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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-09-14, Page 4e4 NiitrliattlAe. rivitvasotirag, (Anti liAttlilitY %LUNN:44 o Intoknow_ILOut. Agent mr various Hue* ot rngtInktne, fire and „biro Vim cleat noinninten liturnintendj 034. 1:paidea agent in uueknaw ot the „lienden mutual. 4101141b6t Chr Vithigg 414 14137 - $4441404400 ru 0+1404. /* 0 O. Lucknow Ledge mots every YrIdaY evening at 01 Clock in their. Balk Camp* boll street, AU brethren eOrnialbr rwrittena 001,9eng—Nnbto thanil, V. T. Armstrong:. Vj Orond, BOA Visheri Treas.; 4,Iex. sl•ti gosstliee. er.C.# 11.1,10yiliFn.SO437..1114 Agawam'. 4. 7. G. Old Might Lodge meets every Thursday night on or_betore tno lull . moon, in the masoidelilall.paveivek street Laakillint. W. M.. V. Armstrong; 8. %V., • Martint.L. Pairleon: 8oey.1 W. .&. (I, lb it Court Sherweed., No. rio,14hchnowi ineeta evory last Mooney of the month, in In the (Mdr.'1low'i1al1. Vjdtutibrcthcrn cordially invited tOittend, Chief Bangen, John i. 13ent_itec# Sccy., Robt, Orahant rainrok..nentra #ionnsten. Treas.. lA 4, 0, 11, W. toucknow Lodge. NO, lsz, 'Meets seoo,4,34onday of °soli month; in the Oilil•• • follows Hall, blaster Workman, J. Mae- Diarniid: fin, Seoy,toah; Roo. OK*. #1100. Vetter; Toms., 11080. • Dental- WirOWLEft, .14. D. Sopc,fl.-.tOilloo 1.11) stair. hi' Button Biopi- Teeinkater. $pee ial attention, to gold plates, crowning and bridgework. visits Wrosetor 1st. and 0rd, Wothiesdayofeacjzonthi Uorrie Thur, Ettlutuni enttitigt Published, every Thursdoy rtiorniotr Isieknow, Ontario, 1116..CICNNZIN. Pto *toter and Editor. • . `Ulnas oF SuusomprioN.,--To AMY addresa In Canada or Great liritalu;oneyear $1.60. six monthin0e., three mouths ilk. 'ro the United $tides, one Year fg-eo. These are the paiu. in advaneerates. When paid in arrears OM rata 00. ler yoar higher. Subs. eribore who fail to receive The Sentinel regunuly by mail wilt confer a foyer by -no- qualatioit no et the tatat an Park Or 9144. When damage of.addrees is desired, both old and tbe now address should he given. NV40. DIsfLAT,A, Anue-bledo itnowh . on eiTlic4"0"* Stuity ANMAT,14-Onkintiortion Mei three in- sertions$1.90. . ..re,rms or Heal Estate for sale Oct each inser- tion; Miecollaneons Articles Vox' Sale, Toitent. liVantod, Lest. Found. oto., each insertion 250. Local iteadcraL Notices, ete.,10o per line per in- sertion, So each subsequent insertion; opeeial late of So to regular display advertisers. Curd of Thanks 250 Qeming Events So and 00 per line. no IletieolOSO than Mo., Legal advertising toe and 60 per line. Auction Sales, briet notice Ai, longer notice 106 per lino for first insertion &vier each subsequent insertion. Pluck -faced 117lai mina 2 lines for 1.. , 7 . • Anftipecial estjee, the object of whichis the pecuniary benefit °limy ludivideat or Assoc's! 00% to be considered onadrcrittcutent and clogged accorditiely, • Tipsiness Oards, eix fines and uudor 4.5.00 Per Year. • • • „. • A. NEWTON, IX 1). S. Dentiet,...0flice” ." • • 411111 Block, 1414°)40°Wi "14 AI1 ;141/dern THURSDA7Y; SEPT 14th 1916 methods 'used. Best. materials furnished • Crown. andBridgo work, -,Painiess extract- . Ion by the. use a the latest simpled and • • suilintestlarenitrallfititaBrOXetimilttril noultreal%thio BRucp COUNTY NE S. . Rev. Mr, Bice, of London, one-tirne rector of Bervie, is building a summer cottage at Kincardine Beach, , Lieut. Erie Robertson ef the Reyal Flying Corps, son of Mr.. and Mrs. • Norman Robertson, of Walkerton, was promoted on June. 1stto the rank of Captain: Capt. Robertson went to England a member of the king Corps with the idea of doing aviation. work but was given an appointment in 'the British War Office. ATAlki HOWE ob, 1-tErmE.—The \great Preponderance of bachelors at the House of.Befuge, Walkerton, was atill further increased by the arrival on Friday of two aged members of that order, to wt Walhain Th3mpson and Ian. McKay, of Wiarten, together with Miss Jane Crandon, also of that town, who were brought down by Constable Ward and handed over to the Keeper, saythe pru.ce Times: The men who are raising fanfilles and ' bnying niiuinery havee strange habit . • ; of keeping afloat and remaitimg outof the Refuge that,the less burdened . 'bachelors can neither understand !ler I acquire. , Gordon. Bonter,a get.richluick man,, who some Months ego, fooled a num- ber of Walkerton people into buying worthless sharee in a goal mine; failed • to:eppear. at Coart.last Week -when he was expected, to. appear for -trial on a , charge of obtaining money on false -.-.-preteneear- Be had been arrested -Kane- : time ago on the charge and Was out on $1990 hail.- He had :written to his wyer, 'Slew, to say that he •ihed important business in New York, , and would like to have the trial post 'poned for three months His $1000 hail was forfeited, but will be returned .if he appearsfor trial in three months. SHORTHeEN FROM Bunoz—Op " the front cover of a recent number' of , the Canadian. Countryman a photo of • the Shorthei% heifer, "Countess 16th", -and .the following reading Matter up- annum po'nnruon, • AND DETERMINATION if the Witt did not oo milch engage our attention, the ciarinkand dioastrous expedition of Sir Ernest Shackleton and Ins emipanions into the Antarctic 'Would liave•been a matter of first rate. interest the lsktrit twoyears. tbe :presence of the war they were ahnost forgotten. Having lc•st practieally all that they had, the'ra. en are now on their way back to,Brititin, their expedition having given occasion for the exercise or.lertitude, courage, determination and devotion to duty equal to that displayed on the battlefield -• • •• Having fo'und it. impossible to carry oat the, original intention of travelling clear egress the„southern ice cap of the earth, passing Over the South Pole by the way, the party, last April, 'decided to make an effort t� return. • They were then on Elephant Island, Their, ship had been lost in the ice,. but they :for. timetely had a small boat and 'a .fair amount of supplies. They had no Means of communicating with the outside world and there was do hope 'of 'a rescue party ceming to their' :aid before 411 sholild have perished. In.this.predicenient Sit Ernest Shack- eten With two companions set Outqn an open,boat fel. the Falkland IslandaLthe nearest bit of British territoryL-where they knew assistance might be obtained, Amore daring enterprise riearely thuld be imagined, and Str Ernest and his companions muat have an exceedingly in- teresting story to tell. • In spite of storm and cold and ice they succeeded in reaching Sydney Harbour on the Falk- land scene, since they had left, of one Of ,the, great navel engage., ments of the war. Here Air Ereest segnred . a ship :and crew, and an effort was made to rescue the men, left behind on Elephant Island. The -way, however, Was found so blecked with, ice, that approach' to the island was impossible, and the ship had to return Another attempt was Mede but it also ended in failure, and itlooked very Much as though the unfortunate men on the island wOuld be left to suffer the late _ _ which -has ovendkeirsomanyadienturens of the far South and' the far North. Here is where Sir Ernest showed his determination and devotion to his men: Eridently.he. woold rescue' them or die ' the effort. He s,omehew reached Punta Arenas, a port of the Chili, once the capital of Patigopia. The au. horities-there-very-k-indly-provided witba ship and crew. with which to make • third effort to reach the Men inerooned n the far South: Thia time they were ortupate in finding the ice sufficiently pen to permit the ohip to approach the potwhere the explorers were encamped. Evidently no time wee lost for within n hour all Were on board ,the ship and he return" Voyage was commenced.' these men shut' in by the ice ritHiccrassettadghtiii-rd4 by the most dreadful storins,, so that at times they could scareely keep out (4 reach of the waves, Inuit have hoped and waited can be more readily imagieed than related. One thing they, knew (and this is all they did know) that if their leader reach- ed Falkland Islands and oit Were possible' for. hurt to return, their rescue was mire. InAbia-they-were-riotAistippointect---- •The expeclitioe -left England 'It few days after * u was "declared. All arrange - mento .had been made, and it was not theaghLivellin.ahanden-the-enteepri Peered: A. Study in Shorthorn type • and Combination. Two-year-old Short- - hornOWned by A. and: G. Amid will . . sheWii at the canadian National • Exhibition. She was Junior Chairipion at the Canadian National, Exhibition • laat-year -and -Grand Champion tif tummer at the leading Western.shows. • We notice by the prize "list of the a Toronto -Exhibition that this animal i • was awarded the:Grand Championship f prize, as being the best in Canada,• ° Cempeteat judges also affirm that 8 Countess poi has no peers 'ie Amer- a ice. This heifer was raised. by Jatnes t G. Thomson, of the Elora road, Car- • A CLoss CAI.IP IN THE . Laxe.--The Southampton Beacon tells the follow. mg little story on an incident of the • bathing beach: On Wednesday morn- ing about 8 o'clock, Miss Lily Baker went out from the Beach .in a canoe. She had tiot gone f.ar when the canoe upset, and being a swimmer she start 'id for shorebFifthoM her progress, arid her cries for help • brought to her rescue Dr. Buttenweiser WhO Wa.S fatting his morning dip in the, lake. he aidgone an ei—r7rantWof times before he reached her, aad test .0.erteeiousness shortly after, and her 'reseuer. found the task too heavy for His daughter then swam out and • brought the uneonseious girl in far • enough for others, who had by this tine reached the scene to reach' them 'With plank, and alt reached shore. no dolor was soon in attendance, and it was not long before alt was o.k. ' nein/ aithugh o*Mies Biker and Dr. • Potion Weiser.: were pretty well used up, Xi& IttOweiser had an anxious few nznute wateking the tootle from the Owe* It was a sort of foolhardy • inidertaking, with -no particular objeet in view other than a feat of accomplishment. The in- tention •wtis to cross the Antarctic' Con- tinent, paslung over the South Pole. fled the enterprise been successful, it would have been the most opectricular polar tripever accomplished, Slit.' the expeditioe appears' 00 have been in bard luck from the beginning, In Arctic and Antaretio travel much depend upon the accident Sh ,of weather, and the ackleton • extleddien appears to bave encountered particalarlY bad (mason. It icgrettable that so much effort, eourqe and lottittuie should have been • wasted in endeavor merely to wio neteriety, whenwebquail lee were so much in, demand on the tattli leolds of Tf14 A• 1/., Irt. CUT. About twenty -41,r thousaod meta throughout "(anada, And the United Statee, are feeling pretty sore these days. •They are the meMbersof the•-A.OIT.W, ,(4neient Order of Alnit$4 'Workmen). This order (*.brotherhood hasjust"09tue though a, basiness and ltas ,been. indulging in a sort of house-eleaningand sttaightening-up.. • •° It was diticiivered seine time, age that the Order,could not Ooptinue maku3g payments »s it had been doing •on the amount of income it enjoyed. The amount of insurance it had undertaken to pay on the death of Inemliee was great out, of proportion to the yearly prendama charged. . - The tialsr couree poosinle, ender the eircumetancee, was to cut down the gal- ite of bli ie tint a tbq P 0. 4onie go .a mathematician, Frof. MacICinzie, of To- ronto University,, was engaged to proper. ly value eiery. This was done by•taking into 0en01114 the age of the polry holdet became amember, and the aniceint.he had paid in. Prof. MacICenzie recently completed his work and reported to the brotherhood. Cuts in the values cif policies very from 25 to 50 per Cent, and many e man, who held a paidsup, policy for $1,000 or $500, istold • that hie policy is practically valueless. ' That is pretty bad news for the man, who, for piers, has been pinching along in order to keep' uphis payments, all the time in the hope and belief that athis death thosadependent upon him would be benefitedlo the 'extent of one or two' thousand dollars &twine of his efforts and saving. . By way of illustrating what actually has been done, we are told that one man who joined -32 pare ago and since then had paid the premium on a $2000 pelicir, is now told' that his policy is redwied to 3982, and that in order to keep it good he must hereafter pay. $8 per • month while he lives. He has paid, in the 32 years,. V800, and.it is evident that he will not ha,ve'to live very Many years before paying out the present value of Iris pol- icy, as it *ill cost him $e per year to. keep it , • • Anether young 'man. joined 4 years ago and has paid $400. HIS $2000 Policy is worth $1219, and his montlilY pay- ments hereafter will be $4.19. Another man, who paid in $700, and, discontinu- ed paymente tic) years ago under anair- rangement- by\ which he got a paid-up policy of $350,18 now teld that his pol- icy lain fat worth only 018, and to keep this miserable little policy geod he must pay $3.60 per year while he lives. 4 LeeknoWma,n tells as that, two years ago, when the( order was thought to bp patorra-soincefinitriciEd-basirchfweeto1. that his $2009 policy was woith $51)0 paid-up policy. He; hadit converted nte a paid up policy • and felt that, it would remain good for at leait $500. Imafine his astonishment and chagrin when the other day he .was notified:that his policy Was in feet worth a little over $11,,and that in order te .keep ,it . good he should hive to start payments again: at the rate of $3,00 per year.'• What: would You give for a policy like that Other two Lucknow Men were simply efarmedthaktimir_pOlieies vitere-ein value at.all, • - • •. • • • Some. members • take the situation • philisophically and say, "Well, we mem- bers were Managing the buisinese . our selves, and sure enough there is tiebody• to bleine but ourselves.", ' • That, of courSe, is tree; yet one can not but feel that' Acre were deceives somewhere and that the fat -salaried me». at the top, who werepaid because they Were supposed te know something, didn't do all that might have been done to •eave the situation. They likely were more concerned with seises their salary' for. a few years longer. • And witat . abed be said about the encouragement given to outsiders to join the order, *hen it must have been evident that it couldnot con- -tinuels-Ninrinesittleilasi were eing taken in riat up to the time when ProL.Mac Kenzie's report was tnade public. • • The publie were caught, au it has been caught a thousand timesover, by t a fake promoter, the. real estate shark and he confidence man. The thing looks, oed on the surface, • ethers are going into it; no careful enquiry is made iintil ayotrcelconing•--41thmeskas'-it -haw goine to the A:0.1J. W. ELECTIONS IN • , r".•If ran nuicitrielit. snot 114 WHAT CAT It has been said that every third person hascatarrh in some,torre, • Sciericehas shown that nasal catarrh :often indicate* * general weakness 011ie,' body; and lOcal tre.atinenta in: the krin of SinkftS and vapors do little,. .if :any good, • • To -correct catarrh You iihoultd treat its „Pailae: by enriching your 'blood with the .011 -food in $ccitVa. UnittlelOir "w1.41c1h io ;medicinal food and 4..titligilAg4Onte tree frOnt any-harinfok ,drags. - 'Try it. ..-ficottlkneNnt#Terente#Vau -. • . — . , ot. ttaiiiia the cbargee a‘gainst the GeV- • • ernment• and there need be no narprine if there is P. political thrn-over euch as resulted at the last Manitoba, election, Ooluthbia has given many sol- diers to the Oaneclian overseas tinny: There are said to be 101000 Men frointhe, province at the front, 0,00Q in England Omit 30,00Q in military camps et • home. ArkangeMents are madb4e have the soldiers vote and tio.aiiitious are the 'crooks Indio are managing • the, election with a view to havirig the goveniment party win at any cost to have all tha votes4recorded that an efibrt pas Made • to get at even the pen in the trenchea The British War Office, however, Weald' • net permit this, They will go aa., far as the Men in Eegland hut no ;farther. • Scarcely a pretence is,mactethatthe vote of the soldiers will be honestly taken. It rarely happens, however, that a party driven to suCh desperate measures is succeisful. • • PROHIBITION IN ALBERTA • (From' rho Calgary Newe Telegram), No better test of, the • satisfactory' re- sults that are attending the enactment sd the dry lawAlberta isle be made than -by a canvass of the banks ancrtis- mess houses. •The information, gather- ed in such canv mss, is the convincing an- swer to those who would 'keep this a "wee Province. • Recently W. F. Gold, who is connected with: the Attorney. Genera's Department, made a ,ten -days' tour of Alberta. • In this, time he visited 38 Merchants, eery one of wheat he .found to be in favor of the Act and to • be basking in the light of increised.bus- •iness returns which they ascribed t� the hanishment et tho bar. The postcfilee • reported hew wings 'accounts, and an • Increase In the savings of three times the best Meath ever experienced. The .bank managetabad a aisailar lale# and even the hotela admitted that their rev Wile Was better than they "expecte4 The butchers, bakers and foodstuft'a deal eta in general reported anaugmcnted tte raand and better pay. In fact, old debts were .being cleaned up rapidly and WIlil on* loiterers atthe bar -were busy mak- • mgand ming moneyand haviogn good , tune in the bosom of their fahlilie4, As for the importation of liquor, it almost negligtble no many places, An •nxprestroffine in one town ba S received • only two packages Of Auer in a week. The conclusion is thet the Probibttion Act s doing Alberta, incalulable • geed; andthat it is benefitting even those whp. • opposed its 44opnon: •wQkbe roue* blared that over a year age ,when the NevosrTelegram supported the move to make Alberta "dry," we argued that • prosperity and happiness Would be two of the first,effeets prehibition, and our prediction 18 coining true. Prohilutioa will be one Of the princitial mean .. of • doubling Alberta's wealih production within the next five years. •---- , THE grin OF THE 'WAR '(The Globe, Toronto)* • . • Every bit of evidence upon • which opinion as to 'the probable length .of the war may tie formed is of great interest to those who have friends "at the fiord. It is worthy of note that Otte*, is per -.P fectmg recruiting plans on the basis of a possible two -!ars' extension ef hostili- ties. Contracts for shell are still being entailed by the Allies which call for the delivery of enormous quantities of high. explosive rnojectiles in Jely, 1917. It has been stated officially in the British House of Continons that Britain Willuot be in n positton to exert her: Maximum strength on the weatera- front till next euramer. hlr Balfour has re(iently 'Visit- ed the Clyde and called upon the wo& men there for ever greater eiertions to keep up Britain's supply of naval and nrercantile vessels, which is constantly leesening through the efforts of the en- emy's submarines and bentuse of acci- clFnts. - .„ z:L=i!rim a Thursday„ SepttOer 4th,„ 916 01'414' 11 MOLAS.,:QNS.. cAp6Ak, IND KEir.1011 08,800,000 as arancho in Canada A general Dant* Onslpess Transacted • Circular Lettered Credit • Dank Money Orders • SAVINGS BANK. DEPARTMNT interact allowed at hiiheit entreat rate • T. S. REID-, Manager, • • 0 These sig4 all indicate that Germany is Still regarded -as af�rwtdabte foe, anti that although vietor s lissuted, the Allies canreap it fruits only by trel • mentions exertions which may couceiv. ably carry hostilities well hit° the (mirth year. The prolongation of the war un- til the artillery superiOrity of • the Allies is more marked ort,all fronts than it has • been on western Treat' during the • pastlwe menths,mightfielha ineape of saving the lives of hUnclreds of thousands of British, French and Russian soldiers who will itaVe to bs. sacrificed In: bands to,hand fightiig if the Allies seek to Se- cure a dthision by the'?veight of numbers 'alone. A: pritish officer dealing with this feature of the situation is reported • as saying t ••• • "Ifiwe nrefer to end theetiminer ogee, sive and wait for spring we shall have quadruple the number of guns 4tncl- so' • much ammunition that we shall have to keep up daily a battle of guns on four times the length •of the present front, with all the shell fire of the biggeSt day in Chid summer's Offensive, in order to coneuine the supplies arriving daily across the Channel, Our present, posi- • tion of artillery and infantry advantage on the Somme front in, settled trench warfare means simply that wecould- kill two Germans to every Briton the Ger- mans The chide of the Allied nations have before them, therefore, the- necessity. of weighing men's, lives against the ability of France and Russia to -continue heap- ing' up supplies of, shells. The cost of munitions is PrOdiginus. It maybe timt the tremendous additions to the Rational 'debt of Britain's allies make haste and the 'consequent sacnfice ef , • . many 3ive inevitable. Britain herself • hes,Still much capital with which to. curry on the war, and the British Policy, • were' that the governing idea of The strategy Of the Allies, Would be to defei.. • the final great offensive until the Allied artillery could so deminate that of Oa, many that the war, would be Won With. . bilMtlin of loss in hfeand hmb, Franco and Runde may not care to assume the financial burden and risk of waiting. • In that event. We end of the war may • reasonably be expectellsOme titne next summer, following a period' of terrific fighting in the open field: • "Persian" Lambs Raised in Canada r • The practicability of, raising Persian ` lambs in this country has been „proved , ..4 by G. W. Sohneton, of Plymouth' town- ship, vvho has made a suceessful exper- iment with Karacul sheep, commercially, known as "Persian" lambs.: A year ago . Mr. Johnston took the initial 'stops in . this new business, and thie spring his fourteen Kermit ewes gave birth to fitteen Iambs, all of which. viere covered . with the glossy curl so essential from a. commercial standpoint. To secure •bent returns the lamb must be slaughtered' at from one to three- days- old, the -fleece ...• being then insmall, tight curls, which • loosen each day later, thereby deterior- atingin Value. Desiring rather to in- crease his stock, none of the lambs of this,year were sacrificed, and in addition' an iinported pure-bred yearling Male has • recently been purchased. „ ‘..i1-11411.1111..111.1tompoligimillilifillmiguip.mollimonlitummploomiiiimimommoilloimuollwouniumopoilloiumllopop.minumilimimm. • 'roam •120.•• WOW= Imo. • mow. ' 1•M•111 „ 010.111 -.014.4.741 11•••••• ••••••• ammo Mama. 0010011 Mean 1111...10 • 1•1•••••• Imola Issue ...WAR LOAN vorawrin ()MINION OF , CANADA' Of $100)000 000 5% ,Bonds Maturing Ist October; 1931. — — —. . ...._ . - . , PAYABLE. AT' PAR AT . ....„. --- - , OTTAWA; HALIFAX, ST. JOHN, CHARLOTTETOWN, MONTREAL, TORONTO.,_ WINNIPEG; ,••••••• , .... . . REGINA, CALGARY, VICTORIA. . , . INTEREST PAYABLE,. 14ALP-YEARLY, 1st APRIL, 1st OCTOBER.., - ' • ,PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PAYABLE . IN GOLD. • ISSUE ' PRICE 97N. ...... ••••••• ••••••••11 Fa▪ wn ••••••• Yam. . 1••••• . -biome Magid Yaw. umia.11- •••••• MUM 11.O0 finlma 1••11 1110.•• Noca.• 1••••••• IMMO •••, ' FULL HALF -YEAR'S' INTEREST WAAL' HE PAID ON la 't :APRIL; 1917. , THE PROCEEDS OF THE LOAN WILL BE USED FOR WAR PURPOSES ONLY. ' . ' ▪ • . Tnn MINISTER OF FINANCE offers herewith, on behalf of =a the Government; the above named Bonds for subscription at 91i, _payable as follows:— • • • • ='" • . -10 per cent on application; = 30 ' 16th October 1916; . . 30 " " 15th Noveml;er, 1916; • '• 271' •15th December, 1916. , ••••., The total allotment of bonds of Allis issue will be limitedi__ •to one htindred million dollars exclusive )of the amount . (if any) paid for by the surrender of bonds as the equiva- . ' lent of cash under, the terms of the War.Lodn prospectus • ▪ of:22nd November, 1915.• •• ▪ The instalments may be paid in full on the lfith day _ • of Ottober, 1916, or on any instalment due date -thereafter, = under discount, tit the rate of four per spilt per annum. All payments are to be made to a chartered, bank _for the "=.• credit,. of elle iVrinistei of Finance. Failure to pay any .• instalment when due will render previous payments lip.ble ......„:_____=—to-forfeiture-end-t-Ite- allotment to eancellation: •••••• SubaeriPtions, accompanieci by a deposit often per cent' MONS a of the ' amountsubaeribed, must • be forwarded through = the niedium Ota chartered bank.Any branch in Canada. - of any- chartered bank will receive.subseri tpg_nnsllAi . . . = provisional receipts.. • . • = This loan is authorized under *Ant of the Parliiament of canadar and beth principal aind •interest will -be it charge .=-"" upon the Consolidated Revenue Fund.• • --F rliT)nilict%t1on may be obtained from any branch Canada of ar anY chtered bank and ,at the °fife° Of any Assistant 'Receiver General in Canada.• • = Sfibseriptions must be for event • ' A general election • will he 'mid in" the Province ri British Columbia. en Sep.-, tember 141h, There, the donservative party hats been long in power, With but it weak opposi- tion; indeed for a netriber of years beLiberal party was ahnost Without repre sentation iri the Legislisture at ail. This condition bnre WI nailing fruit. The affairs Of the province have been badly COndttete,d. There has leng been rnucbtalk graft, 'favoritism and a generon waste of the public resources,. T4ere appears to be a 'ergo illeaSUre •••.. ' mamma I I I • • • In ease of partial '.allotmenth the surplus deposit. be * • applied towards payment of the amount due on the October - • instalment:• • . • • •Scrip. certificates, ton -negotiable or payable. to bearer in accordance witit„the chke oof the applieant for registered • for the provisional receipts. 1. or hearer bonds, will be issued, qfter allotme.n. in. exelxange • • When the serip certifieates -have been 'paid in full and payment endormld thereon by the bank receiving the money, they may be exchanged for. bonds, when Prepared, • with coupons,attached, payable to hearer or registered. as , .010111011111111101011101Miiiillmillimmilillmommili10111111111111011111111111111111011110,111110111111111,11111111111111111111111111101111111111111111i111111111110111110 .• ' . • to principal, or for .fully registered bonds, when- prepared, .without coupons, in accerdanee with the application. • =WINO 0 IMMO =mai moue Immo mama ••••• ✓ ow* ✓ a▪ ms inoloom immoo, ammo* r • = soaks Imo.no . Delivery of scrip certificates and of bonds will be made through the chartered banks. • ' • - • . •,•1•1••••1 llama '• The issue will beexempt from taxes -,,including any , '' income' tak—imposed in pursuance of legislation enacted . =...-: by the Parliament -of Canada.- ....... _ . ilimme• a , .•___,_, • . • \ The bonds with coupons will be issued in denominations of WO, $500, •$1;000. Fully . registered - bonds : without'. coupons will be issued in denominations of $1,000,.'$5,000 Or, any authorized multiple of $000. , . • The bonds will be paid at maturity at par p,t the office = of Minister of Finance and Receiver General at Ottawa,: = •or at the office of the Assistant Receiver General et HaIifax, . St. John, Charlottetown,' Montreal, Toronto, ' Winnipeg, = Regina, Calgary, or Victoria. • . 1 Mom. ••••••• The interest on the fully registered bonds will be paid by cheque, whichwill be remitted by post. Interescon bonds with coupons will be Paid on surrender of coupons: . Both cheques and coupons will be payable free of exchange , • — . at any branch in Canada of any chartered bank, • _ = Subject to the payment of twenty-five cents ,tor each • new bond issued, holders of fully registered' bonds withOut coupons will have the right to convert into bends of the = denomihation of $1,000 with coupons, and holders of bonds_ = ••-witt-eouporar-will-ktvr-the-kight id -Convert into fully- =1' - registered bonds of authorized • denominatibps without • coupons at any • time on application.• tO the• •Minister of• • Finance. • • , .10.—books—of—the:loarl'ivill—bwirepM thepeWirili'd •, • Of Finani,,e, Ottawa. -Applidation will be made in due course for the listing of a • • the issue 'on the • Montreal and Toronto Stock ii.:xchanges, = *-Ilecognized bond and stock brokers will be allowed a commission of one -quart& of one, per cent on allotments = made in respect of appliCations „bearing their, stamp, • provided, however, that no eerruniSsion ;will he allowed . in respect of the amount of any allottnerit paid, for by the, . surrender of bonds issund under the War. Loan prospectusEF-..1, • of 22nd November, 1915. � commission will be allowed , ii respeet of applications on forrns which have not been =, orintcd by the Ring's • • mows • SnbarIption ,Listst will close On or 13etore urd 'September, 1916 ,• • . „ DEPARTMENT OP if 'MAXON; OTTAWA, 0,epternoor lztn, lu.to.. • , 1 ' AP. *