The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-16, Page 5e"�
' Tht*siay', No embel' 18th,. J916
Whatis. Home
without Music?
bring .tit( 'liedied.. t i' dry 1(0144 ; +.
l al'risena " O Ulevclandt trayollu g
agoot ol3 the Lolkc Carrion' .osoolatioo,
casae to Jot itowata .and, gave SU the.
pssistaatco lac oonid.' Tim Neely of
Angus ngus .Orahaa. woo sent to Oodb
eric
at once, ,arriving on friday ,tight, and
/thole of Angus Mnrre,y, 0434 ,Boderia:Sr
tMcl)onakl, of Ooderach, as well ass
Joseph O>'Connot' And John gtjgley
arrivicd en Afonde,y,the feeet'a:l of the
three town boys, taking place on. Sun
Clay wad Monday and those of Messrs.
O'Connor and Quigley on Tuesday
morning at Kingsbridge. The body
rf another victim, G• rdon Haines, Mn
tirnphey shipped to Parkhill, and that
of James. Callahan, of Whitechurch, to
4Vn(glaam, This leaves only one of
the men from this district whose body
hie net been reeuvered,, that of Wilfred'
us in, sone of Phillip' Austin, of
Sheppardtou,
�........... iii � C up - -- ---- .
Canada Machine '
"HEARING IS BELIEVING".
The Columbia dealer nearest to you will gladly demonstrate. Very
easy payments Little cash required. Dealer will'exrplain terms.
Send for a, new free catalogue,
COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE . 0e
"Creators of the Industry.'
"Pioneers and Leaders in the Art.'
"Owners of the Fundamental Patents."'
CANADIAN FACTORY. TORONTO,
For Sale by
• ABOUT •OLEOMAkOARINE
6 (Daily Advertiser.)
•
Many well-intentioned .persons are •to-;
Jay -asking the Dominion •Government
• to permit the free entry of oleomargarine
into the country in order to secure some
measure of relief from the higli cost of
living. (rattle feed is scarce, milk and
'cream have gone•sky high and the cream-
eries are paying unprecedented prices for
butter fat., The result is that milk and
butter have come to be almost luxuries
and with some people. beyond the reach
of, the housewife's purse. '
• The oleomargarine advocates are mak-
ing a strong campaign to offer the sub-
stitute for butter` on Canadian markets,
and it is quite possible..that further
pressure will be brought to bear on the
cabinet; which •is a moat i, pressionabl'e
body along some lines. • Newspapers in
• Toronto which have a city outlook almost
entirely are advocating the free entry 'of
the animal. fat product, and the necessity
for lower, prices is lending weight to their
agitation. The poor man and the man
in .moderate circumstances is being as-
sured that oleomargarine is as valuable
ih 'nutriment as. butter quite as
palatable. Is he to• be blamed if he
'agitates for its free entry.., when butter
is selling from 42 to 47 Cents?? Would
ir,'be a 'measure easure of justice if ;the city
dweller were to be permitted the use of
this apparent - bourn? . Is not oleouiar-
garine barred •simply. because of -.the
•
'tariff? .
Perhaps. But when the public; both
city:and farm dwellers, are -considering
this question they should`remetnber tha"t
the vast racking interssts of Aiuerica are
in practical control of the meat industryn
of Canada. They. know the.advances i
prices of. meats in the last few years and
well may they ask themselvesif the
permanent injury of the dairy business
•would he justified In order to put prac-
tical control of another commodity . into
the hands of the meat trust? It is known
. that in some instances oleomargarine has
been, -sold --as low --as, 1 -0 -cents -a --pound:
With the dairyindustry severely, dealt
with and put out of the way, the packers
would be in a position to -raise prices on
oleomargarine; 'a,• product,- which while
it may have good qualities, will never
be able to supplant the genuine article
that•cotnes frons,;the creamery • or . the.
farm dairy, • '
Of course, The Advertiser is not pre
dieting that:the. dairying industry which
is in^one sense the backbone 'and the
hope of :the country, would be ruined by
-=the-free-entry-of-,oleIrmargarine; Nor
does it argue that there should be a high
tariff wall of protection for the farmer.'
If daii;y butter were to be admitted tree.
that would be another question But if
oleomargarine means that another great
food product. is to be turned into the
hands of the meat -packers. The Adver-
tiser would prefer to be left to the tender
mercies of the unorganized farmers, who.
will give us .butter at fair prices on the
whole, when farms Conditions permit.
CIety rdyh �!'M�01ArWr
At i "u"ItowyM04.0.0lAlirge ewolos 'dV6.0
I...Get P:rep.a,red for Fall and Winter Now.
Do not e 'deceived with a few fine days.. The rain
'and snow will soon be here. Be prepared for' it. Buy
Il' yout. heavy' shoes now, .
We have °them from $2;85 'up to k.50. Our shoes
at $2.85 and $3.50 are extra value.
I We have rubbers tofit all makes. of shoes. We
-guarantee .satisfactioi}..• l
ACKERT &. RA` HWELL.,
"A GOOD SHOE" STORE FOR .ALL THE FAMILY"
�DOMM� w
ssiAri..901•014il08ge nimP .�.AI. AAMPIF. 0.
HURON LOUNTY NEWS I
j3gyeFs of beans last week paid •out
$ 20.000 at'Clinton. Prices were from
$5 'per. bushel up.
It was recently announced' by the
• Militia Dept. that Lieut. .Albert J.
Grigg, formerly of the 33rd or Huron
et-ft,.,wttiq "appointed-tecruitin
officer for Huron .and Bruce counties:
The barbers of Winghann have ,ask
ed• the Town Council to pass •a by-law
providing that barber shops should
close at $.o'clock each evening, except
on evenings i.e£ore a. public holiday.
'rbc clerk was instructed to prepare
the necessary by law. •
EmotEx Bontsp•FouND.--The find=
iaigllof eleven bodies of the crew of the
ill rated_stearnetMcr-ida, -which--was
hist on Lake Erie in the ,stortn of the
20th of hist Month,. by tho . lighthouse
keeper's wife; • Mrs.. ° Esli Woodward,
on Long Point on Nov.. 4th, was one
of.tho'closing'events: of the tragedy
which brought sorrow to so many
homes in Goderich and .Huron county.
On receipt of the news, Jos. Brophey,
accompanied: by John' Graham, • Angus
Mc Donald, Joseph Austin.and Thomas
O'Connor, went to Port Rowan to
identify the bodies and prepare them
for burial, Long 'Point is very marshy
audit was a matter of no little diffi-
culty the party from Goderich had to
dawn o
"More bread and better bread"
arrived the day, the sun first
shone on
Alamo nal
MORE FLouR BETTER
• BREAD and BREAD
10 years'of better home- made bread. s
•
45,o¶ntor-
-i1-idSE "11VfiHO;' 1~ROfv1-'TtMC T-O--TI-ME; HA-VE--FUNDS----REQt=1.1.1-NG
INVESTMENT, MAY PURCHASE AT PAR •
DOMINION* OF CANADA DEBENTURE STOCK .
IN SUMS OF $500 OR ANY MULTIPLE THEREOF
Principal repayable 1st October, 1919. '
Interest payable half -yearly, 1st April and 1st October by. cheque (free_'
of exchange at any`- chartered • Bank in Canada) at the rate of five per cerilt
per
Holdersofthis stock will have the privilege of surrendering purchase. annum
at. par, and
accrued , interest, as the equivalent of cash; in pay e�rrg� any allotment
made under any future war loan issue in. Canada oilier than an issue of
Treasury'Bills or other like short date -Security. •
Proceeds of this stock are for war purposes only.
A Commission of one-quarter„ of one per cent will be allowed to recog-
nized
-.
bond"and stock brokers on allotments made in respect of applications
for this stock which bear their stamp.
For application forms' apply to the Deputy Minister of Finance, Ottawa,
DEPAR'rMOC OBOF ro iN7thAN Q. OTTAWA,
-
sere ere ,thousando of
children who are bright
but . raih-not sick but
underdeveloped „they
Way with their food—they
catch colds easily' and do
not thrive, --they only need
fthep....re,ri...hiquid- ood in
THE BUSYHARDWARE HOUSE
MAKE O JR -STORE. YOUR HEADQUARTERS
PHOHE. 66 . FOR PROMPT DELIVERY
"The Aristocrat
of the
Road
to start there growing and keep
.Children relish
them going.
SCOTT'S. and it carries rare
nutritive qualities to their blood
streams' and. gives them flesh -
food, bone -food and strength -food.
Nothing harmful in SCOTT'S.
Scott ;& Bovine, Toronto, Ont. 16-2
VERY YOUTHFUL THIEVES
•
The Bruce Times, of. Walkerton, tells
the. following remarkable story: - <
The recent doings of two Walkerton
lads; aged 8 and 10 years respectively,
reads more like a chapter from a Dime
Novel Sensation than any real juvenile
exploits in town.
Finding money disappearing from the
0, P. R. till since August last, 'Station
Agent. Hiscox little suspected that any
of the juveniles who were playing' about
the station knew anything of the mystery
and as a consequence watched in vain at
nights for the robbers. But it. seems
that the boys did their work by dajillght,
they watching the station agent depart
and then crawling through the window
and touching up the till in his absence,
One of the boys seems to have .been an
adept at opening the drawer lock with
the blade of a knife, and was able to get
away with it without detection.. But
they pulled off their_ greatest stunt • and
made their biggest haul at the C. P. R.
Thursday, for seeing• the station agent
depart after dinner without locking the
door, they slipped into the office and dis-
covering the safe door partly open' they
made a raid on the cash box, which they
succeeded in prying 1 open' with a flat.
clock key which was hanging on the
wall. They annexed two five dollar bills
and a quarter, and decamped leaving a
copper, which they dropped in the rush,
lying on the. floor. Finding the fallen
cent on his return and seeing the safe
open and' the cash box badly twisted, the
talion a eat scented a robbery, counted
s g
the coin and computed his loss. The
boys next paid a' visit the' same after-
noon to the' C. P. R. expiess office on
Main street, and getting in through the
back door by breaking the glass, attempt-
ed, in the absence.of the operator who
was ata fu`iier ;'to cut, the lock out of,
the till, but the knife' breaking during
the' operations, they decamped without
any plunder. Finding both: liis offices
visited' by burglars, the Agent -telegraph-
ed to Toronto for a detective, but Chief
Ferguson had the youths under : arrest
the next dtiy before the city sleuth arri"v-
ed. The local Sherlock Holmes learning
that the pair had been, spending freely
in a restaurant Thursday night, guessed
who • the thieves were, - captured them
and got a confession. In eye police
court that followed the Station•Agent
claimed to have • lost $35.00, but as the
boys would admit taking only $11 25,
the magistrate split the difference ; and
let them off ou suspended sentence on
condition that • their parents. refund the
C P. R. $20 and pay the costs of 'the
court, va hich was done. Since the trial
it developed that the saine pair had been
selling large quantities of stamps to Mr.
l3oan; the Canadian Express•agent, and
ng i i s a 1 as the boys when questioned on Monday
l eon
in=spite-of hu ase-if-tbc-farmer must- by -chi rireiguson admitted stealing
make his prices according to the law of
.supply and demand. Every farmer who
comes to the London market is a coin-
petitor of -every other farmer. 'The but-
ter business is not in the hands of a
trust, either by combination of farmers
'or ereamertes. The oleoniargarine.busi
neSs'is absolutely in the hands of a trust,
"The Big Four" control prices in Canada
as' in the United States, and the "boon"
of oleomargarine would be a`verydoubt
rut one. The public would' have about
the same chance a's a gentle lambkin with
the meat -packers. Besides all of whicli
there is a sentiment whiel'i clings to the
cloth -wrapped -rolls -and ---crocks of good.
farm batter,that makes it. worth a good
deal urine than the "synthetic" ilnitatid'n,
Mostly we do not eat butter as a. food
but as sari stliing that :makes the food
a -down -easily. '
Wo do not .help ourselves to a dish of
butter and devour it. Ina sense it falls
into the same class as home-made jam
and pickles, and it has a sacred place in
the hotne which will not be usurped un-
less the packers'are able to swing. Ottawa
into line.
•
' St. Helens.
them from the Agricultural Office here,
a key which Sandy -George discovered
under a stone -at the station, was tried in
the Agricultural Office door and found
to be the secret by which they entered
the building. Mr. Boan, who had been
buying the stamps, has, it seems, lost in
installments lately a total of $44 out of
his safe, but as.noclue to this robbery
has been found, the theft is still a mys-
tery .
'--Tuesday,' Nov: 14.
Pies: John Taylor and John Berry,
Who left here about a year agoivitb the
1:i5th and 70th Battalions, writing to a
friend, wish it passed along that they
are Well and note in Eugland. Berry was
,wounded m the leg 'in the fighting at
the Sc mine, but is doidi; well. The let-
ter Written by Pte. Taylor is dated from
gttuntiliottgat11R14
Dr. Clapp is County,Llerk
AGhau:ceto-:SaveMo'iiey
We Need. the Room for Other' Goods .,
.,30x3r?.I'la nSTireid Tires, re. $i�g.J�, Sale'I'rFce�jz.6�'
3 3�
30x34 'Plain. Tires, '•I 2.50 4 "; $:t9.25
30x31 Inner Tubes 4.50 44, 3.9-5
30x34-. � 4.00 $ 5" 4:�
44' .• 4G " 4C 44
3ox 3 Z 3. 0 $ x.;90
5;,gals. -Ford Motor.Oil, reg. 3.7;, bale" Price $2.75 '
5 lu: Cans Auto .Carbide, . reg.. 6oc,,, Sale Price 484.
Electric Bulbs for auto lamps, reg.- 35c„. Sale Price 2'7c.
Large size cans, National Auto. Body I a-essi:ig,,reg... 75c.,
Sale Price 55c. .
Large size cans :Autolene Metal Polish, reg. 5oc., Sale
Price 35c.
5 lb": Cans Cup Grease, reg., 7=.c. Sale Pricep5oc.
5 lbs. Fibre Transmission Grease, re. '9 ., Sale Price
70C.
Auto'Jaeks,. .... .. , reg. $1 00, Sale Price 85c. .
Tire Covers, ....... ..... " 1.25, "• ' $1.00
Auto Pumps " 3 00, '" " $2.55•
Blow -Out. Patches, , .... - ` 'x').50, " " ' .4 )
Blow Out Patches, , "` .60, " .50
Robe Rails, ,,.75,it 41 ,55
Tire Chains, " 2.75, " `' .$2.20
. Try our Special Spark Plug, only 50c. ,
Just arrived—A fresh car of Portland Cement
Bargains. in Second-hand Base Burner Stoves
cLEOD & JQYNT
The Store Where Your Money Goes Farthest
•
0
•
STANT NOW
There's no time Tike the present.
Put off saving and you will never
accumulate .a competence. Start
a savings account at the Bank of
Hamilton to -day.. Small suins -
received f'roir $ I.00 upward.
LUCKNOW BRANCH
"J. A. GLENNIE, Manager.
Capltal.Authorized. $5,000,000
Capital Paid-up - $3,000.000
Surplus; - - - - - . $3,475.000
•
FULLY
EQVIPPED.
ATO EXTRAS
TO BUY
s8
John G. Kuntz, - Lucknow.
•
•
..Dr. Clapp, of I1ildinay, one•time;Con•
servative M. 1'. P. for Centre Bruce And
for 'many years' active . in political life,
has secured the 'appointment to the
Count Court Clerkship, a position
rendered by the death of Mr.
Matthew Goetz. The position is worth
about $3;500 per year and there\ were a
-number after it.
r
"C CREAM, We have appointed W. J.
TAYLOR our AGENT to
receive cream for Lucknow and vicinity.
FARMERS having cream to . sell should
call -at Taylor's Grocery for a can.
�._.AlLeiream wr11L e_pa►id._.foir __ :::ee&l.y__y_,M
Taylor at his store. Cream to be left, there.
Callon Mr. Taylor for prices and full parti-
culars.
Paalmerston,
Palm Gainer Co.Amcsne
®titan°.
BAO STOMACH .TROUBLE
Yields to Delicious Vinol
Shreveport, -1.a:•-511 -had •a bad -atom-
aeh trouble for years and became so
tweak I could hardly walk ,or do any
work, 11iy, appetite _was poor, my food.
would not digest, I bloated and was very
weak and nervous. I tried many tette,
dies without help. I saw Vinol adver•
Beed and tried it, and now any stomach
trouble is completely cured and 1 am
wMAasn''xtt.
Vinol is guaranteed to tone up the,
tired, oyer -taxed and weakened nerves
of the stomach and create strength.
DR. Ai at 5PZNa> 6 LUCKNOW
RAIL MACHINERY j
A Tew leaclinr n1ii Miles. we c;fi'cr tor sale at this season
• 0 of the' year•
The Deering Corin Binder..
The Oliver Riding Plow ,
The Wilkinson Climax • and the International
Ensilage Cotters.
CW. G. Andrew L KNOW
•