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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1926-8-18, Page 4WEDNESDAY, AUGUST, 18, 1920. 1926 . JGUST 1926 r41.)n. rrg/. a�.n44tld TIS salt 5 2 4 5 6 (1 6./ 9, 10 11 f2 [3 14 j�)16 17 IS 19 20 21 22 23 24 225 26 27 .27.1 29 30 31 CI,e trusses �s# C1333)\3',SPAY. AUGUST, 1s, 7"e• EDITORIAL NOTES t1 .4.1411.10.1 On Parliament Hill By R, J. DDraclltn;tn, Press Gallery. 'Nee b u•k in a- ur rebel 1 : +he' bird r -t debate i, i 110'i� ,f cem. must .li the 1.1:2 '..;.,Il, From 111 ii t c ns, r:eht ttn<fpnint 0e1,•,h11, 411'tt.,. If 111` +_ lL not unci the:: 10,01 1'0,1111 (. .� _ e'ellent. \, • r ,.' vativee come c;lh:,t nparrnt l: ,lin kr('' of artunli'y. ' did r;,- want t,1 I oppose the 'At th • ;neons, tlx u;n- the `•,•tinction in 0,.110 e''1- :It,e '('1t•'), .11,1 'lot Far,• t,1 -•1 ne p, .. .. ..•fpr i=ts 1 ,•r s n t"a 1t i.: t 1.n'• Dy holding the election en : tt beer 1 lth. 4Ir.- Mei,-hen can over and dole with before th, World's Series crowds it oil' alt_ true l crier -Where dot.. th-'omit-•) stand in the present election ,':t;tt- 1-•1( )g1 is t utiest.inl days. As a matter of feet o 1111 L•1' little what Op pane a.tt,e1 r, - b,, seeing it has lust :h (tette .1. once possessed. 4. Golf as tt business ---ten ttii11 ,a dollars' worth of :coif bills soli a .1 twenty minion dollars' w u ruts e,•,li' sticks, etc. That is in the U. S ..tan add, of course, tuns Int' ni,li. C o. So golf ;e a young man can mor,, and more every year. The 1.,,d use:1 has a value of tunny millions :11 1. S and nearly a million in Canada. ee o1' In a Detroit plant, a ton of bitunl (nous coal is converted, in four nial- ute,s, into 3,000 feet of gee, 10 _nl- tons of sulphate, 20 pounds of am- monium sulphate, 30 gallon, of ciat.1 light tar, 3 gallons of cresol, oil, 2 -gallons of lubricating oil and 11) of grease. The 1,500 pounds of cok • whieh left can be utilized for many purposes. The market value of the products is ,13.56. The coal co •to about 85 a ton, delivered. A statement made public by tin:, Department of Immigration and Col- onization recently shows that th :r , was an increase of 65 per cent, in im- migration in Canada during the fiat five months of the calendar year 1926, compared with tilt same period a year ago. The actual 'mmigruion was 55,062 in 1926 and 33,111 for the same five months in 1925, For this period, British immigration la. creased from 155,378 to 21,907; im- migration from the United Statee in- (reased from 6,335 to 7,860, and from other countries increased from 12,701 to 28,293. 3. 4. When one remembers that it is cera siderably less than 100 years since the first bathtub was put int) opera- tion in the United States, and that people looked askance at it, wh'l newspapers scorned it as n luv':ry a.nd as undemocratic, an advert(=e- ment for a new apartment on upper Fifth Avenue, New York, announc- ing three to five baths in four -to -sev- en suites seems all the more unusual. Incidentally, not everyone know= that in 1843 Philadelphia • . elphia enacted a ]sic under which bathing between Nov, 1 and March fru was forbidden. and in Boston a year or so later an ordn- ance was passed whieh required, en behalf of the public well-being, that bathe should he taken only when or- dered by a physician. It was about in -the seventies that the bathtub ap- peared in England, If cleanline4s 35 any mark of godliness, there has cer- tainly beet, marked progress attele. ed la the ;atter direction during the hest half c, nttn•r. { There -e noduty in hinder t.1(':,,•. there has boon nr, duty since 1906. Is there any twin orad, in Canada:' Yes. 1)e:pite the inerease 11 gran • production in ( de al la w: are,lethal- ly imp ltine less t'aiue• to -die; :'(nit wt. i!i I,for tri,• war. In tie, tv:e, years inch8, 191-3, oto' total net 're- ports (grilse imports less ,t•xpri•: :1 totalled 61,5;1,1731 lbs. 1u th y . i 1925 ani I 921 1h,• net eete 61.308 ,273 lbs. .As the roan: n" tb,+ fiscal year would coyer the . thu previen s 00onda r }'car : 1:00,• , the fn13ovin^-' r"nlto ,i:ons. la 1112 1913, our total production of grain .(wheat and ,oats) was 1,250,000,000 bushels in 192.1, 1 92 the total ,vas 1,552,000,000 bus hers• Se you will nota that with a twenty per cent in- crease ita production there is no crease in the import of twine, Fur- ther i beve not lnoniiun rl th • m - r r .I .serfproduction fl 1 n f barley Laud ryr in this period. iod. Throw it in for good measlire ,13 amounts to about 50,. 000,000 l ushels. -meantime til.• Brantford cordage Company, one of the largest plants in Canticle r;'llnrt.e, as follows: "Wei have been F110'1 ate steadily ten hours a clay ---fifty-nine hours n week throughout the y:1(r. Despite the addition of the No. 3 mill - from whieh We are now obtain - km full production it has again been found necessary • to work overtime." There you an'(—tan industry under free • trade ill a protectionist cotfitry busy ---and working. overtime. Ill* on •111 '1' l 11 4 f L.1 11. , t• 1 l ,,''e rut etre n 1,11.1e pr,.. 111: ih 117 1(1,, e 1•„ r•,,... �r n•,t 11. 11 '1 orde, •''3 all 111, wor,i:. 111;,•1 ti,ut 1 th, ,•t•` 1 1 1101• gelteie,1 el , u • : peat• -dry given by the Prime' and other ministers of v, Crowil that before 10011(01' 1.111 1 Imngt• wale mad:, an op- 1..ettrete would hl• given i11110 - 1l• etcd thtrehy 10 • lie h..1 3 (, -t,n-„ an telvisuly hoard. 'fh:,1 suet] assurances Note of• h : ily •eeorpol lted by :lie ltop- e 1 ement in the Speech front the 'mom, of the present ses,2(1(1 '11,• ('nllowine' words: • 111 1il,. tun::7 :hook( b, wad, only after the fullest e01(11 tabun or their. b ;wing tii•ll i+„111 p11111113, 1(11(1 1)1a1rt1- t' e /a +1: ;n•1.:ei .e and that r•- },• requesting ('e• - Uv ee.rease• or clee'r,•tt,k Flit „Mudd be 11111' iia' 1 1! most 0•.,','101 in - 1(„d to port by a b:1.ly th+• rite''. aly :tit.. advise th, nun try -'h , -in rt -thereto. ,• 1:161I •U1•-,.,ty hoard will act'urdingly Canada Marches Forward During Past Five Years By OBSERVER ARTICLE I. Canada is marching forward under Liberal rule. Elven the Conservative leaders and press reluctantly admit it. Canada has been steadily marching forward during the past five years—a period of time that synchronizes :with the Mackenzie King administra- tion, If the success of a government is to be measured by the degree of na- tional prosperity—and the two go to- gether for a considerable distance— then the Mackenzie King government and administration may "point with pride" to the satisfactory existing con- ditions even thougn party advocates may claim too much credit for im. proved economic or industrial condi- tions. Nature and providence have a share in prosperity. g+ There are innumerable proofs of this forward march of the dominion to almost every department of national development and national expansion. Practically every checking -up report makes a record or an advance over previous years, emphasizing the claim that it is pre-eminently a going con- cern. This fact is recognized by all who have their eye on present-day conditions—Canadian, American, Brit- ish s and foreign—as I shall hope to r pace in this series of articles. I trust too that they w111 strengthen the faith and inspire the confidence of all Canadians, regardless of their poli- tical impact or effect upon an election campaign. I hope they will prove that Canada is on the up -grade in all that comes under the head of prosperity, and that the best days are yet to be. I am specially hopeful that some of our esteemed editors of great journals espousing the Conservative faith may be cheered up by reading these facts. Specially the Ottawa Journal (Con.) which says editorially: "For five years we had uninterrupted instability in our fiscal and trade policies while the King government held office," and yet in the same editorial the colored glasses of the writer were exchanged for clearer ones and he redeemed himself by writing; "At the presnt moment in Canada all three indices that reveal the trend of a nation's business—viz. railway traffic, the volume of checks cashed at banks, and building operations, are pointing upward." And still again, inthe very same double -leaded leader, the editor rejoices, as well he may and as all Canadians do, that "Canada has turn- ed the corner and is now forging aimed." That's what I'm trying to write and prove. es Two Points of view, Which is the Eight One? But to our task, and a most agree- able one it is, only hoping that the Montreal Gazette will compliment me 'with a perusal of these sentences when they appear in print so that' he may be cured of his depression as he writes that a voice of "shiftlessness and uncertainty, of restlessness and storm and shipwreck"—as bad as that --is heard 10 the land, and In the editorial sanctum of the Gazette al- though it is 700 miles from the stormy and restless sea. Or perhaps it will listen to its neighbor and Contampor- ary, the Montreal Witness, Which says: "As all prosperity in Canada is dependent on the condition of the great basic industries of the field, Sorest and mine, It is encouraging to nOte that all of these are better off than forears whit Y , e them is gen- eral improvement In Pmanufaoturhng, 1 agree with the Witness man that we are far removed from the "dregs of depression" --despite the existence of a, Liberal government of recent years. Now for the evidences. Let a start be made with a few samples by way of appetizers, leav- ing their amplification for later record and treatment. They are pick- ed at random from an overflowing pigeon -hole of Copy and clippings. That Canada has stepped ahen.d of the United States in flour exporta- tion; that the gross agricultural Wealth of the Country 3nereased by over $300,000,000 in 1925 over 1924; that the export value of wheat during the ten months ending May, 1926, showed an increase Of 9143,609,548 over the same period in 1925; that the yield of Canada's farm produce in 192e was equal in value to the yield of all the coal mines in Great Britain; that the western farmer is the richest per capita in all Canada, or in factin any other country; that the average in- come of the Canadian farmer of 91,- 500 (according to the federal deputy minister of agriculture) represents a distribution of 1,500 million dollars of valuation among the million farm- ers of the country; that the Canad- ian auto industry is forging steadily ahead, despite some recent prophecies of calamity when a beneficial tariff adjustment was made; that Canada's chartered banks are handling more checks than at any time since 1920; that the scale of living in 1926 is far in advance of that which people found more or less satisfactory in 1901; that the dairy industry now exceeds mineral production, with a value of $300,000,000 in 1925; that canal traffic is steadily increasing -1,979,623 tons more in 1925 than in 1924; that Can- ada stands high g is per exports;ca ita P and that the revenue of ther p airie provinces 'in 1925—estimated by the Financial Post—of 91,050,000,000, show- ed an increase of !nearly 200 millions over the previous year. More Evidences of Prosperity That the last dominion fiscal year showed a surplus of nearly 934,000,000, a 922,390,000 reduction in the net public debt and marked increases of revenue and production in many lines; that Canada's gold production rose from $21,500,000 in 1924 to 935,800,- 090 in 1925; that the Canadian west had, in 1925, from the point of view of income the most successful finan- cial year In its history—per the es- timate of Hon. T. A. Crerar, who ought to know; that our trade with the Orient is steadily increasing; that our total trade has jumped from 61,501,731,341 in 1921-2 to $2,255,860 in 1925-26, Q, . The Testimony of the Oustosas Stili more evidences Of "the stag- gering load of depression"; The dom. inion customs report for .Tune, 1926, stated that Canada's trade continues to increase and the balance of exports over imports is favorable, That the number of Canadian cars moved by Canadian railways has been increasing since the end of November, 1025; that the operating profits of the Canadian National Railways show a marked increase, with an operating de- ficit of 911,500,000 converted into an operating surplus of $34,000,000; that both railways are spending millions on equipment, extensions, etc., that British Columbia's industrial payroll increased from 9130,000,000 in 1922 to $100,000,000 1n 1025; that a successful year, in 1926, is anticipated for the Canadian steel industry; That newsprint exports continuue to increase, totaling 9102,000,000 in 1025- 26, along with nearly $50,000,000 worth of wood pulp and $13,056,000 of pulp- wood; That Canada's investment in forest industries has reached 9650,000,000; that there are steady increases in scores of other directions, such as ship- ments of grain from Canadian ports; that the unemployment situation in. June last was better than' in any month since 1920; That a lava stock values are Climbing, from 9611,144,000 in 1924 to 9704,287,000 in 1925, together with corresponding Increases of cattle exports to Great Erltain, So much for a few samples of for. ward marehing, with more to follow mud with fuller details in later Instal- ments, The Royal Baric of Canada says "there is a more encouraging outlook for Canadian business In 1920 than at. any time within the lest fivo years," And these are "dregs of depression," Then .give tis more of thCrtl1 watkii for article No, 2, rHE BRUSSELS POST he appointed 'forthwith. That such tariff advk,ory board '51(10 accordingly appoint. ed. And this Roust. regrets that in the. case of drast t. ehnngc, nnitounfed in the budget such as,Urances have not been fulfill. e d." 1 quote rids amendment in full eause I want you to became fend with it; I want you to catch talo- t that it is supposod to ropronent C sewative poi 10y, but more part' arly the word.; in the second p: graph "that before further than were made an opportunity ,llnuld given industries affected thereby, he heard before an advisory hoar The amendment means precisely what it says, industries are to be consulted, but ,in far as the. Conservative party is concerned a tariff -board operated undo' Tory auspices, will pay more attention to the tides and the man' in the 1100(1 than it will pay to the consumer. This is no hasty statement, .t is a• matter of recorded fact. This re- solution expresses regret that the tar- iff advi,•o'y hoard was 1101 consulted but throughout his entire Eastern campaign and, 1 understand he is still continuing in the West, Mr. M'i- glten tells the people that his first duty- if elected, will be to raise the tariff upon agricultural products to the American level. Does he men- tion the tariff board in the dl cssion? It is to 11. done as soon as he is elec- ted. He, is arparently not going to wait for a tariff board. IIe is to trample under foot on the first day of his existence 05 a real premia', the resolution proposed by his lift bower, Dr. Manion, at the last aen.91on of the House. Why is this to be done? On the horizon of the Meig- hen tariff poJbcy to consumer does not exist. The resolution moved by Dr. Manion apparently had nn rela- tion whatever to the contemplated Conservative policy should that par- ty ever occupy the treasury bench- es. It was nothing else but 011 am- endillt;nt made to avoid saying 00111e - thing. It was as far from the truth as ectoplasm from reality. - Note further the words of this re- solution. "That representations re- questing increase or decrease should be made the subject of most cordial investigation anti report 5•y a body possessing the necessary qualifica- tions to advise the minister with re- spect thereto," In his' statement on the public platform in regard to rais- ing the duties on agricultural pro- ducts, Mr, 1Meighen has at once ar- rogated to himself the right powers, qualifications s and intelligences 1(e „ ]1C0S 71eC'- cssai;y not only to advise, but to put into effect without investigation, the suggestions which he makes. 6' - 111(1' (lea on- rtil- 11'll- gt's bn to d." Surely the assertion of such inten- tion demands a careful examination into the qualifications of the Conser- vative leader, ,for the task which he assigns to himself. The assumptions of Mr. Meighen in regard to this are wholly outside the facts. He is im- lined with the idea that the Amheri- can tariff has been built up with an.. tagonism in Canada in mind, Noth- ing could be further from the facts.* I repeat: 1. That reciprocity when offered to Canada by the United States in 19.11, was accepted by the United States and rejected by Canada. We refused to do business on equal terms 10411 the United States; (2) That 31. re- mained on the statute books of the United States for years afterwards• as a standing offer of the people of Canada to do business on topline of generous equality with the American nation. The Tories were in power and therefore the offer could never be. accepted. (3) That the American tariff was afterwards lowered during the time the Conservatives wore 111 power after the war, and that goner. nus anti fair treatment and the dis- play of a willingness to accord to the United States the treatment that it Was then according to us, would have attained for this country an ac• cess to that market on terms excel), Iionnlly profitable to the Do:irtinrt of Colada. These are recognized facts of Canadian economic history. For or stupidities mat that time we have paid a tremendous price., and Mr.I Melghen now asks• us tOac011t111:e• the placid stpi.clity which has cost us al. most as much economic loss as est, eying on the great war. I return to the qualification:; of the reseed Pin For reale Y. 2 Registered Holstein Cows Rising 4 years old, quiet and right in every luny. Also 150 B. -Rock Yearling Hens Phone 2113 Chas. A. Lamont Hon, Gentleman to tender the poop of this country advice on this matt He is specific i41 his promises; he a pears to believe that raising the to i1f of Canada on agricultural p duets, to the. American level, w benefit the people of Canada. Ile apparently not aware of the fact th taken i41 its incident' and it its r ration to the importance of comma (ties affected, the American tariff t day is not higher, but actually low than the Canadian tariff. There not a single man, even in the Col seewative party, obsessed as that pa ty is, with the power of p otect.io to work miracle, who will claim aha a h h,•r deity upon wheat, oats, bat ley or flour, would improv,: by e much as the value of one of the late defunct Russian ('0ufles, the market. value of the wheat, oats, barley and flora' produced in the Do111i11i0IL To suggest such a thing' is an insult to the intelligence, On hay the Airier lean tariff is higher than the Canad- ian; it is double as high, but- as we import only 5,000 tons from the lTni- teed States, and export 314,000 tons, anyone with ordinary vision can see how perfectly 'stupid, ]tow abjectly hopeless, so far as benefitting the Canadian farmer is concerned would be any proposal to increase the duty on hay. Our imports of butter from the -United States last year were less than 74,000 pounds. Our imports of cheese, 8,770 cwt. Our total export of these commodities were: butter, 23,303,805 pounds; cheese, 1,4S3,- 335 cwt. I challenge Mr. Meighen, Mr. Bennett or anyone of the other related defenders of this absurd poli- cy of electric belts and discredited quack serums and medications to tell the Canadian people what value add- ed tariffs would be in this connection. The astounding thing is that on many other items the American tar. if1 is actually much lower than ours. Illustrations of this are: apples, strawberries, es beef, mutton, pork, and lard. In fact, if, we take the whole tariff as it stands on agricultural pro- ducts, it is safe to say that if we consider the nature of the products imported and exported by the two countries, that the American tariff, even to -day, is lower than the Can- adian tariff. Summed up, therefore, we have this extraordinary situation: (1) that the Conserfative party has turned its bark on its own amendmeei to the Robb budget, and now proposes to fix the tariff without reference to a tariff board, (2) that its policy is to "raise" the tariff on agricultural products to the American level, whereas the American level is even lower than ours, (3) it is to ,:do this o1 the advice of its own leader' who, in making a statement of 1113. kind, reveals the fact that he is entirelywanting, in knowledge of the subjects )1e discusses, and therefore wholly unqualified to make any rermnnlen- dation; in regard to tariff pcliey, 1: t alone put into cffedt sug;g•eoaion,s 1' - markable for little, save their inanestupidity, In Or, p• 1'- '0- ill is at 0- er yl r - r1, 11, 0 Wily Whales. Sir John Bland -Sutton, the famous surgeon, tells a striking story to de- monstrate the cunning with which the "killer" 1061110 chases its prey, It feeds on seals, which it cannot easily drag off the tee, but it swims under the ice on which the seal ices, and using 11:s powerful dorsal On, suddenly rises, and breaks off a Mere Of the los with it. If the seal tri, s to escape by sliding over the ice, the whale follows it, and e-nlin•nea Its breaking tlsciics until the seal is oaptu 1'04, The teeth of killer whales make those of the crocodile seem puny, hut, curiously enough, these terrors of 1.1)e seas, who even prey on tlteit' harm- less relatives, hunt in peeks, lilts wolves, Puzzled the Burglar. Magistrate (to convicted 1au'gler); ' "Have you anything to say before sentence Is passed?" Quantity of Square and V.1 Matched Pine which we are of- fering at Rawest current prices. , Thirty Dollar Hemlock.. - 'We still have a quantity of this to offer., Se- cure it while it lasts, 1 She: "Tint think low amused nth - ors al's would be if they could see u8 As 5111 se0 ourselves,” Burglar The only thing I'm kitdc- iu k •• about is being identified by a man that kept his bead undo the bed- 510thes the whole tine," • Makings of a Cool Soldier, Client— Didn'1: you makee a mistake In going into law instead of the arm, ? Lawyer—Why? • Clielit—Ily the wily you. Charge:, there would he little left Of the enemy. As We See Ourselves, 3•fe: T expect we should be atlltta- ed 1f wt, could sae ourselves as others See 1s:" Ament 11.1.1.11.0611.101sILIMINGICTAYI 1[11.126M191.131101..111043.104.1160/10//11/0.1 No Reserve t i, 11 { xr•r a I Ooinniiencirl, Th.ursd ,..,!y, ug.. 1 At the ® �mhamg s'Store ENTIRE STOCK. of Dry Goods, Clothing,Gents' Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, Household Goods and Furniture, also Ford Truck suitable for Baker or Grocer. SALE Thursday Friday Saturday Aug. 19 Aug. 20 Aug. 21 Commencing Each Day at 2.30 p. m. i 613 tarc,• thtrd!w a ingha JAMES TAYLOR, Belgrave, AUCTIONEER 11 Loor Eley Imre.. Most of us, when we 11110 a latchkey in entering a house, have no thought of the historical significance of the action. Yet the latchkey has a sym- bolism entirely its own. Examine the images of the Egyptian deities in the British Museum and you will notice in the hands of some of them a cross With a circular handle. It represents the Ankh, or key of life, one of the oldest of all religious symbols, de- noting the power to open and close the doors to heaven. The key had a magical meaning for the Greeks and Romans. Their gods were often giv- en the title of KeyUearer, as, for example, le Janus, P nusthe god o fg ares 'who was supposed to unlock the doors of war and peace. In early Christian history the symbol of the key ,was associated with St. Peter, with his two keys of gold and iron, A Left -Legged People. A writer of a letter to the London Spectator says: "We are right- handed but we a','e left -legged. This is the reason why soldiers begin their marches with the left foot, why the left foot is placed in the stirrup when mounting a horse, and why the step of a bicycle is on the left side. Our left-leggedness is the origin of the almost universal custom of keeping to the right in walking; the left leg being etronger than the right, the tendency to go to the right la the natural result." 1111. NOTICE TO CREDITORS.—In the matter of *he estate of Mary Jane Keys, 4ato of the Village of Bros. sols, in,the County of Huron, widow deceased. Notice is hereby given 000850nt to "The Re. vised Statutes or Ontario,' Chapter 129, that all Creditors and others heving claims against the estate of the said Mary Jane Keya, who died on or about the Sixth day of 31117.1 A. D.1028, are required on or before the Eleventh day of September, A, 0. 1028, to send by post prepaid or deliver to Henry A. Keys, Brussels P 0., the Executor of the lost will and Testament of deceoaed, their Olule. tlan and Surnames, addresses and descriptions, the felt particulars of their chains, the otnte- ment of their accounts and the nature of their securities Of nay) held by them, duly verlaed by a Statutory Deolarntion. And further take notice that after mull last mentioned date thea a td Executor will teed to distribute the assert of pro - the 1 80 ed 02 armong the parties claims thereto, lol,'having 1110, noulp tc the claims 1(f said Ex shall nor then have liable end he .the said Executor any n y pert there Baba for the aped persons or any part thereof to person or een received of whose clah(11,,, the time not have been 000eived by Trim et the time of such distribution. Dated at Brussels, Ontario, this 11th day of August, A.D. 1828, ., W. 51 SINCLAIR, Solicitor for the Executor. Tenders Wanted The Council of the Township of Grey is asking for tenders for the construction of the Rowland Drain, Plans nu4 specifications may be seen at the Clerk's office. Tenders will be opened Sept. 9th. No tender neceesnr• Sly eooepted. J, H. FEAR, Township Clerk, NOTICE ! ICOAT DRESSES TOWNSHIP OF SISSY Coat dresses of twill are scheduled The Treasurer oe the Township of Grey or fall, These are slightly bloused wnlreoeive ndvnnaopnyment of maxea on the 14th day of each month, whop 5 par cent in the back, but have a straight front per annum wi716en11oweh line, broken only by a belt ole girdle. - Treasuer of Grey Twp, The facings are of soft -colored 01111. House and Lot for Sale fops and crepe de chines. House and lot for Sale The undersigned oferafor sale his comfort• • able brio), oottege on Princess street, Bras• eels, Half•ncre of land, Well and olatern. Imme d latetalon r�oTho 8 e s p trr O further epp o eligible house and lob 011 11reys;tPrs, apply e2yEo wM. WVRI, Brussels BOBreseels,theproperty of the (atteMe, K1 is offo'ed for sale ttrrtnfortable house with 101013 garden. For Pe Mier pnrtioulnrs apply to HARRY REYs, 8.11 R. It, 8 Brussels Voters' Lasts - 1926 Municipality of tho Township of Morris County of Huron, Notinn 1s hereby given that I have transmit- ted or delivered to the persona mentioned in Sections 8 ands of the Ontario voters' Lista Act the copies required by seid Sections to be so trnnsm100ed or delivered of the 11st mode, ptreonnt to snid Ant of 011 persons appearing Mt the Iwo Revised Assessment Roll of the Muoioipolity,. to be entitled to vote -at eleo- tions for members of the Legislative Aoeen,• 1r1y and at Municipal Elections ; and that rho enol list was first nested up in any office In Morris, on the 1701i day of Acgnst, 1050, and remains there for inspection, M0001'0 111'0 called upon to examine the said lint, aid if any nmisei0ne or any other errors are found therein to taste immediate proceed- ings to have the said errors oorrosted eeoord- leg to law, Detect this 18th day of August, 1020. 510 A. 14201515151, Clerk oforifi M a, John D. For the season of 1926 will stand as follows: --- From Monday morning till Tues- day noon he will stand at his own stable, Lot 15, Con, 16, Grey; then 11ewill go South to W. J. Manley's, Lot 4, Con. 10, McKillop, where he will remain till. Thursday newt; then i home to his own stable where he will I remain till the following Tuesday 1 noon. 'forma.—To insure a foal. $10,05 1 1 at his own ,stable; reductions for ex - tea mares, L, TAYLOR ' t ('hone 2810 Farms 'for Sale 1.41.01.4 farmbeing 13314, Lot 25,, OpnA7, Morris 0 Also 155 sores being 4, g North int 211, and 'ne to Con. 7, aMorris. di Good hottaes andsbarns in liret•o)nsa 1 salt lot), aleo all good out -Real. Inge. will sell with or without crop. Rees - on for selling, poor health. For further pert- foulars apply to W. .i1, McCUTCHEON, Proprietor, R. 12.4, Brussels Farm for Sale 100 pore Farm for sale, being south }calf lot E7, Omr.B, Township of Morrie. On premises are n good bar •k barn, 78540 with good Dement stabling ; driving shed 40x24 ; au.,.turtable, good, frame house with good stone cellar two good wells never•fallh,g ; about 5 aoree good maple bush.. This farm 111 well teneed end drained and in good smite or cultivation and is situated 1 mile from Village of Walton, also 1 mile from school and church. Mor tar. the) partionlars apply on the premisee or to. 11.16 J. A. MARBEAL6 R. R.4, Walton,: Farm 'f Or Sale (The old Hamilton Place) 100 Bores, 'being .217;44 Lots 7 8, 0 and North 40*toren of 10, Coca A, 7,uralrerry township, Lenge flrafolsos barn, splendid. atone stabling underneath' windmill, lsrge driving abed, good frame house and atone kitehou, large Prof eWhoxoie3r v1(logeandi11 ill ±00,) 00210,1, Thin farm has been In pasture for 011)011 roars and will give itlabost returns. Farm land videos will rise, For particulars apply to 11308, (0713s0211 Adminletrator J03111 It, Gipson estate P. 0. box 77 Wroxeter Phone 50 Farms for aNe rmor/me 100 nomas of 1nndi , being with 14 otLot 5, 5, and (110110n% onat 1103101 Oon. 7 in the Township of Morris. These farina tiro offered for sale to dloea up the ehtnte of 111 lata Jambi Smith. If not held they will bo ranted for pee eta, ler porliea)nr5ln� I to the ott000t0rs, i1ENRY 08101x130033 q