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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-01-29, Page 5I I a DISTRICT NEWS o Mr. F. H. Butcher, B.A., of the Wingham High School, has tendered his resignation, to accept a position in Brockville.- Miss Cruikshanks, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mre. W. Il. Cruik- shanks, i►as been engaged to fill the vacall(•1'. W Messrs. Alex. i jcKague, of Culross, 'and George Helwig, of Mildmay, audi- ted -the books of the S. B. Rural Tele- phone Co. last Friday. The estimated liability per phone has been reduced to $18.60 during the past year. No extension work was done during the past year owing, to the 'high cost of labor and material., At the inaugural meeting • of the Walkerton Town Couiucil there was. a general increase. in salary to all the officials excepting the town treasurer. The sealarie;; set are as follows. Cleat $350; Treasurer, .$375; Chief of Police caretaker of Town Hall, weigh scales clerk, etc., including free living apart- ments, $750; cemetery caretaker $600; and free pasture;. night constable $2.75 per night; pumping engineer, ' $550 and free house; assessor, $150; collector, $200; M.O.H., $75; chair-. Milli; $6,.ar1e1 members, $5. Mrs- Susan Miners, an inmate of the House,, . . Refuge sstr. .Walkerton,. died there as the result of a strnkt. .Jan0•46th. She and her husband had been sent to the Refuge from Kincar- dine. The husband died In the hospi- tal a year ago, from cancer of rho face. Mrs. Miners was 75 yaa-rs of e, age. Mr. Frank Carter, Paisley, an- -founces the engagement of his daugh ter, Edna Elizabeth, ftte Dr. P. J. F. Houston,, son of Mrs. Janet Houston, of Toronto, formerly of Paisley. Dr. Houston practised a, short time in Teesv>rater before going to .Paisley. He recently .moved to Toronto.. The annual report of Huron County Children's Aid Society .for 1919' has been issued in neat booklet'form. In addition to being packed full of :prac- tieal information there is a good pho- togravure of the new Home in •coder- ich, purchased last year 'and portraits of . Treasurer . Sheriff ,key,nolds (an old and well-known resident of 'Huron and a warm supporter tAbe-$oeit1..y4..and Hon.. President, W. H. Kerr,_ of The Brussels Post. Persons particularly interested could secure a copy by dropping a . note to Co. Secretary G. 1 M. Elliott,Goderich, who would be de- lighted• to supply information. The Society is doing a splendid ,work and is being generously supported by County and Municipal grants and. personal gifts, which are high predated by the office bearrrq. �1'Ciss 1 Bentley, t'Matron of the Home, is proving the wisdom of her appoint- ment. EIGHTH CON., KINLONIL Monday, .tan. 26th Did some one say it was 'going to thaw? Rev. Mr. Kilpatrick, of Ripley, vis- ited W. R. Johnston's on Wednesday last. Mr. John `H• Wall, of Clearwater, Man., is renewing old acquaintances on the Eighth. We are pleased to ,,rt that Mr. Mac Smith is up and around again.. A' number from here attended _ the V- F. 0. meeting in Ripley on Wednes- day night and port a very profitable evening. The young people seemed not to mind the unpleasant weather -'Friday night and a good representation of the community were at Holyrood to hear the debate. The speakers did well, and the judges well deserve credit for the fairness of, their decision: It was sh.own that fifty years ago the people' wdaere.;Inore'..tiec:iet,,ble than those—of'the pr sent time. - *e hope the discus- sion will prove profitable 'to all who attended, and that a more sociable and neighborly feeling will develop as a result• • Next Friday evening the 10th con. people will be responsible for the program. CT. AUGUSTINE (iftellitidrot °1::,-:1 N‘t•tis• Maly Fenelon is attending School at' Clinton. We welcome Mr. and Mrs. High Geo. l4rnphy back to, twr burg. Mr. Pat Kearney is not keap$g as strong as hie friends would wish. M r. Charlie King has returned to Sandwich College after spending the vacation here. A number of our sports -took in the box social and 'entertainment at IX. Helens, and report a very •enjyable time. • We ea tliat W. gibbons is going about wi . his hand, tied up.. as the re- sult of an aosiident -in the bush: While handling a log; the canthook handle broke, and the log came back on his hand. However, it is not serious, and he will soon be 0. K, again. FORDYCE Monday, Jan:' 26. Miss Katie McDonald spent the week -end at her home in Lucknow.• Mr. and Mrs. W Taylor visited at .Weu....AIct"c•ttie'., of W:estti ld, re- cently. Miss Victoria Champion spent a week with her sister, Mrs. Sandy Havens. Mr. and Mrs. Clark; -of Hensall, are visiting with their daughter, Mrs. J. Mr♦ :on. Mr Jas. Phillips, who 'has been-vis- itiog his father fur a few weeks, re- ;tutared ,ta;,h s 7.hame,in the'West. "Mrs.-Jas. Snowden 'and sun Ernes,• of Laurelivreturned horde last -week after spending a month with her mother, Mrs. Robt. Ilaines. • • • f7411226rPidOklfir 0$YiiiiVt Jhic ctrl/ TE little ones just cannot remember • to scrape off snow and slush from their feet. But why worry about it --you can so easily remove all sign of the little foot -marks by .occasionally rut Bing -over the floor with an - An O -Cedar Treatment daily is sufficient to keep your floors beautiful. Good for any r—varnished hardwood cr painted soft wood—or linoleum. 0 -Cedar Polish Mop $ i 50 -> U -Cedar Poli,h 15 cotta to $3.U0 sits. : , OUR SI.U)S ,AIN ,SKATES desats appreciated by the boys aka gir'le: ' `Let Ahern pick out-aaC" 10711'nivi tl''''frorn the severst f ne Coasters, F1i;t'.s and Stoat t we`sbow fur ,this wiutti', play. ------------i McLEOD&JOYNT • I-•-^. The Store Where Your Money _-- Goes Farthest WINGHAM, ONT. The school wag/competent instructors and superior courses., Graduates placed in positions. Affiliated with the Elliott Business College, Tor- onto; and the Central, Business College, Stratford. Write for free cata- logue. Enter any time. • D. A. McLachlin, Pres. Phone 166 Murray McLeish, Principal. eir FAMOUS for its TURA STORIES `''bleu Ludendorff, the brain - of the (Iertuaki army',announced. Itis Menioit's of the War, iteras at once obviousthat this would be the" -most sensational volume of the ;-far. Headers -of The Toronto Star did -not deed to worry about when the volume would be available, or what it would cost—they got the .whole story day by clay - in the columns of The Star. In former days, such a work would have been puiblisll edonly in hook form, and ht a prate of pe r half &OO. To=day- subscribers -to annews- - lraper like The Star get • it, and get it first as- a mat.teeof course, THE. TORONTO STAR is unftlue in the number of its high-class magazine features' Most newspapers •content themselves with the;' routine day:by-day news. They seem to think that if an event doesn't happen to- day it hasn't• news value. The Star clings ' to no such anti- quated idea. It' resiizes that rarely does a single happening stand by itself—any more •than one note on ,a piano . makes a tune. Hence the prominence The Star gives to special articles. "When.lord French gave out his sensational reIniniseelrces. The star i►ublished them. All through the war, it publish- etl .reviews by The greatest war critics; including P. 11. Siflliollds. This correspondent is still writ, ing for The Star on interna- national nterna-national affairs. When Mrs. Humphrey -Ward visited the battlefields her -de- script ions were printed by The Star. When Herman Bernstein, by an expedition into Siberia, secured the memoirs a the late Tzar's commissary, t'asily Pankratov, it was in The Star that Canadian readers' got the first full story•of those last tragic-- days of the —Howe a of -She- Romanofls. These were all features exon- sive to The Star in its field. Its connections enable it to pick anti choose—often to make a first selection. When, you• subscribe for The Star you are introdlueed not only to all 'the news of the day— complete and crisp --but also to the "high spots of the literature of current events." Whet} you ` subscribe to• The Star you be- come a reader of CANADA'S GREATEST' NEWSPAPER A paper edited on broad gauge lines, a paper always in the forefront of progressive movements ---supreme in sp )rts---a believer in the saving grace of humor ---a LIVE newspaper full of news, full of ideas, informing, stimulajng, well illustrated. The subscription price is $0c for nna month ---$1.25 for three months- -$2.00 for six months --$3.00 per year. Fill in the coupon and mail it to -day. �+' 1•o 1•nbilwh,tp,i Toronto star. Toronto. /1,r ,r .- •deur Strut + ' Menne enter nut as a slit, •rlber to The Toronto Star for month.. for WI. l.•h ,.t.n•• ftwA !(aeI?laed-aEn or swampy old!!' crit ! .....,...,.,.,,....,_._ '- b I Name hnd nddre.i In full 111 • /«A �. • — . --•..win � Iesiit write • a` pinlwly. and soy whether qtr.. New.. Mt-..►► t• r rear s go- } • - BREWING TEA All that one needs to make. good tea is an earthenware pot, some tea and 'water.that is boiling at the time it is poured on the leaves, which 'should then be allowed to infuse for. a few moments, when the liquor must be poured off. That sounds.•easy and it is all there is to it; it is astonishing how seldom this simple formula is 'followed out in actual practice. • The 'b9usewife's most common mistake is to use water at a' temperature below the boiling' point. No matter haw-, choice the tea, if the water is not at boiling temperature the •important constituents of the leaf are not dis- -. biovar•_- everybody is 'talk- ing eeonomyr_it'ig -a mood tithe. :to call. attention to the waste caused by "using; water below the• boiling point.. To prove that one can ,waste in. making water be.losvjs, ardtd arod :arod, arodar tea get two ,grades,• one a very cheap tea and the other a tea of tV same kind .biit11567aw the cheapest tea with bpiling water and the better sample with • water below► the boiling point. . You may be. sur- prised_at the. >^eetdlt, btathe__Ease �i11 convince you that boiling water drawn off cheap tea makes - a better drink • than is possible to have wtih water which is not boiling even when The tea itself is •of good quality. ,Tea is often served in a china tea- pot containing he tea leaves and a arger .. -sup: .redly. filled, with boil - in • water. ea made by ouring the water into the small pot through the tea is often unsatisfactory fbeacuse of the difficulty of keeping the water up to the boiling point. It may have been boiling when poured, burcfhe cold. pot chilled' it just enough to make it too cold to draw a good cup of tea. Wasted' tea. leaves are just. as real waste as uneaten bread, or fat thrown into the _;garbage.,can_ it is -not-aev- essary to economize to the extent , of cuttings out your •cup.of tea, hut when.. you draw it see that you get all the vjrtw there is in the leaves. • 't'sd' boiling water and practice real econ- omy. . • Y - • THE l'EW WHO HOLT) OUT • The freshman :glasses enrolled in our• colleges and bieraehoirls foot' up a vast total. • No one expects that ins four years there will be an equal nuin- ber, of graduates.The president of a scientific school, 'eeleliraated the coun- try aver for its rigorous training, says Which enters. fall by the wayside: In other; walks of life there' is -a tremendous discrepancy between those who enter'. on ^a worthy undertaking and those who carry it through, 0ftet 1 1. D o not suffer another day with :t :ping Bleed- ing. of - r%trud• ink Piles. 2'n surgical oper- ation required. Dr. Chase's Ointment will relieve you at once and as certainly cure _jou. 60c. a nox; all defilers. or bdn►anson. Bates & Co. Limited. Tor�+nto. Sample box free if you mention thte paper and enclose 2c. stamp to pay postage. the beginners seem about equal in en- thdsiasm. Each one is ardent, .earnest ' full of hope and ambition. But the steady "keping at it" day after day '. is the real test. Tlae enthusiasm of one 'dies down like the blaze of shay- -ins. hay- h ts. Another finds the work harder, than he expected. Another. imagines he has discovered a shorter path to the goal he wishes to reach and turns, Iles-'6ac, on is fellows. ATT honor to the ; re* wTio "hold out, whether the work is hard or easy; who, when en- thusiasm flickers and' outside encour- agement fails, set their••teetdh ansa go with the' grind. It is to such' that the ' world '•tentrusts its responsible tasks: to whoni it turns in extremity: See, that 'you are ready to begin and just as ready to lay aside the task under- taken.. Be one of the fgw who hoki out. • RIVERSIDE• - A sad death occurred at Toronto on Sunday, when Miss Lillian Pette - place, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Petteplace, of . Riversdale, was called away.' The young lady who was in her 28th year, was employed by ' the T. Eaton Co. She enjoyed the hest of health until .6 weeks ago. when she was operated upon for appendi t • citis at the Western Hospital. Pere- fonitis later set ib which proved fat- - • al. She .Was a bright, intelligent young lady and made many friends. Besides her -parents, she leaves the following brothers. and .sisters:— Mrs. Arthur Steebing, of Kitchener; :�Ttan, crit-chener . Jimmie., Marion, Katherine and Morley at home. The ' funeral took place from the family home, Riversdale, Wednesday after- noon to the .Baptist Cemetery at e;reer►ock. -Revd Mr. McKenzie,^ • of Riversdale, conducted the service- KEEP IT SWEET Keep your stomach sweet today and ward off the indi- gestion of toniorrow — try the new aid to digestion. As pleasant and as safe to take as candy. MADE sv SCOTT . DOWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION • .A