The Lucknow Sentinel, 1924-04-24, Page 41***.„4,
--..
lOyfiktil."-- Iti1(14milis'
' ;Xi. E. (-PIS*14 POI; r;,
. Diet- HarroWii-*.ind 1 4' 7.•,:
FROST WIRE
. p:)...9,, C0104', -4; -Gate and Wo'ieit Fence.
.
'I'IMOTIIY ANII.?, OLOYER'spsp.,;:.i.. , . ,„
NO. 1-li,e4t: -Alsdke:: A1,411114;0, Seet.,.. .G.rimin
and Ontario Alfalfa grown in Peel, County,
. t'or,Siiii
T
INCORPORATED .1855
!Capital- aid Reserve; $9,000,000 .
. Over 125 Branches ' • •
0 SONS
Special SavingS Departments
are provided at every one of our branches, and
lssute to our Pdeposi tors prompt and courteous
attention: "
-4, Deposits Of 31.00 and Upwards invited
Saving Denartinents at every Bralieh
MANAGER, LUCI:cNOW' BRANCH.
LAND CREAMERY-
*ingham - Ontario:
wned and operated by
Le. United Farmers Co -0
o. Ltd:
1 -lead Office, Toronto, Ontario
ighest prices paid to individual shippers sending
their cream thdirect1y by rail.
Cranien. Mgr2Creamery
eaforth Creamer
CREAM ; BUYING, STATION
Hightest cash prices paid for
Cream and Eggs. We guarantee'
service and satisfaction to all our
r"s•
Give us a trialsw.d let us prove
to you that we are a worth while
markeL
. ,
Cecil Mullin,
Lucknow Branch
'Phone 63-
.
Ph 74 Phone. 256
iVirigharn ,
Luclmow
Monumental VVvo
LUCKNOW and VITINGHA51
Has the largest and most complete
stock in! the most beautiful designs
to,choose from; in
Marble,. Scotch, SWedish suF Cart-
. ndlien diani'tes
We 0 ,!k sPecialitY of .Family
Monunients- and invite -your iespet-
Inscriptions Neatly, Carefully and
Piomptly Done.- •
' See us before placing your order.
Orilemnemini.moMm
DOuglas 13ros. , ' A. Spottott
Luckttovr, Ont. ••
Litekedie L. 0. L.. No: 40.8, meets in
their lodge iroom every second Tees-
7'ditV7Orthei month : at '8,-,'"o'eleek
W.M. H. M. Parker; Rec. Sec's?..,Wm.
-McQuillth„ - •
•
' The eheatier the Sift- the More hap-
,
viness holds:
He isn't a confirmed bachelor un-
til he gets the complacent feeling
tbat Most of the 14ides would like
07* 1444,'
• •
• ,GODERICI1
, Though the • vote on April 14th.
,
was comparatively light,' the 'bylaw
'to :'issue debentures for $58,000 ,for
the remodelling of the Collegiate
Institute 'Wilding and the erection
of a two-story addition thereto was
carried by the ratepayers by the
comfortable majority of fifty votes,
When the votes hack been suirsmed up
the 'count steed: 198 for the bylaw
-and 148 against. The. debentures,
Which will bear interest at the rate
of five and one-half.per cent., are to
be issued fey a term of thirty years.
The contract .for • the work was
let some -time 'ago, . subject, of
•
course, to the Teasing of the bylaw,
the silecessful tender having been
put in by Jelin Avery' "' & Son, conL---
tractors, of Mitchell. -
Work on the construction of the
new addition is to be begun. in the
very near future, whilethe Contre-
are to secure posie"ssion of the
preseht blinding • for purposes of
re-
n-i delling not later than July 2nd..
It is understood, ' as part of the con -
tract, that the whole renoVated and
completed .buildirig, Js to _be. ready
for ,ocenpancy • (with the exception of
the gymnasium), by -September Fith
next. C
Among „the votes :cast on: the by-
law were -those .of• Mrs; Jane Anstay,
agail-:eighti-eight- Years, and.-Mrs..-
Thomis Hell, aged ' eighty-three
years both:: of :whom; Walked,i: to., poll.:
Ing Subdivision No; 1 to lend their
support to the project.' ,, „,„
A . LEAP -YEAR STORY
They had ' been talking as they.
sat on the 4sofy." She had lemarked
(incidently, Of 'course): "Oh; it 'inhit,
he terrible to a ' man to be-rejeited
by a woman:" •
"Indeed it. aintit," was his res-:
'hen, after a whilei, ,witli syriiPa.
thetic disingenuousness, the eidlaim-
ed, don't think that I could ever
have the heart to do it,"
AndtherrCame-Silenceiii. he-begen
to think it over and .discovered that '
, he was being, .13hOyeci 'Vet ",••,d s
sOVered -that he -wit:being ShoVed'
:over • the etriiito.niaL
precipice. ,•
Another Leap Year jump.'
"Good-bye, I'll give you „a ring
(telphonet he indant),. tomorrow!," •
."01t,_. you 'Do,-yciu -mean
This is sb 'Sudden," '
•
0 0 0 .4.
,
Another advantage Adam had.,
Eve couldn't threaten to go home to
her mother,
LITCKNOW SENTINEL, • TIIVIZSDAY AsPEIL 24t111, 1,94)4 •
1.41ci
r"
THE
rpENTINEL
a mot.'nj
.0 -0 , 94
'andEditor-....
'TEU,RtSPAIT A1R-1L. 21th:, 1924
.0
WOULD7L,IICE-MORWLIGIIT
ThePibli ACCUfents `Coinmitiee
of the Ontario ;Legialatere, "haVing
finished its work Of enquiring into
the business methods Which prevail-
ed in the Treakireep •"Liepartment
Mr., Peter 'Smith was at the
.bad of .it,the .pubflc.will be. enter-
tained:no lenger•-bY,-:-Sens'ational --exts-
pesures, in that qtarter 2'• ,
thoPie 'hundred -end -two - thous-
and'dollars bail , On which he is re -
likely 3veIi guarantee :the'
apPearance-Of-11117:7Sfiiith-iirsOurt-.
when the,' time enmes, and • further
diselosures may then be mides, and
• the inquiry:- into :the cause -of,• the
failure , of , the ,. Horne -Bank may
throw yet, more light upon the pec-
uliar and shady Methods of high
:finance. But, be that as it May,the
report of the investigation so far
has been a useful education to thepublic.-
., • ,
The Public.would -like' to see the
inyestigation. reach farther back into
'history. The'disclesurea se far have
left.the impressionthat even 'Rfore
the day. of Peter, Smith things; were
not all as they should have been. In-
deed' there is a convictions that for
an indefinite period reaching, into
the past the same' rhethed of buying
fors - sthesTreaSery.:7Depart-
ment have pressiled. Every sale s„of
bends, every sale 'of timber .;limits
and every big contrast giVes t
grafters their opportunity,
GERMANY , PREPARING •
FOR WAR?
'lhisrn. 4,014:401;41 tc;r4vraiti,ilz, poLI.1.4.47:1,:breff:
„.ttientW„to-overthro* the
islrittriC,474;bt,nsilltary.,400.,Ite
4PnW9,i0.:'beealt.6•``S..i)111441.P9184ed...
Re. Wag .rag,414,.'-gnpPreatf.P70''inti:Iar-:
-rested, .ancLAfter.a..,,eort of 4reiCal
trial, yes given ...his iiberiy. The law
in 90l14 -10W .„ #81, elPwher.et-114
9Nshallub4epp%xaer_
euted off -hand it that. .„the'„.,,rePubligan..:t4nme,niiment,-----ok
!Ve-i,a7tiii.17:47 very .0 -id,
gt erlePlY:-the IAPP114.434 A11,(1,.
tatlitS. Shuuld war conie, they 'can
all readily •get. together, '
TRE. .S SHLITS.
•
OLITHORIENTALS
bill dealing with emigration re-
Ceritly, .paased "by the • United States
,Coegresa,...imp_s tip* hp'..a....gresit
fr-
or in. 'Japan beeihise the snetipure' exs.
eludes Jananeie altogether. :from the
United:.•Stateal as permanent resid-
'. This same -Emigration Bill • cuts
deviin t a. very low figure the nuni-
bers which ,inay come Into the mien: -
try 'frein many EuroPean colintrics,
such as Italy for example. •
It places 'ne reStrictienrsupon na-
tive 'been citizens of any North Am-
erican country, so . that Canadians;
Mexicans and folk from aey South
American eoentry may -go and come
as they please,. provided they, aer not
of the criminal" "elasS, and, can show
that ;they are not • likely to become
public 'charges. • •
The measure, appears to be all of-
fence.to wanityrather :time
to their interestsThey 'take • it that
. .
, the, 13. S., Congress regards all Jap -
he anese as an inferior race. and there-
fore "undesirables." This; liowevei;AS'
not the 'reason for the exclusion bill.
Japanese and Chinese; have • been
landing: upon ' the Pacific Coast of
Canada and the.' United, States for
•thirty year in ever-increasing numr-
bers, ,and -between these Orientals
and the white race serious antagon-
ism has developed. '
It meisbesall Wrong—it May be
all the fault of, thewhites—but it is
fiet ea:evident as thet oil and va-
ter will pot, mix, that ,the white anti
yellovir, Men will not get on pecefully
together, It, seems certain that the
fhthre will Mins. ree riots and race
warfare if the Orientals are anon,-
.
qs-1_ to come,
There is no use n 'talking about" re-'
, • , •
lieving. the pressure of population
in the East. Japanese, . Chinese and
Indians Could , flee& this contieent'
ter four hundred Mileg in trent the
Pacific Coast, converting it*into, an:
ither China withont relieving, the-.
, .
pressure in Asia, to any -noticeable
Jegree
_
What then would we :have?An-
- sther 'China or India on this contin-
ent and conditions no better than
,efore, in the East::: But thatwould
not be all., There would, be a Mixing:
of ;races, , and there would' be • ;race
troubles as ure• as there would-be.
Impossible t ;estimate • the
amount Of truth': there is in the're-
.
ports that Germany :is; secretlyr-,•hut
vigorously preparing.' to renew the
War upon Fiaece, •
• " before the Greet -War; that
-wet end"since its Close these at the
head ::•Of. ;affairs in Germany 'hay
been ' charged .with the utmost ba
faith and • bad' intentions - toward
4sieighboring,4etnint.ries •
As the .Witi proved; thoslie hel
this view of the Germans • Were. righ
and -there can be ne,'deubt bet „the
the inilitarists of Germany thos
who belies Shat the, greatness of
country tonsista. in its Military 'POW
er, that its only security in: th
atrength of its, arrineacnnd that in
.only Way to get on with ,neighbors
„keep them in fear• -:-.:see no otherway
• out Of the country's present Piigh
than. the, crushing of France and -.al
others who maystand in the way . of
'German, dornnitien of the WOK& 'If
these:• men can relieve .the War,they
doubtless will de :s regardless of all
existing. 'treaties.. •
•
The Dews. • Commission
cm' Experts appointed.semestime :ago
to ascertain the ability . of Germany
to pay • tlie• reparations / •claiineit-bY
- France, 'repertestlhat....• Gesmany is
mike. able....to,pay;,•and. that without
-taxing the, Gernian people heavier -
than the :'people of Britain did Fran-
ce now taXed, and have been
taxed .ever slnee the war. .The Ger-
man 'Government has . all along
,claimed ' that it was ipipessiblesfor
'Germany to. meet ' the demands' •„of
the. countries, which., Wen the., war:
The Dews- commission further as--
that-inatead
alysed financially the , German' GOy-
ernmerit -had alkalong since the 'war,
been heilly ••gettirig_,its railroads into
a condition of -high effiCieney—that
- thoughe It-, bad, ne moner to pay for
the dm -nage : :done t • France it , had
mi1lins- to expend-unori railroads,'
so that• no it has by far the est-
equipped
ilroadi. in Europe. This
itselr. fin t• be , regarded 'As prepar;
ation, 'f' r war as effieieht !means of
transportation . is of ' the utmost iriv
a
t,
portance• in war, "*.
• France is -known to have a bigger,
and inOre• efficient army than it had
befOre :the wet, :and that sO -far as
gathering and , preparing War mater-
ial ' concerne4.: nothing has been
left undone, tiiat ,Germany - wOuld
have-ri-"difficult-task- eVerebdiihg:.
France 'Mope: And • Fraffee :would not
be entirely alone as on ...attack, must
come' . thrOUgh 13elguhn or SWitzer-
land,,..Unless. the.: Germans would.. first
'iindertake. to: the Preneh.,Mit,1
of the oecitPied territory along the;
-Rhine. • • . 2 ,
The 'WetthilesS f France would be
-in-finaneing-a—tivar;---aUs-there-seitn-
nOvs be no 'harrowing, ibroad,
.Germany '. in all, likdliliond," wOuld
be able -to pull' Russia in on her side,
as in.' the defeat' Of France- and Eleilt"
taiii,ttredS" of 'Russia would
the deepest satisfaction, as well as
permanently „wiping out all .finan-
cial Obligations,to these countriea.
' Another thing which lend i color of
truth • the itoride Gentian preaar-
atiOnliLi th ,wfch
For our part we believe" in keep-
ing this cOntinent for the .whites,
and_t_he, nosthern_eshites_at_thats-and-
letting the Orientals get on as Well
• •
as they- can in Asia. •
RETURNED MEN MAKING GOOD
, •
It is cif: general interest ..that, 'the
returned soldiers-, who . were given a
start in farming are making good
Thirty veterans took farms on what
was- -formerly the Bobtail Indian- ,Re-
serve; near Ponoka Alberta and ac-
cording to the latest report, only .one
of these is likely to fail in the enter-
. ., The reserVei, was taken, over from
the Indian Department by the Sold-
iers Settlement Board' in 1919, and
,Oisided; into:. hang:* ofan, aVerage
.sizeisif 214 acres: The, original praie-
-ie is now =pretty -broken 'up, , one
third to , one -hal! of •the acreage be-
ing Under cultivation.
aystom of mhos& farthing is' be,-
ing largely adopted; '-which give!'
greatercertainty tO the enterprise.
• ;Ceiirly all the men have been . able
:to ,meet. their annual payment, ao far.
'MAY-9.0.RODGAN-"—D GUN,
•
. The' first part'of an, actual tiriiber
surveying trip In Northern Ontario
Is given in the May issue of Rod
Gun In- Carkada_.by• -, A. • •igggney,
dealing with :everyphase of the
-worfc, while 0, 'Sladeri :6E14,
v'sod story n a ti0Vtil.panoet'irip•Iri
lriglarsy4t, Rh u ereeet, aricuti OW aftii!le);,70- Ohrne
it,
„exeithig ..account • Of a Derlione,:
..
'venture, by' John Cook; ad Mark G.
MeElhiriney gives an interesting de.'
• seription • 'of' to bemitifin
Bset't :perk, The sneakingwildeats
along the Clyde River, Nova Scotia,
•give IlonnYeastle: Dale stibjeCt mat-
ter for a vooli '4ititten article, While
"A StrikV Goose those in Newfound.
land" by E. Gallop is, an unusual and,:
'wall told atory, to4,
CANADIAN FOOD BUSINESS
INCREASING TIII YEAR
• 1,00.11:t!'"4gfthe: bealthy grow -
'Of andia In'dii0trir. 44 -ring the
-three. The'411S* is con-
tained, in the.fact that '43% of the
entire Production*the-.-Plant- of- the -
Fd ..MotOr •Cp, ,has beeiFshipped to
British 9verseas, Doniihions , when
coupley with fikures corieerninP:
_oin a htirAniim
trnly remarkablp4showing.,
There"; were producea t149 ears
and trucks !' in the month of 1-.Mantli,,
1924, - and for the first three-month
Period just ended, • a total,' of 21.I,49
cars of all nimlels. This Compared.
with a: Similar perioCin 1923.shows
an increase of 16%' in -the, total, bu.3-
ineSs one to .-daW this year. An.:,
other interesting feature is the tre-
mendous ", grokh ,in the eleami car
buainess. This. Branch of the Ford
Companies activity apprexinsatieg
10% of' its. Canadian ••.Salea
• In addition to the . huge Thant at.
Ford,-lind- :the .three Assembly -Plants
located at'Montreal, Toronto-• and
Winnipeg, therehas recently been
opened an Assembly -Branch at Port
Elizabeth, Smith Africa,. where
about 300 cars: per reerith will V.
turned out;
‘.
THE BRUCE HOUSE OF- REFUGE•
'
For the year 1923 there were
new ininates , admitted to. -Bru
County House of Refuge which w
established' about a quarter of a ce
'Wry' . ago for the hoMelesa' , poor
'the County, , says tile Chealey • Pnte
Fiat •There Were 47in the instit
tik4.sfor -the- :year --The qtverst.ge-e
Pense per week for each person W
the Modest slim of . $2.67 whi
would' barely, pay ,the cost of .
meal on a .rellWay diner it a trave
•ler's• 'pbeket beak Was;large, inotes
to appease the . cravings of a Vora
doe's 'maw: The keeper and niatrO
arid .the hired help all get their • grti
at the - big boarding house. The Pro
ducts of. the:,••• farm '• amounted t
$15941.9 and the produce Sold t
$43,75. • The !Old Men in the -Hoes
-of Refuge do ',considerable .of th
worlson. the farei. and thus help
p,ythehjkeep of -$,67. per week
There' are...opportunitiea.' for gratin
at, the House et Refuge :jest ,as ther
are in ,any public. institution, • in
charge a have been made in. othe.
epturities of crooked work, but Brim
County has been • fortiMate in it
clieiee of . shell:hien -as JeaePh-41-
White•• and. John H, Wiles, and be
ginning in 1924 the 1.atter'S 'sore fn.:
keeper, , Whe are inen•of high clia:riC'-1
ter'. and :Would ' net: cona'escencl to
thieving. like 'inanyir igh.p sitiom-
of trust' .these days.
ENFORCE' 'THE• CRIMINAL, LAWS
• ( l'orento Saturday -Night).
Following the.latest 'bandit 'out-
rage . in Montreal where 'seine ,hued -
red and forty thousand •d011ars'>•was
tolen .from a motor ear belonging,
'•to the " Bank of HOchehiga and the'
'uriver killed, as well as one of the.
robbers, 'ha a brought out a .sUgges-
tion in the Canediart . Senate that
, attacks withi„firesrmsfor. purposes,
of robbery he- made a -capital' often,
se. -If is believed that: the death . pen-
•
14
ce-
as
n-
or
as
eh,
ne
1- '
11
O.
0,
tity ler such a- rime would tie the
most effective 'deterrent to. criinin-
ls this class. •Te, this we imagine
11 people except those who on geh-
rar principles' believe that a Sian, on
he' Wrist is all that,•is coming 'to a
killer" or One who yobs' with, heir-
e,r as a possibility will agree.
There is ' of a practical iji
re in the suggestion that the man -
facture: and sale. of firearms be re.,-
tricted• by law. For those who 'really
ant thein revolvers Will .alWays be
rocutabld. , The effect „ of 'sea tie-
nactinent 'would b,e that all decent
itizens would :do„ without lirearni0,
hile• thugie, earings nothing for- law
rd order. Would Of , course -obtain
1 "they deeired."`Thus" law abiding
tizene would find ,theniselves .more
the bands of :the burglar Mid
old -Up 'man, than is° now, the ease.
In connection With the '• Montreal
eid:,ne and the recOrd: of the dead
bber, Harry -Stone, who was. shot
irough the :heart by one of the
nk's 'employees, it is clear' that.
ey are a gang of international'
ooks,•.Stons--had long critninal
cord • and is, tbOuglit to have'. been
e of the !tank -who held up ,the
oronto bank rnessengera se 311e.4
ssfelly a few months ,ago. SOO
as a-- fair- 'examplr-t'-ot,,a ,crasrof'
Milne' that alleuld be •shewn
arter, .and his galig-sit.thd •-".
fertuhate • enough to. capture •
Thrift-
preeent Cede; 'which en.
les the court to try any member
sUch, 'a gang for murder even if
e in•diyklual's actual, guilt,cannot
esteblishdd:,
It is generally recognized that o
urts and our parele boards are too J
lent With certain types of crim.
is, The polide of our larger cen-
3 are donstantly picking up tittles t
d neer tmurderers viho aeme p
a
on
ce
Cr
tiu
th
un
ab
Of
be
co
ien
ina
tre
en
1
r,1
,SMA1144
e
,arrive
RAKES,. LAWN AND 'GARDEN,' HOER! -AND
T
't ULM, ATORS,'GARDEN *SPADES AND s '
t
CARPJT. BEATERS
, 'I •
-•
O'CEDAR OIL P0LISIL,,25 AND 50c • SIZES OR IN BULK.
, . .
mcREsco . ANDALARASTINE ALWAYS ON . HAND.
• FOR PAINTING AND VA,RNISIIINfGr-,MARTIN• SENOUR
.100% PURE PAINTS AND VARNISHES, '
FOR. PAINTING THE CAR-=-"EFFWIS" ENAMEL.'
LAWN • MOWERS :AT A GOOD PRICE
1*AGOls1S-, RUBBER TIRE OR DISC WHEEL,
NEW PERFECTION COAL on, .STOVES, *sr'. its
RIGHT HEAT 'Volt EVERY KIND OF:COOKING, Apso# ov-
. . .
RNS; $6..06 TO 58.75. •'-" • • i
. .
COILED SpRING AN fl fl»fl WIRE ON • HAND. ALSO •
, .
viriyvEN rENttis14:
Fresh Car of Cement just arrived.
The Store Where, Your Money Pies the .FartheSt
Phone 6
ucknow.
'T
ROBBED WHAM STORE
•given ,their liberty: In the ProVince
of Quebec, the manner hi; Which des-
perate trimirials are allowed out on
Which they promptly forfeit
. has 'Jong beewn public scandal, and
,
we are glad to aee that Quebec's' at-
torney-generaf ` may ' take steps to
end ,this condjtion The7ease-et;the
holdup mah' who Was killed in
Montreal i a good„ -exairiple of the
systerns.Th is fellow had been, in pri-
son for ..dezeh different crimes, .in'
a .dozen .different States' and also;in
Capada , • .bet alWays managed a re-
lease befOre; serving-: more than a
11Orti071, ,of a teeth -..jf it happened te
be for a. more • or 'less protitseted per:.
iod. Toronto --chief of police', stated,
recentlY. that.ie -Opinion -. there
would be n need for:making the
use of a .,"gen", by a ciiininal .acap-
ital
Offende; if 'convicted criMinala of
this'. class 'were; Iallowed to serve
term. ' ' •
o 0-0
GODERICH
' • . . • .
: Two }feting Indians from the Sau-
geen reserve are doing tont• in t .
.;Provincial Penitentiary, -for the rob,
'bees!, :Of J.A ;MIN 'SOre ,nt. Wing-.
ham They broke into -I 'the store. on,
the night: of „Fridey.April .11th; lied,.
ther,. were arrested the day'
ing, ‘at the ,Reserve. .' .
Mr. • Mills discovered the robbery
lioling.O.P.SHeein.g.rotthilelsdtorcehiSef4aturdlleayM rn-
o,
who
sow...learned that..tvve,. Indian youths.'
had left that morning! by -the 'early
train fer, SouthanaptOM ,Allen iM--
inediately notified . Constable.: Solo; '
man of the Reserve wlip':Placed. the
two young fellows under 'arrest on.
their • arrival. They are NorMan .
.iatnes and .Franeis! Moses aged ,I.S4
an IS, ,and both baying previous '
jail; records. Allen motored. to South-
ampton on Sunday and the suspects' '
• Were - handed over. to Befdre
'leaving' they :unearthed the stolen
goods ins the,woods where 'the were
•covere with ' brush : and 'bark.-- There -
was a suit of clothes, boots ties, col-
lers,„swenters and „other artkies en'
men's wear. •
.forOenmMegionedrar'eyte'thReeildh.deifan;;,wrodoc
reri.-
!AY,' but the. court lahted only a few'
minutes as the prhionere,' admitted
the theft. As' the offence Was One of
housebreaking and robbery the
ien-
tence could • not be light, so Magis-
trate Reid gave 'them a teem of • not:
less than •18 months and not more • '
than two Years, -depending upon con-,
,Navigation ••,. was opened here on
Saturday When three freighters, th-,
mid, din of whistles and., cheers from
the crewa, cjf the .19vessels Which
• wintered 'in Goderieh harbor,: started
northward bound. The Jelly hies, of
,Montreal, was ' the. first vessel' to
leave the harbor and to. inaugurate
the navigation . season, of 1924 for
Goderj h The .Jolly 'Inez was Oise.
the last boat to 'arrive ,here Iasi fall,
•The 'Glensannox left during the af-
teimoon for,the, Upper Lakes. " The
Maplecourt; and the Canadian • Sewer
haVe. alse:cleare-d for C011ingwood te,
go into drYdneka kir ,Yepaira.
There
up. here.fofthe;wjntor,-afld
their presencemeant- a' - inf-fOr the
town, as large Sums, were . spent, on
equipment and fitting out for'the
spring, Nearly' all ', of the .re-
Mitining: `Veisels in the harbor will •
' It appears that -the fellows 'were,
rt Wingham four years ago engaged
in Pulling They were. paid at
..'lgill!s;„ (dom., and- so s became; familiar s"
:tyith,the _surroundings.
—WHY DOC'TORS
• ADVISE' TONIC
•
-leave for ,POrt.'Arthur and tort WTI
"Hain Within,' the .next 'few days,
though a few cross the lake to Ain.
ericatt, ports to Secure coal.
Goderieb citizene are much distur-
bed:over the :,lowneid: of the _harbor
,The water' is fully two feet
below normal. IlnlestAredging
done or the water rises'. leaded 'VeS.
SelS May have difficulty entering the
-.-8everal - boats '
the harbor entrance last fell and a'
lighter:hadlid.be•SeCuredffroiniSarn.:
ia. The 'Chicago DthifiekeCanel is
blained-for-the—cOnditiOiriii741-firia:
and Goddrich citizens realize that
thesituation which Is developing is
a serious one as far AS navigation ail
e Great iiakes: is concerned,'
13,-,Stoiher‘ has "bough i Mr.
ohn Ford's cottage on Huron street,
There'' ilk bounds connected.:
vith, this residence Which will give
he District Representative tit ,,009:
ortunity ,.'praetising landscape'
•
eon,' harct to ,tietine h#ve een
4rdon1nif.-1 (Onto) NilVs Record,
„
This is the season when' your syit-
tem. is.. trying tri adjust itself to
warmer weather, Tour liver beedmeil
aIngish, and your bowels,.eloged
un with poisonous, •siekenin't
st result, many sufferfroni sielt
.symptOins as spur 'stematch Coated
tongue,. bad ,taste, bileettalt 0'
-regUlar-, movementa ."erthi: !'.howe 16-
•slck-headaches, pains ` in -1 the ',lied('
and
aliedeathla testi C'tei:na'si And
jour:liver
Cher's fiver and 13lood Syrup. litit
Your stornach in .conciition—soothit:
your tired rand over -toted nerveth
brace up your, system and send intr.
dr ;' and healthier „blued! coursing ,
.thrtiugh -your ,
Notice the cptick differenee
way. you look, eat, sleep and feel--;.
improVeinent In leas thant.li hours:
lronur,. tolOhi ed,4104fig)::::
have, of tia cost. t
0,0404 OY A. A .11$1110i
IN SPRING'
1.
rr".