The Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-02-21, Page 4e Supe ulpment-Co.
ergus, areoingto give, absolute -
free one, of their Superior Litter
ier Outits.
1$"•;,9.
A
dth
• i:10
',7!"77."'"'" ' •
310.gq. -3213110IMPEEME,:
iNfonPORATO .055". .
, ,
Capital' and •Reserver. $9.000;000.•
Over. 125 lillitschfie • •
tOLS
OURTESY TO ALL
- is made to 1im1t
unnecesssary formalitities and to assure Speedy and
courteous servite to customers:
Saving Departments at every Branch
„ •
-
S. REID, MANAGER; LUCKNOV.V BRANCH.'11
alorth Creamer
:CREAM BUTTNG'STATION..
Hightest cash prices paid„for
Cream and Eggs, We guarantee
rseivice and satisfaction to all our
patrons.
Give us a trial .it.d let us prove .
to you that we are a worth while
market.
Ceci14'
Mgr. Lucknow Branch
Phone 63.
U-Nee&a a Monument
The Lucknow Marble and 'Gran-,
its Works, has a large and aim -
pieta :stock—the most beautiful
designs to choose from in Mar -
'Me; Scotch and Canadian Gran- •
.Wo make a Specialty of Family
Monuments and invite your in-
spection.
Inscriptions neatly and prompt-
, .
done. -
--Caft-,-ind-see-un-bdor.• Pladag
your order.
ROBT. A. SPOTTON,
Lucknow, _Ontario.
Until we are permanekt17 -settled
ses W. .1. Douglas'
.DON'T BE A SHRINKING VIOLET
• - (EY -Herber.t -Kaufnian)
Confidence, as well as Charity, be-
..
Igins at home. Nobody will estimate
your worth above the levelyon es-
tablish for it, 'Remember Queen
abeth's, advice to hesitant Raleigh, "If
thy heart fails thee, climb not at all;"
. Every Alan :Who seeks: a market for.
gifts Or goods' 'Inuit be; a persistent
selesMan. The 'best Ofwits and Wares
require adept presentation:
Shrinking violets don't line the
paths of success. ,None offame's
shining marks were lime -lighted by
-accident. • . •
Homer sang both WS own Praises
and, songs. Horace prentformed post -
time erased his ..inemOry.
Alexander the Great : included a.
:Come Ofpress agents. in Macedon's
phalanxes, Voltaire made sure that
contemporaries heard the bell when-
ever: he scored' a' military -bullseye.•
Caesar also 'Wore. a gong on his
career and sounded it continually. '
Napoleon's advertising skill Was,
only secondary to his 'military genius,
Whistler's impressive assurance in-
spired mach of the reverence subse-
quently accorded , his portraits and
etchings.;
' Disraeli, whom the Commons 'thou-
ght to heckle -tut' ,or Parliao*nt was
sneer -and -jeer -proof,
--His•-proplietteiretorti--"Tiretliite will
come when you will heir me," rings
through history' as the ,battle-cryof
conqueror, certain of irresistible
telentaand ultimate destiny:
'These men' were all supreme egot-
ists,, Empire makers and Precedent
breakers, &Tani !,weaver s and element
tamers have always scorned the hyp-
ocritical. pretense with 'which quitters
and. failures amnglY cloak baffled
vanity.' There's , a sharp sour .grape
flavor to. -most-, of the 'critipisin that
spatter's dynamic ,earnestrieis„,
-guatrare7likeii-to-be-nolsyjes"
natural for minds 'operating at 'high-
pressure -to :blow-offLstesin. The;Pre-.'
veiling ,.cock instinctively crows, 'just
as herd leadersare prone to trumpet
the outcome, of their combats.-
Andrew Carnegie publicly ' smacked
his lips at the taste of Iichievethent.
Henry Ford is ;s1 supertnan and Intewvs
Lucknow L. O. L.,110,428. meets in
their lodge room every second Tues.
, day of the month at 8 o'clock p.m.
• W.M.:H. M. Parker; Rec. Sec'y..Win
MiQuillin:'
,
it, Comparison so assures hini. Rpose7
.:MARCH ROD AND GUN velt delighted to discuss hiniself
Stead' Of leas' interesting sUbjectS:, :
The -story, of Three Yankee Hunters
Who 'came up from New York to have
some hunting in New 13rUnswick is
well described by Charles "E,. Williams
of New York, one of the party, in the
March issue f Rodazid gun; hi Can-
,. • Tatkzt and all sportsmen will eiljedi this,
narrative. For those who have never
visited Jasper National. Park,..or'for
those who Wish.. to renew their rem-
,
etribignees- of this beauty' spot, C, E.
Trowbr,idge's well' illustrated article
on Jasper Park will ha of particular
. interest. "Fishing on the Eastern
Slope of the Rocky' Mountains" is a
good story by*D E. Elliott, while
lionnycatitle. Male .qirrielniicount
Of /mese hunting in Nova Scotia. In
.„
:the Guns and Ammunition • depart-
.snent,, E, W; Fry and J. -11; Mattern
continue their ' good 'articles in the
new serieti,,'•
. • • ,
And ,yet the woman Who' Won't
shake hands forfear of gernut
'tryon a ,hat that has'been on seventy
Itasds, • ,• , •
if irian beim% it idgillat' 10,
algvis like all other ditYli oltesPt 014
POO
$10Attfir/S !Mira, paPert OW the
Tothevictors ;belong ,the spoils, ,
Psycho -analysts are well aware
that much apparent 'inedesty is Cal-
culated pose. , Chronically 'retiring
persons are frequently the mest.cen7.
Ceited ' folk .of one's acquaintance, .
Painful self -conisciausneselone,,:-tieli:,
their totigties. Retieenee oftesest
springs from lack of expression.•
When. ridiculed for appearing at a
'ball with, three glaring
•dirrinends in , his shirt ,front'a prom),
inent Politician once remarked, "I
notice them that has 'ent, Wears 'ent,"
Rather such snattitude toward so-
ciety than morbid timidly or hat: of
Uriah Heap and Mr, pecksnift, • ' •
Lanes win% beworfi to the door of
Emerson's Mythical rat trap invern.'
if be hasn't the gumption' to broad':
cast the merits ofa superior produict.
Declare, yurself Let the band play
when yon are parading ability and
. fighting for place.
An ()rater is a man who can say an
ondisputed thing with enough enthus-
iasm to make it seem novel and
thrilling, •
And so we spend more tor qiiewing
gum thin bola, win, Wen; xo
n:uan motor to, oxareixe tha chin VOW
thi-01014, ,• . • -.••
NOY S.PNTA$P1:4:
PiAllAhed'Aiyer'firhara„ditSf MOTfifil4
• at•P!elcilOiV!..0atarde, • ° '
D. ?ii"kepFile• Proprietor
• and, poioi
'T'Otlit'SDAY, 'FEBRUARY 21St, 1923
tOl"
• ' ,
SENTINEI TOMMY, VXBRVAIri 210# 19P
eirenmstancey Ime 466eived not only
,an encouraging 'Word butlaled titian
governor
to help hi 'get A lieivr,`Anrt: in life
Both gaol officers c'arriect on at low
salarteSi the ,tnrnker...nciver receiv-
ing more. than $45.0 until the last
couple of Years, The small payclic surely bad enough now 'with an occa,
not e.oneern, them„.,; !perhaps. grMirett:ionat, red -eyed-- fend .iniharge •oCi•
e7init•
continue office for life or ...geedtticerise tgeOtritt1es4f .eboeze‘at 8 Goti.,
,r3' •
one can readily see the injustice that vere penalties, against • 'anyone in
'follow it these. men, who were eharg,e, Pr, :AA auto being in .'an
suddenly released under a new reg.' ictited.cOnditien but that would ilotl
illation. regarding age do not receive bring back the -life- Or. reduce the
some recognitroN„ The_goverantent„ _ageny_of th0A.e..:kilked. or -manned WI
t6 PaYini. its ,the. le; in
proportion Of 'three-fifths of the-av-' maudlin..Condition;
•erage, salary received,.*: . the.
hos the .past, three years, Providing • ENVIRON111ENT
the County •• Council alsti: does its • •
. „.
part, -Otherwise.,...the,I.Whole,thing'..fallS A ,Worrn may „garden 'fair
to the:ground.' One may „not belieV-e never' knaiii s 1:ving there:,
A rose, Mak bloom. in a filthy Yard,
in the idea' Of Petitions, but the cir-
cumstandes. of the:present prise are sh."41asthiesIttehre
• - And many a min in a ragged coat
out ,of the ordinary and if advantage '
is not taken of the gevernment's of:
nes-more--in-his-brain thairthe-woild
-fer•it.inians,--that-crying-injustiee gill- —mak- know :
be done to two worthy officers who While many an ignorant •' clumsy
have served long and faithfully. clown
. •
Was born in a mansion in London
'
town •
ANOTHER 0; T. A.. VOTE- So. what is the use•of.environment'?
And many •a lad all the sign -posts
(Chesley EnterPrise).:.
bath their -body , •
If OP' '9'. repealed •
the Ontario elector ...An votes for,:
Government Control andr 'after,
wards irOured by, the reckless driv-
ing of a: 'drunken auto tlriver will not I
get, much, ..sympathy: . is
i.14,4ittaligaz
village of 'Chatsworth: appears
• tii,haVe man mho' takes..14Mself very •will ntox
seriously as a Weather Prolibet:
It yenta -seein that-at-the„-beginn=-:
-Tiing-.7•04:the---Year,he7toid. the World-10:is ready W do its barc bv driver fan •auto ho
w• hat sort
'IPtI'litrci.6ulg:hOWtit7t1:119t--W1%*Vienige. 'ijna
mind, of course, • only this part Of Ont • -
44.10:' •
-1Ye-didn't7read-the--Prophecy,- but
it-Wonid appear noW that.••the'''Aveather. he
.predicted for` January was jpSi .about
the opposite of 'what we got. So, Mr.
J, B. Bowes, the prophet, writes; to
The P.alaieY Advocate, and perhaps to
•
other papers..tosaythIt ho ----feels "Very sorry and humbler by the
the great imistake be had made in aria
fmaSt of the weather for Januari.
Writing in 'tannery he ,"The
severe storm: .we !have just ccrine./thr..,
ough is the one expected On Feernary
5th, It appears •that he iwas right pass
with regard to the stein!, but. wrong
regarding :the. date. Well most folk
know that there will be a,few -storms'
during -January , and February. How-
ever the Chatsworth prophet is un-
daunted, and saysthat. the Weather
as it 'was.bUt...proVes„'the 'truth of his
theory, and he haS something to ,say
. Wont. the Planets, the asteroids and
the -heat of the sun He then proeeeds:
to reVisehis forecasts for each•Inon-.
'th of the year ,1924.. ' ' '
'
Of , he Says `,.`Very,
coldest about Feb, 8th. Off again,
you see: ' The 'lowest teMperafure so.
tar Was on. Feb, ' 15 whe locaIly it.
;
s , ;
We fel:- ti• -t after this break about.cOmplish and -to, :.compare it ' with To' carry us' tin :to .the top of the hill
.e ruary t e i.oph: • wilt Goverrinient..,Contrel;, F,rona ,one end, And so we •sow so .shall We reap:.•`..
sorry, and hunifileci; ' But -instead , of of the country to the otherNhe coni- 'When 'gathering thorn's we Well maY
. . .
,scrapping his theory,:an nightly•.con-, eniilit find no one,' not even „ • ,
cludinethat. knows. nothini at all' the 'bitterest anti -Prohibitionist, tWhile blarning it on o, . envir.9"int"
1.about the 'Matter, Mr Bowes will ay one. word •appr;'ilti Of.the -ma The, worrk.niav hiii•rew through the
look '.over his 'forecasts and find. that aloOn, keepers 'And raurn to the.
lace ,that_game_it.„
'here' and there he was -correct, • and 'Aaring that they :Would vote agains-t ./. ,•„ •
'.-iin-the---strength7701—.thesP-ts retirrn. However, ;they'. found ' a The 'Mae may'. hold its;' head on high intci better :men than those ;brought
hits he. will 'Contintie to ” take binIself good many „•of the wriigtiriier beer . A17.7 AnAdndigvoch,beier4lieitle.rineol,Yr7Pee4s.!errLoillinYic•
,
and his theorie's bout' the weather ,,,,?eAte;s • Si,e4ing.. tne. • „
quite SeriOnsly., ;••
sYstefOund in •.; British Coleunbia and
rn of Govern
•Ment sale,
And'sdo our Heavenly Father'S' onment;' tont ;the Onvirenineht has 'a •
Now. if our mission .1We :fill 1(1 -wouldn't matter- about'your. etnVir,
.I.whole lot to do with making foik '
e" will then •work the Eternal ,
CENTRAL 'HEATING,: ••Qiiebec,••but the'COmmiStioners
add, plan • !the eenunissiOners eould.ncit: fail' to And that is enongli for any man' good; or b d
The Speech from the rone in
Wowas born of a poor and lonely
. •
the Ontario Legislatgre indicated While, many, a one in the purple bred
that a •referendum On the continuance Was found in the gutter, lyingdead
of the 0:, T. A. would he taken this So mach for a, Man's, environment.
summer, just ai was expected, The A swaggering gait and a stylish garb
vote will not be taken . 'on the re, :liar cover the marks of the old back
mopueenhilg000sftedhoatoevlernbamyesn%tbtiotwonnersthhipe may be in,eaner than the inenn,est sin,
But the smallness of the soul within
system which has pro -yen a failure ' A disgrace to any environment. I
so far as stoPPAng dri-Wikenness 18 ff youn heart is always pure and
45oneerned in Quebec and British Col , clean •
want, and vvhich, is to be tried otit in And You shun the things that • are
Alberta'. ,1 small and: mean:.
if' you love your neighbor as ylonrself •
Last fall. a committee Of four fair-
_ 1.nd give to others of Your wealth,,
minded men fra,in‘ Edinburgh, Scot- you can shine in any environment.
land, visited Canada and United Sta- • •
We have all been given our own free
tes to see what prohibition had ac- • .
YPIT humble circumstanees may have
,i great soul, That is, true, But, boys:
Wiltrare-Well-on the average develope„
The idea. of Installing a, ,central
.
heating plant in Lucknow has come
before the citizen through the fact
that the School Board is confronted
by the, problem, Of installit.g 'a new
heating system Of some sort at the
School. "
Central ',heating developed out of
he heating of large • 'buildings. by
3teaM.:generated in a larpCin the.
- •
basement of ,the building, or near-hy.
Steam was then supplied to other
buildings in the neighborhood, and iit
was soon descovered that, with pro-
,
per prOteztion of the pipes hot steam,
could be supplied at distances of a
mile or more:, This isLirow,being-done
with entire success. •
The plan has certain„ verY- attrac-
tive features, For instance 'there
the ,elimination of coal, .dust, smoke
and ashes about the, house of place
of business, After installation it ,is
economical,- As ,cheap :low-grade fuel
which cannot' be used in the ordinary
rile ce or'.,:steve_gan be used Th 4;4 iS
a great consideration at the present
time in Ontario, Where the supply of
'hard, coal bas become W'SetionS pro
blein
' 'Installation, of course; is a big pro-
bletn 'especially Of the serVite is to be,
-supplied on a conrvinereial,scale=that
is When it'is 'pr6p".oi:dir to supply not
a 'Cow buildiriga-tiiif sell the Service to
clwellitigs and husineSs places, as ele-
ctric current is • new, Supplied, This
would involve the laying of a system!'
of Main pipes in the streets .•
,Lucknow needs alsopaved streets; ,
and the .problem for the ratepayers
paved streets'," a Central 'heating plant
or both;
THE RETIRED ilytili'otillert*:
Thesuggegtion that thejailor and
turnkeyrecently relieved of their 4chi:
tips at .the Walkerton Jail iihould be
allowed a portiOn Of their previous
salary by way Of a 'pension has met
witjh
a„ geod4le:41,4,adtjemgisti ci in
In conneCtion vith the Matter .The
Walkerton Teleseope .has the follow:•
ing to 'itti5.7:-A Bruce .contemporary is
wrong when it says that the Gaoler
and Turnkey Who were recently re-'
tired,. by the •Government, receiVed
free board along With' their Salaries,
Though ninny people appear fa hare
that Impression, it has neer been
the Case.. On the other ,hand, it is a
mql-known tact that sick' prisorter
were often 'provided for ,from tly
n•aoler's private table ,and many!
,mitoing prio,onero tn -unfortunuto
see, however; that they had 'hut . To be li.ergdit to m177. environment.
BELFAST
acquaintance, with the actual workino• • —Phoebe Henchry
and result of these systema. Note—While there, is a certain de-
verness about the above' verses, the ,
Visiting. *British .Columbia the com-
missioners found that.; Governnient
gale has, not diminished: drunkenneas,
that it .encourages /i secret drinking;
and that, the bootlegger is as active
is active as ever. where it exists., •
-The, cities 1/2"of Quebec, the report
gay's, are the .'wettest" Spots • of
Nath 'Anerica and the :corn:mission=
ers saw; little difference' between the
social conditions . Montreal and
those where the open;7bar is .operat-
.
'ng, Drug consumption is on the in-
crease,' and Montreal s the enlic•city
...in., the.. North. American: continent,
, , ,
vi•here, „legalized Vice is permitted.,
109' gallons per bead to 36 gallons.'
After a careful survey of condi-
:ions the commissioners are agreed
•
(1) that prohihition has proved a
success,in the:United States and Can -
,;,(1a; (2) that Scotland Should have it;,
(3) that -it should—Came-gardually
and ,..(4) • local _option 1.s..,a "geed start. -
ng point., They also agree that "Gov=
liniment contre1" in Canada is not a
.snecess,'
• Even beer -sodden • Great ' Britain
'.has: been 'making great progress' in
'he.. last few decades tOwards. lessen.:
the evils Of the „drink traffie.
1892 England., and Wales with -11 pop=
:dation ot:29 millions:consumed 27;-_
:5'10,000. barrels of •beer, In 1922 ,with
population of 38 rnilliona :the nirr-
',et of barrels of beer consumed. dron. ,
"ed to21,000,000 ;barrels, From 1899 1'
o 1922 the ameunt, Of spirits drunk
'n ',England and Wales • dropned. fl;oni
i_(9 aj10 per hado .3 L2
This is a .ffopefUl., sign Of the effM:17,7
.'hat are 'being put forth to lessin: •
'aneful 'ravages of beozeni, Old Enfr-
land, • "' ' -7••-•!"..-.n •
Ramsay MacDonald, the now Lab'.
Premier of :Great Britain,, is st` tot,
ql abstainer and a Prohibition'st
300 of the members, of the New 13r;t,1
ish House of Commons, nearll bolt
the total number, are total n'ttain-
ers, ,.onda number, are pledged,' to lo,
n1 -option an d-infavorof.allowir tLF
,electors to vote on Simday ,
With a gradual' ciirtailr,en+ 21' 'the.
;liouor traffic in the Motherleml
Will be a tletermineci effort pi -
by the friends of -sobriety in
to hold what we have 'even' thon,,h
t6 present systein ban not ertirolY
'elinlinated"the bootleggers ttrho aoe
the .biggest sneaki in 'Christendom
,rind• human jackals because they pro"'
on the weakness of their:fella.' •044".^
ona who -have Required such en ft- • '
Re for strong drink the.- '
-Atte 400poilOrAi1yitirsdixtv6:4-
' MiSs, Irene Brunt visited witb.l!ilrs'.
philosophy them .is 'far fiotil sound,
John Emmekton of . Kirilough, laSt
It is true that "a 'rose may bloom in
a,
filthy Yard, .bUt. the ",satne rose • .
blown with ereater beauty and sweet-
ness in a well-kept.garcien: !`A. hovel
week,
Mr. an -Mrs. ,Wilson Irwin spent
Sunday with, their spit., -Mr. • Gordon
•,•,•
:TOT Shelter •a gifted bard,?t. which is ttW1fl, of Wawanosh,
another Way of saying that a Man in. Mr, James Cooke has Started' out at
hi'6: duties of the Tctitriship,
of Ashfield.'- • , • :.•
Air.. and Mrs„. E.x..art., Taylor,. of .•
tueknoV':.Sfient 'Monday at 'the:ha/me;
of her Ptii•ents ,Mr:. and •14.rs''.' Joseph. „
Hackett .
. ,
Mi
William Irwin,. of . Liicknew;
spent a feW days. last Week With. Mr.
g1eigh-)9,4d, froat 'here attended
'the'. Valentine Social held at Alafeklitig
T.riclity night laSt'and all report a...
g000 'time • '
•
Mr, and Mrs, Tom Hackett. and "
danghter, Irling, of Zion, visited in
the burg last .Week
-Mr, -and Mrs:. -Roy Alton and fant
,-
'.:'ily
spent ,a 'day test Week_with.f.derids..._.:
at Tort Albert
Tssitanimisrestr.s. •
41%; of all Genuine
Ford Parts -are•sold
for 15 cents or leap,
35% si all Genuine
Ford Parts are sold
for 10 cents or less.
,The blue and white
'sign 'identifies the
'Authorized Ford
Serried Stations.
Ctisso
'There are 350o authorized Ford Ser. „
viers Stations in Canada. '
Each pf these Ford Servke Stations is
a ditect link between she Ford user and '
"•FthEde
Ford
factoryordchmirsecmbaaninndby
cea.,aldiledsPeincialyelvert;46nPer'eci-
adon pert ng to servicing. your ,Fetd.
Each carriesi a complete atock of; Genuine
adenticVwidi tie -F00.-Par.A1 -Which ar,e.
et:Wit-al `parts in your
car' and dierefore c� -ordinate perfectly .
' with every other" part
+Every Ford part and every Ford fiervice:
•
!penman' Is criarge, a rot. at a atandara
IOW !am You need net bargain; he-
, cause you Ywill not be overZharged.
.And 90, no matter where you buy Yo.itt •
Ford or where you use it, there is al-
ways a Ford Service Station nearby read)i
to give you expert and immediate tierviCe.
•
-----
GermineParrs
:For Sale Here
. ,
RE1? FRONT
, ...' ., . -
HARDWARE,
' • '
-,-,•••^•••••••""T,..:::+.
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. . . . .:.
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9,rin' .4 Te
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oth • -0 4..,41..,..,:,4
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.
,1 , p3cia
.iso ,,
41,'-i'Vt:-.• `•''' „.',., ., 11,
1 •
, Piiee
,
Poat
1.-..‘i,,A , 4., . -i• ' 4..v,. 0 & -
• le i • :4 '14 • (. ',ti.
1., • .t.,..': '4% '1/2 1, .•`'
'IMPERIAL
-
t • if
• '1* -3.....c,-.
.
,
WARE—THAT
ITE:POTATO
... ..,,, -Watch '
,.. .. • ,
• ,
: r .
‘ 1 '..., .k; et..,- „ Our .- Window
41k
. . .
TWO -COAT, GOOD GRAY GRAN-,
P01`, WHILE . THEY LAST ' 6.,QT SIZE;
. -
..... . __$1.19.
CANADA WARE—THAT tl'IllitEE-COAT GRANITE, sjii, IT 4, •.
0,ECKILEB, writ' wittrE LINING, ALWAYS LOOKS
NICE AND CLEAN, IN,THE .6-tit:SIZE, WHILE THEY
LAST, $1.49, .
• : . / . • ;
WE ARE. ALSO 'AGENTS FOR THE. •BUCKEY ET II E.
WORLD'S FOREMOST INCUBA'FORS AND BROODERS.
IF YOU ARE THINE•ING OF BUYING AN IlVCIJBA'rOR'
• , OR BROODER THIS COMING SPRING, CONSULT US.
• BEFORE PURCHASING:
CRO:SS-CUT . SX'WSLE.A DER, MEMIER; IMPROVED RACE '
ANI) PIIILADELPI A LANCE., WE IIAVE ON HAND ,
.,. ALL TBB TIME„ • ,
TREE SET AXE ---FULLY 'GUARANTEED, .
A GOO SEIAE_Cp0_N:_0F__SECOND_„„GROWTH :HICKORY_AXEL_.
„
"HANDLES,
,
AE &' PORT:ECUS
, . . ..
. ,
;Ill& Store Where Your MOBOr. (oes the' Farthest
one 66.'. - --. Lticknow..
YPIT humble circumstanees may have
,i great soul, That is, true, But, boys:
Wiltrare-Well-on the average develope„
The idea. of Installing a, ,central
.
heating plant in Lucknow has come
before the citizen through the fact
that the School Board is confronted
by the, problem, Of installit.g 'a new
heating system Of some sort at the
School. "
Central ',heating developed out of
he heating of large • 'buildings. by
3teaM.:generated in a larpCin the.
- •
basement of ,the building, or near-hy.
Steam was then supplied to other
buildings in the neighborhood, and iit
was soon descovered that, with pro-
,
per prOteztion of the pipes hot steam,
could be supplied at distances of a
mile or more:, This isLirow,being-done
with entire success. •
The plan has certain„ verY- attrac-
tive features, For instance 'there
the ,elimination of coal, .dust, smoke
and ashes about the, house of place
of business, After installation it ,is
economical,- As ,cheap :low-grade fuel
which cannot' be used in the ordinary
rile ce or'.,:steve_gan be used Th 4;4 iS
a great consideration at the present
time in Ontario, Where the supply of
'hard, coal bas become W'SetionS pro
blein
' 'Installation, of course; is a big pro-
bletn 'especially Of the serVite is to be,
-supplied on a conrvinereial,scale=that
is When it'is 'pr6p".oi:dir to supply not
a 'Cow buildiriga-tiiif sell the Service to
clwellitigs and husineSs places, as ele-
ctric current is • new, Supplied, This
would involve the laying of a system!'
of Main pipes in the streets .•
,Lucknow needs alsopaved streets; ,
and the .problem for the ratepayers
paved streets'," a Central 'heating plant
or both;
THE RETIRED ilytili'otillert*:
Thesuggegtion that thejailor and
turnkeyrecently relieved of their 4chi:
tips at .the Walkerton Jail iihould be
allowed a portiOn Of their previous
salary by way Of a 'pension has met
witjh
a„ geod4le:41,4,adtjemgisti ci in
In conneCtion vith the Matter .The
Walkerton Teleseope .has the follow:•
ing to 'itti5.7:-A Bruce .contemporary is
wrong when it says that the Gaoler
and Turnkey Who were recently re-'
tired,. by the •Government, receiVed
free board along With' their Salaries,
Though ninny people appear fa hare
that Impression, it has neer been
the Case.. On the other ,hand, it is a
mql-known tact that sick' prisorter
were often 'provided for ,from tly
n•aoler's private table ,and many!
,mitoing prio,onero tn -unfortunuto
see, however; that they had 'hut . To be li.ergdit to m177. environment.
BELFAST
acquaintance, with the actual workino• • —Phoebe Henchry
and result of these systema. Note—While there, is a certain de-
verness about the above' verses, the ,
Visiting. *British .Columbia the com-
missioners found that.; Governnient
gale has, not diminished: drunkenneas,
that it .encourages /i secret drinking;
and that, the bootlegger is as active
is active as ever. where it exists., •
-The, cities 1/2"of Quebec, the report
gay's, are the .'wettest" Spots • of
Nath 'Anerica and the :corn:mission=
ers saw; little difference' between the
social conditions . Montreal and
those where the open;7bar is .operat-
.
'ng, Drug consumption is on the in-
crease,' and Montreal s the enlic•city
...in., the.. North. American: continent,
, , ,
vi•here, „legalized Vice is permitted.,
109' gallons per bead to 36 gallons.'
After a careful survey of condi-
:ions the commissioners are agreed
•
(1) that prohihition has proved a
success,in the:United States and Can -
,;,(1a; (2) that Scotland Should have it;,
(3) that -it should—Came-gardually
and ,..(4) • local _option 1.s..,a "geed start. -
ng point., They also agree that "Gov=
liniment contre1" in Canada is not a
.snecess,'
• Even beer -sodden • Great ' Britain
'.has: been 'making great progress' in
'he.. last few decades tOwards. lessen.:
the evils Of the „drink traffie.
1892 England., and Wales with -11 pop=
:dation ot:29 millions:consumed 27;-_
:5'10,000. barrels of •beer, In 1922 ,with
population of 38 rnilliona :the nirr-
',et of barrels of beer consumed. dron. ,
"ed to21,000,000 ;barrels, From 1899 1'
o 1922 the ameunt, Of spirits drunk
'n ',England and Wales • dropned. fl;oni
i_(9 aj10 per hado .3 L2
This is a .ffopefUl., sign Of the effM:17,7
.'hat are 'being put forth to lessin: •
'aneful 'ravages of beozeni, Old Enfr-
land, • "' ' -7••-•!"..-.n •
Ramsay MacDonald, the now Lab'.
Premier of :Great Britain,, is st` tot,
ql abstainer and a Prohibition'st
300 of the members, of the New 13r;t,1
ish House of Commons, nearll bolt
the total number, are total n'ttain-
ers, ,.onda number, are pledged,' to lo,
n1 -option an d-infavorof.allowir tLF
,electors to vote on Simday ,
With a gradual' ciirtailr,en+ 21' 'the.
;liouor traffic in the Motherleml
Will be a tletermineci effort pi -
by the friends of -sobriety in
to hold what we have 'even' thon,,h
t6 present systein ban not ertirolY
'elinlinated"the bootleggers ttrho aoe
the .biggest sneaki in 'Christendom
,rind• human jackals because they pro"'
on the weakness of their:fella.' •044".^
ona who -have Required such en ft- • '
Re for strong drink the.- '
-Atte 400poilOrAi1yitirsdixtv6:4-
' MiSs, Irene Brunt visited witb.l!ilrs'.
philosophy them .is 'far fiotil sound,
John Emmekton of . Kirilough, laSt
It is true that "a 'rose may bloom in
a,
filthy Yard, .bUt. the ",satne rose • .
blown with ereater beauty and sweet-
ness in a well-kept.garcien: !`A. hovel
week,
Mr. an -Mrs. ,Wilson Irwin spent
Sunday with, their spit., -Mr. • Gordon
•,•,•
:TOT Shelter •a gifted bard,?t. which is ttW1fl, of Wawanosh,
another Way of saying that a Man in. Mr, James Cooke has Started' out at
hi'6: duties of the Tctitriship,
of Ashfield.'- • , • :.•
Air.. and Mrs„. E.x..art., Taylor,. of .•
tueknoV':.Sfient 'Monday at 'the:ha/me;
of her Ptii•ents ,Mr:. and •14.rs''.' Joseph. „
Hackett .
. ,
Mi
William Irwin,. of . Liicknew;
spent a feW days. last Week With. Mr.
g1eigh-)9,4d, froat 'here attended
'the'. Valentine Social held at Alafeklitig
T.riclity night laSt'and all report a...
g000 'time • '
•
Mr, and Mrs, Tom Hackett. and "
danghter, Irling, of Zion, visited in
the burg last .Week
-Mr, -and Mrs:. -Roy Alton and fant
,-
'.:'ily
spent ,a 'day test Week_with.f.derids..._.:
at Tort Albert
Tssitanimisrestr.s. •
41%; of all Genuine
Ford Parts -are•sold
for 15 cents or leap,
35% si all Genuine
Ford Parts are sold
for 10 cents or less.
,The blue and white
'sign 'identifies the
'Authorized Ford
Serried Stations.
Ctisso
'There are 350o authorized Ford Ser. „
viers Stations in Canada. '
Each pf these Ford Servke Stations is
a ditect link between she Ford user and '
"•FthEde
Ford
factoryordchmirsecmbaaninndby
cea.,aldiledsPeincialyelvert;46nPer'eci-
adon pert ng to servicing. your ,Fetd.
Each carriesi a complete atock of; Genuine
adenticVwidi tie -F00.-Par.A1 -Which ar,e.
et:Wit-al `parts in your
car' and dierefore c� -ordinate perfectly .
' with every other" part
+Every Ford part and every Ford fiervice:
•
!penman' Is criarge, a rot. at a atandara
IOW !am You need net bargain; he-
, cause you Ywill not be overZharged.
.And 90, no matter where you buy Yo.itt •
Ford or where you use it, there is al-
ways a Ford Service Station nearby read)i
to give you expert and immediate tierviCe.
•
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GermineParrs
:For Sale Here