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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1926-9-8, Page 3Builders' Supplies W E•HANDLE All Kinds of Lumber, Interior Finish, Doors, Sash Gyproc Fireproof Wallboard. Lline, Hardwall Plaster 8. C. and Quebec Shingles Brant -Ford Asphalt Roofing , All goods delivered on short notice •- Phone at our expense for prices Gorrie 5 r 3 ; Wroxeter 626 r 9 R. J. Hueston & Son GCRRIE - ONTARIO , THE BRUSSELS POST A WWI) RsDAY, SI.PT, 8, 1926, winter have very deep armholes, out WAIT UNTIL LATER TAILORED FURS n ��„n4r �n P.,"s• 9,. " N: ur 0'',•1 salt to uncuolcecl meat, The advane-i fur coats show many ?i t as this tou�•l1s 1+„ ; tailored models with lapels and leuth- d, M LADY'S ,7�, T+Y �..-...-...., t cr belw. + COLUMN. i DELICIOUS OMELET 41ver or ;:old cloth, + > i When you have left over liver, SANDWICH HINTS +++++++i-++ ++* rut it in very ,mall pieces and molt Spread etch slice bcfrne cutting asp+ cially foodi„h when human it in the ontel,t -this I, delicious. it from tip, larr, llut a.1, 1 ft. oil' th,- heFISH show their dissatisfaction will, Tho train and the motor car ,have ive for an hour will be easi-er to FISHAND VEGETABLES STUNNING GOWN spread. With fish servo vegAublos thatI A stunning. i.vening gown has an It's the principal of the thing.-- have a distinct flavor, such :ls rc ,^ a of black Chantilly lace ov- THEY'RE GOOD, TOO pars, cucumber., cabbag-, beets, orIoverdrosi or a silver lame slip, w;th brilliant Whc•n frying; in d ,y, fat., if the onions, red roses outlining the hent. fat gets too hot befor,• you arc: ready to use it, cool by throwinr• in a few IMPROVEw MEAT I FEATHER FLOWERS slices of raw potatoes, To make meat savory let it lie, Conventioual flowers, mac,: entire- ----• over night in a dressing of oil, vine" ly of feathers in many colors, aru NEW SLEEVES gar and paprika. used to trim the winter hats. Some of the new Parka coats for winter have very deep armholes, out THE DIFFERFNCIu BETWEEN almost to the waistline, and wide, AFTERTHOUGHT AND FORE - embroidered or trimmed clecves. THOUGHT VELVETS USED 1 "Safety Find" i, it slogan whims Very gorgeous velvets and bro- ,for several years has stured the pab- eacled materials for wlntw+ an, used Ix- in the face everywhere. Persort- for skirts and jolned to blouses of al safety in th,- multi is just the dif- �frrence 41ver or ;:old cloth, between afterthought and Colborne .......... forethought. The phrases 1 -Take u °rhe rrench have be -it hold- Clrtnc,-" and "Try Anythrag Once" Zurich ................. asp+ cially foodi„h when human ing street d,!nwnstruti+mr to lib, and limb ar„ the ;ssu,.., at stake. show their dissatisfaction will, Tho train and the motor car ,have the turaw of th(: Ami rtean debt { rut too often at crossings. Thu. in- tact. It sc•cros, how:,vcr, that I experienced boatman has taund the it isn't the terms they object to, t •d `r too deep and th,. chanec-tak. It's the principal of the thing.-- in„ industrial worker has found out Belgrave .............. nnney times thatserious injury is th,, .Judge. � penalty for plating false value at'. Clinton ............. Oct. l"30611 lvruics or grandstand plays. The known accident reword of the Province of Ontario is that one out of every ten industrial workers re- port injury once during each year i to the Workmen's C rmponsation Board, with every reason to believe M at least seventy-five per C(tnr. Of thesf ?F"• A!' so-called accidents are avoidable when care is exercised. The mutil- ated hands of machine operators, sprains, bruises and eontdsions of t t. other industrial workers, the blind and partially blind workers, sound ample warning to the careless and i,.bh thoughtless. Quite true chance ta- , lo f r ' err may enjoy immunity for over an extended time, but th . law of ay. erago holds true and no regret or ° afterthought can restore life or limb, nor atone for suffering and sorrow. That self-inflicted injury does not enter into the situation is m , e e ° m P t��, !.'d obvious, but there is no good reason il•"� in, •'�. v^o o �; "cr a", ,,;,• e+. 1 " °'".� N ti° Y �," , '>•!t �,"'a +x Wirt.."., r> 1he er,180toms ✓<�.c L a r ► s�,HI f y M f�.� 1 -� 5 A , '4 �5 �. a, � _ I for so many accidents occurring ° ° ° through failure to exercas, common r4 ` _„ , � � , a . 6' E S�k l s �' — ', », ':'S " sense. When warned of danger b al�'fs �.'�ly sis�.�.` cis, cr-,n1V"cte 01, h.v�,- r �� � with t �� ; a I �� " k1, ,, 4:3? 9 g y others it is well to remember th.- good intention and appreciate the ..:r great possibility of some better les- @gf� Q s t�ap , �n� . s o , 11«r. >.F r o I' c 1. y , 'a � son learned at great cost. Safety is ��i5r. i o,ini�al.li ,5� �nF'r'v.�;.�!.os�+,1.rv, e"'s'�ll�a yam` c6finc; legitimate uslines49y k���'a W�3rk.•S�i(t"� j c. 'X s ".+.,., r.-iii.;.:t, 1j.h;f.;..ii� of general interest, but onyl when ° g , r a we appreciate the vital individual in- ,,,,� roil 2k,, d" c•f ® m , @ ��, ° ° v a a1 T;"' • S {{ and �t»om. (y t1h �;�b a "in dhe Fa iill��nist.a talion o 'asst ice, �d,i�• L�r�E.�r:n}SFl fa ii r �+aiwFr s� . c texest to each cops young or old, and ti exercise individual care, can we ex - F' c CUC but t sew inst nces,ameat`fre tfty roven— Stoler, automobi?^s, smuggled into Canada with the connivance of Customs officials, were sold fora pittance to friends of the King Government, and those found guilty were allowed not only to go unpunished but to continue their nefarious trade. to 2 Smuggled liquor selling vias engaged in on a large scale by Cust(,,ms officials whose duty it was to protect the Treasury. 3 Corrupt officials were unpunished and promoted; honest officials were punished and demoted. 7 A total revenue loss estimated at x+35,000,000 mr. c+r^r %w4s'tl.e result of the smuggling thus condoned by the Xing Govern- ment. 8 A $54,800 loss was sustained in one case alone when Mr. Cardin, Acting Minister of Customs and Excise. setEled for `µt3,200 with a dishonest importer, who, according to Mr. r. own officials, had cheated the Traasurn; nut of duties amounting to $58,000. This deal was coneumra ted just previous to the last election. Prison -made goods are on the prohibited list, yet tons and tons of such goods, produced in prisons where contagious Free liquor, from Government warehouses in Montreal, was diseases were prevalent among the inmates, were smuggled ' supplied in generous ;i antities to members of th-,- IM'g Gov - into Canada for sale to innocent Canadian consumers, with ernment and to Government officials in Ottawa, in contra - the direct knowledge and co-operation of Government officials. vention both of the Federal Law and the Prohibition Law of Ontario. a. Police officers—members of the incorruptible Royal Canadian Mounted—were withdrawn from the Quebec boundary line at The habit-forming drug traffic is one of the worst curses in the request of the smuggling ring. Honest traders had asked 10 the world today. tinder the protection of the King Govern - for increased police protection, but the King Government ment, Montreal became one of the great do -pe- distributing I preferred to grant the request of those who were defrauding” centres of Forth America. the public revenue. i I Guilt}r knowledge even in 1923 of the frauds that were being The peak of this corruption, and of this interference with the practised has been proven against the King Government Customs collection and the administration of justice, is proven I. beyond the shadow of a doubt. 'Time and again, in 1924 and by the evidence to have been reached just prio to the general 1925, the Commercial Protective Association—an organization election of October, 1925, when, at the writ`i.e=:i rd off t e of business men—placed before Mr: Kin; irrefutable evidences Liberal candidates, Ministers of the Crown call, :4 off the of it, that they had succeeded in tracing down at their own Royal Canadian Mounted Police because they were enforcing exoense,* With his Government hopelessly entangled with the law, kept convicted crooks out of jail, and sanctioned Canada's criminal. element, Mr. King did not—dared not— Treasury frauds as a means of securing the return of the King take any action t0 remedy the appalling conditions. Government to power. Despite the fact that with Mr. Kennedy supporting them, the Liberals had a majority on the Investigation Committee, that the Chairman Mr. Mercier was a Liberal, and that the Prosecuting Counsel Mr. Calder was a Liberal candidate in the last election, and despite the further foot that the committee tee sat almost daily fior fire months, thaws affording Liberal members ample opportunity to uncover malfeasance on the part of previous ministries, not one word of proof, not one breath of suspicion, was brought against the administration of the Customs Departm,6nt Bander the Laurier, Borden and Meighen Govern- ments, but only against its administration under lir. William Lynn MacKenzie King! Has anything more disgraceful ever besmirched the pages sof Canadian hey; history ? Can a proud and honourable nation, whose -people fear Gard and eschew evil, afford to condone such dishonesty, such corruption, on the part Of its leaders and public servants' V4,t,,,T,E or � ® . c en in. Huron. North s For Andrew Hicks in Huron South And car. liElect" Liberal-ConsrrvatWe Victory Cb,mnittte. 36 Bing 9trcet $apt, Tbrbnto I e pect to enjoy reasonable immunity I from accidents. SCHOOL FAIR DATES, 1326. Grand Bend............ Sept. 7 Dashwood .............. Sept. 8 Crediton ............... Sept. 9 Winchelsea ............. Sept. 10 Wroxeter , ... -_. ...... Sept. 13 Bluevale ................Sept 15 Ashfield ............... • Sept. 16 St. Helens .............. Sept. 1; Colborne .......... Sept: 18 Hensall ................ Sept. 20 Zurich ................. Sept. 21 Varna ................. Sept. 22 Blyth ................. Sept. 23 Ethel .................. Sept. 24 Gorrie .................. Sept. 25 Walton ............... Sept. 2T Goderich Twp. ...... .. Sept. 28 Belgrave .............. Sept. 29 Dublin ....... K,.,,....... Sept. 36 Clinton ............. Oct. 4 and 5 FALL FAIR DATES Brussels .......... Sept. 30, Oct 1 Atwood ..............Sept. 21-22 Bayfield ..... • .... . Sept. 28••29 Blyth ............... Sept. 22-23 Dungannon ............. Oct. 7-8 Exeter .............. Sept. 21-22 Fordwich ................. Oct. Goderich ............. Sept. 8-10 Listowel ............. Sept. 27-2k London .............. Sept. I1-18 Lucknow ............ Sept. 23-24 1litchell ............. Sept. 28--29 Milverton .......... , . Sept. 23-2.1 Ripley ............... Sept. 28.21,1 St. Marys ............ Seat. 23-24 Seaforth ............. Sepf. 23-24 Teeswater .............. Oct. 5-6 Toronto ......... Aug. 28 -Sept. 11 Wingham .............. Oct. 7-8 Zurich ............ Sept. 80 -get. 1 "Oh, Mother, guess whatl I just saw a lady with -,'reat long hair gathered up in a bump on the top of her head and held there with pieces of bent wire." V. "We saw the advertisement about this house being for sale, and we've come to see it." "Yes, madam, but after read- ing the ad writer"s description of it we have decided not to sell."—Wall Street Journal. a•F®•�•�a�•wA•d•at�•m•1•as•r�"[ a•ra"eoa•a•r a H E N S 4 + WANTED + Highest market prices H. T' paid.: see me or Mone Nn. 2x, Brns- itnd i ; eels, will,call mad get our Heng. .. vollick _-,...,r.wm, °e tvt,,it �titkc' X64Ae, i<'�tatit,a A 1 ■