of adoubt as to ,• .the guilt Of the accused. They •eonfess- :ed to • the police • and they •pleaded . giilty in .ceur*.'n:hga ..cone out that they kidnapped the -boy to get: mon- ey. t.'"With , whieh. to .pay gambling, • debts, and that' their killed ' him for entertainment;.Leopold has Said that ' all. he could see wrong': with it was that they were caught. .., :It these Vonfessed murderers es: • cape :the ,as, they ;likely will,, • there .Can be no justification here- after for. • hanging any man in the. 'State Of IllinoiSe for iimider. :NO more deserving ease than the pre- sent. can Come :before the einirts. • In. cenneetiOn With this farsical trial -it ha's:come mit that a mincl..eX- . _ . .pert. brought frctin WaShington by , the. defence, • was:paid $250.06 • per . . day, while he studied the 'criminals and gayevidence ,ealculated to save, theni.; Naturally, lie found 'them' ;nor= illy IrresPensible, and excusable:Jar wit/they had done: Mind, experts engaged ..by, the prosecution . have found the very opposite, ' • Could anything ,tis more •' * • ' And it' • sbould .not b • forgotten/ that the criminal soar*" in. Canada are following in 'the fedbstesis Of the courie in the United Statues. • The Globe' Pertinently. suggests that "the ,1 - 'wide 'margin ;between and'4on-, evietions for .Murder •Canada, re, •quires explanations."' - , PLYING AROUND THE WORLD • At the .present' Stagecif, develope- , ment flying around woirld, does not appear to have rinich advantage', in srieed; oyer other niore coninion means: Of travel: The pritish fiyerk,lilagLaren, after :Mani. delays. 'and mishaps. has, been obliged ,to 'aboridan' the :flight • his , •machine having .been 'wrecked •pn the •Sebezian Wast, north of Japan. Mac - Laren appears . to have been. unin- juied; and 'is On his 'Way • ,home by machines" "going together -have had • taineWhat, better,..leck,.: although, one of them, appear's, ka, have, been, forced to give up, haying come to, grief on the 'flight from Scotland to Iceland. ;Fog over :the, ecean appears • to have been. the mosttroublesome ob- stacler,-It Avas fog ,whichlorced.,4rae-- Laren-fey make the landing • in which' ASIIFIELD cOuNcth trie• pn July,14th, all mem. bers., being present, minutes -Of Jun•"6 'meeting read "Iind. • aPlireved on Mo- tion "of 'Earrisil and . Campbell." Coin: inanicatio,ns, from clerk of Kinloss Township re Henderson Drain: Mov- ed by Farrish and Catnpbell • and. ie - solved • that „clerk • notify Kinloss 'P.,0 4110. Mil4tNe • selveajialaieley....,,atly„rfu,rther-, inent; The- folliiiing bills -were ordered paid in: motierrof Jamieson and Sull- ivan. Geo. Twamley Gravel .$26.85; Kilpatrick gravel -128.25y grad. ing $36.00, Oil ,25 $64,50; Min:die '<gt Son spikes; staples wire ;and. lock •$5,47; Jno. H. Reid, Repair bridge Read 5 $2.25• Thos. McIntyre, draw - Ing tile '' road ,6 $4,59; A, Elliot re pair bvide cul. and grading. road 6 I6:59F-TIFor-Slare-kelaff, grading • on road 5; $5.06; L. Siniley'Spikes; $1:00; Harvey Sillib gravelling: read 7. $7.- 75; Tgoal:t & poilack ,grading $13.- 30. repair we'shetit,ril, 7 $4.00 $1,7.00; Russell Free broken spring • Lorne .Farrish • grading road g $10.09; Hogan widening road and put- ting in. tile $14.50; Sidney ,Ferguson putting; in tile. road 2 $4.00; Elmer Farrish Poets $9.00; Neil G.. McNeil- . • de repair two.culs on road 1,',g, $5,- 0-0; Alex Harvey posts and braces • ;Albert 0. Loughlin, filling washout on road' 5 $.50; Robert Men, qry raking atcines on road 4, 84.60; , • • lett' ,Treleavep; repair tivo culverts „ "on Toad 5 $5:00; William- Claire gra- ding on road 4, $3.0,0; Fred Johnston. ..;-rading. on road three $5.00;"Wesley .Twaniley gravel $34.75;,' . G., Prayne 'Examining sheep ,.$3.60.; ;Isaac Haw- kins' graireling and tinting on hill •• 10.00;Mike Feley grading. en Ill& Lake R.' .road 2 40O; jno. Green' :yrading lake range 'road 2 $6.00; .faines Drennan 'grading- road 3 .$5.- 00; C.. O'Reilly 'rePair road. 3 $3.00;:" J. Sullivan toWing on hill lake :range. road two $1.2.90; Tim Griffin grad - ;ng and repair hill Lake Range. 00; -.,3119.- Jamieson. work. in .pit. $5.00;-. .Coupcil adjeu,ined to meet on An- ituSt 14th, Same Place and.hour, on motion of JainiesOn and Campbell. Reeve C. •E.,'Metionagh,' Clerk. MORE ABOUT G0VERN1VIENT ' CONTROLL IN BRITISH, • COLUMBIA: iverking.' of ......gol'yernment contr�lof liquor selling ;as it . has Worked ;out. .A Part Of the .a.rticle ha S beengoing the rounds of .the • Ontario -.press: and We here reproduce, a it Jot is, it special 1.nterest tfOntanio-. en,ttc. see 'AreliieJohnson, chairman ..of.. the liquor control board and pne' of the ,leading •lawyers : of 'the ,• province.. ."Talk .of trusting brewer :who has :broken. every 'Promise be ever Made ,t6. people!" :he said. '144 Would:las,' hef trust .e'fox'in a hen roost as , to trust a .brewer to sell beet within re- gulations.. They, promised to be con.: tent_ with the present, law, but •We' have had . Only three ; years and they...are :already lobbying for •; beer .by the, glass.; The brewers have ' not Played by -FS. at." ali; They, 'have, been selling beer at all hours tothe baotleggini,e, clubs. They can't Play. fairThey are not . built th'at,..way. Man who break ,one iawVail -break i:two:"..?; . 1. fold. Johnson that over • in 'the '.i.fniCe'd;-8-,tates the breieta •andi liquor interests were. -.working „ to have .beer aid Wine 'brotight back , again, under k9v,erement control and asked him what he ,thOtight, of • that. •' au ever set .. those: brewerieS and. , wineries going again and allow ,mak' alepholie: betagesa..of' :COY Strength,' 'they tijiWsoon be in cohtrol, of polifici; be in the Saddle:and will ride roughshod over ' any iaws H.-that,youean.,tnake lating, the sale ' of their product" he answered.: "I)onTt evergive • them that edge on Yea. Give 'tbe. brewers a bung, :and they'll soon', want a whole. barrel., OPeti but,' a crack, of' the 'door t� them:and _they'll push in and .take.' poS4e,ssion of' 'yourwhole house, as they -are •doing in, British Columbia; ...,„..y.T4,...haye„thcmd, What PretetierFOu''`WiTi' cwOhr a thousand ..hteWerieS. arid half a ntil- lion beet-sellets!.., nian,, , you „ „ might, as Welt try to conitol ' "yoti Who Would knov,, Wh,a,t g'.oVetn'inent • control has dom i.' Britisha1tinbia$ithn. -In„,1020 the publicdebt WAS 36561.- -The moderationists aaid, governinent con- trol' ty'airld'. reduc'e- the public' debt, Ii 123 the 'Public debt' was $68,1611-- 100:: .o,ver".,..twicS.:ititielt• ttsi -bee fere gOverninent, control came in force. They said 'it Would reduce, taxation „ A fanner With '$ acr piiid •t in 1520 and .$852; in 1028;• another with 10 acres paid;$65 in 1920 paid $64 in 1923, another' with 16 acres in fruit and 32 in grain and hay paid $1,251' in 1923, Thetaxes , on,' a honks and lot 14'yali0oUVer•inereaile4 frOtti REDFRONT •RA:,, S-Ii`AS61,4 PURE MANILLA ROPE, THE ROPE' you,CAN • TausT--sp- Emon WgAIIING AND 11 ANDLING. QUALITIES. YOU WILL FIND OUR PRICE IS BIGHT. PULLEYS—IRON, WOOD AND. STEEL ON NAND. • BEATTY HAY FORKS AND cAR8. "mApLp., LEAr. BRAND, 44'RON:G ,PITCHFORKS, 4, 4)/1,-,- . •• • AM) .5, 'in', RANDLPS41RYON' GUARANTEED ',REAL Y••,AL.,VE STRAPPED OR FiSORULAPI. . „. ' • • ROPE—%140ri. ILL'Or LOADERS, 5 -I6 -INCH FOR' TRIP ,ROPE, 1/24NC4 PLYMOUTH • PURE : MAN -ILA FOR • PLYMOUTH "GOLD MEDAL": BINDER TWINE. • • • SPRINKLERS. -GALVANIZED Ars,10- JAIIANN,ED, 1, 1 •, 14 AND 16 -QT. kik.' • • BERGER'S' GUARAN TEED ,kuRp PARIS GREEN. ARSENATE, OF LEAD' . ' • •. • • .CEMENT, LIME AND PARISTONE-ALWAYS ON HAND. • , E ARE PLEASED TO ,ANNOUNCE THAT THE MANUFAC- , • •• 'mime HAS bowEimp• THE PRICE ON #IsrroN HARD WALL PLASTER. • • , • Place 'Your Order for Coal Now Yob Will\Find OurPriceRight E-& PORTEOUS 1 Hardware Coal” PluMbing.• ,•'I'insmithing • mcknow., PROPERT.IES'..FOR SALE: : The following prOperty',' all , situated in the ;Village of Liwicriow; being part of the Estate of the late WM. Allin, are for sale PARCEL Solid. Brick Store, , vith dwelling , above, and 'noW: odeupied as a dry 14•oocls .store; situated on the. North West 'Corner 'of Campbell arid. Inglis Sheets.' PARCEL NO ' • Frame Dwelling two -stories With :large lot on West; side of Inglis Street„elose to business section ,,.. • Two story 13riek 'Block, now occupied as a general store, _ jewellry.store and farm implement Warerobins. The seeond .i1Q01* occupied as general living-rooms„-dental--Amrlors and Of-. • flees., This .property is, le first class state of repair and has been newly decorated situated on south aide of Campbell Street. • PARCEL NO, 4. • :Oita -story Frame, Black af' four...stores; ;i3Ow occupied aS a bar- • ber..liep, laundry and gents' tailoring. 'Phis, property is .sizz,7- ate0 en northside of 'Campbell Street ' , . • PARCEL, NO: 3.. TWo-story' Frame ;Building of two Sthres now. occupied, !Zs . , • shoe 'repair and ,harneas shop, "situated on south' side. of bell Steet .• . • •• PARCEL,,,NO. 6: Large "..Lot 'With frontage on north .side .of. ,street, frame" been used as a dry', goods • 'store and dwelhng. . PARCEL NO 7. • . ' • • Two-story 'Ftatir,e.:it. Of two stores, on south .side of Campbell 'Stivet and now 'occupied as'a cafe arid meat inirket- PARCELNO; , ',Resiticne,e• on. Havelock Street, next tethe Methodist Chureh, • fully equi• pped,:.'bathrocin; electric : lights, •bot air furnace, ,hard,'"and,-seft •water,arge front Verandah ;with , "laWn at front and both sides of. house•, driVeWays and large,,,,, garage—for three :cars, ftiriziee and hujt cellar's. are ''separ-• ate.' In addition there are two frame barns on stone foUnda-,, tions that make ideal Stables ahtl drive Sheds,' garden at:mar. This property , is, One of the best in LueknoW, both, tug regards .41peation -:.and general repair. esl.fiTh-reosie-'013firc°e%Crir -ri-rci-nanbwtil'teisPected-b Y'-intere „ , W. GAilin, _ ,and there . were Hm00,;sales Of' pro- froni non-payment. of taxeS in Vancouver last year' than Jiver before; Ontario is warnedand on October 23 will have ",,a chance to prove whether the Warning 'Means anythinijg '..nOt. the only proper thing for this prov- ince:, --o-o-o As welCome as sunshine in every. place is the beaming approach of a goed-uttn•ed feeo: Ointiaariliog.treet • r -VINED OR 'WAVING STILL • Licenee •Inspecor Mat,tt. • Beckett of, Owe. Sound paid a Visit to the'"'-` rin 'L�ui5 Martin,, in Carrick township recently and found a still,. together with a quantity • of mash. A , dilgozit.,had leen inade, by Martin, in the' *hodslied and, was cleVerly concealed, by the Woodpile, Martin • appeared before IViagistrate 'A.E.' Me-;. Neb.., 'and atter, pieading gui1t, was Cot. This is- Martin's 'Second appear- , assessed $500 $:.0e0acolt: ostixtiirneoriot.11;:hAard,,la4, 0 , - • '