HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1927-2-16, Page 6WET,iNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 17127
Yoe Produce Good Cra
S tem
t �' dill s ,
1 new la
met v (
and want the beat results under t � Y
ship your Cream to THE HALM CREAMERY, Chir Creamery
will be operated 24. hours a day in the hot weatherand
your Cream will be in our Creamery and Graded 15. minutes
after arrival in Palmerston, Thus assuring the farmer who
{ produces good Cream the best possible Grade .land Price,
i We loan our Patrons Cans and pay cash for each can of
CreantreceiVed, You Can ship on any train any day and ie
I assured of prompt delivery and pay. Send us a i.rial Can
1 to -day.
The Palm Creamers Co
irerstanl kkt1
THE BRUSSELS POST
They rejoiced atwaye, "with glad-
m•s
Tuev 1':• i 'aingleness of heart,"
serving God with the whole heart.
Mi.,: : w:ts ideal, normal " ervin,: in
and through the Church," The re -
suite were what they always i 11 be.
The people op of the world had rev, r -
m. le
int feet. for such sepernetural .ted
11m m„ lit ae. emeineeted t • it
admiratiee and rc peel, •'lt:evnr f: -
,:o with 111 Ili- people." Ala' thee-
„:ople were av, d, :ts they Keri, io ,int•.
v h n Clod. people live "the life that
i. Christ.”
a r r -e ane There
Weil oven two htintised nmembtle
.a Hutt. •, :lo .,
is rr .,t a„1, an
sine.sea__a¢q�ec:.-.ae:.s.!asrr.�'m•e._-va�m_•rar .c.ma..Hea.�::�'m� sa:-rnmw�., .... e' •. t
o her eentres in Quebec, left over
the. Canadian Pacific iii, lines recently
to attend the annual conventions o£
the Canadian and U.S. Snowshoe
Unions at Manchester, N.H.
Sunday School Lesson
BY CHABLI=S G. TRUMBULL
(Editor of The Sunday School Times)
SERVING IN AND THROUGH THE
CHURCH.
Sunday, Feb. 20.—Matt, u : 13-
13-16; Acts 2; 42-47.
Golden Text:
We are laborers together with
God (I. Cor. 3:9).
In a mission school in China the
teacher asked a class of girls why
the Lord Jesus Christ called His dis-
ciples "the salt of the earth." She
asked them to think of the qualities
or uses salt has. They mentioned
several: Salt keeps food front spoil-
ing; it gives taste or flavor. Then one
Chinese girl spoke up, and said: "Salt
makes people thirsty."
Could there have been a better
answer? Surely God wani.s Christ-
ians, wherever they aro, to rook•-' the
unsaved around them thirsty for the
water of life. If the Christian is not
living in such a Way t: at ()there shall
see that he hie something tboy have
not, and shall heein to wane it for
themselves with a dee' e, n thirst.
that finally ',,aen1 s .al ae-t, intoler-
able, is not that Chri+tiee in dancer
of having lost his savor?" Oar Leri
spoke a sobering word es He said:
"If the salt hnve koet lmi :aver,
wherewith shall it be sell -ea: Ie is
thenceforth need for nothige, bot to
be' cast out. and te tra-de .1 teeter
foot of men." A C;ha'iet'.:a who ha,
lost his testimony is reepected by
neither tl:e world nor the Church.
Christ calf believers, net only
salt, hut -also light. "Ye are the
light of the, v-oeld." Hut we know
that Christ Himself ie time light of
the world. "That (Cr 1. t t waii the
true Light, which lighte.th every man
that cometh into tile. wart ei (Jolie
1:9). Christ said of 1l n.e'i: "I au
the light of the world; a_ than fel-
,
loweth
el-
loweth itI& shall not walk in e
nese, but =hall hnve tl.,• li-slit of Lire"
(John 8:12). Another Kia+:ecru of
our Lord on Hein apd 1-1 l: ;: s, endue
able with thio Lesson is 5u mile. 12;
85-46. Again "God is lieh!-, and in
Him is no darkness it :.i1. If we
say that we have ie11n ehie with
Him, an,l walk in darl;na,'. we Ile,
and do not tell the tru.h" C1. John
1:5, 6)...:„
Sin is ilarknes=: rt n ou ,« .s
light. And so Christ, who _.vis Him-
self
-1 mmself to those who believe nn flim a:,
Saviour, and berones their ri_'t'.-eous-
nese and actual life, takes tthene into
literril union with Him -elf; and wtat
Christ Is, Christian: are. That le
the any t•n-i' and trlory of true Ch„ -
tianity. The:•r,fore Christ, who ie the
light of the world, can ear to Chris-
tians: "Ye are the light of the
world." They are put into the w„rid
to shine, not to cloud or cover or
conceal their shining. "Neither do
i men light a candle, and put it under
a bushel, but on a candlestick; and
it giveth light unto all that are in
the house.”
Shining is the most effective Chris-
tiant service we can render. It is
more: effective than talking, although
telling out the Good News about
I Christ, by word of Mouth, is also vi-
tally important. But the striking 11-
• lustration has been used of the re-
lative place of talking and shining:
"Suppose that you were aneut to en-
ter Heaven and stopped to make a
few remarks to the people on earth.
Suppose that at the same moment a
sunbeam was leaving the ;an, and
that your words and the ray of light
Ihad the same distance to „o 1.) reach
j the earth. In eight minutes the pee -
1 pl• en the earth would lee ,hat sun-
. be..•.,: but emir voice would not
! r the., for 7,133,19 intimate, or
i a ' 11 year._, beemee sound
is
ire ..lower than li ht. Yet
tl' - • at many people wane would
tee : talk than shine)"
• pass:tee in Acta sive; a re
He. eble picture of the Cla ire':n of
' C' as gilt and light, bee_tu':• ab-
irl r:,- in Christ. The effect on the
r unsaved world that w e wetehine
-these early Ci ri_acans show, 1 that
. tle'•y were indeed -:alt and light.
'Tem. cute:• ul,on ev '
•1eIy fear that meant a-irnir:a:inn,
.ard wot•shil, of dsocl, and bungee an i
thirst for what these C:Vistlan,
so that "the Lord add.el le tine
Church deli: uch a, ..coati ii:, s117 -
ed." There. no dillim:11-y .,bona`
multitudes of coin-erelone when the
Church Tweets it.v .ea or .::11 -tidied
with the radiance of ('ilia Iiiin,-cit,
the Sun of I ightro:t ta...
Eight. .l, thinee characterized the lire
and saveiee of these Christiane.
"Ting eontinue4 s: nlfaetly in
tit anoetice' dost -lee." Thme held,
witieeet waveri110 or red••rv:rtion of
roto .nit, to the purity of apestolie
trutie _ivcn to us in the New Testa-
ment.
"And fellow -hip, . , ,from h'rause
to house." God wants Hie children
to have fcllowihip one wit•, •another.
"In breaking of bread." The
Lard's Supper was obeeeverd, a;+ He
, a:k.d,
And in !warier-." There ; no
eenntie e Christian ssrvi •,_ with•,ut
1.11!1,,) l•'':' --ver.
171:..y 1 vel umr elft:h liven, h tv'in c
thio ee e•ennon," and using what
heti for cal era, "ae every
n,: t!. '1rncy wren. fulti,'in;
el Stahel:inns •ea non• .i . ' C.
C .?•'•, ..,, 0 " mai Phillipie .0 2.2 4.
'i'h �y were living out the lave of love.
'dile . . - 0- the teepl: , . ,
n t-sintt'
Cod," tures gave "' ,, a
large e place in their life.
ri! , •
ra mg
ETTER CREAM
ETTER BUTTER
ETTER PRICES
We are now prepared to Grade your Create honestly,
gather it twice a week and deliver at nnr Creamery each day
we lift it, We gather with covered truck to keep eon off it,
We pay a Preminin of 1 sent net. lb, butter -fat for Spec-
ials over that of No, 1 grade, and 8 cents per Ib. butter -fat for
No, 1 grade over that of No. 2 grade.:
The basic prineiple of the improvement in the quality of
Ontario hatter le the elimiottion of Secnnd and off grade
cream, This may be accomplished by pitying the peeduner
of gond cream a better price per pound of hatter -fat than le
paid to the producer of peer e1•ealn. We eolinit your patron-
age and co-operation for better enarket.
aas•We will loan you a can,
See our Agent, T. Cr McCALL,
or Phone 23xo, Brussels.
The Seaforth Creamery
Japan ranks third in world ton-
nage, Great Britain heads the list
with an aggregate tonnage of 21,-
952,000 tons, the United States sec-
ond with 13,740,000 tons and Japan
third with 4,000,000 tons; .Germany
follows with 3,000,000 tons.
Nearly 100 messengers of the Cana-
dian Pacific Telegraphs were the
guests of the Company at a ban-
quet in the Windsor Street Station
banquet hall recently. The compli-
mentary dinner was tendered to the
boys as a token of appreciation of
the service rendered to the company
and the public in their daily delivery
of telegraph messages throughout
Montreal.
Immigration to Canada for the
calendar year 1926 was 135,984,
compared with 84,007 for 1925, a
gain of 60 per rent. Of the total
new arrivals 45,819 came from the
British Isles; 20.1144 from the United
States and 60,221 from other coun-
tries. Returned Canadians in the
period totalled 62,293, as against
13807 in 1023.
Figures submitted at the annual
nn ent:inn of time Nova Scotia
Dairymen's Association showed 27
cmc cordes operating in the province
is 1124, ?redwing 4,76.1,000 pounds
of hurt= r, tr an increase of 5111
per ceet. over the production of
10:13. The ineree.ee in value was
$421,816.
3. E. Martin, surerintendent of
the Hall culture service of Alberta,
announce that nearly 809,000 brown
trout eggs have safely arrived from
\Yisu,neln at the Banff hatchery,
and that the trout, which are closely
related to the Loch Leven trout, will
be distributed throughout the tribu-
taries of the Peed Deer River, Al-
berta.
E. W. Beatty announced recently
that time Canadian Pacific is to build
th '1, 1: 1 yuan hotel on the site of
the old "Q'!' i ii" at Toronto. The
pew hael. will be en Front Street
or , edge the new Union Station,
which is to be opened in June, and
it will he the largest and finest of
the tallow line of Canadian Pacific
hotels, and it will be Toronto's first
lig modern hotel entirely owned and
operated lay a Canadian company.
Canada's wool production in 1926
is estimated at 17,180,270 pounds, as
compared with 15,553,045 pounds in
1925. The value of the clip of
19211 is estimated provisionally at
eta, sfee00, as compared with 611,-
901,000 in 1925. Ontario led in pro-
duction with 4,026,31n pounds, fol-
lowed by Quebec with 4,850,116
pounds. Alberta led in Western
Canada with a yield of 2,400,000
pounds.
New trade arrangements will be
made between Canada and Cuba as
a result of the visit of the Canadian
Minister of Finance to that coun-
try. Canada will receive preferen-
tial treatment from Cuba and the
products of that country will be ad-
mitted to Canada on terms similar
to those extended to France and
other favored nations. During the
twelve months ended November,
1926, .imports from Cuba totalled
$8,074,101 and exports to Cuba
$8,099,980.
Feted by the Governor of the
State, the Mayor and many other
prominent people of Columbus, Ohio,
has been the experience • of Sam
Glode, Micmac guide of the Milford
Camp in Nova Scotia, who arrived
at the Windsor Station, Montreal,
recently, on his return from a two
weeks visit to Columbus, where he
attended the convention and banquet
of the League of Ohio Sportsmen.
Glade is noted 1heoughaut the woods
of Nova h,:otia for his mmcamy
ability at moose calling, adds oc -ori
the gathering of over 1,500 sport --
men on Canadian hunting facilities,
particularly in refererme to Nova
Scotia,
w e4.1.6•.64.644+6'6•R3r1 6•:6+4.1'ri'
1'
4•
•
`let
• •
A
WANTED .,
4e
e
p Highest inarkc•t prices '
puri.
6
6 • See me or Phone No. 2x; 13rue-
Kele, and 1 will pall and get. ,I,
you - liid,•s.
r ' i,y^
eteree t-deo• sneeeteve c et a e-te ale ortefteel• t o
7-7-77
ORD"R ALFALFA SEED EARLY
Al1•ali'a on every farm; .alfalfa
the univereal hay crop! lit • are
slogans that are becomnmitmg more and
more general each year. The pres-
ence of alfalfa on every farm in
Huron County is a highly desirable
condition. Os course, there may still
remain a few who take a viewpoint
opposite to that of the writer. Nev-
ertheless, if a largo crop of highly
nutritional leguminous hay is wanted.
and c,•urely it must be in a great
live stock country, then why not
more of it?
Each spring finds more seed re-
quired to fill the increased demands
of the growers, old and new. There
is plenty of high quality, hardy alf-
alfa seed in Ontario but growers are
well advised to order the:r supplies
early. Our neighbors to the south
are buying car loads of Ontario
Variegated seed because they know
it is suitable to their needs. There-
fore, get in ahead .of them and avoid
embarrasment and higher prices lat-
er on.
FARM LABOR SUPPLY
The farm labor situation in the
County is anything but t happy ore.
Too many farmers are iinding it i:n-
po:sible to do the thousand and one
jobs around the farm without, suit-
able help. Something has to be ne-
!h cted. It may be the farm, the
live stock. the home or politica. In
rang event, it is a serious drawback
to rural prosperity and happiness.
The Inmiinigration and Colonization
Branch of the Ontario Department of
Agriculture is doing it:: utmost, thro'
its agents in the old land, to fill the
rt ti,1' meat for farm help. This
year tits Department has an inertias -
111 number of applications front gear-
' ried own in Britain to be Intel with
Ontario ferment. Many of these limen
have families while others have no
children. Surely a place can he
found for some of these peol)1e right
here on the farms of Huron County.
Send in an application early and
your chancres of receivin • ::citable
help are Con-lderably enhanced. Se
or write your Agricultural Uepresea-
t ttivr, and he will he glad to .file .an
application for you.
CANNED g1tt".I.!'.
t3ritain Is Now e.oriousiy Taken Tree
in,lta,: re,
The recently -formed National Fond
Canning Ceuneil is launching a great
campaign to persuade the British
public to buy rimmed foods which have
been grown and canned in Britain.
The popularity of fruit and vegetables
en preserved is alwn.ye growing great-
er, and last year more than 200,000,-
000
00,000;000 pounds of these goods were con-
sumed which had been imported from
rho United States.
It is only during the last two or
three years that the food -canning in-
dustry has been seriously taken up
in Britain. Now growers, canners,
and distributors declare that they can
do better in this line than any other
country, Next season it is hoped to
increase the otmtTut of tinned fruit
three or four times. Several large
firms have ordered canning plants,
encouraged by time fact that the Brit-
ish nation spend 828,000,000 every
year on tinned food.
It is a common fallacy that tinned
fruit loses all its nourishment, Far
from this being the ease, it is actu-
ally a fact that fruit cooked in a
can contains far ino'o valuable pro-
perties than stewed fresh fruit, When
fruit is cooked in an airtight tin the
valuable vitamine C, one elf whose
roost useful functions is the proven -
tion of rickets, is retained.
Sir Edgar E. Jones, chairman of
the National rood Council, said re-
cently that while it Is obvious that
I3n•Ytain cannot grow all the fruits
now being imported from America,
there is no excuee for the importer
tion of canned apples, plums, soft
fruits, peas, and other vegetables.
Britain grows the finest peas in the
world, yet she imports dried peas
from Japan instead of devoting the
thousands of acres of uifcultivated
land to growing then for ourselves.
America; through the canned fruit
industry, has thrown out a challenge
to British enterprise which is now be-
ing answered in good earnest.
Johnny,' aged 0, was standing
at a soda water stand and was
finishing a dish of ice cream
when his= little sister sidled up
and looked longingly at the
goodies.e
"If I ware you," he said, "I
wouldn't bother to get any of
this stuff, This 15 my fifth, and,
11 doesn't taste admit ;,rood,"
r e0 glee 4 `J00044etn090®eigiQe
In Dubious
Garb
e,_,d,...••......,....,,., ,.
C,ca
By RALPIi HAMILTON
p0.4494444iVU+2,@t>..c...�rati cr
teapyrlr1ht, 1919, bP the, western Novopaper mielol' )
"Dear, dear!" mourned and let lea
Alvin Trite-, tend stood looking down
at a Memel form lying prune 1114(1 the,
straw-lilterad floor of en abandoned
sheltie, 011',! at a relnnte corner or his
fart(.
He wee n genial old soul, tide pi/ 1'-
ent-filer d I•ind•h?arted &mem, et lr, t-
numn and the prop and slay or sterling
uprightness end dignity in the cent -
mutiny. lie had 1 evil i' • ^ ,fi"
wln'ri he fancied that a green etee ee l-
ed from within. Ile stepped n, cos
the threshold and, startled and pur,-
zlod, gazed down est the recumbent fig-
ure. -It was That of a young matt with
a refined cast of features, his eyes
closed In sleep. Two further discov-
eries of the farmer brought n serious
expression to his face. One hand was
abrased and bleeding, and a cut In the
head showed a second recent injury.
"A convict—an escaped convict," so-
liloquized Prince. "Poor fellow! And
he's badly hurt, What Is my duty in
the case? He looks likely, and per-
haps ,a mother, a sister Is worrying
about him. There Isn't anything of
the criminal in that face. Shall I pro-
tect him?"
The decision was quickly made.
Prince proceeded across the farm, got
to the house, made up a bundle and,
hitching up a horse to the old family
carryall, started back the route he
had come.
"Mother and Zelda away," he solilo-
quized, "and I don't,eee Zeph anywhere
around. That just suits me."
Zeplt Barnes was tine handy man
about the farm. At that moment he
was malting his way past the old shed.
IIis coarse lips puckered as he dis-
covered its inmate. He scented a mys-
tery as he sow Prince returning, He
wondered if there IVIS any reward of-
fered for tine apprehension of om-
elets and, climbing to the slnllovb loft
in the structure, waited for develop-
ments.
These materialized with the arrival
of Prince. The latter proceeded to dis-
robe the stranger. He made ar bundle
of the ineriminnling conviet garb and
thrust it into an old manger, attired
him fn a suit of his (ten,.11fted lam
into the wagon and drove to the hens?.
He got his involuntary guest to bed,
applied lotions to his wounds. and won-
dered what bit story would be. When
conseloneness was restored, Alvin
Prince gently inquired if the injuries
were painful.
"I think only a stumbling fail," re-
plier) his guest, "Ler the see, I was—
Whore was I? What was I doing?
I'm all dazed. My name is Wilbur
Thorne. I have a twine, but I left
it for wandering a long time ago. I've
kept: going with all kinds of jobs. You
must be a pretty kind port' of a roan
to take in a stranger this way."
"00, that is all right." declared
Prince lightly, and felt a ceratin deli-
cacy about referring to his convict sus-
picions.
11Irs. Prince and her daughter Zelda
carne home two clays later from a
week's visit: to a relative, to find the
interesting -looking stranger Insisting
upon doing some light work about the
farm. They were so used to the chari-
table impulses of the husband and fa-
ther, that they did not question him
when he told them that he was taking
care of his visitor until he got ou his
feet again.
Ms frank, engaging ways won the
favorable opinion of Zelda and her
mother, and as the weeks drifted on
Wilbur Thorne became so useful and
so happy that Prince had not the tweet
to either question him or turn him
away,
IIe had not noticed that a band of
mutual liking was being cemented be-
tween the two young people, hut Zeph
Barnes, himself secretly in love with
Zelda, though the better detested him,
Wlt5 witness to an interview between
Thorne and herself when the letter
confessed his deep affection for the
farmer's daughter. Just before dusk
that evening, just as the family were
seated an the lawn, lir. Prince read -
Ing, Mrs, Prince at her knitting and
-Zelda and Thorne looking over a pic-
torlal magazine, there appeared Zeph
Burnes and a man whom the farmer at
once recognized as the town marshal,
"There's the man," spoke Zeph,
pointing to Thorne. "TIe's an escaped
convict, and here—" and he tore open
n bundle under his arm, revealing the
convict's garb ih which Prince had
first seen Thorne.
"Why! you give me a link in the
past always a mystery to me," exclaim-
ed Thorne abruptly, arising to his foot
with an animated expression on his
face. "I wore that suit the day I
got hurt. Where did you ever get it,
Zeph? You see, Mr. Prince, my last
job was playing the convict for some
movie people over beyond the village.
I took a casual stroll In it while wait-
ing for my part in the scenario, had
anbad fall, and—and I guess you can
tell how you found mel"
.Zeph drew back crestfallen, The
marshal, however, Insisted on some
close questioning, and Wilbur Thorne
was forced to tell that he was the son
of n wealthy man with whom lie had
quarreled to become a wanderer, A.
repentant truant, now that he had won
Zelda's love, he was welling to ask pa-
rental forgiveness, and a week later
Alvin Prince was glad to accept Wil.
bur Thorne as his soc-tet-I tt, _
anac;.a's 7 est .fano'
-----Prices t 'frrown $375.00 u
TERMS TO SUIT ALL
ho not waste time solving 1)w/ides but get in
touch With the old nstablisht'tl atilt reliable
Linn and get full i alue.fur your nvi,ney.
ason & ,
97 Ontnrio St. Phone 171
Stratford
COMMERCIAL F% -YIN SAFE AT LAST
No Accidents in 4.':utatllt lnvelcfn„
injury or Death In 1925.
According to the report on civil
aviation for the year 1925, issued by
time Department of National Defeuee,
titers were no accidents to aircraft
involving injury or death to that
year. The aircraft mileage was stat-
ed to be 255,526 utiles; the number
of Rights were 3,171, and the aircraft
hours were 4,091.
"The development of aviation on a
business basis in Canada," reacts the,
report, "as elsewhere hes been an up-
hill struggle, Nu subsidies have been
granted by the Government and only
those services which have served a
useful purpose have survived."
Among the larger commercial flying
companies in the Dominion are Brock
and Weymouth, of Canada, Limited,
Dominion Aerial ilxplot'al,lon Com-
pany, Fairchild Aerial Surveys Com-
pany of Canada, Limited, and the
Northern Air Services: hutted, of
Hailnybury, Ontario,
The great necessity in the north,
avers the report., was an improved
method of transportation and obect'-
vation for its proper development and
so the airplane came with its service
in these respects,
Every year during the winter a
series of informal conferences Is held
with the repres,utattvea of the Gov-
ernment departments interested to
flying and a tentative program of
work is drawn up for the following
summer. This 1e dbecusced and co-
ordinntod at a general meeting at
which representatives from , all
branches are invited to attend.
'An aircraft indu••!ry','' continues
the report. "to cenetruet in Canada
the aircraft and e•oninnteut requited
for military and civil flying, Is an
e-=•ntial part of the satisfactory de-
velopment of Canadian aviation,"
In 11)25 new ennetr•ustion Included
Avro two -seated single float sea
pieties. These were burl! to meet the
needs of the fom'estsciatic ern• n
smeller fire detrction petrel aircraft
in 1lanitoba, flee::? aro showing are
interest in airmen construction work
and contracts have 1m sn 1ct to the•
Ottawa Car 3lennractu•ine f empany
end the Laurentidr 11r s, rviee for
the reconditioninc of aircraft and the
nr:nsttuetlon of ilnats end other air-
craft parts in their shops. Det Can-
n,rlien requirements :re not pet euf-
ficient, it is said, to jrfstify the build-
ing of engines here and so for sotne
years they will likely be imported.
„The rpanrirelnenrs," ab•• report de- f
euros, however. "of the Royal Can- I
adi"n Air Force, the provincial and
commercial services, should sufce
for the maintenance of a small but
gradually increasing aircraft Indus- 1
Three hundred of the i 7,00 Men-
nonites from Canada who are estab-
lishing a colony fu the Paraguayan
Chaco, have already arrived and ate
preparing for the others who soon
will start for their new house.
AN ADVANCE
Henderson—You and your wife
should be as one.
Hobart—We really are. as 10.
"How's that?"
"She's the one and I'm the
nought."
NO RACE SUICIDE
Mr. and Mrs. G. Bouchard were
married eight years ago. They now
have a family of 12 children. Mrs,
,Bouchard gave birth to twins four
times in succession. The latest ad-
ditions to bite family were born a
few days ago, The Bouchard home
is at Valin River, Chicoutimi, Que-
bec.
try in Canada."
ROYAL POULTRY FARM
PROSPEROUS ,CONCERN '
Princess Mary's poultry farm at
Goldsborough is so profitable that
she is now planning to extend it, and
the Icing has established a similar
Tarin at Frogmore.
Princess Mary's farm is operated
on strictly business principles, anti,
she has a very complete set of books
kept, which shows exactly the cost of
producing every fowl,
JUDGES ARE NAMED TO
HEAR ELECTION PROTESTS
The judges of the Supreme Court
in council have appointer) the rota
judges, who will try the three elec-
tion protests—from North Ilrute,
South Bruce and Port Arthur—aris-
ing from recent provincial elections.
The judges are Chief Justice
Latchford and Justices Middleton,
Orde, Rose, Fisher and Smyth.
They will sit in throe different
courts of two judges each.
2,567 DEER KILI,ED
The season just closed saw a
greater number of nimrnds in the
bush than_in any previous year, the.
1920 mark being batter than that of
1925, 3,557 having gone into camp
this year as compared with 3,148
last year. While the numl)er of
hunters showed a marked increase,
the number of deer and hear killed
was not approximately large:, the
1926 count for deer amounting to
2,567, as compared with 2,426 for
lust year. Moose appeared more
plentiful than they hnve been for
some yea's past, this season's hunt
ascounting for 179, which is 29 more
than in 1925,-e Apparently the early
frost caused a great nlanmber of beer
to hibernate before the hutting sen -
son opened, but 30 being bagged this
year as compared with 48 last year.
OBSELETE EXPRESSION
You never hear a girl say any
more, "That was when I was in short
dresses."
li
P
tt,
td. i` e
This ever-present task of tho business
man is one that Advertising can most effi-
ciently perform.
Advertising in TIE BRUSSELS POST
would carry any ).message you desire into
every home in this community. It would
spread the "news'; about new merchandise,
special sales or new store policies quickly and
thoroughly.
Take a [friendly interest in telling the
"buyers" of this town what you have for sale
thfit is of service to lthdm and you will win
new customers constantly.
s
PROGRESSIVE MERCll NT3 ADVERTISE
r-