HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1926-11-24, Page 6vymNEsDA,y, NOV. 24, 1920.
6.1,,Tertethe
THE BRUSSELS POST
Wanted
We pay Highest Cash Price for
Cream. 1 cent per lb. Butter Fat
extra paid for all Cream delivered
.at our Creamery.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
russels Creamery Co.
Phone 22 Limited
•••••moss,TIMMeie,
Buffalo Given New Lease
of Life in Canada
Success of Experiment at Wain-
wright—Rapid Increase of Herd
Necessitates Finding of New Out-
lets for Surplus
Canadians in every peovince can-
not help but feel a thrill of peak
when they learn that the grew: herd
of buffalo, at Buffalo National park,
has been increasing so rapidly that
although four- thousand head have in
the past two years been ehipped to
augment the wild herd in the North-
west Territories there is till such a
surplus over the the capacity of Buf-
falo park that arrangements are be-
dispese of two
1926 to the big Wood Buffalo park
near Fort Smith, Northwest Terri-
tories, and now, at the proper. sea-
son, two thousand more are to be
slaughtered under the most modern
and humane conditions, -and buffalo
meat, heads, and robes will, to a lim-
ited extent, be again available.
The problems are many and var-
ied. There are experiments in -dom-
estication, in cross -breeding with
domestic cattle and yak, and in
dressing the hides. Progress is be-
ing made in all these and very de-
finite success has attended the last -
in zi
et oned investigation. The oil
ing made to thaueend
methods of tanning turned out
more. This simple statement means goes robs, lett one a little too heavy
that the great experiment undertake are- . el! en. making up into over -
en by Canada in 1907 has proved a co.- .. eee , for driving. The nee: -
success beyond the higheet expecte- er • eeeesete produce a pelt soft and
tion of its advocates; it means that pl' -he and so much lighter than the
the niche prepared by histoeians far loh! hat inen's overcoats now weigh
the buffalo aloneside the dedo and ( fie ' eight pounds up, according to
other extinct species will not be re- the -.: fleming. Buffalo robes have al-
quired; it means that one of the lar- heen noted for their wearing
gest and most magnificient mammals ) qualitiee but these -frOm Wainwright
on the earth has been -Oven a new 1 are superior to those of oil times,
lease of life; and, en the at -talked because the animals am not killed
side, et means that this animal, -which in summer hut in early autumn,
played such a large part in the day's when the hide is in the best possible
of the opening up of nur middlerendition and the new hair is dark
wea
wet, has been brought bank to nest and glossy and firmlY anchored. In
eautumn also the animal ie 'el prime
problem: Cern
PROHIBITION DECREASF.S JUV-
ENILE DELINQUENCY AND
DRUNKENNESS IN THE
UNITED STATES
Irving Fisher Cites Finger Print Bur -
ea to Show Decline of First Of.
fenders—Defends Flaming Youth
Toronto, November 1.1.—In an ad-
dress delivered here this afternoon
at Massey Hall, -under the auspieee
of the Canadian Prohibition Bureau,
Irving Fidler, Prole:ogee of E.-enem-
iesU
of Yale niversity, asserted that
a study of conditions and authentle
(late has lett to the coneluetons that
the total consumption of alcoholic
beverage in the United States is lees
than 16% of pre -prohibition con-
sumption and probably less then 10
Quoting from a careful cumpila-
tion of statistics gathered into the
form of charts and graphs, which ap-
pear in his book, "Prohibiteon At Its
Worst," which has recently created a
sensation in the United States, Pro-
fessor Fisher announced that, in
spite of newspaper stories of spec-
tacular "Crime Waves" juvenile de-
linquency has decreased enormously.
He made the statement that ac-
cording to figures prepared by the
Gerry Society (Tht Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to Children in
New York City) the number of cases
of juvenile criminality fell eharply to
less than 50% of that in pre -prohibi-
tion years. The figures covering the
years 1920, 1921, 1922 :and 1923,
during which national prohibition
was en effect, and 1914, 1915, 1916,
1917, ,1918 and 1919- pre -prohibition
years.
No safeguard" he said, "against
the so-called crime wave in the rising
generation has yet been found which
seems more effective than prohibition
For the sake of the city children
Canadians in solving
nected with the development of the ' "nditi"T-as regards meat. Th''di--
far North. posal of a portion of the herd :n
The "return" of the bufalo moues 1924 gave Canadians a new idea of
very .much to citizens in all parts of buffalo meat, which they had euppos-
Canada, as thoee whoeo recollection; r'd was used chiefly for making pem-
or readeng goes hack to the eighties mime, and when citizens dintovered
of laet century will at once mallet-. that it was as nutritious and well --
Forty years ago the family buffalo flavored as the best beef, and had.
robes were ae much an inetitution in moreover, an &luring wild 'tang the-
well-reeenated Canadian noueeholes tat • for it rapidly developed.
as the heating stoves. Thee,' robes Of the heads only a proportion are
were in conetant use. One constitut- fine enough for mounting hu e teeth-
ed a thick, warm rug for the email are selected and carefully handled
children to play On befOr•:: the fire, so as eo giv'e the best result. It is,
another was always uede as a Inc. perhaps, worthy of note thee of the
robe when the family went driving heads and robes that the previous
in winter, while the best on" made dieposal made possible is large pro -
a fine splash of dark •and regal ceder portion were picked up by residents
when displayed he a. :leap- over the of other countries. The teritieb Isles
buck • of the sleigh. And, thee, &epee i awe well represeeted, so was every
in the coldset weather and moet die- . part of the -United States and France
tart spare bedroom, no ea: :needed and ..von Argentina secured seine et
guest could be cold if a role. were the trophies.
used as ti coverlet. For thee, Min It is as yet impossible to proheey
had to do much driving a "buffalo" the full development of the buitale
overcoat was a neceesity. under modern conditinne ler, enough
This wae the normal moose of ate has beeu ;tccomplish...I tt, ;how thee
rules: until the middle ehrhties when the one time -"lord of the plaine" hoe
the Canadian house:held:or awoke to returned to become once more an
the fact that there were ne more important factor in Canadhan life,
buffalo robes, They did not grow --"---------
dearer by slow degrees. They sine- BACK TO NORMAL -
-ply disap•peared from the Market an:I t By Ark, the (-lever editorial writer
could not be had at any mine, leaf- oil the StratfMal- Beacon -Herald)
falo robes remained out of Canadien
life until two -years ago when a com- Don't forget the rhicken suppee on
paratively few specimens were avail- Thursday evening, Good program
able, because of the killing of the aft'l.' Admission, 25 cents.—From
:menus animate in the Baffalo park a w'''-'klY newsPaPar.
in the autumn of 1924. I mad ehe thing through twice 01'
9lleeeSt4 ha, of couree, brought re- mere, and wondered if the news was
eponsibilities. If the last buirale true that they could entertain a chap
were now dead and its Ain mounted and feed hien for a quarter,too.
and neatly labelled in the Victoria In daye when chicken feed is high,
Memorial Museum in Ottawa, cee- when tntertainees draw stele fees,
Min :Government officials would have how can they feed a man om that and
been spared many of their anxious stuff him from the neck to knees.
, hours of the past ten yeas. For Hie ,, It is a .goodly thing, it is, to See
Canadian buffalo did not etemain an t"c''''' uhkk" suPPer8 raras' it 3*itrlds
Anaemic, spiritless "representative of me of the far-off days when things
a .vanished race." H„ „ama bath like this wee often done.
with a bang A fent-, that would
bold the most husky preirie eteer was
naehing to a gay young butfelo; tied
the herd grew so feet that the gen-
erous "park" of nearly 200,000 :ac-
res (roughly abOut 18 miles square)
became some years ago too small,
Sipes that time the selection of the
'1:,ast methods of disposing of the an-
neal surplus of about two theusand
animals has been one of the immed-
iate problems of the. Department tef
the Interior. Two thousand buffalo
. *era slaughtered in 1024, neeely
font thousand Mae, at already Ante
• edi We tent teeth in 1985: and
When I lived on coneestlion ten wo
used to reckon we lived high, when
we invaded church bazaars and feast.
ed on the chicken pte. It Was real
chicken he them days, easel ehicken
with two legs, by heck, and never
askin' anyone to pick the mueeles off
the neck.
And after all the folks was fed,
they used to have a concert than, and
on the platfotm there wae set a
dozen of the leadini men, and &I of
them would make a speech, or crack
a joke he thought wag new, it would
be nigh to 12 o'clock Wore theft
nottetin' get glean theetagli,
bitten the number of eases Of juvet
nile delinquency has fatlen eharply to
lees than 50% of the number in pro -
prohibition years. The report of the
Children's Court of New York City
also shows a rapid decline 10 1.19'
cure:: of juvenile offenders and re,
ports the delinquency of boye and
eirle 'was cut in half.
"The ease of Cleveland, Ohio,
analogous to that of New York. Ae
a member of the City Council of
Cleveland, Mrs. Helton If, Green
quoted stetistics of the Cleveeind
Juvenile Court from 1915 to 1921.
In that in Cleveland lute he
creased by 300,000 population -while
arrests for juvenile delinqueney had
fallen from 2,847 boys awl 655 girl's
in 1918 ( the last year before_ state
prohibtion. to 1,e9R boys and :121
girls in 1925. The night court, ch -
ting in liquor cases, had been dune
away with and a single judge was
taking care of all that name before
the Municipal Court; the CLOVIS had
diminished from 41,150 in 1917 to
23,893 in 1925.
Moderation League Figures Exposed
The wet chitin that prohibition has
not decreased drunkenness, Profes-
sor Fisher charged, is without foun-
dation of fact. He riddled the re-
cent reports of the Moderation
League, a wet organization, on the
ground of its inaccuracy. It fails,
he said, to take into consideration
the increase in populatoin; to separ-
ate records of fleet offenders cenvict
ed of drunkenness, from confirmed
old rounders and repeaters; and it
refuses to admit that the poisonous
nature of bootleg whisky, whit+ is
almost instantaneous in its effete,
makes drunkenness more apparent.,
aud increases the record of arrest,
though the amount of drunhenness
has actually decreased.
Professor Fisher said:
"What the publieqacks is striking
TEE STORY OF
JOSEPH MARTIN
FEELS LIKE A NEW MAN SINCE
TAKING "FRUIT-A-TIVES"
T1 11.
JOStPH
MARTIN
The story of Mr. Joseph Martin
of St. ITrsule, P.Q. reads like a
modern miracle. His was an un-
usually bad case of iedigestion. In
his own words he writes. "For
about ten years I could not digest
my food. For o. year I could not
work, I had no strength and I
could hardly eat, I was like dead.
Now I work and eat as much as I
like and feel like a new man.
Your "Fruit -a -tires have relieved
SIC completely, and I would have
died without your remedy. I am
thankful to you, as you have saved
a martyr of dyspepsia," (Signed)
Joseph Martin.
"Pruit-a-tiees" are different front
any other medicine, being made of
pies, e , thied prune's
the intensified juicetof fresh an-
orangesI
figs
combined Await tonics. 50. They lTill
glYe you protnpt .relief,* 25e. and
50e, a box—at all dealers. •
ages from 1917 to 1919 inclueive,
and under the National Prohibition
drink must go. evidence that an exaggeratee impree- Law, of the first full five years of
"According to data computed from sion has been .ereated as VI til!, al- its application.
Police Department reports in New leered failure of prohibition. Stan- "Mr. Shirk's failure to seperate
York City, immediately after the 1 ley Shiek, Research Director of the the records of first convictions front
adoption of /national prohibition, one
Moderation League, who hercently old rounders and repeaters es met by
third fewer boys and girls were ar- put forth figures tending to show a study of the Finger Print Bureau
e
rested for general crimenality. T.i that drunkenness has inereaeled, of the Magistrate Court of New
succeeding years this proportion of charts the reeords for drunkenness: York City. I am indebtee to Karl
in :no and towns of Om Unitml G. Karsten, one of the best Ameri-
can statistical authorities for sug-
gesting a very simple test uf the ef-
fectiveness of prohibition in using
these finer print records.
"The records show a eteede and
pronounced decrease of - first offen-
ders (as indicated for eonvictione
for drunkenness for the first time)
front 24 per 10,000 populiticoe for
the year 1914 to only 6 per .1.0,00e
population for the year 1_925.
"They show that for the • year
1916 the number of first offenders
per 10,000 population of New York
City was 19. Then the wete-timei re -
?frictions ,came. The number of fle4.
offenders fell to 14 per 10,000 popu-
lation in 1917; to 7 in 191e; to (1 iii
1919. In 1920, the first yene of eas
Hertel prohibition, the offend ,ee were
7 per 10,000 population; ie 1921, .7.
1922,in 9; in 1928, 9; :se 1924, 8:
and in 1925 they fell below 6eper
10,000 population,
"Tn 1916 the number le first; of -
/enders was 10,126 in a populntion
of 5,312,000; in 1925 the imputation
had grown to 6,252,000 yet the num-
ber of firet offenders :fell to 3,517;
while the -total number of co:wit:times
in these two periods was 16,355 and
8,816 respectively.
"Out of every 100 convictions fur
drunkeeness in 1916, 62 were of
first offenders and 38 of repeaters;
but in 1925, out of 100 convictions!,
only 51 were first offenders while 49
were repeaters.
"Will the eminent gentleman of
Moderation League ponder theee fig-
ures? Could a more typical, mem-
pieta and convincing single demon-
stration be made Of the rapidly
weakening influence of the liquor
traffic and the liquor habit upon the
much maligned flaming yeah or the
country, including our gide, than
this record achieved in .. wet New
York City?"
arrests has declined still further un-
til in 1923 and 1924 they were lees
than 45% of the pre-war average.
"The Gerry Society goes even
further in its reports and fink that
diving the period of national prohi-
States from 1914 to 1920 incluerer.
The curve of Mr. Shirk's chert coy-.
ors the period of the licensed saloon
from 1914 to 1916 Ineluelve. war-
time restrictions of alcoholie hover -
(Conservative Literature)
frE'Av11()'
ON PARTYI4A
Among the many eitan.fes that have
:.1raracterized the last ittlarlvr of. a
3entrury none is more emplittlie, and
also perhaps so tar-reaehiut., as the
tilutit!;_i0 which hiet t
cloctorate in regarl 1,, party Peliti"i•
E t le th; men's! 911,;:l tide It)
:he party man. i0 1. eidehre. aeet,
' et that ';:tord: j}. ilytng cat.
'dm ext.msion 1,1 tronvidt-,e, with
lh pr,....toec of 1 10; tail' r‘eli 111 1)1
lot-hooih, with the cualylexity
modern conditioni of lite, anfi,
with the ereoii,,t, hew 90r1
g.rooR:. tryin;.! 0)01.effce-
Avtxpre.,sicei te 0 !' 7ot
tecial. Fre,
;1,-r ; !MS 11 rine
it to,o:oli 5 50.11.. 1 toi 31 t11i11-4%,
•1 one 00 other ; 90;-
1,.A with bonds ,1.; 0t,•011,,: to- bound
hem t0 their 1•;•ii!•1••11.;
fl.ihosr thinne ie.: they may there
10 /10 dollbt Mal in Oniario the
hr•lor- slIt,..1;•;;!;,.1 at the Ince
to;•111 to a trelo; r..lotn! ,-;tratn, ono
while it may it will th-
l( atdy etuete- "rom 11de conflict
ti,,terely intone, And it is nut he -
eau., th- 71.10il; i -s11. (1 )0).) the . lee-
( me is 0 Ot•;,/ ooe! rot' 11 10, Indeed..
One or 1 11; old, :t in 0t,trlo 9011t(,
1,11) In Valls,. • a!tItito ,;1' mind in
Which It 94 appr: e ;s dot that in
which other p1iile:.1 i141, ;4 al, ap•
preached. 'nee. le 1)1. 1)10) 111 Litt-
raltelil wiece: neeeesartly lot 1118 Om
a good Liberal is opposed to the Gov-
-rament sal. ef littexleaing liquors.
jliat ad there is nothing in Coneer-
vatisin whieli saye that the loyal
Coeservative meet le. tie, seeps agent
of the brear had The
Liberal Party in Ontario itrelf has
demonserated tette, rot' While 111( (O-
riel part of the parte lam doclart,i1
Itself to be "dry," anether and not
negligible part has deriared itself to
be even "wetter" then the official
Conservative Party which, in turn, Is
practically seeking to oust from its
ranks those who do not tivink that in
Government Control 1 ins the sali, a Inn
of the 1?T/W/11CP. Presumably on 511
other inatters then, M. unity in both
Liberal and Cone: ranke, out
as the other mantes ere not assum-
ing much importanee in this election
there is little conifert to be derived
from that.
Leaving Ontario for a moment and
looking at the other Provinces, it is
Interesting to observe that where
Government Control 114 the laW tho
Government adminestering It 18 not
Oonetervative. Breit:It Columbia hae
a Liberal Government; Alberta a
Fernier Government; Saskatchewan a
Liberal Government; Manitoba. a
Partner Government; and Queben it
Liberal Government. All these have
Government Control syeteme, In
1916e when 'Hon. T, c, Nortis was
made Premier of Manitoba hie oppote,
ent, Street. A. el „AN:, J11, led the Con-
servative Party to d; leaf on it plat -
forte of complete prohibition, and thr
Onterlo TeMPOrancr, Act was Model-
led on. that of Manitoba, which was
deattreletk., Ste et. A, 11, 6.1.k5.ee-Ail4
(Conservative Literature)
,r,••• nts; ,;1; Ire:Or (01:5(1
John Mitedolosid i • 1*ml am everywhere
ail the "Mace:eclat :ect," And, of
ceurseheir lluel. Rem is the worthy
son Of the areal ..!.r .7ohn elardon-
ald. St) that if pe 1: ;;;1. HI tens coont
for anything I 11;• • -ative Party
earl at least ctli 11. 1., !; rr;•a
with the.Act whi, 1, 1,0s lu, approtai,
if not adoration, i the Prohibition.
lits. And it ntay be further noted
that in lln other hums ef 1411 011(0141 outeide of tee eve:, 30e1011 enjoy
‘'onservativ,• Gov, omente there 1.4
Prehiltitionra The W11,1.'1011, th,., "dim,
seems to Is; thal, ;OW; from (101a'(
those Provinces which have Liberal
ProareaSiVe (40N ere tneno hate ,dee
Government Control; and those Pro-
vinitos which inv.. 1'. nmerratIve ()eV-
Pritillents have Proienitiell,
11111 11 has bo-il ',loin!, 11 orit
hare changed. :Pied un reasoning
aori bigott, d atillor.nce to party is
no longer the Mlle, and ill this the
boor voter dulls He can and
eleend approach the question with an
open Tahiti and till, %'( 0' 11, h as
his judgment and emiscience 40(10,
and. while it is not the intention of
the writer to inj• his own vit wti
Into 11111 maLtor, 10 is urgr-d that lot)
11.:4 party tios and 1)1111(1 (bus sii, 91,1
not be allowed 10 ..11111d hell, ;4)
HISO should tho mind he kept clear
or preteoneeived 4. 11a and pr. judiees.
'Plum., is 110 ro•ei1 10 impugn the bon -
',sty or the ° etetv, hile Prohi bitten Mt
who now thiults that theme eetter
medium then the strict terms of the
Ontario Teraptantice Act Is requin-d
Is, brill:: lhe 60on1e 10 tolnperanee.
TIO re is equally ne need to quarrol
with tho rotor vIlu lionostly. thitilts
moro and not loso prohibition Is the
need or the hour. What is needed
is a fair and e tolerant view of the
position the Province, is now iu alter
nine years of Ontario Tomperanee
Act, and an intolligont and unpartial
survey of,what otherwho have had
tho same problems have done to
meet there, and the: results they have
obtained. Further, if fault M found
evIth what others 'have done there
ehould be a elneere effort to ascertain
whether the fault Is inherent in the
;scheme which they have adopted or
'hether the advantages can bo had
Witheut the defects and whether, that
havingObeen done, the resultant it
better ihnet the system. which Ontario
now has.
There rawst be in the heart of every
voter a desire to get this matter set-
tled (mice hir all, That it hoe domi-
nated the politics of this Prorinee
too long it beyond queirtien, and
there roust be a sympathetic attitude
towarde any sincere and conscdeth-
tious ettOrt tO remove it from the
irritating position it has so long 00-
eapted. Other Provinces and other
conntriee haze had the same trouble!,
and many ot them have expeeimented
be schemes to remedy it. What foie -
teem has attended their efforts is
a matter whieh cannotbe disenseect
acrsr; but It is significant...that where-
as the agitation to hrinrab ut the
change was coaselees, now that the
change has betm brought about there
Is no appreciable movement on fhot
te revert to the old conditione,
But, above all, the voter must feel
free to do what he himself thinks
eight mid not what hinetrty thinkta
Father and Son
Fight Side by Side
Roy Is a handsome lad of fifteen.
Who iscry proud of anew set of head
phonesome friend sent to hint. Now
he can hear AB far as Boston on hiS
radio. The wires come right in by his
cot, where he rests most of the time.
You see, Roy is in the Muskoka Hos-
pital for Consumptives and Is by no
means at4 Well as he looks, althoug.11
he says he is getting along tine. lee
cart visit his Dad, too, which is an-
other source of comfort to him.
Dad Is In the same Institution, also
making the never ceasing struggle
against the fell disease. So often
"1'. B." grips more than ono In a
family. Both aro really making good
program, however—the eomplote rest,
the cliscipl0 and the care of kindly
nurses an oetors are having their
usual goo .,ffect in this efficient
institution,
The Muskoka Hospital Is urgently
In need et Hinds. What can you mere
to help't
Contributions may be sent to Nom
W. A. Charlton, President, 228 College
Steeet, Toronto 2, OntarlO,
Being :struck by a happy thfought
never hurt enlybody,
eh oh th
Farm relief tonally canoe after
the evening eheres ate done.
Tcaatifiel Silverware is
a aiodern'Arpcessky
AND what bettor indication of
taste and refinement than a
service of celebrated
COMMUNITY PLATE
The Tobtapar, De Luxo
By reason of our complete srocks
this store is fast becoming known
as headquarters for this ddight-
fel ware.
Prices Most Reasonable
J. R. WENDT
Jeweler
Wroxeter
Ontario
-e4
Money Circulation
Circulation
In This Country
First Currency Said to Have Been
Upon Cheap Playing Cards—This
Plan, However, Only Proved a
Temporary Expedient
Many write -es of Canadian finan-
eial history fall into the error of
loin was that of obtaining the paper.
A search revealed the information
-that the only paper which could be
found were the cheap playing cards
which every soldier carried in his
knap-sack. These the governor de-
cided to use, Some were usen whole
cil6ah5nilla. sh
ewas
nthrest nneyfw
clarocimooneyNeof
four portions. The playing cards of
and others were torn- into two and
8
France. As this little story of Can-
ada's money progresses, we shall see
that there was money in cerculation
in Canada 'Prior .to that date. The
card Money is unique in that it was
the -first money of Canadian °eight
and as a means of meeting a great
financial difficulty it -was probably it
Pioneer experinient.
Let us look for a mement at the
conditione of New France . in 1685.
The great article of tea& was the
skin(of the beaver. A large per-
centage of the _civilian population of.
the time were dependent upon the
fur trade for an existence. They
could barter the skins for the. arti-
cles that the monopoly fur exporters
had to offer, and as a consequence
had their little use for actual money. king. After the conqueet of Can -
On the other hand, however, them ada the face value of the card mon-
were the eoldiers and the membrs ey outstanding represented at tretnen-
of the French foreign civil service. dous sum. The British Government,
They were not producers in the was urged to do something towerds
same sense as that of the fur hunt- redeeming it but about the only peo-
ers. They were paid in -the legal ple who herniated were epeeulatore
coin of France. The, king would who had sent agents amonget the
send mit actual money to meet these French people to buy it up for a
that day did not have a deeoeative
back. On the plain side the gov-
ernor wrote in ink the value they
were supposed to represent. A drop
of molten wax and the officiel seal
completed the manufacture of this
-
interesting money. It was accepted
and in the spring that followed, the
long-delayed funds arrived. The
card moriey was redeemed and de-
stroyed. I do not think to specimen
of the fleet card money remained.
This governor had met a difficult
.situation and also set an exiimple
which meant the ruin of many poor
people in the colony. tielbsequent
governors used this means to create
funds for their own .purposen al-
though it had been forbidden by the
expenses. It had to nun the risk of
•captuee and shipwreck. When one
shipment :failed to arrive, it meant
great •hardship. When two or three
consecutive shipments :tailed to ate
rive, it meant a near catastrophe, for
the money...did not remaen ia the
colony but was mostly tient back to
France in payment for special goods
imported.
As the Christmas season or the
year 1684 settled over Quebec anti
the St. Lawrence wns firmer -Pia -
ed in the grip of the ice king, Jac -
eines de MeUlles, shook his head as
aiteoxpression that all hope had pass-
ed. Shipment after shipment thet
had been expected to bring the ur-
gently needed emoney- failed to ar-
rive. The troops weed'elamoring for
theiv payhand January 1, 1685, was
the day upon which it was clue.
Something mud, be done and done.
quickly. After deep :consideration of
the Problem the governor decided to ,
create money. He would issue pap-
er money and stamp them with the
royal seal, and' when the money came .
from France in the spring, he would
redeem his paper. The next proh-'
paltry sure.
In every communety there are
some people -like the farmer': haree
whieln although not exactly lazy,
was taken to stopping frequently.
lest he fail to hear his driver say -
whoa.
--
In most states the,law gives the
Pedestrian the right of way, but it
line not pot 'given him the proper
technique for walking throteah a sol-
id line of motor cars.,
One educator states that present-
day children are better and brightee
than their parents; but *tree parent
didn't think the same thing when be
was a youngster?.
The art. in lietening to mutic, eaye
Uncle Bill, is being able to keep
someone from telling you all about it
while it is being played.
. --
Surely no one will find fault with
the cattle owner if he indulges quite
frequently in the process of watering
his stock..
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etuan,
There are a great many ways to do a job of
priding ; , but quality printing is only 'done one
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and no matter what your needs may be, from
•,
name card to booklet, we do it the quality. way.
P, S,. -.We aIso do it in a way to save you money,
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Publishing House