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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1941-06-05, Page 6y NOTES „ the regular Sam Brown belt with re 1 volver and holster.. But ,on' Ate belt, under the right- „armwill be slung' ..ERMEN ,will eaYy W=. J. Free- ; a leather baric! -cuff case which is more i eea'water. • who twit week available in a scuffle than,the old hip aa�!tm , elerieti pound pike that, pocket redeptaele. ed just. two` inches• short.'of r s .hat a+ee'.feet ' ,The catch' was made in REDUCING a charge of driving athem With the tools of wa .. o t,. THE Lt CKNOW ` SENT1NEL AN OPEN. LETTER TO PEOPLE OF BRUCE' Ciitixens ,of Bruce County; We have •ibeen asked• by. the, people„ 'Of the British Isles to help provide ittles• bill rFbld� NEWST-ANDARDB are to be.:er- ected.` for .00 new street, lighting sys- •:tem . o Ches'ley,'s. main street.. '500 : n. and 300 watt, lamps --Will he used -the; business. section. • ' R. PATERSQN, former GEORGE Bruce ; County, Agricultural. Repres- •entatrYe.'Is at• presentaiin, Canada ,tot a. three-eaoxttb leave. of absence, from ltiis.. :post ,cat Canada_: House, London, En lund.`'Mz. 'Pa"teraon holds the nn „ g portant office ;oi : Trade~ Ciomanissioner • In England of the jDoiiriiiniion Govern; '004 • Agricultural Branch. Mr:LPat raon_c._a�iin3o. Canada for• -the--put ipose . of ,cocferring. 'with: officals of. �f:the Department olf 'Trade ;and Com-' ', aimerce and 1 riculture en matters pertaining ..to the movement to the. ,British isles', .of.tai important food ;protects with 'which he •is' primarily' 'cone • PBO' INCIAL OFFICER McCLEV-1 they may -save --themselves '.and -save: motor., ear while iitoxieated, ta one of reckless driving, Magistrate Walk- er, fined AlienMcKinnon, ;Wali . emir-, rier of Glamis, $20and costs and sus- pended his .driver's ;perrldt for thirty -?LANs.. ,'1 OR ,'the erection of a; $35;000 theatre in the Hanover, ),fain street "hoUTow?' were ,shattered last, 'week by the; refusal : of R C'i'Berk- inshaiw•, head of the priorities Branch. cif -the Munitions' aind 'Supply Depart-. meat, to issue a permit for the nevi uslclin . -0n -JUNE 9th, ratepayers of :Kin- erdine will vote for or✓;aga'inst• the ' by --law- t -4 -build -an arena ' in -that town at a cost not to exceed $18,000: us from becoming slaves of the Hun, Thus is an honour but it is also a. great responsibility. Many, of - us .taking part .:lin thin Victory ,Loan •Campaign ' were able lo take an active part 'in:defea'ting the . German army. of , 1913. -. Now, we, have .fretted because age ;or ., other . circumstances :prevented. is ,from doing all Iwe felt we should iwhen danger threatens the 'safety. and freedom• of our ' families. • '• ` .Our l Country may demand. saicri- fiees from all . of Vs • :before . this war . is wort;..hut the Victory: Loan is no Sacrifice; it is an opportunity. We ar not asked :to ive but to THE • FOLLOWING were amens_ those. who attended :the R �t.: A. F. dance at Port Albert, . on Friday ev- ening: Miss Blanche McDougall, Miss Dorothy Burgess, _Alias Annie_ Far - gallDonald McLeod, . Lloyd McDou- gall :and' Fraser McKinnon -Ripley Express. IN CHINA' for the past few years, Miss' Dorothy1VIaeKenz e; dau 'titer of: Mr.. ,;and Mrs. W. A. MacKenzie of j Kincardine and formerly of 'the Han- . I9 has .;received liis issue of:. the new unifc rng rec.e%itly approved .liy; the de- _..as*t':.kehti,..t L....atg l ich embodies soma, drastic !changes. The well - ;dressed Proviineni1 pelieeman will now aveair a cross between gray and Air • _poets to return home. shortly from the Orient. She has been on the staff .of the .Canadian ;Mission School re- cently re-established at Jenshaw. Pre- sent: plans call for Miss MacKenzie to fly from' 'her station, .to. Hong. Kong and to sail from there in •:July • VICTORY LOAN quotas for Ash:- field shyfield and West Wawanosh .Township fiave sen se% lot-$'56;200--ari $3g;5&'0 respectively. . The' Huron :Comity quota' by municipalities '.totals $1,- 300,000. lr300,000. Force -blue, 'with. cap :, to match and over high school' teaching staff, ex - lend the money we have in the bank to Canada and Canada offers us the best. r}nd safest security , in the world today, itself. • born vagi canvasser will be 'a neigh.. of yours and I am confident that you will welcome him .and place your sub- scription with 'him for as many -tory Bdtida .as you can'Your. canvas; ser has many calls tei 'melee and your prompt .help will' make' lois 'task easier.. . millions "of dollars on There are deposit 'in 'the` B,aflks -Of this Coun- try: The Hun= womb( take it from :t}s _Canada asks . us to lend it. We all want' to help .',as' ,best we can and now the opportunity'is: here: NO donation is asked. It so little that' it is Bard to realize it means' sod much,.. Let us Lend' to Defend the Right to Be Free. -Lt us Help 1 in`ish the Jab: •. Yours in •Confidence,--- • Farquhar Shaw, • 'Chairman, Bruce County. Walkerton, June 3rd, 1941; s f THURSDAY, ...WNW 5th, -„19"11 Your Victory rids • NO . present,• -%i:rr`aLl -e to a : for thein at g If ou. caiz�ot O r Thai/ byDecemberett : Next Less Than Ph ,Inches of ;Rain Rainfall iill May would 'have •been• about nil; had -it -Pot ' been -'for last week's showers, . which came in time to relieve a drought condition' that was- becoming .serious. Total rainfall for the month ' amounted , to 1.43 in- "ciiea.T efi re" �wiere • 6 ars :oi"io r 'sunshine, .with' the' high temperature of the month recorded: at 82 degrees. and the lowest at 29 'degrees.. • .� The'Minister of. Finance of the Dominion of Canada offers for public subscription ,000/'00,0 Dated; and bearing Interest Froin:15th 'June 1941, and offered in Iwo maturities; the choice of .wlkh is,optional with the subscriber, as Follows=. Ten-year _ t% 'BONDS, DUE, 1°5th JUNE 1951" PAYABLE AT MATURITY AT:101%y' Callable' at/ 01% • inor after 1950 ' < Interest payable 15th June and December Denominations, . $50i- 350,$100 $-5,00, $1,000, $5,000,:$25,000 ISSUE P.RICEi 100%, yielding 3:09%q: to maturity--.--- .., • Principal and interest will :bis payable in lawful money of Canada] the principal 'at any cigency of the Bank. of Canada andthe interest semi-annually, ! . without charge, at any branch in Canada of any 'Chartered Bank. Bonds, maybo registered as to Principal or as to principal and interest. 4,4 :Five and one-half. year 2% BONDS,:;D1JE 15th DECEMBER 1946 PAYABLE. AT 'MATURITY 'IAT 100%' _ Non -callable to _maturity_ lnterest:pay`able 15 h Tune and December: • Denominations, $1,000,..• ,, ; .$5;000.; 425,00(L'_____• - . 25,00Q' ----T, ISSUE P -RI E1 99%. -yielding -29% to -maturity CASH • SUBSCRIPTIONS. . , Cash subscriptions for either'or672k maturities oft ih •loan: maybe:patn i futtedtheliime Of app1icailedir'-"" at the issue price in each, case 'without accrued interest. ' Bearer bonds with coupons will be available for prompt -delivery. Cash subscriptions. may also be made payable*, instalments, plus accrued interest, as follows 10% on application; _ 15% :on 15th. July 1941;. •15%.on 15th August 1941, " 20% on 15th September 1941; 20% on 15th October' 1`94I, • • ' 20.11 % on the 3% bonds oh 19.52% on the 2% bonds, on 15th November 1941.. . -' The last payment on 15th November 1941,.covers the final payment of principal, plus .71 'of 1%'in the' •' case of the 3% bonds and .52 of ,1% in the case, of, the Ve bonds representing accrued 'interest from 15th' • June 1941, to the due dates of the respective instalments.... CONVERSION SUBSCRIPTIONS Holders of Dominion'of Canada 5% National Service' Loan Bonds due 15th November•1941, may, for • ' the period :during 'which the'subscriphon lists are open, tender their bonds with Anal coupon attached, in lieu, of • p g. • cash,' on subscriptions for a like or greeter par value of bonds of, one or both maturities of this loan The surrender K'alue of the. National 'Service. Loan 5% Bonds will. be ,402:15%v of their par value, inclusive of • accrued interest; the resulting adjustment tole paid in cash. THE• .M MINISTER OF FINANCE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO ACCEPT OR TO ALLOT THE ;WHOLE OR ANY PART OF S THE `'.AMOUNT OF :THIS LOAN .,SUBSCRIBED FOR CASH ' FOR EITHER OR. BOTH,. MATURITIES iF TOTAL SUBSCRIPTIONS , ARE . iN ''EXCESS • OF $600,000,000. THE PROCEEDS OF'THiS LOAN WILL BE USED' BY THE•GOVERNM'ENT TO FINANCE EXPENDITURES FOR. •• : WAR PURPOSES. • SUBSCRIPTIONS MAY BE MADE THROUGH ANY OFFICIAL REPRESENTATIVE, ANY VICTORY LOAN COMMITTEE 011 MEMBER THEREOF, ANY BRANCH IN CANADA OF ANY CHARTERED BANK, OR -ANY AUTHORIZED'' SAV4NGS BANK, TRUST -OR LOAN COMPANY, FROM WHOM MAY BE OBTAINED , .APPLICATION FORMS AND COPIES OF THE OFFICIAL PROSPECTUS CONTAINING' COMPIEtE• - DETAILS CO THE LOAN. THE !ISYS WILL OPEN ON 2ND JUNE 1`941, AND 'WILL CLOSE, ,.NNOT LATER THAN 21ST JUNE19414 WITH OR WITHOUT NOTICE, AT THE DISCRETION OF THE MINISTER OF FINANCE: - Depatment of Finatce, Ottawa, 31st Moy-1941: • '4 e§ili �'� tdlil'Wp a. t • rtidl ate' in Canada's new those who wish. to.. a P Fort .. P , Victo Loan but who -find it inconvenient to "pay In 4, ,.,. die of issue, ” full'for a bond or bonds by June 15th, the d . i .:office -tans_ -Bank_.. --arrangements—are available at- any of of -Montreal. . maturing g in 1961 may arrange to —Purchasers of bonds- rna pay10% by . o June 1 5thwith the balance fn five monthly ' instalments thereafter. Your payments will bear interesf, • .at the .cog :on rate of hebond. Special.arrangements are also.. available to purchasers of bondsmaturing in 11.946.. • The Bank of Montreal 'will be pleased to: arrange any reasonable plan to Butt mdtvtd.ual requireMents4 requirementsand will welcome your enquiries. We urge you ',to sekii the manager of the nearest branch of the Bank nowt without. delay'.:.. Buy Victory Bonds--4hey are a'ninvestment in human freedom. , • ie 11 it At el SE ro r' 2 t e � 6 e 1 0 OF ESTABLISHED 1817 Winstone Churchill -Defeated - at -Dundee, Winston, Churchill was out. of Parliament again ,but it was not in his nature 'to be idle. He. began' to' write "The World Crisis" that -stupendous and authoritative his- tory of the First •Great :War, which •is still. regarded es •the best history .of that, war. • "_ The 'following year, there was, a General• Election and ,Winston contes- ..ted West Taeicestek.'still labelling him .self as -a -Liberal. Hewas, -againde feated,• but • the tide' was, soon to turn Engand's modern T,St. , • George was to •findnew••dragon in..the !orii3. .oftTie `ciaTis�s; iiia ;oTd\ enemy. 'The • Liberal ' leader, Mr. Asquith, _decided • to. -.put • a minority I Labour government •'•in power, ..• and Mr.• Churchill •parted company with- his, old friends and party.Once again lie was a• man without a party . • Defeat That • Was A Victory Early,, in 1924,' at' the invitation• of a group, of influential :Conservatives, Winston Churchill stood for :the. Ab- bey division of Westminster as a Con stitutional,. candidate, • pledges, to fight Socialism. Opposedto him were a Lib- eral, a Socialist and the official Con- servative. • • With but eight days left before election day, and having no organize-, tion behind, him, Winston•£hurchill ',Put tip a tremendous fight.. He' lost— but by only, ,¢3 votea..It. was a "defeat,, hut•for Mr.: Churchill a moral victory -'and its moral 'naafi not •lost ;dnStair. ley Baldwin, the Conservative :leader.' 'Becomes Conservatitre Minister • , Winston • Churchill 'offered a".sub- saly to the owners while negotiations were, proceeding, but these :proved. abortive, and Lord Birkenhead, Win- ston's' great' friend, said acidly: "It' would be possible to say without., et- -aggeration of the Miners' leaders that they were the stupidest•meli in Eng- land. if we had not frequent .occasion•. to' meet the owners. too!" • The General Strike began. Volun- teers kept the. essential `services go- ing, but: Winston Churchill realised that, , without . newspapers,• • rumors' would be widespread: and cause trouble, ,so he' organised the •'=British •Gazette",. which made journalistic' history..When the'strikewas broken, -the •- Social -ins -railed -at the "British :Gazette"' and its founder, 'Churchill. 'They declared that 'Wiled been partis•- 'T? v.hi1ent1y araii- Labou Churchill 'cheerfully. admitted ' the thrust, adding "Holy can. I .be expeet ed to • be ' itnpartial as To`'between the. fire brigade and the 'fire ?" anoth- er •Labour critic . who said the paper 'was a "rag"., he retorted -"Well, 'I :hope jt -has sickened the Socialists of State Social sm`iii newspapers!" Continued next week.. ' • (Copyright' Reserved.) EDUCATIONAL • ASSOCIATIOi ,CONV-ENTtON.F AT ,TIVERTON • The Annual Trustees and Ratepay- ers convention' will be held in Tiverton on Friday afternoon, June' Trustees . should , avail thein§elves of thi .opporltunity to keep posted' on' .chatters of interest to themselves and to their schools. 'It 'is expected.that the In Teeters, In the following November, .when the Secretary of the . entail i Trust Mr. Baldwin formed his second Con- ees association and a guest .speaker servative ' . government, Winston will'be present. Pairents and rate - Churchill was` offered the prize plum . a era are ixivited. • • of the Cabinet -he became. Chancellor 'p y of the Exchequer. This electrified the I country,. for , 1Vlr. Churchill had not ASK ROAD BE ' PAVED at that time, joined the Conservative , party, Perhaps, .as a calumnst said Mayor J. IL Crawford, Councillor J. at the time, Baldwin remembered; the j, Evans, A. J. Walker, A. R. DuVal 'old 'country . adage . "that an old 'and Ronald Rae ofd Wingham' joined poacher made the best gamekeeper". with Reeve Ross: of Teeswater, Reeve' The :partnership between Baldwin McInnis ' of 'Culross, 'Messrs. Foster and Churchill was unusual: in tem-" Moffatt, W. L. Thompson and 'W. I. perment and onitlook;. they'were poles Freeman of Teeswater,' in a depute - apart:: Baldwin .was a man of peace; ,tion that "waited on the . Minister of Churchill -a fighter. -Winston-believed- Highways, Toronto, Froin. T, B. Mc. in' action; while Baldwin had •a firm Questoli;• with the request that. the conviction . that events would shape road . from W ingha'm to Teeswater be 'theninelvies if they were left ' well paved. They,met with a 'very fine alone!- History records its own' ver-, reception but the minister did 'not. diet on these two eminent British give any definite answer as to wheth- statesmen, for to Mr. Churchill' is left .er or not this' work would .be' carried the' gigantic taskof'andoing some of out.• a ca t e friends a - Mr. Baldwins obis of omission". p ,Friend of the People .HORSE MADE FINE SHOWING r we d have more and nor- e neighbours. We'd have Iri his first }midget, Churchill was to Saturday, May 24th saw the open- of his common sense philosophy. , , fur- ther great the%Widows% Orphans�a df Ne �Hainburg, Keen interf the harness est season nfelt , This little note is- meant to, bring p p y a breath of warm prtng "eltinook"' in Wingham and rattanle, as the local from: Sunny Alberta to Sentinel read. horse, Adinore Grattan, was compel- ers: ` ing in, the 2.30. pace. He deserved the ' ' 4 S:incercly,' intere§t by, winning .first place in all HUGH MaelVIILI:AN, three heats, one heat was paced in. 213. _ . Admore Grattan, sire Admiral Grat- tan; damn Mitre Bearer, was raised by Mr, Foxton, Winghaan. A year ago he was ` purchased' liy, . D. MeCharles of. Ltacknow•' and L. C•.. Turv,ey sof Blue - vale. He has been trained since, last Pall by Mr. Turvey, who drove him on Saturday,. Idle was considered' to have given. the Most outstanding pet SUNNY \ALBE'RTA Dear ,Sentinel Friends: ' - .This province, ,being, on the• sunny side .of• the Rockies, will surely • m . future, be , one of the great home building areas sof Canada: 1 oximity • to .the 'Pacific so warm•.:breezes pre- • vents Jack 'Frost from holding sway • .in winter longer than ' two or • three days'at a time,. Warm,Chinooks sweep through the he Mountain 'valleys and presto,. he is. driven back north or .east again. Alberta's, climate there fore,•• is more moderate than:" Bruce County people,vusually_ ,imagine. Just now Spring is in the air. Pop- ' lars hang with.^a' million' cat -tail-like blossoms. Glow-th-is_rapid.-What yes= � terday• was ' only a : ggreen• sheen over • the bush lands, today has the appear- azi f full�ieafed lo�relidiess; • • Endless rolling acres ••spring, up in- to green wheat •fields in' a day, or two: Homey ,Homesteads I. am sitting in an; Alberta home- stead: It's. 'early forenoon: The - pall of'smoke from Rocky Mountain House- bush'.fires 'has lifted 'just enough to • ` reveal. the • magnificient Rockies. Snow topped peaks foraea'line .'artistic between 'sky blue. and • earth: On 'the kitchen wall in. front .of. me hangs , • • the high -borne head df a.' mountain4; tam shot last autumn. He looks a' monarch, dead but not dethroned. His eyesstill look_ far and ,high toward• his mountain home., ; In the -farm yard, is' a • flock: 'of , scratching hens and Ci -owing roosters. "Why • scratch so hard", my • farmer friend cautions; "eggs • are only eight cents a . dozen, in . the Village"; Com-' puting further he . adds_ that "even • eight cents may be of,more•valu&than 'wheat at forty cents a bushel". So' perhaps the hens had. betterlscratch away. Beyond this • scene •are,the tree • tor, the plough, the packer, .the, disc , and the seed drill.. Yesterday I saw • an. outfit 'working: . A •„twelve -foot. course. disced, 'harrowed, seeded • and .fertilized at .the rate' of fivemiles • an hour •all' .iii 'ane opxation: Bitf what a cost! The 'whole outfit •alo e equals' the cost .of many a good quget, er section -nearly $2;500.00. • "This' power farming, if we can't organize . and to • ntorp co-operative, planning, is going•'to be our undoing", remarked • the. driver. •"-I often think -141• rather go' back to horses," he. added They're more company, 'more-'econoniical; and .-, . they keep las'from .getting these get- • rich -quick ideas, • that in. the end mean. get-poor-suddenlye 'We need to farm on a smaller scale. A. half sec- tion is quite enough. We'd then have More time to' plant trees and ,make our homes and .gardens .more beautiful and comfortable, We'd have more . • chickens , horses d t 1.- round."Also ' to live", he em 'hasizeve rriorc.. 'ne p eel at the end ' 'Winston d s ableannounce . Contributory` Old'Age.Pensiong plan.. • Yet Philip Snowdon, formai Ch'an- cellar in the' Labour governifi"ent of Ramsay MacDonald, jeered at, his ad- versary, and twitted Churchill with changing his ,mind. 4 "To improve is' to eliange", riposted. Mr. Churchill. "To . be perfect is to have ehanged' often!" General Strike • • • The catastrophic General Strike burst.,on the country in 1926, arising from the dispute in the coal industry. Employers wanted • a reduction of wages or increased 'Ours. The coal 'Comity Weed Meeting A weed meeting open . to all in- terested and esp'ecislly the weed ix-, speetoi`s, To:Whshjp Road' Siiprinten- ' , dents, Rural ,Reeves and lYeput�y Reeves, the County. Engineer and School Inspectors'^ has been arra" 'ed rn for this 'miners solemnly swore, "Not ripen- •fornranee of the day. His next chanceheld Thursday afternoon to be icy off • the part riot a minute ori the to 'exhibit ,his speed will be hi Glen C1Sntori,in the Ag ieulttir l Boat'd Room, coe. Advance -Times,. 44 yN Ore G