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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-30, Page 5• KT*! • YI••774,MilOrifffitilic .1,71417- 1477717WM7111F, ral!,417"7"--' govomtei4atfr g 46 •41.a.4.4444 - 44,4444144.5.44.54, 771V""'"7-777' If a ".."4".• hat 18 flome - without Music? • 4 . . 0 „ , • 0, 4,, • ,; • • The Columbia dealer nearest to you will gladly demonstrate. 'Very easy payments Little cash required. Dealer will explain terme ' Send for a new free catalogue. . , • .- - -."Creatorg a the industr,y.”. , ". .` • •' "Pioneers and Leaders in the Ari' 1' Owners Of the nuidamental. ratenti.,: CAICADIA11. FACTORY TORONTO viijg item tbv wep,* of meder• at* ineeme. Atnong the minerw, *miter - men, lumbermen and other emploYed elinsses, It is customary to •contributes voluntarily, olio dity's 'pay it-Joontli to theYatriotie $und Nome. of the vow ing camps thus raise as high as. 020 00 : per capita mob year for the Fund. For exanple. the town of Phoenix, With a ,populatisir of 1,000, *bass promised 020 per head; . 1 MON 400UNTY NEWS Tho ("aunty Council of 'liven will. rueekat Oorlerieh fou Pee. Otb; 'Die %Aerial Organ Co. hag eedy. ed a, contract ter 30,000 obeli hOxee, which ate to be delivered by Au. 19TVii:e itsbting plant of Prusses is out Popula- )Will of coal, and for one 1111;4 recently the tion lase ,towu MSSin f/arkeese. ,A.e there is Greenwood 000 $111,000 &it:acuity in procuring ,ceal - the pros. $ilvetaa. • • •-•.1 —; '1;060 101000 'poets for the future are not bright. Kaslo 1,000 • 10,000 RUOVITION;;r0 Sown:at .—Oyer 100 ;citizens teuclered a warm reeeptiento Lieut. Garry Carey, son of Mr. 0. F. Carey, of flederieb,,asi he atrived home at midnighp. No formal. reception 1' •wos tendered, FdthoUgh representatives .0raniyaa %sea. 20,000 00,004:t Itoselatosi„ „ 4,000. 's 30,900 'Such giviug cannot he .surpaseed 30 aG ily part 9( anada. 0.4actyet, with all the sacrifice mi- le:ilea:in the raising cf one million'dollars of the .CouPci4 , 4114, War. •AtOciliary a year by the people of British Columbia, were on band."'Atorch light procession they cannot' begin to carry their own was formed and the hero taken to his load: 'Thirty:five thonsand 'nep lava home. Lieut.., Carey enlisted as a Pri•- 'gone from British • Columbia, which vate ill. the Princess put; but was later represents 'one in ten of their white transferred to th mperial army and larger Percentage of ma only bort 'ime ago obtained his 1:11:PduAlialetni°ll' have enlisted than from any 'Commission:as a lieutenant. Ile his other province. Hence, the Patriotic been wounded •three times, 'He was. ,Fund 'is helping nearly 7,000 - The neat of living is higher there than. in .the East, so the average rate per fam- ily is aperoximitely $20 per month, Already they are spending $135,600 a month, and this figure will probably THE BUSY HARDWARE HOUSE MAKE OUR STORE YOUR HEADQUARTERS PHONE 66 FOR PROMPT DELIVERY 0 • • SKATES Their light weight and keen glass -hard edge havp won •hosts of hockey players to *hese guaranteed skates. given three weeks' furlough and, came home in charge of a number of return- ed soldiers. He is the third son of Mr Carey and has one brother in. active service, one brother, Lieut. v. Carey, being killed abbot a month ago. . Inatillt. to 0100,000 per month before. long, for British Columbia still continues to send nien,. It is estimated that be, Indians 111 The Army . ttveen S1,750,000. and $2,000,000 will be • despatch frci'm Ottawa, indicates required to meet the needs of the Fund • in British Colunibm during the coining year. Of this,suin, all in excess of $t,000,000 must be raised outside the province, That is to say, itmust be contributed in the East by ccnnnunities who carry a far lighter burden pronon. tionately WenBritish Cohimbia„and who may be justly asked to contilbute towards helpimi, out this hard-pressed province: . "The f and amen ie.' Princi ple upon which the Fund adininisteied is that eaeh great many BOOS, mufflers Mid other that in the present big struggle the Can- adkan Red man is certainly doing his bit: No less than twelve hundred 'Indians have enlisted in the EMpire's service. Of these; 65 are in Bruce County Batts, - Jinn, hailing from 'Cape Croker where the entire male population between the,iges of 21 and•65 years is only 108. Indiana at the front have proyen.themselves. ex- • cellent riflemen and possess greatpowers of endurance.- To the warfundslast year: .the Indians contributed over $7,090, while Indian women have knittecLa a ••7 •• Capital Authorized Capital Petd,up . urplus • - $3,476.000 • The Saving Habit is easily ac- „ quire& You can open a Savings Account in this tank with one dollar, and add to ,it weekly or .mmthly without inconvenience. • LUCKNOW BRANCH $5,000,000 J. A. GLENNIE, Diana:car, $3,00o.oao . • • " . • . . . -.'• — ‚—‚4 4011N 10, .14UNit' LUCKNOW l'OtrizINOCIATt$650 11.0A1Xiltia$130 • .y1, • , '• NEEDS OF TIIE PATRIOTIC FUND, What OfhiSh• Columbia .Necis, and What the • . • , People There Are ' • Ottawa; Nov. Ia.—The demstm ar- iiverl•:at by the National' Execntive of the Cmnadian Patriotic Fund at its Octobermeeting; that it would continue, during 1917, to appeal. for support to the patriotic people of Canadian along similar lines as heretofore, has met with general approval and hearty response. From all parts of Canada aie coping re- newed assurances in effect:that the people' are Willing, to give not only as generously but even more generously 'thin hereto- fore. - ' . • The Honorary Secretary of the Patri, Sif-HeWerk7A.roes, has juit retihned to Ottawa from a: trip in the West of five weeks' duration His time was occupied prinCipally in visiting Brit- ish Columbia points, and hcS reports that. the response of, the people of tho Wel Pacific: province has been all.:tliat could be aslied or desired • Sir Herbert entered British Colijrnhia-' via the Crow's*Nest Pass and ivas- 'at, 4ertne by Mr. Fred' Nation, local Organizer of the Fund for the , provinee. .Together they visited every princtpal point throughout the Kootenay, tlm Boundary and the Okanagan , districts. Meetings were held at twenty different, points and pledges renewed for`the enin- ing year • — The giting in some parts of British Colunibia surpasses anything ,Wo, know of in the East. "In fact", says Sii Hei+; bert, "We visited twenty amail places with a combined population of 15,00o. souls, and securmg proinises for -0.100,000 during the coming yed. We also found Vancouver busily engaged in a campaign with -a $400.000 objective, --a.114 ' Victoria prepping tn,zask its citizens. for $200,000 more."- • Asked for Nailer information regard- -ingale-position-otthe Columbia, Sir Hutert Ames said: "British -Columbia, with a total White population it the Present time Probably not exceedkn'g 350,000, hat; undestakeu to raisonext,year for tho PairiotieFfind no lese a sum than $1,000;000. When we consider tivit theio id very little agri., ;Altura' hind in British • Coliintbia; so that there are no farming- commtinitjen 'enjoying enhanced' imees1 that there ate practically no war orders to be filled; that much of the hunber cannot be Ship- ped for lack of bottoms, and that, gee. Orally speaking, British' Oolninbia is iv& less than any other province intl.i; „Dominion from War condition., we will realize what it tneans for 350,000 people to rinse $1,000,000 for a Patriotic pin-, Irwin one year. There are few rioi. men in *Risk Colmnbitti tithed+, few large subserip&ris front corporations and lout millienages. he bulk of the • • •community shall raise what tt can and draw what.it requires: British Ctoldln-. b. ia, is certainly raising all it can. Is is epenilii* the inphey oatefully and „the degrae of comfort obtained by tpe sol- diers' %lives in that province is not by -any means more lavish than in the East We look, therefore, confidently to the older partiof•Canads, where thofireter's have gdod'crops, which they tire. se:ling at high.prices and whew almost •every town Iwitha machineshop has a. big nay - r011 through muni -tion orders, te", make up the balance which British. Columbia, will lack during -the -coming- year. We do not. believe we will look; in vain" • "KINLOSS. COUNCIL. Council met as per' adjournment.. Members all present.. Minutes of pre- vious meeting were. read, -adopted and ,signed. • Moved by, McDiarma,..seconded by Tiffin that ty-law No. 86, it by-law to raise by loan the sum of $1,500 for Red Cross purposes, be now introduced and read a first, se'iond and third time and finally passed. 13y -law introduced and read a first, second and third time and finally passed, By-law introduced and' read as above. • gothu on being put to the meeting was carried unanimously. Cheques issued:- Wm Piercy, damages to sWep by dogs; $12 00. Rita Swan, drawing tile' to Holyrood, 1 50. Harry Hamilton-, culvert and drawing tile to liolyrood, 4.50. Thns McConnell, '68 yds 'gravel, 5 44. ' William Thompson, cleaning ditch at lot 18, con 10, 3 00. 3as Johnston, cleaning drain, By-law No 68, 3 00, John Purvis, 61 yards ra-vist.71-788t—ften171,1-illUi; gradhirlOth sideline, 13 00. Melvin Irwin, damage to buggy at lot 5, coh 7, 5. 00. Wendel Taylor, filling hole ori, 30th SR, con, 3, 500. Jerry Casemore, insp Moore's Con- tract, 3 00. ----Thos Moore, 437 yds gravel at. 48c, lot 35, son 2i 41-76. Jerry Case-• morn, 1-day"woi k, 2 50. Thos Moore, 67 yds gravel and, 1‘ days' :work, 7 M. Thos Roach, ditch add cleaning tile at lot 1°, don.6, 4 50. • John McDonald, 422 yds gravel, 0 76; John MCLeed, tie yds, gravel, 4 48.. James Henderson, per tile account, 48 70. John Bennett, culvert and filling washout at lot 1.0, 2nd 11 8, 6 00. Roy Cole, railing at lot 10, 2nd It 8, less old railing, 1 03, 43 85. -JohnLittle, Pierey's sheep, 1 Is. John Barnes, filling waShout on, Kinloss and. Kincardine boundary, 2 00...s Reuben Stauffiir, cleaning ditch at lot 10, 3rd .corn -forts.-. It is a noteworthy fact that the first man from Brant County to fall atlangemarck was Lieutetiant Cameron Brant, a, gredt-great-grand son ofjosePli Brant, the Indian wherendered such service to the ,British in 1776. "L AFTER -GRIPPE - Vinolltestoredirr.ktirtin's Strength. Wapakoneta, Ohio.—"L am a farmer 4' by' occupation, and the Grippe, left me with a bad cough and In a nervous, weak, run-downcondition, and') I could not seem to 'get' anything to do me any good until I 'Wok, Vinol,:whieh built, me up,. and my cough and nervousness are all • gone, and I ,can truly say Vinod 'is , that is claimed for it."—JAMES MARTIN.• Vivid is a constitutional remedy for -all ..weak, nervous and run-down condi- tions of .Men; women and children, and for chronic coughs,coldis and bronchitis. DR. A. M. SPENCE LUCKNOW Qurfice4i f,e/slor,,-roatt Orrofi,grr. • . ' Skating Season Will Soon Be Here. We have a. lull line 91SKATESfroM500 to $6.00 per pair. Hockey Sticks and Pucks. ross Cut Saws, Axes; Saw'Sets Feed Baskets, Chaff and Ensilage Forks, Stable Brooms, Stable Shovels, Stable Scrapers Fresh .Fortland Cement alway on hand We 1tave just , received that New Pandora flange with the ImprovedoPrates. • Come in and seemit.* The' Store Where Your Money tiojes Farthest • v A AA We have appointed W. 4. - ‘60716. v I. • TAYLOR, our, AGENT to receive cream for Lucknow and • , FARMERS. having •cieam. to sell Should call at Taylorls, Grocery for a an. , All dream will be. paid for weekly by Mr. -‘ 'riylor.at his store. , Cream to be left there. Call on -Mr. .Taylor for, prices and .parti- culars. • - . , • Palmerston- Pahn *Creamery ,Co. ' • .••••• -• •• . • , • 4. • ' • 4' • ' . , The Cheapest Thing in the Modern World The pOlisher of an important Canadian daily newspaper has said in his newspaper this. :.• • • • • HE newspaper is about he cheapest thing in the modern Id -for -its valuer---I-f-not-elso,-w-ore-oonsidered.Save...0 , Butness being over, Council adjourn- ed to meet as per statute on Dec. '15t1i, '016 at 10 o'clock a.A. Tumults MURRAY, Clerk. • Purple Grave —Monday ; Nov.' 27, Mr, Ana Mrs, • Barry Logan visited Lecknow friends Sunday. ; • Miss Mildredlong spent -the weekend at het/home near °chetah. .. . MitiS Morris and' Mr. Meta'y were guest's of Mr and Mrs. Dan NieDonald Sunday. liratik Stanley spent patt, ot last week 'with her mother, Mrs. Colwell, of Xinlough. ' ?fr. and Mrs. Chat. Shown, of the South Line, 'Wore At(usias visitore at Witt,11,111%, • .1 a • .4 ; ..• •4 • the usefulness of the advertisements and the market prices, to the average home, a dollar spent in newspapers • must mean the saving of many dollars in a home. • • • a T is not necessary to. argue the value to you of your home news- .," paper. But we ask this of you -:'Isn't three cents. a week little enough for THE SENTINEt, which gathers for you all the news of Bruce and Huron? No city daily can do what Tin. SEI is do- • ing for and in these counties: It does net give you with desired Tull- • nes trre'pews of St Helens, Eangside, Lanes, .Bervie, Glaxnis, etc. n6t tell you what local merchants., havow.o offer. Locinews • and happenings are told only sufficiently in a. !octal newspaper. • 4. • • • 4 • . , . • The price of The Sentinel has been; $1.50 since July 1st, 1916. ' • This increase of 50 cents a year vv.* made necessary by rising cost ei of every direction—paper, ink, type, wages, cost of living, . • 11" IF- . • . •• HAT we are concerned about\ is tliat you value your weekly V V newspaper to continue, as a subscriber at the higher rate. Three coppers a weekl You cannot say that your cannot afford thew-, -- They are the price of a postage stamp, -half the price of a i'smoke,'.' • the money you would give a child to buy candy NI ith, the price of a pair of la.ces.' 4. Be Loral To Your Local Weekl • 6 • t • ^ " I