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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1929-5-8, Page 7Cream Grading Means BETTER CREAM ETTER BUTTER TER PRICES CE S We are newpra axed to GradeyourCream honestly , gather it twice a week and deliver at our Creamery each day we lift it. We gather with covered truck to keep sun off it. We pay a premium of 1 cent per lb. butter fat for Specials over that of No. 1 grade, and 3 cents per lb. but- ter -fat for No 1 grade over that of No. 2 grade, The basic principle of the improvement in the quality of Ontario 'butter is the elimination of second and off grade cream. This may be accomplished by paying the producer of good cream a better price per pound of butterfat t,tnn is paid to the producers of poor ereaen. We solicit your patronage and co-operation for better market, +We will loan you a can. See our Agent, T. C. MCCALL, • or Phone 2310, Brussels. The ' Seaforth Creamery 1 • The Wanderer Novelized by William A. Page From Maurice V. Samuels' Great Biblical Drama of the Prodigal Son, Presented at the Manhattan Opera House, New York Copyright, 12117, by William Elliott, P,. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest "Why dost thou remain bare?" asked Jesse. "ls augbt wrung with the dogs?" "Nay, my father." answered Gaal quickly, "But go thou wattle." "I am nnxious about the stranger who hath passed through Llebron uud who may have news of Jether," replied Jesse sadly, "But hope hath almost left me iu mine old age."' "If thou bearest the worst tby strength may leave thee,' argued Gaal. "Nay, 1 shall hope again. But thou, Gaal, go thou within and bid thy mother place a plate for the stranger next to -next to Jether's empty one." The old man's vvi 'e choked as be mentioned the absent one. "Thou wilt hear no good, I warn thee," said Gaal gruffly. "And thou" -declared Jesse bitterly .-"it thou hadst shown a kinder heart unto thy brother be might have <ptyed with us." "If thou hadst made trim toll as I have toiled," answered Gaal, "thea thou mightest have less cause to fear the tidings from the stranger." Angrily he strode into the house. Again the dog barked in the distance. Then several others Joined In, until from the dog house and the goat lades - tire came a perfect chorus of dogs, some angrily, some joyfully. "Wby do the dogs bark thus, Shelah? Were they not fed?" asked Jesse. "I myself left food for them a Little while ago," replied Shelah wonder- ingly. "Go to them, for there is something. And remember, Shelah, though naught is lower than a dog, yet a good master will not neglect one," As Shelah left to investigate. Buldah, hearing the barking of the dogs, came from the house and approached Jesse anxiously. "Go thou within," commanded the patriarch. "The air is chill, and•I will GAAL, SON OF JESSE. 01 could smite thee tothe earthwith my one finger, yet 1 spare there', loin thee presently, after Shelah re- ports about the dogs that do bark so strangely." "I, too, have noted the barking of the dregs. But come within, Jesse. The , evening meal emitter thee." A loud cry from Shelah interrupted worn. tle came re [nem, m great 6- citment, "Master," he cried, "what shall 1 do? There was a man, a beggar, among the dogs, gnawing a bone that they Ind turned from. Jle lay upon the ground iu agony, o for had set upou y,one pen Ile. I could not see his face the way he lay, but I did beat the doge away Prom him and close the gate upon him." "Iluldah, go with Shelah" Jesse wild thoughtfully. "There are reusone why I must remain here; Thou bast cantle ways, and sin perhaps bath drty- en the man to madness. Sometimes, too, such men have boly v1s10u04 Crow their Castings. Speak soft to elm and bid trim Peer the lord uud give him food and straw to rest on fur thr Might." fluiduh, as though sensing 11(1 tut pendlug calamity, looked strangely fit Jesse and then I011owed Rheluh toward the dug kennels ,Iesse strode a fee steps dawn the road, Duly to !piste') Mack at hearing u fearful cry 01 opal:. flout the direetlou of the sheds The volae was that of tlnldnb, end engiesi! was in every nate. Tlu'wlgh the gut tiering dark nes:. Jesse saw her aiding Shelu11 1" hale (•arty, hall' drug a lamp and sen: c,r„ torte clad only in rugs. Ile stinted f„ ward her eagerly. Mut something m,(11. 11;111 pause. The math: r dropped lav harden at his feet, end he saw Ilett was the hotly of a Mian fainting lieu, exhaustion. Ile leaned over, when (1 mother, facing him pili'ously. cried. "true boy! Our buy has come bonier "What?" cried Jesse, with e1 rt'y ul pain uud sorrow, stricken at the sight of the poor, wounded body tying be Pure him and remembering, in aline 01 his former anxiety over Jether, that he had sworn a mighty oath (hal never elmul1 the boy took upuu MIs face again. "Our boy? Nay, 1 have sworn he shall not 101112 upon my fare again' With a great, imperious gesture he resolutely turned his hark upon the body Tying there upon the ground With ,a slugle sweep of his hand he carried the loose mantle which druped troth lits shoulders up and over Iris head, completely hiding his fere. De stood there, stolid, mute, firm 115 a rock. The mother, alternutely sobbing over her buy and pleading with the corn mending figure or the aged patriarch. suught to move him to pity, "Look at our boy, my .Iclhrr," she begged. "See what the world hall, dour to him." And as Jesse stood there, silent, she addressed her words to the boy upon album she was now shedding a moth- er's tears and who lay silent and lin avusible upon the grass before her as she kneeled beside him. "oh, my boyl" she sobbed. "My pee boy: Tu come baclt thus, when thou Wert Ilke the morning. Thy. hair- s.) (mile once, Now bow thin thou art anti ihfuniteu. Open thine eyes, the sole br11wu eyes, uud look upon tilt ntul Iu'r, Aly ring"-. :the 'caged over the prostrate figure eel kissed the ring which Jether still 22011 1(1,ot his finger. "lie hunger's, but my ring Is still mein his linger, when with it he could have bought food. Oh, wy I (y--Sbelnh, get water and bathe his twee. Oh, my bap, take my strength into thee, my sit phalli, Jether. 0 hod, be gracious unto (1s and spare him. Spare hire lu us," CHAPTER XIV. The Penitent Prodigal. /a R Khellin fetched the water, and Jesse still stood mutely to one side, refusing l0 look upuu the body Or his sun, the weber erred u lucid het' ousel "Who hath dotty thea to him? Be they «tee ed; Le Lord God, 1 call 113 (emulative 1122011 them! Cursed be the fruit or their bodies and the fralt 0t their lauds! Cursed may they he when they go I1 a110 1011011 they conte Dui• O (lad, leave the my boy, sly heath! 1111 boyl" she subbed, with one lust heartbreaking fry 8)r anguish, as elle fell forward prostrate across the bores of her sun and sobbed. A staldeu glimmer of returning tem eriousIress reused .ictlier, Fie mored, he half attempted to rise, and then net:wally and tmconsciousiy his arm went around the (10022 of his mother. anti be whispered, as if he were but a child again, "Mother." "Aly boy -my beautiful boy," she sob. bed. THE ORU5SE14 PAST .� Wk71)NBSDA1, MAX Sth, 1929, *mai, ettraeteg uy the olltherst, came been the house and surveyed the scene just as lother e#nbraeed ills mother, "So, then," he said contemptuously to the boy, "For all thy promieesto Me, thou hast revealed tbyseli, after ell, to thy mother,,, Jluldah, slowly comprtheu(ling tine fearful knowledge that Gual all the thee had known o(1 Tether's preseuco, drew herself up ind!gnuutly, "Thou knewest?" she cried, hu pale end sorrow. row. "A e yo, and l or thine ins owp sake I kept sllenee;" replied Gaal surlily, "Thou knewest -anti yet told me not?" shrieked the mother. "Ile scorned to take food of me," re• torted Gaal "curtly. "Besides, he bath deserved naught °lee. 13o went away' of his own accord. He should have stayed away, then," Huldah shook her head bitterly. "Thou hast a hard heart, Gaal," she said. "Where didst thou get it? I shall not soon forgive thee this. Now help me to carry Jether in." "What? Touch him? Bast seen his sores?" demanded Gaal. "1 have kissed his sores," replied the mother, a wonderful ligbt shining in her eyes through her tears. "fle shall not come into the house," declared Gaal sternly, taking heart from the fact that the aged Jesse had neither spoken nor uncovered his face, '"This is thy father's house, not thine," she said proudly. "My father's silence speaks," cried Gaal angrily. "No more than.1 would he have this disgrace thrust upon us, We have told all that Jether is an hon- ored man among the high ones of the city, and now shall a 1 this thing giro us the Ile? No; he shall not enter my fa. tiler's house,' "Thou speakest only. for thyself," she said, "My Lather hears, yet speaks not," derhered Dual "A man must judge what best befits the honor of his house, and since my rather will not speak I will give orders here, Rut Jether mast net Ole here. nor need he die at all, though better could scarcely happen to him, If thou wilt go within quietly I slmll here him curried to Seine nelgh- bur's house and pay fur his cure malt be can move 0u," And as Gaal reueled over and looked closer at the prostrate form of the younger son and sneered emitemptu- ously the mother sprung between them and thrust him back, "I have asked the wrath of Wed on those who have hruugilt Jether to this plight," she cried passiuuately, "Shall thy mother's tongue now call down a curse on thee also? Stand back, Gaal. Thou shalt not touch thy brother. ills mother twill protect him, Naomi. Res san-come ye all." The mother, frantic at the prospect that Gaal might yet be able to send Jether from her and not comprehend b ng the reason for the sblett(•e of ,iesse in refusing to speak to her sou or to uncover his face so that he might look upon the boy, cried out aloud so that all might bear. "It is our Jether," sbe called to Na- omi, as the maiden quickly responded, The young girl gazed in amazement as she saw before her the beggar whom she bud left but a few moments ago HULDAH AND JETHER. "Look at our boy, my Jether; see what the world hath done to him!" She leaner( over Min A single garment wrapped About bis nerl( was the outy thing not or rugs upon his body. "My moll" she cried. "Ile wears it yet, 1121' token I gore him," "ileal, all of ye," pleaded fluidal! to the servluts. "Jooter, our sou, bath roomed to vs. it is not as we all ex• peeled when the city called him front us. But he manes beelt very 111 and In great misery. Thutigb he uuw looks so wretched, ye remember how fair he. was uud bow lits smile was lite the,. sunshine. Be bus been greatly wronged, as men are in the city who come as tt'usting 01105. I em old and cannot lift my child alone, but ye who love him, too, shall help rue to bear trim to his own room, careful of his woundd:" Naomi knelt tenderly by his side and caressed him lovingly. (;ani fiercely swept both Women aside and stepped toward the boy as ha lay upon the grass. "That ye shall not do. Know this of Jether. Before he went away he of- fended the law of God by offering in• sett to our aged 'father, The Almighty hath brought him to ibis. Let bin] be taken elsewhere, but not into thy ens' ter's house. ?Touch bim net et thy pe•il,". MFS4.404.41.14 i'04+e*+•4•'i'•efelee, WANTED + Highest market price o FM paid for your Hens ;Nis Yol l ick • mulaan threw to Jesse, who bad never Once stirred, but stood, silent as an Image, with his back toward the prostrate Jether. "My husband," she pleaded, "bid thy servants obey thy wife. In these many, many years that 1 have been even as a part of tbee never before have 1 been made to speak twice to thy servants, who now hesitate because they have heard the command of Gate. For now In thy silence Gaal would play the mas- ter, Our boy le 111, so very ill that my heart is trembling. Shall he be kept thus waitiug? Speak to thy servants and command them to obey me." Naomi added her pleadings to those of the mother. "Speak, uncle," she cried. "Uncover thy face. Our Jether is not dead., Wby dost thou still cover thy face?" Suddenly she realized that the act of covering the face meant that in tbe eyes of Jesse the boy was as dead to him. She cried out to horror and sob- bed in FIuldah's arms. But the mother was not to be thus cheated of her boy, and when she realized that appeals to Jesse were in vain she knelt again by the prostrate figure, so silent and so weak upon the sward. "Jether, caust thou clot speak?" she wept. "Thy voice alone can reach thy father's heart. Mine Is no longer music to him. Open thine eyes, and be will read in them full repentance, though to thy mother be would show only a mantle that hides his wounded pride. Jether-Jether hear thy mother." Jether slowly upcued Its eyes and bait raised himself upon his eihow. !le looked at his mother and smiled. He turned toward the stere figure of the silent Jesse, and then sadly reached out his hand to his 'nether, "This is what 1 have wanted, motb- er," he said wealtly. "To Iold thy hand. Mother -at last." Huldah held hint (Onvulsively in her i arms and wept, while Gaal sneered at ibis display of uffectlon. "Reg from thy mnlher-bah 2" hesnid. "Nay. (!nal wrongs me, mother;" sold ,tether softly. "I would beg naught save thy forgiveness, Father ("1(s just, l took my portion and I wasted it. 1 alined, too -oh, In sc man}' ways. Ana once 1 saw God's Iighti nig hurled ugalust me." Cie turned once more toward the fu. they, "lather, thou stundest there and will nut look at me. Itul let me may to thee 1 did nut come to be welcomed as thy son. I threw tent right away when 1 fared forth and would not listen to thee, Rut In the lauds where I hove beeu there is Ito call fur helpers, Must for u stranger. Nor have I strength. 1 cannot walk to kneel before thee But couldst thou nut let rutile uric roue for me until 1 am strong nod ren, work? Fur 1 would work. rather. gladly if I could for any one 111 any way. And when 1 um but strong enough to go 1 shall go un, And I promise Thee that un 111 1 have wiped out my slug by labor uud good deeds no man shall know that 1 am Jether son or Jesse." Huldah exultantly turned wee -more to Jesse, full of hope. "Thou heareat, Jesse? This Is aur own boy. and he Is sorry and repent ant. He is flesh or our flesh Thou wouldst not turn even a beggar from thy door. Shall our Son plead In roto to thee? Naomi, kneel before thy un els and add thy, prayers to ours so that our Jether may stay." Rut ere Naomi could do more than more a step a strange vote0 was henrd among the gathering, wed n stranger pushed his way through the throng He urns rugged and travel stained. 1 come at the bidding or Jesse. Which is rte? demanded the stranger, "Who art thou?" dried Caal. "1 nm Haggai, the son of Manasseh, newly come frons Jerusalem." ,tether looked up in surprise end dis- may. It was the Judean he had known la the house or Nadine who 00w evoke. 1101;4001d, but ye did sen4 Tor iue, (8)4 I must speak the truth. Now let ane go," But Gaal, sousing some further ter• rible wrengdoing of the .erring Jether, detained Ilhn. "Walt, We would learn more of thee," be asked, ""ties[ heard. moth et•? Jollier hatb done something 'so shameful !hut God's bawl salute Mtn for it. Let this man tell freely of it, that all msy know we drive 11110 justly from Our door," nl ll dabIndignantly cwt a o n nded the t stumpy to sneak. ""Yes. stranger, speck forth the mal Mei" she cried, "sty sem bath done no wrong to auy map save to himself." Haggai turned and for the first time recognized Jether, who half supported bimsei( on one arm as be gazed up et ti4gal, "So thou still Brest," sold Dagga! sternly. "i had thought thee dead. And better far did thy kin wear sack. cloth for thee, for living or dead thou art accursed oP God, " "Stop. thou slanderer!" cried 13uideb. ""Nee, woman, hear me. i1 is rigbt that all sboald know. With mine own ears I heard a wanton tell while be steed mute, denying naught by word or deed, that out of love for ber Jether bad sacrificed unto the Babylonian goddess Ishtar, He bath renounced tbe god of Judea." Hnldah and the rest shrank back with borlror. Only Jesse remained un• moved, Els face still covered, his body erect as a statue. ""Speak! Bo 1 lie?" demanded Hag, gal, Jether slowly struggled to his feet, faced him and said humbly, "Thou dost not tie." Then look into mine eyes," cried Haggai roughly, ""Didst thou not stand before the very attar of the heathen and say a thing so terrible that no man dare repeat it?" Jetber nodded, ""Again thou speak - est truth. And in the awful storm which followed," he added, speaking tensely and with awe of the Almighty, ""in that storm l saw tbe face of God. And but for something that spoke deep in any heart and bade me live and suf- fer and atone I should have perished there," Gael interrupted with a triumphant cry "A11, uuw ye know my brother as he is -an idolater, a blaspbemer, accursed. Who will now hold a baud to such a one and face God's wrath's:" iluldah, with a piteous cry, clutched .!ether's arm and gazed into bis eyes. "Thou bast done that thing?"" she cried, sobbing, and covered her face with her cloak. Jether held out his arms to her beseechingly. "Mother," he cried, "dost thou also desert me? Now, when peace had just come to me, tbou Merest me." liul(lah looked at him with supreme mother love, grasped his bead and sank sobbing at his feet while he strove to comfort ber, Gnat sought to bring the unhappy scene to an end as soon as be couil.. "Into the house, all of ye, and thou, too, stranger, if thou wilt be our guest," he directed. Haggai slung his leathern water b01• tle over his arm and grasped his staff. "Not of a house accursed," he said gruffly and strode ori.' down the road. The servants started to obey tbe voice of Gaal, as Jether softly caressed his mother, when suddenly the hitherto stolid figure of Jesse moved. With an imperious gesture he dropped the man- tle from his face. With a kindly and forgiving smile upon his countenance, as though Inspired from heaven, the aged patriarch turned. ""Iloi il" he cried in a great voice as though speaking a holy message. "Let no cue stir. I hear -I hear." He paused, as if listening to a dia- tom voice from the angels. "1 bear the message," he cried joy- fully. oy fully. "Our son is once more with us." He went to Jether and looked at him kindly, as all present showed their ale provai-all except Gaal, who stood aloof. "My son," continued the patriarch, "thou hast sinned greatly, and thou bast suffered greatly. But it thou bast known God's wrath and still bath found peace, no man on earth shall take it from thee. It is thy greater I Look lute mine eyes that I may see it." Jether gazed into those kindly eyes and sobbed as be fell into his father's lrotecting and affectionate embrace. "Father!" he sobbed, "Thou shalt come into my house again. Thou shalt there regain thy strength, and there thou shalt abide with us." "I shall again abide with thee?" re- peute(1 Jether, dazed and yet happy. "Thou shalt not leave home again. Thou must have given proot of thine "tenement. Thy curse bath passed from 11100." "At last -oh, my father, thy words put new strength into me." "Call all the neighbors," continued .lesse, raising his voice and directing servants to scatter over the country. side. "In the house of Jesse shall be rejoicing. In a world of famine here is abundant harvest, A coat for my son -the best my chest contains. He shall receive my guests and do me houor, for while we others have wanted the road our fathers have walked be has gone out and traveled stonier roads, and yet he has returned to us Spread a great feast where all are welcome. Divide the season's store among the needy, Ue who was lost found. He who was dead is now mighty among the ilvhig." Gaal strode' to hint fiercely . as the faithful Shelah brought Jether a beau. tiful coat and aided the lad to cover his nakedness. "Art then meet?" cried 'Gaal, "This tams 15 a beggar punished for Inas sins. Callest thyself just? What sort of justice is this for me, who bath never sinned against any one? Yet for me CHAPTER XV, The Father's Forgiveness. 1111.10 all gazed in wonder and awe at the stranger, Haggai continued: "A servant of Jesse bode me come hither in the enure 01' (rod. Art thou he who scut?" "Jesse is my father," retitled Gaol sternly. "Fie dill send for thee for what he would nu lunger Ince-news of his soh ,Jether:" Ilaggal bowed us though in aerwie0 for the dead. Tbeu lie spoke: "Tell him, then, that ,Jether his son Is dead. God's bend smote shim at .ie- rusalom '' Naomi interrupted elm indignantly. 'Why sagest thou tint?" she demand- ed. "Art thou his enemy to tell such a 1ie3" Haggai bowed reveroutly before the girl. "It is no lie, ns 1 know it. Rut that I am his enemy f do admit, 115 must all true sons of Abram. Once it was my thought to prove his friend because ho, too, seemed one of us. But ere be died ho did whet no man of the seed can ever forgive, 1 More no wish, fair maiden. to trines cloud 11000 thin is �" .. "" "�'■. _ _ _,. I Prance now has 6,180,000 (legend.' Letterheads Envelopes Billheads And all kinds of Business Stationery printed lat Th i n e "ted e Post Publishing House. We will do a job that wifl do credit to your business. Look over your stock of Office Stationery and if it requires replenishing call fie by telephone 81. The Post Publishing House ,uuu aoest naugur. my menus thou bast not once invited to a feast, not uuee in all these years." Jesse turned to him and smiled be- uiguantly, "Thou bast not gone forth into the world and yet come back, Gael. Nor couldst thou comprehend the Justice of compassion. la my arms my boy vests again. No unkind word shall reach my son. Yet, Gael, 1 had hoped that thou wouldst rejoice with me on els return and forgive thy brother as I have forgiven him." Gaal turned away angrily. Huldah came to him, placed her band affec- tionately y on his shoulder oulder and pleaded: "Our son Is with us once more, Gaal; tby brother, tby younger brother. Wilt thou not join with us in welcoming home the wanderer?" Gaal moodily refused to answer. Jether spoke. al," he whispered, "my brother"- ostery and bard heart of the elder Ciro relaxed. Perhaps he felt that he, too, had been partly to blame for the misunderstnudings of the past. Re hesitated, and the gentle voice of his mother and the plight of the boy Je- flier moved him. lie turued, paused. and In a moment he and .!ether were on, !era ciug. "Jether!" lie cried, "Goal!" answered the boy gladly. And when tbe brothers clasped each other and tjulduh and Jesse embraced for the sake of their two children the servants silently gave way before them. The gentle Naomi rushed to tether's side, uud, arm in um. the two brothers, the street cousin and the aged patriarch and bis suite turned to stinctively once more to reenter the house of their ancestors, there fittingly to celebrate the erening meal end pre- pare the feast of thanksgiving for the return of the prodigal. And in the gathering twilight, stand. tug upon the thresbuld avulse which be had never expected to step again, Jetber paused, looked lovingly at the little group shout him and said proud lee bappily, wonderfully: "My father's Meisel" Tna END. Mother. Most of all the other beautiful things a life come by twos and threes, by ',mins and hundreds--identy of roses, nus, sunsets, rainbows, brothers and 'stere, aunts and cousins, but only one ..other In all the wide world. t worth a Pitt Village. An loci .0. u'•-lergc'^und vtl'a,t" ^, t AV' ''1( 'tr'".its and houses, has a n d(ee'w:"rnd near the storm -we( r ( 'v of 3kail, oil the mainland. In the nein res. Prof V. Horden Childs, of Mite. mete 1'niv • 'sity, who has par ly rv- "vated til., sil!at;(•. described the die - were ae b(ing unitive in W(•stua'1, Several huts have so far been un- urthr'd, with paved floors, stone 1>lv.s and reels, where Picts of the u•iv t'hriteian per!od lived and di•:d. Tile ;treats, roofed over with great •ren" slabs, are no more than four ':•(r high. hut a skeleton of a woman 1'et 6 inches in height has been discovered, Mite era its premium list, More ietatl. 18200,000,000 will he plaid out fog their support this year, 1 About six per cent 02 the coal !burned in the ordinary' domestic grate up the tIhilnney in the form or soot. The eyes of such birds ltsieagler. vultures and buzzards ha0e a telen- copic arrangement. Those of the smaller birds have, n1i;l; roscople mow- ers, • ! Debts Ooftlecteci We Collect Accounts, Notes and , Judgments anywhere and every- ' where, No collection, no eh"tge. Write us today for particulars. Canadian Creditors' ',Ass'n Post Office Box 951, Owen Sound W. D. S. JAMIESON, MD; CM; LMaCC; Physician and Surgeon Office Melielvey Block, Bruaselttr Successor. to Dr. White Phone 45. T. T. M'ri,AE M. B..M, O, P.. di S. O. M. 0. a., Village of Br¢esels. Physician, Surgeon, A000uohe¢r Office at residenee, opposite Me1v ilia Munch. William street. OR. WARDGAW Honor graduate of the Ontario Patens Oo lege. Day and night calls. Office oppw ?lour Mfll, Ethel. 11. N. 'aS`Ldo wan!, BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, CONVEYANCER, NOTARY PUBL1dj LECKIE BLOCK • BRUSSELS AUCTIONEERS JAMES TAYLOR Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in lila parts of the county, Satisfeett,•ni' Guaranteed, or tic pa!- Ordera IEP'" at The Post promptly attended fa: Belgrave Post Office, PHONES: Brussels, 15-13. North. Huron, 15-628 KEMP BROS. Auctioneers Auction Sales of all kinds accepted and conducted. Satisfaction Guar- anteed and terms reasonable. Phones Listowel at 121, 38 or 18 at our ex- pense. D. M. SCOTT Licensed Auctioneer PRICES MODERATE For reference consult any person,. whose sale I have of£iciatd at. 61 Craig Street, LONDON WM. SPENCE Ethel, Ont. 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